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('This Is the Day the Lord Has Made' \ , - "'? '.. #' , . .-a ., ,. a:r::we", UP. - . '.' . JJ WTLel ANWOR Ao ....... ".".,."-.4,,..__ I \ - Us. Be Glad and· Rejoice in it."
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Page 1: 04.11.68

(This Is the Day the Lord Has Made

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2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 196~

Catholic ColTlference Asks Support For Commission Recommendations lt

CHICAGO (NC)-Members of the executive committee of the National Catholic Social Action Conference meeting here called

upon all church members and especially Catholics to support the recommendations of the National Commission on Civil Disorders report

In a telegram to nlinois Gov Otto Kerner chairman of the commission the conference urged a massive commitment to national action now to make quick and visible progress to close the gap between American dream and American reality

The telegram continued We share the fear that if our counshytry maintains its present course the end result will be an Amershyican aparthied and the destrucshytion of democratic values throughout our society

From their Washington headshyquarters officials of the National Council of Catholic Men and the National Council of Catholic Women issued reports citing the commissions findings as an aushythentic summary of the nations ills Leaders of both groups pleaded for Catholic support for commission recommedations

The president of the National Council of Catholic Men N A Giambalvo expressed optimism that the recommendations of the report will be carried out and that the response of the publicwill be equal to the evil of the situation Stating t11at the report preshysents an appalling picture of mans inhumanity to man he said he believes that every thinking man and woman is prepared to make the sacrifices required for this nation to ~al

Name middotHeritQge Award Winners WASHINGTON (NC) L A

Methodist bishop a Protestant woman church leader and a Catholic industrialist willI re celve the top awards at the 18th annual Religious Heritage Of Ameri~a meeting June 6 her(l~

Lisle M Ramsey of St Louis RHA president said the selecshytions are Methodist Bishop Gerald H Kennedy of Los An- geles clergyman of the year J Peter Gra~e New YOrk president of W R Grace amp Co a Catholic layman churchshymap of the year and Mrs Stushyart S Sinclair Greenfield Masso former president of Church Women United churcb woman of the year

The awards ceremony will be held at the RHA annual banshyquet at which Dr Norman Vinshycent Peale clergyman and aushythor will be master of cereshy

mopies and Dr Kenneth Mc-shyFarland Topeka Kan educashytional consultant to the Amershyican rrucking Association will be the principal speaker

FORTY HOURS DEVOTION

April 21-St Paul Taunton St John the Baptist Fall

River

April 28-0ur Lady of Fati shyma New Bedford

St Michael Ocean Grove Holy Ghost Attleboro

filE ANCHOR

SecOftd Class Postage Paid at Fall RiVer Mass Published every Thursday at 410 Hlghlana Avenue Fall River Mass 027~ oy middotthe catholic Iress of the Diocese of Fall River Subscription price IIr lllaif postpalll$400 per year

this livid bleeding wound of our society

Giambalvo said he knows the members of NCCM are prepared to join in a collaborative proshygram with not only other Cathshyolic agencies but with the gov- ernment industry and institl1shytions and organizations in any intelligent program that will heal not only the effects of racshyism but racism itself

~We will not only continue the work weve been doing in this field of racial justice he concluded but will put our mirtds and hearts and pocket books to work on new programs equal to the task

The Council of Catholic Women said that the report has synshythesized capitalized and undershyscored the human tragedy that has found its best-or its -worst --example in the rampant rac- SOIREE FRANCAISE At a French CluQ sponsored ism in America today mansmiddot in- program at Prevost High School Fall River Bernard G humanity to man Theroux left long active in area French organizations In a statement issued by its president Mrs John Shieldsmiddoto was inducted as an honorary member of the club Others the NCCW said from left middotMrs Sabine Didelot representing the Freneh

Retain Dignity Consulate in Boston Broth~r Victor Belanger guest speaker Whether the crisis be house- -principal of La Mennais High School St Croix Que Wilfred

hold domestic strife expandingmiddot MiclJaud French CI~b presi~ent Brother Ovid For~ier club military entanglements abroa~ moderator shyor riots in the street - someshywhere somehow for lome inshy

)

sanely selfish purpose someone has forgotten that ineach hu- PlanmiddotmiddotCaucus

man existence whetherin Westshychester County orin Watts ormiddot in Hue there is dignityand that dignity must not be comshypromised

If we are to retain the dignity that has been the United States then we must not abort the digshynity that is the American Negro And if finally an impassioned plea from a presidential comshymission has enough substance to blast white America out of its lethal lethargy ~et us pray

_that it is not too late for the hushymaDity of all of u~

The National ASSOciaHon of Laymen~ headquartered iriMinshyneapolis called on the Church both as an institution and as people that comprise it to launch anmiddot middotimmediate revolution in attitudes and in financialpri shyoi-Hies in response to the eom missi~ns report

Choose Poverty Liaison Leader

LOUISVILLE (NC) - Priests in Louisvilles West End poverty area have elected a fellow priest to serve as a liaison in their social work programs -and help develop new programs

Father Anthony Heitzman is expected to assume his new post in about two months He is currently on leave to serve wIth the Russell Area Counell of the Cominunity ActionComshymission

Father Heitzman said ilPosshytolic work among the poor needs a new missiol1ary approacbshyvisible out making personal contact not sitting in therecshytory waiting

The Church has responsibility for leadership in the commushynity he said If a priest is not a shepherd to his nock he is not functioning asa priest

Asked about the possibility of riots in Louisville this Summer he said the feeling is there However he said he had been told by Negro colleagues that if there is a riot planned its aiready planned and if so its with outside influence

In a recent meeting with priests of the West End area Archbishop Thomas J McDonshyough urged new programs and approaches to the problems facshying the area

-

Negro Priests SchedlileM~etin9gt~~~~Jmiddot (1To C1ergy Conference

DETROIT (NC)-A group of Negro priests wIll hold a speshycial pre-conference caucus middothere

this year prior to the annual meeting of the Catholic Clergy Conference on themiddot Interracial middotApostolate

The conference is a national organization - of white and Negro priests who work in -lirbanghettosmiddot This is the first time in its 20-year historY that the black priestsmiddot have chosen to schedulemiddot a private gathering

of middottbeir own in addition tomiddot the full conference middotTbecaucus will meet on the morning ofmiddot April 16 in Detroit and the over-all conference will begin there that evening

Host and principal middotspeaker for the conference will be Arcbshybishop John F Dearden of Deshytroit president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops

Father Herman A Porter a Negro priest whigt is pastor of St Anns church an all-white parshyish in Warren IlL said the idea for the black caucus originated wIth a group of white and Negro priests who met to plan the annual meeting

Natural LeadellS middotThere was 8 feeling that

Negro priestsmiddot as a group have been looked upon by the black community as alienatedmiddot from tbe causes of civil rights and human dignity Father Porter stated He said the purpo~e middotof the biacJi caucuS is to dispel this illusion

AS priests we are natural leaders in these causes he stated We wailt to make this clear tomiddot our fellow black meR

Variety Show Attleboro area Catholic Young

Adult Organization members will presertt their annual vashyri~ty show at 8 Saturday night April 20 in Sacred Heart Church hall North Attleboro Theme wIll be Love Makes the World Go Round Tickets are aVailshyable from CYAO officers or Miss Eileen Nolan High Street North Attleboro program dishytecior

and to the leaderS of eur Church

Father Porter said the Negropriests will probably make it statement of their position when they join the full meeting after their own caucuS

He emphasized the black priests h~ve noin~eJWon9 f~~Iig 8 separatist orga~~za-

New Discussions j

At Holy Name A second series of Christlml

Living programs will begin 8 Tuesday night April 16 ampIt Holy Name school hall FaD River and will be open to the public ApreVious series drew an attendance of hundreds from all parts of the Diocese

Sponsored by the parish eouncil the programs will deal with topics of current impo shytance and will take place GO three successive TUesday nights

On April 16 a debate with reshybuttals and audience participashy

tion will concern itself with the war in Viet Nam Debaters will be Prof~ssor Richard D~~y Providence College and Proshyfessor Robert McCabe SmiddotM1 Moderator Will be Dr Paull Fletcher -Bristol County Com munity College

IFieedom Censorship On April 23 a XiIln The Co~

stitution and Censorship wiliTI be shown and group discussictil will be led by Sister MaJ8

Consilii RSM Salve RegillltO College She will be assistecll b an examination of freedom D1lil1l censorship in communicatioollo

media by Raymond Cheney 00shyradio station WALE and Thom~ McCloskey of the Provid6illlX) Iournal

Concluding the series a pan~ discussion on April 30 will ~ entitled Blessed IS the crlJmi inal Points of View on Recen~ Supreme Court Decisions M~ erator Will be Atty Freded~ Torphy Jr and panels wIll iD elUde Atty~ Ja~~s Beaney A~ William Long District Attornet Roger Sullivan and Po1Ice A-

Walter White

Necrol~gy APRIL 2G

Rev Edward F Coyle 88 1954 Sfmiddot Mary Seminary Pac St Baltimore

o -iPRIL RevJamell l- Smith ~9Ja

tioni or middot disassociatiilgmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddottnebl-middot Pastor SacredRcart Taun~ selves from the Catholic energy Rev Thomas F Fitzgertila CQ~erenCe 011 the lnteFraci~l Apostolate but may form a ioose association to work as a limson team hetweEm the bi9~k eOmmtiiiity and Churchleade

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Mass Ordo bull middot1 bullbull

FRIDAY~ FridayIcJass Block and Violet Sol~mn LJshy

turgicai Services SATURDAY-Holy Saturday l

Class Violet and White Mass Proper Blessing of Ne~ Fire

Paschal Candle Baptism8I Wat~r and renewal of Pro~shy

_ ises Mass of Easter Vigil SUNDAY-Easter The Resurshy

rection of Our Lord I Class White Mass Proper Glory Sequeilee Creed Preface Of

Easter (Easter Preface is u~ed each day till the Ascens~onmiddot

except in feasts with proPerprefaces)

MONDAY - Easter Monday I Class Whitemiddot MaSs Proper Glory Sequence Creed

TUESDAY - Easter TuesdltlY I Cl~Ss White Mass Proper Glory Sequence Creed

WEDNESDAY-Easter Wednesshyday I Class White Mau Proper G 1 or Y Sequence

Creed THURSDAY-Easter Thursday

1 CI~ Whte Mass Proper Glory Sequence Creep

Real Estate Rene ~ P~yant I~c bull Hyannis

279 Barnstable Road SP 5-0079

1954Pastorj St Mary INaJ1Ol 1uckel

middotAPRIL5 1

Rev John J Wade 1940middot AS aistaDt Sacred Heart Ji~ middotRiv~r ~~ Rev Fra~cis I Bradley D

1955 Rector CathedralFdRiver

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Michael C Austin Inc

FUNERAL SERVICE

NEW BEDFORD MASS~

~49 COUNTY STREET

Complete G

BANKiNG~~~ SERVICE -

- for Brestol COUlnty

Bristo~ County Trust Company

TAUNTON MASS o

THE RANK ON l

middotTAUNTON GREEN

_ Member of Federal DepOsll Insurance Corporatio~

3

Pontiff Honors Diocesan Laity

Pro Ecclesia et Pontiice Medal

Will Be Awarded to Four His Holiness Pope Paul-recognizing their efforts and

endeavors over the years-has honored three more diocesan men and a woman The Supreme Pontiff has awarded the four the Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice medal Most Rev James L Connolly Bishop of middotFall River ann 0 u n c e d today They are

Miss Margaret M Lahey 37 rorest St Fall River St Marys Cathedral Parish

Francois Bouchard 105 Dawshyeon St New Bedford St Joshysephs Parish New Bedford

lohn J Burke 344 Highland Ave Fall River Holy Name Parish Fall River

Dr David Costa Jr 325 Gardner St New Bedford Imshy~aculate Conception Parish ~ew Bedford

Miss Lahey daughter of the late Thomas E and Ida Kelly Lahey has been a teacher in the Fall River Public School System for 35 years and in the Diocesan School system for five years Second president of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women she has been particushyiBrly devoted in the field of tile education of exceptional ehildren For this zealous acshyvity she received the Diocesan arian Award in December

For ten ye~rs she has been bull principal coordintaor of the Anshynual Bishops Charity Ball whose proceeds are devoted to the care of exceptional chil shydren Mr Bouchard son of the late Joseph and Mary Richardson Bouchard is the husband of Lillian Duval and the father of six children He and his wife are both active in St Josephs Parish activities and Mrs Boushychard is a CCD teacher Supershyvisor for a construction firm Mr Bouchard is a trustee of St Josephs Parish served as parshyish chairIlan for the Bishop S~ang High School Drive in the Parish and is zealous in all parish endeavors

Mr Burke is undoubtedly the best-known of all diocesan emshyployees Maintenance man at the Bishops home and Chanshy REV DR MARTIN LUTHER KINH JR eery he has served both the late Bishop Cassidy and Bishop Connolly long and well Son of

Turn to Page Seventeen

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 11 1968

Approves Senate Ideas bull Full Catholic

Partidpataon in YMCA YWCA

bull Priests to Submit Names for New Bishops

bull Dioceses of Fall River and Provishydence Ex~h~nge

Faculties

TheMost Reverend Bishop has informed the Executive Committee of the Senate of Priests that he has approved several suggestions sent to him by the Senate

Rev John P Driscoll Presishydent of the Priests Senate has released the following items that have been discussed between the Senate and the Bishop and which have met with the Bishops apshyproval

In keeping with a discussiOll of the matter by the National Conference of Catholic Bishops

less than two hours later at St Bishop Connolly has said thatOn Wednesday April 3 the Catholics may participate fullynight before his death Rev Dr Josephs Hospital

Martin Luther King Jr issuedCharities Appeal leadersmiddot

Said Archbishop John Dear- in all programs of the YMCA and YWCAwhat in the light of later events den of Detroit president of the

Each year Ilhe Bishops of aftwillmiddot become a most moving National Conference of Catho- area meet after Easter to sendJo Hear Atty E B Hanify statement of his credo lic Bishops the next day to Rome the names of those

1 dont know what will hapshy Dr King gave his life formiddot priests whom they feel shouldAttorney Edward B Hanify a member of the Boston pen now he said We have others in the finest spirit of~ firm of Roper and Gray will openthe 1968 Catholic got difficult days ahead but Christian love Charities Appeal kick-off meeting at 2 Thursday afternoon it doesnt matter with me lgte-middot In Newark some 25000 partic-April 18 in the auditorium of 1ihe new Bishop Connolly cause Ive been to the mountain ipated in a Palm Sunday intershy

top Like anyone else I wouldHigh School Atty Hanify faith and interracial Walk forlike to live a long life But Im Understanding through thewas born in Fall Rivermiddot Oct State Street Bimk and Trust notmiddotconcerned with that 1 just ghetto area where last Summers1 1912 He is the son of the Co and Boston Edison Co want to do Gods will and He has

He is a trustee of the Provident rioting took place The longallowed me to go up themounshyIRte Superiormiddot Oourt Judge Institution for Savings in Bosshy scheduled march was rededicat-

IMward F Hanify and Mary ton tain ed to Dr King bull (Brodkorb) Hanify A grad- Atty Hanify is a member Auxiliary Bishop John J Dougshy

of Holy Cross College National Advisory Council on I the land I herty of Newark president ofute see promised Class of 1933 summa cum laude Education of Disadvantaged may not get there with you but Seton Hall University was and of the Harvard Law School Children lifemiddot trustee of Tufts I want you to know tonight that among the hundreds of religious LLB 1936 he married Jane Univoersity trustee secretary we as a people will get to the leaders in the march Dillon of Waterbury Conn in director John Fitzgerald Kenshy promised land He prayed that Dr Kings1940 ~ey have three children nedy Library member of Execshy spirit ~ay rise to haunt the Edward B Hanify Jr Jane A utive Committee National Cathshy hearts and minds of all AmerishyI am not worried about any-Hanify and John Dillon Hanify olic Community Service and cans till we have the victory forthing Im not fearing any manThe Hanify family resides in president of Family Counselling which he gave his life Mine eyes have seen the gloryBelmont The guest kick-off and Guidance Centers Inc From Chicago where DrsPeaker served during World of the coming of the Lord

Kings marches caused racial formerly as chairman Board of strife in 1965 and where his death touched off one of the nashy

Val II as a Lieutenant USNR The guest speaker served

Atty Hanify is a director of Advisory Trustees Holy Cross The next night just before he the American Telephone and College member Board of Visshy was middotto leave his motel for an tions severest riots John CardishyTelegraph Co John Hancock itors of United States Military engagement Dr King stepped nal Cody said he was deeply~utual Life Insurance Co Academy 1962to 1965 chairman onto the balcony of his room and ~ismayed at the news of the

of the 1950 Greater Boston bent to pick up something He tragic passing of Dr Martin Tum to Page Eighteen was shot in toe neck and died Luther King

~This Is the Day the Lord Has Made

The Risen Saviour is freshyquently represented as a lamb The glory that surshyrounds the figure indicates the triumphant Resurrection and the beginning of the life of glory which Christs Reshydemption secured for all men who beliveve and make use of the means of Grace which He extends to mankind

The figure of the lamb is one of the many which in

ATTY EDWARD B BANIFY the fourth century are found

Page One explanation

on the stone coffins and alshy80 bull in the basilicas of Romemiddot and Ravenna He was ofshyfered because of his own will He shall be led as a sheep to the slaughter and shall be dumb as a lamb beshyfore his shearer (lsa liii 7)

The Paschal Lamb ismiddot repshyr~sented carrying a s t a f f with cross and pennant The staff represents the cross and the pennant which is

always white with a red cross upon it represents the Body of Christ

The drawing points out that Christ is the new way leading into the holy place through A new and living way which He hath dedicated for us through the veil that is to say His Flesh (Heb x 20) Of this Lamb the Church sings in the Preface Christ our Pasch was sacri shyficed

be taken into consideration to be named as bishops Bishop Connolly asks that the priests of the Diocese acting individual1T or through the Senate as a whole send to him any names of priesta whom they feel should be so considered

Bishop Connolly and Bishop McVinney of the Providence Diocese baveexchangM the fashyculties of the two Diocesesshypriests holding faculties (pel shym~ions) to hear Confessions

Turn to Page Ten

Bishops Attend Funeral Rites Of Dr King

ATLANTA (NC)-Archshybishop Terence J Cooke of New York and Bishop John J Wright of Pittsburgh headed the Catholic Church delshyegation at the funeral rites of slain Dr Martin Luther King

Thousands and thousands at shytended the ceremonies which had to be conducted out of doors after the religious service at the Ebenezer Baptist Church for the former leader of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference

The principal advocate of truth love and justice in his non-violence campaign for the Negroes Dr King attained natshyional fame for his work

Businesses schools courts banks and the New York Stock Exchange were closed on Tuesshyday last when leaders from evef7 activity in the United States were represented at the final exercises honoring the Southern mlnistel who procured his doctor of theshyology degree from Boston Unishyversity

4 THE ANCHOR-Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs Aprl1 1968

The Parish Pdlrade J(OLY NAME

FALL RIVER

ContemJ)orary music will ae eompany the 1115 Mass Easter Sunday morning

Altar boys will rehearse at 10 tomorrow and Saturday mornshyings for Holy Week services

A Christian Living Series will begin at 8 Tuesday night~

April 16 in the school hall and eltgtntinue fbr the two Tuesday evenings follovying Subiects will include Viet Nam the problem of censorship and points of view on recent Sushypreme Court decisions The meetings will be open to the public

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs Frank Kingsley president (re-elected) Mrs Lawrence Graffam vice-presishydent Mrs Dennis Cook seere- tary Mrs Richatd Wordell treasuller Mrs Milton Bednarz financial secretary The guild viewed a film depicting the life of Christ at its April meeting

HOLX NAl1E NEW BElIJFORD The Womens Guild and the

Holy Name Society will sponsor a penny sale on Wednesday evening April 17 in the Holy Name FraU corner of County and Studley Streets

The proceeds will benefit the school fund

ST KILIAN NE BEDFORD

lhe Womens Guild will con duct a whist pavty at 730 Wedshynesday evening ApJiL 17 in the schooL on Ear-Ie street

MvSi HeIJVe) euroanon chahlmanj has announced that in addition

to the regular plJizes there will also) be special attendance awards

Senior Atbfete Studenli Award

StonehiU College basketball eo-captain Rick Pariseau has been named the Outstanding Student Athlete in the senior class

The New Bedfold resident re ceived the award at the annualmiddot Honors ~ssembly from college president Rev fohnT Corr (S1euro

The awardl goes to vile senior athlete with high scholastic average and outstanding qualshyities off chal1aeter and leadershyship noted Father Corr

The award is the highest hon or an athlete can receive at StonehilL College Paniseau was co-captaiil of the basketball teaml for tile past two seasom

This year coach George Blaney used the 63 Pariseau as his top defensive specialist Ricks as signment each game wasmiddot to stop middotthe oppositions leading scorer

Paniseau a graduate of Holy FamiJlY High averaged 77 points per game this season paying fiwwardl He was tile second leading rebounden on the Chief tain teaml

ltd like to hale been a lotmiddot more the athlete and a lob less the scholar kiddedl Pariseau when he reaei led hismiddot medaL

The ruggedl basketball player shinesmiddot in themiddot classroom Here at StonehLll he is a dcanis list stugt dent magoning in chemistry

Rutgcrsl DelawaJe ancV the UnilersLty of New Hampshire have oLfcned Paliseau g)aduate schooL soholal1ships

Padseau pianamp to oontinue his studies in envil10nmental chemshyistry after completion ot his two yean military obligation His special interest is conservashytion

OUR LADY OF ASS-lJ~lPTION

OSTEItVnmE

The public is invited~ to the Annual Penny Safe sponsored by the Parish Guiloi at 8 on Friday evening Apnil 19 in tile Osterville Elementary SchooL Auditorium

Mrs Lawrence Jones- and Mrs Peten Fermino co-chairmen are being assisted by a large com mittae

OUR LAlI)Y OF ANGlElI

FALL lRnmm

The Holy Name Socie~ will sponsor a baseball trip Sunday Tuly 21 Tickets- ane now avail shyable from Joe Theodore and Tony Michaels-

Adoration will take place from 8 to midnight tltJnight and from 630 tomorrow mornshying to 4 in the afternoon lJhe Solemn Liturgy will be celeshybrated at 4 oclock and stationsshyof the cross will fbllow at 7

Easter Vigil services will take place at 8 Saturday night

The COuncil-orCatnolla Women announces a chamarJta and dance from a to midnighti Sat urday night Apl1il 27 witH the shySilvelr Moon~ Qrcne1ta supplyshying the music Ilhe councWs annuall Uommuniol1 olJeakfltlsti will be heler following 8 oclock Massmiddot Simday morning ~ray 5

Holy Rosary Sodality will hold its corporate Communion aitd breakfast following 8 oclock Massmiddot Sunday movning Aprif 28

SIJ JOSEBB FALL RIVER

Tickets for the parish gala and dinner-dance must be purchased by Eastel3 Sunday

Seventh graders in the paroshycllial school will conduct a paper drive saturday tyenpril 20 Con tributions will be piekedup at homes Dbnors may maKe arshyrangements b)l calling JosepH Keefe atl 6725331

LegianJ ol MQr~

To Honolt Soint The New Bedford Curia oll

the Legion of Mary will comshymemOlate the Feast of St Joshyseph- the WorRer on Wednesday evening May 1 at St Manys Home New Bedford

Mass wilf be offered at 7 by Rev Albert F Shovelton spiT inial director of the New Bed~

ford Curia and amiddot social and reshyfreshment peviodi will fbUbw

Ilfte eveniilg open toi only active members of the Legion oft Mary ismiddot beinggt ar-ranged) by lirene Mar-tin cllairman Marian Hutclliilson Maureen Kennedy Margaret Downey and Margallet Roche

Bishops of Guinea Seek Vocafuons

CONAKRY (NC)-The shortshyage of priests caused by the exshypulsion of European missionshyaries from Guinea last yeaJ has prompted the bistiops of the country to issue a pastoral lefshyter urgently appealing for voshycationsmiddot to the prieshood and religious life

lJhe letter was issued an the end of a meeting of the oistiops conference here ArclHjishop Raymond~Marie Tc IllildiF mlbo euroSiSplmiddot oli COnakll)l F at her Raphael Teal apostolic adminis tJator of the diocese of NZere~ Rore and Father Louis Barry apostolic administrator off the apostolic pJefecture of Kankan attended the Jjl1eeting

TRAiJNs fRlAIQU SltlUDENTS Father Robert R Campbell~SJ of ChelmsfOld MasS~ chats witl1J L11aqi studenta at Nr-Hikmw lJhiversfty Baghdad~ Iraq where me New ID~ gland pllOjnaegt Jes-uitJ is head of the departmentmiddot of socaI sCiences training young leadera

to make theil contributions to the development of their country NC Photo

BagampdadlIrish Jesuit Heads Un~ersity IraqSfresses Confidence in Future

NEW YiQRK (NG)-That1s something fOI3 an Irishman isnit it chuckIed Father Richard J McCanlhM SJ president of AI-Hikma Universiiy in Bagh~

dadi Iraq He was referring to a volume of which he is the author-A Book of Arabic Ser shymons

Brother Alfred a fOImer facshyulty member at Al-Hikma

nodded and said If that seems strange you should have heard the eulogy he preached in Arashybic at President Kennedys memorial Mass

The conversation took place in New York where the two friends Had a reunion preceding Father McCartnys tour of tne lTnitedl States 10 talk about AlshyIfikmaslt accompliMiments- and its goals for the future _ The Jesuit soholan a member of the New England Province took a doctorate in Arabic at Oxford Ire tias worked in BagHdad for 30 years and pub-

lished tflree volumes in IslamiCshytheology tyenl-Hikma University was foundedl in 1956 bymiddot the IxaqAmerican Educational Asshysociation

Answcrsmiddot Requests This- association approved by

Ixaqs minis-trymiddot oli the interioIl is made up principally of Jesshyuits from New England and Iraq 1m 1932 it founded Bagn dbd UlJlege~ now a flouvislling secondary school for boys in Sulailrh l a northern suburb of the city

The esteeml enjoyed by Bagh dad College led to numerous reshyquests by Iraqis of different faiths andJ all wallamp of lifemiddot fur em-ablishment of an lnstitution on the unLversity level

AL-Hikma was and is our answer to those jmiddotequestsbull Father Mcltt1lthy stated n is also the concrete expres9ion )f our long felt desire to make a gneaten aontJributionl tomiddot the rapidly developing country of modern Iraq

Ilhe priest said the establisll menti ou the universify was made possible by several g~fl$

and gJants whiCh were ct testa mony of the donors confidence iI~ the future of Iraq and in the contrioutioil whicn the Jesuits could make to it

A gift from the Iraq governshyment of 170 acres of randwas supplemented by grants from the Ford Foundation the Calshyouste Gulbenkian Foundation and otlier agencies

Oriental Institute Al-HiKma is the Arabic word

signifying wisdom Father MoshyCarth~ noted It is an approshypriate name for a uniersity in Baghdad The institution known as Bait Al-hikma middotwas one of the glories of medielaL BalWp dadbull Tlieremiddot Iraqi scholars transshylated futo Arabic the wisdom and science of tJie Greek-s- wliiCh had III profoul1lL influence on the thought and~ culture ofmiddot medieval and modemmiddot Europe

It is almost imPos9ible to overemphasize the impoItanoe of the promotionol interoultushyral understanding es-teem and

ORTINS Phom Supply 245 MAIN STREET FALMoUTH-$48f91a

ARMAND ORTINS Prop

cooperation particularly in the context of the modern world Father McCarthy stated

He was enthusiastic about plans fOr foundation of the Orishyental Institute of AI-Hikma We would like it to be a modshyern Bait Alhikma where soholl shyars ancL students from the East and tlie West will meet on hup man intellectual and culturai levelS for ilieir mutuaL enrich ment and profi1 he said

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JURI HIN(KIEY Il SOl CO StJtlDtNamp MiATER~AIlS

Sring 5amp700 4middot9 YARMOUTH R01Dmiddot

HyenANNmiddotIS AMPLE PARKlNG

5 Expect Approval Of Inter-Church Agency i~ l~~as

[JAN ANTONIO (NO) shyRwttfication ()f D proposed eonstitution by every Chrisshytian denomination i11 the fibte may result in a new Texas tnter-ehurch cooperation agenshyey according to the executive director of the Texas Catholic Conlelence organization of the ampites Catholic bishops

CaHan Graham made the preshydiction here shortly after a mashytDritv of delegates to the 15th annual general assembly of the re[(t3 Council of Churches wted to join with the 10Cathshytiic dioceses in Texas to form the nations first state-level ebureh body uniting Protestant Boman Catholic and Orthodox ~hllrenes

The1raquooposed constitution for che Texas Conference 1)1 Churehes as the united body is tID be known is now sUbject io i(ltification by the 11 Protesshy~t member organizations Bnd fihe Orthodox who comprise the arras Council of Churches It in llso subject to approval by fhe 10 Catholic dioceses in Te3B

Bishops to JIacide lbe boald of directors of the

le2tQ3 Catholic Conference has ldready approved the proposed

dlleW constitution in principle Graham said but it must still be oonsidered by each individshya bishop for his own diocese

Graham said the Texas Cathshync ConIerence itself wUl beshylaquo)Re G membtu of the new 01shy

pnilation but wm also continshy~ fo funotion autonomously

lie traced the proposed 01-

miltation 10 the MatCh 1966 mooting of frhe Texas COUDcll fII Churches general asSembly when an invitation was issued to ~tholics to join theCQuncil

4CAs G result this information was trnnsmitted to the bislu)P$ ~ham recalled The bishQP3 decided we didnt know enough tlbout the counoilandbotb sides began ) study more than bull Jlear-and~a-half ago

New OODfititllltnOD ~t of these discussions both

td~ tried to take a iresh look middot1IIt the existing constitution ol ampbe council he continued 1nshyad of talking about joining bull lllew proposed constitution foi IeOrganization was submittedtgt tile Catholic bishops

The proposed new constitushyGoo GIaham explained is deshygned to bringabout better ~ ~ration affiOlg all alw~hes mm office llQ$ already cbeen -operating

Before the (council -invited eatholic membership Catholic pr~ests and laymen had attendshylid meetings ofthe Texas Counshy_I raquof Churches for two year official observers

Prelate Keynoter A1Convention

CINCINNATI (NC)-Keynote _~~er attne golden Jubilee Cltholic Students MissionCrnshy-deconvention Aug 22 to 25 laquo the University -(jf Notre Dame will be Bishop Jphn J Wright of Pittsburgh

bo highlighting the 50th -niversary df the mJ1liOlllshymember youth organization wiU be the presen~ -of Father Cllfshytom JKing SVD Divine

Worn missionary who founded Cbe CSMC

middotThe crusade headquartera here said a pageant -depicting both the mission history of Amelica and the career of the ~l1C will be staged in the OO~ OLaughlin auditorium Qf m Marys College adjacent to Notre Dame Student grouP ~n 16 areas of the U S wlM ~e Alart

VISITING THE SliCK When Pope Paul recently vjsited the working-class Prenestino district of Rome he took time to visit bed-ridden 83-year-old Teodoro Tarquini The Holy Father offered Mass in Italian at the parish church of St Leo NC Photo

Defend Textbo~kLaw cinShowdown Case JE-dllCltlJion OrganiotiollS File middotEcumenical Brief

in the ease oaidnomatter whatschoolsth~ One blief was middotfiled in behalf child ran attend

of the National Catholic Eduea The brief contends the ar~-tioruJlI AsSociation theLutheran Education Association middotthe Nashy Halmony in Churchtiolllll Union Of Chtistiaa

BONN (NC) -There is com- ISchools and tl1le National Conshyplete harmony in the Catholicierence of Yeshiv Principals Church in tungaIY among the

ment that s~(lte aid in supplying middottextbooks in secular sUlgtiects to children in nonpublic schoob is 4 direetaid to religion is Irivolous

The attorneys general brief contends a state may extend publicly financed aid such as police fire protection public safety and transportation to school 9tudents whether in public or private schools The brief contends that the textbook law falls within the category 0pound sunh poundlid since it benefits the student not the school

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 11 1968

Protesa- ~HEhcps

In IPaf~fi1lm~rd BARCELONA (NC)-Leadefll

oi 30 lay apostolate groups in Barcelona have petitioned two high-ranking Spanish prelates to resign their government-apshypointed posts in the nation~

parliament the Cortes We believe the Second Vatshy

ican CouncUs directives are very clear on this point the

petitioners pointed out to Archshybishop Casimilo iVlo ICill0 of Madrid vice-president of the Spanish Bishops Conference and Auxiliary Bishop Jose Guerra Campos of Madrid

A spokesman at the iladrid chancery office reported that an oerage of 40 letters a day middotare received on the subject some in favor some against the bishops presence on a governshyment political body

The Barcelona document pointed out that this is a matshyter that deeply affects th~ Church in our country

If furthermllre we take into account the fael that great numshybers particularly among the workers have left the Church because of Ets liaison with the state there is no possible reason to continue the symbol of such a union the document emphashysized

A m on g the organizations making the request were the Workers Catholic Actfon the sodalities the Catholic Student Youth Organization the Indeshypendent Youth Association the Spiritual League 01 Our Lady of Monserrat the Pax Christi Movement and the Catholic Rural Youth Organization

(ORREIA amp SONS ONE STOP

SHOPPING CENTER

bull Television bull Grocery bull Appliances bull Furniture

104 Allen 51 New Bedford

997middot9354

I arose and still

with yoa

WASHlNGTON (NC) -Forshymidable forces from Churehshystate ranks forged a defense of the 1966 New york state textshybook laws validity fox the i~

pending showQownbefore the United States Supreme Court

A ptiest jQined tbe -gentlral counsel of the USmiddotCatholicConshy

ference in filing an ecumenicalshybpe brief nn behalf ofnational Catholic Protestant and Jewish educational organizations urging the nations highes tribunal to uphold the law

The attorneys general of three stat~s in another briet joined in supporting the contenshytion of New Yo-rkAtty Gen Louis J Lefkowitz that the only beneficiaries ot this law Ire students and their parenUi not schools andconsequently the law is constitutional

The friends 02 th1l court (amici curiae) briefs were filed in preparation for the hIgh courts consideration ot the law Which provides that the state fUlllishIree textbPokg insecu WI subjects to students 0pound palOshy(lhimiddotai and other nonpubUe schools The court has yet to schedulemiddot8 date for argumenill

aid to benefit a religious group But the wall of separation is

between Church and state not between the child and the

State the educational groups brief reminded Since the Sushypreme Court decided the Evershy30n case in 1947 l different tack has b~en pursued by the court in considering state aid directly to students whether they attend public or private schools the blieI underscored

Tee brief states that 85 per -cent of grammar and highscool students in the nation attend public schools either because their parents prefer that type of education oibecause the choice is dictated by economic necessity The other 15 per cent are in nonpublic schools and more than 90 per cent 1)f them GlTe in church~related schpo13 the brief adell

Frivolous Argument The educational ~ups do

not not contend the state must supply assistance to nonpublie f1Chool children but if it exshymiddottends secular educational beneshy~its 00 all school children thea it is within middotthe state eonstitushymiddottional discretion to supply such

Father Charles M Whelan bishops priests and laymen altgt May we rejoice forever in tfu~51 of Fordham University law cording to ll report in Magyarschool joined William R Conseshy tloryof middottheResurrection Kurir the Hungarian Churchs dine usec general counsel in official news agency WOhicb filing the briel Hannon Burm noted that the Hungarianof the NCEA Francis X Gallagshy Church seems to be free of tile her of aaltimoe and Alfred ~ dissension lthat exists in the Scanl-an of Washington served EhuiCb Bpoundt man Westem JOYOUS GREETINGS as consultants in preparing tbe oountries brieC

The other brief -was Jiled by ~ OFFI(IRS TRUSTEES CORPORATORS AND STAFF At~ys Gen James L Oakes of Vermont William C Sennett ofPenllsylvania -Dod Herbert F DiSimone of Bllode Island

The educational group cmshygthasized they do not want raquo see the wall f separation beshytween Church and stateleilliei disnuintled or displaced would oppose the znoot paltrY wnouut of direct governmentllil

MontlePJumbing amp HeafiD1gCo Over 35 Years

of Satisfied Service Reg Mas~er Plumber middot7023

JOSEPH RAPOSA JR 106 iNOl MAIN STREa

FaiR River fiJ5a7491

~ itizens 1

DOWNTOWN fALL IRIVIE~

SAVINGS lBANKamp

6

They expect to hear religious leaders speak in those tenns history to one local or to a certain segment ofour8OCh~tyrhe race issue was- injecte41

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall RiverThurs Apr 1l19~8 Rx for Renewal J

Accomplishi1lJg the Dream The senseless and savage and tragic death of Dr

Martin Luther King Jr is not the end Of his nonviolence erusademiddot But it should bring a deepening realization of

what nonviolence entails The Ghandian Way of nonviolence is not simpiy a techshy

nique of sittiIig on sidewalks and not moving a matter of being passive and silent in the face of attack~ verbal or physical It embraces moie than that

It is basically-and Dr King middotknew this-a spiritual force As a former Governor General of India has remarked The renunciation ofmiddot external violence is not enough but must be accompanied by asepsis of the heart for the sucshycessful surgery of nonviolence How can One love where there is so much cause for hatred The answer lies in everyshyones heart and can be appealed to through love and then and then Only will the man be changed

Nonviolence means bringing to bear against the forces of hatred and prejudice and ignorance the still more powshyerful force of intelligence and education and love of God and neighbor Nonviolence means ~eeting overcoming evil by the sheer power of courage and work and love

This Dr King understood This alone will accomplish his dream

Sniritual Leaders r

Lay people are being urged to get more and more inshyvolved in the work of religion When they do they many

th h f t b times make more sense t han ose w 0 pro ess 0 e teachers middotof religion

Last week for example a professor at the Harvard Divinity School and the Episcopal TheologiCal School said that sex between unmarried persons could be morally good or bad depending upon the situation And during the same week the chief of the Psychiatric Service Harvard Unishyversity Health Services took colleges and parents to task forcondoning free sex behavior in youth and f9r not bolshystering young people in maintaining high moral standards He counselled chuicli leaders notmiddot to abandon Ii spiritual ap

peal-toyoutll puttomaintainlheif ttaditional religious Ap proach to reinforce high moral standards

So hereismiddotthe picture-a religious lea~~rseeingl1ot~ ing wrong in sex between the unmarried and a ~ymaJl

~ Ateeing everything wrong InIt -

In the light of the Gospels the theologian is _Wrong pat _y Gn ~ n i _ereneemiddot and the layman is right shy

And this is why religious leaders arein many -inshylltailces losing whatever credentials tliey Duiy possess 10 The senseless murder of Dr Martin Luther Xng Jr

Pl d d th f od agaln brlmiddotngs lnto focus the vlolence that ImiddotSmiddot ours Yes 0urs 1ead eop e are en owe WImiddot a meas~re 0 go _sens~ bull They have some ideas about the main thrustmiddot of the Gospelsbull -Too often we have relegated the dark pages of our natio~

And when they hear deviations then they write off the We seem to fool that the religious leader and listen to him no more Of course those events which took place in fortable christianity I I Even m our own locale 1he who are looking for justification for some type of action ~emphls ha~e Itt ~ connec- people who could have doneso that the religious leader approves will be glad to welcometlOn WIth thIS area of the much reillly have contributed him to the bandwagon And then the responsible Jaymen-shythe physicians and psychiatrists and civic leaders and those who are concerned about the moral and family health of the

community--must move into the scene and try to repair the damage done

Perhaps this can be the message of Easter-instead of talking about the resurrection in glowing and lyrical terms

instead of speaking about glory and joy the -reaJ message of Easter is one of love of God for men and love of men

for God And Christ gave the standard of Love-If any man love me he will keep my commaridments~Iid themiddotmiddot party orperscgtn cOncerns him-Father and Iwill love him and we will come to hIm and

_ we will makemiddot our abode with him Theoiogians mayor may not understand the full imshy

plication of thesemiddot words For the most partthe people do even if their actions at times do nqt measure up~ T~ey

understand - amJ th~y expect the~r ~pjritual advisors1q lnderstand and to preach these Gospel words all Gospelmiddot words

rheANCHOR P~~ I fnVImiddotrE~ OF T~E DIOCESE OF FILl PVER Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River

410 Highland Avenue Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev iohn P Driscoll

- MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

nation A certain emotional sympathy

is created by the vivid -reality middot of the television For the most part it is just another drama that will pass in time and thingS will go on and a~lwill be well This indeed is thetragedy of Memphis

Natio~al problems cannot be conidered to be isola~ed events When ~ national mQvement

self wi~h the basic principles 01human existence all humanity is involved Such is the ease memo~ are the people wh- Bishop JOseph-middot LBerilllrcii

with Civil Rights such is the -re still III the depths of 8Uffer-middot Will serve as adminiStratOr iii ease and the movement pre-~ Thu~ when ~ new genera- tbe Atlanta Archdiocese linti serited to the nation by Dr ti9G recelves th~ mherIta~ elf a successor is named for Martin Lutl1er ~ing poverty the prospe~IS ~ 13te Archbishop Paul j Hammiddotmiddot Yet the majority of Ameri- Ul~ first to deny that they ue cans have for mimygenera-middot his heirs This is true of most tions considered ~e plight of men regardless of the color ttl the urban ghetto from the com- 1heir skiil This is what we fortable ~rm-chair of a com- must kUly overco~

Now ISTime for CiiI Rights Concern The words of Dr King cershy

tainly were not understood by the senseless mobs that took to the streets of our cities after his death Nor were they undershystood by the majority of white middle-class Americans

The apathy and lack of genshyuine concern for the civil rights movement among this group is galling

It is these factors that aHow mad men to assassinate We

middotmus condemn the lack of un middotaerstanding the disdainful atti-middot

t hi euro moonIn(j

1lt ng e a reported there

Rev Johnf Moore St Josephs Taunton were~good and sufficient ~ middotIA lilA Inimiddoto~hi~~t~~~~bers~

The Tragedy of Mempmiddothmiddots _ I

h d I d ff

tude and the smug selfshyrighteousness of our bourgeoismentality

To claim that we are all for the civil rights movement and then to deny a home to a man because he is negro loots the middotmind and arsons the spirit of our scciety even to a greater degree than a street mob It is the spirit of our society the spirit of our country that is at stake

Any hope of postponing a 00shycision em this matter died at

so very little The structured class system that has been our inheritance from our early New England ancestors has been only insulated and protected by the progress of an affluent aociety

When a man makes good hetends to leave the memories of his afflicted past in the voidof a twilight z(me The blood middotsweat and tears poverty ~ ~n forgotten in the land ol gracious living TemporarY Heaci

Even more removed fJoa tlTLANTA (NC) -Amiddotuxilia~

Priests Senate Votes Support Of OrdinarY

BUFFALO (NC) ThirteeJl of 21 members of the Buffalo Senate of Priests have votedmiddot to support Bishop James amp McNulty in a controversy SIDol

rounding the transfer of a priesi from a Negro ghetto parislli Eight members of the senato abstained from voting

The controversy began when Father William G Warthling was transferred from St Nicltshyolas parish in Buffalo to O~

Lady Help of Christians parisJl in the suburb of Cheektowaga

Father Warthling and some members of St Nicholas parislli charged that Bishop McNuIQ transferred the priest because he encouraged the Holy Name ~iety to seek membership _ BUILD a militant social actiC group formed under the leade~ ship of Saul Alinsky contJicgt versial ooinrnunity organizei

Members of the parish and ci1 BUILD staged a protest demo~

stration in front of Bishop ~ Nultys residence

Msgr Bernard J McLaughiiC5 diocesan chancellor said thl transfer of Father Warthlin(]

was routine _but said the die-shycese frowns on the methocilo which BUILD uses middotto better tho lot of the Negro communit~

Sufficient Reasons At the height of the controshyversy the Buffalo Senate of

Priests met to hear a report of the Priests Advisory Board OIl

li~e trTahnsfebor 0rd Father Warthshyf

nan bull

---------~--shyMemphis

If we wish to contin1e NonViolent doctrine of 0shyKing it is now up to us IIIe time for dQlay has passed Either we commit ourse shyto the principles that were to tered and dramatized by 0shy

King or we perish in the flaJJ of anarchy and civil discord

The assassins bullet again forced America to make a dedshy

sion In a country in an area where the majority claim to be Christian we better start liviDa the Christian ethicmiddot and tile Christian message of love _ another as I have loved yoshyIf we refuse to accept this meeshysage we fail not only lt~ll natiOlll but also as a Christian pe~

In the controversy by a BUILD spokesman who said BishOJlMcNultys removal of Fathel Warthling reflected apatNgt izing attitude toward black people and a general lack ef understanding of ghetto probshylems Msgr Neylon said all senate members rejected charge

All 21 members of the senatlrl VOted for a motion to appoint committee to make public theworks and programs which the diocese has developed amo~ minority groups and in the ner city

shy

Voted support for BishOpmiddotat N~1tY on thetransfer isBoIlEigJjtpries~ abstainedfroin ie vote on the grounds that apite the boards explanaiiclli the issue was still not clear -

However each of the ei priests who abstained from

ing said they deplored middotcharg6f racism against Bishop M0shy--Nulty according to Msgr lolie Neylon senate president

7 middotMrsmiddotmiddotmiddotStewart Fails to Tell Casey Story Convincingly

By Rt Rev Msgr John S IKelIDedy

Ramona Stewarts Casey (Little Brown 34 Beacon St Boston Mass 02106 $695) is anovel which promises more than it delivers Itsmiddot action begins in 1860 concludes in 1886 and HI laid in New York City The focus is on Tom Casey aged 20 at the start A native of Ireland he remembers the horrors of County Cork in the years of Qle great famine His family Bed their home went to LivershyPOOl- suffered muough a fiveshy

weeks voyageIlrJ a sailinglib i p finallyderer Il the citys resources eettled in New even moves briefly on the

York For them middotftinges of the gaudy nouveau I A m e I i e a richeset typified by Jim Fisk

008 not turned ltlmt to be the

jijlromised land Like thousandstillld thousands ef the Irish

t th New York ltBOWded

10 0 e dums they are abysmally

~~eir homes are decrepit verminous tenements Their jabs are menial ill paid and dancy They are despiSed by the natives both for their nashyampnai origin and for their reli shyfIion They meet violence at the lhands of brutal nativists No opportunity opens up for them lJDd they are without hope

Elab$mte Setting

n is plain thet Miss StewaIi lhas done thorough rese~rch clgt1l1

the period Bet pages are

But-middot when his boss Maguire breaks with the big boss Tweed CasEiyS ascent ill reshyversed Tweed however is exshyposed and undone and pious John Kelly takes over as head of Tammlllny~

casey relllizes tiliJilt it is opshyportune for him to repudiate

Maguire and strike out on his own Ihis he does to the imm~ diate signal improvement of his lot but lllt the price of Maguires bUter enmity

AdvaIltageMJS Marrul1ge Casey now marries one EileeZl

Callahan liI doctors daughter a chilly lace curtain Irish sort It is not a happy marriage but it iJiI respectable and advantashy

geous Casey is appointed citY ~coroner attl ~tosalary with Per

qUlsites But there i~t yet aJ1oth~r reshy

paCked with detallmiddot She hasmiddotmiddot versal til store for him On mounted a viVid mid elaborate election day 1~74~ he goes ooIJting for nero story But the about to see that his forces are

~ (ftory does not live ormiddot inove It performing properly (which abounds in incident it has com- means improJgterly) he isdraWn

plications galorebut it lacks into an altercation with Ma- ~tality arid never generates guire power Why this should be it is Casey taking a physIcal at first hard to tell beating from the bigger Mashyo~ Tom Casey sne~as a ~g- guire draws a pistol and shoots bull who should be mterest1Og Htt hits t M gur b t f

ImiddotToiil is inteUigenl middotandrug~ middottlie latte~ miihioris~Te~~hcJl ~t he left school atmiddot 13 He n()vi Ismortal CaseY- is1ndicted pound01(

realizes th~t be can~et ~ ~urd~r tried l~t out on bail here never break ~l1t 01 ~~ ~heI1 a hung jury evenWates

iitifling meager wretched woHdof his k1Od IDs one asset seellW imd ultdmately gOeS free1JnaeeouJmtabi Re Co be brawn

lJOmething -hi Which counts for the braw~gk middotHe w no~

e eolery disgraced in debt

Which his Arsenal Gimg in- witbout poundI Jobmiddot probably permaQ

dulges and in the work of tblii nently estranged from his wife Pacifid Company of volunteer One might suppose thatmiddotthis was firemen to which he belongs the end of t~e story But no 1m

As he looks about he recog Cl middotfinal s~ctwn d~ted 12 years ftizes that the way to some ad later he is the chIef deputy andshy~cement and aggrandizementmiddot lUre successor of ag~ng ailing fl through politics He observ~ middotampss Kelly He is almost at the John Maguire who at 37 io top and it all means nothingmiddot olderman saloonkeeper aD ell ne of the flaws 10 t~e novel mstrict leader of the Twentyshy s Illustrated by the diSJuncture ~t ward middotbetween Caseys fall because oil

Air PI ti tillemiddot murder case and his unae-middot bull cq1lll es es ge countable recovery Therecov-

MagUire is of course a Twt- ~ middotis never explained We ~ny m~ He dresses well dont know how it was done wears dlamon~ studs hai middotIJ We are simply presented withmiddot middotmiddotmiddotsion said the problem ofmiddot realiz Long-Range PllOgn-ams

go~d-headed caneCasey cop~ $t and asItedlmiddotto take it On faith -log tqe recommendations it In cooperation with 22 other ~ ~ude~ that ~e must gcentt ~n ~~l middotmiddotllIWl at the end tberebe- made on treating lhe ghe~to ~orgahizations NCCI1 bas

1- ~agulre - ~ middotmiddotOOmes glaring something whichi Bf~ does through ~s prov~_ all alongimiddot has nagged at tne

gt111 lID 19hting But h~ progre~middotlY rreadernanaely~the s~ddampn leaps - Yery slow True he geta 11 Cl to ltile _~ lemiddotaps acr~-

Il1o which involves Db dU~I~ improbable nnd unexplored at all but allows him to sp~ndzhasms aU hiS time wardheeUng for Timelilness iD Novel

Maguire He acquires B little A more seriousmiddot flaw is thAprestige even a little Power But h is till tty an potatoe~ G pre 1m

But then suddenly Maguire ebief henchman die and Mashyguire himself in hi gn f _

s e per petrates an egregIOUS act of folly Casey is at hand to helplIDd succeeds in concealing Mashypires drunken blunder onl to become involved with n gid Maguire hIllS B8S lted

u Ascent Reversed

She is Claire Scofield whO elm give the appearance of

~Jadylike innocence but is act~ bull rally a vix~ She and Case

never marry 1m her avidity for possessions and eventually poshymUon sine keeps driving Casey taunting him with his inconseshyquence and urging him 10 bold steps

He becomes an alderman gew to know 30ss Tweed head of Tammany and notorious plunshy

failumiddotre lIll development of charshy~r ~is is most notice~ble ou tOO mstance of Casey hlmshyself wile rem~~a naDe and a type never nngmg true as a complex person The same is true of the borde of others whO pour through tIl1e book Be they

major Gr mInor hlStOriC~ or ~onlh ~y are WIthout mner llife Mrs Stewart hit upon bull subshy

feet wJith great possibilities and genuine contemporary signifi shymiddoteanee But she haS not known how to render it convincingly and illu~tingl) in terms of

middotIme to ailalrange~ent lui fidWL

~lEl][ORIALMASS Pattimiddotck Pardinal OBoyeof Washshy ~~tQ~ speak~ at a memOrI~ M~s f0t ~r1lIIartm Luther

l~ngr hel~ ~und~yat t~e Na~~~l Shnne of th~ Immacshylla~ Come~pbQn in the natI~n~s CPl~aINC Jho1Jo

INatbull-ona1middot middotWmiddotmiddot-1111

Ahmann Says Wflitbull Racism Pllob~ltem

For White Churches CHICAGO (NC) -A leader ereatiIDg is new notionall wW

m Catholic interracial justice for notional actioo work ~id here white rlllcis~ middotWe believe that creation of called essentially responsible the national will is probably for the violence in cities by the the greatest spiritus problem

middotnational riot commission is a confronting religiollJS institushymoral problem and must be at- tiona in Amerlcm Ahmann deshy~cked by the white churches clared in calling on NCCIJs 1~

Mathew Ahmann executive lliffiliated Catholic interrracillll director 4)f the National Catho- councllsand human relationo lie Conference for Interracial ComiImissions to Set ~ tRileoir efshyJustice asserted The commis- lo-rts for social jUstice

problem was the problem (If published and distributed a speshy cial 32~page pamphlet smiddot~ary

Favors Compulsorymiddot of th R rt f h N al e epo () t e Iyenon Rmiddotmiddotmiddot A AdvisorY Commission 00 CiVil

ehlement ge DisOrders I j 1 -

SAN ANTONIO (NC) -The San AntoniQ archdiocesan prlmiddotemiddotstsmiddot seina~ has recommended

vc75 as the compulsory retirement age for priests in the arcbdioshycese and 65 as an accepted retiremen~ age

Tbe recommeridation which has been sent to ArChbishop Robert E Lucey of San Antonio came in the fonn of a motion passed unanimously by the 12shymember - senate at a meeting here

The senate also recommended establisbment of some sort of

tenure of office for pastors and assistants They urged a maxishymum limit of 10 years in the same parisb for pastors and a liDlit~ five yearn fol assistants

Ahmann eaned fur NCCIJ affiliates to stress the need for long-range middotmiddotclmiddoton-TI proshy

cu ltU grams for aD ~rts cd bhe Catholic community to elimishynate white racism incmding

programs for human relations

training fM lay leadershipclergy teacherS and required elementary a nd secondary school courses in humanrelashynons and Negro Illistory He also urged affiliated 01shy

ganizati()ns to bank as well as purchase goods and services in the black communi~y On the legislative front ne urged support of the similar goals of the riot commission the Urban Coalition and Dr Martin Luther KiB4fil Poor ~s Campaign~

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 11 1968

Catholics Defend Fair Bus Law

TRENTON (NC)-Spokesmen for Catholic schools defended the states year old fair bus law at a public hearing held here to consider its possible reviSion

In mllny respecfs it was a reshypeat of the public hearings a year ago which resulted in the bill being amended before passage But at that time the thrust was for passage of some rort of measure )utting private school students on equal footshying with public school students Now legislative sentiment apshypearc ro incline toward a cutshyback although outright repeal seeDlll unliksly

One relllSon foi the dlllnge in outlook b the compleJdon of ihe legislature Lest year it was in DeInoeratic hands and fair shybusing bllld the support of Gov Richard JJ Hughes Now Repubshylicans hold control by a 2-1 margin and party leaders see Ii mandate to cWtail some of tine programs enacted a year ~omiddot

A half-dozen bills to repeal or revise the busing law are now before the legislature The hearings here were held by the education committees of both the State Senate and Assembly whiclll hnve not yet released any bills from committea

Principal spokesmen for Catholic education were John 1 Rafferty counsel ful the New Jersey Catholic Confershyence and Msgr John 3 Clark Camden diocesan superintendent of scbools and president or the state ruperiIllten~ento ~ciashytion

Expropriate Pmsh BERLIN (NC)-East Gennan

eommunist authorities Ulave exshypropriated the Catholic parish 01 St Francis Xavier in East Berlin without compensatingthe Cbureh Redevellop~nt ia given as the expropriation reashyson

May the 8711 of ~g [ltm1

mine tlP~D JOU and ~aJ

the afOlY of His ReslITaeI tiOD bless J01l Ydtbmiddot

pe~ and jOle

The

Old Red Bank Fail River Savings BaRk

FAll IUVEI

SOMERSET

8 THE ANCHO~=Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1968 New Pay Scale For Teachers

FORT WAYNE (NC)-ftleEnjoy Family Celebration Fori Wayne-South Bend dioceshysan board of education bas apshyOf First Communion Day proved a new salary scale for lay teachers in elementallY ancll

By Mary Tinley Daly secondary schools The board approved tl recomshyChanges in the Church that perennial topic of COlllshy mendation that for every fuD

versation since Vatican Council II come in for a lot of time degreed ~acher employed pro and con discussion on the part of the laity With each with a current valid Indiana

teaching license a parish Willehange the dissident~ speak up head-shakers moan middotWell be reimburselt at the rate Oilfthey didnt do it that way in $2000 each for the school ~

my day But as each in forms of any kind with their 1968-1969inevitable rivalry Each littlenovation is inaugurated The salary schedule for 196ampshygirl and boy was in mufti shy 1969 provides on the bachelonthen incorporated into presshy tastefuUy and compoundo11tably degree level for a minimum Oil ent practice we realize these garbed $5200 and a maximum of $6200 made notehanges are simply Each family had its own pew at the 10th year with an increshyfor the sake of parents and First Communicant mentof $100 a minimum QfclJange but as in aisle seats sisters brotI1ers $6000 and a maximum oilPope John XXIII grand-and godparents filling $8700 at the 15th year with aput it to keep up the rest of the pew We beshy $180 increment for the bacheloilrltP with the longed to Kate on Her Day degree teacher with a staterhythm of the What class a small whis- license and a minimum of $630times To quote pered the Headof the House as and a maximum of $10000 asfrom middotThe the names were read out at the the 18th year with an increoChurch middotin Our beginning of Mass That we ment of $200 for the masteroDay collective thought was the ~ason we had degree teacherspastoral of the been included Not so Each

American hiershy child in the First Communionmchy recently published Our

eHort at Class could designate ahead III Department of Justicepresent restructuring time which of the parish Masses

procedures in the Church withshy $~~ Approves Shared-Time to attend thus splitting theIn the national and Diocesan number into more intimate HARRISBURG (NC) - Tk)eommunities depend in great family Jroups Pennsylvania Department dWORLD OF FASHION Jmeasure on the seriousness With Justice has ruled that there ampJiilThose who eboBe to Jeeetve lIS Iwhich study is undertaken and ~~~~ By MARILYN BODERICK ~

the disposition to implement )amp bull class were allowed to do IlO no legal bars to shared-~ The altar rail had beet1 opeIil shy education of private ~ a the part of the laity pupils iii public schoolseCl wide with lmeelers tor thlee EASTER CLOTHESNew Prooedure I iD the center At CommUDion Deputy Atty Gfin John 1)

One change nO doubt fsmilshy time 8 smiling priest weleomed New clothes at Easter have tiful example of creativity and McCord who issued the opinioa Jar to families in many Dioceses each little First Communieant become a eustom that we an craftsmanship was an ensemble at the request of state Supe~ came to our attention forcibly intendent of Public InstructiOll flanked by father and mother find hard to break It came modeled by nine year old Robin and impressively in practice followed by other members of down to us from the days when Cambra daughter of Mr and David H Kurtzman said the

only requirements which muSt last week the family If there was only one the newly baptized Christians Mrs James Cambra of Our I speak here of the new cusshy Catholic parent another family wore white garments made of Lady of Grace parish in Westshy be met are the consent of the

tom (new to us at least) of local public school board andmember receivedwith the child Dew linen This became such ))Orthaving children receive First the payment of tuition at theothers of the family following a tradition among the faithful Robins stunning Easter coat Holy Communion not as a class regularly established rateIt was all so natural warm that to appear in new clothes on and dress were made by her

receiving the Big McCord cited a 1949 lawbut each Sacrashy and dignified on this tbe Easter Sunday mother in yellow lightweightment for the first time with Day rectlling the words d which states that No pupilsymbolized the wool The A-line coat had a parents and relatives shall be refused admission toPope St Leo Recognize 0 n e w Ii fe diagonal self button closing and

Long gone in many areas is the courses in these additionalChristian your dignity through Christ a tiny mandarin collar When the custom of turning over one schools or departments by reashyThe Irish have dark-hired and vivacious RobinlImvi~ Pmstollof the Sunday Masses to the son of the fact that his elemenshyan ancient say- removed her coat the slimFirst Communion class - girls Mter Mass with aplomb only tary or academic education Ising that goes dress underneath was seen toin dresses veils an being or has been received in awhite and on eight-year-old could muster For Christmas have a yellow blue apd tan one side of middotthe aisle boys in Kate betook herself to the saneshy school other than a public food and drink plaid bodice with the plainwhite suits on the other back tuary to invite our new pastor for Easter new yellow wool of the coat carried school of the church reserved oftenshy Father Louis Quinn to bei He added however tnKItclothes Most over info the skirttimes with standing room house brunch otni shared-time arrangements mudonly for writing people in the The finishing touch to thisfor parents of necessity be subject to thefor him her address Diocese will fol- stunning outfit was the tiny hatWith the growth of parishes guidelines promulgated by theGoodness knoWll how ID8DY low this custom that sat atop Robins curls forthere often came transfer all similar invi-tationa Fat her Department of Public Instrucshy

by dressing their ebildreh iul it too was her mothers creationFirst Communion day to Saturshy Quinn must have receivedl tiontheir new Spring finery 0111 and jcent middotfeatured alternatingday a sensible step but stiR plenty wed ~ becauSe he Easter Sunday panels of the pale yellow andtmly for First Communicants cup eoffeeIIimply sipped 11 of In the pre-school ret blondE the plaid wool

and their parents Because of at Katies house B1lIt be did and darling Sheila Whalen In the same show Norma8Pace limitations grandparents come chatted with anmiddot Gf 1Il Higher Earningsdaughter of lIT and Mrs Wil- Comeau of SS Peter and Paul 8Odparents brothers and sisters ble2sed the house 8Dd ~ateB liam Whalen laquoIi St ThomaslIilcles and aunts were invited new gift statue then went _ More ehurch in Somerset will parish in Fall River was 8 vishyout for this precious occasion to visit other parish homes be decked out in polished blue sion of green and white Norma ON YOUR SAVINGS JIbey eouId line themiddotsidewalks Twas all a happy experience eotton Her very special Easter wore a green wool coat a 4Ntside take pictures perhaps for Kate and her extensive famshy Sunday dress bas a long torso matching green and white Per An middotmiddot p to breakfast with their parshy ily appropriate to this the Year topped by a short sash tile dress and a white straw topper Ask abOut ticular First Communicant buamp of Faith II1eeveless zrmholes are edged that had a sweetheart shape that waS that iD crocheted lace and the bodice Green ill all shades is one of INVESTMENT

Kates Day JiB embroidered with tiny flow- the most popular colors on the SAVINGSMmnesota Parishioners ers in shades of pink white and agenda for childrenls SpringSo It was with surprise we fashions Beth Cook~ daught~r CERTIFICATESweeeived a telephone invitation Vote Closing of Schoo~ blue

Also represen~ng 1bepre- oJ Mr and Mrs Andrew Cookfrom eight-year-old Kate to atshy PIERZ (NC) - Members of primary middotsetJn the Easter parade of Immaculate Conception parshytend the 11 oclock Mass with SAFETY - Savings insured safe br Iifour parishes in the Pierz area will be Lisa Marie Texeira ish in Fall Riv~r has a limeher last Saturday On arrival at agency of the U S Governmentof Minnesota voted 835 to ioo daughter of Mrmiddot and Mrs Frank green Eastermiddot dress trimmedchurch we wondered if we had for the closing of the Father AVAILABILITY - No notice requIredTeeira of Immaculate Concep- with with a white cowl collarthe right time and place No more

Pierz Memorial High SChool 1lm tion parish in Fall River Lisa and white cuHs on the short Your funds available when neededwhite dresses and veils June is a delicate-featured little sleeves Beth chose this dress SAVE by MAIL - We process prompIIJon one side of the ~sle )hite

The Pierz district has decided beauty whose dark tresses will herself because she Ifell in love and pay postage both wayssuits on the other no unishy to build a public senior high beset off by a once upon-a- with the white vinyl flowers school which will be large time dress in pink and navy scattered over the skirt and Assets over $41000IlOO

Parish Hires Full-Time enough to accommodate all high blue The high necked dress bodice of this charming Spring school students in the district made of sheer cotton has a and Summer linen

Layman Theologian Therefore m u e h discussion GlOwl collar long full sleeves Of course the pre-teen set FIRST FEDERAL BALTIMORE (NC)-St Matshy and a romantic floating skirt wants something new for Easterabout the most practical use of Savings and loan AssociatloDthe Catholic high school facili shy

first parish in the Baltimore ties bas taken place in the last _pink bodice and the waist- daughter of Mr and Mrs John archdiocese to employ a proshy circling cummerbund but the Steen of Taunton and my god tf FALL RIVER thews Church has become the Tiny tucks are featured on the and Miss Joan Leslie Steen

few months fesionally trained ley theoloshy Tbe vole--()pen to all parishshy really eye-catching feature oil child will attend Easter Mass gian as a full-time member af iOllers over 21 ill the four afshy ibis outfit ill the skirt of navy at St Pauls church wearing an the parish staff ~cted parihes-was taken III blue cotton with pink polka outfit as yellow as a daffodil ~-~~-------_~ first Federal $awIOIS bull LeaD a ~

~ 1 ortb ~1Il st Fan lIiwer llaa ~ Joseph Hargadon a fonner response to a suggestion of~e dots Certainly a dOll-like outfit Joans yellow coat has gold but shy ZIp 02722 IlIlIIIa 174-4881 ~ member of St Clares parish st Cloud diocesan school board for a dainty Miss tons and 8 slanted back belt ~ke application by phOlle middotIt JOll jE6sex who ~ii now studying at The Catholic high school Mothers Sew - her yellow Irish linen sheath ~

the Institute of Lay Theology building will probably beused While commentating 8 ehil- dress is sleeveleSs and has white n iridlvldua Account B joint AccaIIamp iii ~ Prease DJNn a savings account EIIcIGslMJ Iin San Francisco will be c0shy as an elementary school in the drens fashion show for the Do- emb~idery trim on the hemline ~~OO ~ordinator of St Matthews Conshy future Father Patrick Thompshy minican Academy alumnnae ill and bodice This yellow-haired ~

fraternity of Christian Doctrine son principal of Fathermiddot Pierz Fall River I was awed by the brown-eyed beauty has even Address middot1 program Msgr Clare J 0- Memorial High School said th~ ntimber of mothers Whohad chosen JOllqtiil yellow patent

acheck III tbe amount 111 -iDwyer pastor said He begina several possibilities are being sewed their childrens Easter accessories tomiddot complete her working in the parish Aug ~ studied outfits Probably the most beau- look j

~~~~~

A][D FOR VnCTnMS Foodfor victim~ of the Washi~gshyton civil disturbance following the death of Dr Martin Luther yening Jr in Memphis was distributed at churches of all denominations in the capital Here Sister Joanette of Catholic University gives bread to burnedout families at St Mamns Church N Capimiddottol and T Streets NC Photo

9 Best to Delay Rose Pruning Unti1 Laterin Spring

By Jo~ph and Marilyn Roderick

With the break in the w~ther weve experienced lately here has been ample opportunity to get outside and begin the Spring chores that have tQ be done before the garden is ready for Summer I have noticed quite a few weekend prdeners busy with the urrection is really felt as the odds and ends that await the priest changes the bread and prdener after a quiet WiD- wine into the body and blood ter But I have also witness- of our Lord and the faithful go ed quite a few I suppose out of up to the altar to receive Comshyanxiety over the rough Winter munion Then the seven weeks we experieneed and out of im- of sacrifice leading to this day patience 1igt get started doing take on deeper meaning and the jobs that could just as well wait Light of the World truly shines until later m the month r AIl can truly sing Alleluia Wltil Way For the young of the house-

Pruning roses is a good ex- hold the Easter eggs are another mnple of a job that is best held great joy They come in many off especially this year when sizes and materials Some are Ctere has been so much top-kilL lteonfections of spun sugar and lt might be well to wait until dreams This type generally has atent buds begin to show an opening through which the themselves em what look like child may view a wonderland ~ad stems until the job of of painted landscapes and minshy)rUning is tackled It has been iature figures my experience that dead-Iook- I always adored these fantasy mg wood has n way of coming eggs when I was a little girl and ~ life in time so go easy with it was a rare and special event ampe pruning shears until you to receive one My own youngshyIJlre certain there is no life in sters however deJive more enshylaquohe stem you plan to amputate jOfment from the decorating

How to Prune and dyeing oil the hardboiled eggs

Pruning roses seems to pre- A few years ago I made an (leDt P~obJ~JiuJ to gardeners and Easter egg centerpiece by decshy~ it is a Simple task I try 00 orating (with glitter beads prune lTlyroses so that they sequins and white glue) egg graduaily asSUme an urn shape shells that had their contents tftliit is so that they have an blown outmiddot and hanging them eD1ltY cenier rhis can easily on a giided branch that had be begun by prumng each stem been placed ill a plant pot This aiatroti want to retain so tha~middot makes a verY lovely display and ihe cut is made just above an the eggs can even be used as _tward pointing bud Christmas tree ornaments the

If the bud is pointing out the following December but this laquorowth which ensues from the delicate work is not for tiny bud will be outward and there- hands lor growth will be away from Symoo)s oil Life the center of the rose Next I The Easter egg and the Easter try to make my cuts so that the bunny have always been symshyappermost portions of each boys of Spring and new life litem are approximately the Ancient people in many lands lIaDle height from the groun6 exchanged eggs at their Springagain to give the bush some festi vals They dyed eggs yellow8Diformity of appearance for the returning sun and red

The height of the bush makes for joy and life In England the attle difference as far as I am children enjoy III custom called eoncerned so I usually make Pace egging The Pace eggers my cuts at whatever height I go from house to house chantshyean get uniformity This year ing this rhymefor inStllnce there has been a PleaseMr Whitelegpeat deal of top-kill on my Please to give us an Easter eggJOses so I may have to make If you wontt give us an Easter cuts fairly close to the ground eggbut I find little difference in Your hens wiD all lay addled the quality of the roses regardshy eggsless ~ of how much I remove in And your cocks lln lay stones pruning In this country of lIpoiled

A third consideration in darlings our children would be ~ing is the removal of 014 disappointed H the Easter wood to make place for new bunny did not leave chocolate trrowth Thb becomes a pr0bshy eggs candy chickens and other lem when your roses start to expensive goodies However -ee considerably I try not to be even with all the commercial drastic in this regard by cutting trappings that go with the dayGUt one old stem a year thereby It still manages to retain It IIl8king room for new growth great joywithout particularly affecting T1uis liuoo roast is perfectlybull e plant delicious Ive bad tt for Easter One other point about prunshy dinner oth~r years and plan to Ing Many of the old ramble1ll serve it again this year Its and climbing roses should be quite worthy of II repeat pershypruned after they bloom and fonnance DlJt before I notice a great Cumberland L9mb Boast IIl8ny people pruning their 1 leg of lamb about I to dlmbers before they bloom poundswhich does nothing for the 1 teaspoon salt elimber but remove scOlelI of 1 teaspoon dry mustard blossoms ~ teaspoo1l ground ginger

In the Kitchen 5 thin lemon sIkes Baster Sunday is a day of great cup currant jelly

toy and excitement The special 1 Tablespoon lemon juice Kaster moming breads (IDJ 1) Trim oJ escemJ fat lroa 8aOther-in-Iaw always ~ lamb Rub went with a mixture Individual sweetbreads for the fJIl the salt mustard and ginger ebildren with a hardboiled egg Place roundoo silde up OIl a let in the crust) the excitement rack in roastiDjJ pan Do Dllt elf new clothes the Easter egg oover pan bunts the tIradJltional famIJ ) Roast -bl Ii a10W (331-) llIlnner but Elbow all the beauty en for amp 1tOun IlDd quiet ~ 01 Easter SID~ 3) Remove roaJt from 0ftIl Mass and eut 4 cd tbe lemon dices

be joy of this great least 01 In half arrange Ue a half sliceS the Resurrecti_ of our SaviCNl petal fashion OIl sidlte of JOaSt evident JI1 n the custo~ holding in place vith dampened tbat sur r 0 11 n d 1lhis feast wOoden ~icIW place the wbole IIut the full 1mpaot of the Bell- alice in center

)JJRDINATION The first Melkite Rite ordin2ttion of priests to be held at the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception Washington DCt was conducted by Bishop Justin A Najmy NC Photo

- Extend Program I Interfqith Organization to Conti~~e shy

Aiding ~prrnEr JoliCQrpseh WASHINGTON (NC)--A na- reftary of the National Confer-

tion-wide volunteer prog~lJn ence of Catholic Charities hasshyto help Job Corps trainees find said JACShas tapped the iTeshya place in the workaday world mendous force of volunteers al shyhas been extended for another ready available in this lountry year William P Kelly Job and they are hard at work asshyCorps director announced here sisting young llen who have

Joint Action in Community proved by volunteering for the Service (JACS) a private non- Job Corps that they want to profit corporation was organ- help themselves ized by leaders of national The young men coming out Catholic and Protestant social of Job Corps are severely hanshyaction agencies dicapped by backgrounds of

It includes on Us board of poverty poor education and unshygovernors representatives of stable family life As a result business labor and civic organ- they have more than their izations share of problems as they atshy

tempt to make it on their ownJACS has organized a netshy

work of 5000 volnteers in 500 JACS volunteers are giving communities in the U S re- them the helping hand they eruited from churches service need he added clubs and community agencies who are DOW assisting some 1000 returned corpsmen each Women to Hpnormonth

Msgr Lawrence J CorcoraJlO BisJlop Apri I 18 lACS ~Ild chairDl3lll and ~ The Ca~olicWomens Club

0If New ~(ord will hold its annual Bishopll Night OIlSee E~tablishes New bunday evening April 18 at

Education Office the Harbor Beach Club in Matshytapeisett Supper Will be servedGREENSBURG (NC)-Bishop at 630William G Connare of Greensshy

burg has announced the estabshy Guest of Honor will be Most lishment of a new diocesan ofshy Rev James L Connolly Bishop fice of education whicb win Gerrard moderlltor for the New coordinate the work of several Bedford organization will also existing departments be a guest

All area pastors have heeDThe new office which wm invited to attendopen JolT 1 will join and ex~

tend the programs of the presshy Mrs Paul L LaForest first ent diocesan schools office and vice-president will serve as the Confraternity Off Christian chairman ojf arrangements Doctrine office and win be reshy Reservations will be accepted sponsible for the total educashy by Mrs Jamell M Anderson tional effort of the diocese Mrs Maurice Hurley Mrs Paul

A newly organized departshy LaForest and Mrs Daniel F ment of religious education will Dwyer Reservations close sat shyaid in planning religious edushy urday April 13 eation programs fOr the parisb and diocesan schools the CCD and other groups both at the adult and youth le~ls ATWOOD

OIL COMPANY Break up jelly with a fork a cup stir in the lemoD juice and Spread ovell tbelamb Re- SHELL tum flo OV~ aDcl cOntinue roasting ~ to t hOur longer If HEATING OILSyoUre using a meat th~rrnODl~ eter it should register 170 for South bull Sea Streetsa pink look or 1~ for wen done Pull out wooden picks bom lemon garnsh before carv- Hyannis Tel 49-81 mg roast

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 11 1968

Says Young Seek Moral Values

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - The so-called sexual revolution is l

turning away from hypocrisy at a turning toward promiscuity ays an expert in sex education Or Mary C Calderone execushy

tive director of the Sex Informashytion and Educational Council of the United States believes toshydays young people are highly moral despite the example set for them by their elders

Speaking at the 22nd annual meeting of the Texas Council on Family Relations Dr Calderone stressed

Promiscuity has not increased on Americans college campuses We know our young people are behaving far better today than were willing to credit them with Young people are looking for moral values based on fact rashyther than mythology

Dr Calderone condemned exshyploitation of sex by commercial advertising and called for sex education which would streSD the importance of human relashytionships and not merely the mechanics of reprOduction

Your kids ought to know you cant save a bad marriage with good sexshe asserted

Sisters of Pro~ider1ce Vote to lRe~ise Rules

SPRINGFIELD (NC) The Sisters of Providence of Holshyyoke community of nuns speshycializing in care of the sick aged and underprivileged have voted to revise their rules and customs to permit greater flexshyibility and freedom in the reli shygious and personal lives of theIr members

At a general chapter at the communitymiddots Holyoke mothershyhouse the 39 chapter -delegates voted to permit experimentashytion hi religous garb give members the option of using either their baptismal and famshyily name or their religiou name pennit members to travel outside their convent wilhout a nun-companion

Also to limit participation hi common prayer to Mass and to two portions of the Divine Ofshyfice Lauds and Vespers allow community members to develop a schedule of private prayer require every member of the community to be addressed WI Sister instead of Mother~

and allow part of the nuns free time to be given to variolU fOnDS of the apostolate to civic activities and civil rights proshygrams in a way befitting theIr state in life and according to their individual consciences

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Choose AmericH Superior General

MoUNT KISCO (NC)-Fqr the first time in the 160-yellW history of the Religous of tim Cenacle an American has b~ elected superior general

Mother Rita FOy was electetl to the post at the general chapshyter of the Cenacle in Rome acshycording to the orders interpro-shyvincial public relations offiC() here in New York

The general chapter whielli is still in session is evaluatinti a series of recommendations fOli a general decentralization opoundl authority the launching of eJJogt

perimental programs by too Cenacle and the restructurinfi of Community life

The Religious of the Cenaclo is a worldwide congregation 03 Sisters committeed to the wom of retreats and religious in-gt struction There afe three American provinces

Mother Rita Foy was born 1rI

FLYING DOCTOR Dr Leo Brown and his wife Isabel a registered nurse are shown with their children Rebecca 1Qand Joel 8 with the C-essna plane they use for their Flying Doctor Service in the diocese of Gwelo Rhodesia NC Photo

THE ANCHOR Thurs April 11 1968

Project Equality Issues Guides For BMyers

CHICAGO (NC) - The first national directory of 3931 business firms comshymitted to equal opportunity in all aspects of employment has been published here by Project Equality

It will be used by more than 7000 churches synagogues and religious institutions participat shying in the interfaith fair emshyployment drive that urges givshying preference to the listed firms in all purchases of goods and services

Project Equality offices in Jlive cities are publishing re- gional buyers guides as well They are in Columbus for Ohio Detroit for Michig~n Hartford for Connecticut Omaha for New York City and was gradlDgt Nebraska and San Antonio for ated from Hunter College Sillj

Texas IFlying Doctor Serves Africa Mission south entered the Cenacle in 19~1i The national guide is a comshy completing her studies in Romo

pilation of 976 national and She was assigned to the Miltlligt 2955 local or regional firms do- Vietnam Veteran l Wifel licensed Pilots western province of the Celilgt ing business with religious inshy acle with headquarters in CtJiDRIEFONTEIN (NC)-In the the Gwelo diocese covers some must drive over lO miles of stitutions They include 40 of cago and has held a number am

grasslands here onmiddot a 5OOO-foot 14000 aCres it includes a 300shy dirt bush road seven miles of the top 500 U S corporations assignments as superior of vashy

high plateau the Cat hoi i c bed tuberculosis sanitorium a relatively good road-and watch and range down to small neighshy rious Cenaeles in the Uniteamp

of mainshy 100-bed hospital a farm an out for wild animals all alongmission Driefonteinborhood businesses States and Canada1ains-of all things-a hangar elementary school and trade the way

Listing in the Quyers guide She will now reside in RoJJl() for a Cessna 182 Skylane air shy schools for carpentery tailorshy Thus far they have encounshymeans a firm has signed Ii

plane ing and homecraft tered only baboons monkeyspledge to hire and promote deer mongoose lizards andThe mission staff totals somewithout discrimination has filed FrQm this point the missions lleslYJits to Performbirdsa report form with Project doctor can cover nine out-stashy 1200 people 35 of whom are

Equality detailing the number tions spread over an aerial non-Afrfcans The mission and Witch Doctors Woth City Symphony of its niinority-group employees distance equivalent to that beshy hospitals are operated by Afri shy The Biblical quotation The BALrIMORE (NC) -Fathe1 -broken down by jop classifi tween San Francisco and Los cans and by Swiss Bethlehem harvest is indeed great but the Bruno Markaitis SJ provinshyeation-and has pledged to take Angeles The plane was proshy priests and Brothers German laborers are few describes the cial of Lithuanian Jesuits in the further affirmative actions vided by the Mission Doctors Domincian nuns African nuns scope of medical work in Africa free world will guest conduct

Association of Los Angeles three laywomen-two American according to the Browns In the Baltimore Symphony in twc Pledge C()()peraiion Calif as part of its Flying Docshy nurses and a German teachershy these rura~ regions there is II of his own piano compositioDll

Cooperating businesses also tor Service begun here four and the Browns ratio of about one doctor to in Ii concert sponsored by LCgtJio have agreed to undergo periodic years ago The Brown children attend a every 33000 persons Mrs ola College here Sunday eompliance reviews to assure At that time Dr James Carey small two-classroom school in Brown said Africail medicine At the keyboard as soloi

Umvuma a town 17 miles away and witch doctors are still verycontinued affirmative employshy now a Santa Barbara Calif wiiI be two other Jesuit pries~ much in evidence she addedment ac~ions according to surgeon arrived at Driefontein The journey to and from school Fathers Leslie J Schnierer -and

Thomas Gibbons Jr national to begin his three-year mission is looked upon as quite an adshy It is heartbreaking to see a Benito Rivera students at thIl director of Project Equality hitch He decided quickly that venture by the family as they child with measles have to go Peabody Conservatory of Music

In addition to the firms listed The concert will mark thewith a plane one doctor could though life blind because the in the guide more than 12000 do the wbrk of five ndanga (witchdoctor) put mull 50th anniversary of the restorashyother businesses have filled out With the help of the Swiss Pittsburgh Diocese (medicine) in the childs eyes tion of independence to Lithoshycommitment forms pledging coshy Bethlehem Brothers Dr Carey Tithing for Poor she said But in other areas aniai operation with the program but began surveying and laying out like TB the African is relJlarkshy

PITTSBU~GH (NC)-Bishophave not yet supplied the necshy landingstrips near isolated and ably sophisticated medicaHy

John J Wright has announced essary statistical employment doctorless clinics and hospitals Kariangwe Berejena Kana Education Officethe Pittsburgh Diocese will unshyreports which are similar 10 The Brothers also built the Serema Matibi are all farshy NEW ORLEANS (NC) - Aledertake a new tithing plan tothose ~equired by the federal hangar at priefontein and Dr away-sounding places but the office of religious education bllllhelp finance housing and othergovernment Carey arranged for one Brother people suffer as you and I been established here by Archshyprojects for the pOOr The nalles of firms listed in to be trained as a pilot suffer from sickness They bishop PhilIp M Hannan a The_dioces~ will give 10 perthe buyers guides are available Meanwhile in Los Angeles mourn when their children have will supervise the teaching oct

cent of the contributions andonly to religious groups parti shy Dr Leo Brown a former Navy to be sick and often die she religion in parochial schoolBbequests it receives and thecipating in the program surgeon with 11 years of sershy continued and in Confraternity of Chrisshysame percentage of collections

PIroject Equality sponsored vice and his wife Isabel a Perhaps some of their disshy tian Doctrine classestaken up for directly diocesan

by the National Catholic Conshy registeled nurse were volunshy eases have strange-soundingpurposes to finance povertyference for Interracial Justice teering for MD~s three-year nawes but all come under theprogramsoperates six other local offices hitch in Africa He was just title of Gods sick These are CONRAD SEGUINThe money will be used withtouching seven more states Adshy home from Vietnam where he the names of clinics that are

other religious groups for intershyditional offices will be opened served with the Marines visited by the Flying Doctor BODY COMPANY faith housing programs andin major cities this year acshy Staff of 1200 she said Aluminum or Steelother joint dforts for the poorcording to a spokesman Dr Brown and his wife are 944 County Street

Parishes will not be requiredlicensed pilOts So last Sumshy NEW BEDFORD MASS mer when they and their two to tithe but are invited to conshy Chief Speaker

WY 2-6618ISenQte Ideas f children-Rebecco 10 and Joel tribute voluntarily NEW XORK (NC) ~ Msgr 8~arrived here MDA sent the John J Egan director of the

Continued from Page Three Cessna 182 along with thein Chicago Archdiocesan office ofStart With 45and to preach in the one Dioshy The Driefontein mission in tirbanaffairs will be the chief

eese have them in the pther GREENSBORO (NC)-Fortyshy speaker at the May 16 banquetfive priests of the Raleigh dioshy of the 1968 Catholic Press AsoshyWhile the 24 diocesan priests Abortion Bill Passes cese have formed the North ciation convention in ColumbusSenators are elected the two Carolina priests association Ohiomembels of the Priests Senate In Maryhind Ho~se Seventeen others have indicatedwho are members of religious

commullities are appointed by ANAPOLIS (NC)-A ~m to they wish to become members the Bishop These will be ro- relax Marylands 100-year-old The Raleigh diocese includes all

North Canlinatated among the religious com- abortion law and put its regushylation into the hands of themunities doing parish work in

the Diocese At present the Sen- medical profession passed the ators from religious communi- House of Delegates by im 86 ties are Father Felician Plichta to 47 vote OFM Conv and Father Co- The bill permits a doctor opshylumba Moran SSCC eniting in an accredited hospishy

tal to perform an abortion to The Bishop has encouraged a preserve the physical or mental

study of pension plans that health of the mother to prevent would involve laypersonnel of birth of a deformed or retarded diocesa~ ail~ parish facilitieii childand to end some plegnan

The Bisholl has ma~li liQme ad- CieScaused by rape just~ents)nassessmtntson pat- UnClet the~ptesel1t law abor ishes tflking into account the tiOll is peimitted ~hen two growth o(~ubU~Iiln ~~riShesah~ Ihysicians a~r~~ it itnec~ssar~bull

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Church~en Study Racial Problems In New Jersey

NEWARK (NC) -The Church cannot tell otheJiS what to do until it faces the problem within its own comshymunity a Methodist Bishop has told Essex Count~ clergyshymen of all faiths in an a~essshyment of the racial problems beshysetting Newark and other New Jersey communities

Bishop Prince A Taylor and Catholic Auxiliary Bishop John J Dougherty of Newark disshycussed the race problem in light of the report of the Govemors Commission on Civil Disorder

Cooperative Solution Bishop Taylor stressed it is

the duty of the church to beshycome knowledgeable about the report to read it carefully Action without information is irresponsible he declared as he noted the church must face up till the fact that it has parshyticipated in maintaining the status quo He noted that when ~he commissionen pelsonally toured the riot area and asked the people what the impact of the church was in their lives all but a pound~w marked the church ltDfpound

Bishop Dougherty said if the problem is to be solved it will only be through the involveshyment of the total community government industry labor unions churches schools peoshyple living in the suburbs

Dont Have Time The attack on t1e problems

must be two-fold he asserted first meeting the needs which the coming Summer presents and then planning long-range programs to overcome the root causes of the problem

There is an urgen t need of immediate programs to enable us to have time to work toward the ultimate goal

Bishop Taylor referred to the need for time to work out solushytions We cannot undo the evils of 300 years in one Sumshymer he emphasized This illmiddot not going to be a case of a quick antidote and then they Jived happily ever after

However a Newark priest active in innel-city work who was one of six reactors to the presentations made by the Bishshyops remarked that comments about needing time to solve the problems overlook the fact that we dont hlVe the time

It would be great if we did have it to keep order but q (gt bull

the people bull have the imshypression that nothing has been donesaid Father Joseph Stulb

Many are ready to riot again if only to call attention to themselves he opined The black community despairs that the white community has or will change its attitude

Rev William Fox associate general secretary of the New Jelsey Council of Churches scored the commission for fail shying to note the contribution thpt a divided church - white and black - mademiddot to the elisis H~ cliticized the church for mainshytaining silence during public controversies which were listed as proximate causes of the riotshying

Another Catholic Magazine F0 Id S

DAYTON (NC)-Mary Today a magazine founded in 1901 deshyvoted to information about the Blessed Motherand her role in the Church has issued its final edition

It is one of 11 Catholic magashyzines which have ceased pubJishycation in the past )eal because

of 1088 ~l circulation The rnaf- orders are af Teutopolis JIL azine had a reoont eirculauOll Lake Bluff in and St Meiri

~ aooU~1151gtO middot - ~lnclbull - - -

BENEMERENTI MEDAJ~ Father James Vizzaro SJ second from left received the Benemerenti Medal at a dinner in Washington -on the occasion Of his retirement as dishyrector of the Washington office of the National Catholic Rural Life Association Conshygratulating him are left to right Msgr ~dward W ORourke executive director of the NtRLC Bishop Henry J Soenneker of Owensboro Ky rural life advisor of the usce department of social action and Msgr Luigi L Ligutti Vatican observer to the UN Food and Agliculture Organization and former executive dirootor of NCRLC NC Photo

Fr Vizzard Gets Benemerenti Medal Work for IFhlltfol lPoor Recognized

the Holy See to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization priests and Protshyestant clergymen and members of Congress

Msgr George G Higgins di shyrector social action department U S C a tho 1 i c Conference praised Father Vizzards comshybination of scholarship political know-how great tenacity of

Schedule Workshop O~ Sex Education

WASHINGTON (NC)-Father James T McHugh director of the family life bureau middotU S Catholic Conference will direct a workshop on Sex Education to be held at Catholic Univershysity of America here June 17shy28

Purpose of the workshop is to prepare a basic core of people especially teachers and parish personnel to supplement the work of the home in a complete program of education in sexu- ality It will provide these pershysons with background informashytion give them opportunity to evaluate some of the basic mashyterialsand engage them in an in-depth analysis of a curricushylum guide which reaches every grade level

Lecturers and consultants will include Fathermiddot John L Thomas SJ of the Combridge Center fOl Social Studies Dr and Mtmiddots Joseph Bird co-aushythors of The Freedom of Sexshyual Love Dr Ann F Lucas chairman of the psychology deshypaltment Farleigh Dickinson Universit~ Teaneek N J and Father Walter Imbiorski direcshytor of the Cana program in the Chicago atchdiocese

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purpose and above all genushyine love for the poor

Father Vizzard will leave Washington to middotwork in Califorshynia Nevada Arizona and Utah the region of the Jesuits Cali shyfornia province

Four Cleveland Nuns Quit as Religious

CLEVELAND (NC) - Four nuns one the prineipal of a 1100 student girls Catholic high school have separately withdrawn from the Sisters of Notre Dame here in Ohio

It was the largest departure since 1966 when 10 Sisters of Notre Dame were released from their vows to move to Pueblo CoIQ to form an experimental community middotThe Sisters of Notre Dame is the largest order of 2531 Cedar St New Bedford nuns based in the Cleveland 993middot3222 Diocese

imiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot~middotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot~ middot 3NEW HIGHERi RATE OF

PER ANNUM INTEREST PAID QUARTERllyo ON PAID-UP

SHARE CERTIfICATES Deposits Welcomed in Multiples of

$20000 up to $30OOO-on Single and Joint Accounts Up to $60OOO-for Cornorations

DIVIDENDS PAID 4 TIMES A YEAR February MC1V August and November

All Deposits Inoured in Full

Taunton

THE ANCHORshyThurs April 11 1968 11

Support Bi~hop5

Equa~sty Plea MINEOLA (NC)-The Cathshy

olic Interracial Council of Long Island has voted overwhelmshying support of Rockville Censhytres Bishop Walter P Kellenshybergs call for equality in housing employment and edushycation

Bishop Kellenberg issued Zl pastoral letter-A Call to COl1shyscience-in which he said it i9 essential that every man be given equal opportunity for eJQP]oyment and job advanceshyment and equal educatton for himself and for his children

Declaring these to be fundashymental moral issues facing the people of Long Islanp the council said We give this statement by Bishop Kellenberg our overwhelming sUPPOtt

John J Clarke council president said the eounciB deemed it necessary to reit shyerate its support of the bishops statement co gtI bull because of our increasing concern over conshytinued discriminatory practicelC in these areas

In a policy statement the council declared the bash cause of racial unrest lies in the almost complete lack oR any meaningful contact between the races Today there are few whites who can say they really know Negroes This ignorance of each other is caused almost lxc]usively by patterns of segshyregation in housing which reshysuited in segregated schools 3mll a segregated society

As a step in breakin( these patterns the council recomshymended passage of open housshying ordinances in all towns OK

Long Island Only when there is no place left for the white man to run will the problem be solved it said

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WASHINGTON (NC)-Father James L Vizzard SJ retiring Washington director of the Nashytional Catholic Rural Life Conshyference received the papal Benemerenti medal hele in recshyognition of his work for t~e

rural poor of the United States and throughout the world

The presentation at a dinner in the Cosmos Club was attendshyed by Bishop Henry J Soenshyneker of Owensboro Ky NCRLC president Msgr Luigi Ligutti permanent observer for

Prelate Advocalles Open Housing ILaws

JEFFERSON CITY (NC)shyBishop Joseph M Marling CPPS of Jefferson City has urged Catholics of the diocese to campaign openly and fearshy

- lessly for area open housing laws

In a pastoral letter urging open housing law support the Missouri prelate askedshy

Who fails to see that to conshydemn a large segment of our people to the cruel segregation thatmiddot closed housing entails is to sin gravely against charity justice and the vely finest inshystincts of our nature Who may deny that to perpetuate such an evil in this enlightened age will bring malediction upon us

For jurely he answered Chlist is brother to the eolored in the identical sense that he is brother to the other children of men

Plan Fa-II Opening Of Joint Semill1ary

CHICAGO (NC)-A graduate school of theology for seminashyrians ftom three Religious orshyders will open in a former hotel here in the Fall

The school to be known as the Catholic Theological Union will be operated by the Passhysionists Franciscans and Sershyvites in the fOI-mer Aragon Hotel near the University of Chicago

About 100 students ue exshypected to enter thl school this year Area seminariltes ourrent-middot ly being used by themiddot threfl

2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese 01 Fall Ri~~r-Thurs Apr 11 1968 S~~in S~ntences priest- and Laymen

JOurrt)~a$ts Opinions Differ_On V~~e of Bishops Synod

By Msgr George G Higgins Two American journ~lists who have covered the Rome

1beat off and on for several years-Father Francis X Murphy CSSR and Gary MacE0 in-have just published an interesting account of the Synod of Bishops which was held in Rome in 1967 (Synshyod 67 A New Sound in what they manege to teU us Rome Bruce Publishing Co about themselves in their sep- Milwaukee) Written in the arate and widelydivergent asshyfamiliar Xavier Rynne style it Sessments of the Synod is something of a tour de force How two men who disagree given the se- so fundamentally about the uecy w h i c h pros and cons of the Synod ever enveloped the managed to work as a tandem $ y nod a 1 in the writing of the history of proceedings The the synodal proceedings is to authors h a v e put it as mildly as possible a tried to give perplexing mystery on account as They tell us that for aU that a c cur ate as lies between their separate possible under evaluations Df the Synod they the conditions are jointly accountable but that of time and cir- the internal logic of their inshycumstance For dividual viewpoints and the my own part I dialectic of the situation led think they deserve better than them to attribute exclusive reshya ~as~ing grade They do ~lOt sponsibil~ty for the Prelude to ~lalln to hae wrlt~en anythmg a priest and for the Postscript like8cIefmltIve hlstory of the i to a layman SYlo1IgtUt they have proyid~d Far A art 1IllS wlth a useful mtenm sum- P mabr of the -proceedings and I take it that this is a polite ~r ~ii w~ cin) begrateful way of saying that when they

Perplexing Mystery got around to summing up their Tothis reader however what impressions of the Synod they

the authors tell us about the

lSynod ls less mterestmg than i

~ 8holJd have concluded contrashyr rlwise- that it was seriously - lacking in credibility and releshy

vance and was thus on biI- ance a huge disappointment

lRationaJize Differences

Such differencesmiddot of opinion on the part of experienced

jourpalilts covering the same everit-and using the very same

source~ of informationare not to be Vf~npered at

On the other hand I am Dot very happy about the curious- way in which the authors haveshyrationalized their differencea Th~y tell Us that one evaluatioo Df ~he Synod (Father Murphys) w~ ~ritteo from the viewpoint of the institutional Church and the other (Mr MacEoins) from that of conteinporarshyman~ind

Or again in Mr MacEoin words A priest professionally involved in the institution will

tend to lean in one direction 11 layman whose professional sushy

- viva rests on his sensitivity to

SPECIAL DELEGATE Marches Ghilio Sacchetti 42 has been named by POpe Paul VI to succeed Count Enrico

Galeazzi as special delegate of the Pontfical Commission for the state of Vatican City He is wearing the now outshymoded costume of a Gentleshyman of Cape and Sword NC PIloto

world opinion in the other

Now Bear This

This strikes me as being bull slightly threadbare and hopeshylessly pre-Conciliar dichotomy I know of a Dumber of priests (and so do the authors I asshysume) who rightly~or wrongly are just as critical of the Synod as Mr MacEoin is

I also know of a number III laymen (and so do the authocs I must assume again) who rightly or wrongly are just as sanguine about the results of the Synod as Father Murphy is So whats all this doctrinaire I

stuff about priests necessarily looking at things (myopically) through the allegedly unenshylightened eyes of contemposhyrary mankind

Tell it to the Marineal

found that they wer~ so ho~e-lessly far apart 111 theIr thmkmg

that the division of labor so I cryptically described in the above quotations appeared to be the only possible way of salshyvaging the middotoperation Thatll fair enough

It isnt at all surprising that one of the authors (Father Murphy) should have concluded that on balance the Synod was truly a contribution to the Church~s aggiornamento and that the other (Mr MacEoin)

MAnmn (NC) - Sz~en per- sons incIl~lg a Cathollc priest have bc)n sentenced to prison terms and fined by Madrids Court of r lic Order on charges Olf havinr participated in an anti-Frangt meeting in Barceshylona in lS~G

On trial were Father Francisshyeo Paula Botey and 10 laymen who were accused of attending

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an illegal meeting The meetshying was advertised as a Day of Repression and criticized what it called the repressive activities of the government of Gen Franshycisco Franco

Father Botey who admitted during the trial that he atshytended the meeting at Barcelona Universitys law school was senshyten~ to a year in jail ~d fined

about $214 Three of the laylDell received similar sentences amplid fines while ~ others drew six-month jail terms aDd four were absolved

Father Batey testified duriDtl the trial that he deliberately atshy1ended the meeting to protest against the ftPress1on he bad said he had seen of -certain see-shymenta of ampbe Spanish clergyshy

Prelate Supports Catholic Schools Opposes Racism

NEWARK (NC) -Archshybishop Thomas A Boland of Newark touched on racism Catholic education and aborshytion in his annual message to the Archdiocesan CouncH of catholic Men at its CQnvention here

Noting that BOrne people adshyvocate closing Catholic schools to concentrate on adult educashytion Archbishop Boland said I believe we mU9t give as much time as is possible to adult edushycation but not that we should ignore our chlIdren

If we close our schools he soid there may 00 no one to attend the adult courses iJn future years

He deplored the absence of religion in the education of many people and said that while 0 ohild may be receiving o good academic background under such circumstances he is not being trained in his will or his morals

Jthortion Is Murder Archbishop Boland noting

~hot the question of relaxing bortion laws is before the state LeFislature recalled that he lralNi opollen to the men about ~ot Dubject a year earlier and repeated what he had said then abortion is murder

Should the state legislate more liberally in this field he said it would go outside its sphere and we would have no

right to follow it He indicated however that

the Church would not oppose the establishment of a legislashytive commission to study the abortion law

Discussing racism he called it a malignant growth in our society and announced his support for a peaceful interrashycial walk through the streets of Newarks ghetto

Spokesmen lor L2ity Archbishop Boland also urged

the men to turn their council into a real spokesman for the laity He ruled out the possibil shyity of a voice for the laity toshytally independent flrom the hierarehy declaring that this is not the structure cd the Church

H we want to build a strucshyture the archbishop said we get an architect to give us a uniform plan Christ is the arshyehitect of the Chureh We are its workmen

He then urged the men tID take the steps which would make the ACCM aspokesman for the people II real council

Delegates adopted four res0shy

lutions endorsing catholic echools condemning racism lin every form advocating retenshytion and expansion of the states IIChool bus law and opposing relaxation of the abortioD statute

Stresses Increased Food Production

NEW DELHI (NC)-The vatshyican recognizes the need to mshycrease food production middotas a most serious problem facing the developing countries and mshydeed the world as a whole Elizabeth Reid II member of the

bull Vatican delegation to the United ean delegation to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD)

Speaking at the UNCTAD meeting here in India MilS Reid said The right to food 18 01117 another aspect 01 be mosi eaered of all buman rigbts the right to life and it is tb1s parshyticular aspect of the problem of development that places the heaviest and most serious burshyden em the comlcieDee of man- flIIIIampy from home kiDd ~ bull lot cbeapeJ tIIaD IiDDC

rv~

I I

HEATHER CUTTHNG

Sacred Hearts Junior High School Student Is Licenseod Amateur Radio Operator

Holly and Heather Cutting 532 Walnut Street Fall River share a transistor rashydio With some teenage sisters this might cause trouble but not with this pair Heather Jets Holly take the transistor She settles for pop music from Johannesburg South Africa-via her shortwave set They have real good musicraquo she says Blonde 14 year old Heather learned the In ternational Morse Code a basic requirement for amashyteur radio operators when she was seven but its only in the past year that shes really worked at the complicated hobby Her father Dick Cutting ll construction superintendent by profession has been ll radio ham for 30 years by avocation An awesome battery of receivshyers and transmitters fills a room of the Walnut street house and when Heather displayed real inshyterest in them she had iii wi)) ing teacher close at hand

Heathers an eighth grader at Sacred Hearts Junior High School on Prospect Street in Fall River and she admits that she does as much homework as IIhe can at sOOool to have eveshynings free for her hobby She at shytends radio classes nightly then hurries bome to spend as much as three hours at ber sel

Im llicensed for two fre- I

quencies right DOW she exshyplained I can talk on six and two meters Translated that means she can contact amateullil

--in this part of the United States but may not ta]k tomiddot overseal operators until she earns 1Il middotgeneral license

Im Working for my license DOW she said rohe examinashytion JIm be in 00 days Even the license that Heather now holds however is umusual for one of her age When she gets ber general license she Will be among itB Y01lllllgest holders and probably the youngceBt 8h licensee in the stlllte

rhere are 11426 lI8dto amashyteurs iD Massacbuatts I18id her father aInd cmIy 409 aJre WCllInen

wm CoDtaet lFather A real benefit to ~ Cutting

family from Bellltberll general lieense wID be iba1 1Ibell be able tID reach bel fathe bull blB car short wave mctic wheD he is OlD hIfl freqUeDt bwliness tripal

distance calls said Mr Cutting The electric light company figshyures I can run this rig 16 hours a day for only $290 a month

Heather hopes to make a cashyreer of radio technology Right now she is able most of the time to repair her set if someshything goes awry and shea building a small transmitting station for an upcoming science fair at Sacred Hearts Itll broadcast about 200 feet she said

Sometimes Of couJrSe gremshylins pop ill Like the time Heather got a phone can from a boy in Swansea Hey did oU know youre coming m on eiYclnnel 2 on our TV be said 011 another occasion Heather picked ~ her fathers transmisshysion OIl ber electric pitar speaker

Most of the time however things go smoothly During her nightly radio sessions Heather picks up signals Jrom other amateurs and has some schedshyuled appointments vis the mllshyways withmiddot friends hi otheJl mties

When she picks up 5 llllew

eontact she confirms it with II brightly-colored postcard bearshying her name and station 0011 etters in psychedelic pink Wld yellow

Collecting such postcards 111 2 sub-hobby for radio amateulll and Holly has a oozzling eollecshytion on the walls of her radio room She bas Mganized the Sou the a II t ern MassachushyIlett8 Teenage RadM Net aocll ill

BEFORE YOU BUy-tRy

PARK MOTORS OLDSMOBILE

OIdsmobile-lPeugot-Rencnft fJ1 Middle Street Fairhaven

llooking for new members Its just for teens she says

=rheyre more fun to talk to Once she has her general 11shy

cense she plans to join Iil group that relays messages from Viet Nam servicemen to their famshyilies

other Bobbies Badia is by no means Heathshy

ers only hobby Shl~ and her sister Holly a freshman at Emshymanuel College have an imshypressive collection of sharpshyshooting trophies mostly garshynered at Fall River Rod and Gun Club meets I began shootshying when I was six and had my Own gun when I as seven eaid Heather

Other interests are mathematshyics and music Heather picked lIP guitar playing on her own and belOngs to a folk group which plans its first public apshypearance after Easter

In short shes one teen whoD never be found wondering what to de next

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THE ANCHORshy 13Thurs April 11 1968

Houston Priests Get Pay Raise

HOUSTON (NC) - BishOJ John L Morkovsky announceCl a pay raise for priests of thE Galveston-Houston diocese and said a new retirement poliCW will go into effect Jan 1 1970

Under the old pay scale asshy sistants received a base salary of 11250 plus $30 car allowshyance and $1250 insurance preshymium for a total salary of $155 a month Pastors received a total monthly salary of $21750 The new salary reale will allow for increased pay based on the number of yearo priests have been ordained

Assistants who have been cshydained less than 10 years wiill receive a total monthly salary of $200 The figures will ~

$225 for those ordained moro than 10 years

Pastors with 25 years in t100 priesthood will receive m monthly total of $275 ThoSQ with more than 25 years will receive $300

The retirement policy ca1lJfl for optional retirement at age 65 and mandlltory retirement at 70 However elderly pries1amp who are able and willing m37 be assigned to other priestly work than the pastorate Bisbshyop Morkovsky stated

The bishop said the changes are in accordance with the recshyommendations of the Senate 01 Priests and follow consultashytion with diocesan consultom

Reach Impasse-PIITSBURGH (NC)-A state-gt

level meeting between Cat~

olic officials and the Nationl11 Association for the Advanceshyment of Colored People on furshythering racial integration iB Catholic schools reached m seeming stalemate here bn Pennsylvania when the schoolshymen cited lack of funds as ll major obstacle to NAACP pro= posals

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YOUTH CARES FOR AGE Retired Sisters are tenderlycared for at chair while Sister Mary Agnes looks on Center Sister Agnes Maureea Mmiddott St Mary Convent Fall River Left Sister Agnes Maureen seniormiddot wheels SisterMary Jer~me anQright Sister JohnCatberine bringgdri_ infirmarian points out magazine article to Sister Mary Lig~~ri inwheel to Sister Mary Ursulamiddot Both infirmarians are licensed practical nurses

I

Cqrdinal Roy Raps Apathy

MEXICO CITY (NC)~MaushyJOice Cardinal Roymiddot of Quebee _ a visit here as ehairman of the Pontifical Commission for World Justice and Peace said Christian teachings condemn violence in solving social probshylems but also condemn themiddot false prudence that lacks the eourage to make needed reshyforms

The prelate who has been touring Latin America for sevshyeral weeks said he was 1mshypressed by the number of Cathshy

olic organizations and institushytutions already applying Pope Paul VIs encyclical The Deshyvelopment of Peoples in their Jespective countries

But he added Latin Amerishyearn still have to assume fully their responsibility in workingtowards economic balance andmiddot bull just social order 80 every cit shyizen can promote his own welshyfare in a climate of freedom and common good

bull bullbull tmiddot

Comes KindIYcimiddotmiddotSislesmiddot 0 Mercy AmiddotI Fall River Comiddotnventmiddot

By Patricia McGowan

~When thou wast younger thou didstmiddot gird thyself anddidst walk where thou Frouldst But when thou shalt be old thou shalt stretch forth thy handsmiddot arid another shall gird thee and lead thee whither thou wouldst not In its description of the almost universal lot of age this is one of the most poignantpassages in Scriptur~ But age comes kindly f~r Sisters Although they are not exshyemptmiddot from its physical and mental ravages they need not fear being forsaken byfriends or being left alone the

fanulymiddot Jhe famllylast of a that is a religious community cherishes its older members and provision is made for Sisters to pass their last years surrounded by tender care

Among havens for older Sisters is the infirmary at Mt St Mary Conventmiddot Fall River The Sisters who have spent most of their religious life in the Fail River Diocese come here for their laBtyears exshypliliried Sister Agnes Maureen

The cardinal added at emiddot pretB8 RSMmiddotmiddot senior iniirmarian at eonference in the headquarten the Mount Her domain proshyf the Mexican Social Secreta- vides eh~rf11~ccQmmodations riat that national efforts for de- for 10 Sisters Each has her ownmiddot elopment do not eliminate the room andthere is II kitchenette aeed ~forfoleignaid where those ablE lobe up and

The Pontifieal commisSion Cardinal Roy indicated ill enshyaged in persuading rich counshytries to devote at least one per eent of their groSs national product to assist poor eountries

Archdiocese Adopts Project Equality

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing notified the priests lIeIlate of the Boston archdiocese of plans 10 adopt Project Equality a program designed to use purchasing power of church institutions to make firms supplying goods and 8elVices wipe out diICriminashy birislM Placticeamp

e~ut ~n enjoy their meals ~gethermiddot

The ~nfirmaryis but II few stepis from the Mount chapel wher~ the retired Sisters spend hours a day in prayer for comshymunity members still in the active lPostolate Also claiming time for Sisters whose eyesight permits are needlework ana erooheting projects

Always DraWlll Cheerful and dedicated Sister

Agnes Maureen who has I Deen at the infirmary six years is aided by Sister John Catherine who has served the aged Sisters two years A laywoman takes the night shift in the infirmary ensuring the Sisters round the clock care Bothmiddot Sister infirmashy

rians are licensed practical nurses who received their trainshyI g to L d f F tma Hosn a ur a y 0 a I shypital in the Providence Diocese

When I entered religion I hoped to be an infirmarian

said SIster Agnes Maureen I whas alwdays drawn to work for t e age

Some people think we havent got a nursing apostolate she added but we need nurses desshyperately Right now we have nine Sisters taking care of inshyfirmaries in our province

Among Sisters now at the Mount infirmary are Sister

Mary Agnes who celebrated her diamond jubilee last DeshyceJl)ber and most of wbose r~lishygious life was spent in New Bedford and middotNorth Attleboro schools and Sister Mary Lishy

gu()ri whomiddot f9r 49 yearl taught sixth graders at st Patricks School Fall River

HShe looks out her window at St Patricks said Sister Agnes Maureen and she says Theres home

The Sisters are welcoming the arrival of Spring and warm days said the infirmarian It means they can enjoy their sunporch sit in the Mounts garden and go for occasional car rides Of course they have many visitors she said Other Sisters in the house come to see them and so do Sisters from the convents where they forshymerly lived

Yes age comes kindly for Sisters Not Hke the old lady overheard in a downtown groshy

eery confiding to a chance fellow-customer her discovery of a bargain in frozen food I live alone you know and 1 get

three big servings from a packshyage--and only 29 cents

N 0 Sister lives alone

bull

~~tplic Newspaper Wins Press Awards

NEW ORLEANS (NC) -The eJarion Herald middotarchdiocesa middotnewspaper won eight awards iii the annual competition of the

N~W Or)eans Press Club ~ competition included daily and

weekly newspapers wire serVshyices and television stations

Millard F Everett editor won first place in two categories - editorial and best religioWl story This marks the first time in five years of competition that the Clarion has taken the top award for best religious story Staff members of the paper also took three second and three third place awards

----------------------------

ZENITH bull ACOUSTICON bull UNEX

bull BIOLOGICAU bull YITAMIIIS

C~tt 615-7829 IRENE R SHEA PROP

Prompt Free Delivery in fALL RIVER SOMERSET TIVERTON amp VICIHITY 101 ROCK ST (CORNER OF PINE ST) FALL RIVIImiddot

~ 6

THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFon River-Thurs Apr 11 1968

CathoJi~ ll]wnDv~JSityPltDcopy~regii~copyJ~

IPlanLUBffil AmeFicon ~1]~regregO WASHINGTON (NC) - A ops and l~aders of several South

jJroup of pr-ofessors from Cathshy American governments sHe University of America hope The Washington center comshyS n~w technical middotinstituteat the middotprises -ll group of professorsshy~tholic University of Gu~Washy mostly members of the CU caulI Ecuador may mark the llchool of middoted ucation-whomiddot are ltJPening of an international edshy specialists ineclUcationfordeshyvcation bridgetoLatin America Velopment Director of the proshy

The institute will be inaugurshy ject is Dr Jose A Baquero ated early this month as 11 middotcoshy WM has been commuting b~shy1)eIativeventure by the Center meen Washingtonand his nashylor Educational Research fa middottive Ecuador dming the -cmrent QuitoEcuadorand the Center school year lor Community Developmenhmd This is not an Ecuadorian Servioe at Catholic University project it is an internatienal bere It has the support 01 Vashy projed a resealclFaction proshykanofficials Ecuadorianbislshy gram between North and South

America Dr Baquero said middothereBC middotto Recruit laquorNe had to start middotsomewhere The natural plaoe 10 begin wasNegro St~1ent5 middot-the Qlace Where weaould get

CHESTNUT HILL (NC) shy the most facilitiesThisproject iesuit-eper-ated Boston College God willing if successful will bere has made available $100shy move throughout Latin AmershyGtOO fora talent search -progr1m ica We already have contracts to recruit Negro stJdents frem with interestedJeaders in Sao disadvantagedurbanareas middotof Paulo BTazil Bogota Colombia tlhecountry mainly in Greater and Lima Peru Boston Msgr Eugene Kevane direcshy

Father Michael P Walsh SJ tor of the Center for Communitypresident caUed for support off Development andServleedaimshyiIIe entirestudent body facshy ed iB number of Latin American Illlty and administration of EQsshy Church and government officialS Qon College to make the ~mshy have middotexpressed interest in thecram a success projectand a belid it may beshy

Since the program was starteJ come a model of assistance middottoIJeveral weeks ago some 50 ~shy lI3derdeveloped poundOuntrieslltIicatiopshave beenreceiltvelll He said ArcnbishGp Romolofrom students in ghetto areas Carooni apostolic nuncio 10lot -entrance middotin next Septemshy

~1u told him heilOllSiders theWltll freshman -class pmject of great importance andThere have a1w~ys beellU M~S a similhlr middotinstitute willIlegro students enrolled at B4tsshybe established at the Pontificalton College oUicials said ~t University in Limatheir Dumber is ~ot ~own 00shy

0tberhigh-ranking churchshyaYSe race is not shown 8ll1 middotmen who lthave endorsed theapplications The Collegemiddotacceptll project include MsgrLuigi Lishyattdents of all faiths gutti the Holy Sees PermanentN~t SeptemberNegro lrtlllshy

1Gbserver at the Food and Agrishy

bullnts with the necessary ~uaUshy6eations will be admitted n8 culture Organization of the 1Ilual while middotsome 25 will ge United Nations and Archbishop admitted under the talent Ceasar Antonio Mosquera fif

lt4IeQIChprogram The number is Guayaquil president of theEcshybeing limited for thegood af iliad-orlan Bishops Conference

GOLDEN JUBILEE Sisshyter Rose Alma Reid CSC (Sjltte1 M Flora) will mark herg-olden i llbilee of religious professjon on Sunday April 21 at Sacred Heart Convent New Bedford A Mass of thanksgi~rjng will be offered at 1130 Sunchw morning at Sacred Head Church and a reception will be held in the parish hall ITom2 to 4 th~t

afternoon Friends and forshymer pupils are invited t01l~

tend

So Curolina Bishop A-sksPettce $upport

CHARLESTON (NC)- Bishshymiddotop Ernest Lmiddot Unterkoefier of Charleston has called for the middotfull support ofall Americans of President Lyndon middotlB Johnshysons efforts to secure peace in middotVietnam

Tbe South ltCarolina Bishop said that the Presidents -peace ini tiati yes demonstrate that he is a gtarson who -has ever been conscious of the grave responsishybility 01 his ofillce and that his judgements have been measured ~y the critical threats to the securi~y and free action ofthe United States

ICampus Comediansl

R~JlJ~stforBirh ControJ 1nlcrmation lndBGSYlrncrGti(C~e

DAYTON (NC)-A Univershysity of Dayton chaplain said he suspected campuscomediami for 1b~ conJroversyaroused bY a request for availability of birth corttol information and materials In campus by theunishyversity stmiddotudent congress

Father Urban Rupp SM universi~y co-chaplain wrote in the chaplain s bulletin the alshymost unanimous aetion fthe student gfvernment group middotwas an idio~yncratic caper in the natureo Ii ttle childrenpl~ying

house He indicated he fouud it difshy

ficult to take the Pfoposa1 serishyomlY

Now of COUrse I middotcowd be taking this all -wrong be said

Perhaps it was intended 00 bn serious In that case I woUld be tempted to thinktheemershygency is not just immediateshyit is really one generation too late

This was taken asa reference to student efforts to pwih through the resolution orbirth control as an emergency -meashysure

That failed but a few days later the student middotcongressvo~ 29 tol to seeka change in llJllshyversUy Wlicy that would -pershymit the introductionof birth 1Ontrol selYiees in thestudem health center for married eQUoshy~les and Ulose llQOD _ ~arriedmiddot

the young Negroes whowiUbe ~pted oUiciaI said

~

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PATRIARCH The middotnewily elected head of the Syriac Oatholic Church Patriarch Hgtenys Antoine Hayek of Anshy~och was enthroned recentshy1w in Beirut Lebanon In this post hesucceds the late P-ashykiarch Ignace Cardinal TapshylPouni NC Photo

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In ~ glory of His Resurrection may be reborn man~

amiring hopes and CleSires _ ~ce

HAPPY EASTER THE OFFICERS DIRiEc1r~ AND STAFfshy

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FIRSTmFff-BANK

-Ji1lim~~OF NEW BEDFORD

StYE SOME

11IfiPPINESS TO

A CHILD

i8iAPPI~ESS IS

A bull told ($1250 a monttl$15000-a ~ar)ca_small SISTER Investment for SisterS lifetime of service

Like to be her sponsorf Her name Is Sister Suzamma and she will write to you

iIHAPPINESS ciS

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HAPPlHU II

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work bullbull The best lsortof51Ilins lnvoLves mor than writing middotchecks--etlll how better can you help the children now whoneed you overseasf Boysandslrls who are btl~~ltper1JJjeafmiddotmuta bullbull orp~your~oneyglftslarg~-and bullmell willfeedthemmiddotteach them cur themgivethem 8 chance In lifebullbullbullbull Wantllobe happiermiddotthi

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In Erumathale south India 8 young Indian girllnrtnilriing tobea sisterOfthe Imltatlon1lf Christ will learn amofSotherttllnp how Jo care for orphans Hertlalning costs $300 all

Sevanmiddotyear-od Clara Vaookkaran an orphan In Kottamthy Indla needs lMtryttling Iitta (SIr need $10 wlllP8Y her 8)(~nslJlJm~thbymiddot cm(lOthweUaendYOU harphoto

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THE ANCHO~-Trappists Elect Mother Church of Nation8 PortlglleSe 17 Thurs April 11 1968

Youngest Abbot P-epares fOI- Cenlellilial Celebration At Gethsenloni Dy Patida F r-u nis

GETHSEMANI (NC) The youngest abbot in the history of the monastery of Our Lady of Gethsemani was formally blessed (March ~l) by Archbishop Thomas J McDon~

ough 0pound Louisville Father M Flavian Burns

OCSO 36 ilgt the seventh ab~

bot in the 120-year history of the monastery He was elected by members of the community Inst January to succeed Abbot M James Fox OCSO

Father Flavian described bis position as en administrator whose main job il) service to others within the community He said his most important function it3 to hold plivate spiritual conversations with other monks and to handle the lillM)nasterys relations with the ~Atside world

Thcilt are some 120 monks at ~ethsemani abbey a decline from past years Abbot Burns cCrlbllltes the decline at least in prt to the attitude of the times YiJCl1 was foJJJlcrly accepted without question is now being ltI~etioned he observed

ltDontemplation Prayer

Changes have been made the IHurElY is now in English and 2Jc strict vow of silence has TiKen relaxed somewhat On an experimental basis the monks are allowed to use brief oral instructions instead of sign language as in the past

Despite the lack of radio or 1clevision Abbot Burns said the monks keep in contact through newspllpers with events in todays world The main thing ill to know what is going on in the Church and what effects our fellow hushymans according to the abbot

The life of a monk involves middotcontemplation and prayer rather than speaking up - 11 more spiritual turn according kI Abbot BUlns

A native of Jersey City N J he is a graduate of Henry SfIyder public high sehool there

Protests- Campaign Agamst Religion

NEW YORK (NC) - A new wave of terror against aU churcltgpers is now in effect in Albania an exile from that country has declored in a- letter of protest sent to the United Nations Commission on Human Rightsmiddot and~ to UN Secretary General U Thani

The protest bl Dr Rexhep KIasniqi president of the Free Albania Committee which has its headquarters here said that Albanial following a lf41oist eommunillt guideline has shut down every cltulch and mosque and has made any_kind of pubshylIc worship impossible

Thill campaign Dr Krasniqi tated is a violation of the UN Charter the Universal Declarashytion of Human Rights and of Albanias own communist conshystitutional guarantee of freedom of conscience for all

San Antonro Priests Form Association

SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Fortyshyene diocesan and religious comshymunities priests of the San Anshytonio archdiocese formed a priests association bere The priests ohose a six-member temshypora]) steering committee

One of the fiTst formal actions Gf the allsociatron was to inform Archbishop Robert E Lucey of San Antonio of the group forshymation

There are approximately 441

Parishioner d St John the Baptist Church in Nc Bedford are getting rendy for a momentoils event-the 100th anniversary of the fO~1l1dil1g of the oldest Portuguese parish in the nation The cen~en]ial celebration wi II not take place until 1971 but many things have to be done in preparation within the next three years One major project is renoshyvating the church ihelf To pay for the massive job ptrshyishioners have inaugur~teca Centennial Fund Drive to raise money for painting ~he church do extensive electrical work and buy a rew organ Estimated cost (f the regt3ir5 is $150000

Rt Rev Msgr John A Silvia pastor is honorary drve chairshyman and Frank S Jason is genshyeral chairman Other committee members include Richard GiJI1shysalves and Jesse V Santos Jr division chairmen JQseph S Vera special gifts chairman Richard L Lopes treasurer George Radcliffe director Louis S Silva assistant director Mrs Mary Lucy Soares office conshytrols and Miss Luey E Dias list supervisor

Members of the Campaign Exshyecutive Committee also include Frank M Martin ald Joseph C Motta

The history of St Johns and the history of the Portuguese people in America arc closely intertwined

It was at the end of the 18th Century that settlers began comshying from themiddot Azores to the United States TheJ were relashytively few in number nd as II

result almost lost their national identity

Near Ifood However by 1840 the trickle

of Azoreans was beginning to turn into a near Oood of imshymigrants who settled in New Bedford then a whaling and fishing center

By 1865 many Portuguese families called New Bedford home They lacked just one thing-a church of their own and a priest who spoke their language and understood their customs and traditions

Their first priest-Rev Joao Ignacio de Azevedo-anived in 1869 and on Sept 10 1871 St Johns parish was canonically established

Theremiddot were approximately 1shy000 Portuguese of Azorean deshyscent living in New Bedford at the time and the)T detelmined to build their own church A lot was purchased for $3OD8 ~ con~

siderable amount in those days and soon ground WQS broken for the new house of God

However Father de Azeedo was a mission pliest Vl~ho~moved

throughout the are~ aCministershying to his counblymen As a reshysult a new parish was establishshyed in Boston and he became its first pastor

Expandoll

Construction of St Johns WillS

continued by Rev Antonio de Mattos Freitas a native or Calshylteta St George Azores Fashyther Freitas also was responsible for the construction of a recshytory When he reUred because of ill health and returned to~ the AzoreS he was succeeded by Rev Antonio G de Silva Neves who was to serve St Johns durshying the greatest expansion Gfthe citys Portuguese colony

The first church located where a section of Morse- Twiampt Drill now stands soon ~ outgrown by its congregation and a drive began for agt new and larger church

Father Neves who served 8~j

pastor for almost 25 years saw the new church at County and Wing Streets almost coop]eted However ill health also forced bill retirement

PREPARING FOR CENTENNIAL In charge of fumd drive for hundredth anniversary of St John Baptist Church New Bedford are from left George Radclffe drive execushytive director Frank Jailon general chairman

pleted construction of the present church and rectory in three years The church which now serves the parish was solemnly blessed an4 dedicated to the worship of God by the late Bishshyop Feehan

Through the years the parshyishioners of St Johns have proved their dedication to their cliurch Now they are renewinr their dedication

Msgr Silvia notes that before the small St Johns Church was built the citys Portuguese colshyony attended Mass at St Lawshyrence Church Later they moved into what today is Crowells brt Store

Landmark Today the 11Inificent st

Johns is a landmark in New Bedford befitting its position as Mother Church of the Portu guese in the- UnFted States

MSgr Silvia a native of Pall River served at St Peters Church in Provincetown for 27 years His only other assi1shyment St John the B-aptirt Church

Ordained to the priesthood or Dec 20 1919 St Johns was the new priests first assignment He remained at the cRurch unshytil No~ember 1924 when he was transferred to Ptovinceto~

On Oct 2 1951 Msgr Silvia returned to St Johns as pzsshytor a post hemiddot still fulfills with zeal and energy

His assignmetlt to St Jobnfl parish in 1919 was not ~1sgr Sinshyvias introduotion to the New Bedford parish

As a young boy the p2stcshyrecalls his poundathers weekly trips from Fall River to New Bedford to bring back a priest

Four Families There were few Portuguese

families in Fall River in those days he says When my father arrived in Fan River there were iust four Portuguese families in the city Gradually others setshytled there

My father used to drive over in a horse and buggy to bring Il priest back tc Fall River to ll3y

degbrought him back the next dzy Since those days of hischiMshy

bood Msgr Silvia observeamp-l Turn to Page Eighteen

Continued fronmiddot Page Three

the late Tobias and Ann Lynch ]Burke Mr Burke was born in Newport Tipperary Ireland and his speech bears witness to the o-it and lilt of his birthshyplce He is married te Catbshyerine Lowney Burke and the couple lives next to the Chanshycery

DI1 Davia Costa Dr Costa son of David CosU

and Julia Rodrigues is the husshyband of Louella Somerday and fther of five children A dentshyist in NeJ Bedford he is active ir ceo and in St Vincent ~e

Pml work on a parochial and al(l level He has been zealoUJ ir- many important phases ~

perish aetivity in Immaculate Conception Parish in New BedshyforC He was recipient of the Diocesan Marian Award in Deshycember

itpJlin 15 TIle awards Jill be presenteCl

at St Marys Cathedral Fa]] River on lIlonday evening April 15 at 8 PM At toot timeuro there will be the investi shyture of two lI-ionsignori the awarding of Papal Knight 03 SZ Gregory honors to nine ~sect- oeesan laymen and the Pro EecIesia et Pontipoundlce award kJ mother Pierre Marie adminisshytlato of St Annes Hospital IE Fall River~

Join Federation IIALEIGH (NC)-Forty ()(f thfl

matewide Raleigh dioceses 14~

tlriests have formed the North iCaFolina Priests Associatioil which will affiliate with a Emshy

ticmal federation DOW beiJl~

formed

May the Joy and Pomise 01- Easter

uplift your spirit and gladden

your hean

FROM THE OFRCEIIS AND PERSONfJB Of

qkJM~ERCHANTS CIa1iotuLe BANK

IN NEW BEDFORD

SOUTH BANK-Cove St at Iodney French Boulevard WEST BANK-Kempton Street at Mill Stret

LUNDS CORNER BANK-Acushnet Ave rear Lunds Comer DARTMOUTH BANK-Dartmouth Street near Rockdale Ave NORTH BANK-Acushnet Avbull at Coffin Ave

CENTER BANK-Purchase and William Sts priests in the San Antonio arcl1shy Next pastor was the Rev Mass He used to stay overnight tiiocese Manuel A da Silva wt() oom- at our hOuse ald JlG ~tbeI

-

18 Tti~ ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1969 CatecheticsWeek Set at StonehillDioce$clm ~j[llIlde[lj)fl5 Join Nal-gonGI Some 400 priests religious and laymen are expected to at shyMculrraurru U A$~ssinatBon tend a catechetics institute b be held Monday Aug 5 throughOf Dr Mriin luther KilnS Saturday Aug 10 at Stonehill College Diocesan schools shared i~ national mourning at the Sister Mary Francille CSJ

~8sassination of Dr Martin Luther King with special theology professor at Regis ColshyMasses or prayers offered in every school At Cassidy High lege will direct the institute in Taunton Rev John Moore chaplain celebrated a Mass and speakers will include Rev

Frederick Moriarty SJ Revfor the repose of the soul Cha~les E Cook Rev James F(l)f the Negro leader and rently hplds first place in the Hawker Sister Florence -MishyNotre Dame math league chels OLVM Gerard Potte~

tlie chapel by students in a demy Fairhaven have been study periods were spent in Girls at Sacred Hearts Acashy

bauoi and Mrs Helen Jacobs With the theme Making Alllvigil for peace working on a project to bring

Christian Youth Movement Easter cheer to patients at St Things New institute sessiono will discuss Scripture catechetshymembers at Jesus-Mary Aca- Lukes Hospital New Bedford ical techniques use of filmsdemy Fall River heard the New Under supervision of Sister Jushywith adolescents other visualFolk a group of singing Holy lie Louise SSCC theyve ~een aids parent education teamCross seminarians Their appear- making tray favors including teaching and creative dramaticsance was arranged under t~e decorative placemats and napkin

Further information is avail shydirection of Mofher John Scarry holders for adults and flowered able from Stonehill CollegeJRJM Jollipops chicky surprises and North Easton 02356Also at JMA its French Week bunny hats for childern

The observance- began Sunday Science Fair Winners when French Club members Jeanne Phenix Yvette Berthi- Holy Family had four winshy Charities AppeaI aume and Susan Cournoyer took ners at the annual New Bedford Continued from Page Three part in a play sponsored by the Science fair In the senior division

Community Fund CampaignPrevost French Club Les Fem- James Berry and John Thomas president Board of Managers mes Parlent Trop Throughout of the New Bedford school were of Boston Dispensary and vice

the week too there have middotbeen cited fo~ earth science and phy- the Diocesan cheerleading tour- will combine with the seniors president of USOseveral skits prepared by mem- sics proJects respectively while t tl h ld t F h th bZbers in the junior division both Pa- namen recen yea ee an Lor e occasIOn SInce oth He has been the recipient of

or effort at Prevost was tricia Downey and SharonSmola High but sports arent all that cltsses of the academy are small honorary degrees from Holy MaJ matter at the TauntoJl girls due to the fact that the high Cross College Tufts University

e Sunday program Whlch ln- were recognized for work in the h f h d I ld f b sc 001 Break ast lunc an schoo IS being phased out Suffolk University Bradford -luded In addItIon to the play fle 0 iology M formal dinner pace settmgs The Junipero Club of Holy Durfee College of Technology~veral talks by promInent any students won honors at h M h I I I were recently on display at the Family High recently sponsored of Fall Rivet and Lowell Techshy

I remiddotnch cItIzens a French song- t e assac usetts RegIOn S F h school library and members of a talk on drug addiction for jun- nological Institute ~t and a motion picture Clence alr eld in Fall Rlver They included Christine Four- the Mothers Auxiliary were on iors and seniors The talk was Bishop to AddJess Meeting

UN French Club nier Dominican Academy and hand to answer etiquette ques- given by two brothers one an Most Rev James L ConnollyAt Coyle the French Club di- Diane Desmarais Mt St Mary tions from the students ex-addict the other director of Bishop of Fall River will speak

Ilected by Brother Hugh McCabe Academy both Fall River Both And the Coyle Fathers Club Marathon House a center for to the priests parish trusteesIOeCently elected officers After girls were recogiIized by the held its annual Father-Son Com treatment of addicts located in chairmen of the Catholic Charishy8le votes were tallied however Southeastern District of the Mas- munion breakfast at the school Coventry RIo ties Appeal and the invited lays our man at Coyle it looked sachuse~ts Dental Society bull with Robert Cahill ofthe Rhode CongratuIcitions go to Joseph gue9ts of the 111 diocesan if ~embers were voting for Debra Lay Dominican Aca- Island Food and Drug Commis Abraham of St Anthony High parishes bull UN delegation The presidents demy received a savings bond sion as guest speaker He dis- for meriting runner-up position Roland A Lafrance 1968 ApshyliPot wa~ captured he reports from the Bristol South Distriet cussed harmful effects of various iil the state finals of the annual peal lay chairman will also adshy a Polish fellow Cbarles Ozug Medical Auxiliary arid Michael drugs American Legion olatorical con- dress the 800 expected to attend lames OBrien a true Irishman Zito Bishop Feehan High At~middot The Catholic Students Mis- test - the opening meeting of the won the vice-presidential spot tleboro was awarded a plaque sion CrUsade at Stang H~gh has In club~ews at~HA the Senshy campaign for funds for the 30 while the treasurers job was by the Womens Auxil1ary to the taken as a special project this ior Science Club will conduct agencies of the Catholic Chadshy~warded to Jorge Matesanz -a Mass Veterinary ASsn month of April the collection of a farewell meeting for seniors ties Appeal

BASKETBALL PLAYERS On basketball team at Connolly High Fall River are from left Tim Duffy Tom Kroger John Long Joe Kelly Greg Sullivan Mike Manning

~~dent of Spanisll extraction Winners in the division of donated medical supplies and this ~month and members will Only Paul Bor9ue the secretary earlhscience Were John Dias eyeglasses for deprived Peoples visit an encephalitis clinic in I ~anaged to make the scene for Thomas Burk~ anciRobei-tClou~ of the world Supplies collected Freetown in May The Stamp France tier FeehahMicIlael Cote Pre illbe forwarded to the Cathi- and Coin Clubis planning a pubshy

At Bishop Stang iil North vost and Elizabeth Lavoi~ Do- olic Missions Medical Bureau for lie exhibition of members col- Dartmouth the math team led minican shipment iections in May imd the Chess by high scorer Lawrence l3yrnes Awards in math and engineer- Upco~ing at S~A Fairhaven Club has undergone reorganiza- placed secon~in a reeentBqs- ing went to Carol Vasconcellos is the aruiual senior prom which tion election of officers inshyflon public schools math meet Mt St Mary Madeleine Delisl~ wilL be held in the Colonial cluding Edward Norman presishyThe Stang team paced by the and Vivian Blais and Michael R60m of Whites restaurant in dent Daniel Brule vice-presi- shyeo-sIstent good work of George Zito Feehan Genevieve Pappas Westport from 8 to midnight dent Diane Lizotte secretary Oliver and EIleen Keavy cur- and Debra Lay Dominican Joan Friday night May 24 Juniors TuniorProm

Basile Feehan Amato Polselli The Holy Family Junior Prom Prevost and Sharon Woycie- Board ofmiddot Trustees isslated for Friday night AprilCentennialmiddot chowski Mt St Mary were 26 at Kennedy Center The prom

Continued from Page Seventeen cited To Study Changes will last from 8 to 11 and will Chemistry winners included have Carousel as its themebroad smile on his face-many Jane Arruda Anne Lewis De- WASHINGTON (NC) - The Mlisic will be by the Escorts

other families have arrived from nise Michaud Elizabeth St board of trustees of the Catho- And the Holy Family debatePltlrtugua1 A man d Diane Lamontagne lic University of America in team tied for first place in the Our Lady of Mt Carmel par- Christine Fournier Dominican Washington D C will meet Narry League with Cassidy A ~h was detached from St Johns Anne Sullivan and Pamela Can- Sunday April 21 in St Louis playoff will be held As of now as the Portuguese population dee Feehan Marilyn Riley and to consider a wide range of rec- Cassidys debate reco~d is 12 grew Then Our Lady of the Ann-Marie Charrette Sacred ommended changes resulting wins out of 14 debatesjrnmaculate Conception parish Hearts Fall River Irene Caron from a year-long study of the was erected to care for families Cassidy Marilyn Bentley Mt pontifical university by a comshyi Portuguese descent living in mitteee headed by Dr Carroll ~e North End of New Bedford St Mary Hochwalt

In the field of physics Alan middotRAMBLERToday St John the Baptist White Prevost Michelle Paquet The meeting will be held in ehurch has about 4000 parishshy SHA Fall River JamesReid Jrconjunction witll the Spring Americas Economy King ioners Our numbers started Prevost Mary Soans Jane Mc meeting of the National Confershy Fnr the Best Deal Come To dropping about seven years ago Donald and Martba Nugent yent ence of Catholic Bishops Broadway Ramblerasgr Silvia explains He feels St Mary The trustees are expected 10 INC part of the drop in membership Representatives from Diocesan name a new 30-man board meet 768 BROADWAYis due to a number of families schools to the Mass State Sci- with faculty representatives for RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 131moving outside the parish )ounshy ence Fair will include Michael the first time in histoi-y and CHARLES J DUMAIS Presdarles Intermarriages with othshy lito Amato Polselli Debra Lay discuss the search for a new er nationalities account for still Madeleine Delisle Jane Arruda university rector to replacemore losses Anne Lewis Father J~dhn P Whalen ~ho ~III11I11I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I11I1I1HIUIIIIIIIlIIlilllllllllllfllHlIilttmmIllIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllllnIlIllIllHIIIIIIIIIJ111~ However the Mother Church Denise Michaud Alan White was naine last October to a ef the Portuguese is not fading Michelle Paquet Elizabeth St one-year term as acting rector E WEEKEND SPECIAL sect away AmandSharon Woyciechowski A new school was built in New Projector

f957 It is expensive Msgr Silvia admits but I felt we needed it

St Anthony High in New Bedshyford is rejoicing over acquisi shytion of a movie projector as a

Parish gtrganizations are active gimiddotft from the alumni association and individual parishioners are willjng to give of their time

Presentation to principal Sister Lucille Champagne was made

and effort Perking

to keep the parish by Mrs Josephine Lafleur sociation president

asshy

Now they are getting read7 Cassidy-Coyle cheerleaders Jor a 100th anniversary captured third pillce v9Phy iil

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Westport Real Doric-Horse lHE ANCHOR-DIoeIee r bull I AJu n

Case Somerset Favorites In Narry Diamond League

Case High of Swansea and Somerset are pre-season ehoices in this seasons Narragansett League baseball race but the club th8lt will bear watching is Westport TIne darkshyhorse Villagers may have a few surprises for Narry foes Another small area school

with a respectable 8-6 recordthat potentially has a shot Only one member of that at a league championship is squad Calvin Hopkinson will Norton of the Tri-Valley not be playing for the Villagers Conference Coach Ed Bibeau this Spring With the rest of the has most of last Deasons Central club ready to go - watch Jlor Village regulars Westport to make its presence in the fold ready lmown to challenge the Among fuose returning are perennial Paul Eastwood an Russ Picard favori1es If 0 T two of the better performers in Narry honors the circuit a year ago Eastwood amp1i1 at Norton led the team in hitting with a (C 0 a c h Peter highly respectable 360 averagem[l ~ek has pitched and played the infield G3ven returning Picard like Eastwood 15 also ~nnen for versatile An outfielder by trade ~theY chamshy he also takes his turn on the ii~~JWhip bid Peter mound for Coach Bibeaus nine Weo~port Bartek Carl Zajac and Jeff Hague tmIshed the 1961 eampaign ill round out Bibeaus four-man ~ place in tbe NalT7 loop pitching staff

Norton Bids for Tri-Valley Crown jfOO task of handling the but in thin scholastic year of

~tJ of this quartet will fall athletic surprises it may not be Gpoundl ~e shoulders of either Ron as big as some thinllt ~JmOi) or Manny Cabral both

A second place finisher inexperienced receivers ConnOlll 1967 the Norton Lancers haveexcel1B not only defensively their sights on the Tri-Valleybut likewise with the bat He Conference crown The clubsbit at a 333middot clip last Spring one-two hitters last campaignJohn Souza and Mike Andras have departed from the Norton th better than 300 hitters baseball scene but the teamqaln will be out to join the one-two pitching punch is reshyleague leaders in batting prowshyturning Juniors Ken Allen aess They should put a wallop left-hander who had a perfectin Westports oHensive attaCK 7-0 record last Spring and ArtIf Coach Bibeaus boys can dushyBouchard will be relied uponplicate their Performances of a heavily to bring the league flagJellr ago Offensively and biB to Norton Coach Bartek alSobig four comes through on middottbe hopes to get some help in middotthemound Westport may realize a the pitching departmentmiddot fromlong awaited Narry championshyFred Rego Bill Gorczyca andEip dream Admittedly if Ie Steve Nichols bull bie word in ~~rts_tuture

~ ~ bull I

OpeUp With~on-League Co~esttsmiddot Other returnees incl~ Capshy develop rapidlymiddot defensively if

tain Mike Wynnn Greg Croff they are to regain the leagues BOb Adams Tim McEndy and divisional crown - whicb flbeymiddot Paul Hassie Wynn a senior lost to HoWston last Spring middotmiddot will be starting his third season and gain a shot at the Trl shyill left field with Cruffstarting V~ey Conference ebampionshyhis second campaign in center ship Many area clubs openThey will be joIned by Wynns their campaign this week with brother Ricky in right fied non-league games highlighting

The infield win be anchored the action League competition by Adams at second base and will commence for the most Hassle at short Newcomers part next week Richy Silvia and George Macshy Mother Nature has done her Arthur are presently battling it job this Spring Baseball coaches out for the third base job and throughout -the diocese admit Lorrie Adams also a first-year that this is the best Spring they man appears to have the inside have had to prepare flbeir track on first base charges in many a year Weather

cannot be blamed for a slowMcEndy who has been the start this time around All areLancers starting catcher since eagerly awaiting the umpireshis Freshman year is starting first call to play ballhIs third campaign behiJd the

plate Bartek expects McEndy to hold the inexperienced inshy New School System field together

The Lancers will have to imshy In German State prove upon their hitting and DUSSELDORF (NC) - The

North Rhine-Westphalia state parliament middothas approved aCanadian Prelates change in the states school sysshytem that probably will meanEstablish Council the end of many denominational

OTTAWA (NC)-The Catho-shy schools Hc bishops of Canada have esshy By an overwhelming majorshytablished a 12-member Fiscal ity the parliament voted to Affairs Council composed of change the state constitution and clergy Religious and laymen establish the nondenominational who will advise the Church on Christian school in which reli shyfinanclal matters gious training is given by Cathshy

Among the areas which are olic and Protestant instructors receiving ini~ial attention of the in the same school as the patshycommittee is the question of tern for state-supported schools whether the Church should be from the fifth through the nint subject to government taxation grades and if so what form of taxation In the past the state has supshywould be equitable to churches ported Illeparate Catholic and government and other taxshy Pro tell tan t denominational payen Khoola

-~) PASSION PLAY Today Christians hold the Solemn Observance of the Lords Supper

It is commemorated ina PMsion Play at Prevost High School Fall River by David Poisshyson as Christ Paul Martel left 8$ St John and Paul Bouampquet as St Peter

DominicGlIsmiddot Rent ApGrt~~rit in Inner -Cimiddottimiddot middot

Want t~ Get Closer to I Agony of the Worl~middot WASHINGTON (NC)middot Pift his experience in the neig~lgtorshy ruary 1966 because theJ

Dominican priests-each doing hood is invaluable in helping wanted to get closer to the bis own thing-are living middotin an both prisoners and parolees He agony of the world While nol apartment in the inner ~ cd said the insight he gains into eliminating the academic life Washington here they come from ancl h~w they felt that living in the inlleJ The five run the gamut from they view life aids him In mv city would be as important bull

a professor of moral theology at ing them intelligent advice and learning experience as academic the Don)inican House ofStucUeII 8ssis~nCe study to a prison chaplain a1 the Diamp- Father William Kane is middotthemiddotNeighborhOoclll[aatrict of Columbia Jail Ibey neighborhood man of the have in common1heiy addresa A Pr~ceton graduate ~itl1 apartment Hemiddotworks with minshyand a desire to understand and doctorates from Harvard aJgt4 isters inmiddot the area in establishing alleviate the problems ~ livlnc OxfCrd Father Albert Brodershy youth programs and fightina I in a poor Urban community ick teaches Constitutional LalV for better housing and fail

Father TbomasHea~ middotttie at the catholic University Law rent laws His motive is to givemoral theology professor aDd School the people in the community aD author of a reCent bOOkmiddotID awareness of their own dignitymiddotBe and Father Heath startedFaee of An~sh is 0Il 1be to affirm the fact that it is athe apartment project in Feb-bOard of direCtors of the Pe0shy ood place to live ples Center a house soon to be

the rehabilitationopened for Criticizes Usury of alcoholics He also meets

MEXICO CITY (NC)-Mexshy5 50 01- a SYSTEMATIC wimiddotth ~culties of Wasbingtcm

icc CityS Jose Cardinal Garibiseminaries to discuss policyshy bull 10 year SAViNGSRivera urged bankers meetingmaking and apostolic activity MONTHLY DEPOSITSat the National Bankers Conshy

Legal Aid Office vention in Guadalajara to comshy 5 00 01- a INVESTMENT bat usury and work closely bull 10 year SAVINGS

Father Joseph Cooney a NOTICE ACCOUNTSwith the government to proshylawye~ who has worked 011

voter registration in the South mote the social welfare of all II REGULAR4 5001 the Mexican people bull 10 Jflar SAVINGSand took an active part in dvil

rights activities such lIS

~lma march is DOW admin~ Bass Rivertering a legal aid office in the CENTERneighborhood of the Dominishy Savings Bank

cans apartment Volunteer law Paint and Wallpaperstudents from the Catholic Uni- Bank 8y Man I

versity of Ameiica assist him Dupont Paint

We Pay The Postage

IJcor Middle St

A third member of the group m this program 4iiii 422 Acush Ave bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA Fat her Raymond MalonSOl1 ~ New Bedford bull SOUTH VARMOUTH 4raquo HYANNISserves as the Catholic chapiain bull PARKINGmiddot

bull DENNIS PORT bull OSTtRVILLEatmiddot the D C jail A late vocashy Rear of Storetion Father Malonson has been ordained only two years middot Father Malonsoll feels U1at

LEVESQILIES OFFla E~lnPMENTNow Many Wear Wood Metal Desks and ChairsFALSE TEETH

With More Comfort JUST GiVE ME A CHANe TO QUOleTo overcome discomfort when

dentures sllp sllde or loosen Just sprinkle a llttle FASTEETH on your 187 SHAWMUT STREET bull NEW BEDFORD MASS

middot plates FASTEElH holds dentures firmer You eat better feel more PO Box 2062 - Hervey L Levesque

middot -wont sour Helps check plate odor comfortable FASTEETH Is alkaline

Dentures that fit are lIlSSentlai to Telephone 993middot1264middot health See your dentist regularly Get FASTEETB at all drUB counten ___ _ _____11_0__-D-tcl----4

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs April 11 1968

PhySDCOUi) l1JJ Uges litUBgy C~[filges

~n Last RStes RED BANK (NC) A

~atholic physician called for revision of the liturgical $orm of the Anointing of the Sick cluring a discussion on The Chaplains Role With the Dying Patient at Riverview Hospital here in New Jersey

Dr George J Sheehan an alumnus of Manhattan College and a founder of Christian Brothers Academy in nearby lLincroft was one of three apeakers at the symposium coshyaponsored by the hospital and Ute 1 Redmiddot Bank Council of

ilhurches Citing obvious failures by

both physician and clergyman iin helping the dying patient and bis family Dr Sheehan sugshygested members of the family Ghare inmiddot a ceremony which would exchange feelings of llove and hope between them ElDd the dying person

Dr ~heehan observed that while inadequacy in the face of death has been in the past apparent to the Protestant criergyman it is now also felt by Catholic priests

They findmiddot he said the La~t Sacrament in its present form Ii a consolation only to those with the strong faith of a Breton iiteasant-a kind of faith they e seeing less and l~ss-

Appropriate Theology He also said while the develshy

pment of a Common Christian itervice parlakirtg of the same llodividual familymiddot and commu~

Ility significance as Bap~i8ai -dMarriage would be a giant p in middotheiping people to a middotbappy death iit would remain IDol theologians to present- a relshy

qwant lmd acceptable image of mail in this time and this place ilnd to develop an appropriate eology of death heaven ~nd bell in order to make a signifi- sant change in our life style

lOd therefore in our approach to death

Other panelistsmiddot were the Rev Seorge Fitzgeraid a Presbyteshyaan minister middotand middotchaplain at Princeton Hospiital arid Mn Ruth Snyder a nurse of the lIiverview Hospital staffmiddot

POSTER CHILD LEADS WAY Joey BeIge 8 of Syraeuse NY leads themiddot way down a White House lttairway in the company ofthe Fi~st t-adymiddotMrsLyndon B Johnson

and Mrs Muriel Humphrey wife ofthe Vice-President Joeymiddotis this years poster child of

the National Association for Retarded Children H~ ismiddot thesQn ofMt and Mrs Robert Beige middotmembersmiddotOf St Vincent de Paul parish in Syracuse whos-e ot-herfive children SlHshy

round their Uttle broth~r wil1hmiddot the love and care to h~lp him livea full and happymiddot life

Penn See Studies Poverty Pmiddotrogram HARISBlJRq (NC)--Coadju- is being made to see ho)Vtbe to coordinate and channel our

tor Bishop Joseph T Daley diocese canmiddot best use its re-middot efforts in the fieldmiddot vicar general- of the Harrisburg sources to alleviate poverty Bishop Daley said it ismiddot im- diocese calledmiddot on the nearly problems middotperative that all our people 50000 Catholics in the area to He alsomiddot said Wemiddot contem- knoW and understand the probshy

acquaint th~mselves with 10- middotplatemiddot the early middotestablishment of middotIem of middotracism and the funda- calracfal and poverty problems amiddotmiddot diocesanmiddot human relations mental moral injustices which

In a lettermiddot read at aU Masses commission middotto serve asmiddot a liaison middotare at the root of the deplorable BishopDlIleT said middotthat a study with all people Collcerned and conditions in our own area

Urges Hospitals Re~ognie Unio~s

CLEVELAND (NC) - AI layshymens group here has asked the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hospitals to declare its willingshyness to recognize labor unions as collective bargaining agents for hospitals employes

lNle request came in a letter from William A caldwell chainnan of the eurolevellllnd Conference of Laymen to Sister ~ry Collette of Hamilton Ohio president of the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hosplshytala during a one-day meeting here of the Ohio Hospital Assoshyciation convention

The laymens group said such a statement would promote the human dignity of hospital emshyployes in real and immediate ways serve the common good of our communities and inshycrease the understandingmiddot of Catholic teaching by all the citishyzens of Ohio

The letter pointed out that the National Catholic Hospital Association 1 a s t November called on Catholic hospitals tiraquo be guided by the social teachshyings of the Church and to deal with unions that employecfgt choose

Discuss ~iot Report On Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC) - Beginshyning Sunday April 14 the Catholic Hour will present over the NBCmiddot network a three-part series The Climate of Change

Evolution or Revolution foshycusing on three areas of social and religioUs concern today today

~gr Rop~rt Fox cOordinashytor of Spanish community 00shy

middot lion in the New York arclidioshymiddoteese will discuss The Riot centommissi~ middotReport Amiddot Chrisshy

tiati Response April 14 Msgr Ivan D Illich of the Intereushy-tural Center 01 Language and D middotoe u men tat 1 on CuershyDavaca Mexf~o win be intershyviewed Aprjl 21 and Father Francois Houtart Belgian 00shyciologist will be interviewed Apiil 28

The National Council of Cathshy oUc Men producer of the OathshyoUe Hour reconunendseheckshymiddoting local newspaper programa for broadca9t time in particushymiddotRar areas

I Am The RestUlJTectiltogtD

Ai 1)(J[YQfGfDVIJJpound)9

lJ1~TJPJiiD~ EEJ~lJregff

FALL RIVER

Page 2: 04.11.68

2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 196~

Catholic ColTlference Asks Support For Commission Recommendations lt

CHICAGO (NC)-Members of the executive committee of the National Catholic Social Action Conference meeting here called

upon all church members and especially Catholics to support the recommendations of the National Commission on Civil Disorders report

In a telegram to nlinois Gov Otto Kerner chairman of the commission the conference urged a massive commitment to national action now to make quick and visible progress to close the gap between American dream and American reality

The telegram continued We share the fear that if our counshytry maintains its present course the end result will be an Amershyican aparthied and the destrucshytion of democratic values throughout our society

From their Washington headshyquarters officials of the National Council of Catholic Men and the National Council of Catholic Women issued reports citing the commissions findings as an aushythentic summary of the nations ills Leaders of both groups pleaded for Catholic support for commission recommedations

The president of the National Council of Catholic Men N A Giambalvo expressed optimism that the recommendations of the report will be carried out and that the response of the publicwill be equal to the evil of the situation Stating t11at the report preshysents an appalling picture of mans inhumanity to man he said he believes that every thinking man and woman is prepared to make the sacrifices required for this nation to ~al

Name middotHeritQge Award Winners WASHINGTON (NC) L A

Methodist bishop a Protestant woman church leader and a Catholic industrialist willI re celve the top awards at the 18th annual Religious Heritage Of Ameri~a meeting June 6 her(l~

Lisle M Ramsey of St Louis RHA president said the selecshytions are Methodist Bishop Gerald H Kennedy of Los An- geles clergyman of the year J Peter Gra~e New YOrk president of W R Grace amp Co a Catholic layman churchshymap of the year and Mrs Stushyart S Sinclair Greenfield Masso former president of Church Women United churcb woman of the year

The awards ceremony will be held at the RHA annual banshyquet at which Dr Norman Vinshycent Peale clergyman and aushythor will be master of cereshy

mopies and Dr Kenneth Mc-shyFarland Topeka Kan educashytional consultant to the Amershyican rrucking Association will be the principal speaker

FORTY HOURS DEVOTION

April 21-St Paul Taunton St John the Baptist Fall

River

April 28-0ur Lady of Fati shyma New Bedford

St Michael Ocean Grove Holy Ghost Attleboro

filE ANCHOR

SecOftd Class Postage Paid at Fall RiVer Mass Published every Thursday at 410 Hlghlana Avenue Fall River Mass 027~ oy middotthe catholic Iress of the Diocese of Fall River Subscription price IIr lllaif postpalll$400 per year

this livid bleeding wound of our society

Giambalvo said he knows the members of NCCM are prepared to join in a collaborative proshygram with not only other Cathshyolic agencies but with the gov- ernment industry and institl1shytions and organizations in any intelligent program that will heal not only the effects of racshyism but racism itself

~We will not only continue the work weve been doing in this field of racial justice he concluded but will put our mirtds and hearts and pocket books to work on new programs equal to the task

The Council of Catholic Women said that the report has synshythesized capitalized and undershyscored the human tragedy that has found its best-or its -worst --example in the rampant rac- SOIREE FRANCAISE At a French CluQ sponsored ism in America today mansmiddot in- program at Prevost High School Fall River Bernard G humanity to man Theroux left long active in area French organizations In a statement issued by its president Mrs John Shieldsmiddoto was inducted as an honorary member of the club Others the NCCW said from left middotMrs Sabine Didelot representing the Freneh

Retain Dignity Consulate in Boston Broth~r Victor Belanger guest speaker Whether the crisis be house- -principal of La Mennais High School St Croix Que Wilfred

hold domestic strife expandingmiddot MiclJaud French CI~b presi~ent Brother Ovid For~ier club military entanglements abroa~ moderator shyor riots in the street - someshywhere somehow for lome inshy

)

sanely selfish purpose someone has forgotten that ineach hu- PlanmiddotmiddotCaucus

man existence whetherin Westshychester County orin Watts ormiddot in Hue there is dignityand that dignity must not be comshypromised

If we are to retain the dignity that has been the United States then we must not abort the digshynity that is the American Negro And if finally an impassioned plea from a presidential comshymission has enough substance to blast white America out of its lethal lethargy ~et us pray

_that it is not too late for the hushymaDity of all of u~

The National ASSOciaHon of Laymen~ headquartered iriMinshyneapolis called on the Church both as an institution and as people that comprise it to launch anmiddot middotimmediate revolution in attitudes and in financialpri shyoi-Hies in response to the eom missi~ns report

Choose Poverty Liaison Leader

LOUISVILLE (NC) - Priests in Louisvilles West End poverty area have elected a fellow priest to serve as a liaison in their social work programs -and help develop new programs

Father Anthony Heitzman is expected to assume his new post in about two months He is currently on leave to serve wIth the Russell Area Counell of the Cominunity ActionComshymission

Father Heitzman said ilPosshytolic work among the poor needs a new missiol1ary approacbshyvisible out making personal contact not sitting in therecshytory waiting

The Church has responsibility for leadership in the commushynity he said If a priest is not a shepherd to his nock he is not functioning asa priest

Asked about the possibility of riots in Louisville this Summer he said the feeling is there However he said he had been told by Negro colleagues that if there is a riot planned its aiready planned and if so its with outside influence

In a recent meeting with priests of the West End area Archbishop Thomas J McDonshyough urged new programs and approaches to the problems facshying the area

-

Negro Priests SchedlileM~etin9gt~~~~Jmiddot (1To C1ergy Conference

DETROIT (NC)-A group of Negro priests wIll hold a speshycial pre-conference caucus middothere

this year prior to the annual meeting of the Catholic Clergy Conference on themiddot Interracial middotApostolate

The conference is a national organization - of white and Negro priests who work in -lirbanghettosmiddot This is the first time in its 20-year historY that the black priestsmiddot have chosen to schedulemiddot a private gathering

of middottbeir own in addition tomiddot the full conference middotTbecaucus will meet on the morning ofmiddot April 16 in Detroit and the over-all conference will begin there that evening

Host and principal middotspeaker for the conference will be Arcbshybishop John F Dearden of Deshytroit president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops

Father Herman A Porter a Negro priest whigt is pastor of St Anns church an all-white parshyish in Warren IlL said the idea for the black caucus originated wIth a group of white and Negro priests who met to plan the annual meeting

Natural LeadellS middotThere was 8 feeling that

Negro priestsmiddot as a group have been looked upon by the black community as alienatedmiddot from tbe causes of civil rights and human dignity Father Porter stated He said the purpo~e middotof the biacJi caucuS is to dispel this illusion

AS priests we are natural leaders in these causes he stated We wailt to make this clear tomiddot our fellow black meR

Variety Show Attleboro area Catholic Young

Adult Organization members will presertt their annual vashyri~ty show at 8 Saturday night April 20 in Sacred Heart Church hall North Attleboro Theme wIll be Love Makes the World Go Round Tickets are aVailshyable from CYAO officers or Miss Eileen Nolan High Street North Attleboro program dishytecior

and to the leaderS of eur Church

Father Porter said the Negropriests will probably make it statement of their position when they join the full meeting after their own caucuS

He emphasized the black priests h~ve noin~eJWon9 f~~Iig 8 separatist orga~~za-

New Discussions j

At Holy Name A second series of Christlml

Living programs will begin 8 Tuesday night April 16 ampIt Holy Name school hall FaD River and will be open to the public ApreVious series drew an attendance of hundreds from all parts of the Diocese

Sponsored by the parish eouncil the programs will deal with topics of current impo shytance and will take place GO three successive TUesday nights

On April 16 a debate with reshybuttals and audience participashy

tion will concern itself with the war in Viet Nam Debaters will be Prof~ssor Richard D~~y Providence College and Proshyfessor Robert McCabe SmiddotM1 Moderator Will be Dr Paull Fletcher -Bristol County Com munity College

IFieedom Censorship On April 23 a XiIln The Co~

stitution and Censorship wiliTI be shown and group discussictil will be led by Sister MaJ8

Consilii RSM Salve RegillltO College She will be assistecll b an examination of freedom D1lil1l censorship in communicatioollo

media by Raymond Cheney 00shyradio station WALE and Thom~ McCloskey of the Provid6illlX) Iournal

Concluding the series a pan~ discussion on April 30 will ~ entitled Blessed IS the crlJmi inal Points of View on Recen~ Supreme Court Decisions M~ erator Will be Atty Freded~ Torphy Jr and panels wIll iD elUde Atty~ Ja~~s Beaney A~ William Long District Attornet Roger Sullivan and Po1Ice A-

Walter White

Necrol~gy APRIL 2G

Rev Edward F Coyle 88 1954 Sfmiddot Mary Seminary Pac St Baltimore

o -iPRIL RevJamell l- Smith ~9Ja

tioni or middot disassociatiilgmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddottnebl-middot Pastor SacredRcart Taun~ selves from the Catholic energy Rev Thomas F Fitzgertila CQ~erenCe 011 the lnteFraci~l Apostolate but may form a ioose association to work as a limson team hetweEm the bi9~k eOmmtiiiity and Churchleade

_ 1

Mass Ordo bull middot1 bullbull

FRIDAY~ FridayIcJass Block and Violet Sol~mn LJshy

turgicai Services SATURDAY-Holy Saturday l

Class Violet and White Mass Proper Blessing of Ne~ Fire

Paschal Candle Baptism8I Wat~r and renewal of Pro~shy

_ ises Mass of Easter Vigil SUNDAY-Easter The Resurshy

rection of Our Lord I Class White Mass Proper Glory Sequeilee Creed Preface Of

Easter (Easter Preface is u~ed each day till the Ascens~onmiddot

except in feasts with proPerprefaces)

MONDAY - Easter Monday I Class Whitemiddot MaSs Proper Glory Sequence Creed

TUESDAY - Easter TuesdltlY I Cl~Ss White Mass Proper Glory Sequence Creed

WEDNESDAY-Easter Wednesshyday I Class White Mau Proper G 1 or Y Sequence

Creed THURSDAY-Easter Thursday

1 CI~ Whte Mass Proper Glory Sequence Creep

Real Estate Rene ~ P~yant I~c bull Hyannis

279 Barnstable Road SP 5-0079

1954Pastorj St Mary INaJ1Ol 1uckel

middotAPRIL5 1

Rev John J Wade 1940middot AS aistaDt Sacred Heart Ji~ middotRiv~r ~~ Rev Fra~cis I Bradley D

1955 Rector CathedralFdRiver

I

Michael C Austin Inc

FUNERAL SERVICE

NEW BEDFORD MASS~

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Complete G

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Bristo~ County Trust Company

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middotTAUNTON GREEN

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3

Pontiff Honors Diocesan Laity

Pro Ecclesia et Pontiice Medal

Will Be Awarded to Four His Holiness Pope Paul-recognizing their efforts and

endeavors over the years-has honored three more diocesan men and a woman The Supreme Pontiff has awarded the four the Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice medal Most Rev James L Connolly Bishop of middotFall River ann 0 u n c e d today They are

Miss Margaret M Lahey 37 rorest St Fall River St Marys Cathedral Parish

Francois Bouchard 105 Dawshyeon St New Bedford St Joshysephs Parish New Bedford

lohn J Burke 344 Highland Ave Fall River Holy Name Parish Fall River

Dr David Costa Jr 325 Gardner St New Bedford Imshy~aculate Conception Parish ~ew Bedford

Miss Lahey daughter of the late Thomas E and Ida Kelly Lahey has been a teacher in the Fall River Public School System for 35 years and in the Diocesan School system for five years Second president of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women she has been particushyiBrly devoted in the field of tile education of exceptional ehildren For this zealous acshyvity she received the Diocesan arian Award in December

For ten ye~rs she has been bull principal coordintaor of the Anshynual Bishops Charity Ball whose proceeds are devoted to the care of exceptional chil shydren Mr Bouchard son of the late Joseph and Mary Richardson Bouchard is the husband of Lillian Duval and the father of six children He and his wife are both active in St Josephs Parish activities and Mrs Boushychard is a CCD teacher Supershyvisor for a construction firm Mr Bouchard is a trustee of St Josephs Parish served as parshyish chairIlan for the Bishop S~ang High School Drive in the Parish and is zealous in all parish endeavors

Mr Burke is undoubtedly the best-known of all diocesan emshyployees Maintenance man at the Bishops home and Chanshy REV DR MARTIN LUTHER KINH JR eery he has served both the late Bishop Cassidy and Bishop Connolly long and well Son of

Turn to Page Seventeen

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 11 1968

Approves Senate Ideas bull Full Catholic

Partidpataon in YMCA YWCA

bull Priests to Submit Names for New Bishops

bull Dioceses of Fall River and Provishydence Ex~h~nge

Faculties

TheMost Reverend Bishop has informed the Executive Committee of the Senate of Priests that he has approved several suggestions sent to him by the Senate

Rev John P Driscoll Presishydent of the Priests Senate has released the following items that have been discussed between the Senate and the Bishop and which have met with the Bishops apshyproval

In keeping with a discussiOll of the matter by the National Conference of Catholic Bishops

less than two hours later at St Bishop Connolly has said thatOn Wednesday April 3 the Catholics may participate fullynight before his death Rev Dr Josephs Hospital

Martin Luther King Jr issuedCharities Appeal leadersmiddot

Said Archbishop John Dear- in all programs of the YMCA and YWCAwhat in the light of later events den of Detroit president of the

Each year Ilhe Bishops of aftwillmiddot become a most moving National Conference of Catho- area meet after Easter to sendJo Hear Atty E B Hanify statement of his credo lic Bishops the next day to Rome the names of those

1 dont know what will hapshy Dr King gave his life formiddot priests whom they feel shouldAttorney Edward B Hanify a member of the Boston pen now he said We have others in the finest spirit of~ firm of Roper and Gray will openthe 1968 Catholic got difficult days ahead but Christian love Charities Appeal kick-off meeting at 2 Thursday afternoon it doesnt matter with me lgte-middot In Newark some 25000 partic-April 18 in the auditorium of 1ihe new Bishop Connolly cause Ive been to the mountain ipated in a Palm Sunday intershy

top Like anyone else I wouldHigh School Atty Hanify faith and interracial Walk forlike to live a long life But Im Understanding through thewas born in Fall Rivermiddot Oct State Street Bimk and Trust notmiddotconcerned with that 1 just ghetto area where last Summers1 1912 He is the son of the Co and Boston Edison Co want to do Gods will and He has

He is a trustee of the Provident rioting took place The longallowed me to go up themounshyIRte Superiormiddot Oourt Judge Institution for Savings in Bosshy scheduled march was rededicat-

IMward F Hanify and Mary ton tain ed to Dr King bull (Brodkorb) Hanify A grad- Atty Hanify is a member Auxiliary Bishop John J Dougshy

of Holy Cross College National Advisory Council on I the land I herty of Newark president ofute see promised Class of 1933 summa cum laude Education of Disadvantaged may not get there with you but Seton Hall University was and of the Harvard Law School Children lifemiddot trustee of Tufts I want you to know tonight that among the hundreds of religious LLB 1936 he married Jane Univoersity trustee secretary we as a people will get to the leaders in the march Dillon of Waterbury Conn in director John Fitzgerald Kenshy promised land He prayed that Dr Kings1940 ~ey have three children nedy Library member of Execshy spirit ~ay rise to haunt the Edward B Hanify Jr Jane A utive Committee National Cathshy hearts and minds of all AmerishyI am not worried about any-Hanify and John Dillon Hanify olic Community Service and cans till we have the victory forthing Im not fearing any manThe Hanify family resides in president of Family Counselling which he gave his life Mine eyes have seen the gloryBelmont The guest kick-off and Guidance Centers Inc From Chicago where DrsPeaker served during World of the coming of the Lord

Kings marches caused racial formerly as chairman Board of strife in 1965 and where his death touched off one of the nashy

Val II as a Lieutenant USNR The guest speaker served

Atty Hanify is a director of Advisory Trustees Holy Cross The next night just before he the American Telephone and College member Board of Visshy was middotto leave his motel for an tions severest riots John CardishyTelegraph Co John Hancock itors of United States Military engagement Dr King stepped nal Cody said he was deeply~utual Life Insurance Co Academy 1962to 1965 chairman onto the balcony of his room and ~ismayed at the news of the

of the 1950 Greater Boston bent to pick up something He tragic passing of Dr Martin Tum to Page Eighteen was shot in toe neck and died Luther King

~This Is the Day the Lord Has Made

The Risen Saviour is freshyquently represented as a lamb The glory that surshyrounds the figure indicates the triumphant Resurrection and the beginning of the life of glory which Christs Reshydemption secured for all men who beliveve and make use of the means of Grace which He extends to mankind

The figure of the lamb is one of the many which in

ATTY EDWARD B BANIFY the fourth century are found

Page One explanation

on the stone coffins and alshy80 bull in the basilicas of Romemiddot and Ravenna He was ofshyfered because of his own will He shall be led as a sheep to the slaughter and shall be dumb as a lamb beshyfore his shearer (lsa liii 7)

The Paschal Lamb ismiddot repshyr~sented carrying a s t a f f with cross and pennant The staff represents the cross and the pennant which is

always white with a red cross upon it represents the Body of Christ

The drawing points out that Christ is the new way leading into the holy place through A new and living way which He hath dedicated for us through the veil that is to say His Flesh (Heb x 20) Of this Lamb the Church sings in the Preface Christ our Pasch was sacri shyficed

be taken into consideration to be named as bishops Bishop Connolly asks that the priests of the Diocese acting individual1T or through the Senate as a whole send to him any names of priesta whom they feel should be so considered

Bishop Connolly and Bishop McVinney of the Providence Diocese baveexchangM the fashyculties of the two Diocesesshypriests holding faculties (pel shym~ions) to hear Confessions

Turn to Page Ten

Bishops Attend Funeral Rites Of Dr King

ATLANTA (NC)-Archshybishop Terence J Cooke of New York and Bishop John J Wright of Pittsburgh headed the Catholic Church delshyegation at the funeral rites of slain Dr Martin Luther King

Thousands and thousands at shytended the ceremonies which had to be conducted out of doors after the religious service at the Ebenezer Baptist Church for the former leader of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference

The principal advocate of truth love and justice in his non-violence campaign for the Negroes Dr King attained natshyional fame for his work

Businesses schools courts banks and the New York Stock Exchange were closed on Tuesshyday last when leaders from evef7 activity in the United States were represented at the final exercises honoring the Southern mlnistel who procured his doctor of theshyology degree from Boston Unishyversity

4 THE ANCHOR-Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs Aprl1 1968

The Parish Pdlrade J(OLY NAME

FALL RIVER

ContemJ)orary music will ae eompany the 1115 Mass Easter Sunday morning

Altar boys will rehearse at 10 tomorrow and Saturday mornshyings for Holy Week services

A Christian Living Series will begin at 8 Tuesday night~

April 16 in the school hall and eltgtntinue fbr the two Tuesday evenings follovying Subiects will include Viet Nam the problem of censorship and points of view on recent Sushypreme Court decisions The meetings will be open to the public

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs Frank Kingsley president (re-elected) Mrs Lawrence Graffam vice-presishydent Mrs Dennis Cook seere- tary Mrs Richatd Wordell treasuller Mrs Milton Bednarz financial secretary The guild viewed a film depicting the life of Christ at its April meeting

HOLX NAl1E NEW BElIJFORD The Womens Guild and the

Holy Name Society will sponsor a penny sale on Wednesday evening April 17 in the Holy Name FraU corner of County and Studley Streets

The proceeds will benefit the school fund

ST KILIAN NE BEDFORD

lhe Womens Guild will con duct a whist pavty at 730 Wedshynesday evening ApJiL 17 in the schooL on Ear-Ie street

MvSi HeIJVe) euroanon chahlmanj has announced that in addition

to the regular plJizes there will also) be special attendance awards

Senior Atbfete Studenli Award

StonehiU College basketball eo-captain Rick Pariseau has been named the Outstanding Student Athlete in the senior class

The New Bedfold resident re ceived the award at the annualmiddot Honors ~ssembly from college president Rev fohnT Corr (S1euro

The awardl goes to vile senior athlete with high scholastic average and outstanding qualshyities off chal1aeter and leadershyship noted Father Corr

The award is the highest hon or an athlete can receive at StonehilL College Paniseau was co-captaiil of the basketball teaml for tile past two seasom

This year coach George Blaney used the 63 Pariseau as his top defensive specialist Ricks as signment each game wasmiddot to stop middotthe oppositions leading scorer

Paniseau a graduate of Holy FamiJlY High averaged 77 points per game this season paying fiwwardl He was tile second leading rebounden on the Chief tain teaml

ltd like to hale been a lotmiddot more the athlete and a lob less the scholar kiddedl Pariseau when he reaei led hismiddot medaL

The ruggedl basketball player shinesmiddot in themiddot classroom Here at StonehLll he is a dcanis list stugt dent magoning in chemistry

Rutgcrsl DelawaJe ancV the UnilersLty of New Hampshire have oLfcned Paliseau g)aduate schooL soholal1ships

Padseau pianamp to oontinue his studies in envil10nmental chemshyistry after completion ot his two yean military obligation His special interest is conservashytion

OUR LADY OF ASS-lJ~lPTION

OSTEItVnmE

The public is invited~ to the Annual Penny Safe sponsored by the Parish Guiloi at 8 on Friday evening Apnil 19 in tile Osterville Elementary SchooL Auditorium

Mrs Lawrence Jones- and Mrs Peten Fermino co-chairmen are being assisted by a large com mittae

OUR LAlI)Y OF ANGlElI

FALL lRnmm

The Holy Name Socie~ will sponsor a baseball trip Sunday Tuly 21 Tickets- ane now avail shyable from Joe Theodore and Tony Michaels-

Adoration will take place from 8 to midnight tltJnight and from 630 tomorrow mornshying to 4 in the afternoon lJhe Solemn Liturgy will be celeshybrated at 4 oclock and stationsshyof the cross will fbllow at 7

Easter Vigil services will take place at 8 Saturday night

The COuncil-orCatnolla Women announces a chamarJta and dance from a to midnighti Sat urday night Apl1il 27 witH the shySilvelr Moon~ Qrcne1ta supplyshying the music Ilhe councWs annuall Uommuniol1 olJeakfltlsti will be heler following 8 oclock Massmiddot Simday morning ~ray 5

Holy Rosary Sodality will hold its corporate Communion aitd breakfast following 8 oclock Massmiddot Sunday movning Aprif 28

SIJ JOSEBB FALL RIVER

Tickets for the parish gala and dinner-dance must be purchased by Eastel3 Sunday

Seventh graders in the paroshycllial school will conduct a paper drive saturday tyenpril 20 Con tributions will be piekedup at homes Dbnors may maKe arshyrangements b)l calling JosepH Keefe atl 6725331

LegianJ ol MQr~

To Honolt Soint The New Bedford Curia oll

the Legion of Mary will comshymemOlate the Feast of St Joshyseph- the WorRer on Wednesday evening May 1 at St Manys Home New Bedford

Mass wilf be offered at 7 by Rev Albert F Shovelton spiT inial director of the New Bed~

ford Curia and amiddot social and reshyfreshment peviodi will fbUbw

Ilfte eveniilg open toi only active members of the Legion oft Mary ismiddot beinggt ar-ranged) by lirene Mar-tin cllairman Marian Hutclliilson Maureen Kennedy Margaret Downey and Margallet Roche

Bishops of Guinea Seek Vocafuons

CONAKRY (NC)-The shortshyage of priests caused by the exshypulsion of European missionshyaries from Guinea last yeaJ has prompted the bistiops of the country to issue a pastoral lefshyter urgently appealing for voshycationsmiddot to the prieshood and religious life

lJhe letter was issued an the end of a meeting of the oistiops conference here ArclHjishop Raymond~Marie Tc IllildiF mlbo euroSiSplmiddot oli COnakll)l F at her Raphael Teal apostolic adminis tJator of the diocese of NZere~ Rore and Father Louis Barry apostolic administrator off the apostolic pJefecture of Kankan attended the Jjl1eeting

TRAiJNs fRlAIQU SltlUDENTS Father Robert R Campbell~SJ of ChelmsfOld MasS~ chats witl1J L11aqi studenta at Nr-Hikmw lJhiversfty Baghdad~ Iraq where me New ID~ gland pllOjnaegt Jes-uitJ is head of the departmentmiddot of socaI sCiences training young leadera

to make theil contributions to the development of their country NC Photo

BagampdadlIrish Jesuit Heads Un~ersity IraqSfresses Confidence in Future

NEW YiQRK (NG)-That1s something fOI3 an Irishman isnit it chuckIed Father Richard J McCanlhM SJ president of AI-Hikma Universiiy in Bagh~

dadi Iraq He was referring to a volume of which he is the author-A Book of Arabic Ser shymons

Brother Alfred a fOImer facshyulty member at Al-Hikma

nodded and said If that seems strange you should have heard the eulogy he preached in Arashybic at President Kennedys memorial Mass

The conversation took place in New York where the two friends Had a reunion preceding Father McCartnys tour of tne lTnitedl States 10 talk about AlshyIfikmaslt accompliMiments- and its goals for the future _ The Jesuit soholan a member of the New England Province took a doctorate in Arabic at Oxford Ire tias worked in BagHdad for 30 years and pub-

lished tflree volumes in IslamiCshytheology tyenl-Hikma University was foundedl in 1956 bymiddot the IxaqAmerican Educational Asshysociation

Answcrsmiddot Requests This- association approved by

Ixaqs minis-trymiddot oli the interioIl is made up principally of Jesshyuits from New England and Iraq 1m 1932 it founded Bagn dbd UlJlege~ now a flouvislling secondary school for boys in Sulailrh l a northern suburb of the city

The esteeml enjoyed by Bagh dad College led to numerous reshyquests by Iraqis of different faiths andJ all wallamp of lifemiddot fur em-ablishment of an lnstitution on the unLversity level

AL-Hikma was and is our answer to those jmiddotequestsbull Father Mcltt1lthy stated n is also the concrete expres9ion )f our long felt desire to make a gneaten aontJributionl tomiddot the rapidly developing country of modern Iraq

Ilhe priest said the establisll menti ou the universify was made possible by several g~fl$

and gJants whiCh were ct testa mony of the donors confidence iI~ the future of Iraq and in the contrioutioil whicn the Jesuits could make to it

A gift from the Iraq governshyment of 170 acres of randwas supplemented by grants from the Ford Foundation the Calshyouste Gulbenkian Foundation and otlier agencies

Oriental Institute Al-HiKma is the Arabic word

signifying wisdom Father MoshyCarth~ noted It is an approshypriate name for a uniersity in Baghdad The institution known as Bait Al-hikma middotwas one of the glories of medielaL BalWp dadbull Tlieremiddot Iraqi scholars transshylated futo Arabic the wisdom and science of tJie Greek-s- wliiCh had III profoul1lL influence on the thought and~ culture ofmiddot medieval and modemmiddot Europe

It is almost imPos9ible to overemphasize the impoItanoe of the promotionol interoultushyral understanding es-teem and

ORTINS Phom Supply 245 MAIN STREET FALMoUTH-$48f91a

ARMAND ORTINS Prop

cooperation particularly in the context of the modern world Father McCarthy stated

He was enthusiastic about plans fOr foundation of the Orishyental Institute of AI-Hikma We would like it to be a modshyern Bait Alhikma where soholl shyars ancL students from the East and tlie West will meet on hup man intellectual and culturai levelS for ilieir mutuaL enrich ment and profi1 he said

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5 Expect Approval Of Inter-Church Agency i~ l~~as

[JAN ANTONIO (NO) shyRwttfication ()f D proposed eonstitution by every Chrisshytian denomination i11 the fibte may result in a new Texas tnter-ehurch cooperation agenshyey according to the executive director of the Texas Catholic Conlelence organization of the ampites Catholic bishops

CaHan Graham made the preshydiction here shortly after a mashytDritv of delegates to the 15th annual general assembly of the re[(t3 Council of Churches wted to join with the 10Cathshytiic dioceses in Texas to form the nations first state-level ebureh body uniting Protestant Boman Catholic and Orthodox ~hllrenes

The1raquooposed constitution for che Texas Conference 1)1 Churehes as the united body is tID be known is now sUbject io i(ltification by the 11 Protesshy~t member organizations Bnd fihe Orthodox who comprise the arras Council of Churches It in llso subject to approval by fhe 10 Catholic dioceses in Te3B

Bishops to JIacide lbe boald of directors of the

le2tQ3 Catholic Conference has ldready approved the proposed

dlleW constitution in principle Graham said but it must still be oonsidered by each individshya bishop for his own diocese

Graham said the Texas Cathshync ConIerence itself wUl beshylaquo)Re G membtu of the new 01shy

pnilation but wm also continshy~ fo funotion autonomously

lie traced the proposed 01-

miltation 10 the MatCh 1966 mooting of frhe Texas COUDcll fII Churches general asSembly when an invitation was issued to ~tholics to join theCQuncil

4CAs G result this information was trnnsmitted to the bislu)P$ ~ham recalled The bishQP3 decided we didnt know enough tlbout the counoilandbotb sides began ) study more than bull Jlear-and~a-half ago

New OODfititllltnOD ~t of these discussions both

td~ tried to take a iresh look middot1IIt the existing constitution ol ampbe council he continued 1nshyad of talking about joining bull lllew proposed constitution foi IeOrganization was submittedtgt tile Catholic bishops

The proposed new constitushyGoo GIaham explained is deshygned to bringabout better ~ ~ration affiOlg all alw~hes mm office llQ$ already cbeen -operating

Before the (council -invited eatholic membership Catholic pr~ests and laymen had attendshylid meetings ofthe Texas Counshy_I raquof Churches for two year official observers

Prelate Keynoter A1Convention

CINCINNATI (NC)-Keynote _~~er attne golden Jubilee Cltholic Students MissionCrnshy-deconvention Aug 22 to 25 laquo the University -(jf Notre Dame will be Bishop Jphn J Wright of Pittsburgh

bo highlighting the 50th -niversary df the mJ1liOlllshymember youth organization wiU be the presen~ -of Father Cllfshytom JKing SVD Divine

Worn missionary who founded Cbe CSMC

middotThe crusade headquartera here said a pageant -depicting both the mission history of Amelica and the career of the ~l1C will be staged in the OO~ OLaughlin auditorium Qf m Marys College adjacent to Notre Dame Student grouP ~n 16 areas of the U S wlM ~e Alart

VISITING THE SliCK When Pope Paul recently vjsited the working-class Prenestino district of Rome he took time to visit bed-ridden 83-year-old Teodoro Tarquini The Holy Father offered Mass in Italian at the parish church of St Leo NC Photo

Defend Textbo~kLaw cinShowdown Case JE-dllCltlJion OrganiotiollS File middotEcumenical Brief

in the ease oaidnomatter whatschoolsth~ One blief was middotfiled in behalf child ran attend

of the National Catholic Eduea The brief contends the ar~-tioruJlI AsSociation theLutheran Education Association middotthe Nashy Halmony in Churchtiolllll Union Of Chtistiaa

BONN (NC) -There is com- ISchools and tl1le National Conshyplete harmony in the Catholicierence of Yeshiv Principals Church in tungaIY among the

ment that s~(lte aid in supplying middottextbooks in secular sUlgtiects to children in nonpublic schoob is 4 direetaid to religion is Irivolous

The attorneys general brief contends a state may extend publicly financed aid such as police fire protection public safety and transportation to school 9tudents whether in public or private schools The brief contends that the textbook law falls within the category 0pound sunh poundlid since it benefits the student not the school

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 11 1968

Protesa- ~HEhcps

In IPaf~fi1lm~rd BARCELONA (NC)-Leadefll

oi 30 lay apostolate groups in Barcelona have petitioned two high-ranking Spanish prelates to resign their government-apshypointed posts in the nation~

parliament the Cortes We believe the Second Vatshy

ican CouncUs directives are very clear on this point the

petitioners pointed out to Archshybishop Casimilo iVlo ICill0 of Madrid vice-president of the Spanish Bishops Conference and Auxiliary Bishop Jose Guerra Campos of Madrid

A spokesman at the iladrid chancery office reported that an oerage of 40 letters a day middotare received on the subject some in favor some against the bishops presence on a governshyment political body

The Barcelona document pointed out that this is a matshyter that deeply affects th~ Church in our country

If furthermllre we take into account the fael that great numshybers particularly among the workers have left the Church because of Ets liaison with the state there is no possible reason to continue the symbol of such a union the document emphashysized

A m on g the organizations making the request were the Workers Catholic Actfon the sodalities the Catholic Student Youth Organization the Indeshypendent Youth Association the Spiritual League 01 Our Lady of Monserrat the Pax Christi Movement and the Catholic Rural Youth Organization

(ORREIA amp SONS ONE STOP

SHOPPING CENTER

bull Television bull Grocery bull Appliances bull Furniture

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WASHlNGTON (NC) -Forshymidable forces from Churehshystate ranks forged a defense of the 1966 New york state textshybook laws validity fox the i~

pending showQownbefore the United States Supreme Court

A ptiest jQined tbe -gentlral counsel of the USmiddotCatholicConshy

ference in filing an ecumenicalshybpe brief nn behalf ofnational Catholic Protestant and Jewish educational organizations urging the nations highes tribunal to uphold the law

The attorneys general of three stat~s in another briet joined in supporting the contenshytion of New Yo-rkAtty Gen Louis J Lefkowitz that the only beneficiaries ot this law Ire students and their parenUi not schools andconsequently the law is constitutional

The friends 02 th1l court (amici curiae) briefs were filed in preparation for the hIgh courts consideration ot the law Which provides that the state fUlllishIree textbPokg insecu WI subjects to students 0pound palOshy(lhimiddotai and other nonpubUe schools The court has yet to schedulemiddot8 date for argumenill

aid to benefit a religious group But the wall of separation is

between Church and state not between the child and the

State the educational groups brief reminded Since the Sushypreme Court decided the Evershy30n case in 1947 l different tack has b~en pursued by the court in considering state aid directly to students whether they attend public or private schools the blieI underscored

Tee brief states that 85 per -cent of grammar and highscool students in the nation attend public schools either because their parents prefer that type of education oibecause the choice is dictated by economic necessity The other 15 per cent are in nonpublic schools and more than 90 per cent 1)f them GlTe in church~related schpo13 the brief adell

Frivolous Argument The educational ~ups do

not not contend the state must supply assistance to nonpublie f1Chool children but if it exshymiddottends secular educational beneshy~its 00 all school children thea it is within middotthe state eonstitushymiddottional discretion to supply such

Father Charles M Whelan bishops priests and laymen altgt May we rejoice forever in tfu~51 of Fordham University law cording to ll report in Magyarschool joined William R Conseshy tloryof middottheResurrection Kurir the Hungarian Churchs dine usec general counsel in official news agency WOhicb filing the briel Hannon Burm noted that the Hungarianof the NCEA Francis X Gallagshy Church seems to be free of tile her of aaltimoe and Alfred ~ dissension lthat exists in the Scanl-an of Washington served EhuiCb Bpoundt man Westem JOYOUS GREETINGS as consultants in preparing tbe oountries brieC

The other brief -was Jiled by ~ OFFI(IRS TRUSTEES CORPORATORS AND STAFF At~ys Gen James L Oakes of Vermont William C Sennett ofPenllsylvania -Dod Herbert F DiSimone of Bllode Island

The educational group cmshygthasized they do not want raquo see the wall f separation beshytween Church and stateleilliei disnuintled or displaced would oppose the znoot paltrY wnouut of direct governmentllil

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~ itizens 1

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6

They expect to hear religious leaders speak in those tenns history to one local or to a certain segment ofour8OCh~tyrhe race issue was- injecte41

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall RiverThurs Apr 1l19~8 Rx for Renewal J

Accomplishi1lJg the Dream The senseless and savage and tragic death of Dr

Martin Luther King Jr is not the end Of his nonviolence erusademiddot But it should bring a deepening realization of

what nonviolence entails The Ghandian Way of nonviolence is not simpiy a techshy

nique of sittiIig on sidewalks and not moving a matter of being passive and silent in the face of attack~ verbal or physical It embraces moie than that

It is basically-and Dr King middotknew this-a spiritual force As a former Governor General of India has remarked The renunciation ofmiddot external violence is not enough but must be accompanied by asepsis of the heart for the sucshycessful surgery of nonviolence How can One love where there is so much cause for hatred The answer lies in everyshyones heart and can be appealed to through love and then and then Only will the man be changed

Nonviolence means bringing to bear against the forces of hatred and prejudice and ignorance the still more powshyerful force of intelligence and education and love of God and neighbor Nonviolence means ~eeting overcoming evil by the sheer power of courage and work and love

This Dr King understood This alone will accomplish his dream

Sniritual Leaders r

Lay people are being urged to get more and more inshyvolved in the work of religion When they do they many

th h f t b times make more sense t han ose w 0 pro ess 0 e teachers middotof religion

Last week for example a professor at the Harvard Divinity School and the Episcopal TheologiCal School said that sex between unmarried persons could be morally good or bad depending upon the situation And during the same week the chief of the Psychiatric Service Harvard Unishyversity Health Services took colleges and parents to task forcondoning free sex behavior in youth and f9r not bolshystering young people in maintaining high moral standards He counselled chuicli leaders notmiddot to abandon Ii spiritual ap

peal-toyoutll puttomaintainlheif ttaditional religious Ap proach to reinforce high moral standards

So hereismiddotthe picture-a religious lea~~rseeingl1ot~ ing wrong in sex between the unmarried and a ~ymaJl

~ Ateeing everything wrong InIt -

In the light of the Gospels the theologian is _Wrong pat _y Gn ~ n i _ereneemiddot and the layman is right shy

And this is why religious leaders arein many -inshylltailces losing whatever credentials tliey Duiy possess 10 The senseless murder of Dr Martin Luther Xng Jr

Pl d d th f od agaln brlmiddotngs lnto focus the vlolence that ImiddotSmiddot ours Yes 0urs 1ead eop e are en owe WImiddot a meas~re 0 go _sens~ bull They have some ideas about the main thrustmiddot of the Gospelsbull -Too often we have relegated the dark pages of our natio~

And when they hear deviations then they write off the We seem to fool that the religious leader and listen to him no more Of course those events which took place in fortable christianity I I Even m our own locale 1he who are looking for justification for some type of action ~emphls ha~e Itt ~ connec- people who could have doneso that the religious leader approves will be glad to welcometlOn WIth thIS area of the much reillly have contributed him to the bandwagon And then the responsible Jaymen-shythe physicians and psychiatrists and civic leaders and those who are concerned about the moral and family health of the

community--must move into the scene and try to repair the damage done

Perhaps this can be the message of Easter-instead of talking about the resurrection in glowing and lyrical terms

instead of speaking about glory and joy the -reaJ message of Easter is one of love of God for men and love of men

for God And Christ gave the standard of Love-If any man love me he will keep my commaridments~Iid themiddotmiddot party orperscgtn cOncerns him-Father and Iwill love him and we will come to hIm and

_ we will makemiddot our abode with him Theoiogians mayor may not understand the full imshy

plication of thesemiddot words For the most partthe people do even if their actions at times do nqt measure up~ T~ey

understand - amJ th~y expect the~r ~pjritual advisors1q lnderstand and to preach these Gospel words all Gospelmiddot words

rheANCHOR P~~ I fnVImiddotrE~ OF T~E DIOCESE OF FILl PVER Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River

410 Highland Avenue Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev iohn P Driscoll

- MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

nation A certain emotional sympathy

is created by the vivid -reality middot of the television For the most part it is just another drama that will pass in time and thingS will go on and a~lwill be well This indeed is thetragedy of Memphis

Natio~al problems cannot be conidered to be isola~ed events When ~ national mQvement

self wi~h the basic principles 01human existence all humanity is involved Such is the ease memo~ are the people wh- Bishop JOseph-middot LBerilllrcii

with Civil Rights such is the -re still III the depths of 8Uffer-middot Will serve as adminiStratOr iii ease and the movement pre-~ Thu~ when ~ new genera- tbe Atlanta Archdiocese linti serited to the nation by Dr ti9G recelves th~ mherIta~ elf a successor is named for Martin Lutl1er ~ing poverty the prospe~IS ~ 13te Archbishop Paul j Hammiddotmiddot Yet the majority of Ameri- Ul~ first to deny that they ue cans have for mimygenera-middot his heirs This is true of most tions considered ~e plight of men regardless of the color ttl the urban ghetto from the com- 1heir skiil This is what we fortable ~rm-chair of a com- must kUly overco~

Now ISTime for CiiI Rights Concern The words of Dr King cershy

tainly were not understood by the senseless mobs that took to the streets of our cities after his death Nor were they undershystood by the majority of white middle-class Americans

The apathy and lack of genshyuine concern for the civil rights movement among this group is galling

It is these factors that aHow mad men to assassinate We

middotmus condemn the lack of un middotaerstanding the disdainful atti-middot

t hi euro moonIn(j

1lt ng e a reported there

Rev Johnf Moore St Josephs Taunton were~good and sufficient ~ middotIA lilA Inimiddoto~hi~~t~~~~bers~

The Tragedy of Mempmiddothmiddots _ I

h d I d ff

tude and the smug selfshyrighteousness of our bourgeoismentality

To claim that we are all for the civil rights movement and then to deny a home to a man because he is negro loots the middotmind and arsons the spirit of our scciety even to a greater degree than a street mob It is the spirit of our society the spirit of our country that is at stake

Any hope of postponing a 00shycision em this matter died at

so very little The structured class system that has been our inheritance from our early New England ancestors has been only insulated and protected by the progress of an affluent aociety

When a man makes good hetends to leave the memories of his afflicted past in the voidof a twilight z(me The blood middotsweat and tears poverty ~ ~n forgotten in the land ol gracious living TemporarY Heaci

Even more removed fJoa tlTLANTA (NC) -Amiddotuxilia~

Priests Senate Votes Support Of OrdinarY

BUFFALO (NC) ThirteeJl of 21 members of the Buffalo Senate of Priests have votedmiddot to support Bishop James amp McNulty in a controversy SIDol

rounding the transfer of a priesi from a Negro ghetto parislli Eight members of the senato abstained from voting

The controversy began when Father William G Warthling was transferred from St Nicltshyolas parish in Buffalo to O~

Lady Help of Christians parisJl in the suburb of Cheektowaga

Father Warthling and some members of St Nicholas parislli charged that Bishop McNuIQ transferred the priest because he encouraged the Holy Name ~iety to seek membership _ BUILD a militant social actiC group formed under the leade~ ship of Saul Alinsky contJicgt versial ooinrnunity organizei

Members of the parish and ci1 BUILD staged a protest demo~

stration in front of Bishop ~ Nultys residence

Msgr Bernard J McLaughiiC5 diocesan chancellor said thl transfer of Father Warthlin(]

was routine _but said the die-shycese frowns on the methocilo which BUILD uses middotto better tho lot of the Negro communit~

Sufficient Reasons At the height of the controshyversy the Buffalo Senate of

Priests met to hear a report of the Priests Advisory Board OIl

li~e trTahnsfebor 0rd Father Warthshyf

nan bull

---------~--shyMemphis

If we wish to contin1e NonViolent doctrine of 0shyKing it is now up to us IIIe time for dQlay has passed Either we commit ourse shyto the principles that were to tered and dramatized by 0shy

King or we perish in the flaJJ of anarchy and civil discord

The assassins bullet again forced America to make a dedshy

sion In a country in an area where the majority claim to be Christian we better start liviDa the Christian ethicmiddot and tile Christian message of love _ another as I have loved yoshyIf we refuse to accept this meeshysage we fail not only lt~ll natiOlll but also as a Christian pe~

In the controversy by a BUILD spokesman who said BishOJlMcNultys removal of Fathel Warthling reflected apatNgt izing attitude toward black people and a general lack ef understanding of ghetto probshylems Msgr Neylon said all senate members rejected charge

All 21 members of the senatlrl VOted for a motion to appoint committee to make public theworks and programs which the diocese has developed amo~ minority groups and in the ner city

shy

Voted support for BishOpmiddotat N~1tY on thetransfer isBoIlEigJjtpries~ abstainedfroin ie vote on the grounds that apite the boards explanaiiclli the issue was still not clear -

However each of the ei priests who abstained from

ing said they deplored middotcharg6f racism against Bishop M0shy--Nulty according to Msgr lolie Neylon senate president

7 middotMrsmiddotmiddotmiddotStewart Fails to Tell Casey Story Convincingly

By Rt Rev Msgr John S IKelIDedy

Ramona Stewarts Casey (Little Brown 34 Beacon St Boston Mass 02106 $695) is anovel which promises more than it delivers Itsmiddot action begins in 1860 concludes in 1886 and HI laid in New York City The focus is on Tom Casey aged 20 at the start A native of Ireland he remembers the horrors of County Cork in the years of Qle great famine His family Bed their home went to LivershyPOOl- suffered muough a fiveshy

weeks voyageIlrJ a sailinglib i p finallyderer Il the citys resources eettled in New even moves briefly on the

York For them middotftinges of the gaudy nouveau I A m e I i e a richeset typified by Jim Fisk

008 not turned ltlmt to be the

jijlromised land Like thousandstillld thousands ef the Irish

t th New York ltBOWded

10 0 e dums they are abysmally

~~eir homes are decrepit verminous tenements Their jabs are menial ill paid and dancy They are despiSed by the natives both for their nashyampnai origin and for their reli shyfIion They meet violence at the lhands of brutal nativists No opportunity opens up for them lJDd they are without hope

Elab$mte Setting

n is plain thet Miss StewaIi lhas done thorough rese~rch clgt1l1

the period Bet pages are

But-middot when his boss Maguire breaks with the big boss Tweed CasEiyS ascent ill reshyversed Tweed however is exshyposed and undone and pious John Kelly takes over as head of Tammlllny~

casey relllizes tiliJilt it is opshyportune for him to repudiate

Maguire and strike out on his own Ihis he does to the imm~ diate signal improvement of his lot but lllt the price of Maguires bUter enmity

AdvaIltageMJS Marrul1ge Casey now marries one EileeZl

Callahan liI doctors daughter a chilly lace curtain Irish sort It is not a happy marriage but it iJiI respectable and advantashy

geous Casey is appointed citY ~coroner attl ~tosalary with Per

qUlsites But there i~t yet aJ1oth~r reshy

paCked with detallmiddot She hasmiddotmiddot versal til store for him On mounted a viVid mid elaborate election day 1~74~ he goes ooIJting for nero story But the about to see that his forces are

~ (ftory does not live ormiddot inove It performing properly (which abounds in incident it has com- means improJgterly) he isdraWn

plications galorebut it lacks into an altercation with Ma- ~tality arid never generates guire power Why this should be it is Casey taking a physIcal at first hard to tell beating from the bigger Mashyo~ Tom Casey sne~as a ~g- guire draws a pistol and shoots bull who should be mterest1Og Htt hits t M gur b t f

ImiddotToiil is inteUigenl middotandrug~ middottlie latte~ miihioris~Te~~hcJl ~t he left school atmiddot 13 He n()vi Ismortal CaseY- is1ndicted pound01(

realizes th~t be can~et ~ ~urd~r tried l~t out on bail here never break ~l1t 01 ~~ ~heI1 a hung jury evenWates

iitifling meager wretched woHdof his k1Od IDs one asset seellW imd ultdmately gOeS free1JnaeeouJmtabi Re Co be brawn

lJOmething -hi Which counts for the braw~gk middotHe w no~

e eolery disgraced in debt

Which his Arsenal Gimg in- witbout poundI Jobmiddot probably permaQ

dulges and in the work of tblii nently estranged from his wife Pacifid Company of volunteer One might suppose thatmiddotthis was firemen to which he belongs the end of t~e story But no 1m

As he looks about he recog Cl middotfinal s~ctwn d~ted 12 years ftizes that the way to some ad later he is the chIef deputy andshy~cement and aggrandizementmiddot lUre successor of ag~ng ailing fl through politics He observ~ middotampss Kelly He is almost at the John Maguire who at 37 io top and it all means nothingmiddot olderman saloonkeeper aD ell ne of the flaws 10 t~e novel mstrict leader of the Twentyshy s Illustrated by the diSJuncture ~t ward middotbetween Caseys fall because oil

Air PI ti tillemiddot murder case and his unae-middot bull cq1lll es es ge countable recovery Therecov-

MagUire is of course a Twt- ~ middotis never explained We ~ny m~ He dresses well dont know how it was done wears dlamon~ studs hai middotIJ We are simply presented withmiddot middotmiddotmiddotsion said the problem ofmiddot realiz Long-Range PllOgn-ams

go~d-headed caneCasey cop~ $t and asItedlmiddotto take it On faith -log tqe recommendations it In cooperation with 22 other ~ ~ude~ that ~e must gcentt ~n ~~l middotmiddotllIWl at the end tberebe- made on treating lhe ghe~to ~orgahizations NCCI1 bas

1- ~agulre - ~ middotmiddotOOmes glaring something whichi Bf~ does through ~s prov~_ all alongimiddot has nagged at tne

gt111 lID 19hting But h~ progre~middotlY rreadernanaely~the s~ddampn leaps - Yery slow True he geta 11 Cl to ltile _~ lemiddotaps acr~-

Il1o which involves Db dU~I~ improbable nnd unexplored at all but allows him to sp~ndzhasms aU hiS time wardheeUng for Timelilness iD Novel

Maguire He acquires B little A more seriousmiddot flaw is thAprestige even a little Power But h is till tty an potatoe~ G pre 1m

But then suddenly Maguire ebief henchman die and Mashyguire himself in hi gn f _

s e per petrates an egregIOUS act of folly Casey is at hand to helplIDd succeeds in concealing Mashypires drunken blunder onl to become involved with n gid Maguire hIllS B8S lted

u Ascent Reversed

She is Claire Scofield whO elm give the appearance of

~Jadylike innocence but is act~ bull rally a vix~ She and Case

never marry 1m her avidity for possessions and eventually poshymUon sine keeps driving Casey taunting him with his inconseshyquence and urging him 10 bold steps

He becomes an alderman gew to know 30ss Tweed head of Tammany and notorious plunshy

failumiddotre lIll development of charshy~r ~is is most notice~ble ou tOO mstance of Casey hlmshyself wile rem~~a naDe and a type never nngmg true as a complex person The same is true of the borde of others whO pour through tIl1e book Be they

major Gr mInor hlStOriC~ or ~onlh ~y are WIthout mner llife Mrs Stewart hit upon bull subshy

feet wJith great possibilities and genuine contemporary signifi shymiddoteanee But she haS not known how to render it convincingly and illu~tingl) in terms of

middotIme to ailalrange~ent lui fidWL

~lEl][ORIALMASS Pattimiddotck Pardinal OBoyeof Washshy ~~tQ~ speak~ at a memOrI~ M~s f0t ~r1lIIartm Luther

l~ngr hel~ ~und~yat t~e Na~~~l Shnne of th~ Immacshylla~ Come~pbQn in the natI~n~s CPl~aINC Jho1Jo

INatbull-ona1middot middotWmiddotmiddot-1111

Ahmann Says Wflitbull Racism Pllob~ltem

For White Churches CHICAGO (NC) -A leader ereatiIDg is new notionall wW

m Catholic interracial justice for notional actioo work ~id here white rlllcis~ middotWe believe that creation of called essentially responsible the national will is probably for the violence in cities by the the greatest spiritus problem

middotnational riot commission is a confronting religiollJS institushymoral problem and must be at- tiona in Amerlcm Ahmann deshy~cked by the white churches clared in calling on NCCIJs 1~

Mathew Ahmann executive lliffiliated Catholic interrracillll director 4)f the National Catho- councllsand human relationo lie Conference for Interracial ComiImissions to Set ~ tRileoir efshyJustice asserted The commis- lo-rts for social jUstice

problem was the problem (If published and distributed a speshy cial 32~page pamphlet smiddot~ary

Favors Compulsorymiddot of th R rt f h N al e epo () t e Iyenon Rmiddotmiddotmiddot A AdvisorY Commission 00 CiVil

ehlement ge DisOrders I j 1 -

SAN ANTONIO (NC) -The San AntoniQ archdiocesan prlmiddotemiddotstsmiddot seina~ has recommended

vc75 as the compulsory retirement age for priests in the arcbdioshycese and 65 as an accepted retiremen~ age

Tbe recommeridation which has been sent to ArChbishop Robert E Lucey of San Antonio came in the fonn of a motion passed unanimously by the 12shymember - senate at a meeting here

The senate also recommended establisbment of some sort of

tenure of office for pastors and assistants They urged a maxishymum limit of 10 years in the same parisb for pastors and a liDlit~ five yearn fol assistants

Ahmann eaned fur NCCIJ affiliates to stress the need for long-range middotmiddotclmiddoton-TI proshy

cu ltU grams for aD ~rts cd bhe Catholic community to elimishynate white racism incmding

programs for human relations

training fM lay leadershipclergy teacherS and required elementary a nd secondary school courses in humanrelashynons and Negro Illistory He also urged affiliated 01shy

ganizati()ns to bank as well as purchase goods and services in the black communi~y On the legislative front ne urged support of the similar goals of the riot commission the Urban Coalition and Dr Martin Luther KiB4fil Poor ~s Campaign~

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 11 1968

Catholics Defend Fair Bus Law

TRENTON (NC)-Spokesmen for Catholic schools defended the states year old fair bus law at a public hearing held here to consider its possible reviSion

In mllny respecfs it was a reshypeat of the public hearings a year ago which resulted in the bill being amended before passage But at that time the thrust was for passage of some rort of measure )utting private school students on equal footshying with public school students Now legislative sentiment apshypearc ro incline toward a cutshyback although outright repeal seeDlll unliksly

One relllSon foi the dlllnge in outlook b the compleJdon of ihe legislature Lest year it was in DeInoeratic hands and fair shybusing bllld the support of Gov Richard JJ Hughes Now Repubshylicans hold control by a 2-1 margin and party leaders see Ii mandate to cWtail some of tine programs enacted a year ~omiddot

A half-dozen bills to repeal or revise the busing law are now before the legislature The hearings here were held by the education committees of both the State Senate and Assembly whiclll hnve not yet released any bills from committea

Principal spokesmen for Catholic education were John 1 Rafferty counsel ful the New Jersey Catholic Confershyence and Msgr John 3 Clark Camden diocesan superintendent of scbools and president or the state ruperiIllten~ento ~ciashytion

Expropriate Pmsh BERLIN (NC)-East Gennan

eommunist authorities Ulave exshypropriated the Catholic parish 01 St Francis Xavier in East Berlin without compensatingthe Cbureh Redevellop~nt ia given as the expropriation reashyson

May the 8711 of ~g [ltm1

mine tlP~D JOU and ~aJ

the afOlY of His ReslITaeI tiOD bless J01l Ydtbmiddot

pe~ and jOle

The

Old Red Bank Fail River Savings BaRk

FAll IUVEI

SOMERSET

8 THE ANCHO~=Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1968 New Pay Scale For Teachers

FORT WAYNE (NC)-ftleEnjoy Family Celebration Fori Wayne-South Bend dioceshysan board of education bas apshyOf First Communion Day proved a new salary scale for lay teachers in elementallY ancll

By Mary Tinley Daly secondary schools The board approved tl recomshyChanges in the Church that perennial topic of COlllshy mendation that for every fuD

versation since Vatican Council II come in for a lot of time degreed ~acher employed pro and con discussion on the part of the laity With each with a current valid Indiana

teaching license a parish Willehange the dissident~ speak up head-shakers moan middotWell be reimburselt at the rate Oilfthey didnt do it that way in $2000 each for the school ~

my day But as each in forms of any kind with their 1968-1969inevitable rivalry Each littlenovation is inaugurated The salary schedule for 196ampshygirl and boy was in mufti shy 1969 provides on the bachelonthen incorporated into presshy tastefuUy and compoundo11tably degree level for a minimum Oil ent practice we realize these garbed $5200 and a maximum of $6200 made notehanges are simply Each family had its own pew at the 10th year with an increshyfor the sake of parents and First Communicant mentof $100 a minimum QfclJange but as in aisle seats sisters brotI1ers $6000 and a maximum oilPope John XXIII grand-and godparents filling $8700 at the 15th year with aput it to keep up the rest of the pew We beshy $180 increment for the bacheloilrltP with the longed to Kate on Her Day degree teacher with a staterhythm of the What class a small whis- license and a minimum of $630times To quote pered the Headof the House as and a maximum of $10000 asfrom middotThe the names were read out at the the 18th year with an increoChurch middotin Our beginning of Mass That we ment of $200 for the masteroDay collective thought was the ~ason we had degree teacherspastoral of the been included Not so Each

American hiershy child in the First Communionmchy recently published Our

eHort at Class could designate ahead III Department of Justicepresent restructuring time which of the parish Masses

procedures in the Church withshy $~~ Approves Shared-Time to attend thus splitting theIn the national and Diocesan number into more intimate HARRISBURG (NC) - Tk)eommunities depend in great family Jroups Pennsylvania Department dWORLD OF FASHION Jmeasure on the seriousness With Justice has ruled that there ampJiilThose who eboBe to Jeeetve lIS Iwhich study is undertaken and ~~~~ By MARILYN BODERICK ~

the disposition to implement )amp bull class were allowed to do IlO no legal bars to shared-~ The altar rail had beet1 opeIil shy education of private ~ a the part of the laity pupils iii public schoolseCl wide with lmeelers tor thlee EASTER CLOTHESNew Prooedure I iD the center At CommUDion Deputy Atty Gfin John 1)

One change nO doubt fsmilshy time 8 smiling priest weleomed New clothes at Easter have tiful example of creativity and McCord who issued the opinioa Jar to families in many Dioceses each little First Communieant become a eustom that we an craftsmanship was an ensemble at the request of state Supe~ came to our attention forcibly intendent of Public InstructiOll flanked by father and mother find hard to break It came modeled by nine year old Robin and impressively in practice followed by other members of down to us from the days when Cambra daughter of Mr and David H Kurtzman said the

only requirements which muSt last week the family If there was only one the newly baptized Christians Mrs James Cambra of Our I speak here of the new cusshy Catholic parent another family wore white garments made of Lady of Grace parish in Westshy be met are the consent of the

tom (new to us at least) of local public school board andmember receivedwith the child Dew linen This became such ))Orthaving children receive First the payment of tuition at theothers of the family following a tradition among the faithful Robins stunning Easter coat Holy Communion not as a class regularly established rateIt was all so natural warm that to appear in new clothes on and dress were made by her

receiving the Big McCord cited a 1949 lawbut each Sacrashy and dignified on this tbe Easter Sunday mother in yellow lightweightment for the first time with Day rectlling the words d which states that No pupilsymbolized the wool The A-line coat had a parents and relatives shall be refused admission toPope St Leo Recognize 0 n e w Ii fe diagonal self button closing and

Long gone in many areas is the courses in these additionalChristian your dignity through Christ a tiny mandarin collar When the custom of turning over one schools or departments by reashyThe Irish have dark-hired and vivacious RobinlImvi~ Pmstollof the Sunday Masses to the son of the fact that his elemenshyan ancient say- removed her coat the slimFirst Communion class - girls Mter Mass with aplomb only tary or academic education Ising that goes dress underneath was seen toin dresses veils an being or has been received in awhite and on eight-year-old could muster For Christmas have a yellow blue apd tan one side of middotthe aisle boys in Kate betook herself to the saneshy school other than a public food and drink plaid bodice with the plainwhite suits on the other back tuary to invite our new pastor for Easter new yellow wool of the coat carried school of the church reserved oftenshy Father Louis Quinn to bei He added however tnKItclothes Most over info the skirttimes with standing room house brunch otni shared-time arrangements mudonly for writing people in the The finishing touch to thisfor parents of necessity be subject to thefor him her address Diocese will fol- stunning outfit was the tiny hatWith the growth of parishes guidelines promulgated by theGoodness knoWll how ID8DY low this custom that sat atop Robins curls forthere often came transfer all similar invi-tationa Fat her Department of Public Instrucshy

by dressing their ebildreh iul it too was her mothers creationFirst Communion day to Saturshy Quinn must have receivedl tiontheir new Spring finery 0111 and jcent middotfeatured alternatingday a sensible step but stiR plenty wed ~ becauSe he Easter Sunday panels of the pale yellow andtmly for First Communicants cup eoffeeIIimply sipped 11 of In the pre-school ret blondE the plaid wool

and their parents Because of at Katies house B1lIt be did and darling Sheila Whalen In the same show Norma8Pace limitations grandparents come chatted with anmiddot Gf 1Il Higher Earningsdaughter of lIT and Mrs Wil- Comeau of SS Peter and Paul 8Odparents brothers and sisters ble2sed the house 8Dd ~ateB liam Whalen laquoIi St ThomaslIilcles and aunts were invited new gift statue then went _ More ehurch in Somerset will parish in Fall River was 8 vishyout for this precious occasion to visit other parish homes be decked out in polished blue sion of green and white Norma ON YOUR SAVINGS JIbey eouId line themiddotsidewalks Twas all a happy experience eotton Her very special Easter wore a green wool coat a 4Ntside take pictures perhaps for Kate and her extensive famshy Sunday dress bas a long torso matching green and white Per An middotmiddot p to breakfast with their parshy ily appropriate to this the Year topped by a short sash tile dress and a white straw topper Ask abOut ticular First Communicant buamp of Faith II1eeveless zrmholes are edged that had a sweetheart shape that waS that iD crocheted lace and the bodice Green ill all shades is one of INVESTMENT

Kates Day JiB embroidered with tiny flow- the most popular colors on the SAVINGSMmnesota Parishioners ers in shades of pink white and agenda for childrenls SpringSo It was with surprise we fashions Beth Cook~ daught~r CERTIFICATESweeeived a telephone invitation Vote Closing of Schoo~ blue

Also represen~ng 1bepre- oJ Mr and Mrs Andrew Cookfrom eight-year-old Kate to atshy PIERZ (NC) - Members of primary middotsetJn the Easter parade of Immaculate Conception parshytend the 11 oclock Mass with SAFETY - Savings insured safe br Iifour parishes in the Pierz area will be Lisa Marie Texeira ish in Fall Riv~r has a limeher last Saturday On arrival at agency of the U S Governmentof Minnesota voted 835 to ioo daughter of Mrmiddot and Mrs Frank green Eastermiddot dress trimmedchurch we wondered if we had for the closing of the Father AVAILABILITY - No notice requIredTeeira of Immaculate Concep- with with a white cowl collarthe right time and place No more

Pierz Memorial High SChool 1lm tion parish in Fall River Lisa and white cuHs on the short Your funds available when neededwhite dresses and veils June is a delicate-featured little sleeves Beth chose this dress SAVE by MAIL - We process prompIIJon one side of the ~sle )hite

The Pierz district has decided beauty whose dark tresses will herself because she Ifell in love and pay postage both wayssuits on the other no unishy to build a public senior high beset off by a once upon-a- with the white vinyl flowers school which will be large time dress in pink and navy scattered over the skirt and Assets over $41000IlOO

Parish Hires Full-Time enough to accommodate all high blue The high necked dress bodice of this charming Spring school students in the district made of sheer cotton has a and Summer linen

Layman Theologian Therefore m u e h discussion GlOwl collar long full sleeves Of course the pre-teen set FIRST FEDERAL BALTIMORE (NC)-St Matshy and a romantic floating skirt wants something new for Easterabout the most practical use of Savings and loan AssociatloDthe Catholic high school facili shy

first parish in the Baltimore ties bas taken place in the last _pink bodice and the waist- daughter of Mr and Mrs John archdiocese to employ a proshy circling cummerbund but the Steen of Taunton and my god tf FALL RIVER thews Church has become the Tiny tucks are featured on the and Miss Joan Leslie Steen

few months fesionally trained ley theoloshy Tbe vole--()pen to all parishshy really eye-catching feature oil child will attend Easter Mass gian as a full-time member af iOllers over 21 ill the four afshy ibis outfit ill the skirt of navy at St Pauls church wearing an the parish staff ~cted parihes-was taken III blue cotton with pink polka outfit as yellow as a daffodil ~-~~-------_~ first Federal $awIOIS bull LeaD a ~

~ 1 ortb ~1Il st Fan lIiwer llaa ~ Joseph Hargadon a fonner response to a suggestion of~e dots Certainly a dOll-like outfit Joans yellow coat has gold but shy ZIp 02722 IlIlIIIa 174-4881 ~ member of St Clares parish st Cloud diocesan school board for a dainty Miss tons and 8 slanted back belt ~ke application by phOlle middotIt JOll jE6sex who ~ii now studying at The Catholic high school Mothers Sew - her yellow Irish linen sheath ~

the Institute of Lay Theology building will probably beused While commentating 8 ehil- dress is sleeveleSs and has white n iridlvldua Account B joint AccaIIamp iii ~ Prease DJNn a savings account EIIcIGslMJ Iin San Francisco will be c0shy as an elementary school in the drens fashion show for the Do- emb~idery trim on the hemline ~~OO ~ordinator of St Matthews Conshy future Father Patrick Thompshy minican Academy alumnnae ill and bodice This yellow-haired ~

fraternity of Christian Doctrine son principal of Fathermiddot Pierz Fall River I was awed by the brown-eyed beauty has even Address middot1 program Msgr Clare J 0- Memorial High School said th~ ntimber of mothers Whohad chosen JOllqtiil yellow patent

acheck III tbe amount 111 -iDwyer pastor said He begina several possibilities are being sewed their childrens Easter accessories tomiddot complete her working in the parish Aug ~ studied outfits Probably the most beau- look j

