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ium-gymnasium. Rev. ,Arthur G. Considine, pastor, has stated that no definite date has been set for ground breaking. The new structure will be located at the rear of t~e Church with both facacle8 being parallel. All principals must possess at least a Teacher's Certifi­ cate from the Common­ wealth of Massachus'etts.The W. the proposed new St. Mary's School, So. Dartmouth, that will consist of eight classrooms, library, hea.lth room, all-purpose room, and auditor- Leon Joseph Cardinal Suenens
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Page 1: 12.15.66

ium-gymnasium. Rev. ,Arthur G. Considine, pastor, has stated that no definite date has been set for ground breaking. The new structure will be located at the rear of t~e Church with both facacle8 being parallel.

'..

NEW SOUTH DARTMOUTH PAROCHIAL SCHOOL: The drawing W. the proposed new St. Mary's School, So. Dartmouth, that will consist of eight classrooms, library, hea.lth room, all-purpose room, and auditor-

The ANCHOR

hU Rivea'o M@ss., Thursd(1lY'o D@.::. 15, ]~~c§>

$4.00 per YearVol. 10, N@. 50 © 1966 The Anchor PRICE 10c

Board Requires New ~atio;

Non-Teaching Principals All diocesan elementary schools containing six c1ass­

lOOoms or more and an high schools with an enrollment of ~50 students or more must maintain a supervising principal who is not required to teach regularly scheduled classet=;.

Date fOIr, Oblate Ordinatm<OJn Set

Rev. Leo R. Gravel, O.M.I., will be ordained a Catholic priest, serving the Church in the community of the Oblates <1)( Mal'y Immaculate, Dec. 17 by Most Rev. Eric F. MacKenzie, Auxiliary Bishop of Boston. The «ndination ceremony will take place in St. Peter's Church. Lowell. The young priest will

Tul'll to Page Eighteen

l&ev.l\.1r. Leo R. GraveL om

All principals must possess at least a Teacher's Certifi­cate from the Common­wealth of Massachus'etts. The religious-to-lay teachers ratio, clearly explained, will be' effec­tive as of September, 1967.

These decisions, reached and voted on by the Diocesan Board of Education, this week received the approval of the Most Rev. James L. Connolly, Diocesan Bishop.

A recommendation -was also made that principals also pos-: sess a Master's degree with some courses in education adminis­

'tration. However" the demand for a Teacher's Certificate was the only requirement at this time.

It was the unanimous opinion .of the Advisory Council, to ,the. Diocesan Board of Education' that if there was to be' educa­tional leadership' within" the' schools, the principal had to be freed of routine classroom teach­ing.

A study of the .schools in the,. Diocese of ]fall River revealed that: over 30 schools have al­ready established the policy of maintaining a supervising prin­cipal and have the three re­ligious to one lay teacher ratio: 9 schools will have to release one of' the religious teachers as a supervising prinCipal a~d hire one lay teacher; 9 schools will havc to hire one lay teacher so

Turn to Page Twelve

Bishop Eulogizes Life Of Devote'd Chancellor

In a eulogy delivered to a congregation of Bishops, monsignori, priests,' religious, friends and relatives that filled St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, Bishop Connolly lauded the priestliness of his departed chancellor, Rt. Rev. Msgr. John H. Hackett, J.C.D., in a. manner that manifested the beloved prelate as the true exemplar of everything eveit' written or stated about the ideal priest. With words and ide a s gathered from the Scriptures and various spir­itual 'writings, Bishop Connolly wove them into a tapestry of the ideal priest-Monsignor Hackett. The eulogy follows:

Turn to Page Four

Leon Joseph Cardinal Suenens

Belgian Cardinal CICOP Speaker

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Eu­ropean Cardinal who is widely acclaimed as an architect of -the Eumenical Council is scheduled to address the 1967 Catholic' Inter - American Cooperation p.ogram (CICOP) Conference to be held in Boston from January 26-28.

Leon Joseph Cardinal Suenens, Archbishop of Brussels, will speak at CICOP's Grand Assem"; bly on the importance of Latin America in relation to the Uni­versal Church and the brother­hood of mankind.

Cardinal Suenens' close ties with the Council began in 1962

Turn to Page Eighteen

Christmas Ar~und Dioc~se' True Di$p~ay of Charity

As Christmas approaches, state, municipal and reo Jigious institutions within the Diocese brace themselves for the annual flood of visitors bearing candy, toilet articles, toys and other remembrances. A lot of this yearly attentiolll is welcome, but officials in charge of these institutions do have a few wistful wordt=; to t=;ay. "If only people would come at other times than Christ­mas," said one woman. "Our people need attention the other 11 'months of the year, too."

"Toys!" 'excla~med a super­visor at the Paul Dever State School, 1~80 Bay Street, Taun­ton. "We wade through them at this time of year-but what we really need are pajamas for our children. You should see the things they have to wear to bed!" Expanding on the subject. she said, "The laundry is hard on pajamas, and they are quickly

Turn to Page Six

Bishop Connolly Shifts Curates

Most Rev. James L. Connolly, Bishop of the Diocese of Fall River, today announced the tt-ansfer of two assistants affect­ing two parishes in the Diocese. The transfers are effective Tues­day, Dec. 20.

They are: Rev. William P. Blottrilan from Holy Family, East Taunton to St. Mary's, North Attleboro, and· Rev.. Harold J. Wilson from St. Mary's, North Attleboro, to Holy Family, East Taunton.

Father Blottman, the son of Mrs. Kathryn M. Blottman and the late John B. Blottman, H) Carpenter Street, Attleboro, was graduated from Attleboro High School and awarded a Bachelor of Science degree by Holy Cross College. He served two years in the U. S. Army and attended St. Philip Neri ::'ichool, Boston, be­fore entering the major semi­nary.

Turn to Page Thirteen

ceo Unit to Hear Brother Joseph

Postponed due to the funeral of Msgr. Hackett, the Confrater­nity of Christian Doctrine Lead­ership Day scheduled for last Saturday at Bishop Stang High School, will be held this Satur­day .at Bishop Cassidy High in Taunton.

Hundl'eds of public high school students enrolled in CCD parish schools of religion are expected to attend the day. They will par­ticipate in a series of conferences and discussions designed to as­sist them in assuming roles as Cht"istian leaders.

Dr. Walter English will ad­dress delegates on their role in ecumenical affairs and race re­lations. Dr. English has been ac- ,

Turn to Page Eighteen

Brother 'Joseph !aDDone

Page 2: 12.15.66

2 THE' ANCHOR~~~ese of Fan Fiver-Thw:s. Dee. U,l966, ',' , , " "': ',\", " -; ':." \"',' , ,

,\ '

, '

Diocese' of 'Fa H" River

OFF~C[AL

Rev. Church,

boro, as

Rev.

William P. Elottman, assistant' at Holy Family East Taunton,'to St. Mary's Church, North Attle­

assistant.

Harold J. Wilson, 2ssistant at St. Mary's Church. Nor.th Attleboro, to Holy Family Churc~, East Taunton. as assistant.

AplKlintments effective- Tuesday, Deeember '20.

/~;;5'" Bishop of Fall Rive;

Pope to Begin Chri!>tmo$ With Mcmss mn Flcr~rnc~

VATICAN CITY (NG)-Pope Paul VI will celebrate Christmas midnight Mass in the flood-damaged cathedral of Florence. ,Shortly afterward he will return to Rome hI' Mass in St. Peter's basilica. It will be his first visit. since his election to the papacy to the capital of the Tuscan region of north-central Italy, which suffered the gravest blows of the flood disaster ,of Nov. 4, including the loss of several lives.

Sixty per cent of the city itself was under several feet of water during the height of the flolild. Many priceless arl treasures and historic documents' were de-, stroyed or severely damaged.

. The Pope will leave Vatican City at 6 P,M. Christmas eve, aceording to an announcement of the press office of L'Osserva-: t9re Romano. Vatican City-daily, and will make the three-and­one-qalf-hour freeway trip Dy eaT.

Following: the midnight Mass, .he will repair to the residence of E:tmenegildo Cardinal F I CI r i t aerCllss the square. This residence of Florence's archbishop was also damaged by flood and was one of the centers for rescue and Pe­

lief operations. Early Christmas morning the Pope will return to Rome to- celebrate Mass in S1l; Peter's basilica' at 11:15 A.M. and then give the traditional Christmas pontifical! blessing "to the city and the world" bom the .basilica'scentrol balelllny overlooking St. Peter's square.

In the past, it has been cus­tomary th.,at the Pope celebrate Christmas midnight Mass in tile Sistine Chapel for members of the diplomatic corps accredited to the Holy See. This year, that Mass will be celebrated instead by Amleto Cardinal Cicognani, Papal Secretary of State on Cbristmas eve, the L'Osserva.­tore Romano announcement said.

The L'Osservtore Romano an­lllouncement said the visit to

"' , fORTY HOURS I:

DEVOTION, Ii Dec. 18--0ur Lady of Health,. I

. ,Fan River. ' :

. St. Louis, Fan lRiver. I Dec. 25-St. Mary's Hom e ,

New Bedford. St. ,Helena's Convent, FaD:

River. "

mE A."Il:HOR licccnd Class- I'ostlllllt PalO lit Fnlf, mlfllT,

Mas. PublTshe, ever) Thursday el 410 Hishiano I\venue•. ,=all Rive, Mass. 02722 b~ the Catholic Press OJ the Dloceso at FoD R,ve, SlJbscrlptlor. prlco 119' mait. PGStj:lald $4,00 per Yell,.

Florence wHl be devoid of the usual protocol surrounding a papal trip'outside the Vatican (a "most private form"). It said the Pope intended by it tl) "share in the grief caused 'by the grave damage done te the Tuscan metropolis and other cities and zones devastated (by the flood) and to offer to all of them the comforlof a Christian Ch.Fist­mas."

As soon as the :Pope arrives in Florence he, will go first to the Church of Santa Croce sev­eral blocks from the cathedral to meet the people thel'e. It was the area surrounding this ancient. monument that suffered' the gravest damage. In the Chureh itself, rich in historical and' ar" tisth: treasures, the water reach­ed a level of 20 feet.

Then he is expected to meet Church and· civil afficials ill the

. archbishop's residence before midnight Mass.

Mass Oreto FRIDAY-Ember Friday in Ad­

vent. II ClaSs. Violet. Mass :Proper; No Glory or Creed; 2nd ,Prayer St. Eusebius, :Bish­op and Martyr; Common Pref­ace. No fast or abstinence.

SATURDAY - Ember Saturday in Advent. II Class. Violet. Mass Proper; No Glo1'Y or Cree6l; ,Common Preface. The Celebrant may omit 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 5th lessons with their versicles and prayers appoint­ed for this day. The first les­son and the Epistle, however, must be said. No fast or absti ­nence.

SUNDAY - IV Sunday of Ad­vent.. I Class. Violet. Mass Proper; No Glory; Creed; Preface of Trinity. -

MONDAY - Mass of previi>us Sunday. II Class. Vio,let~ Mass Proper; No Glory of Creed; Common Preface. .

TUESDAY - Mass of previous, Sunday. .II Class. Vio1et. Mass, Proper; No Glory or Creed; Common Preface~

WEDNESDAY~t. Thomas Apostle. II Class. Red.. Ma~ Proper; Glory; 2nd PrayeF of previous Sunday; Creed; Pref­ace of Apostles.

THURSD.AY-Mass 'of ~evi-QU5 Sunday. II Class. Violet. :Mass Proper; No _Glory ~or CJreed; Common Preface.

.GRATEFUL MEDALlS'l': _Medal of Honor winner, Robert Emmett O'Mal!ey, thank~ Msgr. Thomas J. Grady, diredor of the National &hrine of the Immaculate Con­cepticm, Washington, for having offered a Mass of Thanks­giving (Dec. 7) which the honored ,Marine sergeant at ­tended with his family. NC Photo.

10: Hi~rnians Follow Custom; 10 OtheF$' IPr'e'er ,Different Type of Penance,"

Resettles 2,090 Cuban Refug~e$

LOS ANGELES (NC)-A 00=>

pori stated that· durina the p~

Ill) months 2,090 Cuban refugeecJ ,were resettled in the L()s Ar;p

, geles archdiocese. ' The reporl as of Dec. 1; fil"Q

anniversary Of the Cuba to U. B. refugee air lift, was submitte@ . by Mrs. Betty Kirsnis, direct~

of the CaUwlic Welfare BureaU:0 Cuban Resettlement Office.

"Since June, 1962, we have ~

settled 6,471 Cuban refugeev here," she said. "In the first 10 months of the Havana-Miam:'1 air lift resulting from the U.'s.,., Cuban Memorandum of Undeib standing, the archdiocese has l'E? settled 2,090 refugees.

"Arrivals here are avel!'agi~

about 50 persons a week. Durifl{l the course of the air lift we ha~

reunited 70 Cuban :;amilies­-these have been reunions be-­tween parents just out of Cuoo and the children they sent unaeo oompainied years ago," she saicll.

"The notable thing about these . reunions is that they have lDeem brought about through the hel19 of Cuban Volunteers. We have developed a program of Cubao helping Cuban on a voll.ll1teel1 basis," she stated.

"Cubans already settled hero are volunteering to sponsor tho parents of Cuban children living in foster homes. The children were sent out of Cuba by thetl

,'parents. Now they are being reo­united thanks to our volunteel? Cuban sponso:rs;" lVlrs. Kirsnbl

•said.

Necrology DEC. 23

Rev. Owen J. Kiernan, J90ll0 Pastor,. Immaculate Conception;, Fall River.

Rev. Charles P. Trainor, S&" 1947, St. Edward Seminary, Seco attIe, Wash.

DEC. 24 Bev. James K. Beaven, l00f!,

Faster, Saered Heart, Taunton. Rev. Timothy J. Duff, 1914"

Assistant, St. Joseph, WoodfJ He.le.

DEC. Z7 Rev. Thomas J. StapletOiil"

195ti; Pastor, Corpus Christi" . sandwich.

DEC. 28' Rev. Charles R. Smith, ]'95!np

Pastor, immaculate Concepoolltt FaD River.

D. D. Sullivan" SOlIS '

fUNERAL HOME 469 lOCUST STREET.

FAll RIVER, MASS. 672·3381.

,Wilfred C~ James IE. DriscoD Sullivan, Jr.

O'ROURKE funeral Home

571 Second' Street fan River, Mass.

679-607,2 MICHAEL J. McMAHON

IUcensed Funeral Director Registered Embalmer

BROOKLAWN FUNERAL HOME, INC.

Il. ItilFCCI Roy - Go LGfflllM Roy

Roger LlIFranl:&

FUNERAL DIRECTORS' ". 15 Irvington a. '"

995-5166' New Bedford

;

NEW YORK (NC)-The first meat-ea;ting Friday f0r U. S. Catholics found 20 members of the Ancil~nt. Order, of Hiber­nians here split right down the middle--10 chose 'to have :fish for lunch anyway, while another to. indicatli!d a preference for a different ~dnd of penance.

The 20 officers of the Lieut. Patrick J. Walsh Division of the order. which claims the title of the oldest Irish-Catholic lay group in the country, held their annual meeting at Johnny

Commllu,ities Sh,are Canadoon Church

NELSON (NC) - Plans for Anglicans, Catholics and United Church members to share the same building, pews and altar which will combine five churches into one are being studied here. in British Colum­bia.

Similar' plans are being eon­sidered in two other communi­ties in the area.

Four of five communities have, indicated their willingness to support the plan.

An Edgewood' congregation has not indicated that it is ready to come in.to the plan. The new church is planned to house the congregations which total about 20- families for each of the three churches.

While they will share facili ­ties, separate sacristies will be \milt to store the vestments; sacred vessels land other articles used by the different. Chul·ches.

,

Joyce's Pub 011 Third Avel\ue~ It was the first Friday si'nfle

the nation's Roman Catholies ' were released from the obliga­tion of abstinence by'1;he"'Na­tional Conference ot, Catholic Bishops. ,]~he new ruling went into effect the. first week of Ad,vent.

Detective Sgt. Timothy P. Finn, president of the division said that he would continue ~ eat fish on Friday at least :for the time being. .

But Francis D. X. Finnegan, a public 'relations consultant, or­dered roast beef and announced am.ore hercUlean penance:' "1 woU,'t argue 'with my wife te­night," he said.

.'."#~4~"'##~'''#'~';~

St. Francis ,Residence

FOR YO'UNG WOMEN 196 Whipple St., Fall River

Conducted by Franciscan Missionaries of Mary

ROOMS - MEALS OVERNIGHT HOSPITALITY

Inquire 673·7890

JEFFRE,Y E. SULLIVAN' FU'lers!! Re,ne" I

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672~2391 '~ I

Rose E. Sulliv&III: ,'." i

JJeffrey E. Suliivatl" ,',... ;..:.

Page 3: 12.15.66

3 THE ANCHOR-Relief Services New Di.,.ector of eCD Exceptional Children Thurs., Dec. 15, 1966

Fear Cutback Program Finds Many Rewards in Work Council Salutes In Program By Eva Maria Dane NEW YORK (NC)--Over­ Exceptional is the term Jean Sullivan, newly appointed director of the Diocesan. Catholic Church

seas distribution of surplus food by Catholic Relief Ser­vices may be cut as much as 50 per cent this year due to pending shortages in government food supplies. During the past fiscal year the Catholic agency distributed 745,000 tons of food in approximately 77 countries under the U. S. Food for Peace Program..

Fear that government ap­proved quotas will not be met this. year because of reduced agricultural surpluses was ex­pressed by CRS officials here who reported that they are con­ferring with government officials (!)ll the matter.

In' a statement on the program eRS said it is "greatly concerned that the availability of U. S. government donated foods is considerably below the amount that this agency needs to main­tain its existing programs, there­by necessitating a probable cut­back in our food distribution program overseas by 50 per cent.

In Doubtful Status "We have brought this dilem­

ma to the attention of interested government officials and con­gressmen," the statement contin­ued, "in the hope that they will fully understand not only the concern of CR~ and all the American voluntary agencies but @f the recipient countries and!. people overseas.

"We have committed ourselves ~ helping the needy of these countries with a certain quantity of U. S. government donated foods based on government fig­~res and now find ourselves in the position whereby we may not have the quantities to fulfill these obligations.

''Therefore .the continuation of many of the essential food pro­grams such as school lunch pro­grams so vital to the health of millions of impoverished pe~ple fa in a doubtful state."

. CRS is one of several volun­teer agencies which distribute U. S. food surpluses abroad un­der provisions of the, Food for Peace Program. :

A similar 50 per cent reduction in foods available for distribu­tion was reported by Church WorId Service, an agency of the National Council of Churches, at the council's triennial meeting in Miami.

New York Doctors Seek Relaxed Law

NEW YORK (NC)-A com­mittee of the New York County Medical Society has proposed legislation be introduced in the state legislature to relax the state's 138-year-old law on abor­tion.

The committee said more than 83 per cent of the state's doctors favor ,amending the law, which permits abortion only if the ex­pectant mother's life is in dan­ger.

"We do not favor abortion on demand," said Dr. Lionel Sand­ler, consultin" surgeon at Bronx­Lebanon Hospital. "We are, how­ever, formally and definitely committed to a program which will legalize therapeutic abor­tions by licensed physicians in properly approved hospitals for well defined indications ' on health, humanitarian and euge­Die grounds."

Oldest BALTIMORE (NC)-Requiem

Mass for Brother Walter Dolan, 8Z, oldest member of the Congre­ption of Brothers of St. Francis Xavier, was offered in the Mt. St. Joseph High School chapel '-ere.

Confraternity of Christian Doctrine program for mentally retarded children, prefers to use for those with whom she works. "These special children of God teach us many times more than we can teach them, just by their happy outlook, their enduring perseverance, their friendliness. If we return this patience and love with understanding, we can help them overcome many hurdles. But we must be careful not to do too much for them, rather encourage them to do their best and as much as they can on their own, gradually."

Doing too much, ranges from tying a shop lace to expecting unimaginative tasks. Such a hurried or unthoughtfu' ap­proach does not give them a chance to become more self re­liant, Miss Sullivan explained.

She herself was unfluttered and relaxed during a brief pause after a full day's work, that was prolonging into the evening with special home counselling.

The Sullivans live on Williston Street, Sagamore, in a cozy white ranch house filled with religious' statues and books, and, at the time of the interview, the aroma of special cookery. A married sister was expected from New Jersey for a visit with her' family.

Jean, born in Medford, went to public schools there, then at­tended and,graduated from Em­manuel College in Boston, ma­joring in German and Russian.

For a while she thought of entering the foreign service, but after a few years with the De­fense Department in Washing­ton she chose the -teaching pro­fession instead.

She obtained a Master's de­gree in elementary education from Boston Teachers' College and is now working for a Cer­tificate of Advanced Graduate Studies.

When the family moved to Cape Cod six years ago she be­gan teaching special classes in the primary schools of Bourne and loved it.

Adjustment Counselor When the town became eli ­

gible for federal aid under Title I of the Elementary and Primary Education Act of 1965, however, Miss Sullivan was tapped to be­come an adjustment counselor.

Her interest in special children has now found a wider scope as Diocesan program director for CCD classes.

The first of five centers planned for the diocese was set up in October under her super­vision with the invaluabk help of Sister Jamesita and Sister Mary Howard at Nazareth Hall in Hyannis. . Children from all over Cape

Cod, whether they attend special classes in the schools, or at home, receive religious instruction be­tween 4 and 5 each, Thursday afternoon. The usual age span is from 6 to 16, but older students are welcome.

Sister Maureen assisted Miss Sullivan When she opened the second center at Nazareth Hall in Fall River.

Miss Sullivan with four other lay people, will teach at the third center, to open at Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth with Sister Joan Bernadette as director.

At the beginning of next year, two more CCD centers for spe-, cial children will be established in Taunton and Attleboro.

Creative Approach There are many different texts

and workbooks used, depending on individual needs. Among these is Henri Bissonier's Cate­chetical Pedagogy of the Men­tally Deficient, published by Lumen Vitae Press of Brussels in 1962, sent to Miss Sullivan by SiBtel', James of the Sisters o.f

Our Lady of Victory that used to teach in West Harwich.

Miss Sullivan expects to in­clude arts and crafts in her pro':' grams. She will use graphic out­lines in texts as illustrations to the lesson only, not for coloring in. "These children are creative in their own sphere and I do not want to squelch that."

In addition to her regular school day that begins around 8 in the morning, ends at 4 in the afternoon, but frequently calls for evening home sessions, Miss ­Sullivan attends the weekly CCD Teacher Training Course ,at Otis Air Force Base.

Tho ugh counselling differs from teaching, Jean Sullivan enjoys her new role as bridge between school and home. She is able to help those children to whom class room teachers have no .time to listen. Through her talks with these children she can later determine with principal or teacher whether an individ­ual should be put up or down a grade and what physical or emo­tional problem may be obstruct­ing the learning process.

It is usually poor hearing, de­fective eyesight or circumstances at home that are responsible for under-achievers, she claims.

Attends Cursillo What does she enjoy as recre­

ation in the time left between studies and teaching?

Reading mystery stories or books on religion. When there is a little time at her disposal she. spends it on absorbing cate­chetical material.

Senate Enlarged BELLEVILLE, (NC)-A clergy

senate of sev.en members, re­cently elected by diocesan clergy here in Illinois in secret ballot­ing, has been enlarged to 19 members..

JEAN SULLIVAN

"I am a great pamphlet read­er," she smiled.

In September Jean Sullivan made a Cursillo ,at La Salette Shrine in Attleboro.

"Through week-end group dis­cussions this experience in Christian living brings one to a much closer understanding of people. It also awakened in me greater awareness of my sur­roundings, especially nature," she avowed.

Contrary to retreats that can be frequented as often as one wishes, a Cursillo is a religious exercise one undertakes just once in a lifetime.

Recently Miss Sullivan attend­ed the regional CCD conference at Worcester.

"It was tremendously inspira­tional to see special children participate in the Mass and to hear a youngster, despite a dif­ficult speech pattern, rear' the Epistle with profound religious fervor," she recalled.

"These children belong to God's family and are close to Him in a very special way," she said. Opening up new avenues for them to Christ is a wonder­fully rewarding task for her and those that work towards this goal.

