05.02.68

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fa. CATHOUC CHARITIES AIPIPIEAII. >he ANCHOR BEGINS NEXT SUNDAY Win You Give More Than Yau Ever Gave Before? \

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CATHOUC CHARITIES AIPIPIEAII. ANCHOR >he \

Transcript of 05.02.68

Page 1: 05.02.68

faCATHOUC CHARITIES AIPIPIEAII gthe ANCHOR BEGINS NEXT SUNDAY

Win You Give More Than Yau Ever Gave Before

2 ~~~r~~~H~2~1~DfJ ~ ~Pi~~~t~) f~~~~~l~S ~tsectpe~a ~~ffs -1lfotes~ Inle1sie Ca Mtfilnlmiddot$(CrnDi01 Nreg~ CCCEO (regOllfrer Na~~~~~middot Yo~~tral11$ Wqrk

I tr BishOp Connolly will ble~ Fathers of thesltlqt~dHe~ WtlLmiddot~n J MG~C~ MylSe ~~~ d~~~~~ t~ ~4 ~iigO~i~ $400 Brn Iflgroe~

F A Trac~y Co PIDLADELPmA (NC)shyLIIlI~t CfLUlleII5l Avenue Fall River Saturday Rev FrancIs X Wallace Ph d I h hd _

UoilI ll1JIHI~iiO morning May 11 The ceremony $300 1 a e 1gt la 8 are lOces NOTRE DAME (NC) will come at the beginning of J L Marshall amp Sons Inc director of vocations says tm

The Poor Peoples Campaign an all-day in-service workshop Rt Rev John F Denehy most intensive vocation rampgt for Fall River lirea CCD teach- $200 cruitment programs in 1hllI

in Washingtonmiddot may be the ers Milton Bradley Company Church are centered in Ne~ last great march our last Renovations to the center A friend communities chance to be convinced to do formerly Sacred Hearts Ele- $132 something constructively in mentary School included paint- A Friend Referring to ihe remarks ~

h I I middott t fi d Msgr Thomas J Reese directol1l eae oca commum yon ing and furnishing classrooms $100 of social services for the Wfllo realistic solutions to make the and equipping a lounge book- Walsh Bros Incorporated promise of America come true store and audio-visual area for Sullivan Bros-Printers mington diocese that the CatiP for all Americans according to the benefit of those aciive in Rev middotF Anatole ~srnarais otic Church is guilty of whib Father Theodore M Hesburgh Confraternityof Christian Doc- Rev James A Dury racism due to its lack of NegrQ

d t f th Umiddot priests and nuns Msgr Edshy eSC presl en 0 e mver- trine work Rev Albert F Shovelton sity of Notre Dame An open house at the center Rey James A Clark ~rd J Thompson said

middot F~tlJer H~burgh S8id tha~ will be held for the public from IaSalette Shrine-Attleboro If there is any organizationpeople canhrush off or con- ~ _I R which is seeking Negro candlFo demn-the rilarchbutmiddot you cannot 2 19 5 Satur~ay and Sunda ~ bull i ao ijver dates for the priesthood and ~ isolate or insulate yourself from afternoon~ May 25 a~d 26 ~ $110~ -- ligioUs life it is the orgaruzatiOfl

the pro1gtlerptbat tle marchpor- VhitesFamilyDiilinglwom- of Catholic vocation directors1O

trl1YS because it win continue ~ ~mn~~tl IlllJI ~lJ~emiddotmiddotI White Spa Caterers to exist in yuur community tQ)Ul9l1(J(QJU9i)~ ~v~ti $1000 BrandirigMsgr Reeses coma

ments uninformed and rnisinshyuntil you have found realistic rl1IIpIal CIllIIIlemiddot1I F an River N$at ional Bank means of eliminating it Ir W ll ~ ~ 9 g 1Il U 75o formed Msgr Thompson saicll

We cannot all march he REV THOMAS ~ PLUNKETT BUCK HILL FALLS (NC)- J A Schroeder Construction If Msgr Reese had evermiddot continued but each of us can Dr Eugene Carson Blake Inc tended a meeting of Catholid do something even more mean- American Presbyterian leade - $508 lt vocatIon directozjl~ he wouWI

middot ingfulereate equality ofmiddot op- Fall River Native now serving as general secre- Mr~ amp Mrs JOhn~ l4CGinn know how deeplyrConcerned 1PIl portUIlityined1Jootion employ- tary of the World Cotmcimiddotof (Leary Press) arcent in seeking out aUthentifj ment and housing in our com p middot ChmiddotIe Churches told delegateS to the Mr~~ MrS James j BullOck vOcations in the Negro coma

munity This is whatthemareh lon~er In 1 wccs U S Confer~nce con- IdeaLLauridry-middotmiddot munity His lopsi~ed ernphamr is all about SANTIAGO (NC)-Twen- vention herein Pennsylvania ~middot19 iiv middot$30cf I~gt dOes no serVice temiddot1he white

Fatner Hesburghs stiltement ty~five years ago in March preach the Gospel to a hungry Geiier3l Cleaning amp Sales Co oommunity to the black comshy on the PoormiddotPeoples Campaign man without middotjpving him food IDe middote t munity orto the Church COJlDoo

cllme in responsemiddot to 8 request o~ 1943thefll~t~~p o is both futile and cruel 0 FjrstFederal Savings amp Loan munity from Notre Damesmiddot Student 12 Milryknoij mlsslpn~rs ~r- In a plea uriingihe involve- rlAss()C

Government which is organiz- rivedin tilfs South ~~Jican ment of middotthe Christian churches i 258 iog ac~llectiontof clothing ltmcl CopntIY throughout tlie world inmiddotthe W~b~ Oil CompiulY Cardi~al P~Qlsel

~~n~y ~o~ use by (ca~paign TodayChile is ho~e 19r 51 sOcial economic and political gt $200 sp0Jlsors~ yenllry~nolllrs includingafter 8 que~tions of oJr tiriteDr Biake FilnRiver Gl~ Co

quarter of a century of work said middotmiddotmiddotSt Annes Shrine I Ga~dhi~s Jdeals here for each four of middotthe origi- n is because I believe the $~75 BHOPAL (NC) - ValerimfiPrelate Protests hal group - Maryknoll Fathers Christian faith most fully com- RoQery AWl1cox Cardinal Gracias of Bombay hall Thomas J Piunkett James V prehends the reality of human $150 called for Indias rededicatiOli

~Hogmiddot Killings Manning Joseph H Cappel and life and exis~nce on this planet rextile Workers Umon of Am- to the ideall of Mahatma Gandhl P Martin ~unqe that I believe the churches have erica AFL-CIO during celebrations of the GaaaDES MOI~ES (NC)-The exshy

ecutive director of the National Father Plunkett a Fail River the task and opportunity - of ~10~ d1i birth centennial next year middot Catholic Rural-Life Confererice native now has as his home awakening a responsible werld Manuel CHllarlo-Real E~te The cardinal a member of the has protested hog killings and address the residence of his society Confirmation Class-19G8 OL mltional celebration committee burials by members of the Na sister-in-law Mrs Robert Clif- Pointing out that the WCC of Angels Parish told a meeting here that it Watl tional Farmers Organization ford 23 Bridge Street North and the Catholic Church are T~ompson Apex Company Gandhi who gave India thcl TIOga Sportswear Co(NFO) seeking higher prices for Easton pl~dgoomiddot to full cooperatIon in P fi Oil Co precious gift of ~arizationIV

their animals the area of Christian social re- aCI c mpanyA reunion held at the Maryshy The state that Gandhi CJIoooI object vigorously to the sponsibility Dr Blake pointed Peerless La~dry

knol Center House in Santiago dained the cardinal declareddestruction of meat in a world out that the major problem to Laura Curtam amp Drapery Comarked the 25th anniversary was not a Godless state but cmesuffering from protein deficienshy be faced by the two groups is Inc At a luncheon Very Rev Rayshy in which recognition will becy Msgr Edward W ORourke the growing gap between the D amp D Sales amp Servicemond A Hill MM Maryknoll given to all religions in spitesaid Particularly while an orshy rich nations and the poor In Memory of Mr amp Mrs

Superior of Chpe congratulated James W Kearns of the fact that India has B preshyganization such as CROP (the the men and thanked them not dominantly Hindu and alarpmiddotmiddotInmiddot Memory of Revmiddot Gilorgeonly for their wo~derfui sershy McNamee Moslem population

Christian Rural Overseas Pro- gram) is prepared to deliver the M~ss Orelo

vice to the Chutch and to Maryshy In Memory ofRt Rev Edmeat to those who need it Today when moral and spilgtshyknoll but -for their example FRIDAY - Mass of preceding mund J Ward itual values are at a low ebbCROP announced shortly after to all Maryknollers ~unday IV Class White

the rash of hog killings began when our hold on the spiritualNewmiddot Bedford in March that it had made ar Since Chile became a middotmission or vein of the ancient civilizatioo

5S Alexander amp Companions r bull $100 rangements with a large national country Maryknollers have eSshy is loosening when sacredriesv

Red Glory Preface ofEaster Blue Ribhon Laundrytablished 60 churches and chapshy of family life and dignity 02 donated to the Church World SATURDAY-St Monica Widshy Taunton meat packer to prOCess hogs

els and 95 outstations Credit women is in peril Gandhi hl Service Organization middotf~r use unions arid cooperative schQols there in memory to tell us Dei ow III Class Wltite Mass $150 overseas clinics and dispensaries social to forget ourselves Proper Glory Preface of Particular Council of Taunton

~No casemiddot has come to my atshy service centers and school lunch St Vincent de PaulEaster tention of an acceptance by an programs have been some of the $100 NFO group of the CROP offer many projects formed by Maryshy SUNDAY-Third Sunday after Alfred S OKeefe

knollers for the people hereMsgr ORourke stated Easter II Class White Mass James E Miles Insurance Co He said an Iowa NFO group Ordained in 1927 Proper Glory Creed Preface St Marys Womens Guild

indicated it would donate 2000 of EasterEach of the four originalhogs to charity rather than deshy NlIfIh AUleboro

priests to Chile who are still MONDAY - Mass of precedingstroy the animals if meat packshy $200servjng today saw service in the Sunday IV Class White Massers would sign price contracts Society of St Vincent de PaulOrient firstby a certain date The hogs Proper Glory Preface of Sacred Heart C0n ference

Easterwere shot later on a farm near Father Plunkett from North $100 Story City An estimate of the Easton Mass was ordained in W H Riley amp Son IncTUESDAY-St Stanislaus Bishshyvalue of the destroyed hogs was 1927 and assigned at that time from $75000 to $85000

fORTY HOURS DEVOTHON

May3-St Vincent Home Fall River

May 5-st Marys Attleboro St Joseph New Bedford

May 12--8t Patrick Falshymouth

Mt st Joseph Academy Fall River

tHE AllCllOi

op Martyr III Class Red Cape Codto Korea He is now stationed Mass Proper Glory Preface $101in Santiago although his first of Easter Falmouth Diner FalmouthChilean assignment was to Chil shy $100 Ian WEDNESDAY-Mass of precedshy Mr amp Mrs Michael Ames

~g Sunday IV Class WhiteFather Manning from Queens middotmiddotFalmouth ViUage New York was ordained THURSDAY - St Gregory Nashy Mramp Mrs L C Antonellis in 1935 and assigned to Kaying zillDzen Bishop Confessor Falmouth First assigned to Talca Chile and Doctor of the Church m The Wood Lumber Companyhe now serves in Chillan Class White Mass Proper Flilmouth

Glory (Epistle The justFather Cappel from Cincinshy man 0 00)nati Ohio was ordained in 1935 also His first mission assignshyment was to Peng Yangmiddot He - Necrology served in La Serena and Chil shylan ~hilemiddot before his present MAY 12 assignment at Curepto Rev John F cfa Valles 1920

Father Dunn from Flushing Chaplain United States Army New York was ordained in 1938

Second Class Postage Paid at Fall River and originally assigned to Korea MAY 13 Mass Published every Thcnda) at 410 He irst served at Temuco Rtmiddot Rev Osias Boucher 1955Highland Avenuet Fall River MaSs 02722 Ily tbe Cllt1lollc ess of tile Diocese of rail Chile andmiddot is DOW assiped PastorBlessecl Sacrament PaD River Subscrlptiol -Ica IIr _n ~ per Santiago Biver

A Friend Falmouth

D D Sullivan ampSons FUNERAL HOME 469 LOCUSTSTREET FALL RIVER MASS

672-3381 Wilfred C James Eo

Driscoll SuIIiva Jr

JEfltm~V ~ SULLIVAN JliooWtEfl(]Jn Rome

550 Locust Street Fain I1Uver Mass

67~-2391

Rose IE SullivlUl Jellfrey E Sullivan

~I II DOANrmiddot8tALmiddotAM~S

INCORPORATEO_

bull HYANNIS bull HARWICHPORT

bull Sount YAAMOU11t

WThe ANCHOR An Anchor ofhe Soul Sure anti Firm-$1 Paul

He~rtHouse-to-House Appeal Starts Sunday

Annual Contributions Climb Purchasing Power Regresses

The first Catholic Charities Appeal in the Fall In a letter read at all masses in all churches River Diocese in 1942 realized a total of $150781 of the diocese on Sunday last Bishop Conn~lly

The 25th annual Appeal last year netted $772shy said709 - five times as much

Fall River Mass May 21 1968 While this growth may seem impressive at AI we prepare our Charities programme for first blush the diocesan Ohurchs expenses to meet the year ahead weare especially mindful of the

Vol 12 No 18 1968 $400 per Year an ever expanding program have skyrocketed even compalsion of Chris-to After all Our Lord came PRICE IOc

more than the quintuple climb in receipts from the into the world to reveal the goodness of God in charitable of all faiths within the diocese ways that human eyes and hearts could see and

Many of the present diocesan social services under~tand We are called Christians We should were not in existence 26 years ago while others be like our Savior Our Blessed Lord expects that were in their formative-infant stage He says I have given you an example that you

may do likewise Our neighbors in need look toBack in 1942 some housewives will remember that the bacon they served father with his eggs us for the compassion of Christ And God knows in the morning cost 19-eents-a-pound as contrasted the number and variety of crying needs grow from

year to year with todays price of approximately $1 Roasts were selling at 19-cents-a-pound back a quarter century One reason for this is found in the fact that ago This type of me~t today is just about six times problems formerly hidden in the home are now as costly open to the public eye -some to excite pity in

A leg of lamb was advertised at 15-cents-ashy the heart others to frighten us into action Such pound when the first Catholic Charities Appeal as these may strike at any level from children was made 26 year ago Oranges in 1942 were 19shy and certainly through youth into the domestic cents-a-dozen courts to reach fulfillment in the frustration of old

MONSIGNOR LEVASSEUR MQNSlGNOR CHILDS Hence while costs have gone up and up for age The Diocese of Fall River has been equipped every family expenses have been climbing steadily to deal competently with sueh problems in the in the operation of the diocesan agencies So much services we staff and support ~ that the purchasing power of last years recordshyM~nsignori Mark Each year in our Charities Appeal we givebreaking total is no greater - if it is as much as

assurance of continuing and expanding works inshy- the first realization 26 years ago even though volving employment for many hundreds in Homes the dollar total is moreGolden Jubilees for the Aged Serviees for youth social relationshyEmphasizing the many dire needs of the dishyships care for the mentally retarded and the likeTwo monsignori in the Diocese of Fall ocese notwithstanding the accomplishments of The institutions are visible evidence of where theRiver will celebrate the golden jubilees of the past quartercentury Most Rev James L Oharity doll~r goes But many people fail to realizetheir ordination to the Priesthood on May 18 Connolly Bishop of Fall River again called upon what Catholic Charity does for tne local economy

lU~ Rev Msgr Felix S Ohilds pastor an understanding laity for even greater sacrifice Tum 10 Page Four -in this years Appeal Turn to Page Six

Women of Diocese 17 Marian Awards Convene Saturday For Educators

The ecumenical spirit of the post-Conciliar age has been manifested by the Diocesan Council of Catholic Woshy Bishop Connolly announced today that 17 Marian men in the extension of their invitations to the Polish Natshy Medals will be awarded to persons who have been involved tonal Church St Georges Greek Orthodox Church Ahavath in the field of education throughout the Diocese of Fall Achim Synagogue Temple Riv~r The awards ceremony will take place on Friday at Sinai Tifereth Israel Syna- River have named the following Feehan High School Attleshygogue the YWCA and the to serve as registrars boro during the Diocesan Mathieus School Fall River has

District I-Fall River Mrs given 49 years of teaching sershyTeacher Association ConvenshyChurchwomen United to at- Orner Levesque Miss Jacqueline vice to the Diocesetiontend the 15th Annual Conven- Mathieu and Mrs Raymond She has 17 years of service astion of the DCCW scheduled for Poisson The following will receive the a superior in various conventsSaturday at Stang High No District 2-New Bedford Mrs Maria~ Medal of the community and has beenDartmouth Joseph P Harrington and Miss Mother Jeanne Theresa Desshy active in music and dramatics

Everett S Allen assistant ed- Frances McCarthy biens SSJ and Sr Marie Cecile in the schools staffed by theitoI of the New Bedford Stand- District 3 -Taunton Mrs Clement SSJ Sisters of St Josephcud-Times will be the principal George E Lemieux and Mrs Sr Mary Thomas OP isSr Mary Thomas Holloranspeaker His topic is A Ques- Alfred C Leonard presently vicaress of the comshyOP and Sr Mary Paulinelion of Morality District 4 - AttJeboro Mrs munity at Dominican AcademyDesrochers OPThree workshops are sched- George Bauza ant Mrs Vincent Sister Suzanne Breckel RSM Turn to Page Seventeenuled for the convention They McGinn Sr Virginia Grenier CSC will be on Community Mfairs District 5-Cape Cod and the Sr Anne Denise Neylon SND Confraternity of Christian Doc- Islands Mrs Philip Dempsey Tealaquohers to Hear Sr Mary Aloysia Sullivan Criticize Daleystrine and Church Communities and Mrs Annie Eldridge SUSC and Sr John Elizabeth

The co-chairmen of the regis- Mrs Cecile Cummings of Fall f$yc~oIOSlY Head Creamer SUSC Order to Shoottration committee Miss Adrienne River and Mrs James Souza of Sister Mary Felicita HeffershyLemieux of Taunton and Mrs Taunton head the committee for At Salve Regnna nan RSM Sr Miriam ONeill Chicago RiotersMichael J McMahon of Fall Clergy Religious and guests RSM Sr Maureen HanleySister Suzanne Breckel RSM Sr Mary Urban Geddes WASHINGTON (NC)-A

RSM PhD will discuss RSM and Sr Mary Carmela white Catholic priest toldMsgr Higgins Stresses Importance Creativity Challenge to Corbett RSM newspaper editors here that Conformity at the aftershy Sr Grace de Sales Flanagan Mayor Richard J Dale) will MSBTOf Occupational Safety laws noon session of the diocesan

~get some return gunfire ifSr joall Louise RowneyWASHINGTON (NC) - Vigshy Safety and Health Act of 1968 Catholic Teachers Association Chicago police carry out hisconvention in Attleboro today OLVM erous immediate support is The legislation calls for the order to shoot arsonists andBro Albertus Smith CSCneeded if Congress is 10 enact esbablishment and enforcement Sister Suzanne is the chairshy looters during riotsMiss Mary Cabrallegislation this year to halt the of federal safety and health man of the Psychology Qepartshy Father James E Groppl

mounting toll of occupational standards for the workplace and ment and Director of Psychoshy Mother Jeanne Theresa SSJ whose civil rights activities in deaths and injuries in the research and training grants-inshy logical Services at Salve Regina has held administrative posts Milwaukee have kept him in

United States Msgr George G aid to states College in Newport with the Sisters of St Joseph constant battle with that citysfor the past 22 years and atHiggins director Social Action Every working day of the More than 800 religious and police force joined Atty Gen

Department U S Catholic Con- present is on the administrative year finds 55 killed 3500 disshy laity will hear the Newport nun Ramsey Clarkmiddot in criticizingstaffference said here bull abled and over 27000 injured at the annual twoday conclave Daleys order during a panel

Msgr Higgins addressed repshy on the job Msgr Higgins hold which is being held at Bishop In addition Sister organized discussion before the American resentatives of some three dozen the meeting Such a sacrifice Feehan High School and promoted the educational Society of Newspaper Editors national groups of an organizashy is not necessary The goods and Sister Suzanne received both The more oppressive a policeprograms for the Sisters of St tional meeting of a joint comshy services our nation provides in her Master of Arts Degree and department becomes FatherJoseph mittee to support the Adminisshy greater abundance than any her Doctorate in Philosophy Sr Marie Cecile SSJ pri shy Groppi said the greater is OUI

trations proposed Occupational Turn to Page Four from Boston College mary grade teaeJ1er at 81 Turn IlI Page Four

4 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 21968

DDocesan Students Enter Home Stretc~ of Study Beforre Year End Examinations loom

As Diocesan students entered the home stretch of study before year-end exams Springs the Thing was the theme of a seasonal dance held by Jesus-Mary Academy juniors in Fall River Donna Lacerda general chairman

STUDENT COUNCILLORS Student council members at Coyle High School Tallntonare from left seated James Sherrin St Marys parish Taunton and Frank McGlligan Holy Name Fall River both senior representatives rear Gary Kingsbury St Paul Taunton council president Lawshyrence Costa Sacred Heart Taunton senior representative

was aided by Diane Trial publicity and Diane Froshyment decorations At Mt St Mary Academy also Fall River students were serious deshyspite the season as they heard an exhibition debate presented by the Anne Brownell Memoshyrial Debate Society Kathy Polak and Dawn Hannafin deshyfended the affirmative and Cynthia OConnell and Carol Vasconcellos the negative side of the question whether narshycotics should be legalized Doushyble purpose of the program was to give students an opportushynity to learn about an important current problem and to demonshystrate debate techniques

The Prevost Glee Club will hold its annual concert Sunday May 5 at the auditorium of Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River Guest performers will include the SHA glee club the Dominican Academy glee club and the Cathedral Choristers from St Marys Cathedral Fall River

Among proficiency certificate winners at the annual educashytional night program of the Southeastern Mass Chapter of the Administrative Management Society were students from Dishyocesan highs Receiving awards for proficiency in spelling and mathematics were Diane Tremshyblay St Anthonys High New Bedford Jeannine Dubois Mt St Mary Doris Desrosiers Jesus-Mary Academy and Pashytricia Murphy Rose DeSouza Kathleen Kurowski Margaret Mary McIntyre and Elizabeth Saulnier from Holy Family New Bedford The girls were high scorcrs in a competitive exam open to students in all area high schools

At Holy Family High in New

Safety Laws Continued from Page Three

other country need not be stained with the blood of its workers

Nationwide standards are needed he said to stop a tendency to compete at the exshypense of health and safety in the plant the mine and on the construction site

This is a false type of compeshytion he said noting that the National Safety Council has figshyures to prove that investment in work safety and health pays off in financial as well as human terms

l1sgr Higgins and Dr Lorin E Kerr presid~nt of Group Health Associatioll of America Inc wele named co-chairmen of the joint committee to supshyport the safey legislation

William R Hutton executive director of the National Council of Senior Citizens was named executive secretary of the group

Among the organizations repshyresented at the meeting were the American Public Health Asshysociation Blue Cross - Blue Shield Group Health Associashytion of America AFL-CIO American Arbitration AssociashytIon National Education Assoshyciation General Federation of Womens Clubs YMCA YWCA International Brotherhood of Teamsters United Mine WarkshyelS American Nurses Associashytion National Federation of Business and Professional Womshy

ens Clubs National Association of Colored Womens Clubs and National Falmers Union

Bedford the debate society was far from idle during the vacashytion week reports Michael Corshynell At the Eastern Nazarene High School Tournament HF representatives won a third pl~ce trophy Debaters were Cynthia Rego Karl Fryzel Margaret McJntyre and Kevin Harrington And at the Daniel Webster Tournament at Melrose High School the ifF squad won first place in both the chamshypionship and novice divisions and second place over-all for the best total school win-loss record

Today Karl Fryzel and Cindy Rego are debating against Bishshyop Cassidy High of Taunton in the place-off round for the Narry League championship Both HF debaters have 10-2 records and Cindy has recently added to her laurels by receiving complete scholarships including room board and tuition to both Pembroke and Radcliffe

At Prevost a MoUiers Day whist is planned by the senior class for 8 to 11 Saturday night May 11 at Jesus-Mary auditoshyrium -

And at Jesus~Marymiddot the high honors list for the thirdquarter has been announced Seniors on the list are Diane Dugal and Madeleine St Denis junior is Doris Desrosiers sophomore is Danielle Chouinard and freshshyman is Lucille Nadeau Twenty seniors nine juniors six sophshyomores and six freshmen are on the honor roll and honarable mention was merited by three seniors and three juniors

Social orker Miss Eleanor Tarpy a social

worker from the BlOckton VA Hospital spoke on social work careers recently to interested juniors and seniors at Mt St Mary Academy- She covered most aspects of social work and recommended various colleges for specialization in this area

The Good News Singers were what was happening at Dominishycan Academy and their concert was enjoyed by all comers Also on the DA scene a Latin ban- quet for former Latin students hosted by Sister Helen and her jumor class Italian food and grape juice were on the menu and Latin games were played

Not to be outdone DA Enshyglish students presented The Old Lady Shows Her Medals to the school on Tuesday Also on Tuesday came an evening of coffee house entertainment titled The Looking Glass

Rev William Cullen SJ spoke at a mother-daughter Communion supper held Sunshyday at Mt St Mary and also

from the Fall River school sevshyeral girls accompanied by middotSisshyter Mary Phyllis attended a National Honor Society convenshytion at Cardinal Spellman High School

Mounties Elizabeth Perry Laurie Sampson and Kerry Mello returned to Rhode Island College Sunday to evaluate a

conference recently held there on the subject of teen tensions

Thirteen Mount juniors cam paigned f6r office in the stushydent council with elections takshying place yesterday

The girl middotreceiving most votes will be president with the next three in line taking the offices of vice-president secreshytary and tImiddoteasurer This method replaces the previous system of separate votes for each office

Criticize Daleys Continued from Page Three

desire to resist to the point where we dont care whether we live or die any longer

Double Standard

In Milwaukee he maintained the police through constant harassment and intimidation had dehumanized the Negro He said a double standard of justice exists in the city and under it harsh penalties are

given Negroes and minor penshymiddot alties given whites for the same offenses

These kind of injustices he said are now apparent to the black community

Referring directly to Daleys order (April 15) that Chicago police should use deadly force against arsonists and shoot to maim or cripple looters during urban rioting Father Groppi said

If he uses that kind of treatshyment he is going to get some reshyturn gunfire and I think it will be justified It is outrageous to shoot down a 12-year-old kid for steaking a six-pack of beer

Atty Gen Clark also warned the newspaper editors that shooting of rioters by police

middot could lead to a very dangerous escalation of racial violence in

middot American cities

Exccssic Use

Clark said it was clear from recent riots that only a very tiny fraction of Americas Neshygroes are prepared to resort to

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Order to Shoot lawlessness and violence

Excessive use of violence by police he said could drive a larger portion of the black comshymunity to terrorist and guershyrilla tactics

Clark noted that more than 100 cities had outbleaks OfV10shylence following the assassinaUon of Dr Martin Luther King But police generally acted wiih balance and because of that there were fewer deaths and less property damage in aJl of these disorders than we had- in one riot last year he said

To Discuss New Vincentian Rule

The monthly meeting of the Fall River Particular Council of the Society of St Vincent de Paul will be held in Notre Dame parish -Tuesday night May 7 Benediction will be gi ven in Notre Dame Church at 745 and the meeting will follow middotat the parish St Vincent de Paul Store 1799 Pleasant Street Camp apshy

plications will be distributed and the new Vincentian rule will be discussed

Members planning to attend the regional meeting of Vincenshytians May 31 through June 2 are asked to send their registration blanks to the Catholic Welfare Bureau PO Box 1565 Fall River as soon as possible

Golden Jubilees Continued from Page Three

emeritus of the Sacred Heari Parish Fall River and Rt Reu Msgr Annand Levasseur paltol of St Annes Parish New Bedshyford were ordained in st Marys Cathedral Fall River om May HI 1918 by the late Bishop Feehan

Monsignor Childs was bom Oct 23 1891 in CenterviHe (Barnstable) the son of WHtOIil L Childs and the late Emmal McKenney Childs The Monshysignor attended St AnselmlIl College Manchester N H st Marys Seminary in Baltimo~

and the Apostolic Mission Home at Catholic University in 1be nations capital city

He served as an assistant biI several areas They included S1shyFrancis Xavier Hyannis m Josephs No Dighton SacreCl Heart in Fall River which ~ later returned to as pastor

The jubilatian headed five parishes before his retiremem in 1966 In addition to the Sashycred Heart he was also pastor of St Peters Dighton St Patshyricks Somerset St Louis Falli River and the Immaculate Conshyception Fall River

Msgr Childs was long active in the diocesan matrimonial court He served as defendell of the bond promoter of justice and pro-synodal judge In ad~

tion he was chaplain of the Knights of Columbus Councillm 86 Bnd 295 chaplain of the Columbian Squires and taM Assl1Jl1ption Circle Daughien of Isabella Somers~t and also the Assumption Circle FaD River

In 1964 he was elevated btJ Pope Paul to the rank of deshymestic prelate with the title of monsignor

Monsignor Cliilds will retum to the Sacred Heart Clureb Fall River on the evening cd May 16 for a Mass of Thankampshygivingmiddot and a reception in the Sacred Heart School Pine StreeL

Msgr Levasseur was born ilm Fall River the son of the late Napoleon and Georgianna MaFshyehand Levasseur He attended Assumption College WorcesteKo

middotSt Marys Seminary Baltimore and Catholic University WeBbshyin81on

As an assistant the jubilarlaiill served in St John the Baptilri Fall River St Hyacinth New Bedford and St Anthony New Bedford

In 1933 the New Bedfonll middotprelate was named pastor of SL Hyacinths and served there for seven years until his present assignment to St Annes W8IIl announced in 1940

His diocesan appointment include procurator fiscalis II member of the administratiYe council and consultor for parisi priests

A Mass of Thanksgiving wiD be offered at a date to be aDshy

nounced later

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 2 1968

~Ii7 I i j

FIRST COMMUNION Youngsters in special education religion classeS meida Sister Joan Bernadette SND instructor Shelley Lagasse RashyreCeive first Holy Oommunion at Mass celebrated for them at Bishop phe]le Ambrose Dennis Silvares Mrs George F Gifford special education StanK High School North Dartmouth From left Frank Mendonca James -chairman and teacher At right Bishop Connolly congratulates Frank ~nstant Rachel Ambrose Kenneth Pereira Joseph Arruda Sh~uon AI- Mendonca

j~rchbishop Sets Catholic CollegesWarns Catholics of IntercommulnionCollege Program To Become Co-ed For Sem~Dlarians Damages IEcumenism Cause Bishop Sellys KANSAS CITY (NC)-Rockshy

hurst College and A vila College ST PAUL (NC)-Transshy STOCKHOLM (NC)-8wedish mere demonstration of goodwin throughout the Church But here in Missouri will become

Catholics wele warned against If such an act of intercomshy he added pressure groupsk of the college program coeducational in Septemberpernlilting the ecumenical spirit munion were sufficient for comshy seeking reforms contrary to the 1969 the plesidents of the twofor St Paul and Minneapolis to result in an intercominunshy plete unity the whole ecumenishy views of the Church will institutions have announcedseminaries from St Paul ion with separated Christian cal movement would have no achieve nothing for reform or

Until then they said theySeminary to the College of St brethlen that would violate the real meaning ecumenlsm will make a study of areas ofII1omas was announced here by Catholic concept of eucharistic Bishop Taylor said that intershy The bishop questioned whether coordination and cooperationCoadjutor Archbishop Leo C sacramentalism communion is therefore impos- Catholics and Protestants in this between the two private colshyByrne Bishop John E Taylor OM sible for Catholics in principle country have sufficiently coshy leges each of which will retainThe prelate said Nazareth of Stockholm said in his newly despite our grief over this operated in aU fields where its separate identityBall Preparatory Seminary will issued Guidelines on Intershy reality because there are widely there are theological obshyI()

Father Maurice E VanAckshylie continued communion with Separated divergent ideas over such essenshy stacles to such collaboration eren SJ Rockhurst presidentArchbishop Leo Binz of St Brethl-en that the practice of tial question as the hierarchical such as in communications and and Sister Olive Louise CSJintercommunion by Catholics ministry the sacrament of Holy social and educational undershyPaul and Minneapolis issued a Avila president made the jointindividually or collectively with Orders sacrifice and the sacrashy takings and even in spiritual~ree implementing the new announcem(~nt after approval byEvangelical (Protcstant) Chris- ments themselves ecumenism through commonIllOgram and canonically erectshy the two boards of directorstians in this country damages To ignore such considerations prayer

b accommodate seminarians the cause of ecumimism and is the bishop continued is to reshy Only an ecumenism that orshy The objective of the change is making collegiate studies be- opposed to the will of the Cathshy sort to a sort of magic concepshy ganically grows up from inside to broaden and strengthen our ~nning Sept 1 _

_g St John Vianney Se~inary

olic Church tion of the sacrament which can bring about concrete results educational programs and our The guidelines have been disshy would separate it from the pershy even though it may be a slow community services and to proshyThe decree states canonical

tributed to the clergy and Reli shy sonal faith and conviction of process he said vide a richer diversity of opshyooquirements are to be met for gious of Sweden and some of those receiving it tions available in the privatelJl[)pointing officials of the new thelaity Pressure Groups sector of higher education inJeffiinary but that the academshy Priests Aid Families rntercommunion the bishop Kansas City the announcement()e instruction of the students Actually Bishop Taylorsaid is a matter of concern to said fJlld their academic evaluation said we Catholics have someshy Of Arrested Men many Catholics and non-Cathshyare to be handled chiefly times been accused of such a NEWARK (NC) - Fifteen Rockhurst is one of 28 U Solic Christians especially youthselrough the College of St mag-ic idea by Protestants Newark priests have volunteered colleges and universities conshyand students In some quartersThomas Bishop Taylor said he was to participate in a program ducted by the Jesuits Avila ishe noted it is maintained that

Archbishop Byrne said the sympathetic to what he caned which will find them working one of five colleges operated byintelcommunion ill a means of init iatives and impulses arisshy the Sisters of St Joseph ofIbOve to St Thomas will bring with the families of men arshyChristian unity

llbe seminary college program ing from inside the Church and J-eSted by the po]ice for vIolating Car6ndeletHowever the bishop added it ro a certain impa-tience the law Qnto conformity with the Amershy is in the Eucharist the sacrashy

ean system of education It will Members oj the Newarkment of unity that the tragedylmprove the academic and curshy Priests Gro~p an association ofof Christian disunity is mostriculum resources available to Aid for Unemployed clergy the priests will collaboshyevidentIJeminarians he said and enshy rate in a program already inaushy

Theological Realities Mexican-Americansable them to take advantage of gurated under Protestant ausshyTo seek intercommunion bybull more specialized faculty and WASHINGTON (NC) - More pices The invitation to partici shy

a single joint act without regardIDOre extensive physical facili shy than 2500 unemployed persons pate was extended by Dean to the theological realitiesties Cited as examples were the mainly Mexican-Americans will Ledie C Laughlin of Trinitywhich are at the base of theIUbrary science laboratories and receive job preparation and Episcopal cathedralEuchalist he said is to reducephysical education facilities placement services in 11 Southshy The priests will be available tothe Eucharistic celebration to a

Archbishop Byrne said the St western cities under projects anshy prisoners in the varioUS precinct Paul Seminary faculty will be nounced by Labor Secretary stations and courts of the city free to concentrate on the theshy Willard Wirtz and will subequently visit theRochester Priests ologate and to implement plans Approximately $5 million in families of the arrested men ro ~r deeper more intensive Form Assodation Manpower Development and acquaint them with the situashyaludy of theology in accordance Trail1ing Act funds have been tionROCHESTER (NC) - Priests

LUMBER co So Dartmouth and Hyannis

So Dartmouth 997middot9384 Hyannis 2921

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with the granting of the master here have joined the growing earmarked for the projects ~ arts degree in theology for which have been developed bytrend tow a r d independentmiddotwhich preliminary accreditation Mexican - Amercian organizashypriests organizations by formshylas been obtained tions The projects have been deshying a Priests Association of

signed by the staff of OperationThe major seminary will also Roohester SER (Service Employment Reshy~ able to serve those priests The diocese already has a development) with the assistancewho desire advanced work in Priests Council formerly called of the Department of Labor andCbeology studies he said a senate Health Education and WelfareSome 115 priests met to vote

on a constitution for the new Operation SER is directed byHails Example association and elect a 15-memshy Jobs for Progress Inc a nonshy

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope ber coordinating committee profit organization sponsored by Paul has told chaplains to About 230 priests including major Mexican - American orshyItalys Christian labor unions about 20 members of religious ganizations the League of United Qhat their work is a real exshy communities serving in the dioshy Latin American Citizens and

STONEHILL COLLEGE

Summer Session Evening Classes JUNE 24middot AUG 2 630 - 915

UNDERGRADUATE COURSES Liberal Artl bull Bus Admin bull Science bull Math

Write Director of Summer Session 5TONEHILL COLLEGE

IHnplc of the Churchs interest cese have signed up for the the American GI Forum of the N Easton Mass 02356 Tel 238-2052 696-0400 AD the working classes organization United States

6 rm ANCHOR-Diocese ofJloR RiverThurbull May 2 1968 ( CafttMlCYBoya ~ ~ ~ middot12~middot _ bull~-~ ltshy

~ Tribute $tresses Value Shall We Talk Money or Concern Of~iaIW~

OceasiQnally the criticism is leuroveled against Ohurch leaders that they taik money too often

There may be some truth to this Perhaips what they should do is talk concern-the

eoncern that each person has or should have for his brothers and sisters in the family of God

Such a talk might well go like this Here is a child who is mentally retarded whose parents

have neither the ability nor the time to teach him about the things of earth or of heaven - spend several hours a day with him because he is your little brother in the Lord

Here is a person ravaged by an incurable sickness-middot take this person into your home and care for him until God calls him home because this sick person is your brother in the Lord

Here are a group of young adults entering into the world of the adult with apprehension and fears and anxieties -spend several hours a day with them to answer questions and to talk over problems and to suggest lines of conduct because they are your brothers and sisters in the LOrd

Here are some people who were good mothers and fathers~ and wonderful grandparents and now they are entering their senior years and their strength is failing

middot f hand they need carefuI and patIent care-care or t em because they belong to you they are your parents and grandparents they are your relativesand they are also your brothers and sisters in the Lord

Here isa young unmarried mother who needs guidance

and help here is a father whose wife has died and who has young middotchildren and no one to care for them here is an engaged couple seeking some basic principles about marshy

riage here is a married couple who feel a curtain of misshyunderstanding coming between them-all these are your

Your brothers and sisters in the Lord so you should take the time to educate yourselves about their problems take the time and make the effort to listen to them without watching the clock give them professional advice take them into your home for long-range care give hours of your time in

counselling them and following up their difficulties Do all this And then no one would have to talk money The conshy

eern would be there the services would be rendered the works of the Lord would be done And you would be doingthem

What you cannot do these things you havent the time or the skill yourselves

Well someone has to do these things And someone has to support those who dothe works of the Lord ~omeone

has to give them the means they need to work with theld d d hI I h bUl mg an the facIlitIes an t e too s to Imp ement t elr concern able distanceshave to be traveled thus relieving parent

IJLIf you cam~~t orWI11 not d0bullthe works th emse1V~S ~Jlen and child of straiilarid daily fatigue Inthis matter we Un ~ou ~nd WIll you dosomethInamp to ~~dthoseWho ~re are open to suggestion and will proceed only when and if workmg m your name for and WIth your brot~ersandtheideais approved The expansion of this field into two ~ee4 Government Aid

t th Lo d f l f God d hOO Citing poverty as an example 8IS ers me r rom ove 0 an neIg r or three urban areas awaiF~ alon~ assura~ce that the schools Msgr Higgins said Thisis what the Catholic Charities middotA~rme~ns be staffed by specI~nytramedsIstersaIded by competent ~There is much thatiildividshy

Either dO the workS of GOd yourselves ~helpthoseWho members of thelalty ual citizensmiddot and groups of citishy- are oing these w~1ks o~ meCy an4 cent1oation and eh~ritygtAnother ~bjectiveaboutwhich we seek advice is the zenscm domiddot to all~viate ~ _ and concern m your name c - problem but they cannot ~l~lt bull

L t t talk ih bet t lk d settmg up of a Home for the Aged ChrOnIcally-Ill on The tpe problem alone The gov~~ aaIcaetIosn aOnd yocmiddotatmImiddotomiddotonn~arnd geIVnIng of~se Jaf concern ~ Cape We have fQur tracts of land between Harwiehaitd middottmh~nt ~~~l hile to do much ~ mu bull bull an It IS domg at the present

Lets tak GOO and the goodcto bl done This ~FaJmouthI~settle~ ar~~~ WhIle l~ IS true~an~ nurslll~_tim~ and probably morethiuR mustbe done and in the nameOf God TakeGodfrommiddothomesare bemgbU11~weareconvlllced the~eIsroomfor an recent Adritinistration haj the word good middotandwhat is leftgtmiddot Just an 0 And this one sfuffed by religious women where the near presence proPQsed stands for nothing of a chapel and the stimulus of prayerful exercises would he p~nciple of subsi~ia~ properly understood does

It comes downto this do the work-s of G6dmiddotyourselves uplIftmiddot mmds and hearts However here agamwe would middotpro~ibit the government from to the degree that you can and support those who are like the benefit of your thinking meeting this pressing challenge doing the WOlks of God in your name [ Oli the contrary itobliges the

Our Youth faCIlItIes are constantly expandmg and Im- government to supplement the Now dges that gIVe ~ lIttle dlf1er~ntattItude ~waNLpr6VingFamilyproblemsmiddotnot always of an extremeserl necessarily limited programs at

the Appeal keepour Welfare Family Life and social workers busy In oluntary oIganizfltions il) the ~ f~eld of SOclal welfare ancl ~

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rheANCHOR frICr~L NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALLPVER Published weeklyby The Catllolic Press of the Diocese of Fall River

410 Highland Avenue Fall River Moss 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Rt R~v DanielF Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

CM~I-A~amplU ~~ Ar=t=es App~al ~tlkI1vlhbl ~1llJ1WI If II

Continued from Page Three

Our immediate plans for expansion are bigger than any attempted before There are two important commitments The accommodations at Catholic Memorial Home are to increase through the construction of an addition to the

Nursing Wing This is done with a view to provide for married couples and for such others as could benefit in spirit by being closer to rehabilitation facilities and proshyfessional care

A second objective and it involves a great deal is to modernize our homes for children St Marys New Bedford and St Vincents in Fall River date back a long time Both are iJil constant need of repair But money spent on them is practically wasted So we are about to erect a new St Vincents designed according to the best of modern ideas and for accommodation of 120 boys and girls up to the middle-teen years

1 dFor the menta ly retar ed we would like to provide ht M d th h F d h dovermg care on ays roug rl ay were consl er-

WASHINGTON (NO) _ There is no profession other than social work whieli keeps its fingea- so middotoonting ously and sensitively on tile pulse of human misery notr which is more rewarding in tbaspiritual enrichment of th~ who labor to alleviate the sui

fering of their fellow man The tribute to thesocial worJr

profession was given at the 50tJa anniversary convocation of the Catholic Universitys NationalCatholic School of Social Service by Patrick Cardiilld OBoyle of Washington

In paying the tribute Cardinal OBoyle a graduate of the New

York School of Social Servicewho had a long social work eashyreer before becoming archbishshyop confessed to the gathering that he is still a welfare workshyer at heart

Founded in 1918 The convocation was the higba

light of a weekend celebratiolll of the schools anniversary The present school developed from the Service School opened by the National Catholic Welfare Conference in 1918 to trailamp women for social workwitb American military personneland their families andfor-reshylief and rehabilitation at hOmci and abroad

The National Catholic School of Social Service was foundedin 1921 and NCWC entrusted responsibility for it to the Na- tionat Council of Catholic Women In 1947 this school was m~rged with the Catholic UMshyversity School of Social work the unified school retaining the name National Catholic Schooi of Social Service

Among seminar speakers was Msgr George G Higgins diree- tor social action departmentU S catholic Conference who stressed that although Catholics have justifiably prided OUllshy

selves on having helped to keep alive the notion of subsidiaIi~in social and economic life the7

must be equally alive -- importance and indispensabiUw of far reaching governmentalaction in the social and economorder

all fIelds we are blessed by havmg donated serVIces~ For cial reform this we are d~eply grateful since it allows us to visualize with confidence projects such as the ones Jisted above Publisher to Head

Beginning then next Su~day our volunteer wqrkers Historical Socmiddotiety will make their round of calls tothe homes and offices of all to whom we turJifor support Our record in the past

t h b f d th tSIX een years as een one 0 more an more en USIas IC response from the business community as well as the individshyual donor Apart from the satisfaction of seeing their dollar well spent all who have aided our appeal are beneficiaries of the diocese remembered most certainly in my prayers and masses as well as those ministering to heeds and being helped by the thirty separate social charitable activities that we have Everyone is happy over what has been done But a great many who need to be helped are hopefully watchshying the results of the 1968 campaign and I am among tllem

NEW YORK (NC)-Victor ~ Ridder publisher of New Yorlnl archdiocesan newspaper TIleCatholic News has been elected president of the United States Catholic Historical Society

The societys main purposes are discussonand pUbl~catiODof documents books and papers relating to the history of toe Catholic Church and the deveJ opment of Catholic culture IIIAmerica The society has pub-lished some 50 volumes sinc its founding in 1884

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r~pe s_ ~(l (Jlj(~ntucky MountaiTJ Missions t4~ecl ~dOlll f

~f Vocatio~s1 DescriiJes 4ppalacll_ia sPoverty VATICAN CITY (NC) By Dorothy Mitch~n Eastman

Pope Paul VI stressed the Appa~achiaie a powerful word The ve~ name evokes visions of rugged mountain Churchs need fOT priestlyand Religious vocations and life isolation poverty misery and despair In this vast area that encltYmpasses 11 states 1fhe freedom ~hat should charac- live 16 mi11~on of the most poverty-striken people in the Uni1Jed States In every category terize such vocations in a mes- of hUmampn activity Appalachia has fewer of the good things of life than d~s the rest C3ge addressed to the faithful of f America Nowhere in this The latest accomplishment of Gte world on the fifth World nat~on do people h~ve less CAP Inc is the completion of Blny of Prayer for Vocations iYWOme 00 live in poorer II Grade A dairy farming com-

The need the Pope said stems Grom the plan of salvation in the housing nOwhere do they pleL mind of God who wanted have rewer educational oppor- Special schools are set up~rist to be the sole S)urce of tunities or suffer from such Il during the Summer months to

ed al th d teach religion We had six ofGl1vation and of sanctity and 1acit 0 m lC care as ey 0 pho wanteOl His mission to be in Appalachia nowhere in all these Bible schools going last

ld h d Ch Summer Father Beiting saiderpetuated and sPread through we wor as organIze rIS-I ti t d f dh ts Over 350 children have been ~n men partakers in the am y oun so ew a eren A I h included in this program Eighty17liesthood of Christ indispen- us In ppa at lao lmiddotmiddotmiddotll

e Eastern K~ntuc area h middotilmiddot~ per cent of them have been non-Bable ministers of the word and u ~ nt 1

A _1 h h th d b d Catholicsof grace among the rest of man- 9pac la as e U 10US lS-IIdnd tindion of being the poorest of CeJlwllS foil Rellilgilll)n

This need arlslng from the the poor in all CIf th1lSe cate- A8 a follow up to the Bible nature of the Church is DOW glt)ries ~ -schools the parish has organized more acute the Pope continued Four of the poorest counties three centers fur year round OOoause the numbers of the of Eastern Kentucky comprise religious instruction ministers of the Gospel are dim- the parish of Father Ralph Bei- We have a very active bome luishing while the fields open ting He has a parish roughly visitation programFather said tD their work are increasing tile siire of the state of Rhode and this year we will visit be-

The Second Vatican Councils Island tween three and four thousand IMghlighting of the priesthood On his first speaking tour in homes of the faithful the Pope said New England the tall rugged Each year about 2000 people should not lead to a dimming looking priest came to Bishop give from a few days to a few of the ministerinl or hierarchi- Casidy High School in Taun- weeks of their spare time school eal priesthood bull bull bull In fact the ton to talk to the student lxgtdY breaks or vacations to work at more the common priesthood is and the senior class from Coyle one of the four centers Father to be improved the more it has High School has eStablished in his parish Deed of the ministry of the hier- The priests five day tour m- Priests nuns college students arehical priesthood and the eluded addresses at Harvard whltlle families go down to the more the function entrusted to University Regis College Holy area from all over the country tIhe latter manifests its abso- Cross College and Newton Col- to work for the Appalachian lute necessity lege Gf the Sacred Heart as poor

N ---OO- for S I weJn as a TV appearance on One of Charlie Kings inOO has ~ a VBuOD Bob Kenneds Contact show shy P lid d th t been to find useful work for

ampUe ope a e at ODe B~ktAD Aidshya _ f th Ch h d all these volunteers as carpenshy-=gt ales 0 e urc an so Aocompanying Father Beiting ters nurses farmers cooks el the Christian salvation of the - e tour was a lookingld t be ~-d be- -- 6 teaching Bible classes or coun-WOT canno JU6~ as and personable young man from ded ch ri ti h FATHER BElTING seling at the children scamps --amp vun on a sma c p e- Brockton twenty year old Char- Every Sunday of the year DOmena or movements which Be King Charlie has interrupted From the inception of hi8themselves need the ministry rather Beiting and two other -d approval of the hierarchical lWloollege days lit John Carroll pastorate Father Beiting has car- priests drive over 200 miles to Driesthood University to work with Father ried on a dual apostolate As say Masses for 1~heir parishioners

The priesthoods authority Belting as a full time lay vol- well as tending to the needs of in homes in the three churches Mel the priests sacramental unteereaming the grand sum crl of the 45000 who live within af the parish in a candy store

a dollar a day the boundaries of his parish be and a pavillion power1 b to fo Charlie -_ hi h worK-- on everenew the bloodless reflected lito ti as 1 every Non-Catholic attendance at the tie e ra on are necessary l wo~ in Appalachi has con- th li ht _ C Improve e econOmiC p g Masses is often three times as IoU hurch and the salvation of -ced hlm that his vocatlhn th A I h F--d Vlll ~ e ppa ac Ian poor rom greatmiddotmiddotas the native Catholic at shynki d hIDa n e lHU bull I er ea-ng hiS deCNgte~ in the- dist b tion 0 f f d and I thmg tendence in countries As dditi in ~ n u 00 c 0 these

an a ona reason 41- -l~ltIno work omong the poor - -d Co g 10 al~ th ed I ti ~ w ~ G middotressmg n ress n where only one personmiddotin everyOU

_ng e ne or voca ons ~ think its true that we will tt F th h ht Ole Pope cited the secularization n what Eug~ne McCarlh COmml ees a er as song 1000 is Catholic

~ ~ or to attack the poverty of Eastern ~ the modern w9rldwhJch has CaDs QmoraJ revoiution to solve Kentteky with every means Summer Missions

a greater need ~r a conse-middot the Poverty crisis m this cOOn-avaiiable Formiddotfive weeJ~8 everymiddotSummer ~t~an~eciaf~thZed preseten~e tij- be said New Project Father Belting and a team of ~ewltUus 0 ~ mys neB ~ pilther Beiting haSbeen -WOrk As his familiarity with the priests seminari~ and ~y ~ Go~ ~L Cor 4 1) jWg hi Eastern Kentucky since areaincreased and the extent of people go through the countryshy

Wllhngll1ess to Sacrifice [OOa when he was assignedamp workmiddot to be done became more middotside ona streetpreaching misshy ~ ~ addi~on to the need for mission parish under the aus- and more pressing the need for sion Reception is not always WOCations the Pope in his mes- pices of the Diocese of Coving- a permanent solution to eco-middot cordial in this section where ~ stressW freedom of voca-middot ton~ Besides his 1000 square nomie ills became evident In prejudice against Catholics runs fions by which he said he mile parish he bas middotthe respon~ mlilw~rto this need in the Sum- high Father and his preachers meant personal IU1Q voluntary sibility of all 25 counties in mer of 1965 Father Beiting have at times h~ to proclaim ehlation to the cause of Christmiddot Eastern Kentucky through his founded the Christian Appala- the good news of Christs messhyIInd of His Church position as Deail of Kentucky ehian Project Inc an independ- B1ge ~f broth~rhood and middotconshy

There cannot be any voca- Mountain Missions In this posi- ent ~on-Igtrofit organization cern a~id ca~ca~ and hurled aons he said unless they are tion Father directS all the mis- working to develop the economic tomatoes ~ unless in other words they siooory and soCial endeavorS of resources of the region to the The Word is not falling OD

00e offered spontaneously of t1-e Church in this the most advantage of the middotpoor Now in entirely stony ground even in themselves conscr~usly gener- ~pera1e povenymiddot area of its fourth y~ar of setvi~ in ~ -an a~eamiddot wpell~ for genera-tions Ciusly totally America Jackson COUl)t~ the CAP Inc Catholics have been thougbt to ~ This hesa1d applieS Doth to Per capita income in these lias carried out numerous devel- I be mleagiie witb the devil The ~stly and Religious vocati6ns eotJnties avera~es bet~~~rt ~50 ClPmental training and employ- parish is currently instructing male and female vocations ana $840 a year Nearly nine ou~ plent programs Among these 25 people in themiddot faith

Willingness to sacrifice the M every 10 houses is lIubstand ate tlie lntroduction and pro- The expenses of our proshy Pope went on is the cru of the atil lacliing electricity running duction of- sevetal itlew crops gram are enormous Father middot~bleril The world of religion water or inside faciliti~ Tl1ere in themiddot count4ls agricult~ral sighed and theyre financed

discredited by atheism or hedon- ~ no higher per cent of illiter- economy and many technical entirely by contributions On lEm he said is no longer as at- atePeople in the UnIted SUites innovations iIi the agricUltural his speaking tour Father is ~~tive as it OJlC~ was _ thml in Eastern Kentucky Med- field searching for individuals or

Bul youth he said is stillre- ieal facilities ale few and far Complementing the agrjcul- groupswhowill sponsor one of eeptive to the call of the Church between tural prOjects several small in- the 25 full time volunteers like to do difficult things heroic We need doctors desperately dustrialptograms serve to train Charlie King (~t a OOstof $30 a Cbings Father Beiting said sadly and employ natives of the month) Olrmiddottomiddot pledge contribushyThe Pope urged families to be Sickness Leads to Apathy county The woodworking fac- tions for any item on his list -tiling to make the sacrifices of Malnutrition takes Its toll in tOry turns out high quality Ap- of immediate needs - items bull son or daughter to the Church many ways The mountain pal~hian woodcrafts ranging ranging from tires for their

people have often been carica from knick-kneeks to Appala- much used cars to a Holstein turedas lazy but Wldernourish- - chian musical instruments ~ for the dLiry farm

Two in One merrt and sickness are the real Seasonal employment is pro- In concluding his talk to the BERLIN (NC) - The World eauses of their apathy Most of vided through the production of students at Cassidy Father asked

Congress of Catholic Youth these people have middotbeen sick Christmas wreaths Plans are if they would like his address lIePresenting the International since the day they were born ~ on the drawing board for a pal- 01 on second thought he

Catholic Youth Federation and Father asserted letmaking industry and assorted qUIPPed would you rather have the World Federation of Cathoshy Theyre gooCl people-won- enterprises that will employ Charlies lie Young Women and Girls deriul people he insisted Its over 100 men in the county For those who would like have voted to merge the two a shame There should be many which has one of the highest Fathers it Is St Williams erganizations to form the World more people working to help unemployment statistics in the Church 224 rexington Street

tibem nation Lancaster KentuclqWederation of Catholic Youth

THE ANCHORshy 7 Thursday May-2 l968

Crisis in Poland Affects Church

BERLIN (NC)-The Catholic Ohurch and Catholic members of Polands Sejm (parliament) have been caught in the crossshyfire of the current political crisis in that country and the resurgence of anti-Semitism that has a~companied it

For the first time the Church has bean publicly attacked for its support on the students demshyonstrations in March fur intelshylectual and democratic freeshydoms

Jozef Kepa first secretary of the Warsaw Communist party committee in m speech released (April HI) backed party chief Wladyslaw Gomulkas efforts to tone down the anti-Jewish stateshyments that have been rampant in the press on television and in public speeches but had hard words for the Catholic hiershyarchy

Target of Kepas criticisms was Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski of Warsaw who praised the stushydents iOr their maturity and moderation

The voice of the reactionary party of the Church hierarchy had been heard Kepa said among forces united against the peoples power He condemned the support given by Polish Roman Catholic leaders to the student demonstrations

Meanwhile in the Sejm the five Catholic members known as the Znak group were assailed by Premier Jozef Cyrankiewicz aid Politburo member Zenonmiddot Klisko because the Cathltllic legshyislators had asked the governshyment if it approved of a violashytion of civil rights by police acshytion against the demonstrating students Kliszko called the Catholic deputies friends of pro-Israel Jews and revisionshyists

Future Bright ROME (NC) -The religious

liberty situation in Czechosiovshyakia has already changed greatly

for Catholics and hopes for th~

future middotseem bright according to Bishop Frantisek Tomesek a p 0 s t ltl) 1 i e administrator of Prague

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~~gtT_

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FoR River-Thurs May 2 t9688 Urges Vctory ~ VietnomRecipes Re1call Memor~es ST lOUIS (NC)-A oan fbft Victory in Wetnam and a coo-gt demnation of Communism ltBOf Many Friendly Coks intrinsleany evil highlighteltl a series of IOresolutions adoptedBy Mary Enley Dally bIY the priests and bishops Belraquo ving on the Cardinal Mindszen~II A collection of cookbooks 16 a good addition to a kitchen Council governing board ~

Like a dictionary or an encyclopedia a good cookbook is the anti-communist CaJdina$ 8Il authoritative source of information but like that dictionshy lIlindszenty F~undation

ary or encyclopedia irts a cold impersonal font of lrnow- The resolutions adopted a1l the end of the foundations threegt

ledge On the other hand backs cf enveloPes on a blank day celebration of its 10th anni-o there probably is 8Jt your check on the inside of a match versary he1e outlined a p~ Muse certainly ~ ours folde around the margin of a gram based on demands for vioo those h~nd-gasthered recipes seven cents off coupon-whatshy tory in Vietnam rigorous pun-o dear and welcome as letters from ever blank Paper is to be found ishment flaquo riote16 and looters bome These receipes fur goodies in a- womans purse But they and ltm e Fecognition 1baII )lou have been represent communication ~ith there can be no useful ~ served at hoones other people OIl a common logue wiIth men of iN win of friends the ground masters of ~ceit band - written In the never-never land of Released with the resoluti01d ones on yel- things to be done remains the was a stmement from Lola Beue lowing cracked sorting and clasSification of Holmes a Negro leader whO paper in spidery these recipes type them out on joined the Communist party 1ft ecript by hands inde~ cards file neatly divided 1957 as an -informer for the long stilled the into soups salads desserts Federal Bureau of Investi~ti~ ones you took etc (FBI) Emphasizing the comJiNshy~er the tele- And yet though order may be Dist role in civil rights aotiw Phone haH ill heavens first lawthere is someshy ties Miss Holmes told conte shyIlhorthand the thing-quite a something---to be ence delegates othe half in said for our box of recipes In Much of the civil t1rrnlGII ebbreviations the this-sounds- anticipatwn of company coming youre seeing right now was 8Iloo 8OOd kind you jagged out of or just a yen to fix something nmged by the Communist p~ the evening paper with a bobby different we leaf tbrough the when I was a member pin meant to try and probably assorted sizes and shapes of our didnt miscellany M brings reminis-

Also there are the puzzlers cences nostalgia and more Conege Functioning shybow-tos from experts who cook often than not_ an idea of someshyby in9tinet--a handful of flour thing entirely different from the Despite Resignations or SCl just enough so that it item we were originally seek- River mark 50th anniversary In wheelchair Miss Mary R LADYSMITH (NC) - Ibl looks right or enough milk so ing acting president of Mount SeDshy

Dailey organizer and charmiddotter member of Fall River unitario College Sister DonnaItll smooth but not too runny For instance 1Ibere Is fIbe standing from left Mrs Mary Hennessey ticket chainnan Marie Rudolph said the Wis-- Pantry Library cookie recipe in the delicate for anniversary observ-ance Mrs Catherine Lee sUite re- consin college is functioningSuch is the collection-if tbis script of our late beloved neighshy

-bor Mrs Madeline Kelly with gent Rev James Morse chapiain Miss Mary F Maleadynormally after the recent resiglag-tag box of this-and-that its addendum Patsy you might ~n+- srtate regentmiddot Mrs Mary Lou Silvia general chairman nation of founder-president Si9shycould be called a collection-at pao ter Ann Mary Gullan eigbIJour house in the pantry li- like to make these as a surprise for observance faculty members and three acJfur your mother (Patsy wes brary tihen 12 years old) ministration personnel

A trained librarian indeed a Sister Donna Marie said thetrained anybody in the artmiddot of T-heres Marguerite Culhanell veal-in-wine we begged from former president resigned imshy

orderly classification even a he after having this at her mediately but the resignatioJUl well-trained cook woulq be house Isabel Donohoes trick of of the other members of -therwORL~ appalled at this motley array sprinkling chicken with vinegar e~BYMAllULYN RODERICK~ eollege are not effective until Some recipes are written on the to firm it up resulting in chicken June 1 She said the college is

salad par excellence many a recruiting faculty members at kindly with FRENCH FLAIR this time and does not anticioopet reciPe shared

lIS by readers of this column pate any difficultay in acquw One Pork Chop rve always read and heard Another tip fur Summer visi shy ing replacements by the Fall

term that French women have a flair tors to this home of the 1968 Also tbere is one addedre- for clothes but I never realized Man And His World is to The resignations were based

eently by a nameless friend we the truth of this statement until plan on wearing bright little on a dispute over the role to be met when she came to a collec- I visited Montreal Immediately dresses and suits but please no played at the college by the _tion center to get food for her it hits you from the moment bermudas or tight slacks Do newly appointed lay vice-pres-shyfamily afteT her home hadbeen you step out of -your car in however take your hemlines up ident Granmiddott E Zachary

GOLDEN JUBILEE Daughters of Isabella in Fall

partially burned out quring the front of tbe hotel that this is a an inch or two for the minilook recent rioting Many many city of women is the tbing in this land of the Catholic parishes had contiib- who know and mounties and I think I had the uted food ~d clothing Any who care about longest hemlines in town with number cf men and women dressing Minishy them just above my knees (-at came to deliver the donated skirts are evshy least they felt that way)supplies and remained to work erywhere but Ourls have taken over this sorting clothi~ packaging sup- miniskirts worn town and they look so delightfulplies for families of two four with style and that I couldnt resist visiting the and on up chicness colOl talented hair stylist in the hotel

Back to the newest recipe abounds bright and having my hair cut and~ This woman had been given a pinks v i vi d curled a Ie 68 For evening bag of mushrooms by a friendly 0 ran g e s and these curls (with the aid of falls grocer on her block If I could citrus yellows and hairpieces of course) cascade have a pork chop-just one pork f rillsan d down the neckline giving these chop she said I could fix flounces float forth and a walk I Canadian women a fragile fem- my familys favorite dinner down a street is like watching inine appearance that is hard to

One pork chop for a family an everchanging fashion show compete with In fact if you of four We couldnt believe it What astonished me as much feel like getting an inferiority until we tried it at our house as the sense of style that pershy complex about your looks this and were asked for a repeat vades the city was the aura cf is the place to go I guarantee performance Heres how good g-rooming Nowhere do you when you return youll want

Use large-capped mushrooms see a sloppy woman no one is new hair style a new sense of Fry the pork chop cool Be- seen walking the streets with make-up and a oomplete new

wardrobe shymove meat and grind it Add curlers in their hair or runs in seasoned bread crumbs and a - their stockings Obviously the bit of grated onion both sauteed - women ~ Morit~eal are con- in melted margarine or fat from cerned WIth theIr appearance

J UBI L A R I AN Sister - the chop Pile on top of in- and work hard to keep it up Color Process verted mushroom capS Make a - One thing in their favor is the

Mary Marciann of the Feli- er~am ~uee (dried or canned price 01 the clothes One can cian Sisters marked her sil- nulk Wl~ do) into which you - pick up a lovely summer dress Booklets vel jubilee of reJi~iou8 pro- have added ithe chopped and fur about twenty-two dollars ill fession at St Stanislaus sauteed mushroom stems ~our Cenadian money or a smashing-shy

0 a SYSTEMATIC55001( ear SAVINGS

MONTHLY DEPOSITS

5 00 01 amiddot INVESTMENT bull 10 year SAVINGS

NOTICE ACCOUNTS a REGULAR450 year SAVINGS

Bass River Savings Bank

Bank By Mail We Pay The Postage

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA

bull SOUTH YARMOUTH bull HYANNIS bull DENNIS PORT - bull OSTfRVlllpound

Year Books

Brochures

Convent Fall River on Sun- sauce into bottom of a shallow - slack sUit for around thirty-middot pan top withthe stufted mush- eight High fashion for a small AmericCin Pr~s~ Inc

oay~ Observance ~p~luded a rooms ~bake until tender price seems to be the motto of ~ Mass of thanksgIvmg cele- 20-30 nunutes the little boutiques tbatmiddot are OFFSET PRII~ITERS~~ LEnERPRESS

brated by Rev Itobert S So now into our heterogene-- ~ound everywhere and if youre Kaszynski StS~nslau8uscollection J0~ this ~ded middotplannin~ a tri~ to this SOPhis~- 1-~7JOFFI~ VENUE hone 997~942t pastor and a -reception for lte~ - communIcation agam - eate~ CIty thiS Summer don t~

- _ remJnder of someone -who was outfit YOU16elf before You go - friepds m the parochial -willillg to share her houSewife -- save a few pennies fur some

school -haU- _ lmowhow delightful buys up there

New Bedford Mass

~

9 New Insecticide Promises To End Dangmiddoter of Sprays

By Joseph and Manlyn Roderick

I doni lmow how other prdeners fared over the Winter but my roses were hit pretty hard Most of my pruning is done now and very ~itble remains of 1ast years IIOwth Luckily the roses surrived wt ground level but I Gidnt have much of a job a~ h Nader knew which ones the~ldmg w at to prune Slnce children would enjoy the hours most of what I could see ihey were open and how much ve the root crown is dead they cost

This year I am going to try bull We found our hotel through stematic approach to ridding this tiny book that described it IDY plants of insects rather than in glowing tenns and it tlllmed IPr~ying simply their upper sur- out to be all that the autho18 IIaces A systematic insecticide had said and then some II taken in through a plants Dining SJl)Ob fIlIOots and passes through its sya- However every bit as imporshytern The one I purchased is in taut as our place oli lodging was granular form and contains a the places where we dined and fertilizer A measured amount Mr Frommer and Mr Godwin III Spread around the base of the couldnt have given us better mose bush worked into the sou tips on dining if they had been ifhen given a thorough watering with us personally One evening The roots then absorb the fer- Joe and I (thanks to 11 kindshytilizer and insecticide and sup- hearted Nana) ate alone at a lit shyposedly keep the plant free from tIe bit of Portugal transplanted IIU chewing and sucking insects to this continent called the k six weeks Fado ComP1ete with melanshy

SLfer~ Quicker moly guitars and Spanish-Por-I would be parUcularly grate- tuguese cooking it was a delight

ful ii the systamic program to the eye ear and palate worked beacuse it would elim- Equally as good though were Snate spraying No matter how inexpensive luncheon places cautious one is there is alwaYs suchlS A La Crepe Bretonne Gte possibility that children win and the Pam Pam The former

I th th has an upstairs constructed Uld eome in contact WI e spray 1_ at d lik te hi dend harm themselves ~r e e a pIra span

Aside from the safety factor 8 bill of fare thart ~onsists of this method Js also much quicker ~late-SI~ paper-thin crepes llIld easier ttuui spraying No filled WIth any of 81 different messy spray cans and no lost fillings One cOld spend a energy in pumping and unblock- whole afternoon Just watchi~g Ing nozzles just a third of a tJeCOOks cr~ating these deli shycmpful of an odorless material ClOUS concoctIOns but Montreal applied around a plant every six hol~ so many wonders that one weeks with no danger that it ham t time to linger over any will rain ~e day after you one thIng

ra ed and wash off the ra The Pam Pam too was a 8P t y 1 sP Y charmIng IneXpenSIve restaurant ala erla fo f 1 H g d

I am more than willing to try I a anu y un anan In ecor IIOmething new but being a pes- and dIshes It featured flourless simist at heart I cannot conceive cakes Both my mother and I had of something which is so easy some for desse~ but before I actually working Lurking An could ask the w81tre~s what they the back of JDy mind is the feel- did make them WIth if ~ey mg that someone devised a omi~~d flo~r Jason wa~ dIPPIng method of satisfying lazy gar- his hands In ~veryones plates ampmers that the were doing and I thought It best to pay our

y bill and departoomethmg about theIr roses to try without having to go to

B tt J d I f lt th t h t 0 oean e a a

m h t bl rt f a s garuc rou e so 0 upill forroses We will give it Il

we s~mpled of thIS cosmopolItan_ b t ti d -cy was u an appe zer an

try though and hope that the that we would like to ret~m RSults live up to the message ag81~ for an entree-but WIthshy

out a two year older on the label of the product Now that were all back in a

lJm the llUtchem routine at least until Summer l have come to the conclusion vacation heres a tasty little

tfhat any family that attempts vegetable recipe to add interest to take a vacation trip with a ta everyday menus toddler has to be either courageshy lEGGS l1lgtJIVAN eurolUS or stupid and Im afraid we (Il) I dIE)tfull into the latter category eVl eggs When our plans to visit Wash- G hard-cooked eg~s lngton over the Spring vacation 1 2~ oz can deVIled ham failed because it was impossible teaspoon Worcestershire to obtain reservations (evishy sauce dently everyone else in the U S teaspoon grated onion bad the same plans only sooner Ik teaspoon salt titan we did) we set our sights yenteaspoon dmiddotry mustard aorthwaTd Montreal was our Dash pepper go~l and with our terrible two Z Tablespoons cream or milk in tow along with some genial (Broccoli and Saaee) smndparents and two young 1 pkg frozen or 1 bunch fresh ladies of seven and nine we set broccoli Iotth ona rainy Mond~ momshy Im Tablespoons butter or Ing margarine

Fortunately I had come with 1~ Tablespoons flour -e a pocket book guide of Montshy ~ teaspoon dry mustard Ileal andQuebec written by Arshy teaspoon salt thU1 Frommer and John God- Dash pepper win in ~peration with ttIe cup milk Bank of Nova SCOtia n was Jk cup grated sharp cheese absolutely priceless The 8Ushy 1) Prepare the deviled eggs thorS described in expllcit detai by cutting I( inch slice from one botel motel and rooming house end of shelled egg remove yolk eccQmmodations different types and mash yolks and end slices eftestaurants from ones where with the ham Worcestershire ~ can get eggs toast and cofshy oniorisalt mustard pepper and Iee-tor 65c io the elite gounnet cream mill well and then use laavens that lure 1be patrons flo fill hollows of egg whites with theIr haute cuisine and I) COOk broccoli as label dfshy~Hy the bighllghts of the city recls (if f~n) or in a small ampat tourist shbUldnt misa am9unt of wBtell Until tender ISald highUght were even catoeshymzed - tba JastantlJ tile

if yf

I) J I

EVERYBODYS GOTTA EAT Pfc~Charles Richards of Pittson Pa s-hares his C-ratio~~ w~th fatigue-hatted Httle Vietnamese boy in a villag~ near Saigon where Richards outfit the 1st Battalion 27th Infantry 25th Inshy

fan try Division was on a sweeping oPeration Jleoar the Vietnamese capital ~C Photo

We Like It Here Milwaukee Neighborhood Committee Works

To Prevent Panic Selling-MILWAUKEE (NC) - Some

strange signs are beginning to appear in the windows of homes around St Agnes parish on the citys North Side

Theyre being displayed by persons interested in stabilizing the area They call attention to a program that aims to reduce house turnover so that home and area values can be mainshytained

In the eyes of the organizers the prgram is designed to preshyvent panic selling

The signs read Were Not Moving to SUburbia-We Like It Here and This House Is NOT For Sale

Theyve been prepared by an

NUlises Cound~ Mee~

MOlY ]] at St Annes The Diocesan Council of Cathshy

olic Nurses will hold their Spring Plenary Meeting on Satshyurday May 11 at st Annes School of Nursing Fall River

The business meeting and election of officers scheduled for 4 oclock will be followed at 5 by an address by Rev Donald J Bowen assistant at St Marys Norton

Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament will be given at 630 and the banquet will follow at 715

Reservations must be made with Mrs Ann Fleming 228 Oak Grove Ave Fall River no later tlban Sunday May 5

melting the butter in a saucepan and stirring in flour mustard saltand pepper Remove from heat and stir in the milk Re- tum to heat and cook until

thickened stirring constantly Add the grated cheese and stir -tmtil smooth

In amiddot cassetrGle dish arrange gt

the cooked broccoli Stand the deviledmiddot eggs with stuffed ends

up between and on broccoli pieces Pour the sauce over aU-

area stabilization committee for distribution in homes in an area populated by about 40000 pershysons about one-third Negroes

The signs are one of the means by which we hope to dis~ourage unethical real estate salesmen according to Anshythony L Silva acting commitshy

middottee chairman and a member of St Agnes parish

Fear Tactics

He explained at rl~ent meetshyings that the program is not sponsored by a religious group Nor are the committee apshyproaching the problem on a color basis but 18ther as a matshyter of economics

Our aim is to restore confishydence in the area and countershyact unethical salesmen since they tend to operate on fear tactics said Silva

The immediate goal of the group is to make its efforts known to all residents of the area by establishing a network of block contacts

Persons who have expressed interest in the program represhysent St Agnes Roosevelt Drive Presbyterian Garden Homes Evangelical Lutheran Augusshytana Evangelical Lutheranmiddot Siloah Lutheran amI Elim Tabshyernacle churches

THE ANCHOR-Thursday May 2 1968 -------------=

Teaching Sisters To Get Raise

DALLAS (NC) - Bishop Thomas K Gorman of DallasshyFort Worth has approved a salshyary raise for Sisters teaching in parochial schools which was recommended by the diocesan board of education

In a letter to all pastors Bishshyop Gorman stated As of Sepshytember the base minimum salshyary for each Sister in regular service to the local parish will be $1500 per year

Enclosed with -the letter was an agreement signed by Bishop Gorman fM the signature of each pastor and the major supeshyrior of the religious order of Sisters serving his school

The agreement provides thllgtt the parish pay the stated base minimum salary to eac~ Sister provide a convent and its upshykeep along with utilities inshycluding a telephone an automoshybile and its maintenance and health insurance

Sister Caroleen of the Schooi Sisters of Notre Dame diocesan superintendent of schools said the increase in the minimUm base salary Is fbe first such since 1959 when it was set at

$960

Withdraw Missionaries From Angola Territory

NEW YORK (NC) - The United Church of Christ and the United Church of Canada are w~thdrawingthe majoritr of theIr missionaries from the Portuguese West African ter- ritory of Angola

Dr Alford Carleton execushytive vice-president of the United Churchs Board for World Ministries whose headshyquarters are hele said the acshytion was being taken because the Portuguese government is apparently seeking tomiddot extinshyguish Protestant missionary acshytivity in Angola

The two churches have withshydrawn all missionaries III total of 12 whose terms of service had already been extended for more than a year beyond the normal term The missionaries wiJI apply for readmission

Portuguese administrators have in the past given assurshyances that re-entry permits would be given but Dr Carleshyton said there have been inshystances of denials of re-entry permits to missionaries

BlUE R~ION

LAUNDRY 273 CENTRAL AVE

NEW BEDFORD ~

fFr~~sectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsect~ llli= 111

WHITE SPA-CATERERS

BANQUETS bull WEDDINGS bull PARtiES 0

bull COMMUNION BREAKFASTS

1343 PLEASANT STREET FAURIVEI

993-l780

and bakemiddotin a 400middot oVeftaboutI~sect~ggsectsect~~sectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsect~sectsectI~J30 minutes 01 untilbubblTmiddot1 I

992-6216

-ObtainsFreedo ForRefugees

MADRID (NC)--Amiddot group t1ti youth leaders who spent a nig~

middotin a church to avoid a I~est ~ police was released la~

through the help of Auxilia~ Bishop Angel Mortll Figuls ~ Madrid

The youths had taken refureg in the church of Our Lady ~ Montana in suburban MorataJaiJ after police raided a mccting bll a parish building which th0 youths said was a house of thQ people of God Q

The meeting which had b~

announced in the padsh tIbQ previous Sunday as a conferenltcO on Ohristian doctrine was SUib rounded by police on suspiciolQf that it was an illegal meetin~ of workers oommimiddotttees-inde-o pendent labor organizations Tb() police arrested a Catholic woramp ers leader Dannen Ruiz Abo-1 gado Juan Canet a lawyer a~ Father Juan Jose Maria Bltlllesashyteros as they left the meetin- The three were late releasecA

However middotthe Y9uths atten+shying the conference fled to ~

church to avoid arrest and ve mained there until BishOJll Morta arrived and obtainecll

their freedom after negotia~ with the police

10 ~H~ ANCHORshy )hursday May2 bull 19~8 (

- - bull )

Sup~me C~ult Qars Obscenity

For Youth WASHINGTON (NC)

For more than two years the Supreme Court has made it clear thatin the eyes of the law obscenitymiddot is a sometime thing its distribution ~o adults nearly impossible to regulate without endangering the Conshystitutions guarantees of free speech and opinion

But over the same two years the Court has indicated thai it might be possible to control the

availability of obscene books and films to the young and in

1967 it issued an op~n invitashycmiddotmiddot tion to the nations ~a~yers to find the right cases an4 the right arguments tot~stmiddotthis middotmiddotview _

This year the cases were found and the Supreme Court did what most observers thought it would do it permitted states and citiesto control distribution of obscene material to youngshylIJters - providect It drlws the lines finely and tightly

It returrled from amiddotJtwo-week recess to rule thatmiddotmiddot NeW York middot States law barring phsons un- Organization Starts ~er 17 from buying smut met ~ middotthe ~e~t~nd tpatrgtalIas1s middot~lm CLEANUP FatherDetm6d P McDermott of New Yorks lower East ~ide St Housingmiddot Program

elasslflcatlOn law undet whIchmiddotmiddotmiddot bull - bull WASHINGTON (NC) - ~1 bull

minors areprevented from see- BrIgId spansn pas8~s o~t pamt ~nd prusJ1e~ to sl1rpl1r~a~ volunteers who particIpated m Church-sponsored nonprofit 0IJ)00

lt ingsome movies didnot ih~ AprIl ZO ()peratJoA Cleanup It was estImated that 50000 urban people of all baek- ganization here haS launched II

middotThemiddotopinions shoUld go li-long grounds w~re joined in the WOllk by 5000 suburbanites in cleaning andpaintin~ aJong~ousing program Wider whiClli way toward clearing up a con- 46 Streets NC Photo It hopes to purchase 322 sl~ lrti-tutional atmosphefe which at homes rehabilitate them aDCil middottimes hasbeen no Clearer thanmiddot 0 000 p J resellmiddotthem to poor families DiP

the air around the Supreme middotMmiddotore ThanmiddotS1 middotinGmiddot reo CIt Day rOJe ect del federal financing Courts building on a Pilrticu- The organization-Urban Beshylarly still slmlne~ day 1ew YOk middotPrmiddotelamiddotte Heomiddotds lomiddotmiddotn~Sectmiddot omiddotmiddotrmiddot-amiddot n Effort habilitation Corp~will begiul

While the Court in an 8-1 de- 1lIIII 1lIIII the program with therehabi eision written by Justice Thur- tation of nine row houses whiob 000 Marshall-his first major ~ NEW YORK (NC)Jt- Wall z At the end of tbe da~ they ~teas of densest poverty ~Jl it will purchase from the ~ epiiiion-tlirewout the Dallal greatday for New York-one ~ Bat down togethermiddot at tables iyIanhatian andthe Bronx _ development Lanmiddotdmiddot Agen~ filmmiddot clasSification law because hard work oonstructiye dia- str~ng tile length of streets to Last SumJl1er in its thitd year Washi~gtonurban refewal tfwas unduly vague even there logueand happy celebration eat a meal of celebraHon pro- of successful operation the thorny agency The RIA apo K upheld the right of goer~- -Along 45 streets in the Man- vided and prepared by people ~rojec(wastlIreatenea b~ out- proved sale of the houses to ~

Jnen~ to prote~t the Y0llng 1~m hattan and Bronx ooroughs of the block 1gtreak of violence in East Har- group at a purchasemiddot price ~ ~slble bad mfluenc~ some 50000 Negroes Puerto Many in~olved said they felt lem $26100

Different Directions Ricans Italians Jews Slavs the most important aspect of the To counteract riot threats Purchase and rehabilitatiOll middotIt did so without p~ssing on Orit~nt~ls and eople~f otmiddothe whole projeot was not renova- Msgr Fox organized East Har- work which will be done bIT

themiddot meri~~or lackof merits nationalities were joined by middottion but relationship It gave lem peace processions For five Negro contractors and involVG of the film involved but hinted some 5000 guest volunteers _ an opportunity at a time middotof nghts more than 1000 old and young Negroes as apprentice6 middot111at had the law been suffi- from suburbia and other middle alienation and fear between YQung Puerto Ricans walked will be carried out under ~

eielitly explicit about what con- class areas black and white rich and poor through their streets with ban- $]37000 mortgage provided ~ stihites proper or improper con- They spent the day c1eani1g inner city and suburbia oung nersmiddot flowrs singing songs the International BrothelhooCl

duct the Dallas censors would renovating and decorating the and old for people to meet one carrying candles and standing of Electrical Workers and guall shy have had no trouble iicei1sing inner city streets and alleys another as persons in an at- up for peace hope and love anteed by the Federal Housins middotthe film buildings and residences 10- mosphere of work play and La~gely through their efforts Administration under its 221pound(

Instead thc Court said they gether the men women and accomplishment peace was restored to the area program were set adrift in a boundless children residents wOlked shoul- Its one way to make real sea and arrived at their con- der to shoulder with priests what Dr Martin Luther King elusion--that the film should be nuns laymen and women vol- envisioned when he said I Archbishop Greets shown to adults only - from unteers They cleaned back- have a dream as East Harlemshy DEBROSS OIL many different directions yalds and basements did car- ite Valentine Haddock described Armenian Patriarch ~uch a situation is wide open pen try work made plumbing all the people helping one anshy NEW YORK (NC) ~Archshy co

te abuses not the least of which repairs painted doors windows other to become not even just bishop Terence J Cooke ofNew would be a drift among film- and building facades friends-relatives York welcomed His Holiness Heating Oils makers toward the most innocu- At the end of each block a Peace Processing Vasken I Supreme PatIiarch ous and the totally inane The large and colorful mural was Cleaned out basements and andCatholicos of all Armenians and Burnersresult The vast wasteland that painted on a wall depicting the backyards on streets are to be at an ecumenical service in St some have described in refer- good things happening transformed later again by Patricks cathedral 365 NORTH FRONT STREET ence to another medium might street residents and guest vol- It marked the first time the

NEW BEDFORDbe a verdant paradise in com- Award Ecumenical unteers working in partnelship supreme spiritual leader of the parison into vest pocket parks basket- Armenian church had been reshy

But because the law was Theology Diploma ball courts little theaters reme- ceived in a Catholic cathedral in ivague said Marshall it does KAMPALA (NC)-A theolo- dial schools and teenage neigh- the United States JIlot follow that the Constitution gical diploma of the University borhood clubs requires absolute fleedom to of East Africa jointly recognized This non-sectarian project exhibit every motion picture of by the Catholic and Anglican was instituted by Msgr Robert every kind at all times and all Churches in East Africa has been J Fox New York archdiocesan places awarded for the first time coordinator for Spanish com-

The first four Uganda students munity action who four years to receive the diploma fare An- ago originated a creative comshy

Schedule Unveiling glicans munity action program Sum-The theological diploma repre- mer in the City now operatingOf Pope1s Statue sents an agreement between out of 26 store fronts in eight

FATIMA (NC) -A 12-footshy Catholics and Anglicans over the high statue of Pope P~lUl VI syllabus and subjects of the theshy

wili be unveiled Monday May ological course However such TRI CITY13 at the Marian shrine here on an agreement does not iriclude the first anniversaly of the any changes in doctrinal teach- BOILER REPAIR COJontiffl visit to the shril)e ing by the churches Each stu- SLAB BRIDGE ROAD Ihe st~tue depicts Pope Paul dent ~oJl~ws th~ course accold- ASSONET MASS 02702 i

- ~ri~ellngmiddot in prayc 1eiore ~ a~ ing to th~ doctrines middotof hismiddot remiddot Tel 644middot55~6 image of Our Lady of FaJimashy ~pectiYemiddotchurpoundh _ BOILERS RE-TUBED

bull ~ Ali tlhe~ middotmiddotbmiddoti~~psmiddot of P~rtugalI The churches alsoagreed tJ1at S EP A I are expected middotto attendmiddot the un themiddot ina in emphgtIS -Inmiddot th tli_e TUBE R teED

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THE ANCHORshyThursday May 2 1968

Portland Prelote Stresses Crisis

In Education PORTLAND (NC) - Co- )0

adjutor Bishop PetermiddotL Ger- BATON ROUGE (N2)-Tho ety apostolic administrator Louisiana AFL-CIO app Dved tl

of the Portland diocese des- ~ resolution calling for s ~ supshycribed the grave and serious 1 bull port to children attendi 3 nonshycrisis in regard tQ finances and c middot~lmiddot ~ i public schools at its COil ~ntion personnel in the field of Cath- ~H 1 here oUc education at a press con- l~ The resolution endar d the ference here proposal that tuition supple-

While affirming the desira- ments for the teaching oj nOiF bility of Catholic education the religious subjects bc paid Maine bishop pointed to the toward the education of chill-gt serious problems in financing dren regardless of race creed and staffing a system of schools or religion in state alproved which aims at providing a Cath- non-public schools which me~ olic education for all children all the requirements of law whose parents desire it He Emile Comar executive ~ middotnoted both the rising costs of rector of the Louisiana reder2lshyeducation and the dlOp in voca- tion Citizens for EducHtionllll tions and in the number of Reli- Freedom said It is gmtifyin(l gious available for teaching that the state AFL-CIO in tho

Bishop Gerety n~ted During adopted resolution recognizecll the past ten rears six Catholic __ -_~scgtbull~- Jf the need of parents with ct~ schools in this state alld 11 dren in non-public schools

Catholic elementaly schools CARDINAL J~EGER IN AFRICA The retired ~rchbishop of Montreal Paul-Emile Tuitions continue to dse ant1 have closed their doors During Cardmal Leger who has dedicated his Iif e to work with the poor in Africa is continu- taxes are becoming increasingJy41 the same period we have scen II t th h fl k f d f higher and the combination eithe enrollment in our Catholic a y mee mg WI IS oc or ISCUSSIons 0 conditIons m the DIocese of Yaounde Cam- the two has placed a lremeiF schools decrease by 25 per cent eroun NC Photo dous financial burden on thill

middot~i~~~i~e~~~~~Ct~I~~O~Cmiddotard-nal Leger Works for Afmiddotr-ca Lepers -n~~nt of the states populashymg statements Tbe labor organizations resa-

Expand Quality lution noted The contributioJ)fl

The middotsystem be Seeks to Bring SpirituQI Material Aid which these schools havecannot ex- made panded beeause of staffing to the state have long been ree problems financi~l deuromands YAOUNDE (NC)-lt is said The fact that he left behipd COmmodate himself to the new ognized by the public and~middot

and theincreasing costs of pres- that when Paul Emile Cardinal one of the most important dJ- environment and to be ready public officials ent day education Leger former arehbishop of oceses in the world does not fig) to I work effeetivelr It added that the parents bl

Schools must be consoUdated Montreal arrived at the lepro- ure in their thinking but theymiddot The eardinal is already famil- these tuition supported schooJJ wherever hldicated for maxi- s~rium of Nianing in Senega appreciate the sacrifice that is iar with the specific plOblcms of have repeatedly demonstrateflJ mum use of the available Reli- last Dec IS the lepers looked involvedmiddot in leaving his nfltive the lepers villages He thinks their support of both public ani I gious persoJmel at their fingers to see if a mir- country and adapting to a Dew that they need good pharmacies non-public education to the

We mustmiddot concentrate on ex- acle was going to happen and environment and is concerned with CHing for benefit of all Louisiana eh~ cellence in the schools we have they were going w be instan- Cardinal Leger has put him- all types of sicknesses He sees dren Where this is not possible the taneously cured It was in fact self at the service of Archbishop a need for wells powelhouses bishop said the schools in- the first time that the lepers JeanZoa of Yaounde He is food suppliers and medicinesmiddot of Brotherhood Lackvolved will have to be closed had seen a cardinal learning one of the languages various kinds

We must greatly evpand the ri1l~ cardinal however through of Cameroun the one that is Menace to Peace~ Men Not Outcasts S(l()pe and quality of our reli- middotworks of chari1y has for a long most widely spoken in the reshy VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pe~gious education proglams reach- time been concerned withmiddot the middotgion He thinks that jcent wiJl What makes the cardinal parshy is still menaced by questions laquofing out to all age groups lepers M~~y of the houses in take two years for him lamp ale- tkularly admired is that he reshy

prestige and an insufficient senstlBishop Gerety announced the leprosanum here at Yaoul)de gards the lepers as men and not of human brotherhood PQ~that he is creating a task force have been built through his - as outcasts He knows that many Paul VI told thousands of isi~to study religious education gifts The same is tgtrue of sev- Pope Asks Respect lepers are severely mutilated tors gathered in St Pete

plograms in the diocese He eral leprosaria of the Ivory For Human Rights and Cfln no longer take their SQuare for a Sunday noon blesvshywill ask the group he said to Coast Dahomey and Camerouf place in society It is because of ingmake reco~mendations ~on- The cardinl i6 still in the VATICAN CITY (NC)--Jt is middotthis that he seeks to bring them

eerning how the limitedre- stage of making contacts in the vain to proclaim h~man rights material and spiritual aid Speaking from a window ovei shysources of the diocese can best three leprosaria here unless everythlllg IS done ~o He also gives thought to the looking the square Popc P~u1 be used to ploovide an effec- Cardinal Leger does not want ensure the duty of respecting prevention of the disease If cleclared We must support willi tive religious education for the to impose either his aid or him- them by all people everywhere leprosaria are well organized it our hopes that cause (of peace) total community of adults lind self on anyone He has said re- l1ld for all people Pope Paul will perhaps be possible to wage which so many desire and proshychildren peatedly that he does not want VI declared In a letter to the In- a campaign to eradicate the mote with a sense of impartiality

He said he will also ask for to be a burden and tl1at he ternational Conferenee on Hu- disease completey and justice with true love ofi reeommenltlations on the best wants to be regarded as a simple man Rights meeting in Tehran The cardinals realism aston- freedom and of respect for su1ishy

fering peoplesuse of the dioceses Religious priest Iran ishes many Africans who like personnel Disinterested Help The lettel signed by the Pope to live from day to day and who

~-------------bull That is why the Africans ad- was sent to Father Theodore do not like their customs to be mire him Moslems and Chris- Hesburgh CSC president of upset The cardinal understands tians agree that his is an exam- Notre Dame University and head that the Africans must be shoWn pIc of disinterested help that is of the papal delegation to the that aid is not directed at deshynot often seen in Africa ongress The meeting is being stroying their customs but at

held on the 20th anniversary of bringing them a better standard the United Natio)ls Declaration of living

Workers Charges of Human Rights and in conshyjunction with the International Reject CelibacyDenied in Germany Human Rights Year

ROERMOND (NC)-TwcllyshyBONN (NC)-Charges by the The papal letter dec111red one young Dutch priests havewomens branch of the Indian With all men of goodwill we told Bishop Petrus Moors ofYoung Christian Workers shall follow with great interest this Netherlands See that they(YCW) that living and working ~his conference in Tehran which can no longer accept the plicstlyconditions for Indian girls means to formulate and prepare a celibacy obligationtraining as nurses in West Gershy program of measures to be taken

many were unsatisfactory were on the prolongation of this Hushy denied here man Rights Year

The Rev Hubert Debatin Racial discrimination raises soProtestant minister who initi shy

many troubles social injustice F L COLLINS amp SONSated a program of nursing economic misery and ideologicaltraining for girls from Indias oppression so many revolts that INCORPORATED 1937Kerala state saId that the Indishyrecourse to violence as a meansan government had ordered an

investigation of the complaints to right these wrongs to human The Indian embassy here howshy dignity is a grave temptation ever refused to comment (The Development of Peoples)

Rev Mr Debatin said he visshyON CD HOARD Alexandshy Ited the embassy and told offi shy

er P Tureaud Sr chief cials that the charges wer~ completely false Despite thecounsel for the Louisiana no comment by the embassy

branch of the National Assoshy it is reliably repOrted that emshyciation for theAd~ancement bassy officials did visit several of Colorelti People tNAACP) hospitals and questioned Indian

girlS about th~ir living and beeame the first Negro elecshyworking conditions ted to the Catholic tJniver~ The niinist~r iJaidthe Indian

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12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 2 1968

C~~e$ ~~Ergy Role in Sreg~Hrch F9f ~~ Crisis Sc~~tm(ln

By Msgr George G Higgins The bighop of a middle-siood eastern diocese recently

gnnounced at ceremonies memorializing Martin Luther King Jr that the diocese will spend a substantial portion of its annual Development Fund to improve the condition ef the Negro bullbullbull The money poslible that even those Cahoshyhe was at pains to empha- lies (and Protestants) who are size will not be gpent pater- most vigorously opposeq to

wilistically but in close 00- clerical involvement in social operation with local Negro and economic issues are nevershyleaders He said that his com- theless in fevor of using church mitffiimt wi 11 funds as seed money to develshylTeceiVe the op projects for the benefit of bacJcing of the the poor in general and for areas Catholics poor Negroes in partiCUlar I make tbisDisconcerting Fact ~ o m mit - I would hope of course that ment he as- this might prove to be the case aert1d confi- but only time will tell lIIent that our Meanwhile the fact that Catholic people such a high percentage of Cathshyshare this love olies and protestants are 00

-m Ii d concern record as being opposed to That the bishop the middotchurches getting involved felt it necessary in political and social issues is to make the latter statement for rather disconcerting to put it the record might lead one ~ as mil~ly as possible suspeet that in point of factmiddot be I say tliisas one who can symshyantiCfpated that some of hi$ pathizewith thoseCatholicsor Catholic people would object to Protestants or Jews who object his 0 decision and was mereIi to certain types of clerical inshyWying to neutralize their op~ volvement which either ignore mtion in advance or to put it the complexities of the political morecrudely was trying to ~rocess or tend to oversimplify beat them to the punc~ sO to the application of moral prinei-Bjpeak pIes to complex social and ecoshy

I Expert Opposition pomic problems or finally tend Be that as it may a recent to leave the impression that

ampallup Poll on the attitude of Clerics have a monopoly on the Cathdlics 3lld Protestants with regard to the involvement of their churches and their clergy in political and social issues would seem to suggest thatshylIIlless his diocese is the rare exceptl(~n that proves the rule -~he bIShop can exp~t a cershyiau~ amount of 0PPoSIb~)D from a slzable JIllnonty of his Cathshyooc people

lftY-Seven per cent of Cathshyclies res~ndmg m the Gallu~ survey said that the churcti~~ should not get involved with 35 per cent statmg that t~e d1~rch~~ sho~d express SOCIal enS pO~~Ical Vle~s

~gn Icantly l~ was found ~at more Catholics than Pro~-

Virtue of political prudence or have been granted ethical inshysights thatmiddot have been denied to other mortals

S~rious Obligation It is one thing however to

demand that clerics stay within the limits of their o~ compeshytence in the political order and quite another thing to try to muzzle them or to deny that they have any role at all to play in the field of public policy In the case of civil rights for exatitple they havemiddot a serious

Gbligation to teach the truth as they see it

To do so in any meaningful woay tlley must at times move beyond the realm of general

0Stants thmk ~hat the ~hurlt~esprinciples into the area of spe- should n~ get ~volved ~n soc~al and polItlcal Issues Fifty-~wo lPOerlledcefnt of the Protesta~ts P avored mvolvment whIle 42 ~er cent disagreed

Hadden Study Contrarirwise however a

mudy released during the same week in which middotthe Gallup findshymgs were made public found

ntat in all caSes Protestantsmiddot were more vigorous in their opshyposition to social action by clergymen thaI) either Roman Catholics or Jews

The latter study directed by ~effrey K Hadden a sociologist at Western Reserve University in Cleveland was summarized In ~onsiderabledetail by Edwaro R iFiske in an article entitled -Cl~rgy and Civil Rights in the editorial section of the Sunday Ap~il 21 issue of the New York linles

Since the Gallup and HadGen Alrveys dealt specifically with the right of the clergy and the ehurches to speak o~t on social and political issues (civil rights tor example) and not on the role of the churches in financing programs aimed at improving U1t ~ot of Negroes their findshyings do not necessarily m~ ofoou~E that the bishop referrect to a~ove will encounter oppe-

cifies~ even at the risk of a~tagshyonizing those Catholics who disshyagree ith them

This does not mean that clershyies or other representatives of official church bodies should shortcircuit the political procshyess by trying to force their own solutions on the body politic by means of heavy-handed authorshyitarian edicts

If they were to shirk this reshysponsibility or run awoay frOm this challenge for fear of antagshyonizing a minority (or for that matter eyen a majority) of their people they would be unshyworthy of their calling

-This having been said howshyever itshould be noted that clericS and other representatives of offlCiilI church bodies alSo

have an obllgation to keep their methods of teaching under conshystant review

Wo~ CUt Out We cannot automatically as-middot

Sume in other words that all of those who object to clerical involvement in political and soc~lissues are necessarily in

HEADS NCEA Bishop Raymond J 9allagher of Lafayette Ind was elected president general of the Natshyional Catholic Educational Association at the associa- tions 65th annual conven- tion in San Francisco NC Photo

Venerate Fatima Statue in Brazil

LISBON (NC)-Manuel Cardshyinal Goncalves Cerejeira patri- arch of Lisbon imd Bishop Joao Pereira Venancio of Leiria whose diocese includes the Marshyian shrine of Fatima returned here after participating in threeshyday ceremonies in Brazil honorshying Our Lady of Fatima

They t~ok the statue of the -Pilgrim Virgin of Fatima with them to Brazil

At Sao Paulo they took part in Portuguese - Brazilian Communshyity Day celebrations At Inhangshyabau and at Rio de Janei1G thousands joined them in ven- erating the statue

The patriarch and Bishop Venshy

ancio were accompanied in Brazil by the rector of the Fat-middot i m a shrine Msgr Antonio Borges

_ sitiOJifrom any slgnificantnuili middot te~ which they caiiunder- pany a mernber of the Jew-middot

ber ~f his people for usin~ cii- stand and absorb jish fAith has neen elected GCeSaIl f~nds for the economic -Ifthis sho~d prove to be the to in bOardof +-~ t- and~ ~OCIal bettel1nent 01 the case we have our work cut out ~ bull wu~ ~ W

Wack citizens of his communitlT ~r~ in the montha ftbat lie the CaU~hc VnlverampliyNe ~~ other words it is quite aheiid middotPboto

~ ~

bad faith It may be in the case of some

r of tb~m at le9st we are at fault TRUSTEE BenJamin T ~ in the sense that we havent Iearned how to communicate the Rome president of aWaah Go~l meSsage to them in i n g ton construction oom-

The Servant Queen IiJ the Constitution on the Church we find the testimony of

Sacred Scripture and the Church Fathers combined with more recent pronouncements by the popes Mary the Mother of God an4 of the Redeemer was united to Him by a close inen soluble bond and waS accorded a special role in the mystery Qf the middotIncamiddotrnate Word that is in the economy of salvation

Whenmiddot Mary uttered the words of her Fiat she made a ~l eommitment to God so that He could carry out His de- slgus in middothermiddot Mary never took back hell ad of total surrender Dot even on the road to CalvarY lFrom that firstmiddot moment she devoted herself wholly to serving DM only her heavenly Fashyther and the Incarnate Word but also the whole human race lin the llncarnation Our Blessed Mother first brought Christ to the world Anell that is precisely what she would have 70U do aUmiddot your life-bring Christ to the world

Ev~n after the AScenslon she loyally and steadfastly camiddotrried out~~r role aCting as spirit1lI mother to the beloved disciple anli ~~ ne~rn Cl1urch~ With good reason then we can say tha~~e wJole life of the Lords humble handtnaid~from the moment IIhewas porn to the present-is one of loVing seZvice to her cltildren what gzeater example and what ~tei model could y~ chqose to imitate in Oilder to fulfill your ta~k as a Christian called to~ove and -to serVe your poor 8iKl sUffering bro~ers arqupd the world

You must DOW take over Mars task~ You are the door through which Christ enters the world You muSt receive the Lon and bear Him in 70ur heart sO thaamp He rnA7 beeo~e the heartmiddot ofmiddot your life Then His love Jiis goodne~ Dis pity for the multitude middotwill shine through you into the world Then He will smile through your eyes Then He will help with your hanels Then He will comfort with your goodness Then He will relive in your pers~n His life of long ago for the sake of todayS desperate humanity

In this the month dedicated to the Mother of the church show your love for her by making her task your task by sacrificing to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith-to help those of her children who are in such need

SAlLVATioN and SERviCE lUe the work of The Soclet7 il~r ~~ Propagati~n of th~ Faith Please cut Gut this column llInd sen~ your of~ering to Right Reverend EdwardT OMeara Nationll-ll Director 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 Or directly to your local Diocesan Director BU Rev Msgr Raymond TConsid~e 3611 North Main Street Fall River Massachusetts e~7~omiddot

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13 New Jersey Grand Jury Absolves Police of Deaths During Rioftong

NEWARK (NC) - A special and charged it with lcHrity m Essex Cotmty grand jury inves- permitting some of lots material tigating the deaths of 28 people to i1all into private hands which during rioting in this city last misused il Summer absolved po1dce laquol Reporting on the deaths it blame iO the deatbs in a pre- found that three were not conshysentment which rebuked an nected with the rioting that anti-poverty agency for failure eight resulted from wounds inshyto cooperate willi law enforce- curred while participating in ment agencies criminal acts that nine of those

The presentment was issued killed were apparently innocent after the jury had heard more bystanders that two apparently than 100 witnesses over an resulted from sniper fire that eight-week period It said there two were from accidental was insufficient evidence to shooting and that one could not warrant indictment in any of be classified the cases presented to it al- Another special grand jury is though an earlier trial resulted now being paneled to carry out hi the conviction of a man for an investigation of Newarks fatally shooting a woman municipal government This inshy

In the final analysis the vestigation was recommended ~ury concluded the responsi- by the governors commission bility for the loss of life and which reported a pervasive property that is the inevitable feeling of corruption in Newshyproduct of rioting and mass ark lawlessness cannot be placed upon those whose duty it is to enforce and protect the freedom Convention lliead of our society

Courage Restraint N E MonsignorIt rests squarely upon the

MANCHESTER (NC)-Msgrhoulders of those who for euroolin A MacDonald presidentwhatever purpose incite and of the Manchester diocese senateparticipate in riots and the of priests has been selected asflouting of law and order in chairman of the national con-complete disregard of the rights stiiutional convention of theand well-being of the vast mashyproposed U S priests councilsjority of our citizens organization 110 be held May 20Although the presentment and 21 in Chicago leveled some small criticisms at

I1he monsignor earlier hadpolice actions it generally upshybeen elected as the Bostonheld the work of law enforceshyprovince delegate to a 29-memshyment officers and this was in ber ad hoc steering committeecontrast to the report of the for the convention When ill wasNew Jersey (()vernors Comshydecided 110 limicent the steeringmission on Civil Disorder commimiddotlltee 110 8 members thewhich was highly critical of the

police JJlQIlsignor was elected to this group then ohosen as chairmanWith some exceptions the

jury said police both local and Msgr MacDonald said the state together with National purposes of the proposed NashyGuardsmen acquitted themselves tional Federation of Priests with courage and restraint in Councils are to promote priestly the early stages of the riot brotherhood by faciJi1ating comshy

munion among priests councilsPoor Judgment to provide a forum for the disshyThe grand jury said the poshycussion of pastoral matters tolice were handicapped by lack enable priests councils to speakof training appropriate equipshywith a common representativement effective direction and voice to proD101e and collabshyexperience in dealing with the orate in programs of pastoraltype of situation in which they research and action to impleshywere involved ment the reriewal of priestlyThe jury did say that in the life to provide the means forlater stages of the disturbances priests councils united nationshythere were examples of poor ally to cooperate with the tityjudgment excessive use of fireshythe ~eligious the bishops andarms and D manifestation of with others in addressing thevindictiveness that eannot be needs of the Church in the modshytolerated in law enforceD1ent ern World and to do whateverpersonnel is necessary to carry out theseAD10ng the recommendations purposesit made was one that looting be

Members of the Priests Senshyeffectively controlled at its ate of the Diocese of Fall Riverearliest manifestations It also have sent suggestions regardingcalled for the improveD1ent and the proposed organization toupdating of equipment and said Monsignor MacDonaldthe use of chemicals and nonshy

lethal gases should be explored and considered Priests Paid SllEme

The jury called for improveshyment in police-community relashy Salary as Laborers tions and said there is no place PARIS (NC) - The averagefor abusive language or ill salary of priests in the Paris treatment of any group of citi shy region is about the saD1e as thatzens Like the governors COD1shy of an unskilled laborer accordshymission it deplored the use of ing to figures contained in thepersonally-owned weapons by first public budget report of thepolice Paris archdiocese

The anti-poverty agency crit shy The archdiocesan operatingicized was Newark Legal Servshybudget the report showed isices Project a branch of the $440000 a year most of whichUnited Community Corp which is for the salaries of 384 nonshyhelps ghetto residents with legal parish priests more than a thirdproblems

retired This indishyCharges Laxity of whoD1 are cates an average of less than $1-The jury accused it of failing 000 a year to cooperate in post-riot invesshy

Parishes pay direclly the 600tigations said the character of it taken were parish priests but their base salshystatements had

inadequate and ary is only about $50 a monthunprofesSional Honorariums for baptisms marshyriages and special Masses add

Receives Admiral about an equal amount to this VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope sum but pcrivate requests for

Paul VI received in audience Masses are declining Parish Adm Joseph Edet Akinwale priests send to the archdiocese Wey of the Nigerian Navy who the honorari~s of Masses they had told a press conference that coannot celebrate In 1964 this he hoped to present a message amounted to about 22000 Masses from the Nigerian government a year now it is only about three on the Biafra siiuatiolL ~middotfourmiddot thousand~

r THE ANCHORshyThursday May 2 1968

I

Schoo~s Exp~ore

Dual E~l~~rMJcemlt LOUISVILLE (NC)-Catholie

school officials here are trying to work out dual enrollment agreeD1entS with public schoo officials in two locations

If agreement is reached stushydents at Flaget High School here and at Bethlehem Academy may benefit next Fall from the proshygram

Moves toward the dual enrQllshyment concept were made possishyble when the Kentucky attorney general issued an opinion which said in effect that public schools might get state financial assistance for students enrolled part-time in public schools

Under the plan students in private schools could take some subjects in public schools and others in their own schools

Famiddotther Thomas P Casper Louisville diocesan superintendshyent of schools said he is submitshyting dual enrollment proposalpoundNEWMAN CLUBS MEET At oonferenee of Newman to the Louisville Bardstown andClubs from area colleges representatives of Fall River Dishy Nelson County boards of educa~

reese included from left Walter La Rosa Our Lady ill Mt tion Carmel parish Seekonk a student at Bristol Community While action on the roposaw College Lydia Rocha St Michaels Fall River BCC Rev is up U the public boards-the

attorney generals opinion grantvHarold J Wilson BOC Newman Club chaplain Morgan permission but does not force

Childs St Patricks Falmouth SMTL ootion-Father Casper said he if very pleased that there are possibilities open now for deshyveloping dual enrollD1entReturns to Moscow Final form of any dual enroll shyment effort is still to be decided

Fr Dion Assumption College President But one such method treated in the attorney generals opinion

Named Apostolic Administrator is the leasing of space in Cathshyolic schools by public schoom

WORCESTER (NC) - Father a visiting Russian churchman and the operation of this spaceLouis F Dion AA president here Father Bissonnette is now as public school classroomsof AssuD1ption College here will academic dean at Assumption resign his post June 30 to be- College COD1e apostolic administrator in Father Dion had to wait more New Jersey Bishopthe Soviet Union and chaplain than three years after Father to American Roman Catholics Bissonnettes expulsion before Asks United Action in Moscow obtaining a Soviet visa enabling ATLANTIC CITY (NC) shy

Father Dion held the same him to go to Moscow via Paris Bishop George H Guilfoyle of posts in Russia from 1959 to in January 1959 Camden issued a call for united 1961 He served as assistant to Father Dion said he is looking action on the part of all of WJ the president and registrar of forward to his return to the to 36Sist our fellow man as Assumption College from 1962 Moscow post He bad not specifshy he helped dedicate a HUD1aJ until his appointment as presi- ically requested the assignment Resources Center aiD1ed at job dent ill June 1964 he said but it was offered to develpoment for some of this

He replaces Father Eugene him and he accepted it willingly resort areas 50000 poor LaPlante AA who returns to Powers of Bishop This nation has made treshythe Assumptionist Fathers The duties of chaplain Father mendous strides in the fields opound AD1erican province for reassign- Dion explained are not con- science industry business and ment after a three-year term fined to American Catholics medicine he said It is shameshy

ful that in view of all this proshySeventh to Serve living in Moscow They include gress we still have millions ofFather Dion is the seventh he said the entire foreign colshypeople who live in poverty andAmerican priest-all Assump- ony - the diplomatic corps wanttionists-to serve in Moscow un- newspaper personnel and tour-

Bishop Guilfoyle said theder the terms of the 1933 Roose- ists Camden diocese will contributevelt-Litvinov agreement estab- Since there ar(~ no European

$1000 to the new center to belishing diploD1atic relations be- priests-or priests of any other nationality-in Moscow serving used for whatever program the

tween the U S and the USSR in the capacity of chaplain he board of directors decides hi He was replaced in 1961 by said the American chaplain needed Father Joseph Richard AA ministers to the spiritual needs who served four years in the of Catholics attached to the post staffs of embassies and legations

His iD1D1ediate predecessor accredited to the Soviet governshy FAIRHAVENwas Father Georges Bisslgtnnette ment AA who was expelled in The post of apostolic adminisshy LUMBERMaTch 1955 by the Soviet gov- trator Father Dion said inshy

COMPANYernment in retaliation for U S volves all the powers and funcshyrefusal to prolong the visa of tions of a bishop except ordina~

tion and consecration of bishops Complete line It is assigned to a priest usuallyAtlanta Archdiocese Building Materials in areas where there is DO

Joins Equal Housing hierarchy who is then dimiddotrectly responsible to the Holy See 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVENATLANTA (NC)-The lllChshy Father Dion expects to arrivediocese of Atl~lnta has joined in Moscow in early August he 993-2611more than 50 metropolitan At- said

lan-ta organizations and indi- viduals as co-spo~sors of the Atlanta Metropoli tan COmmit- bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull~

tee on Equal Opporunity ill Housing

HThe objective of the confer- BISAILLONS ence will be primarily educashytional Father Noel C Burtenshy GARAGEshaw ehancellor of the arch- diocese and member of the execu-tive committee said 24-Hour Wrecker

He added We expect this dialogue and interChange will establish middotnecessary communicashy 653 Washington Street Fairhaven tion and provide Some answers 994-5058~ the housing problems facing reater Atlanta bull

Thanks Catholics For Refugee Aid

VATICAN - CITY (NC)-NearMsgrEllis Relates Hist~ry middotmiddotEastmiddotwelfare work of U S Cathshyolics has been praised by Pope Paul VL0+ Training for Priesthood

Such a message in the Popes By Rt Rev Msgr Jobs S Kennedy

The publication of a book by Monsignor John Tracy Ellis founder and dean of a new school of American Cath~

lti)lic churchhistory is always a weloome event This is true even when the book is among his minor works SuCh is Essays in Seminary Educoshytion (Fides Notre Dame Inshydiana 46556 $595) amiddot 001shylection of papers and address-C2S There is some repetition in Chese essays which were preshyared for vari shyeus occasions But it does not illessen the imshyact of a book which shows us n keen critical in tell i g ence brought to beal OIl a subject of bas i c imporshylance The hand rDf the historian iIs seen throughshy~t the book The first three essays are specifically historical

The firsi deals with the trainshylog or preparation of priests from the apostolic age to the ~ncil of Trent the second with the same subject from the time of Trent to ~ 1960s The tird is todevoted diocesan theological seminaries in the American Middle West 1811shy1889

A survey such 00 the author Makes in the two opening chap $ers is of especial interest beshyeause it brings out tile implausshyible but incontestable fact that b about the fimiddotI9t 1500 years of its existence the Church did DOt have anything even regem- bling a standard ~m of edushy_tion for the priesfil100d

Monastie Schools fttere were no special schoobl

lor the clergy before the time Of

The medieval universitieQ were foundedmiddot by the Church amd the clery p~yed ~ im ~rtant part m them But theyWei b d al ~ ed ti e y no means I e Jormiddot ushy(l3 on for the pnesthood SInce2he the I g I kemelyq 1~~~y~middotou~emiddot~~U Iersi~ of P middotkmiddotlmiddot5middot6

-Y arlS n ovv or ~(fears to complete thedoCtOriite ill theology Hence few priestsbenefited f-rom 4--

~ UDlversI Effective Response

lhe POr estate of the clergy~ glarmgly a~parent in the ens of the Renalsance and the Bef~rmation and this middotis prj shy

manly llttutablello educashytional defiCiency And evea hen the reforming Council of lIrent was launched it took 1~ ~rs ~efore a dec~ on clerical educa~on was achieved and a long tlme thereafter before its proVISIonS were carned out in practice

Monsignor Elliss treatment of

ticularly the institutions founded by St Vincent de Paul and Jean-Jacques Olier

These men win the authors praise for their effective reshygponseto a vital need But he does IlQt hesitate to lay to them ~e responsibility for some of the anti-intellectual bias which chamcterizea too many seminashyli13 in subsequent centuries

incredible NWIIlber In the United States some

quite ancient history was reshylived as the bishops of new dioceses had cleriea schools of sorts in their own homes But in the days of the very first bishop John Oarroll a real

had b - -bli hed semmary een - 9when the Sulpichms came to Baltimore in 1791 and founded St Marys

Later developmen1s are sumshymarized by Monsignor Ellis with attention to the various types of seminaries and the growth m numbers from 50 in 1668 to 571 iIn 1964 Thi6 last incredible number is indicative 0If tile regre~le proliferation Which led to needless duplicashytiOD inadequacy in quality and waste of resources

A test of middotthe exeellence of American seminaries is proshyposed by the atrtbor how many men of enduring reputation ba~ flhey produced The anshyswerJs that tIhe fteonl is not distinguished And much of the lelIlainder of the book is given 110 probing for reasons m exshyplanation Of this

Routine Teaeldllamp at Augustine whomiddotbecame Ihi Anierican ~mi~ry of -ilJhop of Hippo in 396 His 1be ft refleCted _ national

_

LlIFE MEMBERS Msgr John E Boyd chaplain left and Dominick Maxwell Jr right Grand Knight of Fall River Council 86 of the Knights of Columbus i~vest Jerome D Foley and Dr Joseph Carvalho as life members

~

Rural Ireland Charge Farmers Lack Formal Training

In Agriculture ROSSLARE (NC)The need Wbat chance had the boy who

for priests to be more involved left school at 14 of making the in social problems was stressed grade at farming ~he excepshyby 9peakers at the annual meetshy tional lads made it The rest are

~ e9tablished and mairitaineCi~ - In the future he said until 4- disregard cif inteli~tualqua1itY this is rectified Ninety-five nAr ~ his own household and had In ~y instances ~ty mem- ~ imitators ~gt bera ere apPOint~~ t~eir ~t of e5ent-day farmers Thereafter came the mona~f)le positi - middotth m rd io ~v~ had IlQ post-primary edushySchools initiated by St BenediCt ons WIlifo ~ga r cation NinetYofive per cent ofin thmiddot th proper qlla Ications MuCh of farmers have had middotno formal esnr cent~ the~ fllie teaching was rolltine and~rting in middotligrlcultllredr~ and-middot eP1scqp~ Scboo~ an~ dun Collateral reading _n6t middot~JFlWle Awayampnally themiddot medieval UDlvenu- middot~~d lib ties middot - ~ampt~W1~ an nu-~ wer~ Fcaither qerinehy ~ncluded

~e )mperorPbariemaible ~~~poundreed ~tho~~laquo~ lt m the eigh~h ~turydecr~ miD not aencournt ~e~ch~Gt~~n6~llIIr~Watmiddot ilhat alLclencs m~be lble to middotwas virtuall uilkn a lj ~

ifead im~~ri~ J~d~ve ~m- faculties PU~Shed v~illi~~e iT ~~~t ~~t~Bltcs petence In ~h~~ )~1esslC~~Idu- Monsignor Ellis points tJ01 the BOGOTA (NC) _ Anglican tiaif~king ~ DllIllmum timidity which prevailed after Bishop David Benson Reed of

q I I~~ons they ~ere to be the eJcesses perpetrated in 1l1e BogOta offered accommodations e~ ~~ deprIved of repression of Modernism in the for~five Catholic bishops during me iectr~~ IS we can see w a fim part of the present centurY theforthcoming International

g ere had been He sees a change in the era of Eucharistic Congresss in August

ing of the Christu Rex Society an Irish organization for priestDmiddot engaged in pastoml work

Over 250 priests and represhysentatives of agriculturalorgan- izations attended the cOngress here on the theme Rural Ireshyland

Father Jerome Dennehy CC of Kenm2lre criticized the fail- ure of the Iri9h educational sysshytem to provide the farmer with the basic knowledge necessarY to enable him to profimiddott from advice from government agenshydes onfurming methods

No real progress can be made

Vatican II and happily notes and five Ecuadorian prelates aeshythe improvements already made cepted his invitation

lUld those-in prosPectmiddotmiddot He hJ They are Bishops Bernardo hopeful for the future Ech R f Amb to d

evern~ wz 0 a anlIJiteUktlllal A~lieDtmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot-middotCandiiiomiddotRada Cenosian of Guashybull - d middotmiddotd A 1 B h

in8 ConclUding ~y~ ran a liln UXIlary IS ops Priestmiddot as rntelleCtllal~~ v~rll9middotmiddotGabrieI1iazCueva Ernesto that abettereducated and mueh Alvarez ~liaVlcente CIsneros of

and ea r Gua allmoreaware enti laitrmiddotmiddot y qu demands a certainmiddotleveloflD-middot B~SbtPAnBeedli has JurCls~lctib~n

middotfellectual attainment and alivemiddot middot~v~r eo g cans In 0 om la its cl and Ecuador and has been an

~~ ooes ermeam that the ecumenical leader in these

now fading away with thei~

farms Father Eamonn Casey nashy

ijonal director of the catholic Housing Aid Society in London stressed the necessity for the priest to work with underprivishyleged members of -society Too often he said the theologians are on the periphery - they should come doWn to earth and mix with the people-who really

priest has to be a professional~untries ~ _ ~=====~_ intellectual such is not his _ Over 200 bis~ops a~ 1~ ~r-Etmiddotmiddot D ampD SALES AND SERVICE cation ltR does mean that he has dinals have saId they Wlll at-sect to maintain a genuiDe hifei-est end the EUcharistie Congress to - sect ill things intellectUal anq m Mbeid be~ sectpublic questions sect

Monsignor Ellismiddot chides sUPe- sect riors for their failure to eneour- p~iori ~ the minisky in sect age priests 110 use their ~cial teD-dayretreatS preceding or- sect talents skills and aptitudes dination Better than nothing sectAnd he urgeS priests 110 acquire one suPPoses sect( and retain habits of 9tudy It is In the lntervaJ there has sect to be hoped that both these cau- ~ great improvement But sect

name has been sent to lI1sgr John G Nolan president of the Pontifical lVlission for Palestine whose headquarters are in New Vork Written by Amleto Carshydinal Cicogilani Papal Secreshytary of State it referred to the

1 Missions 19 years service to ~ Palestinian refugees particushy

larly victims of the recent Arab-Israeli conflictto

It singled out as particularly praiseworthy the contribution of the Catholic Near East Welshyfare Association saying that middotthrough the unflagging genershyosi ty of the catholics of the United States of America it provided qlost of the means for the Missions work following the recent conflict

The papal letter declared No other agency surpasses the Pontifical Mission in length of

middot actualmiddot serviCe and its identifl shycapon with the paternal intershy~ and concern of the Holy Father merits his encourageshyment hismiddot blessing and his prayerful good wishes

Cardinal middotCicOgnanl wrote that Pope Paul out of paternal afshyfection for the homeless and of grateful esteem for the Pontifi shycal Mission bids memiddot send yOIll the enclosed check for $5000 Added to this was a furthell amount of money contributed

middot by the Congregation for the Oriental Churches

Msgr Nolan was asked that during his Easter visit to the refugee campS he kindly disshytribute the total sum in the Popes Dame to all the needyen

ar~~~stChneU~made adicbot-SAVE MONEY ON omy of man saying here is middotthe

body her~ is the soul-Iam YOUR middotOImiddotLmiddotHEATconCerned only with the soul bull bull bull bull Tmiddothe love of Christ is for the whole person and anything ~ -4~ WYman that concerns 1llieperson is of ~ US92 concern to middotChrist

He said thatmiddot the priest middotshould CHARLES F VARGAS selk tomiddotmiddot develop ~ature Ght-ls- tiMlS amongdsmiddotflockiuidcpre- 54 ROCKDALE AvENUE pare themmiddotforlife Th~ role of 1 the ~~esthe~dmiddotiftcl~desmiddotth~middot ~E~ BEDFORD MASS proVISIon Qfmiddotmiddot mformatlOn oo sexual and~ari~itLplmiddotobiehis 1

He stlggcentstJd middottbatmiddotmiddotmiddotPri~middot main~in cQJjt$C~ wjth~ those whlt emjgra~~mmiddottheir_ par- ish~ and follo~middotup middotthe middotcareers( of boys who are releasedmiddot from refprm schools t

1 bull bullbull - - ~_ _ - ~ ( ~

~ ~ lt

~III1I11I11I11I11I1UIIIIIIlIl1mlllllIII1I1I1I11I1I1I1I11II11I1I11I11I11IIIII11I1I11IIllIUIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~

tionary words win be wideiy~ OW measure canOOt be the poor sect AIR COmiddotIDmiddotImiddotTmiddotIO~IImiddot bullGmiddot

c INC

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~ post-Tridentinemiddot seminaries bulland responsibly beard Performance of the past It sect I~ I~ I~ lis remarkably extensive but the It is hard 110 believe tb1Ilt as must be the imperious demands sect main focus is on those ofF~Ce ~ as the seventee~th centu~lt ~ the p~sent an4 ~~ fUture ~ 363 SECOND ST FALL RIVER MASSbull bull the seventeenth century Pal- fa France some clena lOt their ~IWIIIUIUIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIUUlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUUIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIUIiIUWlimllllli5

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16

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs May 2 1968 Back Presidenills ~reg~reg ~~~1rf~Jreg~MO~ ~~~lliJO[[reg(gJ ~rntilO1fi)[[fr~ofr~r

CHICAGO (NC)-The Assoshy~~ ~~regramp~~ o[J1j [Q)1 W[J1lJ[[o ciation of Chicago Priests an

The record compiled 56 years ful Swamppodle a neighborshy unofficial group of some 1500 priests in the archdiocese ofago still stands in big league hood within sight of the U S

baseball annals-most runs al shy Capitol talked about Father Chioago has endorsed President Johnsons current efforts to]owed one game 24 Travers Travers band

fA J (Joe) Detroit Never before had the bandsshy negotiate a Settlement of the

Father Aloysius J Travers men performed like they did in Vietnam war The ACP in its fifth plenarygJ 75 who achieved the dubishy the 1919 May procession-never

ous pitching distinction died had such old favorites as Tis session here turned down a resolution prepared by its soshylast week in Misericordia Hosshy the Month of Our Mother and cial action subcommittee onpital Philadelphia He acquied 0 Mary We C~own Thee With

baseball immortality on May Blossoms Today been so spir shy peace calling for complete cesshy

112 1912 as pitcher for the One sation of U S bombing in Vietshyitedly played by Gonzaga bandsshynam to support the Presidents limited decrease in bombing

men as the procession windedlDay Wonders Detroits brawling Tigers were through Swampoodle streets glated to play Connie Macks After the procession was over and negotiation moves

Two other peace resolutionspOwerful Philadelphia As that the school rector called in recommended by the subcomshy_ daymiddotin old Shibe Park Detroits Father Travers and congratushy

Btar Ty Cobb had drawn a fine mittee were approved They

and two-day suspension for formance The rector added lated him on the bands pershy

put the ACP on record as favorshy

belting a heckling fan a few But high school musicians with ing draft law revisions so that a person might be exempt as a

lligers decided if Cobb couldnt mustaches Dont you think thatdays earlier in New York~ ~he

conscientious objector to a parshywas going a bit too far ticular war without necessarilyFather T~avers had recruitedplay they wouldnt either so being a conscientious objector

Famous llnfield a dozen or so members of thecenthey went on strike

to all war and so that a per

With the aid of Connie Mack crack Fort Myer Army Band

son could be exempt as a conshyfOm nearby Arlington Va scientious objector on humanishy

ed up a collection of Philadelshydressed them in cadet uniforms~e Detroit management roundshy

tarian as well as religioUlland put them in the school band groundsBesides teaching at Stphia sandlot players signed

The ACP also approved threeJosephs Prep and Gonzagathem to Detroit contracts and recommendations of its liturgy

as the Tigers sf Francis Xavier High in New committee York As a result the priests group

Father Travers also taught atfielded the One Day Wonders

Al Travers 19 fresh out of has urged the National Confershyat Josephs Prep School rho Disbands Hawks ence of Catholic Bishops to reshyhelped recruit the sandlotters One of his moSt heartbreaking submit two liturgical petitioJUloppointed himself pitcher He assignments was given him some to the Conglegation of Rites inctftein recalled I learned that 25 years ago He was sent back Rome The petitions which had e pitcher would collect-50 to St Josephs College where New Problem ~en turned down by the Vati shyeX-tra so I volunteered the battIe cry is The Hawk can congregation would allowThat day the As scored 24 will never die as moderator the establishment of experimenshyINns on 25 hits with io nuts of athletics Priest Urges F~ir labor Practices tal centers for the liturgycmearned against young Travshy His jOb-disband the Hawks For CatholicSchool Faculties throughout the country and limshy

erG The wonder is the score football team with a minimum ited experimentation with thewasnt higher for young Tra~~rs of uproar from students and SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-For betweell the school and the liturgy without prior approvalwas pitching against the best alumni since football had beshy as long as anyone can rememshy religious community of the Vaticanbalt team of the era-against come a moneymiddot losing sport at ber the Religious and lay peoshy Some experts says that the

PhiladelphiaS famous $100000 St Josephs and a number of nte third resolution called on-pie who serve on the faculties best solution to this problem is

infield of John Phelan (Stuffy) other Catholic colleges in ~those the NCCB to take concrete stepsof Catholic grammar and high to bar Religious from partici shy

McInni6 at first Eddie Collins days to implement proposals of itsschools have been the type of pating in labor organizations

lJeCOnd Jack Barry short and He did his job well directing liturgy committee for adaptashypeople who would never think But Father Reicher indicated

IPrank (Home Run) Baker third attention to St Joes basketball tion of the Mass to smaIl anelof going out on strike against this would only divide the Reshy special age groupsSaves Franchise team which has grown into one unfair labor practices since ligiousand lay faculty of schools

But young Travers and the of the nations powerhouses this would imply some sort of even more than they are dividedORe Day Wonders who had For the last 25 years Father guilt on the part of p~ors and now India to ReconsiderI2ever seen Detroit saved the Tlavers had been stationed at bishops Urging a period of experishybaseball franchise for the Tigers St Josephs Prep in semishy Well those days are gone forshy meritation to work out new Deporting Priestttlat day If they hadnt pl~yed retirement during recent years ever according to Chicagos forms of collective bargaining NEW DELHI (NC) - Indiantile As chances are the Amershy Requiem Mass for the colorful Father Robert Reicher and the Father Reicher concluded It ill Prime Minister Indira GandbJ1bean L~ague would have lifted one-day big leaguer was ofshy job now is to set up standards obvious that the right to barshy has promised reconsideration ofDetroits franchise because of fered Thursday at GeuChurch of fair labor practice and guidshy gain collectively is a natural the order expelling Jesuitthe players strike in Philadelphia ance for faculty members grievshy tight clearly defended time and Father Vincent Ferr r of theDespite the lopsided score procedures against Cathoshy agaiil ethically and morally Poona diocese Indiaance fromlPatJher Travers got several big lic school administrators But this right also implies an lleague offers as a result of his Canonist Cates Need The pmmise was made when

Speaking to participants at 8 obligation to know what colleCshy tlhree members of the Indiani pitching He turned them down secondary school department tive bargaining involves went to St Josephs College For Negro Prieds parliament met with Mrs Ganshy

meeting during the Nationalthen joined the Jesuits ATLANTIC CITY (Nch - A dhi here and asked her to get

National Catholic Educational the order cancelled and grantThe lesson he learned fmln plea for more Negro Catholic Bishops Ask PopeAssociation convention here Indian citizemihip to the priestthe unorthodox recruiting as a priests has been made at the Father Reicher outlined some ofone-day big leaguer stood him annual Easterri regional meeting To Visit Canada Father Ferrer founder of thethe problems facing Catholic in good stead a half-dozen years of the Canon Law Society of OTTAWA (NC) -Pope Paul Maharashtra Farmers Servicelabor - management relations

later when he was teaching at America here in New Jersey The pliest is chairman of the VI may visit Canada next month Society was scheduled for deshyGQnzaga High School in Washshy Msgr Thomas J Reese of Wilshy to attend the National Confershy portation last year but wasChicago archdiocesan Catholicington D C mington in the neighboring State ence on Poverty sponsored by granted several extensions ofCouncil on Working Life and a

Recruits Ringers of Delaware speaking on experishy jVell-known labor expert Christian Churches in Canada his stay He was accused by iiimiddot mental parishes accused the Hindu groupS ofanti-Indian acshyFather Travers was in charge Religious who teach in CatBshy Bishop Alexander Carter presshy

Church of racism and said that tivities and by the Maharashtraof the school b~llld which used olic schools pose a special diffi shy ident of the Canadian CatholicNegro Catholics prefer to - be state government of anti shyto master only about two or culty hi labor relations because Conference has acknowledged national activitiesselved by black priests of whom

CHURCHES UNITED Bishop Reuben H Mueller left of the Evangeli~al United Brethren Church and Methoshydist Bishop Lloyd C Wicke led representatives of their respective bodies at ceremonies in Dallas proclaiming the union of the two churches The new body is to be known as the United Methodist Churlth NC Photo

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IIlfllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIUIIIlIDutuUliUllllUiHlllllllllilllllllllllllllllilllUIIIIIIIIIIIIUII~given to the Washington arch we need black priests and we bid to raise the standards of diocese by Church spokesmen need them fast preaching in Australia and New here in Pennsylvania Zealand will be made shortly Lobster Boats Msgr Philip J Dowling execshy it was resolved at a meeting hereCapital Cityutive secretary of John Cardinal of leaders of religious orders

Krols Commission on Human VATICAN CITY (NC)-Qn The effort will inchide a fullyshyRelations noted that the Washshy the eighth anniversary of the otganized Pastoral Year obsershyington Archdiocesan Office of foundation of Brazils new capishy vance seminars for priests of all bull bull bull Urban Affairs has asked assist shy tal of Brasilia Pope Paul VI ages on updating preaching techshy s iz e s ance from Philadelphia and other sent a radio message of best niques the establishment of II bull bull bull dioceses In providing foOd es wishes in Portuguese and pressshy preaching center and the use pecially for those po)r who will ed a button that illumined a of a recorded service on techshy I Macleansreceive temporary housing in the cross on the cathedral of that niques of oral communicatiOil f8cilities of the Washington city The Pope performed the directedby the ObJates of MalT sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAYBt Tel 9979351 sect archdiocese oclemony in his private library Immaculate ~1I111111l111IHlUlnlllllllllllUllllllnIIllIUllllllUllllllllllllllIllltUIIllllllllllUluiuUWlUllllml~

three tunes a year In those of their obligation of obedience that feelers have been sent outthere are fewdays the school had a cadet Father Reicher pointed out to have the Pope corne to Monshy

If any institution can standeorps and one of its big annual What this means he added is teal for th~ May 26-29 meeting events was marching in the anshy that occasionally Religious mllYoondemned on the basis of the

It would be the first papalrecent Kerner Report on Civilnual parish-May procession be used to break a strike called visit to Canada Pope Paul visitedDisorders it is the CatholicFor years residents of color- by lay faculty members this country as a Cardinal in theChurch among others that is But more likely is the conflict early 19508guilty of white racism he trapping the individual Reli shyPlan to Help ~eed opined Bishop Carter said if a favorshygious whose loyalty is divided

Asserting that the number of able reply is reCeived from RomeCapital MCIl(lc61ers Negro clergy middotdoes not nearly the Canadian government would

PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A meet the needs of Negro Catho- Australia to Have extend an official invitation pledge of cooperation in feeding lies Msgr Reese said Pope Paul visited the United the poor who will gather in the If the Church is going to be Better Preaching Nations inNew York in 1965 nations capital in May has beell relevant to the black community SYDNEY (NC)-A concerted

I

Marian Awards Continued from Page Three

Fall River and has spent her entire religious life within the Diocese of Fall River

Sister has served as consult shyant with various education comshymittees in the diocese and bas promoted the educational proshygram of the Dominican Sisters

Sr Mary Pauline OP bead of the Science Department of

the Dominican Academy Fall River was one of the originatolll of the Region III Science Fair and has served as president of the regions Fair for two years

She is presently ooordinator of the Massachusetts state Scishyence Fair -

Sr Virginia CSC is presshyently chairman of the Th~logy

Department Notre Dame Colshylege Manchester N H and served from 1941 to ]958 as principal of St Anthonys New Bedford

She has always been a leader in new an innovative ideas in education

Sister Anne Denise SND presently principal of St Marys High School Lynn is well shyremembered as the first princishypal of Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth and has served in many administrative posts for the Sisters of Notre Dame

Sr Mary Aloysia SUSC is dean of the College of the Sashycred Hearts Fall River and has given outstanding service in coshyoperation with the Catholic School Department in planning in-service courses for the teachshyers of the diocesan schools

She also serves asmiddot coordinator of the educational program of the Sisters of the Holy Union

Sr John Elizabeth SUSC is Guidance Director at the Acadshyemy of the Sacred Hearts Fall River and has served in numershyous administrative positions atthe Fall River school

She was the first principal of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton and has served on committees of local and state educational organizations

Sr Mary Felicita RSM is now involved in the tutorial program at Mt St MaryS Acadshyemy Fall River and has served in the various sclIools of the diocese

For 26 years Sister served as Diocesan School Supervisor iD the Catholic School Office

Sr Miriam RSM is also in the tutorial program at the Sisshyters of Mercy Academy in Fall River A former teacher and principal in schools of the dioshycese Sister served for 26 yean

IN NEW POST Father Charles F Sheedy CSC former dean of arts and letshyterS has been appointed to the new post of dean of theoshylogical studies and institutes at the University of Nobe Dame NC Photo

to Educators tiS Diocesan Supervisor in the Catholic School Department

This year completes 50 years of service in the field of educashyto the Diocese of Fall River

Sister Maureen RSM is principal of Nazareth Hall Fall River She organized the proshygram and was the first principal of the Fall River school lor exshyceptional children a position she still holds

She is a consultant lind D member of city and state comshymittees for the mentlllly l1eshytarded

Sr Mary Urban RSM is Diocesan supervisor of schools and was the first principal at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

She is a member of state and city educational committees

Sr Mary Carmela RSM is a member of the English Departshyment of St Xaviers Academy Providence and was the first principal of Mt St Marys Academy Fall River

She is a consultant on secondshyary school curriculum planning

Sr Grace de Sales MSBT is presently superior of the Censhyacle of Our Lady of the Assumpshytion Osterville a position she also held at the Cenac1e of St Patricks Parish Wareham

Sister founded the kindergarshytens at Osterville and Wareham and has taught Chfistian Docshytrine classes on the elementary and secondary levels during her many years of selvice in the diocese

Sr Joan Louise OLVM is suPerior of the Victory Noll Convent in the Immaculate Conception Parish No Easton She has served as catechetical specialist in dioceses in Iowa and California and her present assignment is CCD supervisor for the Diocese of Fall River

Brother Albertus CSC is supervisor of Education for the Eastern Province of the Holy Cross Brothers and is professor of mathematics at Stonehill College No Easton He also ~ught mathematics and physics at Monsignor Coyle High School Taunton

Miss Mary Cabral of 1)69 Camshybridge Street Fall River is presently teaching at Espirito Santo School Fall River where she is completing 43 years of service as a lay teacher in ~e

Diocese of Fall Ri vcr

Whites to Solve White Problem

TOLEDO (NC)-Bishop Joon A Donovan has made a public request to whites to take up the white problem

He urged it for those lookshying for a modern up-Io-date apostolate for down-to-earth Christians who are at the same time dedicated Americans

middotSpeaking at a dinner of the northwestern Ohio district Fourth Degree Knights of Coshylumbus the Toledo bishop said

This ugly situation was fathered by injustice and is nourished by that subtle and insidious vice called prejudiCe

Need In this deplorable situation

in which the world ffinds itself today the pressing need is for those who call themselves Christians to think as Christians to form Christian attitudes and to live as Christians

Just as we cannot separate Christ from His Gospel so too we cannot separate love of GOO from love of our fellowmen without exception

The real Christian mlid the bishop does not live alongside but with others He constantly interprets anothers actions in the best possible light bying to remember always the way in which the Lord met loved and drew people to Himsel

SAIGON (NC) - The people wept and we wept everybody wept Sister Nicole said deshyscribing her teams departure after 16 days of relief work in Hue

She and two other Vietnamshy-ese Sisters Daughters of Charshyity of St Vincent de Paul with

The communImiddots1s T truce

17 girl students had gone to stricken Hue on a mission of mercy

offensive had left families in mourning houses in ruins ~nd people hungry and sick The government of Vietnam had inshyvited volunteers to bring help to the citys thousands of sufshyferers

The plane that brought tile Sisters and their students also brought 85 youths from Saigon~

The boys did manual work such as cleaning up the damaged hosshypital in Hues The Sisters team was divided into three groups one to give medical care anshyother to visit homes a third to l)ok after children

The 17 girls are some of those being trained by the Sisters as social workers for family assist shyance under a plan sponsored by a Vietnamese womens associashytion Five of the 17 are Cathshyolics The others are mostly Buddhists On April 12 all were fasting since it was the 15th day of the lunar month for the lBud-

Catholic Boy Scout Officials to Meet

WASHINGTON (NC)-About 150 leaders of CQtholic Boy Scout organizations will meet here to attend the 20th biennial oonference of the National Cathshyolic Committee OIl Scouting

The meeting will be a Iowshyday work session tor chairmen chaplains and other officioals cd the nations diocesan I seouiing ~ommittees The meeting will end with a banquet in honO Gl Patrick Cardinal OBoyle ol Washington

---- -----~

middot1FI

1

PRAYER CRUSADE _Danny Thomas has filmed n 10-minute color documentary on the value of family pray~r

to be used by Father Patrick Peyton CSC in his Camshypaign for Family Prayer Father Peyton said he expects 200000 people at a Milwailkee rally to be held Sunday May 12

IEverybody Weptl

Nun Describes Relief Teams Departure From Stricken Hue

dhims and Good Friday for the Catholics

The Asia Foundation here gave a grant to pay for the meals of the Sisters team dur ing their stay

- Before leaving Saigon the Sisters had collected medicines food soap and clothing from welfare agencies including Catholic Relief Services and

Vietnam Christian Service (Protestant) The United Nashytions Childrens Fund (UNICEF) provided milk powder which enabled the team to give milk to 450 children every day

Warn Medics LONDON (NC)-The day beshy

fore Britains new abortion law went into effect the nations 5500 CMholic doctors were warned by John Cardinal Heenan of WeBtminister that they should DOt perfom any abortions

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THE ANCHOR- 17 Thursday May 2 1968

Cufr ~t~1 Days Of orw~~~1ion

En C[[i~da OTTAWA (NC)-Chrietshy

mas and New Years Day now are the only holy days of obligation for Canadav estimated 8000000 Catholics

The Canadian Catholic Conshyference comprising Canadafl Bishops has announced thampa other holy days will be cellshyebrated on the Sunday nearem the holy day

The holy days affected aye Epiphany usually celebrat~

Jan 6 Ascension now falling on the 40th day after East~Ilp

All Saints now celebrated Nou I and the Immaculate ConcejilP tion now celebrated Dec 8

The Bishops said observance of the feast days on Sundayu means they will be celebratecll bull by a larger more relaxed anell accessible congregation of the faithful rather than a congreshygaUon of people constrained by the obligation of attending Maw in addition to their work

Canadas Bishops postwn~ until next Fall a decision Gil

wlether to restoremiddot the anciej~ office of permanent deacon m the Church The Bishops of the United States meeting simultashy

neously in St Louis hlst week ~ted to petition Pope Paul VJ for permission to restore ~

perinanent diaconate ror marshyried and unmarried men of ma ture years

Fish Sales Up SYDNEY (NC)-Best tilini)

that ever happened to the fisb industry said Mark J06eph chairman of the New SouUl -lales Fish Authority of the Churchs lifting of the ban CJ[l

Friday meat eating He has tb~ ligures to back up his verdictshya 25 per cent rise in fish e4)Dshy

slImption here since the ehlnge

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The Parish Parade New Jersey Suburbanites of All Faiths Aid Ghetto Arson Victims HOLY NAME OUR LADY OF ANGELS

FALL RIVER FALL RIVER NEWARK (NC) - Priest~ the citys anti-poverty agenCll Contemporary music will acshy

company the 11 oclock Mass Sunday morning May 5

First communicants will reshyeeive at a special Mass at 9 Saturday morning May 25 Mayshycrowning ceremonies will be held Sunday May 26 The Womens Guild announces

fts installation banquet for Tuesday night May 7 Tickets are available from all members

Catholic Charities collectors are asked to meet in the parish school at 730 tonight for dist~shyOOtion of contact cards

lIT MARGARET BUZZARDS BAY

SS Margltlret-Mary Guild of Buzzards Bay and Onset will Sponsor a rummage sale from 9 1lo 1 Saturday May 18 at St Margarets kindergarten hall Main Street Buzzards Bay Do iaations may be left at the hall during mornings of the precedshying week Chairman for the ~vent is Mrs William Brady

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild will reshyieive Holy CommuniOn in a bodyaf the815 Mass 00 Sunshydity morning A breakfast will follow in the school hall The icuest speaker will beRt Rev Anthony M Gomes Mrs Arthur Belanger gpiIshyftual chairman of the Guild is _ charge of the breakfast

81 JOSEPH AIRHAVEN Nominations and elections of officers for the Association of file Sacred middotHearts will be held at 630 on Sunday evening in the rectory ~ Dues are now payable to the tleasurer Mrs Jeannette Dushylude

IACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

Preprimary registration will be held from 2 to 4 Sunday afternoon May 5 in 1he school office Some openings also exist in first sixth and eighth grades

The CCD adult discussion group will meet at 8 Sunday night in the home of Mr and Mrs J G N Bonneau

So Easton Club Pledges

$5000 The newly formed Womens

Club of Holy Cross Parish So Easton has pledged $5000 toward the building fund acshycording to an announcement made today by Mrs Arthur J L Peterson the organizations first president The pledge will be paid at the rate of $1000 per year

This pledge has been added to The Second Mile Building Fund campaign now in progress under the chairmanship of Robshyert Dray and Louis A Lyne serving as director

The Altar Boys will sponSor a cake sale Sunday May 26

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a Communion breakshyfast following 8 oclock Mass this Sunday morning Installashytion of officers will be held at a banquet following 5 oclock Mass Sunday afternoon May 26

Children of Mary will attend a Communion breakfast followshying 8 oclock Mass Sunday mornshying May 12

The annual blessing of autoshymobiles will take place at 130 Sunday afternoon May 26 in the church parking lot

ST GEORGE WESTP~RT

A Maybasket whist is planned for 8 Saturday night May 4 hi

the school hall on Route 177 PrOCeeds will benefit the school fund and table and attendance prizes will be awarded

STMARY NORTH ATTLEBORO Parishioners are planning a

testimonial honoring Msgr Ed- ward B Booth Pastor at 7

Sunday night May 26 Tickets are now available

Christians Jews Combat Racism

NEW YORK (NC)The Nashytional Confeferice of Christians and Jews has launched a nation wide educational effort to conshyfront the problem of white racism in middotAmerica agency headquarters here announced

The NCeJ has given top prl~

ority to finding ways toimpleshyment the recommendations of the National Advisory Commisshysion on Civil Disorders The commission blamed white racshyism as the underlying cause of urban unrest

In a progress re-port to the NCCJ board of trustees meeting here Dr Samuel L Gandy dean of the Ho~ard University school of religion Washington D C and chairman of the NCCJ nashytional program ad7isory comshymittee stated

NCCJs 130 professional staff members in 70 cities are curshy~ntly engaged in developing programs with police business and labor leaders parents and teachers clergy and with youth and all of the various institutes workshops and dialogues which are being conducted are emphashysizing the findings of this reshyport

Dr Gandy quoted to the board a letter to President Lynshydon B Johnson from Dr Stershyling W Brown NCCJ presishydent in which the agency head said that NCCJ embraced the commission report as a sancshytion and guideline for our efshyforts in the private sectol

111I1111I11111111111111I1111I11I1111I1111111111I111111I111111I11I11I11I11I1111I111111111111I11111111I1111I111111I11I11I111111I111II11111111111D

ministers nuns and lay people of all denominations pitched in here to try and make Easter a dltty of joy for the more than 600 people burned out of their homes in a waveof arson which erupted in this city following the funeral of Dr Martin Luther King

Concerned citizens of surshyrounding suburban communishyties who only a week before had participated in a massive Wa 1k for Understanding through ghetto streets respondshyedspontaneously to the need

Without anymiddot special appeal going out people of all denomshyinations call e 11 inner-city churches to ask what they could do and they were directed to the United Community Corp

NEW LEADER Sister Rosemary Markham SSS is the new Superior General of the Sisters of Social Ser-

vice a Los Angeles based community engaged in social and catechetical work with missions in Formosa and Mexico NCPhoto

Christians Jews Discuss Diamiddotlogue

SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-The question of whether JewishshyChristian dialogue should be by speech or by action was the theme that ran through the talks and discussions at a Conference on Interfaith Dialogue sponsored by Catholic Protestant and Jewshyish organizations at Seton Hall University here

Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum director of interreligious affairs for the American Jewish Comshymittee was generally in favor of the action approach saying that the dialogue must avoid beshycoming a convenient conspiracy on the part of middle-class whites to buffer themselves against the realities of the inner city

Father Edward H Flannery executive secretary of the U S Catholic Bishops Secretariat for Catholic-Jewish Relations said that while he would be the last to cut off action in the realm of social justice and charity he also felt that Jews and Christians could not effectively present a common ftont to society until they have straightened out their own affairs

Father Flannery referred to statements that the -ChristianshyJewish dialogue had died in the wake of last Junes six-day war between Israel and Arab nations He said that it was not so much a matter of its dying but of its not having been tried yet

Over Holy Thursday Good Friday and Holy Saturday more than 10 tons of food and clothing were donated and the UCC staff was swamped with the task of sorting the materiaL

With schools and church ofshyfices closed priests and nuns made their way individually and in groups to UCC headshy

quarters to help with the task of unloading cars and station wagons and sorting and distribshyuting the clothing

At least 50 offers of assistance came in to Queen of Angels pariSh in the heart of the ghettc and the callers were asked to organize relief efforts in their own communities and then gd the material 110 the UCCbull

FEEL GOOD TODAY

THt HOLY fATHER MISSION AiD TD THlaRIENTAL DHURDH

Thlsoolumns happiest readers are the men

Te date this second phase bas listed 35 gifts totaling $12000 Combined with the initial campaign the Building Fund now lists 233 donors who haVe pledged a total of $117()00 The Womens Club that was founded less than six months ago has initiated a long range program for the spiritual cll1shytural and financial efforts of the parish

In addition to the regular methods of aiding the parish finandally the women have conducted teen-age projects and have assisted the Mens Club fu

i bull various progrlms

~MANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

BRISTOL COUNTY

9G-OAY NOTIC~

TIMENOW OPEN ACCOUNT5PAYS o bull bull Interest Compounded Quarterly

Offices in

NORTH ATTLEBORO MAINSIFDIEILlDgt AnUBORO FAUS

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women and children who know they~r needed The days were busiest helping others are the happiest days of our livesbullbullbull Who needs you most Surprisingly God needs you - for inmiddot stance to help art abandoned orphan become e Godloving responsible adult Lepers need you (there are still 15middotmillion lepers In the world) blind children need y~u ~ndlo do we bull bullbull Here In New York we are your agents tellin you where the Holy Father says your help Is needed and channeling your help promptlyand Oafely to the people iii needbullbullbull Want to feel good right now Do without something you want but do not need and send the money instead for one of the needs below Youll feel good especialiy if your gift is big enough to mean a sacrifice to you This is your chance to do something meaningful for the world - its Gods world - while youre still alive

D Only $850 gives our priests and SIsters i south India enough Dapsone miracle tablebamp for 43 lepers for a yearl D For only $250 a week ($10 a month $120 a year) you can make sure that an abandoned child has food clothing a blanket and love Well send you a photo of the child you adopt tell you something about him (or her) and ask the Sistermiddotinmiddotcharge to keep you Informed

D Your stringless gifts in any amount ($5000 MEET $1000 $500 $100 $50 $25 $10 $5 $2)

MISSION will help the neediest wherever they are - in EMERGENCIES india and he Hol~ Land for instance

D Only you can make your will-and do It this THINK week to be sure the poor will have your help

OF even after youre gone Our legal title CATHOLIO YOURSELF NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION Also our priests

TOO will offer promptly the Masses you provide for

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NEAR EAST MISSIONS MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretary Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoo 330 Madison Avenue New York N~Y 10017 Teephone 212YUkon 6middot5840

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Lawrence High of Falmouth Seeksmiddot State Track Tut~e

By PETER BARTEK Norton High Coach

The Capeway Conference track season has already begun but the handwriting is already on the wall This campaign like last years will be a battle for second place Admittedly notbing Short of a miracle can or will prevent Lawrence High of Falmouth from winning its second straight conference t rae k championship But fol Coach Jim Kalperis and his trackstersmiddot the league championship is only a Gtepping stone to the State C ham p io n - ship The goal of every athletic team in the state hi to earn the title of State Champion This is not beshyyond the grasp of the Falmouth Peier Clippers If hard Bartek work and dedication are the means to this end then Falshymouth will reign as State track champions

Success does not come easily em any endeavor and success batpound

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not come easily to the Falmouth tracksters They like all accomshyplished athletes have labored long and diligently to aChieve the measure of sUccess they now enjot lt

N1)t toomiddot many yearsato Lawshyrence High was just ~nother

sChool Participating in track But the efforts of many and the dedication of one IJ1im in parshyticular has brought immeasurshyable success to the Falmouth track scene That man is Jim Kalperis

Coach Kalperis haseombined

his knowledge af track his coaching ta1EntS aiiCl tirelessenergies middotto build a virtual track dynasty The latest noteworthy feat of middotliliitnickmen came in the forinof anotheriState title

Thisti~emiddotiS th~nivision IIi

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1

- BC~ and Norry Races Are Close 1

lbe format formiddot the St~te reo lays has been altered this ear with competition being held at four separate locations in East- em Massachusetts Weymouth captured the Division I crown the DiviSion n title went to

Andover and Williams corralled the laurels in Division IV

The meet drew ll5 schools in each of the four diviSions with over 2000 youngsters partici shypating in all classes

Enroute to its victory Falshymouth collected 51 points comshypared to runner-up Barnstable with 22Jh

Falmouth took first place in the discus high jump pole vault 440 yard run shuttle hurdles two mile run and the 880 -

With tbis type of success in state competition it is easy to see why the Capeway Confershyence title has been practically conceded to Falmouth

Sharing the spotlight with the trackmen at Falmouth are the diamondmen The Clippers who are in the thick of the loop baseball picture were given a

Mike Rainnie tossed amp no-hittel at Barnstable to gain a 1-0 vershydict

Its still much too early to predict with any accuracy

what will happen in the Cape wai baseball race But it ap- pears nomiddotclub will dominate th~t sport like Falmouth controIa track Falmouth Dartmouth Fairhaven and Barnstable are expected to fight it out through the entire season One close to the scene summed it up best when he said anyone in the league could win this thing

Close races are also developshying in the Bristol County and Narragansett Leagues

In the BCL both Bishop Fee han of Attleboro and Durfee High of Fall River encountered a few difficulties in early season play but seem to have found the range of late The clubs will meet in an important contest today in Fall River Late inning rallies have brought both clubS from the brink of defeat to vicshytory in previous outings The victor will have to be dubbed

shot in the arm last week as the team to beat

Brennan of Feehan D~est ill le~guej

Coach Tom Maccarone of Feeshyhan has had outstanding pershyfonnances from his pitching staff but the key to the Shamshyrocks success has been shortshystop Ty Blrennan Maccarone stated before the season that Brennan was his best player and perhaps the best in the whole Bristol County Judging from Brennans perfonnance to date one of the keys to stopping Feehan is stopping the classy shortstop

Coach Joe Lewis Hilltoppers play a brand of ball similar to his counterpart TOIJl Karams basketball club Make a mistake and the Fall Riverites will capshyitalize on it Durfees first two league victories came about beshycause of opponent miscues

The Hilltoppers have been playing steady ball throughout the early part of the campaign and are improving with every game Their ability 10 avoid costly mistakes eI tbeir -n

making and timely hitting has proven a winning combination

Come what may in todays contest the BCL llace has just begun

Not to be outdone by tile larger BCL and Capeway Conshyference the Narry loop is conshyducting a torrid race of its own At the end of the first week of action Seekonk and DightonshyRehoboth were tied for the top spot Following two weeks of play Gase of Swansea Dighton and Somerset were lodged In the first position The hectic lCampaign will probably find another change in the top spot at the conclusion of this weeks activity

From Cape Cod to Attleboro competition is keener this year than it bas been in many seashysons The road to the league championship is always diffJshycult to Davigate but this year it appears as though the road win be duttered wiill meR obstacles than ill quite

cone~~ lb~aders ConcllregrnmOB War In V~~It~IlJJm

NEW YORK (NC)-Stushydent government presidents and editors of campus newsshypapers at more than 500 colleges in 49 states have conshydemned the war in Vietnam as

lt immoral and unjust and said ~~ they believe they should not

~ i~~~~~~~ii ~~~b~~ shy --_ ~ and Laymen Convinced About

-- ~-__ Vietnnm Was coordirlated by shy _ -- shy ~ Rev RObert lVi Hundley lHullent

--lt--1 at Union Th~ological Snppary --J here and an associate pltISor at -- ~I th~ Congn~gationalChllrch hn ~_ Scarsdale N-Y He saiQ most

--middot1 students who signed the stateshy~-__-~~- ~~ -___- __~_~J ment havenot been active in

FINE ARTS FESTIVAL Making preparations for Fine Arts Festival at Bishop Stang High School North

Dartmouth are Paul Leahy and Margaret Polycarpo

~ Unmiddot-ty middotIs Chr-stlTs middotW-II

P Off W I E deg I pOi degI

ontl e comes cumenlca I grlmage From United Kingdom toHoly Lar-d

anti-war activities heretoforemiddot

Solicits Support

He added

Many of the student Itl~ders who have signed this sbtcment

recognize that they may be plaeshying their future caJeers illmiddotjeopshy~rdy and conceivably are riskshying punitive action being taken

against them by the capiicioWJ V~TICAN ~ITY (NC)~TO an Fathers Arthur Payton anSel~c~ve Sfdtvice Systerh~~~

I ecumenical pilgrimage oQ its Anglican who is director 01 ~ev Yi~am Sloan Cot~~1 Jr-) way to the Holy Land Pope interchurCh travel in LOndon bull aclive memjgter of Clergymiddot ~nd Paul VI recalled the words he Among its members were An- Laymen Concerned AboutbullVI~tshyspoke on his own pilgrimage glieans CatholiCs Oithodox and nam ~1dmiddota Yal~ U~Iverslt7

there in 1964 that unity is the will of Christ

He said that it was with parshyticular pleasure that we welshycome this ecumenical pilgrimshyage from the United Kingdom to the Holy LaRd You are aboUt to follow in the fOQtSteps af God made man in the country of His birth Hill mission and His blessed death for us men and for our salvation (NiceneCreed)

Your visit caUsto mind our own unforgettable pilgrimage to the Holy Places From the grotto of Bethlehem we then declared It npw appears clearly to all that the problem of unity cannot be eluded Today this will cif Christ is imposed upon our minds and demands th~t we undertake with wisdom and love every possible way of bringing all Christi~ns t6 enjoy the great benefit and supreme honor of the unity of the middotChurch

He also recalled his plea from Bethlehem that love of Christ and of the Church should inshyspire that every future moveshyment toward meeting and reshyconciliation

The pilgrimage was led by

DIOCESAN DIREC1OR First woman to serve as a diocesan director of radio-TV is Miss Patricia Smith of Pueblo Colo who is also a photo-journalist on the staff gf Dateline Colorado m cesan weekly newspaper

Protestants not only from Great Britain but from France and Germany as well

Msgi Gianfrancesco Arrighi undersecretary of the Secretashyriat for Promoting Christian Unity and Canon John Findlow representative of Anglican Archbishop Michael Ramsey of Canterbury at the Holy See accompanied middotthe pilgrims to the Vatican

Votes Moratorium On ChuDch Building

CHICAGO (NC)-The Chicago Conference of Laymen is urging Church authorities at both the archdiocesan and parish levels to declare a moratorium on 10- cal construction projects so that funds can be channeled to projshyects in the ghetto areas

The action was taken at the second annual meeting of the

ll200-member organization The 300 in attendance passed

some 50 resolutions half of them dealing with urban problems The membership said it will seek ways to alleviate white racism especially within the Catholic Church

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ch~plaJD saId The stand taken by these

y~ung men should serve to reshymmd Americans everywhere that the war in Vietnam 1s not over that American and Vietshy

namese boys are stillmiddotdying

He continued

These middotmen of conscience should be supported by eveQY priest minister and rabbi who cares about the sanctity of conshyscience

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Jesuit Comments Di~cordNormal Amon9 Catholics

RIO DE JANEIRO (NC)shylD i SC 0 r d among Catholics after the Second Vatican Council is perfectly normal but It is not normal for proshygressive or conservative Cathoshylics to refuse to accept the dishyrectives of the council and the pope Jesuit superior general said here Father Arrupe is in Brazil for 30 days to visit Jesuit houses in the country and to preside at the May 6 to 14 meeting here of all South Amershyican Jesuit provincials

He said that his visit is inshytended to adapt the order here flo the requirements of the agshygirnameJ1to or up-dating

The most important aggiorshy namento in our day he said

is that of the mind We have to ~nsider and respect human valshyues as such This was always the Churchs doctrine but now the Church is insisting on it more We ought not to consider the Churchs interest in human values as opportunism Our in tEmtion is only to serve mankin~ better)

Press Uses Images Dudng his stay here Father

Arrupe willmiddot visit 20 local(tiesWhere Jesuits are woikilg

ts B 1Ilhele are 1000 JesUl m razl~ bull

He said that he regarded as bull joke the Brazilian presss ref-

elences to him as ~the black l T Ch Pope cussion of he angmg a1middot

Because of my cassock hemiddot

tlaid I am black but I am not the Pope ~ understand that the press has to use images to exshylI)lain concepts more effectively

Honor Editor NEW YORK (NC) ~ Robert

6lmstead news editormiddot of the National Catholic Reporter weekly newspaper published in Kansas City Mo received honshyelable mention in the 1968 Paul Tobenkin Memolial Award Competition here

-

MEET IN ST LOUIS Bishop-elect Timothy J~ Harringshyth d f th Sf W 1 ft d

ton ~ orcester e leoscllfses ~ atn t ~ l~mg

ish a panel a~ the lQ68Presi dents Conference of the Nashytional Council of cat~olic yene~l

Role of CouDcil The parish will retairi its role

as a community of worship whose members go out ihto the world and bring it theeurohristjan

message Bernatd Lyons Ghishycago public relations ~onsultant saidmiddot

The pa~ish on the other hand mustmiddot become part of the world

alound it a wHr1e$S to the whole community and fake on roles not in relation only to -its

GUIDING CHURCH IN UNITED STATES More than 200 members of the hierarchy participated in the decisions of the annual Spring meeting of the National Conference

Predict Important Authorities Emphcisixe

WASHINGTON (NC)-Three members but to the world in authorities on parish life have agreed here that the parish basic organiz~tion iil the Church will have to undergo some lmportant changes if the ChUlch is goingto meet th~ needs of societyin the 20th censhy tury

But just how the parislt is going to change ~s far from setshytied they ~onceqed in a dis

which it exists Father John Corriga~ of this city a directozlt of the Nationalmiddot Liturgical Con ference asserted

Whatever it does the parish must becomemiddot a vital force in the cOlJlrnunity around it Father Geno Baroill execu~ive secretary Washington archdi

ocesan Office ~f Urpan Affairs declared

RIot ComparlmiddotsoDmiddot

Father Baroni whose work blings hini into constant contactmiddot with Negro problems in WaSh- laymen will inhibit soCial ac- ington saw~ astriking par~illel tion but added later this is a between the Churchs needs and risk wltirth taking

-those of thebiack ghetto Right now~ he observed - one of the mos~ urgent prob Society to Consider lems in the ghetto is that Of Sh fmiddot

community organization We 5 emnary I t arll learl1ing that pe~ple ri~t be CARTHAGENA CNC) _ The

cause they have beel- cut o~t ofSocieiy of the Precious Blood meaningful participation in so- ciety

In the ~hurch laymen have been cut out of this participa tion also They dont riot but they dont really concern them selves with the concerns of the Church unle~s thy ~ave t~i~ sense of partlclpatlcm he saId

New Resndemlce For US PIiDests

ROME (NC)-A new resident house for American priests working In the offices of the Roman Curia (the Churchs censhytral administrative offices) or on assignment in Rome for the US bishops has been opened to provide adequate economical lodgings and community surshyroundings

The residence called Villa Stritch after the late Samuel Cardinal Stritch of Chicago is composed of two apartment comshyplexes and is designed to meet the immediate needs of US priests already at work in Rome and to anticipate future housing needs as internationalization of the Roman Curia continues

In addition to American$ resshyident in Rome the villa is also expected to house priests on special assignments for the bishshyops in Rome bishops who come to Rome for work on var~ous

Church commissions or otherVatican offices or for such events as the synod of bishops and ma-Jor congresses In short it is hoped that the new villa wilL

will study the possibilities and implications of moving the or ders main theological school flOm St Charles Seminary here in Ohio to a university campus or urban center and of buildingmiddot an adequate program at St QJ1arles The Carthagena SChOt

has been the societys maJor seminary for over 100 years

Major superiors and middotelected delegates representing the soshycietys Cincinnati province voted to fOlm a committee to carry out the study during a provincial chapter meeting held at St Charles at which modernizing the training of candidates for the priesthood in the society Vas tqe chief subject of discussion

middotA report of the meeting in- dicated that the delegates were aware of trends in the Church 1-way from comparative isloationmiddot of seminary establishments to university campuses and urban centers

SPECIAL RATES FOR

Smiddot I O dcho0 utings an Picnics

of Catholic Bishops in St Louis last week An enormoUis amount of homework on position papers was approved ~

the Bishops NC Photo

I see the parish councils and their recognition of freedom asneceSsai-y to do this he added

Worth Risk They agreed they sha~e abull

feiling opound un~asin~ss _middotaboti~ these cOuncIls relatively new amQJ1g Cathol~cs pa~icula~lY their attitude t~ward SOCI~ issues

d Father Baroni sal he has ~

leery feeling about parishcouncils He declared there is

the danger that conservative

contribute to increased racial understanding and involvement

fur the people of the diOcese

Montie Plumbing amp Heating Co Over 35 Years

of Satisfied Service Reg Master Plumber 7023

JOSEPH RAPOSA JR 806 NO MAIN SYREIET

Fall River 675-7497

Parishes

Lyons author of th~ book middotParish Councils - Renewin the Parish Community said be

middotwas somewhat more optiniistici I donit think we are going to

solve these problems by 10~~1 at the dangers exclusively hie commented

Diocese to Discuss C~m~issi~n Rep~rt

LANSING (NC) - Catholics thoughout t~e Lansing diocese will participate in forums and home discussion groups 1as~ on the report of the National Acf visory Commission on Civil Disshyorders The program which begaa with public forums in six citie on April 29 was planned ~

middot three diocesanmiddot agencies-the Ofshyfice of Social and Community Service the Office of Renewal Through Vatican II and the adult education division of tne Education Department It was initiated in response to an appeal made by Bishop Alexshyander Zaleski The day following the death of Dr Martin Luther King Bishop Zaleski asked dishyocesan directors to plan an imshymediate program designed to

meetmg of heBIShops n erence WIt ISop e e~ros be a center of communi~y life CONTACT MANAGER - LINCOLN PARK of BrowI)svIlle Texas and fOtmiddotmer chancellor of the Fall for bishops arid priests with spe- 9996984 636-2744 ~iver Di~~~~lt __~gt -cilla~~gnrn~iitS~~o~~~ ~ Oc)QI~OC~)OQCIOC)oOOOCgtoc)OQltjIOcXllOOOCgtOC)oOC~)OIL)QOCgtOCPOoO

Page 2: 05.02.68

2 ~~~r~~~H~2~1~DfJ ~ ~Pi~~~t~) f~~~~~l~S ~tsectpe~a ~~ffs -1lfotes~ Inle1sie Ca Mtfilnlmiddot$(CrnDi01 Nreg~ CCCEO (regOllfrer Na~~~~~middot Yo~~tral11$ Wqrk

I tr BishOp Connolly will ble~ Fathers of thesltlqt~dHe~ WtlLmiddot~n J MG~C~ MylSe ~~~ d~~~~~ t~ ~4 ~iigO~i~ $400 Brn Iflgroe~

F A Trac~y Co PIDLADELPmA (NC)shyLIIlI~t CfLUlleII5l Avenue Fall River Saturday Rev FrancIs X Wallace Ph d I h hd _

UoilI ll1JIHI~iiO morning May 11 The ceremony $300 1 a e 1gt la 8 are lOces NOTRE DAME (NC) will come at the beginning of J L Marshall amp Sons Inc director of vocations says tm

The Poor Peoples Campaign an all-day in-service workshop Rt Rev John F Denehy most intensive vocation rampgt for Fall River lirea CCD teach- $200 cruitment programs in 1hllI

in Washingtonmiddot may be the ers Milton Bradley Company Church are centered in Ne~ last great march our last Renovations to the center A friend communities chance to be convinced to do formerly Sacred Hearts Ele- $132 something constructively in mentary School included paint- A Friend Referring to ihe remarks ~

h I I middott t fi d Msgr Thomas J Reese directol1l eae oca commum yon ing and furnishing classrooms $100 of social services for the Wfllo realistic solutions to make the and equipping a lounge book- Walsh Bros Incorporated promise of America come true store and audio-visual area for Sullivan Bros-Printers mington diocese that the CatiP for all Americans according to the benefit of those aciive in Rev middotF Anatole ~srnarais otic Church is guilty of whib Father Theodore M Hesburgh Confraternityof Christian Doc- Rev James A Dury racism due to its lack of NegrQ

d t f th Umiddot priests and nuns Msgr Edshy eSC presl en 0 e mver- trine work Rev Albert F Shovelton sity of Notre Dame An open house at the center Rey James A Clark ~rd J Thompson said

middot F~tlJer H~burgh S8id tha~ will be held for the public from IaSalette Shrine-Attleboro If there is any organizationpeople canhrush off or con- ~ _I R which is seeking Negro candlFo demn-the rilarchbutmiddot you cannot 2 19 5 Satur~ay and Sunda ~ bull i ao ijver dates for the priesthood and ~ isolate or insulate yourself from afternoon~ May 25 a~d 26 ~ $110~ -- ligioUs life it is the orgaruzatiOfl

the pro1gtlerptbat tle marchpor- VhitesFamilyDiilinglwom- of Catholic vocation directors1O

trl1YS because it win continue ~ ~mn~~tl IlllJI ~lJ~emiddotmiddotI White Spa Caterers to exist in yuur community tQ)Ul9l1(J(QJU9i)~ ~v~ti $1000 BrandirigMsgr Reeses coma

ments uninformed and rnisinshyuntil you have found realistic rl1IIpIal CIllIIIlemiddot1I F an River N$at ional Bank means of eliminating it Ir W ll ~ ~ 9 g 1Il U 75o formed Msgr Thompson saicll

We cannot all march he REV THOMAS ~ PLUNKETT BUCK HILL FALLS (NC)- J A Schroeder Construction If Msgr Reese had evermiddot continued but each of us can Dr Eugene Carson Blake Inc tended a meeting of Catholid do something even more mean- American Presbyterian leade - $508 lt vocatIon directozjl~ he wouWI

middot ingfulereate equality ofmiddot op- Fall River Native now serving as general secre- Mr~ amp Mrs JOhn~ l4CGinn know how deeplyrConcerned 1PIl portUIlityined1Jootion employ- tary of the World Cotmcimiddotof (Leary Press) arcent in seeking out aUthentifj ment and housing in our com p middot ChmiddotIe Churches told delegateS to the Mr~~ MrS James j BullOck vOcations in the Negro coma

munity This is whatthemareh lon~er In 1 wccs U S Confer~nce con- IdeaLLauridry-middotmiddot munity His lopsi~ed ernphamr is all about SANTIAGO (NC)-Twen- vention herein Pennsylvania ~middot19 iiv middot$30cf I~gt dOes no serVice temiddot1he white

Fatner Hesburghs stiltement ty~five years ago in March preach the Gospel to a hungry Geiier3l Cleaning amp Sales Co oommunity to the black comshy on the PoormiddotPeoples Campaign man without middotjpving him food IDe middote t munity orto the Church COJlDoo

cllme in responsemiddot to 8 request o~ 1943thefll~t~~p o is both futile and cruel 0 FjrstFederal Savings amp Loan munity from Notre Damesmiddot Student 12 Milryknoij mlsslpn~rs ~r- In a plea uriingihe involve- rlAss()C

Government which is organiz- rivedin tilfs South ~~Jican ment of middotthe Christian churches i 258 iog ac~llectiontof clothing ltmcl CopntIY throughout tlie world inmiddotthe W~b~ Oil CompiulY Cardi~al P~Qlsel

~~n~y ~o~ use by (ca~paign TodayChile is ho~e 19r 51 sOcial economic and political gt $200 sp0Jlsors~ yenllry~nolllrs includingafter 8 que~tions of oJr tiriteDr Biake FilnRiver Gl~ Co

quarter of a century of work said middotmiddotmiddotSt Annes Shrine I Ga~dhi~s Jdeals here for each four of middotthe origi- n is because I believe the $~75 BHOPAL (NC) - ValerimfiPrelate Protests hal group - Maryknoll Fathers Christian faith most fully com- RoQery AWl1cox Cardinal Gracias of Bombay hall Thomas J Piunkett James V prehends the reality of human $150 called for Indias rededicatiOli

~Hogmiddot Killings Manning Joseph H Cappel and life and exis~nce on this planet rextile Workers Umon of Am- to the ideall of Mahatma Gandhl P Martin ~unqe that I believe the churches have erica AFL-CIO during celebrations of the GaaaDES MOI~ES (NC)-The exshy

ecutive director of the National Father Plunkett a Fail River the task and opportunity - of ~10~ d1i birth centennial next year middot Catholic Rural-Life Confererice native now has as his home awakening a responsible werld Manuel CHllarlo-Real E~te The cardinal a member of the has protested hog killings and address the residence of his society Confirmation Class-19G8 OL mltional celebration committee burials by members of the Na sister-in-law Mrs Robert Clif- Pointing out that the WCC of Angels Parish told a meeting here that it Watl tional Farmers Organization ford 23 Bridge Street North and the Catholic Church are T~ompson Apex Company Gandhi who gave India thcl TIOga Sportswear Co(NFO) seeking higher prices for Easton pl~dgoomiddot to full cooperatIon in P fi Oil Co precious gift of ~arizationIV

their animals the area of Christian social re- aCI c mpanyA reunion held at the Maryshy The state that Gandhi CJIoooI object vigorously to the sponsibility Dr Blake pointed Peerless La~dry

knol Center House in Santiago dained the cardinal declareddestruction of meat in a world out that the major problem to Laura Curtam amp Drapery Comarked the 25th anniversary was not a Godless state but cmesuffering from protein deficienshy be faced by the two groups is Inc At a luncheon Very Rev Rayshy in which recognition will becy Msgr Edward W ORourke the growing gap between the D amp D Sales amp Servicemond A Hill MM Maryknoll given to all religions in spitesaid Particularly while an orshy rich nations and the poor In Memory of Mr amp Mrs

Superior of Chpe congratulated James W Kearns of the fact that India has B preshyganization such as CROP (the the men and thanked them not dominantly Hindu and alarpmiddotmiddotInmiddot Memory of Revmiddot Gilorgeonly for their wo~derfui sershy McNamee Moslem population

Christian Rural Overseas Pro- gram) is prepared to deliver the M~ss Orelo

vice to the Chutch and to Maryshy In Memory ofRt Rev Edmeat to those who need it Today when moral and spilgtshyknoll but -for their example FRIDAY - Mass of preceding mund J Ward itual values are at a low ebbCROP announced shortly after to all Maryknollers ~unday IV Class White

the rash of hog killings began when our hold on the spiritualNewmiddot Bedford in March that it had made ar Since Chile became a middotmission or vein of the ancient civilizatioo

5S Alexander amp Companions r bull $100 rangements with a large national country Maryknollers have eSshy is loosening when sacredriesv

Red Glory Preface ofEaster Blue Ribhon Laundrytablished 60 churches and chapshy of family life and dignity 02 donated to the Church World SATURDAY-St Monica Widshy Taunton meat packer to prOCess hogs

els and 95 outstations Credit women is in peril Gandhi hl Service Organization middotf~r use unions arid cooperative schQols there in memory to tell us Dei ow III Class Wltite Mass $150 overseas clinics and dispensaries social to forget ourselves Proper Glory Preface of Particular Council of Taunton