~~~~~

A][D FOR VnCTnMS Foodfor victim~ of the Washi~gshyton civil disturbance following the death of Dr Martin Luther yening Jr in Memphis was distributed at churches of all denominations in the capital Here Sister Joanette of Catholic University gives bread to burnedout families at St Mamns Church N Capimiddottol and T Streets NC Photo

9 Best to Delay Rose Pruning Unti1 Laterin Spring

By Jo~ph and Marilyn Roderick

With the break in the w~ther weve experienced lately here has been ample opportunity to get outside and begin the Spring chores that have tQ be done before the garden is ready for Summer I have noticed quite a few weekend prdeners busy with the urrection is really felt as the odds and ends that await the priest changes the bread and prdener after a quiet WiD- wine into the body and blood ter But I have also witness- of our Lord and the faithful go ed quite a few I suppose out of up to the altar to receive Comshyanxiety over the rough Winter munion Then the seven weeks we experieneed and out of im- of sacrifice leading to this day patience 1igt get started doing take on deeper meaning and the jobs that could just as well wait Light of the World truly shines until later m the month r AIl can truly sing Alleluia Wltil Way For the young of the house-

Pruning roses is a good ex- hold the Easter eggs are another mnple of a job that is best held great joy They come in many off especially this year when sizes and materials Some are Ctere has been so much top-kilL lteonfections of spun sugar and lt might be well to wait until dreams This type generally has atent buds begin to show an opening through which the themselves em what look like child may view a wonderland ~ad stems until the job of of painted landscapes and minshy)rUning is tackled It has been iature figures my experience that dead-Iook- I always adored these fantasy mg wood has n way of coming eggs when I was a little girl and ~ life in time so go easy with it was a rare and special event ampe pruning shears until you to receive one My own youngshyIJlre certain there is no life in sters however deJive more enshylaquohe stem you plan to amputate jOfment from the decorating

How to Prune and dyeing oil the hardboiled eggs

Pruning roses seems to pre- A few years ago I made an (leDt P~obJ~JiuJ to gardeners and Easter egg centerpiece by decshy~ it is a Simple task I try 00 orating (with glitter beads prune lTlyroses so that they sequins and white glue) egg graduaily asSUme an urn shape shells that had their contents tftliit is so that they have an blown outmiddot and hanging them eD1ltY cenier rhis can easily on a giided branch that had be begun by prumng each stem been placed ill a plant pot This aiatroti want to retain so tha~middot makes a verY lovely display and ihe cut is made just above an the eggs can even be used as _tward pointing bud Christmas tree ornaments the

If the bud is pointing out the following December but this laquorowth which ensues from the delicate work is not for tiny bud will be outward and there- hands lor growth will be away from Symoo)s oil Life the center of the rose Next I The Easter egg and the Easter try to make my cuts so that the bunny have always been symshyappermost portions of each boys of Spring and new life litem are approximately the Ancient people in many lands lIaDle height from the groun6 exchanged eggs at their Springagain to give the bush some festi vals They dyed eggs yellow8Diformity of appearance for the returning sun and red

The height of the bush makes for joy and life In England the attle difference as far as I am children enjoy III custom called eoncerned so I usually make Pace egging The Pace eggers my cuts at whatever height I go from house to house chantshyean get uniformity This year ing this rhymefor inStllnce there has been a PleaseMr Whitelegpeat deal of top-kill on my Please to give us an Easter eggJOses so I may have to make If you wontt give us an Easter cuts fairly close to the ground eggbut I find little difference in Your hens wiD all lay addled the quality of the roses regardshy eggsless ~ of how much I remove in And your cocks lln lay stones pruning In this country of lIpoiled

A third consideration in darlings our children would be ~ing is the removal of 014 disappointed H the Easter wood to make place for new bunny did not leave chocolate trrowth Thb becomes a pr0bshy eggs candy chickens and other lem when your roses start to expensive goodies However -ee considerably I try not to be even with all the commercial drastic in this regard by cutting trappings that go with the dayGUt one old stem a year thereby It still manages to retain It IIl8king room for new growth great joywithout particularly affecting T1uis liuoo roast is perfectlybull e plant delicious Ive bad tt for Easter One other point about prunshy dinner oth~r years and plan to Ing Many of the old ramble1ll serve it again this year Its and climbing roses should be quite worthy of II repeat pershypruned after they bloom and fonnance DlJt before I notice a great Cumberland L9mb Boast IIl8ny people pruning their 1 leg of lamb about I to dlmbers before they bloom poundswhich does nothing for the 1 teaspoon salt elimber but remove scOlelI of 1 teaspoon dry mustard blossoms ~ teaspoo1l ground ginger

In the Kitchen 5 thin lemon sIkes Baster Sunday is a day of great cup currant jelly

toy and excitement The special 1 Tablespoon lemon juice Kaster moming breads (IDJ 1) Trim oJ escemJ fat lroa 8aOther-in-Iaw always ~ lamb Rub went with a mixture Individual sweetbreads for the fJIl the salt mustard and ginger ebildren with a hardboiled egg Place roundoo silde up OIl a let in the crust) the excitement rack in roastiDjJ pan Do Dllt elf new clothes the Easter egg oover pan bunts the tIradJltional famIJ ) Roast -bl Ii a10W (331-) llIlnner but Elbow all the beauty en for amp 1tOun IlDd quiet ~ 01 Easter SID~ 3) Remove roaJt from 0ftIl Mass and eut 4 cd tbe lemon dices

be joy of this great least 01 In half arrange Ue a half sliceS the Resurrecti_ of our SaviCNl petal fashion OIl sidlte of JOaSt evident JI1 n the custo~ holding in place vith dampened tbat sur r 0 11 n d 1lhis feast wOoden ~icIW place the wbole IIut the full 1mpaot of the Bell- alice in center

)JJRDINATION The first Melkite Rite ordin2ttion of priests to be held at the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception Washington DCt was conducted by Bishop Justin A Najmy NC Photo

- Extend Program I Interfqith Organization to Conti~~e shy

Aiding ~prrnEr JoliCQrpseh WASHINGTON (NC)--A na- reftary of the National Confer-

tion-wide volunteer prog~lJn ence of Catholic Charities hasshyto help Job Corps trainees find said JACShas tapped the iTeshya place in the workaday world mendous force of volunteers al shyhas been extended for another ready available in this lountry year William P Kelly Job and they are hard at work asshyCorps director announced here sisting young llen who have

Joint Action in Community proved by volunteering for the Service (JACS) a private non- Job Corps that they want to profit corporation was organ- help themselves ized by leaders of national The young men coming out Catholic and Protestant social of Job Corps are severely hanshyaction agencies dicapped by backgrounds of

It includes on Us board of poverty poor education and unshygovernors representatives of stable family life As a result business labor and civic organ- they have more than their izations share of problems as they atshy

tempt to make it on their ownJACS has organized a netshy

work of 5000 volnteers in 500 JACS volunteers are giving communities in the U S re- them the helping hand they eruited from churches service need he added clubs and community agencies who are DOW assisting some 1000 returned corpsmen each Women to Hpnormonth

Msgr Lawrence J CorcoraJlO BisJlop Apri I 18 lACS ~Ild chairDl3lll and ~ The Ca~olicWomens Club

0If New ~(ord will hold its annual Bishopll Night OIlSee E~tablishes New bunday evening April 18 at

Education Office the Harbor Beach Club in Matshytapeisett Supper Will be servedGREENSBURG (NC)-Bishop at 630William G Connare of Greensshy

burg has announced the estabshy Guest of Honor will be Most lishment of a new diocesan ofshy Rev James L Connolly Bishop fice of education whicb win Gerrard moderlltor for the New coordinate the work of several Bedford organization will also existing departments be a guest

All area pastors have heeDThe new office which wm invited to attendopen JolT 1 will join and ex~

tend the programs of the presshy Mrs Paul L LaForest first ent diocesan schools office and vice-president will serve as the Confraternity Off Christian chairman ojf arrangements Doctrine office and win be reshy Reservations will be accepted sponsible for the total educashy by Mrs Jamell M Anderson tional effort of the diocese Mrs Maurice Hurley Mrs Paul

A newly organized departshy LaForest and Mrs Daniel F ment of religious education will Dwyer Reservations close sat shyaid in planning religious edushy urday April 13 eation programs fOr the parisb and diocesan schools the CCD and other groups both at the adult and youth le~ls ATWOOD

OIL COMPANY Break up jelly with a fork a cup stir in the lemoD juice and Spread ovell tbelamb Re- SHELL tum flo OV~ aDcl cOntinue roasting ~ to t hOur longer If HEATING OILSyoUre using a meat th~rrnODl~ eter it should register 170 for South bull Sea Streetsa pink look or 1~ for wen done Pull out wooden picks bom lemon garnsh before carv- Hyannis Tel 49-81 mg roast

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 11 1968

Says Young Seek Moral Values

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - The so-called sexual revolution is l

turning away from hypocrisy at a turning toward promiscuity ays an expert in sex education Or Mary C Calderone execushy

tive director of the Sex Informashytion and Educational Council of the United States believes toshydays young people are highly moral despite the example set for them by their elders

Speaking at the 22nd annual meeting of the Texas Council on Family Relations Dr Calderone stressed

Promiscuity has not increased on Americans college campuses We know our young people are behaving far better today than were willing to credit them with Young people are looking for moral values based on fact rashyther than mythology

Dr Calderone condemned exshyploitation of sex by commercial advertising and called for sex education which would streSD the importance of human relashytionships and not merely the mechanics of reprOduction

Your kids ought to know you cant save a bad marriage with good sexshe asserted

Sisters of Pro~ider1ce Vote to lRe~ise Rules

SPRINGFIELD (NC) The Sisters of Providence of Holshyyoke community of nuns speshycializing in care of the sick aged and underprivileged have voted to revise their rules and customs to permit greater flexshyibility and freedom in the reli shygious and personal lives of theIr members

At a general chapter at the communitymiddots Holyoke mothershyhouse the 39 chapter -delegates voted to permit experimentashytion hi religous garb give members the option of using either their baptismal and famshyily name or their religiou name pennit members to travel outside their convent wilhout a nun-companion

Also to limit participation hi common prayer to Mass and to two portions of the Divine Ofshyfice Lauds and Vespers allow community members to develop a schedule of private prayer require every member of the community to be addressed WI Sister instead of Mother~

and allow part of the nuns free time to be given to variolU fOnDS of the apostolate to civic activities and civil rights proshygrams in a way befitting theIr state in life and according to their individual consciences

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Choose AmericH Superior General

MoUNT KISCO (NC)-Fqr the first time in the 160-yellW history of the Religous of tim Cenacle an American has b~ elected superior general

Mother Rita FOy was electetl to the post at the general chapshyter of the Cenacle in Rome acshycording to the orders interpro-shyvincial public relations offiC() here in New York

The general chapter whielli is still in session is evaluatinti a series of recommendations fOli a general decentralization opoundl authority the launching of eJJogt

perimental programs by too Cenacle and the restructurinfi of Community life

The Religious of the Cenaclo is a worldwide congregation 03 Sisters committeed to the wom of retreats and religious in-gt struction There afe three American provinces

Mother Rita Foy was born 1rI

FLYING DOCTOR Dr Leo Brown and his wife Isabel a registered nurse are shown with their children Rebecca 1Qand Joel 8 with the C-essna plane they use for their Flying Doctor Service in the diocese of Gwelo Rhodesia NC Photo

THE ANCHOR Thurs April 11 1968

Project Equality Issues Guides For BMyers

CHICAGO (NC) - The first national directory of 3931 business firms comshymitted to equal opportunity in all aspects of employment has been published here by Project Equality

It will be used by more than 7000 churches synagogues and religious institutions participat shying in the interfaith fair emshyployment drive that urges givshying preference to the listed firms in all purchases of goods and services

Project Equality offices in Jlive cities are publishing re- gional buyers guides as well They are in Columbus for Ohio Detroit for Michig~n Hartford for Connecticut Omaha for New York City and was gradlDgt Nebraska and San Antonio for ated from Hunter College Sillj

Texas IFlying Doctor Serves Africa Mission south entered the Cenacle in 19~1i The national guide is a comshy completing her studies in Romo

pilation of 976 national and She was assigned to the Miltlligt 2955 local or regional firms do- Vietnam Veteran l Wifel licensed Pilots western province of the Celilgt ing business with religious inshy acle with headquarters in CtJiDRIEFONTEIN (NC)-In the the Gwelo diocese covers some must drive over lO miles of stitutions They include 40 of cago and has held a number am

grasslands here onmiddot a 5OOO-foot 14000 aCres it includes a 300shy dirt bush road seven miles of the top 500 U S corporations assignments as superior of vashy

high plateau the Cat hoi i c bed tuberculosis sanitorium a relatively good road-and watch and range down to small neighshy rious Cenaeles in the Uniteamp

of mainshy 100-bed hospital a farm an out for wild animals all alongmission Driefonteinborhood businesses States and Canada1ains-of all things-a hangar elementary school and trade the way

Listing in the Quyers guide She will now reside in RoJJl() for a Cessna 182 Skylane air shy schools for carpentery tailorshy Thus far they have encounshymeans a firm has signed Ii

plane ing and homecraft tered only baboons monkeyspledge to hire and promote deer mongoose lizards andThe mission staff totals somewithout discrimination has filed FrQm this point the missions lleslYJits to Performbirdsa report form with Project doctor can cover nine out-stashy 1200 people 35 of whom are

Equality detailing the number tions spread over an aerial non-Afrfcans The mission and Witch Doctors Woth City Symphony of its niinority-group employees distance equivalent to that beshy hospitals are operated by Afri shy The Biblical quotation The BALrIMORE (NC) -Fathe1 -broken down by jop classifi tween San Francisco and Los cans and by Swiss Bethlehem harvest is indeed great but the Bruno Markaitis SJ provinshyeation-and has pledged to take Angeles The plane was proshy priests and Brothers German laborers are few describes the cial of Lithuanian Jesuits in the further affirmative actions vided by the Mission Doctors Domincian nuns African nuns scope of medical work in Africa free world will guest conduct

Association of Los Angeles three laywomen-two American according to the Browns In the Baltimore Symphony in twc Pledge C()()peraiion Calif as part of its Flying Docshy nurses and a German teachershy these rura~ regions there is II of his own piano compositioDll

Cooperating businesses also tor Service begun here four and the Browns ratio of about one doctor to in Ii concert sponsored by LCgtJio have agreed to undergo periodic years ago The Brown children attend a every 33000 persons Mrs ola College here Sunday eompliance reviews to assure At that time Dr James Carey small two-classroom school in Brown said Africail medicine At the keyboard as soloi

Umvuma a town 17 miles away and witch doctors are still verycontinued affirmative employshy now a Santa Barbara Calif wiiI be two other Jesuit pries~ much in evidence she addedment ac~ions according to surgeon arrived at Driefontein The journey to and from school Fathers Leslie J Schnierer -and

Thomas Gibbons Jr national to begin his three-year mission is looked upon as quite an adshy It is heartbreaking to see a Benito Rivera students at thIl director of Project Equality hitch He decided quickly that venture by the family as they child with measles have to go Peabody Conservatory of Music

In addition to the firms listed The concert will mark thewith a plane one doctor could though life blind because the in the guide more than 12000 do the wbrk of five ndanga (witchdoctor) put mull 50th anniversary of the restorashyother businesses have filled out With the help of the Swiss Pittsburgh Diocese (medicine) in the childs eyes tion of independence to Lithoshycommitment forms pledging coshy Bethlehem Brothers Dr Carey Tithing for Poor she said But in other areas aniai operation with the program but began surveying and laying out like TB the African is relJlarkshy

PITTSBU~GH (NC)-Bishophave not yet supplied the necshy landingstrips near isolated and ably sophisticated medicaHy

John J Wright has announced essary statistical employment doctorless clinics and hospitals Kariangwe Berejena Kana Education Officethe Pittsburgh Diocese will unshyreports which are similar 10 The Brothers also built the Serema Matibi are all farshy NEW ORLEANS (NC) - Aledertake a new tithing plan tothose ~equired by the federal hangar at priefontein and Dr away-sounding places but the office of religious education bllllhelp finance housing and othergovernment Carey arranged for one Brother people suffer as you and I been established here by Archshyprojects for the pOOr The nalles of firms listed in to be trained as a pilot suffer from sickness They bishop PhilIp M Hannan a The_dioces~ will give 10 perthe buyers guides are available Meanwhile in Los Angeles mourn when their children have will supervise the teaching oct

cent of the contributions andonly to religious groups parti shy Dr Leo Brown a former Navy to be sick and often die she religion in parochial schoolBbequests it receives and thecipating in the program surgeon with 11 years of sershy continued and in Confraternity of Chrisshysame percentage of collections

PIroject Equality sponsored vice and his wife Isabel a Perhaps some of their disshy tian Doctrine classestaken up for directly diocesan

by the National Catholic Conshy registeled nurse were volunshy eases have strange-soundingpurposes to finance povertyference for Interracial Justice teering for MD~s three-year nawes but all come under theprogramsoperates six other local offices hitch in Africa He was just title of Gods sick These are CONRAD SEGUINThe money will be used withtouching seven more states Adshy home from Vietnam where he the names of clinics that are

other religious groups for intershyditional offices will be opened served with the Marines visited by the Flying Doctor BODY COMPANY faith housing programs andin major cities this year acshy Staff of 1200 she said Aluminum or Steelother joint dforts for the poorcording to a spokesman Dr Brown and his wife are 944 County Street

Parishes will not be requiredlicensed pilOts So last Sumshy NEW BEDFORD MASS mer when they and their two to tithe but are invited to conshy Chief Speaker

WY 2-6618ISenQte Ideas f children-Rebecco 10 and Joel tribute voluntarily NEW XORK (NC) ~ Msgr 8~arrived here MDA sent the John J Egan director of the

Continued from Page Three Cessna 182 along with thein Chicago Archdiocesan office ofStart With 45and to preach in the one Dioshy The Driefontein mission in tirbanaffairs will be the chief

eese have them in the pther GREENSBORO (NC)-Fortyshy speaker at the May 16 banquetfive priests of the Raleigh dioshy of the 1968 Catholic Press AsoshyWhile the 24 diocesan priests Abortion Bill Passes cese have formed the North ciation convention in ColumbusSenators are elected the two Carolina priests association Ohiomembels of the Priests Senate In Maryhind Ho~se Seventeen others have indicatedwho are members of religious

commullities are appointed by ANAPOLIS (NC)-A ~m to they wish to become members the Bishop These will be ro- relax Marylands 100-year-old The Raleigh diocese includes all

North Canlinatated among the religious com- abortion law and put its regushylation into the hands of themunities doing parish work in

the Diocese At present the Sen- medical profession passed the ators from religious communi- House of Delegates by im 86 ties are Father Felician Plichta to 47 vote OFM Conv and Father Co- The bill permits a doctor opshylumba Moran SSCC eniting in an accredited hospishy

tal to perform an abortion to The Bishop has encouraged a preserve the physical or mental

study of pension plans that health of the mother to prevent would involve laypersonnel of birth of a deformed or retarded diocesa~ ail~ parish facilitieii childand to end some plegnan

The Bisholl has ma~li liQme ad- CieScaused by rape just~ents)nassessmtntson pat- UnClet the~ptesel1t law abor ishes tflking into account the tiOll is peimitted ~hen two growth o(~ubU~Iiln ~~riShesah~ Ihysicians a~r~~ it itnec~ssar~bull

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Church~en Study Racial Problems In New Jersey

NEWARK (NC) -The Church cannot tell otheJiS what to do until it faces the problem within its own comshymunity a Methodist Bishop has told Essex Count~ clergyshymen of all faiths in an a~essshyment of the racial problems beshysetting Newark and other New Jersey communities

Bishop Prince A Taylor and Catholic Auxiliary Bishop John J Dougherty of Newark disshycussed the race problem in light of the report of the Govemors Commission on Civil Disorder

Cooperative Solution Bishop Taylor stressed it is

the duty of the church to beshycome knowledgeable about the report to read it carefully Action without information is irresponsible he declared as he noted the church must face up till the fact that it has parshyticipated in maintaining the status quo He noted that when ~he commissionen pelsonally toured the riot area and asked the people what the impact of the church was in their lives all but a pound~w marked the church ltDfpound

Bishop Dougherty said if the problem is to be solved it will only be through the involveshyment of the total community government industry labor unions churches schools peoshyple living in the suburbs

Dont Have Time The attack on t1e problems

must be two-fold he asserted first meeting the needs which the coming Summer presents and then planning long-range programs to overcome the root causes of the problem

There is an urgen t need of immediate programs to enable us to have time to work toward the ultimate goal

Bishop Taylor referred to the need for time to work out solushytions We cannot undo the evils of 300 years in one Sumshymer he emphasized This illmiddot not going to be a case of a quick antidote and then they Jived happily ever after

However a Newark priest active in innel-city work who was one of six reactors to the presentations made by the Bishshyops remarked that comments about needing time to solve the problems overlook the fact that we dont hlVe the time

It would be great if we did have it to keep order but q (gt bull

the people bull have the imshypression that nothing has been donesaid Father Joseph Stulb

Many are ready to riot again if only to call attention to themselves he opined The black community despairs that the white community has or will change its attitude

Rev William Fox associate general secretary of the New Jelsey Council of Churches scored the commission for fail shying to note the contribution thpt a divided church - white and black - mademiddot to the elisis H~ cliticized the church for mainshytaining silence during public controversies which were listed as proximate causes of the riotshying

Another Catholic Magazine F0 Id S

DAYTON (NC)-Mary Today a magazine founded in 1901 deshyvoted to information about the Blessed Motherand her role in the Church has issued its final edition

It is one of 11 Catholic magashyzines which have ceased pubJishycation in the past )eal because

of 1088 ~l circulation The rnaf- orders are af Teutopolis JIL azine had a reoont eirculauOll Lake Bluff in and St Meiri

~ aooU~1151gtO middot - ~lnclbull - - -

BENEMERENTI MEDAJ~ Father James Vizzaro SJ second from left received the Benemerenti Medal at a dinner in Washington -on the occasion Of his retirement as dishyrector of the Washington office of the National Catholic Rural Life Association Conshygratulating him are left to right Msgr ~dward W ORourke executive director of the NtRLC Bishop Henry J Soenneker of Owensboro Ky rural life advisor of the usce department of social action and Msgr Luigi L Ligutti Vatican observer to the UN Food and Agliculture Organization and former executive dirootor of NCRLC NC Photo

Fr Vizzard Gets Benemerenti Medal Work for IFhlltfol lPoor Recognized

the Holy See to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization priests and Protshyestant clergymen and members of Congress

Msgr George G Higgins di shyrector social action department U S C a tho 1 i c Conference praised Father Vizzards comshybination of scholarship political know-how great tenacity of

Schedule Workshop O~ Sex Education

WASHINGTON (NC)-Father James T McHugh director of the family life bureau middotU S Catholic Conference will direct a workshop on Sex Education to be held at Catholic Univershysity of America here June 17shy28

Purpose of the workshop is to prepare a basic core of people especially teachers and parish personnel to supplement the work of the home in a complete program of education in sexu- ality It will provide these pershysons with background informashytion give them opportunity to evaluate some of the basic mashyterialsand engage them in an in-depth analysis of a curricushylum guide which reaches every grade level

Lecturers and consultants will include Fathermiddot John L Thomas SJ of the Combridge Center fOl Social Studies Dr and Mtmiddots Joseph Bird co-aushythors of The Freedom of Sexshyual Love Dr Ann F Lucas chairman of the psychology deshypaltment Farleigh Dickinson Universit~ Teaneek N J and Father Walter Imbiorski direcshytor of the Cana program in the Chicago atchdiocese

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purpose and above all genushyine love for the poor

Father Vizzard will leave Washington to middotwork in Califorshynia Nevada Arizona and Utah the region of the Jesuits Cali shyfornia province

Four Cleveland Nuns Quit as Religious

CLEVELAND (NC) - Four nuns one the prineipal of a 1100 student girls Catholic high school have separately withdrawn from the Sisters of Notre Dame here in Ohio

It was the largest departure since 1966 when 10 Sisters of Notre Dame were released from their vows to move to Pueblo CoIQ to form an experimental community middotThe Sisters of Notre Dame is the largest order of 2531 Cedar St New Bedford nuns based in the Cleveland 993middot3222 Diocese

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Taunton

THE ANCHORshyThurs April 11 1968 11

Support Bi~hop5

Equa~sty Plea MINEOLA (NC)-The Cathshy

olic Interracial Council of Long Island has voted overwhelmshying support of Rockville Censhytres Bishop Walter P Kellenshybergs call for equality in housing employment and edushycation

Bishop Kellenberg issued Zl pastoral letter-A Call to COl1shyscience-in which he said it i9 essential that every man be given equal opportunity for eJQP]oyment and job advanceshyment and equal educatton for himself and for his children

Declaring these to be fundashymental moral issues facing the people of Long Islanp the council said We give this statement by Bishop Kellenberg our overwhelming sUPPOtt

John J Clarke council president said the eounciB deemed it necessary to reit shyerate its support of the bishops statement co gtI bull because of our increasing concern over conshytinued discriminatory practicelC in these areas

In a policy statement the council declared the bash cause of racial unrest lies in the almost complete lack oR any meaningful contact between the races Today there are few whites who can say they really know Negroes This ignorance of each other is caused almost lxc]usively by patterns of segshyregation in housing which reshysuited in segregated schools 3mll a segregated society

As a step in breakin( these patterns the council recomshymended passage of open housshying ordinances in all towns OK

Long Island Only when there is no place left for the white man to run will the problem be solved it said

Norris H Tripp SHEET METAL

J fESER Prop

RESIDENTIAL INDUSTRIAL

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WASHINGTON (NC)-Father James L Vizzard SJ retiring Washington director of the Nashytional Catholic Rural Life Conshyference received the papal Benemerenti medal hele in recshyognition of his work for t~e

rural poor of the United States and throughout the world

The presentation at a dinner in the Cosmos Club was attendshyed by Bishop Henry J Soenshyneker of Owensboro Ky NCRLC president Msgr Luigi Ligutti permanent observer for

Prelate Advocalles Open Housing ILaws

JEFFERSON CITY (NC)shyBishop Joseph M Marling CPPS of Jefferson City has urged Catholics of the diocese to campaign openly and fearshy

- lessly for area open housing laws

In a pastoral letter urging open housing law support the Missouri prelate askedshy

Who fails to see that to conshydemn a large segment of our people to the cruel segregation thatmiddot closed housing entails is to sin gravely against charity justice and the vely finest inshystincts of our nature Who may deny that to perpetuate such an evil in this enlightened age will bring malediction upon us

For jurely he answered Chlist is brother to the eolored in the identical sense that he is brother to the other children of men

Plan Fa-II Opening Of Joint Semill1ary

CHICAGO (NC)-A graduate school of theology for seminashyrians ftom three Religious orshyders will open in a former hotel here in the Fall

The school to be known as the Catholic Theological Union will be operated by the Passhysionists Franciscans and Sershyvites in the fOI-mer Aragon Hotel near the University of Chicago

About 100 students ue exshypected to enter thl school this year Area seminariltes ourrent-middot ly being used by themiddot threfl

2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese 01 Fall Ri~~r-Thurs Apr 11 1968 S~~in S~ntences priest- and Laymen

JOurrt)~a$ts Opinions Differ_On V~~e of Bishops Synod

By Msgr George G Higgins Two American journ~lists who have covered the Rome

1beat off and on for several years-Father Francis X Murphy CSSR and Gary MacE0 in-have just published an interesting account of the Synod of Bishops which was held in Rome in 1967 (Synshyod 67 A New Sound in what they manege to teU us Rome Bruce Publishing Co about themselves in their sep- Milwaukee) Written in the arate and widelydivergent asshyfamiliar Xavier Rynne style it Sessments of the Synod is something of a tour de force How two men who disagree given the se- so fundamentally about the uecy w h i c h pros and cons of the Synod ever enveloped the managed to work as a tandem $ y nod a 1 in the writing of the history of proceedings The the synodal proceedings is to authors h a v e put it as mildly as possible a tried to give perplexing mystery on account as They tell us that for aU that a c cur ate as lies between their separate possible under evaluations Df the Synod they the conditions are jointly accountable but that of time and cir- the internal logic of their inshycumstance For dividual viewpoints and the my own part I dialectic of the situation led think they deserve better than them to attribute exclusive reshya ~as~ing grade They do ~lOt sponsibil~ty for the Prelude to ~lalln to hae wrlt~en anythmg a priest and for the Postscript like8cIefmltIve hlstory of the i to a layman SYlo1IgtUt they have proyid~d Far A art 1IllS wlth a useful mtenm sum- P mabr of the -proceedings and I take it that this is a polite ~r ~ii w~ cin) begrateful way of saying that when they

Perplexing Mystery got around to summing up their Tothis reader however what impressions of the Synod they

the authors tell us about the

lSynod ls less mterestmg than i

~ 8holJd have concluded contrashyr rlwise- that it was seriously - lacking in credibility and releshy

vance and was thus on biI- ance a huge disappointment

lRationaJize Differences

Such differencesmiddot of opinion on the part of experienced

jourpalilts covering the same everit-and using the very same

source~ of informationare not to be Vf~npered at

On the other hand I am Dot very happy about the curious- way in which the authors haveshyrationalized their differencea Th~y tell Us that one evaluatioo Df ~he Synod (Father Murphys) w~ ~ritteo from the viewpoint of the institutional Church and the other (Mr MacEoins) from that of conteinporarshyman~ind

Or again in Mr MacEoin words A priest professionally involved in the institution will

tend to lean in one direction 11 layman whose professional sushy

- viva rests on his sensitivity to

SPECIAL DELEGATE Marches Ghilio Sacchetti 42 has been named by POpe Paul VI to succeed Count Enrico

Galeazzi as special delegate of the Pontfical Commission for the state of Vatican City He is wearing the now outshymoded costume of a Gentleshyman of Cape and Sword NC PIloto

world opinion in the other

Now Bear This

This strikes me as being bull slightly threadbare and hopeshylessly pre-Conciliar dichotomy I know of a Dumber of priests (and so do the authors I asshysume) who rightly~or wrongly are just as critical of the Synod as Mr MacEoin is

I also know of a number III laymen (and so do the authocs I must assume again) who rightly or wrongly are just as sanguine about the results of the Synod as Father Murphy is So whats all this doctrinaire I

stuff about priests necessarily looking at things (myopically) through the allegedly unenshylightened eyes of contemposhyrary mankind

Tell it to the Marineal

found that they wer~ so ho~e-lessly far apart 111 theIr thmkmg

that the division of labor so I cryptically described in the above quotations appeared to be the only possible way of salshyvaging the middotoperation Thatll fair enough

It isnt at all surprising that one of the authors (Father Murphy) should have concluded that on balance the Synod was truly a contribution to the Church~s aggiornamento and that the other (Mr MacEoin)

MAnmn (NC) - Sz~en per- sons incIl~lg a Cathollc priest have bc)n sentenced to prison terms and fined by Madrids Court of r lic Order on charges Olf havinr participated in an anti-Frangt meeting in Barceshylona in lS~G

On trial were Father Francisshyeo Paula Botey and 10 laymen who were accused of attending

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an illegal meeting The meetshying was advertised as a Day of Repression and criticized what it called the repressive activities of the government of Gen Franshycisco Franco

Father Botey who admitted during the trial that he atshytended the meeting at Barcelona Universitys law school was senshyten~ to a year in jail ~d fined

about $214 Three of the laylDell received similar sentences amplid fines while ~ others drew six-month jail terms aDd four were absolved

Father Batey testified duriDtl the trial that he deliberately atshy1ended the meeting to protest against the ftPress1on he bad said he had seen of -certain see-shymenta of ampbe Spanish clergyshy

Prelate Supports Catholic Schools Opposes Racism

NEWARK (NC) -Archshybishop Thomas A Boland of Newark touched on racism Catholic education and aborshytion in his annual message to the Archdiocesan CouncH of catholic Men at its CQnvention here

Noting that BOrne people adshyvocate closing Catholic schools to concentrate on adult educashytion Archbishop Boland said I believe we mU9t give as much time as is possible to adult edushycation but not that we should ignore our chlIdren

If we close our schools he soid there may 00 no one to attend the adult courses iJn future years

He deplored the absence of religion in the education of many people and said that while 0 ohild may be receiving o good academic background under such circumstances he is not being trained in his will or his morals

Jthortion Is Murder Archbishop Boland noting

~hot the question of relaxing bortion laws is before the state LeFislature recalled that he lralNi opollen to the men about ~ot Dubject a year earlier and repeated what he had said then abortion is murder

Should the state legislate more liberally in this field he said it would go outside its sphere and we would have no

right to follow it He indicated however that

the Church would not oppose the establishment of a legislashytive commission to study the abortion law

Discussing racism he called it a malignant growth in our society and announced his support for a peaceful interrashycial walk through the streets of Newarks ghetto

Spokesmen lor L2ity Archbishop Boland also urged

the men to turn their council into a real spokesman for the laity He ruled out the possibil shyity of a voice for the laity toshytally independent flrom the hierarehy declaring that this is not the structure cd the Church

H we want to build a strucshyture the archbishop said we get an architect to give us a uniform plan Christ is the arshyehitect of the Chureh We are its workmen

He then urged the men tID take the steps which would make the ACCM aspokesman for the people II real council

Delegates adopted four res0shy

lutions endorsing catholic echools condemning racism lin every form advocating retenshytion and expansion of the states IIChool bus law and opposing relaxation of the abortioD statute

Stresses Increased Food Production

NEW DELHI (NC)-The vatshyican recognizes the need to mshycrease food production middotas a most serious problem facing the developing countries and mshydeed the world as a whole Elizabeth Reid II member of the

bull Vatican delegation to the United ean delegation to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD)

Speaking at the UNCTAD meeting here in India MilS Reid said The right to food 18 01117 another aspect 01 be mosi eaered of all buman rigbts the right to life and it is tb1s parshyticular aspect of the problem of development that places the heaviest and most serious burshyden em the comlcieDee of man- flIIIIampy from home kiDd ~ bull lot cbeapeJ tIIaD IiDDC

rv~

I I

HEATHER CUTTHNG

Sacred Hearts Junior High School Student Is Licenseod Amateur Radio Operator

Holly and Heather Cutting 532 Walnut Street Fall River share a transistor rashydio With some teenage sisters this might cause trouble but not with this pair Heather Jets Holly take the transistor She settles for pop music from Johannesburg South Africa-via her shortwave set They have real good musicraquo she says Blonde 14 year old Heather learned the In ternational Morse Code a basic requirement for amashyteur radio operators when she was seven but its only in the past year that shes really worked at the complicated hobby Her father Dick Cutting ll construction superintendent by profession has been ll radio ham for 30 years by avocation An awesome battery of receivshyers and transmitters fills a room of the Walnut street house and when Heather displayed real inshyterest in them she had iii wi)) ing teacher close at hand

Heathers an eighth grader at Sacred Hearts Junior High School on Prospect Street in Fall River and she admits that she does as much homework as IIhe can at sOOool to have eveshynings free for her hobby She at shytends radio classes nightly then hurries bome to spend as much as three hours at ber sel

Im llicensed for two fre- I

quencies right DOW she exshyplained I can talk on six and two meters Translated that means she can contact amateullil

--in this part of the United States but may not ta]k tomiddot overseal operators until she earns 1Il middotgeneral license

Im Working for my license DOW she said rohe examinashytion JIm be in 00 days Even the license that Heather now holds however is umusual for one of her age When she gets ber general license she Will be among itB Y01lllllgest holders and probably the youngceBt 8h licensee in the stlllte

rhere are 11426 lI8dto amashyteurs iD Massacbuatts I18id her father aInd cmIy 409 aJre WCllInen

wm CoDtaet lFather A real benefit to ~ Cutting

family from Bellltberll general lieense wID be iba1 1Ibell be able tID reach bel fathe bull blB car short wave mctic wheD he is OlD hIfl freqUeDt bwliness tripal

distance calls said Mr Cutting The electric light company figshyures I can run this rig 16 hours a day for only $290 a month

Heather hopes to make a cashyreer of radio technology Right now she is able most of the time to repair her set if someshything goes awry and shea building a small transmitting station for an upcoming science fair at Sacred Hearts Itll broadcast about 200 feet she said

Sometimes Of couJrSe gremshylins pop ill Like the time Heather got a phone can from a boy in Swansea Hey did oU know youre coming m on eiYclnnel 2 on our TV be said 011 another occasion Heather picked ~ her fathers transmisshysion OIl ber electric pitar speaker

Most of the time however things go smoothly During her nightly radio sessions Heather picks up signals Jrom other amateurs and has some schedshyuled appointments vis the mllshyways withmiddot friends hi otheJl mties

When she picks up 5 llllew

eontact she confirms it with II brightly-colored postcard bearshying her name and station 0011 etters in psychedelic pink Wld yellow

Collecting such postcards 111 2 sub-hobby for radio amateulll and Holly has a oozzling eollecshytion on the walls of her radio room She bas Mganized the Sou the a II t ern MassachushyIlett8 Teenage RadM Net aocll ill

BEFORE YOU BUy-tRy

PARK MOTORS OLDSMOBILE

OIdsmobile-lPeugot-Rencnft fJ1 Middle Street Fairhaven

llooking for new members Its just for teens she says

=rheyre more fun to talk to Once she has her general 11shy

cense she plans to join Iil group that relays messages from Viet Nam servicemen to their famshyilies

other Bobbies Badia is by no means Heathshy

ers only hobby Shl~ and her sister Holly a freshman at Emshymanuel College have an imshypressive collection of sharpshyshooting trophies mostly garshynered at Fall River Rod and Gun Club meets I began shootshying when I was six and had my Own gun when I as seven eaid Heather

Other interests are mathematshyics and music Heather picked lIP guitar playing on her own and belOngs to a folk group which plans its first public apshypearance after Easter

In short shes one teen whoD never be found wondering what to de next

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THE ANCHORshy 13Thurs April 11 1968

Houston Priests Get Pay Raise

HOUSTON (NC) - BishOJ John L Morkovsky announceCl a pay raise for priests of thE Galveston-Houston diocese and said a new retirement poliCW will go into effect Jan 1 1970

Under the old pay scale asshy sistants received a base salary of 11250 plus $30 car allowshyance and $1250 insurance preshymium for a total salary of $155 a month Pastors received a total monthly salary of $21750 The new salary reale will allow for increased pay based on the number of yearo priests have been ordained

Assistants who have been cshydained less than 10 years wiill receive a total monthly salary of $200 The figures will ~

$225 for those ordained moro than 10 years

Pastors with 25 years in t100 priesthood will receive m monthly total of $275 ThoSQ with more than 25 years will receive $300

The retirement policy ca1lJfl for optional retirement at age 65 and mandlltory retirement at 70 However elderly pries1amp who are able and willing m37 be assigned to other priestly work than the pastorate Bisbshyop Morkovsky stated

The bishop said the changes are in accordance with the recshyommendations of the Senate 01 Priests and follow consultashytion with diocesan consultom

Reach Impasse-PIITSBURGH (NC)-A state-gt

level meeting between Cat~

olic officials and the Nationl11 Association for the Advanceshyment of Colored People on furshythering racial integration iB Catholic schools reached m seeming stalemate here bn Pennsylvania when the schoolshymen cited lack of funds as ll major obstacle to NAACP pro= posals

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YOUTH CARES FOR AGE Retired Sisters are tenderlycared for at chair while Sister Mary Agnes looks on Center Sister Agnes Maureea Mmiddott St Mary Convent Fall River Left Sister Agnes Maureen seniormiddot wheels SisterMary Jer~me anQright Sister JohnCatberine bringgdri_ infirmarian points out magazine article to Sister Mary Lig~~ri inwheel to Sister Mary Ursulamiddot Both infirmarians are licensed practical nurses

I

Cqrdinal Roy Raps Apathy

MEXICO CITY (NC)~MaushyJOice Cardinal Roymiddot of Quebee _ a visit here as ehairman of the Pontifical Commission for World Justice and Peace said Christian teachings condemn violence in solving social probshylems but also condemn themiddot false prudence that lacks the eourage to make needed reshyforms

The prelate who has been touring Latin America for sevshyeral weeks said he was 1mshypressed by the number of Cathshy

olic organizations and institushytutions already applying Pope Paul VIs encyclical The Deshyvelopment of Peoples in their Jespective countries

But he added Latin Amerishyearn still have to assume fully their responsibility in workingtowards economic balance andmiddot bull just social order 80 every cit shyizen can promote his own welshyfare in a climate of freedom and common good

bull bullbull tmiddot

Comes KindIYcimiddotmiddotSislesmiddot 0 Mercy AmiddotI Fall River Comiddotnventmiddot

By Patricia McGowan

~When thou wast younger thou didstmiddot gird thyself anddidst walk where thou Frouldst But when thou shalt be old thou shalt stretch forth thy handsmiddot arid another shall gird thee and lead thee whither thou wouldst not In its description of the almost universal lot of age this is one of the most poignantpassages in Scriptur~ But age comes kindly f~r Sisters Although they are not exshyemptmiddot from its physical and mental ravages they need not fear being forsaken byfriends or being left alone the

fanulymiddot Jhe famllylast of a that is a religious community cherishes its older members and provision is made for Sisters to pass their last years surrounded by tender care

Among havens for older Sisters is the infirmary at Mt St Mary Conventmiddot Fall River The Sisters who have spent most of their religious life in the Fail River Diocese come here for their laBtyears exshypliliried Sister Agnes Maureen

The cardinal added at emiddot pretB8 RSMmiddotmiddot senior iniirmarian at eonference in the headquarten the Mount Her domain proshyf the Mexican Social Secreta- vides eh~rf11~ccQmmodations riat that national efforts for de- for 10 Sisters Each has her ownmiddot elopment do not eliminate the room andthere is II kitchenette aeed ~forfoleignaid where those ablE lobe up and

The Pontifieal commisSion Cardinal Roy indicated ill enshyaged in persuading rich counshytries to devote at least one per eent of their groSs national product to assist poor eountries

Archdiocese Adopts Project Equality

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing notified the priests lIeIlate of the Boston archdiocese of plans 10 adopt Project Equality a program designed to use purchasing power of church institutions to make firms supplying goods and 8elVices wipe out diICriminashy birislM Placticeamp

e~ut ~n enjoy their meals ~gethermiddot

The ~nfirmaryis but II few stepis from the Mount chapel wher~ the retired Sisters spend hours a day in prayer for comshymunity members still in the active lPostolate Also claiming time for Sisters whose eyesight permits are needlework ana erooheting projects

Always DraWlll Cheerful and dedicated Sister

Agnes Maureen who has I Deen at the infirmary six years is aided by Sister John Catherine who has served the aged Sisters two years A laywoman takes the night shift in the infirmary ensuring the Sisters round the clock care Bothmiddot Sister infirmashy

rians are licensed practical nurses who received their trainshyI g to L d f F tma Hosn a ur a y 0 a I shypital in the Providence Diocese

When I entered religion I hoped to be an infirmarian

said SIster Agnes Maureen I whas alwdays drawn to work for t e age

Some people think we havent got a nursing apostolate she added but we need nurses desshyperately Right now we have nine Sisters taking care of inshyfirmaries in our province

Among Sisters now at the Mount infirmary are Sister

Mary Agnes who celebrated her diamond jubilee last DeshyceJl)ber and most of wbose r~lishygious life was spent in New Bedford and middotNorth Attleboro schools and Sister Mary Lishy

gu()ri whomiddot f9r 49 yearl taught sixth graders at st Patricks School Fall River

HShe looks out her window at St Patricks said Sister Agnes Maureen and she says Theres home

The Sisters are welcoming the arrival of Spring and warm days said the infirmarian It means they can enjoy their sunporch sit in the Mounts garden and go for occasional car rides Of course they have many visitors she said Other Sisters in the house come to see them and so do Sisters from the convents where they forshymerly lived

Yes age comes kindly for Sisters Not Hke the old lady overheard in a downtown groshy

eery confiding to a chance fellow-customer her discovery of a bargain in frozen food I live alone you know and 1 get

three big servings from a packshyage--and only 29 cents

N 0 Sister lives alone

bull

~~tplic Newspaper Wins Press Awards

NEW ORLEANS (NC) -The eJarion Herald middotarchdiocesa middotnewspaper won eight awards iii the annual competition of the

N~W Or)eans Press Club ~ competition included daily and

weekly newspapers wire serVshyices and television stations

Millard F Everett editor won first place in two categories - editorial and best religioWl story This marks the first time in five years of competition that the Clarion has taken the top award for best religious story Staff members of the paper also took three second and three third place awards

----------------------------

ZENITH bull ACOUSTICON bull UNEX

bull BIOLOGICAU bull YITAMIIIS

C~tt 615-7829 IRENE R SHEA PROP

Prompt Free Delivery in fALL RIVER SOMERSET TIVERTON amp VICIHITY 101 ROCK ST (CORNER OF PINE ST) FALL RIVIImiddot

~ 6

THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFon River-Thurs Apr 11 1968

CathoJi~ ll]wnDv~JSityPltDcopy~regii~copyJ~

IPlanLUBffil AmeFicon ~1]~regregO WASHINGTON (NC) - A ops and l~aders of several South

jJroup of pr-ofessors from Cathshy American governments sHe University of America hope The Washington center comshyS n~w technical middotinstituteat the middotprises -ll group of professorsshy~tholic University of Gu~Washy mostly members of the CU caulI Ecuador may mark the llchool of middoted ucation-whomiddot are ltJPening of an international edshy specialists ineclUcationfordeshyvcation bridgetoLatin America Velopment Director of the proshy

The institute will be inaugurshy ject is Dr Jose A Baquero ated early this month as 11 middotcoshy WM has been commuting b~shy1)eIativeventure by the Center meen Washingtonand his nashylor Educational Research fa middottive Ecuador dming the -cmrent QuitoEcuadorand the Center school year lor Community Developmenhmd This is not an Ecuadorian Servioe at Catholic University project it is an internatienal bere It has the support 01 Vashy projed a resealclFaction proshykanofficials Ecuadorianbislshy gram between North and South

America Dr Baquero said middothereBC middotto Recruit laquorNe had to start middotsomewhere The natural plaoe 10 begin wasNegro St~1ent5 middot-the Qlace Where weaould get

CHESTNUT HILL (NC) shy the most facilitiesThisproject iesuit-eper-ated Boston College God willing if successful will bere has made available $100shy move throughout Latin AmershyGtOO fora talent search -progr1m ica We already have contracts to recruit Negro stJdents frem with interestedJeaders in Sao disadvantagedurbanareas middotof Paulo BTazil Bogota Colombia tlhecountry mainly in Greater and Lima Peru Boston Msgr Eugene Kevane direcshy

Father Michael P Walsh SJ tor of the Center for Communitypresident caUed for support off Development andServleedaimshyiIIe entirestudent body facshy ed iB number of Latin American Illlty and administration of EQsshy Church and government officialS Qon College to make the ~mshy have middotexpressed interest in thecram a success projectand a belid it may beshy

Since the program was starteJ come a model of assistance middottoIJeveral weeks ago some 50 ~shy lI3derdeveloped poundOuntrieslltIicatiopshave beenreceiltvelll He said ArcnbishGp Romolofrom students in ghetto areas Carooni apostolic nuncio 10lot -entrance middotin next Septemshy

~1u told him heilOllSiders theWltll freshman -class pmject of great importance andThere have a1w~ys beellU M~S a similhlr middotinstitute willIlegro students enrolled at B4tsshybe established at the Pontificalton College oUicials said ~t University in Limatheir Dumber is ~ot ~own 00shy

0tberhigh-ranking churchshyaYSe race is not shown 8ll1 middotmen who lthave endorsed theapplications The Collegemiddotacceptll project include MsgrLuigi Lishyattdents of all faiths gutti the Holy Sees PermanentN~t SeptemberNegro lrtlllshy

1Gbserver at the Food and Agrishy

bullnts with the necessary ~uaUshy6eations will be admitted n8 culture Organization of the 1Ilual while middotsome 25 will ge United Nations and Archbishop admitted under the talent Ceasar Antonio Mosquera fif

lt4IeQIChprogram The number is Guayaquil president of theEcshybeing limited for thegood af iliad-orlan Bishops Conference

GOLDEN JUBILEE Sisshyter Rose Alma Reid CSC (Sjltte1 M Flora) will mark herg-olden i llbilee of religious professjon on Sunday April 21 at Sacred Heart Convent New Bedford A Mass of thanksgi~rjng will be offered at 1130 Sunchw morning at Sacred Head Church and a reception will be held in the parish hall ITom2 to 4 th~t

afternoon Friends and forshymer pupils are invited t01l~

tend

So Curolina Bishop A-sksPettce $upport

CHARLESTON (NC)- Bishshymiddotop Ernest Lmiddot Unterkoefier of Charleston has called for the middotfull support ofall Americans of President Lyndon middotlB Johnshysons efforts to secure peace in middotVietnam

Tbe South ltCarolina Bishop said that the Presidents -peace ini tiati yes demonstrate that he is a gtarson who -has ever been conscious of the grave responsishybility 01 his ofillce and that his judgements have been measured ~y the critical threats to the securi~y and free action ofthe United States

ICampus Comediansl

R~JlJ~stforBirh ControJ 1nlcrmation lndBGSYlrncrGti(C~e

DAYTON (NC)-A Univershysity of Dayton chaplain said he suspected campuscomediami for 1b~ conJroversyaroused bY a request for availability of birth corttol information and materials In campus by theunishyversity stmiddotudent congress

Father Urban Rupp SM universi~y co-chaplain wrote in the chaplain s bulletin the alshymost unanimous aetion fthe student gfvernment group middotwas an idio~yncratic caper in the natureo Ii ttle childrenpl~ying

house He indicated he fouud it difshy

ficult to take the Pfoposa1 serishyomlY

Now of COUrse I middotcowd be taking this all -wrong be said

Perhaps it was intended 00 bn serious In that case I woUld be tempted to thinktheemershygency is not just immediateshyit is really one generation too late

This was taken asa reference to student efforts to pwih through the resolution orbirth control as an emergency -meashysure

That failed but a few days later the student middotcongressvo~ 29 tol to seeka change in llJllshyversUy Wlicy that would -pershymit the introductionof birth 1Ontrol selYiees in thestudem health center for married eQUoshy~les and Ulose llQOD _ ~arriedmiddot

the young Negroes whowiUbe ~pted oUiciaI said

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PATRIARCH The middotnewily elected head of the Syriac Oatholic Church Patriarch Hgtenys Antoine Hayek of Anshy~och was enthroned recentshy1w in Beirut Lebanon In this post hesucceds the late P-ashykiarch Ignace Cardinal TapshylPouni NC Photo

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In ~ glory of His Resurrection may be reborn man~

amiring hopes and CleSires _ ~ce

HAPPY EASTER THE OFFICERS DIRiEc1r~ AND STAFfshy

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-Ji1lim~~OF NEW BEDFORD

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iIHAPPINESS ciS

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THE ANCHO~-Trappists Elect Mother Church of Nation8 PortlglleSe 17 Thurs April 11 1968

Youngest Abbot P-epares fOI- Cenlellilial Celebration At Gethsenloni Dy Patida F r-u nis

GETHSEMANI (NC) The youngest abbot in the history of the monastery of Our Lady of Gethsemani was formally blessed (March ~l) by Archbishop Thomas J McDon~

ough 0pound Louisville Father M Flavian Burns

OCSO 36 ilgt the seventh ab~

bot in the 120-year history of the monastery He was elected by members of the community Inst January to succeed Abbot M James Fox OCSO

Father Flavian described bis position as en administrator whose main job il) service to others within the community He said his most important function it3 to hold plivate spiritual conversations with other monks and to handle the lillM)nasterys relations with the ~Atside world

Thcilt are some 120 monks at ~ethsemani abbey a decline from past years Abbot Burns cCrlbllltes the decline at least in prt to the attitude of the times YiJCl1 was foJJJlcrly accepted without question is now being ltI~etioned he observed

ltDontemplation Prayer

Changes have been made the IHurElY is now in English and 2Jc strict vow of silence has TiKen relaxed somewhat On an experimental basis the monks are allowed to use brief oral instructions instead of sign language as in the past

Despite the lack of radio or 1clevision Abbot Burns said the monks keep in contact through newspllpers with events in todays world The main thing ill to know what is going on in the Church and what effects our fellow hushymans according to the abbot

The life of a monk involves middotcontemplation and prayer rather than speaking up - 11 more spiritual turn according kI Abbot BUlns

A native of Jersey City N J he is a graduate of Henry SfIyder public high sehool there

Protests- Campaign Agamst Religion

NEW YORK (NC) - A new wave of terror against aU churcltgpers is now in effect in Albania an exile from that country has declored in a- letter of protest sent to the United Nations Commission on Human Rightsmiddot and~ to UN Secretary General U Thani

The protest bl Dr Rexhep KIasniqi president of the Free Albania Committee which has its headquarters here said that Albanial following a lf41oist eommunillt guideline has shut down every cltulch and mosque and has made any_kind of pubshylIc worship impossible

Thill campaign Dr Krasniqi tated is a violation of the UN Charter the Universal Declarashytion of Human Rights and of Albanias own communist conshystitutional guarantee of freedom of conscience for all

San Antonro Priests Form Association

SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Fortyshyene diocesan and religious comshymunities priests of the San Anshytonio archdiocese formed a priests association bere The priests ohose a six-member temshypora]) steering committee

One of the fiTst formal actions Gf the allsociatron was to inform Archbishop Robert E Lucey of San Antonio of the group forshymation

There are approximately 441

Parishioner d St John the Baptist Church in Nc Bedford are getting rendy for a momentoils event-the 100th anniversary of the fO~1l1dil1g of the oldest Portuguese parish in the nation The cen~en]ial celebration wi II not take place until 1971 but many things have to be done in preparation within the next three years One major project is renoshyvating the church ihelf To pay for the massive job ptrshyishioners have inaugur~teca Centennial Fund Drive to raise money for painting ~he church do extensive electrical work and buy a rew organ Estimated cost (f the regt3ir5 is $150000

Rt Rev Msgr John A Silvia pastor is honorary drve chairshyman and Frank S Jason is genshyeral chairman Other committee members include Richard GiJI1shysalves and Jesse V Santos Jr division chairmen JQseph S Vera special gifts chairman Richard L Lopes treasurer George Radcliffe director Louis S Silva assistant director Mrs Mary Lucy Soares office conshytrols and Miss Luey E Dias list supervisor

Members of the Campaign Exshyecutive Committee also include Frank M Martin ald Joseph C Motta

The history of St Johns and the history of the Portuguese people in America arc closely intertwined

It was at the end of the 18th Century that settlers began comshying from themiddot Azores to the United States TheJ were relashytively few in number nd as II

result almost lost their national identity

Near Ifood However by 1840 the trickle

of Azoreans was beginning to turn into a near Oood of imshymigrants who settled in New Bedford then a whaling and fishing center

By 1865 many Portuguese families called New Bedford home They lacked just one thing-a church of their own and a priest who spoke their language and understood their customs and traditions

Their first priest-Rev Joao Ignacio de Azevedo-anived in 1869 and on Sept 10 1871 St Johns parish was canonically established

Theremiddot were approximately 1shy000 Portuguese of Azorean deshyscent living in New Bedford at the time and the)T detelmined to build their own church A lot was purchased for $3OD8 ~ con~

siderable amount in those days and soon ground WQS broken for the new house of God

However Father de Azeedo was a mission pliest Vl~ho~moved

throughout the are~ aCministershying to his counblymen As a reshysult a new parish was establishshyed in Boston and he became its first pastor

Expandoll

Construction of St Johns WillS

continued by Rev Antonio de Mattos Freitas a native or Calshylteta St George Azores Fashyther Freitas also was responsible for the construction of a recshytory When he reUred because of ill health and returned to~ the AzoreS he was succeeded by Rev Antonio G de Silva Neves who was to serve St Johns durshying the greatest expansion Gfthe citys Portuguese colony

The first church located where a section of Morse- Twiampt Drill now stands soon ~ outgrown by its congregation and a drive began for agt new and larger church

Father Neves who served 8~j

pastor for almost 25 years saw the new church at County and Wing Streets almost coop]eted However ill health also forced bill retirement

PREPARING FOR CENTENNIAL In charge of fumd drive for hundredth anniversary of St John Baptist Church New Bedford are from left George Radclffe drive execushytive director Frank Jailon general chairman

pleted construction of the present church and rectory in three years The church which now serves the parish was solemnly blessed an4 dedicated to the worship of God by the late Bishshyop Feehan

Through the years the parshyishioners of St Johns have proved their dedication to their cliurch Now they are renewinr their dedication

Msgr Silvia notes that before the small St Johns Church was built the citys Portuguese colshyony attended Mass at St Lawshyrence Church Later they moved into what today is Crowells brt Store

Landmark Today the 11Inificent st

Johns is a landmark in New Bedford befitting its position as Mother Church of the Portu guese in the- UnFted States

MSgr Silvia a native of Pall River served at St Peters Church in Provincetown for 27 years His only other assi1shyment St John the B-aptirt Church

Ordained to the priesthood or Dec 20 1919 St Johns was the new priests first assignment He remained at the cRurch unshytil No~ember 1924 when he was transferred to Ptovinceto~

On Oct 2 1951 Msgr Silvia returned to St Johns as pzsshytor a post hemiddot still fulfills with zeal and energy

His assignmetlt to St Jobnfl parish in 1919 was not ~1sgr Sinshyvias introduotion to the New Bedford parish

As a young boy the p2stcshyrecalls his poundathers weekly trips from Fall River to New Bedford to bring back a priest

Four Families There were few Portuguese

families in Fall River in those days he says When my father arrived in Fan River there were iust four Portuguese families in the city Gradually others setshytled there

My father used to drive over in a horse and buggy to bring Il priest back tc Fall River to ll3y

degbrought him back the next dzy Since those days of hischiMshy

bood Msgr Silvia observeamp-l Turn to Page Eighteen

Continued fronmiddot Page Three

the late Tobias and Ann Lynch ]Burke Mr Burke was born in Newport Tipperary Ireland and his speech bears witness to the o-it and lilt of his birthshyplce He is married te Catbshyerine Lowney Burke and the couple lives next to the Chanshycery

DI1 Davia Costa Dr Costa son of David CosU

and Julia Rodrigues is the husshyband of Louella Somerday and fther of five children A dentshyist in NeJ Bedford he is active ir ceo and in St Vincent ~e

Pml work on a parochial and al(l level He has been zealoUJ ir- many important phases ~

perish aetivity in Immaculate Conception Parish in New BedshyforC He was recipient of the Diocesan Marian Award in Deshycember

itpJlin 15 TIle awards Jill be presenteCl

at St Marys Cathedral Fa]] River on lIlonday evening April 15 at 8 PM At toot timeuro there will be the investi shyture of two lI-ionsignori the awarding of Papal Knight 03 SZ Gregory honors to nine ~sect- oeesan laymen and the Pro EecIesia et Pontipoundlce award kJ mother Pierre Marie adminisshytlato of St Annes Hospital IE Fall River~

Join Federation IIALEIGH (NC)-Forty ()(f thfl

matewide Raleigh dioceses 14~

tlriests have formed the North iCaFolina Priests Associatioil which will affiliate with a Emshy

ticmal federation DOW beiJl~

formed

May the Joy and Pomise 01- Easter

uplift your spirit and gladden

your hean

FROM THE OFRCEIIS AND PERSONfJB Of

qkJM~ERCHANTS CIa1iotuLe BANK

IN NEW BEDFORD

SOUTH BANK-Cove St at Iodney French Boulevard WEST BANK-Kempton Street at Mill Stret

LUNDS CORNER BANK-Acushnet Ave rear Lunds Comer DARTMOUTH BANK-Dartmouth Street near Rockdale Ave NORTH BANK-Acushnet Avbull at Coffin Ave

CENTER BANK-Purchase and William Sts priests in the San Antonio arcl1shy Next pastor was the Rev Mass He used to stay overnight tiiocese Manuel A da Silva wt() oom- at our hOuse ald JlG ~tbeI

-

18 Tti~ ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1969 CatecheticsWeek Set at StonehillDioce$clm ~j[llIlde[lj)fl5 Join Nal-gonGI Some 400 priests religious and laymen are expected to at shyMculrraurru U A$~ssinatBon tend a catechetics institute b be held Monday Aug 5 throughOf Dr Mriin luther KilnS Saturday Aug 10 at Stonehill College Diocesan schools shared i~ national mourning at the Sister Mary Francille CSJ

~8sassination of Dr Martin Luther King with special theology professor at Regis ColshyMasses or prayers offered in every school At Cassidy High lege will direct the institute in Taunton Rev John Moore chaplain celebrated a Mass and speakers will include Rev

Frederick Moriarty SJ Revfor the repose of the soul Cha~les E Cook Rev James F(l)f the Negro leader and rently hplds first place in the Hawker Sister Florence -MishyNotre Dame math league chels OLVM Gerard Potte~

tlie chapel by students in a demy Fairhaven have been study periods were spent in Girls at Sacred Hearts Acashy

bauoi and Mrs Helen Jacobs With the theme Making Alllvigil for peace working on a project to bring

Christian Youth Movement Easter cheer to patients at St Things New institute sessiono will discuss Scripture catechetshymembers at Jesus-Mary Aca- Lukes Hospital New Bedford ical techniques use of filmsdemy Fall River heard the New Under supervision of Sister Jushywith adolescents other visualFolk a group of singing Holy lie Louise SSCC theyve ~een aids parent education teamCross seminarians Their appear- making tray favors including teaching and creative dramaticsance was arranged under t~e decorative placemats and napkin

Further information is avail shydirection of Mofher John Scarry holders for adults and flowered able from Stonehill CollegeJRJM Jollipops chicky surprises and North Easton 02356Also at JMA its French Week bunny hats for childern

The observance- began Sunday Science Fair Winners when French Club members Jeanne Phenix Yvette Berthi- Holy Family had four winshy Charities AppeaI aume and Susan Cournoyer took ners at the annual New Bedford Continued from Page Three part in a play sponsored by the Science fair In the senior division

Community Fund CampaignPrevost French Club Les Fem- James Berry and John Thomas president Board of Managers mes Parlent Trop Throughout of the New Bedford school were of Boston Dispensary and vice

the week too there have middotbeen cited fo~ earth science and phy- the Diocesan cheerleading tour- will combine with the seniors president of USOseveral skits prepared by mem- sics proJects respectively while t tl h ld t F h th bZbers in the junior division both Pa- namen recen yea ee an Lor e occasIOn SInce oth He has been the recipient of

or effort at Prevost was tricia Downey and SharonSmola High but sports arent all that cltsses of the academy are small honorary degrees from Holy MaJ matter at the TauntoJl girls due to the fact that the high Cross College Tufts University

e Sunday program Whlch ln- were recognized for work in the h f h d I ld f b sc 001 Break ast lunc an schoo IS being phased out Suffolk University Bradford -luded In addItIon to the play fle 0 iology M formal dinner pace settmgs The Junipero Club of Holy Durfee College of Technology~veral talks by promInent any students won honors at h M h I I I were recently on display at the Family High recently sponsored of Fall Rivet and Lowell Techshy

I remiddotnch cItIzens a French song- t e assac usetts RegIOn S F h school library and members of a talk on drug addiction for jun- nological Institute ~t and a motion picture Clence alr eld in Fall Rlver They included Christine Four- the Mothers Auxiliary were on iors and seniors The talk was Bishop to AddJess Meeting

UN French Club nier Dominican Academy and hand to answer etiquette ques- given by two brothers one an Most Rev James L ConnollyAt Coyle the French Club di- Diane Desmarais Mt St Mary tions from the students ex-addict the other director of Bishop of Fall River will speak

Ilected by Brother Hugh McCabe Academy both Fall River Both And the Coyle Fathers Club Marathon House a center for to the priests parish trusteesIOeCently elected officers After girls were recogiIized by the held its annual Father-Son Com treatment of addicts located in chairmen of the Catholic Charishy8le votes were tallied however Southeastern District of the Mas- munion breakfast at the school Coventry RIo ties Appeal and the invited lays our man at Coyle it looked sachuse~ts Dental Society bull with Robert Cahill ofthe Rhode CongratuIcitions go to Joseph gue9ts of the 111 diocesan if ~embers were voting for Debra Lay Dominican Aca- Island Food and Drug Commis Abraham of St Anthony High parishes bull UN delegation The presidents demy received a savings bond sion as guest speaker He dis- for meriting runner-up position Roland A Lafrance 1968 ApshyliPot wa~ captured he reports from the Bristol South Distriet cussed harmful effects of various iil the state finals of the annual peal lay chairman will also adshy a Polish fellow Cbarles Ozug Medical Auxiliary arid Michael drugs American Legion olatorical con- dress the 800 expected to attend lames OBrien a true Irishman Zito Bishop Feehan High At~middot The Catholic Students Mis- test - the opening meeting of the won the vice-presidential spot tleboro was awarded a plaque sion CrUsade at Stang H~gh has In club~ews at~HA the Senshy campaign for funds for the 30 while the treasurers job was by the Womens Auxil1ary to the taken as a special project this ior Science Club will conduct agencies of the Catholic Chadshy~warded to Jorge Matesanz -a Mass Veterinary ASsn month of April the collection of a farewell meeting for seniors ties Appeal

BASKETBALL PLAYERS On basketball team at Connolly High Fall River are from left Tim Duffy Tom Kroger John Long Joe Kelly Greg Sullivan Mike Manning

~~dent of Spanisll extraction Winners in the division of donated medical supplies and this ~month and members will Only Paul Bor9ue the secretary earlhscience Were John Dias eyeglasses for deprived Peoples visit an encephalitis clinic in I ~anaged to make the scene for Thomas Burk~ anciRobei-tClou~ of the world Supplies collected Freetown in May The Stamp France tier FeehahMicIlael Cote Pre illbe forwarded to the Cathi- and Coin Clubis planning a pubshy

At Bishop Stang iil North vost and Elizabeth Lavoi~ Do- olic Missions Medical Bureau for lie exhibition of members col- Dartmouth the math team led minican shipment iections in May imd the Chess by high scorer Lawrence l3yrnes Awards in math and engineer- Upco~ing at S~A Fairhaven Club has undergone reorganiza- placed secon~in a reeentBqs- ing went to Carol Vasconcellos is the aruiual senior prom which tion election of officers inshyflon public schools math meet Mt St Mary Madeleine Delisl~ wilL be held in the Colonial cluding Edward Norman presishyThe Stang team paced by the and Vivian Blais and Michael R60m of Whites restaurant in dent Daniel Brule vice-presi- shyeo-sIstent good work of George Zito Feehan Genevieve Pappas Westport from 8 to midnight dent Diane Lizotte secretary Oliver and EIleen Keavy cur- and Debra Lay Dominican Joan Friday night May 24 Juniors TuniorProm

Basile Feehan Amato Polselli The Holy Family Junior Prom Prevost and Sharon Woycie- Board ofmiddot Trustees isslated for Friday night AprilCentennialmiddot chowski Mt St Mary were 26 at Kennedy Center The prom

Continued from Page Seventeen cited To Study Changes will last from 8 to 11 and will Chemistry winners included have Carousel as its themebroad smile on his face-many Jane Arruda Anne Lewis De- WASHINGTON (NC) - The Mlisic will be by the Escorts

other families have arrived from nise Michaud Elizabeth St board of trustees of the Catho- And the Holy Family debatePltlrtugua1 A man d Diane Lamontagne lic University of America in team tied for first place in the Our Lady of Mt Carmel par- Christine Fournier Dominican Washington D C will meet Narry League with Cassidy A ~h was detached from St Johns Anne Sullivan and Pamela Can- Sunday April 21 in St Louis playoff will be held As of now as the Portuguese population dee Feehan Marilyn Riley and to consider a wide range of rec- Cassidys debate reco~d is 12 grew Then Our Lady of the Ann-Marie Charrette Sacred ommended changes resulting wins out of 14 debatesjrnmaculate Conception parish Hearts Fall River Irene Caron from a year-long study of the was erected to care for families Cassidy Marilyn Bentley Mt pontifical university by a comshyi Portuguese descent living in mitteee headed by Dr Carroll ~e North End of New Bedford St Mary Hochwalt

In the field of physics Alan middotRAMBLERToday St John the Baptist White Prevost Michelle Paquet The meeting will be held in ehurch has about 4000 parishshy SHA Fall River JamesReid Jrconjunction witll the Spring Americas Economy King ioners Our numbers started Prevost Mary Soans Jane Mc meeting of the National Confershy Fnr the Best Deal Come To dropping about seven years ago Donald and Martba Nugent yent ence of Catholic Bishops Broadway Ramblerasgr Silvia explains He feels St Mary The trustees are expected 10 INC part of the drop in membership Representatives from Diocesan name a new 30-man board meet 768 BROADWAYis due to a number of families schools to the Mass State Sci- with faculty representatives for RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 131moving outside the parish )ounshy ence Fair will include Michael the first time in histoi-y and CHARLES J DUMAIS Presdarles Intermarriages with othshy lito Amato Polselli Debra Lay discuss the search for a new er nationalities account for still Madeleine Delisle Jane Arruda university rector to replacemore losses Anne Lewis Father J~dhn P Whalen ~ho ~III11I11I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I11I1I1HIUIIIIIIIlIIlilllllllllllfllHlIilttmmIllIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllllnIlIllIllHIIIIIIIIIJ111~ However the Mother Church Denise Michaud Alan White was naine last October to a ef the Portuguese is not fading Michelle Paquet Elizabeth St one-year term as acting rector E WEEKEND SPECIAL sect away AmandSharon Woyciechowski A new school was built in New Projector

f957 It is expensive Msgr Silvia admits but I felt we needed it

St Anthony High in New Bedshyford is rejoicing over acquisi shytion of a movie projector as a

Parish gtrganizations are active gimiddotft from the alumni association and individual parishioners are willjng to give of their time

Presentation to principal Sister Lucille Champagne was made

and effort Perking

to keep the parish by Mrs Josephine Lafleur sociation president

asshy

Now they are getting read7 Cassidy-Coyle cheerleaders Jor a 100th anniversary captured third pillce v9Phy iil

_

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Case Somerset Favorites In Narry Diamond League

Case High of Swansea and Somerset are pre-season ehoices in this seasons Narragansett League baseball race but the club th8lt will bear watching is Westport TIne darkshyhorse Villagers may have a few surprises for Narry foes Another small area school

with a respectable 8-6 recordthat potentially has a shot Only one member of that at a league championship is squad Calvin Hopkinson will Norton of the Tri-Valley not be playing for the Villagers Conference Coach Ed Bibeau this Spring With the rest of the has most of last Deasons Central club ready to go - watch Jlor Village regulars Westport to make its presence in the fold ready lmown to challenge the Among fuose returning are perennial Paul Eastwood an Russ Picard favori1es If 0 T two of the better performers in Narry honors the circuit a year ago Eastwood amp1i1 at Norton led the team in hitting with a (C 0 a c h Peter highly respectable 360 averagem[l ~ek has pitched and played the infield G3ven returning Picard like Eastwood 15 also ~nnen for versatile An outfielder by trade ~theY chamshy he also takes his turn on the ii~~JWhip bid Peter mound for Coach Bibeaus nine Weo~port Bartek Carl Zajac and Jeff Hague tmIshed the 1961 eampaign ill round out Bibeaus four-man ~ place in tbe NalT7 loop pitching staff

Norton Bids for Tri-Valley Crown jfOO task of handling the but in thin scholastic year of

~tJ of this quartet will fall athletic surprises it may not be Gpoundl ~e shoulders of either Ron as big as some thinllt ~JmOi) or Manny Cabral both

A second place finisher inexperienced receivers ConnOlll 1967 the Norton Lancers haveexcel1B not only defensively their sights on the Tri-Valleybut likewise with the bat He Conference crown The clubsbit at a 333middot clip last Spring one-two hitters last campaignJohn Souza and Mike Andras have departed from the Norton th better than 300 hitters baseball scene but the teamqaln will be out to join the one-two pitching punch is reshyleague leaders in batting prowshyturning Juniors Ken Allen aess They should put a wallop left-hander who had a perfectin Westports oHensive attaCK 7-0 record last Spring and ArtIf Coach Bibeaus boys can dushyBouchard will be relied uponplicate their Performances of a heavily to bring the league flagJellr ago Offensively and biB to Norton Coach Bartek alSobig four comes through on middottbe hopes to get some help in middotthemound Westport may realize a the pitching departmentmiddot fromlong awaited Narry championshyFred Rego Bill Gorczyca andEip dream Admittedly if Ie Steve Nichols bull bie word in ~~rts_tuture

~ ~ bull I

OpeUp With~on-League Co~esttsmiddot Other returnees incl~ Capshy develop rapidlymiddot defensively if

tain Mike Wynnn Greg Croff they are to regain the leagues BOb Adams Tim McEndy and divisional crown - whicb flbeymiddot Paul Hassie Wynn a senior lost to HoWston last Spring middotmiddot will be starting his third season and gain a shot at the Trl shyill left field with Cruffstarting V~ey Conference ebampionshyhis second campaign in center ship Many area clubs openThey will be joIned by Wynns their campaign this week with brother Ricky in right fied non-league games highlighting

The infield win be anchored the action League competition by Adams at second base and will commence for the most Hassle at short Newcomers part next week Richy Silvia and George Macshy Mother Nature has done her Arthur are presently battling it job this Spring Baseball coaches out for the third base job and throughout -the diocese admit Lorrie Adams also a first-year that this is the best Spring they man appears to have the inside have had to prepare flbeir track on first base charges in many a year Weather

cannot be blamed for a slowMcEndy who has been the start this time around All areLancers starting catcher since eagerly awaiting the umpireshis Freshman year is starting first call to play ballhIs third campaign behiJd the

plate Bartek expects McEndy to hold the inexperienced inshy New School System field together

The Lancers will have to imshy In German State prove upon their hitting and DUSSELDORF (NC) - The

North Rhine-Westphalia state parliament middothas approved aCanadian Prelates change in the states school sysshytem that probably will meanEstablish Council the end of many denominational

OTTAWA (NC)-The Catho-shy schools Hc bishops of Canada have esshy By an overwhelming majorshytablished a 12-member Fiscal ity the parliament voted to Affairs Council composed of change the state constitution and clergy Religious and laymen establish the nondenominational who will advise the Church on Christian school in which reli shyfinanclal matters gious training is given by Cathshy

Among the areas which are olic and Protestant instructors receiving ini~ial attention of the in the same school as the patshycommittee is the question of tern for state-supported schools whether the Church should be from the fifth through the nint subject to government taxation grades and if so what form of taxation In the past the state has supshywould be equitable to churches ported Illeparate Catholic and government and other taxshy Pro tell tan t denominational payen Khoola

-~) PASSION PLAY Today Christians hold the Solemn Observance of the Lords Supper

It is commemorated ina PMsion Play at Prevost High School Fall River by David Poisshyson as Christ Paul Martel left 8$ St John and Paul Bouampquet as St Peter

DominicGlIsmiddot Rent ApGrt~~rit in Inner -Cimiddottimiddot middot

Want t~ Get Closer to I Agony of the Worl~middot WASHINGTON (NC)middot Pift his experience in the neig~lgtorshy ruary 1966 because theJ

Dominican priests-each doing hood is invaluable in helping wanted to get closer to the bis own thing-are living middotin an both prisoners and parolees He agony of the world While nol apartment in the inner ~ cd said the insight he gains into eliminating the academic life Washington here they come from ancl h~w they felt that living in the inlleJ The five run the gamut from they view life aids him In mv city would be as important bull

a professor of moral theology at ing them intelligent advice and learning experience as academic the Don)inican House ofStucUeII 8ssis~nCe study to a prison chaplain a1 the Diamp- Father William Kane is middotthemiddotNeighborhOoclll[aatrict of Columbia Jail Ibey neighborhood man of the have in common1heiy addresa A Pr~ceton graduate ~itl1 apartment Hemiddotworks with minshyand a desire to understand and doctorates from Harvard aJgt4 isters inmiddot the area in establishing alleviate the problems ~ livlnc OxfCrd Father Albert Brodershy youth programs and fightina I in a poor Urban community ick teaches Constitutional LalV for better housing and fail

Father TbomasHea~ middotttie at the catholic University Law rent laws His motive is to givemoral theology professor aDd School the people in the community aD author of a reCent bOOkmiddotID awareness of their own dignitymiddotBe and Father Heath startedFaee of An~sh is 0Il 1be to affirm the fact that it is athe apartment project in Feb-bOard of direCtors of the Pe0shy ood place to live ples Center a house soon to be

the rehabilitationopened for Criticizes Usury of alcoholics He also meets

MEXICO CITY (NC)-Mexshy5 50 01- a SYSTEMATIC wimiddotth ~culties of Wasbingtcm

icc CityS Jose Cardinal Garibiseminaries to discuss policyshy bull 10 year SAViNGSRivera urged bankers meetingmaking and apostolic activity MONTHLY DEPOSITSat the National Bankers Conshy

Legal Aid Office vention in Guadalajara to comshy 5 00 01- a INVESTMENT bat usury and work closely bull 10 year SAVINGS

Father Joseph Cooney a NOTICE ACCOUNTSwith the government to proshylawye~ who has worked 011

voter registration in the South mote the social welfare of all II REGULAR4 5001 the Mexican people bull 10 Jflar SAVINGSand took an active part in dvil

rights activities such lIS

~lma march is DOW admin~ Bass Rivertering a legal aid office in the CENTERneighborhood of the Dominishy Savings Bank

cans apartment Volunteer law Paint and Wallpaperstudents from the Catholic Uni- Bank 8y Man I

versity of Ameiica assist him Dupont Paint

We Pay The Postage

IJcor Middle St

A third member of the group m this program 4iiii 422 Acush Ave bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA Fat her Raymond MalonSOl1 ~ New Bedford bull SOUTH VARMOUTH 4raquo HYANNISserves as the Catholic chapiain bull PARKINGmiddot

bull DENNIS PORT bull OSTtRVILLEatmiddot the D C jail A late vocashy Rear of Storetion Father Malonson has been ordained only two years middot Father Malonsoll feels U1at

LEVESQILIES OFFla E~lnPMENTNow Many Wear Wood Metal Desks and ChairsFALSE TEETH

With More Comfort JUST GiVE ME A CHANe TO QUOleTo overcome discomfort when

dentures sllp sllde or loosen Just sprinkle a llttle FASTEETH on your 187 SHAWMUT STREET bull NEW BEDFORD MASS

middot plates FASTEElH holds dentures firmer You eat better feel more PO Box 2062 - Hervey L Levesque

middot -wont sour Helps check plate odor comfortable FASTEETH Is alkaline

Dentures that fit are lIlSSentlai to Telephone 993middot1264middot health See your dentist regularly Get FASTEETB at all drUB counten ___ _ _____11_0__-D-tcl----4

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs April 11 1968

PhySDCOUi) l1JJ Uges litUBgy C~[filges

~n Last RStes RED BANK (NC) A

~atholic physician called for revision of the liturgical $orm of the Anointing of the Sick cluring a discussion on The Chaplains Role With the Dying Patient at Riverview Hospital here in New Jersey

Dr George J Sheehan an alumnus of Manhattan College and a founder of Christian Brothers Academy in nearby lLincroft was one of three apeakers at the symposium coshyaponsored by the hospital and Ute 1 Redmiddot Bank Council of

ilhurches Citing obvious failures by

both physician and clergyman iin helping the dying patient and bis family Dr Sheehan sugshygested members of the family Ghare inmiddot a ceremony which would exchange feelings of llove and hope between them ElDd the dying person

Dr ~heehan observed that while inadequacy in the face of death has been in the past apparent to the Protestant criergyman it is now also felt by Catholic priests

They findmiddot he said the La~t Sacrament in its present form Ii a consolation only to those with the strong faith of a Breton iiteasant-a kind of faith they e seeing less and l~ss-

Appropriate Theology He also said while the develshy

pment of a Common Christian itervice parlakirtg of the same llodividual familymiddot and commu~

Ility significance as Bap~i8ai -dMarriage would be a giant p in middotheiping people to a middotbappy death iit would remain IDol theologians to present- a relshy

qwant lmd acceptable image of mail in this time and this place ilnd to develop an appropriate eology of death heaven ~nd bell in order to make a signifi- sant change in our life style

lOd therefore in our approach to death

Other panelistsmiddot were the Rev Seorge Fitzgeraid a Presbyteshyaan minister middotand middotchaplain at Princeton Hospiital arid Mn Ruth Snyder a nurse of the lIiverview Hospital staffmiddot

POSTER CHILD LEADS WAY Joey BeIge 8 of Syraeuse NY leads themiddot way down a White House lttairway in the company ofthe Fi~st t-adymiddotMrsLyndon B Johnson

and Mrs Muriel Humphrey wife ofthe Vice-President Joeymiddotis this years poster child of

the National Association for Retarded Children H~ ismiddot thesQn ofMt and Mrs Robert Beige middotmembersmiddotOf St Vincent de Paul parish in Syracuse whos-e ot-herfive children SlHshy

round their Uttle broth~r wil1hmiddot the love and care to h~lp him livea full and happymiddot life

Penn See Studies Poverty Pmiddotrogram HARISBlJRq (NC)--Coadju- is being made to see ho)Vtbe to coordinate and channel our

tor Bishop Joseph T Daley diocese canmiddot best use its re-middot efforts in the fieldmiddot vicar general- of the Harrisburg sources to alleviate poverty Bishop Daley said it ismiddot im- diocese calledmiddot on the nearly problems middotperative that all our people 50000 Catholics in the area to He alsomiddot said Wemiddot contem- knoW and understand the probshy

acquaint th~mselves with 10- middotplatemiddot the early middotestablishment of middotIem of middotracism and the funda- calracfal and poverty problems amiddotmiddot diocesanmiddot human relations mental moral injustices which

In a lettermiddot read at aU Masses commission middotto serve asmiddot a liaison middotare at the root of the deplorable BishopDlIleT said middotthat a study with all people Collcerned and conditions in our own area

Urges Hospitals Re~ognie Unio~s

CLEVELAND (NC) - AI layshymens group here has asked the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hospitals to declare its willingshyness to recognize labor unions as collective bargaining agents for hospitals employes

lNle request came in a letter from William A caldwell chainnan of the eurolevellllnd Conference of Laymen to Sister ~ry Collette of Hamilton Ohio president of the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hosplshytala during a one-day meeting here of the Ohio Hospital Assoshyciation convention

The laymens group said such a statement would promote the human dignity of hospital emshyployes in real and immediate ways serve the common good of our communities and inshycrease the understandingmiddot of Catholic teaching by all the citishyzens of Ohio

The letter pointed out that the National Catholic Hospital Association 1 a s t November called on Catholic hospitals tiraquo be guided by the social teachshyings of the Church and to deal with unions that employecfgt choose

Discuss ~iot Report On Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC) - Beginshyning Sunday April 14 the Catholic Hour will present over the NBCmiddot network a three-part series The Climate of Change

Evolution or Revolution foshycusing on three areas of social and religioUs concern today today

~gr Rop~rt Fox cOordinashytor of Spanish community 00shy

middot lion in the New York arclidioshymiddoteese will discuss The Riot centommissi~ middotReport Amiddot Chrisshy

tiati Response April 14 Msgr Ivan D Illich of the Intereushy-tural Center 01 Language and D middotoe u men tat 1 on CuershyDavaca Mexf~o win be intershyviewed Aprjl 21 and Father Francois Houtart Belgian 00shyciologist will be interviewed Apiil 28

The National Council of Cathshy oUc Men producer of the OathshyoUe Hour reconunendseheckshymiddoting local newspaper programa for broadca9t time in particushymiddotRar areas

I Am The RestUlJTectiltogtD

Ai 1)(J[YQfGfDVIJJpound)9

lJ1~TJPJiiD~ EEJ~lJregff

FALL RIVER

Page 3: 04.11.68

3

Pontiff Honors Diocesan Laity

Pro Ecclesia et Pontiice Medal

Will Be Awarded to Four His Holiness Pope Paul-recognizing their efforts and

endeavors over the years-has honored three more diocesan men and a woman The Supreme Pontiff has awarded the four the Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice medal Most Rev James L Connolly Bishop of middotFall River ann 0 u n c e d today They are

Miss Margaret M Lahey 37 rorest St Fall River St Marys Cathedral Parish

Francois Bouchard 105 Dawshyeon St New Bedford St Joshysephs Parish New Bedford

lohn J Burke 344 Highland Ave Fall River Holy Name Parish Fall River

Dr David Costa Jr 325 Gardner St New Bedford Imshy~aculate Conception Parish ~ew Bedford

Miss Lahey daughter of the late Thomas E and Ida Kelly Lahey has been a teacher in the Fall River Public School System for 35 years and in the Diocesan School system for five years Second president of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women she has been particushyiBrly devoted in the field of tile education of exceptional ehildren For this zealous acshyvity she received the Diocesan arian Award in December

For ten ye~rs she has been bull principal coordintaor of the Anshynual Bishops Charity Ball whose proceeds are devoted to the care of exceptional chil shydren Mr Bouchard son of the late Joseph and Mary Richardson Bouchard is the husband of Lillian Duval and the father of six children He and his wife are both active in St Josephs Parish activities and Mrs Boushychard is a CCD teacher Supershyvisor for a construction firm Mr Bouchard is a trustee of St Josephs Parish served as parshyish chairIlan for the Bishop S~ang High School Drive in the Parish and is zealous in all parish endeavors

Mr Burke is undoubtedly the best-known of all diocesan emshyployees Maintenance man at the Bishops home and Chanshy REV DR MARTIN LUTHER KINH JR eery he has served both the late Bishop Cassidy and Bishop Connolly long and well Son of

Turn to Page Seventeen

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 11 1968

Approves Senate Ideas bull Full Catholic

Partidpataon in YMCA YWCA

bull Priests to Submit Names for New Bishops

bull Dioceses of Fall River and Provishydence Ex~h~nge

Faculties

TheMost Reverend Bishop has informed the Executive Committee of the Senate of Priests that he has approved several suggestions sent to him by the Senate

Rev John P Driscoll Presishydent of the Priests Senate has released the following items that have been discussed between the Senate and the Bishop and which have met with the Bishops apshyproval

In keeping with a discussiOll of the matter by the National Conference of Catholic Bishops

less than two hours later at St Bishop Connolly has said thatOn Wednesday April 3 the Catholics may participate fullynight before his death Rev Dr Josephs Hospital

Martin Luther King Jr issuedCharities Appeal leadersmiddot

Said Archbishop John Dear- in all programs of the YMCA and YWCAwhat in the light of later events den of Detroit president of the

Each year Ilhe Bishops of aftwillmiddot become a most moving National Conference of Catho- area meet after Easter to sendJo Hear Atty E B Hanify statement of his credo lic Bishops the next day to Rome the names of those

1 dont know what will hapshy Dr King gave his life formiddot priests whom they feel shouldAttorney Edward B Hanify a member of the Boston pen now he said We have others in the finest spirit of~ firm of Roper and Gray will openthe 1968 Catholic got difficult days ahead but Christian love Charities Appeal kick-off meeting at 2 Thursday afternoon it doesnt matter with me lgte-middot In Newark some 25000 partic-April 18 in the auditorium of 1ihe new Bishop Connolly cause Ive been to the mountain ipated in a Palm Sunday intershy

top Like anyone else I wouldHigh School Atty Hanify faith and interracial Walk forlike to live a long life But Im Understanding through thewas born in Fall Rivermiddot Oct State Street Bimk and Trust notmiddotconcerned with that 1 just ghetto area where last Summers1 1912 He is the son of the Co and Boston Edison Co want to do Gods will and He has

He is a trustee of the Provident rioting took place The longallowed me to go up themounshyIRte Superiormiddot Oourt Judge Institution for Savings in Bosshy scheduled march was rededicat-

IMward F Hanify and Mary ton tain ed to Dr King bull (Brodkorb) Hanify A grad- Atty Hanify is a member Auxiliary Bishop John J Dougshy

of Holy Cross College National Advisory Council on I the land I herty of Newark president ofute see promised Class of 1933 summa cum laude Education of Disadvantaged may not get there with you but Seton Hall University was and of the Harvard Law School Children lifemiddot trustee of Tufts I want you to know tonight that among the hundreds of religious LLB 1936 he married Jane Univoersity trustee secretary we as a people will get to the leaders in the march Dillon of Waterbury Conn in director John Fitzgerald Kenshy promised land He prayed that Dr Kings1940 ~ey have three children nedy Library member of Execshy spirit ~ay rise to haunt the Edward B Hanify Jr Jane A utive Committee National Cathshy hearts and minds of all AmerishyI am not worried about any-Hanify and John Dillon Hanify olic Community Service and cans till we have the victory forthing Im not fearing any manThe Hanify family resides in president of Family Counselling which he gave his life Mine eyes have seen the gloryBelmont The guest kick-off and Guidance Centers Inc From Chicago where DrsPeaker served during World of the coming of the Lord

Kings marches caused racial formerly as chairman Board of strife in 1965 and where his death touched off one of the nashy

Val II as a Lieutenant USNR The guest speaker served

Atty Hanify is a director of Advisory Trustees Holy Cross The next night just before he the American Telephone and College member Board of Visshy was middotto leave his motel for an tions severest riots John CardishyTelegraph Co John Hancock itors of United States Military engagement Dr King stepped nal Cody said he was deeply~utual Life Insurance Co Academy 1962to 1965 chairman onto the balcony of his room and ~ismayed at the news of the

of the 1950 Greater Boston bent to pick up something He tragic passing of Dr Martin Tum to Page Eighteen was shot in toe neck and died Luther King

~This Is the Day the Lord Has Made

The Risen Saviour is freshyquently represented as a lamb The glory that surshyrounds the figure indicates the triumphant Resurrection and the beginning of the life of glory which Christs Reshydemption secured for all men who beliveve and make use of the means of Grace which He extends to mankind

The figure of the lamb is one of the many which in

ATTY EDWARD B BANIFY the fourth century are found

Page One explanation

on the stone coffins and alshy80 bull in the basilicas of Romemiddot and Ravenna He was ofshyfered because of his own will He shall be led as a sheep to the slaughter and shall be dumb as a lamb beshyfore his shearer (lsa liii 7)

The Paschal Lamb ismiddot repshyr~sented carrying a s t a f f with cross and pennant The staff represents the cross and the pennant which is

always white with a red cross upon it represents the Body of Christ

The drawing points out that Christ is the new way leading into the holy place through A new and living way which He hath dedicated for us through the veil that is to say His Flesh (Heb x 20) Of this Lamb the Church sings in the Preface Christ our Pasch was sacri shyficed

be taken into consideration to be named as bishops Bishop Connolly asks that the priests of the Diocese acting individual1T or through the Senate as a whole send to him any names of priesta whom they feel should be so considered

Bishop Connolly and Bishop McVinney of the Providence Diocese baveexchangM the fashyculties of the two Diocesesshypriests holding faculties (pel shym~ions) to hear Confessions

Turn to Page Ten

Bishops Attend Funeral Rites Of Dr King

ATLANTA (NC)-Archshybishop Terence J Cooke of New York and Bishop John J Wright of Pittsburgh headed the Catholic Church delshyegation at the funeral rites of slain Dr Martin Luther King

Thousands and thousands at shytended the ceremonies which had to be conducted out of doors after the religious service at the Ebenezer Baptist Church for the former leader of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference

The principal advocate of truth love and justice in his non-violence campaign for the Negroes Dr King attained natshyional fame for his work

Businesses schools courts banks and the New York Stock Exchange were closed on Tuesshyday last when leaders from evef7 activity in the United States were represented at the final exercises honoring the Southern mlnistel who procured his doctor of theshyology degree from Boston Unishyversity

4 THE ANCHOR-Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs Aprl1 1968

The Parish Pdlrade J(OLY NAME

FALL RIVER

ContemJ)orary music will ae eompany the 1115 Mass Easter Sunday morning

Altar boys will rehearse at 10 tomorrow and Saturday mornshyings for Holy Week services

A Christian Living Series will begin at 8 Tuesday night~

April 16 in the school hall and eltgtntinue fbr the two Tuesday evenings follovying Subiects will include Viet Nam the problem of censorship and points of view on recent Sushypreme Court decisions The meetings will be open to the public

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs Frank Kingsley president (re-elected) Mrs Lawrence Graffam vice-presishydent Mrs Dennis Cook seere- tary Mrs Richatd Wordell treasuller Mrs Milton Bednarz financial secretary The guild viewed a film depicting the life of Christ at its April meeting

HOLX NAl1E NEW BElIJFORD The Womens Guild and the

Holy Name Society will sponsor a penny sale on Wednesday evening April 17 in the Holy Name FraU corner of County and Studley Streets

The proceeds will benefit the school fund

ST KILIAN NE BEDFORD

lhe Womens Guild will con duct a whist pavty at 730 Wedshynesday evening ApJiL 17 in the schooL on Ear-Ie street

MvSi HeIJVe) euroanon chahlmanj has announced that in addition

to the regular plJizes there will also) be special attendance awards

Senior Atbfete Studenli Award

StonehiU College basketball eo-captain Rick Pariseau has been named the Outstanding Student Athlete in the senior class

The New Bedfold resident re ceived the award at the annualmiddot Honors ~ssembly from college president Rev fohnT Corr (S1euro

The awardl goes to vile senior athlete with high scholastic average and outstanding qualshyities off chal1aeter and leadershyship noted Father Corr

The award is the highest hon or an athlete can receive at StonehilL College Paniseau was co-captaiil of the basketball teaml for tile past two seasom

This year coach George Blaney used the 63 Pariseau as his top defensive specialist Ricks as signment each game wasmiddot to stop middotthe oppositions leading scorer

Paniseau a graduate of Holy FamiJlY High averaged 77 points per game this season paying fiwwardl He was tile second leading rebounden on the Chief tain teaml

ltd like to hale been a lotmiddot more the athlete and a lob less the scholar kiddedl Pariseau when he reaei led hismiddot medaL

The ruggedl basketball player shinesmiddot in themiddot classroom Here at StonehLll he is a dcanis list stugt dent magoning in chemistry

Rutgcrsl DelawaJe ancV the UnilersLty of New Hampshire have oLfcned Paliseau g)aduate schooL soholal1ships

Padseau pianamp to oontinue his studies in envil10nmental chemshyistry after completion ot his two yean military obligation His special interest is conservashytion

OUR LADY OF ASS-lJ~lPTION

OSTEItVnmE

The public is invited~ to the Annual Penny Safe sponsored by the Parish Guiloi at 8 on Friday evening Apnil 19 in tile Osterville Elementary SchooL Auditorium

Mrs Lawrence Jones- and Mrs Peten Fermino co-chairmen are being assisted by a large com mittae

OUR LAlI)Y OF ANGlElI

FALL lRnmm

The Holy Name Socie~ will sponsor a baseball trip Sunday Tuly 21 Tickets- ane now avail shyable from Joe Theodore and Tony Michaels-

Adoration will take place from 8 to midnight tltJnight and from 630 tomorrow mornshying to 4 in the afternoon lJhe Solemn Liturgy will be celeshybrated at 4 oclock and stationsshyof the cross will fbllow at 7

Easter Vigil services will take place at 8 Saturday night

The COuncil-orCatnolla Women announces a chamarJta and dance from a to midnighti Sat urday night Apl1il 27 witH the shySilvelr Moon~ Qrcne1ta supplyshying the music Ilhe councWs annuall Uommuniol1 olJeakfltlsti will be heler following 8 oclock Massmiddot Simday morning ~ray 5

Holy Rosary Sodality will hold its corporate Communion aitd breakfast following 8 oclock Massmiddot Sunday movning Aprif 28

SIJ JOSEBB FALL RIVER

Tickets for the parish gala and dinner-dance must be purchased by Eastel3 Sunday

Seventh graders in the paroshycllial school will conduct a paper drive saturday tyenpril 20 Con tributions will be piekedup at homes Dbnors may maKe arshyrangements b)l calling JosepH Keefe atl 6725331

LegianJ ol MQr~

To Honolt Soint The New Bedford Curia oll

the Legion of Mary will comshymemOlate the Feast of St Joshyseph- the WorRer on Wednesday evening May 1 at St Manys Home New Bedford

Mass wilf be offered at 7 by Rev Albert F Shovelton spiT inial director of the New Bed~

ford Curia and amiddot social and reshyfreshment peviodi will fbUbw

Ilfte eveniilg open toi only active members of the Legion oft Mary ismiddot beinggt ar-ranged) by lirene Mar-tin cllairman Marian Hutclliilson Maureen Kennedy Margaret Downey and Margallet Roche

Bishops of Guinea Seek Vocafuons

CONAKRY (NC)-The shortshyage of priests caused by the exshypulsion of European missionshyaries from Guinea last yeaJ has prompted the bistiops of the country to issue a pastoral lefshyter urgently appealing for voshycationsmiddot to the prieshood and religious life

lJhe letter was issued an the end of a meeting of the oistiops conference here ArclHjishop Raymond~Marie Tc IllildiF mlbo euroSiSplmiddot oli COnakll)l F at her Raphael Teal apostolic adminis tJator of the diocese of NZere~ Rore and Father Louis Barry apostolic administrator off the apostolic pJefecture of Kankan attended the Jjl1eeting

TRAiJNs fRlAIQU SltlUDENTS Father Robert R Campbell~SJ of ChelmsfOld MasS~ chats witl1J L11aqi studenta at Nr-Hikmw lJhiversfty Baghdad~ Iraq where me New ID~ gland pllOjnaegt Jes-uitJ is head of the departmentmiddot of socaI sCiences training young leadera

to make theil contributions to the development of their country NC Photo

BagampdadlIrish Jesuit Heads Un~ersity IraqSfresses Confidence in Future

NEW YiQRK (NG)-That1s something fOI3 an Irishman isnit it chuckIed Father Richard J McCanlhM SJ president of AI-Hikma Universiiy in Bagh~

dadi Iraq He was referring to a volume of which he is the author-A Book of Arabic Ser shymons

Brother Alfred a fOImer facshyulty member at Al-Hikma

nodded and said If that seems strange you should have heard the eulogy he preached in Arashybic at President Kennedys memorial Mass

The conversation took place in New York where the two friends Had a reunion preceding Father McCartnys tour of tne lTnitedl States 10 talk about AlshyIfikmaslt accompliMiments- and its goals for the future _ The Jesuit soholan a member of the New England Province took a doctorate in Arabic at Oxford Ire tias worked in BagHdad for 30 years and pub-

lished tflree volumes in IslamiCshytheology tyenl-Hikma University was foundedl in 1956 bymiddot the IxaqAmerican Educational Asshysociation

Answcrsmiddot Requests This- association approved by

Ixaqs minis-trymiddot oli the interioIl is made up principally of Jesshyuits from New England and Iraq 1m 1932 it founded Bagn dbd UlJlege~ now a flouvislling secondary school for boys in Sulailrh l a northern suburb of the city

The esteeml enjoyed by Bagh dad College led to numerous reshyquests by Iraqis of different faiths andJ all wallamp of lifemiddot fur em-ablishment of an lnstitution on the unLversity level

AL-Hikma was and is our answer to those jmiddotequestsbull Father Mcltt1lthy stated n is also the concrete expres9ion )f our long felt desire to make a gneaten aontJributionl tomiddot the rapidly developing country of modern Iraq

Ilhe priest said the establisll menti ou the universify was made possible by several g~fl$

and gJants whiCh were ct testa mony of the donors confidence iI~ the future of Iraq and in the contrioutioil whicn the Jesuits could make to it

A gift from the Iraq governshyment of 170 acres of randwas supplemented by grants from the Ford Foundation the Calshyouste Gulbenkian Foundation and otlier agencies

Oriental Institute Al-HiKma is the Arabic word

signifying wisdom Father MoshyCarth~ noted It is an approshypriate name for a uniersity in Baghdad The institution known as Bait Al-hikma middotwas one of the glories of medielaL BalWp dadbull Tlieremiddot Iraqi scholars transshylated futo Arabic the wisdom and science of tJie Greek-s- wliiCh had III profoul1lL influence on the thought and~ culture ofmiddot medieval and modemmiddot Europe

It is almost imPos9ible to overemphasize the impoItanoe of the promotionol interoultushyral understanding es-teem and

ORTINS Phom Supply 245 MAIN STREET FALMoUTH-$48f91a

ARMAND ORTINS Prop

cooperation particularly in the context of the modern world Father McCarthy stated

He was enthusiastic about plans fOr foundation of the Orishyental Institute of AI-Hikma We would like it to be a modshyern Bait Alhikma where soholl shyars ancL students from the East and tlie West will meet on hup man intellectual and culturai levelS for ilieir mutuaL enrich ment and profi1 he said

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5 Expect Approval Of Inter-Church Agency i~ l~~as

[JAN ANTONIO (NO) shyRwttfication ()f D proposed eonstitution by every Chrisshytian denomination i11 the fibte may result in a new Texas tnter-ehurch cooperation agenshyey according to the executive director of the Texas Catholic Conlelence organization of the ampites Catholic bishops

CaHan Graham made the preshydiction here shortly after a mashytDritv of delegates to the 15th annual general assembly of the re[(t3 Council of Churches wted to join with the 10Cathshytiic dioceses in Texas to form the nations first state-level ebureh body uniting Protestant Boman Catholic and Orthodox ~hllrenes

The1raquooposed constitution for che Texas Conference 1)1 Churehes as the united body is tID be known is now sUbject io i(ltification by the 11 Protesshy~t member organizations Bnd fihe Orthodox who comprise the arras Council of Churches It in llso subject to approval by fhe 10 Catholic dioceses in Te3B

Bishops to JIacide lbe boald of directors of the

le2tQ3 Catholic Conference has ldready approved the proposed

dlleW constitution in principle Graham said but it must still be oonsidered by each individshya bishop for his own diocese

Graham said the Texas Cathshync ConIerence itself wUl beshylaquo)Re G membtu of the new 01shy

pnilation but wm also continshy~ fo funotion autonomously

lie traced the proposed 01-

miltation 10 the MatCh 1966 mooting of frhe Texas COUDcll fII Churches general asSembly when an invitation was issued to ~tholics to join theCQuncil

4CAs G result this information was trnnsmitted to the bislu)P$ ~ham recalled The bishQP3 decided we didnt know enough tlbout the counoilandbotb sides began ) study more than bull Jlear-and~a-half ago

New OODfititllltnOD ~t of these discussions both

td~ tried to take a iresh look middot1IIt the existing constitution ol ampbe council he continued 1nshyad of talking about joining bull lllew proposed constitution foi IeOrganization was submittedtgt tile Catholic bishops

The proposed new constitushyGoo GIaham explained is deshygned to bringabout better ~ ~ration affiOlg all alw~hes mm office llQ$ already cbeen -operating

Before the (council -invited eatholic membership Catholic pr~ests and laymen had attendshylid meetings ofthe Texas Counshy_I raquof Churches for two year official observers

Prelate Keynoter A1Convention

CINCINNATI (NC)-Keynote _~~er attne golden Jubilee Cltholic Students MissionCrnshy-deconvention Aug 22 to 25 laquo the University -(jf Notre Dame will be Bishop Jphn J Wright of Pittsburgh

bo highlighting the 50th -niversary df the mJ1liOlllshymember youth organization wiU be the presen~ -of Father Cllfshytom JKing SVD Divine

Worn missionary who founded Cbe CSMC

middotThe crusade headquartera here said a pageant -depicting both the mission history of Amelica and the career of the ~l1C will be staged in the OO~ OLaughlin auditorium Qf m Marys College adjacent to Notre Dame Student grouP ~n 16 areas of the U S wlM ~e Alart

VISITING THE SliCK When Pope Paul recently vjsited the working-class Prenestino district of Rome he took time to visit bed-ridden 83-year-old Teodoro Tarquini The Holy Father offered Mass in Italian at the parish church of St Leo NC Photo

Defend Textbo~kLaw cinShowdown Case JE-dllCltlJion OrganiotiollS File middotEcumenical Brief

in the ease oaidnomatter whatschoolsth~ One blief was middotfiled in behalf child ran attend

of the National Catholic Eduea The brief contends the ar~-tioruJlI AsSociation theLutheran Education Association middotthe Nashy Halmony in Churchtiolllll Union Of Chtistiaa

BONN (NC) -There is com- ISchools and tl1le National Conshyplete harmony in the Catholicierence of Yeshiv Principals Church in tungaIY among the

ment that s~(lte aid in supplying middottextbooks in secular sUlgtiects to children in nonpublic schoob is 4 direetaid to religion is Irivolous

The attorneys general brief contends a state may extend publicly financed aid such as police fire protection public safety and transportation to school 9tudents whether in public or private schools The brief contends that the textbook law falls within the category 0pound sunh poundlid since it benefits the student not the school

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 11 1968

Protesa- ~HEhcps

In IPaf~fi1lm~rd BARCELONA (NC)-Leadefll

oi 30 lay apostolate groups in Barcelona have petitioned two high-ranking Spanish prelates to resign their government-apshypointed posts in the nation~

parliament the Cortes We believe the Second Vatshy

ican CouncUs directives are very clear on this point the

petitioners pointed out to Archshybishop Casimilo iVlo ICill0 of Madrid vice-president of the Spanish Bishops Conference and Auxiliary Bishop Jose Guerra Campos of Madrid

A spokesman at the iladrid chancery office reported that an oerage of 40 letters a day middotare received on the subject some in favor some against the bishops presence on a governshyment political body

The Barcelona document pointed out that this is a matshyter that deeply affects th~ Church in our country

If furthermllre we take into account the fael that great numshybers particularly among the workers have left the Church because of Ets liaison with the state there is no possible reason to continue the symbol of such a union the document emphashysized

A m on g the organizations making the request were the Workers Catholic Actfon the sodalities the Catholic Student Youth Organization the Indeshypendent Youth Association the Spiritual League 01 Our Lady of Monserrat the Pax Christi Movement and the Catholic Rural Youth Organization

(ORREIA amp SONS ONE STOP

SHOPPING CENTER

bull Television bull Grocery bull Appliances bull Furniture

104 Allen 51 New Bedford

997middot9354

I arose and still

with yoa

WASHlNGTON (NC) -Forshymidable forces from Churehshystate ranks forged a defense of the 1966 New york state textshybook laws validity fox the i~

pending showQownbefore the United States Supreme Court

A ptiest jQined tbe -gentlral counsel of the USmiddotCatholicConshy

ference in filing an ecumenicalshybpe brief nn behalf ofnational Catholic Protestant and Jewish educational organizations urging the nations highes tribunal to uphold the law

The attorneys general of three stat~s in another briet joined in supporting the contenshytion of New Yo-rkAtty Gen Louis J Lefkowitz that the only beneficiaries ot this law Ire students and their parenUi not schools andconsequently the law is constitutional

The friends 02 th1l court (amici curiae) briefs were filed in preparation for the hIgh courts consideration ot the law Which provides that the state fUlllishIree textbPokg insecu WI subjects to students 0pound palOshy(lhimiddotai and other nonpubUe schools The court has yet to schedulemiddot8 date for argumenill

aid to benefit a religious group But the wall of separation is

between Church and state not between the child and the

State the educational groups brief reminded Since the Sushypreme Court decided the Evershy30n case in 1947 l different tack has b~en pursued by the court in considering state aid directly to students whether they attend public or private schools the blieI underscored

Tee brief states that 85 per -cent of grammar and highscool students in the nation attend public schools either because their parents prefer that type of education oibecause the choice is dictated by economic necessity The other 15 per cent are in nonpublic schools and more than 90 per cent 1)f them GlTe in church~related schpo13 the brief adell

Frivolous Argument The educational ~ups do

not not contend the state must supply assistance to nonpublie f1Chool children but if it exshymiddottends secular educational beneshy~its 00 all school children thea it is within middotthe state eonstitushymiddottional discretion to supply such

Father Charles M Whelan bishops priests and laymen altgt May we rejoice forever in tfu~51 of Fordham University law cording to ll report in Magyarschool joined William R Conseshy tloryof middottheResurrection Kurir the Hungarian Churchs dine usec general counsel in official news agency WOhicb filing the briel Hannon Burm noted that the Hungarianof the NCEA Francis X Gallagshy Church seems to be free of tile her of aaltimoe and Alfred ~ dissension lthat exists in the Scanl-an of Washington served EhuiCb Bpoundt man Westem JOYOUS GREETINGS as consultants in preparing tbe oountries brieC

The other brief -was Jiled by ~ OFFI(IRS TRUSTEES CORPORATORS AND STAFF At~ys Gen James L Oakes of Vermont William C Sennett ofPenllsylvania -Dod Herbert F DiSimone of Bllode Island

The educational group cmshygthasized they do not want raquo see the wall f separation beshytween Church and stateleilliei disnuintled or displaced would oppose the znoot paltrY wnouut of direct governmentllil

MontlePJumbing amp HeafiD1gCo Over 35 Years

of Satisfied Service Reg Mas~er Plumber middot7023

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~ itizens 1

DOWNTOWN fALL IRIVIE~

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6

They expect to hear religious leaders speak in those tenns history to one local or to a certain segment ofour8OCh~tyrhe race issue was- injecte41

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall RiverThurs Apr 1l19~8 Rx for Renewal J

Accomplishi1lJg the Dream The senseless and savage and tragic death of Dr

Martin Luther King Jr is not the end Of his nonviolence erusademiddot But it should bring a deepening realization of

what nonviolence entails The Ghandian Way of nonviolence is not simpiy a techshy

nique of sittiIig on sidewalks and not moving a matter of being passive and silent in the face of attack~ verbal or physical It embraces moie than that

It is basically-and Dr King middotknew this-a spiritual force As a former Governor General of India has remarked The renunciation ofmiddot external violence is not enough but must be accompanied by asepsis of the heart for the sucshycessful surgery of nonviolence How can One love where there is so much cause for hatred The answer lies in everyshyones heart and can be appealed to through love and then and then Only will the man be changed

Nonviolence means bringing to bear against the forces of hatred and prejudice and ignorance the still more powshyerful force of intelligence and education and love of God and neighbor Nonviolence means ~eeting overcoming evil by the sheer power of courage and work and love

This Dr King understood This alone will accomplish his dream

Sniritual Leaders r

Lay people are being urged to get more and more inshyvolved in the work of religion When they do they many

th h f t b times make more sense t han ose w 0 pro ess 0 e teachers middotof religion

Last week for example a professor at the Harvard Divinity School and the Episcopal TheologiCal School said that sex between unmarried persons could be morally good or bad depending upon the situation And during the same week the chief of the Psychiatric Service Harvard Unishyversity Health Services took colleges and parents to task forcondoning free sex behavior in youth and f9r not bolshystering young people in maintaining high moral standards He counselled chuicli leaders notmiddot to abandon Ii spiritual ap

peal-toyoutll puttomaintainlheif ttaditional religious Ap proach to reinforce high moral standards

So hereismiddotthe picture-a religious lea~~rseeingl1ot~ ing wrong in sex between the unmarried and a ~ymaJl

~ Ateeing everything wrong InIt -

In the light of the Gospels the theologian is _Wrong pat _y Gn ~ n i _ereneemiddot and the layman is right shy

And this is why religious leaders arein many -inshylltailces losing whatever credentials tliey Duiy possess 10 The senseless murder of Dr Martin Luther Xng Jr

Pl d d th f od agaln brlmiddotngs lnto focus the vlolence that ImiddotSmiddot ours Yes 0urs 1ead eop e are en owe WImiddot a meas~re 0 go _sens~ bull They have some ideas about the main thrustmiddot of the Gospelsbull -Too often we have relegated the dark pages of our natio~

And when they hear deviations then they write off the We seem to fool that the religious leader and listen to him no more Of course those events which took place in fortable christianity I I Even m our own locale 1he who are looking for justification for some type of action ~emphls ha~e Itt ~ connec- people who could have doneso that the religious leader approves will be glad to welcometlOn WIth thIS area of the much reillly have contributed him to the bandwagon And then the responsible Jaymen-shythe physicians and psychiatrists and civic leaders and those who are concerned about the moral and family health of the

community--must move into the scene and try to repair the damage done

Perhaps this can be the message of Easter-instead of talking about the resurrection in glowing and lyrical terms

instead of speaking about glory and joy the -reaJ message of Easter is one of love of God for men and love of men

for God And Christ gave the standard of Love-If any man love me he will keep my commaridments~Iid themiddotmiddot party orperscgtn cOncerns him-Father and Iwill love him and we will come to hIm and

_ we will makemiddot our abode with him Theoiogians mayor may not understand the full imshy

plication of thesemiddot words For the most partthe people do even if their actions at times do nqt measure up~ T~ey

understand - amJ th~y expect the~r ~pjritual advisors1q lnderstand and to preach these Gospel words all Gospelmiddot words

rheANCHOR P~~ I fnVImiddotrE~ OF T~E DIOCESE OF FILl PVER Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River

410 Highland Avenue Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev iohn P Driscoll

- MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

nation A certain emotional sympathy

is created by the vivid -reality middot of the television For the most part it is just another drama that will pass in time and thingS will go on and a~lwill be well This indeed is thetragedy of Memphis

Natio~al problems cannot be conidered to be isola~ed events When ~ national mQvement

self wi~h the basic principles 01human existence all humanity is involved Such is the ease memo~ are the people wh- Bishop JOseph-middot LBerilllrcii

with Civil Rights such is the -re still III the depths of 8Uffer-middot Will serve as adminiStratOr iii ease and the movement pre-~ Thu~ when ~ new genera- tbe Atlanta Archdiocese linti serited to the nation by Dr ti9G recelves th~ mherIta~ elf a successor is named for Martin Lutl1er ~ing poverty the prospe~IS ~ 13te Archbishop Paul j Hammiddotmiddot Yet the majority of Ameri- Ul~ first to deny that they ue cans have for mimygenera-middot his heirs This is true of most tions considered ~e plight of men regardless of the color ttl the urban ghetto from the com- 1heir skiil This is what we fortable ~rm-chair of a com- must kUly overco~

Now ISTime for CiiI Rights Concern The words of Dr King cershy

tainly were not understood by the senseless mobs that took to the streets of our cities after his death Nor were they undershystood by the majority of white middle-class Americans

The apathy and lack of genshyuine concern for the civil rights movement among this group is galling

It is these factors that aHow mad men to assassinate We

middotmus condemn the lack of un middotaerstanding the disdainful atti-middot

t hi euro moonIn(j

1lt ng e a reported there

Rev Johnf Moore St Josephs Taunton were~good and sufficient ~ middotIA lilA Inimiddoto~hi~~t~~~~bers~

The Tragedy of Mempmiddothmiddots _ I

h d I d ff

tude and the smug selfshyrighteousness of our bourgeoismentality

To claim that we are all for the civil rights movement and then to deny a home to a man because he is negro loots the middotmind and arsons the spirit of our scciety even to a greater degree than a street mob It is the spirit of our society the spirit of our country that is at stake

Any hope of postponing a 00shycision em this matter died at

so very little The structured class system that has been our inheritance from our early New England ancestors has been only insulated and protected by the progress of an affluent aociety

When a man makes good hetends to leave the memories of his afflicted past in the voidof a twilight z(me The blood middotsweat and tears poverty ~ ~n forgotten in the land ol gracious living TemporarY Heaci

Even more removed fJoa tlTLANTA (NC) -Amiddotuxilia~

Priests Senate Votes Support Of OrdinarY

BUFFALO (NC) ThirteeJl of 21 members of the Buffalo Senate of Priests have votedmiddot to support Bishop James amp McNulty in a controversy SIDol

rounding the transfer of a priesi from a Negro ghetto parislli Eight members of the senato abstained from voting

The controversy began when Father William G Warthling was transferred from St Nicltshyolas parish in Buffalo to O~

Lady Help of Christians parisJl in the suburb of Cheektowaga

Father Warthling and some members of St Nicholas parislli charged that Bishop McNuIQ transferred the priest because he encouraged the Holy Name ~iety to seek membership _ BUILD a militant social actiC group formed under the leade~ ship of Saul Alinsky contJicgt versial ooinrnunity organizei

Members of the parish and ci1 BUILD staged a protest demo~

stration in front of Bishop ~ Nultys residence

Msgr Bernard J McLaughiiC5 diocesan chancellor said thl transfer of Father Warthlin(]

was routine _but said the die-shycese frowns on the methocilo which BUILD uses middotto better tho lot of the Negro communit~

Sufficient Reasons At the height of the controshyversy the Buffalo Senate of

Priests met to hear a report of the Priests Advisory Board OIl

li~e trTahnsfebor 0rd Father Warthshyf

nan bull

---------~--shyMemphis

If we wish to contin1e NonViolent doctrine of 0shyKing it is now up to us IIIe time for dQlay has passed Either we commit ourse shyto the principles that were to tered and dramatized by 0shy

King or we perish in the flaJJ of anarchy and civil discord

The assassins bullet again forced America to make a dedshy

sion In a country in an area where the majority claim to be Christian we better start liviDa the Christian ethicmiddot and tile Christian message of love _ another as I have loved yoshyIf we refuse to accept this meeshysage we fail not only lt~ll natiOlll but also as a Christian pe~

In the controversy by a BUILD spokesman who said BishOJlMcNultys removal of Fathel Warthling reflected apatNgt izing attitude toward black people and a general lack ef understanding of ghetto probshylems Msgr Neylon said all senate members rejected charge

All 21 members of the senatlrl VOted for a motion to appoint committee to make public theworks and programs which the diocese has developed amo~ minority groups and in the ner city

shy

Voted support for BishOpmiddotat N~1tY on thetransfer isBoIlEigJjtpries~ abstainedfroin ie vote on the grounds that apite the boards explanaiiclli the issue was still not clear -

However each of the ei priests who abstained from

ing said they deplored middotcharg6f racism against Bishop M0shy--Nulty according to Msgr lolie Neylon senate president

7 middotMrsmiddotmiddotmiddotStewart Fails to Tell Casey Story Convincingly

By Rt Rev Msgr John S IKelIDedy

Ramona Stewarts Casey (Little Brown 34 Beacon St Boston Mass 02106 $695) is anovel which promises more than it delivers Itsmiddot action begins in 1860 concludes in 1886 and HI laid in New York City The focus is on Tom Casey aged 20 at the start A native of Ireland he remembers the horrors of County Cork in the years of Qle great famine His family Bed their home went to LivershyPOOl- suffered muough a fiveshy

weeks voyageIlrJ a sailinglib i p finallyderer Il the citys resources eettled in New even moves briefly on the

York For them middotftinges of the gaudy nouveau I A m e I i e a richeset typified by Jim Fisk

008 not turned ltlmt to be the

jijlromised land Like thousandstillld thousands ef the Irish

t th New York ltBOWded

10 0 e dums they are abysmally

~~eir homes are decrepit verminous tenements Their jabs are menial ill paid and dancy They are despiSed by the natives both for their nashyampnai origin and for their reli shyfIion They meet violence at the lhands of brutal nativists No opportunity opens up for them lJDd they are without hope

Elab$mte Setting

n is plain thet Miss StewaIi lhas done thorough rese~rch clgt1l1

the period Bet pages are

But-middot when his boss Maguire breaks with the big boss Tweed CasEiyS ascent ill reshyversed Tweed however is exshyposed and undone and pious John Kelly takes over as head of Tammlllny~

casey relllizes tiliJilt it is opshyportune for him to repudiate

Maguire and strike out on his own Ihis he does to the imm~ diate signal improvement of his lot but lllt the price of Maguires bUter enmity

AdvaIltageMJS Marrul1ge Casey now marries one EileeZl

Callahan liI doctors daughter a chilly lace curtain Irish sort It is not a happy marriage but it iJiI respectable and advantashy

geous Casey is appointed citY ~coroner attl ~tosalary with Per

qUlsites But there i~t yet aJ1oth~r reshy

paCked with detallmiddot She hasmiddotmiddot versal til store for him On mounted a viVid mid elaborate election day 1~74~ he goes ooIJting for nero story But the about to see that his forces are

~ (ftory does not live ormiddot inove It performing properly (which abounds in incident it has com- means improJgterly) he isdraWn

plications galorebut it lacks into an altercation with Ma- ~tality arid never generates guire power Why this should be it is Casey taking a physIcal at first hard to tell beating from the bigger Mashyo~ Tom Casey sne~as a ~g- guire draws a pistol and shoots bull who should be mterest1Og Htt hits t M gur b t f

ImiddotToiil is inteUigenl middotandrug~ middottlie latte~ miihioris~Te~~hcJl ~t he left school atmiddot 13 He n()vi Ismortal CaseY- is1ndicted pound01(

realizes th~t be can~et ~ ~urd~r tried l~t out on bail here never break ~l1t 01 ~~ ~heI1 a hung jury evenWates

iitifling meager wretched woHdof his k1Od IDs one asset seellW imd ultdmately gOeS free1JnaeeouJmtabi Re Co be brawn

lJOmething -hi Which counts for the braw~gk middotHe w no~

e eolery disgraced in debt

Which his Arsenal Gimg in- witbout poundI Jobmiddot probably permaQ

dulges and in the work of tblii nently estranged from his wife Pacifid Company of volunteer One might suppose thatmiddotthis was firemen to which he belongs the end of t~e story But no 1m

As he looks about he recog Cl middotfinal s~ctwn d~ted 12 years ftizes that the way to some ad later he is the chIef deputy andshy~cement and aggrandizementmiddot lUre successor of ag~ng ailing fl through politics He observ~ middotampss Kelly He is almost at the John Maguire who at 37 io top and it all means nothingmiddot olderman saloonkeeper aD ell ne of the flaws 10 t~e novel mstrict leader of the Twentyshy s Illustrated by the diSJuncture ~t ward middotbetween Caseys fall because oil

Air PI ti tillemiddot murder case and his unae-middot bull cq1lll es es ge countable recovery Therecov-

MagUire is of course a Twt- ~ middotis never explained We ~ny m~ He dresses well dont know how it was done wears dlamon~ studs hai middotIJ We are simply presented withmiddot middotmiddotmiddotsion said the problem ofmiddot realiz Long-Range PllOgn-ams

go~d-headed caneCasey cop~ $t and asItedlmiddotto take it On faith -log tqe recommendations it In cooperation with 22 other ~ ~ude~ that ~e must gcentt ~n ~~l middotmiddotllIWl at the end tberebe- made on treating lhe ghe~to ~orgahizations NCCI1 bas

1- ~agulre - ~ middotmiddotOOmes glaring something whichi Bf~ does through ~s prov~_ all alongimiddot has nagged at tne

gt111 lID 19hting But h~ progre~middotlY rreadernanaely~the s~ddampn leaps - Yery slow True he geta 11 Cl to ltile _~ lemiddotaps acr~-

Il1o which involves Db dU~I~ improbable nnd unexplored at all but allows him to sp~ndzhasms aU hiS time wardheeUng for Timelilness iD Novel

Maguire He acquires B little A more seriousmiddot flaw is thAprestige even a little Power But h is till tty an potatoe~ G pre 1m

But then suddenly Maguire ebief henchman die and Mashyguire himself in hi gn f _

s e per petrates an egregIOUS act of folly Casey is at hand to helplIDd succeeds in concealing Mashypires drunken blunder onl to become involved with n gid Maguire hIllS B8S lted

u Ascent Reversed

She is Claire Scofield whO elm give the appearance of

~Jadylike innocence but is act~ bull rally a vix~ She and Case

never marry 1m her avidity for possessions and eventually poshymUon sine keeps driving Casey taunting him with his inconseshyquence and urging him 10 bold steps

He becomes an alderman gew to know 30ss Tweed head of Tammany and notorious plunshy

failumiddotre lIll development of charshy~r ~is is most notice~ble ou tOO mstance of Casey hlmshyself wile rem~~a naDe and a type never nngmg true as a complex person The same is true of the borde of others whO pour through tIl1e book Be they

major Gr mInor hlStOriC~ or ~onlh ~y are WIthout mner llife Mrs Stewart hit upon bull subshy

feet wJith great possibilities and genuine contemporary signifi shymiddoteanee But she haS not known how to render it convincingly and illu~tingl) in terms of

middotIme to ailalrange~ent lui fidWL

~lEl][ORIALMASS Pattimiddotck Pardinal OBoyeof Washshy ~~tQ~ speak~ at a memOrI~ M~s f0t ~r1lIIartm Luther

l~ngr hel~ ~und~yat t~e Na~~~l Shnne of th~ Immacshylla~ Come~pbQn in the natI~n~s CPl~aINC Jho1Jo

INatbull-ona1middot middotWmiddotmiddot-1111

Ahmann Says Wflitbull Racism Pllob~ltem

For White Churches CHICAGO (NC) -A leader ereatiIDg is new notionall wW

m Catholic interracial justice for notional actioo work ~id here white rlllcis~ middotWe believe that creation of called essentially responsible the national will is probably for the violence in cities by the the greatest spiritus problem

middotnational riot commission is a confronting religiollJS institushymoral problem and must be at- tiona in Amerlcm Ahmann deshy~cked by the white churches clared in calling on NCCIJs 1~

Mathew Ahmann executive lliffiliated Catholic interrracillll director 4)f the National Catho- councllsand human relationo lie Conference for Interracial ComiImissions to Set ~ tRileoir efshyJustice asserted The commis- lo-rts for social jUstice

problem was the problem (If published and distributed a speshy cial 32~page pamphlet smiddot~ary

Favors Compulsorymiddot of th R rt f h N al e epo () t e Iyenon Rmiddotmiddotmiddot A AdvisorY Commission 00 CiVil

ehlement ge DisOrders I j 1 -

SAN ANTONIO (NC) -The San AntoniQ archdiocesan prlmiddotemiddotstsmiddot seina~ has recommended

vc75 as the compulsory retirement age for priests in the arcbdioshycese and 65 as an accepted retiremen~ age

Tbe recommeridation which has been sent to ArChbishop Robert E Lucey of San Antonio came in the fonn of a motion passed unanimously by the 12shymember - senate at a meeting here

The senate also recommended establisbment of some sort of

tenure of office for pastors and assistants They urged a maxishymum limit of 10 years in the same parisb for pastors and a liDlit~ five yearn fol assistants

Ahmann eaned fur NCCIJ affiliates to stress the need for long-range middotmiddotclmiddoton-TI proshy

cu ltU grams for aD ~rts cd bhe Catholic community to elimishynate white racism incmding

programs for human relations

training fM lay leadershipclergy teacherS and required elementary a nd secondary school courses in humanrelashynons and Negro Illistory He also urged affiliated 01shy

ganizati()ns to bank as well as purchase goods and services in the black communi~y On the legislative front ne urged support of the similar goals of the riot commission the Urban Coalition and Dr Martin Luther KiB4fil Poor ~s Campaign~

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 11 1968

Catholics Defend Fair Bus Law

TRENTON (NC)-Spokesmen for Catholic schools defended the states year old fair bus law at a public hearing held here to consider its possible reviSion

In mllny respecfs it was a reshypeat of the public hearings a year ago which resulted in the bill being amended before passage But at that time the thrust was for passage of some rort of measure )utting private school students on equal footshying with public school students Now legislative sentiment apshypearc ro incline toward a cutshyback although outright repeal seeDlll unliksly

One relllSon foi the dlllnge in outlook b the compleJdon of ihe legislature Lest year it was in DeInoeratic hands and fair shybusing bllld the support of Gov Richard JJ Hughes Now Repubshylicans hold control by a 2-1 margin and party leaders see Ii mandate to cWtail some of tine programs enacted a year ~omiddot

A half-dozen bills to repeal or revise the busing law are now before the legislature The hearings here were held by the education committees of both the State Senate and Assembly whiclll hnve not yet released any bills from committea

Principal spokesmen for Catholic education were John 1 Rafferty counsel ful the New Jersey Catholic Confershyence and Msgr John 3 Clark Camden diocesan superintendent of scbools and president or the state ruperiIllten~ento ~ciashytion

Expropriate Pmsh BERLIN (NC)-East Gennan

eommunist authorities Ulave exshypropriated the Catholic parish 01 St Francis Xavier in East Berlin without compensatingthe Cbureh Redevellop~nt ia given as the expropriation reashyson

May the 8711 of ~g [ltm1

mine tlP~D JOU and ~aJ

the afOlY of His ReslITaeI tiOD bless J01l Ydtbmiddot

pe~ and jOle

The

Old Red Bank Fail River Savings BaRk

FAll IUVEI

SOMERSET

8 THE ANCHO~=Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1968 New Pay Scale For Teachers

FORT WAYNE (NC)-ftleEnjoy Family Celebration Fori Wayne-South Bend dioceshysan board of education bas apshyOf First Communion Day proved a new salary scale for lay teachers in elementallY ancll

By Mary Tinley Daly secondary schools The board approved tl recomshyChanges in the Church that perennial topic of COlllshy mendation that for every fuD

versation since Vatican Council II come in for a lot of time degreed ~acher employed pro and con discussion on the part of the laity With each with a current valid Indiana

teaching license a parish Willehange the dissident~ speak up head-shakers moan middotWell be reimburselt at the rate Oilfthey didnt do it that way in $2000 each for the school ~

my day But as each in forms of any kind with their 1968-1969inevitable rivalry Each littlenovation is inaugurated The salary schedule for 196ampshygirl and boy was in mufti shy 1969 provides on the bachelonthen incorporated into presshy tastefuUy and compoundo11tably degree level for a minimum Oil ent practice we realize these garbed $5200 and a maximum of $6200 made notehanges are simply Each family had its own pew at the 10th year with an increshyfor the sake of parents and First Communicant mentof $100 a minimum QfclJange but as in aisle seats sisters brotI1ers $6000 and a maximum oilPope John XXIII grand-and godparents filling $8700 at the 15th year with aput it to keep up the rest of the pew We beshy $180 increment for the bacheloilrltP with the longed to Kate on Her Day degree teacher with a staterhythm of the What class a small whis- license and a minimum of $630times To quote pered the Headof the House as and a maximum of $10000 asfrom middotThe the names were read out at the the 18th year with an increoChurch middotin Our beginning of Mass That we ment of $200 for the masteroDay collective thought was the ~ason we had degree teacherspastoral of the been included Not so Each

American hiershy child in the First Communionmchy recently published Our

eHort at Class could designate ahead III Department of Justicepresent restructuring time which of the parish Masses

procedures in the Church withshy $~~ Approves Shared-Time to attend thus splitting theIn the national and Diocesan number into more intimate HARRISBURG (NC) - Tk)eommunities depend in great family Jroups Pennsylvania Department dWORLD OF FASHION Jmeasure on the seriousness With Justice has ruled that there ampJiilThose who eboBe to Jeeetve lIS Iwhich study is undertaken and ~~~~ By MARILYN BODERICK ~

the disposition to implement )amp bull class were allowed to do IlO no legal bars to shared-~ The altar rail had beet1 opeIil shy education of private ~ a the part of the laity pupils iii public schoolseCl wide with lmeelers tor thlee EASTER CLOTHESNew Prooedure I iD the center At CommUDion Deputy Atty Gfin John 1)

One change nO doubt fsmilshy time 8 smiling priest weleomed New clothes at Easter have tiful example of creativity and McCord who issued the opinioa Jar to families in many Dioceses each little First Communieant become a eustom that we an craftsmanship was an ensemble at the request of state Supe~ came to our attention forcibly intendent of Public InstructiOll flanked by father and mother find hard to break It came modeled by nine year old Robin and impressively in practice followed by other members of down to us from the days when Cambra daughter of Mr and David H Kurtzman said the

only requirements which muSt last week the family If there was only one the newly baptized Christians Mrs James Cambra of Our I speak here of the new cusshy Catholic parent another family wore white garments made of Lady of Grace parish in Westshy be met are the consent of the

tom (new to us at least) of local public school board andmember receivedwith the child Dew linen This became such ))Orthaving children receive First the payment of tuition at theothers of the family following a tradition among the faithful Robins stunning Easter coat Holy Communion not as a class regularly established rateIt was all so natural warm that to appear in new clothes on and dress were made by her

receiving the Big McCord cited a 1949 lawbut each Sacrashy and dignified on this tbe Easter Sunday mother in yellow lightweightment for the first time with Day rectlling the words d which states that No pupilsymbolized the wool The A-line coat had a parents and relatives shall be refused admission toPope St Leo Recognize 0 n e w Ii fe diagonal self button closing and

Long gone in many areas is the courses in these additionalChristian your dignity through Christ a tiny mandarin collar When the custom of turning over one schools or departments by reashyThe Irish have dark-hired and vivacious RobinlImvi~ Pmstollof the Sunday Masses to the son of the fact that his elemenshyan ancient say- removed her coat the slimFirst Communion class - girls Mter Mass with aplomb only tary or academic education Ising that goes dress underneath was seen toin dresses veils an being or has been received in awhite and on eight-year-old could muster For Christmas have a yellow blue apd tan one side of middotthe aisle boys in Kate betook herself to the saneshy school other than a public food and drink plaid bodice with the plainwhite suits on the other back tuary to invite our new pastor for Easter new yellow wool of the coat carried school of the church reserved oftenshy Father Louis Quinn to bei He added however tnKItclothes Most over info the skirttimes with standing room house brunch otni shared-time arrangements mudonly for writing people in the The finishing touch to thisfor parents of necessity be subject to thefor him her address Diocese will fol- stunning outfit was the tiny hatWith the growth of parishes guidelines promulgated by theGoodness knoWll how ID8DY low this custom that sat atop Robins curls forthere often came transfer all similar invi-tationa Fat her Department of Public Instrucshy

by dressing their ebildreh iul it too was her mothers creationFirst Communion day to Saturshy Quinn must have receivedl tiontheir new Spring finery 0111 and jcent middotfeatured alternatingday a sensible step but stiR plenty wed ~ becauSe he Easter Sunday panels of the pale yellow andtmly for First Communicants cup eoffeeIIimply sipped 11 of In the pre-school ret blondE the plaid wool

and their parents Because of at Katies house B1lIt be did and darling Sheila Whalen In the same show Norma8Pace limitations grandparents come chatted with anmiddot Gf 1Il Higher Earningsdaughter of lIT and Mrs Wil- Comeau of SS Peter and Paul 8Odparents brothers and sisters ble2sed the house 8Dd ~ateB liam Whalen laquoIi St ThomaslIilcles and aunts were invited new gift statue then went _ More ehurch in Somerset will parish in Fall River was 8 vishyout for this precious occasion to visit other parish homes be decked out in polished blue sion of green and white Norma ON YOUR SAVINGS JIbey eouId line themiddotsidewalks Twas all a happy experience eotton Her very special Easter wore a green wool coat a 4Ntside take pictures perhaps for Kate and her extensive famshy Sunday dress bas a long torso matching green and white Per An middotmiddot p to breakfast with their parshy ily appropriate to this the Year topped by a short sash tile dress and a white straw topper Ask abOut ticular First Communicant buamp of Faith II1eeveless zrmholes are edged that had a sweetheart shape that waS that iD crocheted lace and the bodice Green ill all shades is one of INVESTMENT

Kates Day JiB embroidered with tiny flow- the most popular colors on the SAVINGSMmnesota Parishioners ers in shades of pink white and agenda for childrenls SpringSo It was with surprise we fashions Beth Cook~ daught~r CERTIFICATESweeeived a telephone invitation Vote Closing of Schoo~ blue

Also represen~ng 1bepre- oJ Mr and Mrs Andrew Cookfrom eight-year-old Kate to atshy PIERZ (NC) - Members of primary middotsetJn the Easter parade of Immaculate Conception parshytend the 11 oclock Mass with SAFETY - Savings insured safe br Iifour parishes in the Pierz area will be Lisa Marie Texeira ish in Fall Riv~r has a limeher last Saturday On arrival at agency of the U S Governmentof Minnesota voted 835 to ioo daughter of Mrmiddot and Mrs Frank green Eastermiddot dress trimmedchurch we wondered if we had for the closing of the Father AVAILABILITY - No notice requIredTeeira of Immaculate Concep- with with a white cowl collarthe right time and place No more

Pierz Memorial High SChool 1lm tion parish in Fall River Lisa and white cuHs on the short Your funds available when neededwhite dresses and veils June is a delicate-featured little sleeves Beth chose this dress SAVE by MAIL - We process prompIIJon one side of the ~sle )hite

The Pierz district has decided beauty whose dark tresses will herself because she Ifell in love and pay postage both wayssuits on the other no unishy to build a public senior high beset off by a once upon-a- with the white vinyl flowers school which will be large time dress in pink and navy scattered over the skirt and Assets over $41000IlOO

Parish Hires Full-Time enough to accommodate all high blue The high necked dress bodice of this charming Spring school students in the district made of sheer cotton has a and Summer linen

Layman Theologian Therefore m u e h discussion GlOwl collar long full sleeves Of course the pre-teen set FIRST FEDERAL BALTIMORE (NC)-St Matshy and a romantic floating skirt wants something new for Easterabout the most practical use of Savings and loan AssociatloDthe Catholic high school facili shy

first parish in the Baltimore ties bas taken place in the last _pink bodice and the waist- daughter of Mr and Mrs John archdiocese to employ a proshy circling cummerbund but the Steen of Taunton and my god tf FALL RIVER thews Church has become the Tiny tucks are featured on the and Miss Joan Leslie Steen

few months fesionally trained ley theoloshy Tbe vole--()pen to all parishshy really eye-catching feature oil child will attend Easter Mass gian as a full-time member af iOllers over 21 ill the four afshy ibis outfit ill the skirt of navy at St Pauls church wearing an the parish staff ~cted parihes-was taken III blue cotton with pink polka outfit as yellow as a daffodil ~-~~-------_~ first Federal $awIOIS bull LeaD a ~

~ 1 ortb ~1Il st Fan lIiwer llaa ~ Joseph Hargadon a fonner response to a suggestion of~e dots Certainly a dOll-like outfit Joans yellow coat has gold but shy ZIp 02722 IlIlIIIa 174-4881 ~ member of St Clares parish st Cloud diocesan school board for a dainty Miss tons and 8 slanted back belt ~ke application by phOlle middotIt JOll jE6sex who ~ii now studying at The Catholic high school Mothers Sew - her yellow Irish linen sheath ~

the Institute of Lay Theology building will probably beused While commentating 8 ehil- dress is sleeveleSs and has white n iridlvldua Account B joint AccaIIamp iii ~ Prease DJNn a savings account EIIcIGslMJ Iin San Francisco will be c0shy as an elementary school in the drens fashion show for the Do- emb~idery trim on the hemline ~~OO ~ordinator of St Matthews Conshy future Father Patrick Thompshy minican Academy alumnnae ill and bodice This yellow-haired ~

fraternity of Christian Doctrine son principal of Fathermiddot Pierz Fall River I was awed by the brown-eyed beauty has even Address middot1 program Msgr Clare J 0- Memorial High School said th~ ntimber of mothers Whohad chosen JOllqtiil yellow patent