DONNELLY PAINTING SERVICE

Commercial _ Industrial Institutional

Painting and Decorating

Fall River 672-1911

74 Williamson Street

MIAMI BEACH (NC) - The Catholic Church has been recog­nized as a communion "in agree­ment with the preamble of the constitution of the National Council of Churches," in a res­olution adopted by the' general board.

Meeting the day before the opening of the seventh triennial session of the NCC's general as­sembly, the board, which has no binding authority on the 41 mil­lion members of 30 cooperating denominations, permits the Cath­olic Church to send fraternal· delegates to general assemblies, and to have Catholics on NCC programs, boards, committees. In addition the action makes Cath­olics eligible to be elected to the staff of the council. . The NCC constitution pream­

ble says that any group that J;ecognizes Jesus Christ as divine is eligible for membership in the council. .

Only one of the 120-member board dissented on approval of the resolution. A Methodist min­ister, the Rev. Guy C. Teterich, Tulsa, Okla., called for "a little longer courtship, a little more sub rosa goodwill." With others, he had questioned whether there had been any indication from the Catholic Church that such an overture would be welcomed.

Dr. John Coventry Smith of New York, general secretary of the commission on ecumenical missions and relations of the United Presbyterian Church in the U. S. A., who is co-chairman of a joint committee of Protes­tants and Catholics working on ' Christian unity, said in reply that "when a fellow is ready to pop the question, he usually has some idea that the answer will be yes."

P«:II!LIlists S~hedM~e

Precu:hi~~ hildshate WASHINGTON (NC) -The

future of parish missions and retreats will be discussed at a three-day Paulist preaching In­stitute at St. Paul's College here beginning next Monday.

The institute will inclwle a presentation of the area mis~ion concept, by a Canadian Redemp­torist priest, Father Edward Boyce, C.SS.R., of Windsor, Ont. The institute will also include a panel discussion of Sisters' re­treats.

TH E MUSIC SHOP Baldwin & Hammond

Pianos & Organs Lew Dalbec, Proprietor

Sales and Service 269 Union S't.. New Bedford

Tel. 992·7064 138-140 North Main St.

Fall River, Mass. Tel. 675-7721

BIG DIVIDEND NEWS i

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SYSTEMATIC SAVINGS

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Page 4: 12.15.66

4 THE ANCHOR....Diocese,of Fall Fiver-T.hurs.Jlec. 15, 1966.;

Bishop 'EM;o,gfixes M,~gJ'" Jtrac~hetfr Continued ,from !Page ,<Dne and grown -men to· look for

"A priest lought to ,be adorned Christ in the Christian and find with ,all .virtues, and ·set the,ex- little tor \TIO likeness. It ds \WOl'Se all!ple of .thegood life, ,for to ,be ,disillusioned IQya minister others." (Imita.tion of Christ, of ,the ,Gmjpel. Book IV, :Chapter5) But .howcan we -be adorned

'Beloved .in 'Christ: with all virtues? ~How otherwi~e

'The'image of the true priest is than as Christ was? He put. aside best 'found jn Our Lorl:l. :But 'it His (Goaheaa ,to 'become.one-,with is not alone~found in Him. 'O,ver us.~He ,emptied :Himself, fbeuom­the centuries, ·there 'have 'been iQ.g Ilike 'us .in ;all :save ~sin. '''8ac­mal?Y sainted men, and ,women, rificeandtoblation'!J]hou \wonldst too, who were so much in .\ove not; but a ,boq,y'.Dhou thas Ifitted with, so devotea .to .the ·things tome " * * Then £aid iI: 'Behalil of 'God, ·that th~y were ,found 'to I,come'to do Thy \Will'O (Goo.'''' be Christlike. (Hebrews 10: 5':7)

St. Pa~l ~,as .such a one. H~ The ,Imitation .of Christ lmight ~ould wnte ~n c?mple~e ~,o~~es~y. seem to be impossible for mS,if Fo~ me·to lIv7 Is'ChrIst. Wlt~ we forget that ,He liveo each

Chnst I am naIled to th.e ~r~sst moment in the Presence .of ~God, ~e challe?g~s t,he" faIt~: u 0 and never forgot that He was grow up m. Chnst, t? ,put ye come .to rede~m ,ano 'leao man­

on the Lord Jesus Chnst. kind pack to .theEather. These Mal1Y who have been Christ- one might say .were <the ltwo 'oe­

like were not priests. Such ,a one votions of His .eantlily ·life. ,And was St. Francis of Assisi. His who,can say.they;are·lbeyond.us? simple, complete love of God, No one 'not 'c.verthe ,saints and his •gift 0'£ finding God's coulil ib~ .entirely 'as .He \was.tErtt image;in,creation has ne\rer been' theyser..ved,God,.and 1theY Ilil!tea ~atched. Brother a~d sister to up' ·theirlhearts .and 'h£!pes ;of hIm was all .humankmd, but .es- men lin lpropontion 'to ltheirle£.font. geCiaJ..!y the innocent .and poor. Uike (0.ur lLottd ItlieY Iloveo (Go&, StraI1ge~y he .was known .to .say first :ana ifol1emost, .antl Ith~ that 'if 'he .met ,an aI1gel .and ,a ptto.vedltheirUo.veIQ,yUookiingffm;, pJiiest, :he woul~ .-show .11e.v.erence anll lbtilltliJ)g \Up (Ohuist ·linlthEiir

. to '.the priest first. own Hittle (llOn~er 'Iof lthe ",woma. !rhis was ,but .11easonable, for, "1My lmeat iis tto ·dio Ithe '\Wtill

the ,priest lis Iheld .to Ibe ':another onmim tthat ~sellt ,me:" '''IDhy \Wlill Christ." .He ,must be "so, ,sinlle Ihe be ,aone :on ·.eanth .:as iit' ,iis iin continues .the ,ministl)Y ,of (0ur ·hea.ven:" "lI(oO:lilw~ySlthe,ttliiQgs Blessed ,Lottd. .Eor \that he ,has that lplease }:Him:" "lllIeavemy iJeen .ordained, "Mou ,have mot Eather, tthe thour lhas tCom~; Iglo­chosen ;Me, .but J ,hav~ ,chosen rit'Y itq.,y 'Son, lthat ttqy 50il jm~y

you." '~No ,one ,takes ·thIS ,honor glolii~y'IDhee:"'YAniilttiisJisleter­on Jhimself, but .that ,is .called 'QY mil tli'fe, Ithat lth~y ,ml!y,ll!;now God, .as .Aaron \was." (,H')b..5 ..4-) 'llhee lthe (0ne 'IDnue (Goa .ana So ,it .is that .while (evet;,:~mne Jesu~ (Ohnist \Whom 'mhOli'lhast called lQY ,the name ,Christian is sent:" l~lJ6hn': 1FT, ;2-;3) fAnfl :in e;x;pected .to reflect ,the ,life .of the .moment ,of mIs :agorty., "1not Chl'ist, ~the ,priest tis called ,to as IT ,Will, Ibut .as IDhou \'Willst~"

BE ,Christ. "I :ha.ve J.finishea lthe "wonk 'IDhou \What ,Christ looked :1ike al- gavest .Me· ·to ,.ao:" "\I~to 'IDqy

'Wl!YS intnigues Ipeqple. Some said hands IT Icommentl1N.!",y :llpinit:" ~hey saw him in the face of tthe This is the pattern, briefly Cure Of Ars,' or the charity of stated of the love of the ,eternal St. Vincent .de ,Raul. ,Bl.1t lit ,is Son, ~ade man, for the Father. not in :looks or gestures that we . It;is -simple. 'Many, :but not ,all discern lthe 'Lovo. It ,is ,in '.deeds. good priest. have 'liveo tby ·it: "So .let your light ,shine ·before Some :alle still '.weighed (down lQY men that theY ,m<:JY see .y.our the,cares .anc.;anX!ietieslthat beset gooa 'Works .and glorify ,y.our all humankind. 'J1]o 'look linto ~the Father ';Who is in ,hea,ven." This minnor js .to ',seeonly .themselves. is meant 'for.a:ll,of us. But it Jis 'the image .of Chnisfs

'So, we .~ook to ~ee .a .man life, [to .be .notedQy :arl'Yone .who adorned WJth ,all v.lUtues,~the looks ,closely and .makes ,honest measure df whose life is .full,- comparison' .with Ihis ,own. beca~se .~e 'l~ves .bo.th ,God ,and mhe author O'fltheITmitation (of man for thl .lp.ve of God. JIhe Chni t tell . '''mh . t t p:rliest who ciimsat .less ,iB bound SIS IUS. e .pEles ,m~s to 'fall :far short ,of .the .Imitation set the exa,~ple, of the lII.ooa Jlilfe of ~Christ. J'Ie consents ,to .be ~or lother-s. iBut what 'IS imOl1e milled ''':Another Christ"; in .fact, IDlPo~tant ,than ,that ,he ,lead lthe he may be' proud and happy ~ay un Iknowleqge, .love .and :ser-­"lith ,the Ititle. IBut ,he 'cannot ~u(!e of ,?od? 'mhe Lo.ve -of .God dtand IcompaniBon ,\'Jith \what IS the fIrst and 'Igneat~st .o~m­dveryone sees and recognizes in mandment. llhe ~~;ve· ~ nelgh­the ,Milil!Or ,of tthe Life rJ:f .0ur bor comes ne:<c.t. :For "ho.w ,can liord. anyone say he loves ..Goq, :\v.hom

. , . he has not seen,and say that Ch:lst 'was mdeed '~?sscs~ed of he 'does not 'love ,'his neigHbor

all vlntucs. :He eJi1eIClsed them. whom 'he sees?" Someone .might IPnotest ~weakly ". , that He \was tthe Son ,of IGoa. But ~y thIS shal1_~ll" ~en .~now uemember lthat He \WaSmlll1,' also, that you ,are "M;~ dlsc~ples, .If .you , and tempted It. t fo have Jove, ,one .for ..another, .as.J:

. was no r h If ." 'N . '1.::nothing that 'He saia· "I am the ave or you. ! o· .011~,dn ,IUS

Way, . and the Truth, and the senses, c~.Uld 'hear, o.r rea~ 'these wife." IIi IHe '!laia: "l1em'n 'of !Me words 'without .askulg hlm.self, ilbat lam meek .and humble of h?w 'much ~they \have 'meant ~o . t 0 "II if' tl ·t f hIm. They 'were alHlresseft 1to near ,:an 'You 'WI m res or th t Ell it lb il:\lour :souls," it's handly wJse Ito e' w ve, .0. e 'sure, ,.an think lthaLHe .was nottankiingito the;~ore they -'<!P~y .to (:m,:who "S all fAd h H contmue 'the <!postolate,--;p~lests. ~ , 0 us. n w en e re- B t ·h·t 'f th Oh" t' .?minil il lth a tl' '''1 h u W a 0 0 er rls Ians.

. e e pos es. .' a:\le Do they not mean anything 'at :~Iven :')(OU ;an (example, that'~ all. But are we not called by .lhave done you also should do. th 'f 'Ch . ·t? "",.. "t ' 'f ,t lk' ,t "t e name 0 rIS. ~nU" we

A e was a mg 0 ,pl'les s. consent .tobe ,nnitators ,in .name It is un'fair to our flocks, as

well as unfair Ito Christ for any :me of us lto ltllke a .negati.ve atti ­~ude ;and aat 'as thol!gh .doomed ~o impemection. JMa~be we ,can Just !Aer.oss '(The not be "other .Chnists" joall that. Coggeshall St. Bridge ~he phrase entails. .But we should . ~Fciirhaven, IN'loss. :it least ltry. 'We 'must It::y. 'There Finest "V'orie1y ,of':nust be no 'llOlitt:adiction 'be­;;ween what men ·see lin us, 'and .st:A'FO'OD '.\ihat they know chm:adterized Served 'Anywhere - ""IsoGur lLoua :ano ~Saviour. '1t 'is a SUA 1(-S-:CMOPS-<CMlCKENpitiful experience 'for r.!hHdren

,~SRW!A'mt@N .mmr AWAlRD: fOita'tiioll df. Merit '"".as a.w.mxded !to Fxa:nois (Ca1.1<1inal $peUmwn l~iY ffihe ~Sa:h.u1i1iion Army ,Association ,of New T'.oik at:a lhmcpeon 'in Ibis "honor. ITue£t ~o t:rij;gili1t:: ,n:. WiictIor Herd, lpnesiaerit; ,Salv.ation zAnnty IA-ssOOia1lion of New Y6rk; the {Owt1imlI;; llliUd \Oommissioner Wiilliam iE. jli)aw.idsen, ll'enm1Jarial :Commanaer cd! .the SaIv.8­l1iic,m ~I1111iY:'S [Il-state leastern terVjtor~. INC:: ;P~dte.

(Qri~,y? .<Dr us ,our ,steady, .certain 'v.lay ,of ,serw,ing :.God 'not tiIlus­Itl.ated :Qy'\whait ,we do :to ,imitate lthe 'minist~'Y .,if 1C0rqpassion that twas (Ohliistls.

IItds 1I10t·:for mothing 'that the (Church' 'has .!Homes lfor 'the h\ged :and ::IJifiI;m, ,welfare 'bureaus, 'cana ,(!on':ferrenaes, :hospitlils, in­:stitutions !for lthe IPoor,and the sick"'poor, 'youth.'center-s,·sohools Jor ,the 1mentally retarded, camps 'a'n d an" educational system touchiI1g ,all ..le,\(els of life. This is a true Jim<\ge of ,GhEist ,in .the wonld. .But ;where ,do .we .fit .into it? . .Are we ..just complacently h<\IlP.Y ,tha·..Bomeone,else d.s bear­

: ing .the .reElPonsibility for ",us? . And .ho.w .can .we (claim .credit

if .our .head .Is .not .in it. iNo, 1Tl'Y lbelo:ved in 'Christ, \we

cannot stand :honestly or .com­fodabl,y in :the sight·of (God, with emp~y ,hands. ..Ma)ibe tthat's .whir so ,many ·dread \the ·thought lof jutlgmelit. tEut ;the good ana faitlIful ,ser.;v:ant, \who !has :li\led, like (Ghrist tin the ,abiai'ng IPlles­ence ,of (God, '\\lhose ,hear.t ,was always lifted I~P in !thanks ito God, ,who .aulltUlted n;1iPons~biil­it~, ,tmals in ..health, .ana .demands on rhis time ;lmd ,talents, cheer­fully ;and ,gt;:lce£ullY. ,he .aould move .easi!hY .and ,readilY ,from the e.\ler - pressi..Qg ,needs .of ,this w.oiild, ,into Ithe .compall'Y ,of ,the blessed. F.or .1ll'\i}lOne .who ;makes a ,heaMen on (earth '~y ,w,hat ,be

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doel!, :in ,devoted,consec&atod ser.vice .to ,God, ,at .the .altar, ,in the :.hea.nts, .the ,grateful 'hearts of ;men, \will .be ,no stnanger .to the courts 0::: heaven.

So it il!, ,with sorrow indeed, but.OQy,in,a life.of,corqplete ded­ication, ,that .we ,bid adieu to ,a cherished ipdest, follower ,of Christ. .The ..impact of ,his ·bci.ef career will always remain with UI!, in ,the heams ,and ·minds .of gratefulpniests .and Ipeqple, ,ion ' the ideals <6f ~seminanians, :settin'g their .standards liigh, ,and ,as ia

,bright star of faith :and ,hope, beckoniJ)g ,us iall ever .onwar-d and upward /in the .know.leqge, the :love, ;anii .the .service of God. We are :the .poorer for.his .pass­ing. 'Brtt ~he ,has 'left us .all .8

priceless.'hetitage. M<\y ,his soril be 'jqy'lul cilw'lYs, with ·the sairits in What we .all 'hope m<\y be our own eternal dwelling ,place.­With tGoq, "Eather, .Sonand :HolY Spirit, and Mary, .~ueen <Of Heaven.

Present.in :the sanctuar)' .wet:e, 'Most :Rev..James .J. ,Gen:aro,

V.G., AuxUiar,y of 'the 'Diocese ,of 'Fa"}l 1River;Most ;Re:v. 'Russell J. Mc'Vinney, Bishop cff .theProvi­dence 1I)iocese; 'Most "Rev. Hum­berto 'So lMedeiros, 'Bishop ·cff the BIIownsville, Texas, Diocese.

!\I\t 'iritenr.eritser:vices at ·St. P.atriok1s 'Cemetery, Wall 'River, Bishop Gerrard 'contlucted the commital services 'assiste6 ,by Bishop 'Medeiros, 'Rt. Rev. 'Msgr. Wil'liamH., HarriQgton and a very 'large number cff .the clergy.

'Monsignor .HaCkett <is ,survived by 'one 'bro,ther, :Dr. :Robert S. l:{ackett 'of .Fall:R.ive::;, :five neph­ews, ;two iriiecel!, land .two aunts, Mrs. Barold Creamer ·6f FoaU Rive:;, .antlMrs. :Ge01;ge Sulliv,an" . 0'£ 'Newport.

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Page 5: 12.15.66

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PAPAL ENCLOSURE INVOKED ,A''I1 ~IONASTERY: The So, Dartmouth 8a;rmel was enclosed by' Bishop Connolly follow.ing cellemonies af the former Sol-E~Mar hospital. Left : Sister Mary, Q.e.D., taJ.ks to a vis-idJCllJ'iin' the "speak room" prior to enclosure. Bish­op Connolly, assisted by Rev; Reginald M. B'arrette, blesses the chapel. Right: Sister Agnes, Q.C.D." a' native of New Bedford, shows how packages, will be' received from and delivered to the "outside world!'~

,

8ishop Gerrard TH! AN€HOR- 5; Thurs., Dec. 15, 1'966·

Newman Speaker Professor Anthony J. John, Brother Advises

:wewman Club adVisor at', SMTI, .' announced a schedule for S-elf-Evaluati'onlIlleetings atld lectures for the Reond half of the academic year. All meetings; will be held from 1 Of Seho'ofs' to 2 on, indicated- dates. in room.. WORCESTER (NC) ­)ft4 of the North Dartmouth' cam­ Catholic schools must updatepus. of the' college. Heard' this month, was Rev; John L . .Nalfs; their "philosophy and objec­pastor of the FIrst Presbyterian tives" in light of the needs ellurch, New· Bedford. of the students a'nd communities

Scheduled for Jan. 10 is ''The' they'serve, a national edUcation Church and the Pill," a lecture consultant'said here. bJrDr. Arthur F.,Buckley, K.S.G. The need for self-evaluation

"In Action and Community, aimed at updating was stressed lUaction" will be the topic of by Brother Anthony Wallace, Rev. Anthony Rocha, Catholic F.S,C., National Catholic Educa­Memorial Home Chaplain, in tional Association evaluation Fall River. He will speak Feb. 7. consultant, in an address to

Worcester diocesan elementaryRev. Kenneth Michael, assist.. school principals and teachers.IIot at St. Anthony of the Desert

The meeting marked theMaronite Rite Church, Fall launching of a self-evaluationRiver" will discuss "The Council

! program by diocesan elementaryand the Eastern Rites" Feb. 14. "L, schools that will extend over the U Anglicanism. and the Church

next two to three years, accord­I!1f Rome" will be explained Feb. ing to Father .Tohn D. Thomas,zo, by Rev; Edward S. Winsor, diocesan school' superintendent.rector at St. Columba's Episco­

Father Thomas said the pro­pal Chapel,. Middletown, R. I. gram was undertaken "in viewMarch l4's topic will be "The' of the criticism leveled againstDivine Liturgy,~' discussed by Catholic schools across theRev. Constantine Bebis, pastor country." He called it "impera­of St. George Greek Orthodox tive that we make every effortChurch, New Bedford. A panel to achieve excellence in Catholicdiscussion is slated for March 28. education."Sisters, at Soutlt, DUfJ"tmouth's' CarmeliteRabbi Theodore Gluck of Tif­

Principal Roleal'eth Israel Congregation, New Bedford, will speak on "Judaism· The program will employ and the Modern World" April 11. Monaste~y N O:W Separated' ironl' World' guidelines contained in "Evalua­

tive Criteria for Catholic Ele­BislWIl GerraTcll mentary Schools," a comprehen­At 6 o'clock Sunday night,' twelve Carmelite nuns and· one postulant-thirteen wom­Bishop GerraTd will address, sive study prepared by the

Iltudents Oil' "Newman. and the en of God-turned tlieir backs on the secular. world and retired to a world of puayer NCEA which has headquartersVatican Council" on April 25 and within a 12~aare ~apal enclosure in South Dartmouth. "For us," Mother Therese, Q.C.D., in Washington; D. C. tbe year's activities will close acting- prioress l said: as a stead~~ stream of las-v minute visitors poured through the'form­ A committee responsible for Sunday, May 7' with a Commu.. er Sol-e-Mar Hospital, "en.. the implementation of the pro­won breakfast. Non - Catholic gram will be established in eachclosure is very, very desir­ For some of the 13 nuns who fessed members of the house forstudents oil the college are cor­ school. Members will inclUdethe door the public en­ a three-year term and may beable. "We really aall't.Iive OUI' saw todially invited, to aU meetings faculty, pl;lrents and the·pastor.trance hall close behind them re-elected only once. Then sheand lectures. contemplative' 1if e um d e D Brother Wallace said facultySunday night, it was the last must remain out of office .forNewly-appointed club chap­ these circumstances, We are not' members' will have the "princi­view they will have of the "out­ three' years before she is againlain is Rev. Albert Shovelton and eschewing the world· as, such­ pal role" in the self-evaluation.With easing eligible.lltudent officers, aTe Frank Law~ although it's' not as· good as, it':

side world:' some He emphasized, however, thatof the stringent rules of the or­ The' 13 religious at the Dart­rmlce' president; Morgan Childsl should- be-but to 11ve' a life' of parents can proVide a "helpfulder, founded' by st. Teresa of mouth house now include Mothervice~president; Marianne Gats­ prayer,we have to huve' soU­ service" in the program as canAvila in Spaip. in 1562, some mayby, secretaJ!1Y;. and Stanley Baa­ tude:'" Therese' and her sister, Sister pastors and outside professional

mk;, treasurer. leave' enclosure, with special J:,ucy, natives of Bridgewater; educators.Since the Dartmouth Carmel; dispensation, fbr-emergency rea... Sister Algnes; a· native of Newfirst in me Fall' Riv.er Diocese, sons, But some may never again: Bedford, who celebrated her

Archeology Aid's step foot' in the world outsiiic' golden jubilee in the order last are dedicated to His service andwas, established in June by a· nucleus of 12 nuns from Bostoll! their enclosure' wallS: Some' will' summer; Sister Bernadette, a that of· His people,Ca,rmel. the former children'S die' there. after a' lifetime spent native' of' Ii-eland; SIster Mar­ "Our'life," Mother Therese' ad­Bibl:e: Sc:holars hospital has been the center of' praying for those' "outside:'" garet MillY' of' Milton. whose fa.. mits! "requires a speoial voca­

DETROIT' (NC)-An arcbeol­ mass· confusion as,hordes of'vol­ S~turday' afternoon; befure' thel' is, "unofficial, photographer" tion. There are some who feel oglst said- h>ere' scientist!! are-' Uil-teers helped get, it iittb; shape; celebrating Benediction in' the' fOr the" order; Sister Maria, a we should be ti:!aching or nursing pining increasing respect f<.r fOe. the' religious community. Ca!l'mel. chapell the' Mostt ffilv. roFmer MHnodist, converted' to . instead'of lIving'our way oillie;

Catholicism· "through' the good:th.e- histol1ical traditions of' the' Men from' Catholic churches Jbmes<i:l,. Connolly,lJ).m, bisnop:o£' "But' we feel we' can do more' Bible'. throughout the' mreal washed' Fall Ri vel', commended; me' DIs" example' of' Catholic friends in' good, by. prayer than by devoting