~No casemiddot has come to my atshy service centers and school lunch St Vincent de PaulEaster tention of an acceptance by an programs have been some of the $100 NFO group of the CROP offer many projects formed by Maryshy SUNDAY-Third Sunday after Alfred S OKeefe

knollers for the people hereMsgr ORourke stated Easter II Class White Mass James E Miles Insurance Co He said an Iowa NFO group Ordained in 1927 Proper Glory Creed Preface St Marys Womens Guild

indicated it would donate 2000 of EasterEach of the four originalhogs to charity rather than deshy NlIfIh AUleboro

priests to Chile who are still MONDAY - Mass of precedingstroy the animals if meat packshy $200servjng today saw service in the Sunday IV Class White Massers would sign price contracts Society of St Vincent de PaulOrient firstby a certain date The hogs Proper Glory Preface of Sacred Heart C0n ference

Easterwere shot later on a farm near Father Plunkett from North $100 Story City An estimate of the Easton Mass was ordained in W H Riley amp Son IncTUESDAY-St Stanislaus Bishshyvalue of the destroyed hogs was 1927 and assigned at that time from $75000 to $85000

fORTY HOURS DEVOTHON

May3-St Vincent Home Fall River

May 5-st Marys Attleboro St Joseph New Bedford

May 12--8t Patrick Falshymouth

Mt st Joseph Academy Fall River

tHE AllCllOi

op Martyr III Class Red Cape Codto Korea He is now stationed Mass Proper Glory Preface $101in Santiago although his first of Easter Falmouth Diner FalmouthChilean assignment was to Chil shy $100 Ian WEDNESDAY-Mass of precedshy Mr amp Mrs Michael Ames

~g Sunday IV Class WhiteFather Manning from Queens middotmiddotFalmouth ViUage New York was ordained THURSDAY - St Gregory Nashy Mramp Mrs L C Antonellis in 1935 and assigned to Kaying zillDzen Bishop Confessor Falmouth First assigned to Talca Chile and Doctor of the Church m The Wood Lumber Companyhe now serves in Chillan Class White Mass Proper Flilmouth

Glory (Epistle The justFather Cappel from Cincinshy man 0 00)nati Ohio was ordained in 1935 also His first mission assignshyment was to Peng Yangmiddot He - Necrology served in La Serena and Chil shylan ~hilemiddot before his present MAY 12 assignment at Curepto Rev John F cfa Valles 1920

Father Dunn from Flushing Chaplain United States Army New York was ordained in 1938

Second Class Postage Paid at Fall River and originally assigned to Korea MAY 13 Mass Published every Thcnda) at 410 He irst served at Temuco Rtmiddot Rev Osias Boucher 1955Highland Avenuet Fall River MaSs 02722 Ily tbe Cllt1lollc ess of tile Diocese of rail Chile andmiddot is DOW assiped PastorBlessecl Sacrament PaD River Subscrlptiol -Ica IIr _n ~ per Santiago Biver

A Friend Falmouth

D D Sullivan ampSons FUNERAL HOME 469 LOCUSTSTREET FALL RIVER MASS

672-3381 Wilfred C James Eo

Driscoll SuIIiva Jr

JEfltm~V ~ SULLIVAN JliooWtEfl(]Jn Rome

550 Locust Street Fain I1Uver Mass

67~-2391

Rose IE SullivlUl Jellfrey E Sullivan

~I II DOANrmiddot8tALmiddotAM~S

INCORPORATEO_

bull HYANNIS bull HARWICHPORT

bull Sount YAAMOU11t

WThe ANCHOR An Anchor ofhe Soul Sure anti Firm-$1 Paul

He~rtHouse-to-House Appeal Starts Sunday

Annual Contributions Climb Purchasing Power Regresses

The first Catholic Charities Appeal in the Fall In a letter read at all masses in all churches River Diocese in 1942 realized a total of $150781 of the diocese on Sunday last Bishop Conn~lly

The 25th annual Appeal last year netted $772shy said709 - five times as much

Fall River Mass May 21 1968 While this growth may seem impressive at AI we prepare our Charities programme for first blush the diocesan Ohurchs expenses to meet the year ahead weare especially mindful of the

Vol 12 No 18 1968 $400 per Year an ever expanding program have skyrocketed even compalsion of Chris-to After all Our Lord came PRICE IOc

more than the quintuple climb in receipts from the into the world to reveal the goodness of God in charitable of all faiths within the diocese ways that human eyes and hearts could see and

Many of the present diocesan social services under~tand We are called Christians We should were not in existence 26 years ago while others be like our Savior Our Blessed Lord expects that were in their formative-infant stage He says I have given you an example that you

may do likewise Our neighbors in need look toBack in 1942 some housewives will remember that the bacon they served father with his eggs us for the compassion of Christ And God knows in the morning cost 19-eents-a-pound as contrasted the number and variety of crying needs grow from

year to year with todays price of approximately $1 Roasts were selling at 19-cents-a-pound back a quarter century One reason for this is found in the fact that ago This type of me~t today is just about six times problems formerly hidden in the home are now as costly open to the public eye -some to excite pity in

A leg of lamb was advertised at 15-cents-ashy the heart others to frighten us into action Such pound when the first Catholic Charities Appeal as these may strike at any level from children was made 26 year ago Oranges in 1942 were 19shy and certainly through youth into the domestic cents-a-dozen courts to reach fulfillment in the frustration of old

MONSIGNOR LEVASSEUR MQNSlGNOR CHILDS Hence while costs have gone up and up for age The Diocese of Fall River has been equipped every family expenses have been climbing steadily to deal competently with sueh problems in the in the operation of the diocesan agencies So much services we staff and support ~ that the purchasing power of last years recordshyM~nsignori Mark Each year in our Charities Appeal we givebreaking total is no greater - if it is as much as

assurance of continuing and expanding works inshy- the first realization 26 years ago even though volving employment for many hundreds in Homes the dollar total is moreGolden Jubilees for the Aged Serviees for youth social relationshyEmphasizing the many dire needs of the dishyships care for the mentally retarded and the likeTwo monsignori in the Diocese of Fall ocese notwithstanding the accomplishments of The institutions are visible evidence of where theRiver will celebrate the golden jubilees of the past quartercentury Most Rev James L Oharity doll~r goes But many people fail to realizetheir ordination to the Priesthood on May 18 Connolly Bishop of Fall River again called upon what Catholic Charity does for tne local economy

lU~ Rev Msgr Felix S Ohilds pastor an understanding laity for even greater sacrifice Tum 10 Page Four -in this years Appeal Turn to Page Six

Women of Diocese 17 Marian Awards Convene Saturday For Educators

The ecumenical spirit of the post-Conciliar age has been manifested by the Diocesan Council of Catholic Woshy Bishop Connolly announced today that 17 Marian men in the extension of their invitations to the Polish Natshy Medals will be awarded to persons who have been involved tonal Church St Georges Greek Orthodox Church Ahavath in the field of education throughout the Diocese of Fall Achim Synagogue Temple Riv~r The awards ceremony will take place on Friday at Sinai Tifereth Israel Syna- River have named the following Feehan High School Attleshygogue the YWCA and the to serve as registrars boro during the Diocesan Mathieus School Fall River has

District I-Fall River Mrs given 49 years of teaching sershyTeacher Association ConvenshyChurchwomen United to at- Orner Levesque Miss Jacqueline vice to the Diocesetiontend the 15th Annual Conven- Mathieu and Mrs Raymond She has 17 years of service astion of the DCCW scheduled for Poisson The following will receive the a superior in various conventsSaturday at Stang High No District 2-New Bedford Mrs Maria~ Medal of the community and has beenDartmouth Joseph P Harrington and Miss Mother Jeanne Theresa Desshy active in music and dramatics

Everett S Allen assistant ed- Frances McCarthy biens SSJ and Sr Marie Cecile in the schools staffed by theitoI of the New Bedford Stand- District 3 -Taunton Mrs Clement SSJ Sisters of St Josephcud-Times will be the principal George E Lemieux and Mrs Sr Mary Thomas OP isSr Mary Thomas Holloranspeaker His topic is A Ques- Alfred C Leonard presently vicaress of the comshyOP and Sr Mary Paulinelion of Morality District 4 - AttJeboro Mrs munity at Dominican AcademyDesrochers OPThree workshops are sched- George Bauza ant Mrs Vincent Sister Suzanne Breckel RSM Turn to Page Seventeenuled for the convention They McGinn Sr Virginia Grenier CSC will be on Community Mfairs District 5-Cape Cod and the Sr Anne Denise Neylon SND Confraternity of Christian Doc- Islands Mrs Philip Dempsey Tealaquohers to Hear Sr Mary Aloysia Sullivan Criticize Daleystrine and Church Communities and Mrs Annie Eldridge SUSC and Sr John Elizabeth

The co-chairmen of the regis- Mrs Cecile Cummings of Fall f$yc~oIOSlY Head Creamer SUSC Order to Shoottration committee Miss Adrienne River and Mrs James Souza of Sister Mary Felicita HeffershyLemieux of Taunton and Mrs Taunton head the committee for At Salve Regnna nan RSM Sr Miriam ONeill Chicago RiotersMichael J McMahon of Fall Clergy Religious and guests RSM Sr Maureen HanleySister Suzanne Breckel RSM Sr Mary Urban Geddes WASHINGTON (NC)-A

RSM PhD will discuss RSM and Sr Mary Carmela white Catholic priest toldMsgr Higgins Stresses Importance Creativity Challenge to Corbett RSM newspaper editors here that Conformity at the aftershy Sr Grace de Sales Flanagan Mayor Richard J Dale) will MSBTOf Occupational Safety laws noon session of the diocesan

~get some return gunfire ifSr joall Louise RowneyWASHINGTON (NC) - Vigshy Safety and Health Act of 1968 Catholic Teachers Association Chicago police carry out hisconvention in Attleboro today OLVM erous immediate support is The legislation calls for the order to shoot arsonists andBro Albertus Smith CSCneeded if Congress is 10 enact esbablishment and enforcement Sister Suzanne is the chairshy looters during riotsMiss Mary Cabrallegislation this year to halt the of federal safety and health man of the Psychology Qepartshy Father James E Groppl

mounting toll of occupational standards for the workplace and ment and Director of Psychoshy Mother Jeanne Theresa SSJ whose civil rights activities in deaths and injuries in the research and training grants-inshy logical Services at Salve Regina has held administrative posts Milwaukee have kept him in

United States Msgr George G aid to states College in Newport with the Sisters of St Joseph constant battle with that citysfor the past 22 years and atHiggins director Social Action Every working day of the More than 800 religious and police force joined Atty Gen

Department U S Catholic Con- present is on the administrative year finds 55 killed 3500 disshy laity will hear the Newport nun Ramsey Clarkmiddot in criticizingstaffference said here bull abled and over 27000 injured at the annual twoday conclave Daleys order during a panel

Msgr Higgins addressed repshy on the job Msgr Higgins hold which is being held at Bishop In addition Sister organized discussion before the American resentatives of some three dozen the meeting Such a sacrifice Feehan High School and promoted the educational Society of Newspaper Editors national groups of an organizashy is not necessary The goods and Sister Suzanne received both The more oppressive a policeprograms for the Sisters of St tional meeting of a joint comshy services our nation provides in her Master of Arts Degree and department becomes FatherJoseph mittee to support the Adminisshy greater abundance than any her Doctorate in Philosophy Sr Marie Cecile SSJ pri shy Groppi said the greater is OUI

trations proposed Occupational Turn to Page Four from Boston College mary grade teaeJ1er at 81 Turn IlI Page Four

4 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 21968

DDocesan Students Enter Home Stretc~ of Study Beforre Year End Examinations loom

As Diocesan students entered the home stretch of study before year-end exams Springs the Thing was the theme of a seasonal dance held by Jesus-Mary Academy juniors in Fall River Donna Lacerda general chairman

STUDENT COUNCILLORS Student council members at Coyle High School Tallntonare from left seated James Sherrin St Marys parish Taunton and Frank McGlligan Holy Name Fall River both senior representatives rear Gary Kingsbury St Paul Taunton council president Lawshyrence Costa Sacred Heart Taunton senior representative

was aided by Diane Trial publicity and Diane Froshyment decorations At Mt St Mary Academy also Fall River students were serious deshyspite the season as they heard an exhibition debate presented by the Anne Brownell Memoshyrial Debate Society Kathy Polak and Dawn Hannafin deshyfended the affirmative and Cynthia OConnell and Carol Vasconcellos the negative side of the question whether narshycotics should be legalized Doushyble purpose of the program was to give students an opportushynity to learn about an important current problem and to demonshystrate debate techniques

The Prevost Glee Club will hold its annual concert Sunday May 5 at the auditorium of Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River Guest performers will include the SHA glee club the Dominican Academy glee club and the Cathedral Choristers from St Marys Cathedral Fall River

Among proficiency certificate winners at the annual educashytional night program of the Southeastern Mass Chapter of the Administrative Management Society were students from Dishyocesan highs Receiving awards for proficiency in spelling and mathematics were Diane Tremshyblay St Anthonys High New Bedford Jeannine Dubois Mt St Mary Doris Desrosiers Jesus-Mary Academy and Pashytricia Murphy Rose DeSouza Kathleen Kurowski Margaret Mary McIntyre and Elizabeth Saulnier from Holy Family New Bedford The girls were high scorcrs in a competitive exam open to students in all area high schools

At Holy Family High in New

Safety Laws Continued from Page Three

other country need not be stained with the blood of its workers

Nationwide standards are needed he said to stop a tendency to compete at the exshypense of health and safety in the plant the mine and on the construction site

This is a false type of compeshytion he said noting that the National Safety Council has figshyures to prove that investment in work safety and health pays off in financial as well as human terms

l1sgr Higgins and Dr Lorin E Kerr presid~nt of Group Health Associatioll of America Inc wele named co-chairmen of the joint committee to supshyport the safey legislation

William R Hutton executive director of the National Council of Senior Citizens was named executive secretary of the group

Among the organizations repshyresented at the meeting were the American Public Health Asshysociation Blue Cross - Blue Shield Group Health Associashytion of America AFL-CIO American Arbitration AssociashytIon National Education Assoshyciation General Federation of Womens Clubs YMCA YWCA International Brotherhood of Teamsters United Mine WarkshyelS American Nurses Associashytion National Federation of Business and Professional Womshy

ens Clubs National Association of Colored Womens Clubs and National Falmers Union

Bedford the debate society was far from idle during the vacashytion week reports Michael Corshynell At the Eastern Nazarene High School Tournament HF representatives won a third pl~ce trophy Debaters were Cynthia Rego Karl Fryzel Margaret McJntyre and Kevin Harrington And at the Daniel Webster Tournament at Melrose High School the ifF squad won first place in both the chamshypionship and novice divisions and second place over-all for the best total school win-loss record

Today Karl Fryzel and Cindy Rego are debating against Bishshyop Cassidy High of Taunton in the place-off round for the Narry League championship Both HF debaters have 10-2 records and Cindy has recently added to her laurels by receiving complete scholarships including room board and tuition to both Pembroke and Radcliffe

At Prevost a MoUiers Day whist is planned by the senior class for 8 to 11 Saturday night May 11 at Jesus-Mary auditoshyrium -

And at Jesus~Marymiddot the high honors list for the thirdquarter has been announced Seniors on the list are Diane Dugal and Madeleine St Denis junior is Doris Desrosiers sophomore is Danielle Chouinard and freshshyman is Lucille Nadeau Twenty seniors nine juniors six sophshyomores and six freshmen are on the honor roll and honarable mention was merited by three seniors and three juniors

Social orker Miss Eleanor Tarpy a social

worker from the BlOckton VA Hospital spoke on social work careers recently to interested juniors and seniors at Mt St Mary Academy- She covered most aspects of social work and recommended various colleges for specialization in this area

The Good News Singers were what was happening at Dominishycan Academy and their concert was enjoyed by all comers Also on the DA scene a Latin ban- quet for former Latin students hosted by Sister Helen and her jumor class Italian food and grape juice were on the menu and Latin games were played

Not to be outdone DA Enshyglish students presented The Old Lady Shows Her Medals to the school on Tuesday Also on Tuesday came an evening of coffee house entertainment titled The Looking Glass

Rev William Cullen SJ spoke at a mother-daughter Communion supper held Sunshyday at Mt St Mary and also

from the Fall River school sevshyeral girls accompanied by middotSisshyter Mary Phyllis attended a National Honor Society convenshytion at Cardinal Spellman High School

Mounties Elizabeth Perry Laurie Sampson and Kerry Mello returned to Rhode Island College Sunday to evaluate a

conference recently held there on the subject of teen tensions

Thirteen Mount juniors cam paigned f6r office in the stushydent council with elections takshying place yesterday

The girl middotreceiving most votes will be president with the next three in line taking the offices of vice-president secreshytary and tImiddoteasurer This method replaces the previous system of separate votes for each office

Criticize Daleys Continued from Page Three

desire to resist to the point where we dont care whether we live or die any longer

Double Standard

In Milwaukee he maintained the police through constant harassment and intimidation had dehumanized the Negro He said a double standard of justice exists in the city and under it harsh penalties are

given Negroes and minor penshymiddot alties given whites for the same offenses

These kind of injustices he said are now apparent to the black community

Referring directly to Daleys order (April 15) that Chicago police should use deadly force against arsonists and shoot to maim or cripple looters during urban rioting Father Groppi said

If he uses that kind of treatshyment he is going to get some reshyturn gunfire and I think it will be justified It is outrageous to shoot down a 12-year-old kid for steaking a six-pack of beer

Atty Gen Clark also warned the newspaper editors that shooting of rioters by police

middot could lead to a very dangerous escalation of racial violence in

middot American cities

Exccssic Use

Clark said it was clear from recent riots that only a very tiny fraction of Americas Neshygroes are prepared to resort to

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Order to Shoot lawlessness and violence

Excessive use of violence by police he said could drive a larger portion of the black comshymunity to terrorist and guershyrilla tactics

Clark noted that more than 100 cities had outbleaks OfV10shylence following the assassinaUon of Dr Martin Luther King But police generally acted wiih balance and because of that there were fewer deaths and less property damage in aJl of these disorders than we had- in one riot last year he said

To Discuss New Vincentian Rule

The monthly meeting of the Fall River Particular Council of the Society of St Vincent de Paul will be held in Notre Dame parish -Tuesday night May 7 Benediction will be gi ven in Notre Dame Church at 745 and the meeting will follow middotat the parish St Vincent de Paul Store 1799 Pleasant Street Camp apshy

plications will be distributed and the new Vincentian rule will be discussed

Members planning to attend the regional meeting of Vincenshytians May 31 through June 2 are asked to send their registration blanks to the Catholic Welfare Bureau PO Box 1565 Fall River as soon as possible

Golden Jubilees Continued from Page Three

emeritus of the Sacred Heari Parish Fall River and Rt Reu Msgr Annand Levasseur paltol of St Annes Parish New Bedshyford were ordained in st Marys Cathedral Fall River om May HI 1918 by the late Bishop Feehan

Monsignor Childs was bom Oct 23 1891 in CenterviHe (Barnstable) the son of WHtOIil L Childs and the late Emmal McKenney Childs The Monshysignor attended St AnselmlIl College Manchester N H st Marys Seminary in Baltimo~

and the Apostolic Mission Home at Catholic University in 1be nations capital city

He served as an assistant biI several areas They included S1shyFrancis Xavier Hyannis m Josephs No Dighton SacreCl Heart in Fall River which ~ later returned to as pastor

The jubilatian headed five parishes before his retiremem in 1966 In addition to the Sashycred Heart he was also pastor of St Peters Dighton St Patshyricks Somerset St Louis Falli River and the Immaculate Conshyception Fall River

Msgr Childs was long active in the diocesan matrimonial court He served as defendell of the bond promoter of justice and pro-synodal judge In ad~

tion he was chaplain of the Knights of Columbus Councillm 86 Bnd 295 chaplain of the Columbian Squires and taM Assl1Jl1ption Circle Daughien of Isabella Somers~t and also the Assumption Circle FaD River

In 1964 he was elevated btJ Pope Paul to the rank of deshymestic prelate with the title of monsignor

Monsignor Cliilds will retum to the Sacred Heart Clureb Fall River on the evening cd May 16 for a Mass of Thankampshygivingmiddot and a reception in the Sacred Heart School Pine StreeL

Msgr Levasseur was born ilm Fall River the son of the late Napoleon and Georgianna MaFshyehand Levasseur He attended Assumption College WorcesteKo

middotSt Marys Seminary Baltimore and Catholic University WeBbshyin81on

As an assistant the jubilarlaiill served in St John the Baptilri Fall River St Hyacinth New Bedford and St Anthony New Bedford

In 1933 the New Bedfonll middotprelate was named pastor of SL Hyacinths and served there for seven years until his present assignment to St Annes W8IIl announced in 1940

His diocesan appointment include procurator fiscalis II member of the administratiYe council and consultor for parisi priests

A Mass of Thanksgiving wiD be offered at a date to be aDshy

nounced later

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 2 1968

~Ii7 I i j

FIRST COMMUNION Youngsters in special education religion classeS meida Sister Joan Bernadette SND instructor Shelley Lagasse RashyreCeive first Holy Oommunion at Mass celebrated for them at Bishop phe]le Ambrose Dennis Silvares Mrs George F Gifford special education StanK High School North Dartmouth From left Frank Mendonca James -chairman and teacher At right Bishop Connolly congratulates Frank ~nstant Rachel Ambrose Kenneth Pereira Joseph Arruda Sh~uon AI- Mendonca

j~rchbishop Sets Catholic CollegesWarns Catholics of IntercommulnionCollege Program To Become Co-ed For Sem~Dlarians Damages IEcumenism Cause Bishop Sellys KANSAS CITY (NC)-Rockshy

hurst College and A vila College ST PAUL (NC)-Transshy STOCKHOLM (NC)-8wedish mere demonstration of goodwin throughout the Church But here in Missouri will become

Catholics wele warned against If such an act of intercomshy he added pressure groupsk of the college program coeducational in Septemberpernlilting the ecumenical spirit munion were sufficient for comshy seeking reforms contrary to the 1969 the plesidents of the twofor St Paul and Minneapolis to result in an intercominunshy plete unity the whole ecumenishy views of the Church will institutions have announcedseminaries from St Paul ion with separated Christian cal movement would have no achieve nothing for reform or

Until then they said theySeminary to the College of St brethlen that would violate the real meaning ecumenlsm will make a study of areas ofII1omas was announced here by Catholic concept of eucharistic Bishop Taylor said that intershy The bishop questioned whether coordination and cooperationCoadjutor Archbishop Leo C sacramentalism communion is therefore impos- Catholics and Protestants in this between the two private colshyByrne Bishop John E Taylor OM sible for Catholics in principle country have sufficiently coshy leges each of which will retainThe prelate said Nazareth of Stockholm said in his newly despite our grief over this operated in aU fields where its separate identityBall Preparatory Seminary will issued Guidelines on Intershy reality because there are widely there are theological obshyI()

Father Maurice E VanAckshylie continued communion with Separated divergent ideas over such essenshy stacles to such collaboration eren SJ Rockhurst presidentArchbishop Leo Binz of St Brethl-en that the practice of tial question as the hierarchical such as in communications and and Sister Olive Louise CSJintercommunion by Catholics ministry the sacrament of Holy social and educational undershyPaul and Minneapolis issued a Avila president made the jointindividually or collectively with Orders sacrifice and the sacrashy takings and even in spiritual~ree implementing the new announcem(~nt after approval byEvangelical (Protcstant) Chris- ments themselves ecumenism through commonIllOgram and canonically erectshy the two boards of directorstians in this country damages To ignore such considerations prayer

b accommodate seminarians the cause of ecumimism and is the bishop continued is to reshy Only an ecumenism that orshy The objective of the change is making collegiate studies be- opposed to the will of the Cathshy sort to a sort of magic concepshy ganically grows up from inside to broaden and strengthen our ~nning Sept 1 _

_g St John Vianney Se~inary

olic Church tion of the sacrament which can bring about concrete results educational programs and our The guidelines have been disshy would separate it from the pershy even though it may be a slow community services and to proshyThe decree states canonical

tributed to the clergy and Reli shy sonal faith and conviction of process he said vide a richer diversity of opshyooquirements are to be met for gious of Sweden and some of those receiving it tions available in the privatelJl[)pointing officials of the new thelaity Pressure Groups sector of higher education inJeffiinary but that the academshy Priests Aid Families rntercommunion the bishop Kansas City the announcement()e instruction of the students Actually Bishop Taylorsaid is a matter of concern to said fJlld their academic evaluation said we Catholics have someshy Of Arrested Men many Catholics and non-Cathshyare to be handled chiefly times been accused of such a NEWARK (NC) - Fifteen Rockhurst is one of 28 U Solic Christians especially youthselrough the College of St mag-ic idea by Protestants Newark priests have volunteered colleges and universities conshyand students In some quartersThomas Bishop Taylor said he was to participate in a program ducted by the Jesuits Avila ishe noted it is maintained that

Archbishop Byrne said the sympathetic to what he caned which will find them working one of five colleges operated byintelcommunion ill a means of init iatives and impulses arisshy the Sisters of St Joseph ofIbOve to St Thomas will bring with the families of men arshyChristian unity

llbe seminary college program ing from inside the Church and J-eSted by the po]ice for vIolating Car6ndeletHowever the bishop added it ro a certain impa-tience the law Qnto conformity with the Amershy is in the Eucharist the sacrashy

ean system of education It will Members oj the Newarkment of unity that the tragedylmprove the academic and curshy Priests Gro~p an association ofof Christian disunity is mostriculum resources available to Aid for Unemployed clergy the priests will collaboshyevidentIJeminarians he said and enshy rate in a program already inaushy

Theological Realities Mexican-Americansable them to take advantage of gurated under Protestant ausshyTo seek intercommunion bybull more specialized faculty and WASHINGTON (NC) - More pices The invitation to partici shy

a single joint act without regardIDOre extensive physical facili shy than 2500 unemployed persons pate was extended by Dean to the theological realitiesties Cited as examples were the mainly Mexican-Americans will Ledie C Laughlin of Trinitywhich are at the base of theIUbrary science laboratories and receive job preparation and Episcopal cathedralEuchalist he said is to reducephysical education facilities placement services in 11 Southshy The priests will be available tothe Eucharistic celebration to a

Archbishop Byrne said the St western cities under projects anshy prisoners in the varioUS precinct Paul Seminary faculty will be nounced by Labor Secretary stations and courts of the city free to concentrate on the theshy Willard Wirtz and will subequently visit theRochester Priests ologate and to implement plans Approximately $5 million in families of the arrested men ro ~r deeper more intensive Form Assodation Manpower Development and acquaint them with the situashyaludy of theology in accordance Trail1ing Act funds have been tionROCHESTER (NC) - Priests

LUMBER co So Dartmouth and Hyannis

So Dartmouth 997middot9384 Hyannis 2921

J B

with the granting of the master here have joined the growing earmarked for the projects ~ arts degree in theology for which have been developed bytrend tow a r d independentmiddotwhich preliminary accreditation Mexican - Amercian organizashypriests organizations by formshylas been obtained tions The projects have been deshying a Priests Association of

signed by the staff of OperationThe major seminary will also Roohester SER (Service Employment Reshy~ able to serve those priests The diocese already has a development) with the assistancewho desire advanced work in Priests Council formerly called of the Department of Labor andCbeology studies he said a senate Health Education and WelfareSome 115 priests met to vote

on a constitution for the new Operation SER is directed byHails Example association and elect a 15-memshy Jobs for Progress Inc a nonshy

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope ber coordinating committee profit organization sponsored by Paul has told chaplains to About 230 priests including major Mexican - American orshyItalys Christian labor unions about 20 members of religious ganizations the League of United Qhat their work is a real exshy communities serving in the dioshy Latin American Citizens and

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6 rm ANCHOR-Diocese ofJloR RiverThurbull May 2 1968 ( CafttMlCYBoya ~ ~ ~ middot12~middot _ bull~-~ ltshy

~ Tribute $tresses Value Shall We Talk Money or Concern Of~iaIW~

OceasiQnally the criticism is leuroveled against Ohurch leaders that they taik money too often

There may be some truth to this Perhaips what they should do is talk concern-the

eoncern that each person has or should have for his brothers and sisters in the family of God

Such a talk might well go like this Here is a child who is mentally retarded whose parents

have neither the ability nor the time to teach him about the things of earth or of heaven - spend several hours a day with him because he is your little brother in the Lord

Here is a person ravaged by an incurable sickness-middot take this person into your home and care for him until God calls him home because this sick person is your brother in the Lord

Here are a group of young adults entering into the world of the adult with apprehension and fears and anxieties -spend several hours a day with them to answer questions and to talk over problems and to suggest lines of conduct because they are your brothers and sisters in the LOrd

Here are some people who were good mothers and fathers~ and wonderful grandparents and now they are entering their senior years and their strength is failing

middot f hand they need carefuI and patIent care-care or t em because they belong to you they are your parents and grandparents they are your relativesand they are also your brothers and sisters in the Lord

Here isa young unmarried mother who needs guidance

and help here is a father whose wife has died and who has young middotchildren and no one to care for them here is an engaged couple seeking some basic principles about marshy

riage here is a married couple who feel a curtain of misshyunderstanding coming between them-all these are your

Your brothers and sisters in the Lord so you should take the time to educate yourselves about their problems take the time and make the effort to listen to them without watching the clock give them professional advice take them into your home for long-range care give hours of your time in

counselling them and following up their difficulties Do all this And then no one would have to talk money The conshy

eern would be there the services would be rendered the works of the Lord would be done And you would be doingthem

What you cannot do these things you havent the time or the skill yourselves

Well someone has to do these things And someone has to support those who dothe works of the Lord ~omeone

has to give them the means they need to work with theld d d hI I h bUl mg an the facIlitIes an t e too s to Imp ement t elr concern able distanceshave to be traveled thus relieving parent

IJLIf you cam~~t orWI11 not d0bullthe works th emse1V~S ~Jlen and child of straiilarid daily fatigue Inthis matter we Un ~ou ~nd WIll you dosomethInamp to ~~dthoseWho ~re are open to suggestion and will proceed only when and if workmg m your name for and WIth your brot~ersandtheideais approved The expansion of this field into two ~ee4 Government Aid

t th Lo d f l f God d hOO Citing poverty as an example 8IS ers me r rom ove 0 an neIg r or three urban areas awaiF~ alon~ assura~ce that the schools Msgr Higgins said Thisis what the Catholic Charities middotA~rme~ns be staffed by specI~nytramedsIstersaIded by competent ~There is much thatiildividshy

Either dO the workS of GOd yourselves ~helpthoseWho members of thelalty ual citizensmiddot and groups of citishy- are oing these w~1ks o~ meCy an4 cent1oation and eh~ritygtAnother ~bjectiveaboutwhich we seek advice is the zenscm domiddot to all~viate ~ _ and concern m your name c - problem but they cannot ~l~lt bull

L t t talk ih bet t lk d settmg up of a Home for the Aged ChrOnIcally-Ill on The tpe problem alone The gov~~ aaIcaetIosn aOnd yocmiddotatmImiddotomiddotonn~arnd geIVnIng of~se Jaf concern ~ Cape We have fQur tracts of land between Harwiehaitd middottmh~nt ~~~l hile to do much ~ mu bull bull an It IS domg at the present

Lets tak GOO and the goodcto bl done This ~FaJmouthI~settle~ ar~~~ WhIle l~ IS true~an~ nurslll~_tim~ and probably morethiuR mustbe done and in the nameOf God TakeGodfrommiddothomesare bemgbU11~weareconvlllced the~eIsroomfor an recent Adritinistration haj the word good middotandwhat is leftgtmiddot Just an 0 And this one sfuffed by religious women where the near presence proPQsed stands for nothing of a chapel and the stimulus of prayerful exercises would he p~nciple of subsi~ia~ properly understood does

It comes downto this do the work-s of G6dmiddotyourselves uplIftmiddot mmds and hearts However here agamwe would middotpro~ibit the government from to the degree that you can and support those who are like the benefit of your thinking meeting this pressing challenge doing the WOlks of God in your name [ Oli the contrary itobliges the

Our Youth faCIlItIes are constantly expandmg and Im- government to supplement the Now dges that gIVe ~ lIttle dlf1er~ntattItude ~waNLpr6VingFamilyproblemsmiddotnot always of an extremeserl necessarily limited programs at

the Appeal keepour Welfare Family Life and social workers busy In oluntary oIganizfltions il) the ~ f~eld of SOclal welfare ancl ~

--------------~---- -oo

rheANCHOR frICr~L NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALLPVER Published weeklyby The Catllolic Press of the Diocese of Fall River

410 Highland Avenue Fall River Moss 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Rt R~v DanielF Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

CM~I-A~amplU ~~ Ar=t=es App~al ~tlkI1vlhbl ~1llJ1WI If II

Continued from Page Three

Our immediate plans for expansion are bigger than any attempted before There are two important commitments The accommodations at Catholic Memorial Home are to increase through the construction of an addition to the

Nursing Wing This is done with a view to provide for married couples and for such others as could benefit in spirit by being closer to rehabilitation facilities and proshyfessional care

A second objective and it involves a great deal is to modernize our homes for children St Marys New Bedford and St Vincents in Fall River date back a long time Both are iJil constant need of repair But money spent on them is practically wasted So we are about to erect a new St Vincents designed according to the best of modern ideas and for accommodation of 120 boys and girls up to the middle-teen years

1 dFor the menta ly retar ed we would like to provide ht M d th h F d h dovermg care on ays roug rl ay were consl er-

WASHINGTON (NO) _ There is no profession other than social work whieli keeps its fingea- so middotoonting ously and sensitively on tile pulse of human misery notr which is more rewarding in tbaspiritual enrichment of th~ who labor to alleviate the sui

fering of their fellow man The tribute to thesocial worJr

profession was given at the 50tJa anniversary convocation of the Catholic Universitys NationalCatholic School of Social Service by Patrick Cardiilld OBoyle of Washington

In paying the tribute Cardinal OBoyle a graduate of the New

York School of Social Servicewho had a long social work eashyreer before becoming archbishshyop confessed to the gathering that he is still a welfare workshyer at heart

Founded in 1918 The convocation was the higba

light of a weekend celebratiolll of the schools anniversary The present school developed from the Service School opened by the National Catholic Welfare Conference in 1918 to trailamp women for social workwitb American military personneland their families andfor-reshylief and rehabilitation at hOmci and abroad

The National Catholic School of Social Service was foundedin 1921 and NCWC entrusted responsibility for it to the Na- tionat Council of Catholic Women In 1947 this school was m~rged with the Catholic UMshyversity School of Social work the unified school retaining the name National Catholic Schooi of Social Service

Among seminar speakers was Msgr George G Higgins diree- tor social action departmentU S catholic Conference who stressed that although Catholics have justifiably prided OUllshy

selves on having helped to keep alive the notion of subsidiaIi~in social and economic life the7

must be equally alive -- importance and indispensabiUw of far reaching governmentalaction in the social and economorder

all fIelds we are blessed by havmg donated serVIces~ For cial reform this we are d~eply grateful since it allows us to visualize with confidence projects such as the ones Jisted above Publisher to Head

Beginning then next Su~day our volunteer wqrkers Historical Socmiddotiety will make their round of calls tothe homes and offices of all to whom we turJifor support Our record in the past

t h b f d th tSIX een years as een one 0 more an more en USIas IC response from the business community as well as the individshyual donor Apart from the satisfaction of seeing their dollar well spent all who have aided our appeal are beneficiaries of the diocese remembered most certainly in my prayers and masses as well as those ministering to heeds and being helped by the thirty separate social charitable activities that we have Everyone is happy over what has been done But a great many who need to be helped are hopefully watchshying the results of the 1968 campaign and I am among tllem

NEW YORK (NC)-Victor ~ Ridder publisher of New Yorlnl archdiocesan newspaper TIleCatholic News has been elected president of the United States Catholic Historical Society

The societys main purposes are discussonand pUbl~catiODof documents books and papers relating to the history of toe Catholic Church and the deveJ opment of Catholic culture IIIAmerica The society has pub-lished some 50 volumes sinc its founding in 1884

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C~~~-Jimiddot ~ ~t I~middot~

r~pe s_ ~(l (Jlj(~ntucky MountaiTJ Missions t4~ecl ~dOlll f

~f Vocatio~s1 DescriiJes 4ppalacll_ia sPoverty VATICAN CITY (NC) By Dorothy Mitch~n Eastman

Pope Paul VI stressed the Appa~achiaie a powerful word The ve~ name evokes visions of rugged mountain Churchs need fOT priestlyand Religious vocations and life isolation poverty misery and despair In this vast area that encltYmpasses 11 states 1fhe freedom ~hat should charac- live 16 mi11~on of the most poverty-striken people in the Uni1Jed States In every category terize such vocations in a mes- of hUmampn activity Appalachia has fewer of the good things of life than d~s the rest C3ge addressed to the faithful of f America Nowhere in this The latest accomplishment of Gte world on the fifth World nat~on do people h~ve less CAP Inc is the completion of Blny of Prayer for Vocations iYWOme 00 live in poorer II Grade A dairy farming com-

The need the Pope said stems Grom the plan of salvation in the housing nOwhere do they pleL mind of God who wanted have rewer educational oppor- Special schools are set up~rist to be the sole S)urce of tunities or suffer from such Il during the Summer months to

ed al th d teach religion We had six ofGl1vation and of sanctity and 1acit 0 m lC care as ey 0 pho wanteOl His mission to be in Appalachia nowhere in all these Bible schools going last

ld h d Ch Summer Father Beiting saiderpetuated and sPread through we wor as organIze rIS-I ti t d f dh ts Over 350 children have been ~n men partakers in the am y oun so ew a eren A I h included in this program Eighty17liesthood of Christ indispen- us In ppa at lao lmiddotmiddotmiddotll

e Eastern K~ntuc area h middotilmiddot~ per cent of them have been non-Bable ministers of the word and u ~ nt 1

A _1 h h th d b d Catholicsof grace among the rest of man- 9pac la as e U 10US lS-IIdnd tindion of being the poorest of CeJlwllS foil Rellilgilll)n

This need arlslng from the the poor in all CIf th1lSe cate- A8 a follow up to the Bible nature of the Church is DOW glt)ries ~ -schools the parish has organized more acute the Pope continued Four of the poorest counties three centers fur year round OOoause the numbers of the of Eastern Kentucky comprise religious instruction ministers of the Gospel are dim- the parish of Father Ralph Bei- We have a very active bome luishing while the fields open ting He has a parish roughly visitation programFather said tD their work are increasing tile siire of the state of Rhode and this year we will visit be-

The Second Vatican Councils Island tween three and four thousand IMghlighting of the priesthood On his first speaking tour in homes of the faithful the Pope said New England the tall rugged Each year about 2000 people should not lead to a dimming looking priest came to Bishop give from a few days to a few of the ministerinl or hierarchi- Casidy High School in Taun- weeks of their spare time school eal priesthood bull bull bull In fact the ton to talk to the student lxgtdY breaks or vacations to work at more the common priesthood is and the senior class from Coyle one of the four centers Father to be improved the more it has High School has eStablished in his parish Deed of the ministry of the hier- The priests five day tour m- Priests nuns college students arehical priesthood and the eluded addresses at Harvard whltlle families go down to the more the function entrusted to University Regis College Holy area from all over the country tIhe latter manifests its abso- Cross College and Newton Col- to work for the Appalachian lute necessity lege Gf the Sacred Heart as poor

N ---OO- for S I weJn as a TV appearance on One of Charlie Kings inOO has ~ a VBuOD Bob Kenneds Contact show shy P lid d th t been to find useful work for

ampUe ope a e at ODe B~ktAD Aidshya _ f th Ch h d all these volunteers as carpenshy-=gt ales 0 e urc an so Aocompanying Father Beiting ters nurses farmers cooks el the Christian salvation of the - e tour was a lookingld t be ~-d be- -- 6 teaching Bible classes or coun-WOT canno JU6~ as and personable young man from ded ch ri ti h FATHER BElTING seling at the children scamps --amp vun on a sma c p e- Brockton twenty year old Char- Every Sunday of the year DOmena or movements which Be King Charlie has interrupted From the inception of hi8themselves need the ministry rather Beiting and two other -d approval of the hierarchical lWloollege days lit John Carroll pastorate Father Beiting has car- priests drive over 200 miles to Driesthood University to work with Father ried on a dual apostolate As say Masses for 1~heir parishioners

The priesthoods authority Belting as a full time lay vol- well as tending to the needs of in homes in the three churches Mel the priests sacramental unteereaming the grand sum crl of the 45000 who live within af the parish in a candy store

a dollar a day the boundaries of his parish be and a pavillion power1 b to fo Charlie -_ hi h worK-- on everenew the bloodless reflected lito ti as 1 every Non-Catholic attendance at the tie e ra on are necessary l wo~ in Appalachi has con- th li ht _ C Improve e econOmiC p g Masses is often three times as IoU hurch and the salvation of -ced hlm that his vocatlhn th A I h F--d Vlll ~ e ppa ac Ian poor rom greatmiddotmiddotas the native Catholic at shynki d hIDa n e lHU bull I er ea-ng hiS deCNgte~ in the- dist b tion 0 f f d and I thmg tendence in countries As dditi in ~ n u 00 c 0 these

an a ona reason 41- -l~ltIno work omong the poor - -d Co g 10 al~ th ed I ti ~ w ~ G middotressmg n ress n where only one personmiddotin everyOU

_ng e ne or voca ons ~ think its true that we will tt F th h ht Ole Pope cited the secularization n what Eug~ne McCarlh COmml ees a er as song 1000 is Catholic

~ ~ or to attack the poverty of Eastern ~ the modern w9rldwhJch has CaDs QmoraJ revoiution to solve Kentteky with every means Summer Missions

a greater need ~r a conse-middot the Poverty crisis m this cOOn-avaiiable Formiddotfive weeJ~8 everymiddotSummer ~t~an~eciaf~thZed preseten~e tij- be said New Project Father Belting and a team of ~ewltUus 0 ~ mys neB ~ pilther Beiting haSbeen -WOrk As his familiarity with the priests seminari~ and ~y ~ Go~ ~L Cor 4 1) jWg hi Eastern Kentucky since areaincreased and the extent of people go through the countryshy

Wllhngll1ess to Sacrifice [OOa when he was assignedamp workmiddot to be done became more middotside ona streetpreaching misshy ~ ~ addi~on to the need for mission parish under the aus- and more pressing the need for sion Reception is not always WOCations the Pope in his mes- pices of the Diocese of Coving- a permanent solution to eco-middot cordial in this section where ~ stressW freedom of voca-middot ton~ Besides his 1000 square nomie ills became evident In prejudice against Catholics runs fions by which he said he mile parish he bas middotthe respon~ mlilw~rto this need in the Sum- high Father and his preachers meant personal IU1Q voluntary sibility of all 25 counties in mer of 1965 Father Beiting have at times h~ to proclaim ehlation to the cause of Christmiddot Eastern Kentucky through his founded the Christian Appala- the good news of Christs messhyIInd of His Church position as Deail of Kentucky ehian Project Inc an independ- B1ge ~f broth~rhood and middotconshy

There cannot be any voca- Mountain Missions In this posi- ent ~on-Igtrofit organization cern a~id ca~ca~ and hurled aons he said unless they are tion Father directS all the mis- working to develop the economic tomatoes ~ unless in other words they siooory and soCial endeavorS of resources of the region to the The Word is not falling OD

00e offered spontaneously of t1-e Church in this the most advantage of the middotpoor Now in entirely stony ground even in themselves conscr~usly gener- ~pera1e povenymiddot area of its fourth y~ar of setvi~ in ~ -an a~eamiddot wpell~ for genera-tions Ciusly totally America Jackson COUl)t~ the CAP Inc Catholics have been thougbt to ~ This hesa1d applieS Doth to Per capita income in these lias carried out numerous devel- I be mleagiie witb the devil The ~stly and Religious vocati6ns eotJnties avera~es bet~~~rt ~50 ClPmental training and employ- parish is currently instructing male and female vocations ana $840 a year Nearly nine ou~ plent programs Among these 25 people in themiddot faith

Willingness to sacrifice the M every 10 houses is lIubstand ate tlie lntroduction and pro- The expenses of our proshy Pope went on is the cru of the atil lacliing electricity running duction of- sevetal itlew crops gram are enormous Father middot~bleril The world of religion water or inside faciliti~ Tl1ere in themiddot count4ls agricult~ral sighed and theyre financed

discredited by atheism or hedon- ~ no higher per cent of illiter- economy and many technical entirely by contributions On lEm he said is no longer as at- atePeople in the UnIted SUites innovations iIi the agricUltural his speaking tour Father is ~~tive as it OJlC~ was _ thml in Eastern Kentucky Med- field searching for individuals or

Bul youth he said is stillre- ieal facilities ale few and far Complementing the agrjcul- groupswhowill sponsor one of eeptive to the call of the Church between tural prOjects several small in- the 25 full time volunteers like to do difficult things heroic We need doctors desperately dustrialptograms serve to train Charlie King (~t a OOstof $30 a Cbings Father Beiting said sadly and employ natives of the month) Olrmiddottomiddot pledge contribushyThe Pope urged families to be Sickness Leads to Apathy county The woodworking fac- tions for any item on his list -tiling to make the sacrifices of Malnutrition takes Its toll in tOry turns out high quality Ap- of immediate needs - items bull son or daughter to the Church many ways The mountain pal~hian woodcrafts ranging ranging from tires for their

people have often been carica from knick-kneeks to Appala- much used cars to a Holstein turedas lazy but Wldernourish- - chian musical instruments ~ for the dLiry farm

Two in One merrt and sickness are the real Seasonal employment is pro- In concluding his talk to the BERLIN (NC) - The World eauses of their apathy Most of vided through the production of students at Cassidy Father asked

Congress of Catholic Youth these people have middotbeen sick Christmas wreaths Plans are if they would like his address lIePresenting the International since the day they were born ~ on the drawing board for a pal- 01 on second thought he

Catholic Youth Federation and Father asserted letmaking industry and assorted qUIPPed would you rather have the World Federation of Cathoshy Theyre gooCl people-won- enterprises that will employ Charlies lie Young Women and Girls deriul people he insisted Its over 100 men in the county For those who would like have voted to merge the two a shame There should be many which has one of the highest Fathers it Is St Williams erganizations to form the World more people working to help unemployment statistics in the Church 224 rexington Street

tibem nation Lancaster KentuclqWederation of Catholic Youth

THE ANCHORshy 7 Thursday May-2 l968

Crisis in Poland Affects Church

BERLIN (NC)-The Catholic Ohurch and Catholic members of Polands Sejm (parliament) have been caught in the crossshyfire of the current political crisis in that country and the resurgence of anti-Semitism that has a~companied it

For the first time the Church has bean publicly attacked for its support on the students demshyonstrations in March fur intelshylectual and democratic freeshydoms

Jozef Kepa first secretary of the Warsaw Communist party committee in m speech released (April HI) backed party chief Wladyslaw Gomulkas efforts to tone down the anti-Jewish stateshyments that have been rampant in the press on television and in public speeches but had hard words for the Catholic hiershyarchy

Target of Kepas criticisms was Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski of Warsaw who praised the stushydents iOr their maturity and moderation

The voice of the reactionary party of the Church hierarchy had been heard Kepa said among forces united against the peoples power He condemned the support given by Polish Roman Catholic leaders to the student demonstrations

Meanwhile in the Sejm the five Catholic members known as the Znak group were assailed by Premier Jozef Cyrankiewicz aid Politburo member Zenonmiddot Klisko because the Cathltllic legshyislators had asked the governshyment if it approved of a violashytion of civil rights by police acshytion against the demonstrating students Kliszko called the Catholic deputies friends of pro-Israel Jews and revisionshyists

Future Bright ROME (NC) -The religious

liberty situation in Czechosiovshyakia has already changed greatly

for Catholics and hopes for th~

future middotseem bright according to Bishop Frantisek Tomesek a p 0 s t ltl) 1 i e administrator of Prague

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FoR River-Thurs May 2 t9688 Urges Vctory ~ VietnomRecipes Re1call Memor~es ST lOUIS (NC)-A oan fbft Victory in Wetnam and a coo-gt demnation of Communism ltBOf Many Friendly Coks intrinsleany evil highlighteltl a series of IOresolutions adoptedBy Mary Enley Dally bIY the priests and bishops Belraquo ving on the Cardinal Mindszen~II A collection of cookbooks 16 a good addition to a kitchen Council governing board ~

Like a dictionary or an encyclopedia a good cookbook is the anti-communist CaJdina$ 8Il authoritative source of information but like that dictionshy lIlindszenty F~undation

ary or encyclopedia irts a cold impersonal font of lrnow- The resolutions adopted a1l the end of the foundations threegt

ledge On the other hand backs cf enveloPes on a blank day celebration of its 10th anni-o there probably is 8Jt your check on the inside of a match versary he1e outlined a p~ Muse certainly ~ ours folde around the margin of a gram based on demands for vioo those h~nd-gasthered recipes seven cents off coupon-whatshy tory in Vietnam rigorous pun-o dear and welcome as letters from ever blank Paper is to be found ishment flaquo riote16 and looters bome These receipes fur goodies in a- womans purse But they and ltm e Fecognition 1baII )lou have been represent communication ~ith there can be no useful ~ served at hoones other people OIl a common logue wiIth men of iN win of friends the ground masters of ~ceit band - written In the never-never land of Released with the resoluti01d ones on yel- things to be done remains the was a stmement from Lola Beue lowing cracked sorting and clasSification of Holmes a Negro leader whO paper in spidery these recipes type them out on joined the Communist party 1ft ecript by hands inde~ cards file neatly divided 1957 as an -informer for the long stilled the into soups salads desserts Federal Bureau of Investi~ti~ ones you took etc (FBI) Emphasizing the comJiNshy~er the tele- And yet though order may be Dist role in civil rights aotiw Phone haH ill heavens first lawthere is someshy ties Miss Holmes told conte shyIlhorthand the thing-quite a something---to be ence delegates othe half in said for our box of recipes In Much of the civil t1rrnlGII ebbreviations the this-sounds- anticipatwn of company coming youre seeing right now was 8Iloo 8OOd kind you jagged out of or just a yen to fix something nmged by the Communist p~ the evening paper with a bobby different we leaf tbrough the when I was a member pin meant to try and probably assorted sizes and shapes of our didnt miscellany M brings reminis-

Also there are the puzzlers cences nostalgia and more Conege Functioning shybow-tos from experts who cook often than not_ an idea of someshyby in9tinet--a handful of flour thing entirely different from the Despite Resignations or SCl just enough so that it item we were originally seek- River mark 50th anniversary In wheelchair Miss Mary R LADYSMITH (NC) - Ibl looks right or enough milk so ing acting president of Mount SeDshy

Dailey organizer and charmiddotter member of Fall River unitario College Sister DonnaItll smooth but not too runny For instance 1Ibere Is fIbe standing from left Mrs Mary Hennessey ticket chainnan Marie Rudolph said the Wis-- Pantry Library cookie recipe in the delicate for anniversary observ-ance Mrs Catherine Lee sUite re- consin college is functioningSuch is the collection-if tbis script of our late beloved neighshy

-bor Mrs Madeline Kelly with gent Rev James Morse chapiain Miss Mary F Maleadynormally after the recent resiglag-tag box of this-and-that its addendum Patsy you might ~n+- srtate regentmiddot Mrs Mary Lou Silvia general chairman nation of founder-president Si9shycould be called a collection-at pao ter Ann Mary Gullan eigbIJour house in the pantry li- like to make these as a surprise for observance faculty members and three acJfur your mother (Patsy wes brary tihen 12 years old) ministration personnel

A trained librarian indeed a Sister Donna Marie said thetrained anybody in the artmiddot of T-heres Marguerite Culhanell veal-in-wine we begged from former president resigned imshy

orderly classification even a he after having this at her mediately but the resignatioJUl well-trained cook woulq be house Isabel Donohoes trick of of the other members of -therwORL~ appalled at this motley array sprinkling chicken with vinegar e~BYMAllULYN RODERICK~ eollege are not effective until Some recipes are written on the to firm it up resulting in chicken June 1 She said the college is

salad par excellence many a recruiting faculty members at kindly with FRENCH FLAIR this time and does not anticioopet reciPe shared

lIS by readers of this column pate any difficultay in acquw One Pork Chop rve always read and heard Another tip fur Summer visi shy ing replacements by the Fall

term that French women have a flair tors to this home of the 1968 Also tbere is one addedre- for clothes but I never realized Man And His World is to The resignations were based

eently by a nameless friend we the truth of this statement until plan on wearing bright little on a dispute over the role to be met when she came to a collec- I visited Montreal Immediately dresses and suits but please no played at the college by the _tion center to get food for her it hits you from the moment bermudas or tight slacks Do newly appointed lay vice-pres-shyfamily afteT her home hadbeen you step out of -your car in however take your hemlines up ident Granmiddott E Zachary

GOLDEN JUBILEE Daughters of Isabella in Fall

partially burned out quring the front of tbe hotel that this is a an inch or two for the minilook recent rioting Many many city of women is the tbing in this land of the Catholic parishes had contiib- who know and mounties and I think I had the uted food ~d clothing Any who care about longest hemlines in town with number cf men and women dressing Minishy them just above my knees (-at came to deliver the donated skirts are evshy least they felt that way)supplies and remained to work erywhere but Ourls have taken over this sorting clothi~ packaging sup- miniskirts worn town and they look so delightfulplies for families of two four with style and that I couldnt resist visiting the and on up chicness colOl talented hair stylist in the hotel

Back to the newest recipe abounds bright and having my hair cut and~ This woman had been given a pinks v i vi d curled a Ie 68 For evening bag of mushrooms by a friendly 0 ran g e s and these curls (with the aid of falls grocer on her block If I could citrus yellows and hairpieces of course) cascade have a pork chop-just one pork f rillsan d down the neckline giving these chop she said I could fix flounces float forth and a walk I Canadian women a fragile fem- my familys favorite dinner down a street is like watching inine appearance that is hard to

One pork chop for a family an everchanging fashion show compete with In fact if you of four We couldnt believe it What astonished me as much feel like getting an inferiority until we tried it at our house as the sense of style that pershy complex about your looks this and were asked for a repeat vades the city was the aura cf is the place to go I guarantee performance Heres how good g-rooming Nowhere do you when you return youll want

Use large-capped mushrooms see a sloppy woman no one is new hair style a new sense of Fry the pork chop cool Be- seen walking the streets with make-up and a oomplete new

wardrobe shymove meat and grind it Add curlers in their hair or runs in seasoned bread crumbs and a - their stockings Obviously the bit of grated onion both sauteed - women ~ Morit~eal are con- in melted margarine or fat from cerned WIth theIr appearance

J UBI L A R I AN Sister - the chop Pile on top of in- and work hard to keep it up Color Process verted mushroom capS Make a - One thing in their favor is the

Mary Marciann of the Feli- er~am ~uee (dried or canned price 01 the clothes One can cian Sisters marked her sil- nulk Wl~ do) into which you - pick up a lovely summer dress Booklets vel jubilee of reJi~iou8 pro- have added ithe chopped and fur about twenty-two dollars ill fession at St Stanislaus sauteed mushroom stems ~our Cenadian money or a smashing-shy

0 a SYSTEMATIC55001( ear SAVINGS

MONTHLY DEPOSITS

5 00 01 amiddot INVESTMENT bull 10 year SAVINGS

NOTICE ACCOUNTS a REGULAR450 year SAVINGS

Bass River Savings Bank

Bank By Mail We Pay The Postage

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA

bull SOUTH YARMOUTH bull HYANNIS bull DENNIS PORT - bull OSTfRVlllpound

Year Books

Brochures

Convent Fall River on Sun- sauce into bottom of a shallow - slack sUit for around thirty-middot pan top withthe stufted mush- eight High fashion for a small AmericCin Pr~s~ Inc

oay~ Observance ~p~luded a rooms ~bake until tender price seems to be the motto of ~ Mass of thanksgIvmg cele- 20-30 nunutes the little boutiques tbatmiddot are OFFSET PRII~ITERS~~ LEnERPRESS

brated by Rev Itobert S So now into our heterogene-- ~ound everywhere and if youre Kaszynski StS~nslau8uscollection J0~ this ~ded middotplannin~ a tri~ to this SOPhis~- 1-~7JOFFI~ VENUE hone 997~942t pastor and a -reception for lte~ - communIcation agam - eate~ CIty thiS Summer don t~

- _ remJnder of someone -who was outfit YOU16elf before You go - friepds m the parochial -willillg to share her houSewife -- save a few pennies fur some

school -haU- _ lmowhow delightful buys up there

New Bedford Mass

~

9 New Insecticide Promises To End Dangmiddoter of Sprays

By Joseph and Manlyn Roderick

I doni lmow how other prdeners fared over the Winter but my roses were hit pretty hard Most of my pruning is done now and very ~itble remains of 1ast years IIOwth Luckily the roses surrived wt ground level but I Gidnt have much of a job a~ h Nader knew which ones the~ldmg w at to prune Slnce children would enjoy the hours most of what I could see ihey were open and how much ve the root crown is dead they cost

This year I am going to try bull We found our hotel through stematic approach to ridding this tiny book that described it IDY plants of insects rather than in glowing tenns and it tlllmed IPr~ying simply their upper sur- out to be all that the autho18 IIaces A systematic insecticide had said and then some II taken in through a plants Dining SJl)Ob fIlIOots and passes through its sya- However every bit as imporshytern The one I purchased is in taut as our place oli lodging was granular form and contains a the places where we dined and fertilizer A measured amount Mr Frommer and Mr Godwin III Spread around the base of the couldnt have given us better mose bush worked into the sou tips on dining if they had been ifhen given a thorough watering with us personally One evening The roots then absorb the fer- Joe and I (thanks to 11 kindshytilizer and insecticide and sup- hearted Nana) ate alone at a lit shyposedly keep the plant free from tIe bit of Portugal transplanted IIU chewing and sucking insects to this continent called the k six weeks Fado ComP1ete with melanshy

SLfer~ Quicker moly guitars and Spanish-Por-I would be parUcularly grate- tuguese cooking it was a delight

ful ii the systamic program to the eye ear and palate worked beacuse it would elim- Equally as good though were Snate spraying No matter how inexpensive luncheon places cautious one is there is alwaYs suchlS A La Crepe Bretonne Gte possibility that children win and the Pam Pam The former

I th th has an upstairs constructed Uld eome in contact WI e spray 1_ at d lik te hi dend harm themselves ~r e e a pIra span

Aside from the safety factor 8 bill of fare thart ~onsists of this method Js also much quicker ~late-SI~ paper-thin crepes llIld easier ttuui spraying No filled WIth any of 81 different messy spray cans and no lost fillings One cOld spend a energy in pumping and unblock- whole afternoon Just watchi~g Ing nozzles just a third of a tJeCOOks cr~ating these deli shycmpful of an odorless material ClOUS concoctIOns but Montreal applied around a plant every six hol~ so many wonders that one weeks with no danger that it ham t time to linger over any will rain ~e day after you one thIng

ra ed and wash off the ra The Pam Pam too was a 8P t y 1 sP Y charmIng IneXpenSIve restaurant ala erla fo f 1 H g d

I am more than willing to try I a anu y un anan In ecor IIOmething new but being a pes- and dIshes It featured flourless simist at heart I cannot conceive cakes Both my mother and I had of something which is so easy some for desse~ but before I actually working Lurking An could ask the w81tre~s what they the back of JDy mind is the feel- did make them WIth if ~ey mg that someone devised a omi~~d flo~r Jason wa~ dIPPIng method of satisfying lazy gar- his hands In ~veryones plates ampmers that the were doing and I thought It best to pay our

y bill and departoomethmg about theIr roses to try without having to go to

B tt J d I f lt th t h t 0 oean e a a

m h t bl rt f a s garuc rou e so 0 upill forroses We will give it Il

we s~mpled of thIS cosmopolItan_ b t ti d -cy was u an appe zer an

try though and hope that the that we would like to ret~m RSults live up to the message ag81~ for an entree-but WIthshy

out a two year older on the label of the product Now that were all back in a

lJm the llUtchem routine at least until Summer l have come to the conclusion vacation heres a tasty little

tfhat any family that attempts vegetable recipe to add interest to take a vacation trip with a ta everyday menus toddler has to be either courageshy lEGGS l1lgtJIVAN eurolUS or stupid and Im afraid we (Il) I dIE)tfull into the latter category eVl eggs When our plans to visit Wash- G hard-cooked eg~s lngton over the Spring vacation 1 2~ oz can deVIled ham failed because it was impossible teaspoon Worcestershire to obtain reservations (evishy sauce dently everyone else in the U S teaspoon grated onion bad the same plans only sooner Ik teaspoon salt titan we did) we set our sights yenteaspoon dmiddotry mustard aorthwaTd Montreal was our Dash pepper go~l and with our terrible two Z Tablespoons cream or milk in tow along with some genial (Broccoli and Saaee) smndparents and two young 1 pkg frozen or 1 bunch fresh ladies of seven and nine we set broccoli Iotth ona rainy Mond~ momshy Im Tablespoons butter or Ing margarine

Fortunately I had come with 1~ Tablespoons flour -e a pocket book guide of Montshy ~ teaspoon dry mustard Ileal andQuebec written by Arshy teaspoon salt thU1 Frommer and John God- Dash pepper win in ~peration with ttIe cup milk Bank of Nova SCOtia n was Jk cup grated sharp cheese absolutely priceless The 8Ushy 1) Prepare the deviled eggs thorS described in expllcit detai by cutting I( inch slice from one botel motel and rooming house end of shelled egg remove yolk eccQmmodations different types and mash yolks and end slices eftestaurants from ones where with the ham Worcestershire ~ can get eggs toast and cofshy oniorisalt mustard pepper and Iee-tor 65c io the elite gounnet cream mill well and then use laavens that lure 1be patrons flo fill hollows of egg whites with theIr haute cuisine and I) COOk broccoli as label dfshy~Hy the bighllghts of the city recls (if f~n) or in a small ampat tourist shbUldnt misa am9unt of wBtell Until tender ISald highUght were even catoeshymzed - tba JastantlJ tile

if yf

I) J I

EVERYBODYS GOTTA EAT Pfc~Charles Richards of Pittson Pa s-hares his C-ratio~~ w~th fatigue-hatted Httle Vietnamese boy in a villag~ near Saigon where Richards outfit the 1st Battalion 27th Infantry 25th Inshy

fan try Division was on a sweeping oPeration Jleoar the Vietnamese capital ~C Photo

We Like It Here Milwaukee Neighborhood Committee Works

To Prevent Panic Selling-MILWAUKEE (NC) - Some

strange signs are beginning to appear in the windows of homes around St Agnes parish on the citys North Side

Theyre being displayed by persons interested in stabilizing the area They call attention to a program that aims to reduce house turnover so that home and area values can be mainshytained

In the eyes of the organizers the prgram is designed to preshyvent panic selling

The signs read Were Not Moving to SUburbia-We Like It Here and This House Is NOT For Sale

Theyve been prepared by an

NUlises Cound~ Mee~

MOlY ]] at St Annes The Diocesan Council of Cathshy

olic Nurses will hold their Spring Plenary Meeting on Satshyurday May 11 at st Annes School of Nursing Fall River

The business meeting and election of officers scheduled for 4 oclock will be followed at 5 by an address by Rev Donald J Bowen assistant at St Marys Norton

Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament will be given at 630 and the banquet will follow at 715

Reservations must be made with Mrs Ann Fleming 228 Oak Grove Ave Fall River no later tlban Sunday May 5

melting the butter in a saucepan and stirring in flour mustard saltand pepper Remove from heat and stir in the milk Re- tum to heat and cook until

thickened stirring constantly Add the grated cheese and stir -tmtil smooth

In amiddot cassetrGle dish arrange gt

the cooked broccoli Stand the deviledmiddot eggs with stuffed ends

up between and on broccoli pieces Pour the sauce over aU-

area stabilization committee for distribution in homes in an area populated by about 40000 pershysons about one-third Negroes

The signs are one of the means by which we hope to dis~ourage unethical real estate salesmen according to Anshythony L Silva acting commitshy

middottee chairman and a member of St Agnes parish

Fear Tactics

He explained at rl~ent meetshyings that the program is not sponsored by a religious group Nor are the committee apshyproaching the problem on a color basis but 18ther as a matshyter of economics

Our aim is to restore confishydence in the area and countershyact unethical salesmen since they tend to operate on fear tactics said Silva

The immediate goal of the group is to make its efforts known to all residents of the area by establishing a network of block contacts

Persons who have expressed interest in the program represhysent St Agnes Roosevelt Drive Presbyterian Garden Homes Evangelical Lutheran Augusshytana Evangelical Lutheranmiddot Siloah Lutheran amI Elim Tabshyernacle churches

THE ANCHOR-Thursday May 2 1968 -------------=

Teaching Sisters To Get Raise

DALLAS (NC) - Bishop Thomas K Gorman of DallasshyFort Worth has approved a salshyary raise for Sisters teaching in parochial schools which was recommended by the diocesan board of education

In a letter to all pastors Bishshyop Gorman stated As of Sepshytember the base minimum salshyary for each Sister in regular service to the local parish will be $1500 per year

Enclosed with -the letter was an agreement signed by Bishop Gorman fM the signature of each pastor and the major supeshyrior of the religious order of Sisters serving his school

The agreement provides thllgtt the parish pay the stated base minimum salary to eac~ Sister provide a convent and its upshykeep along with utilities inshycluding a telephone an automoshybile and its maintenance and health insurance

Sister Caroleen of the Schooi Sisters of Notre Dame diocesan superintendent of schools said the increase in the minimUm base salary Is fbe first such since 1959 when it was set at

$960

Withdraw Missionaries From Angola Territory

NEW YORK (NC) - The United Church of Christ and the United Church of Canada are w~thdrawingthe majoritr of theIr missionaries from the Portuguese West African ter- ritory of Angola

Dr Alford Carleton execushytive vice-president of the United Churchs Board for World Ministries whose headshyquarters are hele said the acshytion was being taken because the Portuguese government is apparently seeking tomiddot extinshyguish Protestant missionary acshytivity in Angola

The two churches have withshydrawn all missionaries III total of 12 whose terms of service had already been extended for more than a year beyond the normal term The missionaries wiJI apply for readmission

Portuguese administrators have in the past given assurshyances that re-entry permits would be given but Dr Carleshyton said there have been inshystances of denials of re-entry permits to missionaries

BlUE R~ION

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and bakemiddotin a 400middot oVeftaboutI~sect~ggsectsect~~sectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsect~sectsectI~J30 minutes 01 untilbubblTmiddot1 I

992-6216

-ObtainsFreedo ForRefugees

MADRID (NC)--Amiddot group t1ti youth leaders who spent a nig~

middotin a church to avoid a I~est ~ police was released la~

through the help of Auxilia~ Bishop Angel Mortll Figuls ~ Madrid

The youths had taken refureg in the church of Our Lady ~ Montana in suburban MorataJaiJ after police raided a mccting bll a parish building which th0 youths said was a house of thQ people of God Q

The meeting which had b~

announced in the padsh tIbQ previous Sunday as a conferenltcO on Ohristian doctrine was SUib rounded by police on suspiciolQf that it was an illegal meetin~ of workers oommimiddotttees-inde-o pendent labor organizations Tb() police arrested a Catholic woramp ers leader Dannen Ruiz Abo-1 gado Juan Canet a lawyer a~ Father Juan Jose Maria Bltlllesashyteros as they left the meetin- The three were late releasecA

However middotthe Y9uths atten+shying the conference fled to ~

church to avoid arrest and ve mained there until BishOJll Morta arrived and obtainecll

their freedom after negotia~ with the police

10 ~H~ ANCHORshy )hursday May2 bull 19~8 (

- - bull )

Sup~me C~ult Qars Obscenity

For Youth WASHINGTON (NC)

For more than two years the Supreme Court has made it clear thatin the eyes of the law obscenitymiddot is a sometime thing its distribution ~o adults nearly impossible to regulate without endangering the Conshystitutions guarantees of free speech and opinion

But over the same two years the Court has indicated thai it might be possible to control the

availability of obscene books and films to the young and in

1967 it issued an op~n invitashycmiddotmiddot tion to the nations ~a~yers to find the right cases an4 the right arguments tot~stmiddotthis middotmiddotview _

This year the cases were found and the Supreme Court did what most observers thought it would do it permitted states and citiesto control distribution of obscene material to youngshylIJters - providect It drlws the lines finely and tightly

It returrled from amiddotJtwo-week recess to rule thatmiddotmiddot NeW York middot States law barring phsons un- Organization Starts ~er 17 from buying smut met ~ middotthe ~e~t~nd tpatrgtalIas1s middot~lm CLEANUP FatherDetm6d P McDermott of New Yorks lower East ~ide St Housingmiddot Program

elasslflcatlOn law undet whIchmiddotmiddotmiddot bull - bull WASHINGTON (NC) - ~1 bull

minors areprevented from see- BrIgId spansn pas8~s o~t pamt ~nd prusJ1e~ to sl1rpl1r~a~ volunteers who particIpated m Church-sponsored nonprofit 0IJ)00

lt ingsome movies didnot ih~ AprIl ZO ()peratJoA Cleanup It was estImated that 50000 urban people of all baek- ganization here haS launched II

middotThemiddotopinions shoUld go li-long grounds w~re joined in the WOllk by 5000 suburbanites in cleaning andpaintin~ aJong~ousing program Wider whiClli way toward clearing up a con- 46 Streets NC Photo It hopes to purchase 322 sl~ lrti-tutional atmosphefe which at homes rehabilitate them aDCil middottimes hasbeen no Clearer thanmiddot 0 000 p J resellmiddotthem to poor families DiP

the air around the Supreme middotMmiddotore ThanmiddotS1 middotinGmiddot reo CIt Day rOJe ect del federal financing Courts building on a Pilrticu- The organization-Urban Beshylarly still slmlne~ day 1ew YOk middotPrmiddotelamiddotte Heomiddotds lomiddotmiddotn~Sectmiddot omiddotmiddotrmiddot-amiddot n Effort habilitation Corp~will begiul

While the Court in an 8-1 de- 1lIIII 1lIIII the program with therehabi eision written by Justice Thur- tation of nine row houses whiob 000 Marshall-his first major ~ NEW YORK (NC)Jt- Wall z At the end of tbe da~ they ~teas of densest poverty ~Jl it will purchase from the ~ epiiiion-tlirewout the Dallal greatday for New York-one ~ Bat down togethermiddot at tables iyIanhatian andthe Bronx _ development Lanmiddotdmiddot Agen~ filmmiddot clasSification law because hard work oonstructiye dia- str~ng tile length of streets to Last SumJl1er in its thitd year Washi~gtonurban refewal tfwas unduly vague even there logueand happy celebration eat a meal of celebraHon pro- of successful operation the thorny agency The RIA apo K upheld the right of goer~- -Along 45 streets in the Man- vided and prepared by people ~rojec(wastlIreatenea b~ out- proved sale of the houses to ~

Jnen~ to prote~t the Y0llng 1~m hattan and Bronx ooroughs of the block 1gtreak of violence in East Har- group at a purchasemiddot price ~ ~slble bad mfluenc~ some 50000 Negroes Puerto Many in~olved said they felt lem $26100

Different Directions Ricans Italians Jews Slavs the most important aspect of the To counteract riot threats Purchase and rehabilitatiOll middotIt did so without p~ssing on Orit~nt~ls and eople~f otmiddothe whole projeot was not renova- Msgr Fox organized East Har- work which will be done bIT

themiddot meri~~or lackof merits nationalities were joined by middottion but relationship It gave lem peace processions For five Negro contractors and involVG of the film involved but hinted some 5000 guest volunteers _ an opportunity at a time middotof nghts more than 1000 old and young Negroes as apprentice6 middot111at had the law been suffi- from suburbia and other middle alienation and fear between YQung Puerto Ricans walked will be carried out under ~

eielitly explicit about what con- class areas black and white rich and poor through their streets with ban- $]37000 mortgage provided ~ stihites proper or improper con- They spent the day c1eani1g inner city and suburbia oung nersmiddot flowrs singing songs the International BrothelhooCl

duct the Dallas censors would renovating and decorating the and old for people to meet one carrying candles and standing of Electrical Workers and guall shy have had no trouble iicei1sing inner city streets and alleys another as persons in an at- up for peace hope and love anteed by the Federal Housins middotthe film buildings and residences 10- mosphere of work play and La~gely through their efforts Administration under its 221pound(

Instead thc Court said they gether the men women and accomplishment peace was restored to the area program were set adrift in a boundless children residents wOlked shoul- Its one way to make real sea and arrived at their con- der to shoulder with priests what Dr Martin Luther King elusion--that the film should be nuns laymen and women vol- envisioned when he said I Archbishop Greets shown to adults only - from unteers They cleaned back- have a dream as East Harlemshy DEBROSS OIL many different directions yalds and basements did car- ite Valentine Haddock described Armenian Patriarch ~uch a situation is wide open pen try work made plumbing all the people helping one anshy NEW YORK (NC) ~Archshy co

te abuses not the least of which repairs painted doors windows other to become not even just bishop Terence J Cooke ofNew would be a drift among film- and building facades friends-relatives York welcomed His Holiness Heating Oils makers toward the most innocu- At the end of each block a Peace Processing Vasken I Supreme PatIiarch ous and the totally inane The large and colorful mural was Cleaned out basements and andCatholicos of all Armenians and Burnersresult The vast wasteland that painted on a wall depicting the backyards on streets are to be at an ecumenical service in St some have described in refer- good things happening transformed later again by Patricks cathedral 365 NORTH FRONT STREET ence to another medium might street residents and guest vol- It marked the first time the

NEW BEDFORDbe a verdant paradise in com- Award Ecumenical unteers working in partnelship supreme spiritual leader of the parison into vest pocket parks basket- Armenian church had been reshy

But because the law was Theology Diploma ball courts little theaters reme- ceived in a Catholic cathedral in ivague said Marshall it does KAMPALA (NC)-A theolo- dial schools and teenage neigh- the United States JIlot follow that the Constitution gical diploma of the University borhood clubs requires absolute fleedom to of East Africa jointly recognized This non-sectarian project exhibit every motion picture of by the Catholic and Anglican was instituted by Msgr Robert every kind at all times and all Churches in East Africa has been J Fox New York archdiocesan places awarded for the first time coordinator for Spanish com-

The first four Uganda students munity action who four years to receive the diploma fare An- ago originated a creative comshy

Schedule Unveiling glicans munity action program Sum-The theological diploma repre- mer in the City now operatingOf Pope1s Statue sents an agreement between out of 26 store fronts in eight

FATIMA (NC) -A 12-footshy Catholics and Anglicans over the high statue of Pope P~lUl VI syllabus and subjects of the theshy

wili be unveiled Monday May ological course However such TRI CITY13 at the Marian shrine here on an agreement does not iriclude the first anniversaly of the any changes in doctrinal teach- BOILER REPAIR COJontiffl visit to the shril)e ing by the churches Each stu- SLAB BRIDGE ROAD Ihe st~tue depicts Pope Paul dent ~oJl~ws th~ course accold- ASSONET MASS 02702 i

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II ~sAfL~CfiO Ik

Aid to 5t~

THE ANCHORshyThursday May 2 1968

Portland Prelote Stresses Crisis

In Education PORTLAND (NC) - Co- )0

adjutor Bishop PetermiddotL Ger- BATON ROUGE (N2)-Tho ety apostolic administrator Louisiana AFL-CIO app Dved tl

of the Portland diocese des- ~ resolution calling for s ~ supshycribed the grave and serious 1 bull port to children attendi 3 nonshycrisis in regard tQ finances and c middot~lmiddot ~ i public schools at its COil ~ntion personnel in the field of Cath- ~H 1 here oUc education at a press con- l~ The resolution endar d the ference here proposal that tuition supple-

While affirming the desira- ments for the teaching oj nOiF bility of Catholic education the religious subjects bc paid Maine bishop pointed to the toward the education of chill-gt serious problems in financing dren regardless of race creed and staffing a system of schools or religion in state alproved which aims at providing a Cath- non-public schools which me~ olic education for all children all the requirements of law whose parents desire it He Emile Comar executive ~ middotnoted both the rising costs of rector of the Louisiana reder2lshyeducation and the dlOp in voca- tion Citizens for EducHtionllll tions and in the number of Reli- Freedom said It is gmtifyin(l gious available for teaching that the state AFL-CIO in tho

Bishop Gerety n~ted During adopted resolution recognizecll the past ten rears six Catholic __ -_~scgtbull~- Jf the need of parents with ct~ schools in this state alld 11 dren in non-public schools

Catholic elementaly schools CARDINAL J~EGER IN AFRICA The retired ~rchbishop of Montreal Paul-Emile Tuitions continue to dse ant1 have closed their doors During Cardmal Leger who has dedicated his Iif e to work with the poor in Africa is continu- taxes are becoming increasingJy41 the same period we have scen II t th h fl k f d f higher and the combination eithe enrollment in our Catholic a y mee mg WI IS oc or ISCUSSIons 0 conditIons m the DIocese of Yaounde Cam- the two has placed a lremeiF schools decrease by 25 per cent eroun NC Photo dous financial burden on thill

middot~i~~~i~e~~~~~Ct~I~~O~Cmiddotard-nal Leger Works for Afmiddotr-ca Lepers -n~~nt of the states populashymg statements Tbe labor organizations resa-

Expand Quality lution noted The contributioJ)fl

The middotsystem be Seeks to Bring SpirituQI Material Aid which these schools havecannot ex- made panded beeause of staffing to the state have long been ree problems financi~l deuromands YAOUNDE (NC)-lt is said The fact that he left behipd COmmodate himself to the new ognized by the public and~middot

and theincreasing costs of pres- that when Paul Emile Cardinal one of the most important dJ- environment and to be ready public officials ent day education Leger former arehbishop of oceses in the world does not fig) to I work effeetivelr It added that the parents bl

Schools must be consoUdated Montreal arrived at the lepro- ure in their thinking but theymiddot The eardinal is already famil- these tuition supported schooJJ wherever hldicated for maxi- s~rium of Nianing in Senega appreciate the sacrifice that is iar with the specific plOblcms of have repeatedly demonstrateflJ mum use of the available Reli- last Dec IS the lepers looked involvedmiddot in leaving his nfltive the lepers villages He thinks their support of both public ani I gious persoJmel at their fingers to see if a mir- country and adapting to a Dew that they need good pharmacies non-public education to the

We mustmiddot concentrate on ex- acle was going to happen and environment and is concerned with CHing for benefit of all Louisiana eh~ cellence in the schools we have they were going w be instan- Cardinal Leger has put him- all types of sicknesses He sees dren Where this is not possible the taneously cured It was in fact self at the service of Archbishop a need for wells powelhouses bishop said the schools in- the first time that the lepers JeanZoa of Yaounde He is food suppliers and medicinesmiddot of Brotherhood Lackvolved will have to be closed had seen a cardinal learning one of the languages various kinds

We must greatly evpand the ri1l~ cardinal however through of Cameroun the one that is Menace to Peace~ Men Not Outcasts S(l()pe and quality of our reli- middotworks of chari1y has for a long most widely spoken in the reshy VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pe~gious education proglams reach- time been concerned withmiddot the middotgion He thinks that jcent wiJl What makes the cardinal parshy is still menaced by questions laquofing out to all age groups lepers M~~y of the houses in take two years for him lamp ale- tkularly admired is that he reshy

prestige and an insufficient senstlBishop Gerety announced the leprosanum here at Yaoul)de gards the lepers as men and not of human brotherhood PQ~that he is creating a task force have been built through his - as outcasts He knows that many Paul VI told thousands of isi~to study religious education gifts The same is tgtrue of sev- Pope Asks Respect lepers are severely mutilated tors gathered in St Pete

plograms in the diocese He eral leprosaria of the Ivory For Human Rights and Cfln no longer take their SQuare for a Sunday noon blesvshywill ask the group he said to Coast Dahomey and Camerouf place in society It is because of ingmake reco~mendations ~on- The cardinl i6 still in the VATICAN CITY (NC)--Jt is middotthis that he seeks to bring them

eerning how the limitedre- stage of making contacts in the vain to proclaim h~man rights material and spiritual aid Speaking from a window ovei shysources of the diocese can best three leprosaria here unless everythlllg IS done ~o He also gives thought to the looking the square Popc P~u1 be used to ploovide an effec- Cardinal Leger does not want ensure the duty of respecting prevention of the disease If cleclared We must support willi tive religious education for the to impose either his aid or him- them by all people everywhere leprosaria are well organized it our hopes that cause (of peace) total community of adults lind self on anyone He has said re- l1ld for all people Pope Paul will perhaps be possible to wage which so many desire and proshychildren peatedly that he does not want VI declared In a letter to the In- a campaign to eradicate the mote with a sense of impartiality

He said he will also ask for to be a burden and tl1at he ternational Conferenee on Hu- disease completey and justice with true love ofi reeommenltlations on the best wants to be regarded as a simple man Rights meeting in Tehran The cardinals realism aston- freedom and of respect for su1ishy

fering peoplesuse of the dioceses Religious priest Iran ishes many Africans who like personnel Disinterested Help The lettel signed by the Pope to live from day to day and who

~-------------bull That is why the Africans ad- was sent to Father Theodore do not like their customs to be mire him Moslems and Chris- Hesburgh CSC president of upset The cardinal understands tians agree that his is an exam- Notre Dame University and head that the Africans must be shoWn pIc of disinterested help that is of the papal delegation to the that aid is not directed at deshynot often seen in Africa ongress The meeting is being stroying their customs but at

held on the 20th anniversary of bringing them a better standard the United Natio)ls Declaration of living

Workers Charges of Human Rights and in conshyjunction with the International Reject CelibacyDenied in Germany Human Rights Year

ROERMOND (NC)-TwcllyshyBONN (NC)-Charges by the The papal letter dec111red one young Dutch priests havewomens branch of the Indian With all men of goodwill we told Bishop Petrus Moors ofYoung Christian Workers shall follow with great interest this Netherlands See that they(YCW) that living and working ~his conference in Tehran which can no longer accept the plicstlyconditions for Indian girls means to formulate and prepare a celibacy obligationtraining as nurses in West Gershy program of measures to be taken

many were unsatisfactory were on the prolongation of this Hushy denied here man Rights Year

The Rev Hubert Debatin Racial discrimination raises soProtestant minister who initi shy

many troubles social injustice F L COLLINS amp SONSated a program of nursing economic misery and ideologicaltraining for girls from Indias oppression so many revolts that INCORPORATED 1937Kerala state saId that the Indishyrecourse to violence as a meansan government had ordered an

investigation of the complaints to right these wrongs to human The Indian embassy here howshy dignity is a grave temptation ever refused to comment (The Development of Peoples)

Rev Mr Debatin said he visshyON CD HOARD Alexandshy Ited the embassy and told offi shy

er P Tureaud Sr chief cials that the charges wer~ completely false Despite thecounsel for the Louisiana no comment by the embassy

branch of the National Assoshy it is reliably repOrted that emshyciation for theAd~ancement bassy officials did visit several of Colorelti People tNAACP) hospitals and questioned Indian

girlS about th~ir living and beeame the first Negro elecshyworking conditions ted to the Catholic tJniver~ The niinist~r iJaidthe Indian

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12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 2 1968

C~~e$ ~~Ergy Role in Sreg~Hrch F9f ~~ Crisis Sc~~tm(ln

By Msgr George G Higgins The bighop of a middle-siood eastern diocese recently

gnnounced at ceremonies memorializing Martin Luther King Jr that the diocese will spend a substantial portion of its annual Development Fund to improve the condition ef the Negro bullbullbull The money poslible that even those Cahoshyhe was at pains to empha- lies (and Protestants) who are size will not be gpent pater- most vigorously opposeq to

wilistically but in close 00- clerical involvement in social operation with local Negro and economic issues are nevershyleaders He said that his com- theless in fevor of using church mitffiimt wi 11 funds as seed money to develshylTeceiVe the op projects for the benefit of bacJcing of the the poor in general and for areas Catholics poor Negroes in partiCUlar I make tbisDisconcerting Fact ~ o m mit - I would hope of course that ment he as- this might prove to be the case aert1d confi- but only time will tell lIIent that our Meanwhile the fact that Catholic people such a high percentage of Cathshyshare this love olies and protestants are 00

-m Ii d concern record as being opposed to That the bishop the middotchurches getting involved felt it necessary in political and social issues is to make the latter statement for rather disconcerting to put it the record might lead one ~ as mil~ly as possible suspeet that in point of factmiddot be I say tliisas one who can symshyantiCfpated that some of hi$ pathizewith thoseCatholicsor Catholic people would object to Protestants or Jews who object his 0 decision and was mereIi to certain types of clerical inshyWying to neutralize their op~ volvement which either ignore mtion in advance or to put it the complexities of the political morecrudely was trying to ~rocess or tend to oversimplify beat them to the punc~ sO to the application of moral prinei-Bjpeak pIes to complex social and ecoshy

I Expert Opposition pomic problems or finally tend Be that as it may a recent to leave the impression that

ampallup Poll on the attitude of Clerics have a monopoly on the Cathdlics 3lld Protestants with regard to the involvement of their churches and their clergy in political and social issues would seem to suggest thatshylIIlless his diocese is the rare exceptl(~n that proves the rule -~he bIShop can exp~t a cershyiau~ amount of 0PPoSIb~)D from a slzable JIllnonty of his Cathshyooc people

lftY-Seven per cent of Cathshyclies res~ndmg m the Gallu~ survey said that the churcti~~ should not get involved with 35 per cent statmg that t~e d1~rch~~ sho~d express SOCIal enS pO~~Ical Vle~s

~gn Icantly l~ was found ~at more Catholics than Pro~-

Virtue of political prudence or have been granted ethical inshysights thatmiddot have been denied to other mortals

S~rious Obligation It is one thing however to

demand that clerics stay within the limits of their o~ compeshytence in the political order and quite another thing to try to muzzle them or to deny that they have any role at all to play in the field of public policy In the case of civil rights for exatitple they havemiddot a serious

Gbligation to teach the truth as they see it

To do so in any meaningful woay tlley must at times move beyond the realm of general

0Stants thmk ~hat the ~hurlt~esprinciples into the area of spe- should n~ get ~volved ~n soc~al and polItlcal Issues Fifty-~wo lPOerlledcefnt of the Protesta~ts P avored mvolvment whIle 42 ~er cent disagreed

Hadden Study Contrarirwise however a

mudy released during the same week in which middotthe Gallup findshymgs were made public found

ntat in all caSes Protestantsmiddot were more vigorous in their opshyposition to social action by clergymen thaI) either Roman Catholics or Jews

The latter study directed by ~effrey K Hadden a sociologist at Western Reserve University in Cleveland was summarized In ~onsiderabledetail by Edwaro R iFiske in an article entitled -Cl~rgy and Civil Rights in the editorial section of the Sunday Ap~il 21 issue of the New York linles

Since the Gallup and HadGen Alrveys dealt specifically with the right of the clergy and the ehurches to speak o~t on social and political issues (civil rights tor example) and not on the role of the churches in financing programs aimed at improving U1t ~ot of Negroes their findshyings do not necessarily m~ ofoou~E that the bishop referrect to a~ove will encounter oppe-

cifies~ even at the risk of a~tagshyonizing those Catholics who disshyagree ith them

This does not mean that clershyies or other representatives of official church bodies should shortcircuit the political procshyess by trying to force their own solutions on the body politic by means of heavy-handed authorshyitarian edicts

If they were to shirk this reshysponsibility or run awoay frOm this challenge for fear of antagshyonizing a minority (or for that matter eyen a majority) of their people they would be unshyworthy of their calling

-This having been said howshyever itshould be noted that clericS and other representatives of offlCiilI church bodies alSo

have an obllgation to keep their methods of teaching under conshystant review

Wo~ CUt Out We cannot automatically as-middot

Sume in other words that all of those who object to clerical involvement in political and soc~lissues are necessarily in

HEADS NCEA Bishop Raymond J 9allagher of Lafayette Ind was elected president general of the Natshyional Catholic Educational Association at the associa- tions 65th annual conven- tion in San Francisco NC Photo

Venerate Fatima Statue in Brazil

LISBON (NC)-Manuel Cardshyinal Goncalves Cerejeira patri- arch of Lisbon imd Bishop Joao Pereira Venancio of Leiria whose diocese includes the Marshyian shrine of Fatima returned here after participating in threeshyday ceremonies in Brazil honorshying Our Lady of Fatima

They t~ok the statue of the -Pilgrim Virgin of Fatima with them to Brazil

At Sao Paulo they took part in Portuguese - Brazilian Communshyity Day celebrations At Inhangshyabau and at Rio de Janei1G thousands joined them in ven- erating the statue

The patriarch and Bishop Venshy

ancio were accompanied in Brazil by the rector of the Fat-middot i m a shrine Msgr Antonio Borges

_ sitiOJifrom any slgnificantnuili middot te~ which they caiiunder- pany a mernber of the Jew-middot

ber ~f his people for usin~ cii- stand and absorb jish fAith has neen elected GCeSaIl f~nds for the economic -Ifthis sho~d prove to be the to in bOardof +-~ t- and~ ~OCIal bettel1nent 01 the case we have our work cut out ~ bull wu~ ~ W

Wack citizens of his communitlT ~r~ in the montha ftbat lie the CaU~hc VnlverampliyNe ~~ other words it is quite aheiid middotPboto

~ ~

bad faith It may be in the case of some

r of tb~m at le9st we are at fault TRUSTEE BenJamin T ~ in the sense that we havent Iearned how to communicate the Rome president of aWaah Go~l meSsage to them in i n g ton construction oom-

The Servant Queen IiJ the Constitution on the Church we find the testimony of

Sacred Scripture and the Church Fathers combined with more recent pronouncements by the popes Mary the Mother of God an4 of the Redeemer was united to Him by a close inen soluble bond and waS accorded a special role in the mystery Qf the middotIncamiddotrnate Word that is in the economy of salvation

Whenmiddot Mary uttered the words of her Fiat she made a ~l eommitment to God so that He could carry out His de- slgus in middothermiddot Mary never took back hell ad of total surrender Dot even on the road to CalvarY lFrom that firstmiddot moment she devoted herself wholly to serving DM only her heavenly Fashyther and the Incarnate Word but also the whole human race lin the llncarnation Our Blessed Mother first brought Christ to the world Anell that is precisely what she would have 70U do aUmiddot your life-bring Christ to the world

Ev~n after the AScenslon she loyally and steadfastly camiddotrried out~~r role aCting as spirit1lI mother to the beloved disciple anli ~~ ne~rn Cl1urch~ With good reason then we can say tha~~e wJole life of the Lords humble handtnaid~from the moment IIhewas porn to the present-is one of loVing seZvice to her cltildren what gzeater example and what ~tei model could y~ chqose to imitate in Oilder to fulfill your ta~k as a Christian called to~ove and -to serVe your poor 8iKl sUffering bro~ers arqupd the world

You must DOW take over Mars task~ You are the door through which Christ enters the world You muSt receive the Lon and bear Him in 70ur heart sO thaamp He rnA7 beeo~e the heartmiddot ofmiddot your life Then His love Jiis goodne~ Dis pity for the multitude middotwill shine through you into the world Then He will smile through your eyes Then He will help with your hanels Then He will comfort with your goodness Then He will relive in your pers~n His life of long ago for the sake of todayS desperate humanity

In this the month dedicated to the Mother of the church show your love for her by making her task your task by sacrificing to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith-to help those of her children who are in such need

SAlLVATioN and SERviCE lUe the work of The Soclet7 il~r ~~ Propagati~n of th~ Faith Please cut Gut this column llInd sen~ your of~ering to Right Reverend EdwardT OMeara Nationll-ll Director 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 Or directly to your local Diocesan Director BU Rev Msgr Raymond TConsid~e 3611 North Main Street Fall River Massachusetts e~7~omiddot

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13 New Jersey Grand Jury Absolves Police of Deaths During Rioftong

NEWARK (NC) - A special and charged it with lcHrity m Essex Cotmty grand jury inves- permitting some of lots material tigating the deaths of 28 people to i1all into private hands which during rioting in this city last misused il Summer absolved po1dce laquol Reporting on the deaths it blame iO the deatbs in a pre- found that three were not conshysentment which rebuked an nected with the rioting that anti-poverty agency for failure eight resulted from wounds inshyto cooperate willi law enforce- curred while participating in ment agencies criminal acts that nine of those

The presentment was issued killed were apparently innocent after the jury had heard more bystanders that two apparently than 100 witnesses over an resulted from sniper fire that eight-week period It said there two were from accidental was insufficient evidence to shooting and that one could not warrant indictment in any of be classified the cases presented to it al- Another special grand jury is though an earlier trial resulted now being paneled to carry out hi the conviction of a man for an investigation of Newarks fatally shooting a woman municipal government This inshy

In the final analysis the vestigation was recommended ~ury concluded the responsi- by the governors commission bility for the loss of life and which reported a pervasive property that is the inevitable feeling of corruption in Newshyproduct of rioting and mass ark lawlessness cannot be placed upon those whose duty it is to enforce and protect the freedom Convention lliead of our society

Courage Restraint N E MonsignorIt rests squarely upon the

MANCHESTER (NC)-Msgrhoulders of those who for euroolin A MacDonald presidentwhatever purpose incite and of the Manchester diocese senateparticipate in riots and the of priests has been selected asflouting of law and order in chairman of the national con-complete disregard of the rights stiiutional convention of theand well-being of the vast mashyproposed U S priests councilsjority of our citizens organization 110 be held May 20Although the presentment and 21 in Chicago leveled some small criticisms at

I1he monsignor earlier hadpolice actions it generally upshybeen elected as the Bostonheld the work of law enforceshyprovince delegate to a 29-memshyment officers and this was in ber ad hoc steering committeecontrast to the report of the for the convention When ill wasNew Jersey (()vernors Comshydecided 110 limicent the steeringmission on Civil Disorder commimiddotlltee 110 8 members thewhich was highly critical of the

police JJlQIlsignor was elected to this group then ohosen as chairmanWith some exceptions the

jury said police both local and Msgr MacDonald said the state together with National purposes of the proposed NashyGuardsmen acquitted themselves tional Federation of Priests with courage and restraint in Councils are to promote priestly the early stages of the riot brotherhood by faciJi1ating comshy

munion among priests councilsPoor Judgment to provide a forum for the disshyThe grand jury said the poshycussion of pastoral matters tolice were handicapped by lack enable priests councils to speakof training appropriate equipshywith a common representativement effective direction and voice to proD101e and collabshyexperience in dealing with the orate in programs of pastoraltype of situation in which they research and action to impleshywere involved ment the reriewal of priestlyThe jury did say that in the life to provide the means forlater stages of the disturbances priests councils united nationshythere were examples of poor ally to cooperate with the tityjudgment excessive use of fireshythe ~eligious the bishops andarms and D manifestation of with others in addressing thevindictiveness that eannot be needs of the Church in the modshytolerated in law enforceD1ent ern World and to do whateverpersonnel is necessary to carry out theseAD10ng the recommendations purposesit made was one that looting be

Members of the Priests Senshyeffectively controlled at its ate of the Diocese of Fall Riverearliest manifestations It also have sent suggestions regardingcalled for the improveD1ent and the proposed organization toupdating of equipment and said Monsignor MacDonaldthe use of chemicals and nonshy

lethal gases should be explored and considered Priests Paid SllEme

The jury called for improveshyment in police-community relashy Salary as Laborers tions and said there is no place PARIS (NC) - The averagefor abusive language or ill salary of priests in the Paris treatment of any group of citi shy region is about the saD1e as thatzens Like the governors COD1shy of an unskilled laborer accordshymission it deplored the use of ing to figures contained in thepersonally-owned weapons by first public budget report of thepolice Paris archdiocese

The anti-poverty agency crit shy The archdiocesan operatingicized was Newark Legal Servshybudget the report showed isices Project a branch of the $440000 a year most of whichUnited Community Corp which is for the salaries of 384 nonshyhelps ghetto residents with legal parish priests more than a thirdproblems

retired This indishyCharges Laxity of whoD1 are cates an average of less than $1-The jury accused it of failing 000 a year to cooperate in post-riot invesshy

Parishes pay direclly the 600tigations said the character of it taken were parish priests but their base salshystatements had

inadequate and ary is only about $50 a monthunprofesSional Honorariums for baptisms marshyriages and special Masses add

Receives Admiral about an equal amount to this VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope sum but pcrivate requests for

Paul VI received in audience Masses are declining Parish Adm Joseph Edet Akinwale priests send to the archdiocese Wey of the Nigerian Navy who the honorari~s of Masses they had told a press conference that coannot celebrate In 1964 this he hoped to present a message amounted to about 22000 Masses from the Nigerian government a year now it is only about three on the Biafra siiuatiolL ~middotfourmiddot thousand~

r THE ANCHORshyThursday May 2 1968

I

Schoo~s Exp~ore

Dual E~l~~rMJcemlt LOUISVILLE (NC)-Catholie

school officials here are trying to work out dual enrollment agreeD1entS with public schoo officials in two locations

If agreement is reached stushydents at Flaget High School here and at Bethlehem Academy may benefit next Fall from the proshygram

Moves toward the dual enrQllshyment concept were made possishyble when the Kentucky attorney general issued an opinion which said in effect that public schools might get state financial assistance for students enrolled part-time in public schools

Under the plan students in private schools could take some subjects in public schools and others in their own schools

Famiddotther Thomas P Casper Louisville diocesan superintendshyent of schools said he is submitshyting dual enrollment proposalpoundNEWMAN CLUBS MEET At oonferenee of Newman to the Louisville Bardstown andClubs from area colleges representatives of Fall River Dishy Nelson County boards of educa~

reese included from left Walter La Rosa Our Lady ill Mt tion Carmel parish Seekonk a student at Bristol Community While action on the roposaw College Lydia Rocha St Michaels Fall River BCC Rev is up U the public boards-the

attorney generals opinion grantvHarold J Wilson BOC Newman Club chaplain Morgan permission but does not force

Childs St Patricks Falmouth SMTL ootion-Father Casper said he if very pleased that there are possibilities open now for deshyveloping dual enrollD1entReturns to Moscow Final form of any dual enroll shyment effort is still to be decided

Fr Dion Assumption College President But one such method treated in the attorney generals opinion

Named Apostolic Administrator is the leasing of space in Cathshyolic schools by public schoom

WORCESTER (NC) - Father a visiting Russian churchman and the operation of this spaceLouis F Dion AA president here Father Bissonnette is now as public school classroomsof AssuD1ption College here will academic dean at Assumption resign his post June 30 to be- College COD1e apostolic administrator in Father Dion had to wait more New Jersey Bishopthe Soviet Union and chaplain than three years after Father to American Roman Catholics Bissonnettes expulsion before Asks United Action in Moscow obtaining a Soviet visa enabling ATLANTIC CITY (NC) shy

Father Dion held the same him to go to Moscow via Paris Bishop George H Guilfoyle of posts in Russia from 1959 to in January 1959 Camden issued a call for united 1961 He served as assistant to Father Dion said he is looking action on the part of all of WJ the president and registrar of forward to his return to the to 36Sist our fellow man as Assumption College from 1962 Moscow post He bad not specifshy he helped dedicate a HUD1aJ until his appointment as presi- ically requested the assignment Resources Center aiD1ed at job dent ill June 1964 he said but it was offered to develpoment for some of this

He replaces Father Eugene him and he accepted it willingly resort areas 50000 poor LaPlante AA who returns to Powers of Bishop This nation has made treshythe Assumptionist Fathers The duties of chaplain Father mendous strides in the fields opound AD1erican province for reassign- Dion explained are not con- science industry business and ment after a three-year term fined to American Catholics medicine he said It is shameshy

ful that in view of all this proshySeventh to Serve living in Moscow They include gress we still have millions ofFather Dion is the seventh he said the entire foreign colshypeople who live in poverty andAmerican priest-all Assump- ony - the diplomatic corps wanttionists-to serve in Moscow un- newspaper personnel and tour-

Bishop Guilfoyle said theder the terms of the 1933 Roose- ists Camden diocese will contributevelt-Litvinov agreement estab- Since there ar(~ no European

$1000 to the new center to belishing diploD1atic relations be- priests-or priests of any other nationality-in Moscow serving used for whatever program the

tween the U S and the USSR in the capacity of chaplain he board of directors decides hi He was replaced in 1961 by said the American chaplain needed Father Joseph Richard AA ministers to the spiritual needs who served four years in the of Catholics attached to the post staffs of embassies and legations

His iD1D1ediate predecessor accredited to the Soviet governshy FAIRHAVENwas Father Georges Bisslgtnnette ment AA who was expelled in The post of apostolic adminisshy LUMBERMaTch 1955 by the Soviet gov- trator Father Dion said inshy

COMPANYernment in retaliation for U S volves all the powers and funcshyrefusal to prolong the visa of tions of a bishop except ordina~

tion and consecration of bishops Complete line It is assigned to a priest usuallyAtlanta Archdiocese Building Materials in areas where there is DO

Joins Equal Housing hierarchy who is then dimiddotrectly responsible to the Holy See 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVENATLANTA (NC)-The lllChshy Father Dion expects to arrivediocese of Atl~lnta has joined in Moscow in early August he 993-2611more than 50 metropolitan At- said

lan-ta organizations and indi- viduals as co-spo~sors of the Atlanta Metropoli tan COmmit- bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull~

tee on Equal Opporunity ill Housing

HThe objective of the confer- BISAILLONS ence will be primarily educashytional Father Noel C Burtenshy GARAGEshaw ehancellor of the arch- diocese and member of the execu-tive committee said 24-Hour Wrecker

He added We expect this dialogue and interChange will establish middotnecessary communicashy 653 Washington Street Fairhaven tion and provide Some answers 994-5058~ the housing problems facing reater Atlanta bull

Thanks Catholics For Refugee Aid

VATICAN - CITY (NC)-NearMsgrEllis Relates Hist~ry middotmiddotEastmiddotwelfare work of U S Cathshyolics has been praised by Pope Paul VL0+ Training for Priesthood

Such a message in the Popes By Rt Rev Msgr Jobs S Kennedy

The publication of a book by Monsignor John Tracy Ellis founder and dean of a new school of American Cath~

lti)lic churchhistory is always a weloome event This is true even when the book is among his minor works SuCh is Essays in Seminary Educoshytion (Fides Notre Dame Inshydiana 46556 $595) amiddot 001shylection of papers and address-C2S There is some repetition in Chese essays which were preshyared for vari shyeus occasions But it does not illessen the imshyact of a book which shows us n keen critical in tell i g ence brought to beal OIl a subject of bas i c imporshylance The hand rDf the historian iIs seen throughshy~t the book The first three essays are specifically historical

The firsi deals with the trainshylog or preparation of priests from the apostolic age to the ~ncil of Trent the second with the same subject from the time of Trent to ~ 1960s The tird is todevoted diocesan theological seminaries in the American Middle West 1811shy1889

A survey such 00 the author Makes in the two opening chap $ers is of especial interest beshyeause it brings out tile implausshyible but incontestable fact that b about the fimiddotI9t 1500 years of its existence the Church did DOt have anything even regem- bling a standard ~m of edushy_tion for the priesfil100d

Monastie Schools fttere were no special schoobl

lor the clergy before the time Of

The medieval universitieQ were foundedmiddot by the Church amd the clery p~yed ~ im ~rtant part m them But theyWei b d al ~ ed ti e y no means I e Jormiddot ushy(l3 on for the pnesthood SInce2he the I g I kemelyq 1~~~y~middotou~emiddot~~U Iersi~ of P middotkmiddotlmiddot5middot6

-Y arlS n ovv or ~(fears to complete thedoCtOriite ill theology Hence few priestsbenefited f-rom 4--

~ UDlversI Effective Response

lhe POr estate of the clergy~ glarmgly a~parent in the ens of the Renalsance and the Bef~rmation and this middotis prj shy

manly llttutablello educashytional defiCiency And evea hen the reforming Council of lIrent was launched it took 1~ ~rs ~efore a dec~ on clerical educa~on was achieved and a long tlme thereafter before its proVISIonS were carned out in practice

Monsignor Elliss treatment of

ticularly the institutions founded by St Vincent de Paul and Jean-Jacques Olier

These men win the authors praise for their effective reshygponseto a vital need But he does IlQt hesitate to lay to them ~e responsibility for some of the anti-intellectual bias which chamcterizea too many seminashyli13 in subsequent centuries

incredible NWIIlber In the United States some

quite ancient history was reshylived as the bishops of new dioceses had cleriea schools of sorts in their own homes But in the days of the very first bishop John Oarroll a real

had b - -bli hed semmary een - 9when the Sulpichms came to Baltimore in 1791 and founded St Marys

Later developmen1s are sumshymarized by Monsignor Ellis with attention to the various types of seminaries and the growth m numbers from 50 in 1668 to 571 iIn 1964 Thi6 last incredible number is indicative 0If tile regre~le proliferation Which led to needless duplicashytiOD inadequacy in quality and waste of resources

A test of middotthe exeellence of American seminaries is proshyposed by the atrtbor how many men of enduring reputation ba~ flhey produced The anshyswerJs that tIhe fteonl is not distinguished And much of the lelIlainder of the book is given 110 probing for reasons m exshyplanation Of this

Routine Teaeldllamp at Augustine whomiddotbecame Ihi Anierican ~mi~ry of -ilJhop of Hippo in 396 His 1be ft refleCted _ national

_

LlIFE MEMBERS Msgr John E Boyd chaplain left and Dominick Maxwell Jr right Grand Knight of Fall River Council 86 of the Knights of Columbus i~vest Jerome D Foley and Dr Joseph Carvalho as life members

~

Rural Ireland Charge Farmers Lack Formal Training

In Agriculture ROSSLARE (NC)The need Wbat chance had the boy who

for priests to be more involved left school at 14 of making the in social problems was stressed grade at farming ~he excepshyby 9peakers at the annual meetshy tional lads made it The rest are

~ e9tablished and mairitaineCi~ - In the future he said until 4- disregard cif inteli~tualqua1itY this is rectified Ninety-five nAr ~ his own household and had In ~y instances ~ty mem- ~ imitators ~gt bera ere apPOint~~ t~eir ~t of e5ent-day farmers Thereafter came the mona~f)le positi - middotth m rd io ~v~ had IlQ post-primary edushySchools initiated by St BenediCt ons WIlifo ~ga r cation NinetYofive per cent ofin thmiddot th proper qlla Ications MuCh of farmers have had middotno formal esnr cent~ the~ fllie teaching was rolltine and~rting in middotligrlcultllredr~ and-middot eP1scqp~ Scboo~ an~ dun Collateral reading _n6t middot~JFlWle Awayampnally themiddot medieval UDlvenu- middot~~d lib ties middot - ~ampt~W1~ an nu-~ wer~ Fcaither qerinehy ~ncluded

~e )mperorPbariemaible ~~~poundreed ~tho~~laquo~ lt m the eigh~h ~turydecr~ miD not aencournt ~e~ch~Gt~~n6~llIIr~Watmiddot ilhat alLclencs m~be lble to middotwas virtuall uilkn a lj ~

ifead im~~ri~ J~d~ve ~m- faculties PU~Shed v~illi~~e iT ~~~t ~~t~Bltcs petence In ~h~~ )~1esslC~~Idu- Monsignor Ellis points tJ01 the BOGOTA (NC) _ Anglican tiaif~king ~ DllIllmum timidity which prevailed after Bishop David Benson Reed of

q I I~~ons they ~ere to be the eJcesses perpetrated in 1l1e BogOta offered accommodations e~ ~~ deprIved of repression of Modernism in the for~five Catholic bishops during me iectr~~ IS we can see w a fim part of the present centurY theforthcoming International

g ere had been He sees a change in the era of Eucharistic Congresss in August

ing of the Christu Rex Society an Irish organization for priestDmiddot engaged in pastoml work

Over 250 priests and represhysentatives of agriculturalorgan- izations attended the cOngress here on the theme Rural Ireshyland

Father Jerome Dennehy CC of Kenm2lre criticized the fail- ure of the Iri9h educational sysshytem to provide the farmer with the basic knowledge necessarY to enable him to profimiddott from advice from government agenshydes onfurming methods

No real progress can be made

Vatican II and happily notes and five Ecuadorian prelates aeshythe improvements already made cepted his invitation

lUld those-in prosPectmiddotmiddot He hJ They are Bishops Bernardo hopeful for the future Ech R f Amb to d

evern~ wz 0 a anlIJiteUktlllal A~lieDtmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot-middotCandiiiomiddotRada Cenosian of Guashybull - d middotmiddotd A 1 B h

in8 ConclUding ~y~ ran a liln UXIlary IS ops Priestmiddot as rntelleCtllal~~ v~rll9middotmiddotGabrieI1iazCueva Ernesto that abettereducated and mueh Alvarez ~liaVlcente CIsneros of

and ea r Gua allmoreaware enti laitrmiddotmiddot y qu demands a certainmiddotleveloflD-middot B~SbtPAnBeedli has JurCls~lctib~n

middotfellectual attainment and alivemiddot middot~v~r eo g cans In 0 om la its cl and Ecuador and has been an

~~ ooes ermeam that the ecumenical leader in these

now fading away with thei~

farms Father Eamonn Casey nashy

ijonal director of the catholic Housing Aid Society in London stressed the necessity for the priest to work with underprivishyleged members of -society Too often he said the theologians are on the periphery - they should come doWn to earth and mix with the people-who really

priest has to be a professional~untries ~ _ ~=====~_ intellectual such is not his _ Over 200 bis~ops a~ 1~ ~r-Etmiddotmiddot D ampD SALES AND SERVICE cation ltR does mean that he has dinals have saId they Wlll at-sect to maintain a genuiDe hifei-est end the EUcharistie Congress to - sect ill things intellectUal anq m Mbeid be~ sectpublic questions sect

Monsignor Ellismiddot chides sUPe- sect riors for their failure to eneour- p~iori ~ the minisky in sect age priests 110 use their ~cial teD-dayretreatS preceding or- sect talents skills and aptitudes dination Better than nothing sectAnd he urgeS priests 110 acquire one suPPoses sect( and retain habits of 9tudy It is In the lntervaJ there has sect to be hoped that both these cau- ~ great improvement But sect

name has been sent to lI1sgr John G Nolan president of the Pontifical lVlission for Palestine whose headquarters are in New Vork Written by Amleto Carshydinal Cicogilani Papal Secreshytary of State it referred to the

1 Missions 19 years service to ~ Palestinian refugees particushy

larly victims of the recent Arab-Israeli conflictto

It singled out as particularly praiseworthy the contribution of the Catholic Near East Welshyfare Association saying that middotthrough the unflagging genershyosi ty of the catholics of the United States of America it provided qlost of the means for the Missions work following the recent conflict

The papal letter declared No other agency surpasses the Pontifical Mission in length of

middot actualmiddot serviCe and its identifl shycapon with the paternal intershy~ and concern of the Holy Father merits his encourageshyment hismiddot blessing and his prayerful good wishes

Cardinal middotCicOgnanl wrote that Pope Paul out of paternal afshyfection for the homeless and of grateful esteem for the Pontifi shycal Mission bids memiddot send yOIll the enclosed check for $5000 Added to this was a furthell amount of money contributed

middot by the Congregation for the Oriental Churches

Msgr Nolan was asked that during his Easter visit to the refugee campS he kindly disshytribute the total sum in the Popes Dame to all the needyen

ar~~~stChneU~made adicbot-SAVE MONEY ON omy of man saying here is middotthe

body her~ is the soul-Iam YOUR middotOImiddotLmiddotHEATconCerned only with the soul bull bull bull bull Tmiddothe love of Christ is for the whole person and anything ~ -4~ WYman that concerns 1llieperson is of ~ US92 concern to middotChrist

He said thatmiddot the priest middotshould CHARLES F VARGAS selk tomiddotmiddot develop ~ature Ght-ls- tiMlS amongdsmiddotflockiuidcpre- 54 ROCKDALE AvENUE pare themmiddotforlife Th~ role of 1 the ~~esthe~dmiddotiftcl~desmiddotth~middot ~E~ BEDFORD MASS proVISIon Qfmiddotmiddot mformatlOn oo sexual and~ari~itLplmiddotobiehis 1

He stlggcentstJd middottbatmiddotmiddotmiddotPri~middot main~in cQJjt$C~ wjth~ those whlt emjgra~~mmiddottheir_ par- ish~ and follo~middotup middotthe middotcareers( of boys who are releasedmiddot from refprm schools t

1 bull bullbull - - ~_ _ - ~ ( ~

~ ~ lt

~III1I11I11I11I11I1UIIIIIIlIl1mlllllIII1I1I1I11I1I1I1I11II11I1I11I11I11IIIII11I1I11IIllIUIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~

tionary words win be wideiy~ OW measure canOOt be the poor sect AIR COmiddotIDmiddotImiddotTmiddotIO~IImiddot bullGmiddot

c INC

=====sect=

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~ post-Tridentinemiddot seminaries bulland responsibly beard Performance of the past It sect I~ I~ I~ lis remarkably extensive but the It is hard 110 believe tb1Ilt as must be the imperious demands sect main focus is on those ofF~Ce ~ as the seventee~th centu~lt ~ the p~sent an4 ~~ fUture ~ 363 SECOND ST FALL RIVER MASSbull bull the seventeenth century Pal- fa France some clena lOt their ~IWIIIUIUIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIUUlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUUIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIUIiIUWlimllllli5

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs May 2 1968 Back Presidenills ~reg~reg ~~~1rf~Jreg~MO~ ~~~lliJO[[reg(gJ ~rntilO1fi)[[fr~ofr~r

CHICAGO (NC)-The Assoshy~~ ~~regramp~~ o[J1j [Q)1 W[J1lJ[[o ciation of Chicago Priests an

The record compiled 56 years ful Swamppodle a neighborshy unofficial group of some 1500 priests in the archdiocese ofago still stands in big league hood within sight of the U S

baseball annals-most runs al shy Capitol talked about Father Chioago has endorsed President Johnsons current efforts to]owed one game 24 Travers Travers band

fA J (Joe) Detroit Never before had the bandsshy negotiate a Settlement of the

Father Aloysius J Travers men performed like they did in Vietnam war The ACP in its fifth plenarygJ 75 who achieved the dubishy the 1919 May procession-never

ous pitching distinction died had such old favorites as Tis session here turned down a resolution prepared by its soshylast week in Misericordia Hosshy the Month of Our Mother and cial action subcommittee onpital Philadelphia He acquied 0 Mary We C~own Thee With

baseball immortality on May Blossoms Today been so spir shy peace calling for complete cesshy

112 1912 as pitcher for the One sation of U S bombing in Vietshyitedly played by Gonzaga bandsshynam to support the Presidents limited decrease in bombing

men as the procession windedlDay Wonders Detroits brawling Tigers were through Swampoodle streets glated to play Connie Macks After the procession was over and negotiation moves

Two other peace resolutionspOwerful Philadelphia As that the school rector called in recommended by the subcomshy_ daymiddotin old Shibe Park Detroits Father Travers and congratushy

Btar Ty Cobb had drawn a fine mittee were approved They

and two-day suspension for formance The rector added lated him on the bands pershy

put the ACP on record as favorshy

belting a heckling fan a few But high school musicians with ing draft law revisions so that a person might be exempt as a

lligers decided if Cobb couldnt mustaches Dont you think thatdays earlier in New York~ ~he

conscientious objector to a parshywas going a bit too far ticular war without necessarilyFather T~avers had recruitedplay they wouldnt either so being a conscientious objector

Famous llnfield a dozen or so members of thecenthey went on strike

to all war and so that a per

With the aid of Connie Mack crack Fort Myer Army Band

son could be exempt as a conshyfOm nearby Arlington Va scientious objector on humanishy

ed up a collection of Philadelshydressed them in cadet uniforms~e Detroit management roundshy

tarian as well as religioUlland put them in the school band groundsBesides teaching at Stphia sandlot players signed

The ACP also approved threeJosephs Prep and Gonzagathem to Detroit contracts and recommendations of its liturgy

as the Tigers sf Francis Xavier High in New committee York As a result the priests group

Father Travers also taught atfielded the One Day Wonders

Al Travers 19 fresh out of has urged the National Confershyat Josephs Prep School rho Disbands Hawks ence of Catholic Bishops to reshyhelped recruit the sandlotters One of his moSt heartbreaking submit two liturgical petitioJUloppointed himself pitcher He assignments was given him some to the Conglegation of Rites inctftein recalled I learned that 25 years ago He was sent back Rome The petitions which had e pitcher would collect-50 to St Josephs College where New Problem ~en turned down by the Vati shyeX-tra so I volunteered the battIe cry is The Hawk can congregation would allowThat day the As scored 24 will never die as moderator the establishment of experimenshyINns on 25 hits with io nuts of athletics Priest Urges F~ir labor Practices tal centers for the liturgycmearned against young Travshy His jOb-disband the Hawks For CatholicSchool Faculties throughout the country and limshy

erG The wonder is the score football team with a minimum ited experimentation with thewasnt higher for young Tra~~rs of uproar from students and SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-For betweell the school and the liturgy without prior approvalwas pitching against the best alumni since football had beshy as long as anyone can rememshy religious community of the Vaticanbalt team of the era-against come a moneymiddot losing sport at ber the Religious and lay peoshy Some experts says that the

PhiladelphiaS famous $100000 St Josephs and a number of nte third resolution called on-pie who serve on the faculties best solution to this problem is

infield of John Phelan (Stuffy) other Catholic colleges in ~those the NCCB to take concrete stepsof Catholic grammar and high to bar Religious from partici shy

McInni6 at first Eddie Collins days to implement proposals of itsschools have been the type of pating in labor organizations

lJeCOnd Jack Barry short and He did his job well directing liturgy committee for adaptashypeople who would never think But Father Reicher indicated

IPrank (Home Run) Baker third attention to St Joes basketball tion of the Mass to smaIl anelof going out on strike against this would only divide the Reshy special age groupsSaves Franchise team which has grown into one unfair labor practices since ligiousand lay faculty of schools

But young Travers and the of the nations powerhouses this would imply some sort of even more than they are dividedORe Day Wonders who had For the last 25 years Father guilt on the part of p~ors and now India to ReconsiderI2ever seen Detroit saved the Tlavers had been stationed at bishops Urging a period of experishybaseball franchise for the Tigers St Josephs Prep in semishy Well those days are gone forshy meritation to work out new Deporting Priestttlat day If they hadnt pl~yed retirement during recent years ever according to Chicagos forms of collective bargaining NEW DELHI (NC) - Indiantile As chances are the Amershy Requiem Mass for the colorful Father Robert Reicher and the Father Reicher concluded It ill Prime Minister Indira GandbJ1bean L~ague would have lifted one-day big leaguer was ofshy job now is to set up standards obvious that the right to barshy has promised reconsideration ofDetroits franchise because of fered Thursday at GeuChurch of fair labor practice and guidshy gain collectively is a natural the order expelling Jesuitthe players strike in Philadelphia ance for faculty members grievshy tight clearly defended time and Father Vincent Ferr r of theDespite the lopsided score procedures against Cathoshy agaiil ethically and morally Poona diocese Indiaance fromlPatJher Travers got several big lic school administrators But this right also implies an lleague offers as a result of his Canonist Cates Need The pmmise was made when

Speaking to participants at 8 obligation to know what colleCshy tlhree members of the Indiani pitching He turned them down secondary school department tive bargaining involves went to St Josephs College For Negro Prieds parliament met with Mrs Ganshy

meeting during the Nationalthen joined the Jesuits ATLANTIC CITY (Nch - A dhi here and asked her to get

National Catholic Educational the order cancelled and grantThe lesson he learned fmln plea for more Negro Catholic Bishops Ask PopeAssociation convention here Indian citizemihip to the priestthe unorthodox recruiting as a priests has been made at the Father Reicher outlined some ofone-day big leaguer stood him annual Easterri regional meeting To Visit Canada Father Ferrer founder of thethe problems facing Catholic in good stead a half-dozen years of the Canon Law Society of OTTAWA (NC) -Pope Paul Maharashtra Farmers Servicelabor - management relations

later when he was teaching at America here in New Jersey The pliest is chairman of the VI may visit Canada next month Society was scheduled for deshyGQnzaga High School in Washshy Msgr Thomas J Reese of Wilshy to attend the National Confershy portation last year but wasChicago archdiocesan Catholicington D C mington in the neighboring State ence on Poverty sponsored by granted several extensions ofCouncil on Working Life and a

Recruits Ringers of Delaware speaking on experishy jVell-known labor expert Christian Churches in Canada his stay He was accused by iiimiddot mental parishes accused the Hindu groupS ofanti-Indian acshyFather Travers was in charge Religious who teach in CatBshy Bishop Alexander Carter presshy

Church of racism and said that tivities and by the Maharashtraof the school b~llld which used olic schools pose a special diffi shy ident of the Canadian CatholicNegro Catholics prefer to - be state government of anti shyto master only about two or culty hi labor relations because Conference has acknowledged national activitiesselved by black priests of whom

CHURCHES UNITED Bishop Reuben H Mueller left of the Evangeli~al United Brethren Church and Methoshydist Bishop Lloyd C Wicke led representatives of their respective bodies at ceremonies in Dallas proclaiming the union of the two churches The new body is to be known as the United Methodist Churlth NC Photo

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997-9354

IIlfllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIUIIIlIDutuUliUllllUiHlllllllllilllllllllllllllllilllUIIIIIIIIIIIIUII~given to the Washington arch we need black priests and we bid to raise the standards of diocese by Church spokesmen need them fast preaching in Australia and New here in Pennsylvania Zealand will be made shortly Lobster Boats Msgr Philip J Dowling execshy it was resolved at a meeting hereCapital Cityutive secretary of John Cardinal of leaders of religious orders

Krols Commission on Human VATICAN CITY (NC)-Qn The effort will inchide a fullyshyRelations noted that the Washshy the eighth anniversary of the otganized Pastoral Year obsershyington Archdiocesan Office of foundation of Brazils new capishy vance seminars for priests of all bull bull bull Urban Affairs has asked assist shy tal of Brasilia Pope Paul VI ages on updating preaching techshy s iz e s ance from Philadelphia and other sent a radio message of best niques the establishment of II bull bull bull dioceses In providing foOd es wishes in Portuguese and pressshy preaching center and the use pecially for those po)r who will ed a button that illumined a of a recorded service on techshy I Macleansreceive temporary housing in the cross on the cathedral of that niques of oral communicatiOil f8cilities of the Washington city The Pope performed the directedby the ObJates of MalT sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAYBt Tel 9979351 sect archdiocese oclemony in his private library Immaculate ~1I111111l111IHlUlnlllllllllllUllllllnIIllIUllllllUllllllllllllllIllltUIIllllllllllUluiuUWlUllllml~

three tunes a year In those of their obligation of obedience that feelers have been sent outthere are fewdays the school had a cadet Father Reicher pointed out to have the Pope corne to Monshy

If any institution can standeorps and one of its big annual What this means he added is teal for th~ May 26-29 meeting events was marching in the anshy that occasionally Religious mllYoondemned on the basis of the

It would be the first papalrecent Kerner Report on Civilnual parish-May procession be used to break a strike called visit to Canada Pope Paul visitedDisorders it is the CatholicFor years residents of color- by lay faculty members this country as a Cardinal in theChurch among others that is But more likely is the conflict early 19508guilty of white racism he trapping the individual Reli shyPlan to Help ~eed opined Bishop Carter said if a favorshygious whose loyalty is divided

Asserting that the number of able reply is reCeived from RomeCapital MCIl(lc61ers Negro clergy middotdoes not nearly the Canadian government would

PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A meet the needs of Negro Catho- Australia to Have extend an official invitation pledge of cooperation in feeding lies Msgr Reese said Pope Paul visited the United the poor who will gather in the If the Church is going to be Better Preaching Nations inNew York in 1965 nations capital in May has beell relevant to the black community SYDNEY (NC)-A concerted

I

Marian Awards Continued from Page Three

Fall River and has spent her entire religious life within the Diocese of Fall River

Sister has served as consult shyant with various education comshymittees in the diocese and bas promoted the educational proshygram of the Dominican Sisters

Sr Mary Pauline OP bead of the Science Department of

the Dominican Academy Fall River was one of the originatolll of the Region III Science Fair and has served as president of the regions Fair for two years

She is presently ooordinator of the Massachusetts state Scishyence Fair -

Sr Virginia CSC is presshyently chairman of the Th~logy

Department Notre Dame Colshylege Manchester N H and served from 1941 to ]958 as principal of St Anthonys New Bedford

She has always been a leader in new an innovative ideas in education

Sister Anne Denise SND presently principal of St Marys High School Lynn is well shyremembered as the first princishypal of Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth and has served in many administrative posts for the Sisters of Notre Dame

Sr Mary Aloysia SUSC is dean of the College of the Sashycred Hearts Fall River and has given outstanding service in coshyoperation with the Catholic School Department in planning in-service courses for the teachshyers of the diocesan schools

She also serves asmiddot coordinator of the educational program of the Sisters of the Holy Union

Sr John Elizabeth SUSC is Guidance Director at the Acadshyemy of the Sacred Hearts Fall River and has served in numershyous administrative positions atthe Fall River school

She was the first principal of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton and has served on committees of local and state educational organizations

Sr Mary Felicita RSM is now involved in the tutorial program at Mt St MaryS Acadshyemy Fall River and has served in the various sclIools of the diocese

For 26 years Sister served as Diocesan School Supervisor iD the Catholic School Office

Sr Miriam RSM is also in the tutorial program at the Sisshyters of Mercy Academy in Fall River A former teacher and principal in schools of the dioshycese Sister served for 26 yean

IN NEW POST Father Charles F Sheedy CSC former dean of arts and letshyterS has been appointed to the new post of dean of theoshylogical studies and institutes at the University of Nobe Dame NC Photo

to Educators tiS Diocesan Supervisor in the Catholic School Department

This year completes 50 years of service in the field of educashyto the Diocese of Fall River

Sister Maureen RSM is principal of Nazareth Hall Fall River She organized the proshygram and was the first principal of the Fall River school lor exshyceptional children a position she still holds

She is a consultant lind D member of city and state comshymittees for the mentlllly l1eshytarded

Sr Mary Urban RSM is Diocesan supervisor of schools and was the first principal at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

She is a member of state and city educational committees

Sr Mary Carmela RSM is a member of the English Departshyment of St Xaviers Academy Providence and was the first principal of Mt St Marys Academy Fall River

She is a consultant on secondshyary school curriculum planning

Sr Grace de Sales MSBT is presently superior of the Censhyacle of Our Lady of the Assumpshytion Osterville a position she also held at the Cenac1e of St Patricks Parish Wareham

Sister founded the kindergarshytens at Osterville and Wareham and has taught Chfistian Docshytrine classes on the elementary and secondary levels during her many years of selvice in the diocese

Sr Joan Louise OLVM is suPerior of the Victory Noll Convent in the Immaculate Conception Parish No Easton She has served as catechetical specialist in dioceses in Iowa and California and her present assignment is CCD supervisor for the Diocese of Fall River

Brother Albertus CSC is supervisor of Education for the Eastern Province of the Holy Cross Brothers and is professor of mathematics at Stonehill College No Easton He also ~ught mathematics and physics at Monsignor Coyle High School Taunton

Miss Mary Cabral of 1)69 Camshybridge Street Fall River is presently teaching at Espirito Santo School Fall River where she is completing 43 years of service as a lay teacher in ~e

Diocese of Fall Ri vcr

Whites to Solve White Problem

TOLEDO (NC)-Bishop Joon A Donovan has made a public request to whites to take up the white problem

He urged it for those lookshying for a modern up-Io-date apostolate for down-to-earth Christians who are at the same time dedicated Americans

middotSpeaking at a dinner of the northwestern Ohio district Fourth Degree Knights of Coshylumbus the Toledo bishop said

This ugly situation was fathered by injustice and is nourished by that subtle and insidious vice called prejudiCe

Need In this deplorable situation

in which the world ffinds itself today the pressing need is for those who call themselves Christians to think as Christians to form Christian attitudes and to live as Christians

Just as we cannot separate Christ from His Gospel so too we cannot separate love of GOO from love of our fellowmen without exception

The real Christian mlid the bishop does not live alongside but with others He constantly interprets anothers actions in the best possible light bying to remember always the way in which the Lord met loved and drew people to Himsel

SAIGON (NC) - The people wept and we wept everybody wept Sister Nicole said deshyscribing her teams departure after 16 days of relief work in Hue

She and two other Vietnamshy-ese Sisters Daughters of Charshyity of St Vincent de Paul with

The communImiddots1s T truce

17 girl students had gone to stricken Hue on a mission of mercy

offensive had left families in mourning houses in ruins ~nd people hungry and sick The government of Vietnam had inshyvited volunteers to bring help to the citys thousands of sufshyferers

The plane that brought tile Sisters and their students also brought 85 youths from Saigon~

The boys did manual work such as cleaning up the damaged hosshypital in Hues The Sisters team was divided into three groups one to give medical care anshyother to visit homes a third to l)ok after children

The 17 girls are some of those being trained by the Sisters as social workers for family assist shyance under a plan sponsored by a Vietnamese womens associashytion Five of the 17 are Cathshyolics The others are mostly Buddhists On April 12 all were fasting since it was the 15th day of the lunar month for the lBud-

Catholic Boy Scout Officials to Meet

WASHINGTON (NC)-About 150 leaders of CQtholic Boy Scout organizations will meet here to attend the 20th biennial oonference of the National Cathshyolic Committee OIl Scouting

The meeting will be a Iowshyday work session tor chairmen chaplains and other officioals cd the nations diocesan I seouiing ~ommittees The meeting will end with a banquet in honO Gl Patrick Cardinal OBoyle ol Washington

---- -----~

middot1FI

1

PRAYER CRUSADE _Danny Thomas has filmed n 10-minute color documentary on the value of family pray~r

to be used by Father Patrick Peyton CSC in his Camshypaign for Family Prayer Father Peyton said he expects 200000 people at a Milwailkee rally to be held Sunday May 12

IEverybody Weptl

Nun Describes Relief Teams Departure From Stricken Hue

dhims and Good Friday for the Catholics

The Asia Foundation here gave a grant to pay for the meals of the Sisters team dur ing their stay

- Before leaving Saigon the Sisters had collected medicines food soap and clothing from welfare agencies including Catholic Relief Services and

Vietnam Christian Service (Protestant) The United Nashytions Childrens Fund (UNICEF) provided milk powder which enabled the team to give milk to 450 children every day

Warn Medics LONDON (NC)-The day beshy

fore Britains new abortion law went into effect the nations 5500 CMholic doctors were warned by John Cardinal Heenan of WeBtminister that they should DOt perfom any abortions

WEAR Shoes That Fit

THE FAMILY SHOE STORE

Johns Shoe Store 43 FOURTH STREET

Fan River OS 8-5811

THE ANCHOR- 17 Thursday May 2 1968

Cufr ~t~1 Days Of orw~~~1ion

En C[[i~da OTTAWA (NC)-Chrietshy

mas and New Years Day now are the only holy days of obligation for Canadav estimated 8000000 Catholics

The Canadian Catholic Conshyference comprising Canadafl Bishops has announced thampa other holy days will be cellshyebrated on the Sunday nearem the holy day

The holy days affected aye Epiphany usually celebrat~

Jan 6 Ascension now falling on the 40th day after East~Ilp

All Saints now celebrated Nou I and the Immaculate ConcejilP tion now celebrated Dec 8

The Bishops said observance of the feast days on Sundayu means they will be celebratecll bull by a larger more relaxed anell accessible congregation of the faithful rather than a congreshygaUon of people constrained by the obligation of attending Maw in addition to their work

Canadas Bishops postwn~ until next Fall a decision Gil

wlether to restoremiddot the anciej~ office of permanent deacon m the Church The Bishops of the United States meeting simultashy

neously in St Louis hlst week ~ted to petition Pope Paul VJ for permission to restore ~

perinanent diaconate ror marshyried and unmarried men of ma ture years

Fish Sales Up SYDNEY (NC)-Best tilini)

that ever happened to the fisb industry said Mark J06eph chairman of the New SouUl -lales Fish Authority of the Churchs lifting of the ban CJ[l

Friday meat eating He has tb~ ligures to back up his verdictshya 25 per cent rise in fish e4)Dshy

slImption here since the ehlnge

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The Parish Parade New Jersey Suburbanites of All Faiths Aid Ghetto Arson Victims HOLY NAME OUR LADY OF ANGELS

FALL RIVER FALL RIVER NEWARK (NC) - Priest~ the citys anti-poverty agenCll Contemporary music will acshy

company the 11 oclock Mass Sunday morning May 5

First communicants will reshyeeive at a special Mass at 9 Saturday morning May 25 Mayshycrowning ceremonies will be held Sunday May 26 The Womens Guild announces

fts installation banquet for Tuesday night May 7 Tickets are available from all members

Catholic Charities collectors are asked to meet in the parish school at 730 tonight for dist~shyOOtion of contact cards

lIT MARGARET BUZZARDS BAY

SS Margltlret-Mary Guild of Buzzards Bay and Onset will Sponsor a rummage sale from 9 1lo 1 Saturday May 18 at St Margarets kindergarten hall Main Street Buzzards Bay Do iaations may be left at the hall during mornings of the precedshying week Chairman for the ~vent is Mrs William Brady

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild will reshyieive Holy CommuniOn in a bodyaf the815 Mass 00 Sunshydity morning A breakfast will follow in the school hall The icuest speaker will beRt Rev Anthony M Gomes Mrs Arthur Belanger gpiIshyftual chairman of the Guild is _ charge of the breakfast

81 JOSEPH AIRHAVEN Nominations and elections of officers for the Association of file Sacred middotHearts will be held at 630 on Sunday evening in the rectory ~ Dues are now payable to the tleasurer Mrs Jeannette Dushylude

IACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

Preprimary registration will be held from 2 to 4 Sunday afternoon May 5 in 1he school office Some openings also exist in first sixth and eighth grades

The CCD adult discussion group will meet at 8 Sunday night in the home of Mr and Mrs J G N Bonneau

So Easton Club Pledges

$5000 The newly formed Womens

Club of Holy Cross Parish So Easton has pledged $5000 toward the building fund acshycording to an announcement made today by Mrs Arthur J L Peterson the organizations first president The pledge will be paid at the rate of $1000 per year

This pledge has been added to The Second Mile Building Fund campaign now in progress under the chairmanship of Robshyert Dray and Louis A Lyne serving as director

The Altar Boys will sponSor a cake sale Sunday May 26

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a Communion breakshyfast following 8 oclock Mass this Sunday morning Installashytion of officers will be held at a banquet following 5 oclock Mass Sunday afternoon May 26

Children of Mary will attend a Communion breakfast followshying 8 oclock Mass Sunday mornshying May 12

The annual blessing of autoshymobiles will take place at 130 Sunday afternoon May 26 in the church parking lot

ST GEORGE WESTP~RT

A Maybasket whist is planned for 8 Saturday night May 4 hi

the school hall on Route 177 PrOCeeds will benefit the school fund and table and attendance prizes will be awarded

STMARY NORTH ATTLEBORO Parishioners are planning a

testimonial honoring Msgr Ed- ward B Booth Pastor at 7

Sunday night May 26 Tickets are now available

Christians Jews Combat Racism

NEW YORK (NC)The Nashytional Confeferice of Christians and Jews has launched a nation wide educational effort to conshyfront the problem of white racism in middotAmerica agency headquarters here announced

The NCeJ has given top prl~

ority to finding ways toimpleshyment the recommendations of the National Advisory Commisshysion on Civil Disorders The commission blamed white racshyism as the underlying cause of urban unrest

In a progress re-port to the NCCJ board of trustees meeting here Dr Samuel L Gandy dean of the Ho~ard University school of religion Washington D C and chairman of the NCCJ nashytional program ad7isory comshymittee stated

NCCJs 130 professional staff members in 70 cities are curshy~ntly engaged in developing programs with police business and labor leaders parents and teachers clergy and with youth and all of the various institutes workshops and dialogues which are being conducted are emphashysizing the findings of this reshyport

Dr Gandy quoted to the board a letter to President Lynshydon B Johnson from Dr Stershyling W Brown NCCJ presishydent in which the agency head said that NCCJ embraced the commission report as a sancshytion and guideline for our efshyforts in the private sectol

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ministers nuns and lay people of all denominations pitched in here to try and make Easter a dltty of joy for the more than 600 people burned out of their homes in a waveof arson which erupted in this city following the funeral of Dr Martin Luther King

Concerned citizens of surshyrounding suburban communishyties who only a week before had participated in a massive Wa 1k for Understanding through ghetto streets respondshyedspontaneously to the need

Without anymiddot special appeal going out people of all denomshyinations call e 11 inner-city churches to ask what they could do and they were directed to the United Community Corp

NEW LEADER Sister Rosemary Markham SSS is the new Superior General of the Sisters of Social Ser-

vice a Los Angeles based community engaged in social and catechetical work with missions in Formosa and Mexico NCPhoto

Christians Jews Discuss Diamiddotlogue

SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-The question of whether JewishshyChristian dialogue should be by speech or by action was the theme that ran through the talks and discussions at a Conference on Interfaith Dialogue sponsored by Catholic Protestant and Jewshyish organizations at Seton Hall University here

Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum director of interreligious affairs for the American Jewish Comshymittee was generally in favor of the action approach saying that the dialogue must avoid beshycoming a convenient conspiracy on the part of middle-class whites to buffer themselves against the realities of the inner city

Father Edward H Flannery executive secretary of the U S Catholic Bishops Secretariat for Catholic-Jewish Relations said that while he would be the last to cut off action in the realm of social justice and charity he also felt that Jews and Christians could not effectively present a common ftont to society until they have straightened out their own affairs

Father Flannery referred to statements that the -ChristianshyJewish dialogue had died in the wake of last Junes six-day war between Israel and Arab nations He said that it was not so much a matter of its dying but of its not having been tried yet

Over Holy Thursday Good Friday and Holy Saturday more than 10 tons of food and clothing were donated and the UCC staff was swamped with the task of sorting the materiaL

With schools and church ofshyfices closed priests and nuns made their way individually and in groups to UCC headshy

quarters to help with the task of unloading cars and station wagons and sorting and distribshyuting the clothing

At least 50 offers of assistance came in to Queen of Angels pariSh in the heart of the ghettc and the callers were asked to organize relief efforts in their own communities and then gd the material 110 the UCCbull

FEEL GOOD TODAY

THt HOLY fATHER MISSION AiD TD THlaRIENTAL DHURDH

Thlsoolumns happiest readers are the men

Te date this second phase bas listed 35 gifts totaling $12000 Combined with the initial campaign the Building Fund now lists 233 donors who haVe pledged a total of $117()00 The Womens Club that was founded less than six months ago has initiated a long range program for the spiritual cll1shytural and financial efforts of the parish

In addition to the regular methods of aiding the parish finandally the women have conducted teen-age projects and have assisted the Mens Club fu

i bull various progrlms

~MANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

BRISTOL COUNTY

9G-OAY NOTIC~

TIMENOW OPEN ACCOUNT5PAYS o bull bull Interest Compounded Quarterly

Offices in

NORTH ATTLEBORO MAINSIFDIEILlDgt AnUBORO FAUS

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women and children who know they~r needed The days were busiest helping others are the happiest days of our livesbullbullbull Who needs you most Surprisingly God needs you - for inmiddot stance to help art abandoned orphan become e Godloving responsible adult Lepers need you (there are still 15middotmillion lepers In the world) blind children need y~u ~ndlo do we bull bullbull Here In New York we are your agents tellin you where the Holy Father says your help Is needed and channeling your help promptlyand Oafely to the people iii needbullbullbull Want to feel good right now Do without something you want but do not need and send the money instead for one of the needs below Youll feel good especialiy if your gift is big enough to mean a sacrifice to you This is your chance to do something meaningful for the world - its Gods world - while youre still alive

D Only $850 gives our priests and SIsters i south India enough Dapsone miracle tablebamp for 43 lepers for a yearl D For only $250 a week ($10 a month $120 a year) you can make sure that an abandoned child has food clothing a blanket and love Well send you a photo of the child you adopt tell you something about him (or her) and ask the Sistermiddotinmiddotcharge to keep you Informed

D Your stringless gifts in any amount ($5000 MEET $1000 $500 $100 $50 $25 $10 $5 $2)

MISSION will help the neediest wherever they are - in EMERGENCIES india and he Hol~ Land for instance

D Only you can make your will-and do It this THINK week to be sure the poor will have your help

OF even after youre gone Our legal title CATHOLIO YOURSELF NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION Also our priests

TOO will offer promptly the Masses you provide for

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THE CATHOLIC

NAMIlR _

~ 8TREJa~ ~_

OITY 8TATI_IIP COD

NBAR lAST WILPARI AbullbullaaIATID

NEAR EAST MISSIONS MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretary Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoo 330 Madison Avenue New York N~Y 10017 Teephone 212YUkon 6middot5840

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Lawrence High of Falmouth Seeksmiddot State Track Tut~e

By PETER BARTEK Norton High Coach

The Capeway Conference track season has already begun but the handwriting is already on the wall This campaign like last years will be a battle for second place Admittedly notbing Short of a miracle can or will prevent Lawrence High of Falmouth from winning its second straight conference t rae k championship But fol Coach Jim Kalperis and his trackstersmiddot the league championship is only a Gtepping stone to the State C ham p io n - ship The goal of every athletic team in the state hi to earn the title of State Champion This is not beshyyond the grasp of the Falmouth Peier Clippers If hard Bartek work and dedication are the means to this end then Falshymouth will reign as State track champions

Success does not come easily em any endeavor and success batpound

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not come easily to the Falmouth tracksters They like all accomshyplished athletes have labored long and diligently to aChieve the measure of sUccess they now enjot lt

N1)t toomiddot many yearsato Lawshyrence High was just ~nother

sChool Participating in track But the efforts of many and the dedication of one IJ1im in parshyticular has brought immeasurshyable success to the Falmouth track scene That man is Jim Kalperis

Coach Kalperis haseombined

his knowledge af track his coaching ta1EntS aiiCl tirelessenergies middotto build a virtual track dynasty The latest noteworthy feat of middotliliitnickmen came in the forinof anotheriState title

Thisti~emiddotiS th~nivision IIi

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- BC~ and Norry Races Are Close 1

lbe format formiddot the St~te reo lays has been altered this ear with competition being held at four separate locations in East- em Massachusetts Weymouth captured the Division I crown the DiviSion n title went to

Andover and Williams corralled the laurels in Division IV

The meet drew ll5 schools in each of the four diviSions with over 2000 youngsters partici shypating in all classes

Enroute to its victory Falshymouth collected 51 points comshypared to runner-up Barnstable with 22Jh

Falmouth took first place in the discus high jump pole vault 440 yard run shuttle hurdles two mile run and the 880 -

With tbis type of success in state competition it is easy to see why the Capeway Confershyence title has been practically conceded to Falmouth

Sharing the spotlight with the trackmen at Falmouth are the diamondmen The Clippers who are in the thick of the loop baseball picture were given a

Mike Rainnie tossed amp no-hittel at Barnstable to gain a 1-0 vershydict

Its still much too early to predict with any accuracy

what will happen in the Cape wai baseball race But it ap- pears nomiddotclub will dominate th~t sport like Falmouth controIa track Falmouth Dartmouth Fairhaven and Barnstable are expected to fight it out through the entire season One close to the scene summed it up best when he said anyone in the league could win this thing

Close races are also developshying in the Bristol County and Narragansett Leagues

In the BCL both Bishop Fee han of Attleboro and Durfee High of Fall River encountered a few difficulties in early season play but seem to have found the range of late The clubs will meet in an important contest today in Fall River Late inning rallies have brought both clubS from the brink of defeat to vicshytory in previous outings The victor will have to be dubbed

shot in the arm last week as the team to beat

Brennan of Feehan D~est ill le~guej

Coach Tom Maccarone of Feeshyhan has had outstanding pershyfonnances from his pitching staff but the key to the Shamshyrocks success has been shortshystop Ty Blrennan Maccarone stated before the season that Brennan was his best player and perhaps the best in the whole Bristol County Judging from Brennans perfonnance to date one of the keys to stopping Feehan is stopping the classy shortstop

Coach Joe Lewis Hilltoppers play a brand of ball similar to his counterpart TOIJl Karams basketball club Make a mistake and the Fall Riverites will capshyitalize on it Durfees first two league victories came about beshycause of opponent miscues

The Hilltoppers have been playing steady ball throughout the early part of the campaign and are improving with every game Their ability 10 avoid costly mistakes eI tbeir -n

making and timely hitting has proven a winning combination

Come what may in todays contest the BCL llace has just begun

Not to be outdone by tile larger BCL and Capeway Conshyference the Narry loop is conshyducting a torrid race of its own At the end of the first week of action Seekonk and DightonshyRehoboth were tied for the top spot Following two weeks of play Gase of Swansea Dighton and Somerset were lodged In the first position The hectic lCampaign will probably find another change in the top spot at the conclusion of this weeks activity

From Cape Cod to Attleboro competition is keener this year than it bas been in many seashysons The road to the league championship is always diffJshycult to Davigate but this year it appears as though the road win be duttered wiill meR obstacles than ill quite

cone~~ lb~aders ConcllregrnmOB War In V~~It~IlJJm

NEW YORK (NC)-Stushydent government presidents and editors of campus newsshypapers at more than 500 colleges in 49 states have conshydemned the war in Vietnam as

lt immoral and unjust and said ~~ they believe they should not

~ i~~~~~~~ii ~~~b~~ shy --_ ~ and Laymen Convinced About

-- ~-__ Vietnnm Was coordirlated by shy _ -- shy ~ Rev RObert lVi Hundley lHullent

--lt--1 at Union Th~ological Snppary --J here and an associate pltISor at -- ~I th~ Congn~gationalChllrch hn ~_ Scarsdale N-Y He saiQ most

--middot1 students who signed the stateshy~-__-~~- ~~ -___- __~_~J ment havenot been active in

FINE ARTS FESTIVAL Making preparations for Fine Arts Festival at Bishop Stang High School North

Dartmouth are Paul Leahy and Margaret Polycarpo

~ Unmiddot-ty middotIs Chr-stlTs middotW-II

P Off W I E deg I pOi degI

ontl e comes cumenlca I grlmage From United Kingdom toHoly Lar-d

anti-war activities heretoforemiddot

Solicits Support

He added

Many of the student Itl~ders who have signed this sbtcment

recognize that they may be plaeshying their future caJeers illmiddotjeopshy~rdy and conceivably are riskshying punitive action being taken

against them by the capiicioWJ V~TICAN ~ITY (NC)~TO an Fathers Arthur Payton anSel~c~ve Sfdtvice Systerh~~~

I ecumenical pilgrimage oQ its Anglican who is director 01 ~ev Yi~am Sloan Cot~~1 Jr-) way to the Holy Land Pope interchurCh travel in LOndon bull aclive memjgter of Clergymiddot ~nd Paul VI recalled the words he Among its members were An- Laymen Concerned AboutbullVI~tshyspoke on his own pilgrimage glieans CatholiCs Oithodox and nam ~1dmiddota Yal~ U~Iverslt7

there in 1964 that unity is the will of Christ

He said that it was with parshyticular pleasure that we welshycome this ecumenical pilgrimshyage from the United Kingdom to the Holy LaRd You are aboUt to follow in the fOQtSteps af God made man in the country of His birth Hill mission and His blessed death for us men and for our salvation (NiceneCreed)

Your visit caUsto mind our own unforgettable pilgrimage to the Holy Places From the grotto of Bethlehem we then declared It npw appears clearly to all that the problem of unity cannot be eluded Today this will cif Christ is imposed upon our minds and demands th~t we undertake with wisdom and love every possible way of bringing all Christi~ns t6 enjoy the great benefit and supreme honor of the unity of the middotChurch

He also recalled his plea from Bethlehem that love of Christ and of the Church should inshyspire that every future moveshyment toward meeting and reshyconciliation

The pilgrimage was led by

DIOCESAN DIREC1OR First woman to serve as a diocesan director of radio-TV is Miss Patricia Smith of Pueblo Colo who is also a photo-journalist on the staff gf Dateline Colorado m cesan weekly newspaper

Protestants not only from Great Britain but from France and Germany as well

Msgi Gianfrancesco Arrighi undersecretary of the Secretashyriat for Promoting Christian Unity and Canon John Findlow representative of Anglican Archbishop Michael Ramsey of Canterbury at the Holy See accompanied middotthe pilgrims to the Vatican

Votes Moratorium On ChuDch Building

CHICAGO (NC)-The Chicago Conference of Laymen is urging Church authorities at both the archdiocesan and parish levels to declare a moratorium on 10- cal construction projects so that funds can be channeled to projshyects in the ghetto areas

The action was taken at the second annual meeting of the

ll200-member organization The 300 in attendance passed

some 50 resolutions half of them dealing with urban problems The membership said it will seek ways to alleviate white racism especially within the Catholic Church

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ch~plaJD saId The stand taken by these

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He continued

These middotmen of conscience should be supported by eveQY priest minister and rabbi who cares about the sanctity of conshyscience

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Jesuit Comments Di~cordNormal Amon9 Catholics

RIO DE JANEIRO (NC)shylD i SC 0 r d among Catholics after the Second Vatican Council is perfectly normal but It is not normal for proshygressive or conservative Cathoshylics to refuse to accept the dishyrectives of the council and the pope Jesuit superior general said here Father Arrupe is in Brazil for 30 days to visit Jesuit houses in the country and to preside at the May 6 to 14 meeting here of all South Amershyican Jesuit provincials

He said that his visit is inshytended to adapt the order here flo the requirements of the agshygirnameJ1to or up-dating

The most important aggiorshy namento in our day he said

is that of the mind We have to ~nsider and respect human valshyues as such This was always the Churchs doctrine but now the Church is insisting on it more We ought not to consider the Churchs interest in human values as opportunism Our in tEmtion is only to serve mankin~ better)

Press Uses Images Dudng his stay here Father

Arrupe willmiddot visit 20 local(tiesWhere Jesuits are woikilg

ts B 1Ilhele are 1000 JesUl m razl~ bull

He said that he regarded as bull joke the Brazilian presss ref-

elences to him as ~the black l T Ch Pope cussion of he angmg a1middot

Because of my cassock hemiddot

tlaid I am black but I am not the Pope ~ understand that the press has to use images to exshylI)lain concepts more effectively

Honor Editor NEW YORK (NC) ~ Robert

6lmstead news editormiddot of the National Catholic Reporter weekly newspaper published in Kansas City Mo received honshyelable mention in the 1968 Paul Tobenkin Memolial Award Competition here

-

MEET IN ST LOUIS Bishop-elect Timothy J~ Harringshyth d f th Sf W 1 ft d

ton ~ orcester e leoscllfses ~ atn t ~ l~mg

ish a panel a~ the lQ68Presi dents Conference of the Nashytional Council of cat~olic yene~l

Role of CouDcil The parish will retairi its role

as a community of worship whose members go out ihto the world and bring it theeurohristjan

message Bernatd Lyons Ghishycago public relations ~onsultant saidmiddot

The pa~ish on the other hand mustmiddot become part of the world

alound it a wHr1e$S to the whole community and fake on roles not in relation only to -its

GUIDING CHURCH IN UNITED STATES More than 200 members of the hierarchy participated in the decisions of the annual Spring meeting of the National Conference

Predict Important Authorities Emphcisixe

WASHINGTON (NC)-Three members but to the world in authorities on parish life have agreed here that the parish basic organiz~tion iil the Church will have to undergo some lmportant changes if the ChUlch is goingto meet th~ needs of societyin the 20th censhy tury

But just how the parislt is going to change ~s far from setshytied they ~onceqed in a dis

which it exists Father John Corriga~ of this city a directozlt of the Nationalmiddot Liturgical Con ference asserted

Whatever it does the parish must becomemiddot a vital force in the cOlJlrnunity around it Father Geno Baroill execu~ive secretary Washington archdi

ocesan Office ~f Urpan Affairs declared

RIot ComparlmiddotsoDmiddot

Father Baroni whose work blings hini into constant contactmiddot with Negro problems in WaSh- laymen will inhibit soCial ac- ington saw~ astriking par~illel tion but added later this is a between the Churchs needs and risk wltirth taking

-those of thebiack ghetto Right now~ he observed - one of the mos~ urgent prob Society to Consider lems in the ghetto is that Of Sh fmiddot

community organization We 5 emnary I t arll learl1ing that pe~ple ri~t be CARTHAGENA CNC) _ The

cause they have beel- cut o~t ofSocieiy of the Precious Blood meaningful participation in so- ciety

In the ~hurch laymen have been cut out of this participa tion also They dont riot but they dont really concern them selves with the concerns of the Church unle~s thy ~ave t~i~ sense of partlclpatlcm he saId

New Resndemlce For US PIiDests

ROME (NC)-A new resident house for American priests working In the offices of the Roman Curia (the Churchs censhytral administrative offices) or on assignment in Rome for the US bishops has been opened to provide adequate economical lodgings and community surshyroundings

The residence called Villa Stritch after the late Samuel Cardinal Stritch of Chicago is composed of two apartment comshyplexes and is designed to meet the immediate needs of US priests already at work in Rome and to anticipate future housing needs as internationalization of the Roman Curia continues

In addition to American$ resshyident in Rome the villa is also expected to house priests on special assignments for the bishshyops in Rome bishops who come to Rome for work on var~ous

Church commissions or otherVatican offices or for such events as the synod of bishops and ma-Jor congresses In short it is hoped that the new villa wilL

will study the possibilities and implications of moving the or ders main theological school flOm St Charles Seminary here in Ohio to a university campus or urban center and of buildingmiddot an adequate program at St QJ1arles The Carthagena SChOt

has been the societys maJor seminary for over 100 years

Major superiors and middotelected delegates representing the soshycietys Cincinnati province voted to fOlm a committee to carry out the study during a provincial chapter meeting held at St Charles at which modernizing the training of candidates for the priesthood in the society Vas tqe chief subject of discussion

middotA report of the meeting in- dicated that the delegates were aware of trends in the Church 1-way from comparative isloationmiddot of seminary establishments to university campuses and urban centers

SPECIAL RATES FOR

Smiddot I O dcho0 utings an Picnics

of Catholic Bishops in St Louis last week An enormoUis amount of homework on position papers was approved ~

the Bishops NC Photo

I see the parish councils and their recognition of freedom asneceSsai-y to do this he added

Worth Risk They agreed they sha~e abull

feiling opound un~asin~ss _middotaboti~ these cOuncIls relatively new amQJ1g Cathol~cs pa~icula~lY their attitude t~ward SOCI~ issues

d Father Baroni sal he has ~

leery feeling about parishcouncils He declared there is

the danger that conservative

contribute to increased racial understanding and involvement

fur the people of the diOcese

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Lyons author of th~ book middotParish Councils - Renewin the Parish Community said be

middotwas somewhat more optiniistici I donit think we are going to

solve these problems by 10~~1 at the dangers exclusively hie commented

Diocese to Discuss C~m~issi~n Rep~rt

LANSING (NC) - Catholics thoughout t~e Lansing diocese will participate in forums and home discussion groups 1as~ on the report of the National Acf visory Commission on Civil Disshyorders The program which begaa with public forums in six citie on April 29 was planned ~

middot three diocesanmiddot agencies-the Ofshyfice of Social and Community Service the Office of Renewal Through Vatican II and the adult education division of tne Education Department It was initiated in response to an appeal made by Bishop Alexshyander Zaleski The day following the death of Dr Martin Luther King Bishop Zaleski asked dishyocesan directors to plan an imshymediate program designed to

meetmg of heBIShops n erence WIt ISop e e~ros be a center of communi~y life CONTACT MANAGER - LINCOLN PARK of BrowI)svIlle Texas and fOtmiddotmer chancellor of the Fall for bishops arid priests with spe- 9996984 636-2744 ~iver Di~~~~lt __~gt -cilla~~gnrn~iitS~~o~~~ ~ Oc)QI~OC~)OQCIOC)oOOOCgtoc)OQltjIOcXllOOOCgtOC)oOC~)OIL)QOCgtOCPOoO

Page 3: 05.02.68

WThe ANCHOR An Anchor ofhe Soul Sure anti Firm-$1 Paul

He~rtHouse-to-House Appeal Starts Sunday

Annual Contributions Climb Purchasing Power Regresses

The first Catholic Charities Appeal in the Fall In a letter read at all masses in all churches River Diocese in 1942 realized a total of $150781 of the diocese on Sunday last Bishop Conn~lly

The 25th annual Appeal last year netted $772shy said709 - five times as much

Fall River Mass May 21 1968 While this growth may seem impressive at AI we prepare our Charities programme for first blush the diocesan Ohurchs expenses to meet the year ahead weare especially mindful of the

Vol 12 No 18 1968 $400 per Year an ever expanding program have skyrocketed even compalsion of Chris-to After all Our Lord came PRICE IOc

more than the quintuple climb in receipts from the into the world to reveal the goodness of God in charitable of all faiths within the diocese ways that human eyes and hearts could see and

Many of the present diocesan social services under~tand We are called Christians We should were not in existence 26 years ago while others be like our Savior Our Blessed Lord expects that were in their formative-infant stage He says I have given you an example that you

may do likewise Our neighbors in need look toBack in 1942 some housewives will remember that the bacon they served father with his eggs us for the compassion of Christ And God knows in the morning cost 19-eents-a-pound as contrasted the number and variety of crying needs grow from

year to year with todays price of approximately $1 Roasts were selling at 19-cents-a-pound back a quarter century One reason for this is found in the fact that ago This type of me~t today is just about six times problems formerly hidden in the home are now as costly open to the public eye -some to excite pity in

A leg of lamb was advertised at 15-cents-ashy the heart others to frighten us into action Such pound when the first Catholic Charities Appeal as these may strike at any level from children was made 26 year ago Oranges in 1942 were 19shy and certainly through youth into the domestic cents-a-dozen courts to reach fulfillment in the frustration of old

MONSIGNOR LEVASSEUR MQNSlGNOR CHILDS Hence while costs have gone up and up for age The Diocese of Fall River has been equipped every family expenses have been climbing steadily to deal competently with sueh problems in the in the operation of the diocesan agencies So much services we staff and support ~ that the purchasing power of last years recordshyM~nsignori Mark Each year in our Charities Appeal we givebreaking total is no greater - if it is as much as

assurance of continuing and expanding works inshy- the first realization 26 years ago even though volving employment for many hundreds in Homes the dollar total is moreGolden Jubilees for the Aged Serviees for youth social relationshyEmphasizing the many dire needs of the dishyships care for the mentally retarded and the likeTwo monsignori in the Diocese of Fall ocese notwithstanding the accomplishments of The institutions are visible evidence of where theRiver will celebrate the golden jubilees of the past quartercentury Most Rev James L Oharity doll~r goes But many people fail to realizetheir ordination to the Priesthood on May 18 Connolly Bishop of Fall River again called upon what Catholic Charity does for tne local economy

lU~ Rev Msgr Felix S Ohilds pastor an understanding laity for even greater sacrifice Tum 10 Page Four -in this years Appeal Turn to Page Six

Women of Diocese 17 Marian Awards Convene Saturday For Educators

The ecumenical spirit of the post-Conciliar age has been manifested by the Diocesan Council of Catholic Woshy Bishop Connolly announced today that 17 Marian men in the extension of their invitations to the Polish Natshy Medals will be awarded to persons who have been involved tonal Church St Georges Greek Orthodox Church Ahavath in the field of education throughout the Diocese of Fall Achim Synagogue Temple Riv~r The awards ceremony will take place on Friday at Sinai Tifereth Israel Syna- River have named the following Feehan High School Attleshygogue the YWCA and the to serve as registrars boro during the Diocesan Mathieus School Fall River has

District I-Fall River Mrs given 49 years of teaching sershyTeacher Association ConvenshyChurchwomen United to at- Orner Levesque Miss Jacqueline vice to the Diocesetiontend the 15th Annual Conven- Mathieu and Mrs Raymond She has 17 years of service astion of the DCCW scheduled for Poisson The following will receive the a superior in various conventsSaturday at Stang High No District 2-New Bedford Mrs Maria~ Medal of the community and has beenDartmouth Joseph P Harrington and Miss Mother Jeanne Theresa Desshy active in music and dramatics

Everett S Allen assistant ed- Frances McCarthy biens SSJ and Sr Marie Cecile in the schools staffed by theitoI of the New Bedford Stand- District 3 -Taunton Mrs Clement SSJ Sisters of St Josephcud-Times will be the principal George E Lemieux and Mrs Sr Mary Thomas OP isSr Mary Thomas Holloranspeaker His topic is A Ques- Alfred C Leonard presently vicaress of the comshyOP and Sr Mary Paulinelion of Morality District 4 - AttJeboro Mrs munity at Dominican AcademyDesrochers OPThree workshops are sched- George Bauza ant Mrs Vincent Sister Suzanne Breckel RSM Turn to Page Seventeenuled for the convention They McGinn Sr Virginia Grenier CSC will be on Community Mfairs District 5-Cape Cod and the Sr Anne Denise Neylon SND Confraternity of Christian Doc- Islands Mrs Philip Dempsey Tealaquohers to Hear Sr Mary Aloysia Sullivan Criticize Daleystrine and Church Communities and Mrs Annie Eldridge SUSC and Sr John Elizabeth

The co-chairmen of the regis- Mrs Cecile Cummings of Fall f$yc~oIOSlY Head Creamer SUSC Order to Shoottration committee Miss Adrienne River and Mrs James Souza of Sister Mary Felicita HeffershyLemieux of Taunton and Mrs Taunton head the committee for At Salve Regnna nan RSM Sr Miriam ONeill Chicago RiotersMichael J McMahon of Fall Clergy Religious and guests RSM Sr Maureen HanleySister Suzanne Breckel RSM Sr Mary Urban Geddes WASHINGTON (NC)-A

RSM PhD will discuss RSM and Sr Mary Carmela white Catholic priest toldMsgr Higgins Stresses Importance Creativity Challenge to Corbett RSM newspaper editors here that Conformity at the aftershy Sr Grace de Sales Flanagan Mayor Richard J Dale) will MSBTOf Occupational Safety laws noon session of the diocesan

~get some return gunfire ifSr joall Louise RowneyWASHINGTON (NC) - Vigshy Safety and Health Act of 1968 Catholic Teachers Association Chicago police carry out hisconvention in Attleboro today OLVM erous immediate support is The legislation calls for the order to shoot arsonists andBro Albertus Smith CSCneeded if Congress is 10 enact esbablishment and enforcement Sister Suzanne is the chairshy looters during riotsMiss Mary Cabrallegislation this year to halt the of federal safety and health man of the Psychology Qepartshy Father James E Groppl

mounting toll of occupational standards for the workplace and ment and Director of Psychoshy Mother Jeanne Theresa SSJ whose civil rights activities in deaths and injuries in the research and training grants-inshy logical Services at Salve Regina has held administrative posts Milwaukee have kept him in

United States Msgr George G aid to states College in Newport with the Sisters of St Joseph constant battle with that citysfor the past 22 years and atHiggins director Social Action Every working day of the More than 800 religious and police force joined Atty Gen

Department U S Catholic Con- present is on the administrative year finds 55 killed 3500 disshy laity will hear the Newport nun Ramsey Clarkmiddot in criticizingstaffference said here bull abled and over 27000 injured at the annual twoday conclave Daleys order during a panel

Msgr Higgins addressed repshy on the job Msgr Higgins hold which is being held at Bishop In addition Sister organized discussion before the American resentatives of some three dozen the meeting Such a sacrifice Feehan High School and promoted the educational Society of Newspaper Editors national groups of an organizashy is not necessary The goods and Sister Suzanne received both The more oppressive a policeprograms for the Sisters of St tional meeting of a joint comshy services our nation provides in her Master of Arts Degree and department becomes FatherJoseph mittee to support the Adminisshy greater abundance than any her Doctorate in Philosophy Sr Marie Cecile SSJ pri shy Groppi said the greater is OUI

trations proposed Occupational Turn to Page Four from Boston College mary grade teaeJ1er at 81 Turn IlI Page Four

4 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 21968

DDocesan Students Enter Home Stretc~ of Study Beforre Year End Examinations loom

As Diocesan students entered the home stretch of study before year-end exams Springs the Thing was the theme of a seasonal dance held by Jesus-Mary Academy juniors in Fall River Donna Lacerda general chairman

STUDENT COUNCILLORS Student council members at Coyle High School Tallntonare from left seated James Sherrin St Marys parish Taunton and Frank McGlligan Holy Name Fall River both senior representatives rear Gary Kingsbury St Paul Taunton council president Lawshyrence Costa Sacred Heart Taunton senior representative

was aided by Diane Trial publicity and Diane Froshyment decorations At Mt St Mary Academy also Fall River students were serious deshyspite the season as they heard an exhibition debate presented by the Anne Brownell Memoshyrial Debate Society Kathy Polak and Dawn Hannafin deshyfended the affirmative and Cynthia OConnell and Carol Vasconcellos the negative side of the question whether narshycotics should be legalized Doushyble purpose of the program was to give students an opportushynity to learn about an important current problem and to demonshystrate debate techniques

The Prevost Glee Club will hold its annual concert Sunday May 5 at the auditorium of Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River Guest performers will include the SHA glee club the Dominican Academy glee club and the Cathedral Choristers from St Marys Cathedral Fall River

Among proficiency certificate winners at the annual educashytional night program of the Southeastern Mass Chapter of the Administrative Management Society were students from Dishyocesan highs Receiving awards for proficiency in spelling and mathematics were Diane Tremshyblay St Anthonys High New Bedford Jeannine Dubois Mt St Mary Doris Desrosiers Jesus-Mary Academy and Pashytricia Murphy Rose DeSouza Kathleen Kurowski Margaret Mary McIntyre and Elizabeth Saulnier from Holy Family New Bedford The girls were high scorcrs in a competitive exam open to students in all area high schools

At Holy Family High in New

Safety Laws Continued from Page Three

other country need not be stained with the blood of its workers

Nationwide standards are needed he said to stop a tendency to compete at the exshypense of health and safety in the plant the mine and on the construction site

This is a false type of compeshytion he said noting that the National Safety Council has figshyures to prove that investment in work safety and health pays off in financial as well as human terms

l1sgr Higgins and Dr Lorin E Kerr presid~nt of Group Health Associatioll of America Inc wele named co-chairmen of the joint committee to supshyport the safey legislation

William R Hutton executive director of the National Council of Senior Citizens was named executive secretary of the group

Among the organizations repshyresented at the meeting were the American Public Health Asshysociation Blue Cross - Blue Shield Group Health Associashytion of America AFL-CIO American Arbitration AssociashytIon National Education Assoshyciation General Federation of Womens Clubs YMCA YWCA International Brotherhood of Teamsters United Mine WarkshyelS American Nurses Associashytion National Federation of Business and Professional Womshy

ens Clubs National Association of Colored Womens Clubs and National Falmers Union

Bedford the debate society was far from idle during the vacashytion week reports Michael Corshynell At the Eastern Nazarene High School Tournament HF representatives won a third pl~ce trophy Debaters were Cynthia Rego Karl Fryzel Margaret McJntyre and Kevin Harrington And at the Daniel Webster Tournament at Melrose High School the ifF squad won first place in both the chamshypionship and novice divisions and second place over-all for the best total school win-loss record

Today Karl Fryzel and Cindy Rego are debating against Bishshyop Cassidy High of Taunton in the place-off round for the Narry League championship Both HF debaters have 10-2 records and Cindy has recently added to her laurels by receiving complete scholarships including room board and tuition to both Pembroke and Radcliffe

At Prevost a MoUiers Day whist is planned by the senior class for 8 to 11 Saturday night May 11 at Jesus-Mary auditoshyrium -

And at Jesus~Marymiddot the high honors list for the thirdquarter has been announced Seniors on the list are Diane Dugal and Madeleine St Denis junior is Doris Desrosiers sophomore is Danielle Chouinard and freshshyman is Lucille Nadeau Twenty seniors nine juniors six sophshyomores and six freshmen are on the honor roll and honarable mention was merited by three seniors and three juniors

Social orker Miss Eleanor Tarpy a social

worker from the BlOckton VA Hospital spoke on social work careers recently to interested juniors and seniors at Mt St Mary Academy- She covered most aspects of social work and recommended various colleges for specialization in this area

The Good News Singers were what was happening at Dominishycan Academy and their concert was enjoyed by all comers Also on the DA scene a Latin ban- quet for former Latin students hosted by Sister Helen and her jumor class Italian food and grape juice were on the menu and Latin games were played

Not to be outdone DA Enshyglish students presented The Old Lady Shows Her Medals to the school on Tuesday Also on Tuesday came an evening of coffee house entertainment titled The Looking Glass

Rev William Cullen SJ spoke at a mother-daughter Communion supper held Sunshyday at Mt St Mary and also

from the Fall River school sevshyeral girls accompanied by middotSisshyter Mary Phyllis attended a National Honor Society convenshytion at Cardinal Spellman High School

Mounties Elizabeth Perry Laurie Sampson and Kerry Mello returned to Rhode Island College Sunday to evaluate a

conference recently held there on the subject of teen tensions

Thirteen Mount juniors cam paigned f6r office in the stushydent council with elections takshying place yesterday

The girl middotreceiving most votes will be president with the next three in line taking the offices of vice-president secreshytary and tImiddoteasurer This method replaces the previous system of separate votes for each office

Criticize Daleys Continued from Page Three

desire to resist to the point where we dont care whether we live or die any longer

Double Standard

In Milwaukee he maintained the police through constant harassment and intimidation had dehumanized the Negro He said a double standard of justice exists in the city and under it harsh penalties are

given Negroes and minor penshymiddot alties given whites for the same offenses

These kind of injustices he said are now apparent to the black community

Referring directly to Daleys order (April 15) that Chicago police should use deadly force against arsonists and shoot to maim or cripple looters during urban rioting Father Groppi said

If he uses that kind of treatshyment he is going to get some reshyturn gunfire and I think it will be justified It is outrageous to shoot down a 12-year-old kid for steaking a six-pack of beer

Atty Gen Clark also warned the newspaper editors that shooting of rioters by police

middot could lead to a very dangerous escalation of racial violence in

middot American cities

Exccssic Use

Clark said it was clear from recent riots that only a very tiny fraction of Americas Neshygroes are prepared to resort to

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Order to Shoot lawlessness and violence

Excessive use of violence by police he said could drive a larger portion of the black comshymunity to terrorist and guershyrilla tactics

Clark noted that more than 100 cities had outbleaks OfV10shylence following the assassinaUon of Dr Martin Luther King But police generally acted wiih balance and because of that there were fewer deaths and less property damage in aJl of these disorders than we had- in one riot last year he said

To Discuss New Vincentian Rule

The monthly meeting of the Fall River Particular Council of the Society of St Vincent de Paul will be held in Notre Dame parish -Tuesday night May 7 Benediction will be gi ven in Notre Dame Church at 745 and the meeting will follow middotat the parish St Vincent de Paul Store 1799 Pleasant Street Camp apshy

plications will be distributed and the new Vincentian rule will be discussed

Members planning to attend the regional meeting of Vincenshytians May 31 through June 2 are asked to send their registration blanks to the Catholic Welfare Bureau PO Box 1565 Fall River as soon as possible

Golden Jubilees Continued from Page Three

emeritus of the Sacred Heari Parish Fall River and Rt Reu Msgr Annand Levasseur paltol of St Annes Parish New Bedshyford were ordained in st Marys Cathedral Fall River om May HI 1918 by the late Bishop Feehan

Monsignor Childs was bom Oct 23 1891 in CenterviHe (Barnstable) the son of WHtOIil L Childs and the late Emmal McKenney Childs The Monshysignor attended St AnselmlIl College Manchester N H st Marys Seminary in Baltimo~

and the Apostolic Mission Home at Catholic University in 1be nations capital city

He served as an assistant biI several areas They included S1shyFrancis Xavier Hyannis m Josephs No Dighton SacreCl Heart in Fall River which ~ later returned to as pastor

The jubilatian headed five parishes before his retiremem in 1966 In addition to the Sashycred Heart he was also pastor of St Peters Dighton St Patshyricks Somerset St Louis Falli River and the Immaculate Conshyception Fall River

Msgr Childs was long active in the diocesan matrimonial court He served as defendell of the bond promoter of justice and pro-synodal judge In ad~

tion he was chaplain of the Knights of Columbus Councillm 86 Bnd 295 chaplain of the Columbian Squires and taM Assl1Jl1ption Circle Daughien of Isabella Somers~t and also the Assumption Circle FaD River

In 1964 he was elevated btJ Pope Paul to the rank of deshymestic prelate with the title of monsignor

Monsignor Cliilds will retum to the Sacred Heart Clureb Fall River on the evening cd May 16 for a Mass of Thankampshygivingmiddot and a reception in the Sacred Heart School Pine StreeL

Msgr Levasseur was born ilm Fall River the son of the late Napoleon and Georgianna MaFshyehand Levasseur He attended Assumption College WorcesteKo

middotSt Marys Seminary Baltimore and Catholic University WeBbshyin81on

As an assistant the jubilarlaiill served in St John the Baptilri Fall River St Hyacinth New Bedford and St Anthony New Bedford

In 1933 the New Bedfonll middotprelate was named pastor of SL Hyacinths and served there for seven years until his present assignment to St Annes W8IIl announced in 1940

His diocesan appointment include procurator fiscalis II member of the administratiYe council and consultor for parisi priests

A Mass of Thanksgiving wiD be offered at a date to be aDshy

nounced later

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 2 1968

~Ii7 I i j

FIRST COMMUNION Youngsters in special education religion classeS meida Sister Joan Bernadette SND instructor Shelley Lagasse RashyreCeive first Holy Oommunion at Mass celebrated for them at Bishop phe]le Ambrose Dennis Silvares Mrs George F Gifford special education StanK High School North Dartmouth From left Frank Mendonca James -chairman and teacher At right Bishop Connolly congratulates Frank ~nstant Rachel Ambrose Kenneth Pereira Joseph Arruda Sh~uon AI- Mendonca

j~rchbishop Sets Catholic CollegesWarns Catholics of IntercommulnionCollege Program To Become Co-ed For Sem~Dlarians Damages IEcumenism Cause Bishop Sellys KANSAS CITY (NC)-Rockshy

hurst College and A vila College ST PAUL (NC)-Transshy STOCKHOLM (NC)-8wedish mere demonstration of goodwin throughout the Church But here in Missouri will become

Catholics wele warned against If such an act of intercomshy he added pressure groupsk of the college program coeducational in Septemberpernlilting the ecumenical spirit munion were sufficient for comshy seeking reforms contrary to the 1969 the plesidents of the twofor St Paul and Minneapolis to result in an intercominunshy plete unity the whole ecumenishy views of the Church will institutions have announcedseminaries from St Paul ion with separated Christian cal movement would have no achieve nothing for reform or

Until then they said theySeminary to the College of St brethlen that would violate the real meaning ecumenlsm will make a study of areas ofII1omas was announced here by Catholic concept of eucharistic Bishop Taylor said that intershy The bishop questioned whether coordination and cooperationCoadjutor Archbishop Leo C sacramentalism communion is therefore impos- Catholics and Protestants in this between the two private colshyByrne Bishop John E Taylor OM sible for Catholics in principle country have sufficiently coshy leges each of which will retainThe prelate said Nazareth of Stockholm said in his newly despite our grief over this operated in aU fields where its separate identityBall Preparatory Seminary will issued Guidelines on Intershy reality because there are widely there are theological obshyI()