acheck III tbe amount 111 -iDwyer pastor said He begina several possibilities are being sewed their childrens Easter accessories tomiddot complete her working in the parish Aug ~ studied outfits Probably the most beau- look j

~~~~~

A][D FOR VnCTnMS Foodfor victim~ of the Washi~gshyton civil disturbance following the death of Dr Martin Luther yening Jr in Memphis was distributed at churches of all denominations in the capital Here Sister Joanette of Catholic University gives bread to burnedout families at St Mamns Church N Capimiddottol and T Streets NC Photo

9 Best to Delay Rose Pruning Unti1 Laterin Spring

By Jo~ph and Marilyn Roderick

With the break in the w~ther weve experienced lately here has been ample opportunity to get outside and begin the Spring chores that have tQ be done before the garden is ready for Summer I have noticed quite a few weekend prdeners busy with the urrection is really felt as the odds and ends that await the priest changes the bread and prdener after a quiet WiD- wine into the body and blood ter But I have also witness- of our Lord and the faithful go ed quite a few I suppose out of up to the altar to receive Comshyanxiety over the rough Winter munion Then the seven weeks we experieneed and out of im- of sacrifice leading to this day patience 1igt get started doing take on deeper meaning and the jobs that could just as well wait Light of the World truly shines until later m the month r AIl can truly sing Alleluia Wltil Way For the young of the house-

Pruning roses is a good ex- hold the Easter eggs are another mnple of a job that is best held great joy They come in many off especially this year when sizes and materials Some are Ctere has been so much top-kilL lteonfections of spun sugar and lt might be well to wait until dreams This type generally has atent buds begin to show an opening through which the themselves em what look like child may view a wonderland ~ad stems until the job of of painted landscapes and minshy)rUning is tackled It has been iature figures my experience that dead-Iook- I always adored these fantasy mg wood has n way of coming eggs when I was a little girl and ~ life in time so go easy with it was a rare and special event ampe pruning shears until you to receive one My own youngshyIJlre certain there is no life in sters however deJive more enshylaquohe stem you plan to amputate jOfment from the decorating

How to Prune and dyeing oil the hardboiled eggs

Pruning roses seems to pre- A few years ago I made an (leDt P~obJ~JiuJ to gardeners and Easter egg centerpiece by decshy~ it is a Simple task I try 00 orating (with glitter beads prune lTlyroses so that they sequins and white glue) egg graduaily asSUme an urn shape shells that had their contents tftliit is so that they have an blown outmiddot and hanging them eD1ltY cenier rhis can easily on a giided branch that had be begun by prumng each stem been placed ill a plant pot This aiatroti want to retain so tha~middot makes a verY lovely display and ihe cut is made just above an the eggs can even be used as _tward pointing bud Christmas tree ornaments the

If the bud is pointing out the following December but this laquorowth which ensues from the delicate work is not for tiny bud will be outward and there- hands lor growth will be away from Symoo)s oil Life the center of the rose Next I The Easter egg and the Easter try to make my cuts so that the bunny have always been symshyappermost portions of each boys of Spring and new life litem are approximately the Ancient people in many lands lIaDle height from the groun6 exchanged eggs at their Springagain to give the bush some festi vals They dyed eggs yellow8Diformity of appearance for the returning sun and red

The height of the bush makes for joy and life In England the attle difference as far as I am children enjoy III custom called eoncerned so I usually make Pace egging The Pace eggers my cuts at whatever height I go from house to house chantshyean get uniformity This year ing this rhymefor inStllnce there has been a PleaseMr Whitelegpeat deal of top-kill on my Please to give us an Easter eggJOses so I may have to make If you wontt give us an Easter cuts fairly close to the ground eggbut I find little difference in Your hens wiD all lay addled the quality of the roses regardshy eggsless ~ of how much I remove in And your cocks lln lay stones pruning In this country of lIpoiled

A third consideration in darlings our children would be ~ing is the removal of 014 disappointed H the Easter wood to make place for new bunny did not leave chocolate trrowth Thb becomes a pr0bshy eggs candy chickens and other lem when your roses start to expensive goodies However -ee considerably I try not to be even with all the commercial drastic in this regard by cutting trappings that go with the dayGUt one old stem a year thereby It still manages to retain It IIl8king room for new growth great joywithout particularly affecting T1uis liuoo roast is perfectlybull e plant delicious Ive bad tt for Easter One other point about prunshy dinner oth~r years and plan to Ing Many of the old ramble1ll serve it again this year Its and climbing roses should be quite worthy of II repeat pershypruned after they bloom and fonnance DlJt before I notice a great Cumberland L9mb Boast IIl8ny people pruning their 1 leg of lamb about I to dlmbers before they bloom poundswhich does nothing for the 1 teaspoon salt elimber but remove scOlelI of 1 teaspoon dry mustard blossoms ~ teaspoo1l ground ginger

In the Kitchen 5 thin lemon sIkes Baster Sunday is a day of great cup currant jelly

toy and excitement The special 1 Tablespoon lemon juice Kaster moming breads (IDJ 1) Trim oJ escemJ fat lroa 8aOther-in-Iaw always ~ lamb Rub went with a mixture Individual sweetbreads for the fJIl the salt mustard and ginger ebildren with a hardboiled egg Place roundoo silde up OIl a let in the crust) the excitement rack in roastiDjJ pan Do Dllt elf new clothes the Easter egg oover pan bunts the tIradJltional famIJ ) Roast -bl Ii a10W (331-) llIlnner but Elbow all the beauty en for amp 1tOun IlDd quiet ~ 01 Easter SID~ 3) Remove roaJt from 0ftIl Mass and eut 4 cd tbe lemon dices

be joy of this great least 01 In half arrange Ue a half sliceS the Resurrecti_ of our SaviCNl petal fashion OIl sidlte of JOaSt evident JI1 n the custo~ holding in place vith dampened tbat sur r 0 11 n d 1lhis feast wOoden ~icIW place the wbole IIut the full 1mpaot of the Bell- alice in center

)JJRDINATION The first Melkite Rite ordin2ttion of priests to be held at the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception Washington DCt was conducted by Bishop Justin A Najmy NC Photo

- Extend Program I Interfqith Organization to Conti~~e shy

Aiding ~prrnEr JoliCQrpseh WASHINGTON (NC)--A na- reftary of the National Confer-

tion-wide volunteer prog~lJn ence of Catholic Charities hasshyto help Job Corps trainees find said JACShas tapped the iTeshya place in the workaday world mendous force of volunteers al shyhas been extended for another ready available in this lountry year William P Kelly Job and they are hard at work asshyCorps director announced here sisting young llen who have

Joint Action in Community proved by volunteering for the Service (JACS) a private non- Job Corps that they want to profit corporation was organ- help themselves ized by leaders of national The young men coming out Catholic and Protestant social of Job Corps are severely hanshyaction agencies dicapped by backgrounds of

It includes on Us board of poverty poor education and unshygovernors representatives of stable family life As a result business labor and civic organ- they have more than their izations share of problems as they atshy

tempt to make it on their ownJACS has organized a netshy

work of 5000 volnteers in 500 JACS volunteers are giving communities in the U S re- them the helping hand they eruited from churches service need he added clubs and community agencies who are DOW assisting some 1000 returned corpsmen each Women to Hpnormonth

Msgr Lawrence J CorcoraJlO BisJlop Apri I 18 lACS ~Ild chairDl3lll and ~ The Ca~olicWomens Club

0If New ~(ord will hold its annual Bishopll Night OIlSee E~tablishes New bunday evening April 18 at

Education Office the Harbor Beach Club in Matshytapeisett Supper Will be servedGREENSBURG (NC)-Bishop at 630William G Connare of Greensshy

burg has announced the estabshy Guest of Honor will be Most lishment of a new diocesan ofshy Rev James L Connolly Bishop fice of education whicb win Gerrard moderlltor for the New coordinate the work of several Bedford organization will also existing departments be a guest

All area pastors have heeDThe new office which wm invited to attendopen JolT 1 will join and ex~

tend the programs of the presshy Mrs Paul L LaForest first ent diocesan schools office and vice-president will serve as the Confraternity Off Christian chairman ojf arrangements Doctrine office and win be reshy Reservations will be accepted sponsible for the total educashy by Mrs Jamell M Anderson tional effort of the diocese Mrs Maurice Hurley Mrs Paul

A newly organized departshy LaForest and Mrs Daniel F ment of religious education will Dwyer Reservations close sat shyaid in planning religious edushy urday April 13 eation programs fOr the parisb and diocesan schools the CCD and other groups both at the adult and youth le~ls ATWOOD

OIL COMPANY Break up jelly with a fork a cup stir in the lemoD juice and Spread ovell tbelamb Re- SHELL tum flo OV~ aDcl cOntinue roasting ~ to t hOur longer If HEATING OILSyoUre using a meat th~rrnODl~ eter it should register 170 for South bull Sea Streetsa pink look or 1~ for wen done Pull out wooden picks bom lemon garnsh before carv- Hyannis Tel 49-81 mg roast

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 11 1968

Says Young Seek Moral Values

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - The so-called sexual revolution is l

turning away from hypocrisy at a turning toward promiscuity ays an expert in sex education Or Mary C Calderone execushy

tive director of the Sex Informashytion and Educational Council of the United States believes toshydays young people are highly moral despite the example set for them by their elders

Speaking at the 22nd annual meeting of the Texas Council on Family Relations Dr Calderone stressed

Promiscuity has not increased on Americans college campuses We know our young people are behaving far better today than were willing to credit them with Young people are looking for moral values based on fact rashyther than mythology

Dr Calderone condemned exshyploitation of sex by commercial advertising and called for sex education which would streSD the importance of human relashytionships and not merely the mechanics of reprOduction

Your kids ought to know you cant save a bad marriage with good sexshe asserted

Sisters of Pro~ider1ce Vote to lRe~ise Rules

SPRINGFIELD (NC) The Sisters of Providence of Holshyyoke community of nuns speshycializing in care of the sick aged and underprivileged have voted to revise their rules and customs to permit greater flexshyibility and freedom in the reli shygious and personal lives of theIr members

At a general chapter at the communitymiddots Holyoke mothershyhouse the 39 chapter -delegates voted to permit experimentashytion hi religous garb give members the option of using either their baptismal and famshyily name or their religiou name pennit members to travel outside their convent wilhout a nun-companion

Also to limit participation hi common prayer to Mass and to two portions of the Divine Ofshyfice Lauds and Vespers allow community members to develop a schedule of private prayer require every member of the community to be addressed WI Sister instead of Mother~

and allow part of the nuns free time to be given to variolU fOnDS of the apostolate to civic activities and civil rights proshygrams in a way befitting theIr state in life and according to their individual consciences

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Choose AmericH Superior General

MoUNT KISCO (NC)-Fqr the first time in the 160-yellW history of the Religous of tim Cenacle an American has b~ elected superior general

Mother Rita FOy was electetl to the post at the general chapshyter of the Cenacle in Rome acshycording to the orders interpro-shyvincial public relations offiC() here in New York

The general chapter whielli is still in session is evaluatinti a series of recommendations fOli a general decentralization opoundl authority the launching of eJJogt

perimental programs by too Cenacle and the restructurinfi of Community life

The Religious of the Cenaclo is a worldwide congregation 03 Sisters committeed to the wom of retreats and religious in-gt struction There afe three American provinces

Mother Rita Foy was born 1rI

FLYING DOCTOR Dr Leo Brown and his wife Isabel a registered nurse are shown with their children Rebecca 1Qand Joel 8 with the C-essna plane they use for their Flying Doctor Service in the diocese of Gwelo Rhodesia NC Photo

THE ANCHOR Thurs April 11 1968

Project Equality Issues Guides For BMyers

CHICAGO (NC) - The first national directory of 3931 business firms comshymitted to equal opportunity in all aspects of employment has been published here by Project Equality

It will be used by more than 7000 churches synagogues and religious institutions participat shying in the interfaith fair emshyployment drive that urges givshying preference to the listed firms in all purchases of goods and services

Project Equality offices in Jlive cities are publishing re- gional buyers guides as well They are in Columbus for Ohio Detroit for Michig~n Hartford for Connecticut Omaha for New York City and was gradlDgt Nebraska and San Antonio for ated from Hunter College Sillj

Texas IFlying Doctor Serves Africa Mission south entered the Cenacle in 19~1i The national guide is a comshy completing her studies in Romo

pilation of 976 national and She was assigned to the Miltlligt 2955 local or regional firms do- Vietnam Veteran l Wifel licensed Pilots western province of the Celilgt ing business with religious inshy acle with headquarters in CtJiDRIEFONTEIN (NC)-In the the Gwelo diocese covers some must drive over lO miles of stitutions They include 40 of cago and has held a number am

grasslands here onmiddot a 5OOO-foot 14000 aCres it includes a 300shy dirt bush road seven miles of the top 500 U S corporations assignments as superior of vashy

high plateau the Cat hoi i c bed tuberculosis sanitorium a relatively good road-and watch and range down to small neighshy rious Cenaeles in the Uniteamp

of mainshy 100-bed hospital a farm an out for wild animals all alongmission Driefonteinborhood businesses States and Canada1ains-of all things-a hangar elementary school and trade the way

Listing in the Quyers guide She will now reside in RoJJl() for a Cessna 182 Skylane air shy schools for carpentery tailorshy Thus far they have encounshymeans a firm has signed Ii

plane ing and homecraft tered only baboons monkeyspledge to hire and promote deer mongoose lizards andThe mission staff totals somewithout discrimination has filed FrQm this point the missions lleslYJits to Performbirdsa report form with Project doctor can cover nine out-stashy 1200 people 35 of whom are

Equality detailing the number tions spread over an aerial non-Afrfcans The mission and Witch Doctors Woth City Symphony of its niinority-group employees distance equivalent to that beshy hospitals are operated by Afri shy The Biblical quotation The BALrIMORE (NC) -Fathe1 -broken down by jop classifi tween San Francisco and Los cans and by Swiss Bethlehem harvest is indeed great but the Bruno Markaitis SJ provinshyeation-and has pledged to take Angeles The plane was proshy priests and Brothers German laborers are few describes the cial of Lithuanian Jesuits in the further affirmative actions vided by the Mission Doctors Domincian nuns African nuns scope of medical work in Africa free world will guest conduct

Association of Los Angeles three laywomen-two American according to the Browns In the Baltimore Symphony in twc Pledge C()()peraiion Calif as part of its Flying Docshy nurses and a German teachershy these rura~ regions there is II of his own piano compositioDll

Cooperating businesses also tor Service begun here four and the Browns ratio of about one doctor to in Ii concert sponsored by LCgtJio have agreed to undergo periodic years ago The Brown children attend a every 33000 persons Mrs ola College here Sunday eompliance reviews to assure At that time Dr James Carey small two-classroom school in Brown said Africail medicine At the keyboard as soloi

Umvuma a town 17 miles away and witch doctors are still verycontinued affirmative employshy now a Santa Barbara Calif wiiI be two other Jesuit pries~ much in evidence she addedment ac~ions according to surgeon arrived at Driefontein The journey to and from school Fathers Leslie J Schnierer -and

Thomas Gibbons Jr national to begin his three-year mission is looked upon as quite an adshy It is heartbreaking to see a Benito Rivera students at thIl director of Project Equality hitch He decided quickly that venture by the family as they child with measles have to go Peabody Conservatory of Music

In addition to the firms listed The concert will mark thewith a plane one doctor could though life blind because the in the guide more than 12000 do the wbrk of five ndanga (witchdoctor) put mull 50th anniversary of the restorashyother businesses have filled out With the help of the Swiss Pittsburgh Diocese (medicine) in the childs eyes tion of independence to Lithoshycommitment forms pledging coshy Bethlehem Brothers Dr Carey Tithing for Poor she said But in other areas aniai operation with the program but began surveying and laying out like TB the African is relJlarkshy

PITTSBU~GH (NC)-Bishophave not yet supplied the necshy landingstrips near isolated and ably sophisticated medicaHy

John J Wright has announced essary statistical employment doctorless clinics and hospitals Kariangwe Berejena Kana Education Officethe Pittsburgh Diocese will unshyreports which are similar 10 The Brothers also built the Serema Matibi are all farshy NEW ORLEANS (NC) - Aledertake a new tithing plan tothose ~equired by the federal hangar at priefontein and Dr away-sounding places but the office of religious education bllllhelp finance housing and othergovernment Carey arranged for one Brother people suffer as you and I been established here by Archshyprojects for the pOOr The nalles of firms listed in to be trained as a pilot suffer from sickness They bishop PhilIp M Hannan a The_dioces~ will give 10 perthe buyers guides are available Meanwhile in Los Angeles mourn when their children have will supervise the teaching oct

cent of the contributions andonly to religious groups parti shy Dr Leo Brown a former Navy to be sick and often die she religion in parochial schoolBbequests it receives and thecipating in the program surgeon with 11 years of sershy continued and in Confraternity of Chrisshysame percentage of collections

PIroject Equality sponsored vice and his wife Isabel a Perhaps some of their disshy tian Doctrine classestaken up for directly diocesan

by the National Catholic Conshy registeled nurse were volunshy eases have strange-soundingpurposes to finance povertyference for Interracial Justice teering for MD~s three-year nawes but all come under theprogramsoperates six other local offices hitch in Africa He was just title of Gods sick These are CONRAD SEGUINThe money will be used withtouching seven more states Adshy home from Vietnam where he the names of clinics that are

other religious groups for intershyditional offices will be opened served with the Marines visited by the Flying Doctor BODY COMPANY faith housing programs andin major cities this year acshy Staff of 1200 she said Aluminum or Steelother joint dforts for the poorcording to a spokesman Dr Brown and his wife are 944 County Street

Parishes will not be requiredlicensed pilOts So last Sumshy NEW BEDFORD MASS mer when they and their two to tithe but are invited to conshy Chief Speaker

WY 2-6618ISenQte Ideas f children-Rebecco 10 and Joel tribute voluntarily NEW XORK (NC) ~ Msgr 8~arrived here MDA sent the John J Egan director of the

Continued from Page Three Cessna 182 along with thein Chicago Archdiocesan office ofStart With 45and to preach in the one Dioshy The Driefontein mission in tirbanaffairs will be the chief

eese have them in the pther GREENSBORO (NC)-Fortyshy speaker at the May 16 banquetfive priests of the Raleigh dioshy of the 1968 Catholic Press AsoshyWhile the 24 diocesan priests Abortion Bill Passes cese have formed the North ciation convention in ColumbusSenators are elected the two Carolina priests association Ohiomembels of the Priests Senate In Maryhind Ho~se Seventeen others have indicatedwho are members of religious

commullities are appointed by ANAPOLIS (NC)-A ~m to they wish to become members the Bishop These will be ro- relax Marylands 100-year-old The Raleigh diocese includes all

North Canlinatated among the religious com- abortion law and put its regushylation into the hands of themunities doing parish work in

the Diocese At present the Sen- medical profession passed the ators from religious communi- House of Delegates by im 86 ties are Father Felician Plichta to 47 vote OFM Conv and Father Co- The bill permits a doctor opshylumba Moran SSCC eniting in an accredited hospishy

tal to perform an abortion to The Bishop has encouraged a preserve the physical or mental

study of pension plans that health of the mother to prevent would involve laypersonnel of birth of a deformed or retarded diocesa~ ail~ parish facilitieii childand to end some plegnan

The Bisholl has ma~li liQme ad- CieScaused by rape just~ents)nassessmtntson pat- UnClet the~ptesel1t law abor ishes tflking into account the tiOll is peimitted ~hen two growth o(~ubU~Iiln ~~riShesah~ Ihysicians a~r~~ it itnec~ssar~bull

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Church~en Study Racial Problems In New Jersey

NEWARK (NC) -The Church cannot tell otheJiS what to do until it faces the problem within its own comshymunity a Methodist Bishop has told Essex Count~ clergyshymen of all faiths in an a~essshyment of the racial problems beshysetting Newark and other New Jersey communities

Bishop Prince A Taylor and Catholic Auxiliary Bishop John J Dougherty of Newark disshycussed the race problem in light of the report of the Govemors Commission on Civil Disorder

Cooperative Solution Bishop Taylor stressed it is

the duty of the church to beshycome knowledgeable about the report to read it carefully Action without information is irresponsible he declared as he noted the church must face up till the fact that it has parshyticipated in maintaining the status quo He noted that when ~he commissionen pelsonally toured the riot area and asked the people what the impact of the church was in their lives all but a pound~w marked the church ltDfpound

Bishop Dougherty said if the problem is to be solved it will only be through the involveshyment of the total community government industry labor unions churches schools peoshyple living in the suburbs

Dont Have Time The attack on t1e problems

must be two-fold he asserted first meeting the needs which the coming Summer presents and then planning long-range programs to overcome the root causes of the problem

There is an urgen t need of immediate programs to enable us to have time to work toward the ultimate goal

Bishop Taylor referred to the need for time to work out solushytions We cannot undo the evils of 300 years in one Sumshymer he emphasized This illmiddot not going to be a case of a quick antidote and then they Jived happily ever after

However a Newark priest active in innel-city work who was one of six reactors to the presentations made by the Bishshyops remarked that comments about needing time to solve the problems overlook the fact that we dont hlVe the time

It would be great if we did have it to keep order but q (gt bull

the people bull have the imshypression that nothing has been donesaid Father Joseph Stulb

Many are ready to riot again if only to call attention to themselves he opined The black community despairs that the white community has or will change its attitude

Rev William Fox associate general secretary of the New Jelsey Council of Churches scored the commission for fail shying to note the contribution thpt a divided church - white and black - mademiddot to the elisis H~ cliticized the church for mainshytaining silence during public controversies which were listed as proximate causes of the riotshying

Another Catholic Magazine F0 Id S

DAYTON (NC)-Mary Today a magazine founded in 1901 deshyvoted to information about the Blessed Motherand her role in the Church has issued its final edition

It is one of 11 Catholic magashyzines which have ceased pubJishycation in the past )eal because

of 1088 ~l circulation The rnaf- orders are af Teutopolis JIL azine had a reoont eirculauOll Lake Bluff in and St Meiri

~ aooU~1151gtO middot - ~lnclbull - - -

BENEMERENTI MEDAJ~ Father James Vizzaro SJ second from left received the Benemerenti Medal at a dinner in Washington -on the occasion Of his retirement as dishyrector of the Washington office of the National Catholic Rural Life Association Conshygratulating him are left to right Msgr ~dward W ORourke executive director of the NtRLC Bishop Henry J Soenneker of Owensboro Ky rural life advisor of the usce department of social action and Msgr Luigi L Ligutti Vatican observer to the UN Food and Agliculture Organization and former executive dirootor of NCRLC NC Photo

Fr Vizzard Gets Benemerenti Medal Work for IFhlltfol lPoor Recognized

the Holy See to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization priests and Protshyestant clergymen and members of Congress

Msgr George G Higgins di shyrector social action department U S C a tho 1 i c Conference praised Father Vizzards comshybination of scholarship political know-how great tenacity of

Schedule Workshop O~ Sex Education

WASHINGTON (NC)-Father James T McHugh director of the family life bureau middotU S Catholic Conference will direct a workshop on Sex Education to be held at Catholic Univershysity of America here June 17shy28

Purpose of the workshop is to prepare a basic core of people especially teachers and parish personnel to supplement the work of the home in a complete program of education in sexu- ality It will provide these pershysons with background informashytion give them opportunity to evaluate some of the basic mashyterialsand engage them in an in-depth analysis of a curricushylum guide which reaches every grade level

Lecturers and consultants will include Fathermiddot John L Thomas SJ of the Combridge Center fOl Social Studies Dr and Mtmiddots Joseph Bird co-aushythors of The Freedom of Sexshyual Love Dr Ann F Lucas chairman of the psychology deshypaltment Farleigh Dickinson Universit~ Teaneek N J and Father Walter Imbiorski direcshytor of the Cana program in the Chicago atchdiocese

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purpose and above all genushyine love for the poor

Father Vizzard will leave Washington to middotwork in Califorshynia Nevada Arizona and Utah the region of the Jesuits Cali shyfornia province

Four Cleveland Nuns Quit as Religious

CLEVELAND (NC) - Four nuns one the prineipal of a 1100 student girls Catholic high school have separately withdrawn from the Sisters of Notre Dame here in Ohio

It was the largest departure since 1966 when 10 Sisters of Notre Dame were released from their vows to move to Pueblo CoIQ to form an experimental community middotThe Sisters of Notre Dame is the largest order of 2531 Cedar St New Bedford nuns based in the Cleveland 993middot3222 Diocese

imiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot~middotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot~ middot 3NEW HIGHERi RATE OF

PER ANNUM INTEREST PAID QUARTERllyo ON PAID-UP

SHARE CERTIfICATES Deposits Welcomed in Multiples of

$20000 up to $30OOO-on Single and Joint Accounts Up to $60OOO-for Cornorations

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All Deposits Inoured in Full

Taunton

THE ANCHORshyThurs April 11 1968 11

Support Bi~hop5

Equa~sty Plea MINEOLA (NC)-The Cathshy

olic Interracial Council of Long Island has voted overwhelmshying support of Rockville Censhytres Bishop Walter P Kellenshybergs call for equality in housing employment and edushycation

Bishop Kellenberg issued Zl pastoral letter-A Call to COl1shyscience-in which he said it i9 essential that every man be given equal opportunity for eJQP]oyment and job advanceshyment and equal educatton for himself and for his children

Declaring these to be fundashymental moral issues facing the people of Long Islanp the council said We give this statement by Bishop Kellenberg our overwhelming sUPPOtt

John J Clarke council president said the eounciB deemed it necessary to reit shyerate its support of the bishops statement co gtI bull because of our increasing concern over conshytinued discriminatory practicelC in these areas

In a policy statement the council declared the bash cause of racial unrest lies in the almost complete lack oR any meaningful contact between the races Today there are few whites who can say they really know Negroes This ignorance of each other is caused almost lxc]usively by patterns of segshyregation in housing which reshysuited in segregated schools 3mll a segregated society

As a step in breakin( these patterns the council recomshymended passage of open housshying ordinances in all towns OK

Long Island Only when there is no place left for the white man to run will the problem be solved it said

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WASHINGTON (NC)-Father James L Vizzard SJ retiring Washington director of the Nashytional Catholic Rural Life Conshyference received the papal Benemerenti medal hele in recshyognition of his work for t~e

rural poor of the United States and throughout the world

The presentation at a dinner in the Cosmos Club was attendshyed by Bishop Henry J Soenshyneker of Owensboro Ky NCRLC president Msgr Luigi Ligutti permanent observer for

Prelate Advocalles Open Housing ILaws

JEFFERSON CITY (NC)shyBishop Joseph M Marling CPPS of Jefferson City has urged Catholics of the diocese to campaign openly and fearshy

- lessly for area open housing laws

In a pastoral letter urging open housing law support the Missouri prelate askedshy

Who fails to see that to conshydemn a large segment of our people to the cruel segregation thatmiddot closed housing entails is to sin gravely against charity justice and the vely finest inshystincts of our nature Who may deny that to perpetuate such an evil in this enlightened age will bring malediction upon us

For jurely he answered Chlist is brother to the eolored in the identical sense that he is brother to the other children of men

Plan Fa-II Opening Of Joint Semill1ary

CHICAGO (NC)-A graduate school of theology for seminashyrians ftom three Religious orshyders will open in a former hotel here in the Fall

The school to be known as the Catholic Theological Union will be operated by the Passhysionists Franciscans and Sershyvites in the fOI-mer Aragon Hotel near the University of Chicago

About 100 students ue exshypected to enter thl school this year Area seminariltes ourrent-middot ly being used by themiddot threfl

2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese 01 Fall Ri~~r-Thurs Apr 11 1968 S~~in S~ntences priest- and Laymen

JOurrt)~a$ts Opinions Differ_On V~~e of Bishops Synod

By Msgr George G Higgins Two American journ~lists who have covered the Rome

1beat off and on for several years-Father Francis X Murphy CSSR and Gary MacE0 in-have just published an interesting account of the Synod of Bishops which was held in Rome in 1967 (Synshyod 67 A New Sound in what they manege to teU us Rome Bruce Publishing Co about themselves in their sep- Milwaukee) Written in the arate and widelydivergent asshyfamiliar Xavier Rynne style it Sessments of the Synod is something of a tour de force How two men who disagree given the se- so fundamentally about the uecy w h i c h pros and cons of the Synod ever enveloped the managed to work as a tandem $ y nod a 1 in the writing of the history of proceedings The the synodal proceedings is to authors h a v e put it as mildly as possible a tried to give perplexing mystery on account as They tell us that for aU that a c cur ate as lies between their separate possible under evaluations Df the Synod they the conditions are jointly accountable but that of time and cir- the internal logic of their inshycumstance For dividual viewpoints and the my own part I dialectic of the situation led think they deserve better than them to attribute exclusive reshya ~as~ing grade They do ~lOt sponsibil~ty for the Prelude to ~lalln to hae wrlt~en anythmg a priest and for the Postscript like8cIefmltIve hlstory of the i to a layman SYlo1IgtUt they have proyid~d Far A art 1IllS wlth a useful mtenm sum- P mabr of the -proceedings and I take it that this is a polite ~r ~ii w~ cin) begrateful way of saying that when they

Perplexing Mystery got around to summing up their Tothis reader however what impressions of the Synod they

the authors tell us about the

lSynod ls less mterestmg than i

~ 8holJd have concluded contrashyr rlwise- that it was seriously - lacking in credibility and releshy

vance and was thus on biI- ance a huge disappointment

lRationaJize Differences

Such differencesmiddot of opinion on the part of experienced

jourpalilts covering the same everit-and using the very same

source~ of informationare not to be Vf~npered at

On the other hand I am Dot very happy about the curious- way in which the authors haveshyrationalized their differencea Th~y tell Us that one evaluatioo Df ~he Synod (Father Murphys) w~ ~ritteo from the viewpoint of the institutional Church and the other (Mr MacEoins) from that of conteinporarshyman~ind

Or again in Mr MacEoin words A priest professionally involved in the institution will

tend to lean in one direction 11 layman whose professional sushy

- viva rests on his sensitivity to

SPECIAL DELEGATE Marches Ghilio Sacchetti 42 has been named by POpe Paul VI to succeed Count Enrico

Galeazzi as special delegate of the Pontfical Commission for the state of Vatican City He is wearing the now outshymoded costume of a Gentleshyman of Cape and Sword NC PIloto

world opinion in the other

Now Bear This

This strikes me as being bull slightly threadbare and hopeshylessly pre-Conciliar dichotomy I know of a Dumber of priests (and so do the authors I asshysume) who rightly~or wrongly are just as critical of the Synod as Mr MacEoin is

I also know of a number III laymen (and so do the authocs I must assume again) who rightly or wrongly are just as sanguine about the results of the Synod as Father Murphy is So whats all this doctrinaire I

stuff about priests necessarily looking at things (myopically) through the allegedly unenshylightened eyes of contemposhyrary mankind

Tell it to the Marineal

found that they wer~ so ho~e-lessly far apart 111 theIr thmkmg

that the division of labor so I cryptically described in the above quotations appeared to be the only possible way of salshyvaging the middotoperation Thatll fair enough

It isnt at all surprising that one of the authors (Father Murphy) should have concluded that on balance the Synod was truly a contribution to the Church~s aggiornamento and that the other (Mr MacEoin)

MAnmn (NC) - Sz~en per- sons incIl~lg a Cathollc priest have bc)n sentenced to prison terms and fined by Madrids Court of r lic Order on charges Olf havinr participated in an anti-Frangt meeting in Barceshylona in lS~G

On trial were Father Francisshyeo Paula Botey and 10 laymen who were accused of attending

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an illegal meeting The meetshying was advertised as a Day of Repression and criticized what it called the repressive activities of the government of Gen Franshycisco Franco

Father Botey who admitted during the trial that he atshytended the meeting at Barcelona Universitys law school was senshyten~ to a year in jail ~d fined

about $214 Three of the laylDell received similar sentences amplid fines while ~ others drew six-month jail terms aDd four were absolved

Father Batey testified duriDtl the trial that he deliberately atshy1ended the meeting to protest against the ftPress1on he bad said he had seen of -certain see-shymenta of ampbe Spanish clergyshy

Prelate Supports Catholic Schools Opposes Racism

NEWARK (NC) -Archshybishop Thomas A Boland of Newark touched on racism Catholic education and aborshytion in his annual message to the Archdiocesan CouncH of catholic Men at its CQnvention here

Noting that BOrne people adshyvocate closing Catholic schools to concentrate on adult educashytion Archbishop Boland said I believe we mU9t give as much time as is possible to adult edushycation but not that we should ignore our chlIdren

If we close our schools he soid there may 00 no one to attend the adult courses iJn future years

He deplored the absence of religion in the education of many people and said that while 0 ohild may be receiving o good academic background under such circumstances he is not being trained in his will or his morals

Jthortion Is Murder Archbishop Boland noting

~hot the question of relaxing bortion laws is before the state LeFislature recalled that he lralNi opollen to the men about ~ot Dubject a year earlier and repeated what he had said then abortion is murder

Should the state legislate more liberally in this field he said it would go outside its sphere and we would have no

right to follow it He indicated however that

the Church would not oppose the establishment of a legislashytive commission to study the abortion law

Discussing racism he called it a malignant growth in our society and announced his support for a peaceful interrashycial walk through the streets of Newarks ghetto

Spokesmen lor L2ity Archbishop Boland also urged

the men to turn their council into a real spokesman for the laity He ruled out the possibil shyity of a voice for the laity toshytally independent flrom the hierarehy declaring that this is not the structure cd the Church

H we want to build a strucshyture the archbishop said we get an architect to give us a uniform plan Christ is the arshyehitect of the Chureh We are its workmen

He then urged the men tID take the steps which would make the ACCM aspokesman for the people II real council

Delegates adopted four res0shy

lutions endorsing catholic echools condemning racism lin every form advocating retenshytion and expansion of the states IIChool bus law and opposing relaxation of the abortioD statute

Stresses Increased Food Production

NEW DELHI (NC)-The vatshyican recognizes the need to mshycrease food production middotas a most serious problem facing the developing countries and mshydeed the world as a whole Elizabeth Reid II member of the

bull Vatican delegation to the United ean delegation to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD)

Speaking at the UNCTAD meeting here in India MilS Reid said The right to food 18 01117 another aspect 01 be mosi eaered of all buman rigbts the right to life and it is tb1s parshyticular aspect of the problem of development that places the heaviest and most serious burshyden em the comlcieDee of man- flIIIIampy from home kiDd ~ bull lot cbeapeJ tIIaD IiDDC

rv~

I I

HEATHER CUTTHNG

Sacred Hearts Junior High School Student Is Licenseod Amateur Radio Operator

Holly and Heather Cutting 532 Walnut Street Fall River share a transistor rashydio With some teenage sisters this might cause trouble but not with this pair Heather Jets Holly take the transistor She settles for pop music from Johannesburg South Africa-via her shortwave set They have real good musicraquo she says Blonde 14 year old Heather learned the In ternational Morse Code a basic requirement for amashyteur radio operators when she was seven but its only in the past year that shes really worked at the complicated hobby Her father Dick Cutting ll construction superintendent by profession has been ll radio ham for 30 years by avocation An awesome battery of receivshyers and transmitters fills a room of the Walnut street house and when Heather displayed real inshyterest in them she had iii wi)) ing teacher close at hand

Heathers an eighth grader at Sacred Hearts Junior High School on Prospect Street in Fall River and she admits that she does as much homework as IIhe can at sOOool to have eveshynings free for her hobby She at shytends radio classes nightly then hurries bome to spend as much as three hours at ber sel

Im llicensed for two fre- I

quencies right DOW she exshyplained I can talk on six and two meters Translated that means she can contact amateullil

--in this part of the United States but may not ta]k tomiddot overseal operators until she earns 1Il middotgeneral license

Im Working for my license DOW she said rohe examinashytion JIm be in 00 days Even the license that Heather now holds however is umusual for one of her age When she gets ber general license she Will be among itB Y01lllllgest holders and probably the youngceBt 8h licensee in the stlllte

rhere are 11426 lI8dto amashyteurs iD Massacbuatts I18id her father aInd cmIy 409 aJre WCllInen

wm CoDtaet lFather A real benefit to ~ Cutting

family from Bellltberll general lieense wID be iba1 1Ibell be able tID reach bel fathe bull blB car short wave mctic wheD he is OlD hIfl freqUeDt bwliness tripal

distance calls said Mr Cutting The electric light company figshyures I can run this rig 16 hours a day for only $290 a month

Heather hopes to make a cashyreer of radio technology Right now she is able most of the time to repair her set if someshything goes awry and shea building a small transmitting station for an upcoming science fair at Sacred Hearts Itll broadcast about 200 feet she said

Sometimes Of couJrSe gremshylins pop ill Like the time Heather got a phone can from a boy in Swansea Hey did oU know youre coming m on eiYclnnel 2 on our TV be said 011 another occasion Heather picked ~ her fathers transmisshysion OIl ber electric pitar speaker

Most of the time however things go smoothly During her nightly radio sessions Heather picks up signals Jrom other amateurs and has some schedshyuled appointments vis the mllshyways withmiddot friends hi otheJl mties

When she picks up 5 llllew

eontact she confirms it with II brightly-colored postcard bearshying her name and station 0011 etters in psychedelic pink Wld yellow

Collecting such postcards 111 2 sub-hobby for radio amateulll and Holly has a oozzling eollecshytion on the walls of her radio room She bas Mganized the Sou the a II t ern MassachushyIlett8 Teenage RadM Net aocll ill

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OIdsmobile-lPeugot-Rencnft fJ1 Middle Street Fairhaven

llooking for new members Its just for teens she says

=rheyre more fun to talk to Once she has her general 11shy

cense she plans to join Iil group that relays messages from Viet Nam servicemen to their famshyilies

other Bobbies Badia is by no means Heathshy

ers only hobby Shl~ and her sister Holly a freshman at Emshymanuel College have an imshypressive collection of sharpshyshooting trophies mostly garshynered at Fall River Rod and Gun Club meets I began shootshying when I was six and had my Own gun when I as seven eaid Heather

Other interests are mathematshyics and music Heather picked lIP guitar playing on her own and belOngs to a folk group which plans its first public apshypearance after Easter

In short shes one teen whoD never be found wondering what to de next

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THE ANCHORshy 13Thurs April 11 1968

Houston Priests Get Pay Raise

HOUSTON (NC) - BishOJ John L Morkovsky announceCl a pay raise for priests of thE Galveston-Houston diocese and said a new retirement poliCW will go into effect Jan 1 1970

Under the old pay scale asshy sistants received a base salary of 11250 plus $30 car allowshyance and $1250 insurance preshymium for a total salary of $155 a month Pastors received a total monthly salary of $21750 The new salary reale will allow for increased pay based on the number of yearo priests have been ordained

Assistants who have been cshydained less than 10 years wiill receive a total monthly salary of $200 The figures will ~

$225 for those ordained moro than 10 years

Pastors with 25 years in t100 priesthood will receive m monthly total of $275 ThoSQ with more than 25 years will receive $300

The retirement policy ca1lJfl for optional retirement at age 65 and mandlltory retirement at 70 However elderly pries1amp who are able and willing m37 be assigned to other priestly work than the pastorate Bisbshyop Morkovsky stated

The bishop said the changes are in accordance with the recshyommendations of the Senate 01 Priests and follow consultashytion with diocesan consultom

Reach Impasse-PIITSBURGH (NC)-A state-gt

level meeting between Cat~

olic officials and the Nationl11 Association for the Advanceshyment of Colored People on furshythering racial integration iB Catholic schools reached m seeming stalemate here bn Pennsylvania when the schoolshymen cited lack of funds as ll major obstacle to NAACP pro= posals

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YOUTH CARES FOR AGE Retired Sisters are tenderlycared for at chair while Sister Mary Agnes looks on Center Sister Agnes Maureea Mmiddott St Mary Convent Fall River Left Sister Agnes Maureen seniormiddot wheels SisterMary Jer~me anQright Sister JohnCatberine bringgdri_ infirmarian points out magazine article to Sister Mary Lig~~ri inwheel to Sister Mary Ursulamiddot Both infirmarians are licensed practical nurses

I

Cqrdinal Roy Raps Apathy

MEXICO CITY (NC)~MaushyJOice Cardinal Roymiddot of Quebee _ a visit here as ehairman of the Pontifical Commission for World Justice and Peace said Christian teachings condemn violence in solving social probshylems but also condemn themiddot false prudence that lacks the eourage to make needed reshyforms

The prelate who has been touring Latin America for sevshyeral weeks said he was 1mshypressed by the number of Cathshy

olic organizations and institushytutions already applying Pope Paul VIs encyclical The Deshyvelopment of Peoples in their Jespective countries

But he added Latin Amerishyearn still have to assume fully their responsibility in workingtowards economic balance andmiddot bull just social order 80 every cit shyizen can promote his own welshyfare in a climate of freedom and common good

bull bullbull tmiddot

Comes KindIYcimiddotmiddotSislesmiddot 0 Mercy AmiddotI Fall River Comiddotnventmiddot

By Patricia McGowan

~When thou wast younger thou didstmiddot gird thyself anddidst walk where thou Frouldst But when thou shalt be old thou shalt stretch forth thy handsmiddot arid another shall gird thee and lead thee whither thou wouldst not In its description of the almost universal lot of age this is one of the most poignantpassages in Scriptur~ But age comes kindly f~r Sisters Although they are not exshyemptmiddot from its physical and mental ravages they need not fear being forsaken byfriends or being left alone the

fanulymiddot Jhe famllylast of a that is a religious community cherishes its older members and provision is made for Sisters to pass their last years surrounded by tender care

Among havens for older Sisters is the infirmary at Mt St Mary Conventmiddot Fall River The Sisters who have spent most of their religious life in the Fail River Diocese come here for their laBtyears exshypliliried Sister Agnes Maureen

The cardinal added at emiddot pretB8 RSMmiddotmiddot senior iniirmarian at eonference in the headquarten the Mount Her domain proshyf the Mexican Social Secreta- vides eh~rf11~ccQmmodations riat that national efforts for de- for 10 Sisters Each has her ownmiddot elopment do not eliminate the room andthere is II kitchenette aeed ~forfoleignaid where those ablE lobe up and

The Pontifieal commisSion Cardinal Roy indicated ill enshyaged in persuading rich counshytries to devote at least one per eent of their groSs national product to assist poor eountries

Archdiocese Adopts Project Equality

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing notified the priests lIeIlate of the Boston archdiocese of plans 10 adopt Project Equality a program designed to use purchasing power of church institutions to make firms supplying goods and 8elVices wipe out diICriminashy birislM Placticeamp

e~ut ~n enjoy their meals ~gethermiddot

The ~nfirmaryis but II few stepis from the Mount chapel wher~ the retired Sisters spend hours a day in prayer for comshymunity members still in the active lPostolate Also claiming time for Sisters whose eyesight permits are needlework ana erooheting projects

Always DraWlll Cheerful and dedicated Sister

Agnes Maureen who has I Deen at the infirmary six years is aided by Sister John Catherine who has served the aged Sisters two years A laywoman takes the night shift in the infirmary ensuring the Sisters round the clock care Bothmiddot Sister infirmashy

rians are licensed practical nurses who received their trainshyI g to L d f F tma Hosn a ur a y 0 a I shypital in the Providence Diocese

When I entered religion I hoped to be an infirmarian

said SIster Agnes Maureen I whas alwdays drawn to work for t e age

Some people think we havent got a nursing apostolate she added but we need nurses desshyperately Right now we have nine Sisters taking care of inshyfirmaries in our province

Among Sisters now at the Mount infirmary are Sister

Mary Agnes who celebrated her diamond jubilee last DeshyceJl)ber and most of wbose r~lishygious life was spent in New Bedford and middotNorth Attleboro schools and Sister Mary Lishy

gu()ri whomiddot f9r 49 yearl taught sixth graders at st Patricks School Fall River

HShe looks out her window at St Patricks said Sister Agnes Maureen and she says Theres home

The Sisters are welcoming the arrival of Spring and warm days said the infirmarian It means they can enjoy their sunporch sit in the Mounts garden and go for occasional car rides Of course they have many visitors she said Other Sisters in the house come to see them and so do Sisters from the convents where they forshymerly lived

Yes age comes kindly for Sisters Not Hke the old lady overheard in a downtown groshy

eery confiding to a chance fellow-customer her discovery of a bargain in frozen food I live alone you know and 1 get

three big servings from a packshyage--and only 29 cents

N 0 Sister lives alone

bull

~~tplic Newspaper Wins Press Awards

NEW ORLEANS (NC) -The eJarion Herald middotarchdiocesa middotnewspaper won eight awards iii the annual competition of the

N~W Or)eans Press Club ~ competition included daily and

weekly newspapers wire serVshyices and television stations

Millard F Everett editor won first place in two categories - editorial and best religioWl story This marks the first time in five years of competition that the Clarion has taken the top award for best religious story Staff members of the paper also took three second and three third place awards

----------------------------

ZENITH bull ACOUSTICON bull UNEX

bull BIOLOGICAU bull YITAMIIIS

C~tt 615-7829 IRENE R SHEA PROP

Prompt Free Delivery in fALL RIVER SOMERSET TIVERTON amp VICIHITY 101 ROCK ST (CORNER OF PINE ST) FALL RIVIImiddot

~ 6

THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFon River-Thurs Apr 11 1968

CathoJi~ ll]wnDv~JSityPltDcopy~regii~copyJ~

IPlanLUBffil AmeFicon ~1]~regregO WASHINGTON (NC) - A ops and l~aders of several South

jJroup of pr-ofessors from Cathshy American governments sHe University of America hope The Washington center comshyS n~w technical middotinstituteat the middotprises -ll group of professorsshy~tholic University of Gu~Washy mostly members of the CU caulI Ecuador may mark the llchool of middoted ucation-whomiddot are ltJPening of an international edshy specialists ineclUcationfordeshyvcation bridgetoLatin America Velopment Director of the proshy

The institute will be inaugurshy ject is Dr Jose A Baquero ated early this month as 11 middotcoshy WM has been commuting b~shy1)eIativeventure by the Center meen Washingtonand his nashylor Educational Research fa middottive Ecuador dming the -cmrent QuitoEcuadorand the Center school year lor Community Developmenhmd This is not an Ecuadorian Servioe at Catholic University project it is an internatienal bere It has the support 01 Vashy projed a resealclFaction proshykanofficials Ecuadorianbislshy gram between North and South

America Dr Baquero said middothereBC middotto Recruit laquorNe had to start middotsomewhere The natural plaoe 10 begin wasNegro St~1ent5 middot-the Qlace Where weaould get

CHESTNUT HILL (NC) shy the most facilitiesThisproject iesuit-eper-ated Boston College God willing if successful will bere has made available $100shy move throughout Latin AmershyGtOO fora talent search -progr1m ica We already have contracts to recruit Negro stJdents frem with interestedJeaders in Sao disadvantagedurbanareas middotof Paulo BTazil Bogota Colombia tlhecountry mainly in Greater and Lima Peru Boston Msgr Eugene Kevane direcshy

Father Michael P Walsh SJ tor of the Center for Communitypresident caUed for support off Development andServleedaimshyiIIe entirestudent body facshy ed iB number of Latin American Illlty and administration of EQsshy Church and government officialS Qon College to make the ~mshy have middotexpressed interest in thecram a success projectand a belid it may beshy

Since the program was starteJ come a model of assistance middottoIJeveral weeks ago some 50 ~shy lI3derdeveloped poundOuntrieslltIicatiopshave beenreceiltvelll He said ArcnbishGp Romolofrom students in ghetto areas Carooni apostolic nuncio 10lot -entrance middotin next Septemshy

~1u told him heilOllSiders theWltll freshman -class pmject of great importance andThere have a1w~ys beellU M~S a similhlr middotinstitute willIlegro students enrolled at B4tsshybe established at the Pontificalton College oUicials said ~t University in Limatheir Dumber is ~ot ~own 00shy

0tberhigh-ranking churchshyaYSe race is not shown 8ll1 middotmen who lthave endorsed theapplications The Collegemiddotacceptll project include MsgrLuigi Lishyattdents of all faiths gutti the Holy Sees PermanentN~t SeptemberNegro lrtlllshy

1Gbserver at the Food and Agrishy

bullnts with the necessary ~uaUshy6eations will be admitted n8 culture Organization of the 1Ilual while middotsome 25 will ge United Nations and Archbishop admitted under the talent Ceasar Antonio Mosquera fif

lt4IeQIChprogram The number is Guayaquil president of theEcshybeing limited for thegood af iliad-orlan Bishops Conference

GOLDEN JUBILEE Sisshyter Rose Alma Reid CSC (Sjltte1 M Flora) will mark herg-olden i llbilee of religious professjon on Sunday April 21 at Sacred Heart Convent New Bedford A Mass of thanksgi~rjng will be offered at 1130 Sunchw morning at Sacred Head Church and a reception will be held in the parish hall ITom2 to 4 th~t

afternoon Friends and forshymer pupils are invited t01l~

tend

So Curolina Bishop A-sksPettce $upport

CHARLESTON (NC)- Bishshymiddotop Ernest Lmiddot Unterkoefier of Charleston has called for the middotfull support ofall Americans of President Lyndon middotlB Johnshysons efforts to secure peace in middotVietnam

Tbe South ltCarolina Bishop said that the Presidents -peace ini tiati yes demonstrate that he is a gtarson who -has ever been conscious of the grave responsishybility 01 his ofillce and that his judgements have been measured ~y the critical threats to the securi~y and free action ofthe United States

ICampus Comediansl

R~JlJ~stforBirh ControJ 1nlcrmation lndBGSYlrncrGti(C~e

DAYTON (NC)-A Univershysity of Dayton chaplain said he suspected campuscomediami for 1b~ conJroversyaroused bY a request for availability of birth corttol information and materials In campus by theunishyversity stmiddotudent congress

Father Urban Rupp SM universi~y co-chaplain wrote in the chaplain s bulletin the alshymost unanimous aetion fthe student gfvernment group middotwas an idio~yncratic caper in the natureo Ii ttle childrenpl~ying

house He indicated he fouud it difshy

ficult to take the Pfoposa1 serishyomlY

Now of COUrse I middotcowd be taking this all -wrong be said

Perhaps it was intended 00 bn serious In that case I woUld be tempted to thinktheemershygency is not just immediateshyit is really one generation too late

This was taken asa reference to student efforts to pwih through the resolution orbirth control as an emergency -meashysure

That failed but a few days later the student middotcongressvo~ 29 tol to seeka change in llJllshyversUy Wlicy that would -pershymit the introductionof birth 1Ontrol selYiees in thestudem health center for married eQUoshy~les and Ulose llQOD _ ~arriedmiddot

the young Negroes whowiUbe ~pted oUiciaI said

~

bull

PATRIARCH The middotnewily elected head of the Syriac Oatholic Church Patriarch Hgtenys Antoine Hayek of Anshy~och was enthroned recentshy1w in Beirut Lebanon In this post hesucceds the late P-ashykiarch Ignace Cardinal TapshylPouni NC Photo

I

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In ~ glory of His Resurrection may be reborn man~

amiring hopes and CleSires _ ~ce

HAPPY EASTER THE OFFICERS DIRiEc1r~ AND STAFfshy

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FIRSTmFff-BANK

-Ji1lim~~OF NEW BEDFORD

StYE SOME

11IfiPPINESS TO

A CHILD

i8iAPPI~ESS IS

A bull told ($1250 a monttl$15000-a ~ar)ca_small SISTER Investment for SisterS lifetime of service

Like to be her sponsorf Her name Is Sister Suzamma and she will write to you

iIHAPPINESS ciS

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HAPPlHU II

CLOTH

Whonareyouhapp~t7Happlnll3s 110$ In giving Youre ha1J)lest when you sIva yourself to ttle peopeyeniho needyou most bullbullbullA mother for Instance hums with ~pplnesswhensh8bath~

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work bullbull The best lsortof51Ilins lnvoLves mor than writing middotchecks--etlll how better can you help the children now whoneed you overseasf Boysandslrls who are btl~~ltper1JJjeafmiddotmuta bullbull orp~your~oneyglftslarg~-and bullmell willfeedthemmiddotteach them cur themgivethem 8 chance In lifebullbullbullbull Wantllobe happiermiddotthi

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In Erumathale south India 8 young Indian girllnrtnilriing tobea sisterOfthe Imltatlon1lf Christ will learn amofSotherttllnp how Jo care for orphans Hertlalning costs $300 all

Sevanmiddotyear-od Clara Vaookkaran an orphan In Kottamthy Indla needs lMtryttling Iitta (SIr need $10 wlllP8Y her 8)(~nslJlJm~thbymiddot cm(lOthweUaendYOU harphoto

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THE ANCHO~-Trappists Elect Mother Church of Nation8 PortlglleSe 17 Thurs April 11 1968

Youngest Abbot P-epares fOI- Cenlellilial Celebration At Gethsenloni Dy Patida F r-u nis

GETHSEMANI (NC) The youngest abbot in the history of the monastery of Our Lady of Gethsemani was formally blessed (March ~l) by Archbishop Thomas J McDon~

ough 0pound Louisville Father M Flavian Burns

OCSO 36 ilgt the seventh ab~

bot in the 120-year history of the monastery He was elected by members of the community Inst January to succeed Abbot M James Fox OCSO

Father Flavian described bis position as en administrator whose main job il) service to others within the community He said his most important function it3 to hold plivate spiritual conversations with other monks and to handle the lillM)nasterys relations with the ~Atside world

Thcilt are some 120 monks at ~ethsemani abbey a decline from past years Abbot Burns cCrlbllltes the decline at least in prt to the attitude of the times YiJCl1 was foJJJlcrly accepted without question is now being ltI~etioned he observed

ltDontemplation Prayer

Changes have been made the IHurElY is now in English and 2Jc strict vow of silence has TiKen relaxed somewhat On an experimental basis the monks are allowed to use brief oral instructions instead of sign language as in the past

Despite the lack of radio or 1clevision Abbot Burns said the monks keep in contact through newspllpers with events in todays world The main thing ill to know what is going on in the Church and what effects our fellow hushymans according to the abbot

The life of a monk involves middotcontemplation and prayer rather than speaking up - 11 more spiritual turn according kI Abbot BUlns

A native of Jersey City N J he is a graduate of Henry SfIyder public high sehool there

Protests- Campaign Agamst Religion

NEW YORK (NC) - A new wave of terror against aU churcltgpers is now in effect in Albania an exile from that country has declored in a- letter of protest sent to the United Nations Commission on Human Rightsmiddot and~ to UN Secretary General U Thani

The protest bl Dr Rexhep KIasniqi president of the Free Albania Committee which has its headquarters here said that Albanial following a lf41oist eommunillt guideline has shut down every cltulch and mosque and has made any_kind of pubshylIc worship impossible

Thill campaign Dr Krasniqi tated is a violation of the UN Charter the Universal Declarashytion of Human Rights and of Albanias own communist conshystitutional guarantee of freedom of conscience for all

San Antonro Priests Form Association

SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Fortyshyene diocesan and religious comshymunities priests of the San Anshytonio archdiocese formed a priests association bere The priests ohose a six-member temshypora]) steering committee

One of the fiTst formal actions Gf the allsociatron was to inform Archbishop Robert E Lucey of San Antonio of the group forshymation

There are approximately 441

Parishioner d St John the Baptist Church in Nc Bedford are getting rendy for a momentoils event-the 100th anniversary of the fO~1l1dil1g of the oldest Portuguese parish in the nation The cen~en]ial celebration wi II not take place until 1971 but many things have to be done in preparation within the next three years One major project is renoshyvating the church ihelf To pay for the massive job ptrshyishioners have inaugur~teca Centennial Fund Drive to raise money for painting ~he church do extensive electrical work and buy a rew organ Estimated cost (f the regt3ir5 is $150000

Rt Rev Msgr John A Silvia pastor is honorary drve chairshyman and Frank S Jason is genshyeral chairman Other committee members include Richard GiJI1shysalves and Jesse V Santos Jr division chairmen JQseph S Vera special gifts chairman Richard L Lopes treasurer George Radcliffe director Louis S Silva assistant director Mrs Mary Lucy Soares office conshytrols and Miss Luey E Dias list supervisor

Members of the Campaign Exshyecutive Committee also include Frank M Martin ald Joseph C Motta

The history of St Johns and the history of the Portuguese people in America arc closely intertwined

It was at the end of the 18th Century that settlers began comshying from themiddot Azores to the United States TheJ were relashytively few in number nd as II

result almost lost their national identity

Near Ifood However by 1840 the trickle

of Azoreans was beginning to turn into a near Oood of imshymigrants who settled in New Bedford then a whaling and fishing center

By 1865 many Portuguese families called New Bedford home They lacked just one thing-a church of their own and a priest who spoke their language and understood their customs and traditions

Their first priest-Rev Joao Ignacio de Azevedo-anived in 1869 and on Sept 10 1871 St Johns parish was canonically established

Theremiddot were approximately 1shy000 Portuguese of Azorean deshyscent living in New Bedford at the time and the)T detelmined to build their own church A lot was purchased for $3OD8 ~ con~

siderable amount in those days and soon ground WQS broken for the new house of God

However Father de Azeedo was a mission pliest Vl~ho~moved

throughout the are~ aCministershying to his counblymen As a reshysult a new parish was establishshyed in Boston and he became its first pastor

Expandoll

Construction of St Johns WillS

continued by Rev Antonio de Mattos Freitas a native or Calshylteta St George Azores Fashyther Freitas also was responsible for the construction of a recshytory When he reUred because of ill health and returned to~ the AzoreS he was succeeded by Rev Antonio G de Silva Neves who was to serve St Johns durshying the greatest expansion Gfthe citys Portuguese colony

The first church located where a section of Morse- Twiampt Drill now stands soon ~ outgrown by its congregation and a drive began for agt new and larger church

Father Neves who served 8~j

pastor for almost 25 years saw the new church at County and Wing Streets almost coop]eted However ill health also forced bill retirement

PREPARING FOR CENTENNIAL In charge of fumd drive for hundredth anniversary of St John Baptist Church New Bedford are from left George Radclffe drive execushytive director Frank Jailon general chairman

pleted construction of the present church and rectory in three years The church which now serves the parish was solemnly blessed an4 dedicated to the worship of God by the late Bishshyop Feehan

Through the years the parshyishioners of St Johns have proved their dedication to their cliurch Now they are renewinr their dedication

Msgr Silvia notes that before the small St Johns Church was built the citys Portuguese colshyony attended Mass at St Lawshyrence Church Later they moved into what today is Crowells brt Store

Landmark Today the 11Inificent st

Johns is a landmark in New Bedford befitting its position as Mother Church of the Portu guese in the- UnFted States

MSgr Silvia a native of Pall River served at St Peters Church in Provincetown for 27 years His only other assi1shyment St John the B-aptirt Church

Ordained to the priesthood or Dec 20 1919 St Johns was the new priests first assignment He remained at the cRurch unshytil No~ember 1924 when he was transferred to Ptovinceto~

On Oct 2 1951 Msgr Silvia returned to St Johns as pzsshytor a post hemiddot still fulfills with zeal and energy

His assignmetlt to St Jobnfl parish in 1919 was not ~1sgr Sinshyvias introduotion to the New Bedford parish

As a young boy the p2stcshyrecalls his poundathers weekly trips from Fall River to New Bedford to bring back a priest

Four Families There were few Portuguese

families in Fall River in those days he says When my father arrived in Fan River there were iust four Portuguese families in the city Gradually others setshytled there

My father used to drive over in a horse and buggy to bring Il priest back tc Fall River to ll3y

degbrought him back the next dzy Since those days of hischiMshy

bood Msgr Silvia observeamp-l Turn to Page Eighteen

Continued fronmiddot Page Three

the late Tobias and Ann Lynch ]Burke Mr Burke was born in Newport Tipperary Ireland and his speech bears witness to the o-it and lilt of his birthshyplce He is married te Catbshyerine Lowney Burke and the couple lives next to the Chanshycery

DI1 Davia Costa Dr Costa son of David CosU

and Julia Rodrigues is the husshyband of Louella Somerday and fther of five children A dentshyist in NeJ Bedford he is active ir ceo and in St Vincent ~e

Pml work on a parochial and al(l level He has been zealoUJ ir- many important phases ~

perish aetivity in Immaculate Conception Parish in New BedshyforC He was recipient of the Diocesan Marian Award in Deshycember

itpJlin 15 TIle awards Jill be presenteCl

at St Marys Cathedral Fa]] River on lIlonday evening April 15 at 8 PM At toot timeuro there will be the investi shyture of two lI-ionsignori the awarding of Papal Knight 03 SZ Gregory honors to nine ~sect- oeesan laymen and the Pro EecIesia et Pontipoundlce award kJ mother Pierre Marie adminisshytlato of St Annes Hospital IE Fall River~

Join Federation IIALEIGH (NC)-Forty ()(f thfl

matewide Raleigh dioceses 14~

tlriests have formed the North iCaFolina Priests Associatioil which will affiliate with a Emshy

ticmal federation DOW beiJl~

formed

May the Joy and Pomise 01- Easter

uplift your spirit and gladden

your hean

FROM THE OFRCEIIS AND PERSONfJB Of

qkJM~ERCHANTS CIa1iotuLe BANK

IN NEW BEDFORD

SOUTH BANK-Cove St at Iodney French Boulevard WEST BANK-Kempton Street at Mill Stret

LUNDS CORNER BANK-Acushnet Ave rear Lunds Comer DARTMOUTH BANK-Dartmouth Street near Rockdale Ave NORTH BANK-Acushnet Avbull at Coffin Ave

CENTER BANK-Purchase and William Sts priests in the San Antonio arcl1shy Next pastor was the Rev Mass He used to stay overnight tiiocese Manuel A da Silva wt() oom- at our hOuse ald JlG ~tbeI

-

18 Tti~ ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1969 CatecheticsWeek Set at StonehillDioce$clm ~j[llIlde[lj)fl5 Join Nal-gonGI Some 400 priests religious and laymen are expected to at shyMculrraurru U A$~ssinatBon tend a catechetics institute b be held Monday Aug 5 throughOf Dr Mriin luther KilnS Saturday Aug 10 at Stonehill College Diocesan schools shared i~ national mourning at the Sister Mary Francille CSJ

~8sassination of Dr Martin Luther King with special theology professor at Regis ColshyMasses or prayers offered in every school At Cassidy High lege will direct the institute in Taunton Rev John Moore chaplain celebrated a Mass and speakers will include Rev

Frederick Moriarty SJ Revfor the repose of the soul Cha~les E Cook Rev James F(l)f the Negro leader and rently hplds first place in the Hawker Sister Florence -MishyNotre Dame math league chels OLVM Gerard Potte~

tlie chapel by students in a demy Fairhaven have been study periods were spent in Girls at Sacred Hearts Acashy

bauoi and Mrs Helen Jacobs With the theme Making Alllvigil for peace working on a project to bring

Christian Youth Movement Easter cheer to patients at St Things New institute sessiono will discuss Scripture catechetshymembers at Jesus-Mary Aca- Lukes Hospital New Bedford ical techniques use of filmsdemy Fall River heard the New Under supervision of Sister Jushywith adolescents other visualFolk a group of singing Holy lie Louise SSCC theyve ~een aids parent education teamCross seminarians Their appear- making tray favors including teaching and creative dramaticsance was arranged under t~e decorative placemats and napkin

Further information is avail shydirection of Mofher John Scarry holders for adults and flowered able from Stonehill CollegeJRJM Jollipops chicky surprises and North Easton 02356Also at JMA its French Week bunny hats for childern

The observance- began Sunday Science Fair Winners when French Club members Jeanne Phenix Yvette Berthi- Holy Family had four winshy Charities AppeaI aume and Susan Cournoyer took ners at the annual New Bedford Continued from Page Three part in a play sponsored by the Science fair In the senior division

Community Fund CampaignPrevost French Club Les Fem- James Berry and John Thomas president Board of Managers mes Parlent Trop Throughout of the New Bedford school were of Boston Dispensary and vice

the week too there have middotbeen cited fo~ earth science and phy- the Diocesan cheerleading tour- will combine with the seniors president of USOseveral skits prepared by mem- sics proJects respectively while t tl h ld t F h th bZbers in the junior division both Pa- namen recen yea ee an Lor e occasIOn SInce oth He has been the recipient of

or effort at Prevost was tricia Downey and SharonSmola High but sports arent all that cltsses of the academy are small honorary degrees from Holy MaJ matter at the TauntoJl girls due to the fact that the high Cross College Tufts University

e Sunday program Whlch ln- were recognized for work in the h f h d I ld f b sc 001 Break ast lunc an schoo IS being phased out Suffolk University Bradford -luded In addItIon to the play fle 0 iology M formal dinner pace settmgs The Junipero Club of Holy Durfee College of Technology~veral talks by promInent any students won honors at h M h I I I were recently on display at the Family High recently sponsored of Fall Rivet and Lowell Techshy

I remiddotnch cItIzens a French song- t e assac usetts RegIOn S F h school library and members of a talk on drug addiction for jun- nological Institute ~t and a motion picture Clence alr eld in Fall Rlver They included Christine Four- the Mothers Auxiliary were on iors and seniors The talk was Bishop to AddJess Meeting

UN French Club nier Dominican Academy and hand to answer etiquette ques- given by two brothers one an Most Rev James L ConnollyAt Coyle the French Club di- Diane Desmarais Mt St Mary tions from the students ex-addict the other director of Bishop of Fall River will speak

Ilected by Brother Hugh McCabe Academy both Fall River Both And the Coyle Fathers Club Marathon House a center for to the priests parish trusteesIOeCently elected officers After girls were recogiIized by the held its annual Father-Son Com treatment of addicts located in chairmen of the Catholic Charishy8le votes were tallied however Southeastern District of the Mas- munion breakfast at the school Coventry RIo ties Appeal and the invited lays our man at Coyle it looked sachuse~ts Dental Society bull with Robert Cahill ofthe Rhode CongratuIcitions go to Joseph gue9ts of the 111 diocesan if ~embers were voting for Debra Lay Dominican Aca- Island Food and Drug Commis Abraham of St Anthony High parishes bull UN delegation The presidents demy received a savings bond sion as guest speaker He dis- for meriting runner-up position Roland A Lafrance 1968 ApshyliPot wa~ captured he reports from the Bristol South Distriet cussed harmful effects of various iil the state finals of the annual peal lay chairman will also adshy a Polish fellow Cbarles Ozug Medical Auxiliary arid Michael drugs American Legion olatorical con- dress the 800 expected to attend lames OBrien a true Irishman Zito Bishop Feehan High At~middot The Catholic Students Mis- test - the opening meeting of the won the vice-presidential spot tleboro was awarded a plaque sion CrUsade at Stang H~gh has In club~ews at~HA the Senshy campaign for funds for the 30 while the treasurers job was by the Womens Auxil1ary to the taken as a special project this ior Science Club will conduct agencies of the Catholic Chadshy~warded to Jorge Matesanz -a Mass Veterinary ASsn month of April the collection of a farewell meeting for seniors ties Appeal

BASKETBALL PLAYERS On basketball team at Connolly High Fall River are from left Tim Duffy Tom Kroger John Long Joe Kelly Greg Sullivan Mike Manning

~~dent of Spanisll extraction Winners in the division of donated medical supplies and this ~month and members will Only Paul Bor9ue the secretary earlhscience Were John Dias eyeglasses for deprived Peoples visit an encephalitis clinic in I ~anaged to make the scene for Thomas Burk~ anciRobei-tClou~ of the world Supplies collected Freetown in May The Stamp France tier FeehahMicIlael Cote Pre illbe forwarded to the Cathi- and Coin Clubis planning a pubshy

At Bishop Stang iil North vost and Elizabeth Lavoi~ Do- olic Missions Medical Bureau for lie exhibition of members col- Dartmouth the math team led minican shipment iections in May imd the Chess by high scorer Lawrence l3yrnes Awards in math and engineer- Upco~ing at S~A Fairhaven Club has undergone reorganiza- placed secon~in a reeentBqs- ing went to Carol Vasconcellos is the aruiual senior prom which tion election of officers inshyflon public schools math meet Mt St Mary Madeleine Delisl~ wilL be held in the Colonial cluding Edward Norman presishyThe Stang team paced by the and Vivian Blais and Michael R60m of Whites restaurant in dent Daniel Brule vice-presi- shyeo-sIstent good work of George Zito Feehan Genevieve Pappas Westport from 8 to midnight dent Diane Lizotte secretary Oliver and EIleen Keavy cur- and Debra Lay Dominican Joan Friday night May 24 Juniors TuniorProm

Basile Feehan Amato Polselli The Holy Family Junior Prom Prevost and Sharon Woycie- Board ofmiddot Trustees isslated for Friday night AprilCentennialmiddot chowski Mt St Mary were 26 at Kennedy Center The prom

Continued from Page Seventeen cited To Study Changes will last from 8 to 11 and will Chemistry winners included have Carousel as its themebroad smile on his face-many Jane Arruda Anne Lewis De- WASHINGTON (NC) - The Mlisic will be by the Escorts

other families have arrived from nise Michaud Elizabeth St board of trustees of the Catho- And the Holy Family debatePltlrtugua1 A man d Diane Lamontagne lic University of America in team tied for first place in the Our Lady of Mt Carmel par- Christine Fournier Dominican Washington D C will meet Narry League with Cassidy A ~h was detached from St Johns Anne Sullivan and Pamela Can- Sunday April 21 in St Louis playoff will be held As of now as the Portuguese population dee Feehan Marilyn Riley and to consider a wide range of rec- Cassidys debate reco~d is 12 grew Then Our Lady of the Ann-Marie Charrette Sacred ommended changes resulting wins out of 14 debatesjrnmaculate Conception parish Hearts Fall River Irene Caron from a year-long study of the was erected to care for families Cassidy Marilyn Bentley Mt pontifical university by a comshyi Portuguese descent living in mitteee headed by Dr Carroll ~e North End of New Bedford St Mary Hochwalt

In the field of physics Alan middotRAMBLERToday St John the Baptist White Prevost Michelle Paquet The meeting will be held in ehurch has about 4000 parishshy SHA Fall River JamesReid Jrconjunction witll the Spring Americas Economy King ioners Our numbers started Prevost Mary Soans Jane Mc meeting of the National Confershy Fnr the Best Deal Come To dropping about seven years ago Donald and Martba Nugent yent ence of Catholic Bishops Broadway Ramblerasgr Silvia explains He feels St Mary The trustees are expected 10 INC part of the drop in membership Representatives from Diocesan name a new 30-man board meet 768 BROADWAYis due to a number of families schools to the Mass State Sci- with faculty representatives for RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 131moving outside the parish )ounshy ence Fair will include Michael the first time in histoi-y and CHARLES J DUMAIS Presdarles Intermarriages with othshy lito Amato Polselli Debra Lay discuss the search for a new er nationalities account for still Madeleine Delisle Jane Arruda university rector to replacemore losses Anne Lewis Father J~dhn P Whalen ~ho ~III11I11I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I11I1I1HIUIIIIIIIlIIlilllllllllllfllHlIilttmmIllIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllllnIlIllIllHIIIIIIIIIJ111~ However the Mother Church Denise Michaud Alan White was naine last October to a ef the Portuguese is not fading Michelle Paquet Elizabeth St one-year term as acting rector E WEEKEND SPECIAL sect away AmandSharon Woyciechowski A new school was built in New Projector

f957 It is expensive Msgr Silvia admits but I felt we needed it

St Anthony High in New Bedshyford is rejoicing over acquisi shytion of a movie projector as a

Parish gtrganizations are active gimiddotft from the alumni association and individual parishioners are willjng to give of their time

Presentation to principal Sister Lucille Champagne was made

and effort Perking

to keep the parish by Mrs Josephine Lafleur sociation president

asshy

Now they are getting read7 Cassidy-Coyle cheerleaders Jor a 100th anniversary captured third pillce v9Phy iil

_

Sturtevant 6 Hook

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Westport Real Doric-Horse lHE ANCHOR-DIoeIee r bull I AJu n

Case Somerset Favorites In Narry Diamond League

Case High of Swansea and Somerset are pre-season ehoices in this seasons Narragansett League baseball race but the club th8lt will bear watching is Westport TIne darkshyhorse Villagers may have a few surprises for Narry foes Another small area school

with a respectable 8-6 recordthat potentially has a shot Only one member of that at a league championship is squad Calvin Hopkinson will Norton of the Tri-Valley not be playing for the Villagers Conference Coach Ed Bibeau this Spring With the rest of the has most of last Deasons Central club ready to go - watch Jlor Village regulars Westport to make its presence in the fold ready lmown to challenge the Among fuose returning are perennial Paul Eastwood an Russ Picard favori1es If 0 T two of the better performers in Narry honors the circuit a year ago Eastwood amp1i1 at Norton led the team in hitting with a (C 0 a c h Peter highly respectable 360 averagem[l ~ek has pitched and played the infield G3ven returning Picard like Eastwood 15 also ~nnen for versatile An outfielder by trade ~theY chamshy he also takes his turn on the ii~~JWhip bid Peter mound for Coach Bibeaus nine Weo~port Bartek Carl Zajac and Jeff Hague tmIshed the 1961 eampaign ill round out Bibeaus four-man ~ place in tbe NalT7 loop pitching staff

Norton Bids for Tri-Valley Crown jfOO task of handling the but in thin scholastic year of

~tJ of this quartet will fall athletic surprises it may not be Gpoundl ~e shoulders of either Ron as big as some thinllt ~JmOi) or Manny Cabral both

A second place finisher inexperienced receivers ConnOlll 1967 the Norton Lancers haveexcel1B not only defensively their sights on the Tri-Valleybut likewise with the bat He Conference crown The clubsbit at a 333middot clip last Spring one-two hitters last campaignJohn Souza and Mike Andras have departed from the Norton th better than 300 hitters baseball scene but the teamqaln will be out to join the one-two pitching punch is reshyleague leaders in batting prowshyturning Juniors Ken Allen aess They should put a wallop left-hander who had a perfectin Westports oHensive attaCK 7-0 record last Spring and ArtIf Coach Bibeaus boys can dushyBouchard will be relied uponplicate their Performances of a heavily to bring the league flagJellr ago Offensively and biB to Norton Coach Bartek alSobig four comes through on middottbe hopes to get some help in middotthemound Westport may realize a the pitching departmentmiddot fromlong awaited Narry championshyFred Rego Bill Gorczyca andEip dream Admittedly if Ie Steve Nichols bull bie word in ~~rts_tuture

~ ~ bull I

OpeUp With~on-League Co~esttsmiddot Other returnees incl~ Capshy develop rapidlymiddot defensively if

tain Mike Wynnn Greg Croff they are to regain the leagues BOb Adams Tim McEndy and divisional crown - whicb flbeymiddot Paul Hassie Wynn a senior lost to HoWston last Spring middotmiddot will be starting his third season and gain a shot at the Trl shyill left field with Cruffstarting V~ey Conference ebampionshyhis second campaign in center ship Many area clubs openThey will be joIned by Wynns their campaign this week with brother Ricky in right fied non-league games highlighting

The infield win be anchored the action League competition by Adams at second base and will commence for the most Hassle at short Newcomers part next week Richy Silvia and George Macshy Mother Nature has done her Arthur are presently battling it job this Spring Baseball coaches out for the third base job and throughout -the diocese admit Lorrie Adams also a first-year that this is the best Spring they man appears to have the inside have had to prepare flbeir track on first base charges in many a year Weather

cannot be blamed for a slowMcEndy who has been the start this time around All areLancers starting catcher since eagerly awaiting the umpireshis Freshman year is starting first call to play ballhIs third campaign behiJd the

plate Bartek expects McEndy to hold the inexperienced inshy New School System field together

The Lancers will have to imshy In German State prove upon their hitting and DUSSELDORF (NC) - The

North Rhine-Westphalia state parliament middothas approved aCanadian Prelates change in the states school sysshytem that probably will meanEstablish Council the end of many denominational

OTTAWA (NC)-The Catho-shy schools Hc bishops of Canada have esshy By an overwhelming majorshytablished a 12-member Fiscal ity the parliament voted to Affairs Council composed of change the state constitution and clergy Religious and laymen establish the nondenominational who will advise the Church on Christian school in which reli shyfinanclal matters gious training is given by Cathshy

Among the areas which are olic and Protestant instructors receiving ini~ial attention of the in the same school as the patshycommittee is the question of tern for state-supported schools whether the Church should be from the fifth through the nint subject to government taxation grades and if so what form of taxation In the past the state has supshywould be equitable to churches ported Illeparate Catholic and government and other taxshy Pro tell tan t denominational payen Khoola

-~) PASSION PLAY Today Christians hold the Solemn Observance of the Lords Supper

It is commemorated ina PMsion Play at Prevost High School Fall River by David Poisshyson as Christ Paul Martel left 8$ St John and Paul Bouampquet as St Peter

DominicGlIsmiddot Rent ApGrt~~rit in Inner -Cimiddottimiddot middot

Want t~ Get Closer to I Agony of the Worl~middot WASHINGTON (NC)middot Pift his experience in the neig~lgtorshy ruary 1966 because theJ

Dominican priests-each doing hood is invaluable in helping wanted to get closer to the bis own thing-are living middotin an both prisoners and parolees He agony of the world While nol apartment in the inner ~ cd said the insight he gains into eliminating the academic life Washington here they come from ancl h~w they felt that living in the inlleJ The five run the gamut from they view life aids him In mv city would be as important bull

a professor of moral theology at ing them intelligent advice and learning experience as academic the Don)inican House ofStucUeII 8ssis~nCe study to a prison chaplain a1 the Diamp- Father William Kane is middotthemiddotNeighborhOoclll[aatrict of Columbia Jail Ibey neighborhood man of the have in common1heiy addresa A Pr~ceton graduate ~itl1 apartment Hemiddotworks with minshyand a desire to understand and doctorates from Harvard aJgt4 isters inmiddot the area in establishing alleviate the problems ~ livlnc OxfCrd Father Albert Brodershy youth programs and fightina I in a poor Urban community ick teaches Constitutional LalV for better housing and fail

Father TbomasHea~ middotttie at the catholic University Law rent laws His motive is to givemoral theology professor aDd School the people in the community aD author of a reCent bOOkmiddotID awareness of their own dignitymiddotBe and Father Heath startedFaee of An~sh is 0Il 1be to affirm the fact that it is athe apartment project in Feb-bOard of direCtors of the Pe0shy ood place to live ples Center a house soon to be

the rehabilitationopened for Criticizes Usury of alcoholics He also meets

MEXICO CITY (NC)-Mexshy5 50 01- a SYSTEMATIC wimiddotth ~culties of Wasbingtcm

icc CityS Jose Cardinal Garibiseminaries to discuss policyshy bull 10 year SAViNGSRivera urged bankers meetingmaking and apostolic activity MONTHLY DEPOSITSat the National Bankers Conshy

Legal Aid Office vention in Guadalajara to comshy 5 00 01- a INVESTMENT bat usury and work closely bull 10 year SAVINGS

Father Joseph Cooney a NOTICE ACCOUNTSwith the government to proshylawye~ who has worked 011

voter registration in the South mote the social welfare of all II REGULAR4 5001 the Mexican people bull 10 Jflar SAVINGSand took an active part in dvil

rights activities such lIS

~lma march is DOW admin~ Bass Rivertering a legal aid office in the CENTERneighborhood of the Dominishy Savings Bank

cans apartment Volunteer law Paint and Wallpaperstudents from the Catholic Uni- Bank 8y Man I

versity of Ameiica assist him Dupont Paint

We Pay The Postage

IJcor Middle St

A third member of the group m this program 4iiii 422 Acush Ave bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA Fat her Raymond MalonSOl1 ~ New Bedford bull SOUTH VARMOUTH 4raquo HYANNISserves as the Catholic chapiain bull PARKINGmiddot

bull DENNIS PORT bull OSTtRVILLEatmiddot the D C jail A late vocashy Rear of Storetion Father Malonson has been ordained only two years middot Father Malonsoll feels U1at

LEVESQILIES OFFla E~lnPMENTNow Many Wear Wood Metal Desks and ChairsFALSE TEETH

With More Comfort JUST GiVE ME A CHANe TO QUOleTo overcome discomfort when

dentures sllp sllde or loosen Just sprinkle a llttle FASTEETH on your 187 SHAWMUT STREET bull NEW BEDFORD MASS

middot plates FASTEElH holds dentures firmer You eat better feel more PO Box 2062 - Hervey L Levesque

middot -wont sour Helps check plate odor comfortable FASTEETH Is alkaline

Dentures that fit are lIlSSentlai to Telephone 993middot1264middot health See your dentist regularly Get FASTEETB at all drUB counten ___ _ _____11_0__-D-tcl----4

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs April 11 1968

PhySDCOUi) l1JJ Uges litUBgy C~[filges

~n Last RStes RED BANK (NC) A

~atholic physician called for revision of the liturgical $orm of the Anointing of the Sick cluring a discussion on The Chaplains Role With the Dying Patient at Riverview Hospital here in New Jersey

Dr George J Sheehan an alumnus of Manhattan College and a founder of Christian Brothers Academy in nearby lLincroft was one of three apeakers at the symposium coshyaponsored by the hospital and Ute 1 Redmiddot Bank Council of

ilhurches Citing obvious failures by

both physician and clergyman iin helping the dying patient and bis family Dr Sheehan sugshygested members of the family Ghare inmiddot a ceremony which would exchange feelings of llove and hope between them ElDd the dying person

Dr ~heehan observed that while inadequacy in the face of death has been in the past apparent to the Protestant criergyman it is now also felt by Catholic priests

They findmiddot he said the La~t Sacrament in its present form Ii a consolation only to those with the strong faith of a Breton iiteasant-a kind of faith they e seeing less and l~ss-

Appropriate Theology He also said while the develshy

pment of a Common Christian itervice parlakirtg of the same llodividual familymiddot and commu~

Ility significance as Bap~i8ai -dMarriage would be a giant p in middotheiping people to a middotbappy death iit would remain IDol theologians to present- a relshy

qwant lmd acceptable image of mail in this time and this place ilnd to develop an appropriate eology of death heaven ~nd bell in order to make a signifi- sant change in our life style

lOd therefore in our approach to death

Other panelistsmiddot were the Rev Seorge Fitzgeraid a Presbyteshyaan minister middotand middotchaplain at Princeton Hospiital arid Mn Ruth Snyder a nurse of the lIiverview Hospital staffmiddot

POSTER CHILD LEADS WAY Joey BeIge 8 of Syraeuse NY leads themiddot way down a White House lttairway in the company ofthe Fi~st t-adymiddotMrsLyndon B Johnson

and Mrs Muriel Humphrey wife ofthe Vice-President Joeymiddotis this years poster child of

the National Association for Retarded Children H~ ismiddot thesQn ofMt and Mrs Robert Beige middotmembersmiddotOf St Vincent de Paul parish in Syracuse whos-e ot-herfive children SlHshy

round their Uttle broth~r wil1hmiddot the love and care to h~lp him livea full and happymiddot life

Penn See Studies Poverty Pmiddotrogram HARISBlJRq (NC)--Coadju- is being made to see ho)Vtbe to coordinate and channel our

tor Bishop Joseph T Daley diocese canmiddot best use its re-middot efforts in the fieldmiddot vicar general- of the Harrisburg sources to alleviate poverty Bishop Daley said it ismiddot im- diocese calledmiddot on the nearly problems middotperative that all our people 50000 Catholics in the area to He alsomiddot said Wemiddot contem- knoW and understand the probshy

acquaint th~mselves with 10- middotplatemiddot the early middotestablishment of middotIem of middotracism and the funda- calracfal and poverty problems amiddotmiddot diocesanmiddot human relations mental moral injustices which

In a lettermiddot read at aU Masses commission middotto serve asmiddot a liaison middotare at the root of the deplorable BishopDlIleT said middotthat a study with all people Collcerned and conditions in our own area

Urges Hospitals Re~ognie Unio~s

CLEVELAND (NC) - AI layshymens group here has asked the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hospitals to declare its willingshyness to recognize labor unions as collective bargaining agents for hospitals employes

lNle request came in a letter from William A caldwell chainnan of the eurolevellllnd Conference of Laymen to Sister ~ry Collette of Hamilton Ohio president of the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hosplshytala during a one-day meeting here of the Ohio Hospital Assoshyciation convention

The laymens group said such a statement would promote the human dignity of hospital emshyployes in real and immediate ways serve the common good of our communities and inshycrease the understandingmiddot of Catholic teaching by all the citishyzens of Ohio

The letter pointed out that the National Catholic Hospital Association 1 a s t November called on Catholic hospitals tiraquo be guided by the social teachshyings of the Church and to deal with unions that employecfgt choose

Discuss ~iot Report On Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC) - Beginshyning Sunday April 14 the Catholic Hour will present over the NBCmiddot network a three-part series The Climate of Change

Evolution or Revolution foshycusing on three areas of social and religioUs concern today today

~gr Rop~rt Fox cOordinashytor of Spanish community 00shy

middot lion in the New York arclidioshymiddoteese will discuss The Riot centommissi~ middotReport Amiddot Chrisshy

tiati Response April 14 Msgr Ivan D Illich of the Intereushy-tural Center 01 Language and D middotoe u men tat 1 on CuershyDavaca Mexf~o win be intershyviewed Aprjl 21 and Father Francois Houtart Belgian 00shyciologist will be interviewed Apiil 28

The National Council of Cathshy oUc Men producer of the OathshyoUe Hour reconunendseheckshymiddoting local newspaper programa for broadca9t time in particushymiddotRar areas

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FALL RIVER

Page 4: 04.11.68

4 THE ANCHOR-Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs Aprl1 1968

The Parish Pdlrade J(OLY NAME

FALL RIVER

ContemJ)orary music will ae eompany the 1115 Mass Easter Sunday morning

Altar boys will rehearse at 10 tomorrow and Saturday mornshyings for Holy Week services

A Christian Living Series will begin at 8 Tuesday night~

April 16 in the school hall and eltgtntinue fbr the two Tuesday evenings follovying Subiects will include Viet Nam the problem of censorship and points of view on recent Sushypreme Court decisions The meetings will be open to the public

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs Frank Kingsley president (re-elected) Mrs Lawrence Graffam vice-presishydent Mrs Dennis Cook seere- tary Mrs Richatd Wordell treasuller Mrs Milton Bednarz financial secretary The guild viewed a film depicting the life of Christ at its April meeting

HOLX NAl1E NEW BElIJFORD The Womens Guild and the

Holy Name Society will sponsor a penny sale on Wednesday evening April 17 in the Holy Name FraU corner of County and Studley Streets

The proceeds will benefit the school fund

ST KILIAN NE BEDFORD

lhe Womens Guild will con duct a whist pavty at 730 Wedshynesday evening ApJiL 17 in the schooL on Ear-Ie street

MvSi HeIJVe) euroanon chahlmanj has announced that in addition

to the regular plJizes there will also) be special attendance awards

Senior Atbfete Studenli Award

StonehiU College basketball eo-captain Rick Pariseau has been named the Outstanding Student Athlete in the senior class

The New Bedfold resident re ceived the award at the annualmiddot Honors ~ssembly from college president Rev fohnT Corr (S1euro

The awardl goes to vile senior athlete with high scholastic average and outstanding qualshyities off chal1aeter and leadershyship noted Father Corr

The award is the highest hon or an athlete can receive at StonehilL College Paniseau was co-captaiil of the basketball teaml for tile past two seasom

This year coach George Blaney used the 63 Pariseau as his top defensive specialist Ricks as signment each game wasmiddot to stop middotthe oppositions leading scorer

Paniseau a graduate of Holy FamiJlY High averaged 77 points per game this season paying fiwwardl He was tile second leading rebounden on the Chief tain teaml

ltd like to hale been a lotmiddot more the athlete and a lob less the scholar kiddedl Pariseau when he reaei led hismiddot medaL

The ruggedl basketball player shinesmiddot in themiddot classroom Here at StonehLll he is a dcanis list stugt dent magoning in chemistry

Rutgcrsl DelawaJe ancV the UnilersLty of New Hampshire have oLfcned Paliseau g)aduate schooL soholal1ships

Padseau pianamp to oontinue his studies in envil10nmental chemshyistry after completion ot his two yean military obligation His special interest is conservashytion

OUR LADY OF ASS-lJ~lPTION

OSTEItVnmE

The public is invited~ to the Annual Penny Safe sponsored by the Parish Guiloi at 8 on Friday evening Apnil 19 in tile Osterville Elementary SchooL Auditorium

Mrs Lawrence Jones- and Mrs Peten Fermino co-chairmen are being assisted by a large com mittae

OUR LAlI)Y OF ANGlElI

FALL lRnmm

The Holy Name Socie~ will sponsor a baseball trip Sunday Tuly 21 Tickets- ane now avail shyable from Joe Theodore and Tony Michaels-

Adoration will take place from 8 to midnight tltJnight and from 630 tomorrow mornshying to 4 in the afternoon lJhe Solemn Liturgy will be celeshybrated at 4 oclock and stationsshyof the cross will fbllow at 7

Easter Vigil services will take place at 8 Saturday night

The COuncil-orCatnolla Women announces a chamarJta and dance from a to midnighti Sat urday night Apl1il 27 witH the shySilvelr Moon~ Qrcne1ta supplyshying the music Ilhe councWs annuall Uommuniol1 olJeakfltlsti will be heler following 8 oclock Massmiddot Simday morning ~ray 5

Holy Rosary Sodality will hold its corporate Communion aitd breakfast following 8 oclock Massmiddot Sunday movning Aprif 28

SIJ JOSEBB FALL RIVER

Tickets for the parish gala and dinner-dance must be purchased by Eastel3 Sunday

Seventh graders in the paroshycllial school will conduct a paper drive saturday tyenpril 20 Con tributions will be piekedup at homes Dbnors may maKe arshyrangements b)l calling JosepH Keefe atl 6725331

LegianJ ol MQr~

To Honolt Soint The New Bedford Curia oll

the Legion of Mary will comshymemOlate the Feast of St Joshyseph- the WorRer on Wednesday evening May 1 at St Manys Home New Bedford

Mass wilf be offered at 7 by Rev Albert F Shovelton spiT inial director of the New Bed~

ford Curia and amiddot social and reshyfreshment peviodi will fbUbw

Ilfte eveniilg open toi only active members of the Legion oft Mary ismiddot beinggt ar-ranged) by lirene Mar-tin cllairman Marian Hutclliilson Maureen Kennedy Margaret Downey and Margallet Roche

Bishops of Guinea Seek Vocafuons

CONAKRY (NC)-The shortshyage of priests caused by the exshypulsion of European missionshyaries from Guinea last yeaJ has prompted the bistiops of the country to issue a pastoral lefshyter urgently appealing for voshycationsmiddot to the prieshood and religious life

lJhe letter was issued an the end of a meeting of the oistiops conference here ArclHjishop Raymond~Marie Tc IllildiF mlbo euroSiSplmiddot oli COnakll)l F at her Raphael Teal apostolic adminis tJator of the diocese of NZere~ Rore and Father Louis Barry apostolic administrator off the apostolic pJefecture of Kankan attended the Jjl1eeting

TRAiJNs fRlAIQU SltlUDENTS Father Robert R Campbell~SJ of ChelmsfOld MasS~ chats witl1J L11aqi studenta at Nr-Hikmw lJhiversfty Baghdad~ Iraq where me New ID~ gland pllOjnaegt Jes-uitJ is head of the departmentmiddot of socaI sCiences training young leadera

to make theil contributions to the development of their country NC Photo

BagampdadlIrish Jesuit Heads Un~ersity IraqSfresses Confidence in Future

NEW YiQRK (NG)-That1s something fOI3 an Irishman isnit it chuckIed Father Richard J McCanlhM SJ president of AI-Hikma Universiiy in Bagh~

dadi Iraq He was referring to a volume of which he is the author-A Book of Arabic Ser shymons

Brother Alfred a fOImer facshyulty member at Al-Hikma

nodded and said If that seems strange you should have heard the eulogy he preached in Arashybic at President Kennedys memorial Mass

The conversation took place in New York where the two friends Had a reunion preceding Father McCartnys tour of tne lTnitedl States 10 talk about AlshyIfikmaslt accompliMiments- and its goals for the future _ The Jesuit soholan a member of the New England Province took a doctorate in Arabic at Oxford Ire tias worked in BagHdad for 30 years and pub-

lished tflree volumes in IslamiCshytheology tyenl-Hikma University was foundedl in 1956 bymiddot the IxaqAmerican Educational Asshysociation

Answcrsmiddot Requests This- association approved by

Ixaqs minis-trymiddot oli the interioIl is made up principally of Jesshyuits from New England and Iraq 1m 1932 it founded Bagn dbd UlJlege~ now a flouvislling secondary school for boys in Sulailrh l a northern suburb of the city

The esteeml enjoyed by Bagh dad College led to numerous reshyquests by Iraqis of different faiths andJ all wallamp of lifemiddot fur em-ablishment of an lnstitution on the unLversity level

AL-Hikma was and is our answer to those jmiddotequestsbull Father Mcltt1lthy stated n is also the concrete expres9ion )f our long felt desire to make a gneaten aontJributionl tomiddot the rapidly developing country of modern Iraq

Ilhe priest said the establisll menti ou the universify was made possible by several g~fl$

and gJants whiCh were ct testa mony of the donors confidence iI~ the future of Iraq and in the contrioutioil whicn the Jesuits could make to it

A gift from the Iraq governshyment of 170 acres of randwas supplemented by grants from the Ford Foundation the Calshyouste Gulbenkian Foundation and otlier agencies

Oriental Institute Al-HiKma is the Arabic word

signifying wisdom Father MoshyCarth~ noted It is an approshypriate name for a uniersity in Baghdad The institution known as Bait Al-hikma middotwas one of the glories of medielaL BalWp dadbull Tlieremiddot Iraqi scholars transshylated futo Arabic the wisdom and science of tJie Greek-s- wliiCh had III profoul1lL influence on the thought and~ culture ofmiddot medieval and modemmiddot Europe

It is almost imPos9ible to overemphasize the impoItanoe of the promotionol interoultushyral understanding es-teem and

ORTINS Phom Supply 245 MAIN STREET FALMoUTH-$48f91a

ARMAND ORTINS Prop

cooperation particularly in the context of the modern world Father McCarthy stated

He was enthusiastic about plans fOr foundation of the Orishyental Institute of AI-Hikma We would like it to be a modshyern Bait Alhikma where soholl shyars ancL students from the East and tlie West will meet on hup man intellectual and culturai levelS for ilieir mutuaL enrich ment and profi1 he said

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5 Expect Approval Of Inter-Church Agency i~ l~~as

[JAN ANTONIO (NO) shyRwttfication ()f D proposed eonstitution by every Chrisshytian denomination i11 the fibte may result in a new Texas tnter-ehurch cooperation agenshyey according to the executive director of the Texas Catholic Conlelence organization of the ampites Catholic bishops

CaHan Graham made the preshydiction here shortly after a mashytDritv of delegates to the 15th annual general assembly of the re[(t3 Council of Churches wted to join with the 10Cathshytiic dioceses in Texas to form the nations first state-level ebureh body uniting Protestant Boman Catholic and Orthodox ~hllrenes

The1raquooposed constitution for che Texas Conference 1)1 Churehes as the united body is tID be known is now sUbject io i(ltification by the 11 Protesshy~t member organizations Bnd fihe Orthodox who comprise the arras Council of Churches It in llso subject to approval by fhe 10 Catholic dioceses in Te3B

Bishops to JIacide lbe boald of directors of the

le2tQ3 Catholic Conference has ldready approved the proposed

dlleW constitution in principle Graham said but it must still be oonsidered by each individshya bishop for his own diocese

Graham said the Texas Cathshync ConIerence itself wUl beshylaquo)Re G membtu of the new 01shy

pnilation but wm also continshy~ fo funotion autonomously

lie traced the proposed 01-

miltation 10 the MatCh 1966 mooting of frhe Texas COUDcll fII Churches general asSembly when an invitation was issued to ~tholics to join theCQuncil

4CAs G result this information was trnnsmitted to the bislu)P$ ~ham recalled The bishQP3 decided we didnt know enough tlbout the counoilandbotb sides began ) study more than bull Jlear-and~a-half ago

New OODfititllltnOD ~t of these discussions both

td~ tried to take a iresh look middot1IIt the existing constitution ol ampbe council he continued 1nshyad of talking about joining bull lllew proposed constitution foi IeOrganization was submittedtgt tile Catholic bishops

The proposed new constitushyGoo GIaham explained is deshygned to bringabout better ~ ~ration affiOlg all alw~hes mm office llQ$ already cbeen -operating

Before the (council -invited eatholic membership Catholic pr~ests and laymen had attendshylid meetings ofthe Texas Counshy_I raquof Churches for two year official observers

Prelate Keynoter A1Convention

CINCINNATI (NC)-Keynote _~~er attne golden Jubilee Cltholic Students MissionCrnshy-deconvention Aug 22 to 25 laquo the University -(jf Notre Dame will be Bishop Jphn J Wright of Pittsburgh

bo highlighting the 50th -niversary df the mJ1liOlllshymember youth organization wiU be the presen~ -of Father Cllfshytom JKing SVD Divine

Worn missionary who founded Cbe CSMC

middotThe crusade headquartera here said a pageant -depicting both the mission history of Amelica and the career of the ~l1C will be staged in the OO~ OLaughlin auditorium Qf m Marys College adjacent to Notre Dame Student grouP ~n 16 areas of the U S wlM ~e Alart

VISITING THE SliCK When Pope Paul recently vjsited the working-class Prenestino district of Rome he took time to visit bed-ridden 83-year-old Teodoro Tarquini The Holy Father offered Mass in Italian at the parish church of St Leo NC Photo

Defend Textbo~kLaw cinShowdown Case JE-dllCltlJion OrganiotiollS File middotEcumenical Brief

in the ease oaidnomatter whatschoolsth~ One blief was middotfiled in behalf child ran attend

of the National Catholic Eduea The brief contends the ar~-tioruJlI AsSociation theLutheran Education Association middotthe Nashy Halmony in Churchtiolllll Union Of Chtistiaa

BONN (NC) -There is com- ISchools and tl1le National Conshyplete harmony in the Catholicierence of Yeshiv Principals Church in tungaIY among the

ment that s~(lte aid in supplying middottextbooks in secular sUlgtiects to children in nonpublic schoob is 4 direetaid to religion is Irivolous

The attorneys general brief contends a state may extend publicly financed aid such as police fire protection public safety and transportation to school 9tudents whether in public or private schools The brief contends that the textbook law falls within the category 0pound sunh poundlid since it benefits the student not the school

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 11 1968

Protesa- ~HEhcps

In IPaf~fi1lm~rd BARCELONA (NC)-Leadefll

oi 30 lay apostolate groups in Barcelona have petitioned two high-ranking Spanish prelates to resign their government-apshypointed posts in the nation~

parliament the Cortes We believe the Second Vatshy

ican CouncUs directives are very clear on this point the

petitioners pointed out to Archshybishop Casimilo iVlo ICill0 of Madrid vice-president of the Spanish Bishops Conference and Auxiliary Bishop Jose Guerra Campos of Madrid

A spokesman at the iladrid chancery office reported that an oerage of 40 letters a day middotare received on the subject some in favor some against the bishops presence on a governshyment political body

The Barcelona document pointed out that this is a matshyter that deeply affects th~ Church in our country

If furthermllre we take into account the fael that great numshybers particularly among the workers have left the Church because of Ets liaison with the state there is no possible reason to continue the symbol of such a union the document emphashysized

A m on g the organizations making the request were the Workers Catholic Actfon the sodalities the Catholic Student Youth Organization the Indeshypendent Youth Association the Spiritual League 01 Our Lady of Monserrat the Pax Christi Movement and the Catholic Rural Youth Organization

(ORREIA amp SONS ONE STOP

SHOPPING CENTER

bull Television bull Grocery bull Appliances bull Furniture

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WASHlNGTON (NC) -Forshymidable forces from Churehshystate ranks forged a defense of the 1966 New york state textshybook laws validity fox the i~

pending showQownbefore the United States Supreme Court

A ptiest jQined tbe -gentlral counsel of the USmiddotCatholicConshy

ference in filing an ecumenicalshybpe brief nn behalf ofnational Catholic Protestant and Jewish educational organizations urging the nations highes tribunal to uphold the law

The attorneys general of three stat~s in another briet joined in supporting the contenshytion of New Yo-rkAtty Gen Louis J Lefkowitz that the only beneficiaries ot this law Ire students and their parenUi not schools andconsequently the law is constitutional

The friends 02 th1l court (amici curiae) briefs were filed in preparation for the hIgh courts consideration ot the law Which provides that the state fUlllishIree textbPokg insecu WI subjects to students 0pound palOshy(lhimiddotai and other nonpubUe schools The court has yet to schedulemiddot8 date for argumenill

aid to benefit a religious group But the wall of separation is

between Church and state not between the child and the

State the educational groups brief reminded Since the Sushypreme Court decided the Evershy30n case in 1947 l different tack has b~en pursued by the court in considering state aid directly to students whether they attend public or private schools the blieI underscored

Tee brief states that 85 per -cent of grammar and highscool students in the nation attend public schools either because their parents prefer that type of education oibecause the choice is dictated by economic necessity The other 15 per cent are in nonpublic schools and more than 90 per cent 1)f them GlTe in church~related schpo13 the brief adell

Frivolous Argument The educational ~ups do

not not contend the state must supply assistance to nonpublie f1Chool children but if it exshymiddottends secular educational beneshy~its 00 all school children thea it is within middotthe state eonstitushymiddottional discretion to supply such

Father Charles M Whelan bishops priests and laymen altgt May we rejoice forever in tfu~51 of Fordham University law cording to ll report in Magyarschool joined William R Conseshy tloryof middottheResurrection Kurir the Hungarian Churchs dine usec general counsel in official news agency WOhicb filing the briel Hannon Burm noted that the Hungarianof the NCEA Francis X Gallagshy Church seems to be free of tile her of aaltimoe and Alfred ~ dissension lthat exists in the Scanl-an of Washington served EhuiCb Bpoundt man Westem JOYOUS GREETINGS as consultants in preparing tbe oountries brieC

The other brief -was Jiled by ~ OFFI(IRS TRUSTEES CORPORATORS AND STAFF At~ys Gen James L Oakes of Vermont William C Sennett ofPenllsylvania -Dod Herbert F DiSimone of Bllode Island

The educational group cmshygthasized they do not want raquo see the wall f separation beshytween Church and stateleilliei disnuintled or displaced would oppose the znoot paltrY wnouut of direct governmentllil

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~ itizens 1

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They expect to hear religious leaders speak in those tenns history to one local or to a certain segment ofour8OCh~tyrhe race issue was- injecte41

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall RiverThurs Apr 1l19~8 Rx for Renewal J

Accomplishi1lJg the Dream The senseless and savage and tragic death of Dr

Martin Luther King Jr is not the end Of his nonviolence erusademiddot But it should bring a deepening realization of

what nonviolence entails The Ghandian Way of nonviolence is not simpiy a techshy

nique of sittiIig on sidewalks and not moving a matter of being passive and silent in the face of attack~ verbal or physical It embraces moie than that

It is basically-and Dr King middotknew this-a spiritual force As a former Governor General of India has remarked The renunciation ofmiddot external violence is not enough but must be accompanied by asepsis of the heart for the sucshycessful surgery of nonviolence How can One love where there is so much cause for hatred The answer lies in everyshyones heart and can be appealed to through love and then and then Only will the man be changed

Nonviolence means bringing to bear against the forces of hatred and prejudice and ignorance the still more powshyerful force of intelligence and education and love of God and neighbor Nonviolence means ~eeting overcoming evil by the sheer power of courage and work and love

This Dr King understood This alone will accomplish his dream

Sniritual Leaders r

Lay people are being urged to get more and more inshyvolved in the work of religion When they do they many

th h f t b times make more sense t han ose w 0 pro ess 0 e teachers middotof religion

Last week for example a professor at the Harvard Divinity School and the Episcopal TheologiCal School said that sex between unmarried persons could be morally good or bad depending upon the situation And during the same week the chief of the Psychiatric Service Harvard Unishyversity Health Services took colleges and parents to task forcondoning free sex behavior in youth and f9r not bolshystering young people in maintaining high moral standards He counselled chuicli leaders notmiddot to abandon Ii spiritual ap

peal-toyoutll puttomaintainlheif ttaditional religious Ap proach to reinforce high moral standards

So hereismiddotthe picture-a religious lea~~rseeingl1ot~ ing wrong in sex between the unmarried and a ~ymaJl

~ Ateeing everything wrong InIt -

In the light of the Gospels the theologian is _Wrong pat _y Gn ~ n i _ereneemiddot and the layman is right shy

And this is why religious leaders arein many -inshylltailces losing whatever credentials tliey Duiy possess 10 The senseless murder of Dr Martin Luther Xng Jr

Pl d d th f od agaln brlmiddotngs lnto focus the vlolence that ImiddotSmiddot ours Yes 0urs 1ead eop e are en owe WImiddot a meas~re 0 go _sens~ bull They have some ideas about the main thrustmiddot of the Gospelsbull -Too often we have relegated the dark pages of our natio~

And when they hear deviations then they write off the We seem to fool that the religious leader and listen to him no more Of course those events which took place in fortable christianity I I Even m our own locale 1he who are looking for justification for some type of action ~emphls ha~e Itt ~ connec- people who could have doneso that the religious leader approves will be glad to welcometlOn WIth thIS area of the much reillly have contributed him to the bandwagon And then the responsible Jaymen-shythe physicians and psychiatrists and civic leaders and those who are concerned about the moral and family health of the

community--must move into the scene and try to repair the damage done

Perhaps this can be the message of Easter-instead of talking about the resurrection in glowing and lyrical terms

instead of speaking about glory and joy the -reaJ message of Easter is one of love of God for men and love of men

for God And Christ gave the standard of Love-If any man love me he will keep my commaridments~Iid themiddotmiddot party orperscgtn cOncerns him-Father and Iwill love him and we will come to hIm and

_ we will makemiddot our abode with him Theoiogians mayor may not understand the full imshy

plication of thesemiddot words For the most partthe people do even if their actions at times do nqt measure up~ T~ey

understand - amJ th~y expect the~r ~pjritual advisors1q lnderstand and to preach these Gospel words all Gospelmiddot words

rheANCHOR P~~ I fnVImiddotrE~ OF T~E DIOCESE OF FILl PVER Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River

410 Highland Avenue Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev iohn P Driscoll

- MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

nation A certain emotional sympathy

is created by the vivid -reality middot of the television For the most part it is just another drama that will pass in time and thingS will go on and a~lwill be well This indeed is thetragedy of Memphis

Natio~al problems cannot be conidered to be isola~ed events When ~ national mQvement

self wi~h the basic principles 01human existence all humanity is involved Such is the ease memo~ are the people wh- Bishop JOseph-middot LBerilllrcii

with Civil Rights such is the -re still III the depths of 8Uffer-middot Will serve as adminiStratOr iii ease and the movement pre-~ Thu~ when ~ new genera- tbe Atlanta Archdiocese linti serited to the nation by Dr ti9G recelves th~ mherIta~ elf a successor is named for Martin Lutl1er ~ing poverty the prospe~IS ~ 13te Archbishop Paul j Hammiddotmiddot Yet the majority of Ameri- Ul~ first to deny that they ue cans have for mimygenera-middot his heirs This is true of most tions considered ~e plight of men regardless of the color ttl the urban ghetto from the com- 1heir skiil This is what we fortable ~rm-chair of a com- must kUly overco~

Now ISTime for CiiI Rights Concern The words of Dr King cershy

tainly were not understood by the senseless mobs that took to the streets of our cities after his death Nor were they undershystood by the majority of white middle-class Americans

The apathy and lack of genshyuine concern for the civil rights movement among this group is galling

It is these factors that aHow mad men to assassinate We

middotmus condemn the lack of un middotaerstanding the disdainful atti-middot

t hi euro moonIn(j

1lt ng e a reported there

Rev Johnf Moore St Josephs Taunton were~good and sufficient ~ middotIA lilA Inimiddoto~hi~~t~~~~bers~

The Tragedy of Mempmiddothmiddots _ I

h d I d ff

tude and the smug selfshyrighteousness of our bourgeoismentality

To claim that we are all for the civil rights movement and then to deny a home to a man because he is negro loots the middotmind and arsons the spirit of our scciety even to a greater degree than a street mob It is the spirit of our society the spirit of our country that is at stake

Any hope of postponing a 00shycision em this matter died at

so very little The structured class system that has been our inheritance from our early New England ancestors has been only insulated and protected by the progress of an affluent aociety

When a man makes good hetends to leave the memories of his afflicted past in the voidof a twilight z(me The blood middotsweat and tears poverty ~ ~n forgotten in the land ol gracious living TemporarY Heaci

Even more removed fJoa tlTLANTA (NC) -Amiddotuxilia~

Priests Senate Votes Support Of OrdinarY

BUFFALO (NC) ThirteeJl of 21 members of the Buffalo Senate of Priests have votedmiddot to support Bishop James amp McNulty in a controversy SIDol

rounding the transfer of a priesi from a Negro ghetto parislli Eight members of the senato abstained from voting

The controversy began when Father William G Warthling was transferred from St Nicltshyolas parish in Buffalo to O~

Lady Help of Christians parisJl in the suburb of Cheektowaga

Father Warthling and some members of St Nicholas parislli charged that Bishop McNuIQ transferred the priest because he encouraged the Holy Name ~iety to seek membership _ BUILD a militant social actiC group formed under the leade~ ship of Saul Alinsky contJicgt versial ooinrnunity organizei

Members of the parish and ci1 BUILD staged a protest demo~

stration in front of Bishop ~ Nultys residence

Msgr Bernard J McLaughiiC5 diocesan chancellor said thl transfer of Father Warthlin(]

was routine _but said the die-shycese frowns on the methocilo which BUILD uses middotto better tho lot of the Negro communit~

Sufficient Reasons At the height of the controshyversy the Buffalo Senate of

Priests met to hear a report of the Priests Advisory Board OIl

li~e trTahnsfebor 0rd Father Warthshyf

nan bull

---------~--shyMemphis

If we wish to contin1e NonViolent doctrine of 0shyKing it is now up to us IIIe time for dQlay has passed Either we commit ourse shyto the principles that were to tered and dramatized by 0shy

King or we perish in the flaJJ of anarchy and civil discord

The assassins bullet again forced America to make a dedshy

sion In a country in an area where the majority claim to be Christian we better start liviDa the Christian ethicmiddot and tile Christian message of love _ another as I have loved yoshyIf we refuse to accept this meeshysage we fail not only lt~ll natiOlll but also as a Christian pe~

In the controversy by a BUILD spokesman who said BishOJlMcNultys removal of Fathel Warthling reflected apatNgt izing attitude toward black people and a general lack ef understanding of ghetto probshylems Msgr Neylon said all senate members rejected charge

All 21 members of the senatlrl VOted for a motion to appoint committee to make public theworks and programs which the diocese has developed amo~ minority groups and in the ner city

shy

Voted support for BishOpmiddotat N~1tY on thetransfer isBoIlEigJjtpries~ abstainedfroin ie vote on the grounds that apite the boards explanaiiclli the issue was still not clear -

However each of the ei priests who abstained from

ing said they deplored middotcharg6f racism against Bishop M0shy--Nulty according to Msgr lolie Neylon senate president

7 middotMrsmiddotmiddotmiddotStewart Fails to Tell Casey Story Convincingly

By Rt Rev Msgr John S IKelIDedy

Ramona Stewarts Casey (Little Brown 34 Beacon St Boston Mass 02106 $695) is anovel which promises more than it delivers Itsmiddot action begins in 1860 concludes in 1886 and HI laid in New York City The focus is on Tom Casey aged 20 at the start A native of Ireland he remembers the horrors of County Cork in the years of Qle great famine His family Bed their home went to LivershyPOOl- suffered muough a fiveshy

weeks voyageIlrJ a sailinglib i p finallyderer Il the citys resources eettled in New even moves briefly on the

York For them middotftinges of the gaudy nouveau I A m e I i e a richeset typified by Jim Fisk

008 not turned ltlmt to be the

jijlromised land Like thousandstillld thousands ef the Irish

t th New York ltBOWded

10 0 e dums they are abysmally

~~eir homes are decrepit verminous tenements Their jabs are menial ill paid and dancy They are despiSed by the natives both for their nashyampnai origin and for their reli shyfIion They meet violence at the lhands of brutal nativists No opportunity opens up for them lJDd they are without hope

Elab$mte Setting

n is plain thet Miss StewaIi lhas done thorough rese~rch clgt1l1

the period Bet pages are

But-middot when his boss Maguire breaks with the big boss Tweed CasEiyS ascent ill reshyversed Tweed however is exshyposed and undone and pious John Kelly takes over as head of Tammlllny~

casey relllizes tiliJilt it is opshyportune for him to repudiate

Maguire and strike out on his own Ihis he does to the imm~ diate signal improvement of his lot but lllt the price of Maguires bUter enmity

AdvaIltageMJS Marrul1ge Casey now marries one EileeZl

Callahan liI doctors daughter a chilly lace curtain Irish sort It is not a happy marriage but it iJiI respectable and advantashy

geous Casey is appointed citY ~coroner attl ~tosalary with Per

qUlsites But there i~t yet aJ1oth~r reshy

paCked with detallmiddot She hasmiddotmiddot versal til store for him On mounted a viVid mid elaborate election day 1~74~ he goes ooIJting for nero story But the about to see that his forces are

~ (ftory does not live ormiddot inove It performing properly (which abounds in incident it has com- means improJgterly) he isdraWn

plications galorebut it lacks into an altercation with Ma- ~tality arid never generates guire power Why this should be it is Casey taking a physIcal at first hard to tell beating from the bigger Mashyo~ Tom Casey sne~as a ~g- guire draws a pistol and shoots bull who should be mterest1Og Htt hits t M gur b t f

ImiddotToiil is inteUigenl middotandrug~ middottlie latte~ miihioris~Te~~hcJl ~t he left school atmiddot 13 He n()vi Ismortal CaseY- is1ndicted pound01(

realizes th~t be can~et ~ ~urd~r tried l~t out on bail here never break ~l1t 01 ~~ ~heI1 a hung jury evenWates

iitifling meager wretched woHdof his k1Od IDs one asset seellW imd ultdmately gOeS free1JnaeeouJmtabi Re Co be brawn

lJOmething -hi Which counts for the braw~gk middotHe w no~

e eolery disgraced in debt

Which his Arsenal Gimg in- witbout poundI Jobmiddot probably permaQ

dulges and in the work of tblii nently estranged from his wife Pacifid Company of volunteer One might suppose thatmiddotthis was firemen to which he belongs the end of t~e story But no 1m

As he looks about he recog Cl middotfinal s~ctwn d~ted 12 years ftizes that the way to some ad later he is the chIef deputy andshy~cement and aggrandizementmiddot lUre successor of ag~ng ailing fl through politics He observ~ middotampss Kelly He is almost at the John Maguire who at 37 io top and it all means nothingmiddot olderman saloonkeeper aD ell ne of the flaws 10 t~e novel mstrict leader of the Twentyshy s Illustrated by the diSJuncture ~t ward middotbetween Caseys fall because oil

Air PI ti tillemiddot murder case and his unae-middot bull cq1lll es es ge countable recovery Therecov-

MagUire is of course a Twt- ~ middotis never explained We ~ny m~ He dresses well dont know how it was done wears dlamon~ studs hai middotIJ We are simply presented withmiddot middotmiddotmiddotsion said the problem ofmiddot realiz Long-Range PllOgn-ams

go~d-headed caneCasey cop~ $t and asItedlmiddotto take it On faith -log tqe recommendations it In cooperation with 22 other ~ ~ude~ that ~e must gcentt ~n ~~l middotmiddotllIWl at the end tberebe- made on treating lhe ghe~to ~orgahizations NCCI1 bas

1- ~agulre - ~ middotmiddotOOmes glaring something whichi Bf~ does through ~s prov~_ all alongimiddot has nagged at tne

gt111 lID 19hting But h~ progre~middotlY rreadernanaely~the s~ddampn leaps - Yery slow True he geta 11 Cl to ltile _~ lemiddotaps acr~-

Il1o which involves Db dU~I~ improbable nnd unexplored at all but allows him to sp~ndzhasms aU hiS time wardheeUng for Timelilness iD Novel

Maguire He acquires B little A more seriousmiddot flaw is thAprestige even a little Power But h is till tty an potatoe~ G pre 1m

But then suddenly Maguire ebief henchman die and Mashyguire himself in hi gn f _

s e per petrates an egregIOUS act of folly Casey is at hand to helplIDd succeeds in concealing Mashypires drunken blunder onl to become involved with n gid Maguire hIllS B8S lted

u Ascent Reversed

She is Claire Scofield whO elm give the appearance of

~Jadylike innocence but is act~ bull rally a vix~ She and Case

never marry 1m her avidity for possessions and eventually poshymUon sine keeps driving Casey taunting him with his inconseshyquence and urging him 10 bold steps

He becomes an alderman gew to know 30ss Tweed head of Tammany and notorious plunshy

failumiddotre lIll development of charshy~r ~is is most notice~ble ou tOO mstance of Casey hlmshyself wile rem~~a naDe and a type never nngmg true as a complex person The same is true of the borde of others whO pour through tIl1e book Be they

major Gr mInor hlStOriC~ or ~onlh ~y are WIthout mner llife Mrs Stewart hit upon bull subshy

feet wJith great possibilities and genuine contemporary signifi shymiddoteanee But she haS not known how to render it convincingly and illu~tingl) in terms of

middotIme to ailalrange~ent lui fidWL

~lEl][ORIALMASS Pattimiddotck Pardinal OBoyeof Washshy ~~tQ~ speak~ at a memOrI~ M~s f0t ~r1lIIartm Luther

l~ngr hel~ ~und~yat t~e Na~~~l Shnne of th~ Immacshylla~ Come~pbQn in the natI~n~s CPl~aINC Jho1Jo

INatbull-ona1middot middotWmiddotmiddot-1111

Ahmann Says Wflitbull Racism Pllob~ltem

For White Churches CHICAGO (NC) -A leader ereatiIDg is new notionall wW

m Catholic interracial justice for notional actioo work ~id here white rlllcis~ middotWe believe that creation of called essentially responsible the national will is probably for the violence in cities by the the greatest spiritus problem

middotnational riot commission is a confronting religiollJS institushymoral problem and must be at- tiona in Amerlcm Ahmann deshy~cked by the white churches clared in calling on NCCIJs 1~

Mathew Ahmann executive lliffiliated Catholic interrracillll director 4)f the National Catho- councllsand human relationo lie Conference for Interracial ComiImissions to Set ~ tRileoir efshyJustice asserted The commis- lo-rts for social jUstice

problem was the problem (If published and distributed a speshy cial 32~page pamphlet smiddot~ary

Favors Compulsorymiddot of th R rt f h N al e epo () t e Iyenon Rmiddotmiddotmiddot A AdvisorY Commission 00 CiVil

ehlement ge DisOrders I j 1 -

SAN ANTONIO (NC) -The San AntoniQ archdiocesan prlmiddotemiddotstsmiddot seina~ has recommended

vc75 as the compulsory retirement age for priests in the arcbdioshycese and 65 as an accepted retiremen~ age

Tbe recommeridation which has been sent to ArChbishop Robert E Lucey of San Antonio came in the fonn of a motion passed unanimously by the 12shymember - senate at a meeting here

The senate also recommended establisbment of some sort of

tenure of office for pastors and assistants They urged a maxishymum limit of 10 years in the same parisb for pastors and a liDlit~ five yearn fol assistants

Ahmann eaned fur NCCIJ affiliates to stress the need for long-range middotmiddotclmiddoton-TI proshy

cu ltU grams for aD ~rts cd bhe Catholic community to elimishynate white racism incmding

programs for human relations

training fM lay leadershipclergy teacherS and required elementary a nd secondary school courses in humanrelashynons and Negro Illistory He also urged affiliated 01shy

ganizati()ns to bank as well as purchase goods and services in the black communi~y On the legislative front ne urged support of the similar goals of the riot commission the Urban Coalition and Dr Martin Luther KiB4fil Poor ~s Campaign~

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 11 1968

Catholics Defend Fair Bus Law

TRENTON (NC)-Spokesmen for Catholic schools defended the states year old fair bus law at a public hearing held here to consider its possible reviSion

In mllny respecfs it was a reshypeat of the public hearings a year ago which resulted in the bill being amended before passage But at that time the thrust was for passage of some rort of measure )utting private school students on equal footshying with public school students Now legislative sentiment apshypearc ro incline toward a cutshyback although outright repeal seeDlll unliksly

One relllSon foi the dlllnge in outlook b the compleJdon of ihe legislature Lest year it was in DeInoeratic hands and fair shybusing bllld the support of Gov Richard JJ Hughes Now Repubshylicans hold control by a 2-1 margin and party leaders see Ii mandate to cWtail some of tine programs enacted a year ~omiddot

A half-dozen bills to repeal or revise the busing law are now before the legislature The hearings here were held by the education committees of both the State Senate and Assembly whiclll hnve not yet released any bills from committea

Principal spokesmen for Catholic education were John 1 Rafferty counsel ful the New Jersey Catholic Confershyence and Msgr John 3 Clark Camden diocesan superintendent of scbools and president or the state ruperiIllten~ento ~ciashytion

Expropriate Pmsh BERLIN (NC)-East Gennan

eommunist authorities Ulave exshypropriated the Catholic parish 01 St Francis Xavier in East Berlin without compensatingthe Cbureh Redevellop~nt ia given as the expropriation reashyson

May the 8711 of ~g [ltm1

mine tlP~D JOU and ~aJ

the afOlY of His ReslITaeI tiOD bless J01l Ydtbmiddot

pe~ and jOle

The

Old Red Bank Fail River Savings BaRk

FAll IUVEI

SOMERSET

8 THE ANCHO~=Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1968 New Pay Scale For Teachers

FORT WAYNE (NC)-ftleEnjoy Family Celebration Fori Wayne-South Bend dioceshysan board of education bas apshyOf First Communion Day proved a new salary scale for lay teachers in elementallY ancll

By Mary Tinley Daly secondary schools The board approved tl recomshyChanges in the Church that perennial topic of COlllshy mendation that for every fuD

versation since Vatican Council II come in for a lot of time degreed ~acher employed pro and con discussion on the part of the laity With each with a current valid Indiana

teaching license a parish Willehange the dissident~ speak up head-shakers moan middotWell be reimburselt at the rate Oilfthey didnt do it that way in $2000 each for the school ~

my day But as each in forms of any kind with their 1968-1969inevitable rivalry Each littlenovation is inaugurated The salary schedule for 196ampshygirl and boy was in mufti shy 1969 provides on the bachelonthen incorporated into presshy tastefuUy and compoundo11tably degree level for a minimum Oil ent practice we realize these garbed $5200 and a maximum of $6200 made notehanges are simply Each family had its own pew at the 10th year with an increshyfor the sake of parents and First Communicant mentof $100 a minimum QfclJange but as in aisle seats sisters brotI1ers $6000 and a maximum oilPope John XXIII grand-and godparents filling $8700 at the 15th year with aput it to keep up the rest of the pew We beshy $180 increment for the bacheloilrltP with the longed to Kate on Her Day degree teacher with a staterhythm of the What class a small whis- license and a minimum of $630times To quote pered the Headof the House as and a maximum of $10000 asfrom middotThe the names were read out at the the 18th year with an increoChurch middotin Our beginning of Mass That we ment of $200 for the masteroDay collective thought was the ~ason we had degree teacherspastoral of the been included Not so Each

American hiershy child in the First Communionmchy recently published Our

eHort at Class could designate ahead III Department of Justicepresent restructuring time which of the parish Masses

procedures in the Church withshy $~~ Approves Shared-Time to attend thus splitting theIn the national and Diocesan number into more intimate HARRISBURG (NC) - Tk)eommunities depend in great family Jroups Pennsylvania Department dWORLD OF FASHION Jmeasure on the seriousness With Justice has ruled that there ampJiilThose who eboBe to Jeeetve lIS Iwhich study is undertaken and ~~~~ By MARILYN BODERICK ~

the disposition to implement )amp bull class were allowed to do IlO no legal bars to shared-~ The altar rail had beet1 opeIil shy education of private ~ a the part of the laity pupils iii public schoolseCl wide with lmeelers tor thlee EASTER CLOTHESNew Prooedure I iD the center At CommUDion Deputy Atty Gfin John 1)

One change nO doubt fsmilshy time 8 smiling priest weleomed New clothes at Easter have tiful example of creativity and McCord who issued the opinioa Jar to families in many Dioceses each little First Communieant become a eustom that we an craftsmanship was an ensemble at the request of state Supe~ came to our attention forcibly intendent of Public InstructiOll flanked by father and mother find hard to break It came modeled by nine year old Robin and impressively in practice followed by other members of down to us from the days when Cambra daughter of Mr and David H Kurtzman said the

only requirements which muSt last week the family If there was only one the newly baptized Christians Mrs James Cambra of Our I speak here of the new cusshy Catholic parent another family wore white garments made of Lady of Grace parish in Westshy be met are the consent of the

tom (new to us at least) of local public school board andmember receivedwith the child Dew linen This became such ))Orthaving children receive First the payment of tuition at theothers of the family following a tradition among the faithful Robins stunning Easter coat Holy Communion not as a class regularly established rateIt was all so natural warm that to appear in new clothes on and dress were made by her

receiving the Big McCord cited a 1949 lawbut each Sacrashy and dignified on this tbe Easter Sunday mother in yellow lightweightment for the first time with Day rectlling the words d which states that No pupilsymbolized the wool The A-line coat had a parents and relatives shall be refused admission toPope St Leo Recognize 0 n e w Ii fe diagonal self button closing and

Long gone in many areas is the courses in these additionalChristian your dignity through Christ a tiny mandarin collar When the custom of turning over one schools or departments by reashyThe Irish have dark-hired and vivacious RobinlImvi~ Pmstollof the Sunday Masses to the son of the fact that his elemenshyan ancient say- removed her coat the slimFirst Communion class - girls Mter Mass with aplomb only tary or academic education Ising that goes dress underneath was seen toin dresses veils an being or has been received in awhite and on eight-year-old could muster For Christmas have a yellow blue apd tan one side of middotthe aisle boys in Kate betook herself to the saneshy school other than a public food and drink plaid bodice with the plainwhite suits on the other back tuary to invite our new pastor for Easter new yellow wool of the coat carried school of the church reserved oftenshy Father Louis Quinn to bei He added however tnKItclothes Most over info the skirttimes with standing room house brunch otni shared-time arrangements mudonly for writing people in the The finishing touch to thisfor parents of necessity be subject to thefor him her address Diocese will fol- stunning outfit was the tiny hatWith the growth of parishes guidelines promulgated by theGoodness knoWll how ID8DY low this custom that sat atop Robins curls forthere often came transfer all similar invi-tationa Fat her Department of Public Instrucshy

by dressing their ebildreh iul it too was her mothers creationFirst Communion day to Saturshy Quinn must have receivedl tiontheir new Spring finery 0111 and jcent middotfeatured alternatingday a sensible step but stiR plenty wed ~ becauSe he Easter Sunday panels of the pale yellow andtmly for First Communicants cup eoffeeIIimply sipped 11 of In the pre-school ret blondE the plaid wool

and their parents Because of at Katies house B1lIt be did and darling Sheila Whalen In the same show Norma8Pace limitations grandparents come chatted with anmiddot Gf 1Il Higher Earningsdaughter of lIT and Mrs Wil- Comeau of SS Peter and Paul 8Odparents brothers and sisters ble2sed the house 8Dd ~ateB liam Whalen laquoIi St ThomaslIilcles and aunts were invited new gift statue then went _ More ehurch in Somerset will parish in Fall River was 8 vishyout for this precious occasion to visit other parish homes be decked out in polished blue sion of green and white Norma ON YOUR SAVINGS JIbey eouId line themiddotsidewalks Twas all a happy experience eotton Her very special Easter wore a green wool coat a 4Ntside take pictures perhaps for Kate and her extensive famshy Sunday dress bas a long torso matching green and white Per An middotmiddot p to breakfast with their parshy ily appropriate to this the Year topped by a short sash tile dress and a white straw topper Ask abOut ticular First Communicant buamp of Faith II1eeveless zrmholes are edged that had a sweetheart shape that waS that iD crocheted lace and the bodice Green ill all shades is one of INVESTMENT

Kates Day JiB embroidered with tiny flow- the most popular colors on the SAVINGSMmnesota Parishioners ers in shades of pink white and agenda for childrenls SpringSo It was with surprise we fashions Beth Cook~ daught~r CERTIFICATESweeeived a telephone invitation Vote Closing of Schoo~ blue

Also represen~ng 1bepre- oJ Mr and Mrs Andrew Cookfrom eight-year-old Kate to atshy PIERZ (NC) - Members of primary middotsetJn the Easter parade of Immaculate Conception parshytend the 11 oclock Mass with SAFETY - Savings insured safe br Iifour parishes in the Pierz area will be Lisa Marie Texeira ish in Fall Riv~r has a limeher last Saturday On arrival at agency of the U S Governmentof Minnesota voted 835 to ioo daughter of Mrmiddot and Mrs Frank green Eastermiddot dress trimmedchurch we wondered if we had for the closing of the Father AVAILABILITY - No notice requIredTeeira of Immaculate Concep- with with a white cowl collarthe right time and place No more

Pierz Memorial High SChool 1lm tion parish in Fall River Lisa and white cuHs on the short Your funds available when neededwhite dresses and veils June is a delicate-featured little sleeves Beth chose this dress SAVE by MAIL - We process prompIIJon one side of the ~sle )hite

The Pierz district has decided beauty whose dark tresses will herself because she Ifell in love and pay postage both wayssuits on the other no unishy to build a public senior high beset off by a once upon-a- with the white vinyl flowers school which will be large time dress in pink and navy scattered over the skirt and Assets over $41000IlOO

Parish Hires Full-Time enough to accommodate all high blue The high necked dress bodice of this charming Spring school students in the district made of sheer cotton has a and Summer linen

Layman Theologian Therefore m u e h discussion GlOwl collar long full sleeves Of course the pre-teen set FIRST FEDERAL BALTIMORE (NC)-St Matshy and a romantic floating skirt wants something new for Easterabout the most practical use of Savings and loan AssociatloDthe Catholic high school facili shy

first parish in the Baltimore ties bas taken place in the last _pink bodice and the waist- daughter of Mr and Mrs John archdiocese to employ a proshy circling cummerbund but the Steen of Taunton and my god tf FALL RIVER thews Church has become the Tiny tucks are featured on the and Miss Joan Leslie Steen

few months fesionally trained ley theoloshy Tbe vole--()pen to all parishshy really eye-catching feature oil child will attend Easter Mass gian as a full-time member af iOllers over 21 ill the four afshy ibis outfit ill the skirt of navy at St Pauls church wearing an the parish staff ~cted parihes-was taken III blue cotton with pink polka outfit as yellow as a daffodil ~-~~-------_~ first Federal $awIOIS bull LeaD a ~

~ 1 ortb ~1Il st Fan lIiwer llaa ~ Joseph Hargadon a fonner response to a suggestion of~e dots Certainly a dOll-like outfit Joans yellow coat has gold but shy ZIp 02722 IlIlIIIa 174-4881 ~ member of St Clares parish st Cloud diocesan school board for a dainty Miss tons and 8 slanted back belt ~ke application by phOlle middotIt JOll jE6sex who ~ii now studying at The Catholic high school Mothers Sew - her yellow Irish linen sheath ~

the Institute of Lay Theology building will probably beused While commentating 8 ehil- dress is sleeveleSs and has white n iridlvldua Account B joint AccaIIamp iii ~ Prease DJNn a savings account EIIcIGslMJ Iin San Francisco will be c0shy as an elementary school in the drens fashion show for the Do- emb~idery trim on the hemline ~~OO ~ordinator of St Matthews Conshy future Father Patrick Thompshy minican Academy alumnnae ill and bodice This yellow-haired ~

fraternity of Christian Doctrine son principal of Fathermiddot Pierz Fall River I was awed by the brown-eyed beauty has even Address middot1 program Msgr Clare J 0- Memorial High School said th~ ntimber of mothers Whohad chosen JOllqtiil yellow patent

acheck III tbe amount 111 -iDwyer pastor said He begina several possibilities are being sewed their childrens Easter accessories tomiddot complete her working in the parish Aug ~ studied outfits Probably the most beau- look j

~~~~~

A][D FOR VnCTnMS Foodfor victim~ of the Washi~gshyton civil disturbance following the death of Dr Martin Luther yening Jr in Memphis was distributed at churches of all denominations in the capital Here Sister Joanette of Catholic University gives bread to burnedout families at St Mamns Church N Capimiddottol and T Streets NC Photo

9 Best to Delay Rose Pruning Unti1 Laterin Spring

By Jo~ph and Marilyn Roderick

With the break in the w~ther weve experienced lately here has been ample opportunity to get outside and begin the Spring chores that have tQ be done before the garden is ready for Summer I have noticed quite a few weekend prdeners busy with the urrection is really felt as the odds and ends that await the priest changes the bread and prdener after a quiet WiD- wine into the body and blood ter But I have also witness- of our Lord and the faithful go ed quite a few I suppose out of up to the altar to receive Comshyanxiety over the rough Winter munion Then the seven weeks we experieneed and out of im- of sacrifice leading to this day patience 1igt get started doing take on deeper meaning and the jobs that could just as well wait Light of the World truly shines until later m the month r AIl can truly sing Alleluia Wltil Way For the young of the house-

Pruning roses is a good ex- hold the Easter eggs are another mnple of a job that is best held great joy They come in many off especially this year when sizes and materials Some are Ctere has been so much top-kilL lteonfections of spun sugar and lt might be well to wait until dreams This type generally has atent buds begin to show an opening through which the themselves em what look like child may view a wonderland ~ad stems until the job of of painted landscapes and minshy)rUning is tackled It has been iature figures my experience that dead-Iook- I always adored these fantasy mg wood has n way of coming eggs when I was a little girl and ~ life in time so go easy with it was a rare and special event ampe pruning shears until you to receive one My own youngshyIJlre certain there is no life in sters however deJive more enshylaquohe stem you plan to amputate jOfment from the decorating

How to Prune and dyeing oil the hardboiled eggs

Pruning roses seems to pre- A few years ago I made an (leDt P~obJ~JiuJ to gardeners and Easter egg centerpiece by decshy~ it is a Simple task I try 00 orating (with glitter beads prune lTlyroses so that they sequins and white glue) egg graduaily asSUme an urn shape shells that had their contents tftliit is so that they have an blown outmiddot and hanging them eD1ltY cenier rhis can easily on a giided branch that had be begun by prumng each stem been placed ill a plant pot This aiatroti want to retain so tha~middot makes a verY lovely display and ihe cut is made just above an the eggs can even be used as _tward pointing bud Christmas tree ornaments the

If the bud is pointing out the following December but this laquorowth which ensues from the delicate work is not for tiny bud will be outward and there- hands lor growth will be away from Symoo)s oil Life the center of the rose Next I The Easter egg and the Easter try to make my cuts so that the bunny have always been symshyappermost portions of each boys of Spring and new life litem are approximately the Ancient people in many lands lIaDle height from the groun6 exchanged eggs at their Springagain to give the bush some festi vals They dyed eggs yellow8Diformity of appearance for the returning sun and red

The height of the bush makes for joy and life In England the attle difference as far as I am children enjoy III custom called eoncerned so I usually make Pace egging The Pace eggers my cuts at whatever height I go from house to house chantshyean get uniformity This year ing this rhymefor inStllnce there has been a PleaseMr Whitelegpeat deal of top-kill on my Please to give us an Easter eggJOses so I may have to make If you wontt give us an Easter cuts fairly close to the ground eggbut I find little difference in Your hens wiD all lay addled the quality of the roses regardshy eggsless ~ of how much I remove in And your cocks lln lay stones pruning In this country of lIpoiled

A third consideration in darlings our children would be ~ing is the removal of 014 disappointed H the Easter wood to make place for new bunny did not leave chocolate trrowth Thb becomes a pr0bshy eggs candy chickens and other lem when your roses start to expensive goodies However -ee considerably I try not to be even with all the commercial drastic in this regard by cutting trappings that go with the dayGUt one old stem a year thereby It still manages to retain It IIl8king room for new growth great joywithout particularly affecting T1uis liuoo roast is perfectlybull e plant delicious Ive bad tt for Easter One other point about prunshy dinner oth~r years and plan to Ing Many of the old ramble1ll serve it again this year Its and climbing roses should be quite worthy of II repeat pershypruned after they bloom and fonnance DlJt before I notice a great Cumberland L9mb Boast IIl8ny people pruning their 1 leg of lamb about I to dlmbers before they bloom poundswhich does nothing for the 1 teaspoon salt elimber but remove scOlelI of 1 teaspoon dry mustard blossoms ~ teaspoo1l ground ginger

In the Kitchen 5 thin lemon sIkes Baster Sunday is a day of great cup currant jelly

toy and excitement The special 1 Tablespoon lemon juice Kaster moming breads (IDJ 1) Trim oJ escemJ fat lroa 8aOther-in-Iaw always ~ lamb Rub went with a mixture Individual sweetbreads for the fJIl the salt mustard and ginger ebildren with a hardboiled egg Place roundoo silde up OIl a let in the crust) the excitement rack in roastiDjJ pan Do Dllt elf new clothes the Easter egg oover pan bunts the tIradJltional famIJ ) Roast -bl Ii a10W (331-) llIlnner but Elbow all the beauty en for amp 1tOun IlDd quiet ~ 01 Easter SID~ 3) Remove roaJt from 0ftIl Mass and eut 4 cd tbe lemon dices

be joy of this great least 01 In half arrange Ue a half sliceS the Resurrecti_ of our SaviCNl petal fashion OIl sidlte of JOaSt evident JI1 n the custo~ holding in place vith dampened tbat sur r 0 11 n d 1lhis feast wOoden ~icIW place the wbole IIut the full 1mpaot of the Bell- alice in center

)JJRDINATION The first Melkite Rite ordin2ttion of priests to be held at the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception Washington DCt was conducted by Bishop Justin A Najmy NC Photo

- Extend Program I Interfqith Organization to Conti~~e shy

Aiding ~prrnEr JoliCQrpseh WASHINGTON (NC)--A na- reftary of the National Confer-

tion-wide volunteer prog~lJn ence of Catholic Charities hasshyto help Job Corps trainees find said JACShas tapped the iTeshya place in the workaday world mendous force of volunteers al shyhas been extended for another ready available in this lountry year William P Kelly Job and they are hard at work asshyCorps director announced here sisting young llen who have

Joint Action in Community proved by volunteering for the Service (JACS) a private non- Job Corps that they want to profit corporation was organ- help themselves ized by leaders of national The young men coming out Catholic and Protestant social of Job Corps are severely hanshyaction agencies dicapped by backgrounds of

It includes on Us board of poverty poor education and unshygovernors representatives of stable family life As a result business labor and civic organ- they have more than their izations share of problems as they atshy

tempt to make it on their ownJACS has organized a netshy

work of 5000 volnteers in 500 JACS volunteers are giving communities in the U S re- them the helping hand they eruited from churches service need he added clubs and community agencies who are DOW assisting some 1000 returned corpsmen each Women to Hpnormonth

Msgr Lawrence J CorcoraJlO BisJlop Apri I 18 lACS ~Ild chairDl3lll and ~ The Ca~olicWomens Club

0If New ~(ord will hold its annual Bishopll Night OIlSee E~tablishes New bunday evening April 18 at

Education Office the Harbor Beach Club in Matshytapeisett Supper Will be servedGREENSBURG (NC)-Bishop at 630William G Connare of Greensshy

burg has announced the estabshy Guest of Honor will be Most lishment of a new diocesan ofshy Rev James L Connolly Bishop fice of education whicb win Gerrard moderlltor for the New coordinate the work of several Bedford organization will also existing departments be a guest

All area pastors have heeDThe new office which wm invited to attendopen JolT 1 will join and ex~

tend the programs of the presshy Mrs Paul L LaForest first ent diocesan schools office and vice-president will serve as the Confraternity Off Christian chairman ojf arrangements Doctrine office and win be reshy Reservations will be accepted sponsible for the total educashy by Mrs Jamell M Anderson tional effort of the diocese Mrs Maurice Hurley Mrs Paul

A newly organized departshy LaForest and Mrs Daniel F ment of religious education will Dwyer Reservations close sat shyaid in planning religious edushy urday April 13 eation programs fOr the parisb and diocesan schools the CCD and other groups both at the adult and youth le~ls ATWOOD

OIL COMPANY Break up jelly with a fork a cup stir in the lemoD juice and Spread ovell tbelamb Re- SHELL tum flo OV~ aDcl cOntinue roasting ~ to t hOur longer If HEATING OILSyoUre using a meat th~rrnODl~ eter it should register 170 for South bull Sea Streetsa pink look or 1~ for wen done Pull out wooden picks bom lemon garnsh before carv- Hyannis Tel 49-81 mg roast

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 11 1968

Says Young Seek Moral Values

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - The so-called sexual revolution is l

turning away from hypocrisy at a turning toward promiscuity ays an expert in sex education Or Mary C Calderone execushy

tive director of the Sex Informashytion and Educational Council of the United States believes toshydays young people are highly moral despite the example set for them by their elders

Speaking at the 22nd annual meeting of the Texas Council on Family Relations Dr Calderone stressed

Promiscuity has not increased on Americans college campuses We know our young people are behaving far better today than were willing to credit them with Young people are looking for moral values based on fact rashyther than mythology

Dr Calderone condemned exshyploitation of sex by commercial advertising and called for sex education which would streSD the importance of human relashytionships and not merely the mechanics of reprOduction

Your kids ought to know you cant save a bad marriage with good sexshe asserted

Sisters of Pro~ider1ce Vote to lRe~ise Rules

SPRINGFIELD (NC) The Sisters of Providence of Holshyyoke community of nuns speshycializing in care of the sick aged and underprivileged have voted to revise their rules and customs to permit greater flexshyibility and freedom in the reli shygious and personal lives of theIr members

At a general chapter at the communitymiddots Holyoke mothershyhouse the 39 chapter -delegates voted to permit experimentashytion hi religous garb give members the option of using either their baptismal and famshyily name or their religiou name pennit members to travel outside their convent wilhout a nun-companion

Also to limit participation hi common prayer to Mass and to two portions of the Divine Ofshyfice Lauds and Vespers allow community members to develop a schedule of private prayer require every member of the community to be addressed WI Sister instead of Mother~

and allow part of the nuns free time to be given to variolU fOnDS of the apostolate to civic activities and civil rights proshygrams in a way befitting theIr state in life and according to their individual consciences

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Choose AmericH Superior General

MoUNT KISCO (NC)-Fqr the first time in the 160-yellW history of the Religous of tim Cenacle an American has b~ elected superior general

Mother Rita FOy was electetl to the post at the general chapshyter of the Cenacle in Rome acshycording to the orders interpro-shyvincial public relations offiC() here in New York

The general chapter whielli is still in session is evaluatinti a series of recommendations fOli a general decentralization opoundl authority the launching of eJJogt

perimental programs by too Cenacle and the restructurinfi of Community life

The Religious of the Cenaclo is a worldwide congregation 03 Sisters committeed to the wom of retreats and religious in-gt struction There afe three American provinces

Mother Rita Foy was born 1rI

FLYING DOCTOR Dr Leo Brown and his wife Isabel a registered nurse are shown with their children Rebecca 1Qand Joel 8 with the C-essna plane they use for their Flying Doctor Service in the diocese of Gwelo Rhodesia NC Photo

THE ANCHOR Thurs April 11 1968

Project Equality Issues Guides For BMyers

CHICAGO (NC) - The first national directory of 3931 business firms comshymitted to equal opportunity in all aspects of employment has been published here by Project Equality

It will be used by more than 7000 churches synagogues and religious institutions participat shying in the interfaith fair emshyployment drive that urges givshying preference to the listed firms in all purchases of goods and services

Project Equality offices in Jlive cities are publishing re- gional buyers guides as well They are in Columbus for Ohio Detroit for Michig~n Hartford for Connecticut Omaha for New York City and was gradlDgt Nebraska and San Antonio for ated from Hunter College Sillj

Texas IFlying Doctor Serves Africa Mission south entered the Cenacle in 19~1i The national guide is a comshy completing her studies in Romo

pilation of 976 national and She was assigned to the Miltlligt 2955 local or regional firms do- Vietnam Veteran l Wifel licensed Pilots western province of the Celilgt ing business with religious inshy acle with headquarters in CtJiDRIEFONTEIN (NC)-In the the Gwelo diocese covers some must drive over lO miles of stitutions They include 40 of cago and has held a number am

grasslands here onmiddot a 5OOO-foot 14000 aCres it includes a 300shy dirt bush road seven miles of the top 500 U S corporations assignments as superior of vashy

high plateau the Cat hoi i c bed tuberculosis sanitorium a relatively good road-and watch and range down to small neighshy rious Cenaeles in the Uniteamp

of mainshy 100-bed hospital a farm an out for wild animals all alongmission Driefonteinborhood businesses States and Canada1ains-of all things-a hangar elementary school and trade the way

Listing in the Quyers guide She will now reside in RoJJl() for a Cessna 182 Skylane air shy schools for carpentery tailorshy Thus far they have encounshymeans a firm has signed Ii

plane ing and homecraft tered only baboons monkeyspledge to hire and promote deer mongoose lizards andThe mission staff totals somewithout discrimination has filed FrQm this point the missions lleslYJits to Performbirdsa report form with Project doctor can cover nine out-stashy 1200 people 35 of whom are

Equality detailing the number tions spread over an aerial non-Afrfcans The mission and Witch Doctors Woth City Symphony of its niinority-group employees distance equivalent to that beshy hospitals are operated by Afri shy The Biblical quotation The BALrIMORE (NC) -Fathe1 -broken down by jop classifi tween San Francisco and Los cans and by Swiss Bethlehem harvest is indeed great but the Bruno Markaitis SJ provinshyeation-and has pledged to take Angeles The plane was proshy priests and Brothers German laborers are few describes the cial of Lithuanian Jesuits in the further affirmative actions vided by the Mission Doctors Domincian nuns African nuns scope of medical work in Africa free world will guest conduct

Association of Los Angeles three laywomen-two American according to the Browns In the Baltimore Symphony in twc Pledge C()()peraiion Calif as part of its Flying Docshy nurses and a German teachershy these rura~ regions there is II of his own piano compositioDll

Cooperating businesses also tor Service begun here four and the Browns ratio of about one doctor to in Ii concert sponsored by LCgtJio have agreed to undergo periodic years ago The Brown children attend a every 33000 persons Mrs ola College here Sunday eompliance reviews to assure At that time Dr James Carey small two-classroom school in Brown said Africail medicine At the keyboard as soloi

Umvuma a town 17 miles away and witch doctors are still verycontinued affirmative employshy now a Santa Barbara Calif wiiI be two other Jesuit pries~ much in evidence she addedment ac~ions according to surgeon arrived at Driefontein The journey to and from school Fathers Leslie J Schnierer -and

Thomas Gibbons Jr national to begin his three-year mission is looked upon as quite an adshy It is heartbreaking to see a Benito Rivera students at thIl director of Project Equality hitch He decided quickly that venture by the family as they child with measles have to go Peabody Conservatory of Music

In addition to the firms listed The concert will mark thewith a plane one doctor could though life blind because the in the guide more than 12000 do the wbrk of five ndanga (witchdoctor) put mull 50th anniversary of the restorashyother businesses have filled out With the help of the Swiss Pittsburgh Diocese (medicine) in the childs eyes tion of independence to Lithoshycommitment forms pledging coshy Bethlehem Brothers Dr Carey Tithing for Poor she said But in other areas aniai operation with the program but began surveying and laying out like TB the African is relJlarkshy

PITTSBU~GH (NC)-Bishophave not yet supplied the necshy landingstrips near isolated and ably sophisticated medicaHy

John J Wright has announced essary statistical employment doctorless clinics and hospitals Kariangwe Berejena Kana Education Officethe Pittsburgh Diocese will unshyreports which are similar 10 The Brothers also built the Serema Matibi are all farshy NEW ORLEANS (NC) - Aledertake a new tithing plan tothose ~equired by the federal hangar at priefontein and Dr away-sounding places but the office of religious education bllllhelp finance housing and othergovernment Carey arranged for one Brother people suffer as you and I been established here by Archshyprojects for the pOOr The nalles of firms listed in to be trained as a pilot suffer from sickness They bishop PhilIp M Hannan a The_dioces~ will give 10 perthe buyers guides are available Meanwhile in Los Angeles mourn when their children have will supervise the teaching oct

cent of the contributions andonly to religious groups parti shy Dr Leo Brown a former Navy to be sick and often die she religion in parochial schoolBbequests it receives and thecipating in the program surgeon with 11 years of sershy continued and in Confraternity of Chrisshysame percentage of collections

PIroject Equality sponsored vice and his wife Isabel a Perhaps some of their disshy tian Doctrine classestaken up for directly diocesan

by the National Catholic Conshy registeled nurse were volunshy eases have strange-soundingpurposes to finance povertyference for Interracial Justice teering for MD~s three-year nawes but all come under theprogramsoperates six other local offices hitch in Africa He was just title of Gods sick These are CONRAD SEGUINThe money will be used withtouching seven more states Adshy home from Vietnam where he the names of clinics that are

other religious groups for intershyditional offices will be opened served with the Marines visited by the Flying Doctor BODY COMPANY faith housing programs andin major cities this year acshy Staff of 1200 she said Aluminum or Steelother joint dforts for the poorcording to a spokesman Dr Brown and his wife are 944 County Street

Parishes will not be requiredlicensed pilOts So last Sumshy NEW BEDFORD MASS mer when they and their two to tithe but are invited to conshy Chief Speaker

WY 2-6618ISenQte Ideas f children-Rebecco 10 and Joel tribute voluntarily NEW XORK (NC) ~ Msgr 8~arrived here MDA sent the John J Egan director of the

Continued from Page Three Cessna 182 along with thein Chicago Archdiocesan office ofStart With 45and to preach in the one Dioshy The Driefontein mission in tirbanaffairs will be the chief

eese have them in the pther GREENSBORO (NC)-Fortyshy speaker at the May 16 banquetfive priests of the Raleigh dioshy of the 1968 Catholic Press AsoshyWhile the 24 diocesan priests Abortion Bill Passes cese have formed the North ciation convention in ColumbusSenators are elected the two Carolina priests association Ohiomembels of the Priests Senate In Maryhind Ho~se Seventeen others have indicatedwho are members of religious

commullities are appointed by ANAPOLIS (NC)-A ~m to they wish to become members the Bishop These will be ro- relax Marylands 100-year-old The Raleigh diocese includes all

North Canlinatated among the religious com- abortion law and put its regushylation into the hands of themunities doing parish work in

the Diocese At present the Sen- medical profession passed the ators from religious communi- House of Delegates by im 86 ties are Father Felician Plichta to 47 vote OFM Conv and Father Co- The bill permits a doctor opshylumba Moran SSCC eniting in an accredited hospishy

tal to perform an abortion to The Bishop has encouraged a preserve the physical or mental

study of pension plans that health of the mother to prevent would involve laypersonnel of birth of a deformed or retarded diocesa~ ail~ parish facilitieii childand to end some plegnan

The Bisholl has ma~li liQme ad- CieScaused by rape just~ents)nassessmtntson pat- UnClet the~ptesel1t law abor ishes tflking into account the tiOll is peimitted ~hen two growth o(~ubU~Iiln ~~riShesah~ Ihysicians a~r~~ it itnec~ssar~bull

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Church~en Study Racial Problems In New Jersey

NEWARK (NC) -The Church cannot tell otheJiS what to do until it faces the problem within its own comshymunity a Methodist Bishop has told Essex Count~ clergyshymen of all faiths in an a~essshyment of the racial problems beshysetting Newark and other New Jersey communities

Bishop Prince A Taylor and Catholic Auxiliary Bishop John J Dougherty of Newark disshycussed the race problem in light of the report of the Govemors Commission on Civil Disorder

Cooperative Solution Bishop Taylor stressed it is

the duty of the church to beshycome knowledgeable about the report to read it carefully Action without information is irresponsible he declared as he noted the church must face up till the fact that it has parshyticipated in maintaining the status quo He noted that when ~he commissionen pelsonally toured the riot area and asked the people what the impact of the church was in their lives all but a pound~w marked the church ltDfpound

Bishop Dougherty said if the problem is to be solved it will only be through the involveshyment of the total community government industry labor unions churches schools peoshyple living in the suburbs

Dont Have Time The attack on t1e problems

must be two-fold he asserted first meeting the needs which the coming Summer presents and then planning long-range programs to overcome the root causes of the problem

There is an urgen t need of immediate programs to enable us to have time to work toward the ultimate goal

Bishop Taylor referred to the need for time to work out solushytions We cannot undo the evils of 300 years in one Sumshymer he emphasized This illmiddot not going to be a case of a quick antidote and then they Jived happily ever after

However a Newark priest active in innel-city work who was one of six reactors to the presentations made by the Bishshyops remarked that comments about needing time to solve the problems overlook the fact that we dont hlVe the time

It would be great if we did have it to keep order but q (gt bull

the people bull have the imshypression that nothing has been donesaid Father Joseph Stulb

Many are ready to riot again if only to call attention to themselves he opined The black community despairs that the white community has or will change its attitude

Rev William Fox associate general secretary of the New Jelsey Council of Churches scored the commission for fail shying to note the contribution thpt a divided church - white and black - mademiddot to the elisis H~ cliticized the church for mainshytaining silence during public controversies which were listed as proximate causes of the riotshying

Another Catholic Magazine F0 Id S

DAYTON (NC)-Mary Today a magazine founded in 1901 deshyvoted to information about the Blessed Motherand her role in the Church has issued its final edition

It is one of 11 Catholic magashyzines which have ceased pubJishycation in the past )eal because

of 1088 ~l circulation The rnaf- orders are af Teutopolis JIL azine had a reoont eirculauOll Lake Bluff in and St Meiri

~ aooU~1151gtO middot - ~lnclbull - - -

BENEMERENTI MEDAJ~ Father James Vizzaro SJ second from left received the Benemerenti Medal at a dinner in Washington -on the occasion Of his retirement as dishyrector of the Washington office of the National Catholic Rural Life Association Conshygratulating him are left to right Msgr ~dward W ORourke executive director of the NtRLC Bishop Henry J Soenneker of Owensboro Ky rural life advisor of the usce department of social action and Msgr Luigi L Ligutti Vatican observer to the UN Food and Agliculture Organization and former executive dirootor of NCRLC NC Photo

Fr Vizzard Gets Benemerenti Medal Work for IFhlltfol lPoor Recognized

the Holy See to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization priests and Protshyestant clergymen and members of Congress

Msgr George G Higgins di shyrector social action department U S C a tho 1 i c Conference praised Father Vizzards comshybination of scholarship political know-how great tenacity of

Schedule Workshop O~ Sex Education

WASHINGTON (NC)-Father James T McHugh director of the family life bureau middotU S Catholic Conference will direct a workshop on Sex Education to be held at Catholic Univershysity of America here June 17shy28

Purpose of the workshop is to prepare a basic core of people especially teachers and parish personnel to supplement the work of the home in a complete program of education in sexu- ality It will provide these pershysons with background informashytion give them opportunity to evaluate some of the basic mashyterialsand engage them in an in-depth analysis of a curricushylum guide which reaches every grade level

Lecturers and consultants will include Fathermiddot John L Thomas SJ of the Combridge Center fOl Social Studies Dr and Mtmiddots Joseph Bird co-aushythors of The Freedom of Sexshyual Love Dr Ann F Lucas chairman of the psychology deshypaltment Farleigh Dickinson Universit~ Teaneek N J and Father Walter Imbiorski direcshytor of the Cana program in the Chicago atchdiocese

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purpose and above all genushyine love for the poor

Father Vizzard will leave Washington to middotwork in Califorshynia Nevada Arizona and Utah the region of the Jesuits Cali shyfornia province

Four Cleveland Nuns Quit as Religious

CLEVELAND (NC) - Four nuns one the prineipal of a 1100 student girls Catholic high school have separately withdrawn from the Sisters of Notre Dame here in Ohio

It was the largest departure since 1966 when 10 Sisters of Notre Dame were released from their vows to move to Pueblo CoIQ to form an experimental community middotThe Sisters of Notre Dame is the largest order of 2531 Cedar St New Bedford nuns based in the Cleveland 993middot3222 Diocese

imiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot~middotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot~ middot 3NEW HIGHERi RATE OF

PER ANNUM INTEREST PAID QUARTERllyo ON PAID-UP

SHARE CERTIfICATES Deposits Welcomed in Multiples of

$20000 up to $30OOO-on Single and Joint Accounts Up to $60OOO-for Cornorations

DIVIDENDS PAID 4 TIMES A YEAR February MC1V August and November

All Deposits Inoured in Full

Taunton

THE ANCHORshyThurs April 11 1968 11

Support Bi~hop5

Equa~sty Plea MINEOLA (NC)-The Cathshy

olic Interracial Council of Long Island has voted overwhelmshying support of Rockville Censhytres Bishop Walter P Kellenshybergs call for equality in housing employment and edushycation

Bishop Kellenberg issued Zl pastoral letter-A Call to COl1shyscience-in which he said it i9 essential that every man be given equal opportunity for eJQP]oyment and job advanceshyment and equal educatton for himself and for his children

Declaring these to be fundashymental moral issues facing the people of Long Islanp the council said We give this statement by Bishop Kellenberg our overwhelming sUPPOtt

John J Clarke council president said the eounciB deemed it necessary to reit shyerate its support of the bishops statement co gtI bull because of our increasing concern over conshytinued discriminatory practicelC in these areas

In a policy statement the council declared the bash cause of racial unrest lies in the almost complete lack oR any meaningful contact between the races Today there are few whites who can say they really know Negroes This ignorance of each other is caused almost lxc]usively by patterns of segshyregation in housing which reshysuited in segregated schools 3mll a segregated society

As a step in breakin( these patterns the council recomshymended passage of open housshying ordinances in all towns OK

Long Island Only when there is no place left for the white man to run will the problem be solved it said

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WASHINGTON (NC)-Father James L Vizzard SJ retiring Washington director of the Nashytional Catholic Rural Life Conshyference received the papal Benemerenti medal hele in recshyognition of his work for t~e

rural poor of the United States and throughout the world

The presentation at a dinner in the Cosmos Club was attendshyed by Bishop Henry J Soenshyneker of Owensboro Ky NCRLC president Msgr Luigi Ligutti permanent observer for

Prelate Advocalles Open Housing ILaws

JEFFERSON CITY (NC)shyBishop Joseph M Marling CPPS of Jefferson City has urged Catholics of the diocese to campaign openly and fearshy

- lessly for area open housing laws

In a pastoral letter urging open housing law support the Missouri prelate askedshy

Who fails to see that to conshydemn a large segment of our people to the cruel segregation thatmiddot closed housing entails is to sin gravely against charity justice and the vely finest inshystincts of our nature Who may deny that to perpetuate such an evil in this enlightened age will bring malediction upon us

For jurely he answered Chlist is brother to the eolored in the identical sense that he is brother to the other children of men

Plan Fa-II Opening Of Joint Semill1ary

CHICAGO (NC)-A graduate school of theology for seminashyrians ftom three Religious orshyders will open in a former hotel here in the Fall

The school to be known as the Catholic Theological Union will be operated by the Passhysionists Franciscans and Sershyvites in the fOI-mer Aragon Hotel near the University of Chicago

About 100 students ue exshypected to enter thl school this year Area seminariltes ourrent-middot ly being used by themiddot threfl

2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese 01 Fall Ri~~r-Thurs Apr 11 1968 S~~in S~ntences priest- and Laymen

JOurrt)~a$ts Opinions Differ_On V~~e of Bishops Synod

By Msgr George G Higgins Two American journ~lists who have covered the Rome

1beat off and on for several years-Father Francis X Murphy CSSR and Gary MacE0 in-have just published an interesting account of the Synod of Bishops which was held in Rome in 1967 (Synshyod 67 A New Sound in what they manege to teU us Rome Bruce Publishing Co about themselves in their sep- Milwaukee) Written in the arate and widelydivergent asshyfamiliar Xavier Rynne style it Sessments of the Synod is something of a tour de force How two men who disagree given the se- so fundamentally about the uecy w h i c h pros and cons of the Synod ever enveloped the managed to work as a tandem $ y nod a 1 in the writing of the history of proceedings The the synodal proceedings is to authors h a v e put it as mildly as possible a tried to give perplexing mystery on account as They tell us that for aU that a c cur ate as lies between their separate possible under evaluations Df the Synod they the conditions are jointly accountable but that of time and cir- the internal logic of their inshycumstance For dividual viewpoints and the my own part I dialectic of the situation led think they deserve better than them to attribute exclusive reshya ~as~ing grade They do ~lOt sponsibil~ty for the Prelude to ~lalln to hae wrlt~en anythmg a priest and for the Postscript like8cIefmltIve hlstory of the i to a layman SYlo1IgtUt they have proyid~d Far A art 1IllS wlth a useful mtenm sum- P mabr of the -proceedings and I take it that this is a polite ~r ~ii w~ cin) begrateful way of saying that when they

Perplexing Mystery got around to summing up their Tothis reader however what impressions of the Synod they

the authors tell us about the

lSynod ls less mterestmg than i

~ 8holJd have concluded contrashyr rlwise- that it was seriously - lacking in credibility and releshy

vance and was thus on biI- ance a huge disappointment

lRationaJize Differences

Such differencesmiddot of opinion on the part of experienced

jourpalilts covering the same everit-and using the very same

source~ of informationare not to be Vf~npered at

On the other hand I am Dot very happy about the curious- way in which the authors haveshyrationalized their differencea Th~y tell Us that one evaluatioo Df ~he Synod (Father Murphys) w~ ~ritteo from the viewpoint of the institutional Church and the other (Mr MacEoins) from that of conteinporarshyman~ind

Or again in Mr MacEoin words A priest professionally involved in the institution will

tend to lean in one direction 11 layman whose professional sushy

- viva rests on his sensitivity to

SPECIAL DELEGATE Marches Ghilio Sacchetti 42 has been named by POpe Paul VI to succeed Count Enrico

Galeazzi as special delegate of the Pontfical Commission for the state of Vatican City He is wearing the now outshymoded costume of a Gentleshyman of Cape and Sword NC PIloto

world opinion in the other

Now Bear This

This strikes me as being bull slightly threadbare and hopeshylessly pre-Conciliar dichotomy I know of a Dumber of priests (and so do the authors I asshysume) who rightly~or wrongly are just as critical of the Synod as Mr MacEoin is

I also know of a number III laymen (and so do the authocs I must assume again) who rightly or wrongly are just as sanguine about the results of the Synod as Father Murphy is So whats all this doctrinaire I

stuff about priests necessarily looking at things (myopically) through the allegedly unenshylightened eyes of contemposhyrary mankind

Tell it to the Marineal

found that they wer~ so ho~e-lessly far apart 111 theIr thmkmg

that the division of labor so I cryptically described in the above quotations appeared to be the only possible way of salshyvaging the middotoperation Thatll fair enough

It isnt at all surprising that one of the authors (Father Murphy) should have concluded that on balance the Synod was truly a contribution to the Church~s aggiornamento and that the other (Mr MacEoin)

MAnmn (NC) - Sz~en per- sons incIl~lg a Cathollc priest have bc)n sentenced to prison terms and fined by Madrids Court of r lic Order on charges Olf havinr participated in an anti-Frangt meeting in Barceshylona in lS~G

On trial were Father Francisshyeo Paula Botey and 10 laymen who were accused of attending

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an illegal meeting The meetshying was advertised as a Day of Repression and criticized what it called the repressive activities of the government of Gen Franshycisco Franco

Father Botey who admitted during the trial that he atshytended the meeting at Barcelona Universitys law school was senshyten~ to a year in jail ~d fined

about $214 Three of the laylDell received similar sentences amplid fines while ~ others drew six-month jail terms aDd four were absolved

Father Batey testified duriDtl the trial that he deliberately atshy1ended the meeting to protest against the ftPress1on he bad said he had seen of -certain see-shymenta of ampbe Spanish clergyshy

Prelate Supports Catholic Schools Opposes Racism

NEWARK (NC) -Archshybishop Thomas A Boland of Newark touched on racism Catholic education and aborshytion in his annual message to the Archdiocesan CouncH of catholic Men at its CQnvention here

Noting that BOrne people adshyvocate closing Catholic schools to concentrate on adult educashytion Archbishop Boland said I believe we mU9t give as much time as is possible to adult edushycation but not that we should ignore our chlIdren

If we close our schools he soid there may 00 no one to attend the adult courses iJn future years

He deplored the absence of religion in the education of many people and said that while 0 ohild may be receiving o good academic background under such circumstances he is not being trained in his will or his morals

Jthortion Is Murder Archbishop Boland noting

~hot the question of relaxing bortion laws is before the state LeFislature recalled that he lralNi opollen to the men about ~ot Dubject a year earlier and repeated what he had said then abortion is murder

Should the state legislate more liberally in this field he said it would go outside its sphere and we would have no

right to follow it He indicated however that

the Church would not oppose the establishment of a legislashytive commission to study the abortion law

Discussing racism he called it a malignant growth in our society and announced his support for a peaceful interrashycial walk through the streets of Newarks ghetto

Spokesmen lor L2ity Archbishop Boland also urged

the men to turn their council into a real spokesman for the laity He ruled out the possibil shyity of a voice for the laity toshytally independent flrom the hierarehy declaring that this is not the structure cd the Church

H we want to build a strucshyture the archbishop said we get an architect to give us a uniform plan Christ is the arshyehitect of the Chureh We are its workmen

He then urged the men tID take the steps which would make the ACCM aspokesman for the people II real council

Delegates adopted four res0shy

lutions endorsing catholic echools condemning racism lin every form advocating retenshytion and expansion of the states IIChool bus law and opposing relaxation of the abortioD statute

Stresses Increased Food Production

NEW DELHI (NC)-The vatshyican recognizes the need to mshycrease food production middotas a most serious problem facing the developing countries and mshydeed the world as a whole Elizabeth Reid II member of the

bull Vatican delegation to the United ean delegation to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD)

Speaking at the UNCTAD meeting here in India MilS Reid said The right to food 18 01117 another aspect 01 be mosi eaered of all buman rigbts the right to life and it is tb1s parshyticular aspect of the problem of development that places the heaviest and most serious burshyden em the comlcieDee of man- flIIIIampy from home kiDd ~ bull lot cbeapeJ tIIaD IiDDC

rv~

I I

HEATHER CUTTHNG

Sacred Hearts Junior High School Student Is Licenseod Amateur Radio Operator

Holly and Heather Cutting 532 Walnut Street Fall River share a transistor rashydio With some teenage sisters this might cause trouble but not with this pair Heather Jets Holly take the transistor She settles for pop music from Johannesburg South Africa-via her shortwave set They have real good musicraquo she says Blonde 14 year old Heather learned the In ternational Morse Code a basic requirement for amashyteur radio operators when she was seven but its only in the past year that shes really worked at the complicated hobby Her father Dick Cutting ll construction superintendent by profession has been ll radio ham for 30 years by avocation An awesome battery of receivshyers and transmitters fills a room of the Walnut street house and when Heather displayed real inshyterest in them she had iii wi)) ing teacher close at hand

Heathers an eighth grader at Sacred Hearts Junior High School on Prospect Street in Fall River and she admits that she does as much homework as IIhe can at sOOool to have eveshynings free for her hobby She at shytends radio classes nightly then hurries bome to spend as much as three hours at ber sel

Im llicensed for two fre- I

quencies right DOW she exshyplained I can talk on six and two meters Translated that means she can contact amateullil

--in this part of the United States but may not ta]k tomiddot overseal operators until she earns 1Il middotgeneral license

Im Working for my license DOW she said rohe examinashytion JIm be in 00 days Even the license that Heather now holds however is umusual for one of her age When she gets ber general license she Will be among itB Y01lllllgest holders and probably the youngceBt 8h licensee in the stlllte

rhere are 11426 lI8dto amashyteurs iD Massacbuatts I18id her father aInd cmIy 409 aJre WCllInen

wm CoDtaet lFather A real benefit to ~ Cutting

family from Bellltberll general lieense wID be iba1 1Ibell be able tID reach bel fathe bull blB car short wave mctic wheD he is OlD hIfl freqUeDt bwliness tripal

distance calls said Mr Cutting The electric light company figshyures I can run this rig 16 hours a day for only $290 a month

Heather hopes to make a cashyreer of radio technology Right now she is able most of the time to repair her set if someshything goes awry and shea building a small transmitting station for an upcoming science fair at Sacred Hearts Itll broadcast about 200 feet she said

Sometimes Of couJrSe gremshylins pop ill Like the time Heather got a phone can from a boy in Swansea Hey did oU know youre coming m on eiYclnnel 2 on our TV be said 011 another occasion Heather picked ~ her fathers transmisshysion OIl ber electric pitar speaker

Most of the time however things go smoothly During her nightly radio sessions Heather picks up signals Jrom other amateurs and has some schedshyuled appointments vis the mllshyways withmiddot friends hi otheJl mties

When she picks up 5 llllew

eontact she confirms it with II brightly-colored postcard bearshying her name and station 0011 etters in psychedelic pink Wld yellow

Collecting such postcards 111 2 sub-hobby for radio amateulll and Holly has a oozzling eollecshytion on the walls of her radio room She bas Mganized the Sou the a II t ern MassachushyIlett8 Teenage RadM Net aocll ill

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OIdsmobile-lPeugot-Rencnft fJ1 Middle Street Fairhaven

llooking for new members Its just for teens she says

=rheyre more fun to talk to Once she has her general 11shy

cense she plans to join Iil group that relays messages from Viet Nam servicemen to their famshyilies

other Bobbies Badia is by no means Heathshy

ers only hobby Shl~ and her sister Holly a freshman at Emshymanuel College have an imshypressive collection of sharpshyshooting trophies mostly garshynered at Fall River Rod and Gun Club meets I began shootshying when I was six and had my Own gun when I as seven eaid Heather

Other interests are mathematshyics and music Heather picked lIP guitar playing on her own and belOngs to a folk group which plans its first public apshypearance after Easter

In short shes one teen whoD never be found wondering what to de next

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THE ANCHORshy 13Thurs April 11 1968

Houston Priests Get Pay Raise

HOUSTON (NC) - BishOJ John L Morkovsky announceCl a pay raise for priests of thE Galveston-Houston diocese and said a new retirement poliCW will go into effect Jan 1 1970

Under the old pay scale asshy sistants received a base salary of 11250 plus $30 car allowshyance and $1250 insurance preshymium for a total salary of $155 a month Pastors received a total monthly salary of $21750 The new salary reale will allow for increased pay based on the number of yearo priests have been ordained

Assistants who have been cshydained less than 10 years wiill receive a total monthly salary of $200 The figures will ~

$225 for those ordained moro than 10 years

Pastors with 25 years in t100 priesthood will receive m monthly total of $275 ThoSQ with more than 25 years will receive $300

The retirement policy ca1lJfl for optional retirement at age 65 and mandlltory retirement at 70 However elderly pries1amp who are able and willing m37 be assigned to other priestly work than the pastorate Bisbshyop Morkovsky stated

The bishop said the changes are in accordance with the recshyommendations of the Senate 01 Priests and follow consultashytion with diocesan consultom

Reach Impasse-PIITSBURGH (NC)-A state-gt

level meeting between Cat~

olic officials and the Nationl11 Association for the Advanceshyment of Colored People on furshythering racial integration iB Catholic schools reached m seeming stalemate here bn Pennsylvania when the schoolshymen cited lack of funds as ll major obstacle to NAACP pro= posals

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YOUTH CARES FOR AGE Retired Sisters are tenderlycared for at chair while Sister Mary Agnes looks on Center Sister Agnes Maureea Mmiddott St Mary Convent Fall River Left Sister Agnes Maureen seniormiddot wheels SisterMary Jer~me anQright Sister JohnCatberine bringgdri_ infirmarian points out magazine article to Sister Mary Lig~~ri inwheel to Sister Mary Ursulamiddot Both infirmarians are licensed practical nurses

I

Cqrdinal Roy Raps Apathy

MEXICO CITY (NC)~MaushyJOice Cardinal Roymiddot of Quebee _ a visit here as ehairman of the Pontifical Commission for World Justice and Peace said Christian teachings condemn violence in solving social probshylems but also condemn themiddot false prudence that lacks the eourage to make needed reshyforms

The prelate who has been touring Latin America for sevshyeral weeks said he was 1mshypressed by the number of Cathshy

olic organizations and institushytutions already applying Pope Paul VIs encyclical The Deshyvelopment of Peoples in their Jespective countries

But he added Latin Amerishyearn still have to assume fully their responsibility in workingtowards economic balance andmiddot bull just social order 80 every cit shyizen can promote his own welshyfare in a climate of freedom and common good

bull bullbull tmiddot

Comes KindIYcimiddotmiddotSislesmiddot 0 Mercy AmiddotI Fall River Comiddotnventmiddot

By Patricia McGowan

~When thou wast younger thou didstmiddot gird thyself anddidst walk where thou Frouldst But when thou shalt be old thou shalt stretch forth thy handsmiddot arid another shall gird thee and lead thee whither thou wouldst not In its description of the almost universal lot of age this is one of the most poignantpassages in Scriptur~ But age comes kindly f~r Sisters Although they are not exshyemptmiddot from its physical and mental ravages they need not fear being forsaken byfriends or being left alone the

fanulymiddot Jhe famllylast of a that is a religious community cherishes its older members and provision is made for Sisters to pass their last years surrounded by tender care

Among havens for older Sisters is the infirmary at Mt St Mary Conventmiddot Fall River The Sisters who have spent most of their religious life in the Fail River Diocese come here for their laBtyears exshypliliried Sister Agnes Maureen

The cardinal added at emiddot pretB8 RSMmiddotmiddot senior iniirmarian at eonference in the headquarten the Mount Her domain proshyf the Mexican Social Secreta- vides eh~rf11~ccQmmodations riat that national efforts for de- for 10 Sisters Each has her ownmiddot elopment do not eliminate the room andthere is II kitchenette aeed ~forfoleignaid where those ablE lobe up and

The Pontifieal commisSion Cardinal Roy indicated ill enshyaged in persuading rich counshytries to devote at least one per eent of their groSs national product to assist poor eountries

Archdiocese Adopts Project Equality

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing notified the priests lIeIlate of the Boston archdiocese of plans 10 adopt Project Equality a program designed to use purchasing power of church institutions to make firms supplying goods and 8elVices wipe out diICriminashy birislM Placticeamp

e~ut ~n enjoy their meals ~gethermiddot

The ~nfirmaryis but II few stepis from the Mount chapel wher~ the retired Sisters spend hours a day in prayer for comshymunity members still in the active lPostolate Also claiming time for Sisters whose eyesight permits are needlework ana erooheting projects

Always DraWlll Cheerful and dedicated Sister

Agnes Maureen who has I Deen at the infirmary six years is aided by Sister John Catherine who has served the aged Sisters two years A laywoman takes the night shift in the infirmary ensuring the Sisters round the clock care Bothmiddot Sister infirmashy

rians are licensed practical nurses who received their trainshyI g to L d f F tma Hosn a ur a y 0 a I shypital in the Providence Diocese

When I entered religion I hoped to be an infirmarian

said SIster Agnes Maureen I whas alwdays drawn to work for t e age

Some people think we havent got a nursing apostolate she added but we need nurses desshyperately Right now we have nine Sisters taking care of inshyfirmaries in our province

Among Sisters now at the Mount infirmary are Sister

Mary Agnes who celebrated her diamond jubilee last DeshyceJl)ber and most of wbose r~lishygious life was spent in New Bedford and middotNorth Attleboro schools and Sister Mary Lishy

gu()ri whomiddot f9r 49 yearl taught sixth graders at st Patricks School Fall River

HShe looks out her window at St Patricks said Sister Agnes Maureen and she says Theres home

The Sisters are welcoming the arrival of Spring and warm days said the infirmarian It means they can enjoy their sunporch sit in the Mounts garden and go for occasional car rides Of course they have many visitors she said Other Sisters in the house come to see them and so do Sisters from the convents where they forshymerly lived

Yes age comes kindly for Sisters Not Hke the old lady overheard in a downtown groshy

eery confiding to a chance fellow-customer her discovery of a bargain in frozen food I live alone you know and 1 get

three big servings from a packshyage--and only 29 cents

N 0 Sister lives alone

bull

~~tplic Newspaper Wins Press Awards

NEW ORLEANS (NC) -The eJarion Herald middotarchdiocesa middotnewspaper won eight awards iii the annual competition of the

N~W Or)eans Press Club ~ competition included daily and

weekly newspapers wire serVshyices and television stations

Millard F Everett editor won first place in two categories - editorial and best religioWl story This marks the first time in five years of competition that the Clarion has taken the top award for best religious story Staff members of the paper also took three second and three third place awards

----------------------------

ZENITH bull ACOUSTICON bull UNEX

bull BIOLOGICAU bull YITAMIIIS

C~tt 615-7829 IRENE R SHEA PROP

Prompt Free Delivery in fALL RIVER SOMERSET TIVERTON amp VICIHITY 101 ROCK ST (CORNER OF PINE ST) FALL RIVIImiddot

~ 6

THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFon River-Thurs Apr 11 1968

CathoJi~ ll]wnDv~JSityPltDcopy~regii~copyJ~

IPlanLUBffil AmeFicon ~1]~regregO WASHINGTON (NC) - A ops and l~aders of several South

jJroup of pr-ofessors from Cathshy American governments sHe University of America hope The Washington center comshyS n~w technical middotinstituteat the middotprises -ll group of professorsshy~tholic University of Gu~Washy mostly members of the CU caulI Ecuador may mark the llchool of middoted ucation-whomiddot are ltJPening of an international edshy specialists ineclUcationfordeshyvcation bridgetoLatin America Velopment Director of the proshy

The institute will be inaugurshy ject is Dr Jose A Baquero ated early this month as 11 middotcoshy WM has been commuting b~shy1)eIativeventure by the Center meen Washingtonand his nashylor Educational Research fa middottive Ecuador dming the -cmrent QuitoEcuadorand the Center school year lor Community Developmenhmd This is not an Ecuadorian Servioe at Catholic University project it is an internatienal bere It has the support 01 Vashy projed a resealclFaction proshykanofficials Ecuadorianbislshy gram between North and South

America Dr Baquero said middothereBC middotto Recruit laquorNe had to start middotsomewhere The natural plaoe 10 begin wasNegro St~1ent5 middot-the Qlace Where weaould get

CHESTNUT HILL (NC) shy the most facilitiesThisproject iesuit-eper-ated Boston College God willing if successful will bere has made available $100shy move throughout Latin AmershyGtOO fora talent search -progr1m ica We already have contracts to recruit Negro stJdents frem with interestedJeaders in Sao disadvantagedurbanareas middotof Paulo BTazil Bogota Colombia tlhecountry mainly in Greater and Lima Peru Boston Msgr Eugene Kevane direcshy

Father Michael P Walsh SJ tor of the Center for Communitypresident caUed for support off Development andServleedaimshyiIIe entirestudent body facshy ed iB number of Latin American Illlty and administration of EQsshy Church and government officialS Qon College to make the ~mshy have middotexpressed interest in thecram a success projectand a belid it may beshy

Since the program was starteJ come a model of assistance middottoIJeveral weeks ago some 50 ~shy lI3derdeveloped poundOuntrieslltIicatiopshave beenreceiltvelll He said ArcnbishGp Romolofrom students in ghetto areas Carooni apostolic nuncio 10lot -entrance middotin next Septemshy

~1u told him heilOllSiders theWltll freshman -class pmject of great importance andThere have a1w~ys beellU M~S a similhlr middotinstitute willIlegro students enrolled at B4tsshybe established at the Pontificalton College oUicials said ~t University in Limatheir Dumber is ~ot ~own 00shy

0tberhigh-ranking churchshyaYSe race is not shown 8ll1 middotmen who lthave endorsed theapplications The Collegemiddotacceptll project include MsgrLuigi Lishyattdents of all faiths gutti the Holy Sees PermanentN~t SeptemberNegro lrtlllshy

1Gbserver at the Food and Agrishy

bullnts with the necessary ~uaUshy6eations will be admitted n8 culture Organization of the 1Ilual while middotsome 25 will ge United Nations and Archbishop admitted under the talent Ceasar Antonio Mosquera fif

lt4IeQIChprogram The number is Guayaquil president of theEcshybeing limited for thegood af iliad-orlan Bishops Conference

GOLDEN JUBILEE Sisshyter Rose Alma Reid CSC (Sjltte1 M Flora) will mark herg-olden i llbilee of religious professjon on Sunday April 21 at Sacred Heart Convent New Bedford A Mass of thanksgi~rjng will be offered at 1130 Sunchw morning at Sacred Head Church and a reception will be held in the parish hall ITom2 to 4 th~t

afternoon Friends and forshymer pupils are invited t01l~

tend

So Curolina Bishop A-sksPettce $upport

CHARLESTON (NC)- Bishshymiddotop Ernest Lmiddot Unterkoefier of Charleston has called for the middotfull support ofall Americans of President Lyndon middotlB Johnshysons efforts to secure peace in middotVietnam

Tbe South ltCarolina Bishop said that the Presidents -peace ini tiati yes demonstrate that he is a gtarson who -has ever been conscious of the grave responsishybility 01 his ofillce and that his judgements have been measured ~y the critical threats to the securi~y and free action ofthe United States

ICampus Comediansl

R~JlJ~stforBirh ControJ 1nlcrmation lndBGSYlrncrGti(C~e

DAYTON (NC)-A Univershysity of Dayton chaplain said he suspected campuscomediami for 1b~ conJroversyaroused bY a request for availability of birth corttol information and materials In campus by theunishyversity stmiddotudent congress

Father Urban Rupp SM universi~y co-chaplain wrote in the chaplain s bulletin the alshymost unanimous aetion fthe student gfvernment group middotwas an idio~yncratic caper in the natureo Ii ttle childrenpl~ying

house He indicated he fouud it difshy

ficult to take the Pfoposa1 serishyomlY

Now of COUrse I middotcowd be taking this all -wrong be said

Perhaps it was intended 00 bn serious In that case I woUld be tempted to thinktheemershygency is not just immediateshyit is really one generation too late

This was taken asa reference to student efforts to pwih through the resolution orbirth control as an emergency -meashysure

That failed but a few days later the student middotcongressvo~ 29 tol to seeka change in llJllshyversUy Wlicy that would -pershymit the introductionof birth 1Ontrol selYiees in thestudem health center for married eQUoshy~les and Ulose llQOD _ ~arriedmiddot

the young Negroes whowiUbe ~pted oUiciaI said

~

bull

PATRIARCH The middotnewily elected head of the Syriac Oatholic Church Patriarch Hgtenys Antoine Hayek of Anshy~och was enthroned recentshy1w in Beirut Lebanon In this post hesucceds the late P-ashykiarch Ignace Cardinal TapshylPouni NC Photo

I

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In ~ glory of His Resurrection may be reborn man~

amiring hopes and CleSires _ ~ce

HAPPY EASTER THE OFFICERS DIRiEc1r~ AND STAFfshy

il1Jf11l

FIRSTmFff-BANK

-Ji1lim~~OF NEW BEDFORD

StYE SOME

11IfiPPINESS TO

A CHILD

i8iAPPI~ESS IS

A bull told ($1250 a monttl$15000-a ~ar)ca_small SISTER Investment for SisterS lifetime of service

Like to be her sponsorf Her name Is Sister Suzamma and she will write to you

iIHAPPINESS ciS

IfOOD

HAPPlHU II

CLOTH

Whonareyouhapp~t7Happlnll3s 110$ In giving Youre ha1J)lest when you sIva yourself to ttle peopeyeniho needyou most bullbullbullA mother for Instance hums with ~pplnesswhensh8bath~

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work bullbull The best lsortof51Ilins lnvoLves mor than writing middotchecks--etlll how better can you help the children now whoneed you overseasf Boysandslrls who are btl~~ltper1JJjeafmiddotmuta bullbull orp~your~oneyglftslarg~-and bullmell willfeedthemmiddotteach them cur themgivethem 8 chance In lifebullbullbullbull Wantllobe happiermiddotthi

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In Erumathale south India 8 young Indian girllnrtnilriing tobea sisterOfthe Imltatlon1lf Christ will learn amofSotherttllnp how Jo care for orphans Hertlalning costs $300 all

Sevanmiddotyear-od Clara Vaookkaran an orphan In Kottamthy Indla needs lMtryttling Iitta (SIr need $10 wlllP8Y her 8)(~nslJlJm~thbymiddot cm(lOthweUaendYOU harphoto

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THE ANCHO~-Trappists Elect Mother Church of Nation8 PortlglleSe 17 Thurs April 11 1968

Youngest Abbot P-epares fOI- Cenlellilial Celebration At Gethsenloni Dy Patida F r-u nis

GETHSEMANI (NC) The youngest abbot in the history of the monastery of Our Lady of Gethsemani was formally blessed (March ~l) by Archbishop Thomas J McDon~

ough 0pound Louisville Father M Flavian Burns

OCSO 36 ilgt the seventh ab~

bot in the 120-year history of the monastery He was elected by members of the community Inst January to succeed Abbot M James Fox OCSO

Father Flavian described bis position as en administrator whose main job il) service to others within the community He said his most important function it3 to hold plivate spiritual conversations with other monks and to handle the lillM)nasterys relations with the ~Atside world

Thcilt are some 120 monks at ~ethsemani abbey a decline from past years Abbot Burns cCrlbllltes the decline at least in prt to the attitude of the times YiJCl1 was foJJJlcrly accepted without question is now being ltI~etioned he observed

ltDontemplation Prayer

Changes have been made the IHurElY is now in English and 2Jc strict vow of silence has TiKen relaxed somewhat On an experimental basis the monks are allowed to use brief oral instructions instead of sign language as in the past

Despite the lack of radio or 1clevision Abbot Burns said the monks keep in contact through newspllpers with events in todays world The main thing ill to know what is going on in the Church and what effects our fellow hushymans according to the abbot

The life of a monk involves middotcontemplation and prayer rather than speaking up - 11 more spiritual turn according kI Abbot BUlns

A native of Jersey City N J he is a graduate of Henry SfIyder public high sehool there

Protests- Campaign Agamst Religion

NEW YORK (NC) - A new wave of terror against aU churcltgpers is now in effect in Albania an exile from that country has declored in a- letter of protest sent to the United Nations Commission on Human Rightsmiddot and~ to UN Secretary General U Thani

The protest bl Dr Rexhep KIasniqi president of the Free Albania Committee which has its headquarters here said that Albanial following a lf41oist eommunillt guideline has shut down every cltulch and mosque and has made any_kind of pubshylIc worship impossible

Thill campaign Dr Krasniqi tated is a violation of the UN Charter the Universal Declarashytion of Human Rights and of Albanias own communist conshystitutional guarantee of freedom of conscience for all

San Antonro Priests Form Association

SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Fortyshyene diocesan and religious comshymunities priests of the San Anshytonio archdiocese formed a priests association bere The priests ohose a six-member temshypora]) steering committee

One of the fiTst formal actions Gf the allsociatron was to inform Archbishop Robert E Lucey of San Antonio of the group forshymation

There are approximately 441

Parishioner d St John the Baptist Church in Nc Bedford are getting rendy for a momentoils event-the 100th anniversary of the fO~1l1dil1g of the oldest Portuguese parish in the nation The cen~en]ial celebration wi II not take place until 1971 but many things have to be done in preparation within the next three years One major project is renoshyvating the church ihelf To pay for the massive job ptrshyishioners have inaugur~teca Centennial Fund Drive to raise money for painting ~he church do extensive electrical work and buy a rew organ Estimated cost (f the regt3ir5 is $150000

Rt Rev Msgr John A Silvia pastor is honorary drve chairshyman and Frank S Jason is genshyeral chairman Other committee members include Richard GiJI1shysalves and Jesse V Santos Jr division chairmen JQseph S Vera special gifts chairman Richard L Lopes treasurer George Radcliffe director Louis S Silva assistant director Mrs Mary Lucy Soares office conshytrols and Miss Luey E Dias list supervisor

Members of the Campaign Exshyecutive Committee also include Frank M Martin ald Joseph C Motta

The history of St Johns and the history of the Portuguese people in America arc closely intertwined

It was at the end of the 18th Century that settlers began comshying from themiddot Azores to the United States TheJ were relashytively few in number nd as II

result almost lost their national identity

Near Ifood However by 1840 the trickle

of Azoreans was beginning to turn into a near Oood of imshymigrants who settled in New Bedford then a whaling and fishing center

By 1865 many Portuguese families called New Bedford home They lacked just one thing-a church of their own and a priest who spoke their language and understood their customs and traditions

Their first priest-Rev Joao Ignacio de Azevedo-anived in 1869 and on Sept 10 1871 St Johns parish was canonically established

Theremiddot were approximately 1shy000 Portuguese of Azorean deshyscent living in New Bedford at the time and the)T detelmined to build their own church A lot was purchased for $3OD8 ~ con~

siderable amount in those days and soon ground WQS broken for the new house of God

However Father de Azeedo was a mission pliest Vl~ho~moved

throughout the are~ aCministershying to his counblymen As a reshysult a new parish was establishshyed in Boston and he became its first pastor

Expandoll

Construction of St Johns WillS

continued by Rev Antonio de Mattos Freitas a native or Calshylteta St George Azores Fashyther Freitas also was responsible for the construction of a recshytory When he reUred because of ill health and returned to~ the AzoreS he was succeeded by Rev Antonio G de Silva Neves who was to serve St Johns durshying the greatest expansion Gfthe citys Portuguese colony

The first church located where a section of Morse- Twiampt Drill now stands soon ~ outgrown by its congregation and a drive began for agt new and larger church

Father Neves who served 8~j

pastor for almost 25 years saw the new church at County and Wing Streets almost coop]eted However ill health also forced bill retirement

PREPARING FOR CENTENNIAL In charge of fumd drive for hundredth anniversary of St John Baptist Church New Bedford are from left George Radclffe drive execushytive director Frank Jailon general chairman

pleted construction of the present church and rectory in three years The church which now serves the parish was solemnly blessed an4 dedicated to the worship of God by the late Bishshyop Feehan

Through the years the parshyishioners of St Johns have proved their dedication to their cliurch Now they are renewinr their dedication

Msgr Silvia notes that before the small St Johns Church was built the citys Portuguese colshyony attended Mass at St Lawshyrence Church Later they moved into what today is Crowells brt Store

Landmark Today the 11Inificent st

Johns is a landmark in New Bedford befitting its position as Mother Church of the Portu guese in the- UnFted States

MSgr Silvia a native of Pall River served at St Peters Church in Provincetown for 27 years His only other assi1shyment St John the B-aptirt Church

Ordained to the priesthood or Dec 20 1919 St Johns was the new priests first assignment He remained at the cRurch unshytil No~ember 1924 when he was transferred to Ptovinceto~

On Oct 2 1951 Msgr Silvia returned to St Johns as pzsshytor a post hemiddot still fulfills with zeal and energy

His assignmetlt to St Jobnfl parish in 1919 was not ~1sgr Sinshyvias introduotion to the New Bedford parish

As a young boy the p2stcshyrecalls his poundathers weekly trips from Fall River to New Bedford to bring back a priest

Four Families There were few Portuguese

families in Fall River in those days he says When my father arrived in Fan River there were iust four Portuguese families in the city Gradually others setshytled there

My father used to drive over in a horse and buggy to bring Il priest back tc Fall River to ll3y

degbrought him back the next dzy Since those days of hischiMshy

bood Msgr Silvia observeamp-l Turn to Page Eighteen

Continued fronmiddot Page Three

the late Tobias and Ann Lynch ]Burke Mr Burke was born in Newport Tipperary Ireland and his speech bears witness to the o-it and lilt of his birthshyplce He is married te Catbshyerine Lowney Burke and the couple lives next to the Chanshycery

DI1 Davia Costa Dr Costa son of David CosU

and Julia Rodrigues is the husshyband of Louella Somerday and fther of five children A dentshyist in NeJ Bedford he is active ir ceo and in St Vincent ~e

Pml work on a parochial and al(l level He has been zealoUJ ir- many important phases ~

perish aetivity in Immaculate Conception Parish in New BedshyforC He was recipient of the Diocesan Marian Award in Deshycember

itpJlin 15 TIle awards Jill be presenteCl

at St Marys Cathedral Fa]] River on lIlonday evening April 15 at 8 PM At toot timeuro there will be the investi shyture of two lI-ionsignori the awarding of Papal Knight 03 SZ Gregory honors to nine ~sect- oeesan laymen and the Pro EecIesia et Pontipoundlce award kJ mother Pierre Marie adminisshytlato of St Annes Hospital IE Fall River~

Join Federation IIALEIGH (NC)-Forty ()(f thfl

matewide Raleigh dioceses 14~

tlriests have formed the North iCaFolina Priests Associatioil which will affiliate with a Emshy

ticmal federation DOW beiJl~

formed

May the Joy and Pomise 01- Easter

uplift your spirit and gladden

your hean

FROM THE OFRCEIIS AND PERSONfJB Of

qkJM~ERCHANTS CIa1iotuLe BANK

IN NEW BEDFORD

SOUTH BANK-Cove St at Iodney French Boulevard WEST BANK-Kempton Street at Mill Stret

LUNDS CORNER BANK-Acushnet Ave rear Lunds Comer DARTMOUTH BANK-Dartmouth Street near Rockdale Ave NORTH BANK-Acushnet Avbull at Coffin Ave

CENTER BANK-Purchase and William Sts priests in the San Antonio arcl1shy Next pastor was the Rev Mass He used to stay overnight tiiocese Manuel A da Silva wt() oom- at our hOuse ald JlG ~tbeI

-

18 Tti~ ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1969 CatecheticsWeek Set at StonehillDioce$clm ~j[llIlde[lj)fl5 Join Nal-gonGI Some 400 priests religious and laymen are expected to at shyMculrraurru U A$~ssinatBon tend a catechetics institute b be held Monday Aug 5 throughOf Dr Mriin luther KilnS Saturday Aug 10 at Stonehill College Diocesan schools shared i~ national mourning at the Sister Mary Francille CSJ

~8sassination of Dr Martin Luther King with special theology professor at Regis ColshyMasses or prayers offered in every school At Cassidy High lege will direct the institute in Taunton Rev John Moore chaplain celebrated a Mass and speakers will include Rev

Frederick Moriarty SJ Revfor the repose of the soul Cha~les E Cook Rev James F(l)f the Negro leader and rently hplds first place in the Hawker Sister Florence -MishyNotre Dame math league chels OLVM Gerard Potte~

tlie chapel by students in a demy Fairhaven have been study periods were spent in Girls at Sacred Hearts Acashy

bauoi and Mrs Helen Jacobs With the theme Making Alllvigil for peace working on a project to bring

Christian Youth Movement Easter cheer to patients at St Things New institute sessiono will discuss Scripture catechetshymembers at Jesus-Mary Aca- Lukes Hospital New Bedford ical techniques use of filmsdemy Fall River heard the New Under supervision of Sister Jushywith adolescents other visualFolk a group of singing Holy lie Louise SSCC theyve ~een aids parent education teamCross seminarians Their appear- making tray favors including teaching and creative dramaticsance was arranged under t~e decorative placemats and napkin

Further information is avail shydirection of Mofher John Scarry holders for adults and flowered able from Stonehill CollegeJRJM Jollipops chicky surprises and North Easton 02356Also at JMA its French Week bunny hats for childern

The observance- began Sunday Science Fair Winners when French Club members Jeanne Phenix Yvette Berthi- Holy Family had four winshy Charities AppeaI aume and Susan Cournoyer took ners at the annual New Bedford Continued from Page Three part in a play sponsored by the Science fair In the senior division

Community Fund CampaignPrevost French Club Les Fem- James Berry and John Thomas president Board of Managers mes Parlent Trop Throughout of the New Bedford school were of Boston Dispensary and vice

the week too there have middotbeen cited fo~ earth science and phy- the Diocesan cheerleading tour- will combine with the seniors president of USOseveral skits prepared by mem- sics proJects respectively while t tl h ld t F h th bZbers in the junior division both Pa- namen recen yea ee an Lor e occasIOn SInce oth He has been the recipient of

or effort at Prevost was tricia Downey and SharonSmola High but sports arent all that cltsses of the academy are small honorary degrees from Holy MaJ matter at the TauntoJl girls due to the fact that the high Cross College Tufts University

e Sunday program Whlch ln- were recognized for work in the h f h d I ld f b sc 001 Break ast lunc an schoo IS being phased out Suffolk University Bradford -luded In addItIon to the play fle 0 iology M formal dinner pace settmgs The Junipero Club of Holy Durfee College of Technology~veral talks by promInent any students won honors at h M h I I I were recently on display at the Family High recently sponsored of Fall Rivet and Lowell Techshy

I remiddotnch cItIzens a French song- t e assac usetts RegIOn S F h school library and members of a talk on drug addiction for jun- nological Institute ~t and a motion picture Clence alr eld in Fall Rlver They included Christine Four- the Mothers Auxiliary were on iors and seniors The talk was Bishop to AddJess Meeting

UN French Club nier Dominican Academy and hand to answer etiquette ques- given by two brothers one an Most Rev James L ConnollyAt Coyle the French Club di- Diane Desmarais Mt St Mary tions from the students ex-addict the other director of Bishop of Fall River will speak

Ilected by Brother Hugh McCabe Academy both Fall River Both And the Coyle Fathers Club Marathon House a center for to the priests parish trusteesIOeCently elected officers After girls were recogiIized by the held its annual Father-Son Com treatment of addicts located in chairmen of the Catholic Charishy8le votes were tallied however Southeastern District of the Mas- munion breakfast at the school Coventry RIo ties Appeal and the invited lays our man at Coyle it looked sachuse~ts Dental Society bull with Robert Cahill ofthe Rhode CongratuIcitions go to Joseph gue9ts of the 111 diocesan if ~embers were voting for Debra Lay Dominican Aca- Island Food and Drug Commis Abraham of St Anthony High parishes bull UN delegation The presidents demy received a savings bond sion as guest speaker He dis- for meriting runner-up position Roland A Lafrance 1968 ApshyliPot wa~ captured he reports from the Bristol South Distriet cussed harmful effects of various iil the state finals of the annual peal lay chairman will also adshy a Polish fellow Cbarles Ozug Medical Auxiliary arid Michael drugs American Legion olatorical con- dress the 800 expected to attend lames OBrien a true Irishman Zito Bishop Feehan High At~middot The Catholic Students Mis- test - the opening meeting of the won the vice-presidential spot tleboro was awarded a plaque sion CrUsade at Stang H~gh has In club~ews at~HA the Senshy campaign for funds for the 30 while the treasurers job was by the Womens Auxil1ary to the taken as a special project this ior Science Club will conduct agencies of the Catholic Chadshy~warded to Jorge Matesanz -a Mass Veterinary ASsn month of April the collection of a farewell meeting for seniors ties Appeal

BASKETBALL PLAYERS On basketball team at Connolly High Fall River are from left Tim Duffy Tom Kroger John Long Joe Kelly Greg Sullivan Mike Manning

~~dent of Spanisll extraction Winners in the division of donated medical supplies and this ~month and members will Only Paul Bor9ue the secretary earlhscience Were John Dias eyeglasses for deprived Peoples visit an encephalitis clinic in I ~anaged to make the scene for Thomas Burk~ anciRobei-tClou~ of the world Supplies collected Freetown in May The Stamp France tier FeehahMicIlael Cote Pre illbe forwarded to the Cathi- and Coin Clubis planning a pubshy

At Bishop Stang iil North vost and Elizabeth Lavoi~ Do- olic Missions Medical Bureau for lie exhibition of members col- Dartmouth the math team led minican shipment iections in May imd the Chess by high scorer Lawrence l3yrnes Awards in math and engineer- Upco~ing at S~A Fairhaven Club has undergone reorganiza- placed secon~in a reeentBqs- ing went to Carol Vasconcellos is the aruiual senior prom which tion election of officers inshyflon public schools math meet Mt St Mary Madeleine Delisl~ wilL be held in the Colonial cluding Edward Norman presishyThe Stang team paced by the and Vivian Blais and Michael R60m of Whites restaurant in dent Daniel Brule vice-presi- shyeo-sIstent good work of George Zito Feehan Genevieve Pappas Westport from 8 to midnight dent Diane Lizotte secretary Oliver and EIleen Keavy cur- and Debra Lay Dominican Joan Friday night May 24 Juniors TuniorProm

Basile Feehan Amato Polselli The Holy Family Junior Prom Prevost and Sharon Woycie- Board ofmiddot Trustees isslated for Friday night AprilCentennialmiddot chowski Mt St Mary were 26 at Kennedy Center The prom

Continued from Page Seventeen cited To Study Changes will last from 8 to 11 and will Chemistry winners included have Carousel as its themebroad smile on his face-many Jane Arruda Anne Lewis De- WASHINGTON (NC) - The Mlisic will be by the Escorts

other families have arrived from nise Michaud Elizabeth St board of trustees of the Catho- And the Holy Family debatePltlrtugua1 A man d Diane Lamontagne lic University of America in team tied for first place in the Our Lady of Mt Carmel par- Christine Fournier Dominican Washington D C will meet Narry League with Cassidy A ~h was detached from St Johns Anne Sullivan and Pamela Can- Sunday April 21 in St Louis playoff will be held As of now as the Portuguese population dee Feehan Marilyn Riley and to consider a wide range of rec- Cassidys debate reco~d is 12 grew Then Our Lady of the Ann-Marie Charrette Sacred ommended changes resulting wins out of 14 debatesjrnmaculate Conception parish Hearts Fall River Irene Caron from a year-long study of the was erected to care for families Cassidy Marilyn Bentley Mt pontifical university by a comshyi Portuguese descent living in mitteee headed by Dr Carroll ~e North End of New Bedford St Mary Hochwalt

In the field of physics Alan middotRAMBLERToday St John the Baptist White Prevost Michelle Paquet The meeting will be held in ehurch has about 4000 parishshy SHA Fall River JamesReid Jrconjunction witll the Spring Americas Economy King ioners Our numbers started Prevost Mary Soans Jane Mc meeting of the National Confershy Fnr the Best Deal Come To dropping about seven years ago Donald and Martba Nugent yent ence of Catholic Bishops Broadway Ramblerasgr Silvia explains He feels St Mary The trustees are expected 10 INC part of the drop in membership Representatives from Diocesan name a new 30-man board meet 768 BROADWAYis due to a number of families schools to the Mass State Sci- with faculty representatives for RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 131moving outside the parish )ounshy ence Fair will include Michael the first time in histoi-y and CHARLES J DUMAIS Presdarles Intermarriages with othshy lito Amato Polselli Debra Lay discuss the search for a new er nationalities account for still Madeleine Delisle Jane Arruda university rector to replacemore losses Anne Lewis Father J~dhn P Whalen ~ho ~III11I11I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I11I1I1HIUIIIIIIIlIIlilllllllllllfllHlIilttmmIllIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllllnIlIllIllHIIIIIIIIIJ111~ However the Mother Church Denise Michaud Alan White was naine last October to a ef the Portuguese is not fading Michelle Paquet Elizabeth St one-year term as acting rector E WEEKEND SPECIAL sect away AmandSharon Woyciechowski A new school was built in New Projector

f957 It is expensive Msgr Silvia admits but I felt we needed it

St Anthony High in New Bedshyford is rejoicing over acquisi shytion of a movie projector as a

Parish gtrganizations are active gimiddotft from the alumni association and individual parishioners are willjng to give of their time

Presentation to principal Sister Lucille Champagne was made

and effort Perking

to keep the parish by Mrs Josephine Lafleur sociation president

asshy

Now they are getting read7 Cassidy-Coyle cheerleaders Jor a 100th anniversary captured third pillce v9Phy iil

_

Sturtevant 6 Hook

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Westport Real Doric-Horse lHE ANCHOR-DIoeIee r bull I AJu n

Case Somerset Favorites In Narry Diamond League

Case High of Swansea and Somerset are pre-season ehoices in this seasons Narragansett League baseball race but the club th8lt will bear watching is Westport TIne darkshyhorse Villagers may have a few surprises for Narry foes Another small area school

with a respectable 8-6 recordthat potentially has a shot Only one member of that at a league championship is squad Calvin Hopkinson will Norton of the Tri-Valley not be playing for the Villagers Conference Coach Ed Bibeau this Spring With the rest of the has most of last Deasons Central club ready to go - watch Jlor Village regulars Westport to make its presence in the fold ready lmown to challenge the Among fuose returning are perennial Paul Eastwood an Russ Picard favori1es If 0 T two of the better performers in Narry honors the circuit a year ago Eastwood amp1i1 at Norton led the team in hitting with a (C 0 a c h Peter highly respectable 360 averagem[l ~ek has pitched and played the infield G3ven returning Picard like Eastwood 15 also ~nnen for versatile An outfielder by trade ~theY chamshy he also takes his turn on the ii~~JWhip bid Peter mound for Coach Bibeaus nine Weo~port Bartek Carl Zajac and Jeff Hague tmIshed the 1961 eampaign ill round out Bibeaus four-man ~ place in tbe NalT7 loop pitching staff

Norton Bids for Tri-Valley Crown jfOO task of handling the but in thin scholastic year of

~tJ of this quartet will fall athletic surprises it may not be Gpoundl ~e shoulders of either Ron as big as some thinllt ~JmOi) or Manny Cabral both

A second place finisher inexperienced receivers ConnOlll 1967 the Norton Lancers haveexcel1B not only defensively their sights on the Tri-Valleybut likewise with the bat He Conference crown The clubsbit at a 333middot clip last Spring one-two hitters last campaignJohn Souza and Mike Andras have departed from the Norton th better than 300 hitters baseball scene but the teamqaln will be out to join the one-two pitching punch is reshyleague leaders in batting prowshyturning Juniors Ken Allen aess They should put a wallop left-hander who had a perfectin Westports oHensive attaCK 7-0 record last Spring and ArtIf Coach Bibeaus boys can dushyBouchard will be relied uponplicate their Performances of a heavily to bring the league flagJellr ago Offensively and biB to Norton Coach Bartek alSobig four comes through on middottbe hopes to get some help in middotthemound Westport may realize a the pitching departmentmiddot fromlong awaited Narry championshyFred Rego Bill Gorczyca andEip dream Admittedly if Ie Steve Nichols bull bie word in ~~rts_tuture

~ ~ bull I

OpeUp With~on-League Co~esttsmiddot Other returnees incl~ Capshy develop rapidlymiddot defensively if

tain Mike Wynnn Greg Croff they are to regain the leagues BOb Adams Tim McEndy and divisional crown - whicb flbeymiddot Paul Hassie Wynn a senior lost to HoWston last Spring middotmiddot will be starting his third season and gain a shot at the Trl shyill left field with Cruffstarting V~ey Conference ebampionshyhis second campaign in center ship Many area clubs openThey will be joIned by Wynns their campaign this week with brother Ricky in right fied non-league games highlighting

The infield win be anchored the action League competition by Adams at second base and will commence for the most Hassle at short Newcomers part next week Richy Silvia and George Macshy Mother Nature has done her Arthur are presently battling it job this Spring Baseball coaches out for the third base job and throughout -the diocese admit Lorrie Adams also a first-year that this is the best Spring they man appears to have the inside have had to prepare flbeir track on first base charges in many a year Weather

cannot be blamed for a slowMcEndy who has been the start this time around All areLancers starting catcher since eagerly awaiting the umpireshis Freshman year is starting first call to play ballhIs third campaign behiJd the

plate Bartek expects McEndy to hold the inexperienced inshy New School System field together

The Lancers will have to imshy In German State prove upon their hitting and DUSSELDORF (NC) - The

North Rhine-Westphalia state parliament middothas approved aCanadian Prelates change in the states school sysshytem that probably will meanEstablish Council the end of many denominational

OTTAWA (NC)-The Catho-shy schools Hc bishops of Canada have esshy By an overwhelming majorshytablished a 12-member Fiscal ity the parliament voted to Affairs Council composed of change the state constitution and clergy Religious and laymen establish the nondenominational who will advise the Church on Christian school in which reli shyfinanclal matters gious training is given by Cathshy

Among the areas which are olic and Protestant instructors receiving ini~ial attention of the in the same school as the patshycommittee is the question of tern for state-supported schools whether the Church should be from the fifth through the nint subject to government taxation grades and if so what form of taxation In the past the state has supshywould be equitable to churches ported Illeparate Catholic and government and other taxshy Pro tell tan t denominational payen Khoola

-~) PASSION PLAY Today Christians hold the Solemn Observance of the Lords Supper

It is commemorated ina PMsion Play at Prevost High School Fall River by David Poisshyson as Christ Paul Martel left 8$ St John and Paul Bouampquet as St Peter

DominicGlIsmiddot Rent ApGrt~~rit in Inner -Cimiddottimiddot middot

Want t~ Get Closer to I Agony of the Worl~middot WASHINGTON (NC)middot Pift his experience in the neig~lgtorshy ruary 1966 because theJ

Dominican priests-each doing hood is invaluable in helping wanted to get closer to the bis own thing-are living middotin an both prisoners and parolees He agony of the world While nol apartment in the inner ~ cd said the insight he gains into eliminating the academic life Washington here they come from ancl h~w they felt that living in the inlleJ The five run the gamut from they view life aids him In mv city would be as important bull

a professor of moral theology at ing them intelligent advice and learning experience as academic the Don)inican House ofStucUeII 8ssis~nCe study to a prison chaplain a1 the Diamp- Father William Kane is middotthemiddotNeighborhOoclll[aatrict of Columbia Jail Ibey neighborhood man of the have in common1heiy addresa A Pr~ceton graduate ~itl1 apartment Hemiddotworks with minshyand a desire to understand and doctorates from Harvard aJgt4 isters inmiddot the area in establishing alleviate the problems ~ livlnc OxfCrd Father Albert Brodershy youth programs and fightina I in a poor Urban community ick teaches Constitutional LalV for better housing and fail

Father TbomasHea~ middotttie at the catholic University Law rent laws His motive is to givemoral theology professor aDd School the people in the community aD author of a reCent bOOkmiddotID awareness of their own dignitymiddotBe and Father Heath startedFaee of An~sh is 0Il 1be to affirm the fact that it is athe apartment project in Feb-bOard of direCtors of the Pe0shy ood place to live ples Center a house soon to be

the rehabilitationopened for Criticizes Usury of alcoholics He also meets

MEXICO CITY (NC)-Mexshy5 50 01- a SYSTEMATIC wimiddotth ~culties of Wasbingtcm

icc CityS Jose Cardinal Garibiseminaries to discuss policyshy bull 10 year SAViNGSRivera urged bankers meetingmaking and apostolic activity MONTHLY DEPOSITSat the National Bankers Conshy

Legal Aid Office vention in Guadalajara to comshy 5 00 01- a INVESTMENT bat usury and work closely bull 10 year SAVINGS

Father Joseph Cooney a NOTICE ACCOUNTSwith the government to proshylawye~ who has worked 011

voter registration in the South mote the social welfare of all II REGULAR4 5001 the Mexican people bull 10 Jflar SAVINGSand took an active part in dvil

rights activities such lIS

~lma march is DOW admin~ Bass Rivertering a legal aid office in the CENTERneighborhood of the Dominishy Savings Bank

cans apartment Volunteer law Paint and Wallpaperstudents from the Catholic Uni- Bank 8y Man I

versity of Ameiica assist him Dupont Paint

We Pay The Postage

IJcor Middle St

A third member of the group m this program 4iiii 422 Acush Ave bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA Fat her Raymond MalonSOl1 ~ New Bedford bull SOUTH VARMOUTH 4raquo HYANNISserves as the Catholic chapiain bull PARKINGmiddot

bull DENNIS PORT bull OSTtRVILLEatmiddot the D C jail A late vocashy Rear of Storetion Father Malonson has been ordained only two years middot Father Malonsoll feels U1at

LEVESQILIES OFFla E~lnPMENTNow Many Wear Wood Metal Desks and ChairsFALSE TEETH

With More Comfort JUST GiVE ME A CHANe TO QUOleTo overcome discomfort when

dentures sllp sllde or loosen Just sprinkle a llttle FASTEETH on your 187 SHAWMUT STREET bull NEW BEDFORD MASS

middot plates FASTEElH holds dentures firmer You eat better feel more PO Box 2062 - Hervey L Levesque

middot -wont sour Helps check plate odor comfortable FASTEETH Is alkaline

Dentures that fit are lIlSSentlai to Telephone 993middot1264middot health See your dentist regularly Get FASTEETB at all drUB counten ___ _ _____11_0__-D-tcl----4

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs April 11 1968

PhySDCOUi) l1JJ Uges litUBgy C~[filges

~n Last RStes RED BANK (NC) A

~atholic physician called for revision of the liturgical $orm of the Anointing of the Sick cluring a discussion on The Chaplains Role With the Dying Patient at Riverview Hospital here in New Jersey

Dr George J Sheehan an alumnus of Manhattan College and a founder of Christian Brothers Academy in nearby lLincroft was one of three apeakers at the symposium coshyaponsored by the hospital and Ute 1 Redmiddot Bank Council of

ilhurches Citing obvious failures by

both physician and clergyman iin helping the dying patient and bis family Dr Sheehan sugshygested members of the family Ghare inmiddot a ceremony which would exchange feelings of llove and hope between them ElDd the dying person

Dr ~heehan observed that while inadequacy in the face of death has been in the past apparent to the Protestant criergyman it is now also felt by Catholic priests

They findmiddot he said the La~t Sacrament in its present form Ii a consolation only to those with the strong faith of a Breton iiteasant-a kind of faith they e seeing less and l~ss-

Appropriate Theology He also said while the develshy

pment of a Common Christian itervice parlakirtg of the same llodividual familymiddot and commu~

Ility significance as Bap~i8ai -dMarriage would be a giant p in middotheiping people to a middotbappy death iit would remain IDol theologians to present- a relshy

qwant lmd acceptable image of mail in this time and this place ilnd to develop an appropriate eology of death heaven ~nd bell in order to make a signifi- sant change in our life style

lOd therefore in our approach to death

Other panelistsmiddot were the Rev Seorge Fitzgeraid a Presbyteshyaan minister middotand middotchaplain at Princeton Hospiital arid Mn Ruth Snyder a nurse of the lIiverview Hospital staffmiddot

POSTER CHILD LEADS WAY Joey BeIge 8 of Syraeuse NY leads themiddot way down a White House lttairway in the company ofthe Fi~st t-adymiddotMrsLyndon B Johnson

and Mrs Muriel Humphrey wife ofthe Vice-President Joeymiddotis this years poster child of

the National Association for Retarded Children H~ ismiddot thesQn ofMt and Mrs Robert Beige middotmembersmiddotOf St Vincent de Paul parish in Syracuse whos-e ot-herfive children SlHshy

round their Uttle broth~r wil1hmiddot the love and care to h~lp him livea full and happymiddot life

Penn See Studies Poverty Pmiddotrogram HARISBlJRq (NC)--Coadju- is being made to see ho)Vtbe to coordinate and channel our

tor Bishop Joseph T Daley diocese canmiddot best use its re-middot efforts in the fieldmiddot vicar general- of the Harrisburg sources to alleviate poverty Bishop Daley said it ismiddot im- diocese calledmiddot on the nearly problems middotperative that all our people 50000 Catholics in the area to He alsomiddot said Wemiddot contem- knoW and understand the probshy

acquaint th~mselves with 10- middotplatemiddot the early middotestablishment of middotIem of middotracism and the funda- calracfal and poverty problems amiddotmiddot diocesanmiddot human relations mental moral injustices which

In a lettermiddot read at aU Masses commission middotto serve asmiddot a liaison middotare at the root of the deplorable BishopDlIleT said middotthat a study with all people Collcerned and conditions in our own area

Urges Hospitals Re~ognie Unio~s

CLEVELAND (NC) - AI layshymens group here has asked the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hospitals to declare its willingshyness to recognize labor unions as collective bargaining agents for hospitals employes

lNle request came in a letter from William A caldwell chainnan of the eurolevellllnd Conference of Laymen to Sister ~ry Collette of Hamilton Ohio president of the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hosplshytala during a one-day meeting here of the Ohio Hospital Assoshyciation convention

The laymens group said such a statement would promote the human dignity of hospital emshyployes in real and immediate ways serve the common good of our communities and inshycrease the understandingmiddot of Catholic teaching by all the citishyzens of Ohio

The letter pointed out that the National Catholic Hospital Association 1 a s t November called on Catholic hospitals tiraquo be guided by the social teachshyings of the Church and to deal with unions that employecfgt choose

Discuss ~iot Report On Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC) - Beginshyning Sunday April 14 the Catholic Hour will present over the NBCmiddot network a three-part series The Climate of Change

Evolution or Revolution foshycusing on three areas of social and religioUs concern today today

~gr Rop~rt Fox cOordinashytor of Spanish community 00shy

middot lion in the New York arclidioshymiddoteese will discuss The Riot centommissi~ middotReport Amiddot Chrisshy

tiati Response April 14 Msgr Ivan D Illich of the Intereushy-tural Center 01 Language and D middotoe u men tat 1 on CuershyDavaca Mexf~o win be intershyviewed Aprjl 21 and Father Francois Houtart Belgian 00shyciologist will be interviewed Apiil 28

The National Council of Cathshy oUc Men producer of the OathshyoUe Hour reconunendseheckshymiddoting local newspaper programa for broadca9t time in particushymiddotRar areas

I Am The RestUlJTectiltogtD

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FALL RIVER

Page 5: 04.11.68

5 Expect Approval Of Inter-Church Agency i~ l~~as

[JAN ANTONIO (NO) shyRwttfication ()f D proposed eonstitution by every Chrisshytian denomination i11 the fibte may result in a new Texas tnter-ehurch cooperation agenshyey according to the executive director of the Texas Catholic Conlelence organization of the ampites Catholic bishops

CaHan Graham made the preshydiction here shortly after a mashytDritv of delegates to the 15th annual general assembly of the re[(t3 Council of Churches wted to join with the 10Cathshytiic dioceses in Texas to form the nations first state-level ebureh body uniting Protestant Boman Catholic and Orthodox ~hllrenes

The1raquooposed constitution for che Texas Conference 1)1 Churehes as the united body is tID be known is now sUbject io i(ltification by the 11 Protesshy~t member organizations Bnd fihe Orthodox who comprise the arras Council of Churches It in llso subject to approval by fhe 10 Catholic dioceses in Te3B

Bishops to JIacide lbe boald of directors of the

le2tQ3 Catholic Conference has ldready approved the proposed

dlleW constitution in principle Graham said but it must still be oonsidered by each individshya bishop for his own diocese

Graham said the Texas Cathshync ConIerence itself wUl beshylaquo)Re G membtu of the new 01shy

pnilation but wm also continshy~ fo funotion autonomously

lie traced the proposed 01-

miltation 10 the MatCh 1966 mooting of frhe Texas COUDcll fII Churches general asSembly when an invitation was issued to ~tholics to join theCQuncil

4CAs G result this information was trnnsmitted to the bislu)P$ ~ham recalled The bishQP3 decided we didnt know enough tlbout the counoilandbotb sides began ) study more than bull Jlear-and~a-half ago

New OODfititllltnOD ~t of these discussions both

td~ tried to take a iresh look middot1IIt the existing constitution ol ampbe council he continued 1nshyad of talking about joining bull lllew proposed constitution foi IeOrganization was submittedtgt tile Catholic bishops

The proposed new constitushyGoo GIaham explained is deshygned to bringabout better ~ ~ration affiOlg all alw~hes mm office llQ$ already cbeen -operating

Before the (council -invited eatholic membership Catholic pr~ests and laymen had attendshylid meetings ofthe Texas Counshy_I raquof Churches for two year official observers

Prelate Keynoter A1Convention

CINCINNATI (NC)-Keynote _~~er attne golden Jubilee Cltholic Students MissionCrnshy-deconvention Aug 22 to 25 laquo the University -(jf Notre Dame will be Bishop Jphn J Wright of Pittsburgh

bo highlighting the 50th -niversary df the mJ1liOlllshymember youth organization wiU be the presen~ -of Father Cllfshytom JKing SVD Divine

Worn missionary who founded Cbe CSMC

middotThe crusade headquartera here said a pageant -depicting both the mission history of Amelica and the career of the ~l1C will be staged in the OO~ OLaughlin auditorium Qf m Marys College adjacent to Notre Dame Student grouP ~n 16 areas of the U S wlM ~e Alart

VISITING THE SliCK When Pope Paul recently vjsited the working-class Prenestino district of Rome he took time to visit bed-ridden 83-year-old Teodoro Tarquini The Holy Father offered Mass in Italian at the parish church of St Leo NC Photo

Defend Textbo~kLaw cinShowdown Case JE-dllCltlJion OrganiotiollS File middotEcumenical Brief

in the ease oaidnomatter whatschoolsth~ One blief was middotfiled in behalf child ran attend

of the National Catholic Eduea The brief contends the ar~-tioruJlI AsSociation theLutheran Education Association middotthe Nashy Halmony in Churchtiolllll Union Of Chtistiaa

BONN (NC) -There is com- ISchools and tl1le National Conshyplete harmony in the Catholicierence of Yeshiv Principals Church in tungaIY among the

ment that s~(lte aid in supplying middottextbooks in secular sUlgtiects to children in nonpublic schoob is 4 direetaid to religion is Irivolous

The attorneys general brief contends a state may extend publicly financed aid such as police fire protection public safety and transportation to school 9tudents whether in public or private schools The brief contends that the textbook law falls within the category 0pound sunh poundlid since it benefits the student not the school

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 11 1968

Protesa- ~HEhcps

In IPaf~fi1lm~rd BARCELONA (NC)-Leadefll

oi 30 lay apostolate groups in Barcelona have petitioned two high-ranking Spanish prelates to resign their government-apshypointed posts in the nation~

parliament the Cortes We believe the Second Vatshy

ican CouncUs directives are very clear on this point the

petitioners pointed out to Archshybishop Casimilo iVlo ICill0 of Madrid vice-president of the Spanish Bishops Conference and Auxiliary Bishop Jose Guerra Campos of Madrid

A spokesman at the iladrid chancery office reported that an oerage of 40 letters a day middotare received on the subject some in favor some against the bishops presence on a governshyment political body

The Barcelona document pointed out that this is a matshyter that deeply affects th~ Church in our country

If furthermllre we take into account the fael that great numshybers particularly among the workers have left the Church because of Ets liaison with the state there is no possible reason to continue the symbol of such a union the document emphashysized

A m on g the organizations making the request were the Workers Catholic Actfon the sodalities the Catholic Student Youth Organization the Indeshypendent Youth Association the Spiritual League 01 Our Lady of Monserrat the Pax Christi Movement and the Catholic Rural Youth Organization

(ORREIA amp SONS ONE STOP

SHOPPING CENTER

bull Television bull Grocery bull Appliances bull Furniture

104 Allen 51 New Bedford

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WASHlNGTON (NC) -Forshymidable forces from Churehshystate ranks forged a defense of the 1966 New york state textshybook laws validity fox the i~

pending showQownbefore the United States Supreme Court

A ptiest jQined tbe -gentlral counsel of the USmiddotCatholicConshy

ference in filing an ecumenicalshybpe brief nn behalf ofnational Catholic Protestant and Jewish educational organizations urging the nations highes tribunal to uphold the law

The attorneys general of three stat~s in another briet joined in supporting the contenshytion of New Yo-rkAtty Gen Louis J Lefkowitz that the only beneficiaries ot this law Ire students and their parenUi not schools andconsequently the law is constitutional

The friends 02 th1l court (amici curiae) briefs were filed in preparation for the hIgh courts consideration ot the law Which provides that the state fUlllishIree textbPokg insecu WI subjects to students 0pound palOshy(lhimiddotai and other nonpubUe schools The court has yet to schedulemiddot8 date for argumenill

aid to benefit a religious group But the wall of separation is

between Church and state not between the child and the

State the educational groups brief reminded Since the Sushypreme Court decided the Evershy30n case in 1947 l different tack has b~en pursued by the court in considering state aid directly to students whether they attend public or private schools the blieI underscored

Tee brief states that 85 per -cent of grammar and highscool students in the nation attend public schools either because their parents prefer that type of education oibecause the choice is dictated by economic necessity The other 15 per cent are in nonpublic schools and more than 90 per cent 1)f them GlTe in church~related schpo13 the brief adell