"The' Bible' hal> moved intolthe­ down, walls, and did! necessal"y,l calced l <l:armeUies:fol" ttieir'wiU.. ' my neighborhood in Worcester;" ourselves to more tangible good mainstream, oS' w{)rld histo1'Yi canpentry.' work., Teen-age· vollo­ ingness "to. spend' yom," li:v~ Sister Rose'of Cambridge, a sec­ works." tIlanlts' to' the' dascoveries of' a!l"'-' unteers, w.ielded, paint, brushes­ shielded· f.rom' tlie' would;, ~t', retary,r in; the' probation· office' in' The' Second' Vatican Council dleology;" claimed Dl.":,.Tames B\ with, both wilL and, skill. NeW! make'the problems- of! the worltl. Middlesex; Coum, before' entering agreed.Priichal"d, cU'I.'at:or of the biblical friends, with cars. :ram er:randSl, youI' owm 'llhis·is a r foreign' idea' the cOftvent;. Sister Angelo of In its decree' on Adaptation "clieology. seetlan of the UnLver­ 'Fhe" nuns themselves; got. their: in,toda~'Js-WOl'U:l. ManYi aoo will\. T{)ronto, Sister Mary, Wmches­ and Renewal' of the ReligiousIit3'i' of Pennsyl'Y.ania Museum, ceramic workshop. im onder' ana" ing- tOI share' ttle' joys; of tlie' tel";' Sister' Ann, R~ading, Pll.; Life, the' bishops assembled· in,

Dr. Pritchalld, who' spends; stamed, turning, outi. figurines Resurrection, not, as man;yv to' Sister Christina of Dorchester, council in Vatican ,II stated in tIlFee' months> of the' year. 'digging; and, othe.!' cel'~ic. items that, share the carrying of the €OOSSl'" Sister Mary Magdalen of ,Dan­ part: among: the' l'Uins, of SIll ancient, win- Help' themt suppont. them1­ These' Uii>l'teen. women' of:' GOd bur,y; Conn., and Jeannie Oes­ ":r.Iembers of those' communi­'rillage'in Jordan\, said "there'is:a< sel.....~ Tohey beg<mt wonk on', new; are' willing' to' give' up' the' worlii terle' of Philadelphia, the' postu­ ties which are' totally dedicated: popular misconception v,h',a't: M'8SS. vestments' thut they, hopec fOr the' people'ofi 1!he'W{)rltl, liln~; who' entered' the' house to1contemplation'give themselves we're interested! in old, trinkets· alsol will be a soureec of;. income· From now onl 1!he'si!X professedj seven' weeks, ago; to' God alone in solitude and si. and- artifacts. Our real inter.est and on beautifun~ hand-painted' nuns, six' nov-ices' and one' postu.. · lence and through constant pray­

Eventually. theY' hope' to addis learning about the people of and, hand-lettered novena cards, lant will neiUiel1 see- nOl1'be seen' er. and ready penance.tot their Carmelite' family astiwse days, and how they. lived." and· house' blessings. that·. will be', ijy "outsiders," except. for "No' matter how urgent may'y;oung: w.omen of. the Fall RiverDr. Pritchard has spent six, on sale at the Dartmouth mon..· monthly visits with: members· of be' tHe' needs of the active apos-­

studying the remains_ ot their families'-separated by' a' Diocese learn more about them.pea~s astery, tolate; such communities, will al.. the ancient village of Gideon' The' "open door"' pollcy in' e£;:.> metal screen. Despite their difficult life-or ways have a distinguished partwhere Joshua fought his battle. reef there since the' original' Donations and gift articles perhaps because' of 'it-the mem­ to play· in Chlist's l\'Tystical Bbdy

"We didn't find any record gr.aup-now supplemented by' II may be passed to them through, bers of Dartmouth Carmel radi­ where 'all members have not the tbat the sun stood stm, but we' . new' novice from Philadelphia­ a' revolving' turntable. Requests ate serenity and peace. There is same function.''' did learn that a lot of the names. ' for prayers may be'made to iliem' nothing, wrong with their sense The role played by the mem­arrived, had; a two"f"old' purpose:and facts mentioned in the Bible in a speaking room, with theTo. let the people of the) diocese of humor; either. bers of the'Discalced Carmelite nre accurate and a pretty fair meet the Carmeli~s' and! ~am nun screened off' by a dl."awn Order is indeed a very specialRecently, they were presenteddescription of the way things. WDnl," Dr., Pr!d;chard said: about'their wouk and' to give' curtain.

two' black sheep,. a ram and an one. They renounce the world them the time to obtain one of The Carmelites have gone ewe. Naming the new pets, for life so that they may ask the' necessary ingredients of'en­ back to their traditional "menu." their Heavenly Father to showerwhich Mother Therese says will

his graces and blessings on thePope PCluJl~ Tiara closure--a high fence,to'separate from which meat is barred. They function as !four-legged lawn­them from the worldi have returned to their Great people of the world. mowers this coming summer,Exhib'ited a~ Church Silence, with unnecessary con­ They are prayIng tOT us.The fence, donated oy a prom­ "mowing our grass and we have

versation restricted to their dailyMARLBORO (NC)-Thecoro­ inent Catholic Businessman in a lot of it," might have been dif­Illation tiara of Pope Paul VI was New Bedford who prefers to re­ two hours of recreation, one hour ficult. P'apal Thanks

after lunch, another aofter dinnerexhibit.ed at Immaculate Concep­ main anonymous, is a six-foot VATICAN CITY (NC)-OneBut not for the Carmelites.--during which they will· con­tion Church here by the Catholic chain iron fence topped with: hundred twenty Dutch officersThey immediately christened the:Near East Welfare Association, three' rows of' barbed wire. It', tinue to do handwork. and soldiers were received by

sheep Adam and Eve. What,else?eustod'ian of' tlie crown. entirely' encloses the l2':'acre Each of the more·than 60 Car­ Pope Paul VI in a special audi­The crown, on public display, ' "world" of the Carmelites, from mels now located l in' the United If true happiness is an indica­ ence to receive his thanks for

"'has inspired new and wider the front of t'heir Ilew home to' States, is autonomous, self-sus­ tion of the presence of God, as their good-will gesture in help­Ibpport for the world struggle the low water" marlt' of' their taining and' self:'governing. The is said, God has fouQ.d a new ing to clean up the aftermath of acainst wanto" he added. property filci.lu! ClArk:sJ CAve,; prioress is elected' by the pro.. home with the Carmelites who the flood in Florence. Italy.

Page 6: 12.15.66

C

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Fiver-Thurs. Dec. 15, 1966

LEST WE'

FORGET

C'.

There must be some significance to the fact that in last Sunday's The New York Times, film critic Bosley D Crowther began his column with the words: "It has come time to wag a warning finger at Andy Warhol and his By IEdwal'd P. McDonagh '\

underground friends and tell them, politely but firmly LEADERSHIP DAY that they are pushing a reckless thing too far." He was This Saturday, December ~ talking about what he refers to as film peep-shows, as at 9:30 A.M., the Second LeadeJ>o

ship Program win begin allobsessions with decay. Bishop Cassidy High School bit

Mr. Crowther i8 a sophisticated man, a man of great Taunton. experience in viewing and reviewing films, a man quite How well I remember the ready to see something of value in even the ,most start ­ first, held in Taunton last April.

I rode on the bus to Cassieis';ling of films. But he warns that there is danger in the with 16 of our parish CCD st.,

type of films crawling out of off-beat movie houses and .dents. They had signed up val­basement screens and in corpmercial houses frequented untarily for the program, but 3ll by the average viewer. the bus got closer to our desf.i..

nation, the atmosphere took aThe movie industry is in trouble. It looks for profits gloomy tum. Clearly my stDaand sees them in either expensive spectaculars or in the dents were having second films that go as far as decency allows-and then a little thoughts about spending a fuJI farther. A new group of film-makers is coming along that Spring day-a saturday at tba';

-in the confines of a school. is quite willing to pander -to the tastes of those looking You would think we were ap­for films in the latter catergory. There is no question about proaching Devils' Island with •

it-the signs are there for all· to read. Language, situa­ boat load. of prisoners' who haci tions, dialogue-things that were only hinted at five years no hope of parole. ago are brought out into the open and flaunted today. And Last Monday night at CCD

class these some students touredthis will continue and grow worse as long as it makes the rooms !lnd spoke enthusias­in Diocese money by attracting an audience. And with what unhappy' Chrastmcs tically about Leadership Day, to

effects on the tastes and sensitivities and morals of people. Continued from Page One always appreciated, and' one their fellow-students. Aprilll;l This awareness must be kept in mind in the after­ worn out. We need sturdy record for. which theSisters have' prisoners were December's PeJ1­

math of the Legion of Decency Pledge taken last Sunday. nightclothes to fit boys and girls been seeking in vain is an ar- suaders. from age five to 14.' They rangement of· "Happy 'Birthday If anything, next Satur(ia~Not only the Church is concerned. A man like Mr. Crowther needn't be new-just sturdy!" to .. You" suitable for playing Leadership Day should be J?etter

likewise smells the aroma that is in the movie wind. It Other needs at Paul. Dever: when guests' birthdays are cele-. than the first, The same~~,am. is the smell of decay. "We want volunteers all year brated. So if anyone has· that led by Brother Mulryan of Coy.

, round just to talk to the chil-. particular disc t. t • High, has planned the program dren, help feed them, even' fold At St. Vincent's Home,;Fan with an expert tOUCh. The ~o.-The Sides of An Arch diapers. We use an awful lot of River,Rev. John,P. Cronin, eli- ,mula of conferences and discUlS­diapers." . rector, noted in a Christmas let- sions u$ed in April will be ~

In his farewell talk in St.. Patrick's Cathedral in' New' The supervisor said that many ter that the gift of service is peated at Stang because the. st8-York before' leaving to' become spiritual father of the Di- children at the state school never most. needed by the ·home c~. dents liked it so ·well. . ocese of ROChester, Bishop FuJton' Sheeilinterestihgly,recei.ve,visitors. ~'Personal atten- dren. Workers Who can. contrib- . ,The program· starts at 9:.

. . . , . . tion could dO,.a tremendous ute skills such as plumbing, ear- A.M, with registration' and gri-'contrasted the so-caIled'liberals -and sQ-called'conservatives amount. for many of our _young­ pentry or painting are alw. tlrig acquainted. At -10:40 A...· in :the Churcii~s ;'.'t~o· sides~ of:~nareh;'building: froQl"'o~ sterso" in demand;as are those who eaJ1 ·Mass will be celebrated in the a..' posite·. directions.· They arein.tension,dn opposition 'and iJl· . NoOne Comes' . teach the children some speeial ditorium by Father Joseph ·Po...... seeming contradiction' ':~ .....~ '. . Whereas. many· children at .subject. such as arts and craft8l ers. After lunch the students will

singing, dimcing or nature stuciiJ. listen to an address. by· DoctClll' : .•. And .he .addeq, .: wth Jii~ight h1to the. pre~ise; ~ori~e~ :i~~~ If:O,:rfl?~i~;c=:~::::u=~ "Even if you can spare only a ' ·Walter'· English 'Of Springfieb\'

of .the present,· ~'there.is.hardly anything, a . young·man it's a' minority who are' aban­ few hours a month, we'd like teo . Mass; ·Dr. ,English is aneducatClll' . says' today-that- Christ did· not ·S33T, -but the difference' doned by relatives, the opPOSite have. you," .said ,Father Cronin. who. has ·been active in .. is that Christ balan'cedhis ,radicalism with holiness, "sac-' is true· at the Lovering Colony He .noted that .volunteers wu· Council of Churches and eea­rjfice ~nd r~demptio~,". ... .'. '. . . for the aged on Davis Street in will . take a special inteJ:est iD menism.

Taunton, a department of· Taun­ ,particular children, taking them From '1:30 to 2:30 P,M" the . Those within the Church are either conservative or ton State Hospital, The Lover­ o~_ outings or .home for the holi- students will form discussion

radical by. temperament.' So far, so good.·But they must. ing Colony guests are not men­ days or weekend are more thaD groups to examine their role iii.

realize that their point of .view is. more one of approach' tally ill, but lire men and women welcome. race-relations and ecumenical at ­alone in the world, with no re­ Needed too are women who fairs. The discussions will be

than it is one of essence. It is more a way of looking at sources. will help with housework, clean- guided by college students' who. a problem than it is of acceptance or rejection of a Church "Most have outlived friends ing and the ever-present pile of have agr~ed to help out,

mending created by 81 children.teaching. This realization alone will enable a person to and family members," said a Much the same needs are pres- Bernice Clarke, a registeredreconcile the oft-times violent attacks of the one group on spokesman. "There are many . ent at St. Mary's Home, New nurse from Cambridge, who iI9

other. who no gifts atthe . receive at all Bedford, where the Sister Supe- active in several areas of the LayChristmas, and for some reason' rior said, "We'd be grateful for, Apostolate, will address the' stu­not many organizations ·seemBut further-those who consider themselves either anyone who'd take home some dents next on their opportunltiesto know about us. There was aconservatives or radicals must subscribe to all that Christ of the mending to do, We.just for Christian Leadership. Theminister's wife who used to visit haven't enough sewing machines, discussion format will follow. has said and.done-and this means to bring into their lives us," she added, "but she hasn't and the boys' clothes especially From 4:30 to 5:30 P,M" a cokeHis holiness and prayer and sacrifice and. patience and come for two years or so, and need lots of repairs." break and entertainment have mercy. there aren't many others who St, Mary's has an organized been provided. If you have afind us,"

For a man should not live by hi's temperament alone The Lovering women could auxiliary, 'the Infant of Prague good folk singer in your CCD Guild, whose members take an crowd, make sure he comes andbut in the likeness of Christ. There is great talk today use hand lotions, hairnets, stock­ interest in specific children, re- . brings his guitar. At 5:30 P,M.,ings, talc and cologne, she said, on being humaq. And being human is a necessity. But membering. them with holiday the students from the partici ­while the men enjoy tobacco inone never stops there-he is called on to be more than gifts, keeping an eye on their pating parishes will evaluate theany form, But most of all, Visi­

human, more than natural, to be super-human and super- schoolwork and in general sup- conferences and deliver sum­tors would be welcome. plying motherly affection.' New maries to the assembly.'natural. And this means not just"reactipg to a 'situation At Taunton' State Hospital it ­mem})ers are always welcomed Spaghetti and meatballs allaccording to. one's humanity but· reactjng to it with the' self, located at 60 Hodges Ave­ by this group. . 6:30, followed by' singing all theDue, Taunton, there are variouspersonality of a Christ-formed individual. asAlso mentioned needs by .. way home on the bus because • . Yule activities Scheduied,but the the superior are Winter caps for will have been a good day. volunteer services' 'office" SaId boys and girls, dungarees, whitethat offers to stage ward 'parties shirts and white socks for the . for groups. of 60 patientS or so boys and pleated skirts; blouseS Catholic Club Plan.ifi$ad ~f large affairs lor 'hun'­

dreds of people would' be' milch and. white socks for the girls. Bishor/s Night.'~Qf" course, people have manyappt:eciated. "Such pa'rties would calIS made, on them at this time . Fall. Riv.er Catholic 'WomaR\, be a' little 'more personal· thanANCHOR' of .year.." she said. "We· don't Club will hold' its annualthe bigger ontis," said thevolun~ .. .. want to ask for a lot-just what­ Bishop's Night at '8 Tuesda7teer serVices director. GiftS such ever can be afforded." night, Dec. 13 at St Patrick"OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAkL RIVER as stretch socks, toilet articles

Throughout the Diocese, needs auditorium. With Bishop Connol­and tissues are enJoyed by pa­don't vary mUCh. There's a. year­ ly as guest of honor, the Cil"Published weekly by The Cat~oli~ Press of th.e Diocese of Fall River. tients, she add.ed, and if they are roUnd aching void in many eld­ Cod Conservatory Chorale -willgift-wrapped, it's an appreciated. . 410 Highland Ave~ue' . erly hearts, that could be filled present a program under theextra touch.Fall· River, Mass. 02722 " 675-7151 by loving visitors; children direction of Harrington .van

Catholic lInstitutions.· need to f~l there are people in- . Hoesen. . PUBLISHER . Catholic institutions in the terested in them; all institutions Mrs. Thomas Burke, club pre!>­

Most Rev. James l. C~mnolly, D.O., PhD•. Diocese report t~mselves fairly . need a little imagination on' the ident, will head the hospitali~

GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER well cared for by guilds, sodali­ part of would-be helpers. to the committee, assisted by past pres­ties and other organizations, but . end that things that are really idents. Mrs. Fre.derick DagataRt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll Santa has rect~ived a few special needed' are supplied. and Mrs. Bel/trand Letendre wiD. JAANAGING EDITOR " requests. At Taunton's Marian It's a challenge for Christmas 'be chairmaJl and cochainilan ~

lHugh J. Golden' Manor, for instance, records are and the entire New Year. the coffee hour committee... ,

Page 7: 12.15.66

Christmas Plans Take Back .Seat Today as Studen~ Participate In Fint Diocesan Math Meet

Students in Dioce~an highs' are wrenching their thoughts from Christmas joys tOOay as they participate in the first Diocesan math mee~ to Ire held at Bishop Stang High School, North Dartmouth. And another, school has 1rePorted its selections as representatives to Student Government Day in B.oston April 7. Aime' Silva and Kathleen Masse will go from ~assidy High in Taunton.

Students from all Diocesan highs attended the funeral of

" 1\Ilsgr. John Hackett last Satur­day at St. Mary's Cathedral~ And

'~ girls at Cassidy are also mourn­ing the death of Mother 'Anna

'Gertrude, superior at Bishop : "'CassidyConvent since its' a'pen­

"'mg in 1963. Among the hundreds 1 efstudents under her care while she was principal at Sacred Heart parochial school in Fall 1Ri.ver was Msgr. Hackett.

Area winner in the annual Voice of Democracy contest fOl: Fall River was Pauline Roppe, junior at Jesus-Mary Academy. She won $25 for an essay on "'What Democracy Means to Me."

Rochelle Goyette. Alumnae con­soled themselves at a Christmas party sponsored by the, Alurn.­nae-PTA, featuring a chicken pie supper and social hour.

Gym meets tryouts .have been held at SHA Fall River and soph representatives 01 the Debrabant Debate,~ wer~ among partici ­pants in it tourney at Bayview 4Cademy.' ' 'And back to basketball, at l'JIt.

Si:.:,llIIafy's the varsity co-c~ talns for the season are Carol Morton and !)()nna Ferreira. Heading the' jayv~!es are Patricia Golden and MaryLou Clarke.

Christmas Plans Music history and, Music II

classes at- Cassidy caroled and distributed gifts to patients at Lakeville Hospital, Paul Dever

'School and Marian Manor; while French Club members at the Taunton School presented a prQ­

ntE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~lhUN. Dee. ~ 19416

Newspaper Staff , ,gram of Fienchcarols at Marian Heading the staff ofEssa,' ,~anor, a, project especially en­

school paper at St. Anthony "'Joyed, by guests o,f Fr.ench back­ LOVE IS THEME: "Love" is the theme of Advent activities at Bishop Cas~idy High 'High, New Beciford, is Michael!:": ,ground. ~ at CaSSidy, sopho­ School. Taunton. Inspired by a cursilIo-typeJ;"etreat, students arranged an Advent Rally , .lame's, aided by Ronald Dubois;' ,'ma~~ rehgIOn cl~ss membe~ are to-})rornote "effective, modern preparati9n for Christmas." Folk-Mass songs and select­'news editor' Dianne Brule' aI't Ii wntin.g to relatives and, fnends iOlla ftom"Up with P~ple" were sung and banners created by art students depicted,the

editor; La~Gobeil, businesS" inViet Nam as a holiday proiee:t; ~~' (}lG9d f9r today's world. At rally Rev. John Moore, school chaplain, lights Advent 'IDilnaget; and Diane Beaulieu; "and, glee c~ub members,s~g 1ft

IIlimeograpber-in-charge.' ," ", 'a. pll~ntatlon of .Handel s Mes- wreath .. ,candle as students hold banners. I' " Future plans of the budding: I, Slah' ,at .Cen~r~l Congregational ' :jou~aUsts mclude,for Miehae~ "CluiI'clt ln' Mldd17bo;0." .' , llIom, ,Margaret Hewey, Marie De .. 0,&, lab,orat~~ ,~l;l X-ray at Bay View High School, whit&> 'attendance at SMTI With'a.majo!"· ,,,Theme'of CasSidy 8 Chn~tmas, SOUza,' Susan"Grant, Carol VaF­in. art· for 'Ronald Stonehill;with! :,COOftcen Sunday, Dec.,; 18' 18 "A "', gas arid ''Elizabeth lVIichney.' • che'mistry maj~r; for' Dianne I" €antic~e of Peace." On the pro- ' 'Doctor Speaks ' and for the other Diane;, with gram~, a 8010?y Sharon Frc;: Dr.and:vIrs; Joseph Kerrins, one "n," 'a~ secretarial career. cllet,te, .. Sweet Little J~sus !Joy. 'ad<kesSec,i' seniors at SHA Fall Laura's future plans are' unan- GI~ at SHA. Fall River mter- River and at Cassidy on Inar­nounced, but as of now her bo&.- ested,m ~ttendm~ UMass had a.1n riage recently; and on the same; Wes include dancing, reading' '~um~ to dlscuss the U~ll-, day' 'the' seniors took a home­and sewing. 'i7e.rslty, With \ a repre:rentative, making test in comp,etition for

'Girls fit CasSidy High are' en- Uus m?n~h; and ~so thIS month Homemaker of the Year awards. joying the second issue ot'the those, mterested m' emplo-yment, Well, as. the' twig is bent * **

'lChool paper, Paw Prints,' w~icb ,by the, telephone company teok, 'And'this' is CoiIrtesy Week ata career. And Christmas projects ,gained highest rating at the New tests" ,'SHA alSo' a good virtue for' continue: to proliferate at -DA: England Scholastic Publieatioo.';, ;" At':Dominican Academy' Anne filwfe' h&riemakers to possess. Sophomore A girls have "adopt­

, "ConferellCC held recently ,at B6s~"'''MaiieFolsterheadsvafsity bas- 'Posters" f~miriaiilg students of eli" a needy family and' are' re­,ton University. !!" 'i':ltetbaU' playerS; and Gail Todd 'thiS are strategically located pfiiringto)"s' 'fo~"the children;'

Students at Prevost High,'faU,J,,,is jily.\reecaptain, Practice is in 'aroulld,the'school, courtesy olFreshm'an B students, are making ! ,River, honored Brother RogCll" , fuU swing; and at Cassidy High the' NHS. Maybe hoopsters at' favol'S, ,which, wiU be: de~vered

Millette on the occasion of' his' 1 juniors'captured intramural bas-' ApPOnequetlligh' don't think, by the Sisters 'of thefaclrlty to ,15th anniversary of religiotlS I'keto.all' :playoffs, scoring 28 to 3

prefession. He has taught at Pre-' , uver'freshmen, who had previ­'YOSt on several occasions durinl:-' 'OUsly eliminated sop hom a r,e his teacbing career, his most re-' 'fiWiyers. eent assignment being in 1965, 'Mt. St. Mary glee club and 01'­

when he n;tw:ned to the boys' 'che~ra' members. will present scbool as prmclpal. T~e program their' annual ChrI~tm~ concert p~ented by.Prevostites on the SUnday, Dec: 1.8: «:limaxmg a full anmversary mcluded a par~y week of activItIes. ~on!iay saw en Macbeth offered by the semor saphomores prese~tmg a pro­class; selections by the glee club; gra~ commemoratmg the. 135th and addr:esses by Rev. Ro.ger anmv~rsary of the fo~md~ng of Poirier of Notre Dame pansh; the ~Iste~ of Mercy, ~lghhghted Arthur Canuel, Prevost faculty by hIstories of Fall River Mercy member; and Paul Carrier, rep- convents..Yesterday Mother ~c-Jresenting the student body. Auley Gul1d members entert~m-

Student of Month ed"faculty members at a Chrlst ­-' " , ", " 't d ltd

"mMi~hele Dion was studel1t of 31ha!i! ~r y', adn ~ so ~e.stedrtahY , 'fihe month at Dbminican A,cad- '," ",'Jumorsan semors VISI e, e

emy, Fall River, last month; 'and" 'iRose' 'Hawthorne Lathrop Home winners of a Dominilog hooten-" "'to 'catolfor patients. Today the anny held recently were 130b ,National Honor Society will Congello and Alan Soares., ' " ,'I". meet"wi~1i the altend~featu~ing,20-sef\JOr~,l~tf;lrs, mcludmg gifts FOR COMPLETE INFORMATION CONTACT:

Winners 'of a "College Bowl"'" a"discuSSlOn on Cathohc vs. non-", Imd, ,~n.~ert~nme,nt. An unusual 999-6984 or 636-2744quiz sponsored by the National'~·:Ctl~oliccolleges.~d tomotro~ ,,~eet~ng 9f alumqae and students

, ~onor Society at Mt. St. Mary""busmess students WIll take aptI..,." IS, pl~n!1ed: fqp ~edI).~sday, pee. '.1' Academy, Fall River,' were a"'" ''tutIe tests. ',," ,

team including Karen Fennessey" "Cassidy ,debaters met Feehan Karen Marek, Kathryn Golde~' dittoes' recently at Cassidy, and

, .1Ii Marie Morgan. ',also at the Taunton school the" "Girls 'at Sacred Hearts Acad- 'yearbook s t a f f sponsored a emy, Fall River, entedained' Dress-Up Day as a fund raising members of Sacred Heart parIsh event. ,Each student pa!ing .~5

; Men's Club last S~day night" 'was 'excused from, we~nng um­

with a "hymnanny," ,their, sec- fo~'~~r:th~ day. QUIte ~ fewend songfest of the day. Earlier IJOSS1blhtJ.e~In that sch~me. Next Utey, together with'" students' ' money ralsmg even~ for the year

from other Diocesan highs, at- book: a March fashIOn show. tended a Sodality union meeting '.',Also at Cassidy, seven students

at Bishop Stang High, which was' ".'are:receiving congratulations fordimaxed by a buffet supper and;tiieill' reception of the Marian ,. hootenanny. . '" :Award, presented to Girl Souts, , Basketball is big around the' 'Daughters of Isabella or Catholic

, Diocese just now. At Jesus-Mary Dau.ghters of America for their

the ';mnual alumnae gamere~tl1t- 'knowledge of and participation .. ~n a score 'of 43-28' for 'the in Church activities. The seven school team., led, b¥ ~taia are Maureen Burns, Anna Call'­

tecbAoIOgy'co'lirses: Following a , the glee club, under moderator 'panel discuSsi'on!' participated' in by five ;alumnae, representatives of different fields of, specializa­tion wili be available for student

'questionin'g;' " , 'Als6 at nAKlithie lIayden has

been accepted at Rhode Island HospitaJ"nursing :schQol, so ap-, pare~tly:, she p~elin't w'!H, for Dec.' ~1 to make up her mind on

their SHA opposite numbers are patients at ,Lakevii~e Hospital, so courteous. Both varsity and for whom, they will sing the jayvee teams from SHA beat, CbristmasMass. the 'Apponequet teams, 55-II)' , Roly FamUyand 46-5.