Father Maurice E VanAckshylie continued communion with Separated divergent ideas over such essenshy stacles to such collaboration eren SJ Rockhurst presidentArchbishop Leo Binz of St Brethl-en that the practice of tial question as the hierarchical such as in communications and and Sister Olive Louise CSJintercommunion by Catholics ministry the sacrament of Holy social and educational undershyPaul and Minneapolis issued a Avila president made the jointindividually or collectively with Orders sacrifice and the sacrashy takings and even in spiritual~ree implementing the new announcem(~nt after approval byEvangelical (Protcstant) Chris- ments themselves ecumenism through commonIllOgram and canonically erectshy the two boards of directorstians in this country damages To ignore such considerations prayer

b accommodate seminarians the cause of ecumimism and is the bishop continued is to reshy Only an ecumenism that orshy The objective of the change is making collegiate studies be- opposed to the will of the Cathshy sort to a sort of magic concepshy ganically grows up from inside to broaden and strengthen our ~nning Sept 1 _

_g St John Vianney Se~inary

olic Church tion of the sacrament which can bring about concrete results educational programs and our The guidelines have been disshy would separate it from the pershy even though it may be a slow community services and to proshyThe decree states canonical

tributed to the clergy and Reli shy sonal faith and conviction of process he said vide a richer diversity of opshyooquirements are to be met for gious of Sweden and some of those receiving it tions available in the privatelJl[)pointing officials of the new thelaity Pressure Groups sector of higher education inJeffiinary but that the academshy Priests Aid Families rntercommunion the bishop Kansas City the announcement()e instruction of the students Actually Bishop Taylorsaid is a matter of concern to said fJlld their academic evaluation said we Catholics have someshy Of Arrested Men many Catholics and non-Cathshyare to be handled chiefly times been accused of such a NEWARK (NC) - Fifteen Rockhurst is one of 28 U Solic Christians especially youthselrough the College of St mag-ic idea by Protestants Newark priests have volunteered colleges and universities conshyand students In some quartersThomas Bishop Taylor said he was to participate in a program ducted by the Jesuits Avila ishe noted it is maintained that

Archbishop Byrne said the sympathetic to what he caned which will find them working one of five colleges operated byintelcommunion ill a means of init iatives and impulses arisshy the Sisters of St Joseph ofIbOve to St Thomas will bring with the families of men arshyChristian unity

llbe seminary college program ing from inside the Church and J-eSted by the po]ice for vIolating Car6ndeletHowever the bishop added it ro a certain impa-tience the law Qnto conformity with the Amershy is in the Eucharist the sacrashy

ean system of education It will Members oj the Newarkment of unity that the tragedylmprove the academic and curshy Priests Gro~p an association ofof Christian disunity is mostriculum resources available to Aid for Unemployed clergy the priests will collaboshyevidentIJeminarians he said and enshy rate in a program already inaushy

Theological Realities Mexican-Americansable them to take advantage of gurated under Protestant ausshyTo seek intercommunion bybull more specialized faculty and WASHINGTON (NC) - More pices The invitation to partici shy

a single joint act without regardIDOre extensive physical facili shy than 2500 unemployed persons pate was extended by Dean to the theological realitiesties Cited as examples were the mainly Mexican-Americans will Ledie C Laughlin of Trinitywhich are at the base of theIUbrary science laboratories and receive job preparation and Episcopal cathedralEuchalist he said is to reducephysical education facilities placement services in 11 Southshy The priests will be available tothe Eucharistic celebration to a

Archbishop Byrne said the St western cities under projects anshy prisoners in the varioUS precinct Paul Seminary faculty will be nounced by Labor Secretary stations and courts of the city free to concentrate on the theshy Willard Wirtz and will subequently visit theRochester Priests ologate and to implement plans Approximately $5 million in families of the arrested men ro ~r deeper more intensive Form Assodation Manpower Development and acquaint them with the situashyaludy of theology in accordance Trail1ing Act funds have been tionROCHESTER (NC) - Priests

LUMBER co So Dartmouth and Hyannis

So Dartmouth 997middot9384 Hyannis 2921

J B

with the granting of the master here have joined the growing earmarked for the projects ~ arts degree in theology for which have been developed bytrend tow a r d independentmiddotwhich preliminary accreditation Mexican - Amercian organizashypriests organizations by formshylas been obtained tions The projects have been deshying a Priests Association of

signed by the staff of OperationThe major seminary will also Roohester SER (Service Employment Reshy~ able to serve those priests The diocese already has a development) with the assistancewho desire advanced work in Priests Council formerly called of the Department of Labor andCbeology studies he said a senate Health Education and WelfareSome 115 priests met to vote

on a constitution for the new Operation SER is directed byHails Example association and elect a 15-memshy Jobs for Progress Inc a nonshy

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope ber coordinating committee profit organization sponsored by Paul has told chaplains to About 230 priests including major Mexican - American orshyItalys Christian labor unions about 20 members of religious ganizations the League of United Qhat their work is a real exshy communities serving in the dioshy Latin American Citizens and

STONEHILL COLLEGE

Summer Session Evening Classes JUNE 24middot AUG 2 630 - 915

UNDERGRADUATE COURSES Liberal Artl bull Bus Admin bull Science bull Math

Write Director of Summer Session 5TONEHILL COLLEGE

IHnplc of the Churchs interest cese have signed up for the the American GI Forum of the N Easton Mass 02356 Tel 238-2052 696-0400 AD the working classes organization United States

6 rm ANCHOR-Diocese ofJloR RiverThurbull May 2 1968 ( CafttMlCYBoya ~ ~ ~ middot12~middot _ bull~-~ ltshy

~ Tribute $tresses Value Shall We Talk Money or Concern Of~iaIW~

OceasiQnally the criticism is leuroveled against Ohurch leaders that they taik money too often

There may be some truth to this Perhaips what they should do is talk concern-the

eoncern that each person has or should have for his brothers and sisters in the family of God

Such a talk might well go like this Here is a child who is mentally retarded whose parents

have neither the ability nor the time to teach him about the things of earth or of heaven - spend several hours a day with him because he is your little brother in the Lord

Here is a person ravaged by an incurable sickness-middot take this person into your home and care for him until God calls him home because this sick person is your brother in the Lord

Here are a group of young adults entering into the world of the adult with apprehension and fears and anxieties -spend several hours a day with them to answer questions and to talk over problems and to suggest lines of conduct because they are your brothers and sisters in the LOrd

Here are some people who were good mothers and fathers~ and wonderful grandparents and now they are entering their senior years and their strength is failing

middot f hand they need carefuI and patIent care-care or t em because they belong to you they are your parents and grandparents they are your relativesand they are also your brothers and sisters in the Lord

Here isa young unmarried mother who needs guidance

and help here is a father whose wife has died and who has young middotchildren and no one to care for them here is an engaged couple seeking some basic principles about marshy

riage here is a married couple who feel a curtain of misshyunderstanding coming between them-all these are your

Your brothers and sisters in the Lord so you should take the time to educate yourselves about their problems take the time and make the effort to listen to them without watching the clock give them professional advice take them into your home for long-range care give hours of your time in

counselling them and following up their difficulties Do all this And then no one would have to talk money The conshy

eern would be there the services would be rendered the works of the Lord would be done And you would be doingthem

What you cannot do these things you havent the time or the skill yourselves

Well someone has to do these things And someone has to support those who dothe works of the Lord ~omeone

has to give them the means they need to work with theld d d hI I h bUl mg an the facIlitIes an t e too s to Imp ement t elr concern able distanceshave to be traveled thus relieving parent

IJLIf you cam~~t orWI11 not d0bullthe works th emse1V~S ~Jlen and child of straiilarid daily fatigue Inthis matter we Un ~ou ~nd WIll you dosomethInamp to ~~dthoseWho ~re are open to suggestion and will proceed only when and if workmg m your name for and WIth your brot~ersandtheideais approved The expansion of this field into two ~ee4 Government Aid

t th Lo d f l f God d hOO Citing poverty as an example 8IS ers me r rom ove 0 an neIg r or three urban areas awaiF~ alon~ assura~ce that the schools Msgr Higgins said Thisis what the Catholic Charities middotA~rme~ns be staffed by specI~nytramedsIstersaIded by competent ~There is much thatiildividshy

Either dO the workS of GOd yourselves ~helpthoseWho members of thelalty ual citizensmiddot and groups of citishy- are oing these w~1ks o~ meCy an4 cent1oation and eh~ritygtAnother ~bjectiveaboutwhich we seek advice is the zenscm domiddot to all~viate ~ _ and concern m your name c - problem but they cannot ~l~lt bull

L t t talk ih bet t lk d settmg up of a Home for the Aged ChrOnIcally-Ill on The tpe problem alone The gov~~ aaIcaetIosn aOnd yocmiddotatmImiddotomiddotonn~arnd geIVnIng of~se Jaf concern ~ Cape We have fQur tracts of land between Harwiehaitd middottmh~nt ~~~l hile to do much ~ mu bull bull an It IS domg at the present

Lets tak GOO and the goodcto bl done This ~FaJmouthI~settle~ ar~~~ WhIle l~ IS true~an~ nurslll~_tim~ and probably morethiuR mustbe done and in the nameOf God TakeGodfrommiddothomesare bemgbU11~weareconvlllced the~eIsroomfor an recent Adritinistration haj the word good middotandwhat is leftgtmiddot Just an 0 And this one sfuffed by religious women where the near presence proPQsed stands for nothing of a chapel and the stimulus of prayerful exercises would he p~nciple of subsi~ia~ properly understood does

It comes downto this do the work-s of G6dmiddotyourselves uplIftmiddot mmds and hearts However here agamwe would middotpro~ibit the government from to the degree that you can and support those who are like the benefit of your thinking meeting this pressing challenge doing the WOlks of God in your name [ Oli the contrary itobliges the

Our Youth faCIlItIes are constantly expandmg and Im- government to supplement the Now dges that gIVe ~ lIttle dlf1er~ntattItude ~waNLpr6VingFamilyproblemsmiddotnot always of an extremeserl necessarily limited programs at

the Appeal keepour Welfare Family Life and social workers busy In oluntary oIganizfltions il) the ~ f~eld of SOclal welfare ancl ~

--------------~---- -oo

rheANCHOR frICr~L NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALLPVER Published weeklyby The Catllolic Press of the Diocese of Fall River

410 Highland Avenue Fall River Moss 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Rt R~v DanielF Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

CM~I-A~amplU ~~ Ar=t=es App~al ~tlkI1vlhbl ~1llJ1WI If II

Continued from Page Three

Our immediate plans for expansion are bigger than any attempted before There are two important commitments The accommodations at Catholic Memorial Home are to increase through the construction of an addition to the

Nursing Wing This is done with a view to provide for married couples and for such others as could benefit in spirit by being closer to rehabilitation facilities and proshyfessional care

A second objective and it involves a great deal is to modernize our homes for children St Marys New Bedford and St Vincents in Fall River date back a long time Both are iJil constant need of repair But money spent on them is practically wasted So we are about to erect a new St Vincents designed according to the best of modern ideas and for accommodation of 120 boys and girls up to the middle-teen years

1 dFor the menta ly retar ed we would like to provide ht M d th h F d h dovermg care on ays roug rl ay were consl er-

WASHINGTON (NO) _ There is no profession other than social work whieli keeps its fingea- so middotoonting ously and sensitively on tile pulse of human misery notr which is more rewarding in tbaspiritual enrichment of th~ who labor to alleviate the sui

fering of their fellow man The tribute to thesocial worJr

profession was given at the 50tJa anniversary convocation of the Catholic Universitys NationalCatholic School of Social Service by Patrick Cardiilld OBoyle of Washington

In paying the tribute Cardinal OBoyle a graduate of the New

York School of Social Servicewho had a long social work eashyreer before becoming archbishshyop confessed to the gathering that he is still a welfare workshyer at heart

Founded in 1918 The convocation was the higba

light of a weekend celebratiolll of the schools anniversary The present school developed from the Service School opened by the National Catholic Welfare Conference in 1918 to trailamp women for social workwitb American military personneland their families andfor-reshylief and rehabilitation at hOmci and abroad

The National Catholic School of Social Service was foundedin 1921 and NCWC entrusted responsibility for it to the Na- tionat Council of Catholic Women In 1947 this school was m~rged with the Catholic UMshyversity School of Social work the unified school retaining the name National Catholic Schooi of Social Service

Among seminar speakers was Msgr George G Higgins diree- tor social action departmentU S catholic Conference who stressed that although Catholics have justifiably prided OUllshy

selves on having helped to keep alive the notion of subsidiaIi~in social and economic life the7

must be equally alive -- importance and indispensabiUw of far reaching governmentalaction in the social and economorder

all fIelds we are blessed by havmg donated serVIces~ For cial reform this we are d~eply grateful since it allows us to visualize with confidence projects such as the ones Jisted above Publisher to Head

Beginning then next Su~day our volunteer wqrkers Historical Socmiddotiety will make their round of calls tothe homes and offices of all to whom we turJifor support Our record in the past

t h b f d th tSIX een years as een one 0 more an more en USIas IC response from the business community as well as the individshyual donor Apart from the satisfaction of seeing their dollar well spent all who have aided our appeal are beneficiaries of the diocese remembered most certainly in my prayers and masses as well as those ministering to heeds and being helped by the thirty separate social charitable activities that we have Everyone is happy over what has been done But a great many who need to be helped are hopefully watchshying the results of the 1968 campaign and I am among tllem

NEW YORK (NC)-Victor ~ Ridder publisher of New Yorlnl archdiocesan newspaper TIleCatholic News has been elected president of the United States Catholic Historical Society

The societys main purposes are discussonand pUbl~catiODof documents books and papers relating to the history of toe Catholic Church and the deveJ opment of Catholic culture IIIAmerica The society has pub-lished some 50 volumes sinc its founding in 1884

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C~~~-Jimiddot ~ ~t I~middot~

r~pe s_ ~(l (Jlj(~ntucky MountaiTJ Missions t4~ecl ~dOlll f

~f Vocatio~s1 DescriiJes 4ppalacll_ia sPoverty VATICAN CITY (NC) By Dorothy Mitch~n Eastman

Pope Paul VI stressed the Appa~achiaie a powerful word The ve~ name evokes visions of rugged mountain Churchs need fOT priestlyand Religious vocations and life isolation poverty misery and despair In this vast area that encltYmpasses 11 states 1fhe freedom ~hat should charac- live 16 mi11~on of the most poverty-striken people in the Uni1Jed States In every category terize such vocations in a mes- of hUmampn activity Appalachia has fewer of the good things of life than d~s the rest C3ge addressed to the faithful of f America Nowhere in this The latest accomplishment of Gte world on the fifth World nat~on do people h~ve less CAP Inc is the completion of Blny of Prayer for Vocations iYWOme 00 live in poorer II Grade A dairy farming com-

The need the Pope said stems Grom the plan of salvation in the housing nOwhere do they pleL mind of God who wanted have rewer educational oppor- Special schools are set up~rist to be the sole S)urce of tunities or suffer from such Il during the Summer months to

ed al th d teach religion We had six ofGl1vation and of sanctity and 1acit 0 m lC care as ey 0 pho wanteOl His mission to be in Appalachia nowhere in all these Bible schools going last

ld h d Ch Summer Father Beiting saiderpetuated and sPread through we wor as organIze rIS-I ti t d f dh ts Over 350 children have been ~n men partakers in the am y oun so ew a eren A I h included in this program Eighty17liesthood of Christ indispen- us In ppa at lao lmiddotmiddotmiddotll

e Eastern K~ntuc area h middotilmiddot~ per cent of them have been non-Bable ministers of the word and u ~ nt 1

A _1 h h th d b d Catholicsof grace among the rest of man- 9pac la as e U 10US lS-IIdnd tindion of being the poorest of CeJlwllS foil Rellilgilll)n

This need arlslng from the the poor in all CIf th1lSe cate- A8 a follow up to the Bible nature of the Church is DOW glt)ries ~ -schools the parish has organized more acute the Pope continued Four of the poorest counties three centers fur year round OOoause the numbers of the of Eastern Kentucky comprise religious instruction ministers of the Gospel are dim- the parish of Father Ralph Bei- We have a very active bome luishing while the fields open ting He has a parish roughly visitation programFather said tD their work are increasing tile siire of the state of Rhode and this year we will visit be-

The Second Vatican Councils Island tween three and four thousand IMghlighting of the priesthood On his first speaking tour in homes of the faithful the Pope said New England the tall rugged Each year about 2000 people should not lead to a dimming looking priest came to Bishop give from a few days to a few of the ministerinl or hierarchi- Casidy High School in Taun- weeks of their spare time school eal priesthood bull bull bull In fact the ton to talk to the student lxgtdY breaks or vacations to work at more the common priesthood is and the senior class from Coyle one of the four centers Father to be improved the more it has High School has eStablished in his parish Deed of the ministry of the hier- The priests five day tour m- Priests nuns college students arehical priesthood and the eluded addresses at Harvard whltlle families go down to the more the function entrusted to University Regis College Holy area from all over the country tIhe latter manifests its abso- Cross College and Newton Col- to work for the Appalachian lute necessity lege Gf the Sacred Heart as poor

N ---OO- for S I weJn as a TV appearance on One of Charlie Kings inOO has ~ a VBuOD Bob Kenneds Contact show shy P lid d th t been to find useful work for

ampUe ope a e at ODe B~ktAD Aidshya _ f th Ch h d all these volunteers as carpenshy-=gt ales 0 e urc an so Aocompanying Father Beiting ters nurses farmers cooks el the Christian salvation of the - e tour was a lookingld t be ~-d be- -- 6 teaching Bible classes or coun-WOT canno JU6~ as and personable young man from ded ch ri ti h FATHER BElTING seling at the children scamps --amp vun on a sma c p e- Brockton twenty year old Char- Every Sunday of the year DOmena or movements which Be King Charlie has interrupted From the inception of hi8themselves need the ministry rather Beiting and two other -d approval of the hierarchical lWloollege days lit John Carroll pastorate Father Beiting has car- priests drive over 200 miles to Driesthood University to work with Father ried on a dual apostolate As say Masses for 1~heir parishioners

The priesthoods authority Belting as a full time lay vol- well as tending to the needs of in homes in the three churches Mel the priests sacramental unteereaming the grand sum crl of the 45000 who live within af the parish in a candy store

a dollar a day the boundaries of his parish be and a pavillion power1 b to fo Charlie -_ hi h worK-- on everenew the bloodless reflected lito ti as 1 every Non-Catholic attendance at the tie e ra on are necessary l wo~ in Appalachi has con- th li ht _ C Improve e econOmiC p g Masses is often three times as IoU hurch and the salvation of -ced hlm that his vocatlhn th A I h F--d Vlll ~ e ppa ac Ian poor rom greatmiddotmiddotas the native Catholic at shynki d hIDa n e lHU bull I er ea-ng hiS deCNgte~ in the- dist b tion 0 f f d and I thmg tendence in countries As dditi in ~ n u 00 c 0 these

an a ona reason 41- -l~ltIno work omong the poor - -d Co g 10 al~ th ed I ti ~ w ~ G middotressmg n ress n where only one personmiddotin everyOU

_ng e ne or voca ons ~ think its true that we will tt F th h ht Ole Pope cited the secularization n what Eug~ne McCarlh COmml ees a er as song 1000 is Catholic

~ ~ or to attack the poverty of Eastern ~ the modern w9rldwhJch has CaDs QmoraJ revoiution to solve Kentteky with every means Summer Missions

a greater need ~r a conse-middot the Poverty crisis m this cOOn-avaiiable Formiddotfive weeJ~8 everymiddotSummer ~t~an~eciaf~thZed preseten~e tij- be said New Project Father Belting and a team of ~ewltUus 0 ~ mys neB ~ pilther Beiting haSbeen -WOrk As his familiarity with the priests seminari~ and ~y ~ Go~ ~L Cor 4 1) jWg hi Eastern Kentucky since areaincreased and the extent of people go through the countryshy

Wllhngll1ess to Sacrifice [OOa when he was assignedamp workmiddot to be done became more middotside ona streetpreaching misshy ~ ~ addi~on to the need for mission parish under the aus- and more pressing the need for sion Reception is not always WOCations the Pope in his mes- pices of the Diocese of Coving- a permanent solution to eco-middot cordial in this section where ~ stressW freedom of voca-middot ton~ Besides his 1000 square nomie ills became evident In prejudice against Catholics runs fions by which he said he mile parish he bas middotthe respon~ mlilw~rto this need in the Sum- high Father and his preachers meant personal IU1Q voluntary sibility of all 25 counties in mer of 1965 Father Beiting have at times h~ to proclaim ehlation to the cause of Christmiddot Eastern Kentucky through his founded the Christian Appala- the good news of Christs messhyIInd of His Church position as Deail of Kentucky ehian Project Inc an independ- B1ge ~f broth~rhood and middotconshy

There cannot be any voca- Mountain Missions In this posi- ent ~on-Igtrofit organization cern a~id ca~ca~ and hurled aons he said unless they are tion Father directS all the mis- working to develop the economic tomatoes ~ unless in other words they siooory and soCial endeavorS of resources of the region to the The Word is not falling OD

00e offered spontaneously of t1-e Church in this the most advantage of the middotpoor Now in entirely stony ground even in themselves conscr~usly gener- ~pera1e povenymiddot area of its fourth y~ar of setvi~ in ~ -an a~eamiddot wpell~ for genera-tions Ciusly totally America Jackson COUl)t~ the CAP Inc Catholics have been thougbt to ~ This hesa1d applieS Doth to Per capita income in these lias carried out numerous devel- I be mleagiie witb the devil The ~stly and Religious vocati6ns eotJnties avera~es bet~~~rt ~50 ClPmental training and employ- parish is currently instructing male and female vocations ana $840 a year Nearly nine ou~ plent programs Among these 25 people in themiddot faith

Willingness to sacrifice the M every 10 houses is lIubstand ate tlie lntroduction and pro- The expenses of our proshy Pope went on is the cru of the atil lacliing electricity running duction of- sevetal itlew crops gram are enormous Father middot~bleril The world of religion water or inside faciliti~ Tl1ere in themiddot count4ls agricult~ral sighed and theyre financed

discredited by atheism or hedon- ~ no higher per cent of illiter- economy and many technical entirely by contributions On lEm he said is no longer as at- atePeople in the UnIted SUites innovations iIi the agricUltural his speaking tour Father is ~~tive as it OJlC~ was _ thml in Eastern Kentucky Med- field searching for individuals or

Bul youth he said is stillre- ieal facilities ale few and far Complementing the agrjcul- groupswhowill sponsor one of eeptive to the call of the Church between tural prOjects several small in- the 25 full time volunteers like to do difficult things heroic We need doctors desperately dustrialptograms serve to train Charlie King (~t a OOstof $30 a Cbings Father Beiting said sadly and employ natives of the month) Olrmiddottomiddot pledge contribushyThe Pope urged families to be Sickness Leads to Apathy county The woodworking fac- tions for any item on his list -tiling to make the sacrifices of Malnutrition takes Its toll in tOry turns out high quality Ap- of immediate needs - items bull son or daughter to the Church many ways The mountain pal~hian woodcrafts ranging ranging from tires for their

people have often been carica from knick-kneeks to Appala- much used cars to a Holstein turedas lazy but Wldernourish- - chian musical instruments ~ for the dLiry farm

Two in One merrt and sickness are the real Seasonal employment is pro- In concluding his talk to the BERLIN (NC) - The World eauses of their apathy Most of vided through the production of students at Cassidy Father asked

Congress of Catholic Youth these people have middotbeen sick Christmas wreaths Plans are if they would like his address lIePresenting the International since the day they were born ~ on the drawing board for a pal- 01 on second thought he

Catholic Youth Federation and Father asserted letmaking industry and assorted qUIPPed would you rather have the World Federation of Cathoshy Theyre gooCl people-won- enterprises that will employ Charlies lie Young Women and Girls deriul people he insisted Its over 100 men in the county For those who would like have voted to merge the two a shame There should be many which has one of the highest Fathers it Is St Williams erganizations to form the World more people working to help unemployment statistics in the Church 224 rexington Street

tibem nation Lancaster KentuclqWederation of Catholic Youth

THE ANCHORshy 7 Thursday May-2 l968

Crisis in Poland Affects Church

BERLIN (NC)-The Catholic Ohurch and Catholic members of Polands Sejm (parliament) have been caught in the crossshyfire of the current political crisis in that country and the resurgence of anti-Semitism that has a~companied it

For the first time the Church has bean publicly attacked for its support on the students demshyonstrations in March fur intelshylectual and democratic freeshydoms

Jozef Kepa first secretary of the Warsaw Communist party committee in m speech released (April HI) backed party chief Wladyslaw Gomulkas efforts to tone down the anti-Jewish stateshyments that have been rampant in the press on television and in public speeches but had hard words for the Catholic hiershyarchy

Target of Kepas criticisms was Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski of Warsaw who praised the stushydents iOr their maturity and moderation

The voice of the reactionary party of the Church hierarchy had been heard Kepa said among forces united against the peoples power He condemned the support given by Polish Roman Catholic leaders to the student demonstrations

Meanwhile in the Sejm the five Catholic members known as the Znak group were assailed by Premier Jozef Cyrankiewicz aid Politburo member Zenonmiddot Klisko because the Cathltllic legshyislators had asked the governshyment if it approved of a violashytion of civil rights by police acshytion against the demonstrating students Kliszko called the Catholic deputies friends of pro-Israel Jews and revisionshyists

Future Bright ROME (NC) -The religious

liberty situation in Czechosiovshyakia has already changed greatly

for Catholics and hopes for th~

future middotseem bright according to Bishop Frantisek Tomesek a p 0 s t ltl) 1 i e administrator of Prague

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FoR River-Thurs May 2 t9688 Urges Vctory ~ VietnomRecipes Re1call Memor~es ST lOUIS (NC)-A oan fbft Victory in Wetnam and a coo-gt demnation of Communism ltBOf Many Friendly Coks intrinsleany evil highlighteltl a series of IOresolutions adoptedBy Mary Enley Dally bIY the priests and bishops Belraquo ving on the Cardinal Mindszen~II A collection of cookbooks 16 a good addition to a kitchen Council governing board ~

Like a dictionary or an encyclopedia a good cookbook is the anti-communist CaJdina$ 8Il authoritative source of information but like that dictionshy lIlindszenty F~undation

ary or encyclopedia irts a cold impersonal font of lrnow- The resolutions adopted a1l the end of the foundations threegt

ledge On the other hand backs cf enveloPes on a blank day celebration of its 10th anni-o there probably is 8Jt your check on the inside of a match versary he1e outlined a p~ Muse certainly ~ ours folde around the margin of a gram based on demands for vioo those h~nd-gasthered recipes seven cents off coupon-whatshy tory in Vietnam rigorous pun-o dear and welcome as letters from ever blank Paper is to be found ishment flaquo riote16 and looters bome These receipes fur goodies in a- womans purse But they and ltm e Fecognition 1baII )lou have been represent communication ~ith there can be no useful ~ served at hoones other people OIl a common logue wiIth men of iN win of friends the ground masters of ~ceit band - written In the never-never land of Released with the resoluti01d ones on yel- things to be done remains the was a stmement from Lola Beue lowing cracked sorting and clasSification of Holmes a Negro leader whO paper in spidery these recipes type them out on joined the Communist party 1ft ecript by hands inde~ cards file neatly divided 1957 as an -informer for the long stilled the into soups salads desserts Federal Bureau of Investi~ti~ ones you took etc (FBI) Emphasizing the comJiNshy~er the tele- And yet though order may be Dist role in civil rights aotiw Phone haH ill heavens first lawthere is someshy ties Miss Holmes told conte shyIlhorthand the thing-quite a something---to be ence delegates othe half in said for our box of recipes In Much of the civil t1rrnlGII ebbreviations the this-sounds- anticipatwn of company coming youre seeing right now was 8Iloo 8OOd kind you jagged out of or just a yen to fix something nmged by the Communist p~ the evening paper with a bobby different we leaf tbrough the when I was a member pin meant to try and probably assorted sizes and shapes of our didnt miscellany M brings reminis-

Also there are the puzzlers cences nostalgia and more Conege Functioning shybow-tos from experts who cook often than not_ an idea of someshyby in9tinet--a handful of flour thing entirely different from the Despite Resignations or SCl just enough so that it item we were originally seek- River mark 50th anniversary In wheelchair Miss Mary R LADYSMITH (NC) - Ibl looks right or enough milk so ing acting president of Mount SeDshy

Dailey organizer and charmiddotter member of Fall River unitario College Sister DonnaItll smooth but not too runny For instance 1Ibere Is fIbe standing from left Mrs Mary Hennessey ticket chainnan Marie Rudolph said the Wis-- Pantry Library cookie recipe in the delicate for anniversary observ-ance Mrs Catherine Lee sUite re- consin college is functioningSuch is the collection-if tbis script of our late beloved neighshy

-bor Mrs Madeline Kelly with gent Rev James Morse chapiain Miss Mary F Maleadynormally after the recent resiglag-tag box of this-and-that its addendum Patsy you might ~n+- srtate regentmiddot Mrs Mary Lou Silvia general chairman nation of founder-president Si9shycould be called a collection-at pao ter Ann Mary Gullan eigbIJour house in the pantry li- like to make these as a surprise for observance faculty members and three acJfur your mother (Patsy wes brary tihen 12 years old) ministration personnel

A trained librarian indeed a Sister Donna Marie said thetrained anybody in the artmiddot of T-heres Marguerite Culhanell veal-in-wine we begged from former president resigned imshy

orderly classification even a he after having this at her mediately but the resignatioJUl well-trained cook woulq be house Isabel Donohoes trick of of the other members of -therwORL~ appalled at this motley array sprinkling chicken with vinegar e~BYMAllULYN RODERICK~ eollege are not effective until Some recipes are written on the to firm it up resulting in chicken June 1 She said the college is

salad par excellence many a recruiting faculty members at kindly with FRENCH FLAIR this time and does not anticioopet reciPe shared

lIS by readers of this column pate any difficultay in acquw One Pork Chop rve always read and heard Another tip fur Summer visi shy ing replacements by the Fall

term that French women have a flair tors to this home of the 1968 Also tbere is one addedre- for clothes but I never realized Man And His World is to The resignations were based

eently by a nameless friend we the truth of this statement until plan on wearing bright little on a dispute over the role to be met when she came to a collec- I visited Montreal Immediately dresses and suits but please no played at the college by the _tion center to get food for her it hits you from the moment bermudas or tight slacks Do newly appointed lay vice-pres-shyfamily afteT her home hadbeen you step out of -your car in however take your hemlines up ident Granmiddott E Zachary

GOLDEN JUBILEE Daughters of Isabella in Fall

partially burned out quring the front of tbe hotel that this is a an inch or two for the minilook recent rioting Many many city of women is the tbing in this land of the Catholic parishes had contiib- who know and mounties and I think I had the uted food ~d clothing Any who care about longest hemlines in town with number cf men and women dressing Minishy them just above my knees (-at came to deliver the donated skirts are evshy least they felt that way)supplies and remained to work erywhere but Ourls have taken over this sorting clothi~ packaging sup- miniskirts worn town and they look so delightfulplies for families of two four with style and that I couldnt resist visiting the and on up chicness colOl talented hair stylist in the hotel

Back to the newest recipe abounds bright and having my hair cut and~ This woman had been given a pinks v i vi d curled a Ie 68 For evening bag of mushrooms by a friendly 0 ran g e s and these curls (with the aid of falls grocer on her block If I could citrus yellows and hairpieces of course) cascade have a pork chop-just one pork f rillsan d down the neckline giving these chop she said I could fix flounces float forth and a walk I Canadian women a fragile fem- my familys favorite dinner down a street is like watching inine appearance that is hard to

One pork chop for a family an everchanging fashion show compete with In fact if you of four We couldnt believe it What astonished me as much feel like getting an inferiority until we tried it at our house as the sense of style that pershy complex about your looks this and were asked for a repeat vades the city was the aura cf is the place to go I guarantee performance Heres how good g-rooming Nowhere do you when you return youll want

Use large-capped mushrooms see a sloppy woman no one is new hair style a new sense of Fry the pork chop cool Be- seen walking the streets with make-up and a oomplete new

wardrobe shymove meat and grind it Add curlers in their hair or runs in seasoned bread crumbs and a - their stockings Obviously the bit of grated onion both sauteed - women ~ Morit~eal are con- in melted margarine or fat from cerned WIth theIr appearance

J UBI L A R I AN Sister - the chop Pile on top of in- and work hard to keep it up Color Process verted mushroom capS Make a - One thing in their favor is the

Mary Marciann of the Feli- er~am ~uee (dried or canned price 01 the clothes One can cian Sisters marked her sil- nulk Wl~ do) into which you - pick up a lovely summer dress Booklets vel jubilee of reJi~iou8 pro- have added ithe chopped and fur about twenty-two dollars ill fession at St Stanislaus sauteed mushroom stems ~our Cenadian money or a smashing-shy

0 a SYSTEMATIC55001( ear SAVINGS

MONTHLY DEPOSITS

5 00 01 amiddot INVESTMENT bull 10 year SAVINGS

NOTICE ACCOUNTS a REGULAR450 year SAVINGS

Bass River Savings Bank

Bank By Mail We Pay The Postage

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA

bull SOUTH YARMOUTH bull HYANNIS bull DENNIS PORT - bull OSTfRVlllpound

Year Books

Brochures

Convent Fall River on Sun- sauce into bottom of a shallow - slack sUit for around thirty-middot pan top withthe stufted mush- eight High fashion for a small AmericCin Pr~s~ Inc

oay~ Observance ~p~luded a rooms ~bake until tender price seems to be the motto of ~ Mass of thanksgIvmg cele- 20-30 nunutes the little boutiques tbatmiddot are OFFSET PRII~ITERS~~ LEnERPRESS

brated by Rev Itobert S So now into our heterogene-- ~ound everywhere and if youre Kaszynski StS~nslau8uscollection J0~ this ~ded middotplannin~ a tri~ to this SOPhis~- 1-~7JOFFI~ VENUE hone 997~942t pastor and a -reception for lte~ - communIcation agam - eate~ CIty thiS Summer don t~

- _ remJnder of someone -who was outfit YOU16elf before You go - friepds m the parochial -willillg to share her houSewife -- save a few pennies fur some

school -haU- _ lmowhow delightful buys up there

New Bedford Mass

~

9 New Insecticide Promises To End Dangmiddoter of Sprays

By Joseph and Manlyn Roderick

I doni lmow how other prdeners fared over the Winter but my roses were hit pretty hard Most of my pruning is done now and very ~itble remains of 1ast years IIOwth Luckily the roses surrived wt ground level but I Gidnt have much of a job a~ h Nader knew which ones the~ldmg w at to prune Slnce children would enjoy the hours most of what I could see ihey were open and how much ve the root crown is dead they cost

This year I am going to try bull We found our hotel through stematic approach to ridding this tiny book that described it IDY plants of insects rather than in glowing tenns and it tlllmed IPr~ying simply their upper sur- out to be all that the autho18 IIaces A systematic insecticide had said and then some II taken in through a plants Dining SJl)Ob fIlIOots and passes through its sya- However every bit as imporshytern The one I purchased is in taut as our place oli lodging was granular form and contains a the places where we dined and fertilizer A measured amount Mr Frommer and Mr Godwin III Spread around the base of the couldnt have given us better mose bush worked into the sou tips on dining if they had been ifhen given a thorough watering with us personally One evening The roots then absorb the fer- Joe and I (thanks to 11 kindshytilizer and insecticide and sup- hearted Nana) ate alone at a lit shyposedly keep the plant free from tIe bit of Portugal transplanted IIU chewing and sucking insects to this continent called the k six weeks Fado ComP1ete with melanshy

SLfer~ Quicker moly guitars and Spanish-Por-I would be parUcularly grate- tuguese cooking it was a delight

ful ii the systamic program to the eye ear and palate worked beacuse it would elim- Equally as good though were Snate spraying No matter how inexpensive luncheon places cautious one is there is alwaYs suchlS A La Crepe Bretonne Gte possibility that children win and the Pam Pam The former

I th th has an upstairs constructed Uld eome in contact WI e spray 1_ at d lik te hi dend harm themselves ~r e e a pIra span

Aside from the safety factor 8 bill of fare thart ~onsists of this method Js also much quicker ~late-SI~ paper-thin crepes llIld easier ttuui spraying No filled WIth any of 81 different messy spray cans and no lost fillings One cOld spend a energy in pumping and unblock- whole afternoon Just watchi~g Ing nozzles just a third of a tJeCOOks cr~ating these deli shycmpful of an odorless material ClOUS concoctIOns but Montreal applied around a plant every six hol~ so many wonders that one weeks with no danger that it ham t time to linger over any will rain ~e day after you one thIng

ra ed and wash off the ra The Pam Pam too was a 8P t y 1 sP Y charmIng IneXpenSIve restaurant ala erla fo f 1 H g d

I am more than willing to try I a anu y un anan In ecor IIOmething new but being a pes- and dIshes It featured flourless simist at heart I cannot conceive cakes Both my mother and I had of something which is so easy some for desse~ but before I actually working Lurking An could ask the w81tre~s what they the back of JDy mind is the feel- did make them WIth if ~ey mg that someone devised a omi~~d flo~r Jason wa~ dIPPIng method of satisfying lazy gar- his hands In ~veryones plates ampmers that the were doing and I thought It best to pay our

y bill and departoomethmg about theIr roses to try without having to go to

B tt J d I f lt th t h t 0 oean e a a

m h t bl rt f a s garuc rou e so 0 upill forroses We will give it Il

we s~mpled of thIS cosmopolItan_ b t ti d -cy was u an appe zer an

try though and hope that the that we would like to ret~m RSults live up to the message ag81~ for an entree-but WIthshy

out a two year older on the label of the product Now that were all back in a

lJm the llUtchem routine at least until Summer l have come to the conclusion vacation heres a tasty little

tfhat any family that attempts vegetable recipe to add interest to take a vacation trip with a ta everyday menus toddler has to be either courageshy lEGGS l1lgtJIVAN eurolUS or stupid and Im afraid we (Il) I dIE)tfull into the latter category eVl eggs When our plans to visit Wash- G hard-cooked eg~s lngton over the Spring vacation 1 2~ oz can deVIled ham failed because it was impossible teaspoon Worcestershire to obtain reservations (evishy sauce dently everyone else in the U S teaspoon grated onion bad the same plans only sooner Ik teaspoon salt titan we did) we set our sights yenteaspoon dmiddotry mustard aorthwaTd Montreal was our Dash pepper go~l and with our terrible two Z Tablespoons cream or milk in tow along with some genial (Broccoli and Saaee) smndparents and two young 1 pkg frozen or 1 bunch fresh ladies of seven and nine we set broccoli Iotth ona rainy Mond~ momshy Im Tablespoons butter or Ing margarine

Fortunately I had come with 1~ Tablespoons flour -e a pocket book guide of Montshy ~ teaspoon dry mustard Ileal andQuebec written by Arshy teaspoon salt thU1 Frommer and John God- Dash pepper win in ~peration with ttIe cup milk Bank of Nova SCOtia n was Jk cup grated sharp cheese absolutely priceless The 8Ushy 1) Prepare the deviled eggs thorS described in expllcit detai by cutting I( inch slice from one botel motel and rooming house end of shelled egg remove yolk eccQmmodations different types and mash yolks and end slices eftestaurants from ones where with the ham Worcestershire ~ can get eggs toast and cofshy oniorisalt mustard pepper and Iee-tor 65c io the elite gounnet cream mill well and then use laavens that lure 1be patrons flo fill hollows of egg whites with theIr haute cuisine and I) COOk broccoli as label dfshy~Hy the bighllghts of the city recls (if f~n) or in a small ampat tourist shbUldnt misa am9unt of wBtell Until tender ISald highUght were even catoeshymzed - tba JastantlJ tile

if yf

I) J I

EVERYBODYS GOTTA EAT Pfc~Charles Richards of Pittson Pa s-hares his C-ratio~~ w~th fatigue-hatted Httle Vietnamese boy in a villag~ near Saigon where Richards outfit the 1st Battalion 27th Infantry 25th Inshy

fan try Division was on a sweeping oPeration Jleoar the Vietnamese capital ~C Photo

We Like It Here Milwaukee Neighborhood Committee Works

To Prevent Panic Selling-MILWAUKEE (NC) - Some

strange signs are beginning to appear in the windows of homes around St Agnes parish on the citys North Side

Theyre being displayed by persons interested in stabilizing the area They call attention to a program that aims to reduce house turnover so that home and area values can be mainshytained

In the eyes of the organizers the prgram is designed to preshyvent panic selling

The signs read Were Not Moving to SUburbia-We Like It Here and This House Is NOT For Sale

Theyve been prepared by an

NUlises Cound~ Mee~

MOlY ]] at St Annes The Diocesan Council of Cathshy

olic Nurses will hold their Spring Plenary Meeting on Satshyurday May 11 at st Annes School of Nursing Fall River

The business meeting and election of officers scheduled for 4 oclock will be followed at 5 by an address by Rev Donald J Bowen assistant at St Marys Norton

Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament will be given at 630 and the banquet will follow at 715

Reservations must be made with Mrs Ann Fleming 228 Oak Grove Ave Fall River no later tlban Sunday May 5

melting the butter in a saucepan and stirring in flour mustard saltand pepper Remove from heat and stir in the milk Re- tum to heat and cook until

thickened stirring constantly Add the grated cheese and stir -tmtil smooth

In amiddot cassetrGle dish arrange gt

the cooked broccoli Stand the deviledmiddot eggs with stuffed ends

up between and on broccoli pieces Pour the sauce over aU-

area stabilization committee for distribution in homes in an area populated by about 40000 pershysons about one-third Negroes

The signs are one of the means by which we hope to dis~ourage unethical real estate salesmen according to Anshythony L Silva acting commitshy

middottee chairman and a member of St Agnes parish

Fear Tactics

He explained at rl~ent meetshyings that the program is not sponsored by a religious group Nor are the committee apshyproaching the problem on a color basis but 18ther as a matshyter of economics

Our aim is to restore confishydence in the area and countershyact unethical salesmen since they tend to operate on fear tactics said Silva

The immediate goal of the group is to make its efforts known to all residents of the area by establishing a network of block contacts

Persons who have expressed interest in the program represhysent St Agnes Roosevelt Drive Presbyterian Garden Homes Evangelical Lutheran Augusshytana Evangelical Lutheranmiddot Siloah Lutheran amI Elim Tabshyernacle churches

THE ANCHOR-Thursday May 2 1968 -------------=

Teaching Sisters To Get Raise

DALLAS (NC) - Bishop Thomas K Gorman of DallasshyFort Worth has approved a salshyary raise for Sisters teaching in parochial schools which was recommended by the diocesan board of education

In a letter to all pastors Bishshyop Gorman stated As of Sepshytember the base minimum salshyary for each Sister in regular service to the local parish will be $1500 per year

Enclosed with -the letter was an agreement signed by Bishop Gorman fM the signature of each pastor and the major supeshyrior of the religious order of Sisters serving his school

The agreement provides thllgtt the parish pay the stated base minimum salary to eac~ Sister provide a convent and its upshykeep along with utilities inshycluding a telephone an automoshybile and its maintenance and health insurance

Sister Caroleen of the Schooi Sisters of Notre Dame diocesan superintendent of schools said the increase in the minimUm base salary Is fbe first such since 1959 when it was set at

$960

Withdraw Missionaries From Angola Territory

NEW YORK (NC) - The United Church of Christ and the United Church of Canada are w~thdrawingthe majoritr of theIr missionaries from the Portuguese West African ter- ritory of Angola

Dr Alford Carleton execushytive vice-president of the United Churchs Board for World Ministries whose headshyquarters are hele said the acshytion was being taken because the Portuguese government is apparently seeking tomiddot extinshyguish Protestant missionary acshytivity in Angola

The two churches have withshydrawn all missionaries III total of 12 whose terms of service had already been extended for more than a year beyond the normal term The missionaries wiJI apply for readmission

Portuguese administrators have in the past given assurshyances that re-entry permits would be given but Dr Carleshyton said there have been inshystances of denials of re-entry permits to missionaries

BlUE R~ION

LAUNDRY 273 CENTRAL AVE

NEW BEDFORD ~

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992-6216

-ObtainsFreedo ForRefugees

MADRID (NC)--Amiddot group t1ti youth leaders who spent a nig~

middotin a church to avoid a I~est ~ police was released la~

through the help of Auxilia~ Bishop Angel Mortll Figuls ~ Madrid

The youths had taken refureg in the church of Our Lady ~ Montana in suburban MorataJaiJ after police raided a mccting bll a parish building which th0 youths said was a house of thQ people of God Q

The meeting which had b~

announced in the padsh tIbQ previous Sunday as a conferenltcO on Ohristian doctrine was SUib rounded by police on suspiciolQf that it was an illegal meetin~ of workers oommimiddotttees-inde-o pendent labor organizations Tb() police arrested a Catholic woramp ers leader Dannen Ruiz Abo-1 gado Juan Canet a lawyer a~ Father Juan Jose Maria Bltlllesashyteros as they left the meetin- The three were late releasecA

However middotthe Y9uths atten+shying the conference fled to ~

church to avoid arrest and ve mained there until BishOJll Morta arrived and obtainecll

their freedom after negotia~ with the police

10 ~H~ ANCHORshy )hursday May2 bull 19~8 (

- - bull )

Sup~me C~ult Qars Obscenity

For Youth WASHINGTON (NC)

For more than two years the Supreme Court has made it clear thatin the eyes of the law obscenitymiddot is a sometime thing its distribution ~o adults nearly impossible to regulate without endangering the Conshystitutions guarantees of free speech and opinion

But over the same two years the Court has indicated thai it might be possible to control the

availability of obscene books and films to the young and in

1967 it issued an op~n invitashycmiddotmiddot tion to the nations ~a~yers to find the right cases an4 the right arguments tot~stmiddotthis middotmiddotview _

This year the cases were found and the Supreme Court did what most observers thought it would do it permitted states and citiesto control distribution of obscene material to youngshylIJters - providect It drlws the lines finely and tightly

It returrled from amiddotJtwo-week recess to rule thatmiddotmiddot NeW York middot States law barring phsons un- Organization Starts ~er 17 from buying smut met ~ middotthe ~e~t~nd tpatrgtalIas1s middot~lm CLEANUP FatherDetm6d P McDermott of New Yorks lower East ~ide St Housingmiddot Program

elasslflcatlOn law undet whIchmiddotmiddotmiddot bull - bull WASHINGTON (NC) - ~1 bull

minors areprevented from see- BrIgId spansn pas8~s o~t pamt ~nd prusJ1e~ to sl1rpl1r~a~ volunteers who particIpated m Church-sponsored nonprofit 0IJ)00

lt ingsome movies didnot ih~ AprIl ZO ()peratJoA Cleanup It was estImated that 50000 urban people of all baek- ganization here haS launched II

middotThemiddotopinions shoUld go li-long grounds w~re joined in the WOllk by 5000 suburbanites in cleaning andpaintin~ aJong~ousing program Wider whiClli way toward clearing up a con- 46 Streets NC Photo It hopes to purchase 322 sl~ lrti-tutional atmosphefe which at homes rehabilitate them aDCil middottimes hasbeen no Clearer thanmiddot 0 000 p J resellmiddotthem to poor families DiP

the air around the Supreme middotMmiddotore ThanmiddotS1 middotinGmiddot reo CIt Day rOJe ect del federal financing Courts building on a Pilrticu- The organization-Urban Beshylarly still slmlne~ day 1ew YOk middotPrmiddotelamiddotte Heomiddotds lomiddotmiddotn~Sectmiddot omiddotmiddotrmiddot-amiddot n Effort habilitation Corp~will begiul

While the Court in an 8-1 de- 1lIIII 1lIIII the program with therehabi eision written by Justice Thur- tation of nine row houses whiob 000 Marshall-his first major ~ NEW YORK (NC)Jt- Wall z At the end of tbe da~ they ~teas of densest poverty ~Jl it will purchase from the ~ epiiiion-tlirewout the Dallal greatday for New York-one ~ Bat down togethermiddot at tables iyIanhatian andthe Bronx _ development Lanmiddotdmiddot Agen~ filmmiddot clasSification law because hard work oonstructiye dia- str~ng tile length of streets to Last SumJl1er in its thitd year Washi~gtonurban refewal tfwas unduly vague even there logueand happy celebration eat a meal of celebraHon pro- of successful operation the thorny agency The RIA apo K upheld the right of goer~- -Along 45 streets in the Man- vided and prepared by people ~rojec(wastlIreatenea b~ out- proved sale of the houses to ~

Jnen~ to prote~t the Y0llng 1~m hattan and Bronx ooroughs of the block 1gtreak of violence in East Har- group at a purchasemiddot price ~ ~slble bad mfluenc~ some 50000 Negroes Puerto Many in~olved said they felt lem $26100

Different Directions Ricans Italians Jews Slavs the most important aspect of the To counteract riot threats Purchase and rehabilitatiOll middotIt did so without p~ssing on Orit~nt~ls and eople~f otmiddothe whole projeot was not renova- Msgr Fox organized East Har- work which will be done bIT

themiddot meri~~or lackof merits nationalities were joined by middottion but relationship It gave lem peace processions For five Negro contractors and involVG of the film involved but hinted some 5000 guest volunteers _ an opportunity at a time middotof nghts more than 1000 old and young Negroes as apprentice6 middot111at had the law been suffi- from suburbia and other middle alienation and fear between YQung Puerto Ricans walked will be carried out under ~

eielitly explicit about what con- class areas black and white rich and poor through their streets with ban- $]37000 mortgage provided ~ stihites proper or improper con- They spent the day c1eani1g inner city and suburbia oung nersmiddot flowrs singing songs the International BrothelhooCl

duct the Dallas censors would renovating and decorating the and old for people to meet one carrying candles and standing of Electrical Workers and guall shy have had no trouble iicei1sing inner city streets and alleys another as persons in an at- up for peace hope and love anteed by the Federal Housins middotthe film buildings and residences 10- mosphere of work play and La~gely through their efforts Administration under its 221pound(

Instead thc Court said they gether the men women and accomplishment peace was restored to the area program were set adrift in a boundless children residents wOlked shoul- Its one way to make real sea and arrived at their con- der to shoulder with priests what Dr Martin Luther King elusion--that the film should be nuns laymen and women vol- envisioned when he said I Archbishop Greets shown to adults only - from unteers They cleaned back- have a dream as East Harlemshy DEBROSS OIL many different directions yalds and basements did car- ite Valentine Haddock described Armenian Patriarch ~uch a situation is wide open pen try work made plumbing all the people helping one anshy NEW YORK (NC) ~Archshy co

te abuses not the least of which repairs painted doors windows other to become not even just bishop Terence J Cooke ofNew would be a drift among film- and building facades friends-relatives York welcomed His Holiness Heating Oils makers toward the most innocu- At the end of each block a Peace Processing Vasken I Supreme PatIiarch ous and the totally inane The large and colorful mural was Cleaned out basements and andCatholicos of all Armenians and Burnersresult The vast wasteland that painted on a wall depicting the backyards on streets are to be at an ecumenical service in St some have described in refer- good things happening transformed later again by Patricks cathedral 365 NORTH FRONT STREET ence to another medium might street residents and guest vol- It marked the first time the

NEW BEDFORDbe a verdant paradise in com- Award Ecumenical unteers working in partnelship supreme spiritual leader of the parison into vest pocket parks basket- Armenian church had been reshy

But because the law was Theology Diploma ball courts little theaters reme- ceived in a Catholic cathedral in ivague said Marshall it does KAMPALA (NC)-A theolo- dial schools and teenage neigh- the United States JIlot follow that the Constitution gical diploma of the University borhood clubs requires absolute fleedom to of East Africa jointly recognized This non-sectarian project exhibit every motion picture of by the Catholic and Anglican was instituted by Msgr Robert every kind at all times and all Churches in East Africa has been J Fox New York archdiocesan places awarded for the first time coordinator for Spanish com-

The first four Uganda students munity action who four years to receive the diploma fare An- ago originated a creative comshy

Schedule Unveiling glicans munity action program Sum-The theological diploma repre- mer in the City now operatingOf Pope1s Statue sents an agreement between out of 26 store fronts in eight

FATIMA (NC) -A 12-footshy Catholics and Anglicans over the high statue of Pope P~lUl VI syllabus and subjects of the theshy

wili be unveiled Monday May ological course However such TRI CITY13 at the Marian shrine here on an agreement does not iriclude the first anniversaly of the any changes in doctrinal teach- BOILER REPAIR COJontiffl visit to the shril)e ing by the churches Each stu- SLAB BRIDGE ROAD Ihe st~tue depicts Pope Paul dent ~oJl~ws th~ course accold- ASSONET MASS 02702 i

- ~ri~ellngmiddot in prayc 1eiore ~ a~ ing to th~ doctrines middotof hismiddot remiddot Tel 644middot55~6 image of Our Lady of FaJimashy ~pectiYemiddotchurpoundh _ BOILERS RE-TUBED

bull ~ Ali tlhe~ middotmiddotbmiddoti~~psmiddot of P~rtugalI The churches alsoagreed tJ1at S EP A I are expected middotto attendmiddot the un themiddot ina in emphgtIS -Inmiddot th tli_e TUBE R teED

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THE ANCHORshyThursday May 2 1968

Portland Prelote Stresses Crisis

In Education PORTLAND (NC) - Co- )0

adjutor Bishop PetermiddotL Ger- BATON ROUGE (N2)-Tho ety apostolic administrator Louisiana AFL-CIO app Dved tl

of the Portland diocese des- ~ resolution calling for s ~ supshycribed the grave and serious 1 bull port to children attendi 3 nonshycrisis in regard tQ finances and c middot~lmiddot ~ i public schools at its COil ~ntion personnel in the field of Cath- ~H 1 here oUc education at a press con- l~ The resolution endar d the ference here proposal that tuition supple-

While affirming the desira- ments for the teaching oj nOiF bility of Catholic education the religious subjects bc paid Maine bishop pointed to the toward the education of chill-gt serious problems in financing dren regardless of race creed and staffing a system of schools or religion in state alproved which aims at providing a Cath- non-public schools which me~ olic education for all children all the requirements of law whose parents desire it He Emile Comar executive ~ middotnoted both the rising costs of rector of the Louisiana reder2lshyeducation and the dlOp in voca- tion Citizens for EducHtionllll tions and in the number of Reli- Freedom said It is gmtifyin(l gious available for teaching that the state AFL-CIO in tho

Bishop Gerety n~ted During adopted resolution recognizecll the past ten rears six Catholic __ -_~scgtbull~- Jf the need of parents with ct~ schools in this state alld 11 dren in non-public schools

Catholic elementaly schools CARDINAL J~EGER IN AFRICA The retired ~rchbishop of Montreal Paul-Emile Tuitions continue to dse ant1 have closed their doors During Cardmal Leger who has dedicated his Iif e to work with the poor in Africa is continu- taxes are becoming increasingJy41 the same period we have scen II t th h fl k f d f higher and the combination eithe enrollment in our Catholic a y mee mg WI IS oc or ISCUSSIons 0 conditIons m the DIocese of Yaounde Cam- the two has placed a lremeiF schools decrease by 25 per cent eroun NC Photo dous financial burden on thill

middot~i~~~i~e~~~~~Ct~I~~O~Cmiddotard-nal Leger Works for Afmiddotr-ca Lepers -n~~nt of the states populashymg statements Tbe labor organizations resa-

Expand Quality lution noted The contributioJ)fl

The middotsystem be Seeks to Bring SpirituQI Material Aid which these schools havecannot ex- made panded beeause of staffing to the state have long been ree problems financi~l deuromands YAOUNDE (NC)-lt is said The fact that he left behipd COmmodate himself to the new ognized by the public and~middot

and theincreasing costs of pres- that when Paul Emile Cardinal one of the most important dJ- environment and to be ready public officials ent day education Leger former arehbishop of oceses in the world does not fig) to I work effeetivelr It added that the parents bl

Schools must be consoUdated Montreal arrived at the lepro- ure in their thinking but theymiddot The eardinal is already famil- these tuition supported schooJJ wherever hldicated for maxi- s~rium of Nianing in Senega appreciate the sacrifice that is iar with the specific plOblcms of have repeatedly demonstrateflJ mum use of the available Reli- last Dec IS the lepers looked involvedmiddot in leaving his nfltive the lepers villages He thinks their support of both public ani I gious persoJmel at their fingers to see if a mir- country and adapting to a Dew that they need good pharmacies non-public education to the

We mustmiddot concentrate on ex- acle was going to happen and environment and is concerned with CHing for benefit of all Louisiana eh~ cellence in the schools we have they were going w be instan- Cardinal Leger has put him- all types of sicknesses He sees dren Where this is not possible the taneously cured It was in fact self at the service of Archbishop a need for wells powelhouses bishop said the schools in- the first time that the lepers JeanZoa of Yaounde He is food suppliers and medicinesmiddot of Brotherhood Lackvolved will have to be closed had seen a cardinal learning one of the languages various kinds

We must greatly evpand the ri1l~ cardinal however through of Cameroun the one that is Menace to Peace~ Men Not Outcasts S(l()pe and quality of our reli- middotworks of chari1y has for a long most widely spoken in the reshy VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pe~gious education proglams reach- time been concerned withmiddot the middotgion He thinks that jcent wiJl What makes the cardinal parshy is still menaced by questions laquofing out to all age groups lepers M~~y of the houses in take two years for him lamp ale- tkularly admired is that he reshy

prestige and an insufficient senstlBishop Gerety announced the leprosanum here at Yaoul)de gards the lepers as men and not of human brotherhood PQ~that he is creating a task force have been built through his - as outcasts He knows that many Paul VI told thousands of isi~to study religious education gifts The same is tgtrue of sev- Pope Asks Respect lepers are severely mutilated tors gathered in St Pete

plograms in the diocese He eral leprosaria of the Ivory For Human Rights and Cfln no longer take their SQuare for a Sunday noon blesvshywill ask the group he said to Coast Dahomey and Camerouf place in society It is because of ingmake reco~mendations ~on- The cardinl i6 still in the VATICAN CITY (NC)--Jt is middotthis that he seeks to bring them

eerning how the limitedre- stage of making contacts in the vain to proclaim h~man rights material and spiritual aid Speaking from a window ovei shysources of the diocese can best three leprosaria here unless everythlllg IS done ~o He also gives thought to the looking the square Popc P~u1 be used to ploovide an effec- Cardinal Leger does not want ensure the duty of respecting prevention of the disease If cleclared We must support willi tive religious education for the to impose either his aid or him- them by all people everywhere leprosaria are well organized it our hopes that cause (of peace) total community of adults lind self on anyone He has said re- l1ld for all people Pope Paul will perhaps be possible to wage which so many desire and proshychildren peatedly that he does not want VI declared In a letter to the In- a campaign to eradicate the mote with a sense of impartiality

He said he will also ask for to be a burden and tl1at he ternational Conferenee on Hu- disease completey and justice with true love ofi reeommenltlations on the best wants to be regarded as a simple man Rights meeting in Tehran The cardinals realism aston- freedom and of respect for su1ishy

fering peoplesuse of the dioceses Religious priest Iran ishes many Africans who like personnel Disinterested Help The lettel signed by the Pope to live from day to day and who

~-------------bull That is why the Africans ad- was sent to Father Theodore do not like their customs to be mire him Moslems and Chris- Hesburgh CSC president of upset The cardinal understands tians agree that his is an exam- Notre Dame University and head that the Africans must be shoWn pIc of disinterested help that is of the papal delegation to the that aid is not directed at deshynot often seen in Africa ongress The meeting is being stroying their customs but at

held on the 20th anniversary of bringing them a better standard the United Natio)ls Declaration of living

Workers Charges of Human Rights and in conshyjunction with the International Reject CelibacyDenied in Germany Human Rights Year

ROERMOND (NC)-TwcllyshyBONN (NC)-Charges by the The papal letter dec111red one young Dutch priests havewomens branch of the Indian With all men of goodwill we told Bishop Petrus Moors ofYoung Christian Workers shall follow with great interest this Netherlands See that they(YCW) that living and working ~his conference in Tehran which can no longer accept the plicstlyconditions for Indian girls means to formulate and prepare a celibacy obligationtraining as nurses in West Gershy program of measures to be taken

many were unsatisfactory were on the prolongation of this Hushy denied here man Rights Year

The Rev Hubert Debatin Racial discrimination raises soProtestant minister who initi shy

many troubles social injustice F L COLLINS amp SONSated a program of nursing economic misery and ideologicaltraining for girls from Indias oppression so many revolts that INCORPORATED 1937Kerala state saId that the Indishyrecourse to violence as a meansan government had ordered an

investigation of the complaints to right these wrongs to human The Indian embassy here howshy dignity is a grave temptation ever refused to comment (The Development of Peoples)

Rev Mr Debatin said he visshyON CD HOARD Alexandshy Ited the embassy and told offi shy

er P Tureaud Sr chief cials that the charges wer~ completely false Despite thecounsel for the Louisiana no comment by the embassy

branch of the National Assoshy it is reliably repOrted that emshyciation for theAd~ancement bassy officials did visit several of Colorelti People tNAACP) hospitals and questioned Indian

girlS about th~ir living and beeame the first Negro elecshyworking conditions ted to the Catholic tJniver~ The niinist~r iJaidthe Indian

sity board of trustoos NC yew will be asked to WithdrawPhoto ~ alleamplatioNi~

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12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 2 1968

C~~e$ ~~Ergy Role in Sreg~Hrch F9f ~~ Crisis Sc~~tm(ln

By Msgr George G Higgins The bighop of a middle-siood eastern diocese recently

gnnounced at ceremonies memorializing Martin Luther King Jr that the diocese will spend a substantial portion of its annual Development Fund to improve the condition ef the Negro bullbullbull The money poslible that even those Cahoshyhe was at pains to empha- lies (and Protestants) who are size will not be gpent pater- most vigorously opposeq to

wilistically but in close 00- clerical involvement in social operation with local Negro and economic issues are nevershyleaders He said that his com- theless in fevor of using church mitffiimt wi 11 funds as seed money to develshylTeceiVe the op projects for the benefit of bacJcing of the the poor in general and for areas Catholics poor Negroes in partiCUlar I make tbisDisconcerting Fact ~ o m mit - I would hope of course that ment he as- this might prove to be the case aert1d confi- but only time will tell lIIent that our Meanwhile the fact that Catholic people such a high percentage of Cathshyshare this love olies and protestants are 00

-m Ii d concern record as being opposed to That the bishop the middotchurches getting involved felt it necessary in political and social issues is to make the latter statement for rather disconcerting to put it the record might lead one ~ as mil~ly as possible suspeet that in point of factmiddot be I say tliisas one who can symshyantiCfpated that some of hi$ pathizewith thoseCatholicsor Catholic people would object to Protestants or Jews who object his 0 decision and was mereIi to certain types of clerical inshyWying to neutralize their op~ volvement which either ignore mtion in advance or to put it the complexities of the political morecrudely was trying to ~rocess or tend to oversimplify beat them to the punc~ sO to the application of moral prinei-Bjpeak pIes to complex social and ecoshy

I Expert Opposition pomic problems or finally tend Be that as it may a recent to leave the impression that

ampallup Poll on the attitude of Clerics have a monopoly on the Cathdlics 3lld Protestants with regard to the involvement of their churches and their clergy in political and social issues would seem to suggest thatshylIIlless his diocese is the rare exceptl(~n that proves the rule -~he bIShop can exp~t a cershyiau~ amount of 0PPoSIb~)D from a slzable JIllnonty of his Cathshyooc people

lftY-Seven per cent of Cathshyclies res~ndmg m the Gallu~ survey said that the churcti~~ should not get involved with 35 per cent statmg that t~e d1~rch~~ sho~d express SOCIal enS pO~~Ical Vle~s

~gn Icantly l~ was found ~at more Catholics than Pro~-

Virtue of political prudence or have been granted ethical inshysights thatmiddot have been denied to other mortals

S~rious Obligation It is one thing however to

demand that clerics stay within the limits of their o~ compeshytence in the political order and quite another thing to try to muzzle them or to deny that they have any role at all to play in the field of public policy In the case of civil rights for exatitple they havemiddot a serious

Gbligation to teach the truth as they see it

To do so in any meaningful woay tlley must at times move beyond the realm of general

0Stants thmk ~hat the ~hurlt~esprinciples into the area of spe- should n~ get ~volved ~n soc~al and polItlcal Issues Fifty-~wo lPOerlledcefnt of the Protesta~ts P avored mvolvment whIle 42 ~er cent disagreed

Hadden Study Contrarirwise however a

mudy released during the same week in which middotthe Gallup findshymgs were made public found

ntat in all caSes Protestantsmiddot were more vigorous in their opshyposition to social action by clergymen thaI) either Roman Catholics or Jews

The latter study directed by ~effrey K Hadden a sociologist at Western Reserve University in Cleveland was summarized In ~onsiderabledetail by Edwaro R iFiske in an article entitled -Cl~rgy and Civil Rights in the editorial section of the Sunday Ap~il 21 issue of the New York linles

Since the Gallup and HadGen Alrveys dealt specifically with the right of the clergy and the ehurches to speak o~t on social and political issues (civil rights tor example) and not on the role of the churches in financing programs aimed at improving U1t ~ot of Negroes their findshyings do not necessarily m~ ofoou~E that the bishop referrect to a~ove will encounter oppe-

cifies~ even at the risk of a~tagshyonizing those Catholics who disshyagree ith them

This does not mean that clershyies or other representatives of official church bodies should shortcircuit the political procshyess by trying to force their own solutions on the body politic by means of heavy-handed authorshyitarian edicts

If they were to shirk this reshysponsibility or run awoay frOm this challenge for fear of antagshyonizing a minority (or for that matter eyen a majority) of their people they would be unshyworthy of their calling

-This having been said howshyever itshould be noted that clericS and other representatives of offlCiilI church bodies alSo

have an obllgation to keep their methods of teaching under conshystant review

Wo~ CUt Out We cannot automatically as-middot

Sume in other words that all of those who object to clerical involvement in political and soc~lissues are necessarily in

HEADS NCEA Bishop Raymond J 9allagher of Lafayette Ind was elected president general of the Natshyional Catholic Educational Association at the associa- tions 65th annual conven- tion in San Francisco NC Photo

Venerate Fatima Statue in Brazil

LISBON (NC)-Manuel Cardshyinal Goncalves Cerejeira patri- arch of Lisbon imd Bishop Joao Pereira Venancio of Leiria whose diocese includes the Marshyian shrine of Fatima returned here after participating in threeshyday ceremonies in Brazil honorshying Our Lady of Fatima

They t~ok the statue of the -Pilgrim Virgin of Fatima with them to Brazil

At Sao Paulo they took part in Portuguese - Brazilian Communshyity Day celebrations At Inhangshyabau and at Rio de Janei1G thousands joined them in ven- erating the statue

The patriarch and Bishop Venshy

ancio were accompanied in Brazil by the rector of the Fat-middot i m a shrine Msgr Antonio Borges

_ sitiOJifrom any slgnificantnuili middot te~ which they caiiunder- pany a mernber of the Jew-middot

ber ~f his people for usin~ cii- stand and absorb jish fAith has neen elected GCeSaIl f~nds for the economic -Ifthis sho~d prove to be the to in bOardof +-~ t- and~ ~OCIal bettel1nent 01 the case we have our work cut out ~ bull wu~ ~ W

Wack citizens of his communitlT ~r~ in the montha ftbat lie the CaU~hc VnlverampliyNe ~~ other words it is quite aheiid middotPboto

~ ~

bad faith It may be in the case of some

r of tb~m at le9st we are at fault TRUSTEE BenJamin T ~ in the sense that we havent Iearned how to communicate the Rome president of aWaah Go~l meSsage to them in i n g ton construction oom-

The Servant Queen IiJ the Constitution on the Church we find the testimony of

Sacred Scripture and the Church Fathers combined with more recent pronouncements by the popes Mary the Mother of God an4 of the Redeemer was united to Him by a close inen soluble bond and waS accorded a special role in the mystery Qf the middotIncamiddotrnate Word that is in the economy of salvation

Whenmiddot Mary uttered the words of her Fiat she made a ~l eommitment to God so that He could carry out His de- slgus in middothermiddot Mary never took back hell ad of total surrender Dot even on the road to CalvarY lFrom that firstmiddot moment she devoted herself wholly to serving DM only her heavenly Fashyther and the Incarnate Word but also the whole human race lin the llncarnation Our Blessed Mother first brought Christ to the world Anell that is precisely what she would have 70U do aUmiddot your life-bring Christ to the world

Ev~n after the AScenslon she loyally and steadfastly camiddotrried out~~r role aCting as spirit1lI mother to the beloved disciple anli ~~ ne~rn Cl1urch~ With good reason then we can say tha~~e wJole life of the Lords humble handtnaid~from the moment IIhewas porn to the present-is one of loVing seZvice to her cltildren what gzeater example and what ~tei model could y~ chqose to imitate in Oilder to fulfill your ta~k as a Christian called to~ove and -to serVe your poor 8iKl sUffering bro~ers arqupd the world

You must DOW take over Mars task~ You are the door through which Christ enters the world You muSt receive the Lon and bear Him in 70ur heart sO thaamp He rnA7 beeo~e the heartmiddot ofmiddot your life Then His love Jiis goodne~ Dis pity for the multitude middotwill shine through you into the world Then He will smile through your eyes Then He will help with your hanels Then He will comfort with your goodness Then He will relive in your pers~n His life of long ago for the sake of todayS desperate humanity

In this the month dedicated to the Mother of the church show your love for her by making her task your task by sacrificing to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith-to help those of her children who are in such need

SAlLVATioN and SERviCE lUe the work of The Soclet7 il~r ~~ Propagati~n of th~ Faith Please cut Gut this column llInd sen~ your of~ering to Right Reverend EdwardT OMeara Nationll-ll Director 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 Or directly to your local Diocesan Director BU Rev Msgr Raymond TConsid~e 3611 North Main Street Fall River Massachusetts e~7~omiddot

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13 New Jersey Grand Jury Absolves Police of Deaths During Rioftong

NEWARK (NC) - A special and charged it with lcHrity m Essex Cotmty grand jury inves- permitting some of lots material tigating the deaths of 28 people to i1all into private hands which during rioting in this city last misused il Summer absolved po1dce laquol Reporting on the deaths it blame iO the deatbs in a pre- found that three were not conshysentment which rebuked an nected with the rioting that anti-poverty agency for failure eight resulted from wounds inshyto cooperate willi law enforce- curred while participating in ment agencies criminal acts that nine of those

The presentment was issued killed were apparently innocent after the jury had heard more bystanders that two apparently than 100 witnesses over an resulted from sniper fire that eight-week period It said there two were from accidental was insufficient evidence to shooting and that one could not warrant indictment in any of be classified the cases presented to it al- Another special grand jury is though an earlier trial resulted now being paneled to carry out hi the conviction of a man for an investigation of Newarks fatally shooting a woman municipal government This inshy

In the final analysis the vestigation was recommended ~ury concluded the responsi- by the governors commission bility for the loss of life and which reported a pervasive property that is the inevitable feeling of corruption in Newshyproduct of rioting and mass ark lawlessness cannot be placed upon those whose duty it is to enforce and protect the freedom Convention lliead of our society

Courage Restraint N E MonsignorIt rests squarely upon the

MANCHESTER (NC)-Msgrhoulders of those who for euroolin A MacDonald presidentwhatever purpose incite and of the Manchester diocese senateparticipate in riots and the of priests has been selected asflouting of law and order in chairman of the national con-complete disregard of the rights stiiutional convention of theand well-being of the vast mashyproposed U S priests councilsjority of our citizens organization 110 be held May 20Although the presentment and 21 in Chicago leveled some small criticisms at

I1he monsignor earlier hadpolice actions it generally upshybeen elected as the Bostonheld the work of law enforceshyprovince delegate to a 29-memshyment officers and this was in ber ad hoc steering committeecontrast to the report of the for the convention When ill wasNew Jersey (()vernors Comshydecided 110 limicent the steeringmission on Civil Disorder commimiddotlltee 110 8 members thewhich was highly critical of the

police JJlQIlsignor was elected to this group then ohosen as chairmanWith some exceptions the

jury said police both local and Msgr MacDonald said the state together with National purposes of the proposed NashyGuardsmen acquitted themselves tional Federation of Priests with courage and restraint in Councils are to promote priestly the early stages of the riot brotherhood by faciJi1ating comshy

munion among priests councilsPoor Judgment to provide a forum for the disshyThe grand jury said the poshycussion of pastoral matters tolice were handicapped by lack enable priests councils to speakof training appropriate equipshywith a common representativement effective direction and voice to proD101e and collabshyexperience in dealing with the orate in programs of pastoraltype of situation in which they research and action to impleshywere involved ment the reriewal of priestlyThe jury did say that in the life to provide the means forlater stages of the disturbances priests councils united nationshythere were examples of poor ally to cooperate with the tityjudgment excessive use of fireshythe ~eligious the bishops andarms and D manifestation of with others in addressing thevindictiveness that eannot be needs of the Church in the modshytolerated in law enforceD1ent ern World and to do whateverpersonnel is necessary to carry out theseAD10ng the recommendations purposesit made was one that looting be

Members of the Priests Senshyeffectively controlled at its ate of the Diocese of Fall Riverearliest manifestations It also have sent suggestions regardingcalled for the improveD1ent and the proposed organization toupdating of equipment and said Monsignor MacDonaldthe use of chemicals and nonshy

lethal gases should be explored and considered Priests Paid SllEme

The jury called for improveshyment in police-community relashy Salary as Laborers tions and said there is no place PARIS (NC) - The averagefor abusive language or ill salary of priests in the Paris treatment of any group of citi shy region is about the saD1e as thatzens Like the governors COD1shy of an unskilled laborer accordshymission it deplored the use of ing to figures contained in thepersonally-owned weapons by first public budget report of thepolice Paris archdiocese

The anti-poverty agency crit shy The archdiocesan operatingicized was Newark Legal Servshybudget the report showed isices Project a branch of the $440000 a year most of whichUnited Community Corp which is for the salaries of 384 nonshyhelps ghetto residents with legal parish priests more than a thirdproblems

retired This indishyCharges Laxity of whoD1 are cates an average of less than $1-The jury accused it of failing 000 a year to cooperate in post-riot invesshy

Parishes pay direclly the 600tigations said the character of it taken were parish priests but their base salshystatements had

inadequate and ary is only about $50 a monthunprofesSional Honorariums for baptisms marshyriages and special Masses add

Receives Admiral about an equal amount to this VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope sum but pcrivate requests for

Paul VI received in audience Masses are declining Parish Adm Joseph Edet Akinwale priests send to the archdiocese Wey of the Nigerian Navy who the honorari~s of Masses they had told a press conference that coannot celebrate In 1964 this he hoped to present a message amounted to about 22000 Masses from the Nigerian government a year now it is only about three on the Biafra siiuatiolL ~middotfourmiddot thousand~

r THE ANCHORshyThursday May 2 1968

I

Schoo~s Exp~ore

Dual E~l~~rMJcemlt LOUISVILLE (NC)-Catholie

school officials here are trying to work out dual enrollment agreeD1entS with public schoo officials in two locations

If agreement is reached stushydents at Flaget High School here and at Bethlehem Academy may benefit next Fall from the proshygram

Moves toward the dual enrQllshyment concept were made possishyble when the Kentucky attorney general issued an opinion which said in effect that public schools might get state financial assistance for students enrolled part-time in public schools

Under the plan students in private schools could take some subjects in public schools and others in their own schools

Famiddotther Thomas P Casper Louisville diocesan superintendshyent of schools said he is submitshyting dual enrollment proposalpoundNEWMAN CLUBS MEET At oonferenee of Newman to the Louisville Bardstown andClubs from area colleges representatives of Fall River Dishy Nelson County boards of educa~

reese included from left Walter La Rosa Our Lady ill Mt tion Carmel parish Seekonk a student at Bristol Community While action on the roposaw College Lydia Rocha St Michaels Fall River BCC Rev is up U the public boards-the

attorney generals opinion grantvHarold J Wilson BOC Newman Club chaplain Morgan permission but does not force

Childs St Patricks Falmouth SMTL ootion-Father Casper said he if very pleased that there are possibilities open now for deshyveloping dual enrollD1entReturns to Moscow Final form of any dual enroll shyment effort is still to be decided

Fr Dion Assumption College President But one such method treated in the attorney generals opinion

Named Apostolic Administrator is the leasing of space in Cathshyolic schools by public schoom

WORCESTER (NC) - Father a visiting Russian churchman and the operation of this spaceLouis F Dion AA president here Father Bissonnette is now as public school classroomsof AssuD1ption College here will academic dean at Assumption resign his post June 30 to be- College COD1e apostolic administrator in Father Dion had to wait more New Jersey Bishopthe Soviet Union and chaplain than three years after Father to American Roman Catholics Bissonnettes expulsion before Asks United Action in Moscow obtaining a Soviet visa enabling ATLANTIC CITY (NC) shy

Father Dion held the same him to go to Moscow via Paris Bishop George H Guilfoyle of posts in Russia from 1959 to in January 1959 Camden issued a call for united 1961 He served as assistant to Father Dion said he is looking action on the part of all of WJ the president and registrar of forward to his return to the to 36Sist our fellow man as Assumption College from 1962 Moscow post He bad not specifshy he helped dedicate a HUD1aJ until his appointment as presi- ically requested the assignment Resources Center aiD1ed at job dent ill June 1964 he said but it was offered to develpoment for some of this

He replaces Father Eugene him and he accepted it willingly resort areas 50000 poor LaPlante AA who returns to Powers of Bishop This nation has made treshythe Assumptionist Fathers The duties of chaplain Father mendous strides in the fields opound AD1erican province for reassign- Dion explained are not con- science industry business and ment after a three-year term fined to American Catholics medicine he said It is shameshy

ful that in view of all this proshySeventh to Serve living in Moscow They include gress we still have millions ofFather Dion is the seventh he said the entire foreign colshypeople who live in poverty andAmerican priest-all Assump- ony - the diplomatic corps wanttionists-to serve in Moscow un- newspaper personnel and tour-

Bishop Guilfoyle said theder the terms of the 1933 Roose- ists Camden diocese will contributevelt-Litvinov agreement estab- Since there ar(~ no European

$1000 to the new center to belishing diploD1atic relations be- priests-or priests of any other nationality-in Moscow serving used for whatever program the

tween the U S and the USSR in the capacity of chaplain he board of directors decides hi He was replaced in 1961 by said the American chaplain needed Father Joseph Richard AA ministers to the spiritual needs who served four years in the of Catholics attached to the post staffs of embassies and legations

His iD1D1ediate predecessor accredited to the Soviet governshy FAIRHAVENwas Father Georges Bisslgtnnette ment AA who was expelled in The post of apostolic adminisshy LUMBERMaTch 1955 by the Soviet gov- trator Father Dion said inshy

COMPANYernment in retaliation for U S volves all the powers and funcshyrefusal to prolong the visa of tions of a bishop except ordina~

tion and consecration of bishops Complete line It is assigned to a priest usuallyAtlanta Archdiocese Building Materials in areas where there is DO

Joins Equal Housing hierarchy who is then dimiddotrectly responsible to the Holy See 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVENATLANTA (NC)-The lllChshy Father Dion expects to arrivediocese of Atl~lnta has joined in Moscow in early August he 993-2611more than 50 metropolitan At- said

lan-ta organizations and indi- viduals as co-spo~sors of the Atlanta Metropoli tan COmmit- bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull~

tee on Equal Opporunity ill Housing

HThe objective of the confer- BISAILLONS ence will be primarily educashytional Father Noel C Burtenshy GARAGEshaw ehancellor of the arch- diocese and member of the execu-tive committee said 24-Hour Wrecker

He added We expect this dialogue and interChange will establish middotnecessary communicashy 653 Washington Street Fairhaven tion and provide Some answers 994-5058~ the housing problems facing reater Atlanta bull

Thanks Catholics For Refugee Aid

VATICAN - CITY (NC)-NearMsgrEllis Relates Hist~ry middotmiddotEastmiddotwelfare work of U S Cathshyolics has been praised by Pope Paul VL0+ Training for Priesthood

Such a message in the Popes By Rt Rev Msgr Jobs S Kennedy

The publication of a book by Monsignor John Tracy Ellis founder and dean of a new school of American Cath~

lti)lic churchhistory is always a weloome event This is true even when the book is among his minor works SuCh is Essays in Seminary Educoshytion (Fides Notre Dame Inshydiana 46556 $595) amiddot 001shylection of papers and address-C2S There is some repetition in Chese essays which were preshyared for vari shyeus occasions But it does not illessen the imshyact of a book which shows us n keen critical in tell i g ence brought to beal OIl a subject of bas i c imporshylance The hand rDf the historian iIs seen throughshy~t the book The first three essays are specifically historical

The firsi deals with the trainshylog or preparation of priests from the apostolic age to the ~ncil of Trent the second with the same subject from the time of Trent to ~ 1960s The tird is todevoted diocesan theological seminaries in the American Middle West 1811shy1889

A survey such 00 the author Makes in the two opening chap $ers is of especial interest beshyeause it brings out tile implausshyible but incontestable fact that b about the fimiddotI9t 1500 years of its existence the Church did DOt have anything even regem- bling a standard ~m of edushy_tion for the priesfil100d

Monastie Schools fttere were no special schoobl

lor the clergy before the time Of

The medieval universitieQ were foundedmiddot by the Church amd the clery p~yed ~ im ~rtant part m them But theyWei b d al ~ ed ti e y no means I e Jormiddot ushy(l3 on for the pnesthood SInce2he the I g I kemelyq 1~~~y~middotou~emiddot~~U Iersi~ of P middotkmiddotlmiddot5middot6

-Y arlS n ovv or ~(fears to complete thedoCtOriite ill theology Hence few priestsbenefited f-rom 4--

~ UDlversI Effective Response

lhe POr estate of the clergy~ glarmgly a~parent in the ens of the Renalsance and the Bef~rmation and this middotis prj shy

manly llttutablello educashytional defiCiency And evea hen the reforming Council of lIrent was launched it took 1~ ~rs ~efore a dec~ on clerical educa~on was achieved and a long tlme thereafter before its proVISIonS were carned out in practice

Monsignor Elliss treatment of

ticularly the institutions founded by St Vincent de Paul and Jean-Jacques Olier

These men win the authors praise for their effective reshygponseto a vital need But he does IlQt hesitate to lay to them ~e responsibility for some of the anti-intellectual bias which chamcterizea too many seminashyli13 in subsequent centuries

incredible NWIIlber In the United States some

quite ancient history was reshylived as the bishops of new dioceses had cleriea schools of sorts in their own homes But in the days of the very first bishop John Oarroll a real

had b - -bli hed semmary een - 9when the Sulpichms came to Baltimore in 1791 and founded St Marys

Later developmen1s are sumshymarized by Monsignor Ellis with attention to the various types of seminaries and the growth m numbers from 50 in 1668 to 571 iIn 1964 Thi6 last incredible number is indicative 0If tile regre~le proliferation Which led to needless duplicashytiOD inadequacy in quality and waste of resources

A test of middotthe exeellence of American seminaries is proshyposed by the atrtbor how many men of enduring reputation ba~ flhey produced The anshyswerJs that tIhe fteonl is not distinguished And much of the lelIlainder of the book is given 110 probing for reasons m exshyplanation Of this

Routine Teaeldllamp at Augustine whomiddotbecame Ihi Anierican ~mi~ry of -ilJhop of Hippo in 396 His 1be ft refleCted _ national

_

LlIFE MEMBERS Msgr John E Boyd chaplain left and Dominick Maxwell Jr right Grand Knight of Fall River Council 86 of the Knights of Columbus i~vest Jerome D Foley and Dr Joseph Carvalho as life members

~

Rural Ireland Charge Farmers Lack Formal Training

In Agriculture ROSSLARE (NC)The need Wbat chance had the boy who

for priests to be more involved left school at 14 of making the in social problems was stressed grade at farming ~he excepshyby 9peakers at the annual meetshy tional lads made it The rest are

~ e9tablished and mairitaineCi~ - In the future he said until 4- disregard cif inteli~tualqua1itY this is rectified Ninety-five nAr ~ his own household and had In ~y instances ~ty mem- ~ imitators ~gt bera ere apPOint~~ t~eir ~t of e5ent-day farmers Thereafter came the mona~f)le positi - middotth m rd io ~v~ had IlQ post-primary edushySchools initiated by St BenediCt ons WIlifo ~ga r cation NinetYofive per cent ofin thmiddot th proper qlla Ications MuCh of farmers have had middotno formal esnr cent~ the~ fllie teaching was rolltine and~rting in middotligrlcultllredr~ and-middot eP1scqp~ Scboo~ an~ dun Collateral reading _n6t middot~JFlWle Awayampnally themiddot medieval UDlvenu- middot~~d lib ties middot - ~ampt~W1~ an nu-~ wer~ Fcaither qerinehy ~ncluded

~e )mperorPbariemaible ~~~poundreed ~tho~~laquo~ lt m the eigh~h ~turydecr~ miD not aencournt ~e~ch~Gt~~n6~llIIr~Watmiddot ilhat alLclencs m~be lble to middotwas virtuall uilkn a lj ~

ifead im~~ri~ J~d~ve ~m- faculties PU~Shed v~illi~~e iT ~~~t ~~t~Bltcs petence In ~h~~ )~1esslC~~Idu- Monsignor Ellis points tJ01 the BOGOTA (NC) _ Anglican tiaif~king ~ DllIllmum timidity which prevailed after Bishop David Benson Reed of

q I I~~ons they ~ere to be the eJcesses perpetrated in 1l1e BogOta offered accommodations e~ ~~ deprIved of repression of Modernism in the for~five Catholic bishops during me iectr~~ IS we can see w a fim part of the present centurY theforthcoming International

g ere had been He sees a change in the era of Eucharistic Congresss in August

ing of the Christu Rex Society an Irish organization for priestDmiddot engaged in pastoml work

Over 250 priests and represhysentatives of agriculturalorgan- izations attended the cOngress here on the theme Rural Ireshyland

Father Jerome Dennehy CC of Kenm2lre criticized the fail- ure of the Iri9h educational sysshytem to provide the farmer with the basic knowledge necessarY to enable him to profimiddott from advice from government agenshydes onfurming methods

No real progress can be made

Vatican II and happily notes and five Ecuadorian prelates aeshythe improvements already made cepted his invitation

lUld those-in prosPectmiddotmiddot He hJ They are Bishops Bernardo hopeful for the future Ech R f Amb to d

evern~ wz 0 a anlIJiteUktlllal A~lieDtmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot-middotCandiiiomiddotRada Cenosian of Guashybull - d middotmiddotd A 1 B h

in8 ConclUding ~y~ ran a liln UXIlary IS ops Priestmiddot as rntelleCtllal~~ v~rll9middotmiddotGabrieI1iazCueva Ernesto that abettereducated and mueh Alvarez ~liaVlcente CIsneros of

and ea r Gua allmoreaware enti laitrmiddotmiddot y qu demands a certainmiddotleveloflD-middot B~SbtPAnBeedli has JurCls~lctib~n

middotfellectual attainment and alivemiddot middot~v~r eo g cans In 0 om la its cl and Ecuador and has been an

~~ ooes ermeam that the ecumenical leader in these

now fading away with thei~

farms Father Eamonn Casey nashy

ijonal director of the catholic Housing Aid Society in London stressed the necessity for the priest to work with underprivishyleged members of -society Too often he said the theologians are on the periphery - they should come doWn to earth and mix with the people-who really

priest has to be a professional~untries ~ _ ~=====~_ intellectual such is not his _ Over 200 bis~ops a~ 1~ ~r-Etmiddotmiddot D ampD SALES AND SERVICE cation ltR does mean that he has dinals have saId they Wlll at-sect to maintain a genuiDe hifei-est end the EUcharistie Congress to - sect ill things intellectUal anq m Mbeid be~ sectpublic questions sect

Monsignor Ellismiddot chides sUPe- sect riors for their failure to eneour- p~iori ~ the minisky in sect age priests 110 use their ~cial teD-dayretreatS preceding or- sect talents skills and aptitudes dination Better than nothing sectAnd he urgeS priests 110 acquire one suPPoses sect( and retain habits of 9tudy It is In the lntervaJ there has sect to be hoped that both these cau- ~ great improvement But sect

name has been sent to lI1sgr John G Nolan president of the Pontifical lVlission for Palestine whose headquarters are in New Vork Written by Amleto Carshydinal Cicogilani Papal Secreshytary of State it referred to the

1 Missions 19 years service to ~ Palestinian refugees particushy

larly victims of the recent Arab-Israeli conflictto

It singled out as particularly praiseworthy the contribution of the Catholic Near East Welshyfare Association saying that middotthrough the unflagging genershyosi ty of the catholics of the United States of America it provided qlost of the means for the Missions work following the recent conflict

The papal letter declared No other agency surpasses the Pontifical Mission in length of

middot actualmiddot serviCe and its identifl shycapon with the paternal intershy~ and concern of the Holy Father merits his encourageshyment hismiddot blessing and his prayerful good wishes

Cardinal middotCicOgnanl wrote that Pope Paul out of paternal afshyfection for the homeless and of grateful esteem for the Pontifi shycal Mission bids memiddot send yOIll the enclosed check for $5000 Added to this was a furthell amount of money contributed

middot by the Congregation for the Oriental Churches

Msgr Nolan was asked that during his Easter visit to the refugee campS he kindly disshytribute the total sum in the Popes Dame to all the needyen

ar~~~stChneU~made adicbot-SAVE MONEY ON omy of man saying here is middotthe

body her~ is the soul-Iam YOUR middotOImiddotLmiddotHEATconCerned only with the soul bull bull bull bull Tmiddothe love of Christ is for the whole person and anything ~ -4~ WYman that concerns 1llieperson is of ~ US92 concern to middotChrist

He said thatmiddot the priest middotshould CHARLES F VARGAS selk tomiddotmiddot develop ~ature Ght-ls- tiMlS amongdsmiddotflockiuidcpre- 54 ROCKDALE AvENUE pare themmiddotforlife Th~ role of 1 the ~~esthe~dmiddotiftcl~desmiddotth~middot ~E~ BEDFORD MASS proVISIon Qfmiddotmiddot mformatlOn oo sexual and~ari~itLplmiddotobiehis 1

He stlggcentstJd middottbatmiddotmiddotmiddotPri~middot main~in cQJjt$C~ wjth~ those whlt emjgra~~mmiddottheir_ par- ish~ and follo~middotup middotthe middotcareers( of boys who are releasedmiddot from refprm schools t

1 bull bullbull - - ~_ _ - ~ ( ~

~ ~ lt

~III1I11I11I11I11I1UIIIIIIlIl1mlllllIII1I1I1I11I1I1I1I11II11I1I11I11I11IIIII11I1I11IIllIUIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~

tionary words win be wideiy~ OW measure canOOt be the poor sect AIR COmiddotIDmiddotImiddotTmiddotIO~IImiddot bullGmiddot

c INC

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~ post-Tridentinemiddot seminaries bulland responsibly beard Performance of the past It sect I~ I~ I~ lis remarkably extensive but the It is hard 110 believe tb1Ilt as must be the imperious demands sect main focus is on those ofF~Ce ~ as the seventee~th centu~lt ~ the p~sent an4 ~~ fUture ~ 363 SECOND ST FALL RIVER MASSbull bull the seventeenth century Pal- fa France some clena lOt their ~IWIIIUIUIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIUUlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUUIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIUIiIUWlimllllli5

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16

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs May 2 1968 Back Presidenills ~reg~reg ~~~1rf~Jreg~MO~ ~~~lliJO[[reg(gJ ~rntilO1fi)[[fr~ofr~r

CHICAGO (NC)-The Assoshy~~ ~~regramp~~ o[J1j [Q)1 W[J1lJ[[o ciation of Chicago Priests an

The record compiled 56 years ful Swamppodle a neighborshy unofficial group of some 1500 priests in the archdiocese ofago still stands in big league hood within sight of the U S

baseball annals-most runs al shy Capitol talked about Father Chioago has endorsed President Johnsons current efforts to]owed one game 24 Travers Travers band

fA J (Joe) Detroit Never before had the bandsshy negotiate a Settlement of the

Father Aloysius J Travers men performed like they did in Vietnam war The ACP in its fifth plenarygJ 75 who achieved the dubishy the 1919 May procession-never

ous pitching distinction died had such old favorites as Tis session here turned down a resolution prepared by its soshylast week in Misericordia Hosshy the Month of Our Mother and cial action subcommittee onpital Philadelphia He acquied 0 Mary We C~own Thee With

baseball immortality on May Blossoms Today been so spir shy peace calling for complete cesshy

112 1912 as pitcher for the One sation of U S bombing in Vietshyitedly played by Gonzaga bandsshynam to support the Presidents limited decrease in bombing

men as the procession windedlDay Wonders Detroits brawling Tigers were through Swampoodle streets glated to play Connie Macks After the procession was over and negotiation moves

Two other peace resolutionspOwerful Philadelphia As that the school rector called in recommended by the subcomshy_ daymiddotin old Shibe Park Detroits Father Travers and congratushy

Btar Ty Cobb had drawn a fine mittee were approved They

and two-day suspension for formance The rector added lated him on the bands pershy

put the ACP on record as favorshy

belting a heckling fan a few But high school musicians with ing draft law revisions so that a person might be exempt as a

lligers decided if Cobb couldnt mustaches Dont you think thatdays earlier in New York~ ~he

conscientious objector to a parshywas going a bit too far ticular war without necessarilyFather T~avers had recruitedplay they wouldnt either so being a conscientious objector

Famous llnfield a dozen or so members of thecenthey went on strike

to all war and so that a per

With the aid of Connie Mack crack Fort Myer Army Band

son could be exempt as a conshyfOm nearby Arlington Va scientious objector on humanishy

ed up a collection of Philadelshydressed them in cadet uniforms~e Detroit management roundshy

tarian as well as religioUlland put them in the school band groundsBesides teaching at Stphia sandlot players signed

The ACP also approved threeJosephs Prep and Gonzagathem to Detroit contracts and recommendations of its liturgy

as the Tigers sf Francis Xavier High in New committee York As a result the priests group

Father Travers also taught atfielded the One Day Wonders

Al Travers 19 fresh out of has urged the National Confershyat Josephs Prep School rho Disbands Hawks ence of Catholic Bishops to reshyhelped recruit the sandlotters One of his moSt heartbreaking submit two liturgical petitioJUloppointed himself pitcher He assignments was given him some to the Conglegation of Rites inctftein recalled I learned that 25 years ago He was sent back Rome The petitions which had e pitcher would collect-50 to St Josephs College where New Problem ~en turned down by the Vati shyeX-tra so I volunteered the battIe cry is The Hawk can congregation would allowThat day the As scored 24 will never die as moderator the establishment of experimenshyINns on 25 hits with io nuts of athletics Priest Urges F~ir labor Practices tal centers for the liturgycmearned against young Travshy His jOb-disband the Hawks For CatholicSchool Faculties throughout the country and limshy

erG The wonder is the score football team with a minimum ited experimentation with thewasnt higher for young Tra~~rs of uproar from students and SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-For betweell the school and the liturgy without prior approvalwas pitching against the best alumni since football had beshy as long as anyone can rememshy religious community of the Vaticanbalt team of the era-against come a moneymiddot losing sport at ber the Religious and lay peoshy Some experts says that the

PhiladelphiaS famous $100000 St Josephs and a number of nte third resolution called on-pie who serve on the faculties best solution to this problem is

infield of John Phelan (Stuffy) other Catholic colleges in ~those the NCCB to take concrete stepsof Catholic grammar and high to bar Religious from partici shy

McInni6 at first Eddie Collins days to implement proposals of itsschools have been the type of pating in labor organizations

lJeCOnd Jack Barry short and He did his job well directing liturgy committee for adaptashypeople who would never think But Father Reicher indicated

IPrank (Home Run) Baker third attention to St Joes basketball tion of the Mass to smaIl anelof going out on strike against this would only divide the Reshy special age groupsSaves Franchise team which has grown into one unfair labor practices since ligiousand lay faculty of schools

But young Travers and the of the nations powerhouses this would imply some sort of even more than they are dividedORe Day Wonders who had For the last 25 years Father guilt on the part of p~ors and now India to ReconsiderI2ever seen Detroit saved the Tlavers had been stationed at bishops Urging a period of experishybaseball franchise for the Tigers St Josephs Prep in semishy Well those days are gone forshy meritation to work out new Deporting Priestttlat day If they hadnt pl~yed retirement during recent years ever according to Chicagos forms of collective bargaining NEW DELHI (NC) - Indiantile As chances are the Amershy Requiem Mass for the colorful Father Robert Reicher and the Father Reicher concluded It ill Prime Minister Indira GandbJ1bean L~ague would have lifted one-day big leaguer was ofshy job now is to set up standards obvious that the right to barshy has promised reconsideration ofDetroits franchise because of fered Thursday at GeuChurch of fair labor practice and guidshy gain collectively is a natural the order expelling Jesuitthe players strike in Philadelphia ance for faculty members grievshy tight clearly defended time and Father Vincent Ferr r of theDespite the lopsided score procedures against Cathoshy agaiil ethically and morally Poona diocese Indiaance fromlPatJher Travers got several big lic school administrators But this right also implies an lleague offers as a result of his Canonist Cates Need The pmmise was made when

Speaking to participants at 8 obligation to know what colleCshy tlhree members of the Indiani pitching He turned them down secondary school department tive bargaining involves went to St Josephs College For Negro Prieds parliament met with Mrs Ganshy

meeting during the Nationalthen joined the Jesuits ATLANTIC CITY (Nch - A dhi here and asked her to get

National Catholic Educational the order cancelled and grantThe lesson he learned fmln plea for more Negro Catholic Bishops Ask PopeAssociation convention here Indian citizemihip to the priestthe unorthodox recruiting as a priests has been made at the Father Reicher outlined some ofone-day big leaguer stood him annual Easterri regional meeting To Visit Canada Father Ferrer founder of thethe problems facing Catholic in good stead a half-dozen years of the Canon Law Society of OTTAWA (NC) -Pope Paul Maharashtra Farmers Servicelabor - management relations

later when he was teaching at America here in New Jersey The pliest is chairman of the VI may visit Canada next month Society was scheduled for deshyGQnzaga High School in Washshy Msgr Thomas J Reese of Wilshy to attend the National Confershy portation last year but wasChicago archdiocesan Catholicington D C mington in the neighboring State ence on Poverty sponsored by granted several extensions ofCouncil on Working Life and a

Recruits Ringers of Delaware speaking on experishy jVell-known labor expert Christian Churches in Canada his stay He was accused by iiimiddot mental parishes accused the Hindu groupS ofanti-Indian acshyFather Travers was in charge Religious who teach in CatBshy Bishop Alexander Carter presshy

Church of racism and said that tivities and by the Maharashtraof the school b~llld which used olic schools pose a special diffi shy ident of the Canadian CatholicNegro Catholics prefer to - be state government of anti shyto master only about two or culty hi labor relations because Conference has acknowledged national activitiesselved by black priests of whom

CHURCHES UNITED Bishop Reuben H Mueller left of the Evangeli~al United Brethren Church and Methoshydist Bishop Lloyd C Wicke led representatives of their respective bodies at ceremonies in Dallas proclaiming the union of the two churches The new body is to be known as the United Methodist Churlth NC Photo

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IIlfllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIUIIIlIDutuUliUllllUiHlllllllllilllllllllllllllllilllUIIIIIIIIIIIIUII~given to the Washington arch we need black priests and we bid to raise the standards of diocese by Church spokesmen need them fast preaching in Australia and New here in Pennsylvania Zealand will be made shortly Lobster Boats Msgr Philip J Dowling execshy it was resolved at a meeting hereCapital Cityutive secretary of John Cardinal of leaders of religious orders

Krols Commission on Human VATICAN CITY (NC)-Qn The effort will inchide a fullyshyRelations noted that the Washshy the eighth anniversary of the otganized Pastoral Year obsershyington Archdiocesan Office of foundation of Brazils new capishy vance seminars for priests of all bull bull bull Urban Affairs has asked assist shy tal of Brasilia Pope Paul VI ages on updating preaching techshy s iz e s ance from Philadelphia and other sent a radio message of best niques the establishment of II bull bull bull dioceses In providing foOd es wishes in Portuguese and pressshy preaching center and the use pecially for those po)r who will ed a button that illumined a of a recorded service on techshy I Macleansreceive temporary housing in the cross on the cathedral of that niques of oral communicatiOil f8cilities of the Washington city The Pope performed the directedby the ObJates of MalT sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAYBt Tel 9979351 sect archdiocese oclemony in his private library Immaculate ~1I111111l111IHlUlnlllllllllllUllllllnIIllIUllllllUllllllllllllllIllltUIIllllllllllUluiuUWlUllllml~

three tunes a year In those of their obligation of obedience that feelers have been sent outthere are fewdays the school had a cadet Father Reicher pointed out to have the Pope corne to Monshy

If any institution can standeorps and one of its big annual What this means he added is teal for th~ May 26-29 meeting events was marching in the anshy that occasionally Religious mllYoondemned on the basis of the

It would be the first papalrecent Kerner Report on Civilnual parish-May procession be used to break a strike called visit to Canada Pope Paul visitedDisorders it is the CatholicFor years residents of color- by lay faculty members this country as a Cardinal in theChurch among others that is But more likely is the conflict early 19508guilty of white racism he trapping the individual Reli shyPlan to Help ~eed opined Bishop Carter said if a favorshygious whose loyalty is divided

Asserting that the number of able reply is reCeived from RomeCapital MCIl(lc61ers Negro clergy middotdoes not nearly the Canadian government would

PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A meet the needs of Negro Catho- Australia to Have extend an official invitation pledge of cooperation in feeding lies Msgr Reese said Pope Paul visited the United the poor who will gather in the If the Church is going to be Better Preaching Nations inNew York in 1965 nations capital in May has beell relevant to the black community SYDNEY (NC)-A concerted

I

Marian Awards Continued from Page Three

Fall River and has spent her entire religious life within the Diocese of Fall River

Sister has served as consult shyant with various education comshymittees in the diocese and bas promoted the educational proshygram of the Dominican Sisters

Sr Mary Pauline OP bead of the Science Department of

the Dominican Academy Fall River was one of the originatolll of the Region III Science Fair and has served as president of the regions Fair for two years

She is presently ooordinator of the Massachusetts state Scishyence Fair -

Sr Virginia CSC is presshyently chairman of the Th~logy

Department Notre Dame Colshylege Manchester N H and served from 1941 to ]958 as principal of St Anthonys New Bedford

She has always been a leader in new an innovative ideas in education

Sister Anne Denise SND presently principal of St Marys High School Lynn is well shyremembered as the first princishypal of Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth and has served in many administrative posts for the Sisters of Notre Dame

Sr Mary Aloysia SUSC is dean of the College of the Sashycred Hearts Fall River and has given outstanding service in coshyoperation with the Catholic School Department in planning in-service courses for the teachshyers of the diocesan schools

She also serves asmiddot coordinator of the educational program of the Sisters of the Holy Union

Sr John Elizabeth SUSC is Guidance Director at the Acadshyemy of the Sacred Hearts Fall River and has served in numershyous administrative positions atthe Fall River school

She was the first principal of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton and has served on committees of local and state educational organizations

Sr Mary Felicita RSM is now involved in the tutorial program at Mt St MaryS Acadshyemy Fall River and has served in the various sclIools of the diocese

For 26 years Sister served as Diocesan School Supervisor iD the Catholic School Office

Sr Miriam RSM is also in the tutorial program at the Sisshyters of Mercy Academy in Fall River A former teacher and principal in schools of the dioshycese Sister served for 26 yean

IN NEW POST Father Charles F Sheedy CSC former dean of arts and letshyterS has been appointed to the new post of dean of theoshylogical studies and institutes at the University of Nobe Dame NC Photo

to Educators tiS Diocesan Supervisor in the Catholic School Department

This year completes 50 years of service in the field of educashyto the Diocese of Fall River

Sister Maureen RSM is principal of Nazareth Hall Fall River She organized the proshygram and was the first principal of the Fall River school lor exshyceptional children a position she still holds

She is a consultant lind D member of city and state comshymittees for the mentlllly l1eshytarded

Sr Mary Urban RSM is Diocesan supervisor of schools and was the first principal at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

She is a member of state and city educational committees

Sr Mary Carmela RSM is a member of the English Departshyment of St Xaviers Academy Providence and was the first principal of Mt St Marys Academy Fall River

She is a consultant on secondshyary school curriculum planning

Sr Grace de Sales MSBT is presently superior of the Censhyacle of Our Lady of the Assumpshytion Osterville a position she also held at the Cenac1e of St Patricks Parish Wareham

Sister founded the kindergarshytens at Osterville and Wareham and has taught Chfistian Docshytrine classes on the elementary and secondary levels during her many years of selvice in the diocese

Sr Joan Louise OLVM is suPerior of the Victory Noll Convent in the Immaculate Conception Parish No Easton She has served as catechetical specialist in dioceses in Iowa and California and her present assignment is CCD supervisor for the Diocese of Fall River

Brother Albertus CSC is supervisor of Education for the Eastern Province of the Holy Cross Brothers and is professor of mathematics at Stonehill College No Easton He also ~ught mathematics and physics at Monsignor Coyle High School Taunton

Miss Mary Cabral of 1)69 Camshybridge Street Fall River is presently teaching at Espirito Santo School Fall River where she is completing 43 years of service as a lay teacher in ~e

Diocese of Fall Ri vcr

Whites to Solve White Problem

TOLEDO (NC)-Bishop Joon A Donovan has made a public request to whites to take up the white problem

He urged it for those lookshying for a modern up-Io-date apostolate for down-to-earth Christians who are at the same time dedicated Americans

middotSpeaking at a dinner of the northwestern Ohio district Fourth Degree Knights of Coshylumbus the Toledo bishop said

This ugly situation was fathered by injustice and is nourished by that subtle and insidious vice called prejudiCe

Need In this deplorable situation

in which the world ffinds itself today the pressing need is for those who call themselves Christians to think as Christians to form Christian attitudes and to live as Christians

Just as we cannot separate Christ from His Gospel so too we cannot separate love of GOO from love of our fellowmen without exception

The real Christian mlid the bishop does not live alongside but with others He constantly interprets anothers actions in the best possible light bying to remember always the way in which the Lord met loved and drew people to Himsel

SAIGON (NC) - The people wept and we wept everybody wept Sister Nicole said deshyscribing her teams departure after 16 days of relief work in Hue

She and two other Vietnamshy-ese Sisters Daughters of Charshyity of St Vincent de Paul with

The communImiddots1s T truce

17 girl students had gone to stricken Hue on a mission of mercy

offensive had left families in mourning houses in ruins ~nd people hungry and sick The government of Vietnam had inshyvited volunteers to bring help to the citys thousands of sufshyferers

The plane that brought tile Sisters and their students also brought 85 youths from Saigon~

The boys did manual work such as cleaning up the damaged hosshypital in Hues The Sisters team was divided into three groups one to give medical care anshyother to visit homes a third to l)ok after children

The 17 girls are some of those being trained by the Sisters as social workers for family assist shyance under a plan sponsored by a Vietnamese womens associashytion Five of the 17 are Cathshyolics The others are mostly Buddhists On April 12 all were fasting since it was the 15th day of the lunar month for the lBud-

Catholic Boy Scout Officials to Meet

WASHINGTON (NC)-About 150 leaders of CQtholic Boy Scout organizations will meet here to attend the 20th biennial oonference of the National Cathshyolic Committee OIl Scouting

The meeting will be a Iowshyday work session tor chairmen chaplains and other officioals cd the nations diocesan I seouiing ~ommittees The meeting will end with a banquet in honO Gl Patrick Cardinal OBoyle ol Washington

---- -----~

middot1FI

1

PRAYER CRUSADE _Danny Thomas has filmed n 10-minute color documentary on the value of family pray~r

to be used by Father Patrick Peyton CSC in his Camshypaign for Family Prayer Father Peyton said he expects 200000 people at a Milwailkee rally to be held Sunday May 12

IEverybody Weptl

Nun Describes Relief Teams Departure From Stricken Hue

dhims and Good Friday for the Catholics

The Asia Foundation here gave a grant to pay for the meals of the Sisters team dur ing their stay

- Before leaving Saigon the Sisters had collected medicines food soap and clothing from welfare agencies including Catholic Relief Services and

Vietnam Christian Service (Protestant) The United Nashytions Childrens Fund (UNICEF) provided milk powder which enabled the team to give milk to 450 children every day

Warn Medics LONDON (NC)-The day beshy

fore Britains new abortion law went into effect the nations 5500 CMholic doctors were warned by John Cardinal Heenan of WeBtminister that they should DOt perfom any abortions

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THE ANCHOR- 17 Thursday May 2 1968

Cufr ~t~1 Days Of orw~~~1ion

En C[[i~da OTTAWA (NC)-Chrietshy

mas and New Years Day now are the only holy days of obligation for Canadav estimated 8000000 Catholics

The Canadian Catholic Conshyference comprising Canadafl Bishops has announced thampa other holy days will be cellshyebrated on the Sunday nearem the holy day

The holy days affected aye Epiphany usually celebrat~

Jan 6 Ascension now falling on the 40th day after East~Ilp

All Saints now celebrated Nou I and the Immaculate ConcejilP tion now celebrated Dec 8

The Bishops said observance of the feast days on Sundayu means they will be celebratecll bull by a larger more relaxed anell accessible congregation of the faithful rather than a congreshygaUon of people constrained by the obligation of attending Maw in addition to their work

Canadas Bishops postwn~ until next Fall a decision Gil

wlether to restoremiddot the anciej~ office of permanent deacon m the Church The Bishops of the United States meeting simultashy

neously in St Louis hlst week ~ted to petition Pope Paul VJ for permission to restore ~

perinanent diaconate ror marshyried and unmarried men of ma ture years

Fish Sales Up SYDNEY (NC)-Best tilini)

that ever happened to the fisb industry said Mark J06eph chairman of the New SouUl -lales Fish Authority of the Churchs lifting of the ban CJ[l

Friday meat eating He has tb~ ligures to back up his verdictshya 25 per cent rise in fish e4)Dshy

slImption here since the ehlnge

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The Parish Parade New Jersey Suburbanites of All Faiths Aid Ghetto Arson Victims HOLY NAME OUR LADY OF ANGELS

FALL RIVER FALL RIVER NEWARK (NC) - Priest~ the citys anti-poverty agenCll Contemporary music will acshy

company the 11 oclock Mass Sunday morning May 5

First communicants will reshyeeive at a special Mass at 9 Saturday morning May 25 Mayshycrowning ceremonies will be held Sunday May 26 The Womens Guild announces

fts installation banquet for Tuesday night May 7 Tickets are available from all members

Catholic Charities collectors are asked to meet in the parish school at 730 tonight for dist~shyOOtion of contact cards

lIT MARGARET BUZZARDS BAY

SS Margltlret-Mary Guild of Buzzards Bay and Onset will Sponsor a rummage sale from 9 1lo 1 Saturday May 18 at St Margarets kindergarten hall Main Street Buzzards Bay Do iaations may be left at the hall during mornings of the precedshying week Chairman for the ~vent is Mrs William Brady

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild will reshyieive Holy CommuniOn in a bodyaf the815 Mass 00 Sunshydity morning A breakfast will follow in the school hall The icuest speaker will beRt Rev Anthony M Gomes Mrs Arthur Belanger gpiIshyftual chairman of the Guild is _ charge of the breakfast

81 JOSEPH AIRHAVEN Nominations and elections of officers for the Association of file Sacred middotHearts will be held at 630 on Sunday evening in the rectory ~ Dues are now payable to the tleasurer Mrs Jeannette Dushylude

IACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

Preprimary registration will be held from 2 to 4 Sunday afternoon May 5 in 1he school office Some openings also exist in first sixth and eighth grades

The CCD adult discussion group will meet at 8 Sunday night in the home of Mr and Mrs J G N Bonneau

So Easton Club Pledges

$5000 The newly formed Womens

Club of Holy Cross Parish So Easton has pledged $5000 toward the building fund acshycording to an announcement made today by Mrs Arthur J L Peterson the organizations first president The pledge will be paid at the rate of $1000 per year

This pledge has been added to The Second Mile Building Fund campaign now in progress under the chairmanship of Robshyert Dray and Louis A Lyne serving as director

The Altar Boys will sponSor a cake sale Sunday May 26

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a Communion breakshyfast following 8 oclock Mass this Sunday morning Installashytion of officers will be held at a banquet following 5 oclock Mass Sunday afternoon May 26

Children of Mary will attend a Communion breakfast followshying 8 oclock Mass Sunday mornshying May 12

The annual blessing of autoshymobiles will take place at 130 Sunday afternoon May 26 in the church parking lot

ST GEORGE WESTP~RT

A Maybasket whist is planned for 8 Saturday night May 4 hi

the school hall on Route 177 PrOCeeds will benefit the school fund and table and attendance prizes will be awarded

STMARY NORTH ATTLEBORO Parishioners are planning a

testimonial honoring Msgr Ed- ward B Booth Pastor at 7

Sunday night May 26 Tickets are now available

Christians Jews Combat Racism

NEW YORK (NC)The Nashytional Confeferice of Christians and Jews has launched a nation wide educational effort to conshyfront the problem of white racism in middotAmerica agency headquarters here announced

The NCeJ has given top prl~

ority to finding ways toimpleshyment the recommendations of the National Advisory Commisshysion on Civil Disorders The commission blamed white racshyism as the underlying cause of urban unrest

In a progress re-port to the NCCJ board of trustees meeting here Dr Samuel L Gandy dean of the Ho~ard University school of religion Washington D C and chairman of the NCCJ nashytional program ad7isory comshymittee stated

NCCJs 130 professional staff members in 70 cities are curshy~ntly engaged in developing programs with police business and labor leaders parents and teachers clergy and with youth and all of the various institutes workshops and dialogues which are being conducted are emphashysizing the findings of this reshyport

Dr Gandy quoted to the board a letter to President Lynshydon B Johnson from Dr Stershyling W Brown NCCJ presishydent in which the agency head said that NCCJ embraced the commission report as a sancshytion and guideline for our efshyforts in the private sectol

111I1111I11111111111111I1111I11I1111I1111111111I111111I111111I11I11I11I11I1111I111111111111I11111111I1111I111111I11I11I111111I111II11111111111D

ministers nuns and lay people of all denominations pitched in here to try and make Easter a dltty of joy for the more than 600 people burned out of their homes in a waveof arson which erupted in this city following the funeral of Dr Martin Luther King

Concerned citizens of surshyrounding suburban communishyties who only a week before had participated in a massive Wa 1k for Understanding through ghetto streets respondshyedspontaneously to the need

Without anymiddot special appeal going out people of all denomshyinations call e 11 inner-city churches to ask what they could do and they were directed to the United Community Corp

NEW LEADER Sister Rosemary Markham SSS is the new Superior General of the Sisters of Social Ser-

vice a Los Angeles based community engaged in social and catechetical work with missions in Formosa and Mexico NCPhoto

Christians Jews Discuss Diamiddotlogue

SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-The question of whether JewishshyChristian dialogue should be by speech or by action was the theme that ran through the talks and discussions at a Conference on Interfaith Dialogue sponsored by Catholic Protestant and Jewshyish organizations at Seton Hall University here

Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum director of interreligious affairs for the American Jewish Comshymittee was generally in favor of the action approach saying that the dialogue must avoid beshycoming a convenient conspiracy on the part of middle-class whites to buffer themselves against the realities of the inner city

Father Edward H Flannery executive secretary of the U S Catholic Bishops Secretariat for Catholic-Jewish Relations said that while he would be the last to cut off action in the realm of social justice and charity he also felt that Jews and Christians could not effectively present a common ftont to society until they have straightened out their own affairs

Father Flannery referred to statements that the -ChristianshyJewish dialogue had died in the wake of last Junes six-day war between Israel and Arab nations He said that it was not so much a matter of its dying but of its not having been tried yet

Over Holy Thursday Good Friday and Holy Saturday more than 10 tons of food and clothing were donated and the UCC staff was swamped with the task of sorting the materiaL

With schools and church ofshyfices closed priests and nuns made their way individually and in groups to UCC headshy

quarters to help with the task of unloading cars and station wagons and sorting and distribshyuting the clothing

At least 50 offers of assistance came in to Queen of Angels pariSh in the heart of the ghettc and the callers were asked to organize relief efforts in their own communities and then gd the material 110 the UCCbull

FEEL GOOD TODAY

THt HOLY fATHER MISSION AiD TD THlaRIENTAL DHURDH

Thlsoolumns happiest readers are the men

Te date this second phase bas listed 35 gifts totaling $12000 Combined with the initial campaign the Building Fund now lists 233 donors who haVe pledged a total of $117()00 The Womens Club that was founded less than six months ago has initiated a long range program for the spiritual cll1shytural and financial efforts of the parish

In addition to the regular methods of aiding the parish finandally the women have conducted teen-age projects and have assisted the Mens Club fu

i bull various progrlms

~MANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

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TIMENOW OPEN ACCOUNT5PAYS o bull bull Interest Compounded Quarterly

Offices in

NORTH ATTLEBORO MAINSIFDIEILlDgt AnUBORO FAUS

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women and children who know they~r needed The days were busiest helping others are the happiest days of our livesbullbullbull Who needs you most Surprisingly God needs you - for inmiddot stance to help art abandoned orphan become e Godloving responsible adult Lepers need you (there are still 15middotmillion lepers In the world) blind children need y~u ~ndlo do we bull bullbull Here In New York we are your agents tellin you where the Holy Father says your help Is needed and channeling your help promptlyand Oafely to the people iii needbullbullbull Want to feel good right now Do without something you want but do not need and send the money instead for one of the needs below Youll feel good especialiy if your gift is big enough to mean a sacrifice to you This is your chance to do something meaningful for the world - its Gods world - while youre still alive

D Only $850 gives our priests and SIsters i south India enough Dapsone miracle tablebamp for 43 lepers for a yearl D For only $250 a week ($10 a month $120 a year) you can make sure that an abandoned child has food clothing a blanket and love Well send you a photo of the child you adopt tell you something about him (or her) and ask the Sistermiddotinmiddotcharge to keep you Informed

D Your stringless gifts in any amount ($5000 MEET $1000 $500 $100 $50 $25 $10 $5 $2)

MISSION will help the neediest wherever they are - in EMERGENCIES india and he Hol~ Land for instance

D Only you can make your will-and do It this THINK week to be sure the poor will have your help

OF even after youre gone Our legal title CATHOLIO YOURSELF NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION Also our priests

TOO will offer promptly the Masses you provide for

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Lawrence High of Falmouth Seeksmiddot State Track Tut~e

By PETER BARTEK Norton High Coach

The Capeway Conference track season has already begun but the handwriting is already on the wall This campaign like last years will be a battle for second place Admittedly notbing Short of a miracle can or will prevent Lawrence High of Falmouth from winning its second straight conference t rae k championship But fol Coach Jim Kalperis and his trackstersmiddot the league championship is only a Gtepping stone to the State C ham p io n - ship The goal of every athletic team in the state hi to earn the title of State Champion This is not beshyyond the grasp of the Falmouth Peier Clippers If hard Bartek work and dedication are the means to this end then Falshymouth will reign as State track champions

Success does not come easily em any endeavor and success batpound

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not come easily to the Falmouth tracksters They like all accomshyplished athletes have labored long and diligently to aChieve the measure of sUccess they now enjot lt

N1)t toomiddot many yearsato Lawshyrence High was just ~nother

sChool Participating in track But the efforts of many and the dedication of one IJ1im in parshyticular has brought immeasurshyable success to the Falmouth track scene That man is Jim Kalperis

Coach Kalperis haseombined

his knowledge af track his coaching ta1EntS aiiCl tirelessenergies middotto build a virtual track dynasty The latest noteworthy feat of middotliliitnickmen came in the forinof anotheriState title

Thisti~emiddotiS th~nivision IIi

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1

- BC~ and Norry Races Are Close 1

lbe format formiddot the St~te reo lays has been altered this ear with competition being held at four separate locations in East- em Massachusetts Weymouth captured the Division I crown the DiviSion n title went to

Andover and Williams corralled the laurels in Division IV

The meet drew ll5 schools in each of the four diviSions with over 2000 youngsters partici shypating in all classes

Enroute to its victory Falshymouth collected 51 points comshypared to runner-up Barnstable with 22Jh

Falmouth took first place in the discus high jump pole vault 440 yard run shuttle hurdles two mile run and the 880 -

With tbis type of success in state competition it is easy to see why the Capeway Confershyence title has been practically conceded to Falmouth

Sharing the spotlight with the trackmen at Falmouth are the diamondmen The Clippers who are in the thick of the loop baseball picture were given a

Mike Rainnie tossed amp no-hittel at Barnstable to gain a 1-0 vershydict

Its still much too early to predict with any accuracy

what will happen in the Cape wai baseball race But it ap- pears nomiddotclub will dominate th~t sport like Falmouth controIa track Falmouth Dartmouth Fairhaven and Barnstable are expected to fight it out through the entire season One close to the scene summed it up best when he said anyone in the league could win this thing

Close races are also developshying in the Bristol County and Narragansett Leagues

In the BCL both Bishop Fee han of Attleboro and Durfee High of Fall River encountered a few difficulties in early season play but seem to have found the range of late The clubs will meet in an important contest today in Fall River Late inning rallies have brought both clubS from the brink of defeat to vicshytory in previous outings The victor will have to be dubbed

shot in the arm last week as the team to beat

Brennan of Feehan D~est ill le~guej

Coach Tom Maccarone of Feeshyhan has had outstanding pershyfonnances from his pitching staff but the key to the Shamshyrocks success has been shortshystop Ty Blrennan Maccarone stated before the season that Brennan was his best player and perhaps the best in the whole Bristol County Judging from Brennans perfonnance to date one of the keys to stopping Feehan is stopping the classy shortstop

Coach Joe Lewis Hilltoppers play a brand of ball similar to his counterpart TOIJl Karams basketball club Make a mistake and the Fall Riverites will capshyitalize on it Durfees first two league victories came about beshycause of opponent miscues

The Hilltoppers have been playing steady ball throughout the early part of the campaign and are improving with every game Their ability 10 avoid costly mistakes eI tbeir -n

making and timely hitting has proven a winning combination

Come what may in todays contest the BCL llace has just begun

Not to be outdone by tile larger BCL and Capeway Conshyference the Narry loop is conshyducting a torrid race of its own At the end of the first week of action Seekonk and DightonshyRehoboth were tied for the top spot Following two weeks of play Gase of Swansea Dighton and Somerset were lodged In the first position The hectic lCampaign will probably find another change in the top spot at the conclusion of this weeks activity

From Cape Cod to Attleboro competition is keener this year than it bas been in many seashysons The road to the league championship is always diffJshycult to Davigate but this year it appears as though the road win be duttered wiill meR obstacles than ill quite

cone~~ lb~aders ConcllregrnmOB War In V~~It~IlJJm

NEW YORK (NC)-Stushydent government presidents and editors of campus newsshypapers at more than 500 colleges in 49 states have conshydemned the war in Vietnam as

lt immoral and unjust and said ~~ they believe they should not

~ i~~~~~~~ii ~~~b~~ shy --_ ~ and Laymen Convinced About

-- ~-__ Vietnnm Was coordirlated by shy _ -- shy ~ Rev RObert lVi Hundley lHullent

--lt--1 at Union Th~ological Snppary --J here and an associate pltISor at -- ~I th~ Congn~gationalChllrch hn ~_ Scarsdale N-Y He saiQ most

--middot1 students who signed the stateshy~-__-~~- ~~ -___- __~_~J ment havenot been active in

FINE ARTS FESTIVAL Making preparations for Fine Arts Festival at Bishop Stang High School North

Dartmouth are Paul Leahy and Margaret Polycarpo

~ Unmiddot-ty middotIs Chr-stlTs middotW-II

P Off W I E deg I pOi degI

ontl e comes cumenlca I grlmage From United Kingdom toHoly Lar-d

anti-war activities heretoforemiddot

Solicits Support

He added

Many of the student Itl~ders who have signed this sbtcment

recognize that they may be plaeshying their future caJeers illmiddotjeopshy~rdy and conceivably are riskshying punitive action being taken

against them by the capiicioWJ V~TICAN ~ITY (NC)~TO an Fathers Arthur Payton anSel~c~ve Sfdtvice Systerh~~~

I ecumenical pilgrimage oQ its Anglican who is director 01 ~ev Yi~am Sloan Cot~~1 Jr-) way to the Holy Land Pope interchurCh travel in LOndon bull aclive memjgter of Clergymiddot ~nd Paul VI recalled the words he Among its members were An- Laymen Concerned AboutbullVI~tshyspoke on his own pilgrimage glieans CatholiCs Oithodox and nam ~1dmiddota Yal~ U~Iverslt7

there in 1964 that unity is the will of Christ

He said that it was with parshyticular pleasure that we welshycome this ecumenical pilgrimshyage from the United Kingdom to the Holy LaRd You are aboUt to follow in the fOQtSteps af God made man in the country of His birth Hill mission and His blessed death for us men and for our salvation (NiceneCreed)

Your visit caUsto mind our own unforgettable pilgrimage to the Holy Places From the grotto of Bethlehem we then declared It npw appears clearly to all that the problem of unity cannot be eluded Today this will cif Christ is imposed upon our minds and demands th~t we undertake with wisdom and love every possible way of bringing all Christi~ns t6 enjoy the great benefit and supreme honor of the unity of the middotChurch

He also recalled his plea from Bethlehem that love of Christ and of the Church should inshyspire that every future moveshyment toward meeting and reshyconciliation

The pilgrimage was led by

DIOCESAN DIREC1OR First woman to serve as a diocesan director of radio-TV is Miss Patricia Smith of Pueblo Colo who is also a photo-journalist on the staff gf Dateline Colorado m cesan weekly newspaper

Protestants not only from Great Britain but from France and Germany as well

Msgi Gianfrancesco Arrighi undersecretary of the Secretashyriat for Promoting Christian Unity and Canon John Findlow representative of Anglican Archbishop Michael Ramsey of Canterbury at the Holy See accompanied middotthe pilgrims to the Vatican

Votes Moratorium On ChuDch Building

CHICAGO (NC)-The Chicago Conference of Laymen is urging Church authorities at both the archdiocesan and parish levels to declare a moratorium on 10- cal construction projects so that funds can be channeled to projshyects in the ghetto areas

The action was taken at the second annual meeting of the

ll200-member organization The 300 in attendance passed

some 50 resolutions half of them dealing with urban problems The membership said it will seek ways to alleviate white racism especially within the Catholic Church

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ch~plaJD saId The stand taken by these

y~ung men should serve to reshymmd Americans everywhere that the war in Vietnam 1s not over that American and Vietshy

namese boys are stillmiddotdying

He continued

These middotmen of conscience should be supported by eveQY priest minister and rabbi who cares about the sanctity of conshyscience

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Jesuit Comments Di~cordNormal Amon9 Catholics

RIO DE JANEIRO (NC)shylD i SC 0 r d among Catholics after the Second Vatican Council is perfectly normal but It is not normal for proshygressive or conservative Cathoshylics to refuse to accept the dishyrectives of the council and the pope Jesuit superior general said here Father Arrupe is in Brazil for 30 days to visit Jesuit houses in the country and to preside at the May 6 to 14 meeting here of all South Amershyican Jesuit provincials

He said that his visit is inshytended to adapt the order here flo the requirements of the agshygirnameJ1to or up-dating

The most important aggiorshy namento in our day he said

is that of the mind We have to ~nsider and respect human valshyues as such This was always the Churchs doctrine but now the Church is insisting on it more We ought not to consider the Churchs interest in human values as opportunism Our in tEmtion is only to serve mankin~ better)

Press Uses Images Dudng his stay here Father

Arrupe willmiddot visit 20 local(tiesWhere Jesuits are woikilg

ts B 1Ilhele are 1000 JesUl m razl~ bull

He said that he regarded as bull joke the Brazilian presss ref-

elences to him as ~the black l T Ch Pope cussion of he angmg a1middot

Because of my cassock hemiddot

tlaid I am black but I am not the Pope ~ understand that the press has to use images to exshylI)lain concepts more effectively

Honor Editor NEW YORK (NC) ~ Robert

6lmstead news editormiddot of the National Catholic Reporter weekly newspaper published in Kansas City Mo received honshyelable mention in the 1968 Paul Tobenkin Memolial Award Competition here

-

MEET IN ST LOUIS Bishop-elect Timothy J~ Harringshyth d f th Sf W 1 ft d

ton ~ orcester e leoscllfses ~ atn t ~ l~mg

ish a panel a~ the lQ68Presi dents Conference of the Nashytional Council of cat~olic yene~l

Role of CouDcil The parish will retairi its role

as a community of worship whose members go out ihto the world and bring it theeurohristjan

message Bernatd Lyons Ghishycago public relations ~onsultant saidmiddot

The pa~ish on the other hand mustmiddot become part of the world

alound it a wHr1e$S to the whole community and fake on roles not in relation only to -its

GUIDING CHURCH IN UNITED STATES More than 200 members of the hierarchy participated in the decisions of the annual Spring meeting of the National Conference

Predict Important Authorities Emphcisixe

WASHINGTON (NC)-Three members but to the world in authorities on parish life have agreed here that the parish basic organiz~tion iil the Church will have to undergo some lmportant changes if the ChUlch is goingto meet th~ needs of societyin the 20th censhy tury

But just how the parislt is going to change ~s far from setshytied they ~onceqed in a dis

which it exists Father John Corriga~ of this city a directozlt of the Nationalmiddot Liturgical Con ference asserted

Whatever it does the parish must becomemiddot a vital force in the cOlJlrnunity around it Father Geno Baroill execu~ive secretary Washington archdi

ocesan Office ~f Urpan Affairs declared

RIot ComparlmiddotsoDmiddot

Father Baroni whose work blings hini into constant contactmiddot with Negro problems in WaSh- laymen will inhibit soCial ac- ington saw~ astriking par~illel tion but added later this is a between the Churchs needs and risk wltirth taking

-those of thebiack ghetto Right now~ he observed - one of the mos~ urgent prob Society to Consider lems in the ghetto is that Of Sh fmiddot

community organization We 5 emnary I t arll learl1ing that pe~ple ri~t be CARTHAGENA CNC) _ The

cause they have beel- cut o~t ofSocieiy of the Precious Blood meaningful participation in so- ciety

In the ~hurch laymen have been cut out of this participa tion also They dont riot but they dont really concern them selves with the concerns of the Church unle~s thy ~ave t~i~ sense of partlclpatlcm he saId

New Resndemlce For US PIiDests

ROME (NC)-A new resident house for American priests working In the offices of the Roman Curia (the Churchs censhytral administrative offices) or on assignment in Rome for the US bishops has been opened to provide adequate economical lodgings and community surshyroundings

The residence called Villa Stritch after the late Samuel Cardinal Stritch of Chicago is composed of two apartment comshyplexes and is designed to meet the immediate needs of US priests already at work in Rome and to anticipate future housing needs as internationalization of the Roman Curia continues

In addition to American$ resshyident in Rome the villa is also expected to house priests on special assignments for the bishshyops in Rome bishops who come to Rome for work on var~ous

Church commissions or otherVatican offices or for such events as the synod of bishops and ma-Jor congresses In short it is hoped that the new villa wilL

will study the possibilities and implications of moving the or ders main theological school flOm St Charles Seminary here in Ohio to a university campus or urban center and of buildingmiddot an adequate program at St QJ1arles The Carthagena SChOt

has been the societys maJor seminary for over 100 years

Major superiors and middotelected delegates representing the soshycietys Cincinnati province voted to fOlm a committee to carry out the study during a provincial chapter meeting held at St Charles at which modernizing the training of candidates for the priesthood in the society Vas tqe chief subject of discussion

middotA report of the meeting in- dicated that the delegates were aware of trends in the Church 1-way from comparative isloationmiddot of seminary establishments to university campuses and urban centers

SPECIAL RATES FOR

Smiddot I O dcho0 utings an Picnics

of Catholic Bishops in St Louis last week An enormoUis amount of homework on position papers was approved ~

the Bishops NC Photo

I see the parish councils and their recognition of freedom asneceSsai-y to do this he added

Worth Risk They agreed they sha~e abull

feiling opound un~asin~ss _middotaboti~ these cOuncIls relatively new amQJ1g Cathol~cs pa~icula~lY their attitude t~ward SOCI~ issues

d Father Baroni sal he has ~

leery feeling about parishcouncils He declared there is

the danger that conservative

contribute to increased racial understanding and involvement

fur the people of the diOcese

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Lyons author of th~ book middotParish Councils - Renewin the Parish Community said be

middotwas somewhat more optiniistici I donit think we are going to

solve these problems by 10~~1 at the dangers exclusively hie commented

Diocese to Discuss C~m~issi~n Rep~rt

LANSING (NC) - Catholics thoughout t~e Lansing diocese will participate in forums and home discussion groups 1as~ on the report of the National Acf visory Commission on Civil Disshyorders The program which begaa with public forums in six citie on April 29 was planned ~

middot three diocesanmiddot agencies-the Ofshyfice of Social and Community Service the Office of Renewal Through Vatican II and the adult education division of tne Education Department It was initiated in response to an appeal made by Bishop Alexshyander Zaleski The day following the death of Dr Martin Luther King Bishop Zaleski asked dishyocesan directors to plan an imshymediate program designed to

meetmg of heBIShops n erence WIt ISop e e~ros be a center of communi~y life CONTACT MANAGER - LINCOLN PARK of BrowI)svIlle Texas and fOtmiddotmer chancellor of the Fall for bishops arid priests with spe- 9996984 636-2744 ~iver Di~~~~lt __~gt -cilla~~gnrn~iitS~~o~~~ ~ Oc)QI~OC~)OQCIOC)oOOOCgtoc)OQltjIOcXllOOOCgtOC)oOC~)OIL)QOCgtOCPOoO

Page 4: 05.02.68

4 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 21968

DDocesan Students Enter Home Stretc~ of Study Beforre Year End Examinations loom

As Diocesan students entered the home stretch of study before year-end exams Springs the Thing was the theme of a seasonal dance held by Jesus-Mary Academy juniors in Fall River Donna Lacerda general chairman

STUDENT COUNCILLORS Student council members at Coyle High School Tallntonare from left seated James Sherrin St Marys parish Taunton and Frank McGlligan Holy Name Fall River both senior representatives rear Gary Kingsbury St Paul Taunton council president Lawshyrence Costa Sacred Heart Taunton senior representative

was aided by Diane Trial publicity and Diane Froshyment decorations At Mt St Mary Academy also Fall River students were serious deshyspite the season as they heard an exhibition debate presented by the Anne Brownell Memoshyrial Debate Society Kathy Polak and Dawn Hannafin deshyfended the affirmative and Cynthia OConnell and Carol Vasconcellos the negative side of the question whether narshycotics should be legalized Doushyble purpose of the program was to give students an opportushynity to learn about an important current problem and to demonshystrate debate techniques

The Prevost Glee Club will hold its annual concert Sunday May 5 at the auditorium of Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River Guest performers will include the SHA glee club the Dominican Academy glee club and the Cathedral Choristers from St Marys Cathedral Fall River

Among proficiency certificate winners at the annual educashytional night program of the Southeastern Mass Chapter of the Administrative Management Society were students from Dishyocesan highs Receiving awards for proficiency in spelling and mathematics were Diane Tremshyblay St Anthonys High New Bedford Jeannine Dubois Mt St Mary Doris Desrosiers Jesus-Mary Academy and Pashytricia Murphy Rose DeSouza Kathleen Kurowski Margaret Mary McIntyre and Elizabeth Saulnier from Holy Family New Bedford The girls were high scorcrs in a competitive exam open to students in all area high schools

At Holy Family High in New

Safety Laws Continued from Page Three

other country need not be stained with the blood of its workers

Nationwide standards are needed he said to stop a tendency to compete at the exshypense of health and safety in the plant the mine and on the construction site

This is a false type of compeshytion he said noting that the National Safety Council has figshyures to prove that investment in work safety and health pays off in financial as well as human terms

l1sgr Higgins and Dr Lorin E Kerr presid~nt of Group Health Associatioll of America Inc wele named co-chairmen of the joint committee to supshyport the safey legislation

William R Hutton executive director of the National Council of Senior Citizens was named executive secretary of the group

Among the organizations repshyresented at the meeting were the American Public Health Asshysociation Blue Cross - Blue Shield Group Health Associashytion of America AFL-CIO American Arbitration AssociashytIon National Education Assoshyciation General Federation of Womens Clubs YMCA YWCA International Brotherhood of Teamsters United Mine WarkshyelS American Nurses Associashytion National Federation of Business and Professional Womshy

ens Clubs National Association of Colored Womens Clubs and National Falmers Union

Bedford the debate society was far from idle during the vacashytion week reports Michael Corshynell At the Eastern Nazarene High School Tournament HF representatives won a third pl~ce trophy Debaters were Cynthia Rego Karl Fryzel Margaret McJntyre and Kevin Harrington And at the Daniel Webster Tournament at Melrose High School the ifF squad won first place in both the chamshypionship and novice divisions and second place over-all for the best total school win-loss record

Today Karl Fryzel and Cindy Rego are debating against Bishshyop Cassidy High of Taunton in the place-off round for the Narry League championship Both HF debaters have 10-2 records and Cindy has recently added to her laurels by receiving complete scholarships including room board and tuition to both Pembroke and Radcliffe

At Prevost a MoUiers Day whist is planned by the senior class for 8 to 11 Saturday night May 11 at Jesus-Mary auditoshyrium -

And at Jesus~Marymiddot the high honors list for the thirdquarter has been announced Seniors on the list are Diane Dugal and Madeleine St Denis junior is Doris Desrosiers sophomore is Danielle Chouinard and freshshyman is Lucille Nadeau Twenty seniors nine juniors six sophshyomores and six freshmen are on the honor roll and honarable mention was merited by three seniors and three juniors

Social orker Miss Eleanor Tarpy a social

worker from the BlOckton VA Hospital spoke on social work careers recently to interested juniors and seniors at Mt St Mary Academy- She covered most aspects of social work and recommended various colleges for specialization in this area

The Good News Singers were what was happening at Dominishycan Academy and their concert was enjoyed by all comers Also on the DA scene a Latin ban- quet for former Latin students hosted by Sister Helen and her jumor class Italian food and grape juice were on the menu and Latin games were played

Not to be outdone DA Enshyglish students presented The Old Lady Shows Her Medals to the school on Tuesday Also on Tuesday came an evening of coffee house entertainment titled The Looking Glass

Rev William Cullen SJ spoke at a mother-daughter Communion supper held Sunshyday at Mt St Mary and also

from the Fall River school sevshyeral girls accompanied by middotSisshyter Mary Phyllis attended a National Honor Society convenshytion at Cardinal Spellman High School

Mounties Elizabeth Perry Laurie Sampson and Kerry Mello returned to Rhode Island College Sunday to evaluate a

conference recently held there on the subject of teen tensions

Thirteen Mount juniors cam paigned f6r office in the stushydent council with elections takshying place yesterday

The girl middotreceiving most votes will be president with the next three in line taking the offices of vice-president secreshytary and tImiddoteasurer This method replaces the previous system of separate votes for each office

Criticize Daleys Continued from Page Three

desire to resist to the point where we dont care whether we live or die any longer

Double Standard

In Milwaukee he maintained the police through constant harassment and intimidation had dehumanized the Negro He said a double standard of justice exists in the city and under it harsh penalties are

given Negroes and minor penshymiddot alties given whites for the same offenses

These kind of injustices he said are now apparent to the black community

Referring directly to Daleys order (April 15) that Chicago police should use deadly force against arsonists and shoot to maim or cripple looters during urban rioting Father Groppi said

If he uses that kind of treatshyment he is going to get some reshyturn gunfire and I think it will be justified It is outrageous to shoot down a 12-year-old kid for steaking a six-pack of beer

Atty Gen Clark also warned the newspaper editors that shooting of rioters by police

middot could lead to a very dangerous escalation of racial violence in

middot American cities

Exccssic Use

Clark said it was clear from recent riots that only a very tiny fraction of Americas Neshygroes are prepared to resort to

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Order to Shoot lawlessness and violence

Excessive use of violence by police he said could drive a larger portion of the black comshymunity to terrorist and guershyrilla tactics

Clark noted that more than 100 cities had outbleaks OfV10shylence following the assassinaUon of Dr Martin Luther King But police generally acted wiih balance and because of that there were fewer deaths and less property damage in aJl of these disorders than we had- in one riot last year he said

To Discuss New Vincentian Rule

The monthly meeting of the Fall River Particular Council of the Society of St Vincent de Paul will be held in Notre Dame parish -Tuesday night May 7 Benediction will be gi ven in Notre Dame Church at 745 and the meeting will follow middotat the parish St Vincent de Paul Store 1799 Pleasant Street Camp apshy

plications will be distributed and the new Vincentian rule will be discussed

Members planning to attend the regional meeting of Vincenshytians May 31 through June 2 are asked to send their registration blanks to the Catholic Welfare Bureau PO Box 1565 Fall River as soon as possible

Golden Jubilees Continued from Page Three

emeritus of the Sacred Heari Parish Fall River and Rt Reu Msgr Annand Levasseur paltol of St Annes Parish New Bedshyford were ordained in st Marys Cathedral Fall River om May HI 1918 by the late Bishop Feehan

Monsignor Childs was bom Oct 23 1891 in CenterviHe (Barnstable) the son of WHtOIil L Childs and the late Emmal McKenney Childs The Monshysignor attended St AnselmlIl College Manchester N H st Marys Seminary in Baltimo~

and the Apostolic Mission Home at Catholic University in 1be nations capital city

He served as an assistant biI several areas They included S1shyFrancis Xavier Hyannis m Josephs No Dighton SacreCl Heart in Fall River which ~ later returned to as pastor

The jubilatian headed five parishes before his retiremem in 1966 In addition to the Sashycred Heart he was also pastor of St Peters Dighton St Patshyricks Somerset St Louis Falli River and the Immaculate Conshyception Fall River

Msgr Childs was long active in the diocesan matrimonial court He served as defendell of the bond promoter of justice and pro-synodal judge In ad~

tion he was chaplain of the Knights of Columbus Councillm 86 Bnd 295 chaplain of the Columbian Squires and taM Assl1Jl1ption Circle Daughien of Isabella Somers~t and also the Assumption Circle FaD River

In 1964 he was elevated btJ Pope Paul to the rank of deshymestic prelate with the title of monsignor

Monsignor Cliilds will retum to the Sacred Heart Clureb Fall River on the evening cd May 16 for a Mass of Thankampshygivingmiddot and a reception in the Sacred Heart School Pine StreeL

Msgr Levasseur was born ilm Fall River the son of the late Napoleon and Georgianna MaFshyehand Levasseur He attended Assumption College WorcesteKo

middotSt Marys Seminary Baltimore and Catholic University WeBbshyin81on

As an assistant the jubilarlaiill served in St John the Baptilri Fall River St Hyacinth New Bedford and St Anthony New Bedford

In 1933 the New Bedfonll middotprelate was named pastor of SL Hyacinths and served there for seven years until his present assignment to St Annes W8IIl announced in 1940

His diocesan appointment include procurator fiscalis II member of the administratiYe council and consultor for parisi priests

A Mass of Thanksgiving wiD be offered at a date to be aDshy

nounced later

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 2 1968

~Ii7 I i j

FIRST COMMUNION Youngsters in special education religion classeS meida Sister Joan Bernadette SND instructor Shelley Lagasse RashyreCeive first Holy Oommunion at Mass celebrated for them at Bishop phe]le Ambrose Dennis Silvares Mrs George F Gifford special education StanK High School North Dartmouth From left Frank Mendonca James -chairman and teacher At right Bishop Connolly congratulates Frank ~nstant Rachel Ambrose Kenneth Pereira Joseph Arruda Sh~uon AI- Mendonca

j~rchbishop Sets Catholic CollegesWarns Catholics of IntercommulnionCollege Program To Become Co-ed For Sem~Dlarians Damages IEcumenism Cause Bishop Sellys KANSAS CITY (NC)-Rockshy

hurst College and A vila College ST PAUL (NC)-Transshy STOCKHOLM (NC)-8wedish mere demonstration of goodwin throughout the Church But here in Missouri will become

Catholics wele warned against If such an act of intercomshy he added pressure groupsk of the college program coeducational in Septemberpernlilting the ecumenical spirit munion were sufficient for comshy seeking reforms contrary to the 1969 the plesidents of the twofor St Paul and Minneapolis to result in an intercominunshy plete unity the whole ecumenishy views of the Church will institutions have announcedseminaries from St Paul ion with separated Christian cal movement would have no achieve nothing for reform or

Until then they said theySeminary to the College of St brethlen that would violate the real meaning ecumenlsm will make a study of areas ofII1omas was announced here by Catholic concept of eucharistic Bishop Taylor said that intershy The bishop questioned whether coordination and cooperationCoadjutor Archbishop Leo C sacramentalism communion is therefore impos- Catholics and Protestants in this between the two private colshyByrne Bishop John E Taylor OM sible for Catholics in principle country have sufficiently coshy leges each of which will retainThe prelate said Nazareth of Stockholm said in his newly despite our grief over this operated in aU fields where its separate identityBall Preparatory Seminary will issued Guidelines on Intershy reality because there are widely there are theological obshyI()

Father Maurice E VanAckshylie continued communion with Separated divergent ideas over such essenshy stacles to such collaboration eren SJ Rockhurst presidentArchbishop Leo Binz of St Brethl-en that the practice of tial question as the hierarchical such as in communications and and Sister Olive Louise CSJintercommunion by Catholics ministry the sacrament of Holy social and educational undershyPaul and Minneapolis issued a Avila president made the jointindividually or collectively with Orders sacrifice and the sacrashy takings and even in spiritual~ree implementing the new announcem(~nt after approval byEvangelical (Protcstant) Chris- ments themselves ecumenism through commonIllOgram and canonically erectshy the two boards of directorstians in this country damages To ignore such considerations prayer

b accommodate seminarians the cause of ecumimism and is the bishop continued is to reshy Only an ecumenism that orshy The objective of the change is making collegiate studies be- opposed to the will of the Cathshy sort to a sort of magic concepshy ganically grows up from inside to broaden and strengthen our ~nning Sept 1 _

_g St John Vianney Se~inary

olic Church tion of the sacrament which can bring about concrete results educational programs and our The guidelines have been disshy would separate it from the pershy even though it may be a slow community services and to proshyThe decree states canonical

tributed to the clergy and Reli shy sonal faith and conviction of process he said vide a richer diversity of opshyooquirements are to be met for gious of Sweden and some of those receiving it tions available in the privatelJl[)pointing officials of the new thelaity Pressure Groups sector of higher education inJeffiinary but that the academshy Priests Aid Families rntercommunion the bishop Kansas City the announcement()e instruction of the students Actually Bishop Taylorsaid is a matter of concern to said fJlld their academic evaluation said we Catholics have someshy Of Arrested Men many Catholics and non-Cathshyare to be handled chiefly times been accused of such a NEWARK (NC) - Fifteen Rockhurst is one of 28 U Solic Christians especially youthselrough the College of St mag-ic idea by Protestants Newark priests have volunteered colleges and universities conshyand students In some quartersThomas Bishop Taylor said he was to participate in a program ducted by the Jesuits Avila ishe noted it is maintained that

Archbishop Byrne said the sympathetic to what he caned which will find them working one of five colleges operated byintelcommunion ill a means of init iatives and impulses arisshy the Sisters of St Joseph ofIbOve to St Thomas will bring with the families of men arshyChristian unity

llbe seminary college program ing from inside the Church and J-eSted by the po]ice for vIolating Car6ndeletHowever the bishop added it ro a certain impa-tience the law Qnto conformity with the Amershy is in the Eucharist the sacrashy

ean system of education It will Members oj the Newarkment of unity that the tragedylmprove the academic and curshy Priests Gro~p an association ofof Christian disunity is mostriculum resources available to Aid for Unemployed clergy the priests will collaboshyevidentIJeminarians he said and enshy rate in a program already inaushy

Theological Realities Mexican-Americansable them to take advantage of gurated under Protestant ausshyTo seek intercommunion bybull more specialized faculty and WASHINGTON (NC) - More pices The invitation to partici shy

a single joint act without regardIDOre extensive physical facili shy than 2500 unemployed persons pate was extended by Dean to the theological realitiesties Cited as examples were the mainly Mexican-Americans will Ledie C Laughlin of Trinitywhich are at the base of theIUbrary science laboratories and receive job preparation and Episcopal cathedralEuchalist he said is to reducephysical education facilities placement services in 11 Southshy The priests will be available tothe Eucharistic celebration to a

Archbishop Byrne said the St western cities under projects anshy prisoners in the varioUS precinct Paul Seminary faculty will be nounced by Labor Secretary stations and courts of the city free to concentrate on the theshy Willard Wirtz and will subequently visit theRochester Priests ologate and to implement plans Approximately $5 million in families of the arrested men ro ~r deeper more intensive Form Assodation Manpower Development and acquaint them with the situashyaludy of theology in accordance Trail1ing Act funds have been tionROCHESTER (NC) - Priests

LUMBER co So Dartmouth and Hyannis

So Dartmouth 997middot9384 Hyannis 2921

J B

with the granting of the master here have joined the growing earmarked for the projects ~ arts degree in theology for which have been developed bytrend tow a r d independentmiddotwhich preliminary accreditation Mexican - Amercian organizashypriests organizations by formshylas been obtained tions The projects have been deshying a Priests Association of

signed by the staff of OperationThe major seminary will also Roohester SER (Service Employment Reshy~ able to serve those priests The diocese already has a development) with the assistancewho desire advanced work in Priests Council formerly called of the Department of Labor andCbeology studies he said a senate Health Education and WelfareSome 115 priests met to vote

on a constitution for the new Operation SER is directed byHails Example association and elect a 15-memshy Jobs for Progress Inc a nonshy

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope ber coordinating committee profit organization sponsored by Paul has told chaplains to About 230 priests including major Mexican - American orshyItalys Christian labor unions about 20 members of religious ganizations the League of United Qhat their work is a real exshy communities serving in the dioshy Latin American Citizens and

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6 rm ANCHOR-Diocese ofJloR RiverThurbull May 2 1968 ( CafttMlCYBoya ~ ~ ~ middot12~middot _ bull~-~ ltshy

~ Tribute $tresses Value Shall We Talk Money or Concern Of~iaIW~

OceasiQnally the criticism is leuroveled against Ohurch leaders that they taik money too often

There may be some truth to this Perhaips what they should do is talk concern-the

eoncern that each person has or should have for his brothers and sisters in the family of God

Such a talk might well go like this Here is a child who is mentally retarded whose parents

have neither the ability nor the time to teach him about the things of earth or of heaven - spend several hours a day with him because he is your little brother in the Lord

Here is a person ravaged by an incurable sickness-middot take this person into your home and care for him until God calls him home because this sick person is your brother in the Lord

Here are a group of young adults entering into the world of the adult with apprehension and fears and anxieties -spend several hours a day with them to answer questions and to talk over problems and to suggest lines of conduct because they are your brothers and sisters in the LOrd

Here are some people who were good mothers and fathers~ and wonderful grandparents and now they are entering their senior years and their strength is failing

middot f hand they need carefuI and patIent care-care or t em because they belong to you they are your parents and grandparents they are your relativesand they are also your brothers and sisters in the Lord

Here isa young unmarried mother who needs guidance

and help here is a father whose wife has died and who has young middotchildren and no one to care for them here is an engaged couple seeking some basic principles about marshy

riage here is a married couple who feel a curtain of misshyunderstanding coming between them-all these are your

Your brothers and sisters in the Lord so you should take the time to educate yourselves about their problems take the time and make the effort to listen to them without watching the clock give them professional advice take them into your home for long-range care give hours of your time in

counselling them and following up their difficulties Do all this And then no one would have to talk money The conshy

eern would be there the services would be rendered the works of the Lord would be done And you would be doingthem

What you cannot do these things you havent the time or the skill yourselves

Well someone has to do these things And someone has to support those who dothe works of the Lord ~omeone

has to give them the means they need to work with theld d d hI I h bUl mg an the facIlitIes an t e too s to Imp ement t elr concern able distanceshave to be traveled thus relieving parent

IJLIf you cam~~t orWI11 not d0bullthe works th emse1V~S ~Jlen and child of straiilarid daily fatigue Inthis matter we Un ~ou ~nd WIll you dosomethInamp to ~~dthoseWho ~re are open to suggestion and will proceed only when and if workmg m your name for and WIth your brot~ersandtheideais approved The expansion of this field into two ~ee4 Government Aid

t th Lo d f l f God d hOO Citing poverty as an example 8IS ers me r rom ove 0 an neIg r or three urban areas awaiF~ alon~ assura~ce that the schools Msgr Higgins said Thisis what the Catholic Charities middotA~rme~ns be staffed by specI~nytramedsIstersaIded by competent ~There is much thatiildividshy

Either dO the workS of GOd yourselves ~helpthoseWho members of thelalty ual citizensmiddot and groups of citishy- are oing these w~1ks o~ meCy an4 cent1oation and eh~ritygtAnother ~bjectiveaboutwhich we seek advice is the zenscm domiddot to all~viate ~ _ and concern m your name c - problem but they cannot ~l~lt bull

L t t talk ih bet t lk d settmg up of a Home for the Aged ChrOnIcally-Ill on The tpe problem alone The gov~~ aaIcaetIosn aOnd yocmiddotatmImiddotomiddotonn~arnd geIVnIng of~se Jaf concern ~ Cape We have fQur tracts of land between Harwiehaitd middottmh~nt ~~~l hile to do much ~ mu bull bull an It IS domg at the present

Lets tak GOO and the goodcto bl done This ~FaJmouthI~settle~ ar~~~ WhIle l~ IS true~an~ nurslll~_tim~ and probably morethiuR mustbe done and in the nameOf God TakeGodfrommiddothomesare bemgbU11~weareconvlllced the~eIsroomfor an recent Adritinistration haj the word good middotandwhat is leftgtmiddot Just an 0 And this one sfuffed by religious women where the near presence proPQsed stands for nothing of a chapel and the stimulus of prayerful exercises would he p~nciple of subsi~ia~ properly understood does

It comes downto this do the work-s of G6dmiddotyourselves uplIftmiddot mmds and hearts However here agamwe would middotpro~ibit the government from to the degree that you can and support those who are like the benefit of your thinking meeting this pressing challenge doing the WOlks of God in your name [ Oli the contrary itobliges the

Our Youth faCIlItIes are constantly expandmg and Im- government to supplement the Now dges that gIVe ~ lIttle dlf1er~ntattItude ~waNLpr6VingFamilyproblemsmiddotnot always of an extremeserl necessarily limited programs at

the Appeal keepour Welfare Family Life and social workers busy In oluntary oIganizfltions il) the ~ f~eld of SOclal welfare ancl ~

--------------~---- -oo

rheANCHOR frICr~L NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALLPVER Published weeklyby The Catllolic Press of the Diocese of Fall River

410 Highland Avenue Fall River Moss 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Rt R~v DanielF Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

CM~I-A~amplU ~~ Ar=t=es App~al ~tlkI1vlhbl ~1llJ1WI If II

Continued from Page Three

Our immediate plans for expansion are bigger than any attempted before There are two important commitments The accommodations at Catholic Memorial Home are to increase through the construction of an addition to the

Nursing Wing This is done with a view to provide for married couples and for such others as could benefit in spirit by being closer to rehabilitation facilities and proshyfessional care

A second objective and it involves a great deal is to modernize our homes for children St Marys New Bedford and St Vincents in Fall River date back a long time Both are iJil constant need of repair But money spent on them is practically wasted So we are about to erect a new St Vincents designed according to the best of modern ideas and for accommodation of 120 boys and girls up to the middle-teen years

1 dFor the menta ly retar ed we would like to provide ht M d th h F d h dovermg care on ays roug rl ay were consl er-

WASHINGTON (NO) _ There is no profession other than social work whieli keeps its fingea- so middotoonting ously and sensitively on tile pulse of human misery notr which is more rewarding in tbaspiritual enrichment of th~ who labor to alleviate the sui

fering of their fellow man The tribute to thesocial worJr

profession was given at the 50tJa anniversary convocation of the Catholic Universitys NationalCatholic School of Social Service by Patrick Cardiilld OBoyle of Washington

In paying the tribute Cardinal OBoyle a graduate of the New

York School of Social Servicewho had a long social work eashyreer before becoming archbishshyop confessed to the gathering that he is still a welfare workshyer at heart

Founded in 1918 The convocation was the higba

light of a weekend celebratiolll of the schools anniversary The present school developed from the Service School opened by the National Catholic Welfare Conference in 1918 to trailamp women for social workwitb American military personneland their families andfor-reshylief and rehabilitation at hOmci and abroad

The National Catholic School of Social Service was foundedin 1921 and NCWC entrusted responsibility for it to the Na- tionat Council of Catholic Women In 1947 this school was m~rged with the Catholic UMshyversity School of Social work the unified school retaining the name National Catholic Schooi of Social Service

Among seminar speakers was Msgr George G Higgins diree- tor social action departmentU S catholic Conference who stressed that although Catholics have justifiably prided OUllshy

selves on having helped to keep alive the notion of subsidiaIi~in social and economic life the7

must be equally alive -- importance and indispensabiUw of far reaching governmentalaction in the social and economorder

all fIelds we are blessed by havmg donated serVIces~ For cial reform this we are d~eply grateful since it allows us to visualize with confidence projects such as the ones Jisted above Publisher to Head

Beginning then next Su~day our volunteer wqrkers Historical Socmiddotiety will make their round of calls tothe homes and offices of all to whom we turJifor support Our record in the past

t h b f d th tSIX een years as een one 0 more an more en USIas IC response from the business community as well as the individshyual donor Apart from the satisfaction of seeing their dollar well spent all who have aided our appeal are beneficiaries of the diocese remembered most certainly in my prayers and masses as well as those ministering to heeds and being helped by the thirty separate social charitable activities that we have Everyone is happy over what has been done But a great many who need to be helped are hopefully watchshying the results of the 1968 campaign and I am among tllem

NEW YORK (NC)-Victor ~ Ridder publisher of New Yorlnl archdiocesan newspaper TIleCatholic News has been elected president of the United States Catholic Historical Society

The societys main purposes are discussonand pUbl~catiODof documents books and papers relating to the history of toe Catholic Church and the deveJ opment of Catholic culture IIIAmerica The society has pub-lished some 50 volumes sinc its founding in 1884

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C~~~-Jimiddot ~ ~t I~middot~

r~pe s_ ~(l (Jlj(~ntucky MountaiTJ Missions t4~ecl ~dOlll f

~f Vocatio~s1 DescriiJes 4ppalacll_ia sPoverty VATICAN CITY (NC) By Dorothy Mitch~n Eastman

Pope Paul VI stressed the Appa~achiaie a powerful word The ve~ name evokes visions of rugged mountain Churchs need fOT priestlyand Religious vocations and life isolation poverty misery and despair In this vast area that encltYmpasses 11 states 1fhe freedom ~hat should charac- live 16 mi11~on of the most poverty-striken people in the Uni1Jed States In every category terize such vocations in a mes- of hUmampn activity Appalachia has fewer of the good things of life than d~s the rest C3ge addressed to the faithful of f America Nowhere in this The latest accomplishment of Gte world on the fifth World nat~on do people h~ve less CAP Inc is the completion of Blny of Prayer for Vocations iYWOme 00 live in poorer II Grade A dairy farming com-

The need the Pope said stems Grom the plan of salvation in the housing nOwhere do they pleL mind of God who wanted have rewer educational oppor- Special schools are set up~rist to be the sole S)urce of tunities or suffer from such Il during the Summer months to

ed al th d teach religion We had six ofGl1vation and of sanctity and 1acit 0 m lC care as ey 0 pho wanteOl His mission to be in Appalachia nowhere in all these Bible schools going last

ld h d Ch Summer Father Beiting saiderpetuated and sPread through we wor as organIze rIS-I ti t d f dh ts Over 350 children have been ~n men partakers in the am y oun so ew a eren A I h included in this program Eighty17liesthood of Christ indispen- us In ppa at lao lmiddotmiddotmiddotll

e Eastern K~ntuc area h middotilmiddot~ per cent of them have been non-Bable ministers of the word and u ~ nt 1

A _1 h h th d b d Catholicsof grace among the rest of man- 9pac la as e U 10US lS-IIdnd tindion of being the poorest of CeJlwllS foil Rellilgilll)n

This need arlslng from the the poor in all CIf th1lSe cate- A8 a follow up to the Bible nature of the Church is DOW glt)ries ~ -schools the parish has organized more acute the Pope continued Four of the poorest counties three centers fur year round OOoause the numbers of the of Eastern Kentucky comprise religious instruction ministers of the Gospel are dim- the parish of Father Ralph Bei- We have a very active bome luishing while the fields open ting He has a parish roughly visitation programFather said tD their work are increasing tile siire of the state of Rhode and this year we will visit be-

The Second Vatican Councils Island tween three and four thousand IMghlighting of the priesthood On his first speaking tour in homes of the faithful the Pope said New England the tall rugged Each year about 2000 people should not lead to a dimming looking priest came to Bishop give from a few days to a few of the ministerinl or hierarchi- Casidy High School in Taun- weeks of their spare time school eal priesthood bull bull bull In fact the ton to talk to the student lxgtdY breaks or vacations to work at more the common priesthood is and the senior class from Coyle one of the four centers Father to be improved the more it has High School has eStablished in his parish Deed of the ministry of the hier- The priests five day tour m- Priests nuns college students arehical priesthood and the eluded addresses at Harvard whltlle families go down to the more the function entrusted to University Regis College Holy area from all over the country tIhe latter manifests its abso- Cross College and Newton Col- to work for the Appalachian lute necessity lege Gf the Sacred Heart as poor

N ---OO- for S I weJn as a TV appearance on One of Charlie Kings inOO has ~ a VBuOD Bob Kenneds Contact show shy P lid d th t been to find useful work for

ampUe ope a e at ODe B~ktAD Aidshya _ f th Ch h d all these volunteers as carpenshy-=gt ales 0 e urc an so Aocompanying Father Beiting ters nurses farmers cooks el the Christian salvation of the - e tour was a lookingld t be ~-d be- -- 6 teaching Bible classes or coun-WOT canno JU6~ as and personable young man from ded ch ri ti h FATHER BElTING seling at the children scamps --amp vun on a sma c p e- Brockton twenty year old Char- Every Sunday of the year DOmena or movements which Be King Charlie has interrupted From the inception of hi8themselves need the ministry rather Beiting and two other -d approval of the hierarchical lWloollege days lit John Carroll pastorate Father Beiting has car- priests drive over 200 miles to Driesthood University to work with Father ried on a dual apostolate As say Masses for 1~heir parishioners

The priesthoods authority Belting as a full time lay vol- well as tending to the needs of in homes in the three churches Mel the priests sacramental unteereaming the grand sum crl of the 45000 who live within af the parish in a candy store

a dollar a day the boundaries of his parish be and a pavillion power1 b to fo Charlie -_ hi h worK-- on everenew the bloodless reflected lito ti as 1 every Non-Catholic attendance at the tie e ra on are necessary l wo~ in Appalachi has con- th li ht _ C Improve e econOmiC p g Masses is often three times as IoU hurch and the salvation of -ced hlm that his vocatlhn th A I h F--d Vlll ~ e ppa ac Ian poor rom greatmiddotmiddotas the native Catholic at shynki d hIDa n e lHU bull I er ea-ng hiS deCNgte~ in the- dist b tion 0 f f d and I thmg tendence in countries As dditi in ~ n u 00 c 0 these

an a ona reason 41- -l~ltIno work omong the poor - -d Co g 10 al~ th ed I ti ~ w ~ G middotressmg n ress n where only one personmiddotin everyOU

_ng e ne or voca ons ~ think its true that we will tt F th h ht Ole Pope cited the secularization n what Eug~ne McCarlh COmml ees a er as song 1000 is Catholic

~ ~ or to attack the poverty of Eastern ~ the modern w9rldwhJch has CaDs QmoraJ revoiution to solve Kentteky with every means Summer Missions

a greater need ~r a conse-middot the Poverty crisis m this cOOn-avaiiable Formiddotfive weeJ~8 everymiddotSummer ~t~an~eciaf~thZed preseten~e tij- be said New Project Father Belting and a team of ~ewltUus 0 ~ mys neB ~ pilther Beiting haSbeen -WOrk As his familiarity with the priests seminari~ and ~y ~ Go~ ~L Cor 4 1) jWg hi Eastern Kentucky since areaincreased and the extent of people go through the countryshy

Wllhngll1ess to Sacrifice [OOa when he was assignedamp workmiddot to be done became more middotside ona streetpreaching misshy ~ ~ addi~on to the need for mission parish under the aus- and more pressing the need for sion Reception is not always WOCations the Pope in his mes- pices of the Diocese of Coving- a permanent solution to eco-middot cordial in this section where ~ stressW freedom of voca-middot ton~ Besides his 1000 square nomie ills became evident In prejudice against Catholics runs fions by which he said he mile parish he bas middotthe respon~ mlilw~rto this need in the Sum- high Father and his preachers meant personal IU1Q voluntary sibility of all 25 counties in mer of 1965 Father Beiting have at times h~ to proclaim ehlation to the cause of Christmiddot Eastern Kentucky through his founded the Christian Appala- the good news of Christs messhyIInd of His Church position as Deail of Kentucky ehian Project Inc an independ- B1ge ~f broth~rhood and middotconshy

There cannot be any voca- Mountain Missions In this posi- ent ~on-Igtrofit organization cern a~id ca~ca~ and hurled aons he said unless they are tion Father directS all the mis- working to develop the economic tomatoes ~ unless in other words they siooory and soCial endeavorS of resources of the region to the The Word is not falling OD

00e offered spontaneously of t1-e Church in this the most advantage of the middotpoor Now in entirely stony ground even in themselves conscr~usly gener- ~pera1e povenymiddot area of its fourth y~ar of setvi~ in ~ -an a~eamiddot wpell~ for genera-tions Ciusly totally America Jackson COUl)t~ the CAP Inc Catholics have been thougbt to ~ This hesa1d applieS Doth to Per capita income in these lias carried out numerous devel- I be mleagiie witb the devil The ~stly and Religious vocati6ns eotJnties avera~es bet~~~rt ~50 ClPmental training and employ- parish is currently instructing male and female vocations ana $840 a year Nearly nine ou~ plent programs Among these 25 people in themiddot faith

Willingness to sacrifice the M every 10 houses is lIubstand ate tlie lntroduction and pro- The expenses of our proshy Pope went on is the cru of the atil lacliing electricity running duction of- sevetal itlew crops gram are enormous Father middot~bleril The world of religion water or inside faciliti~ Tl1ere in themiddot count4ls agricult~ral sighed and theyre financed

discredited by atheism or hedon- ~ no higher per cent of illiter- economy and many technical entirely by contributions On lEm he said is no longer as at- atePeople in the UnIted SUites innovations iIi the agricUltural his speaking tour Father is ~~tive as it OJlC~ was _ thml in Eastern Kentucky Med- field searching for individuals or

Bul youth he said is stillre- ieal facilities ale few and far Complementing the agrjcul- groupswhowill sponsor one of eeptive to the call of the Church between tural prOjects several small in- the 25 full time volunteers like to do difficult things heroic We need doctors desperately dustrialptograms serve to train Charlie King (~t a OOstof $30 a Cbings Father Beiting said sadly and employ natives of the month) Olrmiddottomiddot pledge contribushyThe Pope urged families to be Sickness Leads to Apathy county The woodworking fac- tions for any item on his list -tiling to make the sacrifices of Malnutrition takes Its toll in tOry turns out high quality Ap- of immediate needs - items bull son or daughter to the Church many ways The mountain pal~hian woodcrafts ranging ranging from tires for their

people have often been carica from knick-kneeks to Appala- much used cars to a Holstein turedas lazy but Wldernourish- - chian musical instruments ~ for the dLiry farm

Two in One merrt and sickness are the real Seasonal employment is pro- In concluding his talk to the BERLIN (NC) - The World eauses of their apathy Most of vided through the production of students at Cassidy Father asked

Congress of Catholic Youth these people have middotbeen sick Christmas wreaths Plans are if they would like his address lIePresenting the International since the day they were born ~ on the drawing board for a pal- 01 on second thought he

Catholic Youth Federation and Father asserted letmaking industry and assorted qUIPPed would you rather have the World Federation of Cathoshy Theyre gooCl people-won- enterprises that will employ Charlies lie Young Women and Girls deriul people he insisted Its over 100 men in the county For those who would like have voted to merge the two a shame There should be many which has one of the highest Fathers it Is St Williams erganizations to form the World more people working to help unemployment statistics in the Church 224 rexington Street

tibem nation Lancaster KentuclqWederation of Catholic Youth

THE ANCHORshy 7 Thursday May-2 l968

Crisis in Poland Affects Church

BERLIN (NC)-The Catholic Ohurch and Catholic members of Polands Sejm (parliament) have been caught in the crossshyfire of the current political crisis in that country and the resurgence of anti-Semitism that has a~companied it

For the first time the Church has bean publicly attacked for its support on the students demshyonstrations in March fur intelshylectual and democratic freeshydoms

Jozef Kepa first secretary of the Warsaw Communist party committee in m speech released (April HI) backed party chief Wladyslaw Gomulkas efforts to tone down the anti-Jewish stateshyments that have been rampant in the press on television and in public speeches but had hard words for the Catholic hiershyarchy

Target of Kepas criticisms was Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski of Warsaw who praised the stushydents iOr their maturity and moderation

The voice of the reactionary party of the Church hierarchy had been heard Kepa said among forces united against the peoples power He condemned the support given by Polish Roman Catholic leaders to the student demonstrations

Meanwhile in the Sejm the five Catholic members known as the Znak group were assailed by Premier Jozef Cyrankiewicz aid Politburo member Zenonmiddot Klisko because the Cathltllic legshyislators had asked the governshyment if it approved of a violashytion of civil rights by police acshytion against the demonstrating students Kliszko called the Catholic deputies friends of pro-Israel Jews and revisionshyists

Future Bright ROME (NC) -The religious

liberty situation in Czechosiovshyakia has already changed greatly

for Catholics and hopes for th~

future middotseem bright according to Bishop Frantisek Tomesek a p 0 s t ltl) 1 i e administrator of Prague

GERALD E McNALLY Construction Co Inc

454 MAIN STREET SOMERSET MASS

bull

mEPHONE- 675-7992

YOUI H

CIeLI

IDEAL LAUNDRY 373 New Boston Road

Fan River 678-5677

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FoR River-Thurs May 2 t9688 Urges Vctory ~ VietnomRecipes Re1call Memor~es ST lOUIS (NC)-A oan fbft Victory in Wetnam and a coo-gt demnation of Communism ltBOf Many Friendly Coks intrinsleany evil highlighteltl a series of IOresolutions adoptedBy Mary Enley Dally bIY the priests and bishops Belraquo ving on the Cardinal Mindszen~II A collection of cookbooks 16 a good addition to a kitchen Council governing board ~

Like a dictionary or an encyclopedia a good cookbook is the anti-communist CaJdina$ 8Il authoritative source of information but like that dictionshy lIlindszenty F~undation

ary or encyclopedia irts a cold impersonal font of lrnow- The resolutions adopted a1l the end of the foundations threegt

ledge On the other hand backs cf enveloPes on a blank day celebration of its 10th anni-o there probably is 8Jt your check on the inside of a match versary he1e outlined a p~ Muse certainly ~ ours folde around the margin of a gram based on demands for vioo those h~nd-gasthered recipes seven cents off coupon-whatshy tory in Vietnam rigorous pun-o dear and welcome as letters from ever blank Paper is to be found ishment flaquo riote16 and looters bome These receipes fur goodies in a- womans purse But they and ltm e Fecognition 1baII )lou have been represent communication ~ith there can be no useful ~ served at hoones other people OIl a common logue wiIth men of iN win of friends the ground masters of ~ceit band - written In the never-never land of Released with the resoluti01d ones on yel- things to be done remains the was a stmement from Lola Beue lowing cracked sorting and clasSification of Holmes a Negro leader whO paper in spidery these recipes type them out on joined the Communist party 1ft ecript by hands inde~ cards file neatly divided 1957 as an -informer for the long stilled the into soups salads desserts Federal Bureau of Investi~ti~ ones you took etc (FBI) Emphasizing the comJiNshy~er the tele- And yet though order may be Dist role in civil rights aotiw Phone haH ill heavens first lawthere is someshy ties Miss Holmes told conte shyIlhorthand the thing-quite a something---to be ence delegates othe half in said for our box of recipes In Much of the civil t1rrnlGII ebbreviations the this-sounds- anticipatwn of company coming youre seeing right now was 8Iloo 8OOd kind you jagged out of or just a yen to fix something nmged by the Communist p~ the evening paper with a bobby different we leaf tbrough the when I was a member pin meant to try and probably assorted sizes and shapes of our didnt miscellany M brings reminis-

Also there are the puzzlers cences nostalgia and more Conege Functioning shybow-tos from experts who cook often than not_ an idea of someshyby in9tinet--a handful of flour thing entirely different from the Despite Resignations or SCl just enough so that it item we were originally seek- River mark 50th anniversary In wheelchair Miss Mary R LADYSMITH (NC) - Ibl looks right or enough milk so ing acting president of Mount SeDshy

Dailey organizer and charmiddotter member of Fall River unitario College Sister DonnaItll smooth but not too runny For instance 1Ibere Is fIbe standing from left Mrs Mary Hennessey ticket chainnan Marie Rudolph said the Wis-- Pantry Library cookie recipe in the delicate for anniversary observ-ance Mrs Catherine Lee sUite re- consin college is functioningSuch is the collection-if tbis script of our late beloved neighshy

-bor Mrs Madeline Kelly with gent Rev James Morse chapiain Miss Mary F Maleadynormally after the recent resiglag-tag box of this-and-that its addendum Patsy you might ~n+- srtate regentmiddot Mrs Mary Lou Silvia general chairman nation of founder-president Si9shycould be called a collection-at pao ter Ann Mary Gullan eigbIJour house in the pantry li- like to make these as a surprise for observance faculty members and three acJfur your mother (Patsy wes brary tihen 12 years old) ministration personnel

A trained librarian indeed a Sister Donna Marie said thetrained anybody in the artmiddot of T-heres Marguerite Culhanell veal-in-wine we begged from former president resigned imshy

orderly classification even a he after having this at her mediately but the resignatioJUl well-trained cook woulq be house Isabel Donohoes trick of of the other members of -therwORL~ appalled at this motley array sprinkling chicken with vinegar e~BYMAllULYN RODERICK~ eollege are not effective until Some recipes are written on the to firm it up resulting in chicken June 1 She said the college is

salad par excellence many a recruiting faculty members at kindly with FRENCH FLAIR this time and does not anticioopet reciPe shared

lIS by readers of this column pate any difficultay in acquw One Pork Chop rve always read and heard Another tip fur Summer visi shy ing replacements by the Fall

term that French women have a flair tors to this home of the 1968 Also tbere is one addedre- for clothes but I never realized Man And His World is to The resignations were based

eently by a nameless friend we the truth of this statement until plan on wearing bright little on a dispute over the role to be met when she came to a collec- I visited Montreal Immediately dresses and suits but please no played at the college by the _tion center to get food for her it hits you from the moment bermudas or tight slacks Do newly appointed lay vice-pres-shyfamily afteT her home hadbeen you step out of -your car in however take your hemlines up ident Granmiddott E Zachary

GOLDEN JUBILEE Daughters of Isabella in Fall

partially burned out quring the front of tbe hotel that this is a an inch or two for the minilook recent rioting Many many city of women is the tbing in this land of the Catholic parishes had contiib- who know and mounties and I think I had the uted food ~d clothing Any who care about longest hemlines in town with number cf men and women dressing Minishy them just above my knees (-at came to deliver the donated skirts are evshy least they felt that way)supplies and remained to work erywhere but Ourls have taken over this sorting clothi~ packaging sup- miniskirts worn town and they look so delightfulplies for families of two four with style and that I couldnt resist visiting the and on up chicness colOl talented hair stylist in the hotel