Frivolous Argument The educational ~ups do

not not contend the state must supply assistance to nonpublie f1Chool children but if it exshymiddottends secular educational beneshy~its 00 all school children thea it is within middotthe state eonstitushymiddottional discretion to supply such

Father Charles M Whelan bishops priests and laymen altgt May we rejoice forever in tfu~51 of Fordham University law cording to ll report in Magyarschool joined William R Conseshy tloryof middottheResurrection Kurir the Hungarian Churchs dine usec general counsel in official news agency WOhicb filing the briel Hannon Burm noted that the Hungarianof the NCEA Francis X Gallagshy Church seems to be free of tile her of aaltimoe and Alfred ~ dissension lthat exists in the Scanl-an of Washington served EhuiCb Bpoundt man Westem JOYOUS GREETINGS as consultants in preparing tbe oountries brieC

The other brief -was Jiled by ~ OFFI(IRS TRUSTEES CORPORATORS AND STAFF At~ys Gen James L Oakes of Vermont William C Sennett ofPenllsylvania -Dod Herbert F DiSimone of Bllode Island

The educational group cmshygthasized they do not want raquo see the wall f separation beshytween Church and stateleilliei disnuintled or displaced would oppose the znoot paltrY wnouut of direct governmentllil

MontlePJumbing amp HeafiD1gCo Over 35 Years

of Satisfied Service Reg Mas~er Plumber middot7023

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FaiR River fiJ5a7491

~ itizens 1

DOWNTOWN fALL IRIVIE~

SAVINGS lBANKamp

6

They expect to hear religious leaders speak in those tenns history to one local or to a certain segment ofour8OCh~tyrhe race issue was- injecte41

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall RiverThurs Apr 1l19~8 Rx for Renewal J

Accomplishi1lJg the Dream The senseless and savage and tragic death of Dr

Martin Luther King Jr is not the end Of his nonviolence erusademiddot But it should bring a deepening realization of

what nonviolence entails The Ghandian Way of nonviolence is not simpiy a techshy

nique of sittiIig on sidewalks and not moving a matter of being passive and silent in the face of attack~ verbal or physical It embraces moie than that

It is basically-and Dr King middotknew this-a spiritual force As a former Governor General of India has remarked The renunciation ofmiddot external violence is not enough but must be accompanied by asepsis of the heart for the sucshycessful surgery of nonviolence How can One love where there is so much cause for hatred The answer lies in everyshyones heart and can be appealed to through love and then and then Only will the man be changed

Nonviolence means bringing to bear against the forces of hatred and prejudice and ignorance the still more powshyerful force of intelligence and education and love of God and neighbor Nonviolence means ~eeting overcoming evil by the sheer power of courage and work and love

This Dr King understood This alone will accomplish his dream

Sniritual Leaders r

Lay people are being urged to get more and more inshyvolved in the work of religion When they do they many

th h f t b times make more sense t han ose w 0 pro ess 0 e teachers middotof religion

Last week for example a professor at the Harvard Divinity School and the Episcopal TheologiCal School said that sex between unmarried persons could be morally good or bad depending upon the situation And during the same week the chief of the Psychiatric Service Harvard Unishyversity Health Services took colleges and parents to task forcondoning free sex behavior in youth and f9r not bolshystering young people in maintaining high moral standards He counselled chuicli leaders notmiddot to abandon Ii spiritual ap

peal-toyoutll puttomaintainlheif ttaditional religious Ap proach to reinforce high moral standards

So hereismiddotthe picture-a religious lea~~rseeingl1ot~ ing wrong in sex between the unmarried and a ~ymaJl

~ Ateeing everything wrong InIt -

In the light of the Gospels the theologian is _Wrong pat _y Gn ~ n i _ereneemiddot and the layman is right shy

And this is why religious leaders arein many -inshylltailces losing whatever credentials tliey Duiy possess 10 The senseless murder of Dr Martin Luther Xng Jr

Pl d d th f od agaln brlmiddotngs lnto focus the vlolence that ImiddotSmiddot ours Yes 0urs 1ead eop e are en owe WImiddot a meas~re 0 go _sens~ bull They have some ideas about the main thrustmiddot of the Gospelsbull -Too often we have relegated the dark pages of our natio~

And when they hear deviations then they write off the We seem to fool that the religious leader and listen to him no more Of course those events which took place in fortable christianity I I Even m our own locale 1he who are looking for justification for some type of action ~emphls ha~e Itt ~ connec- people who could have doneso that the religious leader approves will be glad to welcometlOn WIth thIS area of the much reillly have contributed him to the bandwagon And then the responsible Jaymen-shythe physicians and psychiatrists and civic leaders and those who are concerned about the moral and family health of the

community--must move into the scene and try to repair the damage done

Perhaps this can be the message of Easter-instead of talking about the resurrection in glowing and lyrical terms

instead of speaking about glory and joy the -reaJ message of Easter is one of love of God for men and love of men

for God And Christ gave the standard of Love-If any man love me he will keep my commaridments~Iid themiddotmiddot party orperscgtn cOncerns him-Father and Iwill love him and we will come to hIm and

_ we will makemiddot our abode with him Theoiogians mayor may not understand the full imshy

plication of thesemiddot words For the most partthe people do even if their actions at times do nqt measure up~ T~ey

understand - amJ th~y expect the~r ~pjritual advisors1q lnderstand and to preach these Gospel words all Gospelmiddot words

rheANCHOR P~~ I fnVImiddotrE~ OF T~E DIOCESE OF FILl PVER Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River

410 Highland Avenue Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev iohn P Driscoll

- MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

nation A certain emotional sympathy

is created by the vivid -reality middot of the television For the most part it is just another drama that will pass in time and thingS will go on and a~lwill be well This indeed is thetragedy of Memphis

Natio~al problems cannot be conidered to be isola~ed events When ~ national mQvement

self wi~h the basic principles 01human existence all humanity is involved Such is the ease memo~ are the people wh- Bishop JOseph-middot LBerilllrcii

with Civil Rights such is the -re still III the depths of 8Uffer-middot Will serve as adminiStratOr iii ease and the movement pre-~ Thu~ when ~ new genera- tbe Atlanta Archdiocese linti serited to the nation by Dr ti9G recelves th~ mherIta~ elf a successor is named for Martin Lutl1er ~ing poverty the prospe~IS ~ 13te Archbishop Paul j Hammiddotmiddot Yet the majority of Ameri- Ul~ first to deny that they ue cans have for mimygenera-middot his heirs This is true of most tions considered ~e plight of men regardless of the color ttl the urban ghetto from the com- 1heir skiil This is what we fortable ~rm-chair of a com- must kUly overco~

Now ISTime for CiiI Rights Concern The words of Dr King cershy

tainly were not understood by the senseless mobs that took to the streets of our cities after his death Nor were they undershystood by the majority of white middle-class Americans

The apathy and lack of genshyuine concern for the civil rights movement among this group is galling

It is these factors that aHow mad men to assassinate We

middotmus condemn the lack of un middotaerstanding the disdainful atti-middot

t hi euro moonIn(j

1lt ng e a reported there

Rev Johnf Moore St Josephs Taunton were~good and sufficient ~ middotIA lilA Inimiddoto~hi~~t~~~~bers~

The Tragedy of Mempmiddothmiddots _ I

h d I d ff

tude and the smug selfshyrighteousness of our bourgeoismentality

To claim that we are all for the civil rights movement and then to deny a home to a man because he is negro loots the middotmind and arsons the spirit of our scciety even to a greater degree than a street mob It is the spirit of our society the spirit of our country that is at stake

Any hope of postponing a 00shycision em this matter died at

so very little The structured class system that has been our inheritance from our early New England ancestors has been only insulated and protected by the progress of an affluent aociety

When a man makes good hetends to leave the memories of his afflicted past in the voidof a twilight z(me The blood middotsweat and tears poverty ~ ~n forgotten in the land ol gracious living TemporarY Heaci

Even more removed fJoa tlTLANTA (NC) -Amiddotuxilia~

Priests Senate Votes Support Of OrdinarY

BUFFALO (NC) ThirteeJl of 21 members of the Buffalo Senate of Priests have votedmiddot to support Bishop James amp McNulty in a controversy SIDol

rounding the transfer of a priesi from a Negro ghetto parislli Eight members of the senato abstained from voting

The controversy began when Father William G Warthling was transferred from St Nicltshyolas parish in Buffalo to O~

Lady Help of Christians parisJl in the suburb of Cheektowaga

Father Warthling and some members of St Nicholas parislli charged that Bishop McNuIQ transferred the priest because he encouraged the Holy Name ~iety to seek membership _ BUILD a militant social actiC group formed under the leade~ ship of Saul Alinsky contJicgt versial ooinrnunity organizei

Members of the parish and ci1 BUILD staged a protest demo~

stration in front of Bishop ~ Nultys residence

Msgr Bernard J McLaughiiC5 diocesan chancellor said thl transfer of Father Warthlin(]

was routine _but said the die-shycese frowns on the methocilo which BUILD uses middotto better tho lot of the Negro communit~

Sufficient Reasons At the height of the controshyversy the Buffalo Senate of

Priests met to hear a report of the Priests Advisory Board OIl

li~e trTahnsfebor 0rd Father Warthshyf

nan bull

---------~--shyMemphis

If we wish to contin1e NonViolent doctrine of 0shyKing it is now up to us IIIe time for dQlay has passed Either we commit ourse shyto the principles that were to tered and dramatized by 0shy

King or we perish in the flaJJ of anarchy and civil discord

The assassins bullet again forced America to make a dedshy

sion In a country in an area where the majority claim to be Christian we better start liviDa the Christian ethicmiddot and tile Christian message of love _ another as I have loved yoshyIf we refuse to accept this meeshysage we fail not only lt~ll natiOlll but also as a Christian pe~

In the controversy by a BUILD spokesman who said BishOJlMcNultys removal of Fathel Warthling reflected apatNgt izing attitude toward black people and a general lack ef understanding of ghetto probshylems Msgr Neylon said all senate members rejected charge

All 21 members of the senatlrl VOted for a motion to appoint committee to make public theworks and programs which the diocese has developed amo~ minority groups and in the ner city

shy

Voted support for BishOpmiddotat N~1tY on thetransfer isBoIlEigJjtpries~ abstainedfroin ie vote on the grounds that apite the boards explanaiiclli the issue was still not clear -

However each of the ei priests who abstained from

ing said they deplored middotcharg6f racism against Bishop M0shy--Nulty according to Msgr lolie Neylon senate president

7 middotMrsmiddotmiddotmiddotStewart Fails to Tell Casey Story Convincingly

By Rt Rev Msgr John S IKelIDedy

Ramona Stewarts Casey (Little Brown 34 Beacon St Boston Mass 02106 $695) is anovel which promises more than it delivers Itsmiddot action begins in 1860 concludes in 1886 and HI laid in New York City The focus is on Tom Casey aged 20 at the start A native of Ireland he remembers the horrors of County Cork in the years of Qle great famine His family Bed their home went to LivershyPOOl- suffered muough a fiveshy

weeks voyageIlrJ a sailinglib i p finallyderer Il the citys resources eettled in New even moves briefly on the

York For them middotftinges of the gaudy nouveau I A m e I i e a richeset typified by Jim Fisk

008 not turned ltlmt to be the

jijlromised land Like thousandstillld thousands ef the Irish

t th New York ltBOWded

10 0 e dums they are abysmally

~~eir homes are decrepit verminous tenements Their jabs are menial ill paid and dancy They are despiSed by the natives both for their nashyampnai origin and for their reli shyfIion They meet violence at the lhands of brutal nativists No opportunity opens up for them lJDd they are without hope

Elab$mte Setting

n is plain thet Miss StewaIi lhas done thorough rese~rch clgt1l1

the period Bet pages are

But-middot when his boss Maguire breaks with the big boss Tweed CasEiyS ascent ill reshyversed Tweed however is exshyposed and undone and pious John Kelly takes over as head of Tammlllny~

casey relllizes tiliJilt it is opshyportune for him to repudiate

Maguire and strike out on his own Ihis he does to the imm~ diate signal improvement of his lot but lllt the price of Maguires bUter enmity

AdvaIltageMJS Marrul1ge Casey now marries one EileeZl

Callahan liI doctors daughter a chilly lace curtain Irish sort It is not a happy marriage but it iJiI respectable and advantashy

geous Casey is appointed citY ~coroner attl ~tosalary with Per

qUlsites But there i~t yet aJ1oth~r reshy

paCked with detallmiddot She hasmiddotmiddot versal til store for him On mounted a viVid mid elaborate election day 1~74~ he goes ooIJting for nero story But the about to see that his forces are

~ (ftory does not live ormiddot inove It performing properly (which abounds in incident it has com- means improJgterly) he isdraWn

plications galorebut it lacks into an altercation with Ma- ~tality arid never generates guire power Why this should be it is Casey taking a physIcal at first hard to tell beating from the bigger Mashyo~ Tom Casey sne~as a ~g- guire draws a pistol and shoots bull who should be mterest1Og Htt hits t M gur b t f

ImiddotToiil is inteUigenl middotandrug~ middottlie latte~ miihioris~Te~~hcJl ~t he left school atmiddot 13 He n()vi Ismortal CaseY- is1ndicted pound01(

realizes th~t be can~et ~ ~urd~r tried l~t out on bail here never break ~l1t 01 ~~ ~heI1 a hung jury evenWates

iitifling meager wretched woHdof his k1Od IDs one asset seellW imd ultdmately gOeS free1JnaeeouJmtabi Re Co be brawn

lJOmething -hi Which counts for the braw~gk middotHe w no~

e eolery disgraced in debt

Which his Arsenal Gimg in- witbout poundI Jobmiddot probably permaQ

dulges and in the work of tblii nently estranged from his wife Pacifid Company of volunteer One might suppose thatmiddotthis was firemen to which he belongs the end of t~e story But no 1m

As he looks about he recog Cl middotfinal s~ctwn d~ted 12 years ftizes that the way to some ad later he is the chIef deputy andshy~cement and aggrandizementmiddot lUre successor of ag~ng ailing fl through politics He observ~ middotampss Kelly He is almost at the John Maguire who at 37 io top and it all means nothingmiddot olderman saloonkeeper aD ell ne of the flaws 10 t~e novel mstrict leader of the Twentyshy s Illustrated by the diSJuncture ~t ward middotbetween Caseys fall because oil

Air PI ti tillemiddot murder case and his unae-middot bull cq1lll es es ge countable recovery Therecov-

MagUire is of course a Twt- ~ middotis never explained We ~ny m~ He dresses well dont know how it was done wears dlamon~ studs hai middotIJ We are simply presented withmiddot middotmiddotmiddotsion said the problem ofmiddot realiz Long-Range PllOgn-ams

go~d-headed caneCasey cop~ $t and asItedlmiddotto take it On faith -log tqe recommendations it In cooperation with 22 other ~ ~ude~ that ~e must gcentt ~n ~~l middotmiddotllIWl at the end tberebe- made on treating lhe ghe~to ~orgahizations NCCI1 bas

1- ~agulre - ~ middotmiddotOOmes glaring something whichi Bf~ does through ~s prov~_ all alongimiddot has nagged at tne

gt111 lID 19hting But h~ progre~middotlY rreadernanaely~the s~ddampn leaps - Yery slow True he geta 11 Cl to ltile _~ lemiddotaps acr~-

Il1o which involves Db dU~I~ improbable nnd unexplored at all but allows him to sp~ndzhasms aU hiS time wardheeUng for Timelilness iD Novel

Maguire He acquires B little A more seriousmiddot flaw is thAprestige even a little Power But h is till tty an potatoe~ G pre 1m

But then suddenly Maguire ebief henchman die and Mashyguire himself in hi gn f _

s e per petrates an egregIOUS act of folly Casey is at hand to helplIDd succeeds in concealing Mashypires drunken blunder onl to become involved with n gid Maguire hIllS B8S lted

u Ascent Reversed

She is Claire Scofield whO elm give the appearance of

~Jadylike innocence but is act~ bull rally a vix~ She and Case

never marry 1m her avidity for possessions and eventually poshymUon sine keeps driving Casey taunting him with his inconseshyquence and urging him 10 bold steps

He becomes an alderman gew to know 30ss Tweed head of Tammany and notorious plunshy

failumiddotre lIll development of charshy~r ~is is most notice~ble ou tOO mstance of Casey hlmshyself wile rem~~a naDe and a type never nngmg true as a complex person The same is true of the borde of others whO pour through tIl1e book Be they

major Gr mInor hlStOriC~ or ~onlh ~y are WIthout mner llife Mrs Stewart hit upon bull subshy

feet wJith great possibilities and genuine contemporary signifi shymiddoteanee But she haS not known how to render it convincingly and illu~tingl) in terms of

middotIme to ailalrange~ent lui fidWL

~lEl][ORIALMASS Pattimiddotck Pardinal OBoyeof Washshy ~~tQ~ speak~ at a memOrI~ M~s f0t ~r1lIIartm Luther

l~ngr hel~ ~und~yat t~e Na~~~l Shnne of th~ Immacshylla~ Come~pbQn in the natI~n~s CPl~aINC Jho1Jo

INatbull-ona1middot middotWmiddotmiddot-1111

Ahmann Says Wflitbull Racism Pllob~ltem

For White Churches CHICAGO (NC) -A leader ereatiIDg is new notionall wW

m Catholic interracial justice for notional actioo work ~id here white rlllcis~ middotWe believe that creation of called essentially responsible the national will is probably for the violence in cities by the the greatest spiritus problem

middotnational riot commission is a confronting religiollJS institushymoral problem and must be at- tiona in Amerlcm Ahmann deshy~cked by the white churches clared in calling on NCCIJs 1~

Mathew Ahmann executive lliffiliated Catholic interrracillll director 4)f the National Catho- councllsand human relationo lie Conference for Interracial ComiImissions to Set ~ tRileoir efshyJustice asserted The commis- lo-rts for social jUstice

problem was the problem (If published and distributed a speshy cial 32~page pamphlet smiddot~ary

Favors Compulsorymiddot of th R rt f h N al e epo () t e Iyenon Rmiddotmiddotmiddot A AdvisorY Commission 00 CiVil

ehlement ge DisOrders I j 1 -

SAN ANTONIO (NC) -The San AntoniQ archdiocesan prlmiddotemiddotstsmiddot seina~ has recommended

vc75 as the compulsory retirement age for priests in the arcbdioshycese and 65 as an accepted retiremen~ age

Tbe recommeridation which has been sent to ArChbishop Robert E Lucey of San Antonio came in the fonn of a motion passed unanimously by the 12shymember - senate at a meeting here

The senate also recommended establisbment of some sort of

tenure of office for pastors and assistants They urged a maxishymum limit of 10 years in the same parisb for pastors and a liDlit~ five yearn fol assistants

Ahmann eaned fur NCCIJ affiliates to stress the need for long-range middotmiddotclmiddoton-TI proshy

cu ltU grams for aD ~rts cd bhe Catholic community to elimishynate white racism incmding

programs for human relations

training fM lay leadershipclergy teacherS and required elementary a nd secondary school courses in humanrelashynons and Negro Illistory He also urged affiliated 01shy

ganizati()ns to bank as well as purchase goods and services in the black communi~y On the legislative front ne urged support of the similar goals of the riot commission the Urban Coalition and Dr Martin Luther KiB4fil Poor ~s Campaign~

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 11 1968

Catholics Defend Fair Bus Law

TRENTON (NC)-Spokesmen for Catholic schools defended the states year old fair bus law at a public hearing held here to consider its possible reviSion

In mllny respecfs it was a reshypeat of the public hearings a year ago which resulted in the bill being amended before passage But at that time the thrust was for passage of some rort of measure )utting private school students on equal footshying with public school students Now legislative sentiment apshypearc ro incline toward a cutshyback although outright repeal seeDlll unliksly

One relllSon foi the dlllnge in outlook b the compleJdon of ihe legislature Lest year it was in DeInoeratic hands and fair shybusing bllld the support of Gov Richard JJ Hughes Now Repubshylicans hold control by a 2-1 margin and party leaders see Ii mandate to cWtail some of tine programs enacted a year ~omiddot

A half-dozen bills to repeal or revise the busing law are now before the legislature The hearings here were held by the education committees of both the State Senate and Assembly whiclll hnve not yet released any bills from committea

Principal spokesmen for Catholic education were John 1 Rafferty counsel ful the New Jersey Catholic Confershyence and Msgr John 3 Clark Camden diocesan superintendent of scbools and president or the state ruperiIllten~ento ~ciashytion

Expropriate Pmsh BERLIN (NC)-East Gennan

eommunist authorities Ulave exshypropriated the Catholic parish 01 St Francis Xavier in East Berlin without compensatingthe Cbureh Redevellop~nt ia given as the expropriation reashyson

May the 8711 of ~g [ltm1

mine tlP~D JOU and ~aJ

the afOlY of His ReslITaeI tiOD bless J01l Ydtbmiddot

pe~ and jOle

The

Old Red Bank Fail River Savings BaRk

FAll IUVEI

SOMERSET

8 THE ANCHO~=Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1968 New Pay Scale For Teachers

FORT WAYNE (NC)-ftleEnjoy Family Celebration Fori Wayne-South Bend dioceshysan board of education bas apshyOf First Communion Day proved a new salary scale for lay teachers in elementallY ancll

By Mary Tinley Daly secondary schools The board approved tl recomshyChanges in the Church that perennial topic of COlllshy mendation that for every fuD

versation since Vatican Council II come in for a lot of time degreed ~acher employed pro and con discussion on the part of the laity With each with a current valid Indiana

teaching license a parish Willehange the dissident~ speak up head-shakers moan middotWell be reimburselt at the rate Oilfthey didnt do it that way in $2000 each for the school ~

my day But as each in forms of any kind with their 1968-1969inevitable rivalry Each littlenovation is inaugurated The salary schedule for 196ampshygirl and boy was in mufti shy 1969 provides on the bachelonthen incorporated into presshy tastefuUy and compoundo11tably degree level for a minimum Oil ent practice we realize these garbed $5200 and a maximum of $6200 made notehanges are simply Each family had its own pew at the 10th year with an increshyfor the sake of parents and First Communicant mentof $100 a minimum QfclJange but as in aisle seats sisters brotI1ers $6000 and a maximum oilPope John XXIII grand-and godparents filling $8700 at the 15th year with aput it to keep up the rest of the pew We beshy $180 increment for the bacheloilrltP with the longed to Kate on Her Day degree teacher with a staterhythm of the What class a small whis- license and a minimum of $630times To quote pered the Headof the House as and a maximum of $10000 asfrom middotThe the names were read out at the the 18th year with an increoChurch middotin Our beginning of Mass That we ment of $200 for the masteroDay collective thought was the ~ason we had degree teacherspastoral of the been included Not so Each

American hiershy child in the First Communionmchy recently published Our

eHort at Class could designate ahead III Department of Justicepresent restructuring time which of the parish Masses

procedures in the Church withshy $~~ Approves Shared-Time to attend thus splitting theIn the national and Diocesan number into more intimate HARRISBURG (NC) - Tk)eommunities depend in great family Jroups Pennsylvania Department dWORLD OF FASHION Jmeasure on the seriousness With Justice has ruled that there ampJiilThose who eboBe to Jeeetve lIS Iwhich study is undertaken and ~~~~ By MARILYN BODERICK ~

the disposition to implement )amp bull class were allowed to do IlO no legal bars to shared-~ The altar rail had beet1 opeIil shy education of private ~ a the part of the laity pupils iii public schoolseCl wide with lmeelers tor thlee EASTER CLOTHESNew Prooedure I iD the center At CommUDion Deputy Atty Gfin John 1)

One change nO doubt fsmilshy time 8 smiling priest weleomed New clothes at Easter have tiful example of creativity and McCord who issued the opinioa Jar to families in many Dioceses each little First Communieant become a eustom that we an craftsmanship was an ensemble at the request of state Supe~ came to our attention forcibly intendent of Public InstructiOll flanked by father and mother find hard to break It came modeled by nine year old Robin and impressively in practice followed by other members of down to us from the days when Cambra daughter of Mr and David H Kurtzman said the

only requirements which muSt last week the family If there was only one the newly baptized Christians Mrs James Cambra of Our I speak here of the new cusshy Catholic parent another family wore white garments made of Lady of Grace parish in Westshy be met are the consent of the

tom (new to us at least) of local public school board andmember receivedwith the child Dew linen This became such ))Orthaving children receive First the payment of tuition at theothers of the family following a tradition among the faithful Robins stunning Easter coat Holy Communion not as a class regularly established rateIt was all so natural warm that to appear in new clothes on and dress were made by her

receiving the Big McCord cited a 1949 lawbut each Sacrashy and dignified on this tbe Easter Sunday mother in yellow lightweightment for the first time with Day rectlling the words d which states that No pupilsymbolized the wool The A-line coat had a parents and relatives shall be refused admission toPope St Leo Recognize 0 n e w Ii fe diagonal self button closing and

Long gone in many areas is the courses in these additionalChristian your dignity through Christ a tiny mandarin collar When the custom of turning over one schools or departments by reashyThe Irish have dark-hired and vivacious RobinlImvi~ Pmstollof the Sunday Masses to the son of the fact that his elemenshyan ancient say- removed her coat the slimFirst Communion class - girls Mter Mass with aplomb only tary or academic education Ising that goes dress underneath was seen toin dresses veils an being or has been received in awhite and on eight-year-old could muster For Christmas have a yellow blue apd tan one side of middotthe aisle boys in Kate betook herself to the saneshy school other than a public food and drink plaid bodice with the plainwhite suits on the other back tuary to invite our new pastor for Easter new yellow wool of the coat carried school of the church reserved oftenshy Father Louis Quinn to bei He added however tnKItclothes Most over info the skirttimes with standing room house brunch otni shared-time arrangements mudonly for writing people in the The finishing touch to thisfor parents of necessity be subject to thefor him her address Diocese will fol- stunning outfit was the tiny hatWith the growth of parishes guidelines promulgated by theGoodness knoWll how ID8DY low this custom that sat atop Robins curls forthere often came transfer all similar invi-tationa Fat her Department of Public Instrucshy

by dressing their ebildreh iul it too was her mothers creationFirst Communion day to Saturshy Quinn must have receivedl tiontheir new Spring finery 0111 and jcent middotfeatured alternatingday a sensible step but stiR plenty wed ~ becauSe he Easter Sunday panels of the pale yellow andtmly for First Communicants cup eoffeeIIimply sipped 11 of In the pre-school ret blondE the plaid wool

and their parents Because of at Katies house B1lIt be did and darling Sheila Whalen In the same show Norma8Pace limitations grandparents come chatted with anmiddot Gf 1Il Higher Earningsdaughter of lIT and Mrs Wil- Comeau of SS Peter and Paul 8Odparents brothers and sisters ble2sed the house 8Dd ~ateB liam Whalen laquoIi St ThomaslIilcles and aunts were invited new gift statue then went _ More ehurch in Somerset will parish in Fall River was 8 vishyout for this precious occasion to visit other parish homes be decked out in polished blue sion of green and white Norma ON YOUR SAVINGS JIbey eouId line themiddotsidewalks Twas all a happy experience eotton Her very special Easter wore a green wool coat a 4Ntside take pictures perhaps for Kate and her extensive famshy Sunday dress bas a long torso matching green and white Per An middotmiddot p to breakfast with their parshy ily appropriate to this the Year topped by a short sash tile dress and a white straw topper Ask abOut ticular First Communicant buamp of Faith II1eeveless zrmholes are edged that had a sweetheart shape that waS that iD crocheted lace and the bodice Green ill all shades is one of INVESTMENT

Kates Day JiB embroidered with tiny flow- the most popular colors on the SAVINGSMmnesota Parishioners ers in shades of pink white and agenda for childrenls SpringSo It was with surprise we fashions Beth Cook~ daught~r CERTIFICATESweeeived a telephone invitation Vote Closing of Schoo~ blue

Also represen~ng 1bepre- oJ Mr and Mrs Andrew Cookfrom eight-year-old Kate to atshy PIERZ (NC) - Members of primary middotsetJn the Easter parade of Immaculate Conception parshytend the 11 oclock Mass with SAFETY - Savings insured safe br Iifour parishes in the Pierz area will be Lisa Marie Texeira ish in Fall Riv~r has a limeher last Saturday On arrival at agency of the U S Governmentof Minnesota voted 835 to ioo daughter of Mrmiddot and Mrs Frank green Eastermiddot dress trimmedchurch we wondered if we had for the closing of the Father AVAILABILITY - No notice requIredTeeira of Immaculate Concep- with with a white cowl collarthe right time and place No more

Pierz Memorial High SChool 1lm tion parish in Fall River Lisa and white cuHs on the short Your funds available when neededwhite dresses and veils June is a delicate-featured little sleeves Beth chose this dress SAVE by MAIL - We process prompIIJon one side of the ~sle )hite

The Pierz district has decided beauty whose dark tresses will herself because she Ifell in love and pay postage both wayssuits on the other no unishy to build a public senior high beset off by a once upon-a- with the white vinyl flowers school which will be large time dress in pink and navy scattered over the skirt and Assets over $41000IlOO

Parish Hires Full-Time enough to accommodate all high blue The high necked dress bodice of this charming Spring school students in the district made of sheer cotton has a and Summer linen

Layman Theologian Therefore m u e h discussion GlOwl collar long full sleeves Of course the pre-teen set FIRST FEDERAL BALTIMORE (NC)-St Matshy and a romantic floating skirt wants something new for Easterabout the most practical use of Savings and loan AssociatloDthe Catholic high school facili shy

first parish in the Baltimore ties bas taken place in the last _pink bodice and the waist- daughter of Mr and Mrs John archdiocese to employ a proshy circling cummerbund but the Steen of Taunton and my god tf FALL RIVER thews Church has become the Tiny tucks are featured on the and Miss Joan Leslie Steen

few months fesionally trained ley theoloshy Tbe vole--()pen to all parishshy really eye-catching feature oil child will attend Easter Mass gian as a full-time member af iOllers over 21 ill the four afshy ibis outfit ill the skirt of navy at St Pauls church wearing an the parish staff ~cted parihes-was taken III blue cotton with pink polka outfit as yellow as a daffodil ~-~~-------_~ first Federal $awIOIS bull LeaD a ~

~ 1 ortb ~1Il st Fan lIiwer llaa ~ Joseph Hargadon a fonner response to a suggestion of~e dots Certainly a dOll-like outfit Joans yellow coat has gold but shy ZIp 02722 IlIlIIIa 174-4881 ~ member of St Clares parish st Cloud diocesan school board for a dainty Miss tons and 8 slanted back belt ~ke application by phOlle middotIt JOll jE6sex who ~ii now studying at The Catholic high school Mothers Sew - her yellow Irish linen sheath ~

the Institute of Lay Theology building will probably beused While commentating 8 ehil- dress is sleeveleSs and has white n iridlvldua Account B joint AccaIIamp iii ~ Prease DJNn a savings account EIIcIGslMJ Iin San Francisco will be c0shy as an elementary school in the drens fashion show for the Do- emb~idery trim on the hemline ~~OO ~ordinator of St Matthews Conshy future Father Patrick Thompshy minican Academy alumnnae ill and bodice This yellow-haired ~

fraternity of Christian Doctrine son principal of Fathermiddot Pierz Fall River I was awed by the brown-eyed beauty has even Address middot1 program Msgr Clare J 0- Memorial High School said th~ ntimber of mothers Whohad chosen JOllqtiil yellow patent

acheck III tbe amount 111 -iDwyer pastor said He begina several possibilities are being sewed their childrens Easter accessories tomiddot complete her working in the parish Aug ~ studied outfits Probably the most beau- look j

~~~~~

A][D FOR VnCTnMS Foodfor victim~ of the Washi~gshyton civil disturbance following the death of Dr Martin Luther yening Jr in Memphis was distributed at churches of all denominations in the capital Here Sister Joanette of Catholic University gives bread to burnedout families at St Mamns Church N Capimiddottol and T Streets NC Photo

9 Best to Delay Rose Pruning Unti1 Laterin Spring

By Jo~ph and Marilyn Roderick

With the break in the w~ther weve experienced lately here has been ample opportunity to get outside and begin the Spring chores that have tQ be done before the garden is ready for Summer I have noticed quite a few weekend prdeners busy with the urrection is really felt as the odds and ends that await the priest changes the bread and prdener after a quiet WiD- wine into the body and blood ter But I have also witness- of our Lord and the faithful go ed quite a few I suppose out of up to the altar to receive Comshyanxiety over the rough Winter munion Then the seven weeks we experieneed and out of im- of sacrifice leading to this day patience 1igt get started doing take on deeper meaning and the jobs that could just as well wait Light of the World truly shines until later m the month r AIl can truly sing Alleluia Wltil Way For the young of the house-

Pruning roses is a good ex- hold the Easter eggs are another mnple of a job that is best held great joy They come in many off especially this year when sizes and materials Some are Ctere has been so much top-kilL lteonfections of spun sugar and lt might be well to wait until dreams This type generally has atent buds begin to show an opening through which the themselves em what look like child may view a wonderland ~ad stems until the job of of painted landscapes and minshy)rUning is tackled It has been iature figures my experience that dead-Iook- I always adored these fantasy mg wood has n way of coming eggs when I was a little girl and ~ life in time so go easy with it was a rare and special event ampe pruning shears until you to receive one My own youngshyIJlre certain there is no life in sters however deJive more enshylaquohe stem you plan to amputate jOfment from the decorating

How to Prune and dyeing oil the hardboiled eggs

Pruning roses seems to pre- A few years ago I made an (leDt P~obJ~JiuJ to gardeners and Easter egg centerpiece by decshy~ it is a Simple task I try 00 orating (with glitter beads prune lTlyroses so that they sequins and white glue) egg graduaily asSUme an urn shape shells that had their contents tftliit is so that they have an blown outmiddot and hanging them eD1ltY cenier rhis can easily on a giided branch that had be begun by prumng each stem been placed ill a plant pot This aiatroti want to retain so tha~middot makes a verY lovely display and ihe cut is made just above an the eggs can even be used as _tward pointing bud Christmas tree ornaments the

If the bud is pointing out the following December but this laquorowth which ensues from the delicate work is not for tiny bud will be outward and there- hands lor growth will be away from Symoo)s oil Life the center of the rose Next I The Easter egg and the Easter try to make my cuts so that the bunny have always been symshyappermost portions of each boys of Spring and new life litem are approximately the Ancient people in many lands lIaDle height from the groun6 exchanged eggs at their Springagain to give the bush some festi vals They dyed eggs yellow8Diformity of appearance for the returning sun and red

The height of the bush makes for joy and life In England the attle difference as far as I am children enjoy III custom called eoncerned so I usually make Pace egging The Pace eggers my cuts at whatever height I go from house to house chantshyean get uniformity This year ing this rhymefor inStllnce there has been a PleaseMr Whitelegpeat deal of top-kill on my Please to give us an Easter eggJOses so I may have to make If you wontt give us an Easter cuts fairly close to the ground eggbut I find little difference in Your hens wiD all lay addled the quality of the roses regardshy eggsless ~ of how much I remove in And your cocks lln lay stones pruning In this country of lIpoiled

A third consideration in darlings our children would be ~ing is the removal of 014 disappointed H the Easter wood to make place for new bunny did not leave chocolate trrowth Thb becomes a pr0bshy eggs candy chickens and other lem when your roses start to expensive goodies However -ee considerably I try not to be even with all the commercial drastic in this regard by cutting trappings that go with the dayGUt one old stem a year thereby It still manages to retain It IIl8king room for new growth great joywithout particularly affecting T1uis liuoo roast is perfectlybull e plant delicious Ive bad tt for Easter One other point about prunshy dinner oth~r years and plan to Ing Many of the old ramble1ll serve it again this year Its and climbing roses should be quite worthy of II repeat pershypruned after they bloom and fonnance DlJt before I notice a great Cumberland L9mb Boast IIl8ny people pruning their 1 leg of lamb about I to dlmbers before they bloom poundswhich does nothing for the 1 teaspoon salt elimber but remove scOlelI of 1 teaspoon dry mustard blossoms ~ teaspoo1l ground ginger

In the Kitchen 5 thin lemon sIkes Baster Sunday is a day of great cup currant jelly

toy and excitement The special 1 Tablespoon lemon juice Kaster moming breads (IDJ 1) Trim oJ escemJ fat lroa 8aOther-in-Iaw always ~ lamb Rub went with a mixture Individual sweetbreads for the fJIl the salt mustard and ginger ebildren with a hardboiled egg Place roundoo silde up OIl a let in the crust) the excitement rack in roastiDjJ pan Do Dllt elf new clothes the Easter egg oover pan bunts the tIradJltional famIJ ) Roast -bl Ii a10W (331-) llIlnner but Elbow all the beauty en for amp 1tOun IlDd quiet ~ 01 Easter SID~ 3) Remove roaJt from 0ftIl Mass and eut 4 cd tbe lemon dices

be joy of this great least 01 In half arrange Ue a half sliceS the Resurrecti_ of our SaviCNl petal fashion OIl sidlte of JOaSt evident JI1 n the custo~ holding in place vith dampened tbat sur r 0 11 n d 1lhis feast wOoden ~icIW place the wbole IIut the full 1mpaot of the Bell- alice in center

)JJRDINATION The first Melkite Rite ordin2ttion of priests to be held at the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception Washington DCt was conducted by Bishop Justin A Najmy NC Photo

- Extend Program I Interfqith Organization to Conti~~e shy

Aiding ~prrnEr JoliCQrpseh WASHINGTON (NC)--A na- reftary of the National Confer-

tion-wide volunteer prog~lJn ence of Catholic Charities hasshyto help Job Corps trainees find said JACShas tapped the iTeshya place in the workaday world mendous force of volunteers al shyhas been extended for another ready available in this lountry year William P Kelly Job and they are hard at work asshyCorps director announced here sisting young llen who have

Joint Action in Community proved by volunteering for the Service (JACS) a private non- Job Corps that they want to profit corporation was organ- help themselves ized by leaders of national The young men coming out Catholic and Protestant social of Job Corps are severely hanshyaction agencies dicapped by backgrounds of

It includes on Us board of poverty poor education and unshygovernors representatives of stable family life As a result business labor and civic organ- they have more than their izations share of problems as they atshy

tempt to make it on their ownJACS has organized a netshy

work of 5000 volnteers in 500 JACS volunteers are giving communities in the U S re- them the helping hand they eruited from churches service need he added clubs and community agencies who are DOW assisting some 1000 returned corpsmen each Women to Hpnormonth

Msgr Lawrence J CorcoraJlO BisJlop Apri I 18 lACS ~Ild chairDl3lll and ~ The Ca~olicWomens Club

0If New ~(ord will hold its annual Bishopll Night OIlSee E~tablishes New bunday evening April 18 at

Education Office the Harbor Beach Club in Matshytapeisett Supper Will be servedGREENSBURG (NC)-Bishop at 630William G Connare of Greensshy

burg has announced the estabshy Guest of Honor will be Most lishment of a new diocesan ofshy Rev James L Connolly Bishop fice of education whicb win Gerrard moderlltor for the New coordinate the work of several Bedford organization will also existing departments be a guest

All area pastors have heeDThe new office which wm invited to attendopen JolT 1 will join and ex~

tend the programs of the presshy Mrs Paul L LaForest first ent diocesan schools office and vice-president will serve as the Confraternity Off Christian chairman ojf arrangements Doctrine office and win be reshy Reservations will be accepted sponsible for the total educashy by Mrs Jamell M Anderson tional effort of the diocese Mrs Maurice Hurley Mrs Paul

A newly organized departshy LaForest and Mrs Daniel F ment of religious education will Dwyer Reservations close sat shyaid in planning religious edushy urday April 13 eation programs fOr the parisb and diocesan schools the CCD and other groups both at the adult and youth le~ls ATWOOD

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 11 1968

Says Young Seek Moral Values

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - The so-called sexual revolution is l

turning away from hypocrisy at a turning toward promiscuity ays an expert in sex education Or Mary C Calderone execushy

tive director of the Sex Informashytion and Educational Council of the United States believes toshydays young people are highly moral despite the example set for them by their elders

Speaking at the 22nd annual meeting of the Texas Council on Family Relations Dr Calderone stressed

Promiscuity has not increased on Americans college campuses We know our young people are behaving far better today than were willing to credit them with Young people are looking for moral values based on fact rashyther than mythology

Dr Calderone condemned exshyploitation of sex by commercial advertising and called for sex education which would streSD the importance of human relashytionships and not merely the mechanics of reprOduction

Your kids ought to know you cant save a bad marriage with good sexshe asserted

Sisters of Pro~ider1ce Vote to lRe~ise Rules

SPRINGFIELD (NC) The Sisters of Providence of Holshyyoke community of nuns speshycializing in care of the sick aged and underprivileged have voted to revise their rules and customs to permit greater flexshyibility and freedom in the reli shygious and personal lives of theIr members

At a general chapter at the communitymiddots Holyoke mothershyhouse the 39 chapter -delegates voted to permit experimentashytion hi religous garb give members the option of using either their baptismal and famshyily name or their religiou name pennit members to travel outside their convent wilhout a nun-companion

Also to limit participation hi common prayer to Mass and to two portions of the Divine Ofshyfice Lauds and Vespers allow community members to develop a schedule of private prayer require every member of the community to be addressed WI Sister instead of Mother~

and allow part of the nuns free time to be given to variolU fOnDS of the apostolate to civic activities and civil rights proshygrams in a way befitting theIr state in life and according to their individual consciences

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Choose AmericH Superior General

MoUNT KISCO (NC)-Fqr the first time in the 160-yellW history of the Religous of tim Cenacle an American has b~ elected superior general

Mother Rita FOy was electetl to the post at the general chapshyter of the Cenacle in Rome acshycording to the orders interpro-shyvincial public relations offiC() here in New York

The general chapter whielli is still in session is evaluatinti a series of recommendations fOli a general decentralization opoundl authority the launching of eJJogt

perimental programs by too Cenacle and the restructurinfi of Community life

The Religious of the Cenaclo is a worldwide congregation 03 Sisters committeed to the wom of retreats and religious in-gt struction There afe three American provinces

Mother Rita Foy was born 1rI

FLYING DOCTOR Dr Leo Brown and his wife Isabel a registered nurse are shown with their children Rebecca 1Qand Joel 8 with the C-essna plane they use for their Flying Doctor Service in the diocese of Gwelo Rhodesia NC Photo

THE ANCHOR Thurs April 11 1968

Project Equality Issues Guides For BMyers

CHICAGO (NC) - The first national directory of 3931 business firms comshymitted to equal opportunity in all aspects of employment has been published here by Project Equality

It will be used by more than 7000 churches synagogues and religious institutions participat shying in the interfaith fair emshyployment drive that urges givshying preference to the listed firms in all purchases of goods and services

Project Equality offices in Jlive cities are publishing re- gional buyers guides as well They are in Columbus for Ohio Detroit for Michig~n Hartford for Connecticut Omaha for New York City and was gradlDgt Nebraska and San Antonio for ated from Hunter College Sillj

Texas IFlying Doctor Serves Africa Mission south entered the Cenacle in 19~1i The national guide is a comshy completing her studies in Romo

pilation of 976 national and She was assigned to the Miltlligt 2955 local or regional firms do- Vietnam Veteran l Wifel licensed Pilots western province of the Celilgt ing business with religious inshy acle with headquarters in CtJiDRIEFONTEIN (NC)-In the the Gwelo diocese covers some must drive over lO miles of stitutions They include 40 of cago and has held a number am

grasslands here onmiddot a 5OOO-foot 14000 aCres it includes a 300shy dirt bush road seven miles of the top 500 U S corporations assignments as superior of vashy

high plateau the Cat hoi i c bed tuberculosis sanitorium a relatively good road-and watch and range down to small neighshy rious Cenaeles in the Uniteamp

of mainshy 100-bed hospital a farm an out for wild animals all alongmission Driefonteinborhood businesses States and Canada1ains-of all things-a hangar elementary school and trade the way

Listing in the Quyers guide She will now reside in RoJJl() for a Cessna 182 Skylane air shy schools for carpentery tailorshy Thus far they have encounshymeans a firm has signed Ii

plane ing and homecraft tered only baboons monkeyspledge to hire and promote deer mongoose lizards andThe mission staff totals somewithout discrimination has filed FrQm this point the missions lleslYJits to Performbirdsa report form with Project doctor can cover nine out-stashy 1200 people 35 of whom are

Equality detailing the number tions spread over an aerial non-Afrfcans The mission and Witch Doctors Woth City Symphony of its niinority-group employees distance equivalent to that beshy hospitals are operated by Afri shy The Biblical quotation The BALrIMORE (NC) -Fathe1 -broken down by jop classifi tween San Francisco and Los cans and by Swiss Bethlehem harvest is indeed great but the Bruno Markaitis SJ provinshyeation-and has pledged to take Angeles The plane was proshy priests and Brothers German laborers are few describes the cial of Lithuanian Jesuits in the further affirmative actions vided by the Mission Doctors Domincian nuns African nuns scope of medical work in Africa free world will guest conduct

Association of Los Angeles three laywomen-two American according to the Browns In the Baltimore Symphony in twc Pledge C()()peraiion Calif as part of its Flying Docshy nurses and a German teachershy these rura~ regions there is II of his own piano compositioDll

Cooperating businesses also tor Service begun here four and the Browns ratio of about one doctor to in Ii concert sponsored by LCgtJio have agreed to undergo periodic years ago The Brown children attend a every 33000 persons Mrs ola College here Sunday eompliance reviews to assure At that time Dr James Carey small two-classroom school in Brown said Africail medicine At the keyboard as soloi

Umvuma a town 17 miles away and witch doctors are still verycontinued affirmative employshy now a Santa Barbara Calif wiiI be two other Jesuit pries~ much in evidence she addedment ac~ions according to surgeon arrived at Driefontein The journey to and from school Fathers Leslie J Schnierer -and

Thomas Gibbons Jr national to begin his three-year mission is looked upon as quite an adshy It is heartbreaking to see a Benito Rivera students at thIl director of Project Equality hitch He decided quickly that venture by the family as they child with measles have to go Peabody Conservatory of Music

In addition to the firms listed The concert will mark thewith a plane one doctor could though life blind because the in the guide more than 12000 do the wbrk of five ndanga (witchdoctor) put mull 50th anniversary of the restorashyother businesses have filled out With the help of the Swiss Pittsburgh Diocese (medicine) in the childs eyes tion of independence to Lithoshycommitment forms pledging coshy Bethlehem Brothers Dr Carey Tithing for Poor she said But in other areas aniai operation with the program but began surveying and laying out like TB the African is relJlarkshy

PITTSBU~GH (NC)-Bishophave not yet supplied the necshy landingstrips near isolated and ably sophisticated medicaHy

John J Wright has announced essary statistical employment doctorless clinics and hospitals Kariangwe Berejena Kana Education Officethe Pittsburgh Diocese will unshyreports which are similar 10 The Brothers also built the Serema Matibi are all farshy NEW ORLEANS (NC) - Aledertake a new tithing plan tothose ~equired by the federal hangar at priefontein and Dr away-sounding places but the office of religious education bllllhelp finance housing and othergovernment Carey arranged for one Brother people suffer as you and I been established here by Archshyprojects for the pOOr The nalles of firms listed in to be trained as a pilot suffer from sickness They bishop PhilIp M Hannan a The_dioces~ will give 10 perthe buyers guides are available Meanwhile in Los Angeles mourn when their children have will supervise the teaching oct

cent of the contributions andonly to religious groups parti shy Dr Leo Brown a former Navy to be sick and often die she religion in parochial schoolBbequests it receives and thecipating in the program surgeon with 11 years of sershy continued and in Confraternity of Chrisshysame percentage of collections

PIroject Equality sponsored vice and his wife Isabel a Perhaps some of their disshy tian Doctrine classestaken up for directly diocesan

by the National Catholic Conshy registeled nurse were volunshy eases have strange-soundingpurposes to finance povertyference for Interracial Justice teering for MD~s three-year nawes but all come under theprogramsoperates six other local offices hitch in Africa He was just title of Gods sick These are CONRAD SEGUINThe money will be used withtouching seven more states Adshy home from Vietnam where he the names of clinics that are

other religious groups for intershyditional offices will be opened served with the Marines visited by the Flying Doctor BODY COMPANY faith housing programs andin major cities this year acshy Staff of 1200 she said Aluminum or Steelother joint dforts for the poorcording to a spokesman Dr Brown and his wife are 944 County Street

Parishes will not be requiredlicensed pilOts So last Sumshy NEW BEDFORD MASS mer when they and their two to tithe but are invited to conshy Chief Speaker

WY 2-6618ISenQte Ideas f children-Rebecco 10 and Joel tribute voluntarily NEW XORK (NC) ~ Msgr 8~arrived here MDA sent the John J Egan director of the

Continued from Page Three Cessna 182 along with thein Chicago Archdiocesan office ofStart With 45and to preach in the one Dioshy The Driefontein mission in tirbanaffairs will be the chief

eese have them in the pther GREENSBORO (NC)-Fortyshy speaker at the May 16 banquetfive priests of the Raleigh dioshy of the 1968 Catholic Press AsoshyWhile the 24 diocesan priests Abortion Bill Passes cese have formed the North ciation convention in ColumbusSenators are elected the two Carolina priests association Ohiomembels of the Priests Senate In Maryhind Ho~se Seventeen others have indicatedwho are members of religious

commullities are appointed by ANAPOLIS (NC)-A ~m to they wish to become members the Bishop These will be ro- relax Marylands 100-year-old The Raleigh diocese includes all

North Canlinatated among the religious com- abortion law and put its regushylation into the hands of themunities doing parish work in

the Diocese At present the Sen- medical profession passed the ators from religious communi- House of Delegates by im 86 ties are Father Felician Plichta to 47 vote OFM Conv and Father Co- The bill permits a doctor opshylumba Moran SSCC eniting in an accredited hospishy

tal to perform an abortion to The Bishop has encouraged a preserve the physical or mental

study of pension plans that health of the mother to prevent would involve laypersonnel of birth of a deformed or retarded diocesa~ ail~ parish facilitieii childand to end some plegnan

The Bisholl has ma~li liQme ad- CieScaused by rape just~ents)nassessmtntson pat- UnClet the~ptesel1t law abor ishes tflking into account the tiOll is peimitted ~hen two growth o(~ubU~Iiln ~~riShesah~ Ihysicians a~r~~ it itnec~ssar~bull

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Church~en Study Racial Problems In New Jersey

NEWARK (NC) -The Church cannot tell otheJiS what to do until it faces the problem within its own comshymunity a Methodist Bishop has told Essex Count~ clergyshymen of all faiths in an a~essshyment of the racial problems beshysetting Newark and other New Jersey communities

Bishop Prince A Taylor and Catholic Auxiliary Bishop John J Dougherty of Newark disshycussed the race problem in light of the report of the Govemors Commission on Civil Disorder

Cooperative Solution Bishop Taylor stressed it is

the duty of the church to beshycome knowledgeable about the report to read it carefully Action without information is irresponsible he declared as he noted the church must face up till the fact that it has parshyticipated in maintaining the status quo He noted that when ~he commissionen pelsonally toured the riot area and asked the people what the impact of the church was in their lives all but a pound~w marked the church ltDfpound

Bishop Dougherty said if the problem is to be solved it will only be through the involveshyment of the total community government industry labor unions churches schools peoshyple living in the suburbs

Dont Have Time The attack on t1e problems

must be two-fold he asserted first meeting the needs which the coming Summer presents and then planning long-range programs to overcome the root causes of the problem

There is an urgen t need of immediate programs to enable us to have time to work toward the ultimate goal

Bishop Taylor referred to the need for time to work out solushytions We cannot undo the evils of 300 years in one Sumshymer he emphasized This illmiddot not going to be a case of a quick antidote and then they Jived happily ever after

However a Newark priest active in innel-city work who was one of six reactors to the presentations made by the Bishshyops remarked that comments about needing time to solve the problems overlook the fact that we dont hlVe the time

It would be great if we did have it to keep order but q (gt bull

the people bull have the imshypression that nothing has been donesaid Father Joseph Stulb

Many are ready to riot again if only to call attention to themselves he opined The black community despairs that the white community has or will change its attitude

Rev William Fox associate general secretary of the New Jelsey Council of Churches scored the commission for fail shying to note the contribution thpt a divided church - white and black - mademiddot to the elisis H~ cliticized the church for mainshytaining silence during public controversies which were listed as proximate causes of the riotshying

Another Catholic Magazine F0 Id S

DAYTON (NC)-Mary Today a magazine founded in 1901 deshyvoted to information about the Blessed Motherand her role in the Church has issued its final edition

It is one of 11 Catholic magashyzines which have ceased pubJishycation in the past )eal because

of 1088 ~l circulation The rnaf- orders are af Teutopolis JIL azine had a reoont eirculauOll Lake Bluff in and St Meiri

~ aooU~1151gtO middot - ~lnclbull - - -

BENEMERENTI MEDAJ~ Father James Vizzaro SJ second from left received the Benemerenti Medal at a dinner in Washington -on the occasion Of his retirement as dishyrector of the Washington office of the National Catholic Rural Life Association Conshygratulating him are left to right Msgr ~dward W ORourke executive director of the NtRLC Bishop Henry J Soenneker of Owensboro Ky rural life advisor of the usce department of social action and Msgr Luigi L Ligutti Vatican observer to the UN Food and Agliculture Organization and former executive dirootor of NCRLC NC Photo

Fr Vizzard Gets Benemerenti Medal Work for IFhlltfol lPoor Recognized

the Holy See to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization priests and Protshyestant clergymen and members of Congress

Msgr George G Higgins di shyrector social action department U S C a tho 1 i c Conference praised Father Vizzards comshybination of scholarship political know-how great tenacity of

Schedule Workshop O~ Sex Education

WASHINGTON (NC)-Father James T McHugh director of the family life bureau middotU S Catholic Conference will direct a workshop on Sex Education to be held at Catholic Univershysity of America here June 17shy28

Purpose of the workshop is to prepare a basic core of people especially teachers and parish personnel to supplement the work of the home in a complete program of education in sexu- ality It will provide these pershysons with background informashytion give them opportunity to evaluate some of the basic mashyterialsand engage them in an in-depth analysis of a curricushylum guide which reaches every grade level

Lecturers and consultants will include Fathermiddot John L Thomas SJ of the Combridge Center fOl Social Studies Dr and Mtmiddots Joseph Bird co-aushythors of The Freedom of Sexshyual Love Dr Ann F Lucas chairman of the psychology deshypaltment Farleigh Dickinson Universit~ Teaneek N J and Father Walter Imbiorski direcshytor of the Cana program in the Chicago atchdiocese

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purpose and above all genushyine love for the poor

Father Vizzard will leave Washington to middotwork in Califorshynia Nevada Arizona and Utah the region of the Jesuits Cali shyfornia province

Four Cleveland Nuns Quit as Religious

CLEVELAND (NC) - Four nuns one the prineipal of a 1100 student girls Catholic high school have separately withdrawn from the Sisters of Notre Dame here in Ohio

It was the largest departure since 1966 when 10 Sisters of Notre Dame were released from their vows to move to Pueblo CoIQ to form an experimental community middotThe Sisters of Notre Dame is the largest order of 2531 Cedar St New Bedford nuns based in the Cleveland 993middot3222 Diocese

imiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot~middotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot~ middot 3NEW HIGHERi RATE OF

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Taunton

THE ANCHORshyThurs April 11 1968 11

Support Bi~hop5

Equa~sty Plea MINEOLA (NC)-The Cathshy

olic Interracial Council of Long Island has voted overwhelmshying support of Rockville Censhytres Bishop Walter P Kellenshybergs call for equality in housing employment and edushycation

Bishop Kellenberg issued Zl pastoral letter-A Call to COl1shyscience-in which he said it i9 essential that every man be given equal opportunity for eJQP]oyment and job advanceshyment and equal educatton for himself and for his children

Declaring these to be fundashymental moral issues facing the people of Long Islanp the council said We give this statement by Bishop Kellenberg our overwhelming sUPPOtt

John J Clarke council president said the eounciB deemed it necessary to reit shyerate its support of the bishops statement co gtI bull because of our increasing concern over conshytinued discriminatory practicelC in these areas

In a policy statement the council declared the bash cause of racial unrest lies in the almost complete lack oR any meaningful contact between the races Today there are few whites who can say they really know Negroes This ignorance of each other is caused almost lxc]usively by patterns of segshyregation in housing which reshysuited in segregated schools 3mll a segregated society

As a step in breakin( these patterns the council recomshymended passage of open housshying ordinances in all towns OK

Long Island Only when there is no place left for the white man to run will the problem be solved it said

Norris H Tripp SHEET METAL

J fESER Prop

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WASHINGTON (NC)-Father James L Vizzard SJ retiring Washington director of the Nashytional Catholic Rural Life Conshyference received the papal Benemerenti medal hele in recshyognition of his work for t~e

rural poor of the United States and throughout the world

The presentation at a dinner in the Cosmos Club was attendshyed by Bishop Henry J Soenshyneker of Owensboro Ky NCRLC president Msgr Luigi Ligutti permanent observer for

Prelate Advocalles Open Housing ILaws

JEFFERSON CITY (NC)shyBishop Joseph M Marling CPPS of Jefferson City has urged Catholics of the diocese to campaign openly and fearshy

- lessly for area open housing laws

In a pastoral letter urging open housing law support the Missouri prelate askedshy

Who fails to see that to conshydemn a large segment of our people to the cruel segregation thatmiddot closed housing entails is to sin gravely against charity justice and the vely finest inshystincts of our nature Who may deny that to perpetuate such an evil in this enlightened age will bring malediction upon us

For jurely he answered Chlist is brother to the eolored in the identical sense that he is brother to the other children of men

Plan Fa-II Opening Of Joint Semill1ary

CHICAGO (NC)-A graduate school of theology for seminashyrians ftom three Religious orshyders will open in a former hotel here in the Fall

The school to be known as the Catholic Theological Union will be operated by the Passhysionists Franciscans and Sershyvites in the fOI-mer Aragon Hotel near the University of Chicago

About 100 students ue exshypected to enter thl school this year Area seminariltes ourrent-middot ly being used by themiddot threfl

2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese 01 Fall Ri~~r-Thurs Apr 11 1968 S~~in S~ntences priest- and Laymen

JOurrt)~a$ts Opinions Differ_On V~~e of Bishops Synod

By Msgr George G Higgins Two American journ~lists who have covered the Rome

1beat off and on for several years-Father Francis X Murphy CSSR and Gary MacE0 in-have just published an interesting account of the Synod of Bishops which was held in Rome in 1967 (Synshyod 67 A New Sound in what they manege to teU us Rome Bruce Publishing Co about themselves in their sep- Milwaukee) Written in the arate and widelydivergent asshyfamiliar Xavier Rynne style it Sessments of the Synod is something of a tour de force How two men who disagree given the se- so fundamentally about the uecy w h i c h pros and cons of the Synod ever enveloped the managed to work as a tandem $ y nod a 1 in the writing of the history of proceedings The the synodal proceedings is to authors h a v e put it as mildly as possible a tried to give perplexing mystery on account as They tell us that for aU that a c cur ate as lies between their separate possible under evaluations Df the Synod they the conditions are jointly accountable but that of time and cir- the internal logic of their inshycumstance For dividual viewpoints and the my own part I dialectic of the situation led think they deserve better than them to attribute exclusive reshya ~as~ing grade They do ~lOt sponsibil~ty for the Prelude to ~lalln to hae wrlt~en anythmg a priest and for the Postscript like8cIefmltIve hlstory of the i to a layman SYlo1IgtUt they have proyid~d Far A art 1IllS wlth a useful mtenm sum- P mabr of the -proceedings and I take it that this is a polite ~r ~ii w~ cin) begrateful way of saying that when they

Perplexing Mystery got around to summing up their Tothis reader however what impressions of the Synod they

the authors tell us about the

lSynod ls less mterestmg than i

~ 8holJd have concluded contrashyr rlwise- that it was seriously - lacking in credibility and releshy

vance and was thus on biI- ance a huge disappointment

lRationaJize Differences

Such differencesmiddot of opinion on the part of experienced

jourpalilts covering the same everit-and using the very same

source~ of informationare not to be Vf~npered at

On the other hand I am Dot very happy about the curious- way in which the authors haveshyrationalized their differencea Th~y tell Us that one evaluatioo Df ~he Synod (Father Murphys) w~ ~ritteo from the viewpoint of the institutional Church and the other (Mr MacEoins) from that of conteinporarshyman~ind

Or again in Mr MacEoin words A priest professionally involved in the institution will

tend to lean in one direction 11 layman whose professional sushy

- viva rests on his sensitivity to

SPECIAL DELEGATE Marches Ghilio Sacchetti 42 has been named by POpe Paul VI to succeed Count Enrico

Galeazzi as special delegate of the Pontfical Commission for the state of Vatican City He is wearing the now outshymoded costume of a Gentleshyman of Cape and Sword NC PIloto

world opinion in the other

Now Bear This

This strikes me as being bull slightly threadbare and hopeshylessly pre-Conciliar dichotomy I know of a Dumber of priests (and so do the authors I asshysume) who rightly~or wrongly are just as critical of the Synod as Mr MacEoin is

I also know of a number III laymen (and so do the authocs I must assume again) who rightly or wrongly are just as sanguine about the results of the Synod as Father Murphy is So whats all this doctrinaire I

stuff about priests necessarily looking at things (myopically) through the allegedly unenshylightened eyes of contemposhyrary mankind

Tell it to the Marineal

found that they wer~ so ho~e-lessly far apart 111 theIr thmkmg

that the division of labor so I cryptically described in the above quotations appeared to be the only possible way of salshyvaging the middotoperation Thatll fair enough

It isnt at all surprising that one of the authors (Father Murphy) should have concluded that on balance the Synod was truly a contribution to the Church~s aggiornamento and that the other (Mr MacEoin)

MAnmn (NC) - Sz~en per- sons incIl~lg a Cathollc priest have bc)n sentenced to prison terms and fined by Madrids Court of r lic Order on charges Olf havinr participated in an anti-Frangt meeting in Barceshylona in lS~G

On trial were Father Francisshyeo Paula Botey and 10 laymen who were accused of attending

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an illegal meeting The meetshying was advertised as a Day of Repression and criticized what it called the repressive activities of the government of Gen Franshycisco Franco

Father Botey who admitted during the trial that he atshytended the meeting at Barcelona Universitys law school was senshyten~ to a year in jail ~d fined

about $214 Three of the laylDell received similar sentences amplid fines while ~ others drew six-month jail terms aDd four were absolved

Father Batey testified duriDtl the trial that he deliberately atshy1ended the meeting to protest against the ftPress1on he bad said he had seen of -certain see-shymenta of ampbe Spanish clergyshy

Prelate Supports Catholic Schools Opposes Racism

NEWARK (NC) -Archshybishop Thomas A Boland of Newark touched on racism Catholic education and aborshytion in his annual message to the Archdiocesan CouncH of catholic Men at its CQnvention here

Noting that BOrne people adshyvocate closing Catholic schools to concentrate on adult educashytion Archbishop Boland said I believe we mU9t give as much time as is possible to adult edushycation but not that we should ignore our chlIdren

If we close our schools he soid there may 00 no one to attend the adult courses iJn future years

He deplored the absence of religion in the education of many people and said that while 0 ohild may be receiving o good academic background under such circumstances he is not being trained in his will or his morals

Jthortion Is Murder Archbishop Boland noting

~hot the question of relaxing bortion laws is before the state LeFislature recalled that he lralNi opollen to the men about ~ot Dubject a year earlier and repeated what he had said then abortion is murder

Should the state legislate more liberally in this field he said it would go outside its sphere and we would have no

right to follow it He indicated however that

the Church would not oppose the establishment of a legislashytive commission to study the abortion law

Discussing racism he called it a malignant growth in our society and announced his support for a peaceful interrashycial walk through the streets of Newarks ghetto

Spokesmen lor L2ity Archbishop Boland also urged

the men to turn their council into a real spokesman for the laity He ruled out the possibil shyity of a voice for the laity toshytally independent flrom the hierarehy declaring that this is not the structure cd the Church

H we want to build a strucshyture the archbishop said we get an architect to give us a uniform plan Christ is the arshyehitect of the Chureh We are its workmen

He then urged the men tID take the steps which would make the ACCM aspokesman for the people II real council

Delegates adopted four res0shy

lutions endorsing catholic echools condemning racism lin every form advocating retenshytion and expansion of the states IIChool bus law and opposing relaxation of the abortioD statute

Stresses Increased Food Production

NEW DELHI (NC)-The vatshyican recognizes the need to mshycrease food production middotas a most serious problem facing the developing countries and mshydeed the world as a whole Elizabeth Reid II member of the

bull Vatican delegation to the United ean delegation to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD)

Speaking at the UNCTAD meeting here in India MilS Reid said The right to food 18 01117 another aspect 01 be mosi eaered of all buman rigbts the right to life and it is tb1s parshyticular aspect of the problem of development that places the heaviest and most serious burshyden em the comlcieDee of man- flIIIIampy from home kiDd ~ bull lot cbeapeJ tIIaD IiDDC

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HEATHER CUTTHNG

Sacred Hearts Junior High School Student Is Licenseod Amateur Radio Operator

Holly and Heather Cutting 532 Walnut Street Fall River share a transistor rashydio With some teenage sisters this might cause trouble but not with this pair Heather Jets Holly take the transistor She settles for pop music from Johannesburg South Africa-via her shortwave set They have real good musicraquo she says Blonde 14 year old Heather learned the In ternational Morse Code a basic requirement for amashyteur radio operators when she was seven but its only in the past year that shes really worked at the complicated hobby Her father Dick Cutting ll construction superintendent by profession has been ll radio ham for 30 years by avocation An awesome battery of receivshyers and transmitters fills a room of the Walnut street house and when Heather displayed real inshyterest in them she had iii wi)) ing teacher close at hand

Heathers an eighth grader at Sacred Hearts Junior High School on Prospect Street in Fall River and she admits that she does as much homework as IIhe can at sOOool to have eveshynings free for her hobby She at shytends radio classes nightly then hurries bome to spend as much as three hours at ber sel

Im llicensed for two fre- I

quencies right DOW she exshyplained I can talk on six and two meters Translated that means she can contact amateullil

--in this part of the United States but may not ta]k tomiddot overseal operators until she earns 1Il middotgeneral license

Im Working for my license DOW she said rohe examinashytion JIm be in 00 days Even the license that Heather now holds however is umusual for one of her age When she gets ber general license she Will be among itB Y01lllllgest holders and probably the youngceBt 8h licensee in the stlllte

rhere are 11426 lI8dto amashyteurs iD Massacbuatts I18id her father aInd cmIy 409 aJre WCllInen

wm CoDtaet lFather A real benefit to ~ Cutting

family from Bellltberll general lieense wID be iba1 1Ibell be able tID reach bel fathe bull blB car short wave mctic wheD he is OlD hIfl freqUeDt bwliness tripal

distance calls said Mr Cutting The electric light company figshyures I can run this rig 16 hours a day for only $290 a month

Heather hopes to make a cashyreer of radio technology Right now she is able most of the time to repair her set if someshything goes awry and shea building a small transmitting station for an upcoming science fair at Sacred Hearts Itll broadcast about 200 feet she said

Sometimes Of couJrSe gremshylins pop ill Like the time Heather got a phone can from a boy in Swansea Hey did oU know youre coming m on eiYclnnel 2 on our TV be said 011 another occasion Heather picked ~ her fathers transmisshysion OIl ber electric pitar speaker

Most of the time however things go smoothly During her nightly radio sessions Heather picks up signals Jrom other amateurs and has some schedshyuled appointments vis the mllshyways withmiddot friends hi otheJl mties

When she picks up 5 llllew

eontact she confirms it with II brightly-colored postcard bearshying her name and station 0011 etters in psychedelic pink Wld yellow

Collecting such postcards 111 2 sub-hobby for radio amateulll and Holly has a oozzling eollecshytion on the walls of her radio room She bas Mganized the Sou the a II t ern MassachushyIlett8 Teenage RadM Net aocll ill

BEFORE YOU BUy-tRy

PARK MOTORS OLDSMOBILE

OIdsmobile-lPeugot-Rencnft fJ1 Middle Street Fairhaven

llooking for new members Its just for teens she says

=rheyre more fun to talk to Once she has her general 11shy

cense she plans to join Iil group that relays messages from Viet Nam servicemen to their famshyilies

other Bobbies Badia is by no means Heathshy

ers only hobby Shl~ and her sister Holly a freshman at Emshymanuel College have an imshypressive collection of sharpshyshooting trophies mostly garshynered at Fall River Rod and Gun Club meets I began shootshying when I was six and had my Own gun when I as seven eaid Heather

Other interests are mathematshyics and music Heather picked lIP guitar playing on her own and belOngs to a folk group which plans its first public apshypearance after Easter

In short shes one teen whoD never be found wondering what to de next

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Prescriptions called for and delivered

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THE ANCHORshy 13Thurs April 11 1968

Houston Priests Get Pay Raise

HOUSTON (NC) - BishOJ John L Morkovsky announceCl a pay raise for priests of thE Galveston-Houston diocese and said a new retirement poliCW will go into effect Jan 1 1970

Under the old pay scale asshy sistants received a base salary of 11250 plus $30 car allowshyance and $1250 insurance preshymium for a total salary of $155 a month Pastors received a total monthly salary of $21750 The new salary reale will allow for increased pay based on the number of yearo priests have been ordained

Assistants who have been cshydained less than 10 years wiill receive a total monthly salary of $200 The figures will ~

$225 for those ordained moro than 10 years

Pastors with 25 years in t100 priesthood will receive m monthly total of $275 ThoSQ with more than 25 years will receive $300

The retirement policy ca1lJfl for optional retirement at age 65 and mandlltory retirement at 70 However elderly pries1amp who are able and willing m37 be assigned to other priestly work than the pastorate Bisbshyop Morkovsky stated

The bishop said the changes are in accordance with the recshyommendations of the Senate 01 Priests and follow consultashytion with diocesan consultom

Reach Impasse-PIITSBURGH (NC)-A state-gt

level meeting between Cat~

olic officials and the Nationl11 Association for the Advanceshyment of Colored People on furshythering racial integration iB Catholic schools reached m seeming stalemate here bn Pennsylvania when the schoolshymen cited lack of funds as ll major obstacle to NAACP pro= posals

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J~p-~~C~ and TIM IsBands THE EXTERMINATOR CO 5TERUNG 8EVERAGES~ ~middotNC

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foIo~ng i~d~duals MAsoN FURNITURE SHOWROOMSALLENS CUT RATE New~Bedford cI Business Concerns ANN DALE PRODUCTs INC II A McWHIRRCOMPANY

DURO FINISHING CORPbull Tile MacKENDE AND WINSLOW INC PAUl G ClEARY amp CO INC

TOM EUISON ~

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SOBiLOfF BRotHERS ~

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YOUTH CARES FOR AGE Retired Sisters are tenderlycared for at chair while Sister Mary Agnes looks on Center Sister Agnes Maureea Mmiddott St Mary Convent Fall River Left Sister Agnes Maureen seniormiddot wheels SisterMary Jer~me anQright Sister JohnCatberine bringgdri_ infirmarian points out magazine article to Sister Mary Lig~~ri inwheel to Sister Mary Ursulamiddot Both infirmarians are licensed practical nurses

I

Cqrdinal Roy Raps Apathy

MEXICO CITY (NC)~MaushyJOice Cardinal Roymiddot of Quebee _ a visit here as ehairman of the Pontifical Commission for World Justice and Peace said Christian teachings condemn violence in solving social probshylems but also condemn themiddot false prudence that lacks the eourage to make needed reshyforms

The prelate who has been touring Latin America for sevshyeral weeks said he was 1mshypressed by the number of Cathshy

olic organizations and institushytutions already applying Pope Paul VIs encyclical The Deshyvelopment of Peoples in their Jespective countries

But he added Latin Amerishyearn still have to assume fully their responsibility in workingtowards economic balance andmiddot bull just social order 80 every cit shyizen can promote his own welshyfare in a climate of freedom and common good

bull bullbull tmiddot

Comes KindIYcimiddotmiddotSislesmiddot 0 Mercy AmiddotI Fall River Comiddotnventmiddot

By Patricia McGowan

~When thou wast younger thou didstmiddot gird thyself anddidst walk where thou Frouldst But when thou shalt be old thou shalt stretch forth thy handsmiddot arid another shall gird thee and lead thee whither thou wouldst not In its description of the almost universal lot of age this is one of the most poignantpassages in Scriptur~ But age comes kindly f~r Sisters Although they are not exshyemptmiddot from its physical and mental ravages they need not fear being forsaken byfriends or being left alone the

fanulymiddot Jhe famllylast of a that is a religious community cherishes its older members and provision is made for Sisters to pass their last years surrounded by tender care

Among havens for older Sisters is the infirmary at Mt St Mary Conventmiddot Fall River The Sisters who have spent most of their religious life in the Fail River Diocese come here for their laBtyears exshypliliried Sister Agnes Maureen

The cardinal added at emiddot pretB8 RSMmiddotmiddot senior iniirmarian at eonference in the headquarten the Mount Her domain proshyf the Mexican Social Secreta- vides eh~rf11~ccQmmodations riat that national efforts for de- for 10 Sisters Each has her ownmiddot elopment do not eliminate the room andthere is II kitchenette aeed ~forfoleignaid where those ablE lobe up and

The Pontifieal commisSion Cardinal Roy indicated ill enshyaged in persuading rich counshytries to devote at least one per eent of their groSs national product to assist poor eountries

Archdiocese Adopts Project Equality

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing notified the priests lIeIlate of the Boston archdiocese of plans 10 adopt Project Equality a program designed to use purchasing power of church institutions to make firms supplying goods and 8elVices wipe out diICriminashy birislM Placticeamp

e~ut ~n enjoy their meals ~gethermiddot

The ~nfirmaryis but II few stepis from the Mount chapel wher~ the retired Sisters spend hours a day in prayer for comshymunity members still in the active lPostolate Also claiming time for Sisters whose eyesight permits are needlework ana erooheting projects

Always DraWlll Cheerful and dedicated Sister

Agnes Maureen who has I Deen at the infirmary six years is aided by Sister John Catherine who has served the aged Sisters two years A laywoman takes the night shift in the infirmary ensuring the Sisters round the clock care Bothmiddot Sister infirmashy

rians are licensed practical nurses who received their trainshyI g to L d f F tma Hosn a ur a y 0 a I shypital in the Providence Diocese

When I entered religion I hoped to be an infirmarian

said SIster Agnes Maureen I whas alwdays drawn to work for t e age

Some people think we havent got a nursing apostolate she added but we need nurses desshyperately Right now we have nine Sisters taking care of inshyfirmaries in our province

Among Sisters now at the Mount infirmary are Sister

Mary Agnes who celebrated her diamond jubilee last DeshyceJl)ber and most of wbose r~lishygious life was spent in New Bedford and middotNorth Attleboro schools and Sister Mary Lishy

gu()ri whomiddot f9r 49 yearl taught sixth graders at st Patricks School Fall River

HShe looks out her window at St Patricks said Sister Agnes Maureen and she says Theres home

The Sisters are welcoming the arrival of Spring and warm days said the infirmarian It means they can enjoy their sunporch sit in the Mounts garden and go for occasional car rides Of course they have many visitors she said Other Sisters in the house come to see them and so do Sisters from the convents where they forshymerly lived

Yes age comes kindly for Sisters Not Hke the old lady overheard in a downtown groshy

eery confiding to a chance fellow-customer her discovery of a bargain in frozen food I live alone you know and 1 get

three big servings from a packshyage--and only 29 cents

N 0 Sister lives alone

bull

~~tplic Newspaper Wins Press Awards

NEW ORLEANS (NC) -The eJarion Herald middotarchdiocesa middotnewspaper won eight awards iii the annual competition of the

N~W Or)eans Press Club ~ competition included daily and

weekly newspapers wire serVshyices and television stations

Millard F Everett editor won first place in two categories - editorial and best religioWl story This marks the first time in five years of competition that the Clarion has taken the top award for best religious story Staff members of the paper also took three second and three third place awards

----------------------------

ZENITH bull ACOUSTICON bull UNEX

bull BIOLOGICAU bull YITAMIIIS

C~tt 615-7829 IRENE R SHEA PROP

Prompt Free Delivery in fALL RIVER SOMERSET TIVERTON amp VICIHITY 101 ROCK ST (CORNER OF PINE ST) FALL RIVIImiddot

~ 6

THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFon River-Thurs Apr 11 1968

CathoJi~ ll]wnDv~JSityPltDcopy~regii~copyJ~

IPlanLUBffil AmeFicon ~1]~regregO WASHINGTON (NC) - A ops and l~aders of several South

jJroup of pr-ofessors from Cathshy American governments sHe University of America hope The Washington center comshyS n~w technical middotinstituteat the middotprises -ll group of professorsshy~tholic University of Gu~Washy mostly members of the CU caulI Ecuador may mark the llchool of middoted ucation-whomiddot are ltJPening of an international edshy specialists ineclUcationfordeshyvcation bridgetoLatin America Velopment Director of the proshy

The institute will be inaugurshy ject is Dr Jose A Baquero ated early this month as 11 middotcoshy WM has been commuting b~shy1)eIativeventure by the Center meen Washingtonand his nashylor Educational Research fa middottive Ecuador dming the -cmrent QuitoEcuadorand the Center school year lor Community Developmenhmd This is not an Ecuadorian Servioe at Catholic University project it is an internatienal bere It has the support 01 Vashy projed a resealclFaction proshykanofficials Ecuadorianbislshy gram between North and South

America Dr Baquero said middothereBC middotto Recruit laquorNe had to start middotsomewhere The natural plaoe 10 begin wasNegro St~1ent5 middot-the Qlace Where weaould get

CHESTNUT HILL (NC) shy the most facilitiesThisproject iesuit-eper-ated Boston College God willing if successful will bere has made available $100shy move throughout Latin AmershyGtOO fora talent search -progr1m ica We already have contracts to recruit Negro stJdents frem with interestedJeaders in Sao disadvantagedurbanareas middotof Paulo BTazil Bogota Colombia tlhecountry mainly in Greater and Lima Peru Boston Msgr Eugene Kevane direcshy

Father Michael P Walsh SJ tor of the Center for Communitypresident caUed for support off Development andServleedaimshyiIIe entirestudent body facshy ed iB number of Latin American Illlty and administration of EQsshy Church and government officialS Qon College to make the ~mshy have middotexpressed interest in thecram a success projectand a belid it may beshy

Since the program was starteJ come a model of assistance middottoIJeveral weeks ago some 50 ~shy lI3derdeveloped poundOuntrieslltIicatiopshave beenreceiltvelll He said ArcnbishGp Romolofrom students in ghetto areas Carooni apostolic nuncio 10lot -entrance middotin next Septemshy

~1u told him heilOllSiders theWltll freshman -class pmject of great importance andThere have a1w~ys beellU M~S a similhlr middotinstitute willIlegro students enrolled at B4tsshybe established at the Pontificalton College oUicials said ~t University in Limatheir Dumber is ~ot ~own 00shy

0tberhigh-ranking churchshyaYSe race is not shown 8ll1 middotmen who lthave endorsed theapplications The Collegemiddotacceptll project include MsgrLuigi Lishyattdents of all faiths gutti the Holy Sees PermanentN~t SeptemberNegro lrtlllshy

1Gbserver at the Food and Agrishy

bullnts with the necessary ~uaUshy6eations will be admitted n8 culture Organization of the 1Ilual while middotsome 25 will ge United Nations and Archbishop admitted under the talent Ceasar Antonio Mosquera fif

lt4IeQIChprogram The number is Guayaquil president of theEcshybeing limited for thegood af iliad-orlan Bishops Conference

GOLDEN JUBILEE Sisshyter Rose Alma Reid CSC (Sjltte1 M Flora) will mark herg-olden i llbilee of religious professjon on Sunday April 21 at Sacred Heart Convent New Bedford A Mass of thanksgi~rjng will be offered at 1130 Sunchw morning at Sacred Head Church and a reception will be held in the parish hall ITom2 to 4 th~t

afternoon Friends and forshymer pupils are invited t01l~

tend

So Curolina Bishop A-sksPettce $upport

CHARLESTON (NC)- Bishshymiddotop Ernest Lmiddot Unterkoefier of Charleston has called for the middotfull support ofall Americans of President Lyndon middotlB Johnshysons efforts to secure peace in middotVietnam

Tbe South ltCarolina Bishop said that the Presidents -peace ini tiati yes demonstrate that he is a gtarson who -has ever been conscious of the grave responsishybility 01 his ofillce and that his judgements have been measured ~y the critical threats to the securi~y and free action ofthe United States

ICampus Comediansl

R~JlJ~stforBirh ControJ 1nlcrmation lndBGSYlrncrGti(C~e

DAYTON (NC)-A Univershysity of Dayton chaplain said he suspected campuscomediami for 1b~ conJroversyaroused bY a request for availability of birth corttol information and materials In campus by theunishyversity stmiddotudent congress

Father Urban Rupp SM universi~y co-chaplain wrote in the chaplain s bulletin the alshymost unanimous aetion fthe student gfvernment group middotwas an idio~yncratic caper in the natureo Ii ttle childrenpl~ying

house He indicated he fouud it difshy

ficult to take the Pfoposa1 serishyomlY

Now of COUrse I middotcowd be taking this all -wrong be said

Perhaps it was intended 00 bn serious In that case I woUld be tempted to thinktheemershygency is not just immediateshyit is really one generation too late

This was taken asa reference to student efforts to pwih through the resolution orbirth control as an emergency -meashysure

That failed but a few days later the student middotcongressvo~ 29 tol to seeka change in llJllshyversUy Wlicy that would -pershymit the introductionof birth 1Ontrol selYiees in thestudem health center for married eQUoshy~les and Ulose llQOD _ ~arriedmiddot

the young Negroes whowiUbe ~pted oUiciaI said

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PATRIARCH The middotnewily elected head of the Syriac Oatholic Church Patriarch Hgtenys Antoine Hayek of Anshy~och was enthroned recentshy1w in Beirut Lebanon In this post hesucceds the late P-ashykiarch Ignace Cardinal TapshylPouni NC Photo

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In ~ glory of His Resurrection may be reborn man~

amiring hopes and CleSires _ ~ce

HAPPY EASTER THE OFFICERS DIRiEc1r~ AND STAFfshy

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FIRSTmFff-BANK

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StYE SOME

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A CHILD

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A bull told ($1250 a monttl$15000-a ~ar)ca_small SISTER Investment for SisterS lifetime of service

Like to be her sponsorf Her name Is Sister Suzamma and she will write to you

iIHAPPINESS ciS

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THE ANCHO~-Trappists Elect Mother Church of Nation8 PortlglleSe 17 Thurs April 11 1968

Youngest Abbot P-epares fOI- Cenlellilial Celebration At Gethsenloni Dy Patida F r-u nis

GETHSEMANI (NC) The youngest abbot in the history of the monastery of Our Lady of Gethsemani was formally blessed (March ~l) by Archbishop Thomas J McDon~

ough 0pound Louisville Father M Flavian Burns

OCSO 36 ilgt the seventh ab~

bot in the 120-year history of the monastery He was elected by members of the community Inst January to succeed Abbot M James Fox OCSO

Father Flavian described bis position as en administrator whose main job il) service to others within the community He said his most important function it3 to hold plivate spiritual conversations with other monks and to handle the lillM)nasterys relations with the ~Atside world

Thcilt are some 120 monks at ~ethsemani abbey a decline from past years Abbot Burns cCrlbllltes the decline at least in prt to the attitude of the times YiJCl1 was foJJJlcrly accepted without question is now being ltI~etioned he observed

ltDontemplation Prayer

Changes have been made the IHurElY is now in English and 2Jc strict vow of silence has TiKen relaxed somewhat On an experimental basis the monks are allowed to use brief oral instructions instead of sign language as in the past

Despite the lack of radio or 1clevision Abbot Burns said the monks keep in contact through newspllpers with events in todays world The main thing ill to know what is going on in the Church and what effects our fellow hushymans according to the abbot

The life of a monk involves middotcontemplation and prayer rather than speaking up - 11 more spiritual turn according kI Abbot BUlns

A native of Jersey City N J he is a graduate of Henry SfIyder public high sehool there

Protests- Campaign Agamst Religion

NEW YORK (NC) - A new wave of terror against aU churcltgpers is now in effect in Albania an exile from that country has declored in a- letter of protest sent to the United Nations Commission on Human Rightsmiddot and~ to UN Secretary General U Thani

The protest bl Dr Rexhep KIasniqi president of the Free Albania Committee which has its headquarters here said that Albanial following a lf41oist eommunillt guideline has shut down every cltulch and mosque and has made any_kind of pubshylIc worship impossible

Thill campaign Dr Krasniqi tated is a violation of the UN Charter the Universal Declarashytion of Human Rights and of Albanias own communist conshystitutional guarantee of freedom of conscience for all

San Antonro Priests Form Association

SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Fortyshyene diocesan and religious comshymunities priests of the San Anshytonio archdiocese formed a priests association bere The priests ohose a six-member temshypora]) steering committee

One of the fiTst formal actions Gf the allsociatron was to inform Archbishop Robert E Lucey of San Antonio of the group forshymation

There are approximately 441

Parishioner d St John the Baptist Church in Nc Bedford are getting rendy for a momentoils event-the 100th anniversary of the fO~1l1dil1g of the oldest Portuguese parish in the nation The cen~en]ial celebration wi II not take place until 1971 but many things have to be done in preparation within the next three years One major project is renoshyvating the church ihelf To pay for the massive job ptrshyishioners have inaugur~teca Centennial Fund Drive to raise money for painting ~he church do extensive electrical work and buy a rew organ Estimated cost (f the regt3ir5 is $150000

Rt Rev Msgr John A Silvia pastor is honorary drve chairshyman and Frank S Jason is genshyeral chairman Other committee members include Richard GiJI1shysalves and Jesse V Santos Jr division chairmen JQseph S Vera special gifts chairman Richard L Lopes treasurer George Radcliffe director Louis S Silva assistant director Mrs Mary Lucy Soares office conshytrols and Miss Luey E Dias list supervisor

Members of the Campaign Exshyecutive Committee also include Frank M Martin ald Joseph C Motta

The history of St Johns and the history of the Portuguese people in America arc closely intertwined

It was at the end of the 18th Century that settlers began comshying from themiddot Azores to the United States TheJ were relashytively few in number nd as II

result almost lost their national identity

Near Ifood However by 1840 the trickle

of Azoreans was beginning to turn into a near Oood of imshymigrants who settled in New Bedford then a whaling and fishing center

By 1865 many Portuguese families called New Bedford home They lacked just one thing-a church of their own and a priest who spoke their language and understood their customs and traditions

Their first priest-Rev Joao Ignacio de Azevedo-anived in 1869 and on Sept 10 1871 St Johns parish was canonically established

Theremiddot were approximately 1shy000 Portuguese of Azorean deshyscent living in New Bedford at the time and the)T detelmined to build their own church A lot was purchased for $3OD8 ~ con~

siderable amount in those days and soon ground WQS broken for the new house of God

However Father de Azeedo was a mission pliest Vl~ho~moved

throughout the are~ aCministershying to his counblymen As a reshysult a new parish was establishshyed in Boston and he became its first pastor

Expandoll

Construction of St Johns WillS

continued by Rev Antonio de Mattos Freitas a native or Calshylteta St George Azores Fashyther Freitas also was responsible for the construction of a recshytory When he reUred because of ill health and returned to~ the AzoreS he was succeeded by Rev Antonio G de Silva Neves who was to serve St Johns durshying the greatest expansion Gfthe citys Portuguese colony

The first church located where a section of Morse- Twiampt Drill now stands soon ~ outgrown by its congregation and a drive began for agt new and larger church

Father Neves who served 8~j

pastor for almost 25 years saw the new church at County and Wing Streets almost coop]eted However ill health also forced bill retirement

PREPARING FOR CENTENNIAL In charge of fumd drive for hundredth anniversary of St John Baptist Church New Bedford are from left George Radclffe drive execushytive director Frank Jailon general chairman

pleted construction of the present church and rectory in three years The church which now serves the parish was solemnly blessed an4 dedicated to the worship of God by the late Bishshyop Feehan

Through the years the parshyishioners of St Johns have proved their dedication to their cliurch Now they are renewinr their dedication

Msgr Silvia notes that before the small St Johns Church was built the citys Portuguese colshyony attended Mass at St Lawshyrence Church Later they moved into what today is Crowells brt Store

Landmark Today the 11Inificent st

Johns is a landmark in New Bedford befitting its position as Mother Church of the Portu guese in the- UnFted States

MSgr Silvia a native of Pall River served at St Peters Church in Provincetown for 27 years His only other assi1shyment St John the B-aptirt Church

Ordained to the priesthood or Dec 20 1919 St Johns was the new priests first assignment He remained at the cRurch unshytil No~ember 1924 when he was transferred to Ptovinceto~

On Oct 2 1951 Msgr Silvia returned to St Johns as pzsshytor a post hemiddot still fulfills with zeal and energy

His assignmetlt to St Jobnfl parish in 1919 was not ~1sgr Sinshyvias introduotion to the New Bedford parish

As a young boy the p2stcshyrecalls his poundathers weekly trips from Fall River to New Bedford to bring back a priest

Four Families There were few Portuguese

families in Fall River in those days he says When my father arrived in Fan River there were iust four Portuguese families in the city Gradually others setshytled there

My father used to drive over in a horse and buggy to bring Il priest back tc Fall River to ll3y

degbrought him back the next dzy Since those days of hischiMshy

bood Msgr Silvia observeamp-l Turn to Page Eighteen

Continued fronmiddot Page Three

the late Tobias and Ann Lynch ]Burke Mr Burke was born in Newport Tipperary Ireland and his speech bears witness to the o-it and lilt of his birthshyplce He is married te Catbshyerine Lowney Burke and the couple lives next to the Chanshycery

DI1 Davia Costa Dr Costa son of David CosU

and Julia Rodrigues is the husshyband of Louella Somerday and fther of five children A dentshyist in NeJ Bedford he is active ir ceo and in St Vincent ~e

Pml work on a parochial and al(l level He has been zealoUJ ir- many important phases ~

perish aetivity in Immaculate Conception Parish in New BedshyforC He was recipient of the Diocesan Marian Award in Deshycember

itpJlin 15 TIle awards Jill be presenteCl

at St Marys Cathedral Fa]] River on lIlonday evening April 15 at 8 PM At toot timeuro there will be the investi shyture of two lI-ionsignori the awarding of Papal Knight 03 SZ Gregory honors to nine ~sect- oeesan laymen and the Pro EecIesia et Pontipoundlce award kJ mother Pierre Marie adminisshytlato of St Annes Hospital IE Fall River~

Join Federation IIALEIGH (NC)-Forty ()(f thfl

matewide Raleigh dioceses 14~

tlriests have formed the North iCaFolina Priests Associatioil which will affiliate with a Emshy

ticmal federation DOW beiJl~

formed

May the Joy and Pomise 01- Easter

uplift your spirit and gladden

your hean

FROM THE OFRCEIIS AND PERSONfJB Of

qkJM~ERCHANTS CIa1iotuLe BANK

IN NEW BEDFORD

SOUTH BANK-Cove St at Iodney French Boulevard WEST BANK-Kempton Street at Mill Stret

LUNDS CORNER BANK-Acushnet Ave rear Lunds Comer DARTMOUTH BANK-Dartmouth Street near Rockdale Ave NORTH BANK-Acushnet Avbull at Coffin Ave

CENTER BANK-Purchase and William Sts priests in the San Antonio arcl1shy Next pastor was the Rev Mass He used to stay overnight tiiocese Manuel A da Silva wt() oom- at our hOuse ald JlG ~tbeI

-

18 Tti~ ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1969 CatecheticsWeek Set at StonehillDioce$clm ~j[llIlde[lj)fl5 Join Nal-gonGI Some 400 priests religious and laymen are expected to at shyMculrraurru U A$~ssinatBon tend a catechetics institute b be held Monday Aug 5 throughOf Dr Mriin luther KilnS Saturday Aug 10 at Stonehill College Diocesan schools shared i~ national mourning at the Sister Mary Francille CSJ

~8sassination of Dr Martin Luther King with special theology professor at Regis ColshyMasses or prayers offered in every school At Cassidy High lege will direct the institute in Taunton Rev John Moore chaplain celebrated a Mass and speakers will include Rev

Frederick Moriarty SJ Revfor the repose of the soul Cha~les E Cook Rev James F(l)f the Negro leader and rently hplds first place in the Hawker Sister Florence -MishyNotre Dame math league chels OLVM Gerard Potte~

tlie chapel by students in a demy Fairhaven have been study periods were spent in Girls at Sacred Hearts Acashy

bauoi and Mrs Helen Jacobs With the theme Making Alllvigil for peace working on a project to bring

Christian Youth Movement Easter cheer to patients at St Things New institute sessiono will discuss Scripture catechetshymembers at Jesus-Mary Aca- Lukes Hospital New Bedford ical techniques use of filmsdemy Fall River heard the New Under supervision of Sister Jushywith adolescents other visualFolk a group of singing Holy lie Louise SSCC theyve ~een aids parent education teamCross seminarians Their appear- making tray favors including teaching and creative dramaticsance was arranged under t~e decorative placemats and napkin

Further information is avail shydirection of Mofher John Scarry holders for adults and flowered able from Stonehill CollegeJRJM Jollipops chicky surprises and North Easton 02356Also at JMA its French Week bunny hats for childern

The observance- began Sunday Science Fair Winners when French Club members Jeanne Phenix Yvette Berthi- Holy Family had four winshy Charities AppeaI aume and Susan Cournoyer took ners at the annual New Bedford Continued from Page Three part in a play sponsored by the Science fair In the senior division

Community Fund CampaignPrevost French Club Les Fem- James Berry and John Thomas president Board of Managers mes Parlent Trop Throughout of the New Bedford school were of Boston Dispensary and vice

the week too there have middotbeen cited fo~ earth science and phy- the Diocesan cheerleading tour- will combine with the seniors president of USOseveral skits prepared by mem- sics proJects respectively while t tl h ld t F h th bZbers in the junior division both Pa- namen recen yea ee an Lor e occasIOn SInce oth He has been the recipient of

or effort at Prevost was tricia Downey and SharonSmola High but sports arent all that cltsses of the academy are small honorary degrees from Holy MaJ matter at the TauntoJl girls due to the fact that the high Cross College Tufts University

e Sunday program Whlch ln- were recognized for work in the h f h d I ld f b sc 001 Break ast lunc an schoo IS being phased out Suffolk University Bradford -luded In addItIon to the play fle 0 iology M formal dinner pace settmgs The Junipero Club of Holy Durfee College of Technology~veral talks by promInent any students won honors at h M h I I I were recently on display at the Family High recently sponsored of Fall Rivet and Lowell Techshy

I remiddotnch cItIzens a French song- t e assac usetts RegIOn S F h school library and members of a talk on drug addiction for jun- nological Institute ~t and a motion picture Clence alr eld in Fall Rlver They included Christine Four- the Mothers Auxiliary were on iors and seniors The talk was Bishop to AddJess Meeting

UN French Club nier Dominican Academy and hand to answer etiquette ques- given by two brothers one an Most Rev James L ConnollyAt Coyle the French Club di- Diane Desmarais Mt St Mary tions from the students ex-addict the other director of Bishop of Fall River will speak

Ilected by Brother Hugh McCabe Academy both Fall River Both And the Coyle Fathers Club Marathon House a center for to the priests parish trusteesIOeCently elected officers After girls were recogiIized by the held its annual Father-Son Com treatment of addicts located in chairmen of the Catholic Charishy8le votes were tallied however Southeastern District of the Mas- munion breakfast at the school Coventry RIo ties Appeal and the invited lays our man at Coyle it looked sachuse~ts Dental Society bull with Robert Cahill ofthe Rhode CongratuIcitions go to Joseph gue9ts of the 111 diocesan if ~embers were voting for Debra Lay Dominican Aca- Island Food and Drug Commis Abraham of St Anthony High parishes bull UN delegation The presidents demy received a savings bond sion as guest speaker He dis- for meriting runner-up position Roland A Lafrance 1968 ApshyliPot wa~ captured he reports from the Bristol South Distriet cussed harmful effects of various iil the state finals of the annual peal lay chairman will also adshy a Polish fellow Cbarles Ozug Medical Auxiliary arid Michael drugs American Legion olatorical con- dress the 800 expected to attend lames OBrien a true Irishman Zito Bishop Feehan High At~middot The Catholic Students Mis- test - the opening meeting of the won the vice-presidential spot tleboro was awarded a plaque sion CrUsade at Stang H~gh has In club~ews at~HA the Senshy campaign for funds for the 30 while the treasurers job was by the Womens Auxil1ary to the taken as a special project this ior Science Club will conduct agencies of the Catholic Chadshy~warded to Jorge Matesanz -a Mass Veterinary ASsn month of April the collection of a farewell meeting for seniors ties Appeal

BASKETBALL PLAYERS On basketball team at Connolly High Fall River are from left Tim Duffy Tom Kroger John Long Joe Kelly Greg Sullivan Mike Manning

~~dent of Spanisll extraction Winners in the division of donated medical supplies and this ~month and members will Only Paul Bor9ue the secretary earlhscience Were John Dias eyeglasses for deprived Peoples visit an encephalitis clinic in I ~anaged to make the scene for Thomas Burk~ anciRobei-tClou~ of the world Supplies collected Freetown in May The Stamp France tier FeehahMicIlael Cote Pre illbe forwarded to the Cathi- and Coin Clubis planning a pubshy

At Bishop Stang iil North vost and Elizabeth Lavoi~ Do- olic Missions Medical Bureau for lie exhibition of members col- Dartmouth the math team led minican shipment iections in May imd the Chess by high scorer Lawrence l3yrnes Awards in math and engineer- Upco~ing at S~A Fairhaven Club has undergone reorganiza- placed secon~in a reeentBqs- ing went to Carol Vasconcellos is the aruiual senior prom which tion election of officers inshyflon public schools math meet Mt St Mary Madeleine Delisl~ wilL be held in the Colonial cluding Edward Norman presishyThe Stang team paced by the and Vivian Blais and Michael R60m of Whites restaurant in dent Daniel Brule vice-presi- shyeo-sIstent good work of George Zito Feehan Genevieve Pappas Westport from 8 to midnight dent Diane Lizotte secretary Oliver and EIleen Keavy cur- and Debra Lay Dominican Joan Friday night May 24 Juniors TuniorProm

Basile Feehan Amato Polselli The Holy Family Junior Prom Prevost and Sharon Woycie- Board ofmiddot Trustees isslated for Friday night AprilCentennialmiddot chowski Mt St Mary were 26 at Kennedy Center The prom

Continued from Page Seventeen cited To Study Changes will last from 8 to 11 and will Chemistry winners included have Carousel as its themebroad smile on his face-many Jane Arruda Anne Lewis De- WASHINGTON (NC) - The Mlisic will be by the Escorts

other families have arrived from nise Michaud Elizabeth St board of trustees of the Catho- And the Holy Family debatePltlrtugua1 A man d Diane Lamontagne lic University of America in team tied for first place in the Our Lady of Mt Carmel par- Christine Fournier Dominican Washington D C will meet Narry League with Cassidy A ~h was detached from St Johns Anne Sullivan and Pamela Can- Sunday April 21 in St Louis playoff will be held As of now as the Portuguese population dee Feehan Marilyn Riley and to consider a wide range of rec- Cassidys debate reco~d is 12 grew Then Our Lady of the Ann-Marie Charrette Sacred ommended changes resulting wins out of 14 debatesjrnmaculate Conception parish Hearts Fall River Irene Caron from a year-long study of the was erected to care for families Cassidy Marilyn Bentley Mt pontifical university by a comshyi Portuguese descent living in mitteee headed by Dr Carroll ~e North End of New Bedford St Mary Hochwalt

In the field of physics Alan middotRAMBLERToday St John the Baptist White Prevost Michelle Paquet The meeting will be held in ehurch has about 4000 parishshy SHA Fall River JamesReid Jrconjunction witll the Spring Americas Economy King ioners Our numbers started Prevost Mary Soans Jane Mc meeting of the National Confershy Fnr the Best Deal Come To dropping about seven years ago Donald and Martba Nugent yent ence of Catholic Bishops Broadway Ramblerasgr Silvia explains He feels St Mary The trustees are expected 10 INC part of the drop in membership Representatives from Diocesan name a new 30-man board meet 768 BROADWAYis due to a number of families schools to the Mass State Sci- with faculty representatives for RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 131moving outside the parish )ounshy ence Fair will include Michael the first time in histoi-y and CHARLES J DUMAIS Presdarles Intermarriages with othshy lito Amato Polselli Debra Lay discuss the search for a new er nationalities account for still Madeleine Delisle Jane Arruda university rector to replacemore losses Anne Lewis Father J~dhn P Whalen ~ho ~III11I11I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I11I1I1HIUIIIIIIIlIIlilllllllllllfllHlIilttmmIllIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllllnIlIllIllHIIIIIIIIIJ111~ However the Mother Church Denise Michaud Alan White was naine last October to a ef the Portuguese is not fading Michelle Paquet Elizabeth St one-year term as acting rector E WEEKEND SPECIAL sect away AmandSharon Woyciechowski A new school was built in New Projector

f957 It is expensive Msgr Silvia admits but I felt we needed it

St Anthony High in New Bedshyford is rejoicing over acquisi shytion of a movie projector as a

Parish gtrganizations are active gimiddotft from the alumni association and individual parishioners are willjng to give of their time

Presentation to principal Sister Lucille Champagne was made

and effort Perking

to keep the parish by Mrs Josephine Lafleur sociation president

asshy

Now they are getting read7 Cassidy-Coyle cheerleaders Jor a 100th anniversary captured third pillce v9Phy iil

_

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Case Somerset Favorites In Narry Diamond League

Case High of Swansea and Somerset are pre-season ehoices in this seasons Narragansett League baseball race but the club th8lt will bear watching is Westport TIne darkshyhorse Villagers may have a few surprises for Narry foes Another small area school

with a respectable 8-6 recordthat potentially has a shot Only one member of that at a league championship is squad Calvin Hopkinson will Norton of the Tri-Valley not be playing for the Villagers Conference Coach Ed Bibeau this Spring With the rest of the has most of last Deasons Central club ready to go - watch Jlor Village regulars Westport to make its presence in the fold ready lmown to challenge the Among fuose returning are perennial Paul Eastwood an Russ Picard favori1es If 0 T two of the better performers in Narry honors the circuit a year ago Eastwood amp1i1 at Norton led the team in hitting with a (C 0 a c h Peter highly respectable 360 averagem[l ~ek has pitched and played the infield G3ven returning Picard like Eastwood 15 also ~nnen for versatile An outfielder by trade ~theY chamshy he also takes his turn on the ii~~JWhip bid Peter mound for Coach Bibeaus nine Weo~port Bartek Carl Zajac and Jeff Hague tmIshed the 1961 eampaign ill round out Bibeaus four-man ~ place in tbe NalT7 loop pitching staff

Norton Bids for Tri-Valley Crown jfOO task of handling the but in thin scholastic year of

~tJ of this quartet will fall athletic surprises it may not be Gpoundl ~e shoulders of either Ron as big as some thinllt ~JmOi) or Manny Cabral both

A second place finisher inexperienced receivers ConnOlll 1967 the Norton Lancers haveexcel1B not only defensively their sights on the Tri-Valleybut likewise with the bat He Conference crown The clubsbit at a 333middot clip last Spring one-two hitters last campaignJohn Souza and Mike Andras have departed from the Norton th better than 300 hitters baseball scene but the teamqaln will be out to join the one-two pitching punch is reshyleague leaders in batting prowshyturning Juniors Ken Allen aess They should put a wallop left-hander who had a perfectin Westports oHensive attaCK 7-0 record last Spring and ArtIf Coach Bibeaus boys can dushyBouchard will be relied uponplicate their Performances of a heavily to bring the league flagJellr ago Offensively and biB to Norton Coach Bartek alSobig four comes through on middottbe hopes to get some help in middotthemound Westport may realize a the pitching departmentmiddot fromlong awaited Narry championshyFred Rego Bill Gorczyca andEip dream Admittedly if Ie Steve Nichols bull bie word in ~~rts_tuture

~ ~ bull I

OpeUp With~on-League Co~esttsmiddot Other returnees incl~ Capshy develop rapidlymiddot defensively if

tain Mike Wynnn Greg Croff they are to regain the leagues BOb Adams Tim McEndy and divisional crown - whicb flbeymiddot Paul Hassie Wynn a senior lost to HoWston last Spring middotmiddot will be starting his third season and gain a shot at the Trl shyill left field with Cruffstarting V~ey Conference ebampionshyhis second campaign in center ship Many area clubs openThey will be joIned by Wynns their campaign this week with brother Ricky in right fied non-league games highlighting

The infield win be anchored the action League competition by Adams at second base and will commence for the most Hassle at short Newcomers part next week Richy Silvia and George Macshy Mother Nature has done her Arthur are presently battling it job this Spring Baseball coaches out for the third base job and throughout -the diocese admit Lorrie Adams also a first-year that this is the best Spring they man appears to have the inside have had to prepare flbeir track on first base charges in many a year Weather

cannot be blamed for a slowMcEndy who has been the start this time around All areLancers starting catcher since eagerly awaiting the umpireshis Freshman year is starting first call to play ballhIs third campaign behiJd the

plate Bartek expects McEndy to hold the inexperienced inshy New School System field together

The Lancers will have to imshy In German State prove upon their hitting and DUSSELDORF (NC) - The

North Rhine-Westphalia state parliament middothas approved aCanadian Prelates change in the states school sysshytem that probably will meanEstablish Council the end of many denominational

OTTAWA (NC)-The Catho-shy schools Hc bishops of Canada have esshy By an overwhelming majorshytablished a 12-member Fiscal ity the parliament voted to Affairs Council composed of change the state constitution and clergy Religious and laymen establish the nondenominational who will advise the Church on Christian school in which reli shyfinanclal matters gious training is given by Cathshy

Among the areas which are olic and Protestant instructors receiving ini~ial attention of the in the same school as the patshycommittee is the question of tern for state-supported schools whether the Church should be from the fifth through the nint subject to government taxation grades and if so what form of taxation In the past the state has supshywould be equitable to churches ported Illeparate Catholic and government and other taxshy Pro tell tan t denominational payen Khoola

-~) PASSION PLAY Today Christians hold the Solemn Observance of the Lords Supper

It is commemorated ina PMsion Play at Prevost High School Fall River by David Poisshyson as Christ Paul Martel left 8$ St John and Paul Bouampquet as St Peter

DominicGlIsmiddot Rent ApGrt~~rit in Inner -Cimiddottimiddot middot

Want t~ Get Closer to I Agony of the Worl~middot WASHINGTON (NC)middot Pift his experience in the neig~lgtorshy ruary 1966 because theJ

Dominican priests-each doing hood is invaluable in helping wanted to get closer to the bis own thing-are living middotin an both prisoners and parolees He agony of the world While nol apartment in the inner ~ cd said the insight he gains into eliminating the academic life Washington here they come from ancl h~w they felt that living in the inlleJ The five run the gamut from they view life aids him In mv city would be as important bull

a professor of moral theology at ing them intelligent advice and learning experience as academic the Don)inican House ofStucUeII 8ssis~nCe study to a prison chaplain a1 the Diamp- Father William Kane is middotthemiddotNeighborhOoclll[aatrict of Columbia Jail Ibey neighborhood man of the have in common1heiy addresa A Pr~ceton graduate ~itl1 apartment Hemiddotworks with minshyand a desire to understand and doctorates from Harvard aJgt4 isters inmiddot the area in establishing alleviate the problems ~ livlnc OxfCrd Father Albert Brodershy youth programs and fightina I in a poor Urban community ick teaches Constitutional LalV for better housing and fail

Father TbomasHea~ middotttie at the catholic University Law rent laws His motive is to givemoral theology professor aDd School the people in the community aD author of a reCent bOOkmiddotID awareness of their own dignitymiddotBe and Father Heath startedFaee of An~sh is 0Il 1be to affirm the fact that it is athe apartment project in Feb-bOard of direCtors of the Pe0shy ood place to live ples Center a house soon to be

the rehabilitationopened for Criticizes Usury of alcoholics He also meets

MEXICO CITY (NC)-Mexshy5 50 01- a SYSTEMATIC wimiddotth ~culties of Wasbingtcm

icc CityS Jose Cardinal Garibiseminaries to discuss policyshy bull 10 year SAViNGSRivera urged bankers meetingmaking and apostolic activity MONTHLY DEPOSITSat the National Bankers Conshy

Legal Aid Office vention in Guadalajara to comshy 5 00 01- a INVESTMENT bat usury and work closely bull 10 year SAVINGS

Father Joseph Cooney a NOTICE ACCOUNTSwith the government to proshylawye~ who has worked 011

voter registration in the South mote the social welfare of all II REGULAR4 5001 the Mexican people bull 10 Jflar SAVINGSand took an active part in dvil

rights activities such lIS

~lma march is DOW admin~ Bass Rivertering a legal aid office in the CENTERneighborhood of the Dominishy Savings Bank

cans apartment Volunteer law Paint and Wallpaperstudents from the Catholic Uni- Bank 8y Man I

versity of Ameiica assist him Dupont Paint

We Pay The Postage

IJcor Middle St

A third member of the group m this program 4iiii 422 Acush Ave bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA Fat her Raymond MalonSOl1 ~ New Bedford bull SOUTH VARMOUTH 4raquo HYANNISserves as the Catholic chapiain bull PARKINGmiddot

bull DENNIS PORT bull OSTtRVILLEatmiddot the D C jail A late vocashy Rear of Storetion Father Malonson has been ordained only two years middot Father Malonsoll feels U1at

LEVESQILIES OFFla E~lnPMENTNow Many Wear Wood Metal Desks and ChairsFALSE TEETH

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs April 11 1968

PhySDCOUi) l1JJ Uges litUBgy C~[filges

~n Last RStes RED BANK (NC) A

~atholic physician called for revision of the liturgical $orm of the Anointing of the Sick cluring a discussion on The Chaplains Role With the Dying Patient at Riverview Hospital here in New Jersey

Dr George J Sheehan an alumnus of Manhattan College and a founder of Christian Brothers Academy in nearby lLincroft was one of three apeakers at the symposium coshyaponsored by the hospital and Ute 1 Redmiddot Bank Council of

ilhurches Citing obvious failures by

both physician and clergyman iin helping the dying patient and bis family Dr Sheehan sugshygested members of the family Ghare inmiddot a ceremony which would exchange feelings of llove and hope between them ElDd the dying person

Dr ~heehan observed that while inadequacy in the face of death has been in the past apparent to the Protestant criergyman it is now also felt by Catholic priests

They findmiddot he said the La~t Sacrament in its present form Ii a consolation only to those with the strong faith of a Breton iiteasant-a kind of faith they e seeing less and l~ss-

Appropriate Theology He also said while the develshy

pment of a Common Christian itervice parlakirtg of the same llodividual familymiddot and commu~

Ility significance as Bap~i8ai -dMarriage would be a giant p in middotheiping people to a middotbappy death iit would remain IDol theologians to present- a relshy

qwant lmd acceptable image of mail in this time and this place ilnd to develop an appropriate eology of death heaven ~nd bell in order to make a signifi- sant change in our life style

lOd therefore in our approach to death

Other panelistsmiddot were the Rev Seorge Fitzgeraid a Presbyteshyaan minister middotand middotchaplain at Princeton Hospiital arid Mn Ruth Snyder a nurse of the lIiverview Hospital staffmiddot

POSTER CHILD LEADS WAY Joey BeIge 8 of Syraeuse NY leads themiddot way down a White House lttairway in the company ofthe Fi~st t-adymiddotMrsLyndon B Johnson

and Mrs Muriel Humphrey wife ofthe Vice-President Joeymiddotis this years poster child of

the National Association for Retarded Children H~ ismiddot thesQn ofMt and Mrs Robert Beige middotmembersmiddotOf St Vincent de Paul parish in Syracuse whos-e ot-herfive children SlHshy

round their Uttle broth~r wil1hmiddot the love and care to h~lp him livea full and happymiddot life

Penn See Studies Poverty Pmiddotrogram HARISBlJRq (NC)--Coadju- is being made to see ho)Vtbe to coordinate and channel our

tor Bishop Joseph T Daley diocese canmiddot best use its re-middot efforts in the fieldmiddot vicar general- of the Harrisburg sources to alleviate poverty Bishop Daley said it ismiddot im- diocese calledmiddot on the nearly problems middotperative that all our people 50000 Catholics in the area to He alsomiddot said Wemiddot contem- knoW and understand the probshy

acquaint th~mselves with 10- middotplatemiddot the early middotestablishment of middotIem of middotracism and the funda- calracfal and poverty problems amiddotmiddot diocesanmiddot human relations mental moral injustices which

In a lettermiddot read at aU Masses commission middotto serve asmiddot a liaison middotare at the root of the deplorable BishopDlIleT said middotthat a study with all people Collcerned and conditions in our own area

Urges Hospitals Re~ognie Unio~s

CLEVELAND (NC) - AI layshymens group here has asked the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hospitals to declare its willingshyness to recognize labor unions as collective bargaining agents for hospitals employes

lNle request came in a letter from William A caldwell chainnan of the eurolevellllnd Conference of Laymen to Sister ~ry Collette of Hamilton Ohio president of the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hosplshytala during a one-day meeting here of the Ohio Hospital Assoshyciation convention

The laymens group said such a statement would promote the human dignity of hospital emshyployes in real and immediate ways serve the common good of our communities and inshycrease the understandingmiddot of Catholic teaching by all the citishyzens of Ohio

The letter pointed out that the National Catholic Hospital Association 1 a s t November called on Catholic hospitals tiraquo be guided by the social teachshyings of the Church and to deal with unions that employecfgt choose

Discuss ~iot Report On Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC) - Beginshyning Sunday April 14 the Catholic Hour will present over the NBCmiddot network a three-part series The Climate of Change

Evolution or Revolution foshycusing on three areas of social and religioUs concern today today

~gr Rop~rt Fox cOordinashytor of Spanish community 00shy

middot lion in the New York arclidioshymiddoteese will discuss The Riot centommissi~ middotReport Amiddot Chrisshy

tiati Response April 14 Msgr Ivan D Illich of the Intereushy-tural Center 01 Language and D middotoe u men tat 1 on CuershyDavaca Mexf~o win be intershyviewed Aprjl 21 and Father Francois Houtart Belgian 00shyciologist will be interviewed Apiil 28

The National Council of Cathshy oUc Men producer of the OathshyoUe Hour reconunendseheckshymiddoting local newspaper programa for broadca9t time in particushymiddotRar areas

I Am The RestUlJTectiltogtD

Ai 1)(J[YQfGfDVIJJpound)9

lJ1~TJPJiiD~ EEJ~lJregff

FALL RIVER

Page 6: 04.11.68

6

They expect to hear religious leaders speak in those tenns history to one local or to a certain segment ofour8OCh~tyrhe race issue was- injecte41

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall RiverThurs Apr 1l19~8 Rx for Renewal J

Accomplishi1lJg the Dream The senseless and savage and tragic death of Dr

Martin Luther King Jr is not the end Of his nonviolence erusademiddot But it should bring a deepening realization of

what nonviolence entails The Ghandian Way of nonviolence is not simpiy a techshy

nique of sittiIig on sidewalks and not moving a matter of being passive and silent in the face of attack~ verbal or physical It embraces moie than that

It is basically-and Dr King middotknew this-a spiritual force As a former Governor General of India has remarked The renunciation ofmiddot external violence is not enough but must be accompanied by asepsis of the heart for the sucshycessful surgery of nonviolence How can One love where there is so much cause for hatred The answer lies in everyshyones heart and can be appealed to through love and then and then Only will the man be changed

Nonviolence means bringing to bear against the forces of hatred and prejudice and ignorance the still more powshyerful force of intelligence and education and love of God and neighbor Nonviolence means ~eeting overcoming evil by the sheer power of courage and work and love

This Dr King understood This alone will accomplish his dream

Sniritual Leaders r

Lay people are being urged to get more and more inshyvolved in the work of religion When they do they many

th h f t b times make more sense t han ose w 0 pro ess 0 e teachers middotof religion

Last week for example a professor at the Harvard Divinity School and the Episcopal TheologiCal School said that sex between unmarried persons could be morally good or bad depending upon the situation And during the same week the chief of the Psychiatric Service Harvard Unishyversity Health Services took colleges and parents to task forcondoning free sex behavior in youth and f9r not bolshystering young people in maintaining high moral standards He counselled chuicli leaders notmiddot to abandon Ii spiritual ap

peal-toyoutll puttomaintainlheif ttaditional religious Ap proach to reinforce high moral standards

So hereismiddotthe picture-a religious lea~~rseeingl1ot~ ing wrong in sex between the unmarried and a ~ymaJl

~ Ateeing everything wrong InIt -

In the light of the Gospels the theologian is _Wrong pat _y Gn ~ n i _ereneemiddot and the layman is right shy

And this is why religious leaders arein many -inshylltailces losing whatever credentials tliey Duiy possess 10 The senseless murder of Dr Martin Luther Xng Jr

Pl d d th f od agaln brlmiddotngs lnto focus the vlolence that ImiddotSmiddot ours Yes 0urs 1ead eop e are en owe WImiddot a meas~re 0 go _sens~ bull They have some ideas about the main thrustmiddot of the Gospelsbull -Too often we have relegated the dark pages of our natio~

And when they hear deviations then they write off the We seem to fool that the religious leader and listen to him no more Of course those events which took place in fortable christianity I I Even m our own locale 1he who are looking for justification for some type of action ~emphls ha~e Itt ~ connec- people who could have doneso that the religious leader approves will be glad to welcometlOn WIth thIS area of the much reillly have contributed him to the bandwagon And then the responsible Jaymen-shythe physicians and psychiatrists and civic leaders and those who are concerned about the moral and family health of the

community--must move into the scene and try to repair the damage done

Perhaps this can be the message of Easter-instead of talking about the resurrection in glowing and lyrical terms

instead of speaking about glory and joy the -reaJ message of Easter is one of love of God for men and love of men

for God And Christ gave the standard of Love-If any man love me he will keep my commaridments~Iid themiddotmiddot party orperscgtn cOncerns him-Father and Iwill love him and we will come to hIm and

_ we will makemiddot our abode with him Theoiogians mayor may not understand the full imshy

plication of thesemiddot words For the most partthe people do even if their actions at times do nqt measure up~ T~ey

understand - amJ th~y expect the~r ~pjritual advisors1q lnderstand and to preach these Gospel words all Gospelmiddot words

rheANCHOR P~~ I fnVImiddotrE~ OF T~E DIOCESE OF FILl PVER Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River

410 Highland Avenue Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev iohn P Driscoll

- MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

nation A certain emotional sympathy

is created by the vivid -reality middot of the television For the most part it is just another drama that will pass in time and thingS will go on and a~lwill be well This indeed is thetragedy of Memphis

Natio~al problems cannot be conidered to be isola~ed events When ~ national mQvement

self wi~h the basic principles 01human existence all humanity is involved Such is the ease memo~ are the people wh- Bishop JOseph-middot LBerilllrcii

with Civil Rights such is the -re still III the depths of 8Uffer-middot Will serve as adminiStratOr iii ease and the movement pre-~ Thu~ when ~ new genera- tbe Atlanta Archdiocese linti serited to the nation by Dr ti9G recelves th~ mherIta~ elf a successor is named for Martin Lutl1er ~ing poverty the prospe~IS ~ 13te Archbishop Paul j Hammiddotmiddot Yet the majority of Ameri- Ul~ first to deny that they ue cans have for mimygenera-middot his heirs This is true of most tions considered ~e plight of men regardless of the color ttl the urban ghetto from the com- 1heir skiil This is what we fortable ~rm-chair of a com- must kUly overco~

Now ISTime for CiiI Rights Concern The words of Dr King cershy

tainly were not understood by the senseless mobs that took to the streets of our cities after his death Nor were they undershystood by the majority of white middle-class Americans

The apathy and lack of genshyuine concern for the civil rights movement among this group is galling

It is these factors that aHow mad men to assassinate We

middotmus condemn the lack of un middotaerstanding the disdainful atti-middot

t hi euro moonIn(j

1lt ng e a reported there

Rev Johnf Moore St Josephs Taunton were~good and sufficient ~ middotIA lilA Inimiddoto~hi~~t~~~~bers~

The Tragedy of Mempmiddothmiddots _ I

h d I d ff

tude and the smug selfshyrighteousness of our bourgeoismentality

To claim that we are all for the civil rights movement and then to deny a home to a man because he is negro loots the middotmind and arsons the spirit of our scciety even to a greater degree than a street mob It is the spirit of our society the spirit of our country that is at stake

Any hope of postponing a 00shycision em this matter died at

so very little The structured class system that has been our inheritance from our early New England ancestors has been only insulated and protected by the progress of an affluent aociety

When a man makes good hetends to leave the memories of his afflicted past in the voidof a twilight z(me The blood middotsweat and tears poverty ~ ~n forgotten in the land ol gracious living TemporarY Heaci

Even more removed fJoa tlTLANTA (NC) -Amiddotuxilia~

Priests Senate Votes Support Of OrdinarY

BUFFALO (NC) ThirteeJl of 21 members of the Buffalo Senate of Priests have votedmiddot to support Bishop James amp McNulty in a controversy SIDol

rounding the transfer of a priesi from a Negro ghetto parislli Eight members of the senato abstained from voting

The controversy began when Father William G Warthling was transferred from St Nicltshyolas parish in Buffalo to O~

Lady Help of Christians parisJl in the suburb of Cheektowaga

Father Warthling and some members of St Nicholas parislli charged that Bishop McNuIQ transferred the priest because he encouraged the Holy Name ~iety to seek membership _ BUILD a militant social actiC group formed under the leade~ ship of Saul Alinsky contJicgt versial ooinrnunity organizei

Members of the parish and ci1 BUILD staged a protest demo~

stration in front of Bishop ~ Nultys residence

Msgr Bernard J McLaughiiC5 diocesan chancellor said thl transfer of Father Warthlin(]

was routine _but said the die-shycese frowns on the methocilo which BUILD uses middotto better tho lot of the Negro communit~

Sufficient Reasons At the height of the controshyversy the Buffalo Senate of

Priests met to hear a report of the Priests Advisory Board OIl

li~e trTahnsfebor 0rd Father Warthshyf

nan bull

---------~--shyMemphis

If we wish to contin1e NonViolent doctrine of 0shyKing it is now up to us IIIe time for dQlay has passed Either we commit ourse shyto the principles that were to tered and dramatized by 0shy

King or we perish in the flaJJ of anarchy and civil discord

The assassins bullet again forced America to make a dedshy

sion In a country in an area where the majority claim to be Christian we better start liviDa the Christian ethicmiddot and tile Christian message of love _ another as I have loved yoshyIf we refuse to accept this meeshysage we fail not only lt~ll natiOlll but also as a Christian pe~

In the controversy by a BUILD spokesman who said BishOJlMcNultys removal of Fathel Warthling reflected apatNgt izing attitude toward black people and a general lack ef understanding of ghetto probshylems Msgr Neylon said all senate members rejected charge

All 21 members of the senatlrl VOted for a motion to appoint committee to make public theworks and programs which the diocese has developed amo~ minority groups and in the ner city

shy

Voted support for BishOpmiddotat N~1tY on thetransfer isBoIlEigJjtpries~ abstainedfroin ie vote on the grounds that apite the boards explanaiiclli the issue was still not clear -

However each of the ei priests who abstained from

ing said they deplored middotcharg6f racism against Bishop M0shy--Nulty according to Msgr lolie Neylon senate president

7 middotMrsmiddotmiddotmiddotStewart Fails to Tell Casey Story Convincingly

By Rt Rev Msgr John S IKelIDedy

Ramona Stewarts Casey (Little Brown 34 Beacon St Boston Mass 02106 $695) is anovel which promises more than it delivers Itsmiddot action begins in 1860 concludes in 1886 and HI laid in New York City The focus is on Tom Casey aged 20 at the start A native of Ireland he remembers the horrors of County Cork in the years of Qle great famine His family Bed their home went to LivershyPOOl- suffered muough a fiveshy

weeks voyageIlrJ a sailinglib i p finallyderer Il the citys resources eettled in New even moves briefly on the

York For them middotftinges of the gaudy nouveau I A m e I i e a richeset typified by Jim Fisk

008 not turned ltlmt to be the

jijlromised land Like thousandstillld thousands ef the Irish

t th New York ltBOWded

10 0 e dums they are abysmally

~~eir homes are decrepit verminous tenements Their jabs are menial ill paid and dancy They are despiSed by the natives both for their nashyampnai origin and for their reli shyfIion They meet violence at the lhands of brutal nativists No opportunity opens up for them lJDd they are without hope

Elab$mte Setting

n is plain thet Miss StewaIi lhas done thorough rese~rch clgt1l1

the period Bet pages are

But-middot when his boss Maguire breaks with the big boss Tweed CasEiyS ascent ill reshyversed Tweed however is exshyposed and undone and pious John Kelly takes over as head of Tammlllny~

casey relllizes tiliJilt it is opshyportune for him to repudiate

Maguire and strike out on his own Ihis he does to the imm~ diate signal improvement of his lot but lllt the price of Maguires bUter enmity

AdvaIltageMJS Marrul1ge Casey now marries one EileeZl

Callahan liI doctors daughter a chilly lace curtain Irish sort It is not a happy marriage but it iJiI respectable and advantashy

geous Casey is appointed citY ~coroner attl ~tosalary with Per

qUlsites But there i~t yet aJ1oth~r reshy

paCked with detallmiddot She hasmiddotmiddot versal til store for him On mounted a viVid mid elaborate election day 1~74~ he goes ooIJting for nero story But the about to see that his forces are

~ (ftory does not live ormiddot inove It performing properly (which abounds in incident it has com- means improJgterly) he isdraWn

plications galorebut it lacks into an altercation with Ma- ~tality arid never generates guire power Why this should be it is Casey taking a physIcal at first hard to tell beating from the bigger Mashyo~ Tom Casey sne~as a ~g- guire draws a pistol and shoots bull who should be mterest1Og Htt hits t M gur b t f

ImiddotToiil is inteUigenl middotandrug~ middottlie latte~ miihioris~Te~~hcJl ~t he left school atmiddot 13 He n()vi Ismortal CaseY- is1ndicted pound01(

realizes th~t be can~et ~ ~urd~r tried l~t out on bail here never break ~l1t 01 ~~ ~heI1 a hung jury evenWates

iitifling meager wretched woHdof his k1Od IDs one asset seellW imd ultdmately gOeS free1JnaeeouJmtabi Re Co be brawn

lJOmething -hi Which counts for the braw~gk middotHe w no~

e eolery disgraced in debt

Which his Arsenal Gimg in- witbout poundI Jobmiddot probably permaQ

dulges and in the work of tblii nently estranged from his wife Pacifid Company of volunteer One might suppose thatmiddotthis was firemen to which he belongs the end of t~e story But no 1m

As he looks about he recog Cl middotfinal s~ctwn d~ted 12 years ftizes that the way to some ad later he is the chIef deputy andshy~cement and aggrandizementmiddot lUre successor of ag~ng ailing fl through politics He observ~ middotampss Kelly He is almost at the John Maguire who at 37 io top and it all means nothingmiddot olderman saloonkeeper aD ell ne of the flaws 10 t~e novel mstrict leader of the Twentyshy s Illustrated by the diSJuncture ~t ward middotbetween Caseys fall because oil

Air PI ti tillemiddot murder case and his unae-middot bull cq1lll es es ge countable recovery Therecov-

MagUire is of course a Twt- ~ middotis never explained We ~ny m~ He dresses well dont know how it was done wears dlamon~ studs hai middotIJ We are simply presented withmiddot middotmiddotmiddotsion said the problem ofmiddot realiz Long-Range PllOgn-ams

go~d-headed caneCasey cop~ $t and asItedlmiddotto take it On faith -log tqe recommendations it In cooperation with 22 other ~ ~ude~ that ~e must gcentt ~n ~~l middotmiddotllIWl at the end tberebe- made on treating lhe ghe~to ~orgahizations NCCI1 bas

1- ~agulre - ~ middotmiddotOOmes glaring something whichi Bf~ does through ~s prov~_ all alongimiddot has nagged at tne

gt111 lID 19hting But h~ progre~middotlY rreadernanaely~the s~ddampn leaps - Yery slow True he geta 11 Cl to ltile _~ lemiddotaps acr~-

Il1o which involves Db dU~I~ improbable nnd unexplored at all but allows him to sp~ndzhasms aU hiS time wardheeUng for Timelilness iD Novel

Maguire He acquires B little A more seriousmiddot flaw is thAprestige even a little Power But h is till tty an potatoe~ G pre 1m

But then suddenly Maguire ebief henchman die and Mashyguire himself in hi gn f _

s e per petrates an egregIOUS act of folly Casey is at hand to helplIDd succeeds in concealing Mashypires drunken blunder onl to become involved with n gid Maguire hIllS B8S lted

u Ascent Reversed

She is Claire Scofield whO elm give the appearance of

~Jadylike innocence but is act~ bull rally a vix~ She and Case

never marry 1m her avidity for possessions and eventually poshymUon sine keeps driving Casey taunting him with his inconseshyquence and urging him 10 bold steps

He becomes an alderman gew to know 30ss Tweed head of Tammany and notorious plunshy

failumiddotre lIll development of charshy~r ~is is most notice~ble ou tOO mstance of Casey hlmshyself wile rem~~a naDe and a type never nngmg true as a complex person The same is true of the borde of others whO pour through tIl1e book Be they

major Gr mInor hlStOriC~ or ~onlh ~y are WIthout mner llife Mrs Stewart hit upon bull subshy

feet wJith great possibilities and genuine contemporary signifi shymiddoteanee But she haS not known how to render it convincingly and illu~tingl) in terms of

middotIme to ailalrange~ent lui fidWL

~lEl][ORIALMASS Pattimiddotck Pardinal OBoyeof Washshy ~~tQ~ speak~ at a memOrI~ M~s f0t ~r1lIIartm Luther

l~ngr hel~ ~und~yat t~e Na~~~l Shnne of th~ Immacshylla~ Come~pbQn in the natI~n~s CPl~aINC Jho1Jo

INatbull-ona1middot middotWmiddotmiddot-1111

Ahmann Says Wflitbull Racism Pllob~ltem

For White Churches CHICAGO (NC) -A leader ereatiIDg is new notionall wW

m Catholic interracial justice for notional actioo work ~id here white rlllcis~ middotWe believe that creation of called essentially responsible the national will is probably for the violence in cities by the the greatest spiritus problem

middotnational riot commission is a confronting religiollJS institushymoral problem and must be at- tiona in Amerlcm Ahmann deshy~cked by the white churches clared in calling on NCCIJs 1~

Mathew Ahmann executive lliffiliated Catholic interrracillll director 4)f the National Catho- councllsand human relationo lie Conference for Interracial ComiImissions to Set ~ tRileoir efshyJustice asserted The commis- lo-rts for social jUstice

problem was the problem (If published and distributed a speshy cial 32~page pamphlet smiddot~ary

Favors Compulsorymiddot of th R rt f h N al e epo () t e Iyenon Rmiddotmiddotmiddot A AdvisorY Commission 00 CiVil

ehlement ge DisOrders I j 1 -

SAN ANTONIO (NC) -The San AntoniQ archdiocesan prlmiddotemiddotstsmiddot seina~ has recommended

vc75 as the compulsory retirement age for priests in the arcbdioshycese and 65 as an accepted retiremen~ age

Tbe recommeridation which has been sent to ArChbishop Robert E Lucey of San Antonio came in the fonn of a motion passed unanimously by the 12shymember - senate at a meeting here

The senate also recommended establisbment of some sort of

tenure of office for pastors and assistants They urged a maxishymum limit of 10 years in the same parisb for pastors and a liDlit~ five yearn fol assistants

Ahmann eaned fur NCCIJ affiliates to stress the need for long-range middotmiddotclmiddoton-TI proshy

cu ltU grams for aD ~rts cd bhe Catholic community to elimishynate white racism incmding

programs for human relations

training fM lay leadershipclergy teacherS and required elementary a nd secondary school courses in humanrelashynons and Negro Illistory He also urged affiliated 01shy

ganizati()ns to bank as well as purchase goods and services in the black communi~y On the legislative front ne urged support of the similar goals of the riot commission the Urban Coalition and Dr Martin Luther KiB4fil Poor ~s Campaign~

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 11 1968

Catholics Defend Fair Bus Law

TRENTON (NC)-Spokesmen for Catholic schools defended the states year old fair bus law at a public hearing held here to consider its possible reviSion

In mllny respecfs it was a reshypeat of the public hearings a year ago which resulted in the bill being amended before passage But at that time the thrust was for passage of some rort of measure )utting private school students on equal footshying with public school students Now legislative sentiment apshypearc ro incline toward a cutshyback although outright repeal seeDlll unliksly

One relllSon foi the dlllnge in outlook b the compleJdon of ihe legislature Lest year it was in DeInoeratic hands and fair shybusing bllld the support of Gov Richard JJ Hughes Now Repubshylicans hold control by a 2-1 margin and party leaders see Ii mandate to cWtail some of tine programs enacted a year ~omiddot

A half-dozen bills to repeal or revise the busing law are now before the legislature The hearings here were held by the education committees of both the State Senate and Assembly whiclll hnve not yet released any bills from committea

Principal spokesmen for Catholic education were John 1 Rafferty counsel ful the New Jersey Catholic Confershyence and Msgr John 3 Clark Camden diocesan superintendent of scbools and president or the state ruperiIllten~ento ~ciashytion

Expropriate Pmsh BERLIN (NC)-East Gennan

eommunist authorities Ulave exshypropriated the Catholic parish 01 St Francis Xavier in East Berlin without compensatingthe Cbureh Redevellop~nt ia given as the expropriation reashyson

May the 8711 of ~g [ltm1

mine tlP~D JOU and ~aJ

the afOlY of His ReslITaeI tiOD bless J01l Ydtbmiddot

pe~ and jOle

The

Old Red Bank Fail River Savings BaRk

FAll IUVEI

SOMERSET

8 THE ANCHO~=Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1968 New Pay Scale For Teachers

FORT WAYNE (NC)-ftleEnjoy Family Celebration Fori Wayne-South Bend dioceshysan board of education bas apshyOf First Communion Day proved a new salary scale for lay teachers in elementallY ancll

By Mary Tinley Daly secondary schools The board approved tl recomshyChanges in the Church that perennial topic of COlllshy mendation that for every fuD

versation since Vatican Council II come in for a lot of time degreed ~acher employed pro and con discussion on the part of the laity With each with a current valid Indiana

teaching license a parish Willehange the dissident~ speak up head-shakers moan middotWell be reimburselt at the rate Oilfthey didnt do it that way in $2000 each for the school ~

my day But as each in forms of any kind with their 1968-1969inevitable rivalry Each littlenovation is inaugurated The salary schedule for 196ampshygirl and boy was in mufti shy 1969 provides on the bachelonthen incorporated into presshy tastefuUy and compoundo11tably degree level for a minimum Oil ent practice we realize these garbed $5200 and a maximum of $6200 made notehanges are simply Each family had its own pew at the 10th year with an increshyfor the sake of parents and First Communicant mentof $100 a minimum QfclJange but as in aisle seats sisters brotI1ers $6000 and a maximum oilPope John XXIII grand-and godparents filling $8700 at the 15th year with aput it to keep up the rest of the pew We beshy $180 increment for the bacheloilrltP with the longed to Kate on Her Day degree teacher with a staterhythm of the What class a small whis- license and a minimum of $630times To quote pered the Headof the House as and a maximum of $10000 asfrom middotThe the names were read out at the the 18th year with an increoChurch middotin Our beginning of Mass That we ment of $200 for the masteroDay collective thought was the ~ason we had degree teacherspastoral of the been included Not so Each

American hiershy child in the First Communionmchy recently published Our

eHort at Class could designate ahead III Department of Justicepresent restructuring time which of the parish Masses

procedures in the Church withshy $~~ Approves Shared-Time to attend thus splitting theIn the national and Diocesan number into more intimate HARRISBURG (NC) - Tk)eommunities depend in great family Jroups Pennsylvania Department dWORLD OF FASHION Jmeasure on the seriousness With Justice has ruled that there ampJiilThose who eboBe to Jeeetve lIS Iwhich study is undertaken and ~~~~ By MARILYN BODERICK ~

the disposition to implement )amp bull class were allowed to do IlO no legal bars to shared-~ The altar rail had beet1 opeIil shy education of private ~ a the part of the laity pupils iii public schoolseCl wide with lmeelers tor thlee EASTER CLOTHESNew Prooedure I iD the center At CommUDion Deputy Atty Gfin John 1)

One change nO doubt fsmilshy time 8 smiling priest weleomed New clothes at Easter have tiful example of creativity and McCord who issued the opinioa Jar to families in many Dioceses each little First Communieant become a eustom that we an craftsmanship was an ensemble at the request of state Supe~ came to our attention forcibly intendent of Public InstructiOll flanked by father and mother find hard to break It came modeled by nine year old Robin and impressively in practice followed by other members of down to us from the days when Cambra daughter of Mr and David H Kurtzman said the

only requirements which muSt last week the family If there was only one the newly baptized Christians Mrs James Cambra of Our I speak here of the new cusshy Catholic parent another family wore white garments made of Lady of Grace parish in Westshy be met are the consent of the

tom (new to us at least) of local public school board andmember receivedwith the child Dew linen This became such ))Orthaving children receive First the payment of tuition at theothers of the family following a tradition among the faithful Robins stunning Easter coat Holy Communion not as a class regularly established rateIt was all so natural warm that to appear in new clothes on and dress were made by her

receiving the Big McCord cited a 1949 lawbut each Sacrashy and dignified on this tbe Easter Sunday mother in yellow lightweightment for the first time with Day rectlling the words d which states that No pupilsymbolized the wool The A-line coat had a parents and relatives shall be refused admission toPope St Leo Recognize 0 n e w Ii fe diagonal self button closing and

Long gone in many areas is the courses in these additionalChristian your dignity through Christ a tiny mandarin collar When the custom of turning over one schools or departments by reashyThe Irish have dark-hired and vivacious RobinlImvi~ Pmstollof the Sunday Masses to the son of the fact that his elemenshyan ancient say- removed her coat the slimFirst Communion class - girls Mter Mass with aplomb only tary or academic education Ising that goes dress underneath was seen toin dresses veils an being or has been received in awhite and on eight-year-old could muster For Christmas have a yellow blue apd tan one side of middotthe aisle boys in Kate betook herself to the saneshy school other than a public food and drink plaid bodice with the plainwhite suits on the other back tuary to invite our new pastor for Easter new yellow wool of the coat carried school of the church reserved oftenshy Father Louis Quinn to bei He added however tnKItclothes Most over info the skirttimes with standing room house brunch otni shared-time arrangements mudonly for writing people in the The finishing touch to thisfor parents of necessity be subject to thefor him her address Diocese will fol- stunning outfit was the tiny hatWith the growth of parishes guidelines promulgated by theGoodness knoWll how ID8DY low this custom that sat atop Robins curls forthere often came transfer all similar invi-tationa Fat her Department of Public Instrucshy

by dressing their ebildreh iul it too was her mothers creationFirst Communion day to Saturshy Quinn must have receivedl tiontheir new Spring finery 0111 and jcent middotfeatured alternatingday a sensible step but stiR plenty wed ~ becauSe he Easter Sunday panels of the pale yellow andtmly for First Communicants cup eoffeeIIimply sipped 11 of In the pre-school ret blondE the plaid wool

and their parents Because of at Katies house B1lIt be did and darling Sheila Whalen In the same show Norma8Pace limitations grandparents come chatted with anmiddot Gf 1Il Higher Earningsdaughter of lIT and Mrs Wil- Comeau of SS Peter and Paul 8Odparents brothers and sisters ble2sed the house 8Dd ~ateB liam Whalen laquoIi St ThomaslIilcles and aunts were invited new gift statue then went _ More ehurch in Somerset will parish in Fall River was 8 vishyout for this precious occasion to visit other parish homes be decked out in polished blue sion of green and white Norma ON YOUR SAVINGS JIbey eouId line themiddotsidewalks Twas all a happy experience eotton Her very special Easter wore a green wool coat a 4Ntside take pictures perhaps for Kate and her extensive famshy Sunday dress bas a long torso matching green and white Per An middotmiddot p to breakfast with their parshy ily appropriate to this the Year topped by a short sash tile dress and a white straw topper Ask abOut ticular First Communicant buamp of Faith II1eeveless zrmholes are edged that had a sweetheart shape that waS that iD crocheted lace and the bodice Green ill all shades is one of INVESTMENT

Kates Day JiB embroidered with tiny flow- the most popular colors on the SAVINGSMmnesota Parishioners ers in shades of pink white and agenda for childrenls SpringSo It was with surprise we fashions Beth Cook~ daught~r CERTIFICATESweeeived a telephone invitation Vote Closing of Schoo~ blue

Also represen~ng 1bepre- oJ Mr and Mrs Andrew Cookfrom eight-year-old Kate to atshy PIERZ (NC) - Members of primary middotsetJn the Easter parade of Immaculate Conception parshytend the 11 oclock Mass with SAFETY - Savings insured safe br Iifour parishes in the Pierz area will be Lisa Marie Texeira ish in Fall Riv~r has a limeher last Saturday On arrival at agency of the U S Governmentof Minnesota voted 835 to ioo daughter of Mrmiddot and Mrs Frank green Eastermiddot dress trimmedchurch we wondered if we had for the closing of the Father AVAILABILITY - No notice requIredTeeira of Immaculate Concep- with with a white cowl collarthe right time and place No more

Pierz Memorial High SChool 1lm tion parish in Fall River Lisa and white cuHs on the short Your funds available when neededwhite dresses and veils June is a delicate-featured little sleeves Beth chose this dress SAVE by MAIL - We process prompIIJon one side of the ~sle )hite

The Pierz district has decided beauty whose dark tresses will herself because she Ifell in love and pay postage both wayssuits on the other no unishy to build a public senior high beset off by a once upon-a- with the white vinyl flowers school which will be large time dress in pink and navy scattered over the skirt and Assets over $41000IlOO

Parish Hires Full-Time enough to accommodate all high blue The high necked dress bodice of this charming Spring school students in the district made of sheer cotton has a and Summer linen

Layman Theologian Therefore m u e h discussion GlOwl collar long full sleeves Of course the pre-teen set FIRST FEDERAL BALTIMORE (NC)-St Matshy and a romantic floating skirt wants something new for Easterabout the most practical use of Savings and loan AssociatloDthe Catholic high school facili shy

first parish in the Baltimore ties bas taken place in the last _pink bodice and the waist- daughter of Mr and Mrs John archdiocese to employ a proshy circling cummerbund but the Steen of Taunton and my god tf FALL RIVER thews Church has become the Tiny tucks are featured on the and Miss Joan Leslie Steen

few months fesionally trained ley theoloshy Tbe vole--()pen to all parishshy really eye-catching feature oil child will attend Easter Mass gian as a full-time member af iOllers over 21 ill the four afshy ibis outfit ill the skirt of navy at St Pauls church wearing an the parish staff ~cted parihes-was taken III blue cotton with pink polka outfit as yellow as a daffodil ~-~~-------_~ first Federal $awIOIS bull LeaD a ~

~ 1 ortb ~1Il st Fan lIiwer llaa ~ Joseph Hargadon a fonner response to a suggestion of~e dots Certainly a dOll-like outfit Joans yellow coat has gold but shy ZIp 02722 IlIlIIIa 174-4881 ~ member of St Clares parish st Cloud diocesan school board for a dainty Miss tons and 8 slanted back belt ~ke application by phOlle middotIt JOll jE6sex who ~ii now studying at The Catholic high school Mothers Sew - her yellow Irish linen sheath ~

the Institute of Lay Theology building will probably beused While commentating 8 ehil- dress is sleeveleSs and has white n iridlvldua Account B joint AccaIIamp iii ~ Prease DJNn a savings account EIIcIGslMJ Iin San Francisco will be c0shy as an elementary school in the drens fashion show for the Do- emb~idery trim on the hemline ~~OO ~ordinator of St Matthews Conshy future Father Patrick Thompshy minican Academy alumnnae ill and bodice This yellow-haired ~

fraternity of Christian Doctrine son principal of Fathermiddot Pierz Fall River I was awed by the brown-eyed beauty has even Address middot1 program Msgr Clare J 0- Memorial High School said th~ ntimber of mothers Whohad chosen JOllqtiil yellow patent

acheck III tbe amount 111 -iDwyer pastor said He begina several possibilities are being sewed their childrens Easter accessories tomiddot complete her working in the parish Aug ~ studied outfits Probably the most beau- look j

~~~~~

A][D FOR VnCTnMS Foodfor victim~ of the Washi~gshyton civil disturbance following the death of Dr Martin Luther yening Jr in Memphis was distributed at churches of all denominations in the capital Here Sister Joanette of Catholic University gives bread to burnedout families at St Mamns Church N Capimiddottol and T Streets NC Photo

9 Best to Delay Rose Pruning Unti1 Laterin Spring

By Jo~ph and Marilyn Roderick

With the break in the w~ther weve experienced lately here has been ample opportunity to get outside and begin the Spring chores that have tQ be done before the garden is ready for Summer I have noticed quite a few weekend prdeners busy with the urrection is really felt as the odds and ends that await the priest changes the bread and prdener after a quiet WiD- wine into the body and blood ter But I have also witness- of our Lord and the faithful go ed quite a few I suppose out of up to the altar to receive Comshyanxiety over the rough Winter munion Then the seven weeks we experieneed and out of im- of sacrifice leading to this day patience 1igt get started doing take on deeper meaning and the jobs that could just as well wait Light of the World truly shines until later m the month r AIl can truly sing Alleluia Wltil Way For the young of the house-

Pruning roses is a good ex- hold the Easter eggs are another mnple of a job that is best held great joy They come in many off especially this year when sizes and materials Some are Ctere has been so much top-kilL lteonfections of spun sugar and lt might be well to wait until dreams This type generally has atent buds begin to show an opening through which the themselves em what look like child may view a wonderland ~ad stems until the job of of painted landscapes and minshy)rUning is tackled It has been iature figures my experience that dead-Iook- I always adored these fantasy mg wood has n way of coming eggs when I was a little girl and ~ life in time so go easy with it was a rare and special event ampe pruning shears until you to receive one My own youngshyIJlre certain there is no life in sters however deJive more enshylaquohe stem you plan to amputate jOfment from the decorating

How to Prune and dyeing oil the hardboiled eggs

Pruning roses seems to pre- A few years ago I made an (leDt P~obJ~JiuJ to gardeners and Easter egg centerpiece by decshy~ it is a Simple task I try 00 orating (with glitter beads prune lTlyroses so that they sequins and white glue) egg graduaily asSUme an urn shape shells that had their contents tftliit is so that they have an blown outmiddot and hanging them eD1ltY cenier rhis can easily on a giided branch that had be begun by prumng each stem been placed ill a plant pot This aiatroti want to retain so tha~middot makes a verY lovely display and ihe cut is made just above an the eggs can even be used as _tward pointing bud Christmas tree ornaments the

If the bud is pointing out the following December but this laquorowth which ensues from the delicate work is not for tiny bud will be outward and there- hands lor growth will be away from Symoo)s oil Life the center of the rose Next I The Easter egg and the Easter try to make my cuts so that the bunny have always been symshyappermost portions of each boys of Spring and new life litem are approximately the Ancient people in many lands lIaDle height from the groun6 exchanged eggs at their Springagain to give the bush some festi vals They dyed eggs yellow8Diformity of appearance for the returning sun and red

The height of the bush makes for joy and life In England the attle difference as far as I am children enjoy III custom called eoncerned so I usually make Pace egging The Pace eggers my cuts at whatever height I go from house to house chantshyean get uniformity This year ing this rhymefor inStllnce there has been a PleaseMr Whitelegpeat deal of top-kill on my Please to give us an Easter eggJOses so I may have to make If you wontt give us an Easter cuts fairly close to the ground eggbut I find little difference in Your hens wiD all lay addled the quality of the roses regardshy eggsless ~ of how much I remove in And your cocks lln lay stones pruning In this country of lIpoiled

A third consideration in darlings our children would be ~ing is the removal of 014 disappointed H the Easter wood to make place for new bunny did not leave chocolate trrowth Thb becomes a pr0bshy eggs candy chickens and other lem when your roses start to expensive goodies However -ee considerably I try not to be even with all the commercial drastic in this regard by cutting trappings that go with the dayGUt one old stem a year thereby It still manages to retain It IIl8king room for new growth great joywithout particularly affecting T1uis liuoo roast is perfectlybull e plant delicious Ive bad tt for Easter One other point about prunshy dinner oth~r years and plan to Ing Many of the old ramble1ll serve it again this year Its and climbing roses should be quite worthy of II repeat pershypruned after they bloom and fonnance DlJt before I notice a great Cumberland L9mb Boast IIl8ny people pruning their 1 leg of lamb about I to dlmbers before they bloom poundswhich does nothing for the 1 teaspoon salt elimber but remove scOlelI of 1 teaspoon dry mustard blossoms ~ teaspoo1l ground ginger

In the Kitchen 5 thin lemon sIkes Baster Sunday is a day of great cup currant jelly

toy and excitement The special 1 Tablespoon lemon juice Kaster moming breads (IDJ 1) Trim oJ escemJ fat lroa 8aOther-in-Iaw always ~ lamb Rub went with a mixture Individual sweetbreads for the fJIl the salt mustard and ginger ebildren with a hardboiled egg Place roundoo silde up OIl a let in the crust) the excitement rack in roastiDjJ pan Do Dllt elf new clothes the Easter egg oover pan bunts the tIradJltional famIJ ) Roast -bl Ii a10W (331-) llIlnner but Elbow all the beauty en for amp 1tOun IlDd quiet ~ 01 Easter SID~ 3) Remove roaJt from 0ftIl Mass and eut 4 cd tbe lemon dices

be joy of this great least 01 In half arrange Ue a half sliceS the Resurrecti_ of our SaviCNl petal fashion OIl sidlte of JOaSt evident JI1 n the custo~ holding in place vith dampened tbat sur r 0 11 n d 1lhis feast wOoden ~icIW place the wbole IIut the full 1mpaot of the Bell- alice in center

)JJRDINATION The first Melkite Rite ordin2ttion of priests to be held at the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception Washington DCt was conducted by Bishop Justin A Najmy NC Photo

- Extend Program I Interfqith Organization to Conti~~e shy

Aiding ~prrnEr JoliCQrpseh WASHINGTON (NC)--A na- reftary of the National Confer-

tion-wide volunteer prog~lJn ence of Catholic Charities hasshyto help Job Corps trainees find said JACShas tapped the iTeshya place in the workaday world mendous force of volunteers al shyhas been extended for another ready available in this lountry year William P Kelly Job and they are hard at work asshyCorps director announced here sisting young llen who have

Joint Action in Community proved by volunteering for the Service (JACS) a private non- Job Corps that they want to profit corporation was organ- help themselves ized by leaders of national The young men coming out Catholic and Protestant social of Job Corps are severely hanshyaction agencies dicapped by backgrounds of

It includes on Us board of poverty poor education and unshygovernors representatives of stable family life As a result business labor and civic organ- they have more than their izations share of problems as they atshy

tempt to make it on their ownJACS has organized a netshy

work of 5000 volnteers in 500 JACS volunteers are giving communities in the U S re- them the helping hand they eruited from churches service need he added clubs and community agencies who are DOW assisting some 1000 returned corpsmen each Women to Hpnormonth

Msgr Lawrence J CorcoraJlO BisJlop Apri I 18 lACS ~Ild chairDl3lll and ~ The Ca~olicWomens Club

0If New ~(ord will hold its annual Bishopll Night OIlSee E~tablishes New bunday evening April 18 at

Education Office the Harbor Beach Club in Matshytapeisett Supper Will be servedGREENSBURG (NC)-Bishop at 630William G Connare of Greensshy

burg has announced the estabshy Guest of Honor will be Most lishment of a new diocesan ofshy Rev James L Connolly Bishop fice of education whicb win Gerrard moderlltor for the New coordinate the work of several Bedford organization will also existing departments be a guest

All area pastors have heeDThe new office which wm invited to attendopen JolT 1 will join and ex~

tend the programs of the presshy Mrs Paul L LaForest first ent diocesan schools office and vice-president will serve as the Confraternity Off Christian chairman ojf arrangements Doctrine office and win be reshy Reservations will be accepted sponsible for the total educashy by Mrs Jamell M Anderson tional effort of the diocese Mrs Maurice Hurley Mrs Paul

A newly organized departshy LaForest and Mrs Daniel F ment of religious education will Dwyer Reservations close sat shyaid in planning religious edushy urday April 13 eation programs fOr the parisb and diocesan schools the CCD and other groups both at the adult and youth le~ls ATWOOD

OIL COMPANY Break up jelly with a fork a cup stir in the lemoD juice and Spread ovell tbelamb Re- SHELL tum flo OV~ aDcl cOntinue roasting ~ to t hOur longer If HEATING OILSyoUre using a meat th~rrnODl~ eter it should register 170 for South bull Sea Streetsa pink look or 1~ for wen done Pull out wooden picks bom lemon garnsh before carv- Hyannis Tel 49-81 mg roast

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 11 1968

Says Young Seek Moral Values

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - The so-called sexual revolution is l

turning away from hypocrisy at a turning toward promiscuity ays an expert in sex education Or Mary C Calderone execushy

tive director of the Sex Informashytion and Educational Council of the United States believes toshydays young people are highly moral despite the example set for them by their elders

Speaking at the 22nd annual meeting of the Texas Council on Family Relations Dr Calderone stressed

Promiscuity has not increased on Americans college campuses We know our young people are behaving far better today than were willing to credit them with Young people are looking for moral values based on fact rashyther than mythology

Dr Calderone condemned exshyploitation of sex by commercial advertising and called for sex education which would streSD the importance of human relashytionships and not merely the mechanics of reprOduction

Your kids ought to know you cant save a bad marriage with good sexshe asserted

Sisters of Pro~ider1ce Vote to lRe~ise Rules

SPRINGFIELD (NC) The Sisters of Providence of Holshyyoke community of nuns speshycializing in care of the sick aged and underprivileged have voted to revise their rules and customs to permit greater flexshyibility and freedom in the reli shygious and personal lives of theIr members

At a general chapter at the communitymiddots Holyoke mothershyhouse the 39 chapter -delegates voted to permit experimentashytion hi religous garb give members the option of using either their baptismal and famshyily name or their religiou name pennit members to travel outside their convent wilhout a nun-companion

Also to limit participation hi common prayer to Mass and to two portions of the Divine Ofshyfice Lauds and Vespers allow community members to develop a schedule of private prayer require every member of the community to be addressed WI Sister instead of Mother~

and allow part of the nuns free time to be given to variolU fOnDS of the apostolate to civic activities and civil rights proshygrams in a way befitting theIr state in life and according to their individual consciences

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Choose AmericH Superior General

MoUNT KISCO (NC)-Fqr the first time in the 160-yellW history of the Religous of tim Cenacle an American has b~ elected superior general

Mother Rita FOy was electetl to the post at the general chapshyter of the Cenacle in Rome acshycording to the orders interpro-shyvincial public relations offiC() here in New York

The general chapter whielli is still in session is evaluatinti a series of recommendations fOli a general decentralization opoundl authority the launching of eJJogt

perimental programs by too Cenacle and the restructurinfi of Community life

The Religious of the Cenaclo is a worldwide congregation 03 Sisters committeed to the wom of retreats and religious in-gt struction There afe three American provinces

Mother Rita Foy was born 1rI

FLYING DOCTOR Dr Leo Brown and his wife Isabel a registered nurse are shown with their children Rebecca 1Qand Joel 8 with the C-essna plane they use for their Flying Doctor Service in the diocese of Gwelo Rhodesia NC Photo

THE ANCHOR Thurs April 11 1968

Project Equality Issues Guides For BMyers

CHICAGO (NC) - The first national directory of 3931 business firms comshymitted to equal opportunity in all aspects of employment has been published here by Project Equality

It will be used by more than 7000 churches synagogues and religious institutions participat shying in the interfaith fair emshyployment drive that urges givshying preference to the listed firms in all purchases of goods and services

Project Equality offices in Jlive cities are publishing re- gional buyers guides as well They are in Columbus for Ohio Detroit for Michig~n Hartford for Connecticut Omaha for New York City and was gradlDgt Nebraska and San Antonio for ated from Hunter College Sillj

Texas IFlying Doctor Serves Africa Mission south entered the Cenacle in 19~1i The national guide is a comshy completing her studies in Romo

pilation of 976 national and She was assigned to the Miltlligt 2955 local or regional firms do- Vietnam Veteran l Wifel licensed Pilots western province of the Celilgt ing business with religious inshy acle with headquarters in CtJiDRIEFONTEIN (NC)-In the the Gwelo diocese covers some must drive over lO miles of stitutions They include 40 of cago and has held a number am

grasslands here onmiddot a 5OOO-foot 14000 aCres it includes a 300shy dirt bush road seven miles of the top 500 U S corporations assignments as superior of vashy

high plateau the Cat hoi i c bed tuberculosis sanitorium a relatively good road-and watch and range down to small neighshy rious Cenaeles in the Uniteamp

of mainshy 100-bed hospital a farm an out for wild animals all alongmission Driefonteinborhood businesses States and Canada1ains-of all things-a hangar elementary school and trade the way

Listing in the Quyers guide She will now reside in RoJJl() for a Cessna 182 Skylane air shy schools for carpentery tailorshy Thus far they have encounshymeans a firm has signed Ii

plane ing and homecraft tered only baboons monkeyspledge to hire and promote deer mongoose lizards andThe mission staff totals somewithout discrimination has filed FrQm this point the missions lleslYJits to Performbirdsa report form with Project doctor can cover nine out-stashy 1200 people 35 of whom are

Equality detailing the number tions spread over an aerial non-Afrfcans The mission and Witch Doctors Woth City Symphony of its niinority-group employees distance equivalent to that beshy hospitals are operated by Afri shy The Biblical quotation The BALrIMORE (NC) -Fathe1 -broken down by jop classifi tween San Francisco and Los cans and by Swiss Bethlehem harvest is indeed great but the Bruno Markaitis SJ provinshyeation-and has pledged to take Angeles The plane was proshy priests and Brothers German laborers are few describes the cial of Lithuanian Jesuits in the further affirmative actions vided by the Mission Doctors Domincian nuns African nuns scope of medical work in Africa free world will guest conduct

Association of Los Angeles three laywomen-two American according to the Browns In the Baltimore Symphony in twc Pledge C()()peraiion Calif as part of its Flying Docshy nurses and a German teachershy these rura~ regions there is II of his own piano compositioDll

Cooperating businesses also tor Service begun here four and the Browns ratio of about one doctor to in Ii concert sponsored by LCgtJio have agreed to undergo periodic years ago The Brown children attend a every 33000 persons Mrs ola College here Sunday eompliance reviews to assure At that time Dr James Carey small two-classroom school in Brown said Africail medicine At the keyboard as soloi

Umvuma a town 17 miles away and witch doctors are still verycontinued affirmative employshy now a Santa Barbara Calif wiiI be two other Jesuit pries~ much in evidence she addedment ac~ions according to surgeon arrived at Driefontein The journey to and from school Fathers Leslie J Schnierer -and

Thomas Gibbons Jr national to begin his three-year mission is looked upon as quite an adshy It is heartbreaking to see a Benito Rivera students at thIl director of Project Equality hitch He decided quickly that venture by the family as they child with measles have to go Peabody Conservatory of Music

In addition to the firms listed The concert will mark thewith a plane one doctor could though life blind because the in the guide more than 12000 do the wbrk of five ndanga (witchdoctor) put mull 50th anniversary of the restorashyother businesses have filled out With the help of the Swiss Pittsburgh Diocese (medicine) in the childs eyes tion of independence to Lithoshycommitment forms pledging coshy Bethlehem Brothers Dr Carey Tithing for Poor she said But in other areas aniai operation with the program but began surveying and laying out like TB the African is relJlarkshy

PITTSBU~GH (NC)-Bishophave not yet supplied the necshy landingstrips near isolated and ably sophisticated medicaHy

John J Wright has announced essary statistical employment doctorless clinics and hospitals Kariangwe Berejena Kana Education Officethe Pittsburgh Diocese will unshyreports which are similar 10 The Brothers also built the Serema Matibi are all farshy NEW ORLEANS (NC) - Aledertake a new tithing plan tothose ~equired by the federal hangar at priefontein and Dr away-sounding places but the office of religious education bllllhelp finance housing and othergovernment Carey arranged for one Brother people suffer as you and I been established here by Archshyprojects for the pOOr The nalles of firms listed in to be trained as a pilot suffer from sickness They bishop PhilIp M Hannan a The_dioces~ will give 10 perthe buyers guides are available Meanwhile in Los Angeles mourn when their children have will supervise the teaching oct

cent of the contributions andonly to religious groups parti shy Dr Leo Brown a former Navy to be sick and often die she religion in parochial schoolBbequests it receives and thecipating in the program surgeon with 11 years of sershy continued and in Confraternity of Chrisshysame percentage of collections

PIroject Equality sponsored vice and his wife Isabel a Perhaps some of their disshy tian Doctrine classestaken up for directly diocesan

by the National Catholic Conshy registeled nurse were volunshy eases have strange-soundingpurposes to finance povertyference for Interracial Justice teering for MD~s three-year nawes but all come under theprogramsoperates six other local offices hitch in Africa He was just title of Gods sick These are CONRAD SEGUINThe money will be used withtouching seven more states Adshy home from Vietnam where he the names of clinics that are

other religious groups for intershyditional offices will be opened served with the Marines visited by the Flying Doctor BODY COMPANY faith housing programs andin major cities this year acshy Staff of 1200 she said Aluminum or Steelother joint dforts for the poorcording to a spokesman Dr Brown and his wife are 944 County Street

Parishes will not be requiredlicensed pilOts So last Sumshy NEW BEDFORD MASS mer when they and their two to tithe but are invited to conshy Chief Speaker

WY 2-6618ISenQte Ideas f children-Rebecco 10 and Joel tribute voluntarily NEW XORK (NC) ~ Msgr 8~arrived here MDA sent the John J Egan director of the

Continued from Page Three Cessna 182 along with thein Chicago Archdiocesan office ofStart With 45and to preach in the one Dioshy The Driefontein mission in tirbanaffairs will be the chief

eese have them in the pther GREENSBORO (NC)-Fortyshy speaker at the May 16 banquetfive priests of the Raleigh dioshy of the 1968 Catholic Press AsoshyWhile the 24 diocesan priests Abortion Bill Passes cese have formed the North ciation convention in ColumbusSenators are elected the two Carolina priests association Ohiomembels of the Priests Senate In Maryhind Ho~se Seventeen others have indicatedwho are members of religious

commullities are appointed by ANAPOLIS (NC)-A ~m to they wish to become members the Bishop These will be ro- relax Marylands 100-year-old The Raleigh diocese includes all

North Canlinatated among the religious com- abortion law and put its regushylation into the hands of themunities doing parish work in

the Diocese At present the Sen- medical profession passed the ators from religious communi- House of Delegates by im 86 ties are Father Felician Plichta to 47 vote OFM Conv and Father Co- The bill permits a doctor opshylumba Moran SSCC eniting in an accredited hospishy

tal to perform an abortion to The Bishop has encouraged a preserve the physical or mental

study of pension plans that health of the mother to prevent would involve laypersonnel of birth of a deformed or retarded diocesa~ ail~ parish facilitieii childand to end some plegnan

The Bisholl has ma~li liQme ad- CieScaused by rape just~ents)nassessmtntson pat- UnClet the~ptesel1t law abor ishes tflking into account the tiOll is peimitted ~hen two growth o(~ubU~Iiln ~~riShesah~ Ihysicians a~r~~ it itnec~ssar~bull

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Church~en Study Racial Problems In New Jersey

NEWARK (NC) -The Church cannot tell otheJiS what to do until it faces the problem within its own comshymunity a Methodist Bishop has told Essex Count~ clergyshymen of all faiths in an a~essshyment of the racial problems beshysetting Newark and other New Jersey communities

Bishop Prince A Taylor and Catholic Auxiliary Bishop John J Dougherty of Newark disshycussed the race problem in light of the report of the Govemors Commission on Civil Disorder

Cooperative Solution Bishop Taylor stressed it is

the duty of the church to beshycome knowledgeable about the report to read it carefully Action without information is irresponsible he declared as he noted the church must face up till the fact that it has parshyticipated in maintaining the status quo He noted that when ~he commissionen pelsonally toured the riot area and asked the people what the impact of the church was in their lives all but a pound~w marked the church ltDfpound

Bishop Dougherty said if the problem is to be solved it will only be through the involveshyment of the total community government industry labor unions churches schools peoshyple living in the suburbs

Dont Have Time The attack on t1e problems

must be two-fold he asserted first meeting the needs which the coming Summer presents and then planning long-range programs to overcome the root causes of the problem

There is an urgen t need of immediate programs to enable us to have time to work toward the ultimate goal

Bishop Taylor referred to the need for time to work out solushytions We cannot undo the evils of 300 years in one Sumshymer he emphasized This illmiddot not going to be a case of a quick antidote and then they Jived happily ever after

However a Newark priest active in innel-city work who was one of six reactors to the presentations made by the Bishshyops remarked that comments about needing time to solve the problems overlook the fact that we dont hlVe the time

It would be great if we did have it to keep order but q (gt bull

the people bull have the imshypression that nothing has been donesaid Father Joseph Stulb

Many are ready to riot again if only to call attention to themselves he opined The black community despairs that the white community has or will change its attitude

Rev William Fox associate general secretary of the New Jelsey Council of Churches scored the commission for fail shying to note the contribution thpt a divided church - white and black - mademiddot to the elisis H~ cliticized the church for mainshytaining silence during public controversies which were listed as proximate causes of the riotshying

Another Catholic Magazine F0 Id S

DAYTON (NC)-Mary Today a magazine founded in 1901 deshyvoted to information about the Blessed Motherand her role in the Church has issued its final edition

It is one of 11 Catholic magashyzines which have ceased pubJishycation in the past )eal because

of 1088 ~l circulation The rnaf- orders are af Teutopolis JIL azine had a reoont eirculauOll Lake Bluff in and St Meiri

~ aooU~1151gtO middot - ~lnclbull - - -

BENEMERENTI MEDAJ~ Father James Vizzaro SJ second from left received the Benemerenti Medal at a dinner in Washington -on the occasion Of his retirement as dishyrector of the Washington office of the National Catholic Rural Life Association Conshygratulating him are left to right Msgr ~dward W ORourke executive director of the NtRLC Bishop Henry J Soenneker of Owensboro Ky rural life advisor of the usce department of social action and Msgr Luigi L Ligutti Vatican observer to the UN Food and Agliculture Organization and former executive dirootor of NCRLC NC Photo

Fr Vizzard Gets Benemerenti Medal Work for IFhlltfol lPoor Recognized

the Holy See to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization priests and Protshyestant clergymen and members of Congress

Msgr George G Higgins di shyrector social action department U S C a tho 1 i c Conference praised Father Vizzards comshybination of scholarship political know-how great tenacity of

Schedule Workshop O~ Sex Education

WASHINGTON (NC)-Father James T McHugh director of the family life bureau middotU S Catholic Conference will direct a workshop on Sex Education to be held at Catholic Univershysity of America here June 17shy28

Purpose of the workshop is to prepare a basic core of people especially teachers and parish personnel to supplement the work of the home in a complete program of education in sexu- ality It will provide these pershysons with background informashytion give them opportunity to evaluate some of the basic mashyterialsand engage them in an in-depth analysis of a curricushylum guide which reaches every grade level

Lecturers and consultants will include Fathermiddot John L Thomas SJ of the Combridge Center fOl Social Studies Dr and Mtmiddots Joseph Bird co-aushythors of The Freedom of Sexshyual Love Dr Ann F Lucas chairman of the psychology deshypaltment Farleigh Dickinson Universit~ Teaneek N J and Father Walter Imbiorski direcshytor of the Cana program in the Chicago atchdiocese

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purpose and above all genushyine love for the poor

Father Vizzard will leave Washington to middotwork in Califorshynia Nevada Arizona and Utah the region of the Jesuits Cali shyfornia province

Four Cleveland Nuns Quit as Religious

CLEVELAND (NC) - Four nuns one the prineipal of a 1100 student girls Catholic high school have separately withdrawn from the Sisters of Notre Dame here in Ohio

It was the largest departure since 1966 when 10 Sisters of Notre Dame were released from their vows to move to Pueblo CoIQ to form an experimental community middotThe Sisters of Notre Dame is the largest order of 2531 Cedar St New Bedford nuns based in the Cleveland 993middot3222 Diocese

imiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot~middotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot~ middot 3NEW HIGHERi RATE OF

PER ANNUM INTEREST PAID QUARTERllyo ON PAID-UP

SHARE CERTIfICATES Deposits Welcomed in Multiples of

$20000 up to $30OOO-on Single and Joint Accounts Up to $60OOO-for Cornorations

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All Deposits Inoured in Full

Taunton

THE ANCHORshyThurs April 11 1968 11

Support Bi~hop5

Equa~sty Plea MINEOLA (NC)-The Cathshy

olic Interracial Council of Long Island has voted overwhelmshying support of Rockville Censhytres Bishop Walter P Kellenshybergs call for equality in housing employment and edushycation

Bishop Kellenberg issued Zl pastoral letter-A Call to COl1shyscience-in which he said it i9 essential that every man be given equal opportunity for eJQP]oyment and job advanceshyment and equal educatton for himself and for his children

Declaring these to be fundashymental moral issues facing the people of Long Islanp the council said We give this statement by Bishop Kellenberg our overwhelming sUPPOtt

John J Clarke council president said the eounciB deemed it necessary to reit shyerate its support of the bishops statement co gtI bull because of our increasing concern over conshytinued discriminatory practicelC in these areas

In a policy statement the council declared the bash cause of racial unrest lies in the almost complete lack oR any meaningful contact between the races Today there are few whites who can say they really know Negroes This ignorance of each other is caused almost lxc]usively by patterns of segshyregation in housing which reshysuited in segregated schools 3mll a segregated society

As a step in breakin( these patterns the council recomshymended passage of open housshying ordinances in all towns OK

Long Island Only when there is no place left for the white man to run will the problem be solved it said

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WASHINGTON (NC)-Father James L Vizzard SJ retiring Washington director of the Nashytional Catholic Rural Life Conshyference received the papal Benemerenti medal hele in recshyognition of his work for t~e

rural poor of the United States and throughout the world

The presentation at a dinner in the Cosmos Club was attendshyed by Bishop Henry J Soenshyneker of Owensboro Ky NCRLC president Msgr Luigi Ligutti permanent observer for

Prelate Advocalles Open Housing ILaws

JEFFERSON CITY (NC)shyBishop Joseph M Marling CPPS of Jefferson City has urged Catholics of the diocese to campaign openly and fearshy

- lessly for area open housing laws

In a pastoral letter urging open housing law support the Missouri prelate askedshy

Who fails to see that to conshydemn a large segment of our people to the cruel segregation thatmiddot closed housing entails is to sin gravely against charity justice and the vely finest inshystincts of our nature Who may deny that to perpetuate such an evil in this enlightened age will bring malediction upon us

For jurely he answered Chlist is brother to the eolored in the identical sense that he is brother to the other children of men

Plan Fa-II Opening Of Joint Semill1ary

CHICAGO (NC)-A graduate school of theology for seminashyrians ftom three Religious orshyders will open in a former hotel here in the Fall

The school to be known as the Catholic Theological Union will be operated by the Passhysionists Franciscans and Sershyvites in the fOI-mer Aragon Hotel near the University of Chicago

About 100 students ue exshypected to enter thl school this year Area seminariltes ourrent-middot ly being used by themiddot threfl

2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese 01 Fall Ri~~r-Thurs Apr 11 1968 S~~in S~ntences priest- and Laymen

JOurrt)~a$ts Opinions Differ_On V~~e of Bishops Synod

By Msgr George G Higgins Two American journ~lists who have covered the Rome

1beat off and on for several years-Father Francis X Murphy CSSR and Gary MacE0 in-have just published an interesting account of the Synod of Bishops which was held in Rome in 1967 (Synshyod 67 A New Sound in what they manege to teU us Rome Bruce Publishing Co about themselves in their sep- Milwaukee) Written in the arate and widelydivergent asshyfamiliar Xavier Rynne style it Sessments of the Synod is something of a tour de force How two men who disagree given the se- so fundamentally about the uecy w h i c h pros and cons of the Synod ever enveloped the managed to work as a tandem $ y nod a 1 in the writing of the history of proceedings The the synodal proceedings is to authors h a v e put it as mildly as possible a tried to give perplexing mystery on account as They tell us that for aU that a c cur ate as lies between their separate possible under evaluations Df the Synod they the conditions are jointly accountable but that of time and cir- the internal logic of their inshycumstance For dividual viewpoints and the my own part I dialectic of the situation led think they deserve better than them to attribute exclusive reshya ~as~ing grade They do ~lOt sponsibil~ty for the Prelude to ~lalln to hae wrlt~en anythmg a priest and for the Postscript like8cIefmltIve hlstory of the i to a layman SYlo1IgtUt they have proyid~d Far A art 1IllS wlth a useful mtenm sum- P mabr of the -proceedings and I take it that this is a polite ~r ~ii w~ cin) begrateful way of saying that when they

Perplexing Mystery got around to summing up their Tothis reader however what impressions of the Synod they

the authors tell us about the

lSynod ls less mterestmg than i

~ 8holJd have concluded contrashyr rlwise- that it was seriously - lacking in credibility and releshy

vance and was thus on biI- ance a huge disappointment

lRationaJize Differences

Such differencesmiddot of opinion on the part of experienced

jourpalilts covering the same everit-and using the very same

source~ of informationare not to be Vf~npered at

On the other hand I am Dot very happy about the curious- way in which the authors haveshyrationalized their differencea Th~y tell Us that one evaluatioo Df ~he Synod (Father Murphys) w~ ~ritteo from the viewpoint of the institutional Church and the other (Mr MacEoins) from that of conteinporarshyman~ind

Or again in Mr MacEoin words A priest professionally involved in the institution will

tend to lean in one direction 11 layman whose professional sushy

- viva rests on his sensitivity to

SPECIAL DELEGATE Marches Ghilio Sacchetti 42 has been named by POpe Paul VI to succeed Count Enrico

Galeazzi as special delegate of the Pontfical Commission for the state of Vatican City He is wearing the now outshymoded costume of a Gentleshyman of Cape and Sword NC PIloto

world opinion in the other

Now Bear This

This strikes me as being bull slightly threadbare and hopeshylessly pre-Conciliar dichotomy I know of a Dumber of priests (and so do the authors I asshysume) who rightly~or wrongly are just as critical of the Synod as Mr MacEoin is

I also know of a number III laymen (and so do the authocs I must assume again) who rightly or wrongly are just as sanguine about the results of the Synod as Father Murphy is So whats all this doctrinaire I

stuff about priests necessarily looking at things (myopically) through the allegedly unenshylightened eyes of contemposhyrary mankind

Tell it to the Marineal

found that they wer~ so ho~e-lessly far apart 111 theIr thmkmg

that the division of labor so I cryptically described in the above quotations appeared to be the only possible way of salshyvaging the middotoperation Thatll fair enough

It isnt at all surprising that one of the authors (Father Murphy) should have concluded that on balance the Synod was truly a contribution to the Church~s aggiornamento and that the other (Mr MacEoin)

MAnmn (NC) - Sz~en per- sons incIl~lg a Cathollc priest have bc)n sentenced to prison terms and fined by Madrids Court of r lic Order on charges Olf havinr participated in an anti-Frangt meeting in Barceshylona in lS~G

On trial were Father Francisshyeo Paula Botey and 10 laymen who were accused of attending

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an illegal meeting The meetshying was advertised as a Day of Repression and criticized what it called the repressive activities of the government of Gen Franshycisco Franco

Father Botey who admitted during the trial that he atshytended the meeting at Barcelona Universitys law school was senshyten~ to a year in jail ~d fined

about $214 Three of the laylDell received similar sentences amplid fines while ~ others drew six-month jail terms aDd four were absolved

Father Batey testified duriDtl the trial that he deliberately atshy1ended the meeting to protest against the ftPress1on he bad said he had seen of -certain see-shymenta of ampbe Spanish clergyshy

Prelate Supports Catholic Schools Opposes Racism

NEWARK (NC) -Archshybishop Thomas A Boland of Newark touched on racism Catholic education and aborshytion in his annual message to the Archdiocesan CouncH of catholic Men at its CQnvention here

Noting that BOrne people adshyvocate closing Catholic schools to concentrate on adult educashytion Archbishop Boland said I believe we mU9t give as much time as is possible to adult edushycation but not that we should ignore our chlIdren

If we close our schools he soid there may 00 no one to attend the adult courses iJn future years

He deplored the absence of religion in the education of many people and said that while 0 ohild may be receiving o good academic background under such circumstances he is not being trained in his will or his morals

Jthortion Is Murder Archbishop Boland noting

~hot the question of relaxing bortion laws is before the state LeFislature recalled that he lralNi opollen to the men about ~ot Dubject a year earlier and repeated what he had said then abortion is murder

Should the state legislate more liberally in this field he said it would go outside its sphere and we would have no

right to follow it He indicated however that

the Church would not oppose the establishment of a legislashytive commission to study the abortion law

Discussing racism he called it a malignant growth in our society and announced his support for a peaceful interrashycial walk through the streets of Newarks ghetto

Spokesmen lor L2ity Archbishop Boland also urged

the men to turn their council into a real spokesman for the laity He ruled out the possibil shyity of a voice for the laity toshytally independent flrom the hierarehy declaring that this is not the structure cd the Church

H we want to build a strucshyture the archbishop said we get an architect to give us a uniform plan Christ is the arshyehitect of the Chureh We are its workmen

He then urged the men tID take the steps which would make the ACCM aspokesman for the people II real council

Delegates adopted four res0shy

lutions endorsing catholic echools condemning racism lin every form advocating retenshytion and expansion of the states IIChool bus law and opposing relaxation of the abortioD statute

Stresses Increased Food Production

NEW DELHI (NC)-The vatshyican recognizes the need to mshycrease food production middotas a most serious problem facing the developing countries and mshydeed the world as a whole Elizabeth Reid II member of the

bull Vatican delegation to the United ean delegation to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD)

Speaking at the UNCTAD meeting here in India MilS Reid said The right to food 18 01117 another aspect 01 be mosi eaered of all buman rigbts the right to life and it is tb1s parshyticular aspect of the problem of development that places the heaviest and most serious burshyden em the comlcieDee of man- flIIIIampy from home kiDd ~ bull lot cbeapeJ tIIaD IiDDC

rv~

I I

HEATHER CUTTHNG

Sacred Hearts Junior High School Student Is Licenseod Amateur Radio Operator

Holly and Heather Cutting 532 Walnut Street Fall River share a transistor rashydio With some teenage sisters this might cause trouble but not with this pair Heather Jets Holly take the transistor She settles for pop music from Johannesburg South Africa-via her shortwave set They have real good musicraquo she says Blonde 14 year old Heather learned the In ternational Morse Code a basic requirement for amashyteur radio operators when she was seven but its only in the past year that shes really worked at the complicated hobby Her father Dick Cutting ll construction superintendent by profession has been ll radio ham for 30 years by avocation An awesome battery of receivshyers and transmitters fills a room of the Walnut street house and when Heather displayed real inshyterest in them she had iii wi)) ing teacher close at hand

Heathers an eighth grader at Sacred Hearts Junior High School on Prospect Street in Fall River and she admits that she does as much homework as IIhe can at sOOool to have eveshynings free for her hobby She at shytends radio classes nightly then hurries bome to spend as much as three hours at ber sel

Im llicensed for two fre- I

quencies right DOW she exshyplained I can talk on six and two meters Translated that means she can contact amateullil

--in this part of the United States but may not ta]k tomiddot overseal operators until she earns 1Il middotgeneral license

Im Working for my license DOW she said rohe examinashytion JIm be in 00 days Even the license that Heather now holds however is umusual for one of her age When she gets ber general license she Will be among itB Y01lllllgest holders and probably the youngceBt 8h licensee in the stlllte

rhere are 11426 lI8dto amashyteurs iD Massacbuatts I18id her father aInd cmIy 409 aJre WCllInen

wm CoDtaet lFather A real benefit to ~ Cutting

family from Bellltberll general lieense wID be iba1 1Ibell be able tID reach bel fathe bull blB car short wave mctic wheD he is OlD hIfl freqUeDt bwliness tripal

distance calls said Mr Cutting The electric light company figshyures I can run this rig 16 hours a day for only $290 a month

Heather hopes to make a cashyreer of radio technology Right now she is able most of the time to repair her set if someshything goes awry and shea building a small transmitting station for an upcoming science fair at Sacred Hearts Itll broadcast about 200 feet she said

Sometimes Of couJrSe gremshylins pop ill Like the time Heather got a phone can from a boy in Swansea Hey did oU know youre coming m on eiYclnnel 2 on our TV be said 011 another occasion Heather picked ~ her fathers transmisshysion OIl ber electric pitar speaker

Most of the time however things go smoothly During her nightly radio sessions Heather picks up signals Jrom other amateurs and has some schedshyuled appointments vis the mllshyways withmiddot friends hi otheJl mties

When she picks up 5 llllew

eontact she confirms it with II brightly-colored postcard bearshying her name and station 0011 etters in psychedelic pink Wld yellow

Collecting such postcards 111 2 sub-hobby for radio amateulll and Holly has a oozzling eollecshytion on the walls of her radio room She bas Mganized the Sou the a II t ern MassachushyIlett8 Teenage RadM Net aocll ill

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OIdsmobile-lPeugot-Rencnft fJ1 Middle Street Fairhaven

llooking for new members Its just for teens she says

=rheyre more fun to talk to Once she has her general 11shy

cense she plans to join Iil group that relays messages from Viet Nam servicemen to their famshyilies

other Bobbies Badia is by no means Heathshy

ers only hobby Shl~ and her sister Holly a freshman at Emshymanuel College have an imshypressive collection of sharpshyshooting trophies mostly garshynered at Fall River Rod and Gun Club meets I began shootshying when I was six and had my Own gun when I as seven eaid Heather

Other interests are mathematshyics and music Heather picked lIP guitar playing on her own and belOngs to a folk group which plans its first public apshypearance after Easter

In short shes one teen whoD never be found wondering what to de next

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THE ANCHORshy 13Thurs April 11 1968

Houston Priests Get Pay Raise

HOUSTON (NC) - BishOJ John L Morkovsky announceCl a pay raise for priests of thE Galveston-Houston diocese and said a new retirement poliCW will go into effect Jan 1 1970

Under the old pay scale asshy sistants received a base salary of 11250 plus $30 car allowshyance and $1250 insurance preshymium for a total salary of $155 a month Pastors received a total monthly salary of $21750 The new salary reale will allow for increased pay based on the number of yearo priests have been ordained

Assistants who have been cshydained less than 10 years wiill receive a total monthly salary of $200 The figures will ~

$225 for those ordained moro than 10 years

Pastors with 25 years in t100 priesthood will receive m monthly total of $275 ThoSQ with more than 25 years will receive $300

The retirement policy ca1lJfl for optional retirement at age 65 and mandlltory retirement at 70 However elderly pries1amp who are able and willing m37 be assigned to other priestly work than the pastorate Bisbshyop Morkovsky stated

The bishop said the changes are in accordance with the recshyommendations of the Senate 01 Priests and follow consultashytion with diocesan consultom

Reach Impasse-PIITSBURGH (NC)-A state-gt

level meeting between Cat~

olic officials and the Nationl11 Association for the Advanceshyment of Colored People on furshythering racial integration iB Catholic schools reached m seeming stalemate here bn Pennsylvania when the schoolshymen cited lack of funds as ll major obstacle to NAACP pro= posals

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YOUTH CARES FOR AGE Retired Sisters are tenderlycared for at chair while Sister Mary Agnes looks on Center Sister Agnes Maureea Mmiddott St Mary Convent Fall River Left Sister Agnes Maureen seniormiddot wheels SisterMary Jer~me anQright Sister JohnCatberine bringgdri_ infirmarian points out magazine article to Sister Mary Lig~~ri inwheel to Sister Mary Ursulamiddot Both infirmarians are licensed practical nurses

I

Cqrdinal Roy Raps Apathy

MEXICO CITY (NC)~MaushyJOice Cardinal Roymiddot of Quebee _ a visit here as ehairman of the Pontifical Commission for World Justice and Peace said Christian teachings condemn violence in solving social probshylems but also condemn themiddot false prudence that lacks the eourage to make needed reshyforms

The prelate who has been touring Latin America for sevshyeral weeks said he was 1mshypressed by the number of Cathshy

olic organizations and institushytutions already applying Pope Paul VIs encyclical The Deshyvelopment of Peoples in their Jespective countries

But he added Latin Amerishyearn still have to assume fully their responsibility in workingtowards economic balance andmiddot bull just social order 80 every cit shyizen can promote his own welshyfare in a climate of freedom and common good

bull bullbull tmiddot

Comes KindIYcimiddotmiddotSislesmiddot 0 Mercy AmiddotI Fall River Comiddotnventmiddot

By Patricia McGowan

~When thou wast younger thou didstmiddot gird thyself anddidst walk where thou Frouldst But when thou shalt be old thou shalt stretch forth thy handsmiddot arid another shall gird thee and lead thee whither thou wouldst not In its description of the almost universal lot of age this is one of the most poignantpassages in Scriptur~ But age comes kindly f~r Sisters Although they are not exshyemptmiddot from its physical and mental ravages they need not fear being forsaken byfriends or being left alone the

fanulymiddot Jhe famllylast of a that is a religious community cherishes its older members and provision is made for Sisters to pass their last years surrounded by tender care

Among havens for older Sisters is the infirmary at Mt St Mary Conventmiddot Fall River The Sisters who have spent most of their religious life in the Fail River Diocese come here for their laBtyears exshypliliried Sister Agnes Maureen

The cardinal added at emiddot pretB8 RSMmiddotmiddot senior iniirmarian at eonference in the headquarten the Mount Her domain proshyf the Mexican Social Secreta- vides eh~rf11~ccQmmodations riat that national efforts for de- for 10 Sisters Each has her ownmiddot elopment do not eliminate the room andthere is II kitchenette aeed ~forfoleignaid where those ablE lobe up and

The Pontifieal commisSion Cardinal Roy indicated ill enshyaged in persuading rich counshytries to devote at least one per eent of their groSs national product to assist poor eountries

Archdiocese Adopts Project Equality

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing notified the priests lIeIlate of the Boston archdiocese of plans 10 adopt Project Equality a program designed to use purchasing power of church institutions to make firms supplying goods and 8elVices wipe out diICriminashy birislM Placticeamp

e~ut ~n enjoy their meals ~gethermiddot

The ~nfirmaryis but II few stepis from the Mount chapel wher~ the retired Sisters spend hours a day in prayer for comshymunity members still in the active lPostolate Also claiming time for Sisters whose eyesight permits are needlework ana erooheting projects

Always DraWlll Cheerful and dedicated Sister

Agnes Maureen who has I Deen at the infirmary six years is aided by Sister John Catherine who has served the aged Sisters two years A laywoman takes the night shift in the infirmary ensuring the Sisters round the clock care Bothmiddot Sister infirmashy

rians are licensed practical nurses who received their trainshyI g to L d f F tma Hosn a ur a y 0 a I shypital in the Providence Diocese

When I entered religion I hoped to be an infirmarian

said SIster Agnes Maureen I whas alwdays drawn to work for t e age

Some people think we havent got a nursing apostolate she added but we need nurses desshyperately Right now we have nine Sisters taking care of inshyfirmaries in our province

Among Sisters now at the Mount infirmary are Sister

Mary Agnes who celebrated her diamond jubilee last DeshyceJl)ber and most of wbose r~lishygious life was spent in New Bedford and middotNorth Attleboro schools and Sister Mary Lishy

gu()ri whomiddot f9r 49 yearl taught sixth graders at st Patricks School Fall River

HShe looks out her window at St Patricks said Sister Agnes Maureen and she says Theres home

The Sisters are welcoming the arrival of Spring and warm days said the infirmarian It means they can enjoy their sunporch sit in the Mounts garden and go for occasional car rides Of course they have many visitors she said Other Sisters in the house come to see them and so do Sisters from the convents where they forshymerly lived

Yes age comes kindly for Sisters Not Hke the old lady overheard in a downtown groshy

eery confiding to a chance fellow-customer her discovery of a bargain in frozen food I live alone you know and 1 get

three big servings from a packshyage--and only 29 cents

N 0 Sister lives alone

bull

~~tplic Newspaper Wins Press Awards

NEW ORLEANS (NC) -The eJarion Herald middotarchdiocesa middotnewspaper won eight awards iii the annual competition of the

N~W Or)eans Press Club ~ competition included daily and

weekly newspapers wire serVshyices and television stations

Millard F Everett editor won first place in two categories - editorial and best religioWl story This marks the first time in five years of competition that the Clarion has taken the top award for best religious story Staff members of the paper also took three second and three third place awards

----------------------------

ZENITH bull ACOUSTICON bull UNEX

bull BIOLOGICAU bull YITAMIIIS

C~tt 615-7829 IRENE R SHEA PROP

Prompt Free Delivery in fALL RIVER SOMERSET TIVERTON amp VICIHITY 101 ROCK ST (CORNER OF PINE ST) FALL RIVIImiddot

~ 6

THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFon River-Thurs Apr 11 1968

CathoJi~ ll]wnDv~JSityPltDcopy~regii~copyJ~

IPlanLUBffil AmeFicon ~1]~regregO WASHINGTON (NC) - A ops and l~aders of several South

jJroup of pr-ofessors from Cathshy American governments sHe University of America hope The Washington center comshyS n~w technical middotinstituteat the middotprises -ll group of professorsshy~tholic University of Gu~Washy mostly members of the CU caulI Ecuador may mark the llchool of middoted ucation-whomiddot are ltJPening of an international edshy specialists ineclUcationfordeshyvcation bridgetoLatin America Velopment Director of the proshy

The institute will be inaugurshy ject is Dr Jose A Baquero ated early this month as 11 middotcoshy WM has been commuting b~shy1)eIativeventure by the Center meen Washingtonand his nashylor Educational Research fa middottive Ecuador dming the -cmrent QuitoEcuadorand the Center school year lor Community Developmenhmd This is not an Ecuadorian Servioe at Catholic University project it is an internatienal bere It has the support 01 Vashy projed a resealclFaction proshykanofficials Ecuadorianbislshy gram between North and South

America Dr Baquero said middothereBC middotto Recruit laquorNe had to start middotsomewhere The natural plaoe 10 begin wasNegro St~1ent5 middot-the Qlace Where weaould get

CHESTNUT HILL (NC) shy the most facilitiesThisproject iesuit-eper-ated Boston College God willing if successful will bere has made available $100shy move throughout Latin AmershyGtOO fora talent search -progr1m ica We already have contracts to recruit Negro stJdents frem with interestedJeaders in Sao disadvantagedurbanareas middotof Paulo BTazil Bogota Colombia tlhecountry mainly in Greater and Lima Peru Boston Msgr Eugene Kevane direcshy

Father Michael P Walsh SJ tor of the Center for Communitypresident caUed for support off Development andServleedaimshyiIIe entirestudent body facshy ed iB number of Latin American Illlty and administration of EQsshy Church and government officialS Qon College to make the ~mshy have middotexpressed interest in thecram a success projectand a belid it may beshy

Since the program was starteJ come a model of assistance middottoIJeveral weeks ago some 50 ~shy lI3derdeveloped poundOuntrieslltIicatiopshave beenreceiltvelll He said ArcnbishGp Romolofrom students in ghetto areas Carooni apostolic nuncio 10lot -entrance middotin next Septemshy

~1u told him heilOllSiders theWltll freshman -class pmject of great importance andThere have a1w~ys beellU M~S a similhlr middotinstitute willIlegro students enrolled at B4tsshybe established at the Pontificalton College oUicials said ~t University in Limatheir Dumber is ~ot ~own 00shy

0tberhigh-ranking churchshyaYSe race is not shown 8ll1 middotmen who lthave endorsed theapplications The Collegemiddotacceptll project include MsgrLuigi Lishyattdents of all faiths gutti the Holy Sees PermanentN~t SeptemberNegro lrtlllshy

1Gbserver at the Food and Agrishy

bullnts with the necessary ~uaUshy6eations will be admitted n8 culture Organization of the 1Ilual while middotsome 25 will ge United Nations and Archbishop admitted under the talent Ceasar Antonio Mosquera fif

lt4IeQIChprogram The number is Guayaquil president of theEcshybeing limited for thegood af iliad-orlan Bishops Conference