Cassidy freshmen presented a The Monsignor McKeOill De­dll'amatic' reading of «Golden. bate Society at Holy' Family Doom" 'by Lord Dunsany, with High School participated at an seven girls in leading roles; and intermediate debate tournament also at Cassidy sophomores are making themselves responsible for keeping their former senior ' sisters, now Cassidy's first alum­

ae up to date on school hap­ LINCOLN PARK BALLROOM ~nings. Together with copies of Itt. 6-Between Fall Rivell' and New Bedfordthe school paper, they're writing

1 tt ' t the alums One of frhe Finest Facilities in Southern New Englan~' newsy e ers 0 .

'Sodality 'Party Available for:",' .. ruesdily,~ec. 20 JU~o~' .and 'BANQUETS .' TESTIMONIALS

,semor, $Qda~lsts . at Domm~can Acad~y ,~JU gl,:e a p~rty ~or :: -=ASHiQ,~",SHQWS and SPECIA~ pARTIES"

, 2J. a~;the .Fa~l Rnrer girls' sc.hool, wltli ,Cec~le Levesque, preSident :tImlllUlllltlllllliilllUlllIIHlllllllllllllllllllllltIUlIIlIIlIIlIllIlIHtllIIlIIlIIllIIllIlllIlIIllIIllIIlIIllIIlI1IIIlIInllltlillll~ of the class of. '63 i~ ch~rge. ~he ~ " ", " ': ~

purpQse of the .meetmg IS to give '§_----=-_' ;;;;_----=-_='D'" & 'D" SA'LES, AND S'ERVIC'E,students,a nobon of the oppor­tunities for, high school ~rad.u-

. ates. offer.ed .bycolleges, JUnior, , == INC col,es, ~usmesS .schools, nurs- § .

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Sister Mary EvangeUa, R.S.M., is preparing ,Christmas carols fer a' party at Kennedy Center. The Marian Chapter of the National Honor Society at Holy Family is preparing a Christmas play for the same party.

The HF basketball team will play five games outside their Na'Cry, League Schedule. Tomor­row the annual alumni game will be played,and other -non-league games include one against North Attleboro at home on Dec. :!D and 'an away game against North Attleboro on Dec. 30. Dec. 23 Holy Family will play Dart­mouth High School away and __ Dec. 27 Dartmouth will take en, Holy Family at Kennedy Center. The first Narry League game will be on Jan. 3 against Dighton-Rehoboth. This year Holy Family will play 14 league games against seven Narry League Teams.

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Page 8: 12.15.66

8

Top S~«:naets of Secrre~ S~!r~rn.(;~

'~iruc~~d~ [F!rlUJifr~~ke ,~<e(bO[p~~ By Mary Tinley IDaly

No Johnny-come-lately, this fruitcake! Made from a 1i"ecipe nearly 100 years old, mixed in tlle sam.e white bowl

. each holiday seasOn since, it has come down as a Christmas tradition in the family of Mrs.'Frank ~. Wilson, wife, of the _

:retired. Chief of the United States Secret Service, author Of "Special Agent." Mrs. Wi1~

. o;..~ri· has graciously consented -.. 10 share her prized fam ily recipe with the readers of this column. Showing us' the ' eriginai, Ii Ii ntiwi: i tie Ii' 0 'Ii ;;eliowed a l1....d erackfng < paper," ~uditp. , ~i~!lon . pointed riut that . Hi e}' '.i~ng-ago ~ncestor,:in.·: .rred.ericksbtirg,Va.; had care"­:fully noted .th'~ Cost of ingredi­.mts, $2.48. Same ingredients, in 1966, come to about $6, w'orth every penny, and making alittle more than seven pounds of cake/

Gooqr.;ss kno,,:,,"s how.. long.preparatIOn took m that Llm~r-', ick famiJy, in Frederickshurg a century ago. Even now, with an electric mixer, llD electric stove,., prepared fruits and nuts, it is s1,ill a two":day operation as" Judith. Wilson meticul',usly fol-:.., lows the family procedure to achieve a moist, mellow fruit-

ONE HUNDRED PLUS: At 105 years oiage~ Sister Sophia Zimmer,O.S.B., was' receiiHY. ~pre to opseryeher­birthday at the Mo'therholis({ of· 'the, Benedictine : Sisters in St. Joseph, Milm. Sister Sopllia,:retired since '1954~,is alert, keeps up on "what's new," and enjoys a good sense Of humor. NC Photo.

separate bowl, beat butter until 'very light and fluffy, add to ,this, remaining 2 cups flour alternatelywith egg yolks; add sugar gradu­

,ally (high speed on mi~er); add stiffly beaten egg. whites and mix thorough1y.

Transfer Batter ' At· this stage, Judith recom:'

.mends transferring batter to a huge ·bowl (pernaps: a turkey. ,ro'a~te~), , a r- d 'durnping the dredged fruit and nuts on top to be mixed evenly. This,is where "C'hief" Wilson enters the picture,. with his strong right arm to do tile mixing. Lastly,. add sherry, and brandy. Blend but do not riverstir' . to keep liquids from draining flour, from fruit. Spoon into prepared pan or ,pans.

Bake at 300 degrees on bottom shelf of ovtn'for 1lh hours, leav­ing oven door shut. At end of

1lh hours, turn heat to 325 de-, grees' and bake one more hour or until cake is nicely browned. Let cool completely in pan on'

cake rack. To store: Wrap cold cake in What is charm? The dictionray,

several thicknesses of cellophane defines it as "That which fasci­kitchen, wrap; then aluminum' nates or attracts, exciting love

Mrs. Letendre went on to tell' of a series of lectures she has' been 'giving on poise and charm' at the International Ladies Gar­ment Workers Union.

cake. that "ages" itself and re.:'", foil. Fasten with rubber band to and admiration," but-it seems to keep all air out and your cake .. I .­quires no periodic doctoring . me It IS ·a more e USlve some-:­

'Yithspirits as do most modern will be aged and ready for, thing that is hard to capture on fruitcakes. Christmas' eating or, giving as a pap e r .. '1'he'

Here is Mrs. Wilson's recipe: gift par excellene'e---:a gift that Kennedy c I an ingredients:' 10'eggs; %, lb. goes each Christmas to ,Wilson all have it, ob­

butter; ,2 cups sugar; 3' cups relatives in Buffalo, N. Y:. ' vi 0 u sly but flour; 1lh bQxes currants; 1 box' White It'rllit.eake newsmen claim

: ,Seedless raisins; lh box, golden As a companion 'piece, a white. the Johnsons' raisins; lh Ib:figs;English '-Wal- fruitcake, Mrs. Wilson shareS DUt meats from lh lb. in shells; 'with us a recipe from Helen 1 .cup, blanched and slivered. al- Cawley, wife of the late William monds;' Ih lb.' citron; 3 ',half': Cawley of Chief Wilson's staff' pieces .each candied lemon 'and: ..at the Secret:Service: orange ,rind; Yilb. ,:each,red and· 1 Ib, butter; 1 lb. flour (4 cups

.. greell candied ch,erries; 3 sliced candied pineapple (one each White, red, green); grated rind one'lemon, (an essential ingredi­ent); dessertspoon each of, nut­meg and allspice; 'wine glass of sherry, same amount of brandy.

. Method; first dayi Pick over ra~sins and currants:. for stems;, w.ash and drain at.Ieast three times; spread out to dry on sev":' eral thicknesses of newspapers,' change papers as they absorb water and le~. dry.: overnight. Soak citron in boiling:wliter until soft enough to cut e~sily; if you

a use packaged ·slivered almonds, soaksimilar.Jy, Prepare pan or pans (either one 12" x :Jy" deep;' or two 9y" x 3%). Line bottom of pans with white shelf, paper, let ­ting paper extend an inch or so up the, sides. Line 'again with

'second paper, letting it extend an, inch above' top of pan. Do not grease, the cake'· w ill do it for you. ,

Second day: Cut up all fruits, nuts and grate ~emonrind onto

. Pllper and dredge all wi.th one cup of the flour until each piece is flour-coated. Separate eggs, heat yolks .until pale' yelow: In

Manhattan College Has' New' President

PURCHASE (NC) -. Mother Elizabeth J. McCormack has· been inaugurated as sixthpresi­dent of Manhattanville College of. the Sacred Heart here.

At the inauguration some 68 , college and university presidents

wen! among m'ore than 300 of­

sifted); 2% cups 'sugar; 2 lb.. white raisins; 4 cups finely cl,lt pecans;'6 eggs; 1 cup brandy.

Wash, stem and dry raisins as, abQve, cover with brandy, put lid on crock, and let stand ove'r­night, stirring occasionally .(all

'brandy will be absorbed). Cream, butter, add sugar gradually; add beaten yolks alternately with flou'i'; fold in whites; dump in raisins and nuts, blend. Bake in similarly prepared pans at 315 degrees for 1% hOUrs; turn oven down to 300 'and bake 45 minutes . more: Store' cake in saine way.

These are two secrets of the Secret Service for which' 'we are' grateful,!'

Says Smut 'Peddlers

Try:to 'HoQk' Young MILWAUKEE (NC)-Peddlefll

of pornographic literature work' at "'hooking" young' people in' much· the same way as' dope peddlers, a Post· Office official told the Citizens for Decent Lit.;

. erature here. 'Frank R. Borowski, adminis­

trative 'service .chief of the Mil­waukee Post Office, said that children between 7 and 16 have become the target of pornogra­phy peddlers and asked parents to act as "the first line of de": fense'; between their children' and those WhO would sell them' ,smut.

He said that by ordering an item adve,rtised in a youth mag­azine, a young person could be­come part of a mailing list

ficial delegates. . through which he would 'receive " Mother McCormack, a member offers of pornographic materials.

of the Religious of the Sacred Borowski urged parents to turn Heart of Jesus, succeeds ·Mother such mail over to the postmaster Eleanor M. O'Byrne, who' re­ with the envelope in which it

don't. 'It doesn't seem to stem fro m. beauty' alone; fdr we all know many' p I a i n people, physically', Who exude genuine' charm from every pore and on the other hand most of us have. met a truly beautiful or hand-" some person who has not an. ounce of it.

When one has a perplexing problem the best sol!Jtion is t<l seek the answer, from an expert. I had heard of ,the wonderful. job that Mrs. Irma C. Letendre of St. Anne's parish, Fall River'. was dong in the charm courses she gives, therefore I felt that she would be a petfect choice to answer my question.

A student' of beauty ,and charm !Courses for over 22 years, Mrs. Letendre, the mother of seven children and the wife of a prom­inent businessman, has still

'found time, to convey her knowl­edge- of beauty and grace to other women, and when I asked' her to help' answer my questions on. ;charm she graciously as­sented.

Many Things \ "Charm is a mixture of many

things," said ihis lovely, soft sppken, wpman, "dress, self-con­:fidence, poise, and manners, but most of all it is an awareness of and a consideration for others' rather than a preoccupation with self. In' my. course I try to make.

,a woman· know' herself com­pletely, her faults and attributes,' then and only then can she work on these faults, and develop :her good points. Once she feels com­

. pletely confident that, what she is wearing and doing is correct,. then she can forget about herself and concentrate on others. When she knows her skin type, she can use cleansers and makeup cor­rectly. When 'she realizes her :figure faults she can go on te

,Parish Shelter For Orphans

HAZELTON (NC)-A shelW;i> for aband<!Ded Indian children, run entirely by Indians, has beed opened by the parishioners 'of ~

· Mary Magdelene Church in Ha~

wilget Indian Reserve here iW ,British Columbia.

Alfred and Helen Joseph, a\tl Indian couple who are houSQ parents of the home, had long been alarmed, at the number eli children in the dist'rict who' were 'found abandoned by parents While they went on drjnkint."i sprees or were. serving tim~ ii;l jail. 'Such c;hildren were oft~ taken from their parents perm&->

· ne~tly by so.cial'welfai:~ ~ry-. ices under the Child/ Protectioti

.Act of Canad'a: They Wdlildsub,- . sequen1Jy, be' placed in no....

,. Indian' homes .where the ': eD­vii-d'riinentisforeignto them. ~

'\ :,The':,iosephs persuaded FatheIi' , John ·c)'ReileY.tolet them mow, int~ an .abandoned' house a'dj&. 'cent to' his chtii:ch. They undeJ... took maJor repairS to' make. tIlt;) center habitable. Although todaY the wallpaper on the walls is stiJft. yellowed and peeling with age, the center is a haven for young-,: sters who would otherwise findl',l themselves' in the unfamilisll" : surroundings of white fostell"" homes.

/E'stabfish Juni~;'~Jte ·For Nuns' Education

,CINCINNATI, (NC)~The :!re-. ciety of Mary. Raparatrix in the,! United States has established· ~l'

juniorate -here to pr'ovide twC). years of advanced education foil' young nuns 'after their first pro­

~'Right no'w we're working on fession of· vows at the novitia$G wardrobe," 'she' said: "I try to in Detroit. . 'showwomen how' good basic 'Establishn}E!Dt of the juniorate, clothes' can be dressed up or according to Mother' Marion down with'the proper accessories O'Brien, provincial'superior foY ,

. and how one dress' can take on the society in the United States, two .or three different· looks.. ,. was a'mong tHe major advailceS Quality rather than quantity is made during, the society's "yeaii' also a 'point I -attempt to stres·s. A of adaptation" which the soc.iet,? good, well"-styled coat.or dress. ,concludes today. may cost more' than' a tricky, The society' has also modlfiecll .. overdone one' but ·the 'years of its habit, ·adopted . English 1M. wear·,they get out of, -the basic the chanting o~ the divine office, ,: will save them over' a ,period of eliminated . the distinction 00­time, no~ to mention the feeling tween two. degrees of Religiol,l,!, : of confidence one acquires with members, and returned 'to use Cldf., the right clothes." baptism~l n~mes.

Harried Hobsewi;e We also discuss~d the harried' ,

housewife Vl(ho often claims' th~t', she hasn't the time to look good or worry ll.bout her appear~nce.' She. flatly stated that a woman owes it to her family, to look and" feel as g<;lod as she possibly' can:'

"A woman· who can combine the jobs of wife, mother, chauf':' feuI', ' etc.," and stiilhave p'oise and chann is certainly a woman Perfected. B;;iti Mrs. Helen Sui':" livaii; my. bail' stylist fromlllew 'Bedford, and I try to teach, our stUdents that' it regular beauty routine can take' o~iyafew ~in';' utes.,.,ora woman's day if worked' , out properly." , Mrs; Letendre, who certainly is a warm and charmirig ad for her own courses gave a parting bit of advice for any female who. j:ares hoW she looks. ~'Al­ways walk out of your house dressed and Inade up as if you;re going to meet, the most impo'r': tant person in the world.'" ' 993-2611

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Page 9: 12.15.66

-Jewish People 'Mark Cha:nukah As Christians Observe Advent

By Joseph and Mari~YIll Roderick , ,

This fa gift-giving time so here are a few suggestions for ilDyone on your list who if! a gardener. If mOst gardeners are nike myself, they spend money sparingly on gardening tools boca-use they would rather invest in plants than in aids for gardening. If you have such a. person on your.list, then lR[er children always come to

number itemtl see Meryl and Melissa's Christ ­~'any of mas tree and exchange presents,which are not too expensive but Ellen and Karen haveal­

gnd yet make useful gifts. ready been gifted with theirThe first thing that cpmes to Chanukah presents, fQr this ob­

mind is a· good pair of, sturdy: servance is always held just be­garoening gloves, elipecially. for fore our Christmas.; a:nlil it isthe lover af roses-Such a !pair: the holiday when gats are ex­of, gloves can be found in ~e $5 change'>. ' b ,$10 range and will c:~rtainly

be, w.elcome. This holiday b~~ more than' .Another relatively ipe:x;peJ1liive two thousand years ago when the '

&lit is a good pocket knife. Tbis, Temple at Jerusalem was cap­s!u:>uld be good in, the sensetP.at tUlred by a cruel -Syrian emperbr n will keep its edge ,without con­ who force{! his own pagan' idDls finual sharpening and it should on the Jewish people. Outraged In li~ht enough to be .carried by this act, a small amlY of Jew­~mfortably. Also in this price ish patriots battled against the li<Wge one might include a warm mighty soldiers of this emPeror lltai r of washable work pants so for three long and weary years i'ibat the man of the house will until they finally drove the look fairly presentable without pagans from their Temple. ~ving any concern about kneel­ J'udnh the Maccabee, who was ing or Bitting on the ground the leader of, tlle patriots, re-" jYbile working. moved the idols from their house

J[n a little higher price brae~et, of worship, cleansed it and once (iDe might Include a pair of more made it a place where the ~uning. shears, again stressing Jewish people could worshipebe quality of theb1ade. or ll' Goo. Tmsdedieationwas eele­rzood paiF Gd long-handled shears. brated fOl" eight days by prayerAnd there is also that special and song and led to &Ie PTesent ~lea or rhododendron or what celebration of Chanukah, which bave you that he has beea means dedication, and lasts for <ireaming of buying .but nevex eight days. (lUi te seems to get.

it is aiso known as the FeastThen there are an the electrl-, of Lights because of the custom

~ appliances which win C!tt of lighting candles on each of the<Iown on hiI work load. sucm as eight holiday nights. These aretm electric hedge clipper « to remi nli the Jewish peQple oflawn trimmer. Maybe too a sub­the miracle that is said to havelJCriptioll and membership in the taken place in the Temple whenMassachusetts Horticultural SG­it was reclaimed fr~m theldety or one of the many special­pagnns. When the JerlVish armyISed flower societies. entererd the place of prayer

For those looking for an extra­ emly a small jar of ht'ly,oil-justIlPecial gift, there are any nUID­ enough for one day-was left.!ler of high-priced items worth But this tiny jar of oil burn,ed!buying..Window greenhouSes are

f~ eight days and nights ,until ,(JUr~ lo make a gardener happy; new oil could be made to fill the,l'm'owlng that he can spend the tb~ s~cred lamps.dreary Winter mt>Dths dOOng' 9iOinething worthwhile. In t1lw 'Just as ~r Christmns is a, time .espcCt the Dew fluorescemt :tight' of 'parties andspec:ial foods, jJ3rdens will keep a gardefiet' Chanukah is ,the holiday when busy and happy for most of the gifts ,are ,given and families hold ~ar are be 10und in community and household gath­and to II ange of pl'iees aRdsizes. erings along with servmg tradi­

twnal food such as latkis, a kindAt any rate, these are only a of pOtato pancake. This yearlew suggestions for those of you Chanukah began on the eighth:-ho have gardeners on your, of December and will eontimie.opping list. The im,portant until tomorrow with the fatheribing is that you bUY a Quality of the house lighting one more

~m at the price you decide to candle on a special candelabral!lllY. Nothing is given more abuse each night of the holiday. This

~an a garden tool and any in-' part M the holiday is very sim­

~rior product will deteriorate ilar to our lighting of the, Advent1fIjlpidlY. Wreath with the whole family

III the Kitchen reciting prayers around the lighted candles.

. At this moment in our lwliday ThiS r~ipe f0t the potatoIlIeason when GUr thoughts are,

latkis, the traditional pancakesfilled with the coming of Christ aerirM during Chanukah ,waslIlnd our particular Christian cel­given me by my deaFest friendebs'ation our Jewish neighbors MrS. Arnold Rosenberg of Tem­lire celebl'ating one of their pleBeth El, Fall River.createst aD D u·a I obserVllllces,'

Haflukkah, 01' Chanukah. Potato Latkfis I have been very fortunate be­ 4 medium: sized potlltoes (raw).-use for the past 25 years one 0Ii. 1 CHliOrt grated .,. close9t friends has been a girl 1 egg

~ the Jewish faith. ThTOughout 1te cup sifted flourthese years I have sbaredher 1 teaspoon saltbolidays and Ilbe has sharet'mine ~ teaspoon baking pGWder , .. much as we could. ~ teaspoon· pepper

When she was married I Wal 1) Grate potatoes very fineIl bridesmaid in a moving, touch­

anllt drain (}ft most of ·the liquid.Ing ceremony that was elCplained dearly to aU the' guests by the 2) Add the onion, egg, sifted Imbbi and when I delivet~d my flour, salt, baking power and Ilirst child in a Catholic hospital, pepper to the grated potatoes IJhe was in the delivery room as and mix well. DlY private nurse. '

3) Drop by tablespoonfu1!l inThe mutual respect we ha'Wl hot fat and, fry Ul'ltil brown C!ll

~ for one another's religion both sid.es.and customs has brought us very

dose over the years and we often This is a tasty substitute for IDddingly say that we started whipped potatoes and even Joe. ~r own ecumenical movement III who isn't a potato fancier, en­~t<...r of a eentw-y a,p. jgyed them.

THE ANCHOR­ 9 Thurs.,' Dec. 15, 1966

Censorship lOV4

In Court Test CHICAGO (NC) - Columbia

Pictures Corp. has filed suit iii U. S. District Court here to te~

the constitutionality of Chicago's movie censorship ordinance.

Arguments have been scheril­uled by Judge Abraham L. lVla­rovitz on a petition by Colum­bia, one of the country's largest film makers, for a restraining order against a ruling by Chi­cago Police Chief O. W. WilSOl1

that none under 17 years old be admitted tp s,eetht;! British-mada movie "Georgy 'Girl."

The suit claims that the polire censorship roling, violate,S the constitotional right of 'freedoCl of speech. The suit also claims' the Chicago censorship ordl-,'

" naD~ 5.s· ~'repugll.ant to the Con": stituti·on·.':f>f'the Uriited States.'; , amll1 asked'thatall monies paicl iti,' the. past by COlumbia for movie permits here be refunded. Tea, movie opened here Nov. 17 on a restricted audience basis aftezo Columbia had petitioned flllr an unrestricted permit.