Back to the newest recipe abounds bright and having my hair cut and~ This woman had been given a pinks v i vi d curled a Ie 68 For evening bag of mushrooms by a friendly 0 ran g e s and these curls (with the aid of falls grocer on her block If I could citrus yellows and hairpieces of course) cascade have a pork chop-just one pork f rillsan d down the neckline giving these chop she said I could fix flounces float forth and a walk I Canadian women a fragile fem- my familys favorite dinner down a street is like watching inine appearance that is hard to

One pork chop for a family an everchanging fashion show compete with In fact if you of four We couldnt believe it What astonished me as much feel like getting an inferiority until we tried it at our house as the sense of style that pershy complex about your looks this and were asked for a repeat vades the city was the aura cf is the place to go I guarantee performance Heres how good g-rooming Nowhere do you when you return youll want

Use large-capped mushrooms see a sloppy woman no one is new hair style a new sense of Fry the pork chop cool Be- seen walking the streets with make-up and a oomplete new

wardrobe shymove meat and grind it Add curlers in their hair or runs in seasoned bread crumbs and a - their stockings Obviously the bit of grated onion both sauteed - women ~ Morit~eal are con- in melted margarine or fat from cerned WIth theIr appearance

J UBI L A R I AN Sister - the chop Pile on top of in- and work hard to keep it up Color Process verted mushroom capS Make a - One thing in their favor is the

Mary Marciann of the Feli- er~am ~uee (dried or canned price 01 the clothes One can cian Sisters marked her sil- nulk Wl~ do) into which you - pick up a lovely summer dress Booklets vel jubilee of reJi~iou8 pro- have added ithe chopped and fur about twenty-two dollars ill fession at St Stanislaus sauteed mushroom stems ~our Cenadian money or a smashing-shy

0 a SYSTEMATIC55001( ear SAVINGS

MONTHLY DEPOSITS

5 00 01 amiddot INVESTMENT bull 10 year SAVINGS

NOTICE ACCOUNTS a REGULAR450 year SAVINGS

Bass River Savings Bank

Bank By Mail We Pay The Postage

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA

bull SOUTH YARMOUTH bull HYANNIS bull DENNIS PORT - bull OSTfRVlllpound

Year Books

Brochures

Convent Fall River on Sun- sauce into bottom of a shallow - slack sUit for around thirty-middot pan top withthe stufted mush- eight High fashion for a small AmericCin Pr~s~ Inc

oay~ Observance ~p~luded a rooms ~bake until tender price seems to be the motto of ~ Mass of thanksgIvmg cele- 20-30 nunutes the little boutiques tbatmiddot are OFFSET PRII~ITERS~~ LEnERPRESS

brated by Rev Itobert S So now into our heterogene-- ~ound everywhere and if youre Kaszynski StS~nslau8uscollection J0~ this ~ded middotplannin~ a tri~ to this SOPhis~- 1-~7JOFFI~ VENUE hone 997~942t pastor and a -reception for lte~ - communIcation agam - eate~ CIty thiS Summer don t~

- _ remJnder of someone -who was outfit YOU16elf before You go - friepds m the parochial -willillg to share her houSewife -- save a few pennies fur some

school -haU- _ lmowhow delightful buys up there

New Bedford Mass

~

9 New Insecticide Promises To End Dangmiddoter of Sprays

By Joseph and Manlyn Roderick

I doni lmow how other prdeners fared over the Winter but my roses were hit pretty hard Most of my pruning is done now and very ~itble remains of 1ast years IIOwth Luckily the roses surrived wt ground level but I Gidnt have much of a job a~ h Nader knew which ones the~ldmg w at to prune Slnce children would enjoy the hours most of what I could see ihey were open and how much ve the root crown is dead they cost

This year I am going to try bull We found our hotel through stematic approach to ridding this tiny book that described it IDY plants of insects rather than in glowing tenns and it tlllmed IPr~ying simply their upper sur- out to be all that the autho18 IIaces A systematic insecticide had said and then some II taken in through a plants Dining SJl)Ob fIlIOots and passes through its sya- However every bit as imporshytern The one I purchased is in taut as our place oli lodging was granular form and contains a the places where we dined and fertilizer A measured amount Mr Frommer and Mr Godwin III Spread around the base of the couldnt have given us better mose bush worked into the sou tips on dining if they had been ifhen given a thorough watering with us personally One evening The roots then absorb the fer- Joe and I (thanks to 11 kindshytilizer and insecticide and sup- hearted Nana) ate alone at a lit shyposedly keep the plant free from tIe bit of Portugal transplanted IIU chewing and sucking insects to this continent called the k six weeks Fado ComP1ete with melanshy

SLfer~ Quicker moly guitars and Spanish-Por-I would be parUcularly grate- tuguese cooking it was a delight

ful ii the systamic program to the eye ear and palate worked beacuse it would elim- Equally as good though were Snate spraying No matter how inexpensive luncheon places cautious one is there is alwaYs suchlS A La Crepe Bretonne Gte possibility that children win and the Pam Pam The former

I th th has an upstairs constructed Uld eome in contact WI e spray 1_ at d lik te hi dend harm themselves ~r e e a pIra span

Aside from the safety factor 8 bill of fare thart ~onsists of this method Js also much quicker ~late-SI~ paper-thin crepes llIld easier ttuui spraying No filled WIth any of 81 different messy spray cans and no lost fillings One cOld spend a energy in pumping and unblock- whole afternoon Just watchi~g Ing nozzles just a third of a tJeCOOks cr~ating these deli shycmpful of an odorless material ClOUS concoctIOns but Montreal applied around a plant every six hol~ so many wonders that one weeks with no danger that it ham t time to linger over any will rain ~e day after you one thIng

ra ed and wash off the ra The Pam Pam too was a 8P t y 1 sP Y charmIng IneXpenSIve restaurant ala erla fo f 1 H g d

I am more than willing to try I a anu y un anan In ecor IIOmething new but being a pes- and dIshes It featured flourless simist at heart I cannot conceive cakes Both my mother and I had of something which is so easy some for desse~ but before I actually working Lurking An could ask the w81tre~s what they the back of JDy mind is the feel- did make them WIth if ~ey mg that someone devised a omi~~d flo~r Jason wa~ dIPPIng method of satisfying lazy gar- his hands In ~veryones plates ampmers that the were doing and I thought It best to pay our

y bill and departoomethmg about theIr roses to try without having to go to

B tt J d I f lt th t h t 0 oean e a a

m h t bl rt f a s garuc rou e so 0 upill forroses We will give it Il

we s~mpled of thIS cosmopolItan_ b t ti d -cy was u an appe zer an

try though and hope that the that we would like to ret~m RSults live up to the message ag81~ for an entree-but WIthshy

out a two year older on the label of the product Now that were all back in a

lJm the llUtchem routine at least until Summer l have come to the conclusion vacation heres a tasty little

tfhat any family that attempts vegetable recipe to add interest to take a vacation trip with a ta everyday menus toddler has to be either courageshy lEGGS l1lgtJIVAN eurolUS or stupid and Im afraid we (Il) I dIE)tfull into the latter category eVl eggs When our plans to visit Wash- G hard-cooked eg~s lngton over the Spring vacation 1 2~ oz can deVIled ham failed because it was impossible teaspoon Worcestershire to obtain reservations (evishy sauce dently everyone else in the U S teaspoon grated onion bad the same plans only sooner Ik teaspoon salt titan we did) we set our sights yenteaspoon dmiddotry mustard aorthwaTd Montreal was our Dash pepper go~l and with our terrible two Z Tablespoons cream or milk in tow along with some genial (Broccoli and Saaee) smndparents and two young 1 pkg frozen or 1 bunch fresh ladies of seven and nine we set broccoli Iotth ona rainy Mond~ momshy Im Tablespoons butter or Ing margarine

Fortunately I had come with 1~ Tablespoons flour -e a pocket book guide of Montshy ~ teaspoon dry mustard Ileal andQuebec written by Arshy teaspoon salt thU1 Frommer and John God- Dash pepper win in ~peration with ttIe cup milk Bank of Nova SCOtia n was Jk cup grated sharp cheese absolutely priceless The 8Ushy 1) Prepare the deviled eggs thorS described in expllcit detai by cutting I( inch slice from one botel motel and rooming house end of shelled egg remove yolk eccQmmodations different types and mash yolks and end slices eftestaurants from ones where with the ham Worcestershire ~ can get eggs toast and cofshy oniorisalt mustard pepper and Iee-tor 65c io the elite gounnet cream mill well and then use laavens that lure 1be patrons flo fill hollows of egg whites with theIr haute cuisine and I) COOk broccoli as label dfshy~Hy the bighllghts of the city recls (if f~n) or in a small ampat tourist shbUldnt misa am9unt of wBtell Until tender ISald highUght were even catoeshymzed - tba JastantlJ tile

if yf

I) J I

EVERYBODYS GOTTA EAT Pfc~Charles Richards of Pittson Pa s-hares his C-ratio~~ w~th fatigue-hatted Httle Vietnamese boy in a villag~ near Saigon where Richards outfit the 1st Battalion 27th Infantry 25th Inshy

fan try Division was on a sweeping oPeration Jleoar the Vietnamese capital ~C Photo

We Like It Here Milwaukee Neighborhood Committee Works

To Prevent Panic Selling-MILWAUKEE (NC) - Some

strange signs are beginning to appear in the windows of homes around St Agnes parish on the citys North Side

Theyre being displayed by persons interested in stabilizing the area They call attention to a program that aims to reduce house turnover so that home and area values can be mainshytained

In the eyes of the organizers the prgram is designed to preshyvent panic selling

The signs read Were Not Moving to SUburbia-We Like It Here and This House Is NOT For Sale

Theyve been prepared by an

NUlises Cound~ Mee~

MOlY ]] at St Annes The Diocesan Council of Cathshy

olic Nurses will hold their Spring Plenary Meeting on Satshyurday May 11 at st Annes School of Nursing Fall River

The business meeting and election of officers scheduled for 4 oclock will be followed at 5 by an address by Rev Donald J Bowen assistant at St Marys Norton

Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament will be given at 630 and the banquet will follow at 715

Reservations must be made with Mrs Ann Fleming 228 Oak Grove Ave Fall River no later tlban Sunday May 5

melting the butter in a saucepan and stirring in flour mustard saltand pepper Remove from heat and stir in the milk Re- tum to heat and cook until

thickened stirring constantly Add the grated cheese and stir -tmtil smooth

In amiddot cassetrGle dish arrange gt

the cooked broccoli Stand the deviledmiddot eggs with stuffed ends

up between and on broccoli pieces Pour the sauce over aU-

area stabilization committee for distribution in homes in an area populated by about 40000 pershysons about one-third Negroes

The signs are one of the means by which we hope to dis~ourage unethical real estate salesmen according to Anshythony L Silva acting commitshy

middottee chairman and a member of St Agnes parish

Fear Tactics

He explained at rl~ent meetshyings that the program is not sponsored by a religious group Nor are the committee apshyproaching the problem on a color basis but 18ther as a matshyter of economics

Our aim is to restore confishydence in the area and countershyact unethical salesmen since they tend to operate on fear tactics said Silva

The immediate goal of the group is to make its efforts known to all residents of the area by establishing a network of block contacts

Persons who have expressed interest in the program represhysent St Agnes Roosevelt Drive Presbyterian Garden Homes Evangelical Lutheran Augusshytana Evangelical Lutheranmiddot Siloah Lutheran amI Elim Tabshyernacle churches

THE ANCHOR-Thursday May 2 1968 -------------=

Teaching Sisters To Get Raise

DALLAS (NC) - Bishop Thomas K Gorman of DallasshyFort Worth has approved a salshyary raise for Sisters teaching in parochial schools which was recommended by the diocesan board of education

In a letter to all pastors Bishshyop Gorman stated As of Sepshytember the base minimum salshyary for each Sister in regular service to the local parish will be $1500 per year

Enclosed with -the letter was an agreement signed by Bishop Gorman fM the signature of each pastor and the major supeshyrior of the religious order of Sisters serving his school

The agreement provides thllgtt the parish pay the stated base minimum salary to eac~ Sister provide a convent and its upshykeep along with utilities inshycluding a telephone an automoshybile and its maintenance and health insurance

Sister Caroleen of the Schooi Sisters of Notre Dame diocesan superintendent of schools said the increase in the minimUm base salary Is fbe first such since 1959 when it was set at

$960

Withdraw Missionaries From Angola Territory

NEW YORK (NC) - The United Church of Christ and the United Church of Canada are w~thdrawingthe majoritr of theIr missionaries from the Portuguese West African ter- ritory of Angola

Dr Alford Carleton execushytive vice-president of the United Churchs Board for World Ministries whose headshyquarters are hele said the acshytion was being taken because the Portuguese government is apparently seeking tomiddot extinshyguish Protestant missionary acshytivity in Angola

The two churches have withshydrawn all missionaries III total of 12 whose terms of service had already been extended for more than a year beyond the normal term The missionaries wiJI apply for readmission

Portuguese administrators have in the past given assurshyances that re-entry permits would be given but Dr Carleshyton said there have been inshystances of denials of re-entry permits to missionaries

BlUE R~ION

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-ObtainsFreedo ForRefugees

MADRID (NC)--Amiddot group t1ti youth leaders who spent a nig~

middotin a church to avoid a I~est ~ police was released la~

through the help of Auxilia~ Bishop Angel Mortll Figuls ~ Madrid

The youths had taken refureg in the church of Our Lady ~ Montana in suburban MorataJaiJ after police raided a mccting bll a parish building which th0 youths said was a house of thQ people of God Q

The meeting which had b~

announced in the padsh tIbQ previous Sunday as a conferenltcO on Ohristian doctrine was SUib rounded by police on suspiciolQf that it was an illegal meetin~ of workers oommimiddotttees-inde-o pendent labor organizations Tb() police arrested a Catholic woramp ers leader Dannen Ruiz Abo-1 gado Juan Canet a lawyer a~ Father Juan Jose Maria Bltlllesashyteros as they left the meetin- The three were late releasecA

However middotthe Y9uths atten+shying the conference fled to ~

church to avoid arrest and ve mained there until BishOJll Morta arrived and obtainecll

their freedom after negotia~ with the police

10 ~H~ ANCHORshy )hursday May2 bull 19~8 (

- - bull )

Sup~me C~ult Qars Obscenity

For Youth WASHINGTON (NC)

For more than two years the Supreme Court has made it clear thatin the eyes of the law obscenitymiddot is a sometime thing its distribution ~o adults nearly impossible to regulate without endangering the Conshystitutions guarantees of free speech and opinion

But over the same two years the Court has indicated thai it might be possible to control the

availability of obscene books and films to the young and in

1967 it issued an op~n invitashycmiddotmiddot tion to the nations ~a~yers to find the right cases an4 the right arguments tot~stmiddotthis middotmiddotview _

This year the cases were found and the Supreme Court did what most observers thought it would do it permitted states and citiesto control distribution of obscene material to youngshylIJters - providect It drlws the lines finely and tightly

It returrled from amiddotJtwo-week recess to rule thatmiddotmiddot NeW York middot States law barring phsons un- Organization Starts ~er 17 from buying smut met ~ middotthe ~e~t~nd tpatrgtalIas1s middot~lm CLEANUP FatherDetm6d P McDermott of New Yorks lower East ~ide St Housingmiddot Program

elasslflcatlOn law undet whIchmiddotmiddotmiddot bull - bull WASHINGTON (NC) - ~1 bull

minors areprevented from see- BrIgId spansn pas8~s o~t pamt ~nd prusJ1e~ to sl1rpl1r~a~ volunteers who particIpated m Church-sponsored nonprofit 0IJ)00

lt ingsome movies didnot ih~ AprIl ZO ()peratJoA Cleanup It was estImated that 50000 urban people of all baek- ganization here haS launched II

middotThemiddotopinions shoUld go li-long grounds w~re joined in the WOllk by 5000 suburbanites in cleaning andpaintin~ aJong~ousing program Wider whiClli way toward clearing up a con- 46 Streets NC Photo It hopes to purchase 322 sl~ lrti-tutional atmosphefe which at homes rehabilitate them aDCil middottimes hasbeen no Clearer thanmiddot 0 000 p J resellmiddotthem to poor families DiP

the air around the Supreme middotMmiddotore ThanmiddotS1 middotinGmiddot reo CIt Day rOJe ect del federal financing Courts building on a Pilrticu- The organization-Urban Beshylarly still slmlne~ day 1ew YOk middotPrmiddotelamiddotte Heomiddotds lomiddotmiddotn~Sectmiddot omiddotmiddotrmiddot-amiddot n Effort habilitation Corp~will begiul

While the Court in an 8-1 de- 1lIIII 1lIIII the program with therehabi eision written by Justice Thur- tation of nine row houses whiob 000 Marshall-his first major ~ NEW YORK (NC)Jt- Wall z At the end of tbe da~ they ~teas of densest poverty ~Jl it will purchase from the ~ epiiiion-tlirewout the Dallal greatday for New York-one ~ Bat down togethermiddot at tables iyIanhatian andthe Bronx _ development Lanmiddotdmiddot Agen~ filmmiddot clasSification law because hard work oonstructiye dia- str~ng tile length of streets to Last SumJl1er in its thitd year Washi~gtonurban refewal tfwas unduly vague even there logueand happy celebration eat a meal of celebraHon pro- of successful operation the thorny agency The RIA apo K upheld the right of goer~- -Along 45 streets in the Man- vided and prepared by people ~rojec(wastlIreatenea b~ out- proved sale of the houses to ~

Jnen~ to prote~t the Y0llng 1~m hattan and Bronx ooroughs of the block 1gtreak of violence in East Har- group at a purchasemiddot price ~ ~slble bad mfluenc~ some 50000 Negroes Puerto Many in~olved said they felt lem $26100

Different Directions Ricans Italians Jews Slavs the most important aspect of the To counteract riot threats Purchase and rehabilitatiOll middotIt did so without p~ssing on Orit~nt~ls and eople~f otmiddothe whole projeot was not renova- Msgr Fox organized East Har- work which will be done bIT

themiddot meri~~or lackof merits nationalities were joined by middottion but relationship It gave lem peace processions For five Negro contractors and involVG of the film involved but hinted some 5000 guest volunteers _ an opportunity at a time middotof nghts more than 1000 old and young Negroes as apprentice6 middot111at had the law been suffi- from suburbia and other middle alienation and fear between YQung Puerto Ricans walked will be carried out under ~

eielitly explicit about what con- class areas black and white rich and poor through their streets with ban- $]37000 mortgage provided ~ stihites proper or improper con- They spent the day c1eani1g inner city and suburbia oung nersmiddot flowrs singing songs the International BrothelhooCl

duct the Dallas censors would renovating and decorating the and old for people to meet one carrying candles and standing of Electrical Workers and guall shy have had no trouble iicei1sing inner city streets and alleys another as persons in an at- up for peace hope and love anteed by the Federal Housins middotthe film buildings and residences 10- mosphere of work play and La~gely through their efforts Administration under its 221pound(

Instead thc Court said they gether the men women and accomplishment peace was restored to the area program were set adrift in a boundless children residents wOlked shoul- Its one way to make real sea and arrived at their con- der to shoulder with priests what Dr Martin Luther King elusion--that the film should be nuns laymen and women vol- envisioned when he said I Archbishop Greets shown to adults only - from unteers They cleaned back- have a dream as East Harlemshy DEBROSS OIL many different directions yalds and basements did car- ite Valentine Haddock described Armenian Patriarch ~uch a situation is wide open pen try work made plumbing all the people helping one anshy NEW YORK (NC) ~Archshy co

te abuses not the least of which repairs painted doors windows other to become not even just bishop Terence J Cooke ofNew would be a drift among film- and building facades friends-relatives York welcomed His Holiness Heating Oils makers toward the most innocu- At the end of each block a Peace Processing Vasken I Supreme PatIiarch ous and the totally inane The large and colorful mural was Cleaned out basements and andCatholicos of all Armenians and Burnersresult The vast wasteland that painted on a wall depicting the backyards on streets are to be at an ecumenical service in St some have described in refer- good things happening transformed later again by Patricks cathedral 365 NORTH FRONT STREET ence to another medium might street residents and guest vol- It marked the first time the

NEW BEDFORDbe a verdant paradise in com- Award Ecumenical unteers working in partnelship supreme spiritual leader of the parison into vest pocket parks basket- Armenian church had been reshy

But because the law was Theology Diploma ball courts little theaters reme- ceived in a Catholic cathedral in ivague said Marshall it does KAMPALA (NC)-A theolo- dial schools and teenage neigh- the United States JIlot follow that the Constitution gical diploma of the University borhood clubs requires absolute fleedom to of East Africa jointly recognized This non-sectarian project exhibit every motion picture of by the Catholic and Anglican was instituted by Msgr Robert every kind at all times and all Churches in East Africa has been J Fox New York archdiocesan places awarded for the first time coordinator for Spanish com-

The first four Uganda students munity action who four years to receive the diploma fare An- ago originated a creative comshy

Schedule Unveiling glicans munity action program Sum-The theological diploma repre- mer in the City now operatingOf Pope1s Statue sents an agreement between out of 26 store fronts in eight

FATIMA (NC) -A 12-footshy Catholics and Anglicans over the high statue of Pope P~lUl VI syllabus and subjects of the theshy

wili be unveiled Monday May ological course However such TRI CITY13 at the Marian shrine here on an agreement does not iriclude the first anniversaly of the any changes in doctrinal teach- BOILER REPAIR COJontiffl visit to the shril)e ing by the churches Each stu- SLAB BRIDGE ROAD Ihe st~tue depicts Pope Paul dent ~oJl~ws th~ course accold- ASSONET MASS 02702 i

- ~ri~ellngmiddot in prayc 1eiore ~ a~ ing to th~ doctrines middotof hismiddot remiddot Tel 644middot55~6 image of Our Lady of FaJimashy ~pectiYemiddotchurpoundh _ BOILERS RE-TUBED

bull ~ Ali tlhe~ middotmiddotbmiddoti~~psmiddot of P~rtugalI The churches alsoagreed tJ1at S EP A I are expected middotto attendmiddot the un themiddot ina in emphgtIS -Inmiddot th tli_e TUBE R teED

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11

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THE ANCHORshyThursday May 2 1968

Portland Prelote Stresses Crisis

In Education PORTLAND (NC) - Co- )0

adjutor Bishop PetermiddotL Ger- BATON ROUGE (N2)-Tho ety apostolic administrator Louisiana AFL-CIO app Dved tl

of the Portland diocese des- ~ resolution calling for s ~ supshycribed the grave and serious 1 bull port to children attendi 3 nonshycrisis in regard tQ finances and c middot~lmiddot ~ i public schools at its COil ~ntion personnel in the field of Cath- ~H 1 here oUc education at a press con- l~ The resolution endar d the ference here proposal that tuition supple-

While affirming the desira- ments for the teaching oj nOiF bility of Catholic education the religious subjects bc paid Maine bishop pointed to the toward the education of chill-gt serious problems in financing dren regardless of race creed and staffing a system of schools or religion in state alproved which aims at providing a Cath- non-public schools which me~ olic education for all children all the requirements of law whose parents desire it He Emile Comar executive ~ middotnoted both the rising costs of rector of the Louisiana reder2lshyeducation and the dlOp in voca- tion Citizens for EducHtionllll tions and in the number of Reli- Freedom said It is gmtifyin(l gious available for teaching that the state AFL-CIO in tho

Bishop Gerety n~ted During adopted resolution recognizecll the past ten rears six Catholic __ -_~scgtbull~- Jf the need of parents with ct~ schools in this state alld 11 dren in non-public schools

Catholic elementaly schools CARDINAL J~EGER IN AFRICA The retired ~rchbishop of Montreal Paul-Emile Tuitions continue to dse ant1 have closed their doors During Cardmal Leger who has dedicated his Iif e to work with the poor in Africa is continu- taxes are becoming increasingJy41 the same period we have scen II t th h fl k f d f higher and the combination eithe enrollment in our Catholic a y mee mg WI IS oc or ISCUSSIons 0 conditIons m the DIocese of Yaounde Cam- the two has placed a lremeiF schools decrease by 25 per cent eroun NC Photo dous financial burden on thill

middot~i~~~i~e~~~~~Ct~I~~O~Cmiddotard-nal Leger Works for Afmiddotr-ca Lepers -n~~nt of the states populashymg statements Tbe labor organizations resa-

Expand Quality lution noted The contributioJ)fl

The middotsystem be Seeks to Bring SpirituQI Material Aid which these schools havecannot ex- made panded beeause of staffing to the state have long been ree problems financi~l deuromands YAOUNDE (NC)-lt is said The fact that he left behipd COmmodate himself to the new ognized by the public and~middot

and theincreasing costs of pres- that when Paul Emile Cardinal one of the most important dJ- environment and to be ready public officials ent day education Leger former arehbishop of oceses in the world does not fig) to I work effeetivelr It added that the parents bl

Schools must be consoUdated Montreal arrived at the lepro- ure in their thinking but theymiddot The eardinal is already famil- these tuition supported schooJJ wherever hldicated for maxi- s~rium of Nianing in Senega appreciate the sacrifice that is iar with the specific plOblcms of have repeatedly demonstrateflJ mum use of the available Reli- last Dec IS the lepers looked involvedmiddot in leaving his nfltive the lepers villages He thinks their support of both public ani I gious persoJmel at their fingers to see if a mir- country and adapting to a Dew that they need good pharmacies non-public education to the

We mustmiddot concentrate on ex- acle was going to happen and environment and is concerned with CHing for benefit of all Louisiana eh~ cellence in the schools we have they were going w be instan- Cardinal Leger has put him- all types of sicknesses He sees dren Where this is not possible the taneously cured It was in fact self at the service of Archbishop a need for wells powelhouses bishop said the schools in- the first time that the lepers JeanZoa of Yaounde He is food suppliers and medicinesmiddot of Brotherhood Lackvolved will have to be closed had seen a cardinal learning one of the languages various kinds

We must greatly evpand the ri1l~ cardinal however through of Cameroun the one that is Menace to Peace~ Men Not Outcasts S(l()pe and quality of our reli- middotworks of chari1y has for a long most widely spoken in the reshy VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pe~gious education proglams reach- time been concerned withmiddot the middotgion He thinks that jcent wiJl What makes the cardinal parshy is still menaced by questions laquofing out to all age groups lepers M~~y of the houses in take two years for him lamp ale- tkularly admired is that he reshy

prestige and an insufficient senstlBishop Gerety announced the leprosanum here at Yaoul)de gards the lepers as men and not of human brotherhood PQ~that he is creating a task force have been built through his - as outcasts He knows that many Paul VI told thousands of isi~to study religious education gifts The same is tgtrue of sev- Pope Asks Respect lepers are severely mutilated tors gathered in St Pete

plograms in the diocese He eral leprosaria of the Ivory For Human Rights and Cfln no longer take their SQuare for a Sunday noon blesvshywill ask the group he said to Coast Dahomey and Camerouf place in society It is because of ingmake reco~mendations ~on- The cardinl i6 still in the VATICAN CITY (NC)--Jt is middotthis that he seeks to bring them

eerning how the limitedre- stage of making contacts in the vain to proclaim h~man rights material and spiritual aid Speaking from a window ovei shysources of the diocese can best three leprosaria here unless everythlllg IS done ~o He also gives thought to the looking the square Popc P~u1 be used to ploovide an effec- Cardinal Leger does not want ensure the duty of respecting prevention of the disease If cleclared We must support willi tive religious education for the to impose either his aid or him- them by all people everywhere leprosaria are well organized it our hopes that cause (of peace) total community of adults lind self on anyone He has said re- l1ld for all people Pope Paul will perhaps be possible to wage which so many desire and proshychildren peatedly that he does not want VI declared In a letter to the In- a campaign to eradicate the mote with a sense of impartiality

He said he will also ask for to be a burden and tl1at he ternational Conferenee on Hu- disease completey and justice with true love ofi reeommenltlations on the best wants to be regarded as a simple man Rights meeting in Tehran The cardinals realism aston- freedom and of respect for su1ishy

fering peoplesuse of the dioceses Religious priest Iran ishes many Africans who like personnel Disinterested Help The lettel signed by the Pope to live from day to day and who

~-------------bull That is why the Africans ad- was sent to Father Theodore do not like their customs to be mire him Moslems and Chris- Hesburgh CSC president of upset The cardinal understands tians agree that his is an exam- Notre Dame University and head that the Africans must be shoWn pIc of disinterested help that is of the papal delegation to the that aid is not directed at deshynot often seen in Africa ongress The meeting is being stroying their customs but at

held on the 20th anniversary of bringing them a better standard the United Natio)ls Declaration of living

Workers Charges of Human Rights and in conshyjunction with the International Reject CelibacyDenied in Germany Human Rights Year

ROERMOND (NC)-TwcllyshyBONN (NC)-Charges by the The papal letter dec111red one young Dutch priests havewomens branch of the Indian With all men of goodwill we told Bishop Petrus Moors ofYoung Christian Workers shall follow with great interest this Netherlands See that they(YCW) that living and working ~his conference in Tehran which can no longer accept the plicstlyconditions for Indian girls means to formulate and prepare a celibacy obligationtraining as nurses in West Gershy program of measures to be taken

many were unsatisfactory were on the prolongation of this Hushy denied here man Rights Year

The Rev Hubert Debatin Racial discrimination raises soProtestant minister who initi shy

many troubles social injustice F L COLLINS amp SONSated a program of nursing economic misery and ideologicaltraining for girls from Indias oppression so many revolts that INCORPORATED 1937Kerala state saId that the Indishyrecourse to violence as a meansan government had ordered an

investigation of the complaints to right these wrongs to human The Indian embassy here howshy dignity is a grave temptation ever refused to comment (The Development of Peoples)

Rev Mr Debatin said he visshyON CD HOARD Alexandshy Ited the embassy and told offi shy

er P Tureaud Sr chief cials that the charges wer~ completely false Despite thecounsel for the Louisiana no comment by the embassy

branch of the National Assoshy it is reliably repOrted that emshyciation for theAd~ancement bassy officials did visit several of Colorelti People tNAACP) hospitals and questioned Indian

girlS about th~ir living and beeame the first Negro elecshyworking conditions ted to the Catholic tJniver~ The niinist~r iJaidthe Indian

sity board of trustoos NC yew will be asked to WithdrawPhoto ~ alleamplatioNi~

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12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 2 1968

C~~e$ ~~Ergy Role in Sreg~Hrch F9f ~~ Crisis Sc~~tm(ln

By Msgr George G Higgins The bighop of a middle-siood eastern diocese recently

gnnounced at ceremonies memorializing Martin Luther King Jr that the diocese will spend a substantial portion of its annual Development Fund to improve the condition ef the Negro bullbullbull The money poslible that even those Cahoshyhe was at pains to empha- lies (and Protestants) who are size will not be gpent pater- most vigorously opposeq to

wilistically but in close 00- clerical involvement in social operation with local Negro and economic issues are nevershyleaders He said that his com- theless in fevor of using church mitffiimt wi 11 funds as seed money to develshylTeceiVe the op projects for the benefit of bacJcing of the the poor in general and for areas Catholics poor Negroes in partiCUlar I make tbisDisconcerting Fact ~ o m mit - I would hope of course that ment he as- this might prove to be the case aert1d confi- but only time will tell lIIent that our Meanwhile the fact that Catholic people such a high percentage of Cathshyshare this love olies and protestants are 00

-m Ii d concern record as being opposed to That the bishop the middotchurches getting involved felt it necessary in political and social issues is to make the latter statement for rather disconcerting to put it the record might lead one ~ as mil~ly as possible suspeet that in point of factmiddot be I say tliisas one who can symshyantiCfpated that some of hi$ pathizewith thoseCatholicsor Catholic people would object to Protestants or Jews who object his 0 decision and was mereIi to certain types of clerical inshyWying to neutralize their op~ volvement which either ignore mtion in advance or to put it the complexities of the political morecrudely was trying to ~rocess or tend to oversimplify beat them to the punc~ sO to the application of moral prinei-Bjpeak pIes to complex social and ecoshy

I Expert Opposition pomic problems or finally tend Be that as it may a recent to leave the impression that

ampallup Poll on the attitude of Clerics have a monopoly on the Cathdlics 3lld Protestants with regard to the involvement of their churches and their clergy in political and social issues would seem to suggest thatshylIIlless his diocese is the rare exceptl(~n that proves the rule -~he bIShop can exp~t a cershyiau~ amount of 0PPoSIb~)D from a slzable JIllnonty of his Cathshyooc people

lftY-Seven per cent of Cathshyclies res~ndmg m the Gallu~ survey said that the churcti~~ should not get involved with 35 per cent statmg that t~e d1~rch~~ sho~d express SOCIal enS pO~~Ical Vle~s

~gn Icantly l~ was found ~at more Catholics than Pro~-

Virtue of political prudence or have been granted ethical inshysights thatmiddot have been denied to other mortals

S~rious Obligation It is one thing however to

demand that clerics stay within the limits of their o~ compeshytence in the political order and quite another thing to try to muzzle them or to deny that they have any role at all to play in the field of public policy In the case of civil rights for exatitple they havemiddot a serious

Gbligation to teach the truth as they see it

To do so in any meaningful woay tlley must at times move beyond the realm of general

0Stants thmk ~hat the ~hurlt~esprinciples into the area of spe- should n~ get ~volved ~n soc~al and polItlcal Issues Fifty-~wo lPOerlledcefnt of the Protesta~ts P avored mvolvment whIle 42 ~er cent disagreed

Hadden Study Contrarirwise however a

mudy released during the same week in which middotthe Gallup findshymgs were made public found

ntat in all caSes Protestantsmiddot were more vigorous in their opshyposition to social action by clergymen thaI) either Roman Catholics or Jews

The latter study directed by ~effrey K Hadden a sociologist at Western Reserve University in Cleveland was summarized In ~onsiderabledetail by Edwaro R iFiske in an article entitled -Cl~rgy and Civil Rights in the editorial section of the Sunday Ap~il 21 issue of the New York linles

Since the Gallup and HadGen Alrveys dealt specifically with the right of the clergy and the ehurches to speak o~t on social and political issues (civil rights tor example) and not on the role of the churches in financing programs aimed at improving U1t ~ot of Negroes their findshyings do not necessarily m~ ofoou~E that the bishop referrect to a~ove will encounter oppe-

cifies~ even at the risk of a~tagshyonizing those Catholics who disshyagree ith them

This does not mean that clershyies or other representatives of official church bodies should shortcircuit the political procshyess by trying to force their own solutions on the body politic by means of heavy-handed authorshyitarian edicts

If they were to shirk this reshysponsibility or run awoay frOm this challenge for fear of antagshyonizing a minority (or for that matter eyen a majority) of their people they would be unshyworthy of their calling

-This having been said howshyever itshould be noted that clericS and other representatives of offlCiilI church bodies alSo

have an obllgation to keep their methods of teaching under conshystant review

Wo~ CUt Out We cannot automatically as-middot

Sume in other words that all of those who object to clerical involvement in political and soc~lissues are necessarily in

HEADS NCEA Bishop Raymond J 9allagher of Lafayette Ind was elected president general of the Natshyional Catholic Educational Association at the associa- tions 65th annual conven- tion in San Francisco NC Photo

Venerate Fatima Statue in Brazil

LISBON (NC)-Manuel Cardshyinal Goncalves Cerejeira patri- arch of Lisbon imd Bishop Joao Pereira Venancio of Leiria whose diocese includes the Marshyian shrine of Fatima returned here after participating in threeshyday ceremonies in Brazil honorshying Our Lady of Fatima

They t~ok the statue of the -Pilgrim Virgin of Fatima with them to Brazil

At Sao Paulo they took part in Portuguese - Brazilian Communshyity Day celebrations At Inhangshyabau and at Rio de Janei1G thousands joined them in ven- erating the statue

The patriarch and Bishop Venshy

ancio were accompanied in Brazil by the rector of the Fat-middot i m a shrine Msgr Antonio Borges

_ sitiOJifrom any slgnificantnuili middot te~ which they caiiunder- pany a mernber of the Jew-middot

ber ~f his people for usin~ cii- stand and absorb jish fAith has neen elected GCeSaIl f~nds for the economic -Ifthis sho~d prove to be the to in bOardof +-~ t- and~ ~OCIal bettel1nent 01 the case we have our work cut out ~ bull wu~ ~ W

Wack citizens of his communitlT ~r~ in the montha ftbat lie the CaU~hc VnlverampliyNe ~~ other words it is quite aheiid middotPboto

~ ~

bad faith It may be in the case of some

r of tb~m at le9st we are at fault TRUSTEE BenJamin T ~ in the sense that we havent Iearned how to communicate the Rome president of aWaah Go~l meSsage to them in i n g ton construction oom-

The Servant Queen IiJ the Constitution on the Church we find the testimony of

Sacred Scripture and the Church Fathers combined with more recent pronouncements by the popes Mary the Mother of God an4 of the Redeemer was united to Him by a close inen soluble bond and waS accorded a special role in the mystery Qf the middotIncamiddotrnate Word that is in the economy of salvation

Whenmiddot Mary uttered the words of her Fiat she made a ~l eommitment to God so that He could carry out His de- slgus in middothermiddot Mary never took back hell ad of total surrender Dot even on the road to CalvarY lFrom that firstmiddot moment she devoted herself wholly to serving DM only her heavenly Fashyther and the Incarnate Word but also the whole human race lin the llncarnation Our Blessed Mother first brought Christ to the world Anell that is precisely what she would have 70U do aUmiddot your life-bring Christ to the world

Ev~n after the AScenslon she loyally and steadfastly camiddotrried out~~r role aCting as spirit1lI mother to the beloved disciple anli ~~ ne~rn Cl1urch~ With good reason then we can say tha~~e wJole life of the Lords humble handtnaid~from the moment IIhewas porn to the present-is one of loVing seZvice to her cltildren what gzeater example and what ~tei model could y~ chqose to imitate in Oilder to fulfill your ta~k as a Christian called to~ove and -to serVe your poor 8iKl sUffering bro~ers arqupd the world

You must DOW take over Mars task~ You are the door through which Christ enters the world You muSt receive the Lon and bear Him in 70ur heart sO thaamp He rnA7 beeo~e the heartmiddot ofmiddot your life Then His love Jiis goodne~ Dis pity for the multitude middotwill shine through you into the world Then He will smile through your eyes Then He will help with your hanels Then He will comfort with your goodness Then He will relive in your pers~n His life of long ago for the sake of todayS desperate humanity

In this the month dedicated to the Mother of the church show your love for her by making her task your task by sacrificing to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith-to help those of her children who are in such need

SAlLVATioN and SERviCE lUe the work of The Soclet7 il~r ~~ Propagati~n of th~ Faith Please cut Gut this column llInd sen~ your of~ering to Right Reverend EdwardT OMeara Nationll-ll Director 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 Or directly to your local Diocesan Director BU Rev Msgr Raymond TConsid~e 3611 North Main Street Fall River Massachusetts e~7~omiddot

DAUGHTERS middotDf ST PAUL-combine a middotlife of prayer and action Bringers of the Gospel Messhysage to souls everywhere by means of personal contact Pauline Missionaries labor in 30 Nations Members witness to Christ in a unique missionshypropagation of the printed Word of God The Sisters write illustrate print and bind their own publications and diffuse them among people of all creeds races and cultures Young girls 14-23 interested in this vital Mission may write to

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13 New Jersey Grand Jury Absolves Police of Deaths During Rioftong

NEWARK (NC) - A special and charged it with lcHrity m Essex Cotmty grand jury inves- permitting some of lots material tigating the deaths of 28 people to i1all into private hands which during rioting in this city last misused il Summer absolved po1dce laquol Reporting on the deaths it blame iO the deatbs in a pre- found that three were not conshysentment which rebuked an nected with the rioting that anti-poverty agency for failure eight resulted from wounds inshyto cooperate willi law enforce- curred while participating in ment agencies criminal acts that nine of those

The presentment was issued killed were apparently innocent after the jury had heard more bystanders that two apparently than 100 witnesses over an resulted from sniper fire that eight-week period It said there two were from accidental was insufficient evidence to shooting and that one could not warrant indictment in any of be classified the cases presented to it al- Another special grand jury is though an earlier trial resulted now being paneled to carry out hi the conviction of a man for an investigation of Newarks fatally shooting a woman municipal government This inshy

In the final analysis the vestigation was recommended ~ury concluded the responsi- by the governors commission bility for the loss of life and which reported a pervasive property that is the inevitable feeling of corruption in Newshyproduct of rioting and mass ark lawlessness cannot be placed upon those whose duty it is to enforce and protect the freedom Convention lliead of our society

Courage Restraint N E MonsignorIt rests squarely upon the

MANCHESTER (NC)-Msgrhoulders of those who for euroolin A MacDonald presidentwhatever purpose incite and of the Manchester diocese senateparticipate in riots and the of priests has been selected asflouting of law and order in chairman of the national con-complete disregard of the rights stiiutional convention of theand well-being of the vast mashyproposed U S priests councilsjority of our citizens organization 110 be held May 20Although the presentment and 21 in Chicago leveled some small criticisms at

I1he monsignor earlier hadpolice actions it generally upshybeen elected as the Bostonheld the work of law enforceshyprovince delegate to a 29-memshyment officers and this was in ber ad hoc steering committeecontrast to the report of the for the convention When ill wasNew Jersey (()vernors Comshydecided 110 limicent the steeringmission on Civil Disorder commimiddotlltee 110 8 members thewhich was highly critical of the

police JJlQIlsignor was elected to this group then ohosen as chairmanWith some exceptions the

jury said police both local and Msgr MacDonald said the state together with National purposes of the proposed NashyGuardsmen acquitted themselves tional Federation of Priests with courage and restraint in Councils are to promote priestly the early stages of the riot brotherhood by faciJi1ating comshy

munion among priests councilsPoor Judgment to provide a forum for the disshyThe grand jury said the poshycussion of pastoral matters tolice were handicapped by lack enable priests councils to speakof training appropriate equipshywith a common representativement effective direction and voice to proD101e and collabshyexperience in dealing with the orate in programs of pastoraltype of situation in which they research and action to impleshywere involved ment the reriewal of priestlyThe jury did say that in the life to provide the means forlater stages of the disturbances priests councils united nationshythere were examples of poor ally to cooperate with the tityjudgment excessive use of fireshythe ~eligious the bishops andarms and D manifestation of with others in addressing thevindictiveness that eannot be needs of the Church in the modshytolerated in law enforceD1ent ern World and to do whateverpersonnel is necessary to carry out theseAD10ng the recommendations purposesit made was one that looting be

Members of the Priests Senshyeffectively controlled at its ate of the Diocese of Fall Riverearliest manifestations It also have sent suggestions regardingcalled for the improveD1ent and the proposed organization toupdating of equipment and said Monsignor MacDonaldthe use of chemicals and nonshy

lethal gases should be explored and considered Priests Paid SllEme

The jury called for improveshyment in police-community relashy Salary as Laborers tions and said there is no place PARIS (NC) - The averagefor abusive language or ill salary of priests in the Paris treatment of any group of citi shy region is about the saD1e as thatzens Like the governors COD1shy of an unskilled laborer accordshymission it deplored the use of ing to figures contained in thepersonally-owned weapons by first public budget report of thepolice Paris archdiocese

The anti-poverty agency crit shy The archdiocesan operatingicized was Newark Legal Servshybudget the report showed isices Project a branch of the $440000 a year most of whichUnited Community Corp which is for the salaries of 384 nonshyhelps ghetto residents with legal parish priests more than a thirdproblems

retired This indishyCharges Laxity of whoD1 are cates an average of less than $1-The jury accused it of failing 000 a year to cooperate in post-riot invesshy

Parishes pay direclly the 600tigations said the character of it taken were parish priests but their base salshystatements had

inadequate and ary is only about $50 a monthunprofesSional Honorariums for baptisms marshyriages and special Masses add

Receives Admiral about an equal amount to this VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope sum but pcrivate requests for

Paul VI received in audience Masses are declining Parish Adm Joseph Edet Akinwale priests send to the archdiocese Wey of the Nigerian Navy who the honorari~s of Masses they had told a press conference that coannot celebrate In 1964 this he hoped to present a message amounted to about 22000 Masses from the Nigerian government a year now it is only about three on the Biafra siiuatiolL ~middotfourmiddot thousand~

r THE ANCHORshyThursday May 2 1968

I

Schoo~s Exp~ore

Dual E~l~~rMJcemlt LOUISVILLE (NC)-Catholie

school officials here are trying to work out dual enrollment agreeD1entS with public schoo officials in two locations

If agreement is reached stushydents at Flaget High School here and at Bethlehem Academy may benefit next Fall from the proshygram

Moves toward the dual enrQllshyment concept were made possishyble when the Kentucky attorney general issued an opinion which said in effect that public schools might get state financial assistance for students enrolled part-time in public schools

Under the plan students in private schools could take some subjects in public schools and others in their own schools

Famiddotther Thomas P Casper Louisville diocesan superintendshyent of schools said he is submitshyting dual enrollment proposalpoundNEWMAN CLUBS MEET At oonferenee of Newman to the Louisville Bardstown andClubs from area colleges representatives of Fall River Dishy Nelson County boards of educa~

reese included from left Walter La Rosa Our Lady ill Mt tion Carmel parish Seekonk a student at Bristol Community While action on the roposaw College Lydia Rocha St Michaels Fall River BCC Rev is up U the public boards-the

attorney generals opinion grantvHarold J Wilson BOC Newman Club chaplain Morgan permission but does not force

Childs St Patricks Falmouth SMTL ootion-Father Casper said he if very pleased that there are possibilities open now for deshyveloping dual enrollD1entReturns to Moscow Final form of any dual enroll shyment effort is still to be decided

Fr Dion Assumption College President But one such method treated in the attorney generals opinion

Named Apostolic Administrator is the leasing of space in Cathshyolic schools by public schoom

WORCESTER (NC) - Father a visiting Russian churchman and the operation of this spaceLouis F Dion AA president here Father Bissonnette is now as public school classroomsof AssuD1ption College here will academic dean at Assumption resign his post June 30 to be- College COD1e apostolic administrator in Father Dion had to wait more New Jersey Bishopthe Soviet Union and chaplain than three years after Father to American Roman Catholics Bissonnettes expulsion before Asks United Action in Moscow obtaining a Soviet visa enabling ATLANTIC CITY (NC) shy

Father Dion held the same him to go to Moscow via Paris Bishop George H Guilfoyle of posts in Russia from 1959 to in January 1959 Camden issued a call for united 1961 He served as assistant to Father Dion said he is looking action on the part of all of WJ the president and registrar of forward to his return to the to 36Sist our fellow man as Assumption College from 1962 Moscow post He bad not specifshy he helped dedicate a HUD1aJ until his appointment as presi- ically requested the assignment Resources Center aiD1ed at job dent ill June 1964 he said but it was offered to develpoment for some of this

He replaces Father Eugene him and he accepted it willingly resort areas 50000 poor LaPlante AA who returns to Powers of Bishop This nation has made treshythe Assumptionist Fathers The duties of chaplain Father mendous strides in the fields opound AD1erican province for reassign- Dion explained are not con- science industry business and ment after a three-year term fined to American Catholics medicine he said It is shameshy

ful that in view of all this proshySeventh to Serve living in Moscow They include gress we still have millions ofFather Dion is the seventh he said the entire foreign colshypeople who live in poverty andAmerican priest-all Assump- ony - the diplomatic corps wanttionists-to serve in Moscow un- newspaper personnel and tour-

Bishop Guilfoyle said theder the terms of the 1933 Roose- ists Camden diocese will contributevelt-Litvinov agreement estab- Since there ar(~ no European

$1000 to the new center to belishing diploD1atic relations be- priests-or priests of any other nationality-in Moscow serving used for whatever program the

tween the U S and the USSR in the capacity of chaplain he board of directors decides hi He was replaced in 1961 by said the American chaplain needed Father Joseph Richard AA ministers to the spiritual needs who served four years in the of Catholics attached to the post staffs of embassies and legations

His iD1D1ediate predecessor accredited to the Soviet governshy FAIRHAVENwas Father Georges Bisslgtnnette ment AA who was expelled in The post of apostolic adminisshy LUMBERMaTch 1955 by the Soviet gov- trator Father Dion said inshy

COMPANYernment in retaliation for U S volves all the powers and funcshyrefusal to prolong the visa of tions of a bishop except ordina~

tion and consecration of bishops Complete line It is assigned to a priest usuallyAtlanta Archdiocese Building Materials in areas where there is DO

Joins Equal Housing hierarchy who is then dimiddotrectly responsible to the Holy See 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVENATLANTA (NC)-The lllChshy Father Dion expects to arrivediocese of Atl~lnta has joined in Moscow in early August he 993-2611more than 50 metropolitan At- said

lan-ta organizations and indi- viduals as co-spo~sors of the Atlanta Metropoli tan COmmit- bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull~

tee on Equal Opporunity ill Housing

HThe objective of the confer- BISAILLONS ence will be primarily educashytional Father Noel C Burtenshy GARAGEshaw ehancellor of the arch- diocese and member of the execu-tive committee said 24-Hour Wrecker

He added We expect this dialogue and interChange will establish middotnecessary communicashy 653 Washington Street Fairhaven tion and provide Some answers 994-5058~ the housing problems facing reater Atlanta bull

Thanks Catholics For Refugee Aid

VATICAN - CITY (NC)-NearMsgrEllis Relates Hist~ry middotmiddotEastmiddotwelfare work of U S Cathshyolics has been praised by Pope Paul VL0+ Training for Priesthood

Such a message in the Popes By Rt Rev Msgr Jobs S Kennedy

The publication of a book by Monsignor John Tracy Ellis founder and dean of a new school of American Cath~

lti)lic churchhistory is always a weloome event This is true even when the book is among his minor works SuCh is Essays in Seminary Educoshytion (Fides Notre Dame Inshydiana 46556 $595) amiddot 001shylection of papers and address-C2S There is some repetition in Chese essays which were preshyared for vari shyeus occasions But it does not illessen the imshyact of a book which shows us n keen critical in tell i g ence brought to beal OIl a subject of bas i c imporshylance The hand rDf the historian iIs seen throughshy~t the book The first three essays are specifically historical

The firsi deals with the trainshylog or preparation of priests from the apostolic age to the ~ncil of Trent the second with the same subject from the time of Trent to ~ 1960s The tird is todevoted diocesan theological seminaries in the American Middle West 1811shy1889

A survey such 00 the author Makes in the two opening chap $ers is of especial interest beshyeause it brings out tile implausshyible but incontestable fact that b about the fimiddotI9t 1500 years of its existence the Church did DOt have anything even regem- bling a standard ~m of edushy_tion for the priesfil100d

Monastie Schools fttere were no special schoobl

lor the clergy before the time Of

The medieval universitieQ were foundedmiddot by the Church amd the clery p~yed ~ im ~rtant part m them But theyWei b d al ~ ed ti e y no means I e Jormiddot ushy(l3 on for the pnesthood SInce2he the I g I kemelyq 1~~~y~middotou~emiddot~~U Iersi~ of P middotkmiddotlmiddot5middot6

-Y arlS n ovv or ~(fears to complete thedoCtOriite ill theology Hence few priestsbenefited f-rom 4--

~ UDlversI Effective Response

lhe POr estate of the clergy~ glarmgly a~parent in the ens of the Renalsance and the Bef~rmation and this middotis prj shy

manly llttutablello educashytional defiCiency And evea hen the reforming Council of lIrent was launched it took 1~ ~rs ~efore a dec~ on clerical educa~on was achieved and a long tlme thereafter before its proVISIonS were carned out in practice

Monsignor Elliss treatment of

ticularly the institutions founded by St Vincent de Paul and Jean-Jacques Olier

These men win the authors praise for their effective reshygponseto a vital need But he does IlQt hesitate to lay to them ~e responsibility for some of the anti-intellectual bias which chamcterizea too many seminashyli13 in subsequent centuries

incredible NWIIlber In the United States some

quite ancient history was reshylived as the bishops of new dioceses had cleriea schools of sorts in their own homes But in the days of the very first bishop John Oarroll a real

had b - -bli hed semmary een - 9when the Sulpichms came to Baltimore in 1791 and founded St Marys

Later developmen1s are sumshymarized by Monsignor Ellis with attention to the various types of seminaries and the growth m numbers from 50 in 1668 to 571 iIn 1964 Thi6 last incredible number is indicative 0If tile regre~le proliferation Which led to needless duplicashytiOD inadequacy in quality and waste of resources

A test of middotthe exeellence of American seminaries is proshyposed by the atrtbor how many men of enduring reputation ba~ flhey produced The anshyswerJs that tIhe fteonl is not distinguished And much of the lelIlainder of the book is given 110 probing for reasons m exshyplanation Of this

Routine Teaeldllamp at Augustine whomiddotbecame Ihi Anierican ~mi~ry of -ilJhop of Hippo in 396 His 1be ft refleCted _ national

_

LlIFE MEMBERS Msgr John E Boyd chaplain left and Dominick Maxwell Jr right Grand Knight of Fall River Council 86 of the Knights of Columbus i~vest Jerome D Foley and Dr Joseph Carvalho as life members

~

Rural Ireland Charge Farmers Lack Formal Training

In Agriculture ROSSLARE (NC)The need Wbat chance had the boy who

for priests to be more involved left school at 14 of making the in social problems was stressed grade at farming ~he excepshyby 9peakers at the annual meetshy tional lads made it The rest are

~ e9tablished and mairitaineCi~ - In the future he said until 4- disregard cif inteli~tualqua1itY this is rectified Ninety-five nAr ~ his own household and had In ~y instances ~ty mem- ~ imitators ~gt bera ere apPOint~~ t~eir ~t of e5ent-day farmers Thereafter came the mona~f)le positi - middotth m rd io ~v~ had IlQ post-primary edushySchools initiated by St BenediCt ons WIlifo ~ga r cation NinetYofive per cent ofin thmiddot th proper qlla Ications MuCh of farmers have had middotno formal esnr cent~ the~ fllie teaching was rolltine and~rting in middotligrlcultllredr~ and-middot eP1scqp~ Scboo~ an~ dun Collateral reading _n6t middot~JFlWle Awayampnally themiddot medieval UDlvenu- middot~~d lib ties middot - ~ampt~W1~ an nu-~ wer~ Fcaither qerinehy ~ncluded

~e )mperorPbariemaible ~~~poundreed ~tho~~laquo~ lt m the eigh~h ~turydecr~ miD not aencournt ~e~ch~Gt~~n6~llIIr~Watmiddot ilhat alLclencs m~be lble to middotwas virtuall uilkn a lj ~

ifead im~~ri~ J~d~ve ~m- faculties PU~Shed v~illi~~e iT ~~~t ~~t~Bltcs petence In ~h~~ )~1esslC~~Idu- Monsignor Ellis points tJ01 the BOGOTA (NC) _ Anglican tiaif~king ~ DllIllmum timidity which prevailed after Bishop David Benson Reed of

q I I~~ons they ~ere to be the eJcesses perpetrated in 1l1e BogOta offered accommodations e~ ~~ deprIved of repression of Modernism in the for~five Catholic bishops during me iectr~~ IS we can see w a fim part of the present centurY theforthcoming International

g ere had been He sees a change in the era of Eucharistic Congresss in August

ing of the Christu Rex Society an Irish organization for priestDmiddot engaged in pastoml work

Over 250 priests and represhysentatives of agriculturalorgan- izations attended the cOngress here on the theme Rural Ireshyland

Father Jerome Dennehy CC of Kenm2lre criticized the fail- ure of the Iri9h educational sysshytem to provide the farmer with the basic knowledge necessarY to enable him to profimiddott from advice from government agenshydes onfurming methods

No real progress can be made

Vatican II and happily notes and five Ecuadorian prelates aeshythe improvements already made cepted his invitation

lUld those-in prosPectmiddotmiddot He hJ They are Bishops Bernardo hopeful for the future Ech R f Amb to d

evern~ wz 0 a anlIJiteUktlllal A~lieDtmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot-middotCandiiiomiddotRada Cenosian of Guashybull - d middotmiddotd A 1 B h

in8 ConclUding ~y~ ran a liln UXIlary IS ops Priestmiddot as rntelleCtllal~~ v~rll9middotmiddotGabrieI1iazCueva Ernesto that abettereducated and mueh Alvarez ~liaVlcente CIsneros of

and ea r Gua allmoreaware enti laitrmiddotmiddot y qu demands a certainmiddotleveloflD-middot B~SbtPAnBeedli has JurCls~lctib~n

middotfellectual attainment and alivemiddot middot~v~r eo g cans In 0 om la its cl and Ecuador and has been an

~~ ooes ermeam that the ecumenical leader in these

now fading away with thei~

farms Father Eamonn Casey nashy

ijonal director of the catholic Housing Aid Society in London stressed the necessity for the priest to work with underprivishyleged members of -society Too often he said the theologians are on the periphery - they should come doWn to earth and mix with the people-who really

priest has to be a professional~untries ~ _ ~=====~_ intellectual such is not his _ Over 200 bis~ops a~ 1~ ~r-Etmiddotmiddot D ampD SALES AND SERVICE cation ltR does mean that he has dinals have saId they Wlll at-sect to maintain a genuiDe hifei-est end the EUcharistie Congress to - sect ill things intellectUal anq m Mbeid be~ sectpublic questions sect

Monsignor Ellismiddot chides sUPe- sect riors for their failure to eneour- p~iori ~ the minisky in sect age priests 110 use their ~cial teD-dayretreatS preceding or- sect talents skills and aptitudes dination Better than nothing sectAnd he urgeS priests 110 acquire one suPPoses sect( and retain habits of 9tudy It is In the lntervaJ there has sect to be hoped that both these cau- ~ great improvement But sect

name has been sent to lI1sgr John G Nolan president of the Pontifical lVlission for Palestine whose headquarters are in New Vork Written by Amleto Carshydinal Cicogilani Papal Secreshytary of State it referred to the

1 Missions 19 years service to ~ Palestinian refugees particushy

larly victims of the recent Arab-Israeli conflictto

It singled out as particularly praiseworthy the contribution of the Catholic Near East Welshyfare Association saying that middotthrough the unflagging genershyosi ty of the catholics of the United States of America it provided qlost of the means for the Missions work following the recent conflict

The papal letter declared No other agency surpasses the Pontifical Mission in length of

middot actualmiddot serviCe and its identifl shycapon with the paternal intershy~ and concern of the Holy Father merits his encourageshyment hismiddot blessing and his prayerful good wishes

Cardinal middotCicOgnanl wrote that Pope Paul out of paternal afshyfection for the homeless and of grateful esteem for the Pontifi shycal Mission bids memiddot send yOIll the enclosed check for $5000 Added to this was a furthell amount of money contributed

middot by the Congregation for the Oriental Churches

Msgr Nolan was asked that during his Easter visit to the refugee campS he kindly disshytribute the total sum in the Popes Dame to all the needyen

ar~~~stChneU~made adicbot-SAVE MONEY ON omy of man saying here is middotthe

body her~ is the soul-Iam YOUR middotOImiddotLmiddotHEATconCerned only with the soul bull bull bull bull Tmiddothe love of Christ is for the whole person and anything ~ -4~ WYman that concerns 1llieperson is of ~ US92 concern to middotChrist

He said thatmiddot the priest middotshould CHARLES F VARGAS selk tomiddotmiddot develop ~ature Ght-ls- tiMlS amongdsmiddotflockiuidcpre- 54 ROCKDALE AvENUE pare themmiddotforlife Th~ role of 1 the ~~esthe~dmiddotiftcl~desmiddotth~middot ~E~ BEDFORD MASS proVISIon Qfmiddotmiddot mformatlOn oo sexual and~ari~itLplmiddotobiehis 1

He stlggcentstJd middottbatmiddotmiddotmiddotPri~middot main~in cQJjt$C~ wjth~ those whlt emjgra~~mmiddottheir_ par- ish~ and follo~middotup middotthe middotcareers( of boys who are releasedmiddot from refprm schools t

1 bull bullbull - - ~_ _ - ~ ( ~

~ ~ lt

~III1I11I11I11I11I1UIIIIIIlIl1mlllllIII1I1I1I11I1I1I1I11II11I1I11I11I11IIIII11I1I11IIllIUIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~

tionary words win be wideiy~ OW measure canOOt be the poor sect AIR COmiddotIDmiddotImiddotTmiddotIO~IImiddot bullGmiddot

c INC

=====sect=

FRIGIDArnE __

REFRIGERATImiddotO~ ~

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~ post-Tridentinemiddot seminaries bulland responsibly beard Performance of the past It sect I~ I~ I~ lis remarkably extensive but the It is hard 110 believe tb1Ilt as must be the imperious demands sect main focus is on those ofF~Ce ~ as the seventee~th centu~lt ~ the p~sent an4 ~~ fUture ~ 363 SECOND ST FALL RIVER MASSbull bull the seventeenth century Pal- fa France some clena lOt their ~IWIIIUIUIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIUUlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUUIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIUIiIUWlimllllli5

HE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 2 1968 1S

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs May 2 1968 Back Presidenills ~reg~reg ~~~1rf~Jreg~MO~ ~~~lliJO[[reg(gJ ~rntilO1fi)[[fr~ofr~r

CHICAGO (NC)-The Assoshy~~ ~~regramp~~ o[J1j [Q)1 W[J1lJ[[o ciation of Chicago Priests an

The record compiled 56 years ful Swamppodle a neighborshy unofficial group of some 1500 priests in the archdiocese ofago still stands in big league hood within sight of the U S

baseball annals-most runs al shy Capitol talked about Father Chioago has endorsed President Johnsons current efforts to]owed one game 24 Travers Travers band

fA J (Joe) Detroit Never before had the bandsshy negotiate a Settlement of the

Father Aloysius J Travers men performed like they did in Vietnam war The ACP in its fifth plenarygJ 75 who achieved the dubishy the 1919 May procession-never

ous pitching distinction died had such old favorites as Tis session here turned down a resolution prepared by its soshylast week in Misericordia Hosshy the Month of Our Mother and cial action subcommittee onpital Philadelphia He acquied 0 Mary We C~own Thee With

baseball immortality on May Blossoms Today been so spir shy peace calling for complete cesshy

112 1912 as pitcher for the One sation of U S bombing in Vietshyitedly played by Gonzaga bandsshynam to support the Presidents limited decrease in bombing

men as the procession windedlDay Wonders Detroits brawling Tigers were through Swampoodle streets glated to play Connie Macks After the procession was over and negotiation moves

Two other peace resolutionspOwerful Philadelphia As that the school rector called in recommended by the subcomshy_ daymiddotin old Shibe Park Detroits Father Travers and congratushy

Btar Ty Cobb had drawn a fine mittee were approved They

and two-day suspension for formance The rector added lated him on the bands pershy

put the ACP on record as favorshy

belting a heckling fan a few But high school musicians with ing draft law revisions so that a person might be exempt as a

lligers decided if Cobb couldnt mustaches Dont you think thatdays earlier in New York~ ~he

conscientious objector to a parshywas going a bit too far ticular war without necessarilyFather T~avers had recruitedplay they wouldnt either so being a conscientious objector

Famous llnfield a dozen or so members of thecenthey went on strike

to all war and so that a per

With the aid of Connie Mack crack Fort Myer Army Band

son could be exempt as a conshyfOm nearby Arlington Va scientious objector on humanishy

ed up a collection of Philadelshydressed them in cadet uniforms~e Detroit management roundshy

tarian as well as religioUlland put them in the school band groundsBesides teaching at Stphia sandlot players signed

The ACP also approved threeJosephs Prep and Gonzagathem to Detroit contracts and recommendations of its liturgy

as the Tigers sf Francis Xavier High in New committee York As a result the priests group

Father Travers also taught atfielded the One Day Wonders

Al Travers 19 fresh out of has urged the National Confershyat Josephs Prep School rho Disbands Hawks ence of Catholic Bishops to reshyhelped recruit the sandlotters One of his moSt heartbreaking submit two liturgical petitioJUloppointed himself pitcher He assignments was given him some to the Conglegation of Rites inctftein recalled I learned that 25 years ago He was sent back Rome The petitions which had e pitcher would collect-50 to St Josephs College where New Problem ~en turned down by the Vati shyeX-tra so I volunteered the battIe cry is The Hawk can congregation would allowThat day the As scored 24 will never die as moderator the establishment of experimenshyINns on 25 hits with io nuts of athletics Priest Urges F~ir labor Practices tal centers for the liturgycmearned against young Travshy His jOb-disband the Hawks For CatholicSchool Faculties throughout the country and limshy

erG The wonder is the score football team with a minimum ited experimentation with thewasnt higher for young Tra~~rs of uproar from students and SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-For betweell the school and the liturgy without prior approvalwas pitching against the best alumni since football had beshy as long as anyone can rememshy religious community of the Vaticanbalt team of the era-against come a moneymiddot losing sport at ber the Religious and lay peoshy Some experts says that the

PhiladelphiaS famous $100000 St Josephs and a number of nte third resolution called on-pie who serve on the faculties best solution to this problem is

infield of John Phelan (Stuffy) other Catholic colleges in ~those the NCCB to take concrete stepsof Catholic grammar and high to bar Religious from partici shy

McInni6 at first Eddie Collins days to implement proposals of itsschools have been the type of pating in labor organizations

lJeCOnd Jack Barry short and He did his job well directing liturgy committee for adaptashypeople who would never think But Father Reicher indicated

IPrank (Home Run) Baker third attention to St Joes basketball tion of the Mass to smaIl anelof going out on strike against this would only divide the Reshy special age groupsSaves Franchise team which has grown into one unfair labor practices since ligiousand lay faculty of schools

But young Travers and the of the nations powerhouses this would imply some sort of even more than they are dividedORe Day Wonders who had For the last 25 years Father guilt on the part of p~ors and now India to ReconsiderI2ever seen Detroit saved the Tlavers had been stationed at bishops Urging a period of experishybaseball franchise for the Tigers St Josephs Prep in semishy Well those days are gone forshy meritation to work out new Deporting Priestttlat day If they hadnt pl~yed retirement during recent years ever according to Chicagos forms of collective bargaining NEW DELHI (NC) - Indiantile As chances are the Amershy Requiem Mass for the colorful Father Robert Reicher and the Father Reicher concluded It ill Prime Minister Indira GandbJ1bean L~ague would have lifted one-day big leaguer was ofshy job now is to set up standards obvious that the right to barshy has promised reconsideration ofDetroits franchise because of fered Thursday at GeuChurch of fair labor practice and guidshy gain collectively is a natural the order expelling Jesuitthe players strike in Philadelphia ance for faculty members grievshy tight clearly defended time and Father Vincent Ferr r of theDespite the lopsided score procedures against Cathoshy agaiil ethically and morally Poona diocese Indiaance fromlPatJher Travers got several big lic school administrators But this right also implies an lleague offers as a result of his Canonist Cates Need The pmmise was made when

Speaking to participants at 8 obligation to know what colleCshy tlhree members of the Indiani pitching He turned them down secondary school department tive bargaining involves went to St Josephs College For Negro Prieds parliament met with Mrs Ganshy

meeting during the Nationalthen joined the Jesuits ATLANTIC CITY (Nch - A dhi here and asked her to get

National Catholic Educational the order cancelled and grantThe lesson he learned fmln plea for more Negro Catholic Bishops Ask PopeAssociation convention here Indian citizemihip to the priestthe unorthodox recruiting as a priests has been made at the Father Reicher outlined some ofone-day big leaguer stood him annual Easterri regional meeting To Visit Canada Father Ferrer founder of thethe problems facing Catholic in good stead a half-dozen years of the Canon Law Society of OTTAWA (NC) -Pope Paul Maharashtra Farmers Servicelabor - management relations

later when he was teaching at America here in New Jersey The pliest is chairman of the VI may visit Canada next month Society was scheduled for deshyGQnzaga High School in Washshy Msgr Thomas J Reese of Wilshy to attend the National Confershy portation last year but wasChicago archdiocesan Catholicington D C mington in the neighboring State ence on Poverty sponsored by granted several extensions ofCouncil on Working Life and a

Recruits Ringers of Delaware speaking on experishy jVell-known labor expert Christian Churches in Canada his stay He was accused by iiimiddot mental parishes accused the Hindu groupS ofanti-Indian acshyFather Travers was in charge Religious who teach in CatBshy Bishop Alexander Carter presshy

Church of racism and said that tivities and by the Maharashtraof the school b~llld which used olic schools pose a special diffi shy ident of the Canadian CatholicNegro Catholics prefer to - be state government of anti shyto master only about two or culty hi labor relations because Conference has acknowledged national activitiesselved by black priests of whom

CHURCHES UNITED Bishop Reuben H Mueller left of the Evangeli~al United Brethren Church and Methoshydist Bishop Lloyd C Wicke led representatives of their respective bodies at ceremonies in Dallas proclaiming the union of the two churches The new body is to be known as the United Methodist Churlth NC Photo

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IIlfllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIUIIIlIDutuUliUllllUiHlllllllllilllllllllllllllllilllUIIIIIIIIIIIIUII~given to the Washington arch we need black priests and we bid to raise the standards of diocese by Church spokesmen need them fast preaching in Australia and New here in Pennsylvania Zealand will be made shortly Lobster Boats Msgr Philip J Dowling execshy it was resolved at a meeting hereCapital Cityutive secretary of John Cardinal of leaders of religious orders

Krols Commission on Human VATICAN CITY (NC)-Qn The effort will inchide a fullyshyRelations noted that the Washshy the eighth anniversary of the otganized Pastoral Year obsershyington Archdiocesan Office of foundation of Brazils new capishy vance seminars for priests of all bull bull bull Urban Affairs has asked assist shy tal of Brasilia Pope Paul VI ages on updating preaching techshy s iz e s ance from Philadelphia and other sent a radio message of best niques the establishment of II bull bull bull dioceses In providing foOd es wishes in Portuguese and pressshy preaching center and the use pecially for those po)r who will ed a button that illumined a of a recorded service on techshy I Macleansreceive temporary housing in the cross on the cathedral of that niques of oral communicatiOil f8cilities of the Washington city The Pope performed the directedby the ObJates of MalT sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAYBt Tel 9979351 sect archdiocese oclemony in his private library Immaculate ~1I111111l111IHlUlnlllllllllllUllllllnIIllIUllllllUllllllllllllllIllltUIIllllllllllUluiuUWlUllllml~

three tunes a year In those of their obligation of obedience that feelers have been sent outthere are fewdays the school had a cadet Father Reicher pointed out to have the Pope corne to Monshy

If any institution can standeorps and one of its big annual What this means he added is teal for th~ May 26-29 meeting events was marching in the anshy that occasionally Religious mllYoondemned on the basis of the

It would be the first papalrecent Kerner Report on Civilnual parish-May procession be used to break a strike called visit to Canada Pope Paul visitedDisorders it is the CatholicFor years residents of color- by lay faculty members this country as a Cardinal in theChurch among others that is But more likely is the conflict early 19508guilty of white racism he trapping the individual Reli shyPlan to Help ~eed opined Bishop Carter said if a favorshygious whose loyalty is divided

Asserting that the number of able reply is reCeived from RomeCapital MCIl(lc61ers Negro clergy middotdoes not nearly the Canadian government would

PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A meet the needs of Negro Catho- Australia to Have extend an official invitation pledge of cooperation in feeding lies Msgr Reese said Pope Paul visited the United the poor who will gather in the If the Church is going to be Better Preaching Nations inNew York in 1965 nations capital in May has beell relevant to the black community SYDNEY (NC)-A concerted

I

Marian Awards Continued from Page Three

Fall River and has spent her entire religious life within the Diocese of Fall River

Sister has served as consult shyant with various education comshymittees in the diocese and bas promoted the educational proshygram of the Dominican Sisters

Sr Mary Pauline OP bead of the Science Department of

the Dominican Academy Fall River was one of the originatolll of the Region III Science Fair and has served as president of the regions Fair for two years

She is presently ooordinator of the Massachusetts state Scishyence Fair -

Sr Virginia CSC is presshyently chairman of the Th~logy

Department Notre Dame Colshylege Manchester N H and served from 1941 to ]958 as principal of St Anthonys New Bedford

She has always been a leader in new an innovative ideas in education

Sister Anne Denise SND presently principal of St Marys High School Lynn is well shyremembered as the first princishypal of Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth and has served in many administrative posts for the Sisters of Notre Dame

Sr Mary Aloysia SUSC is dean of the College of the Sashycred Hearts Fall River and has given outstanding service in coshyoperation with the Catholic School Department in planning in-service courses for the teachshyers of the diocesan schools

She also serves asmiddot coordinator of the educational program of the Sisters of the Holy Union

Sr John Elizabeth SUSC is Guidance Director at the Acadshyemy of the Sacred Hearts Fall River and has served in numershyous administrative positions atthe Fall River school

She was the first principal of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton and has served on committees of local and state educational organizations

Sr Mary Felicita RSM is now involved in the tutorial program at Mt St MaryS Acadshyemy Fall River and has served in the various sclIools of the diocese

For 26 years Sister served as Diocesan School Supervisor iD the Catholic School Office

Sr Miriam RSM is also in the tutorial program at the Sisshyters of Mercy Academy in Fall River A former teacher and principal in schools of the dioshycese Sister served for 26 yean

IN NEW POST Father Charles F Sheedy CSC former dean of arts and letshyterS has been appointed to the new post of dean of theoshylogical studies and institutes at the University of Nobe Dame NC Photo

to Educators tiS Diocesan Supervisor in the Catholic School Department

This year completes 50 years of service in the field of educashyto the Diocese of Fall River

Sister Maureen RSM is principal of Nazareth Hall Fall River She organized the proshygram and was the first principal of the Fall River school lor exshyceptional children a position she still holds

She is a consultant lind D member of city and state comshymittees for the mentlllly l1eshytarded

Sr Mary Urban RSM is Diocesan supervisor of schools and was the first principal at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

She is a member of state and city educational committees

Sr Mary Carmela RSM is a member of the English Departshyment of St Xaviers Academy Providence and was the first principal of Mt St Marys Academy Fall River

She is a consultant on secondshyary school curriculum planning

Sr Grace de Sales MSBT is presently superior of the Censhyacle of Our Lady of the Assumpshytion Osterville a position she also held at the Cenac1e of St Patricks Parish Wareham

Sister founded the kindergarshytens at Osterville and Wareham and has taught Chfistian Docshytrine classes on the elementary and secondary levels during her many years of selvice in the diocese

Sr Joan Louise OLVM is suPerior of the Victory Noll Convent in the Immaculate Conception Parish No Easton She has served as catechetical specialist in dioceses in Iowa and California and her present assignment is CCD supervisor for the Diocese of Fall River

Brother Albertus CSC is supervisor of Education for the Eastern Province of the Holy Cross Brothers and is professor of mathematics at Stonehill College No Easton He also ~ught mathematics and physics at Monsignor Coyle High School Taunton

Miss Mary Cabral of 1)69 Camshybridge Street Fall River is presently teaching at Espirito Santo School Fall River where she is completing 43 years of service as a lay teacher in ~e

Diocese of Fall Ri vcr

Whites to Solve White Problem

TOLEDO (NC)-Bishop Joon A Donovan has made a public request to whites to take up the white problem

He urged it for those lookshying for a modern up-Io-date apostolate for down-to-earth Christians who are at the same time dedicated Americans

middotSpeaking at a dinner of the northwestern Ohio district Fourth Degree Knights of Coshylumbus the Toledo bishop said

This ugly situation was fathered by injustice and is nourished by that subtle and insidious vice called prejudiCe

Need In this deplorable situation

in which the world ffinds itself today the pressing need is for those who call themselves Christians to think as Christians to form Christian attitudes and to live as Christians

Just as we cannot separate Christ from His Gospel so too we cannot separate love of GOO from love of our fellowmen without exception

The real Christian mlid the bishop does not live alongside but with others He constantly interprets anothers actions in the best possible light bying to remember always the way in which the Lord met loved and drew people to Himsel

SAIGON (NC) - The people wept and we wept everybody wept Sister Nicole said deshyscribing her teams departure after 16 days of relief work in Hue

She and two other Vietnamshy-ese Sisters Daughters of Charshyity of St Vincent de Paul with

The communImiddots1s T truce

17 girl students had gone to stricken Hue on a mission of mercy

offensive had left families in mourning houses in ruins ~nd people hungry and sick The government of Vietnam had inshyvited volunteers to bring help to the citys thousands of sufshyferers

The plane that brought tile Sisters and their students also brought 85 youths from Saigon~

The boys did manual work such as cleaning up the damaged hosshypital in Hues The Sisters team was divided into three groups one to give medical care anshyother to visit homes a third to l)ok after children

The 17 girls are some of those being trained by the Sisters as social workers for family assist shyance under a plan sponsored by a Vietnamese womens associashytion Five of the 17 are Cathshyolics The others are mostly Buddhists On April 12 all were fasting since it was the 15th day of the lunar month for the lBud-

Catholic Boy Scout Officials to Meet

WASHINGTON (NC)-About 150 leaders of CQtholic Boy Scout organizations will meet here to attend the 20th biennial oonference of the National Cathshyolic Committee OIl Scouting

The meeting will be a Iowshyday work session tor chairmen chaplains and other officioals cd the nations diocesan I seouiing ~ommittees The meeting will end with a banquet in honO Gl Patrick Cardinal OBoyle ol Washington

---- -----~

middot1FI

1

PRAYER CRUSADE _Danny Thomas has filmed n 10-minute color documentary on the value of family pray~r

to be used by Father Patrick Peyton CSC in his Camshypaign for Family Prayer Father Peyton said he expects 200000 people at a Milwailkee rally to be held Sunday May 12

IEverybody Weptl

Nun Describes Relief Teams Departure From Stricken Hue

dhims and Good Friday for the Catholics

The Asia Foundation here gave a grant to pay for the meals of the Sisters team dur ing their stay

- Before leaving Saigon the Sisters had collected medicines food soap and clothing from welfare agencies including Catholic Relief Services and

Vietnam Christian Service (Protestant) The United Nashytions Childrens Fund (UNICEF) provided milk powder which enabled the team to give milk to 450 children every day

Warn Medics LONDON (NC)-The day beshy

fore Britains new abortion law went into effect the nations 5500 CMholic doctors were warned by John Cardinal Heenan of WeBtminister that they should DOt perfom any abortions

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THE ANCHOR- 17 Thursday May 2 1968

Cufr ~t~1 Days Of orw~~~1ion

En C[[i~da OTTAWA (NC)-Chrietshy

mas and New Years Day now are the only holy days of obligation for Canadav estimated 8000000 Catholics

The Canadian Catholic Conshyference comprising Canadafl Bishops has announced thampa other holy days will be cellshyebrated on the Sunday nearem the holy day

The holy days affected aye Epiphany usually celebrat~

Jan 6 Ascension now falling on the 40th day after East~Ilp

All Saints now celebrated Nou I and the Immaculate ConcejilP tion now celebrated Dec 8

The Bishops said observance of the feast days on Sundayu means they will be celebratecll bull by a larger more relaxed anell accessible congregation of the faithful rather than a congreshygaUon of people constrained by the obligation of attending Maw in addition to their work

Canadas Bishops postwn~ until next Fall a decision Gil

wlether to restoremiddot the anciej~ office of permanent deacon m the Church The Bishops of the United States meeting simultashy

neously in St Louis hlst week ~ted to petition Pope Paul VJ for permission to restore ~

perinanent diaconate ror marshyried and unmarried men of ma ture years

Fish Sales Up SYDNEY (NC)-Best tilini)

that ever happened to the fisb industry said Mark J06eph chairman of the New SouUl -lales Fish Authority of the Churchs lifting of the ban CJ[l

Friday meat eating He has tb~ ligures to back up his verdictshya 25 per cent rise in fish e4)Dshy

slImption here since the ehlnge

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The Parish Parade New Jersey Suburbanites of All Faiths Aid Ghetto Arson Victims HOLY NAME OUR LADY OF ANGELS

FALL RIVER FALL RIVER NEWARK (NC) - Priest~ the citys anti-poverty agenCll Contemporary music will acshy

company the 11 oclock Mass Sunday morning May 5

First communicants will reshyeeive at a special Mass at 9 Saturday morning May 25 Mayshycrowning ceremonies will be held Sunday May 26 The Womens Guild announces

fts installation banquet for Tuesday night May 7 Tickets are available from all members

Catholic Charities collectors are asked to meet in the parish school at 730 tonight for dist~shyOOtion of contact cards

lIT MARGARET BUZZARDS BAY

SS Margltlret-Mary Guild of Buzzards Bay and Onset will Sponsor a rummage sale from 9 1lo 1 Saturday May 18 at St Margarets kindergarten hall Main Street Buzzards Bay Do iaations may be left at the hall during mornings of the precedshying week Chairman for the ~vent is Mrs William Brady

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild will reshyieive Holy CommuniOn in a bodyaf the815 Mass 00 Sunshydity morning A breakfast will follow in the school hall The icuest speaker will beRt Rev Anthony M Gomes Mrs Arthur Belanger gpiIshyftual chairman of the Guild is _ charge of the breakfast

81 JOSEPH AIRHAVEN Nominations and elections of officers for the Association of file Sacred middotHearts will be held at 630 on Sunday evening in the rectory ~ Dues are now payable to the tleasurer Mrs Jeannette Dushylude

IACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

Preprimary registration will be held from 2 to 4 Sunday afternoon May 5 in 1he school office Some openings also exist in first sixth and eighth grades

The CCD adult discussion group will meet at 8 Sunday night in the home of Mr and Mrs J G N Bonneau

So Easton Club Pledges

$5000 The newly formed Womens

Club of Holy Cross Parish So Easton has pledged $5000 toward the building fund acshycording to an announcement made today by Mrs Arthur J L Peterson the organizations first president The pledge will be paid at the rate of $1000 per year

This pledge has been added to The Second Mile Building Fund campaign now in progress under the chairmanship of Robshyert Dray and Louis A Lyne serving as director

The Altar Boys will sponSor a cake sale Sunday May 26

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a Communion breakshyfast following 8 oclock Mass this Sunday morning Installashytion of officers will be held at a banquet following 5 oclock Mass Sunday afternoon May 26

Children of Mary will attend a Communion breakfast followshying 8 oclock Mass Sunday mornshying May 12

The annual blessing of autoshymobiles will take place at 130 Sunday afternoon May 26 in the church parking lot

ST GEORGE WESTP~RT

A Maybasket whist is planned for 8 Saturday night May 4 hi

the school hall on Route 177 PrOCeeds will benefit the school fund and table and attendance prizes will be awarded

STMARY NORTH ATTLEBORO Parishioners are planning a

testimonial honoring Msgr Ed- ward B Booth Pastor at 7

Sunday night May 26 Tickets are now available

Christians Jews Combat Racism

NEW YORK (NC)The Nashytional Confeferice of Christians and Jews has launched a nation wide educational effort to conshyfront the problem of white racism in middotAmerica agency headquarters here announced

The NCeJ has given top prl~

ority to finding ways toimpleshyment the recommendations of the National Advisory Commisshysion on Civil Disorders The commission blamed white racshyism as the underlying cause of urban unrest

In a progress re-port to the NCCJ board of trustees meeting here Dr Samuel L Gandy dean of the Ho~ard University school of religion Washington D C and chairman of the NCCJ nashytional program ad7isory comshymittee stated

NCCJs 130 professional staff members in 70 cities are curshy~ntly engaged in developing programs with police business and labor leaders parents and teachers clergy and with youth and all of the various institutes workshops and dialogues which are being conducted are emphashysizing the findings of this reshyport

Dr Gandy quoted to the board a letter to President Lynshydon B Johnson from Dr Stershyling W Brown NCCJ presishydent in which the agency head said that NCCJ embraced the commission report as a sancshytion and guideline for our efshyforts in the private sectol

111I1111I11111111111111I1111I11I1111I1111111111I111111I111111I11I11I11I11I1111I111111111111I11111111I1111I111111I11I11I111111I111II11111111111D

ministers nuns and lay people of all denominations pitched in here to try and make Easter a dltty of joy for the more than 600 people burned out of their homes in a waveof arson which erupted in this city following the funeral of Dr Martin Luther King

Concerned citizens of surshyrounding suburban communishyties who only a week before had participated in a massive Wa 1k for Understanding through ghetto streets respondshyedspontaneously to the need

Without anymiddot special appeal going out people of all denomshyinations call e 11 inner-city churches to ask what they could do and they were directed to the United Community Corp

NEW LEADER Sister Rosemary Markham SSS is the new Superior General of the Sisters of Social Ser-

vice a Los Angeles based community engaged in social and catechetical work with missions in Formosa and Mexico NCPhoto

Christians Jews Discuss Diamiddotlogue

SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-The question of whether JewishshyChristian dialogue should be by speech or by action was the theme that ran through the talks and discussions at a Conference on Interfaith Dialogue sponsored by Catholic Protestant and Jewshyish organizations at Seton Hall University here

Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum director of interreligious affairs for the American Jewish Comshymittee was generally in favor of the action approach saying that the dialogue must avoid beshycoming a convenient conspiracy on the part of middle-class whites to buffer themselves against the realities of the inner city

Father Edward H Flannery executive secretary of the U S Catholic Bishops Secretariat for Catholic-Jewish Relations said that while he would be the last to cut off action in the realm of social justice and charity he also felt that Jews and Christians could not effectively present a common ftont to society until they have straightened out their own affairs

Father Flannery referred to statements that the -ChristianshyJewish dialogue had died in the wake of last Junes six-day war between Israel and Arab nations He said that it was not so much a matter of its dying but of its not having been tried yet

Over Holy Thursday Good Friday and Holy Saturday more than 10 tons of food and clothing were donated and the UCC staff was swamped with the task of sorting the materiaL

With schools and church ofshyfices closed priests and nuns made their way individually and in groups to UCC headshy

quarters to help with the task of unloading cars and station wagons and sorting and distribshyuting the clothing

At least 50 offers of assistance came in to Queen of Angels pariSh in the heart of the ghettc and the callers were asked to organize relief efforts in their own communities and then gd the material 110 the UCCbull

FEEL GOOD TODAY

THt HOLY fATHER MISSION AiD TD THlaRIENTAL DHURDH

Thlsoolumns happiest readers are the men

Te date this second phase bas listed 35 gifts totaling $12000 Combined with the initial campaign the Building Fund now lists 233 donors who haVe pledged a total of $117()00 The Womens Club that was founded less than six months ago has initiated a long range program for the spiritual cll1shytural and financial efforts of the parish

In addition to the regular methods of aiding the parish finandally the women have conducted teen-age projects and have assisted the Mens Club fu

i bull various progrlms

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women and children who know they~r needed The days were busiest helping others are the happiest days of our livesbullbullbull Who needs you most Surprisingly God needs you - for inmiddot stance to help art abandoned orphan become e Godloving responsible adult Lepers need you (there are still 15middotmillion lepers In the world) blind children need y~u ~ndlo do we bull bullbull Here In New York we are your agents tellin you where the Holy Father says your help Is needed and channeling your help promptlyand Oafely to the people iii needbullbullbull Want to feel good right now Do without something you want but do not need and send the money instead for one of the needs below Youll feel good especialiy if your gift is big enough to mean a sacrifice to you This is your chance to do something meaningful for the world - its Gods world - while youre still alive

D Only $850 gives our priests and SIsters i south India enough Dapsone miracle tablebamp for 43 lepers for a yearl D For only $250 a week ($10 a month $120 a year) you can make sure that an abandoned child has food clothing a blanket and love Well send you a photo of the child you adopt tell you something about him (or her) and ask the Sistermiddotinmiddotcharge to keep you Informed

D Your stringless gifts in any amount ($5000 MEET $1000 $500 $100 $50 $25 $10 $5 $2)

MISSION will help the neediest wherever they are - in EMERGENCIES india and he Hol~ Land for instance

D Only you can make your will-and do It this THINK week to be sure the poor will have your help

OF even after youre gone Our legal title CATHOLIO YOURSELF NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION Also our priests

TOO will offer promptly the Masses you provide for

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DO SOMETHING

MEANINGfUL WHILE

YOURE STILL ALIVE

HELP LEPERS

CHILDREN NEED

YOU

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THE CATHOLIC

NAMIlR _

~ 8TREJa~ ~_

OITY 8TATI_IIP COD

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NEAR EAST MISSIONS MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretary Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoo 330 Madison Avenue New York N~Y 10017 Teephone 212YUkon 6middot5840

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Lawrence High of Falmouth Seeksmiddot State Track Tut~e

By PETER BARTEK Norton High Coach

The Capeway Conference track season has already begun but the handwriting is already on the wall This campaign like last years will be a battle for second place Admittedly notbing Short of a miracle can or will prevent Lawrence High of Falmouth from winning its second straight conference t rae k championship But fol Coach Jim Kalperis and his trackstersmiddot the league championship is only a Gtepping stone to the State C ham p io n - ship The goal of every athletic team in the state hi to earn the title of State Champion This is not beshyyond the grasp of the Falmouth Peier Clippers If hard Bartek work and dedication are the means to this end then Falshymouth will reign as State track champions

Success does not come easily em any endeavor and success batpound

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not come easily to the Falmouth tracksters They like all accomshyplished athletes have labored long and diligently to aChieve the measure of sUccess they now enjot lt

N1)t toomiddot many yearsato Lawshyrence High was just ~nother

sChool Participating in track But the efforts of many and the dedication of one IJ1im in parshyticular has brought immeasurshyable success to the Falmouth track scene That man is Jim Kalperis

Coach Kalperis haseombined

his knowledge af track his coaching ta1EntS aiiCl tirelessenergies middotto build a virtual track dynasty The latest noteworthy feat of middotliliitnickmen came in the forinof anotheriState title

Thisti~emiddotiS th~nivision IIi

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1

- BC~ and Norry Races Are Close 1

lbe format formiddot the St~te reo lays has been altered this ear with competition being held at four separate locations in East- em Massachusetts Weymouth captured the Division I crown the DiviSion n title went to

Andover and Williams corralled the laurels in Division IV

The meet drew ll5 schools in each of the four diviSions with over 2000 youngsters partici shypating in all classes

Enroute to its victory Falshymouth collected 51 points comshypared to runner-up Barnstable with 22Jh

Falmouth took first place in the discus high jump pole vault 440 yard run shuttle hurdles two mile run and the 880 -

With tbis type of success in state competition it is easy to see why the Capeway Confershyence title has been practically conceded to Falmouth

Sharing the spotlight with the trackmen at Falmouth are the diamondmen The Clippers who are in the thick of the loop baseball picture were given a

Mike Rainnie tossed amp no-hittel at Barnstable to gain a 1-0 vershydict

Its still much too early to predict with any accuracy

what will happen in the Cape wai baseball race But it ap- pears nomiddotclub will dominate th~t sport like Falmouth controIa track Falmouth Dartmouth Fairhaven and Barnstable are expected to fight it out through the entire season One close to the scene summed it up best when he said anyone in the league could win this thing

Close races are also developshying in the Bristol County and Narragansett Leagues

In the BCL both Bishop Fee han of Attleboro and Durfee High of Fall River encountered a few difficulties in early season play but seem to have found the range of late The clubs will meet in an important contest today in Fall River Late inning rallies have brought both clubS from the brink of defeat to vicshytory in previous outings The victor will have to be dubbed

shot in the arm last week as the team to beat

Brennan of Feehan D~est ill le~guej

Coach Tom Maccarone of Feeshyhan has had outstanding pershyfonnances from his pitching staff but the key to the Shamshyrocks success has been shortshystop Ty Blrennan Maccarone stated before the season that Brennan was his best player and perhaps the best in the whole Bristol County Judging from Brennans perfonnance to date one of the keys to stopping Feehan is stopping the classy shortstop

Coach Joe Lewis Hilltoppers play a brand of ball similar to his counterpart TOIJl Karams basketball club Make a mistake and the Fall Riverites will capshyitalize on it Durfees first two league victories came about beshycause of opponent miscues

The Hilltoppers have been playing steady ball throughout the early part of the campaign and are improving with every game Their ability 10 avoid costly mistakes eI tbeir -n

making and timely hitting has proven a winning combination

Come what may in todays contest the BCL llace has just begun

Not to be outdone by tile larger BCL and Capeway Conshyference the Narry loop is conshyducting a torrid race of its own At the end of the first week of action Seekonk and DightonshyRehoboth were tied for the top spot Following two weeks of play Gase of Swansea Dighton and Somerset were lodged In the first position The hectic lCampaign will probably find another change in the top spot at the conclusion of this weeks activity

From Cape Cod to Attleboro competition is keener this year than it bas been in many seashysons The road to the league championship is always diffJshycult to Davigate but this year it appears as though the road win be duttered wiill meR obstacles than ill quite

cone~~ lb~aders ConcllregrnmOB War In V~~It~IlJJm

NEW YORK (NC)-Stushydent government presidents and editors of campus newsshypapers at more than 500 colleges in 49 states have conshydemned the war in Vietnam as

lt immoral and unjust and said ~~ they believe they should not

~ i~~~~~~~ii ~~~b~~ shy --_ ~ and Laymen Convinced About

-- ~-__ Vietnnm Was coordirlated by shy _ -- shy ~ Rev RObert lVi Hundley lHullent

--lt--1 at Union Th~ological Snppary --J here and an associate pltISor at -- ~I th~ Congn~gationalChllrch hn ~_ Scarsdale N-Y He saiQ most

--middot1 students who signed the stateshy~-__-~~- ~~ -___- __~_~J ment havenot been active in

FINE ARTS FESTIVAL Making preparations for Fine Arts Festival at Bishop Stang High School North

Dartmouth are Paul Leahy and Margaret Polycarpo

~ Unmiddot-ty middotIs Chr-stlTs middotW-II

P Off W I E deg I pOi degI

ontl e comes cumenlca I grlmage From United Kingdom toHoly Lar-d

anti-war activities heretoforemiddot

Solicits Support

He added

Many of the student Itl~ders who have signed this sbtcment

recognize that they may be plaeshying their future caJeers illmiddotjeopshy~rdy and conceivably are riskshying punitive action being taken

against them by the capiicioWJ V~TICAN ~ITY (NC)~TO an Fathers Arthur Payton anSel~c~ve Sfdtvice Systerh~~~

I ecumenical pilgrimage oQ its Anglican who is director 01 ~ev Yi~am Sloan Cot~~1 Jr-) way to the Holy Land Pope interchurCh travel in LOndon bull aclive memjgter of Clergymiddot ~nd Paul VI recalled the words he Among its members were An- Laymen Concerned AboutbullVI~tshyspoke on his own pilgrimage glieans CatholiCs Oithodox and nam ~1dmiddota Yal~ U~Iverslt7

there in 1964 that unity is the will of Christ

He said that it was with parshyticular pleasure that we welshycome this ecumenical pilgrimshyage from the United Kingdom to the Holy LaRd You are aboUt to follow in the fOQtSteps af God made man in the country of His birth Hill mission and His blessed death for us men and for our salvation (NiceneCreed)

Your visit caUsto mind our own unforgettable pilgrimage to the Holy Places From the grotto of Bethlehem we then declared It npw appears clearly to all that the problem of unity cannot be eluded Today this will cif Christ is imposed upon our minds and demands th~t we undertake with wisdom and love every possible way of bringing all Christi~ns t6 enjoy the great benefit and supreme honor of the unity of the middotChurch

He also recalled his plea from Bethlehem that love of Christ and of the Church should inshyspire that every future moveshyment toward meeting and reshyconciliation

The pilgrimage was led by

DIOCESAN DIREC1OR First woman to serve as a diocesan director of radio-TV is Miss Patricia Smith of Pueblo Colo who is also a photo-journalist on the staff gf Dateline Colorado m cesan weekly newspaper

Protestants not only from Great Britain but from France and Germany as well

Msgi Gianfrancesco Arrighi undersecretary of the Secretashyriat for Promoting Christian Unity and Canon John Findlow representative of Anglican Archbishop Michael Ramsey of Canterbury at the Holy See accompanied middotthe pilgrims to the Vatican

Votes Moratorium On ChuDch Building

CHICAGO (NC)-The Chicago Conference of Laymen is urging Church authorities at both the archdiocesan and parish levels to declare a moratorium on 10- cal construction projects so that funds can be channeled to projshyects in the ghetto areas

The action was taken at the second annual meeting of the

ll200-member organization The 300 in attendance passed

some 50 resolutions half of them dealing with urban problems The membership said it will seek ways to alleviate white racism especially within the Catholic Church

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ch~plaJD saId The stand taken by these

y~ung men should serve to reshymmd Americans everywhere that the war in Vietnam 1s not over that American and Vietshy

namese boys are stillmiddotdying

He continued

These middotmen of conscience should be supported by eveQY priest minister and rabbi who cares about the sanctity of conshyscience

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Jesuit Comments Di~cordNormal Amon9 Catholics

RIO DE JANEIRO (NC)shylD i SC 0 r d among Catholics after the Second Vatican Council is perfectly normal but It is not normal for proshygressive or conservative Cathoshylics to refuse to accept the dishyrectives of the council and the pope Jesuit superior general said here Father Arrupe is in Brazil for 30 days to visit Jesuit houses in the country and to preside at the May 6 to 14 meeting here of all South Amershyican Jesuit provincials

He said that his visit is inshytended to adapt the order here flo the requirements of the agshygirnameJ1to or up-dating

The most important aggiorshy namento in our day he said

is that of the mind We have to ~nsider and respect human valshyues as such This was always the Churchs doctrine but now the Church is insisting on it more We ought not to consider the Churchs interest in human values as opportunism Our in tEmtion is only to serve mankin~ better)

Press Uses Images Dudng his stay here Father

Arrupe willmiddot visit 20 local(tiesWhere Jesuits are woikilg

ts B 1Ilhele are 1000 JesUl m razl~ bull

He said that he regarded as bull joke the Brazilian presss ref-

elences to him as ~the black l T Ch Pope cussion of he angmg a1middot

Because of my cassock hemiddot

tlaid I am black but I am not the Pope ~ understand that the press has to use images to exshylI)lain concepts more effectively

Honor Editor NEW YORK (NC) ~ Robert

6lmstead news editormiddot of the National Catholic Reporter weekly newspaper published in Kansas City Mo received honshyelable mention in the 1968 Paul Tobenkin Memolial Award Competition here

-

MEET IN ST LOUIS Bishop-elect Timothy J~ Harringshyth d f th Sf W 1 ft d

ton ~ orcester e leoscllfses ~ atn t ~ l~mg

ish a panel a~ the lQ68Presi dents Conference of the Nashytional Council of cat~olic yene~l

Role of CouDcil The parish will retairi its role

as a community of worship whose members go out ihto the world and bring it theeurohristjan

message Bernatd Lyons Ghishycago public relations ~onsultant saidmiddot

The pa~ish on the other hand mustmiddot become part of the world

alound it a wHr1e$S to the whole community and fake on roles not in relation only to -its

GUIDING CHURCH IN UNITED STATES More than 200 members of the hierarchy participated in the decisions of the annual Spring meeting of the National Conference

Predict Important Authorities Emphcisixe

WASHINGTON (NC)-Three members but to the world in authorities on parish life have agreed here that the parish basic organiz~tion iil the Church will have to undergo some lmportant changes if the ChUlch is goingto meet th~ needs of societyin the 20th censhy tury

But just how the parislt is going to change ~s far from setshytied they ~onceqed in a dis

which it exists Father John Corriga~ of this city a directozlt of the Nationalmiddot Liturgical Con ference asserted

Whatever it does the parish must becomemiddot a vital force in the cOlJlrnunity around it Father Geno Baroill execu~ive secretary Washington archdi

ocesan Office ~f Urpan Affairs declared

RIot ComparlmiddotsoDmiddot

Father Baroni whose work blings hini into constant contactmiddot with Negro problems in WaSh- laymen will inhibit soCial ac- ington saw~ astriking par~illel tion but added later this is a between the Churchs needs and risk wltirth taking

-those of thebiack ghetto Right now~ he observed - one of the mos~ urgent prob Society to Consider lems in the ghetto is that Of Sh fmiddot

community organization We 5 emnary I t arll learl1ing that pe~ple ri~t be CARTHAGENA CNC) _ The

cause they have beel- cut o~t ofSocieiy of the Precious Blood meaningful participation in so- ciety

In the ~hurch laymen have been cut out of this participa tion also They dont riot but they dont really concern them selves with the concerns of the Church unle~s thy ~ave t~i~ sense of partlclpatlcm he saId

New Resndemlce For US PIiDests

ROME (NC)-A new resident house for American priests working In the offices of the Roman Curia (the Churchs censhytral administrative offices) or on assignment in Rome for the US bishops has been opened to provide adequate economical lodgings and community surshyroundings

The residence called Villa Stritch after the late Samuel Cardinal Stritch of Chicago is composed of two apartment comshyplexes and is designed to meet the immediate needs of US priests already at work in Rome and to anticipate future housing needs as internationalization of the Roman Curia continues

In addition to American$ resshyident in Rome the villa is also expected to house priests on special assignments for the bishshyops in Rome bishops who come to Rome for work on var~ous

Church commissions or otherVatican offices or for such events as the synod of bishops and ma-Jor congresses In short it is hoped that the new villa wilL

will study the possibilities and implications of moving the or ders main theological school flOm St Charles Seminary here in Ohio to a university campus or urban center and of buildingmiddot an adequate program at St QJ1arles The Carthagena SChOt

has been the societys maJor seminary for over 100 years

Major superiors and middotelected delegates representing the soshycietys Cincinnati province voted to fOlm a committee to carry out the study during a provincial chapter meeting held at St Charles at which modernizing the training of candidates for the priesthood in the society Vas tqe chief subject of discussion

middotA report of the meeting in- dicated that the delegates were aware of trends in the Church 1-way from comparative isloationmiddot of seminary establishments to university campuses and urban centers

SPECIAL RATES FOR

Smiddot I O dcho0 utings an Picnics

of Catholic Bishops in St Louis last week An enormoUis amount of homework on position papers was approved ~

the Bishops NC Photo

I see the parish councils and their recognition of freedom asneceSsai-y to do this he added

Worth Risk They agreed they sha~e abull

feiling opound un~asin~ss _middotaboti~ these cOuncIls relatively new amQJ1g Cathol~cs pa~icula~lY their attitude t~ward SOCI~ issues

d Father Baroni sal he has ~

leery feeling about parishcouncils He declared there is

the danger that conservative

contribute to increased racial understanding and involvement

fur the people of the diOcese

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Parishes

Lyons author of th~ book middotParish Councils - Renewin the Parish Community said be

middotwas somewhat more optiniistici I donit think we are going to

solve these problems by 10~~1 at the dangers exclusively hie commented

Diocese to Discuss C~m~issi~n Rep~rt

LANSING (NC) - Catholics thoughout t~e Lansing diocese will participate in forums and home discussion groups 1as~ on the report of the National Acf visory Commission on Civil Disshyorders The program which begaa with public forums in six citie on April 29 was planned ~

middot three diocesanmiddot agencies-the Ofshyfice of Social and Community Service the Office of Renewal Through Vatican II and the adult education division of tne Education Department It was initiated in response to an appeal made by Bishop Alexshyander Zaleski The day following the death of Dr Martin Luther King Bishop Zaleski asked dishyocesan directors to plan an imshymediate program designed to

meetmg of heBIShops n erence WIt ISop e e~ros be a center of communi~y life CONTACT MANAGER - LINCOLN PARK of BrowI)svIlle Texas and fOtmiddotmer chancellor of the Fall for bishops arid priests with spe- 9996984 636-2744 ~iver Di~~~~lt __~gt -cilla~~gnrn~iitS~~o~~~ ~ Oc)QI~OC~)OQCIOC)oOOOCgtoc)OQltjIOcXllOOOCgtOC)oOC~)OIL)QOCgtOCPOoO

Page 5: 05.02.68

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 2 1968

~Ii7 I i j

FIRST COMMUNION Youngsters in special education religion classeS meida Sister Joan Bernadette SND instructor Shelley Lagasse RashyreCeive first Holy Oommunion at Mass celebrated for them at Bishop phe]le Ambrose Dennis Silvares Mrs George F Gifford special education StanK High School North Dartmouth From left Frank Mendonca James -chairman and teacher At right Bishop Connolly congratulates Frank ~nstant Rachel Ambrose Kenneth Pereira Joseph Arruda Sh~uon AI- Mendonca

j~rchbishop Sets Catholic CollegesWarns Catholics of IntercommulnionCollege Program To Become Co-ed For Sem~Dlarians Damages IEcumenism Cause Bishop Sellys KANSAS CITY (NC)-Rockshy

hurst College and A vila College ST PAUL (NC)-Transshy STOCKHOLM (NC)-8wedish mere demonstration of goodwin throughout the Church But here in Missouri will become

Catholics wele warned against If such an act of intercomshy he added pressure groupsk of the college program coeducational in Septemberpernlilting the ecumenical spirit munion were sufficient for comshy seeking reforms contrary to the 1969 the plesidents of the twofor St Paul and Minneapolis to result in an intercominunshy plete unity the whole ecumenishy views of the Church will institutions have announcedseminaries from St Paul ion with separated Christian cal movement would have no achieve nothing for reform or

Until then they said theySeminary to the College of St brethlen that would violate the real meaning ecumenlsm will make a study of areas ofII1omas was announced here by Catholic concept of eucharistic Bishop Taylor said that intershy The bishop questioned whether coordination and cooperationCoadjutor Archbishop Leo C sacramentalism communion is therefore impos- Catholics and Protestants in this between the two private colshyByrne Bishop John E Taylor OM sible for Catholics in principle country have sufficiently coshy leges each of which will retainThe prelate said Nazareth of Stockholm said in his newly despite our grief over this operated in aU fields where its separate identityBall Preparatory Seminary will issued Guidelines on Intershy reality because there are widely there are theological obshyI()

Father Maurice E VanAckshylie continued communion with Separated divergent ideas over such essenshy stacles to such collaboration eren SJ Rockhurst presidentArchbishop Leo Binz of St Brethl-en that the practice of tial question as the hierarchical such as in communications and and Sister Olive Louise CSJintercommunion by Catholics ministry the sacrament of Holy social and educational undershyPaul and Minneapolis issued a Avila president made the jointindividually or collectively with Orders sacrifice and the sacrashy takings and even in spiritual~ree implementing the new announcem(~nt after approval byEvangelical (Protcstant) Chris- ments themselves ecumenism through commonIllOgram and canonically erectshy the two boards of directorstians in this country damages To ignore such considerations prayer

b accommodate seminarians the cause of ecumimism and is the bishop continued is to reshy Only an ecumenism that orshy The objective of the change is making collegiate studies be- opposed to the will of the Cathshy sort to a sort of magic concepshy ganically grows up from inside to broaden and strengthen our ~nning Sept 1 _

_g St John Vianney Se~inary

olic Church tion of the sacrament which can bring about concrete results educational programs and our The guidelines have been disshy would separate it from the pershy even though it may be a slow community services and to proshyThe decree states canonical

tributed to the clergy and Reli shy sonal faith and conviction of process he said vide a richer diversity of opshyooquirements are to be met for gious of Sweden and some of those receiving it tions available in the privatelJl[)pointing officials of the new thelaity Pressure Groups sector of higher education inJeffiinary but that the academshy Priests Aid Families rntercommunion the bishop Kansas City the announcement()e instruction of the students Actually Bishop Taylorsaid is a matter of concern to said fJlld their academic evaluation said we Catholics have someshy Of Arrested Men many Catholics and non-Cathshyare to be handled chiefly times been accused of such a NEWARK (NC) - Fifteen Rockhurst is one of 28 U Solic Christians especially youthselrough the College of St mag-ic idea by Protestants Newark priests have volunteered colleges and universities conshyand students In some quartersThomas Bishop Taylor said he was to participate in a program ducted by the Jesuits Avila ishe noted it is maintained that

Archbishop Byrne said the sympathetic to what he caned which will find them working one of five colleges operated byintelcommunion ill a means of init iatives and impulses arisshy the Sisters of St Joseph ofIbOve to St Thomas will bring with the families of men arshyChristian unity

llbe seminary college program ing from inside the Church and J-eSted by the po]ice for vIolating Car6ndeletHowever the bishop added it ro a certain impa-tience the law Qnto conformity with the Amershy is in the Eucharist the sacrashy

ean system of education It will Members oj the Newarkment of unity that the tragedylmprove the academic and curshy Priests Gro~p an association ofof Christian disunity is mostriculum resources available to Aid for Unemployed clergy the priests will collaboshyevidentIJeminarians he said and enshy rate in a program already inaushy

Theological Realities Mexican-Americansable them to take advantage of gurated under Protestant ausshyTo seek intercommunion bybull more specialized faculty and WASHINGTON (NC) - More pices The invitation to partici shy

a single joint act without regardIDOre extensive physical facili shy than 2500 unemployed persons pate was extended by Dean to the theological realitiesties Cited as examples were the mainly Mexican-Americans will Ledie C Laughlin of Trinitywhich are at the base of theIUbrary science laboratories and receive job preparation and Episcopal cathedralEuchalist he said is to reducephysical education facilities placement services in 11 Southshy The priests will be available tothe Eucharistic celebration to a

Archbishop Byrne said the St western cities under projects anshy prisoners in the varioUS precinct Paul Seminary faculty will be nounced by Labor Secretary stations and courts of the city free to concentrate on the theshy Willard Wirtz and will subequently visit theRochester Priests ologate and to implement plans Approximately $5 million in families of the arrested men ro ~r deeper more intensive Form Assodation Manpower Development and acquaint them with the situashyaludy of theology in accordance Trail1ing Act funds have been tionROCHESTER (NC) - Priests

LUMBER co So Dartmouth and Hyannis

So Dartmouth 997middot9384 Hyannis 2921

J B

with the granting of the master here have joined the growing earmarked for the projects ~ arts degree in theology for which have been developed bytrend tow a r d independentmiddotwhich preliminary accreditation Mexican - Amercian organizashypriests organizations by formshylas been obtained tions The projects have been deshying a Priests Association of

signed by the staff of OperationThe major seminary will also Roohester SER (Service Employment Reshy~ able to serve those priests The diocese already has a development) with the assistancewho desire advanced work in Priests Council formerly called of the Department of Labor andCbeology studies he said a senate Health Education and WelfareSome 115 priests met to vote

on a constitution for the new Operation SER is directed byHails Example association and elect a 15-memshy Jobs for Progress Inc a nonshy

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope ber coordinating committee profit organization sponsored by Paul has told chaplains to About 230 priests including major Mexican - American orshyItalys Christian labor unions about 20 members of religious ganizations the League of United Qhat their work is a real exshy communities serving in the dioshy Latin American Citizens and

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IHnplc of the Churchs interest cese have signed up for the the American GI Forum of the N Easton Mass 02356 Tel 238-2052 696-0400 AD the working classes organization United States

6 rm ANCHOR-Diocese ofJloR RiverThurbull May 2 1968 ( CafttMlCYBoya ~ ~ ~ middot12~middot _ bull~-~ ltshy

~ Tribute $tresses Value Shall We Talk Money or Concern Of~iaIW~

OceasiQnally the criticism is leuroveled against Ohurch leaders that they taik money too often

There may be some truth to this Perhaips what they should do is talk concern-the

eoncern that each person has or should have for his brothers and sisters in the family of God

Such a talk might well go like this Here is a child who is mentally retarded whose parents

have neither the ability nor the time to teach him about the things of earth or of heaven - spend several hours a day with him because he is your little brother in the Lord

Here is a person ravaged by an incurable sickness-middot take this person into your home and care for him until God calls him home because this sick person is your brother in the Lord

Here are a group of young adults entering into the world of the adult with apprehension and fears and anxieties -spend several hours a day with them to answer questions and to talk over problems and to suggest lines of conduct because they are your brothers and sisters in the LOrd

Here are some people who were good mothers and fathers~ and wonderful grandparents and now they are entering their senior years and their strength is failing

middot f hand they need carefuI and patIent care-care or t em because they belong to you they are your parents and grandparents they are your relativesand they are also your brothers and sisters in the Lord

Here isa young unmarried mother who needs guidance

and help here is a father whose wife has died and who has young middotchildren and no one to care for them here is an engaged couple seeking some basic principles about marshy

riage here is a married couple who feel a curtain of misshyunderstanding coming between them-all these are your

Your brothers and sisters in the Lord so you should take the time to educate yourselves about their problems take the time and make the effort to listen to them without watching the clock give them professional advice take them into your home for long-range care give hours of your time in

counselling them and following up their difficulties Do all this And then no one would have to talk money The conshy

eern would be there the services would be rendered the works of the Lord would be done And you would be doingthem

What you cannot do these things you havent the time or the skill yourselves

Well someone has to do these things And someone has to support those who dothe works of the Lord ~omeone

has to give them the means they need to work with theld d d hI I h bUl mg an the facIlitIes an t e too s to Imp ement t elr concern able distanceshave to be traveled thus relieving parent

IJLIf you cam~~t orWI11 not d0bullthe works th emse1V~S ~Jlen and child of straiilarid daily fatigue Inthis matter we Un ~ou ~nd WIll you dosomethInamp to ~~dthoseWho ~re are open to suggestion and will proceed only when and if workmg m your name for and WIth your brot~ersandtheideais approved The expansion of this field into two ~ee4 Government Aid

t th Lo d f l f God d hOO Citing poverty as an example 8IS ers me r rom ove 0 an neIg r or three urban areas awaiF~ alon~ assura~ce that the schools Msgr Higgins said Thisis what the Catholic Charities middotA~rme~ns be staffed by specI~nytramedsIstersaIded by competent ~There is much thatiildividshy

Either dO the workS of GOd yourselves ~helpthoseWho members of thelalty ual citizensmiddot and groups of citishy- are oing these w~1ks o~ meCy an4 cent1oation and eh~ritygtAnother ~bjectiveaboutwhich we seek advice is the zenscm domiddot to all~viate ~ _ and concern m your name c - problem but they cannot ~l~lt bull

L t t talk ih bet t lk d settmg up of a Home for the Aged ChrOnIcally-Ill on The tpe problem alone The gov~~ aaIcaetIosn aOnd yocmiddotatmImiddotomiddotonn~arnd geIVnIng of~se Jaf concern ~ Cape We have fQur tracts of land between Harwiehaitd middottmh~nt ~~~l hile to do much ~ mu bull bull an It IS domg at the present

Lets tak GOO and the goodcto bl done This ~FaJmouthI~settle~ ar~~~ WhIle l~ IS true~an~ nurslll~_tim~ and probably morethiuR mustbe done and in the nameOf God TakeGodfrommiddothomesare bemgbU11~weareconvlllced the~eIsroomfor an recent Adritinistration haj the word good middotandwhat is leftgtmiddot Just an 0 And this one sfuffed by religious women where the near presence proPQsed stands for nothing of a chapel and the stimulus of prayerful exercises would he p~nciple of subsi~ia~ properly understood does

It comes downto this do the work-s of G6dmiddotyourselves uplIftmiddot mmds and hearts However here agamwe would middotpro~ibit the government from to the degree that you can and support those who are like the benefit of your thinking meeting this pressing challenge doing the WOlks of God in your name [ Oli the contrary itobliges the

Our Youth faCIlItIes are constantly expandmg and Im- government to supplement the Now dges that gIVe ~ lIttle dlf1er~ntattItude ~waNLpr6VingFamilyproblemsmiddotnot always of an extremeserl necessarily limited programs at

the Appeal keepour Welfare Family Life and social workers busy In oluntary oIganizfltions il) the ~ f~eld of SOclal welfare ancl ~

--------------~---- -oo

rheANCHOR frICr~L NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALLPVER Published weeklyby The Catllolic Press of the Diocese of Fall River

410 Highland Avenue Fall River Moss 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Rt R~v DanielF Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

CM~I-A~amplU ~~ Ar=t=es App~al ~tlkI1vlhbl ~1llJ1WI If II

Continued from Page Three

Our immediate plans for expansion are bigger than any attempted before There are two important commitments The accommodations at Catholic Memorial Home are to increase through the construction of an addition to the

Nursing Wing This is done with a view to provide for married couples and for such others as could benefit in spirit by being closer to rehabilitation facilities and proshyfessional care

A second objective and it involves a great deal is to modernize our homes for children St Marys New Bedford and St Vincents in Fall River date back a long time Both are iJil constant need of repair But money spent on them is practically wasted So we are about to erect a new St Vincents designed according to the best of modern ideas and for accommodation of 120 boys and girls up to the middle-teen years

1 dFor the menta ly retar ed we would like to provide ht M d th h F d h dovermg care on ays roug rl ay were consl er-

WASHINGTON (NO) _ There is no profession other than social work whieli keeps its fingea- so middotoonting ously and sensitively on tile pulse of human misery notr which is more rewarding in tbaspiritual enrichment of th~ who labor to alleviate the sui

fering of their fellow man The tribute to thesocial worJr

profession was given at the 50tJa anniversary convocation of the Catholic Universitys NationalCatholic School of Social Service by Patrick Cardiilld OBoyle of Washington

In paying the tribute Cardinal OBoyle a graduate of the New

York School of Social Servicewho had a long social work eashyreer before becoming archbishshyop confessed to the gathering that he is still a welfare workshyer at heart

Founded in 1918 The convocation was the higba

light of a weekend celebratiolll of the schools anniversary The present school developed from the Service School opened by the National Catholic Welfare Conference in 1918 to trailamp women for social workwitb American military personneland their families andfor-reshylief and rehabilitation at hOmci and abroad

The National Catholic School of Social Service was foundedin 1921 and NCWC entrusted responsibility for it to the Na- tionat Council of Catholic Women In 1947 this school was m~rged with the Catholic UMshyversity School of Social work the unified school retaining the name National Catholic Schooi of Social Service

Among seminar speakers was Msgr George G Higgins diree- tor social action departmentU S catholic Conference who stressed that although Catholics have justifiably prided OUllshy

selves on having helped to keep alive the notion of subsidiaIi~in social and economic life the7

must be equally alive -- importance and indispensabiUw of far reaching governmentalaction in the social and economorder

all fIelds we are blessed by havmg donated serVIces~ For cial reform this we are d~eply grateful since it allows us to visualize with confidence projects such as the ones Jisted above Publisher to Head

Beginning then next Su~day our volunteer wqrkers Historical Socmiddotiety will make their round of calls tothe homes and offices of all to whom we turJifor support Our record in the past

t h b f d th tSIX een years as een one 0 more an more en USIas IC response from the business community as well as the individshyual donor Apart from the satisfaction of seeing their dollar well spent all who have aided our appeal are beneficiaries of the diocese remembered most certainly in my prayers and masses as well as those ministering to heeds and being helped by the thirty separate social charitable activities that we have Everyone is happy over what has been done But a great many who need to be helped are hopefully watchshying the results of the 1968 campaign and I am among tllem

NEW YORK (NC)-Victor ~ Ridder publisher of New Yorlnl archdiocesan newspaper TIleCatholic News has been elected president of the United States Catholic Historical Society

The societys main purposes are discussonand pUbl~catiODof documents books and papers relating to the history of toe Catholic Church and the deveJ opment of Catholic culture IIIAmerica The society has pub-lished some 50 volumes sinc its founding in 1884

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r~pe s_ ~(l (Jlj(~ntucky MountaiTJ Missions t4~ecl ~dOlll f

~f Vocatio~s1 DescriiJes 4ppalacll_ia sPoverty VATICAN CITY (NC) By Dorothy Mitch~n Eastman

Pope Paul VI stressed the Appa~achiaie a powerful word The ve~ name evokes visions of rugged mountain Churchs need fOT priestlyand Religious vocations and life isolation poverty misery and despair In this vast area that encltYmpasses 11 states 1fhe freedom ~hat should charac- live 16 mi11~on of the most poverty-striken people in the Uni1Jed States In every category terize such vocations in a mes- of hUmampn activity Appalachia has fewer of the good things of life than d~s the rest C3ge addressed to the faithful of f America Nowhere in this The latest accomplishment of Gte world on the fifth World nat~on do people h~ve less CAP Inc is the completion of Blny of Prayer for Vocations iYWOme 00 live in poorer II Grade A dairy farming com-

The need the Pope said stems Grom the plan of salvation in the housing nOwhere do they pleL mind of God who wanted have rewer educational oppor- Special schools are set up~rist to be the sole S)urce of tunities or suffer from such Il during the Summer months to

ed al th d teach religion We had six ofGl1vation and of sanctity and 1acit 0 m lC care as ey 0 pho wanteOl His mission to be in Appalachia nowhere in all these Bible schools going last

ld h d Ch Summer Father Beiting saiderpetuated and sPread through we wor as organIze rIS-I ti t d f dh ts Over 350 children have been ~n men partakers in the am y oun so ew a eren A I h included in this program Eighty17liesthood of Christ indispen- us In ppa at lao lmiddotmiddotmiddotll

e Eastern K~ntuc area h middotilmiddot~ per cent of them have been non-Bable ministers of the word and u ~ nt 1

A _1 h h th d b d Catholicsof grace among the rest of man- 9pac la as e U 10US lS-IIdnd tindion of being the poorest of CeJlwllS foil Rellilgilll)n

This need arlslng from the the poor in all CIf th1lSe cate- A8 a follow up to the Bible nature of the Church is DOW glt)ries ~ -schools the parish has organized more acute the Pope continued Four of the poorest counties three centers fur year round OOoause the numbers of the of Eastern Kentucky comprise religious instruction ministers of the Gospel are dim- the parish of Father Ralph Bei- We have a very active bome luishing while the fields open ting He has a parish roughly visitation programFather said tD their work are increasing tile siire of the state of Rhode and this year we will visit be-

The Second Vatican Councils Island tween three and four thousand IMghlighting of the priesthood On his first speaking tour in homes of the faithful the Pope said New England the tall rugged Each year about 2000 people should not lead to a dimming looking priest came to Bishop give from a few days to a few of the ministerinl or hierarchi- Casidy High School in Taun- weeks of their spare time school eal priesthood bull bull bull In fact the ton to talk to the student lxgtdY breaks or vacations to work at more the common priesthood is and the senior class from Coyle one of the four centers Father to be improved the more it has High School has eStablished in his parish Deed of the ministry of the hier- The priests five day tour m- Priests nuns college students arehical priesthood and the eluded addresses at Harvard whltlle families go down to the more the function entrusted to University Regis College Holy area from all over the country tIhe latter manifests its abso- Cross College and Newton Col- to work for the Appalachian lute necessity lege Gf the Sacred Heart as poor

N ---OO- for S I weJn as a TV appearance on One of Charlie Kings inOO has ~ a VBuOD Bob Kenneds Contact show shy P lid d th t been to find useful work for

ampUe ope a e at ODe B~ktAD Aidshya _ f th Ch h d all these volunteers as carpenshy-=gt ales 0 e urc an so Aocompanying Father Beiting ters nurses farmers cooks el the Christian salvation of the - e tour was a lookingld t be ~-d be- -- 6 teaching Bible classes or coun-WOT canno JU6~ as and personable young man from ded ch ri ti h FATHER BElTING seling at the children scamps --amp vun on a sma c p e- Brockton twenty year old Char- Every Sunday of the year DOmena or movements which Be King Charlie has interrupted From the inception of hi8themselves need the ministry rather Beiting and two other -d approval of the hierarchical lWloollege days lit John Carroll pastorate Father Beiting has car- priests drive over 200 miles to Driesthood University to work with Father ried on a dual apostolate As say Masses for 1~heir parishioners

The priesthoods authority Belting as a full time lay vol- well as tending to the needs of in homes in the three churches Mel the priests sacramental unteereaming the grand sum crl of the 45000 who live within af the parish in a candy store

a dollar a day the boundaries of his parish be and a pavillion power1 b to fo Charlie -_ hi h worK-- on everenew the bloodless reflected lito ti as 1 every Non-Catholic attendance at the tie e ra on are necessary l wo~ in Appalachi has con- th li ht _ C Improve e econOmiC p g Masses is often three times as IoU hurch and the salvation of -ced hlm that his vocatlhn th A I h F--d Vlll ~ e ppa ac Ian poor rom greatmiddotmiddotas the native Catholic at shynki d hIDa n e lHU bull I er ea-ng hiS deCNgte~ in the- dist b tion 0 f f d and I thmg tendence in countries As dditi in ~ n u 00 c 0 these

an a ona reason 41- -l~ltIno work omong the poor - -d Co g 10 al~ th ed I ti ~ w ~ G middotressmg n ress n where only one personmiddotin everyOU

_ng e ne or voca ons ~ think its true that we will tt F th h ht Ole Pope cited the secularization n what Eug~ne McCarlh COmml ees a er as song 1000 is Catholic

~ ~ or to attack the poverty of Eastern ~ the modern w9rldwhJch has CaDs QmoraJ revoiution to solve Kentteky with every means Summer Missions

a greater need ~r a conse-middot the Poverty crisis m this cOOn-avaiiable Formiddotfive weeJ~8 everymiddotSummer ~t~an~eciaf~thZed preseten~e tij- be said New Project Father Belting and a team of ~ewltUus 0 ~ mys neB ~ pilther Beiting haSbeen -WOrk As his familiarity with the priests seminari~ and ~y ~ Go~ ~L Cor 4 1) jWg hi Eastern Kentucky since areaincreased and the extent of people go through the countryshy

Wllhngll1ess to Sacrifice [OOa when he was assignedamp workmiddot to be done became more middotside ona streetpreaching misshy ~ ~ addi~on to the need for mission parish under the aus- and more pressing the need for sion Reception is not always WOCations the Pope in his mes- pices of the Diocese of Coving- a permanent solution to eco-middot cordial in this section where ~ stressW freedom of voca-middot ton~ Besides his 1000 square nomie ills became evident In prejudice against Catholics runs fions by which he said he mile parish he bas middotthe respon~ mlilw~rto this need in the Sum- high Father and his preachers meant personal IU1Q voluntary sibility of all 25 counties in mer of 1965 Father Beiting have at times h~ to proclaim ehlation to the cause of Christmiddot Eastern Kentucky through his founded the Christian Appala- the good news of Christs messhyIInd of His Church position as Deail of Kentucky ehian Project Inc an independ- B1ge ~f broth~rhood and middotconshy

There cannot be any voca- Mountain Missions In this posi- ent ~on-Igtrofit organization cern a~id ca~ca~ and hurled aons he said unless they are tion Father directS all the mis- working to develop the economic tomatoes ~ unless in other words they siooory and soCial endeavorS of resources of the region to the The Word is not falling OD

00e offered spontaneously of t1-e Church in this the most advantage of the middotpoor Now in entirely stony ground even in themselves conscr~usly gener- ~pera1e povenymiddot area of its fourth y~ar of setvi~ in ~ -an a~eamiddot wpell~ for genera-tions Ciusly totally America Jackson COUl)t~ the CAP Inc Catholics have been thougbt to ~ This hesa1d applieS Doth to Per capita income in these lias carried out numerous devel- I be mleagiie witb the devil The ~stly and Religious vocati6ns eotJnties avera~es bet~~~rt ~50 ClPmental training and employ- parish is currently instructing male and female vocations ana $840 a year Nearly nine ou~ plent programs Among these 25 people in themiddot faith

Willingness to sacrifice the M every 10 houses is lIubstand ate tlie lntroduction and pro- The expenses of our proshy Pope went on is the cru of the atil lacliing electricity running duction of- sevetal itlew crops gram are enormous Father middot~bleril The world of religion water or inside faciliti~ Tl1ere in themiddot count4ls agricult~ral sighed and theyre financed

discredited by atheism or hedon- ~ no higher per cent of illiter- economy and many technical entirely by contributions On lEm he said is no longer as at- atePeople in the UnIted SUites innovations iIi the agricUltural his speaking tour Father is ~~tive as it OJlC~ was _ thml in Eastern Kentucky Med- field searching for individuals or

Bul youth he said is stillre- ieal facilities ale few and far Complementing the agrjcul- groupswhowill sponsor one of eeptive to the call of the Church between tural prOjects several small in- the 25 full time volunteers like to do difficult things heroic We need doctors desperately dustrialptograms serve to train Charlie King (~t a OOstof $30 a Cbings Father Beiting said sadly and employ natives of the month) Olrmiddottomiddot pledge contribushyThe Pope urged families to be Sickness Leads to Apathy county The woodworking fac- tions for any item on his list -tiling to make the sacrifices of Malnutrition takes Its toll in tOry turns out high quality Ap- of immediate needs - items bull son or daughter to the Church many ways The mountain pal~hian woodcrafts ranging ranging from tires for their

people have often been carica from knick-kneeks to Appala- much used cars to a Holstein turedas lazy but Wldernourish- - chian musical instruments ~ for the dLiry farm

Two in One merrt and sickness are the real Seasonal employment is pro- In concluding his talk to the BERLIN (NC) - The World eauses of their apathy Most of vided through the production of students at Cassidy Father asked

Congress of Catholic Youth these people have middotbeen sick Christmas wreaths Plans are if they would like his address lIePresenting the International since the day they were born ~ on the drawing board for a pal- 01 on second thought he

Catholic Youth Federation and Father asserted letmaking industry and assorted qUIPPed would you rather have the World Federation of Cathoshy Theyre gooCl people-won- enterprises that will employ Charlies lie Young Women and Girls deriul people he insisted Its over 100 men in the county For those who would like have voted to merge the two a shame There should be many which has one of the highest Fathers it Is St Williams erganizations to form the World more people working to help unemployment statistics in the Church 224 rexington Street

tibem nation Lancaster KentuclqWederation of Catholic Youth

THE ANCHORshy 7 Thursday May-2 l968

Crisis in Poland Affects Church

BERLIN (NC)-The Catholic Ohurch and Catholic members of Polands Sejm (parliament) have been caught in the crossshyfire of the current political crisis in that country and the resurgence of anti-Semitism that has a~companied it

For the first time the Church has bean publicly attacked for its support on the students demshyonstrations in March fur intelshylectual and democratic freeshydoms

Jozef Kepa first secretary of the Warsaw Communist party committee in m speech released (April HI) backed party chief Wladyslaw Gomulkas efforts to tone down the anti-Jewish stateshyments that have been rampant in the press on television and in public speeches but had hard words for the Catholic hiershyarchy

Target of Kepas criticisms was Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski of Warsaw who praised the stushydents iOr their maturity and moderation

The voice of the reactionary party of the Church hierarchy had been heard Kepa said among forces united against the peoples power He condemned the support given by Polish Roman Catholic leaders to the student demonstrations

Meanwhile in the Sejm the five Catholic members known as the Znak group were assailed by Premier Jozef Cyrankiewicz aid Politburo member Zenonmiddot Klisko because the Cathltllic legshyislators had asked the governshyment if it approved of a violashytion of civil rights by police acshytion against the demonstrating students Kliszko called the Catholic deputies friends of pro-Israel Jews and revisionshyists

Future Bright ROME (NC) -The religious

liberty situation in Czechosiovshyakia has already changed greatly

for Catholics and hopes for th~

future middotseem bright according to Bishop Frantisek Tomesek a p 0 s t ltl) 1 i e administrator of Prague

GERALD E McNALLY Construction Co Inc

454 MAIN STREET SOMERSET MASS

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YOUI H

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FoR River-Thurs May 2 t9688 Urges Vctory ~ VietnomRecipes Re1call Memor~es ST lOUIS (NC)-A oan fbft Victory in Wetnam and a coo-gt demnation of Communism ltBOf Many Friendly Coks intrinsleany evil highlighteltl a series of IOresolutions adoptedBy Mary Enley Dally bIY the priests and bishops Belraquo ving on the Cardinal Mindszen~II A collection of cookbooks 16 a good addition to a kitchen Council governing board ~

Like a dictionary or an encyclopedia a good cookbook is the anti-communist CaJdina$ 8Il authoritative source of information but like that dictionshy lIlindszenty F~undation

ary or encyclopedia irts a cold impersonal font of lrnow- The resolutions adopted a1l the end of the foundations threegt

ledge On the other hand backs cf enveloPes on a blank day celebration of its 10th anni-o there probably is 8Jt your check on the inside of a match versary he1e outlined a p~ Muse certainly ~ ours folde around the margin of a gram based on demands for vioo those h~nd-gasthered recipes seven cents off coupon-whatshy tory in Vietnam rigorous pun-o dear and welcome as letters from ever blank Paper is to be found ishment flaquo riote16 and looters bome These receipes fur goodies in a- womans purse But they and ltm e Fecognition 1baII )lou have been represent communication ~ith there can be no useful ~ served at hoones other people OIl a common logue wiIth men of iN win of friends the ground masters of ~ceit band - written In the never-never land of Released with the resoluti01d ones on yel- things to be done remains the was a stmement from Lola Beue lowing cracked sorting and clasSification of Holmes a Negro leader whO paper in spidery these recipes type them out on joined the Communist party 1ft ecript by hands inde~ cards file neatly divided 1957 as an -informer for the long stilled the into soups salads desserts Federal Bureau of Investi~ti~ ones you took etc (FBI) Emphasizing the comJiNshy~er the tele- And yet though order may be Dist role in civil rights aotiw Phone haH ill heavens first lawthere is someshy ties Miss Holmes told conte shyIlhorthand the thing-quite a something---to be ence delegates othe half in said for our box of recipes In Much of the civil t1rrnlGII ebbreviations the this-sounds- anticipatwn of company coming youre seeing right now was 8Iloo 8OOd kind you jagged out of or just a yen to fix something nmged by the Communist p~ the evening paper with a bobby different we leaf tbrough the when I was a member pin meant to try and probably assorted sizes and shapes of our didnt miscellany M brings reminis-

Also there are the puzzlers cences nostalgia and more Conege Functioning shybow-tos from experts who cook often than not_ an idea of someshyby in9tinet--a handful of flour thing entirely different from the Despite Resignations or SCl just enough so that it item we were originally seek- River mark 50th anniversary In wheelchair Miss Mary R LADYSMITH (NC) - Ibl looks right or enough milk so ing acting president of Mount SeDshy

Dailey organizer and charmiddotter member of Fall River unitario College Sister DonnaItll smooth but not too runny For instance 1Ibere Is fIbe standing from left Mrs Mary Hennessey ticket chainnan Marie Rudolph said the Wis-- Pantry Library cookie recipe in the delicate for anniversary observ-ance Mrs Catherine Lee sUite re- consin college is functioningSuch is the collection-if tbis script of our late beloved neighshy

-bor Mrs Madeline Kelly with gent Rev James Morse chapiain Miss Mary F Maleadynormally after the recent resiglag-tag box of this-and-that its addendum Patsy you might ~n+- srtate regentmiddot Mrs Mary Lou Silvia general chairman nation of founder-president Si9shycould be called a collection-at pao ter Ann Mary Gullan eigbIJour house in the pantry li- like to make these as a surprise for observance faculty members and three acJfur your mother (Patsy wes brary tihen 12 years old) ministration personnel

A trained librarian indeed a Sister Donna Marie said thetrained anybody in the artmiddot of T-heres Marguerite Culhanell veal-in-wine we begged from former president resigned imshy

orderly classification even a he after having this at her mediately but the resignatioJUl well-trained cook woulq be house Isabel Donohoes trick of of the other members of -therwORL~ appalled at this motley array sprinkling chicken with vinegar e~BYMAllULYN RODERICK~ eollege are not effective until Some recipes are written on the to firm it up resulting in chicken June 1 She said the college is

salad par excellence many a recruiting faculty members at kindly with FRENCH FLAIR this time and does not anticioopet reciPe shared

lIS by readers of this column pate any difficultay in acquw One Pork Chop rve always read and heard Another tip fur Summer visi shy ing replacements by the Fall

term that French women have a flair tors to this home of the 1968 Also tbere is one addedre- for clothes but I never realized Man And His World is to The resignations were based

eently by a nameless friend we the truth of this statement until plan on wearing bright little on a dispute over the role to be met when she came to a collec- I visited Montreal Immediately dresses and suits but please no played at the college by the _tion center to get food for her it hits you from the moment bermudas or tight slacks Do newly appointed lay vice-pres-shyfamily afteT her home hadbeen you step out of -your car in however take your hemlines up ident Granmiddott E Zachary

GOLDEN JUBILEE Daughters of Isabella in Fall

partially burned out quring the front of tbe hotel that this is a an inch or two for the minilook recent rioting Many many city of women is the tbing in this land of the Catholic parishes had contiib- who know and mounties and I think I had the uted food ~d clothing Any who care about longest hemlines in town with number cf men and women dressing Minishy them just above my knees (-at came to deliver the donated skirts are evshy least they felt that way)supplies and remained to work erywhere but Ourls have taken over this sorting clothi~ packaging sup- miniskirts worn town and they look so delightfulplies for families of two four with style and that I couldnt resist visiting the and on up chicness colOl talented hair stylist in the hotel

Back to the newest recipe abounds bright and having my hair cut and~ This woman had been given a pinks v i vi d curled a Ie 68 For evening bag of mushrooms by a friendly 0 ran g e s and these curls (with the aid of falls grocer on her block If I could citrus yellows and hairpieces of course) cascade have a pork chop-just one pork f rillsan d down the neckline giving these chop she said I could fix flounces float forth and a walk I Canadian women a fragile fem- my familys favorite dinner down a street is like watching inine appearance that is hard to

One pork chop for a family an everchanging fashion show compete with In fact if you of four We couldnt believe it What astonished me as much feel like getting an inferiority until we tried it at our house as the sense of style that pershy complex about your looks this and were asked for a repeat vades the city was the aura cf is the place to go I guarantee performance Heres how good g-rooming Nowhere do you when you return youll want

Use large-capped mushrooms see a sloppy woman no one is new hair style a new sense of Fry the pork chop cool Be- seen walking the streets with make-up and a oomplete new

wardrobe shymove meat and grind it Add curlers in their hair or runs in seasoned bread crumbs and a - their stockings Obviously the bit of grated onion both sauteed - women ~ Morit~eal are con- in melted margarine or fat from cerned WIth theIr appearance

J UBI L A R I AN Sister - the chop Pile on top of in- and work hard to keep it up Color Process verted mushroom capS Make a - One thing in their favor is the

Mary Marciann of the Feli- er~am ~uee (dried or canned price 01 the clothes One can cian Sisters marked her sil- nulk Wl~ do) into which you - pick up a lovely summer dress Booklets vel jubilee of reJi~iou8 pro- have added ithe chopped and fur about twenty-two dollars ill fession at St Stanislaus sauteed mushroom stems ~our Cenadian money or a smashing-shy

0 a SYSTEMATIC55001( ear SAVINGS

MONTHLY DEPOSITS

5 00 01 amiddot INVESTMENT bull 10 year SAVINGS

NOTICE ACCOUNTS a REGULAR450 year SAVINGS

Bass River Savings Bank

Bank By Mail We Pay The Postage

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA

bull SOUTH YARMOUTH bull HYANNIS bull DENNIS PORT - bull OSTfRVlllpound

Year Books

Brochures

Convent Fall River on Sun- sauce into bottom of a shallow - slack sUit for around thirty-middot pan top withthe stufted mush- eight High fashion for a small AmericCin Pr~s~ Inc

oay~ Observance ~p~luded a rooms ~bake until tender price seems to be the motto of ~ Mass of thanksgIvmg cele- 20-30 nunutes the little boutiques tbatmiddot are OFFSET PRII~ITERS~~ LEnERPRESS

brated by Rev Itobert S So now into our heterogene-- ~ound everywhere and if youre Kaszynski StS~nslau8uscollection J0~ this ~ded middotplannin~ a tri~ to this SOPhis~- 1-~7JOFFI~ VENUE hone 997~942t pastor and a -reception for lte~ - communIcation agam - eate~ CIty thiS Summer don t~

- _ remJnder of someone -who was outfit YOU16elf before You go - friepds m the parochial -willillg to share her houSewife -- save a few pennies fur some

school -haU- _ lmowhow delightful buys up there

New Bedford Mass

~

9 New Insecticide Promises To End Dangmiddoter of Sprays

By Joseph and Manlyn Roderick

I doni lmow how other prdeners fared over the Winter but my roses were hit pretty hard Most of my pruning is done now and very ~itble remains of 1ast years IIOwth Luckily the roses surrived wt ground level but I Gidnt have much of a job a~ h Nader knew which ones the~ldmg w at to prune Slnce children would enjoy the hours most of what I could see ihey were open and how much ve the root crown is dead they cost

This year I am going to try bull We found our hotel through stematic approach to ridding this tiny book that described it IDY plants of insects rather than in glowing tenns and it tlllmed IPr~ying simply their upper sur- out to be all that the autho18 IIaces A systematic insecticide had said and then some II taken in through a plants Dining SJl)Ob fIlIOots and passes through its sya- However every bit as imporshytern The one I purchased is in taut as our place oli lodging was granular form and contains a the places where we dined and fertilizer A measured amount Mr Frommer and Mr Godwin III Spread around the base of the couldnt have given us better mose bush worked into the sou tips on dining if they had been ifhen given a thorough watering with us personally One evening The roots then absorb the fer- Joe and I (thanks to 11 kindshytilizer and insecticide and sup- hearted Nana) ate alone at a lit shyposedly keep the plant free from tIe bit of Portugal transplanted IIU chewing and sucking insects to this continent called the k six weeks Fado ComP1ete with melanshy

SLfer~ Quicker moly guitars and Spanish-Por-I would be parUcularly grate- tuguese cooking it was a delight

ful ii the systamic program to the eye ear and palate worked beacuse it would elim- Equally as good though were Snate spraying No matter how inexpensive luncheon places cautious one is there is alwaYs suchlS A La Crepe Bretonne Gte possibility that children win and the Pam Pam The former

I th th has an upstairs constructed Uld eome in contact WI e spray 1_ at d lik te hi dend harm themselves ~r e e a pIra span

Aside from the safety factor 8 bill of fare thart ~onsists of this method Js also much quicker ~late-SI~ paper-thin crepes llIld easier ttuui spraying No filled WIth any of 81 different messy spray cans and no lost fillings One cOld spend a energy in pumping and unblock- whole afternoon Just watchi~g Ing nozzles just a third of a tJeCOOks cr~ating these deli shycmpful of an odorless material ClOUS concoctIOns but Montreal applied around a plant every six hol~ so many wonders that one weeks with no danger that it ham t time to linger over any will rain ~e day after you one thIng

ra ed and wash off the ra The Pam Pam too was a 8P t y 1 sP Y charmIng IneXpenSIve restaurant ala erla fo f 1 H g d

I am more than willing to try I a anu y un anan In ecor IIOmething new but being a pes- and dIshes It featured flourless simist at heart I cannot conceive cakes Both my mother and I had of something which is so easy some for desse~ but before I actually working Lurking An could ask the w81tre~s what they the back of JDy mind is the feel- did make them WIth if ~ey mg that someone devised a omi~~d flo~r Jason wa~ dIPPIng method of satisfying lazy gar- his hands In ~veryones plates ampmers that the were doing and I thought It best to pay our

y bill and departoomethmg about theIr roses to try without having to go to

B tt J d I f lt th t h t 0 oean e a a

m h t bl rt f a s garuc rou e so 0 upill forroses We will give it Il

we s~mpled of thIS cosmopolItan_ b t ti d -cy was u an appe zer an

try though and hope that the that we would like to ret~m RSults live up to the message ag81~ for an entree-but WIthshy

out a two year older on the label of the product Now that were all back in a

lJm the llUtchem routine at least until Summer l have come to the conclusion vacation heres a tasty little

tfhat any family that attempts vegetable recipe to add interest to take a vacation trip with a ta everyday menus toddler has to be either courageshy lEGGS l1lgtJIVAN eurolUS or stupid and Im afraid we (Il) I dIE)tfull into the latter category eVl eggs When our plans to visit Wash- G hard-cooked eg~s lngton over the Spring vacation 1 2~ oz can deVIled ham failed because it was impossible teaspoon Worcestershire to obtain reservations (evishy sauce dently everyone else in the U S teaspoon grated onion bad the same plans only sooner Ik teaspoon salt titan we did) we set our sights yenteaspoon dmiddotry mustard aorthwaTd Montreal was our Dash pepper go~l and with our terrible two Z Tablespoons cream or milk in tow along with some genial (Broccoli and Saaee) smndparents and two young 1 pkg frozen or 1 bunch fresh ladies of seven and nine we set broccoli Iotth ona rainy Mond~ momshy Im Tablespoons butter or Ing margarine

Fortunately I had come with 1~ Tablespoons flour -e a pocket book guide of Montshy ~ teaspoon dry mustard Ileal andQuebec written by Arshy teaspoon salt thU1 Frommer and John God- Dash pepper win in ~peration with ttIe cup milk Bank of Nova SCOtia n was Jk cup grated sharp cheese absolutely priceless The 8Ushy 1) Prepare the deviled eggs thorS described in expllcit detai by cutting I( inch slice from one botel motel and rooming house end of shelled egg remove yolk eccQmmodations different types and mash yolks and end slices eftestaurants from ones where with the ham Worcestershire ~ can get eggs toast and cofshy oniorisalt mustard pepper and Iee-tor 65c io the elite gounnet cream mill well and then use laavens that lure 1be patrons flo fill hollows of egg whites with theIr haute cuisine and I) COOk broccoli as label dfshy~Hy the bighllghts of the city recls (if f~n) or in a small ampat tourist shbUldnt misa am9unt of wBtell Until tender ISald highUght were even catoeshymzed - tba JastantlJ tile

if yf

I) J I

EVERYBODYS GOTTA EAT Pfc~Charles Richards of Pittson Pa s-hares his C-ratio~~ w~th fatigue-hatted Httle Vietnamese boy in a villag~ near Saigon where Richards outfit the 1st Battalion 27th Infantry 25th Inshy

fan try Division was on a sweeping oPeration Jleoar the Vietnamese capital ~C Photo

We Like It Here Milwaukee Neighborhood Committee Works

To Prevent Panic Selling-MILWAUKEE (NC) - Some

strange signs are beginning to appear in the windows of homes around St Agnes parish on the citys North Side

Theyre being displayed by persons interested in stabilizing the area They call attention to a program that aims to reduce house turnover so that home and area values can be mainshytained

In the eyes of the organizers the prgram is designed to preshyvent panic selling

The signs read Were Not Moving to SUburbia-We Like It Here and This House Is NOT For Sale

Theyve been prepared by an

NUlises Cound~ Mee~

MOlY ]] at St Annes The Diocesan Council of Cathshy

olic Nurses will hold their Spring Plenary Meeting on Satshyurday May 11 at st Annes School of Nursing Fall River

The business meeting and election of officers scheduled for 4 oclock will be followed at 5 by an address by Rev Donald J Bowen assistant at St Marys Norton

Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament will be given at 630 and the banquet will follow at 715

Reservations must be made with Mrs Ann Fleming 228 Oak Grove Ave Fall River no later tlban Sunday May 5

melting the butter in a saucepan and stirring in flour mustard saltand pepper Remove from heat and stir in the milk Re- tum to heat and cook until

thickened stirring constantly Add the grated cheese and stir -tmtil smooth

In amiddot cassetrGle dish arrange gt

the cooked broccoli Stand the deviledmiddot eggs with stuffed ends

up between and on broccoli pieces Pour the sauce over aU-

area stabilization committee for distribution in homes in an area populated by about 40000 pershysons about one-third Negroes

The signs are one of the means by which we hope to dis~ourage unethical real estate salesmen according to Anshythony L Silva acting commitshy

middottee chairman and a member of St Agnes parish

Fear Tactics

He explained at rl~ent meetshyings that the program is not sponsored by a religious group Nor are the committee apshyproaching the problem on a color basis but 18ther as a matshyter of economics

Our aim is to restore confishydence in the area and countershyact unethical salesmen since they tend to operate on fear tactics said Silva

The immediate goal of the group is to make its efforts known to all residents of the area by establishing a network of block contacts

Persons who have expressed interest in the program represhysent St Agnes Roosevelt Drive Presbyterian Garden Homes Evangelical Lutheran Augusshytana Evangelical Lutheranmiddot Siloah Lutheran amI Elim Tabshyernacle churches

THE ANCHOR-Thursday May 2 1968 -------------=

Teaching Sisters To Get Raise

DALLAS (NC) - Bishop Thomas K Gorman of DallasshyFort Worth has approved a salshyary raise for Sisters teaching in parochial schools which was recommended by the diocesan board of education

In a letter to all pastors Bishshyop Gorman stated As of Sepshytember the base minimum salshyary for each Sister in regular service to the local parish will be $1500 per year

Enclosed with -the letter was an agreement signed by Bishop Gorman fM the signature of each pastor and the major supeshyrior of the religious order of Sisters serving his school

The agreement provides thllgtt the parish pay the stated base minimum salary to eac~ Sister provide a convent and its upshykeep along with utilities inshycluding a telephone an automoshybile and its maintenance and health insurance

Sister Caroleen of the Schooi Sisters of Notre Dame diocesan superintendent of schools said the increase in the minimUm base salary Is fbe first such since 1959 when it was set at

$960

Withdraw Missionaries From Angola Territory

NEW YORK (NC) - The United Church of Christ and the United Church of Canada are w~thdrawingthe majoritr of theIr missionaries from the Portuguese West African ter- ritory of Angola

Dr Alford Carleton execushytive vice-president of the United Churchs Board for World Ministries whose headshyquarters are hele said the acshytion was being taken because the Portuguese government is apparently seeking tomiddot extinshyguish Protestant missionary acshytivity in Angola

The two churches have withshydrawn all missionaries III total of 12 whose terms of service had already been extended for more than a year beyond the normal term The missionaries wiJI apply for readmission

Portuguese administrators have in the past given assurshyances that re-entry permits would be given but Dr Carleshyton said there have been inshystances of denials of re-entry permits to missionaries

BlUE R~ION

LAUNDRY 273 CENTRAL AVE

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fFr~~sectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsect~ llli= 111

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-ObtainsFreedo ForRefugees

MADRID (NC)--Amiddot group t1ti youth leaders who spent a nig~

middotin a church to avoid a I~est ~ police was released la~

through the help of Auxilia~ Bishop Angel Mortll Figuls ~ Madrid

The youths had taken refureg in the church of Our Lady ~ Montana in suburban MorataJaiJ after police raided a mccting bll a parish building which th0 youths said was a house of thQ people of God Q

The meeting which had b~

announced in the padsh tIbQ previous Sunday as a conferenltcO on Ohristian doctrine was SUib rounded by police on suspiciolQf that it was an illegal meetin~ of workers oommimiddotttees-inde-o pendent labor organizations Tb() police arrested a Catholic woramp ers leader Dannen Ruiz Abo-1 gado Juan Canet a lawyer a~ Father Juan Jose Maria Bltlllesashyteros as they left the meetin- The three were late releasecA

However middotthe Y9uths atten+shying the conference fled to ~

church to avoid arrest and ve mained there until BishOJll Morta arrived and obtainecll

their freedom after negotia~ with the police

10 ~H~ ANCHORshy )hursday May2 bull 19~8 (

- - bull )

Sup~me C~ult Qars Obscenity

For Youth WASHINGTON (NC)

For more than two years the Supreme Court has made it clear thatin the eyes of the law obscenitymiddot is a sometime thing its distribution ~o adults nearly impossible to regulate without endangering the Conshystitutions guarantees of free speech and opinion

But over the same two years the Court has indicated thai it might be possible to control the

availability of obscene books and films to the young and in

1967 it issued an op~n invitashycmiddotmiddot tion to the nations ~a~yers to find the right cases an4 the right arguments tot~stmiddotthis middotmiddotview _

This year the cases were found and the Supreme Court did what most observers thought it would do it permitted states and citiesto control distribution of obscene material to youngshylIJters - providect It drlws the lines finely and tightly

It returrled from amiddotJtwo-week recess to rule thatmiddotmiddot NeW York middot States law barring phsons un- Organization Starts ~er 17 from buying smut met ~ middotthe ~e~t~nd tpatrgtalIas1s middot~lm CLEANUP FatherDetm6d P McDermott of New Yorks lower East ~ide St Housingmiddot Program

elasslflcatlOn law undet whIchmiddotmiddotmiddot bull - bull WASHINGTON (NC) - ~1 bull

minors areprevented from see- BrIgId spansn pas8~s o~t pamt ~nd prusJ1e~ to sl1rpl1r~a~ volunteers who particIpated m Church-sponsored nonprofit 0IJ)00

lt ingsome movies didnot ih~ AprIl ZO ()peratJoA Cleanup It was estImated that 50000 urban people of all baek- ganization here haS launched II

middotThemiddotopinions shoUld go li-long grounds w~re joined in the WOllk by 5000 suburbanites in cleaning andpaintin~ aJong~ousing program Wider whiClli way toward clearing up a con- 46 Streets NC Photo It hopes to purchase 322 sl~ lrti-tutional atmosphefe which at homes rehabilitate them aDCil middottimes hasbeen no Clearer thanmiddot 0 000 p J resellmiddotthem to poor families DiP

the air around the Supreme middotMmiddotore ThanmiddotS1 middotinGmiddot reo CIt Day rOJe ect del federal financing Courts building on a Pilrticu- The organization-Urban Beshylarly still slmlne~ day 1ew YOk middotPrmiddotelamiddotte Heomiddotds lomiddotmiddotn~Sectmiddot omiddotmiddotrmiddot-amiddot n Effort habilitation Corp~will begiul

While the Court in an 8-1 de- 1lIIII 1lIIII the program with therehabi eision written by Justice Thur- tation of nine row houses whiob 000 Marshall-his first major ~ NEW YORK (NC)Jt- Wall z At the end of tbe da~ they ~teas of densest poverty ~Jl it will purchase from the ~ epiiiion-tlirewout the Dallal greatday for New York-one ~ Bat down togethermiddot at tables iyIanhatian andthe Bronx _ development Lanmiddotdmiddot Agen~ filmmiddot clasSification law because hard work oonstructiye dia- str~ng tile length of streets to Last SumJl1er in its thitd year Washi~gtonurban refewal tfwas unduly vague even there logueand happy celebration eat a meal of celebraHon pro- of successful operation the thorny agency The RIA apo K upheld the right of goer~- -Along 45 streets in the Man- vided and prepared by people ~rojec(wastlIreatenea b~ out- proved sale of the houses to ~

Jnen~ to prote~t the Y0llng 1~m hattan and Bronx ooroughs of the block 1gtreak of violence in East Har- group at a purchasemiddot price ~ ~slble bad mfluenc~ some 50000 Negroes Puerto Many in~olved said they felt lem $26100

Different Directions Ricans Italians Jews Slavs the most important aspect of the To counteract riot threats Purchase and rehabilitatiOll middotIt did so without p~ssing on Orit~nt~ls and eople~f otmiddothe whole projeot was not renova- Msgr Fox organized East Har- work which will be done bIT

themiddot meri~~or lackof merits nationalities were joined by middottion but relationship It gave lem peace processions For five Negro contractors and involVG of the film involved but hinted some 5000 guest volunteers _ an opportunity at a time middotof nghts more than 1000 old and young Negroes as apprentice6 middot111at had the law been suffi- from suburbia and other middle alienation and fear between YQung Puerto Ricans walked will be carried out under ~

eielitly explicit about what con- class areas black and white rich and poor through their streets with ban- $]37000 mortgage provided ~ stihites proper or improper con- They spent the day c1eani1g inner city and suburbia oung nersmiddot flowrs singing songs the International BrothelhooCl

duct the Dallas censors would renovating and decorating the and old for people to meet one carrying candles and standing of Electrical Workers and guall shy have had no trouble iicei1sing inner city streets and alleys another as persons in an at- up for peace hope and love anteed by the Federal Housins middotthe film buildings and residences 10- mosphere of work play and La~gely through their efforts Administration under its 221pound(

Instead thc Court said they gether the men women and accomplishment peace was restored to the area program were set adrift in a boundless children residents wOlked shoul- Its one way to make real sea and arrived at their con- der to shoulder with priests what Dr Martin Luther King elusion--that the film should be nuns laymen and women vol- envisioned when he said I Archbishop Greets shown to adults only - from unteers They cleaned back- have a dream as East Harlemshy DEBROSS OIL many different directions yalds and basements did car- ite Valentine Haddock described Armenian Patriarch ~uch a situation is wide open pen try work made plumbing all the people helping one anshy NEW YORK (NC) ~Archshy co

te abuses not the least of which repairs painted doors windows other to become not even just bishop Terence J Cooke ofNew would be a drift among film- and building facades friends-relatives York welcomed His Holiness Heating Oils makers toward the most innocu- At the end of each block a Peace Processing Vasken I Supreme PatIiarch ous and the totally inane The large and colorful mural was Cleaned out basements and andCatholicos of all Armenians and Burnersresult The vast wasteland that painted on a wall depicting the backyards on streets are to be at an ecumenical service in St some have described in refer- good things happening transformed later again by Patricks cathedral 365 NORTH FRONT STREET ence to another medium might street residents and guest vol- It marked the first time the

NEW BEDFORDbe a verdant paradise in com- Award Ecumenical unteers working in partnelship supreme spiritual leader of the parison into vest pocket parks basket- Armenian church had been reshy

But because the law was Theology Diploma ball courts little theaters reme- ceived in a Catholic cathedral in ivague said Marshall it does KAMPALA (NC)-A theolo- dial schools and teenage neigh- the United States JIlot follow that the Constitution gical diploma of the University borhood clubs requires absolute fleedom to of East Africa jointly recognized This non-sectarian project exhibit every motion picture of by the Catholic and Anglican was instituted by Msgr Robert every kind at all times and all Churches in East Africa has been J Fox New York archdiocesan places awarded for the first time coordinator for Spanish com-

The first four Uganda students munity action who four years to receive the diploma fare An- ago originated a creative comshy

Schedule Unveiling glicans munity action program Sum-The theological diploma repre- mer in the City now operatingOf Pope1s Statue sents an agreement between out of 26 store fronts in eight

FATIMA (NC) -A 12-footshy Catholics and Anglicans over the high statue of Pope P~lUl VI syllabus and subjects of the theshy

wili be unveiled Monday May ological course However such TRI CITY13 at the Marian shrine here on an agreement does not iriclude the first anniversaly of the any changes in doctrinal teach- BOILER REPAIR COJontiffl visit to the shril)e ing by the churches Each stu- SLAB BRIDGE ROAD Ihe st~tue depicts Pope Paul dent ~oJl~ws th~ course accold- ASSONET MASS 02702 i

- ~ri~ellngmiddot in prayc 1eiore ~ a~ ing to th~ doctrines middotof hismiddot remiddot Tel 644middot55~6 image of Our Lady of FaJimashy ~pectiYemiddotchurpoundh _ BOILERS RE-TUBED

bull ~ Ali tlhe~ middotmiddotbmiddoti~~psmiddot of P~rtugalI The churches alsoagreed tJ1at S EP A I are expected middotto attendmiddot the un themiddot ina in emphgtIS -Inmiddot th tli_e TUBE R teED

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11

II ~sAfL~CfiO Ik

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THE ANCHORshyThursday May 2 1968

Portland Prelote Stresses Crisis

In Education PORTLAND (NC) - Co- )0

adjutor Bishop PetermiddotL Ger- BATON ROUGE (N2)-Tho ety apostolic administrator Louisiana AFL-CIO app Dved tl

of the Portland diocese des- ~ resolution calling for s ~ supshycribed the grave and serious 1 bull port to children attendi 3 nonshycrisis in regard tQ finances and c middot~lmiddot ~ i public schools at its COil ~ntion personnel in the field of Cath- ~H 1 here oUc education at a press con- l~ The resolution endar d the ference here proposal that tuition supple-

While affirming the desira- ments for the teaching oj nOiF bility of Catholic education the religious subjects bc paid Maine bishop pointed to the toward the education of chill-gt serious problems in financing dren regardless of race creed and staffing a system of schools or religion in state alproved which aims at providing a Cath- non-public schools which me~ olic education for all children all the requirements of law whose parents desire it He Emile Comar executive ~ middotnoted both the rising costs of rector of the Louisiana reder2lshyeducation and the dlOp in voca- tion Citizens for EducHtionllll tions and in the number of Reli- Freedom said It is gmtifyin(l gious available for teaching that the state AFL-CIO in tho

Bishop Gerety n~ted During adopted resolution recognizecll the past ten rears six Catholic __ -_~scgtbull~- Jf the need of parents with ct~ schools in this state alld 11 dren in non-public schools

Catholic elementaly schools CARDINAL J~EGER IN AFRICA The retired ~rchbishop of Montreal Paul-Emile Tuitions continue to dse ant1 have closed their doors During Cardmal Leger who has dedicated his Iif e to work with the poor in Africa is continu- taxes are becoming increasingJy41 the same period we have scen II t th h fl k f d f higher and the combination eithe enrollment in our Catholic a y mee mg WI IS oc or ISCUSSIons 0 conditIons m the DIocese of Yaounde Cam- the two has placed a lremeiF schools decrease by 25 per cent eroun NC Photo dous financial burden on thill

middot~i~~~i~e~~~~~Ct~I~~O~Cmiddotard-nal Leger Works for Afmiddotr-ca Lepers -n~~nt of the states populashymg statements Tbe labor organizations resa-

Expand Quality lution noted The contributioJ)fl

The middotsystem be Seeks to Bring SpirituQI Material Aid which these schools havecannot ex- made panded beeause of staffing to the state have long been ree problems financi~l deuromands YAOUNDE (NC)-lt is said The fact that he left behipd COmmodate himself to the new ognized by the public and~middot

and theincreasing costs of pres- that when Paul Emile Cardinal one of the most important dJ- environment and to be ready public officials ent day education Leger former arehbishop of oceses in the world does not fig) to I work effeetivelr It added that the parents bl

Schools must be consoUdated Montreal arrived at the lepro- ure in their thinking but theymiddot The eardinal is already famil- these tuition supported schooJJ wherever hldicated for maxi- s~rium of Nianing in Senega appreciate the sacrifice that is iar with the specific plOblcms of have repeatedly demonstrateflJ mum use of the available Reli- last Dec IS the lepers looked involvedmiddot in leaving his nfltive the lepers villages He thinks their support of both public ani I gious persoJmel at their fingers to see if a mir- country and adapting to a Dew that they need good pharmacies non-public education to the

We mustmiddot concentrate on ex- acle was going to happen and environment and is concerned with CHing for benefit of all Louisiana eh~ cellence in the schools we have they were going w be instan- Cardinal Leger has put him- all types of sicknesses He sees dren Where this is not possible the taneously cured It was in fact self at the service of Archbishop a need for wells powelhouses bishop said the schools in- the first time that the lepers JeanZoa of Yaounde He is food suppliers and medicinesmiddot of Brotherhood Lackvolved will have to be closed had seen a cardinal learning one of the languages various kinds

We must greatly evpand the ri1l~ cardinal however through of Cameroun the one that is Menace to Peace~ Men Not Outcasts S(l()pe and quality of our reli- middotworks of chari1y has for a long most widely spoken in the reshy VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pe~gious education proglams reach- time been concerned withmiddot the middotgion He thinks that jcent wiJl What makes the cardinal parshy is still menaced by questions laquofing out to all age groups lepers M~~y of the houses in take two years for him lamp ale- tkularly admired is that he reshy

prestige and an insufficient senstlBishop Gerety announced the leprosanum here at Yaoul)de gards the lepers as men and not of human brotherhood PQ~that he is creating a task force have been built through his - as outcasts He knows that many Paul VI told thousands of isi~to study religious education gifts The same is tgtrue of sev- Pope Asks Respect lepers are severely mutilated tors gathered in St Pete

plograms in the diocese He eral leprosaria of the Ivory For Human Rights and Cfln no longer take their SQuare for a Sunday noon blesvshywill ask the group he said to Coast Dahomey and Camerouf place in society It is because of ingmake reco~mendations ~on- The cardinl i6 still in the VATICAN CITY (NC)--Jt is middotthis that he seeks to bring them

eerning how the limitedre- stage of making contacts in the vain to proclaim h~man rights material and spiritual aid Speaking from a window ovei shysources of the diocese can best three leprosaria here unless everythlllg IS done ~o He also gives thought to the looking the square Popc P~u1 be used to ploovide an effec- Cardinal Leger does not want ensure the duty of respecting prevention of the disease If cleclared We must support willi tive religious education for the to impose either his aid or him- them by all people everywhere leprosaria are well organized it our hopes that cause (of peace) total community of adults lind self on anyone He has said re- l1ld for all people Pope Paul will perhaps be possible to wage which so many desire and proshychildren peatedly that he does not want VI declared In a letter to the In- a campaign to eradicate the mote with a sense of impartiality

He said he will also ask for to be a burden and tl1at he ternational Conferenee on Hu- disease completey and justice with true love ofi reeommenltlations on the best wants to be regarded as a simple man Rights meeting in Tehran The cardinals realism aston- freedom and of respect for su1ishy

fering peoplesuse of the dioceses Religious priest Iran ishes many Africans who like personnel Disinterested Help The lettel signed by the Pope to live from day to day and who

~-------------bull That is why the Africans ad- was sent to Father Theodore do not like their customs to be mire him Moslems and Chris- Hesburgh CSC president of upset The cardinal understands tians agree that his is an exam- Notre Dame University and head that the Africans must be shoWn pIc of disinterested help that is of the papal delegation to the that aid is not directed at deshynot often seen in Africa ongress The meeting is being stroying their customs but at

held on the 20th anniversary of bringing them a better standard the United Natio)ls Declaration of living

Workers Charges of Human Rights and in conshyjunction with the International Reject CelibacyDenied in Germany Human Rights Year

ROERMOND (NC)-TwcllyshyBONN (NC)-Charges by the The papal letter dec111red one young Dutch priests havewomens branch of the Indian With all men of goodwill we told Bishop Petrus Moors ofYoung Christian Workers shall follow with great interest this Netherlands See that they(YCW) that living and working ~his conference in Tehran which can no longer accept the plicstlyconditions for Indian girls means to formulate and prepare a celibacy obligationtraining as nurses in West Gershy program of measures to be taken

many were unsatisfactory were on the prolongation of this Hushy denied here man Rights Year

The Rev Hubert Debatin Racial discrimination raises soProtestant minister who initi shy

many troubles social injustice F L COLLINS amp SONSated a program of nursing economic misery and ideologicaltraining for girls from Indias oppression so many revolts that INCORPORATED 1937Kerala state saId that the Indishyrecourse to violence as a meansan government had ordered an

investigation of the complaints to right these wrongs to human The Indian embassy here howshy dignity is a grave temptation ever refused to comment (The Development of Peoples)

Rev Mr Debatin said he visshyON CD HOARD Alexandshy Ited the embassy and told offi shy

er P Tureaud Sr chief cials that the charges wer~ completely false Despite thecounsel for the Louisiana no comment by the embassy

branch of the National Assoshy it is reliably repOrted that emshyciation for theAd~ancement bassy officials did visit several of Colorelti People tNAACP) hospitals and questioned Indian

girlS about th~ir living and beeame the first Negro elecshyworking conditions ted to the Catholic tJniver~ The niinist~r iJaidthe Indian

sity board of trustoos NC yew will be asked to WithdrawPhoto ~ alleamplatioNi~

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12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 2 1968

C~~e$ ~~Ergy Role in Sreg~Hrch F9f ~~ Crisis Sc~~tm(ln

By Msgr George G Higgins The bighop of a middle-siood eastern diocese recently

gnnounced at ceremonies memorializing Martin Luther King Jr that the diocese will spend a substantial portion of its annual Development Fund to improve the condition ef the Negro bullbullbull The money poslible that even those Cahoshyhe was at pains to empha- lies (and Protestants) who are size will not be gpent pater- most vigorously opposeq to

wilistically but in close 00- clerical involvement in social operation with local Negro and economic issues are nevershyleaders He said that his com- theless in fevor of using church mitffiimt wi 11 funds as seed money to develshylTeceiVe the op projects for the benefit of bacJcing of the the poor in general and for areas Catholics poor Negroes in partiCUlar I make tbisDisconcerting Fact ~ o m mit - I would hope of course that ment he as- this might prove to be the case aert1d confi- but only time will tell lIIent that our Meanwhile the fact that Catholic people such a high percentage of Cathshyshare this love olies and protestants are 00

-m Ii d concern record as being opposed to That the bishop the middotchurches getting involved felt it necessary in political and social issues is to make the latter statement for rather disconcerting to put it the record might lead one ~ as mil~ly as possible suspeet that in point of factmiddot be I say tliisas one who can symshyantiCfpated that some of hi$ pathizewith thoseCatholicsor Catholic people would object to Protestants or Jews who object his 0 decision and was mereIi to certain types of clerical inshyWying to neutralize their op~ volvement which either ignore mtion in advance or to put it the complexities of the political morecrudely was trying to ~rocess or tend to oversimplify beat them to the punc~ sO to the application of moral prinei-Bjpeak pIes to complex social and ecoshy

I Expert Opposition pomic problems or finally tend Be that as it may a recent to leave the impression that

ampallup Poll on the attitude of Clerics have a monopoly on the Cathdlics 3lld Protestants with regard to the involvement of their churches and their clergy in political and social issues would seem to suggest thatshylIIlless his diocese is the rare exceptl(~n that proves the rule -~he bIShop can exp~t a cershyiau~ amount of 0PPoSIb~)D from a slzable JIllnonty of his Cathshyooc people

lftY-Seven per cent of Cathshyclies res~ndmg m the Gallu~ survey said that the churcti~~ should not get involved with 35 per cent statmg that t~e d1~rch~~ sho~d express SOCIal enS pO~~Ical Vle~s

~gn Icantly l~ was found ~at more Catholics than Pro~-

Virtue of political prudence or have been granted ethical inshysights thatmiddot have been denied to other mortals

S~rious Obligation It is one thing however to

demand that clerics stay within the limits of their o~ compeshytence in the political order and quite another thing to try to muzzle them or to deny that they have any role at all to play in the field of public policy In the case of civil rights for exatitple they havemiddot a serious

Gbligation to teach the truth as they see it

To do so in any meaningful woay tlley must at times move beyond the realm of general

0Stants thmk ~hat the ~hurlt~esprinciples into the area of spe- should n~ get ~volved ~n soc~al and polItlcal Issues Fifty-~wo lPOerlledcefnt of the Protesta~ts P avored mvolvment whIle 42 ~er cent disagreed

Hadden Study Contrarirwise however a

mudy released during the same week in which middotthe Gallup findshymgs were made public found

ntat in all caSes Protestantsmiddot were more vigorous in their opshyposition to social action by clergymen thaI) either Roman Catholics or Jews

The latter study directed by ~effrey K Hadden a sociologist at Western Reserve University in Cleveland was summarized In ~onsiderabledetail by Edwaro R iFiske in an article entitled -Cl~rgy and Civil Rights in the editorial section of the Sunday Ap~il 21 issue of the New York linles

Since the Gallup and HadGen Alrveys dealt specifically with the right of the clergy and the ehurches to speak o~t on social and political issues (civil rights tor example) and not on the role of the churches in financing programs aimed at improving U1t ~ot of Negroes their findshyings do not necessarily m~ ofoou~E that the bishop referrect to a~ove will encounter oppe-

cifies~ even at the risk of a~tagshyonizing those Catholics who disshyagree ith them

This does not mean that clershyies or other representatives of official church bodies should shortcircuit the political procshyess by trying to force their own solutions on the body politic by means of heavy-handed authorshyitarian edicts

If they were to shirk this reshysponsibility or run awoay frOm this challenge for fear of antagshyonizing a minority (or for that matter eyen a majority) of their people they would be unshyworthy of their calling

-This having been said howshyever itshould be noted that clericS and other representatives of offlCiilI church bodies alSo

have an obllgation to keep their methods of teaching under conshystant review

Wo~ CUt Out We cannot automatically as-middot

Sume in other words that all of those who object to clerical involvement in political and soc~lissues are necessarily in

HEADS NCEA Bishop Raymond J 9allagher of Lafayette Ind was elected president general of the Natshyional Catholic Educational Association at the associa- tions 65th annual conven- tion in San Francisco NC Photo

Venerate Fatima Statue in Brazil

LISBON (NC)-Manuel Cardshyinal Goncalves Cerejeira patri- arch of Lisbon imd Bishop Joao Pereira Venancio of Leiria whose diocese includes the Marshyian shrine of Fatima returned here after participating in threeshyday ceremonies in Brazil honorshying Our Lady of Fatima

They t~ok the statue of the -Pilgrim Virgin of Fatima with them to Brazil

At Sao Paulo they took part in Portuguese - Brazilian Communshyity Day celebrations At Inhangshyabau and at Rio de Janei1G thousands joined them in ven- erating the statue

The patriarch and Bishop Venshy

ancio were accompanied in Brazil by the rector of the Fat-middot i m a shrine Msgr Antonio Borges

_ sitiOJifrom any slgnificantnuili middot te~ which they caiiunder- pany a mernber of the Jew-middot

ber ~f his people for usin~ cii- stand and absorb jish fAith has neen elected GCeSaIl f~nds for the economic -Ifthis sho~d prove to be the to in bOardof +-~ t- and~ ~OCIal bettel1nent 01 the case we have our work cut out ~ bull wu~ ~ W

Wack citizens of his communitlT ~r~ in the montha ftbat lie the CaU~hc VnlverampliyNe ~~ other words it is quite aheiid middotPboto

~ ~

bad faith It may be in the case of some

r of tb~m at le9st we are at fault TRUSTEE BenJamin T ~ in the sense that we havent Iearned how to communicate the Rome president of aWaah Go~l meSsage to them in i n g ton construction oom-

The Servant Queen IiJ the Constitution on the Church we find the testimony of

Sacred Scripture and the Church Fathers combined with more recent pronouncements by the popes Mary the Mother of God an4 of the Redeemer was united to Him by a close inen soluble bond and waS accorded a special role in the mystery Qf the middotIncamiddotrnate Word that is in the economy of salvation

Whenmiddot Mary uttered the words of her Fiat she made a ~l eommitment to God so that He could carry out His de- slgus in middothermiddot Mary never took back hell ad of total surrender Dot even on the road to CalvarY lFrom that firstmiddot moment she devoted herself wholly to serving DM only her heavenly Fashyther and the Incarnate Word but also the whole human race lin the llncarnation Our Blessed Mother first brought Christ to the world Anell that is precisely what she would have 70U do aUmiddot your life-bring Christ to the world

Ev~n after the AScenslon she loyally and steadfastly camiddotrried out~~r role aCting as spirit1lI mother to the beloved disciple anli ~~ ne~rn Cl1urch~ With good reason then we can say tha~~e wJole life of the Lords humble handtnaid~from the moment IIhewas porn to the present-is one of loVing seZvice to her cltildren what gzeater example and what ~tei model could y~ chqose to imitate in Oilder to fulfill your ta~k as a Christian called to~ove and -to serVe your poor 8iKl sUffering bro~ers arqupd the world

You must DOW take over Mars task~ You are the door through which Christ enters the world You muSt receive the Lon and bear Him in 70ur heart sO thaamp He rnA7 beeo~e the heartmiddot ofmiddot your life Then His love Jiis goodne~ Dis pity for the multitude middotwill shine through you into the world Then He will smile through your eyes Then He will help with your hanels Then He will comfort with your goodness Then He will relive in your pers~n His life of long ago for the sake of todayS desperate humanity

In this the month dedicated to the Mother of the church show your love for her by making her task your task by sacrificing to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith-to help those of her children who are in such need

SAlLVATioN and SERviCE lUe the work of The Soclet7 il~r ~~ Propagati~n of th~ Faith Please cut Gut this column llInd sen~ your of~ering to Right Reverend EdwardT OMeara Nationll-ll Director 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 Or directly to your local Diocesan Director BU Rev Msgr Raymond TConsid~e 3611 North Main Street Fall River Massachusetts e~7~omiddot

DAUGHTERS middotDf ST PAUL-combine a middotlife of prayer and action Bringers of the Gospel Messhysage to souls everywhere by means of personal contact Pauline Missionaries labor in 30 Nations Members witness to Christ in a unique missionshypropagation of the printed Word of God The Sisters write illustrate print and bind their own publications and diffuse them among people of all creeds races and cultures Young girls 14-23 interested in this vital Mission may write to