GOLDEN JUBILEE Sisshyter Rose Alma Reid CSC (Sjltte1 M Flora) will mark herg-olden i llbilee of religious professjon on Sunday April 21 at Sacred Heart Convent New Bedford A Mass of thanksgi~rjng will be offered at 1130 Sunchw morning at Sacred Head Church and a reception will be held in the parish hall ITom2 to 4 th~t

afternoon Friends and forshymer pupils are invited t01l~

tend

So Curolina Bishop A-sksPettce $upport

CHARLESTON (NC)- Bishshymiddotop Ernest Lmiddot Unterkoefier of Charleston has called for the middotfull support ofall Americans of President Lyndon middotlB Johnshysons efforts to secure peace in middotVietnam

Tbe South ltCarolina Bishop said that the Presidents -peace ini tiati yes demonstrate that he is a gtarson who -has ever been conscious of the grave responsishybility 01 his ofillce and that his judgements have been measured ~y the critical threats to the securi~y and free action ofthe United States

ICampus Comediansl

R~JlJ~stforBirh ControJ 1nlcrmation lndBGSYlrncrGti(C~e

DAYTON (NC)-A Univershysity of Dayton chaplain said he suspected campuscomediami for 1b~ conJroversyaroused bY a request for availability of birth corttol information and materials In campus by theunishyversity stmiddotudent congress

Father Urban Rupp SM universi~y co-chaplain wrote in the chaplain s bulletin the alshymost unanimous aetion fthe student gfvernment group middotwas an idio~yncratic caper in the natureo Ii ttle childrenpl~ying

house He indicated he fouud it difshy

ficult to take the Pfoposa1 serishyomlY

Now of COUrse I middotcowd be taking this all -wrong be said

Perhaps it was intended 00 bn serious In that case I woUld be tempted to thinktheemershygency is not just immediateshyit is really one generation too late

This was taken asa reference to student efforts to pwih through the resolution orbirth control as an emergency -meashysure

That failed but a few days later the student middotcongressvo~ 29 tol to seeka change in llJllshyversUy Wlicy that would -pershymit the introductionof birth 1Ontrol selYiees in thestudem health center for married eQUoshy~les and Ulose llQOD _ ~arriedmiddot

the young Negroes whowiUbe ~pted oUiciaI said

~

bull

PATRIARCH The middotnewily elected head of the Syriac Oatholic Church Patriarch Hgtenys Antoine Hayek of Anshy~och was enthroned recentshy1w in Beirut Lebanon In this post hesucceds the late P-ashykiarch Ignace Cardinal TapshylPouni NC Photo

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In ~ glory of His Resurrection may be reborn man~

amiring hopes and CleSires _ ~ce

HAPPY EASTER THE OFFICERS DIRiEc1r~ AND STAFfshy

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FIRSTmFff-BANK

-Ji1lim~~OF NEW BEDFORD

StYE SOME

11IfiPPINESS TO

A CHILD

i8iAPPI~ESS IS

A bull told ($1250 a monttl$15000-a ~ar)ca_small SISTER Investment for SisterS lifetime of service

Like to be her sponsorf Her name Is Sister Suzamma and she will write to you

iIHAPPINESS ciS

IfOOD

HAPPlHU II

CLOTH

Whonareyouhapp~t7Happlnll3s 110$ In giving Youre ha1J)lest when you sIva yourself to ttle peopeyeniho needyou most bullbullbullA mother for Instance hums with ~pplnesswhensh8bath~

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In Erumathale south India 8 young Indian girllnrtnilriing tobea sisterOfthe Imltatlon1lf Christ will learn amofSotherttllnp how Jo care for orphans Hertlalning costs $300 all

Sevanmiddotyear-od Clara Vaookkaran an orphan In Kottamthy Indla needs lMtryttling Iitta (SIr need $10 wlllP8Y her 8)(~nslJlJm~thbymiddot cm(lOthweUaendYOU harphoto

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THE ANCHO~-Trappists Elect Mother Church of Nation8 PortlglleSe 17 Thurs April 11 1968

Youngest Abbot P-epares fOI- Cenlellilial Celebration At Gethsenloni Dy Patida F r-u nis

GETHSEMANI (NC) The youngest abbot in the history of the monastery of Our Lady of Gethsemani was formally blessed (March ~l) by Archbishop Thomas J McDon~

ough 0pound Louisville Father M Flavian Burns

OCSO 36 ilgt the seventh ab~

bot in the 120-year history of the monastery He was elected by members of the community Inst January to succeed Abbot M James Fox OCSO

Father Flavian described bis position as en administrator whose main job il) service to others within the community He said his most important function it3 to hold plivate spiritual conversations with other monks and to handle the lillM)nasterys relations with the ~Atside world

Thcilt are some 120 monks at ~ethsemani abbey a decline from past years Abbot Burns cCrlbllltes the decline at least in prt to the attitude of the times YiJCl1 was foJJJlcrly accepted without question is now being ltI~etioned he observed

ltDontemplation Prayer

Changes have been made the IHurElY is now in English and 2Jc strict vow of silence has TiKen relaxed somewhat On an experimental basis the monks are allowed to use brief oral instructions instead of sign language as in the past

Despite the lack of radio or 1clevision Abbot Burns said the monks keep in contact through newspllpers with events in todays world The main thing ill to know what is going on in the Church and what effects our fellow hushymans according to the abbot

The life of a monk involves middotcontemplation and prayer rather than speaking up - 11 more spiritual turn according kI Abbot BUlns

A native of Jersey City N J he is a graduate of Henry SfIyder public high sehool there

Protests- Campaign Agamst Religion

NEW YORK (NC) - A new wave of terror against aU churcltgpers is now in effect in Albania an exile from that country has declored in a- letter of protest sent to the United Nations Commission on Human Rightsmiddot and~ to UN Secretary General U Thani

The protest bl Dr Rexhep KIasniqi president of the Free Albania Committee which has its headquarters here said that Albanial following a lf41oist eommunillt guideline has shut down every cltulch and mosque and has made any_kind of pubshylIc worship impossible

Thill campaign Dr Krasniqi tated is a violation of the UN Charter the Universal Declarashytion of Human Rights and of Albanias own communist conshystitutional guarantee of freedom of conscience for all

San Antonro Priests Form Association

SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Fortyshyene diocesan and religious comshymunities priests of the San Anshytonio archdiocese formed a priests association bere The priests ohose a six-member temshypora]) steering committee

One of the fiTst formal actions Gf the allsociatron was to inform Archbishop Robert E Lucey of San Antonio of the group forshymation

There are approximately 441

Parishioner d St John the Baptist Church in Nc Bedford are getting rendy for a momentoils event-the 100th anniversary of the fO~1l1dil1g of the oldest Portuguese parish in the nation The cen~en]ial celebration wi II not take place until 1971 but many things have to be done in preparation within the next three years One major project is renoshyvating the church ihelf To pay for the massive job ptrshyishioners have inaugur~teca Centennial Fund Drive to raise money for painting ~he church do extensive electrical work and buy a rew organ Estimated cost (f the regt3ir5 is $150000

Rt Rev Msgr John A Silvia pastor is honorary drve chairshyman and Frank S Jason is genshyeral chairman Other committee members include Richard GiJI1shysalves and Jesse V Santos Jr division chairmen JQseph S Vera special gifts chairman Richard L Lopes treasurer George Radcliffe director Louis S Silva assistant director Mrs Mary Lucy Soares office conshytrols and Miss Luey E Dias list supervisor

Members of the Campaign Exshyecutive Committee also include Frank M Martin ald Joseph C Motta

The history of St Johns and the history of the Portuguese people in America arc closely intertwined

It was at the end of the 18th Century that settlers began comshying from themiddot Azores to the United States TheJ were relashytively few in number nd as II

result almost lost their national identity

Near Ifood However by 1840 the trickle

of Azoreans was beginning to turn into a near Oood of imshymigrants who settled in New Bedford then a whaling and fishing center

By 1865 many Portuguese families called New Bedford home They lacked just one thing-a church of their own and a priest who spoke their language and understood their customs and traditions

Their first priest-Rev Joao Ignacio de Azevedo-anived in 1869 and on Sept 10 1871 St Johns parish was canonically established

Theremiddot were approximately 1shy000 Portuguese of Azorean deshyscent living in New Bedford at the time and the)T detelmined to build their own church A lot was purchased for $3OD8 ~ con~

siderable amount in those days and soon ground WQS broken for the new house of God

However Father de Azeedo was a mission pliest Vl~ho~moved

throughout the are~ aCministershying to his counblymen As a reshysult a new parish was establishshyed in Boston and he became its first pastor

Expandoll

Construction of St Johns WillS

continued by Rev Antonio de Mattos Freitas a native or Calshylteta St George Azores Fashyther Freitas also was responsible for the construction of a recshytory When he reUred because of ill health and returned to~ the AzoreS he was succeeded by Rev Antonio G de Silva Neves who was to serve St Johns durshying the greatest expansion Gfthe citys Portuguese colony

The first church located where a section of Morse- Twiampt Drill now stands soon ~ outgrown by its congregation and a drive began for agt new and larger church

Father Neves who served 8~j

pastor for almost 25 years saw the new church at County and Wing Streets almost coop]eted However ill health also forced bill retirement

PREPARING FOR CENTENNIAL In charge of fumd drive for hundredth anniversary of St John Baptist Church New Bedford are from left George Radclffe drive execushytive director Frank Jailon general chairman

pleted construction of the present church and rectory in three years The church which now serves the parish was solemnly blessed an4 dedicated to the worship of God by the late Bishshyop Feehan

Through the years the parshyishioners of St Johns have proved their dedication to their cliurch Now they are renewinr their dedication

Msgr Silvia notes that before the small St Johns Church was built the citys Portuguese colshyony attended Mass at St Lawshyrence Church Later they moved into what today is Crowells brt Store

Landmark Today the 11Inificent st

Johns is a landmark in New Bedford befitting its position as Mother Church of the Portu guese in the- UnFted States

MSgr Silvia a native of Pall River served at St Peters Church in Provincetown for 27 years His only other assi1shyment St John the B-aptirt Church

Ordained to the priesthood or Dec 20 1919 St Johns was the new priests first assignment He remained at the cRurch unshytil No~ember 1924 when he was transferred to Ptovinceto~

On Oct 2 1951 Msgr Silvia returned to St Johns as pzsshytor a post hemiddot still fulfills with zeal and energy

His assignmetlt to St Jobnfl parish in 1919 was not ~1sgr Sinshyvias introduotion to the New Bedford parish

As a young boy the p2stcshyrecalls his poundathers weekly trips from Fall River to New Bedford to bring back a priest

Four Families There were few Portuguese

families in Fall River in those days he says When my father arrived in Fan River there were iust four Portuguese families in the city Gradually others setshytled there

My father used to drive over in a horse and buggy to bring Il priest back tc Fall River to ll3y

degbrought him back the next dzy Since those days of hischiMshy

bood Msgr Silvia observeamp-l Turn to Page Eighteen

Continued fronmiddot Page Three

the late Tobias and Ann Lynch ]Burke Mr Burke was born in Newport Tipperary Ireland and his speech bears witness to the o-it and lilt of his birthshyplce He is married te Catbshyerine Lowney Burke and the couple lives next to the Chanshycery

DI1 Davia Costa Dr Costa son of David CosU

and Julia Rodrigues is the husshyband of Louella Somerday and fther of five children A dentshyist in NeJ Bedford he is active ir ceo and in St Vincent ~e

Pml work on a parochial and al(l level He has been zealoUJ ir- many important phases ~

perish aetivity in Immaculate Conception Parish in New BedshyforC He was recipient of the Diocesan Marian Award in Deshycember

itpJlin 15 TIle awards Jill be presenteCl

at St Marys Cathedral Fa]] River on lIlonday evening April 15 at 8 PM At toot timeuro there will be the investi shyture of two lI-ionsignori the awarding of Papal Knight 03 SZ Gregory honors to nine ~sect- oeesan laymen and the Pro EecIesia et Pontipoundlce award kJ mother Pierre Marie adminisshytlato of St Annes Hospital IE Fall River~

Join Federation IIALEIGH (NC)-Forty ()(f thfl

matewide Raleigh dioceses 14~

tlriests have formed the North iCaFolina Priests Associatioil which will affiliate with a Emshy

ticmal federation DOW beiJl~

formed

May the Joy and Pomise 01- Easter

uplift your spirit and gladden

your hean

FROM THE OFRCEIIS AND PERSONfJB Of

qkJM~ERCHANTS CIa1iotuLe BANK

IN NEW BEDFORD

SOUTH BANK-Cove St at Iodney French Boulevard WEST BANK-Kempton Street at Mill Stret

LUNDS CORNER BANK-Acushnet Ave rear Lunds Comer DARTMOUTH BANK-Dartmouth Street near Rockdale Ave NORTH BANK-Acushnet Avbull at Coffin Ave

CENTER BANK-Purchase and William Sts priests in the San Antonio arcl1shy Next pastor was the Rev Mass He used to stay overnight tiiocese Manuel A da Silva wt() oom- at our hOuse ald JlG ~tbeI

-

18 Tti~ ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1969 CatecheticsWeek Set at StonehillDioce$clm ~j[llIlde[lj)fl5 Join Nal-gonGI Some 400 priests religious and laymen are expected to at shyMculrraurru U A$~ssinatBon tend a catechetics institute b be held Monday Aug 5 throughOf Dr Mriin luther KilnS Saturday Aug 10 at Stonehill College Diocesan schools shared i~ national mourning at the Sister Mary Francille CSJ

~8sassination of Dr Martin Luther King with special theology professor at Regis ColshyMasses or prayers offered in every school At Cassidy High lege will direct the institute in Taunton Rev John Moore chaplain celebrated a Mass and speakers will include Rev

Frederick Moriarty SJ Revfor the repose of the soul Cha~les E Cook Rev James F(l)f the Negro leader and rently hplds first place in the Hawker Sister Florence -MishyNotre Dame math league chels OLVM Gerard Potte~

tlie chapel by students in a demy Fairhaven have been study periods were spent in Girls at Sacred Hearts Acashy

bauoi and Mrs Helen Jacobs With the theme Making Alllvigil for peace working on a project to bring

Christian Youth Movement Easter cheer to patients at St Things New institute sessiono will discuss Scripture catechetshymembers at Jesus-Mary Aca- Lukes Hospital New Bedford ical techniques use of filmsdemy Fall River heard the New Under supervision of Sister Jushywith adolescents other visualFolk a group of singing Holy lie Louise SSCC theyve ~een aids parent education teamCross seminarians Their appear- making tray favors including teaching and creative dramaticsance was arranged under t~e decorative placemats and napkin

Further information is avail shydirection of Mofher John Scarry holders for adults and flowered able from Stonehill CollegeJRJM Jollipops chicky surprises and North Easton 02356Also at JMA its French Week bunny hats for childern

The observance- began Sunday Science Fair Winners when French Club members Jeanne Phenix Yvette Berthi- Holy Family had four winshy Charities AppeaI aume and Susan Cournoyer took ners at the annual New Bedford Continued from Page Three part in a play sponsored by the Science fair In the senior division

Community Fund CampaignPrevost French Club Les Fem- James Berry and John Thomas president Board of Managers mes Parlent Trop Throughout of the New Bedford school were of Boston Dispensary and vice

the week too there have middotbeen cited fo~ earth science and phy- the Diocesan cheerleading tour- will combine with the seniors president of USOseveral skits prepared by mem- sics proJects respectively while t tl h ld t F h th bZbers in the junior division both Pa- namen recen yea ee an Lor e occasIOn SInce oth He has been the recipient of

or effort at Prevost was tricia Downey and SharonSmola High but sports arent all that cltsses of the academy are small honorary degrees from Holy MaJ matter at the TauntoJl girls due to the fact that the high Cross College Tufts University

e Sunday program Whlch ln- were recognized for work in the h f h d I ld f b sc 001 Break ast lunc an schoo IS being phased out Suffolk University Bradford -luded In addItIon to the play fle 0 iology M formal dinner pace settmgs The Junipero Club of Holy Durfee College of Technology~veral talks by promInent any students won honors at h M h I I I were recently on display at the Family High recently sponsored of Fall Rivet and Lowell Techshy

I remiddotnch cItIzens a French song- t e assac usetts RegIOn S F h school library and members of a talk on drug addiction for jun- nological Institute ~t and a motion picture Clence alr eld in Fall Rlver They included Christine Four- the Mothers Auxiliary were on iors and seniors The talk was Bishop to AddJess Meeting

UN French Club nier Dominican Academy and hand to answer etiquette ques- given by two brothers one an Most Rev James L ConnollyAt Coyle the French Club di- Diane Desmarais Mt St Mary tions from the students ex-addict the other director of Bishop of Fall River will speak

Ilected by Brother Hugh McCabe Academy both Fall River Both And the Coyle Fathers Club Marathon House a center for to the priests parish trusteesIOeCently elected officers After girls were recogiIized by the held its annual Father-Son Com treatment of addicts located in chairmen of the Catholic Charishy8le votes were tallied however Southeastern District of the Mas- munion breakfast at the school Coventry RIo ties Appeal and the invited lays our man at Coyle it looked sachuse~ts Dental Society bull with Robert Cahill ofthe Rhode CongratuIcitions go to Joseph gue9ts of the 111 diocesan if ~embers were voting for Debra Lay Dominican Aca- Island Food and Drug Commis Abraham of St Anthony High parishes bull UN delegation The presidents demy received a savings bond sion as guest speaker He dis- for meriting runner-up position Roland A Lafrance 1968 ApshyliPot wa~ captured he reports from the Bristol South Distriet cussed harmful effects of various iil the state finals of the annual peal lay chairman will also adshy a Polish fellow Cbarles Ozug Medical Auxiliary arid Michael drugs American Legion olatorical con- dress the 800 expected to attend lames OBrien a true Irishman Zito Bishop Feehan High At~middot The Catholic Students Mis- test - the opening meeting of the won the vice-presidential spot tleboro was awarded a plaque sion CrUsade at Stang H~gh has In club~ews at~HA the Senshy campaign for funds for the 30 while the treasurers job was by the Womens Auxil1ary to the taken as a special project this ior Science Club will conduct agencies of the Catholic Chadshy~warded to Jorge Matesanz -a Mass Veterinary ASsn month of April the collection of a farewell meeting for seniors ties Appeal

BASKETBALL PLAYERS On basketball team at Connolly High Fall River are from left Tim Duffy Tom Kroger John Long Joe Kelly Greg Sullivan Mike Manning

~~dent of Spanisll extraction Winners in the division of donated medical supplies and this ~month and members will Only Paul Bor9ue the secretary earlhscience Were John Dias eyeglasses for deprived Peoples visit an encephalitis clinic in I ~anaged to make the scene for Thomas Burk~ anciRobei-tClou~ of the world Supplies collected Freetown in May The Stamp France tier FeehahMicIlael Cote Pre illbe forwarded to the Cathi- and Coin Clubis planning a pubshy

At Bishop Stang iil North vost and Elizabeth Lavoi~ Do- olic Missions Medical Bureau for lie exhibition of members col- Dartmouth the math team led minican shipment iections in May imd the Chess by high scorer Lawrence l3yrnes Awards in math and engineer- Upco~ing at S~A Fairhaven Club has undergone reorganiza- placed secon~in a reeentBqs- ing went to Carol Vasconcellos is the aruiual senior prom which tion election of officers inshyflon public schools math meet Mt St Mary Madeleine Delisl~ wilL be held in the Colonial cluding Edward Norman presishyThe Stang team paced by the and Vivian Blais and Michael R60m of Whites restaurant in dent Daniel Brule vice-presi- shyeo-sIstent good work of George Zito Feehan Genevieve Pappas Westport from 8 to midnight dent Diane Lizotte secretary Oliver and EIleen Keavy cur- and Debra Lay Dominican Joan Friday night May 24 Juniors TuniorProm

Basile Feehan Amato Polselli The Holy Family Junior Prom Prevost and Sharon Woycie- Board ofmiddot Trustees isslated for Friday night AprilCentennialmiddot chowski Mt St Mary were 26 at Kennedy Center The prom

Continued from Page Seventeen cited To Study Changes will last from 8 to 11 and will Chemistry winners included have Carousel as its themebroad smile on his face-many Jane Arruda Anne Lewis De- WASHINGTON (NC) - The Mlisic will be by the Escorts

other families have arrived from nise Michaud Elizabeth St board of trustees of the Catho- And the Holy Family debatePltlrtugua1 A man d Diane Lamontagne lic University of America in team tied for first place in the Our Lady of Mt Carmel par- Christine Fournier Dominican Washington D C will meet Narry League with Cassidy A ~h was detached from St Johns Anne Sullivan and Pamela Can- Sunday April 21 in St Louis playoff will be held As of now as the Portuguese population dee Feehan Marilyn Riley and to consider a wide range of rec- Cassidys debate reco~d is 12 grew Then Our Lady of the Ann-Marie Charrette Sacred ommended changes resulting wins out of 14 debatesjrnmaculate Conception parish Hearts Fall River Irene Caron from a year-long study of the was erected to care for families Cassidy Marilyn Bentley Mt pontifical university by a comshyi Portuguese descent living in mitteee headed by Dr Carroll ~e North End of New Bedford St Mary Hochwalt

In the field of physics Alan middotRAMBLERToday St John the Baptist White Prevost Michelle Paquet The meeting will be held in ehurch has about 4000 parishshy SHA Fall River JamesReid Jrconjunction witll the Spring Americas Economy King ioners Our numbers started Prevost Mary Soans Jane Mc meeting of the National Confershy Fnr the Best Deal Come To dropping about seven years ago Donald and Martba Nugent yent ence of Catholic Bishops Broadway Ramblerasgr Silvia explains He feels St Mary The trustees are expected 10 INC part of the drop in membership Representatives from Diocesan name a new 30-man board meet 768 BROADWAYis due to a number of families schools to the Mass State Sci- with faculty representatives for RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 131moving outside the parish )ounshy ence Fair will include Michael the first time in histoi-y and CHARLES J DUMAIS Presdarles Intermarriages with othshy lito Amato Polselli Debra Lay discuss the search for a new er nationalities account for still Madeleine Delisle Jane Arruda university rector to replacemore losses Anne Lewis Father J~dhn P Whalen ~ho ~III11I11I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I11I1I1HIUIIIIIIIlIIlilllllllllllfllHlIilttmmIllIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllllnIlIllIllHIIIIIIIIIJ111~ However the Mother Church Denise Michaud Alan White was naine last October to a ef the Portuguese is not fading Michelle Paquet Elizabeth St one-year term as acting rector E WEEKEND SPECIAL sect away AmandSharon Woyciechowski A new school was built in New Projector

f957 It is expensive Msgr Silvia admits but I felt we needed it

St Anthony High in New Bedshyford is rejoicing over acquisi shytion of a movie projector as a

Parish gtrganizations are active gimiddotft from the alumni association and individual parishioners are willjng to give of their time

Presentation to principal Sister Lucille Champagne was made

and effort Perking

to keep the parish by Mrs Josephine Lafleur sociation president

asshy

Now they are getting read7 Cassidy-Coyle cheerleaders Jor a 100th anniversary captured third pillce v9Phy iil

_

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==I == MacleansI UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN

Tet 99793511

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Westport Real Doric-Horse lHE ANCHOR-DIoeIee r bull I AJu n

Case Somerset Favorites In Narry Diamond League

Case High of Swansea and Somerset are pre-season ehoices in this seasons Narragansett League baseball race but the club th8lt will bear watching is Westport TIne darkshyhorse Villagers may have a few surprises for Narry foes Another small area school

with a respectable 8-6 recordthat potentially has a shot Only one member of that at a league championship is squad Calvin Hopkinson will Norton of the Tri-Valley not be playing for the Villagers Conference Coach Ed Bibeau this Spring With the rest of the has most of last Deasons Central club ready to go - watch Jlor Village regulars Westport to make its presence in the fold ready lmown to challenge the Among fuose returning are perennial Paul Eastwood an Russ Picard favori1es If 0 T two of the better performers in Narry honors the circuit a year ago Eastwood amp1i1 at Norton led the team in hitting with a (C 0 a c h Peter highly respectable 360 averagem[l ~ek has pitched and played the infield G3ven returning Picard like Eastwood 15 also ~nnen for versatile An outfielder by trade ~theY chamshy he also takes his turn on the ii~~JWhip bid Peter mound for Coach Bibeaus nine Weo~port Bartek Carl Zajac and Jeff Hague tmIshed the 1961 eampaign ill round out Bibeaus four-man ~ place in tbe NalT7 loop pitching staff

Norton Bids for Tri-Valley Crown jfOO task of handling the but in thin scholastic year of

~tJ of this quartet will fall athletic surprises it may not be Gpoundl ~e shoulders of either Ron as big as some thinllt ~JmOi) or Manny Cabral both

A second place finisher inexperienced receivers ConnOlll 1967 the Norton Lancers haveexcel1B not only defensively their sights on the Tri-Valleybut likewise with the bat He Conference crown The clubsbit at a 333middot clip last Spring one-two hitters last campaignJohn Souza and Mike Andras have departed from the Norton th better than 300 hitters baseball scene but the teamqaln will be out to join the one-two pitching punch is reshyleague leaders in batting prowshyturning Juniors Ken Allen aess They should put a wallop left-hander who had a perfectin Westports oHensive attaCK 7-0 record last Spring and ArtIf Coach Bibeaus boys can dushyBouchard will be relied uponplicate their Performances of a heavily to bring the league flagJellr ago Offensively and biB to Norton Coach Bartek alSobig four comes through on middottbe hopes to get some help in middotthemound Westport may realize a the pitching departmentmiddot fromlong awaited Narry championshyFred Rego Bill Gorczyca andEip dream Admittedly if Ie Steve Nichols bull bie word in ~~rts_tuture

~ ~ bull I

OpeUp With~on-League Co~esttsmiddot Other returnees incl~ Capshy develop rapidlymiddot defensively if

tain Mike Wynnn Greg Croff they are to regain the leagues BOb Adams Tim McEndy and divisional crown - whicb flbeymiddot Paul Hassie Wynn a senior lost to HoWston last Spring middotmiddot will be starting his third season and gain a shot at the Trl shyill left field with Cruffstarting V~ey Conference ebampionshyhis second campaign in center ship Many area clubs openThey will be joIned by Wynns their campaign this week with brother Ricky in right fied non-league games highlighting

The infield win be anchored the action League competition by Adams at second base and will commence for the most Hassle at short Newcomers part next week Richy Silvia and George Macshy Mother Nature has done her Arthur are presently battling it job this Spring Baseball coaches out for the third base job and throughout -the diocese admit Lorrie Adams also a first-year that this is the best Spring they man appears to have the inside have had to prepare flbeir track on first base charges in many a year Weather

cannot be blamed for a slowMcEndy who has been the start this time around All areLancers starting catcher since eagerly awaiting the umpireshis Freshman year is starting first call to play ballhIs third campaign behiJd the

plate Bartek expects McEndy to hold the inexperienced inshy New School System field together

The Lancers will have to imshy In German State prove upon their hitting and DUSSELDORF (NC) - The

North Rhine-Westphalia state parliament middothas approved aCanadian Prelates change in the states school sysshytem that probably will meanEstablish Council the end of many denominational

OTTAWA (NC)-The Catho-shy schools Hc bishops of Canada have esshy By an overwhelming majorshytablished a 12-member Fiscal ity the parliament voted to Affairs Council composed of change the state constitution and clergy Religious and laymen establish the nondenominational who will advise the Church on Christian school in which reli shyfinanclal matters gious training is given by Cathshy

Among the areas which are olic and Protestant instructors receiving ini~ial attention of the in the same school as the patshycommittee is the question of tern for state-supported schools whether the Church should be from the fifth through the nint subject to government taxation grades and if so what form of taxation In the past the state has supshywould be equitable to churches ported Illeparate Catholic and government and other taxshy Pro tell tan t denominational payen Khoola

-~) PASSION PLAY Today Christians hold the Solemn Observance of the Lords Supper

It is commemorated ina PMsion Play at Prevost High School Fall River by David Poisshyson as Christ Paul Martel left 8$ St John and Paul Bouampquet as St Peter

DominicGlIsmiddot Rent ApGrt~~rit in Inner -Cimiddottimiddot middot

Want t~ Get Closer to I Agony of the Worl~middot WASHINGTON (NC)middot Pift his experience in the neig~lgtorshy ruary 1966 because theJ

Dominican priests-each doing hood is invaluable in helping wanted to get closer to the bis own thing-are living middotin an both prisoners and parolees He agony of the world While nol apartment in the inner ~ cd said the insight he gains into eliminating the academic life Washington here they come from ancl h~w they felt that living in the inlleJ The five run the gamut from they view life aids him In mv city would be as important bull

a professor of moral theology at ing them intelligent advice and learning experience as academic the Don)inican House ofStucUeII 8ssis~nCe study to a prison chaplain a1 the Diamp- Father William Kane is middotthemiddotNeighborhOoclll[aatrict of Columbia Jail Ibey neighborhood man of the have in common1heiy addresa A Pr~ceton graduate ~itl1 apartment Hemiddotworks with minshyand a desire to understand and doctorates from Harvard aJgt4 isters inmiddot the area in establishing alleviate the problems ~ livlnc OxfCrd Father Albert Brodershy youth programs and fightina I in a poor Urban community ick teaches Constitutional LalV for better housing and fail

Father TbomasHea~ middotttie at the catholic University Law rent laws His motive is to givemoral theology professor aDd School the people in the community aD author of a reCent bOOkmiddotID awareness of their own dignitymiddotBe and Father Heath startedFaee of An~sh is 0Il 1be to affirm the fact that it is athe apartment project in Feb-bOard of direCtors of the Pe0shy ood place to live ples Center a house soon to be

the rehabilitationopened for Criticizes Usury of alcoholics He also meets

MEXICO CITY (NC)-Mexshy5 50 01- a SYSTEMATIC wimiddotth ~culties of Wasbingtcm

icc CityS Jose Cardinal Garibiseminaries to discuss policyshy bull 10 year SAViNGSRivera urged bankers meetingmaking and apostolic activity MONTHLY DEPOSITSat the National Bankers Conshy

Legal Aid Office vention in Guadalajara to comshy 5 00 01- a INVESTMENT bat usury and work closely bull 10 year SAVINGS

Father Joseph Cooney a NOTICE ACCOUNTSwith the government to proshylawye~ who has worked 011

voter registration in the South mote the social welfare of all II REGULAR4 5001 the Mexican people bull 10 Jflar SAVINGSand took an active part in dvil

rights activities such lIS

~lma march is DOW admin~ Bass Rivertering a legal aid office in the CENTERneighborhood of the Dominishy Savings Bank

cans apartment Volunteer law Paint and Wallpaperstudents from the Catholic Uni- Bank 8y Man I

versity of Ameiica assist him Dupont Paint

We Pay The Postage

IJcor Middle St

A third member of the group m this program 4iiii 422 Acush Ave bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA Fat her Raymond MalonSOl1 ~ New Bedford bull SOUTH VARMOUTH 4raquo HYANNISserves as the Catholic chapiain bull PARKINGmiddot

bull DENNIS PORT bull OSTtRVILLEatmiddot the D C jail A late vocashy Rear of Storetion Father Malonson has been ordained only two years middot Father Malonsoll feels U1at

LEVESQILIES OFFla E~lnPMENTNow Many Wear Wood Metal Desks and ChairsFALSE TEETH

With More Comfort JUST GiVE ME A CHANe TO QUOleTo overcome discomfort when

dentures sllp sllde or loosen Just sprinkle a llttle FASTEETH on your 187 SHAWMUT STREET bull NEW BEDFORD MASS

middot plates FASTEElH holds dentures firmer You eat better feel more PO Box 2062 - Hervey L Levesque

middot -wont sour Helps check plate odor comfortable FASTEETH Is alkaline

Dentures that fit are lIlSSentlai to Telephone 993middot1264middot health See your dentist regularly Get FASTEETB at all drUB counten ___ _ _____11_0__-D-tcl----4

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs April 11 1968

PhySDCOUi) l1JJ Uges litUBgy C~[filges

~n Last RStes RED BANK (NC) A

~atholic physician called for revision of the liturgical $orm of the Anointing of the Sick cluring a discussion on The Chaplains Role With the Dying Patient at Riverview Hospital here in New Jersey

Dr George J Sheehan an alumnus of Manhattan College and a founder of Christian Brothers Academy in nearby lLincroft was one of three apeakers at the symposium coshyaponsored by the hospital and Ute 1 Redmiddot Bank Council of

ilhurches Citing obvious failures by

both physician and clergyman iin helping the dying patient and bis family Dr Sheehan sugshygested members of the family Ghare inmiddot a ceremony which would exchange feelings of llove and hope between them ElDd the dying person

Dr ~heehan observed that while inadequacy in the face of death has been in the past apparent to the Protestant criergyman it is now also felt by Catholic priests

They findmiddot he said the La~t Sacrament in its present form Ii a consolation only to those with the strong faith of a Breton iiteasant-a kind of faith they e seeing less and l~ss-

Appropriate Theology He also said while the develshy

pment of a Common Christian itervice parlakirtg of the same llodividual familymiddot and commu~

Ility significance as Bap~i8ai -dMarriage would be a giant p in middotheiping people to a middotbappy death iit would remain IDol theologians to present- a relshy

qwant lmd acceptable image of mail in this time and this place ilnd to develop an appropriate eology of death heaven ~nd bell in order to make a signifi- sant change in our life style

lOd therefore in our approach to death

Other panelistsmiddot were the Rev Seorge Fitzgeraid a Presbyteshyaan minister middotand middotchaplain at Princeton Hospiital arid Mn Ruth Snyder a nurse of the lIiverview Hospital staffmiddot

POSTER CHILD LEADS WAY Joey BeIge 8 of Syraeuse NY leads themiddot way down a White House lttairway in the company ofthe Fi~st t-adymiddotMrsLyndon B Johnson

and Mrs Muriel Humphrey wife ofthe Vice-President Joeymiddotis this years poster child of

the National Association for Retarded Children H~ ismiddot thesQn ofMt and Mrs Robert Beige middotmembersmiddotOf St Vincent de Paul parish in Syracuse whos-e ot-herfive children SlHshy

round their Uttle broth~r wil1hmiddot the love and care to h~lp him livea full and happymiddot life

Penn See Studies Poverty Pmiddotrogram HARISBlJRq (NC)--Coadju- is being made to see ho)Vtbe to coordinate and channel our

tor Bishop Joseph T Daley diocese canmiddot best use its re-middot efforts in the fieldmiddot vicar general- of the Harrisburg sources to alleviate poverty Bishop Daley said it ismiddot im- diocese calledmiddot on the nearly problems middotperative that all our people 50000 Catholics in the area to He alsomiddot said Wemiddot contem- knoW and understand the probshy

acquaint th~mselves with 10- middotplatemiddot the early middotestablishment of middotIem of middotracism and the funda- calracfal and poverty problems amiddotmiddot diocesanmiddot human relations mental moral injustices which

In a lettermiddot read at aU Masses commission middotto serve asmiddot a liaison middotare at the root of the deplorable BishopDlIleT said middotthat a study with all people Collcerned and conditions in our own area

Urges Hospitals Re~ognie Unio~s

CLEVELAND (NC) - AI layshymens group here has asked the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hospitals to declare its willingshyness to recognize labor unions as collective bargaining agents for hospitals employes

lNle request came in a letter from William A caldwell chainnan of the eurolevellllnd Conference of Laymen to Sister ~ry Collette of Hamilton Ohio president of the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hosplshytala during a one-day meeting here of the Ohio Hospital Assoshyciation convention

The laymens group said such a statement would promote the human dignity of hospital emshyployes in real and immediate ways serve the common good of our communities and inshycrease the understandingmiddot of Catholic teaching by all the citishyzens of Ohio

The letter pointed out that the National Catholic Hospital Association 1 a s t November called on Catholic hospitals tiraquo be guided by the social teachshyings of the Church and to deal with unions that employecfgt choose

Discuss ~iot Report On Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC) - Beginshyning Sunday April 14 the Catholic Hour will present over the NBCmiddot network a three-part series The Climate of Change

Evolution or Revolution foshycusing on three areas of social and religioUs concern today today

~gr Rop~rt Fox cOordinashytor of Spanish community 00shy

middot lion in the New York arclidioshymiddoteese will discuss The Riot centommissi~ middotReport Amiddot Chrisshy

tiati Response April 14 Msgr Ivan D Illich of the Intereushy-tural Center 01 Language and D middotoe u men tat 1 on CuershyDavaca Mexf~o win be intershyviewed Aprjl 21 and Father Francois Houtart Belgian 00shyciologist will be interviewed Apiil 28

The National Council of Cathshy oUc Men producer of the OathshyoUe Hour reconunendseheckshymiddoting local newspaper programa for broadca9t time in particushymiddotRar areas

I Am The RestUlJTectiltogtD

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FALL RIVER

Page 7: 04.11.68

7 middotMrsmiddotmiddotmiddotStewart Fails to Tell Casey Story Convincingly

By Rt Rev Msgr John S IKelIDedy

Ramona Stewarts Casey (Little Brown 34 Beacon St Boston Mass 02106 $695) is anovel which promises more than it delivers Itsmiddot action begins in 1860 concludes in 1886 and HI laid in New York City The focus is on Tom Casey aged 20 at the start A native of Ireland he remembers the horrors of County Cork in the years of Qle great famine His family Bed their home went to LivershyPOOl- suffered muough a fiveshy

weeks voyageIlrJ a sailinglib i p finallyderer Il the citys resources eettled in New even moves briefly on the

York For them middotftinges of the gaudy nouveau I A m e I i e a richeset typified by Jim Fisk

008 not turned ltlmt to be the

jijlromised land Like thousandstillld thousands ef the Irish

t th New York ltBOWded

10 0 e dums they are abysmally

~~eir homes are decrepit verminous tenements Their jabs are menial ill paid and dancy They are despiSed by the natives both for their nashyampnai origin and for their reli shyfIion They meet violence at the lhands of brutal nativists No opportunity opens up for them lJDd they are without hope

Elab$mte Setting

n is plain thet Miss StewaIi lhas done thorough rese~rch clgt1l1

the period Bet pages are

But-middot when his boss Maguire breaks with the big boss Tweed CasEiyS ascent ill reshyversed Tweed however is exshyposed and undone and pious John Kelly takes over as head of Tammlllny~

casey relllizes tiliJilt it is opshyportune for him to repudiate

Maguire and strike out on his own Ihis he does to the imm~ diate signal improvement of his lot but lllt the price of Maguires bUter enmity

AdvaIltageMJS Marrul1ge Casey now marries one EileeZl

Callahan liI doctors daughter a chilly lace curtain Irish sort It is not a happy marriage but it iJiI respectable and advantashy

geous Casey is appointed citY ~coroner attl ~tosalary with Per

qUlsites But there i~t yet aJ1oth~r reshy

paCked with detallmiddot She hasmiddotmiddot versal til store for him On mounted a viVid mid elaborate election day 1~74~ he goes ooIJting for nero story But the about to see that his forces are

~ (ftory does not live ormiddot inove It performing properly (which abounds in incident it has com- means improJgterly) he isdraWn

plications galorebut it lacks into an altercation with Ma- ~tality arid never generates guire power Why this should be it is Casey taking a physIcal at first hard to tell beating from the bigger Mashyo~ Tom Casey sne~as a ~g- guire draws a pistol and shoots bull who should be mterest1Og Htt hits t M gur b t f

ImiddotToiil is inteUigenl middotandrug~ middottlie latte~ miihioris~Te~~hcJl ~t he left school atmiddot 13 He n()vi Ismortal CaseY- is1ndicted pound01(

realizes th~t be can~et ~ ~urd~r tried l~t out on bail here never break ~l1t 01 ~~ ~heI1 a hung jury evenWates

iitifling meager wretched woHdof his k1Od IDs one asset seellW imd ultdmately gOeS free1JnaeeouJmtabi Re Co be brawn

lJOmething -hi Which counts for the braw~gk middotHe w no~

e eolery disgraced in debt

Which his Arsenal Gimg in- witbout poundI Jobmiddot probably permaQ

dulges and in the work of tblii nently estranged from his wife Pacifid Company of volunteer One might suppose thatmiddotthis was firemen to which he belongs the end of t~e story But no 1m

As he looks about he recog Cl middotfinal s~ctwn d~ted 12 years ftizes that the way to some ad later he is the chIef deputy andshy~cement and aggrandizementmiddot lUre successor of ag~ng ailing fl through politics He observ~ middotampss Kelly He is almost at the John Maguire who at 37 io top and it all means nothingmiddot olderman saloonkeeper aD ell ne of the flaws 10 t~e novel mstrict leader of the Twentyshy s Illustrated by the diSJuncture ~t ward middotbetween Caseys fall because oil

Air PI ti tillemiddot murder case and his unae-middot bull cq1lll es es ge countable recovery Therecov-

MagUire is of course a Twt- ~ middotis never explained We ~ny m~ He dresses well dont know how it was done wears dlamon~ studs hai middotIJ We are simply presented withmiddot middotmiddotmiddotsion said the problem ofmiddot realiz Long-Range PllOgn-ams

go~d-headed caneCasey cop~ $t and asItedlmiddotto take it On faith -log tqe recommendations it In cooperation with 22 other ~ ~ude~ that ~e must gcentt ~n ~~l middotmiddotllIWl at the end tberebe- made on treating lhe ghe~to ~orgahizations NCCI1 bas

1- ~agulre - ~ middotmiddotOOmes glaring something whichi Bf~ does through ~s prov~_ all alongimiddot has nagged at tne

gt111 lID 19hting But h~ progre~middotlY rreadernanaely~the s~ddampn leaps - Yery slow True he geta 11 Cl to ltile _~ lemiddotaps acr~-

Il1o which involves Db dU~I~ improbable nnd unexplored at all but allows him to sp~ndzhasms aU hiS time wardheeUng for Timelilness iD Novel

Maguire He acquires B little A more seriousmiddot flaw is thAprestige even a little Power But h is till tty an potatoe~ G pre 1m

But then suddenly Maguire ebief henchman die and Mashyguire himself in hi gn f _

s e per petrates an egregIOUS act of folly Casey is at hand to helplIDd succeeds in concealing Mashypires drunken blunder onl to become involved with n gid Maguire hIllS B8S lted

u Ascent Reversed

She is Claire Scofield whO elm give the appearance of

~Jadylike innocence but is act~ bull rally a vix~ She and Case

never marry 1m her avidity for possessions and eventually poshymUon sine keeps driving Casey taunting him with his inconseshyquence and urging him 10 bold steps

He becomes an alderman gew to know 30ss Tweed head of Tammany and notorious plunshy

failumiddotre lIll development of charshy~r ~is is most notice~ble ou tOO mstance of Casey hlmshyself wile rem~~a naDe and a type never nngmg true as a complex person The same is true of the borde of others whO pour through tIl1e book Be they

major Gr mInor hlStOriC~ or ~onlh ~y are WIthout mner llife Mrs Stewart hit upon bull subshy

feet wJith great possibilities and genuine contemporary signifi shymiddoteanee But she haS not known how to render it convincingly and illu~tingl) in terms of

middotIme to ailalrange~ent lui fidWL

~lEl][ORIALMASS Pattimiddotck Pardinal OBoyeof Washshy ~~tQ~ speak~ at a memOrI~ M~s f0t ~r1lIIartm Luther

l~ngr hel~ ~und~yat t~e Na~~~l Shnne of th~ Immacshylla~ Come~pbQn in the natI~n~s CPl~aINC Jho1Jo

INatbull-ona1middot middotWmiddotmiddot-1111

Ahmann Says Wflitbull Racism Pllob~ltem

For White Churches CHICAGO (NC) -A leader ereatiIDg is new notionall wW

m Catholic interracial justice for notional actioo work ~id here white rlllcis~ middotWe believe that creation of called essentially responsible the national will is probably for the violence in cities by the the greatest spiritus problem

middotnational riot commission is a confronting religiollJS institushymoral problem and must be at- tiona in Amerlcm Ahmann deshy~cked by the white churches clared in calling on NCCIJs 1~

Mathew Ahmann executive lliffiliated Catholic interrracillll director 4)f the National Catho- councllsand human relationo lie Conference for Interracial ComiImissions to Set ~ tRileoir efshyJustice asserted The commis- lo-rts for social jUstice

problem was the problem (If published and distributed a speshy cial 32~page pamphlet smiddot~ary

Favors Compulsorymiddot of th R rt f h N al e epo () t e Iyenon Rmiddotmiddotmiddot A AdvisorY Commission 00 CiVil

ehlement ge DisOrders I j 1 -

SAN ANTONIO (NC) -The San AntoniQ archdiocesan prlmiddotemiddotstsmiddot seina~ has recommended

vc75 as the compulsory retirement age for priests in the arcbdioshycese and 65 as an accepted retiremen~ age

Tbe recommeridation which has been sent to ArChbishop Robert E Lucey of San Antonio came in the fonn of a motion passed unanimously by the 12shymember - senate at a meeting here

The senate also recommended establisbment of some sort of

tenure of office for pastors and assistants They urged a maxishymum limit of 10 years in the same parisb for pastors and a liDlit~ five yearn fol assistants

Ahmann eaned fur NCCIJ affiliates to stress the need for long-range middotmiddotclmiddoton-TI proshy

cu ltU grams for aD ~rts cd bhe Catholic community to elimishynate white racism incmding

programs for human relations

training fM lay leadershipclergy teacherS and required elementary a nd secondary school courses in humanrelashynons and Negro Illistory He also urged affiliated 01shy

ganizati()ns to bank as well as purchase goods and services in the black communi~y On the legislative front ne urged support of the similar goals of the riot commission the Urban Coalition and Dr Martin Luther KiB4fil Poor ~s Campaign~

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 11 1968

Catholics Defend Fair Bus Law

TRENTON (NC)-Spokesmen for Catholic schools defended the states year old fair bus law at a public hearing held here to consider its possible reviSion

In mllny respecfs it was a reshypeat of the public hearings a year ago which resulted in the bill being amended before passage But at that time the thrust was for passage of some rort of measure )utting private school students on equal footshying with public school students Now legislative sentiment apshypearc ro incline toward a cutshyback although outright repeal seeDlll unliksly

One relllSon foi the dlllnge in outlook b the compleJdon of ihe legislature Lest year it was in DeInoeratic hands and fair shybusing bllld the support of Gov Richard JJ Hughes Now Repubshylicans hold control by a 2-1 margin and party leaders see Ii mandate to cWtail some of tine programs enacted a year ~omiddot

A half-dozen bills to repeal or revise the busing law are now before the legislature The hearings here were held by the education committees of both the State Senate and Assembly whiclll hnve not yet released any bills from committea

Principal spokesmen for Catholic education were John 1 Rafferty counsel ful the New Jersey Catholic Confershyence and Msgr John 3 Clark Camden diocesan superintendent of scbools and president or the state ruperiIllten~ento ~ciashytion

Expropriate Pmsh BERLIN (NC)-East Gennan

eommunist authorities Ulave exshypropriated the Catholic parish 01 St Francis Xavier in East Berlin without compensatingthe Cbureh Redevellop~nt ia given as the expropriation reashyson

May the 8711 of ~g [ltm1

mine tlP~D JOU and ~aJ

the afOlY of His ReslITaeI tiOD bless J01l Ydtbmiddot

pe~ and jOle

The

Old Red Bank Fail River Savings BaRk

FAll IUVEI

SOMERSET

8 THE ANCHO~=Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1968 New Pay Scale For Teachers

FORT WAYNE (NC)-ftleEnjoy Family Celebration Fori Wayne-South Bend dioceshysan board of education bas apshyOf First Communion Day proved a new salary scale for lay teachers in elementallY ancll

By Mary Tinley Daly secondary schools The board approved tl recomshyChanges in the Church that perennial topic of COlllshy mendation that for every fuD

versation since Vatican Council II come in for a lot of time degreed ~acher employed pro and con discussion on the part of the laity With each with a current valid Indiana

teaching license a parish Willehange the dissident~ speak up head-shakers moan middotWell be reimburselt at the rate Oilfthey didnt do it that way in $2000 each for the school ~

my day But as each in forms of any kind with their 1968-1969inevitable rivalry Each littlenovation is inaugurated The salary schedule for 196ampshygirl and boy was in mufti shy 1969 provides on the bachelonthen incorporated into presshy tastefuUy and compoundo11tably degree level for a minimum Oil ent practice we realize these garbed $5200 and a maximum of $6200 made notehanges are simply Each family had its own pew at the 10th year with an increshyfor the sake of parents and First Communicant mentof $100 a minimum QfclJange but as in aisle seats sisters brotI1ers $6000 and a maximum oilPope John XXIII grand-and godparents filling $8700 at the 15th year with aput it to keep up the rest of the pew We beshy $180 increment for the bacheloilrltP with the longed to Kate on Her Day degree teacher with a staterhythm of the What class a small whis- license and a minimum of $630times To quote pered the Headof the House as and a maximum of $10000 asfrom middotThe the names were read out at the the 18th year with an increoChurch middotin Our beginning of Mass That we ment of $200 for the masteroDay collective thought was the ~ason we had degree teacherspastoral of the been included Not so Each

American hiershy child in the First Communionmchy recently published Our

eHort at Class could designate ahead III Department of Justicepresent restructuring time which of the parish Masses

procedures in the Church withshy $~~ Approves Shared-Time to attend thus splitting theIn the national and Diocesan number into more intimate HARRISBURG (NC) - Tk)eommunities depend in great family Jroups Pennsylvania Department dWORLD OF FASHION Jmeasure on the seriousness With Justice has ruled that there ampJiilThose who eboBe to Jeeetve lIS Iwhich study is undertaken and ~~~~ By MARILYN BODERICK ~

the disposition to implement )amp bull class were allowed to do IlO no legal bars to shared-~ The altar rail had beet1 opeIil shy education of private ~ a the part of the laity pupils iii public schoolseCl wide with lmeelers tor thlee EASTER CLOTHESNew Prooedure I iD the center At CommUDion Deputy Atty Gfin John 1)

One change nO doubt fsmilshy time 8 smiling priest weleomed New clothes at Easter have tiful example of creativity and McCord who issued the opinioa Jar to families in many Dioceses each little First Communieant become a eustom that we an craftsmanship was an ensemble at the request of state Supe~ came to our attention forcibly intendent of Public InstructiOll flanked by father and mother find hard to break It came modeled by nine year old Robin and impressively in practice followed by other members of down to us from the days when Cambra daughter of Mr and David H Kurtzman said the

only requirements which muSt last week the family If there was only one the newly baptized Christians Mrs James Cambra of Our I speak here of the new cusshy Catholic parent another family wore white garments made of Lady of Grace parish in Westshy be met are the consent of the

tom (new to us at least) of local public school board andmember receivedwith the child Dew linen This became such ))Orthaving children receive First the payment of tuition at theothers of the family following a tradition among the faithful Robins stunning Easter coat Holy Communion not as a class regularly established rateIt was all so natural warm that to appear in new clothes on and dress were made by her

receiving the Big McCord cited a 1949 lawbut each Sacrashy and dignified on this tbe Easter Sunday mother in yellow lightweightment for the first time with Day rectlling the words d which states that No pupilsymbolized the wool The A-line coat had a parents and relatives shall be refused admission toPope St Leo Recognize 0 n e w Ii fe diagonal self button closing and

Long gone in many areas is the courses in these additionalChristian your dignity through Christ a tiny mandarin collar When the custom of turning over one schools or departments by reashyThe Irish have dark-hired and vivacious RobinlImvi~ Pmstollof the Sunday Masses to the son of the fact that his elemenshyan ancient say- removed her coat the slimFirst Communion class - girls Mter Mass with aplomb only tary or academic education Ising that goes dress underneath was seen toin dresses veils an being or has been received in awhite and on eight-year-old could muster For Christmas have a yellow blue apd tan one side of middotthe aisle boys in Kate betook herself to the saneshy school other than a public food and drink plaid bodice with the plainwhite suits on the other back tuary to invite our new pastor for Easter new yellow wool of the coat carried school of the church reserved oftenshy Father Louis Quinn to bei He added however tnKItclothes Most over info the skirttimes with standing room house brunch otni shared-time arrangements mudonly for writing people in the The finishing touch to thisfor parents of necessity be subject to thefor him her address Diocese will fol- stunning outfit was the tiny hatWith the growth of parishes guidelines promulgated by theGoodness knoWll how ID8DY low this custom that sat atop Robins curls forthere often came transfer all similar invi-tationa Fat her Department of Public Instrucshy

by dressing their ebildreh iul it too was her mothers creationFirst Communion day to Saturshy Quinn must have receivedl tiontheir new Spring finery 0111 and jcent middotfeatured alternatingday a sensible step but stiR plenty wed ~ becauSe he Easter Sunday panels of the pale yellow andtmly for First Communicants cup eoffeeIIimply sipped 11 of In the pre-school ret blondE the plaid wool

and their parents Because of at Katies house B1lIt be did and darling Sheila Whalen In the same show Norma8Pace limitations grandparents come chatted with anmiddot Gf 1Il Higher Earningsdaughter of lIT and Mrs Wil- Comeau of SS Peter and Paul 8Odparents brothers and sisters ble2sed the house 8Dd ~ateB liam Whalen laquoIi St ThomaslIilcles and aunts were invited new gift statue then went _ More ehurch in Somerset will parish in Fall River was 8 vishyout for this precious occasion to visit other parish homes be decked out in polished blue sion of green and white Norma ON YOUR SAVINGS JIbey eouId line themiddotsidewalks Twas all a happy experience eotton Her very special Easter wore a green wool coat a 4Ntside take pictures perhaps for Kate and her extensive famshy Sunday dress bas a long torso matching green and white Per An middotmiddot p to breakfast with their parshy ily appropriate to this the Year topped by a short sash tile dress and a white straw topper Ask abOut ticular First Communicant buamp of Faith II1eeveless zrmholes are edged that had a sweetheart shape that waS that iD crocheted lace and the bodice Green ill all shades is one of INVESTMENT

Kates Day JiB embroidered with tiny flow- the most popular colors on the SAVINGSMmnesota Parishioners ers in shades of pink white and agenda for childrenls SpringSo It was with surprise we fashions Beth Cook~ daught~r CERTIFICATESweeeived a telephone invitation Vote Closing of Schoo~ blue

Also represen~ng 1bepre- oJ Mr and Mrs Andrew Cookfrom eight-year-old Kate to atshy PIERZ (NC) - Members of primary middotsetJn the Easter parade of Immaculate Conception parshytend the 11 oclock Mass with SAFETY - Savings insured safe br Iifour parishes in the Pierz area will be Lisa Marie Texeira ish in Fall Riv~r has a limeher last Saturday On arrival at agency of the U S Governmentof Minnesota voted 835 to ioo daughter of Mrmiddot and Mrs Frank green Eastermiddot dress trimmedchurch we wondered if we had for the closing of the Father AVAILABILITY - No notice requIredTeeira of Immaculate Concep- with with a white cowl collarthe right time and place No more

Pierz Memorial High SChool 1lm tion parish in Fall River Lisa and white cuHs on the short Your funds available when neededwhite dresses and veils June is a delicate-featured little sleeves Beth chose this dress SAVE by MAIL - We process prompIIJon one side of the ~sle )hite

The Pierz district has decided beauty whose dark tresses will herself because she Ifell in love and pay postage both wayssuits on the other no unishy to build a public senior high beset off by a once upon-a- with the white vinyl flowers school which will be large time dress in pink and navy scattered over the skirt and Assets over $41000IlOO

Parish Hires Full-Time enough to accommodate all high blue The high necked dress bodice of this charming Spring school students in the district made of sheer cotton has a and Summer linen

Layman Theologian Therefore m u e h discussion GlOwl collar long full sleeves Of course the pre-teen set FIRST FEDERAL BALTIMORE (NC)-St Matshy and a romantic floating skirt wants something new for Easterabout the most practical use of Savings and loan AssociatloDthe Catholic high school facili shy

first parish in the Baltimore ties bas taken place in the last _pink bodice and the waist- daughter of Mr and Mrs John archdiocese to employ a proshy circling cummerbund but the Steen of Taunton and my god tf FALL RIVER thews Church has become the Tiny tucks are featured on the and Miss Joan Leslie Steen

few months fesionally trained ley theoloshy Tbe vole--()pen to all parishshy really eye-catching feature oil child will attend Easter Mass gian as a full-time member af iOllers over 21 ill the four afshy ibis outfit ill the skirt of navy at St Pauls church wearing an the parish staff ~cted parihes-was taken III blue cotton with pink polka outfit as yellow as a daffodil ~-~~-------_~ first Federal $awIOIS bull LeaD a ~

~ 1 ortb ~1Il st Fan lIiwer llaa ~ Joseph Hargadon a fonner response to a suggestion of~e dots Certainly a dOll-like outfit Joans yellow coat has gold but shy ZIp 02722 IlIlIIIa 174-4881 ~ member of St Clares parish st Cloud diocesan school board for a dainty Miss tons and 8 slanted back belt ~ke application by phOlle middotIt JOll jE6sex who ~ii now studying at The Catholic high school Mothers Sew - her yellow Irish linen sheath ~

the Institute of Lay Theology building will probably beused While commentating 8 ehil- dress is sleeveleSs and has white n iridlvldua Account B joint AccaIIamp iii ~ Prease DJNn a savings account EIIcIGslMJ Iin San Francisco will be c0shy as an elementary school in the drens fashion show for the Do- emb~idery trim on the hemline ~~OO ~ordinator of St Matthews Conshy future Father Patrick Thompshy minican Academy alumnnae ill and bodice This yellow-haired ~

fraternity of Christian Doctrine son principal of Fathermiddot Pierz Fall River I was awed by the brown-eyed beauty has even Address middot1 program Msgr Clare J 0- Memorial High School said th~ ntimber of mothers Whohad chosen JOllqtiil yellow patent

acheck III tbe amount 111 -iDwyer pastor said He begina several possibilities are being sewed their childrens Easter accessories tomiddot complete her working in the parish Aug ~ studied outfits Probably the most beau- look j

~~~~~

A][D FOR VnCTnMS Foodfor victim~ of the Washi~gshyton civil disturbance following the death of Dr Martin Luther yening Jr in Memphis was distributed at churches of all denominations in the capital Here Sister Joanette of Catholic University gives bread to burnedout families at St Mamns Church N Capimiddottol and T Streets NC Photo

9 Best to Delay Rose Pruning Unti1 Laterin Spring

By Jo~ph and Marilyn Roderick

With the break in the w~ther weve experienced lately here has been ample opportunity to get outside and begin the Spring chores that have tQ be done before the garden is ready for Summer I have noticed quite a few weekend prdeners busy with the urrection is really felt as the odds and ends that await the priest changes the bread and prdener after a quiet WiD- wine into the body and blood ter But I have also witness- of our Lord and the faithful go ed quite a few I suppose out of up to the altar to receive Comshyanxiety over the rough Winter munion Then the seven weeks we experieneed and out of im- of sacrifice leading to this day patience 1igt get started doing take on deeper meaning and the jobs that could just as well wait Light of the World truly shines until later m the month r AIl can truly sing Alleluia Wltil Way For the young of the house-

Pruning roses is a good ex- hold the Easter eggs are another mnple of a job that is best held great joy They come in many off especially this year when sizes and materials Some are Ctere has been so much top-kilL lteonfections of spun sugar and lt might be well to wait until dreams This type generally has atent buds begin to show an opening through which the themselves em what look like child may view a wonderland ~ad stems until the job of of painted landscapes and minshy)rUning is tackled It has been iature figures my experience that dead-Iook- I always adored these fantasy mg wood has n way of coming eggs when I was a little girl and ~ life in time so go easy with it was a rare and special event ampe pruning shears until you to receive one My own youngshyIJlre certain there is no life in sters however deJive more enshylaquohe stem you plan to amputate jOfment from the decorating

How to Prune and dyeing oil the hardboiled eggs

Pruning roses seems to pre- A few years ago I made an (leDt P~obJ~JiuJ to gardeners and Easter egg centerpiece by decshy~ it is a Simple task I try 00 orating (with glitter beads prune lTlyroses so that they sequins and white glue) egg graduaily asSUme an urn shape shells that had their contents tftliit is so that they have an blown outmiddot and hanging them eD1ltY cenier rhis can easily on a giided branch that had be begun by prumng each stem been placed ill a plant pot This aiatroti want to retain so tha~middot makes a verY lovely display and ihe cut is made just above an the eggs can even be used as _tward pointing bud Christmas tree ornaments the

If the bud is pointing out the following December but this laquorowth which ensues from the delicate work is not for tiny bud will be outward and there- hands lor growth will be away from Symoo)s oil Life the center of the rose Next I The Easter egg and the Easter try to make my cuts so that the bunny have always been symshyappermost portions of each boys of Spring and new life litem are approximately the Ancient people in many lands lIaDle height from the groun6 exchanged eggs at their Springagain to give the bush some festi vals They dyed eggs yellow8Diformity of appearance for the returning sun and red

The height of the bush makes for joy and life In England the attle difference as far as I am children enjoy III custom called eoncerned so I usually make Pace egging The Pace eggers my cuts at whatever height I go from house to house chantshyean get uniformity This year ing this rhymefor inStllnce there has been a PleaseMr Whitelegpeat deal of top-kill on my Please to give us an Easter eggJOses so I may have to make If you wontt give us an Easter cuts fairly close to the ground eggbut I find little difference in Your hens wiD all lay addled the quality of the roses regardshy eggsless ~ of how much I remove in And your cocks lln lay stones pruning In this country of lIpoiled

A third consideration in darlings our children would be ~ing is the removal of 014 disappointed H the Easter wood to make place for new bunny did not leave chocolate trrowth Thb becomes a pr0bshy eggs candy chickens and other lem when your roses start to expensive goodies However -ee considerably I try not to be even with all the commercial drastic in this regard by cutting trappings that go with the dayGUt one old stem a year thereby It still manages to retain It IIl8king room for new growth great joywithout particularly affecting T1uis liuoo roast is perfectlybull e plant delicious Ive bad tt for Easter One other point about prunshy dinner oth~r years and plan to Ing Many of the old ramble1ll serve it again this year Its and climbing roses should be quite worthy of II repeat pershypruned after they bloom and fonnance DlJt before I notice a great Cumberland L9mb Boast IIl8ny people pruning their 1 leg of lamb about I to dlmbers before they bloom poundswhich does nothing for the 1 teaspoon salt elimber but remove scOlelI of 1 teaspoon dry mustard blossoms ~ teaspoo1l ground ginger

In the Kitchen 5 thin lemon sIkes Baster Sunday is a day of great cup currant jelly

toy and excitement The special 1 Tablespoon lemon juice Kaster moming breads (IDJ 1) Trim oJ escemJ fat lroa 8aOther-in-Iaw always ~ lamb Rub went with a mixture Individual sweetbreads for the fJIl the salt mustard and ginger ebildren with a hardboiled egg Place roundoo silde up OIl a let in the crust) the excitement rack in roastiDjJ pan Do Dllt elf new clothes the Easter egg oover pan bunts the tIradJltional famIJ ) Roast -bl Ii a10W (331-) llIlnner but Elbow all the beauty en for amp 1tOun IlDd quiet ~ 01 Easter SID~ 3) Remove roaJt from 0ftIl Mass and eut 4 cd tbe lemon dices

be joy of this great least 01 In half arrange Ue a half sliceS the Resurrecti_ of our SaviCNl petal fashion OIl sidlte of JOaSt evident JI1 n the custo~ holding in place vith dampened tbat sur r 0 11 n d 1lhis feast wOoden ~icIW place the wbole IIut the full 1mpaot of the Bell- alice in center

)JJRDINATION The first Melkite Rite ordin2ttion of priests to be held at the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception Washington DCt was conducted by Bishop Justin A Najmy NC Photo

- Extend Program I Interfqith Organization to Conti~~e shy

Aiding ~prrnEr JoliCQrpseh WASHINGTON (NC)--A na- reftary of the National Confer-

tion-wide volunteer prog~lJn ence of Catholic Charities hasshyto help Job Corps trainees find said JACShas tapped the iTeshya place in the workaday world mendous force of volunteers al shyhas been extended for another ready available in this lountry year William P Kelly Job and they are hard at work asshyCorps director announced here sisting young llen who have

Joint Action in Community proved by volunteering for the Service (JACS) a private non- Job Corps that they want to profit corporation was organ- help themselves ized by leaders of national The young men coming out Catholic and Protestant social of Job Corps are severely hanshyaction agencies dicapped by backgrounds of

It includes on Us board of poverty poor education and unshygovernors representatives of stable family life As a result business labor and civic organ- they have more than their izations share of problems as they atshy

tempt to make it on their ownJACS has organized a netshy

work of 5000 volnteers in 500 JACS volunteers are giving communities in the U S re- them the helping hand they eruited from churches service need he added clubs and community agencies who are DOW assisting some 1000 returned corpsmen each Women to Hpnormonth

Msgr Lawrence J CorcoraJlO BisJlop Apri I 18 lACS ~Ild chairDl3lll and ~ The Ca~olicWomens Club

0If New ~(ord will hold its annual Bishopll Night OIlSee E~tablishes New bunday evening April 18 at

Education Office the Harbor Beach Club in Matshytapeisett Supper Will be servedGREENSBURG (NC)-Bishop at 630William G Connare of Greensshy

burg has announced the estabshy Guest of Honor will be Most lishment of a new diocesan ofshy Rev James L Connolly Bishop fice of education whicb win Gerrard moderlltor for the New coordinate the work of several Bedford organization will also existing departments be a guest

All area pastors have heeDThe new office which wm invited to attendopen JolT 1 will join and ex~

tend the programs of the presshy Mrs Paul L LaForest first ent diocesan schools office and vice-president will serve as the Confraternity Off Christian chairman ojf arrangements Doctrine office and win be reshy Reservations will be accepted sponsible for the total educashy by Mrs Jamell M Anderson tional effort of the diocese Mrs Maurice Hurley Mrs Paul

A newly organized departshy LaForest and Mrs Daniel F ment of religious education will Dwyer Reservations close sat shyaid in planning religious edushy urday April 13 eation programs fOr the parisb and diocesan schools the CCD and other groups both at the adult and youth le~ls ATWOOD

OIL COMPANY Break up jelly with a fork a cup stir in the lemoD juice and Spread ovell tbelamb Re- SHELL tum flo OV~ aDcl cOntinue roasting ~ to t hOur longer If HEATING OILSyoUre using a meat th~rrnODl~ eter it should register 170 for South bull Sea Streetsa pink look or 1~ for wen done Pull out wooden picks bom lemon garnsh before carv- Hyannis Tel 49-81 mg roast

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 11 1968

Says Young Seek Moral Values

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - The so-called sexual revolution is l

turning away from hypocrisy at a turning toward promiscuity ays an expert in sex education Or Mary C Calderone execushy

tive director of the Sex Informashytion and Educational Council of the United States believes toshydays young people are highly moral despite the example set for them by their elders

Speaking at the 22nd annual meeting of the Texas Council on Family Relations Dr Calderone stressed

Promiscuity has not increased on Americans college campuses We know our young people are behaving far better today than were willing to credit them with Young people are looking for moral values based on fact rashyther than mythology

Dr Calderone condemned exshyploitation of sex by commercial advertising and called for sex education which would streSD the importance of human relashytionships and not merely the mechanics of reprOduction

Your kids ought to know you cant save a bad marriage with good sexshe asserted

Sisters of Pro~ider1ce Vote to lRe~ise Rules

SPRINGFIELD (NC) The Sisters of Providence of Holshyyoke community of nuns speshycializing in care of the sick aged and underprivileged have voted to revise their rules and customs to permit greater flexshyibility and freedom in the reli shygious and personal lives of theIr members

At a general chapter at the communitymiddots Holyoke mothershyhouse the 39 chapter -delegates voted to permit experimentashytion hi religous garb give members the option of using either their baptismal and famshyily name or their religiou name pennit members to travel outside their convent wilhout a nun-companion

Also to limit participation hi common prayer to Mass and to two portions of the Divine Ofshyfice Lauds and Vespers allow community members to develop a schedule of private prayer require every member of the community to be addressed WI Sister instead of Mother~

and allow part of the nuns free time to be given to variolU fOnDS of the apostolate to civic activities and civil rights proshygrams in a way befitting theIr state in life and according to their individual consciences

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Choose AmericH Superior General

MoUNT KISCO (NC)-Fqr the first time in the 160-yellW history of the Religous of tim Cenacle an American has b~ elected superior general

Mother Rita FOy was electetl to the post at the general chapshyter of the Cenacle in Rome acshycording to the orders interpro-shyvincial public relations offiC() here in New York

The general chapter whielli is still in session is evaluatinti a series of recommendations fOli a general decentralization opoundl authority the launching of eJJogt

perimental programs by too Cenacle and the restructurinfi of Community life

The Religious of the Cenaclo is a worldwide congregation 03 Sisters committeed to the wom of retreats and religious in-gt struction There afe three American provinces

Mother Rita Foy was born 1rI

FLYING DOCTOR Dr Leo Brown and his wife Isabel a registered nurse are shown with their children Rebecca 1Qand Joel 8 with the C-essna plane they use for their Flying Doctor Service in the diocese of Gwelo Rhodesia NC Photo

THE ANCHOR Thurs April 11 1968

Project Equality Issues Guides For BMyers

CHICAGO (NC) - The first national directory of 3931 business firms comshymitted to equal opportunity in all aspects of employment has been published here by Project Equality

It will be used by more than 7000 churches synagogues and religious institutions participat shying in the interfaith fair emshyployment drive that urges givshying preference to the listed firms in all purchases of goods and services

Project Equality offices in Jlive cities are publishing re- gional buyers guides as well They are in Columbus for Ohio Detroit for Michig~n Hartford for Connecticut Omaha for New York City and was gradlDgt Nebraska and San Antonio for ated from Hunter College Sillj

Texas IFlying Doctor Serves Africa Mission south entered the Cenacle in 19~1i The national guide is a comshy completing her studies in Romo

pilation of 976 national and She was assigned to the Miltlligt 2955 local or regional firms do- Vietnam Veteran l Wifel licensed Pilots western province of the Celilgt ing business with religious inshy acle with headquarters in CtJiDRIEFONTEIN (NC)-In the the Gwelo diocese covers some must drive over lO miles of stitutions They include 40 of cago and has held a number am

grasslands here onmiddot a 5OOO-foot 14000 aCres it includes a 300shy dirt bush road seven miles of the top 500 U S corporations assignments as superior of vashy

high plateau the Cat hoi i c bed tuberculosis sanitorium a relatively good road-and watch and range down to small neighshy rious Cenaeles in the Uniteamp

of mainshy 100-bed hospital a farm an out for wild animals all alongmission Driefonteinborhood businesses States and Canada1ains-of all things-a hangar elementary school and trade the way

Listing in the Quyers guide She will now reside in RoJJl() for a Cessna 182 Skylane air shy schools for carpentery tailorshy Thus far they have encounshymeans a firm has signed Ii

plane ing and homecraft tered only baboons monkeyspledge to hire and promote deer mongoose lizards andThe mission staff totals somewithout discrimination has filed FrQm this point the missions lleslYJits to Performbirdsa report form with Project doctor can cover nine out-stashy 1200 people 35 of whom are

Equality detailing the number tions spread over an aerial non-Afrfcans The mission and Witch Doctors Woth City Symphony of its niinority-group employees distance equivalent to that beshy hospitals are operated by Afri shy The Biblical quotation The BALrIMORE (NC) -Fathe1 -broken down by jop classifi tween San Francisco and Los cans and by Swiss Bethlehem harvest is indeed great but the Bruno Markaitis SJ provinshyeation-and has pledged to take Angeles The plane was proshy priests and Brothers German laborers are few describes the cial of Lithuanian Jesuits in the further affirmative actions vided by the Mission Doctors Domincian nuns African nuns scope of medical work in Africa free world will guest conduct

Association of Los Angeles three laywomen-two American according to the Browns In the Baltimore Symphony in twc Pledge C()()peraiion Calif as part of its Flying Docshy nurses and a German teachershy these rura~ regions there is II of his own piano compositioDll

Cooperating businesses also tor Service begun here four and the Browns ratio of about one doctor to in Ii concert sponsored by LCgtJio have agreed to undergo periodic years ago The Brown children attend a every 33000 persons Mrs ola College here Sunday eompliance reviews to assure At that time Dr James Carey small two-classroom school in Brown said Africail medicine At the keyboard as soloi

Umvuma a town 17 miles away and witch doctors are still verycontinued affirmative employshy now a Santa Barbara Calif wiiI be two other Jesuit pries~ much in evidence she addedment ac~ions according to surgeon arrived at Driefontein The journey to and from school Fathers Leslie J Schnierer -and

Thomas Gibbons Jr national to begin his three-year mission is looked upon as quite an adshy It is heartbreaking to see a Benito Rivera students at thIl director of Project Equality hitch He decided quickly that venture by the family as they child with measles have to go Peabody Conservatory of Music

In addition to the firms listed The concert will mark thewith a plane one doctor could though life blind because the in the guide more than 12000 do the wbrk of five ndanga (witchdoctor) put mull 50th anniversary of the restorashyother businesses have filled out With the help of the Swiss Pittsburgh Diocese (medicine) in the childs eyes tion of independence to Lithoshycommitment forms pledging coshy Bethlehem Brothers Dr Carey Tithing for Poor she said But in other areas aniai operation with the program but began surveying and laying out like TB the African is relJlarkshy

PITTSBU~GH (NC)-Bishophave not yet supplied the necshy landingstrips near isolated and ably sophisticated medicaHy

John J Wright has announced essary statistical employment doctorless clinics and hospitals Kariangwe Berejena Kana Education Officethe Pittsburgh Diocese will unshyreports which are similar 10 The Brothers also built the Serema Matibi are all farshy NEW ORLEANS (NC) - Aledertake a new tithing plan tothose ~equired by the federal hangar at priefontein and Dr away-sounding places but the office of religious education bllllhelp finance housing and othergovernment Carey arranged for one Brother people suffer as you and I been established here by Archshyprojects for the pOOr The nalles of firms listed in to be trained as a pilot suffer from sickness They bishop PhilIp M Hannan a The_dioces~ will give 10 perthe buyers guides are available Meanwhile in Los Angeles mourn when their children have will supervise the teaching oct

cent of the contributions andonly to religious groups parti shy Dr Leo Brown a former Navy to be sick and often die she religion in parochial schoolBbequests it receives and thecipating in the program surgeon with 11 years of sershy continued and in Confraternity of Chrisshysame percentage of collections

PIroject Equality sponsored vice and his wife Isabel a Perhaps some of their disshy tian Doctrine classestaken up for directly diocesan

by the National Catholic Conshy registeled nurse were volunshy eases have strange-soundingpurposes to finance povertyference for Interracial Justice teering for MD~s three-year nawes but all come under theprogramsoperates six other local offices hitch in Africa He was just title of Gods sick These are CONRAD SEGUINThe money will be used withtouching seven more states Adshy home from Vietnam where he the names of clinics that are

other religious groups for intershyditional offices will be opened served with the Marines visited by the Flying Doctor BODY COMPANY faith housing programs andin major cities this year acshy Staff of 1200 she said Aluminum or Steelother joint dforts for the poorcording to a spokesman Dr Brown and his wife are 944 County Street

Parishes will not be requiredlicensed pilOts So last Sumshy NEW BEDFORD MASS mer when they and their two to tithe but are invited to conshy Chief Speaker

WY 2-6618ISenQte Ideas f children-Rebecco 10 and Joel tribute voluntarily NEW XORK (NC) ~ Msgr 8~arrived here MDA sent the John J Egan director of the

Continued from Page Three Cessna 182 along with thein Chicago Archdiocesan office ofStart With 45and to preach in the one Dioshy The Driefontein mission in tirbanaffairs will be the chief

eese have them in the pther GREENSBORO (NC)-Fortyshy speaker at the May 16 banquetfive priests of the Raleigh dioshy of the 1968 Catholic Press AsoshyWhile the 24 diocesan priests Abortion Bill Passes cese have formed the North ciation convention in ColumbusSenators are elected the two Carolina priests association Ohiomembels of the Priests Senate In Maryhind Ho~se Seventeen others have indicatedwho are members of religious

commullities are appointed by ANAPOLIS (NC)-A ~m to they wish to become members the Bishop These will be ro- relax Marylands 100-year-old The Raleigh diocese includes all

North Canlinatated among the religious com- abortion law and put its regushylation into the hands of themunities doing parish work in

the Diocese At present the Sen- medical profession passed the ators from religious communi- House of Delegates by im 86 ties are Father Felician Plichta to 47 vote OFM Conv and Father Co- The bill permits a doctor opshylumba Moran SSCC eniting in an accredited hospishy

tal to perform an abortion to The Bishop has encouraged a preserve the physical or mental

study of pension plans that health of the mother to prevent would involve laypersonnel of birth of a deformed or retarded diocesa~ ail~ parish facilitieii childand to end some plegnan

The Bisholl has ma~li liQme ad- CieScaused by rape just~ents)nassessmtntson pat- UnClet the~ptesel1t law abor ishes tflking into account the tiOll is peimitted ~hen two growth o(~ubU~Iiln ~~riShesah~ Ihysicians a~r~~ it itnec~ssar~bull

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Church~en Study Racial Problems In New Jersey

NEWARK (NC) -The Church cannot tell otheJiS what to do until it faces the problem within its own comshymunity a Methodist Bishop has told Essex Count~ clergyshymen of all faiths in an a~essshyment of the racial problems beshysetting Newark and other New Jersey communities

Bishop Prince A Taylor and Catholic Auxiliary Bishop John J Dougherty of Newark disshycussed the race problem in light of the report of the Govemors Commission on Civil Disorder

Cooperative Solution Bishop Taylor stressed it is

the duty of the church to beshycome knowledgeable about the report to read it carefully Action without information is irresponsible he declared as he noted the church must face up till the fact that it has parshyticipated in maintaining the status quo He noted that when ~he commissionen pelsonally toured the riot area and asked the people what the impact of the church was in their lives all but a pound~w marked the church ltDfpound

Bishop Dougherty said if the problem is to be solved it will only be through the involveshyment of the total community government industry labor unions churches schools peoshyple living in the suburbs

Dont Have Time The attack on t1e problems

must be two-fold he asserted first meeting the needs which the coming Summer presents and then planning long-range programs to overcome the root causes of the problem

There is an urgen t need of immediate programs to enable us to have time to work toward the ultimate goal

Bishop Taylor referred to the need for time to work out solushytions We cannot undo the evils of 300 years in one Sumshymer he emphasized This illmiddot not going to be a case of a quick antidote and then they Jived happily ever after

However a Newark priest active in innel-city work who was one of six reactors to the presentations made by the Bishshyops remarked that comments about needing time to solve the problems overlook the fact that we dont hlVe the time

It would be great if we did have it to keep order but q (gt bull

the people bull have the imshypression that nothing has been donesaid Father Joseph Stulb

Many are ready to riot again if only to call attention to themselves he opined The black community despairs that the white community has or will change its attitude

Rev William Fox associate general secretary of the New Jelsey Council of Churches scored the commission for fail shying to note the contribution thpt a divided church - white and black - mademiddot to the elisis H~ cliticized the church for mainshytaining silence during public controversies which were listed as proximate causes of the riotshying

Another Catholic Magazine F0 Id S

DAYTON (NC)-Mary Today a magazine founded in 1901 deshyvoted to information about the Blessed Motherand her role in the Church has issued its final edition

It is one of 11 Catholic magashyzines which have ceased pubJishycation in the past )eal because

of 1088 ~l circulation The rnaf- orders are af Teutopolis JIL azine had a reoont eirculauOll Lake Bluff in and St Meiri

~ aooU~1151gtO middot - ~lnclbull - - -

BENEMERENTI MEDAJ~ Father James Vizzaro SJ second from left received the Benemerenti Medal at a dinner in Washington -on the occasion Of his retirement as dishyrector of the Washington office of the National Catholic Rural Life Association Conshygratulating him are left to right Msgr ~dward W ORourke executive director of the NtRLC Bishop Henry J Soenneker of Owensboro Ky rural life advisor of the usce department of social action and Msgr Luigi L Ligutti Vatican observer to the UN Food and Agliculture Organization and former executive dirootor of NCRLC NC Photo

Fr Vizzard Gets Benemerenti Medal Work for IFhlltfol lPoor Recognized

the Holy See to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization priests and Protshyestant clergymen and members of Congress

Msgr George G Higgins di shyrector social action department U S C a tho 1 i c Conference praised Father Vizzards comshybination of scholarship political know-how great tenacity of

Schedule Workshop O~ Sex Education

WASHINGTON (NC)-Father James T McHugh director of the family life bureau middotU S Catholic Conference will direct a workshop on Sex Education to be held at Catholic Univershysity of America here June 17shy28

Purpose of the workshop is to prepare a basic core of people especially teachers and parish personnel to supplement the work of the home in a complete program of education in sexu- ality It will provide these pershysons with background informashytion give them opportunity to evaluate some of the basic mashyterialsand engage them in an in-depth analysis of a curricushylum guide which reaches every grade level

Lecturers and consultants will include Fathermiddot John L Thomas SJ of the Combridge Center fOl Social Studies Dr and Mtmiddots Joseph Bird co-aushythors of The Freedom of Sexshyual Love Dr Ann F Lucas chairman of the psychology deshypaltment Farleigh Dickinson Universit~ Teaneek N J and Father Walter Imbiorski direcshytor of the Cana program in the Chicago atchdiocese

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purpose and above all genushyine love for the poor

Father Vizzard will leave Washington to middotwork in Califorshynia Nevada Arizona and Utah the region of the Jesuits Cali shyfornia province

Four Cleveland Nuns Quit as Religious

CLEVELAND (NC) - Four nuns one the prineipal of a 1100 student girls Catholic high school have separately withdrawn from the Sisters of Notre Dame here in Ohio

It was the largest departure since 1966 when 10 Sisters of Notre Dame were released from their vows to move to Pueblo CoIQ to form an experimental community middotThe Sisters of Notre Dame is the largest order of 2531 Cedar St New Bedford nuns based in the Cleveland 993middot3222 Diocese

imiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot~middotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot~ middot 3NEW HIGHERi RATE OF

PER ANNUM INTEREST PAID QUARTERllyo ON PAID-UP

SHARE CERTIfICATES Deposits Welcomed in Multiples of

$20000 up to $30OOO-on Single and Joint Accounts Up to $60OOO-for Cornorations

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All Deposits Inoured in Full

Taunton

THE ANCHORshyThurs April 11 1968 11

Support Bi~hop5

Equa~sty Plea MINEOLA (NC)-The Cathshy

olic Interracial Council of Long Island has voted overwhelmshying support of Rockville Censhytres Bishop Walter P Kellenshybergs call for equality in housing employment and edushycation

Bishop Kellenberg issued Zl pastoral letter-A Call to COl1shyscience-in which he said it i9 essential that every man be given equal opportunity for eJQP]oyment and job advanceshyment and equal educatton for himself and for his children

Declaring these to be fundashymental moral issues facing the people of Long Islanp the council said We give this statement by Bishop Kellenberg our overwhelming sUPPOtt

John J Clarke council president said the eounciB deemed it necessary to reit shyerate its support of the bishops statement co gtI bull because of our increasing concern over conshytinued discriminatory practicelC in these areas

In a policy statement the council declared the bash cause of racial unrest lies in the almost complete lack oR any meaningful contact between the races Today there are few whites who can say they really know Negroes This ignorance of each other is caused almost lxc]usively by patterns of segshyregation in housing which reshysuited in segregated schools 3mll a segregated society

As a step in breakin( these patterns the council recomshymended passage of open housshying ordinances in all towns OK

Long Island Only when there is no place left for the white man to run will the problem be solved it said

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WASHINGTON (NC)-Father James L Vizzard SJ retiring Washington director of the Nashytional Catholic Rural Life Conshyference received the papal Benemerenti medal hele in recshyognition of his work for t~e

rural poor of the United States and throughout the world

The presentation at a dinner in the Cosmos Club was attendshyed by Bishop Henry J Soenshyneker of Owensboro Ky NCRLC president Msgr Luigi Ligutti permanent observer for

Prelate Advocalles Open Housing ILaws

JEFFERSON CITY (NC)shyBishop Joseph M Marling CPPS of Jefferson City has urged Catholics of the diocese to campaign openly and fearshy

- lessly for area open housing laws

In a pastoral letter urging open housing law support the Missouri prelate askedshy

Who fails to see that to conshydemn a large segment of our people to the cruel segregation thatmiddot closed housing entails is to sin gravely against charity justice and the vely finest inshystincts of our nature Who may deny that to perpetuate such an evil in this enlightened age will bring malediction upon us

For jurely he answered Chlist is brother to the eolored in the identical sense that he is brother to the other children of men

Plan Fa-II Opening Of Joint Semill1ary

CHICAGO (NC)-A graduate school of theology for seminashyrians ftom three Religious orshyders will open in a former hotel here in the Fall

The school to be known as the Catholic Theological Union will be operated by the Passhysionists Franciscans and Sershyvites in the fOI-mer Aragon Hotel near the University of Chicago

About 100 students ue exshypected to enter thl school this year Area seminariltes ourrent-middot ly being used by themiddot threfl

2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese 01 Fall Ri~~r-Thurs Apr 11 1968 S~~in S~ntences priest- and Laymen

JOurrt)~a$ts Opinions Differ_On V~~e of Bishops Synod

By Msgr George G Higgins Two American journ~lists who have covered the Rome

1beat off and on for several years-Father Francis X Murphy CSSR and Gary MacE0 in-have just published an interesting account of the Synod of Bishops which was held in Rome in 1967 (Synshyod 67 A New Sound in what they manege to teU us Rome Bruce Publishing Co about themselves in their sep- Milwaukee) Written in the arate and widelydivergent asshyfamiliar Xavier Rynne style it Sessments of the Synod is something of a tour de force How two men who disagree given the se- so fundamentally about the uecy w h i c h pros and cons of the Synod ever enveloped the managed to work as a tandem $ y nod a 1 in the writing of the history of proceedings The the synodal proceedings is to authors h a v e put it as mildly as possible a tried to give perplexing mystery on account as They tell us that for aU that a c cur ate as lies between their separate possible under evaluations Df the Synod they the conditions are jointly accountable but that of time and cir- the internal logic of their inshycumstance For dividual viewpoints and the my own part I dialectic of the situation led think they deserve better than them to attribute exclusive reshya ~as~ing grade They do ~lOt sponsibil~ty for the Prelude to ~lalln to hae wrlt~en anythmg a priest and for the Postscript like8cIefmltIve hlstory of the i to a layman SYlo1IgtUt they have proyid~d Far A art 1IllS wlth a useful mtenm sum- P mabr of the -proceedings and I take it that this is a polite ~r ~ii w~ cin) begrateful way of saying that when they

Perplexing Mystery got around to summing up their Tothis reader however what impressions of the Synod they

the authors tell us about the

lSynod ls less mterestmg than i

~ 8holJd have concluded contrashyr rlwise- that it was seriously - lacking in credibility and releshy

vance and was thus on biI- ance a huge disappointment

lRationaJize Differences

Such differencesmiddot of opinion on the part of experienced

jourpalilts covering the same everit-and using the very same

source~ of informationare not to be Vf~npered at

On the other hand I am Dot very happy about the curious- way in which the authors haveshyrationalized their differencea Th~y tell Us that one evaluatioo Df ~he Synod (Father Murphys) w~ ~ritteo from the viewpoint of the institutional Church and the other (Mr MacEoins) from that of conteinporarshyman~ind

Or again in Mr MacEoin words A priest professionally involved in the institution will

tend to lean in one direction 11 layman whose professional sushy

- viva rests on his sensitivity to

SPECIAL DELEGATE Marches Ghilio Sacchetti 42 has been named by POpe Paul VI to succeed Count Enrico

Galeazzi as special delegate of the Pontfical Commission for the state of Vatican City He is wearing the now outshymoded costume of a Gentleshyman of Cape and Sword NC PIloto

world opinion in the other

Now Bear This

This strikes me as being bull slightly threadbare and hopeshylessly pre-Conciliar dichotomy I know of a Dumber of priests (and so do the authors I asshysume) who rightly~or wrongly are just as critical of the Synod as Mr MacEoin is

I also know of a number III laymen (and so do the authocs I must assume again) who rightly or wrongly are just as sanguine about the results of the Synod as Father Murphy is So whats all this doctrinaire I

stuff about priests necessarily looking at things (myopically) through the allegedly unenshylightened eyes of contemposhyrary mankind

Tell it to the Marineal

found that they wer~ so ho~e-lessly far apart 111 theIr thmkmg

that the division of labor so I cryptically described in the above quotations appeared to be the only possible way of salshyvaging the middotoperation Thatll fair enough

It isnt at all surprising that one of the authors (Father Murphy) should have concluded that on balance the Synod was truly a contribution to the Church~s aggiornamento and that the other (Mr MacEoin)

MAnmn (NC) - Sz~en per- sons incIl~lg a Cathollc priest have bc)n sentenced to prison terms and fined by Madrids Court of r lic Order on charges Olf havinr participated in an anti-Frangt meeting in Barceshylona in lS~G

On trial were Father Francisshyeo Paula Botey and 10 laymen who were accused of attending

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an illegal meeting The meetshying was advertised as a Day of Repression and criticized what it called the repressive activities of the government of Gen Franshycisco Franco

Father Botey who admitted during the trial that he atshytended the meeting at Barcelona Universitys law school was senshyten~ to a year in jail ~d fined

about $214 Three of the laylDell received similar sentences amplid fines while ~ others drew six-month jail terms aDd four were absolved

Father Batey testified duriDtl the trial that he deliberately atshy1ended the meeting to protest against the ftPress1on he bad said he had seen of -certain see-shymenta of ampbe Spanish clergyshy

Prelate Supports Catholic Schools Opposes Racism

NEWARK (NC) -Archshybishop Thomas A Boland of Newark touched on racism Catholic education and aborshytion in his annual message to the Archdiocesan CouncH of catholic Men at its CQnvention here

Noting that BOrne people adshyvocate closing Catholic schools to concentrate on adult educashytion Archbishop Boland said I believe we mU9t give as much time as is possible to adult edushycation but not that we should ignore our chlIdren

If we close our schools he soid there may 00 no one to attend the adult courses iJn future years

He deplored the absence of religion in the education of many people and said that while 0 ohild may be receiving o good academic background under such circumstances he is not being trained in his will or his morals

Jthortion Is Murder Archbishop Boland noting

~hot the question of relaxing bortion laws is before the state LeFislature recalled that he lralNi opollen to the men about ~ot Dubject a year earlier and repeated what he had said then abortion is murder

Should the state legislate more liberally in this field he said it would go outside its sphere and we would have no

right to follow it He indicated however that

the Church would not oppose the establishment of a legislashytive commission to study the abortion law

Discussing racism he called it a malignant growth in our society and announced his support for a peaceful interrashycial walk through the streets of Newarks ghetto

Spokesmen lor L2ity Archbishop Boland also urged

the men to turn their council into a real spokesman for the laity He ruled out the possibil shyity of a voice for the laity toshytally independent flrom the hierarehy declaring that this is not the structure cd the Church

H we want to build a strucshyture the archbishop said we get an architect to give us a uniform plan Christ is the arshyehitect of the Chureh We are its workmen

He then urged the men tID take the steps which would make the ACCM aspokesman for the people II real council

Delegates adopted four res0shy

lutions endorsing catholic echools condemning racism lin every form advocating retenshytion and expansion of the states IIChool bus law and opposing relaxation of the abortioD statute

Stresses Increased Food Production

NEW DELHI (NC)-The vatshyican recognizes the need to mshycrease food production middotas a most serious problem facing the developing countries and mshydeed the world as a whole Elizabeth Reid II member of the

bull Vatican delegation to the United ean delegation to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD)

Speaking at the UNCTAD meeting here in India MilS Reid said The right to food 18 01117 another aspect 01 be mosi eaered of all buman rigbts the right to life and it is tb1s parshyticular aspect of the problem of development that places the heaviest and most serious burshyden em the comlcieDee of man- flIIIIampy from home kiDd ~ bull lot cbeapeJ tIIaD IiDDC

rv~

I I

HEATHER CUTTHNG

Sacred Hearts Junior High School Student Is Licenseod Amateur Radio Operator

Holly and Heather Cutting 532 Walnut Street Fall River share a transistor rashydio With some teenage sisters this might cause trouble but not with this pair Heather Jets Holly take the transistor She settles for pop music from Johannesburg South Africa-via her shortwave set They have real good musicraquo she says Blonde 14 year old Heather learned the In ternational Morse Code a basic requirement for amashyteur radio operators when she was seven but its only in the past year that shes really worked at the complicated hobby Her father Dick Cutting ll construction superintendent by profession has been ll radio ham for 30 years by avocation An awesome battery of receivshyers and transmitters fills a room of the Walnut street house and when Heather displayed real inshyterest in them she had iii wi)) ing teacher close at hand

Heathers an eighth grader at Sacred Hearts Junior High School on Prospect Street in Fall River and she admits that she does as much homework as IIhe can at sOOool to have eveshynings free for her hobby She at shytends radio classes nightly then hurries bome to spend as much as three hours at ber sel

Im llicensed for two fre- I

quencies right DOW she exshyplained I can talk on six and two meters Translated that means she can contact amateullil

--in this part of the United States but may not ta]k tomiddot overseal operators until she earns 1Il middotgeneral license

Im Working for my license DOW she said rohe examinashytion JIm be in 00 days Even the license that Heather now holds however is umusual for one of her age When she gets ber general license she Will be among itB Y01lllllgest holders and probably the youngceBt 8h licensee in the stlllte

rhere are 11426 lI8dto amashyteurs iD Massacbuatts I18id her father aInd cmIy 409 aJre WCllInen

wm CoDtaet lFather A real benefit to ~ Cutting

family from Bellltberll general lieense wID be iba1 1Ibell be able tID reach bel fathe bull blB car short wave mctic wheD he is OlD hIfl freqUeDt bwliness tripal

distance calls said Mr Cutting The electric light company figshyures I can run this rig 16 hours a day for only $290 a month

Heather hopes to make a cashyreer of radio technology Right now she is able most of the time to repair her set if someshything goes awry and shea building a small transmitting station for an upcoming science fair at Sacred Hearts Itll broadcast about 200 feet she said

Sometimes Of couJrSe gremshylins pop ill Like the time Heather got a phone can from a boy in Swansea Hey did oU know youre coming m on eiYclnnel 2 on our TV be said 011 another occasion Heather picked ~ her fathers transmisshysion OIl ber electric pitar speaker

Most of the time however things go smoothly During her nightly radio sessions Heather picks up signals Jrom other amateurs and has some schedshyuled appointments vis the mllshyways withmiddot friends hi otheJl mties

When she picks up 5 llllew

eontact she confirms it with II brightly-colored postcard bearshying her name and station 0011 etters in psychedelic pink Wld yellow

Collecting such postcards 111 2 sub-hobby for radio amateulll and Holly has a oozzling eollecshytion on the walls of her radio room She bas Mganized the Sou the a II t ern MassachushyIlett8 Teenage RadM Net aocll ill

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OIdsmobile-lPeugot-Rencnft fJ1 Middle Street Fairhaven

llooking for new members Its just for teens she says

=rheyre more fun to talk to Once she has her general 11shy

cense she plans to join Iil group that relays messages from Viet Nam servicemen to their famshyilies

other Bobbies Badia is by no means Heathshy

ers only hobby Shl~ and her sister Holly a freshman at Emshymanuel College have an imshypressive collection of sharpshyshooting trophies mostly garshynered at Fall River Rod and Gun Club meets I began shootshying when I was six and had my Own gun when I as seven eaid Heather

Other interests are mathematshyics and music Heather picked lIP guitar playing on her own and belOngs to a folk group which plans its first public apshypearance after Easter

In short shes one teen whoD never be found wondering what to de next

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THE ANCHORshy 13Thurs April 11 1968

Houston Priests Get Pay Raise

HOUSTON (NC) - BishOJ John L Morkovsky announceCl a pay raise for priests of thE Galveston-Houston diocese and said a new retirement poliCW will go into effect Jan 1 1970

Under the old pay scale asshy sistants received a base salary of 11250 plus $30 car allowshyance and $1250 insurance preshymium for a total salary of $155 a month Pastors received a total monthly salary of $21750 The new salary reale will allow for increased pay based on the number of yearo priests have been ordained

Assistants who have been cshydained less than 10 years wiill receive a total monthly salary of $200 The figures will ~

$225 for those ordained moro than 10 years

Pastors with 25 years in t100 priesthood will receive m monthly total of $275 ThoSQ with more than 25 years will receive $300

The retirement policy ca1lJfl for optional retirement at age 65 and mandlltory retirement at 70 However elderly pries1amp who are able and willing m37 be assigned to other priestly work than the pastorate Bisbshyop Morkovsky stated

The bishop said the changes are in accordance with the recshyommendations of the Senate 01 Priests and follow consultashytion with diocesan consultom

Reach Impasse-PIITSBURGH (NC)-A state-gt

level meeting between Cat~

olic officials and the Nationl11 Association for the Advanceshyment of Colored People on furshythering racial integration iB Catholic schools reached m seeming stalemate here bn Pennsylvania when the schoolshymen cited lack of funds as ll major obstacle to NAACP pro= posals

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YOUTH CARES FOR AGE Retired Sisters are tenderlycared for at chair while Sister Mary Agnes looks on Center Sister Agnes Maureea Mmiddott St Mary Convent Fall River Left Sister Agnes Maureen seniormiddot wheels SisterMary Jer~me anQright Sister JohnCatberine bringgdri_ infirmarian points out magazine article to Sister Mary Lig~~ri inwheel to Sister Mary Ursulamiddot Both infirmarians are licensed practical nurses

I

Cqrdinal Roy Raps Apathy

MEXICO CITY (NC)~MaushyJOice Cardinal Roymiddot of Quebee _ a visit here as ehairman of the Pontifical Commission for World Justice and Peace said Christian teachings condemn violence in solving social probshylems but also condemn themiddot false prudence that lacks the eourage to make needed reshyforms

The prelate who has been touring Latin America for sevshyeral weeks said he was 1mshypressed by the number of Cathshy

olic organizations and institushytutions already applying Pope Paul VIs encyclical The Deshyvelopment of Peoples in their Jespective countries

But he added Latin Amerishyearn still have to assume fully their responsibility in workingtowards economic balance andmiddot bull just social order 80 every cit shyizen can promote his own welshyfare in a climate of freedom and common good

bull bullbull tmiddot

Comes KindIYcimiddotmiddotSislesmiddot 0 Mercy AmiddotI Fall River Comiddotnventmiddot

By Patricia McGowan

~When thou wast younger thou didstmiddot gird thyself anddidst walk where thou Frouldst But when thou shalt be old thou shalt stretch forth thy handsmiddot arid another shall gird thee and lead thee whither thou wouldst not In its description of the almost universal lot of age this is one of the most poignantpassages in Scriptur~ But age comes kindly f~r Sisters Although they are not exshyemptmiddot from its physical and mental ravages they need not fear being forsaken byfriends or being left alone the

fanulymiddot Jhe famllylast of a that is a religious community cherishes its older members and provision is made for Sisters to pass their last years surrounded by tender care

Among havens for older Sisters is the infirmary at Mt St Mary Conventmiddot Fall River The Sisters who have spent most of their religious life in the Fail River Diocese come here for their laBtyears exshypliliried Sister Agnes Maureen

The cardinal added at emiddot pretB8 RSMmiddotmiddot senior iniirmarian at eonference in the headquarten the Mount Her domain proshyf the Mexican Social Secreta- vides eh~rf11~ccQmmodations riat that national efforts for de- for 10 Sisters Each has her ownmiddot elopment do not eliminate the room andthere is II kitchenette aeed ~forfoleignaid where those ablE lobe up and

The Pontifieal commisSion Cardinal Roy indicated ill enshyaged in persuading rich counshytries to devote at least one per eent of their groSs national product to assist poor eountries

Archdiocese Adopts Project Equality

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing notified the priests lIeIlate of the Boston archdiocese of plans 10 adopt Project Equality a program designed to use purchasing power of church institutions to make firms supplying goods and 8elVices wipe out diICriminashy birislM Placticeamp

e~ut ~n enjoy their meals ~gethermiddot

The ~nfirmaryis but II few stepis from the Mount chapel wher~ the retired Sisters spend hours a day in prayer for comshymunity members still in the active lPostolate Also claiming time for Sisters whose eyesight permits are needlework ana erooheting projects

Always DraWlll Cheerful and dedicated Sister

Agnes Maureen who has I Deen at the infirmary six years is aided by Sister John Catherine who has served the aged Sisters two years A laywoman takes the night shift in the infirmary ensuring the Sisters round the clock care Bothmiddot Sister infirmashy

rians are licensed practical nurses who received their trainshyI g to L d f F tma Hosn a ur a y 0 a I shypital in the Providence Diocese

When I entered religion I hoped to be an infirmarian

said SIster Agnes Maureen I whas alwdays drawn to work for t e age

Some people think we havent got a nursing apostolate she added but we need nurses desshyperately Right now we have nine Sisters taking care of inshyfirmaries in our province

Among Sisters now at the Mount infirmary are Sister

Mary Agnes who celebrated her diamond jubilee last DeshyceJl)ber and most of wbose r~lishygious life was spent in New Bedford and middotNorth Attleboro schools and Sister Mary Lishy

gu()ri whomiddot f9r 49 yearl taught sixth graders at st Patricks School Fall River

HShe looks out her window at St Patricks said Sister Agnes Maureen and she says Theres home

The Sisters are welcoming the arrival of Spring and warm days said the infirmarian It means they can enjoy their sunporch sit in the Mounts garden and go for occasional car rides Of course they have many visitors she said Other Sisters in the house come to see them and so do Sisters from the convents where they forshymerly lived

Yes age comes kindly for Sisters Not Hke the old lady overheard in a downtown groshy

eery confiding to a chance fellow-customer her discovery of a bargain in frozen food I live alone you know and 1 get

three big servings from a packshyage--and only 29 cents

N 0 Sister lives alone

bull

~~tplic Newspaper Wins Press Awards

NEW ORLEANS (NC) -The eJarion Herald middotarchdiocesa middotnewspaper won eight awards iii the annual competition of the

N~W Or)eans Press Club ~ competition included daily and

weekly newspapers wire serVshyices and television stations

Millard F Everett editor won first place in two categories - editorial and best religioWl story This marks the first time in five years of competition that the Clarion has taken the top award for best religious story Staff members of the paper also took three second and three third place awards

----------------------------

ZENITH bull ACOUSTICON bull UNEX

bull BIOLOGICAU bull YITAMIIIS

C~tt 615-7829 IRENE R SHEA PROP

Prompt Free Delivery in fALL RIVER SOMERSET TIVERTON amp VICIHITY 101 ROCK ST (CORNER OF PINE ST) FALL RIVIImiddot

~ 6

THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFon River-Thurs Apr 11 1968

CathoJi~ ll]wnDv~JSityPltDcopy~regii~copyJ~

IPlanLUBffil AmeFicon ~1]~regregO WASHINGTON (NC) - A ops and l~aders of several South

jJroup of pr-ofessors from Cathshy American governments sHe University of America hope The Washington center comshyS n~w technical middotinstituteat the middotprises -ll group of professorsshy~tholic University of Gu~Washy mostly members of the CU caulI Ecuador may mark the llchool of middoted ucation-whomiddot are ltJPening of an international edshy specialists ineclUcationfordeshyvcation bridgetoLatin America Velopment Director of the proshy

The institute will be inaugurshy ject is Dr Jose A Baquero ated early this month as 11 middotcoshy WM has been commuting b~shy1)eIativeventure by the Center meen Washingtonand his nashylor Educational Research fa middottive Ecuador dming the -cmrent QuitoEcuadorand the Center school year lor Community Developmenhmd This is not an Ecuadorian Servioe at Catholic University project it is an internatienal bere It has the support 01 Vashy projed a resealclFaction proshykanofficials Ecuadorianbislshy gram between North and South

America Dr Baquero said middothereBC middotto Recruit laquorNe had to start middotsomewhere The natural plaoe 10 begin wasNegro St~1ent5 middot-the Qlace Where weaould get

CHESTNUT HILL (NC) shy the most facilitiesThisproject iesuit-eper-ated Boston College God willing if successful will bere has made available $100shy move throughout Latin AmershyGtOO fora talent search -progr1m ica We already have contracts to recruit Negro stJdents frem with interestedJeaders in Sao disadvantagedurbanareas middotof Paulo BTazil Bogota Colombia tlhecountry mainly in Greater and Lima Peru Boston Msgr Eugene Kevane direcshy

Father Michael P Walsh SJ tor of the Center for Communitypresident caUed for support off Development andServleedaimshyiIIe entirestudent body facshy ed iB number of Latin American Illlty and administration of EQsshy Church and government officialS Qon College to make the ~mshy have middotexpressed interest in thecram a success projectand a belid it may beshy

Since the program was starteJ come a model of assistance middottoIJeveral weeks ago some 50 ~shy lI3derdeveloped poundOuntrieslltIicatiopshave beenreceiltvelll He said ArcnbishGp Romolofrom students in ghetto areas Carooni apostolic nuncio 10lot -entrance middotin next Septemshy

~1u told him heilOllSiders theWltll freshman -class pmject of great importance andThere have a1w~ys beellU M~S a similhlr middotinstitute willIlegro students enrolled at B4tsshybe established at the Pontificalton College oUicials said ~t University in Limatheir Dumber is ~ot ~own 00shy

0tberhigh-ranking churchshyaYSe race is not shown 8ll1 middotmen who lthave endorsed theapplications The Collegemiddotacceptll project include MsgrLuigi Lishyattdents of all faiths gutti the Holy Sees PermanentN~t SeptemberNegro lrtlllshy

1Gbserver at the Food and Agrishy

bullnts with the necessary ~uaUshy6eations will be admitted n8 culture Organization of the 1Ilual while middotsome 25 will ge United Nations and Archbishop admitted under the talent Ceasar Antonio Mosquera fif

lt4IeQIChprogram The number is Guayaquil president of theEcshybeing limited for thegood af iliad-orlan Bishops Conference

GOLDEN JUBILEE Sisshyter Rose Alma Reid CSC (Sjltte1 M Flora) will mark herg-olden i llbilee of religious professjon on Sunday April 21 at Sacred Heart Convent New Bedford A Mass of thanksgi~rjng will be offered at 1130 Sunchw morning at Sacred Head Church and a reception will be held in the parish hall ITom2 to 4 th~t

afternoon Friends and forshymer pupils are invited t01l~

tend

So Curolina Bishop A-sksPettce $upport

CHARLESTON (NC)- Bishshymiddotop Ernest Lmiddot Unterkoefier of Charleston has called for the middotfull support ofall Americans of President Lyndon middotlB Johnshysons efforts to secure peace in middotVietnam

Tbe South ltCarolina Bishop said that the Presidents -peace ini tiati yes demonstrate that he is a gtarson who -has ever been conscious of the grave responsishybility 01 his ofillce and that his judgements have been measured ~y the critical threats to the securi~y and free action ofthe United States

ICampus Comediansl

R~JlJ~stforBirh ControJ 1nlcrmation lndBGSYlrncrGti(C~e

DAYTON (NC)-A Univershysity of Dayton chaplain said he suspected campuscomediami for 1b~ conJroversyaroused bY a request for availability of birth corttol information and materials In campus by theunishyversity stmiddotudent congress

Father Urban Rupp SM universi~y co-chaplain wrote in the chaplain s bulletin the alshymost unanimous aetion fthe student gfvernment group middotwas an idio~yncratic caper in the natureo Ii ttle childrenpl~ying

house He indicated he fouud it difshy

ficult to take the Pfoposa1 serishyomlY

Now of COUrse I middotcowd be taking this all -wrong be said

Perhaps it was intended 00 bn serious In that case I woUld be tempted to thinktheemershygency is not just immediateshyit is really one generation too late

This was taken asa reference to student efforts to pwih through the resolution orbirth control as an emergency -meashysure

That failed but a few days later the student middotcongressvo~ 29 tol to seeka change in llJllshyversUy Wlicy that would -pershymit the introductionof birth 1Ontrol selYiees in thestudem health center for married eQUoshy~les and Ulose llQOD _ ~arriedmiddot

the young Negroes whowiUbe ~pted oUiciaI said

~

bull

PATRIARCH The middotnewily elected head of the Syriac Oatholic Church Patriarch Hgtenys Antoine Hayek of Anshy~och was enthroned recentshy1w in Beirut Lebanon In this post hesucceds the late P-ashykiarch Ignace Cardinal TapshylPouni NC Photo

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In ~ glory of His Resurrection may be reborn man~

amiring hopes and CleSires _ ~ce

HAPPY EASTER THE OFFICERS DIRiEc1r~ AND STAFfshy

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FIRSTmFff-BANK

-Ji1lim~~OF NEW BEDFORD

StYE SOME

11IfiPPINESS TO

A CHILD

i8iAPPI~ESS IS

A bull told ($1250 a monttl$15000-a ~ar)ca_small SISTER Investment for SisterS lifetime of service

Like to be her sponsorf Her name Is Sister Suzamma and she will write to you

iIHAPPINESS ciS

IfOOD

HAPPlHU II

CLOTH

Whonareyouhapp~t7Happlnll3s 110$ In giving Youre ha1J)lest when you sIva yourself to ttle peopeyeniho needyou most bullbullbullA mother for Instance hums with ~pplnesswhensh8bath~

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In Erumathale south India 8 young Indian girllnrtnilriing tobea sisterOfthe Imltatlon1lf Christ will learn amofSotherttllnp how Jo care for orphans Hertlalning costs $300 all

Sevanmiddotyear-od Clara Vaookkaran an orphan In Kottamthy Indla needs lMtryttling Iitta (SIr need $10 wlllP8Y her 8)(~nslJlJm~thbymiddot cm(lOthweUaendYOU harphoto

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THE ANCHO~-Trappists Elect Mother Church of Nation8 PortlglleSe 17 Thurs April 11 1968

Youngest Abbot P-epares fOI- Cenlellilial Celebration At Gethsenloni Dy Patida F r-u nis

GETHSEMANI (NC) The youngest abbot in the history of the monastery of Our Lady of Gethsemani was formally blessed (March ~l) by Archbishop Thomas J McDon~

ough 0pound Louisville Father M Flavian Burns

OCSO 36 ilgt the seventh ab~

bot in the 120-year history of the monastery He was elected by members of the community Inst January to succeed Abbot M James Fox OCSO

Father Flavian described bis position as en administrator whose main job il) service to others within the community He said his most important function it3 to hold plivate spiritual conversations with other monks and to handle the lillM)nasterys relations with the ~Atside world

Thcilt are some 120 monks at ~ethsemani abbey a decline from past years Abbot Burns cCrlbllltes the decline at least in prt to the attitude of the times YiJCl1 was foJJJlcrly accepted without question is now being ltI~etioned he observed

ltDontemplation Prayer

Changes have been made the IHurElY is now in English and 2Jc strict vow of silence has TiKen relaxed somewhat On an experimental basis the monks are allowed to use brief oral instructions instead of sign language as in the past

Despite the lack of radio or 1clevision Abbot Burns said the monks keep in contact through newspllpers with events in todays world The main thing ill to know what is going on in the Church and what effects our fellow hushymans according to the abbot

The life of a monk involves middotcontemplation and prayer rather than speaking up - 11 more spiritual turn according kI Abbot BUlns

A native of Jersey City N J he is a graduate of Henry SfIyder public high sehool there

Protests- Campaign Agamst Religion

NEW YORK (NC) - A new wave of terror against aU churcltgpers is now in effect in Albania an exile from that country has declored in a- letter of protest sent to the United Nations Commission on Human Rightsmiddot and~ to UN Secretary General U Thani

The protest bl Dr Rexhep KIasniqi president of the Free Albania Committee which has its headquarters here said that Albanial following a lf41oist eommunillt guideline has shut down every cltulch and mosque and has made any_kind of pubshylIc worship impossible

Thill campaign Dr Krasniqi tated is a violation of the UN Charter the Universal Declarashytion of Human Rights and of Albanias own communist conshystitutional guarantee of freedom of conscience for all

San Antonro Priests Form Association

SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Fortyshyene diocesan and religious comshymunities priests of the San Anshytonio archdiocese formed a priests association bere The priests ohose a six-member temshypora]) steering committee

One of the fiTst formal actions Gf the allsociatron was to inform Archbishop Robert E Lucey of San Antonio of the group forshymation

There are approximately 441

Parishioner d St John the Baptist Church in Nc Bedford are getting rendy for a momentoils event-the 100th anniversary of the fO~1l1dil1g of the oldest Portuguese parish in the nation The cen~en]ial celebration wi II not take place until 1971 but many things have to be done in preparation within the next three years One major project is renoshyvating the church ihelf To pay for the massive job ptrshyishioners have inaugur~teca Centennial Fund Drive to raise money for painting ~he church do extensive electrical work and buy a rew organ Estimated cost (f the regt3ir5 is $150000

Rt Rev Msgr John A Silvia pastor is honorary drve chairshyman and Frank S Jason is genshyeral chairman Other committee members include Richard GiJI1shysalves and Jesse V Santos Jr division chairmen JQseph S Vera special gifts chairman Richard L Lopes treasurer George Radcliffe director Louis S Silva assistant director Mrs Mary Lucy Soares office conshytrols and Miss Luey E Dias list supervisor

Members of the Campaign Exshyecutive Committee also include Frank M Martin ald Joseph C Motta

The history of St Johns and the history of the Portuguese people in America arc closely intertwined

It was at the end of the 18th Century that settlers began comshying from themiddot Azores to the United States TheJ were relashytively few in number nd as II

result almost lost their national identity

Near Ifood However by 1840 the trickle

of Azoreans was beginning to turn into a near Oood of imshymigrants who settled in New Bedford then a whaling and fishing center

By 1865 many Portuguese families called New Bedford home They lacked just one thing-a church of their own and a priest who spoke their language and understood their customs and traditions

Their first priest-Rev Joao Ignacio de Azevedo-anived in 1869 and on Sept 10 1871 St Johns parish was canonically established

Theremiddot were approximately 1shy000 Portuguese of Azorean deshyscent living in New Bedford at the time and the)T detelmined to build their own church A lot was purchased for $3OD8 ~ con~

siderable amount in those days and soon ground WQS broken for the new house of God

However Father de Azeedo was a mission pliest Vl~ho~moved

throughout the are~ aCministershying to his counblymen As a reshysult a new parish was establishshyed in Boston and he became its first pastor

Expandoll

Construction of St Johns WillS

continued by Rev Antonio de Mattos Freitas a native or Calshylteta St George Azores Fashyther Freitas also was responsible for the construction of a recshytory When he reUred because of ill health and returned to~ the AzoreS he was succeeded by Rev Antonio G de Silva Neves who was to serve St Johns durshying the greatest expansion Gfthe citys Portuguese colony

The first church located where a section of Morse- Twiampt Drill now stands soon ~ outgrown by its congregation and a drive began for agt new and larger church

Father Neves who served 8~j

pastor for almost 25 years saw the new church at County and Wing Streets almost coop]eted However ill health also forced bill retirement

PREPARING FOR CENTENNIAL In charge of fumd drive for hundredth anniversary of St John Baptist Church New Bedford are from left George Radclffe drive execushytive director Frank Jailon general chairman

pleted construction of the present church and rectory in three years The church which now serves the parish was solemnly blessed an4 dedicated to the worship of God by the late Bishshyop Feehan

Through the years the parshyishioners of St Johns have proved their dedication to their cliurch Now they are renewinr their dedication

Msgr Silvia notes that before the small St Johns Church was built the citys Portuguese colshyony attended Mass at St Lawshyrence Church Later they moved into what today is Crowells brt Store

Landmark Today the 11Inificent st

Johns is a landmark in New Bedford befitting its position as Mother Church of the Portu guese in the- UnFted States

MSgr Silvia a native of Pall River served at St Peters Church in Provincetown for 27 years His only other assi1shyment St John the B-aptirt Church

Ordained to the priesthood or Dec 20 1919 St Johns was the new priests first assignment He remained at the cRurch unshytil No~ember 1924 when he was transferred to Ptovinceto~

On Oct 2 1951 Msgr Silvia returned to St Johns as pzsshytor a post hemiddot still fulfills with zeal and energy

His assignmetlt to St Jobnfl parish in 1919 was not ~1sgr Sinshyvias introduotion to the New Bedford parish

As a young boy the p2stcshyrecalls his poundathers weekly trips from Fall River to New Bedford to bring back a priest

Four Families There were few Portuguese

families in Fall River in those days he says When my father arrived in Fan River there were iust four Portuguese families in the city Gradually others setshytled there

My father used to drive over in a horse and buggy to bring Il priest back tc Fall River to ll3y

degbrought him back the next dzy Since those days of hischiMshy

bood Msgr Silvia observeamp-l Turn to Page Eighteen

Continued fronmiddot Page Three

the late Tobias and Ann Lynch ]Burke Mr Burke was born in Newport Tipperary Ireland and his speech bears witness to the o-it and lilt of his birthshyplce He is married te Catbshyerine Lowney Burke and the couple lives next to the Chanshycery

DI1 Davia Costa Dr Costa son of David CosU

and Julia Rodrigues is the husshyband of Louella Somerday and fther of five children A dentshyist in NeJ Bedford he is active ir ceo and in St Vincent ~e

Pml work on a parochial and al(l level He has been zealoUJ ir- many important phases ~

perish aetivity in Immaculate Conception Parish in New BedshyforC He was recipient of the Diocesan Marian Award in Deshycember

itpJlin 15 TIle awards Jill be presenteCl

at St Marys Cathedral Fa]] River on lIlonday evening April 15 at 8 PM At toot timeuro there will be the investi shyture of two lI-ionsignori the awarding of Papal Knight 03 SZ Gregory honors to nine ~sect- oeesan laymen and the Pro EecIesia et Pontipoundlce award kJ mother Pierre Marie adminisshytlato of St Annes Hospital IE Fall River~

Join Federation IIALEIGH (NC)-Forty ()(f thfl

matewide Raleigh dioceses 14~

tlriests have formed the North iCaFolina Priests Associatioil which will affiliate with a Emshy

ticmal federation DOW beiJl~

formed

May the Joy and Pomise 01- Easter

uplift your spirit and gladden

your hean

FROM THE OFRCEIIS AND PERSONfJB Of

qkJM~ERCHANTS CIa1iotuLe BANK

IN NEW BEDFORD

SOUTH BANK-Cove St at Iodney French Boulevard WEST BANK-Kempton Street at Mill Stret

LUNDS CORNER BANK-Acushnet Ave rear Lunds Comer DARTMOUTH BANK-Dartmouth Street near Rockdale Ave NORTH BANK-Acushnet Avbull at Coffin Ave

CENTER BANK-Purchase and William Sts priests in the San Antonio arcl1shy Next pastor was the Rev Mass He used to stay overnight tiiocese Manuel A da Silva wt() oom- at our hOuse ald JlG ~tbeI

-

18 Tti~ ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1969 CatecheticsWeek Set at StonehillDioce$clm ~j[llIlde[lj)fl5 Join Nal-gonGI Some 400 priests religious and laymen are expected to at shyMculrraurru U A$~ssinatBon tend a catechetics institute b be held Monday Aug 5 throughOf Dr Mriin luther KilnS Saturday Aug 10 at Stonehill College Diocesan schools shared i~ national mourning at the Sister Mary Francille CSJ

~8sassination of Dr Martin Luther King with special theology professor at Regis ColshyMasses or prayers offered in every school At Cassidy High lege will direct the institute in Taunton Rev John Moore chaplain celebrated a Mass and speakers will include Rev

Frederick Moriarty SJ Revfor the repose of the soul Cha~les E Cook Rev James F(l)f the Negro leader and rently hplds first place in the Hawker Sister Florence -MishyNotre Dame math league chels OLVM Gerard Potte~

tlie chapel by students in a demy Fairhaven have been study periods were spent in Girls at Sacred Hearts Acashy

bauoi and Mrs Helen Jacobs With the theme Making Alllvigil for peace working on a project to bring

Christian Youth Movement Easter cheer to patients at St Things New institute sessiono will discuss Scripture catechetshymembers at Jesus-Mary Aca- Lukes Hospital New Bedford ical techniques use of filmsdemy Fall River heard the New Under supervision of Sister Jushywith adolescents other visualFolk a group of singing Holy lie Louise SSCC theyve ~een aids parent education teamCross seminarians Their appear- making tray favors including teaching and creative dramaticsance was arranged under t~e decorative placemats and napkin

Further information is avail shydirection of Mofher John Scarry holders for adults and flowered able from Stonehill CollegeJRJM Jollipops chicky surprises and North Easton 02356Also at JMA its French Week bunny hats for childern

The observance- began Sunday Science Fair Winners when French Club members Jeanne Phenix Yvette Berthi- Holy Family had four winshy Charities AppeaI aume and Susan Cournoyer took ners at the annual New Bedford Continued from Page Three part in a play sponsored by the Science fair In the senior division

Community Fund CampaignPrevost French Club Les Fem- James Berry and John Thomas president Board of Managers mes Parlent Trop Throughout of the New Bedford school were of Boston Dispensary and vice

the week too there have middotbeen cited fo~ earth science and phy- the Diocesan cheerleading tour- will combine with the seniors president of USOseveral skits prepared by mem- sics proJects respectively while t tl h ld t F h th bZbers in the junior division both Pa- namen recen yea ee an Lor e occasIOn SInce oth He has been the recipient of

or effort at Prevost was tricia Downey and SharonSmola High but sports arent all that cltsses of the academy are small honorary degrees from Holy MaJ matter at the TauntoJl girls due to the fact that the high Cross College Tufts University

e Sunday program Whlch ln- were recognized for work in the h f h d I ld f b sc 001 Break ast lunc an schoo IS being phased out Suffolk University Bradford -luded In addItIon to the play fle 0 iology M formal dinner pace settmgs The Junipero Club of Holy Durfee College of Technology~veral talks by promInent any students won honors at h M h I I I were recently on display at the Family High recently sponsored of Fall Rivet and Lowell Techshy

I remiddotnch cItIzens a French song- t e assac usetts RegIOn S F h school library and members of a talk on drug addiction for jun- nological Institute ~t and a motion picture Clence alr eld in Fall Rlver They included Christine Four- the Mothers Auxiliary were on iors and seniors The talk was Bishop to AddJess Meeting

UN French Club nier Dominican Academy and hand to answer etiquette ques- given by two brothers one an Most Rev James L ConnollyAt Coyle the French Club di- Diane Desmarais Mt St Mary tions from the students ex-addict the other director of Bishop of Fall River will speak

Ilected by Brother Hugh McCabe Academy both Fall River Both And the Coyle Fathers Club Marathon House a center for to the priests parish trusteesIOeCently elected officers After girls were recogiIized by the held its annual Father-Son Com treatment of addicts located in chairmen of the Catholic Charishy8le votes were tallied however Southeastern District of the Mas- munion breakfast at the school Coventry RIo ties Appeal and the invited lays our man at Coyle it looked sachuse~ts Dental Society bull with Robert Cahill ofthe Rhode CongratuIcitions go to Joseph gue9ts of the 111 diocesan if ~embers were voting for Debra Lay Dominican Aca- Island Food and Drug Commis Abraham of St Anthony High parishes bull UN delegation The presidents demy received a savings bond sion as guest speaker He dis- for meriting runner-up position Roland A Lafrance 1968 ApshyliPot wa~ captured he reports from the Bristol South Distriet cussed harmful effects of various iil the state finals of the annual peal lay chairman will also adshy a Polish fellow Cbarles Ozug Medical Auxiliary arid Michael drugs American Legion olatorical con- dress the 800 expected to attend lames OBrien a true Irishman Zito Bishop Feehan High At~middot The Catholic Students Mis- test - the opening meeting of the won the vice-presidential spot tleboro was awarded a plaque sion CrUsade at Stang H~gh has In club~ews at~HA the Senshy campaign for funds for the 30 while the treasurers job was by the Womens Auxil1ary to the taken as a special project this ior Science Club will conduct agencies of the Catholic Chadshy~warded to Jorge Matesanz -a Mass Veterinary ASsn month of April the collection of a farewell meeting for seniors ties Appeal

BASKETBALL PLAYERS On basketball team at Connolly High Fall River are from left Tim Duffy Tom Kroger John Long Joe Kelly Greg Sullivan Mike Manning

~~dent of Spanisll extraction Winners in the division of donated medical supplies and this ~month and members will Only Paul Bor9ue the secretary earlhscience Were John Dias eyeglasses for deprived Peoples visit an encephalitis clinic in I ~anaged to make the scene for Thomas Burk~ anciRobei-tClou~ of the world Supplies collected Freetown in May The Stamp France tier FeehahMicIlael Cote Pre illbe forwarded to the Cathi- and Coin Clubis planning a pubshy

At Bishop Stang iil North vost and Elizabeth Lavoi~ Do- olic Missions Medical Bureau for lie exhibition of members col- Dartmouth the math team led minican shipment iections in May imd the Chess by high scorer Lawrence l3yrnes Awards in math and engineer- Upco~ing at S~A Fairhaven Club has undergone reorganiza- placed secon~in a reeentBqs- ing went to Carol Vasconcellos is the aruiual senior prom which tion election of officers inshyflon public schools math meet Mt St Mary Madeleine Delisl~ wilL be held in the Colonial cluding Edward Norman presishyThe Stang team paced by the and Vivian Blais and Michael R60m of Whites restaurant in dent Daniel Brule vice-presi- shyeo-sIstent good work of George Zito Feehan Genevieve Pappas Westport from 8 to midnight dent Diane Lizotte secretary Oliver and EIleen Keavy cur- and Debra Lay Dominican Joan Friday night May 24 Juniors TuniorProm

Basile Feehan Amato Polselli The Holy Family Junior Prom Prevost and Sharon Woycie- Board ofmiddot Trustees isslated for Friday night AprilCentennialmiddot chowski Mt St Mary were 26 at Kennedy Center The prom

Continued from Page Seventeen cited To Study Changes will last from 8 to 11 and will Chemistry winners included have Carousel as its themebroad smile on his face-many Jane Arruda Anne Lewis De- WASHINGTON (NC) - The Mlisic will be by the Escorts

other families have arrived from nise Michaud Elizabeth St board of trustees of the Catho- And the Holy Family debatePltlrtugua1 A man d Diane Lamontagne lic University of America in team tied for first place in the Our Lady of Mt Carmel par- Christine Fournier Dominican Washington D C will meet Narry League with Cassidy A ~h was detached from St Johns Anne Sullivan and Pamela Can- Sunday April 21 in St Louis playoff will be held As of now as the Portuguese population dee Feehan Marilyn Riley and to consider a wide range of rec- Cassidys debate reco~d is 12 grew Then Our Lady of the Ann-Marie Charrette Sacred ommended changes resulting wins out of 14 debatesjrnmaculate Conception parish Hearts Fall River Irene Caron from a year-long study of the was erected to care for families Cassidy Marilyn Bentley Mt pontifical university by a comshyi Portuguese descent living in mitteee headed by Dr Carroll ~e North End of New Bedford St Mary Hochwalt

In the field of physics Alan middotRAMBLERToday St John the Baptist White Prevost Michelle Paquet The meeting will be held in ehurch has about 4000 parishshy SHA Fall River JamesReid Jrconjunction witll the Spring Americas Economy King ioners Our numbers started Prevost Mary Soans Jane Mc meeting of the National Confershy Fnr the Best Deal Come To dropping about seven years ago Donald and Martba Nugent yent ence of Catholic Bishops Broadway Ramblerasgr Silvia explains He feels St Mary The trustees are expected 10 INC part of the drop in membership Representatives from Diocesan name a new 30-man board meet 768 BROADWAYis due to a number of families schools to the Mass State Sci- with faculty representatives for RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 131moving outside the parish )ounshy ence Fair will include Michael the first time in histoi-y and CHARLES J DUMAIS Presdarles Intermarriages with othshy lito Amato Polselli Debra Lay discuss the search for a new er nationalities account for still Madeleine Delisle Jane Arruda university rector to replacemore losses Anne Lewis Father J~dhn P Whalen ~ho ~III11I11I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I11I1I1HIUIIIIIIIlIIlilllllllllllfllHlIilttmmIllIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllllnIlIllIllHIIIIIIIIIJ111~ However the Mother Church Denise Michaud Alan White was naine last October to a ef the Portuguese is not fading Michelle Paquet Elizabeth St one-year term as acting rector E WEEKEND SPECIAL sect away AmandSharon Woyciechowski A new school was built in New Projector

f957 It is expensive Msgr Silvia admits but I felt we needed it

St Anthony High in New Bedshyford is rejoicing over acquisi shytion of a movie projector as a

Parish gtrganizations are active gimiddotft from the alumni association and individual parishioners are willjng to give of their time

Presentation to principal Sister Lucille Champagne was made

and effort Perking

to keep the parish by Mrs Josephine Lafleur sociation president

asshy

Now they are getting read7 Cassidy-Coyle cheerleaders Jor a 100th anniversary captured third pillce v9Phy iil

_

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==I == MacleansI UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN

Tet 99793511

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Westport Real Doric-Horse lHE ANCHOR-DIoeIee r bull I AJu n

Case Somerset Favorites In Narry Diamond League

Case High of Swansea and Somerset are pre-season ehoices in this seasons Narragansett League baseball race but the club th8lt will bear watching is Westport TIne darkshyhorse Villagers may have a few surprises for Narry foes Another small area school

with a respectable 8-6 recordthat potentially has a shot Only one member of that at a league championship is squad Calvin Hopkinson will Norton of the Tri-Valley not be playing for the Villagers Conference Coach Ed Bibeau this Spring With the rest of the has most of last Deasons Central club ready to go - watch Jlor Village regulars Westport to make its presence in the fold ready lmown to challenge the Among fuose returning are perennial Paul Eastwood an Russ Picard favori1es If 0 T two of the better performers in Narry honors the circuit a year ago Eastwood amp1i1 at Norton led the team in hitting with a (C 0 a c h Peter highly respectable 360 averagem[l ~ek has pitched and played the infield G3ven returning Picard like Eastwood 15 also ~nnen for versatile An outfielder by trade ~theY chamshy he also takes his turn on the ii~~JWhip bid Peter mound for Coach Bibeaus nine Weo~port Bartek Carl Zajac and Jeff Hague tmIshed the 1961 eampaign ill round out Bibeaus four-man ~ place in tbe NalT7 loop pitching staff

Norton Bids for Tri-Valley Crown jfOO task of handling the but in thin scholastic year of

~tJ of this quartet will fall athletic surprises it may not be Gpoundl ~e shoulders of either Ron as big as some thinllt ~JmOi) or Manny Cabral both

A second place finisher inexperienced receivers ConnOlll 1967 the Norton Lancers haveexcel1B not only defensively their sights on the Tri-Valleybut likewise with the bat He Conference crown The clubsbit at a 333middot clip last Spring one-two hitters last campaignJohn Souza and Mike Andras have departed from the Norton th better than 300 hitters baseball scene but the teamqaln will be out to join the one-two pitching punch is reshyleague leaders in batting prowshyturning Juniors Ken Allen aess They should put a wallop left-hander who had a perfectin Westports oHensive attaCK 7-0 record last Spring and ArtIf Coach Bibeaus boys can dushyBouchard will be relied uponplicate their Performances of a heavily to bring the league flagJellr ago Offensively and biB to Norton Coach Bartek alSobig four comes through on middottbe hopes to get some help in middotthemound Westport may realize a the pitching departmentmiddot fromlong awaited Narry championshyFred Rego Bill Gorczyca andEip dream Admittedly if Ie Steve Nichols bull bie word in ~~rts_tuture

~ ~ bull I

OpeUp With~on-League Co~esttsmiddot Other returnees incl~ Capshy develop rapidlymiddot defensively if

tain Mike Wynnn Greg Croff they are to regain the leagues BOb Adams Tim McEndy and divisional crown - whicb flbeymiddot Paul Hassie Wynn a senior lost to HoWston last Spring middotmiddot will be starting his third season and gain a shot at the Trl shyill left field with Cruffstarting V~ey Conference ebampionshyhis second campaign in center ship Many area clubs openThey will be joIned by Wynns their campaign this week with brother Ricky in right fied non-league games highlighting

The infield win be anchored the action League competition by Adams at second base and will commence for the most Hassle at short Newcomers part next week Richy Silvia and George Macshy Mother Nature has done her Arthur are presently battling it job this Spring Baseball coaches out for the third base job and throughout -the diocese admit Lorrie Adams also a first-year that this is the best Spring they man appears to have the inside have had to prepare flbeir track on first base charges in many a year Weather

cannot be blamed for a slowMcEndy who has been the start this time around All areLancers starting catcher since eagerly awaiting the umpireshis Freshman year is starting first call to play ballhIs third campaign behiJd the

plate Bartek expects McEndy to hold the inexperienced inshy New School System field together

The Lancers will have to imshy In German State prove upon their hitting and DUSSELDORF (NC) - The

North Rhine-Westphalia state parliament middothas approved aCanadian Prelates change in the states school sysshytem that probably will meanEstablish Council the end of many denominational

OTTAWA (NC)-The Catho-shy schools Hc bishops of Canada have esshy By an overwhelming majorshytablished a 12-member Fiscal ity the parliament voted to Affairs Council composed of change the state constitution and clergy Religious and laymen establish the nondenominational who will advise the Church on Christian school in which reli shyfinanclal matters gious training is given by Cathshy

Among the areas which are olic and Protestant instructors receiving ini~ial attention of the in the same school as the patshycommittee is the question of tern for state-supported schools whether the Church should be from the fifth through the nint subject to government taxation grades and if so what form of taxation In the past the state has supshywould be equitable to churches ported Illeparate Catholic and government and other taxshy Pro tell tan t denominational payen Khoola

-~) PASSION PLAY Today Christians hold the Solemn Observance of the Lords Supper

It is commemorated ina PMsion Play at Prevost High School Fall River by David Poisshyson as Christ Paul Martel left 8$ St John and Paul Bouampquet as St Peter

DominicGlIsmiddot Rent ApGrt~~rit in Inner -Cimiddottimiddot middot

Want t~ Get Closer to I Agony of the Worl~middot WASHINGTON (NC)middot Pift his experience in the neig~lgtorshy ruary 1966 because theJ

Dominican priests-each doing hood is invaluable in helping wanted to get closer to the bis own thing-are living middotin an both prisoners and parolees He agony of the world While nol apartment in the inner ~ cd said the insight he gains into eliminating the academic life Washington here they come from ancl h~w they felt that living in the inlleJ The five run the gamut from they view life aids him In mv city would be as important bull

a professor of moral theology at ing them intelligent advice and learning experience as academic the Don)inican House ofStucUeII 8ssis~nCe study to a prison chaplain a1 the Diamp- Father William Kane is middotthemiddotNeighborhOoclll[aatrict of Columbia Jail Ibey neighborhood man of the have in common1heiy addresa A Pr~ceton graduate ~itl1 apartment Hemiddotworks with minshyand a desire to understand and doctorates from Harvard aJgt4 isters inmiddot the area in establishing alleviate the problems ~ livlnc OxfCrd Father Albert Brodershy youth programs and fightina I in a poor Urban community ick teaches Constitutional LalV for better housing and fail

Father TbomasHea~ middotttie at the catholic University Law rent laws His motive is to givemoral theology professor aDd School the people in the community aD author of a reCent bOOkmiddotID awareness of their own dignitymiddotBe and Father Heath startedFaee of An~sh is 0Il 1be to affirm the fact that it is athe apartment project in Feb-bOard of direCtors of the Pe0shy ood place to live ples Center a house soon to be

the rehabilitationopened for Criticizes Usury of alcoholics He also meets

MEXICO CITY (NC)-Mexshy5 50 01- a SYSTEMATIC wimiddotth ~culties of Wasbingtcm

icc CityS Jose Cardinal Garibiseminaries to discuss policyshy bull 10 year SAViNGSRivera urged bankers meetingmaking and apostolic activity MONTHLY DEPOSITSat the National Bankers Conshy

Legal Aid Office vention in Guadalajara to comshy 5 00 01- a INVESTMENT bat usury and work closely bull 10 year SAVINGS

Father Joseph Cooney a NOTICE ACCOUNTSwith the government to proshylawye~ who has worked 011

voter registration in the South mote the social welfare of all II REGULAR4 5001 the Mexican people bull 10 Jflar SAVINGSand took an active part in dvil

rights activities such lIS

~lma march is DOW admin~ Bass Rivertering a legal aid office in the CENTERneighborhood of the Dominishy Savings Bank

cans apartment Volunteer law Paint and Wallpaperstudents from the Catholic Uni- Bank 8y Man I

versity of Ameiica assist him Dupont Paint

We Pay The Postage

IJcor Middle St

A third member of the group m this program 4iiii 422 Acush Ave bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA Fat her Raymond MalonSOl1 ~ New Bedford bull SOUTH VARMOUTH 4raquo HYANNISserves as the Catholic chapiain bull PARKINGmiddot

bull DENNIS PORT bull OSTtRVILLEatmiddot the D C jail A late vocashy Rear of Storetion Father Malonson has been ordained only two years middot Father Malonsoll feels U1at

LEVESQILIES OFFla E~lnPMENTNow Many Wear Wood Metal Desks and ChairsFALSE TEETH

With More Comfort JUST GiVE ME A CHANe TO QUOleTo overcome discomfort when

dentures sllp sllde or loosen Just sprinkle a llttle FASTEETH on your 187 SHAWMUT STREET bull NEW BEDFORD MASS

middot plates FASTEElH holds dentures firmer You eat better feel more PO Box 2062 - Hervey L Levesque

middot -wont sour Helps check plate odor comfortable FASTEETH Is alkaline

Dentures that fit are lIlSSentlai to Telephone 993middot1264middot health See your dentist regularly Get FASTEETB at all drUB counten ___ _ _____11_0__-D-tcl----4

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs April 11 1968

PhySDCOUi) l1JJ Uges litUBgy C~[filges

~n Last RStes RED BANK (NC) A

~atholic physician called for revision of the liturgical $orm of the Anointing of the Sick cluring a discussion on The Chaplains Role With the Dying Patient at Riverview Hospital here in New Jersey

Dr George J Sheehan an alumnus of Manhattan College and a founder of Christian Brothers Academy in nearby lLincroft was one of three apeakers at the symposium coshyaponsored by the hospital and Ute 1 Redmiddot Bank Council of

ilhurches Citing obvious failures by

both physician and clergyman iin helping the dying patient and bis family Dr Sheehan sugshygested members of the family Ghare inmiddot a ceremony which would exchange feelings of llove and hope between them ElDd the dying person

Dr ~heehan observed that while inadequacy in the face of death has been in the past apparent to the Protestant criergyman it is now also felt by Catholic priests

They findmiddot he said the La~t Sacrament in its present form Ii a consolation only to those with the strong faith of a Breton iiteasant-a kind of faith they e seeing less and l~ss-

Appropriate Theology He also said while the develshy

pment of a Common Christian itervice parlakirtg of the same llodividual familymiddot and commu~

Ility significance as Bap~i8ai -dMarriage would be a giant p in middotheiping people to a middotbappy death iit would remain IDol theologians to present- a relshy

qwant lmd acceptable image of mail in this time and this place ilnd to develop an appropriate eology of death heaven ~nd bell in order to make a signifi- sant change in our life style

lOd therefore in our approach to death

Other panelistsmiddot were the Rev Seorge Fitzgeraid a Presbyteshyaan minister middotand middotchaplain at Princeton Hospiital arid Mn Ruth Snyder a nurse of the lIiverview Hospital staffmiddot

POSTER CHILD LEADS WAY Joey BeIge 8 of Syraeuse NY leads themiddot way down a White House lttairway in the company ofthe Fi~st t-adymiddotMrsLyndon B Johnson

and Mrs Muriel Humphrey wife ofthe Vice-President Joeymiddotis this years poster child of

the National Association for Retarded Children H~ ismiddot thesQn ofMt and Mrs Robert Beige middotmembersmiddotOf St Vincent de Paul parish in Syracuse whos-e ot-herfive children SlHshy

round their Uttle broth~r wil1hmiddot the love and care to h~lp him livea full and happymiddot life

Penn See Studies Poverty Pmiddotrogram HARISBlJRq (NC)--Coadju- is being made to see ho)Vtbe to coordinate and channel our

tor Bishop Joseph T Daley diocese canmiddot best use its re-middot efforts in the fieldmiddot vicar general- of the Harrisburg sources to alleviate poverty Bishop Daley said it ismiddot im- diocese calledmiddot on the nearly problems middotperative that all our people 50000 Catholics in the area to He alsomiddot said Wemiddot contem- knoW and understand the probshy

acquaint th~mselves with 10- middotplatemiddot the early middotestablishment of middotIem of middotracism and the funda- calracfal and poverty problems amiddotmiddot diocesanmiddot human relations mental moral injustices which

In a lettermiddot read at aU Masses commission middotto serve asmiddot a liaison middotare at the root of the deplorable BishopDlIleT said middotthat a study with all people Collcerned and conditions in our own area

Urges Hospitals Re~ognie Unio~s

CLEVELAND (NC) - AI layshymens group here has asked the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hospitals to declare its willingshyness to recognize labor unions as collective bargaining agents for hospitals employes

lNle request came in a letter from William A caldwell chainnan of the eurolevellllnd Conference of Laymen to Sister ~ry Collette of Hamilton Ohio president of the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hosplshytala during a one-day meeting here of the Ohio Hospital Assoshyciation convention

The laymens group said such a statement would promote the human dignity of hospital emshyployes in real and immediate ways serve the common good of our communities and inshycrease the understandingmiddot of Catholic teaching by all the citishyzens of Ohio

The letter pointed out that the National Catholic Hospital Association 1 a s t November called on Catholic hospitals tiraquo be guided by the social teachshyings of the Church and to deal with unions that employecfgt choose

Discuss ~iot Report On Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC) - Beginshyning Sunday April 14 the Catholic Hour will present over the NBCmiddot network a three-part series The Climate of Change

Evolution or Revolution foshycusing on three areas of social and religioUs concern today today

~gr Rop~rt Fox cOordinashytor of Spanish community 00shy

middot lion in the New York arclidioshymiddoteese will discuss The Riot centommissi~ middotReport Amiddot Chrisshy

tiati Response April 14 Msgr Ivan D Illich of the Intereushy-tural Center 01 Language and D middotoe u men tat 1 on CuershyDavaca Mexf~o win be intershyviewed Aprjl 21 and Father Francois Houtart Belgian 00shyciologist will be interviewed Apiil 28

The National Council of Cathshy oUc Men producer of the OathshyoUe Hour reconunendseheckshymiddoting local newspaper programa for broadca9t time in particushymiddotRar areas

I Am The RestUlJTectiltogtD

Ai 1)(J[YQfGfDVIJJpound)9

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FALL RIVER

Page 8: 04.11.68

8 THE ANCHO~=Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1968 New Pay Scale For Teachers

FORT WAYNE (NC)-ftleEnjoy Family Celebration Fori Wayne-South Bend dioceshysan board of education bas apshyOf First Communion Day proved a new salary scale for lay teachers in elementallY ancll

By Mary Tinley Daly secondary schools The board approved tl recomshyChanges in the Church that perennial topic of COlllshy mendation that for every fuD

versation since Vatican Council II come in for a lot of time degreed ~acher employed pro and con discussion on the part of the laity With each with a current valid Indiana

teaching license a parish Willehange the dissident~ speak up head-shakers moan middotWell be reimburselt at the rate Oilfthey didnt do it that way in $2000 each for the school ~

my day But as each in forms of any kind with their 1968-1969inevitable rivalry Each littlenovation is inaugurated The salary schedule for 196ampshygirl and boy was in mufti shy 1969 provides on the bachelonthen incorporated into presshy tastefuUy and compoundo11tably degree level for a minimum Oil ent practice we realize these garbed $5200 and a maximum of $6200 made notehanges are simply Each family had its own pew at the 10th year with an increshyfor the sake of parents and First Communicant mentof $100 a minimum QfclJange but as in aisle seats sisters brotI1ers $6000 and a maximum oilPope John XXIII grand-and godparents filling $8700 at the 15th year with aput it to keep up the rest of the pew We beshy $180 increment for the bacheloilrltP with the longed to Kate on Her Day degree teacher with a staterhythm of the What class a small whis- license and a minimum of $630times To quote pered the Headof the House as and a maximum of $10000 asfrom middotThe the names were read out at the the 18th year with an increoChurch middotin Our beginning of Mass That we ment of $200 for the masteroDay collective thought was the ~ason we had degree teacherspastoral of the been included Not so Each

American hiershy child in the First Communionmchy recently published Our

eHort at Class could designate ahead III Department of Justicepresent restructuring time which of the parish Masses

procedures in the Church withshy $~~ Approves Shared-Time to attend thus splitting theIn the national and Diocesan number into more intimate HARRISBURG (NC) - Tk)eommunities depend in great family Jroups Pennsylvania Department dWORLD OF FASHION Jmeasure on the seriousness With Justice has ruled that there ampJiilThose who eboBe to Jeeetve lIS Iwhich study is undertaken and ~~~~ By MARILYN BODERICK ~

the disposition to implement )amp bull class were allowed to do IlO no legal bars to shared-~ The altar rail had beet1 opeIil shy education of private ~ a the part of the laity pupils iii public schoolseCl wide with lmeelers tor thlee EASTER CLOTHESNew Prooedure I iD the center At CommUDion Deputy Atty Gfin John 1)

One change nO doubt fsmilshy time 8 smiling priest weleomed New clothes at Easter have tiful example of creativity and McCord who issued the opinioa Jar to families in many Dioceses each little First Communieant become a eustom that we an craftsmanship was an ensemble at the request of state Supe~ came to our attention forcibly intendent of Public InstructiOll flanked by father and mother find hard to break It came modeled by nine year old Robin and impressively in practice followed by other members of down to us from the days when Cambra daughter of Mr and David H Kurtzman said the

only requirements which muSt last week the family If there was only one the newly baptized Christians Mrs James Cambra of Our I speak here of the new cusshy Catholic parent another family wore white garments made of Lady of Grace parish in Westshy be met are the consent of the

tom (new to us at least) of local public school board andmember receivedwith the child Dew linen This became such ))Orthaving children receive First the payment of tuition at theothers of the family following a tradition among the faithful Robins stunning Easter coat Holy Communion not as a class regularly established rateIt was all so natural warm that to appear in new clothes on and dress were made by her

receiving the Big McCord cited a 1949 lawbut each Sacrashy and dignified on this tbe Easter Sunday mother in yellow lightweightment for the first time with Day rectlling the words d which states that No pupilsymbolized the wool The A-line coat had a parents and relatives shall be refused admission toPope St Leo Recognize 0 n e w Ii fe diagonal self button closing and

Long gone in many areas is the courses in these additionalChristian your dignity through Christ a tiny mandarin collar When the custom of turning over one schools or departments by reashyThe Irish have dark-hired and vivacious RobinlImvi~ Pmstollof the Sunday Masses to the son of the fact that his elemenshyan ancient say- removed her coat the slimFirst Communion class - girls Mter Mass with aplomb only tary or academic education Ising that goes dress underneath was seen toin dresses veils an being or has been received in awhite and on eight-year-old could muster For Christmas have a yellow blue apd tan one side of middotthe aisle boys in Kate betook herself to the saneshy school other than a public food and drink plaid bodice with the plainwhite suits on the other back tuary to invite our new pastor for Easter new yellow wool of the coat carried school of the church reserved oftenshy Father Louis Quinn to bei He added however tnKItclothes Most over info the skirttimes with standing room house brunch otni shared-time arrangements mudonly for writing people in the The finishing touch to thisfor parents of necessity be subject to thefor him her address Diocese will fol- stunning outfit was the tiny hatWith the growth of parishes guidelines promulgated by theGoodness knoWll how ID8DY low this custom that sat atop Robins curls forthere often came transfer all similar invi-tationa Fat her Department of Public Instrucshy

by dressing their ebildreh iul it too was her mothers creationFirst Communion day to Saturshy Quinn must have receivedl tiontheir new Spring finery 0111 and jcent middotfeatured alternatingday a sensible step but stiR plenty wed ~ becauSe he Easter Sunday panels of the pale yellow andtmly for First Communicants cup eoffeeIIimply sipped 11 of In the pre-school ret blondE the plaid wool

and their parents Because of at Katies house B1lIt be did and darling Sheila Whalen In the same show Norma8Pace limitations grandparents come chatted with anmiddot Gf 1Il Higher Earningsdaughter of lIT and Mrs Wil- Comeau of SS Peter and Paul 8Odparents brothers and sisters ble2sed the house 8Dd ~ateB liam Whalen laquoIi St ThomaslIilcles and aunts were invited new gift statue then went _ More ehurch in Somerset will parish in Fall River was 8 vishyout for this precious occasion to visit other parish homes be decked out in polished blue sion of green and white Norma ON YOUR SAVINGS JIbey eouId line themiddotsidewalks Twas all a happy experience eotton Her very special Easter wore a green wool coat a 4Ntside take pictures perhaps for Kate and her extensive famshy Sunday dress bas a long torso matching green and white Per An middotmiddot p to breakfast with their parshy ily appropriate to this the Year topped by a short sash tile dress and a white straw topper Ask abOut ticular First Communicant buamp of Faith II1eeveless zrmholes are edged that had a sweetheart shape that waS that iD crocheted lace and the bodice Green ill all shades is one of INVESTMENT

Kates Day JiB embroidered with tiny flow- the most popular colors on the SAVINGSMmnesota Parishioners ers in shades of pink white and agenda for childrenls SpringSo It was with surprise we fashions Beth Cook~ daught~r CERTIFICATESweeeived a telephone invitation Vote Closing of Schoo~ blue

Also represen~ng 1bepre- oJ Mr and Mrs Andrew Cookfrom eight-year-old Kate to atshy PIERZ (NC) - Members of primary middotsetJn the Easter parade of Immaculate Conception parshytend the 11 oclock Mass with SAFETY - Savings insured safe br Iifour parishes in the Pierz area will be Lisa Marie Texeira ish in Fall Riv~r has a limeher last Saturday On arrival at agency of the U S Governmentof Minnesota voted 835 to ioo daughter of Mrmiddot and Mrs Frank green Eastermiddot dress trimmedchurch we wondered if we had for the closing of the Father AVAILABILITY - No notice requIredTeeira of Immaculate Concep- with with a white cowl collarthe right time and place No more

Pierz Memorial High SChool 1lm tion parish in Fall River Lisa and white cuHs on the short Your funds available when neededwhite dresses and veils June is a delicate-featured little sleeves Beth chose this dress SAVE by MAIL - We process prompIIJon one side of the ~sle )hite

The Pierz district has decided beauty whose dark tresses will herself because she Ifell in love and pay postage both wayssuits on the other no unishy to build a public senior high beset off by a once upon-a- with the white vinyl flowers school which will be large time dress in pink and navy scattered over the skirt and Assets over $41000IlOO

Parish Hires Full-Time enough to accommodate all high blue The high necked dress bodice of this charming Spring school students in the district made of sheer cotton has a and Summer linen

Layman Theologian Therefore m u e h discussion GlOwl collar long full sleeves Of course the pre-teen set FIRST FEDERAL BALTIMORE (NC)-St Matshy and a romantic floating skirt wants something new for Easterabout the most practical use of Savings and loan AssociatloDthe Catholic high school facili shy

first parish in the Baltimore ties bas taken place in the last _pink bodice and the waist- daughter of Mr and Mrs John archdiocese to employ a proshy circling cummerbund but the Steen of Taunton and my god tf FALL RIVER thews Church has become the Tiny tucks are featured on the and Miss Joan Leslie Steen

few months fesionally trained ley theoloshy Tbe vole--()pen to all parishshy really eye-catching feature oil child will attend Easter Mass gian as a full-time member af iOllers over 21 ill the four afshy ibis outfit ill the skirt of navy at St Pauls church wearing an the parish staff ~cted parihes-was taken III blue cotton with pink polka outfit as yellow as a daffodil ~-~~-------_~ first Federal $awIOIS bull LeaD a ~

~ 1 ortb ~1Il st Fan lIiwer llaa ~ Joseph Hargadon a fonner response to a suggestion of~e dots Certainly a dOll-like outfit Joans yellow coat has gold but shy ZIp 02722 IlIlIIIa 174-4881 ~ member of St Clares parish st Cloud diocesan school board for a dainty Miss tons and 8 slanted back belt ~ke application by phOlle middotIt JOll jE6sex who ~ii now studying at The Catholic high school Mothers Sew - her yellow Irish linen sheath ~

the Institute of Lay Theology building will probably beused While commentating 8 ehil- dress is sleeveleSs and has white n iridlvldua Account B joint AccaIIamp iii ~ Prease DJNn a savings account EIIcIGslMJ Iin San Francisco will be c0shy as an elementary school in the drens fashion show for the Do- emb~idery trim on the hemline ~~OO ~ordinator of St Matthews Conshy future Father Patrick Thompshy minican Academy alumnnae ill and bodice This yellow-haired ~

fraternity of Christian Doctrine son principal of Fathermiddot Pierz Fall River I was awed by the brown-eyed beauty has even Address middot1 program Msgr Clare J 0- Memorial High School said th~ ntimber of mothers Whohad chosen JOllqtiil yellow patent

acheck III tbe amount 111 -iDwyer pastor said He begina several possibilities are being sewed their childrens Easter accessories tomiddot complete her working in the parish Aug ~ studied outfits Probably the most beau- look j

~~~~~

A][D FOR VnCTnMS Foodfor victim~ of the Washi~gshyton civil disturbance following the death of Dr Martin Luther yening Jr in Memphis was distributed at churches of all denominations in the capital Here Sister Joanette of Catholic University gives bread to burnedout families at St Mamns Church N Capimiddottol and T Streets NC Photo

9 Best to Delay Rose Pruning Unti1 Laterin Spring

By Jo~ph and Marilyn Roderick

With the break in the w~ther weve experienced lately here has been ample opportunity to get outside and begin the Spring chores that have tQ be done before the garden is ready for Summer I have noticed quite a few weekend prdeners busy with the urrection is really felt as the odds and ends that await the priest changes the bread and prdener after a quiet WiD- wine into the body and blood ter But I have also witness- of our Lord and the faithful go ed quite a few I suppose out of up to the altar to receive Comshyanxiety over the rough Winter munion Then the seven weeks we experieneed and out of im- of sacrifice leading to this day patience 1igt get started doing take on deeper meaning and the jobs that could just as well wait Light of the World truly shines until later m the month r AIl can truly sing Alleluia Wltil Way For the young of the house-

Pruning roses is a good ex- hold the Easter eggs are another mnple of a job that is best held great joy They come in many off especially this year when sizes and materials Some are Ctere has been so much top-kilL lteonfections of spun sugar and lt might be well to wait until dreams This type generally has atent buds begin to show an opening through which the themselves em what look like child may view a wonderland ~ad stems until the job of of painted landscapes and minshy)rUning is tackled It has been iature figures my experience that dead-Iook- I always adored these fantasy mg wood has n way of coming eggs when I was a little girl and ~ life in time so go easy with it was a rare and special event ampe pruning shears until you to receive one My own youngshyIJlre certain there is no life in sters however deJive more enshylaquohe stem you plan to amputate jOfment from the decorating

How to Prune and dyeing oil the hardboiled eggs

Pruning roses seems to pre- A few years ago I made an (leDt P~obJ~JiuJ to gardeners and Easter egg centerpiece by decshy~ it is a Simple task I try 00 orating (with glitter beads prune lTlyroses so that they sequins and white glue) egg graduaily asSUme an urn shape shells that had their contents tftliit is so that they have an blown outmiddot and hanging them eD1ltY cenier rhis can easily on a giided branch that had be begun by prumng each stem been placed ill a plant pot This aiatroti want to retain so tha~middot makes a verY lovely display and ihe cut is made just above an the eggs can even be used as _tward pointing bud Christmas tree ornaments the

If the bud is pointing out the following December but this laquorowth which ensues from the delicate work is not for tiny bud will be outward and there- hands lor growth will be away from Symoo)s oil Life the center of the rose Next I The Easter egg and the Easter try to make my cuts so that the bunny have always been symshyappermost portions of each boys of Spring and new life litem are approximately the Ancient people in many lands lIaDle height from the groun6 exchanged eggs at their Springagain to give the bush some festi vals They dyed eggs yellow8Diformity of appearance for the returning sun and red

The height of the bush makes for joy and life In England the attle difference as far as I am children enjoy III custom called eoncerned so I usually make Pace egging The Pace eggers my cuts at whatever height I go from house to house chantshyean get uniformity This year ing this rhymefor inStllnce there has been a PleaseMr Whitelegpeat deal of top-kill on my Please to give us an Easter eggJOses so I may have to make If you wontt give us an Easter cuts fairly close to the ground eggbut I find little difference in Your hens wiD all lay addled the quality of the roses regardshy eggsless ~ of how much I remove in And your cocks lln lay stones pruning In this country of lIpoiled

A third consideration in darlings our children would be ~ing is the removal of 014 disappointed H the Easter wood to make place for new bunny did not leave chocolate trrowth Thb becomes a pr0bshy eggs candy chickens and other lem when your roses start to expensive goodies However -ee considerably I try not to be even with all the commercial drastic in this regard by cutting trappings that go with the dayGUt one old stem a year thereby It still manages to retain It IIl8king room for new growth great joywithout particularly affecting T1uis liuoo roast is perfectlybull e plant delicious Ive bad tt for Easter One other point about prunshy dinner oth~r years and plan to Ing Many of the old ramble1ll serve it again this year Its and climbing roses should be quite worthy of II repeat pershypruned after they bloom and fonnance DlJt before I notice a great Cumberland L9mb Boast IIl8ny people pruning their 1 leg of lamb about I to dlmbers before they bloom poundswhich does nothing for the 1 teaspoon salt elimber but remove scOlelI of 1 teaspoon dry mustard blossoms ~ teaspoo1l ground ginger

In the Kitchen 5 thin lemon sIkes Baster Sunday is a day of great cup currant jelly

toy and excitement The special 1 Tablespoon lemon juice Kaster moming breads (IDJ 1) Trim oJ escemJ fat lroa 8aOther-in-Iaw always ~ lamb Rub went with a mixture Individual sweetbreads for the fJIl the salt mustard and ginger ebildren with a hardboiled egg Place roundoo silde up OIl a let in the crust) the excitement rack in roastiDjJ pan Do Dllt elf new clothes the Easter egg oover pan bunts the tIradJltional famIJ ) Roast -bl Ii a10W (331-) llIlnner but Elbow all the beauty en for amp 1tOun IlDd quiet ~ 01 Easter SID~ 3) Remove roaJt from 0ftIl Mass and eut 4 cd tbe lemon dices

be joy of this great least 01 In half arrange Ue a half sliceS the Resurrecti_ of our SaviCNl petal fashion OIl sidlte of JOaSt evident JI1 n the custo~ holding in place vith dampened tbat sur r 0 11 n d 1lhis feast wOoden ~icIW place the wbole IIut the full 1mpaot of the Bell- alice in center

)JJRDINATION The first Melkite Rite ordin2ttion of priests to be held at the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception Washington DCt was conducted by Bishop Justin A Najmy NC Photo

- Extend Program I Interfqith Organization to Conti~~e shy

Aiding ~prrnEr JoliCQrpseh WASHINGTON (NC)--A na- reftary of the National Confer-

tion-wide volunteer prog~lJn ence of Catholic Charities hasshyto help Job Corps trainees find said JACShas tapped the iTeshya place in the workaday world mendous force of volunteers al shyhas been extended for another ready available in this lountry year William P Kelly Job and they are hard at work asshyCorps director announced here sisting young llen who have

Joint Action in Community proved by volunteering for the Service (JACS) a private non- Job Corps that they want to profit corporation was organ- help themselves ized by leaders of national The young men coming out Catholic and Protestant social of Job Corps are severely hanshyaction agencies dicapped by backgrounds of

It includes on Us board of poverty poor education and unshygovernors representatives of stable family life As a result business labor and civic organ- they have more than their izations share of problems as they atshy

tempt to make it on their ownJACS has organized a netshy

work of 5000 volnteers in 500 JACS volunteers are giving communities in the U S re- them the helping hand they eruited from churches service need he added clubs and community agencies who are DOW assisting some 1000 returned corpsmen each Women to Hpnormonth

Msgr Lawrence J CorcoraJlO BisJlop Apri I 18 lACS ~Ild chairDl3lll and ~ The Ca~olicWomens Club

0If New ~(ord will hold its annual Bishopll Night OIlSee E~tablishes New bunday evening April 18 at

Education Office the Harbor Beach Club in Matshytapeisett Supper Will be servedGREENSBURG (NC)-Bishop at 630William G Connare of Greensshy

burg has announced the estabshy Guest of Honor will be Most lishment of a new diocesan ofshy Rev James L Connolly Bishop fice of education whicb win Gerrard moderlltor for the New coordinate the work of several Bedford organization will also existing departments be a guest

All area pastors have heeDThe new office which wm invited to attendopen JolT 1 will join and ex~

tend the programs of the presshy Mrs Paul L LaForest first ent diocesan schools office and vice-president will serve as the Confraternity Off Christian chairman ojf arrangements Doctrine office and win be reshy Reservations will be accepted sponsible for the total educashy by Mrs Jamell M Anderson tional effort of the diocese Mrs Maurice Hurley Mrs Paul

A newly organized departshy LaForest and Mrs Daniel F ment of religious education will Dwyer Reservations close sat shyaid in planning religious edushy urday April 13 eation programs fOr the parisb and diocesan schools the CCD and other groups both at the adult and youth le~ls ATWOOD

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 11 1968

Says Young Seek Moral Values

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - The so-called sexual revolution is l

turning away from hypocrisy at a turning toward promiscuity ays an expert in sex education Or Mary C Calderone execushy

tive director of the Sex Informashytion and Educational Council of the United States believes toshydays young people are highly moral despite the example set for them by their elders

Speaking at the 22nd annual meeting of the Texas Council on Family Relations Dr Calderone stressed

Promiscuity has not increased on Americans college campuses We know our young people are behaving far better today than were willing to credit them with Young people are looking for moral values based on fact rashyther than mythology

Dr Calderone condemned exshyploitation of sex by commercial advertising and called for sex education which would streSD the importance of human relashytionships and not merely the mechanics of reprOduction

Your kids ought to know you cant save a bad marriage with good sexshe asserted

Sisters of Pro~ider1ce Vote to lRe~ise Rules

SPRINGFIELD (NC) The Sisters of Providence of Holshyyoke community of nuns speshycializing in care of the sick aged and underprivileged have voted to revise their rules and customs to permit greater flexshyibility and freedom in the reli shygious and personal lives of theIr members

At a general chapter at the communitymiddots Holyoke mothershyhouse the 39 chapter -delegates voted to permit experimentashytion hi religous garb give members the option of using either their baptismal and famshyily name or their religiou name pennit members to travel outside their convent wilhout a nun-companion

Also to limit participation hi common prayer to Mass and to two portions of the Divine Ofshyfice Lauds and Vespers allow community members to develop a schedule of private prayer require every member of the community to be addressed WI Sister instead of Mother~

and allow part of the nuns free time to be given to variolU fOnDS of the apostolate to civic activities and civil rights proshygrams in a way befitting theIr state in life and according to their individual consciences

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Choose AmericH Superior General

MoUNT KISCO (NC)-Fqr the first time in the 160-yellW history of the Religous of tim Cenacle an American has b~ elected superior general

Mother Rita FOy was electetl to the post at the general chapshyter of the Cenacle in Rome acshycording to the orders interpro-shyvincial public relations offiC() here in New York

The general chapter whielli is still in session is evaluatinti a series of recommendations fOli a general decentralization opoundl authority the launching of eJJogt

perimental programs by too Cenacle and the restructurinfi of Community life

The Religious of the Cenaclo is a worldwide congregation 03 Sisters committeed to the wom of retreats and religious in-gt struction There afe three American provinces

Mother Rita Foy was born 1rI

FLYING DOCTOR Dr Leo Brown and his wife Isabel a registered nurse are shown with their children Rebecca 1Qand Joel 8 with the C-essna plane they use for their Flying Doctor Service in the diocese of Gwelo Rhodesia NC Photo

THE ANCHOR Thurs April 11 1968

Project Equality Issues Guides For BMyers

CHICAGO (NC) - The first national directory of 3931 business firms comshymitted to equal opportunity in all aspects of employment has been published here by Project Equality

It will be used by more than 7000 churches synagogues and religious institutions participat shying in the interfaith fair emshyployment drive that urges givshying preference to the listed firms in all purchases of goods and services

Project Equality offices in Jlive cities are publishing re- gional buyers guides as well They are in Columbus for Ohio Detroit for Michig~n Hartford for Connecticut Omaha for New York City and was gradlDgt Nebraska and San Antonio for ated from Hunter College Sillj

Texas IFlying Doctor Serves Africa Mission south entered the Cenacle in 19~1i The national guide is a comshy completing her studies in Romo

pilation of 976 national and She was assigned to the Miltlligt 2955 local or regional firms do- Vietnam Veteran l Wifel licensed Pilots western province of the Celilgt ing business with religious inshy acle with headquarters in CtJiDRIEFONTEIN (NC)-In the the Gwelo diocese covers some must drive over lO miles of stitutions They include 40 of cago and has held a number am

grasslands here onmiddot a 5OOO-foot 14000 aCres it includes a 300shy dirt bush road seven miles of the top 500 U S corporations assignments as superior of vashy

high plateau the Cat hoi i c bed tuberculosis sanitorium a relatively good road-and watch and range down to small neighshy rious Cenaeles in the Uniteamp

of mainshy 100-bed hospital a farm an out for wild animals all alongmission Driefonteinborhood businesses States and Canada1ains-of all things-a hangar elementary school and trade the way

Listing in the Quyers guide She will now reside in RoJJl() for a Cessna 182 Skylane air shy schools for carpentery tailorshy Thus far they have encounshymeans a firm has signed Ii

plane ing and homecraft tered only baboons monkeyspledge to hire and promote deer mongoose lizards andThe mission staff totals somewithout discrimination has filed FrQm this point the missions lleslYJits to Performbirdsa report form with Project doctor can cover nine out-stashy 1200 people 35 of whom are

Equality detailing the number tions spread over an aerial non-Afrfcans The mission and Witch Doctors Woth City Symphony of its niinority-group employees distance equivalent to that beshy hospitals are operated by Afri shy The Biblical quotation The BALrIMORE (NC) -Fathe1 -broken down by jop classifi tween San Francisco and Los cans and by Swiss Bethlehem harvest is indeed great but the Bruno Markaitis SJ provinshyeation-and has pledged to take Angeles The plane was proshy priests and Brothers German laborers are few describes the cial of Lithuanian Jesuits in the further affirmative actions vided by the Mission Doctors Domincian nuns African nuns scope of medical work in Africa free world will guest conduct

Association of Los Angeles three laywomen-two American according to the Browns In the Baltimore Symphony in twc Pledge C()()peraiion Calif as part of its Flying Docshy nurses and a German teachershy these rura~ regions there is II of his own piano compositioDll

Cooperating businesses also tor Service begun here four and the Browns ratio of about one doctor to in Ii concert sponsored by LCgtJio have agreed to undergo periodic years ago The Brown children attend a every 33000 persons Mrs ola College here Sunday eompliance reviews to assure At that time Dr James Carey small two-classroom school in Brown said Africail medicine At the keyboard as soloi

Umvuma a town 17 miles away and witch doctors are still verycontinued affirmative employshy now a Santa Barbara Calif wiiI be two other Jesuit pries~ much in evidence she addedment ac~ions according to surgeon arrived at Driefontein The journey to and from school Fathers Leslie J Schnierer -and

Thomas Gibbons Jr national to begin his three-year mission is looked upon as quite an adshy It is heartbreaking to see a Benito Rivera students at thIl director of Project Equality hitch He decided quickly that venture by the family as they child with measles have to go Peabody Conservatory of Music

In addition to the firms listed The concert will mark thewith a plane one doctor could though life blind because the in the guide more than 12000 do the wbrk of five ndanga (witchdoctor) put mull 50th anniversary of the restorashyother businesses have filled out With the help of the Swiss Pittsburgh Diocese (medicine) in the childs eyes tion of independence to Lithoshycommitment forms pledging coshy Bethlehem Brothers Dr Carey Tithing for Poor she said But in other areas aniai operation with the program but began surveying and laying out like TB the African is relJlarkshy

PITTSBU~GH (NC)-Bishophave not yet supplied the necshy landingstrips near isolated and ably sophisticated medicaHy

John J Wright has announced essary statistical employment doctorless clinics and hospitals Kariangwe Berejena Kana Education Officethe Pittsburgh Diocese will unshyreports which are similar 10 The Brothers also built the Serema Matibi are all farshy NEW ORLEANS (NC) - Aledertake a new tithing plan tothose ~equired by the federal hangar at priefontein and Dr away-sounding places but the office of religious education bllllhelp finance housing and othergovernment Carey arranged for one Brother people suffer as you and I been established here by Archshyprojects for the pOOr The nalles of firms listed in to be trained as a pilot suffer from sickness They bishop PhilIp M Hannan a The_dioces~ will give 10 perthe buyers guides are available Meanwhile in Los Angeles mourn when their children have will supervise the teaching oct

cent of the contributions andonly to religious groups parti shy Dr Leo Brown a former Navy to be sick and often die she religion in parochial schoolBbequests it receives and thecipating in the program surgeon with 11 years of sershy continued and in Confraternity of Chrisshysame percentage of collections

PIroject Equality sponsored vice and his wife Isabel a Perhaps some of their disshy tian Doctrine classestaken up for directly diocesan

by the National Catholic Conshy registeled nurse were volunshy eases have strange-soundingpurposes to finance povertyference for Interracial Justice teering for MD~s three-year nawes but all come under theprogramsoperates six other local offices hitch in Africa He was just title of Gods sick These are CONRAD SEGUINThe money will be used withtouching seven more states Adshy home from Vietnam where he the names of clinics that are

other religious groups for intershyditional offices will be opened served with the Marines visited by the Flying Doctor BODY COMPANY faith housing programs andin major cities this year acshy Staff of 1200 she said Aluminum or Steelother joint dforts for the poorcording to a spokesman Dr Brown and his wife are 944 County Street

Parishes will not be requiredlicensed pilOts So last Sumshy NEW BEDFORD MASS mer when they and their two to tithe but are invited to conshy Chief Speaker

WY 2-6618ISenQte Ideas f children-Rebecco 10 and Joel tribute voluntarily NEW XORK (NC) ~ Msgr 8~arrived here MDA sent the John J Egan director of the

Continued from Page Three Cessna 182 along with thein Chicago Archdiocesan office ofStart With 45and to preach in the one Dioshy The Driefontein mission in tirbanaffairs will be the chief

eese have them in the pther GREENSBORO (NC)-Fortyshy speaker at the May 16 banquetfive priests of the Raleigh dioshy of the 1968 Catholic Press AsoshyWhile the 24 diocesan priests Abortion Bill Passes cese have formed the North ciation convention in ColumbusSenators are elected the two Carolina priests association Ohiomembels of the Priests Senate In Maryhind Ho~se Seventeen others have indicatedwho are members of religious

commullities are appointed by ANAPOLIS (NC)-A ~m to they wish to become members the Bishop These will be ro- relax Marylands 100-year-old The Raleigh diocese includes all

North Canlinatated among the religious com- abortion law and put its regushylation into the hands of themunities doing parish work in

the Diocese At present the Sen- medical profession passed the ators from religious communi- House of Delegates by im 86 ties are Father Felician Plichta to 47 vote OFM Conv and Father Co- The bill permits a doctor opshylumba Moran SSCC eniting in an accredited hospishy

tal to perform an abortion to The Bishop has encouraged a preserve the physical or mental

study of pension plans that health of the mother to prevent would involve laypersonnel of birth of a deformed or retarded diocesa~ ail~ parish facilitieii childand to end some plegnan

The Bisholl has ma~li liQme ad- CieScaused by rape just~ents)nassessmtntson pat- UnClet the~ptesel1t law abor ishes tflking into account the tiOll is peimitted ~hen two growth o(~ubU~Iiln ~~riShesah~ Ihysicians a~r~~ it itnec~ssar~bull

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Church~en Study Racial Problems In New Jersey

NEWARK (NC) -The Church cannot tell otheJiS what to do until it faces the problem within its own comshymunity a Methodist Bishop has told Essex Count~ clergyshymen of all faiths in an a~essshyment of the racial problems beshysetting Newark and other New Jersey communities

Bishop Prince A Taylor and Catholic Auxiliary Bishop John J Dougherty of Newark disshycussed the race problem in light of the report of the Govemors Commission on Civil Disorder

Cooperative Solution Bishop Taylor stressed it is

the duty of the church to beshycome knowledgeable about the report to read it carefully Action without information is irresponsible he declared as he noted the church must face up till the fact that it has parshyticipated in maintaining the status quo He noted that when ~he commissionen pelsonally toured the riot area and asked the people what the impact of the church was in their lives all but a pound~w marked the church ltDfpound

Bishop Dougherty said if the problem is to be solved it will only be through the involveshyment of the total community government industry labor unions churches schools peoshyple living in the suburbs

Dont Have Time The attack on t1e problems

must be two-fold he asserted first meeting the needs which the coming Summer presents and then planning long-range programs to overcome the root causes of the problem

There is an urgen t need of immediate programs to enable us to have time to work toward the ultimate goal

Bishop Taylor referred to the need for time to work out solushytions We cannot undo the evils of 300 years in one Sumshymer he emphasized This illmiddot not going to be a case of a quick antidote and then they Jived happily ever after

However a Newark priest active in innel-city work who was one of six reactors to the presentations made by the Bishshyops remarked that comments about needing time to solve the problems overlook the fact that we dont hlVe the time

It would be great if we did have it to keep order but q (gt bull

the people bull have the imshypression that nothing has been donesaid Father Joseph Stulb

Many are ready to riot again if only to call attention to themselves he opined The black community despairs that the white community has or will change its attitude

Rev William Fox associate general secretary of the New Jelsey Council of Churches scored the commission for fail shying to note the contribution thpt a divided church - white and black - mademiddot to the elisis H~ cliticized the church for mainshytaining silence during public controversies which were listed as proximate causes of the riotshying

Another Catholic Magazine F0 Id S

DAYTON (NC)-Mary Today a magazine founded in 1901 deshyvoted to information about the Blessed Motherand her role in the Church has issued its final edition

It is one of 11 Catholic magashyzines which have ceased pubJishycation in the past )eal because

of 1088 ~l circulation The rnaf- orders are af Teutopolis JIL azine had a reoont eirculauOll Lake Bluff in and St Meiri

~ aooU~1151gtO middot - ~lnclbull - - -

BENEMERENTI MEDAJ~ Father James Vizzaro SJ second from left received the Benemerenti Medal at a dinner in Washington -on the occasion Of his retirement as dishyrector of the Washington office of the National Catholic Rural Life Association Conshygratulating him are left to right Msgr ~dward W ORourke executive director of the NtRLC Bishop Henry J Soenneker of Owensboro Ky rural life advisor of the usce department of social action and Msgr Luigi L Ligutti Vatican observer to the UN Food and Agliculture Organization and former executive dirootor of NCRLC NC Photo

Fr Vizzard Gets Benemerenti Medal Work for IFhlltfol lPoor Recognized

the Holy See to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization priests and Protshyestant clergymen and members of Congress

Msgr George G Higgins di shyrector social action department U S C a tho 1 i c Conference praised Father Vizzards comshybination of scholarship political know-how great tenacity of

Schedule Workshop O~ Sex Education

WASHINGTON (NC)-Father James T McHugh director of the family life bureau middotU S Catholic Conference will direct a workshop on Sex Education to be held at Catholic Univershysity of America here June 17shy28

Purpose of the workshop is to prepare a basic core of people especially teachers and parish personnel to supplement the work of the home in a complete program of education in sexu- ality It will provide these pershysons with background informashytion give them opportunity to evaluate some of the basic mashyterialsand engage them in an in-depth analysis of a curricushylum guide which reaches every grade level

Lecturers and consultants will include Fathermiddot John L Thomas SJ of the Combridge Center fOl Social Studies Dr and Mtmiddots Joseph Bird co-aushythors of The Freedom of Sexshyual Love Dr Ann F Lucas chairman of the psychology deshypaltment Farleigh Dickinson Universit~ Teaneek N J and Father Walter Imbiorski direcshytor of the Cana program in the Chicago atchdiocese

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purpose and above all genushyine love for the poor

Father Vizzard will leave Washington to middotwork in Califorshynia Nevada Arizona and Utah the region of the Jesuits Cali shyfornia province

Four Cleveland Nuns Quit as Religious

CLEVELAND (NC) - Four nuns one the prineipal of a 1100 student girls Catholic high school have separately withdrawn from the Sisters of Notre Dame here in Ohio

It was the largest departure since 1966 when 10 Sisters of Notre Dame were released from their vows to move to Pueblo CoIQ to form an experimental community middotThe Sisters of Notre Dame is the largest order of 2531 Cedar St New Bedford nuns based in the Cleveland 993middot3222 Diocese

imiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot~middotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot~ middot 3NEW HIGHERi RATE OF

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Taunton

THE ANCHORshyThurs April 11 1968 11

Support Bi~hop5

Equa~sty Plea MINEOLA (NC)-The Cathshy

olic Interracial Council of Long Island has voted overwhelmshying support of Rockville Censhytres Bishop Walter P Kellenshybergs call for equality in housing employment and edushycation

Bishop Kellenberg issued Zl pastoral letter-A Call to COl1shyscience-in which he said it i9 essential that every man be given equal opportunity for eJQP]oyment and job advanceshyment and equal educatton for himself and for his children

Declaring these to be fundashymental moral issues facing the people of Long Islanp the council said We give this statement by Bishop Kellenberg our overwhelming sUPPOtt

John J Clarke council president said the eounciB deemed it necessary to reit shyerate its support of the bishops statement co gtI bull because of our increasing concern over conshytinued discriminatory practicelC in these areas

In a policy statement the council declared the bash cause of racial unrest lies in the almost complete lack oR any meaningful contact between the races Today there are few whites who can say they really know Negroes This ignorance of each other is caused almost lxc]usively by patterns of segshyregation in housing which reshysuited in segregated schools 3mll a segregated society

As a step in breakin( these patterns the council recomshymended passage of open housshying ordinances in all towns OK

Long Island Only when there is no place left for the white man to run will the problem be solved it said

Norris H Tripp SHEET METAL

J fESER Prop

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WASHINGTON (NC)-Father James L Vizzard SJ retiring Washington director of the Nashytional Catholic Rural Life Conshyference received the papal Benemerenti medal hele in recshyognition of his work for t~e

rural poor of the United States and throughout the world

The presentation at a dinner in the Cosmos Club was attendshyed by Bishop Henry J Soenshyneker of Owensboro Ky NCRLC president Msgr Luigi Ligutti permanent observer for

Prelate Advocalles Open Housing ILaws

JEFFERSON CITY (NC)shyBishop Joseph M Marling CPPS of Jefferson City has urged Catholics of the diocese to campaign openly and fearshy

- lessly for area open housing laws

In a pastoral letter urging open housing law support the Missouri prelate askedshy

Who fails to see that to conshydemn a large segment of our people to the cruel segregation thatmiddot closed housing entails is to sin gravely against charity justice and the vely finest inshystincts of our nature Who may deny that to perpetuate such an evil in this enlightened age will bring malediction upon us

For jurely he answered Chlist is brother to the eolored in the identical sense that he is brother to the other children of men

Plan Fa-II Opening Of Joint Semill1ary

CHICAGO (NC)-A graduate school of theology for seminashyrians ftom three Religious orshyders will open in a former hotel here in the Fall

The school to be known as the Catholic Theological Union will be operated by the Passhysionists Franciscans and Sershyvites in the fOI-mer Aragon Hotel near the University of Chicago

About 100 students ue exshypected to enter thl school this year Area seminariltes ourrent-middot ly being used by themiddot threfl

2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese 01 Fall Ri~~r-Thurs Apr 11 1968 S~~in S~ntences priest- and Laymen

JOurrt)~a$ts Opinions Differ_On V~~e of Bishops Synod

By Msgr George G Higgins Two American journ~lists who have covered the Rome

1beat off and on for several years-Father Francis X Murphy CSSR and Gary MacE0 in-have just published an interesting account of the Synod of Bishops which was held in Rome in 1967 (Synshyod 67 A New Sound in what they manege to teU us Rome Bruce Publishing Co about themselves in their sep- Milwaukee) Written in the arate and widelydivergent asshyfamiliar Xavier Rynne style it Sessments of the Synod is something of a tour de force How two men who disagree given the se- so fundamentally about the uecy w h i c h pros and cons of the Synod ever enveloped the managed to work as a tandem $ y nod a 1 in the writing of the history of proceedings The the synodal proceedings is to authors h a v e put it as mildly as possible a tried to give perplexing mystery on account as They tell us that for aU that a c cur ate as lies between their separate possible under evaluations Df the Synod they the conditions are jointly accountable but that of time and cir- the internal logic of their inshycumstance For dividual viewpoints and the my own part I dialectic of the situation led think they deserve better than them to attribute exclusive reshya ~as~ing grade They do ~lOt sponsibil~ty for the Prelude to ~lalln to hae wrlt~en anythmg a priest and for the Postscript like8cIefmltIve hlstory of the i to a layman SYlo1IgtUt they have proyid~d Far A art 1IllS wlth a useful mtenm sum- P mabr of the -proceedings and I take it that this is a polite ~r ~ii w~ cin) begrateful way of saying that when they

Perplexing Mystery got around to summing up their Tothis reader however what impressions of the Synod they

the authors tell us about the

lSynod ls less mterestmg than i

~ 8holJd have concluded contrashyr rlwise- that it was seriously - lacking in credibility and releshy

vance and was thus on biI- ance a huge disappointment

lRationaJize Differences

Such differencesmiddot of opinion on the part of experienced

jourpalilts covering the same everit-and using the very same

source~ of informationare not to be Vf~npered at

On the other hand I am Dot very happy about the curious- way in which the authors haveshyrationalized their differencea Th~y tell Us that one evaluatioo Df ~he Synod (Father Murphys) w~ ~ritteo from the viewpoint of the institutional Church and the other (Mr MacEoins) from that of conteinporarshyman~ind

Or again in Mr MacEoin words A priest professionally involved in the institution will

tend to lean in one direction 11 layman whose professional sushy

- viva rests on his sensitivity to

SPECIAL DELEGATE Marches Ghilio Sacchetti 42 has been named by POpe Paul VI to succeed Count Enrico

Galeazzi as special delegate of the Pontfical Commission for the state of Vatican City He is wearing the now outshymoded costume of a Gentleshyman of Cape and Sword NC PIloto

world opinion in the other

Now Bear This

This strikes me as being bull slightly threadbare and hopeshylessly pre-Conciliar dichotomy I know of a Dumber of priests (and so do the authors I asshysume) who rightly~or wrongly are just as critical of the Synod as Mr MacEoin is

I also know of a number III laymen (and so do the authocs I must assume again) who rightly or wrongly are just as sanguine about the results of the Synod as Father Murphy is So whats all this doctrinaire I

stuff about priests necessarily looking at things (myopically) through the allegedly unenshylightened eyes of contemposhyrary mankind

Tell it to the Marineal

found that they wer~ so ho~e-lessly far apart 111 theIr thmkmg

that the division of labor so I cryptically described in the above quotations appeared to be the only possible way of salshyvaging the middotoperation Thatll fair enough

It isnt at all surprising that one of the authors (Father Murphy) should have concluded that on balance the Synod was truly a contribution to the Church~s aggiornamento and that the other (Mr MacEoin)

MAnmn (NC) - Sz~en per- sons incIl~lg a Cathollc priest have bc)n sentenced to prison terms and fined by Madrids Court of r lic Order on charges Olf havinr participated in an anti-Frangt meeting in Barceshylona in lS~G

On trial were Father Francisshyeo Paula Botey and 10 laymen who were accused of attending

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an illegal meeting The meetshying was advertised as a Day of Repression and criticized what it called the repressive activities of the government of Gen Franshycisco Franco

Father Botey who admitted during the trial that he atshytended the meeting at Barcelona Universitys law school was senshyten~ to a year in jail ~d fined

about $214 Three of the laylDell received similar sentences amplid fines while ~ others drew six-month jail terms aDd four were absolved

Father Batey testified duriDtl the trial that he deliberately atshy1ended the meeting to protest against the ftPress1on he bad said he had seen of -certain see-shymenta of ampbe Spanish clergyshy

Prelate Supports Catholic Schools Opposes Racism

NEWARK (NC) -Archshybishop Thomas A Boland of Newark touched on racism Catholic education and aborshytion in his annual message to the Archdiocesan CouncH of catholic Men at its CQnvention here

Noting that BOrne people adshyvocate closing Catholic schools to concentrate on adult educashytion Archbishop Boland said I believe we mU9t give as much time as is possible to adult edushycation but not that we should ignore our chlIdren

If we close our schools he soid there may 00 no one to attend the adult courses iJn future years

He deplored the absence of religion in the education of many people and said that while 0 ohild may be receiving o good academic background under such circumstances he is not being trained in his will or his morals

Jthortion Is Murder Archbishop Boland noting

~hot the question of relaxing bortion laws is before the state LeFislature recalled that he lralNi opollen to the men about ~ot Dubject a year earlier and repeated what he had said then abortion is murder

Should the state legislate more liberally in this field he said it would go outside its sphere and we would have no

right to follow it He indicated however that

the Church would not oppose the establishment of a legislashytive commission to study the abortion law

Discussing racism he called it a malignant growth in our society and announced his support for a peaceful interrashycial walk through the streets of Newarks ghetto

Spokesmen lor L2ity Archbishop Boland also urged

the men to turn their council into a real spokesman for the laity He ruled out the possibil shyity of a voice for the laity toshytally independent flrom the hierarehy declaring that this is not the structure cd the Church

H we want to build a strucshyture the archbishop said we get an architect to give us a uniform plan Christ is the arshyehitect of the Chureh We are its workmen

He then urged the men tID take the steps which would make the ACCM aspokesman for the people II real council

Delegates adopted four res0shy

lutions endorsing catholic echools condemning racism lin every form advocating retenshytion and expansion of the states IIChool bus law and opposing relaxation of the abortioD statute

Stresses Increased Food Production

NEW DELHI (NC)-The vatshyican recognizes the need to mshycrease food production middotas a most serious problem facing the developing countries and mshydeed the world as a whole Elizabeth Reid II member of the

bull Vatican delegation to the United ean delegation to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD)

Speaking at the UNCTAD meeting here in India MilS Reid said The right to food 18 01117 another aspect 01 be mosi eaered of all buman rigbts the right to life and it is tb1s parshyticular aspect of the problem of development that places the heaviest and most serious burshyden em the comlcieDee of man- flIIIIampy from home kiDd ~ bull lot cbeapeJ tIIaD IiDDC

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HEATHER CUTTHNG

Sacred Hearts Junior High School Student Is Licenseod Amateur Radio Operator

Holly and Heather Cutting 532 Walnut Street Fall River share a transistor rashydio With some teenage sisters this might cause trouble but not with this pair Heather Jets Holly take the transistor She settles for pop music from Johannesburg South Africa-via her shortwave set They have real good musicraquo she says Blonde 14 year old Heather learned the In ternational Morse Code a basic requirement for amashyteur radio operators when she was seven but its only in the past year that shes really worked at the complicated hobby Her father Dick Cutting ll construction superintendent by profession has been ll radio ham for 30 years by avocation An awesome battery of receivshyers and transmitters fills a room of the Walnut street house and when Heather displayed real inshyterest in them she had iii wi)) ing teacher close at hand

Heathers an eighth grader at Sacred Hearts Junior High School on Prospect Street in Fall River and she admits that she does as much homework as IIhe can at sOOool to have eveshynings free for her hobby She at shytends radio classes nightly then hurries bome to spend as much as three hours at ber sel

Im llicensed for two fre- I

quencies right DOW she exshyplained I can talk on six and two meters Translated that means she can contact amateullil

--in this part of the United States but may not ta]k tomiddot overseal operators until she earns 1Il middotgeneral license

Im Working for my license DOW she said rohe examinashytion JIm be in 00 days Even the license that Heather now holds however is umusual for one of her age When she gets ber general license she Will be among itB Y01lllllgest holders and probably the youngceBt 8h licensee in the stlllte

rhere are 11426 lI8dto amashyteurs iD Massacbuatts I18id her father aInd cmIy 409 aJre WCllInen

wm CoDtaet lFather A real benefit to ~ Cutting

family from Bellltberll general lieense wID be iba1 1Ibell be able tID reach bel fathe bull blB car short wave mctic wheD he is OlD hIfl freqUeDt bwliness tripal

distance calls said Mr Cutting The electric light company figshyures I can run this rig 16 hours a day for only $290 a month

Heather hopes to make a cashyreer of radio technology Right now she is able most of the time to repair her set if someshything goes awry and shea building a small transmitting station for an upcoming science fair at Sacred Hearts Itll broadcast about 200 feet she said

Sometimes Of couJrSe gremshylins pop ill Like the time Heather got a phone can from a boy in Swansea Hey did oU know youre coming m on eiYclnnel 2 on our TV be said 011 another occasion Heather picked ~ her fathers transmisshysion OIl ber electric pitar speaker

Most of the time however things go smoothly During her nightly radio sessions Heather picks up signals Jrom other amateurs and has some schedshyuled appointments vis the mllshyways withmiddot friends hi otheJl mties

When she picks up 5 llllew

eontact she confirms it with II brightly-colored postcard bearshying her name and station 0011 etters in psychedelic pink Wld yellow

Collecting such postcards 111 2 sub-hobby for radio amateulll and Holly has a oozzling eollecshytion on the walls of her radio room She bas Mganized the Sou the a II t ern MassachushyIlett8 Teenage RadM Net aocll ill

BEFORE YOU BUy-tRy

PARK MOTORS OLDSMOBILE

OIdsmobile-lPeugot-Rencnft fJ1 Middle Street Fairhaven

llooking for new members Its just for teens she says

=rheyre more fun to talk to Once she has her general 11shy

cense she plans to join Iil group that relays messages from Viet Nam servicemen to their famshyilies

other Bobbies Badia is by no means Heathshy

ers only hobby Shl~ and her sister Holly a freshman at Emshymanuel College have an imshypressive collection of sharpshyshooting trophies mostly garshynered at Fall River Rod and Gun Club meets I began shootshying when I was six and had my Own gun when I as seven eaid Heather

Other interests are mathematshyics and music Heather picked lIP guitar playing on her own and belOngs to a folk group which plans its first public apshypearance after Easter

In short shes one teen whoD never be found wondering what to de next

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THE ANCHORshy 13Thurs April 11 1968

Houston Priests Get Pay Raise

HOUSTON (NC) - BishOJ John L Morkovsky announceCl a pay raise for priests of thE Galveston-Houston diocese and said a new retirement poliCW will go into effect Jan 1 1970

Under the old pay scale asshy sistants received a base salary of 11250 plus $30 car allowshyance and $1250 insurance preshymium for a total salary of $155 a month Pastors received a total monthly salary of $21750 The new salary reale will allow for increased pay based on the number of yearo priests have been ordained

Assistants who have been cshydained less than 10 years wiill receive a total monthly salary of $200 The figures will ~

$225 for those ordained moro than 10 years

Pastors with 25 years in t100 priesthood will receive m monthly total of $275 ThoSQ with more than 25 years will receive $300

The retirement policy ca1lJfl for optional retirement at age 65 and mandlltory retirement at 70 However elderly pries1amp who are able and willing m37 be assigned to other priestly work than the pastorate Bisbshyop Morkovsky stated

The bishop said the changes are in accordance with the recshyommendations of the Senate 01 Priests and follow consultashytion with diocesan consultom

Reach Impasse-PIITSBURGH (NC)-A state-gt

level meeting between Cat~

olic officials and the Nationl11 Association for the Advanceshyment of Colored People on furshythering racial integration iB Catholic schools reached m seeming stalemate here bn Pennsylvania when the schoolshymen cited lack of funds as ll major obstacle to NAACP pro= posals

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YOUTH CARES FOR AGE Retired Sisters are tenderlycared for at chair while Sister Mary Agnes looks on Center Sister Agnes Maureea Mmiddott St Mary Convent Fall River Left Sister Agnes Maureen seniormiddot wheels SisterMary Jer~me anQright Sister JohnCatberine bringgdri_ infirmarian points out magazine article to Sister Mary Lig~~ri inwheel to Sister Mary Ursulamiddot Both infirmarians are licensed practical nurses

I

Cqrdinal Roy Raps Apathy

MEXICO CITY (NC)~MaushyJOice Cardinal Roymiddot of Quebee _ a visit here as ehairman of the Pontifical Commission for World Justice and Peace said Christian teachings condemn violence in solving social probshylems but also condemn themiddot false prudence that lacks the eourage to make needed reshyforms

The prelate who has been touring Latin America for sevshyeral weeks said he was 1mshypressed by the number of Cathshy

olic organizations and institushytutions already applying Pope Paul VIs encyclical The Deshyvelopment of Peoples in their Jespective countries

But he added Latin Amerishyearn still have to assume fully their responsibility in workingtowards economic balance andmiddot bull just social order 80 every cit shyizen can promote his own welshyfare in a climate of freedom and common good

bull bullbull tmiddot

Comes KindIYcimiddotmiddotSislesmiddot 0 Mercy AmiddotI Fall River Comiddotnventmiddot