Ii'ALL RIVER AREA COMMITTEE: Members ().f the DCCW, District No.1, meet for arrangements for the Bish­ Priest 'Pastor Advisor' op's Charity Ball., Ian. U. UlfttG right : Mrs. Robert Ned­ At Baptist Collegederma:n,Sacred H~. Fall River; Mrs. Vincent A. Coady,

RALEIGH (NC) - A Catillo.HeSomerset Catholic Women's' Club; Mrs. Henry Gillet, 00­ priest was "pnstorelected ad­m.aeulateConeeption, Fall River; Mrs. Stanley' M. Jalliclc, viser" by the Christian Associa­SS.peter and Palla}, Fall River. tion Council at the Baptist ­

oriented Meredith College fat' women here in North Carolina.

Father Gordon Kendall is amAnnual Bi'shop's Ball the chaplain for Catholic stu­dents at nearby North Carolina

Committees foTom fan River and Cape Cod State College, where he conducts tbe "Bar Jonah" coffee house f:eJr

Areas Serving on Various Committees students to hear and discuss sucll varied topics as "The TheologjiJ"

The five areas of the Diocesan James Bentley, Mrs. Aime Tur­ Illf Guitar Folk-Music," Bud­Council of Catholic Women. and geon. Mrs.' Dolores CangeUo, dhism and "Death of God theoil ­members of the St. Vincent de Mrs. Russell Berden, Mrs, Claire ogy."Paul Society are now in full Moquin. s~ in their preparations fer Mrs. Edgar Berube, Mrs. Man­the 12th annual Bishop's Charity uel F. l\-lello, Mrs. Patrick Mur­Ball to be held em Wednesday phy, Mrs. Joseph Veloza. night, Jan. 11, 1967, at the Lin­ , Ma'S. John Souza, Mrs; Joseph colriPark Ballroom. Silvia, Mrs. Alfred Almeida, Miss

'Committeemen 'from the Fall \ Clorinda Ventura, Mrs. Albert RiVel'~ alit! Cape Cod' areas have . Auclair. completed tbei,r planning meet­ MONTHLY CHURCH

Mrs. Charles B. Gagnon. Mrs.ingS and aU arrangements 'for the :AJex Bore, Mrs. John Kirkman, BUDGET ENVELOPES.fhud' drive towards the most sue""' Mrs. .Milton Bednarz. Mrs. Wil­cesSful social"event in 12 years· fred Driscoll. PRINTED AND, MAtLED are finalized:

Mrs. George Shott, Mrs. El­Fall River Area dridge Rose, Mrs. Joseph ~. Write or Phone 612-1322

·Hespitality-Mrs. Michael Mc­ Richards, Mrs. Delphis M01'last,Mahon, Mrs. Anthony J. Geary, , 234 Second Street - Fall R"'-Mrs. Ang.elina Burtin. Mrs. Henry Gillet, Edouard La­ Mrs. William Snyder, Mrs. croix. Maurice Ouellette, Mrs. Albert

Albert Petit, Louis ViveiroS, Cailtifl, Mrs. "Edward DeCiccio,Ant@ne Michaels, Henry Des-' Mrs. Norman Desjardens, Mt'S. mond, Armand Gauthier. Norbert McK;enna, Albert Petit,

James Diskin, Roland Guay, ElilGmrad Lacroix. George Doucette, Alfred Almei­ Cape Cod Areada, Antone Pacheco, Frank

Hospitillity-Mrs. Nestor Robi­Plichta. dou, Mrs. Gilbert J. Noonan",Presentees - Mrs. James A. Mrs. John Lauzoms, Mrs. Jamei3O'Brien, Jr., Mrs. Vincent A. Quirk:Coady, Mrs. Thomas R Cahill,

John Cook, .Richard J. Terrio,Mrs.'William A. Murphy. Frank Cook, Arthur Wills, FredDecorating-Mrs, Stanley Jan-' MeComisky.icIt', Mr. Robert Coggeshall, Mr.

Presentees-Mrs. Nestor Robi-John McAvoy, Mrs. Alfred AI'­dou. ,meida, Mrs. Leonard F. Berlo.

TWlkets-MJ;S. Robert O'Neill.M'rs, Thomas' F. Burke, Mrs. Thomas H. Cahill, Mrs. Dolores' Cangello, Mrs. Roger R. Dahe, Mrs. Donald Hinchcliffe.

Mrs. Patrick ,J .. Hurley, Mrs. CONV£N'IENT 8ANKI'NG ThOmas Lawlor. Miss .Jacqueline'

WtTMOUT TttAFFIC & PARKtNG PROBLEMSMatmeu, MI'!!. Wilfred St. Michel, , at tileMrs. Raymond A. Poisson.

Mrs. Joseph Velozo,Mrs. Hen­ry Gillet, Mrs. Joseph Viveiros, Sl.ADE'S FERRY TRUST COMPANY Norman Hathaway.

Tickets-Mrs. Rob. Nedderman, SOM£RSS, MASS. Mrs. .John J. Ferry, Mrs. William Sherry, Mrs. Angelo Flynn, Mrs. The most friendly,c1emocroticBANK offeringFrederick J. Sullivan.

Mrs. Ann Hughes, Mrs.' .fohn Complete One-Stop BankingPatota, Mrs. Alvan J, Hoar, Mrs. Raymond Barrette, Mrs. Ken­ Club Accounts Auto 1.oons neth Leger. Checking AuOunts Business loans

Mrs. John Gay, Mrs. John Sav;ngs Accounts Ileal Estate loans Btirk.e, Mrs. Charles Gagnon. oM Somerset Shopping Area-Brightman St. BridgeMrs. Harold Hodkinson, Mrs. GIlbert Sta:lsfield. Member Fede.rol Deposit insurance Corporation

Mm. Horace Sa1f1or. Mr,s.

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICE!

Page 10: 12.15.66

I

.,~ THE' ANCHOR- , '" '" . Thurs.; 'Dec,' 1'5;' '1966I," .•

I: •.• :1 { .--....."..,..........--.~-.,.o+---,....;...-

,. "'Rev'.P.J. O'Ne,ill NECEC Keynoter

Rev. 'Patrick J.' O'Neill, Ph.D., Sl,Iperintendent, of D i 0 c e san Schools, was ·the keynote speak­er at the first general meeting elf the New England Catholic Ed­ucation Center at Alumni Hall, lBoston College. Guests of the unit were the major superiors ot" the religious communities staffing schools in the New En­gland area.

Because of the importance of the principals' work and, the great deal they can do to help or hinder the educational growth of the schools which they admin­ister, a research study concerned the 1200 Catholic schools in New England during the first months of 1966.

Ninety per cent of all elemen­tary principals in New England

"filled in questionnaires which supplied data that has been an­alyzed in terms of New England wide' problems with son,e brel!l, ­down relevant to the problems of the individual New England dio­,ceses.

Father O'Neill' conducted the entire study of the elemental'y school principalship as a require­ment for his doctoral dissertation and gave an abstract of his re­se~rch .study to the New York Research Study Council in Al­bany, New York.

The Superintendent of Dio­cesan Schools explained that the

'purpose of this research was not only to collect basic infonnation about, New England principals but also to develop datu on the task of principals to day f,unc­tioris as educational leadel'S of i1)ur schools.

Rev. Paul McHugh spoke to 1he religious' supcrion; about eurrent governmental, aid pro­

': ,J:ra!1is: He' showed, through the ­'use:of' general statistics, that

many of the programs are not being used to the maximum.

Panelists for the sessions in­cluded: Rt. Rev. Msgr. George Murray of New Hampshire; Dr. Mary Griffen, Boston College;

, Rev. John Boles, Newton; Very Rev. Msgr. Arthur T. Geoghegan

'of Providence, R. L; Walter' Driscoll of Boston College and George Madous ,of NECEC.

Future meetings al'e already in ,: the planning stage. The New En­

gland Catholic Education Center (NECEC) was inaugul'ated in 19'65 when the 11 Archdioceses an'd Dioceses of New England united to conduct research and provide service to the ,1200 Catholic schools of the New En­

'J:land states.

lrih~rraci(ll Agency Creates New Unit

CHICAGO (NC) -,-' The Na­,'tion'al' Catholic Confel'ence for

Interractial Justice has' created a'new department of urban serv­ices.

Mathew Ahmann, NCCIJ exe­cutive director, has announced that Emil' J. Seliga; Los Angeles savings and loan executive and civic leader, 'is' ~irector of the new department, with offices in Los Angeles:

"We propose," Ahmann said, "to undertake a comprehensive inquiry into existing problems' and programs of urban affairs. From this we expect to offer a workable progral.l for USll on the local level of the Church. Such m progl'am would serve to imple­onent the recent American Cath­ClIlic 3ishops' policy stutement 1lJrging 'full fl'eeclom of the' hous-,

" ','ing'market, to all, mino'rity ,j groups. ,It ",iould, pm:ticularly -l?e ,..aimed, at mobilizing a response ,from the man in the ,pe,w ;lI1d at:..

','helping to shaI'e the, cit~' of the " , 'fu~ure.",

-:SaYSc -,..Episc~pol,.1, j-I ,PrOViI!lCetfJVV~i ~ent~1i,a~ian\,F~licitated~,\: ..Church,.: Backs' , ,On···O~casion. of lOOth" Birthday" '

'" :, " U)'Eva Maria Dane " ' \. Birth Control' ~. Frank, "Scarry Jack" :Crawley was 100 years ,and 3 days old when I ,called on him "': ~EW YQRK;,(~C).,~ The

and as fit as a fiddle. In fact, he gave his pastor; Fclther Leo J. Duart, .and me ,a special, Je<lQer of -the E,»,i.s <: ,0 P a~ concert" on his harmonica~ The little sitting room at the home he shares with a widowed church in this country haa daughter Ed,na Lynch on Central Street in Provincetown still brimmed with flowers and reaffirmed his church's Slip..

, birthday messages ffom ec- por~ of y. ~. government partici ­clesiastical and civic, digna- patlOn 111 bIrth c0:l!trol progl'ams.,

. . ~ ,The statement Issued here ~ tanes and hIS many many the Rt. Rev. John E. Hines, pre': friends. Cardinal Richard siding bishop, of the Episcopal! Cushing had sent him an auto- church, was viewed as a stancll graphed photograph and a letter against the statement issued by with the offering of a triduum the U. S. National Conference of of Masses. Catholic Bishops.

Bishop James Connolly added At their annual meeting m , to his blessings the hope to see WashiJlgton the Catholic prelates

"Scarry Jack" in the Spring issued a statement opposing in­when he will come to Province- creased U. S. government activ­town for the blessing of the new ities which seek "to persuade and school. even coerce the underprivilegecll

Governor John A. Volpe ex- to limit the size 9f their fam­'pressed the pride of the Com- ilies." monweaIth in honoring Prov- Bishop Hines in his spccia1l incetown's distinguished citizen .' message called upon the Episco­on the passing through a century, pal Church to double the funds from Civil War to Space Age. allocated to its worldwide pro-

And there was one from a grams of .birth control. The Epis­lady in Eastham recalling the copal church i~ this country hac eagerness' with which she ex- some 3.3 million members. peeted the fish he would bring, Sponsor Clinics to her home when she was a "The Episcopal Church and'the child. bishops of the whole Anglican

As :we chatted about bygone Communion have clearly e~

days the merry patriarch would pressed vigorous support of the point with pride to what today worldwide programs of popula­would seem extraordinary feats ,tion control," Bishop Hines but then were just part of earn- stated. ing one's daily livelihood. .. Bishop Hines' statement dis-

Many a time did he walk the, closed for the first time that 20 miles from Wellfleet to Prov- "pilot birth' control clinics are incetown loaded with the heavy currently being sponsored both catch of squid. His strength was overseas and inside the Unitecll proverbial. He would earn a ,States by our Church." whole barrel of ,flour weighing It was reported that between some 200 pounds by demonstrat- 15 and 20 birth control cliniCl!l ing he, was able to carry it home. now are operated in variolls see-

The sca!.' on his head for which 'tions of the U.S., in the Philip­he' earned the nickname has dis:', :Father Duart congratulating }~rank Crawley pines and Costa Rica by the a~peared. He had bt:ought it over Episcopal, Church. . to , Provi ncet6wn when he ar- $25 each. ri yed :as a youth of 17 from his- The bell, a matter of fiery dis­native San Miguel in, the Azores. ' pute between him and a local

From the sunny: island 'he' fire man, with SCarry' Jack th'e bro'ught with hi.in 'the"reiigious ' vietor,' now rests at the Prov­fet-v'or and devotion expressed 'in'cetow;~' Inn 'underneath a in proce'ssions and' a deep co'~- mural of the fish peddler in hiS cern, for the affairs of the fire engine truck. Church. For many years he was For his 100th birthday party the leading spirit behind the the dapper old man ordered a street festivities on holy days in new suit and at the reception Provincetown. offered by another 'daughter Mrs.

He raised a family of 11 chil- ,Thomas Cote of 41 Comrnercial dren, three sons and eight daugh- Street was dancing a Portuguese tel's. But there was always Quadrille. Among the 600 well enough to band together to help wishers t'hat came to honor him SAVE DOLLARSothers in need or the parish. was 102 year old Maude Du-

Those who could not pay \for ganne fro!" Provincetown. the fish would exchange it for with the turnips or fruits from Eastham Grant for Lab or Wellfleet, most welcome on the sandy Cape Tip. LOS ANGELES (NC) - A MERCHANTS

During World War I HScarry $20,000 grant from, the Raskob Jack" had a pleasure boat to Foundation for Catholic Activi­ OIEconomy"take visitors to see the warships ties. was 'awarded to Our Lady

,anchored in the harbor,' or run Queen of Angels High School to errands for the crew. ,~ establish a business opportuni­ ,Aulo Loan Planties Jabor~tory.He' went fishing, until advanc­ed in age. Then .he became a beloved figure selling fish from the, .,town's outmoded fire en­ • ,IHOM,-: IMPROVEMENT LOANS gines until, he_ was 78 years old., ,Where.A ,

.. Scarry Jac,k bought five cl ~ PERSONAL lOANS'GOOD NAMEthese model T'Ford,Fire Eilgines,he ,recaHed, bell and" all for ' • VACATION, LOANS

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Page 11: 12.15.66

.11 ' ,. .THE, ANCHOD­Urges, ,Christians ClUSidy.· Faculty', ~t!ni~er- at 'Liturgical Mee", .Thurs.; De~. 15, 1966

Face Chaflengft Of ,Va,tican 'II .. : Enthused over 'Vnlorgetable Experie,nce" Governor Bans

DAyroN' (NC)-':"It :j~ me'" By Dorothy Eastman Cross Burning,,thing' to' nod assent to 'the RICHMOND (NC)-The gov.S~ster l\.;Iiriam Gabriel, S.U.S.C., chairman of religious for Diocesan schools, and headneed for renewal, but quite 'ernor of Virginia declared wali'

of the reljgion department at Bishop Cassidy High School, T~lmton, has returned fromanother to grasp and em­ here on cross-burning-a prac­the first Liturgical Congress sponsored by the Conference of Clerics and Religious. Over fice long associated with thebrace the specific challenges

spelled out by the Second Vati ­ 1,000 delegates heard five major addresses by five liturgical theologians during the two Ku Klux Klan.

can Council, Sister MaUl'a, C.S.J., day Congress. The Congress, Gov. Mills E. Godwin, .Tr., ad­of the National Catholic Confer­ dressing the Richmond chaptel1'which has as its theme "Lit­

of the National Conferc· ' ce otience for Interracial Justice, told urgy in Clerical and Relig- . Christians and Jews declared:Bn audience of parochial and ious Formation" was held at•public school teachers in Day­ "I will offer, beginnin::: Thurs­

ton. Bishop Carroll High School in day morning (Dec. 8), a f't:1nding Opening the Traveling Nuns Washington, D. C. It was con­ reward of $1,000 for info"mation

Workshop in Intergroup Rela­ ceived and initiated by a semi­ leading to the arrest and convic­tions at the University of Day­ nar'ian, Mr. Peter Blanchard, S.M. tion of any person illegally burn­ton, the associate director of ed­ Movements toward reform in ing a cross in this state." ucational services in the NCCIJ the liturgy, the Church's public

Thc governor noted thatworship, began at the beginningoffices in Chicago said the coun­ cross burning without the con­of the century, have been rapid­cil documents not only present sent of the property oW.cr in­ly gaining momentum since thechallenges .but make it clear volved is a felony under a Vill'­encyclical "Mediator Dei" of"what it means to be Christian in ginia law enacted in 1952.Pppe Pius XII and the Constitu­tion on the Sacred Liturgy /of

our day." "Men of faith know thatAssent to the council really

throughout history, crimC',; com­Vatican II.means that "we must live the mitted in liberty's name haveThese documents stand aswords of these decrees," she said. been exceeded only by thoseshining symbols of the struggleCites Obligation committed in God's name," Gov.of the Church to respond to theSister Maura asked whether or Godwin said. "In our own timepresence of the Holy Spirit. Nownot Christians are seriously de­and in our own state," he added,we begin the work of under­. termined to develop the "rever­"the most reprehensible offstanding what the Spirit said inence for man" stressed in the these is the desecration of thethese documents about deepen-,council's Constitution on the most sacred Christian symbo],ing and intensifying the worship·Church in the Modern World. the burning of a cross."which the Church offers to God.That document, Sister Maura

"This is an old device - - onesaid, stresses the obligation "to Major JEffort long associated with the recordmake ourselves the neighbor to' This Liturgical Congress was a of bigotry compiled by the Kunabsolutely every person and of major effort to respond to the

actively helping him when he Klux Klan," the governol' con­challenge presented to it in the tinued. "Throughout its historycomes across our path." liturgical renewal. in the South, the flaming crossThe council is specific here, Sister Miriam Gabriel describ­has been a symbol of terror. ]flsshe said, emphasizing that this ed the meeting as a great success use must be stamped out."means the old and the aban­ in every way. "It was beautifully

doned, the foreign laborer, the _ planned and well organized and child born out of wedlock and an unforgettable experience to the hungry. It calls for opposi­ hear so many outstanding speak­tion to whatever is opposed to ers in just two days" she said. life itself and whatever degrades Rev. Terrance Toland, S.J., human dignity, she continued. who holdli the degree of Doctor

Five Sisters conducted the of Sacred Theolog'y from the day-long workshop, devoted to Gregorian University in Rome, all facets of the plight of the and is executive vice president Americtan Negro, the problems· .of .St. Joseph's College, was the of the inner city, and the diffi';;" first'sp~aker·. In .his talk he de- . culties faced by migl~ant work:..·, veloped the theme that was em. . h e a rd'· :in' many variations

The workshop was sponsored throughout the Congress: "Are' by the Catholic IntelTacial people willing to meet ·Christ in SISTER MIRIAM GABRIEL, S.U.S.C. Council of Dayton and the Inter­ the liturgy and. in humanity?" Cultural Education Committee The theologian warned his lis­of Dayton area parochial schools, teners that they may be missing ""Mon. ''The' people should be Communion, which was dis­in cooperation with the Univer­ God if they don't see Him in brought to understand the theo­ tributed to about 1,000 people,sity of Dayton. other people. "We meet God in logical and historical develop­ consisted of a large host of wheat

the humanity of Christ," he said, ment of liturgical practices," he bread that had to be chewed, and "and we find our salvation in the said. was received standing up. TheReligion Teachers context of the Trinitarian com­ congregation sang as a Commu­He believes that our presentmunity. ·The love of God is OnlyHold Workshop difficulties are an outgrowth of nion hymn, "Taste and See How seen visibly in the love of man. Sweet the Lord is."poor liturgical and theologicalALLENTOWN Some 200 ele­ We start the community of God

mentary school teachers in the training and that through reli ­ It was suggested at one of thewhen we are in this world. diocese of Allentown here in gious education we are gradually 'workshop sessions conducted byFather Anselm BUl'ke, .0.Carm.,Pennsylvania took part in an realizi ng the truth that through Father George Hagmaier, C.S.P.,another speaker, also. took his intensive program of in-service the Eucharist Christ is forming that, since the Mass is a socialdoctorate .in th~ology. at the Gre­training to update the teaching us into a united, loving commu­ act, the sharing of the Eucharis­gOI·ian. He teaches ,philosophyof religion in Catholic schools nity. tic meal, it should be adapted.md theology at both Ne·w Ro­this Fall. Not the ]<~nd meaningfully to the culture andchelle and Mount Mercy Colleges.

Four week end sessions were the people of our times. It wasFather· Burke continued the For many years,. the liturgicalscheduled, with about 30 teach­ advised, however,' that experi­theme of the person in relation expert stated, Mass was thought ers assigned to each. The week­ by some to be' over after Com­ mentation should be well plan­to God. He told his audience "As ends were open to both religious, mi.lllion. But Communion is 110t ned and under the direction ofa Christian, I have to make myand lay teachers, and expenses personhooC open to God and let the end of Mass - it's really a lyt~Jrgists.

"were borne by the vadous par- God transform:·me with my co­ beginning, he' said~ After Com­ "Speakers at the Congress . ishes involved. operation." munion we can say ·"Christ is . strongly supported a continual

A series of lectures and dis­ living in me. Now I have the program. in education at theCommitted Man'cussions on the Bible and reli-· power to love.'" When the cele­ parish level to acquaint Catho­He defined spirituality as each: gious education, doetdl~e, psy­ br'ant says '''Go, the Mass is over" lics with the reasons behind

chology, the arts and religious person's particulal' way of real­ he means "Go forth, now that Hturgical changes.:izing his life with ·Christ. Devo­education· and methotls of cate­ you have received Christ - re­ The Congress was so successful,tion-that word often heard butchesis was held. Discussions in­ ceived the power to love. You Sister Miriarr. Gabriel says, that·

cluded an orientatioll 611 the' m'any times misundel'stood-he have a mission to bring Christ there is a possibility that it may'described as the quality of beingSecond Vatican Council. to the people in this world.'" n9w be held annually.a committed man, open to others, Delegates to the Congress par­"so that all my pl'ayer is Trini­

ticipated in a concelebrated MassBaptism Unites Us, tarian-to God, thl'Ough Christ, where some of the innovationsthrough the liturgy of thePatriarch Says discussed dU~'ing the sessionsChurch." were put into practice. FatherISTANBUL (NC) - "Nothing The well-known author, Rev. Kevin Seasoltz, O.S.B., of theseparates us; there is no need Gel'ard Sloyan, was' another Religious Education departmentfor our separation," said Ortho­ speaker. Father Sloyan is chair­of Catholic University was prin­dox Patriarch Athenagoras of man of the Religious Education cipal celebrant.Constantinople to a group of Department at Catholic Univer­

Spanish priests and lay Catholics sity and president of the Society "'heaten Host who visited him there. of Catholic College 'Teachers of At the kiss of peace that pre­

The Patriarch expressed his Sacred Doctrine. His' talk was 'on cedeS" Communion each partici ­pleasure at· receiving the visitors ."Current Problems in Modern pant turned to his neighbor, took and told them that "Baptism h,as Eucl'!a)'istic Devotion." . his hand, and said "Christ is here united us and Baptism is the Father Sloyan stated that one and always will be." This pl'ac­Church's door. When one enters Qf ttlecurrent problems· is: that tice is a preparation for Com­with others through the same t:atholics are' 'poorly educated munion-'''with God.. aild my door, the bouse OOlon" wall." _ the subject of EuchaE.i.siic de.. .....,.iuJU)or."