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13 New Jersey Grand Jury Absolves Police of Deaths During Rioftong

NEWARK (NC) - A special and charged it with lcHrity m Essex Cotmty grand jury inves- permitting some of lots material tigating the deaths of 28 people to i1all into private hands which during rioting in this city last misused il Summer absolved po1dce laquol Reporting on the deaths it blame iO the deatbs in a pre- found that three were not conshysentment which rebuked an nected with the rioting that anti-poverty agency for failure eight resulted from wounds inshyto cooperate willi law enforce- curred while participating in ment agencies criminal acts that nine of those

The presentment was issued killed were apparently innocent after the jury had heard more bystanders that two apparently than 100 witnesses over an resulted from sniper fire that eight-week period It said there two were from accidental was insufficient evidence to shooting and that one could not warrant indictment in any of be classified the cases presented to it al- Another special grand jury is though an earlier trial resulted now being paneled to carry out hi the conviction of a man for an investigation of Newarks fatally shooting a woman municipal government This inshy

In the final analysis the vestigation was recommended ~ury concluded the responsi- by the governors commission bility for the loss of life and which reported a pervasive property that is the inevitable feeling of corruption in Newshyproduct of rioting and mass ark lawlessness cannot be placed upon those whose duty it is to enforce and protect the freedom Convention lliead of our society

Courage Restraint N E MonsignorIt rests squarely upon the

MANCHESTER (NC)-Msgrhoulders of those who for euroolin A MacDonald presidentwhatever purpose incite and of the Manchester diocese senateparticipate in riots and the of priests has been selected asflouting of law and order in chairman of the national con-complete disregard of the rights stiiutional convention of theand well-being of the vast mashyproposed U S priests councilsjority of our citizens organization 110 be held May 20Although the presentment and 21 in Chicago leveled some small criticisms at

I1he monsignor earlier hadpolice actions it generally upshybeen elected as the Bostonheld the work of law enforceshyprovince delegate to a 29-memshyment officers and this was in ber ad hoc steering committeecontrast to the report of the for the convention When ill wasNew Jersey (()vernors Comshydecided 110 limicent the steeringmission on Civil Disorder commimiddotlltee 110 8 members thewhich was highly critical of the

police JJlQIlsignor was elected to this group then ohosen as chairmanWith some exceptions the

jury said police both local and Msgr MacDonald said the state together with National purposes of the proposed NashyGuardsmen acquitted themselves tional Federation of Priests with courage and restraint in Councils are to promote priestly the early stages of the riot brotherhood by faciJi1ating comshy

munion among priests councilsPoor Judgment to provide a forum for the disshyThe grand jury said the poshycussion of pastoral matters tolice were handicapped by lack enable priests councils to speakof training appropriate equipshywith a common representativement effective direction and voice to proD101e and collabshyexperience in dealing with the orate in programs of pastoraltype of situation in which they research and action to impleshywere involved ment the reriewal of priestlyThe jury did say that in the life to provide the means forlater stages of the disturbances priests councils united nationshythere were examples of poor ally to cooperate with the tityjudgment excessive use of fireshythe ~eligious the bishops andarms and D manifestation of with others in addressing thevindictiveness that eannot be needs of the Church in the modshytolerated in law enforceD1ent ern World and to do whateverpersonnel is necessary to carry out theseAD10ng the recommendations purposesit made was one that looting be

Members of the Priests Senshyeffectively controlled at its ate of the Diocese of Fall Riverearliest manifestations It also have sent suggestions regardingcalled for the improveD1ent and the proposed organization toupdating of equipment and said Monsignor MacDonaldthe use of chemicals and nonshy

lethal gases should be explored and considered Priests Paid SllEme

The jury called for improveshyment in police-community relashy Salary as Laborers tions and said there is no place PARIS (NC) - The averagefor abusive language or ill salary of priests in the Paris treatment of any group of citi shy region is about the saD1e as thatzens Like the governors COD1shy of an unskilled laborer accordshymission it deplored the use of ing to figures contained in thepersonally-owned weapons by first public budget report of thepolice Paris archdiocese

The anti-poverty agency crit shy The archdiocesan operatingicized was Newark Legal Servshybudget the report showed isices Project a branch of the $440000 a year most of whichUnited Community Corp which is for the salaries of 384 nonshyhelps ghetto residents with legal parish priests more than a thirdproblems

retired This indishyCharges Laxity of whoD1 are cates an average of less than $1-The jury accused it of failing 000 a year to cooperate in post-riot invesshy

Parishes pay direclly the 600tigations said the character of it taken were parish priests but their base salshystatements had

inadequate and ary is only about $50 a monthunprofesSional Honorariums for baptisms marshyriages and special Masses add

Receives Admiral about an equal amount to this VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope sum but pcrivate requests for

Paul VI received in audience Masses are declining Parish Adm Joseph Edet Akinwale priests send to the archdiocese Wey of the Nigerian Navy who the honorari~s of Masses they had told a press conference that coannot celebrate In 1964 this he hoped to present a message amounted to about 22000 Masses from the Nigerian government a year now it is only about three on the Biafra siiuatiolL ~middotfourmiddot thousand~

r THE ANCHORshyThursday May 2 1968

I

Schoo~s Exp~ore

Dual E~l~~rMJcemlt LOUISVILLE (NC)-Catholie

school officials here are trying to work out dual enrollment agreeD1entS with public schoo officials in two locations

If agreement is reached stushydents at Flaget High School here and at Bethlehem Academy may benefit next Fall from the proshygram

Moves toward the dual enrQllshyment concept were made possishyble when the Kentucky attorney general issued an opinion which said in effect that public schools might get state financial assistance for students enrolled part-time in public schools

Under the plan students in private schools could take some subjects in public schools and others in their own schools

Famiddotther Thomas P Casper Louisville diocesan superintendshyent of schools said he is submitshyting dual enrollment proposalpoundNEWMAN CLUBS MEET At oonferenee of Newman to the Louisville Bardstown andClubs from area colleges representatives of Fall River Dishy Nelson County boards of educa~

reese included from left Walter La Rosa Our Lady ill Mt tion Carmel parish Seekonk a student at Bristol Community While action on the roposaw College Lydia Rocha St Michaels Fall River BCC Rev is up U the public boards-the

attorney generals opinion grantvHarold J Wilson BOC Newman Club chaplain Morgan permission but does not force

Childs St Patricks Falmouth SMTL ootion-Father Casper said he if very pleased that there are possibilities open now for deshyveloping dual enrollD1entReturns to Moscow Final form of any dual enroll shyment effort is still to be decided

Fr Dion Assumption College President But one such method treated in the attorney generals opinion

Named Apostolic Administrator is the leasing of space in Cathshyolic schools by public schoom

WORCESTER (NC) - Father a visiting Russian churchman and the operation of this spaceLouis F Dion AA president here Father Bissonnette is now as public school classroomsof AssuD1ption College here will academic dean at Assumption resign his post June 30 to be- College COD1e apostolic administrator in Father Dion had to wait more New Jersey Bishopthe Soviet Union and chaplain than three years after Father to American Roman Catholics Bissonnettes expulsion before Asks United Action in Moscow obtaining a Soviet visa enabling ATLANTIC CITY (NC) shy

Father Dion held the same him to go to Moscow via Paris Bishop George H Guilfoyle of posts in Russia from 1959 to in January 1959 Camden issued a call for united 1961 He served as assistant to Father Dion said he is looking action on the part of all of WJ the president and registrar of forward to his return to the to 36Sist our fellow man as Assumption College from 1962 Moscow post He bad not specifshy he helped dedicate a HUD1aJ until his appointment as presi- ically requested the assignment Resources Center aiD1ed at job dent ill June 1964 he said but it was offered to develpoment for some of this

He replaces Father Eugene him and he accepted it willingly resort areas 50000 poor LaPlante AA who returns to Powers of Bishop This nation has made treshythe Assumptionist Fathers The duties of chaplain Father mendous strides in the fields opound AD1erican province for reassign- Dion explained are not con- science industry business and ment after a three-year term fined to American Catholics medicine he said It is shameshy

ful that in view of all this proshySeventh to Serve living in Moscow They include gress we still have millions ofFather Dion is the seventh he said the entire foreign colshypeople who live in poverty andAmerican priest-all Assump- ony - the diplomatic corps wanttionists-to serve in Moscow un- newspaper personnel and tour-

Bishop Guilfoyle said theder the terms of the 1933 Roose- ists Camden diocese will contributevelt-Litvinov agreement estab- Since there ar(~ no European

$1000 to the new center to belishing diploD1atic relations be- priests-or priests of any other nationality-in Moscow serving used for whatever program the

tween the U S and the USSR in the capacity of chaplain he board of directors decides hi He was replaced in 1961 by said the American chaplain needed Father Joseph Richard AA ministers to the spiritual needs who served four years in the of Catholics attached to the post staffs of embassies and legations

His iD1D1ediate predecessor accredited to the Soviet governshy FAIRHAVENwas Father Georges Bisslgtnnette ment AA who was expelled in The post of apostolic adminisshy LUMBERMaTch 1955 by the Soviet gov- trator Father Dion said inshy

COMPANYernment in retaliation for U S volves all the powers and funcshyrefusal to prolong the visa of tions of a bishop except ordina~

tion and consecration of bishops Complete line It is assigned to a priest usuallyAtlanta Archdiocese Building Materials in areas where there is DO

Joins Equal Housing hierarchy who is then dimiddotrectly responsible to the Holy See 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVENATLANTA (NC)-The lllChshy Father Dion expects to arrivediocese of Atl~lnta has joined in Moscow in early August he 993-2611more than 50 metropolitan At- said

lan-ta organizations and indi- viduals as co-spo~sors of the Atlanta Metropoli tan COmmit- bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull~

tee on Equal Opporunity ill Housing

HThe objective of the confer- BISAILLONS ence will be primarily educashytional Father Noel C Burtenshy GARAGEshaw ehancellor of the arch- diocese and member of the execu-tive committee said 24-Hour Wrecker

He added We expect this dialogue and interChange will establish middotnecessary communicashy 653 Washington Street Fairhaven tion and provide Some answers 994-5058~ the housing problems facing reater Atlanta bull

Thanks Catholics For Refugee Aid

VATICAN - CITY (NC)-NearMsgrEllis Relates Hist~ry middotmiddotEastmiddotwelfare work of U S Cathshyolics has been praised by Pope Paul VL0+ Training for Priesthood

Such a message in the Popes By Rt Rev Msgr Jobs S Kennedy

The publication of a book by Monsignor John Tracy Ellis founder and dean of a new school of American Cath~

lti)lic churchhistory is always a weloome event This is true even when the book is among his minor works SuCh is Essays in Seminary Educoshytion (Fides Notre Dame Inshydiana 46556 $595) amiddot 001shylection of papers and address-C2S There is some repetition in Chese essays which were preshyared for vari shyeus occasions But it does not illessen the imshyact of a book which shows us n keen critical in tell i g ence brought to beal OIl a subject of bas i c imporshylance The hand rDf the historian iIs seen throughshy~t the book The first three essays are specifically historical

The firsi deals with the trainshylog or preparation of priests from the apostolic age to the ~ncil of Trent the second with the same subject from the time of Trent to ~ 1960s The tird is todevoted diocesan theological seminaries in the American Middle West 1811shy1889

A survey such 00 the author Makes in the two opening chap $ers is of especial interest beshyeause it brings out tile implausshyible but incontestable fact that b about the fimiddotI9t 1500 years of its existence the Church did DOt have anything even regem- bling a standard ~m of edushy_tion for the priesfil100d

Monastie Schools fttere were no special schoobl

lor the clergy before the time Of

The medieval universitieQ were foundedmiddot by the Church amd the clery p~yed ~ im ~rtant part m them But theyWei b d al ~ ed ti e y no means I e Jormiddot ushy(l3 on for the pnesthood SInce2he the I g I kemelyq 1~~~y~middotou~emiddot~~U Iersi~ of P middotkmiddotlmiddot5middot6

-Y arlS n ovv or ~(fears to complete thedoCtOriite ill theology Hence few priestsbenefited f-rom 4--

~ UDlversI Effective Response

lhe POr estate of the clergy~ glarmgly a~parent in the ens of the Renalsance and the Bef~rmation and this middotis prj shy

manly llttutablello educashytional defiCiency And evea hen the reforming Council of lIrent was launched it took 1~ ~rs ~efore a dec~ on clerical educa~on was achieved and a long tlme thereafter before its proVISIonS were carned out in practice

Monsignor Elliss treatment of

ticularly the institutions founded by St Vincent de Paul and Jean-Jacques Olier

These men win the authors praise for their effective reshygponseto a vital need But he does IlQt hesitate to lay to them ~e responsibility for some of the anti-intellectual bias which chamcterizea too many seminashyli13 in subsequent centuries

incredible NWIIlber In the United States some

quite ancient history was reshylived as the bishops of new dioceses had cleriea schools of sorts in their own homes But in the days of the very first bishop John Oarroll a real

had b - -bli hed semmary een - 9when the Sulpichms came to Baltimore in 1791 and founded St Marys

Later developmen1s are sumshymarized by Monsignor Ellis with attention to the various types of seminaries and the growth m numbers from 50 in 1668 to 571 iIn 1964 Thi6 last incredible number is indicative 0If tile regre~le proliferation Which led to needless duplicashytiOD inadequacy in quality and waste of resources

A test of middotthe exeellence of American seminaries is proshyposed by the atrtbor how many men of enduring reputation ba~ flhey produced The anshyswerJs that tIhe fteonl is not distinguished And much of the lelIlainder of the book is given 110 probing for reasons m exshyplanation Of this

Routine Teaeldllamp at Augustine whomiddotbecame Ihi Anierican ~mi~ry of -ilJhop of Hippo in 396 His 1be ft refleCted _ national

_

LlIFE MEMBERS Msgr John E Boyd chaplain left and Dominick Maxwell Jr right Grand Knight of Fall River Council 86 of the Knights of Columbus i~vest Jerome D Foley and Dr Joseph Carvalho as life members

~

Rural Ireland Charge Farmers Lack Formal Training

In Agriculture ROSSLARE (NC)The need Wbat chance had the boy who

for priests to be more involved left school at 14 of making the in social problems was stressed grade at farming ~he excepshyby 9peakers at the annual meetshy tional lads made it The rest are

~ e9tablished and mairitaineCi~ - In the future he said until 4- disregard cif inteli~tualqua1itY this is rectified Ninety-five nAr ~ his own household and had In ~y instances ~ty mem- ~ imitators ~gt bera ere apPOint~~ t~eir ~t of e5ent-day farmers Thereafter came the mona~f)le positi - middotth m rd io ~v~ had IlQ post-primary edushySchools initiated by St BenediCt ons WIlifo ~ga r cation NinetYofive per cent ofin thmiddot th proper qlla Ications MuCh of farmers have had middotno formal esnr cent~ the~ fllie teaching was rolltine and~rting in middotligrlcultllredr~ and-middot eP1scqp~ Scboo~ an~ dun Collateral reading _n6t middot~JFlWle Awayampnally themiddot medieval UDlvenu- middot~~d lib ties middot - ~ampt~W1~ an nu-~ wer~ Fcaither qerinehy ~ncluded

~e )mperorPbariemaible ~~~poundreed ~tho~~laquo~ lt m the eigh~h ~turydecr~ miD not aencournt ~e~ch~Gt~~n6~llIIr~Watmiddot ilhat alLclencs m~be lble to middotwas virtuall uilkn a lj ~

ifead im~~ri~ J~d~ve ~m- faculties PU~Shed v~illi~~e iT ~~~t ~~t~Bltcs petence In ~h~~ )~1esslC~~Idu- Monsignor Ellis points tJ01 the BOGOTA (NC) _ Anglican tiaif~king ~ DllIllmum timidity which prevailed after Bishop David Benson Reed of

q I I~~ons they ~ere to be the eJcesses perpetrated in 1l1e BogOta offered accommodations e~ ~~ deprIved of repression of Modernism in the for~five Catholic bishops during me iectr~~ IS we can see w a fim part of the present centurY theforthcoming International

g ere had been He sees a change in the era of Eucharistic Congresss in August

ing of the Christu Rex Society an Irish organization for priestDmiddot engaged in pastoml work

Over 250 priests and represhysentatives of agriculturalorgan- izations attended the cOngress here on the theme Rural Ireshyland

Father Jerome Dennehy CC of Kenm2lre criticized the fail- ure of the Iri9h educational sysshytem to provide the farmer with the basic knowledge necessarY to enable him to profimiddott from advice from government agenshydes onfurming methods

No real progress can be made

Vatican II and happily notes and five Ecuadorian prelates aeshythe improvements already made cepted his invitation

lUld those-in prosPectmiddotmiddot He hJ They are Bishops Bernardo hopeful for the future Ech R f Amb to d

evern~ wz 0 a anlIJiteUktlllal A~lieDtmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot-middotCandiiiomiddotRada Cenosian of Guashybull - d middotmiddotd A 1 B h

in8 ConclUding ~y~ ran a liln UXIlary IS ops Priestmiddot as rntelleCtllal~~ v~rll9middotmiddotGabrieI1iazCueva Ernesto that abettereducated and mueh Alvarez ~liaVlcente CIsneros of

and ea r Gua allmoreaware enti laitrmiddotmiddot y qu demands a certainmiddotleveloflD-middot B~SbtPAnBeedli has JurCls~lctib~n

middotfellectual attainment and alivemiddot middot~v~r eo g cans In 0 om la its cl and Ecuador and has been an

~~ ooes ermeam that the ecumenical leader in these

now fading away with thei~

farms Father Eamonn Casey nashy

ijonal director of the catholic Housing Aid Society in London stressed the necessity for the priest to work with underprivishyleged members of -society Too often he said the theologians are on the periphery - they should come doWn to earth and mix with the people-who really

priest has to be a professional~untries ~ _ ~=====~_ intellectual such is not his _ Over 200 bis~ops a~ 1~ ~r-Etmiddotmiddot D ampD SALES AND SERVICE cation ltR does mean that he has dinals have saId they Wlll at-sect to maintain a genuiDe hifei-est end the EUcharistie Congress to - sect ill things intellectUal anq m Mbeid be~ sectpublic questions sect

Monsignor Ellismiddot chides sUPe- sect riors for their failure to eneour- p~iori ~ the minisky in sect age priests 110 use their ~cial teD-dayretreatS preceding or- sect talents skills and aptitudes dination Better than nothing sectAnd he urgeS priests 110 acquire one suPPoses sect( and retain habits of 9tudy It is In the lntervaJ there has sect to be hoped that both these cau- ~ great improvement But sect

name has been sent to lI1sgr John G Nolan president of the Pontifical lVlission for Palestine whose headquarters are in New Vork Written by Amleto Carshydinal Cicogilani Papal Secreshytary of State it referred to the

1 Missions 19 years service to ~ Palestinian refugees particushy

larly victims of the recent Arab-Israeli conflictto

It singled out as particularly praiseworthy the contribution of the Catholic Near East Welshyfare Association saying that middotthrough the unflagging genershyosi ty of the catholics of the United States of America it provided qlost of the means for the Missions work following the recent conflict

The papal letter declared No other agency surpasses the Pontifical Mission in length of

middot actualmiddot serviCe and its identifl shycapon with the paternal intershy~ and concern of the Holy Father merits his encourageshyment hismiddot blessing and his prayerful good wishes

Cardinal middotCicOgnanl wrote that Pope Paul out of paternal afshyfection for the homeless and of grateful esteem for the Pontifi shycal Mission bids memiddot send yOIll the enclosed check for $5000 Added to this was a furthell amount of money contributed

middot by the Congregation for the Oriental Churches

Msgr Nolan was asked that during his Easter visit to the refugee campS he kindly disshytribute the total sum in the Popes Dame to all the needyen

ar~~~stChneU~made adicbot-SAVE MONEY ON omy of man saying here is middotthe

body her~ is the soul-Iam YOUR middotOImiddotLmiddotHEATconCerned only with the soul bull bull bull bull Tmiddothe love of Christ is for the whole person and anything ~ -4~ WYman that concerns 1llieperson is of ~ US92 concern to middotChrist

He said thatmiddot the priest middotshould CHARLES F VARGAS selk tomiddotmiddot develop ~ature Ght-ls- tiMlS amongdsmiddotflockiuidcpre- 54 ROCKDALE AvENUE pare themmiddotforlife Th~ role of 1 the ~~esthe~dmiddotiftcl~desmiddotth~middot ~E~ BEDFORD MASS proVISIon Qfmiddotmiddot mformatlOn oo sexual and~ari~itLplmiddotobiehis 1

He stlggcentstJd middottbatmiddotmiddotmiddotPri~middot main~in cQJjt$C~ wjth~ those whlt emjgra~~mmiddottheir_ par- ish~ and follo~middotup middotthe middotcareers( of boys who are releasedmiddot from refprm schools t

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HE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 2 1968 1S

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs May 2 1968 Back Presidenills ~reg~reg ~~~1rf~Jreg~MO~ ~~~lliJO[[reg(gJ ~rntilO1fi)[[fr~ofr~r

CHICAGO (NC)-The Assoshy~~ ~~regramp~~ o[J1j [Q)1 W[J1lJ[[o ciation of Chicago Priests an

The record compiled 56 years ful Swamppodle a neighborshy unofficial group of some 1500 priests in the archdiocese ofago still stands in big league hood within sight of the U S

baseball annals-most runs al shy Capitol talked about Father Chioago has endorsed President Johnsons current efforts to]owed one game 24 Travers Travers band

fA J (Joe) Detroit Never before had the bandsshy negotiate a Settlement of the

Father Aloysius J Travers men performed like they did in Vietnam war The ACP in its fifth plenarygJ 75 who achieved the dubishy the 1919 May procession-never

ous pitching distinction died had such old favorites as Tis session here turned down a resolution prepared by its soshylast week in Misericordia Hosshy the Month of Our Mother and cial action subcommittee onpital Philadelphia He acquied 0 Mary We C~own Thee With

baseball immortality on May Blossoms Today been so spir shy peace calling for complete cesshy

112 1912 as pitcher for the One sation of U S bombing in Vietshyitedly played by Gonzaga bandsshynam to support the Presidents limited decrease in bombing

men as the procession windedlDay Wonders Detroits brawling Tigers were through Swampoodle streets glated to play Connie Macks After the procession was over and negotiation moves

Two other peace resolutionspOwerful Philadelphia As that the school rector called in recommended by the subcomshy_ daymiddotin old Shibe Park Detroits Father Travers and congratushy

Btar Ty Cobb had drawn a fine mittee were approved They

and two-day suspension for formance The rector added lated him on the bands pershy

put the ACP on record as favorshy

belting a heckling fan a few But high school musicians with ing draft law revisions so that a person might be exempt as a

lligers decided if Cobb couldnt mustaches Dont you think thatdays earlier in New York~ ~he

conscientious objector to a parshywas going a bit too far ticular war without necessarilyFather T~avers had recruitedplay they wouldnt either so being a conscientious objector

Famous llnfield a dozen or so members of thecenthey went on strike

to all war and so that a per

With the aid of Connie Mack crack Fort Myer Army Band

son could be exempt as a conshyfOm nearby Arlington Va scientious objector on humanishy

ed up a collection of Philadelshydressed them in cadet uniforms~e Detroit management roundshy

tarian as well as religioUlland put them in the school band groundsBesides teaching at Stphia sandlot players signed

The ACP also approved threeJosephs Prep and Gonzagathem to Detroit contracts and recommendations of its liturgy

as the Tigers sf Francis Xavier High in New committee York As a result the priests group

Father Travers also taught atfielded the One Day Wonders

Al Travers 19 fresh out of has urged the National Confershyat Josephs Prep School rho Disbands Hawks ence of Catholic Bishops to reshyhelped recruit the sandlotters One of his moSt heartbreaking submit two liturgical petitioJUloppointed himself pitcher He assignments was given him some to the Conglegation of Rites inctftein recalled I learned that 25 years ago He was sent back Rome The petitions which had e pitcher would collect-50 to St Josephs College where New Problem ~en turned down by the Vati shyeX-tra so I volunteered the battIe cry is The Hawk can congregation would allowThat day the As scored 24 will never die as moderator the establishment of experimenshyINns on 25 hits with io nuts of athletics Priest Urges F~ir labor Practices tal centers for the liturgycmearned against young Travshy His jOb-disband the Hawks For CatholicSchool Faculties throughout the country and limshy

erG The wonder is the score football team with a minimum ited experimentation with thewasnt higher for young Tra~~rs of uproar from students and SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-For betweell the school and the liturgy without prior approvalwas pitching against the best alumni since football had beshy as long as anyone can rememshy religious community of the Vaticanbalt team of the era-against come a moneymiddot losing sport at ber the Religious and lay peoshy Some experts says that the

PhiladelphiaS famous $100000 St Josephs and a number of nte third resolution called on-pie who serve on the faculties best solution to this problem is

infield of John Phelan (Stuffy) other Catholic colleges in ~those the NCCB to take concrete stepsof Catholic grammar and high to bar Religious from partici shy

McInni6 at first Eddie Collins days to implement proposals of itsschools have been the type of pating in labor organizations

lJeCOnd Jack Barry short and He did his job well directing liturgy committee for adaptashypeople who would never think But Father Reicher indicated

IPrank (Home Run) Baker third attention to St Joes basketball tion of the Mass to smaIl anelof going out on strike against this would only divide the Reshy special age groupsSaves Franchise team which has grown into one unfair labor practices since ligiousand lay faculty of schools

But young Travers and the of the nations powerhouses this would imply some sort of even more than they are dividedORe Day Wonders who had For the last 25 years Father guilt on the part of p~ors and now India to ReconsiderI2ever seen Detroit saved the Tlavers had been stationed at bishops Urging a period of experishybaseball franchise for the Tigers St Josephs Prep in semishy Well those days are gone forshy meritation to work out new Deporting Priestttlat day If they hadnt pl~yed retirement during recent years ever according to Chicagos forms of collective bargaining NEW DELHI (NC) - Indiantile As chances are the Amershy Requiem Mass for the colorful Father Robert Reicher and the Father Reicher concluded It ill Prime Minister Indira GandbJ1bean L~ague would have lifted one-day big leaguer was ofshy job now is to set up standards obvious that the right to barshy has promised reconsideration ofDetroits franchise because of fered Thursday at GeuChurch of fair labor practice and guidshy gain collectively is a natural the order expelling Jesuitthe players strike in Philadelphia ance for faculty members grievshy tight clearly defended time and Father Vincent Ferr r of theDespite the lopsided score procedures against Cathoshy agaiil ethically and morally Poona diocese Indiaance fromlPatJher Travers got several big lic school administrators But this right also implies an lleague offers as a result of his Canonist Cates Need The pmmise was made when

Speaking to participants at 8 obligation to know what colleCshy tlhree members of the Indiani pitching He turned them down secondary school department tive bargaining involves went to St Josephs College For Negro Prieds parliament met with Mrs Ganshy

meeting during the Nationalthen joined the Jesuits ATLANTIC CITY (Nch - A dhi here and asked her to get

National Catholic Educational the order cancelled and grantThe lesson he learned fmln plea for more Negro Catholic Bishops Ask PopeAssociation convention here Indian citizemihip to the priestthe unorthodox recruiting as a priests has been made at the Father Reicher outlined some ofone-day big leaguer stood him annual Easterri regional meeting To Visit Canada Father Ferrer founder of thethe problems facing Catholic in good stead a half-dozen years of the Canon Law Society of OTTAWA (NC) -Pope Paul Maharashtra Farmers Servicelabor - management relations

later when he was teaching at America here in New Jersey The pliest is chairman of the VI may visit Canada next month Society was scheduled for deshyGQnzaga High School in Washshy Msgr Thomas J Reese of Wilshy to attend the National Confershy portation last year but wasChicago archdiocesan Catholicington D C mington in the neighboring State ence on Poverty sponsored by granted several extensions ofCouncil on Working Life and a

Recruits Ringers of Delaware speaking on experishy jVell-known labor expert Christian Churches in Canada his stay He was accused by iiimiddot mental parishes accused the Hindu groupS ofanti-Indian acshyFather Travers was in charge Religious who teach in CatBshy Bishop Alexander Carter presshy

Church of racism and said that tivities and by the Maharashtraof the school b~llld which used olic schools pose a special diffi shy ident of the Canadian CatholicNegro Catholics prefer to - be state government of anti shyto master only about two or culty hi labor relations because Conference has acknowledged national activitiesselved by black priests of whom

CHURCHES UNITED Bishop Reuben H Mueller left of the Evangeli~al United Brethren Church and Methoshydist Bishop Lloyd C Wicke led representatives of their respective bodies at ceremonies in Dallas proclaiming the union of the two churches The new body is to be known as the United Methodist Churlth NC Photo

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IIlfllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIUIIIlIDutuUliUllllUiHlllllllllilllllllllllllllllilllUIIIIIIIIIIIIUII~given to the Washington arch we need black priests and we bid to raise the standards of diocese by Church spokesmen need them fast preaching in Australia and New here in Pennsylvania Zealand will be made shortly Lobster Boats Msgr Philip J Dowling execshy it was resolved at a meeting hereCapital Cityutive secretary of John Cardinal of leaders of religious orders

Krols Commission on Human VATICAN CITY (NC)-Qn The effort will inchide a fullyshyRelations noted that the Washshy the eighth anniversary of the otganized Pastoral Year obsershyington Archdiocesan Office of foundation of Brazils new capishy vance seminars for priests of all bull bull bull Urban Affairs has asked assist shy tal of Brasilia Pope Paul VI ages on updating preaching techshy s iz e s ance from Philadelphia and other sent a radio message of best niques the establishment of II bull bull bull dioceses In providing foOd es wishes in Portuguese and pressshy preaching center and the use pecially for those po)r who will ed a button that illumined a of a recorded service on techshy I Macleansreceive temporary housing in the cross on the cathedral of that niques of oral communicatiOil f8cilities of the Washington city The Pope performed the directedby the ObJates of MalT sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAYBt Tel 9979351 sect archdiocese oclemony in his private library Immaculate ~1I111111l111IHlUlnlllllllllllUllllllnIIllIUllllllUllllllllllllllIllltUIIllllllllllUluiuUWlUllllml~

three tunes a year In those of their obligation of obedience that feelers have been sent outthere are fewdays the school had a cadet Father Reicher pointed out to have the Pope corne to Monshy

If any institution can standeorps and one of its big annual What this means he added is teal for th~ May 26-29 meeting events was marching in the anshy that occasionally Religious mllYoondemned on the basis of the

It would be the first papalrecent Kerner Report on Civilnual parish-May procession be used to break a strike called visit to Canada Pope Paul visitedDisorders it is the CatholicFor years residents of color- by lay faculty members this country as a Cardinal in theChurch among others that is But more likely is the conflict early 19508guilty of white racism he trapping the individual Reli shyPlan to Help ~eed opined Bishop Carter said if a favorshygious whose loyalty is divided

Asserting that the number of able reply is reCeived from RomeCapital MCIl(lc61ers Negro clergy middotdoes not nearly the Canadian government would

PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A meet the needs of Negro Catho- Australia to Have extend an official invitation pledge of cooperation in feeding lies Msgr Reese said Pope Paul visited the United the poor who will gather in the If the Church is going to be Better Preaching Nations inNew York in 1965 nations capital in May has beell relevant to the black community SYDNEY (NC)-A concerted

I

Marian Awards Continued from Page Three

Fall River and has spent her entire religious life within the Diocese of Fall River

Sister has served as consult shyant with various education comshymittees in the diocese and bas promoted the educational proshygram of the Dominican Sisters

Sr Mary Pauline OP bead of the Science Department of

the Dominican Academy Fall River was one of the originatolll of the Region III Science Fair and has served as president of the regions Fair for two years

She is presently ooordinator of the Massachusetts state Scishyence Fair -

Sr Virginia CSC is presshyently chairman of the Th~logy

Department Notre Dame Colshylege Manchester N H and served from 1941 to ]958 as principal of St Anthonys New Bedford

She has always been a leader in new an innovative ideas in education

Sister Anne Denise SND presently principal of St Marys High School Lynn is well shyremembered as the first princishypal of Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth and has served in many administrative posts for the Sisters of Notre Dame

Sr Mary Aloysia SUSC is dean of the College of the Sashycred Hearts Fall River and has given outstanding service in coshyoperation with the Catholic School Department in planning in-service courses for the teachshyers of the diocesan schools

She also serves asmiddot coordinator of the educational program of the Sisters of the Holy Union

Sr John Elizabeth SUSC is Guidance Director at the Acadshyemy of the Sacred Hearts Fall River and has served in numershyous administrative positions atthe Fall River school

She was the first principal of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton and has served on committees of local and state educational organizations

Sr Mary Felicita RSM is now involved in the tutorial program at Mt St MaryS Acadshyemy Fall River and has served in the various sclIools of the diocese

For 26 years Sister served as Diocesan School Supervisor iD the Catholic School Office

Sr Miriam RSM is also in the tutorial program at the Sisshyters of Mercy Academy in Fall River A former teacher and principal in schools of the dioshycese Sister served for 26 yean

IN NEW POST Father Charles F Sheedy CSC former dean of arts and letshyterS has been appointed to the new post of dean of theoshylogical studies and institutes at the University of Nobe Dame NC Photo

to Educators tiS Diocesan Supervisor in the Catholic School Department

This year completes 50 years of service in the field of educashyto the Diocese of Fall River

Sister Maureen RSM is principal of Nazareth Hall Fall River She organized the proshygram and was the first principal of the Fall River school lor exshyceptional children a position she still holds

She is a consultant lind D member of city and state comshymittees for the mentlllly l1eshytarded

Sr Mary Urban RSM is Diocesan supervisor of schools and was the first principal at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

She is a member of state and city educational committees

Sr Mary Carmela RSM is a member of the English Departshyment of St Xaviers Academy Providence and was the first principal of Mt St Marys Academy Fall River

She is a consultant on secondshyary school curriculum planning

Sr Grace de Sales MSBT is presently superior of the Censhyacle of Our Lady of the Assumpshytion Osterville a position she also held at the Cenac1e of St Patricks Parish Wareham

Sister founded the kindergarshytens at Osterville and Wareham and has taught Chfistian Docshytrine classes on the elementary and secondary levels during her many years of selvice in the diocese

Sr Joan Louise OLVM is suPerior of the Victory Noll Convent in the Immaculate Conception Parish No Easton She has served as catechetical specialist in dioceses in Iowa and California and her present assignment is CCD supervisor for the Diocese of Fall River

Brother Albertus CSC is supervisor of Education for the Eastern Province of the Holy Cross Brothers and is professor of mathematics at Stonehill College No Easton He also ~ught mathematics and physics at Monsignor Coyle High School Taunton

Miss Mary Cabral of 1)69 Camshybridge Street Fall River is presently teaching at Espirito Santo School Fall River where she is completing 43 years of service as a lay teacher in ~e

Diocese of Fall Ri vcr

Whites to Solve White Problem

TOLEDO (NC)-Bishop Joon A Donovan has made a public request to whites to take up the white problem

He urged it for those lookshying for a modern up-Io-date apostolate for down-to-earth Christians who are at the same time dedicated Americans

middotSpeaking at a dinner of the northwestern Ohio district Fourth Degree Knights of Coshylumbus the Toledo bishop said

This ugly situation was fathered by injustice and is nourished by that subtle and insidious vice called prejudiCe

Need In this deplorable situation

in which the world ffinds itself today the pressing need is for those who call themselves Christians to think as Christians to form Christian attitudes and to live as Christians

Just as we cannot separate Christ from His Gospel so too we cannot separate love of GOO from love of our fellowmen without exception

The real Christian mlid the bishop does not live alongside but with others He constantly interprets anothers actions in the best possible light bying to remember always the way in which the Lord met loved and drew people to Himsel

SAIGON (NC) - The people wept and we wept everybody wept Sister Nicole said deshyscribing her teams departure after 16 days of relief work in Hue

She and two other Vietnamshy-ese Sisters Daughters of Charshyity of St Vincent de Paul with

The communImiddots1s T truce

17 girl students had gone to stricken Hue on a mission of mercy

offensive had left families in mourning houses in ruins ~nd people hungry and sick The government of Vietnam had inshyvited volunteers to bring help to the citys thousands of sufshyferers

The plane that brought tile Sisters and their students also brought 85 youths from Saigon~

The boys did manual work such as cleaning up the damaged hosshypital in Hues The Sisters team was divided into three groups one to give medical care anshyother to visit homes a third to l)ok after children

The 17 girls are some of those being trained by the Sisters as social workers for family assist shyance under a plan sponsored by a Vietnamese womens associashytion Five of the 17 are Cathshyolics The others are mostly Buddhists On April 12 all were fasting since it was the 15th day of the lunar month for the lBud-

Catholic Boy Scout Officials to Meet

WASHINGTON (NC)-About 150 leaders of CQtholic Boy Scout organizations will meet here to attend the 20th biennial oonference of the National Cathshyolic Committee OIl Scouting

The meeting will be a Iowshyday work session tor chairmen chaplains and other officioals cd the nations diocesan I seouiing ~ommittees The meeting will end with a banquet in honO Gl Patrick Cardinal OBoyle ol Washington

---- -----~

middot1FI

1

PRAYER CRUSADE _Danny Thomas has filmed n 10-minute color documentary on the value of family pray~r

to be used by Father Patrick Peyton CSC in his Camshypaign for Family Prayer Father Peyton said he expects 200000 people at a Milwailkee rally to be held Sunday May 12

IEverybody Weptl

Nun Describes Relief Teams Departure From Stricken Hue

dhims and Good Friday for the Catholics

The Asia Foundation here gave a grant to pay for the meals of the Sisters team dur ing their stay

- Before leaving Saigon the Sisters had collected medicines food soap and clothing from welfare agencies including Catholic Relief Services and

Vietnam Christian Service (Protestant) The United Nashytions Childrens Fund (UNICEF) provided milk powder which enabled the team to give milk to 450 children every day

Warn Medics LONDON (NC)-The day beshy

fore Britains new abortion law went into effect the nations 5500 CMholic doctors were warned by John Cardinal Heenan of WeBtminister that they should DOt perfom any abortions

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THE ANCHOR- 17 Thursday May 2 1968

Cufr ~t~1 Days Of orw~~~1ion

En C[[i~da OTTAWA (NC)-Chrietshy

mas and New Years Day now are the only holy days of obligation for Canadav estimated 8000000 Catholics

The Canadian Catholic Conshyference comprising Canadafl Bishops has announced thampa other holy days will be cellshyebrated on the Sunday nearem the holy day

The holy days affected aye Epiphany usually celebrat~

Jan 6 Ascension now falling on the 40th day after East~Ilp

All Saints now celebrated Nou I and the Immaculate ConcejilP tion now celebrated Dec 8

The Bishops said observance of the feast days on Sundayu means they will be celebratecll bull by a larger more relaxed anell accessible congregation of the faithful rather than a congreshygaUon of people constrained by the obligation of attending Maw in addition to their work

Canadas Bishops postwn~ until next Fall a decision Gil

wlether to restoremiddot the anciej~ office of permanent deacon m the Church The Bishops of the United States meeting simultashy

neously in St Louis hlst week ~ted to petition Pope Paul VJ for permission to restore ~

perinanent diaconate ror marshyried and unmarried men of ma ture years

Fish Sales Up SYDNEY (NC)-Best tilini)

that ever happened to the fisb industry said Mark J06eph chairman of the New SouUl -lales Fish Authority of the Churchs lifting of the ban CJ[l

Friday meat eating He has tb~ ligures to back up his verdictshya 25 per cent rise in fish e4)Dshy

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The Parish Parade New Jersey Suburbanites of All Faiths Aid Ghetto Arson Victims HOLY NAME OUR LADY OF ANGELS

FALL RIVER FALL RIVER NEWARK (NC) - Priest~ the citys anti-poverty agenCll Contemporary music will acshy

company the 11 oclock Mass Sunday morning May 5

First communicants will reshyeeive at a special Mass at 9 Saturday morning May 25 Mayshycrowning ceremonies will be held Sunday May 26 The Womens Guild announces

fts installation banquet for Tuesday night May 7 Tickets are available from all members

Catholic Charities collectors are asked to meet in the parish school at 730 tonight for dist~shyOOtion of contact cards

lIT MARGARET BUZZARDS BAY

SS Margltlret-Mary Guild of Buzzards Bay and Onset will Sponsor a rummage sale from 9 1lo 1 Saturday May 18 at St Margarets kindergarten hall Main Street Buzzards Bay Do iaations may be left at the hall during mornings of the precedshying week Chairman for the ~vent is Mrs William Brady

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild will reshyieive Holy CommuniOn in a bodyaf the815 Mass 00 Sunshydity morning A breakfast will follow in the school hall The icuest speaker will beRt Rev Anthony M Gomes Mrs Arthur Belanger gpiIshyftual chairman of the Guild is _ charge of the breakfast

81 JOSEPH AIRHAVEN Nominations and elections of officers for the Association of file Sacred middotHearts will be held at 630 on Sunday evening in the rectory ~ Dues are now payable to the tleasurer Mrs Jeannette Dushylude

IACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

Preprimary registration will be held from 2 to 4 Sunday afternoon May 5 in 1he school office Some openings also exist in first sixth and eighth grades

The CCD adult discussion group will meet at 8 Sunday night in the home of Mr and Mrs J G N Bonneau

So Easton Club Pledges

$5000 The newly formed Womens

Club of Holy Cross Parish So Easton has pledged $5000 toward the building fund acshycording to an announcement made today by Mrs Arthur J L Peterson the organizations first president The pledge will be paid at the rate of $1000 per year

This pledge has been added to The Second Mile Building Fund campaign now in progress under the chairmanship of Robshyert Dray and Louis A Lyne serving as director

The Altar Boys will sponSor a cake sale Sunday May 26

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a Communion breakshyfast following 8 oclock Mass this Sunday morning Installashytion of officers will be held at a banquet following 5 oclock Mass Sunday afternoon May 26

Children of Mary will attend a Communion breakfast followshying 8 oclock Mass Sunday mornshying May 12

The annual blessing of autoshymobiles will take place at 130 Sunday afternoon May 26 in the church parking lot

ST GEORGE WESTP~RT

A Maybasket whist is planned for 8 Saturday night May 4 hi

the school hall on Route 177 PrOCeeds will benefit the school fund and table and attendance prizes will be awarded

STMARY NORTH ATTLEBORO Parishioners are planning a

testimonial honoring Msgr Ed- ward B Booth Pastor at 7

Sunday night May 26 Tickets are now available

Christians Jews Combat Racism

NEW YORK (NC)The Nashytional Confeferice of Christians and Jews has launched a nation wide educational effort to conshyfront the problem of white racism in middotAmerica agency headquarters here announced

The NCeJ has given top prl~

ority to finding ways toimpleshyment the recommendations of the National Advisory Commisshysion on Civil Disorders The commission blamed white racshyism as the underlying cause of urban unrest

In a progress re-port to the NCCJ board of trustees meeting here Dr Samuel L Gandy dean of the Ho~ard University school of religion Washington D C and chairman of the NCCJ nashytional program ad7isory comshymittee stated

NCCJs 130 professional staff members in 70 cities are curshy~ntly engaged in developing programs with police business and labor leaders parents and teachers clergy and with youth and all of the various institutes workshops and dialogues which are being conducted are emphashysizing the findings of this reshyport

Dr Gandy quoted to the board a letter to President Lynshydon B Johnson from Dr Stershyling W Brown NCCJ presishydent in which the agency head said that NCCJ embraced the commission report as a sancshytion and guideline for our efshyforts in the private sectol

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ministers nuns and lay people of all denominations pitched in here to try and make Easter a dltty of joy for the more than 600 people burned out of their homes in a waveof arson which erupted in this city following the funeral of Dr Martin Luther King

Concerned citizens of surshyrounding suburban communishyties who only a week before had participated in a massive Wa 1k for Understanding through ghetto streets respondshyedspontaneously to the need

Without anymiddot special appeal going out people of all denomshyinations call e 11 inner-city churches to ask what they could do and they were directed to the United Community Corp

NEW LEADER Sister Rosemary Markham SSS is the new Superior General of the Sisters of Social Ser-

vice a Los Angeles based community engaged in social and catechetical work with missions in Formosa and Mexico NCPhoto

Christians Jews Discuss Diamiddotlogue

SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-The question of whether JewishshyChristian dialogue should be by speech or by action was the theme that ran through the talks and discussions at a Conference on Interfaith Dialogue sponsored by Catholic Protestant and Jewshyish organizations at Seton Hall University here

Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum director of interreligious affairs for the American Jewish Comshymittee was generally in favor of the action approach saying that the dialogue must avoid beshycoming a convenient conspiracy on the part of middle-class whites to buffer themselves against the realities of the inner city

Father Edward H Flannery executive secretary of the U S Catholic Bishops Secretariat for Catholic-Jewish Relations said that while he would be the last to cut off action in the realm of social justice and charity he also felt that Jews and Christians could not effectively present a common ftont to society until they have straightened out their own affairs

Father Flannery referred to statements that the -ChristianshyJewish dialogue had died in the wake of last Junes six-day war between Israel and Arab nations He said that it was not so much a matter of its dying but of its not having been tried yet

Over Holy Thursday Good Friday and Holy Saturday more than 10 tons of food and clothing were donated and the UCC staff was swamped with the task of sorting the materiaL

With schools and church ofshyfices closed priests and nuns made their way individually and in groups to UCC headshy

quarters to help with the task of unloading cars and station wagons and sorting and distribshyuting the clothing

At least 50 offers of assistance came in to Queen of Angels pariSh in the heart of the ghettc and the callers were asked to organize relief efforts in their own communities and then gd the material 110 the UCCbull

FEEL GOOD TODAY

THt HOLY fATHER MISSION AiD TD THlaRIENTAL DHURDH

Thlsoolumns happiest readers are the men

Te date this second phase bas listed 35 gifts totaling $12000 Combined with the initial campaign the Building Fund now lists 233 donors who haVe pledged a total of $117()00 The Womens Club that was founded less than six months ago has initiated a long range program for the spiritual cll1shytural and financial efforts of the parish

In addition to the regular methods of aiding the parish finandally the women have conducted teen-age projects and have assisted the Mens Club fu

i bull various progrlms

~MANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

BRISTOL COUNTY

9G-OAY NOTIC~

TIMENOW OPEN ACCOUNT5PAYS o bull bull Interest Compounded Quarterly

Offices in

NORTH ATTLEBORO MAINSIFDIEILlDgt AnUBORO FAUS

1111I111111111111I11I11I 11I11I11I1111 1111I11I11I11I11I11I1II1111111111111111illlllllllllllllllllllllllllll111111 1111I1 11I11I 11I11I11111111I11I11

women and children who know they~r needed The days were busiest helping others are the happiest days of our livesbullbullbull Who needs you most Surprisingly God needs you - for inmiddot stance to help art abandoned orphan become e Godloving responsible adult Lepers need you (there are still 15middotmillion lepers In the world) blind children need y~u ~ndlo do we bull bullbull Here In New York we are your agents tellin you where the Holy Father says your help Is needed and channeling your help promptlyand Oafely to the people iii needbullbullbull Want to feel good right now Do without something you want but do not need and send the money instead for one of the needs below Youll feel good especialiy if your gift is big enough to mean a sacrifice to you This is your chance to do something meaningful for the world - its Gods world - while youre still alive

D Only $850 gives our priests and SIsters i south India enough Dapsone miracle tablebamp for 43 lepers for a yearl D For only $250 a week ($10 a month $120 a year) you can make sure that an abandoned child has food clothing a blanket and love Well send you a photo of the child you adopt tell you something about him (or her) and ask the Sistermiddotinmiddotcharge to keep you Informed

D Your stringless gifts in any amount ($5000 MEET $1000 $500 $100 $50 $25 $10 $5 $2)

MISSION will help the neediest wherever they are - in EMERGENCIES india and he Hol~ Land for instance

D Only you can make your will-and do It this THINK week to be sure the poor will have your help

OF even after youre gone Our legal title CATHOLIO YOURSELF NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION Also our priests

TOO will offer promptly the Masses you provide for

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DO SOMETHING

MEANINGfUL WHILE

YOURE STILL ALIVE

HELP LEPERS

CHILDREN NEED

YOU

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THE CATHOLIC

NAMIlR _

~ 8TREJa~ ~_

OITY 8TATI_IIP COD

NBAR lAST WILPARI AbullbullaaIATID

NEAR EAST MISSIONS MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretary Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoo 330 Madison Avenue New York N~Y 10017 Teephone 212YUkon 6middot5840

1 - ~

Base~C~~~ptitfonKe~nlt i~t ~ bull bull bull ~ bullbull ~ bullbull bull bull c ~ ~~ ltgt J

Lawrence High of Falmouth Seeksmiddot State Track Tut~e

By PETER BARTEK Norton High Coach

The Capeway Conference track season has already begun but the handwriting is already on the wall This campaign like last years will be a battle for second place Admittedly notbing Short of a miracle can or will prevent Lawrence High of Falmouth from winning its second straight conference t rae k championship But fol Coach Jim Kalperis and his trackstersmiddot the league championship is only a Gtepping stone to the State C ham p io n - ship The goal of every athletic team in the state hi to earn the title of State Champion This is not beshyyond the grasp of the Falmouth Peier Clippers If hard Bartek work and dedication are the means to this end then Falshymouth will reign as State track champions

Success does not come easily em any endeavor and success batpound

j bullbullbull bullbull bull J bull

not come easily to the Falmouth tracksters They like all accomshyplished athletes have labored long and diligently to aChieve the measure of sUccess they now enjot lt

N1)t toomiddot many yearsato Lawshyrence High was just ~nother

sChool Participating in track But the efforts of many and the dedication of one IJ1im in parshyticular has brought immeasurshyable success to the Falmouth track scene That man is Jim Kalperis

Coach Kalperis haseombined

his knowledge af track his coaching ta1EntS aiiCl tirelessenergies middotto build a virtual track dynasty The latest noteworthy feat of middotliliitnickmen came in the forinof anotheriState title

Thisti~emiddotiS th~nivision IIi

~teRelayCha-D1P~~pshjp bull

1

- BC~ and Norry Races Are Close 1

lbe format formiddot the St~te reo lays has been altered this ear with competition being held at four separate locations in East- em Massachusetts Weymouth captured the Division I crown the DiviSion n title went to

Andover and Williams corralled the laurels in Division IV

The meet drew ll5 schools in each of the four diviSions with over 2000 youngsters partici shypating in all classes

Enroute to its victory Falshymouth collected 51 points comshypared to runner-up Barnstable with 22Jh

Falmouth took first place in the discus high jump pole vault 440 yard run shuttle hurdles two mile run and the 880 -

With tbis type of success in state competition it is easy to see why the Capeway Confershyence title has been practically conceded to Falmouth

Sharing the spotlight with the trackmen at Falmouth are the diamondmen The Clippers who are in the thick of the loop baseball picture were given a

Mike Rainnie tossed amp no-hittel at Barnstable to gain a 1-0 vershydict

Its still much too early to predict with any accuracy

what will happen in the Cape wai baseball race But it ap- pears nomiddotclub will dominate th~t sport like Falmouth controIa track Falmouth Dartmouth Fairhaven and Barnstable are expected to fight it out through the entire season One close to the scene summed it up best when he said anyone in the league could win this thing

Close races are also developshying in the Bristol County and Narragansett Leagues

In the BCL both Bishop Fee han of Attleboro and Durfee High of Fall River encountered a few difficulties in early season play but seem to have found the range of late The clubs will meet in an important contest today in Fall River Late inning rallies have brought both clubS from the brink of defeat to vicshytory in previous outings The victor will have to be dubbed

shot in the arm last week as the team to beat

Brennan of Feehan D~est ill le~guej

Coach Tom Maccarone of Feeshyhan has had outstanding pershyfonnances from his pitching staff but the key to the Shamshyrocks success has been shortshystop Ty Blrennan Maccarone stated before the season that Brennan was his best player and perhaps the best in the whole Bristol County Judging from Brennans perfonnance to date one of the keys to stopping Feehan is stopping the classy shortstop

Coach Joe Lewis Hilltoppers play a brand of ball similar to his counterpart TOIJl Karams basketball club Make a mistake and the Fall Riverites will capshyitalize on it Durfees first two league victories came about beshycause of opponent miscues

The Hilltoppers have been playing steady ball throughout the early part of the campaign and are improving with every game Their ability 10 avoid costly mistakes eI tbeir -n

making and timely hitting has proven a winning combination

Come what may in todays contest the BCL llace has just begun

Not to be outdone by tile larger BCL and Capeway Conshyference the Narry loop is conshyducting a torrid race of its own At the end of the first week of action Seekonk and DightonshyRehoboth were tied for the top spot Following two weeks of play Gase of Swansea Dighton and Somerset were lodged In the first position The hectic lCampaign will probably find another change in the top spot at the conclusion of this weeks activity

From Cape Cod to Attleboro competition is keener this year than it bas been in many seashysons The road to the league championship is always diffJshycult to Davigate but this year it appears as though the road win be duttered wiill meR obstacles than ill quite

cone~~ lb~aders ConcllregrnmOB War In V~~It~IlJJm

NEW YORK (NC)-Stushydent government presidents and editors of campus newsshypapers at more than 500 colleges in 49 states have conshydemned the war in Vietnam as

lt immoral and unjust and said ~~ they believe they should not

~ i~~~~~~~ii ~~~b~~ shy --_ ~ and Laymen Convinced About

-- ~-__ Vietnnm Was coordirlated by shy _ -- shy ~ Rev RObert lVi Hundley lHullent

--lt--1 at Union Th~ological Snppary --J here and an associate pltISor at -- ~I th~ Congn~gationalChllrch hn ~_ Scarsdale N-Y He saiQ most

--middot1 students who signed the stateshy~-__-~~- ~~ -___- __~_~J ment havenot been active in

FINE ARTS FESTIVAL Making preparations for Fine Arts Festival at Bishop Stang High School North

Dartmouth are Paul Leahy and Margaret Polycarpo

~ Unmiddot-ty middotIs Chr-stlTs middotW-II

P Off W I E deg I pOi degI

ontl e comes cumenlca I grlmage From United Kingdom toHoly Lar-d

anti-war activities heretoforemiddot

Solicits Support

He added

Many of the student Itl~ders who have signed this sbtcment

recognize that they may be plaeshying their future caJeers illmiddotjeopshy~rdy and conceivably are riskshying punitive action being taken

against them by the capiicioWJ V~TICAN ~ITY (NC)~TO an Fathers Arthur Payton anSel~c~ve Sfdtvice Systerh~~~

I ecumenical pilgrimage oQ its Anglican who is director 01 ~ev Yi~am Sloan Cot~~1 Jr-) way to the Holy Land Pope interchurCh travel in LOndon bull aclive memjgter of Clergymiddot ~nd Paul VI recalled the words he Among its members were An- Laymen Concerned AboutbullVI~tshyspoke on his own pilgrimage glieans CatholiCs Oithodox and nam ~1dmiddota Yal~ U~Iverslt7

there in 1964 that unity is the will of Christ

He said that it was with parshyticular pleasure that we welshycome this ecumenical pilgrimshyage from the United Kingdom to the Holy LaRd You are aboUt to follow in the fOQtSteps af God made man in the country of His birth Hill mission and His blessed death for us men and for our salvation (NiceneCreed)

Your visit caUsto mind our own unforgettable pilgrimage to the Holy Places From the grotto of Bethlehem we then declared It npw appears clearly to all that the problem of unity cannot be eluded Today this will cif Christ is imposed upon our minds and demands th~t we undertake with wisdom and love every possible way of bringing all Christi~ns t6 enjoy the great benefit and supreme honor of the unity of the middotChurch

He also recalled his plea from Bethlehem that love of Christ and of the Church should inshyspire that every future moveshyment toward meeting and reshyconciliation

The pilgrimage was led by

DIOCESAN DIREC1OR First woman to serve as a diocesan director of radio-TV is Miss Patricia Smith of Pueblo Colo who is also a photo-journalist on the staff gf Dateline Colorado m cesan weekly newspaper

Protestants not only from Great Britain but from France and Germany as well

Msgi Gianfrancesco Arrighi undersecretary of the Secretashyriat for Promoting Christian Unity and Canon John Findlow representative of Anglican Archbishop Michael Ramsey of Canterbury at the Holy See accompanied middotthe pilgrims to the Vatican

Votes Moratorium On ChuDch Building

CHICAGO (NC)-The Chicago Conference of Laymen is urging Church authorities at both the archdiocesan and parish levels to declare a moratorium on 10- cal construction projects so that funds can be channeled to projshyects in the ghetto areas

The action was taken at the second annual meeting of the

ll200-member organization The 300 in attendance passed

some 50 resolutions half of them dealing with urban problems The membership said it will seek ways to alleviate white racism especially within the Catholic Church

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ch~plaJD saId The stand taken by these

y~ung men should serve to reshymmd Americans everywhere that the war in Vietnam 1s not over that American and Vietshy

namese boys are stillmiddotdying

He continued

These middotmen of conscience should be supported by eveQY priest minister and rabbi who cares about the sanctity of conshyscience

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Jesuit Comments Di~cordNormal Amon9 Catholics

RIO DE JANEIRO (NC)shylD i SC 0 r d among Catholics after the Second Vatican Council is perfectly normal but It is not normal for proshygressive or conservative Cathoshylics to refuse to accept the dishyrectives of the council and the pope Jesuit superior general said here Father Arrupe is in Brazil for 30 days to visit Jesuit houses in the country and to preside at the May 6 to 14 meeting here of all South Amershyican Jesuit provincials

He said that his visit is inshytended to adapt the order here flo the requirements of the agshygirnameJ1to or up-dating

The most important aggiorshy namento in our day he said

is that of the mind We have to ~nsider and respect human valshyues as such This was always the Churchs doctrine but now the Church is insisting on it more We ought not to consider the Churchs interest in human values as opportunism Our in tEmtion is only to serve mankin~ better)

Press Uses Images Dudng his stay here Father

Arrupe willmiddot visit 20 local(tiesWhere Jesuits are woikilg

ts B 1Ilhele are 1000 JesUl m razl~ bull

He said that he regarded as bull joke the Brazilian presss ref-

elences to him as ~the black l T Ch Pope cussion of he angmg a1middot

Because of my cassock hemiddot

tlaid I am black but I am not the Pope ~ understand that the press has to use images to exshylI)lain concepts more effectively

Honor Editor NEW YORK (NC) ~ Robert

6lmstead news editormiddot of the National Catholic Reporter weekly newspaper published in Kansas City Mo received honshyelable mention in the 1968 Paul Tobenkin Memolial Award Competition here

-

MEET IN ST LOUIS Bishop-elect Timothy J~ Harringshyth d f th Sf W 1 ft d

ton ~ orcester e leoscllfses ~ atn t ~ l~mg

ish a panel a~ the lQ68Presi dents Conference of the Nashytional Council of cat~olic yene~l

Role of CouDcil The parish will retairi its role

as a community of worship whose members go out ihto the world and bring it theeurohristjan

message Bernatd Lyons Ghishycago public relations ~onsultant saidmiddot

The pa~ish on the other hand mustmiddot become part of the world

alound it a wHr1e$S to the whole community and fake on roles not in relation only to -its

GUIDING CHURCH IN UNITED STATES More than 200 members of the hierarchy participated in the decisions of the annual Spring meeting of the National Conference

Predict Important Authorities Emphcisixe

WASHINGTON (NC)-Three members but to the world in authorities on parish life have agreed here that the parish basic organiz~tion iil the Church will have to undergo some lmportant changes if the ChUlch is goingto meet th~ needs of societyin the 20th censhy tury

But just how the parislt is going to change ~s far from setshytied they ~onceqed in a dis

which it exists Father John Corriga~ of this city a directozlt of the Nationalmiddot Liturgical Con ference asserted

Whatever it does the parish must becomemiddot a vital force in the cOlJlrnunity around it Father Geno Baroill execu~ive secretary Washington archdi

ocesan Office ~f Urpan Affairs declared

RIot ComparlmiddotsoDmiddot

Father Baroni whose work blings hini into constant contactmiddot with Negro problems in WaSh- laymen will inhibit soCial ac- ington saw~ astriking par~illel tion but added later this is a between the Churchs needs and risk wltirth taking

-those of thebiack ghetto Right now~ he observed - one of the mos~ urgent prob Society to Consider lems in the ghetto is that Of Sh fmiddot

community organization We 5 emnary I t arll learl1ing that pe~ple ri~t be CARTHAGENA CNC) _ The

cause they have beel- cut o~t ofSocieiy of the Precious Blood meaningful participation in so- ciety

In the ~hurch laymen have been cut out of this participa tion also They dont riot but they dont really concern them selves with the concerns of the Church unle~s thy ~ave t~i~ sense of partlclpatlcm he saId

New Resndemlce For US PIiDests

ROME (NC)-A new resident house for American priests working In the offices of the Roman Curia (the Churchs censhytral administrative offices) or on assignment in Rome for the US bishops has been opened to provide adequate economical lodgings and community surshyroundings

The residence called Villa Stritch after the late Samuel Cardinal Stritch of Chicago is composed of two apartment comshyplexes and is designed to meet the immediate needs of US priests already at work in Rome and to anticipate future housing needs as internationalization of the Roman Curia continues

In addition to American$ resshyident in Rome the villa is also expected to house priests on special assignments for the bishshyops in Rome bishops who come to Rome for work on var~ous

Church commissions or otherVatican offices or for such events as the synod of bishops and ma-Jor congresses In short it is hoped that the new villa wilL

will study the possibilities and implications of moving the or ders main theological school flOm St Charles Seminary here in Ohio to a university campus or urban center and of buildingmiddot an adequate program at St QJ1arles The Carthagena SChOt

has been the societys maJor seminary for over 100 years

Major superiors and middotelected delegates representing the soshycietys Cincinnati province voted to fOlm a committee to carry out the study during a provincial chapter meeting held at St Charles at which modernizing the training of candidates for the priesthood in the society Vas tqe chief subject of discussion

middotA report of the meeting in- dicated that the delegates were aware of trends in the Church 1-way from comparative isloationmiddot of seminary establishments to university campuses and urban centers

SPECIAL RATES FOR

Smiddot I O dcho0 utings an Picnics

of Catholic Bishops in St Louis last week An enormoUis amount of homework on position papers was approved ~

the Bishops NC Photo

I see the parish councils and their recognition of freedom asneceSsai-y to do this he added

Worth Risk They agreed they sha~e abull

feiling opound un~asin~ss _middotaboti~ these cOuncIls relatively new amQJ1g Cathol~cs pa~icula~lY their attitude t~ward SOCI~ issues

d Father Baroni sal he has ~

leery feeling about parishcouncils He declared there is

the danger that conservative

contribute to increased racial understanding and involvement

fur the people of the diOcese

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Parishes

Lyons author of th~ book middotParish Councils - Renewin the Parish Community said be

middotwas somewhat more optiniistici I donit think we are going to

solve these problems by 10~~1 at the dangers exclusively hie commented

Diocese to Discuss C~m~issi~n Rep~rt

LANSING (NC) - Catholics thoughout t~e Lansing diocese will participate in forums and home discussion groups 1as~ on the report of the National Acf visory Commission on Civil Disshyorders The program which begaa with public forums in six citie on April 29 was planned ~

middot three diocesanmiddot agencies-the Ofshyfice of Social and Community Service the Office of Renewal Through Vatican II and the adult education division of tne Education Department It was initiated in response to an appeal made by Bishop Alexshyander Zaleski The day following the death of Dr Martin Luther King Bishop Zaleski asked dishyocesan directors to plan an imshymediate program designed to

meetmg of heBIShops n erence WIt ISop e e~ros be a center of communi~y life CONTACT MANAGER - LINCOLN PARK of BrowI)svIlle Texas and fOtmiddotmer chancellor of the Fall for bishops arid priests with spe- 9996984 636-2744 ~iver Di~~~~lt __~gt -cilla~~gnrn~iitS~~o~~~ ~ Oc)QI~OC~)OQCIOC)oOOOCgtoc)OQltjIOcXllOOOCgtOC)oOC~)OIL)QOCgtOCPOoO

Page 6: 05.02.68

6 rm ANCHOR-Diocese ofJloR RiverThurbull May 2 1968 ( CafttMlCYBoya ~ ~ ~ middot12~middot _ bull~-~ ltshy

~ Tribute $tresses Value Shall We Talk Money or Concern Of~iaIW~

OceasiQnally the criticism is leuroveled against Ohurch leaders that they taik money too often

There may be some truth to this Perhaips what they should do is talk concern-the

eoncern that each person has or should have for his brothers and sisters in the family of God

Such a talk might well go like this Here is a child who is mentally retarded whose parents

have neither the ability nor the time to teach him about the things of earth or of heaven - spend several hours a day with him because he is your little brother in the Lord

Here is a person ravaged by an incurable sickness-middot take this person into your home and care for him until God calls him home because this sick person is your brother in the Lord

Here are a group of young adults entering into the world of the adult with apprehension and fears and anxieties -spend several hours a day with them to answer questions and to talk over problems and to suggest lines of conduct because they are your brothers and sisters in the LOrd

Here are some people who were good mothers and fathers~ and wonderful grandparents and now they are entering their senior years and their strength is failing

middot f hand they need carefuI and patIent care-care or t em because they belong to you they are your parents and grandparents they are your relativesand they are also your brothers and sisters in the Lord

Here isa young unmarried mother who needs guidance

and help here is a father whose wife has died and who has young middotchildren and no one to care for them here is an engaged couple seeking some basic principles about marshy

riage here is a married couple who feel a curtain of misshyunderstanding coming between them-all these are your

Your brothers and sisters in the Lord so you should take the time to educate yourselves about their problems take the time and make the effort to listen to them without watching the clock give them professional advice take them into your home for long-range care give hours of your time in

counselling them and following up their difficulties Do all this And then no one would have to talk money The conshy

eern would be there the services would be rendered the works of the Lord would be done And you would be doingthem

What you cannot do these things you havent the time or the skill yourselves

Well someone has to do these things And someone has to support those who dothe works of the Lord ~omeone

has to give them the means they need to work with theld d d hI I h bUl mg an the facIlitIes an t e too s to Imp ement t elr concern able distanceshave to be traveled thus relieving parent

IJLIf you cam~~t orWI11 not d0bullthe works th emse1V~S ~Jlen and child of straiilarid daily fatigue Inthis matter we Un ~ou ~nd WIll you dosomethInamp to ~~dthoseWho ~re are open to suggestion and will proceed only when and if workmg m your name for and WIth your brot~ersandtheideais approved The expansion of this field into two ~ee4 Government Aid

t th Lo d f l f God d hOO Citing poverty as an example 8IS ers me r rom ove 0 an neIg r or three urban areas awaiF~ alon~ assura~ce that the schools Msgr Higgins said Thisis what the Catholic Charities middotA~rme~ns be staffed by specI~nytramedsIstersaIded by competent ~There is much thatiildividshy

Either dO the workS of GOd yourselves ~helpthoseWho members of thelalty ual citizensmiddot and groups of citishy- are oing these w~1ks o~ meCy an4 cent1oation and eh~ritygtAnother ~bjectiveaboutwhich we seek advice is the zenscm domiddot to all~viate ~ _ and concern m your name c - problem but they cannot ~l~lt bull

L t t talk ih bet t lk d settmg up of a Home for the Aged ChrOnIcally-Ill on The tpe problem alone The gov~~ aaIcaetIosn aOnd yocmiddotatmImiddotomiddotonn~arnd geIVnIng of~se Jaf concern ~ Cape We have fQur tracts of land between Harwiehaitd middottmh~nt ~~~l hile to do much ~ mu bull bull an It IS domg at the present

Lets tak GOO and the goodcto bl done This ~FaJmouthI~settle~ ar~~~ WhIle l~ IS true~an~ nurslll~_tim~ and probably morethiuR mustbe done and in the nameOf God TakeGodfrommiddothomesare bemgbU11~weareconvlllced the~eIsroomfor an recent Adritinistration haj the word good middotandwhat is leftgtmiddot Just an 0 And this one sfuffed by religious women where the near presence proPQsed stands for nothing of a chapel and the stimulus of prayerful exercises would he p~nciple of subsi~ia~ properly understood does

It comes downto this do the work-s of G6dmiddotyourselves uplIftmiddot mmds and hearts However here agamwe would middotpro~ibit the government from to the degree that you can and support those who are like the benefit of your thinking meeting this pressing challenge doing the WOlks of God in your name [ Oli the contrary itobliges the

Our Youth faCIlItIes are constantly expandmg and Im- government to supplement the Now dges that gIVe ~ lIttle dlf1er~ntattItude ~waNLpr6VingFamilyproblemsmiddotnot always of an extremeserl necessarily limited programs at

the Appeal keepour Welfare Family Life and social workers busy In oluntary oIganizfltions il) the ~ f~eld of SOclal welfare ancl ~

--------------~---- -oo

rheANCHOR frICr~L NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALLPVER Published weeklyby The Catllolic Press of the Diocese of Fall River

410 Highland Avenue Fall River Moss 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Rt R~v DanielF Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

CM~I-A~amplU ~~ Ar=t=es App~al ~tlkI1vlhbl ~1llJ1WI If II

Continued from Page Three

Our immediate plans for expansion are bigger than any attempted before There are two important commitments The accommodations at Catholic Memorial Home are to increase through the construction of an addition to the

Nursing Wing This is done with a view to provide for married couples and for such others as could benefit in spirit by being closer to rehabilitation facilities and proshyfessional care

A second objective and it involves a great deal is to modernize our homes for children St Marys New Bedford and St Vincents in Fall River date back a long time Both are iJil constant need of repair But money spent on them is practically wasted So we are about to erect a new St Vincents designed according to the best of modern ideas and for accommodation of 120 boys and girls up to the middle-teen years

1 dFor the menta ly retar ed we would like to provide ht M d th h F d h dovermg care on ays roug rl ay were consl er-

WASHINGTON (NO) _ There is no profession other than social work whieli keeps its fingea- so middotoonting ously and sensitively on tile pulse of human misery notr which is more rewarding in tbaspiritual enrichment of th~ who labor to alleviate the sui

fering of their fellow man The tribute to thesocial worJr

profession was given at the 50tJa anniversary convocation of the Catholic Universitys NationalCatholic School of Social Service by Patrick Cardiilld OBoyle of Washington

In paying the tribute Cardinal OBoyle a graduate of the New

York School of Social Servicewho had a long social work eashyreer before becoming archbishshyop confessed to the gathering that he is still a welfare workshyer at heart

Founded in 1918 The convocation was the higba

light of a weekend celebratiolll of the schools anniversary The present school developed from the Service School opened by the National Catholic Welfare Conference in 1918 to trailamp women for social workwitb American military personneland their families andfor-reshylief and rehabilitation at hOmci and abroad

The National Catholic School of Social Service was foundedin 1921 and NCWC entrusted responsibility for it to the Na- tionat Council of Catholic Women In 1947 this school was m~rged with the Catholic UMshyversity School of Social work the unified school retaining the name National Catholic Schooi of Social Service

Among seminar speakers was Msgr George G Higgins diree- tor social action departmentU S catholic Conference who stressed that although Catholics have justifiably prided OUllshy

selves on having helped to keep alive the notion of subsidiaIi~in social and economic life the7

must be equally alive -- importance and indispensabiUw of far reaching governmentalaction in the social and economorder

all fIelds we are blessed by havmg donated serVIces~ For cial reform this we are d~eply grateful since it allows us to visualize with confidence projects such as the ones Jisted above Publisher to Head

Beginning then next Su~day our volunteer wqrkers Historical Socmiddotiety will make their round of calls tothe homes and offices of all to whom we turJifor support Our record in the past

t h b f d th tSIX een years as een one 0 more an more en USIas IC response from the business community as well as the individshyual donor Apart from the satisfaction of seeing their dollar well spent all who have aided our appeal are beneficiaries of the diocese remembered most certainly in my prayers and masses as well as those ministering to heeds and being helped by the thirty separate social charitable activities that we have Everyone is happy over what has been done But a great many who need to be helped are hopefully watchshying the results of the 1968 campaign and I am among tllem

NEW YORK (NC)-Victor ~ Ridder publisher of New Yorlnl archdiocesan newspaper TIleCatholic News has been elected president of the United States Catholic Historical Society

The societys main purposes are discussonand pUbl~catiODof documents books and papers relating to the history of toe Catholic Church and the deveJ opment of Catholic culture IIIAmerica The society has pub-lished some 50 volumes sinc its founding in 1884

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r~pe s_ ~(l (Jlj(~ntucky MountaiTJ Missions t4~ecl ~dOlll f

~f Vocatio~s1 DescriiJes 4ppalacll_ia sPoverty VATICAN CITY (NC) By Dorothy Mitch~n Eastman

Pope Paul VI stressed the Appa~achiaie a powerful word The ve~ name evokes visions of rugged mountain Churchs need fOT priestlyand Religious vocations and life isolation poverty misery and despair In this vast area that encltYmpasses 11 states 1fhe freedom ~hat should charac- live 16 mi11~on of the most poverty-striken people in the Uni1Jed States In every category terize such vocations in a mes- of hUmampn activity Appalachia has fewer of the good things of life than d~s the rest C3ge addressed to the faithful of f America Nowhere in this The latest accomplishment of Gte world on the fifth World nat~on do people h~ve less CAP Inc is the completion of Blny of Prayer for Vocations iYWOme 00 live in poorer II Grade A dairy farming com-

The need the Pope said stems Grom the plan of salvation in the housing nOwhere do they pleL mind of God who wanted have rewer educational oppor- Special schools are set up~rist to be the sole S)urce of tunities or suffer from such Il during the Summer months to

ed al th d teach religion We had six ofGl1vation and of sanctity and 1acit 0 m lC care as ey 0 pho wanteOl His mission to be in Appalachia nowhere in all these Bible schools going last

ld h d Ch Summer Father Beiting saiderpetuated and sPread through we wor as organIze rIS-I ti t d f dh ts Over 350 children have been ~n men partakers in the am y oun so ew a eren A I h included in this program Eighty17liesthood of Christ indispen- us In ppa at lao lmiddotmiddotmiddotll

e Eastern K~ntuc area h middotilmiddot~ per cent of them have been non-Bable ministers of the word and u ~ nt 1

A _1 h h th d b d Catholicsof grace among the rest of man- 9pac la as e U 10US lS-IIdnd tindion of being the poorest of CeJlwllS foil Rellilgilll)n

This need arlslng from the the poor in all CIf th1lSe cate- A8 a follow up to the Bible nature of the Church is DOW glt)ries ~ -schools the parish has organized more acute the Pope continued Four of the poorest counties three centers fur year round OOoause the numbers of the of Eastern Kentucky comprise religious instruction ministers of the Gospel are dim- the parish of Father Ralph Bei- We have a very active bome luishing while the fields open ting He has a parish roughly visitation programFather said tD their work are increasing tile siire of the state of Rhode and this year we will visit be-

The Second Vatican Councils Island tween three and four thousand IMghlighting of the priesthood On his first speaking tour in homes of the faithful the Pope said New England the tall rugged Each year about 2000 people should not lead to a dimming looking priest came to Bishop give from a few days to a few of the ministerinl or hierarchi- Casidy High School in Taun- weeks of their spare time school eal priesthood bull bull bull In fact the ton to talk to the student lxgtdY breaks or vacations to work at more the common priesthood is and the senior class from Coyle one of the four centers Father to be improved the more it has High School has eStablished in his parish Deed of the ministry of the hier- The priests five day tour m- Priests nuns college students arehical priesthood and the eluded addresses at Harvard whltlle families go down to the more the function entrusted to University Regis College Holy area from all over the country tIhe latter manifests its abso- Cross College and Newton Col- to work for the Appalachian lute necessity lege Gf the Sacred Heart as poor

N ---OO- for S I weJn as a TV appearance on One of Charlie Kings inOO has ~ a VBuOD Bob Kenneds Contact show shy P lid d th t been to find useful work for

ampUe ope a e at ODe B~ktAD Aidshya _ f th Ch h d all these volunteers as carpenshy-=gt ales 0 e urc an so Aocompanying Father Beiting ters nurses farmers cooks el the Christian salvation of the - e tour was a lookingld t be ~-d be- -- 6 teaching Bible classes or coun-WOT canno JU6~ as and personable young man from ded ch ri ti h FATHER BElTING seling at the children scamps --amp vun on a sma c p e- Brockton twenty year old Char- Every Sunday of the year DOmena or movements which Be King Charlie has interrupted From the inception of hi8themselves need the ministry rather Beiting and two other -d approval of the hierarchical lWloollege days lit John Carroll pastorate Father Beiting has car- priests drive over 200 miles to Driesthood University to work with Father ried on a dual apostolate As say Masses for 1~heir parishioners

The priesthoods authority Belting as a full time lay vol- well as tending to the needs of in homes in the three churches Mel the priests sacramental unteereaming the grand sum crl of the 45000 who live within af the parish in a candy store

a dollar a day the boundaries of his parish be and a pavillion power1 b to fo Charlie -_ hi h worK-- on everenew the bloodless reflected lito ti as 1 every Non-Catholic attendance at the tie e ra on are necessary l wo~ in Appalachi has con- th li ht _ C Improve e econOmiC p g Masses is often three times as IoU hurch and the salvation of -ced hlm that his vocatlhn th A I h F--d Vlll ~ e ppa ac Ian poor rom greatmiddotmiddotas the native Catholic at shynki d hIDa n e lHU bull I er ea-ng hiS deCNgte~ in the- dist b tion 0 f f d and I thmg tendence in countries As dditi in ~ n u 00 c 0 these

an a ona reason 41- -l~ltIno work omong the poor - -d Co g 10 al~ th ed I ti ~ w ~ G middotressmg n ress n where only one personmiddotin everyOU

_ng e ne or voca ons ~ think its true that we will tt F th h ht Ole Pope cited the secularization n what Eug~ne McCarlh COmml ees a er as song 1000 is Catholic

~ ~ or to attack the poverty of Eastern ~ the modern w9rldwhJch has CaDs QmoraJ revoiution to solve Kentteky with every means Summer Missions

a greater need ~r a conse-middot the Poverty crisis m this cOOn-avaiiable Formiddotfive weeJ~8 everymiddotSummer ~t~an~eciaf~thZed preseten~e tij- be said New Project Father Belting and a team of ~ewltUus 0 ~ mys neB ~ pilther Beiting haSbeen -WOrk As his familiarity with the priests seminari~ and ~y ~ Go~ ~L Cor 4 1) jWg hi Eastern Kentucky since areaincreased and the extent of people go through the countryshy

Wllhngll1ess to Sacrifice [OOa when he was assignedamp workmiddot to be done became more middotside ona streetpreaching misshy ~ ~ addi~on to the need for mission parish under the aus- and more pressing the need for sion Reception is not always WOCations the Pope in his mes- pices of the Diocese of Coving- a permanent solution to eco-middot cordial in this section where ~ stressW freedom of voca-middot ton~ Besides his 1000 square nomie ills became evident In prejudice against Catholics runs fions by which he said he mile parish he bas middotthe respon~ mlilw~rto this need in the Sum- high Father and his preachers meant personal IU1Q voluntary sibility of all 25 counties in mer of 1965 Father Beiting have at times h~ to proclaim ehlation to the cause of Christmiddot Eastern Kentucky through his founded the Christian Appala- the good news of Christs messhyIInd of His Church position as Deail of Kentucky ehian Project Inc an independ- B1ge ~f broth~rhood and middotconshy

There cannot be any voca- Mountain Missions In this posi- ent ~on-Igtrofit organization cern a~id ca~ca~ and hurled aons he said unless they are tion Father directS all the mis- working to develop the economic tomatoes ~ unless in other words they siooory and soCial endeavorS of resources of the region to the The Word is not falling OD

00e offered spontaneously of t1-e Church in this the most advantage of the middotpoor Now in entirely stony ground even in themselves conscr~usly gener- ~pera1e povenymiddot area of its fourth y~ar of setvi~ in ~ -an a~eamiddot wpell~ for genera-tions Ciusly totally America Jackson COUl)t~ the CAP Inc Catholics have been thougbt to ~ This hesa1d applieS Doth to Per capita income in these lias carried out numerous devel- I be mleagiie witb the devil The ~stly and Religious vocati6ns eotJnties avera~es bet~~~rt ~50 ClPmental training and employ- parish is currently instructing male and female vocations ana $840 a year Nearly nine ou~ plent programs Among these 25 people in themiddot faith

Willingness to sacrifice the M every 10 houses is lIubstand ate tlie lntroduction and pro- The expenses of our proshy Pope went on is the cru of the atil lacliing electricity running duction of- sevetal itlew crops gram are enormous Father middot~bleril The world of religion water or inside faciliti~ Tl1ere in themiddot count4ls agricult~ral sighed and theyre financed

discredited by atheism or hedon- ~ no higher per cent of illiter- economy and many technical entirely by contributions On lEm he said is no longer as at- atePeople in the UnIted SUites innovations iIi the agricUltural his speaking tour Father is ~~tive as it OJlC~ was _ thml in Eastern Kentucky Med- field searching for individuals or

Bul youth he said is stillre- ieal facilities ale few and far Complementing the agrjcul- groupswhowill sponsor one of eeptive to the call of the Church between tural prOjects several small in- the 25 full time volunteers like to do difficult things heroic We need doctors desperately dustrialptograms serve to train Charlie King (~t a OOstof $30 a Cbings Father Beiting said sadly and employ natives of the month) Olrmiddottomiddot pledge contribushyThe Pope urged families to be Sickness Leads to Apathy county The woodworking fac- tions for any item on his list -tiling to make the sacrifices of Malnutrition takes Its toll in tOry turns out high quality Ap- of immediate needs - items bull son or daughter to the Church many ways The mountain pal~hian woodcrafts ranging ranging from tires for their

people have often been carica from knick-kneeks to Appala- much used cars to a Holstein turedas lazy but Wldernourish- - chian musical instruments ~ for the dLiry farm

Two in One merrt and sickness are the real Seasonal employment is pro- In concluding his talk to the BERLIN (NC) - The World eauses of their apathy Most of vided through the production of students at Cassidy Father asked

Congress of Catholic Youth these people have middotbeen sick Christmas wreaths Plans are if they would like his address lIePresenting the International since the day they were born ~ on the drawing board for a pal- 01 on second thought he

Catholic Youth Federation and Father asserted letmaking industry and assorted qUIPPed would you rather have the World Federation of Cathoshy Theyre gooCl people-won- enterprises that will employ Charlies lie Young Women and Girls deriul people he insisted Its over 100 men in the county For those who would like have voted to merge the two a shame There should be many which has one of the highest Fathers it Is St Williams erganizations to form the World more people working to help unemployment statistics in the Church 224 rexington Street

tibem nation Lancaster KentuclqWederation of Catholic Youth

THE ANCHORshy 7 Thursday May-2 l968

Crisis in Poland Affects Church

BERLIN (NC)-The Catholic Ohurch and Catholic members of Polands Sejm (parliament) have been caught in the crossshyfire of the current political crisis in that country and the resurgence of anti-Semitism that has a~companied it

For the first time the Church has bean publicly attacked for its support on the students demshyonstrations in March fur intelshylectual and democratic freeshydoms

Jozef Kepa first secretary of the Warsaw Communist party committee in m speech released (April HI) backed party chief Wladyslaw Gomulkas efforts to tone down the anti-Jewish stateshyments that have been rampant in the press on television and in public speeches but had hard words for the Catholic hiershyarchy

Target of Kepas criticisms was Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski of Warsaw who praised the stushydents iOr their maturity and moderation

The voice of the reactionary party of the Church hierarchy had been heard Kepa said among forces united against the peoples power He condemned the support given by Polish Roman Catholic leaders to the student demonstrations

Meanwhile in the Sejm the five Catholic members known as the Znak group were assailed by Premier Jozef Cyrankiewicz aid Politburo member Zenonmiddot Klisko because the Cathltllic legshyislators had asked the governshyment if it approved of a violashytion of civil rights by police acshytion against the demonstrating students Kliszko called the Catholic deputies friends of pro-Israel Jews and revisionshyists

Future Bright ROME (NC) -The religious

liberty situation in Czechosiovshyakia has already changed greatly

for Catholics and hopes for th~

future middotseem bright according to Bishop Frantisek Tomesek a p 0 s t ltl) 1 i e administrator of Prague

GERALD E McNALLY Construction Co Inc

454 MAIN STREET SOMERSET MASS

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mEPHONE- 675-7992

YOUI H

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IDEAL LAUNDRY 373 New Boston Road

Fan River 678-5677

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FoR River-Thurs May 2 t9688 Urges Vctory ~ VietnomRecipes Re1call Memor~es ST lOUIS (NC)-A oan fbft Victory in Wetnam and a coo-gt demnation of Communism ltBOf Many Friendly Coks intrinsleany evil highlighteltl a series of IOresolutions adoptedBy Mary Enley Dally bIY the priests and bishops Belraquo ving on the Cardinal Mindszen~II A collection of cookbooks 16 a good addition to a kitchen Council governing board ~

Like a dictionary or an encyclopedia a good cookbook is the anti-communist CaJdina$ 8Il authoritative source of information but like that dictionshy lIlindszenty F~undation

ary or encyclopedia irts a cold impersonal font of lrnow- The resolutions adopted a1l the end of the foundations threegt

ledge On the other hand backs cf enveloPes on a blank day celebration of its 10th anni-o there probably is 8Jt your check on the inside of a match versary he1e outlined a p~ Muse certainly ~ ours folde around the margin of a gram based on demands for vioo those h~nd-gasthered recipes seven cents off coupon-whatshy tory in Vietnam rigorous pun-o dear and welcome as letters from ever blank Paper is to be found ishment flaquo riote16 and looters bome These receipes fur goodies in a- womans purse But they and ltm e Fecognition 1baII )lou have been represent communication ~ith there can be no useful ~ served at hoones other people OIl a common logue wiIth men of iN win of friends the ground masters of ~ceit band - written In the never-never land of Released with the resoluti01d ones on yel- things to be done remains the was a stmement from Lola Beue lowing cracked sorting and clasSification of Holmes a Negro leader whO paper in spidery these recipes type them out on joined the Communist party 1ft ecript by hands inde~ cards file neatly divided 1957 as an -informer for the long stilled the into soups salads desserts Federal Bureau of Investi~ti~ ones you took etc (FBI) Emphasizing the comJiNshy~er the tele- And yet though order may be Dist role in civil rights aotiw Phone haH ill heavens first lawthere is someshy ties Miss Holmes told conte shyIlhorthand the thing-quite a something---to be ence delegates othe half in said for our box of recipes In Much of the civil t1rrnlGII ebbreviations the this-sounds- anticipatwn of company coming youre seeing right now was 8Iloo 8OOd kind you jagged out of or just a yen to fix something nmged by the Communist p~ the evening paper with a bobby different we leaf tbrough the when I was a member pin meant to try and probably assorted sizes and shapes of our didnt miscellany M brings reminis-

Also there are the puzzlers cences nostalgia and more Conege Functioning shybow-tos from experts who cook often than not_ an idea of someshyby in9tinet--a handful of flour thing entirely different from the Despite Resignations or SCl just enough so that it item we were originally seek- River mark 50th anniversary In wheelchair Miss Mary R LADYSMITH (NC) - Ibl looks right or enough milk so ing acting president of Mount SeDshy

Dailey organizer and charmiddotter member of Fall River unitario College Sister DonnaItll smooth but not too runny For instance 1Ibere Is fIbe standing from left Mrs Mary Hennessey ticket chainnan Marie Rudolph said the Wis-- Pantry Library cookie recipe in the delicate for anniversary observ-ance Mrs Catherine Lee sUite re- consin college is functioningSuch is the collection-if tbis script of our late beloved neighshy

-bor Mrs Madeline Kelly with gent Rev James Morse chapiain Miss Mary F Maleadynormally after the recent resiglag-tag box of this-and-that its addendum Patsy you might ~n+- srtate regentmiddot Mrs Mary Lou Silvia general chairman nation of founder-president Si9shycould be called a collection-at pao ter Ann Mary Gullan eigbIJour house in the pantry li- like to make these as a surprise for observance faculty members and three acJfur your mother (Patsy wes brary tihen 12 years old) ministration personnel

A trained librarian indeed a Sister Donna Marie said thetrained anybody in the artmiddot of T-heres Marguerite Culhanell veal-in-wine we begged from former president resigned imshy

orderly classification even a he after having this at her mediately but the resignatioJUl well-trained cook woulq be house Isabel Donohoes trick of of the other members of -therwORL~ appalled at this motley array sprinkling chicken with vinegar e~BYMAllULYN RODERICK~ eollege are not effective until Some recipes are written on the to firm it up resulting in chicken June 1 She said the college is

salad par excellence many a recruiting faculty members at kindly with FRENCH FLAIR this time and does not anticioopet reciPe shared

lIS by readers of this column pate any difficultay in acquw One Pork Chop rve always read and heard Another tip fur Summer visi shy ing replacements by the Fall

term that French women have a flair tors to this home of the 1968 Also tbere is one addedre- for clothes but I never realized Man And His World is to The resignations were based

eently by a nameless friend we the truth of this statement until plan on wearing bright little on a dispute over the role to be met when she came to a collec- I visited Montreal Immediately dresses and suits but please no played at the college by the _tion center to get food for her it hits you from the moment bermudas or tight slacks Do newly appointed lay vice-pres-shyfamily afteT her home hadbeen you step out of -your car in however take your hemlines up ident Granmiddott E Zachary

GOLDEN JUBILEE Daughters of Isabella in Fall

partially burned out quring the front of tbe hotel that this is a an inch or two for the minilook recent rioting Many many city of women is the tbing in this land of the Catholic parishes had contiib- who know and mounties and I think I had the uted food ~d clothing Any who care about longest hemlines in town with number cf men and women dressing Minishy them just above my knees (-at came to deliver the donated skirts are evshy least they felt that way)supplies and remained to work erywhere but Ourls have taken over this sorting clothi~ packaging sup- miniskirts worn town and they look so delightfulplies for families of two four with style and that I couldnt resist visiting the and on up chicness colOl talented hair stylist in the hotel

Back to the newest recipe abounds bright and having my hair cut and~ This woman had been given a pinks v i vi d curled a Ie 68 For evening bag of mushrooms by a friendly 0 ran g e s and these curls (with the aid of falls grocer on her block If I could citrus yellows and hairpieces of course) cascade have a pork chop-just one pork f rillsan d down the neckline giving these chop she said I could fix flounces float forth and a walk I Canadian women a fragile fem- my familys favorite dinner down a street is like watching inine appearance that is hard to

One pork chop for a family an everchanging fashion show compete with In fact if you of four We couldnt believe it What astonished me as much feel like getting an inferiority until we tried it at our house as the sense of style that pershy complex about your looks this and were asked for a repeat vades the city was the aura cf is the place to go I guarantee performance Heres how good g-rooming Nowhere do you when you return youll want

Use large-capped mushrooms see a sloppy woman no one is new hair style a new sense of Fry the pork chop cool Be- seen walking the streets with make-up and a oomplete new

wardrobe shymove meat and grind it Add curlers in their hair or runs in seasoned bread crumbs and a - their stockings Obviously the bit of grated onion both sauteed - women ~ Morit~eal are con- in melted margarine or fat from cerned WIth theIr appearance

J UBI L A R I AN Sister - the chop Pile on top of in- and work hard to keep it up Color Process verted mushroom capS Make a - One thing in their favor is the

Mary Marciann of the Feli- er~am ~uee (dried or canned price 01 the clothes One can cian Sisters marked her sil- nulk Wl~ do) into which you - pick up a lovely summer dress Booklets vel jubilee of reJi~iou8 pro- have added ithe chopped and fur about twenty-two dollars ill fession at St Stanislaus sauteed mushroom stems ~our Cenadian money or a smashing-shy

0 a SYSTEMATIC55001( ear SAVINGS

MONTHLY DEPOSITS

5 00 01 amiddot INVESTMENT bull 10 year SAVINGS

NOTICE ACCOUNTS a REGULAR450 year SAVINGS

Bass River Savings Bank

Bank By Mail We Pay The Postage

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA

bull SOUTH YARMOUTH bull HYANNIS bull DENNIS PORT - bull OSTfRVlllpound

Year Books

Brochures

Convent Fall River on Sun- sauce into bottom of a shallow - slack sUit for around thirty-middot pan top withthe stufted mush- eight High fashion for a small AmericCin Pr~s~ Inc

oay~ Observance ~p~luded a rooms ~bake until tender price seems to be the motto of ~ Mass of thanksgIvmg cele- 20-30 nunutes the little boutiques tbatmiddot are OFFSET PRII~ITERS~~ LEnERPRESS

brated by Rev Itobert S So now into our heterogene-- ~ound everywhere and if youre Kaszynski StS~nslau8uscollection J0~ this ~ded middotplannin~ a tri~ to this SOPhis~- 1-~7JOFFI~ VENUE hone 997~942t pastor and a -reception for lte~ - communIcation agam - eate~ CIty thiS Summer don t~

- _ remJnder of someone -who was outfit YOU16elf before You go - friepds m the parochial -willillg to share her houSewife -- save a few pennies fur some

school -haU- _ lmowhow delightful buys up there

New Bedford Mass

~

9 New Insecticide Promises To End Dangmiddoter of Sprays

By Joseph and Manlyn Roderick

I doni lmow how other prdeners fared over the Winter but my roses were hit pretty hard Most of my pruning is done now and very ~itble remains of 1ast years IIOwth Luckily the roses surrived wt ground level but I Gidnt have much of a job a~ h Nader knew which ones the~ldmg w at to prune Slnce children would enjoy the hours most of what I could see ihey were open and how much ve the root crown is dead they cost

This year I am going to try bull We found our hotel through stematic approach to ridding this tiny book that described it IDY plants of insects rather than in glowing tenns and it tlllmed IPr~ying simply their upper sur- out to be all that the autho18 IIaces A systematic insecticide had said and then some II taken in through a plants Dining SJl)Ob fIlIOots and passes through its sya- However every bit as imporshytern The one I purchased is in taut as our place oli lodging was granular form and contains a the places where we dined and fertilizer A measured amount Mr Frommer and Mr Godwin III Spread around the base of the couldnt have given us better mose bush worked into the sou tips on dining if they had been ifhen given a thorough watering with us personally One evening The roots then absorb the fer- Joe and I (thanks to 11 kindshytilizer and insecticide and sup- hearted Nana) ate alone at a lit shyposedly keep the plant free from tIe bit of Portugal transplanted IIU chewing and sucking insects to this continent called the k six weeks Fado ComP1ete with melanshy

SLfer~ Quicker moly guitars and Spanish-Por-I would be parUcularly grate- tuguese cooking it was a delight

ful ii the systamic program to the eye ear and palate worked beacuse it would elim- Equally as good though were Snate spraying No matter how inexpensive luncheon places cautious one is there is alwaYs suchlS A La Crepe Bretonne Gte possibility that children win and the Pam Pam The former

I th th has an upstairs constructed Uld eome in contact WI e spray 1_ at d lik te hi dend harm themselves ~r e e a pIra span

Aside from the safety factor 8 bill of fare thart ~onsists of this method Js also much quicker ~late-SI~ paper-thin crepes llIld easier ttuui spraying No filled WIth any of 81 different messy spray cans and no lost fillings One cOld spend a energy in pumping and unblock- whole afternoon Just watchi~g Ing nozzles just a third of a tJeCOOks cr~ating these deli shycmpful of an odorless material ClOUS concoctIOns but Montreal applied around a plant every six hol~ so many wonders that one weeks with no danger that it ham t time to linger over any will rain ~e day after you one thIng

ra ed and wash off the ra The Pam Pam too was a 8P t y 1 sP Y charmIng IneXpenSIve restaurant ala erla fo f 1 H g d

I am more than willing to try I a anu y un anan In ecor IIOmething new but being a pes- and dIshes It featured flourless simist at heart I cannot conceive cakes Both my mother and I had of something which is so easy some for desse~ but before I actually working Lurking An could ask the w81tre~s what they the back of JDy mind is the feel- did make them WIth if ~ey mg that someone devised a omi~~d flo~r Jason wa~ dIPPIng method of satisfying lazy gar- his hands In ~veryones plates ampmers that the were doing and I thought It best to pay our

y bill and departoomethmg about theIr roses to try without having to go to

B tt J d I f lt th t h t 0 oean e a a

m h t bl rt f a s garuc rou e so 0 upill forroses We will give it Il

we s~mpled of thIS cosmopolItan_ b t ti d -cy was u an appe zer an

try though and hope that the that we would like to ret~m RSults live up to the message ag81~ for an entree-but WIthshy

out a two year older on the label of the product Now that were all back in a

lJm the llUtchem routine at least until Summer l have come to the conclusion vacation heres a tasty little

tfhat any family that attempts vegetable recipe to add interest to take a vacation trip with a ta everyday menus toddler has to be either courageshy lEGGS l1lgtJIVAN eurolUS or stupid and Im afraid we (Il) I dIE)tfull into the latter category eVl eggs When our plans to visit Wash- G hard-cooked eg~s lngton over the Spring vacation 1 2~ oz can deVIled ham failed because it was impossible teaspoon Worcestershire to obtain reservations (evishy sauce dently everyone else in the U S teaspoon grated onion bad the same plans only sooner Ik teaspoon salt titan we did) we set our sights yenteaspoon dmiddotry mustard aorthwaTd Montreal was our Dash pepper go~l and with our terrible two Z Tablespoons cream or milk in tow along with some genial (Broccoli and Saaee) smndparents and two young 1 pkg frozen or 1 bunch fresh ladies of seven and nine we set broccoli Iotth ona rainy Mond~ momshy Im Tablespoons butter or Ing margarine

Fortunately I had come with 1~ Tablespoons flour -e a pocket book guide of Montshy ~ teaspoon dry mustard Ileal andQuebec written by Arshy teaspoon salt thU1 Frommer and John God- Dash pepper win in ~peration with ttIe cup milk Bank of Nova SCOtia n was Jk cup grated sharp cheese absolutely priceless The 8Ushy 1) Prepare the deviled eggs thorS described in expllcit detai by cutting I( inch slice from one botel motel and rooming house end of shelled egg remove yolk eccQmmodations different types and mash yolks and end slices eftestaurants from ones where with the ham Worcestershire ~ can get eggs toast and cofshy oniorisalt mustard pepper and Iee-tor 65c io the elite gounnet cream mill well and then use laavens that lure 1be patrons flo fill hollows of egg whites with theIr haute cuisine and I) COOk broccoli as label dfshy~Hy the bighllghts of the city recls (if f~n) or in a small ampat tourist shbUldnt misa am9unt of wBtell Until tender ISald highUght were even catoeshymzed - tba JastantlJ tile

if yf

I) J I

EVERYBODYS GOTTA EAT Pfc~Charles Richards of Pittson Pa s-hares his C-ratio~~ w~th fatigue-hatted Httle Vietnamese boy in a villag~ near Saigon where Richards outfit the 1st Battalion 27th Infantry 25th Inshy

fan try Division was on a sweeping oPeration Jleoar the Vietnamese capital ~C Photo

We Like It Here Milwaukee Neighborhood Committee Works

To Prevent Panic Selling-MILWAUKEE (NC) - Some

strange signs are beginning to appear in the windows of homes around St Agnes parish on the citys North Side

Theyre being displayed by persons interested in stabilizing the area They call attention to a program that aims to reduce house turnover so that home and area values can be mainshytained

In the eyes of the organizers the prgram is designed to preshyvent panic selling

The signs read Were Not Moving to SUburbia-We Like It Here and This House Is NOT For Sale

Theyve been prepared by an

NUlises Cound~ Mee~

MOlY ]] at St Annes The Diocesan Council of Cathshy

olic Nurses will hold their Spring Plenary Meeting on Satshyurday May 11 at st Annes School of Nursing Fall River

The business meeting and election of officers scheduled for 4 oclock will be followed at 5 by an address by Rev Donald J Bowen assistant at St Marys Norton

Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament will be given at 630 and the banquet will follow at 715

Reservations must be made with Mrs Ann Fleming 228 Oak Grove Ave Fall River no later tlban Sunday May 5

melting the butter in a saucepan and stirring in flour mustard saltand pepper Remove from heat and stir in the milk Re- tum to heat and cook until

thickened stirring constantly Add the grated cheese and stir -tmtil smooth

In amiddot cassetrGle dish arrange gt

the cooked broccoli Stand the deviledmiddot eggs with stuffed ends

up between and on broccoli pieces Pour the sauce over aU-

area stabilization committee for distribution in homes in an area populated by about 40000 pershysons about one-third Negroes

The signs are one of the means by which we hope to dis~ourage unethical real estate salesmen according to Anshythony L Silva acting commitshy

middottee chairman and a member of St Agnes parish

Fear Tactics

He explained at rl~ent meetshyings that the program is not sponsored by a religious group Nor are the committee apshyproaching the problem on a color basis but 18ther as a matshyter of economics

Our aim is to restore confishydence in the area and countershyact unethical salesmen since they tend to operate on fear tactics said Silva

The immediate goal of the group is to make its efforts known to all residents of the area by establishing a network of block contacts

Persons who have expressed interest in the program represhysent St Agnes Roosevelt Drive Presbyterian Garden Homes Evangelical Lutheran Augusshytana Evangelical Lutheranmiddot Siloah Lutheran amI Elim Tabshyernacle churches

THE ANCHOR-Thursday May 2 1968 -------------=

Teaching Sisters To Get Raise

DALLAS (NC) - Bishop Thomas K Gorman of DallasshyFort Worth has approved a salshyary raise for Sisters teaching in parochial schools which was recommended by the diocesan board of education

In a letter to all pastors Bishshyop Gorman stated As of Sepshytember the base minimum salshyary for each Sister in regular service to the local parish will be $1500 per year

Enclosed with -the letter was an agreement signed by Bishop Gorman fM the signature of each pastor and the major supeshyrior of the religious order of Sisters serving his school

The agreement provides thllgtt the parish pay the stated base minimum salary to eac~ Sister provide a convent and its upshykeep along with utilities inshycluding a telephone an automoshybile and its maintenance and health insurance

Sister Caroleen of the Schooi Sisters of Notre Dame diocesan superintendent of schools said the increase in the minimUm base salary Is fbe first such since 1959 when it was set at

$960

Withdraw Missionaries From Angola Territory

NEW YORK (NC) - The United Church of Christ and the United Church of Canada are w~thdrawingthe majoritr of theIr missionaries from the Portuguese West African ter- ritory of Angola

Dr Alford Carleton execushytive vice-president of the United Churchs Board for World Ministries whose headshyquarters are hele said the acshytion was being taken because the Portuguese government is apparently seeking tomiddot extinshyguish Protestant missionary acshytivity in Angola

The two churches have withshydrawn all missionaries III total of 12 whose terms of service had already been extended for more than a year beyond the normal term The missionaries wiJI apply for readmission

Portuguese administrators have in the past given assurshyances that re-entry permits would be given but Dr Carleshyton said there have been inshystances of denials of re-entry permits to missionaries

BlUE R~ION

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992-6216

-ObtainsFreedo ForRefugees

MADRID (NC)--Amiddot group t1ti youth leaders who spent a nig~

middotin a church to avoid a I~est ~ police was released la~

through the help of Auxilia~ Bishop Angel Mortll Figuls ~ Madrid

The youths had taken refureg in the church of Our Lady ~ Montana in suburban MorataJaiJ after police raided a mccting bll a parish building which th0 youths said was a house of thQ people of God Q

The meeting which had b~

announced in the padsh tIbQ previous Sunday as a conferenltcO on Ohristian doctrine was SUib rounded by police on suspiciolQf that it was an illegal meetin~ of workers oommimiddotttees-inde-o pendent labor organizations Tb() police arrested a Catholic woramp ers leader Dannen Ruiz Abo-1 gado Juan Canet a lawyer a~ Father Juan Jose Maria Bltlllesashyteros as they left the meetin- The three were late releasecA

However middotthe Y9uths atten+shying the conference fled to ~

church to avoid arrest and ve mained there until BishOJll Morta arrived and obtainecll

their freedom after negotia~ with the police

10 ~H~ ANCHORshy )hursday May2 bull 19~8 (

- - bull )

Sup~me C~ult Qars Obscenity

For Youth WASHINGTON (NC)

For more than two years the Supreme Court has made it clear thatin the eyes of the law obscenitymiddot is a sometime thing its distribution ~o adults nearly impossible to regulate without endangering the Conshystitutions guarantees of free speech and opinion

But over the same two years the Court has indicated thai it might be possible to control the

availability of obscene books and films to the young and in

1967 it issued an op~n invitashycmiddotmiddot tion to the nations ~a~yers to find the right cases an4 the right arguments tot~stmiddotthis middotmiddotview _

This year the cases were found and the Supreme Court did what most observers thought it would do it permitted states and citiesto control distribution of obscene material to youngshylIJters - providect It drlws the lines finely and tightly

It returrled from amiddotJtwo-week recess to rule thatmiddotmiddot NeW York middot States law barring phsons un- Organization Starts ~er 17 from buying smut met ~ middotthe ~e~t~nd tpatrgtalIas1s middot~lm CLEANUP FatherDetm6d P McDermott of New Yorks lower East ~ide St Housingmiddot Program

elasslflcatlOn law undet whIchmiddotmiddotmiddot bull - bull WASHINGTON (NC) - ~1 bull

minors areprevented from see- BrIgId spansn pas8~s o~t pamt ~nd prusJ1e~ to sl1rpl1r~a~ volunteers who particIpated m Church-sponsored nonprofit 0IJ)00

lt ingsome movies didnot ih~ AprIl ZO ()peratJoA Cleanup It was estImated that 50000 urban people of all baek- ganization here haS launched II

middotThemiddotopinions shoUld go li-long grounds w~re joined in the WOllk by 5000 suburbanites in cleaning andpaintin~ aJong~ousing program Wider whiClli way toward clearing up a con- 46 Streets NC Photo It hopes to purchase 322 sl~ lrti-tutional atmosphefe which at homes rehabilitate them aDCil middottimes hasbeen no Clearer thanmiddot 0 000 p J resellmiddotthem to poor families DiP

the air around the Supreme middotMmiddotore ThanmiddotS1 middotinGmiddot reo CIt Day rOJe ect del federal financing Courts building on a Pilrticu- The organization-Urban Beshylarly still slmlne~ day 1ew YOk middotPrmiddotelamiddotte Heomiddotds lomiddotmiddotn~Sectmiddot omiddotmiddotrmiddot-amiddot n Effort habilitation Corp~will begiul

While the Court in an 8-1 de- 1lIIII 1lIIII the program with therehabi eision written by Justice Thur- tation of nine row houses whiob 000 Marshall-his first major ~ NEW YORK (NC)Jt- Wall z At the end of tbe da~ they ~teas of densest poverty ~Jl it will purchase from the ~ epiiiion-tlirewout the Dallal greatday for New York-one ~ Bat down togethermiddot at tables iyIanhatian andthe Bronx _ development Lanmiddotdmiddot Agen~ filmmiddot clasSification law because hard work oonstructiye dia- str~ng tile length of streets to Last SumJl1er in its thitd year Washi~gtonurban refewal tfwas unduly vague even there logueand happy celebration eat a meal of celebraHon pro- of successful operation the thorny agency The RIA apo K upheld the right of goer~- -Along 45 streets in the Man- vided and prepared by people ~rojec(wastlIreatenea b~ out- proved sale of the houses to ~

Jnen~ to prote~t the Y0llng 1~m hattan and Bronx ooroughs of the block 1gtreak of violence in East Har- group at a purchasemiddot price ~ ~slble bad mfluenc~ some 50000 Negroes Puerto Many in~olved said they felt lem $26100

Different Directions Ricans Italians Jews Slavs the most important aspect of the To counteract riot threats Purchase and rehabilitatiOll middotIt did so without p~ssing on Orit~nt~ls and eople~f otmiddothe whole projeot was not renova- Msgr Fox organized East Har- work which will be done bIT

themiddot meri~~or lackof merits nationalities were joined by middottion but relationship It gave lem peace processions For five Negro contractors and involVG of the film involved but hinted some 5000 guest volunteers _ an opportunity at a time middotof nghts more than 1000 old and young Negroes as apprentice6 middot111at had the law been suffi- from suburbia and other middle alienation and fear between YQung Puerto Ricans walked will be carried out under ~

eielitly explicit about what con- class areas black and white rich and poor through their streets with ban- $]37000 mortgage provided ~ stihites proper or improper con- They spent the day c1eani1g inner city and suburbia oung nersmiddot flowrs singing songs the International BrothelhooCl

duct the Dallas censors would renovating and decorating the and old for people to meet one carrying candles and standing of Electrical Workers and guall shy have had no trouble iicei1sing inner city streets and alleys another as persons in an at- up for peace hope and love anteed by the Federal Housins middotthe film buildings and residences 10- mosphere of work play and La~gely through their efforts Administration under its 221pound(

Instead thc Court said they gether the men women and accomplishment peace was restored to the area program were set adrift in a boundless children residents wOlked shoul- Its one way to make real sea and arrived at their con- der to shoulder with priests what Dr Martin Luther King elusion--that the film should be nuns laymen and women vol- envisioned when he said I Archbishop Greets shown to adults only - from unteers They cleaned back- have a dream as East Harlemshy DEBROSS OIL many different directions yalds and basements did car- ite Valentine Haddock described Armenian Patriarch ~uch a situation is wide open pen try work made plumbing all the people helping one anshy NEW YORK (NC) ~Archshy co

te abuses not the least of which repairs painted doors windows other to become not even just bishop Terence J Cooke ofNew would be a drift among film- and building facades friends-relatives York welcomed His Holiness Heating Oils makers toward the most innocu- At the end of each block a Peace Processing Vasken I Supreme PatIiarch ous and the totally inane The large and colorful mural was Cleaned out basements and andCatholicos of all Armenians and Burnersresult The vast wasteland that painted on a wall depicting the backyards on streets are to be at an ecumenical service in St some have described in refer- good things happening transformed later again by Patricks cathedral 365 NORTH FRONT STREET ence to another medium might street residents and guest vol- It marked the first time the

NEW BEDFORDbe a verdant paradise in com- Award Ecumenical unteers working in partnelship supreme spiritual leader of the parison into vest pocket parks basket- Armenian church had been reshy

But because the law was Theology Diploma ball courts little theaters reme- ceived in a Catholic cathedral in ivague said Marshall it does KAMPALA (NC)-A theolo- dial schools and teenage neigh- the United States JIlot follow that the Constitution gical diploma of the University borhood clubs requires absolute fleedom to of East Africa jointly recognized This non-sectarian project exhibit every motion picture of by the Catholic and Anglican was instituted by Msgr Robert every kind at all times and all Churches in East Africa has been J Fox New York archdiocesan places awarded for the first time coordinator for Spanish com-

The first four Uganda students munity action who four years to receive the diploma fare An- ago originated a creative comshy

Schedule Unveiling glicans munity action program Sum-The theological diploma repre- mer in the City now operatingOf Pope1s Statue sents an agreement between out of 26 store fronts in eight

FATIMA (NC) -A 12-footshy Catholics and Anglicans over the high statue of Pope P~lUl VI syllabus and subjects of the theshy

wili be unveiled Monday May ological course However such TRI CITY13 at the Marian shrine here on an agreement does not iriclude the first anniversaly of the any changes in doctrinal teach- BOILER REPAIR COJontiffl visit to the shril)e ing by the churches Each stu- SLAB BRIDGE ROAD Ihe st~tue depicts Pope Paul dent ~oJl~ws th~ course accold- ASSONET MASS 02702 i

- ~ri~ellngmiddot in prayc 1eiore ~ a~ ing to th~ doctrines middotof hismiddot remiddot Tel 644middot55~6 image of Our Lady of FaJimashy ~pectiYemiddotchurpoundh _ BOILERS RE-TUBED

bull ~ Ali tlhe~ middotmiddotbmiddoti~~psmiddot of P~rtugalI The churches alsoagreed tJ1at S EP A I are expected middotto attendmiddot the un themiddot ina in emphgtIS -Inmiddot th tli_e TUBE R teED

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11

II ~sAfL~CfiO Ik

Aid to 5t~

THE ANCHORshyThursday May 2 1968

Portland Prelote Stresses Crisis

In Education PORTLAND (NC) - Co- )0

adjutor Bishop PetermiddotL Ger- BATON ROUGE (N2)-Tho ety apostolic administrator Louisiana AFL-CIO app Dved tl

of the Portland diocese des- ~ resolution calling for s ~ supshycribed the grave and serious 1 bull port to children attendi 3 nonshycrisis in regard tQ finances and c middot~lmiddot ~ i public schools at its COil ~ntion personnel in the field of Cath- ~H 1 here oUc education at a press con- l~ The resolution endar d the ference here proposal that tuition supple-

While affirming the desira- ments for the teaching oj nOiF bility of Catholic education the religious subjects bc paid Maine bishop pointed to the toward the education of chill-gt serious problems in financing dren regardless of race creed and staffing a system of schools or religion in state alproved which aims at providing a Cath- non-public schools which me~ olic education for all children all the requirements of law whose parents desire it He Emile Comar executive ~ middotnoted both the rising costs of rector of the Louisiana reder2lshyeducation and the dlOp in voca- tion Citizens for EducHtionllll tions and in the number of Reli- Freedom said It is gmtifyin(l gious available for teaching that the state AFL-CIO in tho

Bishop Gerety n~ted During adopted resolution recognizecll the past ten rears six Catholic __ -_~scgtbull~- Jf the need of parents with ct~ schools in this state alld 11 dren in non-public schools

Catholic elementaly schools CARDINAL J~EGER IN AFRICA The retired ~rchbishop of Montreal Paul-Emile Tuitions continue to dse ant1 have closed their doors During Cardmal Leger who has dedicated his Iif e to work with the poor in Africa is continu- taxes are becoming increasingJy41 the same period we have scen II t th h fl k f d f higher and the combination eithe enrollment in our Catholic a y mee mg WI IS oc or ISCUSSIons 0 conditIons m the DIocese of Yaounde Cam- the two has placed a lremeiF schools decrease by 25 per cent eroun NC Photo dous financial burden on thill

middot~i~~~i~e~~~~~Ct~I~~O~Cmiddotard-nal Leger Works for Afmiddotr-ca Lepers -n~~nt of the states populashymg statements Tbe labor organizations resa-

Expand Quality lution noted The contributioJ)fl

The middotsystem be Seeks to Bring SpirituQI Material Aid which these schools havecannot ex- made panded beeause of staffing to the state have long been ree problems financi~l deuromands YAOUNDE (NC)-lt is said The fact that he left behipd COmmodate himself to the new ognized by the public and~middot

and theincreasing costs of pres- that when Paul Emile Cardinal one of the most important dJ- environment and to be ready public officials ent day education Leger former arehbishop of oceses in the world does not fig) to I work effeetivelr It added that the parents bl

Schools must be consoUdated Montreal arrived at the lepro- ure in their thinking but theymiddot The eardinal is already famil- these tuition supported schooJJ wherever hldicated for maxi- s~rium of Nianing in Senega appreciate the sacrifice that is iar with the specific plOblcms of have repeatedly demonstrateflJ mum use of the available Reli- last Dec IS the lepers looked involvedmiddot in leaving his nfltive the lepers villages He thinks their support of both public ani I gious persoJmel at their fingers to see if a mir- country and adapting to a Dew that they need good pharmacies non-public education to the

We mustmiddot concentrate on ex- acle was going to happen and environment and is concerned with CHing for benefit of all Louisiana eh~ cellence in the schools we have they were going w be instan- Cardinal Leger has put him- all types of sicknesses He sees dren Where this is not possible the taneously cured It was in fact self at the service of Archbishop a need for wells powelhouses bishop said the schools in- the first time that the lepers JeanZoa of Yaounde He is food suppliers and medicinesmiddot of Brotherhood Lackvolved will have to be closed had seen a cardinal learning one of the languages various kinds

We must greatly evpand the ri1l~ cardinal however through of Cameroun the one that is Menace to Peace~ Men Not Outcasts S(l()pe and quality of our reli- middotworks of chari1y has for a long most widely spoken in the reshy VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pe~gious education proglams reach- time been concerned withmiddot the middotgion He thinks that jcent wiJl What makes the cardinal parshy is still menaced by questions laquofing out to all age groups lepers M~~y of the houses in take two years for him lamp ale- tkularly admired is that he reshy

prestige and an insufficient senstlBishop Gerety announced the leprosanum here at Yaoul)de gards the lepers as men and not of human brotherhood PQ~that he is creating a task force have been built through his - as outcasts He knows that many Paul VI told thousands of isi~to study religious education gifts The same is tgtrue of sev- Pope Asks Respect lepers are severely mutilated tors gathered in St Pete

plograms in the diocese He eral leprosaria of the Ivory For Human Rights and Cfln no longer take their SQuare for a Sunday noon blesvshywill ask the group he said to Coast Dahomey and Camerouf place in society It is because of ingmake reco~mendations ~on- The cardinl i6 still in the VATICAN CITY (NC)--Jt is middotthis that he seeks to bring them

eerning how the limitedre- stage of making contacts in the vain to proclaim h~man rights material and spiritual aid Speaking from a window ovei shysources of the diocese can best three leprosaria here unless everythlllg IS done ~o He also gives thought to the looking the square Popc P~u1 be used to ploovide an effec- Cardinal Leger does not want ensure the duty of respecting prevention of the disease If cleclared We must support willi tive religious education for the to impose either his aid or him- them by all people everywhere leprosaria are well organized it our hopes that cause (of peace) total community of adults lind self on anyone He has said re- l1ld for all people Pope Paul will perhaps be possible to wage which so many desire and proshychildren peatedly that he does not want VI declared In a letter to the In- a campaign to eradicate the mote with a sense of impartiality

He said he will also ask for to be a burden and tl1at he ternational Conferenee on Hu- disease completey and justice with true love ofi reeommenltlations on the best wants to be regarded as a simple man Rights meeting in Tehran The cardinals realism aston- freedom and of respect for su1ishy

fering peoplesuse of the dioceses Religious priest Iran ishes many Africans who like personnel Disinterested Help The lettel signed by the Pope to live from day to day and who

~-------------bull That is why the Africans ad- was sent to Father Theodore do not like their customs to be mire him Moslems and Chris- Hesburgh CSC president of upset The cardinal understands tians agree that his is an exam- Notre Dame University and head that the Africans must be shoWn pIc of disinterested help that is of the papal delegation to the that aid is not directed at deshynot often seen in Africa ongress The meeting is being stroying their customs but at

held on the 20th anniversary of bringing them a better standard the United Natio)ls Declaration of living

Workers Charges of Human Rights and in conshyjunction with the International Reject CelibacyDenied in Germany Human Rights Year

ROERMOND (NC)-TwcllyshyBONN (NC)-Charges by the The papal letter dec111red one young Dutch priests havewomens branch of the Indian With all men of goodwill we told Bishop Petrus Moors ofYoung Christian Workers shall follow with great interest this Netherlands See that they(YCW) that living and working ~his conference in Tehran which can no longer accept the plicstlyconditions for Indian girls means to formulate and prepare a celibacy obligationtraining as nurses in West Gershy program of measures to be taken

many were unsatisfactory were on the prolongation of this Hushy denied here man Rights Year

The Rev Hubert Debatin Racial discrimination raises soProtestant minister who initi shy

many troubles social injustice F L COLLINS amp SONSated a program of nursing economic misery and ideologicaltraining for girls from Indias oppression so many revolts that INCORPORATED 1937Kerala state saId that the Indishyrecourse to violence as a meansan government had ordered an

investigation of the complaints to right these wrongs to human The Indian embassy here howshy dignity is a grave temptation ever refused to comment (The Development of Peoples)

Rev Mr Debatin said he visshyON CD HOARD Alexandshy Ited the embassy and told offi shy

er P Tureaud Sr chief cials that the charges wer~ completely false Despite thecounsel for the Louisiana no comment by the embassy

branch of the National Assoshy it is reliably repOrted that emshyciation for theAd~ancement bassy officials did visit several of Colorelti People tNAACP) hospitals and questioned Indian

girlS about th~ir living and beeame the first Negro elecshyworking conditions ted to the Catholic tJniver~ The niinist~r iJaidthe Indian

sity board of trustoos NC yew will be asked to WithdrawPhoto ~ alleamplatioNi~

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12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 2 1968

C~~e$ ~~Ergy Role in Sreg~Hrch F9f ~~ Crisis Sc~~tm(ln

By Msgr George G Higgins The bighop of a middle-siood eastern diocese recently

gnnounced at ceremonies memorializing Martin Luther King Jr that the diocese will spend a substantial portion of its annual Development Fund to improve the condition ef the Negro bullbullbull The money poslible that even those Cahoshyhe was at pains to empha- lies (and Protestants) who are size will not be gpent pater- most vigorously opposeq to

wilistically but in close 00- clerical involvement in social operation with local Negro and economic issues are nevershyleaders He said that his com- theless in fevor of using church mitffiimt wi 11 funds as seed money to develshylTeceiVe the op projects for the benefit of bacJcing of the the poor in general and for areas Catholics poor Negroes in partiCUlar I make tbisDisconcerting Fact ~ o m mit - I would hope of course that ment he as- this might prove to be the case aert1d confi- but only time will tell lIIent that our Meanwhile the fact that Catholic people such a high percentage of Cathshyshare this love olies and protestants are 00

-m Ii d concern record as being opposed to That the bishop the middotchurches getting involved felt it necessary in political and social issues is to make the latter statement for rather disconcerting to put it the record might lead one ~ as mil~ly as possible suspeet that in point of factmiddot be I say tliisas one who can symshyantiCfpated that some of hi$ pathizewith thoseCatholicsor Catholic people would object to Protestants or Jews who object his 0 decision and was mereIi to certain types of clerical inshyWying to neutralize their op~ volvement which either ignore mtion in advance or to put it the complexities of the political morecrudely was trying to ~rocess or tend to oversimplify beat them to the punc~ sO to the application of moral prinei-Bjpeak pIes to complex social and ecoshy

I Expert Opposition pomic problems or finally tend Be that as it may a recent to leave the impression that

ampallup Poll on the attitude of Clerics have a monopoly on the Cathdlics 3lld Protestants with regard to the involvement of their churches and their clergy in political and social issues would seem to suggest thatshylIIlless his diocese is the rare exceptl(~n that proves the rule -~he bIShop can exp~t a cershyiau~ amount of 0PPoSIb~)D from a slzable JIllnonty of his Cathshyooc people

lftY-Seven per cent of Cathshyclies res~ndmg m the Gallu~ survey said that the churcti~~ should not get involved with 35 per cent statmg that t~e d1~rch~~ sho~d express SOCIal enS pO~~Ical Vle~s

~gn Icantly l~ was found ~at more Catholics than Pro~-

Virtue of political prudence or have been granted ethical inshysights thatmiddot have been denied to other mortals

S~rious Obligation It is one thing however to

demand that clerics stay within the limits of their o~ compeshytence in the political order and quite another thing to try to muzzle them or to deny that they have any role at all to play in the field of public policy In the case of civil rights for exatitple they havemiddot a serious

Gbligation to teach the truth as they see it

To do so in any meaningful woay tlley must at times move beyond the realm of general

0Stants thmk ~hat the ~hurlt~esprinciples into the area of spe- should n~ get ~volved ~n soc~al and polItlcal Issues Fifty-~wo lPOerlledcefnt of the Protesta~ts P avored mvolvment whIle 42 ~er cent disagreed

Hadden Study Contrarirwise however a

mudy released during the same week in which middotthe Gallup findshymgs were made public found

ntat in all caSes Protestantsmiddot were more vigorous in their opshyposition to social action by clergymen thaI) either Roman Catholics or Jews

The latter study directed by ~effrey K Hadden a sociologist at Western Reserve University in Cleveland was summarized In ~onsiderabledetail by Edwaro R iFiske in an article entitled -Cl~rgy and Civil Rights in the editorial section of the Sunday Ap~il 21 issue of the New York linles

Since the Gallup and HadGen Alrveys dealt specifically with the right of the clergy and the ehurches to speak o~t on social and political issues (civil rights tor example) and not on the role of the churches in financing programs aimed at improving U1t ~ot of Negroes their findshyings do not necessarily m~ ofoou~E that the bishop referrect to a~ove will encounter oppe-

cifies~ even at the risk of a~tagshyonizing those Catholics who disshyagree ith them

This does not mean that clershyies or other representatives of official church bodies should shortcircuit the political procshyess by trying to force their own solutions on the body politic by means of heavy-handed authorshyitarian edicts

If they were to shirk this reshysponsibility or run awoay frOm this challenge for fear of antagshyonizing a minority (or for that matter eyen a majority) of their people they would be unshyworthy of their calling

-This having been said howshyever itshould be noted that clericS and other representatives of offlCiilI church bodies alSo

have an obllgation to keep their methods of teaching under conshystant review

Wo~ CUt Out We cannot automatically as-middot

Sume in other words that all of those who object to clerical involvement in political and soc~lissues are necessarily in

HEADS NCEA Bishop Raymond J 9allagher of Lafayette Ind was elected president general of the Natshyional Catholic Educational Association at the associa- tions 65th annual conven- tion in San Francisco NC Photo

Venerate Fatima Statue in Brazil

LISBON (NC)-Manuel Cardshyinal Goncalves Cerejeira patri- arch of Lisbon imd Bishop Joao Pereira Venancio of Leiria whose diocese includes the Marshyian shrine of Fatima returned here after participating in threeshyday ceremonies in Brazil honorshying Our Lady of Fatima

They t~ok the statue of the -Pilgrim Virgin of Fatima with them to Brazil

At Sao Paulo they took part in Portuguese - Brazilian Communshyity Day celebrations At Inhangshyabau and at Rio de Janei1G thousands joined them in ven- erating the statue

The patriarch and Bishop Venshy

ancio were accompanied in Brazil by the rector of the Fat-middot i m a shrine Msgr Antonio Borges

_ sitiOJifrom any slgnificantnuili middot te~ which they caiiunder- pany a mernber of the Jew-middot

ber ~f his people for usin~ cii- stand and absorb jish fAith has neen elected GCeSaIl f~nds for the economic -Ifthis sho~d prove to be the to in bOardof +-~ t- and~ ~OCIal bettel1nent 01 the case we have our work cut out ~ bull wu~ ~ W

Wack citizens of his communitlT ~r~ in the montha ftbat lie the CaU~hc VnlverampliyNe ~~ other words it is quite aheiid middotPboto

~ ~

bad faith It may be in the case of some

r of tb~m at le9st we are at fault TRUSTEE BenJamin T ~ in the sense that we havent Iearned how to communicate the Rome president of aWaah Go~l meSsage to them in i n g ton construction oom-

The Servant Queen IiJ the Constitution on the Church we find the testimony of

Sacred Scripture and the Church Fathers combined with more recent pronouncements by the popes Mary the Mother of God an4 of the Redeemer was united to Him by a close inen soluble bond and waS accorded a special role in the mystery Qf the middotIncamiddotrnate Word that is in the economy of salvation

Whenmiddot Mary uttered the words of her Fiat she made a ~l eommitment to God so that He could carry out His de- slgus in middothermiddot Mary never took back hell ad of total surrender Dot even on the road to CalvarY lFrom that firstmiddot moment she devoted herself wholly to serving DM only her heavenly Fashyther and the Incarnate Word but also the whole human race lin the llncarnation Our Blessed Mother first brought Christ to the world Anell that is precisely what she would have 70U do aUmiddot your life-bring Christ to the world

Ev~n after the AScenslon she loyally and steadfastly camiddotrried out~~r role aCting as spirit1lI mother to the beloved disciple anli ~~ ne~rn Cl1urch~ With good reason then we can say tha~~e wJole life of the Lords humble handtnaid~from the moment IIhewas porn to the present-is one of loVing seZvice to her cltildren what gzeater example and what ~tei model could y~ chqose to imitate in Oilder to fulfill your ta~k as a Christian called to~ove and -to serVe your poor 8iKl sUffering bro~ers arqupd the world

You must DOW take over Mars task~ You are the door through which Christ enters the world You muSt receive the Lon and bear Him in 70ur heart sO thaamp He rnA7 beeo~e the heartmiddot ofmiddot your life Then His love Jiis goodne~ Dis pity for the multitude middotwill shine through you into the world Then He will smile through your eyes Then He will help with your hanels Then He will comfort with your goodness Then He will relive in your pers~n His life of long ago for the sake of todayS desperate humanity

In this the month dedicated to the Mother of the church show your love for her by making her task your task by sacrificing to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith-to help those of her children who are in such need

SAlLVATioN and SERviCE lUe the work of The Soclet7 il~r ~~ Propagati~n of th~ Faith Please cut Gut this column llInd sen~ your of~ering to Right Reverend EdwardT OMeara Nationll-ll Director 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 Or directly to your local Diocesan Director BU Rev Msgr Raymond TConsid~e 3611 North Main Street Fall River Massachusetts e~7~omiddot

DAUGHTERS middotDf ST PAUL-combine a middotlife of prayer and action Bringers of the Gospel Messhysage to souls everywhere by means of personal contact Pauline Missionaries labor in 30 Nations Members witness to Christ in a unique missionshypropagation of the printed Word of God The Sisters write illustrate print and bind their own publications and diffuse them among people of all creeds races and cultures Young girls 14-23 interested in this vital Mission may write to

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13 New Jersey Grand Jury Absolves Police of Deaths During Rioftong

NEWARK (NC) - A special and charged it with lcHrity m Essex Cotmty grand jury inves- permitting some of lots material tigating the deaths of 28 people to i1all into private hands which during rioting in this city last misused il Summer absolved po1dce laquol Reporting on the deaths it blame iO the deatbs in a pre- found that three were not conshysentment which rebuked an nected with the rioting that anti-poverty agency for failure eight resulted from wounds inshyto cooperate willi law enforce- curred while participating in ment agencies criminal acts that nine of those

The presentment was issued killed were apparently innocent after the jury had heard more bystanders that two apparently than 100 witnesses over an resulted from sniper fire that eight-week period It said there two were from accidental was insufficient evidence to shooting and that one could not warrant indictment in any of be classified the cases presented to it al- Another special grand jury is though an earlier trial resulted now being paneled to carry out hi the conviction of a man for an investigation of Newarks fatally shooting a woman municipal government This inshy

In the final analysis the vestigation was recommended ~ury concluded the responsi- by the governors commission bility for the loss of life and which reported a pervasive property that is the inevitable feeling of corruption in Newshyproduct of rioting and mass ark lawlessness cannot be placed upon those whose duty it is to enforce and protect the freedom Convention lliead of our society

Courage Restraint N E MonsignorIt rests squarely upon the

MANCHESTER (NC)-Msgrhoulders of those who for euroolin A MacDonald presidentwhatever purpose incite and of the Manchester diocese senateparticipate in riots and the of priests has been selected asflouting of law and order in chairman of the national con-complete disregard of the rights stiiutional convention of theand well-being of the vast mashyproposed U S priests councilsjority of our citizens organization 110 be held May 20Although the presentment and 21 in Chicago leveled some small criticisms at

I1he monsignor earlier hadpolice actions it generally upshybeen elected as the Bostonheld the work of law enforceshyprovince delegate to a 29-memshyment officers and this was in ber ad hoc steering committeecontrast to the report of the for the convention When ill wasNew Jersey (()vernors Comshydecided 110 limicent the steeringmission on Civil Disorder commimiddotlltee 110 8 members thewhich was highly critical of the

police JJlQIlsignor was elected to this group then ohosen as chairmanWith some exceptions the

jury said police both local and Msgr MacDonald said the state together with National purposes of the proposed NashyGuardsmen acquitted themselves tional Federation of Priests with courage and restraint in Councils are to promote priestly the early stages of the riot brotherhood by faciJi1ating comshy

munion among priests councilsPoor Judgment to provide a forum for the disshyThe grand jury said the poshycussion of pastoral matters tolice were handicapped by lack enable priests councils to speakof training appropriate equipshywith a common representativement effective direction and voice to proD101e and collabshyexperience in dealing with the orate in programs of pastoraltype of situation in which they research and action to impleshywere involved ment the reriewal of priestlyThe jury did say that in the life to provide the means forlater stages of the disturbances priests councils united nationshythere were examples of poor ally to cooperate with the tityjudgment excessive use of fireshythe ~eligious the bishops andarms and D manifestation of with others in addressing thevindictiveness that eannot be needs of the Church in the modshytolerated in law enforceD1ent ern World and to do whateverpersonnel is necessary to carry out theseAD10ng the recommendations purposesit made was one that looting be

Members of the Priests Senshyeffectively controlled at its ate of the Diocese of Fall Riverearliest manifestations It also have sent suggestions regardingcalled for the improveD1ent and the proposed organization toupdating of equipment and said Monsignor MacDonaldthe use of chemicals and nonshy

lethal gases should be explored and considered Priests Paid SllEme

The jury called for improveshyment in police-community relashy Salary as Laborers tions and said there is no place PARIS (NC) - The averagefor abusive language or ill salary of priests in the Paris treatment of any group of citi shy region is about the saD1e as thatzens Like the governors COD1shy of an unskilled laborer accordshymission it deplored the use of ing to figures contained in thepersonally-owned weapons by first public budget report of thepolice Paris archdiocese

The anti-poverty agency crit shy The archdiocesan operatingicized was Newark Legal Servshybudget the report showed isices Project a branch of the $440000 a year most of whichUnited Community Corp which is for the salaries of 384 nonshyhelps ghetto residents with legal parish priests more than a thirdproblems

retired This indishyCharges Laxity of whoD1 are cates an average of less than $1-The jury accused it of failing 000 a year to cooperate in post-riot invesshy

Parishes pay direclly the 600tigations said the character of it taken were parish priests but their base salshystatements had

inadequate and ary is only about $50 a monthunprofesSional Honorariums for baptisms marshyriages and special Masses add

Receives Admiral about an equal amount to this VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope sum but pcrivate requests for

Paul VI received in audience Masses are declining Parish Adm Joseph Edet Akinwale priests send to the archdiocese Wey of the Nigerian Navy who the honorari~s of Masses they had told a press conference that coannot celebrate In 1964 this he hoped to present a message amounted to about 22000 Masses from the Nigerian government a year now it is only about three on the Biafra siiuatiolL ~middotfourmiddot thousand~

r THE ANCHORshyThursday May 2 1968

I

Schoo~s Exp~ore

Dual E~l~~rMJcemlt LOUISVILLE (NC)-Catholie

school officials here are trying to work out dual enrollment agreeD1entS with public schoo officials in two locations

If agreement is reached stushydents at Flaget High School here and at Bethlehem Academy may benefit next Fall from the proshygram

Moves toward the dual enrQllshyment concept were made possishyble when the Kentucky attorney general issued an opinion which said in effect that public schools might get state financial assistance for students enrolled part-time in public schools

Under the plan students in private schools could take some subjects in public schools and others in their own schools

Famiddotther Thomas P Casper Louisville diocesan superintendshyent of schools said he is submitshyting dual enrollment proposalpoundNEWMAN CLUBS MEET At oonferenee of Newman to the Louisville Bardstown andClubs from area colleges representatives of Fall River Dishy Nelson County boards of educa~

reese included from left Walter La Rosa Our Lady ill Mt tion Carmel parish Seekonk a student at Bristol Community While action on the roposaw College Lydia Rocha St Michaels Fall River BCC Rev is up U the public boards-the

attorney generals opinion grantvHarold J Wilson BOC Newman Club chaplain Morgan permission but does not force

Childs St Patricks Falmouth SMTL ootion-Father Casper said he if very pleased that there are possibilities open now for deshyveloping dual enrollD1entReturns to Moscow Final form of any dual enroll shyment effort is still to be decided

Fr Dion Assumption College President But one such method treated in the attorney generals opinion

Named Apostolic Administrator is the leasing of space in Cathshyolic schools by public schoom

WORCESTER (NC) - Father a visiting Russian churchman and the operation of this spaceLouis F Dion AA president here Father Bissonnette is now as public school classroomsof AssuD1ption College here will academic dean at Assumption resign his post June 30 to be- College COD1e apostolic administrator in Father Dion had to wait more New Jersey Bishopthe Soviet Union and chaplain than three years after Father to American Roman Catholics Bissonnettes expulsion before Asks United Action in Moscow obtaining a Soviet visa enabling ATLANTIC CITY (NC) shy

Father Dion held the same him to go to Moscow via Paris Bishop George H Guilfoyle of posts in Russia from 1959 to in January 1959 Camden issued a call for united 1961 He served as assistant to Father Dion said he is looking action on the part of all of WJ the president and registrar of forward to his return to the to 36Sist our fellow man as Assumption College from 1962 Moscow post He bad not specifshy he helped dedicate a HUD1aJ until his appointment as presi- ically requested the assignment Resources Center aiD1ed at job dent ill June 1964 he said but it was offered to develpoment for some of this

He replaces Father Eugene him and he accepted it willingly resort areas 50000 poor LaPlante AA who returns to Powers of Bishop This nation has made treshythe Assumptionist Fathers The duties of chaplain Father mendous strides in the fields opound AD1erican province for reassign- Dion explained are not con- science industry business and ment after a three-year term fined to American Catholics medicine he said It is shameshy

ful that in view of all this proshySeventh to Serve living in Moscow They include gress we still have millions ofFather Dion is the seventh he said the entire foreign colshypeople who live in poverty andAmerican priest-all Assump- ony - the diplomatic corps wanttionists-to serve in Moscow un- newspaper personnel and tour-

Bishop Guilfoyle said theder the terms of the 1933 Roose- ists Camden diocese will contributevelt-Litvinov agreement estab- Since there ar(~ no European

$1000 to the new center to belishing diploD1atic relations be- priests-or priests of any other nationality-in Moscow serving used for whatever program the

tween the U S and the USSR in the capacity of chaplain he board of directors decides hi He was replaced in 1961 by said the American chaplain needed Father Joseph Richard AA ministers to the spiritual needs who served four years in the of Catholics attached to the post staffs of embassies and legations

His iD1D1ediate predecessor accredited to the Soviet governshy FAIRHAVENwas Father Georges Bisslgtnnette ment AA who was expelled in The post of apostolic adminisshy LUMBERMaTch 1955 by the Soviet gov- trator Father Dion said inshy

COMPANYernment in retaliation for U S volves all the powers and funcshyrefusal to prolong the visa of tions of a bishop except ordina~

tion and consecration of bishops Complete line It is assigned to a priest usuallyAtlanta Archdiocese Building Materials in areas where there is DO

Joins Equal Housing hierarchy who is then dimiddotrectly responsible to the Holy See 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVENATLANTA (NC)-The lllChshy Father Dion expects to arrivediocese of Atl~lnta has joined in Moscow in early August he 993-2611more than 50 metropolitan At- said

lan-ta organizations and indi- viduals as co-spo~sors of the Atlanta Metropoli tan COmmit- bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull~

tee on Equal Opporunity ill Housing

HThe objective of the confer- BISAILLONS ence will be primarily educashytional Father Noel C Burtenshy GARAGEshaw ehancellor of the arch- diocese and member of the execu-tive committee said 24-Hour Wrecker

He added We expect this dialogue and interChange will establish middotnecessary communicashy 653 Washington Street Fairhaven tion and provide Some answers 994-5058~ the housing problems facing reater Atlanta bull

Thanks Catholics For Refugee Aid

VATICAN - CITY (NC)-NearMsgrEllis Relates Hist~ry middotmiddotEastmiddotwelfare work of U S Cathshyolics has been praised by Pope Paul VL0+ Training for Priesthood

Such a message in the Popes By Rt Rev Msgr Jobs S Kennedy

The publication of a book by Monsignor John Tracy Ellis founder and dean of a new school of American Cath~

lti)lic churchhistory is always a weloome event This is true even when the book is among his minor works SuCh is Essays in Seminary Educoshytion (Fides Notre Dame Inshydiana 46556 $595) amiddot 001shylection of papers and address-C2S There is some repetition in Chese essays which were preshyared for vari shyeus occasions But it does not illessen the imshyact of a book which shows us n keen critical in tell i g ence brought to beal OIl a subject of bas i c imporshylance The hand rDf the historian iIs seen throughshy~t the book The first three essays are specifically historical

The firsi deals with the trainshylog or preparation of priests from the apostolic age to the ~ncil of Trent the second with the same subject from the time of Trent to ~ 1960s The tird is todevoted diocesan theological seminaries in the American Middle West 1811shy1889

A survey such 00 the author Makes in the two opening chap $ers is of especial interest beshyeause it brings out tile implausshyible but incontestable fact that b about the fimiddotI9t 1500 years of its existence the Church did DOt have anything even regem- bling a standard ~m of edushy_tion for the priesfil100d

Monastie Schools fttere were no special schoobl

lor the clergy before the time Of

The medieval universitieQ were foundedmiddot by the Church amd the clery p~yed ~ im ~rtant part m them But theyWei b d al ~ ed ti e y no means I e Jormiddot ushy(l3 on for the pnesthood SInce2he the I g I kemelyq 1~~~y~middotou~emiddot~~U Iersi~ of P middotkmiddotlmiddot5middot6

-Y arlS n ovv or ~(fears to complete thedoCtOriite ill theology Hence few priestsbenefited f-rom 4--

~ UDlversI Effective Response

lhe POr estate of the clergy~ glarmgly a~parent in the ens of the Renalsance and the Bef~rmation and this middotis prj shy

manly llttutablello educashytional defiCiency And evea hen the reforming Council of lIrent was launched it took 1~ ~rs ~efore a dec~ on clerical educa~on was achieved and a long tlme thereafter before its proVISIonS were carned out in practice

Monsignor Elliss treatment of

ticularly the institutions founded by St Vincent de Paul and Jean-Jacques Olier

These men win the authors praise for their effective reshygponseto a vital need But he does IlQt hesitate to lay to them ~e responsibility for some of the anti-intellectual bias which chamcterizea too many seminashyli13 in subsequent centuries

incredible NWIIlber In the United States some

quite ancient history was reshylived as the bishops of new dioceses had cleriea schools of sorts in their own homes But in the days of the very first bishop John Oarroll a real

had b - -bli hed semmary een - 9when the Sulpichms came to Baltimore in 1791 and founded St Marys

Later developmen1s are sumshymarized by Monsignor Ellis with attention to the various types of seminaries and the growth m numbers from 50 in 1668 to 571 iIn 1964 Thi6 last incredible number is indicative 0If tile regre~le proliferation Which led to needless duplicashytiOD inadequacy in quality and waste of resources

A test of middotthe exeellence of American seminaries is proshyposed by the atrtbor how many men of enduring reputation ba~ flhey produced The anshyswerJs that tIhe fteonl is not distinguished And much of the lelIlainder of the book is given 110 probing for reasons m exshyplanation Of this

Routine Teaeldllamp at Augustine whomiddotbecame Ihi Anierican ~mi~ry of -ilJhop of Hippo in 396 His 1be ft refleCted _ national

_

LlIFE MEMBERS Msgr John E Boyd chaplain left and Dominick Maxwell Jr right Grand Knight of Fall River Council 86 of the Knights of Columbus i~vest Jerome D Foley and Dr Joseph Carvalho as life members

~

Rural Ireland Charge Farmers Lack Formal Training

In Agriculture ROSSLARE (NC)The need Wbat chance had the boy who

for priests to be more involved left school at 14 of making the in social problems was stressed grade at farming ~he excepshyby 9peakers at the annual meetshy tional lads made it The rest are

~ e9tablished and mairitaineCi~ - In the future he said until 4- disregard cif inteli~tualqua1itY this is rectified Ninety-five nAr ~ his own household and had In ~y instances ~ty mem- ~ imitators ~gt bera ere apPOint~~ t~eir ~t of e5ent-day farmers Thereafter came the mona~f)le positi - middotth m rd io ~v~ had IlQ post-primary edushySchools initiated by St BenediCt ons WIlifo ~ga r cation NinetYofive per cent ofin thmiddot th proper qlla Ications MuCh of farmers have had middotno formal esnr cent~ the~ fllie teaching was rolltine and~rting in middotligrlcultllredr~ and-middot eP1scqp~ Scboo~ an~ dun Collateral reading _n6t middot~JFlWle Awayampnally themiddot medieval UDlvenu- middot~~d lib ties middot - ~ampt~W1~ an nu-~ wer~ Fcaither qerinehy ~ncluded

~e )mperorPbariemaible ~~~poundreed ~tho~~laquo~ lt m the eigh~h ~turydecr~ miD not aencournt ~e~ch~Gt~~n6~llIIr~Watmiddot ilhat alLclencs m~be lble to middotwas virtuall uilkn a lj ~

ifead im~~ri~ J~d~ve ~m- faculties PU~Shed v~illi~~e iT ~~~t ~~t~Bltcs petence In ~h~~ )~1esslC~~Idu- Monsignor Ellis points tJ01 the BOGOTA (NC) _ Anglican tiaif~king ~ DllIllmum timidity which prevailed after Bishop David Benson Reed of

q I I~~ons they ~ere to be the eJcesses perpetrated in 1l1e BogOta offered accommodations e~ ~~ deprIved of repression of Modernism in the for~five Catholic bishops during me iectr~~ IS we can see w a fim part of the present centurY theforthcoming International

g ere had been He sees a change in the era of Eucharistic Congresss in August

ing of the Christu Rex Society an Irish organization for priestDmiddot engaged in pastoml work

Over 250 priests and represhysentatives of agriculturalorgan- izations attended the cOngress here on the theme Rural Ireshyland

Father Jerome Dennehy CC of Kenm2lre criticized the fail- ure of the Iri9h educational sysshytem to provide the farmer with the basic knowledge necessarY to enable him to profimiddott from advice from government agenshydes onfurming methods

No real progress can be made

Vatican II and happily notes and five Ecuadorian prelates aeshythe improvements already made cepted his invitation

lUld those-in prosPectmiddotmiddot He hJ They are Bishops Bernardo hopeful for the future Ech R f Amb to d

evern~ wz 0 a anlIJiteUktlllal A~lieDtmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot-middotCandiiiomiddotRada Cenosian of Guashybull - d middotmiddotd A 1 B h

in8 ConclUding ~y~ ran a liln UXIlary IS ops Priestmiddot as rntelleCtllal~~ v~rll9middotmiddotGabrieI1iazCueva Ernesto that abettereducated and mueh Alvarez ~liaVlcente CIsneros of

and ea r Gua allmoreaware enti laitrmiddotmiddot y qu demands a certainmiddotleveloflD-middot B~SbtPAnBeedli has JurCls~lctib~n

middotfellectual attainment and alivemiddot middot~v~r eo g cans In 0 om la its cl and Ecuador and has been an

~~ ooes ermeam that the ecumenical leader in these

now fading away with thei~

farms Father Eamonn Casey nashy

ijonal director of the catholic Housing Aid Society in London stressed the necessity for the priest to work with underprivishyleged members of -society Too often he said the theologians are on the periphery - they should come doWn to earth and mix with the people-who really

priest has to be a professional~untries ~ _ ~=====~_ intellectual such is not his _ Over 200 bis~ops a~ 1~ ~r-Etmiddotmiddot D ampD SALES AND SERVICE cation ltR does mean that he has dinals have saId they Wlll at-sect to maintain a genuiDe hifei-est end the EUcharistie Congress to - sect ill things intellectUal anq m Mbeid be~ sectpublic questions sect

Monsignor Ellismiddot chides sUPe- sect riors for their failure to eneour- p~iori ~ the minisky in sect age priests 110 use their ~cial teD-dayretreatS preceding or- sect talents skills and aptitudes dination Better than nothing sectAnd he urgeS priests 110 acquire one suPPoses sect( and retain habits of 9tudy It is In the lntervaJ there has sect to be hoped that both these cau- ~ great improvement But sect

name has been sent to lI1sgr John G Nolan president of the Pontifical lVlission for Palestine whose headquarters are in New Vork Written by Amleto Carshydinal Cicogilani Papal Secreshytary of State it referred to the

1 Missions 19 years service to ~ Palestinian refugees particushy

larly victims of the recent Arab-Israeli conflictto

It singled out as particularly praiseworthy the contribution of the Catholic Near East Welshyfare Association saying that middotthrough the unflagging genershyosi ty of the catholics of the United States of America it provided qlost of the means for the Missions work following the recent conflict

The papal letter declared No other agency surpasses the Pontifical Mission in length of

middot actualmiddot serviCe and its identifl shycapon with the paternal intershy~ and concern of the Holy Father merits his encourageshyment hismiddot blessing and his prayerful good wishes

Cardinal middotCicOgnanl wrote that Pope Paul out of paternal afshyfection for the homeless and of grateful esteem for the Pontifi shycal Mission bids memiddot send yOIll the enclosed check for $5000 Added to this was a furthell amount of money contributed

middot by the Congregation for the Oriental Churches

Msgr Nolan was asked that during his Easter visit to the refugee campS he kindly disshytribute the total sum in the Popes Dame to all the needyen

ar~~~stChneU~made adicbot-SAVE MONEY ON omy of man saying here is middotthe

body her~ is the soul-Iam YOUR middotOImiddotLmiddotHEATconCerned only with the soul bull bull bull bull Tmiddothe love of Christ is for the whole person and anything ~ -4~ WYman that concerns 1llieperson is of ~ US92 concern to middotChrist

He said thatmiddot the priest middotshould CHARLES F VARGAS selk tomiddotmiddot develop ~ature Ght-ls- tiMlS amongdsmiddotflockiuidcpre- 54 ROCKDALE AvENUE pare themmiddotforlife Th~ role of 1 the ~~esthe~dmiddotiftcl~desmiddotth~middot ~E~ BEDFORD MASS proVISIon Qfmiddotmiddot mformatlOn oo sexual and~ari~itLplmiddotobiehis 1

He stlggcentstJd middottbatmiddotmiddotmiddotPri~middot main~in cQJjt$C~ wjth~ those whlt emjgra~~mmiddottheir_ par- ish~ and follo~middotup middotthe middotcareers( of boys who are releasedmiddot from refprm schools t

1 bull bullbull - - ~_ _ - ~ ( ~

~ ~ lt

~III1I11I11I11I11I1UIIIIIIlIl1mlllllIII1I1I1I11I1I1I1I11II11I1I11I11I11IIIII11I1I11IIllIUIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~

tionary words win be wideiy~ OW measure canOOt be the poor sect AIR COmiddotIDmiddotImiddotTmiddotIO~IImiddot bullGmiddot

c INC

=====sect=

FRIGIDArnE __

REFRIGERATImiddotO~ ~

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~ post-Tridentinemiddot seminaries bulland responsibly beard Performance of the past It sect I~ I~ I~ lis remarkably extensive but the It is hard 110 believe tb1Ilt as must be the imperious demands sect main focus is on those ofF~Ce ~ as the seventee~th centu~lt ~ the p~sent an4 ~~ fUture ~ 363 SECOND ST FALL RIVER MASSbull bull the seventeenth century Pal- fa France some clena lOt their ~IWIIIUIUIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIUUlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUUIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIUIiIUWlimllllli5

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs May 2 1968 Back Presidenills ~reg~reg ~~~1rf~Jreg~MO~ ~~~lliJO[[reg(gJ ~rntilO1fi)[[fr~ofr~r

CHICAGO (NC)-The Assoshy~~ ~~regramp~~ o[J1j [Q)1 W[J1lJ[[o ciation of Chicago Priests an

The record compiled 56 years ful Swamppodle a neighborshy unofficial group of some 1500 priests in the archdiocese ofago still stands in big league hood within sight of the U S

baseball annals-most runs al shy Capitol talked about Father Chioago has endorsed President Johnsons current efforts to]owed one game 24 Travers Travers band

fA J (Joe) Detroit Never before had the bandsshy negotiate a Settlement of the

Father Aloysius J Travers men performed like they did in Vietnam war The ACP in its fifth plenarygJ 75 who achieved the dubishy the 1919 May procession-never

ous pitching distinction died had such old favorites as Tis session here turned down a resolution prepared by its soshylast week in Misericordia Hosshy the Month of Our Mother and cial action subcommittee onpital Philadelphia He acquied 0 Mary We C~own Thee With

baseball immortality on May Blossoms Today been so spir shy peace calling for complete cesshy

112 1912 as pitcher for the One sation of U S bombing in Vietshyitedly played by Gonzaga bandsshynam to support the Presidents limited decrease in bombing

men as the procession windedlDay Wonders Detroits brawling Tigers were through Swampoodle streets glated to play Connie Macks After the procession was over and negotiation moves

Two other peace resolutionspOwerful Philadelphia As that the school rector called in recommended by the subcomshy_ daymiddotin old Shibe Park Detroits Father Travers and congratushy

Btar Ty Cobb had drawn a fine mittee were approved They

and two-day suspension for formance The rector added lated him on the bands pershy

put the ACP on record as favorshy

belting a heckling fan a few But high school musicians with ing draft law revisions so that a person might be exempt as a

lligers decided if Cobb couldnt mustaches Dont you think thatdays earlier in New York~ ~he

conscientious objector to a parshywas going a bit too far ticular war without necessarilyFather T~avers had recruitedplay they wouldnt either so being a conscientious objector

Famous llnfield a dozen or so members of thecenthey went on strike

to all war and so that a per

With the aid of Connie Mack crack Fort Myer Army Band

son could be exempt as a conshyfOm nearby Arlington Va scientious objector on humanishy

ed up a collection of Philadelshydressed them in cadet uniforms~e Detroit management roundshy

tarian as well as religioUlland put them in the school band groundsBesides teaching at Stphia sandlot players signed

The ACP also approved threeJosephs Prep and Gonzagathem to Detroit contracts and recommendations of its liturgy

as the Tigers sf Francis Xavier High in New committee York As a result the priests group

Father Travers also taught atfielded the One Day Wonders

Al Travers 19 fresh out of has urged the National Confershyat Josephs Prep School rho Disbands Hawks ence of Catholic Bishops to reshyhelped recruit the sandlotters One of his moSt heartbreaking submit two liturgical petitioJUloppointed himself pitcher He assignments was given him some to the Conglegation of Rites inctftein recalled I learned that 25 years ago He was sent back Rome The petitions which had e pitcher would collect-50 to St Josephs College where New Problem ~en turned down by the Vati shyeX-tra so I volunteered the battIe cry is The Hawk can congregation would allowThat day the As scored 24 will never die as moderator the establishment of experimenshyINns on 25 hits with io nuts of athletics Priest Urges F~ir labor Practices tal centers for the liturgycmearned against young Travshy His jOb-disband the Hawks For CatholicSchool Faculties throughout the country and limshy

erG The wonder is the score football team with a minimum ited experimentation with thewasnt higher for young Tra~~rs of uproar from students and SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-For betweell the school and the liturgy without prior approvalwas pitching against the best alumni since football had beshy as long as anyone can rememshy religious community of the Vaticanbalt team of the era-against come a moneymiddot losing sport at ber the Religious and lay peoshy Some experts says that the

PhiladelphiaS famous $100000 St Josephs and a number of nte third resolution called on-pie who serve on the faculties best solution to this problem is

infield of John Phelan (Stuffy) other Catholic colleges in ~those the NCCB to take concrete stepsof Catholic grammar and high to bar Religious from partici shy

McInni6 at first Eddie Collins days to implement proposals of itsschools have been the type of pating in labor organizations

lJeCOnd Jack Barry short and He did his job well directing liturgy committee for adaptashypeople who would never think But Father Reicher indicated

IPrank (Home Run) Baker third attention to St Joes basketball tion of the Mass to smaIl anelof going out on strike against this would only divide the Reshy special age groupsSaves Franchise team which has grown into one unfair labor practices since ligiousand lay faculty of schools

But young Travers and the of the nations powerhouses this would imply some sort of even more than they are dividedORe Day Wonders who had For the last 25 years Father guilt on the part of p~ors and now India to ReconsiderI2ever seen Detroit saved the Tlavers had been stationed at bishops Urging a period of experishybaseball franchise for the Tigers St Josephs Prep in semishy Well those days are gone forshy meritation to work out new Deporting Priestttlat day If they hadnt pl~yed retirement during recent years ever according to Chicagos forms of collective bargaining NEW DELHI (NC) - Indiantile As chances are the Amershy Requiem Mass for the colorful Father Robert Reicher and the Father Reicher concluded It ill Prime Minister Indira GandbJ1bean L~ague would have lifted one-day big leaguer was ofshy job now is to set up standards obvious that the right to barshy has promised reconsideration ofDetroits franchise because of fered Thursday at GeuChurch of fair labor practice and guidshy gain collectively is a natural the order expelling Jesuitthe players strike in Philadelphia ance for faculty members grievshy tight clearly defended time and Father Vincent Ferr r of theDespite the lopsided score procedures against Cathoshy agaiil ethically and morally Poona diocese Indiaance fromlPatJher Travers got several big lic school administrators But this right also implies an lleague offers as a result of his Canonist Cates Need The pmmise was made when

Speaking to participants at 8 obligation to know what colleCshy tlhree members of the Indiani pitching He turned them down secondary school department tive bargaining involves went to St Josephs College For Negro Prieds parliament met with Mrs Ganshy

meeting during the Nationalthen joined the Jesuits ATLANTIC CITY (Nch - A dhi here and asked her to get

National Catholic Educational the order cancelled and grantThe lesson he learned fmln plea for more Negro Catholic Bishops Ask PopeAssociation convention here Indian citizemihip to the priestthe unorthodox recruiting as a priests has been made at the Father Reicher outlined some ofone-day big leaguer stood him annual Easterri regional meeting To Visit Canada Father Ferrer founder of thethe problems facing Catholic in good stead a half-dozen years of the Canon Law Society of OTTAWA (NC) -Pope Paul Maharashtra Farmers Servicelabor - management relations

later when he was teaching at America here in New Jersey The pliest is chairman of the VI may visit Canada next month Society was scheduled for deshyGQnzaga High School in Washshy Msgr Thomas J Reese of Wilshy to attend the National Confershy portation last year but wasChicago archdiocesan Catholicington D C mington in the neighboring State ence on Poverty sponsored by granted several extensions ofCouncil on Working Life and a

Recruits Ringers of Delaware speaking on experishy jVell-known labor expert Christian Churches in Canada his stay He was accused by iiimiddot mental parishes accused the Hindu groupS ofanti-Indian acshyFather Travers was in charge Religious who teach in CatBshy Bishop Alexander Carter presshy

Church of racism and said that tivities and by the Maharashtraof the school b~llld which used olic schools pose a special diffi shy ident of the Canadian CatholicNegro Catholics prefer to - be state government of anti shyto master only about two or culty hi labor relations because Conference has acknowledged national activitiesselved by black priests of whom

CHURCHES UNITED Bishop Reuben H Mueller left of the Evangeli~al United Brethren Church and Methoshydist Bishop Lloyd C Wicke led representatives of their respective bodies at ceremonies in Dallas proclaiming the union of the two churches The new body is to be known as the United Methodist Churlth NC Photo

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IIlfllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIUIIIlIDutuUliUllllUiHlllllllllilllllllllllllllllilllUIIIIIIIIIIIIUII~given to the Washington arch we need black priests and we bid to raise the standards of diocese by Church spokesmen need them fast preaching in Australia and New here in Pennsylvania Zealand will be made shortly Lobster Boats Msgr Philip J Dowling execshy it was resolved at a meeting hereCapital Cityutive secretary of John Cardinal of leaders of religious orders

Krols Commission on Human VATICAN CITY (NC)-Qn The effort will inchide a fullyshyRelations noted that the Washshy the eighth anniversary of the otganized Pastoral Year obsershyington Archdiocesan Office of foundation of Brazils new capishy vance seminars for priests of all bull bull bull Urban Affairs has asked assist shy tal of Brasilia Pope Paul VI ages on updating preaching techshy s iz e s ance from Philadelphia and other sent a radio message of best niques the establishment of II bull bull bull dioceses In providing foOd es wishes in Portuguese and pressshy preaching center and the use pecially for those po)r who will ed a button that illumined a of a recorded service on techshy I Macleansreceive temporary housing in the cross on the cathedral of that niques of oral communicatiOil f8cilities of the Washington city The Pope performed the directedby the ObJates of MalT sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAYBt Tel 9979351 sect archdiocese oclemony in his private library Immaculate ~1I111111l111IHlUlnlllllllllllUllllllnIIllIUllllllUllllllllllllllIllltUIIllllllllllUluiuUWlUllllml~

three tunes a year In those of their obligation of obedience that feelers have been sent outthere are fewdays the school had a cadet Father Reicher pointed out to have the Pope corne to Monshy

If any institution can standeorps and one of its big annual What this means he added is teal for th~ May 26-29 meeting events was marching in the anshy that occasionally Religious mllYoondemned on the basis of the

It would be the first papalrecent Kerner Report on Civilnual parish-May procession be used to break a strike called visit to Canada Pope Paul visitedDisorders it is the CatholicFor years residents of color- by lay faculty members this country as a Cardinal in theChurch among others that is But more likely is the conflict early 19508guilty of white racism he trapping the individual Reli shyPlan to Help ~eed opined Bishop Carter said if a favorshygious whose loyalty is divided

Asserting that the number of able reply is reCeived from RomeCapital MCIl(lc61ers Negro clergy middotdoes not nearly the Canadian government would

PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A meet the needs of Negro Catho- Australia to Have extend an official invitation pledge of cooperation in feeding lies Msgr Reese said Pope Paul visited the United the poor who will gather in the If the Church is going to be Better Preaching Nations inNew York in 1965 nations capital in May has beell relevant to the black community SYDNEY (NC)-A concerted

I

Marian Awards Continued from Page Three

Fall River and has spent her entire religious life within the Diocese of Fall River

Sister has served as consult shyant with various education comshymittees in the diocese and bas promoted the educational proshygram of the Dominican Sisters

Sr Mary Pauline OP bead of the Science Department of

the Dominican Academy Fall River was one of the originatolll of the Region III Science Fair and has served as president of the regions Fair for two years

She is presently ooordinator of the Massachusetts state Scishyence Fair -

Sr Virginia CSC is presshyently chairman of the Th~logy

Department Notre Dame Colshylege Manchester N H and served from 1941 to ]958 as principal of St Anthonys New Bedford

She has always been a leader in new an innovative ideas in education

Sister Anne Denise SND presently principal of St Marys High School Lynn is well shyremembered as the first princishypal of Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth and has served in many administrative posts for the Sisters of Notre Dame

Sr Mary Aloysia SUSC is dean of the College of the Sashycred Hearts Fall River and has given outstanding service in coshyoperation with the Catholic School Department in planning in-service courses for the teachshyers of the diocesan schools

She also serves asmiddot coordinator of the educational program of the Sisters of the Holy Union

Sr John Elizabeth SUSC is Guidance Director at the Acadshyemy of the Sacred Hearts Fall River and has served in numershyous administrative positions atthe Fall River school

She was the first principal of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton and has served on committees of local and state educational organizations

Sr Mary Felicita RSM is now involved in the tutorial program at Mt St MaryS Acadshyemy Fall River and has served in the various sclIools of the diocese

For 26 years Sister served as Diocesan School Supervisor iD the Catholic School Office

Sr Miriam RSM is also in the tutorial program at the Sisshyters of Mercy Academy in Fall River A former teacher and principal in schools of the dioshycese Sister served for 26 yean

IN NEW POST Father Charles F Sheedy CSC former dean of arts and letshyterS has been appointed to the new post of dean of theoshylogical studies and institutes at the University of Nobe Dame NC Photo

to Educators tiS Diocesan Supervisor in the Catholic School Department

This year completes 50 years of service in the field of educashyto the Diocese of Fall River

Sister Maureen RSM is principal of Nazareth Hall Fall River She organized the proshygram and was the first principal of the Fall River school lor exshyceptional children a position she still holds

She is a consultant lind D member of city and state comshymittees for the mentlllly l1eshytarded

Sr Mary Urban RSM is Diocesan supervisor of schools and was the first principal at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

She is a member of state and city educational committees

Sr Mary Carmela RSM is a member of the English Departshyment of St Xaviers Academy Providence and was the first principal of Mt St Marys Academy Fall River

She is a consultant on secondshyary school curriculum planning

Sr Grace de Sales MSBT is presently superior of the Censhyacle of Our Lady of the Assumpshytion Osterville a position she also held at the Cenac1e of St Patricks Parish Wareham

Sister founded the kindergarshytens at Osterville and Wareham and has taught Chfistian Docshytrine classes on the elementary and secondary levels during her many years of selvice in the diocese

Sr Joan Louise OLVM is suPerior of the Victory Noll Convent in the Immaculate Conception Parish No Easton She has served as catechetical specialist in dioceses in Iowa and California and her present assignment is CCD supervisor for the Diocese of Fall River

Brother Albertus CSC is supervisor of Education for the Eastern Province of the Holy Cross Brothers and is professor of mathematics at Stonehill College No Easton He also ~ught mathematics and physics at Monsignor Coyle High School Taunton

Miss Mary Cabral of 1)69 Camshybridge Street Fall River is presently teaching at Espirito Santo School Fall River where she is completing 43 years of service as a lay teacher in ~e

Diocese of Fall Ri vcr

Whites to Solve White Problem

TOLEDO (NC)-Bishop Joon A Donovan has made a public request to whites to take up the white problem

He urged it for those lookshying for a modern up-Io-date apostolate for down-to-earth Christians who are at the same time dedicated Americans

middotSpeaking at a dinner of the northwestern Ohio district Fourth Degree Knights of Coshylumbus the Toledo bishop said

This ugly situation was fathered by injustice and is nourished by that subtle and insidious vice called prejudiCe

Need In this deplorable situation

in which the world ffinds itself today the pressing need is for those who call themselves Christians to think as Christians to form Christian attitudes and to live as Christians

Just as we cannot separate Christ from His Gospel so too we cannot separate love of GOO from love of our fellowmen without exception

The real Christian mlid the bishop does not live alongside but with others He constantly interprets anothers actions in the best possible light bying to remember always the way in which the Lord met loved and drew people to Himsel

SAIGON (NC) - The people wept and we wept everybody wept Sister Nicole said deshyscribing her teams departure after 16 days of relief work in Hue

She and two other Vietnamshy-ese Sisters Daughters of Charshyity of St Vincent de Paul with

The communImiddots1s T truce

17 girl students had gone to stricken Hue on a mission of mercy

offensive had left families in mourning houses in ruins ~nd people hungry and sick The government of Vietnam had inshyvited volunteers to bring help to the citys thousands of sufshyferers

The plane that brought tile Sisters and their students also brought 85 youths from Saigon~

The boys did manual work such as cleaning up the damaged hosshypital in Hues The Sisters team was divided into three groups one to give medical care anshyother to visit homes a third to l)ok after children

The 17 girls are some of those being trained by the Sisters as social workers for family assist shyance under a plan sponsored by a Vietnamese womens associashytion Five of the 17 are Cathshyolics The others are mostly Buddhists On April 12 all were fasting since it was the 15th day of the lunar month for the lBud-

Catholic Boy Scout Officials to Meet

WASHINGTON (NC)-About 150 leaders of CQtholic Boy Scout organizations will meet here to attend the 20th biennial oonference of the National Cathshyolic Committee OIl Scouting

The meeting will be a Iowshyday work session tor chairmen chaplains and other officioals cd the nations diocesan I seouiing ~ommittees The meeting will end with a banquet in honO Gl Patrick Cardinal OBoyle ol Washington

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1

PRAYER CRUSADE _Danny Thomas has filmed n 10-minute color documentary on the value of family pray~r

to be used by Father Patrick Peyton CSC in his Camshypaign for Family Prayer Father Peyton said he expects 200000 people at a Milwailkee rally to be held Sunday May 12

IEverybody Weptl

Nun Describes Relief Teams Departure From Stricken Hue

dhims and Good Friday for the Catholics

The Asia Foundation here gave a grant to pay for the meals of the Sisters team dur ing their stay

- Before leaving Saigon the Sisters had collected medicines food soap and clothing from welfare agencies including Catholic Relief Services and

Vietnam Christian Service (Protestant) The United Nashytions Childrens Fund (UNICEF) provided milk powder which enabled the team to give milk to 450 children every day

Warn Medics LONDON (NC)-The day beshy

fore Britains new abortion law went into effect the nations 5500 CMholic doctors were warned by John Cardinal Heenan of WeBtminister that they should DOt perfom any abortions

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THE ANCHOR- 17 Thursday May 2 1968

Cufr ~t~1 Days Of orw~~~1ion

En C[[i~da OTTAWA (NC)-Chrietshy

mas and New Years Day now are the only holy days of obligation for Canadav estimated 8000000 Catholics

The Canadian Catholic Conshyference comprising Canadafl Bishops has announced thampa other holy days will be cellshyebrated on the Sunday nearem the holy day

The holy days affected aye Epiphany usually celebrat~

Jan 6 Ascension now falling on the 40th day after East~Ilp

All Saints now celebrated Nou I and the Immaculate ConcejilP tion now celebrated Dec 8

The Bishops said observance of the feast days on Sundayu means they will be celebratecll bull by a larger more relaxed anell accessible congregation of the faithful rather than a congreshygaUon of people constrained by the obligation of attending Maw in addition to their work

Canadas Bishops postwn~ until next Fall a decision Gil

wlether to restoremiddot the anciej~ office of permanent deacon m the Church The Bishops of the United States meeting simultashy

neously in St Louis hlst week ~ted to petition Pope Paul VJ for permission to restore ~

perinanent diaconate ror marshyried and unmarried men of ma ture years

Fish Sales Up SYDNEY (NC)-Best tilini)

that ever happened to the fisb industry said Mark J06eph chairman of the New SouUl -lales Fish Authority of the Churchs lifting of the ban CJ[l

Friday meat eating He has tb~ ligures to back up his verdictshya 25 per cent rise in fish e4)Dshy

slImption here since the ehlnge

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The Parish Parade New Jersey Suburbanites of All Faiths Aid Ghetto Arson Victims HOLY NAME OUR LADY OF ANGELS

FALL RIVER FALL RIVER NEWARK (NC) - Priest~ the citys anti-poverty agenCll Contemporary music will acshy

company the 11 oclock Mass Sunday morning May 5

First communicants will reshyeeive at a special Mass at 9 Saturday morning May 25 Mayshycrowning ceremonies will be held Sunday May 26 The Womens Guild announces

fts installation banquet for Tuesday night May 7 Tickets are available from all members

Catholic Charities collectors are asked to meet in the parish school at 730 tonight for dist~shyOOtion of contact cards

lIT MARGARET BUZZARDS BAY

SS Margltlret-Mary Guild of Buzzards Bay and Onset will Sponsor a rummage sale from 9 1lo 1 Saturday May 18 at St Margarets kindergarten hall Main Street Buzzards Bay Do iaations may be left at the hall during mornings of the precedshying week Chairman for the ~vent is Mrs William Brady

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild will reshyieive Holy CommuniOn in a bodyaf the815 Mass 00 Sunshydity morning A breakfast will follow in the school hall The icuest speaker will beRt Rev Anthony M Gomes Mrs Arthur Belanger gpiIshyftual chairman of the Guild is _ charge of the breakfast

81 JOSEPH AIRHAVEN Nominations and elections of officers for the Association of file Sacred middotHearts will be held at 630 on Sunday evening in the rectory ~ Dues are now payable to the tleasurer Mrs Jeannette Dushylude

IACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

Preprimary registration will be held from 2 to 4 Sunday afternoon May 5 in 1he school office Some openings also exist in first sixth and eighth grades

The CCD adult discussion group will meet at 8 Sunday night in the home of Mr and Mrs J G N Bonneau

So Easton Club Pledges

$5000 The newly formed Womens

Club of Holy Cross Parish So Easton has pledged $5000 toward the building fund acshycording to an announcement made today by Mrs Arthur J L Peterson the organizations first president The pledge will be paid at the rate of $1000 per year

This pledge has been added to The Second Mile Building Fund campaign now in progress under the chairmanship of Robshyert Dray and Louis A Lyne serving as director

The Altar Boys will sponSor a cake sale Sunday May 26

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a Communion breakshyfast following 8 oclock Mass this Sunday morning Installashytion of officers will be held at a banquet following 5 oclock Mass Sunday afternoon May 26

Children of Mary will attend a Communion breakfast followshying 8 oclock Mass Sunday mornshying May 12

The annual blessing of autoshymobiles will take place at 130 Sunday afternoon May 26 in the church parking lot

ST GEORGE WESTP~RT

A Maybasket whist is planned for 8 Saturday night May 4 hi

the school hall on Route 177 PrOCeeds will benefit the school fund and table and attendance prizes will be awarded

STMARY NORTH ATTLEBORO Parishioners are planning a

testimonial honoring Msgr Ed- ward B Booth Pastor at 7

Sunday night May 26 Tickets are now available

Christians Jews Combat Racism

NEW YORK (NC)The Nashytional Confeferice of Christians and Jews has launched a nation wide educational effort to conshyfront the problem of white racism in middotAmerica agency headquarters here announced

The NCeJ has given top prl~

ority to finding ways toimpleshyment the recommendations of the National Advisory Commisshysion on Civil Disorders The commission blamed white racshyism as the underlying cause of urban unrest

In a progress re-port to the NCCJ board of trustees meeting here Dr Samuel L Gandy dean of the Ho~ard University school of religion Washington D C and chairman of the NCCJ nashytional program ad7isory comshymittee stated

NCCJs 130 professional staff members in 70 cities are curshy~ntly engaged in developing programs with police business and labor leaders parents and teachers clergy and with youth and all of the various institutes workshops and dialogues which are being conducted are emphashysizing the findings of this reshyport

Dr Gandy quoted to the board a letter to President Lynshydon B Johnson from Dr Stershyling W Brown NCCJ presishydent in which the agency head said that NCCJ embraced the commission report as a sancshytion and guideline for our efshyforts in the private sectol

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ministers nuns and lay people of all denominations pitched in here to try and make Easter a dltty of joy for the more than 600 people burned out of their homes in a waveof arson which erupted in this city following the funeral of Dr Martin Luther King

Concerned citizens of surshyrounding suburban communishyties who only a week before had participated in a massive Wa 1k for Understanding through ghetto streets respondshyedspontaneously to the need

Without anymiddot special appeal going out people of all denomshyinations call e 11 inner-city churches to ask what they could do and they were directed to the United Community Corp

NEW LEADER Sister Rosemary Markham SSS is the new Superior General of the Sisters of Social Ser-

vice a Los Angeles based community engaged in social and catechetical work with missions in Formosa and Mexico NCPhoto

Christians Jews Discuss Diamiddotlogue

SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-The question of whether JewishshyChristian dialogue should be by speech or by action was the theme that ran through the talks and discussions at a Conference on Interfaith Dialogue sponsored by Catholic Protestant and Jewshyish organizations at Seton Hall University here

Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum director of interreligious affairs for the American Jewish Comshymittee was generally in favor of the action approach saying that the dialogue must avoid beshycoming a convenient conspiracy on the part of middle-class whites to buffer themselves against the realities of the inner city

Father Edward H Flannery executive secretary of the U S Catholic Bishops Secretariat for Catholic-Jewish Relations said that while he would be the last to cut off action in the realm of social justice and charity he also felt that Jews and Christians could not effectively present a common ftont to society until they have straightened out their own affairs

Father Flannery referred to statements that the -ChristianshyJewish dialogue had died in the wake of last Junes six-day war between Israel and Arab nations He said that it was not so much a matter of its dying but of its not having been tried yet

Over Holy Thursday Good Friday and Holy Saturday more than 10 tons of food and clothing were donated and the UCC staff was swamped with the task of sorting the materiaL

With schools and church ofshyfices closed priests and nuns made their way individually and in groups to UCC headshy

quarters to help with the task of unloading cars and station wagons and sorting and distribshyuting the clothing

At least 50 offers of assistance came in to Queen of Angels pariSh in the heart of the ghettc and the callers were asked to organize relief efforts in their own communities and then gd the material 110 the UCCbull