By Patricia McGowan

~When thou wast younger thou didstmiddot gird thyself anddidst walk where thou Frouldst But when thou shalt be old thou shalt stretch forth thy handsmiddot arid another shall gird thee and lead thee whither thou wouldst not In its description of the almost universal lot of age this is one of the most poignantpassages in Scriptur~ But age comes kindly f~r Sisters Although they are not exshyemptmiddot from its physical and mental ravages they need not fear being forsaken byfriends or being left alone the

fanulymiddot Jhe famllylast of a that is a religious community cherishes its older members and provision is made for Sisters to pass their last years surrounded by tender care

Among havens for older Sisters is the infirmary at Mt St Mary Conventmiddot Fall River The Sisters who have spent most of their religious life in the Fail River Diocese come here for their laBtyears exshypliliried Sister Agnes Maureen

The cardinal added at emiddot pretB8 RSMmiddotmiddot senior iniirmarian at eonference in the headquarten the Mount Her domain proshyf the Mexican Social Secreta- vides eh~rf11~ccQmmodations riat that national efforts for de- for 10 Sisters Each has her ownmiddot elopment do not eliminate the room andthere is II kitchenette aeed ~forfoleignaid where those ablE lobe up and

The Pontifieal commisSion Cardinal Roy indicated ill enshyaged in persuading rich counshytries to devote at least one per eent of their groSs national product to assist poor eountries

Archdiocese Adopts Project Equality

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing notified the priests lIeIlate of the Boston archdiocese of plans 10 adopt Project Equality a program designed to use purchasing power of church institutions to make firms supplying goods and 8elVices wipe out diICriminashy birislM Placticeamp

e~ut ~n enjoy their meals ~gethermiddot

The ~nfirmaryis but II few stepis from the Mount chapel wher~ the retired Sisters spend hours a day in prayer for comshymunity members still in the active lPostolate Also claiming time for Sisters whose eyesight permits are needlework ana erooheting projects

Always DraWlll Cheerful and dedicated Sister

Agnes Maureen who has I Deen at the infirmary six years is aided by Sister John Catherine who has served the aged Sisters two years A laywoman takes the night shift in the infirmary ensuring the Sisters round the clock care Bothmiddot Sister infirmashy

rians are licensed practical nurses who received their trainshyI g to L d f F tma Hosn a ur a y 0 a I shypital in the Providence Diocese

When I entered religion I hoped to be an infirmarian

said SIster Agnes Maureen I whas alwdays drawn to work for t e age

Some people think we havent got a nursing apostolate she added but we need nurses desshyperately Right now we have nine Sisters taking care of inshyfirmaries in our province

Among Sisters now at the Mount infirmary are Sister

Mary Agnes who celebrated her diamond jubilee last DeshyceJl)ber and most of wbose r~lishygious life was spent in New Bedford and middotNorth Attleboro schools and Sister Mary Lishy

gu()ri whomiddot f9r 49 yearl taught sixth graders at st Patricks School Fall River

HShe looks out her window at St Patricks said Sister Agnes Maureen and she says Theres home

The Sisters are welcoming the arrival of Spring and warm days said the infirmarian It means they can enjoy their sunporch sit in the Mounts garden and go for occasional car rides Of course they have many visitors she said Other Sisters in the house come to see them and so do Sisters from the convents where they forshymerly lived

Yes age comes kindly for Sisters Not Hke the old lady overheard in a downtown groshy

eery confiding to a chance fellow-customer her discovery of a bargain in frozen food I live alone you know and 1 get

three big servings from a packshyage--and only 29 cents

N 0 Sister lives alone

bull

~~tplic Newspaper Wins Press Awards

NEW ORLEANS (NC) -The eJarion Herald middotarchdiocesa middotnewspaper won eight awards iii the annual competition of the

N~W Or)eans Press Club ~ competition included daily and

weekly newspapers wire serVshyices and television stations

Millard F Everett editor won first place in two categories - editorial and best religioWl story This marks the first time in five years of competition that the Clarion has taken the top award for best religious story Staff members of the paper also took three second and three third place awards

----------------------------

ZENITH bull ACOUSTICON bull UNEX

bull BIOLOGICAU bull YITAMIIIS

C~tt 615-7829 IRENE R SHEA PROP

Prompt Free Delivery in fALL RIVER SOMERSET TIVERTON amp VICIHITY 101 ROCK ST (CORNER OF PINE ST) FALL RIVIImiddot

~ 6

THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFon River-Thurs Apr 11 1968

CathoJi~ ll]wnDv~JSityPltDcopy~regii~copyJ~

IPlanLUBffil AmeFicon ~1]~regregO WASHINGTON (NC) - A ops and l~aders of several South

jJroup of pr-ofessors from Cathshy American governments sHe University of America hope The Washington center comshyS n~w technical middotinstituteat the middotprises -ll group of professorsshy~tholic University of Gu~Washy mostly members of the CU caulI Ecuador may mark the llchool of middoted ucation-whomiddot are ltJPening of an international edshy specialists ineclUcationfordeshyvcation bridgetoLatin America Velopment Director of the proshy

The institute will be inaugurshy ject is Dr Jose A Baquero ated early this month as 11 middotcoshy WM has been commuting b~shy1)eIativeventure by the Center meen Washingtonand his nashylor Educational Research fa middottive Ecuador dming the -cmrent QuitoEcuadorand the Center school year lor Community Developmenhmd This is not an Ecuadorian Servioe at Catholic University project it is an internatienal bere It has the support 01 Vashy projed a resealclFaction proshykanofficials Ecuadorianbislshy gram between North and South

America Dr Baquero said middothereBC middotto Recruit laquorNe had to start middotsomewhere The natural plaoe 10 begin wasNegro St~1ent5 middot-the Qlace Where weaould get

CHESTNUT HILL (NC) shy the most facilitiesThisproject iesuit-eper-ated Boston College God willing if successful will bere has made available $100shy move throughout Latin AmershyGtOO fora talent search -progr1m ica We already have contracts to recruit Negro stJdents frem with interestedJeaders in Sao disadvantagedurbanareas middotof Paulo BTazil Bogota Colombia tlhecountry mainly in Greater and Lima Peru Boston Msgr Eugene Kevane direcshy

Father Michael P Walsh SJ tor of the Center for Communitypresident caUed for support off Development andServleedaimshyiIIe entirestudent body facshy ed iB number of Latin American Illlty and administration of EQsshy Church and government officialS Qon College to make the ~mshy have middotexpressed interest in thecram a success projectand a belid it may beshy

Since the program was starteJ come a model of assistance middottoIJeveral weeks ago some 50 ~shy lI3derdeveloped poundOuntrieslltIicatiopshave beenreceiltvelll He said ArcnbishGp Romolofrom students in ghetto areas Carooni apostolic nuncio 10lot -entrance middotin next Septemshy

~1u told him heilOllSiders theWltll freshman -class pmject of great importance andThere have a1w~ys beellU M~S a similhlr middotinstitute willIlegro students enrolled at B4tsshybe established at the Pontificalton College oUicials said ~t University in Limatheir Dumber is ~ot ~own 00shy

0tberhigh-ranking churchshyaYSe race is not shown 8ll1 middotmen who lthave endorsed theapplications The Collegemiddotacceptll project include MsgrLuigi Lishyattdents of all faiths gutti the Holy Sees PermanentN~t SeptemberNegro lrtlllshy

1Gbserver at the Food and Agrishy

bullnts with the necessary ~uaUshy6eations will be admitted n8 culture Organization of the 1Ilual while middotsome 25 will ge United Nations and Archbishop admitted under the talent Ceasar Antonio Mosquera fif

lt4IeQIChprogram The number is Guayaquil president of theEcshybeing limited for thegood af iliad-orlan Bishops Conference

GOLDEN JUBILEE Sisshyter Rose Alma Reid CSC (Sjltte1 M Flora) will mark herg-olden i llbilee of religious professjon on Sunday April 21 at Sacred Heart Convent New Bedford A Mass of thanksgi~rjng will be offered at 1130 Sunchw morning at Sacred Head Church and a reception will be held in the parish hall ITom2 to 4 th~t

afternoon Friends and forshymer pupils are invited t01l~

tend

So Curolina Bishop A-sksPettce $upport

CHARLESTON (NC)- Bishshymiddotop Ernest Lmiddot Unterkoefier of Charleston has called for the middotfull support ofall Americans of President Lyndon middotlB Johnshysons efforts to secure peace in middotVietnam

Tbe South ltCarolina Bishop said that the Presidents -peace ini tiati yes demonstrate that he is a gtarson who -has ever been conscious of the grave responsishybility 01 his ofillce and that his judgements have been measured ~y the critical threats to the securi~y and free action ofthe United States

ICampus Comediansl

R~JlJ~stforBirh ControJ 1nlcrmation lndBGSYlrncrGti(C~e

DAYTON (NC)-A Univershysity of Dayton chaplain said he suspected campuscomediami for 1b~ conJroversyaroused bY a request for availability of birth corttol information and materials In campus by theunishyversity stmiddotudent congress

Father Urban Rupp SM universi~y co-chaplain wrote in the chaplain s bulletin the alshymost unanimous aetion fthe student gfvernment group middotwas an idio~yncratic caper in the natureo Ii ttle childrenpl~ying

house He indicated he fouud it difshy

ficult to take the Pfoposa1 serishyomlY

Now of COUrse I middotcowd be taking this all -wrong be said

Perhaps it was intended 00 bn serious In that case I woUld be tempted to thinktheemershygency is not just immediateshyit is really one generation too late

This was taken asa reference to student efforts to pwih through the resolution orbirth control as an emergency -meashysure

That failed but a few days later the student middotcongressvo~ 29 tol to seeka change in llJllshyversUy Wlicy that would -pershymit the introductionof birth 1Ontrol selYiees in thestudem health center for married eQUoshy~les and Ulose llQOD _ ~arriedmiddot

the young Negroes whowiUbe ~pted oUiciaI said

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PATRIARCH The middotnewily elected head of the Syriac Oatholic Church Patriarch Hgtenys Antoine Hayek of Anshy~och was enthroned recentshy1w in Beirut Lebanon In this post hesucceds the late P-ashykiarch Ignace Cardinal TapshylPouni NC Photo

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In ~ glory of His Resurrection may be reborn man~

amiring hopes and CleSires _ ~ce

HAPPY EASTER THE OFFICERS DIRiEc1r~ AND STAFfshy

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Like to be her sponsorf Her name Is Sister Suzamma and she will write to you

iIHAPPINESS ciS

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THE ANCHO~-Trappists Elect Mother Church of Nation8 PortlglleSe 17 Thurs April 11 1968

Youngest Abbot P-epares fOI- Cenlellilial Celebration At Gethsenloni Dy Patida F r-u nis

GETHSEMANI (NC) The youngest abbot in the history of the monastery of Our Lady of Gethsemani was formally blessed (March ~l) by Archbishop Thomas J McDon~

ough 0pound Louisville Father M Flavian Burns

OCSO 36 ilgt the seventh ab~

bot in the 120-year history of the monastery He was elected by members of the community Inst January to succeed Abbot M James Fox OCSO

Father Flavian described bis position as en administrator whose main job il) service to others within the community He said his most important function it3 to hold plivate spiritual conversations with other monks and to handle the lillM)nasterys relations with the ~Atside world

Thcilt are some 120 monks at ~ethsemani abbey a decline from past years Abbot Burns cCrlbllltes the decline at least in prt to the attitude of the times YiJCl1 was foJJJlcrly accepted without question is now being ltI~etioned he observed

ltDontemplation Prayer

Changes have been made the IHurElY is now in English and 2Jc strict vow of silence has TiKen relaxed somewhat On an experimental basis the monks are allowed to use brief oral instructions instead of sign language as in the past

Despite the lack of radio or 1clevision Abbot Burns said the monks keep in contact through newspllpers with events in todays world The main thing ill to know what is going on in the Church and what effects our fellow hushymans according to the abbot

The life of a monk involves middotcontemplation and prayer rather than speaking up - 11 more spiritual turn according kI Abbot BUlns

A native of Jersey City N J he is a graduate of Henry SfIyder public high sehool there

Protests- Campaign Agamst Religion

NEW YORK (NC) - A new wave of terror against aU churcltgpers is now in effect in Albania an exile from that country has declored in a- letter of protest sent to the United Nations Commission on Human Rightsmiddot and~ to UN Secretary General U Thani

The protest bl Dr Rexhep KIasniqi president of the Free Albania Committee which has its headquarters here said that Albanial following a lf41oist eommunillt guideline has shut down every cltulch and mosque and has made any_kind of pubshylIc worship impossible

Thill campaign Dr Krasniqi tated is a violation of the UN Charter the Universal Declarashytion of Human Rights and of Albanias own communist conshystitutional guarantee of freedom of conscience for all

San Antonro Priests Form Association

SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Fortyshyene diocesan and religious comshymunities priests of the San Anshytonio archdiocese formed a priests association bere The priests ohose a six-member temshypora]) steering committee

One of the fiTst formal actions Gf the allsociatron was to inform Archbishop Robert E Lucey of San Antonio of the group forshymation

There are approximately 441

Parishioner d St John the Baptist Church in Nc Bedford are getting rendy for a momentoils event-the 100th anniversary of the fO~1l1dil1g of the oldest Portuguese parish in the nation The cen~en]ial celebration wi II not take place until 1971 but many things have to be done in preparation within the next three years One major project is renoshyvating the church ihelf To pay for the massive job ptrshyishioners have inaugur~teca Centennial Fund Drive to raise money for painting ~he church do extensive electrical work and buy a rew organ Estimated cost (f the regt3ir5 is $150000

Rt Rev Msgr John A Silvia pastor is honorary drve chairshyman and Frank S Jason is genshyeral chairman Other committee members include Richard GiJI1shysalves and Jesse V Santos Jr division chairmen JQseph S Vera special gifts chairman Richard L Lopes treasurer George Radcliffe director Louis S Silva assistant director Mrs Mary Lucy Soares office conshytrols and Miss Luey E Dias list supervisor

Members of the Campaign Exshyecutive Committee also include Frank M Martin ald Joseph C Motta

The history of St Johns and the history of the Portuguese people in America arc closely intertwined

It was at the end of the 18th Century that settlers began comshying from themiddot Azores to the United States TheJ were relashytively few in number nd as II

result almost lost their national identity

Near Ifood However by 1840 the trickle

of Azoreans was beginning to turn into a near Oood of imshymigrants who settled in New Bedford then a whaling and fishing center

By 1865 many Portuguese families called New Bedford home They lacked just one thing-a church of their own and a priest who spoke their language and understood their customs and traditions

Their first priest-Rev Joao Ignacio de Azevedo-anived in 1869 and on Sept 10 1871 St Johns parish was canonically established

Theremiddot were approximately 1shy000 Portuguese of Azorean deshyscent living in New Bedford at the time and the)T detelmined to build their own church A lot was purchased for $3OD8 ~ con~

siderable amount in those days and soon ground WQS broken for the new house of God

However Father de Azeedo was a mission pliest Vl~ho~moved

throughout the are~ aCministershying to his counblymen As a reshysult a new parish was establishshyed in Boston and he became its first pastor

Expandoll

Construction of St Johns WillS

continued by Rev Antonio de Mattos Freitas a native or Calshylteta St George Azores Fashyther Freitas also was responsible for the construction of a recshytory When he reUred because of ill health and returned to~ the AzoreS he was succeeded by Rev Antonio G de Silva Neves who was to serve St Johns durshying the greatest expansion Gfthe citys Portuguese colony

The first church located where a section of Morse- Twiampt Drill now stands soon ~ outgrown by its congregation and a drive began for agt new and larger church

Father Neves who served 8~j

pastor for almost 25 years saw the new church at County and Wing Streets almost coop]eted However ill health also forced bill retirement

PREPARING FOR CENTENNIAL In charge of fumd drive for hundredth anniversary of St John Baptist Church New Bedford are from left George Radclffe drive execushytive director Frank Jailon general chairman

pleted construction of the present church and rectory in three years The church which now serves the parish was solemnly blessed an4 dedicated to the worship of God by the late Bishshyop Feehan

Through the years the parshyishioners of St Johns have proved their dedication to their cliurch Now they are renewinr their dedication

Msgr Silvia notes that before the small St Johns Church was built the citys Portuguese colshyony attended Mass at St Lawshyrence Church Later they moved into what today is Crowells brt Store

Landmark Today the 11Inificent st

Johns is a landmark in New Bedford befitting its position as Mother Church of the Portu guese in the- UnFted States

MSgr Silvia a native of Pall River served at St Peters Church in Provincetown for 27 years His only other assi1shyment St John the B-aptirt Church

Ordained to the priesthood or Dec 20 1919 St Johns was the new priests first assignment He remained at the cRurch unshytil No~ember 1924 when he was transferred to Ptovinceto~

On Oct 2 1951 Msgr Silvia returned to St Johns as pzsshytor a post hemiddot still fulfills with zeal and energy

His assignmetlt to St Jobnfl parish in 1919 was not ~1sgr Sinshyvias introduotion to the New Bedford parish

As a young boy the p2stcshyrecalls his poundathers weekly trips from Fall River to New Bedford to bring back a priest

Four Families There were few Portuguese

families in Fall River in those days he says When my father arrived in Fan River there were iust four Portuguese families in the city Gradually others setshytled there

My father used to drive over in a horse and buggy to bring Il priest back tc Fall River to ll3y

degbrought him back the next dzy Since those days of hischiMshy

bood Msgr Silvia observeamp-l Turn to Page Eighteen

Continued fronmiddot Page Three

the late Tobias and Ann Lynch ]Burke Mr Burke was born in Newport Tipperary Ireland and his speech bears witness to the o-it and lilt of his birthshyplce He is married te Catbshyerine Lowney Burke and the couple lives next to the Chanshycery

DI1 Davia Costa Dr Costa son of David CosU

and Julia Rodrigues is the husshyband of Louella Somerday and fther of five children A dentshyist in NeJ Bedford he is active ir ceo and in St Vincent ~e

Pml work on a parochial and al(l level He has been zealoUJ ir- many important phases ~

perish aetivity in Immaculate Conception Parish in New BedshyforC He was recipient of the Diocesan Marian Award in Deshycember

itpJlin 15 TIle awards Jill be presenteCl

at St Marys Cathedral Fa]] River on lIlonday evening April 15 at 8 PM At toot timeuro there will be the investi shyture of two lI-ionsignori the awarding of Papal Knight 03 SZ Gregory honors to nine ~sect- oeesan laymen and the Pro EecIesia et Pontipoundlce award kJ mother Pierre Marie adminisshytlato of St Annes Hospital IE Fall River~

Join Federation IIALEIGH (NC)-Forty ()(f thfl

matewide Raleigh dioceses 14~

tlriests have formed the North iCaFolina Priests Associatioil which will affiliate with a Emshy

ticmal federation DOW beiJl~

formed

May the Joy and Pomise 01- Easter

uplift your spirit and gladden

your hean

FROM THE OFRCEIIS AND PERSONfJB Of

qkJM~ERCHANTS CIa1iotuLe BANK

IN NEW BEDFORD

SOUTH BANK-Cove St at Iodney French Boulevard WEST BANK-Kempton Street at Mill Stret

LUNDS CORNER BANK-Acushnet Ave rear Lunds Comer DARTMOUTH BANK-Dartmouth Street near Rockdale Ave NORTH BANK-Acushnet Avbull at Coffin Ave

CENTER BANK-Purchase and William Sts priests in the San Antonio arcl1shy Next pastor was the Rev Mass He used to stay overnight tiiocese Manuel A da Silva wt() oom- at our hOuse ald JlG ~tbeI

-

18 Tti~ ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1969 CatecheticsWeek Set at StonehillDioce$clm ~j[llIlde[lj)fl5 Join Nal-gonGI Some 400 priests religious and laymen are expected to at shyMculrraurru U A$~ssinatBon tend a catechetics institute b be held Monday Aug 5 throughOf Dr Mriin luther KilnS Saturday Aug 10 at Stonehill College Diocesan schools shared i~ national mourning at the Sister Mary Francille CSJ

~8sassination of Dr Martin Luther King with special theology professor at Regis ColshyMasses or prayers offered in every school At Cassidy High lege will direct the institute in Taunton Rev John Moore chaplain celebrated a Mass and speakers will include Rev

Frederick Moriarty SJ Revfor the repose of the soul Cha~les E Cook Rev James F(l)f the Negro leader and rently hplds first place in the Hawker Sister Florence -MishyNotre Dame math league chels OLVM Gerard Potte~

tlie chapel by students in a demy Fairhaven have been study periods were spent in Girls at Sacred Hearts Acashy

bauoi and Mrs Helen Jacobs With the theme Making Alllvigil for peace working on a project to bring

Christian Youth Movement Easter cheer to patients at St Things New institute sessiono will discuss Scripture catechetshymembers at Jesus-Mary Aca- Lukes Hospital New Bedford ical techniques use of filmsdemy Fall River heard the New Under supervision of Sister Jushywith adolescents other visualFolk a group of singing Holy lie Louise SSCC theyve ~een aids parent education teamCross seminarians Their appear- making tray favors including teaching and creative dramaticsance was arranged under t~e decorative placemats and napkin

Further information is avail shydirection of Mofher John Scarry holders for adults and flowered able from Stonehill CollegeJRJM Jollipops chicky surprises and North Easton 02356Also at JMA its French Week bunny hats for childern

The observance- began Sunday Science Fair Winners when French Club members Jeanne Phenix Yvette Berthi- Holy Family had four winshy Charities AppeaI aume and Susan Cournoyer took ners at the annual New Bedford Continued from Page Three part in a play sponsored by the Science fair In the senior division

Community Fund CampaignPrevost French Club Les Fem- James Berry and John Thomas president Board of Managers mes Parlent Trop Throughout of the New Bedford school were of Boston Dispensary and vice

the week too there have middotbeen cited fo~ earth science and phy- the Diocesan cheerleading tour- will combine with the seniors president of USOseveral skits prepared by mem- sics proJects respectively while t tl h ld t F h th bZbers in the junior division both Pa- namen recen yea ee an Lor e occasIOn SInce oth He has been the recipient of

or effort at Prevost was tricia Downey and SharonSmola High but sports arent all that cltsses of the academy are small honorary degrees from Holy MaJ matter at the TauntoJl girls due to the fact that the high Cross College Tufts University

e Sunday program Whlch ln- were recognized for work in the h f h d I ld f b sc 001 Break ast lunc an schoo IS being phased out Suffolk University Bradford -luded In addItIon to the play fle 0 iology M formal dinner pace settmgs The Junipero Club of Holy Durfee College of Technology~veral talks by promInent any students won honors at h M h I I I were recently on display at the Family High recently sponsored of Fall Rivet and Lowell Techshy

I remiddotnch cItIzens a French song- t e assac usetts RegIOn S F h school library and members of a talk on drug addiction for jun- nological Institute ~t and a motion picture Clence alr eld in Fall Rlver They included Christine Four- the Mothers Auxiliary were on iors and seniors The talk was Bishop to AddJess Meeting

UN French Club nier Dominican Academy and hand to answer etiquette ques- given by two brothers one an Most Rev James L ConnollyAt Coyle the French Club di- Diane Desmarais Mt St Mary tions from the students ex-addict the other director of Bishop of Fall River will speak

Ilected by Brother Hugh McCabe Academy both Fall River Both And the Coyle Fathers Club Marathon House a center for to the priests parish trusteesIOeCently elected officers After girls were recogiIized by the held its annual Father-Son Com treatment of addicts located in chairmen of the Catholic Charishy8le votes were tallied however Southeastern District of the Mas- munion breakfast at the school Coventry RIo ties Appeal and the invited lays our man at Coyle it looked sachuse~ts Dental Society bull with Robert Cahill ofthe Rhode CongratuIcitions go to Joseph gue9ts of the 111 diocesan if ~embers were voting for Debra Lay Dominican Aca- Island Food and Drug Commis Abraham of St Anthony High parishes bull UN delegation The presidents demy received a savings bond sion as guest speaker He dis- for meriting runner-up position Roland A Lafrance 1968 ApshyliPot wa~ captured he reports from the Bristol South Distriet cussed harmful effects of various iil the state finals of the annual peal lay chairman will also adshy a Polish fellow Cbarles Ozug Medical Auxiliary arid Michael drugs American Legion olatorical con- dress the 800 expected to attend lames OBrien a true Irishman Zito Bishop Feehan High At~middot The Catholic Students Mis- test - the opening meeting of the won the vice-presidential spot tleboro was awarded a plaque sion CrUsade at Stang H~gh has In club~ews at~HA the Senshy campaign for funds for the 30 while the treasurers job was by the Womens Auxil1ary to the taken as a special project this ior Science Club will conduct agencies of the Catholic Chadshy~warded to Jorge Matesanz -a Mass Veterinary ASsn month of April the collection of a farewell meeting for seniors ties Appeal

BASKETBALL PLAYERS On basketball team at Connolly High Fall River are from left Tim Duffy Tom Kroger John Long Joe Kelly Greg Sullivan Mike Manning

~~dent of Spanisll extraction Winners in the division of donated medical supplies and this ~month and members will Only Paul Bor9ue the secretary earlhscience Were John Dias eyeglasses for deprived Peoples visit an encephalitis clinic in I ~anaged to make the scene for Thomas Burk~ anciRobei-tClou~ of the world Supplies collected Freetown in May The Stamp France tier FeehahMicIlael Cote Pre illbe forwarded to the Cathi- and Coin Clubis planning a pubshy

At Bishop Stang iil North vost and Elizabeth Lavoi~ Do- olic Missions Medical Bureau for lie exhibition of members col- Dartmouth the math team led minican shipment iections in May imd the Chess by high scorer Lawrence l3yrnes Awards in math and engineer- Upco~ing at S~A Fairhaven Club has undergone reorganiza- placed secon~in a reeentBqs- ing went to Carol Vasconcellos is the aruiual senior prom which tion election of officers inshyflon public schools math meet Mt St Mary Madeleine Delisl~ wilL be held in the Colonial cluding Edward Norman presishyThe Stang team paced by the and Vivian Blais and Michael R60m of Whites restaurant in dent Daniel Brule vice-presi- shyeo-sIstent good work of George Zito Feehan Genevieve Pappas Westport from 8 to midnight dent Diane Lizotte secretary Oliver and EIleen Keavy cur- and Debra Lay Dominican Joan Friday night May 24 Juniors TuniorProm

Basile Feehan Amato Polselli The Holy Family Junior Prom Prevost and Sharon Woycie- Board ofmiddot Trustees isslated for Friday night AprilCentennialmiddot chowski Mt St Mary were 26 at Kennedy Center The prom

Continued from Page Seventeen cited To Study Changes will last from 8 to 11 and will Chemistry winners included have Carousel as its themebroad smile on his face-many Jane Arruda Anne Lewis De- WASHINGTON (NC) - The Mlisic will be by the Escorts

other families have arrived from nise Michaud Elizabeth St board of trustees of the Catho- And the Holy Family debatePltlrtugua1 A man d Diane Lamontagne lic University of America in team tied for first place in the Our Lady of Mt Carmel par- Christine Fournier Dominican Washington D C will meet Narry League with Cassidy A ~h was detached from St Johns Anne Sullivan and Pamela Can- Sunday April 21 in St Louis playoff will be held As of now as the Portuguese population dee Feehan Marilyn Riley and to consider a wide range of rec- Cassidys debate reco~d is 12 grew Then Our Lady of the Ann-Marie Charrette Sacred ommended changes resulting wins out of 14 debatesjrnmaculate Conception parish Hearts Fall River Irene Caron from a year-long study of the was erected to care for families Cassidy Marilyn Bentley Mt pontifical university by a comshyi Portuguese descent living in mitteee headed by Dr Carroll ~e North End of New Bedford St Mary Hochwalt

In the field of physics Alan middotRAMBLERToday St John the Baptist White Prevost Michelle Paquet The meeting will be held in ehurch has about 4000 parishshy SHA Fall River JamesReid Jrconjunction witll the Spring Americas Economy King ioners Our numbers started Prevost Mary Soans Jane Mc meeting of the National Confershy Fnr the Best Deal Come To dropping about seven years ago Donald and Martba Nugent yent ence of Catholic Bishops Broadway Ramblerasgr Silvia explains He feels St Mary The trustees are expected 10 INC part of the drop in membership Representatives from Diocesan name a new 30-man board meet 768 BROADWAYis due to a number of families schools to the Mass State Sci- with faculty representatives for RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 131moving outside the parish )ounshy ence Fair will include Michael the first time in histoi-y and CHARLES J DUMAIS Presdarles Intermarriages with othshy lito Amato Polselli Debra Lay discuss the search for a new er nationalities account for still Madeleine Delisle Jane Arruda university rector to replacemore losses Anne Lewis Father J~dhn P Whalen ~ho ~III11I11I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I11I1I1HIUIIIIIIIlIIlilllllllllllfllHlIilttmmIllIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllllnIlIllIllHIIIIIIIIIJ111~ However the Mother Church Denise Michaud Alan White was naine last October to a ef the Portuguese is not fading Michelle Paquet Elizabeth St one-year term as acting rector E WEEKEND SPECIAL sect away AmandSharon Woyciechowski A new school was built in New Projector

f957 It is expensive Msgr Silvia admits but I felt we needed it

St Anthony High in New Bedshyford is rejoicing over acquisi shytion of a movie projector as a

Parish gtrganizations are active gimiddotft from the alumni association and individual parishioners are willjng to give of their time

Presentation to principal Sister Lucille Champagne was made

and effort Perking

to keep the parish by Mrs Josephine Lafleur sociation president

asshy

Now they are getting read7 Cassidy-Coyle cheerleaders Jor a 100th anniversary captured third pillce v9Phy iil

_

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Case Somerset Favorites In Narry Diamond League

Case High of Swansea and Somerset are pre-season ehoices in this seasons Narragansett League baseball race but the club th8lt will bear watching is Westport TIne darkshyhorse Villagers may have a few surprises for Narry foes Another small area school

with a respectable 8-6 recordthat potentially has a shot Only one member of that at a league championship is squad Calvin Hopkinson will Norton of the Tri-Valley not be playing for the Villagers Conference Coach Ed Bibeau this Spring With the rest of the has most of last Deasons Central club ready to go - watch Jlor Village regulars Westport to make its presence in the fold ready lmown to challenge the Among fuose returning are perennial Paul Eastwood an Russ Picard favori1es If 0 T two of the better performers in Narry honors the circuit a year ago Eastwood amp1i1 at Norton led the team in hitting with a (C 0 a c h Peter highly respectable 360 averagem[l ~ek has pitched and played the infield G3ven returning Picard like Eastwood 15 also ~nnen for versatile An outfielder by trade ~theY chamshy he also takes his turn on the ii~~JWhip bid Peter mound for Coach Bibeaus nine Weo~port Bartek Carl Zajac and Jeff Hague tmIshed the 1961 eampaign ill round out Bibeaus four-man ~ place in tbe NalT7 loop pitching staff

Norton Bids for Tri-Valley Crown jfOO task of handling the but in thin scholastic year of

~tJ of this quartet will fall athletic surprises it may not be Gpoundl ~e shoulders of either Ron as big as some thinllt ~JmOi) or Manny Cabral both

A second place finisher inexperienced receivers ConnOlll 1967 the Norton Lancers haveexcel1B not only defensively their sights on the Tri-Valleybut likewise with the bat He Conference crown The clubsbit at a 333middot clip last Spring one-two hitters last campaignJohn Souza and Mike Andras have departed from the Norton th better than 300 hitters baseball scene but the teamqaln will be out to join the one-two pitching punch is reshyleague leaders in batting prowshyturning Juniors Ken Allen aess They should put a wallop left-hander who had a perfectin Westports oHensive attaCK 7-0 record last Spring and ArtIf Coach Bibeaus boys can dushyBouchard will be relied uponplicate their Performances of a heavily to bring the league flagJellr ago Offensively and biB to Norton Coach Bartek alSobig four comes through on middottbe hopes to get some help in middotthemound Westport may realize a the pitching departmentmiddot fromlong awaited Narry championshyFred Rego Bill Gorczyca andEip dream Admittedly if Ie Steve Nichols bull bie word in ~~rts_tuture

~ ~ bull I

OpeUp With~on-League Co~esttsmiddot Other returnees incl~ Capshy develop rapidlymiddot defensively if

tain Mike Wynnn Greg Croff they are to regain the leagues BOb Adams Tim McEndy and divisional crown - whicb flbeymiddot Paul Hassie Wynn a senior lost to HoWston last Spring middotmiddot will be starting his third season and gain a shot at the Trl shyill left field with Cruffstarting V~ey Conference ebampionshyhis second campaign in center ship Many area clubs openThey will be joIned by Wynns their campaign this week with brother Ricky in right fied non-league games highlighting

The infield win be anchored the action League competition by Adams at second base and will commence for the most Hassle at short Newcomers part next week Richy Silvia and George Macshy Mother Nature has done her Arthur are presently battling it job this Spring Baseball coaches out for the third base job and throughout -the diocese admit Lorrie Adams also a first-year that this is the best Spring they man appears to have the inside have had to prepare flbeir track on first base charges in many a year Weather

cannot be blamed for a slowMcEndy who has been the start this time around All areLancers starting catcher since eagerly awaiting the umpireshis Freshman year is starting first call to play ballhIs third campaign behiJd the

plate Bartek expects McEndy to hold the inexperienced inshy New School System field together

The Lancers will have to imshy In German State prove upon their hitting and DUSSELDORF (NC) - The

North Rhine-Westphalia state parliament middothas approved aCanadian Prelates change in the states school sysshytem that probably will meanEstablish Council the end of many denominational

OTTAWA (NC)-The Catho-shy schools Hc bishops of Canada have esshy By an overwhelming majorshytablished a 12-member Fiscal ity the parliament voted to Affairs Council composed of change the state constitution and clergy Religious and laymen establish the nondenominational who will advise the Church on Christian school in which reli shyfinanclal matters gious training is given by Cathshy

Among the areas which are olic and Protestant instructors receiving ini~ial attention of the in the same school as the patshycommittee is the question of tern for state-supported schools whether the Church should be from the fifth through the nint subject to government taxation grades and if so what form of taxation In the past the state has supshywould be equitable to churches ported Illeparate Catholic and government and other taxshy Pro tell tan t denominational payen Khoola

-~) PASSION PLAY Today Christians hold the Solemn Observance of the Lords Supper

It is commemorated ina PMsion Play at Prevost High School Fall River by David Poisshyson as Christ Paul Martel left 8$ St John and Paul Bouampquet as St Peter

DominicGlIsmiddot Rent ApGrt~~rit in Inner -Cimiddottimiddot middot

Want t~ Get Closer to I Agony of the Worl~middot WASHINGTON (NC)middot Pift his experience in the neig~lgtorshy ruary 1966 because theJ

Dominican priests-each doing hood is invaluable in helping wanted to get closer to the bis own thing-are living middotin an both prisoners and parolees He agony of the world While nol apartment in the inner ~ cd said the insight he gains into eliminating the academic life Washington here they come from ancl h~w they felt that living in the inlleJ The five run the gamut from they view life aids him In mv city would be as important bull

a professor of moral theology at ing them intelligent advice and learning experience as academic the Don)inican House ofStucUeII 8ssis~nCe study to a prison chaplain a1 the Diamp- Father William Kane is middotthemiddotNeighborhOoclll[aatrict of Columbia Jail Ibey neighborhood man of the have in common1heiy addresa A Pr~ceton graduate ~itl1 apartment Hemiddotworks with minshyand a desire to understand and doctorates from Harvard aJgt4 isters inmiddot the area in establishing alleviate the problems ~ livlnc OxfCrd Father Albert Brodershy youth programs and fightina I in a poor Urban community ick teaches Constitutional LalV for better housing and fail

Father TbomasHea~ middotttie at the catholic University Law rent laws His motive is to givemoral theology professor aDd School the people in the community aD author of a reCent bOOkmiddotID awareness of their own dignitymiddotBe and Father Heath startedFaee of An~sh is 0Il 1be to affirm the fact that it is athe apartment project in Feb-bOard of direCtors of the Pe0shy ood place to live ples Center a house soon to be

the rehabilitationopened for Criticizes Usury of alcoholics He also meets

MEXICO CITY (NC)-Mexshy5 50 01- a SYSTEMATIC wimiddotth ~culties of Wasbingtcm

icc CityS Jose Cardinal Garibiseminaries to discuss policyshy bull 10 year SAViNGSRivera urged bankers meetingmaking and apostolic activity MONTHLY DEPOSITSat the National Bankers Conshy

Legal Aid Office vention in Guadalajara to comshy 5 00 01- a INVESTMENT bat usury and work closely bull 10 year SAVINGS

Father Joseph Cooney a NOTICE ACCOUNTSwith the government to proshylawye~ who has worked 011

voter registration in the South mote the social welfare of all II REGULAR4 5001 the Mexican people bull 10 Jflar SAVINGSand took an active part in dvil

rights activities such lIS

~lma march is DOW admin~ Bass Rivertering a legal aid office in the CENTERneighborhood of the Dominishy Savings Bank

cans apartment Volunteer law Paint and Wallpaperstudents from the Catholic Uni- Bank 8y Man I

versity of Ameiica assist him Dupont Paint

We Pay The Postage

IJcor Middle St

A third member of the group m this program 4iiii 422 Acush Ave bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA Fat her Raymond MalonSOl1 ~ New Bedford bull SOUTH VARMOUTH 4raquo HYANNISserves as the Catholic chapiain bull PARKINGmiddot

bull DENNIS PORT bull OSTtRVILLEatmiddot the D C jail A late vocashy Rear of Storetion Father Malonson has been ordained only two years middot Father Malonsoll feels U1at

LEVESQILIES OFFla E~lnPMENTNow Many Wear Wood Metal Desks and ChairsFALSE TEETH

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs April 11 1968

PhySDCOUi) l1JJ Uges litUBgy C~[filges

~n Last RStes RED BANK (NC) A

~atholic physician called for revision of the liturgical $orm of the Anointing of the Sick cluring a discussion on The Chaplains Role With the Dying Patient at Riverview Hospital here in New Jersey

Dr George J Sheehan an alumnus of Manhattan College and a founder of Christian Brothers Academy in nearby lLincroft was one of three apeakers at the symposium coshyaponsored by the hospital and Ute 1 Redmiddot Bank Council of

ilhurches Citing obvious failures by

both physician and clergyman iin helping the dying patient and bis family Dr Sheehan sugshygested members of the family Ghare inmiddot a ceremony which would exchange feelings of llove and hope between them ElDd the dying person

Dr ~heehan observed that while inadequacy in the face of death has been in the past apparent to the Protestant criergyman it is now also felt by Catholic priests

They findmiddot he said the La~t Sacrament in its present form Ii a consolation only to those with the strong faith of a Breton iiteasant-a kind of faith they e seeing less and l~ss-

Appropriate Theology He also said while the develshy

pment of a Common Christian itervice parlakirtg of the same llodividual familymiddot and commu~

Ility significance as Bap~i8ai -dMarriage would be a giant p in middotheiping people to a middotbappy death iit would remain IDol theologians to present- a relshy

qwant lmd acceptable image of mail in this time and this place ilnd to develop an appropriate eology of death heaven ~nd bell in order to make a signifi- sant change in our life style

lOd therefore in our approach to death

Other panelistsmiddot were the Rev Seorge Fitzgeraid a Presbyteshyaan minister middotand middotchaplain at Princeton Hospiital arid Mn Ruth Snyder a nurse of the lIiverview Hospital staffmiddot

POSTER CHILD LEADS WAY Joey BeIge 8 of Syraeuse NY leads themiddot way down a White House lttairway in the company ofthe Fi~st t-adymiddotMrsLyndon B Johnson

and Mrs Muriel Humphrey wife ofthe Vice-President Joeymiddotis this years poster child of

the National Association for Retarded Children H~ ismiddot thesQn ofMt and Mrs Robert Beige middotmembersmiddotOf St Vincent de Paul parish in Syracuse whos-e ot-herfive children SlHshy

round their Uttle broth~r wil1hmiddot the love and care to h~lp him livea full and happymiddot life

Penn See Studies Poverty Pmiddotrogram HARISBlJRq (NC)--Coadju- is being made to see ho)Vtbe to coordinate and channel our

tor Bishop Joseph T Daley diocese canmiddot best use its re-middot efforts in the fieldmiddot vicar general- of the Harrisburg sources to alleviate poverty Bishop Daley said it ismiddot im- diocese calledmiddot on the nearly problems middotperative that all our people 50000 Catholics in the area to He alsomiddot said Wemiddot contem- knoW and understand the probshy

acquaint th~mselves with 10- middotplatemiddot the early middotestablishment of middotIem of middotracism and the funda- calracfal and poverty problems amiddotmiddot diocesanmiddot human relations mental moral injustices which

In a lettermiddot read at aU Masses commission middotto serve asmiddot a liaison middotare at the root of the deplorable BishopDlIleT said middotthat a study with all people Collcerned and conditions in our own area

Urges Hospitals Re~ognie Unio~s

CLEVELAND (NC) - AI layshymens group here has asked the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hospitals to declare its willingshyness to recognize labor unions as collective bargaining agents for hospitals employes

lNle request came in a letter from William A caldwell chainnan of the eurolevellllnd Conference of Laymen to Sister ~ry Collette of Hamilton Ohio president of the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hosplshytala during a one-day meeting here of the Ohio Hospital Assoshyciation convention

The laymens group said such a statement would promote the human dignity of hospital emshyployes in real and immediate ways serve the common good of our communities and inshycrease the understandingmiddot of Catholic teaching by all the citishyzens of Ohio

The letter pointed out that the National Catholic Hospital Association 1 a s t November called on Catholic hospitals tiraquo be guided by the social teachshyings of the Church and to deal with unions that employecfgt choose

Discuss ~iot Report On Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC) - Beginshyning Sunday April 14 the Catholic Hour will present over the NBCmiddot network a three-part series The Climate of Change

Evolution or Revolution foshycusing on three areas of social and religioUs concern today today

~gr Rop~rt Fox cOordinashytor of Spanish community 00shy

middot lion in the New York arclidioshymiddoteese will discuss The Riot centommissi~ middotReport Amiddot Chrisshy

tiati Response April 14 Msgr Ivan D Illich of the Intereushy-tural Center 01 Language and D middotoe u men tat 1 on CuershyDavaca Mexf~o win be intershyviewed Aprjl 21 and Father Francois Houtart Belgian 00shyciologist will be interviewed Apiil 28

The National Council of Cathshy oUc Men producer of the OathshyoUe Hour reconunendseheckshymiddoting local newspaper programa for broadca9t time in particushymiddotRar areas

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Page 9: 04.11.68

9 Best to Delay Rose Pruning Unti1 Laterin Spring

By Jo~ph and Marilyn Roderick

With the break in the w~ther weve experienced lately here has been ample opportunity to get outside and begin the Spring chores that have tQ be done before the garden is ready for Summer I have noticed quite a few weekend prdeners busy with the urrection is really felt as the odds and ends that await the priest changes the bread and prdener after a quiet WiD- wine into the body and blood ter But I have also witness- of our Lord and the faithful go ed quite a few I suppose out of up to the altar to receive Comshyanxiety over the rough Winter munion Then the seven weeks we experieneed and out of im- of sacrifice leading to this day patience 1igt get started doing take on deeper meaning and the jobs that could just as well wait Light of the World truly shines until later m the month r AIl can truly sing Alleluia Wltil Way For the young of the house-

Pruning roses is a good ex- hold the Easter eggs are another mnple of a job that is best held great joy They come in many off especially this year when sizes and materials Some are Ctere has been so much top-kilL lteonfections of spun sugar and lt might be well to wait until dreams This type generally has atent buds begin to show an opening through which the themselves em what look like child may view a wonderland ~ad stems until the job of of painted landscapes and minshy)rUning is tackled It has been iature figures my experience that dead-Iook- I always adored these fantasy mg wood has n way of coming eggs when I was a little girl and ~ life in time so go easy with it was a rare and special event ampe pruning shears until you to receive one My own youngshyIJlre certain there is no life in sters however deJive more enshylaquohe stem you plan to amputate jOfment from the decorating

How to Prune and dyeing oil the hardboiled eggs

Pruning roses seems to pre- A few years ago I made an (leDt P~obJ~JiuJ to gardeners and Easter egg centerpiece by decshy~ it is a Simple task I try 00 orating (with glitter beads prune lTlyroses so that they sequins and white glue) egg graduaily asSUme an urn shape shells that had their contents tftliit is so that they have an blown outmiddot and hanging them eD1ltY cenier rhis can easily on a giided branch that had be begun by prumng each stem been placed ill a plant pot This aiatroti want to retain so tha~middot makes a verY lovely display and ihe cut is made just above an the eggs can even be used as _tward pointing bud Christmas tree ornaments the

If the bud is pointing out the following December but this laquorowth which ensues from the delicate work is not for tiny bud will be outward and there- hands lor growth will be away from Symoo)s oil Life the center of the rose Next I The Easter egg and the Easter try to make my cuts so that the bunny have always been symshyappermost portions of each boys of Spring and new life litem are approximately the Ancient people in many lands lIaDle height from the groun6 exchanged eggs at their Springagain to give the bush some festi vals They dyed eggs yellow8Diformity of appearance for the returning sun and red

The height of the bush makes for joy and life In England the attle difference as far as I am children enjoy III custom called eoncerned so I usually make Pace egging The Pace eggers my cuts at whatever height I go from house to house chantshyean get uniformity This year ing this rhymefor inStllnce there has been a PleaseMr Whitelegpeat deal of top-kill on my Please to give us an Easter eggJOses so I may have to make If you wontt give us an Easter cuts fairly close to the ground eggbut I find little difference in Your hens wiD all lay addled the quality of the roses regardshy eggsless ~ of how much I remove in And your cocks lln lay stones pruning In this country of lIpoiled

A third consideration in darlings our children would be ~ing is the removal of 014 disappointed H the Easter wood to make place for new bunny did not leave chocolate trrowth Thb becomes a pr0bshy eggs candy chickens and other lem when your roses start to expensive goodies However -ee considerably I try not to be even with all the commercial drastic in this regard by cutting trappings that go with the dayGUt one old stem a year thereby It still manages to retain It IIl8king room for new growth great joywithout particularly affecting T1uis liuoo roast is perfectlybull e plant delicious Ive bad tt for Easter One other point about prunshy dinner oth~r years and plan to Ing Many of the old ramble1ll serve it again this year Its and climbing roses should be quite worthy of II repeat pershypruned after they bloom and fonnance DlJt before I notice a great Cumberland L9mb Boast IIl8ny people pruning their 1 leg of lamb about I to dlmbers before they bloom poundswhich does nothing for the 1 teaspoon salt elimber but remove scOlelI of 1 teaspoon dry mustard blossoms ~ teaspoo1l ground ginger

In the Kitchen 5 thin lemon sIkes Baster Sunday is a day of great cup currant jelly

toy and excitement The special 1 Tablespoon lemon juice Kaster moming breads (IDJ 1) Trim oJ escemJ fat lroa 8aOther-in-Iaw always ~ lamb Rub went with a mixture Individual sweetbreads for the fJIl the salt mustard and ginger ebildren with a hardboiled egg Place roundoo silde up OIl a let in the crust) the excitement rack in roastiDjJ pan Do Dllt elf new clothes the Easter egg oover pan bunts the tIradJltional famIJ ) Roast -bl Ii a10W (331-) llIlnner but Elbow all the beauty en for amp 1tOun IlDd quiet ~ 01 Easter SID~ 3) Remove roaJt from 0ftIl Mass and eut 4 cd tbe lemon dices

be joy of this great least 01 In half arrange Ue a half sliceS the Resurrecti_ of our SaviCNl petal fashion OIl sidlte of JOaSt evident JI1 n the custo~ holding in place vith dampened tbat sur r 0 11 n d 1lhis feast wOoden ~icIW place the wbole IIut the full 1mpaot of the Bell- alice in center

)JJRDINATION The first Melkite Rite ordin2ttion of priests to be held at the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception Washington DCt was conducted by Bishop Justin A Najmy NC Photo

- Extend Program I Interfqith Organization to Conti~~e shy

Aiding ~prrnEr JoliCQrpseh WASHINGTON (NC)--A na- reftary of the National Confer-

tion-wide volunteer prog~lJn ence of Catholic Charities hasshyto help Job Corps trainees find said JACShas tapped the iTeshya place in the workaday world mendous force of volunteers al shyhas been extended for another ready available in this lountry year William P Kelly Job and they are hard at work asshyCorps director announced here sisting young llen who have

Joint Action in Community proved by volunteering for the Service (JACS) a private non- Job Corps that they want to profit corporation was organ- help themselves ized by leaders of national The young men coming out Catholic and Protestant social of Job Corps are severely hanshyaction agencies dicapped by backgrounds of

It includes on Us board of poverty poor education and unshygovernors representatives of stable family life As a result business labor and civic organ- they have more than their izations share of problems as they atshy

tempt to make it on their ownJACS has organized a netshy

work of 5000 volnteers in 500 JACS volunteers are giving communities in the U S re- them the helping hand they eruited from churches service need he added clubs and community agencies who are DOW assisting some 1000 returned corpsmen each Women to Hpnormonth

Msgr Lawrence J CorcoraJlO BisJlop Apri I 18 lACS ~Ild chairDl3lll and ~ The Ca~olicWomens Club

0If New ~(ord will hold its annual Bishopll Night OIlSee E~tablishes New bunday evening April 18 at

Education Office the Harbor Beach Club in Matshytapeisett Supper Will be servedGREENSBURG (NC)-Bishop at 630William G Connare of Greensshy

burg has announced the estabshy Guest of Honor will be Most lishment of a new diocesan ofshy Rev James L Connolly Bishop fice of education whicb win Gerrard moderlltor for the New coordinate the work of several Bedford organization will also existing departments be a guest

All area pastors have heeDThe new office which wm invited to attendopen JolT 1 will join and ex~

tend the programs of the presshy Mrs Paul L LaForest first ent diocesan schools office and vice-president will serve as the Confraternity Off Christian chairman ojf arrangements Doctrine office and win be reshy Reservations will be accepted sponsible for the total educashy by Mrs Jamell M Anderson tional effort of the diocese Mrs Maurice Hurley Mrs Paul

A newly organized departshy LaForest and Mrs Daniel F ment of religious education will Dwyer Reservations close sat shyaid in planning religious edushy urday April 13 eation programs fOr the parisb and diocesan schools the CCD and other groups both at the adult and youth le~ls ATWOOD

OIL COMPANY Break up jelly with a fork a cup stir in the lemoD juice and Spread ovell tbelamb Re- SHELL tum flo OV~ aDcl cOntinue roasting ~ to t hOur longer If HEATING OILSyoUre using a meat th~rrnODl~ eter it should register 170 for South bull Sea Streetsa pink look or 1~ for wen done Pull out wooden picks bom lemon garnsh before carv- Hyannis Tel 49-81 mg roast

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 11 1968

Says Young Seek Moral Values

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - The so-called sexual revolution is l

turning away from hypocrisy at a turning toward promiscuity ays an expert in sex education Or Mary C Calderone execushy

tive director of the Sex Informashytion and Educational Council of the United States believes toshydays young people are highly moral despite the example set for them by their elders

Speaking at the 22nd annual meeting of the Texas Council on Family Relations Dr Calderone stressed

Promiscuity has not increased on Americans college campuses We know our young people are behaving far better today than were willing to credit them with Young people are looking for moral values based on fact rashyther than mythology

Dr Calderone condemned exshyploitation of sex by commercial advertising and called for sex education which would streSD the importance of human relashytionships and not merely the mechanics of reprOduction

Your kids ought to know you cant save a bad marriage with good sexshe asserted

Sisters of Pro~ider1ce Vote to lRe~ise Rules

SPRINGFIELD (NC) The Sisters of Providence of Holshyyoke community of nuns speshycializing in care of the sick aged and underprivileged have voted to revise their rules and customs to permit greater flexshyibility and freedom in the reli shygious and personal lives of theIr members

At a general chapter at the communitymiddots Holyoke mothershyhouse the 39 chapter -delegates voted to permit experimentashytion hi religous garb give members the option of using either their baptismal and famshyily name or their religiou name pennit members to travel outside their convent wilhout a nun-companion

Also to limit participation hi common prayer to Mass and to two portions of the Divine Ofshyfice Lauds and Vespers allow community members to develop a schedule of private prayer require every member of the community to be addressed WI Sister instead of Mother~

and allow part of the nuns free time to be given to variolU fOnDS of the apostolate to civic activities and civil rights proshygrams in a way befitting theIr state in life and according to their individual consciences

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Choose AmericH Superior General

MoUNT KISCO (NC)-Fqr the first time in the 160-yellW history of the Religous of tim Cenacle an American has b~ elected superior general

Mother Rita FOy was electetl to the post at the general chapshyter of the Cenacle in Rome acshycording to the orders interpro-shyvincial public relations offiC() here in New York

The general chapter whielli is still in session is evaluatinti a series of recommendations fOli a general decentralization opoundl authority the launching of eJJogt

perimental programs by too Cenacle and the restructurinfi of Community life

The Religious of the Cenaclo is a worldwide congregation 03 Sisters committeed to the wom of retreats and religious in-gt struction There afe three American provinces

Mother Rita Foy was born 1rI

FLYING DOCTOR Dr Leo Brown and his wife Isabel a registered nurse are shown with their children Rebecca 1Qand Joel 8 with the C-essna plane they use for their Flying Doctor Service in the diocese of Gwelo Rhodesia NC Photo

THE ANCHOR Thurs April 11 1968

Project Equality Issues Guides For BMyers

CHICAGO (NC) - The first national directory of 3931 business firms comshymitted to equal opportunity in all aspects of employment has been published here by Project Equality

It will be used by more than 7000 churches synagogues and religious institutions participat shying in the interfaith fair emshyployment drive that urges givshying preference to the listed firms in all purchases of goods and services

Project Equality offices in Jlive cities are publishing re- gional buyers guides as well They are in Columbus for Ohio Detroit for Michig~n Hartford for Connecticut Omaha for New York City and was gradlDgt Nebraska and San Antonio for ated from Hunter College Sillj

Texas IFlying Doctor Serves Africa Mission south entered the Cenacle in 19~1i The national guide is a comshy completing her studies in Romo

pilation of 976 national and She was assigned to the Miltlligt 2955 local or regional firms do- Vietnam Veteran l Wifel licensed Pilots western province of the Celilgt ing business with religious inshy acle with headquarters in CtJiDRIEFONTEIN (NC)-In the the Gwelo diocese covers some must drive over lO miles of stitutions They include 40 of cago and has held a number am

grasslands here onmiddot a 5OOO-foot 14000 aCres it includes a 300shy dirt bush road seven miles of the top 500 U S corporations assignments as superior of vashy

high plateau the Cat hoi i c bed tuberculosis sanitorium a relatively good road-and watch and range down to small neighshy rious Cenaeles in the Uniteamp

of mainshy 100-bed hospital a farm an out for wild animals all alongmission Driefonteinborhood businesses States and Canada1ains-of all things-a hangar elementary school and trade the way

Listing in the Quyers guide She will now reside in RoJJl() for a Cessna 182 Skylane air shy schools for carpentery tailorshy Thus far they have encounshymeans a firm has signed Ii

plane ing and homecraft tered only baboons monkeyspledge to hire and promote deer mongoose lizards andThe mission staff totals somewithout discrimination has filed FrQm this point the missions lleslYJits to Performbirdsa report form with Project doctor can cover nine out-stashy 1200 people 35 of whom are

Equality detailing the number tions spread over an aerial non-Afrfcans The mission and Witch Doctors Woth City Symphony of its niinority-group employees distance equivalent to that beshy hospitals are operated by Afri shy The Biblical quotation The BALrIMORE (NC) -Fathe1 -broken down by jop classifi tween San Francisco and Los cans and by Swiss Bethlehem harvest is indeed great but the Bruno Markaitis SJ provinshyeation-and has pledged to take Angeles The plane was proshy priests and Brothers German laborers are few describes the cial of Lithuanian Jesuits in the further affirmative actions vided by the Mission Doctors Domincian nuns African nuns scope of medical work in Africa free world will guest conduct

Association of Los Angeles three laywomen-two American according to the Browns In the Baltimore Symphony in twc Pledge C()()peraiion Calif as part of its Flying Docshy nurses and a German teachershy these rura~ regions there is II of his own piano compositioDll

Cooperating businesses also tor Service begun here four and the Browns ratio of about one doctor to in Ii concert sponsored by LCgtJio have agreed to undergo periodic years ago The Brown children attend a every 33000 persons Mrs ola College here Sunday eompliance reviews to assure At that time Dr James Carey small two-classroom school in Brown said Africail medicine At the keyboard as soloi

Umvuma a town 17 miles away and witch doctors are still verycontinued affirmative employshy now a Santa Barbara Calif wiiI be two other Jesuit pries~ much in evidence she addedment ac~ions according to surgeon arrived at Driefontein The journey to and from school Fathers Leslie J Schnierer -and

Thomas Gibbons Jr national to begin his three-year mission is looked upon as quite an adshy It is heartbreaking to see a Benito Rivera students at thIl director of Project Equality hitch He decided quickly that venture by the family as they child with measles have to go Peabody Conservatory of Music

In addition to the firms listed The concert will mark thewith a plane one doctor could though life blind because the in the guide more than 12000 do the wbrk of five ndanga (witchdoctor) put mull 50th anniversary of the restorashyother businesses have filled out With the help of the Swiss Pittsburgh Diocese (medicine) in the childs eyes tion of independence to Lithoshycommitment forms pledging coshy Bethlehem Brothers Dr Carey Tithing for Poor she said But in other areas aniai operation with the program but began surveying and laying out like TB the African is relJlarkshy

PITTSBU~GH (NC)-Bishophave not yet supplied the necshy landingstrips near isolated and ably sophisticated medicaHy

John J Wright has announced essary statistical employment doctorless clinics and hospitals Kariangwe Berejena Kana Education Officethe Pittsburgh Diocese will unshyreports which are similar 10 The Brothers also built the Serema Matibi are all farshy NEW ORLEANS (NC) - Aledertake a new tithing plan tothose ~equired by the federal hangar at priefontein and Dr away-sounding places but the office of religious education bllllhelp finance housing and othergovernment Carey arranged for one Brother people suffer as you and I been established here by Archshyprojects for the pOOr The nalles of firms listed in to be trained as a pilot suffer from sickness They bishop PhilIp M Hannan a The_dioces~ will give 10 perthe buyers guides are available Meanwhile in Los Angeles mourn when their children have will supervise the teaching oct

cent of the contributions andonly to religious groups parti shy Dr Leo Brown a former Navy to be sick and often die she religion in parochial schoolBbequests it receives and thecipating in the program surgeon with 11 years of sershy continued and in Confraternity of Chrisshysame percentage of collections

PIroject Equality sponsored vice and his wife Isabel a Perhaps some of their disshy tian Doctrine classestaken up for directly diocesan

by the National Catholic Conshy registeled nurse were volunshy eases have strange-soundingpurposes to finance povertyference for Interracial Justice teering for MD~s three-year nawes but all come under theprogramsoperates six other local offices hitch in Africa He was just title of Gods sick These are CONRAD SEGUINThe money will be used withtouching seven more states Adshy home from Vietnam where he the names of clinics that are

other religious groups for intershyditional offices will be opened served with the Marines visited by the Flying Doctor BODY COMPANY faith housing programs andin major cities this year acshy Staff of 1200 she said Aluminum or Steelother joint dforts for the poorcording to a spokesman Dr Brown and his wife are 944 County Street

Parishes will not be requiredlicensed pilOts So last Sumshy NEW BEDFORD MASS mer when they and their two to tithe but are invited to conshy Chief Speaker

WY 2-6618ISenQte Ideas f children-Rebecco 10 and Joel tribute voluntarily NEW XORK (NC) ~ Msgr 8~arrived here MDA sent the John J Egan director of the

Continued from Page Three Cessna 182 along with thein Chicago Archdiocesan office ofStart With 45and to preach in the one Dioshy The Driefontein mission in tirbanaffairs will be the chief

eese have them in the pther GREENSBORO (NC)-Fortyshy speaker at the May 16 banquetfive priests of the Raleigh dioshy of the 1968 Catholic Press AsoshyWhile the 24 diocesan priests Abortion Bill Passes cese have formed the North ciation convention in ColumbusSenators are elected the two Carolina priests association Ohiomembels of the Priests Senate In Maryhind Ho~se Seventeen others have indicatedwho are members of religious

commullities are appointed by ANAPOLIS (NC)-A ~m to they wish to become members the Bishop These will be ro- relax Marylands 100-year-old The Raleigh diocese includes all

North Canlinatated among the religious com- abortion law and put its regushylation into the hands of themunities doing parish work in

the Diocese At present the Sen- medical profession passed the ators from religious communi- House of Delegates by im 86 ties are Father Felician Plichta to 47 vote OFM Conv and Father Co- The bill permits a doctor opshylumba Moran SSCC eniting in an accredited hospishy

tal to perform an abortion to The Bishop has encouraged a preserve the physical or mental

study of pension plans that health of the mother to prevent would involve laypersonnel of birth of a deformed or retarded diocesa~ ail~ parish facilitieii childand to end some plegnan

The Bisholl has ma~li liQme ad- CieScaused by rape just~ents)nassessmtntson pat- UnClet the~ptesel1t law abor ishes tflking into account the tiOll is peimitted ~hen two growth o(~ubU~Iiln ~~riShesah~ Ihysicians a~r~~ it itnec~ssar~bull

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Church~en Study Racial Problems In New Jersey

NEWARK (NC) -The Church cannot tell otheJiS what to do until it faces the problem within its own comshymunity a Methodist Bishop has told Essex Count~ clergyshymen of all faiths in an a~essshyment of the racial problems beshysetting Newark and other New Jersey communities

Bishop Prince A Taylor and Catholic Auxiliary Bishop John J Dougherty of Newark disshycussed the race problem in light of the report of the Govemors Commission on Civil Disorder

Cooperative Solution Bishop Taylor stressed it is

the duty of the church to beshycome knowledgeable about the report to read it carefully Action without information is irresponsible he declared as he noted the church must face up till the fact that it has parshyticipated in maintaining the status quo He noted that when ~he commissionen pelsonally toured the riot area and asked the people what the impact of the church was in their lives all but a pound~w marked the church ltDfpound

Bishop Dougherty said if the problem is to be solved it will only be through the involveshyment of the total community government industry labor unions churches schools peoshyple living in the suburbs

Dont Have Time The attack on t1e problems

must be two-fold he asserted first meeting the needs which the coming Summer presents and then planning long-range programs to overcome the root causes of the problem

There is an urgen t need of immediate programs to enable us to have time to work toward the ultimate goal

Bishop Taylor referred to the need for time to work out solushytions We cannot undo the evils of 300 years in one Sumshymer he emphasized This illmiddot not going to be a case of a quick antidote and then they Jived happily ever after

However a Newark priest active in innel-city work who was one of six reactors to the presentations made by the Bishshyops remarked that comments about needing time to solve the problems overlook the fact that we dont hlVe the time

It would be great if we did have it to keep order but q (gt bull

the people bull have the imshypression that nothing has been donesaid Father Joseph Stulb

Many are ready to riot again if only to call attention to themselves he opined The black community despairs that the white community has or will change its attitude

Rev William Fox associate general secretary of the New Jelsey Council of Churches scored the commission for fail shying to note the contribution thpt a divided church - white and black - mademiddot to the elisis H~ cliticized the church for mainshytaining silence during public controversies which were listed as proximate causes of the riotshying

Another Catholic Magazine F0 Id S

DAYTON (NC)-Mary Today a magazine founded in 1901 deshyvoted to information about the Blessed Motherand her role in the Church has issued its final edition

It is one of 11 Catholic magashyzines which have ceased pubJishycation in the past )eal because

of 1088 ~l circulation The rnaf- orders are af Teutopolis JIL azine had a reoont eirculauOll Lake Bluff in and St Meiri

~ aooU~1151gtO middot - ~lnclbull - - -

BENEMERENTI MEDAJ~ Father James Vizzaro SJ second from left received the Benemerenti Medal at a dinner in Washington -on the occasion Of his retirement as dishyrector of the Washington office of the National Catholic Rural Life Association Conshygratulating him are left to right Msgr ~dward W ORourke executive director of the NtRLC Bishop Henry J Soenneker of Owensboro Ky rural life advisor of the usce department of social action and Msgr Luigi L Ligutti Vatican observer to the UN Food and Agliculture Organization and former executive dirootor of NCRLC NC Photo

Fr Vizzard Gets Benemerenti Medal Work for IFhlltfol lPoor Recognized

the Holy See to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization priests and Protshyestant clergymen and members of Congress

Msgr George G Higgins di shyrector social action department U S C a tho 1 i c Conference praised Father Vizzards comshybination of scholarship political know-how great tenacity of

Schedule Workshop O~ Sex Education

WASHINGTON (NC)-Father James T McHugh director of the family life bureau middotU S Catholic Conference will direct a workshop on Sex Education to be held at Catholic Univershysity of America here June 17shy28

Purpose of the workshop is to prepare a basic core of people especially teachers and parish personnel to supplement the work of the home in a complete program of education in sexu- ality It will provide these pershysons with background informashytion give them opportunity to evaluate some of the basic mashyterialsand engage them in an in-depth analysis of a curricushylum guide which reaches every grade level

Lecturers and consultants will include Fathermiddot John L Thomas SJ of the Combridge Center fOl Social Studies Dr and Mtmiddots Joseph Bird co-aushythors of The Freedom of Sexshyual Love Dr Ann F Lucas chairman of the psychology deshypaltment Farleigh Dickinson Universit~ Teaneek N J and Father Walter Imbiorski direcshytor of the Cana program in the Chicago atchdiocese

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Father Vizzard will leave Washington to middotwork in Califorshynia Nevada Arizona and Utah the region of the Jesuits Cali shyfornia province

Four Cleveland Nuns Quit as Religious

CLEVELAND (NC) - Four nuns one the prineipal of a 1100 student girls Catholic high school have separately withdrawn from the Sisters of Notre Dame here in Ohio

It was the largest departure since 1966 when 10 Sisters of Notre Dame were released from their vows to move to Pueblo CoIQ to form an experimental community middotThe Sisters of Notre Dame is the largest order of 2531 Cedar St New Bedford nuns based in the Cleveland 993middot3222 Diocese

imiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot~middotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot~ middot 3NEW HIGHERi RATE OF

PER ANNUM INTEREST PAID QUARTERllyo ON PAID-UP

SHARE CERTIfICATES Deposits Welcomed in Multiples of

$20000 up to $30OOO-on Single and Joint Accounts Up to $60OOO-for Cornorations

DIVIDENDS PAID 4 TIMES A YEAR February MC1V August and November

All Deposits Inoured in Full

Taunton

THE ANCHORshyThurs April 11 1968 11

Support Bi~hop5

Equa~sty Plea MINEOLA (NC)-The Cathshy

olic Interracial Council of Long Island has voted overwhelmshying support of Rockville Censhytres Bishop Walter P Kellenshybergs call for equality in housing employment and edushycation

Bishop Kellenberg issued Zl pastoral letter-A Call to COl1shyscience-in which he said it i9 essential that every man be given equal opportunity for eJQP]oyment and job advanceshyment and equal educatton for himself and for his children

Declaring these to be fundashymental moral issues facing the people of Long Islanp the council said We give this statement by Bishop Kellenberg our overwhelming sUPPOtt

John J Clarke council president said the eounciB deemed it necessary to reit shyerate its support of the bishops statement co gtI bull because of our increasing concern over conshytinued discriminatory practicelC in these areas

In a policy statement the council declared the bash cause of racial unrest lies in the almost complete lack oR any meaningful contact between the races Today there are few whites who can say they really know Negroes This ignorance of each other is caused almost lxc]usively by patterns of segshyregation in housing which reshysuited in segregated schools 3mll a segregated society

As a step in breakin( these patterns the council recomshymended passage of open housshying ordinances in all towns OK

Long Island Only when there is no place left for the white man to run will the problem be solved it said

Norris H Tripp SHEET METAL

J fESER Prop

RESIDENTIAL INDUSTRIAL

COMMERCIAL

WASHINGTON (NC)-Father James L Vizzard SJ retiring Washington director of the Nashytional Catholic Rural Life Conshyference received the papal Benemerenti medal hele in recshyognition of his work for t~e

rural poor of the United States and throughout the world

The presentation at a dinner in the Cosmos Club was attendshyed by Bishop Henry J Soenshyneker of Owensboro Ky NCRLC president Msgr Luigi Ligutti permanent observer for

Prelate Advocalles Open Housing ILaws

JEFFERSON CITY (NC)shyBishop Joseph M Marling CPPS of Jefferson City has urged Catholics of the diocese to campaign openly and fearshy

- lessly for area open housing laws

In a pastoral letter urging open housing law support the Missouri prelate askedshy

Who fails to see that to conshydemn a large segment of our people to the cruel segregation thatmiddot closed housing entails is to sin gravely against charity justice and the vely finest inshystincts of our nature Who may deny that to perpetuate such an evil in this enlightened age will bring malediction upon us

For jurely he answered Chlist is brother to the eolored in the identical sense that he is brother to the other children of men

Plan Fa-II Opening Of Joint Semill1ary

CHICAGO (NC)-A graduate school of theology for seminashyrians ftom three Religious orshyders will open in a former hotel here in the Fall

The school to be known as the Catholic Theological Union will be operated by the Passhysionists Franciscans and Sershyvites in the fOI-mer Aragon Hotel near the University of Chicago

About 100 students ue exshypected to enter thl school this year Area seminariltes ourrent-middot ly being used by themiddot threfl

2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese 01 Fall Ri~~r-Thurs Apr 11 1968 S~~in S~ntences priest- and Laymen

JOurrt)~a$ts Opinions Differ_On V~~e of Bishops Synod

By Msgr George G Higgins Two American journ~lists who have covered the Rome

1beat off and on for several years-Father Francis X Murphy CSSR and Gary MacE0 in-have just published an interesting account of the Synod of Bishops which was held in Rome in 1967 (Synshyod 67 A New Sound in what they manege to teU us Rome Bruce Publishing Co about themselves in their sep- Milwaukee) Written in the arate and widelydivergent asshyfamiliar Xavier Rynne style it Sessments of the Synod is something of a tour de force How two men who disagree given the se- so fundamentally about the uecy w h i c h pros and cons of the Synod ever enveloped the managed to work as a tandem $ y nod a 1 in the writing of the history of proceedings The the synodal proceedings is to authors h a v e put it as mildly as possible a tried to give perplexing mystery on account as They tell us that for aU that a c cur ate as lies between their separate possible under evaluations Df the Synod they the conditions are jointly accountable but that of time and cir- the internal logic of their inshycumstance For dividual viewpoints and the my own part I dialectic of the situation led think they deserve better than them to attribute exclusive reshya ~as~ing grade They do ~lOt sponsibil~ty for the Prelude to ~lalln to hae wrlt~en anythmg a priest and for the Postscript like8cIefmltIve hlstory of the i to a layman SYlo1IgtUt they have proyid~d Far A art 1IllS wlth a useful mtenm sum- P mabr of the -proceedings and I take it that this is a polite ~r ~ii w~ cin) begrateful way of saying that when they

Perplexing Mystery got around to summing up their Tothis reader however what impressions of the Synod they

the authors tell us about the

lSynod ls less mterestmg than i

~ 8holJd have concluded contrashyr rlwise- that it was seriously - lacking in credibility and releshy

vance and was thus on biI- ance a huge disappointment

lRationaJize Differences

Such differencesmiddot of opinion on the part of experienced

jourpalilts covering the same everit-and using the very same

source~ of informationare not to be Vf~npered at

On the other hand I am Dot very happy about the curious- way in which the authors haveshyrationalized their differencea Th~y tell Us that one evaluatioo Df ~he Synod (Father Murphys) w~ ~ritteo from the viewpoint of the institutional Church and the other (Mr MacEoins) from that of conteinporarshyman~ind

Or again in Mr MacEoin words A priest professionally involved in the institution will

tend to lean in one direction 11 layman whose professional sushy

- viva rests on his sensitivity to

SPECIAL DELEGATE Marches Ghilio Sacchetti 42 has been named by POpe Paul VI to succeed Count Enrico

Galeazzi as special delegate of the Pontfical Commission for the state of Vatican City He is wearing the now outshymoded costume of a Gentleshyman of Cape and Sword NC PIloto

world opinion in the other

Now Bear This

This strikes me as being bull slightly threadbare and hopeshylessly pre-Conciliar dichotomy I know of a Dumber of priests (and so do the authors I asshysume) who rightly~or wrongly are just as critical of the Synod as Mr MacEoin is

I also know of a number III laymen (and so do the authocs I must assume again) who rightly or wrongly are just as sanguine about the results of the Synod as Father Murphy is So whats all this doctrinaire I

stuff about priests necessarily looking at things (myopically) through the allegedly unenshylightened eyes of contemposhyrary mankind

Tell it to the Marineal

found that they wer~ so ho~e-lessly far apart 111 theIr thmkmg

that the division of labor so I cryptically described in the above quotations appeared to be the only possible way of salshyvaging the middotoperation Thatll fair enough

It isnt at all surprising that one of the authors (Father Murphy) should have concluded that on balance the Synod was truly a contribution to the Church~s aggiornamento and that the other (Mr MacEoin)

MAnmn (NC) - Sz~en per- sons incIl~lg a Cathollc priest have bc)n sentenced to prison terms and fined by Madrids Court of r lic Order on charges Olf havinr participated in an anti-Frangt meeting in Barceshylona in lS~G

On trial were Father Francisshyeo Paula Botey and 10 laymen who were accused of attending

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an illegal meeting The meetshying was advertised as a Day of Repression and criticized what it called the repressive activities of the government of Gen Franshycisco Franco

Father Botey who admitted during the trial that he atshytended the meeting at Barcelona Universitys law school was senshyten~ to a year in jail ~d fined

about $214 Three of the laylDell received similar sentences amplid fines while ~ others drew six-month jail terms aDd four were absolved

Father Batey testified duriDtl the trial that he deliberately atshy1ended the meeting to protest against the ftPress1on he bad said he had seen of -certain see-shymenta of ampbe Spanish clergyshy

Prelate Supports Catholic Schools Opposes Racism

NEWARK (NC) -Archshybishop Thomas A Boland of Newark touched on racism Catholic education and aborshytion in his annual message to the Archdiocesan CouncH of catholic Men at its CQnvention here

Noting that BOrne people adshyvocate closing Catholic schools to concentrate on adult educashytion Archbishop Boland said I believe we mU9t give as much time as is possible to adult edushycation but not that we should ignore our chlIdren

If we close our schools he soid there may 00 no one to attend the adult courses iJn future years

He deplored the absence of religion in the education of many people and said that while 0 ohild may be receiving o good academic background under such circumstances he is not being trained in his will or his morals

Jthortion Is Murder Archbishop Boland noting

~hot the question of relaxing bortion laws is before the state LeFislature recalled that he lralNi opollen to the men about ~ot Dubject a year earlier and repeated what he had said then abortion is murder

Should the state legislate more liberally in this field he said it would go outside its sphere and we would have no

right to follow it He indicated however that

the Church would not oppose the establishment of a legislashytive commission to study the abortion law

Discussing racism he called it a malignant growth in our society and announced his support for a peaceful interrashycial walk through the streets of Newarks ghetto

Spokesmen lor L2ity Archbishop Boland also urged

the men to turn their council into a real spokesman for the laity He ruled out the possibil shyity of a voice for the laity toshytally independent flrom the hierarehy declaring that this is not the structure cd the Church

H we want to build a strucshyture the archbishop said we get an architect to give us a uniform plan Christ is the arshyehitect of the Chureh We are its workmen

He then urged the men tID take the steps which would make the ACCM aspokesman for the people II real council

Delegates adopted four res0shy

lutions endorsing catholic echools condemning racism lin every form advocating retenshytion and expansion of the states IIChool bus law and opposing relaxation of the abortioD statute

Stresses Increased Food Production

NEW DELHI (NC)-The vatshyican recognizes the need to mshycrease food production middotas a most serious problem facing the developing countries and mshydeed the world as a whole Elizabeth Reid II member of the

bull Vatican delegation to the United ean delegation to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD)

Speaking at the UNCTAD meeting here in India MilS Reid said The right to food 18 01117 another aspect 01 be mosi eaered of all buman rigbts the right to life and it is tb1s parshyticular aspect of the problem of development that places the heaviest and most serious burshyden em the comlcieDee of man- flIIIIampy from home kiDd ~ bull lot cbeapeJ tIIaD IiDDC

rv~

I I

HEATHER CUTTHNG

Sacred Hearts Junior High School Student Is Licenseod Amateur Radio Operator

Holly and Heather Cutting 532 Walnut Street Fall River share a transistor rashydio With some teenage sisters this might cause trouble but not with this pair Heather Jets Holly take the transistor She settles for pop music from Johannesburg South Africa-via her shortwave set They have real good musicraquo she says Blonde 14 year old Heather learned the In ternational Morse Code a basic requirement for amashyteur radio operators when she was seven but its only in the past year that shes really worked at the complicated hobby Her father Dick Cutting ll construction superintendent by profession has been ll radio ham for 30 years by avocation An awesome battery of receivshyers and transmitters fills a room of the Walnut street house and when Heather displayed real inshyterest in them she had iii wi)) ing teacher close at hand

Heathers an eighth grader at Sacred Hearts Junior High School on Prospect Street in Fall River and she admits that she does as much homework as IIhe can at sOOool to have eveshynings free for her hobby She at shytends radio classes nightly then hurries bome to spend as much as three hours at ber sel

Im llicensed for two fre- I

quencies right DOW she exshyplained I can talk on six and two meters Translated that means she can contact amateullil

--in this part of the United States but may not ta]k tomiddot overseal operators until she earns 1Il middotgeneral license

Im Working for my license DOW she said rohe examinashytion JIm be in 00 days Even the license that Heather now holds however is umusual for one of her age When she gets ber general license she Will be among itB Y01lllllgest holders and probably the youngceBt 8h licensee in the stlllte

rhere are 11426 lI8dto amashyteurs iD Massacbuatts I18id her father aInd cmIy 409 aJre WCllInen

wm CoDtaet lFather A real benefit to ~ Cutting

family from Bellltberll general lieense wID be iba1 1Ibell be able tID reach bel fathe bull blB car short wave mctic wheD he is OlD hIfl freqUeDt bwliness tripal

distance calls said Mr Cutting The electric light company figshyures I can run this rig 16 hours a day for only $290 a month

Heather hopes to make a cashyreer of radio technology Right now she is able most of the time to repair her set if someshything goes awry and shea building a small transmitting station for an upcoming science fair at Sacred Hearts Itll broadcast about 200 feet she said

Sometimes Of couJrSe gremshylins pop ill Like the time Heather got a phone can from a boy in Swansea Hey did oU know youre coming m on eiYclnnel 2 on our TV be said 011 another occasion Heather picked ~ her fathers transmisshysion OIl ber electric pitar speaker

Most of the time however things go smoothly During her nightly radio sessions Heather picks up signals Jrom other amateurs and has some schedshyuled appointments vis the mllshyways withmiddot friends hi otheJl mties

When she picks up 5 llllew

eontact she confirms it with II brightly-colored postcard bearshying her name and station 0011 etters in psychedelic pink Wld yellow

Collecting such postcards 111 2 sub-hobby for radio amateulll and Holly has a oozzling eollecshytion on the walls of her radio room She bas Mganized the Sou the a II t ern MassachushyIlett8 Teenage RadM Net aocll ill

BEFORE YOU BUy-tRy

PARK MOTORS OLDSMOBILE

OIdsmobile-lPeugot-Rencnft fJ1 Middle Street Fairhaven

llooking for new members Its just for teens she says

=rheyre more fun to talk to Once she has her general 11shy

cense she plans to join Iil group that relays messages from Viet Nam servicemen to their famshyilies

other Bobbies Badia is by no means Heathshy

ers only hobby Shl~ and her sister Holly a freshman at Emshymanuel College have an imshypressive collection of sharpshyshooting trophies mostly garshynered at Fall River Rod and Gun Club meets I began shootshying when I was six and had my Own gun when I as seven eaid Heather

Other interests are mathematshyics and music Heather picked lIP guitar playing on her own and belOngs to a folk group which plans its first public apshypearance after Easter

In short shes one teen whoD never be found wondering what to de next

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THE ANCHORshy 13Thurs April 11 1968

Houston Priests Get Pay Raise

HOUSTON (NC) - BishOJ John L Morkovsky announceCl a pay raise for priests of thE Galveston-Houston diocese and said a new retirement poliCW will go into effect Jan 1 1970

Under the old pay scale asshy sistants received a base salary of 11250 plus $30 car allowshyance and $1250 insurance preshymium for a total salary of $155 a month Pastors received a total monthly salary of $21750 The new salary reale will allow for increased pay based on the number of yearo priests have been ordained

Assistants who have been cshydained less than 10 years wiill receive a total monthly salary of $200 The figures will ~

$225 for those ordained moro than 10 years

Pastors with 25 years in t100 priesthood will receive m monthly total of $275 ThoSQ with more than 25 years will receive $300

The retirement policy ca1lJfl for optional retirement at age 65 and mandlltory retirement at 70 However elderly pries1amp who are able and willing m37 be assigned to other priestly work than the pastorate Bisbshyop Morkovsky stated

The bishop said the changes are in accordance with the recshyommendations of the Senate 01 Priests and follow consultashytion with diocesan consultom

Reach Impasse-PIITSBURGH (NC)-A state-gt

level meeting between Cat~

olic officials and the Nationl11 Association for the Advanceshyment of Colored People on furshythering racial integration iB Catholic schools reached m seeming stalemate here bn Pennsylvania when the schoolshymen cited lack of funds as ll major obstacle to NAACP pro= posals

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YOUTH CARES FOR AGE Retired Sisters are tenderlycared for at chair while Sister Mary Agnes looks on Center Sister Agnes Maureea Mmiddott St Mary Convent Fall River Left Sister Agnes Maureen seniormiddot wheels SisterMary Jer~me anQright Sister JohnCatberine bringgdri_ infirmarian points out magazine article to Sister Mary Lig~~ri inwheel to Sister Mary Ursulamiddot Both infirmarians are licensed practical nurses

I

Cqrdinal Roy Raps Apathy

MEXICO CITY (NC)~MaushyJOice Cardinal Roymiddot of Quebee _ a visit here as ehairman of the Pontifical Commission for World Justice and Peace said Christian teachings condemn violence in solving social probshylems but also condemn themiddot false prudence that lacks the eourage to make needed reshyforms

The prelate who has been touring Latin America for sevshyeral weeks said he was 1mshypressed by the number of Cathshy

olic organizations and institushytutions already applying Pope Paul VIs encyclical The Deshyvelopment of Peoples in their Jespective countries

But he added Latin Amerishyearn still have to assume fully their responsibility in workingtowards economic balance andmiddot bull just social order 80 every cit shyizen can promote his own welshyfare in a climate of freedom and common good

bull bullbull tmiddot

Comes KindIYcimiddotmiddotSislesmiddot 0 Mercy AmiddotI Fall River Comiddotnventmiddot

By Patricia McGowan

~When thou wast younger thou didstmiddot gird thyself anddidst walk where thou Frouldst But when thou shalt be old thou shalt stretch forth thy handsmiddot arid another shall gird thee and lead thee whither thou wouldst not In its description of the almost universal lot of age this is one of the most poignantpassages in Scriptur~ But age comes kindly f~r Sisters Although they are not exshyemptmiddot from its physical and mental ravages they need not fear being forsaken byfriends or being left alone the

fanulymiddot Jhe famllylast of a that is a religious community cherishes its older members and provision is made for Sisters to pass their last years surrounded by tender care

Among havens for older Sisters is the infirmary at Mt St Mary Conventmiddot Fall River The Sisters who have spent most of their religious life in the Fail River Diocese come here for their laBtyears exshypliliried Sister Agnes Maureen

The cardinal added at emiddot pretB8 RSMmiddotmiddot senior iniirmarian at eonference in the headquarten the Mount Her domain proshyf the Mexican Social Secreta- vides eh~rf11~ccQmmodations riat that national efforts for de- for 10 Sisters Each has her ownmiddot elopment do not eliminate the room andthere is II kitchenette aeed ~forfoleignaid where those ablE lobe up and

The Pontifieal commisSion Cardinal Roy indicated ill enshyaged in persuading rich counshytries to devote at least one per eent of their groSs national product to assist poor eountries

Archdiocese Adopts Project Equality

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing notified the priests lIeIlate of the Boston archdiocese of plans 10 adopt Project Equality a program designed to use purchasing power of church institutions to make firms supplying goods and 8elVices wipe out diICriminashy birislM Placticeamp

e~ut ~n enjoy their meals ~gethermiddot

The ~nfirmaryis but II few stepis from the Mount chapel wher~ the retired Sisters spend hours a day in prayer for comshymunity members still in the active lPostolate Also claiming time for Sisters whose eyesight permits are needlework ana erooheting projects

Always DraWlll Cheerful and dedicated Sister

Agnes Maureen who has I Deen at the infirmary six years is aided by Sister John Catherine who has served the aged Sisters two years A laywoman takes the night shift in the infirmary ensuring the Sisters round the clock care Bothmiddot Sister infirmashy

rians are licensed practical nurses who received their trainshyI g to L d f F tma Hosn a ur a y 0 a I shypital in the Providence Diocese

When I entered religion I hoped to be an infirmarian

said SIster Agnes Maureen I whas alwdays drawn to work for t e age

Some people think we havent got a nursing apostolate she added but we need nurses desshyperately Right now we have nine Sisters taking care of inshyfirmaries in our province

Among Sisters now at the Mount infirmary are Sister

Mary Agnes who celebrated her diamond jubilee last DeshyceJl)ber and most of wbose r~lishygious life was spent in New Bedford and middotNorth Attleboro schools and Sister Mary Lishy

gu()ri whomiddot f9r 49 yearl taught sixth graders at st Patricks School Fall River

HShe looks out her window at St Patricks said Sister Agnes Maureen and she says Theres home

The Sisters are welcoming the arrival of Spring and warm days said the infirmarian It means they can enjoy their sunporch sit in the Mounts garden and go for occasional car rides Of course they have many visitors she said Other Sisters in the house come to see them and so do Sisters from the convents where they forshymerly lived

Yes age comes kindly for Sisters Not Hke the old lady overheard in a downtown groshy

eery confiding to a chance fellow-customer her discovery of a bargain in frozen food I live alone you know and 1 get

three big servings from a packshyage--and only 29 cents

N 0 Sister lives alone

bull

~~tplic Newspaper Wins Press Awards

NEW ORLEANS (NC) -The eJarion Herald middotarchdiocesa middotnewspaper won eight awards iii the annual competition of the

N~W Or)eans Press Club ~ competition included daily and

weekly newspapers wire serVshyices and television stations

Millard F Everett editor won first place in two categories - editorial and best religioWl story This marks the first time in five years of competition that the Clarion has taken the top award for best religious story Staff members of the paper also took three second and three third place awards

----------------------------

ZENITH bull ACOUSTICON bull UNEX

bull BIOLOGICAU bull YITAMIIIS

C~tt 615-7829 IRENE R SHEA PROP

Prompt Free Delivery in fALL RIVER SOMERSET TIVERTON amp VICIHITY 101 ROCK ST (CORNER OF PINE ST) FALL RIVIImiddot

~ 6

THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFon River-Thurs Apr 11 1968

CathoJi~ ll]wnDv~JSityPltDcopy~regii~copyJ~

IPlanLUBffil AmeFicon ~1]~regregO WASHINGTON (NC) - A ops and l~aders of several South

jJroup of pr-ofessors from Cathshy American governments sHe University of America hope The Washington center comshyS n~w technical middotinstituteat the middotprises -ll group of professorsshy~tholic University of Gu~Washy mostly members of the CU caulI Ecuador may mark the llchool of middoted ucation-whomiddot are ltJPening of an international edshy specialists ineclUcationfordeshyvcation bridgetoLatin America Velopment Director of the proshy

The institute will be inaugurshy ject is Dr Jose A Baquero ated early this month as 11 middotcoshy WM has been commuting b~shy1)eIativeventure by the Center meen Washingtonand his nashylor Educational Research fa middottive Ecuador dming the -cmrent QuitoEcuadorand the Center school year lor Community Developmenhmd This is not an Ecuadorian Servioe at Catholic University project it is an internatienal bere It has the support 01 Vashy projed a resealclFaction proshykanofficials Ecuadorianbislshy gram between North and South

America Dr Baquero said middothereBC middotto Recruit laquorNe had to start middotsomewhere The natural plaoe 10 begin wasNegro St~1ent5 middot-the Qlace Where weaould get

CHESTNUT HILL (NC) shy the most facilitiesThisproject iesuit-eper-ated Boston College God willing if successful will bere has made available $100shy move throughout Latin AmershyGtOO fora talent search -progr1m ica We already have contracts to recruit Negro stJdents frem with interestedJeaders in Sao disadvantagedurbanareas middotof Paulo BTazil Bogota Colombia tlhecountry mainly in Greater and Lima Peru Boston Msgr Eugene Kevane direcshy

Father Michael P Walsh SJ tor of the Center for Communitypresident caUed for support off Development andServleedaimshyiIIe entirestudent body facshy ed iB number of Latin American Illlty and administration of EQsshy Church and government officialS Qon College to make the ~mshy have middotexpressed interest in thecram a success projectand a belid it may beshy

Since the program was starteJ come a model of assistance middottoIJeveral weeks ago some 50 ~shy lI3derdeveloped poundOuntrieslltIicatiopshave beenreceiltvelll He said ArcnbishGp Romolofrom students in ghetto areas Carooni apostolic nuncio 10lot -entrance middotin next Septemshy

~1u told him heilOllSiders theWltll freshman -class pmject of great importance andThere have a1w~ys beellU M~S a similhlr middotinstitute willIlegro students enrolled at B4tsshybe established at the Pontificalton College oUicials said ~t University in Limatheir Dumber is ~ot ~own 00shy

0tberhigh-ranking churchshyaYSe race is not shown 8ll1 middotmen who lthave endorsed theapplications The Collegemiddotacceptll project include MsgrLuigi Lishyattdents of all faiths gutti the Holy Sees PermanentN~t SeptemberNegro lrtlllshy

1Gbserver at the Food and Agrishy

bullnts with the necessary ~uaUshy6eations will be admitted n8 culture Organization of the 1Ilual while middotsome 25 will ge United Nations and Archbishop admitted under the talent Ceasar Antonio Mosquera fif

lt4IeQIChprogram The number is Guayaquil president of theEcshybeing limited for thegood af iliad-orlan Bishops Conference

GOLDEN JUBILEE Sisshyter Rose Alma Reid CSC (Sjltte1 M Flora) will mark herg-olden i llbilee of religious professjon on Sunday April 21 at Sacred Heart Convent New Bedford A Mass of thanksgi~rjng will be offered at 1130 Sunchw morning at Sacred Head Church and a reception will be held in the parish hall ITom2 to 4 th~t

afternoon Friends and forshymer pupils are invited t01l~

tend

So Curolina Bishop A-sksPettce $upport

CHARLESTON (NC)- Bishshymiddotop Ernest Lmiddot Unterkoefier of Charleston has called for the middotfull support ofall Americans of President Lyndon middotlB Johnshysons efforts to secure peace in middotVietnam

Tbe South ltCarolina Bishop said that the Presidents -peace ini tiati yes demonstrate that he is a gtarson who -has ever been conscious of the grave responsishybility 01 his ofillce and that his judgements have been measured ~y the critical threats to the securi~y and free action ofthe United States

ICampus Comediansl

R~JlJ~stforBirh ControJ 1nlcrmation lndBGSYlrncrGti(C~e

DAYTON (NC)-A Univershysity of Dayton chaplain said he suspected campuscomediami for 1b~ conJroversyaroused bY a request for availability of birth corttol information and materials In campus by theunishyversity stmiddotudent congress

Father Urban Rupp SM universi~y co-chaplain wrote in the chaplain s bulletin the alshymost unanimous aetion fthe student gfvernment group middotwas an idio~yncratic caper in the natureo Ii ttle childrenpl~ying

house He indicated he fouud it difshy

ficult to take the Pfoposa1 serishyomlY

Now of COUrse I middotcowd be taking this all -wrong be said

Perhaps it was intended 00 bn serious In that case I woUld be tempted to thinktheemershygency is not just immediateshyit is really one generation too late

This was taken asa reference to student efforts to pwih through the resolution orbirth control as an emergency -meashysure

That failed but a few days later the student middotcongressvo~ 29 tol to seeka change in llJllshyversUy Wlicy that would -pershymit the introductionof birth 1Ontrol selYiees in thestudem health center for married eQUoshy~les and Ulose llQOD _ ~arriedmiddot

the young Negroes whowiUbe ~pted oUiciaI said

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bull

PATRIARCH The middotnewily elected head of the Syriac Oatholic Church Patriarch Hgtenys Antoine Hayek of Anshy~och was enthroned recentshy1w in Beirut Lebanon In this post hesucceds the late P-ashykiarch Ignace Cardinal TapshylPouni NC Photo

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In ~ glory of His Resurrection may be reborn man~

amiring hopes and CleSires _ ~ce

HAPPY EASTER THE OFFICERS DIRiEc1r~ AND STAFfshy

il1Jf11l

FIRSTmFff-BANK

-Ji1lim~~OF NEW BEDFORD

StYE SOME

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Like to be her sponsorf Her name Is Sister Suzamma and she will write to you

iIHAPPINESS ciS

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THE ANCHO~-Trappists Elect Mother Church of Nation8 PortlglleSe 17 Thurs April 11 1968

Youngest Abbot P-epares fOI- Cenlellilial Celebration At Gethsenloni Dy Patida F r-u nis

GETHSEMANI (NC) The youngest abbot in the history of the monastery of Our Lady of Gethsemani was formally blessed (March ~l) by Archbishop Thomas J McDon~

ough 0pound Louisville Father M Flavian Burns

OCSO 36 ilgt the seventh ab~

bot in the 120-year history of the monastery He was elected by members of the community Inst January to succeed Abbot M James Fox OCSO

Father Flavian described bis position as en administrator whose main job il) service to others within the community He said his most important function it3 to hold plivate spiritual conversations with other monks and to handle the lillM)nasterys relations with the ~Atside world

Thcilt are some 120 monks at ~ethsemani abbey a decline from past years Abbot Burns cCrlbllltes the decline at least in prt to the attitude of the times YiJCl1 was foJJJlcrly accepted without question is now being ltI~etioned he observed

ltDontemplation Prayer

Changes have been made the IHurElY is now in English and 2Jc strict vow of silence has TiKen relaxed somewhat On an experimental basis the monks are allowed to use brief oral instructions instead of sign language as in the past

Despite the lack of radio or 1clevision Abbot Burns said the monks keep in contact through newspllpers with events in todays world The main thing ill to know what is going on in the Church and what effects our fellow hushymans according to the abbot

The life of a monk involves middotcontemplation and prayer rather than speaking up - 11 more spiritual turn according kI Abbot BUlns

A native of Jersey City N J he is a graduate of Henry SfIyder public high sehool there

Protests- Campaign Agamst Religion

NEW YORK (NC) - A new wave of terror against aU churcltgpers is now in effect in Albania an exile from that country has declored in a- letter of protest sent to the United Nations Commission on Human Rightsmiddot and~ to UN Secretary General U Thani

The protest bl Dr Rexhep KIasniqi president of the Free Albania Committee which has its headquarters here said that Albanial following a lf41oist eommunillt guideline has shut down every cltulch and mosque and has made any_kind of pubshylIc worship impossible

Thill campaign Dr Krasniqi tated is a violation of the UN Charter the Universal Declarashytion of Human Rights and of Albanias own communist conshystitutional guarantee of freedom of conscience for all

San Antonro Priests Form Association

SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Fortyshyene diocesan and religious comshymunities priests of the San Anshytonio archdiocese formed a priests association bere The priests ohose a six-member temshypora]) steering committee

One of the fiTst formal actions Gf the allsociatron was to inform Archbishop Robert E Lucey of San Antonio of the group forshymation

There are approximately 441

Parishioner d St John the Baptist Church in Nc Bedford are getting rendy for a momentoils event-the 100th anniversary of the fO~1l1dil1g of the oldest Portuguese parish in the nation The cen~en]ial celebration wi II not take place until 1971 but many things have to be done in preparation within the next three years One major project is renoshyvating the church ihelf To pay for the massive job ptrshyishioners have inaugur~teca Centennial Fund Drive to raise money for painting ~he church do extensive electrical work and buy a rew organ Estimated cost (f the regt3ir5 is $150000

Rt Rev Msgr John A Silvia pastor is honorary drve chairshyman and Frank S Jason is genshyeral chairman Other committee members include Richard GiJI1shysalves and Jesse V Santos Jr division chairmen JQseph S Vera special gifts chairman Richard L Lopes treasurer George Radcliffe director Louis S Silva assistant director Mrs Mary Lucy Soares office conshytrols and Miss Luey E Dias list supervisor

Members of the Campaign Exshyecutive Committee also include Frank M Martin ald Joseph C Motta

The history of St Johns and the history of the Portuguese people in America arc closely intertwined

It was at the end of the 18th Century that settlers began comshying from themiddot Azores to the United States TheJ were relashytively few in number nd as II

result almost lost their national identity

Near Ifood However by 1840 the trickle

of Azoreans was beginning to turn into a near Oood of imshymigrants who settled in New Bedford then a whaling and fishing center

By 1865 many Portuguese families called New Bedford home They lacked just one thing-a church of their own and a priest who spoke their language and understood their customs and traditions

Their first priest-Rev Joao Ignacio de Azevedo-anived in 1869 and on Sept 10 1871 St Johns parish was canonically established

Theremiddot were approximately 1shy000 Portuguese of Azorean deshyscent living in New Bedford at the time and the)T detelmined to build their own church A lot was purchased for $3OD8 ~ con~

siderable amount in those days and soon ground WQS broken for the new house of God

However Father de Azeedo was a mission pliest Vl~ho~moved

throughout the are~ aCministershying to his counblymen As a reshysult a new parish was establishshyed in Boston and he became its first pastor

Expandoll

Construction of St Johns WillS

continued by Rev Antonio de Mattos Freitas a native or Calshylteta St George Azores Fashyther Freitas also was responsible for the construction of a recshytory When he reUred because of ill health and returned to~ the AzoreS he was succeeded by Rev Antonio G de Silva Neves who was to serve St Johns durshying the greatest expansion Gfthe citys Portuguese colony

The first church located where a section of Morse- Twiampt Drill now stands soon ~ outgrown by its congregation and a drive began for agt new and larger church

Father Neves who served 8~j

pastor for almost 25 years saw the new church at County and Wing Streets almost coop]eted However ill health also forced bill retirement

PREPARING FOR CENTENNIAL In charge of fumd drive for hundredth anniversary of St John Baptist Church New Bedford are from left George Radclffe drive execushytive director Frank Jailon general chairman

pleted construction of the present church and rectory in three years The church which now serves the parish was solemnly blessed an4 dedicated to the worship of God by the late Bishshyop Feehan

Through the years the parshyishioners of St Johns have proved their dedication to their cliurch Now they are renewinr their dedication

Msgr Silvia notes that before the small St Johns Church was built the citys Portuguese colshyony attended Mass at St Lawshyrence Church Later they moved into what today is Crowells brt Store

Landmark Today the 11Inificent st

Johns is a landmark in New Bedford befitting its position as Mother Church of the Portu guese in the- UnFted States

MSgr Silvia a native of Pall River served at St Peters Church in Provincetown for 27 years His only other assi1shyment St John the B-aptirt Church

Ordained to the priesthood or Dec 20 1919 St Johns was the new priests first assignment He remained at the cRurch unshytil No~ember 1924 when he was transferred to Ptovinceto~

On Oct 2 1951 Msgr Silvia returned to St Johns as pzsshytor a post hemiddot still fulfills with zeal and energy

His assignmetlt to St Jobnfl parish in 1919 was not ~1sgr Sinshyvias introduotion to the New Bedford parish

As a young boy the p2stcshyrecalls his poundathers weekly trips from Fall River to New Bedford to bring back a priest

Four Families There were few Portuguese

families in Fall River in those days he says When my father arrived in Fan River there were iust four Portuguese families in the city Gradually others setshytled there

My father used to drive over in a horse and buggy to bring Il priest back tc Fall River to ll3y

degbrought him back the next dzy Since those days of hischiMshy

bood Msgr Silvia observeamp-l Turn to Page Eighteen

Continued fronmiddot Page Three

the late Tobias and Ann Lynch ]Burke Mr Burke was born in Newport Tipperary Ireland and his speech bears witness to the o-it and lilt of his birthshyplce He is married te Catbshyerine Lowney Burke and the couple lives next to the Chanshycery

DI1 Davia Costa Dr Costa son of David CosU

and Julia Rodrigues is the husshyband of Louella Somerday and fther of five children A dentshyist in NeJ Bedford he is active ir ceo and in St Vincent ~e

Pml work on a parochial and al(l level He has been zealoUJ ir- many important phases ~

perish aetivity in Immaculate Conception Parish in New BedshyforC He was recipient of the Diocesan Marian Award in Deshycember

itpJlin 15 TIle awards Jill be presenteCl

at St Marys Cathedral Fa]] River on lIlonday evening April 15 at 8 PM At toot timeuro there will be the investi shyture of two lI-ionsignori the awarding of Papal Knight 03 SZ Gregory honors to nine ~sect- oeesan laymen and the Pro EecIesia et Pontipoundlce award kJ mother Pierre Marie adminisshytlato of St Annes Hospital IE Fall River~

Join Federation IIALEIGH (NC)-Forty ()(f thfl

matewide Raleigh dioceses 14~

tlriests have formed the North iCaFolina Priests Associatioil which will affiliate with a Emshy

ticmal federation DOW beiJl~

formed

May the Joy and Pomise 01- Easter

uplift your spirit and gladden

your hean

FROM THE OFRCEIIS AND PERSONfJB Of

qkJM~ERCHANTS CIa1iotuLe BANK

IN NEW BEDFORD

SOUTH BANK-Cove St at Iodney French Boulevard WEST BANK-Kempton Street at Mill Stret

LUNDS CORNER BANK-Acushnet Ave rear Lunds Comer DARTMOUTH BANK-Dartmouth Street near Rockdale Ave NORTH BANK-Acushnet Avbull at Coffin Ave

CENTER BANK-Purchase and William Sts priests in the San Antonio arcl1shy Next pastor was the Rev Mass He used to stay overnight tiiocese Manuel A da Silva wt() oom- at our hOuse ald JlG ~tbeI

-

18 Tti~ ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1969 CatecheticsWeek Set at StonehillDioce$clm ~j[llIlde[lj)fl5 Join Nal-gonGI Some 400 priests religious and laymen are expected to at shyMculrraurru U A$~ssinatBon tend a catechetics institute b be held Monday Aug 5 throughOf Dr Mriin luther KilnS Saturday Aug 10 at Stonehill College Diocesan schools shared i~ national mourning at the Sister Mary Francille CSJ

~8sassination of Dr Martin Luther King with special theology professor at Regis ColshyMasses or prayers offered in every school At Cassidy High lege will direct the institute in Taunton Rev John Moore chaplain celebrated a Mass and speakers will include Rev

Frederick Moriarty SJ Revfor the repose of the soul Cha~les E Cook Rev James F(l)f the Negro leader and rently hplds first place in the Hawker Sister Florence -MishyNotre Dame math league chels OLVM Gerard Potte~

tlie chapel by students in a demy Fairhaven have been study periods were spent in Girls at Sacred Hearts Acashy

bauoi and Mrs Helen Jacobs With the theme Making Alllvigil for peace working on a project to bring

Christian Youth Movement Easter cheer to patients at St Things New institute sessiono will discuss Scripture catechetshymembers at Jesus-Mary Aca- Lukes Hospital New Bedford ical techniques use of filmsdemy Fall River heard the New Under supervision of Sister Jushywith adolescents other visualFolk a group of singing Holy lie Louise SSCC theyve ~een aids parent education teamCross seminarians Their appear- making tray favors including teaching and creative dramaticsance was arranged under t~e decorative placemats and napkin

Further information is avail shydirection of Mofher John Scarry holders for adults and flowered able from Stonehill CollegeJRJM Jollipops chicky surprises and North Easton 02356Also at JMA its French Week bunny hats for childern

The observance- began Sunday Science Fair Winners when French Club members Jeanne Phenix Yvette Berthi- Holy Family had four winshy Charities AppeaI aume and Susan Cournoyer took ners at the annual New Bedford Continued from Page Three part in a play sponsored by the Science fair In the senior division

Community Fund CampaignPrevost French Club Les Fem- James Berry and John Thomas president Board of Managers mes Parlent Trop Throughout of the New Bedford school were of Boston Dispensary and vice

the week too there have middotbeen cited fo~ earth science and phy- the Diocesan cheerleading tour- will combine with the seniors president of USOseveral skits prepared by mem- sics proJects respectively while t tl h ld t F h th bZbers in the junior division both Pa- namen recen yea ee an Lor e occasIOn SInce oth He has been the recipient of

or effort at Prevost was tricia Downey and SharonSmola High but sports arent all that cltsses of the academy are small honorary degrees from Holy MaJ matter at the TauntoJl girls due to the fact that the high Cross College Tufts University

e Sunday program Whlch ln- were recognized for work in the h f h d I ld f b sc 001 Break ast lunc an schoo IS being phased out Suffolk University Bradford -luded In addItIon to the play fle 0 iology M formal dinner pace settmgs The Junipero Club of Holy Durfee College of Technology~veral talks by promInent any students won honors at h M h I I I were recently on display at the Family High recently sponsored of Fall Rivet and Lowell Techshy

I remiddotnch cItIzens a French song- t e assac usetts RegIOn S F h school library and members of a talk on drug addiction for jun- nological Institute ~t and a motion picture Clence alr eld in Fall Rlver They included Christine Four- the Mothers Auxiliary were on iors and seniors The talk was Bishop to AddJess Meeting

UN French Club nier Dominican Academy and hand to answer etiquette ques- given by two brothers one an Most Rev James L ConnollyAt Coyle the French Club di- Diane Desmarais Mt St Mary tions from the students ex-addict the other director of Bishop of Fall River will speak

Ilected by Brother Hugh McCabe Academy both Fall River Both And the Coyle Fathers Club Marathon House a center for to the priests parish trusteesIOeCently elected officers After girls were recogiIized by the held its annual Father-Son Com treatment of addicts located in chairmen of the Catholic Charishy8le votes were tallied however Southeastern District of the Mas- munion breakfast at the school Coventry RIo ties Appeal and the invited lays our man at Coyle it looked sachuse~ts Dental Society bull with Robert Cahill ofthe Rhode CongratuIcitions go to Joseph gue9ts of the 111 diocesan if ~embers were voting for Debra Lay Dominican Aca- Island Food and Drug Commis Abraham of St Anthony High parishes bull UN delegation The presidents demy received a savings bond sion as guest speaker He dis- for meriting runner-up position Roland A Lafrance 1968 ApshyliPot wa~ captured he reports from the Bristol South Distriet cussed harmful effects of various iil the state finals of the annual peal lay chairman will also adshy a Polish fellow Cbarles Ozug Medical Auxiliary arid Michael drugs American Legion olatorical con- dress the 800 expected to attend lames OBrien a true Irishman Zito Bishop Feehan High At~middot The Catholic Students Mis- test - the opening meeting of the won the vice-presidential spot tleboro was awarded a plaque sion CrUsade at Stang H~gh has In club~ews at~HA the Senshy campaign for funds for the 30 while the treasurers job was by the Womens Auxil1ary to the taken as a special project this ior Science Club will conduct agencies of the Catholic Chadshy~warded to Jorge Matesanz -a Mass Veterinary ASsn month of April the collection of a farewell meeting for seniors ties Appeal

BASKETBALL PLAYERS On basketball team at Connolly High Fall River are from left Tim Duffy Tom Kroger John Long Joe Kelly Greg Sullivan Mike Manning

~~dent of Spanisll extraction Winners in the division of donated medical supplies and this ~month and members will Only Paul Bor9ue the secretary earlhscience Were John Dias eyeglasses for deprived Peoples visit an encephalitis clinic in I ~anaged to make the scene for Thomas Burk~ anciRobei-tClou~ of the world Supplies collected Freetown in May The Stamp France tier FeehahMicIlael Cote Pre illbe forwarded to the Cathi- and Coin Clubis planning a pubshy

At Bishop Stang iil North vost and Elizabeth Lavoi~ Do- olic Missions Medical Bureau for lie exhibition of members col- Dartmouth the math team led minican shipment iections in May imd the Chess by high scorer Lawrence l3yrnes Awards in math and engineer- Upco~ing at S~A Fairhaven Club has undergone reorganiza- placed secon~in a reeentBqs- ing went to Carol Vasconcellos is the aruiual senior prom which tion election of officers inshyflon public schools math meet Mt St Mary Madeleine Delisl~ wilL be held in the Colonial cluding Edward Norman presishyThe Stang team paced by the and Vivian Blais and Michael R60m of Whites restaurant in dent Daniel Brule vice-presi- shyeo-sIstent good work of George Zito Feehan Genevieve Pappas Westport from 8 to midnight dent Diane Lizotte secretary Oliver and EIleen Keavy cur- and Debra Lay Dominican Joan Friday night May 24 Juniors TuniorProm

Basile Feehan Amato Polselli The Holy Family Junior Prom Prevost and Sharon Woycie- Board ofmiddot Trustees isslated for Friday night AprilCentennialmiddot chowski Mt St Mary were 26 at Kennedy Center The prom

Continued from Page Seventeen cited To Study Changes will last from 8 to 11 and will Chemistry winners included have Carousel as its themebroad smile on his face-many Jane Arruda Anne Lewis De- WASHINGTON (NC) - The Mlisic will be by the Escorts

other families have arrived from nise Michaud Elizabeth St board of trustees of the Catho- And the Holy Family debatePltlrtugua1 A man d Diane Lamontagne lic University of America in team tied for first place in the Our Lady of Mt Carmel par- Christine Fournier Dominican Washington D C will meet Narry League with Cassidy A ~h was detached from St Johns Anne Sullivan and Pamela Can- Sunday April 21 in St Louis playoff will be held As of now as the Portuguese population dee Feehan Marilyn Riley and to consider a wide range of rec- Cassidys debate reco~d is 12 grew Then Our Lady of the Ann-Marie Charrette Sacred ommended changes resulting wins out of 14 debatesjrnmaculate Conception parish Hearts Fall River Irene Caron from a year-long study of the was erected to care for families Cassidy Marilyn Bentley Mt pontifical university by a comshyi Portuguese descent living in mitteee headed by Dr Carroll ~e North End of New Bedford St Mary Hochwalt

In the field of physics Alan middotRAMBLERToday St John the Baptist White Prevost Michelle Paquet The meeting will be held in ehurch has about 4000 parishshy SHA Fall River JamesReid Jrconjunction witll the Spring Americas Economy King ioners Our numbers started Prevost Mary Soans Jane Mc meeting of the National Confershy Fnr the Best Deal Come To dropping about seven years ago Donald and Martba Nugent yent ence of Catholic Bishops Broadway Ramblerasgr Silvia explains He feels St Mary The trustees are expected 10 INC part of the drop in membership Representatives from Diocesan name a new 30-man board meet 768 BROADWAYis due to a number of families schools to the Mass State Sci- with faculty representatives for RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 131moving outside the parish )ounshy ence Fair will include Michael the first time in histoi-y and CHARLES J DUMAIS Presdarles Intermarriages with othshy lito Amato Polselli Debra Lay discuss the search for a new er nationalities account for still Madeleine Delisle Jane Arruda university rector to replacemore losses Anne Lewis Father J~dhn P Whalen ~ho ~III11I11I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I11I1I1HIUIIIIIIIlIIlilllllllllllfllHlIilttmmIllIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllllnIlIllIllHIIIIIIIIIJ111~ However the Mother Church Denise Michaud Alan White was naine last October to a ef the Portuguese is not fading Michelle Paquet Elizabeth St one-year term as acting rector E WEEKEND SPECIAL sect away AmandSharon Woyciechowski A new school was built in New Projector

f957 It is expensive Msgr Silvia admits but I felt we needed it

St Anthony High in New Bedshyford is rejoicing over acquisi shytion of a movie projector as a

Parish gtrganizations are active gimiddotft from the alumni association and individual parishioners are willjng to give of their time

Presentation to principal Sister Lucille Champagne was made

and effort Perking

to keep the parish by Mrs Josephine Lafleur sociation president

asshy

Now they are getting read7 Cassidy-Coyle cheerleaders Jor a 100th anniversary captured third pillce v9Phy iil

_

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Case Somerset Favorites In Narry Diamond League

Case High of Swansea and Somerset are pre-season ehoices in this seasons Narragansett League baseball race but the club th8lt will bear watching is Westport TIne darkshyhorse Villagers may have a few surprises for Narry foes Another small area school

with a respectable 8-6 recordthat potentially has a shot Only one member of that at a league championship is squad Calvin Hopkinson will Norton of the Tri-Valley not be playing for the Villagers Conference Coach Ed Bibeau this Spring With the rest of the has most of last Deasons Central club ready to go - watch Jlor Village regulars Westport to make its presence in the fold ready lmown to challenge the Among fuose returning are perennial Paul Eastwood an Russ Picard favori1es If 0 T two of the better performers in Narry honors the circuit a year ago Eastwood amp1i1 at Norton led the team in hitting with a (C 0 a c h Peter highly respectable 360 averagem[l ~ek has pitched and played the infield G3ven returning Picard like Eastwood 15 also ~nnen for versatile An outfielder by trade ~theY chamshy he also takes his turn on the ii~~JWhip bid Peter mound for Coach Bibeaus nine Weo~port Bartek Carl Zajac and Jeff Hague tmIshed the 1961 eampaign ill round out Bibeaus four-man ~ place in tbe NalT7 loop pitching staff

Norton Bids for Tri-Valley Crown jfOO task of handling the but in thin scholastic year of

~tJ of this quartet will fall athletic surprises it may not be Gpoundl ~e shoulders of either Ron as big as some thinllt ~JmOi) or Manny Cabral both

A second place finisher inexperienced receivers ConnOlll 1967 the Norton Lancers haveexcel1B not only defensively their sights on the Tri-Valleybut likewise with the bat He Conference crown The clubsbit at a 333middot clip last Spring one-two hitters last campaignJohn Souza and Mike Andras have departed from the Norton th better than 300 hitters baseball scene but the teamqaln will be out to join the one-two pitching punch is reshyleague leaders in batting prowshyturning Juniors Ken Allen aess They should put a wallop left-hander who had a perfectin Westports oHensive attaCK 7-0 record last Spring and ArtIf Coach Bibeaus boys can dushyBouchard will be relied uponplicate their Performances of a heavily to bring the league flagJellr ago Offensively and biB to Norton Coach Bartek alSobig four comes through on middottbe hopes to get some help in middotthemound Westport may realize a the pitching departmentmiddot fromlong awaited Narry championshyFred Rego Bill Gorczyca andEip dream Admittedly if Ie Steve Nichols bull bie word in ~~rts_tuture

~ ~ bull I

OpeUp With~on-League Co~esttsmiddot Other returnees incl~ Capshy develop rapidlymiddot defensively if

tain Mike Wynnn Greg Croff they are to regain the leagues BOb Adams Tim McEndy and divisional crown - whicb flbeymiddot Paul Hassie Wynn a senior lost to HoWston last Spring middotmiddot will be starting his third season and gain a shot at the Trl shyill left field with Cruffstarting V~ey Conference ebampionshyhis second campaign in center ship Many area clubs openThey will be joIned by Wynns their campaign this week with brother Ricky in right fied non-league games highlighting

The infield win be anchored the action League competition by Adams at second base and will commence for the most Hassle at short Newcomers part next week Richy Silvia and George Macshy Mother Nature has done her Arthur are presently battling it job this Spring Baseball coaches out for the third base job and throughout -the diocese admit Lorrie Adams also a first-year that this is the best Spring they man appears to have the inside have had to prepare flbeir track on first base charges in many a year Weather

cannot be blamed for a slowMcEndy who has been the start this time around All areLancers starting catcher since eagerly awaiting the umpireshis Freshman year is starting first call to play ballhIs third campaign behiJd the

plate Bartek expects McEndy to hold the inexperienced inshy New School System field together

The Lancers will have to imshy In German State prove upon their hitting and DUSSELDORF (NC) - The

North Rhine-Westphalia state parliament middothas approved aCanadian Prelates change in the states school sysshytem that probably will meanEstablish Council the end of many denominational

OTTAWA (NC)-The Catho-shy schools Hc bishops of Canada have esshy By an overwhelming majorshytablished a 12-member Fiscal ity the parliament voted to Affairs Council composed of change the state constitution and clergy Religious and laymen establish the nondenominational who will advise the Church on Christian school in which reli shyfinanclal matters gious training is given by Cathshy

Among the areas which are olic and Protestant instructors receiving ini~ial attention of the in the same school as the patshycommittee is the question of tern for state-supported schools whether the Church should be from the fifth through the nint subject to government taxation grades and if so what form of taxation In the past the state has supshywould be equitable to churches ported Illeparate Catholic and government and other taxshy Pro tell tan t denominational payen Khoola

-~) PASSION PLAY Today Christians hold the Solemn Observance of the Lords Supper

It is commemorated ina PMsion Play at Prevost High School Fall River by David Poisshyson as Christ Paul Martel left 8$ St John and Paul Bouampquet as St Peter

DominicGlIsmiddot Rent ApGrt~~rit in Inner -Cimiddottimiddot middot

Want t~ Get Closer to I Agony of the Worl~middot WASHINGTON (NC)middot Pift his experience in the neig~lgtorshy ruary 1966 because theJ

Dominican priests-each doing hood is invaluable in helping wanted to get closer to the bis own thing-are living middotin an both prisoners and parolees He agony of the world While nol apartment in the inner ~ cd said the insight he gains into eliminating the academic life Washington here they come from ancl h~w they felt that living in the inlleJ The five run the gamut from they view life aids him In mv city would be as important bull

a professor of moral theology at ing them intelligent advice and learning experience as academic the Don)inican House ofStucUeII 8ssis~nCe study to a prison chaplain a1 the Diamp- Father William Kane is middotthemiddotNeighborhOoclll[aatrict of Columbia Jail Ibey neighborhood man of the have in common1heiy addresa A Pr~ceton graduate ~itl1 apartment Hemiddotworks with minshyand a desire to understand and doctorates from Harvard aJgt4 isters inmiddot the area in establishing alleviate the problems ~ livlnc OxfCrd Father Albert Brodershy youth programs and fightina I in a poor Urban community ick teaches Constitutional LalV for better housing and fail

Father TbomasHea~ middotttie at the catholic University Law rent laws His motive is to givemoral theology professor aDd School the people in the community aD author of a reCent bOOkmiddotID awareness of their own dignitymiddotBe and Father Heath startedFaee of An~sh is 0Il 1be to affirm the fact that it is athe apartment project in Feb-bOard of direCtors of the Pe0shy ood place to live ples Center a house soon to be

the rehabilitationopened for Criticizes Usury of alcoholics He also meets

MEXICO CITY (NC)-Mexshy5 50 01- a SYSTEMATIC wimiddotth ~culties of Wasbingtcm

icc CityS Jose Cardinal Garibiseminaries to discuss policyshy bull 10 year SAViNGSRivera urged bankers meetingmaking and apostolic activity MONTHLY DEPOSITSat the National Bankers Conshy

Legal Aid Office vention in Guadalajara to comshy 5 00 01- a INVESTMENT bat usury and work closely bull 10 year SAVINGS

Father Joseph Cooney a NOTICE ACCOUNTSwith the government to proshylawye~ who has worked 011

voter registration in the South mote the social welfare of all II REGULAR4 5001 the Mexican people bull 10 Jflar SAVINGSand took an active part in dvil

rights activities such lIS

~lma march is DOW admin~ Bass Rivertering a legal aid office in the CENTERneighborhood of the Dominishy Savings Bank

cans apartment Volunteer law Paint and Wallpaperstudents from the Catholic Uni- Bank 8y Man I

versity of Ameiica assist him Dupont Paint

We Pay The Postage

IJcor Middle St

A third member of the group m this program 4iiii 422 Acush Ave bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA Fat her Raymond MalonSOl1 ~ New Bedford bull SOUTH VARMOUTH 4raquo HYANNISserves as the Catholic chapiain bull PARKINGmiddot

bull DENNIS PORT bull OSTtRVILLEatmiddot the D C jail A late vocashy Rear of Storetion Father Malonson has been ordained only two years middot Father Malonsoll feels U1at

LEVESQILIES OFFla E~lnPMENTNow Many Wear Wood Metal Desks and ChairsFALSE TEETH

With More Comfort JUST GiVE ME A CHANe TO QUOleTo overcome discomfort when

dentures sllp sllde or loosen Just sprinkle a llttle FASTEETH on your 187 SHAWMUT STREET bull NEW BEDFORD MASS

middot plates FASTEElH holds dentures firmer You eat better feel more PO Box 2062 - Hervey L Levesque

middot -wont sour Helps check plate odor comfortable FASTEETH Is alkaline

Dentures that fit are lIlSSentlai to Telephone 993middot1264middot health See your dentist regularly Get FASTEETB at all drUB counten ___ _ _____11_0__-D-tcl----4

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs April 11 1968

PhySDCOUi) l1JJ Uges litUBgy C~[filges

~n Last RStes RED BANK (NC) A

~atholic physician called for revision of the liturgical $orm of the Anointing of the Sick cluring a discussion on The Chaplains Role With the Dying Patient at Riverview Hospital here in New Jersey

Dr George J Sheehan an alumnus of Manhattan College and a founder of Christian Brothers Academy in nearby lLincroft was one of three apeakers at the symposium coshyaponsored by the hospital and Ute 1 Redmiddot Bank Council of

ilhurches Citing obvious failures by

both physician and clergyman iin helping the dying patient and bis family Dr Sheehan sugshygested members of the family Ghare inmiddot a ceremony which would exchange feelings of llove and hope between them ElDd the dying person

Dr ~heehan observed that while inadequacy in the face of death has been in the past apparent to the Protestant criergyman it is now also felt by Catholic priests

They findmiddot he said the La~t Sacrament in its present form Ii a consolation only to those with the strong faith of a Breton iiteasant-a kind of faith they e seeing less and l~ss-

Appropriate Theology He also said while the develshy

pment of a Common Christian itervice parlakirtg of the same llodividual familymiddot and commu~

Ility significance as Bap~i8ai -dMarriage would be a giant p in middotheiping people to a middotbappy death iit would remain IDol theologians to present- a relshy

qwant lmd acceptable image of mail in this time and this place ilnd to develop an appropriate eology of death heaven ~nd bell in order to make a signifi- sant change in our life style

lOd therefore in our approach to death

Other panelistsmiddot were the Rev Seorge Fitzgeraid a Presbyteshyaan minister middotand middotchaplain at Princeton Hospiital arid Mn Ruth Snyder a nurse of the lIiverview Hospital staffmiddot

POSTER CHILD LEADS WAY Joey BeIge 8 of Syraeuse NY leads themiddot way down a White House lttairway in the company ofthe Fi~st t-adymiddotMrsLyndon B Johnson

and Mrs Muriel Humphrey wife ofthe Vice-President Joeymiddotis this years poster child of

the National Association for Retarded Children H~ ismiddot thesQn ofMt and Mrs Robert Beige middotmembersmiddotOf St Vincent de Paul parish in Syracuse whos-e ot-herfive children SlHshy

round their Uttle broth~r wil1hmiddot the love and care to h~lp him livea full and happymiddot life

Penn See Studies Poverty Pmiddotrogram HARISBlJRq (NC)--Coadju- is being made to see ho)Vtbe to coordinate and channel our

tor Bishop Joseph T Daley diocese canmiddot best use its re-middot efforts in the fieldmiddot vicar general- of the Harrisburg sources to alleviate poverty Bishop Daley said it ismiddot im- diocese calledmiddot on the nearly problems middotperative that all our people 50000 Catholics in the area to He alsomiddot said Wemiddot contem- knoW and understand the probshy

acquaint th~mselves with 10- middotplatemiddot the early middotestablishment of middotIem of middotracism and the funda- calracfal and poverty problems amiddotmiddot diocesanmiddot human relations mental moral injustices which

In a lettermiddot read at aU Masses commission middotto serve asmiddot a liaison middotare at the root of the deplorable BishopDlIleT said middotthat a study with all people Collcerned and conditions in our own area

Urges Hospitals Re~ognie Unio~s

CLEVELAND (NC) - AI layshymens group here has asked the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hospitals to declare its willingshyness to recognize labor unions as collective bargaining agents for hospitals employes

lNle request came in a letter from William A caldwell chainnan of the eurolevellllnd Conference of Laymen to Sister ~ry Collette of Hamilton Ohio president of the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hosplshytala during a one-day meeting here of the Ohio Hospital Assoshyciation convention

The laymens group said such a statement would promote the human dignity of hospital emshyployes in real and immediate ways serve the common good of our communities and inshycrease the understandingmiddot of Catholic teaching by all the citishyzens of Ohio

The letter pointed out that the National Catholic Hospital Association 1 a s t November called on Catholic hospitals tiraquo be guided by the social teachshyings of the Church and to deal with unions that employecfgt choose

Discuss ~iot Report On Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC) - Beginshyning Sunday April 14 the Catholic Hour will present over the NBCmiddot network a three-part series The Climate of Change

Evolution or Revolution foshycusing on three areas of social and religioUs concern today today

~gr Rop~rt Fox cOordinashytor of Spanish community 00shy

middot lion in the New York arclidioshymiddoteese will discuss The Riot centommissi~ middotReport Amiddot Chrisshy

tiati Response April 14 Msgr Ivan D Illich of the Intereushy-tural Center 01 Language and D middotoe u men tat 1 on CuershyDavaca Mexf~o win be intershyviewed Aprjl 21 and Father Francois Houtart Belgian 00shyciologist will be interviewed Apiil 28

The National Council of Cathshy oUc Men producer of the OathshyoUe Hour reconunendseheckshymiddoting local newspaper programa for broadca9t time in particushymiddotRar areas

I Am The RestUlJTectiltogtD

Ai 1)(J[YQfGfDVIJJpound)9

lJ1~TJPJiiD~ EEJ~lJregff

FALL RIVER

Page 10: 04.11.68

Choose AmericH Superior General

MoUNT KISCO (NC)-Fqr the first time in the 160-yellW history of the Religous of tim Cenacle an American has b~ elected superior general

Mother Rita FOy was electetl to the post at the general chapshyter of the Cenacle in Rome acshycording to the orders interpro-shyvincial public relations offiC() here in New York

The general chapter whielli is still in session is evaluatinti a series of recommendations fOli a general decentralization opoundl authority the launching of eJJogt

perimental programs by too Cenacle and the restructurinfi of Community life

The Religious of the Cenaclo is a worldwide congregation 03 Sisters committeed to the wom of retreats and religious in-gt struction There afe three American provinces

Mother Rita Foy was born 1rI

FLYING DOCTOR Dr Leo Brown and his wife Isabel a registered nurse are shown with their children Rebecca 1Qand Joel 8 with the C-essna plane they use for their Flying Doctor Service in the diocese of Gwelo Rhodesia NC Photo

THE ANCHOR Thurs April 11 1968

Project Equality Issues Guides For BMyers

CHICAGO (NC) - The first national directory of 3931 business firms comshymitted to equal opportunity in all aspects of employment has been published here by Project Equality

It will be used by more than 7000 churches synagogues and religious institutions participat shying in the interfaith fair emshyployment drive that urges givshying preference to the listed firms in all purchases of goods and services

Project Equality offices in Jlive cities are publishing re- gional buyers guides as well They are in Columbus for Ohio Detroit for Michig~n Hartford for Connecticut Omaha for New York City and was gradlDgt Nebraska and San Antonio for ated from Hunter College Sillj

Texas IFlying Doctor Serves Africa Mission south entered the Cenacle in 19~1i The national guide is a comshy completing her studies in Romo

pilation of 976 national and She was assigned to the Miltlligt 2955 local or regional firms do- Vietnam Veteran l Wifel licensed Pilots western province of the Celilgt ing business with religious inshy acle with headquarters in CtJiDRIEFONTEIN (NC)-In the the Gwelo diocese covers some must drive over lO miles of stitutions They include 40 of cago and has held a number am

grasslands here onmiddot a 5OOO-foot 14000 aCres it includes a 300shy dirt bush road seven miles of the top 500 U S corporations assignments as superior of vashy

high plateau the Cat hoi i c bed tuberculosis sanitorium a relatively good road-and watch and range down to small neighshy rious Cenaeles in the Uniteamp

of mainshy 100-bed hospital a farm an out for wild animals all alongmission Driefonteinborhood businesses States and Canada1ains-of all things-a hangar elementary school and trade the way

Listing in the Quyers guide She will now reside in RoJJl() for a Cessna 182 Skylane air shy schools for carpentery tailorshy Thus far they have encounshymeans a firm has signed Ii

plane ing and homecraft tered only baboons monkeyspledge to hire and promote deer mongoose lizards andThe mission staff totals somewithout discrimination has filed FrQm this point the missions lleslYJits to Performbirdsa report form with Project doctor can cover nine out-stashy 1200 people 35 of whom are

Equality detailing the number tions spread over an aerial non-Afrfcans The mission and Witch Doctors Woth City Symphony of its niinority-group employees distance equivalent to that beshy hospitals are operated by Afri shy The Biblical quotation The BALrIMORE (NC) -Fathe1 -broken down by jop classifi tween San Francisco and Los cans and by Swiss Bethlehem harvest is indeed great but the Bruno Markaitis SJ provinshyeation-and has pledged to take Angeles The plane was proshy priests and Brothers German laborers are few describes the cial of Lithuanian Jesuits in the further affirmative actions vided by the Mission Doctors Domincian nuns African nuns scope of medical work in Africa free world will guest conduct

Association of Los Angeles three laywomen-two American according to the Browns In the Baltimore Symphony in twc Pledge C()()peraiion Calif as part of its Flying Docshy nurses and a German teachershy these rura~ regions there is II of his own piano compositioDll

Cooperating businesses also tor Service begun here four and the Browns ratio of about one doctor to in Ii concert sponsored by LCgtJio have agreed to undergo periodic years ago The Brown children attend a every 33000 persons Mrs ola College here Sunday eompliance reviews to assure At that time Dr James Carey small two-classroom school in Brown said Africail medicine At the keyboard as soloi

Umvuma a town 17 miles away and witch doctors are still verycontinued affirmative employshy now a Santa Barbara Calif wiiI be two other Jesuit pries~ much in evidence she addedment ac~ions according to surgeon arrived at Driefontein The journey to and from school Fathers Leslie J Schnierer -and

Thomas Gibbons Jr national to begin his three-year mission is looked upon as quite an adshy It is heartbreaking to see a Benito Rivera students at thIl director of Project Equality hitch He decided quickly that venture by the family as they child with measles have to go Peabody Conservatory of Music

In addition to the firms listed The concert will mark thewith a plane one doctor could though life blind because the in the guide more than 12000 do the wbrk of five ndanga (witchdoctor) put mull 50th anniversary of the restorashyother businesses have filled out With the help of the Swiss Pittsburgh Diocese (medicine) in the childs eyes tion of independence to Lithoshycommitment forms pledging coshy Bethlehem Brothers Dr Carey Tithing for Poor she said But in other areas aniai operation with the program but began surveying and laying out like TB the African is relJlarkshy

PITTSBU~GH (NC)-Bishophave not yet supplied the necshy landingstrips near isolated and ably sophisticated medicaHy

John J Wright has announced essary statistical employment doctorless clinics and hospitals Kariangwe Berejena Kana Education Officethe Pittsburgh Diocese will unshyreports which are similar 10 The Brothers also built the Serema Matibi are all farshy NEW ORLEANS (NC) - Aledertake a new tithing plan tothose ~equired by the federal hangar at priefontein and Dr away-sounding places but the office of religious education bllllhelp finance housing and othergovernment Carey arranged for one Brother people suffer as you and I been established here by Archshyprojects for the pOOr The nalles of firms listed in to be trained as a pilot suffer from sickness They bishop PhilIp M Hannan a The_dioces~ will give 10 perthe buyers guides are available Meanwhile in Los Angeles mourn when their children have will supervise the teaching oct

cent of the contributions andonly to religious groups parti shy Dr Leo Brown a former Navy to be sick and often die she religion in parochial schoolBbequests it receives and thecipating in the program surgeon with 11 years of sershy continued and in Confraternity of Chrisshysame percentage of collections

PIroject Equality sponsored vice and his wife Isabel a Perhaps some of their disshy tian Doctrine classestaken up for directly diocesan

by the National Catholic Conshy registeled nurse were volunshy eases have strange-soundingpurposes to finance povertyference for Interracial Justice teering for MD~s three-year nawes but all come under theprogramsoperates six other local offices hitch in Africa He was just title of Gods sick These are CONRAD SEGUINThe money will be used withtouching seven more states Adshy home from Vietnam where he the names of clinics that are

other religious groups for intershyditional offices will be opened served with the Marines visited by the Flying Doctor BODY COMPANY faith housing programs andin major cities this year acshy Staff of 1200 she said Aluminum or Steelother joint dforts for the poorcording to a spokesman Dr Brown and his wife are 944 County Street

Parishes will not be requiredlicensed pilOts So last Sumshy NEW BEDFORD MASS mer when they and their two to tithe but are invited to conshy Chief Speaker

WY 2-6618ISenQte Ideas f children-Rebecco 10 and Joel tribute voluntarily NEW XORK (NC) ~ Msgr 8~arrived here MDA sent the John J Egan director of the

Continued from Page Three Cessna 182 along with thein Chicago Archdiocesan office ofStart With 45and to preach in the one Dioshy The Driefontein mission in tirbanaffairs will be the chief

eese have them in the pther GREENSBORO (NC)-Fortyshy speaker at the May 16 banquetfive priests of the Raleigh dioshy of the 1968 Catholic Press AsoshyWhile the 24 diocesan priests Abortion Bill Passes cese have formed the North ciation convention in ColumbusSenators are elected the two Carolina priests association Ohiomembels of the Priests Senate In Maryhind Ho~se Seventeen others have indicatedwho are members of religious

commullities are appointed by ANAPOLIS (NC)-A ~m to they wish to become members the Bishop These will be ro- relax Marylands 100-year-old The Raleigh diocese includes all

North Canlinatated among the religious com- abortion law and put its regushylation into the hands of themunities doing parish work in

the Diocese At present the Sen- medical profession passed the ators from religious communi- House of Delegates by im 86 ties are Father Felician Plichta to 47 vote OFM Conv and Father Co- The bill permits a doctor opshylumba Moran SSCC eniting in an accredited hospishy

tal to perform an abortion to The Bishop has encouraged a preserve the physical or mental

study of pension plans that health of the mother to prevent would involve laypersonnel of birth of a deformed or retarded diocesa~ ail~ parish facilitieii childand to end some plegnan

The Bisholl has ma~li liQme ad- CieScaused by rape just~ents)nassessmtntson pat- UnClet the~ptesel1t law abor ishes tflking into account the tiOll is peimitted ~hen two growth o(~ubU~Iiln ~~riShesah~ Ihysicians a~r~~ it itnec~ssar~bull

t~~d~ci~ illsome~ lhe eiy 10 s~lIre tlesaity Of ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~fi-+ J + hf1~gt~$~- - ~ ~~ t~9~~r~ - ~- ~ ~ co ~ I

SCHOOL Mainten~nce Supplies

SWEEPERS - SOAPS

DISINFECTANTS middotFIRE EXTINGUISH~RS

DAHILL CO J886 P~~CHA~ESTIUET

~ NE~~EDFOA~ bull 9933786 - -

~ ~ ~ lt- -- bull ) bullbullbull - bull ~OOOC~lOOO~lJOCClCGGOOCMIMNMlOOOOOOCMraquoOCl~COOI~

Church~en Study Racial Problems In New Jersey

NEWARK (NC) -The Church cannot tell otheJiS what to do until it faces the problem within its own comshymunity a Methodist Bishop has told Essex Count~ clergyshymen of all faiths in an a~essshyment of the racial problems beshysetting Newark and other New Jersey communities

Bishop Prince A Taylor and Catholic Auxiliary Bishop John J Dougherty of Newark disshycussed the race problem in light of the report of the Govemors Commission on Civil Disorder

Cooperative Solution Bishop Taylor stressed it is

the duty of the church to beshycome knowledgeable about the report to read it carefully Action without information is irresponsible he declared as he noted the church must face up till the fact that it has parshyticipated in maintaining the status quo He noted that when ~he commissionen pelsonally toured the riot area and asked the people what the impact of the church was in their lives all but a pound~w marked the church ltDfpound

Bishop Dougherty said if the problem is to be solved it will only be through the involveshyment of the total community government industry labor unions churches schools peoshyple living in the suburbs

Dont Have Time The attack on t1e problems

must be two-fold he asserted first meeting the needs which the coming Summer presents and then planning long-range programs to overcome the root causes of the problem

There is an urgen t need of immediate programs to enable us to have time to work toward the ultimate goal

Bishop Taylor referred to the need for time to work out solushytions We cannot undo the evils of 300 years in one Sumshymer he emphasized This illmiddot not going to be a case of a quick antidote and then they Jived happily ever after

However a Newark priest active in innel-city work who was one of six reactors to the presentations made by the Bishshyops remarked that comments about needing time to solve the problems overlook the fact that we dont hlVe the time

It would be great if we did have it to keep order but q (gt bull

the people bull have the imshypression that nothing has been donesaid Father Joseph Stulb

Many are ready to riot again if only to call attention to themselves he opined The black community despairs that the white community has or will change its attitude

Rev William Fox associate general secretary of the New Jelsey Council of Churches scored the commission for fail shying to note the contribution thpt a divided church - white and black - mademiddot to the elisis H~ cliticized the church for mainshytaining silence during public controversies which were listed as proximate causes of the riotshying

Another Catholic Magazine F0 Id S

DAYTON (NC)-Mary Today a magazine founded in 1901 deshyvoted to information about the Blessed Motherand her role in the Church has issued its final edition

It is one of 11 Catholic magashyzines which have ceased pubJishycation in the past )eal because

of 1088 ~l circulation The rnaf- orders are af Teutopolis JIL azine had a reoont eirculauOll Lake Bluff in and St Meiri

~ aooU~1151gtO middot - ~lnclbull - - -

BENEMERENTI MEDAJ~ Father James Vizzaro SJ second from left received the Benemerenti Medal at a dinner in Washington -on the occasion Of his retirement as dishyrector of the Washington office of the National Catholic Rural Life Association Conshygratulating him are left to right Msgr ~dward W ORourke executive director of the NtRLC Bishop Henry J Soenneker of Owensboro Ky rural life advisor of the usce department of social action and Msgr Luigi L Ligutti Vatican observer to the UN Food and Agliculture Organization and former executive dirootor of NCRLC NC Photo

Fr Vizzard Gets Benemerenti Medal Work for IFhlltfol lPoor Recognized

the Holy See to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization priests and Protshyestant clergymen and members of Congress

Msgr George G Higgins di shyrector social action department U S C a tho 1 i c Conference praised Father Vizzards comshybination of scholarship political know-how great tenacity of

Schedule Workshop O~ Sex Education

WASHINGTON (NC)-Father James T McHugh director of the family life bureau middotU S Catholic Conference will direct a workshop on Sex Education to be held at Catholic Univershysity of America here June 17shy28

Purpose of the workshop is to prepare a basic core of people especially teachers and parish personnel to supplement the work of the home in a complete program of education in sexu- ality It will provide these pershysons with background informashytion give them opportunity to evaluate some of the basic mashyterialsand engage them in an in-depth analysis of a curricushylum guide which reaches every grade level

Lecturers and consultants will include Fathermiddot John L Thomas SJ of the Combridge Center fOl Social Studies Dr and Mtmiddots Joseph Bird co-aushythors of The Freedom of Sexshyual Love Dr Ann F Lucas chairman of the psychology deshypaltment Farleigh Dickinson Universit~ Teaneek N J and Father Walter Imbiorski direcshytor of the Cana program in the Chicago atchdiocese

ELECTRICAL Contractors

~~ ~ ~KqQ~co-operative

~ bank 944 ~QiJnty St ~ Main dffice Winthrop Str~et rallnton

N B df d bull -B~ach Office 1400 Fail River Ave- Seekonk L

e w___e ~r __ ~J - H-bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull~ shy

purpose and above all genushyine love for the poor

Father Vizzard will leave Washington to middotwork in Califorshynia Nevada Arizona and Utah the region of the Jesuits Cali shyfornia province

Four Cleveland Nuns Quit as Religious

CLEVELAND (NC) - Four nuns one the prineipal of a 1100 student girls Catholic high school have separately withdrawn from the Sisters of Notre Dame here in Ohio

It was the largest departure since 1966 when 10 Sisters of Notre Dame were released from their vows to move to Pueblo CoIQ to form an experimental community middotThe Sisters of Notre Dame is the largest order of 2531 Cedar St New Bedford nuns based in the Cleveland 993middot3222 Diocese

imiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot~middotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot~ middot 3NEW HIGHERi RATE OF

PER ANNUM INTEREST PAID QUARTERllyo ON PAID-UP

SHARE CERTIfICATES Deposits Welcomed in Multiples of

$20000 up to $30OOO-on Single and Joint Accounts Up to $60OOO-for Cornorations

DIVIDENDS PAID 4 TIMES A YEAR February MC1V August and November

All Deposits Inoured in Full

Taunton

THE ANCHORshyThurs April 11 1968 11

Support Bi~hop5

Equa~sty Plea MINEOLA (NC)-The Cathshy

olic Interracial Council of Long Island has voted overwhelmshying support of Rockville Censhytres Bishop Walter P Kellenshybergs call for equality in housing employment and edushycation

Bishop Kellenberg issued Zl pastoral letter-A Call to COl1shyscience-in which he said it i9 essential that every man be given equal opportunity for eJQP]oyment and job advanceshyment and equal educatton for himself and for his children

Declaring these to be fundashymental moral issues facing the people of Long Islanp the council said We give this statement by Bishop Kellenberg our overwhelming sUPPOtt

John J Clarke council president said the eounciB deemed it necessary to reit shyerate its support of the bishops statement co gtI bull because of our increasing concern over conshytinued discriminatory practicelC in these areas

In a policy statement the council declared the bash cause of racial unrest lies in the almost complete lack oR any meaningful contact between the races Today there are few whites who can say they really know Negroes This ignorance of each other is caused almost lxc]usively by patterns of segshyregation in housing which reshysuited in segregated schools 3mll a segregated society

As a step in breakin( these patterns the council recomshymended passage of open housshying ordinances in all towns OK

Long Island Only when there is no place left for the white man to run will the problem be solved it said

Norris H Tripp SHEET METAL

J fESER Prop

RESIDENTIAL INDUSTRIAL

COMMERCIAL

WASHINGTON (NC)-Father James L Vizzard SJ retiring Washington director of the Nashytional Catholic Rural Life Conshyference received the papal Benemerenti medal hele in recshyognition of his work for t~e

rural poor of the United States and throughout the world

The presentation at a dinner in the Cosmos Club was attendshyed by Bishop Henry J Soenshyneker of Owensboro Ky NCRLC president Msgr Luigi Ligutti permanent observer for

Prelate Advocalles Open Housing ILaws

JEFFERSON CITY (NC)shyBishop Joseph M Marling CPPS of Jefferson City has urged Catholics of the diocese to campaign openly and fearshy

- lessly for area open housing laws

In a pastoral letter urging open housing law support the Missouri prelate askedshy

Who fails to see that to conshydemn a large segment of our people to the cruel segregation thatmiddot closed housing entails is to sin gravely against charity justice and the vely finest inshystincts of our nature Who may deny that to perpetuate such an evil in this enlightened age will bring malediction upon us

For jurely he answered Chlist is brother to the eolored in the identical sense that he is brother to the other children of men

Plan Fa-II Opening Of Joint Semill1ary

CHICAGO (NC)-A graduate school of theology for seminashyrians ftom three Religious orshyders will open in a former hotel here in the Fall

The school to be known as the Catholic Theological Union will be operated by the Passhysionists Franciscans and Sershyvites in the fOI-mer Aragon Hotel near the University of Chicago

About 100 students ue exshypected to enter thl school this year Area seminariltes ourrent-middot ly being used by themiddot threfl

2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese 01 Fall Ri~~r-Thurs Apr 11 1968 S~~in S~ntences priest- and Laymen

JOurrt)~a$ts Opinions Differ_On V~~e of Bishops Synod

By Msgr George G Higgins Two American journ~lists who have covered the Rome

1beat off and on for several years-Father Francis X Murphy CSSR and Gary MacE0 in-have just published an interesting account of the Synod of Bishops which was held in Rome in 1967 (Synshyod 67 A New Sound in what they manege to teU us Rome Bruce Publishing Co about themselves in their sep- Milwaukee) Written in the arate and widelydivergent asshyfamiliar Xavier Rynne style it Sessments of the Synod is something of a tour de force How two men who disagree given the se- so fundamentally about the uecy w h i c h pros and cons of the Synod ever enveloped the managed to work as a tandem $ y nod a 1 in the writing of the history of proceedings The the synodal proceedings is to authors h a v e put it as mildly as possible a tried to give perplexing mystery on account as They tell us that for aU that a c cur ate as lies between their separate possible under evaluations Df the Synod they the conditions are jointly accountable but that of time and cir- the internal logic of their inshycumstance For dividual viewpoints and the my own part I dialectic of the situation led think they deserve better than them to attribute exclusive reshya ~as~ing grade They do ~lOt sponsibil~ty for the Prelude to ~lalln to hae wrlt~en anythmg a priest and for the Postscript like8cIefmltIve hlstory of the i to a layman SYlo1IgtUt they have proyid~d Far A art 1IllS wlth a useful mtenm sum- P mabr of the -proceedings and I take it that this is a polite ~r ~ii w~ cin) begrateful way of saying that when they

Perplexing Mystery got around to summing up their Tothis reader however what impressions of the Synod they

the authors tell us about the

lSynod ls less mterestmg than i

~ 8holJd have concluded contrashyr rlwise- that it was seriously - lacking in credibility and releshy

vance and was thus on biI- ance a huge disappointment

lRationaJize Differences

Such differencesmiddot of opinion on the part of experienced

jourpalilts covering the same everit-and using the very same

source~ of informationare not to be Vf~npered at

On the other hand I am Dot very happy about the curious- way in which the authors haveshyrationalized their differencea Th~y tell Us that one evaluatioo Df ~he Synod (Father Murphys) w~ ~ritteo from the viewpoint of the institutional Church and the other (Mr MacEoins) from that of conteinporarshyman~ind

Or again in Mr MacEoin words A priest professionally involved in the institution will

tend to lean in one direction 11 layman whose professional sushy

- viva rests on his sensitivity to

SPECIAL DELEGATE Marches Ghilio Sacchetti 42 has been named by POpe Paul VI to succeed Count Enrico

Galeazzi as special delegate of the Pontfical Commission for the state of Vatican City He is wearing the now outshymoded costume of a Gentleshyman of Cape and Sword NC PIloto

world opinion in the other

Now Bear This

This strikes me as being bull slightly threadbare and hopeshylessly pre-Conciliar dichotomy I know of a Dumber of priests (and so do the authors I asshysume) who rightly~or wrongly are just as critical of the Synod as Mr MacEoin is

I also know of a number III laymen (and so do the authocs I must assume again) who rightly or wrongly are just as sanguine about the results of the Synod as Father Murphy is So whats all this doctrinaire I

stuff about priests necessarily looking at things (myopically) through the allegedly unenshylightened eyes of contemposhyrary mankind

Tell it to the Marineal

found that they wer~ so ho~e-lessly far apart 111 theIr thmkmg

that the division of labor so I cryptically described in the above quotations appeared to be the only possible way of salshyvaging the middotoperation Thatll fair enough

It isnt at all surprising that one of the authors (Father Murphy) should have concluded that on balance the Synod was truly a contribution to the Church~s aggiornamento and that the other (Mr MacEoin)

MAnmn (NC) - Sz~en per- sons incIl~lg a Cathollc priest have bc)n sentenced to prison terms and fined by Madrids Court of r lic Order on charges Olf havinr participated in an anti-Frangt meeting in Barceshylona in lS~G

On trial were Father Francisshyeo Paula Botey and 10 laymen who were accused of attending

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an illegal meeting The meetshying was advertised as a Day of Repression and criticized what it called the repressive activities of the government of Gen Franshycisco Franco

Father Botey who admitted during the trial that he atshytended the meeting at Barcelona Universitys law school was senshyten~ to a year in jail ~d fined

about $214 Three of the laylDell received similar sentences amplid fines while ~ others drew six-month jail terms aDd four were absolved

Father Batey testified duriDtl the trial that he deliberately atshy1ended the meeting to protest against the ftPress1on he bad said he had seen of -certain see-shymenta of ampbe Spanish clergyshy

Prelate Supports Catholic Schools Opposes Racism

NEWARK (NC) -Archshybishop Thomas A Boland of Newark touched on racism Catholic education and aborshytion in his annual message to the Archdiocesan CouncH of catholic Men at its CQnvention here

Noting that BOrne people adshyvocate closing Catholic schools to concentrate on adult educashytion Archbishop Boland said I believe we mU9t give as much time as is possible to adult edushycation but not that we should ignore our chlIdren

If we close our schools he soid there may 00 no one to attend the adult courses iJn future years

He deplored the absence of religion in the education of many people and said that while 0 ohild may be receiving o good academic background under such circumstances he is not being trained in his will or his morals

Jthortion Is Murder Archbishop Boland noting

~hot the question of relaxing bortion laws is before the state LeFislature recalled that he lralNi opollen to the men about ~ot Dubject a year earlier and repeated what he had said then abortion is murder

Should the state legislate more liberally in this field he said it would go outside its sphere and we would have no

right to follow it He indicated however that

the Church would not oppose the establishment of a legislashytive commission to study the abortion law

Discussing racism he called it a malignant growth in our society and announced his support for a peaceful interrashycial walk through the streets of Newarks ghetto

Spokesmen lor L2ity Archbishop Boland also urged

the men to turn their council into a real spokesman for the laity He ruled out the possibil shyity of a voice for the laity toshytally independent flrom the hierarehy declaring that this is not the structure cd the Church

H we want to build a strucshyture the archbishop said we get an architect to give us a uniform plan Christ is the arshyehitect of the Chureh We are its workmen

He then urged the men tID take the steps which would make the ACCM aspokesman for the people II real council

Delegates adopted four res0shy

lutions endorsing catholic echools condemning racism lin every form advocating retenshytion and expansion of the states IIChool bus law and opposing relaxation of the abortioD statute

Stresses Increased Food Production

NEW DELHI (NC)-The vatshyican recognizes the need to mshycrease food production middotas a most serious problem facing the developing countries and mshydeed the world as a whole Elizabeth Reid II member of the

bull Vatican delegation to the United ean delegation to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD)

Speaking at the UNCTAD meeting here in India MilS Reid said The right to food 18 01117 another aspect 01 be mosi eaered of all buman rigbts the right to life and it is tb1s parshyticular aspect of the problem of development that places the heaviest and most serious burshyden em the comlcieDee of man- flIIIIampy from home kiDd ~ bull lot cbeapeJ tIIaD IiDDC

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HEATHER CUTTHNG

Sacred Hearts Junior High School Student Is Licenseod Amateur Radio Operator

Holly and Heather Cutting 532 Walnut Street Fall River share a transistor rashydio With some teenage sisters this might cause trouble but not with this pair Heather Jets Holly take the transistor She settles for pop music from Johannesburg South Africa-via her shortwave set They have real good musicraquo she says Blonde 14 year old Heather learned the In ternational Morse Code a basic requirement for amashyteur radio operators when she was seven but its only in the past year that shes really worked at the complicated hobby Her father Dick Cutting ll construction superintendent by profession has been ll radio ham for 30 years by avocation An awesome battery of receivshyers and transmitters fills a room of the Walnut street house and when Heather displayed real inshyterest in them she had iii wi)) ing teacher close at hand

Heathers an eighth grader at Sacred Hearts Junior High School on Prospect Street in Fall River and she admits that she does as much homework as IIhe can at sOOool to have eveshynings free for her hobby She at shytends radio classes nightly then hurries bome to spend as much as three hours at ber sel

Im llicensed for two fre- I

quencies right DOW she exshyplained I can talk on six and two meters Translated that means she can contact amateullil

--in this part of the United States but may not ta]k tomiddot overseal operators until she earns 1Il middotgeneral license

Im Working for my license DOW she said rohe examinashytion JIm be in 00 days Even the license that Heather now holds however is umusual for one of her age When she gets ber general license she Will be among itB Y01lllllgest holders and probably the youngceBt 8h licensee in the stlllte

rhere are 11426 lI8dto amashyteurs iD Massacbuatts I18id her father aInd cmIy 409 aJre WCllInen

wm CoDtaet lFather A real benefit to ~ Cutting

family from Bellltberll general lieense wID be iba1 1Ibell be able tID reach bel fathe bull blB car short wave mctic wheD he is OlD hIfl freqUeDt bwliness tripal

distance calls said Mr Cutting The electric light company figshyures I can run this rig 16 hours a day for only $290 a month

Heather hopes to make a cashyreer of radio technology Right now she is able most of the time to repair her set if someshything goes awry and shea building a small transmitting station for an upcoming science fair at Sacred Hearts Itll broadcast about 200 feet she said

Sometimes Of couJrSe gremshylins pop ill Like the time Heather got a phone can from a boy in Swansea Hey did oU know youre coming m on eiYclnnel 2 on our TV be said 011 another occasion Heather picked ~ her fathers transmisshysion OIl ber electric pitar speaker

Most of the time however things go smoothly During her nightly radio sessions Heather picks up signals Jrom other amateurs and has some schedshyuled appointments vis the mllshyways withmiddot friends hi otheJl mties

When she picks up 5 llllew

eontact she confirms it with II brightly-colored postcard bearshying her name and station 0011 etters in psychedelic pink Wld yellow

Collecting such postcards 111 2 sub-hobby for radio amateulll and Holly has a oozzling eollecshytion on the walls of her radio room She bas Mganized the Sou the a II t ern MassachushyIlett8 Teenage RadM Net aocll ill

BEFORE YOU BUy-tRy

PARK MOTORS OLDSMOBILE

OIdsmobile-lPeugot-Rencnft fJ1 Middle Street Fairhaven

llooking for new members Its just for teens she says

=rheyre more fun to talk to Once she has her general 11shy

cense she plans to join Iil group that relays messages from Viet Nam servicemen to their famshyilies

other Bobbies Badia is by no means Heathshy

ers only hobby Shl~ and her sister Holly a freshman at Emshymanuel College have an imshypressive collection of sharpshyshooting trophies mostly garshynered at Fall River Rod and Gun Club meets I began shootshying when I was six and had my Own gun when I as seven eaid Heather

Other interests are mathematshyics and music Heather picked lIP guitar playing on her own and belOngs to a folk group which plans its first public apshypearance after Easter

In short shes one teen whoD never be found wondering what to de next

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THE ANCHORshy 13Thurs April 11 1968

Houston Priests Get Pay Raise

HOUSTON (NC) - BishOJ John L Morkovsky announceCl a pay raise for priests of thE Galveston-Houston diocese and said a new retirement poliCW will go into effect Jan 1 1970

Under the old pay scale asshy sistants received a base salary of 11250 plus $30 car allowshyance and $1250 insurance preshymium for a total salary of $155 a month Pastors received a total monthly salary of $21750 The new salary reale will allow for increased pay based on the number of yearo priests have been ordained

Assistants who have been cshydained less than 10 years wiill receive a total monthly salary of $200 The figures will ~

$225 for those ordained moro than 10 years

Pastors with 25 years in t100 priesthood will receive m monthly total of $275 ThoSQ with more than 25 years will receive $300

The retirement policy ca1lJfl for optional retirement at age 65 and mandlltory retirement at 70 However elderly pries1amp who are able and willing m37 be assigned to other priestly work than the pastorate Bisbshyop Morkovsky stated

The bishop said the changes are in accordance with the recshyommendations of the Senate 01 Priests and follow consultashytion with diocesan consultom

Reach Impasse-PIITSBURGH (NC)-A state-gt

level meeting between Cat~

olic officials and the Nationl11 Association for the Advanceshyment of Colored People on furshythering racial integration iB Catholic schools reached m seeming stalemate here bn Pennsylvania when the schoolshymen cited lack of funds as ll major obstacle to NAACP pro= posals

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YOUTH CARES FOR AGE Retired Sisters are tenderlycared for at chair while Sister Mary Agnes looks on Center Sister Agnes Maureea Mmiddott St Mary Convent Fall River Left Sister Agnes Maureen seniormiddot wheels SisterMary Jer~me anQright Sister JohnCatberine bringgdri_ infirmarian points out magazine article to Sister Mary Lig~~ri inwheel to Sister Mary Ursulamiddot Both infirmarians are licensed practical nurses

I

Cqrdinal Roy Raps Apathy

MEXICO CITY (NC)~MaushyJOice Cardinal Roymiddot of Quebee _ a visit here as ehairman of the Pontifical Commission for World Justice and Peace said Christian teachings condemn violence in solving social probshylems but also condemn themiddot false prudence that lacks the eourage to make needed reshyforms

The prelate who has been touring Latin America for sevshyeral weeks said he was 1mshypressed by the number of Cathshy

olic organizations and institushytutions already applying Pope Paul VIs encyclical The Deshyvelopment of Peoples in their Jespective countries

But he added Latin Amerishyearn still have to assume fully their responsibility in workingtowards economic balance andmiddot bull just social order 80 every cit shyizen can promote his own welshyfare in a climate of freedom and common good

bull bullbull tmiddot

Comes KindIYcimiddotmiddotSislesmiddot 0 Mercy AmiddotI Fall River Comiddotnventmiddot

By Patricia McGowan

~When thou wast younger thou didstmiddot gird thyself anddidst walk where thou Frouldst But when thou shalt be old thou shalt stretch forth thy handsmiddot arid another shall gird thee and lead thee whither thou wouldst not In its description of the almost universal lot of age this is one of the most poignantpassages in Scriptur~ But age comes kindly f~r Sisters Although they are not exshyemptmiddot from its physical and mental ravages they need not fear being forsaken byfriends or being left alone the

fanulymiddot Jhe famllylast of a that is a religious community cherishes its older members and provision is made for Sisters to pass their last years surrounded by tender care

Among havens for older Sisters is the infirmary at Mt St Mary Conventmiddot Fall River The Sisters who have spent most of their religious life in the Fail River Diocese come here for their laBtyears exshypliliried Sister Agnes Maureen

The cardinal added at emiddot pretB8 RSMmiddotmiddot senior iniirmarian at eonference in the headquarten the Mount Her domain proshyf the Mexican Social Secreta- vides eh~rf11~ccQmmodations riat that national efforts for de- for 10 Sisters Each has her ownmiddot elopment do not eliminate the room andthere is II kitchenette aeed ~forfoleignaid where those ablE lobe up and

The Pontifieal commisSion Cardinal Roy indicated ill enshyaged in persuading rich counshytries to devote at least one per eent of their groSs national product to assist poor eountries

Archdiocese Adopts Project Equality

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing notified the priests lIeIlate of the Boston archdiocese of plans 10 adopt Project Equality a program designed to use purchasing power of church institutions to make firms supplying goods and 8elVices wipe out diICriminashy birislM Placticeamp

e~ut ~n enjoy their meals ~gethermiddot

The ~nfirmaryis but II few stepis from the Mount chapel wher~ the retired Sisters spend hours a day in prayer for comshymunity members still in the active lPostolate Also claiming time for Sisters whose eyesight permits are needlework ana erooheting projects

Always DraWlll Cheerful and dedicated Sister

Agnes Maureen who has I Deen at the infirmary six years is aided by Sister John Catherine who has served the aged Sisters two years A laywoman takes the night shift in the infirmary ensuring the Sisters round the clock care Bothmiddot Sister infirmashy

rians are licensed practical nurses who received their trainshyI g to L d f F tma Hosn a ur a y 0 a I shypital in the Providence Diocese

When I entered religion I hoped to be an infirmarian

said SIster Agnes Maureen I whas alwdays drawn to work for t e age

Some people think we havent got a nursing apostolate she added but we need nurses desshyperately Right now we have nine Sisters taking care of inshyfirmaries in our province

Among Sisters now at the Mount infirmary are Sister

Mary Agnes who celebrated her diamond jubilee last DeshyceJl)ber and most of wbose r~lishygious life was spent in New Bedford and middotNorth Attleboro schools and Sister Mary Lishy

gu()ri whomiddot f9r 49 yearl taught sixth graders at st Patricks School Fall River

HShe looks out her window at St Patricks said Sister Agnes Maureen and she says Theres home

The Sisters are welcoming the arrival of Spring and warm days said the infirmarian It means they can enjoy their sunporch sit in the Mounts garden and go for occasional car rides Of course they have many visitors she said Other Sisters in the house come to see them and so do Sisters from the convents where they forshymerly lived

Yes age comes kindly for Sisters Not Hke the old lady overheard in a downtown groshy

eery confiding to a chance fellow-customer her discovery of a bargain in frozen food I live alone you know and 1 get

three big servings from a packshyage--and only 29 cents

N 0 Sister lives alone

bull

~~tplic Newspaper Wins Press Awards

NEW ORLEANS (NC) -The eJarion Herald middotarchdiocesa middotnewspaper won eight awards iii the annual competition of the

N~W Or)eans Press Club ~ competition included daily and

weekly newspapers wire serVshyices and television stations

Millard F Everett editor won first place in two categories - editorial and best religioWl story This marks the first time in five years of competition that the Clarion has taken the top award for best religious story Staff members of the paper also took three second and three third place awards

----------------------------

ZENITH bull ACOUSTICON bull UNEX

bull BIOLOGICAU bull YITAMIIIS

C~tt 615-7829 IRENE R SHEA PROP

Prompt Free Delivery in fALL RIVER SOMERSET TIVERTON amp VICIHITY 101 ROCK ST (CORNER OF PINE ST) FALL RIVIImiddot

~ 6

THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFon River-Thurs Apr 11 1968

CathoJi~ ll]wnDv~JSityPltDcopy~regii~copyJ~

IPlanLUBffil AmeFicon ~1]~regregO WASHINGTON (NC) - A ops and l~aders of several South

jJroup of pr-ofessors from Cathshy American governments sHe University of America hope The Washington center comshyS n~w technical middotinstituteat the middotprises -ll group of professorsshy~tholic University of Gu~Washy mostly members of the CU caulI Ecuador may mark the llchool of middoted ucation-whomiddot are ltJPening of an international edshy specialists ineclUcationfordeshyvcation bridgetoLatin America Velopment Director of the proshy

The institute will be inaugurshy ject is Dr Jose A Baquero ated early this month as 11 middotcoshy WM has been commuting b~shy1)eIativeventure by the Center meen Washingtonand his nashylor Educational Research fa middottive Ecuador dming the -cmrent QuitoEcuadorand the Center school year lor Community Developmenhmd This is not an Ecuadorian Servioe at Catholic University project it is an internatienal bere It has the support 01 Vashy projed a resealclFaction proshykanofficials Ecuadorianbislshy gram between North and South

America Dr Baquero said middothereBC middotto Recruit laquorNe had to start middotsomewhere The natural plaoe 10 begin wasNegro St~1ent5 middot-the Qlace Where weaould get

CHESTNUT HILL (NC) shy the most facilitiesThisproject iesuit-eper-ated Boston College God willing if successful will bere has made available $100shy move throughout Latin AmershyGtOO fora talent search -progr1m ica We already have contracts to recruit Negro stJdents frem with interestedJeaders in Sao disadvantagedurbanareas middotof Paulo BTazil Bogota Colombia tlhecountry mainly in Greater and Lima Peru Boston Msgr Eugene Kevane direcshy

Father Michael P Walsh SJ tor of the Center for Communitypresident caUed for support off Development andServleedaimshyiIIe entirestudent body facshy ed iB number of Latin American Illlty and administration of EQsshy Church and government officialS Qon College to make the ~mshy have middotexpressed interest in thecram a success projectand a belid it may beshy

Since the program was starteJ come a model of assistance middottoIJeveral weeks ago some 50 ~shy lI3derdeveloped poundOuntrieslltIicatiopshave beenreceiltvelll He said ArcnbishGp Romolofrom students in ghetto areas Carooni apostolic nuncio 10lot -entrance middotin next Septemshy

~1u told him heilOllSiders theWltll freshman -class pmject of great importance andThere have a1w~ys beellU M~S a similhlr middotinstitute willIlegro students enrolled at B4tsshybe established at the Pontificalton College oUicials said ~t University in Limatheir Dumber is ~ot ~own 00shy

0tberhigh-ranking churchshyaYSe race is not shown 8ll1 middotmen who lthave endorsed theapplications The Collegemiddotacceptll project include MsgrLuigi Lishyattdents of all faiths gutti the Holy Sees PermanentN~t SeptemberNegro lrtlllshy

1Gbserver at the Food and Agrishy

bullnts with the necessary ~uaUshy6eations will be admitted n8 culture Organization of the 1Ilual while middotsome 25 will ge United Nations and Archbishop admitted under the talent Ceasar Antonio Mosquera fif

lt4IeQIChprogram The number is Guayaquil president of theEcshybeing limited for thegood af iliad-orlan Bishops Conference

GOLDEN JUBILEE Sisshyter Rose Alma Reid CSC (Sjltte1 M Flora) will mark herg-olden i llbilee of religious professjon on Sunday April 21 at Sacred Heart Convent New Bedford A Mass of thanksgi~rjng will be offered at 1130 Sunchw morning at Sacred Head Church and a reception will be held in the parish hall ITom2 to 4 th~t

afternoon Friends and forshymer pupils are invited t01l~

tend

So Curolina Bishop A-sksPettce $upport

CHARLESTON (NC)- Bishshymiddotop Ernest Lmiddot Unterkoefier of Charleston has called for the middotfull support ofall Americans of President Lyndon middotlB Johnshysons efforts to secure peace in middotVietnam

Tbe South ltCarolina Bishop said that the Presidents -peace ini tiati yes demonstrate that he is a gtarson who -has ever been conscious of the grave responsishybility 01 his ofillce and that his judgements have been measured ~y the critical threats to the securi~y and free action ofthe United States

ICampus Comediansl

R~JlJ~stforBirh ControJ 1nlcrmation lndBGSYlrncrGti(C~e

DAYTON (NC)-A Univershysity of Dayton chaplain said he suspected campuscomediami for 1b~ conJroversyaroused bY a request for availability of birth corttol information and materials In campus by theunishyversity stmiddotudent congress

Father Urban Rupp SM universi~y co-chaplain wrote in the chaplain s bulletin the alshymost unanimous aetion fthe student gfvernment group middotwas an idio~yncratic caper in the natureo Ii ttle childrenpl~ying

house He indicated he fouud it difshy

ficult to take the Pfoposa1 serishyomlY

Now of COUrse I middotcowd be taking this all -wrong be said

Perhaps it was intended 00 bn serious In that case I woUld be tempted to thinktheemershygency is not just immediateshyit is really one generation too late

This was taken asa reference to student efforts to pwih through the resolution orbirth control as an emergency -meashysure

That failed but a few days later the student middotcongressvo~ 29 tol to seeka change in llJllshyversUy Wlicy that would -pershymit the introductionof birth 1Ontrol selYiees in thestudem health center for married eQUoshy~les and Ulose llQOD _ ~arriedmiddot

the young Negroes whowiUbe ~pted oUiciaI said

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PATRIARCH The middotnewily elected head of the Syriac Oatholic Church Patriarch Hgtenys Antoine Hayek of Anshy~och was enthroned recentshy1w in Beirut Lebanon In this post hesucceds the late P-ashykiarch Ignace Cardinal TapshylPouni NC Photo

I

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In ~ glory of His Resurrection may be reborn man~

amiring hopes and CleSires _ ~ce

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THE ANCHO~-Trappists Elect Mother Church of Nation8 PortlglleSe 17 Thurs April 11 1968

Youngest Abbot P-epares fOI- Cenlellilial Celebration At Gethsenloni Dy Patida F r-u nis

GETHSEMANI (NC) The youngest abbot in the history of the monastery of Our Lady of Gethsemani was formally blessed (March ~l) by Archbishop Thomas J McDon~

ough 0pound Louisville Father M Flavian Burns

OCSO 36 ilgt the seventh ab~

bot in the 120-year history of the monastery He was elected by members of the community Inst January to succeed Abbot M James Fox OCSO

Father Flavian described bis position as en administrator whose main job il) service to others within the community He said his most important function it3 to hold plivate spiritual conversations with other monks and to handle the lillM)nasterys relations with the ~Atside world

Thcilt are some 120 monks at ~ethsemani abbey a decline from past years Abbot Burns cCrlbllltes the decline at least in prt to the attitude of the times YiJCl1 was foJJJlcrly accepted without question is now being ltI~etioned he observed

ltDontemplation Prayer

Changes have been made the IHurElY is now in English and 2Jc strict vow of silence has TiKen relaxed somewhat On an experimental basis the monks are allowed to use brief oral instructions instead of sign language as in the past

Despite the lack of radio or 1clevision Abbot Burns said the monks keep in contact through newspllpers with events in todays world The main thing ill to know what is going on in the Church and what effects our fellow hushymans according to the abbot

The life of a monk involves middotcontemplation and prayer rather than speaking up - 11 more spiritual turn according kI Abbot BUlns

A native of Jersey City N J he is a graduate of Henry SfIyder public high sehool there

Protests- Campaign Agamst Religion

NEW YORK (NC) - A new wave of terror against aU churcltgpers is now in effect in Albania an exile from that country has declored in a- letter of protest sent to the United Nations Commission on Human Rightsmiddot and~ to UN Secretary General U Thani

The protest bl Dr Rexhep KIasniqi president of the Free Albania Committee which has its headquarters here said that Albanial following a lf41oist eommunillt guideline has shut down every cltulch and mosque and has made any_kind of pubshylIc worship impossible

Thill campaign Dr Krasniqi tated is a violation of the UN Charter the Universal Declarashytion of Human Rights and of Albanias own communist conshystitutional guarantee of freedom of conscience for all

San Antonro Priests Form Association

SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Fortyshyene diocesan and religious comshymunities priests of the San Anshytonio archdiocese formed a priests association bere The priests ohose a six-member temshypora]) steering committee

One of the fiTst formal actions Gf the allsociatron was to inform Archbishop Robert E Lucey of San Antonio of the group forshymation

There are approximately 441

Parishioner d St John the Baptist Church in Nc Bedford are getting rendy for a momentoils event-the 100th anniversary of the fO~1l1dil1g of the oldest Portuguese parish in the nation The cen~en]ial celebration wi II not take place until 1971 but many things have to be done in preparation within the next three years One major project is renoshyvating the church ihelf To pay for the massive job ptrshyishioners have inaugur~teca Centennial Fund Drive to raise money for painting ~he church do extensive electrical work and buy a rew organ Estimated cost (f the regt3ir5 is $150000

Rt Rev Msgr John A Silvia pastor is honorary drve chairshyman and Frank S Jason is genshyeral chairman Other committee members include Richard GiJI1shysalves and Jesse V Santos Jr division chairmen JQseph S Vera special gifts chairman Richard L Lopes treasurer George Radcliffe director Louis S Silva assistant director Mrs Mary Lucy Soares office conshytrols and Miss Luey E Dias list supervisor

Members of the Campaign Exshyecutive Committee also include Frank M Martin ald Joseph C Motta

The history of St Johns and the history of the Portuguese people in America arc closely intertwined

It was at the end of the 18th Century that settlers began comshying from themiddot Azores to the United States TheJ were relashytively few in number nd as II

result almost lost their national identity

Near Ifood However by 1840 the trickle

of Azoreans was beginning to turn into a near Oood of imshymigrants who settled in New Bedford then a whaling and fishing center

By 1865 many Portuguese families called New Bedford home They lacked just one thing-a church of their own and a priest who spoke their language and understood their customs and traditions

Their first priest-Rev Joao Ignacio de Azevedo-anived in 1869 and on Sept 10 1871 St Johns parish was canonically established

Theremiddot were approximately 1shy000 Portuguese of Azorean deshyscent living in New Bedford at the time and the)T detelmined to build their own church A lot was purchased for $3OD8 ~ con~

siderable amount in those days and soon ground WQS broken for the new house of God

However Father de Azeedo was a mission pliest Vl~ho~moved

throughout the are~ aCministershying to his counblymen As a reshysult a new parish was establishshyed in Boston and he became its first pastor

Expandoll

Construction of St Johns WillS

continued by Rev Antonio de Mattos Freitas a native or Calshylteta St George Azores Fashyther Freitas also was responsible for the construction of a recshytory When he reUred because of ill health and returned to~ the AzoreS he was succeeded by Rev Antonio G de Silva Neves who was to serve St Johns durshying the greatest expansion Gfthe citys Portuguese colony

The first church located where a section of Morse- Twiampt Drill now stands soon ~ outgrown by its congregation and a drive began for agt new and larger church

Father Neves who served 8~j

pastor for almost 25 years saw the new church at County and Wing Streets almost coop]eted However ill health also forced bill retirement

PREPARING FOR CENTENNIAL In charge of fumd drive for hundredth anniversary of St John Baptist Church New Bedford are from left George Radclffe drive execushytive director Frank Jailon general chairman

pleted construction of the present church and rectory in three years The church which now serves the parish was solemnly blessed an4 dedicated to the worship of God by the late Bishshyop Feehan

Through the years the parshyishioners of St Johns have proved their dedication to their cliurch Now they are renewinr their dedication

Msgr Silvia notes that before the small St Johns Church was built the citys Portuguese colshyony attended Mass at St Lawshyrence Church Later they moved into what today is Crowells brt Store

Landmark Today the 11Inificent st

Johns is a landmark in New Bedford befitting its position as Mother Church of the Portu guese in the- UnFted States

MSgr Silvia a native of Pall River served at St Peters Church in Provincetown for 27 years His only other assi1shyment St John the B-aptirt Church

Ordained to the priesthood or Dec 20 1919 St Johns was the new priests first assignment He remained at the cRurch unshytil No~ember 1924 when he was transferred to Ptovinceto~

On Oct 2 1951 Msgr Silvia returned to St Johns as pzsshytor a post hemiddot still fulfills with zeal and energy

His assignmetlt to St Jobnfl parish in 1919 was not ~1sgr Sinshyvias introduotion to the New Bedford parish

As a young boy the p2stcshyrecalls his poundathers weekly trips from Fall River to New Bedford to bring back a priest

Four Families There were few Portuguese

families in Fall River in those days he says When my father arrived in Fan River there were iust four Portuguese families in the city Gradually others setshytled there

My father used to drive over in a horse and buggy to bring Il priest back tc Fall River to ll3y

degbrought him back the next dzy Since those days of hischiMshy

bood Msgr Silvia observeamp-l Turn to Page Eighteen

Continued fronmiddot Page Three

the late Tobias and Ann Lynch ]Burke Mr Burke was born in Newport Tipperary Ireland and his speech bears witness to the o-it and lilt of his birthshyplce He is married te Catbshyerine Lowney Burke and the couple lives next to the Chanshycery

DI1 Davia Costa Dr Costa son of David CosU

and Julia Rodrigues is the husshyband of Louella Somerday and fther of five children A dentshyist in NeJ Bedford he is active ir ceo and in St Vincent ~e

Pml work on a parochial and al(l level He has been zealoUJ ir- many important phases ~

perish aetivity in Immaculate Conception Parish in New BedshyforC He was recipient of the Diocesan Marian Award in Deshycember

itpJlin 15 TIle awards Jill be presenteCl

at St Marys Cathedral Fa]] River on lIlonday evening April 15 at 8 PM At toot timeuro there will be the investi shyture of two lI-ionsignori the awarding of Papal Knight 03 SZ Gregory honors to nine ~sect- oeesan laymen and the Pro EecIesia et Pontipoundlce award kJ mother Pierre Marie adminisshytlato of St Annes Hospital IE Fall River~

Join Federation IIALEIGH (NC)-Forty ()(f thfl

matewide Raleigh dioceses 14~

tlriests have formed the North iCaFolina Priests Associatioil which will affiliate with a Emshy

ticmal federation DOW beiJl~

formed

May the Joy and Pomise 01- Easter

uplift your spirit and gladden

your hean

FROM THE OFRCEIIS AND PERSONfJB Of

qkJM~ERCHANTS CIa1iotuLe BANK

IN NEW BEDFORD

SOUTH BANK-Cove St at Iodney French Boulevard WEST BANK-Kempton Street at Mill Stret

LUNDS CORNER BANK-Acushnet Ave rear Lunds Comer DARTMOUTH BANK-Dartmouth Street near Rockdale Ave NORTH BANK-Acushnet Avbull at Coffin Ave

CENTER BANK-Purchase and William Sts priests in the San Antonio arcl1shy Next pastor was the Rev Mass He used to stay overnight tiiocese Manuel A da Silva wt() oom- at our hOuse ald JlG ~tbeI

-

18 Tti~ ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1969 CatecheticsWeek Set at StonehillDioce$clm ~j[llIlde[lj)fl5 Join Nal-gonGI Some 400 priests religious and laymen are expected to at shyMculrraurru U A$~ssinatBon tend a catechetics institute b be held Monday Aug 5 throughOf Dr Mriin luther KilnS Saturday Aug 10 at Stonehill College Diocesan schools shared i~ national mourning at the Sister Mary Francille CSJ

~8sassination of Dr Martin Luther King with special theology professor at Regis ColshyMasses or prayers offered in every school At Cassidy High lege will direct the institute in Taunton Rev John Moore chaplain celebrated a Mass and speakers will include Rev

Frederick Moriarty SJ Revfor the repose of the soul Cha~les E Cook Rev James F(l)f the Negro leader and rently hplds first place in the Hawker Sister Florence -MishyNotre Dame math league chels OLVM Gerard Potte~

tlie chapel by students in a demy Fairhaven have been study periods were spent in Girls at Sacred Hearts Acashy

bauoi and Mrs Helen Jacobs With the theme Making Alllvigil for peace working on a project to bring

Christian Youth Movement Easter cheer to patients at St Things New institute sessiono will discuss Scripture catechetshymembers at Jesus-Mary Aca- Lukes Hospital New Bedford ical techniques use of filmsdemy Fall River heard the New Under supervision of Sister Jushywith adolescents other visualFolk a group of singing Holy lie Louise SSCC theyve ~een aids parent education teamCross seminarians Their appear- making tray favors including teaching and creative dramaticsance was arranged under t~e decorative placemats and napkin

Further information is avail shydirection of Mofher John Scarry holders for adults and flowered able from Stonehill CollegeJRJM Jollipops chicky surprises and North Easton 02356Also at JMA its French Week bunny hats for childern

The observance- began Sunday Science Fair Winners when French Club members Jeanne Phenix Yvette Berthi- Holy Family had four winshy Charities AppeaI aume and Susan Cournoyer took ners at the annual New Bedford Continued from Page Three part in a play sponsored by the Science fair In the senior division

Community Fund CampaignPrevost French Club Les Fem- James Berry and John Thomas president Board of Managers mes Parlent Trop Throughout of the New Bedford school were of Boston Dispensary and vice

the week too there have middotbeen cited fo~ earth science and phy- the Diocesan cheerleading tour- will combine with the seniors president of USOseveral skits prepared by mem- sics proJects respectively while t tl h ld t F h th bZbers in the junior division both Pa- namen recen yea ee an Lor e occasIOn SInce oth He has been the recipient of

or effort at Prevost was tricia Downey and SharonSmola High but sports arent all that cltsses of the academy are small honorary degrees from Holy MaJ matter at the TauntoJl girls due to the fact that the high Cross College Tufts University

e Sunday program Whlch ln- were recognized for work in the h f h d I ld f b sc 001 Break ast lunc an schoo IS being phased out Suffolk University Bradford -luded In addItIon to the play fle 0 iology M formal dinner pace settmgs The Junipero Club of Holy Durfee College of Technology~veral talks by promInent any students won honors at h M h I I I were recently on display at the Family High recently sponsored of Fall Rivet and Lowell Techshy

I remiddotnch cItIzens a French song- t e assac usetts RegIOn S F h school library and members of a talk on drug addiction for jun- nological Institute ~t and a motion picture Clence alr eld in Fall Rlver They included Christine Four- the Mothers Auxiliary were on iors and seniors The talk was Bishop to AddJess Meeting

UN French Club nier Dominican Academy and hand to answer etiquette ques- given by two brothers one an Most Rev James L ConnollyAt Coyle the French Club di- Diane Desmarais Mt St Mary tions from the students ex-addict the other director of Bishop of Fall River will speak

Ilected by Brother Hugh McCabe Academy both Fall River Both And the Coyle Fathers Club Marathon House a center for to the priests parish trusteesIOeCently elected officers After girls were recogiIized by the held its annual Father-Son Com treatment of addicts located in chairmen of the Catholic Charishy8le votes were tallied however Southeastern District of the Mas- munion breakfast at the school Coventry RIo ties Appeal and the invited lays our man at Coyle it looked sachuse~ts Dental Society bull with Robert Cahill ofthe Rhode CongratuIcitions go to Joseph gue9ts of the 111 diocesan if ~embers were voting for Debra Lay Dominican Aca- Island Food and Drug Commis Abraham of St Anthony High parishes bull UN delegation The presidents demy received a savings bond sion as guest speaker He dis- for meriting runner-up position Roland A Lafrance 1968 ApshyliPot wa~ captured he reports from the Bristol South Distriet cussed harmful effects of various iil the state finals of the annual peal lay chairman will also adshy a Polish fellow Cbarles Ozug Medical Auxiliary arid Michael drugs American Legion olatorical con- dress the 800 expected to attend lames OBrien a true Irishman Zito Bishop Feehan High At~middot The Catholic Students Mis- test - the opening meeting of the won the vice-presidential spot tleboro was awarded a plaque sion CrUsade at Stang H~gh has In club~ews at~HA the Senshy campaign for funds for the 30 while the treasurers job was by the Womens Auxil1ary to the taken as a special project this ior Science Club will conduct agencies of the Catholic Chadshy~warded to Jorge Matesanz -a Mass Veterinary ASsn month of April the collection of a farewell meeting for seniors ties Appeal

BASKETBALL PLAYERS On basketball team at Connolly High Fall River are from left Tim Duffy Tom Kroger John Long Joe Kelly Greg Sullivan Mike Manning

~~dent of Spanisll extraction Winners in the division of donated medical supplies and this ~month and members will Only Paul Bor9ue the secretary earlhscience Were John Dias eyeglasses for deprived Peoples visit an encephalitis clinic in I ~anaged to make the scene for Thomas Burk~ anciRobei-tClou~ of the world Supplies collected Freetown in May The Stamp France tier FeehahMicIlael Cote Pre illbe forwarded to the Cathi- and Coin Clubis planning a pubshy

At Bishop Stang iil North vost and Elizabeth Lavoi~ Do- olic Missions Medical Bureau for lie exhibition of members col- Dartmouth the math team led minican shipment iections in May imd the Chess by high scorer Lawrence l3yrnes Awards in math and engineer- Upco~ing at S~A Fairhaven Club has undergone reorganiza- placed secon~in a reeentBqs- ing went to Carol Vasconcellos is the aruiual senior prom which tion election of officers inshyflon public schools math meet Mt St Mary Madeleine Delisl~ wilL be held in the Colonial cluding Edward Norman presishyThe Stang team paced by the and Vivian Blais and Michael R60m of Whites restaurant in dent Daniel Brule vice-presi- shyeo-sIstent good work of George Zito Feehan Genevieve Pappas Westport from 8 to midnight dent Diane Lizotte secretary Oliver and EIleen Keavy cur- and Debra Lay Dominican Joan Friday night May 24 Juniors TuniorProm

Basile Feehan Amato Polselli The Holy Family Junior Prom Prevost and Sharon Woycie- Board ofmiddot Trustees isslated for Friday night AprilCentennialmiddot chowski Mt St Mary were 26 at Kennedy Center The prom

Continued from Page Seventeen cited To Study Changes will last from 8 to 11 and will Chemistry winners included have Carousel as its themebroad smile on his face-many Jane Arruda Anne Lewis De- WASHINGTON (NC) - The Mlisic will be by the Escorts

other families have arrived from nise Michaud Elizabeth St board of trustees of the Catho- And the Holy Family debatePltlrtugua1 A man d Diane Lamontagne lic University of America in team tied for first place in the Our Lady of Mt Carmel par- Christine Fournier Dominican Washington D C will meet Narry League with Cassidy A ~h was detached from St Johns Anne Sullivan and Pamela Can- Sunday April 21 in St Louis playoff will be held As of now as the Portuguese population dee Feehan Marilyn Riley and to consider a wide range of rec- Cassidys debate reco~d is 12 grew Then Our Lady of the Ann-Marie Charrette Sacred ommended changes resulting wins out of 14 debatesjrnmaculate Conception parish Hearts Fall River Irene Caron from a year-long study of the was erected to care for families Cassidy Marilyn Bentley Mt pontifical university by a comshyi Portuguese descent living in mitteee headed by Dr Carroll ~e North End of New Bedford St Mary Hochwalt

In the field of physics Alan middotRAMBLERToday St John the Baptist White Prevost Michelle Paquet The meeting will be held in ehurch has about 4000 parishshy SHA Fall River JamesReid Jrconjunction witll the Spring Americas Economy King ioners Our numbers started Prevost Mary Soans Jane Mc meeting of the National Confershy Fnr the Best Deal Come To dropping about seven years ago Donald and Martba Nugent yent ence of Catholic Bishops Broadway Ramblerasgr Silvia explains He feels St Mary The trustees are expected 10 INC part of the drop in membership Representatives from Diocesan name a new 30-man board meet 768 BROADWAYis due to a number of families schools to the Mass State Sci- with faculty representatives for RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 131moving outside the parish )ounshy ence Fair will include Michael the first time in histoi-y and CHARLES J DUMAIS Presdarles Intermarriages with othshy lito Amato Polselli Debra Lay discuss the search for a new er nationalities account for still Madeleine Delisle Jane Arruda university rector to replacemore losses Anne Lewis Father J~dhn P Whalen ~ho ~III11I11I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I11I1I1HIUIIIIIIIlIIlilllllllllllfllHlIilttmmIllIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllllnIlIllIllHIIIIIIIIIJ111~ However the Mother Church Denise Michaud Alan White was naine last October to a ef the Portuguese is not fading Michelle Paquet Elizabeth St one-year term as acting rector E WEEKEND SPECIAL sect away AmandSharon Woyciechowski A new school was built in New Projector

f957 It is expensive Msgr Silvia admits but I felt we needed it

St Anthony High in New Bedshyford is rejoicing over acquisi shytion of a movie projector as a

Parish gtrganizations are active gimiddotft from the alumni association and individual parishioners are willjng to give of their time

Presentation to principal Sister Lucille Champagne was made

and effort Perking

to keep the parish by Mrs Josephine Lafleur sociation president

asshy

Now they are getting read7 Cassidy-Coyle cheerleaders Jor a 100th anniversary captured third pillce v9Phy iil

_

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Case Somerset Favorites In Narry Diamond League

Case High of Swansea and Somerset are pre-season ehoices in this seasons Narragansett League baseball race but the club th8lt will bear watching is Westport TIne darkshyhorse Villagers may have a few surprises for Narry foes Another small area school

with a respectable 8-6 recordthat potentially has a shot Only one member of that at a league championship is squad Calvin Hopkinson will Norton of the Tri-Valley not be playing for the Villagers Conference Coach Ed Bibeau this Spring With the rest of the has most of last Deasons Central club ready to go - watch Jlor Village regulars Westport to make its presence in the fold ready lmown to challenge the Among fuose returning are perennial Paul Eastwood an Russ Picard favori1es If 0 T two of the better performers in Narry honors the circuit a year ago Eastwood amp1i1 at Norton led the team in hitting with a (C 0 a c h Peter highly respectable 360 averagem[l ~ek has pitched and played the infield G3ven returning Picard like Eastwood 15 also ~nnen for versatile An outfielder by trade ~theY chamshy he also takes his turn on the ii~~JWhip bid Peter mound for Coach Bibeaus nine Weo~port Bartek Carl Zajac and Jeff Hague tmIshed the 1961 eampaign ill round out Bibeaus four-man ~ place in tbe NalT7 loop pitching staff

Norton Bids for Tri-Valley Crown jfOO task of handling the but in thin scholastic year of

~tJ of this quartet will fall athletic surprises it may not be Gpoundl ~e shoulders of either Ron as big as some thinllt ~JmOi) or Manny Cabral both

A second place finisher inexperienced receivers ConnOlll 1967 the Norton Lancers haveexcel1B not only defensively their sights on the Tri-Valleybut likewise with the bat He Conference crown The clubsbit at a 333middot clip last Spring one-two hitters last campaignJohn Souza and Mike Andras have departed from the Norton th better than 300 hitters baseball scene but the teamqaln will be out to join the one-two pitching punch is reshyleague leaders in batting prowshyturning Juniors Ken Allen aess They should put a wallop left-hander who had a perfectin Westports oHensive attaCK 7-0 record last Spring and ArtIf Coach Bibeaus boys can dushyBouchard will be relied uponplicate their Performances of a heavily to bring the league flagJellr ago Offensively and biB to Norton Coach Bartek alSobig four comes through on middottbe hopes to get some help in middotthemound Westport may realize a the pitching departmentmiddot fromlong awaited Narry championshyFred Rego Bill Gorczyca andEip dream Admittedly if Ie Steve Nichols bull bie word in ~~rts_tuture

~ ~ bull I

OpeUp With~on-League Co~esttsmiddot Other returnees incl~ Capshy develop rapidlymiddot defensively if

tain Mike Wynnn Greg Croff they are to regain the leagues BOb Adams Tim McEndy and divisional crown - whicb flbeymiddot Paul Hassie Wynn a senior lost to HoWston last Spring middotmiddot will be starting his third season and gain a shot at the Trl shyill left field with Cruffstarting V~ey Conference ebampionshyhis second campaign in center ship Many area clubs openThey will be joIned by Wynns their campaign this week with brother Ricky in right fied non-league games highlighting

The infield win be anchored the action League competition by Adams at second base and will commence for the most Hassle at short Newcomers part next week Richy Silvia and George Macshy Mother Nature has done her Arthur are presently battling it job this Spring Baseball coaches out for the third base job and throughout -the diocese admit Lorrie Adams also a first-year that this is the best Spring they man appears to have the inside have had to prepare flbeir track on first base charges in many a year Weather

cannot be blamed for a slowMcEndy who has been the start this time around All areLancers starting catcher since eagerly awaiting the umpireshis Freshman year is starting first call to play ballhIs third campaign behiJd the

plate Bartek expects McEndy to hold the inexperienced inshy New School System field together

The Lancers will have to imshy In German State prove upon their hitting and DUSSELDORF (NC) - The

North Rhine-Westphalia state parliament middothas approved aCanadian Prelates change in the states school sysshytem that probably will meanEstablish Council the end of many denominational

OTTAWA (NC)-The Catho-shy schools Hc bishops of Canada have esshy By an overwhelming majorshytablished a 12-member Fiscal ity the parliament voted to Affairs Council composed of change the state constitution and clergy Religious and laymen establish the nondenominational who will advise the Church on Christian school in which reli shyfinanclal matters gious training is given by Cathshy

Among the areas which are olic and Protestant instructors receiving ini~ial attention of the in the same school as the patshycommittee is the question of tern for state-supported schools whether the Church should be from the fifth through the nint subject to government taxation grades and if so what form of taxation In the past the state has supshywould be equitable to churches ported Illeparate Catholic and government and other taxshy Pro tell tan t denominational payen Khoola

-~) PASSION PLAY Today Christians hold the Solemn Observance of the Lords Supper

It is commemorated ina PMsion Play at Prevost High School Fall River by David Poisshyson as Christ Paul Martel left 8$ St John and Paul Bouampquet as St Peter

DominicGlIsmiddot Rent ApGrt~~rit in Inner -Cimiddottimiddot middot

Want t~ Get Closer to I Agony of the Worl~middot WASHINGTON (NC)middot Pift his experience in the neig~lgtorshy ruary 1966 because theJ

Dominican priests-each doing hood is invaluable in helping wanted to get closer to the bis own thing-are living middotin an both prisoners and parolees He agony of the world While nol apartment in the inner ~ cd said the insight he gains into eliminating the academic life Washington here they come from ancl h~w they felt that living in the inlleJ The five run the gamut from they view life aids him In mv city would be as important bull

a professor of moral theology at ing them intelligent advice and learning experience as academic the Don)inican House ofStucUeII 8ssis~nCe study to a prison chaplain a1 the Diamp- Father William Kane is middotthemiddotNeighborhOoclll[aatrict of Columbia Jail Ibey neighborhood man of the have in common1heiy addresa A Pr~ceton graduate ~itl1 apartment Hemiddotworks with minshyand a desire to understand and doctorates from Harvard aJgt4 isters inmiddot the area in establishing alleviate the problems ~ livlnc OxfCrd Father Albert Brodershy youth programs and fightina I in a poor Urban community ick teaches Constitutional LalV for better housing and fail