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No Greater Charity

God· Love Y011Father' 'Greeley Optimistic By Most Rev. FuhN! J. Slheen, D.D. About FutWire of Church There is nothing personal about llove ~ tile Missii4UI8. 1m lis

true that we become used to a certain person and linRI his 1IlL\~By'Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy with the MisisODS because' ofilis length of service. But wheIll lit Father Andrew M. Greeley is, by his own admission, comes to the overall interest of the Church and her propagation

something of a freak. He is a liberal, but an optimistic of the Faith to all nations, the personal does not count. Om Bler;sed Lora eliminated it in the Case of Simon, the fisherman.libei'al, and what he is optimistic about is the future of the whose name He changed to Peter. The name Simon was uselll li.D

Catholic Church in the United States. His reasons for this Scripture to recall Peter's'weakness, but in bis official eapmcU,. unusual,' and in some quar­ lIlS head. of _tlie Church; 'he had a new name: Peter or "rook.'" ters- unforgivable" attitude on all levels, destined'to expand From ,that day on all_the'successors of Peter have dropped thea

(although he deplores needless family ,names: Pacelli· was dropped for Pius XU; RoncaiDil II'Oir are );lpelledout',in his new and senseless duplication), be-John xxm: Montini for Paul Vi. The same applies to The SociewbOQk" The Hesitant Pilgrim cause they have something irre­ for the.Propa'gaiion of the Faith. Its National Directors can ccm~

(Sh'~~d and Ward, 64Uiliversity placeable to offer, because the llInd go, but' ~he work, Blithe Church, will uast until 'the CODSI1!lIllli?­Plac-e, New York. $5), This is a Catholic people want them;;tnd

ina~ion o~'t,tie woild. . , ,,,'eoUeCtion of es- because the public autt\Qritjes Gays\vhich con- cannot afford to let them go out' _~ -,.J6hn'XX~Ii;'\Vasaton'~ti~e the bl~ti~nai Directo~ of'.The society::tain;thevield 'of '; of existence. .' ..

fQr the'Prop1\gllion of: the Faith in Italy, just as Bishop ~uiton J..Fatber GreeleY's ' . Student of Reamy:, ' Sheer;, is the National Dir~tor 0(,; Thell'esearch and re- Speaking of duplication, there RELiEF: Msgr. Andrew Society for th~ Propagation·of the faithflection for the is some of it in this boo,k,'Ii is . P. Land{of Brooklyn,h~ in the' United States. The -work of" the,la'st':'t~n 'years. ' inevitable, one supposes, when a been appointed assistant·ex­ Society iIi ·It~ly .. went, on d'espite the. :factHe /is not on- man gathers up essays' written

ecutive director of Catholic that Monsignor RoncalU .left, and the workto maintai'n that over a period of years and makes o( The Society' f9Fth'ePropagation of theaU'is Iil perfect a book of them. It does seem," Relief Services. NCWC, New· Faith, in; t.he 'United States vyill go onor del' where liowever, that repetition of the' York, the American Catholic though Cam' no longer 'Nlltional Director.,.:+ A in"e I' i can same ideas could be eliminafud agency for overse~ assist ­ He changed his work by the ProvidenceCatholicism is. in the editing of the book. There'

ance. Msgr. Landi has served of God" but continued to love and serveeoncerned. No, is no law against it, and the book for many years with th~ the MissicJns. The Holy See changeli, myhe discerns plenty of deficiimcies would be the stronger for such'

responsibility but will never take awayand disorders. In 'fact;, a crisis pruning. agency in Italy. NC Photo. my love for the Missions.and' disorders. -,But in the case of Father

. Why does the, person amoum toIn fact, a: crisis is undo'ubtedly Greeley's book, it may be occurring. But Father Greeley that repetition is not only toler­ Teacher Ratio nothing? Because the Person Who' Os

Continued from Page Ten loved ,in the Missions is Christ. nere are various Presenees ofsees it as a crisis·of growth, not able but welcome. With all the .f decline. gloomy predictions we have as to arrive at the diocesan es- Clarist in the world: the Eucharistie Presence in the tablernaele; ,

It is misread as a crisis of de- heaped upon us, we can do with tablished ratio. the Mystical Presence u.- tbe Chureh; the CharismaUe Preseoee dine, according to him, because some cheering up. Which is not Rev. Patrick :T. O'Neill, Ph.D., Ia the soul by .grace. B~ we also have His SoclaB Presence iJl the it is judged in terms of European to say that Father Greeley, es­ Superintendent of Diocesan poor, the hungry,' the homelss. In two-thirds of 'tile people .... theorizing rather than in those chewing the role' of ,C~ssandra, SChools, advised that a sliding'&'o to bed hUBgry every Dight. ''I' -=&.\1 hungry, I 'was thirst,. &f the actual American condition. plays that of Pollyanna. He is a , ratio would be his recommenda- I was ~ed!' Who is the abiding Person ita mission work!' B lis Thus,' he maintains that Karl realist', He is a student of reality, tion as this would be easier for Cbrist ,Who Is potentiaUy hidden in 'every' non-Christian in tile Rahner's concept of the Church and whereas in it he finds reason an eight grade school to'main- world. lIIe is the One-Who, is Iov~. He is the One for ~ in diaspora simply does nut ap- for criticism, he also finds rea­ tain two lay te:lchers than for a we make our sacrifices. Be is tile 'One for Whom .elabol'. ply here, since the situation of son for confidence, sixteen room school to maintain I beg you, therefore, to continue to love the Pel'llOnof Christ the Church in America, and the He writes well, with ease and four teachers. ia the pOor. " place of religion in ~lrican fluency. He hands out praise 1'he education official_showed society, are, and are likely to ,generously (to, the young Cath­ , that the reaSOD for this is' that' ,D,uring 16 years I have s~nt myself and was spelJ.t for the sake remain, essentiany difXel'ent olic intelligentsia, for example), while the expenses of large of. the ~lissions. All that I reeei ved through television and personal from what obtains in Europe. and blame unrancorously. schools are increasing, the large ,~ts was given to the,.Society; and at the end of my life if I ha~ So, too, with other gloomy Joy in Irelaad ,schools are not located iiI 'par- anything,it will 'be given to the Propagation of the Faith. Remember views: in Father Greeley's opin-, William and Constance Kel1oe, ,ishes whose incomes are' pro- that there is no 'greater, cliadty than to give to the PropagaioD of ion, they are not based on hard husband and wife, are Americans portionately gr(~ater. the. Faith, first, because ft does not help one group but the entire . fact. with a, scholarly interest in ,]~he religious to lay teachers Church'; second, because the Holy, Father decides where your money

Hence he disagrees with. the' things Irish,· and homely expe­ . ratio, established by the Dio-" will be ul;led; third, because there are ,~o ,ipvestments of anYQf your iiberals who foresee the (lisap- rience of living and travelling ce~:aoard is to be effective as alms; :and ,feurth" bcau~ it. is the w,or~ of-the entire Cburch, ROt pea'rance of an insUtutiona]fzed' ih Ireland. As a result of their . of,. "September, 1967. It, .states, just the work of Me group in the Church.' , "

as follows:' . . . ' 0".: : . : . . , .' '. I '. !: . •Chtirch. But be' insiSts em ·the interest and' experience, they' absolute necessity of. change, and·· have produced a book called': '~In otder" to provide' for an' If at.. any, time' you 'wish to make inquiries coneerninc bow radicOlI change,' in systenw, and ,Enjoying Ireland (Devin-Adain,:, equitable distribution "of ,relig­ , you Clan ,help, the Mis~ns. ,write to me and. I will direct YOll. ' structuring. Faults in the~..e, he 23 E. 26th St., New York. $6.50). ious teachers in schools af the , as I have I dirl~cted you in the PaSt, to what Vatican Council D ooids, are responsible' fO,r most" It is ari unusual sort of book, a. diO,cese, ',elementl,iry ,schools ~id ""!U .th~ Misison Society which holds' "first place" of aU ~be el the major difficulties beset'- :combination' of snatches Of his;:" should retain a definite number ' " itoeieties' in the world,The' $Oci~)' ,for the, Propacati_ 01 the' -ting us. tory, character-drawing, and cu- of lay teachers in proportion te Faith: I win meet you, for the res~' of 'oar "yes, in sacritleell

. .'Vants Soda! Re-search riosities, on the one hand,' and" the number of classes in the and serviee for all souls. ·1 beg,. prayer from 70tl and I prombeHe is a }Jrofessional sociologist, on the other, a, very informal school. This proportion shall to pra7 for you. Bye now! God Love :you!

and he believes that the Church travel guide. Ireland is indeed basically be one lay teacher f9['llIlust use his and related disci- enjoyable, and there is no doubt every three religious teachers. Cut out' this column, pin your sac·rifice to it and mail it topies to get pertinent infonnation that the Keh6es did enjoy it. But excluding from the ratio Kin-' Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of The Society for on wh~ch to act decisively. ·He one wonders how much, some of derga.rten teachers and super­ 'the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York, New sees the 'professional gathering the Irish and of the Irish­ vising prin~pals. Specifically, York 10001, or to your Diocesan Director, Rt. Rev. MagI'. Raymond9£ information as essential, for descended will enjoy it, the number of lay teachers re­ T. Considine, 368 North Main 'Street, Fall River, Mass.eKample, to the efficient and Take the chapter entitled "The quired shall be as follows:

, eO~lstructive workings of Zl dio- Flav'or 'of Irish Life," which is "Schook from 1 to 4 grades:"",fOOse, said to be '~a collection of ran- no lay teachers, ,

As he points out, Vatican IT ciom topics and everyday things Schools from 5 to 6 grades: one : ealls for an office of sociul re'- from Irish life.", The, list leads lay teacher ' 8Ie~:rch as standard equipment' for' off with gambling, proceeds to ~hools Irolll 7. to 11 .grades:' a -diocese. Wrong decisions are, crime, .goes on to paganism, then tw(), lay teachers made, rieeds are left urimet, op-' to lawsuits, and cockfighting ,and· Sch~o.is from 12 to 16 grade~: ,po"ttunity is lost, personnel is ends with something dubbed,. three lay teachers misused or unused, all because "rural quality." Quite 11 list, cer- , S4ihqols .over 16 grades: fow: 8Cientific resources are igno-red.' tainly not meant to: be exhaus-, lay te,achers.~.: .

Father ,Greeley' discussas in tive, but hardly representative, llIlany connections tbequestions' either., .

.\':

Commissionef authority and of freedam: in Pins and Stam that, for example, of pastol!'-cur­ Sketchiness is a principal , LA PAZ (NC) - The Bolivian ate.relations, in that of the reli ­ characteristic of this book. It Bishops' 'Conference has created ,

the a 'Commission for Social AetiOQ

<llIlmpus. notes. The authors take delight -cial progress of the working and

gious community, in tbat i~ jumps all over the lot. Sentimen­Catholic college or Wliversity tality is definitely not one of its to promote the "human and 90­ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

. rural claSses H, ' S~ Good Results ia Ireland, but are not in the

And in each instance, altfieugh least misty-eyed or blarney­wary of easy solutions to prob­ tongued. Their approach is di­lems, he maintains that changes rect, thei,r manner plain-spoken. in the prevailing systems aTe not This is a pungent book. • nly imperative but quitepos­sible and bound to produce good reSults. Bishop Honored

:Thus, the crisis in vocations is, JAM~ICA (NC) ,- Auxiliary ill» his mind, not permanent and Bishop John J. Graham, vicar insoluble but can be successfully general of the Philadelphia arch- . worked out in' the next few diocese, was honored by St.. years, given the right approach John's 'University at its annual' and methods. St. Vincent de Paul convocation

Similarly with the criBis in here by the, conferring of ttie , Catholic education, Father Gree­ honorary degree of Doctor of 1ley contends that our schools are, Laws. ' '

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Page 13: 12.15.66

.Airman's Letter Starts Campaign To A~d O!1'phOI'J1S

DAYTON (NC) - A ser­viceman's latter to his par­ents asking for help for Vietnam orphans touched off an interfaith program in this area. It also prompted Mayor Dave Hall to proclaim Sunday, Dec. 4 asYiet-Orphans Day.

The orphl'\nage benefit pro­gram started as an indivicl,ual project in Corpus Christi parish here. '

The letter was written by Air Force Sp/4 Edward A. Seibert,

. former student 'at Chaminade High School here, to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Seibert of Corpus Christi parish.

The letter asked the couple to ' recruit aid for 200 Vietnamese c hil d I' en, in 'an orphanage "adopted" by his company in Soc Trang.

A par~sh meeting was calle'd. An overflow crowd of more than 700 persons set UP a fast-moving organization. The parishioners established the Viet-Orphan l!<'und. Then the mayor issued the proclamation.

Death Threatens The mayor emphasized the 200

children in the orphanage, adopted by the 221s~ Aviation Company at Soc Trang range from the newly born to 15 years old and are threatened by death fro111 starvation and diseases. The youngsters' parents have died, or been killed in the Viet­nam war. •

The parish women then met with wOmen of a neighboring Presbyterian church who wanted to help. The junior Chamber of Commerce of Huber ·Heights, a suburban community, also re­sponded. Man y individuals called to offer cash donations.

A truck firm offered free use of a trailer for receiving donated articles. One department 'of Frig,;. idaire, one of Dayton's largest industries, announced it would cancel its traditional Clu;stmas party to contribute to the fund;

Two Curates Continued from Page One

He was ordained Feb. ]3, 1965 by Bishop Connolly and' has served in Holy Famiily Parish, . Tnunton, since ordination.

Father Wilson, born May 22,. 1940 in Fall River, is the son of Harold E. and, Veronica Griffin Wilson. He attended SS. Peter and Paul School, B. M. Q. Dur:f;ee High School in Fall River, the University of Massachusetts, St. Thomas Seminary in Bloomfield, Conn. and St. John's Seminary. ,in Brighton ..

He 'was ordained by Bishop Con~olly on May 21 of this year and served in Holy Family Par­ish in Taunton until August, at which time he was assigned to St. Mary's Parish in North Attle­boro.

Schedule Editors' Theology Se'minar

NEW YORK (NC) -A theol­ogy seminar for editors of Cath­olic publications on the Second Vatican Council's Constitution on the Nature of the Church will be held Feb. 15 and 16 in Pittsburgh.

The meeting will feature two ,presentations, one by Bishop Emmet Carter of London, Ont., and one by Father Claude Lee­

,tham, of Mt.. Mercy College, Pittsburgh.

John .Deedy, editor of the Pittsburgh Catholic, is chairman of the seminar. David Host, pro­fessor of journalism at Marquette University, Milwaukee, is moder­2tor. The seminar is sponsored by the Catholic Press Associa­at..

CHRISTMAS IS SELFLESSNESS: Of the estimated 15 million lepers' in the world, five million are hidden away in shame, fear, exile" certain death-though ,pills costing

: less than ten for a penny could keep them alive. Catholic sisters like this nurse in' -India search them out" bring food, medicine and hope supplied by your sacrifice in the

annuai Appeal for Lepers now being- conducted by :the Propagation of the Faith Office, 368 No. Main St., Fal1l River. Three dollars will purchase a year's supply of dap.­sone, the leprosy-arresting drug-how many lepers will you!!' sacrifice aid! Six dollars will aid a baby, and its motheli'o Twenty-five dollars 'Will suffice for a family of eight.

'Favors Commuting)Chu'rch in Canada Reveals Survey' Results Death Sentences

SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-Cle-sShows S'ucc'ess, Failures Since Council mency for the 63 men now under ': death sentence in San QuentinOTTAWA (NC) - The first of the French section of the CCC chapters that most groups are Prison is favored by Archbis.hopyear after .Vatican Council, :u social a'ction department, noted. now planning for, updating of Joseph T. ,McGucken of SaJilhas a complex plus and minus, "They are still wary, however' rules. ' Francisco. .balance sheet for the Church in ' ... for example, about involving' Some communities - Jesuits

Canada, a survey disclosed. ' laity ... and members of reli ­ and Oblates among them-have The prelate disclosed his vieWfl There have been successes and ,gious orders . . • within these already held such re-evaluation dul'ing a press conference here , ­

f~ilures since' the close of the ,structures." sessions;"others are in the offing. when a 'reporter asked 'his opin­council Dec. 8, 1965, in the opin­ Share Problems ion as to a proposal that Gov.Exterior Changesion of priest and lay department For priests, Father William Edmund G. Brown commute the heads at the secretariat of the, Ryan, S.J., assistant director of There have been a number of sentences of the doomed men. Canadian Ca~holic Conference 'e:id~rior changes, such as modi-'the CCC's English social action The archbishop said he is nothere. The CCC is the central , fied styles of dress for'nuns. But,department, added these, same aware of any conclusive, scien-, j'office of the Canadian hierarchy~ according to Father Roger Tes­new structures have been one of tific proof that capital punish",Bishops, priests, laity, Reli-'. sier, a White' Father at the eRCthe bright spots of the first year. ment deters crime.gious (nuns and Brothers)-all seci:etariat, "one area of the lifeAn i11formation program for given separate attention and' of Religious in which a great"priests during the year has taken study at the council-have been Fathers Ryan and John T. Shea, deal remains to be done is in toucheq and changed in many the matter of communicationsocial action director, into most NO JOB TOO BIG ways, positive comments stressed. English-speaking dioceses where within religious communities­

NONE TOO SMAllvertically betwl::en members andCite Three'Aspects . they saw the new structures at. superiors, and horizontalty be­Conversely, theSl~ same four first hand. tween each' member and thegroups of'Church members have Father Ryan said he hopes that SULLIVAN BROS.community in which they live."other steps to take, and further bishops will "share increasingly

difficulties to overcome before the problems of the Church -' The laity, in turn, accor'ding to' PRINTER~ all "the expectations of the coun­ whether financial or pastoral­ Tom Johnston, director of the' cil" will be realities, it was noted. with .priests and ,laity'. Priests , CCC Office for the Lay Aposto­ Main Office and Plant

Views gathered through an in­ and laity have the right and late,' are benefiting from' "the 9S Bridge St., lowell, Mass. formal survey by the ccc Infor­ duty to share the maturing proc­ greater awareness concerning mation Service pointed to these ess of anguish and confusion in the role of the laity in, all areas Tel. 458-6333 aspects of the general situation the face of change." of the ,Church."

Auxiliary' Plants across the country. Religious communities - both But, he added, large numbers "The bishops conceive their men and women-have been in­ of the laity "remain unaffected­ BOSTON

role in a new way. The setting volved during the year in a no participation ... no sense of CAMDEN. N.J . up of new structures, of pastoral series of regional meetings or­ .the Church." A priest 'summed

OCEANPORT, N.J.councils, senates of priests, and ganized by the Canadian Reli ­ up the same point this way: "The the like-shows that theY' want gious Conference. The main aim place of the laity in the Church MIAMI to' share their task. m9re and of the discussions was to help of the aggiornamento has been PAWTUCKET, R.I. more with their collaborators," superiors to relate council ideas spelled out, but implementation

PHILADELPH'~Father J. Guy Hamelin, director to the general, provincisl e.r weal has not been startling."

Page 14: 12.15.66

"

VaryinJg [P~ilosop'h"ies,Found In La~gLro ,~deologies' .,'

lFrom "Social RevoluatioJm' in the New Latm America;'\

Edited by JOlhUlU J. CollUSidine, M.M. To the main historiCal projects we have referred 'to.

'l1lotes Marina Bandeira, conservation and transformation. there correspond various specif~c historicalpr'ojects and their specific ideologies and philosophies. This is where the problem becomes more in;." volved: When the statement

l't' b' ' dfG) genera .1 les. €lgms. an : the arguments become heat­

,··ed. Therefore, it should not be a, loss of time to try to give· the,.

" .:meaning which ' :.. ,is being attrib­

.. " utedhere to the :'various specific : historical. proj­

eets to be 'chosen .. as alternatives

by Latin Amer­lca.. Headed bythe ideology of eon s e r v a _ , tism,' we will ,find its princi­

.. p a I branches: Capitalist liberalism: which",

,although dead and buried in its" ,home country, England, stm

.' pirations of the people with com-. munism itself.

Such irrational fear spreads panic' in the upper strata of so':' ' cietyand only increases the ten" sion' between, the wealthy. and the poor. The misery of the peo­pIe should be fought even it communism never existed. ~ , Social Catholicism: in various

forms and with different names

has been sprouting in· different parts of the world since the 1914 War and the Social Encyclicals.

In France, the Social Weeks, the Catholic Action; the ChJjstian Trade Unions have been grasp­ing for a new form of social self-expression.

_ Personalism Philosophy Most ,of these attempts have

been greatly affected by a phil ­, finds its followers in present,day 'osOpby of Christian inspiration: ,Lati.n America. ,personalism. ' The encYclical.

These theories, in ~eir abso­ :Quadragesimo Anno,. developed :. . ., ,lUte sense, are still aecepted by' still further the ideas previously . SAU;oN .ORPHAN: Army Ch~plain" Major ~dWard J. Flatley, a priest of "the, ~rch-

Latin American capitalists ~d. 'otitllnect With" regard to soeial diocese: ~f Phi1adelph~a, ,baptizes an, infant abandoned o~ the doorstep ()f St. Elizabeth~8' what is more, by representatives:., :md"individual ~ of propertY,

!'t1f 'capitalism' from o~herooun-,. fail- :salaries' intervention of the', .,:. 'tries' where these theories, bav:e state when' there is abuse by

o.....h.ana~in .Saigo"n. Godfather ja Lt.Col.Joseph MalloY-i,commanding officer o:f,the U.S. ~p . ...'"

Third Jri,eJd HOf'lpi~~ .. ,who oom~ f~~hj~~g-o, .. a~~ Jpe g~drnother,is· ~~jOf< ;Cath~rine been outlawed through'.:'llIlti ­ economic-powers. A special T. Betz, chief nurse, from ,Elizabeth.·,N.J... ;, .. " ".j" """,,,) ,',,,

E;i~'~o::;,~~,=:,=- ~~ir.~~E":~dl=ChalPlains Ask Aid,()f'6;d~ined O;dCOtiS . Neo-capitalism: refers to an R 0,man 0 Guardini, Lubae.

:::::A;~~~ni=:as:~te'::'a:~~: Co;:;;~hei with other groups

to workers,to the ex~nt of 0(.,. ~ connected with Father Lebret of feting h~ane working condi-: "E.conomieet Humanisme" there lions. But the last instan,ce, the is a' tendency towards' a 'new supreme 'decision, belongs to, fomi 'ttl· social organizationgen­eapital, to money, because mO~,ey , erally referred to as,"Solidarity 09Rtl'ols the means of proguetU)~. Civilization" which ,would: be Therefore, neo-capitalis~'.i8 ~ th~sum i>f countries orgimized'tali ' blandf new form 0 caPI sm, a· in a personalist form of govern­ene, .which acc~ptl, the eJfisten~ 'ment pledgEld to promote inte-" 91. the righ~ of labor, but it, i:S; i- ~. development of the persoft eapitalisIJ!. . 'withiethe community (local,

Let us content ournelves with regtonal and national). ' these two specific pr()jects witk To..this must be added the in­regard to' conservatism. OUr in_ -fiuence of "active non-violence'" tention .is definitely not to. di~-' groups inspired by the move­ecM.trse on these sub~ects,.it 18

simply, to estab~sh some start ­ing pomts for c:hscussion.

Transformation Ill1le'oloU' Now,with regard to the ideol­

'ogy of transformation. we would sort out:

Socialism: in broad terms, in inc~udes ~ll economic sy~te~ which aSSIgn property ~nd. decI­sio~s ,to th: State. ThIS IS the stnct meamng of the word. Its extreme form is collectivist com­munism. .

meut promoting Civil Rights hi tile United ~tates, and varieus European organizations.

These groups who' coUnt man;,

' .., ' . " .

'Cite N~d,(lt"C~nqdiCl" Colleges,," ,'" . ., PORT CREDIT (NC)-A rec- A:special committee on lit~rgy This apoStolate.... if was' added,

ommendati6n that Catholic la1'- at' the '-~versl'ty 'and cOllege' 'derives it;Scha'ra~ier.anddrrl,~m­'men be ordained to serve as dea- . levelaiso \~iU seek to' meet with ics, and even its forms, from the

QOns at Canadian colleges and the. ccC' tiati6hallit~~giC~1 com":' structure' andspirit 'proper 18, tkiverSities is iikely to go to the IDlSSlon. " '. universities. " " :,' _ Canadian bishops from a chap..;" in.'·Il· 'te'ntat:i~e concluding . ' It was in iIiiscQ~te~t,thaFdis­la' " '. ~:_ .. h-' " 's'·"'tem'·'ent,"'riartidpantSat""the""eussion devel,O"-',.;i'a..rouhc:la.,e?cs ­' xn;s ,- mee>Ull:6 ere., .... r l"f':" ,

it-is.one of several recommen-' me~tirigherE(agreed'tha't'tbear;""siblecpiIot'''pro]ecfi'n w iell 'dationsconsidered at a three-day rival 'Of tlieChUrch on the'~am':'."· Catholic laymen"~stabl(sheifin stUdy session here attended by 'pUs'doeShot 'vait'upOnthe"com- . the wii'versitf settin~ 'Inigh;( Be 42~priests :representing chaplain. . in~ Of the ,cba~iairi.It isal~adY •,conSidered f~r' ord,~~a~i~n as;d,ea-Cy services, at 35 English univet:-' there in the persons of pi'ofes- C&nS to assist UniversIty chap.. sities and colleges from Van-sors, Sta#'and'. student:s;, the • lains.. .' .. ' '," " ',.: couver,' B. C., to St. John's New-, statemel1t· said. """ The bishops of Canada an­foundland. Eighteen nuns of va- . Pilot Project . nounced after their' Oc,toller rious reI i g i 0 u s communities' The aPoStorate' in this setting,' 'meeting in. Ottawa .tha~. It special interested in university work also attended.