FEEL GOOD TODAY

THt HOLY fATHER MISSION AiD TD THlaRIENTAL DHURDH

Thlsoolumns happiest readers are the men

Te date this second phase bas listed 35 gifts totaling $12000 Combined with the initial campaign the Building Fund now lists 233 donors who haVe pledged a total of $117()00 The Womens Club that was founded less than six months ago has initiated a long range program for the spiritual cll1shytural and financial efforts of the parish

In addition to the regular methods of aiding the parish finandally the women have conducted teen-age projects and have assisted the Mens Club fu

i bull various progrlms

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women and children who know they~r needed The days were busiest helping others are the happiest days of our livesbullbullbull Who needs you most Surprisingly God needs you - for inmiddot stance to help art abandoned orphan become e Godloving responsible adult Lepers need you (there are still 15middotmillion lepers In the world) blind children need y~u ~ndlo do we bull bullbull Here In New York we are your agents tellin you where the Holy Father says your help Is needed and channeling your help promptlyand Oafely to the people iii needbullbullbull Want to feel good right now Do without something you want but do not need and send the money instead for one of the needs below Youll feel good especialiy if your gift is big enough to mean a sacrifice to you This is your chance to do something meaningful for the world - its Gods world - while youre still alive

D Only $850 gives our priests and SIsters i south India enough Dapsone miracle tablebamp for 43 lepers for a yearl D For only $250 a week ($10 a month $120 a year) you can make sure that an abandoned child has food clothing a blanket and love Well send you a photo of the child you adopt tell you something about him (or her) and ask the Sistermiddotinmiddotcharge to keep you Informed

D Your stringless gifts in any amount ($5000 MEET $1000 $500 $100 $50 $25 $10 $5 $2)

MISSION will help the neediest wherever they are - in EMERGENCIES india and he Hol~ Land for instance

D Only you can make your will-and do It this THINK week to be sure the poor will have your help

OF even after youre gone Our legal title CATHOLIO YOURSELF NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION Also our priests

TOO will offer promptly the Masses you provide for

------~~-----co---GDear ENCLOSlD PLEASE FIND $ _ I MonsIgnor Nolan FOR _

DO SOMETHING

MEANINGfUL WHILE

YOURE STILL ALIVE

HELP LEPERS

CHILDREN NEED

YOU

Please

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THE CATHOLIC

NAMIlR _

~ 8TREJa~ ~_

OITY 8TATI_IIP COD

NBAR lAST WILPARI AbullbullaaIATID

NEAR EAST MISSIONS MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretary Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoo 330 Madison Avenue New York N~Y 10017 Teephone 212YUkon 6middot5840

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Lawrence High of Falmouth Seeksmiddot State Track Tut~e

By PETER BARTEK Norton High Coach

The Capeway Conference track season has already begun but the handwriting is already on the wall This campaign like last years will be a battle for second place Admittedly notbing Short of a miracle can or will prevent Lawrence High of Falmouth from winning its second straight conference t rae k championship But fol Coach Jim Kalperis and his trackstersmiddot the league championship is only a Gtepping stone to the State C ham p io n - ship The goal of every athletic team in the state hi to earn the title of State Champion This is not beshyyond the grasp of the Falmouth Peier Clippers If hard Bartek work and dedication are the means to this end then Falshymouth will reign as State track champions

Success does not come easily em any endeavor and success batpound

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not come easily to the Falmouth tracksters They like all accomshyplished athletes have labored long and diligently to aChieve the measure of sUccess they now enjot lt

N1)t toomiddot many yearsato Lawshyrence High was just ~nother

sChool Participating in track But the efforts of many and the dedication of one IJ1im in parshyticular has brought immeasurshyable success to the Falmouth track scene That man is Jim Kalperis

Coach Kalperis haseombined

his knowledge af track his coaching ta1EntS aiiCl tirelessenergies middotto build a virtual track dynasty The latest noteworthy feat of middotliliitnickmen came in the forinof anotheriState title

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- BC~ and Norry Races Are Close 1

lbe format formiddot the St~te reo lays has been altered this ear with competition being held at four separate locations in East- em Massachusetts Weymouth captured the Division I crown the DiviSion n title went to

Andover and Williams corralled the laurels in Division IV

The meet drew ll5 schools in each of the four diviSions with over 2000 youngsters partici shypating in all classes

Enroute to its victory Falshymouth collected 51 points comshypared to runner-up Barnstable with 22Jh

Falmouth took first place in the discus high jump pole vault 440 yard run shuttle hurdles two mile run and the 880 -

With tbis type of success in state competition it is easy to see why the Capeway Confershyence title has been practically conceded to Falmouth

Sharing the spotlight with the trackmen at Falmouth are the diamondmen The Clippers who are in the thick of the loop baseball picture were given a

Mike Rainnie tossed amp no-hittel at Barnstable to gain a 1-0 vershydict

Its still much too early to predict with any accuracy

what will happen in the Cape wai baseball race But it ap- pears nomiddotclub will dominate th~t sport like Falmouth controIa track Falmouth Dartmouth Fairhaven and Barnstable are expected to fight it out through the entire season One close to the scene summed it up best when he said anyone in the league could win this thing

Close races are also developshying in the Bristol County and Narragansett Leagues

In the BCL both Bishop Fee han of Attleboro and Durfee High of Fall River encountered a few difficulties in early season play but seem to have found the range of late The clubs will meet in an important contest today in Fall River Late inning rallies have brought both clubS from the brink of defeat to vicshytory in previous outings The victor will have to be dubbed

shot in the arm last week as the team to beat

Brennan of Feehan D~est ill le~guej

Coach Tom Maccarone of Feeshyhan has had outstanding pershyfonnances from his pitching staff but the key to the Shamshyrocks success has been shortshystop Ty Blrennan Maccarone stated before the season that Brennan was his best player and perhaps the best in the whole Bristol County Judging from Brennans perfonnance to date one of the keys to stopping Feehan is stopping the classy shortstop

Coach Joe Lewis Hilltoppers play a brand of ball similar to his counterpart TOIJl Karams basketball club Make a mistake and the Fall Riverites will capshyitalize on it Durfees first two league victories came about beshycause of opponent miscues

The Hilltoppers have been playing steady ball throughout the early part of the campaign and are improving with every game Their ability 10 avoid costly mistakes eI tbeir -n

making and timely hitting has proven a winning combination

Come what may in todays contest the BCL llace has just begun

Not to be outdone by tile larger BCL and Capeway Conshyference the Narry loop is conshyducting a torrid race of its own At the end of the first week of action Seekonk and DightonshyRehoboth were tied for the top spot Following two weeks of play Gase of Swansea Dighton and Somerset were lodged In the first position The hectic lCampaign will probably find another change in the top spot at the conclusion of this weeks activity

From Cape Cod to Attleboro competition is keener this year than it bas been in many seashysons The road to the league championship is always diffJshycult to Davigate but this year it appears as though the road win be duttered wiill meR obstacles than ill quite

cone~~ lb~aders ConcllregrnmOB War In V~~It~IlJJm

NEW YORK (NC)-Stushydent government presidents and editors of campus newsshypapers at more than 500 colleges in 49 states have conshydemned the war in Vietnam as

lt immoral and unjust and said ~~ they believe they should not

~ i~~~~~~~ii ~~~b~~ shy --_ ~ and Laymen Convinced About

-- ~-__ Vietnnm Was coordirlated by shy _ -- shy ~ Rev RObert lVi Hundley lHullent

--lt--1 at Union Th~ological Snppary --J here and an associate pltISor at -- ~I th~ Congn~gationalChllrch hn ~_ Scarsdale N-Y He saiQ most

--middot1 students who signed the stateshy~-__-~~- ~~ -___- __~_~J ment havenot been active in

FINE ARTS FESTIVAL Making preparations for Fine Arts Festival at Bishop Stang High School North

Dartmouth are Paul Leahy and Margaret Polycarpo

~ Unmiddot-ty middotIs Chr-stlTs middotW-II

P Off W I E deg I pOi degI

ontl e comes cumenlca I grlmage From United Kingdom toHoly Lar-d

anti-war activities heretoforemiddot

Solicits Support

He added

Many of the student Itl~ders who have signed this sbtcment

recognize that they may be plaeshying their future caJeers illmiddotjeopshy~rdy and conceivably are riskshying punitive action being taken

against them by the capiicioWJ V~TICAN ~ITY (NC)~TO an Fathers Arthur Payton anSel~c~ve Sfdtvice Systerh~~~

I ecumenical pilgrimage oQ its Anglican who is director 01 ~ev Yi~am Sloan Cot~~1 Jr-) way to the Holy Land Pope interchurCh travel in LOndon bull aclive memjgter of Clergymiddot ~nd Paul VI recalled the words he Among its members were An- Laymen Concerned AboutbullVI~tshyspoke on his own pilgrimage glieans CatholiCs Oithodox and nam ~1dmiddota Yal~ U~Iverslt7

there in 1964 that unity is the will of Christ

He said that it was with parshyticular pleasure that we welshycome this ecumenical pilgrimshyage from the United Kingdom to the Holy LaRd You are aboUt to follow in the fOQtSteps af God made man in the country of His birth Hill mission and His blessed death for us men and for our salvation (NiceneCreed)

Your visit caUsto mind our own unforgettable pilgrimage to the Holy Places From the grotto of Bethlehem we then declared It npw appears clearly to all that the problem of unity cannot be eluded Today this will cif Christ is imposed upon our minds and demands th~t we undertake with wisdom and love every possible way of bringing all Christi~ns t6 enjoy the great benefit and supreme honor of the unity of the middotChurch

He also recalled his plea from Bethlehem that love of Christ and of the Church should inshyspire that every future moveshyment toward meeting and reshyconciliation

The pilgrimage was led by

DIOCESAN DIREC1OR First woman to serve as a diocesan director of radio-TV is Miss Patricia Smith of Pueblo Colo who is also a photo-journalist on the staff gf Dateline Colorado m cesan weekly newspaper

Protestants not only from Great Britain but from France and Germany as well

Msgi Gianfrancesco Arrighi undersecretary of the Secretashyriat for Promoting Christian Unity and Canon John Findlow representative of Anglican Archbishop Michael Ramsey of Canterbury at the Holy See accompanied middotthe pilgrims to the Vatican

Votes Moratorium On ChuDch Building

CHICAGO (NC)-The Chicago Conference of Laymen is urging Church authorities at both the archdiocesan and parish levels to declare a moratorium on 10- cal construction projects so that funds can be channeled to projshyects in the ghetto areas

The action was taken at the second annual meeting of the

ll200-member organization The 300 in attendance passed

some 50 resolutions half of them dealing with urban problems The membership said it will seek ways to alleviate white racism especially within the Catholic Church

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ch~plaJD saId The stand taken by these

y~ung men should serve to reshymmd Americans everywhere that the war in Vietnam 1s not over that American and Vietshy

namese boys are stillmiddotdying

He continued

These middotmen of conscience should be supported by eveQY priest minister and rabbi who cares about the sanctity of conshyscience

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Jesuit Comments Di~cordNormal Amon9 Catholics

RIO DE JANEIRO (NC)shylD i SC 0 r d among Catholics after the Second Vatican Council is perfectly normal but It is not normal for proshygressive or conservative Cathoshylics to refuse to accept the dishyrectives of the council and the pope Jesuit superior general said here Father Arrupe is in Brazil for 30 days to visit Jesuit houses in the country and to preside at the May 6 to 14 meeting here of all South Amershyican Jesuit provincials

He said that his visit is inshytended to adapt the order here flo the requirements of the agshygirnameJ1to or up-dating

The most important aggiorshy namento in our day he said

is that of the mind We have to ~nsider and respect human valshyues as such This was always the Churchs doctrine but now the Church is insisting on it more We ought not to consider the Churchs interest in human values as opportunism Our in tEmtion is only to serve mankin~ better)

Press Uses Images Dudng his stay here Father

Arrupe willmiddot visit 20 local(tiesWhere Jesuits are woikilg

ts B 1Ilhele are 1000 JesUl m razl~ bull

He said that he regarded as bull joke the Brazilian presss ref-

elences to him as ~the black l T Ch Pope cussion of he angmg a1middot

Because of my cassock hemiddot

tlaid I am black but I am not the Pope ~ understand that the press has to use images to exshylI)lain concepts more effectively

Honor Editor NEW YORK (NC) ~ Robert

6lmstead news editormiddot of the National Catholic Reporter weekly newspaper published in Kansas City Mo received honshyelable mention in the 1968 Paul Tobenkin Memolial Award Competition here

-

MEET IN ST LOUIS Bishop-elect Timothy J~ Harringshyth d f th Sf W 1 ft d

ton ~ orcester e leoscllfses ~ atn t ~ l~mg

ish a panel a~ the lQ68Presi dents Conference of the Nashytional Council of cat~olic yene~l

Role of CouDcil The parish will retairi its role

as a community of worship whose members go out ihto the world and bring it theeurohristjan

message Bernatd Lyons Ghishycago public relations ~onsultant saidmiddot

The pa~ish on the other hand mustmiddot become part of the world

alound it a wHr1e$S to the whole community and fake on roles not in relation only to -its

GUIDING CHURCH IN UNITED STATES More than 200 members of the hierarchy participated in the decisions of the annual Spring meeting of the National Conference

Predict Important Authorities Emphcisixe

WASHINGTON (NC)-Three members but to the world in authorities on parish life have agreed here that the parish basic organiz~tion iil the Church will have to undergo some lmportant changes if the ChUlch is goingto meet th~ needs of societyin the 20th censhy tury

But just how the parislt is going to change ~s far from setshytied they ~onceqed in a dis

which it exists Father John Corriga~ of this city a directozlt of the Nationalmiddot Liturgical Con ference asserted

Whatever it does the parish must becomemiddot a vital force in the cOlJlrnunity around it Father Geno Baroill execu~ive secretary Washington archdi

ocesan Office ~f Urpan Affairs declared

RIot ComparlmiddotsoDmiddot

Father Baroni whose work blings hini into constant contactmiddot with Negro problems in WaSh- laymen will inhibit soCial ac- ington saw~ astriking par~illel tion but added later this is a between the Churchs needs and risk wltirth taking

-those of thebiack ghetto Right now~ he observed - one of the mos~ urgent prob Society to Consider lems in the ghetto is that Of Sh fmiddot

community organization We 5 emnary I t arll learl1ing that pe~ple ri~t be CARTHAGENA CNC) _ The

cause they have beel- cut o~t ofSocieiy of the Precious Blood meaningful participation in so- ciety

In the ~hurch laymen have been cut out of this participa tion also They dont riot but they dont really concern them selves with the concerns of the Church unle~s thy ~ave t~i~ sense of partlclpatlcm he saId

New Resndemlce For US PIiDests

ROME (NC)-A new resident house for American priests working In the offices of the Roman Curia (the Churchs censhytral administrative offices) or on assignment in Rome for the US bishops has been opened to provide adequate economical lodgings and community surshyroundings

The residence called Villa Stritch after the late Samuel Cardinal Stritch of Chicago is composed of two apartment comshyplexes and is designed to meet the immediate needs of US priests already at work in Rome and to anticipate future housing needs as internationalization of the Roman Curia continues

In addition to American$ resshyident in Rome the villa is also expected to house priests on special assignments for the bishshyops in Rome bishops who come to Rome for work on var~ous

Church commissions or otherVatican offices or for such events as the synod of bishops and ma-Jor congresses In short it is hoped that the new villa wilL

will study the possibilities and implications of moving the or ders main theological school flOm St Charles Seminary here in Ohio to a university campus or urban center and of buildingmiddot an adequate program at St QJ1arles The Carthagena SChOt

has been the societys maJor seminary for over 100 years

Major superiors and middotelected delegates representing the soshycietys Cincinnati province voted to fOlm a committee to carry out the study during a provincial chapter meeting held at St Charles at which modernizing the training of candidates for the priesthood in the society Vas tqe chief subject of discussion

middotA report of the meeting in- dicated that the delegates were aware of trends in the Church 1-way from comparative isloationmiddot of seminary establishments to university campuses and urban centers

SPECIAL RATES FOR

Smiddot I O dcho0 utings an Picnics

of Catholic Bishops in St Louis last week An enormoUis amount of homework on position papers was approved ~

the Bishops NC Photo

I see the parish councils and their recognition of freedom asneceSsai-y to do this he added

Worth Risk They agreed they sha~e abull

feiling opound un~asin~ss _middotaboti~ these cOuncIls relatively new amQJ1g Cathol~cs pa~icula~lY their attitude t~ward SOCI~ issues

d Father Baroni sal he has ~

leery feeling about parishcouncils He declared there is

the danger that conservative

contribute to increased racial understanding and involvement

fur the people of the diOcese

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Lyons author of th~ book middotParish Councils - Renewin the Parish Community said be

middotwas somewhat more optiniistici I donit think we are going to

solve these problems by 10~~1 at the dangers exclusively hie commented

Diocese to Discuss C~m~issi~n Rep~rt

LANSING (NC) - Catholics thoughout t~e Lansing diocese will participate in forums and home discussion groups 1as~ on the report of the National Acf visory Commission on Civil Disshyorders The program which begaa with public forums in six citie on April 29 was planned ~

middot three diocesanmiddot agencies-the Ofshyfice of Social and Community Service the Office of Renewal Through Vatican II and the adult education division of tne Education Department It was initiated in response to an appeal made by Bishop Alexshyander Zaleski The day following the death of Dr Martin Luther King Bishop Zaleski asked dishyocesan directors to plan an imshymediate program designed to

meetmg of heBIShops n erence WIt ISop e e~ros be a center of communi~y life CONTACT MANAGER - LINCOLN PARK of BrowI)svIlle Texas and fOtmiddotmer chancellor of the Fall for bishops arid priests with spe- 9996984 636-2744 ~iver Di~~~~lt __~gt -cilla~~gnrn~iitS~~o~~~ ~ Oc)QI~OC~)OQCIOC)oOOOCgtoc)OQltjIOcXllOOOCgtOC)oOC~)OIL)QOCgtOCPOoO

Page 7: 05.02.68

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r~pe s_ ~(l (Jlj(~ntucky MountaiTJ Missions t4~ecl ~dOlll f

~f Vocatio~s1 DescriiJes 4ppalacll_ia sPoverty VATICAN CITY (NC) By Dorothy Mitch~n Eastman

Pope Paul VI stressed the Appa~achiaie a powerful word The ve~ name evokes visions of rugged mountain Churchs need fOT priestlyand Religious vocations and life isolation poverty misery and despair In this vast area that encltYmpasses 11 states 1fhe freedom ~hat should charac- live 16 mi11~on of the most poverty-striken people in the Uni1Jed States In every category terize such vocations in a mes- of hUmampn activity Appalachia has fewer of the good things of life than d~s the rest C3ge addressed to the faithful of f America Nowhere in this The latest accomplishment of Gte world on the fifth World nat~on do people h~ve less CAP Inc is the completion of Blny of Prayer for Vocations iYWOme 00 live in poorer II Grade A dairy farming com-

The need the Pope said stems Grom the plan of salvation in the housing nOwhere do they pleL mind of God who wanted have rewer educational oppor- Special schools are set up~rist to be the sole S)urce of tunities or suffer from such Il during the Summer months to

ed al th d teach religion We had six ofGl1vation and of sanctity and 1acit 0 m lC care as ey 0 pho wanteOl His mission to be in Appalachia nowhere in all these Bible schools going last

ld h d Ch Summer Father Beiting saiderpetuated and sPread through we wor as organIze rIS-I ti t d f dh ts Over 350 children have been ~n men partakers in the am y oun so ew a eren A I h included in this program Eighty17liesthood of Christ indispen- us In ppa at lao lmiddotmiddotmiddotll

e Eastern K~ntuc area h middotilmiddot~ per cent of them have been non-Bable ministers of the word and u ~ nt 1

A _1 h h th d b d Catholicsof grace among the rest of man- 9pac la as e U 10US lS-IIdnd tindion of being the poorest of CeJlwllS foil Rellilgilll)n

This need arlslng from the the poor in all CIf th1lSe cate- A8 a follow up to the Bible nature of the Church is DOW glt)ries ~ -schools the parish has organized more acute the Pope continued Four of the poorest counties three centers fur year round OOoause the numbers of the of Eastern Kentucky comprise religious instruction ministers of the Gospel are dim- the parish of Father Ralph Bei- We have a very active bome luishing while the fields open ting He has a parish roughly visitation programFather said tD their work are increasing tile siire of the state of Rhode and this year we will visit be-

The Second Vatican Councils Island tween three and four thousand IMghlighting of the priesthood On his first speaking tour in homes of the faithful the Pope said New England the tall rugged Each year about 2000 people should not lead to a dimming looking priest came to Bishop give from a few days to a few of the ministerinl or hierarchi- Casidy High School in Taun- weeks of their spare time school eal priesthood bull bull bull In fact the ton to talk to the student lxgtdY breaks or vacations to work at more the common priesthood is and the senior class from Coyle one of the four centers Father to be improved the more it has High School has eStablished in his parish Deed of the ministry of the hier- The priests five day tour m- Priests nuns college students arehical priesthood and the eluded addresses at Harvard whltlle families go down to the more the function entrusted to University Regis College Holy area from all over the country tIhe latter manifests its abso- Cross College and Newton Col- to work for the Appalachian lute necessity lege Gf the Sacred Heart as poor

N ---OO- for S I weJn as a TV appearance on One of Charlie Kings inOO has ~ a VBuOD Bob Kenneds Contact show shy P lid d th t been to find useful work for

ampUe ope a e at ODe B~ktAD Aidshya _ f th Ch h d all these volunteers as carpenshy-=gt ales 0 e urc an so Aocompanying Father Beiting ters nurses farmers cooks el the Christian salvation of the - e tour was a lookingld t be ~-d be- -- 6 teaching Bible classes or coun-WOT canno JU6~ as and personable young man from ded ch ri ti h FATHER BElTING seling at the children scamps --amp vun on a sma c p e- Brockton twenty year old Char- Every Sunday of the year DOmena or movements which Be King Charlie has interrupted From the inception of hi8themselves need the ministry rather Beiting and two other -d approval of the hierarchical lWloollege days lit John Carroll pastorate Father Beiting has car- priests drive over 200 miles to Driesthood University to work with Father ried on a dual apostolate As say Masses for 1~heir parishioners

The priesthoods authority Belting as a full time lay vol- well as tending to the needs of in homes in the three churches Mel the priests sacramental unteereaming the grand sum crl of the 45000 who live within af the parish in a candy store

a dollar a day the boundaries of his parish be and a pavillion power1 b to fo Charlie -_ hi h worK-- on everenew the bloodless reflected lito ti as 1 every Non-Catholic attendance at the tie e ra on are necessary l wo~ in Appalachi has con- th li ht _ C Improve e econOmiC p g Masses is often three times as IoU hurch and the salvation of -ced hlm that his vocatlhn th A I h F--d Vlll ~ e ppa ac Ian poor rom greatmiddotmiddotas the native Catholic at shynki d hIDa n e lHU bull I er ea-ng hiS deCNgte~ in the- dist b tion 0 f f d and I thmg tendence in countries As dditi in ~ n u 00 c 0 these

an a ona reason 41- -l~ltIno work omong the poor - -d Co g 10 al~ th ed I ti ~ w ~ G middotressmg n ress n where only one personmiddotin everyOU

_ng e ne or voca ons ~ think its true that we will tt F th h ht Ole Pope cited the secularization n what Eug~ne McCarlh COmml ees a er as song 1000 is Catholic

~ ~ or to attack the poverty of Eastern ~ the modern w9rldwhJch has CaDs QmoraJ revoiution to solve Kentteky with every means Summer Missions

a greater need ~r a conse-middot the Poverty crisis m this cOOn-avaiiable Formiddotfive weeJ~8 everymiddotSummer ~t~an~eciaf~thZed preseten~e tij- be said New Project Father Belting and a team of ~ewltUus 0 ~ mys neB ~ pilther Beiting haSbeen -WOrk As his familiarity with the priests seminari~ and ~y ~ Go~ ~L Cor 4 1) jWg hi Eastern Kentucky since areaincreased and the extent of people go through the countryshy

Wllhngll1ess to Sacrifice [OOa when he was assignedamp workmiddot to be done became more middotside ona streetpreaching misshy ~ ~ addi~on to the need for mission parish under the aus- and more pressing the need for sion Reception is not always WOCations the Pope in his mes- pices of the Diocese of Coving- a permanent solution to eco-middot cordial in this section where ~ stressW freedom of voca-middot ton~ Besides his 1000 square nomie ills became evident In prejudice against Catholics runs fions by which he said he mile parish he bas middotthe respon~ mlilw~rto this need in the Sum- high Father and his preachers meant personal IU1Q voluntary sibility of all 25 counties in mer of 1965 Father Beiting have at times h~ to proclaim ehlation to the cause of Christmiddot Eastern Kentucky through his founded the Christian Appala- the good news of Christs messhyIInd of His Church position as Deail of Kentucky ehian Project Inc an independ- B1ge ~f broth~rhood and middotconshy

There cannot be any voca- Mountain Missions In this posi- ent ~on-Igtrofit organization cern a~id ca~ca~ and hurled aons he said unless they are tion Father directS all the mis- working to develop the economic tomatoes ~ unless in other words they siooory and soCial endeavorS of resources of the region to the The Word is not falling OD

00e offered spontaneously of t1-e Church in this the most advantage of the middotpoor Now in entirely stony ground even in themselves conscr~usly gener- ~pera1e povenymiddot area of its fourth y~ar of setvi~ in ~ -an a~eamiddot wpell~ for genera-tions Ciusly totally America Jackson COUl)t~ the CAP Inc Catholics have been thougbt to ~ This hesa1d applieS Doth to Per capita income in these lias carried out numerous devel- I be mleagiie witb the devil The ~stly and Religious vocati6ns eotJnties avera~es bet~~~rt ~50 ClPmental training and employ- parish is currently instructing male and female vocations ana $840 a year Nearly nine ou~ plent programs Among these 25 people in themiddot faith

Willingness to sacrifice the M every 10 houses is lIubstand ate tlie lntroduction and pro- The expenses of our proshy Pope went on is the cru of the atil lacliing electricity running duction of- sevetal itlew crops gram are enormous Father middot~bleril The world of religion water or inside faciliti~ Tl1ere in themiddot count4ls agricult~ral sighed and theyre financed

discredited by atheism or hedon- ~ no higher per cent of illiter- economy and many technical entirely by contributions On lEm he said is no longer as at- atePeople in the UnIted SUites innovations iIi the agricUltural his speaking tour Father is ~~tive as it OJlC~ was _ thml in Eastern Kentucky Med- field searching for individuals or

Bul youth he said is stillre- ieal facilities ale few and far Complementing the agrjcul- groupswhowill sponsor one of eeptive to the call of the Church between tural prOjects several small in- the 25 full time volunteers like to do difficult things heroic We need doctors desperately dustrialptograms serve to train Charlie King (~t a OOstof $30 a Cbings Father Beiting said sadly and employ natives of the month) Olrmiddottomiddot pledge contribushyThe Pope urged families to be Sickness Leads to Apathy county The woodworking fac- tions for any item on his list -tiling to make the sacrifices of Malnutrition takes Its toll in tOry turns out high quality Ap- of immediate needs - items bull son or daughter to the Church many ways The mountain pal~hian woodcrafts ranging ranging from tires for their

people have often been carica from knick-kneeks to Appala- much used cars to a Holstein turedas lazy but Wldernourish- - chian musical instruments ~ for the dLiry farm

Two in One merrt and sickness are the real Seasonal employment is pro- In concluding his talk to the BERLIN (NC) - The World eauses of their apathy Most of vided through the production of students at Cassidy Father asked

Congress of Catholic Youth these people have middotbeen sick Christmas wreaths Plans are if they would like his address lIePresenting the International since the day they were born ~ on the drawing board for a pal- 01 on second thought he

Catholic Youth Federation and Father asserted letmaking industry and assorted qUIPPed would you rather have the World Federation of Cathoshy Theyre gooCl people-won- enterprises that will employ Charlies lie Young Women and Girls deriul people he insisted Its over 100 men in the county For those who would like have voted to merge the two a shame There should be many which has one of the highest Fathers it Is St Williams erganizations to form the World more people working to help unemployment statistics in the Church 224 rexington Street

tibem nation Lancaster KentuclqWederation of Catholic Youth

THE ANCHORshy 7 Thursday May-2 l968

Crisis in Poland Affects Church

BERLIN (NC)-The Catholic Ohurch and Catholic members of Polands Sejm (parliament) have been caught in the crossshyfire of the current political crisis in that country and the resurgence of anti-Semitism that has a~companied it

For the first time the Church has bean publicly attacked for its support on the students demshyonstrations in March fur intelshylectual and democratic freeshydoms

Jozef Kepa first secretary of the Warsaw Communist party committee in m speech released (April HI) backed party chief Wladyslaw Gomulkas efforts to tone down the anti-Jewish stateshyments that have been rampant in the press on television and in public speeches but had hard words for the Catholic hiershyarchy

Target of Kepas criticisms was Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski of Warsaw who praised the stushydents iOr their maturity and moderation

The voice of the reactionary party of the Church hierarchy had been heard Kepa said among forces united against the peoples power He condemned the support given by Polish Roman Catholic leaders to the student demonstrations

Meanwhile in the Sejm the five Catholic members known as the Znak group were assailed by Premier Jozef Cyrankiewicz aid Politburo member Zenonmiddot Klisko because the Cathltllic legshyislators had asked the governshyment if it approved of a violashytion of civil rights by police acshytion against the demonstrating students Kliszko called the Catholic deputies friends of pro-Israel Jews and revisionshyists

Future Bright ROME (NC) -The religious

liberty situation in Czechosiovshyakia has already changed greatly

for Catholics and hopes for th~

future middotseem bright according to Bishop Frantisek Tomesek a p 0 s t ltl) 1 i e administrator of Prague

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FoR River-Thurs May 2 t9688 Urges Vctory ~ VietnomRecipes Re1call Memor~es ST lOUIS (NC)-A oan fbft Victory in Wetnam and a coo-gt demnation of Communism ltBOf Many Friendly Coks intrinsleany evil highlighteltl a series of IOresolutions adoptedBy Mary Enley Dally bIY the priests and bishops Belraquo ving on the Cardinal Mindszen~II A collection of cookbooks 16 a good addition to a kitchen Council governing board ~

Like a dictionary or an encyclopedia a good cookbook is the anti-communist CaJdina$ 8Il authoritative source of information but like that dictionshy lIlindszenty F~undation

ary or encyclopedia irts a cold impersonal font of lrnow- The resolutions adopted a1l the end of the foundations threegt

ledge On the other hand backs cf enveloPes on a blank day celebration of its 10th anni-o there probably is 8Jt your check on the inside of a match versary he1e outlined a p~ Muse certainly ~ ours folde around the margin of a gram based on demands for vioo those h~nd-gasthered recipes seven cents off coupon-whatshy tory in Vietnam rigorous pun-o dear and welcome as letters from ever blank Paper is to be found ishment flaquo riote16 and looters bome These receipes fur goodies in a- womans purse But they and ltm e Fecognition 1baII )lou have been represent communication ~ith there can be no useful ~ served at hoones other people OIl a common logue wiIth men of iN win of friends the ground masters of ~ceit band - written In the never-never land of Released with the resoluti01d ones on yel- things to be done remains the was a stmement from Lola Beue lowing cracked sorting and clasSification of Holmes a Negro leader whO paper in spidery these recipes type them out on joined the Communist party 1ft ecript by hands inde~ cards file neatly divided 1957 as an -informer for the long stilled the into soups salads desserts Federal Bureau of Investi~ti~ ones you took etc (FBI) Emphasizing the comJiNshy~er the tele- And yet though order may be Dist role in civil rights aotiw Phone haH ill heavens first lawthere is someshy ties Miss Holmes told conte shyIlhorthand the thing-quite a something---to be ence delegates othe half in said for our box of recipes In Much of the civil t1rrnlGII ebbreviations the this-sounds- anticipatwn of company coming youre seeing right now was 8Iloo 8OOd kind you jagged out of or just a yen to fix something nmged by the Communist p~ the evening paper with a bobby different we leaf tbrough the when I was a member pin meant to try and probably assorted sizes and shapes of our didnt miscellany M brings reminis-

Also there are the puzzlers cences nostalgia and more Conege Functioning shybow-tos from experts who cook often than not_ an idea of someshyby in9tinet--a handful of flour thing entirely different from the Despite Resignations or SCl just enough so that it item we were originally seek- River mark 50th anniversary In wheelchair Miss Mary R LADYSMITH (NC) - Ibl looks right or enough milk so ing acting president of Mount SeDshy

Dailey organizer and charmiddotter member of Fall River unitario College Sister DonnaItll smooth but not too runny For instance 1Ibere Is fIbe standing from left Mrs Mary Hennessey ticket chainnan Marie Rudolph said the Wis-- Pantry Library cookie recipe in the delicate for anniversary observ-ance Mrs Catherine Lee sUite re- consin college is functioningSuch is the collection-if tbis script of our late beloved neighshy

-bor Mrs Madeline Kelly with gent Rev James Morse chapiain Miss Mary F Maleadynormally after the recent resiglag-tag box of this-and-that its addendum Patsy you might ~n+- srtate regentmiddot Mrs Mary Lou Silvia general chairman nation of founder-president Si9shycould be called a collection-at pao ter Ann Mary Gullan eigbIJour house in the pantry li- like to make these as a surprise for observance faculty members and three acJfur your mother (Patsy wes brary tihen 12 years old) ministration personnel

A trained librarian indeed a Sister Donna Marie said thetrained anybody in the artmiddot of T-heres Marguerite Culhanell veal-in-wine we begged from former president resigned imshy

orderly classification even a he after having this at her mediately but the resignatioJUl well-trained cook woulq be house Isabel Donohoes trick of of the other members of -therwORL~ appalled at this motley array sprinkling chicken with vinegar e~BYMAllULYN RODERICK~ eollege are not effective until Some recipes are written on the to firm it up resulting in chicken June 1 She said the college is

salad par excellence many a recruiting faculty members at kindly with FRENCH FLAIR this time and does not anticioopet reciPe shared

lIS by readers of this column pate any difficultay in acquw One Pork Chop rve always read and heard Another tip fur Summer visi shy ing replacements by the Fall

term that French women have a flair tors to this home of the 1968 Also tbere is one addedre- for clothes but I never realized Man And His World is to The resignations were based

eently by a nameless friend we the truth of this statement until plan on wearing bright little on a dispute over the role to be met when she came to a collec- I visited Montreal Immediately dresses and suits but please no played at the college by the _tion center to get food for her it hits you from the moment bermudas or tight slacks Do newly appointed lay vice-pres-shyfamily afteT her home hadbeen you step out of -your car in however take your hemlines up ident Granmiddott E Zachary

GOLDEN JUBILEE Daughters of Isabella in Fall

partially burned out quring the front of tbe hotel that this is a an inch or two for the minilook recent rioting Many many city of women is the tbing in this land of the Catholic parishes had contiib- who know and mounties and I think I had the uted food ~d clothing Any who care about longest hemlines in town with number cf men and women dressing Minishy them just above my knees (-at came to deliver the donated skirts are evshy least they felt that way)supplies and remained to work erywhere but Ourls have taken over this sorting clothi~ packaging sup- miniskirts worn town and they look so delightfulplies for families of two four with style and that I couldnt resist visiting the and on up chicness colOl talented hair stylist in the hotel

Back to the newest recipe abounds bright and having my hair cut and~ This woman had been given a pinks v i vi d curled a Ie 68 For evening bag of mushrooms by a friendly 0 ran g e s and these curls (with the aid of falls grocer on her block If I could citrus yellows and hairpieces of course) cascade have a pork chop-just one pork f rillsan d down the neckline giving these chop she said I could fix flounces float forth and a walk I Canadian women a fragile fem- my familys favorite dinner down a street is like watching inine appearance that is hard to

One pork chop for a family an everchanging fashion show compete with In fact if you of four We couldnt believe it What astonished me as much feel like getting an inferiority until we tried it at our house as the sense of style that pershy complex about your looks this and were asked for a repeat vades the city was the aura cf is the place to go I guarantee performance Heres how good g-rooming Nowhere do you when you return youll want

Use large-capped mushrooms see a sloppy woman no one is new hair style a new sense of Fry the pork chop cool Be- seen walking the streets with make-up and a oomplete new

wardrobe shymove meat and grind it Add curlers in their hair or runs in seasoned bread crumbs and a - their stockings Obviously the bit of grated onion both sauteed - women ~ Morit~eal are con- in melted margarine or fat from cerned WIth theIr appearance

J UBI L A R I AN Sister - the chop Pile on top of in- and work hard to keep it up Color Process verted mushroom capS Make a - One thing in their favor is the

Mary Marciann of the Feli- er~am ~uee (dried or canned price 01 the clothes One can cian Sisters marked her sil- nulk Wl~ do) into which you - pick up a lovely summer dress Booklets vel jubilee of reJi~iou8 pro- have added ithe chopped and fur about twenty-two dollars ill fession at St Stanislaus sauteed mushroom stems ~our Cenadian money or a smashing-shy

0 a SYSTEMATIC55001( ear SAVINGS

MONTHLY DEPOSITS

5 00 01 amiddot INVESTMENT bull 10 year SAVINGS

NOTICE ACCOUNTS a REGULAR450 year SAVINGS

Bass River Savings Bank

Bank By Mail We Pay The Postage

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA

bull SOUTH YARMOUTH bull HYANNIS bull DENNIS PORT - bull OSTfRVlllpound

Year Books

Brochures

Convent Fall River on Sun- sauce into bottom of a shallow - slack sUit for around thirty-middot pan top withthe stufted mush- eight High fashion for a small AmericCin Pr~s~ Inc

oay~ Observance ~p~luded a rooms ~bake until tender price seems to be the motto of ~ Mass of thanksgIvmg cele- 20-30 nunutes the little boutiques tbatmiddot are OFFSET PRII~ITERS~~ LEnERPRESS

brated by Rev Itobert S So now into our heterogene-- ~ound everywhere and if youre Kaszynski StS~nslau8uscollection J0~ this ~ded middotplannin~ a tri~ to this SOPhis~- 1-~7JOFFI~ VENUE hone 997~942t pastor and a -reception for lte~ - communIcation agam - eate~ CIty thiS Summer don t~

- _ remJnder of someone -who was outfit YOU16elf before You go - friepds m the parochial -willillg to share her houSewife -- save a few pennies fur some

school -haU- _ lmowhow delightful buys up there

New Bedford Mass

~

9 New Insecticide Promises To End Dangmiddoter of Sprays

By Joseph and Manlyn Roderick

I doni lmow how other prdeners fared over the Winter but my roses were hit pretty hard Most of my pruning is done now and very ~itble remains of 1ast years IIOwth Luckily the roses surrived wt ground level but I Gidnt have much of a job a~ h Nader knew which ones the~ldmg w at to prune Slnce children would enjoy the hours most of what I could see ihey were open and how much ve the root crown is dead they cost

This year I am going to try bull We found our hotel through stematic approach to ridding this tiny book that described it IDY plants of insects rather than in glowing tenns and it tlllmed IPr~ying simply their upper sur- out to be all that the autho18 IIaces A systematic insecticide had said and then some II taken in through a plants Dining SJl)Ob fIlIOots and passes through its sya- However every bit as imporshytern The one I purchased is in taut as our place oli lodging was granular form and contains a the places where we dined and fertilizer A measured amount Mr Frommer and Mr Godwin III Spread around the base of the couldnt have given us better mose bush worked into the sou tips on dining if they had been ifhen given a thorough watering with us personally One evening The roots then absorb the fer- Joe and I (thanks to 11 kindshytilizer and insecticide and sup- hearted Nana) ate alone at a lit shyposedly keep the plant free from tIe bit of Portugal transplanted IIU chewing and sucking insects to this continent called the k six weeks Fado ComP1ete with melanshy

SLfer~ Quicker moly guitars and Spanish-Por-I would be parUcularly grate- tuguese cooking it was a delight

ful ii the systamic program to the eye ear and palate worked beacuse it would elim- Equally as good though were Snate spraying No matter how inexpensive luncheon places cautious one is there is alwaYs suchlS A La Crepe Bretonne Gte possibility that children win and the Pam Pam The former

I th th has an upstairs constructed Uld eome in contact WI e spray 1_ at d lik te hi dend harm themselves ~r e e a pIra span

Aside from the safety factor 8 bill of fare thart ~onsists of this method Js also much quicker ~late-SI~ paper-thin crepes llIld easier ttuui spraying No filled WIth any of 81 different messy spray cans and no lost fillings One cOld spend a energy in pumping and unblock- whole afternoon Just watchi~g Ing nozzles just a third of a tJeCOOks cr~ating these deli shycmpful of an odorless material ClOUS concoctIOns but Montreal applied around a plant every six hol~ so many wonders that one weeks with no danger that it ham t time to linger over any will rain ~e day after you one thIng

ra ed and wash off the ra The Pam Pam too was a 8P t y 1 sP Y charmIng IneXpenSIve restaurant ala erla fo f 1 H g d

I am more than willing to try I a anu y un anan In ecor IIOmething new but being a pes- and dIshes It featured flourless simist at heart I cannot conceive cakes Both my mother and I had of something which is so easy some for desse~ but before I actually working Lurking An could ask the w81tre~s what they the back of JDy mind is the feel- did make them WIth if ~ey mg that someone devised a omi~~d flo~r Jason wa~ dIPPIng method of satisfying lazy gar- his hands In ~veryones plates ampmers that the were doing and I thought It best to pay our

y bill and departoomethmg about theIr roses to try without having to go to

B tt J d I f lt th t h t 0 oean e a a

m h t bl rt f a s garuc rou e so 0 upill forroses We will give it Il

we s~mpled of thIS cosmopolItan_ b t ti d -cy was u an appe zer an

try though and hope that the that we would like to ret~m RSults live up to the message ag81~ for an entree-but WIthshy

out a two year older on the label of the product Now that were all back in a

lJm the llUtchem routine at least until Summer l have come to the conclusion vacation heres a tasty little

tfhat any family that attempts vegetable recipe to add interest to take a vacation trip with a ta everyday menus toddler has to be either courageshy lEGGS l1lgtJIVAN eurolUS or stupid and Im afraid we (Il) I dIE)tfull into the latter category eVl eggs When our plans to visit Wash- G hard-cooked eg~s lngton over the Spring vacation 1 2~ oz can deVIled ham failed because it was impossible teaspoon Worcestershire to obtain reservations (evishy sauce dently everyone else in the U S teaspoon grated onion bad the same plans only sooner Ik teaspoon salt titan we did) we set our sights yenteaspoon dmiddotry mustard aorthwaTd Montreal was our Dash pepper go~l and with our terrible two Z Tablespoons cream or milk in tow along with some genial (Broccoli and Saaee) smndparents and two young 1 pkg frozen or 1 bunch fresh ladies of seven and nine we set broccoli Iotth ona rainy Mond~ momshy Im Tablespoons butter or Ing margarine

Fortunately I had come with 1~ Tablespoons flour -e a pocket book guide of Montshy ~ teaspoon dry mustard Ileal andQuebec written by Arshy teaspoon salt thU1 Frommer and John God- Dash pepper win in ~peration with ttIe cup milk Bank of Nova SCOtia n was Jk cup grated sharp cheese absolutely priceless The 8Ushy 1) Prepare the deviled eggs thorS described in expllcit detai by cutting I( inch slice from one botel motel and rooming house end of shelled egg remove yolk eccQmmodations different types and mash yolks and end slices eftestaurants from ones where with the ham Worcestershire ~ can get eggs toast and cofshy oniorisalt mustard pepper and Iee-tor 65c io the elite gounnet cream mill well and then use laavens that lure 1be patrons flo fill hollows of egg whites with theIr haute cuisine and I) COOk broccoli as label dfshy~Hy the bighllghts of the city recls (if f~n) or in a small ampat tourist shbUldnt misa am9unt of wBtell Until tender ISald highUght were even catoeshymzed - tba JastantlJ tile

if yf

I) J I

EVERYBODYS GOTTA EAT Pfc~Charles Richards of Pittson Pa s-hares his C-ratio~~ w~th fatigue-hatted Httle Vietnamese boy in a villag~ near Saigon where Richards outfit the 1st Battalion 27th Infantry 25th Inshy

fan try Division was on a sweeping oPeration Jleoar the Vietnamese capital ~C Photo

We Like It Here Milwaukee Neighborhood Committee Works

To Prevent Panic Selling-MILWAUKEE (NC) - Some

strange signs are beginning to appear in the windows of homes around St Agnes parish on the citys North Side

Theyre being displayed by persons interested in stabilizing the area They call attention to a program that aims to reduce house turnover so that home and area values can be mainshytained

In the eyes of the organizers the prgram is designed to preshyvent panic selling

The signs read Were Not Moving to SUburbia-We Like It Here and This House Is NOT For Sale

Theyve been prepared by an

NUlises Cound~ Mee~

MOlY ]] at St Annes The Diocesan Council of Cathshy

olic Nurses will hold their Spring Plenary Meeting on Satshyurday May 11 at st Annes School of Nursing Fall River

The business meeting and election of officers scheduled for 4 oclock will be followed at 5 by an address by Rev Donald J Bowen assistant at St Marys Norton

Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament will be given at 630 and the banquet will follow at 715

Reservations must be made with Mrs Ann Fleming 228 Oak Grove Ave Fall River no later tlban Sunday May 5

melting the butter in a saucepan and stirring in flour mustard saltand pepper Remove from heat and stir in the milk Re- tum to heat and cook until

thickened stirring constantly Add the grated cheese and stir -tmtil smooth

In amiddot cassetrGle dish arrange gt

the cooked broccoli Stand the deviledmiddot eggs with stuffed ends

up between and on broccoli pieces Pour the sauce over aU-

area stabilization committee for distribution in homes in an area populated by about 40000 pershysons about one-third Negroes

The signs are one of the means by which we hope to dis~ourage unethical real estate salesmen according to Anshythony L Silva acting commitshy

middottee chairman and a member of St Agnes parish

Fear Tactics

He explained at rl~ent meetshyings that the program is not sponsored by a religious group Nor are the committee apshyproaching the problem on a color basis but 18ther as a matshyter of economics

Our aim is to restore confishydence in the area and countershyact unethical salesmen since they tend to operate on fear tactics said Silva

The immediate goal of the group is to make its efforts known to all residents of the area by establishing a network of block contacts

Persons who have expressed interest in the program represhysent St Agnes Roosevelt Drive Presbyterian Garden Homes Evangelical Lutheran Augusshytana Evangelical Lutheranmiddot Siloah Lutheran amI Elim Tabshyernacle churches

THE ANCHOR-Thursday May 2 1968 -------------=

Teaching Sisters To Get Raise

DALLAS (NC) - Bishop Thomas K Gorman of DallasshyFort Worth has approved a salshyary raise for Sisters teaching in parochial schools which was recommended by the diocesan board of education

In a letter to all pastors Bishshyop Gorman stated As of Sepshytember the base minimum salshyary for each Sister in regular service to the local parish will be $1500 per year

Enclosed with -the letter was an agreement signed by Bishop Gorman fM the signature of each pastor and the major supeshyrior of the religious order of Sisters serving his school

The agreement provides thllgtt the parish pay the stated base minimum salary to eac~ Sister provide a convent and its upshykeep along with utilities inshycluding a telephone an automoshybile and its maintenance and health insurance

Sister Caroleen of the Schooi Sisters of Notre Dame diocesan superintendent of schools said the increase in the minimUm base salary Is fbe first such since 1959 when it was set at

$960

Withdraw Missionaries From Angola Territory

NEW YORK (NC) - The United Church of Christ and the United Church of Canada are w~thdrawingthe majoritr of theIr missionaries from the Portuguese West African ter- ritory of Angola

Dr Alford Carleton execushytive vice-president of the United Churchs Board for World Ministries whose headshyquarters are hele said the acshytion was being taken because the Portuguese government is apparently seeking tomiddot extinshyguish Protestant missionary acshytivity in Angola

The two churches have withshydrawn all missionaries III total of 12 whose terms of service had already been extended for more than a year beyond the normal term The missionaries wiJI apply for readmission

Portuguese administrators have in the past given assurshyances that re-entry permits would be given but Dr Carleshyton said there have been inshystances of denials of re-entry permits to missionaries

BlUE R~ION

LAUNDRY 273 CENTRAL AVE

NEW BEDFORD ~

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and bakemiddotin a 400middot oVeftaboutI~sect~ggsectsect~~sectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsect~sectsectI~J30 minutes 01 untilbubblTmiddot1 I

992-6216

-ObtainsFreedo ForRefugees

MADRID (NC)--Amiddot group t1ti youth leaders who spent a nig~

middotin a church to avoid a I~est ~ police was released la~

through the help of Auxilia~ Bishop Angel Mortll Figuls ~ Madrid

The youths had taken refureg in the church of Our Lady ~ Montana in suburban MorataJaiJ after police raided a mccting bll a parish building which th0 youths said was a house of thQ people of God Q

The meeting which had b~

announced in the padsh tIbQ previous Sunday as a conferenltcO on Ohristian doctrine was SUib rounded by police on suspiciolQf that it was an illegal meetin~ of workers oommimiddotttees-inde-o pendent labor organizations Tb() police arrested a Catholic woramp ers leader Dannen Ruiz Abo-1 gado Juan Canet a lawyer a~ Father Juan Jose Maria Bltlllesashyteros as they left the meetin- The three were late releasecA

However middotthe Y9uths atten+shying the conference fled to ~

church to avoid arrest and ve mained there until BishOJll Morta arrived and obtainecll

their freedom after negotia~ with the police

10 ~H~ ANCHORshy )hursday May2 bull 19~8 (

- - bull )

Sup~me C~ult Qars Obscenity

For Youth WASHINGTON (NC)

For more than two years the Supreme Court has made it clear thatin the eyes of the law obscenitymiddot is a sometime thing its distribution ~o adults nearly impossible to regulate without endangering the Conshystitutions guarantees of free speech and opinion

But over the same two years the Court has indicated thai it might be possible to control the

availability of obscene books and films to the young and in

1967 it issued an op~n invitashycmiddotmiddot tion to the nations ~a~yers to find the right cases an4 the right arguments tot~stmiddotthis middotmiddotview _

This year the cases were found and the Supreme Court did what most observers thought it would do it permitted states and citiesto control distribution of obscene material to youngshylIJters - providect It drlws the lines finely and tightly

It returrled from amiddotJtwo-week recess to rule thatmiddotmiddot NeW York middot States law barring phsons un- Organization Starts ~er 17 from buying smut met ~ middotthe ~e~t~nd tpatrgtalIas1s middot~lm CLEANUP FatherDetm6d P McDermott of New Yorks lower East ~ide St Housingmiddot Program

elasslflcatlOn law undet whIchmiddotmiddotmiddot bull - bull WASHINGTON (NC) - ~1 bull

minors areprevented from see- BrIgId spansn pas8~s o~t pamt ~nd prusJ1e~ to sl1rpl1r~a~ volunteers who particIpated m Church-sponsored nonprofit 0IJ)00

lt ingsome movies didnot ih~ AprIl ZO ()peratJoA Cleanup It was estImated that 50000 urban people of all baek- ganization here haS launched II

middotThemiddotopinions shoUld go li-long grounds w~re joined in the WOllk by 5000 suburbanites in cleaning andpaintin~ aJong~ousing program Wider whiClli way toward clearing up a con- 46 Streets NC Photo It hopes to purchase 322 sl~ lrti-tutional atmosphefe which at homes rehabilitate them aDCil middottimes hasbeen no Clearer thanmiddot 0 000 p J resellmiddotthem to poor families DiP

the air around the Supreme middotMmiddotore ThanmiddotS1 middotinGmiddot reo CIt Day rOJe ect del federal financing Courts building on a Pilrticu- The organization-Urban Beshylarly still slmlne~ day 1ew YOk middotPrmiddotelamiddotte Heomiddotds lomiddotmiddotn~Sectmiddot omiddotmiddotrmiddot-amiddot n Effort habilitation Corp~will begiul

While the Court in an 8-1 de- 1lIIII 1lIIII the program with therehabi eision written by Justice Thur- tation of nine row houses whiob 000 Marshall-his first major ~ NEW YORK (NC)Jt- Wall z At the end of tbe da~ they ~teas of densest poverty ~Jl it will purchase from the ~ epiiiion-tlirewout the Dallal greatday for New York-one ~ Bat down togethermiddot at tables iyIanhatian andthe Bronx _ development Lanmiddotdmiddot Agen~ filmmiddot clasSification law because hard work oonstructiye dia- str~ng tile length of streets to Last SumJl1er in its thitd year Washi~gtonurban refewal tfwas unduly vague even there logueand happy celebration eat a meal of celebraHon pro- of successful operation the thorny agency The RIA apo K upheld the right of goer~- -Along 45 streets in the Man- vided and prepared by people ~rojec(wastlIreatenea b~ out- proved sale of the houses to ~

Jnen~ to prote~t the Y0llng 1~m hattan and Bronx ooroughs of the block 1gtreak of violence in East Har- group at a purchasemiddot price ~ ~slble bad mfluenc~ some 50000 Negroes Puerto Many in~olved said they felt lem $26100

Different Directions Ricans Italians Jews Slavs the most important aspect of the To counteract riot threats Purchase and rehabilitatiOll middotIt did so without p~ssing on Orit~nt~ls and eople~f otmiddothe whole projeot was not renova- Msgr Fox organized East Har- work which will be done bIT

themiddot meri~~or lackof merits nationalities were joined by middottion but relationship It gave lem peace processions For five Negro contractors and involVG of the film involved but hinted some 5000 guest volunteers _ an opportunity at a time middotof nghts more than 1000 old and young Negroes as apprentice6 middot111at had the law been suffi- from suburbia and other middle alienation and fear between YQung Puerto Ricans walked will be carried out under ~

eielitly explicit about what con- class areas black and white rich and poor through their streets with ban- $]37000 mortgage provided ~ stihites proper or improper con- They spent the day c1eani1g inner city and suburbia oung nersmiddot flowrs singing songs the International BrothelhooCl

duct the Dallas censors would renovating and decorating the and old for people to meet one carrying candles and standing of Electrical Workers and guall shy have had no trouble iicei1sing inner city streets and alleys another as persons in an at- up for peace hope and love anteed by the Federal Housins middotthe film buildings and residences 10- mosphere of work play and La~gely through their efforts Administration under its 221pound(

Instead thc Court said they gether the men women and accomplishment peace was restored to the area program were set adrift in a boundless children residents wOlked shoul- Its one way to make real sea and arrived at their con- der to shoulder with priests what Dr Martin Luther King elusion--that the film should be nuns laymen and women vol- envisioned when he said I Archbishop Greets shown to adults only - from unteers They cleaned back- have a dream as East Harlemshy DEBROSS OIL many different directions yalds and basements did car- ite Valentine Haddock described Armenian Patriarch ~uch a situation is wide open pen try work made plumbing all the people helping one anshy NEW YORK (NC) ~Archshy co

te abuses not the least of which repairs painted doors windows other to become not even just bishop Terence J Cooke ofNew would be a drift among film- and building facades friends-relatives York welcomed His Holiness Heating Oils makers toward the most innocu- At the end of each block a Peace Processing Vasken I Supreme PatIiarch ous and the totally inane The large and colorful mural was Cleaned out basements and andCatholicos of all Armenians and Burnersresult The vast wasteland that painted on a wall depicting the backyards on streets are to be at an ecumenical service in St some have described in refer- good things happening transformed later again by Patricks cathedral 365 NORTH FRONT STREET ence to another medium might street residents and guest vol- It marked the first time the

NEW BEDFORDbe a verdant paradise in com- Award Ecumenical unteers working in partnelship supreme spiritual leader of the parison into vest pocket parks basket- Armenian church had been reshy

But because the law was Theology Diploma ball courts little theaters reme- ceived in a Catholic cathedral in ivague said Marshall it does KAMPALA (NC)-A theolo- dial schools and teenage neigh- the United States JIlot follow that the Constitution gical diploma of the University borhood clubs requires absolute fleedom to of East Africa jointly recognized This non-sectarian project exhibit every motion picture of by the Catholic and Anglican was instituted by Msgr Robert every kind at all times and all Churches in East Africa has been J Fox New York archdiocesan places awarded for the first time coordinator for Spanish com-

The first four Uganda students munity action who four years to receive the diploma fare An- ago originated a creative comshy

Schedule Unveiling glicans munity action program Sum-The theological diploma repre- mer in the City now operatingOf Pope1s Statue sents an agreement between out of 26 store fronts in eight

FATIMA (NC) -A 12-footshy Catholics and Anglicans over the high statue of Pope P~lUl VI syllabus and subjects of the theshy

wili be unveiled Monday May ological course However such TRI CITY13 at the Marian shrine here on an agreement does not iriclude the first anniversaly of the any changes in doctrinal teach- BOILER REPAIR COJontiffl visit to the shril)e ing by the churches Each stu- SLAB BRIDGE ROAD Ihe st~tue depicts Pope Paul dent ~oJl~ws th~ course accold- ASSONET MASS 02702 i

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THE ANCHORshyThursday May 2 1968

Portland Prelote Stresses Crisis

In Education PORTLAND (NC) - Co- )0

adjutor Bishop PetermiddotL Ger- BATON ROUGE (N2)-Tho ety apostolic administrator Louisiana AFL-CIO app Dved tl

of the Portland diocese des- ~ resolution calling for s ~ supshycribed the grave and serious 1 bull port to children attendi 3 nonshycrisis in regard tQ finances and c middot~lmiddot ~ i public schools at its COil ~ntion personnel in the field of Cath- ~H 1 here oUc education at a press con- l~ The resolution endar d the ference here proposal that tuition supple-

While affirming the desira- ments for the teaching oj nOiF bility of Catholic education the religious subjects bc paid Maine bishop pointed to the toward the education of chill-gt serious problems in financing dren regardless of race creed and staffing a system of schools or religion in state alproved which aims at providing a Cath- non-public schools which me~ olic education for all children all the requirements of law whose parents desire it He Emile Comar executive ~ middotnoted both the rising costs of rector of the Louisiana reder2lshyeducation and the dlOp in voca- tion Citizens for EducHtionllll tions and in the number of Reli- Freedom said It is gmtifyin(l gious available for teaching that the state AFL-CIO in tho

Bishop Gerety n~ted During adopted resolution recognizecll the past ten rears six Catholic __ -_~scgtbull~- Jf the need of parents with ct~ schools in this state alld 11 dren in non-public schools

Catholic elementaly schools CARDINAL J~EGER IN AFRICA The retired ~rchbishop of Montreal Paul-Emile Tuitions continue to dse ant1 have closed their doors During Cardmal Leger who has dedicated his Iif e to work with the poor in Africa is continu- taxes are becoming increasingJy41 the same period we have scen II t th h fl k f d f higher and the combination eithe enrollment in our Catholic a y mee mg WI IS oc or ISCUSSIons 0 conditIons m the DIocese of Yaounde Cam- the two has placed a lremeiF schools decrease by 25 per cent eroun NC Photo dous financial burden on thill

middot~i~~~i~e~~~~~Ct~I~~O~Cmiddotard-nal Leger Works for Afmiddotr-ca Lepers -n~~nt of the states populashymg statements Tbe labor organizations resa-

Expand Quality lution noted The contributioJ)fl

The middotsystem be Seeks to Bring SpirituQI Material Aid which these schools havecannot ex- made panded beeause of staffing to the state have long been ree problems financi~l deuromands YAOUNDE (NC)-lt is said The fact that he left behipd COmmodate himself to the new ognized by the public and~middot

and theincreasing costs of pres- that when Paul Emile Cardinal one of the most important dJ- environment and to be ready public officials ent day education Leger former arehbishop of oceses in the world does not fig) to I work effeetivelr It added that the parents bl

Schools must be consoUdated Montreal arrived at the lepro- ure in their thinking but theymiddot The eardinal is already famil- these tuition supported schooJJ wherever hldicated for maxi- s~rium of Nianing in Senega appreciate the sacrifice that is iar with the specific plOblcms of have repeatedly demonstrateflJ mum use of the available Reli- last Dec IS the lepers looked involvedmiddot in leaving his nfltive the lepers villages He thinks their support of both public ani I gious persoJmel at their fingers to see if a mir- country and adapting to a Dew that they need good pharmacies non-public education to the

We mustmiddot concentrate on ex- acle was going to happen and environment and is concerned with CHing for benefit of all Louisiana eh~ cellence in the schools we have they were going w be instan- Cardinal Leger has put him- all types of sicknesses He sees dren Where this is not possible the taneously cured It was in fact self at the service of Archbishop a need for wells powelhouses bishop said the schools in- the first time that the lepers JeanZoa of Yaounde He is food suppliers and medicinesmiddot of Brotherhood Lackvolved will have to be closed had seen a cardinal learning one of the languages various kinds

We must greatly evpand the ri1l~ cardinal however through of Cameroun the one that is Menace to Peace~ Men Not Outcasts S(l()pe and quality of our reli- middotworks of chari1y has for a long most widely spoken in the reshy VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pe~gious education proglams reach- time been concerned withmiddot the middotgion He thinks that jcent wiJl What makes the cardinal parshy is still menaced by questions laquofing out to all age groups lepers M~~y of the houses in take two years for him lamp ale- tkularly admired is that he reshy

prestige and an insufficient senstlBishop Gerety announced the leprosanum here at Yaoul)de gards the lepers as men and not of human brotherhood PQ~that he is creating a task force have been built through his - as outcasts He knows that many Paul VI told thousands of isi~to study religious education gifts The same is tgtrue of sev- Pope Asks Respect lepers are severely mutilated tors gathered in St Pete

plograms in the diocese He eral leprosaria of the Ivory For Human Rights and Cfln no longer take their SQuare for a Sunday noon blesvshywill ask the group he said to Coast Dahomey and Camerouf place in society It is because of ingmake reco~mendations ~on- The cardinl i6 still in the VATICAN CITY (NC)--Jt is middotthis that he seeks to bring them

eerning how the limitedre- stage of making contacts in the vain to proclaim h~man rights material and spiritual aid Speaking from a window ovei shysources of the diocese can best three leprosaria here unless everythlllg IS done ~o He also gives thought to the looking the square Popc P~u1 be used to ploovide an effec- Cardinal Leger does not want ensure the duty of respecting prevention of the disease If cleclared We must support willi tive religious education for the to impose either his aid or him- them by all people everywhere leprosaria are well organized it our hopes that cause (of peace) total community of adults lind self on anyone He has said re- l1ld for all people Pope Paul will perhaps be possible to wage which so many desire and proshychildren peatedly that he does not want VI declared In a letter to the In- a campaign to eradicate the mote with a sense of impartiality

He said he will also ask for to be a burden and tl1at he ternational Conferenee on Hu- disease completey and justice with true love ofi reeommenltlations on the best wants to be regarded as a simple man Rights meeting in Tehran The cardinals realism aston- freedom and of respect for su1ishy

fering peoplesuse of the dioceses Religious priest Iran ishes many Africans who like personnel Disinterested Help The lettel signed by the Pope to live from day to day and who

~-------------bull That is why the Africans ad- was sent to Father Theodore do not like their customs to be mire him Moslems and Chris- Hesburgh CSC president of upset The cardinal understands tians agree that his is an exam- Notre Dame University and head that the Africans must be shoWn pIc of disinterested help that is of the papal delegation to the that aid is not directed at deshynot often seen in Africa ongress The meeting is being stroying their customs but at

held on the 20th anniversary of bringing them a better standard the United Natio)ls Declaration of living

Workers Charges of Human Rights and in conshyjunction with the International Reject CelibacyDenied in Germany Human Rights Year

ROERMOND (NC)-TwcllyshyBONN (NC)-Charges by the The papal letter dec111red one young Dutch priests havewomens branch of the Indian With all men of goodwill we told Bishop Petrus Moors ofYoung Christian Workers shall follow with great interest this Netherlands See that they(YCW) that living and working ~his conference in Tehran which can no longer accept the plicstlyconditions for Indian girls means to formulate and prepare a celibacy obligationtraining as nurses in West Gershy program of measures to be taken

many were unsatisfactory were on the prolongation of this Hushy denied here man Rights Year

The Rev Hubert Debatin Racial discrimination raises soProtestant minister who initi shy

many troubles social injustice F L COLLINS amp SONSated a program of nursing economic misery and ideologicaltraining for girls from Indias oppression so many revolts that INCORPORATED 1937Kerala state saId that the Indishyrecourse to violence as a meansan government had ordered an

investigation of the complaints to right these wrongs to human The Indian embassy here howshy dignity is a grave temptation ever refused to comment (The Development of Peoples)

Rev Mr Debatin said he visshyON CD HOARD Alexandshy Ited the embassy and told offi shy

er P Tureaud Sr chief cials that the charges wer~ completely false Despite thecounsel for the Louisiana no comment by the embassy

branch of the National Assoshy it is reliably repOrted that emshyciation for theAd~ancement bassy officials did visit several of Colorelti People tNAACP) hospitals and questioned Indian

girlS about th~ir living and beeame the first Negro elecshyworking conditions ted to the Catholic tJniver~ The niinist~r iJaidthe Indian

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12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 2 1968

C~~e$ ~~Ergy Role in Sreg~Hrch F9f ~~ Crisis Sc~~tm(ln

By Msgr George G Higgins The bighop of a middle-siood eastern diocese recently

gnnounced at ceremonies memorializing Martin Luther King Jr that the diocese will spend a substantial portion of its annual Development Fund to improve the condition ef the Negro bullbullbull The money poslible that even those Cahoshyhe was at pains to empha- lies (and Protestants) who are size will not be gpent pater- most vigorously opposeq to

wilistically but in close 00- clerical involvement in social operation with local Negro and economic issues are nevershyleaders He said that his com- theless in fevor of using church mitffiimt wi 11 funds as seed money to develshylTeceiVe the op projects for the benefit of bacJcing of the the poor in general and for areas Catholics poor Negroes in partiCUlar I make tbisDisconcerting Fact ~ o m mit - I would hope of course that ment he as- this might prove to be the case aert1d confi- but only time will tell lIIent that our Meanwhile the fact that Catholic people such a high percentage of Cathshyshare this love olies and protestants are 00

-m Ii d concern record as being opposed to That the bishop the middotchurches getting involved felt it necessary in political and social issues is to make the latter statement for rather disconcerting to put it the record might lead one ~ as mil~ly as possible suspeet that in point of factmiddot be I say tliisas one who can symshyantiCfpated that some of hi$ pathizewith thoseCatholicsor Catholic people would object to Protestants or Jews who object his 0 decision and was mereIi to certain types of clerical inshyWying to neutralize their op~ volvement which either ignore mtion in advance or to put it the complexities of the political morecrudely was trying to ~rocess or tend to oversimplify beat them to the punc~ sO to the application of moral prinei-Bjpeak pIes to complex social and ecoshy

I Expert Opposition pomic problems or finally tend Be that as it may a recent to leave the impression that

ampallup Poll on the attitude of Clerics have a monopoly on the Cathdlics 3lld Protestants with regard to the involvement of their churches and their clergy in political and social issues would seem to suggest thatshylIIlless his diocese is the rare exceptl(~n that proves the rule -~he bIShop can exp~t a cershyiau~ amount of 0PPoSIb~)D from a slzable JIllnonty of his Cathshyooc people

lftY-Seven per cent of Cathshyclies res~ndmg m the Gallu~ survey said that the churcti~~ should not get involved with 35 per cent statmg that t~e d1~rch~~ sho~d express SOCIal enS pO~~Ical Vle~s

~gn Icantly l~ was found ~at more Catholics than Pro~-

Virtue of political prudence or have been granted ethical inshysights thatmiddot have been denied to other mortals

S~rious Obligation It is one thing however to

demand that clerics stay within the limits of their o~ compeshytence in the political order and quite another thing to try to muzzle them or to deny that they have any role at all to play in the field of public policy In the case of civil rights for exatitple they havemiddot a serious

Gbligation to teach the truth as they see it

To do so in any meaningful woay tlley must at times move beyond the realm of general

0Stants thmk ~hat the ~hurlt~esprinciples into the area of spe- should n~ get ~volved ~n soc~al and polItlcal Issues Fifty-~wo lPOerlledcefnt of the Protesta~ts P avored mvolvment whIle 42 ~er cent disagreed

Hadden Study Contrarirwise however a

mudy released during the same week in which middotthe Gallup findshymgs were made public found

ntat in all caSes Protestantsmiddot were more vigorous in their opshyposition to social action by clergymen thaI) either Roman Catholics or Jews

The latter study directed by ~effrey K Hadden a sociologist at Western Reserve University in Cleveland was summarized In ~onsiderabledetail by Edwaro R iFiske in an article entitled -Cl~rgy and Civil Rights in the editorial section of the Sunday Ap~il 21 issue of the New York linles

Since the Gallup and HadGen Alrveys dealt specifically with the right of the clergy and the ehurches to speak o~t on social and political issues (civil rights tor example) and not on the role of the churches in financing programs aimed at improving U1t ~ot of Negroes their findshyings do not necessarily m~ ofoou~E that the bishop referrect to a~ove will encounter oppe-

cifies~ even at the risk of a~tagshyonizing those Catholics who disshyagree ith them

This does not mean that clershyies or other representatives of official church bodies should shortcircuit the political procshyess by trying to force their own solutions on the body politic by means of heavy-handed authorshyitarian edicts

If they were to shirk this reshysponsibility or run awoay frOm this challenge for fear of antagshyonizing a minority (or for that matter eyen a majority) of their people they would be unshyworthy of their calling

-This having been said howshyever itshould be noted that clericS and other representatives of offlCiilI church bodies alSo

have an obllgation to keep their methods of teaching under conshystant review

Wo~ CUt Out We cannot automatically as-middot

Sume in other words that all of those who object to clerical involvement in political and soc~lissues are necessarily in

HEADS NCEA Bishop Raymond J 9allagher of Lafayette Ind was elected president general of the Natshyional Catholic Educational Association at the associa- tions 65th annual conven- tion in San Francisco NC Photo

Venerate Fatima Statue in Brazil

LISBON (NC)-Manuel Cardshyinal Goncalves Cerejeira patri- arch of Lisbon imd Bishop Joao Pereira Venancio of Leiria whose diocese includes the Marshyian shrine of Fatima returned here after participating in threeshyday ceremonies in Brazil honorshying Our Lady of Fatima

They t~ok the statue of the -Pilgrim Virgin of Fatima with them to Brazil

At Sao Paulo they took part in Portuguese - Brazilian Communshyity Day celebrations At Inhangshyabau and at Rio de Janei1G thousands joined them in ven- erating the statue

The patriarch and Bishop Venshy

ancio were accompanied in Brazil by the rector of the Fat-middot i m a shrine Msgr Antonio Borges

_ sitiOJifrom any slgnificantnuili middot te~ which they caiiunder- pany a mernber of the Jew-middot

ber ~f his people for usin~ cii- stand and absorb jish fAith has neen elected GCeSaIl f~nds for the economic -Ifthis sho~d prove to be the to in bOardof +-~ t- and~ ~OCIal bettel1nent 01 the case we have our work cut out ~ bull wu~ ~ W

Wack citizens of his communitlT ~r~ in the montha ftbat lie the CaU~hc VnlverampliyNe ~~ other words it is quite aheiid middotPboto

~ ~

bad faith It may be in the case of some

r of tb~m at le9st we are at fault TRUSTEE BenJamin T ~ in the sense that we havent Iearned how to communicate the Rome president of aWaah Go~l meSsage to them in i n g ton construction oom-

The Servant Queen IiJ the Constitution on the Church we find the testimony of

Sacred Scripture and the Church Fathers combined with more recent pronouncements by the popes Mary the Mother of God an4 of the Redeemer was united to Him by a close inen soluble bond and waS accorded a special role in the mystery Qf the middotIncamiddotrnate Word that is in the economy of salvation

Whenmiddot Mary uttered the words of her Fiat she made a ~l eommitment to God so that He could carry out His de- slgus in middothermiddot Mary never took back hell ad of total surrender Dot even on the road to CalvarY lFrom that firstmiddot moment she devoted herself wholly to serving DM only her heavenly Fashyther and the Incarnate Word but also the whole human race lin the llncarnation Our Blessed Mother first brought Christ to the world Anell that is precisely what she would have 70U do aUmiddot your life-bring Christ to the world

Ev~n after the AScenslon she loyally and steadfastly camiddotrried out~~r role aCting as spirit1lI mother to the beloved disciple anli ~~ ne~rn Cl1urch~ With good reason then we can say tha~~e wJole life of the Lords humble handtnaid~from the moment IIhewas porn to the present-is one of loVing seZvice to her cltildren what gzeater example and what ~tei model could y~ chqose to imitate in Oilder to fulfill your ta~k as a Christian called to~ove and -to serVe your poor 8iKl sUffering bro~ers arqupd the world

You must DOW take over Mars task~ You are the door through which Christ enters the world You muSt receive the Lon and bear Him in 70ur heart sO thaamp He rnA7 beeo~e the heartmiddot ofmiddot your life Then His love Jiis goodne~ Dis pity for the multitude middotwill shine through you into the world Then He will smile through your eyes Then He will help with your hanels Then He will comfort with your goodness Then He will relive in your pers~n His life of long ago for the sake of todayS desperate humanity

In this the month dedicated to the Mother of the church show your love for her by making her task your task by sacrificing to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith-to help those of her children who are in such need

SAlLVATioN and SERviCE lUe the work of The Soclet7 il~r ~~ Propagati~n of th~ Faith Please cut Gut this column llInd sen~ your of~ering to Right Reverend EdwardT OMeara Nationll-ll Director 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 Or directly to your local Diocesan Director BU Rev Msgr Raymond TConsid~e 3611 North Main Street Fall River Massachusetts e~7~omiddot

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13 New Jersey Grand Jury Absolves Police of Deaths During Rioftong

NEWARK (NC) - A special and charged it with lcHrity m Essex Cotmty grand jury inves- permitting some of lots material tigating the deaths of 28 people to i1all into private hands which during rioting in this city last misused il Summer absolved po1dce laquol Reporting on the deaths it blame iO the deatbs in a pre- found that three were not conshysentment which rebuked an nected with the rioting that anti-poverty agency for failure eight resulted from wounds inshyto cooperate willi law enforce- curred while participating in ment agencies criminal acts that nine of those

The presentment was issued killed were apparently innocent after the jury had heard more bystanders that two apparently than 100 witnesses over an resulted from sniper fire that eight-week period It said there two were from accidental was insufficient evidence to shooting and that one could not warrant indictment in any of be classified the cases presented to it al- Another special grand jury is though an earlier trial resulted now being paneled to carry out hi the conviction of a man for an investigation of Newarks fatally shooting a woman municipal government This inshy

In the final analysis the vestigation was recommended ~ury concluded the responsi- by the governors commission bility for the loss of life and which reported a pervasive property that is the inevitable feeling of corruption in Newshyproduct of rioting and mass ark lawlessness cannot be placed upon those whose duty it is to enforce and protect the freedom Convention lliead of our society

Courage Restraint N E MonsignorIt rests squarely upon the

MANCHESTER (NC)-Msgrhoulders of those who for euroolin A MacDonald presidentwhatever purpose incite and of the Manchester diocese senateparticipate in riots and the of priests has been selected asflouting of law and order in chairman of the national con-complete disregard of the rights stiiutional convention of theand well-being of the vast mashyproposed U S priests councilsjority of our citizens organization 110 be held May 20Although the presentment and 21 in Chicago leveled some small criticisms at

I1he monsignor earlier hadpolice actions it generally upshybeen elected as the Bostonheld the work of law enforceshyprovince delegate to a 29-memshyment officers and this was in ber ad hoc steering committeecontrast to the report of the for the convention When ill wasNew Jersey (()vernors Comshydecided 110 limicent the steeringmission on Civil Disorder commimiddotlltee 110 8 members thewhich was highly critical of the

police JJlQIlsignor was elected to this group then ohosen as chairmanWith some exceptions the

jury said police both local and Msgr MacDonald said the state together with National purposes of the proposed NashyGuardsmen acquitted themselves tional Federation of Priests with courage and restraint in Councils are to promote priestly the early stages of the riot brotherhood by faciJi1ating comshy

munion among priests councilsPoor Judgment to provide a forum for the disshyThe grand jury said the poshycussion of pastoral matters tolice were handicapped by lack enable priests councils to speakof training appropriate equipshywith a common representativement effective direction and voice to proD101e and collabshyexperience in dealing with the orate in programs of pastoraltype of situation in which they research and action to impleshywere involved ment the reriewal of priestlyThe jury did say that in the life to provide the means forlater stages of the disturbances priests councils united nationshythere were examples of poor ally to cooperate with the tityjudgment excessive use of fireshythe ~eligious the bishops andarms and D manifestation of with others in addressing thevindictiveness that eannot be needs of the Church in the modshytolerated in law enforceD1ent ern World and to do whateverpersonnel is necessary to carry out theseAD10ng the recommendations purposesit made was one that looting be

Members of the Priests Senshyeffectively controlled at its ate of the Diocese of Fall Riverearliest manifestations It also have sent suggestions regardingcalled for the improveD1ent and the proposed organization toupdating of equipment and said Monsignor MacDonaldthe use of chemicals and nonshy

lethal gases should be explored and considered Priests Paid SllEme

The jury called for improveshyment in police-community relashy Salary as Laborers tions and said there is no place PARIS (NC) - The averagefor abusive language or ill salary of priests in the Paris treatment of any group of citi shy region is about the saD1e as thatzens Like the governors COD1shy of an unskilled laborer accordshymission it deplored the use of ing to figures contained in thepersonally-owned weapons by first public budget report of thepolice Paris archdiocese

The anti-poverty agency crit shy The archdiocesan operatingicized was Newark Legal Servshybudget the report showed isices Project a branch of the $440000 a year most of whichUnited Community Corp which is for the salaries of 384 nonshyhelps ghetto residents with legal parish priests more than a thirdproblems

retired This indishyCharges Laxity of whoD1 are cates an average of less than $1-The jury accused it of failing 000 a year to cooperate in post-riot invesshy

Parishes pay direclly the 600tigations said the character of it taken were parish priests but their base salshystatements had

inadequate and ary is only about $50 a monthunprofesSional Honorariums for baptisms marshyriages and special Masses add

Receives Admiral about an equal amount to this VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope sum but pcrivate requests for

Paul VI received in audience Masses are declining Parish Adm Joseph Edet Akinwale priests send to the archdiocese Wey of the Nigerian Navy who the honorari~s of Masses they had told a press conference that coannot celebrate In 1964 this he hoped to present a message amounted to about 22000 Masses from the Nigerian government a year now it is only about three on the Biafra siiuatiolL ~middotfourmiddot thousand~

r THE ANCHORshyThursday May 2 1968

I

Schoo~s Exp~ore

Dual E~l~~rMJcemlt LOUISVILLE (NC)-Catholie

school officials here are trying to work out dual enrollment agreeD1entS with public schoo officials in two locations

If agreement is reached stushydents at Flaget High School here and at Bethlehem Academy may benefit next Fall from the proshygram

Moves toward the dual enrQllshyment concept were made possishyble when the Kentucky attorney general issued an opinion which said in effect that public schools might get state financial assistance for students enrolled part-time in public schools

Under the plan students in private schools could take some subjects in public schools and others in their own schools

Famiddotther Thomas P Casper Louisville diocesan superintendshyent of schools said he is submitshyting dual enrollment proposalpoundNEWMAN CLUBS MEET At oonferenee of Newman to the Louisville Bardstown andClubs from area colleges representatives of Fall River Dishy Nelson County boards of educa~

reese included from left Walter La Rosa Our Lady ill Mt tion Carmel parish Seekonk a student at Bristol Community While action on the roposaw College Lydia Rocha St Michaels Fall River BCC Rev is up U the public boards-the

attorney generals opinion grantvHarold J Wilson BOC Newman Club chaplain Morgan permission but does not force

Childs St Patricks Falmouth SMTL ootion-Father Casper said he if very pleased that there are possibilities open now for deshyveloping dual enrollD1entReturns to Moscow Final form of any dual enroll shyment effort is still to be decided

Fr Dion Assumption College President But one such method treated in the attorney generals opinion

Named Apostolic Administrator is the leasing of space in Cathshyolic schools by public schoom

WORCESTER (NC) - Father a visiting Russian churchman and the operation of this spaceLouis F Dion AA president here Father Bissonnette is now as public school classroomsof AssuD1ption College here will academic dean at Assumption resign his post June 30 to be- College COD1e apostolic administrator in Father Dion had to wait more New Jersey Bishopthe Soviet Union and chaplain than three years after Father to American Roman Catholics Bissonnettes expulsion before Asks United Action in Moscow obtaining a Soviet visa enabling ATLANTIC CITY (NC) shy

Father Dion held the same him to go to Moscow via Paris Bishop George H Guilfoyle of posts in Russia from 1959 to in January 1959 Camden issued a call for united 1961 He served as assistant to Father Dion said he is looking action on the part of all of WJ the president and registrar of forward to his return to the to 36Sist our fellow man as Assumption College from 1962 Moscow post He bad not specifshy he helped dedicate a HUD1aJ until his appointment as presi- ically requested the assignment Resources Center aiD1ed at job dent ill June 1964 he said but it was offered to develpoment for some of this

He replaces Father Eugene him and he accepted it willingly resort areas 50000 poor LaPlante AA who returns to Powers of Bishop This nation has made treshythe Assumptionist Fathers The duties of chaplain Father mendous strides in the fields opound AD1erican province for reassign- Dion explained are not con- science industry business and ment after a three-year term fined to American Catholics medicine he said It is shameshy

ful that in view of all this proshySeventh to Serve living in Moscow They include gress we still have millions ofFather Dion is the seventh he said the entire foreign colshypeople who live in poverty andAmerican priest-all Assump- ony - the diplomatic corps wanttionists-to serve in Moscow un- newspaper personnel and tour-

Bishop Guilfoyle said theder the terms of the 1933 Roose- ists Camden diocese will contributevelt-Litvinov agreement estab- Since there ar(~ no European

$1000 to the new center to belishing diploD1atic relations be- priests-or priests of any other nationality-in Moscow serving used for whatever program the

tween the U S and the USSR in the capacity of chaplain he board of directors decides hi He was replaced in 1961 by said the American chaplain needed Father Joseph Richard AA ministers to the spiritual needs who served four years in the of Catholics attached to the post staffs of embassies and legations

His iD1D1ediate predecessor accredited to the Soviet governshy FAIRHAVENwas Father Georges Bisslgtnnette ment AA who was expelled in The post of apostolic adminisshy LUMBERMaTch 1955 by the Soviet gov- trator Father Dion said inshy

COMPANYernment in retaliation for U S volves all the powers and funcshyrefusal to prolong the visa of tions of a bishop except ordina~

tion and consecration of bishops Complete line It is assigned to a priest usuallyAtlanta Archdiocese Building Materials in areas where there is DO

Joins Equal Housing hierarchy who is then dimiddotrectly responsible to the Holy See 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVENATLANTA (NC)-The lllChshy Father Dion expects to arrivediocese of Atl~lnta has joined in Moscow in early August he 993-2611more than 50 metropolitan At- said

lan-ta organizations and indi- viduals as co-spo~sors of the Atlanta Metropoli tan COmmit- bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull~

tee on Equal Opporunity ill Housing

HThe objective of the confer- BISAILLONS ence will be primarily educashytional Father Noel C Burtenshy GARAGEshaw ehancellor of the arch- diocese and member of the execu-tive committee said 24-Hour Wrecker

He added We expect this dialogue and interChange will establish middotnecessary communicashy 653 Washington Street Fairhaven tion and provide Some answers 994-5058~ the housing problems facing reater Atlanta bull

Thanks Catholics For Refugee Aid

VATICAN - CITY (NC)-NearMsgrEllis Relates Hist~ry middotmiddotEastmiddotwelfare work of U S Cathshyolics has been praised by Pope Paul VL0+ Training for Priesthood

Such a message in the Popes By Rt Rev Msgr Jobs S Kennedy

The publication of a book by Monsignor John Tracy Ellis founder and dean of a new school of American Cath~

lti)lic churchhistory is always a weloome event This is true even when the book is among his minor works SuCh is Essays in Seminary Educoshytion (Fides Notre Dame Inshydiana 46556 $595) amiddot 001shylection of papers and address-C2S There is some repetition in Chese essays which were preshyared for vari shyeus occasions But it does not illessen the imshyact of a book which shows us n keen critical in tell i g ence brought to beal OIl a subject of bas i c imporshylance The hand rDf the historian iIs seen throughshy~t the book The first three essays are specifically historical

The firsi deals with the trainshylog or preparation of priests from the apostolic age to the ~ncil of Trent the second with the same subject from the time of Trent to ~ 1960s The tird is todevoted diocesan theological seminaries in the American Middle West 1811shy1889

A survey such 00 the author Makes in the two opening chap $ers is of especial interest beshyeause it brings out tile implausshyible but incontestable fact that b about the fimiddotI9t 1500 years of its existence the Church did DOt have anything even regem- bling a standard ~m of edushy_tion for the priesfil100d

Monastie Schools fttere were no special schoobl

lor the clergy before the time Of

The medieval universitieQ were foundedmiddot by the Church amd the clery p~yed ~ im ~rtant part m them But theyWei b d al ~ ed ti e y no means I e Jormiddot ushy(l3 on for the pnesthood SInce2he the I g I kemelyq 1~~~y~middotou~emiddot~~U Iersi~ of P middotkmiddotlmiddot5middot6

-Y arlS n ovv or ~(fears to complete thedoCtOriite ill theology Hence few priestsbenefited f-rom 4--

~ UDlversI Effective Response

lhe POr estate of the clergy~ glarmgly a~parent in the ens of the Renalsance and the Bef~rmation and this middotis prj shy

manly llttutablello educashytional defiCiency And evea hen the reforming Council of lIrent was launched it took 1~ ~rs ~efore a dec~ on clerical educa~on was achieved and a long tlme thereafter before its proVISIonS were carned out in practice

Monsignor Elliss treatment of

ticularly the institutions founded by St Vincent de Paul and Jean-Jacques Olier

These men win the authors praise for their effective reshygponseto a vital need But he does IlQt hesitate to lay to them ~e responsibility for some of the anti-intellectual bias which chamcterizea too many seminashyli13 in subsequent centuries

incredible NWIIlber In the United States some

quite ancient history was reshylived as the bishops of new dioceses had cleriea schools of sorts in their own homes But in the days of the very first bishop John Oarroll a real

had b - -bli hed semmary een - 9when the Sulpichms came to Baltimore in 1791 and founded St Marys

Later developmen1s are sumshymarized by Monsignor Ellis with attention to the various types of seminaries and the growth m numbers from 50 in 1668 to 571 iIn 1964 Thi6 last incredible number is indicative 0If tile regre~le proliferation Which led to needless duplicashytiOD inadequacy in quality and waste of resources

A test of middotthe exeellence of American seminaries is proshyposed by the atrtbor how many men of enduring reputation ba~ flhey produced The anshyswerJs that tIhe fteonl is not distinguished And much of the lelIlainder of the book is given 110 probing for reasons m exshyplanation Of this

Routine Teaeldllamp at Augustine whomiddotbecame Ihi Anierican ~mi~ry of -ilJhop of Hippo in 396 His 1be ft refleCted _ national

_

LlIFE MEMBERS Msgr John E Boyd chaplain left and Dominick Maxwell Jr right Grand Knight of Fall River Council 86 of the Knights of Columbus i~vest Jerome D Foley and Dr Joseph Carvalho as life members

~

Rural Ireland Charge Farmers Lack Formal Training

In Agriculture ROSSLARE (NC)The need Wbat chance had the boy who

for priests to be more involved left school at 14 of making the in social problems was stressed grade at farming ~he excepshyby 9peakers at the annual meetshy tional lads made it The rest are

~ e9tablished and mairitaineCi~ - In the future he said until 4- disregard cif inteli~tualqua1itY this is rectified Ninety-five nAr ~ his own household and had In ~y instances ~ty mem- ~ imitators ~gt bera ere apPOint~~ t~eir ~t of e5ent-day farmers Thereafter came the mona~f)le positi - middotth m rd io ~v~ had IlQ post-primary edushySchools initiated by St BenediCt ons WIlifo ~ga r cation NinetYofive per cent ofin thmiddot th proper qlla Ications MuCh of farmers have had middotno formal esnr cent~ the~ fllie teaching was rolltine and~rting in middotligrlcultllredr~ and-middot eP1scqp~ Scboo~ an~ dun Collateral reading _n6t middot~JFlWle Awayampnally themiddot medieval UDlvenu- middot~~d lib ties middot - ~ampt~W1~ an nu-~ wer~ Fcaither qerinehy ~ncluded

~e )mperorPbariemaible ~~~poundreed ~tho~~laquo~ lt m the eigh~h ~turydecr~ miD not aencournt ~e~ch~Gt~~n6~llIIr~Watmiddot ilhat alLclencs m~be lble to middotwas virtuall uilkn a lj ~

ifead im~~ri~ J~d~ve ~m- faculties PU~Shed v~illi~~e iT ~~~t ~~t~Bltcs petence In ~h~~ )~1esslC~~Idu- Monsignor Ellis points tJ01 the BOGOTA (NC) _ Anglican tiaif~king ~ DllIllmum timidity which prevailed after Bishop David Benson Reed of

q I I~~ons they ~ere to be the eJcesses perpetrated in 1l1e BogOta offered accommodations e~ ~~ deprIved of repression of Modernism in the for~five Catholic bishops during me iectr~~ IS we can see w a fim part of the present centurY theforthcoming International

g ere had been He sees a change in the era of Eucharistic Congresss in August

ing of the Christu Rex Society an Irish organization for priestDmiddot engaged in pastoml work

Over 250 priests and represhysentatives of agriculturalorgan- izations attended the cOngress here on the theme Rural Ireshyland

Father Jerome Dennehy CC of Kenm2lre criticized the fail- ure of the Iri9h educational sysshytem to provide the farmer with the basic knowledge necessarY to enable him to profimiddott from advice from government agenshydes onfurming methods

No real progress can be made

Vatican II and happily notes and five Ecuadorian prelates aeshythe improvements already made cepted his invitation

lUld those-in prosPectmiddotmiddot He hJ They are Bishops Bernardo hopeful for the future Ech R f Amb to d

evern~ wz 0 a anlIJiteUktlllal A~lieDtmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot-middotCandiiiomiddotRada Cenosian of Guashybull - d middotmiddotd A 1 B h

in8 ConclUding ~y~ ran a liln UXIlary IS ops Priestmiddot as rntelleCtllal~~ v~rll9middotmiddotGabrieI1iazCueva Ernesto that abettereducated and mueh Alvarez ~liaVlcente CIsneros of

and ea r Gua allmoreaware enti laitrmiddotmiddot y qu demands a certainmiddotleveloflD-middot B~SbtPAnBeedli has JurCls~lctib~n

middotfellectual attainment and alivemiddot middot~v~r eo g cans In 0 om la its cl and Ecuador and has been an

~~ ooes ermeam that the ecumenical leader in these

now fading away with thei~

farms Father Eamonn Casey nashy

ijonal director of the catholic Housing Aid Society in London stressed the necessity for the priest to work with underprivishyleged members of -society Too often he said the theologians are on the periphery - they should come doWn to earth and mix with the people-who really

priest has to be a professional~untries ~ _ ~=====~_ intellectual such is not his _ Over 200 bis~ops a~ 1~ ~r-Etmiddotmiddot D ampD SALES AND SERVICE cation ltR does mean that he has dinals have saId they Wlll at-sect to maintain a genuiDe hifei-est end the EUcharistie Congress to - sect ill things intellectUal anq m Mbeid be~ sectpublic questions sect

Monsignor Ellismiddot chides sUPe- sect riors for their failure to eneour- p~iori ~ the minisky in sect age priests 110 use their ~cial teD-dayretreatS preceding or- sect talents skills and aptitudes dination Better than nothing sectAnd he urgeS priests 110 acquire one suPPoses sect( and retain habits of 9tudy It is In the lntervaJ there has sect to be hoped that both these cau- ~ great improvement But sect

name has been sent to lI1sgr John G Nolan president of the Pontifical lVlission for Palestine whose headquarters are in New Vork Written by Amleto Carshydinal Cicogilani Papal Secreshytary of State it referred to the

1 Missions 19 years service to ~ Palestinian refugees particushy

larly victims of the recent Arab-Israeli conflictto

It singled out as particularly praiseworthy the contribution of the Catholic Near East Welshyfare Association saying that middotthrough the unflagging genershyosi ty of the catholics of the United States of America it provided qlost of the means for the Missions work following the recent conflict

The papal letter declared No other agency surpasses the Pontifical Mission in length of

middot actualmiddot serviCe and its identifl shycapon with the paternal intershy~ and concern of the Holy Father merits his encourageshyment hismiddot blessing and his prayerful good wishes

Cardinal middotCicOgnanl wrote that Pope Paul out of paternal afshyfection for the homeless and of grateful esteem for the Pontifi shycal Mission bids memiddot send yOIll the enclosed check for $5000 Added to this was a furthell amount of money contributed

middot by the Congregation for the Oriental Churches

Msgr Nolan was asked that during his Easter visit to the refugee campS he kindly disshytribute the total sum in the Popes Dame to all the needyen

ar~~~stChneU~made adicbot-SAVE MONEY ON omy of man saying here is middotthe

body her~ is the soul-Iam YOUR middotOImiddotLmiddotHEATconCerned only with the soul bull bull bull bull Tmiddothe love of Christ is for the whole person and anything ~ -4~ WYman that concerns 1llieperson is of ~ US92 concern to middotChrist

He said thatmiddot the priest middotshould CHARLES F VARGAS selk tomiddotmiddot develop ~ature Ght-ls- tiMlS amongdsmiddotflockiuidcpre- 54 ROCKDALE AvENUE pare themmiddotforlife Th~ role of 1 the ~~esthe~dmiddotiftcl~desmiddotth~middot ~E~ BEDFORD MASS proVISIon Qfmiddotmiddot mformatlOn oo sexual and~ari~itLplmiddotobiehis 1

He stlggcentstJd middottbatmiddotmiddotmiddotPri~middot main~in cQJjt$C~ wjth~ those whlt emjgra~~mmiddottheir_ par- ish~ and follo~middotup middotthe middotcareers( of boys who are releasedmiddot from refprm schools t

1 bull bullbull - - ~_ _ - ~ ( ~

~ ~ lt

~III1I11I11I11I11I1UIIIIIIlIl1mlllllIII1I1I1I11I1I1I1I11II11I1I11I11I11IIIII11I1I11IIllIUIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~

tionary words win be wideiy~ OW measure canOOt be the poor sect AIR COmiddotIDmiddotImiddotTmiddotIO~IImiddot bullGmiddot

c INC

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~ post-Tridentinemiddot seminaries bulland responsibly beard Performance of the past It sect I~ I~ I~ lis remarkably extensive but the It is hard 110 believe tb1Ilt as must be the imperious demands sect main focus is on those ofF~Ce ~ as the seventee~th centu~lt ~ the p~sent an4 ~~ fUture ~ 363 SECOND ST FALL RIVER MASSbull bull the seventeenth century Pal- fa France some clena lOt their ~IWIIIUIUIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIUUlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUUIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIUIiIUWlimllllli5

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs May 2 1968 Back Presidenills ~reg~reg ~~~1rf~Jreg~MO~ ~~~lliJO[[reg(gJ ~rntilO1fi)[[fr~ofr~r

CHICAGO (NC)-The Assoshy~~ ~~regramp~~ o[J1j [Q)1 W[J1lJ[[o ciation of Chicago Priests an

The record compiled 56 years ful Swamppodle a neighborshy unofficial group of some 1500 priests in the archdiocese ofago still stands in big league hood within sight of the U S

baseball annals-most runs al shy Capitol talked about Father Chioago has endorsed President Johnsons current efforts to]owed one game 24 Travers Travers band

fA J (Joe) Detroit Never before had the bandsshy negotiate a Settlement of the

Father Aloysius J Travers men performed like they did in Vietnam war The ACP in its fifth plenarygJ 75 who achieved the dubishy the 1919 May procession-never

ous pitching distinction died had such old favorites as Tis session here turned down a resolution prepared by its soshylast week in Misericordia Hosshy the Month of Our Mother and cial action subcommittee onpital Philadelphia He acquied 0 Mary We C~own Thee With

baseball immortality on May Blossoms Today been so spir shy peace calling for complete cesshy

112 1912 as pitcher for the One sation of U S bombing in Vietshyitedly played by Gonzaga bandsshynam to support the Presidents limited decrease in bombing

men as the procession windedlDay Wonders Detroits brawling Tigers were through Swampoodle streets glated to play Connie Macks After the procession was over and negotiation moves

Two other peace resolutionspOwerful Philadelphia As that the school rector called in recommended by the subcomshy_ daymiddotin old Shibe Park Detroits Father Travers and congratushy

Btar Ty Cobb had drawn a fine mittee were approved They

and two-day suspension for formance The rector added lated him on the bands pershy

put the ACP on record as favorshy

belting a heckling fan a few But high school musicians with ing draft law revisions so that a person might be exempt as a

lligers decided if Cobb couldnt mustaches Dont you think thatdays earlier in New York~ ~he

conscientious objector to a parshywas going a bit too far ticular war without necessarilyFather T~avers had recruitedplay they wouldnt either so being a conscientious objector

Famous llnfield a dozen or so members of thecenthey went on strike

to all war and so that a per

With the aid of Connie Mack crack Fort Myer Army Band

son could be exempt as a conshyfOm nearby Arlington Va scientious objector on humanishy

ed up a collection of Philadelshydressed them in cadet uniforms~e Detroit management roundshy

tarian as well as religioUlland put them in the school band groundsBesides teaching at Stphia sandlot players signed

The ACP also approved threeJosephs Prep and Gonzagathem to Detroit contracts and recommendations of its liturgy

as the Tigers sf Francis Xavier High in New committee York As a result the priests group

Father Travers also taught atfielded the One Day Wonders

Al Travers 19 fresh out of has urged the National Confershyat Josephs Prep School rho Disbands Hawks ence of Catholic Bishops to reshyhelped recruit the sandlotters One of his moSt heartbreaking submit two liturgical petitioJUloppointed himself pitcher He assignments was given him some to the Conglegation of Rites inctftein recalled I learned that 25 years ago He was sent back Rome The petitions which had e pitcher would collect-50 to St Josephs College where New Problem ~en turned down by the Vati shyeX-tra so I volunteered the battIe cry is The Hawk can congregation would allowThat day the As scored 24 will never die as moderator the establishment of experimenshyINns on 25 hits with io nuts of athletics Priest Urges F~ir labor Practices tal centers for the liturgycmearned against young Travshy His jOb-disband the Hawks For CatholicSchool Faculties throughout the country and limshy

erG The wonder is the score football team with a minimum ited experimentation with thewasnt higher for young Tra~~rs of uproar from students and SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-For betweell the school and the liturgy without prior approvalwas pitching against the best alumni since football had beshy as long as anyone can rememshy religious community of the Vaticanbalt team of the era-against come a moneymiddot losing sport at ber the Religious and lay peoshy Some experts says that the

PhiladelphiaS famous $100000 St Josephs and a number of nte third resolution called on-pie who serve on the faculties best solution to this problem is

infield of John Phelan (Stuffy) other Catholic colleges in ~those the NCCB to take concrete stepsof Catholic grammar and high to bar Religious from partici shy

McInni6 at first Eddie Collins days to implement proposals of itsschools have been the type of pating in labor organizations

lJeCOnd Jack Barry short and He did his job well directing liturgy committee for adaptashypeople who would never think But Father Reicher indicated

IPrank (Home Run) Baker third attention to St Joes basketball tion of the Mass to smaIl anelof going out on strike against this would only divide the Reshy special age groupsSaves Franchise team which has grown into one unfair labor practices since ligiousand lay faculty of schools

But young Travers and the of the nations powerhouses this would imply some sort of even more than they are dividedORe Day Wonders who had For the last 25 years Father guilt on the part of p~ors and now India to ReconsiderI2ever seen Detroit saved the Tlavers had been stationed at bishops Urging a period of experishybaseball franchise for the Tigers St Josephs Prep in semishy Well those days are gone forshy meritation to work out new Deporting Priestttlat day If they hadnt pl~yed retirement during recent years ever according to Chicagos forms of collective bargaining NEW DELHI (NC) - Indiantile As chances are the Amershy Requiem Mass for the colorful Father Robert Reicher and the Father Reicher concluded It ill Prime Minister Indira GandbJ1bean L~ague would have lifted one-day big leaguer was ofshy job now is to set up standards obvious that the right to barshy has promised reconsideration ofDetroits franchise because of fered Thursday at GeuChurch of fair labor practice and guidshy gain collectively is a natural the order expelling Jesuitthe players strike in Philadelphia ance for faculty members grievshy tight clearly defended time and Father Vincent Ferr r of theDespite the lopsided score procedures against Cathoshy agaiil ethically and morally Poona diocese Indiaance fromlPatJher Travers got several big lic school administrators But this right also implies an lleague offers as a result of his Canonist Cates Need The pmmise was made when

Speaking to participants at 8 obligation to know what colleCshy tlhree members of the Indiani pitching He turned them down secondary school department tive bargaining involves went to St Josephs College For Negro Prieds parliament met with Mrs Ganshy

meeting during the Nationalthen joined the Jesuits ATLANTIC CITY (Nch - A dhi here and asked her to get

National Catholic Educational the order cancelled and grantThe lesson he learned fmln plea for more Negro Catholic Bishops Ask PopeAssociation convention here Indian citizemihip to the priestthe unorthodox recruiting as a priests has been made at the Father Reicher outlined some ofone-day big leaguer stood him annual Easterri regional meeting To Visit Canada Father Ferrer founder of thethe problems facing Catholic in good stead a half-dozen years of the Canon Law Society of OTTAWA (NC) -Pope Paul Maharashtra Farmers Servicelabor - management relations

later when he was teaching at America here in New Jersey The pliest is chairman of the VI may visit Canada next month Society was scheduled for deshyGQnzaga High School in Washshy Msgr Thomas J Reese of Wilshy to attend the National Confershy portation last year but wasChicago archdiocesan Catholicington D C mington in the neighboring State ence on Poverty sponsored by granted several extensions ofCouncil on Working Life and a

Recruits Ringers of Delaware speaking on experishy jVell-known labor expert Christian Churches in Canada his stay He was accused by iiimiddot mental parishes accused the Hindu groupS ofanti-Indian acshyFather Travers was in charge Religious who teach in CatBshy Bishop Alexander Carter presshy

Church of racism and said that tivities and by the Maharashtraof the school b~llld which used olic schools pose a special diffi shy ident of the Canadian CatholicNegro Catholics prefer to - be state government of anti shyto master only about two or culty hi labor relations because Conference has acknowledged national activitiesselved by black priests of whom

CHURCHES UNITED Bishop Reuben H Mueller left of the Evangeli~al United Brethren Church and Methoshydist Bishop Lloyd C Wicke led representatives of their respective bodies at ceremonies in Dallas proclaiming the union of the two churches The new body is to be known as the United Methodist Churlth NC Photo

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IIlfllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIUIIIlIDutuUliUllllUiHlllllllllilllllllllllllllllilllUIIIIIIIIIIIIUII~given to the Washington arch we need black priests and we bid to raise the standards of diocese by Church spokesmen need them fast preaching in Australia and New here in Pennsylvania Zealand will be made shortly Lobster Boats Msgr Philip J Dowling execshy it was resolved at a meeting hereCapital Cityutive secretary of John Cardinal of leaders of religious orders

Krols Commission on Human VATICAN CITY (NC)-Qn The effort will inchide a fullyshyRelations noted that the Washshy the eighth anniversary of the otganized Pastoral Year obsershyington Archdiocesan Office of foundation of Brazils new capishy vance seminars for priests of all bull bull bull Urban Affairs has asked assist shy tal of Brasilia Pope Paul VI ages on updating preaching techshy s iz e s ance from Philadelphia and other sent a radio message of best niques the establishment of II bull bull bull dioceses In providing foOd es wishes in Portuguese and pressshy preaching center and the use pecially for those po)r who will ed a button that illumined a of a recorded service on techshy I Macleansreceive temporary housing in the cross on the cathedral of that niques of oral communicatiOil f8cilities of the Washington city The Pope performed the directedby the ObJates of MalT sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAYBt Tel 9979351 sect archdiocese oclemony in his private library Immaculate ~1I111111l111IHlUlnlllllllllllUllllllnIIllIUllllllUllllllllllllllIllltUIIllllllllllUluiuUWlUllllml~

three tunes a year In those of their obligation of obedience that feelers have been sent outthere are fewdays the school had a cadet Father Reicher pointed out to have the Pope corne to Monshy

If any institution can standeorps and one of its big annual What this means he added is teal for th~ May 26-29 meeting events was marching in the anshy that occasionally Religious mllYoondemned on the basis of the

It would be the first papalrecent Kerner Report on Civilnual parish-May procession be used to break a strike called visit to Canada Pope Paul visitedDisorders it is the CatholicFor years residents of color- by lay faculty members this country as a Cardinal in theChurch among others that is But more likely is the conflict early 19508guilty of white racism he trapping the individual Reli shyPlan to Help ~eed opined Bishop Carter said if a favorshygious whose loyalty is divided

Asserting that the number of able reply is reCeived from RomeCapital MCIl(lc61ers Negro clergy middotdoes not nearly the Canadian government would

PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A meet the needs of Negro Catho- Australia to Have extend an official invitation pledge of cooperation in feeding lies Msgr Reese said Pope Paul visited the United the poor who will gather in the If the Church is going to be Better Preaching Nations inNew York in 1965 nations capital in May has beell relevant to the black community SYDNEY (NC)-A concerted

I

Marian Awards Continued from Page Three

Fall River and has spent her entire religious life within the Diocese of Fall River

Sister has served as consult shyant with various education comshymittees in the diocese and bas promoted the educational proshygram of the Dominican Sisters

Sr Mary Pauline OP bead of the Science Department of

the Dominican Academy Fall River was one of the originatolll of the Region III Science Fair and has served as president of the regions Fair for two years

She is presently ooordinator of the Massachusetts state Scishyence Fair -

Sr Virginia CSC is presshyently chairman of the Th~logy

Department Notre Dame Colshylege Manchester N H and served from 1941 to ]958 as principal of St Anthonys New Bedford

She has always been a leader in new an innovative ideas in education

Sister Anne Denise SND presently principal of St Marys High School Lynn is well shyremembered as the first princishypal of Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth and has served in many administrative posts for the Sisters of Notre Dame

Sr Mary Aloysia SUSC is dean of the College of the Sashycred Hearts Fall River and has given outstanding service in coshyoperation with the Catholic School Department in planning in-service courses for the teachshyers of the diocesan schools

She also serves asmiddot coordinator of the educational program of the Sisters of the Holy Union

Sr John Elizabeth SUSC is Guidance Director at the Acadshyemy of the Sacred Hearts Fall River and has served in numershyous administrative positions atthe Fall River school

She was the first principal of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton and has served on committees of local and state educational organizations

Sr Mary Felicita RSM is now involved in the tutorial program at Mt St MaryS Acadshyemy Fall River and has served in the various sclIools of the diocese

For 26 years Sister served as Diocesan School Supervisor iD the Catholic School Office

Sr Miriam RSM is also in the tutorial program at the Sisshyters of Mercy Academy in Fall River A former teacher and principal in schools of the dioshycese Sister served for 26 yean

IN NEW POST Father Charles F Sheedy CSC former dean of arts and letshyterS has been appointed to the new post of dean of theoshylogical studies and institutes at the University of Nobe Dame NC Photo

to Educators tiS Diocesan Supervisor in the Catholic School Department

This year completes 50 years of service in the field of educashyto the Diocese of Fall River

Sister Maureen RSM is principal of Nazareth Hall Fall River She organized the proshygram and was the first principal of the Fall River school lor exshyceptional children a position she still holds

She is a consultant lind D member of city and state comshymittees for the mentlllly l1eshytarded

Sr Mary Urban RSM is Diocesan supervisor of schools and was the first principal at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

She is a member of state and city educational committees

Sr Mary Carmela RSM is a member of the English Departshyment of St Xaviers Academy Providence and was the first principal of Mt St Marys Academy Fall River

She is a consultant on secondshyary school curriculum planning

Sr Grace de Sales MSBT is presently superior of the Censhyacle of Our Lady of the Assumpshytion Osterville a position she also held at the Cenac1e of St Patricks Parish Wareham

Sister founded the kindergarshytens at Osterville and Wareham and has taught Chfistian Docshytrine classes on the elementary and secondary levels during her many years of selvice in the diocese

Sr Joan Louise OLVM is suPerior of the Victory Noll Convent in the Immaculate Conception Parish No Easton She has served as catechetical specialist in dioceses in Iowa and California and her present assignment is CCD supervisor for the Diocese of Fall River

Brother Albertus CSC is supervisor of Education for the Eastern Province of the Holy Cross Brothers and is professor of mathematics at Stonehill College No Easton He also ~ught mathematics and physics at Monsignor Coyle High School Taunton

Miss Mary Cabral of 1)69 Camshybridge Street Fall River is presently teaching at Espirito Santo School Fall River where she is completing 43 years of service as a lay teacher in ~e

Diocese of Fall Ri vcr

Whites to Solve White Problem

TOLEDO (NC)-Bishop Joon A Donovan has made a public request to whites to take up the white problem

He urged it for those lookshying for a modern up-Io-date apostolate for down-to-earth Christians who are at the same time dedicated Americans

middotSpeaking at a dinner of the northwestern Ohio district Fourth Degree Knights of Coshylumbus the Toledo bishop said

This ugly situation was fathered by injustice and is nourished by that subtle and insidious vice called prejudiCe

Need In this deplorable situation

in which the world ffinds itself today the pressing need is for those who call themselves Christians to think as Christians to form Christian attitudes and to live as Christians

Just as we cannot separate Christ from His Gospel so too we cannot separate love of GOO from love of our fellowmen without exception

The real Christian mlid the bishop does not live alongside but with others He constantly interprets anothers actions in the best possible light bying to remember always the way in which the Lord met loved and drew people to Himsel

SAIGON (NC) - The people wept and we wept everybody wept Sister Nicole said deshyscribing her teams departure after 16 days of relief work in Hue

She and two other Vietnamshy-ese Sisters Daughters of Charshyity of St Vincent de Paul with

The communImiddots1s T truce

17 girl students had gone to stricken Hue on a mission of mercy

offensive had left families in mourning houses in ruins ~nd people hungry and sick The government of Vietnam had inshyvited volunteers to bring help to the citys thousands of sufshyferers

The plane that brought tile Sisters and their students also brought 85 youths from Saigon~

The boys did manual work such as cleaning up the damaged hosshypital in Hues The Sisters team was divided into three groups one to give medical care anshyother to visit homes a third to l)ok after children

The 17 girls are some of those being trained by the Sisters as social workers for family assist shyance under a plan sponsored by a Vietnamese womens associashytion Five of the 17 are Cathshyolics The others are mostly Buddhists On April 12 all were fasting since it was the 15th day of the lunar month for the lBud-

Catholic Boy Scout Officials to Meet

WASHINGTON (NC)-About 150 leaders of CQtholic Boy Scout organizations will meet here to attend the 20th biennial oonference of the National Cathshyolic Committee OIl Scouting

The meeting will be a Iowshyday work session tor chairmen chaplains and other officioals cd the nations diocesan I seouiing ~ommittees The meeting will end with a banquet in honO Gl Patrick Cardinal OBoyle ol Washington

---- -----~

middot1FI

1

PRAYER CRUSADE _Danny Thomas has filmed n 10-minute color documentary on the value of family pray~r

to be used by Father Patrick Peyton CSC in his Camshypaign for Family Prayer Father Peyton said he expects 200000 people at a Milwailkee rally to be held Sunday May 12

IEverybody Weptl

Nun Describes Relief Teams Departure From Stricken Hue

dhims and Good Friday for the Catholics

The Asia Foundation here gave a grant to pay for the meals of the Sisters team dur ing their stay

- Before leaving Saigon the Sisters had collected medicines food soap and clothing from welfare agencies including Catholic Relief Services and

Vietnam Christian Service (Protestant) The United Nashytions Childrens Fund (UNICEF) provided milk powder which enabled the team to give milk to 450 children every day

Warn Medics LONDON (NC)-The day beshy

fore Britains new abortion law went into effect the nations 5500 CMholic doctors were warned by John Cardinal Heenan of WeBtminister that they should DOt perfom any abortions

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THE ANCHOR- 17 Thursday May 2 1968

Cufr ~t~1 Days Of orw~~~1ion

En C[[i~da OTTAWA (NC)-Chrietshy

mas and New Years Day now are the only holy days of obligation for Canadav estimated 8000000 Catholics

The Canadian Catholic Conshyference comprising Canadafl Bishops has announced thampa other holy days will be cellshyebrated on the Sunday nearem the holy day

The holy days affected aye Epiphany usually celebrat~

Jan 6 Ascension now falling on the 40th day after East~Ilp

All Saints now celebrated Nou I and the Immaculate ConcejilP tion now celebrated Dec 8

The Bishops said observance of the feast days on Sundayu means they will be celebratecll bull by a larger more relaxed anell accessible congregation of the faithful rather than a congreshygaUon of people constrained by the obligation of attending Maw in addition to their work

Canadas Bishops postwn~ until next Fall a decision Gil

wlether to restoremiddot the anciej~ office of permanent deacon m the Church The Bishops of the United States meeting simultashy

neously in St Louis hlst week ~ted to petition Pope Paul VJ for permission to restore ~

perinanent diaconate ror marshyried and unmarried men of ma ture years

Fish Sales Up SYDNEY (NC)-Best tilini)

that ever happened to the fisb industry said Mark J06eph chairman of the New SouUl -lales Fish Authority of the Churchs lifting of the ban CJ[l

Friday meat eating He has tb~ ligures to back up his verdictshya 25 per cent rise in fish e4)Dshy

slImption here since the ehlnge

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The Parish Parade New Jersey Suburbanites of All Faiths Aid Ghetto Arson Victims HOLY NAME OUR LADY OF ANGELS

FALL RIVER FALL RIVER NEWARK (NC) - Priest~ the citys anti-poverty agenCll Contemporary music will acshy

company the 11 oclock Mass Sunday morning May 5

First communicants will reshyeeive at a special Mass at 9 Saturday morning May 25 Mayshycrowning ceremonies will be held Sunday May 26 The Womens Guild announces

fts installation banquet for Tuesday night May 7 Tickets are available from all members

Catholic Charities collectors are asked to meet in the parish school at 730 tonight for dist~shyOOtion of contact cards

lIT MARGARET BUZZARDS BAY

SS Margltlret-Mary Guild of Buzzards Bay and Onset will Sponsor a rummage sale from 9 1lo 1 Saturday May 18 at St Margarets kindergarten hall Main Street Buzzards Bay Do iaations may be left at the hall during mornings of the precedshying week Chairman for the ~vent is Mrs William Brady

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild will reshyieive Holy CommuniOn in a bodyaf the815 Mass 00 Sunshydity morning A breakfast will follow in the school hall The icuest speaker will beRt Rev Anthony M Gomes Mrs Arthur Belanger gpiIshyftual chairman of the Guild is _ charge of the breakfast

81 JOSEPH AIRHAVEN Nominations and elections of officers for the Association of file Sacred middotHearts will be held at 630 on Sunday evening in the rectory ~ Dues are now payable to the tleasurer Mrs Jeannette Dushylude

IACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

Preprimary registration will be held from 2 to 4 Sunday afternoon May 5 in 1he school office Some openings also exist in first sixth and eighth grades

The CCD adult discussion group will meet at 8 Sunday night in the home of Mr and Mrs J G N Bonneau

So Easton Club Pledges

$5000 The newly formed Womens

Club of Holy Cross Parish So Easton has pledged $5000 toward the building fund acshycording to an announcement made today by Mrs Arthur J L Peterson the organizations first president The pledge will be paid at the rate of $1000 per year

This pledge has been added to The Second Mile Building Fund campaign now in progress under the chairmanship of Robshyert Dray and Louis A Lyne serving as director

The Altar Boys will sponSor a cake sale Sunday May 26

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a Communion breakshyfast following 8 oclock Mass this Sunday morning Installashytion of officers will be held at a banquet following 5 oclock Mass Sunday afternoon May 26

Children of Mary will attend a Communion breakfast followshying 8 oclock Mass Sunday mornshying May 12

The annual blessing of autoshymobiles will take place at 130 Sunday afternoon May 26 in the church parking lot

ST GEORGE WESTP~RT

A Maybasket whist is planned for 8 Saturday night May 4 hi

the school hall on Route 177 PrOCeeds will benefit the school fund and table and attendance prizes will be awarded

STMARY NORTH ATTLEBORO Parishioners are planning a

testimonial honoring Msgr Ed- ward B Booth Pastor at 7

Sunday night May 26 Tickets are now available

Christians Jews Combat Racism

NEW YORK (NC)The Nashytional Confeferice of Christians and Jews has launched a nation wide educational effort to conshyfront the problem of white racism in middotAmerica agency headquarters here announced

The NCeJ has given top prl~

ority to finding ways toimpleshyment the recommendations of the National Advisory Commisshysion on Civil Disorders The commission blamed white racshyism as the underlying cause of urban unrest

In a progress re-port to the NCCJ board of trustees meeting here Dr Samuel L Gandy dean of the Ho~ard University school of religion Washington D C and chairman of the NCCJ nashytional program ad7isory comshymittee stated

NCCJs 130 professional staff members in 70 cities are curshy~ntly engaged in developing programs with police business and labor leaders parents and teachers clergy and with youth and all of the various institutes workshops and dialogues which are being conducted are emphashysizing the findings of this reshyport

Dr Gandy quoted to the board a letter to President Lynshydon B Johnson from Dr Stershyling W Brown NCCJ presishydent in which the agency head said that NCCJ embraced the commission report as a sancshytion and guideline for our efshyforts in the private sectol

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ministers nuns and lay people of all denominations pitched in here to try and make Easter a dltty of joy for the more than 600 people burned out of their homes in a waveof arson which erupted in this city following the funeral of Dr Martin Luther King

Concerned citizens of surshyrounding suburban communishyties who only a week before had participated in a massive Wa 1k for Understanding through ghetto streets respondshyedspontaneously to the need

Without anymiddot special appeal going out people of all denomshyinations call e 11 inner-city churches to ask what they could do and they were directed to the United Community Corp

NEW LEADER Sister Rosemary Markham SSS is the new Superior General of the Sisters of Social Ser-

vice a Los Angeles based community engaged in social and catechetical work with missions in Formosa and Mexico NCPhoto

Christians Jews Discuss Diamiddotlogue

SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-The question of whether JewishshyChristian dialogue should be by speech or by action was the theme that ran through the talks and discussions at a Conference on Interfaith Dialogue sponsored by Catholic Protestant and Jewshyish organizations at Seton Hall University here

Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum director of interreligious affairs for the American Jewish Comshymittee was generally in favor of the action approach saying that the dialogue must avoid beshycoming a convenient conspiracy on the part of middle-class whites to buffer themselves against the realities of the inner city

Father Edward H Flannery executive secretary of the U S Catholic Bishops Secretariat for Catholic-Jewish Relations said that while he would be the last to cut off action in the realm of social justice and charity he also felt that Jews and Christians could not effectively present a common ftont to society until they have straightened out their own affairs

Father Flannery referred to statements that the -ChristianshyJewish dialogue had died in the wake of last Junes six-day war between Israel and Arab nations He said that it was not so much a matter of its dying but of its not having been tried yet

Over Holy Thursday Good Friday and Holy Saturday more than 10 tons of food and clothing were donated and the UCC staff was swamped with the task of sorting the materiaL

With schools and church ofshyfices closed priests and nuns made their way individually and in groups to UCC headshy

quarters to help with the task of unloading cars and station wagons and sorting and distribshyuting the clothing

At least 50 offers of assistance came in to Queen of Angels pariSh in the heart of the ghettc and the callers were asked to organize relief efforts in their own communities and then gd the material 110 the UCCbull

FEEL GOOD TODAY

THt HOLY fATHER MISSION AiD TD THlaRIENTAL DHURDH

Thlsoolumns happiest readers are the men

Te date this second phase bas listed 35 gifts totaling $12000 Combined with the initial campaign the Building Fund now lists 233 donors who haVe pledged a total of $117()00 The Womens Club that was founded less than six months ago has initiated a long range program for the spiritual cll1shytural and financial efforts of the parish

In addition to the regular methods of aiding the parish finandally the women have conducted teen-age projects and have assisted the Mens Club fu

i bull various progrlms

~MANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

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TIMENOW OPEN ACCOUNT5PAYS o bull bull Interest Compounded Quarterly

Offices in

NORTH ATTLEBORO MAINSIFDIEILlDgt AnUBORO FAUS

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women and children who know they~r needed The days were busiest helping others are the happiest days of our livesbullbullbull Who needs you most Surprisingly God needs you - for inmiddot stance to help art abandoned orphan become e Godloving responsible adult Lepers need you (there are still 15middotmillion lepers In the world) blind children need y~u ~ndlo do we bull bullbull Here In New York we are your agents tellin you where the Holy Father says your help Is needed and channeling your help promptlyand Oafely to the people iii needbullbullbull Want to feel good right now Do without something you want but do not need and send the money instead for one of the needs below Youll feel good especialiy if your gift is big enough to mean a sacrifice to you This is your chance to do something meaningful for the world - its Gods world - while youre still alive

D Only $850 gives our priests and SIsters i south India enough Dapsone miracle tablebamp for 43 lepers for a yearl D For only $250 a week ($10 a month $120 a year) you can make sure that an abandoned child has food clothing a blanket and love Well send you a photo of the child you adopt tell you something about him (or her) and ask the Sistermiddotinmiddotcharge to keep you Informed

D Your stringless gifts in any amount ($5000 MEET $1000 $500 $100 $50 $25 $10 $5 $2)

MISSION will help the neediest wherever they are - in EMERGENCIES india and he Hol~ Land for instance

D Only you can make your will-and do It this THINK week to be sure the poor will have your help

OF even after youre gone Our legal title CATHOLIO YOURSELF NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION Also our priests

TOO will offer promptly the Masses you provide for

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Lawrence High of Falmouth Seeksmiddot State Track Tut~e

By PETER BARTEK Norton High Coach

The Capeway Conference track season has already begun but the handwriting is already on the wall This campaign like last years will be a battle for second place Admittedly notbing Short of a miracle can or will prevent Lawrence High of Falmouth from winning its second straight conference t rae k championship But fol Coach Jim Kalperis and his trackstersmiddot the league championship is only a Gtepping stone to the State C ham p io n - ship The goal of every athletic team in the state hi to earn the title of State Champion This is not beshyyond the grasp of the Falmouth Peier Clippers If hard Bartek work and dedication are the means to this end then Falshymouth will reign as State track champions

Success does not come easily em any endeavor and success batpound

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not come easily to the Falmouth tracksters They like all accomshyplished athletes have labored long and diligently to aChieve the measure of sUccess they now enjot lt

N1)t toomiddot many yearsato Lawshyrence High was just ~nother

sChool Participating in track But the efforts of many and the dedication of one IJ1im in parshyticular has brought immeasurshyable success to the Falmouth track scene That man is Jim Kalperis

Coach Kalperis haseombined

his knowledge af track his coaching ta1EntS aiiCl tirelessenergies middotto build a virtual track dynasty The latest noteworthy feat of middotliliitnickmen came in the forinof anotheriState title

Thisti~emiddotiS th~nivision IIi

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1

- BC~ and Norry Races Are Close 1

lbe format formiddot the St~te reo lays has been altered this ear with competition being held at four separate locations in East- em Massachusetts Weymouth captured the Division I crown the DiviSion n title went to

Andover and Williams corralled the laurels in Division IV

The meet drew ll5 schools in each of the four diviSions with over 2000 youngsters partici shypating in all classes

Enroute to its victory Falshymouth collected 51 points comshypared to runner-up Barnstable with 22Jh

Falmouth took first place in the discus high jump pole vault 440 yard run shuttle hurdles two mile run and the 880 -

With tbis type of success in state competition it is easy to see why the Capeway Confershyence title has been practically conceded to Falmouth

Sharing the spotlight with the trackmen at Falmouth are the diamondmen The Clippers who are in the thick of the loop baseball picture were given a

Mike Rainnie tossed amp no-hittel at Barnstable to gain a 1-0 vershydict

Its still much too early to predict with any accuracy

what will happen in the Cape wai baseball race But it ap- pears nomiddotclub will dominate th~t sport like Falmouth controIa track Falmouth Dartmouth Fairhaven and Barnstable are expected to fight it out through the entire season One close to the scene summed it up best when he said anyone in the league could win this thing

Close races are also developshying in the Bristol County and Narragansett Leagues

In the BCL both Bishop Fee han of Attleboro and Durfee High of Fall River encountered a few difficulties in early season play but seem to have found the range of late The clubs will meet in an important contest today in Fall River Late inning rallies have brought both clubS from the brink of defeat to vicshytory in previous outings The victor will have to be dubbed

shot in the arm last week as the team to beat

Brennan of Feehan D~est ill le~guej

Coach Tom Maccarone of Feeshyhan has had outstanding pershyfonnances from his pitching staff but the key to the Shamshyrocks success has been shortshystop Ty Blrennan Maccarone stated before the season that Brennan was his best player and perhaps the best in the whole Bristol County Judging from Brennans perfonnance to date one of the keys to stopping Feehan is stopping the classy shortstop

Coach Joe Lewis Hilltoppers play a brand of ball similar to his counterpart TOIJl Karams basketball club Make a mistake and the Fall Riverites will capshyitalize on it Durfees first two league victories came about beshycause of opponent miscues

The Hilltoppers have been playing steady ball throughout the early part of the campaign and are improving with every game Their ability 10 avoid costly mistakes eI tbeir -n

making and timely hitting has proven a winning combination

Come what may in todays contest the BCL llace has just begun

Not to be outdone by tile larger BCL and Capeway Conshyference the Narry loop is conshyducting a torrid race of its own At the end of the first week of action Seekonk and DightonshyRehoboth were tied for the top spot Following two weeks of play Gase of Swansea Dighton and Somerset were lodged In the first position The hectic lCampaign will probably find another change in the top spot at the conclusion of this weeks activity

From Cape Cod to Attleboro competition is keener this year than it bas been in many seashysons The road to the league championship is always diffJshycult to Davigate but this year it appears as though the road win be duttered wiill meR obstacles than ill quite

cone~~ lb~aders ConcllregrnmOB War In V~~It~IlJJm

NEW YORK (NC)-Stushydent government presidents and editors of campus newsshypapers at more than 500 colleges in 49 states have conshydemned the war in Vietnam as

lt immoral and unjust and said ~~ they believe they should not

~ i~~~~~~~ii ~~~b~~ shy --_ ~ and Laymen Convinced About

-- ~-__ Vietnnm Was coordirlated by shy _ -- shy ~ Rev RObert lVi Hundley lHullent

--lt--1 at Union Th~ological Snppary --J here and an associate pltISor at -- ~I th~ Congn~gationalChllrch hn ~_ Scarsdale N-Y He saiQ most

--middot1 students who signed the stateshy~-__-~~- ~~ -___- __~_~J ment havenot been active in

FINE ARTS FESTIVAL Making preparations for Fine Arts Festival at Bishop Stang High School North

Dartmouth are Paul Leahy and Margaret Polycarpo

~ Unmiddot-ty middotIs Chr-stlTs middotW-II

P Off W I E deg I pOi degI

ontl e comes cumenlca I grlmage From United Kingdom toHoly Lar-d

anti-war activities heretoforemiddot

Solicits Support

He added

Many of the student Itl~ders who have signed this sbtcment

recognize that they may be plaeshying their future caJeers illmiddotjeopshy~rdy and conceivably are riskshying punitive action being taken

against them by the capiicioWJ V~TICAN ~ITY (NC)~TO an Fathers Arthur Payton anSel~c~ve Sfdtvice Systerh~~~

I ecumenical pilgrimage oQ its Anglican who is director 01 ~ev Yi~am Sloan Cot~~1 Jr-) way to the Holy Land Pope interchurCh travel in LOndon bull aclive memjgter of Clergymiddot ~nd Paul VI recalled the words he Among its members were An- Laymen Concerned AboutbullVI~tshyspoke on his own pilgrimage glieans CatholiCs Oithodox and nam ~1dmiddota Yal~ U~Iverslt7

there in 1964 that unity is the will of Christ

He said that it was with parshyticular pleasure that we welshycome this ecumenical pilgrimshyage from the United Kingdom to the Holy LaRd You are aboUt to follow in the fOQtSteps af God made man in the country of His birth Hill mission and His blessed death for us men and for our salvation (NiceneCreed)

Your visit caUsto mind our own unforgettable pilgrimage to the Holy Places From the grotto of Bethlehem we then declared It npw appears clearly to all that the problem of unity cannot be eluded Today this will cif Christ is imposed upon our minds and demands th~t we undertake with wisdom and love every possible way of bringing all Christi~ns t6 enjoy the great benefit and supreme honor of the unity of the middotChurch

He also recalled his plea from Bethlehem that love of Christ and of the Church should inshyspire that every future moveshyment toward meeting and reshyconciliation

The pilgrimage was led by

DIOCESAN DIREC1OR First woman to serve as a diocesan director of radio-TV is Miss Patricia Smith of Pueblo Colo who is also a photo-journalist on the staff gf Dateline Colorado m cesan weekly newspaper

Protestants not only from Great Britain but from France and Germany as well

Msgi Gianfrancesco Arrighi undersecretary of the Secretashyriat for Promoting Christian Unity and Canon John Findlow representative of Anglican Archbishop Michael Ramsey of Canterbury at the Holy See accompanied middotthe pilgrims to the Vatican

Votes Moratorium On ChuDch Building

CHICAGO (NC)-The Chicago Conference of Laymen is urging Church authorities at both the archdiocesan and parish levels to declare a moratorium on 10- cal construction projects so that funds can be channeled to projshyects in the ghetto areas

The action was taken at the second annual meeting of the

ll200-member organization The 300 in attendance passed

some 50 resolutions half of them dealing with urban problems The membership said it will seek ways to alleviate white racism especially within the Catholic Church

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ch~plaJD saId The stand taken by these

y~ung men should serve to reshymmd Americans everywhere that the war in Vietnam 1s not over that American and Vietshy

namese boys are stillmiddotdying

He continued

These middotmen of conscience should be supported by eveQY priest minister and rabbi who cares about the sanctity of conshyscience

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Jesuit Comments Di~cordNormal Amon9 Catholics

RIO DE JANEIRO (NC)shylD i SC 0 r d among Catholics after the Second Vatican Council is perfectly normal but It is not normal for proshygressive or conservative Cathoshylics to refuse to accept the dishyrectives of the council and the pope Jesuit superior general said here Father Arrupe is in Brazil for 30 days to visit Jesuit houses in the country and to preside at the May 6 to 14 meeting here of all South Amershyican Jesuit provincials

He said that his visit is inshytended to adapt the order here flo the requirements of the agshygirnameJ1to or up-dating

The most important aggiorshy namento in our day he said

is that of the mind We have to ~nsider and respect human valshyues as such This was always the Churchs doctrine but now the Church is insisting on it more We ought not to consider the Churchs interest in human values as opportunism Our in tEmtion is only to serve mankin~ better)

Press Uses Images Dudng his stay here Father

Arrupe willmiddot visit 20 local(tiesWhere Jesuits are woikilg

ts B 1Ilhele are 1000 JesUl m razl~ bull

He said that he regarded as bull joke the Brazilian presss ref-

elences to him as ~the black l T Ch Pope cussion of he angmg a1middot

Because of my cassock hemiddot

tlaid I am black but I am not the Pope ~ understand that the press has to use images to exshylI)lain concepts more effectively

Honor Editor NEW YORK (NC) ~ Robert

6lmstead news editormiddot of the National Catholic Reporter weekly newspaper published in Kansas City Mo received honshyelable mention in the 1968 Paul Tobenkin Memolial Award Competition here

-

MEET IN ST LOUIS Bishop-elect Timothy J~ Harringshyth d f th Sf W 1 ft d

ton ~ orcester e leoscllfses ~ atn t ~ l~mg

ish a panel a~ the lQ68Presi dents Conference of the Nashytional Council of cat~olic yene~l

Role of CouDcil The parish will retairi its role

as a community of worship whose members go out ihto the world and bring it theeurohristjan

message Bernatd Lyons Ghishycago public relations ~onsultant saidmiddot

The pa~ish on the other hand mustmiddot become part of the world

alound it a wHr1e$S to the whole community and fake on roles not in relation only to -its

GUIDING CHURCH IN UNITED STATES More than 200 members of the hierarchy participated in the decisions of the annual Spring meeting of the National Conference

Predict Important Authorities Emphcisixe

WASHINGTON (NC)-Three members but to the world in authorities on parish life have agreed here that the parish basic organiz~tion iil the Church will have to undergo some lmportant changes if the ChUlch is goingto meet th~ needs of societyin the 20th censhy tury

But just how the parislt is going to change ~s far from setshytied they ~onceqed in a dis

which it exists Father John Corriga~ of this city a directozlt of the Nationalmiddot Liturgical Con ference asserted

Whatever it does the parish must becomemiddot a vital force in the cOlJlrnunity around it Father Geno Baroill execu~ive secretary Washington archdi

ocesan Office ~f Urpan Affairs declared

RIot ComparlmiddotsoDmiddot

Father Baroni whose work blings hini into constant contactmiddot with Negro problems in WaSh- laymen will inhibit soCial ac- ington saw~ astriking par~illel tion but added later this is a between the Churchs needs and risk wltirth taking

-those of thebiack ghetto Right now~ he observed - one of the mos~ urgent prob Society to Consider lems in the ghetto is that Of Sh fmiddot

community organization We 5 emnary I t arll learl1ing that pe~ple ri~t be CARTHAGENA CNC) _ The

cause they have beel- cut o~t ofSocieiy of the Precious Blood meaningful participation in so- ciety

In the ~hurch laymen have been cut out of this participa tion also They dont riot but they dont really concern them selves with the concerns of the Church unle~s thy ~ave t~i~ sense of partlclpatlcm he saId

New Resndemlce For US PIiDests

ROME (NC)-A new resident house for American priests working In the offices of the Roman Curia (the Churchs censhytral administrative offices) or on assignment in Rome for the US bishops has been opened to provide adequate economical lodgings and community surshyroundings

The residence called Villa Stritch after the late Samuel Cardinal Stritch of Chicago is composed of two apartment comshyplexes and is designed to meet the immediate needs of US priests already at work in Rome and to anticipate future housing needs as internationalization of the Roman Curia continues

In addition to American$ resshyident in Rome the villa is also expected to house priests on special assignments for the bishshyops in Rome bishops who come to Rome for work on var~ous

Church commissions or otherVatican offices or for such events as the synod of bishops and ma-Jor congresses In short it is hoped that the new villa wilL

will study the possibilities and implications of moving the or ders main theological school flOm St Charles Seminary here in Ohio to a university campus or urban center and of buildingmiddot an adequate program at St QJ1arles The Carthagena SChOt

has been the societys maJor seminary for over 100 years

Major superiors and middotelected delegates representing the soshycietys Cincinnati province voted to fOlm a committee to carry out the study during a provincial chapter meeting held at St Charles at which modernizing the training of candidates for the priesthood in the society Vas tqe chief subject of discussion

middotA report of the meeting in- dicated that the delegates were aware of trends in the Church 1-way from comparative isloationmiddot of seminary establishments to university campuses and urban centers

SPECIAL RATES FOR

Smiddot I O dcho0 utings an Picnics

of Catholic Bishops in St Louis last week An enormoUis amount of homework on position papers was approved ~

the Bishops NC Photo

I see the parish councils and their recognition of freedom asneceSsai-y to do this he added

Worth Risk They agreed they sha~e abull

feiling opound un~asin~ss _middotaboti~ these cOuncIls relatively new amQJ1g Cathol~cs pa~icula~lY their attitude t~ward SOCI~ issues

d Father Baroni sal he has ~

leery feeling about parishcouncils He declared there is

the danger that conservative

contribute to increased racial understanding and involvement

fur the people of the diOcese

Montie Plumbing amp Heating Co Over 35 Years

of Satisfied Service Reg Master Plumber 7023

JOSEPH RAPOSA JR 806 NO MAIN SYREIET

Fall River 675-7497

Parishes

Lyons author of th~ book middotParish Councils - Renewin the Parish Community said be

middotwas somewhat more optiniistici I donit think we are going to

solve these problems by 10~~1 at the dangers exclusively hie commented

Diocese to Discuss C~m~issi~n Rep~rt

LANSING (NC) - Catholics thoughout t~e Lansing diocese will participate in forums and home discussion groups 1as~ on the report of the National Acf visory Commission on Civil Disshyorders The program which begaa with public forums in six citie on April 29 was planned ~

middot three diocesanmiddot agencies-the Ofshyfice of Social and Community Service the Office of Renewal Through Vatican II and the adult education division of tne Education Department It was initiated in response to an appeal made by Bishop Alexshyander Zaleski The day following the death of Dr Martin Luther King Bishop Zaleski asked dishyocesan directors to plan an imshymediate program designed to

meetmg of heBIShops n erence WIt ISop e e~ros be a center of communi~y life CONTACT MANAGER - LINCOLN PARK of BrowI)svIlle Texas and fOtmiddotmer chancellor of the Fall for bishops arid priests with spe- 9996984 636-2744 ~iver Di~~~~lt __~gt -cilla~~gnrn~iitS~~o~~~ ~ Oc)QI~OC~)OQCIOC)oOOOCgtoc)OQltjIOcXllOOOCgtOC)oOC~)OIL)QOCgtOCPOoO

Page 8: 05.02.68

~~gtT_

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FoR River-Thurs May 2 t9688 Urges Vctory ~ VietnomRecipes Re1call Memor~es ST lOUIS (NC)-A oan fbft Victory in Wetnam and a coo-gt demnation of Communism ltBOf Many Friendly Coks intrinsleany evil highlighteltl a series of IOresolutions adoptedBy Mary Enley Dally bIY the priests and bishops Belraquo ving on the Cardinal Mindszen~II A collection of cookbooks 16 a good addition to a kitchen Council governing board ~

Like a dictionary or an encyclopedia a good cookbook is the anti-communist CaJdina$ 8Il authoritative source of information but like that dictionshy lIlindszenty F~undation

ary or encyclopedia irts a cold impersonal font of lrnow- The resolutions adopted a1l the end of the foundations threegt

ledge On the other hand backs cf enveloPes on a blank day celebration of its 10th anni-o there probably is 8Jt your check on the inside of a match versary he1e outlined a p~ Muse certainly ~ ours folde around the margin of a gram based on demands for vioo those h~nd-gasthered recipes seven cents off coupon-whatshy tory in Vietnam rigorous pun-o dear and welcome as letters from ever blank Paper is to be found ishment flaquo riote16 and looters bome These receipes fur goodies in a- womans purse But they and ltm e Fecognition 1baII )lou have been represent communication ~ith there can be no useful ~ served at hoones other people OIl a common logue wiIth men of iN win of friends the ground masters of ~ceit band - written In the never-never land of Released with the resoluti01d ones on yel- things to be done remains the was a stmement from Lola Beue lowing cracked sorting and clasSification of Holmes a Negro leader whO paper in spidery these recipes type them out on joined the Communist party 1ft ecript by hands inde~ cards file neatly divided 1957 as an -informer for the long stilled the into soups salads desserts Federal Bureau of Investi~ti~ ones you took etc (FBI) Emphasizing the comJiNshy~er the tele- And yet though order may be Dist role in civil rights aotiw Phone haH ill heavens first lawthere is someshy ties Miss Holmes told conte shyIlhorthand the thing-quite a something---to be ence delegates othe half in said for our box of recipes In Much of the civil t1rrnlGII ebbreviations the this-sounds- anticipatwn of company coming youre seeing right now was 8Iloo 8OOd kind you jagged out of or just a yen to fix something nmged by the Communist p~ the evening paper with a bobby different we leaf tbrough the when I was a member pin meant to try and probably assorted sizes and shapes of our didnt miscellany M brings reminis-

Also there are the puzzlers cences nostalgia and more Conege Functioning shybow-tos from experts who cook often than not_ an idea of someshyby in9tinet--a handful of flour thing entirely different from the Despite Resignations or SCl just enough so that it item we were originally seek- River mark 50th anniversary In wheelchair Miss Mary R LADYSMITH (NC) - Ibl looks right or enough milk so ing acting president of Mount SeDshy

Dailey organizer and charmiddotter member of Fall River unitario College Sister DonnaItll smooth but not too runny For instance 1Ibere Is fIbe standing from left Mrs Mary Hennessey ticket chainnan Marie Rudolph said the Wis-- Pantry Library cookie recipe in the delicate for anniversary observ-ance Mrs Catherine Lee sUite re- consin college is functioningSuch is the collection-if tbis script of our late beloved neighshy

-bor Mrs Madeline Kelly with gent Rev James Morse chapiain Miss Mary F Maleadynormally after the recent resiglag-tag box of this-and-that its addendum Patsy you might ~n+- srtate regentmiddot Mrs Mary Lou Silvia general chairman nation of founder-president Si9shycould be called a collection-at pao ter Ann Mary Gullan eigbIJour house in the pantry li- like to make these as a surprise for observance faculty members and three acJfur your mother (Patsy wes brary tihen 12 years old) ministration personnel

A trained librarian indeed a Sister Donna Marie said thetrained anybody in the artmiddot of T-heres Marguerite Culhanell veal-in-wine we begged from former president resigned imshy

orderly classification even a he after having this at her mediately but the resignatioJUl well-trained cook woulq be house Isabel Donohoes trick of of the other members of -therwORL~ appalled at this motley array sprinkling chicken with vinegar e~BYMAllULYN RODERICK~ eollege are not effective until Some recipes are written on the to firm it up resulting in chicken June 1 She said the college is

salad par excellence many a recruiting faculty members at kindly with FRENCH FLAIR this time and does not anticioopet reciPe shared

lIS by readers of this column pate any difficultay in acquw One Pork Chop rve always read and heard Another tip fur Summer visi shy ing replacements by the Fall

term that French women have a flair tors to this home of the 1968 Also tbere is one addedre- for clothes but I never realized Man And His World is to The resignations were based

eently by a nameless friend we the truth of this statement until plan on wearing bright little on a dispute over the role to be met when she came to a collec- I visited Montreal Immediately dresses and suits but please no played at the college by the _tion center to get food for her it hits you from the moment bermudas or tight slacks Do newly appointed lay vice-pres-shyfamily afteT her home hadbeen you step out of -your car in however take your hemlines up ident Granmiddott E Zachary

GOLDEN JUBILEE Daughters of Isabella in Fall

partially burned out quring the front of tbe hotel that this is a an inch or two for the minilook recent rioting Many many city of women is the tbing in this land of the Catholic parishes had contiib- who know and mounties and I think I had the uted food ~d clothing Any who care about longest hemlines in town with number cf men and women dressing Minishy them just above my knees (-at came to deliver the donated skirts are evshy least they felt that way)supplies and remained to work erywhere but Ourls have taken over this sorting clothi~ packaging sup- miniskirts worn town and they look so delightfulplies for families of two four with style and that I couldnt resist visiting the and on up chicness colOl talented hair stylist in the hotel

Back to the newest recipe abounds bright and having my hair cut and~ This woman had been given a pinks v i vi d curled a Ie 68 For evening bag of mushrooms by a friendly 0 ran g e s and these curls (with the aid of falls grocer on her block If I could citrus yellows and hairpieces of course) cascade have a pork chop-just one pork f rillsan d down the neckline giving these chop she said I could fix flounces float forth and a walk I Canadian women a fragile fem- my familys favorite dinner down a street is like watching inine appearance that is hard to

One pork chop for a family an everchanging fashion show compete with In fact if you of four We couldnt believe it What astonished me as much feel like getting an inferiority until we tried it at our house as the sense of style that pershy complex about your looks this and were asked for a repeat vades the city was the aura cf is the place to go I guarantee performance Heres how good g-rooming Nowhere do you when you return youll want

Use large-capped mushrooms see a sloppy woman no one is new hair style a new sense of Fry the pork chop cool Be- seen walking the streets with make-up and a oomplete new

wardrobe shymove meat and grind it Add curlers in their hair or runs in seasoned bread crumbs and a - their stockings Obviously the bit of grated onion both sauteed - women ~ Morit~eal are con- in melted margarine or fat from cerned WIth theIr appearance

J UBI L A R I AN Sister - the chop Pile on top of in- and work hard to keep it up Color Process verted mushroom capS Make a - One thing in their favor is the

Mary Marciann of the Feli- er~am ~uee (dried or canned price 01 the clothes One can cian Sisters marked her sil- nulk Wl~ do) into which you - pick up a lovely summer dress Booklets vel jubilee of reJi~iou8 pro- have added ithe chopped and fur about twenty-two dollars ill fession at St Stanislaus sauteed mushroom stems ~our Cenadian money or a smashing-shy

0 a SYSTEMATIC55001( ear SAVINGS

MONTHLY DEPOSITS

5 00 01 amiddot INVESTMENT bull 10 year SAVINGS

NOTICE ACCOUNTS a REGULAR450 year SAVINGS

Bass River Savings Bank

Bank By Mail We Pay The Postage

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA

bull SOUTH YARMOUTH bull HYANNIS bull DENNIS PORT - bull OSTfRVlllpound

Year Books

Brochures

Convent Fall River on Sun- sauce into bottom of a shallow - slack sUit for around thirty-middot pan top withthe stufted mush- eight High fashion for a small AmericCin Pr~s~ Inc

oay~ Observance ~p~luded a rooms ~bake until tender price seems to be the motto of ~ Mass of thanksgIvmg cele- 20-30 nunutes the little boutiques tbatmiddot are OFFSET PRII~ITERS~~ LEnERPRESS

brated by Rev Itobert S So now into our heterogene-- ~ound everywhere and if youre Kaszynski StS~nslau8uscollection J0~ this ~ded middotplannin~ a tri~ to this SOPhis~- 1-~7JOFFI~ VENUE hone 997~942t pastor and a -reception for lte~ - communIcation agam - eate~ CIty thiS Summer don t~

- _ remJnder of someone -who was outfit YOU16elf before You go - friepds m the parochial -willillg to share her houSewife -- save a few pennies fur some

school -haU- _ lmowhow delightful buys up there

New Bedford Mass

~

9 New Insecticide Promises To End Dangmiddoter of Sprays

By Joseph and Manlyn Roderick

I doni lmow how other prdeners fared over the Winter but my roses were hit pretty hard Most of my pruning is done now and very ~itble remains of 1ast years IIOwth Luckily the roses surrived wt ground level but I Gidnt have much of a job a~ h Nader knew which ones the~ldmg w at to prune Slnce children would enjoy the hours most of what I could see ihey were open and how much ve the root crown is dead they cost

This year I am going to try bull We found our hotel through stematic approach to ridding this tiny book that described it IDY plants of insects rather than in glowing tenns and it tlllmed IPr~ying simply their upper sur- out to be all that the autho18 IIaces A systematic insecticide had said and then some II taken in through a plants Dining SJl)Ob fIlIOots and passes through its sya- However every bit as imporshytern The one I purchased is in taut as our place oli lodging was granular form and contains a the places where we dined and fertilizer A measured amount Mr Frommer and Mr Godwin III Spread around the base of the couldnt have given us better mose bush worked into the sou tips on dining if they had been ifhen given a thorough watering with us personally One evening The roots then absorb the fer- Joe and I (thanks to 11 kindshytilizer and insecticide and sup- hearted Nana) ate alone at a lit shyposedly keep the plant free from tIe bit of Portugal transplanted IIU chewing and sucking insects to this continent called the k six weeks Fado ComP1ete with melanshy

SLfer~ Quicker moly guitars and Spanish-Por-I would be parUcularly grate- tuguese cooking it was a delight

ful ii the systamic program to the eye ear and palate worked beacuse it would elim- Equally as good though were Snate spraying No matter how inexpensive luncheon places cautious one is there is alwaYs suchlS A La Crepe Bretonne Gte possibility that children win and the Pam Pam The former

I th th has an upstairs constructed Uld eome in contact WI e spray 1_ at d lik te hi dend harm themselves ~r e e a pIra span

Aside from the safety factor 8 bill of fare thart ~onsists of this method Js also much quicker ~late-SI~ paper-thin crepes llIld easier ttuui spraying No filled WIth any of 81 different messy spray cans and no lost fillings One cOld spend a energy in pumping and unblock- whole afternoon Just watchi~g Ing nozzles just a third of a tJeCOOks cr~ating these deli shycmpful of an odorless material ClOUS concoctIOns but Montreal applied around a plant every six hol~ so many wonders that one weeks with no danger that it ham t time to linger over any will rain ~e day after you one thIng

ra ed and wash off the ra The Pam Pam too was a 8P t y 1 sP Y charmIng IneXpenSIve restaurant ala erla fo f 1 H g d

I am more than willing to try I a anu y un anan In ecor IIOmething new but being a pes- and dIshes It featured flourless simist at heart I cannot conceive cakes Both my mother and I had of something which is so easy some for desse~ but before I actually working Lurking An could ask the w81tre~s what they the back of JDy mind is the feel- did make them WIth if ~ey mg that someone devised a omi~~d flo~r Jason wa~ dIPPIng method of satisfying lazy gar- his hands In ~veryones plates ampmers that the were doing and I thought It best to pay our

y bill and departoomethmg about theIr roses to try without having to go to

B tt J d I f lt th t h t 0 oean e a a

m h t bl rt f a s garuc rou e so 0 upill forroses We will give it Il

we s~mpled of thIS cosmopolItan_ b t ti d -cy was u an appe zer an

try though and hope that the that we would like to ret~m RSults live up to the message ag81~ for an entree-but WIthshy

out a two year older on the label of the product Now that were all back in a

lJm the llUtchem routine at least until Summer l have come to the conclusion vacation heres a tasty little

tfhat any family that attempts vegetable recipe to add interest to take a vacation trip with a ta everyday menus toddler has to be either courageshy lEGGS l1lgtJIVAN eurolUS or stupid and Im afraid we (Il) I dIE)tfull into the latter category eVl eggs When our plans to visit Wash- G hard-cooked eg~s lngton over the Spring vacation 1 2~ oz can deVIled ham failed because it was impossible teaspoon Worcestershire to obtain reservations (evishy sauce dently everyone else in the U S teaspoon grated onion bad the same plans only sooner Ik teaspoon salt titan we did) we set our sights yenteaspoon dmiddotry mustard aorthwaTd Montreal was our Dash pepper go~l and with our terrible two Z Tablespoons cream or milk in tow along with some genial (Broccoli and Saaee) smndparents and two young 1 pkg frozen or 1 bunch fresh ladies of seven and nine we set broccoli Iotth ona rainy Mond~ momshy Im Tablespoons butter or Ing margarine

Fortunately I had come with 1~ Tablespoons flour -e a pocket book guide of Montshy ~ teaspoon dry mustard Ileal andQuebec written by Arshy teaspoon salt thU1 Frommer and John God- Dash pepper win in ~peration with ttIe cup milk Bank of Nova SCOtia n was Jk cup grated sharp cheese absolutely priceless The 8Ushy 1) Prepare the deviled eggs thorS described in expllcit detai by cutting I( inch slice from one botel motel and rooming house end of shelled egg remove yolk eccQmmodations different types and mash yolks and end slices eftestaurants from ones where with the ham Worcestershire ~ can get eggs toast and cofshy oniorisalt mustard pepper and Iee-tor 65c io the elite gounnet cream mill well and then use laavens that lure 1be patrons flo fill hollows of egg whites with theIr haute cuisine and I) COOk broccoli as label dfshy~Hy the bighllghts of the city recls (if f~n) or in a small ampat tourist shbUldnt misa am9unt of wBtell Until tender ISald highUght were even catoeshymzed - tba JastantlJ tile

if yf

I) J I

EVERYBODYS GOTTA EAT Pfc~Charles Richards of Pittson Pa s-hares his C-ratio~~ w~th fatigue-hatted Httle Vietnamese boy in a villag~ near Saigon where Richards outfit the 1st Battalion 27th Infantry 25th Inshy

fan try Division was on a sweeping oPeration Jleoar the Vietnamese capital ~C Photo

We Like It Here Milwaukee Neighborhood Committee Works

To Prevent Panic Selling-MILWAUKEE (NC) - Some

strange signs are beginning to appear in the windows of homes around St Agnes parish on the citys North Side

Theyre being displayed by persons interested in stabilizing the area They call attention to a program that aims to reduce house turnover so that home and area values can be mainshytained

In the eyes of the organizers the prgram is designed to preshyvent panic selling

The signs read Were Not Moving to SUburbia-We Like It Here and This House Is NOT For Sale

Theyve been prepared by an

NUlises Cound~ Mee~

MOlY ]] at St Annes The Diocesan Council of Cathshy

olic Nurses will hold their Spring Plenary Meeting on Satshyurday May 11 at st Annes School of Nursing Fall River

The business meeting and election of officers scheduled for 4 oclock will be followed at 5 by an address by Rev Donald J Bowen assistant at St Marys Norton

Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament will be given at 630 and the banquet will follow at 715

Reservations must be made with Mrs Ann Fleming 228 Oak Grove Ave Fall River no later tlban Sunday May 5

melting the butter in a saucepan and stirring in flour mustard saltand pepper Remove from heat and stir in the milk Re- tum to heat and cook until

thickened stirring constantly Add the grated cheese and stir -tmtil smooth

In amiddot cassetrGle dish arrange gt

the cooked broccoli Stand the deviledmiddot eggs with stuffed ends

up between and on broccoli pieces Pour the sauce over aU-

area stabilization committee for distribution in homes in an area populated by about 40000 pershysons about one-third Negroes

The signs are one of the means by which we hope to dis~ourage unethical real estate salesmen according to Anshythony L Silva acting commitshy

middottee chairman and a member of St Agnes parish

Fear Tactics

He explained at rl~ent meetshyings that the program is not sponsored by a religious group Nor are the committee apshyproaching the problem on a color basis but 18ther as a matshyter of economics

Our aim is to restore confishydence in the area and countershyact unethical salesmen since they tend to operate on fear tactics said Silva

The immediate goal of the group is to make its efforts known to all residents of the area by establishing a network of block contacts

Persons who have expressed interest in the program represhysent St Agnes Roosevelt Drive Presbyterian Garden Homes Evangelical Lutheran Augusshytana Evangelical Lutheranmiddot Siloah Lutheran amI Elim Tabshyernacle churches

THE ANCHOR-Thursday May 2 1968 -------------=

Teaching Sisters To Get Raise

DALLAS (NC) - Bishop Thomas K Gorman of DallasshyFort Worth has approved a salshyary raise for Sisters teaching in parochial schools which was recommended by the diocesan board of education

In a letter to all pastors Bishshyop Gorman stated As of Sepshytember the base minimum salshyary for each Sister in regular service to the local parish will be $1500 per year

Enclosed with -the letter was an agreement signed by Bishop Gorman fM the signature of each pastor and the major supeshyrior of the religious order of Sisters serving his school

The agreement provides thllgtt the parish pay the stated base minimum salary to eac~ Sister provide a convent and its upshykeep along with utilities inshycluding a telephone an automoshybile and its maintenance and health insurance

Sister Caroleen of the Schooi Sisters of Notre Dame diocesan superintendent of schools said the increase in the minimUm base salary Is fbe first such since 1959 when it was set at

$960

Withdraw Missionaries From Angola Territory

NEW YORK (NC) - The United Church of Christ and the United Church of Canada are w~thdrawingthe majoritr of theIr missionaries from the Portuguese West African ter- ritory of Angola

Dr Alford Carleton execushytive vice-president of the United Churchs Board for World Ministries whose headshyquarters are hele said the acshytion was being taken because the Portuguese government is apparently seeking tomiddot extinshyguish Protestant missionary acshytivity in Angola

The two churches have withshydrawn all missionaries III total of 12 whose terms of service had already been extended for more than a year beyond the normal term The missionaries wiJI apply for readmission

Portuguese administrators have in the past given assurshyances that re-entry permits would be given but Dr Carleshyton said there have been inshystances of denials of re-entry permits to missionaries

BlUE R~ION

LAUNDRY 273 CENTRAL AVE

NEW BEDFORD ~

fFr~~sectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsect~ llli= 111

WHITE SPA-CATERERS

BANQUETS bull WEDDINGS bull PARtiES 0

bull COMMUNION BREAKFASTS

1343 PLEASANT STREET FAURIVEI

993-l780

and bakemiddotin a 400middot oVeftaboutI~sect~ggsectsect~~sectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsectsect~sectsectI~J30 minutes 01 untilbubblTmiddot1 I

992-6216

-ObtainsFreedo ForRefugees

MADRID (NC)--Amiddot group t1ti youth leaders who spent a nig~

middotin a church to avoid a I~est ~ police was released la~

through the help of Auxilia~ Bishop Angel Mortll Figuls ~ Madrid

The youths had taken refureg in the church of Our Lady ~ Montana in suburban MorataJaiJ after police raided a mccting bll a parish building which th0 youths said was a house of thQ people of God Q

The meeting which had b~

announced in the padsh tIbQ previous Sunday as a conferenltcO on Ohristian doctrine was SUib rounded by police on suspiciolQf that it was an illegal meetin~ of workers oommimiddotttees-inde-o pendent labor organizations Tb() police arrested a Catholic woramp ers leader Dannen Ruiz Abo-1 gado Juan Canet a lawyer a~ Father Juan Jose Maria Bltlllesashyteros as they left the meetin- The three were late releasecA

However middotthe Y9uths atten+shying the conference fled to ~

church to avoid arrest and ve mained there until BishOJll Morta arrived and obtainecll

their freedom after negotia~ with the police

10 ~H~ ANCHORshy )hursday May2 bull 19~8 (

- - bull )

Sup~me C~ult Qars Obscenity

For Youth WASHINGTON (NC)

For more than two years the Supreme Court has made it clear thatin the eyes of the law obscenitymiddot is a sometime thing its distribution ~o adults nearly impossible to regulate without endangering the Conshystitutions guarantees of free speech and opinion

But over the same two years the Court has indicated thai it might be possible to control the

availability of obscene books and films to the young and in

1967 it issued an op~n invitashycmiddotmiddot tion to the nations ~a~yers to find the right cases an4 the right arguments tot~stmiddotthis middotmiddotview _

This year the cases were found and the Supreme Court did what most observers thought it would do it permitted states and citiesto control distribution of obscene material to youngshylIJters - providect It drlws the lines finely and tightly

It returrled from amiddotJtwo-week recess to rule thatmiddotmiddot NeW York middot States law barring phsons un- Organization Starts ~er 17 from buying smut met ~ middotthe ~e~t~nd tpatrgtalIas1s middot~lm CLEANUP FatherDetm6d P McDermott of New Yorks lower East ~ide St Housingmiddot Program

elasslflcatlOn law undet whIchmiddotmiddotmiddot bull - bull WASHINGTON (NC) - ~1 bull

minors areprevented from see- BrIgId spansn pas8~s o~t pamt ~nd prusJ1e~ to sl1rpl1r~a~ volunteers who particIpated m Church-sponsored nonprofit 0IJ)00

lt ingsome movies didnot ih~ AprIl ZO ()peratJoA Cleanup It was estImated that 50000 urban people of all baek- ganization here haS launched II

middotThemiddotopinions shoUld go li-long grounds w~re joined in the WOllk by 5000 suburbanites in cleaning andpaintin~ aJong~ousing program Wider whiClli way toward clearing up a con- 46 Streets NC Photo It hopes to purchase 322 sl~ lrti-tutional atmosphefe which at homes rehabilitate them aDCil middottimes hasbeen no Clearer thanmiddot 0 000 p J resellmiddotthem to poor families DiP

the air around the Supreme middotMmiddotore ThanmiddotS1 middotinGmiddot reo CIt Day rOJe ect del federal financing Courts building on a Pilrticu- The organization-Urban Beshylarly still slmlne~ day 1ew YOk middotPrmiddotelamiddotte Heomiddotds lomiddotmiddotn~Sectmiddot omiddotmiddotrmiddot-amiddot n Effort habilitation Corp~will begiul

While the Court in an 8-1 de- 1lIIII 1lIIII the program with therehabi eision written by Justice Thur- tation of nine row houses whiob 000 Marshall-his first major ~ NEW YORK (NC)Jt- Wall z At the end of tbe da~ they ~teas of densest poverty ~Jl it will purchase from the ~ epiiiion-tlirewout the Dallal greatday for New York-one ~ Bat down togethermiddot at tables iyIanhatian andthe Bronx _ development Lanmiddotdmiddot Agen~ filmmiddot clasSification law because hard work oonstructiye dia- str~ng tile length of streets to Last SumJl1er in its thitd year Washi~gtonurban refewal tfwas unduly vague even there logueand happy celebration eat a meal of celebraHon pro- of successful operation the thorny agency The RIA apo K upheld the right of goer~- -Along 45 streets in the Man- vided and prepared by people ~rojec(wastlIreatenea b~ out- proved sale of the houses to ~

Jnen~ to prote~t the Y0llng 1~m hattan and Bronx ooroughs of the block 1gtreak of violence in East Har- group at a purchasemiddot price ~ ~slble bad mfluenc~ some 50000 Negroes Puerto Many in~olved said they felt lem $26100

Different Directions Ricans Italians Jews Slavs the most important aspect of the To counteract riot threats Purchase and rehabilitatiOll middotIt did so without p~ssing on Orit~nt~ls and eople~f otmiddothe whole projeot was not renova- Msgr Fox organized East Har- work which will be done bIT

themiddot meri~~or lackof merits nationalities were joined by middottion but relationship It gave lem peace processions For five Negro contractors and involVG of the film involved but hinted some 5000 guest volunteers _ an opportunity at a time middotof nghts more than 1000 old and young Negroes as apprentice6 middot111at had the law been suffi- from suburbia and other middle alienation and fear between YQung Puerto Ricans walked will be carried out under ~

eielitly explicit about what con- class areas black and white rich and poor through their streets with ban- $]37000 mortgage provided ~ stihites proper or improper con- They spent the day c1eani1g inner city and suburbia oung nersmiddot flowrs singing songs the International BrothelhooCl

duct the Dallas censors would renovating and decorating the and old for people to meet one carrying candles and standing of Electrical Workers and guall shy have had no trouble iicei1sing inner city streets and alleys another as persons in an at- up for peace hope and love anteed by the Federal Housins middotthe film buildings and residences 10- mosphere of work play and La~gely through their efforts Administration under its 221pound(

Instead thc Court said they gether the men women and accomplishment peace was restored to the area program were set adrift in a boundless children residents wOlked shoul- Its one way to make real sea and arrived at their con- der to shoulder with priests what Dr Martin Luther King elusion--that the film should be nuns laymen and women vol- envisioned when he said I Archbishop Greets shown to adults only - from unteers They cleaned back- have a dream as East Harlemshy DEBROSS OIL many different directions yalds and basements did car- ite Valentine Haddock described Armenian Patriarch ~uch a situation is wide open pen try work made plumbing all the people helping one anshy NEW YORK (NC) ~Archshy co

te abuses not the least of which repairs painted doors windows other to become not even just bishop Terence J Cooke ofNew would be a drift among film- and building facades friends-relatives York welcomed His Holiness Heating Oils makers toward the most innocu- At the end of each block a Peace Processing Vasken I Supreme PatIiarch ous and the totally inane The large and colorful mural was Cleaned out basements and andCatholicos of all Armenians and Burnersresult The vast wasteland that painted on a wall depicting the backyards on streets are to be at an ecumenical service in St some have described in refer- good things happening transformed later again by Patricks cathedral 365 NORTH FRONT STREET ence to another medium might street residents and guest vol- It marked the first time the

NEW BEDFORDbe a verdant paradise in com- Award Ecumenical unteers working in partnelship supreme spiritual leader of the parison into vest pocket parks basket- Armenian church had been reshy

But because the law was Theology Diploma ball courts little theaters reme- ceived in a Catholic cathedral in ivague said Marshall it does KAMPALA (NC)-A theolo- dial schools and teenage neigh- the United States JIlot follow that the Constitution gical diploma of the University borhood clubs requires absolute fleedom to of East Africa jointly recognized This non-sectarian project exhibit every motion picture of by the Catholic and Anglican was instituted by Msgr Robert every kind at all times and all Churches in East Africa has been J Fox New York archdiocesan places awarded for the first time coordinator for Spanish com-

The first four Uganda students munity action who four years to receive the diploma fare An- ago originated a creative comshy

Schedule Unveiling glicans munity action program Sum-The theological diploma repre- mer in the City now operatingOf Pope1s Statue sents an agreement between out of 26 store fronts in eight

FATIMA (NC) -A 12-footshy Catholics and Anglicans over the high statue of Pope P~lUl VI syllabus and subjects of the theshy

wili be unveiled Monday May ological course However such TRI CITY13 at the Marian shrine here on an agreement does not iriclude the first anniversaly of the any changes in doctrinal teach- BOILER REPAIR COJontiffl visit to the shril)e ing by the churches Each stu- SLAB BRIDGE ROAD Ihe st~tue depicts Pope Paul dent ~oJl~ws th~ course accold- ASSONET MASS 02702 i

- ~ri~ellngmiddot in prayc 1eiore ~ a~ ing to th~ doctrines middotof hismiddot remiddot Tel 644middot55~6 image of Our Lady of FaJimashy ~pectiYemiddotchurpoundh _ BOILERS RE-TUBED

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II ~sAfL~CfiO Ik

Aid to 5t~

THE ANCHORshyThursday May 2 1968

Portland Prelote Stresses Crisis

In Education PORTLAND (NC) - Co- )0

adjutor Bishop PetermiddotL Ger- BATON ROUGE (N2)-Tho ety apostolic administrator Louisiana AFL-CIO app Dved tl

of the Portland diocese des- ~ resolution calling for s ~ supshycribed the grave and serious 1 bull port to children attendi 3 nonshycrisis in regard tQ finances and c middot~lmiddot ~ i public schools at its COil ~ntion personnel in the field of Cath- ~H 1 here oUc education at a press con- l~ The resolution endar d the ference here proposal that tuition supple-

While affirming the desira- ments for the teaching oj nOiF bility of Catholic education the religious subjects bc paid Maine bishop pointed to the toward the education of chill-gt serious problems in financing dren regardless of race creed and staffing a system of schools or religion in state alproved which aims at providing a Cath- non-public schools which me~ olic education for all children all the requirements of law whose parents desire it He Emile Comar executive ~ middotnoted both the rising costs of rector of the Louisiana reder2lshyeducation and the dlOp in voca- tion Citizens for EducHtionllll tions and in the number of Reli- Freedom said It is gmtifyin(l gious available for teaching that the state AFL-CIO in tho

Bishop Gerety n~ted During adopted resolution recognizecll the past ten rears six Catholic __ -_~scgtbull~- Jf the need of parents with ct~ schools in this state alld 11 dren in non-public schools

Catholic elementaly schools CARDINAL J~EGER IN AFRICA The retired ~rchbishop of Montreal Paul-Emile Tuitions continue to dse ant1 have closed their doors During Cardmal Leger who has dedicated his Iif e to work with the poor in Africa is continu- taxes are becoming increasingJy41 the same period we have scen II t th h fl k f d f higher and the combination eithe enrollment in our Catholic a y mee mg WI IS oc or ISCUSSIons 0 conditIons m the DIocese of Yaounde Cam- the two has placed a lremeiF schools decrease by 25 per cent eroun NC Photo dous financial burden on thill

middot~i~~~i~e~~~~~Ct~I~~O~Cmiddotard-nal Leger Works for Afmiddotr-ca Lepers -n~~nt of the states populashymg statements Tbe labor organizations resa-

Expand Quality lution noted The contributioJ)fl

The middotsystem be Seeks to Bring SpirituQI Material Aid which these schools havecannot ex- made panded beeause of staffing to the state have long been ree problems financi~l deuromands YAOUNDE (NC)-lt is said The fact that he left behipd COmmodate himself to the new ognized by the public and~middot

and theincreasing costs of pres- that when Paul Emile Cardinal one of the most important dJ- environment and to be ready public officials ent day education Leger former arehbishop of oceses in the world does not fig) to I work effeetivelr It added that the parents bl

Schools must be consoUdated Montreal arrived at the lepro- ure in their thinking but theymiddot The eardinal is already famil- these tuition supported schooJJ wherever hldicated for maxi- s~rium of Nianing in Senega appreciate the sacrifice that is iar with the specific plOblcms of have repeatedly demonstrateflJ mum use of the available Reli- last Dec IS the lepers looked involvedmiddot in leaving his nfltive the lepers villages He thinks their support of both public ani I gious persoJmel at their fingers to see if a mir- country and adapting to a Dew that they need good pharmacies non-public education to the

We mustmiddot concentrate on ex- acle was going to happen and environment and is concerned with CHing for benefit of all Louisiana eh~ cellence in the schools we have they were going w be instan- Cardinal Leger has put him- all types of sicknesses He sees dren Where this is not possible the taneously cured It was in fact self at the service of Archbishop a need for wells powelhouses bishop said the schools in- the first time that the lepers JeanZoa of Yaounde He is food suppliers and medicinesmiddot of Brotherhood Lackvolved will have to be closed had seen a cardinal learning one of the languages various kinds

We must greatly evpand the ri1l~ cardinal however through of Cameroun the one that is Menace to Peace~ Men Not Outcasts S(l()pe and quality of our reli- middotworks of chari1y has for a long most widely spoken in the reshy VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pe~gious education proglams reach- time been concerned withmiddot the middotgion He thinks that jcent wiJl What makes the cardinal parshy is still menaced by questions laquofing out to all age groups lepers M~~y of the houses in take two years for him lamp ale- tkularly admired is that he reshy

prestige and an insufficient senstlBishop Gerety announced the leprosanum here at Yaoul)de gards the lepers as men and not of human brotherhood PQ~that he is creating a task force have been built through his - as outcasts He knows that many Paul VI told thousands of isi~to study religious education gifts The same is tgtrue of sev- Pope Asks Respect lepers are severely mutilated tors gathered in St Pete

plograms in the diocese He eral leprosaria of the Ivory For Human Rights and Cfln no longer take their SQuare for a Sunday noon blesvshywill ask the group he said to Coast Dahomey and Camerouf place in society It is because of ingmake reco~mendations ~on- The cardinl i6 still in the VATICAN CITY (NC)--Jt is middotthis that he seeks to bring them

eerning how the limitedre- stage of making contacts in the vain to proclaim h~man rights material and spiritual aid Speaking from a window ovei shysources of the diocese can best three leprosaria here unless everythlllg IS done ~o He also gives thought to the looking the square Popc P~u1 be used to ploovide an effec- Cardinal Leger does not want ensure the duty of respecting prevention of the disease If cleclared We must support willi tive religious education for the to impose either his aid or him- them by all people everywhere leprosaria are well organized it our hopes that cause (of peace) total community of adults lind self on anyone He has said re- l1ld for all people Pope Paul will perhaps be possible to wage which so many desire and proshychildren peatedly that he does not want VI declared In a letter to the In- a campaign to eradicate the mote with a sense of impartiality

He said he will also ask for to be a burden and tl1at he ternational Conferenee on Hu- disease completey and justice with true love ofi reeommenltlations on the best wants to be regarded as a simple man Rights meeting in Tehran The cardinals realism aston- freedom and of respect for su1ishy

fering peoplesuse of the dioceses Religious priest Iran ishes many Africans who like personnel Disinterested Help The lettel signed by the Pope to live from day to day and who

~-------------bull That is why the Africans ad- was sent to Father Theodore do not like their customs to be mire him Moslems and Chris- Hesburgh CSC president of upset The cardinal understands tians agree that his is an exam- Notre Dame University and head that the Africans must be shoWn pIc of disinterested help that is of the papal delegation to the that aid is not directed at deshynot often seen in Africa ongress The meeting is being stroying their customs but at

held on the 20th anniversary of bringing them a better standard the United Natio)ls Declaration of living

Workers Charges of Human Rights and in conshyjunction with the International Reject CelibacyDenied in Germany Human Rights Year

ROERMOND (NC)-TwcllyshyBONN (NC)-Charges by the The papal letter dec111red one young Dutch priests havewomens branch of the Indian With all men of goodwill we told Bishop Petrus Moors ofYoung Christian Workers shall follow with great interest this Netherlands See that they(YCW) that living and working ~his conference in Tehran which can no longer accept the plicstlyconditions for Indian girls means to formulate and prepare a celibacy obligationtraining as nurses in West Gershy program of measures to be taken

many were unsatisfactory were on the prolongation of this Hushy denied here man Rights Year

The Rev Hubert Debatin Racial discrimination raises soProtestant minister who initi shy

many troubles social injustice F L COLLINS amp SONSated a program of nursing economic misery and ideologicaltraining for girls from Indias oppression so many revolts that INCORPORATED 1937Kerala state saId that the Indishyrecourse to violence as a meansan government had ordered an

investigation of the complaints to right these wrongs to human The Indian embassy here howshy dignity is a grave temptation ever refused to comment (The Development of Peoples)

Rev Mr Debatin said he visshyON CD HOARD Alexandshy Ited the embassy and told offi shy

er P Tureaud Sr chief cials that the charges wer~ completely false Despite thecounsel for the Louisiana no comment by the embassy

branch of the National Assoshy it is reliably repOrted that emshyciation for theAd~ancement bassy officials did visit several of Colorelti People tNAACP) hospitals and questioned Indian

girlS about th~ir living and beeame the first Negro elecshyworking conditions ted to the Catholic tJniver~ The niinist~r iJaidthe Indian

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12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 2 1968

C~~e$ ~~Ergy Role in Sreg~Hrch F9f ~~ Crisis Sc~~tm(ln

By Msgr George G Higgins The bighop of a middle-siood eastern diocese recently

gnnounced at ceremonies memorializing Martin Luther King Jr that the diocese will spend a substantial portion of its annual Development Fund to improve the condition ef the Negro bullbullbull The money poslible that even those Cahoshyhe was at pains to empha- lies (and Protestants) who are size will not be gpent pater- most vigorously opposeq to

wilistically but in close 00- clerical involvement in social operation with local Negro and economic issues are nevershyleaders He said that his com- theless in fevor of using church mitffiimt wi 11 funds as seed money to develshylTeceiVe the op projects for the benefit of bacJcing of the the poor in general and for areas Catholics poor Negroes in partiCUlar I make tbisDisconcerting Fact ~ o m mit - I would hope of course that ment he as- this might prove to be the case aert1d confi- but only time will tell lIIent that our Meanwhile the fact that Catholic people such a high percentage of Cathshyshare this love olies and protestants are 00

-m Ii d concern record as being opposed to That the bishop the middotchurches getting involved felt it necessary in political and social issues is to make the latter statement for rather disconcerting to put it the record might lead one ~ as mil~ly as possible suspeet that in point of factmiddot be I say tliisas one who can symshyantiCfpated that some of hi$ pathizewith thoseCatholicsor Catholic people would object to Protestants or Jews who object his 0 decision and was mereIi to certain types of clerical inshyWying to neutralize their op~ volvement which either ignore mtion in advance or to put it the complexities of the political morecrudely was trying to ~rocess or tend to oversimplify beat them to the punc~ sO to the application of moral prinei-Bjpeak pIes to complex social and ecoshy

I Expert Opposition pomic problems or finally tend Be that as it may a recent to leave the impression that

ampallup Poll on the attitude of Clerics have a monopoly on the Cathdlics 3lld Protestants with regard to the involvement of their churches and their clergy in political and social issues would seem to suggest thatshylIIlless his diocese is the rare exceptl(~n that proves the rule -~he bIShop can exp~t a cershyiau~ amount of 0PPoSIb~)D from a slzable JIllnonty of his Cathshyooc people

lftY-Seven per cent of Cathshyclies res~ndmg m the Gallu~ survey said that the churcti~~ should not get involved with 35 per cent statmg that t~e d1~rch~~ sho~d express SOCIal enS pO~~Ical Vle~s