Father TbomasHea~ middotttie at the catholic University Law rent laws His motive is to givemoral theology professor aDd School the people in the community aD author of a reCent bOOkmiddotID awareness of their own dignitymiddotBe and Father Heath startedFaee of An~sh is 0Il 1be to affirm the fact that it is athe apartment project in Feb-bOard of direCtors of the Pe0shy ood place to live ples Center a house soon to be

the rehabilitationopened for Criticizes Usury of alcoholics He also meets

MEXICO CITY (NC)-Mexshy5 50 01- a SYSTEMATIC wimiddotth ~culties of Wasbingtcm

icc CityS Jose Cardinal Garibiseminaries to discuss policyshy bull 10 year SAViNGSRivera urged bankers meetingmaking and apostolic activity MONTHLY DEPOSITSat the National Bankers Conshy

Legal Aid Office vention in Guadalajara to comshy 5 00 01- a INVESTMENT bat usury and work closely bull 10 year SAVINGS

Father Joseph Cooney a NOTICE ACCOUNTSwith the government to proshylawye~ who has worked 011

voter registration in the South mote the social welfare of all II REGULAR4 5001 the Mexican people bull 10 Jflar SAVINGSand took an active part in dvil

rights activities such lIS

~lma march is DOW admin~ Bass Rivertering a legal aid office in the CENTERneighborhood of the Dominishy Savings Bank

cans apartment Volunteer law Paint and Wallpaperstudents from the Catholic Uni- Bank 8y Man I

versity of Ameiica assist him Dupont Paint

We Pay The Postage

IJcor Middle St

A third member of the group m this program 4iiii 422 Acush Ave bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA Fat her Raymond MalonSOl1 ~ New Bedford bull SOUTH VARMOUTH 4raquo HYANNISserves as the Catholic chapiain bull PARKINGmiddot

bull DENNIS PORT bull OSTtRVILLEatmiddot the D C jail A late vocashy Rear of Storetion Father Malonson has been ordained only two years middot Father Malonsoll feels U1at

LEVESQILIES OFFla E~lnPMENTNow Many Wear Wood Metal Desks and ChairsFALSE TEETH

With More Comfort JUST GiVE ME A CHANe TO QUOleTo overcome discomfort when

dentures sllp sllde or loosen Just sprinkle a llttle FASTEETH on your 187 SHAWMUT STREET bull NEW BEDFORD MASS

middot plates FASTEElH holds dentures firmer You eat better feel more PO Box 2062 - Hervey L Levesque

middot -wont sour Helps check plate odor comfortable FASTEETH Is alkaline

Dentures that fit are lIlSSentlai to Telephone 993middot1264middot health See your dentist regularly Get FASTEETB at all drUB counten ___ _ _____11_0__-D-tcl----4

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs April 11 1968

PhySDCOUi) l1JJ Uges litUBgy C~[filges

~n Last RStes RED BANK (NC) A

~atholic physician called for revision of the liturgical $orm of the Anointing of the Sick cluring a discussion on The Chaplains Role With the Dying Patient at Riverview Hospital here in New Jersey

Dr George J Sheehan an alumnus of Manhattan College and a founder of Christian Brothers Academy in nearby lLincroft was one of three apeakers at the symposium coshyaponsored by the hospital and Ute 1 Redmiddot Bank Council of

ilhurches Citing obvious failures by

both physician and clergyman iin helping the dying patient and bis family Dr Sheehan sugshygested members of the family Ghare inmiddot a ceremony which would exchange feelings of llove and hope between them ElDd the dying person

Dr ~heehan observed that while inadequacy in the face of death has been in the past apparent to the Protestant criergyman it is now also felt by Catholic priests

They findmiddot he said the La~t Sacrament in its present form Ii a consolation only to those with the strong faith of a Breton iiteasant-a kind of faith they e seeing less and l~ss-

Appropriate Theology He also said while the develshy

pment of a Common Christian itervice parlakirtg of the same llodividual familymiddot and commu~

Ility significance as Bap~i8ai -dMarriage would be a giant p in middotheiping people to a middotbappy death iit would remain IDol theologians to present- a relshy

qwant lmd acceptable image of mail in this time and this place ilnd to develop an appropriate eology of death heaven ~nd bell in order to make a signifi- sant change in our life style

lOd therefore in our approach to death

Other panelistsmiddot were the Rev Seorge Fitzgeraid a Presbyteshyaan minister middotand middotchaplain at Princeton Hospiital arid Mn Ruth Snyder a nurse of the lIiverview Hospital staffmiddot

POSTER CHILD LEADS WAY Joey BeIge 8 of Syraeuse NY leads themiddot way down a White House lttairway in the company ofthe Fi~st t-adymiddotMrsLyndon B Johnson

and Mrs Muriel Humphrey wife ofthe Vice-President Joeymiddotis this years poster child of

the National Association for Retarded Children H~ ismiddot thesQn ofMt and Mrs Robert Beige middotmembersmiddotOf St Vincent de Paul parish in Syracuse whos-e ot-herfive children SlHshy

round their Uttle broth~r wil1hmiddot the love and care to h~lp him livea full and happymiddot life

Penn See Studies Poverty Pmiddotrogram HARISBlJRq (NC)--Coadju- is being made to see ho)Vtbe to coordinate and channel our

tor Bishop Joseph T Daley diocese canmiddot best use its re-middot efforts in the fieldmiddot vicar general- of the Harrisburg sources to alleviate poverty Bishop Daley said it ismiddot im- diocese calledmiddot on the nearly problems middotperative that all our people 50000 Catholics in the area to He alsomiddot said Wemiddot contem- knoW and understand the probshy

acquaint th~mselves with 10- middotplatemiddot the early middotestablishment of middotIem of middotracism and the funda- calracfal and poverty problems amiddotmiddot diocesanmiddot human relations mental moral injustices which

In a lettermiddot read at aU Masses commission middotto serve asmiddot a liaison middotare at the root of the deplorable BishopDlIleT said middotthat a study with all people Collcerned and conditions in our own area

Urges Hospitals Re~ognie Unio~s

CLEVELAND (NC) - AI layshymens group here has asked the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hospitals to declare its willingshyness to recognize labor unions as collective bargaining agents for hospitals employes

lNle request came in a letter from William A caldwell chainnan of the eurolevellllnd Conference of Laymen to Sister ~ry Collette of Hamilton Ohio president of the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hosplshytala during a one-day meeting here of the Ohio Hospital Assoshyciation convention

The laymens group said such a statement would promote the human dignity of hospital emshyployes in real and immediate ways serve the common good of our communities and inshycrease the understandingmiddot of Catholic teaching by all the citishyzens of Ohio

The letter pointed out that the National Catholic Hospital Association 1 a s t November called on Catholic hospitals tiraquo be guided by the social teachshyings of the Church and to deal with unions that employecfgt choose

Discuss ~iot Report On Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC) - Beginshyning Sunday April 14 the Catholic Hour will present over the NBCmiddot network a three-part series The Climate of Change

Evolution or Revolution foshycusing on three areas of social and religioUs concern today today

~gr Rop~rt Fox cOordinashytor of Spanish community 00shy

middot lion in the New York arclidioshymiddoteese will discuss The Riot centommissi~ middotReport Amiddot Chrisshy

tiati Response April 14 Msgr Ivan D Illich of the Intereushy-tural Center 01 Language and D middotoe u men tat 1 on CuershyDavaca Mexf~o win be intershyviewed Aprjl 21 and Father Francois Houtart Belgian 00shyciologist will be interviewed Apiil 28

The National Council of Cathshy oUc Men producer of the OathshyoUe Hour reconunendseheckshymiddoting local newspaper programa for broadca9t time in particushymiddotRar areas

I Am The RestUlJTectiltogtD

Ai 1)(J[YQfGfDVIJJpound)9

lJ1~TJPJiiD~ EEJ~lJregff

FALL RIVER

Page 11: 04.11.68

Church~en Study Racial Problems In New Jersey

NEWARK (NC) -The Church cannot tell otheJiS what to do until it faces the problem within its own comshymunity a Methodist Bishop has told Essex Count~ clergyshymen of all faiths in an a~essshyment of the racial problems beshysetting Newark and other New Jersey communities

Bishop Prince A Taylor and Catholic Auxiliary Bishop John J Dougherty of Newark disshycussed the race problem in light of the report of the Govemors Commission on Civil Disorder

Cooperative Solution Bishop Taylor stressed it is

the duty of the church to beshycome knowledgeable about the report to read it carefully Action without information is irresponsible he declared as he noted the church must face up till the fact that it has parshyticipated in maintaining the status quo He noted that when ~he commissionen pelsonally toured the riot area and asked the people what the impact of the church was in their lives all but a pound~w marked the church ltDfpound

Bishop Dougherty said if the problem is to be solved it will only be through the involveshyment of the total community government industry labor unions churches schools peoshyple living in the suburbs

Dont Have Time The attack on t1e problems

must be two-fold he asserted first meeting the needs which the coming Summer presents and then planning long-range programs to overcome the root causes of the problem

There is an urgen t need of immediate programs to enable us to have time to work toward the ultimate goal

Bishop Taylor referred to the need for time to work out solushytions We cannot undo the evils of 300 years in one Sumshymer he emphasized This illmiddot not going to be a case of a quick antidote and then they Jived happily ever after

However a Newark priest active in innel-city work who was one of six reactors to the presentations made by the Bishshyops remarked that comments about needing time to solve the problems overlook the fact that we dont hlVe the time

It would be great if we did have it to keep order but q (gt bull

the people bull have the imshypression that nothing has been donesaid Father Joseph Stulb

Many are ready to riot again if only to call attention to themselves he opined The black community despairs that the white community has or will change its attitude

Rev William Fox associate general secretary of the New Jelsey Council of Churches scored the commission for fail shying to note the contribution thpt a divided church - white and black - mademiddot to the elisis H~ cliticized the church for mainshytaining silence during public controversies which were listed as proximate causes of the riotshying

Another Catholic Magazine F0 Id S

DAYTON (NC)-Mary Today a magazine founded in 1901 deshyvoted to information about the Blessed Motherand her role in the Church has issued its final edition

It is one of 11 Catholic magashyzines which have ceased pubJishycation in the past )eal because

of 1088 ~l circulation The rnaf- orders are af Teutopolis JIL azine had a reoont eirculauOll Lake Bluff in and St Meiri

~ aooU~1151gtO middot - ~lnclbull - - -

BENEMERENTI MEDAJ~ Father James Vizzaro SJ second from left received the Benemerenti Medal at a dinner in Washington -on the occasion Of his retirement as dishyrector of the Washington office of the National Catholic Rural Life Association Conshygratulating him are left to right Msgr ~dward W ORourke executive director of the NtRLC Bishop Henry J Soenneker of Owensboro Ky rural life advisor of the usce department of social action and Msgr Luigi L Ligutti Vatican observer to the UN Food and Agliculture Organization and former executive dirootor of NCRLC NC Photo

Fr Vizzard Gets Benemerenti Medal Work for IFhlltfol lPoor Recognized

the Holy See to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization priests and Protshyestant clergymen and members of Congress

Msgr George G Higgins di shyrector social action department U S C a tho 1 i c Conference praised Father Vizzards comshybination of scholarship political know-how great tenacity of

Schedule Workshop O~ Sex Education

WASHINGTON (NC)-Father James T McHugh director of the family life bureau middotU S Catholic Conference will direct a workshop on Sex Education to be held at Catholic Univershysity of America here June 17shy28

Purpose of the workshop is to prepare a basic core of people especially teachers and parish personnel to supplement the work of the home in a complete program of education in sexu- ality It will provide these pershysons with background informashytion give them opportunity to evaluate some of the basic mashyterialsand engage them in an in-depth analysis of a curricushylum guide which reaches every grade level

Lecturers and consultants will include Fathermiddot John L Thomas SJ of the Combridge Center fOl Social Studies Dr and Mtmiddots Joseph Bird co-aushythors of The Freedom of Sexshyual Love Dr Ann F Lucas chairman of the psychology deshypaltment Farleigh Dickinson Universit~ Teaneek N J and Father Walter Imbiorski direcshytor of the Cana program in the Chicago atchdiocese

ELECTRICAL Contractors

~~ ~ ~KqQ~co-operative

~ bank 944 ~QiJnty St ~ Main dffice Winthrop Str~et rallnton

N B df d bull -B~ach Office 1400 Fail River Ave- Seekonk L

e w___e ~r __ ~J - H-bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull~ shy

purpose and above all genushyine love for the poor

Father Vizzard will leave Washington to middotwork in Califorshynia Nevada Arizona and Utah the region of the Jesuits Cali shyfornia province

Four Cleveland Nuns Quit as Religious

CLEVELAND (NC) - Four nuns one the prineipal of a 1100 student girls Catholic high school have separately withdrawn from the Sisters of Notre Dame here in Ohio

It was the largest departure since 1966 when 10 Sisters of Notre Dame were released from their vows to move to Pueblo CoIQ to form an experimental community middotThe Sisters of Notre Dame is the largest order of 2531 Cedar St New Bedford nuns based in the Cleveland 993middot3222 Diocese

imiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot~middotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot~ middot 3NEW HIGHERi RATE OF

PER ANNUM INTEREST PAID QUARTERllyo ON PAID-UP

SHARE CERTIfICATES Deposits Welcomed in Multiples of

$20000 up to $30OOO-on Single and Joint Accounts Up to $60OOO-for Cornorations

DIVIDENDS PAID 4 TIMES A YEAR February MC1V August and November

All Deposits Inoured in Full

Taunton

THE ANCHORshyThurs April 11 1968 11

Support Bi~hop5

Equa~sty Plea MINEOLA (NC)-The Cathshy

olic Interracial Council of Long Island has voted overwhelmshying support of Rockville Censhytres Bishop Walter P Kellenshybergs call for equality in housing employment and edushycation

Bishop Kellenberg issued Zl pastoral letter-A Call to COl1shyscience-in which he said it i9 essential that every man be given equal opportunity for eJQP]oyment and job advanceshyment and equal educatton for himself and for his children

Declaring these to be fundashymental moral issues facing the people of Long Islanp the council said We give this statement by Bishop Kellenberg our overwhelming sUPPOtt

John J Clarke council president said the eounciB deemed it necessary to reit shyerate its support of the bishops statement co gtI bull because of our increasing concern over conshytinued discriminatory practicelC in these areas

In a policy statement the council declared the bash cause of racial unrest lies in the almost complete lack oR any meaningful contact between the races Today there are few whites who can say they really know Negroes This ignorance of each other is caused almost lxc]usively by patterns of segshyregation in housing which reshysuited in segregated schools 3mll a segregated society

As a step in breakin( these patterns the council recomshymended passage of open housshying ordinances in all towns OK

Long Island Only when there is no place left for the white man to run will the problem be solved it said

Norris H Tripp SHEET METAL

J fESER Prop

RESIDENTIAL INDUSTRIAL

COMMERCIAL

WASHINGTON (NC)-Father James L Vizzard SJ retiring Washington director of the Nashytional Catholic Rural Life Conshyference received the papal Benemerenti medal hele in recshyognition of his work for t~e

rural poor of the United States and throughout the world

The presentation at a dinner in the Cosmos Club was attendshyed by Bishop Henry J Soenshyneker of Owensboro Ky NCRLC president Msgr Luigi Ligutti permanent observer for

Prelate Advocalles Open Housing ILaws

JEFFERSON CITY (NC)shyBishop Joseph M Marling CPPS of Jefferson City has urged Catholics of the diocese to campaign openly and fearshy

- lessly for area open housing laws

In a pastoral letter urging open housing law support the Missouri prelate askedshy

Who fails to see that to conshydemn a large segment of our people to the cruel segregation thatmiddot closed housing entails is to sin gravely against charity justice and the vely finest inshystincts of our nature Who may deny that to perpetuate such an evil in this enlightened age will bring malediction upon us

For jurely he answered Chlist is brother to the eolored in the identical sense that he is brother to the other children of men

Plan Fa-II Opening Of Joint Semill1ary

CHICAGO (NC)-A graduate school of theology for seminashyrians ftom three Religious orshyders will open in a former hotel here in the Fall

The school to be known as the Catholic Theological Union will be operated by the Passhysionists Franciscans and Sershyvites in the fOI-mer Aragon Hotel near the University of Chicago

About 100 students ue exshypected to enter thl school this year Area seminariltes ourrent-middot ly being used by themiddot threfl

2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese 01 Fall Ri~~r-Thurs Apr 11 1968 S~~in S~ntences priest- and Laymen

JOurrt)~a$ts Opinions Differ_On V~~e of Bishops Synod

By Msgr George G Higgins Two American journ~lists who have covered the Rome

1beat off and on for several years-Father Francis X Murphy CSSR and Gary MacE0 in-have just published an interesting account of the Synod of Bishops which was held in Rome in 1967 (Synshyod 67 A New Sound in what they manege to teU us Rome Bruce Publishing Co about themselves in their sep- Milwaukee) Written in the arate and widelydivergent asshyfamiliar Xavier Rynne style it Sessments of the Synod is something of a tour de force How two men who disagree given the se- so fundamentally about the uecy w h i c h pros and cons of the Synod ever enveloped the managed to work as a tandem $ y nod a 1 in the writing of the history of proceedings The the synodal proceedings is to authors h a v e put it as mildly as possible a tried to give perplexing mystery on account as They tell us that for aU that a c cur ate as lies between their separate possible under evaluations Df the Synod they the conditions are jointly accountable but that of time and cir- the internal logic of their inshycumstance For dividual viewpoints and the my own part I dialectic of the situation led think they deserve better than them to attribute exclusive reshya ~as~ing grade They do ~lOt sponsibil~ty for the Prelude to ~lalln to hae wrlt~en anythmg a priest and for the Postscript like8cIefmltIve hlstory of the i to a layman SYlo1IgtUt they have proyid~d Far A art 1IllS wlth a useful mtenm sum- P mabr of the -proceedings and I take it that this is a polite ~r ~ii w~ cin) begrateful way of saying that when they

Perplexing Mystery got around to summing up their Tothis reader however what impressions of the Synod they

the authors tell us about the

lSynod ls less mterestmg than i

~ 8holJd have concluded contrashyr rlwise- that it was seriously - lacking in credibility and releshy

vance and was thus on biI- ance a huge disappointment

lRationaJize Differences

Such differencesmiddot of opinion on the part of experienced

jourpalilts covering the same everit-and using the very same

source~ of informationare not to be Vf~npered at

On the other hand I am Dot very happy about the curious- way in which the authors haveshyrationalized their differencea Th~y tell Us that one evaluatioo Df ~he Synod (Father Murphys) w~ ~ritteo from the viewpoint of the institutional Church and the other (Mr MacEoins) from that of conteinporarshyman~ind

Or again in Mr MacEoin words A priest professionally involved in the institution will

tend to lean in one direction 11 layman whose professional sushy

- viva rests on his sensitivity to

SPECIAL DELEGATE Marches Ghilio Sacchetti 42 has been named by POpe Paul VI to succeed Count Enrico

Galeazzi as special delegate of the Pontfical Commission for the state of Vatican City He is wearing the now outshymoded costume of a Gentleshyman of Cape and Sword NC PIloto

world opinion in the other

Now Bear This

This strikes me as being bull slightly threadbare and hopeshylessly pre-Conciliar dichotomy I know of a Dumber of priests (and so do the authors I asshysume) who rightly~or wrongly are just as critical of the Synod as Mr MacEoin is

I also know of a number III laymen (and so do the authocs I must assume again) who rightly or wrongly are just as sanguine about the results of the Synod as Father Murphy is So whats all this doctrinaire I

stuff about priests necessarily looking at things (myopically) through the allegedly unenshylightened eyes of contemposhyrary mankind

Tell it to the Marineal

found that they wer~ so ho~e-lessly far apart 111 theIr thmkmg

that the division of labor so I cryptically described in the above quotations appeared to be the only possible way of salshyvaging the middotoperation Thatll fair enough

It isnt at all surprising that one of the authors (Father Murphy) should have concluded that on balance the Synod was truly a contribution to the Church~s aggiornamento and that the other (Mr MacEoin)

MAnmn (NC) - Sz~en per- sons incIl~lg a Cathollc priest have bc)n sentenced to prison terms and fined by Madrids Court of r lic Order on charges Olf havinr participated in an anti-Frangt meeting in Barceshylona in lS~G

On trial were Father Francisshyeo Paula Botey and 10 laymen who were accused of attending

THE SOCIETY FOR THE PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH SEND YOUR GIFT TO

Ill RighI Reverend Edward TOMeara TheRighi Rnerend RII~T CIItIII4Jiw Natlotud Director OR DliJceSlUl DlTmor 366 Fifth Avenue 368 North MiJln S

Naw York New York 10001 FaIl RJ_ MIISIiIduueIuOl7raquo ~~

AME ADDRESS ZIP

an illegal meeting The meetshying was advertised as a Day of Repression and criticized what it called the repressive activities of the government of Gen Franshycisco Franco

Father Botey who admitted during the trial that he atshytended the meeting at Barcelona Universitys law school was senshyten~ to a year in jail ~d fined

about $214 Three of the laylDell received similar sentences amplid fines while ~ others drew six-month jail terms aDd four were absolved

Father Batey testified duriDtl the trial that he deliberately atshy1ended the meeting to protest against the ftPress1on he bad said he had seen of -certain see-shymenta of ampbe Spanish clergyshy

Prelate Supports Catholic Schools Opposes Racism

NEWARK (NC) -Archshybishop Thomas A Boland of Newark touched on racism Catholic education and aborshytion in his annual message to the Archdiocesan CouncH of catholic Men at its CQnvention here

Noting that BOrne people adshyvocate closing Catholic schools to concentrate on adult educashytion Archbishop Boland said I believe we mU9t give as much time as is possible to adult edushycation but not that we should ignore our chlIdren

If we close our schools he soid there may 00 no one to attend the adult courses iJn future years

He deplored the absence of religion in the education of many people and said that while 0 ohild may be receiving o good academic background under such circumstances he is not being trained in his will or his morals

Jthortion Is Murder Archbishop Boland noting

~hot the question of relaxing bortion laws is before the state LeFislature recalled that he lralNi opollen to the men about ~ot Dubject a year earlier and repeated what he had said then abortion is murder

Should the state legislate more liberally in this field he said it would go outside its sphere and we would have no

right to follow it He indicated however that

the Church would not oppose the establishment of a legislashytive commission to study the abortion law

Discussing racism he called it a malignant growth in our society and announced his support for a peaceful interrashycial walk through the streets of Newarks ghetto

Spokesmen lor L2ity Archbishop Boland also urged

the men to turn their council into a real spokesman for the laity He ruled out the possibil shyity of a voice for the laity toshytally independent flrom the hierarehy declaring that this is not the structure cd the Church

H we want to build a strucshyture the archbishop said we get an architect to give us a uniform plan Christ is the arshyehitect of the Chureh We are its workmen

He then urged the men tID take the steps which would make the ACCM aspokesman for the people II real council

Delegates adopted four res0shy

lutions endorsing catholic echools condemning racism lin every form advocating retenshytion and expansion of the states IIChool bus law and opposing relaxation of the abortioD statute

Stresses Increased Food Production

NEW DELHI (NC)-The vatshyican recognizes the need to mshycrease food production middotas a most serious problem facing the developing countries and mshydeed the world as a whole Elizabeth Reid II member of the

bull Vatican delegation to the United ean delegation to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD)

Speaking at the UNCTAD meeting here in India MilS Reid said The right to food 18 01117 another aspect 01 be mosi eaered of all buman rigbts the right to life and it is tb1s parshyticular aspect of the problem of development that places the heaviest and most serious burshyden em the comlcieDee of man- flIIIIampy from home kiDd ~ bull lot cbeapeJ tIIaD IiDDC

rv~

I I

HEATHER CUTTHNG

Sacred Hearts Junior High School Student Is Licenseod Amateur Radio Operator

Holly and Heather Cutting 532 Walnut Street Fall River share a transistor rashydio With some teenage sisters this might cause trouble but not with this pair Heather Jets Holly take the transistor She settles for pop music from Johannesburg South Africa-via her shortwave set They have real good musicraquo she says Blonde 14 year old Heather learned the In ternational Morse Code a basic requirement for amashyteur radio operators when she was seven but its only in the past year that shes really worked at the complicated hobby Her father Dick Cutting ll construction superintendent by profession has been ll radio ham for 30 years by avocation An awesome battery of receivshyers and transmitters fills a room of the Walnut street house and when Heather displayed real inshyterest in them she had iii wi)) ing teacher close at hand

Heathers an eighth grader at Sacred Hearts Junior High School on Prospect Street in Fall River and she admits that she does as much homework as IIhe can at sOOool to have eveshynings free for her hobby She at shytends radio classes nightly then hurries bome to spend as much as three hours at ber sel

Im llicensed for two fre- I

quencies right DOW she exshyplained I can talk on six and two meters Translated that means she can contact amateullil

--in this part of the United States but may not ta]k tomiddot overseal operators until she earns 1Il middotgeneral license

Im Working for my license DOW she said rohe examinashytion JIm be in 00 days Even the license that Heather now holds however is umusual for one of her age When she gets ber general license she Will be among itB Y01lllllgest holders and probably the youngceBt 8h licensee in the stlllte

rhere are 11426 lI8dto amashyteurs iD Massacbuatts I18id her father aInd cmIy 409 aJre WCllInen

wm CoDtaet lFather A real benefit to ~ Cutting

family from Bellltberll general lieense wID be iba1 1Ibell be able tID reach bel fathe bull blB car short wave mctic wheD he is OlD hIfl freqUeDt bwliness tripal

distance calls said Mr Cutting The electric light company figshyures I can run this rig 16 hours a day for only $290 a month

Heather hopes to make a cashyreer of radio technology Right now she is able most of the time to repair her set if someshything goes awry and shea building a small transmitting station for an upcoming science fair at Sacred Hearts Itll broadcast about 200 feet she said

Sometimes Of couJrSe gremshylins pop ill Like the time Heather got a phone can from a boy in Swansea Hey did oU know youre coming m on eiYclnnel 2 on our TV be said 011 another occasion Heather picked ~ her fathers transmisshysion OIl ber electric pitar speaker

Most of the time however things go smoothly During her nightly radio sessions Heather picks up signals Jrom other amateurs and has some schedshyuled appointments vis the mllshyways withmiddot friends hi otheJl mties

When she picks up 5 llllew

eontact she confirms it with II brightly-colored postcard bearshying her name and station 0011 etters in psychedelic pink Wld yellow

Collecting such postcards 111 2 sub-hobby for radio amateulll and Holly has a oozzling eollecshytion on the walls of her radio room She bas Mganized the Sou the a II t ern MassachushyIlett8 Teenage RadM Net aocll ill

BEFORE YOU BUy-tRy

PARK MOTORS OLDSMOBILE

OIdsmobile-lPeugot-Rencnft fJ1 Middle Street Fairhaven

llooking for new members Its just for teens she says

=rheyre more fun to talk to Once she has her general 11shy

cense she plans to join Iil group that relays messages from Viet Nam servicemen to their famshyilies

other Bobbies Badia is by no means Heathshy

ers only hobby Shl~ and her sister Holly a freshman at Emshymanuel College have an imshypressive collection of sharpshyshooting trophies mostly garshynered at Fall River Rod and Gun Club meets I began shootshying when I was six and had my Own gun when I as seven eaid Heather

Other interests are mathematshyics and music Heather picked lIP guitar playing on her own and belOngs to a folk group which plans its first public apshypearance after Easter

In short shes one teen whoD never be found wondering what to de next

LARIVIERES Pharmacy

Prescriptions called for and delivered

LOFT CHOCOLArES

600 Cottage St 994-1439 New Bedford

Save With Safety at

NEW BEDFORD-ACUSHNET CO-OPERATIVE BANK

115 WILLIAM ST NEW BEDFORD MASS

THE ANCHORshy 13Thurs April 11 1968

Houston Priests Get Pay Raise

HOUSTON (NC) - BishOJ John L Morkovsky announceCl a pay raise for priests of thE Galveston-Houston diocese and said a new retirement poliCW will go into effect Jan 1 1970

Under the old pay scale asshy sistants received a base salary of 11250 plus $30 car allowshyance and $1250 insurance preshymium for a total salary of $155 a month Pastors received a total monthly salary of $21750 The new salary reale will allow for increased pay based on the number of yearo priests have been ordained

Assistants who have been cshydained less than 10 years wiill receive a total monthly salary of $200 The figures will ~

$225 for those ordained moro than 10 years

Pastors with 25 years in t100 priesthood will receive m monthly total of $275 ThoSQ with more than 25 years will receive $300

The retirement policy ca1lJfl for optional retirement at age 65 and mandlltory retirement at 70 However elderly pries1amp who are able and willing m37 be assigned to other priestly work than the pastorate Bisbshyop Morkovsky stated

The bishop said the changes are in accordance with the recshyommendations of the Senate 01 Priests and follow consultashytion with diocesan consultom

Reach Impasse-PIITSBURGH (NC)-A state-gt

level meeting between Cat~

olic officials and the Nationl11 Association for the Advanceshyment of Colored People on furshythering racial integration iB Catholic schools reached m seeming stalemate here bn Pennsylvania when the schoolshymen cited lack of funds as ll major obstacle to NAACP pro= posals

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YOUTH CARES FOR AGE Retired Sisters are tenderlycared for at chair while Sister Mary Agnes looks on Center Sister Agnes Maureea Mmiddott St Mary Convent Fall River Left Sister Agnes Maureen seniormiddot wheels SisterMary Jer~me anQright Sister JohnCatberine bringgdri_ infirmarian points out magazine article to Sister Mary Lig~~ri inwheel to Sister Mary Ursulamiddot Both infirmarians are licensed practical nurses

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Cqrdinal Roy Raps Apathy

MEXICO CITY (NC)~MaushyJOice Cardinal Roymiddot of Quebee _ a visit here as ehairman of the Pontifical Commission for World Justice and Peace said Christian teachings condemn violence in solving social probshylems but also condemn themiddot false prudence that lacks the eourage to make needed reshyforms

The prelate who has been touring Latin America for sevshyeral weeks said he was 1mshypressed by the number of Cathshy

olic organizations and institushytutions already applying Pope Paul VIs encyclical The Deshyvelopment of Peoples in their Jespective countries

But he added Latin Amerishyearn still have to assume fully their responsibility in workingtowards economic balance andmiddot bull just social order 80 every cit shyizen can promote his own welshyfare in a climate of freedom and common good

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Comes KindIYcimiddotmiddotSislesmiddot 0 Mercy AmiddotI Fall River Comiddotnventmiddot

By Patricia McGowan

~When thou wast younger thou didstmiddot gird thyself anddidst walk where thou Frouldst But when thou shalt be old thou shalt stretch forth thy handsmiddot arid another shall gird thee and lead thee whither thou wouldst not In its description of the almost universal lot of age this is one of the most poignantpassages in Scriptur~ But age comes kindly f~r Sisters Although they are not exshyemptmiddot from its physical and mental ravages they need not fear being forsaken byfriends or being left alone the

fanulymiddot Jhe famllylast of a that is a religious community cherishes its older members and provision is made for Sisters to pass their last years surrounded by tender care

Among havens for older Sisters is the infirmary at Mt St Mary Conventmiddot Fall River The Sisters who have spent most of their religious life in the Fail River Diocese come here for their laBtyears exshypliliried Sister Agnes Maureen

The cardinal added at emiddot pretB8 RSMmiddotmiddot senior iniirmarian at eonference in the headquarten the Mount Her domain proshyf the Mexican Social Secreta- vides eh~rf11~ccQmmodations riat that national efforts for de- for 10 Sisters Each has her ownmiddot elopment do not eliminate the room andthere is II kitchenette aeed ~forfoleignaid where those ablE lobe up and

The Pontifieal commisSion Cardinal Roy indicated ill enshyaged in persuading rich counshytries to devote at least one per eent of their groSs national product to assist poor eountries

Archdiocese Adopts Project Equality

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing notified the priests lIeIlate of the Boston archdiocese of plans 10 adopt Project Equality a program designed to use purchasing power of church institutions to make firms supplying goods and 8elVices wipe out diICriminashy birislM Placticeamp

e~ut ~n enjoy their meals ~gethermiddot

The ~nfirmaryis but II few stepis from the Mount chapel wher~ the retired Sisters spend hours a day in prayer for comshymunity members still in the active lPostolate Also claiming time for Sisters whose eyesight permits are needlework ana erooheting projects

Always DraWlll Cheerful and dedicated Sister

Agnes Maureen who has I Deen at the infirmary six years is aided by Sister John Catherine who has served the aged Sisters two years A laywoman takes the night shift in the infirmary ensuring the Sisters round the clock care Bothmiddot Sister infirmashy

rians are licensed practical nurses who received their trainshyI g to L d f F tma Hosn a ur a y 0 a I shypital in the Providence Diocese

When I entered religion I hoped to be an infirmarian

said SIster Agnes Maureen I whas alwdays drawn to work for t e age

Some people think we havent got a nursing apostolate she added but we need nurses desshyperately Right now we have nine Sisters taking care of inshyfirmaries in our province

Among Sisters now at the Mount infirmary are Sister

Mary Agnes who celebrated her diamond jubilee last DeshyceJl)ber and most of wbose r~lishygious life was spent in New Bedford and middotNorth Attleboro schools and Sister Mary Lishy

gu()ri whomiddot f9r 49 yearl taught sixth graders at st Patricks School Fall River

HShe looks out her window at St Patricks said Sister Agnes Maureen and she says Theres home

The Sisters are welcoming the arrival of Spring and warm days said the infirmarian It means they can enjoy their sunporch sit in the Mounts garden and go for occasional car rides Of course they have many visitors she said Other Sisters in the house come to see them and so do Sisters from the convents where they forshymerly lived

Yes age comes kindly for Sisters Not Hke the old lady overheard in a downtown groshy

eery confiding to a chance fellow-customer her discovery of a bargain in frozen food I live alone you know and 1 get

three big servings from a packshyage--and only 29 cents

N 0 Sister lives alone

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~~tplic Newspaper Wins Press Awards

NEW ORLEANS (NC) -The eJarion Herald middotarchdiocesa middotnewspaper won eight awards iii the annual competition of the

N~W Or)eans Press Club ~ competition included daily and

weekly newspapers wire serVshyices and television stations

Millard F Everett editor won first place in two categories - editorial and best religioWl story This marks the first time in five years of competition that the Clarion has taken the top award for best religious story Staff members of the paper also took three second and three third place awards

----------------------------

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFon River-Thurs Apr 11 1968

CathoJi~ ll]wnDv~JSityPltDcopy~regii~copyJ~

IPlanLUBffil AmeFicon ~1]~regregO WASHINGTON (NC) - A ops and l~aders of several South

jJroup of pr-ofessors from Cathshy American governments sHe University of America hope The Washington center comshyS n~w technical middotinstituteat the middotprises -ll group of professorsshy~tholic University of Gu~Washy mostly members of the CU caulI Ecuador may mark the llchool of middoted ucation-whomiddot are ltJPening of an international edshy specialists ineclUcationfordeshyvcation bridgetoLatin America Velopment Director of the proshy

The institute will be inaugurshy ject is Dr Jose A Baquero ated early this month as 11 middotcoshy WM has been commuting b~shy1)eIativeventure by the Center meen Washingtonand his nashylor Educational Research fa middottive Ecuador dming the -cmrent QuitoEcuadorand the Center school year lor Community Developmenhmd This is not an Ecuadorian Servioe at Catholic University project it is an internatienal bere It has the support 01 Vashy projed a resealclFaction proshykanofficials Ecuadorianbislshy gram between North and South

America Dr Baquero said middothereBC middotto Recruit laquorNe had to start middotsomewhere The natural plaoe 10 begin wasNegro St~1ent5 middot-the Qlace Where weaould get

CHESTNUT HILL (NC) shy the most facilitiesThisproject iesuit-eper-ated Boston College God willing if successful will bere has made available $100shy move throughout Latin AmershyGtOO fora talent search -progr1m ica We already have contracts to recruit Negro stJdents frem with interestedJeaders in Sao disadvantagedurbanareas middotof Paulo BTazil Bogota Colombia tlhecountry mainly in Greater and Lima Peru Boston Msgr Eugene Kevane direcshy

Father Michael P Walsh SJ tor of the Center for Communitypresident caUed for support off Development andServleedaimshyiIIe entirestudent body facshy ed iB number of Latin American Illlty and administration of EQsshy Church and government officialS Qon College to make the ~mshy have middotexpressed interest in thecram a success projectand a belid it may beshy

Since the program was starteJ come a model of assistance middottoIJeveral weeks ago some 50 ~shy lI3derdeveloped poundOuntrieslltIicatiopshave beenreceiltvelll He said ArcnbishGp Romolofrom students in ghetto areas Carooni apostolic nuncio 10lot -entrance middotin next Septemshy

~1u told him heilOllSiders theWltll freshman -class pmject of great importance andThere have a1w~ys beellU M~S a similhlr middotinstitute willIlegro students enrolled at B4tsshybe established at the Pontificalton College oUicials said ~t University in Limatheir Dumber is ~ot ~own 00shy

0tberhigh-ranking churchshyaYSe race is not shown 8ll1 middotmen who lthave endorsed theapplications The Collegemiddotacceptll project include MsgrLuigi Lishyattdents of all faiths gutti the Holy Sees PermanentN~t SeptemberNegro lrtlllshy

1Gbserver at the Food and Agrishy

bullnts with the necessary ~uaUshy6eations will be admitted n8 culture Organization of the 1Ilual while middotsome 25 will ge United Nations and Archbishop admitted under the talent Ceasar Antonio Mosquera fif

lt4IeQIChprogram The number is Guayaquil president of theEcshybeing limited for thegood af iliad-orlan Bishops Conference

GOLDEN JUBILEE Sisshyter Rose Alma Reid CSC (Sjltte1 M Flora) will mark herg-olden i llbilee of religious professjon on Sunday April 21 at Sacred Heart Convent New Bedford A Mass of thanksgi~rjng will be offered at 1130 Sunchw morning at Sacred Head Church and a reception will be held in the parish hall ITom2 to 4 th~t

afternoon Friends and forshymer pupils are invited t01l~

tend

So Curolina Bishop A-sksPettce $upport

CHARLESTON (NC)- Bishshymiddotop Ernest Lmiddot Unterkoefier of Charleston has called for the middotfull support ofall Americans of President Lyndon middotlB Johnshysons efforts to secure peace in middotVietnam

Tbe South ltCarolina Bishop said that the Presidents -peace ini tiati yes demonstrate that he is a gtarson who -has ever been conscious of the grave responsishybility 01 his ofillce and that his judgements have been measured ~y the critical threats to the securi~y and free action ofthe United States

ICampus Comediansl

R~JlJ~stforBirh ControJ 1nlcrmation lndBGSYlrncrGti(C~e

DAYTON (NC)-A Univershysity of Dayton chaplain said he suspected campuscomediami for 1b~ conJroversyaroused bY a request for availability of birth corttol information and materials In campus by theunishyversity stmiddotudent congress

Father Urban Rupp SM universi~y co-chaplain wrote in the chaplain s bulletin the alshymost unanimous aetion fthe student gfvernment group middotwas an idio~yncratic caper in the natureo Ii ttle childrenpl~ying

house He indicated he fouud it difshy

ficult to take the Pfoposa1 serishyomlY

Now of COUrse I middotcowd be taking this all -wrong be said

Perhaps it was intended 00 bn serious In that case I woUld be tempted to thinktheemershygency is not just immediateshyit is really one generation too late

This was taken asa reference to student efforts to pwih through the resolution orbirth control as an emergency -meashysure

That failed but a few days later the student middotcongressvo~ 29 tol to seeka change in llJllshyversUy Wlicy that would -pershymit the introductionof birth 1Ontrol selYiees in thestudem health center for married eQUoshy~les and Ulose llQOD _ ~arriedmiddot

the young Negroes whowiUbe ~pted oUiciaI said

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PATRIARCH The middotnewily elected head of the Syriac Oatholic Church Patriarch Hgtenys Antoine Hayek of Anshy~och was enthroned recentshy1w in Beirut Lebanon In this post hesucceds the late P-ashykiarch Ignace Cardinal TapshylPouni NC Photo

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In ~ glory of His Resurrection may be reborn man~

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HAPPY EASTER THE OFFICERS DIRiEc1r~ AND STAFfshy

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THE ANCHO~-Trappists Elect Mother Church of Nation8 PortlglleSe 17 Thurs April 11 1968

Youngest Abbot P-epares fOI- Cenlellilial Celebration At Gethsenloni Dy Patida F r-u nis

GETHSEMANI (NC) The youngest abbot in the history of the monastery of Our Lady of Gethsemani was formally blessed (March ~l) by Archbishop Thomas J McDon~

ough 0pound Louisville Father M Flavian Burns

OCSO 36 ilgt the seventh ab~

bot in the 120-year history of the monastery He was elected by members of the community Inst January to succeed Abbot M James Fox OCSO

Father Flavian described bis position as en administrator whose main job il) service to others within the community He said his most important function it3 to hold plivate spiritual conversations with other monks and to handle the lillM)nasterys relations with the ~Atside world

Thcilt are some 120 monks at ~ethsemani abbey a decline from past years Abbot Burns cCrlbllltes the decline at least in prt to the attitude of the times YiJCl1 was foJJJlcrly accepted without question is now being ltI~etioned he observed

ltDontemplation Prayer

Changes have been made the IHurElY is now in English and 2Jc strict vow of silence has TiKen relaxed somewhat On an experimental basis the monks are allowed to use brief oral instructions instead of sign language as in the past

Despite the lack of radio or 1clevision Abbot Burns said the monks keep in contact through newspllpers with events in todays world The main thing ill to know what is going on in the Church and what effects our fellow hushymans according to the abbot

The life of a monk involves middotcontemplation and prayer rather than speaking up - 11 more spiritual turn according kI Abbot BUlns

A native of Jersey City N J he is a graduate of Henry SfIyder public high sehool there

Protests- Campaign Agamst Religion

NEW YORK (NC) - A new wave of terror against aU churcltgpers is now in effect in Albania an exile from that country has declored in a- letter of protest sent to the United Nations Commission on Human Rightsmiddot and~ to UN Secretary General U Thani

The protest bl Dr Rexhep KIasniqi president of the Free Albania Committee which has its headquarters here said that Albanial following a lf41oist eommunillt guideline has shut down every cltulch and mosque and has made any_kind of pubshylIc worship impossible

Thill campaign Dr Krasniqi tated is a violation of the UN Charter the Universal Declarashytion of Human Rights and of Albanias own communist conshystitutional guarantee of freedom of conscience for all

San Antonro Priests Form Association

SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Fortyshyene diocesan and religious comshymunities priests of the San Anshytonio archdiocese formed a priests association bere The priests ohose a six-member temshypora]) steering committee

One of the fiTst formal actions Gf the allsociatron was to inform Archbishop Robert E Lucey of San Antonio of the group forshymation

There are approximately 441

Parishioner d St John the Baptist Church in Nc Bedford are getting rendy for a momentoils event-the 100th anniversary of the fO~1l1dil1g of the oldest Portuguese parish in the nation The cen~en]ial celebration wi II not take place until 1971 but many things have to be done in preparation within the next three years One major project is renoshyvating the church ihelf To pay for the massive job ptrshyishioners have inaugur~teca Centennial Fund Drive to raise money for painting ~he church do extensive electrical work and buy a rew organ Estimated cost (f the regt3ir5 is $150000

Rt Rev Msgr John A Silvia pastor is honorary drve chairshyman and Frank S Jason is genshyeral chairman Other committee members include Richard GiJI1shysalves and Jesse V Santos Jr division chairmen JQseph S Vera special gifts chairman Richard L Lopes treasurer George Radcliffe director Louis S Silva assistant director Mrs Mary Lucy Soares office conshytrols and Miss Luey E Dias list supervisor

Members of the Campaign Exshyecutive Committee also include Frank M Martin ald Joseph C Motta

The history of St Johns and the history of the Portuguese people in America arc closely intertwined

It was at the end of the 18th Century that settlers began comshying from themiddot Azores to the United States TheJ were relashytively few in number nd as II

result almost lost their national identity

Near Ifood However by 1840 the trickle

of Azoreans was beginning to turn into a near Oood of imshymigrants who settled in New Bedford then a whaling and fishing center

By 1865 many Portuguese families called New Bedford home They lacked just one thing-a church of their own and a priest who spoke their language and understood their customs and traditions

Their first priest-Rev Joao Ignacio de Azevedo-anived in 1869 and on Sept 10 1871 St Johns parish was canonically established

Theremiddot were approximately 1shy000 Portuguese of Azorean deshyscent living in New Bedford at the time and the)T detelmined to build their own church A lot was purchased for $3OD8 ~ con~

siderable amount in those days and soon ground WQS broken for the new house of God

However Father de Azeedo was a mission pliest Vl~ho~moved

throughout the are~ aCministershying to his counblymen As a reshysult a new parish was establishshyed in Boston and he became its first pastor

Expandoll

Construction of St Johns WillS

continued by Rev Antonio de Mattos Freitas a native or Calshylteta St George Azores Fashyther Freitas also was responsible for the construction of a recshytory When he reUred because of ill health and returned to~ the AzoreS he was succeeded by Rev Antonio G de Silva Neves who was to serve St Johns durshying the greatest expansion Gfthe citys Portuguese colony

The first church located where a section of Morse- Twiampt Drill now stands soon ~ outgrown by its congregation and a drive began for agt new and larger church

Father Neves who served 8~j

pastor for almost 25 years saw the new church at County and Wing Streets almost coop]eted However ill health also forced bill retirement

PREPARING FOR CENTENNIAL In charge of fumd drive for hundredth anniversary of St John Baptist Church New Bedford are from left George Radclffe drive execushytive director Frank Jailon general chairman

pleted construction of the present church and rectory in three years The church which now serves the parish was solemnly blessed an4 dedicated to the worship of God by the late Bishshyop Feehan

Through the years the parshyishioners of St Johns have proved their dedication to their cliurch Now they are renewinr their dedication

Msgr Silvia notes that before the small St Johns Church was built the citys Portuguese colshyony attended Mass at St Lawshyrence Church Later they moved into what today is Crowells brt Store

Landmark Today the 11Inificent st

Johns is a landmark in New Bedford befitting its position as Mother Church of the Portu guese in the- UnFted States

MSgr Silvia a native of Pall River served at St Peters Church in Provincetown for 27 years His only other assi1shyment St John the B-aptirt Church

Ordained to the priesthood or Dec 20 1919 St Johns was the new priests first assignment He remained at the cRurch unshytil No~ember 1924 when he was transferred to Ptovinceto~

On Oct 2 1951 Msgr Silvia returned to St Johns as pzsshytor a post hemiddot still fulfills with zeal and energy

His assignmetlt to St Jobnfl parish in 1919 was not ~1sgr Sinshyvias introduotion to the New Bedford parish

As a young boy the p2stcshyrecalls his poundathers weekly trips from Fall River to New Bedford to bring back a priest

Four Families There were few Portuguese

families in Fall River in those days he says When my father arrived in Fan River there were iust four Portuguese families in the city Gradually others setshytled there

My father used to drive over in a horse and buggy to bring Il priest back tc Fall River to ll3y

degbrought him back the next dzy Since those days of hischiMshy

bood Msgr Silvia observeamp-l Turn to Page Eighteen

Continued fronmiddot Page Three

the late Tobias and Ann Lynch ]Burke Mr Burke was born in Newport Tipperary Ireland and his speech bears witness to the o-it and lilt of his birthshyplce He is married te Catbshyerine Lowney Burke and the couple lives next to the Chanshycery

DI1 Davia Costa Dr Costa son of David CosU

and Julia Rodrigues is the husshyband of Louella Somerday and fther of five children A dentshyist in NeJ Bedford he is active ir ceo and in St Vincent ~e

Pml work on a parochial and al(l level He has been zealoUJ ir- many important phases ~

perish aetivity in Immaculate Conception Parish in New BedshyforC He was recipient of the Diocesan Marian Award in Deshycember

itpJlin 15 TIle awards Jill be presenteCl

at St Marys Cathedral Fa]] River on lIlonday evening April 15 at 8 PM At toot timeuro there will be the investi shyture of two lI-ionsignori the awarding of Papal Knight 03 SZ Gregory honors to nine ~sect- oeesan laymen and the Pro EecIesia et Pontipoundlce award kJ mother Pierre Marie adminisshytlato of St Annes Hospital IE Fall River~

Join Federation IIALEIGH (NC)-Forty ()(f thfl

matewide Raleigh dioceses 14~

tlriests have formed the North iCaFolina Priests Associatioil which will affiliate with a Emshy

ticmal federation DOW beiJl~

formed

May the Joy and Pomise 01- Easter

uplift your spirit and gladden

your hean

FROM THE OFRCEIIS AND PERSONfJB Of

qkJM~ERCHANTS CIa1iotuLe BANK

IN NEW BEDFORD

SOUTH BANK-Cove St at Iodney French Boulevard WEST BANK-Kempton Street at Mill Stret

LUNDS CORNER BANK-Acushnet Ave rear Lunds Comer DARTMOUTH BANK-Dartmouth Street near Rockdale Ave NORTH BANK-Acushnet Avbull at Coffin Ave

CENTER BANK-Purchase and William Sts priests in the San Antonio arcl1shy Next pastor was the Rev Mass He used to stay overnight tiiocese Manuel A da Silva wt() oom- at our hOuse ald JlG ~tbeI

-

18 Tti~ ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1969 CatecheticsWeek Set at StonehillDioce$clm ~j[llIlde[lj)fl5 Join Nal-gonGI Some 400 priests religious and laymen are expected to at shyMculrraurru U A$~ssinatBon tend a catechetics institute b be held Monday Aug 5 throughOf Dr Mriin luther KilnS Saturday Aug 10 at Stonehill College Diocesan schools shared i~ national mourning at the Sister Mary Francille CSJ

~8sassination of Dr Martin Luther King with special theology professor at Regis ColshyMasses or prayers offered in every school At Cassidy High lege will direct the institute in Taunton Rev John Moore chaplain celebrated a Mass and speakers will include Rev

Frederick Moriarty SJ Revfor the repose of the soul Cha~les E Cook Rev James F(l)f the Negro leader and rently hplds first place in the Hawker Sister Florence -MishyNotre Dame math league chels OLVM Gerard Potte~

tlie chapel by students in a demy Fairhaven have been study periods were spent in Girls at Sacred Hearts Acashy

bauoi and Mrs Helen Jacobs With the theme Making Alllvigil for peace working on a project to bring

Christian Youth Movement Easter cheer to patients at St Things New institute sessiono will discuss Scripture catechetshymembers at Jesus-Mary Aca- Lukes Hospital New Bedford ical techniques use of filmsdemy Fall River heard the New Under supervision of Sister Jushywith adolescents other visualFolk a group of singing Holy lie Louise SSCC theyve ~een aids parent education teamCross seminarians Their appear- making tray favors including teaching and creative dramaticsance was arranged under t~e decorative placemats and napkin

Further information is avail shydirection of Mofher John Scarry holders for adults and flowered able from Stonehill CollegeJRJM Jollipops chicky surprises and North Easton 02356Also at JMA its French Week bunny hats for childern

The observance- began Sunday Science Fair Winners when French Club members Jeanne Phenix Yvette Berthi- Holy Family had four winshy Charities AppeaI aume and Susan Cournoyer took ners at the annual New Bedford Continued from Page Three part in a play sponsored by the Science fair In the senior division

Community Fund CampaignPrevost French Club Les Fem- James Berry and John Thomas president Board of Managers mes Parlent Trop Throughout of the New Bedford school were of Boston Dispensary and vice

the week too there have middotbeen cited fo~ earth science and phy- the Diocesan cheerleading tour- will combine with the seniors president of USOseveral skits prepared by mem- sics proJects respectively while t tl h ld t F h th bZbers in the junior division both Pa- namen recen yea ee an Lor e occasIOn SInce oth He has been the recipient of

or effort at Prevost was tricia Downey and SharonSmola High but sports arent all that cltsses of the academy are small honorary degrees from Holy MaJ matter at the TauntoJl girls due to the fact that the high Cross College Tufts University

e Sunday program Whlch ln- were recognized for work in the h f h d I ld f b sc 001 Break ast lunc an schoo IS being phased out Suffolk University Bradford -luded In addItIon to the play fle 0 iology M formal dinner pace settmgs The Junipero Club of Holy Durfee College of Technology~veral talks by promInent any students won honors at h M h I I I were recently on display at the Family High recently sponsored of Fall Rivet and Lowell Techshy

I remiddotnch cItIzens a French song- t e assac usetts RegIOn S F h school library and members of a talk on drug addiction for jun- nological Institute ~t and a motion picture Clence alr eld in Fall Rlver They included Christine Four- the Mothers Auxiliary were on iors and seniors The talk was Bishop to AddJess Meeting

UN French Club nier Dominican Academy and hand to answer etiquette ques- given by two brothers one an Most Rev James L ConnollyAt Coyle the French Club di- Diane Desmarais Mt St Mary tions from the students ex-addict the other director of Bishop of Fall River will speak

Ilected by Brother Hugh McCabe Academy both Fall River Both And the Coyle Fathers Club Marathon House a center for to the priests parish trusteesIOeCently elected officers After girls were recogiIized by the held its annual Father-Son Com treatment of addicts located in chairmen of the Catholic Charishy8le votes were tallied however Southeastern District of the Mas- munion breakfast at the school Coventry RIo ties Appeal and the invited lays our man at Coyle it looked sachuse~ts Dental Society bull with Robert Cahill ofthe Rhode CongratuIcitions go to Joseph gue9ts of the 111 diocesan if ~embers were voting for Debra Lay Dominican Aca- Island Food and Drug Commis Abraham of St Anthony High parishes bull UN delegation The presidents demy received a savings bond sion as guest speaker He dis- for meriting runner-up position Roland A Lafrance 1968 ApshyliPot wa~ captured he reports from the Bristol South Distriet cussed harmful effects of various iil the state finals of the annual peal lay chairman will also adshy a Polish fellow Cbarles Ozug Medical Auxiliary arid Michael drugs American Legion olatorical con- dress the 800 expected to attend lames OBrien a true Irishman Zito Bishop Feehan High At~middot The Catholic Students Mis- test - the opening meeting of the won the vice-presidential spot tleboro was awarded a plaque sion CrUsade at Stang H~gh has In club~ews at~HA the Senshy campaign for funds for the 30 while the treasurers job was by the Womens Auxil1ary to the taken as a special project this ior Science Club will conduct agencies of the Catholic Chadshy~warded to Jorge Matesanz -a Mass Veterinary ASsn month of April the collection of a farewell meeting for seniors ties Appeal

BASKETBALL PLAYERS On basketball team at Connolly High Fall River are from left Tim Duffy Tom Kroger John Long Joe Kelly Greg Sullivan Mike Manning

~~dent of Spanisll extraction Winners in the division of donated medical supplies and this ~month and members will Only Paul Bor9ue the secretary earlhscience Were John Dias eyeglasses for deprived Peoples visit an encephalitis clinic in I ~anaged to make the scene for Thomas Burk~ anciRobei-tClou~ of the world Supplies collected Freetown in May The Stamp France tier FeehahMicIlael Cote Pre illbe forwarded to the Cathi- and Coin Clubis planning a pubshy

At Bishop Stang iil North vost and Elizabeth Lavoi~ Do- olic Missions Medical Bureau for lie exhibition of members col- Dartmouth the math team led minican shipment iections in May imd the Chess by high scorer Lawrence l3yrnes Awards in math and engineer- Upco~ing at S~A Fairhaven Club has undergone reorganiza- placed secon~in a reeentBqs- ing went to Carol Vasconcellos is the aruiual senior prom which tion election of officers inshyflon public schools math meet Mt St Mary Madeleine Delisl~ wilL be held in the Colonial cluding Edward Norman presishyThe Stang team paced by the and Vivian Blais and Michael R60m of Whites restaurant in dent Daniel Brule vice-presi- shyeo-sIstent good work of George Zito Feehan Genevieve Pappas Westport from 8 to midnight dent Diane Lizotte secretary Oliver and EIleen Keavy cur- and Debra Lay Dominican Joan Friday night May 24 Juniors TuniorProm

Basile Feehan Amato Polselli The Holy Family Junior Prom Prevost and Sharon Woycie- Board ofmiddot Trustees isslated for Friday night AprilCentennialmiddot chowski Mt St Mary were 26 at Kennedy Center The prom

Continued from Page Seventeen cited To Study Changes will last from 8 to 11 and will Chemistry winners included have Carousel as its themebroad smile on his face-many Jane Arruda Anne Lewis De- WASHINGTON (NC) - The Mlisic will be by the Escorts

other families have arrived from nise Michaud Elizabeth St board of trustees of the Catho- And the Holy Family debatePltlrtugua1 A man d Diane Lamontagne lic University of America in team tied for first place in the Our Lady of Mt Carmel par- Christine Fournier Dominican Washington D C will meet Narry League with Cassidy A ~h was detached from St Johns Anne Sullivan and Pamela Can- Sunday April 21 in St Louis playoff will be held As of now as the Portuguese population dee Feehan Marilyn Riley and to consider a wide range of rec- Cassidys debate reco~d is 12 grew Then Our Lady of the Ann-Marie Charrette Sacred ommended changes resulting wins out of 14 debatesjrnmaculate Conception parish Hearts Fall River Irene Caron from a year-long study of the was erected to care for families Cassidy Marilyn Bentley Mt pontifical university by a comshyi Portuguese descent living in mitteee headed by Dr Carroll ~e North End of New Bedford St Mary Hochwalt

In the field of physics Alan middotRAMBLERToday St John the Baptist White Prevost Michelle Paquet The meeting will be held in ehurch has about 4000 parishshy SHA Fall River JamesReid Jrconjunction witll the Spring Americas Economy King ioners Our numbers started Prevost Mary Soans Jane Mc meeting of the National Confershy Fnr the Best Deal Come To dropping about seven years ago Donald and Martba Nugent yent ence of Catholic Bishops Broadway Ramblerasgr Silvia explains He feels St Mary The trustees are expected 10 INC part of the drop in membership Representatives from Diocesan name a new 30-man board meet 768 BROADWAYis due to a number of families schools to the Mass State Sci- with faculty representatives for RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 131moving outside the parish )ounshy ence Fair will include Michael the first time in histoi-y and CHARLES J DUMAIS Presdarles Intermarriages with othshy lito Amato Polselli Debra Lay discuss the search for a new er nationalities account for still Madeleine Delisle Jane Arruda university rector to replacemore losses Anne Lewis Father J~dhn P Whalen ~ho ~III11I11I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I11I1I1HIUIIIIIIIlIIlilllllllllllfllHlIilttmmIllIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllllnIlIllIllHIIIIIIIIIJ111~ However the Mother Church Denise Michaud Alan White was naine last October to a ef the Portuguese is not fading Michelle Paquet Elizabeth St one-year term as acting rector E WEEKEND SPECIAL sect away AmandSharon Woyciechowski A new school was built in New Projector

f957 It is expensive Msgr Silvia admits but I felt we needed it

St Anthony High in New Bedshyford is rejoicing over acquisi shytion of a movie projector as a

Parish gtrganizations are active gimiddotft from the alumni association and individual parishioners are willjng to give of their time

Presentation to principal Sister Lucille Champagne was made

and effort Perking

to keep the parish by Mrs Josephine Lafleur sociation president

asshy

Now they are getting read7 Cassidy-Coyle cheerleaders Jor a 100th anniversary captured third pillce v9Phy iil

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Case Somerset Favorites In Narry Diamond League

Case High of Swansea and Somerset are pre-season ehoices in this seasons Narragansett League baseball race but the club th8lt will bear watching is Westport TIne darkshyhorse Villagers may have a few surprises for Narry foes Another small area school

with a respectable 8-6 recordthat potentially has a shot Only one member of that at a league championship is squad Calvin Hopkinson will Norton of the Tri-Valley not be playing for the Villagers Conference Coach Ed Bibeau this Spring With the rest of the has most of last Deasons Central club ready to go - watch Jlor Village regulars Westport to make its presence in the fold ready lmown to challenge the Among fuose returning are perennial Paul Eastwood an Russ Picard favori1es If 0 T two of the better performers in Narry honors the circuit a year ago Eastwood amp1i1 at Norton led the team in hitting with a (C 0 a c h Peter highly respectable 360 averagem[l ~ek has pitched and played the infield G3ven returning Picard like Eastwood 15 also ~nnen for versatile An outfielder by trade ~theY chamshy he also takes his turn on the ii~~JWhip bid Peter mound for Coach Bibeaus nine Weo~port Bartek Carl Zajac and Jeff Hague tmIshed the 1961 eampaign ill round out Bibeaus four-man ~ place in tbe NalT7 loop pitching staff

Norton Bids for Tri-Valley Crown jfOO task of handling the but in thin scholastic year of

~tJ of this quartet will fall athletic surprises it may not be Gpoundl ~e shoulders of either Ron as big as some thinllt ~JmOi) or Manny Cabral both

A second place finisher inexperienced receivers ConnOlll 1967 the Norton Lancers haveexcel1B not only defensively their sights on the Tri-Valleybut likewise with the bat He Conference crown The clubsbit at a 333middot clip last Spring one-two hitters last campaignJohn Souza and Mike Andras have departed from the Norton th better than 300 hitters baseball scene but the teamqaln will be out to join the one-two pitching punch is reshyleague leaders in batting prowshyturning Juniors Ken Allen aess They should put a wallop left-hander who had a perfectin Westports oHensive attaCK 7-0 record last Spring and ArtIf Coach Bibeaus boys can dushyBouchard will be relied uponplicate their Performances of a heavily to bring the league flagJellr ago Offensively and biB to Norton Coach Bartek alSobig four comes through on middottbe hopes to get some help in middotthemound Westport may realize a the pitching departmentmiddot fromlong awaited Narry championshyFred Rego Bill Gorczyca andEip dream Admittedly if Ie Steve Nichols bull bie word in ~~rts_tuture

~ ~ bull I

OpeUp With~on-League Co~esttsmiddot Other returnees incl~ Capshy develop rapidlymiddot defensively if

tain Mike Wynnn Greg Croff they are to regain the leagues BOb Adams Tim McEndy and divisional crown - whicb flbeymiddot Paul Hassie Wynn a senior lost to HoWston last Spring middotmiddot will be starting his third season and gain a shot at the Trl shyill left field with Cruffstarting V~ey Conference ebampionshyhis second campaign in center ship Many area clubs openThey will be joIned by Wynns their campaign this week with brother Ricky in right fied non-league games highlighting

The infield win be anchored the action League competition by Adams at second base and will commence for the most Hassle at short Newcomers part next week Richy Silvia and George Macshy Mother Nature has done her Arthur are presently battling it job this Spring Baseball coaches out for the third base job and throughout -the diocese admit Lorrie Adams also a first-year that this is the best Spring they man appears to have the inside have had to prepare flbeir track on first base charges in many a year Weather

cannot be blamed for a slowMcEndy who has been the start this time around All areLancers starting catcher since eagerly awaiting the umpireshis Freshman year is starting first call to play ballhIs third campaign behiJd the

plate Bartek expects McEndy to hold the inexperienced inshy New School System field together

The Lancers will have to imshy In German State prove upon their hitting and DUSSELDORF (NC) - The

North Rhine-Westphalia state parliament middothas approved aCanadian Prelates change in the states school sysshytem that probably will meanEstablish Council the end of many denominational

OTTAWA (NC)-The Catho-shy schools Hc bishops of Canada have esshy By an overwhelming majorshytablished a 12-member Fiscal ity the parliament voted to Affairs Council composed of change the state constitution and clergy Religious and laymen establish the nondenominational who will advise the Church on Christian school in which reli shyfinanclal matters gious training is given by Cathshy

Among the areas which are olic and Protestant instructors receiving ini~ial attention of the in the same school as the patshycommittee is the question of tern for state-supported schools whether the Church should be from the fifth through the nint subject to government taxation grades and if so what form of taxation In the past the state has supshywould be equitable to churches ported Illeparate Catholic and government and other taxshy Pro tell tan t denominational payen Khoola

-~) PASSION PLAY Today Christians hold the Solemn Observance of the Lords Supper

It is commemorated ina PMsion Play at Prevost High School Fall River by David Poisshyson as Christ Paul Martel left 8$ St John and Paul Bouampquet as St Peter

DominicGlIsmiddot Rent ApGrt~~rit in Inner -Cimiddottimiddot middot

Want t~ Get Closer to I Agony of the Worl~middot WASHINGTON (NC)middot Pift his experience in the neig~lgtorshy ruary 1966 because theJ

Dominican priests-each doing hood is invaluable in helping wanted to get closer to the bis own thing-are living middotin an both prisoners and parolees He agony of the world While nol apartment in the inner ~ cd said the insight he gains into eliminating the academic life Washington here they come from ancl h~w they felt that living in the inlleJ The five run the gamut from they view life aids him In mv city would be as important bull

a professor of moral theology at ing them intelligent advice and learning experience as academic the Don)inican House ofStucUeII 8ssis~nCe study to a prison chaplain a1 the Diamp- Father William Kane is middotthemiddotNeighborhOoclll[aatrict of Columbia Jail Ibey neighborhood man of the have in common1heiy addresa A Pr~ceton graduate ~itl1 apartment Hemiddotworks with minshyand a desire to understand and doctorates from Harvard aJgt4 isters inmiddot the area in establishing alleviate the problems ~ livlnc OxfCrd Father Albert Brodershy youth programs and fightina I in a poor Urban community ick teaches Constitutional LalV for better housing and fail

Father TbomasHea~ middotttie at the catholic University Law rent laws His motive is to givemoral theology professor aDd School the people in the community aD author of a reCent bOOkmiddotID awareness of their own dignitymiddotBe and Father Heath startedFaee of An~sh is 0Il 1be to affirm the fact that it is athe apartment project in Feb-bOard of direCtors of the Pe0shy ood place to live ples Center a house soon to be

the rehabilitationopened for Criticizes Usury of alcoholics He also meets

MEXICO CITY (NC)-Mexshy5 50 01- a SYSTEMATIC wimiddotth ~culties of Wasbingtcm

icc CityS Jose Cardinal Garibiseminaries to discuss policyshy bull 10 year SAViNGSRivera urged bankers meetingmaking and apostolic activity MONTHLY DEPOSITSat the National Bankers Conshy

Legal Aid Office vention in Guadalajara to comshy 5 00 01- a INVESTMENT bat usury and work closely bull 10 year SAVINGS

Father Joseph Cooney a NOTICE ACCOUNTSwith the government to proshylawye~ who has worked 011

voter registration in the South mote the social welfare of all II REGULAR4 5001 the Mexican people bull 10 Jflar SAVINGSand took an active part in dvil

rights activities such lIS

~lma march is DOW admin~ Bass Rivertering a legal aid office in the CENTERneighborhood of the Dominishy Savings Bank

cans apartment Volunteer law Paint and Wallpaperstudents from the Catholic Uni- Bank 8y Man I

versity of Ameiica assist him Dupont Paint

We Pay The Postage

IJcor Middle St

A third member of the group m this program 4iiii 422 Acush Ave bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA Fat her Raymond MalonSOl1 ~ New Bedford bull SOUTH VARMOUTH 4raquo HYANNISserves as the Catholic chapiain bull PARKINGmiddot

bull DENNIS PORT bull OSTtRVILLEatmiddot the D C jail A late vocashy Rear of Storetion Father Malonson has been ordained only two years middot Father Malonsoll feels U1at

LEVESQILIES OFFla E~lnPMENTNow Many Wear Wood Metal Desks and ChairsFALSE TEETH

With More Comfort JUST GiVE ME A CHANe TO QUOleTo overcome discomfort when

dentures sllp sllde or loosen Just sprinkle a llttle FASTEETH on your 187 SHAWMUT STREET bull NEW BEDFORD MASS

middot plates FASTEElH holds dentures firmer You eat better feel more PO Box 2062 - Hervey L Levesque

middot -wont sour Helps check plate odor comfortable FASTEETH Is alkaline

Dentures that fit are lIlSSentlai to Telephone 993middot1264middot health See your dentist regularly Get FASTEETB at all drUB counten ___ _ _____11_0__-D-tcl----4

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs April 11 1968

PhySDCOUi) l1JJ Uges litUBgy C~[filges

~n Last RStes RED BANK (NC) A

~atholic physician called for revision of the liturgical $orm of the Anointing of the Sick cluring a discussion on The Chaplains Role With the Dying Patient at Riverview Hospital here in New Jersey

Dr George J Sheehan an alumnus of Manhattan College and a founder of Christian Brothers Academy in nearby lLincroft was one of three apeakers at the symposium coshyaponsored by the hospital and Ute 1 Redmiddot Bank Council of

ilhurches Citing obvious failures by

both physician and clergyman iin helping the dying patient and bis family Dr Sheehan sugshygested members of the family Ghare inmiddot a ceremony which would exchange feelings of llove and hope between them ElDd the dying person

Dr ~heehan observed that while inadequacy in the face of death has been in the past apparent to the Protestant criergyman it is now also felt by Catholic priests

They findmiddot he said the La~t Sacrament in its present form Ii a consolation only to those with the strong faith of a Breton iiteasant-a kind of faith they e seeing less and l~ss-

Appropriate Theology He also said while the develshy

pment of a Common Christian itervice parlakirtg of the same llodividual familymiddot and commu~

Ility significance as Bap~i8ai -dMarriage would be a giant p in middotheiping people to a middotbappy death iit would remain IDol theologians to present- a relshy

qwant lmd acceptable image of mail in this time and this place ilnd to develop an appropriate eology of death heaven ~nd bell in order to make a signifi- sant change in our life style

lOd therefore in our approach to death

Other panelistsmiddot were the Rev Seorge Fitzgeraid a Presbyteshyaan minister middotand middotchaplain at Princeton Hospiital arid Mn Ruth Snyder a nurse of the lIiverview Hospital staffmiddot

POSTER CHILD LEADS WAY Joey BeIge 8 of Syraeuse NY leads themiddot way down a White House lttairway in the company ofthe Fi~st t-adymiddotMrsLyndon B Johnson

and Mrs Muriel Humphrey wife ofthe Vice-President Joeymiddotis this years poster child of

the National Association for Retarded Children H~ ismiddot thesQn ofMt and Mrs Robert Beige middotmembersmiddotOf St Vincent de Paul parish in Syracuse whos-e ot-herfive children SlHshy

round their Uttle broth~r wil1hmiddot the love and care to h~lp him livea full and happymiddot life

Penn See Studies Poverty Pmiddotrogram HARISBlJRq (NC)--Coadju- is being made to see ho)Vtbe to coordinate and channel our

tor Bishop Joseph T Daley diocese canmiddot best use its re-middot efforts in the fieldmiddot vicar general- of the Harrisburg sources to alleviate poverty Bishop Daley said it ismiddot im- diocese calledmiddot on the nearly problems middotperative that all our people 50000 Catholics in the area to He alsomiddot said Wemiddot contem- knoW and understand the probshy

acquaint th~mselves with 10- middotplatemiddot the early middotestablishment of middotIem of middotracism and the funda- calracfal and poverty problems amiddotmiddot diocesanmiddot human relations mental moral injustices which

In a lettermiddot read at aU Masses commission middotto serve asmiddot a liaison middotare at the root of the deplorable BishopDlIleT said middotthat a study with all people Collcerned and conditions in our own area

Urges Hospitals Re~ognie Unio~s

CLEVELAND (NC) - AI layshymens group here has asked the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hospitals to declare its willingshyness to recognize labor unions as collective bargaining agents for hospitals employes

lNle request came in a letter from William A caldwell chainnan of the eurolevellllnd Conference of Laymen to Sister ~ry Collette of Hamilton Ohio president of the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hosplshytala during a one-day meeting here of the Ohio Hospital Assoshyciation convention

The laymens group said such a statement would promote the human dignity of hospital emshyployes in real and immediate ways serve the common good of our communities and inshycrease the understandingmiddot of Catholic teaching by all the citishyzens of Ohio

The letter pointed out that the National Catholic Hospital Association 1 a s t November called on Catholic hospitals tiraquo be guided by the social teachshyings of the Church and to deal with unions that employecfgt choose

Discuss ~iot Report On Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC) - Beginshyning Sunday April 14 the Catholic Hour will present over the NBCmiddot network a three-part series The Climate of Change

Evolution or Revolution foshycusing on three areas of social and religioUs concern today today

~gr Rop~rt Fox cOordinashytor of Spanish community 00shy

middot lion in the New York arclidioshymiddoteese will discuss The Riot centommissi~ middotReport Amiddot Chrisshy

tiati Response April 14 Msgr Ivan D Illich of the Intereushy-tural Center 01 Language and D middotoe u men tat 1 on CuershyDavaca Mexf~o win be intershyviewed Aprjl 21 and Father Francois Houtart Belgian 00shyciologist will be interviewed Apiil 28

The National Council of Cathshy oUc Men producer of the OathshyoUe Hour reconunendseheckshymiddoting local newspaper programa for broadca9t time in particushymiddotRar areas

I Am The RestUlJTectiltogtD

Ai 1)(J[YQfGfDVIJJpound)9

lJ1~TJPJiiD~ EEJ~lJregff

FALL RIVER

Page 12: 04.11.68

2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese 01 Fall Ri~~r-Thurs Apr 11 1968 S~~in S~ntences priest- and Laymen

JOurrt)~a$ts Opinions Differ_On V~~e of Bishops Synod

By Msgr George G Higgins Two American journ~lists who have covered the Rome

1beat off and on for several years-Father Francis X Murphy CSSR and Gary MacE0 in-have just published an interesting account of the Synod of Bishops which was held in Rome in 1967 (Synshyod 67 A New Sound in what they manege to teU us Rome Bruce Publishing Co about themselves in their sep- Milwaukee) Written in the arate and widelydivergent asshyfamiliar Xavier Rynne style it Sessments of the Synod is something of a tour de force How two men who disagree given the se- so fundamentally about the uecy w h i c h pros and cons of the Synod ever enveloped the managed to work as a tandem $ y nod a 1 in the writing of the history of proceedings The the synodal proceedings is to authors h a v e put it as mildly as possible a tried to give perplexing mystery on account as They tell us that for aU that a c cur ate as lies between their separate possible under evaluations Df the Synod they the conditions are jointly accountable but that of time and cir- the internal logic of their inshycumstance For dividual viewpoints and the my own part I dialectic of the situation led think they deserve better than them to attribute exclusive reshya ~as~ing grade They do ~lOt sponsibil~ty for the Prelude to ~lalln to hae wrlt~en anythmg a priest and for the Postscript like8cIefmltIve hlstory of the i to a layman SYlo1IgtUt they have proyid~d Far A art 1IllS wlth a useful mtenm sum- P mabr of the -proceedings and I take it that this is a polite ~r ~ii w~ cin) begrateful way of saying that when they

Perplexing Mystery got around to summing up their Tothis reader however what impressions of the Synod they

the authors tell us about the

lSynod ls less mterestmg than i

~ 8holJd have concluded contrashyr rlwise- that it was seriously - lacking in credibility and releshy

vance and was thus on biI- ance a huge disappointment

lRationaJize Differences

Such differencesmiddot of opinion on the part of experienced

jourpalilts covering the same everit-and using the very same

source~ of informationare not to be Vf~npered at

On the other hand I am Dot very happy about the curious- way in which the authors haveshyrationalized their differencea Th~y tell Us that one evaluatioo Df ~he Synod (Father Murphys) w~ ~ritteo from the viewpoint of the institutional Church and the other (Mr MacEoins) from that of conteinporarshyman~ind

Or again in Mr MacEoin words A priest professionally involved in the institution will

tend to lean in one direction 11 layman whose professional sushy

- viva rests on his sensitivity to

SPECIAL DELEGATE Marches Ghilio Sacchetti 42 has been named by POpe Paul VI to succeed Count Enrico

Galeazzi as special delegate of the Pontfical Commission for the state of Vatican City He is wearing the now outshymoded costume of a Gentleshyman of Cape and Sword NC PIloto

world opinion in the other

Now Bear This

This strikes me as being bull slightly threadbare and hopeshylessly pre-Conciliar dichotomy I know of a Dumber of priests (and so do the authors I asshysume) who rightly~or wrongly are just as critical of the Synod as Mr MacEoin is

I also know of a number III laymen (and so do the authocs I must assume again) who rightly or wrongly are just as sanguine about the results of the Synod as Father Murphy is So whats all this doctrinaire I

stuff about priests necessarily looking at things (myopically) through the allegedly unenshylightened eyes of contemposhyrary mankind

Tell it to the Marineal

found that they wer~ so ho~e-lessly far apart 111 theIr thmkmg

that the division of labor so I cryptically described in the above quotations appeared to be the only possible way of salshyvaging the middotoperation Thatll fair enough

It isnt at all surprising that one of the authors (Father Murphy) should have concluded that on balance the Synod was truly a contribution to the Church~s aggiornamento and that the other (Mr MacEoin)

MAnmn (NC) - Sz~en per- sons incIl~lg a Cathollc priest have bc)n sentenced to prison terms and fined by Madrids Court of r lic Order on charges Olf havinr participated in an anti-Frangt meeting in Barceshylona in lS~G

On trial were Father Francisshyeo Paula Botey and 10 laymen who were accused of attending

THE SOCIETY FOR THE PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH SEND YOUR GIFT TO

Ill RighI Reverend Edward TOMeara TheRighi Rnerend RII~T CIItIII4Jiw Natlotud Director OR DliJceSlUl DlTmor 366 Fifth Avenue 368 North MiJln S

Naw York New York 10001 FaIl RJ_ MIISIiIduueIuOl7raquo ~~

AME ADDRESS ZIP

an illegal meeting The meetshying was advertised as a Day of Repression and criticized what it called the repressive activities of the government of Gen Franshycisco Franco

Father Botey who admitted during the trial that he atshytended the meeting at Barcelona Universitys law school was senshyten~ to a year in jail ~d fined

about $214 Three of the laylDell received similar sentences amplid fines while ~ others drew six-month jail terms aDd four were absolved

Father Batey testified duriDtl the trial that he deliberately atshy1ended the meeting to protest against the ftPress1on he bad said he had seen of -certain see-shymenta of ampbe Spanish clergyshy

Prelate Supports Catholic Schools Opposes Racism

NEWARK (NC) -Archshybishop Thomas A Boland of Newark touched on racism Catholic education and aborshytion in his annual message to the Archdiocesan CouncH of catholic Men at its CQnvention here

Noting that BOrne people adshyvocate closing Catholic schools to concentrate on adult educashytion Archbishop Boland said I believe we mU9t give as much time as is possible to adult edushycation but not that we should ignore our chlIdren

If we close our schools he soid there may 00 no one to attend the adult courses iJn future years

He deplored the absence of religion in the education of many people and said that while 0 ohild may be receiving o good academic background under such circumstances he is not being trained in his will or his morals

Jthortion Is Murder Archbishop Boland noting

~hot the question of relaxing bortion laws is before the state LeFislature recalled that he lralNi opollen to the men about ~ot Dubject a year earlier and repeated what he had said then abortion is murder

Should the state legislate more liberally in this field he said it would go outside its sphere and we would have no

right to follow it He indicated however that

the Church would not oppose the establishment of a legislashytive commission to study the abortion law

Discussing racism he called it a malignant growth in our society and announced his support for a peaceful interrashycial walk through the streets of Newarks ghetto

Spokesmen lor L2ity Archbishop Boland also urged

the men to turn their council into a real spokesman for the laity He ruled out the possibil shyity of a voice for the laity toshytally independent flrom the hierarehy declaring that this is not the structure cd the Church

H we want to build a strucshyture the archbishop said we get an architect to give us a uniform plan Christ is the arshyehitect of the Chureh We are its workmen

He then urged the men tID take the steps which would make the ACCM aspokesman for the people II real council

Delegates adopted four res0shy

lutions endorsing catholic echools condemning racism lin every form advocating retenshytion and expansion of the states IIChool bus law and opposing relaxation of the abortioD statute

Stresses Increased Food Production

NEW DELHI (NC)-The vatshyican recognizes the need to mshycrease food production middotas a most serious problem facing the developing countries and mshydeed the world as a whole Elizabeth Reid II member of the

bull Vatican delegation to the United ean delegation to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD)

Speaking at the UNCTAD meeting here in India MilS Reid said The right to food 18 01117 another aspect 01 be mosi eaered of all buman rigbts the right to life and it is tb1s parshyticular aspect of the problem of development that places the heaviest and most serious burshyden em the comlcieDee of man- flIIIIampy from home kiDd ~ bull lot cbeapeJ tIIaD IiDDC

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HEATHER CUTTHNG

Sacred Hearts Junior High School Student Is Licenseod Amateur Radio Operator

Holly and Heather Cutting 532 Walnut Street Fall River share a transistor rashydio With some teenage sisters this might cause trouble but not with this pair Heather Jets Holly take the transistor She settles for pop music from Johannesburg South Africa-via her shortwave set They have real good musicraquo she says Blonde 14 year old Heather learned the In ternational Morse Code a basic requirement for amashyteur radio operators when she was seven but its only in the past year that shes really worked at the complicated hobby Her father Dick Cutting ll construction superintendent by profession has been ll radio ham for 30 years by avocation An awesome battery of receivshyers and transmitters fills a room of the Walnut street house and when Heather displayed real inshyterest in them she had iii wi)) ing teacher close at hand

Heathers an eighth grader at Sacred Hearts Junior High School on Prospect Street in Fall River and she admits that she does as much homework as IIhe can at sOOool to have eveshynings free for her hobby She at shytends radio classes nightly then hurries bome to spend as much as three hours at ber sel

Im llicensed for two fre- I

quencies right DOW she exshyplained I can talk on six and two meters Translated that means she can contact amateullil

--in this part of the United States but may not ta]k tomiddot overseal operators until she earns 1Il middotgeneral license

Im Working for my license DOW she said rohe examinashytion JIm be in 00 days Even the license that Heather now holds however is umusual for one of her age When she gets ber general license she Will be among itB Y01lllllgest holders and probably the youngceBt 8h licensee in the stlllte

rhere are 11426 lI8dto amashyteurs iD Massacbuatts I18id her father aInd cmIy 409 aJre WCllInen

wm CoDtaet lFather A real benefit to ~ Cutting

family from Bellltberll general lieense wID be iba1 1Ibell be able tID reach bel fathe bull blB car short wave mctic wheD he is OlD hIfl freqUeDt bwliness tripal

distance calls said Mr Cutting The electric light company figshyures I can run this rig 16 hours a day for only $290 a month

Heather hopes to make a cashyreer of radio technology Right now she is able most of the time to repair her set if someshything goes awry and shea building a small transmitting station for an upcoming science fair at Sacred Hearts Itll broadcast about 200 feet she said

Sometimes Of couJrSe gremshylins pop ill Like the time Heather got a phone can from a boy in Swansea Hey did oU know youre coming m on eiYclnnel 2 on our TV be said 011 another occasion Heather picked ~ her fathers transmisshysion OIl ber electric pitar speaker

Most of the time however things go smoothly During her nightly radio sessions Heather picks up signals Jrom other amateurs and has some schedshyuled appointments vis the mllshyways withmiddot friends hi otheJl mties

When she picks up 5 llllew

eontact she confirms it with II brightly-colored postcard bearshying her name and station 0011 etters in psychedelic pink Wld yellow

Collecting such postcards 111 2 sub-hobby for radio amateulll and Holly has a oozzling eollecshytion on the walls of her radio room She bas Mganized the Sou the a II t ern MassachushyIlett8 Teenage RadM Net aocll ill

BEFORE YOU BUy-tRy

PARK MOTORS OLDSMOBILE

OIdsmobile-lPeugot-Rencnft fJ1 Middle Street Fairhaven

llooking for new members Its just for teens she says

=rheyre more fun to talk to Once she has her general 11shy

cense she plans to join Iil group that relays messages from Viet Nam servicemen to their famshyilies

other Bobbies Badia is by no means Heathshy

ers only hobby Shl~ and her sister Holly a freshman at Emshymanuel College have an imshypressive collection of sharpshyshooting trophies mostly garshynered at Fall River Rod and Gun Club meets I began shootshying when I was six and had my Own gun when I as seven eaid Heather

Other interests are mathematshyics and music Heather picked lIP guitar playing on her own and belOngs to a folk group which plans its first public apshypearance after Easter

In short shes one teen whoD never be found wondering what to de next

LARIVIERES Pharmacy

Prescriptions called for and delivered

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Save With Safety at

NEW BEDFORD-ACUSHNET CO-OPERATIVE BANK

115 WILLIAM ST NEW BEDFORD MASS

THE ANCHORshy 13Thurs April 11 1968

Houston Priests Get Pay Raise

HOUSTON (NC) - BishOJ John L Morkovsky announceCl a pay raise for priests of thE Galveston-Houston diocese and said a new retirement poliCW will go into effect Jan 1 1970

Under the old pay scale asshy sistants received a base salary of 11250 plus $30 car allowshyance and $1250 insurance preshymium for a total salary of $155 a month Pastors received a total monthly salary of $21750 The new salary reale will allow for increased pay based on the number of yearo priests have been ordained

Assistants who have been cshydained less than 10 years wiill receive a total monthly salary of $200 The figures will ~

$225 for those ordained moro than 10 years

Pastors with 25 years in t100 priesthood will receive m monthly total of $275 ThoSQ with more than 25 years will receive $300

The retirement policy ca1lJfl for optional retirement at age 65 and mandlltory retirement at 70 However elderly pries1amp who are able and willing m37 be assigned to other priestly work than the pastorate Bisbshyop Morkovsky stated

The bishop said the changes are in accordance with the recshyommendations of the Senate 01 Priests and follow consultashytion with diocesan consultom

Reach Impasse-PIITSBURGH (NC)-A state-gt

level meeting between Cat~

olic officials and the Nationl11 Association for the Advanceshyment of Colored People on furshythering racial integration iB Catholic schools reached m seeming stalemate here bn Pennsylvania when the schoolshymen cited lack of funds as ll major obstacle to NAACP pro= posals

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foIo~ng i~d~duals MAsoN FURNITURE SHOWROOMSALLENS CUT RATE New~Bedford cI Business Concerns ANN DALE PRODUCTs INC II A McWHIRRCOMPANY

DURO FINISHING CORPbull Tile MacKENDE AND WINSLOW INC PAUl G ClEARY amp CO INC

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YOUTH CARES FOR AGE Retired Sisters are tenderlycared for at chair while Sister Mary Agnes looks on Center Sister Agnes Maureea Mmiddott St Mary Convent Fall River Left Sister Agnes Maureen seniormiddot wheels SisterMary Jer~me anQright Sister JohnCatberine bringgdri_ infirmarian points out magazine article to Sister Mary Lig~~ri inwheel to Sister Mary Ursulamiddot Both infirmarians are licensed practical nurses

I

Cqrdinal Roy Raps Apathy

MEXICO CITY (NC)~MaushyJOice Cardinal Roymiddot of Quebee _ a visit here as ehairman of the Pontifical Commission for World Justice and Peace said Christian teachings condemn violence in solving social probshylems but also condemn themiddot false prudence that lacks the eourage to make needed reshyforms

The prelate who has been touring Latin America for sevshyeral weeks said he was 1mshypressed by the number of Cathshy

olic organizations and institushytutions already applying Pope Paul VIs encyclical The Deshyvelopment of Peoples in their Jespective countries

But he added Latin Amerishyearn still have to assume fully their responsibility in workingtowards economic balance andmiddot bull just social order 80 every cit shyizen can promote his own welshyfare in a climate of freedom and common good

bull bullbull tmiddot

Comes KindIYcimiddotmiddotSislesmiddot 0 Mercy AmiddotI Fall River Comiddotnventmiddot

By Patricia McGowan

~When thou wast younger thou didstmiddot gird thyself anddidst walk where thou Frouldst But when thou shalt be old thou shalt stretch forth thy handsmiddot arid another shall gird thee and lead thee whither thou wouldst not In its description of the almost universal lot of age this is one of the most poignantpassages in Scriptur~ But age comes kindly f~r Sisters Although they are not exshyemptmiddot from its physical and mental ravages they need not fear being forsaken byfriends or being left alone the

fanulymiddot Jhe famllylast of a that is a religious community cherishes its older members and provision is made for Sisters to pass their last years surrounded by tender care

Among havens for older Sisters is the infirmary at Mt St Mary Conventmiddot Fall River The Sisters who have spent most of their religious life in the Fail River Diocese come here for their laBtyears exshypliliried Sister Agnes Maureen

The cardinal added at emiddot pretB8 RSMmiddotmiddot senior iniirmarian at eonference in the headquarten the Mount Her domain proshyf the Mexican Social Secreta- vides eh~rf11~ccQmmodations riat that national efforts for de- for 10 Sisters Each has her ownmiddot elopment do not eliminate the room andthere is II kitchenette aeed ~forfoleignaid where those ablE lobe up and

The Pontifieal commisSion Cardinal Roy indicated ill enshyaged in persuading rich counshytries to devote at least one per eent of their groSs national product to assist poor eountries

Archdiocese Adopts Project Equality

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing notified the priests lIeIlate of the Boston archdiocese of plans 10 adopt Project Equality a program designed to use purchasing power of church institutions to make firms supplying goods and 8elVices wipe out diICriminashy birislM Placticeamp

e~ut ~n enjoy their meals ~gethermiddot

The ~nfirmaryis but II few stepis from the Mount chapel wher~ the retired Sisters spend hours a day in prayer for comshymunity members still in the active lPostolate Also claiming time for Sisters whose eyesight permits are needlework ana erooheting projects

Always DraWlll Cheerful and dedicated Sister

Agnes Maureen who has I Deen at the infirmary six years is aided by Sister John Catherine who has served the aged Sisters two years A laywoman takes the night shift in the infirmary ensuring the Sisters round the clock care Bothmiddot Sister infirmashy

rians are licensed practical nurses who received their trainshyI g to L d f F tma Hosn a ur a y 0 a I shypital in the Providence Diocese

When I entered religion I hoped to be an infirmarian

said SIster Agnes Maureen I whas alwdays drawn to work for t e age

Some people think we havent got a nursing apostolate she added but we need nurses desshyperately Right now we have nine Sisters taking care of inshyfirmaries in our province

Among Sisters now at the Mount infirmary are Sister

Mary Agnes who celebrated her diamond jubilee last DeshyceJl)ber and most of wbose r~lishygious life was spent in New Bedford and middotNorth Attleboro schools and Sister Mary Lishy

gu()ri whomiddot f9r 49 yearl taught sixth graders at st Patricks School Fall River

HShe looks out her window at St Patricks said Sister Agnes Maureen and she says Theres home

The Sisters are welcoming the arrival of Spring and warm days said the infirmarian It means they can enjoy their sunporch sit in the Mounts garden and go for occasional car rides Of course they have many visitors she said Other Sisters in the house come to see them and so do Sisters from the convents where they forshymerly lived

Yes age comes kindly for Sisters Not Hke the old lady overheard in a downtown groshy

eery confiding to a chance fellow-customer her discovery of a bargain in frozen food I live alone you know and 1 get

three big servings from a packshyage--and only 29 cents

N 0 Sister lives alone

bull

~~tplic Newspaper Wins Press Awards

NEW ORLEANS (NC) -The eJarion Herald middotarchdiocesa middotnewspaper won eight awards iii the annual competition of the

N~W Or)eans Press Club ~ competition included daily and

weekly newspapers wire serVshyices and television stations

Millard F Everett editor won first place in two categories - editorial and best religioWl story This marks the first time in five years of competition that the Clarion has taken the top award for best religious story Staff members of the paper also took three second and three third place awards

----------------------------

ZENITH bull ACOUSTICON bull UNEX

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C~tt 615-7829 IRENE R SHEA PROP

Prompt Free Delivery in fALL RIVER SOMERSET TIVERTON amp VICIHITY 101 ROCK ST (CORNER OF PINE ST) FALL RIVIImiddot

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFon River-Thurs Apr 11 1968

CathoJi~ ll]wnDv~JSityPltDcopy~regii~copyJ~

IPlanLUBffil AmeFicon ~1]~regregO WASHINGTON (NC) - A ops and l~aders of several South

jJroup of pr-ofessors from Cathshy American governments sHe University of America hope The Washington center comshyS n~w technical middotinstituteat the middotprises -ll group of professorsshy~tholic University of Gu~Washy mostly members of the CU caulI Ecuador may mark the llchool of middoted ucation-whomiddot are ltJPening of an international edshy specialists ineclUcationfordeshyvcation bridgetoLatin America Velopment Director of the proshy

The institute will be inaugurshy ject is Dr Jose A Baquero ated early this month as 11 middotcoshy WM has been commuting b~shy1)eIativeventure by the Center meen Washingtonand his nashylor Educational Research fa middottive Ecuador dming the -cmrent QuitoEcuadorand the Center school year lor Community Developmenhmd This is not an Ecuadorian Servioe at Catholic University project it is an internatienal bere It has the support 01 Vashy projed a resealclFaction proshykanofficials Ecuadorianbislshy gram between North and South

America Dr Baquero said middothereBC middotto Recruit laquorNe had to start middotsomewhere The natural plaoe 10 begin wasNegro St~1ent5 middot-the Qlace Where weaould get

CHESTNUT HILL (NC) shy the most facilitiesThisproject iesuit-eper-ated Boston College God willing if successful will bere has made available $100shy move throughout Latin AmershyGtOO fora talent search -progr1m ica We already have contracts to recruit Negro stJdents frem with interestedJeaders in Sao disadvantagedurbanareas middotof Paulo BTazil Bogota Colombia tlhecountry mainly in Greater and Lima Peru Boston Msgr Eugene Kevane direcshy

Father Michael P Walsh SJ tor of the Center for Communitypresident caUed for support off Development andServleedaimshyiIIe entirestudent body facshy ed iB number of Latin American Illlty and administration of EQsshy Church and government officialS Qon College to make the ~mshy have middotexpressed interest in thecram a success projectand a belid it may beshy

Since the program was starteJ come a model of assistance middottoIJeveral weeks ago some 50 ~shy lI3derdeveloped poundOuntrieslltIicatiopshave beenreceiltvelll He said ArcnbishGp Romolofrom students in ghetto areas Carooni apostolic nuncio 10lot -entrance middotin next Septemshy

~1u told him heilOllSiders theWltll freshman -class pmject of great importance andThere have a1w~ys beellU M~S a similhlr middotinstitute willIlegro students enrolled at B4tsshybe established at the Pontificalton College oUicials said ~t University in Limatheir Dumber is ~ot ~own 00shy

0tberhigh-ranking churchshyaYSe race is not shown 8ll1 middotmen who lthave endorsed theapplications The Collegemiddotacceptll project include MsgrLuigi Lishyattdents of all faiths gutti the Holy Sees PermanentN~t SeptemberNegro lrtlllshy

1Gbserver at the Food and Agrishy

bullnts with the necessary ~uaUshy6eations will be admitted n8 culture Organization of the 1Ilual while middotsome 25 will ge United Nations and Archbishop admitted under the talent Ceasar Antonio Mosquera fif

lt4IeQIChprogram The number is Guayaquil president of theEcshybeing limited for thegood af iliad-orlan Bishops Conference

GOLDEN JUBILEE Sisshyter Rose Alma Reid CSC (Sjltte1 M Flora) will mark herg-olden i llbilee of religious professjon on Sunday April 21 at Sacred Heart Convent New Bedford A Mass of thanksgi~rjng will be offered at 1130 Sunchw morning at Sacred Head Church and a reception will be held in the parish hall ITom2 to 4 th~t

afternoon Friends and forshymer pupils are invited t01l~

tend

So Curolina Bishop A-sksPettce $upport

CHARLESTON (NC)- Bishshymiddotop Ernest Lmiddot Unterkoefier of Charleston has called for the middotfull support ofall Americans of President Lyndon middotlB Johnshysons efforts to secure peace in middotVietnam

Tbe South ltCarolina Bishop said that the Presidents -peace ini tiati yes demonstrate that he is a gtarson who -has ever been conscious of the grave responsishybility 01 his ofillce and that his judgements have been measured ~y the critical threats to the securi~y and free action ofthe United States

ICampus Comediansl

R~JlJ~stforBirh ControJ 1nlcrmation lndBGSYlrncrGti(C~e

DAYTON (NC)-A Univershysity of Dayton chaplain said he suspected campuscomediami for 1b~ conJroversyaroused bY a request for availability of birth corttol information and materials In campus by theunishyversity stmiddotudent congress

Father Urban Rupp SM universi~y co-chaplain wrote in the chaplain s bulletin the alshymost unanimous aetion fthe student gfvernment group middotwas an idio~yncratic caper in the natureo Ii ttle childrenpl~ying

house He indicated he fouud it difshy

ficult to take the Pfoposa1 serishyomlY

Now of COUrse I middotcowd be taking this all -wrong be said

Perhaps it was intended 00 bn serious In that case I woUld be tempted to thinktheemershygency is not just immediateshyit is really one generation too late

This was taken asa reference to student efforts to pwih through the resolution orbirth control as an emergency -meashysure

That failed but a few days later the student middotcongressvo~ 29 tol to seeka change in llJllshyversUy Wlicy that would -pershymit the introductionof birth 1Ontrol selYiees in thestudem health center for married eQUoshy~les and Ulose llQOD _ ~arriedmiddot

the young Negroes whowiUbe ~pted oUiciaI said

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PATRIARCH The middotnewily elected head of the Syriac Oatholic Church Patriarch Hgtenys Antoine Hayek of Anshy~och was enthroned recentshy1w in Beirut Lebanon In this post hesucceds the late P-ashykiarch Ignace Cardinal TapshylPouni NC Photo

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In ~ glory of His Resurrection may be reborn man~

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HAPPY EASTER THE OFFICERS DIRiEc1r~ AND STAFfshy

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-Ji1lim~~OF NEW BEDFORD

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A bull told ($1250 a monttl$15000-a ~ar)ca_small SISTER Investment for SisterS lifetime of service

Like to be her sponsorf Her name Is Sister Suzamma and she will write to you

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THE ANCHO~-Trappists Elect Mother Church of Nation8 PortlglleSe 17 Thurs April 11 1968

Youngest Abbot P-epares fOI- Cenlellilial Celebration At Gethsenloni Dy Patida F r-u nis

GETHSEMANI (NC) The youngest abbot in the history of the monastery of Our Lady of Gethsemani was formally blessed (March ~l) by Archbishop Thomas J McDon~

ough 0pound Louisville Father M Flavian Burns

OCSO 36 ilgt the seventh ab~

bot in the 120-year history of the monastery He was elected by members of the community Inst January to succeed Abbot M James Fox OCSO

Father Flavian described bis position as en administrator whose main job il) service to others within the community He said his most important function it3 to hold plivate spiritual conversations with other monks and to handle the lillM)nasterys relations with the ~Atside world

Thcilt are some 120 monks at ~ethsemani abbey a decline from past years Abbot Burns cCrlbllltes the decline at least in prt to the attitude of the times YiJCl1 was foJJJlcrly accepted without question is now being ltI~etioned he observed

ltDontemplation Prayer

Changes have been made the IHurElY is now in English and 2Jc strict vow of silence has TiKen relaxed somewhat On an experimental basis the monks are allowed to use brief oral instructions instead of sign language as in the past

Despite the lack of radio or 1clevision Abbot Burns said the monks keep in contact through newspllpers with events in todays world The main thing ill to know what is going on in the Church and what effects our fellow hushymans according to the abbot

The life of a monk involves middotcontemplation and prayer rather than speaking up - 11 more spiritual turn according kI Abbot BUlns

A native of Jersey City N J he is a graduate of Henry SfIyder public high sehool there

Protests- Campaign Agamst Religion

NEW YORK (NC) - A new wave of terror against aU churcltgpers is now in effect in Albania an exile from that country has declored in a- letter of protest sent to the United Nations Commission on Human Rightsmiddot and~ to UN Secretary General U Thani

The protest bl Dr Rexhep KIasniqi president of the Free Albania Committee which has its headquarters here said that Albanial following a lf41oist eommunillt guideline has shut down every cltulch and mosque and has made any_kind of pubshylIc worship impossible

Thill campaign Dr Krasniqi tated is a violation of the UN Charter the Universal Declarashytion of Human Rights and of Albanias own communist conshystitutional guarantee of freedom of conscience for all

San Antonro Priests Form Association

SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Fortyshyene diocesan and religious comshymunities priests of the San Anshytonio archdiocese formed a priests association bere The priests ohose a six-member temshypora]) steering committee

One of the fiTst formal actions Gf the allsociatron was to inform Archbishop Robert E Lucey of San Antonio of the group forshymation

There are approximately 441

Parishioner d St John the Baptist Church in Nc Bedford are getting rendy for a momentoils event-the 100th anniversary of the fO~1l1dil1g of the oldest Portuguese parish in the nation The cen~en]ial celebration wi II not take place until 1971 but many things have to be done in preparation within the next three years One major project is renoshyvating the church ihelf To pay for the massive job ptrshyishioners have inaugur~teca Centennial Fund Drive to raise money for painting ~he church do extensive electrical work and buy a rew organ Estimated cost (f the regt3ir5 is $150000

Rt Rev Msgr John A Silvia pastor is honorary drve chairshyman and Frank S Jason is genshyeral chairman Other committee members include Richard GiJI1shysalves and Jesse V Santos Jr division chairmen JQseph S Vera special gifts chairman Richard L Lopes treasurer George Radcliffe director Louis S Silva assistant director Mrs Mary Lucy Soares office conshytrols and Miss Luey E Dias list supervisor

Members of the Campaign Exshyecutive Committee also include Frank M Martin ald Joseph C Motta

The history of St Johns and the history of the Portuguese people in America arc closely intertwined

It was at the end of the 18th Century that settlers began comshying from themiddot Azores to the United States TheJ were relashytively few in number nd as II

result almost lost their national identity

Near Ifood However by 1840 the trickle

of Azoreans was beginning to turn into a near Oood of imshymigrants who settled in New Bedford then a whaling and fishing center

By 1865 many Portuguese families called New Bedford home They lacked just one thing-a church of their own and a priest who spoke their language and understood their customs and traditions

Their first priest-Rev Joao Ignacio de Azevedo-anived in 1869 and on Sept 10 1871 St Johns parish was canonically established

Theremiddot were approximately 1shy000 Portuguese of Azorean deshyscent living in New Bedford at the time and the)T detelmined to build their own church A lot was purchased for $3OD8 ~ con~

siderable amount in those days and soon ground WQS broken for the new house of God

However Father de Azeedo was a mission pliest Vl~ho~moved

throughout the are~ aCministershying to his counblymen As a reshysult a new parish was establishshyed in Boston and he became its first pastor

Expandoll

Construction of St Johns WillS

continued by Rev Antonio de Mattos Freitas a native or Calshylteta St George Azores Fashyther Freitas also was responsible for the construction of a recshytory When he reUred because of ill health and returned to~ the AzoreS he was succeeded by Rev Antonio G de Silva Neves who was to serve St Johns durshying the greatest expansion Gfthe citys Portuguese colony

The first church located where a section of Morse- Twiampt Drill now stands soon ~ outgrown by its congregation and a drive began for agt new and larger church

Father Neves who served 8~j

pastor for almost 25 years saw the new church at County and Wing Streets almost coop]eted However ill health also forced bill retirement

PREPARING FOR CENTENNIAL In charge of fumd drive for hundredth anniversary of St John Baptist Church New Bedford are from left George Radclffe drive execushytive director Frank Jailon general chairman

pleted construction of the present church and rectory in three years The church which now serves the parish was solemnly blessed an4 dedicated to the worship of God by the late Bishshyop Feehan

Through the years the parshyishioners of St Johns have proved their dedication to their cliurch Now they are renewinr their dedication

Msgr Silvia notes that before the small St Johns Church was built the citys Portuguese colshyony attended Mass at St Lawshyrence Church Later they moved into what today is Crowells brt Store

Landmark Today the 11Inificent st

Johns is a landmark in New Bedford befitting its position as Mother Church of the Portu guese in the- UnFted States

MSgr Silvia a native of Pall River served at St Peters Church in Provincetown for 27 years His only other assi1shyment St John the B-aptirt Church

Ordained to the priesthood or Dec 20 1919 St Johns was the new priests first assignment He remained at the cRurch unshytil No~ember 1924 when he was transferred to Ptovinceto~

On Oct 2 1951 Msgr Silvia returned to St Johns as pzsshytor a post hemiddot still fulfills with zeal and energy

His assignmetlt to St Jobnfl parish in 1919 was not ~1sgr Sinshyvias introduotion to the New Bedford parish

As a young boy the p2stcshyrecalls his poundathers weekly trips from Fall River to New Bedford to bring back a priest

Four Families There were few Portuguese

families in Fall River in those days he says When my father arrived in Fan River there were iust four Portuguese families in the city Gradually others setshytled there

My father used to drive over in a horse and buggy to bring Il priest back tc Fall River to ll3y

degbrought him back the next dzy Since those days of hischiMshy

bood Msgr Silvia observeamp-l Turn to Page Eighteen

Continued fronmiddot Page Three

the late Tobias and Ann Lynch ]Burke Mr Burke was born in Newport Tipperary Ireland and his speech bears witness to the o-it and lilt of his birthshyplce He is married te Catbshyerine Lowney Burke and the couple lives next to the Chanshycery

DI1 Davia Costa Dr Costa son of David CosU

and Julia Rodrigues is the husshyband of Louella Somerday and fther of five children A dentshyist in NeJ Bedford he is active ir ceo and in St Vincent ~e

Pml work on a parochial and al(l level He has been zealoUJ ir- many important phases ~

perish aetivity in Immaculate Conception Parish in New BedshyforC He was recipient of the Diocesan Marian Award in Deshycember

itpJlin 15 TIle awards Jill be presenteCl

at St Marys Cathedral Fa]] River on lIlonday evening April 15 at 8 PM At toot timeuro there will be the investi shyture of two lI-ionsignori the awarding of Papal Knight 03 SZ Gregory honors to nine ~sect- oeesan laymen and the Pro EecIesia et Pontipoundlce award kJ mother Pierre Marie adminisshytlato of St Annes Hospital IE Fall River~

Join Federation IIALEIGH (NC)-Forty ()(f thfl

matewide Raleigh dioceses 14~

tlriests have formed the North iCaFolina Priests Associatioil which will affiliate with a Emshy

ticmal federation DOW beiJl~

formed

May the Joy and Pomise 01- Easter

uplift your spirit and gladden

your hean

FROM THE OFRCEIIS AND PERSONfJB Of

qkJM~ERCHANTS CIa1iotuLe BANK

IN NEW BEDFORD

SOUTH BANK-Cove St at Iodney French Boulevard WEST BANK-Kempton Street at Mill Stret

LUNDS CORNER BANK-Acushnet Ave rear Lunds Comer DARTMOUTH BANK-Dartmouth Street near Rockdale Ave NORTH BANK-Acushnet Avbull at Coffin Ave

CENTER BANK-Purchase and William Sts priests in the San Antonio arcl1shy Next pastor was the Rev Mass He used to stay overnight tiiocese Manuel A da Silva wt() oom- at our hOuse ald JlG ~tbeI

-

18 Tti~ ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1969 CatecheticsWeek Set at StonehillDioce$clm ~j[llIlde[lj)fl5 Join Nal-gonGI Some 400 priests religious and laymen are expected to at shyMculrraurru U A$~ssinatBon tend a catechetics institute b be held Monday Aug 5 throughOf Dr Mriin luther KilnS Saturday Aug 10 at Stonehill College Diocesan schools shared i~ national mourning at the Sister Mary Francille CSJ

~8sassination of Dr Martin Luther King with special theology professor at Regis ColshyMasses or prayers offered in every school At Cassidy High lege will direct the institute in Taunton Rev John Moore chaplain celebrated a Mass and speakers will include Rev

Frederick Moriarty SJ Revfor the repose of the soul Cha~les E Cook Rev James F(l)f the Negro leader and rently hplds first place in the Hawker Sister Florence -MishyNotre Dame math league chels OLVM Gerard Potte~

tlie chapel by students in a demy Fairhaven have been study periods were spent in Girls at Sacred Hearts Acashy

bauoi and Mrs Helen Jacobs With the theme Making Alllvigil for peace working on a project to bring

Christian Youth Movement Easter cheer to patients at St Things New institute sessiono will discuss Scripture catechetshymembers at Jesus-Mary Aca- Lukes Hospital New Bedford ical techniques use of filmsdemy Fall River heard the New Under supervision of Sister Jushywith adolescents other visualFolk a group of singing Holy lie Louise SSCC theyve ~een aids parent education teamCross seminarians Their appear- making tray favors including teaching and creative dramaticsance was arranged under t~e decorative placemats and napkin

Further information is avail shydirection of Mofher John Scarry holders for adults and flowered able from Stonehill CollegeJRJM Jollipops chicky surprises and North Easton 02356Also at JMA its French Week bunny hats for childern

The observance- began Sunday Science Fair Winners when French Club members Jeanne Phenix Yvette Berthi- Holy Family had four winshy Charities AppeaI aume and Susan Cournoyer took ners at the annual New Bedford Continued from Page Three part in a play sponsored by the Science fair In the senior division

Community Fund CampaignPrevost French Club Les Fem- James Berry and John Thomas president Board of Managers mes Parlent Trop Throughout of the New Bedford school were of Boston Dispensary and vice

the week too there have middotbeen cited fo~ earth science and phy- the Diocesan cheerleading tour- will combine with the seniors president of USOseveral skits prepared by mem- sics proJects respectively while t tl h ld t F h th bZbers in the junior division both Pa- namen recen yea ee an Lor e occasIOn SInce oth He has been the recipient of

or effort at Prevost was tricia Downey and SharonSmola High but sports arent all that cltsses of the academy are small honorary degrees from Holy MaJ matter at the TauntoJl girls due to the fact that the high Cross College Tufts University

e Sunday program Whlch ln- were recognized for work in the h f h d I ld f b sc 001 Break ast lunc an schoo IS being phased out Suffolk University Bradford -luded In addItIon to the play fle 0 iology M formal dinner pace settmgs The Junipero Club of Holy Durfee College of Technology~veral talks by promInent any students won honors at h M h I I I were recently on display at the Family High recently sponsored of Fall Rivet and Lowell Techshy

I remiddotnch cItIzens a French song- t e assac usetts RegIOn S F h school library and members of a talk on drug addiction for jun- nological Institute ~t and a motion picture Clence alr eld in Fall Rlver They included Christine Four- the Mothers Auxiliary were on iors and seniors The talk was Bishop to AddJess Meeting

UN French Club nier Dominican Academy and hand to answer etiquette ques- given by two brothers one an Most Rev James L ConnollyAt Coyle the French Club di- Diane Desmarais Mt St Mary tions from the students ex-addict the other director of Bishop of Fall River will speak

Ilected by Brother Hugh McCabe Academy both Fall River Both And the Coyle Fathers Club Marathon House a center for to the priests parish trusteesIOeCently elected officers After girls were recogiIized by the held its annual Father-Son Com treatment of addicts located in chairmen of the Catholic Charishy8le votes were tallied however Southeastern District of the Mas- munion breakfast at the school Coventry RIo ties Appeal and the invited lays our man at Coyle it looked sachuse~ts Dental Society bull with Robert Cahill ofthe Rhode CongratuIcitions go to Joseph gue9ts of the 111 diocesan if ~embers were voting for Debra Lay Dominican Aca- Island Food and Drug Commis Abraham of St Anthony High parishes bull UN delegation The presidents demy received a savings bond sion as guest speaker He dis- for meriting runner-up position Roland A Lafrance 1968 ApshyliPot wa~ captured he reports from the Bristol South Distriet cussed harmful effects of various iil the state finals of the annual peal lay chairman will also adshy a Polish fellow Cbarles Ozug Medical Auxiliary arid Michael drugs American Legion olatorical con- dress the 800 expected to attend lames OBrien a true Irishman Zito Bishop Feehan High At~middot The Catholic Students Mis- test - the opening meeting of the won the vice-presidential spot tleboro was awarded a plaque sion CrUsade at Stang H~gh has In club~ews at~HA the Senshy campaign for funds for the 30 while the treasurers job was by the Womens Auxil1ary to the taken as a special project this ior Science Club will conduct agencies of the Catholic Chadshy~warded to Jorge Matesanz -a Mass Veterinary ASsn month of April the collection of a farewell meeting for seniors ties Appeal

BASKETBALL PLAYERS On basketball team at Connolly High Fall River are from left Tim Duffy Tom Kroger John Long Joe Kelly Greg Sullivan Mike Manning

~~dent of Spanisll extraction Winners in the division of donated medical supplies and this ~month and members will Only Paul Bor9ue the secretary earlhscience Were John Dias eyeglasses for deprived Peoples visit an encephalitis clinic in I ~anaged to make the scene for Thomas Burk~ anciRobei-tClou~ of the world Supplies collected Freetown in May The Stamp France tier FeehahMicIlael Cote Pre illbe forwarded to the Cathi- and Coin Clubis planning a pubshy

At Bishop Stang iil North vost and Elizabeth Lavoi~ Do- olic Missions Medical Bureau for lie exhibition of members col- Dartmouth the math team led minican shipment iections in May imd the Chess by high scorer Lawrence l3yrnes Awards in math and engineer- Upco~ing at S~A Fairhaven Club has undergone reorganiza- placed secon~in a reeentBqs- ing went to Carol Vasconcellos is the aruiual senior prom which tion election of officers inshyflon public schools math meet Mt St Mary Madeleine Delisl~ wilL be held in the Colonial cluding Edward Norman presishyThe Stang team paced by the and Vivian Blais and Michael R60m of Whites restaurant in dent Daniel Brule vice-presi- shyeo-sIstent good work of George Zito Feehan Genevieve Pappas Westport from 8 to midnight dent Diane Lizotte secretary Oliver and EIleen Keavy cur- and Debra Lay Dominican Joan Friday night May 24 Juniors TuniorProm

Basile Feehan Amato Polselli The Holy Family Junior Prom Prevost and Sharon Woycie- Board ofmiddot Trustees isslated for Friday night AprilCentennialmiddot chowski Mt St Mary were 26 at Kennedy Center The prom

Continued from Page Seventeen cited To Study Changes will last from 8 to 11 and will Chemistry winners included have Carousel as its themebroad smile on his face-many Jane Arruda Anne Lewis De- WASHINGTON (NC) - The Mlisic will be by the Escorts

other families have arrived from nise Michaud Elizabeth St board of trustees of the Catho- And the Holy Family debatePltlrtugua1 A man d Diane Lamontagne lic University of America in team tied for first place in the Our Lady of Mt Carmel par- Christine Fournier Dominican Washington D C will meet Narry League with Cassidy A ~h was detached from St Johns Anne Sullivan and Pamela Can- Sunday April 21 in St Louis playoff will be held As of now as the Portuguese population dee Feehan Marilyn Riley and to consider a wide range of rec- Cassidys debate reco~d is 12 grew Then Our Lady of the Ann-Marie Charrette Sacred ommended changes resulting wins out of 14 debatesjrnmaculate Conception parish Hearts Fall River Irene Caron from a year-long study of the was erected to care for families Cassidy Marilyn Bentley Mt pontifical university by a comshyi Portuguese descent living in mitteee headed by Dr Carroll ~e North End of New Bedford St Mary Hochwalt

In the field of physics Alan middotRAMBLERToday St John the Baptist White Prevost Michelle Paquet The meeting will be held in ehurch has about 4000 parishshy SHA Fall River JamesReid Jrconjunction witll the Spring Americas Economy King ioners Our numbers started Prevost Mary Soans Jane Mc meeting of the National Confershy Fnr the Best Deal Come To dropping about seven years ago Donald and Martba Nugent yent ence of Catholic Bishops Broadway Ramblerasgr Silvia explains He feels St Mary The trustees are expected 10 INC part of the drop in membership Representatives from Diocesan name a new 30-man board meet 768 BROADWAYis due to a number of families schools to the Mass State Sci- with faculty representatives for RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 131moving outside the parish )ounshy ence Fair will include Michael the first time in histoi-y and CHARLES J DUMAIS Presdarles Intermarriages with othshy lito Amato Polselli Debra Lay discuss the search for a new er nationalities account for still Madeleine Delisle Jane Arruda university rector to replacemore losses Anne Lewis Father J~dhn P Whalen ~ho ~III11I11I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I11I1I1HIUIIIIIIIlIIlilllllllllllfllHlIilttmmIllIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllllnIlIllIllHIIIIIIIIIJ111~ However the Mother Church Denise Michaud Alan White was naine last October to a ef the Portuguese is not fading Michelle Paquet Elizabeth St one-year term as acting rector E WEEKEND SPECIAL sect away AmandSharon Woyciechowski A new school was built in New Projector

f957 It is expensive Msgr Silvia admits but I felt we needed it

St Anthony High in New Bedshyford is rejoicing over acquisi shytion of a movie projector as a

Parish gtrganizations are active gimiddotft from the alumni association and individual parishioners are willjng to give of their time

Presentation to principal Sister Lucille Champagne was made

and effort Perking

to keep the parish by Mrs Josephine Lafleur sociation president

asshy

Now they are getting read7 Cassidy-Coyle cheerleaders Jor a 100th anniversary captured third pillce v9Phy iil

_

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Case Somerset Favorites In Narry Diamond League

Case High of Swansea and Somerset are pre-season ehoices in this seasons Narragansett League baseball race but the club th8lt will bear watching is Westport TIne darkshyhorse Villagers may have a few surprises for Narry foes Another small area school

with a respectable 8-6 recordthat potentially has a shot Only one member of that at a league championship is squad Calvin Hopkinson will Norton of the Tri-Valley not be playing for the Villagers Conference Coach Ed Bibeau this Spring With the rest of the has most of last Deasons Central club ready to go - watch Jlor Village regulars Westport to make its presence in the fold ready lmown to challenge the Among fuose returning are perennial Paul Eastwood an Russ Picard favori1es If 0 T two of the better performers in Narry honors the circuit a year ago Eastwood amp1i1 at Norton led the team in hitting with a (C 0 a c h Peter highly respectable 360 averagem[l ~ek has pitched and played the infield G3ven returning Picard like Eastwood 15 also ~nnen for versatile An outfielder by trade ~theY chamshy he also takes his turn on the ii~~JWhip bid Peter mound for Coach Bibeaus nine Weo~port Bartek Carl Zajac and Jeff Hague tmIshed the 1961 eampaign ill round out Bibeaus four-man ~ place in tbe NalT7 loop pitching staff

Norton Bids for Tri-Valley Crown jfOO task of handling the but in thin scholastic year of

~tJ of this quartet will fall athletic surprises it may not be Gpoundl ~e shoulders of either Ron as big as some thinllt ~JmOi) or Manny Cabral both

A second place finisher inexperienced receivers ConnOlll 1967 the Norton Lancers haveexcel1B not only defensively their sights on the Tri-Valleybut likewise with the bat He Conference crown The clubsbit at a 333middot clip last Spring one-two hitters last campaignJohn Souza and Mike Andras have departed from the Norton th better than 300 hitters baseball scene but the teamqaln will be out to join the one-two pitching punch is reshyleague leaders in batting prowshyturning Juniors Ken Allen aess They should put a wallop left-hander who had a perfectin Westports oHensive attaCK 7-0 record last Spring and ArtIf Coach Bibeaus boys can dushyBouchard will be relied uponplicate their Performances of a heavily to bring the league flagJellr ago Offensively and biB to Norton Coach Bartek alSobig four comes through on middottbe hopes to get some help in middotthemound Westport may realize a the pitching departmentmiddot fromlong awaited Narry championshyFred Rego Bill Gorczyca andEip dream Admittedly if Ie Steve Nichols bull bie word in ~~rts_tuture

~ ~ bull I

OpeUp With~on-League Co~esttsmiddot Other returnees incl~ Capshy develop rapidlymiddot defensively if

tain Mike Wynnn Greg Croff they are to regain the leagues BOb Adams Tim McEndy and divisional crown - whicb flbeymiddot Paul Hassie Wynn a senior lost to HoWston last Spring middotmiddot will be starting his third season and gain a shot at the Trl shyill left field with Cruffstarting V~ey Conference ebampionshyhis second campaign in center ship Many area clubs openThey will be joIned by Wynns their campaign this week with brother Ricky in right fied non-league games highlighting

The infield win be anchored the action League competition by Adams at second base and will commence for the most Hassle at short Newcomers part next week Richy Silvia and George Macshy Mother Nature has done her Arthur are presently battling it job this Spring Baseball coaches out for the third base job and throughout -the diocese admit Lorrie Adams also a first-year that this is the best Spring they man appears to have the inside have had to prepare flbeir track on first base charges in many a year Weather

cannot be blamed for a slowMcEndy who has been the start this time around All areLancers starting catcher since eagerly awaiting the umpireshis Freshman year is starting first call to play ballhIs third campaign behiJd the

plate Bartek expects McEndy to hold the inexperienced inshy New School System field together

The Lancers will have to imshy In German State prove upon their hitting and DUSSELDORF (NC) - The

North Rhine-Westphalia state parliament middothas approved aCanadian Prelates change in the states school sysshytem that probably will meanEstablish Council the end of many denominational

OTTAWA (NC)-The Catho-shy schools Hc bishops of Canada have esshy By an overwhelming majorshytablished a 12-member Fiscal ity the parliament voted to Affairs Council composed of change the state constitution and clergy Religious and laymen establish the nondenominational who will advise the Church on Christian school in which reli shyfinanclal matters gious training is given by Cathshy

Among the areas which are olic and Protestant instructors receiving ini~ial attention of the in the same school as the patshycommittee is the question of tern for state-supported schools whether the Church should be from the fifth through the nint subject to government taxation grades and if so what form of taxation In the past the state has supshywould be equitable to churches ported Illeparate Catholic and government and other taxshy Pro tell tan t denominational payen Khoola

-~) PASSION PLAY Today Christians hold the Solemn Observance of the Lords Supper

It is commemorated ina PMsion Play at Prevost High School Fall River by David Poisshyson as Christ Paul Martel left 8$ St John and Paul Bouampquet as St Peter

DominicGlIsmiddot Rent ApGrt~~rit in Inner -Cimiddottimiddot middot

Want t~ Get Closer to I Agony of the Worl~middot WASHINGTON (NC)middot Pift his experience in the neig~lgtorshy ruary 1966 because theJ

Dominican priests-each doing hood is invaluable in helping wanted to get closer to the bis own thing-are living middotin an both prisoners and parolees He agony of the world While nol apartment in the inner ~ cd said the insight he gains into eliminating the academic life Washington here they come from ancl h~w they felt that living in the inlleJ The five run the gamut from they view life aids him In mv city would be as important bull

a professor of moral theology at ing them intelligent advice and learning experience as academic the Don)inican House ofStucUeII 8ssis~nCe study to a prison chaplain a1 the Diamp- Father William Kane is middotthemiddotNeighborhOoclll[aatrict of Columbia Jail Ibey neighborhood man of the have in common1heiy addresa A Pr~ceton graduate ~itl1 apartment Hemiddotworks with minshyand a desire to understand and doctorates from Harvard aJgt4 isters inmiddot the area in establishing alleviate the problems ~ livlnc OxfCrd Father Albert Brodershy youth programs and fightina I in a poor Urban community ick teaches Constitutional LalV for better housing and fail

Father TbomasHea~ middotttie at the catholic University Law rent laws His motive is to givemoral theology professor aDd School the people in the community aD author of a reCent bOOkmiddotID awareness of their own dignitymiddotBe and Father Heath startedFaee of An~sh is 0Il 1be to affirm the fact that it is athe apartment project in Feb-bOard of direCtors of the Pe0shy ood place to live ples Center a house soon to be

the rehabilitationopened for Criticizes Usury of alcoholics He also meets

MEXICO CITY (NC)-Mexshy5 50 01- a SYSTEMATIC wimiddotth ~culties of Wasbingtcm

icc CityS Jose Cardinal Garibiseminaries to discuss policyshy bull 10 year SAViNGSRivera urged bankers meetingmaking and apostolic activity MONTHLY DEPOSITSat the National Bankers Conshy

Legal Aid Office vention in Guadalajara to comshy 5 00 01- a INVESTMENT bat usury and work closely bull 10 year SAVINGS

Father Joseph Cooney a NOTICE ACCOUNTSwith the government to proshylawye~ who has worked 011

voter registration in the South mote the social welfare of all II REGULAR4 5001 the Mexican people bull 10 Jflar SAVINGSand took an active part in dvil

rights activities such lIS

~lma march is DOW admin~ Bass Rivertering a legal aid office in the CENTERneighborhood of the Dominishy Savings Bank

cans apartment Volunteer law Paint and Wallpaperstudents from the Catholic Uni- Bank 8y Man I

versity of Ameiica assist him Dupont Paint

We Pay The Postage

IJcor Middle St

A third member of the group m this program 4iiii 422 Acush Ave bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA Fat her Raymond MalonSOl1 ~ New Bedford bull SOUTH VARMOUTH 4raquo HYANNISserves as the Catholic chapiain bull PARKINGmiddot

bull DENNIS PORT bull OSTtRVILLEatmiddot the D C jail A late vocashy Rear of Storetion Father Malonson has been ordained only two years middot Father Malonsoll feels U1at

LEVESQILIES OFFla E~lnPMENTNow Many Wear Wood Metal Desks and ChairsFALSE TEETH

With More Comfort JUST GiVE ME A CHANe TO QUOleTo overcome discomfort when

dentures sllp sllde or loosen Just sprinkle a llttle FASTEETH on your 187 SHAWMUT STREET bull NEW BEDFORD MASS

middot plates FASTEElH holds dentures firmer You eat better feel more PO Box 2062 - Hervey L Levesque

middot -wont sour Helps check plate odor comfortable FASTEETH Is alkaline

Dentures that fit are lIlSSentlai to Telephone 993middot1264middot health See your dentist regularly Get FASTEETB at all drUB counten ___ _ _____11_0__-D-tcl----4

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs April 11 1968

PhySDCOUi) l1JJ Uges litUBgy C~[filges

~n Last RStes RED BANK (NC) A

~atholic physician called for revision of the liturgical $orm of the Anointing of the Sick cluring a discussion on The Chaplains Role With the Dying Patient at Riverview Hospital here in New Jersey

Dr George J Sheehan an alumnus of Manhattan College and a founder of Christian Brothers Academy in nearby lLincroft was one of three apeakers at the symposium coshyaponsored by the hospital and Ute 1 Redmiddot Bank Council of

ilhurches Citing obvious failures by

both physician and clergyman iin helping the dying patient and bis family Dr Sheehan sugshygested members of the family Ghare inmiddot a ceremony which would exchange feelings of llove and hope between them ElDd the dying person

Dr ~heehan observed that while inadequacy in the face of death has been in the past apparent to the Protestant criergyman it is now also felt by Catholic priests

They findmiddot he said the La~t Sacrament in its present form Ii a consolation only to those with the strong faith of a Breton iiteasant-a kind of faith they e seeing less and l~ss-

Appropriate Theology He also said while the develshy

pment of a Common Christian itervice parlakirtg of the same llodividual familymiddot and commu~

Ility significance as Bap~i8ai -dMarriage would be a giant p in middotheiping people to a middotbappy death iit would remain IDol theologians to present- a relshy

qwant lmd acceptable image of mail in this time and this place ilnd to develop an appropriate eology of death heaven ~nd bell in order to make a signifi- sant change in our life style

lOd therefore in our approach to death

Other panelistsmiddot were the Rev Seorge Fitzgeraid a Presbyteshyaan minister middotand middotchaplain at Princeton Hospiital arid Mn Ruth Snyder a nurse of the lIiverview Hospital staffmiddot

POSTER CHILD LEADS WAY Joey BeIge 8 of Syraeuse NY leads themiddot way down a White House lttairway in the company ofthe Fi~st t-adymiddotMrsLyndon B Johnson

and Mrs Muriel Humphrey wife ofthe Vice-President Joeymiddotis this years poster child of

the National Association for Retarded Children H~ ismiddot thesQn ofMt and Mrs Robert Beige middotmembersmiddotOf St Vincent de Paul parish in Syracuse whos-e ot-herfive children SlHshy

round their Uttle broth~r wil1hmiddot the love and care to h~lp him livea full and happymiddot life

Penn See Studies Poverty Pmiddotrogram HARISBlJRq (NC)--Coadju- is being made to see ho)Vtbe to coordinate and channel our

tor Bishop Joseph T Daley diocese canmiddot best use its re-middot efforts in the fieldmiddot vicar general- of the Harrisburg sources to alleviate poverty Bishop Daley said it ismiddot im- diocese calledmiddot on the nearly problems middotperative that all our people 50000 Catholics in the area to He alsomiddot said Wemiddot contem- knoW and understand the probshy

acquaint th~mselves with 10- middotplatemiddot the early middotestablishment of middotIem of middotracism and the funda- calracfal and poverty problems amiddotmiddot diocesanmiddot human relations mental moral injustices which

In a lettermiddot read at aU Masses commission middotto serve asmiddot a liaison middotare at the root of the deplorable BishopDlIleT said middotthat a study with all people Collcerned and conditions in our own area

Urges Hospitals Re~ognie Unio~s

CLEVELAND (NC) - AI layshymens group here has asked the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hospitals to declare its willingshyness to recognize labor unions as collective bargaining agents for hospitals employes

lNle request came in a letter from William A caldwell chainnan of the eurolevellllnd Conference of Laymen to Sister ~ry Collette of Hamilton Ohio president of the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hosplshytala during a one-day meeting here of the Ohio Hospital Assoshyciation convention

The laymens group said such a statement would promote the human dignity of hospital emshyployes in real and immediate ways serve the common good of our communities and inshycrease the understandingmiddot of Catholic teaching by all the citishyzens of Ohio

The letter pointed out that the National Catholic Hospital Association 1 a s t November called on Catholic hospitals tiraquo be guided by the social teachshyings of the Church and to deal with unions that employecfgt choose

Discuss ~iot Report On Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC) - Beginshyning Sunday April 14 the Catholic Hour will present over the NBCmiddot network a three-part series The Climate of Change

Evolution or Revolution foshycusing on three areas of social and religioUs concern today today

~gr Rop~rt Fox cOordinashytor of Spanish community 00shy

middot lion in the New York arclidioshymiddoteese will discuss The Riot centommissi~ middotReport Amiddot Chrisshy

tiati Response April 14 Msgr Ivan D Illich of the Intereushy-tural Center 01 Language and D middotoe u men tat 1 on CuershyDavaca Mexf~o win be intershyviewed Aprjl 21 and Father Francois Houtart Belgian 00shyciologist will be interviewed Apiil 28

The National Council of Cathshy oUc Men producer of the OathshyoUe Hour reconunendseheckshymiddoting local newspaper programa for broadca9t time in particushymiddotRar areas

I Am The RestUlJTectiltogtD

Ai 1)(J[YQfGfDVIJJpound)9

lJ1~TJPJiiD~ EEJ~lJregff

FALL RIVER

Page 13: 04.11.68

Prelate Supports Catholic Schools Opposes Racism

NEWARK (NC) -Archshybishop Thomas A Boland of Newark touched on racism Catholic education and aborshytion in his annual message to the Archdiocesan CouncH of catholic Men at its CQnvention here

Noting that BOrne people adshyvocate closing Catholic schools to concentrate on adult educashytion Archbishop Boland said I believe we mU9t give as much time as is possible to adult edushycation but not that we should ignore our chlIdren

If we close our schools he soid there may 00 no one to attend the adult courses iJn future years

He deplored the absence of religion in the education of many people and said that while 0 ohild may be receiving o good academic background under such circumstances he is not being trained in his will or his morals

Jthortion Is Murder Archbishop Boland noting

~hot the question of relaxing bortion laws is before the state LeFislature recalled that he lralNi opollen to the men about ~ot Dubject a year earlier and repeated what he had said then abortion is murder

Should the state legislate more liberally in this field he said it would go outside its sphere and we would have no

right to follow it He indicated however that

the Church would not oppose the establishment of a legislashytive commission to study the abortion law

Discussing racism he called it a malignant growth in our society and announced his support for a peaceful interrashycial walk through the streets of Newarks ghetto

Spokesmen lor L2ity Archbishop Boland also urged

the men to turn their council into a real spokesman for the laity He ruled out the possibil shyity of a voice for the laity toshytally independent flrom the hierarehy declaring that this is not the structure cd the Church

H we want to build a strucshyture the archbishop said we get an architect to give us a uniform plan Christ is the arshyehitect of the Chureh We are its workmen

He then urged the men tID take the steps which would make the ACCM aspokesman for the people II real council

Delegates adopted four res0shy

lutions endorsing catholic echools condemning racism lin every form advocating retenshytion and expansion of the states IIChool bus law and opposing relaxation of the abortioD statute

Stresses Increased Food Production

NEW DELHI (NC)-The vatshyican recognizes the need to mshycrease food production middotas a most serious problem facing the developing countries and mshydeed the world as a whole Elizabeth Reid II member of the

bull Vatican delegation to the United ean delegation to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD)

Speaking at the UNCTAD meeting here in India MilS Reid said The right to food 18 01117 another aspect 01 be mosi eaered of all buman rigbts the right to life and it is tb1s parshyticular aspect of the problem of development that places the heaviest and most serious burshyden em the comlcieDee of man- flIIIIampy from home kiDd ~ bull lot cbeapeJ tIIaD IiDDC

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HEATHER CUTTHNG

Sacred Hearts Junior High School Student Is Licenseod Amateur Radio Operator

Holly and Heather Cutting 532 Walnut Street Fall River share a transistor rashydio With some teenage sisters this might cause trouble but not with this pair Heather Jets Holly take the transistor She settles for pop music from Johannesburg South Africa-via her shortwave set They have real good musicraquo she says Blonde 14 year old Heather learned the In ternational Morse Code a basic requirement for amashyteur radio operators when she was seven but its only in the past year that shes really worked at the complicated hobby Her father Dick Cutting ll construction superintendent by profession has been ll radio ham for 30 years by avocation An awesome battery of receivshyers and transmitters fills a room of the Walnut street house and when Heather displayed real inshyterest in them she had iii wi)) ing teacher close at hand

Heathers an eighth grader at Sacred Hearts Junior High School on Prospect Street in Fall River and she admits that she does as much homework as IIhe can at sOOool to have eveshynings free for her hobby She at shytends radio classes nightly then hurries bome to spend as much as three hours at ber sel

Im llicensed for two fre- I

quencies right DOW she exshyplained I can talk on six and two meters Translated that means she can contact amateullil

--in this part of the United States but may not ta]k tomiddot overseal operators until she earns 1Il middotgeneral license

Im Working for my license DOW she said rohe examinashytion JIm be in 00 days Even the license that Heather now holds however is umusual for one of her age When she gets ber general license she Will be among itB Y01lllllgest holders and probably the youngceBt 8h licensee in the stlllte

rhere are 11426 lI8dto amashyteurs iD Massacbuatts I18id her father aInd cmIy 409 aJre WCllInen

wm CoDtaet lFather A real benefit to ~ Cutting

family from Bellltberll general lieense wID be iba1 1Ibell be able tID reach bel fathe bull blB car short wave mctic wheD he is OlD hIfl freqUeDt bwliness tripal

distance calls said Mr Cutting The electric light company figshyures I can run this rig 16 hours a day for only $290 a month

Heather hopes to make a cashyreer of radio technology Right now she is able most of the time to repair her set if someshything goes awry and shea building a small transmitting station for an upcoming science fair at Sacred Hearts Itll broadcast about 200 feet she said

Sometimes Of couJrSe gremshylins pop ill Like the time Heather got a phone can from a boy in Swansea Hey did oU know youre coming m on eiYclnnel 2 on our TV be said 011 another occasion Heather picked ~ her fathers transmisshysion OIl ber electric pitar speaker

Most of the time however things go smoothly During her nightly radio sessions Heather picks up signals Jrom other amateurs and has some schedshyuled appointments vis the mllshyways withmiddot friends hi otheJl mties

When she picks up 5 llllew

eontact she confirms it with II brightly-colored postcard bearshying her name and station 0011 etters in psychedelic pink Wld yellow

Collecting such postcards 111 2 sub-hobby for radio amateulll and Holly has a oozzling eollecshytion on the walls of her radio room She bas Mganized the Sou the a II t ern MassachushyIlett8 Teenage RadM Net aocll ill

BEFORE YOU BUy-tRy

PARK MOTORS OLDSMOBILE

OIdsmobile-lPeugot-Rencnft fJ1 Middle Street Fairhaven

llooking for new members Its just for teens she says

=rheyre more fun to talk to Once she has her general 11shy

cense she plans to join Iil group that relays messages from Viet Nam servicemen to their famshyilies

other Bobbies Badia is by no means Heathshy

ers only hobby Shl~ and her sister Holly a freshman at Emshymanuel College have an imshypressive collection of sharpshyshooting trophies mostly garshynered at Fall River Rod and Gun Club meets I began shootshying when I was six and had my Own gun when I as seven eaid Heather

Other interests are mathematshyics and music Heather picked lIP guitar playing on her own and belOngs to a folk group which plans its first public apshypearance after Easter

In short shes one teen whoD never be found wondering what to de next

LARIVIERES Pharmacy

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THE ANCHORshy 13Thurs April 11 1968

Houston Priests Get Pay Raise

HOUSTON (NC) - BishOJ John L Morkovsky announceCl a pay raise for priests of thE Galveston-Houston diocese and said a new retirement poliCW will go into effect Jan 1 1970

Under the old pay scale asshy sistants received a base salary of 11250 plus $30 car allowshyance and $1250 insurance preshymium for a total salary of $155 a month Pastors received a total monthly salary of $21750 The new salary reale will allow for increased pay based on the number of yearo priests have been ordained

Assistants who have been cshydained less than 10 years wiill receive a total monthly salary of $200 The figures will ~

$225 for those ordained moro than 10 years

Pastors with 25 years in t100 priesthood will receive m monthly total of $275 ThoSQ with more than 25 years will receive $300

The retirement policy ca1lJfl for optional retirement at age 65 and mandlltory retirement at 70 However elderly pries1amp who are able and willing m37 be assigned to other priestly work than the pastorate Bisbshyop Morkovsky stated

The bishop said the changes are in accordance with the recshyommendations of the Senate 01 Priests and follow consultashytion with diocesan consultom

Reach Impasse-PIITSBURGH (NC)-A state-gt

level meeting between Cat~

olic officials and the Nationl11 Association for the Advanceshyment of Colored People on furshythering racial integration iB Catholic schools reached m seeming stalemate here bn Pennsylvania when the schoolshymen cited lack of funds as ll major obstacle to NAACP pro= posals

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YOUTH CARES FOR AGE Retired Sisters are tenderlycared for at chair while Sister Mary Agnes looks on Center Sister Agnes Maureea Mmiddott St Mary Convent Fall River Left Sister Agnes Maureen seniormiddot wheels SisterMary Jer~me anQright Sister JohnCatberine bringgdri_ infirmarian points out magazine article to Sister Mary Lig~~ri inwheel to Sister Mary Ursulamiddot Both infirmarians are licensed practical nurses

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Cqrdinal Roy Raps Apathy

MEXICO CITY (NC)~MaushyJOice Cardinal Roymiddot of Quebee _ a visit here as ehairman of the Pontifical Commission for World Justice and Peace said Christian teachings condemn violence in solving social probshylems but also condemn themiddot false prudence that lacks the eourage to make needed reshyforms

The prelate who has been touring Latin America for sevshyeral weeks said he was 1mshypressed by the number of Cathshy

olic organizations and institushytutions already applying Pope Paul VIs encyclical The Deshyvelopment of Peoples in their Jespective countries

But he added Latin Amerishyearn still have to assume fully their responsibility in workingtowards economic balance andmiddot bull just social order 80 every cit shyizen can promote his own welshyfare in a climate of freedom and common good

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Comes KindIYcimiddotmiddotSislesmiddot 0 Mercy AmiddotI Fall River Comiddotnventmiddot

By Patricia McGowan

~When thou wast younger thou didstmiddot gird thyself anddidst walk where thou Frouldst But when thou shalt be old thou shalt stretch forth thy handsmiddot arid another shall gird thee and lead thee whither thou wouldst not In its description of the almost universal lot of age this is one of the most poignantpassages in Scriptur~ But age comes kindly f~r Sisters Although they are not exshyemptmiddot from its physical and mental ravages they need not fear being forsaken byfriends or being left alone the

fanulymiddot Jhe famllylast of a that is a religious community cherishes its older members and provision is made for Sisters to pass their last years surrounded by tender care

Among havens for older Sisters is the infirmary at Mt St Mary Conventmiddot Fall River The Sisters who have spent most of their religious life in the Fail River Diocese come here for their laBtyears exshypliliried Sister Agnes Maureen

The cardinal added at emiddot pretB8 RSMmiddotmiddot senior iniirmarian at eonference in the headquarten the Mount Her domain proshyf the Mexican Social Secreta- vides eh~rf11~ccQmmodations riat that national efforts for de- for 10 Sisters Each has her ownmiddot elopment do not eliminate the room andthere is II kitchenette aeed ~forfoleignaid where those ablE lobe up and

The Pontifieal commisSion Cardinal Roy indicated ill enshyaged in persuading rich counshytries to devote at least one per eent of their groSs national product to assist poor eountries

Archdiocese Adopts Project Equality

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing notified the priests lIeIlate of the Boston archdiocese of plans 10 adopt Project Equality a program designed to use purchasing power of church institutions to make firms supplying goods and 8elVices wipe out diICriminashy birislM Placticeamp

e~ut ~n enjoy their meals ~gethermiddot

The ~nfirmaryis but II few stepis from the Mount chapel wher~ the retired Sisters spend hours a day in prayer for comshymunity members still in the active lPostolate Also claiming time for Sisters whose eyesight permits are needlework ana erooheting projects

Always DraWlll Cheerful and dedicated Sister

Agnes Maureen who has I Deen at the infirmary six years is aided by Sister John Catherine who has served the aged Sisters two years A laywoman takes the night shift in the infirmary ensuring the Sisters round the clock care Bothmiddot Sister infirmashy

rians are licensed practical nurses who received their trainshyI g to L d f F tma Hosn a ur a y 0 a I shypital in the Providence Diocese

When I entered religion I hoped to be an infirmarian

said SIster Agnes Maureen I whas alwdays drawn to work for t e age

Some people think we havent got a nursing apostolate she added but we need nurses desshyperately Right now we have nine Sisters taking care of inshyfirmaries in our province

Among Sisters now at the Mount infirmary are Sister

Mary Agnes who celebrated her diamond jubilee last DeshyceJl)ber and most of wbose r~lishygious life was spent in New Bedford and middotNorth Attleboro schools and Sister Mary Lishy

gu()ri whomiddot f9r 49 yearl taught sixth graders at st Patricks School Fall River

HShe looks out her window at St Patricks said Sister Agnes Maureen and she says Theres home

The Sisters are welcoming the arrival of Spring and warm days said the infirmarian It means they can enjoy their sunporch sit in the Mounts garden and go for occasional car rides Of course they have many visitors she said Other Sisters in the house come to see them and so do Sisters from the convents where they forshymerly lived

Yes age comes kindly for Sisters Not Hke the old lady overheard in a downtown groshy

eery confiding to a chance fellow-customer her discovery of a bargain in frozen food I live alone you know and 1 get

three big servings from a packshyage--and only 29 cents

N 0 Sister lives alone

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~~tplic Newspaper Wins Press Awards

NEW ORLEANS (NC) -The eJarion Herald middotarchdiocesa middotnewspaper won eight awards iii the annual competition of the

N~W Or)eans Press Club ~ competition included daily and

weekly newspapers wire serVshyices and television stations

Millard F Everett editor won first place in two categories - editorial and best religioWl story This marks the first time in five years of competition that the Clarion has taken the top award for best religious story Staff members of the paper also took three second and three third place awards

----------------------------

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Prompt Free Delivery in fALL RIVER SOMERSET TIVERTON amp VICIHITY 101 ROCK ST (CORNER OF PINE ST) FALL RIVIImiddot

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFon River-Thurs Apr 11 1968

CathoJi~ ll]wnDv~JSityPltDcopy~regii~copyJ~

IPlanLUBffil AmeFicon ~1]~regregO WASHINGTON (NC) - A ops and l~aders of several South

jJroup of pr-ofessors from Cathshy American governments sHe University of America hope The Washington center comshyS n~w technical middotinstituteat the middotprises -ll group of professorsshy~tholic University of Gu~Washy mostly members of the CU caulI Ecuador may mark the llchool of middoted ucation-whomiddot are ltJPening of an international edshy specialists ineclUcationfordeshyvcation bridgetoLatin America Velopment Director of the proshy

The institute will be inaugurshy ject is Dr Jose A Baquero ated early this month as 11 middotcoshy WM has been commuting b~shy1)eIativeventure by the Center meen Washingtonand his nashylor Educational Research fa middottive Ecuador dming the -cmrent QuitoEcuadorand the Center school year lor Community Developmenhmd This is not an Ecuadorian Servioe at Catholic University project it is an internatienal bere It has the support 01 Vashy projed a resealclFaction proshykanofficials Ecuadorianbislshy gram between North and South

America Dr Baquero said middothereBC middotto Recruit laquorNe had to start middotsomewhere The natural plaoe 10 begin wasNegro St~1ent5 middot-the Qlace Where weaould get

CHESTNUT HILL (NC) shy the most facilitiesThisproject iesuit-eper-ated Boston College God willing if successful will bere has made available $100shy move throughout Latin AmershyGtOO fora talent search -progr1m ica We already have contracts to recruit Negro stJdents frem with interestedJeaders in Sao disadvantagedurbanareas middotof Paulo BTazil Bogota Colombia tlhecountry mainly in Greater and Lima Peru Boston Msgr Eugene Kevane direcshy

Father Michael P Walsh SJ tor of the Center for Communitypresident caUed for support off Development andServleedaimshyiIIe entirestudent body facshy ed iB number of Latin American Illlty and administration of EQsshy Church and government officialS Qon College to make the ~mshy have middotexpressed interest in thecram a success projectand a belid it may beshy

Since the program was starteJ come a model of assistance middottoIJeveral weeks ago some 50 ~shy lI3derdeveloped poundOuntrieslltIicatiopshave beenreceiltvelll He said ArcnbishGp Romolofrom students in ghetto areas Carooni apostolic nuncio 10lot -entrance middotin next Septemshy

~1u told him heilOllSiders theWltll freshman -class pmject of great importance andThere have a1w~ys beellU M~S a similhlr middotinstitute willIlegro students enrolled at B4tsshybe established at the Pontificalton College oUicials said ~t University in Limatheir Dumber is ~ot ~own 00shy

0tberhigh-ranking churchshyaYSe race is not shown 8ll1 middotmen who lthave endorsed theapplications The Collegemiddotacceptll project include MsgrLuigi Lishyattdents of all faiths gutti the Holy Sees PermanentN~t SeptemberNegro lrtlllshy

1Gbserver at the Food and Agrishy

bullnts with the necessary ~uaUshy6eations will be admitted n8 culture Organization of the 1Ilual while middotsome 25 will ge United Nations and Archbishop admitted under the talent Ceasar Antonio Mosquera fif

lt4IeQIChprogram The number is Guayaquil president of theEcshybeing limited for thegood af iliad-orlan Bishops Conference

GOLDEN JUBILEE Sisshyter Rose Alma Reid CSC (Sjltte1 M Flora) will mark herg-olden i llbilee of religious professjon on Sunday April 21 at Sacred Heart Convent New Bedford A Mass of thanksgi~rjng will be offered at 1130 Sunchw morning at Sacred Head Church and a reception will be held in the parish hall ITom2 to 4 th~t

afternoon Friends and forshymer pupils are invited t01l~

tend

So Curolina Bishop A-sksPettce $upport

CHARLESTON (NC)- Bishshymiddotop Ernest Lmiddot Unterkoefier of Charleston has called for the middotfull support ofall Americans of President Lyndon middotlB Johnshysons efforts to secure peace in middotVietnam

Tbe South ltCarolina Bishop said that the Presidents -peace ini tiati yes demonstrate that he is a gtarson who -has ever been conscious of the grave responsishybility 01 his ofillce and that his judgements have been measured ~y the critical threats to the securi~y and free action ofthe United States

ICampus Comediansl

R~JlJ~stforBirh ControJ 1nlcrmation lndBGSYlrncrGti(C~e

DAYTON (NC)-A Univershysity of Dayton chaplain said he suspected campuscomediami for 1b~ conJroversyaroused bY a request for availability of birth corttol information and materials In campus by theunishyversity stmiddotudent congress

Father Urban Rupp SM universi~y co-chaplain wrote in the chaplain s bulletin the alshymost unanimous aetion fthe student gfvernment group middotwas an idio~yncratic caper in the natureo Ii ttle childrenpl~ying

house He indicated he fouud it difshy

ficult to take the Pfoposa1 serishyomlY

Now of COUrse I middotcowd be taking this all -wrong be said

Perhaps it was intended 00 bn serious In that case I woUld be tempted to thinktheemershygency is not just immediateshyit is really one generation too late

This was taken asa reference to student efforts to pwih through the resolution orbirth control as an emergency -meashysure

That failed but a few days later the student middotcongressvo~ 29 tol to seeka change in llJllshyversUy Wlicy that would -pershymit the introductionof birth 1Ontrol selYiees in thestudem health center for married eQUoshy~les and Ulose llQOD _ ~arriedmiddot

the young Negroes whowiUbe ~pted oUiciaI said

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PATRIARCH The middotnewily elected head of the Syriac Oatholic Church Patriarch Hgtenys Antoine Hayek of Anshy~och was enthroned recentshy1w in Beirut Lebanon In this post hesucceds the late P-ashykiarch Ignace Cardinal TapshylPouni NC Photo

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THE ANCHO~-Trappists Elect Mother Church of Nation8 PortlglleSe 17 Thurs April 11 1968

Youngest Abbot P-epares fOI- Cenlellilial Celebration At Gethsenloni Dy Patida F r-u nis

GETHSEMANI (NC) The youngest abbot in the history of the monastery of Our Lady of Gethsemani was formally blessed (March ~l) by Archbishop Thomas J McDon~

ough 0pound Louisville Father M Flavian Burns

OCSO 36 ilgt the seventh ab~

bot in the 120-year history of the monastery He was elected by members of the community Inst January to succeed Abbot M James Fox OCSO

Father Flavian described bis position as en administrator whose main job il) service to others within the community He said his most important function it3 to hold plivate spiritual conversations with other monks and to handle the lillM)nasterys relations with the ~Atside world

Thcilt are some 120 monks at ~ethsemani abbey a decline from past years Abbot Burns cCrlbllltes the decline at least in prt to the attitude of the times YiJCl1 was foJJJlcrly accepted without question is now being ltI~etioned he observed

ltDontemplation Prayer

Changes have been made the IHurElY is now in English and 2Jc strict vow of silence has TiKen relaxed somewhat On an experimental basis the monks are allowed to use brief oral instructions instead of sign language as in the past

Despite the lack of radio or 1clevision Abbot Burns said the monks keep in contact through newspllpers with events in todays world The main thing ill to know what is going on in the Church and what effects our fellow hushymans according to the abbot

The life of a monk involves middotcontemplation and prayer rather than speaking up - 11 more spiritual turn according kI Abbot BUlns

A native of Jersey City N J he is a graduate of Henry SfIyder public high sehool there

Protests- Campaign Agamst Religion

NEW YORK (NC) - A new wave of terror against aU churcltgpers is now in effect in Albania an exile from that country has declored in a- letter of protest sent to the United Nations Commission on Human Rightsmiddot and~ to UN Secretary General U Thani

The protest bl Dr Rexhep KIasniqi president of the Free Albania Committee which has its headquarters here said that Albanial following a lf41oist eommunillt guideline has shut down every cltulch and mosque and has made any_kind of pubshylIc worship impossible

Thill campaign Dr Krasniqi tated is a violation of the UN Charter the Universal Declarashytion of Human Rights and of Albanias own communist conshystitutional guarantee of freedom of conscience for all

San Antonro Priests Form Association

SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Fortyshyene diocesan and religious comshymunities priests of the San Anshytonio archdiocese formed a priests association bere The priests ohose a six-member temshypora]) steering committee

One of the fiTst formal actions Gf the allsociatron was to inform Archbishop Robert E Lucey of San Antonio of the group forshymation

There are approximately 441

Parishioner d St John the Baptist Church in Nc Bedford are getting rendy for a momentoils event-the 100th anniversary of the fO~1l1dil1g of the oldest Portuguese parish in the nation The cen~en]ial celebration wi II not take place until 1971 but many things have to be done in preparation within the next three years One major project is renoshyvating the church ihelf To pay for the massive job ptrshyishioners have inaugur~teca Centennial Fund Drive to raise money for painting ~he church do extensive electrical work and buy a rew organ Estimated cost (f the regt3ir5 is $150000

Rt Rev Msgr John A Silvia pastor is honorary drve chairshyman and Frank S Jason is genshyeral chairman Other committee members include Richard GiJI1shysalves and Jesse V Santos Jr division chairmen JQseph S Vera special gifts chairman Richard L Lopes treasurer George Radcliffe director Louis S Silva assistant director Mrs Mary Lucy Soares office conshytrols and Miss Luey E Dias list supervisor

Members of the Campaign Exshyecutive Committee also include Frank M Martin ald Joseph C Motta

The history of St Johns and the history of the Portuguese people in America arc closely intertwined

It was at the end of the 18th Century that settlers began comshying from themiddot Azores to the United States TheJ were relashytively few in number nd as II

result almost lost their national identity

Near Ifood However by 1840 the trickle

of Azoreans was beginning to turn into a near Oood of imshymigrants who settled in New Bedford then a whaling and fishing center

By 1865 many Portuguese families called New Bedford home They lacked just one thing-a church of their own and a priest who spoke their language and understood their customs and traditions

Their first priest-Rev Joao Ignacio de Azevedo-anived in 1869 and on Sept 10 1871 St Johns parish was canonically established

Theremiddot were approximately 1shy000 Portuguese of Azorean deshyscent living in New Bedford at the time and the)T detelmined to build their own church A lot was purchased for $3OD8 ~ con~

siderable amount in those days and soon ground WQS broken for the new house of God

However Father de Azeedo was a mission pliest Vl~ho~moved

throughout the are~ aCministershying to his counblymen As a reshysult a new parish was establishshyed in Boston and he became its first pastor

Expandoll

Construction of St Johns WillS

continued by Rev Antonio de Mattos Freitas a native or Calshylteta St George Azores Fashyther Freitas also was responsible for the construction of a recshytory When he reUred because of ill health and returned to~ the AzoreS he was succeeded by Rev Antonio G de Silva Neves who was to serve St Johns durshying the greatest expansion Gfthe citys Portuguese colony

The first church located where a section of Morse- Twiampt Drill now stands soon ~ outgrown by its congregation and a drive began for agt new and larger church

Father Neves who served 8~j

pastor for almost 25 years saw the new church at County and Wing Streets almost coop]eted However ill health also forced bill retirement

PREPARING FOR CENTENNIAL In charge of fumd drive for hundredth anniversary of St John Baptist Church New Bedford are from left George Radclffe drive execushytive director Frank Jailon general chairman

pleted construction of the present church and rectory in three years The church which now serves the parish was solemnly blessed an4 dedicated to the worship of God by the late Bishshyop Feehan

Through the years the parshyishioners of St Johns have proved their dedication to their cliurch Now they are renewinr their dedication

Msgr Silvia notes that before the small St Johns Church was built the citys Portuguese colshyony attended Mass at St Lawshyrence Church Later they moved into what today is Crowells brt Store

Landmark Today the 11Inificent st

Johns is a landmark in New Bedford befitting its position as Mother Church of the Portu guese in the- UnFted States

MSgr Silvia a native of Pall River served at St Peters Church in Provincetown for 27 years His only other assi1shyment St John the B-aptirt Church

Ordained to the priesthood or Dec 20 1919 St Johns was the new priests first assignment He remained at the cRurch unshytil No~ember 1924 when he was transferred to Ptovinceto~

On Oct 2 1951 Msgr Silvia returned to St Johns as pzsshytor a post hemiddot still fulfills with zeal and energy

His assignmetlt to St Jobnfl parish in 1919 was not ~1sgr Sinshyvias introduotion to the New Bedford parish

As a young boy the p2stcshyrecalls his poundathers weekly trips from Fall River to New Bedford to bring back a priest

Four Families There were few Portuguese

families in Fall River in those days he says When my father arrived in Fan River there were iust four Portuguese families in the city Gradually others setshytled there

My father used to drive over in a horse and buggy to bring Il priest back tc Fall River to ll3y

degbrought him back the next dzy Since those days of hischiMshy

bood Msgr Silvia observeamp-l Turn to Page Eighteen

Continued fronmiddot Page Three

the late Tobias and Ann Lynch ]Burke Mr Burke was born in Newport Tipperary Ireland and his speech bears witness to the o-it and lilt of his birthshyplce He is married te Catbshyerine Lowney Burke and the couple lives next to the Chanshycery

DI1 Davia Costa Dr Costa son of David CosU

and Julia Rodrigues is the husshyband of Louella Somerday and fther of five children A dentshyist in NeJ Bedford he is active ir ceo and in St Vincent ~e

Pml work on a parochial and al(l level He has been zealoUJ ir- many important phases ~

perish aetivity in Immaculate Conception Parish in New BedshyforC He was recipient of the Diocesan Marian Award in Deshycember

itpJlin 15 TIle awards Jill be presenteCl

at St Marys Cathedral Fa]] River on lIlonday evening April 15 at 8 PM At toot timeuro there will be the investi shyture of two lI-ionsignori the awarding of Papal Knight 03 SZ Gregory honors to nine ~sect- oeesan laymen and the Pro EecIesia et Pontipoundlce award kJ mother Pierre Marie adminisshytlato of St Annes Hospital IE Fall River~

Join Federation IIALEIGH (NC)-Forty ()(f thfl

matewide Raleigh dioceses 14~

tlriests have formed the North iCaFolina Priests Associatioil which will affiliate with a Emshy

ticmal federation DOW beiJl~

formed

May the Joy and Pomise 01- Easter

uplift your spirit and gladden

your hean

FROM THE OFRCEIIS AND PERSONfJB Of

qkJM~ERCHANTS CIa1iotuLe BANK

IN NEW BEDFORD

SOUTH BANK-Cove St at Iodney French Boulevard WEST BANK-Kempton Street at Mill Stret

LUNDS CORNER BANK-Acushnet Ave rear Lunds Comer DARTMOUTH BANK-Dartmouth Street near Rockdale Ave NORTH BANK-Acushnet Avbull at Coffin Ave

CENTER BANK-Purchase and William Sts priests in the San Antonio arcl1shy Next pastor was the Rev Mass He used to stay overnight tiiocese Manuel A da Silva wt() oom- at our hOuse ald JlG ~tbeI

-

18 Tti~ ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1969 CatecheticsWeek Set at StonehillDioce$clm ~j[llIlde[lj)fl5 Join Nal-gonGI Some 400 priests religious and laymen are expected to at shyMculrraurru U A$~ssinatBon tend a catechetics institute b be held Monday Aug 5 throughOf Dr Mriin luther KilnS Saturday Aug 10 at Stonehill College Diocesan schools shared i~ national mourning at the Sister Mary Francille CSJ

~8sassination of Dr Martin Luther King with special theology professor at Regis ColshyMasses or prayers offered in every school At Cassidy High lege will direct the institute in Taunton Rev John Moore chaplain celebrated a Mass and speakers will include Rev

Frederick Moriarty SJ Revfor the repose of the soul Cha~les E Cook Rev James F(l)f the Negro leader and rently hplds first place in the Hawker Sister Florence -MishyNotre Dame math league chels OLVM Gerard Potte~

tlie chapel by students in a demy Fairhaven have been study periods were spent in Girls at Sacred Hearts Acashy

bauoi and Mrs Helen Jacobs With the theme Making Alllvigil for peace working on a project to bring

Christian Youth Movement Easter cheer to patients at St Things New institute sessiono will discuss Scripture catechetshymembers at Jesus-Mary Aca- Lukes Hospital New Bedford ical techniques use of filmsdemy Fall River heard the New Under supervision of Sister Jushywith adolescents other visualFolk a group of singing Holy lie Louise SSCC theyve ~een aids parent education teamCross seminarians Their appear- making tray favors including teaching and creative dramaticsance was arranged under t~e decorative placemats and napkin

Further information is avail shydirection of Mofher John Scarry holders for adults and flowered able from Stonehill CollegeJRJM Jollipops chicky surprises and North Easton 02356Also at JMA its French Week bunny hats for childern

The observance- began Sunday Science Fair Winners when French Club members Jeanne Phenix Yvette Berthi- Holy Family had four winshy Charities AppeaI aume and Susan Cournoyer took ners at the annual New Bedford Continued from Page Three part in a play sponsored by the Science fair In the senior division

Community Fund CampaignPrevost French Club Les Fem- James Berry and John Thomas president Board of Managers mes Parlent Trop Throughout of the New Bedford school were of Boston Dispensary and vice

the week too there have middotbeen cited fo~ earth science and phy- the Diocesan cheerleading tour- will combine with the seniors president of USOseveral skits prepared by mem- sics proJects respectively while t tl h ld t F h th bZbers in the junior division both Pa- namen recen yea ee an Lor e occasIOn SInce oth He has been the recipient of

or effort at Prevost was tricia Downey and SharonSmola High but sports arent all that cltsses of the academy are small honorary degrees from Holy MaJ matter at the TauntoJl girls due to the fact that the high Cross College Tufts University

e Sunday program Whlch ln- were recognized for work in the h f h d I ld f b sc 001 Break ast lunc an schoo IS being phased out Suffolk University Bradford -luded In addItIon to the play fle 0 iology M formal dinner pace settmgs The Junipero Club of Holy Durfee College of Technology~veral talks by promInent any students won honors at h M h I I I were recently on display at the Family High recently sponsored of Fall Rivet and Lowell Techshy

I remiddotnch cItIzens a French song- t e assac usetts RegIOn S F h school library and members of a talk on drug addiction for jun- nological Institute ~t and a motion picture Clence alr eld in Fall Rlver They included Christine Four- the Mothers Auxiliary were on iors and seniors The talk was Bishop to AddJess Meeting

UN French Club nier Dominican Academy and hand to answer etiquette ques- given by two brothers one an Most Rev James L ConnollyAt Coyle the French Club di- Diane Desmarais Mt St Mary tions from the students ex-addict the other director of Bishop of Fall River will speak

Ilected by Brother Hugh McCabe Academy both Fall River Both And the Coyle Fathers Club Marathon House a center for to the priests parish trusteesIOeCently elected officers After girls were recogiIized by the held its annual Father-Son Com treatment of addicts located in chairmen of the Catholic Charishy8le votes were tallied however Southeastern District of the Mas- munion breakfast at the school Coventry RIo ties Appeal and the invited lays our man at Coyle it looked sachuse~ts Dental Society bull with Robert Cahill ofthe Rhode CongratuIcitions go to Joseph gue9ts of the 111 diocesan if ~embers were voting for Debra Lay Dominican Aca- Island Food and Drug Commis Abraham of St Anthony High parishes bull UN delegation The presidents demy received a savings bond sion as guest speaker He dis- for meriting runner-up position Roland A Lafrance 1968 ApshyliPot wa~ captured he reports from the Bristol South Distriet cussed harmful effects of various iil the state finals of the annual peal lay chairman will also adshy a Polish fellow Cbarles Ozug Medical Auxiliary arid Michael drugs American Legion olatorical con- dress the 800 expected to attend lames OBrien a true Irishman Zito Bishop Feehan High At~middot The Catholic Students Mis- test - the opening meeting of the won the vice-presidential spot tleboro was awarded a plaque sion CrUsade at Stang H~gh has In club~ews at~HA the Senshy campaign for funds for the 30 while the treasurers job was by the Womens Auxil1ary to the taken as a special project this ior Science Club will conduct agencies of the Catholic Chadshy~warded to Jorge Matesanz -a Mass Veterinary ASsn month of April the collection of a farewell meeting for seniors ties Appeal

BASKETBALL PLAYERS On basketball team at Connolly High Fall River are from left Tim Duffy Tom Kroger John Long Joe Kelly Greg Sullivan Mike Manning

~~dent of Spanisll extraction Winners in the division of donated medical supplies and this ~month and members will Only Paul Bor9ue the secretary earlhscience Were John Dias eyeglasses for deprived Peoples visit an encephalitis clinic in I ~anaged to make the scene for Thomas Burk~ anciRobei-tClou~ of the world Supplies collected Freetown in May The Stamp France tier FeehahMicIlael Cote Pre illbe forwarded to the Cathi- and Coin Clubis planning a pubshy

At Bishop Stang iil North vost and Elizabeth Lavoi~ Do- olic Missions Medical Bureau for lie exhibition of members col- Dartmouth the math team led minican shipment iections in May imd the Chess by high scorer Lawrence l3yrnes Awards in math and engineer- Upco~ing at S~A Fairhaven Club has undergone reorganiza- placed secon~in a reeentBqs- ing went to Carol Vasconcellos is the aruiual senior prom which tion election of officers inshyflon public schools math meet Mt St Mary Madeleine Delisl~ wilL be held in the Colonial cluding Edward Norman presishyThe Stang team paced by the and Vivian Blais and Michael R60m of Whites restaurant in dent Daniel Brule vice-presi- shyeo-sIstent good work of George Zito Feehan Genevieve Pappas Westport from 8 to midnight dent Diane Lizotte secretary Oliver and EIleen Keavy cur- and Debra Lay Dominican Joan Friday night May 24 Juniors TuniorProm

Basile Feehan Amato Polselli The Holy Family Junior Prom Prevost and Sharon Woycie- Board ofmiddot Trustees isslated for Friday night AprilCentennialmiddot chowski Mt St Mary were 26 at Kennedy Center The prom

Continued from Page Seventeen cited To Study Changes will last from 8 to 11 and will Chemistry winners included have Carousel as its themebroad smile on his face-many Jane Arruda Anne Lewis De- WASHINGTON (NC) - The Mlisic will be by the Escorts

other families have arrived from nise Michaud Elizabeth St board of trustees of the Catho- And the Holy Family debatePltlrtugua1 A man d Diane Lamontagne lic University of America in team tied for first place in the Our Lady of Mt Carmel par- Christine Fournier Dominican Washington D C will meet Narry League with Cassidy A ~h was detached from St Johns Anne Sullivan and Pamela Can- Sunday April 21 in St Louis playoff will be held As of now as the Portuguese population dee Feehan Marilyn Riley and to consider a wide range of rec- Cassidys debate reco~d is 12 grew Then Our Lady of the Ann-Marie Charrette Sacred ommended changes resulting wins out of 14 debatesjrnmaculate Conception parish Hearts Fall River Irene Caron from a year-long study of the was erected to care for families Cassidy Marilyn Bentley Mt pontifical university by a comshyi Portuguese descent living in mitteee headed by Dr Carroll ~e North End of New Bedford St Mary Hochwalt

In the field of physics Alan middotRAMBLERToday St John the Baptist White Prevost Michelle Paquet The meeting will be held in ehurch has about 4000 parishshy SHA Fall River JamesReid Jrconjunction witll the Spring Americas Economy King ioners Our numbers started Prevost Mary Soans Jane Mc meeting of the National Confershy Fnr the Best Deal Come To dropping about seven years ago Donald and Martba Nugent yent ence of Catholic Bishops Broadway Ramblerasgr Silvia explains He feels St Mary The trustees are expected 10 INC part of the drop in membership Representatives from Diocesan name a new 30-man board meet 768 BROADWAYis due to a number of families schools to the Mass State Sci- with faculty representatives for RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 131moving outside the parish )ounshy ence Fair will include Michael the first time in histoi-y and CHARLES J DUMAIS Presdarles Intermarriages with othshy lito Amato Polselli Debra Lay discuss the search for a new er nationalities account for still Madeleine Delisle Jane Arruda university rector to replacemore losses Anne Lewis Father J~dhn P Whalen ~ho ~III11I11I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I11I1I1HIUIIIIIIIlIIlilllllllllllfllHlIilttmmIllIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllllnIlIllIllHIIIIIIIIIJ111~ However the Mother Church Denise Michaud Alan White was naine last October to a ef the Portuguese is not fading Michelle Paquet Elizabeth St one-year term as acting rector E WEEKEND SPECIAL sect away AmandSharon Woyciechowski A new school was built in New Projector

f957 It is expensive Msgr Silvia admits but I felt we needed it

St Anthony High in New Bedshyford is rejoicing over acquisi shytion of a movie projector as a

Parish gtrganizations are active gimiddotft from the alumni association and individual parishioners are willjng to give of their time

Presentation to principal Sister Lucille Champagne was made

and effort Perking

to keep the parish by Mrs Josephine Lafleur sociation president

asshy

Now they are getting read7 Cassidy-Coyle cheerleaders Jor a 100th anniversary captured third pillce v9Phy iil

_

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Westport Real Doric-Horse lHE ANCHOR-DIoeIee r bull I AJu n

Case Somerset Favorites In Narry Diamond League

Case High of Swansea and Somerset are pre-season ehoices in this seasons Narragansett League baseball race but the club th8lt will bear watching is Westport TIne darkshyhorse Villagers may have a few surprises for Narry foes Another small area school

with a respectable 8-6 recordthat potentially has a shot Only one member of that at a league championship is squad Calvin Hopkinson will Norton of the Tri-Valley not be playing for the Villagers Conference Coach Ed Bibeau this Spring With the rest of the has most of last Deasons Central club ready to go - watch Jlor Village regulars Westport to make its presence in the fold ready lmown to challenge the Among fuose returning are perennial Paul Eastwood an Russ Picard favori1es If 0 T two of the better performers in Narry honors the circuit a year ago Eastwood amp1i1 at Norton led the team in hitting with a (C 0 a c h Peter highly respectable 360 averagem[l ~ek has pitched and played the infield G3ven returning Picard like Eastwood 15 also ~nnen for versatile An outfielder by trade ~theY chamshy he also takes his turn on the ii~~JWhip bid Peter mound for Coach Bibeaus nine Weo~port Bartek Carl Zajac and Jeff Hague tmIshed the 1961 eampaign ill round out Bibeaus four-man ~ place in tbe NalT7 loop pitching staff

Norton Bids for Tri-Valley Crown jfOO task of handling the but in thin scholastic year of

~tJ of this quartet will fall athletic surprises it may not be Gpoundl ~e shoulders of either Ron as big as some thinllt ~JmOi) or Manny Cabral both

A second place finisher inexperienced receivers ConnOlll 1967 the Norton Lancers haveexcel1B not only defensively their sights on the Tri-Valleybut likewise with the bat He Conference crown The clubsbit at a 333middot clip last Spring one-two hitters last campaignJohn Souza and Mike Andras have departed from the Norton th better than 300 hitters baseball scene but the teamqaln will be out to join the one-two pitching punch is reshyleague leaders in batting prowshyturning Juniors Ken Allen aess They should put a wallop left-hander who had a perfectin Westports oHensive attaCK 7-0 record last Spring and ArtIf Coach Bibeaus boys can dushyBouchard will be relied uponplicate their Performances of a heavily to bring the league flagJellr ago Offensively and biB to Norton Coach Bartek alSobig four comes through on middottbe hopes to get some help in middotthemound Westport may realize a the pitching departmentmiddot fromlong awaited Narry championshyFred Rego Bill Gorczyca andEip dream Admittedly if Ie Steve Nichols bull bie word in ~~rts_tuture

~ ~ bull I

OpeUp With~on-League Co~esttsmiddot Other returnees incl~ Capshy develop rapidlymiddot defensively if

tain Mike Wynnn Greg Croff they are to regain the leagues BOb Adams Tim McEndy and divisional crown - whicb flbeymiddot Paul Hassie Wynn a senior lost to HoWston last Spring middotmiddot will be starting his third season and gain a shot at the Trl shyill left field with Cruffstarting V~ey Conference ebampionshyhis second campaign in center ship Many area clubs openThey will be joIned by Wynns their campaign this week with brother Ricky in right fied non-league games highlighting

The infield win be anchored the action League competition by Adams at second base and will commence for the most Hassle at short Newcomers part next week Richy Silvia and George Macshy Mother Nature has done her Arthur are presently battling it job this Spring Baseball coaches out for the third base job and throughout -the diocese admit Lorrie Adams also a first-year that this is the best Spring they man appears to have the inside have had to prepare flbeir track on first base charges in many a year Weather

cannot be blamed for a slowMcEndy who has been the start this time around All areLancers starting catcher since eagerly awaiting the umpireshis Freshman year is starting first call to play ballhIs third campaign behiJd the

plate Bartek expects McEndy to hold the inexperienced inshy New School System field together

The Lancers will have to imshy In German State prove upon their hitting and DUSSELDORF (NC) - The

North Rhine-Westphalia state parliament middothas approved aCanadian Prelates change in the states school sysshytem that probably will meanEstablish Council the end of many denominational

OTTAWA (NC)-The Catho-shy schools Hc bishops of Canada have esshy By an overwhelming majorshytablished a 12-member Fiscal ity the parliament voted to Affairs Council composed of change the state constitution and clergy Religious and laymen establish the nondenominational who will advise the Church on Christian school in which reli shyfinanclal matters gious training is given by Cathshy

Among the areas which are olic and Protestant instructors receiving ini~ial attention of the in the same school as the patshycommittee is the question of tern for state-supported schools whether the Church should be from the fifth through the nint subject to government taxation grades and if so what form of taxation In the past the state has supshywould be equitable to churches ported Illeparate Catholic and government and other taxshy Pro tell tan t denominational payen Khoola

-~) PASSION PLAY Today Christians hold the Solemn Observance of the Lords Supper

It is commemorated ina PMsion Play at Prevost High School Fall River by David Poisshyson as Christ Paul Martel left 8$ St John and Paul Bouampquet as St Peter

DominicGlIsmiddot Rent ApGrt~~rit in Inner -Cimiddottimiddot middot

Want t~ Get Closer to I Agony of the Worl~middot WASHINGTON (NC)middot Pift his experience in the neig~lgtorshy ruary 1966 because theJ

Dominican priests-each doing hood is invaluable in helping wanted to get closer to the bis own thing-are living middotin an both prisoners and parolees He agony of the world While nol apartment in the inner ~ cd said the insight he gains into eliminating the academic life Washington here they come from ancl h~w they felt that living in the inlleJ The five run the gamut from they view life aids him In mv city would be as important bull

a professor of moral theology at ing them intelligent advice and learning experience as academic the Don)inican House ofStucUeII 8ssis~nCe study to a prison chaplain a1 the Diamp- Father William Kane is middotthemiddotNeighborhOoclll[aatrict of Columbia Jail Ibey neighborhood man of the have in common1heiy addresa A Pr~ceton graduate ~itl1 apartment Hemiddotworks with minshyand a desire to understand and doctorates from Harvard aJgt4 isters inmiddot the area in establishing alleviate the problems ~ livlnc OxfCrd Father Albert Brodershy youth programs and fightina I in a poor Urban community ick teaches Constitutional LalV for better housing and fail

Father TbomasHea~ middotttie at the catholic University Law rent laws His motive is to givemoral theology professor aDd School the people in the community aD author of a reCent bOOkmiddotID awareness of their own dignitymiddotBe and Father Heath startedFaee of An~sh is 0Il 1be to affirm the fact that it is athe apartment project in Feb-bOard of direCtors of the Pe0shy ood place to live ples Center a house soon to be

the rehabilitationopened for Criticizes Usury of alcoholics He also meets

MEXICO CITY (NC)-Mexshy5 50 01- a SYSTEMATIC wimiddotth ~culties of Wasbingtcm

icc CityS Jose Cardinal Garibiseminaries to discuss policyshy bull 10 year SAViNGSRivera urged bankers meetingmaking and apostolic activity MONTHLY DEPOSITSat the National Bankers Conshy

Legal Aid Office vention in Guadalajara to comshy 5 00 01- a INVESTMENT bat usury and work closely bull 10 year SAVINGS

Father Joseph Cooney a NOTICE ACCOUNTSwith the government to proshylawye~ who has worked 011

voter registration in the South mote the social welfare of all II REGULAR4 5001 the Mexican people bull 10 Jflar SAVINGSand took an active part in dvil

rights activities such lIS

~lma march is DOW admin~ Bass Rivertering a legal aid office in the CENTERneighborhood of the Dominishy Savings Bank

cans apartment Volunteer law Paint and Wallpaperstudents from the Catholic Uni- Bank 8y Man I

versity of Ameiica assist him Dupont Paint

We Pay The Postage

IJcor Middle St

A third member of the group m this program 4iiii 422 Acush Ave bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA Fat her Raymond MalonSOl1 ~ New Bedford bull SOUTH VARMOUTH 4raquo HYANNISserves as the Catholic chapiain bull PARKINGmiddot

bull DENNIS PORT bull OSTtRVILLEatmiddot the D C jail A late vocashy Rear of Storetion Father Malonson has been ordained only two years middot Father Malonsoll feels U1at

LEVESQILIES OFFla E~lnPMENTNow Many Wear Wood Metal Desks and ChairsFALSE TEETH

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dentures sllp sllde or loosen Just sprinkle a llttle FASTEETH on your 187 SHAWMUT STREET bull NEW BEDFORD MASS

middot plates FASTEElH holds dentures firmer You eat better feel more PO Box 2062 - Hervey L Levesque

middot -wont sour Helps check plate odor comfortable FASTEETH Is alkaline

Dentures that fit are lIlSSentlai to Telephone 993middot1264middot health See your dentist regularly Get FASTEETB at all drUB counten ___ _ _____11_0__-D-tcl----4

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs April 11 1968

PhySDCOUi) l1JJ Uges litUBgy C~[filges

~n Last RStes RED BANK (NC) A

~atholic physician called for revision of the liturgical $orm of the Anointing of the Sick cluring a discussion on The Chaplains Role With the Dying Patient at Riverview Hospital here in New Jersey

Dr George J Sheehan an alumnus of Manhattan College and a founder of Christian Brothers Academy in nearby lLincroft was one of three apeakers at the symposium coshyaponsored by the hospital and Ute 1 Redmiddot Bank Council of

ilhurches Citing obvious failures by

both physician and clergyman iin helping the dying patient and bis family Dr Sheehan sugshygested members of the family Ghare inmiddot a ceremony which would exchange feelings of llove and hope between them ElDd the dying person

Dr ~heehan observed that while inadequacy in the face of death has been in the past apparent to the Protestant criergyman it is now also felt by Catholic priests

They findmiddot he said the La~t Sacrament in its present form Ii a consolation only to those with the strong faith of a Breton iiteasant-a kind of faith they e seeing less and l~ss-

Appropriate Theology He also said while the develshy

pment of a Common Christian itervice parlakirtg of the same llodividual familymiddot and commu~

Ility significance as Bap~i8ai -dMarriage would be a giant p in middotheiping people to a middotbappy death iit would remain IDol theologians to present- a relshy

qwant lmd acceptable image of mail in this time and this place ilnd to develop an appropriate eology of death heaven ~nd bell in order to make a signifi- sant change in our life style

lOd therefore in our approach to death

Other panelistsmiddot were the Rev Seorge Fitzgeraid a Presbyteshyaan minister middotand middotchaplain at Princeton Hospiital arid Mn Ruth Snyder a nurse of the lIiverview Hospital staffmiddot

POSTER CHILD LEADS WAY Joey BeIge 8 of Syraeuse NY leads themiddot way down a White House lttairway in the company ofthe Fi~st t-adymiddotMrsLyndon B Johnson

and Mrs Muriel Humphrey wife ofthe Vice-President Joeymiddotis this years poster child of

the National Association for Retarded Children H~ ismiddot thesQn ofMt and Mrs Robert Beige middotmembersmiddotOf St Vincent de Paul parish in Syracuse whos-e ot-herfive children SlHshy

round their Uttle broth~r wil1hmiddot the love and care to h~lp him livea full and happymiddot life

Penn See Studies Poverty Pmiddotrogram HARISBlJRq (NC)--Coadju- is being made to see ho)Vtbe to coordinate and channel our

tor Bishop Joseph T Daley diocese canmiddot best use its re-middot efforts in the fieldmiddot vicar general- of the Harrisburg sources to alleviate poverty Bishop Daley said it ismiddot im- diocese calledmiddot on the nearly problems middotperative that all our people 50000 Catholics in the area to He alsomiddot said Wemiddot contem- knoW and understand the probshy

acquaint th~mselves with 10- middotplatemiddot the early middotestablishment of middotIem of middotracism and the funda- calracfal and poverty problems amiddotmiddot diocesanmiddot human relations mental moral injustices which

In a lettermiddot read at aU Masses commission middotto serve asmiddot a liaison middotare at the root of the deplorable BishopDlIleT said middotthat a study with all people Collcerned and conditions in our own area

Urges Hospitals Re~ognie Unio~s

CLEVELAND (NC) - AI layshymens group here has asked the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hospitals to declare its willingshyness to recognize labor unions as collective bargaining agents for hospitals employes

lNle request came in a letter from William A caldwell chainnan of the eurolevellllnd Conference of Laymen to Sister ~ry Collette of Hamilton Ohio president of the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hosplshytala during a one-day meeting here of the Ohio Hospital Assoshyciation convention

The laymens group said such a statement would promote the human dignity of hospital emshyployes in real and immediate ways serve the common good of our communities and inshycrease the understandingmiddot of Catholic teaching by all the citishyzens of Ohio

The letter pointed out that the National Catholic Hospital Association 1 a s t November called on Catholic hospitals tiraquo be guided by the social teachshyings of the Church and to deal with unions that employecfgt choose

Discuss ~iot Report On Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC) - Beginshyning Sunday April 14 the Catholic Hour will present over the NBCmiddot network a three-part series The Climate of Change

Evolution or Revolution foshycusing on three areas of social and religioUs concern today today

~gr Rop~rt Fox cOordinashytor of Spanish community 00shy

middot lion in the New York arclidioshymiddoteese will discuss The Riot centommissi~ middotReport Amiddot Chrisshy

tiati Response April 14 Msgr Ivan D Illich of the Intereushy-tural Center 01 Language and D middotoe u men tat 1 on CuershyDavaca Mexf~o win be intershyviewed Aprjl 21 and Father Francois Houtart Belgian 00shyciologist will be interviewed Apiil 28

The National Council of Cathshy oUc Men producer of the OathshyoUe Hour reconunendseheckshymiddoting local newspaper programa for broadca9t time in particushymiddotRar areas

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YOUTH CARES FOR AGE Retired Sisters are tenderlycared for at chair while Sister Mary Agnes looks on Center Sister Agnes Maureea Mmiddott St Mary Convent Fall River Left Sister Agnes Maureen seniormiddot wheels SisterMary Jer~me anQright Sister JohnCatberine bringgdri_ infirmarian points out magazine article to Sister Mary Lig~~ri inwheel to Sister Mary Ursulamiddot Both infirmarians are licensed practical nurses

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Cqrdinal Roy Raps Apathy

MEXICO CITY (NC)~MaushyJOice Cardinal Roymiddot of Quebee _ a visit here as ehairman of the Pontifical Commission for World Justice and Peace said Christian teachings condemn violence in solving social probshylems but also condemn themiddot false prudence that lacks the eourage to make needed reshyforms

The prelate who has been touring Latin America for sevshyeral weeks said he was 1mshypressed by the number of Cathshy

olic organizations and institushytutions already applying Pope Paul VIs encyclical The Deshyvelopment of Peoples in their Jespective countries

But he added Latin Amerishyearn still have to assume fully their responsibility in workingtowards economic balance andmiddot bull just social order 80 every cit shyizen can promote his own welshyfare in a climate of freedom and common good

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Comes KindIYcimiddotmiddotSislesmiddot 0 Mercy AmiddotI Fall River Comiddotnventmiddot

By Patricia McGowan

~When thou wast younger thou didstmiddot gird thyself anddidst walk where thou Frouldst But when thou shalt be old thou shalt stretch forth thy handsmiddot arid another shall gird thee and lead thee whither thou wouldst not In its description of the almost universal lot of age this is one of the most poignantpassages in Scriptur~ But age comes kindly f~r Sisters Although they are not exshyemptmiddot from its physical and mental ravages they need not fear being forsaken byfriends or being left alone the

fanulymiddot Jhe famllylast of a that is a religious community cherishes its older members and provision is made for Sisters to pass their last years surrounded by tender care

Among havens for older Sisters is the infirmary at Mt St Mary Conventmiddot Fall River The Sisters who have spent most of their religious life in the Fail River Diocese come here for their laBtyears exshypliliried Sister Agnes Maureen

The cardinal added at emiddot pretB8 RSMmiddotmiddot senior iniirmarian at eonference in the headquarten the Mount Her domain proshyf the Mexican Social Secreta- vides eh~rf11~ccQmmodations riat that national efforts for de- for 10 Sisters Each has her ownmiddot elopment do not eliminate the room andthere is II kitchenette aeed ~forfoleignaid where those ablE lobe up and

The Pontifieal commisSion Cardinal Roy indicated ill enshyaged in persuading rich counshytries to devote at least one per eent of their groSs national product to assist poor eountries

Archdiocese Adopts Project Equality

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing notified the priests lIeIlate of the Boston archdiocese of plans 10 adopt Project Equality a program designed to use purchasing power of church institutions to make firms supplying goods and 8elVices wipe out diICriminashy birislM Placticeamp

e~ut ~n enjoy their meals ~gethermiddot

The ~nfirmaryis but II few stepis from the Mount chapel wher~ the retired Sisters spend hours a day in prayer for comshymunity members still in the active lPostolate Also claiming time for Sisters whose eyesight permits are needlework ana erooheting projects

Always DraWlll Cheerful and dedicated Sister

Agnes Maureen who has I Deen at the infirmary six years is aided by Sister John Catherine who has served the aged Sisters two years A laywoman takes the night shift in the infirmary ensuring the Sisters round the clock care Bothmiddot Sister infirmashy

rians are licensed practical nurses who received their trainshyI g to L d f F tma Hosn a ur a y 0 a I shypital in the Providence Diocese

When I entered religion I hoped to be an infirmarian

said SIster Agnes Maureen I whas alwdays drawn to work for t e age

Some people think we havent got a nursing apostolate she added but we need nurses desshyperately Right now we have nine Sisters taking care of inshyfirmaries in our province

Among Sisters now at the Mount infirmary are Sister

Mary Agnes who celebrated her diamond jubilee last DeshyceJl)ber and most of wbose r~lishygious life was spent in New Bedford and middotNorth Attleboro schools and Sister Mary Lishy

gu()ri whomiddot f9r 49 yearl taught sixth graders at st Patricks School Fall River

HShe looks out her window at St Patricks said Sister Agnes Maureen and she says Theres home

The Sisters are welcoming the arrival of Spring and warm days said the infirmarian It means they can enjoy their sunporch sit in the Mounts garden and go for occasional car rides Of course they have many visitors she said Other Sisters in the house come to see them and so do Sisters from the convents where they forshymerly lived

Yes age comes kindly for Sisters Not Hke the old lady overheard in a downtown groshy

eery confiding to a chance fellow-customer her discovery of a bargain in frozen food I live alone you know and 1 get

three big servings from a packshyage--and only 29 cents

N 0 Sister lives alone

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~~tplic Newspaper Wins Press Awards

NEW ORLEANS (NC) -The eJarion Herald middotarchdiocesa middotnewspaper won eight awards iii the annual competition of the

N~W Or)eans Press Club ~ competition included daily and

weekly newspapers wire serVshyices and television stations

Millard F Everett editor won first place in two categories - editorial and best religioWl story This marks the first time in five years of competition that the Clarion has taken the top award for best religious story Staff members of the paper also took three second and three third place awards

----------------------------

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFon River-Thurs Apr 11 1968

CathoJi~ ll]wnDv~JSityPltDcopy~regii~copyJ~

IPlanLUBffil AmeFicon ~1]~regregO WASHINGTON (NC) - A ops and l~aders of several South

jJroup of pr-ofessors from Cathshy American governments sHe University of America hope The Washington center comshyS n~w technical middotinstituteat the middotprises -ll group of professorsshy~tholic University of Gu~Washy mostly members of the CU caulI Ecuador may mark the llchool of middoted ucation-whomiddot are ltJPening of an international edshy specialists ineclUcationfordeshyvcation bridgetoLatin America Velopment Director of the proshy

The institute will be inaugurshy ject is Dr Jose A Baquero ated early this month as 11 middotcoshy WM has been commuting b~shy1)eIativeventure by the Center meen Washingtonand his nashylor Educational Research fa middottive Ecuador dming the -cmrent QuitoEcuadorand the Center school year lor Community Developmenhmd This is not an Ecuadorian Servioe at Catholic University project it is an internatienal bere It has the support 01 Vashy projed a resealclFaction proshykanofficials Ecuadorianbislshy gram between North and South

America Dr Baquero said middothereBC middotto Recruit laquorNe had to start middotsomewhere The natural plaoe 10 begin wasNegro St~1ent5 middot-the Qlace Where weaould get

CHESTNUT HILL (NC) shy the most facilitiesThisproject iesuit-eper-ated Boston College God willing if successful will bere has made available $100shy move throughout Latin AmershyGtOO fora talent search -progr1m ica We already have contracts to recruit Negro stJdents frem with interestedJeaders in Sao disadvantagedurbanareas middotof Paulo BTazil Bogota Colombia tlhecountry mainly in Greater and Lima Peru Boston Msgr Eugene Kevane direcshy

Father Michael P Walsh SJ tor of the Center for Communitypresident caUed for support off Development andServleedaimshyiIIe entirestudent body facshy ed iB number of Latin American Illlty and administration of EQsshy Church and government officialS Qon College to make the ~mshy have middotexpressed interest in thecram a success projectand a belid it may beshy

Since the program was starteJ come a model of assistance middottoIJeveral weeks ago some 50 ~shy lI3derdeveloped poundOuntrieslltIicatiopshave beenreceiltvelll He said ArcnbishGp Romolofrom students in ghetto areas Carooni apostolic nuncio 10lot -entrance middotin next Septemshy

~1u told him heilOllSiders theWltll freshman -class pmject of great importance andThere have a1w~ys beellU M~S a similhlr middotinstitute willIlegro students enrolled at B4tsshybe established at the Pontificalton College oUicials said ~t University in Limatheir Dumber is ~ot ~own 00shy

0tberhigh-ranking churchshyaYSe race is not shown 8ll1 middotmen who lthave endorsed theapplications The Collegemiddotacceptll project include MsgrLuigi Lishyattdents of all faiths gutti the Holy Sees PermanentN~t SeptemberNegro lrtlllshy

1Gbserver at the Food and Agrishy

bullnts with the necessary ~uaUshy6eations will be admitted n8 culture Organization of the 1Ilual while middotsome 25 will ge United Nations and Archbishop admitted under the talent Ceasar Antonio Mosquera fif

lt4IeQIChprogram The number is Guayaquil president of theEcshybeing limited for thegood af iliad-orlan Bishops Conference

GOLDEN JUBILEE Sisshyter Rose Alma Reid CSC (Sjltte1 M Flora) will mark herg-olden i llbilee of religious professjon on Sunday April 21 at Sacred Heart Convent New Bedford A Mass of thanksgi~rjng will be offered at 1130 Sunchw morning at Sacred Head Church and a reception will be held in the parish hall ITom2 to 4 th~t

afternoon Friends and forshymer pupils are invited t01l~

tend

So Curolina Bishop A-sksPettce $upport

CHARLESTON (NC)- Bishshymiddotop Ernest Lmiddot Unterkoefier of Charleston has called for the middotfull support ofall Americans of President Lyndon middotlB Johnshysons efforts to secure peace in middotVietnam

Tbe South ltCarolina Bishop said that the Presidents -peace ini tiati yes demonstrate that he is a gtarson who -has ever been conscious of the grave responsishybility 01 his ofillce and that his judgements have been measured ~y the critical threats to the securi~y and free action ofthe United States

ICampus Comediansl

R~JlJ~stforBirh ControJ 1nlcrmation lndBGSYlrncrGti(C~e

DAYTON (NC)-A Univershysity of Dayton chaplain said he suspected campuscomediami for 1b~ conJroversyaroused bY a request for availability of birth corttol information and materials In campus by theunishyversity stmiddotudent congress

Father Urban Rupp SM universi~y co-chaplain wrote in the chaplain s bulletin the alshymost unanimous aetion fthe student gfvernment group middotwas an idio~yncratic caper in the natureo Ii ttle childrenpl~ying

house He indicated he fouud it difshy

ficult to take the Pfoposa1 serishyomlY

Now of COUrse I middotcowd be taking this all -wrong be said

Perhaps it was intended 00 bn serious In that case I woUld be tempted to thinktheemershygency is not just immediateshyit is really one generation too late

This was taken asa reference to student efforts to pwih through the resolution orbirth control as an emergency -meashysure

That failed but a few days later the student middotcongressvo~ 29 tol to seeka change in llJllshyversUy Wlicy that would -pershymit the introductionof birth 1Ontrol selYiees in thestudem health center for married eQUoshy~les and Ulose llQOD _ ~arriedmiddot

the young Negroes whowiUbe ~pted oUiciaI said

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PATRIARCH The middotnewily elected head of the Syriac Oatholic Church Patriarch Hgtenys Antoine Hayek of Anshy~och was enthroned recentshy1w in Beirut Lebanon In this post hesucceds the late P-ashykiarch Ignace Cardinal TapshylPouni NC Photo