Afive-member·committee was

The opposite trend will be,a&!;als6, foreign niolley for na"; 0 liI,[email protected]' found in the BritishL,abour ,: tional politics, ,'~Ji:IPZIG (NC)-The Institute,. Party and calls ilself democratic ' ..'IIi .some countries the antag- .for German History in commu";' BOCialism. Another one' is ,the' '6tlisnis' inside the 'parties are' riis't':'hIled East Germany will socialism of Israel.: ,:,stiB.ing :.' them, . But, juSt the ':·issueli a biography of Martin

Marxism: Finds grea.t; acceP~"" ' ..~e, the ,Christian Democrat~c" •Lqtper from a' communist view­

Catholics among them, are be- named to seek an opportunity. to ginning to make their appear~__meet early next year with the ance in Latin America. , Canadian Catholic Conference

The Christian Democratic episcopal commission on educa-Parties in our countries are very ,tion: T~e CCC is the ce~tral..or ­diversified. Their quality varies gamzatIon of the ~anadian hler­as -well, The present great risk archy.' and temptation of our Deino­cratic Parties is the 'importatIon Geil"mlDlll1' Reds Plan of .ready made foreign models,' .., ' .

ance among intellectuals fiI Latin' America who wish to adopt the marxist principles but do 'not ac­eept the Russian, or foll' that mat­tel', the Chinese'solutions.

These marxists stand f<K' aa­tionalism and want to :find, with' ­in the marxist doctrine, their national'forms of self-expression.

Leninst-Communism:There is no risk of niisinterpret.ation here. In Latin America the Russian branches (which ,j~Ciude Stalin-

Parties in some of our co~tries . ,p9.infto commemorate the 450th'" are definitely maturing" "and .. 'anniversary of the Reformation, making headway. October 1967. "

Social Protestanism: Protes- The ,government will also ren'" tant: -denominations have beeQ ovate the castle of, Wittenburg~, con:C~17i:;;(i:abo~t'the same prob- It was on the -door of the castle lems,iil}.'so. after the First World church that Luther, who is· Wa\':;,',' .in _ England,' Germany, buried there, in' 15J'1 nailed the FraRce, the ,United States. Cur- ,,95 Theses expressing his objec­,rentlya .p~o~~Ssor of theology .at ~~ons to ~rtain ~ractices of the the Umve~ty of .Princeton;.', , l.,;hurch. at thli\t bme. Richard ,Shaull, who knows·

,Latin.. America well is baving 1st die-hards), the Chinese, the' I . his writings re~d with increasing'" "'trotskyistS", and the nationalist, ~terest by. young La~ixis. i1].clud­,marxist fight one another but, lag Catholics.', ~,;"., ' jUst'the same, create dangerous .1-'hese are the conflicting ide~·". problems in our continent. Yet a ologies, the conflict~ historical: hysterical fear of communism IU'ojects we find in' Latin Amer~' ean have no less disastrous con- , ica..They are there and cannOt sequences: namely, the unthink- be ignored. WeChristilqlS must ing species, of anti-commuism., be present in this conflict, but

, 'which confuses .the legitimate as- our purpesesinust be very clear. Q

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~eorgetown University Has Plans For Concentrated Care Center

WASHINGTON (NC)-A rev­ supply facilities, a specially de­olutionary medical care center, signed suite of :10 operating expected to be a blueprint for rooms, and a pre-operative area hospital design throughout the - all underground, infection­world, will be constructed at guarded and protected against Georgetown University here. nuclear fallout, Father Campbell

Father Gerard J. CaplpbeD, said. The above-ground struc­S.J., tmiversity president said ture will be divided into sepa­the unusually planned facility is rate concentrated-care units. scheduled for completion in 1969. Expansion Program

The Consecrated Care Center Plans for the facility resulted is a nine-story, 246-bed additiOlll from the work of a four-man to be integrated with the present team of Georgetown University Georgetown :University Hospital. Medical Center physicians-Drs. It will separate critically ill pa­ Charles A. Hufnagel, professor tients from those who are re­ of surgery; John F. Gillespie, as­eeiving convalescent care or sistant professor of surgery; undergohig diagnosis. This is not Charles F. Geschickter, professor presently done in existing con­ of pathology; and W. Proctor ventional hospitals, including Harvey, professor of medicine. Georgetown, Father Campbell The cost of medical care in the said. new center, hopefully, will be

Shelter Area less than present conventional The addition will serve as a care since the facility incorpor­

disaster center for the metropol­ ates a new design as well as itan Washington area, will be ultra modern engineering and eapable of handling simulta­ and architectural advances, Dr. neously up to 1,000 victims of Hufnagel said. disasters such as floods, explo­ The federal government ·has sions, riots, fires or airplane pledged $7,130,000 in planning erashes. and ·construction funds for the

The present hospital facility combined medical setup. George­will be used to provide care for town University will provide the majority of patients who $3.7 million for construction. need only conventional treat- The project is part of a planned ment. /' seven building overall medical

The Concentrated Care Center expansion program at George­will include a shelter area, com­ town University, scheduled for plete emergency treatment and completion in 1970.

Cardinal Cushing· Scores Church F~ilures in Social Apostolate

BOSTON (NC) - The organ­ been received by many AmerI­ized Church has been guilty of cans. He also was critical of the serious failures in the social size of the program, which he apostolate, Ric h a r d Cardinal called mere "tokenism." E:ushing of Boston charged in a He spoke aga~nst those who pastoral letter calling on Catho­ are continually maiiltaining that lics to ~'begin again to be a "the poor should help them­€hurch that exists for others." selves'!· and· ,at the same time

The Church, the Cardinal said, complainjng and becoming fear­• "too often comfortable, self ­ ful when the poor organize ac- ' eontained and generally afflu­ tion programs to achieve power. ent" and its members apathetic ·lJses 01 Power and fearful of involvement in the "It is time," the ·Cardinal social concerns of the day. warned, "that our country, the

"Many of our parishes, like most powerful nation on earth, :Martha of old, are 'busy about should become· aware of the le­many things,' but neglect the gitimate uses of power, black 'one thing which is necessary,'" and white. In our land the citi ­he continued. "Many of our reli ­ zen is the power, and every citi ­gious communities are monu­ zen should have his share." ments of fidelity to the· estab­ Speaking of the .slow struggle

.lished structure; but fail to re- of the Negro to obtain his long .. fleet that world-view and con- denied rights, Cardinal Cushing

cern for mankind which brought expressed hiz personal frustra­their founders to the heights of tion that his teachings on the holiness. subject of racial justice have

Status Quo "too often fallen on deaf ears." "Many of our clergy are more "Evi:m within our own flock,"

dedicated to the maintenance of he said, "there are too many the status quo than they are to who have, it appears, not read the openness of mind and heart or have not heeded our mes­which are so necessary if we are sages." to meet the challenge for surviv­al which is the aggiornamento."

"We must begin again," the Start R.enewal Plan Cardinal said, "to be a Church In Canada Diocesethat exists for others, a Church humble and poor, God's servant WINDSOR (NC) - A three­and the world's." year Catholic "general mission"

Cardinal Cushing charged par­ for spiritual renewal is being ticular failures of the Church in joined by people generally in the areas of peace, poverty, ra­ this corner·of the London dio:' cial relations and religious divi- cese here in Ontario. sion. . . Four non-Catholic ·denomina­

Callil1g on Catholics to be tions have indicated support of leaders in the quest for world the general mission \ of Essex harmony among nations, he County and their intention .to seored excessive nationalism and join in its final phase of renewal sterile anti-communism as ene­ durin~ Lent next year. They are mies of true peace. the Essex deanery of the Angli­

"Patriotism," he. said, "must . can Church of Canada,. the Esse1 not be a cloak for the blanket of establishing:a center for re­and blind acceptance of all de­ of Canada, Giles Boulevard eisions made by the United Christian Church (Disciples of States. This is not patriotism-it Christ), and the Windsor Unitar­can be instead the road to na­ ian Fellowship, which will ap­tional disintegration." point coordinators with the. mis­

Americans, he continued, must sion. come to the realization "that Rabbi Samuel Stollman of self-scrutiny is not treason, self­ Shaar Hashomayin Synagogue examination is not disloyalty." will sit on the coordinating com­

Turning to the problems of mittee as an observer. Among . poverty, the cardinal criticized other denominations being ap­"the spirit of hostility and fear" proached are the Presbyterians, with which the government's the Baptists, the Pentecostals,

. War OD. Poverty program has and Ref01'- ~,~,

MATURITY: Missionary life may be hard at times, but it has its satisfactions, too. This Congolese mother re­joices that her son, originally trained in his Faith by the smiling White Father of Africa, has been consecrated a bishop. NC Photo. I

THE ANCHOR- 15 Thurs., Dec. 15, 1966

BistJ'tl@~ Tanner To $O[J'i)@ Shrr~tne

Mi<clJ!Ji)[email protected] M©l~S WASHINGTON (N C ) =>

Bishop Paul F. Tanner, gefle. eral secretary of the Nationa! Conference of Catholic Bish­ops, will be the principal cele­brant of a concelebrated ponti ­fical high Mass to be televised in color from the National Shrine of the Immaculate Con­ception here, beginning at mid­night Christmas Eve.

The Mass will be televised by the American Broadcasting Com-­pany.

Scaffolding will be down for the midnight Mass, and the great new mosaic, "The Triumph of the Lamb," on the inside of the shrine's sanctuary dome will be on view for the first time.

Two other great new mosaics 'will also be seen at this time. They are the large mosaic of St. Joseph, depicted as the Defender "'-. of the Church, in the east apse of the shrine, and the large mosaic of the Blessed Mother as the woman clothed in the sun with the moon at her feet and stars in her crown, in the west apse.

Msgr. Thomas J. Grady, direc­tor; Father William F. McDon­ough, assistant director, and other priests of the shrine staff will be concelebrants of' the Mass.

The newly formed Shrine Chorale, of 40 mixed voices, win be making its first Christma3 appea~ance.

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Page 16: 12.15.66

THE ~NCHOR-Diocese of FoR Fiver-thvrs.P~~, 15, 11966

Advis'e$ fBrm Treatment Of 'Misguided .Ca-tholics , "' By Msgr. George G. Biggins

(Director, Social Action pe~t., NCWC) Pope Paul VI, in his first encyclical letter, Eccesiam

luam, said that the Church "should enter 'into dialogue with the world in whi~h it exists and labors." The dialogue, &e pointed out, is a method of accomplishing the Church's

'J~postolic mission, an exam­lltle of the art of spiritual been taken in, so to speak; and ~mmunion. Its character- must be protected against. his

own imprudence..)istics are the following: 1 Early this month, when it was

clearness; 2) meekness, patience announced that Roger Garaudy, tlIld generosity;. 3) trust, not only a leading French Marxist theo­iln the power of retician, haC: been invited to-Iec­one's words, but tu.re at St. Louis UniveJisify, olso an attitude these self-appointed guardians of (f) f weI com - orthodoxy vigorously protested l!ng the trust of and almost- but not quite­the interlocutor; forced the university to capitu­4) pedagogical late.

. ,prudence, which The university's board oftrus'-Btrives to learn tees refused to cancel the Ga­the sensitivities, raudy lecture, but, in the wake

~ of the hearer of the protests, decided to- mGve Ii n d requires the lecture site to- a smaller au­that we adapt , ditorium and restrict the audi­ourselves and ence to students: and faculty 1l:be manner of our presentation members engaged. in philosoph­

- in a reasonable way lest we be ical studies. ' displeasing an d incom:l)rehen­able to him. Reacb CompromiSe

"In the dialogue, conducted in Subseq)lently cooler' heads (Ibis way," the Holy Father con- 'prevailed, and a' compromise duded, '''the union of truth and' agreement" was reached. The eharity, of understanding and" board of trustees;. whose original 1»ve is achieved." decision: had been pro,tested by

students, by the - university's, Prudent. Dialogue branch of the American Associa-

Vatican Council n, following tion of the University professors; , the lead of Pope Paul, repeatedly 'and by other individuals and

cmlIed for this ldnd of dialogue groups, finally decided to move between bishops and priests, be- the lecture site back tb the gym­(tween priests and laymen, be- nasium and allow a wider-but tween bishops and priests, be- still not public-audience to (tween Catholics and their sep- hear Garaudy. arated brethren, between Catho- The talk was opened. to stu­lies and Jews--and, lest we for- dents and faculty members from get, between Catholics and unbe- all of the 14 universities: and col­lIievers and even between Cath- leges in the St. Louis area'. In ad­9)lics and militant atheists. dition, holders of seasoIll tickets

"While rejecting atheism, root to the Great Issues: series were and branch," we read in the . admitted to the gymnasium. <Constitution on the Church in I sympathize with> the' admin' ­the Modern World, the Chureb istrators' of St. Louis University. sincerely' professes that all men, They found themselves: in a" believers and unbelievers alike, rather difficult situation. I am ought to work for the rightful sorry, of course; that they gave I'tetterment of this world in in originally to the American 'Which all alike live. Such an Legion and the League of St. ideal cannot be realized, how- Michael, but happy that they @'Vel', apart from sinrere and eventually reversed! themselves: ~dent dialogue.... . at least up to a point.,

Difficult, but Possiblle Soooring, Lesson, The council's plea for frater.- Their experience' wi"th this

faal dialogue between Catholies new breed of poskoncili"ar and atheists had been antici- Catholics who cIailn' to De more' Jl}ated ,by Pope Paul in Ecclesiam orthod'ox than the Pope can be 8uam. He too of course, rejected a sobering lesson to all of us.

. /lItheism. As time goes on, we can un­"It could be said," he hasten- doubtedly expect to, hellE much,

<M ta add, however, ''1l!'lat it. is more from these' well' intentIoned! Iilot so much that we condemn but misguided. zea1'ots. flbose (atl;leistie) systems and' They too, of eo~e, "d~ve a',

:',,? :~:~~:cii~~l ~~os:~~~ t:x~~e:~ sympathetaic hearing, for they are obviously all mixed up about

though,t and deed. Our regret is, the proper- role of the Church m reality, more sorrow for a in the modern worl'd'. lD. otner victim than . the sentence of' words'" they, fOO', mum!' somehow iiudge." or other be ~uded. iI)) the

Dialogue in such conditions, dialogue. ~e Holy, Father conceded, "is On the other hand; we will difficult, not to, say impossible, have to be very firm' with' them. ' although even today we have no They must be' mad'e: to> realize' Jl}reconceived intention of ex- that they simply are not going to <Muding the persons who profess get by with their bullying tac- , these systems and belong to tics. The only way to handle these regimes. For the lover of bullies is to stop them dead in truth discussion is always pos- their tracks, before they start sible." throwing their ..weight around.

At the end of the Council, the We can't afford' to haggle with Holy Father took steps to imple:- them or to settle for a compro­ment his own and the council's mise. Give a bully an inch and /SUpport of dialogue with unbe- he will take a mile. lIievers, including militant athe­nsts. This he did b'y establishing a Joint Donner Dall1cespecial commission, headed by . Cardinal Koenig of Vi(~nna~ for SUNNYVALE (NC)" - LGcal <iealing with unbelievers'. Knights of Columbus; and Masons

,

81. Louis llncident held a dinner dance here. A min­Recent events in St. Louis and ister, a priest and a rabbi spoke

]less publicized rumblings in at the affair, which was: spon'­other cities throughout· the sored jointly by the Lockheed

'United States would seem to sug­ Trowel Club Masonic' Order and gest that some well intentioned the St. Francis, of &sisi Council but misguided American Catho­ No. 4981 of Saratog-Cupertino, lIies think that Pope. Paul has Calif.

MOVIES: Father Patrick J. Sullivan,. 8-.J., has been named exeeutive' secretary and director of the' National Catholic Office' for' Motion Pictures, su'ccessor agency to the Legion of: ])eceney. 'rhe appoiintment was ma:d'e by Bishop C1'I.ristopnel' J. Weldon of Springifel'dr Mass'., chairman of the Bishops' Committee for' Motion; Pie­tures. NC Photo-.,

The .Parish Parade, 8S .. MARGARET~MABY .GUILD~ ItUZZARDS' 18AY ,

Mrs. William Brady, chairman, has announced that Christmas Turkey Whist will be held Sat­urday nig!'J.t, Dec. 17, at 8 in the parish kindergarten hall. In ad­dition to' turkeys, other Christ ­mas articles will be awarded as prizes_

Mrs,. Marion Ellis, will head a large hospitality 'committee for the affair.

The executtve board will meet Tuesday night, Dec~, 27, at 7:45 at the home' of Mrs•. John Gray, Puritan Rd" Buzzards Bay.

The nex~ regular guild meet­ing will be' held on: Wednesday night" Jan. 4.

ST. MARY, , NOlt~B A'l"I'UmORO

Junior. and senior.' CCD mem­bers were present' a~ the Second of a series -ofj ''Deoramas" held at ],a, Sa:tette Retreait House, At­tleboro>. The pro'gtam, "an ed­venture in Christian living," in­cluded showing of a film dealing with teenage problems, a diSCus­sion session;. songfest and Mass. Rev. Rene' Gagnon of the retreat house staff directed the program.

. .If: similar session was held ear­lier in the year for freshman and sophomore CCD students of "tile parish.

OUR LADY OF THE CAPE, BREWSTER

'J1he' annual Christmas party for the Christ Child will be held in the church hall at 4 Sunday afternoon, Dec. 18, for children through; sixth grade. Guests will be students of St. Joan of Arc School of Orleans, who will pre­sent a Christmas pageant.

ST: JOSEPH, FALL RIVER

CYO juniors will sponsor a Christmas dance from 7:15 to 10 tomorrow night.

Jesuits Relinquish Control of College

ST. BONIFACE (NC) -Ad­ministration of the College of St. Bonifacll' here will ·be re­turned from the Society of JesWJ to the archdiocese of St. Boniface effective Jan. 1. The Jesuits will continue to teach there.

Negro 'rellate Scores~ Ra:cism LOUISVDLJuEl (NC)_. Racial

'a n d religious discrimination threaten the heIlitage of: the' trni'l:edi States, .Auxiliary Bishop; Harold R. l?erlly" S\V.D~" oll' New' Orleans, toldi the third! annua} COmmunity Thanksgiving: Rally' here.

More thalli 4000' persons: fumed; .out at the- :ual1'y;. and\ the first' Negro' to, sellve' inl the U.S, hier-' archy ill' the' 20th. century; said it was· the' mgest crowd to' hear him speak since' he oecame ois!'J.op,

WhiTe warning against dis'-" crimination, Bishop Perry re­mind'ed' his listeners that "'we' have" indeed much' for wl}ich' fo be thankful."

"As a religi'ously minded peo'­pie," he said, "we of all faiths should fill ourselves passionate conviction that racism is' an of­fense' against the living· God."

G"r.eeted by sustained applau.se; he added that "racism' is more a'

cciDre: agairist God: than an of'-, f'ense against" man.'" The raUr was: sponsored' by;-CatholiC" Prot­estant;, and Jewish' organizatiozw7 and, the Louisville BaD Associao;. tion.

Los Ang.efe.s, Orpllans H'ear' W'elk Ifand: .-

LOS, ANGELES, (NC)-Tw.G~,

hundred children, from, orphan­ages; and foster homes were' gliests, of bonor at James<Francis: cardinal McIntyre's annual' Christ'mas, party for cIiildr~ Sunday:.

The tots, 3 to:' 5' years old" were' entertai.ned· by Lawrence_ Welk and members of his musie, company.

A:d'ult's were invited to join the party. Their donation will enable Catholic Charities here 1;Q

provide Christmas aid- to hun­dredif of' poor families.

HIAPPV CHR'(JS)Y"MjAS?: e;U;ILD; ACHIURCHt

THE HOLY FATHE~18 MISSION, AIIlJ TO THE ORIENTAL CHURCH

IN In' ThekkuJ Thodel, south India" MidnigHt; Mass INDIA will be in, the open air. Three months ago the

NEW ' tiny;, thatChed·roof parish church collapsedl, .' •• CATHOLICS "This w!iole village will" ring joyfully with carols

GATHER if' Ii can' announce' af. Christmas" we'll" J)uilif, our STONES: church;" Fafl1er George Kuttiyil reportS; "We

are penniless;" yes;, but,we' stlll have' our' health. For weeks; now myipeople, all of·them new,con­vert'si have'been gatheriit!rsfonesev4nings-after' work. The'church will'cost onIYr$3\lOO (the'price of the1buildlng materJals) since'we!1I build:ifour,,' selves, with~ our own' hands, to save the cost of labor." .' ••' These) new? Catholics, are Catholics tOI be. pl7Oud' of.. They; ara our hope-In India•.• oco

Share something with, them- in time for Christ!­mas?' We'll send Father George- immediately, your gifts (taX-dedUctible in the U.S.A,); in any amount-$100, $75; $50;. $25,. $10; $5; $2. They'II'make tile village ring, ••• You may name tne ,cl:\urc11 for your fiu/orlte saint,. put a plaqUe at'tfia'enti'ance In memoJy. of your loved ones. if you' wHet' It aU' bY' yourself ($3. l"OOl~ CIlri9t· mas is:ttte'time to shlml'Gbd's. blessings. Sliant' tftem' ancf your he"art' wifI' rftlgt

.... ­,A, O't,tr.' IllgaI tit18 is, CATHOLIC, NEMi EMr, WELIUa,

NEW, AAoctATIOII. OUr, mission, priest&-, wlill oMu\. IOU' pn:mpt1J:. the Masses" you request,., build, FOR, cburchesl sdlools., convents.. cIl1llcs,. under. tfie, 'Q Ho~ Fitther:'sc directiOn. ~ues1s· to· Ii~ used";

''wllere, needed moat" t8J(e. care of mISslOq",emerpnci8s..

.:~·------·----Co--MOnaI&nor':: EtfCLOHO D'UAU FlD:$.........----__

!ilOIl

ew!_~_..;.__S'AT!I ztp'CODE

TH. C~'I'IIU'ilLII:{".'EA·.' EAST WELFARE ASSOCIAYI"O.'

NE"AR:EAST 1VI1SS1DNS~ ~ fRANCIS CARDINALSP£U.MAN,Presldent: MSGItJOHN G. NOLAN; National secretalY

, .Wdte:, CA7HOLIC,N£AR' EAST WU;FARE Assoc. 330 Madison Avenue·New York.,N.Y. 10017 Tillephone:_ 212/yuko51' 6·5840

Page 17: 12.15.66

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Fiver-Thurs. Dec. 15, 1966 17Jesuit Says Missionary's Job 'To Make Himself Not Needed'

Hum52>f}n~ey Charges ChMU'(dln@$) Lack NEW ORLEANS (NC)-The stive, set up a marine engine

primary objective of a iorei,gn repair shop in Batticaloa, a coast fuU «:@~mitm~,nt to Ai@ [ll;@~lJ'ivedmissionary is to work himBelf oity of 30,000 persons. A shop of out of his job, says Father Fran­ this kind, he said, would expand lVIIAlVII BEACH (NC) - The a year, the Vice President ds X. Mayer, S.J., who has and stabilize the fishing indus­ churches in this country were pointed out that this represents worked himself out of one job in try, the one major industry in chided by the Vice President of "only 41 cents per month for Ceylon and is trying to do the the area. the United States for their lack everyone who belongs to a ll8Jne in another post. Father Mayer said he hopes of full commitment to ending the church in America."