~gn Icantly l~ was found ~at more Catholics than Pro~-

Virtue of political prudence or have been granted ethical inshysights thatmiddot have been denied to other mortals

S~rious Obligation It is one thing however to

demand that clerics stay within the limits of their o~ compeshytence in the political order and quite another thing to try to muzzle them or to deny that they have any role at all to play in the field of public policy In the case of civil rights for exatitple they havemiddot a serious

Gbligation to teach the truth as they see it

To do so in any meaningful woay tlley must at times move beyond the realm of general

0Stants thmk ~hat the ~hurlt~esprinciples into the area of spe- should n~ get ~volved ~n soc~al and polItlcal Issues Fifty-~wo lPOerlledcefnt of the Protesta~ts P avored mvolvment whIle 42 ~er cent disagreed

Hadden Study Contrarirwise however a

mudy released during the same week in which middotthe Gallup findshymgs were made public found

ntat in all caSes Protestantsmiddot were more vigorous in their opshyposition to social action by clergymen thaI) either Roman Catholics or Jews

The latter study directed by ~effrey K Hadden a sociologist at Western Reserve University in Cleveland was summarized In ~onsiderabledetail by Edwaro R iFiske in an article entitled -Cl~rgy and Civil Rights in the editorial section of the Sunday Ap~il 21 issue of the New York linles

Since the Gallup and HadGen Alrveys dealt specifically with the right of the clergy and the ehurches to speak o~t on social and political issues (civil rights tor example) and not on the role of the churches in financing programs aimed at improving U1t ~ot of Negroes their findshyings do not necessarily m~ ofoou~E that the bishop referrect to a~ove will encounter oppe-

cifies~ even at the risk of a~tagshyonizing those Catholics who disshyagree ith them

This does not mean that clershyies or other representatives of official church bodies should shortcircuit the political procshyess by trying to force their own solutions on the body politic by means of heavy-handed authorshyitarian edicts

If they were to shirk this reshysponsibility or run awoay frOm this challenge for fear of antagshyonizing a minority (or for that matter eyen a majority) of their people they would be unshyworthy of their calling

-This having been said howshyever itshould be noted that clericS and other representatives of offlCiilI church bodies alSo

have an obllgation to keep their methods of teaching under conshystant review

Wo~ CUt Out We cannot automatically as-middot

Sume in other words that all of those who object to clerical involvement in political and soc~lissues are necessarily in

HEADS NCEA Bishop Raymond J 9allagher of Lafayette Ind was elected president general of the Natshyional Catholic Educational Association at the associa- tions 65th annual conven- tion in San Francisco NC Photo

Venerate Fatima Statue in Brazil

LISBON (NC)-Manuel Cardshyinal Goncalves Cerejeira patri- arch of Lisbon imd Bishop Joao Pereira Venancio of Leiria whose diocese includes the Marshyian shrine of Fatima returned here after participating in threeshyday ceremonies in Brazil honorshying Our Lady of Fatima

They t~ok the statue of the -Pilgrim Virgin of Fatima with them to Brazil

At Sao Paulo they took part in Portuguese - Brazilian Communshyity Day celebrations At Inhangshyabau and at Rio de Janei1G thousands joined them in ven- erating the statue

The patriarch and Bishop Venshy

ancio were accompanied in Brazil by the rector of the Fat-middot i m a shrine Msgr Antonio Borges

_ sitiOJifrom any slgnificantnuili middot te~ which they caiiunder- pany a mernber of the Jew-middot

ber ~f his people for usin~ cii- stand and absorb jish fAith has neen elected GCeSaIl f~nds for the economic -Ifthis sho~d prove to be the to in bOardof +-~ t- and~ ~OCIal bettel1nent 01 the case we have our work cut out ~ bull wu~ ~ W

Wack citizens of his communitlT ~r~ in the montha ftbat lie the CaU~hc VnlverampliyNe ~~ other words it is quite aheiid middotPboto

~ ~

bad faith It may be in the case of some

r of tb~m at le9st we are at fault TRUSTEE BenJamin T ~ in the sense that we havent Iearned how to communicate the Rome president of aWaah Go~l meSsage to them in i n g ton construction oom-

The Servant Queen IiJ the Constitution on the Church we find the testimony of

Sacred Scripture and the Church Fathers combined with more recent pronouncements by the popes Mary the Mother of God an4 of the Redeemer was united to Him by a close inen soluble bond and waS accorded a special role in the mystery Qf the middotIncamiddotrnate Word that is in the economy of salvation

Whenmiddot Mary uttered the words of her Fiat she made a ~l eommitment to God so that He could carry out His de- slgus in middothermiddot Mary never took back hell ad of total surrender Dot even on the road to CalvarY lFrom that firstmiddot moment she devoted herself wholly to serving DM only her heavenly Fashyther and the Incarnate Word but also the whole human race lin the llncarnation Our Blessed Mother first brought Christ to the world Anell that is precisely what she would have 70U do aUmiddot your life-bring Christ to the world

Ev~n after the AScenslon she loyally and steadfastly camiddotrried out~~r role aCting as spirit1lI mother to the beloved disciple anli ~~ ne~rn Cl1urch~ With good reason then we can say tha~~e wJole life of the Lords humble handtnaid~from the moment IIhewas porn to the present-is one of loVing seZvice to her cltildren what gzeater example and what ~tei model could y~ chqose to imitate in Oilder to fulfill your ta~k as a Christian called to~ove and -to serVe your poor 8iKl sUffering bro~ers arqupd the world

You must DOW take over Mars task~ You are the door through which Christ enters the world You muSt receive the Lon and bear Him in 70ur heart sO thaamp He rnA7 beeo~e the heartmiddot ofmiddot your life Then His love Jiis goodne~ Dis pity for the multitude middotwill shine through you into the world Then He will smile through your eyes Then He will help with your hanels Then He will comfort with your goodness Then He will relive in your pers~n His life of long ago for the sake of todayS desperate humanity

In this the month dedicated to the Mother of the church show your love for her by making her task your task by sacrificing to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith-to help those of her children who are in such need

SAlLVATioN and SERviCE lUe the work of The Soclet7 il~r ~~ Propagati~n of th~ Faith Please cut Gut this column llInd sen~ your of~ering to Right Reverend EdwardT OMeara Nationll-ll Director 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 Or directly to your local Diocesan Director BU Rev Msgr Raymond TConsid~e 3611 North Main Street Fall River Massachusetts e~7~omiddot

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13 New Jersey Grand Jury Absolves Police of Deaths During Rioftong

NEWARK (NC) - A special and charged it with lcHrity m Essex Cotmty grand jury inves- permitting some of lots material tigating the deaths of 28 people to i1all into private hands which during rioting in this city last misused il Summer absolved po1dce laquol Reporting on the deaths it blame iO the deatbs in a pre- found that three were not conshysentment which rebuked an nected with the rioting that anti-poverty agency for failure eight resulted from wounds inshyto cooperate willi law enforce- curred while participating in ment agencies criminal acts that nine of those

The presentment was issued killed were apparently innocent after the jury had heard more bystanders that two apparently than 100 witnesses over an resulted from sniper fire that eight-week period It said there two were from accidental was insufficient evidence to shooting and that one could not warrant indictment in any of be classified the cases presented to it al- Another special grand jury is though an earlier trial resulted now being paneled to carry out hi the conviction of a man for an investigation of Newarks fatally shooting a woman municipal government This inshy

In the final analysis the vestigation was recommended ~ury concluded the responsi- by the governors commission bility for the loss of life and which reported a pervasive property that is the inevitable feeling of corruption in Newshyproduct of rioting and mass ark lawlessness cannot be placed upon those whose duty it is to enforce and protect the freedom Convention lliead of our society

Courage Restraint N E MonsignorIt rests squarely upon the

MANCHESTER (NC)-Msgrhoulders of those who for euroolin A MacDonald presidentwhatever purpose incite and of the Manchester diocese senateparticipate in riots and the of priests has been selected asflouting of law and order in chairman of the national con-complete disregard of the rights stiiutional convention of theand well-being of the vast mashyproposed U S priests councilsjority of our citizens organization 110 be held May 20Although the presentment and 21 in Chicago leveled some small criticisms at

I1he monsignor earlier hadpolice actions it generally upshybeen elected as the Bostonheld the work of law enforceshyprovince delegate to a 29-memshyment officers and this was in ber ad hoc steering committeecontrast to the report of the for the convention When ill wasNew Jersey (()vernors Comshydecided 110 limicent the steeringmission on Civil Disorder commimiddotlltee 110 8 members thewhich was highly critical of the

police JJlQIlsignor was elected to this group then ohosen as chairmanWith some exceptions the

jury said police both local and Msgr MacDonald said the state together with National purposes of the proposed NashyGuardsmen acquitted themselves tional Federation of Priests with courage and restraint in Councils are to promote priestly the early stages of the riot brotherhood by faciJi1ating comshy

munion among priests councilsPoor Judgment to provide a forum for the disshyThe grand jury said the poshycussion of pastoral matters tolice were handicapped by lack enable priests councils to speakof training appropriate equipshywith a common representativement effective direction and voice to proD101e and collabshyexperience in dealing with the orate in programs of pastoraltype of situation in which they research and action to impleshywere involved ment the reriewal of priestlyThe jury did say that in the life to provide the means forlater stages of the disturbances priests councils united nationshythere were examples of poor ally to cooperate with the tityjudgment excessive use of fireshythe ~eligious the bishops andarms and D manifestation of with others in addressing thevindictiveness that eannot be needs of the Church in the modshytolerated in law enforceD1ent ern World and to do whateverpersonnel is necessary to carry out theseAD10ng the recommendations purposesit made was one that looting be

Members of the Priests Senshyeffectively controlled at its ate of the Diocese of Fall Riverearliest manifestations It also have sent suggestions regardingcalled for the improveD1ent and the proposed organization toupdating of equipment and said Monsignor MacDonaldthe use of chemicals and nonshy

lethal gases should be explored and considered Priests Paid SllEme

The jury called for improveshyment in police-community relashy Salary as Laborers tions and said there is no place PARIS (NC) - The averagefor abusive language or ill salary of priests in the Paris treatment of any group of citi shy region is about the saD1e as thatzens Like the governors COD1shy of an unskilled laborer accordshymission it deplored the use of ing to figures contained in thepersonally-owned weapons by first public budget report of thepolice Paris archdiocese

The anti-poverty agency crit shy The archdiocesan operatingicized was Newark Legal Servshybudget the report showed isices Project a branch of the $440000 a year most of whichUnited Community Corp which is for the salaries of 384 nonshyhelps ghetto residents with legal parish priests more than a thirdproblems

retired This indishyCharges Laxity of whoD1 are cates an average of less than $1-The jury accused it of failing 000 a year to cooperate in post-riot invesshy

Parishes pay direclly the 600tigations said the character of it taken were parish priests but their base salshystatements had

inadequate and ary is only about $50 a monthunprofesSional Honorariums for baptisms marshyriages and special Masses add

Receives Admiral about an equal amount to this VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope sum but pcrivate requests for

Paul VI received in audience Masses are declining Parish Adm Joseph Edet Akinwale priests send to the archdiocese Wey of the Nigerian Navy who the honorari~s of Masses they had told a press conference that coannot celebrate In 1964 this he hoped to present a message amounted to about 22000 Masses from the Nigerian government a year now it is only about three on the Biafra siiuatiolL ~middotfourmiddot thousand~

r THE ANCHORshyThursday May 2 1968

I

Schoo~s Exp~ore

Dual E~l~~rMJcemlt LOUISVILLE (NC)-Catholie

school officials here are trying to work out dual enrollment agreeD1entS with public schoo officials in two locations

If agreement is reached stushydents at Flaget High School here and at Bethlehem Academy may benefit next Fall from the proshygram

Moves toward the dual enrQllshyment concept were made possishyble when the Kentucky attorney general issued an opinion which said in effect that public schools might get state financial assistance for students enrolled part-time in public schools

Under the plan students in private schools could take some subjects in public schools and others in their own schools

Famiddotther Thomas P Casper Louisville diocesan superintendshyent of schools said he is submitshyting dual enrollment proposalpoundNEWMAN CLUBS MEET At oonferenee of Newman to the Louisville Bardstown andClubs from area colleges representatives of Fall River Dishy Nelson County boards of educa~

reese included from left Walter La Rosa Our Lady ill Mt tion Carmel parish Seekonk a student at Bristol Community While action on the roposaw College Lydia Rocha St Michaels Fall River BCC Rev is up U the public boards-the

attorney generals opinion grantvHarold J Wilson BOC Newman Club chaplain Morgan permission but does not force

Childs St Patricks Falmouth SMTL ootion-Father Casper said he if very pleased that there are possibilities open now for deshyveloping dual enrollD1entReturns to Moscow Final form of any dual enroll shyment effort is still to be decided

Fr Dion Assumption College President But one such method treated in the attorney generals opinion

Named Apostolic Administrator is the leasing of space in Cathshyolic schools by public schoom

WORCESTER (NC) - Father a visiting Russian churchman and the operation of this spaceLouis F Dion AA president here Father Bissonnette is now as public school classroomsof AssuD1ption College here will academic dean at Assumption resign his post June 30 to be- College COD1e apostolic administrator in Father Dion had to wait more New Jersey Bishopthe Soviet Union and chaplain than three years after Father to American Roman Catholics Bissonnettes expulsion before Asks United Action in Moscow obtaining a Soviet visa enabling ATLANTIC CITY (NC) shy

Father Dion held the same him to go to Moscow via Paris Bishop George H Guilfoyle of posts in Russia from 1959 to in January 1959 Camden issued a call for united 1961 He served as assistant to Father Dion said he is looking action on the part of all of WJ the president and registrar of forward to his return to the to 36Sist our fellow man as Assumption College from 1962 Moscow post He bad not specifshy he helped dedicate a HUD1aJ until his appointment as presi- ically requested the assignment Resources Center aiD1ed at job dent ill June 1964 he said but it was offered to develpoment for some of this

He replaces Father Eugene him and he accepted it willingly resort areas 50000 poor LaPlante AA who returns to Powers of Bishop This nation has made treshythe Assumptionist Fathers The duties of chaplain Father mendous strides in the fields opound AD1erican province for reassign- Dion explained are not con- science industry business and ment after a three-year term fined to American Catholics medicine he said It is shameshy

ful that in view of all this proshySeventh to Serve living in Moscow They include gress we still have millions ofFather Dion is the seventh he said the entire foreign colshypeople who live in poverty andAmerican priest-all Assump- ony - the diplomatic corps wanttionists-to serve in Moscow un- newspaper personnel and tour-

Bishop Guilfoyle said theder the terms of the 1933 Roose- ists Camden diocese will contributevelt-Litvinov agreement estab- Since there ar(~ no European

$1000 to the new center to belishing diploD1atic relations be- priests-or priests of any other nationality-in Moscow serving used for whatever program the

tween the U S and the USSR in the capacity of chaplain he board of directors decides hi He was replaced in 1961 by said the American chaplain needed Father Joseph Richard AA ministers to the spiritual needs who served four years in the of Catholics attached to the post staffs of embassies and legations

His iD1D1ediate predecessor accredited to the Soviet governshy FAIRHAVENwas Father Georges Bisslgtnnette ment AA who was expelled in The post of apostolic adminisshy LUMBERMaTch 1955 by the Soviet gov- trator Father Dion said inshy

COMPANYernment in retaliation for U S volves all the powers and funcshyrefusal to prolong the visa of tions of a bishop except ordina~

tion and consecration of bishops Complete line It is assigned to a priest usuallyAtlanta Archdiocese Building Materials in areas where there is DO

Joins Equal Housing hierarchy who is then dimiddotrectly responsible to the Holy See 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVENATLANTA (NC)-The lllChshy Father Dion expects to arrivediocese of Atl~lnta has joined in Moscow in early August he 993-2611more than 50 metropolitan At- said

lan-ta organizations and indi- viduals as co-spo~sors of the Atlanta Metropoli tan COmmit- bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull~

tee on Equal Opporunity ill Housing

HThe objective of the confer- BISAILLONS ence will be primarily educashytional Father Noel C Burtenshy GARAGEshaw ehancellor of the arch- diocese and member of the execu-tive committee said 24-Hour Wrecker

He added We expect this dialogue and interChange will establish middotnecessary communicashy 653 Washington Street Fairhaven tion and provide Some answers 994-5058~ the housing problems facing reater Atlanta bull

Thanks Catholics For Refugee Aid

VATICAN - CITY (NC)-NearMsgrEllis Relates Hist~ry middotmiddotEastmiddotwelfare work of U S Cathshyolics has been praised by Pope Paul VL0+ Training for Priesthood

Such a message in the Popes By Rt Rev Msgr Jobs S Kennedy

The publication of a book by Monsignor John Tracy Ellis founder and dean of a new school of American Cath~

lti)lic churchhistory is always a weloome event This is true even when the book is among his minor works SuCh is Essays in Seminary Educoshytion (Fides Notre Dame Inshydiana 46556 $595) amiddot 001shylection of papers and address-C2S There is some repetition in Chese essays which were preshyared for vari shyeus occasions But it does not illessen the imshyact of a book which shows us n keen critical in tell i g ence brought to beal OIl a subject of bas i c imporshylance The hand rDf the historian iIs seen throughshy~t the book The first three essays are specifically historical

The firsi deals with the trainshylog or preparation of priests from the apostolic age to the ~ncil of Trent the second with the same subject from the time of Trent to ~ 1960s The tird is todevoted diocesan theological seminaries in the American Middle West 1811shy1889

A survey such 00 the author Makes in the two opening chap $ers is of especial interest beshyeause it brings out tile implausshyible but incontestable fact that b about the fimiddotI9t 1500 years of its existence the Church did DOt have anything even regem- bling a standard ~m of edushy_tion for the priesfil100d

Monastie Schools fttere were no special schoobl

lor the clergy before the time Of

The medieval universitieQ were foundedmiddot by the Church amd the clery p~yed ~ im ~rtant part m them But theyWei b d al ~ ed ti e y no means I e Jormiddot ushy(l3 on for the pnesthood SInce2he the I g I kemelyq 1~~~y~middotou~emiddot~~U Iersi~ of P middotkmiddotlmiddot5middot6

-Y arlS n ovv or ~(fears to complete thedoCtOriite ill theology Hence few priestsbenefited f-rom 4--

~ UDlversI Effective Response

lhe POr estate of the clergy~ glarmgly a~parent in the ens of the Renalsance and the Bef~rmation and this middotis prj shy

manly llttutablello educashytional defiCiency And evea hen the reforming Council of lIrent was launched it took 1~ ~rs ~efore a dec~ on clerical educa~on was achieved and a long tlme thereafter before its proVISIonS were carned out in practice

Monsignor Elliss treatment of

ticularly the institutions founded by St Vincent de Paul and Jean-Jacques Olier

These men win the authors praise for their effective reshygponseto a vital need But he does IlQt hesitate to lay to them ~e responsibility for some of the anti-intellectual bias which chamcterizea too many seminashyli13 in subsequent centuries

incredible NWIIlber In the United States some

quite ancient history was reshylived as the bishops of new dioceses had cleriea schools of sorts in their own homes But in the days of the very first bishop John Oarroll a real

had b - -bli hed semmary een - 9when the Sulpichms came to Baltimore in 1791 and founded St Marys

Later developmen1s are sumshymarized by Monsignor Ellis with attention to the various types of seminaries and the growth m numbers from 50 in 1668 to 571 iIn 1964 Thi6 last incredible number is indicative 0If tile regre~le proliferation Which led to needless duplicashytiOD inadequacy in quality and waste of resources

A test of middotthe exeellence of American seminaries is proshyposed by the atrtbor how many men of enduring reputation ba~ flhey produced The anshyswerJs that tIhe fteonl is not distinguished And much of the lelIlainder of the book is given 110 probing for reasons m exshyplanation Of this

Routine Teaeldllamp at Augustine whomiddotbecame Ihi Anierican ~mi~ry of -ilJhop of Hippo in 396 His 1be ft refleCted _ national

_

LlIFE MEMBERS Msgr John E Boyd chaplain left and Dominick Maxwell Jr right Grand Knight of Fall River Council 86 of the Knights of Columbus i~vest Jerome D Foley and Dr Joseph Carvalho as life members

~

Rural Ireland Charge Farmers Lack Formal Training

In Agriculture ROSSLARE (NC)The need Wbat chance had the boy who

for priests to be more involved left school at 14 of making the in social problems was stressed grade at farming ~he excepshyby 9peakers at the annual meetshy tional lads made it The rest are

~ e9tablished and mairitaineCi~ - In the future he said until 4- disregard cif inteli~tualqua1itY this is rectified Ninety-five nAr ~ his own household and had In ~y instances ~ty mem- ~ imitators ~gt bera ere apPOint~~ t~eir ~t of e5ent-day farmers Thereafter came the mona~f)le positi - middotth m rd io ~v~ had IlQ post-primary edushySchools initiated by St BenediCt ons WIlifo ~ga r cation NinetYofive per cent ofin thmiddot th proper qlla Ications MuCh of farmers have had middotno formal esnr cent~ the~ fllie teaching was rolltine and~rting in middotligrlcultllredr~ and-middot eP1scqp~ Scboo~ an~ dun Collateral reading _n6t middot~JFlWle Awayampnally themiddot medieval UDlvenu- middot~~d lib ties middot - ~ampt~W1~ an nu-~ wer~ Fcaither qerinehy ~ncluded

~e )mperorPbariemaible ~~~poundreed ~tho~~laquo~ lt m the eigh~h ~turydecr~ miD not aencournt ~e~ch~Gt~~n6~llIIr~Watmiddot ilhat alLclencs m~be lble to middotwas virtuall uilkn a lj ~

ifead im~~ri~ J~d~ve ~m- faculties PU~Shed v~illi~~e iT ~~~t ~~t~Bltcs petence In ~h~~ )~1esslC~~Idu- Monsignor Ellis points tJ01 the BOGOTA (NC) _ Anglican tiaif~king ~ DllIllmum timidity which prevailed after Bishop David Benson Reed of

q I I~~ons they ~ere to be the eJcesses perpetrated in 1l1e BogOta offered accommodations e~ ~~ deprIved of repression of Modernism in the for~five Catholic bishops during me iectr~~ IS we can see w a fim part of the present centurY theforthcoming International

g ere had been He sees a change in the era of Eucharistic Congresss in August

ing of the Christu Rex Society an Irish organization for priestDmiddot engaged in pastoml work

Over 250 priests and represhysentatives of agriculturalorgan- izations attended the cOngress here on the theme Rural Ireshyland

Father Jerome Dennehy CC of Kenm2lre criticized the fail- ure of the Iri9h educational sysshytem to provide the farmer with the basic knowledge necessarY to enable him to profimiddott from advice from government agenshydes onfurming methods

No real progress can be made

Vatican II and happily notes and five Ecuadorian prelates aeshythe improvements already made cepted his invitation

lUld those-in prosPectmiddotmiddot He hJ They are Bishops Bernardo hopeful for the future Ech R f Amb to d

evern~ wz 0 a anlIJiteUktlllal A~lieDtmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot-middotCandiiiomiddotRada Cenosian of Guashybull - d middotmiddotd A 1 B h

in8 ConclUding ~y~ ran a liln UXIlary IS ops Priestmiddot as rntelleCtllal~~ v~rll9middotmiddotGabrieI1iazCueva Ernesto that abettereducated and mueh Alvarez ~liaVlcente CIsneros of

and ea r Gua allmoreaware enti laitrmiddotmiddot y qu demands a certainmiddotleveloflD-middot B~SbtPAnBeedli has JurCls~lctib~n

middotfellectual attainment and alivemiddot middot~v~r eo g cans In 0 om la its cl and Ecuador and has been an

~~ ooes ermeam that the ecumenical leader in these

now fading away with thei~

farms Father Eamonn Casey nashy

ijonal director of the catholic Housing Aid Society in London stressed the necessity for the priest to work with underprivishyleged members of -society Too often he said the theologians are on the periphery - they should come doWn to earth and mix with the people-who really

priest has to be a professional~untries ~ _ ~=====~_ intellectual such is not his _ Over 200 bis~ops a~ 1~ ~r-Etmiddotmiddot D ampD SALES AND SERVICE cation ltR does mean that he has dinals have saId they Wlll at-sect to maintain a genuiDe hifei-est end the EUcharistie Congress to - sect ill things intellectUal anq m Mbeid be~ sectpublic questions sect

Monsignor Ellismiddot chides sUPe- sect riors for their failure to eneour- p~iori ~ the minisky in sect age priests 110 use their ~cial teD-dayretreatS preceding or- sect talents skills and aptitudes dination Better than nothing sectAnd he urgeS priests 110 acquire one suPPoses sect( and retain habits of 9tudy It is In the lntervaJ there has sect to be hoped that both these cau- ~ great improvement But sect

name has been sent to lI1sgr John G Nolan president of the Pontifical lVlission for Palestine whose headquarters are in New Vork Written by Amleto Carshydinal Cicogilani Papal Secreshytary of State it referred to the

1 Missions 19 years service to ~ Palestinian refugees particushy

larly victims of the recent Arab-Israeli conflictto

It singled out as particularly praiseworthy the contribution of the Catholic Near East Welshyfare Association saying that middotthrough the unflagging genershyosi ty of the catholics of the United States of America it provided qlost of the means for the Missions work following the recent conflict

The papal letter declared No other agency surpasses the Pontifical Mission in length of

middot actualmiddot serviCe and its identifl shycapon with the paternal intershy~ and concern of the Holy Father merits his encourageshyment hismiddot blessing and his prayerful good wishes

Cardinal middotCicOgnanl wrote that Pope Paul out of paternal afshyfection for the homeless and of grateful esteem for the Pontifi shycal Mission bids memiddot send yOIll the enclosed check for $5000 Added to this was a furthell amount of money contributed

middot by the Congregation for the Oriental Churches

Msgr Nolan was asked that during his Easter visit to the refugee campS he kindly disshytribute the total sum in the Popes Dame to all the needyen

ar~~~stChneU~made adicbot-SAVE MONEY ON omy of man saying here is middotthe

body her~ is the soul-Iam YOUR middotOImiddotLmiddotHEATconCerned only with the soul bull bull bull bull Tmiddothe love of Christ is for the whole person and anything ~ -4~ WYman that concerns 1llieperson is of ~ US92 concern to middotChrist

He said thatmiddot the priest middotshould CHARLES F VARGAS selk tomiddotmiddot develop ~ature Ght-ls- tiMlS amongdsmiddotflockiuidcpre- 54 ROCKDALE AvENUE pare themmiddotforlife Th~ role of 1 the ~~esthe~dmiddotiftcl~desmiddotth~middot ~E~ BEDFORD MASS proVISIon Qfmiddotmiddot mformatlOn oo sexual and~ari~itLplmiddotobiehis 1

He stlggcentstJd middottbatmiddotmiddotmiddotPri~middot main~in cQJjt$C~ wjth~ those whlt emjgra~~mmiddottheir_ par- ish~ and follo~middotup middotthe middotcareers( of boys who are releasedmiddot from refprm schools t

1 bull bullbull - - ~_ _ - ~ ( ~

~ ~ lt

~III1I11I11I11I11I1UIIIIIIlIl1mlllllIII1I1I1I11I1I1I1I11II11I1I11I11I11IIIII11I1I11IIllIUIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~

tionary words win be wideiy~ OW measure canOOt be the poor sect AIR COmiddotIDmiddotImiddotTmiddotIO~IImiddot bullGmiddot

c INC

=====sect=

FRIGIDArnE __

REFRIGERATImiddotO~ ~

APPLIACES ~~

~ post-Tridentinemiddot seminaries bulland responsibly beard Performance of the past It sect I~ I~ I~ lis remarkably extensive but the It is hard 110 believe tb1Ilt as must be the imperious demands sect main focus is on those ofF~Ce ~ as the seventee~th centu~lt ~ the p~sent an4 ~~ fUture ~ 363 SECOND ST FALL RIVER MASSbull bull the seventeenth century Pal- fa France some clena lOt their ~IWIIIUIUIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIUUlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUUIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIUIiIUWlimllllli5

HE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 2 1968 1S

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16

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs May 2 1968 Back Presidenills ~reg~reg ~~~1rf~Jreg~MO~ ~~~lliJO[[reg(gJ ~rntilO1fi)[[fr~ofr~r

CHICAGO (NC)-The Assoshy~~ ~~regramp~~ o[J1j [Q)1 W[J1lJ[[o ciation of Chicago Priests an

The record compiled 56 years ful Swamppodle a neighborshy unofficial group of some 1500 priests in the archdiocese ofago still stands in big league hood within sight of the U S

baseball annals-most runs al shy Capitol talked about Father Chioago has endorsed President Johnsons current efforts to]owed one game 24 Travers Travers band

fA J (Joe) Detroit Never before had the bandsshy negotiate a Settlement of the

Father Aloysius J Travers men performed like they did in Vietnam war The ACP in its fifth plenarygJ 75 who achieved the dubishy the 1919 May procession-never

ous pitching distinction died had such old favorites as Tis session here turned down a resolution prepared by its soshylast week in Misericordia Hosshy the Month of Our Mother and cial action subcommittee onpital Philadelphia He acquied 0 Mary We C~own Thee With

baseball immortality on May Blossoms Today been so spir shy peace calling for complete cesshy

112 1912 as pitcher for the One sation of U S bombing in Vietshyitedly played by Gonzaga bandsshynam to support the Presidents limited decrease in bombing

men as the procession windedlDay Wonders Detroits brawling Tigers were through Swampoodle streets glated to play Connie Macks After the procession was over and negotiation moves

Two other peace resolutionspOwerful Philadelphia As that the school rector called in recommended by the subcomshy_ daymiddotin old Shibe Park Detroits Father Travers and congratushy

Btar Ty Cobb had drawn a fine mittee were approved They

and two-day suspension for formance The rector added lated him on the bands pershy

put the ACP on record as favorshy

belting a heckling fan a few But high school musicians with ing draft law revisions so that a person might be exempt as a

lligers decided if Cobb couldnt mustaches Dont you think thatdays earlier in New York~ ~he

conscientious objector to a parshywas going a bit too far ticular war without necessarilyFather T~avers had recruitedplay they wouldnt either so being a conscientious objector

Famous llnfield a dozen or so members of thecenthey went on strike

to all war and so that a per

With the aid of Connie Mack crack Fort Myer Army Band

son could be exempt as a conshyfOm nearby Arlington Va scientious objector on humanishy

ed up a collection of Philadelshydressed them in cadet uniforms~e Detroit management roundshy

tarian as well as religioUlland put them in the school band groundsBesides teaching at Stphia sandlot players signed

The ACP also approved threeJosephs Prep and Gonzagathem to Detroit contracts and recommendations of its liturgy

as the Tigers sf Francis Xavier High in New committee York As a result the priests group

Father Travers also taught atfielded the One Day Wonders

Al Travers 19 fresh out of has urged the National Confershyat Josephs Prep School rho Disbands Hawks ence of Catholic Bishops to reshyhelped recruit the sandlotters One of his moSt heartbreaking submit two liturgical petitioJUloppointed himself pitcher He assignments was given him some to the Conglegation of Rites inctftein recalled I learned that 25 years ago He was sent back Rome The petitions which had e pitcher would collect-50 to St Josephs College where New Problem ~en turned down by the Vati shyeX-tra so I volunteered the battIe cry is The Hawk can congregation would allowThat day the As scored 24 will never die as moderator the establishment of experimenshyINns on 25 hits with io nuts of athletics Priest Urges F~ir labor Practices tal centers for the liturgycmearned against young Travshy His jOb-disband the Hawks For CatholicSchool Faculties throughout the country and limshy

erG The wonder is the score football team with a minimum ited experimentation with thewasnt higher for young Tra~~rs of uproar from students and SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-For betweell the school and the liturgy without prior approvalwas pitching against the best alumni since football had beshy as long as anyone can rememshy religious community of the Vaticanbalt team of the era-against come a moneymiddot losing sport at ber the Religious and lay peoshy Some experts says that the

PhiladelphiaS famous $100000 St Josephs and a number of nte third resolution called on-pie who serve on the faculties best solution to this problem is

infield of John Phelan (Stuffy) other Catholic colleges in ~those the NCCB to take concrete stepsof Catholic grammar and high to bar Religious from partici shy

McInni6 at first Eddie Collins days to implement proposals of itsschools have been the type of pating in labor organizations

lJeCOnd Jack Barry short and He did his job well directing liturgy committee for adaptashypeople who would never think But Father Reicher indicated

IPrank (Home Run) Baker third attention to St Joes basketball tion of the Mass to smaIl anelof going out on strike against this would only divide the Reshy special age groupsSaves Franchise team which has grown into one unfair labor practices since ligiousand lay faculty of schools

But young Travers and the of the nations powerhouses this would imply some sort of even more than they are dividedORe Day Wonders who had For the last 25 years Father guilt on the part of p~ors and now India to ReconsiderI2ever seen Detroit saved the Tlavers had been stationed at bishops Urging a period of experishybaseball franchise for the Tigers St Josephs Prep in semishy Well those days are gone forshy meritation to work out new Deporting Priestttlat day If they hadnt pl~yed retirement during recent years ever according to Chicagos forms of collective bargaining NEW DELHI (NC) - Indiantile As chances are the Amershy Requiem Mass for the colorful Father Robert Reicher and the Father Reicher concluded It ill Prime Minister Indira GandbJ1bean L~ague would have lifted one-day big leaguer was ofshy job now is to set up standards obvious that the right to barshy has promised reconsideration ofDetroits franchise because of fered Thursday at GeuChurch of fair labor practice and guidshy gain collectively is a natural the order expelling Jesuitthe players strike in Philadelphia ance for faculty members grievshy tight clearly defended time and Father Vincent Ferr r of theDespite the lopsided score procedures against Cathoshy agaiil ethically and morally Poona diocese Indiaance fromlPatJher Travers got several big lic school administrators But this right also implies an lleague offers as a result of his Canonist Cates Need The pmmise was made when

Speaking to participants at 8 obligation to know what colleCshy tlhree members of the Indiani pitching He turned them down secondary school department tive bargaining involves went to St Josephs College For Negro Prieds parliament met with Mrs Ganshy

meeting during the Nationalthen joined the Jesuits ATLANTIC CITY (Nch - A dhi here and asked her to get

National Catholic Educational the order cancelled and grantThe lesson he learned fmln plea for more Negro Catholic Bishops Ask PopeAssociation convention here Indian citizemihip to the priestthe unorthodox recruiting as a priests has been made at the Father Reicher outlined some ofone-day big leaguer stood him annual Easterri regional meeting To Visit Canada Father Ferrer founder of thethe problems facing Catholic in good stead a half-dozen years of the Canon Law Society of OTTAWA (NC) -Pope Paul Maharashtra Farmers Servicelabor - management relations

later when he was teaching at America here in New Jersey The pliest is chairman of the VI may visit Canada next month Society was scheduled for deshyGQnzaga High School in Washshy Msgr Thomas J Reese of Wilshy to attend the National Confershy portation last year but wasChicago archdiocesan Catholicington D C mington in the neighboring State ence on Poverty sponsored by granted several extensions ofCouncil on Working Life and a

Recruits Ringers of Delaware speaking on experishy jVell-known labor expert Christian Churches in Canada his stay He was accused by iiimiddot mental parishes accused the Hindu groupS ofanti-Indian acshyFather Travers was in charge Religious who teach in CatBshy Bishop Alexander Carter presshy

Church of racism and said that tivities and by the Maharashtraof the school b~llld which used olic schools pose a special diffi shy ident of the Canadian CatholicNegro Catholics prefer to - be state government of anti shyto master only about two or culty hi labor relations because Conference has acknowledged national activitiesselved by black priests of whom

CHURCHES UNITED Bishop Reuben H Mueller left of the Evangeli~al United Brethren Church and Methoshydist Bishop Lloyd C Wicke led representatives of their respective bodies at ceremonies in Dallas proclaiming the union of the two churches The new body is to be known as the United Methodist Churlth NC Photo

CORREIA ampSONS ONE STOP

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IIlfllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIUIIIlIDutuUliUllllUiHlllllllllilllllllllllllllllilllUIIIIIIIIIIIIUII~given to the Washington arch we need black priests and we bid to raise the standards of diocese by Church spokesmen need them fast preaching in Australia and New here in Pennsylvania Zealand will be made shortly Lobster Boats Msgr Philip J Dowling execshy it was resolved at a meeting hereCapital Cityutive secretary of John Cardinal of leaders of religious orders

Krols Commission on Human VATICAN CITY (NC)-Qn The effort will inchide a fullyshyRelations noted that the Washshy the eighth anniversary of the otganized Pastoral Year obsershyington Archdiocesan Office of foundation of Brazils new capishy vance seminars for priests of all bull bull bull Urban Affairs has asked assist shy tal of Brasilia Pope Paul VI ages on updating preaching techshy s iz e s ance from Philadelphia and other sent a radio message of best niques the establishment of II bull bull bull dioceses In providing foOd es wishes in Portuguese and pressshy preaching center and the use pecially for those po)r who will ed a button that illumined a of a recorded service on techshy I Macleansreceive temporary housing in the cross on the cathedral of that niques of oral communicatiOil f8cilities of the Washington city The Pope performed the directedby the ObJates of MalT sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAYBt Tel 9979351 sect archdiocese oclemony in his private library Immaculate ~1I111111l111IHlUlnlllllllllllUllllllnIIllIUllllllUllllllllllllllIllltUIIllllllllllUluiuUWlUllllml~

three tunes a year In those of their obligation of obedience that feelers have been sent outthere are fewdays the school had a cadet Father Reicher pointed out to have the Pope corne to Monshy

If any institution can standeorps and one of its big annual What this means he added is teal for th~ May 26-29 meeting events was marching in the anshy that occasionally Religious mllYoondemned on the basis of the

It would be the first papalrecent Kerner Report on Civilnual parish-May procession be used to break a strike called visit to Canada Pope Paul visitedDisorders it is the CatholicFor years residents of color- by lay faculty members this country as a Cardinal in theChurch among others that is But more likely is the conflict early 19508guilty of white racism he trapping the individual Reli shyPlan to Help ~eed opined Bishop Carter said if a favorshygious whose loyalty is divided

Asserting that the number of able reply is reCeived from RomeCapital MCIl(lc61ers Negro clergy middotdoes not nearly the Canadian government would

PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A meet the needs of Negro Catho- Australia to Have extend an official invitation pledge of cooperation in feeding lies Msgr Reese said Pope Paul visited the United the poor who will gather in the If the Church is going to be Better Preaching Nations inNew York in 1965 nations capital in May has beell relevant to the black community SYDNEY (NC)-A concerted

I

Marian Awards Continued from Page Three

Fall River and has spent her entire religious life within the Diocese of Fall River

Sister has served as consult shyant with various education comshymittees in the diocese and bas promoted the educational proshygram of the Dominican Sisters

Sr Mary Pauline OP bead of the Science Department of

the Dominican Academy Fall River was one of the originatolll of the Region III Science Fair and has served as president of the regions Fair for two years

She is presently ooordinator of the Massachusetts state Scishyence Fair -

Sr Virginia CSC is presshyently chairman of the Th~logy

Department Notre Dame Colshylege Manchester N H and served from 1941 to ]958 as principal of St Anthonys New Bedford

She has always been a leader in new an innovative ideas in education

Sister Anne Denise SND presently principal of St Marys High School Lynn is well shyremembered as the first princishypal of Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth and has served in many administrative posts for the Sisters of Notre Dame

Sr Mary Aloysia SUSC is dean of the College of the Sashycred Hearts Fall River and has given outstanding service in coshyoperation with the Catholic School Department in planning in-service courses for the teachshyers of the diocesan schools

She also serves asmiddot coordinator of the educational program of the Sisters of the Holy Union

Sr John Elizabeth SUSC is Guidance Director at the Acadshyemy of the Sacred Hearts Fall River and has served in numershyous administrative positions atthe Fall River school

She was the first principal of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton and has served on committees of local and state educational organizations

Sr Mary Felicita RSM is now involved in the tutorial program at Mt St MaryS Acadshyemy Fall River and has served in the various sclIools of the diocese

For 26 years Sister served as Diocesan School Supervisor iD the Catholic School Office

Sr Miriam RSM is also in the tutorial program at the Sisshyters of Mercy Academy in Fall River A former teacher and principal in schools of the dioshycese Sister served for 26 yean

IN NEW POST Father Charles F Sheedy CSC former dean of arts and letshyterS has been appointed to the new post of dean of theoshylogical studies and institutes at the University of Nobe Dame NC Photo

to Educators tiS Diocesan Supervisor in the Catholic School Department

This year completes 50 years of service in the field of educashyto the Diocese of Fall River

Sister Maureen RSM is principal of Nazareth Hall Fall River She organized the proshygram and was the first principal of the Fall River school lor exshyceptional children a position she still holds

She is a consultant lind D member of city and state comshymittees for the mentlllly l1eshytarded

Sr Mary Urban RSM is Diocesan supervisor of schools and was the first principal at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

She is a member of state and city educational committees

Sr Mary Carmela RSM is a member of the English Departshyment of St Xaviers Academy Providence and was the first principal of Mt St Marys Academy Fall River

She is a consultant on secondshyary school curriculum planning

Sr Grace de Sales MSBT is presently superior of the Censhyacle of Our Lady of the Assumpshytion Osterville a position she also held at the Cenac1e of St Patricks Parish Wareham

Sister founded the kindergarshytens at Osterville and Wareham and has taught Chfistian Docshytrine classes on the elementary and secondary levels during her many years of selvice in the diocese

Sr Joan Louise OLVM is suPerior of the Victory Noll Convent in the Immaculate Conception Parish No Easton She has served as catechetical specialist in dioceses in Iowa and California and her present assignment is CCD supervisor for the Diocese of Fall River

Brother Albertus CSC is supervisor of Education for the Eastern Province of the Holy Cross Brothers and is professor of mathematics at Stonehill College No Easton He also ~ught mathematics and physics at Monsignor Coyle High School Taunton

Miss Mary Cabral of 1)69 Camshybridge Street Fall River is presently teaching at Espirito Santo School Fall River where she is completing 43 years of service as a lay teacher in ~e

Diocese of Fall Ri vcr

Whites to Solve White Problem

TOLEDO (NC)-Bishop Joon A Donovan has made a public request to whites to take up the white problem

He urged it for those lookshying for a modern up-Io-date apostolate for down-to-earth Christians who are at the same time dedicated Americans

middotSpeaking at a dinner of the northwestern Ohio district Fourth Degree Knights of Coshylumbus the Toledo bishop said

This ugly situation was fathered by injustice and is nourished by that subtle and insidious vice called prejudiCe

Need In this deplorable situation

in which the world ffinds itself today the pressing need is for those who call themselves Christians to think as Christians to form Christian attitudes and to live as Christians

Just as we cannot separate Christ from His Gospel so too we cannot separate love of GOO from love of our fellowmen without exception

The real Christian mlid the bishop does not live alongside but with others He constantly interprets anothers actions in the best possible light bying to remember always the way in which the Lord met loved and drew people to Himsel

SAIGON (NC) - The people wept and we wept everybody wept Sister Nicole said deshyscribing her teams departure after 16 days of relief work in Hue

She and two other Vietnamshy-ese Sisters Daughters of Charshyity of St Vincent de Paul with

The communImiddots1s T truce

17 girl students had gone to stricken Hue on a mission of mercy

offensive had left families in mourning houses in ruins ~nd people hungry and sick The government of Vietnam had inshyvited volunteers to bring help to the citys thousands of sufshyferers

The plane that brought tile Sisters and their students also brought 85 youths from Saigon~

The boys did manual work such as cleaning up the damaged hosshypital in Hues The Sisters team was divided into three groups one to give medical care anshyother to visit homes a third to l)ok after children

The 17 girls are some of those being trained by the Sisters as social workers for family assist shyance under a plan sponsored by a Vietnamese womens associashytion Five of the 17 are Cathshyolics The others are mostly Buddhists On April 12 all were fasting since it was the 15th day of the lunar month for the lBud-

Catholic Boy Scout Officials to Meet

WASHINGTON (NC)-About 150 leaders of CQtholic Boy Scout organizations will meet here to attend the 20th biennial oonference of the National Cathshyolic Committee OIl Scouting

The meeting will be a Iowshyday work session tor chairmen chaplains and other officioals cd the nations diocesan I seouiing ~ommittees The meeting will end with a banquet in honO Gl Patrick Cardinal OBoyle ol Washington

---- -----~

middot1FI

1

PRAYER CRUSADE _Danny Thomas has filmed n 10-minute color documentary on the value of family pray~r

to be used by Father Patrick Peyton CSC in his Camshypaign for Family Prayer Father Peyton said he expects 200000 people at a Milwailkee rally to be held Sunday May 12

IEverybody Weptl

Nun Describes Relief Teams Departure From Stricken Hue

dhims and Good Friday for the Catholics

The Asia Foundation here gave a grant to pay for the meals of the Sisters team dur ing their stay

- Before leaving Saigon the Sisters had collected medicines food soap and clothing from welfare agencies including Catholic Relief Services and

Vietnam Christian Service (Protestant) The United Nashytions Childrens Fund (UNICEF) provided milk powder which enabled the team to give milk to 450 children every day

Warn Medics LONDON (NC)-The day beshy

fore Britains new abortion law went into effect the nations 5500 CMholic doctors were warned by John Cardinal Heenan of WeBtminister that they should DOt perfom any abortions

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Fan River OS 8-5811

THE ANCHOR- 17 Thursday May 2 1968

Cufr ~t~1 Days Of orw~~~1ion

En C[[i~da OTTAWA (NC)-Chrietshy

mas and New Years Day now are the only holy days of obligation for Canadav estimated 8000000 Catholics

The Canadian Catholic Conshyference comprising Canadafl Bishops has announced thampa other holy days will be cellshyebrated on the Sunday nearem the holy day

The holy days affected aye Epiphany usually celebrat~

Jan 6 Ascension now falling on the 40th day after East~Ilp

All Saints now celebrated Nou I and the Immaculate ConcejilP tion now celebrated Dec 8

The Bishops said observance of the feast days on Sundayu means they will be celebratecll bull by a larger more relaxed anell accessible congregation of the faithful rather than a congreshygaUon of people constrained by the obligation of attending Maw in addition to their work

Canadas Bishops postwn~ until next Fall a decision Gil

wlether to restoremiddot the anciej~ office of permanent deacon m the Church The Bishops of the United States meeting simultashy

neously in St Louis hlst week ~ted to petition Pope Paul VJ for permission to restore ~

perinanent diaconate ror marshyried and unmarried men of ma ture years

Fish Sales Up SYDNEY (NC)-Best tilini)

that ever happened to the fisb industry said Mark J06eph chairman of the New SouUl -lales Fish Authority of the Churchs lifting of the ban CJ[l

Friday meat eating He has tb~ ligures to back up his verdictshya 25 per cent rise in fish e4)Dshy

slImption here since the ehlnge

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The Parish Parade New Jersey Suburbanites of All Faiths Aid Ghetto Arson Victims HOLY NAME OUR LADY OF ANGELS

FALL RIVER FALL RIVER NEWARK (NC) - Priest~ the citys anti-poverty agenCll Contemporary music will acshy

company the 11 oclock Mass Sunday morning May 5

First communicants will reshyeeive at a special Mass at 9 Saturday morning May 25 Mayshycrowning ceremonies will be held Sunday May 26 The Womens Guild announces

fts installation banquet for Tuesday night May 7 Tickets are available from all members

Catholic Charities collectors are asked to meet in the parish school at 730 tonight for dist~shyOOtion of contact cards

lIT MARGARET BUZZARDS BAY

SS Margltlret-Mary Guild of Buzzards Bay and Onset will Sponsor a rummage sale from 9 1lo 1 Saturday May 18 at St Margarets kindergarten hall Main Street Buzzards Bay Do iaations may be left at the hall during mornings of the precedshying week Chairman for the ~vent is Mrs William Brady

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild will reshyieive Holy CommuniOn in a bodyaf the815 Mass 00 Sunshydity morning A breakfast will follow in the school hall The icuest speaker will beRt Rev Anthony M Gomes Mrs Arthur Belanger gpiIshyftual chairman of the Guild is _ charge of the breakfast

81 JOSEPH AIRHAVEN Nominations and elections of officers for the Association of file Sacred middotHearts will be held at 630 on Sunday evening in the rectory ~ Dues are now payable to the tleasurer Mrs Jeannette Dushylude

IACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

Preprimary registration will be held from 2 to 4 Sunday afternoon May 5 in 1he school office Some openings also exist in first sixth and eighth grades

The CCD adult discussion group will meet at 8 Sunday night in the home of Mr and Mrs J G N Bonneau

So Easton Club Pledges

$5000 The newly formed Womens

Club of Holy Cross Parish So Easton has pledged $5000 toward the building fund acshycording to an announcement made today by Mrs Arthur J L Peterson the organizations first president The pledge will be paid at the rate of $1000 per year

This pledge has been added to The Second Mile Building Fund campaign now in progress under the chairmanship of Robshyert Dray and Louis A Lyne serving as director

The Altar Boys will sponSor a cake sale Sunday May 26

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a Communion breakshyfast following 8 oclock Mass this Sunday morning Installashytion of officers will be held at a banquet following 5 oclock Mass Sunday afternoon May 26

Children of Mary will attend a Communion breakfast followshying 8 oclock Mass Sunday mornshying May 12

The annual blessing of autoshymobiles will take place at 130 Sunday afternoon May 26 in the church parking lot

ST GEORGE WESTP~RT

A Maybasket whist is planned for 8 Saturday night May 4 hi

the school hall on Route 177 PrOCeeds will benefit the school fund and table and attendance prizes will be awarded

STMARY NORTH ATTLEBORO Parishioners are planning a

testimonial honoring Msgr Ed- ward B Booth Pastor at 7

Sunday night May 26 Tickets are now available

Christians Jews Combat Racism

NEW YORK (NC)The Nashytional Confeferice of Christians and Jews has launched a nation wide educational effort to conshyfront the problem of white racism in middotAmerica agency headquarters here announced

The NCeJ has given top prl~

ority to finding ways toimpleshyment the recommendations of the National Advisory Commisshysion on Civil Disorders The commission blamed white racshyism as the underlying cause of urban unrest

In a progress re-port to the NCCJ board of trustees meeting here Dr Samuel L Gandy dean of the Ho~ard University school of religion Washington D C and chairman of the NCCJ nashytional program ad7isory comshymittee stated

NCCJs 130 professional staff members in 70 cities are curshy~ntly engaged in developing programs with police business and labor leaders parents and teachers clergy and with youth and all of the various institutes workshops and dialogues which are being conducted are emphashysizing the findings of this reshyport

Dr Gandy quoted to the board a letter to President Lynshydon B Johnson from Dr Stershyling W Brown NCCJ presishydent in which the agency head said that NCCJ embraced the commission report as a sancshytion and guideline for our efshyforts in the private sectol

111I1111I11111111111111I1111I11I1111I1111111111I111111I111111I11I11I11I11I1111I111111111111I11111111I1111I111111I11I11I111111I111II11111111111D

ministers nuns and lay people of all denominations pitched in here to try and make Easter a dltty of joy for the more than 600 people burned out of their homes in a waveof arson which erupted in this city following the funeral of Dr Martin Luther King

Concerned citizens of surshyrounding suburban communishyties who only a week before had participated in a massive Wa 1k for Understanding through ghetto streets respondshyedspontaneously to the need

Without anymiddot special appeal going out people of all denomshyinations call e 11 inner-city churches to ask what they could do and they were directed to the United Community Corp

NEW LEADER Sister Rosemary Markham SSS is the new Superior General of the Sisters of Social Ser-

vice a Los Angeles based community engaged in social and catechetical work with missions in Formosa and Mexico NCPhoto

Christians Jews Discuss Diamiddotlogue

SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-The question of whether JewishshyChristian dialogue should be by speech or by action was the theme that ran through the talks and discussions at a Conference on Interfaith Dialogue sponsored by Catholic Protestant and Jewshyish organizations at Seton Hall University here

Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum director of interreligious affairs for the American Jewish Comshymittee was generally in favor of the action approach saying that the dialogue must avoid beshycoming a convenient conspiracy on the part of middle-class whites to buffer themselves against the realities of the inner city

Father Edward H Flannery executive secretary of the U S Catholic Bishops Secretariat for Catholic-Jewish Relations said that while he would be the last to cut off action in the realm of social justice and charity he also felt that Jews and Christians could not effectively present a common ftont to society until they have straightened out their own affairs

Father Flannery referred to statements that the -ChristianshyJewish dialogue had died in the wake of last Junes six-day war between Israel and Arab nations He said that it was not so much a matter of its dying but of its not having been tried yet

Over Holy Thursday Good Friday and Holy Saturday more than 10 tons of food and clothing were donated and the UCC staff was swamped with the task of sorting the materiaL

With schools and church ofshyfices closed priests and nuns made their way individually and in groups to UCC headshy

quarters to help with the task of unloading cars and station wagons and sorting and distribshyuting the clothing

At least 50 offers of assistance came in to Queen of Angels pariSh in the heart of the ghettc and the callers were asked to organize relief efforts in their own communities and then gd the material 110 the UCCbull

FEEL GOOD TODAY

THt HOLY fATHER MISSION AiD TD THlaRIENTAL DHURDH

Thlsoolumns happiest readers are the men

Te date this second phase bas listed 35 gifts totaling $12000 Combined with the initial campaign the Building Fund now lists 233 donors who haVe pledged a total of $117()00 The Womens Club that was founded less than six months ago has initiated a long range program for the spiritual cll1shytural and financial efforts of the parish

In addition to the regular methods of aiding the parish finandally the women have conducted teen-age projects and have assisted the Mens Club fu

i bull various progrlms

~MANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

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9G-OAY NOTIC~

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Offices in

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women and children who know they~r needed The days were busiest helping others are the happiest days of our livesbullbullbull Who needs you most Surprisingly God needs you - for inmiddot stance to help art abandoned orphan become e Godloving responsible adult Lepers need you (there are still 15middotmillion lepers In the world) blind children need y~u ~ndlo do we bull bullbull Here In New York we are your agents tellin you where the Holy Father says your help Is needed and channeling your help promptlyand Oafely to the people iii needbullbullbull Want to feel good right now Do without something you want but do not need and send the money instead for one of the needs below Youll feel good especialiy if your gift is big enough to mean a sacrifice to you This is your chance to do something meaningful for the world - its Gods world - while youre still alive

D Only $850 gives our priests and SIsters i south India enough Dapsone miracle tablebamp for 43 lepers for a yearl D For only $250 a week ($10 a month $120 a year) you can make sure that an abandoned child has food clothing a blanket and love Well send you a photo of the child you adopt tell you something about him (or her) and ask the Sistermiddotinmiddotcharge to keep you Informed

D Your stringless gifts in any amount ($5000 MEET $1000 $500 $100 $50 $25 $10 $5 $2)

MISSION will help the neediest wherever they are - in EMERGENCIES india and he Hol~ Land for instance

D Only you can make your will-and do It this THINK week to be sure the poor will have your help

OF even after youre gone Our legal title CATHOLIO YOURSELF NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION Also our priests

TOO will offer promptly the Masses you provide for

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THE CATHOLIC

NAMIlR _

~ 8TREJa~ ~_

OITY 8TATI_IIP COD

NBAR lAST WILPARI AbullbullaaIATID

NEAR EAST MISSIONS MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretary Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoo 330 Madison Avenue New York N~Y 10017 Teephone 212YUkon 6middot5840

1 - ~

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Lawrence High of Falmouth Seeksmiddot State Track Tut~e

By PETER BARTEK Norton High Coach

The Capeway Conference track season has already begun but the handwriting is already on the wall This campaign like last years will be a battle for second place Admittedly notbing Short of a miracle can or will prevent Lawrence High of Falmouth from winning its second straight conference t rae k championship But fol Coach Jim Kalperis and his trackstersmiddot the league championship is only a Gtepping stone to the State C ham p io n - ship The goal of every athletic team in the state hi to earn the title of State Champion This is not beshyyond the grasp of the Falmouth Peier Clippers If hard Bartek work and dedication are the means to this end then Falshymouth will reign as State track champions

Success does not come easily em any endeavor and success batpound

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not come easily to the Falmouth tracksters They like all accomshyplished athletes have labored long and diligently to aChieve the measure of sUccess they now enjot lt

N1)t toomiddot many yearsato Lawshyrence High was just ~nother

sChool Participating in track But the efforts of many and the dedication of one IJ1im in parshyticular has brought immeasurshyable success to the Falmouth track scene That man is Jim Kalperis

Coach Kalperis haseombined

his knowledge af track his coaching ta1EntS aiiCl tirelessenergies middotto build a virtual track dynasty The latest noteworthy feat of middotliliitnickmen came in the forinof anotheriState title

Thisti~emiddotiS th~nivision IIi

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- BC~ and Norry Races Are Close 1

lbe format formiddot the St~te reo lays has been altered this ear with competition being held at four separate locations in East- em Massachusetts Weymouth captured the Division I crown the DiviSion n title went to

Andover and Williams corralled the laurels in Division IV

The meet drew ll5 schools in each of the four diviSions with over 2000 youngsters partici shypating in all classes

Enroute to its victory Falshymouth collected 51 points comshypared to runner-up Barnstable with 22Jh

Falmouth took first place in the discus high jump pole vault 440 yard run shuttle hurdles two mile run and the 880 -

With tbis type of success in state competition it is easy to see why the Capeway Confershyence title has been practically conceded to Falmouth

Sharing the spotlight with the trackmen at Falmouth are the diamondmen The Clippers who are in the thick of the loop baseball picture were given a

Mike Rainnie tossed amp no-hittel at Barnstable to gain a 1-0 vershydict

Its still much too early to predict with any accuracy

what will happen in the Cape wai baseball race But it ap- pears nomiddotclub will dominate th~t sport like Falmouth controIa track Falmouth Dartmouth Fairhaven and Barnstable are expected to fight it out through the entire season One close to the scene summed it up best when he said anyone in the league could win this thing

Close races are also developshying in the Bristol County and Narragansett Leagues

In the BCL both Bishop Fee han of Attleboro and Durfee High of Fall River encountered a few difficulties in early season play but seem to have found the range of late The clubs will meet in an important contest today in Fall River Late inning rallies have brought both clubS from the brink of defeat to vicshytory in previous outings The victor will have to be dubbed

shot in the arm last week as the team to beat

Brennan of Feehan D~est ill le~guej

Coach Tom Maccarone of Feeshyhan has had outstanding pershyfonnances from his pitching staff but the key to the Shamshyrocks success has been shortshystop Ty Blrennan Maccarone stated before the season that Brennan was his best player and perhaps the best in the whole Bristol County Judging from Brennans perfonnance to date one of the keys to stopping Feehan is stopping the classy shortstop

Coach Joe Lewis Hilltoppers play a brand of ball similar to his counterpart TOIJl Karams basketball club Make a mistake and the Fall Riverites will capshyitalize on it Durfees first two league victories came about beshycause of opponent miscues

The Hilltoppers have been playing steady ball throughout the early part of the campaign and are improving with every game Their ability 10 avoid costly mistakes eI tbeir -n

making and timely hitting has proven a winning combination

Come what may in todays contest the BCL llace has just begun

Not to be outdone by tile larger BCL and Capeway Conshyference the Narry loop is conshyducting a torrid race of its own At the end of the first week of action Seekonk and DightonshyRehoboth were tied for the top spot Following two weeks of play Gase of Swansea Dighton and Somerset were lodged In the first position The hectic lCampaign will probably find another change in the top spot at the conclusion of this weeks activity

From Cape Cod to Attleboro competition is keener this year than it bas been in many seashysons The road to the league championship is always diffJshycult to Davigate but this year it appears as though the road win be duttered wiill meR obstacles than ill quite

cone~~ lb~aders ConcllregrnmOB War In V~~It~IlJJm

NEW YORK (NC)-Stushydent government presidents and editors of campus newsshypapers at more than 500 colleges in 49 states have conshydemned the war in Vietnam as

lt immoral and unjust and said ~~ they believe they should not

~ i~~~~~~~ii ~~~b~~ shy --_ ~ and Laymen Convinced About

-- ~-__ Vietnnm Was coordirlated by shy _ -- shy ~ Rev RObert lVi Hundley lHullent

--lt--1 at Union Th~ological Snppary --J here and an associate pltISor at -- ~I th~ Congn~gationalChllrch hn ~_ Scarsdale N-Y He saiQ most

--middot1 students who signed the stateshy~-__-~~- ~~ -___- __~_~J ment havenot been active in

FINE ARTS FESTIVAL Making preparations for Fine Arts Festival at Bishop Stang High School North

Dartmouth are Paul Leahy and Margaret Polycarpo

~ Unmiddot-ty middotIs Chr-stlTs middotW-II

P Off W I E deg I pOi degI

ontl e comes cumenlca I grlmage From United Kingdom toHoly Lar-d

anti-war activities heretoforemiddot

Solicits Support

He added

Many of the student Itl~ders who have signed this sbtcment

recognize that they may be plaeshying their future caJeers illmiddotjeopshy~rdy and conceivably are riskshying punitive action being taken

against them by the capiicioWJ V~TICAN ~ITY (NC)~TO an Fathers Arthur Payton anSel~c~ve Sfdtvice Systerh~~~

I ecumenical pilgrimage oQ its Anglican who is director 01 ~ev Yi~am Sloan Cot~~1 Jr-) way to the Holy Land Pope interchurCh travel in LOndon bull aclive memjgter of Clergymiddot ~nd Paul VI recalled the words he Among its members were An- Laymen Concerned AboutbullVI~tshyspoke on his own pilgrimage glieans CatholiCs Oithodox and nam ~1dmiddota Yal~ U~Iverslt7

there in 1964 that unity is the will of Christ

He said that it was with parshyticular pleasure that we welshycome this ecumenical pilgrimshyage from the United Kingdom to the Holy LaRd You are aboUt to follow in the fOQtSteps af God made man in the country of His birth Hill mission and His blessed death for us men and for our salvation (NiceneCreed)

Your visit caUsto mind our own unforgettable pilgrimage to the Holy Places From the grotto of Bethlehem we then declared It npw appears clearly to all that the problem of unity cannot be eluded Today this will cif Christ is imposed upon our minds and demands th~t we undertake with wisdom and love every possible way of bringing all Christi~ns t6 enjoy the great benefit and supreme honor of the unity of the middotChurch

He also recalled his plea from Bethlehem that love of Christ and of the Church should inshyspire that every future moveshyment toward meeting and reshyconciliation

The pilgrimage was led by

DIOCESAN DIREC1OR First woman to serve as a diocesan director of radio-TV is Miss Patricia Smith of Pueblo Colo who is also a photo-journalist on the staff gf Dateline Colorado m cesan weekly newspaper

Protestants not only from Great Britain but from France and Germany as well

Msgi Gianfrancesco Arrighi undersecretary of the Secretashyriat for Promoting Christian Unity and Canon John Findlow representative of Anglican Archbishop Michael Ramsey of Canterbury at the Holy See accompanied middotthe pilgrims to the Vatican

Votes Moratorium On ChuDch Building

CHICAGO (NC)-The Chicago Conference of Laymen is urging Church authorities at both the archdiocesan and parish levels to declare a moratorium on 10- cal construction projects so that funds can be channeled to projshyects in the ghetto areas

The action was taken at the second annual meeting of the

ll200-member organization The 300 in attendance passed

some 50 resolutions half of them dealing with urban problems The membership said it will seek ways to alleviate white racism especially within the Catholic Church

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ch~plaJD saId The stand taken by these

y~ung men should serve to reshymmd Americans everywhere that the war in Vietnam 1s not over that American and Vietshy

namese boys are stillmiddotdying

He continued

These middotmen of conscience should be supported by eveQY priest minister and rabbi who cares about the sanctity of conshyscience

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Jesuit Comments Di~cordNormal Amon9 Catholics

RIO DE JANEIRO (NC)shylD i SC 0 r d among Catholics after the Second Vatican Council is perfectly normal but It is not normal for proshygressive or conservative Cathoshylics to refuse to accept the dishyrectives of the council and the pope Jesuit superior general said here Father Arrupe is in Brazil for 30 days to visit Jesuit houses in the country and to preside at the May 6 to 14 meeting here of all South Amershyican Jesuit provincials

He said that his visit is inshytended to adapt the order here flo the requirements of the agshygirnameJ1to or up-dating

The most important aggiorshy namento in our day he said

is that of the mind We have to ~nsider and respect human valshyues as such This was always the Churchs doctrine but now the Church is insisting on it more We ought not to consider the Churchs interest in human values as opportunism Our in tEmtion is only to serve mankin~ better)

Press Uses Images Dudng his stay here Father

Arrupe willmiddot visit 20 local(tiesWhere Jesuits are woikilg

ts B 1Ilhele are 1000 JesUl m razl~ bull

He said that he regarded as bull joke the Brazilian presss ref-

elences to him as ~the black l T Ch Pope cussion of he angmg a1middot

Because of my cassock hemiddot

tlaid I am black but I am not the Pope ~ understand that the press has to use images to exshylI)lain concepts more effectively

Honor Editor NEW YORK (NC) ~ Robert

6lmstead news editormiddot of the National Catholic Reporter weekly newspaper published in Kansas City Mo received honshyelable mention in the 1968 Paul Tobenkin Memolial Award Competition here

-

MEET IN ST LOUIS Bishop-elect Timothy J~ Harringshyth d f th Sf W 1 ft d

ton ~ orcester e leoscllfses ~ atn t ~ l~mg

ish a panel a~ the lQ68Presi dents Conference of the Nashytional Council of cat~olic yene~l

Role of CouDcil The parish will retairi its role

as a community of worship whose members go out ihto the world and bring it theeurohristjan

message Bernatd Lyons Ghishycago public relations ~onsultant saidmiddot

The pa~ish on the other hand mustmiddot become part of the world

alound it a wHr1e$S to the whole community and fake on roles not in relation only to -its

GUIDING CHURCH IN UNITED STATES More than 200 members of the hierarchy participated in the decisions of the annual Spring meeting of the National Conference

Predict Important Authorities Emphcisixe

WASHINGTON (NC)-Three members but to the world in authorities on parish life have agreed here that the parish basic organiz~tion iil the Church will have to undergo some lmportant changes if the ChUlch is goingto meet th~ needs of societyin the 20th censhy tury

But just how the parislt is going to change ~s far from setshytied they ~onceqed in a dis

which it exists Father John Corriga~ of this city a directozlt of the Nationalmiddot Liturgical Con ference asserted

Whatever it does the parish must becomemiddot a vital force in the cOlJlrnunity around it Father Geno Baroill execu~ive secretary Washington archdi

ocesan Office ~f Urpan Affairs declared

RIot ComparlmiddotsoDmiddot

Father Baroni whose work blings hini into constant contactmiddot with Negro problems in WaSh- laymen will inhibit soCial ac- ington saw~ astriking par~illel tion but added later this is a between the Churchs needs and risk wltirth taking

-those of thebiack ghetto Right now~ he observed - one of the mos~ urgent prob Society to Consider lems in the ghetto is that Of Sh fmiddot

community organization We 5 emnary I t arll learl1ing that pe~ple ri~t be CARTHAGENA CNC) _ The

cause they have beel- cut o~t ofSocieiy of the Precious Blood meaningful participation in so- ciety

In the ~hurch laymen have been cut out of this participa tion also They dont riot but they dont really concern them selves with the concerns of the Church unle~s thy ~ave t~i~ sense of partlclpatlcm he saId

New Resndemlce For US PIiDests

ROME (NC)-A new resident house for American priests working In the offices of the Roman Curia (the Churchs censhytral administrative offices) or on assignment in Rome for the US bishops has been opened to provide adequate economical lodgings and community surshyroundings

The residence called Villa Stritch after the late Samuel Cardinal Stritch of Chicago is composed of two apartment comshyplexes and is designed to meet the immediate needs of US priests already at work in Rome and to anticipate future housing needs as internationalization of the Roman Curia continues

In addition to American$ resshyident in Rome the villa is also expected to house priests on special assignments for the bishshyops in Rome bishops who come to Rome for work on var~ous

Church commissions or otherVatican offices or for such events as the synod of bishops and ma-Jor congresses In short it is hoped that the new villa wilL

will study the possibilities and implications of moving the or ders main theological school flOm St Charles Seminary here in Ohio to a university campus or urban center and of buildingmiddot an adequate program at St QJ1arles The Carthagena SChOt

has been the societys maJor seminary for over 100 years

Major superiors and middotelected delegates representing the soshycietys Cincinnati province voted to fOlm a committee to carry out the study during a provincial chapter meeting held at St Charles at which modernizing the training of candidates for the priesthood in the society Vas tqe chief subject of discussion

middotA report of the meeting in- dicated that the delegates were aware of trends in the Church 1-way from comparative isloationmiddot of seminary establishments to university campuses and urban centers

SPECIAL RATES FOR

Smiddot I O dcho0 utings an Picnics

of Catholic Bishops in St Louis last week An enormoUis amount of homework on position papers was approved ~

the Bishops NC Photo

I see the parish councils and their recognition of freedom asneceSsai-y to do this he added

Worth Risk They agreed they sha~e abull

feiling opound un~asin~ss _middotaboti~ these cOuncIls relatively new amQJ1g Cathol~cs pa~icula~lY their attitude t~ward SOCI~ issues

d Father Baroni sal he has ~

leery feeling about parishcouncils He declared there is

the danger that conservative

contribute to increased racial understanding and involvement

fur the people of the diOcese

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Parishes

Lyons author of th~ book middotParish Councils - Renewin the Parish Community said be

middotwas somewhat more optiniistici I donit think we are going to

solve these problems by 10~~1 at the dangers exclusively hie commented

Diocese to Discuss C~m~issi~n Rep~rt

LANSING (NC) - Catholics thoughout t~e Lansing diocese will participate in forums and home discussion groups 1as~ on the report of the National Acf visory Commission on Civil Disshyorders The program which begaa with public forums in six citie on April 29 was planned ~

middot three diocesanmiddot agencies-the Ofshyfice of Social and Community Service the Office of Renewal Through Vatican II and the adult education division of tne Education Department It was initiated in response to an appeal made by Bishop Alexshyander Zaleski The day following the death of Dr Martin Luther King Bishop Zaleski asked dishyocesan directors to plan an imshymediate program designed to

meetmg of heBIShops n erence WIt ISop e e~ros be a center of communi~y life CONTACT MANAGER - LINCOLN PARK of BrowI)svIlle Texas and fOtmiddotmer chancellor of the Fall for bishops arid priests with spe- 9996984 636-2744 ~iver Di~~~~lt __~gt -cilla~~gnrn~iitS~~o~~~ ~ Oc)QI~OC~)OQCIOC)oOOOCgtoc)OQltjIOcXllOOOCgtOC)oOC~)OIL)QOCgtOCPOoO

Page 9: 05.02.68

9 New Insecticide Promises To End Dangmiddoter of Sprays

By Joseph and Manlyn Roderick

I doni lmow how other prdeners fared over the Winter but my roses were hit pretty hard Most of my pruning is done now and very ~itble remains of 1ast years IIOwth Luckily the roses surrived wt ground level but I Gidnt have much of a job a~ h Nader knew which ones the~ldmg w at to prune Slnce children would enjoy the hours most of what I could see ihey were open and how much ve the root crown is dead they cost

This year I am going to try bull We found our hotel through stematic approach to ridding this tiny book that described it IDY plants of insects rather than in glowing tenns and it tlllmed IPr~ying simply their upper sur- out to be all that the autho18 IIaces A systematic insecticide had said and then some II taken in through a plants Dining SJl)Ob fIlIOots and passes through its sya- However every bit as imporshytern The one I purchased is in taut as our place oli lodging was granular form and contains a the places where we dined and fertilizer A measured amount Mr Frommer and Mr Godwin III Spread around the base of the couldnt have given us better mose bush worked into the sou tips on dining if they had been ifhen given a thorough watering with us personally One evening The roots then absorb the fer- Joe and I (thanks to 11 kindshytilizer and insecticide and sup- hearted Nana) ate alone at a lit shyposedly keep the plant free from tIe bit of Portugal transplanted IIU chewing and sucking insects to this continent called the k six weeks Fado ComP1ete with melanshy

SLfer~ Quicker moly guitars and Spanish-Por-I would be parUcularly grate- tuguese cooking it was a delight

ful ii the systamic program to the eye ear and palate worked beacuse it would elim- Equally as good though were Snate spraying No matter how inexpensive luncheon places cautious one is there is alwaYs suchlS A La Crepe Bretonne Gte possibility that children win and the Pam Pam The former

I th th has an upstairs constructed Uld eome in contact WI e spray 1_ at d lik te hi dend harm themselves ~r e e a pIra span

Aside from the safety factor 8 bill of fare thart ~onsists of this method Js also much quicker ~late-SI~ paper-thin crepes llIld easier ttuui spraying No filled WIth any of 81 different messy spray cans and no lost fillings One cOld spend a energy in pumping and unblock- whole afternoon Just watchi~g Ing nozzles just a third of a tJeCOOks cr~ating these deli shycmpful of an odorless material ClOUS concoctIOns but Montreal applied around a plant every six hol~ so many wonders that one weeks with no danger that it ham t time to linger over any will rain ~e day after you one thIng

ra ed and wash off the ra The Pam Pam too was a 8P t y 1 sP Y charmIng IneXpenSIve restaurant ala erla fo f 1 H g d

I am more than willing to try I a anu y un anan In ecor IIOmething new but being a pes- and dIshes It featured flourless simist at heart I cannot conceive cakes Both my mother and I had of something which is so easy some for desse~ but before I actually working Lurking An could ask the w81tre~s what they the back of JDy mind is the feel- did make them WIth if ~ey mg that someone devised a omi~~d flo~r Jason wa~ dIPPIng method of satisfying lazy gar- his hands In ~veryones plates ampmers that the were doing and I thought It best to pay our

y bill and departoomethmg about theIr roses to try without having to go to

B tt J d I f lt th t h t 0 oean e a a

m h t bl rt f a s garuc rou e so 0 upill forroses We will give it Il

we s~mpled of thIS cosmopolItan_ b t ti d -cy was u an appe zer an

try though and hope that the that we would like to ret~m RSults live up to the message ag81~ for an entree-but WIthshy

out a two year older on the label of the product Now that were all back in a

lJm the llUtchem routine at least until Summer l have come to the conclusion vacation heres a tasty little

tfhat any family that attempts vegetable recipe to add interest to take a vacation trip with a ta everyday menus toddler has to be either courageshy lEGGS l1lgtJIVAN eurolUS or stupid and Im afraid we (Il) I dIE)tfull into the latter category eVl eggs When our plans to visit Wash- G hard-cooked eg~s lngton over the Spring vacation 1 2~ oz can deVIled ham failed because it was impossible teaspoon Worcestershire to obtain reservations (evishy sauce dently everyone else in the U S teaspoon grated onion bad the same plans only sooner Ik teaspoon salt titan we did) we set our sights yenteaspoon dmiddotry mustard aorthwaTd Montreal was our Dash pepper go~l and with our terrible two Z Tablespoons cream or milk in tow along with some genial (Broccoli and Saaee) smndparents and two young 1 pkg frozen or 1 bunch fresh ladies of seven and nine we set broccoli Iotth ona rainy Mond~ momshy Im Tablespoons butter or Ing margarine

Fortunately I had come with 1~ Tablespoons flour -e a pocket book guide of Montshy ~ teaspoon dry mustard Ileal andQuebec written by Arshy teaspoon salt thU1 Frommer and John God- Dash pepper win in ~peration with ttIe cup milk Bank of Nova SCOtia n was Jk cup grated sharp cheese absolutely priceless The 8Ushy 1) Prepare the deviled eggs thorS described in expllcit detai by cutting I( inch slice from one botel motel and rooming house end of shelled egg remove yolk eccQmmodations different types and mash yolks and end slices eftestaurants from ones where with the ham Worcestershire ~ can get eggs toast and cofshy oniorisalt mustard pepper and Iee-tor 65c io the elite gounnet cream mill well and then use laavens that lure 1be patrons flo fill hollows of egg whites with theIr haute cuisine and I) COOk broccoli as label dfshy~Hy the bighllghts of the city recls (if f~n) or in a small ampat tourist shbUldnt misa am9unt of wBtell Until tender ISald highUght were even catoeshymzed - tba JastantlJ tile

if yf

I) J I

EVERYBODYS GOTTA EAT Pfc~Charles Richards of Pittson Pa s-hares his C-ratio~~ w~th fatigue-hatted Httle Vietnamese boy in a villag~ near Saigon where Richards outfit the 1st Battalion 27th Infantry 25th Inshy

fan try Division was on a sweeping oPeration Jleoar the Vietnamese capital ~C Photo

We Like It Here Milwaukee Neighborhood Committee Works

To Prevent Panic Selling-MILWAUKEE (NC) - Some

strange signs are beginning to appear in the windows of homes around St Agnes parish on the citys North Side

Theyre being displayed by persons interested in stabilizing the area They call attention to a program that aims to reduce house turnover so that home and area values can be mainshytained

In the eyes of the organizers the prgram is designed to preshyvent panic selling

The signs read Were Not Moving to SUburbia-We Like It Here and This House Is NOT For Sale

Theyve been prepared by an

NUlises Cound~ Mee~

MOlY ]] at St Annes The Diocesan Council of Cathshy

olic Nurses will hold their Spring Plenary Meeting on Satshyurday May 11 at st Annes School of Nursing Fall River

The business meeting and election of officers scheduled for 4 oclock will be followed at 5 by an address by Rev Donald J Bowen assistant at St Marys Norton

Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament will be given at 630 and the banquet will follow at 715

Reservations must be made with Mrs Ann Fleming 228 Oak Grove Ave Fall River no later tlban Sunday May 5

melting the butter in a saucepan and stirring in flour mustard saltand pepper Remove from heat and stir in the milk Re- tum to heat and cook until

thickened stirring constantly Add the grated cheese and stir -tmtil smooth

In amiddot cassetrGle dish arrange gt

the cooked broccoli Stand the deviledmiddot eggs with stuffed ends

up between and on broccoli pieces Pour the sauce over aU-

area stabilization committee for distribution in homes in an area populated by about 40000 pershysons about one-third Negroes

The signs are one of the means by which we hope to dis~ourage unethical real estate salesmen according to Anshythony L Silva acting commitshy

middottee chairman and a member of St Agnes parish

Fear Tactics

He explained at rl~ent meetshyings that the program is not sponsored by a religious group Nor are the committee apshyproaching the problem on a color basis but 18ther as a matshyter of economics

Our aim is to restore confishydence in the area and countershyact unethical salesmen since they tend to operate on fear tactics said Silva

The immediate goal of the group is to make its efforts known to all residents of the area by establishing a network of block contacts

Persons who have expressed interest in the program represhysent St Agnes Roosevelt Drive Presbyterian Garden Homes Evangelical Lutheran Augusshytana Evangelical Lutheranmiddot Siloah Lutheran amI Elim Tabshyernacle churches

THE ANCHOR-Thursday May 2 1968 -------------=

Teaching Sisters To Get Raise

DALLAS (NC) - Bishop Thomas K Gorman of DallasshyFort Worth has approved a salshyary raise for Sisters teaching in parochial schools which was recommended by the diocesan board of education

In a letter to all pastors Bishshyop Gorman stated As of Sepshytember the base minimum salshyary for each Sister in regular service to the local parish will be $1500 per year

Enclosed with -the letter was an agreement signed by Bishop Gorman fM the signature of each pastor and the major supeshyrior of the religious order of Sisters serving his school

The agreement provides thllgtt the parish pay the stated base minimum salary to eac~ Sister provide a convent and its upshykeep along with utilities inshycluding a telephone an automoshybile and its maintenance and health insurance

Sister Caroleen of the Schooi Sisters of Notre Dame diocesan superintendent of schools said the increase in the minimUm base salary Is fbe first such since 1959 when it was set at

$960

Withdraw Missionaries From Angola Territory

NEW YORK (NC) - The United Church of Christ and the United Church of Canada are w~thdrawingthe majoritr of theIr missionaries from the Portuguese West African ter- ritory of Angola

Dr Alford Carleton execushytive vice-president of the United Churchs Board for World Ministries whose headshyquarters are hele said the acshytion was being taken because the Portuguese government is apparently seeking tomiddot extinshyguish Protestant missionary acshytivity in Angola

The two churches have withshydrawn all missionaries III total of 12 whose terms of service had already been extended for more than a year beyond the normal term The missionaries wiJI apply for readmission

Portuguese administrators have in the past given assurshyances that re-entry permits would be given but Dr Carleshyton said there have been inshystances of denials of re-entry permits to missionaries

BlUE R~ION

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-ObtainsFreedo ForRefugees

MADRID (NC)--Amiddot group t1ti youth leaders who spent a nig~

middotin a church to avoid a I~est ~ police was released la~

through the help of Auxilia~ Bishop Angel Mortll Figuls ~ Madrid

The youths had taken refureg in the church of Our Lady ~ Montana in suburban MorataJaiJ after police raided a mccting bll a parish building which th0 youths said was a house of thQ people of God Q

The meeting which had b~

announced in the padsh tIbQ previous Sunday as a conferenltcO on Ohristian doctrine was SUib rounded by police on suspiciolQf that it was an illegal meetin~ of workers oommimiddotttees-inde-o pendent labor organizations Tb() police arrested a Catholic woramp ers leader Dannen Ruiz Abo-1 gado Juan Canet a lawyer a~ Father Juan Jose Maria Bltlllesashyteros as they left the meetin- The three were late releasecA

However middotthe Y9uths atten+shying the conference fled to ~

church to avoid arrest and ve mained there until BishOJll Morta arrived and obtainecll

their freedom after negotia~ with the police

10 ~H~ ANCHORshy )hursday May2 bull 19~8 (

- - bull )

Sup~me C~ult Qars Obscenity

For Youth WASHINGTON (NC)

For more than two years the Supreme Court has made it clear thatin the eyes of the law obscenitymiddot is a sometime thing its distribution ~o adults nearly impossible to regulate without endangering the Conshystitutions guarantees of free speech and opinion

But over the same two years the Court has indicated thai it might be possible to control the

availability of obscene books and films to the young and in

1967 it issued an op~n invitashycmiddotmiddot tion to the nations ~a~yers to find the right cases an4 the right arguments tot~stmiddotthis middotmiddotview _

This year the cases were found and the Supreme Court did what most observers thought it would do it permitted states and citiesto control distribution of obscene material to youngshylIJters - providect It drlws the lines finely and tightly

It returrled from amiddotJtwo-week recess to rule thatmiddotmiddot NeW York middot States law barring phsons un- Organization Starts ~er 17 from buying smut met ~ middotthe ~e~t~nd tpatrgtalIas1s middot~lm CLEANUP FatherDetm6d P McDermott of New Yorks lower East ~ide St Housingmiddot Program

elasslflcatlOn law undet whIchmiddotmiddotmiddot bull - bull WASHINGTON (NC) - ~1 bull

minors areprevented from see- BrIgId spansn pas8~s o~t pamt ~nd prusJ1e~ to sl1rpl1r~a~ volunteers who particIpated m Church-sponsored nonprofit 0IJ)00

lt ingsome movies didnot ih~ AprIl ZO ()peratJoA Cleanup It was estImated that 50000 urban people of all baek- ganization here haS launched II

middotThemiddotopinions shoUld go li-long grounds w~re joined in the WOllk by 5000 suburbanites in cleaning andpaintin~ aJong~ousing program Wider whiClli way toward clearing up a con- 46 Streets NC Photo It hopes to purchase 322 sl~ lrti-tutional atmosphefe which at homes rehabilitate them aDCil middottimes hasbeen no Clearer thanmiddot 0 000 p J resellmiddotthem to poor families DiP

the air around the Supreme middotMmiddotore ThanmiddotS1 middotinGmiddot reo CIt Day rOJe ect del federal financing Courts building on a Pilrticu- The organization-Urban Beshylarly still slmlne~ day 1ew YOk middotPrmiddotelamiddotte Heomiddotds lomiddotmiddotn~Sectmiddot omiddotmiddotrmiddot-amiddot n Effort habilitation Corp~will begiul

While the Court in an 8-1 de- 1lIIII 1lIIII the program with therehabi eision written by Justice Thur- tation of nine row houses whiob 000 Marshall-his first major ~ NEW YORK (NC)Jt- Wall z At the end of tbe da~ they ~teas of densest poverty ~Jl it will purchase from the ~ epiiiion-tlirewout the Dallal greatday for New York-one ~ Bat down togethermiddot at tables iyIanhatian andthe Bronx _ development Lanmiddotdmiddot Agen~ filmmiddot clasSification law because hard work oonstructiye dia- str~ng tile length of streets to Last SumJl1er in its thitd year Washi~gtonurban refewal tfwas unduly vague even there logueand happy celebration eat a meal of celebraHon pro- of successful operation the thorny agency The RIA apo K upheld the right of goer~- -Along 45 streets in the Man- vided and prepared by people ~rojec(wastlIreatenea b~ out- proved sale of the houses to ~

Jnen~ to prote~t the Y0llng 1~m hattan and Bronx ooroughs of the block 1gtreak of violence in East Har- group at a purchasemiddot price ~ ~slble bad mfluenc~ some 50000 Negroes Puerto Many in~olved said they felt lem $26100

Different Directions Ricans Italians Jews Slavs the most important aspect of the To counteract riot threats Purchase and rehabilitatiOll middotIt did so without p~ssing on Orit~nt~ls and eople~f otmiddothe whole projeot was not renova- Msgr Fox organized East Har- work which will be done bIT

themiddot meri~~or lackof merits nationalities were joined by middottion but relationship It gave lem peace processions For five Negro contractors and involVG of the film involved but hinted some 5000 guest volunteers _ an opportunity at a time middotof nghts more than 1000 old and young Negroes as apprentice6 middot111at had the law been suffi- from suburbia and other middle alienation and fear between YQung Puerto Ricans walked will be carried out under ~

eielitly explicit about what con- class areas black and white rich and poor through their streets with ban- $]37000 mortgage provided ~ stihites proper or improper con- They spent the day c1eani1g inner city and suburbia oung nersmiddot flowrs singing songs the International BrothelhooCl

duct the Dallas censors would renovating and decorating the and old for people to meet one carrying candles and standing of Electrical Workers and guall shy have had no trouble iicei1sing inner city streets and alleys another as persons in an at- up for peace hope and love anteed by the Federal Housins middotthe film buildings and residences 10- mosphere of work play and La~gely through their efforts Administration under its 221pound(

Instead thc Court said they gether the men women and accomplishment peace was restored to the area program were set adrift in a boundless children residents wOlked shoul- Its one way to make real sea and arrived at their con- der to shoulder with priests what Dr Martin Luther King elusion--that the film should be nuns laymen and women vol- envisioned when he said I Archbishop Greets shown to adults only - from unteers They cleaned back- have a dream as East Harlemshy DEBROSS OIL many different directions yalds and basements did car- ite Valentine Haddock described Armenian Patriarch ~uch a situation is wide open pen try work made plumbing all the people helping one anshy NEW YORK (NC) ~Archshy co

te abuses not the least of which repairs painted doors windows other to become not even just bishop Terence J Cooke ofNew would be a drift among film- and building facades friends-relatives York welcomed His Holiness Heating Oils makers toward the most innocu- At the end of each block a Peace Processing Vasken I Supreme PatIiarch ous and the totally inane The large and colorful mural was Cleaned out basements and andCatholicos of all Armenians and Burnersresult The vast wasteland that painted on a wall depicting the backyards on streets are to be at an ecumenical service in St some have described in refer- good things happening transformed later again by Patricks cathedral 365 NORTH FRONT STREET ence to another medium might street residents and guest vol- It marked the first time the

NEW BEDFORDbe a verdant paradise in com- Award Ecumenical unteers working in partnelship supreme spiritual leader of the parison into vest pocket parks basket- Armenian church had been reshy

But because the law was Theology Diploma ball courts little theaters reme- ceived in a Catholic cathedral in ivague said Marshall it does KAMPALA (NC)-A theolo- dial schools and teenage neigh- the United States JIlot follow that the Constitution gical diploma of the University borhood clubs requires absolute fleedom to of East Africa jointly recognized This non-sectarian project exhibit every motion picture of by the Catholic and Anglican was instituted by Msgr Robert every kind at all times and all Churches in East Africa has been J Fox New York archdiocesan places awarded for the first time coordinator for Spanish com-

The first four Uganda students munity action who four years to receive the diploma fare An- ago originated a creative comshy

Schedule Unveiling glicans munity action program Sum-The theological diploma repre- mer in the City now operatingOf Pope1s Statue sents an agreement between out of 26 store fronts in eight

FATIMA (NC) -A 12-footshy Catholics and Anglicans over the high statue of Pope P~lUl VI syllabus and subjects of the theshy

wili be unveiled Monday May ological course However such TRI CITY13 at the Marian shrine here on an agreement does not iriclude the first anniversaly of the any changes in doctrinal teach- BOILER REPAIR COJontiffl visit to the shril)e ing by the churches Each stu- SLAB BRIDGE ROAD Ihe st~tue depicts Pope Paul dent ~oJl~ws th~ course accold- ASSONET MASS 02702 i

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II ~sAfL~CfiO Ik

Aid to 5t~

THE ANCHORshyThursday May 2 1968

Portland Prelote Stresses Crisis

In Education PORTLAND (NC) - Co- )0

adjutor Bishop PetermiddotL Ger- BATON ROUGE (N2)-Tho ety apostolic administrator Louisiana AFL-CIO app Dved tl

of the Portland diocese des- ~ resolution calling for s ~ supshycribed the grave and serious 1 bull port to children attendi 3 nonshycrisis in regard tQ finances and c middot~lmiddot ~ i public schools at its COil ~ntion personnel in the field of Cath- ~H 1 here oUc education at a press con- l~ The resolution endar d the ference here proposal that tuition supple-

While affirming the desira- ments for the teaching oj nOiF bility of Catholic education the religious subjects bc paid Maine bishop pointed to the toward the education of chill-gt serious problems in financing dren regardless of race creed and staffing a system of schools or religion in state alproved which aims at providing a Cath- non-public schools which me~ olic education for all children all the requirements of law whose parents desire it He Emile Comar executive ~ middotnoted both the rising costs of rector of the Louisiana reder2lshyeducation and the dlOp in voca- tion Citizens for EducHtionllll tions and in the number of Reli- Freedom said It is gmtifyin(l gious available for teaching that the state AFL-CIO in tho

Bishop Gerety n~ted During adopted resolution recognizecll the past ten rears six Catholic __ -_~scgtbull~- Jf the need of parents with ct~ schools in this state alld 11 dren in non-public schools

Catholic elementaly schools CARDINAL J~EGER IN AFRICA The retired ~rchbishop of Montreal Paul-Emile Tuitions continue to dse ant1 have closed their doors During Cardmal Leger who has dedicated his Iif e to work with the poor in Africa is continu- taxes are becoming increasingJy41 the same period we have scen II t th h fl k f d f higher and the combination eithe enrollment in our Catholic a y mee mg WI IS oc or ISCUSSIons 0 conditIons m the DIocese of Yaounde Cam- the two has placed a lremeiF schools decrease by 25 per cent eroun NC Photo dous financial burden on thill

middot~i~~~i~e~~~~~Ct~I~~O~Cmiddotard-nal Leger Works for Afmiddotr-ca Lepers -n~~nt of the states populashymg statements Tbe labor organizations resa-

Expand Quality lution noted The contributioJ)fl

The middotsystem be Seeks to Bring SpirituQI Material Aid which these schools havecannot ex- made panded beeause of staffing to the state have long been ree problems financi~l deuromands YAOUNDE (NC)-lt is said The fact that he left behipd COmmodate himself to the new ognized by the public and~middot

and theincreasing costs of pres- that when Paul Emile Cardinal one of the most important dJ- environment and to be ready public officials ent day education Leger former arehbishop of oceses in the world does not fig) to I work effeetivelr It added that the parents bl

Schools must be consoUdated Montreal arrived at the lepro- ure in their thinking but theymiddot The eardinal is already famil- these tuition supported schooJJ wherever hldicated for maxi- s~rium of Nianing in Senega appreciate the sacrifice that is iar with the specific plOblcms of have repeatedly demonstrateflJ mum use of the available Reli- last Dec IS the lepers looked involvedmiddot in leaving his nfltive the lepers villages He thinks their support of both public ani I gious persoJmel at their fingers to see if a mir- country and adapting to a Dew that they need good pharmacies non-public education to the

We mustmiddot concentrate on ex- acle was going to happen and environment and is concerned with CHing for benefit of all Louisiana eh~ cellence in the schools we have they were going w be instan- Cardinal Leger has put him- all types of sicknesses He sees dren Where this is not possible the taneously cured It was in fact self at the service of Archbishop a need for wells powelhouses bishop said the schools in- the first time that the lepers JeanZoa of Yaounde He is food suppliers and medicinesmiddot of Brotherhood Lackvolved will have to be closed had seen a cardinal learning one of the languages various kinds

We must greatly evpand the ri1l~ cardinal however through of Cameroun the one that is Menace to Peace~ Men Not Outcasts S(l()pe and quality of our reli- middotworks of chari1y has for a long most widely spoken in the reshy VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pe~gious education proglams reach- time been concerned withmiddot the middotgion He thinks that jcent wiJl What makes the cardinal parshy is still menaced by questions laquofing out to all age groups lepers M~~y of the houses in take two years for him lamp ale- tkularly admired is that he reshy

prestige and an insufficient senstlBishop Gerety announced the leprosanum here at Yaoul)de gards the lepers as men and not of human brotherhood PQ~that he is creating a task force have been built through his - as outcasts He knows that many Paul VI told thousands of isi~to study religious education gifts The same is tgtrue of sev- Pope Asks Respect lepers are severely mutilated tors gathered in St Pete

plograms in the diocese He eral leprosaria of the Ivory For Human Rights and Cfln no longer take their SQuare for a Sunday noon blesvshywill ask the group he said to Coast Dahomey and Camerouf place in society It is because of ingmake reco~mendations ~on- The cardinl i6 still in the VATICAN CITY (NC)--Jt is middotthis that he seeks to bring them

eerning how the limitedre- stage of making contacts in the vain to proclaim h~man rights material and spiritual aid Speaking from a window ovei shysources of the diocese can best three leprosaria here unless everythlllg IS done ~o He also gives thought to the looking the square Popc P~u1 be used to ploovide an effec- Cardinal Leger does not want ensure the duty of respecting prevention of the disease If cleclared We must support willi tive religious education for the to impose either his aid or him- them by all people everywhere leprosaria are well organized it our hopes that cause (of peace) total community of adults lind self on anyone He has said re- l1ld for all people Pope Paul will perhaps be possible to wage which so many desire and proshychildren peatedly that he does not want VI declared In a letter to the In- a campaign to eradicate the mote with a sense of impartiality

He said he will also ask for to be a burden and tl1at he ternational Conferenee on Hu- disease completey and justice with true love ofi reeommenltlations on the best wants to be regarded as a simple man Rights meeting in Tehran The cardinals realism aston- freedom and of respect for su1ishy

fering peoplesuse of the dioceses Religious priest Iran ishes many Africans who like personnel Disinterested Help The lettel signed by the Pope to live from day to day and who

~-------------bull That is why the Africans ad- was sent to Father Theodore do not like their customs to be mire him Moslems and Chris- Hesburgh CSC president of upset The cardinal understands tians agree that his is an exam- Notre Dame University and head that the Africans must be shoWn pIc of disinterested help that is of the papal delegation to the that aid is not directed at deshynot often seen in Africa ongress The meeting is being stroying their customs but at

held on the 20th anniversary of bringing them a better standard the United Natio)ls Declaration of living

Workers Charges of Human Rights and in conshyjunction with the International Reject CelibacyDenied in Germany Human Rights Year

ROERMOND (NC)-TwcllyshyBONN (NC)-Charges by the The papal letter dec111red one young Dutch priests havewomens branch of the Indian With all men of goodwill we told Bishop Petrus Moors ofYoung Christian Workers shall follow with great interest this Netherlands See that they(YCW) that living and working ~his conference in Tehran which can no longer accept the plicstlyconditions for Indian girls means to formulate and prepare a celibacy obligationtraining as nurses in West Gershy program of measures to be taken

many were unsatisfactory were on the prolongation of this Hushy denied here man Rights Year

The Rev Hubert Debatin Racial discrimination raises soProtestant minister who initi shy

many troubles social injustice F L COLLINS amp SONSated a program of nursing economic misery and ideologicaltraining for girls from Indias oppression so many revolts that INCORPORATED 1937Kerala state saId that the Indishyrecourse to violence as a meansan government had ordered an

investigation of the complaints to right these wrongs to human The Indian embassy here howshy dignity is a grave temptation ever refused to comment (The Development of Peoples)

Rev Mr Debatin said he visshyON CD HOARD Alexandshy Ited the embassy and told offi shy

er P Tureaud Sr chief cials that the charges wer~ completely false Despite thecounsel for the Louisiana no comment by the embassy

branch of the National Assoshy it is reliably repOrted that emshyciation for theAd~ancement bassy officials did visit several of Colorelti People tNAACP) hospitals and questioned Indian

girlS about th~ir living and beeame the first Negro elecshyworking conditions ted to the Catholic tJniver~ The niinist~r iJaidthe Indian

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12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 2 1968

C~~e$ ~~Ergy Role in Sreg~Hrch F9f ~~ Crisis Sc~~tm(ln

By Msgr George G Higgins The bighop of a middle-siood eastern diocese recently

gnnounced at ceremonies memorializing Martin Luther King Jr that the diocese will spend a substantial portion of its annual Development Fund to improve the condition ef the Negro bullbullbull The money poslible that even those Cahoshyhe was at pains to empha- lies (and Protestants) who are size will not be gpent pater- most vigorously opposeq to

wilistically but in close 00- clerical involvement in social operation with local Negro and economic issues are nevershyleaders He said that his com- theless in fevor of using church mitffiimt wi 11 funds as seed money to develshylTeceiVe the op projects for the benefit of bacJcing of the the poor in general and for areas Catholics poor Negroes in partiCUlar I make tbisDisconcerting Fact ~ o m mit - I would hope of course that ment he as- this might prove to be the case aert1d confi- but only time will tell lIIent that our Meanwhile the fact that Catholic people such a high percentage of Cathshyshare this love olies and protestants are 00

-m Ii d concern record as being opposed to That the bishop the middotchurches getting involved felt it necessary in political and social issues is to make the latter statement for rather disconcerting to put it the record might lead one ~ as mil~ly as possible suspeet that in point of factmiddot be I say tliisas one who can symshyantiCfpated that some of hi$ pathizewith thoseCatholicsor Catholic people would object to Protestants or Jews who object his 0 decision and was mereIi to certain types of clerical inshyWying to neutralize their op~ volvement which either ignore mtion in advance or to put it the complexities of the political morecrudely was trying to ~rocess or tend to oversimplify beat them to the punc~ sO to the application of moral prinei-Bjpeak pIes to complex social and ecoshy

I Expert Opposition pomic problems or finally tend Be that as it may a recent to leave the impression that

ampallup Poll on the attitude of Clerics have a monopoly on the Cathdlics 3lld Protestants with regard to the involvement of their churches and their clergy in political and social issues would seem to suggest thatshylIIlless his diocese is the rare exceptl(~n that proves the rule -~he bIShop can exp~t a cershyiau~ amount of 0PPoSIb~)D from a slzable JIllnonty of his Cathshyooc people

lftY-Seven per cent of Cathshyclies res~ndmg m the Gallu~ survey said that the churcti~~ should not get involved with 35 per cent statmg that t~e d1~rch~~ sho~d express SOCIal enS pO~~Ical Vle~s

~gn Icantly l~ was found ~at more Catholics than Pro~-

Virtue of political prudence or have been granted ethical inshysights thatmiddot have been denied to other mortals

S~rious Obligation It is one thing however to

demand that clerics stay within the limits of their o~ compeshytence in the political order and quite another thing to try to muzzle them or to deny that they have any role at all to play in the field of public policy In the case of civil rights for exatitple they havemiddot a serious

Gbligation to teach the truth as they see it

To do so in any meaningful woay tlley must at times move beyond the realm of general

0Stants thmk ~hat the ~hurlt~esprinciples into the area of spe- should n~ get ~volved ~n soc~al and polItlcal Issues Fifty-~wo lPOerlledcefnt of the Protesta~ts P avored mvolvment whIle 42 ~er cent disagreed

Hadden Study Contrarirwise however a

mudy released during the same week in which middotthe Gallup findshymgs were made public found

ntat in all caSes Protestantsmiddot were more vigorous in their opshyposition to social action by clergymen thaI) either Roman Catholics or Jews

The latter study directed by ~effrey K Hadden a sociologist at Western Reserve University in Cleveland was summarized In ~onsiderabledetail by Edwaro R iFiske in an article entitled -Cl~rgy and Civil Rights in the editorial section of the Sunday Ap~il 21 issue of the New York linles

Since the Gallup and HadGen Alrveys dealt specifically with the right of the clergy and the ehurches to speak o~t on social and political issues (civil rights tor example) and not on the role of the churches in financing programs aimed at improving U1t ~ot of Negroes their findshyings do not necessarily m~ ofoou~E that the bishop referrect to a~ove will encounter oppe-

cifies~ even at the risk of a~tagshyonizing those Catholics who disshyagree ith them

This does not mean that clershyies or other representatives of official church bodies should shortcircuit the political procshyess by trying to force their own solutions on the body politic by means of heavy-handed authorshyitarian edicts

If they were to shirk this reshysponsibility or run awoay frOm this challenge for fear of antagshyonizing a minority (or for that matter eyen a majority) of their people they would be unshyworthy of their calling

-This having been said howshyever itshould be noted that clericS and other representatives of offlCiilI church bodies alSo

have an obllgation to keep their methods of teaching under conshystant review

Wo~ CUt Out We cannot automatically as-middot

Sume in other words that all of those who object to clerical involvement in political and soc~lissues are necessarily in

HEADS NCEA Bishop Raymond J 9allagher of Lafayette Ind was elected president general of the Natshyional Catholic Educational Association at the associa- tions 65th annual conven- tion in San Francisco NC Photo

Venerate Fatima Statue in Brazil

LISBON (NC)-Manuel Cardshyinal Goncalves Cerejeira patri- arch of Lisbon imd Bishop Joao Pereira Venancio of Leiria whose diocese includes the Marshyian shrine of Fatima returned here after participating in threeshyday ceremonies in Brazil honorshying Our Lady of Fatima

They t~ok the statue of the -Pilgrim Virgin of Fatima with them to Brazil

At Sao Paulo they took part in Portuguese - Brazilian Communshyity Day celebrations At Inhangshyabau and at Rio de Janei1G thousands joined them in ven- erating the statue

The patriarch and Bishop Venshy

ancio were accompanied in Brazil by the rector of the Fat-middot i m a shrine Msgr Antonio Borges

_ sitiOJifrom any slgnificantnuili middot te~ which they caiiunder- pany a mernber of the Jew-middot

ber ~f his people for usin~ cii- stand and absorb jish fAith has neen elected GCeSaIl f~nds for the economic -Ifthis sho~d prove to be the to in bOardof +-~ t- and~ ~OCIal bettel1nent 01 the case we have our work cut out ~ bull wu~ ~ W

Wack citizens of his communitlT ~r~ in the montha ftbat lie the CaU~hc VnlverampliyNe ~~ other words it is quite aheiid middotPboto

~ ~

bad faith It may be in the case of some

r of tb~m at le9st we are at fault TRUSTEE BenJamin T ~ in the sense that we havent Iearned how to communicate the Rome president of aWaah Go~l meSsage to them in i n g ton construction oom-

The Servant Queen IiJ the Constitution on the Church we find the testimony of

Sacred Scripture and the Church Fathers combined with more recent pronouncements by the popes Mary the Mother of God an4 of the Redeemer was united to Him by a close inen soluble bond and waS accorded a special role in the mystery Qf the middotIncamiddotrnate Word that is in the economy of salvation

Whenmiddot Mary uttered the words of her Fiat she made a ~l eommitment to God so that He could carry out His de- slgus in middothermiddot Mary never took back hell ad of total surrender Dot even on the road to CalvarY lFrom that firstmiddot moment she devoted herself wholly to serving DM only her heavenly Fashyther and the Incarnate Word but also the whole human race lin the llncarnation Our Blessed Mother first brought Christ to the world Anell that is precisely what she would have 70U do aUmiddot your life-bring Christ to the world

Ev~n after the AScenslon she loyally and steadfastly camiddotrried out~~r role aCting as spirit1lI mother to the beloved disciple anli ~~ ne~rn Cl1urch~ With good reason then we can say tha~~e wJole life of the Lords humble handtnaid~from the moment IIhewas porn to the present-is one of loVing seZvice to her cltildren what gzeater example and what ~tei model could y~ chqose to imitate in Oilder to fulfill your ta~k as a Christian called to~ove and -to serVe your poor 8iKl sUffering bro~ers arqupd the world

You must DOW take over Mars task~ You are the door through which Christ enters the world You muSt receive the Lon and bear Him in 70ur heart sO thaamp He rnA7 beeo~e the heartmiddot ofmiddot your life Then His love Jiis goodne~ Dis pity for the multitude middotwill shine through you into the world Then He will smile through your eyes Then He will help with your hanels Then He will comfort with your goodness Then He will relive in your pers~n His life of long ago for the sake of todayS desperate humanity

In this the month dedicated to the Mother of the church show your love for her by making her task your task by sacrificing to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith-to help those of her children who are in such need

SAlLVATioN and SERviCE lUe the work of The Soclet7 il~r ~~ Propagati~n of th~ Faith Please cut Gut this column llInd sen~ your of~ering to Right Reverend EdwardT OMeara Nationll-ll Director 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 Or directly to your local Diocesan Director BU Rev Msgr Raymond TConsid~e 3611 North Main Street Fall River Massachusetts e~7~omiddot

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13 New Jersey Grand Jury Absolves Police of Deaths During Rioftong

NEWARK (NC) - A special and charged it with lcHrity m Essex Cotmty grand jury inves- permitting some of lots material tigating the deaths of 28 people to i1all into private hands which during rioting in this city last misused il Summer absolved po1dce laquol Reporting on the deaths it blame iO the deatbs in a pre- found that three were not conshysentment which rebuked an nected with the rioting that anti-poverty agency for failure eight resulted from wounds inshyto cooperate willi law enforce- curred while participating in ment agencies criminal acts that nine of those

The presentment was issued killed were apparently innocent after the jury had heard more bystanders that two apparently than 100 witnesses over an resulted from sniper fire that eight-week period It said there two were from accidental was insufficient evidence to shooting and that one could not warrant indictment in any of be classified the cases presented to it al- Another special grand jury is though an earlier trial resulted now being paneled to carry out hi the conviction of a man for an investigation of Newarks fatally shooting a woman municipal government This inshy

In the final analysis the vestigation was recommended ~ury concluded the responsi- by the governors commission bility for the loss of life and which reported a pervasive property that is the inevitable feeling of corruption in Newshyproduct of rioting and mass ark lawlessness cannot be placed upon those whose duty it is to enforce and protect the freedom Convention lliead of our society

Courage Restraint N E MonsignorIt rests squarely upon the

MANCHESTER (NC)-Msgrhoulders of those who for euroolin A MacDonald presidentwhatever purpose incite and of the Manchester diocese senateparticipate in riots and the of priests has been selected asflouting of law and order in chairman of the national con-complete disregard of the rights stiiutional convention of theand well-being of the vast mashyproposed U S priests councilsjority of our citizens organization 110 be held May 20Although the presentment and 21 in Chicago leveled some small criticisms at

I1he monsignor earlier hadpolice actions it generally upshybeen elected as the Bostonheld the work of law enforceshyprovince delegate to a 29-memshyment officers and this was in ber ad hoc steering committeecontrast to the report of the for the convention When ill wasNew Jersey (()vernors Comshydecided 110 limicent the steeringmission on Civil Disorder commimiddotlltee 110 8 members thewhich was highly critical of the

police JJlQIlsignor was elected to this group then ohosen as chairmanWith some exceptions the

jury said police both local and Msgr MacDonald said the state together with National purposes of the proposed NashyGuardsmen acquitted themselves tional Federation of Priests with courage and restraint in Councils are to promote priestly the early stages of the riot brotherhood by faciJi1ating comshy

munion among priests councilsPoor Judgment to provide a forum for the disshyThe grand jury said the poshycussion of pastoral matters tolice were handicapped by lack enable priests councils to speakof training appropriate equipshywith a common representativement effective direction and voice to proD101e and collabshyexperience in dealing with the orate in programs of pastoraltype of situation in which they research and action to impleshywere involved ment the reriewal of priestlyThe jury did say that in the life to provide the means forlater stages of the disturbances priests councils united nationshythere were examples of poor ally to cooperate with the tityjudgment excessive use of fireshythe ~eligious the bishops andarms and D manifestation of with others in addressing thevindictiveness that eannot be needs of the Church in the modshytolerated in law enforceD1ent ern World and to do whateverpersonnel is necessary to carry out theseAD10ng the recommendations purposesit made was one that looting be

Members of the Priests Senshyeffectively controlled at its ate of the Diocese of Fall Riverearliest manifestations It also have sent suggestions regardingcalled for the improveD1ent and the proposed organization toupdating of equipment and said Monsignor MacDonaldthe use of chemicals and nonshy

lethal gases should be explored and considered Priests Paid SllEme

The jury called for improveshyment in police-community relashy Salary as Laborers tions and said there is no place PARIS (NC) - The averagefor abusive language or ill salary of priests in the Paris treatment of any group of citi shy region is about the saD1e as thatzens Like the governors COD1shy of an unskilled laborer accordshymission it deplored the use of ing to figures contained in thepersonally-owned weapons by first public budget report of thepolice Paris archdiocese

The anti-poverty agency crit shy The archdiocesan operatingicized was Newark Legal Servshybudget the report showed isices Project a branch of the $440000 a year most of whichUnited Community Corp which is for the salaries of 384 nonshyhelps ghetto residents with legal parish priests more than a thirdproblems

retired This indishyCharges Laxity of whoD1 are cates an average of less than $1-The jury accused it of failing 000 a year to cooperate in post-riot invesshy

Parishes pay direclly the 600tigations said the character of it taken were parish priests but their base salshystatements had

inadequate and ary is only about $50 a monthunprofesSional Honorariums for baptisms marshyriages and special Masses add

Receives Admiral about an equal amount to this VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope sum but pcrivate requests for

Paul VI received in audience Masses are declining Parish Adm Joseph Edet Akinwale priests send to the archdiocese Wey of the Nigerian Navy who the honorari~s of Masses they had told a press conference that coannot celebrate In 1964 this he hoped to present a message amounted to about 22000 Masses from the Nigerian government a year now it is only about three on the Biafra siiuatiolL ~middotfourmiddot thousand~

r THE ANCHORshyThursday May 2 1968

I

Schoo~s Exp~ore

Dual E~l~~rMJcemlt LOUISVILLE (NC)-Catholie

school officials here are trying to work out dual enrollment agreeD1entS with public schoo officials in two locations

If agreement is reached stushydents at Flaget High School here and at Bethlehem Academy may benefit next Fall from the proshygram

Moves toward the dual enrQllshyment concept were made possishyble when the Kentucky attorney general issued an opinion which said in effect that public schools might get state financial assistance for students enrolled part-time in public schools

Under the plan students in private schools could take some subjects in public schools and others in their own schools

Famiddotther Thomas P Casper Louisville diocesan superintendshyent of schools said he is submitshyting dual enrollment proposalpoundNEWMAN CLUBS MEET At oonferenee of Newman to the Louisville Bardstown andClubs from area colleges representatives of Fall River Dishy Nelson County boards of educa~

reese included from left Walter La Rosa Our Lady ill Mt tion Carmel parish Seekonk a student at Bristol Community While action on the roposaw College Lydia Rocha St Michaels Fall River BCC Rev is up U the public boards-the

attorney generals opinion grantvHarold J Wilson BOC Newman Club chaplain Morgan permission but does not force

Childs St Patricks Falmouth SMTL ootion-Father Casper said he if very pleased that there are possibilities open now for deshyveloping dual enrollD1entReturns to Moscow Final form of any dual enroll shyment effort is still to be decided

Fr Dion Assumption College President But one such method treated in the attorney generals opinion

Named Apostolic Administrator is the leasing of space in Cathshyolic schools by public schoom

WORCESTER (NC) - Father a visiting Russian churchman and the operation of this spaceLouis F Dion AA president here Father Bissonnette is now as public school classroomsof AssuD1ption College here will academic dean at Assumption resign his post June 30 to be- College COD1e apostolic administrator in Father Dion had to wait more New Jersey Bishopthe Soviet Union and chaplain than three years after Father to American Roman Catholics Bissonnettes expulsion before Asks United Action in Moscow obtaining a Soviet visa enabling ATLANTIC CITY (NC) shy

Father Dion held the same him to go to Moscow via Paris Bishop George H Guilfoyle of posts in Russia from 1959 to in January 1959 Camden issued a call for united 1961 He served as assistant to Father Dion said he is looking action on the part of all of WJ the president and registrar of forward to his return to the to 36Sist our fellow man as Assumption College from 1962 Moscow post He bad not specifshy he helped dedicate a HUD1aJ until his appointment as presi- ically requested the assignment Resources Center aiD1ed at job dent ill June 1964 he said but it was offered to develpoment for some of this

He replaces Father Eugene him and he accepted it willingly resort areas 50000 poor LaPlante AA who returns to Powers of Bishop This nation has made treshythe Assumptionist Fathers The duties of chaplain Father mendous strides in the fields opound AD1erican province for reassign- Dion explained are not con- science industry business and ment after a three-year term fined to American Catholics medicine he said It is shameshy

ful that in view of all this proshySeventh to Serve living in Moscow They include gress we still have millions ofFather Dion is the seventh he said the entire foreign colshypeople who live in poverty andAmerican priest-all Assump- ony - the diplomatic corps wanttionists-to serve in Moscow un- newspaper personnel and tour-

Bishop Guilfoyle said theder the terms of the 1933 Roose- ists Camden diocese will contributevelt-Litvinov agreement estab- Since there ar(~ no European

$1000 to the new center to belishing diploD1atic relations be- priests-or priests of any other nationality-in Moscow serving used for whatever program the

tween the U S and the USSR in the capacity of chaplain he board of directors decides hi He was replaced in 1961 by said the American chaplain needed Father Joseph Richard AA ministers to the spiritual needs who served four years in the of Catholics attached to the post staffs of embassies and legations

His iD1D1ediate predecessor accredited to the Soviet governshy FAIRHAVENwas Father Georges Bisslgtnnette ment AA who was expelled in The post of apostolic adminisshy LUMBERMaTch 1955 by the Soviet gov- trator Father Dion said inshy

COMPANYernment in retaliation for U S volves all the powers and funcshyrefusal to prolong the visa of tions of a bishop except ordina~

tion and consecration of bishops Complete line It is assigned to a priest usuallyAtlanta Archdiocese Building Materials in areas where there is DO

Joins Equal Housing hierarchy who is then dimiddotrectly responsible to the Holy See 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVENATLANTA (NC)-The lllChshy Father Dion expects to arrivediocese of Atl~lnta has joined in Moscow in early August he 993-2611more than 50 metropolitan At- said

lan-ta organizations and indi- viduals as co-spo~sors of the Atlanta Metropoli tan COmmit- bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull~

tee on Equal Opporunity ill Housing

HThe objective of the confer- BISAILLONS ence will be primarily educashytional Father Noel C Burtenshy GARAGEshaw ehancellor of the arch- diocese and member of the execu-tive committee said 24-Hour Wrecker

He added We expect this dialogue and interChange will establish middotnecessary communicashy 653 Washington Street Fairhaven tion and provide Some answers 994-5058~ the housing problems facing reater Atlanta bull

Thanks Catholics For Refugee Aid

VATICAN - CITY (NC)-NearMsgrEllis Relates Hist~ry middotmiddotEastmiddotwelfare work of U S Cathshyolics has been praised by Pope Paul VL0+ Training for Priesthood

Such a message in the Popes By Rt Rev Msgr Jobs S Kennedy

The publication of a book by Monsignor John Tracy Ellis founder and dean of a new school of American Cath~

lti)lic churchhistory is always a weloome event This is true even when the book is among his minor works SuCh is Essays in Seminary Educoshytion (Fides Notre Dame Inshydiana 46556 $595) amiddot 001shylection of papers and address-C2S There is some repetition in Chese essays which were preshyared for vari shyeus occasions But it does not illessen the imshyact of a book which shows us n keen critical in tell i g ence brought to beal OIl a subject of bas i c imporshylance The hand rDf the historian iIs seen throughshy~t the book The first three essays are specifically historical

The firsi deals with the trainshylog or preparation of priests from the apostolic age to the ~ncil of Trent the second with the same subject from the time of Trent to ~ 1960s The tird is todevoted diocesan theological seminaries in the American Middle West 1811shy1889

A survey such 00 the author Makes in the two opening chap $ers is of especial interest beshyeause it brings out tile implausshyible but incontestable fact that b about the fimiddotI9t 1500 years of its existence the Church did DOt have anything even regem- bling a standard ~m of edushy_tion for the priesfil100d

Monastie Schools fttere were no special schoobl

lor the clergy before the time Of

The medieval universitieQ were foundedmiddot by the Church amd the clery p~yed ~ im ~rtant part m them But theyWei b d al ~ ed ti e y no means I e Jormiddot ushy(l3 on for the pnesthood SInce2he the I g I kemelyq 1~~~y~middotou~emiddot~~U Iersi~ of P middotkmiddotlmiddot5middot6

-Y arlS n ovv or ~(fears to complete thedoCtOriite ill theology Hence few priestsbenefited f-rom 4--

~ UDlversI Effective Response

lhe POr estate of the clergy~ glarmgly a~parent in the ens of the Renalsance and the Bef~rmation and this middotis prj shy

manly llttutablello educashytional defiCiency And evea hen the reforming Council of lIrent was launched it took 1~ ~rs ~efore a dec~ on clerical educa~on was achieved and a long tlme thereafter before its proVISIonS were carned out in practice

Monsignor Elliss treatment of

ticularly the institutions founded by St Vincent de Paul and Jean-Jacques Olier

These men win the authors praise for their effective reshygponseto a vital need But he does IlQt hesitate to lay to them ~e responsibility for some of the anti-intellectual bias which chamcterizea too many seminashyli13 in subsequent centuries

incredible NWIIlber In the United States some

quite ancient history was reshylived as the bishops of new dioceses had cleriea schools of sorts in their own homes But in the days of the very first bishop John Oarroll a real

had b - -bli hed semmary een - 9when the Sulpichms came to Baltimore in 1791 and founded St Marys

Later developmen1s are sumshymarized by Monsignor Ellis with attention to the various types of seminaries and the growth m numbers from 50 in 1668 to 571 iIn 1964 Thi6 last incredible number is indicative 0If tile regre~le proliferation Which led to needless duplicashytiOD inadequacy in quality and waste of resources

A test of middotthe exeellence of American seminaries is proshyposed by the atrtbor how many men of enduring reputation ba~ flhey produced The anshyswerJs that tIhe fteonl is not distinguished And much of the lelIlainder of the book is given 110 probing for reasons m exshyplanation Of this

Routine Teaeldllamp at Augustine whomiddotbecame Ihi Anierican ~mi~ry of -ilJhop of Hippo in 396 His 1be ft refleCted _ national

_

LlIFE MEMBERS Msgr John E Boyd chaplain left and Dominick Maxwell Jr right Grand Knight of Fall River Council 86 of the Knights of Columbus i~vest Jerome D Foley and Dr Joseph Carvalho as life members

~

Rural Ireland Charge Farmers Lack Formal Training

In Agriculture ROSSLARE (NC)The need Wbat chance had the boy who

for priests to be more involved left school at 14 of making the in social problems was stressed grade at farming ~he excepshyby 9peakers at the annual meetshy tional lads made it The rest are

~ e9tablished and mairitaineCi~ - In the future he said until 4- disregard cif inteli~tualqua1itY this is rectified Ninety-five nAr ~ his own household and had In ~y instances ~ty mem- ~ imitators ~gt bera ere apPOint~~ t~eir ~t of e5ent-day farmers Thereafter came the mona~f)le positi - middotth m rd io ~v~ had IlQ post-primary edushySchools initiated by St BenediCt ons WIlifo ~ga r cation NinetYofive per cent ofin thmiddot th proper qlla Ications MuCh of farmers have had middotno formal esnr cent~ the~ fllie teaching was rolltine and~rting in middotligrlcultllredr~ and-middot eP1scqp~ Scboo~ an~ dun Collateral reading _n6t middot~JFlWle Awayampnally themiddot medieval UDlvenu- middot~~d lib ties middot - ~ampt~W1~ an nu-~ wer~ Fcaither qerinehy ~ncluded

~e )mperorPbariemaible ~~~poundreed ~tho~~laquo~ lt m the eigh~h ~turydecr~ miD not aencournt ~e~ch~Gt~~n6~llIIr~Watmiddot ilhat alLclencs m~be lble to middotwas virtuall uilkn a lj ~

ifead im~~ri~ J~d~ve ~m- faculties PU~Shed v~illi~~e iT ~~~t ~~t~Bltcs petence In ~h~~ )~1esslC~~Idu- Monsignor Ellis points tJ01 the BOGOTA (NC) _ Anglican tiaif~king ~ DllIllmum timidity which prevailed after Bishop David Benson Reed of

q I I~~ons they ~ere to be the eJcesses perpetrated in 1l1e BogOta offered accommodations e~ ~~ deprIved of repression of Modernism in the for~five Catholic bishops during me iectr~~ IS we can see w a fim part of the present centurY theforthcoming International

g ere had been He sees a change in the era of Eucharistic Congresss in August

ing of the Christu Rex Society an Irish organization for priestDmiddot engaged in pastoml work

Over 250 priests and represhysentatives of agriculturalorgan- izations attended the cOngress here on the theme Rural Ireshyland

Father Jerome Dennehy CC of Kenm2lre criticized the fail- ure of the Iri9h educational sysshytem to provide the farmer with the basic knowledge necessarY to enable him to profimiddott from advice from government agenshydes onfurming methods

No real progress can be made

Vatican II and happily notes and five Ecuadorian prelates aeshythe improvements already made cepted his invitation

lUld those-in prosPectmiddotmiddot He hJ They are Bishops Bernardo hopeful for the future Ech R f Amb to d

evern~ wz 0 a anlIJiteUktlllal A~lieDtmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot-middotCandiiiomiddotRada Cenosian of Guashybull - d middotmiddotd A 1 B h

in8 ConclUding ~y~ ran a liln UXIlary IS ops Priestmiddot as rntelleCtllal~~ v~rll9middotmiddotGabrieI1iazCueva Ernesto that abettereducated and mueh Alvarez ~liaVlcente CIsneros of

and ea r Gua allmoreaware enti laitrmiddotmiddot y qu demands a certainmiddotleveloflD-middot B~SbtPAnBeedli has JurCls~lctib~n

middotfellectual attainment and alivemiddot middot~v~r eo g cans In 0 om la its cl and Ecuador and has been an

~~ ooes ermeam that the ecumenical leader in these

now fading away with thei~

farms Father Eamonn Casey nashy

ijonal director of the catholic Housing Aid Society in London stressed the necessity for the priest to work with underprivishyleged members of -society Too often he said the theologians are on the periphery - they should come doWn to earth and mix with the people-who really

priest has to be a professional~untries ~ _ ~=====~_ intellectual such is not his _ Over 200 bis~ops a~ 1~ ~r-Etmiddotmiddot D ampD SALES AND SERVICE cation ltR does mean that he has dinals have saId they Wlll at-sect to maintain a genuiDe hifei-est end the EUcharistie Congress to - sect ill things intellectUal anq m Mbeid be~ sectpublic questions sect

Monsignor Ellismiddot chides sUPe- sect riors for their failure to eneour- p~iori ~ the minisky in sect age priests 110 use their ~cial teD-dayretreatS preceding or- sect talents skills and aptitudes dination Better than nothing sectAnd he urgeS priests 110 acquire one suPPoses sect( and retain habits of 9tudy It is In the lntervaJ there has sect to be hoped that both these cau- ~ great improvement But sect

name has been sent to lI1sgr John G Nolan president of the Pontifical lVlission for Palestine whose headquarters are in New Vork Written by Amleto Carshydinal Cicogilani Papal Secreshytary of State it referred to the

1 Missions 19 years service to ~ Palestinian refugees particushy

larly victims of the recent Arab-Israeli conflictto

It singled out as particularly praiseworthy the contribution of the Catholic Near East Welshyfare Association saying that middotthrough the unflagging genershyosi ty of the catholics of the United States of America it provided qlost of the means for the Missions work following the recent conflict

The papal letter declared No other agency surpasses the Pontifical Mission in length of

middot actualmiddot serviCe and its identifl shycapon with the paternal intershy~ and concern of the Holy Father merits his encourageshyment hismiddot blessing and his prayerful good wishes

Cardinal middotCicOgnanl wrote that Pope Paul out of paternal afshyfection for the homeless and of grateful esteem for the Pontifi shycal Mission bids memiddot send yOIll the enclosed check for $5000 Added to this was a furthell amount of money contributed

middot by the Congregation for the Oriental Churches

Msgr Nolan was asked that during his Easter visit to the refugee campS he kindly disshytribute the total sum in the Popes Dame to all the needyen

ar~~~stChneU~made adicbot-SAVE MONEY ON omy of man saying here is middotthe

body her~ is the soul-Iam YOUR middotOImiddotLmiddotHEATconCerned only with the soul bull bull bull bull Tmiddothe love of Christ is for the whole person and anything ~ -4~ WYman that concerns 1llieperson is of ~ US92 concern to middotChrist

He said thatmiddot the priest middotshould CHARLES F VARGAS selk tomiddotmiddot develop ~ature Ght-ls- tiMlS amongdsmiddotflockiuidcpre- 54 ROCKDALE AvENUE pare themmiddotforlife Th~ role of 1 the ~~esthe~dmiddotiftcl~desmiddotth~middot ~E~ BEDFORD MASS proVISIon Qfmiddotmiddot mformatlOn oo sexual and~ari~itLplmiddotobiehis 1

He stlggcentstJd middottbatmiddotmiddotmiddotPri~middot main~in cQJjt$C~ wjth~ those whlt emjgra~~mmiddottheir_ par- ish~ and follo~middotup middotthe middotcareers( of boys who are releasedmiddot from refprm schools t

1 bull bullbull - - ~_ _ - ~ ( ~

~ ~ lt

~III1I11I11I11I11I1UIIIIIIlIl1mlllllIII1I1I1I11I1I1I1I11II11I1I11I11I11IIIII11I1I11IIllIUIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~

tionary words win be wideiy~ OW measure canOOt be the poor sect AIR COmiddotIDmiddotImiddotTmiddotIO~IImiddot bullGmiddot

c INC

=====sect=

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~ post-Tridentinemiddot seminaries bulland responsibly beard Performance of the past It sect I~ I~ I~ lis remarkably extensive but the It is hard 110 believe tb1Ilt as must be the imperious demands sect main focus is on those ofF~Ce ~ as the seventee~th centu~lt ~ the p~sent an4 ~~ fUture ~ 363 SECOND ST FALL RIVER MASSbull bull the seventeenth century Pal- fa France some clena lOt their ~IWIIIUIUIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIUUlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUUIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIUIiIUWlimllllli5

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs May 2 1968 Back Presidenills ~reg~reg ~~~1rf~Jreg~MO~ ~~~lliJO[[reg(gJ ~rntilO1fi)[[fr~ofr~r

CHICAGO (NC)-The Assoshy~~ ~~regramp~~ o[J1j [Q)1 W[J1lJ[[o ciation of Chicago Priests an

The record compiled 56 years ful Swamppodle a neighborshy unofficial group of some 1500 priests in the archdiocese ofago still stands in big league hood within sight of the U S

baseball annals-most runs al shy Capitol talked about Father Chioago has endorsed President Johnsons current efforts to]owed one game 24 Travers Travers band

fA J (Joe) Detroit Never before had the bandsshy negotiate a Settlement of the

Father Aloysius J Travers men performed like they did in Vietnam war The ACP in its fifth plenarygJ 75 who achieved the dubishy the 1919 May procession-never

ous pitching distinction died had such old favorites as Tis session here turned down a resolution prepared by its soshylast week in Misericordia Hosshy the Month of Our Mother and cial action subcommittee onpital Philadelphia He acquied 0 Mary We C~own Thee With

baseball immortality on May Blossoms Today been so spir shy peace calling for complete cesshy

112 1912 as pitcher for the One sation of U S bombing in Vietshyitedly played by Gonzaga bandsshynam to support the Presidents limited decrease in bombing

men as the procession windedlDay Wonders Detroits brawling Tigers were through Swampoodle streets glated to play Connie Macks After the procession was over and negotiation moves

Two other peace resolutionspOwerful Philadelphia As that the school rector called in recommended by the subcomshy_ daymiddotin old Shibe Park Detroits Father Travers and congratushy

Btar Ty Cobb had drawn a fine mittee were approved They

and two-day suspension for formance The rector added lated him on the bands pershy

put the ACP on record as favorshy

belting a heckling fan a few But high school musicians with ing draft law revisions so that a person might be exempt as a

lligers decided if Cobb couldnt mustaches Dont you think thatdays earlier in New York~ ~he

conscientious objector to a parshywas going a bit too far ticular war without necessarilyFather T~avers had recruitedplay they wouldnt either so being a conscientious objector

Famous llnfield a dozen or so members of thecenthey went on strike

to all war and so that a per

With the aid of Connie Mack crack Fort Myer Army Band

son could be exempt as a conshyfOm nearby Arlington Va scientious objector on humanishy

ed up a collection of Philadelshydressed them in cadet uniforms~e Detroit management roundshy

tarian as well as religioUlland put them in the school band groundsBesides teaching at Stphia sandlot players signed

The ACP also approved threeJosephs Prep and Gonzagathem to Detroit contracts and recommendations of its liturgy

as the Tigers sf Francis Xavier High in New committee York As a result the priests group

Father Travers also taught atfielded the One Day Wonders

Al Travers 19 fresh out of has urged the National Confershyat Josephs Prep School rho Disbands Hawks ence of Catholic Bishops to reshyhelped recruit the sandlotters One of his moSt heartbreaking submit two liturgical petitioJUloppointed himself pitcher He assignments was given him some to the Conglegation of Rites inctftein recalled I learned that 25 years ago He was sent back Rome The petitions which had e pitcher would collect-50 to St Josephs College where New Problem ~en turned down by the Vati shyeX-tra so I volunteered the battIe cry is The Hawk can congregation would allowThat day the As scored 24 will never die as moderator the establishment of experimenshyINns on 25 hits with io nuts of athletics Priest Urges F~ir labor Practices tal centers for the liturgycmearned against young Travshy His jOb-disband the Hawks For CatholicSchool Faculties throughout the country and limshy

erG The wonder is the score football team with a minimum ited experimentation with thewasnt higher for young Tra~~rs of uproar from students and SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-For betweell the school and the liturgy without prior approvalwas pitching against the best alumni since football had beshy as long as anyone can rememshy religious community of the Vaticanbalt team of the era-against come a moneymiddot losing sport at ber the Religious and lay peoshy Some experts says that the

PhiladelphiaS famous $100000 St Josephs and a number of nte third resolution called on-pie who serve on the faculties best solution to this problem is

infield of John Phelan (Stuffy) other Catholic colleges in ~those the NCCB to take concrete stepsof Catholic grammar and high to bar Religious from partici shy

McInni6 at first Eddie Collins days to implement proposals of itsschools have been the type of pating in labor organizations

lJeCOnd Jack Barry short and He did his job well directing liturgy committee for adaptashypeople who would never think But Father Reicher indicated

IPrank (Home Run) Baker third attention to St Joes basketball tion of the Mass to smaIl anelof going out on strike against this would only divide the Reshy special age groupsSaves Franchise team which has grown into one unfair labor practices since ligiousand lay faculty of schools

But young Travers and the of the nations powerhouses this would imply some sort of even more than they are dividedORe Day Wonders who had For the last 25 years Father guilt on the part of p~ors and now India to ReconsiderI2ever seen Detroit saved the Tlavers had been stationed at bishops Urging a period of experishybaseball franchise for the Tigers St Josephs Prep in semishy Well those days are gone forshy meritation to work out new Deporting Priestttlat day If they hadnt pl~yed retirement during recent years ever according to Chicagos forms of collective bargaining NEW DELHI (NC) - Indiantile As chances are the Amershy Requiem Mass for the colorful Father Robert Reicher and the Father Reicher concluded It ill Prime Minister Indira GandbJ1bean L~ague would have lifted one-day big leaguer was ofshy job now is to set up standards obvious that the right to barshy has promised reconsideration ofDetroits franchise because of fered Thursday at GeuChurch of fair labor practice and guidshy gain collectively is a natural the order expelling Jesuitthe players strike in Philadelphia ance for faculty members grievshy tight clearly defended time and Father Vincent Ferr r of theDespite the lopsided score procedures against Cathoshy agaiil ethically and morally Poona diocese Indiaance fromlPatJher Travers got several big lic school administrators But this right also implies an lleague offers as a result of his Canonist Cates Need The pmmise was made when

Speaking to participants at 8 obligation to know what colleCshy tlhree members of the Indiani pitching He turned them down secondary school department tive bargaining involves went to St Josephs College For Negro Prieds parliament met with Mrs Ganshy

meeting during the Nationalthen joined the Jesuits ATLANTIC CITY (Nch - A dhi here and asked her to get

National Catholic Educational the order cancelled and grantThe lesson he learned fmln plea for more Negro Catholic Bishops Ask PopeAssociation convention here Indian citizemihip to the priestthe unorthodox recruiting as a priests has been made at the Father Reicher outlined some ofone-day big leaguer stood him annual Easterri regional meeting To Visit Canada Father Ferrer founder of thethe problems facing Catholic in good stead a half-dozen years of the Canon Law Society of OTTAWA (NC) -Pope Paul Maharashtra Farmers Servicelabor - management relations

later when he was teaching at America here in New Jersey The pliest is chairman of the VI may visit Canada next month Society was scheduled for deshyGQnzaga High School in Washshy Msgr Thomas J Reese of Wilshy to attend the National Confershy portation last year but wasChicago archdiocesan Catholicington D C mington in the neighboring State ence on Poverty sponsored by granted several extensions ofCouncil on Working Life and a

Recruits Ringers of Delaware speaking on experishy jVell-known labor expert Christian Churches in Canada his stay He was accused by iiimiddot mental parishes accused the Hindu groupS ofanti-Indian acshyFather Travers was in charge Religious who teach in CatBshy Bishop Alexander Carter presshy

Church of racism and said that tivities and by the Maharashtraof the school b~llld which used olic schools pose a special diffi shy ident of the Canadian CatholicNegro Catholics prefer to - be state government of anti shyto master only about two or culty hi labor relations because Conference has acknowledged national activitiesselved by black priests of whom

CHURCHES UNITED Bishop Reuben H Mueller left of the Evangeli~al United Brethren Church and Methoshydist Bishop Lloyd C Wicke led representatives of their respective bodies at ceremonies in Dallas proclaiming the union of the two churches The new body is to be known as the United Methodist Churlth NC Photo

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IIlfllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIUIIIlIDutuUliUllllUiHlllllllllilllllllllllllllllilllUIIIIIIIIIIIIUII~given to the Washington arch we need black priests and we bid to raise the standards of diocese by Church spokesmen need them fast preaching in Australia and New here in Pennsylvania Zealand will be made shortly Lobster Boats Msgr Philip J Dowling execshy it was resolved at a meeting hereCapital Cityutive secretary of John Cardinal of leaders of religious orders

Krols Commission on Human VATICAN CITY (NC)-Qn The effort will inchide a fullyshyRelations noted that the Washshy the eighth anniversary of the otganized Pastoral Year obsershyington Archdiocesan Office of foundation of Brazils new capishy vance seminars for priests of all bull bull bull Urban Affairs has asked assist shy tal of Brasilia Pope Paul VI ages on updating preaching techshy s iz e s ance from Philadelphia and other sent a radio message of best niques the establishment of II bull bull bull dioceses In providing foOd es wishes in Portuguese and pressshy preaching center and the use pecially for those po)r who will ed a button that illumined a of a recorded service on techshy I Macleansreceive temporary housing in the cross on the cathedral of that niques of oral communicatiOil f8cilities of the Washington city The Pope performed the directedby the ObJates of MalT sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAYBt Tel 9979351 sect archdiocese oclemony in his private library Immaculate ~1I111111l111IHlUlnlllllllllllUllllllnIIllIUllllllUllllllllllllllIllltUIIllllllllllUluiuUWlUllllml~

three tunes a year In those of their obligation of obedience that feelers have been sent outthere are fewdays the school had a cadet Father Reicher pointed out to have the Pope corne to Monshy

If any institution can standeorps and one of its big annual What this means he added is teal for th~ May 26-29 meeting events was marching in the anshy that occasionally Religious mllYoondemned on the basis of the

It would be the first papalrecent Kerner Report on Civilnual parish-May procession be used to break a strike called visit to Canada Pope Paul visitedDisorders it is the CatholicFor years residents of color- by lay faculty members this country as a Cardinal in theChurch among others that is But more likely is the conflict early 19508guilty of white racism he trapping the individual Reli shyPlan to Help ~eed opined Bishop Carter said if a favorshygious whose loyalty is divided

Asserting that the number of able reply is reCeived from RomeCapital MCIl(lc61ers Negro clergy middotdoes not nearly the Canadian government would

PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A meet the needs of Negro Catho- Australia to Have extend an official invitation pledge of cooperation in feeding lies Msgr Reese said Pope Paul visited the United the poor who will gather in the If the Church is going to be Better Preaching Nations inNew York in 1965 nations capital in May has beell relevant to the black community SYDNEY (NC)-A concerted

I

Marian Awards Continued from Page Three

Fall River and has spent her entire religious life within the Diocese of Fall River

Sister has served as consult shyant with various education comshymittees in the diocese and bas promoted the educational proshygram of the Dominican Sisters

Sr Mary Pauline OP bead of the Science Department of

the Dominican Academy Fall River was one of the originatolll of the Region III Science Fair and has served as president of the regions Fair for two years

She is presently ooordinator of the Massachusetts state Scishyence Fair -

Sr Virginia CSC is presshyently chairman of the Th~logy

Department Notre Dame Colshylege Manchester N H and served from 1941 to ]958 as principal of St Anthonys New Bedford

She has always been a leader in new an innovative ideas in education

Sister Anne Denise SND presently principal of St Marys High School Lynn is well shyremembered as the first princishypal of Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth and has served in many administrative posts for the Sisters of Notre Dame

Sr Mary Aloysia SUSC is dean of the College of the Sashycred Hearts Fall River and has given outstanding service in coshyoperation with the Catholic School Department in planning in-service courses for the teachshyers of the diocesan schools

She also serves asmiddot coordinator of the educational program of the Sisters of the Holy Union

Sr John Elizabeth SUSC is Guidance Director at the Acadshyemy of the Sacred Hearts Fall River and has served in numershyous administrative positions atthe Fall River school

She was the first principal of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton and has served on committees of local and state educational organizations

Sr Mary Felicita RSM is now involved in the tutorial program at Mt St MaryS Acadshyemy Fall River and has served in the various sclIools of the diocese

For 26 years Sister served as Diocesan School Supervisor iD the Catholic School Office

Sr Miriam RSM is also in the tutorial program at the Sisshyters of Mercy Academy in Fall River A former teacher and principal in schools of the dioshycese Sister served for 26 yean

IN NEW POST Father Charles F Sheedy CSC former dean of arts and letshyterS has been appointed to the new post of dean of theoshylogical studies and institutes at the University of Nobe Dame NC Photo

to Educators tiS Diocesan Supervisor in the Catholic School Department

This year completes 50 years of service in the field of educashyto the Diocese of Fall River

Sister Maureen RSM is principal of Nazareth Hall Fall River She organized the proshygram and was the first principal of the Fall River school lor exshyceptional children a position she still holds

She is a consultant lind D member of city and state comshymittees for the mentlllly l1eshytarded

Sr Mary Urban RSM is Diocesan supervisor of schools and was the first principal at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

She is a member of state and city educational committees

Sr Mary Carmela RSM is a member of the English Departshyment of St Xaviers Academy Providence and was the first principal of Mt St Marys Academy Fall River

She is a consultant on secondshyary school curriculum planning

Sr Grace de Sales MSBT is presently superior of the Censhyacle of Our Lady of the Assumpshytion Osterville a position she also held at the Cenac1e of St Patricks Parish Wareham

Sister founded the kindergarshytens at Osterville and Wareham and has taught Chfistian Docshytrine classes on the elementary and secondary levels during her many years of selvice in the diocese

Sr Joan Louise OLVM is suPerior of the Victory Noll Convent in the Immaculate Conception Parish No Easton She has served as catechetical specialist in dioceses in Iowa and California and her present assignment is CCD supervisor for the Diocese of Fall River

Brother Albertus CSC is supervisor of Education for the Eastern Province of the Holy Cross Brothers and is professor of mathematics at Stonehill College No Easton He also ~ught mathematics and physics at Monsignor Coyle High School Taunton

Miss Mary Cabral of 1)69 Camshybridge Street Fall River is presently teaching at Espirito Santo School Fall River where she is completing 43 years of service as a lay teacher in ~e

Diocese of Fall Ri vcr

Whites to Solve White Problem

TOLEDO (NC)-Bishop Joon A Donovan has made a public request to whites to take up the white problem

He urged it for those lookshying for a modern up-Io-date apostolate for down-to-earth Christians who are at the same time dedicated Americans

middotSpeaking at a dinner of the northwestern Ohio district Fourth Degree Knights of Coshylumbus the Toledo bishop said

This ugly situation was fathered by injustice and is nourished by that subtle and insidious vice called prejudiCe

Need In this deplorable situation

in which the world ffinds itself today the pressing need is for those who call themselves Christians to think as Christians to form Christian attitudes and to live as Christians

Just as we cannot separate Christ from His Gospel so too we cannot separate love of GOO from love of our fellowmen without exception

The real Christian mlid the bishop does not live alongside but with others He constantly interprets anothers actions in the best possible light bying to remember always the way in which the Lord met loved and drew people to Himsel

SAIGON (NC) - The people wept and we wept everybody wept Sister Nicole said deshyscribing her teams departure after 16 days of relief work in Hue

She and two other Vietnamshy-ese Sisters Daughters of Charshyity of St Vincent de Paul with

The communImiddots1s T truce

17 girl students had gone to stricken Hue on a mission of mercy

offensive had left families in mourning houses in ruins ~nd people hungry and sick The government of Vietnam had inshyvited volunteers to bring help to the citys thousands of sufshyferers

The plane that brought tile Sisters and their students also brought 85 youths from Saigon~

The boys did manual work such as cleaning up the damaged hosshypital in Hues The Sisters team was divided into three groups one to give medical care anshyother to visit homes a third to l)ok after children

The 17 girls are some of those being trained by the Sisters as social workers for family assist shyance under a plan sponsored by a Vietnamese womens associashytion Five of the 17 are Cathshyolics The others are mostly Buddhists On April 12 all were fasting since it was the 15th day of the lunar month for the lBud-

Catholic Boy Scout Officials to Meet

WASHINGTON (NC)-About 150 leaders of CQtholic Boy Scout organizations will meet here to attend the 20th biennial oonference of the National Cathshyolic Committee OIl Scouting

The meeting will be a Iowshyday work session tor chairmen chaplains and other officioals cd the nations diocesan I seouiing ~ommittees The meeting will end with a banquet in honO Gl Patrick Cardinal OBoyle ol Washington

---- -----~

middot1FI

1

PRAYER CRUSADE _Danny Thomas has filmed n 10-minute color documentary on the value of family pray~r

to be used by Father Patrick Peyton CSC in his Camshypaign for Family Prayer Father Peyton said he expects 200000 people at a Milwailkee rally to be held Sunday May 12

IEverybody Weptl

Nun Describes Relief Teams Departure From Stricken Hue

dhims and Good Friday for the Catholics

The Asia Foundation here gave a grant to pay for the meals of the Sisters team dur ing their stay

- Before leaving Saigon the Sisters had collected medicines food soap and clothing from welfare agencies including Catholic Relief Services and

Vietnam Christian Service (Protestant) The United Nashytions Childrens Fund (UNICEF) provided milk powder which enabled the team to give milk to 450 children every day

Warn Medics LONDON (NC)-The day beshy

fore Britains new abortion law went into effect the nations 5500 CMholic doctors were warned by John Cardinal Heenan of WeBtminister that they should DOt perfom any abortions

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THE ANCHOR- 17 Thursday May 2 1968

Cufr ~t~1 Days Of orw~~~1ion

En C[[i~da OTTAWA (NC)-Chrietshy

mas and New Years Day now are the only holy days of obligation for Canadav estimated 8000000 Catholics

The Canadian Catholic Conshyference comprising Canadafl Bishops has announced thampa other holy days will be cellshyebrated on the Sunday nearem the holy day

The holy days affected aye Epiphany usually celebrat~

Jan 6 Ascension now falling on the 40th day after East~Ilp

All Saints now celebrated Nou I and the Immaculate ConcejilP tion now celebrated Dec 8

The Bishops said observance of the feast days on Sundayu means they will be celebratecll bull by a larger more relaxed anell accessible congregation of the faithful rather than a congreshygaUon of people constrained by the obligation of attending Maw in addition to their work

Canadas Bishops postwn~ until next Fall a decision Gil

wlether to restoremiddot the anciej~ office of permanent deacon m the Church The Bishops of the United States meeting simultashy

neously in St Louis hlst week ~ted to petition Pope Paul VJ for permission to restore ~

perinanent diaconate ror marshyried and unmarried men of ma ture years

Fish Sales Up SYDNEY (NC)-Best tilini)

that ever happened to the fisb industry said Mark J06eph chairman of the New SouUl -lales Fish Authority of the Churchs lifting of the ban CJ[l

Friday meat eating He has tb~ ligures to back up his verdictshya 25 per cent rise in fish e4)Dshy

slImption here since the ehlnge

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The Parish Parade New Jersey Suburbanites of All Faiths Aid Ghetto Arson Victims HOLY NAME OUR LADY OF ANGELS

FALL RIVER FALL RIVER NEWARK (NC) - Priest~ the citys anti-poverty agenCll Contemporary music will acshy

company the 11 oclock Mass Sunday morning May 5

First communicants will reshyeeive at a special Mass at 9 Saturday morning May 25 Mayshycrowning ceremonies will be held Sunday May 26 The Womens Guild announces

fts installation banquet for Tuesday night May 7 Tickets are available from all members

Catholic Charities collectors are asked to meet in the parish school at 730 tonight for dist~shyOOtion of contact cards

lIT MARGARET BUZZARDS BAY

SS Margltlret-Mary Guild of Buzzards Bay and Onset will Sponsor a rummage sale from 9 1lo 1 Saturday May 18 at St Margarets kindergarten hall Main Street Buzzards Bay Do iaations may be left at the hall during mornings of the precedshying week Chairman for the ~vent is Mrs William Brady

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild will reshyieive Holy CommuniOn in a bodyaf the815 Mass 00 Sunshydity morning A breakfast will follow in the school hall The icuest speaker will beRt Rev Anthony M Gomes Mrs Arthur Belanger gpiIshyftual chairman of the Guild is _ charge of the breakfast

81 JOSEPH AIRHAVEN Nominations and elections of officers for the Association of file Sacred middotHearts will be held at 630 on Sunday evening in the rectory ~ Dues are now payable to the tleasurer Mrs Jeannette Dushylude

IACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

Preprimary registration will be held from 2 to 4 Sunday afternoon May 5 in 1he school office Some openings also exist in first sixth and eighth grades

The CCD adult discussion group will meet at 8 Sunday night in the home of Mr and Mrs J G N Bonneau

So Easton Club Pledges

$5000 The newly formed Womens

Club of Holy Cross Parish So Easton has pledged $5000 toward the building fund acshycording to an announcement made today by Mrs Arthur J L Peterson the organizations first president The pledge will be paid at the rate of $1000 per year

This pledge has been added to The Second Mile Building Fund campaign now in progress under the chairmanship of Robshyert Dray and Louis A Lyne serving as director

The Altar Boys will sponSor a cake sale Sunday May 26

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a Communion breakshyfast following 8 oclock Mass this Sunday morning Installashytion of officers will be held at a banquet following 5 oclock Mass Sunday afternoon May 26

Children of Mary will attend a Communion breakfast followshying 8 oclock Mass Sunday mornshying May 12

The annual blessing of autoshymobiles will take place at 130 Sunday afternoon May 26 in the church parking lot

ST GEORGE WESTP~RT

A Maybasket whist is planned for 8 Saturday night May 4 hi

the school hall on Route 177 PrOCeeds will benefit the school fund and table and attendance prizes will be awarded

STMARY NORTH ATTLEBORO Parishioners are planning a

testimonial honoring Msgr Ed- ward B Booth Pastor at 7

Sunday night May 26 Tickets are now available

Christians Jews Combat Racism

NEW YORK (NC)The Nashytional Confeferice of Christians and Jews has launched a nation wide educational effort to conshyfront the problem of white racism in middotAmerica agency headquarters here announced

The NCeJ has given top prl~

ority to finding ways toimpleshyment the recommendations of the National Advisory Commisshysion on Civil Disorders The commission blamed white racshyism as the underlying cause of urban unrest

In a progress re-port to the NCCJ board of trustees meeting here Dr Samuel L Gandy dean of the Ho~ard University school of religion Washington D C and chairman of the NCCJ nashytional program ad7isory comshymittee stated

NCCJs 130 professional staff members in 70 cities are curshy~ntly engaged in developing programs with police business and labor leaders parents and teachers clergy and with youth and all of the various institutes workshops and dialogues which are being conducted are emphashysizing the findings of this reshyport

Dr Gandy quoted to the board a letter to President Lynshydon B Johnson from Dr Stershyling W Brown NCCJ presishydent in which the agency head said that NCCJ embraced the commission report as a sancshytion and guideline for our efshyforts in the private sectol

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ministers nuns and lay people of all denominations pitched in here to try and make Easter a dltty of joy for the more than 600 people burned out of their homes in a waveof arson which erupted in this city following the funeral of Dr Martin Luther King

Concerned citizens of surshyrounding suburban communishyties who only a week before had participated in a massive Wa 1k for Understanding through ghetto streets respondshyedspontaneously to the need

Without anymiddot special appeal going out people of all denomshyinations call e 11 inner-city churches to ask what they could do and they were directed to the United Community Corp

NEW LEADER Sister Rosemary Markham SSS is the new Superior General of the Sisters of Social Ser-

vice a Los Angeles based community engaged in social and catechetical work with missions in Formosa and Mexico NCPhoto

Christians Jews Discuss Diamiddotlogue

SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-The question of whether JewishshyChristian dialogue should be by speech or by action was the theme that ran through the talks and discussions at a Conference on Interfaith Dialogue sponsored by Catholic Protestant and Jewshyish organizations at Seton Hall University here

Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum director of interreligious affairs for the American Jewish Comshymittee was generally in favor of the action approach saying that the dialogue must avoid beshycoming a convenient conspiracy on the part of middle-class whites to buffer themselves against the realities of the inner city

Father Edward H Flannery executive secretary of the U S Catholic Bishops Secretariat for Catholic-Jewish Relations said that while he would be the last to cut off action in the realm of social justice and charity he also felt that Jews and Christians could not effectively present a common ftont to society until they have straightened out their own affairs

Father Flannery referred to statements that the -ChristianshyJewish dialogue had died in the wake of last Junes six-day war between Israel and Arab nations He said that it was not so much a matter of its dying but of its not having been tried yet

Over Holy Thursday Good Friday and Holy Saturday more than 10 tons of food and clothing were donated and the UCC staff was swamped with the task of sorting the materiaL

With schools and church ofshyfices closed priests and nuns made their way individually and in groups to UCC headshy

quarters to help with the task of unloading cars and station wagons and sorting and distribshyuting the clothing

At least 50 offers of assistance came in to Queen of Angels pariSh in the heart of the ghettc and the callers were asked to organize relief efforts in their own communities and then gd the material 110 the UCCbull

FEEL GOOD TODAY

THt HOLY fATHER MISSION AiD TD THlaRIENTAL DHURDH

Thlsoolumns happiest readers are the men

Te date this second phase bas listed 35 gifts totaling $12000 Combined with the initial campaign the Building Fund now lists 233 donors who haVe pledged a total of $117()00 The Womens Club that was founded less than six months ago has initiated a long range program for the spiritual cll1shytural and financial efforts of the parish

In addition to the regular methods of aiding the parish finandally the women have conducted teen-age projects and have assisted the Mens Club fu

i bull various progrlms

~MANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

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Offices in

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women and children who know they~r needed The days were busiest helping others are the happiest days of our livesbullbullbull Who needs you most Surprisingly God needs you - for inmiddot stance to help art abandoned orphan become e Godloving responsible adult Lepers need you (there are still 15middotmillion lepers In the world) blind children need y~u ~ndlo do we bull bullbull Here In New York we are your agents tellin you where the Holy Father says your help Is needed and channeling your help promptlyand Oafely to the people iii needbullbullbull Want to feel good right now Do without something you want but do not need and send the money instead for one of the needs below Youll feel good especialiy if your gift is big enough to mean a sacrifice to you This is your chance to do something meaningful for the world - its Gods world - while youre still alive

D Only $850 gives our priests and SIsters i south India enough Dapsone miracle tablebamp for 43 lepers for a yearl D For only $250 a week ($10 a month $120 a year) you can make sure that an abandoned child has food clothing a blanket and love Well send you a photo of the child you adopt tell you something about him (or her) and ask the Sistermiddotinmiddotcharge to keep you Informed

D Your stringless gifts in any amount ($5000 MEET $1000 $500 $100 $50 $25 $10 $5 $2)

MISSION will help the neediest wherever they are - in EMERGENCIES india and he Hol~ Land for instance

D Only you can make your will-and do It this THINK week to be sure the poor will have your help

OF even after youre gone Our legal title CATHOLIO YOURSELF NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION Also our priests

TOO will offer promptly the Masses you provide for

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Lawrence High of Falmouth Seeksmiddot State Track Tut~e

By PETER BARTEK Norton High Coach

The Capeway Conference track season has already begun but the handwriting is already on the wall This campaign like last years will be a battle for second place Admittedly notbing Short of a miracle can or will prevent Lawrence High of Falmouth from winning its second straight conference t rae k championship But fol Coach Jim Kalperis and his trackstersmiddot the league championship is only a Gtepping stone to the State C ham p io n - ship The goal of every athletic team in the state hi to earn the title of State Champion This is not beshyyond the grasp of the Falmouth Peier Clippers If hard Bartek work and dedication are the means to this end then Falshymouth will reign as State track champions

Success does not come easily em any endeavor and success batpound

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not come easily to the Falmouth tracksters They like all accomshyplished athletes have labored long and diligently to aChieve the measure of sUccess they now enjot lt

N1)t toomiddot many yearsato Lawshyrence High was just ~nother

sChool Participating in track But the efforts of many and the dedication of one IJ1im in parshyticular has brought immeasurshyable success to the Falmouth track scene That man is Jim Kalperis

Coach Kalperis haseombined

his knowledge af track his coaching ta1EntS aiiCl tirelessenergies middotto build a virtual track dynasty The latest noteworthy feat of middotliliitnickmen came in the forinof anotheriState title

Thisti~emiddotiS th~nivision IIi

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- BC~ and Norry Races Are Close 1

lbe format formiddot the St~te reo lays has been altered this ear with competition being held at four separate locations in East- em Massachusetts Weymouth captured the Division I crown the DiviSion n title went to

Andover and Williams corralled the laurels in Division IV

The meet drew ll5 schools in each of the four diviSions with over 2000 youngsters partici shypating in all classes

Enroute to its victory Falshymouth collected 51 points comshypared to runner-up Barnstable with 22Jh

Falmouth took first place in the discus high jump pole vault 440 yard run shuttle hurdles two mile run and the 880 -

With tbis type of success in state competition it is easy to see why the Capeway Confershyence title has been practically conceded to Falmouth

Sharing the spotlight with the trackmen at Falmouth are the diamondmen The Clippers who are in the thick of the loop baseball picture were given a

Mike Rainnie tossed amp no-hittel at Barnstable to gain a 1-0 vershydict

Its still much too early to predict with any accuracy

what will happen in the Cape wai baseball race But it ap- pears nomiddotclub will dominate th~t sport like Falmouth controIa track Falmouth Dartmouth Fairhaven and Barnstable are expected to fight it out through the entire season One close to the scene summed it up best when he said anyone in the league could win this thing

Close races are also developshying in the Bristol County and Narragansett Leagues

In the BCL both Bishop Fee han of Attleboro and Durfee High of Fall River encountered a few difficulties in early season play but seem to have found the range of late The clubs will meet in an important contest today in Fall River Late inning rallies have brought both clubS from the brink of defeat to vicshytory in previous outings The victor will have to be dubbed

shot in the arm last week as the team to beat

Brennan of Feehan D~est ill le~guej

Coach Tom Maccarone of Feeshyhan has had outstanding pershyfonnances from his pitching staff but the key to the Shamshyrocks success has been shortshystop Ty Blrennan Maccarone stated before the season that Brennan was his best player and perhaps the best in the whole Bristol County Judging from Brennans perfonnance to date one of the keys to stopping Feehan is stopping the classy shortstop

Coach Joe Lewis Hilltoppers play a brand of ball similar to his counterpart TOIJl Karams basketball club Make a mistake and the Fall Riverites will capshyitalize on it Durfees first two league victories came about beshycause of opponent miscues

The Hilltoppers have been playing steady ball throughout the early part of the campaign and are improving with every game Their ability 10 avoid costly mistakes eI tbeir -n

making and timely hitting has proven a winning combination

Come what may in todays contest the BCL llace has just begun

Not to be outdone by tile larger BCL and Capeway Conshyference the Narry loop is conshyducting a torrid race of its own At the end of the first week of action Seekonk and DightonshyRehoboth were tied for the top spot Following two weeks of play Gase of Swansea Dighton and Somerset were lodged In the first position The hectic lCampaign will probably find another change in the top spot at the conclusion of this weeks activity

From Cape Cod to Attleboro competition is keener this year than it bas been in many seashysons The road to the league championship is always diffJshycult to Davigate but this year it appears as though the road win be duttered wiill meR obstacles than ill quite

cone~~ lb~aders ConcllregrnmOB War In V~~It~IlJJm

NEW YORK (NC)-Stushydent government presidents and editors of campus newsshypapers at more than 500 colleges in 49 states have conshydemned the war in Vietnam as

lt immoral and unjust and said ~~ they believe they should not

~ i~~~~~~~ii ~~~b~~ shy --_ ~ and Laymen Convinced About

-- ~-__ Vietnnm Was coordirlated by shy _ -- shy ~ Rev RObert lVi Hundley lHullent

--lt--1 at Union Th~ological Snppary --J here and an associate pltISor at -- ~I th~ Congn~gationalChllrch hn ~_ Scarsdale N-Y He saiQ most

--middot1 students who signed the stateshy~-__-~~- ~~ -___- __~_~J ment havenot been active in

FINE ARTS FESTIVAL Making preparations for Fine Arts Festival at Bishop Stang High School North

Dartmouth are Paul Leahy and Margaret Polycarpo

~ Unmiddot-ty middotIs Chr-stlTs middotW-II

P Off W I E deg I pOi degI

ontl e comes cumenlca I grlmage From United Kingdom toHoly Lar-d

anti-war activities heretoforemiddot

Solicits Support

He added

Many of the student Itl~ders who have signed this sbtcment

recognize that they may be plaeshying their future caJeers illmiddotjeopshy~rdy and conceivably are riskshying punitive action being taken

against them by the capiicioWJ V~TICAN ~ITY (NC)~TO an Fathers Arthur Payton anSel~c~ve Sfdtvice Systerh~~~

I ecumenical pilgrimage oQ its Anglican who is director 01 ~ev Yi~am Sloan Cot~~1 Jr-) way to the Holy Land Pope interchurCh travel in LOndon bull aclive memjgter of Clergymiddot ~nd Paul VI recalled the words he Among its members were An- Laymen Concerned AboutbullVI~tshyspoke on his own pilgrimage glieans CatholiCs Oithodox and nam ~1dmiddota Yal~ U~Iverslt7

there in 1964 that unity is the will of Christ

He said that it was with parshyticular pleasure that we welshycome this ecumenical pilgrimshyage from the United Kingdom to the Holy LaRd You are aboUt to follow in the fOQtSteps af God made man in the country of His birth Hill mission and His blessed death for us men and for our salvation (NiceneCreed)

Your visit caUsto mind our own unforgettable pilgrimage to the Holy Places From the grotto of Bethlehem we then declared It npw appears clearly to all that the problem of unity cannot be eluded Today this will cif Christ is imposed upon our minds and demands th~t we undertake with wisdom and love every possible way of bringing all Christi~ns t6 enjoy the great benefit and supreme honor of the unity of the middotChurch

He also recalled his plea from Bethlehem that love of Christ and of the Church should inshyspire that every future moveshyment toward meeting and reshyconciliation

The pilgrimage was led by

DIOCESAN DIREC1OR First woman to serve as a diocesan director of radio-TV is Miss Patricia Smith of Pueblo Colo who is also a photo-journalist on the staff gf Dateline Colorado m cesan weekly newspaper

Protestants not only from Great Britain but from France and Germany as well

Msgi Gianfrancesco Arrighi undersecretary of the Secretashyriat for Promoting Christian Unity and Canon John Findlow representative of Anglican Archbishop Michael Ramsey of Canterbury at the Holy See accompanied middotthe pilgrims to the Vatican

Votes Moratorium On ChuDch Building

CHICAGO (NC)-The Chicago Conference of Laymen is urging Church authorities at both the archdiocesan and parish levels to declare a moratorium on 10- cal construction projects so that funds can be channeled to projshyects in the ghetto areas

The action was taken at the second annual meeting of the

ll200-member organization The 300 in attendance passed

some 50 resolutions half of them dealing with urban problems The membership said it will seek ways to alleviate white racism especially within the Catholic Church

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ch~plaJD saId The stand taken by these

y~ung men should serve to reshymmd Americans everywhere that the war in Vietnam 1s not over that American and Vietshy

namese boys are stillmiddotdying

He continued

These middotmen of conscience should be supported by eveQY priest minister and rabbi who cares about the sanctity of conshyscience

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Jesuit Comments Di~cordNormal Amon9 Catholics

RIO DE JANEIRO (NC)shylD i SC 0 r d among Catholics after the Second Vatican Council is perfectly normal but It is not normal for proshygressive or conservative Cathoshylics to refuse to accept the dishyrectives of the council and the pope Jesuit superior general said here Father Arrupe is in Brazil for 30 days to visit Jesuit houses in the country and to preside at the May 6 to 14 meeting here of all South Amershyican Jesuit provincials

He said that his visit is inshytended to adapt the order here flo the requirements of the agshygirnameJ1to or up-dating

The most important aggiorshy namento in our day he said

is that of the mind We have to ~nsider and respect human valshyues as such This was always the Churchs doctrine but now the Church is insisting on it more We ought not to consider the Churchs interest in human values as opportunism Our in tEmtion is only to serve mankin~ better)

Press Uses Images Dudng his stay here Father

Arrupe willmiddot visit 20 local(tiesWhere Jesuits are woikilg

ts B 1Ilhele are 1000 JesUl m razl~ bull

He said that he regarded as bull joke the Brazilian presss ref-

elences to him as ~the black l T Ch Pope cussion of he angmg a1middot

Because of my cassock hemiddot

tlaid I am black but I am not the Pope ~ understand that the press has to use images to exshylI)lain concepts more effectively

Honor Editor NEW YORK (NC) ~ Robert

6lmstead news editormiddot of the National Catholic Reporter weekly newspaper published in Kansas City Mo received honshyelable mention in the 1968 Paul Tobenkin Memolial Award Competition here

-

MEET IN ST LOUIS Bishop-elect Timothy J~ Harringshyth d f th Sf W 1 ft d

ton ~ orcester e leoscllfses ~ atn t ~ l~mg

ish a panel a~ the lQ68Presi dents Conference of the Nashytional Council of cat~olic yene~l

Role of CouDcil The parish will retairi its role

as a community of worship whose members go out ihto the world and bring it theeurohristjan

message Bernatd Lyons Ghishycago public relations ~onsultant saidmiddot

The pa~ish on the other hand mustmiddot become part of the world

alound it a wHr1e$S to the whole community and fake on roles not in relation only to -its

GUIDING CHURCH IN UNITED STATES More than 200 members of the hierarchy participated in the decisions of the annual Spring meeting of the National Conference

Predict Important Authorities Emphcisixe

WASHINGTON (NC)-Three members but to the world in authorities on parish life have agreed here that the parish basic organiz~tion iil the Church will have to undergo some lmportant changes if the ChUlch is goingto meet th~ needs of societyin the 20th censhy tury

But just how the parislt is going to change ~s far from setshytied they ~onceqed in a dis

which it exists Father John Corriga~ of this city a directozlt of the Nationalmiddot Liturgical Con ference asserted

Whatever it does the parish must becomemiddot a vital force in the cOlJlrnunity around it Father Geno Baroill execu~ive secretary Washington archdi

ocesan Office ~f Urpan Affairs declared

RIot ComparlmiddotsoDmiddot

Father Baroni whose work blings hini into constant contactmiddot with Negro problems in WaSh- laymen will inhibit soCial ac- ington saw~ astriking par~illel tion but added later this is a between the Churchs needs and risk wltirth taking

-those of thebiack ghetto Right now~ he observed - one of the mos~ urgent prob Society to Consider lems in the ghetto is that Of Sh fmiddot

community organization We 5 emnary I t arll learl1ing that pe~ple ri~t be CARTHAGENA CNC) _ The

cause they have beel- cut o~t ofSocieiy of the Precious Blood meaningful participation in so- ciety

In the ~hurch laymen have been cut out of this participa tion also They dont riot but they dont really concern them selves with the concerns of the Church unle~s thy ~ave t~i~ sense of partlclpatlcm he saId

New Resndemlce For US PIiDests

ROME (NC)-A new resident house for American priests working In the offices of the Roman Curia (the Churchs censhytral administrative offices) or on assignment in Rome for the US bishops has been opened to provide adequate economical lodgings and community surshyroundings

The residence called Villa Stritch after the late Samuel Cardinal Stritch of Chicago is composed of two apartment comshyplexes and is designed to meet the immediate needs of US priests already at work in Rome and to anticipate future housing needs as internationalization of the Roman Curia continues

In addition to American$ resshyident in Rome the villa is also expected to house priests on special assignments for the bishshyops in Rome bishops who come to Rome for work on var~ous

Church commissions or otherVatican offices or for such events as the synod of bishops and ma-Jor congresses In short it is hoped that the new villa wilL

will study the possibilities and implications of moving the or ders main theological school flOm St Charles Seminary here in Ohio to a university campus or urban center and of buildingmiddot an adequate program at St QJ1arles The Carthagena SChOt

has been the societys maJor seminary for over 100 years

Major superiors and middotelected delegates representing the soshycietys Cincinnati province voted to fOlm a committee to carry out the study during a provincial chapter meeting held at St Charles at which modernizing the training of candidates for the priesthood in the society Vas tqe chief subject of discussion

middotA report of the meeting in- dicated that the delegates were aware of trends in the Church 1-way from comparative isloationmiddot of seminary establishments to university campuses and urban centers

SPECIAL RATES FOR

Smiddot I O dcho0 utings an Picnics

of Catholic Bishops in St Louis last week An enormoUis amount of homework on position papers was approved ~

the Bishops NC Photo

I see the parish councils and their recognition of freedom asneceSsai-y to do this he added

Worth Risk They agreed they sha~e abull

feiling opound un~asin~ss _middotaboti~ these cOuncIls relatively new amQJ1g Cathol~cs pa~icula~lY their attitude t~ward SOCI~ issues

d Father Baroni sal he has ~

leery feeling about parishcouncils He declared there is

the danger that conservative

contribute to increased racial understanding and involvement

fur the people of the diOcese

Montie Plumbing amp Heating Co Over 35 Years

of Satisfied Service Reg Master Plumber 7023

JOSEPH RAPOSA JR 806 NO MAIN SYREIET

Fall River 675-7497

Parishes

Lyons author of th~ book middotParish Councils - Renewin the Parish Community said be

middotwas somewhat more optiniistici I donit think we are going to

solve these problems by 10~~1 at the dangers exclusively hie commented

Diocese to Discuss C~m~issi~n Rep~rt

LANSING (NC) - Catholics thoughout t~e Lansing diocese will participate in forums and home discussion groups 1as~ on the report of the National Acf visory Commission on Civil Disshyorders The program which begaa with public forums in six citie on April 29 was planned ~

middot three diocesanmiddot agencies-the Ofshyfice of Social and Community Service the Office of Renewal Through Vatican II and the adult education division of tne Education Department It was initiated in response to an appeal made by Bishop Alexshyander Zaleski The day following the death of Dr Martin Luther King Bishop Zaleski asked dishyocesan directors to plan an imshymediate program designed to

meetmg of heBIShops n erence WIt ISop e e~ros be a center of communi~y life CONTACT MANAGER - LINCOLN PARK of BrowI)svIlle Texas and fOtmiddotmer chancellor of the Fall for bishops arid priests with spe- 9996984 636-2744 ~iver Di~~~~lt __~gt -cilla~~gnrn~iitS~~o~~~ ~ Oc)QI~OC~)OQCIOC)oOOOCgtoc)OQltjIOcXllOOOCgtOC)oOC~)OIL)QOCgtOCPOoO

Page 10: 05.02.68

-ObtainsFreedo ForRefugees

MADRID (NC)--Amiddot group t1ti youth leaders who spent a nig~

middotin a church to avoid a I~est ~ police was released la~

through the help of Auxilia~ Bishop Angel Mortll Figuls ~ Madrid

The youths had taken refureg in the church of Our Lady ~ Montana in suburban MorataJaiJ after police raided a mccting bll a parish building which th0 youths said was a house of thQ people of God Q

The meeting which had b~

announced in the padsh tIbQ previous Sunday as a conferenltcO on Ohristian doctrine was SUib rounded by police on suspiciolQf that it was an illegal meetin~ of workers oommimiddotttees-inde-o pendent labor organizations Tb() police arrested a Catholic woramp ers leader Dannen Ruiz Abo-1 gado Juan Canet a lawyer a~ Father Juan Jose Maria Bltlllesashyteros as they left the meetin- The three were late releasecA

However middotthe Y9uths atten+shying the conference fled to ~

church to avoid arrest and ve mained there until BishOJll Morta arrived and obtainecll

their freedom after negotia~ with the police

10 ~H~ ANCHORshy )hursday May2 bull 19~8 (

- - bull )

Sup~me C~ult Qars Obscenity

For Youth WASHINGTON (NC)

For more than two years the Supreme Court has made it clear thatin the eyes of the law obscenitymiddot is a sometime thing its distribution ~o adults nearly impossible to regulate without endangering the Conshystitutions guarantees of free speech and opinion

But over the same two years the Court has indicated thai it might be possible to control the

availability of obscene books and films to the young and in

1967 it issued an op~n invitashycmiddotmiddot tion to the nations ~a~yers to find the right cases an4 the right arguments tot~stmiddotthis middotmiddotview _

This year the cases were found and the Supreme Court did what most observers thought it would do it permitted states and citiesto control distribution of obscene material to youngshylIJters - providect It drlws the lines finely and tightly

It returrled from amiddotJtwo-week recess to rule thatmiddotmiddot NeW York middot States law barring phsons un- Organization Starts ~er 17 from buying smut met ~ middotthe ~e~t~nd tpatrgtalIas1s middot~lm CLEANUP FatherDetm6d P McDermott of New Yorks lower East ~ide St Housingmiddot Program

elasslflcatlOn law undet whIchmiddotmiddotmiddot bull - bull WASHINGTON (NC) - ~1 bull

minors areprevented from see- BrIgId spansn pas8~s o~t pamt ~nd prusJ1e~ to sl1rpl1r~a~ volunteers who particIpated m Church-sponsored nonprofit 0IJ)00

lt ingsome movies didnot ih~ AprIl ZO ()peratJoA Cleanup It was estImated that 50000 urban people of all baek- ganization here haS launched II

middotThemiddotopinions shoUld go li-long grounds w~re joined in the WOllk by 5000 suburbanites in cleaning andpaintin~ aJong~ousing program Wider whiClli way toward clearing up a con- 46 Streets NC Photo It hopes to purchase 322 sl~ lrti-tutional atmosphefe which at homes rehabilitate them aDCil middottimes hasbeen no Clearer thanmiddot 0 000 p J resellmiddotthem to poor families DiP

the air around the Supreme middotMmiddotore ThanmiddotS1 middotinGmiddot reo CIt Day rOJe ect del federal financing Courts building on a Pilrticu- The organization-Urban Beshylarly still slmlne~ day 1ew YOk middotPrmiddotelamiddotte Heomiddotds lomiddotmiddotn~Sectmiddot omiddotmiddotrmiddot-amiddot n Effort habilitation Corp~will begiul

While the Court in an 8-1 de- 1lIIII 1lIIII the program with therehabi eision written by Justice Thur- tation of nine row houses whiob 000 Marshall-his first major ~ NEW YORK (NC)Jt- Wall z At the end of tbe da~ they ~teas of densest poverty ~Jl it will purchase from the ~ epiiiion-tlirewout the Dallal greatday for New York-one ~ Bat down togethermiddot at tables iyIanhatian andthe Bronx _ development Lanmiddotdmiddot Agen~ filmmiddot clasSification law because hard work oonstructiye dia- str~ng tile length of streets to Last SumJl1er in its thitd year Washi~gtonurban refewal tfwas unduly vague even there logueand happy celebration eat a meal of celebraHon pro- of successful operation the thorny agency The RIA apo K upheld the right of goer~- -Along 45 streets in the Man- vided and prepared by people ~rojec(wastlIreatenea b~ out- proved sale of the houses to ~

Jnen~ to prote~t the Y0llng 1~m hattan and Bronx ooroughs of the block 1gtreak of violence in East Har- group at a purchasemiddot price ~ ~slble bad mfluenc~ some 50000 Negroes Puerto Many in~olved said they felt lem $26100

Different Directions Ricans Italians Jews Slavs the most important aspect of the To counteract riot threats Purchase and rehabilitatiOll middotIt did so without p~ssing on Orit~nt~ls and eople~f otmiddothe whole projeot was not renova- Msgr Fox organized East Har- work which will be done bIT

themiddot meri~~or lackof merits nationalities were joined by middottion but relationship It gave lem peace processions For five Negro contractors and involVG of the film involved but hinted some 5000 guest volunteers _ an opportunity at a time middotof nghts more than 1000 old and young Negroes as apprentice6 middot111at had the law been suffi- from suburbia and other middle alienation and fear between YQung Puerto Ricans walked will be carried out under ~

eielitly explicit about what con- class areas black and white rich and poor through their streets with ban- $]37000 mortgage provided ~ stihites proper or improper con- They spent the day c1eani1g inner city and suburbia oung nersmiddot flowrs singing songs the International BrothelhooCl

duct the Dallas censors would renovating and decorating the and old for people to meet one carrying candles and standing of Electrical Workers and guall shy have had no trouble iicei1sing inner city streets and alleys another as persons in an at- up for peace hope and love anteed by the Federal Housins middotthe film buildings and residences 10- mosphere of work play and La~gely through their efforts Administration under its 221pound(