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In ~ glory of His Resurrection may be reborn man~

amiring hopes and CleSires _ ~ce

HAPPY EASTER THE OFFICERS DIRiEc1r~ AND STAFfshy

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THE ANCHO~-Trappists Elect Mother Church of Nation8 PortlglleSe 17 Thurs April 11 1968

Youngest Abbot P-epares fOI- Cenlellilial Celebration At Gethsenloni Dy Patida F r-u nis

GETHSEMANI (NC) The youngest abbot in the history of the monastery of Our Lady of Gethsemani was formally blessed (March ~l) by Archbishop Thomas J McDon~

ough 0pound Louisville Father M Flavian Burns

OCSO 36 ilgt the seventh ab~

bot in the 120-year history of the monastery He was elected by members of the community Inst January to succeed Abbot M James Fox OCSO

Father Flavian described bis position as en administrator whose main job il) service to others within the community He said his most important function it3 to hold plivate spiritual conversations with other monks and to handle the lillM)nasterys relations with the ~Atside world

Thcilt are some 120 monks at ~ethsemani abbey a decline from past years Abbot Burns cCrlbllltes the decline at least in prt to the attitude of the times YiJCl1 was foJJJlcrly accepted without question is now being ltI~etioned he observed

ltDontemplation Prayer

Changes have been made the IHurElY is now in English and 2Jc strict vow of silence has TiKen relaxed somewhat On an experimental basis the monks are allowed to use brief oral instructions instead of sign language as in the past

Despite the lack of radio or 1clevision Abbot Burns said the monks keep in contact through newspllpers with events in todays world The main thing ill to know what is going on in the Church and what effects our fellow hushymans according to the abbot

The life of a monk involves middotcontemplation and prayer rather than speaking up - 11 more spiritual turn according kI Abbot BUlns

A native of Jersey City N J he is a graduate of Henry SfIyder public high sehool there

Protests- Campaign Agamst Religion

NEW YORK (NC) - A new wave of terror against aU churcltgpers is now in effect in Albania an exile from that country has declored in a- letter of protest sent to the United Nations Commission on Human Rightsmiddot and~ to UN Secretary General U Thani

The protest bl Dr Rexhep KIasniqi president of the Free Albania Committee which has its headquarters here said that Albanial following a lf41oist eommunillt guideline has shut down every cltulch and mosque and has made any_kind of pubshylIc worship impossible

Thill campaign Dr Krasniqi tated is a violation of the UN Charter the Universal Declarashytion of Human Rights and of Albanias own communist conshystitutional guarantee of freedom of conscience for all

San Antonro Priests Form Association

SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Fortyshyene diocesan and religious comshymunities priests of the San Anshytonio archdiocese formed a priests association bere The priests ohose a six-member temshypora]) steering committee

One of the fiTst formal actions Gf the allsociatron was to inform Archbishop Robert E Lucey of San Antonio of the group forshymation

There are approximately 441

Parishioner d St John the Baptist Church in Nc Bedford are getting rendy for a momentoils event-the 100th anniversary of the fO~1l1dil1g of the oldest Portuguese parish in the nation The cen~en]ial celebration wi II not take place until 1971 but many things have to be done in preparation within the next three years One major project is renoshyvating the church ihelf To pay for the massive job ptrshyishioners have inaugur~teca Centennial Fund Drive to raise money for painting ~he church do extensive electrical work and buy a rew organ Estimated cost (f the regt3ir5 is $150000

Rt Rev Msgr John A Silvia pastor is honorary drve chairshyman and Frank S Jason is genshyeral chairman Other committee members include Richard GiJI1shysalves and Jesse V Santos Jr division chairmen JQseph S Vera special gifts chairman Richard L Lopes treasurer George Radcliffe director Louis S Silva assistant director Mrs Mary Lucy Soares office conshytrols and Miss Luey E Dias list supervisor

Members of the Campaign Exshyecutive Committee also include Frank M Martin ald Joseph C Motta

The history of St Johns and the history of the Portuguese people in America arc closely intertwined

It was at the end of the 18th Century that settlers began comshying from themiddot Azores to the United States TheJ were relashytively few in number nd as II

result almost lost their national identity

Near Ifood However by 1840 the trickle

of Azoreans was beginning to turn into a near Oood of imshymigrants who settled in New Bedford then a whaling and fishing center

By 1865 many Portuguese families called New Bedford home They lacked just one thing-a church of their own and a priest who spoke their language and understood their customs and traditions

Their first priest-Rev Joao Ignacio de Azevedo-anived in 1869 and on Sept 10 1871 St Johns parish was canonically established

Theremiddot were approximately 1shy000 Portuguese of Azorean deshyscent living in New Bedford at the time and the)T detelmined to build their own church A lot was purchased for $3OD8 ~ con~

siderable amount in those days and soon ground WQS broken for the new house of God

However Father de Azeedo was a mission pliest Vl~ho~moved

throughout the are~ aCministershying to his counblymen As a reshysult a new parish was establishshyed in Boston and he became its first pastor

Expandoll

Construction of St Johns WillS

continued by Rev Antonio de Mattos Freitas a native or Calshylteta St George Azores Fashyther Freitas also was responsible for the construction of a recshytory When he reUred because of ill health and returned to~ the AzoreS he was succeeded by Rev Antonio G de Silva Neves who was to serve St Johns durshying the greatest expansion Gfthe citys Portuguese colony

The first church located where a section of Morse- Twiampt Drill now stands soon ~ outgrown by its congregation and a drive began for agt new and larger church

Father Neves who served 8~j

pastor for almost 25 years saw the new church at County and Wing Streets almost coop]eted However ill health also forced bill retirement

PREPARING FOR CENTENNIAL In charge of fumd drive for hundredth anniversary of St John Baptist Church New Bedford are from left George Radclffe drive execushytive director Frank Jailon general chairman

pleted construction of the present church and rectory in three years The church which now serves the parish was solemnly blessed an4 dedicated to the worship of God by the late Bishshyop Feehan

Through the years the parshyishioners of St Johns have proved their dedication to their cliurch Now they are renewinr their dedication

Msgr Silvia notes that before the small St Johns Church was built the citys Portuguese colshyony attended Mass at St Lawshyrence Church Later they moved into what today is Crowells brt Store

Landmark Today the 11Inificent st

Johns is a landmark in New Bedford befitting its position as Mother Church of the Portu guese in the- UnFted States

MSgr Silvia a native of Pall River served at St Peters Church in Provincetown for 27 years His only other assi1shyment St John the B-aptirt Church

Ordained to the priesthood or Dec 20 1919 St Johns was the new priests first assignment He remained at the cRurch unshytil No~ember 1924 when he was transferred to Ptovinceto~

On Oct 2 1951 Msgr Silvia returned to St Johns as pzsshytor a post hemiddot still fulfills with zeal and energy

His assignmetlt to St Jobnfl parish in 1919 was not ~1sgr Sinshyvias introduotion to the New Bedford parish

As a young boy the p2stcshyrecalls his poundathers weekly trips from Fall River to New Bedford to bring back a priest

Four Families There were few Portuguese

families in Fall River in those days he says When my father arrived in Fan River there were iust four Portuguese families in the city Gradually others setshytled there

My father used to drive over in a horse and buggy to bring Il priest back tc Fall River to ll3y

degbrought him back the next dzy Since those days of hischiMshy

bood Msgr Silvia observeamp-l Turn to Page Eighteen

Continued fronmiddot Page Three

the late Tobias and Ann Lynch ]Burke Mr Burke was born in Newport Tipperary Ireland and his speech bears witness to the o-it and lilt of his birthshyplce He is married te Catbshyerine Lowney Burke and the couple lives next to the Chanshycery

DI1 Davia Costa Dr Costa son of David CosU

and Julia Rodrigues is the husshyband of Louella Somerday and fther of five children A dentshyist in NeJ Bedford he is active ir ceo and in St Vincent ~e

Pml work on a parochial and al(l level He has been zealoUJ ir- many important phases ~

perish aetivity in Immaculate Conception Parish in New BedshyforC He was recipient of the Diocesan Marian Award in Deshycember

itpJlin 15 TIle awards Jill be presenteCl

at St Marys Cathedral Fa]] River on lIlonday evening April 15 at 8 PM At toot timeuro there will be the investi shyture of two lI-ionsignori the awarding of Papal Knight 03 SZ Gregory honors to nine ~sect- oeesan laymen and the Pro EecIesia et Pontipoundlce award kJ mother Pierre Marie adminisshytlato of St Annes Hospital IE Fall River~

Join Federation IIALEIGH (NC)-Forty ()(f thfl

matewide Raleigh dioceses 14~

tlriests have formed the North iCaFolina Priests Associatioil which will affiliate with a Emshy

ticmal federation DOW beiJl~

formed

May the Joy and Pomise 01- Easter

uplift your spirit and gladden

your hean

FROM THE OFRCEIIS AND PERSONfJB Of

qkJM~ERCHANTS CIa1iotuLe BANK

IN NEW BEDFORD

SOUTH BANK-Cove St at Iodney French Boulevard WEST BANK-Kempton Street at Mill Stret

LUNDS CORNER BANK-Acushnet Ave rear Lunds Comer DARTMOUTH BANK-Dartmouth Street near Rockdale Ave NORTH BANK-Acushnet Avbull at Coffin Ave

CENTER BANK-Purchase and William Sts priests in the San Antonio arcl1shy Next pastor was the Rev Mass He used to stay overnight tiiocese Manuel A da Silva wt() oom- at our hOuse ald JlG ~tbeI

-

18 Tti~ ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1969 CatecheticsWeek Set at StonehillDioce$clm ~j[llIlde[lj)fl5 Join Nal-gonGI Some 400 priests religious and laymen are expected to at shyMculrraurru U A$~ssinatBon tend a catechetics institute b be held Monday Aug 5 throughOf Dr Mriin luther KilnS Saturday Aug 10 at Stonehill College Diocesan schools shared i~ national mourning at the Sister Mary Francille CSJ

~8sassination of Dr Martin Luther King with special theology professor at Regis ColshyMasses or prayers offered in every school At Cassidy High lege will direct the institute in Taunton Rev John Moore chaplain celebrated a Mass and speakers will include Rev

Frederick Moriarty SJ Revfor the repose of the soul Cha~les E Cook Rev James F(l)f the Negro leader and rently hplds first place in the Hawker Sister Florence -MishyNotre Dame math league chels OLVM Gerard Potte~

tlie chapel by students in a demy Fairhaven have been study periods were spent in Girls at Sacred Hearts Acashy

bauoi and Mrs Helen Jacobs With the theme Making Alllvigil for peace working on a project to bring

Christian Youth Movement Easter cheer to patients at St Things New institute sessiono will discuss Scripture catechetshymembers at Jesus-Mary Aca- Lukes Hospital New Bedford ical techniques use of filmsdemy Fall River heard the New Under supervision of Sister Jushywith adolescents other visualFolk a group of singing Holy lie Louise SSCC theyve ~een aids parent education teamCross seminarians Their appear- making tray favors including teaching and creative dramaticsance was arranged under t~e decorative placemats and napkin

Further information is avail shydirection of Mofher John Scarry holders for adults and flowered able from Stonehill CollegeJRJM Jollipops chicky surprises and North Easton 02356Also at JMA its French Week bunny hats for childern

The observance- began Sunday Science Fair Winners when French Club members Jeanne Phenix Yvette Berthi- Holy Family had four winshy Charities AppeaI aume and Susan Cournoyer took ners at the annual New Bedford Continued from Page Three part in a play sponsored by the Science fair In the senior division

Community Fund CampaignPrevost French Club Les Fem- James Berry and John Thomas president Board of Managers mes Parlent Trop Throughout of the New Bedford school were of Boston Dispensary and vice

the week too there have middotbeen cited fo~ earth science and phy- the Diocesan cheerleading tour- will combine with the seniors president of USOseveral skits prepared by mem- sics proJects respectively while t tl h ld t F h th bZbers in the junior division both Pa- namen recen yea ee an Lor e occasIOn SInce oth He has been the recipient of

or effort at Prevost was tricia Downey and SharonSmola High but sports arent all that cltsses of the academy are small honorary degrees from Holy MaJ matter at the TauntoJl girls due to the fact that the high Cross College Tufts University

e Sunday program Whlch ln- were recognized for work in the h f h d I ld f b sc 001 Break ast lunc an schoo IS being phased out Suffolk University Bradford -luded In addItIon to the play fle 0 iology M formal dinner pace settmgs The Junipero Club of Holy Durfee College of Technology~veral talks by promInent any students won honors at h M h I I I were recently on display at the Family High recently sponsored of Fall Rivet and Lowell Techshy

I remiddotnch cItIzens a French song- t e assac usetts RegIOn S F h school library and members of a talk on drug addiction for jun- nological Institute ~t and a motion picture Clence alr eld in Fall Rlver They included Christine Four- the Mothers Auxiliary were on iors and seniors The talk was Bishop to AddJess Meeting

UN French Club nier Dominican Academy and hand to answer etiquette ques- given by two brothers one an Most Rev James L ConnollyAt Coyle the French Club di- Diane Desmarais Mt St Mary tions from the students ex-addict the other director of Bishop of Fall River will speak

Ilected by Brother Hugh McCabe Academy both Fall River Both And the Coyle Fathers Club Marathon House a center for to the priests parish trusteesIOeCently elected officers After girls were recogiIized by the held its annual Father-Son Com treatment of addicts located in chairmen of the Catholic Charishy8le votes were tallied however Southeastern District of the Mas- munion breakfast at the school Coventry RIo ties Appeal and the invited lays our man at Coyle it looked sachuse~ts Dental Society bull with Robert Cahill ofthe Rhode CongratuIcitions go to Joseph gue9ts of the 111 diocesan if ~embers were voting for Debra Lay Dominican Aca- Island Food and Drug Commis Abraham of St Anthony High parishes bull UN delegation The presidents demy received a savings bond sion as guest speaker He dis- for meriting runner-up position Roland A Lafrance 1968 ApshyliPot wa~ captured he reports from the Bristol South Distriet cussed harmful effects of various iil the state finals of the annual peal lay chairman will also adshy a Polish fellow Cbarles Ozug Medical Auxiliary arid Michael drugs American Legion olatorical con- dress the 800 expected to attend lames OBrien a true Irishman Zito Bishop Feehan High At~middot The Catholic Students Mis- test - the opening meeting of the won the vice-presidential spot tleboro was awarded a plaque sion CrUsade at Stang H~gh has In club~ews at~HA the Senshy campaign for funds for the 30 while the treasurers job was by the Womens Auxil1ary to the taken as a special project this ior Science Club will conduct agencies of the Catholic Chadshy~warded to Jorge Matesanz -a Mass Veterinary ASsn month of April the collection of a farewell meeting for seniors ties Appeal

BASKETBALL PLAYERS On basketball team at Connolly High Fall River are from left Tim Duffy Tom Kroger John Long Joe Kelly Greg Sullivan Mike Manning

~~dent of Spanisll extraction Winners in the division of donated medical supplies and this ~month and members will Only Paul Bor9ue the secretary earlhscience Were John Dias eyeglasses for deprived Peoples visit an encephalitis clinic in I ~anaged to make the scene for Thomas Burk~ anciRobei-tClou~ of the world Supplies collected Freetown in May The Stamp France tier FeehahMicIlael Cote Pre illbe forwarded to the Cathi- and Coin Clubis planning a pubshy

At Bishop Stang iil North vost and Elizabeth Lavoi~ Do- olic Missions Medical Bureau for lie exhibition of members col- Dartmouth the math team led minican shipment iections in May imd the Chess by high scorer Lawrence l3yrnes Awards in math and engineer- Upco~ing at S~A Fairhaven Club has undergone reorganiza- placed secon~in a reeentBqs- ing went to Carol Vasconcellos is the aruiual senior prom which tion election of officers inshyflon public schools math meet Mt St Mary Madeleine Delisl~ wilL be held in the Colonial cluding Edward Norman presishyThe Stang team paced by the and Vivian Blais and Michael R60m of Whites restaurant in dent Daniel Brule vice-presi- shyeo-sIstent good work of George Zito Feehan Genevieve Pappas Westport from 8 to midnight dent Diane Lizotte secretary Oliver and EIleen Keavy cur- and Debra Lay Dominican Joan Friday night May 24 Juniors TuniorProm

Basile Feehan Amato Polselli The Holy Family Junior Prom Prevost and Sharon Woycie- Board ofmiddot Trustees isslated for Friday night AprilCentennialmiddot chowski Mt St Mary were 26 at Kennedy Center The prom

Continued from Page Seventeen cited To Study Changes will last from 8 to 11 and will Chemistry winners included have Carousel as its themebroad smile on his face-many Jane Arruda Anne Lewis De- WASHINGTON (NC) - The Mlisic will be by the Escorts

other families have arrived from nise Michaud Elizabeth St board of trustees of the Catho- And the Holy Family debatePltlrtugua1 A man d Diane Lamontagne lic University of America in team tied for first place in the Our Lady of Mt Carmel par- Christine Fournier Dominican Washington D C will meet Narry League with Cassidy A ~h was detached from St Johns Anne Sullivan and Pamela Can- Sunday April 21 in St Louis playoff will be held As of now as the Portuguese population dee Feehan Marilyn Riley and to consider a wide range of rec- Cassidys debate reco~d is 12 grew Then Our Lady of the Ann-Marie Charrette Sacred ommended changes resulting wins out of 14 debatesjrnmaculate Conception parish Hearts Fall River Irene Caron from a year-long study of the was erected to care for families Cassidy Marilyn Bentley Mt pontifical university by a comshyi Portuguese descent living in mitteee headed by Dr Carroll ~e North End of New Bedford St Mary Hochwalt

In the field of physics Alan middotRAMBLERToday St John the Baptist White Prevost Michelle Paquet The meeting will be held in ehurch has about 4000 parishshy SHA Fall River JamesReid Jrconjunction witll the Spring Americas Economy King ioners Our numbers started Prevost Mary Soans Jane Mc meeting of the National Confershy Fnr the Best Deal Come To dropping about seven years ago Donald and Martba Nugent yent ence of Catholic Bishops Broadway Ramblerasgr Silvia explains He feels St Mary The trustees are expected 10 INC part of the drop in membership Representatives from Diocesan name a new 30-man board meet 768 BROADWAYis due to a number of families schools to the Mass State Sci- with faculty representatives for RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 131moving outside the parish )ounshy ence Fair will include Michael the first time in histoi-y and CHARLES J DUMAIS Presdarles Intermarriages with othshy lito Amato Polselli Debra Lay discuss the search for a new er nationalities account for still Madeleine Delisle Jane Arruda university rector to replacemore losses Anne Lewis Father J~dhn P Whalen ~ho ~III11I11I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I11I1I1HIUIIIIIIIlIIlilllllllllllfllHlIilttmmIllIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllllnIlIllIllHIIIIIIIIIJ111~ However the Mother Church Denise Michaud Alan White was naine last October to a ef the Portuguese is not fading Michelle Paquet Elizabeth St one-year term as acting rector E WEEKEND SPECIAL sect away AmandSharon Woyciechowski A new school was built in New Projector

f957 It is expensive Msgr Silvia admits but I felt we needed it

St Anthony High in New Bedshyford is rejoicing over acquisi shytion of a movie projector as a

Parish gtrganizations are active gimiddotft from the alumni association and individual parishioners are willjng to give of their time

Presentation to principal Sister Lucille Champagne was made

and effort Perking

to keep the parish by Mrs Josephine Lafleur sociation president

asshy

Now they are getting read7 Cassidy-Coyle cheerleaders Jor a 100th anniversary captured third pillce v9Phy iil

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Case Somerset Favorites In Narry Diamond League

Case High of Swansea and Somerset are pre-season ehoices in this seasons Narragansett League baseball race but the club th8lt will bear watching is Westport TIne darkshyhorse Villagers may have a few surprises for Narry foes Another small area school

with a respectable 8-6 recordthat potentially has a shot Only one member of that at a league championship is squad Calvin Hopkinson will Norton of the Tri-Valley not be playing for the Villagers Conference Coach Ed Bibeau this Spring With the rest of the has most of last Deasons Central club ready to go - watch Jlor Village regulars Westport to make its presence in the fold ready lmown to challenge the Among fuose returning are perennial Paul Eastwood an Russ Picard favori1es If 0 T two of the better performers in Narry honors the circuit a year ago Eastwood amp1i1 at Norton led the team in hitting with a (C 0 a c h Peter highly respectable 360 averagem[l ~ek has pitched and played the infield G3ven returning Picard like Eastwood 15 also ~nnen for versatile An outfielder by trade ~theY chamshy he also takes his turn on the ii~~JWhip bid Peter mound for Coach Bibeaus nine Weo~port Bartek Carl Zajac and Jeff Hague tmIshed the 1961 eampaign ill round out Bibeaus four-man ~ place in tbe NalT7 loop pitching staff

Norton Bids for Tri-Valley Crown jfOO task of handling the but in thin scholastic year of

~tJ of this quartet will fall athletic surprises it may not be Gpoundl ~e shoulders of either Ron as big as some thinllt ~JmOi) or Manny Cabral both

A second place finisher inexperienced receivers ConnOlll 1967 the Norton Lancers haveexcel1B not only defensively their sights on the Tri-Valleybut likewise with the bat He Conference crown The clubsbit at a 333middot clip last Spring one-two hitters last campaignJohn Souza and Mike Andras have departed from the Norton th better than 300 hitters baseball scene but the teamqaln will be out to join the one-two pitching punch is reshyleague leaders in batting prowshyturning Juniors Ken Allen aess They should put a wallop left-hander who had a perfectin Westports oHensive attaCK 7-0 record last Spring and ArtIf Coach Bibeaus boys can dushyBouchard will be relied uponplicate their Performances of a heavily to bring the league flagJellr ago Offensively and biB to Norton Coach Bartek alSobig four comes through on middottbe hopes to get some help in middotthemound Westport may realize a the pitching departmentmiddot fromlong awaited Narry championshyFred Rego Bill Gorczyca andEip dream Admittedly if Ie Steve Nichols bull bie word in ~~rts_tuture

~ ~ bull I

OpeUp With~on-League Co~esttsmiddot Other returnees incl~ Capshy develop rapidlymiddot defensively if

tain Mike Wynnn Greg Croff they are to regain the leagues BOb Adams Tim McEndy and divisional crown - whicb flbeymiddot Paul Hassie Wynn a senior lost to HoWston last Spring middotmiddot will be starting his third season and gain a shot at the Trl shyill left field with Cruffstarting V~ey Conference ebampionshyhis second campaign in center ship Many area clubs openThey will be joIned by Wynns their campaign this week with brother Ricky in right fied non-league games highlighting

The infield win be anchored the action League competition by Adams at second base and will commence for the most Hassle at short Newcomers part next week Richy Silvia and George Macshy Mother Nature has done her Arthur are presently battling it job this Spring Baseball coaches out for the third base job and throughout -the diocese admit Lorrie Adams also a first-year that this is the best Spring they man appears to have the inside have had to prepare flbeir track on first base charges in many a year Weather

cannot be blamed for a slowMcEndy who has been the start this time around All areLancers starting catcher since eagerly awaiting the umpireshis Freshman year is starting first call to play ballhIs third campaign behiJd the

plate Bartek expects McEndy to hold the inexperienced inshy New School System field together

The Lancers will have to imshy In German State prove upon their hitting and DUSSELDORF (NC) - The

North Rhine-Westphalia state parliament middothas approved aCanadian Prelates change in the states school sysshytem that probably will meanEstablish Council the end of many denominational

OTTAWA (NC)-The Catho-shy schools Hc bishops of Canada have esshy By an overwhelming majorshytablished a 12-member Fiscal ity the parliament voted to Affairs Council composed of change the state constitution and clergy Religious and laymen establish the nondenominational who will advise the Church on Christian school in which reli shyfinanclal matters gious training is given by Cathshy

Among the areas which are olic and Protestant instructors receiving ini~ial attention of the in the same school as the patshycommittee is the question of tern for state-supported schools whether the Church should be from the fifth through the nint subject to government taxation grades and if so what form of taxation In the past the state has supshywould be equitable to churches ported Illeparate Catholic and government and other taxshy Pro tell tan t denominational payen Khoola

-~) PASSION PLAY Today Christians hold the Solemn Observance of the Lords Supper

It is commemorated ina PMsion Play at Prevost High School Fall River by David Poisshyson as Christ Paul Martel left 8$ St John and Paul Bouampquet as St Peter

DominicGlIsmiddot Rent ApGrt~~rit in Inner -Cimiddottimiddot middot

Want t~ Get Closer to I Agony of the Worl~middot WASHINGTON (NC)middot Pift his experience in the neig~lgtorshy ruary 1966 because theJ

Dominican priests-each doing hood is invaluable in helping wanted to get closer to the bis own thing-are living middotin an both prisoners and parolees He agony of the world While nol apartment in the inner ~ cd said the insight he gains into eliminating the academic life Washington here they come from ancl h~w they felt that living in the inlleJ The five run the gamut from they view life aids him In mv city would be as important bull

a professor of moral theology at ing them intelligent advice and learning experience as academic the Don)inican House ofStucUeII 8ssis~nCe study to a prison chaplain a1 the Diamp- Father William Kane is middotthemiddotNeighborhOoclll[aatrict of Columbia Jail Ibey neighborhood man of the have in common1heiy addresa A Pr~ceton graduate ~itl1 apartment Hemiddotworks with minshyand a desire to understand and doctorates from Harvard aJgt4 isters inmiddot the area in establishing alleviate the problems ~ livlnc OxfCrd Father Albert Brodershy youth programs and fightina I in a poor Urban community ick teaches Constitutional LalV for better housing and fail

Father TbomasHea~ middotttie at the catholic University Law rent laws His motive is to givemoral theology professor aDd School the people in the community aD author of a reCent bOOkmiddotID awareness of their own dignitymiddotBe and Father Heath startedFaee of An~sh is 0Il 1be to affirm the fact that it is athe apartment project in Feb-bOard of direCtors of the Pe0shy ood place to live ples Center a house soon to be

the rehabilitationopened for Criticizes Usury of alcoholics He also meets

MEXICO CITY (NC)-Mexshy5 50 01- a SYSTEMATIC wimiddotth ~culties of Wasbingtcm

icc CityS Jose Cardinal Garibiseminaries to discuss policyshy bull 10 year SAViNGSRivera urged bankers meetingmaking and apostolic activity MONTHLY DEPOSITSat the National Bankers Conshy

Legal Aid Office vention in Guadalajara to comshy 5 00 01- a INVESTMENT bat usury and work closely bull 10 year SAVINGS

Father Joseph Cooney a NOTICE ACCOUNTSwith the government to proshylawye~ who has worked 011

voter registration in the South mote the social welfare of all II REGULAR4 5001 the Mexican people bull 10 Jflar SAVINGSand took an active part in dvil

rights activities such lIS

~lma march is DOW admin~ Bass Rivertering a legal aid office in the CENTERneighborhood of the Dominishy Savings Bank

cans apartment Volunteer law Paint and Wallpaperstudents from the Catholic Uni- Bank 8y Man I

versity of Ameiica assist him Dupont Paint

We Pay The Postage

IJcor Middle St

A third member of the group m this program 4iiii 422 Acush Ave bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA Fat her Raymond MalonSOl1 ~ New Bedford bull SOUTH VARMOUTH 4raquo HYANNISserves as the Catholic chapiain bull PARKINGmiddot

bull DENNIS PORT bull OSTtRVILLEatmiddot the D C jail A late vocashy Rear of Storetion Father Malonson has been ordained only two years middot Father Malonsoll feels U1at

LEVESQILIES OFFla E~lnPMENTNow Many Wear Wood Metal Desks and ChairsFALSE TEETH

With More Comfort JUST GiVE ME A CHANe TO QUOleTo overcome discomfort when

dentures sllp sllde or loosen Just sprinkle a llttle FASTEETH on your 187 SHAWMUT STREET bull NEW BEDFORD MASS

middot plates FASTEElH holds dentures firmer You eat better feel more PO Box 2062 - Hervey L Levesque

middot -wont sour Helps check plate odor comfortable FASTEETH Is alkaline

Dentures that fit are lIlSSentlai to Telephone 993middot1264middot health See your dentist regularly Get FASTEETB at all drUB counten ___ _ _____11_0__-D-tcl----4

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs April 11 1968

PhySDCOUi) l1JJ Uges litUBgy C~[filges

~n Last RStes RED BANK (NC) A

~atholic physician called for revision of the liturgical $orm of the Anointing of the Sick cluring a discussion on The Chaplains Role With the Dying Patient at Riverview Hospital here in New Jersey

Dr George J Sheehan an alumnus of Manhattan College and a founder of Christian Brothers Academy in nearby lLincroft was one of three apeakers at the symposium coshyaponsored by the hospital and Ute 1 Redmiddot Bank Council of

ilhurches Citing obvious failures by

both physician and clergyman iin helping the dying patient and bis family Dr Sheehan sugshygested members of the family Ghare inmiddot a ceremony which would exchange feelings of llove and hope between them ElDd the dying person

Dr ~heehan observed that while inadequacy in the face of death has been in the past apparent to the Protestant criergyman it is now also felt by Catholic priests

They findmiddot he said the La~t Sacrament in its present form Ii a consolation only to those with the strong faith of a Breton iiteasant-a kind of faith they e seeing less and l~ss-

Appropriate Theology He also said while the develshy

pment of a Common Christian itervice parlakirtg of the same llodividual familymiddot and commu~

Ility significance as Bap~i8ai -dMarriage would be a giant p in middotheiping people to a middotbappy death iit would remain IDol theologians to present- a relshy

qwant lmd acceptable image of mail in this time and this place ilnd to develop an appropriate eology of death heaven ~nd bell in order to make a signifi- sant change in our life style

lOd therefore in our approach to death

Other panelistsmiddot were the Rev Seorge Fitzgeraid a Presbyteshyaan minister middotand middotchaplain at Princeton Hospiital arid Mn Ruth Snyder a nurse of the lIiverview Hospital staffmiddot

POSTER CHILD LEADS WAY Joey BeIge 8 of Syraeuse NY leads themiddot way down a White House lttairway in the company ofthe Fi~st t-adymiddotMrsLyndon B Johnson

and Mrs Muriel Humphrey wife ofthe Vice-President Joeymiddotis this years poster child of

the National Association for Retarded Children H~ ismiddot thesQn ofMt and Mrs Robert Beige middotmembersmiddotOf St Vincent de Paul parish in Syracuse whos-e ot-herfive children SlHshy

round their Uttle broth~r wil1hmiddot the love and care to h~lp him livea full and happymiddot life

Penn See Studies Poverty Pmiddotrogram HARISBlJRq (NC)--Coadju- is being made to see ho)Vtbe to coordinate and channel our

tor Bishop Joseph T Daley diocese canmiddot best use its re-middot efforts in the fieldmiddot vicar general- of the Harrisburg sources to alleviate poverty Bishop Daley said it ismiddot im- diocese calledmiddot on the nearly problems middotperative that all our people 50000 Catholics in the area to He alsomiddot said Wemiddot contem- knoW and understand the probshy

acquaint th~mselves with 10- middotplatemiddot the early middotestablishment of middotIem of middotracism and the funda- calracfal and poverty problems amiddotmiddot diocesanmiddot human relations mental moral injustices which

In a lettermiddot read at aU Masses commission middotto serve asmiddot a liaison middotare at the root of the deplorable BishopDlIleT said middotthat a study with all people Collcerned and conditions in our own area

Urges Hospitals Re~ognie Unio~s

CLEVELAND (NC) - AI layshymens group here has asked the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hospitals to declare its willingshyness to recognize labor unions as collective bargaining agents for hospitals employes

lNle request came in a letter from William A caldwell chainnan of the eurolevellllnd Conference of Laymen to Sister ~ry Collette of Hamilton Ohio president of the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hosplshytala during a one-day meeting here of the Ohio Hospital Assoshyciation convention

The laymens group said such a statement would promote the human dignity of hospital emshyployes in real and immediate ways serve the common good of our communities and inshycrease the understandingmiddot of Catholic teaching by all the citishyzens of Ohio

The letter pointed out that the National Catholic Hospital Association 1 a s t November called on Catholic hospitals tiraquo be guided by the social teachshyings of the Church and to deal with unions that employecfgt choose

Discuss ~iot Report On Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC) - Beginshyning Sunday April 14 the Catholic Hour will present over the NBCmiddot network a three-part series The Climate of Change

Evolution or Revolution foshycusing on three areas of social and religioUs concern today today

~gr Rop~rt Fox cOordinashytor of Spanish community 00shy

middot lion in the New York arclidioshymiddoteese will discuss The Riot centommissi~ middotReport Amiddot Chrisshy

tiati Response April 14 Msgr Ivan D Illich of the Intereushy-tural Center 01 Language and D middotoe u men tat 1 on CuershyDavaca Mexf~o win be intershyviewed Aprjl 21 and Father Francois Houtart Belgian 00shyciologist will be interviewed Apiil 28

The National Council of Cathshy oUc Men producer of the OathshyoUe Hour reconunendseheckshymiddoting local newspaper programa for broadca9t time in particushymiddotRar areas

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Page 15: 04.11.68

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YOUTH CARES FOR AGE Retired Sisters are tenderlycared for at chair while Sister Mary Agnes looks on Center Sister Agnes Maureea Mmiddott St Mary Convent Fall River Left Sister Agnes Maureen seniormiddot wheels SisterMary Jer~me anQright Sister JohnCatberine bringgdri_ infirmarian points out magazine article to Sister Mary Lig~~ri inwheel to Sister Mary Ursulamiddot Both infirmarians are licensed practical nurses

I

Cqrdinal Roy Raps Apathy

MEXICO CITY (NC)~MaushyJOice Cardinal Roymiddot of Quebee _ a visit here as ehairman of the Pontifical Commission for World Justice and Peace said Christian teachings condemn violence in solving social probshylems but also condemn themiddot false prudence that lacks the eourage to make needed reshyforms

The prelate who has been touring Latin America for sevshyeral weeks said he was 1mshypressed by the number of Cathshy

olic organizations and institushytutions already applying Pope Paul VIs encyclical The Deshyvelopment of Peoples in their Jespective countries

But he added Latin Amerishyearn still have to assume fully their responsibility in workingtowards economic balance andmiddot bull just social order 80 every cit shyizen can promote his own welshyfare in a climate of freedom and common good

bull bullbull tmiddot

Comes KindIYcimiddotmiddotSislesmiddot 0 Mercy AmiddotI Fall River Comiddotnventmiddot

By Patricia McGowan

~When thou wast younger thou didstmiddot gird thyself anddidst walk where thou Frouldst But when thou shalt be old thou shalt stretch forth thy handsmiddot arid another shall gird thee and lead thee whither thou wouldst not In its description of the almost universal lot of age this is one of the most poignantpassages in Scriptur~ But age comes kindly f~r Sisters Although they are not exshyemptmiddot from its physical and mental ravages they need not fear being forsaken byfriends or being left alone the

fanulymiddot Jhe famllylast of a that is a religious community cherishes its older members and provision is made for Sisters to pass their last years surrounded by tender care

Among havens for older Sisters is the infirmary at Mt St Mary Conventmiddot Fall River The Sisters who have spent most of their religious life in the Fail River Diocese come here for their laBtyears exshypliliried Sister Agnes Maureen

The cardinal added at emiddot pretB8 RSMmiddotmiddot senior iniirmarian at eonference in the headquarten the Mount Her domain proshyf the Mexican Social Secreta- vides eh~rf11~ccQmmodations riat that national efforts for de- for 10 Sisters Each has her ownmiddot elopment do not eliminate the room andthere is II kitchenette aeed ~forfoleignaid where those ablE lobe up and

The Pontifieal commisSion Cardinal Roy indicated ill enshyaged in persuading rich counshytries to devote at least one per eent of their groSs national product to assist poor eountries

Archdiocese Adopts Project Equality

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing notified the priests lIeIlate of the Boston archdiocese of plans 10 adopt Project Equality a program designed to use purchasing power of church institutions to make firms supplying goods and 8elVices wipe out diICriminashy birislM Placticeamp

e~ut ~n enjoy their meals ~gethermiddot

The ~nfirmaryis but II few stepis from the Mount chapel wher~ the retired Sisters spend hours a day in prayer for comshymunity members still in the active lPostolate Also claiming time for Sisters whose eyesight permits are needlework ana erooheting projects

Always DraWlll Cheerful and dedicated Sister

Agnes Maureen who has I Deen at the infirmary six years is aided by Sister John Catherine who has served the aged Sisters two years A laywoman takes the night shift in the infirmary ensuring the Sisters round the clock care Bothmiddot Sister infirmashy

rians are licensed practical nurses who received their trainshyI g to L d f F tma Hosn a ur a y 0 a I shypital in the Providence Diocese

When I entered religion I hoped to be an infirmarian

said SIster Agnes Maureen I whas alwdays drawn to work for t e age

Some people think we havent got a nursing apostolate she added but we need nurses desshyperately Right now we have nine Sisters taking care of inshyfirmaries in our province

Among Sisters now at the Mount infirmary are Sister

Mary Agnes who celebrated her diamond jubilee last DeshyceJl)ber and most of wbose r~lishygious life was spent in New Bedford and middotNorth Attleboro schools and Sister Mary Lishy

gu()ri whomiddot f9r 49 yearl taught sixth graders at st Patricks School Fall River

HShe looks out her window at St Patricks said Sister Agnes Maureen and she says Theres home

The Sisters are welcoming the arrival of Spring and warm days said the infirmarian It means they can enjoy their sunporch sit in the Mounts garden and go for occasional car rides Of course they have many visitors she said Other Sisters in the house come to see them and so do Sisters from the convents where they forshymerly lived

Yes age comes kindly for Sisters Not Hke the old lady overheard in a downtown groshy

eery confiding to a chance fellow-customer her discovery of a bargain in frozen food I live alone you know and 1 get

three big servings from a packshyage--and only 29 cents

N 0 Sister lives alone

bull

~~tplic Newspaper Wins Press Awards

NEW ORLEANS (NC) -The eJarion Herald middotarchdiocesa middotnewspaper won eight awards iii the annual competition of the

N~W Or)eans Press Club ~ competition included daily and

weekly newspapers wire serVshyices and television stations

Millard F Everett editor won first place in two categories - editorial and best religioWl story This marks the first time in five years of competition that the Clarion has taken the top award for best religious story Staff members of the paper also took three second and three third place awards

----------------------------

ZENITH bull ACOUSTICON bull UNEX

bull BIOLOGICAU bull YITAMIIIS

C~tt 615-7829 IRENE R SHEA PROP

Prompt Free Delivery in fALL RIVER SOMERSET TIVERTON amp VICIHITY 101 ROCK ST (CORNER OF PINE ST) FALL RIVIImiddot

~ 6

THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFon River-Thurs Apr 11 1968

CathoJi~ ll]wnDv~JSityPltDcopy~regii~copyJ~

IPlanLUBffil AmeFicon ~1]~regregO WASHINGTON (NC) - A ops and l~aders of several South

jJroup of pr-ofessors from Cathshy American governments sHe University of America hope The Washington center comshyS n~w technical middotinstituteat the middotprises -ll group of professorsshy~tholic University of Gu~Washy mostly members of the CU caulI Ecuador may mark the llchool of middoted ucation-whomiddot are ltJPening of an international edshy specialists ineclUcationfordeshyvcation bridgetoLatin America Velopment Director of the proshy

The institute will be inaugurshy ject is Dr Jose A Baquero ated early this month as 11 middotcoshy WM has been commuting b~shy1)eIativeventure by the Center meen Washingtonand his nashylor Educational Research fa middottive Ecuador dming the -cmrent QuitoEcuadorand the Center school year lor Community Developmenhmd This is not an Ecuadorian Servioe at Catholic University project it is an internatienal bere It has the support 01 Vashy projed a resealclFaction proshykanofficials Ecuadorianbislshy gram between North and South

America Dr Baquero said middothereBC middotto Recruit laquorNe had to start middotsomewhere The natural plaoe 10 begin wasNegro St~1ent5 middot-the Qlace Where weaould get

CHESTNUT HILL (NC) shy the most facilitiesThisproject iesuit-eper-ated Boston College God willing if successful will bere has made available $100shy move throughout Latin AmershyGtOO fora talent search -progr1m ica We already have contracts to recruit Negro stJdents frem with interestedJeaders in Sao disadvantagedurbanareas middotof Paulo BTazil Bogota Colombia tlhecountry mainly in Greater and Lima Peru Boston Msgr Eugene Kevane direcshy

Father Michael P Walsh SJ tor of the Center for Communitypresident caUed for support off Development andServleedaimshyiIIe entirestudent body facshy ed iB number of Latin American Illlty and administration of EQsshy Church and government officialS Qon College to make the ~mshy have middotexpressed interest in thecram a success projectand a belid it may beshy

Since the program was starteJ come a model of assistance middottoIJeveral weeks ago some 50 ~shy lI3derdeveloped poundOuntrieslltIicatiopshave beenreceiltvelll He said ArcnbishGp Romolofrom students in ghetto areas Carooni apostolic nuncio 10lot -entrance middotin next Septemshy

~1u told him heilOllSiders theWltll freshman -class pmject of great importance andThere have a1w~ys beellU M~S a similhlr middotinstitute willIlegro students enrolled at B4tsshybe established at the Pontificalton College oUicials said ~t University in Limatheir Dumber is ~ot ~own 00shy

0tberhigh-ranking churchshyaYSe race is not shown 8ll1 middotmen who lthave endorsed theapplications The Collegemiddotacceptll project include MsgrLuigi Lishyattdents of all faiths gutti the Holy Sees PermanentN~t SeptemberNegro lrtlllshy

1Gbserver at the Food and Agrishy

bullnts with the necessary ~uaUshy6eations will be admitted n8 culture Organization of the 1Ilual while middotsome 25 will ge United Nations and Archbishop admitted under the talent Ceasar Antonio Mosquera fif

lt4IeQIChprogram The number is Guayaquil president of theEcshybeing limited for thegood af iliad-orlan Bishops Conference

GOLDEN JUBILEE Sisshyter Rose Alma Reid CSC (Sjltte1 M Flora) will mark herg-olden i llbilee of religious professjon on Sunday April 21 at Sacred Heart Convent New Bedford A Mass of thanksgi~rjng will be offered at 1130 Sunchw morning at Sacred Head Church and a reception will be held in the parish hall ITom2 to 4 th~t

afternoon Friends and forshymer pupils are invited t01l~

tend

So Curolina Bishop A-sksPettce $upport

CHARLESTON (NC)- Bishshymiddotop Ernest Lmiddot Unterkoefier of Charleston has called for the middotfull support ofall Americans of President Lyndon middotlB Johnshysons efforts to secure peace in middotVietnam

Tbe South ltCarolina Bishop said that the Presidents -peace ini tiati yes demonstrate that he is a gtarson who -has ever been conscious of the grave responsishybility 01 his ofillce and that his judgements have been measured ~y the critical threats to the securi~y and free action ofthe United States

ICampus Comediansl

R~JlJ~stforBirh ControJ 1nlcrmation lndBGSYlrncrGti(C~e

DAYTON (NC)-A Univershysity of Dayton chaplain said he suspected campuscomediami for 1b~ conJroversyaroused bY a request for availability of birth corttol information and materials In campus by theunishyversity stmiddotudent congress

Father Urban Rupp SM universi~y co-chaplain wrote in the chaplain s bulletin the alshymost unanimous aetion fthe student gfvernment group middotwas an idio~yncratic caper in the natureo Ii ttle childrenpl~ying

house He indicated he fouud it difshy

ficult to take the Pfoposa1 serishyomlY

Now of COUrse I middotcowd be taking this all -wrong be said

Perhaps it was intended 00 bn serious In that case I woUld be tempted to thinktheemershygency is not just immediateshyit is really one generation too late

This was taken asa reference to student efforts to pwih through the resolution orbirth control as an emergency -meashysure

That failed but a few days later the student middotcongressvo~ 29 tol to seeka change in llJllshyversUy Wlicy that would -pershymit the introductionof birth 1Ontrol selYiees in thestudem health center for married eQUoshy~les and Ulose llQOD _ ~arriedmiddot

the young Negroes whowiUbe ~pted oUiciaI said

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PATRIARCH The middotnewily elected head of the Syriac Oatholic Church Patriarch Hgtenys Antoine Hayek of Anshy~och was enthroned recentshy1w in Beirut Lebanon In this post hesucceds the late P-ashykiarch Ignace Cardinal TapshylPouni NC Photo

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In ~ glory of His Resurrection may be reborn man~

amiring hopes and CleSires _ ~ce

HAPPY EASTER THE OFFICERS DIRiEc1r~ AND STAFfshy

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FIRSTmFff-BANK

-Ji1lim~~OF NEW BEDFORD

StYE SOME

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A CHILD

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A bull told ($1250 a monttl$15000-a ~ar)ca_small SISTER Investment for SisterS lifetime of service

Like to be her sponsorf Her name Is Sister Suzamma and she will write to you

iIHAPPINESS ciS

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THE ANCHO~-Trappists Elect Mother Church of Nation8 PortlglleSe 17 Thurs April 11 1968

Youngest Abbot P-epares fOI- Cenlellilial Celebration At Gethsenloni Dy Patida F r-u nis

GETHSEMANI (NC) The youngest abbot in the history of the monastery of Our Lady of Gethsemani was formally blessed (March ~l) by Archbishop Thomas J McDon~

ough 0pound Louisville Father M Flavian Burns

OCSO 36 ilgt the seventh ab~

bot in the 120-year history of the monastery He was elected by members of the community Inst January to succeed Abbot M James Fox OCSO

Father Flavian described bis position as en administrator whose main job il) service to others within the community He said his most important function it3 to hold plivate spiritual conversations with other monks and to handle the lillM)nasterys relations with the ~Atside world

Thcilt are some 120 monks at ~ethsemani abbey a decline from past years Abbot Burns cCrlbllltes the decline at least in prt to the attitude of the times YiJCl1 was foJJJlcrly accepted without question is now being ltI~etioned he observed

ltDontemplation Prayer

Changes have been made the IHurElY is now in English and 2Jc strict vow of silence has TiKen relaxed somewhat On an experimental basis the monks are allowed to use brief oral instructions instead of sign language as in the past

Despite the lack of radio or 1clevision Abbot Burns said the monks keep in contact through newspllpers with events in todays world The main thing ill to know what is going on in the Church and what effects our fellow hushymans according to the abbot

The life of a monk involves middotcontemplation and prayer rather than speaking up - 11 more spiritual turn according kI Abbot BUlns

A native of Jersey City N J he is a graduate of Henry SfIyder public high sehool there

Protests- Campaign Agamst Religion

NEW YORK (NC) - A new wave of terror against aU churcltgpers is now in effect in Albania an exile from that country has declored in a- letter of protest sent to the United Nations Commission on Human Rightsmiddot and~ to UN Secretary General U Thani

The protest bl Dr Rexhep KIasniqi president of the Free Albania Committee which has its headquarters here said that Albanial following a lf41oist eommunillt guideline has shut down every cltulch and mosque and has made any_kind of pubshylIc worship impossible

Thill campaign Dr Krasniqi tated is a violation of the UN Charter the Universal Declarashytion of Human Rights and of Albanias own communist conshystitutional guarantee of freedom of conscience for all

San Antonro Priests Form Association

SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Fortyshyene diocesan and religious comshymunities priests of the San Anshytonio archdiocese formed a priests association bere The priests ohose a six-member temshypora]) steering committee

One of the fiTst formal actions Gf the allsociatron was to inform Archbishop Robert E Lucey of San Antonio of the group forshymation

There are approximately 441

Parishioner d St John the Baptist Church in Nc Bedford are getting rendy for a momentoils event-the 100th anniversary of the fO~1l1dil1g of the oldest Portuguese parish in the nation The cen~en]ial celebration wi II not take place until 1971 but many things have to be done in preparation within the next three years One major project is renoshyvating the church ihelf To pay for the massive job ptrshyishioners have inaugur~teca Centennial Fund Drive to raise money for painting ~he church do extensive electrical work and buy a rew organ Estimated cost (f the regt3ir5 is $150000

Rt Rev Msgr John A Silvia pastor is honorary drve chairshyman and Frank S Jason is genshyeral chairman Other committee members include Richard GiJI1shysalves and Jesse V Santos Jr division chairmen JQseph S Vera special gifts chairman Richard L Lopes treasurer George Radcliffe director Louis S Silva assistant director Mrs Mary Lucy Soares office conshytrols and Miss Luey E Dias list supervisor

Members of the Campaign Exshyecutive Committee also include Frank M Martin ald Joseph C Motta

The history of St Johns and the history of the Portuguese people in America arc closely intertwined

It was at the end of the 18th Century that settlers began comshying from themiddot Azores to the United States TheJ were relashytively few in number nd as II

result almost lost their national identity

Near Ifood However by 1840 the trickle

of Azoreans was beginning to turn into a near Oood of imshymigrants who settled in New Bedford then a whaling and fishing center

By 1865 many Portuguese families called New Bedford home They lacked just one thing-a church of their own and a priest who spoke their language and understood their customs and traditions

Their first priest-Rev Joao Ignacio de Azevedo-anived in 1869 and on Sept 10 1871 St Johns parish was canonically established

Theremiddot were approximately 1shy000 Portuguese of Azorean deshyscent living in New Bedford at the time and the)T detelmined to build their own church A lot was purchased for $3OD8 ~ con~

siderable amount in those days and soon ground WQS broken for the new house of God

However Father de Azeedo was a mission pliest Vl~ho~moved

throughout the are~ aCministershying to his counblymen As a reshysult a new parish was establishshyed in Boston and he became its first pastor

Expandoll

Construction of St Johns WillS

continued by Rev Antonio de Mattos Freitas a native or Calshylteta St George Azores Fashyther Freitas also was responsible for the construction of a recshytory When he reUred because of ill health and returned to~ the AzoreS he was succeeded by Rev Antonio G de Silva Neves who was to serve St Johns durshying the greatest expansion Gfthe citys Portuguese colony

The first church located where a section of Morse- Twiampt Drill now stands soon ~ outgrown by its congregation and a drive began for agt new and larger church

Father Neves who served 8~j

pastor for almost 25 years saw the new church at County and Wing Streets almost coop]eted However ill health also forced bill retirement

PREPARING FOR CENTENNIAL In charge of fumd drive for hundredth anniversary of St John Baptist Church New Bedford are from left George Radclffe drive execushytive director Frank Jailon general chairman

pleted construction of the present church and rectory in three years The church which now serves the parish was solemnly blessed an4 dedicated to the worship of God by the late Bishshyop Feehan

Through the years the parshyishioners of St Johns have proved their dedication to their cliurch Now they are renewinr their dedication

Msgr Silvia notes that before the small St Johns Church was built the citys Portuguese colshyony attended Mass at St Lawshyrence Church Later they moved into what today is Crowells brt Store

Landmark Today the 11Inificent st

Johns is a landmark in New Bedford befitting its position as Mother Church of the Portu guese in the- UnFted States

MSgr Silvia a native of Pall River served at St Peters Church in Provincetown for 27 years His only other assi1shyment St John the B-aptirt Church

Ordained to the priesthood or Dec 20 1919 St Johns was the new priests first assignment He remained at the cRurch unshytil No~ember 1924 when he was transferred to Ptovinceto~

On Oct 2 1951 Msgr Silvia returned to St Johns as pzsshytor a post hemiddot still fulfills with zeal and energy

His assignmetlt to St Jobnfl parish in 1919 was not ~1sgr Sinshyvias introduotion to the New Bedford parish

As a young boy the p2stcshyrecalls his poundathers weekly trips from Fall River to New Bedford to bring back a priest

Four Families There were few Portuguese

families in Fall River in those days he says When my father arrived in Fan River there were iust four Portuguese families in the city Gradually others setshytled there

My father used to drive over in a horse and buggy to bring Il priest back tc Fall River to ll3y

degbrought him back the next dzy Since those days of hischiMshy

bood Msgr Silvia observeamp-l Turn to Page Eighteen

Continued fronmiddot Page Three

the late Tobias and Ann Lynch ]Burke Mr Burke was born in Newport Tipperary Ireland and his speech bears witness to the o-it and lilt of his birthshyplce He is married te Catbshyerine Lowney Burke and the couple lives next to the Chanshycery

DI1 Davia Costa Dr Costa son of David CosU

and Julia Rodrigues is the husshyband of Louella Somerday and fther of five children A dentshyist in NeJ Bedford he is active ir ceo and in St Vincent ~e

Pml work on a parochial and al(l level He has been zealoUJ ir- many important phases ~

perish aetivity in Immaculate Conception Parish in New BedshyforC He was recipient of the Diocesan Marian Award in Deshycember

itpJlin 15 TIle awards Jill be presenteCl

at St Marys Cathedral Fa]] River on lIlonday evening April 15 at 8 PM At toot timeuro there will be the investi shyture of two lI-ionsignori the awarding of Papal Knight 03 SZ Gregory honors to nine ~sect- oeesan laymen and the Pro EecIesia et Pontipoundlce award kJ mother Pierre Marie adminisshytlato of St Annes Hospital IE Fall River~

Join Federation IIALEIGH (NC)-Forty ()(f thfl

matewide Raleigh dioceses 14~

tlriests have formed the North iCaFolina Priests Associatioil which will affiliate with a Emshy

ticmal federation DOW beiJl~

formed

May the Joy and Pomise 01- Easter

uplift your spirit and gladden

your hean

FROM THE OFRCEIIS AND PERSONfJB Of

qkJM~ERCHANTS CIa1iotuLe BANK

IN NEW BEDFORD

SOUTH BANK-Cove St at Iodney French Boulevard WEST BANK-Kempton Street at Mill Stret

LUNDS CORNER BANK-Acushnet Ave rear Lunds Comer DARTMOUTH BANK-Dartmouth Street near Rockdale Ave NORTH BANK-Acushnet Avbull at Coffin Ave

CENTER BANK-Purchase and William Sts priests in the San Antonio arcl1shy Next pastor was the Rev Mass He used to stay overnight tiiocese Manuel A da Silva wt() oom- at our hOuse ald JlG ~tbeI

-

18 Tti~ ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1969 CatecheticsWeek Set at StonehillDioce$clm ~j[llIlde[lj)fl5 Join Nal-gonGI Some 400 priests religious and laymen are expected to at shyMculrraurru U A$~ssinatBon tend a catechetics institute b be held Monday Aug 5 throughOf Dr Mriin luther KilnS Saturday Aug 10 at Stonehill College Diocesan schools shared i~ national mourning at the Sister Mary Francille CSJ

~8sassination of Dr Martin Luther King with special theology professor at Regis ColshyMasses or prayers offered in every school At Cassidy High lege will direct the institute in Taunton Rev John Moore chaplain celebrated a Mass and speakers will include Rev

Frederick Moriarty SJ Revfor the repose of the soul Cha~les E Cook Rev James F(l)f the Negro leader and rently hplds first place in the Hawker Sister Florence -MishyNotre Dame math league chels OLVM Gerard Potte~

tlie chapel by students in a demy Fairhaven have been study periods were spent in Girls at Sacred Hearts Acashy

bauoi and Mrs Helen Jacobs With the theme Making Alllvigil for peace working on a project to bring

Christian Youth Movement Easter cheer to patients at St Things New institute sessiono will discuss Scripture catechetshymembers at Jesus-Mary Aca- Lukes Hospital New Bedford ical techniques use of filmsdemy Fall River heard the New Under supervision of Sister Jushywith adolescents other visualFolk a group of singing Holy lie Louise SSCC theyve ~een aids parent education teamCross seminarians Their appear- making tray favors including teaching and creative dramaticsance was arranged under t~e decorative placemats and napkin

Further information is avail shydirection of Mofher John Scarry holders for adults and flowered able from Stonehill CollegeJRJM Jollipops chicky surprises and North Easton 02356Also at JMA its French Week bunny hats for childern

The observance- began Sunday Science Fair Winners when French Club members Jeanne Phenix Yvette Berthi- Holy Family had four winshy Charities AppeaI aume and Susan Cournoyer took ners at the annual New Bedford Continued from Page Three part in a play sponsored by the Science fair In the senior division

Community Fund CampaignPrevost French Club Les Fem- James Berry and John Thomas president Board of Managers mes Parlent Trop Throughout of the New Bedford school were of Boston Dispensary and vice

the week too there have middotbeen cited fo~ earth science and phy- the Diocesan cheerleading tour- will combine with the seniors president of USOseveral skits prepared by mem- sics proJects respectively while t tl h ld t F h th bZbers in the junior division both Pa- namen recen yea ee an Lor e occasIOn SInce oth He has been the recipient of

or effort at Prevost was tricia Downey and SharonSmola High but sports arent all that cltsses of the academy are small honorary degrees from Holy MaJ matter at the TauntoJl girls due to the fact that the high Cross College Tufts University

e Sunday program Whlch ln- were recognized for work in the h f h d I ld f b sc 001 Break ast lunc an schoo IS being phased out Suffolk University Bradford -luded In addItIon to the play fle 0 iology M formal dinner pace settmgs The Junipero Club of Holy Durfee College of Technology~veral talks by promInent any students won honors at h M h I I I were recently on display at the Family High recently sponsored of Fall Rivet and Lowell Techshy

I remiddotnch cItIzens a French song- t e assac usetts RegIOn S F h school library and members of a talk on drug addiction for jun- nological Institute ~t and a motion picture Clence alr eld in Fall Rlver They included Christine Four- the Mothers Auxiliary were on iors and seniors The talk was Bishop to AddJess Meeting

UN French Club nier Dominican Academy and hand to answer etiquette ques- given by two brothers one an Most Rev James L ConnollyAt Coyle the French Club di- Diane Desmarais Mt St Mary tions from the students ex-addict the other director of Bishop of Fall River will speak

Ilected by Brother Hugh McCabe Academy both Fall River Both And the Coyle Fathers Club Marathon House a center for to the priests parish trusteesIOeCently elected officers After girls were recogiIized by the held its annual Father-Son Com treatment of addicts located in chairmen of the Catholic Charishy8le votes were tallied however Southeastern District of the Mas- munion breakfast at the school Coventry RIo ties Appeal and the invited lays our man at Coyle it looked sachuse~ts Dental Society bull with Robert Cahill ofthe Rhode CongratuIcitions go to Joseph gue9ts of the 111 diocesan if ~embers were voting for Debra Lay Dominican Aca- Island Food and Drug Commis Abraham of St Anthony High parishes bull UN delegation The presidents demy received a savings bond sion as guest speaker He dis- for meriting runner-up position Roland A Lafrance 1968 ApshyliPot wa~ captured he reports from the Bristol South Distriet cussed harmful effects of various iil the state finals of the annual peal lay chairman will also adshy a Polish fellow Cbarles Ozug Medical Auxiliary arid Michael drugs American Legion olatorical con- dress the 800 expected to attend lames OBrien a true Irishman Zito Bishop Feehan High At~middot The Catholic Students Mis- test - the opening meeting of the won the vice-presidential spot tleboro was awarded a plaque sion CrUsade at Stang H~gh has In club~ews at~HA the Senshy campaign for funds for the 30 while the treasurers job was by the Womens Auxil1ary to the taken as a special project this ior Science Club will conduct agencies of the Catholic Chadshy~warded to Jorge Matesanz -a Mass Veterinary ASsn month of April the collection of a farewell meeting for seniors ties Appeal

BASKETBALL PLAYERS On basketball team at Connolly High Fall River are from left Tim Duffy Tom Kroger John Long Joe Kelly Greg Sullivan Mike Manning

~~dent of Spanisll extraction Winners in the division of donated medical supplies and this ~month and members will Only Paul Bor9ue the secretary earlhscience Were John Dias eyeglasses for deprived Peoples visit an encephalitis clinic in I ~anaged to make the scene for Thomas Burk~ anciRobei-tClou~ of the world Supplies collected Freetown in May The Stamp France tier FeehahMicIlael Cote Pre illbe forwarded to the Cathi- and Coin Clubis planning a pubshy

At Bishop Stang iil North vost and Elizabeth Lavoi~ Do- olic Missions Medical Bureau for lie exhibition of members col- Dartmouth the math team led minican shipment iections in May imd the Chess by high scorer Lawrence l3yrnes Awards in math and engineer- Upco~ing at S~A Fairhaven Club has undergone reorganiza- placed secon~in a reeentBqs- ing went to Carol Vasconcellos is the aruiual senior prom which tion election of officers inshyflon public schools math meet Mt St Mary Madeleine Delisl~ wilL be held in the Colonial cluding Edward Norman presishyThe Stang team paced by the and Vivian Blais and Michael R60m of Whites restaurant in dent Daniel Brule vice-presi- shyeo-sIstent good work of George Zito Feehan Genevieve Pappas Westport from 8 to midnight dent Diane Lizotte secretary Oliver and EIleen Keavy cur- and Debra Lay Dominican Joan Friday night May 24 Juniors TuniorProm

Basile Feehan Amato Polselli The Holy Family Junior Prom Prevost and Sharon Woycie- Board ofmiddot Trustees isslated for Friday night AprilCentennialmiddot chowski Mt St Mary were 26 at Kennedy Center The prom

Continued from Page Seventeen cited To Study Changes will last from 8 to 11 and will Chemistry winners included have Carousel as its themebroad smile on his face-many Jane Arruda Anne Lewis De- WASHINGTON (NC) - The Mlisic will be by the Escorts

other families have arrived from nise Michaud Elizabeth St board of trustees of the Catho- And the Holy Family debatePltlrtugua1 A man d Diane Lamontagne lic University of America in team tied for first place in the Our Lady of Mt Carmel par- Christine Fournier Dominican Washington D C will meet Narry League with Cassidy A ~h was detached from St Johns Anne Sullivan and Pamela Can- Sunday April 21 in St Louis playoff will be held As of now as the Portuguese population dee Feehan Marilyn Riley and to consider a wide range of rec- Cassidys debate reco~d is 12 grew Then Our Lady of the Ann-Marie Charrette Sacred ommended changes resulting wins out of 14 debatesjrnmaculate Conception parish Hearts Fall River Irene Caron from a year-long study of the was erected to care for families Cassidy Marilyn Bentley Mt pontifical university by a comshyi Portuguese descent living in mitteee headed by Dr Carroll ~e North End of New Bedford St Mary Hochwalt

In the field of physics Alan middotRAMBLERToday St John the Baptist White Prevost Michelle Paquet The meeting will be held in ehurch has about 4000 parishshy SHA Fall River JamesReid Jrconjunction witll the Spring Americas Economy King ioners Our numbers started Prevost Mary Soans Jane Mc meeting of the National Confershy Fnr the Best Deal Come To dropping about seven years ago Donald and Martba Nugent yent ence of Catholic Bishops Broadway Ramblerasgr Silvia explains He feels St Mary The trustees are expected 10 INC part of the drop in membership Representatives from Diocesan name a new 30-man board meet 768 BROADWAYis due to a number of families schools to the Mass State Sci- with faculty representatives for RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 131moving outside the parish )ounshy ence Fair will include Michael the first time in histoi-y and CHARLES J DUMAIS Presdarles Intermarriages with othshy lito Amato Polselli Debra Lay discuss the search for a new er nationalities account for still Madeleine Delisle Jane Arruda university rector to replacemore losses Anne Lewis Father J~dhn P Whalen ~ho ~III11I11I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I11I1I1HIUIIIIIIIlIIlilllllllllllfllHlIilttmmIllIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllllnIlIllIllHIIIIIIIIIJ111~ However the Mother Church Denise Michaud Alan White was naine last October to a ef the Portuguese is not fading Michelle Paquet Elizabeth St one-year term as acting rector E WEEKEND SPECIAL sect away AmandSharon Woyciechowski A new school was built in New Projector

f957 It is expensive Msgr Silvia admits but I felt we needed it

St Anthony High in New Bedshyford is rejoicing over acquisi shytion of a movie projector as a

Parish gtrganizations are active gimiddotft from the alumni association and individual parishioners are willjng to give of their time

Presentation to principal Sister Lucille Champagne was made

and effort Perking

to keep the parish by Mrs Josephine Lafleur sociation president

asshy

Now they are getting read7 Cassidy-Coyle cheerleaders Jor a 100th anniversary captured third pillce v9Phy iil

_

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Case Somerset Favorites In Narry Diamond League

Case High of Swansea and Somerset are pre-season ehoices in this seasons Narragansett League baseball race but the club th8lt will bear watching is Westport TIne darkshyhorse Villagers may have a few surprises for Narry foes Another small area school

with a respectable 8-6 recordthat potentially has a shot Only one member of that at a league championship is squad Calvin Hopkinson will Norton of the Tri-Valley not be playing for the Villagers Conference Coach Ed Bibeau this Spring With the rest of the has most of last Deasons Central club ready to go - watch Jlor Village regulars Westport to make its presence in the fold ready lmown to challenge the Among fuose returning are perennial Paul Eastwood an Russ Picard favori1es If 0 T two of the better performers in Narry honors the circuit a year ago Eastwood amp1i1 at Norton led the team in hitting with a (C 0 a c h Peter highly respectable 360 averagem[l ~ek has pitched and played the infield G3ven returning Picard like Eastwood 15 also ~nnen for versatile An outfielder by trade ~theY chamshy he also takes his turn on the ii~~JWhip bid Peter mound for Coach Bibeaus nine Weo~port Bartek Carl Zajac and Jeff Hague tmIshed the 1961 eampaign ill round out Bibeaus four-man ~ place in tbe NalT7 loop pitching staff

Norton Bids for Tri-Valley Crown jfOO task of handling the but in thin scholastic year of

~tJ of this quartet will fall athletic surprises it may not be Gpoundl ~e shoulders of either Ron as big as some thinllt ~JmOi) or Manny Cabral both

A second place finisher inexperienced receivers ConnOlll 1967 the Norton Lancers haveexcel1B not only defensively their sights on the Tri-Valleybut likewise with the bat He Conference crown The clubsbit at a 333middot clip last Spring one-two hitters last campaignJohn Souza and Mike Andras have departed from the Norton th better than 300 hitters baseball scene but the teamqaln will be out to join the one-two pitching punch is reshyleague leaders in batting prowshyturning Juniors Ken Allen aess They should put a wallop left-hander who had a perfectin Westports oHensive attaCK 7-0 record last Spring and ArtIf Coach Bibeaus boys can dushyBouchard will be relied uponplicate their Performances of a heavily to bring the league flagJellr ago Offensively and biB to Norton Coach Bartek alSobig four comes through on middottbe hopes to get some help in middotthemound Westport may realize a the pitching departmentmiddot fromlong awaited Narry championshyFred Rego Bill Gorczyca andEip dream Admittedly if Ie Steve Nichols bull bie word in ~~rts_tuture

~ ~ bull I

OpeUp With~on-League Co~esttsmiddot Other returnees incl~ Capshy develop rapidlymiddot defensively if

tain Mike Wynnn Greg Croff they are to regain the leagues BOb Adams Tim McEndy and divisional crown - whicb flbeymiddot Paul Hassie Wynn a senior lost to HoWston last Spring middotmiddot will be starting his third season and gain a shot at the Trl shyill left field with Cruffstarting V~ey Conference ebampionshyhis second campaign in center ship Many area clubs openThey will be joIned by Wynns their campaign this week with brother Ricky in right fied non-league games highlighting

The infield win be anchored the action League competition by Adams at second base and will commence for the most Hassle at short Newcomers part next week Richy Silvia and George Macshy Mother Nature has done her Arthur are presently battling it job this Spring Baseball coaches out for the third base job and throughout -the diocese admit Lorrie Adams also a first-year that this is the best Spring they man appears to have the inside have had to prepare flbeir track on first base charges in many a year Weather

cannot be blamed for a slowMcEndy who has been the start this time around All areLancers starting catcher since eagerly awaiting the umpireshis Freshman year is starting first call to play ballhIs third campaign behiJd the

plate Bartek expects McEndy to hold the inexperienced inshy New School System field together

The Lancers will have to imshy In German State prove upon their hitting and DUSSELDORF (NC) - The

North Rhine-Westphalia state parliament middothas approved aCanadian Prelates change in the states school sysshytem that probably will meanEstablish Council the end of many denominational

OTTAWA (NC)-The Catho-shy schools Hc bishops of Canada have esshy By an overwhelming majorshytablished a 12-member Fiscal ity the parliament voted to Affairs Council composed of change the state constitution and clergy Religious and laymen establish the nondenominational who will advise the Church on Christian school in which reli shyfinanclal matters gious training is given by Cathshy

Among the areas which are olic and Protestant instructors receiving ini~ial attention of the in the same school as the patshycommittee is the question of tern for state-supported schools whether the Church should be from the fifth through the nint subject to government taxation grades and if so what form of taxation In the past the state has supshywould be equitable to churches ported Illeparate Catholic and government and other taxshy Pro tell tan t denominational payen Khoola

-~) PASSION PLAY Today Christians hold the Solemn Observance of the Lords Supper

It is commemorated ina PMsion Play at Prevost High School Fall River by David Poisshyson as Christ Paul Martel left 8$ St John and Paul Bouampquet as St Peter

DominicGlIsmiddot Rent ApGrt~~rit in Inner -Cimiddottimiddot middot

Want t~ Get Closer to I Agony of the Worl~middot WASHINGTON (NC)middot Pift his experience in the neig~lgtorshy ruary 1966 because theJ

Dominican priests-each doing hood is invaluable in helping wanted to get closer to the bis own thing-are living middotin an both prisoners and parolees He agony of the world While nol apartment in the inner ~ cd said the insight he gains into eliminating the academic life Washington here they come from ancl h~w they felt that living in the inlleJ The five run the gamut from they view life aids him In mv city would be as important bull

a professor of moral theology at ing them intelligent advice and learning experience as academic the Don)inican House ofStucUeII 8ssis~nCe study to a prison chaplain a1 the Diamp- Father William Kane is middotthemiddotNeighborhOoclll[aatrict of Columbia Jail Ibey neighborhood man of the have in common1heiy addresa A Pr~ceton graduate ~itl1 apartment Hemiddotworks with minshyand a desire to understand and doctorates from Harvard aJgt4 isters inmiddot the area in establishing alleviate the problems ~ livlnc OxfCrd Father Albert Brodershy youth programs and fightina I in a poor Urban community ick teaches Constitutional LalV for better housing and fail

Father TbomasHea~ middotttie at the catholic University Law rent laws His motive is to givemoral theology professor aDd School the people in the community aD author of a reCent bOOkmiddotID awareness of their own dignitymiddotBe and Father Heath startedFaee of An~sh is 0Il 1be to affirm the fact that it is athe apartment project in Feb-bOard of direCtors of the Pe0shy ood place to live ples Center a house soon to be

the rehabilitationopened for Criticizes Usury of alcoholics He also meets

MEXICO CITY (NC)-Mexshy5 50 01- a SYSTEMATIC wimiddotth ~culties of Wasbingtcm

icc CityS Jose Cardinal Garibiseminaries to discuss policyshy bull 10 year SAViNGSRivera urged bankers meetingmaking and apostolic activity MONTHLY DEPOSITSat the National Bankers Conshy

Legal Aid Office vention in Guadalajara to comshy 5 00 01- a INVESTMENT bat usury and work closely bull 10 year SAVINGS

Father Joseph Cooney a NOTICE ACCOUNTSwith the government to proshylawye~ who has worked 011

voter registration in the South mote the social welfare of all II REGULAR4 5001 the Mexican people bull 10 Jflar SAVINGSand took an active part in dvil

rights activities such lIS

~lma march is DOW admin~ Bass Rivertering a legal aid office in the CENTERneighborhood of the Dominishy Savings Bank

cans apartment Volunteer law Paint and Wallpaperstudents from the Catholic Uni- Bank 8y Man I

versity of Ameiica assist him Dupont Paint

We Pay The Postage

IJcor Middle St

A third member of the group m this program 4iiii 422 Acush Ave bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA Fat her Raymond MalonSOl1 ~ New Bedford bull SOUTH VARMOUTH 4raquo HYANNISserves as the Catholic chapiain bull PARKINGmiddot

bull DENNIS PORT bull OSTtRVILLEatmiddot the D C jail A late vocashy Rear of Storetion Father Malonson has been ordained only two years middot Father Malonsoll feels U1at

LEVESQILIES OFFla E~lnPMENTNow Many Wear Wood Metal Desks and ChairsFALSE TEETH

With More Comfort JUST GiVE ME A CHANe TO QUOleTo overcome discomfort when

dentures sllp sllde or loosen Just sprinkle a llttle FASTEETH on your 187 SHAWMUT STREET bull NEW BEDFORD MASS

middot plates FASTEElH holds dentures firmer You eat better feel more PO Box 2062 - Hervey L Levesque

middot -wont sour Helps check plate odor comfortable FASTEETH Is alkaline

Dentures that fit are lIlSSentlai to Telephone 993middot1264middot health See your dentist regularly Get FASTEETB at all drUB counten ___ _ _____11_0__-D-tcl----4

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs April 11 1968

PhySDCOUi) l1JJ Uges litUBgy C~[filges

~n Last RStes RED BANK (NC) A

~atholic physician called for revision of the liturgical $orm of the Anointing of the Sick cluring a discussion on The Chaplains Role With the Dying Patient at Riverview Hospital here in New Jersey

Dr George J Sheehan an alumnus of Manhattan College and a founder of Christian Brothers Academy in nearby lLincroft was one of three apeakers at the symposium coshyaponsored by the hospital and Ute 1 Redmiddot Bank Council of

ilhurches Citing obvious failures by

both physician and clergyman iin helping the dying patient and bis family Dr Sheehan sugshygested members of the family Ghare inmiddot a ceremony which would exchange feelings of llove and hope between them ElDd the dying person

Dr ~heehan observed that while inadequacy in the face of death has been in the past apparent to the Protestant criergyman it is now also felt by Catholic priests

They findmiddot he said the La~t Sacrament in its present form Ii a consolation only to those with the strong faith of a Breton iiteasant-a kind of faith they e seeing less and l~ss-

Appropriate Theology He also said while the develshy

pment of a Common Christian itervice parlakirtg of the same llodividual familymiddot and commu~

Ility significance as Bap~i8ai -dMarriage would be a giant p in middotheiping people to a middotbappy death iit would remain IDol theologians to present- a relshy

qwant lmd acceptable image of mail in this time and this place ilnd to develop an appropriate eology of death heaven ~nd bell in order to make a signifi- sant change in our life style

lOd therefore in our approach to death

Other panelistsmiddot were the Rev Seorge Fitzgeraid a Presbyteshyaan minister middotand middotchaplain at Princeton Hospiital arid Mn Ruth Snyder a nurse of the lIiverview Hospital staffmiddot

POSTER CHILD LEADS WAY Joey BeIge 8 of Syraeuse NY leads themiddot way down a White House lttairway in the company ofthe Fi~st t-adymiddotMrsLyndon B Johnson

and Mrs Muriel Humphrey wife ofthe Vice-President Joeymiddotis this years poster child of

the National Association for Retarded Children H~ ismiddot thesQn ofMt and Mrs Robert Beige middotmembersmiddotOf St Vincent de Paul parish in Syracuse whos-e ot-herfive children SlHshy

round their Uttle broth~r wil1hmiddot the love and care to h~lp him livea full and happymiddot life

Penn See Studies Poverty Pmiddotrogram HARISBlJRq (NC)--Coadju- is being made to see ho)Vtbe to coordinate and channel our

tor Bishop Joseph T Daley diocese canmiddot best use its re-middot efforts in the fieldmiddot vicar general- of the Harrisburg sources to alleviate poverty Bishop Daley said it ismiddot im- diocese calledmiddot on the nearly problems middotperative that all our people 50000 Catholics in the area to He alsomiddot said Wemiddot contem- knoW and understand the probshy

acquaint th~mselves with 10- middotplatemiddot the early middotestablishment of middotIem of middotracism and the funda- calracfal and poverty problems amiddotmiddot diocesanmiddot human relations mental moral injustices which

In a lettermiddot read at aU Masses commission middotto serve asmiddot a liaison middotare at the root of the deplorable BishopDlIleT said middotthat a study with all people Collcerned and conditions in our own area

Urges Hospitals Re~ognie Unio~s

CLEVELAND (NC) - AI layshymens group here has asked the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hospitals to declare its willingshyness to recognize labor unions as collective bargaining agents for hospitals employes

lNle request came in a letter from William A caldwell chainnan of the eurolevellllnd Conference of Laymen to Sister ~ry Collette of Hamilton Ohio president of the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hosplshytala during a one-day meeting here of the Ohio Hospital Assoshyciation convention

The laymens group said such a statement would promote the human dignity of hospital emshyployes in real and immediate ways serve the common good of our communities and inshycrease the understandingmiddot of Catholic teaching by all the citishyzens of Ohio

The letter pointed out that the National Catholic Hospital Association 1 a s t November called on Catholic hospitals tiraquo be guided by the social teachshyings of the Church and to deal with unions that employecfgt choose

Discuss ~iot Report On Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC) - Beginshyning Sunday April 14 the Catholic Hour will present over the NBCmiddot network a three-part series The Climate of Change

Evolution or Revolution foshycusing on three areas of social and religioUs concern today today

~gr Rop~rt Fox cOordinashytor of Spanish community 00shy

middot lion in the New York arclidioshymiddoteese will discuss The Riot centommissi~ middotReport Amiddot Chrisshy

tiati Response April 14 Msgr Ivan D Illich of the Intereushy-tural Center 01 Language and D middotoe u men tat 1 on CuershyDavaca Mexf~o win be intershyviewed Aprjl 21 and Father Francois Houtart Belgian 00shyciologist will be interviewed Apiil 28

The National Council of Cathshy oUc Men producer of the OathshyoUe Hour reconunendseheckshymiddoting local newspaper programa for broadca9t time in particushymiddotRar areas

I Am The RestUlJTectiltogtD

Ai 1)(J[YQfGfDVIJJpound)9

lJ1~TJPJiiD~ EEJ~lJregff

FALL RIVER

Page 16: 04.11.68

~ 6

THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFon River-Thurs Apr 11 1968

CathoJi~ ll]wnDv~JSityPltDcopy~regii~copyJ~

IPlanLUBffil AmeFicon ~1]~regregO WASHINGTON (NC) - A ops and l~aders of several South

jJroup of pr-ofessors from Cathshy American governments sHe University of America hope The Washington center comshyS n~w technical middotinstituteat the middotprises -ll group of professorsshy~tholic University of Gu~Washy mostly members of the CU caulI Ecuador may mark the llchool of middoted ucation-whomiddot are ltJPening of an international edshy specialists ineclUcationfordeshyvcation bridgetoLatin America Velopment Director of the proshy

The institute will be inaugurshy ject is Dr Jose A Baquero ated early this month as 11 middotcoshy WM has been commuting b~shy1)eIativeventure by the Center meen Washingtonand his nashylor Educational Research fa middottive Ecuador dming the -cmrent QuitoEcuadorand the Center school year lor Community Developmenhmd This is not an Ecuadorian Servioe at Catholic University project it is an internatienal bere It has the support 01 Vashy projed a resealclFaction proshykanofficials Ecuadorianbislshy gram between North and South

America Dr Baquero said middothereBC middotto Recruit laquorNe had to start middotsomewhere The natural plaoe 10 begin wasNegro St~1ent5 middot-the Qlace Where weaould get

CHESTNUT HILL (NC) shy the most facilitiesThisproject iesuit-eper-ated Boston College God willing if successful will bere has made available $100shy move throughout Latin AmershyGtOO fora talent search -progr1m ica We already have contracts to recruit Negro stJdents frem with interestedJeaders in Sao disadvantagedurbanareas middotof Paulo BTazil Bogota Colombia tlhecountry mainly in Greater and Lima Peru Boston Msgr Eugene Kevane direcshy

Father Michael P Walsh SJ tor of the Center for Communitypresident caUed for support off Development andServleedaimshyiIIe entirestudent body facshy ed iB number of Latin American Illlty and administration of EQsshy Church and government officialS Qon College to make the ~mshy have middotexpressed interest in thecram a success projectand a belid it may beshy

Since the program was starteJ come a model of assistance middottoIJeveral weeks ago some 50 ~shy lI3derdeveloped poundOuntrieslltIicatiopshave beenreceiltvelll He said ArcnbishGp Romolofrom students in ghetto areas Carooni apostolic nuncio 10lot -entrance middotin next Septemshy

~1u told him heilOllSiders theWltll freshman -class pmject of great importance andThere have a1w~ys beellU M~S a similhlr middotinstitute willIlegro students enrolled at B4tsshybe established at the Pontificalton College oUicials said ~t University in Limatheir Dumber is ~ot ~own 00shy

0tberhigh-ranking churchshyaYSe race is not shown 8ll1 middotmen who lthave endorsed theapplications The Collegemiddotacceptll project include MsgrLuigi Lishyattdents of all faiths gutti the Holy Sees PermanentN~t SeptemberNegro lrtlllshy

1Gbserver at the Food and Agrishy

bullnts with the necessary ~uaUshy6eations will be admitted n8 culture Organization of the 1Ilual while middotsome 25 will ge United Nations and Archbishop admitted under the talent Ceasar Antonio Mosquera fif

lt4IeQIChprogram The number is Guayaquil president of theEcshybeing limited for thegood af iliad-orlan Bishops Conference

GOLDEN JUBILEE Sisshyter Rose Alma Reid CSC (Sjltte1 M Flora) will mark herg-olden i llbilee of religious professjon on Sunday April 21 at Sacred Heart Convent New Bedford A Mass of thanksgi~rjng will be offered at 1130 Sunchw morning at Sacred Head Church and a reception will be held in the parish hall ITom2 to 4 th~t

afternoon Friends and forshymer pupils are invited t01l~

tend

So Curolina Bishop A-sksPettce $upport

CHARLESTON (NC)- Bishshymiddotop Ernest Lmiddot Unterkoefier of Charleston has called for the middotfull support ofall Americans of President Lyndon middotlB Johnshysons efforts to secure peace in middotVietnam

Tbe South ltCarolina Bishop said that the Presidents -peace ini tiati yes demonstrate that he is a gtarson who -has ever been conscious of the grave responsishybility 01 his ofillce and that his judgements have been measured ~y the critical threats to the securi~y and free action ofthe United States

ICampus Comediansl

R~JlJ~stforBirh ControJ 1nlcrmation lndBGSYlrncrGti(C~e

DAYTON (NC)-A Univershysity of Dayton chaplain said he suspected campuscomediami for 1b~ conJroversyaroused bY a request for availability of birth corttol information and materials In campus by theunishyversity stmiddotudent congress

Father Urban Rupp SM universi~y co-chaplain wrote in the chaplain s bulletin the alshymost unanimous aetion fthe student gfvernment group middotwas an idio~yncratic caper in the natureo Ii ttle childrenpl~ying

house He indicated he fouud it difshy

ficult to take the Pfoposa1 serishyomlY

Now of COUrse I middotcowd be taking this all -wrong be said

Perhaps it was intended 00 bn serious In that case I woUld be tempted to thinktheemershygency is not just immediateshyit is really one generation too late

This was taken asa reference to student efforts to pwih through the resolution orbirth control as an emergency -meashysure

That failed but a few days later the student middotcongressvo~ 29 tol to seeka change in llJllshyversUy Wlicy that would -pershymit the introductionof birth 1Ontrol selYiees in thestudem health center for married eQUoshy~les and Ulose llQOD _ ~arriedmiddot

the young Negroes whowiUbe ~pted oUiciaI said

~

bull

PATRIARCH The middotnewily elected head of the Syriac Oatholic Church Patriarch Hgtenys Antoine Hayek of Anshy~och was enthroned recentshy1w in Beirut Lebanon In this post hesucceds the late P-ashykiarch Ignace Cardinal TapshylPouni NC Photo

I

II

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In ~ glory of His Resurrection may be reborn man~

amiring hopes and CleSires _ ~ce

HAPPY EASTER THE OFFICERS DIRiEc1r~ AND STAFfshy

il1Jf11l

FIRSTmFff-BANK

-Ji1lim~~OF NEW BEDFORD

StYE SOME

11IfiPPINESS TO

A CHILD

i8iAPPI~ESS IS

A bull told ($1250 a monttl$15000-a ~ar)ca_small SISTER Investment for SisterS lifetime of service

Like to be her sponsorf Her name Is Sister Suzamma and she will write to you

iIHAPPINESS ciS

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HAPPlHU II

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anddressesmiddotherb8y Agoodnurl8tllwayshaa Itime fora smlla1iood fathers -wh(tle ~tthelr

work bullbull The best lsortof51Ilins lnvoLves mor than writing middotchecks--etlll how better can you help the children now whoneed you overseasf Boysandslrls who are btl~~ltper1JJjeafmiddotmuta bullbull orp~your~oneyglftslarg~-and bullmell willfeedthemmiddotteach them cur themgivethem 8 chance In lifebullbullbullbull Wantllobe happiermiddotthi

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In Erumathale south India 8 young Indian girllnrtnilriing tobea sisterOfthe Imltatlon1lf Christ will learn amofSotherttllnp how Jo care for orphans Hertlalning costs $300 all

Sevanmiddotyear-od Clara Vaookkaran an orphan In Kottamthy Indla needs lMtryttling Iitta (SIr need $10 wlllP8Y her 8)(~nslJlJm~thbymiddot cm(lOthweUaendYOU harphoto

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THE ANCHO~-Trappists Elect Mother Church of Nation8 PortlglleSe 17 Thurs April 11 1968

Youngest Abbot P-epares fOI- Cenlellilial Celebration At Gethsenloni Dy Patida F r-u nis

GETHSEMANI (NC) The youngest abbot in the history of the monastery of Our Lady of Gethsemani was formally blessed (March ~l) by Archbishop Thomas J McDon~

ough 0pound Louisville Father M Flavian Burns

OCSO 36 ilgt the seventh ab~

bot in the 120-year history of the monastery He was elected by members of the community Inst January to succeed Abbot M James Fox OCSO

Father Flavian described bis position as en administrator whose main job il) service to others within the community He said his most important function it3 to hold plivate spiritual conversations with other monks and to handle the lillM)nasterys relations with the ~Atside world

Thcilt are some 120 monks at ~ethsemani abbey a decline from past years Abbot Burns cCrlbllltes the decline at least in prt to the attitude of the times YiJCl1 was foJJJlcrly accepted without question is now being ltI~etioned he observed

ltDontemplation Prayer

Changes have been made the IHurElY is now in English and 2Jc strict vow of silence has TiKen relaxed somewhat On an experimental basis the monks are allowed to use brief oral instructions instead of sign language as in the past

Despite the lack of radio or 1clevision Abbot Burns said the monks keep in contact through newspllpers with events in todays world The main thing ill to know what is going on in the Church and what effects our fellow hushymans according to the abbot

The life of a monk involves middotcontemplation and prayer rather than speaking up - 11 more spiritual turn according kI Abbot BUlns

A native of Jersey City N J he is a graduate of Henry SfIyder public high sehool there

Protests- Campaign Agamst Religion

NEW YORK (NC) - A new wave of terror against aU churcltgpers is now in effect in Albania an exile from that country has declored in a- letter of protest sent to the United Nations Commission on Human Rightsmiddot and~ to UN Secretary General U Thani

The protest bl Dr Rexhep KIasniqi president of the Free Albania Committee which has its headquarters here said that Albanial following a lf41oist eommunillt guideline has shut down every cltulch and mosque and has made any_kind of pubshylIc worship impossible

Thill campaign Dr Krasniqi tated is a violation of the UN Charter the Universal Declarashytion of Human Rights and of Albanias own communist conshystitutional guarantee of freedom of conscience for all

San Antonro Priests Form Association

SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Fortyshyene diocesan and religious comshymunities priests of the San Anshytonio archdiocese formed a priests association bere The priests ohose a six-member temshypora]) steering committee

One of the fiTst formal actions Gf the allsociatron was to inform Archbishop Robert E Lucey of San Antonio of the group forshymation

There are approximately 441

Parishioner d St John the Baptist Church in Nc Bedford are getting rendy for a momentoils event-the 100th anniversary of the fO~1l1dil1g of the oldest Portuguese parish in the nation The cen~en]ial celebration wi II not take place until 1971 but many things have to be done in preparation within the next three years One major project is renoshyvating the church ihelf To pay for the massive job ptrshyishioners have inaugur~teca Centennial Fund Drive to raise money for painting ~he church do extensive electrical work and buy a rew organ Estimated cost (f the regt3ir5 is $150000

Rt Rev Msgr John A Silvia pastor is honorary drve chairshyman and Frank S Jason is genshyeral chairman Other committee members include Richard GiJI1shysalves and Jesse V Santos Jr division chairmen JQseph S Vera special gifts chairman Richard L Lopes treasurer George Radcliffe director Louis S Silva assistant director Mrs Mary Lucy Soares office conshytrols and Miss Luey E Dias list supervisor

Members of the Campaign Exshyecutive Committee also include Frank M Martin ald Joseph C Motta

The history of St Johns and the history of the Portuguese people in America arc closely intertwined

It was at the end of the 18th Century that settlers began comshying from themiddot Azores to the United States TheJ were relashytively few in number nd as II

result almost lost their national identity

Near Ifood However by 1840 the trickle

of Azoreans was beginning to turn into a near Oood of imshymigrants who settled in New Bedford then a whaling and fishing center

By 1865 many Portuguese families called New Bedford home They lacked just one thing-a church of their own and a priest who spoke their language and understood their customs and traditions

Their first priest-Rev Joao Ignacio de Azevedo-anived in 1869 and on Sept 10 1871 St Johns parish was canonically established

Theremiddot were approximately 1shy000 Portuguese of Azorean deshyscent living in New Bedford at the time and the)T detelmined to build their own church A lot was purchased for $3OD8 ~ con~

siderable amount in those days and soon ground WQS broken for the new house of God

However Father de Azeedo was a mission pliest Vl~ho~moved

throughout the are~ aCministershying to his counblymen As a reshysult a new parish was establishshyed in Boston and he became its first pastor

Expandoll

Construction of St Johns WillS

continued by Rev Antonio de Mattos Freitas a native or Calshylteta St George Azores Fashyther Freitas also was responsible for the construction of a recshytory When he reUred because of ill health and returned to~ the AzoreS he was succeeded by Rev Antonio G de Silva Neves who was to serve St Johns durshying the greatest expansion Gfthe citys Portuguese colony

The first church located where a section of Morse- Twiampt Drill now stands soon ~ outgrown by its congregation and a drive began for agt new and larger church

Father Neves who served 8~j

pastor for almost 25 years saw the new church at County and Wing Streets almost coop]eted However ill health also forced bill retirement

PREPARING FOR CENTENNIAL In charge of fumd drive for hundredth anniversary of St John Baptist Church New Bedford are from left George Radclffe drive execushytive director Frank Jailon general chairman

pleted construction of the present church and rectory in three years The church which now serves the parish was solemnly blessed an4 dedicated to the worship of God by the late Bishshyop Feehan

Through the years the parshyishioners of St Johns have proved their dedication to their cliurch Now they are renewinr their dedication

Msgr Silvia notes that before the small St Johns Church was built the citys Portuguese colshyony attended Mass at St Lawshyrence Church Later they moved into what today is Crowells brt Store

Landmark Today the 11Inificent st

Johns is a landmark in New Bedford befitting its position as Mother Church of the Portu guese in the- UnFted States

MSgr Silvia a native of Pall River served at St Peters Church in Provincetown for 27 years His only other assi1shyment St John the B-aptirt Church

Ordained to the priesthood or Dec 20 1919 St Johns was the new priests first assignment He remained at the cRurch unshytil No~ember 1924 when he was transferred to Ptovinceto~

On Oct 2 1951 Msgr Silvia returned to St Johns as pzsshytor a post hemiddot still fulfills with zeal and energy

His assignmetlt to St Jobnfl parish in 1919 was not ~1sgr Sinshyvias introduotion to the New Bedford parish

As a young boy the p2stcshyrecalls his poundathers weekly trips from Fall River to New Bedford to bring back a priest

Four Families There were few Portuguese

families in Fall River in those days he says When my father arrived in Fan River there were iust four Portuguese families in the city Gradually others setshytled there

My father used to drive over in a horse and buggy to bring Il priest back tc Fall River to ll3y

degbrought him back the next dzy Since those days of hischiMshy

bood Msgr Silvia observeamp-l Turn to Page Eighteen

Continued fronmiddot Page Three

the late Tobias and Ann Lynch ]Burke Mr Burke was born in Newport Tipperary Ireland and his speech bears witness to the o-it and lilt of his birthshyplce He is married te Catbshyerine Lowney Burke and the couple lives next to the Chanshycery

DI1 Davia Costa Dr Costa son of David CosU

and Julia Rodrigues is the husshyband of Louella Somerday and fther of five children A dentshyist in NeJ Bedford he is active ir ceo and in St Vincent ~e

Pml work on a parochial and al(l level He has been zealoUJ ir- many important phases ~

perish aetivity in Immaculate Conception Parish in New BedshyforC He was recipient of the Diocesan Marian Award in Deshycember

itpJlin 15 TIle awards Jill be presenteCl

at St Marys Cathedral Fa]] River on lIlonday evening April 15 at 8 PM At toot timeuro there will be the investi shyture of two lI-ionsignori the awarding of Papal Knight 03 SZ Gregory honors to nine ~sect- oeesan laymen and the Pro EecIesia et Pontipoundlce award kJ mother Pierre Marie adminisshytlato of St Annes Hospital IE Fall River~

Join Federation IIALEIGH (NC)-Forty ()(f thfl

matewide Raleigh dioceses 14~

tlriests have formed the North iCaFolina Priests Associatioil which will affiliate with a Emshy

ticmal federation DOW beiJl~

formed

May the Joy and Pomise 01- Easter

uplift your spirit and gladden

your hean

FROM THE OFRCEIIS AND PERSONfJB Of

qkJM~ERCHANTS CIa1iotuLe BANK

IN NEW BEDFORD

SOUTH BANK-Cove St at Iodney French Boulevard WEST BANK-Kempton Street at Mill Stret

LUNDS CORNER BANK-Acushnet Ave rear Lunds Comer DARTMOUTH BANK-Dartmouth Street near Rockdale Ave NORTH BANK-Acushnet Avbull at Coffin Ave

CENTER BANK-Purchase and William Sts priests in the San Antonio arcl1shy Next pastor was the Rev Mass He used to stay overnight tiiocese Manuel A da Silva wt() oom- at our hOuse ald JlG ~tbeI

-

18 Tti~ ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1969 CatecheticsWeek Set at StonehillDioce$clm ~j[llIlde[lj)fl5 Join Nal-gonGI Some 400 priests religious and laymen are expected to at shyMculrraurru U A$~ssinatBon tend a catechetics institute b be held Monday Aug 5 throughOf Dr Mriin luther KilnS Saturday Aug 10 at Stonehill College Diocesan schools shared i~ national mourning at the Sister Mary Francille CSJ

~8sassination of Dr Martin Luther King with special theology professor at Regis ColshyMasses or prayers offered in every school At Cassidy High lege will direct the institute in Taunton Rev John Moore chaplain celebrated a Mass and speakers will include Rev

Frederick Moriarty SJ Revfor the repose of the soul Cha~les E Cook Rev James F(l)f the Negro leader and rently hplds first place in the Hawker Sister Florence -MishyNotre Dame math league chels OLVM Gerard Potte~

tlie chapel by students in a demy Fairhaven have been study periods were spent in Girls at Sacred Hearts Acashy

bauoi and Mrs Helen Jacobs With the theme Making Alllvigil for peace working on a project to bring

Christian Youth Movement Easter cheer to patients at St Things New institute sessiono will discuss Scripture catechetshymembers at Jesus-Mary Aca- Lukes Hospital New Bedford ical techniques use of filmsdemy Fall River heard the New Under supervision of Sister Jushywith adolescents other visualFolk a group of singing Holy lie Louise SSCC theyve ~een aids parent education teamCross seminarians Their appear- making tray favors including teaching and creative dramaticsance was arranged under t~e decorative placemats and napkin

Further information is avail shydirection of Mofher John Scarry holders for adults and flowered able from Stonehill CollegeJRJM Jollipops chicky surprises and North Easton 02356Also at JMA its French Week bunny hats for childern

The observance- began Sunday Science Fair Winners when French Club members Jeanne Phenix Yvette Berthi- Holy Family had four winshy Charities AppeaI aume and Susan Cournoyer took ners at the annual New Bedford Continued from Page Three part in a play sponsored by the Science fair In the senior division

Community Fund CampaignPrevost French Club Les Fem- James Berry and John Thomas president Board of Managers mes Parlent Trop Throughout of the New Bedford school were of Boston Dispensary and vice

the week too there have middotbeen cited fo~ earth science and phy- the Diocesan cheerleading tour- will combine with the seniors president of USOseveral skits prepared by mem- sics proJects respectively while t tl h ld t F h th bZbers in the junior division both Pa- namen recen yea ee an Lor e occasIOn SInce oth He has been the recipient of

or effort at Prevost was tricia Downey and SharonSmola High but sports arent all that cltsses of the academy are small honorary degrees from Holy MaJ matter at the TauntoJl girls due to the fact that the high Cross College Tufts University

e Sunday program Whlch ln- were recognized for work in the h f h d I ld f b sc 001 Break ast lunc an schoo IS being phased out Suffolk University Bradford -luded In addItIon to the play fle 0 iology M formal dinner pace settmgs The Junipero Club of Holy Durfee College of Technology~veral talks by promInent any students won honors at h M h I I I were recently on display at the Family High recently sponsored of Fall Rivet and Lowell Techshy

I remiddotnch cItIzens a French song- t e assac usetts RegIOn S F h school library and members of a talk on drug addiction for jun- nological Institute ~t and a motion picture Clence alr eld in Fall Rlver They included Christine Four- the Mothers Auxiliary were on iors and seniors The talk was Bishop to AddJess Meeting

UN French Club nier Dominican Academy and hand to answer etiquette ques- given by two brothers one an Most Rev James L ConnollyAt Coyle the French Club di- Diane Desmarais Mt St Mary tions from the students ex-addict the other director of Bishop of Fall River will speak

Ilected by Brother Hugh McCabe Academy both Fall River Both And the Coyle Fathers Club Marathon House a center for to the priests parish trusteesIOeCently elected officers After girls were recogiIized by the held its annual Father-Son Com treatment of addicts located in chairmen of the Catholic Charishy8le votes were tallied however Southeastern District of the Mas- munion breakfast at the school Coventry RIo ties Appeal and the invited lays our man at Coyle it looked sachuse~ts Dental Society bull with Robert Cahill ofthe Rhode CongratuIcitions go to Joseph gue9ts of the 111 diocesan if ~embers were voting for Debra Lay Dominican Aca- Island Food and Drug Commis Abraham of St Anthony High parishes bull UN delegation The presidents demy received a savings bond sion as guest speaker He dis- for meriting runner-up position Roland A Lafrance 1968 ApshyliPot wa~ captured he reports from the Bristol South Distriet cussed harmful effects of various iil the state finals of the annual peal lay chairman will also adshy a Polish fellow Cbarles Ozug Medical Auxiliary arid Michael drugs American Legion olatorical con- dress the 800 expected to attend lames OBrien a true Irishman Zito Bishop Feehan High At~middot The Catholic Students Mis- test - the opening meeting of the won the vice-presidential spot tleboro was awarded a plaque sion CrUsade at Stang H~gh has In club~ews at~HA the Senshy campaign for funds for the 30 while the treasurers job was by the Womens Auxil1ary to the taken as a special project this ior Science Club will conduct agencies of the Catholic Chadshy~warded to Jorge Matesanz -a Mass Veterinary ASsn month of April the collection of a farewell meeting for seniors ties Appeal

BASKETBALL PLAYERS On basketball team at Connolly High Fall River are from left Tim Duffy Tom Kroger John Long Joe Kelly Greg Sullivan Mike Manning

~~dent of Spanisll extraction Winners in the division of donated medical supplies and this ~month and members will Only Paul Bor9ue the secretary earlhscience Were John Dias eyeglasses for deprived Peoples visit an encephalitis clinic in I ~anaged to make the scene for Thomas Burk~ anciRobei-tClou~ of the world Supplies collected Freetown in May The Stamp France tier FeehahMicIlael Cote Pre illbe forwarded to the Cathi- and Coin Clubis planning a pubshy

At Bishop Stang iil North vost and Elizabeth Lavoi~ Do- olic Missions Medical Bureau for lie exhibition of members col- Dartmouth the math team led minican shipment iections in May imd the Chess by high scorer Lawrence l3yrnes Awards in math and engineer- Upco~ing at S~A Fairhaven Club has undergone reorganiza- placed secon~in a reeentBqs- ing went to Carol Vasconcellos is the aruiual senior prom which tion election of officers inshyflon public schools math meet Mt St Mary Madeleine Delisl~ wilL be held in the Colonial cluding Edward Norman presishyThe Stang team paced by the and Vivian Blais and Michael R60m of Whites restaurant in dent Daniel Brule vice-presi- shyeo-sIstent good work of George Zito Feehan Genevieve Pappas Westport from 8 to midnight dent Diane Lizotte secretary Oliver and EIleen Keavy cur- and Debra Lay Dominican Joan Friday night May 24 Juniors TuniorProm

Basile Feehan Amato Polselli The Holy Family Junior Prom Prevost and Sharon Woycie- Board ofmiddot Trustees isslated for Friday night AprilCentennialmiddot chowski Mt St Mary were 26 at Kennedy Center The prom

Continued from Page Seventeen cited To Study Changes will last from 8 to 11 and will Chemistry winners included have Carousel as its themebroad smile on his face-many Jane Arruda Anne Lewis De- WASHINGTON (NC) - The Mlisic will be by the Escorts

other families have arrived from nise Michaud Elizabeth St board of trustees of the Catho- And the Holy Family debatePltlrtugua1 A man d Diane Lamontagne lic University of America in team tied for first place in the Our Lady of Mt Carmel par- Christine Fournier Dominican Washington D C will meet Narry League with Cassidy A ~h was detached from St Johns Anne Sullivan and Pamela Can- Sunday April 21 in St Louis playoff will be held As of now as the Portuguese population dee Feehan Marilyn Riley and to consider a wide range of rec- Cassidys debate reco~d is 12 grew Then Our Lady of the Ann-Marie Charrette Sacred ommended changes resulting wins out of 14 debatesjrnmaculate Conception parish Hearts Fall River Irene Caron from a year-long study of the was erected to care for families Cassidy Marilyn Bentley Mt pontifical university by a comshyi Portuguese descent living in mitteee headed by Dr Carroll ~e North End of New Bedford St Mary Hochwalt

In the field of physics Alan middotRAMBLERToday St John the Baptist White Prevost Michelle Paquet The meeting will be held in ehurch has about 4000 parishshy SHA Fall River JamesReid Jrconjunction witll the Spring Americas Economy King ioners Our numbers started Prevost Mary Soans Jane Mc meeting of the National Confershy Fnr the Best Deal Come To dropping about seven years ago Donald and Martba Nugent yent ence of Catholic Bishops Broadway Ramblerasgr Silvia explains He feels St Mary The trustees are expected 10 INC part of the drop in membership Representatives from Diocesan name a new 30-man board meet 768 BROADWAYis due to a number of families schools to the Mass State Sci- with faculty representatives for RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 131moving outside the parish )ounshy ence Fair will include Michael the first time in histoi-y and CHARLES J DUMAIS Presdarles Intermarriages with othshy lito Amato Polselli Debra Lay discuss the search for a new er nationalities account for still Madeleine Delisle Jane Arruda university rector to replacemore losses Anne Lewis Father J~dhn P Whalen ~ho ~III11I11I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I11I1I1HIUIIIIIIIlIIlilllllllllllfllHlIilttmmIllIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllllnIlIllIllHIIIIIIIIIJ111~ However the Mother Church Denise Michaud Alan White was naine last October to a ef the Portuguese is not fading Michelle Paquet Elizabeth St one-year term as acting rector E WEEKEND SPECIAL sect away AmandSharon Woyciechowski A new school was built in New Projector

f957 It is expensive Msgr Silvia admits but I felt we needed it

St Anthony High in New Bedshyford is rejoicing over acquisi shytion of a movie projector as a

Parish gtrganizations are active gimiddotft from the alumni association and individual parishioners are willjng to give of their time

Presentation to principal Sister Lucille Champagne was made

and effort Perking

to keep the parish by Mrs Josephine Lafleur sociation president

asshy

Now they are getting read7 Cassidy-Coyle cheerleaders Jor a 100th anniversary captured third pillce v9Phy iil

_

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Westport Real Doric-Horse lHE ANCHOR-DIoeIee r bull I AJu n

Case Somerset Favorites In Narry Diamond League

Case High of Swansea and Somerset are pre-season ehoices in this seasons Narragansett League baseball race but the club th8lt will bear watching is Westport TIne darkshyhorse Villagers may have a few surprises for Narry foes Another small area school

with a respectable 8-6 recordthat potentially has a shot Only one member of that at a league championship is squad Calvin Hopkinson will Norton of the Tri-Valley not be playing for the Villagers Conference Coach Ed Bibeau this Spring With the rest of the has most of last Deasons Central club ready to go - watch Jlor Village regulars Westport to make its presence in the fold ready lmown to challenge the Among fuose returning are perennial Paul Eastwood an Russ Picard favori1es If 0 T two of the better performers in Narry honors the circuit a year ago Eastwood amp1i1 at Norton led the team in hitting with a (C 0 a c h Peter highly respectable 360 averagem[l ~ek has pitched and played the infield G3ven returning Picard like Eastwood 15 also ~nnen for versatile An outfielder by trade ~theY chamshy he also takes his turn on the ii~~JWhip bid Peter mound for Coach Bibeaus nine Weo~port Bartek Carl Zajac and Jeff Hague tmIshed the 1961 eampaign ill round out Bibeaus four-man ~ place in tbe NalT7 loop pitching staff

Norton Bids for Tri-Valley Crown jfOO task of handling the but in thin scholastic year of

~tJ of this quartet will fall athletic surprises it may not be Gpoundl ~e shoulders of either Ron as big as some thinllt ~JmOi) or Manny Cabral both

A second place finisher inexperienced receivers ConnOlll 1967 the Norton Lancers haveexcel1B not only defensively their sights on the Tri-Valleybut likewise with the bat He Conference crown The clubsbit at a 333middot clip last Spring one-two hitters last campaignJohn Souza and Mike Andras have departed from the Norton th better than 300 hitters baseball scene but the teamqaln will be out to join the one-two pitching punch is reshyleague leaders in batting prowshyturning Juniors Ken Allen aess They should put a wallop left-hander who had a perfectin Westports oHensive attaCK 7-0 record last Spring and ArtIf Coach Bibeaus boys can dushyBouchard will be relied uponplicate their Performances of a heavily to bring the league flagJellr ago Offensively and biB to Norton Coach Bartek alSobig four comes through on middottbe hopes to get some help in middotthemound Westport may realize a the pitching departmentmiddot fromlong awaited Narry championshyFred Rego Bill Gorczyca andEip dream Admittedly if Ie Steve Nichols bull bie word in ~~rts_tuture

~ ~ bull I

OpeUp With~on-League Co~esttsmiddot Other returnees incl~ Capshy develop rapidlymiddot defensively if

tain Mike Wynnn Greg Croff they are to regain the leagues BOb Adams Tim McEndy and divisional crown - whicb flbeymiddot Paul Hassie Wynn a senior lost to HoWston last Spring middotmiddot will be starting his third season and gain a shot at the Trl shyill left field with Cruffstarting V~ey Conference ebampionshyhis second campaign in center ship Many area clubs openThey will be joIned by Wynns their campaign this week with brother Ricky in right fied non-league games highlighting

The infield win be anchored the action League competition by Adams at second base and will commence for the most Hassle at short Newcomers part next week Richy Silvia and George Macshy Mother Nature has done her Arthur are presently battling it job this Spring Baseball coaches out for the third base job and throughout -the diocese admit Lorrie Adams also a first-year that this is the best Spring they man appears to have the inside have had to prepare flbeir track on first base charges in many a year Weather

cannot be blamed for a slowMcEndy who has been the start this time around All areLancers starting catcher since eagerly awaiting the umpireshis Freshman year is starting first call to play ballhIs third campaign behiJd the

plate Bartek expects McEndy to hold the inexperienced inshy New School System field together

The Lancers will have to imshy In German State prove upon their hitting and DUSSELDORF (NC) - The

North Rhine-Westphalia state parliament middothas approved aCanadian Prelates change in the states school sysshytem that probably will meanEstablish Council the end of many denominational

OTTAWA (NC)-The Catho-shy schools Hc bishops of Canada have esshy By an overwhelming majorshytablished a 12-member Fiscal ity the parliament voted to Affairs Council composed of change the state constitution and clergy Religious and laymen establish the nondenominational who will advise the Church on Christian school in which reli shyfinanclal matters gious training is given by Cathshy

Among the areas which are olic and Protestant instructors receiving ini~ial attention of the in the same school as the patshycommittee is the question of tern for state-supported schools whether the Church should be from the fifth through the nint subject to government taxation grades and if so what form of taxation In the past the state has supshywould be equitable to churches ported Illeparate Catholic and government and other taxshy Pro tell tan t denominational payen Khoola

-~) PASSION PLAY Today Christians hold the Solemn Observance of the Lords Supper

It is commemorated ina PMsion Play at Prevost High School Fall River by David Poisshyson as Christ Paul Martel left 8$ St John and Paul Bouampquet as St Peter

DominicGlIsmiddot Rent ApGrt~~rit in Inner -Cimiddottimiddot middot

Want t~ Get Closer to I Agony of the Worl~middot WASHINGTON (NC)middot Pift his experience in the neig~lgtorshy ruary 1966 because theJ

Dominican priests-each doing hood is invaluable in helping wanted to get closer to the bis own thing-are living middotin an both prisoners and parolees He agony of the world While nol apartment in the inner ~ cd said the insight he gains into eliminating the academic life Washington here they come from ancl h~w they felt that living in the inlleJ The five run the gamut from they view life aids him In mv city would be as important bull

a professor of moral theology at ing them intelligent advice and learning experience as academic the Don)inican House ofStucUeII 8ssis~nCe study to a prison chaplain a1 the Diamp- Father William Kane is middotthemiddotNeighborhOoclll[aatrict of Columbia Jail Ibey neighborhood man of the have in common1heiy addresa A Pr~ceton graduate ~itl1 apartment Hemiddotworks with minshyand a desire to understand and doctorates from Harvard aJgt4 isters inmiddot the area in establishing alleviate the problems ~ livlnc OxfCrd Father Albert Brodershy youth programs and fightina I in a poor Urban community ick teaches Constitutional LalV for better housing and fail

Father TbomasHea~ middotttie at the catholic University Law rent laws His motive is to givemoral theology professor aDd School the people in the community aD author of a reCent bOOkmiddotID awareness of their own dignitymiddotBe and Father Heath startedFaee of An~sh is 0Il 1be to affirm the fact that it is athe apartment project in Feb-bOard of direCtors of the Pe0shy ood place to live ples Center a house soon to be

the rehabilitationopened for Criticizes Usury of alcoholics He also meets

MEXICO CITY (NC)-Mexshy5 50 01- a SYSTEMATIC wimiddotth ~culties of Wasbingtcm

icc CityS Jose Cardinal Garibiseminaries to discuss policyshy bull 10 year SAViNGSRivera urged bankers meetingmaking and apostolic activity MONTHLY DEPOSITSat the National Bankers Conshy

Legal Aid Office vention in Guadalajara to comshy 5 00 01- a INVESTMENT bat usury and work closely bull 10 year SAVINGS

Father Joseph Cooney a NOTICE ACCOUNTSwith the government to proshylawye~ who has worked 011

voter registration in the South mote the social welfare of all II REGULAR4 5001 the Mexican people bull 10 Jflar SAVINGSand took an active part in dvil

rights activities such lIS

~lma march is DOW admin~ Bass Rivertering a legal aid office in the CENTERneighborhood of the Dominishy Savings Bank

cans apartment Volunteer law Paint and Wallpaperstudents from the Catholic Uni- Bank 8y Man I

versity of Ameiica assist him Dupont Paint

We Pay The Postage

IJcor Middle St

A third member of the group m this program 4iiii 422 Acush Ave bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA Fat her Raymond MalonSOl1 ~ New Bedford bull SOUTH VARMOUTH 4raquo HYANNISserves as the Catholic chapiain bull PARKINGmiddot

bull DENNIS PORT bull OSTtRVILLEatmiddot the D C jail A late vocashy Rear of Storetion Father Malonson has been ordained only two years middot Father Malonsoll feels U1at

LEVESQILIES OFFla E~lnPMENTNow Many Wear Wood Metal Desks and ChairsFALSE TEETH

With More Comfort JUST GiVE ME A CHANe TO QUOleTo overcome discomfort when

dentures sllp sllde or loosen Just sprinkle a llttle FASTEETH on your 187 SHAWMUT STREET bull NEW BEDFORD MASS

middot plates FASTEElH holds dentures firmer You eat better feel more PO Box 2062 - Hervey L Levesque

middot -wont sour Helps check plate odor comfortable FASTEETH Is alkaline

Dentures that fit are lIlSSentlai to Telephone 993middot1264middot health See your dentist regularly Get FASTEETB at all drUB counten ___ _ _____11_0__-D-tcl----4

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs April 11 1968

PhySDCOUi) l1JJ Uges litUBgy C~[filges

~n Last RStes RED BANK (NC) A

~atholic physician called for revision of the liturgical $orm of the Anointing of the Sick cluring a discussion on The Chaplains Role With the Dying Patient at Riverview Hospital here in New Jersey

Dr George J Sheehan an alumnus of Manhattan College and a founder of Christian Brothers Academy in nearby lLincroft was one of three apeakers at the symposium coshyaponsored by the hospital and Ute 1 Redmiddot Bank Council of

ilhurches Citing obvious failures by

both physician and clergyman iin helping the dying patient and bis family Dr Sheehan sugshygested members of the family Ghare inmiddot a ceremony which would exchange feelings of llove and hope between them ElDd the dying person

Dr ~heehan observed that while inadequacy in the face of death has been in the past apparent to the Protestant criergyman it is now also felt by Catholic priests

They findmiddot he said the La~t Sacrament in its present form Ii a consolation only to those with the strong faith of a Breton iiteasant-a kind of faith they e seeing less and l~ss-

Appropriate Theology He also said while the develshy

pment of a Common Christian itervice parlakirtg of the same llodividual familymiddot and commu~

Ility significance as Bap~i8ai -dMarriage would be a giant p in middotheiping people to a middotbappy death iit would remain IDol theologians to present- a relshy

qwant lmd acceptable image of mail in this time and this place ilnd to develop an appropriate eology of death heaven ~nd bell in order to make a signifi- sant change in our life style

lOd therefore in our approach to death

Other panelistsmiddot were the Rev Seorge Fitzgeraid a Presbyteshyaan minister middotand middotchaplain at Princeton Hospiital arid Mn Ruth Snyder a nurse of the lIiverview Hospital staffmiddot

POSTER CHILD LEADS WAY Joey BeIge 8 of Syraeuse NY leads themiddot way down a White House lttairway in the company ofthe Fi~st t-adymiddotMrsLyndon B Johnson

and Mrs Muriel Humphrey wife ofthe Vice-President Joeymiddotis this years poster child of

the National Association for Retarded Children H~ ismiddot thesQn ofMt and Mrs Robert Beige middotmembersmiddotOf St Vincent de Paul parish in Syracuse whos-e ot-herfive children SlHshy

round their Uttle broth~r wil1hmiddot the love and care to h~lp him livea full and happymiddot life

Penn See Studies Poverty Pmiddotrogram HARISBlJRq (NC)--Coadju- is being made to see ho)Vtbe to coordinate and channel our

tor Bishop Joseph T Daley diocese canmiddot best use its re-middot efforts in the fieldmiddot vicar general- of the Harrisburg sources to alleviate poverty Bishop Daley said it ismiddot im- diocese calledmiddot on the nearly problems middotperative that all our people 50000 Catholics in the area to He alsomiddot said Wemiddot contem- knoW and understand the probshy

acquaint th~mselves with 10- middotplatemiddot the early middotestablishment of middotIem of middotracism and the funda- calracfal and poverty problems amiddotmiddot diocesanmiddot human relations mental moral injustices which

In a lettermiddot read at aU Masses commission middotto serve asmiddot a liaison middotare at the root of the deplorable BishopDlIleT said middotthat a study with all people Collcerned and conditions in our own area

Urges Hospitals Re~ognie Unio~s

CLEVELAND (NC) - AI layshymens group here has asked the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hospitals to declare its willingshyness to recognize labor unions as collective bargaining agents for hospitals employes

lNle request came in a letter from William A caldwell chainnan of the eurolevellllnd Conference of Laymen to Sister ~ry Collette of Hamilton Ohio president of the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hosplshytala during a one-day meeting here of the Ohio Hospital Assoshyciation convention

The laymens group said such a statement would promote the human dignity of hospital emshyployes in real and immediate ways serve the common good of our communities and inshycrease the understandingmiddot of Catholic teaching by all the citishyzens of Ohio

The letter pointed out that the National Catholic Hospital Association 1 a s t November called on Catholic hospitals tiraquo be guided by the social teachshyings of the Church and to deal with unions that employecfgt choose

Discuss ~iot Report On Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC) - Beginshyning Sunday April 14 the Catholic Hour will present over the NBCmiddot network a three-part series The Climate of Change

Evolution or Revolution foshycusing on three areas of social and religioUs concern today today

~gr Rop~rt Fox cOordinashytor of Spanish community 00shy

middot lion in the New York arclidioshymiddoteese will discuss The Riot centommissi~ middotReport Amiddot Chrisshy

tiati Response April 14 Msgr Ivan D Illich of the Intereushy-tural Center 01 Language and D middotoe u men tat 1 on CuershyDavaca Mexf~o win be intershyviewed Aprjl 21 and Father Francois Houtart Belgian 00shyciologist will be interviewed Apiil 28

The National Council of Cathshy oUc Men producer of the OathshyoUe Hour reconunendseheckshymiddoting local newspaper programa for broadca9t time in particushymiddotRar areas

I Am The RestUlJTectiltogtD

Ai 1)(J[YQfGfDVIJJpound)9

lJ1~TJPJiiD~ EEJ~lJregff

FALL RIVER

Page 17: 04.11.68

THE ANCHO~-Trappists Elect Mother Church of Nation8 PortlglleSe 17 Thurs April 11 1968

Youngest Abbot P-epares fOI- Cenlellilial Celebration At Gethsenloni Dy Patida F r-u nis

GETHSEMANI (NC) The youngest abbot in the history of the monastery of Our Lady of Gethsemani was formally blessed (March ~l) by Archbishop Thomas J McDon~

ough 0pound Louisville Father M Flavian Burns

OCSO 36 ilgt the seventh ab~

bot in the 120-year history of the monastery He was elected by members of the community Inst January to succeed Abbot M James Fox OCSO

Father Flavian described bis position as en administrator whose main job il) service to others within the community He said his most important function it3 to hold plivate spiritual conversations with other monks and to handle the lillM)nasterys relations with the ~Atside world

Thcilt are some 120 monks at ~ethsemani abbey a decline from past years Abbot Burns cCrlbllltes the decline at least in prt to the attitude of the times YiJCl1 was foJJJlcrly accepted without question is now being ltI~etioned he observed

ltDontemplation Prayer

Changes have been made the IHurElY is now in English and 2Jc strict vow of silence has TiKen relaxed somewhat On an experimental basis the monks are allowed to use brief oral instructions instead of sign language as in the past

Despite the lack of radio or 1clevision Abbot Burns said the monks keep in contact through newspllpers with events in todays world The main thing ill to know what is going on in the Church and what effects our fellow hushymans according to the abbot

The life of a monk involves middotcontemplation and prayer rather than speaking up - 11 more spiritual turn according kI Abbot BUlns

A native of Jersey City N J he is a graduate of Henry SfIyder public high sehool there

Protests- Campaign Agamst Religion

NEW YORK (NC) - A new wave of terror against aU churcltgpers is now in effect in Albania an exile from that country has declored in a- letter of protest sent to the United Nations Commission on Human Rightsmiddot and~ to UN Secretary General U Thani

The protest bl Dr Rexhep KIasniqi president of the Free Albania Committee which has its headquarters here said that Albanial following a lf41oist eommunillt guideline has shut down every cltulch and mosque and has made any_kind of pubshylIc worship impossible

Thill campaign Dr Krasniqi tated is a violation of the UN Charter the Universal Declarashytion of Human Rights and of Albanias own communist conshystitutional guarantee of freedom of conscience for all

San Antonro Priests Form Association

SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Fortyshyene diocesan and religious comshymunities priests of the San Anshytonio archdiocese formed a priests association bere The priests ohose a six-member temshypora]) steering committee

One of the fiTst formal actions Gf the allsociatron was to inform Archbishop Robert E Lucey of San Antonio of the group forshymation

There are approximately 441

Parishioner d St John the Baptist Church in Nc Bedford are getting rendy for a momentoils event-the 100th anniversary of the fO~1l1dil1g of the oldest Portuguese parish in the nation The cen~en]ial celebration wi II not take place until 1971 but many things have to be done in preparation within the next three years One major project is renoshyvating the church ihelf To pay for the massive job ptrshyishioners have inaugur~teca Centennial Fund Drive to raise money for painting ~he church do extensive electrical work and buy a rew organ Estimated cost (f the regt3ir5 is $150000

Rt Rev Msgr John A Silvia pastor is honorary drve chairshyman and Frank S Jason is genshyeral chairman Other committee members include Richard GiJI1shysalves and Jesse V Santos Jr division chairmen JQseph S Vera special gifts chairman Richard L Lopes treasurer George Radcliffe director Louis S Silva assistant director Mrs Mary Lucy Soares office conshytrols and Miss Luey E Dias list supervisor

Members of the Campaign Exshyecutive Committee also include Frank M Martin ald Joseph C Motta

The history of St Johns and the history of the Portuguese people in America arc closely intertwined

It was at the end of the 18th Century that settlers began comshying from themiddot Azores to the United States TheJ were relashytively few in number nd as II

result almost lost their national identity

Near Ifood However by 1840 the trickle

of Azoreans was beginning to turn into a near Oood of imshymigrants who settled in New Bedford then a whaling and fishing center

By 1865 many Portuguese families called New Bedford home They lacked just one thing-a church of their own and a priest who spoke their language and understood their customs and traditions

Their first priest-Rev Joao Ignacio de Azevedo-anived in 1869 and on Sept 10 1871 St Johns parish was canonically established

Theremiddot were approximately 1shy000 Portuguese of Azorean deshyscent living in New Bedford at the time and the)T detelmined to build their own church A lot was purchased for $3OD8 ~ con~

siderable amount in those days and soon ground WQS broken for the new house of God

However Father de Azeedo was a mission pliest Vl~ho~moved

throughout the are~ aCministershying to his counblymen As a reshysult a new parish was establishshyed in Boston and he became its first pastor

Expandoll

Construction of St Johns WillS

continued by Rev Antonio de Mattos Freitas a native or Calshylteta St George Azores Fashyther Freitas also was responsible for the construction of a recshytory When he reUred because of ill health and returned to~ the AzoreS he was succeeded by Rev Antonio G de Silva Neves who was to serve St Johns durshying the greatest expansion Gfthe citys Portuguese colony

The first church located where a section of Morse- Twiampt Drill now stands soon ~ outgrown by its congregation and a drive began for agt new and larger church

Father Neves who served 8~j

pastor for almost 25 years saw the new church at County and Wing Streets almost coop]eted However ill health also forced bill retirement

PREPARING FOR CENTENNIAL In charge of fumd drive for hundredth anniversary of St John Baptist Church New Bedford are from left George Radclffe drive execushytive director Frank Jailon general chairman

pleted construction of the present church and rectory in three years The church which now serves the parish was solemnly blessed an4 dedicated to the worship of God by the late Bishshyop Feehan

Through the years the parshyishioners of St Johns have proved their dedication to their cliurch Now they are renewinr their dedication

Msgr Silvia notes that before the small St Johns Church was built the citys Portuguese colshyony attended Mass at St Lawshyrence Church Later they moved into what today is Crowells brt Store

Landmark Today the 11Inificent st

Johns is a landmark in New Bedford befitting its position as Mother Church of the Portu guese in the- UnFted States

MSgr Silvia a native of Pall River served at St Peters Church in Provincetown for 27 years His only other assi1shyment St John the B-aptirt Church

Ordained to the priesthood or Dec 20 1919 St Johns was the new priests first assignment He remained at the cRurch unshytil No~ember 1924 when he was transferred to Ptovinceto~

On Oct 2 1951 Msgr Silvia returned to St Johns as pzsshytor a post hemiddot still fulfills with zeal and energy

His assignmetlt to St Jobnfl parish in 1919 was not ~1sgr Sinshyvias introduotion to the New Bedford parish

As a young boy the p2stcshyrecalls his poundathers weekly trips from Fall River to New Bedford to bring back a priest

Four Families There were few Portuguese

families in Fall River in those days he says When my father arrived in Fan River there were iust four Portuguese families in the city Gradually others setshytled there

My father used to drive over in a horse and buggy to bring Il priest back tc Fall River to ll3y

degbrought him back the next dzy Since those days of hischiMshy

bood Msgr Silvia observeamp-l Turn to Page Eighteen

Continued fronmiddot Page Three

the late Tobias and Ann Lynch ]Burke Mr Burke was born in Newport Tipperary Ireland and his speech bears witness to the o-it and lilt of his birthshyplce He is married te Catbshyerine Lowney Burke and the couple lives next to the Chanshycery

DI1 Davia Costa Dr Costa son of David CosU

and Julia Rodrigues is the husshyband of Louella Somerday and fther of five children A dentshyist in NeJ Bedford he is active ir ceo and in St Vincent ~e

Pml work on a parochial and al(l level He has been zealoUJ ir- many important phases ~

perish aetivity in Immaculate Conception Parish in New BedshyforC He was recipient of the Diocesan Marian Award in Deshycember

itpJlin 15 TIle awards Jill be presenteCl

at St Marys Cathedral Fa]] River on lIlonday evening April 15 at 8 PM At toot timeuro there will be the investi shyture of two lI-ionsignori the awarding of Papal Knight 03 SZ Gregory honors to nine ~sect- oeesan laymen and the Pro EecIesia et Pontipoundlce award kJ mother Pierre Marie adminisshytlato of St Annes Hospital IE Fall River~

Join Federation IIALEIGH (NC)-Forty ()(f thfl

matewide Raleigh dioceses 14~

tlriests have formed the North iCaFolina Priests Associatioil which will affiliate with a Emshy

ticmal federation DOW beiJl~

formed

May the Joy and Pomise 01- Easter

uplift your spirit and gladden

your hean

FROM THE OFRCEIIS AND PERSONfJB Of

qkJM~ERCHANTS CIa1iotuLe BANK

IN NEW BEDFORD

SOUTH BANK-Cove St at Iodney French Boulevard WEST BANK-Kempton Street at Mill Stret

LUNDS CORNER BANK-Acushnet Ave rear Lunds Comer DARTMOUTH BANK-Dartmouth Street near Rockdale Ave NORTH BANK-Acushnet Avbull at Coffin Ave

CENTER BANK-Purchase and William Sts priests in the San Antonio arcl1shy Next pastor was the Rev Mass He used to stay overnight tiiocese Manuel A da Silva wt() oom- at our hOuse ald JlG ~tbeI

-

18 Tti~ ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1969 CatecheticsWeek Set at StonehillDioce$clm ~j[llIlde[lj)fl5 Join Nal-gonGI Some 400 priests religious and laymen are expected to at shyMculrraurru U A$~ssinatBon tend a catechetics institute b be held Monday Aug 5 throughOf Dr Mriin luther KilnS Saturday Aug 10 at Stonehill College Diocesan schools shared i~ national mourning at the Sister Mary Francille CSJ

~8sassination of Dr Martin Luther King with special theology professor at Regis ColshyMasses or prayers offered in every school At Cassidy High lege will direct the institute in Taunton Rev John Moore chaplain celebrated a Mass and speakers will include Rev

Frederick Moriarty SJ Revfor the repose of the soul Cha~les E Cook Rev James F(l)f the Negro leader and rently hplds first place in the Hawker Sister Florence -MishyNotre Dame math league chels OLVM Gerard Potte~

tlie chapel by students in a demy Fairhaven have been study periods were spent in Girls at Sacred Hearts Acashy

bauoi and Mrs Helen Jacobs With the theme Making Alllvigil for peace working on a project to bring

Christian Youth Movement Easter cheer to patients at St Things New institute sessiono will discuss Scripture catechetshymembers at Jesus-Mary Aca- Lukes Hospital New Bedford ical techniques use of filmsdemy Fall River heard the New Under supervision of Sister Jushywith adolescents other visualFolk a group of singing Holy lie Louise SSCC theyve ~een aids parent education teamCross seminarians Their appear- making tray favors including teaching and creative dramaticsance was arranged under t~e decorative placemats and napkin

Further information is avail shydirection of Mofher John Scarry holders for adults and flowered able from Stonehill CollegeJRJM Jollipops chicky surprises and North Easton 02356Also at JMA its French Week bunny hats for childern

The observance- began Sunday Science Fair Winners when French Club members Jeanne Phenix Yvette Berthi- Holy Family had four winshy Charities AppeaI aume and Susan Cournoyer took ners at the annual New Bedford Continued from Page Three part in a play sponsored by the Science fair In the senior division

Community Fund CampaignPrevost French Club Les Fem- James Berry and John Thomas president Board of Managers mes Parlent Trop Throughout of the New Bedford school were of Boston Dispensary and vice

the week too there have middotbeen cited fo~ earth science and phy- the Diocesan cheerleading tour- will combine with the seniors president of USOseveral skits prepared by mem- sics proJects respectively while t tl h ld t F h th bZbers in the junior division both Pa- namen recen yea ee an Lor e occasIOn SInce oth He has been the recipient of

or effort at Prevost was tricia Downey and SharonSmola High but sports arent all that cltsses of the academy are small honorary degrees from Holy MaJ matter at the TauntoJl girls due to the fact that the high Cross College Tufts University

e Sunday program Whlch ln- were recognized for work in the h f h d I ld f b sc 001 Break ast lunc an schoo IS being phased out Suffolk University Bradford -luded In addItIon to the play fle 0 iology M formal dinner pace settmgs The Junipero Club of Holy Durfee College of Technology~veral talks by promInent any students won honors at h M h I I I were recently on display at the Family High recently sponsored of Fall Rivet and Lowell Techshy

I remiddotnch cItIzens a French song- t e assac usetts RegIOn S F h school library and members of a talk on drug addiction for jun- nological Institute ~t and a motion picture Clence alr eld in Fall Rlver They included Christine Four- the Mothers Auxiliary were on iors and seniors The talk was Bishop to AddJess Meeting

UN French Club nier Dominican Academy and hand to answer etiquette ques- given by two brothers one an Most Rev James L ConnollyAt Coyle the French Club di- Diane Desmarais Mt St Mary tions from the students ex-addict the other director of Bishop of Fall River will speak

Ilected by Brother Hugh McCabe Academy both Fall River Both And the Coyle Fathers Club Marathon House a center for to the priests parish trusteesIOeCently elected officers After girls were recogiIized by the held its annual Father-Son Com treatment of addicts located in chairmen of the Catholic Charishy8le votes were tallied however Southeastern District of the Mas- munion breakfast at the school Coventry RIo ties Appeal and the invited lays our man at Coyle it looked sachuse~ts Dental Society bull with Robert Cahill ofthe Rhode CongratuIcitions go to Joseph gue9ts of the 111 diocesan if ~embers were voting for Debra Lay Dominican Aca- Island Food and Drug Commis Abraham of St Anthony High parishes bull UN delegation The presidents demy received a savings bond sion as guest speaker He dis- for meriting runner-up position Roland A Lafrance 1968 ApshyliPot wa~ captured he reports from the Bristol South Distriet cussed harmful effects of various iil the state finals of the annual peal lay chairman will also adshy a Polish fellow Cbarles Ozug Medical Auxiliary arid Michael drugs American Legion olatorical con- dress the 800 expected to attend lames OBrien a true Irishman Zito Bishop Feehan High At~middot The Catholic Students Mis- test - the opening meeting of the won the vice-presidential spot tleboro was awarded a plaque sion CrUsade at Stang H~gh has In club~ews at~HA the Senshy campaign for funds for the 30 while the treasurers job was by the Womens Auxil1ary to the taken as a special project this ior Science Club will conduct agencies of the Catholic Chadshy~warded to Jorge Matesanz -a Mass Veterinary ASsn month of April the collection of a farewell meeting for seniors ties Appeal

BASKETBALL PLAYERS On basketball team at Connolly High Fall River are from left Tim Duffy Tom Kroger John Long Joe Kelly Greg Sullivan Mike Manning

~~dent of Spanisll extraction Winners in the division of donated medical supplies and this ~month and members will Only Paul Bor9ue the secretary earlhscience Were John Dias eyeglasses for deprived Peoples visit an encephalitis clinic in I ~anaged to make the scene for Thomas Burk~ anciRobei-tClou~ of the world Supplies collected Freetown in May The Stamp France tier FeehahMicIlael Cote Pre illbe forwarded to the Cathi- and Coin Clubis planning a pubshy

At Bishop Stang iil North vost and Elizabeth Lavoi~ Do- olic Missions Medical Bureau for lie exhibition of members col- Dartmouth the math team led minican shipment iections in May imd the Chess by high scorer Lawrence l3yrnes Awards in math and engineer- Upco~ing at S~A Fairhaven Club has undergone reorganiza- placed secon~in a reeentBqs- ing went to Carol Vasconcellos is the aruiual senior prom which tion election of officers inshyflon public schools math meet Mt St Mary Madeleine Delisl~ wilL be held in the Colonial cluding Edward Norman presishyThe Stang team paced by the and Vivian Blais and Michael R60m of Whites restaurant in dent Daniel Brule vice-presi- shyeo-sIstent good work of George Zito Feehan Genevieve Pappas Westport from 8 to midnight dent Diane Lizotte secretary Oliver and EIleen Keavy cur- and Debra Lay Dominican Joan Friday night May 24 Juniors TuniorProm

Basile Feehan Amato Polselli The Holy Family Junior Prom Prevost and Sharon Woycie- Board ofmiddot Trustees isslated for Friday night AprilCentennialmiddot chowski Mt St Mary were 26 at Kennedy Center The prom

Continued from Page Seventeen cited To Study Changes will last from 8 to 11 and will Chemistry winners included have Carousel as its themebroad smile on his face-many Jane Arruda Anne Lewis De- WASHINGTON (NC) - The Mlisic will be by the Escorts

other families have arrived from nise Michaud Elizabeth St board of trustees of the Catho- And the Holy Family debatePltlrtugua1 A man d Diane Lamontagne lic University of America in team tied for first place in the Our Lady of Mt Carmel par- Christine Fournier Dominican Washington D C will meet Narry League with Cassidy A ~h was detached from St Johns Anne Sullivan and Pamela Can- Sunday April 21 in St Louis playoff will be held As of now as the Portuguese population dee Feehan Marilyn Riley and to consider a wide range of rec- Cassidys debate reco~d is 12 grew Then Our Lady of the Ann-Marie Charrette Sacred ommended changes resulting wins out of 14 debatesjrnmaculate Conception parish Hearts Fall River Irene Caron from a year-long study of the was erected to care for families Cassidy Marilyn Bentley Mt pontifical university by a comshyi Portuguese descent living in mitteee headed by Dr Carroll ~e North End of New Bedford St Mary Hochwalt

In the field of physics Alan middotRAMBLERToday St John the Baptist White Prevost Michelle Paquet The meeting will be held in ehurch has about 4000 parishshy SHA Fall River JamesReid Jrconjunction witll the Spring Americas Economy King ioners Our numbers started Prevost Mary Soans Jane Mc meeting of the National Confershy Fnr the Best Deal Come To dropping about seven years ago Donald and Martba Nugent yent ence of Catholic Bishops Broadway Ramblerasgr Silvia explains He feels St Mary The trustees are expected 10 INC part of the drop in membership Representatives from Diocesan name a new 30-man board meet 768 BROADWAYis due to a number of families schools to the Mass State Sci- with faculty representatives for RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 131moving outside the parish )ounshy ence Fair will include Michael the first time in histoi-y and CHARLES J DUMAIS Presdarles Intermarriages with othshy lito Amato Polselli Debra Lay discuss the search for a new er nationalities account for still Madeleine Delisle Jane Arruda university rector to replacemore losses Anne Lewis Father J~dhn P Whalen ~ho ~III11I11I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I11I1I1HIUIIIIIIIlIIlilllllllllllfllHlIilttmmIllIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllllnIlIllIllHIIIIIIIIIJ111~ However the Mother Church Denise Michaud Alan White was naine last October to a ef the Portuguese is not fading Michelle Paquet Elizabeth St one-year term as acting rector E WEEKEND SPECIAL sect away AmandSharon Woyciechowski A new school was built in New Projector

f957 It is expensive Msgr Silvia admits but I felt we needed it

St Anthony High in New Bedshyford is rejoicing over acquisi shytion of a movie projector as a

Parish gtrganizations are active gimiddotft from the alumni association and individual parishioners are willjng to give of their time

Presentation to principal Sister Lucille Champagne was made

and effort Perking

to keep the parish by Mrs Josephine Lafleur sociation president

asshy

Now they are getting read7 Cassidy-Coyle cheerleaders Jor a 100th anniversary captured third pillce v9Phy iil

_

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Case Somerset Favorites In Narry Diamond League

Case High of Swansea and Somerset are pre-season ehoices in this seasons Narragansett League baseball race but the club th8lt will bear watching is Westport TIne darkshyhorse Villagers may have a few surprises for Narry foes Another small area school

with a respectable 8-6 recordthat potentially has a shot Only one member of that at a league championship is squad Calvin Hopkinson will Norton of the Tri-Valley not be playing for the Villagers Conference Coach Ed Bibeau this Spring With the rest of the has most of last Deasons Central club ready to go - watch Jlor Village regulars Westport to make its presence in the fold ready lmown to challenge the Among fuose returning are perennial Paul Eastwood an Russ Picard favori1es If 0 T two of the better performers in Narry honors the circuit a year ago Eastwood amp1i1 at Norton led the team in hitting with a (C 0 a c h Peter highly respectable 360 averagem[l ~ek has pitched and played the infield G3ven returning Picard like Eastwood 15 also ~nnen for versatile An outfielder by trade ~theY chamshy he also takes his turn on the ii~~JWhip bid Peter mound for Coach Bibeaus nine Weo~port Bartek Carl Zajac and Jeff Hague tmIshed the 1961 eampaign ill round out Bibeaus four-man ~ place in tbe NalT7 loop pitching staff

Norton Bids for Tri-Valley Crown jfOO task of handling the but in thin scholastic year of

~tJ of this quartet will fall athletic surprises it may not be Gpoundl ~e shoulders of either Ron as big as some thinllt ~JmOi) or Manny Cabral both

A second place finisher inexperienced receivers ConnOlll 1967 the Norton Lancers haveexcel1B not only defensively their sights on the Tri-Valleybut likewise with the bat He Conference crown The clubsbit at a 333middot clip last Spring one-two hitters last campaignJohn Souza and Mike Andras have departed from the Norton th better than 300 hitters baseball scene but the teamqaln will be out to join the one-two pitching punch is reshyleague leaders in batting prowshyturning Juniors Ken Allen aess They should put a wallop left-hander who had a perfectin Westports oHensive attaCK 7-0 record last Spring and ArtIf Coach Bibeaus boys can dushyBouchard will be relied uponplicate their Performances of a heavily to bring the league flagJellr ago Offensively and biB to Norton Coach Bartek alSobig four comes through on middottbe hopes to get some help in middotthemound Westport may realize a the pitching departmentmiddot fromlong awaited Narry championshyFred Rego Bill Gorczyca andEip dream Admittedly if Ie Steve Nichols bull bie word in ~~rts_tuture

~ ~ bull I

OpeUp With~on-League Co~esttsmiddot Other returnees incl~ Capshy develop rapidlymiddot defensively if

tain Mike Wynnn Greg Croff they are to regain the leagues BOb Adams Tim McEndy and divisional crown - whicb flbeymiddot Paul Hassie Wynn a senior lost to HoWston last Spring middotmiddot will be starting his third season and gain a shot at the Trl shyill left field with Cruffstarting V~ey Conference ebampionshyhis second campaign in center ship Many area clubs openThey will be joIned by Wynns their campaign this week with brother Ricky in right fied non-league games highlighting

The infield win be anchored the action League competition by Adams at second base and will commence for the most Hassle at short Newcomers part next week Richy Silvia and George Macshy Mother Nature has done her Arthur are presently battling it job this Spring Baseball coaches out for the third base job and throughout -the diocese admit Lorrie Adams also a first-year that this is the best Spring they man appears to have the inside have had to prepare flbeir track on first base charges in many a year Weather

cannot be blamed for a slowMcEndy who has been the start this time around All areLancers starting catcher since eagerly awaiting the umpireshis Freshman year is starting first call to play ballhIs third campaign behiJd the

plate Bartek expects McEndy to hold the inexperienced inshy New School System field together

The Lancers will have to imshy In German State prove upon their hitting and DUSSELDORF (NC) - The

North Rhine-Westphalia state parliament middothas approved aCanadian Prelates change in the states school sysshytem that probably will meanEstablish Council the end of many denominational

OTTAWA (NC)-The Catho-shy schools Hc bishops of Canada have esshy By an overwhelming majorshytablished a 12-member Fiscal ity the parliament voted to Affairs Council composed of change the state constitution and clergy Religious and laymen establish the nondenominational who will advise the Church on Christian school in which reli shyfinanclal matters gious training is given by Cathshy

Among the areas which are olic and Protestant instructors receiving ini~ial attention of the in the same school as the patshycommittee is the question of tern for state-supported schools whether the Church should be from the fifth through the nint subject to government taxation grades and if so what form of taxation In the past the state has supshywould be equitable to churches ported Illeparate Catholic and government and other taxshy Pro tell tan t denominational payen Khoola

-~) PASSION PLAY Today Christians hold the Solemn Observance of the Lords Supper

It is commemorated ina PMsion Play at Prevost High School Fall River by David Poisshyson as Christ Paul Martel left 8$ St John and Paul Bouampquet as St Peter

DominicGlIsmiddot Rent ApGrt~~rit in Inner -Cimiddottimiddot middot

Want t~ Get Closer to I Agony of the Worl~middot WASHINGTON (NC)middot Pift his experience in the neig~lgtorshy ruary 1966 because theJ

Dominican priests-each doing hood is invaluable in helping wanted to get closer to the bis own thing-are living middotin an both prisoners and parolees He agony of the world While nol apartment in the inner ~ cd said the insight he gains into eliminating the academic life Washington here they come from ancl h~w they felt that living in the inlleJ The five run the gamut from they view life aids him In mv city would be as important bull

a professor of moral theology at ing them intelligent advice and learning experience as academic the Don)inican House ofStucUeII 8ssis~nCe study to a prison chaplain a1 the Diamp- Father William Kane is middotthemiddotNeighborhOoclll[aatrict of Columbia Jail Ibey neighborhood man of the have in common1heiy addresa A Pr~ceton graduate ~itl1 apartment Hemiddotworks with minshyand a desire to understand and doctorates from Harvard aJgt4 isters inmiddot the area in establishing alleviate the problems ~ livlnc OxfCrd Father Albert Brodershy youth programs and fightina I in a poor Urban community ick teaches Constitutional LalV for better housing and fail

Father TbomasHea~ middotttie at the catholic University Law rent laws His motive is to givemoral theology professor aDd School the people in the community aD author of a reCent bOOkmiddotID awareness of their own dignitymiddotBe and Father Heath startedFaee of An~sh is 0Il 1be to affirm the fact that it is athe apartment project in Feb-bOard of direCtors of the Pe0shy ood place to live ples Center a house soon to be

the rehabilitationopened for Criticizes Usury of alcoholics He also meets

MEXICO CITY (NC)-Mexshy5 50 01- a SYSTEMATIC wimiddotth ~culties of Wasbingtcm

icc CityS Jose Cardinal Garibiseminaries to discuss policyshy bull 10 year SAViNGSRivera urged bankers meetingmaking and apostolic activity MONTHLY DEPOSITSat the National Bankers Conshy

Legal Aid Office vention in Guadalajara to comshy 5 00 01- a INVESTMENT bat usury and work closely bull 10 year SAVINGS

Father Joseph Cooney a NOTICE ACCOUNTSwith the government to proshylawye~ who has worked 011

voter registration in the South mote the social welfare of all II REGULAR4 5001 the Mexican people bull 10 Jflar SAVINGSand took an active part in dvil

rights activities such lIS

~lma march is DOW admin~ Bass Rivertering a legal aid office in the CENTERneighborhood of the Dominishy Savings Bank

cans apartment Volunteer law Paint and Wallpaperstudents from the Catholic Uni- Bank 8y Man I

versity of Ameiica assist him Dupont Paint

We Pay The Postage

IJcor Middle St

A third member of the group m this program 4iiii 422 Acush Ave bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA Fat her Raymond MalonSOl1 ~ New Bedford bull SOUTH VARMOUTH 4raquo HYANNISserves as the Catholic chapiain bull PARKINGmiddot

bull DENNIS PORT bull OSTtRVILLEatmiddot the D C jail A late vocashy Rear of Storetion Father Malonson has been ordained only two years middot Father Malonsoll feels U1at

LEVESQILIES OFFla E~lnPMENTNow Many Wear Wood Metal Desks and ChairsFALSE TEETH

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs April 11 1968

PhySDCOUi) l1JJ Uges litUBgy C~[filges

~n Last RStes RED BANK (NC) A

~atholic physician called for revision of the liturgical $orm of the Anointing of the Sick cluring a discussion on The Chaplains Role With the Dying Patient at Riverview Hospital here in New Jersey

Dr George J Sheehan an alumnus of Manhattan College and a founder of Christian Brothers Academy in nearby lLincroft was one of three apeakers at the symposium coshyaponsored by the hospital and Ute 1 Redmiddot Bank Council of

ilhurches Citing obvious failures by

both physician and clergyman iin helping the dying patient and bis family Dr Sheehan sugshygested members of the family Ghare inmiddot a ceremony which would exchange feelings of llove and hope between them ElDd the dying person

Dr ~heehan observed that while inadequacy in the face of death has been in the past apparent to the Protestant criergyman it is now also felt by Catholic priests

They findmiddot he said the La~t Sacrament in its present form Ii a consolation only to those with the strong faith of a Breton iiteasant-a kind of faith they e seeing less and l~ss-

Appropriate Theology He also said while the develshy

pment of a Common Christian itervice parlakirtg of the same llodividual familymiddot and commu~

Ility significance as Bap~i8ai -dMarriage would be a giant p in middotheiping people to a middotbappy death iit would remain IDol theologians to present- a relshy

qwant lmd acceptable image of mail in this time and this place ilnd to develop an appropriate eology of death heaven ~nd bell in order to make a signifi- sant change in our life style

lOd therefore in our approach to death

Other panelistsmiddot were the Rev Seorge Fitzgeraid a Presbyteshyaan minister middotand middotchaplain at Princeton Hospiital arid Mn Ruth Snyder a nurse of the lIiverview Hospital staffmiddot

POSTER CHILD LEADS WAY Joey BeIge 8 of Syraeuse NY leads themiddot way down a White House lttairway in the company ofthe Fi~st t-adymiddotMrsLyndon B Johnson

and Mrs Muriel Humphrey wife ofthe Vice-President Joeymiddotis this years poster child of

the National Association for Retarded Children H~ ismiddot thesQn ofMt and Mrs Robert Beige middotmembersmiddotOf St Vincent de Paul parish in Syracuse whos-e ot-herfive children SlHshy

round their Uttle broth~r wil1hmiddot the love and care to h~lp him livea full and happymiddot life

Penn See Studies Poverty Pmiddotrogram HARISBlJRq (NC)--Coadju- is being made to see ho)Vtbe to coordinate and channel our

tor Bishop Joseph T Daley diocese canmiddot best use its re-middot efforts in the fieldmiddot vicar general- of the Harrisburg sources to alleviate poverty Bishop Daley said it ismiddot im- diocese calledmiddot on the nearly problems middotperative that all our people 50000 Catholics in the area to He alsomiddot said Wemiddot contem- knoW and understand the probshy

acquaint th~mselves with 10- middotplatemiddot the early middotestablishment of middotIem of middotracism and the funda- calracfal and poverty problems amiddotmiddot diocesanmiddot human relations mental moral injustices which

In a lettermiddot read at aU Masses commission middotto serve asmiddot a liaison middotare at the root of the deplorable BishopDlIleT said middotthat a study with all people Collcerned and conditions in our own area

Urges Hospitals Re~ognie Unio~s

CLEVELAND (NC) - AI layshymens group here has asked the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hospitals to declare its willingshyness to recognize labor unions as collective bargaining agents for hospitals employes

lNle request came in a letter from William A caldwell chainnan of the eurolevellllnd Conference of Laymen to Sister ~ry Collette of Hamilton Ohio president of the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hosplshytala during a one-day meeting here of the Ohio Hospital Assoshyciation convention

The laymens group said such a statement would promote the human dignity of hospital emshyployes in real and immediate ways serve the common good of our communities and inshycrease the understandingmiddot of Catholic teaching by all the citishyzens of Ohio

The letter pointed out that the National Catholic Hospital Association 1 a s t November called on Catholic hospitals tiraquo be guided by the social teachshyings of the Church and to deal with unions that employecfgt choose

Discuss ~iot Report On Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC) - Beginshyning Sunday April 14 the Catholic Hour will present over the NBCmiddot network a three-part series The Climate of Change

Evolution or Revolution foshycusing on three areas of social and religioUs concern today today

~gr Rop~rt Fox cOordinashytor of Spanish community 00shy

middot lion in the New York arclidioshymiddoteese will discuss The Riot centommissi~ middotReport Amiddot Chrisshy

tiati Response April 14 Msgr Ivan D Illich of the Intereushy-tural Center 01 Language and D middotoe u men tat 1 on CuershyDavaca Mexf~o win be intershyviewed Aprjl 21 and Father Francois Houtart Belgian 00shyciologist will be interviewed Apiil 28

The National Council of Cathshy oUc Men producer of the OathshyoUe Hour reconunendseheckshymiddoting local newspaper programa for broadca9t time in particushymiddotRar areas

I Am The RestUlJTectiltogtD

Ai 1)(J[YQfGfDVIJJpound)9

lJ1~TJPJiiD~ EEJ~lJregff

FALL RIVER

Page 18: 04.11.68

18 Tti~ ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 11 1969 CatecheticsWeek Set at StonehillDioce$clm ~j[llIlde[lj)fl5 Join Nal-gonGI Some 400 priests religious and laymen are expected to at shyMculrraurru U A$~ssinatBon tend a catechetics institute b be held Monday Aug 5 throughOf Dr Mriin luther KilnS Saturday Aug 10 at Stonehill College Diocesan schools shared i~ national mourning at the Sister Mary Francille CSJ

~8sassination of Dr Martin Luther King with special theology professor at Regis ColshyMasses or prayers offered in every school At Cassidy High lege will direct the institute in Taunton Rev John Moore chaplain celebrated a Mass and speakers will include Rev

Frederick Moriarty SJ Revfor the repose of the soul Cha~les E Cook Rev James F(l)f the Negro leader and rently hplds first place in the Hawker Sister Florence -MishyNotre Dame math league chels OLVM Gerard Potte~

tlie chapel by students in a demy Fairhaven have been study periods were spent in Girls at Sacred Hearts Acashy

bauoi and Mrs Helen Jacobs With the theme Making Alllvigil for peace working on a project to bring

Christian Youth Movement Easter cheer to patients at St Things New institute sessiono will discuss Scripture catechetshymembers at Jesus-Mary Aca- Lukes Hospital New Bedford ical techniques use of filmsdemy Fall River heard the New Under supervision of Sister Jushywith adolescents other visualFolk a group of singing Holy lie Louise SSCC theyve ~een aids parent education teamCross seminarians Their appear- making tray favors including teaching and creative dramaticsance was arranged under t~e decorative placemats and napkin

Further information is avail shydirection of Mofher John Scarry holders for adults and flowered able from Stonehill CollegeJRJM Jollipops chicky surprises and North Easton 02356Also at JMA its French Week bunny hats for childern

The observance- began Sunday Science Fair Winners when French Club members Jeanne Phenix Yvette Berthi- Holy Family had four winshy Charities AppeaI aume and Susan Cournoyer took ners at the annual New Bedford Continued from Page Three part in a play sponsored by the Science fair In the senior division

Community Fund CampaignPrevost French Club Les Fem- James Berry and John Thomas president Board of Managers mes Parlent Trop Throughout of the New Bedford school were of Boston Dispensary and vice

the week too there have middotbeen cited fo~ earth science and phy- the Diocesan cheerleading tour- will combine with the seniors president of USOseveral skits prepared by mem- sics proJects respectively while t tl h ld t F h th bZbers in the junior division both Pa- namen recen yea ee an Lor e occasIOn SInce oth He has been the recipient of

or effort at Prevost was tricia Downey and SharonSmola High but sports arent all that cltsses of the academy are small honorary degrees from Holy MaJ matter at the TauntoJl girls due to the fact that the high Cross College Tufts University

e Sunday program Whlch ln- were recognized for work in the h f h d I ld f b sc 001 Break ast lunc an schoo IS being phased out Suffolk University Bradford -luded In addItIon to the play fle 0 iology M formal dinner pace settmgs The Junipero Club of Holy Durfee College of Technology~veral talks by promInent any students won honors at h M h I I I were recently on display at the Family High recently sponsored of Fall Rivet and Lowell Techshy

I remiddotnch cItIzens a French song- t e assac usetts RegIOn S F h school library and members of a talk on drug addiction for jun- nological Institute ~t and a motion picture Clence alr eld in Fall Rlver They included Christine Four- the Mothers Auxiliary were on iors and seniors The talk was Bishop to AddJess Meeting

UN French Club nier Dominican Academy and hand to answer etiquette ques- given by two brothers one an Most Rev James L ConnollyAt Coyle the French Club di- Diane Desmarais Mt St Mary tions from the students ex-addict the other director of Bishop of Fall River will speak

Ilected by Brother Hugh McCabe Academy both Fall River Both And the Coyle Fathers Club Marathon House a center for to the priests parish trusteesIOeCently elected officers After girls were recogiIized by the held its annual Father-Son Com treatment of addicts located in chairmen of the Catholic Charishy8le votes were tallied however Southeastern District of the Mas- munion breakfast at the school Coventry RIo ties Appeal and the invited lays our man at Coyle it looked sachuse~ts Dental Society bull with Robert Cahill ofthe Rhode CongratuIcitions go to Joseph gue9ts of the 111 diocesan if ~embers were voting for Debra Lay Dominican Aca- Island Food and Drug Commis Abraham of St Anthony High parishes bull UN delegation The presidents demy received a savings bond sion as guest speaker He dis- for meriting runner-up position Roland A Lafrance 1968 ApshyliPot wa~ captured he reports from the Bristol South Distriet cussed harmful effects of various iil the state finals of the annual peal lay chairman will also adshy a Polish fellow Cbarles Ozug Medical Auxiliary arid Michael drugs American Legion olatorical con- dress the 800 expected to attend lames OBrien a true Irishman Zito Bishop Feehan High At~middot The Catholic Students Mis- test - the opening meeting of the won the vice-presidential spot tleboro was awarded a plaque sion CrUsade at Stang H~gh has In club~ews at~HA the Senshy campaign for funds for the 30 while the treasurers job was by the Womens Auxil1ary to the taken as a special project this ior Science Club will conduct agencies of the Catholic Chadshy~warded to Jorge Matesanz -a Mass Veterinary ASsn month of April the collection of a farewell meeting for seniors ties Appeal

BASKETBALL PLAYERS On basketball team at Connolly High Fall River are from left Tim Duffy Tom Kroger John Long Joe Kelly Greg Sullivan Mike Manning

~~dent of Spanisll extraction Winners in the division of donated medical supplies and this ~month and members will Only Paul Bor9ue the secretary earlhscience Were John Dias eyeglasses for deprived Peoples visit an encephalitis clinic in I ~anaged to make the scene for Thomas Burk~ anciRobei-tClou~ of the world Supplies collected Freetown in May The Stamp France tier FeehahMicIlael Cote Pre illbe forwarded to the Cathi- and Coin Clubis planning a pubshy

At Bishop Stang iil North vost and Elizabeth Lavoi~ Do- olic Missions Medical Bureau for lie exhibition of members col- Dartmouth the math team led minican shipment iections in May imd the Chess by high scorer Lawrence l3yrnes Awards in math and engineer- Upco~ing at S~A Fairhaven Club has undergone reorganiza- placed secon~in a reeentBqs- ing went to Carol Vasconcellos is the aruiual senior prom which tion election of officers inshyflon public schools math meet Mt St Mary Madeleine Delisl~ wilL be held in the Colonial cluding Edward Norman presishyThe Stang team paced by the and Vivian Blais and Michael R60m of Whites restaurant in dent Daniel Brule vice-presi- shyeo-sIstent good work of George Zito Feehan Genevieve Pappas Westport from 8 to midnight dent Diane Lizotte secretary Oliver and EIleen Keavy cur- and Debra Lay Dominican Joan Friday night May 24 Juniors TuniorProm

Basile Feehan Amato Polselli The Holy Family Junior Prom Prevost and Sharon Woycie- Board ofmiddot Trustees isslated for Friday night AprilCentennialmiddot chowski Mt St Mary were 26 at Kennedy Center The prom

Continued from Page Seventeen cited To Study Changes will last from 8 to 11 and will Chemistry winners included have Carousel as its themebroad smile on his face-many Jane Arruda Anne Lewis De- WASHINGTON (NC) - The Mlisic will be by the Escorts

other families have arrived from nise Michaud Elizabeth St board of trustees of the Catho- And the Holy Family debatePltlrtugua1 A man d Diane Lamontagne lic University of America in team tied for first place in the Our Lady of Mt Carmel par- Christine Fournier Dominican Washington D C will meet Narry League with Cassidy A ~h was detached from St Johns Anne Sullivan and Pamela Can- Sunday April 21 in St Louis playoff will be held As of now as the Portuguese population dee Feehan Marilyn Riley and to consider a wide range of rec- Cassidys debate reco~d is 12 grew Then Our Lady of the Ann-Marie Charrette Sacred ommended changes resulting wins out of 14 debatesjrnmaculate Conception parish Hearts Fall River Irene Caron from a year-long study of the was erected to care for families Cassidy Marilyn Bentley Mt pontifical university by a comshyi Portuguese descent living in mitteee headed by Dr Carroll ~e North End of New Bedford St Mary Hochwalt

In the field of physics Alan middotRAMBLERToday St John the Baptist White Prevost Michelle Paquet The meeting will be held in ehurch has about 4000 parishshy SHA Fall River JamesReid Jrconjunction witll the Spring Americas Economy King ioners Our numbers started Prevost Mary Soans Jane Mc meeting of the National Confershy Fnr the Best Deal Come To dropping about seven years ago Donald and Martba Nugent yent ence of Catholic Bishops Broadway Ramblerasgr Silvia explains He feels St Mary The trustees are expected 10 INC part of the drop in membership Representatives from Diocesan name a new 30-man board meet 768 BROADWAYis due to a number of families schools to the Mass State Sci- with faculty representatives for RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 131moving outside the parish )ounshy ence Fair will include Michael the first time in histoi-y and CHARLES J DUMAIS Presdarles Intermarriages with othshy lito Amato Polselli Debra Lay discuss the search for a new er nationalities account for still Madeleine Delisle Jane Arruda university rector to replacemore losses Anne Lewis Father J~dhn P Whalen ~ho ~III11I11I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I11I1I1HIUIIIIIIIlIIlilllllllllllfllHlIilttmmIllIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllllnIlIllIllHIIIIIIIIIJ111~ However the Mother Church Denise Michaud Alan White was naine last October to a ef the Portuguese is not fading Michelle Paquet Elizabeth St one-year term as acting rector E WEEKEND SPECIAL sect away AmandSharon Woyciechowski A new school was built in New Projector

f957 It is expensive Msgr Silvia admits but I felt we needed it

St Anthony High in New Bedshyford is rejoicing over acquisi shytion of a movie projector as a

Parish gtrganizations are active gimiddotft from the alumni association and individual parishioners are willjng to give of their time

Presentation to principal Sister Lucille Champagne was made

and effort Perking

to keep the parish by Mrs Josephine Lafleur sociation president

asshy

Now they are getting read7 Cassidy-Coyle cheerleaders Jor a 100th anniversary captured third pillce v9Phy iil

_

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Westport Real Doric-Horse lHE ANCHOR-DIoeIee r bull I AJu n

Case Somerset Favorites In Narry Diamond League

Case High of Swansea and Somerset are pre-season ehoices in this seasons Narragansett League baseball race but the club th8lt will bear watching is Westport TIne darkshyhorse Villagers may have a few surprises for Narry foes Another small area school

with a respectable 8-6 recordthat potentially has a shot Only one member of that at a league championship is squad Calvin Hopkinson will Norton of the Tri-Valley not be playing for the Villagers Conference Coach Ed Bibeau this Spring With the rest of the has most of last Deasons Central club ready to go - watch Jlor Village regulars Westport to make its presence in the fold ready lmown to challenge the Among fuose returning are perennial Paul Eastwood an Russ Picard favori1es If 0 T two of the better performers in Narry honors the circuit a year ago Eastwood amp1i1 at Norton led the team in hitting with a (C 0 a c h Peter highly respectable 360 averagem[l ~ek has pitched and played the infield G3ven returning Picard like Eastwood 15 also ~nnen for versatile An outfielder by trade ~theY chamshy he also takes his turn on the ii~~JWhip bid Peter mound for Coach Bibeaus nine Weo~port Bartek Carl Zajac and Jeff Hague tmIshed the 1961 eampaign ill round out Bibeaus four-man ~ place in tbe NalT7 loop pitching staff

Norton Bids for Tri-Valley Crown jfOO task of handling the but in thin scholastic year of

~tJ of this quartet will fall athletic surprises it may not be Gpoundl ~e shoulders of either Ron as big as some thinllt ~JmOi) or Manny Cabral both

A second place finisher inexperienced receivers ConnOlll 1967 the Norton Lancers haveexcel1B not only defensively their sights on the Tri-Valleybut likewise with the bat He Conference crown The clubsbit at a 333middot clip last Spring one-two hitters last campaignJohn Souza and Mike Andras have departed from the Norton th better than 300 hitters baseball scene but the teamqaln will be out to join the one-two pitching punch is reshyleague leaders in batting prowshyturning Juniors Ken Allen aess They should put a wallop left-hander who had a perfectin Westports oHensive attaCK 7-0 record last Spring and ArtIf Coach Bibeaus boys can dushyBouchard will be relied uponplicate their Performances of a heavily to bring the league flagJellr ago Offensively and biB to Norton Coach Bartek alSobig four comes through on middottbe hopes to get some help in middotthemound Westport may realize a the pitching departmentmiddot fromlong awaited Narry championshyFred Rego Bill Gorczyca andEip dream Admittedly if Ie Steve Nichols bull bie word in ~~rts_tuture

~ ~ bull I

OpeUp With~on-League Co~esttsmiddot Other returnees incl~ Capshy develop rapidlymiddot defensively if

tain Mike Wynnn Greg Croff they are to regain the leagues BOb Adams Tim McEndy and divisional crown - whicb flbeymiddot Paul Hassie Wynn a senior lost to HoWston last Spring middotmiddot will be starting his third season and gain a shot at the Trl shyill left field with Cruffstarting V~ey Conference ebampionshyhis second campaign in center ship Many area clubs openThey will be joIned by Wynns their campaign this week with brother Ricky in right fied non-league games highlighting

The infield win be anchored the action League competition by Adams at second base and will commence for the most Hassle at short Newcomers part next week Richy Silvia and George Macshy Mother Nature has done her Arthur are presently battling it job this Spring Baseball coaches out for the third base job and throughout -the diocese admit Lorrie Adams also a first-year that this is the best Spring they man appears to have the inside have had to prepare flbeir track on first base charges in many a year Weather

cannot be blamed for a slowMcEndy who has been the start this time around All areLancers starting catcher since eagerly awaiting the umpireshis Freshman year is starting first call to play ballhIs third campaign behiJd the

plate Bartek expects McEndy to hold the inexperienced inshy New School System field together

The Lancers will have to imshy In German State prove upon their hitting and DUSSELDORF (NC) - The

North Rhine-Westphalia state parliament middothas approved aCanadian Prelates change in the states school sysshytem that probably will meanEstablish Council the end of many denominational

OTTAWA (NC)-The Catho-shy schools Hc bishops of Canada have esshy By an overwhelming majorshytablished a 12-member Fiscal ity the parliament voted to Affairs Council composed of change the state constitution and clergy Religious and laymen establish the nondenominational who will advise the Church on Christian school in which reli shyfinanclal matters gious training is given by Cathshy

Among the areas which are olic and Protestant instructors receiving ini~ial attention of the in the same school as the patshycommittee is the question of tern for state-supported schools whether the Church should be from the fifth through the nint subject to government taxation grades and if so what form of taxation In the past the state has supshywould be equitable to churches ported Illeparate Catholic and government and other taxshy Pro tell tan t denominational payen Khoola

-~) PASSION PLAY Today Christians hold the Solemn Observance of the Lords Supper

It is commemorated ina PMsion Play at Prevost High School Fall River by David Poisshyson as Christ Paul Martel left 8$ St John and Paul Bouampquet as St Peter

DominicGlIsmiddot Rent ApGrt~~rit in Inner -Cimiddottimiddot middot

Want t~ Get Closer to I Agony of the Worl~middot WASHINGTON (NC)middot Pift his experience in the neig~lgtorshy ruary 1966 because theJ

Dominican priests-each doing hood is invaluable in helping wanted to get closer to the bis own thing-are living middotin an both prisoners and parolees He agony of the world While nol apartment in the inner ~ cd said the insight he gains into eliminating the academic life Washington here they come from ancl h~w they felt that living in the inlleJ The five run the gamut from they view life aids him In mv city would be as important bull

a professor of moral theology at ing them intelligent advice and learning experience as academic the Don)inican House ofStucUeII 8ssis~nCe study to a prison chaplain a1 the Diamp- Father William Kane is middotthemiddotNeighborhOoclll[aatrict of Columbia Jail Ibey neighborhood man of the have in common1heiy addresa A Pr~ceton graduate ~itl1 apartment Hemiddotworks with minshyand a desire to understand and doctorates from Harvard aJgt4 isters inmiddot the area in establishing alleviate the problems ~ livlnc OxfCrd Father Albert Brodershy youth programs and fightina I in a poor Urban community ick teaches Constitutional LalV for better housing and fail

Father TbomasHea~ middotttie at the catholic University Law rent laws His motive is to givemoral theology professor aDd School the people in the community aD author of a reCent bOOkmiddotID awareness of their own dignitymiddotBe and Father Heath startedFaee of An~sh is 0Il 1be to affirm the fact that it is athe apartment project in Feb-bOard of direCtors of the Pe0shy ood place to live ples Center a house soon to be

the rehabilitationopened for Criticizes Usury of alcoholics He also meets

MEXICO CITY (NC)-Mexshy5 50 01- a SYSTEMATIC wimiddotth ~culties of Wasbingtcm

icc CityS Jose Cardinal Garibiseminaries to discuss policyshy bull 10 year SAViNGSRivera urged bankers meetingmaking and apostolic activity MONTHLY DEPOSITSat the National Bankers Conshy

Legal Aid Office vention in Guadalajara to comshy 5 00 01- a INVESTMENT bat usury and work closely bull 10 year SAVINGS

Father Joseph Cooney a NOTICE ACCOUNTSwith the government to proshylawye~ who has worked 011

voter registration in the South mote the social welfare of all II REGULAR4 5001 the Mexican people bull 10 Jflar SAVINGSand took an active part in dvil

rights activities such lIS

~lma march is DOW admin~ Bass Rivertering a legal aid office in the CENTERneighborhood of the Dominishy Savings Bank

cans apartment Volunteer law Paint and Wallpaperstudents from the Catholic Uni- Bank 8y Man I

versity of Ameiica assist him Dupont Paint

We Pay The Postage

IJcor Middle St

A third member of the group m this program 4iiii 422 Acush Ave bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA Fat her Raymond MalonSOl1 ~ New Bedford bull SOUTH VARMOUTH 4raquo HYANNISserves as the Catholic chapiain bull PARKINGmiddot

bull DENNIS PORT bull OSTtRVILLEatmiddot the D C jail A late vocashy Rear of Storetion Father Malonson has been ordained only two years middot Father Malonsoll feels U1at

LEVESQILIES OFFla E~lnPMENTNow Many Wear Wood Metal Desks and ChairsFALSE TEETH

With More Comfort JUST GiVE ME A CHANe TO QUOleTo overcome discomfort when

dentures sllp sllde or loosen Just sprinkle a llttle FASTEETH on your 187 SHAWMUT STREET bull NEW BEDFORD MASS

middot plates FASTEElH holds dentures firmer You eat better feel more PO Box 2062 - Hervey L Levesque

middot -wont sour Helps check plate odor comfortable FASTEETH Is alkaline

Dentures that fit are lIlSSentlai to Telephone 993middot1264middot health See your dentist regularly Get FASTEETB at all drUB counten ___ _ _____11_0__-D-tcl----4

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs April 11 1968

PhySDCOUi) l1JJ Uges litUBgy C~[filges

~n Last RStes RED BANK (NC) A

~atholic physician called for revision of the liturgical $orm of the Anointing of the Sick cluring a discussion on The Chaplains Role With the Dying Patient at Riverview Hospital here in New Jersey

Dr George J Sheehan an alumnus of Manhattan College and a founder of Christian Brothers Academy in nearby lLincroft was one of three apeakers at the symposium coshyaponsored by the hospital and Ute 1 Redmiddot Bank Council of

ilhurches Citing obvious failures by

both physician and clergyman iin helping the dying patient and bis family Dr Sheehan sugshygested members of the family Ghare inmiddot a ceremony which would exchange feelings of llove and hope between them ElDd the dying person

Dr ~heehan observed that while inadequacy in the face of death has been in the past apparent to the Protestant criergyman it is now also felt by Catholic priests

They findmiddot he said the La~t Sacrament in its present form Ii a consolation only to those with the strong faith of a Breton iiteasant-a kind of faith they e seeing less and l~ss-

Appropriate Theology He also said while the develshy

pment of a Common Christian itervice parlakirtg of the same llodividual familymiddot and commu~

Ility significance as Bap~i8ai -dMarriage would be a giant p in middotheiping people to a middotbappy death iit would remain IDol theologians to present- a relshy

qwant lmd acceptable image of mail in this time and this place ilnd to develop an appropriate eology of death heaven ~nd bell in order to make a signifi- sant change in our life style

lOd therefore in our approach to death

Other panelistsmiddot were the Rev Seorge Fitzgeraid a Presbyteshyaan minister middotand middotchaplain at Princeton Hospiital arid Mn Ruth Snyder a nurse of the lIiverview Hospital staffmiddot

POSTER CHILD LEADS WAY Joey BeIge 8 of Syraeuse NY leads themiddot way down a White House lttairway in the company ofthe Fi~st t-adymiddotMrsLyndon B Johnson

and Mrs Muriel Humphrey wife ofthe Vice-President Joeymiddotis this years poster child of

the National Association for Retarded Children H~ ismiddot thesQn ofMt and Mrs Robert Beige middotmembersmiddotOf St Vincent de Paul parish in Syracuse whos-e ot-herfive children SlHshy

round their Uttle broth~r wil1hmiddot the love and care to h~lp him livea full and happymiddot life

Penn See Studies Poverty Pmiddotrogram HARISBlJRq (NC)--Coadju- is being made to see ho)Vtbe to coordinate and channel our

tor Bishop Joseph T Daley diocese canmiddot best use its re-middot efforts in the fieldmiddot vicar general- of the Harrisburg sources to alleviate poverty Bishop Daley said it ismiddot im- diocese calledmiddot on the nearly problems middotperative that all our people 50000 Catholics in the area to He alsomiddot said Wemiddot contem- knoW and understand the probshy

acquaint th~mselves with 10- middotplatemiddot the early middotestablishment of middotIem of middotracism and the funda- calracfal and poverty problems amiddotmiddot diocesanmiddot human relations mental moral injustices which

In a lettermiddot read at aU Masses commission middotto serve asmiddot a liaison middotare at the root of the deplorable BishopDlIleT said middotthat a study with all people Collcerned and conditions in our own area

Urges Hospitals Re~ognie Unio~s

CLEVELAND (NC) - AI layshymens group here has asked the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hospitals to declare its willingshyness to recognize labor unions as collective bargaining agents for hospitals employes

lNle request came in a letter from William A caldwell chainnan of the eurolevellllnd Conference of Laymen to Sister ~ry Collette of Hamilton Ohio president of the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hosplshytala during a one-day meeting here of the Ohio Hospital Assoshyciation convention

The laymens group said such a statement would promote the human dignity of hospital emshyployes in real and immediate ways serve the common good of our communities and inshycrease the understandingmiddot of Catholic teaching by all the citishyzens of Ohio

The letter pointed out that the National Catholic Hospital Association 1 a s t November called on Catholic hospitals tiraquo be guided by the social teachshyings of the Church and to deal with unions that employecfgt choose

Discuss ~iot Report On Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC) - Beginshyning Sunday April 14 the Catholic Hour will present over the NBCmiddot network a three-part series The Climate of Change

Evolution or Revolution foshycusing on three areas of social and religioUs concern today today

~gr Rop~rt Fox cOordinashytor of Spanish community 00shy

middot lion in the New York arclidioshymiddoteese will discuss The Riot centommissi~ middotReport Amiddot Chrisshy

tiati Response April 14 Msgr Ivan D Illich of the Intereushy-tural Center 01 Language and D middotoe u men tat 1 on CuershyDavaca Mexf~o win be intershyviewed Aprjl 21 and Father Francois Houtart Belgian 00shyciologist will be interviewed Apiil 28

The National Council of Cathshy oUc Men producer of the OathshyoUe Hour reconunendseheckshymiddoting local newspaper programa for broadca9t time in particushymiddotRar areas

I Am The RestUlJTectiltogtD

Ai 1)(J[YQfGfDVIJJpound)9

lJ1~TJPJiiD~ EEJ~lJregff

FALL RIVER

Page 19: 04.11.68

Westport Real Doric-Horse lHE ANCHOR-DIoeIee r bull I AJu n

Case Somerset Favorites In Narry Diamond League

Case High of Swansea and Somerset are pre-season ehoices in this seasons Narragansett League baseball race but the club th8lt will bear watching is Westport TIne darkshyhorse Villagers may have a few surprises for Narry foes Another small area school

with a respectable 8-6 recordthat potentially has a shot Only one member of that at a league championship is squad Calvin Hopkinson will Norton of the Tri-Valley not be playing for the Villagers Conference Coach Ed Bibeau this Spring With the rest of the has most of last Deasons Central club ready to go - watch Jlor Village regulars Westport to make its presence in the fold ready lmown to challenge the Among fuose returning are perennial Paul Eastwood an Russ Picard favori1es If 0 T two of the better performers in Narry honors the circuit a year ago Eastwood amp1i1 at Norton led the team in hitting with a (C 0 a c h Peter highly respectable 360 averagem[l ~ek has pitched and played the infield G3ven returning Picard like Eastwood 15 also ~nnen for versatile An outfielder by trade ~theY chamshy he also takes his turn on the ii~~JWhip bid Peter mound for Coach Bibeaus nine Weo~port Bartek Carl Zajac and Jeff Hague tmIshed the 1961 eampaign ill round out Bibeaus four-man ~ place in tbe NalT7 loop pitching staff

Norton Bids for Tri-Valley Crown jfOO task of handling the but in thin scholastic year of

~tJ of this quartet will fall athletic surprises it may not be Gpoundl ~e shoulders of either Ron as big as some thinllt ~JmOi) or Manny Cabral both

A second place finisher inexperienced receivers ConnOlll 1967 the Norton Lancers haveexcel1B not only defensively their sights on the Tri-Valleybut likewise with the bat He Conference crown The clubsbit at a 333middot clip last Spring one-two hitters last campaignJohn Souza and Mike Andras have departed from the Norton th better than 300 hitters baseball scene but the teamqaln will be out to join the one-two pitching punch is reshyleague leaders in batting prowshyturning Juniors Ken Allen aess They should put a wallop left-hander who had a perfectin Westports oHensive attaCK 7-0 record last Spring and ArtIf Coach Bibeaus boys can dushyBouchard will be relied uponplicate their Performances of a heavily to bring the league flagJellr ago Offensively and biB to Norton Coach Bartek alSobig four comes through on middottbe hopes to get some help in middotthemound Westport may realize a the pitching departmentmiddot fromlong awaited Narry championshyFred Rego Bill Gorczyca andEip dream Admittedly if Ie Steve Nichols bull bie word in ~~rts_tuture

~ ~ bull I

OpeUp With~on-League Co~esttsmiddot Other returnees incl~ Capshy develop rapidlymiddot defensively if

tain Mike Wynnn Greg Croff they are to regain the leagues BOb Adams Tim McEndy and divisional crown - whicb flbeymiddot Paul Hassie Wynn a senior lost to HoWston last Spring middotmiddot will be starting his third season and gain a shot at the Trl shyill left field with Cruffstarting V~ey Conference ebampionshyhis second campaign in center ship Many area clubs openThey will be joIned by Wynns their campaign this week with brother Ricky in right fied non-league games highlighting

The infield win be anchored the action League competition by Adams at second base and will commence for the most Hassle at short Newcomers part next week Richy Silvia and George Macshy Mother Nature has done her Arthur are presently battling it job this Spring Baseball coaches out for the third base job and throughout -the diocese admit Lorrie Adams also a first-year that this is the best Spring they man appears to have the inside have had to prepare flbeir track on first base charges in many a year Weather

cannot be blamed for a slowMcEndy who has been the start this time around All areLancers starting catcher since eagerly awaiting the umpireshis Freshman year is starting first call to play ballhIs third campaign behiJd the

plate Bartek expects McEndy to hold the inexperienced inshy New School System field together

The Lancers will have to imshy In German State prove upon their hitting and DUSSELDORF (NC) - The

North Rhine-Westphalia state parliament middothas approved aCanadian Prelates change in the states school sysshytem that probably will meanEstablish Council the end of many denominational

OTTAWA (NC)-The Catho-shy schools Hc bishops of Canada have esshy By an overwhelming majorshytablished a 12-member Fiscal ity the parliament voted to Affairs Council composed of change the state constitution and clergy Religious and laymen establish the nondenominational who will advise the Church on Christian school in which reli shyfinanclal matters gious training is given by Cathshy

Among the areas which are olic and Protestant instructors receiving ini~ial attention of the in the same school as the patshycommittee is the question of tern for state-supported schools whether the Church should be from the fifth through the nint subject to government taxation grades and if so what form of taxation In the past the state has supshywould be equitable to churches ported Illeparate Catholic and government and other taxshy Pro tell tan t denominational payen Khoola

-~) PASSION PLAY Today Christians hold the Solemn Observance of the Lords Supper

It is commemorated ina PMsion Play at Prevost High School Fall River by David Poisshyson as Christ Paul Martel left 8$ St John and Paul Bouampquet as St Peter

DominicGlIsmiddot Rent ApGrt~~rit in Inner -Cimiddottimiddot middot

Want t~ Get Closer to I Agony of the Worl~middot WASHINGTON (NC)middot Pift his experience in the neig~lgtorshy ruary 1966 because theJ

Dominican priests-each doing hood is invaluable in helping wanted to get closer to the bis own thing-are living middotin an both prisoners and parolees He agony of the world While nol apartment in the inner ~ cd said the insight he gains into eliminating the academic life Washington here they come from ancl h~w they felt that living in the inlleJ The five run the gamut from they view life aids him In mv city would be as important bull

a professor of moral theology at ing them intelligent advice and learning experience as academic the Don)inican House ofStucUeII 8ssis~nCe study to a prison chaplain a1 the Diamp- Father William Kane is middotthemiddotNeighborhOoclll[aatrict of Columbia Jail Ibey neighborhood man of the have in common1heiy addresa A Pr~ceton graduate ~itl1 apartment Hemiddotworks with minshyand a desire to understand and doctorates from Harvard aJgt4 isters inmiddot the area in establishing alleviate the problems ~ livlnc OxfCrd Father Albert Brodershy youth programs and fightina I in a poor Urban community ick teaches Constitutional LalV for better housing and fail

Father TbomasHea~ middotttie at the catholic University Law rent laws His motive is to givemoral theology professor aDd School the people in the community aD author of a reCent bOOkmiddotID awareness of their own dignitymiddotBe and Father Heath startedFaee of An~sh is 0Il 1be to affirm the fact that it is athe apartment project in Feb-bOard of direCtors of the Pe0shy ood place to live ples Center a house soon to be

the rehabilitationopened for Criticizes Usury of alcoholics He also meets

MEXICO CITY (NC)-Mexshy5 50 01- a SYSTEMATIC wimiddotth ~culties of Wasbingtcm

icc CityS Jose Cardinal Garibiseminaries to discuss policyshy bull 10 year SAViNGSRivera urged bankers meetingmaking and apostolic activity MONTHLY DEPOSITSat the National Bankers Conshy

Legal Aid Office vention in Guadalajara to comshy 5 00 01- a INVESTMENT bat usury and work closely bull 10 year SAVINGS

Father Joseph Cooney a NOTICE ACCOUNTSwith the government to proshylawye~ who has worked 011

voter registration in the South mote the social welfare of all II REGULAR4 5001 the Mexican people bull 10 Jflar SAVINGSand took an active part in dvil

rights activities such lIS

~lma march is DOW admin~ Bass Rivertering a legal aid office in the CENTERneighborhood of the Dominishy Savings Bank

cans apartment Volunteer law Paint and Wallpaperstudents from the Catholic Uni- Bank 8y Man I

versity of Ameiica assist him Dupont Paint

We Pay The Postage

IJcor Middle St

A third member of the group m this program 4iiii 422 Acush Ave bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA Fat her Raymond MalonSOl1 ~ New Bedford bull SOUTH VARMOUTH 4raquo HYANNISserves as the Catholic chapiain bull PARKINGmiddot

bull DENNIS PORT bull OSTtRVILLEatmiddot the D C jail A late vocashy Rear of Storetion Father Malonson has been ordained only two years middot Father Malonsoll feels U1at

LEVESQILIES OFFla E~lnPMENTNow Many Wear Wood Metal Desks and ChairsFALSE TEETH

With More Comfort JUST GiVE ME A CHANe TO QUOleTo overcome discomfort when

dentures sllp sllde or loosen Just sprinkle a llttle FASTEETH on your 187 SHAWMUT STREET bull NEW BEDFORD MASS

middot plates FASTEElH holds dentures firmer You eat better feel more PO Box 2062 - Hervey L Levesque

middot -wont sour Helps check plate odor comfortable FASTEETH Is alkaline

Dentures that fit are lIlSSentlai to Telephone 993middot1264middot health See your dentist regularly Get FASTEETB at all drUB counten ___ _ _____11_0__-D-tcl----4

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs April 11 1968

PhySDCOUi) l1JJ Uges litUBgy C~[filges

~n Last RStes RED BANK (NC) A

~atholic physician called for revision of the liturgical $orm of the Anointing of the Sick cluring a discussion on The Chaplains Role With the Dying Patient at Riverview Hospital here in New Jersey

Dr George J Sheehan an alumnus of Manhattan College and a founder of Christian Brothers Academy in nearby lLincroft was one of three apeakers at the symposium coshyaponsored by the hospital and Ute 1 Redmiddot Bank Council of

ilhurches Citing obvious failures by

both physician and clergyman iin helping the dying patient and bis family Dr Sheehan sugshygested members of the family Ghare inmiddot a ceremony which would exchange feelings of llove and hope between them ElDd the dying person

Dr ~heehan observed that while inadequacy in the face of death has been in the past apparent to the Protestant criergyman it is now also felt by Catholic priests

They findmiddot he said the La~t Sacrament in its present form Ii a consolation only to those with the strong faith of a Breton iiteasant-a kind of faith they e seeing less and l~ss-

Appropriate Theology He also said while the develshy

pment of a Common Christian itervice parlakirtg of the same llodividual familymiddot and commu~

Ility significance as Bap~i8ai -dMarriage would be a giant p in middotheiping people to a middotbappy death iit would remain IDol theologians to present- a relshy

qwant lmd acceptable image of mail in this time and this place ilnd to develop an appropriate eology of death heaven ~nd bell in order to make a signifi- sant change in our life style

lOd therefore in our approach to death

Other panelistsmiddot were the Rev Seorge Fitzgeraid a Presbyteshyaan minister middotand middotchaplain at Princeton Hospiital arid Mn Ruth Snyder a nurse of the lIiverview Hospital staffmiddot

POSTER CHILD LEADS WAY Joey BeIge 8 of Syraeuse NY leads themiddot way down a White House lttairway in the company ofthe Fi~st t-adymiddotMrsLyndon B Johnson

and Mrs Muriel Humphrey wife ofthe Vice-President Joeymiddotis this years poster child of

the National Association for Retarded Children H~ ismiddot thesQn ofMt and Mrs Robert Beige middotmembersmiddotOf St Vincent de Paul parish in Syracuse whos-e ot-herfive children SlHshy

round their Uttle broth~r wil1hmiddot the love and care to h~lp him livea full and happymiddot life

Penn See Studies Poverty Pmiddotrogram HARISBlJRq (NC)--Coadju- is being made to see ho)Vtbe to coordinate and channel our

tor Bishop Joseph T Daley diocese canmiddot best use its re-middot efforts in the fieldmiddot vicar general- of the Harrisburg sources to alleviate poverty Bishop Daley said it ismiddot im- diocese calledmiddot on the nearly problems middotperative that all our people 50000 Catholics in the area to He alsomiddot said Wemiddot contem- knoW and understand the probshy

acquaint th~mselves with 10- middotplatemiddot the early middotestablishment of middotIem of middotracism and the funda- calracfal and poverty problems amiddotmiddot diocesanmiddot human relations mental moral injustices which

In a lettermiddot read at aU Masses commission middotto serve asmiddot a liaison middotare at the root of the deplorable BishopDlIleT said middotthat a study with all people Collcerned and conditions in our own area

Urges Hospitals Re~ognie Unio~s

CLEVELAND (NC) - AI layshymens group here has asked the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hospitals to declare its willingshyness to recognize labor unions as collective bargaining agents for hospitals employes

lNle request came in a letter from William A caldwell chainnan of the eurolevellllnd Conference of Laymen to Sister ~ry Collette of Hamilton Ohio president of the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hosplshytala during a one-day meeting here of the Ohio Hospital Assoshyciation convention

The laymens group said such a statement would promote the human dignity of hospital emshyployes in real and immediate ways serve the common good of our communities and inshycrease the understandingmiddot of Catholic teaching by all the citishyzens of Ohio

The letter pointed out that the National Catholic Hospital Association 1 a s t November called on Catholic hospitals tiraquo be guided by the social teachshyings of the Church and to deal with unions that employecfgt choose

Discuss ~iot Report On Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC) - Beginshyning Sunday April 14 the Catholic Hour will present over the NBCmiddot network a three-part series The Climate of Change

Evolution or Revolution foshycusing on three areas of social and religioUs concern today today

~gr Rop~rt Fox cOordinashytor of Spanish community 00shy

middot lion in the New York arclidioshymiddoteese will discuss The Riot centommissi~ middotReport Amiddot Chrisshy

tiati Response April 14 Msgr Ivan D Illich of the Intereushy-tural Center 01 Language and D middotoe u men tat 1 on CuershyDavaca Mexf~o win be intershyviewed Aprjl 21 and Father Francois Houtart Belgian 00shyciologist will be interviewed Apiil 28

The National Council of Cathshy oUc Men producer of the OathshyoUe Hour reconunendseheckshymiddoting local newspaper programa for broadca9t time in particushymiddotRar areas

I Am The RestUlJTectiltogtD

Ai 1)(J[YQfGfDVIJJpound)9

lJ1~TJPJiiD~ EEJ~lJregff

FALL RIVER

Page 20: 04.11.68

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs April 11 1968

PhySDCOUi) l1JJ Uges litUBgy C~[filges

~n Last RStes RED BANK (NC) A

~atholic physician called for revision of the liturgical $orm of the Anointing of the Sick cluring a discussion on The Chaplains Role With the Dying Patient at Riverview Hospital here in New Jersey

Dr George J Sheehan an alumnus of Manhattan College and a founder of Christian Brothers Academy in nearby lLincroft was one of three apeakers at the symposium coshyaponsored by the hospital and Ute 1 Redmiddot Bank Council of

ilhurches Citing obvious failures by

both physician and clergyman iin helping the dying patient and bis family Dr Sheehan sugshygested members of the family Ghare inmiddot a ceremony which would exchange feelings of llove and hope between them ElDd the dying person

Dr ~heehan observed that while inadequacy in the face of death has been in the past apparent to the Protestant criergyman it is now also felt by Catholic priests

They findmiddot he said the La~t Sacrament in its present form Ii a consolation only to those with the strong faith of a Breton iiteasant-a kind of faith they e seeing less and l~ss-

Appropriate Theology He also said while the develshy

pment of a Common Christian itervice parlakirtg of the same llodividual familymiddot and commu~

Ility significance as Bap~i8ai -dMarriage would be a giant p in middotheiping people to a middotbappy death iit would remain IDol theologians to present- a relshy

qwant lmd acceptable image of mail in this time and this place ilnd to develop an appropriate eology of death heaven ~nd bell in order to make a signifi- sant change in our life style

lOd therefore in our approach to death

Other panelistsmiddot were the Rev Seorge Fitzgeraid a Presbyteshyaan minister middotand middotchaplain at Princeton Hospiital arid Mn Ruth Snyder a nurse of the lIiverview Hospital staffmiddot

POSTER CHILD LEADS WAY Joey BeIge 8 of Syraeuse NY leads themiddot way down a White House lttairway in the company ofthe Fi~st t-adymiddotMrsLyndon B Johnson

and Mrs Muriel Humphrey wife ofthe Vice-President Joeymiddotis this years poster child of

the National Association for Retarded Children H~ ismiddot thesQn ofMt and Mrs Robert Beige middotmembersmiddotOf St Vincent de Paul parish in Syracuse whos-e ot-herfive children SlHshy

round their Uttle broth~r wil1hmiddot the love and care to h~lp him livea full and happymiddot life

Penn See Studies Poverty Pmiddotrogram HARISBlJRq (NC)--Coadju- is being made to see ho)Vtbe to coordinate and channel our

tor Bishop Joseph T Daley diocese canmiddot best use its re-middot efforts in the fieldmiddot vicar general- of the Harrisburg sources to alleviate poverty Bishop Daley said it ismiddot im- diocese calledmiddot on the nearly problems middotperative that all our people 50000 Catholics in the area to He alsomiddot said Wemiddot contem- knoW and understand the probshy

acquaint th~mselves with 10- middotplatemiddot the early middotestablishment of middotIem of middotracism and the funda- calracfal and poverty problems amiddotmiddot diocesanmiddot human relations mental moral injustices which

In a lettermiddot read at aU Masses commission middotto serve asmiddot a liaison middotare at the root of the deplorable BishopDlIleT said middotthat a study with all people Collcerned and conditions in our own area

Urges Hospitals Re~ognie Unio~s

CLEVELAND (NC) - AI layshymens group here has asked the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hospitals to declare its willingshyness to recognize labor unions as collective bargaining agents for hospitals employes

lNle request came in a letter from William A caldwell chainnan of the eurolevellllnd Conference of Laymen to Sister ~ry Collette of Hamilton Ohio president of the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hosplshytala during a one-day meeting here of the Ohio Hospital Assoshyciation convention

The laymens group said such a statement would promote the human dignity of hospital emshyployes in real and immediate ways serve the common good of our communities and inshycrease the understandingmiddot of Catholic teaching by all the citishyzens of Ohio

The letter pointed out that the National Catholic Hospital Association 1 a s t November called on Catholic hospitals tiraquo be guided by the social teachshyings of the Church and to deal with unions that employecfgt choose

Discuss ~iot Report On Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC) - Beginshyning Sunday April 14 the Catholic Hour will present over the NBCmiddot network a three-part series The Climate of Change

Evolution or Revolution foshycusing on three areas of social and religioUs concern today today

~gr Rop~rt Fox cOordinashytor of Spanish community 00shy

middot lion in the New York arclidioshymiddoteese will discuss The Riot centommissi~ middotReport Amiddot Chrisshy

tiati Response April 14 Msgr Ivan D Illich of the Intereushy-tural Center 01 Language and D middotoe u men tat 1 on CuershyDavaca Mexf~o win be intershyviewed Aprjl 21 and Father Francois Houtart Belgian 00shyciologist will be interviewed Apiil 28

The National Council of Cathshy oUc Men producer of the OathshyoUe Hour reconunendseheckshymiddoting local newspaper programa for broadca9t time in particushymiddotRar areas

I Am The RestUlJTectiltogtD

Ai 1)(J[YQfGfDVIJJpound)9

lJ1~TJPJiiD~ EEJ~lJregff

FALL RIVER