"The job of.a missionary is the coopeJ;ative will grow to sup­ wi.dening gulf between rich and Need Leadershippoor both at home and abroad.

the way Father Mayer put it. ice 'Plant, a trucking route for to make himself not needed," is porlrelated industries such as .an

Addressing the Seventh Gen- Lauding the leadership of Missionaries, he explained, try ·distributing large fish catches, . eral Assembly of the National churches in the civil rights

to raise the standard of living and perhaps even a canning Council of Churches here, Vice struggle in recent years, Mr. in a country and train enough factory. President 1-1ubert H. Humphrey Humphrey warned that "the

native priests so the people can Father Mayer has begun other paid tribute to the churches for mood of the pubIic has changed"

take care of themselves. Tl1Jln projects to give jobs to young­ what they have done in the fight and told the council delegates, the missionaries move to another sters. The boys' sodality makes against poverty and racial dis­ "Right now is when we need place where needs are greater, bricks, using a lonated maohine. crimination but strongly sug­ your leadership most of all." he added. Girls in a nearby school remake gested that they have not done Civil rights progress and social

Father Mayer, here on a visit clothes and do fancy embroid­ enough. reforms of thc past few years after 12 years in Ceylon, said he ery on dresses that are sold in are currently in danger, he said,Today's social problems, the helped to put one parish on its the larger hotels. Vice President maintained, are because of a rising national own feet by planting a grove of "All this 'extracurricular ac­ JR!EID CROSS: William H. too large and too complex to be mood of "I2a~Uon and disillu­

sionment."coconut trees. When they ma­ tivity is necessary now," Father Dabney, Washington, has solved by eit:1er the government tured and began to bear fruit, Mayer said, "before we can carry been appointed Under Sec­ or private institutions alone. "The American people," he the parish could support itself forward the appeal to the spirit. They demand, he continued" "a said, "have not turned into an­retary General of the Leagueon the trees' products, he said. When the thatches. are' falling partnership in which our public gels. There is prejudice in aU

of Red Cross 'Societies, Ge­1\&lajor nndustry apart on the roof of a man's and private institutions, work­ sections of the country; there He was transferred to a par­ house and the rain rushes neva, Switzerland, where he ing together can meet public and are vested interests; there are

ish in financial straits on the through, you have to repair the will direct the Lea g u e ' s private needs without anyone fears-some iegitimate, most il· lower coast of Ceylon. His cur­ roof before he will listen to institution becoming a dominant legitimate. There is, among some,worldwide technical assist ­rent project is to start a cooper- 'you." monolith." the age-old hardness of heart ­ance program. A native -of contempt for the poor, fear of

Boston, Mr. Dabney is a Cites statistics the victim of the ghetto, a grudg­ing attitude- for those on wel­

Sal-es parish in Washington. leaders for their vocal support fare."Lead:ersUrge flrOnk iDiscussion member of St. Francis de Mr. Humphrey praised church

of 'programs to .aid the poor but pointed out that the churches come out in the open again," the

At Cntholic-JJ,eWis'h Dia'iogue NC Photo. "In 1966, all this has begun to

MIAMI SHORES .(NC)-;1ilun­ ."It :is my firm 'hope," !the ,bish­ have .been slow to act on such Vice President claimed, anddreds of 'participants in a Cath­ op said, "that this is but the be­ Auxiliary of Boston government programs as spon­ urged the church leaders not toolic-Jewish dialogue here heard 'ginning of a series of honest and To -Lead Pilgrimage sorship of nonprofit low-rent "run' from the struggle."religious. leaders and scholars objective dialogues between-- the housing.BOSTON (NC) - Auxiliaryappeal for open and frank dis­ .Jewish and Catholic people t1> Bishop Jeremiah F. Minihan of He endorsed a recent sugges­cussions 'to improve relations :achievee1imination of prejudice Boston will lead a pilgrimage to tion by religious leaders that the Rabbi to Lecture

with one ,another. and true acceptance of all men Ireland next July on the invita­ nation aim toward devoting two WASHINGTON (NC) - Rabo!Miami's Bishop Coleman T. <in :the -family .of ·God. tion by William Cardinal Con­ per cent of its national income Marc H. Tanenbaum, director ofCarroll, Dr. Irving Lehrman ,0I :Rabbi Lehrman pointed out way of Armagh to visit Ireland to aid for underdeveloped na­ interreligious affairs of theTemple Emanu-El, Miami Beach; that "dialogue does not imply for celebration of the feast day tions, but questioned whether American Jewish Committee,Father David J. Bowman, S.J., watering-down d.if;ferences. of Blessed Oliver Plunkett at the the 'churches are acting in a will lecture at Catholic Univer­of New York; and Dr. Samuel 'Cons:tnnt Oonversn.tion' shrine in Drogheda. like manner in expenditure of sity of America here on April 3.Sandmel, professor of Bible, "Dialogue mea n s aocepting

Boston pilgrims wlll sail with their own incomes. Rabbi Tanenbaum will speakHebrew Union College, were di.£ferences, reachtn:g .across <our Bishop Minihan on -fhe Queen Citing statistics that Protestant under the auspices of a new two­among principal speakers during ,differences,bratherseng1i\ged in M~ry ..July 12, while others will and Catholic expenditures on year program in ecumenicalthe dialqgue at Barry College. ;a constant conversation. It must go bY plane from New York to .services to those outside the studies conducted at the univer­Bishop Carroll, honorary co­ be knowing each .other a little join the pilgrimage. churches total some $500 million sity's school ('f ~"~red theology.chairman of the meeting with better .and understanding each

Dr. Lehrman told the assembly. ·other a little better," he said. "If for 2,000 years we :have "You 'don't 'have to speak the

failed to carryon a serious, sen­ 'same langua,ge to understand one sible, honest dialogue, the shame another;" he ern,phasized . "We is on both of us. 'live in .a country whichempha­

It would seem to be so sim,ple sizes religio,",s and cultur.al ·plu­for us who live in the same area ralism. to know and understanr' 'each "Therefore' we're going to other," he declared. "If for 2,000 speak different languages .as years we have not done that it Christians and Jews, in .a theo­is indeed unfortunate." J,ogical 'sense, for a lang time to

All Brothers come. Knowing will lead us to "There should be ]ittle prob­ ·understanding and understand­

lem," Bishop Carroll said. "We ing will lead us to love;" 'he 'Pre­are all brothers .in the family of dicted. God. Dialogue in the ·past might Father 'Bowman, first priest well be ,questioned ·as to its sin­ emplQiYed by the faith and order cerity and freedom 'from pre­ department of the National tense. Council of ;Ohurches, said "no

"Those 'of us 'who .have been man ma,y legitimately use the engaged in .a diialogue in ,another New 'J1estament as' a basis for area ha;ve ,come to nlulizehow .anti·- 'Semltism:" He 'Stressed: necessaJ;y ,and e1'feetive .it JS to "Christ is ~jected today., when convince others <ill tour .honestY, He is rejected, primarily by our sinceritY ,and our ,desire to Christians." know. 'I1his ,is tl'ue in 'the field ·01 our relations with those ,O'f :an­other color." Hold Clinic 0111 R4;1Ce

Emphasizin,g that it is impos­(Re1ations~ Hospitalssible to love V ,we ,are affected

by prejudice, the bishop quoted DETRO>IT (NC)-Race rela­a statement 'from ;]'lope Paul VI, tions ·and the Catholic hospitals who said, "All must have :a ,of the :archdiocese ·of Detroit broader .cr.a.ving for brother­ 'came under a clinical 'Scrutiny hood."_ ,daring a ·d&y~long ·conference

hereof mme than 135 hospital .admiriistr.ators and lother !;pecial­

Clothing Campaign ists. Compared with other majorTo B:reak Records U. S. cities, Detroit's Catholic

NEW 'YORK (NC)-Early re­ hospitals were diagnosed as turns from ,the 1966 clothing strong in race relations. But, it campaign of the Catholic Relief was .agreed, .there is still room Services-National Catholic Wel­ for improvement. fare Comerence indicate -that Archbishop John F. Deal'den 1966 totals '-will bneak last year's of Detroit, wllo was recently record of 19.5 million pounds of elected first pr'esident of the clothing colledted. National Confel'enoe ,of Catholic

It will mark the seventh con­ Bishops, asked the delegates 10 secutive year that the campaign exantine their problems "hon­has surpossed the previous year's cestly and frankly," and cited the totals. recent statemen l' of the American

The 1'965 record topped the bishops in which they went on 1964 totol of 18.25 million record "clearly and blun'Uy" on pounds. thD .mH,·., i""up' of race relations.

A FAMILY

~ 52 ISSUES OF ~4t J\,ntqor

For Only $4.00 (Mailed anywhere In the United States)

---_._-----------------------------------------------------------;:1!rlrt J\lIt:C~llr 410 HIGHLAND AVE., FAll RIVER, MASS. : ~ , ~ Enclosed find $_ _ fOT __.__ Christmas, Gift Subscriptions sent to: ~ , , , PLEASE PRINT PLAiNLY ,

.,

, ,,

,,~, ,

'" NAme : , _ ; __ _ --'-_ ,

~ , , Address _ ,,~ , , : City State Zip _ _... ~ , , : GIFT CARD SHOULD READ: :, ,., , : From _ _ _ _ __ ~ , , ~ , : ; Street _ , : City~tate :

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Page 18: 12.15.66

I

1-~,

18 THE ANCHOR-DiOcese of Fall Fiver-Thurs. Dec. 15,·1966

.CeD Unit to Hear Brother Joseph Continued from Page One

Uve in the 'vork of the Council of Churches in the Sprh,g£ield Area. He is a graduate of How­ard University and is direct,or of the Social and Psychological Services Unit of the Springfield school system.

College students have been as­signed to chair delegate. discus­sion groups which will evaluate the addresses given by the va­rious speakers. The discussion sessions are designed to involve the student-delegates in the ap­plication of principles of Chris­tian leadership to their environ­ments in.school, home and com­munity. .

Bernice Clarke, a registered nurse from Cambridge, Mass., who is active in Catholic lay or­

. ganizations, is also scheduled to address the attendees.

Adult CCD workers and spon­sors, many of them teachers, will accompany. the student-delegates. Brother Joseph Iannone, C.S.C., chairman of the religion depart­ment at Notre Dame High School, West Haven, Conn., will address a special assembly of sponsors. Brother Iannone is a· member of the Catholie Interra­

,cial Council of New Haven and has contributed articles to na­tional religious publications.

Rev. Joseph L. Powers, direc­tor of the Confraternity of Chris­tian Doctrine in the Fall River Diocese, will celebrate a special Mass in the Cassidy auditorium

. as part of the program. ' Commenting on. the Confer­

ence arrangeII].ents, Father Pow­ers said, "the decrees of the Vat­ican Council and the American

·Bishops are being put into prac­tice by programs such as the CCD Leadership Day. These de-

Continued from Page One celebrate his first Mas.> the foI­lowing day in St. Theresa's Par­

.' ish in So. Attleboro. Rev. Grav'O!l is the son of Mr.

and Mrs. Raymond Gravel of 41 Westminster Ave., So. Attleboro. His early education was in Our

":Lady of Consolation Elementary School, Pawtucket. He attended

,high school at St. Joseph's Prep . 'Seminary in Bucksport, Maine,

and junior college at St. John the Evangelist College and Sem-. inary in Bar Harbor. Both insti ­

. :tutions are conducted by the' Oblate Fathers. He received the degree of Bachelor of Arts from the Oblate College and Seminary in Natick 'and is presently com­pleting his theological studies there.

As is part of the training of all oblates, Rev. Gravel was actively engaged in the Oblate ministry through catechetical and social work during his college studies. One of the original members of the Kumbaya Folk Singers, he has performed at youth meetings throughout southern New En­gland. At the request of his su­periors he also spent several Summers ai Catholic University in Washington, studying journal­ism.

Rev. Gravel will be one of ·three Oblates ordained priests for St. John the Baptist Province this year. After completion of his theological studies in May, Father Gravel will begin one year of intense pastoral training in Washington before receiving a definite ,assignment.

The 150-year-old Oblate) con­gregation is now at work on every continent,with five prov-' inces in the United States. The Oblate Fathers' and Brothers have been serving the people of this area for a number of years through Our Lady of Fatima Retreat House in Manville and through numerous parish mis­sions. ,

crees have placed a special em­phasis on ~he role of the layman and the discussion f 0 1," mat planned for our delegates will give them -important insights

'into the leadership that will,be required of thein."

Thousands Reached Father Powers indicated that

over 12,000 Catholic students at ­tend public high schools in the Fall River Diocese. Most of their' continuing religious education is provided by parish - operated CCD schools of religion, supple­mented by Diocesan activities such as the Leadership Program.

Brother Tho mas Mulryan, C.S.C., a faculty member at Taunton's Coyle High School and a CCD teacher in that city, is general chairman of the Leader­ship Pro g ram. Proceedings, which will open at 8:30 Satur­day morning, will conclude with. a dinner for delegates and spon­sors at 6:3C in the evening. About 300 delegates are expected, but Brother Mulryan emphasized that eleventh-hour registrations may still be arranged by inter­ested students through parish priests.

Belgian Cardanal Continued from Page One

when 'Pope John XXIII asked him to submit a plan outlining what the Council should attempt to accomplish. Pop~ John alluded to the suggestions made by Car­dinal Suenens in his address on September 1962 one month be­fore the Council opened.

Following the death of Pope John XXIII in 1963 Cardinal Suenens was named as one of the four 'moderators of the Council by Pope Paul VI. During Vati ­can Council II the Cardinal in­tervened in behalf ,of a perma­nent diaconate and suggested that bishops retire after the. age· of 75. In 1964 he was named as a member of the coordinating commission of the Council.

"We are especially fortunate · to have Cardinal Suenens speak to CICOP on Latin America in relation to the Universal Church," said Archbishop John P. Cody, chairman of the U. S. Bishops' Subcommittee for Inter­American Cooperation. "Cardinal Suenens' presentation of the en­cyclical Pacem in Terris before the United Nations at the reque'st of Pope John XXIII clearly dem­onstrated his effectiveness as a speaker. The CICOP audience is certain to benefit from his learned insights into the impor­tance of Latin America to the Universal Church and the world."

So&~Dnfl'w rr®~eB'rn~nOn

· Pltmli'il$ ~e~©«;tmti@mJ ' WASHINGTON (NC) - The

National Federation of Sodalities has announced reorganization plans, including the relocation of its nationa~ headquarters from this city to St. Louis, effective Jan.!.'

The reorganization' was an­nounced by NFS President Rol­land Smith of Cleveland follow­ing action taken at the annual

,meeting here of the board of directors.

Father Joseph F. MacFarlane, S. J., director of the National Sodality Service Center (for­merly the Queen's Work), will direct the national headquarters. The Society of Jesus, which has owned aild managed the Queen's Work and the NSSC for more than 50 years, will relinquish all control as soon as the NFS is ready to provide its own direc­tor and assume complete man­

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Page 19: 12.15.66

Seekonk ·In No"y Debut: '. :'THE 'ANCHOR""'-Oiocese'of' FaifFiver":':'Thurs. Dec. 15, 1966 19

Holy- Family of New'; Bedfo';d' $®ft 'fr@ Ke~!?' Ch@Mplorro~hID~ ~MTI ~D~~d Great ~®h~TJIlrm~tD'lkEjIP

IBy Petel1' &ll'~elk . N OJr~m mIngllil CO@aelll \180 §erw®§ (IDS CYO Baske~ll1l~llli 1Re:ifer~~

Good things come in small packages and Coach Jack Nobrega's Holy Family High basketball quintet of New lBY. JOE MiRANH)A .:'-\, ..··l Bedford will be out to prove the wisdom of this age-old John V. Donnelly Jr. of Fall

River is a member of the basket­adage in the soon-to-start eight-club' Narragansett scholas­ball team at the Southeasterntic league. The New Bedford like a well drilled club that will, Massachusetts Technological In­

parochial secondaJrY institu­ in time, provide stiff competi ­ stoitute. tion has one of the smallest, tion for all opponents.. The War­ The six foot, two inch senior if oot the smallest, boy-en­ riors playing in the Narry is majoring in Business Adminis­rollments of any school within !League Jor the f~rst time this tration and plans a career in the confines of the diocesan ter­ year can be counted on to win teaching. Coming from a family ritorial lines but every year it their share of games. of educators, John hopes to en­ranks among the best in basket­ Diman launched its season on ..ter the guidance field upon grad­ball in its class. . a uation in June.winning note, besting Bristol

Plenty of Height County Agricultural School 39­ Donnelly is cast in a reserve And, again this Winter it looks 34. Coach Angelo Stavros will role on the basketball team by

Uke Nobrega's Holy family club depend on seniors Ed Bednarz coach Phil Wetterland, who de­is the one to beat in the Narry and Walt Korzeniowski to lead scribes his services 'to SMTI as circuit. the Voke contingent. Diman, an "most valuable."

Defending New England Cath­ Big Familyaggressive team, gives up 100 olic tournament (Class B) cham­ much in the height department The Holy Name parish hoop­pion Holy Family will be led ster is one of six children andto be considered a serious threat by high-scoring steve Lawless to win the league title. resides with his parents Mr. and in its bid for a repeat first-place Mrs. John V. Donnelly at 189'Prevost Cops Opener finish. Lawless, 6-4, along with Coach Doug Baxendale, a for­ Garden Street.

mer Durfee High star athlete,Dennis Kenney, 6-2, and Bob John's father is the principal Pariseau, 6-1, will give oppo­ marked his. varsity coaching de­ of Henry Lord Junior High nents a grea~ deal of trouble in but in successful fashion as his School and his mother, a teacher

Prevost High club turned backthe rebounding department. at Morton Junior High School. Steve Daughty and Joe Muraco Three sisters preceded John into. Tiverton, 50-35. The Maple Leafs

will rely on defense in their at ­supply the Blue Wave with two the Donnelly family, Pat, Mrs. tempt to capture the league hon­excellent front courtmen and Patricia Reycorft of Peabody;

round out a well balanced unit. ors. Wayne Levesque and Gil .Meg, Mrs. Mary Margaret Peter­Chouinard provide the offensiveHoly Family, Prevost and son of Annapolis, Md. and Eileen,

Dimen Vocational of Fall River' punch for the Fall River team who resides in New ;Haven, and Westport High do not partic­ but they will need help if Pre­ Conn. and is employed at Yale ipate in football but when the University.vost is to match Holy Family. action shifts to the hardwoqds Case High of Swansea has two John Jr. attended Mount St. these schools often produce the starters and five capable reserves Charles Academy in Woonsocket, best teams in the Narry circuit. returning from last year's com­ but a younger sister, Ann and

Off to Good Start bine. Coach Bob Gordon hopes brother, Tom are both students Coach '~obrega knows that be­ these veterans will jell into a at RM.C. Durfee High School in

ing the favorite means more top contender. Fall River. pressure than being an under­ Gerry Kay, who led Case in Good Rebounder dog. He bas been diligently pre­ scoring last year, is looked to Donnelly's major asset· to the paring bis charges for the first for another stellar effort. Bruce SMTI hoop squad is his rebound­game Dec. 20 against North At­ Lopes, 5-10, Dave Ferguson, 6-0, JOHN DONNELLY OF SMTI

ing prowess arid his ability to tleboro in New Bedford in an and George Jenkinson, 6-3, score from underneath. Wetter­attempt to prove prognosticatol'lll should give the Cardinals the ad­ land said he has called on John son under coach Arnie Oliver of lIlis senior year when Donnel137 oorrect in their evaluation of his ditional board strength needed to help clear the backboards in New Bedford. was named to a AIl-Rhode 1slamB squad. to supplemeQt their offense. Case tight games and the Fall River SS President Interscholastic League first team

is a darkhorse in the race. at tackle.Dighton-Rehoboth has good youth has done a good job. John Jr. is president of the beight in Marcelino Cabral and Burns Has Problem "He is a team player, knows student Senate at SMTI and was John also enjoyed success ·01;}

two capable performers in Dave Westport will host Case in the the game well and has experi­ the hardwood as a high school·a member of that group as a Horrocks and Don Backlund but league opening Jan, 3 in a game ence," Wetterland said. Donnelly junior. Donnelly is also a mem­ senior when his stellar play as may lack the depth necessary to which may well forecast the type is also regarded as an excellent ber of the Varsity Club at· col­ forward helped Mt. St. Charle~ stay with Holy Family. Coacb of season in store for both teams. defensive pl,ayer by the SMTI lege and has been for four years. to a winning record. George Lelievre's Falcons took Westport should be stronger coach. Donnelly has been a credit t@A 1963 graduate of Mt. st. II big 'step in the right direction than in the past few seasons but The 22-year-old forward poss­ Charles, Donnelly' was a star himself, his parents and teachers,when they defeated Class A op­ exactly how much more potent sesses a good jump shot from both academically and athleti~performer on his high school'sponent Taunton, 56-47, quite an remains to be seen. A victory in around the key and has been in­ football team and earned letters cally throughout his young Hie. accomplishment for a Class C the debut could give the West­ strumental in SMTI's early suc­ His accomplishments in thein basketball.llchool. Dighton opens the Narry port club the incentive it needs. cess on the hardwood. class room and on the playingDonnelly played middle guardseason at Holy Family on Jan. 3. Coach Tom Burns of Somer­ Donnelly has also found time field enhance his chances for non defense and tackle on offense . Rhody Winner set is counting on former junior to add part time employment to successful career.for Mt. St. Charles and was aA former Providence College varsity performers. He has seven his schedule While maintaining fierce competitor on the gridiron.kloopster, Coach Dick Bessette jWl'iors and a sophomore on his a B average. One of his jobs is All-Statell-man varsity team. The Bluewill send his Seekonk five into as a referee of basketball in the HilS efforts were rewarded inNarry action against Diman Vo­ Raider mentor is trying to find Fall River Catholic Youth Or­catlonalon Jan. 3. Bessette came a starting five to better last sea­ ganization. SAVE MONEY ON to Seekonk from' Sacred Heart son's record of 10 wins and six Donnelly was also a fullback Academy of Pawtucket where defeats. on SMTI's soccer team whicb be compiled one of the best Runner.-Up Race enjoyed a most successful sea­ 6lf2% YOUR OIL HEAT!

I I

,., .~ ,~

I I I

1

/' :"/' ,Vi>

~ ~representing public school par­enis and teachers. . It; ELECTRICAL.. • fror detailed information

The petition asked the court to "~ . Contractons: J B : write torestrain U. S. Education Com­missioner Harold Howe II and . ~. iii III OfARLES A. MURPHYSecretary John W. Gardner of ~~ . : lUMBER CO.:

~~~. Ilegistered Representativethe U. S. Health, Education snc! . Welfare Department from allo­ ""lIic/(~M145 Pond Street'~~. ­cating the funds under the 1965 "... _ So. Dartmouth • Winchester. Mass.Educ~f1on. Act. ~~. .~, III and Hyannis ._ fA 9-2696 AnchThe suit charges that the act violateli the first amendment of , ~. ~~

a~ : §o. Dartmouth 997-9384 : NClme .. tributing tax-raised funds "to the U. S. Constitution by con­

9.44 County St. ~,~ • Hyan.,is 2921 • Address . .HEATING ·OILsupport of institutions which New Bedfor~ . ~... _. - 1l- ..fI_ teach the. tenetll of a IllhUl'ch." .... ............--.... ....-6 .. , •••••••••••·•••••1 City : :.: .

records among Rhode Island Paul Charest is the only re­coaches. His teams won 113 turning starter at Somerset. A games while losing only 32. pair of 6-2 juniors are battling

Seekonk dropped its opener to for the pivot post nod. They are Norton, 62-53, but they looked Kevin McGee and Dana Hilliard.

Two other starters will be chosen from a trio' including

Ask Court to Stop John Zacamy, Tom Burns Jr. and Jay Jew. _Funds to Schools

Holy Family definitely has toNEW YORK (NC)-A suit for be considered a good bet to re­an injunction to restrain alloca­peat as league champion but thetion of federal funds to church­raCe should prove an interestingrelated schools was filed in U. S. battle for runner-up honors.District Court here by a group

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