Instead thc Court said they gether the men women and accomplishment peace was restored to the area program were set adrift in a boundless children residents wOlked shoul- Its one way to make real sea and arrived at their con- der to shoulder with priests what Dr Martin Luther King elusion--that the film should be nuns laymen and women vol- envisioned when he said I Archbishop Greets shown to adults only - from unteers They cleaned back- have a dream as East Harlemshy DEBROSS OIL many different directions yalds and basements did car- ite Valentine Haddock described Armenian Patriarch ~uch a situation is wide open pen try work made plumbing all the people helping one anshy NEW YORK (NC) ~Archshy co

te abuses not the least of which repairs painted doors windows other to become not even just bishop Terence J Cooke ofNew would be a drift among film- and building facades friends-relatives York welcomed His Holiness Heating Oils makers toward the most innocu- At the end of each block a Peace Processing Vasken I Supreme PatIiarch ous and the totally inane The large and colorful mural was Cleaned out basements and andCatholicos of all Armenians and Burnersresult The vast wasteland that painted on a wall depicting the backyards on streets are to be at an ecumenical service in St some have described in refer- good things happening transformed later again by Patricks cathedral 365 NORTH FRONT STREET ence to another medium might street residents and guest vol- It marked the first time the

NEW BEDFORDbe a verdant paradise in com- Award Ecumenical unteers working in partnelship supreme spiritual leader of the parison into vest pocket parks basket- Armenian church had been reshy

But because the law was Theology Diploma ball courts little theaters reme- ceived in a Catholic cathedral in ivague said Marshall it does KAMPALA (NC)-A theolo- dial schools and teenage neigh- the United States JIlot follow that the Constitution gical diploma of the University borhood clubs requires absolute fleedom to of East Africa jointly recognized This non-sectarian project exhibit every motion picture of by the Catholic and Anglican was instituted by Msgr Robert every kind at all times and all Churches in East Africa has been J Fox New York archdiocesan places awarded for the first time coordinator for Spanish com-

The first four Uganda students munity action who four years to receive the diploma fare An- ago originated a creative comshy

Schedule Unveiling glicans munity action program Sum-The theological diploma repre- mer in the City now operatingOf Pope1s Statue sents an agreement between out of 26 store fronts in eight

FATIMA (NC) -A 12-footshy Catholics and Anglicans over the high statue of Pope P~lUl VI syllabus and subjects of the theshy

wili be unveiled Monday May ological course However such TRI CITY13 at the Marian shrine here on an agreement does not iriclude the first anniversaly of the any changes in doctrinal teach- BOILER REPAIR COJontiffl visit to the shril)e ing by the churches Each stu- SLAB BRIDGE ROAD Ihe st~tue depicts Pope Paul dent ~oJl~ws th~ course accold- ASSONET MASS 02702 i

- ~ri~ellngmiddot in prayc 1eiore ~ a~ ing to th~ doctrines middotof hismiddot remiddot Tel 644middot55~6 image of Our Lady of FaJimashy ~pectiYemiddotchurpoundh _ BOILERS RE-TUBED

bull ~ Ali tlhe~ middotmiddotbmiddoti~~psmiddot of P~rtugalI The churches alsoagreed tJ1at S EP A I are expected middotto attendmiddot the un themiddot ina in emphgtIS -Inmiddot th tli_e TUBE R teED

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II ~sAfL~CfiO Ik

Aid to 5t~

THE ANCHORshyThursday May 2 1968

Portland Prelote Stresses Crisis

In Education PORTLAND (NC) - Co- )0

adjutor Bishop PetermiddotL Ger- BATON ROUGE (N2)-Tho ety apostolic administrator Louisiana AFL-CIO app Dved tl

of the Portland diocese des- ~ resolution calling for s ~ supshycribed the grave and serious 1 bull port to children attendi 3 nonshycrisis in regard tQ finances and c middot~lmiddot ~ i public schools at its COil ~ntion personnel in the field of Cath- ~H 1 here oUc education at a press con- l~ The resolution endar d the ference here proposal that tuition supple-

While affirming the desira- ments for the teaching oj nOiF bility of Catholic education the religious subjects bc paid Maine bishop pointed to the toward the education of chill-gt serious problems in financing dren regardless of race creed and staffing a system of schools or religion in state alproved which aims at providing a Cath- non-public schools which me~ olic education for all children all the requirements of law whose parents desire it He Emile Comar executive ~ middotnoted both the rising costs of rector of the Louisiana reder2lshyeducation and the dlOp in voca- tion Citizens for EducHtionllll tions and in the number of Reli- Freedom said It is gmtifyin(l gious available for teaching that the state AFL-CIO in tho

Bishop Gerety n~ted During adopted resolution recognizecll the past ten rears six Catholic __ -_~scgtbull~- Jf the need of parents with ct~ schools in this state alld 11 dren in non-public schools

Catholic elementaly schools CARDINAL J~EGER IN AFRICA The retired ~rchbishop of Montreal Paul-Emile Tuitions continue to dse ant1 have closed their doors During Cardmal Leger who has dedicated his Iif e to work with the poor in Africa is continu- taxes are becoming increasingJy41 the same period we have scen II t th h fl k f d f higher and the combination eithe enrollment in our Catholic a y mee mg WI IS oc or ISCUSSIons 0 conditIons m the DIocese of Yaounde Cam- the two has placed a lremeiF schools decrease by 25 per cent eroun NC Photo dous financial burden on thill

middot~i~~~i~e~~~~~Ct~I~~O~Cmiddotard-nal Leger Works for Afmiddotr-ca Lepers -n~~nt of the states populashymg statements Tbe labor organizations resa-

Expand Quality lution noted The contributioJ)fl

The middotsystem be Seeks to Bring SpirituQI Material Aid which these schools havecannot ex- made panded beeause of staffing to the state have long been ree problems financi~l deuromands YAOUNDE (NC)-lt is said The fact that he left behipd COmmodate himself to the new ognized by the public and~middot

and theincreasing costs of pres- that when Paul Emile Cardinal one of the most important dJ- environment and to be ready public officials ent day education Leger former arehbishop of oceses in the world does not fig) to I work effeetivelr It added that the parents bl

Schools must be consoUdated Montreal arrived at the lepro- ure in their thinking but theymiddot The eardinal is already famil- these tuition supported schooJJ wherever hldicated for maxi- s~rium of Nianing in Senega appreciate the sacrifice that is iar with the specific plOblcms of have repeatedly demonstrateflJ mum use of the available Reli- last Dec IS the lepers looked involvedmiddot in leaving his nfltive the lepers villages He thinks their support of both public ani I gious persoJmel at their fingers to see if a mir- country and adapting to a Dew that they need good pharmacies non-public education to the

We mustmiddot concentrate on ex- acle was going to happen and environment and is concerned with CHing for benefit of all Louisiana eh~ cellence in the schools we have they were going w be instan- Cardinal Leger has put him- all types of sicknesses He sees dren Where this is not possible the taneously cured It was in fact self at the service of Archbishop a need for wells powelhouses bishop said the schools in- the first time that the lepers JeanZoa of Yaounde He is food suppliers and medicinesmiddot of Brotherhood Lackvolved will have to be closed had seen a cardinal learning one of the languages various kinds

We must greatly evpand the ri1l~ cardinal however through of Cameroun the one that is Menace to Peace~ Men Not Outcasts S(l()pe and quality of our reli- middotworks of chari1y has for a long most widely spoken in the reshy VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pe~gious education proglams reach- time been concerned withmiddot the middotgion He thinks that jcent wiJl What makes the cardinal parshy is still menaced by questions laquofing out to all age groups lepers M~~y of the houses in take two years for him lamp ale- tkularly admired is that he reshy

prestige and an insufficient senstlBishop Gerety announced the leprosanum here at Yaoul)de gards the lepers as men and not of human brotherhood PQ~that he is creating a task force have been built through his - as outcasts He knows that many Paul VI told thousands of isi~to study religious education gifts The same is tgtrue of sev- Pope Asks Respect lepers are severely mutilated tors gathered in St Pete

plograms in the diocese He eral leprosaria of the Ivory For Human Rights and Cfln no longer take their SQuare for a Sunday noon blesvshywill ask the group he said to Coast Dahomey and Camerouf place in society It is because of ingmake reco~mendations ~on- The cardinl i6 still in the VATICAN CITY (NC)--Jt is middotthis that he seeks to bring them

eerning how the limitedre- stage of making contacts in the vain to proclaim h~man rights material and spiritual aid Speaking from a window ovei shysources of the diocese can best three leprosaria here unless everythlllg IS done ~o He also gives thought to the looking the square Popc P~u1 be used to ploovide an effec- Cardinal Leger does not want ensure the duty of respecting prevention of the disease If cleclared We must support willi tive religious education for the to impose either his aid or him- them by all people everywhere leprosaria are well organized it our hopes that cause (of peace) total community of adults lind self on anyone He has said re- l1ld for all people Pope Paul will perhaps be possible to wage which so many desire and proshychildren peatedly that he does not want VI declared In a letter to the In- a campaign to eradicate the mote with a sense of impartiality

He said he will also ask for to be a burden and tl1at he ternational Conferenee on Hu- disease completey and justice with true love ofi reeommenltlations on the best wants to be regarded as a simple man Rights meeting in Tehran The cardinals realism aston- freedom and of respect for su1ishy

fering peoplesuse of the dioceses Religious priest Iran ishes many Africans who like personnel Disinterested Help The lettel signed by the Pope to live from day to day and who

~-------------bull That is why the Africans ad- was sent to Father Theodore do not like their customs to be mire him Moslems and Chris- Hesburgh CSC president of upset The cardinal understands tians agree that his is an exam- Notre Dame University and head that the Africans must be shoWn pIc of disinterested help that is of the papal delegation to the that aid is not directed at deshynot often seen in Africa ongress The meeting is being stroying their customs but at

held on the 20th anniversary of bringing them a better standard the United Natio)ls Declaration of living

Workers Charges of Human Rights and in conshyjunction with the International Reject CelibacyDenied in Germany Human Rights Year

ROERMOND (NC)-TwcllyshyBONN (NC)-Charges by the The papal letter dec111red one young Dutch priests havewomens branch of the Indian With all men of goodwill we told Bishop Petrus Moors ofYoung Christian Workers shall follow with great interest this Netherlands See that they(YCW) that living and working ~his conference in Tehran which can no longer accept the plicstlyconditions for Indian girls means to formulate and prepare a celibacy obligationtraining as nurses in West Gershy program of measures to be taken

many were unsatisfactory were on the prolongation of this Hushy denied here man Rights Year

The Rev Hubert Debatin Racial discrimination raises soProtestant minister who initi shy

many troubles social injustice F L COLLINS amp SONSated a program of nursing economic misery and ideologicaltraining for girls from Indias oppression so many revolts that INCORPORATED 1937Kerala state saId that the Indishyrecourse to violence as a meansan government had ordered an

investigation of the complaints to right these wrongs to human The Indian embassy here howshy dignity is a grave temptation ever refused to comment (The Development of Peoples)

Rev Mr Debatin said he visshyON CD HOARD Alexandshy Ited the embassy and told offi shy

er P Tureaud Sr chief cials that the charges wer~ completely false Despite thecounsel for the Louisiana no comment by the embassy

branch of the National Assoshy it is reliably repOrted that emshyciation for theAd~ancement bassy officials did visit several of Colorelti People tNAACP) hospitals and questioned Indian

girlS about th~ir living and beeame the first Negro elecshyworking conditions ted to the Catholic tJniver~ The niinist~r iJaidthe Indian

sity board of trustoos NC yew will be asked to WithdrawPhoto ~ alleamplatioNi~

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12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 2 1968

C~~e$ ~~Ergy Role in Sreg~Hrch F9f ~~ Crisis Sc~~tm(ln

By Msgr George G Higgins The bighop of a middle-siood eastern diocese recently

gnnounced at ceremonies memorializing Martin Luther King Jr that the diocese will spend a substantial portion of its annual Development Fund to improve the condition ef the Negro bullbullbull The money poslible that even those Cahoshyhe was at pains to empha- lies (and Protestants) who are size will not be gpent pater- most vigorously opposeq to

wilistically but in close 00- clerical involvement in social operation with local Negro and economic issues are nevershyleaders He said that his com- theless in fevor of using church mitffiimt wi 11 funds as seed money to develshylTeceiVe the op projects for the benefit of bacJcing of the the poor in general and for areas Catholics poor Negroes in partiCUlar I make tbisDisconcerting Fact ~ o m mit - I would hope of course that ment he as- this might prove to be the case aert1d confi- but only time will tell lIIent that our Meanwhile the fact that Catholic people such a high percentage of Cathshyshare this love olies and protestants are 00

-m Ii d concern record as being opposed to That the bishop the middotchurches getting involved felt it necessary in political and social issues is to make the latter statement for rather disconcerting to put it the record might lead one ~ as mil~ly as possible suspeet that in point of factmiddot be I say tliisas one who can symshyantiCfpated that some of hi$ pathizewith thoseCatholicsor Catholic people would object to Protestants or Jews who object his 0 decision and was mereIi to certain types of clerical inshyWying to neutralize their op~ volvement which either ignore mtion in advance or to put it the complexities of the political morecrudely was trying to ~rocess or tend to oversimplify beat them to the punc~ sO to the application of moral prinei-Bjpeak pIes to complex social and ecoshy

I Expert Opposition pomic problems or finally tend Be that as it may a recent to leave the impression that

ampallup Poll on the attitude of Clerics have a monopoly on the Cathdlics 3lld Protestants with regard to the involvement of their churches and their clergy in political and social issues would seem to suggest thatshylIIlless his diocese is the rare exceptl(~n that proves the rule -~he bIShop can exp~t a cershyiau~ amount of 0PPoSIb~)D from a slzable JIllnonty of his Cathshyooc people

lftY-Seven per cent of Cathshyclies res~ndmg m the Gallu~ survey said that the churcti~~ should not get involved with 35 per cent statmg that t~e d1~rch~~ sho~d express SOCIal enS pO~~Ical Vle~s

~gn Icantly l~ was found ~at more Catholics than Pro~-

Virtue of political prudence or have been granted ethical inshysights thatmiddot have been denied to other mortals

S~rious Obligation It is one thing however to

demand that clerics stay within the limits of their o~ compeshytence in the political order and quite another thing to try to muzzle them or to deny that they have any role at all to play in the field of public policy In the case of civil rights for exatitple they havemiddot a serious

Gbligation to teach the truth as they see it

To do so in any meaningful woay tlley must at times move beyond the realm of general

0Stants thmk ~hat the ~hurlt~esprinciples into the area of spe- should n~ get ~volved ~n soc~al and polItlcal Issues Fifty-~wo lPOerlledcefnt of the Protesta~ts P avored mvolvment whIle 42 ~er cent disagreed

Hadden Study Contrarirwise however a

mudy released during the same week in which middotthe Gallup findshymgs were made public found

ntat in all caSes Protestantsmiddot were more vigorous in their opshyposition to social action by clergymen thaI) either Roman Catholics or Jews

The latter study directed by ~effrey K Hadden a sociologist at Western Reserve University in Cleveland was summarized In ~onsiderabledetail by Edwaro R iFiske in an article entitled -Cl~rgy and Civil Rights in the editorial section of the Sunday Ap~il 21 issue of the New York linles

Since the Gallup and HadGen Alrveys dealt specifically with the right of the clergy and the ehurches to speak o~t on social and political issues (civil rights tor example) and not on the role of the churches in financing programs aimed at improving U1t ~ot of Negroes their findshyings do not necessarily m~ ofoou~E that the bishop referrect to a~ove will encounter oppe-

cifies~ even at the risk of a~tagshyonizing those Catholics who disshyagree ith them

This does not mean that clershyies or other representatives of official church bodies should shortcircuit the political procshyess by trying to force their own solutions on the body politic by means of heavy-handed authorshyitarian edicts

If they were to shirk this reshysponsibility or run awoay frOm this challenge for fear of antagshyonizing a minority (or for that matter eyen a majority) of their people they would be unshyworthy of their calling

-This having been said howshyever itshould be noted that clericS and other representatives of offlCiilI church bodies alSo

have an obllgation to keep their methods of teaching under conshystant review

Wo~ CUt Out We cannot automatically as-middot

Sume in other words that all of those who object to clerical involvement in political and soc~lissues are necessarily in

HEADS NCEA Bishop Raymond J 9allagher of Lafayette Ind was elected president general of the Natshyional Catholic Educational Association at the associa- tions 65th annual conven- tion in San Francisco NC Photo

Venerate Fatima Statue in Brazil

LISBON (NC)-Manuel Cardshyinal Goncalves Cerejeira patri- arch of Lisbon imd Bishop Joao Pereira Venancio of Leiria whose diocese includes the Marshyian shrine of Fatima returned here after participating in threeshyday ceremonies in Brazil honorshying Our Lady of Fatima

They t~ok the statue of the -Pilgrim Virgin of Fatima with them to Brazil

At Sao Paulo they took part in Portuguese - Brazilian Communshyity Day celebrations At Inhangshyabau and at Rio de Janei1G thousands joined them in ven- erating the statue

The patriarch and Bishop Venshy

ancio were accompanied in Brazil by the rector of the Fat-middot i m a shrine Msgr Antonio Borges

_ sitiOJifrom any slgnificantnuili middot te~ which they caiiunder- pany a mernber of the Jew-middot

ber ~f his people for usin~ cii- stand and absorb jish fAith has neen elected GCeSaIl f~nds for the economic -Ifthis sho~d prove to be the to in bOardof +-~ t- and~ ~OCIal bettel1nent 01 the case we have our work cut out ~ bull wu~ ~ W

Wack citizens of his communitlT ~r~ in the montha ftbat lie the CaU~hc VnlverampliyNe ~~ other words it is quite aheiid middotPboto

~ ~

bad faith It may be in the case of some

r of tb~m at le9st we are at fault TRUSTEE BenJamin T ~ in the sense that we havent Iearned how to communicate the Rome president of aWaah Go~l meSsage to them in i n g ton construction oom-

The Servant Queen IiJ the Constitution on the Church we find the testimony of

Sacred Scripture and the Church Fathers combined with more recent pronouncements by the popes Mary the Mother of God an4 of the Redeemer was united to Him by a close inen soluble bond and waS accorded a special role in the mystery Qf the middotIncamiddotrnate Word that is in the economy of salvation

Whenmiddot Mary uttered the words of her Fiat she made a ~l eommitment to God so that He could carry out His de- slgus in middothermiddot Mary never took back hell ad of total surrender Dot even on the road to CalvarY lFrom that firstmiddot moment she devoted herself wholly to serving DM only her heavenly Fashyther and the Incarnate Word but also the whole human race lin the llncarnation Our Blessed Mother first brought Christ to the world Anell that is precisely what she would have 70U do aUmiddot your life-bring Christ to the world

Ev~n after the AScenslon she loyally and steadfastly camiddotrried out~~r role aCting as spirit1lI mother to the beloved disciple anli ~~ ne~rn Cl1urch~ With good reason then we can say tha~~e wJole life of the Lords humble handtnaid~from the moment IIhewas porn to the present-is one of loVing seZvice to her cltildren what gzeater example and what ~tei model could y~ chqose to imitate in Oilder to fulfill your ta~k as a Christian called to~ove and -to serVe your poor 8iKl sUffering bro~ers arqupd the world

You must DOW take over Mars task~ You are the door through which Christ enters the world You muSt receive the Lon and bear Him in 70ur heart sO thaamp He rnA7 beeo~e the heartmiddot ofmiddot your life Then His love Jiis goodne~ Dis pity for the multitude middotwill shine through you into the world Then He will smile through your eyes Then He will help with your hanels Then He will comfort with your goodness Then He will relive in your pers~n His life of long ago for the sake of todayS desperate humanity

In this the month dedicated to the Mother of the church show your love for her by making her task your task by sacrificing to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith-to help those of her children who are in such need

SAlLVATioN and SERviCE lUe the work of The Soclet7 il~r ~~ Propagati~n of th~ Faith Please cut Gut this column llInd sen~ your of~ering to Right Reverend EdwardT OMeara Nationll-ll Director 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 Or directly to your local Diocesan Director BU Rev Msgr Raymond TConsid~e 3611 North Main Street Fall River Massachusetts e~7~omiddot

DAUGHTERS middotDf ST PAUL-combine a middotlife of prayer and action Bringers of the Gospel Messhysage to souls everywhere by means of personal contact Pauline Missionaries labor in 30 Nations Members witness to Christ in a unique missionshypropagation of the printed Word of God The Sisters write illustrate print and bind their own publications and diffuse them among people of all creeds races and cultures Young girls 14-23 interested in this vital Mission may write to

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13 New Jersey Grand Jury Absolves Police of Deaths During Rioftong

NEWARK (NC) - A special and charged it with lcHrity m Essex Cotmty grand jury inves- permitting some of lots material tigating the deaths of 28 people to i1all into private hands which during rioting in this city last misused il Summer absolved po1dce laquol Reporting on the deaths it blame iO the deatbs in a pre- found that three were not conshysentment which rebuked an nected with the rioting that anti-poverty agency for failure eight resulted from wounds inshyto cooperate willi law enforce- curred while participating in ment agencies criminal acts that nine of those

The presentment was issued killed were apparently innocent after the jury had heard more bystanders that two apparently than 100 witnesses over an resulted from sniper fire that eight-week period It said there two were from accidental was insufficient evidence to shooting and that one could not warrant indictment in any of be classified the cases presented to it al- Another special grand jury is though an earlier trial resulted now being paneled to carry out hi the conviction of a man for an investigation of Newarks fatally shooting a woman municipal government This inshy

In the final analysis the vestigation was recommended ~ury concluded the responsi- by the governors commission bility for the loss of life and which reported a pervasive property that is the inevitable feeling of corruption in Newshyproduct of rioting and mass ark lawlessness cannot be placed upon those whose duty it is to enforce and protect the freedom Convention lliead of our society

Courage Restraint N E MonsignorIt rests squarely upon the

MANCHESTER (NC)-Msgrhoulders of those who for euroolin A MacDonald presidentwhatever purpose incite and of the Manchester diocese senateparticipate in riots and the of priests has been selected asflouting of law and order in chairman of the national con-complete disregard of the rights stiiutional convention of theand well-being of the vast mashyproposed U S priests councilsjority of our citizens organization 110 be held May 20Although the presentment and 21 in Chicago leveled some small criticisms at

I1he monsignor earlier hadpolice actions it generally upshybeen elected as the Bostonheld the work of law enforceshyprovince delegate to a 29-memshyment officers and this was in ber ad hoc steering committeecontrast to the report of the for the convention When ill wasNew Jersey (()vernors Comshydecided 110 limicent the steeringmission on Civil Disorder commimiddotlltee 110 8 members thewhich was highly critical of the

police JJlQIlsignor was elected to this group then ohosen as chairmanWith some exceptions the

jury said police both local and Msgr MacDonald said the state together with National purposes of the proposed NashyGuardsmen acquitted themselves tional Federation of Priests with courage and restraint in Councils are to promote priestly the early stages of the riot brotherhood by faciJi1ating comshy

munion among priests councilsPoor Judgment to provide a forum for the disshyThe grand jury said the poshycussion of pastoral matters tolice were handicapped by lack enable priests councils to speakof training appropriate equipshywith a common representativement effective direction and voice to proD101e and collabshyexperience in dealing with the orate in programs of pastoraltype of situation in which they research and action to impleshywere involved ment the reriewal of priestlyThe jury did say that in the life to provide the means forlater stages of the disturbances priests councils united nationshythere were examples of poor ally to cooperate with the tityjudgment excessive use of fireshythe ~eligious the bishops andarms and D manifestation of with others in addressing thevindictiveness that eannot be needs of the Church in the modshytolerated in law enforceD1ent ern World and to do whateverpersonnel is necessary to carry out theseAD10ng the recommendations purposesit made was one that looting be

Members of the Priests Senshyeffectively controlled at its ate of the Diocese of Fall Riverearliest manifestations It also have sent suggestions regardingcalled for the improveD1ent and the proposed organization toupdating of equipment and said Monsignor MacDonaldthe use of chemicals and nonshy

lethal gases should be explored and considered Priests Paid SllEme

The jury called for improveshyment in police-community relashy Salary as Laborers tions and said there is no place PARIS (NC) - The averagefor abusive language or ill salary of priests in the Paris treatment of any group of citi shy region is about the saD1e as thatzens Like the governors COD1shy of an unskilled laborer accordshymission it deplored the use of ing to figures contained in thepersonally-owned weapons by first public budget report of thepolice Paris archdiocese

The anti-poverty agency crit shy The archdiocesan operatingicized was Newark Legal Servshybudget the report showed isices Project a branch of the $440000 a year most of whichUnited Community Corp which is for the salaries of 384 nonshyhelps ghetto residents with legal parish priests more than a thirdproblems

retired This indishyCharges Laxity of whoD1 are cates an average of less than $1-The jury accused it of failing 000 a year to cooperate in post-riot invesshy

Parishes pay direclly the 600tigations said the character of it taken were parish priests but their base salshystatements had

inadequate and ary is only about $50 a monthunprofesSional Honorariums for baptisms marshyriages and special Masses add

Receives Admiral about an equal amount to this VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope sum but pcrivate requests for

Paul VI received in audience Masses are declining Parish Adm Joseph Edet Akinwale priests send to the archdiocese Wey of the Nigerian Navy who the honorari~s of Masses they had told a press conference that coannot celebrate In 1964 this he hoped to present a message amounted to about 22000 Masses from the Nigerian government a year now it is only about three on the Biafra siiuatiolL ~middotfourmiddot thousand~

r THE ANCHORshyThursday May 2 1968

I

Schoo~s Exp~ore

Dual E~l~~rMJcemlt LOUISVILLE (NC)-Catholie

school officials here are trying to work out dual enrollment agreeD1entS with public schoo officials in two locations

If agreement is reached stushydents at Flaget High School here and at Bethlehem Academy may benefit next Fall from the proshygram

Moves toward the dual enrQllshyment concept were made possishyble when the Kentucky attorney general issued an opinion which said in effect that public schools might get state financial assistance for students enrolled part-time in public schools

Under the plan students in private schools could take some subjects in public schools and others in their own schools

Famiddotther Thomas P Casper Louisville diocesan superintendshyent of schools said he is submitshyting dual enrollment proposalpoundNEWMAN CLUBS MEET At oonferenee of Newman to the Louisville Bardstown andClubs from area colleges representatives of Fall River Dishy Nelson County boards of educa~

reese included from left Walter La Rosa Our Lady ill Mt tion Carmel parish Seekonk a student at Bristol Community While action on the roposaw College Lydia Rocha St Michaels Fall River BCC Rev is up U the public boards-the

attorney generals opinion grantvHarold J Wilson BOC Newman Club chaplain Morgan permission but does not force

Childs St Patricks Falmouth SMTL ootion-Father Casper said he if very pleased that there are possibilities open now for deshyveloping dual enrollD1entReturns to Moscow Final form of any dual enroll shyment effort is still to be decided

Fr Dion Assumption College President But one such method treated in the attorney generals opinion

Named Apostolic Administrator is the leasing of space in Cathshyolic schools by public schoom

WORCESTER (NC) - Father a visiting Russian churchman and the operation of this spaceLouis F Dion AA president here Father Bissonnette is now as public school classroomsof AssuD1ption College here will academic dean at Assumption resign his post June 30 to be- College COD1e apostolic administrator in Father Dion had to wait more New Jersey Bishopthe Soviet Union and chaplain than three years after Father to American Roman Catholics Bissonnettes expulsion before Asks United Action in Moscow obtaining a Soviet visa enabling ATLANTIC CITY (NC) shy

Father Dion held the same him to go to Moscow via Paris Bishop George H Guilfoyle of posts in Russia from 1959 to in January 1959 Camden issued a call for united 1961 He served as assistant to Father Dion said he is looking action on the part of all of WJ the president and registrar of forward to his return to the to 36Sist our fellow man as Assumption College from 1962 Moscow post He bad not specifshy he helped dedicate a HUD1aJ until his appointment as presi- ically requested the assignment Resources Center aiD1ed at job dent ill June 1964 he said but it was offered to develpoment for some of this

He replaces Father Eugene him and he accepted it willingly resort areas 50000 poor LaPlante AA who returns to Powers of Bishop This nation has made treshythe Assumptionist Fathers The duties of chaplain Father mendous strides in the fields opound AD1erican province for reassign- Dion explained are not con- science industry business and ment after a three-year term fined to American Catholics medicine he said It is shameshy

ful that in view of all this proshySeventh to Serve living in Moscow They include gress we still have millions ofFather Dion is the seventh he said the entire foreign colshypeople who live in poverty andAmerican priest-all Assump- ony - the diplomatic corps wanttionists-to serve in Moscow un- newspaper personnel and tour-

Bishop Guilfoyle said theder the terms of the 1933 Roose- ists Camden diocese will contributevelt-Litvinov agreement estab- Since there ar(~ no European

$1000 to the new center to belishing diploD1atic relations be- priests-or priests of any other nationality-in Moscow serving used for whatever program the

tween the U S and the USSR in the capacity of chaplain he board of directors decides hi He was replaced in 1961 by said the American chaplain needed Father Joseph Richard AA ministers to the spiritual needs who served four years in the of Catholics attached to the post staffs of embassies and legations

His iD1D1ediate predecessor accredited to the Soviet governshy FAIRHAVENwas Father Georges Bisslgtnnette ment AA who was expelled in The post of apostolic adminisshy LUMBERMaTch 1955 by the Soviet gov- trator Father Dion said inshy

COMPANYernment in retaliation for U S volves all the powers and funcshyrefusal to prolong the visa of tions of a bishop except ordina~

tion and consecration of bishops Complete line It is assigned to a priest usuallyAtlanta Archdiocese Building Materials in areas where there is DO

Joins Equal Housing hierarchy who is then dimiddotrectly responsible to the Holy See 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVENATLANTA (NC)-The lllChshy Father Dion expects to arrivediocese of Atl~lnta has joined in Moscow in early August he 993-2611more than 50 metropolitan At- said

lan-ta organizations and indi- viduals as co-spo~sors of the Atlanta Metropoli tan COmmit- bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull~

tee on Equal Opporunity ill Housing

HThe objective of the confer- BISAILLONS ence will be primarily educashytional Father Noel C Burtenshy GARAGEshaw ehancellor of the arch- diocese and member of the execu-tive committee said 24-Hour Wrecker

He added We expect this dialogue and interChange will establish middotnecessary communicashy 653 Washington Street Fairhaven tion and provide Some answers 994-5058~ the housing problems facing reater Atlanta bull

Thanks Catholics For Refugee Aid

VATICAN - CITY (NC)-NearMsgrEllis Relates Hist~ry middotmiddotEastmiddotwelfare work of U S Cathshyolics has been praised by Pope Paul VL0+ Training for Priesthood

Such a message in the Popes By Rt Rev Msgr Jobs S Kennedy

The publication of a book by Monsignor John Tracy Ellis founder and dean of a new school of American Cath~

lti)lic churchhistory is always a weloome event This is true even when the book is among his minor works SuCh is Essays in Seminary Educoshytion (Fides Notre Dame Inshydiana 46556 $595) amiddot 001shylection of papers and address-C2S There is some repetition in Chese essays which were preshyared for vari shyeus occasions But it does not illessen the imshyact of a book which shows us n keen critical in tell i g ence brought to beal OIl a subject of bas i c imporshylance The hand rDf the historian iIs seen throughshy~t the book The first three essays are specifically historical

The firsi deals with the trainshylog or preparation of priests from the apostolic age to the ~ncil of Trent the second with the same subject from the time of Trent to ~ 1960s The tird is todevoted diocesan theological seminaries in the American Middle West 1811shy1889

A survey such 00 the author Makes in the two opening chap $ers is of especial interest beshyeause it brings out tile implausshyible but incontestable fact that b about the fimiddotI9t 1500 years of its existence the Church did DOt have anything even regem- bling a standard ~m of edushy_tion for the priesfil100d

Monastie Schools fttere were no special schoobl

lor the clergy before the time Of

The medieval universitieQ were foundedmiddot by the Church amd the clery p~yed ~ im ~rtant part m them But theyWei b d al ~ ed ti e y no means I e Jormiddot ushy(l3 on for the pnesthood SInce2he the I g I kemelyq 1~~~y~middotou~emiddot~~U Iersi~ of P middotkmiddotlmiddot5middot6

-Y arlS n ovv or ~(fears to complete thedoCtOriite ill theology Hence few priestsbenefited f-rom 4--

~ UDlversI Effective Response

lhe POr estate of the clergy~ glarmgly a~parent in the ens of the Renalsance and the Bef~rmation and this middotis prj shy

manly llttutablello educashytional defiCiency And evea hen the reforming Council of lIrent was launched it took 1~ ~rs ~efore a dec~ on clerical educa~on was achieved and a long tlme thereafter before its proVISIonS were carned out in practice

Monsignor Elliss treatment of

ticularly the institutions founded by St Vincent de Paul and Jean-Jacques Olier

These men win the authors praise for their effective reshygponseto a vital need But he does IlQt hesitate to lay to them ~e responsibility for some of the anti-intellectual bias which chamcterizea too many seminashyli13 in subsequent centuries

incredible NWIIlber In the United States some

quite ancient history was reshylived as the bishops of new dioceses had cleriea schools of sorts in their own homes But in the days of the very first bishop John Oarroll a real

had b - -bli hed semmary een - 9when the Sulpichms came to Baltimore in 1791 and founded St Marys

Later developmen1s are sumshymarized by Monsignor Ellis with attention to the various types of seminaries and the growth m numbers from 50 in 1668 to 571 iIn 1964 Thi6 last incredible number is indicative 0If tile regre~le proliferation Which led to needless duplicashytiOD inadequacy in quality and waste of resources

A test of middotthe exeellence of American seminaries is proshyposed by the atrtbor how many men of enduring reputation ba~ flhey produced The anshyswerJs that tIhe fteonl is not distinguished And much of the lelIlainder of the book is given 110 probing for reasons m exshyplanation Of this

Routine Teaeldllamp at Augustine whomiddotbecame Ihi Anierican ~mi~ry of -ilJhop of Hippo in 396 His 1be ft refleCted _ national

_

LlIFE MEMBERS Msgr John E Boyd chaplain left and Dominick Maxwell Jr right Grand Knight of Fall River Council 86 of the Knights of Columbus i~vest Jerome D Foley and Dr Joseph Carvalho as life members

~

Rural Ireland Charge Farmers Lack Formal Training

In Agriculture ROSSLARE (NC)The need Wbat chance had the boy who

for priests to be more involved left school at 14 of making the in social problems was stressed grade at farming ~he excepshyby 9peakers at the annual meetshy tional lads made it The rest are

~ e9tablished and mairitaineCi~ - In the future he said until 4- disregard cif inteli~tualqua1itY this is rectified Ninety-five nAr ~ his own household and had In ~y instances ~ty mem- ~ imitators ~gt bera ere apPOint~~ t~eir ~t of e5ent-day farmers Thereafter came the mona~f)le positi - middotth m rd io ~v~ had IlQ post-primary edushySchools initiated by St BenediCt ons WIlifo ~ga r cation NinetYofive per cent ofin thmiddot th proper qlla Ications MuCh of farmers have had middotno formal esnr cent~ the~ fllie teaching was rolltine and~rting in middotligrlcultllredr~ and-middot eP1scqp~ Scboo~ an~ dun Collateral reading _n6t middot~JFlWle Awayampnally themiddot medieval UDlvenu- middot~~d lib ties middot - ~ampt~W1~ an nu-~ wer~ Fcaither qerinehy ~ncluded

~e )mperorPbariemaible ~~~poundreed ~tho~~laquo~ lt m the eigh~h ~turydecr~ miD not aencournt ~e~ch~Gt~~n6~llIIr~Watmiddot ilhat alLclencs m~be lble to middotwas virtuall uilkn a lj ~

ifead im~~ri~ J~d~ve ~m- faculties PU~Shed v~illi~~e iT ~~~t ~~t~Bltcs petence In ~h~~ )~1esslC~~Idu- Monsignor Ellis points tJ01 the BOGOTA (NC) _ Anglican tiaif~king ~ DllIllmum timidity which prevailed after Bishop David Benson Reed of

q I I~~ons they ~ere to be the eJcesses perpetrated in 1l1e BogOta offered accommodations e~ ~~ deprIved of repression of Modernism in the for~five Catholic bishops during me iectr~~ IS we can see w a fim part of the present centurY theforthcoming International

g ere had been He sees a change in the era of Eucharistic Congresss in August

ing of the Christu Rex Society an Irish organization for priestDmiddot engaged in pastoml work

Over 250 priests and represhysentatives of agriculturalorgan- izations attended the cOngress here on the theme Rural Ireshyland

Father Jerome Dennehy CC of Kenm2lre criticized the fail- ure of the Iri9h educational sysshytem to provide the farmer with the basic knowledge necessarY to enable him to profimiddott from advice from government agenshydes onfurming methods

No real progress can be made

Vatican II and happily notes and five Ecuadorian prelates aeshythe improvements already made cepted his invitation

lUld those-in prosPectmiddotmiddot He hJ They are Bishops Bernardo hopeful for the future Ech R f Amb to d

evern~ wz 0 a anlIJiteUktlllal A~lieDtmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot-middotCandiiiomiddotRada Cenosian of Guashybull - d middotmiddotd A 1 B h

in8 ConclUding ~y~ ran a liln UXIlary IS ops Priestmiddot as rntelleCtllal~~ v~rll9middotmiddotGabrieI1iazCueva Ernesto that abettereducated and mueh Alvarez ~liaVlcente CIsneros of

and ea r Gua allmoreaware enti laitrmiddotmiddot y qu demands a certainmiddotleveloflD-middot B~SbtPAnBeedli has JurCls~lctib~n

middotfellectual attainment and alivemiddot middot~v~r eo g cans In 0 om la its cl and Ecuador and has been an

~~ ooes ermeam that the ecumenical leader in these

now fading away with thei~

farms Father Eamonn Casey nashy

ijonal director of the catholic Housing Aid Society in London stressed the necessity for the priest to work with underprivishyleged members of -society Too often he said the theologians are on the periphery - they should come doWn to earth and mix with the people-who really

priest has to be a professional~untries ~ _ ~=====~_ intellectual such is not his _ Over 200 bis~ops a~ 1~ ~r-Etmiddotmiddot D ampD SALES AND SERVICE cation ltR does mean that he has dinals have saId they Wlll at-sect to maintain a genuiDe hifei-est end the EUcharistie Congress to - sect ill things intellectUal anq m Mbeid be~ sectpublic questions sect

Monsignor Ellismiddot chides sUPe- sect riors for their failure to eneour- p~iori ~ the minisky in sect age priests 110 use their ~cial teD-dayretreatS preceding or- sect talents skills and aptitudes dination Better than nothing sectAnd he urgeS priests 110 acquire one suPPoses sect( and retain habits of 9tudy It is In the lntervaJ there has sect to be hoped that both these cau- ~ great improvement But sect

name has been sent to lI1sgr John G Nolan president of the Pontifical lVlission for Palestine whose headquarters are in New Vork Written by Amleto Carshydinal Cicogilani Papal Secreshytary of State it referred to the

1 Missions 19 years service to ~ Palestinian refugees particushy

larly victims of the recent Arab-Israeli conflictto

It singled out as particularly praiseworthy the contribution of the Catholic Near East Welshyfare Association saying that middotthrough the unflagging genershyosi ty of the catholics of the United States of America it provided qlost of the means for the Missions work following the recent conflict

The papal letter declared No other agency surpasses the Pontifical Mission in length of

middot actualmiddot serviCe and its identifl shycapon with the paternal intershy~ and concern of the Holy Father merits his encourageshyment hismiddot blessing and his prayerful good wishes

Cardinal middotCicOgnanl wrote that Pope Paul out of paternal afshyfection for the homeless and of grateful esteem for the Pontifi shycal Mission bids memiddot send yOIll the enclosed check for $5000 Added to this was a furthell amount of money contributed

middot by the Congregation for the Oriental Churches

Msgr Nolan was asked that during his Easter visit to the refugee campS he kindly disshytribute the total sum in the Popes Dame to all the needyen

ar~~~stChneU~made adicbot-SAVE MONEY ON omy of man saying here is middotthe

body her~ is the soul-Iam YOUR middotOImiddotLmiddotHEATconCerned only with the soul bull bull bull bull Tmiddothe love of Christ is for the whole person and anything ~ -4~ WYman that concerns 1llieperson is of ~ US92 concern to middotChrist

He said thatmiddot the priest middotshould CHARLES F VARGAS selk tomiddotmiddot develop ~ature Ght-ls- tiMlS amongdsmiddotflockiuidcpre- 54 ROCKDALE AvENUE pare themmiddotforlife Th~ role of 1 the ~~esthe~dmiddotiftcl~desmiddotth~middot ~E~ BEDFORD MASS proVISIon Qfmiddotmiddot mformatlOn oo sexual and~ari~itLplmiddotobiehis 1

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HE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 2 1968 1S

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs May 2 1968 Back Presidenills ~reg~reg ~~~1rf~Jreg~MO~ ~~~lliJO[[reg(gJ ~rntilO1fi)[[fr~ofr~r

CHICAGO (NC)-The Assoshy~~ ~~regramp~~ o[J1j [Q)1 W[J1lJ[[o ciation of Chicago Priests an

The record compiled 56 years ful Swamppodle a neighborshy unofficial group of some 1500 priests in the archdiocese ofago still stands in big league hood within sight of the U S

baseball annals-most runs al shy Capitol talked about Father Chioago has endorsed President Johnsons current efforts to]owed one game 24 Travers Travers band

fA J (Joe) Detroit Never before had the bandsshy negotiate a Settlement of the

Father Aloysius J Travers men performed like they did in Vietnam war The ACP in its fifth plenarygJ 75 who achieved the dubishy the 1919 May procession-never

ous pitching distinction died had such old favorites as Tis session here turned down a resolution prepared by its soshylast week in Misericordia Hosshy the Month of Our Mother and cial action subcommittee onpital Philadelphia He acquied 0 Mary We C~own Thee With

baseball immortality on May Blossoms Today been so spir shy peace calling for complete cesshy

112 1912 as pitcher for the One sation of U S bombing in Vietshyitedly played by Gonzaga bandsshynam to support the Presidents limited decrease in bombing

men as the procession windedlDay Wonders Detroits brawling Tigers were through Swampoodle streets glated to play Connie Macks After the procession was over and negotiation moves

Two other peace resolutionspOwerful Philadelphia As that the school rector called in recommended by the subcomshy_ daymiddotin old Shibe Park Detroits Father Travers and congratushy

Btar Ty Cobb had drawn a fine mittee were approved They

and two-day suspension for formance The rector added lated him on the bands pershy

put the ACP on record as favorshy

belting a heckling fan a few But high school musicians with ing draft law revisions so that a person might be exempt as a

lligers decided if Cobb couldnt mustaches Dont you think thatdays earlier in New York~ ~he

conscientious objector to a parshywas going a bit too far ticular war without necessarilyFather T~avers had recruitedplay they wouldnt either so being a conscientious objector

Famous llnfield a dozen or so members of thecenthey went on strike

to all war and so that a per

With the aid of Connie Mack crack Fort Myer Army Band

son could be exempt as a conshyfOm nearby Arlington Va scientious objector on humanishy

ed up a collection of Philadelshydressed them in cadet uniforms~e Detroit management roundshy

tarian as well as religioUlland put them in the school band groundsBesides teaching at Stphia sandlot players signed

The ACP also approved threeJosephs Prep and Gonzagathem to Detroit contracts and recommendations of its liturgy

as the Tigers sf Francis Xavier High in New committee York As a result the priests group

Father Travers also taught atfielded the One Day Wonders

Al Travers 19 fresh out of has urged the National Confershyat Josephs Prep School rho Disbands Hawks ence of Catholic Bishops to reshyhelped recruit the sandlotters One of his moSt heartbreaking submit two liturgical petitioJUloppointed himself pitcher He assignments was given him some to the Conglegation of Rites inctftein recalled I learned that 25 years ago He was sent back Rome The petitions which had e pitcher would collect-50 to St Josephs College where New Problem ~en turned down by the Vati shyeX-tra so I volunteered the battIe cry is The Hawk can congregation would allowThat day the As scored 24 will never die as moderator the establishment of experimenshyINns on 25 hits with io nuts of athletics Priest Urges F~ir labor Practices tal centers for the liturgycmearned against young Travshy His jOb-disband the Hawks For CatholicSchool Faculties throughout the country and limshy

erG The wonder is the score football team with a minimum ited experimentation with thewasnt higher for young Tra~~rs of uproar from students and SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-For betweell the school and the liturgy without prior approvalwas pitching against the best alumni since football had beshy as long as anyone can rememshy religious community of the Vaticanbalt team of the era-against come a moneymiddot losing sport at ber the Religious and lay peoshy Some experts says that the

PhiladelphiaS famous $100000 St Josephs and a number of nte third resolution called on-pie who serve on the faculties best solution to this problem is

infield of John Phelan (Stuffy) other Catholic colleges in ~those the NCCB to take concrete stepsof Catholic grammar and high to bar Religious from partici shy

McInni6 at first Eddie Collins days to implement proposals of itsschools have been the type of pating in labor organizations

lJeCOnd Jack Barry short and He did his job well directing liturgy committee for adaptashypeople who would never think But Father Reicher indicated

IPrank (Home Run) Baker third attention to St Joes basketball tion of the Mass to smaIl anelof going out on strike against this would only divide the Reshy special age groupsSaves Franchise team which has grown into one unfair labor practices since ligiousand lay faculty of schools

But young Travers and the of the nations powerhouses this would imply some sort of even more than they are dividedORe Day Wonders who had For the last 25 years Father guilt on the part of p~ors and now India to ReconsiderI2ever seen Detroit saved the Tlavers had been stationed at bishops Urging a period of experishybaseball franchise for the Tigers St Josephs Prep in semishy Well those days are gone forshy meritation to work out new Deporting Priestttlat day If they hadnt pl~yed retirement during recent years ever according to Chicagos forms of collective bargaining NEW DELHI (NC) - Indiantile As chances are the Amershy Requiem Mass for the colorful Father Robert Reicher and the Father Reicher concluded It ill Prime Minister Indira GandbJ1bean L~ague would have lifted one-day big leaguer was ofshy job now is to set up standards obvious that the right to barshy has promised reconsideration ofDetroits franchise because of fered Thursday at GeuChurch of fair labor practice and guidshy gain collectively is a natural the order expelling Jesuitthe players strike in Philadelphia ance for faculty members grievshy tight clearly defended time and Father Vincent Ferr r of theDespite the lopsided score procedures against Cathoshy agaiil ethically and morally Poona diocese Indiaance fromlPatJher Travers got several big lic school administrators But this right also implies an lleague offers as a result of his Canonist Cates Need The pmmise was made when

Speaking to participants at 8 obligation to know what colleCshy tlhree members of the Indiani pitching He turned them down secondary school department tive bargaining involves went to St Josephs College For Negro Prieds parliament met with Mrs Ganshy

meeting during the Nationalthen joined the Jesuits ATLANTIC CITY (Nch - A dhi here and asked her to get

National Catholic Educational the order cancelled and grantThe lesson he learned fmln plea for more Negro Catholic Bishops Ask PopeAssociation convention here Indian citizemihip to the priestthe unorthodox recruiting as a priests has been made at the Father Reicher outlined some ofone-day big leaguer stood him annual Easterri regional meeting To Visit Canada Father Ferrer founder of thethe problems facing Catholic in good stead a half-dozen years of the Canon Law Society of OTTAWA (NC) -Pope Paul Maharashtra Farmers Servicelabor - management relations

later when he was teaching at America here in New Jersey The pliest is chairman of the VI may visit Canada next month Society was scheduled for deshyGQnzaga High School in Washshy Msgr Thomas J Reese of Wilshy to attend the National Confershy portation last year but wasChicago archdiocesan Catholicington D C mington in the neighboring State ence on Poverty sponsored by granted several extensions ofCouncil on Working Life and a

Recruits Ringers of Delaware speaking on experishy jVell-known labor expert Christian Churches in Canada his stay He was accused by iiimiddot mental parishes accused the Hindu groupS ofanti-Indian acshyFather Travers was in charge Religious who teach in CatBshy Bishop Alexander Carter presshy

Church of racism and said that tivities and by the Maharashtraof the school b~llld which used olic schools pose a special diffi shy ident of the Canadian CatholicNegro Catholics prefer to - be state government of anti shyto master only about two or culty hi labor relations because Conference has acknowledged national activitiesselved by black priests of whom

CHURCHES UNITED Bishop Reuben H Mueller left of the Evangeli~al United Brethren Church and Methoshydist Bishop Lloyd C Wicke led representatives of their respective bodies at ceremonies in Dallas proclaiming the union of the two churches The new body is to be known as the United Methodist Churlth NC Photo

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IIlfllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIUIIIlIDutuUliUllllUiHlllllllllilllllllllllllllllilllUIIIIIIIIIIIIUII~given to the Washington arch we need black priests and we bid to raise the standards of diocese by Church spokesmen need them fast preaching in Australia and New here in Pennsylvania Zealand will be made shortly Lobster Boats Msgr Philip J Dowling execshy it was resolved at a meeting hereCapital Cityutive secretary of John Cardinal of leaders of religious orders

Krols Commission on Human VATICAN CITY (NC)-Qn The effort will inchide a fullyshyRelations noted that the Washshy the eighth anniversary of the otganized Pastoral Year obsershyington Archdiocesan Office of foundation of Brazils new capishy vance seminars for priests of all bull bull bull Urban Affairs has asked assist shy tal of Brasilia Pope Paul VI ages on updating preaching techshy s iz e s ance from Philadelphia and other sent a radio message of best niques the establishment of II bull bull bull dioceses In providing foOd es wishes in Portuguese and pressshy preaching center and the use pecially for those po)r who will ed a button that illumined a of a recorded service on techshy I Macleansreceive temporary housing in the cross on the cathedral of that niques of oral communicatiOil f8cilities of the Washington city The Pope performed the directedby the ObJates of MalT sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAYBt Tel 9979351 sect archdiocese oclemony in his private library Immaculate ~1I111111l111IHlUlnlllllllllllUllllllnIIllIUllllllUllllllllllllllIllltUIIllllllllllUluiuUWlUllllml~

three tunes a year In those of their obligation of obedience that feelers have been sent outthere are fewdays the school had a cadet Father Reicher pointed out to have the Pope corne to Monshy

If any institution can standeorps and one of its big annual What this means he added is teal for th~ May 26-29 meeting events was marching in the anshy that occasionally Religious mllYoondemned on the basis of the

It would be the first papalrecent Kerner Report on Civilnual parish-May procession be used to break a strike called visit to Canada Pope Paul visitedDisorders it is the CatholicFor years residents of color- by lay faculty members this country as a Cardinal in theChurch among others that is But more likely is the conflict early 19508guilty of white racism he trapping the individual Reli shyPlan to Help ~eed opined Bishop Carter said if a favorshygious whose loyalty is divided

Asserting that the number of able reply is reCeived from RomeCapital MCIl(lc61ers Negro clergy middotdoes not nearly the Canadian government would

PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A meet the needs of Negro Catho- Australia to Have extend an official invitation pledge of cooperation in feeding lies Msgr Reese said Pope Paul visited the United the poor who will gather in the If the Church is going to be Better Preaching Nations inNew York in 1965 nations capital in May has beell relevant to the black community SYDNEY (NC)-A concerted

I

Marian Awards Continued from Page Three

Fall River and has spent her entire religious life within the Diocese of Fall River

Sister has served as consult shyant with various education comshymittees in the diocese and bas promoted the educational proshygram of the Dominican Sisters

Sr Mary Pauline OP bead of the Science Department of

the Dominican Academy Fall River was one of the originatolll of the Region III Science Fair and has served as president of the regions Fair for two years

She is presently ooordinator of the Massachusetts state Scishyence Fair -

Sr Virginia CSC is presshyently chairman of the Th~logy

Department Notre Dame Colshylege Manchester N H and served from 1941 to ]958 as principal of St Anthonys New Bedford

She has always been a leader in new an innovative ideas in education

Sister Anne Denise SND presently principal of St Marys High School Lynn is well shyremembered as the first princishypal of Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth and has served in many administrative posts for the Sisters of Notre Dame

Sr Mary Aloysia SUSC is dean of the College of the Sashycred Hearts Fall River and has given outstanding service in coshyoperation with the Catholic School Department in planning in-service courses for the teachshyers of the diocesan schools

She also serves asmiddot coordinator of the educational program of the Sisters of the Holy Union

Sr John Elizabeth SUSC is Guidance Director at the Acadshyemy of the Sacred Hearts Fall River and has served in numershyous administrative positions atthe Fall River school

She was the first principal of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton and has served on committees of local and state educational organizations

Sr Mary Felicita RSM is now involved in the tutorial program at Mt St MaryS Acadshyemy Fall River and has served in the various sclIools of the diocese

For 26 years Sister served as Diocesan School Supervisor iD the Catholic School Office

Sr Miriam RSM is also in the tutorial program at the Sisshyters of Mercy Academy in Fall River A former teacher and principal in schools of the dioshycese Sister served for 26 yean

IN NEW POST Father Charles F Sheedy CSC former dean of arts and letshyterS has been appointed to the new post of dean of theoshylogical studies and institutes at the University of Nobe Dame NC Photo

to Educators tiS Diocesan Supervisor in the Catholic School Department

This year completes 50 years of service in the field of educashyto the Diocese of Fall River

Sister Maureen RSM is principal of Nazareth Hall Fall River She organized the proshygram and was the first principal of the Fall River school lor exshyceptional children a position she still holds

She is a consultant lind D member of city and state comshymittees for the mentlllly l1eshytarded

Sr Mary Urban RSM is Diocesan supervisor of schools and was the first principal at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

She is a member of state and city educational committees

Sr Mary Carmela RSM is a member of the English Departshyment of St Xaviers Academy Providence and was the first principal of Mt St Marys Academy Fall River

She is a consultant on secondshyary school curriculum planning

Sr Grace de Sales MSBT is presently superior of the Censhyacle of Our Lady of the Assumpshytion Osterville a position she also held at the Cenac1e of St Patricks Parish Wareham

Sister founded the kindergarshytens at Osterville and Wareham and has taught Chfistian Docshytrine classes on the elementary and secondary levels during her many years of selvice in the diocese

Sr Joan Louise OLVM is suPerior of the Victory Noll Convent in the Immaculate Conception Parish No Easton She has served as catechetical specialist in dioceses in Iowa and California and her present assignment is CCD supervisor for the Diocese of Fall River

Brother Albertus CSC is supervisor of Education for the Eastern Province of the Holy Cross Brothers and is professor of mathematics at Stonehill College No Easton He also ~ught mathematics and physics at Monsignor Coyle High School Taunton

Miss Mary Cabral of 1)69 Camshybridge Street Fall River is presently teaching at Espirito Santo School Fall River where she is completing 43 years of service as a lay teacher in ~e

Diocese of Fall Ri vcr

Whites to Solve White Problem

TOLEDO (NC)-Bishop Joon A Donovan has made a public request to whites to take up the white problem

He urged it for those lookshying for a modern up-Io-date apostolate for down-to-earth Christians who are at the same time dedicated Americans

middotSpeaking at a dinner of the northwestern Ohio district Fourth Degree Knights of Coshylumbus the Toledo bishop said

This ugly situation was fathered by injustice and is nourished by that subtle and insidious vice called prejudiCe

Need In this deplorable situation

in which the world ffinds itself today the pressing need is for those who call themselves Christians to think as Christians to form Christian attitudes and to live as Christians

Just as we cannot separate Christ from His Gospel so too we cannot separate love of GOO from love of our fellowmen without exception

The real Christian mlid the bishop does not live alongside but with others He constantly interprets anothers actions in the best possible light bying to remember always the way in which the Lord met loved and drew people to Himsel

SAIGON (NC) - The people wept and we wept everybody wept Sister Nicole said deshyscribing her teams departure after 16 days of relief work in Hue

She and two other Vietnamshy-ese Sisters Daughters of Charshyity of St Vincent de Paul with

The communImiddots1s T truce

17 girl students had gone to stricken Hue on a mission of mercy

offensive had left families in mourning houses in ruins ~nd people hungry and sick The government of Vietnam had inshyvited volunteers to bring help to the citys thousands of sufshyferers

The plane that brought tile Sisters and their students also brought 85 youths from Saigon~

The boys did manual work such as cleaning up the damaged hosshypital in Hues The Sisters team was divided into three groups one to give medical care anshyother to visit homes a third to l)ok after children

The 17 girls are some of those being trained by the Sisters as social workers for family assist shyance under a plan sponsored by a Vietnamese womens associashytion Five of the 17 are Cathshyolics The others are mostly Buddhists On April 12 all were fasting since it was the 15th day of the lunar month for the lBud-

Catholic Boy Scout Officials to Meet

WASHINGTON (NC)-About 150 leaders of CQtholic Boy Scout organizations will meet here to attend the 20th biennial oonference of the National Cathshyolic Committee OIl Scouting

The meeting will be a Iowshyday work session tor chairmen chaplains and other officioals cd the nations diocesan I seouiing ~ommittees The meeting will end with a banquet in honO Gl Patrick Cardinal OBoyle ol Washington

---- -----~

middot1FI

1

PRAYER CRUSADE _Danny Thomas has filmed n 10-minute color documentary on the value of family pray~r

to be used by Father Patrick Peyton CSC in his Camshypaign for Family Prayer Father Peyton said he expects 200000 people at a Milwailkee rally to be held Sunday May 12

IEverybody Weptl

Nun Describes Relief Teams Departure From Stricken Hue

dhims and Good Friday for the Catholics

The Asia Foundation here gave a grant to pay for the meals of the Sisters team dur ing their stay

- Before leaving Saigon the Sisters had collected medicines food soap and clothing from welfare agencies including Catholic Relief Services and

Vietnam Christian Service (Protestant) The United Nashytions Childrens Fund (UNICEF) provided milk powder which enabled the team to give milk to 450 children every day

Warn Medics LONDON (NC)-The day beshy

fore Britains new abortion law went into effect the nations 5500 CMholic doctors were warned by John Cardinal Heenan of WeBtminister that they should DOt perfom any abortions

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THE ANCHOR- 17 Thursday May 2 1968

Cufr ~t~1 Days Of orw~~~1ion

En C[[i~da OTTAWA (NC)-Chrietshy

mas and New Years Day now are the only holy days of obligation for Canadav estimated 8000000 Catholics

The Canadian Catholic Conshyference comprising Canadafl Bishops has announced thampa other holy days will be cellshyebrated on the Sunday nearem the holy day

The holy days affected aye Epiphany usually celebrat~

Jan 6 Ascension now falling on the 40th day after East~Ilp

All Saints now celebrated Nou I and the Immaculate ConcejilP tion now celebrated Dec 8

The Bishops said observance of the feast days on Sundayu means they will be celebratecll bull by a larger more relaxed anell accessible congregation of the faithful rather than a congreshygaUon of people constrained by the obligation of attending Maw in addition to their work

Canadas Bishops postwn~ until next Fall a decision Gil

wlether to restoremiddot the anciej~ office of permanent deacon m the Church The Bishops of the United States meeting simultashy

neously in St Louis hlst week ~ted to petition Pope Paul VJ for permission to restore ~

perinanent diaconate ror marshyried and unmarried men of ma ture years

Fish Sales Up SYDNEY (NC)-Best tilini)

that ever happened to the fisb industry said Mark J06eph chairman of the New SouUl -lales Fish Authority of the Churchs lifting of the ban CJ[l

Friday meat eating He has tb~ ligures to back up his verdictshya 25 per cent rise in fish e4)Dshy

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The Parish Parade New Jersey Suburbanites of All Faiths Aid Ghetto Arson Victims HOLY NAME OUR LADY OF ANGELS

FALL RIVER FALL RIVER NEWARK (NC) - Priest~ the citys anti-poverty agenCll Contemporary music will acshy

company the 11 oclock Mass Sunday morning May 5

First communicants will reshyeeive at a special Mass at 9 Saturday morning May 25 Mayshycrowning ceremonies will be held Sunday May 26 The Womens Guild announces

fts installation banquet for Tuesday night May 7 Tickets are available from all members

Catholic Charities collectors are asked to meet in the parish school at 730 tonight for dist~shyOOtion of contact cards

lIT MARGARET BUZZARDS BAY

SS Margltlret-Mary Guild of Buzzards Bay and Onset will Sponsor a rummage sale from 9 1lo 1 Saturday May 18 at St Margarets kindergarten hall Main Street Buzzards Bay Do iaations may be left at the hall during mornings of the precedshying week Chairman for the ~vent is Mrs William Brady

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild will reshyieive Holy CommuniOn in a bodyaf the815 Mass 00 Sunshydity morning A breakfast will follow in the school hall The icuest speaker will beRt Rev Anthony M Gomes Mrs Arthur Belanger gpiIshyftual chairman of the Guild is _ charge of the breakfast

81 JOSEPH AIRHAVEN Nominations and elections of officers for the Association of file Sacred middotHearts will be held at 630 on Sunday evening in the rectory ~ Dues are now payable to the tleasurer Mrs Jeannette Dushylude

IACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

Preprimary registration will be held from 2 to 4 Sunday afternoon May 5 in 1he school office Some openings also exist in first sixth and eighth grades

The CCD adult discussion group will meet at 8 Sunday night in the home of Mr and Mrs J G N Bonneau

So Easton Club Pledges

$5000 The newly formed Womens

Club of Holy Cross Parish So Easton has pledged $5000 toward the building fund acshycording to an announcement made today by Mrs Arthur J L Peterson the organizations first president The pledge will be paid at the rate of $1000 per year

This pledge has been added to The Second Mile Building Fund campaign now in progress under the chairmanship of Robshyert Dray and Louis A Lyne serving as director

The Altar Boys will sponSor a cake sale Sunday May 26

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a Communion breakshyfast following 8 oclock Mass this Sunday morning Installashytion of officers will be held at a banquet following 5 oclock Mass Sunday afternoon May 26

Children of Mary will attend a Communion breakfast followshying 8 oclock Mass Sunday mornshying May 12

The annual blessing of autoshymobiles will take place at 130 Sunday afternoon May 26 in the church parking lot

ST GEORGE WESTP~RT

A Maybasket whist is planned for 8 Saturday night May 4 hi

the school hall on Route 177 PrOCeeds will benefit the school fund and table and attendance prizes will be awarded

STMARY NORTH ATTLEBORO Parishioners are planning a

testimonial honoring Msgr Ed- ward B Booth Pastor at 7

Sunday night May 26 Tickets are now available

Christians Jews Combat Racism

NEW YORK (NC)The Nashytional Confeferice of Christians and Jews has launched a nation wide educational effort to conshyfront the problem of white racism in middotAmerica agency headquarters here announced

The NCeJ has given top prl~

ority to finding ways toimpleshyment the recommendations of the National Advisory Commisshysion on Civil Disorders The commission blamed white racshyism as the underlying cause of urban unrest

In a progress re-port to the NCCJ board of trustees meeting here Dr Samuel L Gandy dean of the Ho~ard University school of religion Washington D C and chairman of the NCCJ nashytional program ad7isory comshymittee stated

NCCJs 130 professional staff members in 70 cities are curshy~ntly engaged in developing programs with police business and labor leaders parents and teachers clergy and with youth and all of the various institutes workshops and dialogues which are being conducted are emphashysizing the findings of this reshyport

Dr Gandy quoted to the board a letter to President Lynshydon B Johnson from Dr Stershyling W Brown NCCJ presishydent in which the agency head said that NCCJ embraced the commission report as a sancshytion and guideline for our efshyforts in the private sectol

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ministers nuns and lay people of all denominations pitched in here to try and make Easter a dltty of joy for the more than 600 people burned out of their homes in a waveof arson which erupted in this city following the funeral of Dr Martin Luther King

Concerned citizens of surshyrounding suburban communishyties who only a week before had participated in a massive Wa 1k for Understanding through ghetto streets respondshyedspontaneously to the need

Without anymiddot special appeal going out people of all denomshyinations call e 11 inner-city churches to ask what they could do and they were directed to the United Community Corp

NEW LEADER Sister Rosemary Markham SSS is the new Superior General of the Sisters of Social Ser-

vice a Los Angeles based community engaged in social and catechetical work with missions in Formosa and Mexico NCPhoto

Christians Jews Discuss Diamiddotlogue

SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-The question of whether JewishshyChristian dialogue should be by speech or by action was the theme that ran through the talks and discussions at a Conference on Interfaith Dialogue sponsored by Catholic Protestant and Jewshyish organizations at Seton Hall University here

Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum director of interreligious affairs for the American Jewish Comshymittee was generally in favor of the action approach saying that the dialogue must avoid beshycoming a convenient conspiracy on the part of middle-class whites to buffer themselves against the realities of the inner city

Father Edward H Flannery executive secretary of the U S Catholic Bishops Secretariat for Catholic-Jewish Relations said that while he would be the last to cut off action in the realm of social justice and charity he also felt that Jews and Christians could not effectively present a common ftont to society until they have straightened out their own affairs

Father Flannery referred to statements that the -ChristianshyJewish dialogue had died in the wake of last Junes six-day war between Israel and Arab nations He said that it was not so much a matter of its dying but of its not having been tried yet

Over Holy Thursday Good Friday and Holy Saturday more than 10 tons of food and clothing were donated and the UCC staff was swamped with the task of sorting the materiaL

With schools and church ofshyfices closed priests and nuns made their way individually and in groups to UCC headshy

quarters to help with the task of unloading cars and station wagons and sorting and distribshyuting the clothing

At least 50 offers of assistance came in to Queen of Angels pariSh in the heart of the ghettc and the callers were asked to organize relief efforts in their own communities and then gd the material 110 the UCCbull

FEEL GOOD TODAY

THt HOLY fATHER MISSION AiD TD THlaRIENTAL DHURDH

Thlsoolumns happiest readers are the men

Te date this second phase bas listed 35 gifts totaling $12000 Combined with the initial campaign the Building Fund now lists 233 donors who haVe pledged a total of $117()00 The Womens Club that was founded less than six months ago has initiated a long range program for the spiritual cll1shytural and financial efforts of the parish

In addition to the regular methods of aiding the parish finandally the women have conducted teen-age projects and have assisted the Mens Club fu

i bull various progrlms

~MANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

BRISTOL COUNTY

9G-OAY NOTIC~

TIMENOW OPEN ACCOUNT5PAYS o bull bull Interest Compounded Quarterly

Offices in

NORTH ATTLEBORO MAINSIFDIEILlDgt AnUBORO FAUS

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women and children who know they~r needed The days were busiest helping others are the happiest days of our livesbullbullbull Who needs you most Surprisingly God needs you - for inmiddot stance to help art abandoned orphan become e Godloving responsible adult Lepers need you (there are still 15middotmillion lepers In the world) blind children need y~u ~ndlo do we bull bullbull Here In New York we are your agents tellin you where the Holy Father says your help Is needed and channeling your help promptlyand Oafely to the people iii needbullbullbull Want to feel good right now Do without something you want but do not need and send the money instead for one of the needs below Youll feel good especialiy if your gift is big enough to mean a sacrifice to you This is your chance to do something meaningful for the world - its Gods world - while youre still alive

D Only $850 gives our priests and SIsters i south India enough Dapsone miracle tablebamp for 43 lepers for a yearl D For only $250 a week ($10 a month $120 a year) you can make sure that an abandoned child has food clothing a blanket and love Well send you a photo of the child you adopt tell you something about him (or her) and ask the Sistermiddotinmiddotcharge to keep you Informed

D Your stringless gifts in any amount ($5000 MEET $1000 $500 $100 $50 $25 $10 $5 $2)

MISSION will help the neediest wherever they are - in EMERGENCIES india and he Hol~ Land for instance

D Only you can make your will-and do It this THINK week to be sure the poor will have your help

OF even after youre gone Our legal title CATHOLIO YOURSELF NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION Also our priests

TOO will offer promptly the Masses you provide for

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Lawrence High of Falmouth Seeksmiddot State Track Tut~e

By PETER BARTEK Norton High Coach

The Capeway Conference track season has already begun but the handwriting is already on the wall This campaign like last years will be a battle for second place Admittedly notbing Short of a miracle can or will prevent Lawrence High of Falmouth from winning its second straight conference t rae k championship But fol Coach Jim Kalperis and his trackstersmiddot the league championship is only a Gtepping stone to the State C ham p io n - ship The goal of every athletic team in the state hi to earn the title of State Champion This is not beshyyond the grasp of the Falmouth Peier Clippers If hard Bartek work and dedication are the means to this end then Falshymouth will reign as State track champions

Success does not come easily em any endeavor and success batpound

j bullbullbull bullbull bull J bull

not come easily to the Falmouth tracksters They like all accomshyplished athletes have labored long and diligently to aChieve the measure of sUccess they now enjot lt

N1)t toomiddot many yearsato Lawshyrence High was just ~nother

sChool Participating in track But the efforts of many and the dedication of one IJ1im in parshyticular has brought immeasurshyable success to the Falmouth track scene That man is Jim Kalperis

Coach Kalperis haseombined

his knowledge af track his coaching ta1EntS aiiCl tirelessenergies middotto build a virtual track dynasty The latest noteworthy feat of middotliliitnickmen came in the forinof anotheriState title

Thisti~emiddotiS th~nivision IIi

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1

- BC~ and Norry Races Are Close 1

lbe format formiddot the St~te reo lays has been altered this ear with competition being held at four separate locations in East- em Massachusetts Weymouth captured the Division I crown the DiviSion n title went to

Andover and Williams corralled the laurels in Division IV

The meet drew ll5 schools in each of the four diviSions with over 2000 youngsters partici shypating in all classes

Enroute to its victory Falshymouth collected 51 points comshypared to runner-up Barnstable with 22Jh

Falmouth took first place in the discus high jump pole vault 440 yard run shuttle hurdles two mile run and the 880 -

With tbis type of success in state competition it is easy to see why the Capeway Confershyence title has been practically conceded to Falmouth

Sharing the spotlight with the trackmen at Falmouth are the diamondmen The Clippers who are in the thick of the loop baseball picture were given a

Mike Rainnie tossed amp no-hittel at Barnstable to gain a 1-0 vershydict

Its still much too early to predict with any accuracy

what will happen in the Cape wai baseball race But it ap- pears nomiddotclub will dominate th~t sport like Falmouth controIa track Falmouth Dartmouth Fairhaven and Barnstable are expected to fight it out through the entire season One close to the scene summed it up best when he said anyone in the league could win this thing

Close races are also developshying in the Bristol County and Narragansett Leagues

In the BCL both Bishop Fee han of Attleboro and Durfee High of Fall River encountered a few difficulties in early season play but seem to have found the range of late The clubs will meet in an important contest today in Fall River Late inning rallies have brought both clubS from the brink of defeat to vicshytory in previous outings The victor will have to be dubbed

shot in the arm last week as the team to beat

Brennan of Feehan D~est ill le~guej

Coach Tom Maccarone of Feeshyhan has had outstanding pershyfonnances from his pitching staff but the key to the Shamshyrocks success has been shortshystop Ty Blrennan Maccarone stated before the season that Brennan was his best player and perhaps the best in the whole Bristol County Judging from Brennans perfonnance to date one of the keys to stopping Feehan is stopping the classy shortstop

Coach Joe Lewis Hilltoppers play a brand of ball similar to his counterpart TOIJl Karams basketball club Make a mistake and the Fall Riverites will capshyitalize on it Durfees first two league victories came about beshycause of opponent miscues

The Hilltoppers have been playing steady ball throughout the early part of the campaign and are improving with every game Their ability 10 avoid costly mistakes eI tbeir -n

making and timely hitting has proven a winning combination

Come what may in todays contest the BCL llace has just begun

Not to be outdone by tile larger BCL and Capeway Conshyference the Narry loop is conshyducting a torrid race of its own At the end of the first week of action Seekonk and DightonshyRehoboth were tied for the top spot Following two weeks of play Gase of Swansea Dighton and Somerset were lodged In the first position The hectic lCampaign will probably find another change in the top spot at the conclusion of this weeks activity

From Cape Cod to Attleboro competition is keener this year than it bas been in many seashysons The road to the league championship is always diffJshycult to Davigate but this year it appears as though the road win be duttered wiill meR obstacles than ill quite

cone~~ lb~aders ConcllregrnmOB War In V~~It~IlJJm

NEW YORK (NC)-Stushydent government presidents and editors of campus newsshypapers at more than 500 colleges in 49 states have conshydemned the war in Vietnam as

lt immoral and unjust and said ~~ they believe they should not

~ i~~~~~~~ii ~~~b~~ shy --_ ~ and Laymen Convinced About

-- ~-__ Vietnnm Was coordirlated by shy _ -- shy ~ Rev RObert lVi Hundley lHullent

--lt--1 at Union Th~ological Snppary --J here and an associate pltISor at -- ~I th~ Congn~gationalChllrch hn ~_ Scarsdale N-Y He saiQ most

--middot1 students who signed the stateshy~-__-~~- ~~ -___- __~_~J ment havenot been active in

FINE ARTS FESTIVAL Making preparations for Fine Arts Festival at Bishop Stang High School North

Dartmouth are Paul Leahy and Margaret Polycarpo

~ Unmiddot-ty middotIs Chr-stlTs middotW-II

P Off W I E deg I pOi degI

ontl e comes cumenlca I grlmage From United Kingdom toHoly Lar-d

anti-war activities heretoforemiddot

Solicits Support

He added

Many of the student Itl~ders who have signed this sbtcment

recognize that they may be plaeshying their future caJeers illmiddotjeopshy~rdy and conceivably are riskshying punitive action being taken

against them by the capiicioWJ V~TICAN ~ITY (NC)~TO an Fathers Arthur Payton anSel~c~ve Sfdtvice Systerh~~~

I ecumenical pilgrimage oQ its Anglican who is director 01 ~ev Yi~am Sloan Cot~~1 Jr-) way to the Holy Land Pope interchurCh travel in LOndon bull aclive memjgter of Clergymiddot ~nd Paul VI recalled the words he Among its members were An- Laymen Concerned AboutbullVI~tshyspoke on his own pilgrimage glieans CatholiCs Oithodox and nam ~1dmiddota Yal~ U~Iverslt7

there in 1964 that unity is the will of Christ

He said that it was with parshyticular pleasure that we welshycome this ecumenical pilgrimshyage from the United Kingdom to the Holy LaRd You are aboUt to follow in the fOQtSteps af God made man in the country of His birth Hill mission and His blessed death for us men and for our salvation (NiceneCreed)

Your visit caUsto mind our own unforgettable pilgrimage to the Holy Places From the grotto of Bethlehem we then declared It npw appears clearly to all that the problem of unity cannot be eluded Today this will cif Christ is imposed upon our minds and demands th~t we undertake with wisdom and love every possible way of bringing all Christi~ns t6 enjoy the great benefit and supreme honor of the unity of the middotChurch

He also recalled his plea from Bethlehem that love of Christ and of the Church should inshyspire that every future moveshyment toward meeting and reshyconciliation

The pilgrimage was led by

DIOCESAN DIREC1OR First woman to serve as a diocesan director of radio-TV is Miss Patricia Smith of Pueblo Colo who is also a photo-journalist on the staff gf Dateline Colorado m cesan weekly newspaper

Protestants not only from Great Britain but from France and Germany as well

Msgi Gianfrancesco Arrighi undersecretary of the Secretashyriat for Promoting Christian Unity and Canon John Findlow representative of Anglican Archbishop Michael Ramsey of Canterbury at the Holy See accompanied middotthe pilgrims to the Vatican

Votes Moratorium On ChuDch Building

CHICAGO (NC)-The Chicago Conference of Laymen is urging Church authorities at both the archdiocesan and parish levels to declare a moratorium on 10- cal construction projects so that funds can be channeled to projshyects in the ghetto areas

The action was taken at the second annual meeting of the

ll200-member organization The 300 in attendance passed

some 50 resolutions half of them dealing with urban problems The membership said it will seek ways to alleviate white racism especially within the Catholic Church

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ch~plaJD saId The stand taken by these

y~ung men should serve to reshymmd Americans everywhere that the war in Vietnam 1s not over that American and Vietshy

namese boys are stillmiddotdying

He continued

These middotmen of conscience should be supported by eveQY priest minister and rabbi who cares about the sanctity of conshyscience

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Jesuit Comments Di~cordNormal Amon9 Catholics

RIO DE JANEIRO (NC)shylD i SC 0 r d among Catholics after the Second Vatican Council is perfectly normal but It is not normal for proshygressive or conservative Cathoshylics to refuse to accept the dishyrectives of the council and the pope Jesuit superior general said here Father Arrupe is in Brazil for 30 days to visit Jesuit houses in the country and to preside at the May 6 to 14 meeting here of all South Amershyican Jesuit provincials

He said that his visit is inshytended to adapt the order here flo the requirements of the agshygirnameJ1to or up-dating

The most important aggiorshy namento in our day he said

is that of the mind We have to ~nsider and respect human valshyues as such This was always the Churchs doctrine but now the Church is insisting on it more We ought not to consider the Churchs interest in human values as opportunism Our in tEmtion is only to serve mankin~ better)

Press Uses Images Dudng his stay here Father

Arrupe willmiddot visit 20 local(tiesWhere Jesuits are woikilg

ts B 1Ilhele are 1000 JesUl m razl~ bull

He said that he regarded as bull joke the Brazilian presss ref-

elences to him as ~the black l T Ch Pope cussion of he angmg a1middot

Because of my cassock hemiddot

tlaid I am black but I am not the Pope ~ understand that the press has to use images to exshylI)lain concepts more effectively

Honor Editor NEW YORK (NC) ~ Robert

6lmstead news editormiddot of the National Catholic Reporter weekly newspaper published in Kansas City Mo received honshyelable mention in the 1968 Paul Tobenkin Memolial Award Competition here

-

MEET IN ST LOUIS Bishop-elect Timothy J~ Harringshyth d f th Sf W 1 ft d

ton ~ orcester e leoscllfses ~ atn t ~ l~mg

ish a panel a~ the lQ68Presi dents Conference of the Nashytional Council of cat~olic yene~l

Role of CouDcil The parish will retairi its role

as a community of worship whose members go out ihto the world and bring it theeurohristjan

message Bernatd Lyons Ghishycago public relations ~onsultant saidmiddot

The pa~ish on the other hand mustmiddot become part of the world

alound it a wHr1e$S to the whole community and fake on roles not in relation only to -its

GUIDING CHURCH IN UNITED STATES More than 200 members of the hierarchy participated in the decisions of the annual Spring meeting of the National Conference

Predict Important Authorities Emphcisixe

WASHINGTON (NC)-Three members but to the world in authorities on parish life have agreed here that the parish basic organiz~tion iil the Church will have to undergo some lmportant changes if the ChUlch is goingto meet th~ needs of societyin the 20th censhy tury

But just how the parislt is going to change ~s far from setshytied they ~onceqed in a dis

which it exists Father John Corriga~ of this city a directozlt of the Nationalmiddot Liturgical Con ference asserted

Whatever it does the parish must becomemiddot a vital force in the cOlJlrnunity around it Father Geno Baroill execu~ive secretary Washington archdi

ocesan Office ~f Urpan Affairs declared

RIot ComparlmiddotsoDmiddot

Father Baroni whose work blings hini into constant contactmiddot with Negro problems in WaSh- laymen will inhibit soCial ac- ington saw~ astriking par~illel tion but added later this is a between the Churchs needs and risk wltirth taking

-those of thebiack ghetto Right now~ he observed - one of the mos~ urgent prob Society to Consider lems in the ghetto is that Of Sh fmiddot

community organization We 5 emnary I t arll learl1ing that pe~ple ri~t be CARTHAGENA CNC) _ The

cause they have beel- cut o~t ofSocieiy of the Precious Blood meaningful participation in so- ciety

In the ~hurch laymen have been cut out of this participa tion also They dont riot but they dont really concern them selves with the concerns of the Church unle~s thy ~ave t~i~ sense of partlclpatlcm he saId

New Resndemlce For US PIiDests

ROME (NC)-A new resident house for American priests working In the offices of the Roman Curia (the Churchs censhytral administrative offices) or on assignment in Rome for the US bishops has been opened to provide adequate economical lodgings and community surshyroundings

The residence called Villa Stritch after the late Samuel Cardinal Stritch of Chicago is composed of two apartment comshyplexes and is designed to meet the immediate needs of US priests already at work in Rome and to anticipate future housing needs as internationalization of the Roman Curia continues

In addition to American$ resshyident in Rome the villa is also expected to house priests on special assignments for the bishshyops in Rome bishops who come to Rome for work on var~ous

Church commissions or otherVatican offices or for such events as the synod of bishops and ma-Jor congresses In short it is hoped that the new villa wilL

will study the possibilities and implications of moving the or ders main theological school flOm St Charles Seminary here in Ohio to a university campus or urban center and of buildingmiddot an adequate program at St QJ1arles The Carthagena SChOt

has been the societys maJor seminary for over 100 years

Major superiors and middotelected delegates representing the soshycietys Cincinnati province voted to fOlm a committee to carry out the study during a provincial chapter meeting held at St Charles at which modernizing the training of candidates for the priesthood in the society Vas tqe chief subject of discussion

middotA report of the meeting in- dicated that the delegates were aware of trends in the Church 1-way from comparative isloationmiddot of seminary establishments to university campuses and urban centers

SPECIAL RATES FOR

Smiddot I O dcho0 utings an Picnics

of Catholic Bishops in St Louis last week An enormoUis amount of homework on position papers was approved ~

the Bishops NC Photo

I see the parish councils and their recognition of freedom asneceSsai-y to do this he added

Worth Risk They agreed they sha~e abull

feiling opound un~asin~ss _middotaboti~ these cOuncIls relatively new amQJ1g Cathol~cs pa~icula~lY their attitude t~ward SOCI~ issues

d Father Baroni sal he has ~

leery feeling about parishcouncils He declared there is

the danger that conservative

contribute to increased racial understanding and involvement

fur the people of the diOcese

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Lyons author of th~ book middotParish Councils - Renewin the Parish Community said be

middotwas somewhat more optiniistici I donit think we are going to

solve these problems by 10~~1 at the dangers exclusively hie commented

Diocese to Discuss C~m~issi~n Rep~rt

LANSING (NC) - Catholics thoughout t~e Lansing diocese will participate in forums and home discussion groups 1as~ on the report of the National Acf visory Commission on Civil Disshyorders The program which begaa with public forums in six citie on April 29 was planned ~

middot three diocesanmiddot agencies-the Ofshyfice of Social and Community Service the Office of Renewal Through Vatican II and the adult education division of tne Education Department It was initiated in response to an appeal made by Bishop Alexshyander Zaleski The day following the death of Dr Martin Luther King Bishop Zaleski asked dishyocesan directors to plan an imshymediate program designed to

meetmg of heBIShops n erence WIt ISop e e~ros be a center of communi~y life CONTACT MANAGER - LINCOLN PARK of BrowI)svIlle Texas and fOtmiddotmer chancellor of the Fall for bishops arid priests with spe- 9996984 636-2744 ~iver Di~~~~lt __~gt -cilla~~gnrn~iitS~~o~~~ ~ Oc)QI~OC~)OQCIOC)oOOOCgtoc)OQltjIOcXllOOOCgtOC)oOC~)OIL)QOCgtOCPOoO

Page 11: 05.02.68

11

II ~sAfL~CfiO Ik

Aid to 5t~

THE ANCHORshyThursday May 2 1968

Portland Prelote Stresses Crisis

In Education PORTLAND (NC) - Co- )0

adjutor Bishop PetermiddotL Ger- BATON ROUGE (N2)-Tho ety apostolic administrator Louisiana AFL-CIO app Dved tl

of the Portland diocese des- ~ resolution calling for s ~ supshycribed the grave and serious 1 bull port to children attendi 3 nonshycrisis in regard tQ finances and c middot~lmiddot ~ i public schools at its COil ~ntion personnel in the field of Cath- ~H 1 here oUc education at a press con- l~ The resolution endar d the ference here proposal that tuition supple-

While affirming the desira- ments for the teaching oj nOiF bility of Catholic education the religious subjects bc paid Maine bishop pointed to the toward the education of chill-gt serious problems in financing dren regardless of race creed and staffing a system of schools or religion in state alproved which aims at providing a Cath- non-public schools which me~ olic education for all children all the requirements of law whose parents desire it He Emile Comar executive ~ middotnoted both the rising costs of rector of the Louisiana reder2lshyeducation and the dlOp in voca- tion Citizens for EducHtionllll tions and in the number of Reli- Freedom said It is gmtifyin(l gious available for teaching that the state AFL-CIO in tho

Bishop Gerety n~ted During adopted resolution recognizecll the past ten rears six Catholic __ -_~scgtbull~- Jf the need of parents with ct~ schools in this state alld 11 dren in non-public schools

Catholic elementaly schools CARDINAL J~EGER IN AFRICA The retired ~rchbishop of Montreal Paul-Emile Tuitions continue to dse ant1 have closed their doors During Cardmal Leger who has dedicated his Iif e to work with the poor in Africa is continu- taxes are becoming increasingJy41 the same period we have scen II t th h fl k f d f higher and the combination eithe enrollment in our Catholic a y mee mg WI IS oc or ISCUSSIons 0 conditIons m the DIocese of Yaounde Cam- the two has placed a lremeiF schools decrease by 25 per cent eroun NC Photo dous financial burden on thill

middot~i~~~i~e~~~~~Ct~I~~O~Cmiddotard-nal Leger Works for Afmiddotr-ca Lepers -n~~nt of the states populashymg statements Tbe labor organizations resa-

Expand Quality lution noted The contributioJ)fl

The middotsystem be Seeks to Bring SpirituQI Material Aid which these schools havecannot ex- made panded beeause of staffing to the state have long been ree problems financi~l deuromands YAOUNDE (NC)-lt is said The fact that he left behipd COmmodate himself to the new ognized by the public and~middot

and theincreasing costs of pres- that when Paul Emile Cardinal one of the most important dJ- environment and to be ready public officials ent day education Leger former arehbishop of oceses in the world does not fig) to I work effeetivelr It added that the parents bl

Schools must be consoUdated Montreal arrived at the lepro- ure in their thinking but theymiddot The eardinal is already famil- these tuition supported schooJJ wherever hldicated for maxi- s~rium of Nianing in Senega appreciate the sacrifice that is iar with the specific plOblcms of have repeatedly demonstrateflJ mum use of the available Reli- last Dec IS the lepers looked involvedmiddot in leaving his nfltive the lepers villages He thinks their support of both public ani I gious persoJmel at their fingers to see if a mir- country and adapting to a Dew that they need good pharmacies non-public education to the

We mustmiddot concentrate on ex- acle was going to happen and environment and is concerned with CHing for benefit of all Louisiana eh~ cellence in the schools we have they were going w be instan- Cardinal Leger has put him- all types of sicknesses He sees dren Where this is not possible the taneously cured It was in fact self at the service of Archbishop a need for wells powelhouses bishop said the schools in- the first time that the lepers JeanZoa of Yaounde He is food suppliers and medicinesmiddot of Brotherhood Lackvolved will have to be closed had seen a cardinal learning one of the languages various kinds

We must greatly evpand the ri1l~ cardinal however through of Cameroun the one that is Menace to Peace~ Men Not Outcasts S(l()pe and quality of our reli- middotworks of chari1y has for a long most widely spoken in the reshy VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pe~gious education proglams reach- time been concerned withmiddot the middotgion He thinks that jcent wiJl What makes the cardinal parshy is still menaced by questions laquofing out to all age groups lepers M~~y of the houses in take two years for him lamp ale- tkularly admired is that he reshy

prestige and an insufficient senstlBishop Gerety announced the leprosanum here at Yaoul)de gards the lepers as men and not of human brotherhood PQ~that he is creating a task force have been built through his - as outcasts He knows that many Paul VI told thousands of isi~to study religious education gifts The same is tgtrue of sev- Pope Asks Respect lepers are severely mutilated tors gathered in St Pete

plograms in the diocese He eral leprosaria of the Ivory For Human Rights and Cfln no longer take their SQuare for a Sunday noon blesvshywill ask the group he said to Coast Dahomey and Camerouf place in society It is because of ingmake reco~mendations ~on- The cardinl i6 still in the VATICAN CITY (NC)--Jt is middotthis that he seeks to bring them

eerning how the limitedre- stage of making contacts in the vain to proclaim h~man rights material and spiritual aid Speaking from a window ovei shysources of the diocese can best three leprosaria here unless everythlllg IS done ~o He also gives thought to the looking the square Popc P~u1 be used to ploovide an effec- Cardinal Leger does not want ensure the duty of respecting prevention of the disease If cleclared We must support willi tive religious education for the to impose either his aid or him- them by all people everywhere leprosaria are well organized it our hopes that cause (of peace) total community of adults lind self on anyone He has said re- l1ld for all people Pope Paul will perhaps be possible to wage which so many desire and proshychildren peatedly that he does not want VI declared In a letter to the In- a campaign to eradicate the mote with a sense of impartiality

He said he will also ask for to be a burden and tl1at he ternational Conferenee on Hu- disease completey and justice with true love ofi reeommenltlations on the best wants to be regarded as a simple man Rights meeting in Tehran The cardinals realism aston- freedom and of respect for su1ishy

fering peoplesuse of the dioceses Religious priest Iran ishes many Africans who like personnel Disinterested Help The lettel signed by the Pope to live from day to day and who

~-------------bull That is why the Africans ad- was sent to Father Theodore do not like their customs to be mire him Moslems and Chris- Hesburgh CSC president of upset The cardinal understands tians agree that his is an exam- Notre Dame University and head that the Africans must be shoWn pIc of disinterested help that is of the papal delegation to the that aid is not directed at deshynot often seen in Africa ongress The meeting is being stroying their customs but at

held on the 20th anniversary of bringing them a better standard the United Natio)ls Declaration of living

Workers Charges of Human Rights and in conshyjunction with the International Reject CelibacyDenied in Germany Human Rights Year

ROERMOND (NC)-TwcllyshyBONN (NC)-Charges by the The papal letter dec111red one young Dutch priests havewomens branch of the Indian With all men of goodwill we told Bishop Petrus Moors ofYoung Christian Workers shall follow with great interest this Netherlands See that they(YCW) that living and working ~his conference in Tehran which can no longer accept the plicstlyconditions for Indian girls means to formulate and prepare a celibacy obligationtraining as nurses in West Gershy program of measures to be taken

many were unsatisfactory were on the prolongation of this Hushy denied here man Rights Year

The Rev Hubert Debatin Racial discrimination raises soProtestant minister who initi shy

many troubles social injustice F L COLLINS amp SONSated a program of nursing economic misery and ideologicaltraining for girls from Indias oppression so many revolts that INCORPORATED 1937Kerala state saId that the Indishyrecourse to violence as a meansan government had ordered an

investigation of the complaints to right these wrongs to human The Indian embassy here howshy dignity is a grave temptation ever refused to comment (The Development of Peoples)

Rev Mr Debatin said he visshyON CD HOARD Alexandshy Ited the embassy and told offi shy

er P Tureaud Sr chief cials that the charges wer~ completely false Despite thecounsel for the Louisiana no comment by the embassy

branch of the National Assoshy it is reliably repOrted that emshyciation for theAd~ancement bassy officials did visit several of Colorelti People tNAACP) hospitals and questioned Indian

girlS about th~ir living and beeame the first Negro elecshyworking conditions ted to the Catholic tJniver~ The niinist~r iJaidthe Indian

sity board of trustoos NC yew will be asked to WithdrawPhoto ~ alleamplatioNi~

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12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 2 1968

C~~e$ ~~Ergy Role in Sreg~Hrch F9f ~~ Crisis Sc~~tm(ln

By Msgr George G Higgins The bighop of a middle-siood eastern diocese recently

gnnounced at ceremonies memorializing Martin Luther King Jr that the diocese will spend a substantial portion of its annual Development Fund to improve the condition ef the Negro bullbullbull The money poslible that even those Cahoshyhe was at pains to empha- lies (and Protestants) who are size will not be gpent pater- most vigorously opposeq to

wilistically but in close 00- clerical involvement in social operation with local Negro and economic issues are nevershyleaders He said that his com- theless in fevor of using church mitffiimt wi 11 funds as seed money to develshylTeceiVe the op projects for the benefit of bacJcing of the the poor in general and for areas Catholics poor Negroes in partiCUlar I make tbisDisconcerting Fact ~ o m mit - I would hope of course that ment he as- this might prove to be the case aert1d confi- but only time will tell lIIent that our Meanwhile the fact that Catholic people such a high percentage of Cathshyshare this love olies and protestants are 00

-m Ii d concern record as being opposed to That the bishop the middotchurches getting involved felt it necessary in political and social issues is to make the latter statement for rather disconcerting to put it the record might lead one ~ as mil~ly as possible suspeet that in point of factmiddot be I say tliisas one who can symshyantiCfpated that some of hi$ pathizewith thoseCatholicsor Catholic people would object to Protestants or Jews who object his 0 decision and was mereIi to certain types of clerical inshyWying to neutralize their op~ volvement which either ignore mtion in advance or to put it the complexities of the political morecrudely was trying to ~rocess or tend to oversimplify beat them to the punc~ sO to the application of moral prinei-Bjpeak pIes to complex social and ecoshy

I Expert Opposition pomic problems or finally tend Be that as it may a recent to leave the impression that

ampallup Poll on the attitude of Clerics have a monopoly on the Cathdlics 3lld Protestants with regard to the involvement of their churches and their clergy in political and social issues would seem to suggest thatshylIIlless his diocese is the rare exceptl(~n that proves the rule -~he bIShop can exp~t a cershyiau~ amount of 0PPoSIb~)D from a slzable JIllnonty of his Cathshyooc people

lftY-Seven per cent of Cathshyclies res~ndmg m the Gallu~ survey said that the churcti~~ should not get involved with 35 per cent statmg that t~e d1~rch~~ sho~d express SOCIal enS pO~~Ical Vle~s

~gn Icantly l~ was found ~at more Catholics than Pro~-

Virtue of political prudence or have been granted ethical inshysights thatmiddot have been denied to other mortals

S~rious Obligation It is one thing however to

demand that clerics stay within the limits of their o~ compeshytence in the political order and quite another thing to try to muzzle them or to deny that they have any role at all to play in the field of public policy In the case of civil rights for exatitple they havemiddot a serious

Gbligation to teach the truth as they see it

To do so in any meaningful woay tlley must at times move beyond the realm of general

0Stants thmk ~hat the ~hurlt~esprinciples into the area of spe- should n~ get ~volved ~n soc~al and polItlcal Issues Fifty-~wo lPOerlledcefnt of the Protesta~ts P avored mvolvment whIle 42 ~er cent disagreed

Hadden Study Contrarirwise however a

mudy released during the same week in which middotthe Gallup findshymgs were made public found

ntat in all caSes Protestantsmiddot were more vigorous in their opshyposition to social action by clergymen thaI) either Roman Catholics or Jews

The latter study directed by ~effrey K Hadden a sociologist at Western Reserve University in Cleveland was summarized In ~onsiderabledetail by Edwaro R iFiske in an article entitled -Cl~rgy and Civil Rights in the editorial section of the Sunday Ap~il 21 issue of the New York linles

Since the Gallup and HadGen Alrveys dealt specifically with the right of the clergy and the ehurches to speak o~t on social and political issues (civil rights tor example) and not on the role of the churches in financing programs aimed at improving U1t ~ot of Negroes their findshyings do not necessarily m~ ofoou~E that the bishop referrect to a~ove will encounter oppe-

cifies~ even at the risk of a~tagshyonizing those Catholics who disshyagree ith them

This does not mean that clershyies or other representatives of official church bodies should shortcircuit the political procshyess by trying to force their own solutions on the body politic by means of heavy-handed authorshyitarian edicts

If they were to shirk this reshysponsibility or run awoay frOm this challenge for fear of antagshyonizing a minority (or for that matter eyen a majority) of their people they would be unshyworthy of their calling

-This having been said howshyever itshould be noted that clericS and other representatives of offlCiilI church bodies alSo

have an obllgation to keep their methods of teaching under conshystant review

Wo~ CUt Out We cannot automatically as-middot

Sume in other words that all of those who object to clerical involvement in political and soc~lissues are necessarily in

HEADS NCEA Bishop Raymond J 9allagher of Lafayette Ind was elected president general of the Natshyional Catholic Educational Association at the associa- tions 65th annual conven- tion in San Francisco NC Photo

Venerate Fatima Statue in Brazil

LISBON (NC)-Manuel Cardshyinal Goncalves Cerejeira patri- arch of Lisbon imd Bishop Joao Pereira Venancio of Leiria whose diocese includes the Marshyian shrine of Fatima returned here after participating in threeshyday ceremonies in Brazil honorshying Our Lady of Fatima

They t~ok the statue of the -Pilgrim Virgin of Fatima with them to Brazil

At Sao Paulo they took part in Portuguese - Brazilian Communshyity Day celebrations At Inhangshyabau and at Rio de Janei1G thousands joined them in ven- erating the statue

The patriarch and Bishop Venshy

ancio were accompanied in Brazil by the rector of the Fat-middot i m a shrine Msgr Antonio Borges

_ sitiOJifrom any slgnificantnuili middot te~ which they caiiunder- pany a mernber of the Jew-middot

ber ~f his people for usin~ cii- stand and absorb jish fAith has neen elected GCeSaIl f~nds for the economic -Ifthis sho~d prove to be the to in bOardof +-~ t- and~ ~OCIal bettel1nent 01 the case we have our work cut out ~ bull wu~ ~ W

Wack citizens of his communitlT ~r~ in the montha ftbat lie the CaU~hc VnlverampliyNe ~~ other words it is quite aheiid middotPboto

~ ~

bad faith It may be in the case of some

r of tb~m at le9st we are at fault TRUSTEE BenJamin T ~ in the sense that we havent Iearned how to communicate the Rome president of aWaah Go~l meSsage to them in i n g ton construction oom-

The Servant Queen IiJ the Constitution on the Church we find the testimony of

Sacred Scripture and the Church Fathers combined with more recent pronouncements by the popes Mary the Mother of God an4 of the Redeemer was united to Him by a close inen soluble bond and waS accorded a special role in the mystery Qf the middotIncamiddotrnate Word that is in the economy of salvation

Whenmiddot Mary uttered the words of her Fiat she made a ~l eommitment to God so that He could carry out His de- slgus in middothermiddot Mary never took back hell ad of total surrender Dot even on the road to CalvarY lFrom that firstmiddot moment she devoted herself wholly to serving DM only her heavenly Fashyther and the Incarnate Word but also the whole human race lin the llncarnation Our Blessed Mother first brought Christ to the world Anell that is precisely what she would have 70U do aUmiddot your life-bring Christ to the world

Ev~n after the AScenslon she loyally and steadfastly camiddotrried out~~r role aCting as spirit1lI mother to the beloved disciple anli ~~ ne~rn Cl1urch~ With good reason then we can say tha~~e wJole life of the Lords humble handtnaid~from the moment IIhewas porn to the present-is one of loVing seZvice to her cltildren what gzeater example and what ~tei model could y~ chqose to imitate in Oilder to fulfill your ta~k as a Christian called to~ove and -to serVe your poor 8iKl sUffering bro~ers arqupd the world

You must DOW take over Mars task~ You are the door through which Christ enters the world You muSt receive the Lon and bear Him in 70ur heart sO thaamp He rnA7 beeo~e the heartmiddot ofmiddot your life Then His love Jiis goodne~ Dis pity for the multitude middotwill shine through you into the world Then He will smile through your eyes Then He will help with your hanels Then He will comfort with your goodness Then He will relive in your pers~n His life of long ago for the sake of todayS desperate humanity

In this the month dedicated to the Mother of the church show your love for her by making her task your task by sacrificing to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith-to help those of her children who are in such need

SAlLVATioN and SERviCE lUe the work of The Soclet7 il~r ~~ Propagati~n of th~ Faith Please cut Gut this column llInd sen~ your of~ering to Right Reverend EdwardT OMeara Nationll-ll Director 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 Or directly to your local Diocesan Director BU Rev Msgr Raymond TConsid~e 3611 North Main Street Fall River Massachusetts e~7~omiddot

DAUGHTERS middotDf ST PAUL-combine a middotlife of prayer and action Bringers of the Gospel Messhysage to souls everywhere by means of personal contact Pauline Missionaries labor in 30 Nations Members witness to Christ in a unique missionshypropagation of the printed Word of God The Sisters write illustrate print and bind their own publications and diffuse them among people of all creeds races and cultures Young girls 14-23 interested in this vital Mission may write to

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13 New Jersey Grand Jury Absolves Police of Deaths During Rioftong

NEWARK (NC) - A special and charged it with lcHrity m Essex Cotmty grand jury inves- permitting some of lots material tigating the deaths of 28 people to i1all into private hands which during rioting in this city last misused il Summer absolved po1dce laquol Reporting on the deaths it blame iO the deatbs in a pre- found that three were not conshysentment which rebuked an nected with the rioting that anti-poverty agency for failure eight resulted from wounds inshyto cooperate willi law enforce- curred while participating in ment agencies criminal acts that nine of those

The presentment was issued killed were apparently innocent after the jury had heard more bystanders that two apparently than 100 witnesses over an resulted from sniper fire that eight-week period It said there two were from accidental was insufficient evidence to shooting and that one could not warrant indictment in any of be classified the cases presented to it al- Another special grand jury is though an earlier trial resulted now being paneled to carry out hi the conviction of a man for an investigation of Newarks fatally shooting a woman municipal government This inshy

In the final analysis the vestigation was recommended ~ury concluded the responsi- by the governors commission bility for the loss of life and which reported a pervasive property that is the inevitable feeling of corruption in Newshyproduct of rioting and mass ark lawlessness cannot be placed upon those whose duty it is to enforce and protect the freedom Convention lliead of our society

Courage Restraint N E MonsignorIt rests squarely upon the

MANCHESTER (NC)-Msgrhoulders of those who for euroolin A MacDonald presidentwhatever purpose incite and of the Manchester diocese senateparticipate in riots and the of priests has been selected asflouting of law and order in chairman of the national con-complete disregard of the rights stiiutional convention of theand well-being of the vast mashyproposed U S priests councilsjority of our citizens organization 110 be held May 20Although the presentment and 21 in Chicago leveled some small criticisms at

I1he monsignor earlier hadpolice actions it generally upshybeen elected as the Bostonheld the work of law enforceshyprovince delegate to a 29-memshyment officers and this was in ber ad hoc steering committeecontrast to the report of the for the convention When ill wasNew Jersey (()vernors Comshydecided 110 limicent the steeringmission on Civil Disorder commimiddotlltee 110 8 members thewhich was highly critical of the

police JJlQIlsignor was elected to this group then ohosen as chairmanWith some exceptions the

jury said police both local and Msgr MacDonald said the state together with National purposes of the proposed NashyGuardsmen acquitted themselves tional Federation of Priests with courage and restraint in Councils are to promote priestly the early stages of the riot brotherhood by faciJi1ating comshy

munion among priests councilsPoor Judgment to provide a forum for the disshyThe grand jury said the poshycussion of pastoral matters tolice were handicapped by lack enable priests councils to speakof training appropriate equipshywith a common representativement effective direction and voice to proD101e and collabshyexperience in dealing with the orate in programs of pastoraltype of situation in which they research and action to impleshywere involved ment the reriewal of priestlyThe jury did say that in the life to provide the means forlater stages of the disturbances priests councils united nationshythere were examples of poor ally to cooperate with the tityjudgment excessive use of fireshythe ~eligious the bishops andarms and D manifestation of with others in addressing thevindictiveness that eannot be needs of the Church in the modshytolerated in law enforceD1ent ern World and to do whateverpersonnel is necessary to carry out theseAD10ng the recommendations purposesit made was one that looting be

Members of the Priests Senshyeffectively controlled at its ate of the Diocese of Fall Riverearliest manifestations It also have sent suggestions regardingcalled for the improveD1ent and the proposed organization toupdating of equipment and said Monsignor MacDonaldthe use of chemicals and nonshy

lethal gases should be explored and considered Priests Paid SllEme

The jury called for improveshyment in police-community relashy Salary as Laborers tions and said there is no place PARIS (NC) - The averagefor abusive language or ill salary of priests in the Paris treatment of any group of citi shy region is about the saD1e as thatzens Like the governors COD1shy of an unskilled laborer accordshymission it deplored the use of ing to figures contained in thepersonally-owned weapons by first public budget report of thepolice Paris archdiocese

The anti-poverty agency crit shy The archdiocesan operatingicized was Newark Legal Servshybudget the report showed isices Project a branch of the $440000 a year most of whichUnited Community Corp which is for the salaries of 384 nonshyhelps ghetto residents with legal parish priests more than a thirdproblems

retired This indishyCharges Laxity of whoD1 are cates an average of less than $1-The jury accused it of failing 000 a year to cooperate in post-riot invesshy

Parishes pay direclly the 600tigations said the character of it taken were parish priests but their base salshystatements had

inadequate and ary is only about $50 a monthunprofesSional Honorariums for baptisms marshyriages and special Masses add

Receives Admiral about an equal amount to this VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope sum but pcrivate requests for

Paul VI received in audience Masses are declining Parish Adm Joseph Edet Akinwale priests send to the archdiocese Wey of the Nigerian Navy who the honorari~s of Masses they had told a press conference that coannot celebrate In 1964 this he hoped to present a message amounted to about 22000 Masses from the Nigerian government a year now it is only about three on the Biafra siiuatiolL ~middotfourmiddot thousand~

r THE ANCHORshyThursday May 2 1968

I

Schoo~s Exp~ore

Dual E~l~~rMJcemlt LOUISVILLE (NC)-Catholie

school officials here are trying to work out dual enrollment agreeD1entS with public schoo officials in two locations

If agreement is reached stushydents at Flaget High School here and at Bethlehem Academy may benefit next Fall from the proshygram

Moves toward the dual enrQllshyment concept were made possishyble when the Kentucky attorney general issued an opinion which said in effect that public schools might get state financial assistance for students enrolled part-time in public schools

Under the plan students in private schools could take some subjects in public schools and others in their own schools

Famiddotther Thomas P Casper Louisville diocesan superintendshyent of schools said he is submitshyting dual enrollment proposalpoundNEWMAN CLUBS MEET At oonferenee of Newman to the Louisville Bardstown andClubs from area colleges representatives of Fall River Dishy Nelson County boards of educa~

reese included from left Walter La Rosa Our Lady ill Mt tion Carmel parish Seekonk a student at Bristol Community While action on the roposaw College Lydia Rocha St Michaels Fall River BCC Rev is up U the public boards-the

attorney generals opinion grantvHarold J Wilson BOC Newman Club chaplain Morgan permission but does not force

Childs St Patricks Falmouth SMTL ootion-Father Casper said he if very pleased that there are possibilities open now for deshyveloping dual enrollD1entReturns to Moscow Final form of any dual enroll shyment effort is still to be decided

Fr Dion Assumption College President But one such method treated in the attorney generals opinion

Named Apostolic Administrator is the leasing of space in Cathshyolic schools by public schoom

WORCESTER (NC) - Father a visiting Russian churchman and the operation of this spaceLouis F Dion AA president here Father Bissonnette is now as public school classroomsof AssuD1ption College here will academic dean at Assumption resign his post June 30 to be- College COD1e apostolic administrator in Father Dion had to wait more New Jersey Bishopthe Soviet Union and chaplain than three years after Father to American Roman Catholics Bissonnettes expulsion before Asks United Action in Moscow obtaining a Soviet visa enabling ATLANTIC CITY (NC) shy

Father Dion held the same him to go to Moscow via Paris Bishop George H Guilfoyle of posts in Russia from 1959 to in January 1959 Camden issued a call for united 1961 He served as assistant to Father Dion said he is looking action on the part of all of WJ the president and registrar of forward to his return to the to 36Sist our fellow man as Assumption College from 1962 Moscow post He bad not specifshy he helped dedicate a HUD1aJ until his appointment as presi- ically requested the assignment Resources Center aiD1ed at job dent ill June 1964 he said but it was offered to develpoment for some of this

He replaces Father Eugene him and he accepted it willingly resort areas 50000 poor LaPlante AA who returns to Powers of Bishop This nation has made treshythe Assumptionist Fathers The duties of chaplain Father mendous strides in the fields opound AD1erican province for reassign- Dion explained are not con- science industry business and ment after a three-year term fined to American Catholics medicine he said It is shameshy

ful that in view of all this proshySeventh to Serve living in Moscow They include gress we still have millions ofFather Dion is the seventh he said the entire foreign colshypeople who live in poverty andAmerican priest-all Assump- ony - the diplomatic corps wanttionists-to serve in Moscow un- newspaper personnel and tour-

Bishop Guilfoyle said theder the terms of the 1933 Roose- ists Camden diocese will contributevelt-Litvinov agreement estab- Since there ar(~ no European

$1000 to the new center to belishing diploD1atic relations be- priests-or priests of any other nationality-in Moscow serving used for whatever program the

tween the U S and the USSR in the capacity of chaplain he board of directors decides hi He was replaced in 1961 by said the American chaplain needed Father Joseph Richard AA ministers to the spiritual needs who served four years in the of Catholics attached to the post staffs of embassies and legations

His iD1D1ediate predecessor accredited to the Soviet governshy FAIRHAVENwas Father Georges Bisslgtnnette ment AA who was expelled in The post of apostolic adminisshy LUMBERMaTch 1955 by the Soviet gov- trator Father Dion said inshy

COMPANYernment in retaliation for U S volves all the powers and funcshyrefusal to prolong the visa of tions of a bishop except ordina~

tion and consecration of bishops Complete line It is assigned to a priest usuallyAtlanta Archdiocese Building Materials in areas where there is DO

Joins Equal Housing hierarchy who is then dimiddotrectly responsible to the Holy See 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVENATLANTA (NC)-The lllChshy Father Dion expects to arrivediocese of Atl~lnta has joined in Moscow in early August he 993-2611more than 50 metropolitan At- said

lan-ta organizations and indi- viduals as co-spo~sors of the Atlanta Metropoli tan COmmit- bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull~

tee on Equal Opporunity ill Housing

HThe objective of the confer- BISAILLONS ence will be primarily educashytional Father Noel C Burtenshy GARAGEshaw ehancellor of the arch- diocese and member of the execu-tive committee said 24-Hour Wrecker

He added We expect this dialogue and interChange will establish middotnecessary communicashy 653 Washington Street Fairhaven tion and provide Some answers 994-5058~ the housing problems facing reater Atlanta bull

Thanks Catholics For Refugee Aid

VATICAN - CITY (NC)-NearMsgrEllis Relates Hist~ry middotmiddotEastmiddotwelfare work of U S Cathshyolics has been praised by Pope Paul VL0+ Training for Priesthood

Such a message in the Popes By Rt Rev Msgr Jobs S Kennedy

The publication of a book by Monsignor John Tracy Ellis founder and dean of a new school of American Cath~

lti)lic churchhistory is always a weloome event This is true even when the book is among his minor works SuCh is Essays in Seminary Educoshytion (Fides Notre Dame Inshydiana 46556 $595) amiddot 001shylection of papers and address-C2S There is some repetition in Chese essays which were preshyared for vari shyeus occasions But it does not illessen the imshyact of a book which shows us n keen critical in tell i g ence brought to beal OIl a subject of bas i c imporshylance The hand rDf the historian iIs seen throughshy~t the book The first three essays are specifically historical

The firsi deals with the trainshylog or preparation of priests from the apostolic age to the ~ncil of Trent the second with the same subject from the time of Trent to ~ 1960s The tird is todevoted diocesan theological seminaries in the American Middle West 1811shy1889

A survey such 00 the author Makes in the two opening chap $ers is of especial interest beshyeause it brings out tile implausshyible but incontestable fact that b about the fimiddotI9t 1500 years of its existence the Church did DOt have anything even regem- bling a standard ~m of edushy_tion for the priesfil100d

Monastie Schools fttere were no special schoobl

lor the clergy before the time Of

The medieval universitieQ were foundedmiddot by the Church amd the clery p~yed ~ im ~rtant part m them But theyWei b d al ~ ed ti e y no means I e Jormiddot ushy(l3 on for the pnesthood SInce2he the I g I kemelyq 1~~~y~middotou~emiddot~~U Iersi~ of P middotkmiddotlmiddot5middot6

-Y arlS n ovv or ~(fears to complete thedoCtOriite ill theology Hence few priestsbenefited f-rom 4--

~ UDlversI Effective Response

lhe POr estate of the clergy~ glarmgly a~parent in the ens of the Renalsance and the Bef~rmation and this middotis prj shy

manly llttutablello educashytional defiCiency And evea hen the reforming Council of lIrent was launched it took 1~ ~rs ~efore a dec~ on clerical educa~on was achieved and a long tlme thereafter before its proVISIonS were carned out in practice

Monsignor Elliss treatment of

ticularly the institutions founded by St Vincent de Paul and Jean-Jacques Olier

These men win the authors praise for their effective reshygponseto a vital need But he does IlQt hesitate to lay to them ~e responsibility for some of the anti-intellectual bias which chamcterizea too many seminashyli13 in subsequent centuries

incredible NWIIlber In the United States some

quite ancient history was reshylived as the bishops of new dioceses had cleriea schools of sorts in their own homes But in the days of the very first bishop John Oarroll a real

had b - -bli hed semmary een - 9when the Sulpichms came to Baltimore in 1791 and founded St Marys

Later developmen1s are sumshymarized by Monsignor Ellis with attention to the various types of seminaries and the growth m numbers from 50 in 1668 to 571 iIn 1964 Thi6 last incredible number is indicative 0If tile regre~le proliferation Which led to needless duplicashytiOD inadequacy in quality and waste of resources

A test of middotthe exeellence of American seminaries is proshyposed by the atrtbor how many men of enduring reputation ba~ flhey produced The anshyswerJs that tIhe fteonl is not distinguished And much of the lelIlainder of the book is given 110 probing for reasons m exshyplanation Of this

Routine Teaeldllamp at Augustine whomiddotbecame Ihi Anierican ~mi~ry of -ilJhop of Hippo in 396 His 1be ft refleCted _ national

_

LlIFE MEMBERS Msgr John E Boyd chaplain left and Dominick Maxwell Jr right Grand Knight of Fall River Council 86 of the Knights of Columbus i~vest Jerome D Foley and Dr Joseph Carvalho as life members

~

Rural Ireland Charge Farmers Lack Formal Training

In Agriculture ROSSLARE (NC)The need Wbat chance had the boy who

for priests to be more involved left school at 14 of making the in social problems was stressed grade at farming ~he excepshyby 9peakers at the annual meetshy tional lads made it The rest are

~ e9tablished and mairitaineCi~ - In the future he said until 4- disregard cif inteli~tualqua1itY this is rectified Ninety-five nAr ~ his own household and had In ~y instances ~ty mem- ~ imitators ~gt bera ere apPOint~~ t~eir ~t of e5ent-day farmers Thereafter came the mona~f)le positi - middotth m rd io ~v~ had IlQ post-primary edushySchools initiated by St BenediCt ons WIlifo ~ga r cation NinetYofive per cent ofin thmiddot th proper qlla Ications MuCh of farmers have had middotno formal esnr cent~ the~ fllie teaching was rolltine and~rting in middotligrlcultllredr~ and-middot eP1scqp~ Scboo~ an~ dun Collateral reading _n6t middot~JFlWle Awayampnally themiddot medieval UDlvenu- middot~~d lib ties middot - ~ampt~W1~ an nu-~ wer~ Fcaither qerinehy ~ncluded

~e )mperorPbariemaible ~~~poundreed ~tho~~laquo~ lt m the eigh~h ~turydecr~ miD not aencournt ~e~ch~Gt~~n6~llIIr~Watmiddot ilhat alLclencs m~be lble to middotwas virtuall uilkn a lj ~

ifead im~~ri~ J~d~ve ~m- faculties PU~Shed v~illi~~e iT ~~~t ~~t~Bltcs petence In ~h~~ )~1esslC~~Idu- Monsignor Ellis points tJ01 the BOGOTA (NC) _ Anglican tiaif~king ~ DllIllmum timidity which prevailed after Bishop David Benson Reed of

q I I~~ons they ~ere to be the eJcesses perpetrated in 1l1e BogOta offered accommodations e~ ~~ deprIved of repression of Modernism in the for~five Catholic bishops during me iectr~~ IS we can see w a fim part of the present centurY theforthcoming International

g ere had been He sees a change in the era of Eucharistic Congresss in August

ing of the Christu Rex Society an Irish organization for priestDmiddot engaged in pastoml work

Over 250 priests and represhysentatives of agriculturalorgan- izations attended the cOngress here on the theme Rural Ireshyland

Father Jerome Dennehy CC of Kenm2lre criticized the fail- ure of the Iri9h educational sysshytem to provide the farmer with the basic knowledge necessarY to enable him to profimiddott from advice from government agenshydes onfurming methods

No real progress can be made

Vatican II and happily notes and five Ecuadorian prelates aeshythe improvements already made cepted his invitation

lUld those-in prosPectmiddotmiddot He hJ They are Bishops Bernardo hopeful for the future Ech R f Amb to d

evern~ wz 0 a anlIJiteUktlllal A~lieDtmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot-middotCandiiiomiddotRada Cenosian of Guashybull - d middotmiddotd A 1 B h

in8 ConclUding ~y~ ran a liln UXIlary IS ops Priestmiddot as rntelleCtllal~~ v~rll9middotmiddotGabrieI1iazCueva Ernesto that abettereducated and mueh Alvarez ~liaVlcente CIsneros of

and ea r Gua allmoreaware enti laitrmiddotmiddot y qu demands a certainmiddotleveloflD-middot B~SbtPAnBeedli has JurCls~lctib~n

middotfellectual attainment and alivemiddot middot~v~r eo g cans In 0 om la its cl and Ecuador and has been an

~~ ooes ermeam that the ecumenical leader in these

now fading away with thei~

farms Father Eamonn Casey nashy

ijonal director of the catholic Housing Aid Society in London stressed the necessity for the priest to work with underprivishyleged members of -society Too often he said the theologians are on the periphery - they should come doWn to earth and mix with the people-who really

priest has to be a professional~untries ~ _ ~=====~_ intellectual such is not his _ Over 200 bis~ops a~ 1~ ~r-Etmiddotmiddot D ampD SALES AND SERVICE cation ltR does mean that he has dinals have saId they Wlll at-sect to maintain a genuiDe hifei-est end the EUcharistie Congress to - sect ill things intellectUal anq m Mbeid be~ sectpublic questions sect

Monsignor Ellismiddot chides sUPe- sect riors for their failure to eneour- p~iori ~ the minisky in sect age priests 110 use their ~cial teD-dayretreatS preceding or- sect talents skills and aptitudes dination Better than nothing sectAnd he urgeS priests 110 acquire one suPPoses sect( and retain habits of 9tudy It is In the lntervaJ there has sect to be hoped that both these cau- ~ great improvement But sect

name has been sent to lI1sgr John G Nolan president of the Pontifical lVlission for Palestine whose headquarters are in New Vork Written by Amleto Carshydinal Cicogilani Papal Secreshytary of State it referred to the

1 Missions 19 years service to ~ Palestinian refugees particushy

larly victims of the recent Arab-Israeli conflictto

It singled out as particularly praiseworthy the contribution of the Catholic Near East Welshyfare Association saying that middotthrough the unflagging genershyosi ty of the catholics of the United States of America it provided qlost of the means for the Missions work following the recent conflict

The papal letter declared No other agency surpasses the Pontifical Mission in length of

middot actualmiddot serviCe and its identifl shycapon with the paternal intershy~ and concern of the Holy Father merits his encourageshyment hismiddot blessing and his prayerful good wishes

Cardinal middotCicOgnanl wrote that Pope Paul out of paternal afshyfection for the homeless and of grateful esteem for the Pontifi shycal Mission bids memiddot send yOIll the enclosed check for $5000 Added to this was a furthell amount of money contributed

middot by the Congregation for the Oriental Churches

Msgr Nolan was asked that during his Easter visit to the refugee campS he kindly disshytribute the total sum in the Popes Dame to all the needyen

ar~~~stChneU~made adicbot-SAVE MONEY ON omy of man saying here is middotthe

body her~ is the soul-Iam YOUR middotOImiddotLmiddotHEATconCerned only with the soul bull bull bull bull Tmiddothe love of Christ is for the whole person and anything ~ -4~ WYman that concerns 1llieperson is of ~ US92 concern to middotChrist

He said thatmiddot the priest middotshould CHARLES F VARGAS selk tomiddotmiddot develop ~ature Ght-ls- tiMlS amongdsmiddotflockiuidcpre- 54 ROCKDALE AvENUE pare themmiddotforlife Th~ role of 1 the ~~esthe~dmiddotiftcl~desmiddotth~middot ~E~ BEDFORD MASS proVISIon Qfmiddotmiddot mformatlOn oo sexual and~ari~itLplmiddotobiehis 1

He stlggcentstJd middottbatmiddotmiddotmiddotPri~middot main~in cQJjt$C~ wjth~ those whlt emjgra~~mmiddottheir_ par- ish~ and follo~middotup middotthe middotcareers( of boys who are releasedmiddot from refprm schools t

1 bull bullbull - - ~_ _ - ~ ( ~

~ ~ lt

~III1I11I11I11I11I1UIIIIIIlIl1mlllllIII1I1I1I11I1I1I1I11II11I1I11I11I11IIIII11I1I11IIllIUIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~

tionary words win be wideiy~ OW measure canOOt be the poor sect AIR COmiddotIDmiddotImiddotTmiddotIO~IImiddot bullGmiddot

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~ post-Tridentinemiddot seminaries bulland responsibly beard Performance of the past It sect I~ I~ I~ lis remarkably extensive but the It is hard 110 believe tb1Ilt as must be the imperious demands sect main focus is on those ofF~Ce ~ as the seventee~th centu~lt ~ the p~sent an4 ~~ fUture ~ 363 SECOND ST FALL RIVER MASSbull bull the seventeenth century Pal- fa France some clena lOt their ~IWIIIUIUIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIUUlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUUIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIUIiIUWlimllllli5

HE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 2 1968 1S

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs May 2 1968 Back Presidenills ~reg~reg ~~~1rf~Jreg~MO~ ~~~lliJO[[reg(gJ ~rntilO1fi)[[fr~ofr~r

CHICAGO (NC)-The Assoshy~~ ~~regramp~~ o[J1j [Q)1 W[J1lJ[[o ciation of Chicago Priests an

The record compiled 56 years ful Swamppodle a neighborshy unofficial group of some 1500 priests in the archdiocese ofago still stands in big league hood within sight of the U S

baseball annals-most runs al shy Capitol talked about Father Chioago has endorsed President Johnsons current efforts to]owed one game 24 Travers Travers band

fA J (Joe) Detroit Never before had the bandsshy negotiate a Settlement of the

Father Aloysius J Travers men performed like they did in Vietnam war The ACP in its fifth plenarygJ 75 who achieved the dubishy the 1919 May procession-never

ous pitching distinction died had such old favorites as Tis session here turned down a resolution prepared by its soshylast week in Misericordia Hosshy the Month of Our Mother and cial action subcommittee onpital Philadelphia He acquied 0 Mary We C~own Thee With

baseball immortality on May Blossoms Today been so spir shy peace calling for complete cesshy

112 1912 as pitcher for the One sation of U S bombing in Vietshyitedly played by Gonzaga bandsshynam to support the Presidents limited decrease in bombing

men as the procession windedlDay Wonders Detroits brawling Tigers were through Swampoodle streets glated to play Connie Macks After the procession was over and negotiation moves

Two other peace resolutionspOwerful Philadelphia As that the school rector called in recommended by the subcomshy_ daymiddotin old Shibe Park Detroits Father Travers and congratushy

Btar Ty Cobb had drawn a fine mittee were approved They

and two-day suspension for formance The rector added lated him on the bands pershy

put the ACP on record as favorshy

belting a heckling fan a few But high school musicians with ing draft law revisions so that a person might be exempt as a

lligers decided if Cobb couldnt mustaches Dont you think thatdays earlier in New York~ ~he

conscientious objector to a parshywas going a bit too far ticular war without necessarilyFather T~avers had recruitedplay they wouldnt either so being a conscientious objector

Famous llnfield a dozen or so members of thecenthey went on strike

to all war and so that a per

With the aid of Connie Mack crack Fort Myer Army Band

son could be exempt as a conshyfOm nearby Arlington Va scientious objector on humanishy

ed up a collection of Philadelshydressed them in cadet uniforms~e Detroit management roundshy

tarian as well as religioUlland put them in the school band groundsBesides teaching at Stphia sandlot players signed

The ACP also approved threeJosephs Prep and Gonzagathem to Detroit contracts and recommendations of its liturgy

as the Tigers sf Francis Xavier High in New committee York As a result the priests group

Father Travers also taught atfielded the One Day Wonders

Al Travers 19 fresh out of has urged the National Confershyat Josephs Prep School rho Disbands Hawks ence of Catholic Bishops to reshyhelped recruit the sandlotters One of his moSt heartbreaking submit two liturgical petitioJUloppointed himself pitcher He assignments was given him some to the Conglegation of Rites inctftein recalled I learned that 25 years ago He was sent back Rome The petitions which had e pitcher would collect-50 to St Josephs College where New Problem ~en turned down by the Vati shyeX-tra so I volunteered the battIe cry is The Hawk can congregation would allowThat day the As scored 24 will never die as moderator the establishment of experimenshyINns on 25 hits with io nuts of athletics Priest Urges F~ir labor Practices tal centers for the liturgycmearned against young Travshy His jOb-disband the Hawks For CatholicSchool Faculties throughout the country and limshy

erG The wonder is the score football team with a minimum ited experimentation with thewasnt higher for young Tra~~rs of uproar from students and SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-For betweell the school and the liturgy without prior approvalwas pitching against the best alumni since football had beshy as long as anyone can rememshy religious community of the Vaticanbalt team of the era-against come a moneymiddot losing sport at ber the Religious and lay peoshy Some experts says that the

PhiladelphiaS famous $100000 St Josephs and a number of nte third resolution called on-pie who serve on the faculties best solution to this problem is

infield of John Phelan (Stuffy) other Catholic colleges in ~those the NCCB to take concrete stepsof Catholic grammar and high to bar Religious from partici shy

McInni6 at first Eddie Collins days to implement proposals of itsschools have been the type of pating in labor organizations

lJeCOnd Jack Barry short and He did his job well directing liturgy committee for adaptashypeople who would never think But Father Reicher indicated

IPrank (Home Run) Baker third attention to St Joes basketball tion of the Mass to smaIl anelof going out on strike against this would only divide the Reshy special age groupsSaves Franchise team which has grown into one unfair labor practices since ligiousand lay faculty of schools

But young Travers and the of the nations powerhouses this would imply some sort of even more than they are dividedORe Day Wonders who had For the last 25 years Father guilt on the part of p~ors and now India to ReconsiderI2ever seen Detroit saved the Tlavers had been stationed at bishops Urging a period of experishybaseball franchise for the Tigers St Josephs Prep in semishy Well those days are gone forshy meritation to work out new Deporting Priestttlat day If they hadnt pl~yed retirement during recent years ever according to Chicagos forms of collective bargaining NEW DELHI (NC) - Indiantile As chances are the Amershy Requiem Mass for the colorful Father Robert Reicher and the Father Reicher concluded It ill Prime Minister Indira GandbJ1bean L~ague would have lifted one-day big leaguer was ofshy job now is to set up standards obvious that the right to barshy has promised reconsideration ofDetroits franchise because of fered Thursday at GeuChurch of fair labor practice and guidshy gain collectively is a natural the order expelling Jesuitthe players strike in Philadelphia ance for faculty members grievshy tight clearly defended time and Father Vincent Ferr r of theDespite the lopsided score procedures against Cathoshy agaiil ethically and morally Poona diocese Indiaance fromlPatJher Travers got several big lic school administrators But this right also implies an lleague offers as a result of his Canonist Cates Need The pmmise was made when

Speaking to participants at 8 obligation to know what colleCshy tlhree members of the Indiani pitching He turned them down secondary school department tive bargaining involves went to St Josephs College For Negro Prieds parliament met with Mrs Ganshy

meeting during the Nationalthen joined the Jesuits ATLANTIC CITY (Nch - A dhi here and asked her to get

National Catholic Educational the order cancelled and grantThe lesson he learned fmln plea for more Negro Catholic Bishops Ask PopeAssociation convention here Indian citizemihip to the priestthe unorthodox recruiting as a priests has been made at the Father Reicher outlined some ofone-day big leaguer stood him annual Easterri regional meeting To Visit Canada Father Ferrer founder of thethe problems facing Catholic in good stead a half-dozen years of the Canon Law Society of OTTAWA (NC) -Pope Paul Maharashtra Farmers Servicelabor - management relations

later when he was teaching at America here in New Jersey The pliest is chairman of the VI may visit Canada next month Society was scheduled for deshyGQnzaga High School in Washshy Msgr Thomas J Reese of Wilshy to attend the National Confershy portation last year but wasChicago archdiocesan Catholicington D C mington in the neighboring State ence on Poverty sponsored by granted several extensions ofCouncil on Working Life and a

Recruits Ringers of Delaware speaking on experishy jVell-known labor expert Christian Churches in Canada his stay He was accused by iiimiddot mental parishes accused the Hindu groupS ofanti-Indian acshyFather Travers was in charge Religious who teach in CatBshy Bishop Alexander Carter presshy

Church of racism and said that tivities and by the Maharashtraof the school b~llld which used olic schools pose a special diffi shy ident of the Canadian CatholicNegro Catholics prefer to - be state government of anti shyto master only about two or culty hi labor relations because Conference has acknowledged national activitiesselved by black priests of whom

CHURCHES UNITED Bishop Reuben H Mueller left of the Evangeli~al United Brethren Church and Methoshydist Bishop Lloyd C Wicke led representatives of their respective bodies at ceremonies in Dallas proclaiming the union of the two churches The new body is to be known as the United Methodist Churlth NC Photo

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IIlfllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIUIIIlIDutuUliUllllUiHlllllllllilllllllllllllllllilllUIIIIIIIIIIIIUII~given to the Washington arch we need black priests and we bid to raise the standards of diocese by Church spokesmen need them fast preaching in Australia and New here in Pennsylvania Zealand will be made shortly Lobster Boats Msgr Philip J Dowling execshy it was resolved at a meeting hereCapital Cityutive secretary of John Cardinal of leaders of religious orders

Krols Commission on Human VATICAN CITY (NC)-Qn The effort will inchide a fullyshyRelations noted that the Washshy the eighth anniversary of the otganized Pastoral Year obsershyington Archdiocesan Office of foundation of Brazils new capishy vance seminars for priests of all bull bull bull Urban Affairs has asked assist shy tal of Brasilia Pope Paul VI ages on updating preaching techshy s iz e s ance from Philadelphia and other sent a radio message of best niques the establishment of II bull bull bull dioceses In providing foOd es wishes in Portuguese and pressshy preaching center and the use pecially for those po)r who will ed a button that illumined a of a recorded service on techshy I Macleansreceive temporary housing in the cross on the cathedral of that niques of oral communicatiOil f8cilities of the Washington city The Pope performed the directedby the ObJates of MalT sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAYBt Tel 9979351 sect archdiocese oclemony in his private library Immaculate ~1I111111l111IHlUlnlllllllllllUllllllnIIllIUllllllUllllllllllllllIllltUIIllllllllllUluiuUWlUllllml~

three tunes a year In those of their obligation of obedience that feelers have been sent outthere are fewdays the school had a cadet Father Reicher pointed out to have the Pope corne to Monshy

If any institution can standeorps and one of its big annual What this means he added is teal for th~ May 26-29 meeting events was marching in the anshy that occasionally Religious mllYoondemned on the basis of the

It would be the first papalrecent Kerner Report on Civilnual parish-May procession be used to break a strike called visit to Canada Pope Paul visitedDisorders it is the CatholicFor years residents of color- by lay faculty members this country as a Cardinal in theChurch among others that is But more likely is the conflict early 19508guilty of white racism he trapping the individual Reli shyPlan to Help ~eed opined Bishop Carter said if a favorshygious whose loyalty is divided

Asserting that the number of able reply is reCeived from RomeCapital MCIl(lc61ers Negro clergy middotdoes not nearly the Canadian government would

PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A meet the needs of Negro Catho- Australia to Have extend an official invitation pledge of cooperation in feeding lies Msgr Reese said Pope Paul visited the United the poor who will gather in the If the Church is going to be Better Preaching Nations inNew York in 1965 nations capital in May has beell relevant to the black community SYDNEY (NC)-A concerted

I

Marian Awards Continued from Page Three

Fall River and has spent her entire religious life within the Diocese of Fall River

Sister has served as consult shyant with various education comshymittees in the diocese and bas promoted the educational proshygram of the Dominican Sisters

Sr Mary Pauline OP bead of the Science Department of

the Dominican Academy Fall River was one of the originatolll of the Region III Science Fair and has served as president of the regions Fair for two years

She is presently ooordinator of the Massachusetts state Scishyence Fair -

Sr Virginia CSC is presshyently chairman of the Th~logy

Department Notre Dame Colshylege Manchester N H and served from 1941 to ]958 as principal of St Anthonys New Bedford

She has always been a leader in new an innovative ideas in education

Sister Anne Denise SND presently principal of St Marys High School Lynn is well shyremembered as the first princishypal of Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth and has served in many administrative posts for the Sisters of Notre Dame

Sr Mary Aloysia SUSC is dean of the College of the Sashycred Hearts Fall River and has given outstanding service in coshyoperation with the Catholic School Department in planning in-service courses for the teachshyers of the diocesan schools

She also serves asmiddot coordinator of the educational program of the Sisters of the Holy Union

Sr John Elizabeth SUSC is Guidance Director at the Acadshyemy of the Sacred Hearts Fall River and has served in numershyous administrative positions atthe Fall River school

She was the first principal of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton and has served on committees of local and state educational organizations

Sr Mary Felicita RSM is now involved in the tutorial program at Mt St MaryS Acadshyemy Fall River and has served in the various sclIools of the diocese

For 26 years Sister served as Diocesan School Supervisor iD the Catholic School Office

Sr Miriam RSM is also in the tutorial program at the Sisshyters of Mercy Academy in Fall River A former teacher and principal in schools of the dioshycese Sister served for 26 yean

IN NEW POST Father Charles F Sheedy CSC former dean of arts and letshyterS has been appointed to the new post of dean of theoshylogical studies and institutes at the University of Nobe Dame NC Photo

to Educators tiS Diocesan Supervisor in the Catholic School Department

This year completes 50 years of service in the field of educashyto the Diocese of Fall River

Sister Maureen RSM is principal of Nazareth Hall Fall River She organized the proshygram and was the first principal of the Fall River school lor exshyceptional children a position she still holds

She is a consultant lind D member of city and state comshymittees for the mentlllly l1eshytarded

Sr Mary Urban RSM is Diocesan supervisor of schools and was the first principal at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

She is a member of state and city educational committees

Sr Mary Carmela RSM is a member of the English Departshyment of St Xaviers Academy Providence and was the first principal of Mt St Marys Academy Fall River

She is a consultant on secondshyary school curriculum planning

Sr Grace de Sales MSBT is presently superior of the Censhyacle of Our Lady of the Assumpshytion Osterville a position she also held at the Cenac1e of St Patricks Parish Wareham

Sister founded the kindergarshytens at Osterville and Wareham and has taught Chfistian Docshytrine classes on the elementary and secondary levels during her many years of selvice in the diocese

Sr Joan Louise OLVM is suPerior of the Victory Noll Convent in the Immaculate Conception Parish No Easton She has served as catechetical specialist in dioceses in Iowa and California and her present assignment is CCD supervisor for the Diocese of Fall River

Brother Albertus CSC is supervisor of Education for the Eastern Province of the Holy Cross Brothers and is professor of mathematics at Stonehill College No Easton He also ~ught mathematics and physics at Monsignor Coyle High School Taunton

Miss Mary Cabral of 1)69 Camshybridge Street Fall River is presently teaching at Espirito Santo School Fall River where she is completing 43 years of service as a lay teacher in ~e

Diocese of Fall Ri vcr

Whites to Solve White Problem

TOLEDO (NC)-Bishop Joon A Donovan has made a public request to whites to take up the white problem

He urged it for those lookshying for a modern up-Io-date apostolate for down-to-earth Christians who are at the same time dedicated Americans

middotSpeaking at a dinner of the northwestern Ohio district Fourth Degree Knights of Coshylumbus the Toledo bishop said

This ugly situation was fathered by injustice and is nourished by that subtle and insidious vice called prejudiCe

Need In this deplorable situation

in which the world ffinds itself today the pressing need is for those who call themselves Christians to think as Christians to form Christian attitudes and to live as Christians

Just as we cannot separate Christ from His Gospel so too we cannot separate love of GOO from love of our fellowmen without exception

The real Christian mlid the bishop does not live alongside but with others He constantly interprets anothers actions in the best possible light bying to remember always the way in which the Lord met loved and drew people to Himsel

SAIGON (NC) - The people wept and we wept everybody wept Sister Nicole said deshyscribing her teams departure after 16 days of relief work in Hue

She and two other Vietnamshy-ese Sisters Daughters of Charshyity of St Vincent de Paul with

The communImiddots1s T truce

17 girl students had gone to stricken Hue on a mission of mercy

offensive had left families in mourning houses in ruins ~nd people hungry and sick The government of Vietnam had inshyvited volunteers to bring help to the citys thousands of sufshyferers

The plane that brought tile Sisters and their students also brought 85 youths from Saigon~

The boys did manual work such as cleaning up the damaged hosshypital in Hues The Sisters team was divided into three groups one to give medical care anshyother to visit homes a third to l)ok after children

The 17 girls are some of those being trained by the Sisters as social workers for family assist shyance under a plan sponsored by a Vietnamese womens associashytion Five of the 17 are Cathshyolics The others are mostly Buddhists On April 12 all were fasting since it was the 15th day of the lunar month for the lBud-

Catholic Boy Scout Officials to Meet

WASHINGTON (NC)-About 150 leaders of CQtholic Boy Scout organizations will meet here to attend the 20th biennial oonference of the National Cathshyolic Committee OIl Scouting

The meeting will be a Iowshyday work session tor chairmen chaplains and other officioals cd the nations diocesan I seouiing ~ommittees The meeting will end with a banquet in honO Gl Patrick Cardinal OBoyle ol Washington

---- -----~

middot1FI

1

PRAYER CRUSADE _Danny Thomas has filmed n 10-minute color documentary on the value of family pray~r

to be used by Father Patrick Peyton CSC in his Camshypaign for Family Prayer Father Peyton said he expects 200000 people at a Milwailkee rally to be held Sunday May 12

IEverybody Weptl

Nun Describes Relief Teams Departure From Stricken Hue

dhims and Good Friday for the Catholics

The Asia Foundation here gave a grant to pay for the meals of the Sisters team dur ing their stay

- Before leaving Saigon the Sisters had collected medicines food soap and clothing from welfare agencies including Catholic Relief Services and

Vietnam Christian Service (Protestant) The United Nashytions Childrens Fund (UNICEF) provided milk powder which enabled the team to give milk to 450 children every day

Warn Medics LONDON (NC)-The day beshy

fore Britains new abortion law went into effect the nations 5500 CMholic doctors were warned by John Cardinal Heenan of WeBtminister that they should DOt perfom any abortions

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THE ANCHOR- 17 Thursday May 2 1968

Cufr ~t~1 Days Of orw~~~1ion

En C[[i~da OTTAWA (NC)-Chrietshy

mas and New Years Day now are the only holy days of obligation for Canadav estimated 8000000 Catholics

The Canadian Catholic Conshyference comprising Canadafl Bishops has announced thampa other holy days will be cellshyebrated on the Sunday nearem the holy day

The holy days affected aye Epiphany usually celebrat~

Jan 6 Ascension now falling on the 40th day after East~Ilp

All Saints now celebrated Nou I and the Immaculate ConcejilP tion now celebrated Dec 8

The Bishops said observance of the feast days on Sundayu means they will be celebratecll bull by a larger more relaxed anell accessible congregation of the faithful rather than a congreshygaUon of people constrained by the obligation of attending Maw in addition to their work

Canadas Bishops postwn~ until next Fall a decision Gil

wlether to restoremiddot the anciej~ office of permanent deacon m the Church The Bishops of the United States meeting simultashy

neously in St Louis hlst week ~ted to petition Pope Paul VJ for permission to restore ~

perinanent diaconate ror marshyried and unmarried men of ma ture years

Fish Sales Up SYDNEY (NC)-Best tilini)

that ever happened to the fisb industry said Mark J06eph chairman of the New SouUl -lales Fish Authority of the Churchs lifting of the ban CJ[l

Friday meat eating He has tb~ ligures to back up his verdictshya 25 per cent rise in fish e4)Dshy

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The Parish Parade New Jersey Suburbanites of All Faiths Aid Ghetto Arson Victims HOLY NAME OUR LADY OF ANGELS

FALL RIVER FALL RIVER NEWARK (NC) - Priest~ the citys anti-poverty agenCll Contemporary music will acshy

company the 11 oclock Mass Sunday morning May 5

First communicants will reshyeeive at a special Mass at 9 Saturday morning May 25 Mayshycrowning ceremonies will be held Sunday May 26 The Womens Guild announces

fts installation banquet for Tuesday night May 7 Tickets are available from all members

Catholic Charities collectors are asked to meet in the parish school at 730 tonight for dist~shyOOtion of contact cards

lIT MARGARET BUZZARDS BAY

SS Margltlret-Mary Guild of Buzzards Bay and Onset will Sponsor a rummage sale from 9 1lo 1 Saturday May 18 at St Margarets kindergarten hall Main Street Buzzards Bay Do iaations may be left at the hall during mornings of the precedshying week Chairman for the ~vent is Mrs William Brady

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild will reshyieive Holy CommuniOn in a bodyaf the815 Mass 00 Sunshydity morning A breakfast will follow in the school hall The icuest speaker will beRt Rev Anthony M Gomes Mrs Arthur Belanger gpiIshyftual chairman of the Guild is _ charge of the breakfast

81 JOSEPH AIRHAVEN Nominations and elections of officers for the Association of file Sacred middotHearts will be held at 630 on Sunday evening in the rectory ~ Dues are now payable to the tleasurer Mrs Jeannette Dushylude

IACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

Preprimary registration will be held from 2 to 4 Sunday afternoon May 5 in 1he school office Some openings also exist in first sixth and eighth grades

The CCD adult discussion group will meet at 8 Sunday night in the home of Mr and Mrs J G N Bonneau

So Easton Club Pledges

$5000 The newly formed Womens

Club of Holy Cross Parish So Easton has pledged $5000 toward the building fund acshycording to an announcement made today by Mrs Arthur J L Peterson the organizations first president The pledge will be paid at the rate of $1000 per year

This pledge has been added to The Second Mile Building Fund campaign now in progress under the chairmanship of Robshyert Dray and Louis A Lyne serving as director

The Altar Boys will sponSor a cake sale Sunday May 26

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a Communion breakshyfast following 8 oclock Mass this Sunday morning Installashytion of officers will be held at a banquet following 5 oclock Mass Sunday afternoon May 26

Children of Mary will attend a Communion breakfast followshying 8 oclock Mass Sunday mornshying May 12

The annual blessing of autoshymobiles will take place at 130 Sunday afternoon May 26 in the church parking lot

ST GEORGE WESTP~RT

A Maybasket whist is planned for 8 Saturday night May 4 hi

the school hall on Route 177 PrOCeeds will benefit the school fund and table and attendance prizes will be awarded

STMARY NORTH ATTLEBORO Parishioners are planning a

testimonial honoring Msgr Ed- ward B Booth Pastor at 7

Sunday night May 26 Tickets are now available

Christians Jews Combat Racism

NEW YORK (NC)The Nashytional Confeferice of Christians and Jews has launched a nation wide educational effort to conshyfront the problem of white racism in middotAmerica agency headquarters here announced

The NCeJ has given top prl~

ority to finding ways toimpleshyment the recommendations of the National Advisory Commisshysion on Civil Disorders The commission blamed white racshyism as the underlying cause of urban unrest

In a progress re-port to the NCCJ board of trustees meeting here Dr Samuel L Gandy dean of the Ho~ard University school of religion Washington D C and chairman of the NCCJ nashytional program ad7isory comshymittee stated

NCCJs 130 professional staff members in 70 cities are curshy~ntly engaged in developing programs with police business and labor leaders parents and teachers clergy and with youth and all of the various institutes workshops and dialogues which are being conducted are emphashysizing the findings of this reshyport

Dr Gandy quoted to the board a letter to President Lynshydon B Johnson from Dr Stershyling W Brown NCCJ presishydent in which the agency head said that NCCJ embraced the commission report as a sancshytion and guideline for our efshyforts in the private sectol

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ministers nuns and lay people of all denominations pitched in here to try and make Easter a dltty of joy for the more than 600 people burned out of their homes in a waveof arson which erupted in this city following the funeral of Dr Martin Luther King

Concerned citizens of surshyrounding suburban communishyties who only a week before had participated in a massive Wa 1k for Understanding through ghetto streets respondshyedspontaneously to the need

Without anymiddot special appeal going out people of all denomshyinations call e 11 inner-city churches to ask what they could do and they were directed to the United Community Corp

NEW LEADER Sister Rosemary Markham SSS is the new Superior General of the Sisters of Social Ser-

vice a Los Angeles based community engaged in social and catechetical work with missions in Formosa and Mexico NCPhoto

Christians Jews Discuss Diamiddotlogue

SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-The question of whether JewishshyChristian dialogue should be by speech or by action was the theme that ran through the talks and discussions at a Conference on Interfaith Dialogue sponsored by Catholic Protestant and Jewshyish organizations at Seton Hall University here

Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum director of interreligious affairs for the American Jewish Comshymittee was generally in favor of the action approach saying that the dialogue must avoid beshycoming a convenient conspiracy on the part of middle-class whites to buffer themselves against the realities of the inner city

Father Edward H Flannery executive secretary of the U S Catholic Bishops Secretariat for Catholic-Jewish Relations said that while he would be the last to cut off action in the realm of social justice and charity he also felt that Jews and Christians could not effectively present a common ftont to society until they have straightened out their own affairs

Father Flannery referred to statements that the -ChristianshyJewish dialogue had died in the wake of last Junes six-day war between Israel and Arab nations He said that it was not so much a matter of its dying but of its not having been tried yet

Over Holy Thursday Good Friday and Holy Saturday more than 10 tons of food and clothing were donated and the UCC staff was swamped with the task of sorting the materiaL

With schools and church ofshyfices closed priests and nuns made their way individually and in groups to UCC headshy

quarters to help with the task of unloading cars and station wagons and sorting and distribshyuting the clothing

At least 50 offers of assistance came in to Queen of Angels pariSh in the heart of the ghettc and the callers were asked to organize relief efforts in their own communities and then gd the material 110 the UCCbull

FEEL GOOD TODAY

THt HOLY fATHER MISSION AiD TD THlaRIENTAL DHURDH

Thlsoolumns happiest readers are the men

Te date this second phase bas listed 35 gifts totaling $12000 Combined with the initial campaign the Building Fund now lists 233 donors who haVe pledged a total of $117()00 The Womens Club that was founded less than six months ago has initiated a long range program for the spiritual cll1shytural and financial efforts of the parish

In addition to the regular methods of aiding the parish finandally the women have conducted teen-age projects and have assisted the Mens Club fu

i bull various progrlms

~MANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

BRISTOL COUNTY

9G-OAY NOTIC~

TIMENOW OPEN ACCOUNT5PAYS o bull bull Interest Compounded Quarterly

Offices in

NORTH ATTLEBORO MAINSIFDIEILlDgt AnUBORO FAUS

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women and children who know they~r needed The days were busiest helping others are the happiest days of our livesbullbullbull Who needs you most Surprisingly God needs you - for inmiddot stance to help art abandoned orphan become e Godloving responsible adult Lepers need you (there are still 15middotmillion lepers In the world) blind children need y~u ~ndlo do we bull bullbull Here In New York we are your agents tellin you where the Holy Father says your help Is needed and channeling your help promptlyand Oafely to the people iii needbullbullbull Want to feel good right now Do without something you want but do not need and send the money instead for one of the needs below Youll feel good especialiy if your gift is big enough to mean a sacrifice to you This is your chance to do something meaningful for the world - its Gods world - while youre still alive

D Only $850 gives our priests and SIsters i south India enough Dapsone miracle tablebamp for 43 lepers for a yearl D For only $250 a week ($10 a month $120 a year) you can make sure that an abandoned child has food clothing a blanket and love Well send you a photo of the child you adopt tell you something about him (or her) and ask the Sistermiddotinmiddotcharge to keep you Informed

D Your stringless gifts in any amount ($5000 MEET $1000 $500 $100 $50 $25 $10 $5 $2)

MISSION will help the neediest wherever they are - in EMERGENCIES india and he Hol~ Land for instance

D Only you can make your will-and do It this THINK week to be sure the poor will have your help

OF even after youre gone Our legal title CATHOLIO YOURSELF NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION Also our priests

TOO will offer promptly the Masses you provide for

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DO SOMETHING

MEANINGfUL WHILE

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HELP LEPERS

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THE CATHOLIC

NAMIlR _

~ 8TREJa~ ~_

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NEAR EAST MISSIONS MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretary Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoo 330 Madison Avenue New York N~Y 10017 Teephone 212YUkon 6middot5840

1 - ~

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Lawrence High of Falmouth Seeksmiddot State Track Tut~e

By PETER BARTEK Norton High Coach

The Capeway Conference track season has already begun but the handwriting is already on the wall This campaign like last years will be a battle for second place Admittedly notbing Short of a miracle can or will prevent Lawrence High of Falmouth from winning its second straight conference t rae k championship But fol Coach Jim Kalperis and his trackstersmiddot the league championship is only a Gtepping stone to the State C ham p io n - ship The goal of every athletic team in the state hi to earn the title of State Champion This is not beshyyond the grasp of the Falmouth Peier Clippers If hard Bartek work and dedication are the means to this end then Falshymouth will reign as State track champions

Success does not come easily em any endeavor and success batpound

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not come easily to the Falmouth tracksters They like all accomshyplished athletes have labored long and diligently to aChieve the measure of sUccess they now enjot lt

N1)t toomiddot many yearsato Lawshyrence High was just ~nother

sChool Participating in track But the efforts of many and the dedication of one IJ1im in parshyticular has brought immeasurshyable success to the Falmouth track scene That man is Jim Kalperis

Coach Kalperis haseombined

his knowledge af track his coaching ta1EntS aiiCl tirelessenergies middotto build a virtual track dynasty The latest noteworthy feat of middotliliitnickmen came in the forinof anotheriState title

Thisti~emiddotiS th~nivision IIi

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1

- BC~ and Norry Races Are Close 1

lbe format formiddot the St~te reo lays has been altered this ear with competition being held at four separate locations in East- em Massachusetts Weymouth captured the Division I crown the DiviSion n title went to

Andover and Williams corralled the laurels in Division IV

The meet drew ll5 schools in each of the four diviSions with over 2000 youngsters partici shypating in all classes

Enroute to its victory Falshymouth collected 51 points comshypared to runner-up Barnstable with 22Jh

Falmouth took first place in the discus high jump pole vault 440 yard run shuttle hurdles two mile run and the 880 -

With tbis type of success in state competition it is easy to see why the Capeway Confershyence title has been practically conceded to Falmouth

Sharing the spotlight with the trackmen at Falmouth are the diamondmen The Clippers who are in the thick of the loop baseball picture were given a

Mike Rainnie tossed amp no-hittel at Barnstable to gain a 1-0 vershydict

Its still much too early to predict with any accuracy

what will happen in the Cape wai baseball race But it ap- pears nomiddotclub will dominate th~t sport like Falmouth controIa track Falmouth Dartmouth Fairhaven and Barnstable are expected to fight it out through the entire season One close to the scene summed it up best when he said anyone in the league could win this thing

Close races are also developshying in the Bristol County and Narragansett Leagues

In the BCL both Bishop Fee han of Attleboro and Durfee High of Fall River encountered a few difficulties in early season play but seem to have found the range of late The clubs will meet in an important contest today in Fall River Late inning rallies have brought both clubS from the brink of defeat to vicshytory in previous outings The victor will have to be dubbed

shot in the arm last week as the team to beat

Brennan of Feehan D~est ill le~guej

Coach Tom Maccarone of Feeshyhan has had outstanding pershyfonnances from his pitching staff but the key to the Shamshyrocks success has been shortshystop Ty Blrennan Maccarone stated before the season that Brennan was his best player and perhaps the best in the whole Bristol County Judging from Brennans perfonnance to date one of the keys to stopping Feehan is stopping the classy shortstop

Coach Joe Lewis Hilltoppers play a brand of ball similar to his counterpart TOIJl Karams basketball club Make a mistake and the Fall Riverites will capshyitalize on it Durfees first two league victories came about beshycause of opponent miscues

The Hilltoppers have been playing steady ball throughout the early part of the campaign and are improving with every game Their ability 10 avoid costly mistakes eI tbeir -n

making and timely hitting has proven a winning combination

Come what may in todays contest the BCL llace has just begun

Not to be outdone by tile larger BCL and Capeway Conshyference the Narry loop is conshyducting a torrid race of its own At the end of the first week of action Seekonk and DightonshyRehoboth were tied for the top spot Following two weeks of play Gase of Swansea Dighton and Somerset were lodged In the first position The hectic lCampaign will probably find another change in the top spot at the conclusion of this weeks activity

From Cape Cod to Attleboro competition is keener this year than it bas been in many seashysons The road to the league championship is always diffJshycult to Davigate but this year it appears as though the road win be duttered wiill meR obstacles than ill quite

cone~~ lb~aders ConcllregrnmOB War In V~~It~IlJJm

NEW YORK (NC)-Stushydent government presidents and editors of campus newsshypapers at more than 500 colleges in 49 states have conshydemned the war in Vietnam as

lt immoral and unjust and said ~~ they believe they should not

~ i~~~~~~~ii ~~~b~~ shy --_ ~ and Laymen Convinced About

-- ~-__ Vietnnm Was coordirlated by shy _ -- shy ~ Rev RObert lVi Hundley lHullent

--lt--1 at Union Th~ological Snppary --J here and an associate pltISor at -- ~I th~ Congn~gationalChllrch hn ~_ Scarsdale N-Y He saiQ most

--middot1 students who signed the stateshy~-__-~~- ~~ -___- __~_~J ment havenot been active in

FINE ARTS FESTIVAL Making preparations for Fine Arts Festival at Bishop Stang High School North

Dartmouth are Paul Leahy and Margaret Polycarpo

~ Unmiddot-ty middotIs Chr-stlTs middotW-II

P Off W I E deg I pOi degI

ontl e comes cumenlca I grlmage From United Kingdom toHoly Lar-d

anti-war activities heretoforemiddot

Solicits Support

He added

Many of the student Itl~ders who have signed this sbtcment

recognize that they may be plaeshying their future caJeers illmiddotjeopshy~rdy and conceivably are riskshying punitive action being taken

against them by the capiicioWJ V~TICAN ~ITY (NC)~TO an Fathers Arthur Payton anSel~c~ve Sfdtvice Systerh~~~

I ecumenical pilgrimage oQ its Anglican who is director 01 ~ev Yi~am Sloan Cot~~1 Jr-) way to the Holy Land Pope interchurCh travel in LOndon bull aclive memjgter of Clergymiddot ~nd Paul VI recalled the words he Among its members were An- Laymen Concerned AboutbullVI~tshyspoke on his own pilgrimage glieans CatholiCs Oithodox and nam ~1dmiddota Yal~ U~Iverslt7

there in 1964 that unity is the will of Christ

He said that it was with parshyticular pleasure that we welshycome this ecumenical pilgrimshyage from the United Kingdom to the Holy LaRd You are aboUt to follow in the fOQtSteps af God made man in the country of His birth Hill mission and His blessed death for us men and for our salvation (NiceneCreed)

Your visit caUsto mind our own unforgettable pilgrimage to the Holy Places From the grotto of Bethlehem we then declared It npw appears clearly to all that the problem of unity cannot be eluded Today this will cif Christ is imposed upon our minds and demands th~t we undertake with wisdom and love every possible way of bringing all Christi~ns t6 enjoy the great benefit and supreme honor of the unity of the middotChurch

He also recalled his plea from Bethlehem that love of Christ and of the Church should inshyspire that every future moveshyment toward meeting and reshyconciliation

The pilgrimage was led by

DIOCESAN DIREC1OR First woman to serve as a diocesan director of radio-TV is Miss Patricia Smith of Pueblo Colo who is also a photo-journalist on the staff gf Dateline Colorado m cesan weekly newspaper

Protestants not only from Great Britain but from France and Germany as well

Msgi Gianfrancesco Arrighi undersecretary of the Secretashyriat for Promoting Christian Unity and Canon John Findlow representative of Anglican Archbishop Michael Ramsey of Canterbury at the Holy See accompanied middotthe pilgrims to the Vatican

Votes Moratorium On ChuDch Building

CHICAGO (NC)-The Chicago Conference of Laymen is urging Church authorities at both the archdiocesan and parish levels to declare a moratorium on 10- cal construction projects so that funds can be channeled to projshyects in the ghetto areas

The action was taken at the second annual meeting of the

ll200-member organization The 300 in attendance passed

some 50 resolutions half of them dealing with urban problems The membership said it will seek ways to alleviate white racism especially within the Catholic Church

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ch~plaJD saId The stand taken by these

y~ung men should serve to reshymmd Americans everywhere that the war in Vietnam 1s not over that American and Vietshy

namese boys are stillmiddotdying

He continued

These middotmen of conscience should be supported by eveQY priest minister and rabbi who cares about the sanctity of conshyscience

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Jesuit Comments Di~cordNormal Amon9 Catholics

RIO DE JANEIRO (NC)shylD i SC 0 r d among Catholics after the Second Vatican Council is perfectly normal but It is not normal for proshygressive or conservative Cathoshylics to refuse to accept the dishyrectives of the council and the pope Jesuit superior general said here Father Arrupe is in Brazil for 30 days to visit Jesuit houses in the country and to preside at the May 6 to 14 meeting here of all South Amershyican Jesuit provincials

He said that his visit is inshytended to adapt the order here flo the requirements of the agshygirnameJ1to or up-dating

The most important aggiorshy namento in our day he said

is that of the mind We have to ~nsider and respect human valshyues as such This was always the Churchs doctrine but now the Church is insisting on it more We ought not to consider the Churchs interest in human values as opportunism Our in tEmtion is only to serve mankin~ better)

Press Uses Images Dudng his stay here Father

Arrupe willmiddot visit 20 local(tiesWhere Jesuits are woikilg

ts B 1Ilhele are 1000 JesUl m razl~ bull

He said that he regarded as bull joke the Brazilian presss ref-

elences to him as ~the black l T Ch Pope cussion of he angmg a1middot

Because of my cassock hemiddot

tlaid I am black but I am not the Pope ~ understand that the press has to use images to exshylI)lain concepts more effectively

Honor Editor NEW YORK (NC) ~ Robert

6lmstead news editormiddot of the National Catholic Reporter weekly newspaper published in Kansas City Mo received honshyelable mention in the 1968 Paul Tobenkin Memolial Award Competition here

-

MEET IN ST LOUIS Bishop-elect Timothy J~ Harringshyth d f th Sf W 1 ft d

ton ~ orcester e leoscllfses ~ atn t ~ l~mg

ish a panel a~ the lQ68Presi dents Conference of the Nashytional Council of cat~olic yene~l

Role of CouDcil The parish will retairi its role

as a community of worship whose members go out ihto the world and bring it theeurohristjan

message Bernatd Lyons Ghishycago public relations ~onsultant saidmiddot

The pa~ish on the other hand mustmiddot become part of the world

alound it a wHr1e$S to the whole community and fake on roles not in relation only to -its

GUIDING CHURCH IN UNITED STATES More than 200 members of the hierarchy participated in the decisions of the annual Spring meeting of the National Conference

Predict Important Authorities Emphcisixe

WASHINGTON (NC)-Three members but to the world in authorities on parish life have agreed here that the parish basic organiz~tion iil the Church will have to undergo some lmportant changes if the ChUlch is goingto meet th~ needs of societyin the 20th censhy tury

But just how the parislt is going to change ~s far from setshytied they ~onceqed in a dis

which it exists Father John Corriga~ of this city a directozlt of the Nationalmiddot Liturgical Con ference asserted

Whatever it does the parish must becomemiddot a vital force in the cOlJlrnunity around it Father Geno Baroill execu~ive secretary Washington archdi

ocesan Office ~f Urpan Affairs declared

RIot ComparlmiddotsoDmiddot

Father Baroni whose work blings hini into constant contactmiddot with Negro problems in WaSh- laymen will inhibit soCial ac- ington saw~ astriking par~illel tion but added later this is a between the Churchs needs and risk wltirth taking

-those of thebiack ghetto Right now~ he observed - one of the mos~ urgent prob Society to Consider lems in the ghetto is that Of Sh fmiddot

community organization We 5 emnary I t arll learl1ing that pe~ple ri~t be CARTHAGENA CNC) _ The

cause they have beel- cut o~t ofSocieiy of the Precious Blood meaningful participation in so- ciety

In the ~hurch laymen have been cut out of this participa tion also They dont riot but they dont really concern them selves with the concerns of the Church unle~s thy ~ave t~i~ sense of partlclpatlcm he saId

New Resndemlce For US PIiDests

ROME (NC)-A new resident house for American priests working In the offices of the Roman Curia (the Churchs censhytral administrative offices) or on assignment in Rome for the US bishops has been opened to provide adequate economical lodgings and community surshyroundings

The residence called Villa Stritch after the late Samuel Cardinal Stritch of Chicago is composed of two apartment comshyplexes and is designed to meet the immediate needs of US priests already at work in Rome and to anticipate future housing needs as internationalization of the Roman Curia continues

In addition to American$ resshyident in Rome the villa is also expected to house priests on special assignments for the bishshyops in Rome bishops who come to Rome for work on var~ous

Church commissions or otherVatican offices or for such events as the synod of bishops and ma-Jor congresses In short it is hoped that the new villa wilL

will study the possibilities and implications of moving the or ders main theological school flOm St Charles Seminary here in Ohio to a university campus or urban center and of buildingmiddot an adequate program at St QJ1arles The Carthagena SChOt

has been the societys maJor seminary for over 100 years

Major superiors and middotelected delegates representing the soshycietys Cincinnati province voted to fOlm a committee to carry out the study during a provincial chapter meeting held at St Charles at which modernizing the training of candidates for the priesthood in the society Vas tqe chief subject of discussion

middotA report of the meeting in- dicated that the delegates were aware of trends in the Church 1-way from comparative isloationmiddot of seminary establishments to university campuses and urban centers

SPECIAL RATES FOR

Smiddot I O dcho0 utings an Picnics

of Catholic Bishops in St Louis last week An enormoUis amount of homework on position papers was approved ~

the Bishops NC Photo

I see the parish councils and their recognition of freedom asneceSsai-y to do this he added

Worth Risk They agreed they sha~e abull

feiling opound un~asin~ss _middotaboti~ these cOuncIls relatively new amQJ1g Cathol~cs pa~icula~lY their attitude t~ward SOCI~ issues

d Father Baroni sal he has ~

leery feeling about parishcouncils He declared there is

the danger that conservative

contribute to increased racial understanding and involvement

fur the people of the diOcese

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Parishes

Lyons author of th~ book middotParish Councils - Renewin the Parish Community said be

middotwas somewhat more optiniistici I donit think we are going to

solve these problems by 10~~1 at the dangers exclusively hie commented

Diocese to Discuss C~m~issi~n Rep~rt

LANSING (NC) - Catholics thoughout t~e Lansing diocese will participate in forums and home discussion groups 1as~ on the report of the National Acf visory Commission on Civil Disshyorders The program which begaa with public forums in six citie on April 29 was planned ~

middot three diocesanmiddot agencies-the Ofshyfice of Social and Community Service the Office of Renewal Through Vatican II and the adult education division of tne Education Department It was initiated in response to an appeal made by Bishop Alexshyander Zaleski The day following the death of Dr Martin Luther King Bishop Zaleski asked dishyocesan directors to plan an imshymediate program designed to

meetmg of heBIShops n erence WIt ISop e e~ros be a center of communi~y life CONTACT MANAGER - LINCOLN PARK of BrowI)svIlle Texas and fOtmiddotmer chancellor of the Fall for bishops arid priests with spe- 9996984 636-2744 ~iver Di~~~~lt __~gt -cilla~~gnrn~iitS~~o~~~ ~ Oc)QI~OC~)OQCIOC)oOOOCgtoc)OQltjIOcXllOOOCgtOC)oOC~)OIL)QOCgtOCPOoO

Page 12: 05.02.68

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12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 2 1968

C~~e$ ~~Ergy Role in Sreg~Hrch F9f ~~ Crisis Sc~~tm(ln

By Msgr George G Higgins The bighop of a middle-siood eastern diocese recently

gnnounced at ceremonies memorializing Martin Luther King Jr that the diocese will spend a substantial portion of its annual Development Fund to improve the condition ef the Negro bullbullbull The money poslible that even those Cahoshyhe was at pains to empha- lies (and Protestants) who are size will not be gpent pater- most vigorously opposeq to

wilistically but in close 00- clerical involvement in social operation with local Negro and economic issues are nevershyleaders He said that his com- theless in fevor of using church mitffiimt wi 11 funds as seed money to develshylTeceiVe the op projects for the benefit of bacJcing of the the poor in general and for areas Catholics poor Negroes in partiCUlar I make tbisDisconcerting Fact ~ o m mit - I would hope of course that ment he as- this might prove to be the case aert1d confi- but only time will tell lIIent that our Meanwhile the fact that Catholic people such a high percentage of Cathshyshare this love olies and protestants are 00

-m Ii d concern record as being opposed to That the bishop the middotchurches getting involved felt it necessary in political and social issues is to make the latter statement for rather disconcerting to put it the record might lead one ~ as mil~ly as possible suspeet that in point of factmiddot be I say tliisas one who can symshyantiCfpated that some of hi$ pathizewith thoseCatholicsor Catholic people would object to Protestants or Jews who object his 0 decision and was mereIi to certain types of clerical inshyWying to neutralize their op~ volvement which either ignore mtion in advance or to put it the complexities of the political morecrudely was trying to ~rocess or tend to oversimplify beat them to the punc~ sO to the application of moral prinei-Bjpeak pIes to complex social and ecoshy

I Expert Opposition pomic problems or finally tend Be that as it may a recent to leave the impression that

ampallup Poll on the attitude of Clerics have a monopoly on the Cathdlics 3lld Protestants with regard to the involvement of their churches and their clergy in political and social issues would seem to suggest thatshylIIlless his diocese is the rare exceptl(~n that proves the rule -~he bIShop can exp~t a cershyiau~ amount of 0PPoSIb~)D from a slzable JIllnonty of his Cathshyooc people

lftY-Seven per cent of Cathshyclies res~ndmg m the Gallu~ survey said that the churcti~~ should not get involved with 35 per cent statmg that t~e d1~rch~~ sho~d express SOCIal enS pO~~Ical Vle~s

~gn Icantly l~ was found ~at more Catholics than Pro~-

Virtue of political prudence or have been granted ethical inshysights thatmiddot have been denied to other mortals

S~rious Obligation It is one thing however to

demand that clerics stay within the limits of their o~ compeshytence in the political order and quite another thing to try to muzzle them or to deny that they have any role at all to play in the field of public policy In the case of civil rights for exatitple they havemiddot a serious

Gbligation to teach the truth as they see it

To do so in any meaningful woay tlley must at times move beyond the realm of general

0Stants thmk ~hat the ~hurlt~esprinciples into the area of spe- should n~ get ~volved ~n soc~al and polItlcal Issues Fifty-~wo lPOerlledcefnt of the Protesta~ts P avored mvolvment whIle 42 ~er cent disagreed

Hadden Study Contrarirwise however a

mudy released during the same week in which middotthe Gallup findshymgs were made public found

ntat in all caSes Protestantsmiddot were more vigorous in their opshyposition to social action by clergymen thaI) either Roman Catholics or Jews

The latter study directed by ~effrey K Hadden a sociologist at Western Reserve University in Cleveland was summarized In ~onsiderabledetail by Edwaro R iFiske in an article entitled -Cl~rgy and Civil Rights in the editorial section of the Sunday Ap~il 21 issue of the New York linles

Since the Gallup and HadGen Alrveys dealt specifically with the right of the clergy and the ehurches to speak o~t on social and political issues (civil rights tor example) and not on the role of the churches in financing programs aimed at improving U1t ~ot of Negroes their findshyings do not necessarily m~ ofoou~E that the bishop referrect to a~ove will encounter oppe-

cifies~ even at the risk of a~tagshyonizing those Catholics who disshyagree ith them

This does not mean that clershyies or other representatives of official church bodies should shortcircuit the political procshyess by trying to force their own solutions on the body politic by means of heavy-handed authorshyitarian edicts

If they were to shirk this reshysponsibility or run awoay frOm this challenge for fear of antagshyonizing a minority (or for that matter eyen a majority) of their people they would be unshyworthy of their calling

-This having been said howshyever itshould be noted that clericS and other representatives of offlCiilI church bodies alSo

have an obllgation to keep their methods of teaching under conshystant review

Wo~ CUt Out We cannot automatically as-middot

Sume in other words that all of those who object to clerical involvement in political and soc~lissues are necessarily in

HEADS NCEA Bishop Raymond J 9allagher of Lafayette Ind was elected president general of the Natshyional Catholic Educational Association at the associa- tions 65th annual conven- tion in San Francisco NC Photo

Venerate Fatima Statue in Brazil

LISBON (NC)-Manuel Cardshyinal Goncalves Cerejeira patri- arch of Lisbon imd Bishop Joao Pereira Venancio of Leiria whose diocese includes the Marshyian shrine of Fatima returned here after participating in threeshyday ceremonies in Brazil honorshying Our Lady of Fatima

They t~ok the statue of the -Pilgrim Virgin of Fatima with them to Brazil

At Sao Paulo they took part in Portuguese - Brazilian Communshyity Day celebrations At Inhangshyabau and at Rio de Janei1G thousands joined them in ven- erating the statue

The patriarch and Bishop Venshy

ancio were accompanied in Brazil by the rector of the Fat-middot i m a shrine Msgr Antonio Borges

_ sitiOJifrom any slgnificantnuili middot te~ which they caiiunder- pany a mernber of the Jew-middot

ber ~f his people for usin~ cii- stand and absorb jish fAith has neen elected GCeSaIl f~nds for the economic -Ifthis sho~d prove to be the to in bOardof +-~ t- and~ ~OCIal bettel1nent 01 the case we have our work cut out ~ bull wu~ ~ W

Wack citizens of his communitlT ~r~ in the montha ftbat lie the CaU~hc VnlverampliyNe ~~ other words it is quite aheiid middotPboto

~ ~

bad faith It may be in the case of some

r of tb~m at le9st we are at fault TRUSTEE BenJamin T ~ in the sense that we havent Iearned how to communicate the Rome president of aWaah Go~l meSsage to them in i n g ton construction oom-

The Servant Queen IiJ the Constitution on the Church we find the testimony of

Sacred Scripture and the Church Fathers combined with more recent pronouncements by the popes Mary the Mother of God an4 of the Redeemer was united to Him by a close inen soluble bond and waS accorded a special role in the mystery Qf the middotIncamiddotrnate Word that is in the economy of salvation

Whenmiddot Mary uttered the words of her Fiat she made a ~l eommitment to God so that He could carry out His de- slgus in middothermiddot Mary never took back hell ad of total surrender Dot even on the road to CalvarY lFrom that firstmiddot moment she devoted herself wholly to serving DM only her heavenly Fashyther and the Incarnate Word but also the whole human race lin the llncarnation Our Blessed Mother first brought Christ to the world Anell that is precisely what she would have 70U do aUmiddot your life-bring Christ to the world

Ev~n after the AScenslon she loyally and steadfastly camiddotrried out~~r role aCting as spirit1lI mother to the beloved disciple anli ~~ ne~rn Cl1urch~ With good reason then we can say tha~~e wJole life of the Lords humble handtnaid~from the moment IIhewas porn to the present-is one of loVing seZvice to her cltildren what gzeater example and what ~tei model could y~ chqose to imitate in Oilder to fulfill your ta~k as a Christian called to~ove and -to serVe your poor 8iKl sUffering bro~ers arqupd the world

You must DOW take over Mars task~ You are the door through which Christ enters the world You muSt receive the Lon and bear Him in 70ur heart sO thaamp He rnA7 beeo~e the heartmiddot ofmiddot your life Then His love Jiis goodne~ Dis pity for the multitude middotwill shine through you into the world Then He will smile through your eyes Then He will help with your hanels Then He will comfort with your goodness Then He will relive in your pers~n His life of long ago for the sake of todayS desperate humanity

In this the month dedicated to the Mother of the church show your love for her by making her task your task by sacrificing to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith-to help those of her children who are in such need

SAlLVATioN and SERviCE lUe the work of The Soclet7 il~r ~~ Propagati~n of th~ Faith Please cut Gut this column llInd sen~ your of~ering to Right Reverend EdwardT OMeara Nationll-ll Director 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 Or directly to your local Diocesan Director BU Rev Msgr Raymond TConsid~e 3611 North Main Street Fall River Massachusetts e~7~omiddot

DAUGHTERS middotDf ST PAUL-combine a middotlife of prayer and action Bringers of the Gospel Messhysage to souls everywhere by means of personal contact Pauline Missionaries labor in 30 Nations Members witness to Christ in a unique missionshypropagation of the printed Word of God The Sisters write illustrate print and bind their own publications and diffuse them among people of all creeds races and cultures Young girls 14-23 interested in this vital Mission may write to

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13 New Jersey Grand Jury Absolves Police of Deaths During Rioftong

NEWARK (NC) - A special and charged it with lcHrity m Essex Cotmty grand jury inves- permitting some of lots material tigating the deaths of 28 people to i1all into private hands which during rioting in this city last misused il Summer absolved po1dce laquol Reporting on the deaths it blame iO the deatbs in a pre- found that three were not conshysentment which rebuked an nected with the rioting that anti-poverty agency for failure eight resulted from wounds inshyto cooperate willi law enforce- curred while participating in ment agencies criminal acts that nine of those

The presentment was issued killed were apparently innocent after the jury had heard more bystanders that two apparently than 100 witnesses over an resulted from sniper fire that eight-week period It said there two were from accidental was insufficient evidence to shooting and that one could not warrant indictment in any of be classified the cases presented to it al- Another special grand jury is though an earlier trial resulted now being paneled to carry out hi the conviction of a man for an investigation of Newarks fatally shooting a woman municipal government This inshy

In the final analysis the vestigation was recommended ~ury concluded the responsi- by the governors commission bility for the loss of life and which reported a pervasive property that is the inevitable feeling of corruption in Newshyproduct of rioting and mass ark lawlessness cannot be placed upon those whose duty it is to enforce and protect the freedom Convention lliead of our society

Courage Restraint N E MonsignorIt rests squarely upon the

MANCHESTER (NC)-Msgrhoulders of those who for euroolin A MacDonald presidentwhatever purpose incite and of the Manchester diocese senateparticipate in riots and the of priests has been selected asflouting of law and order in chairman of the national con-complete disregard of the rights stiiutional convention of theand well-being of the vast mashyproposed U S priests councilsjority of our citizens organization 110 be held May 20Although the presentment and 21 in Chicago leveled some small criticisms at

I1he monsignor earlier hadpolice actions it generally upshybeen elected as the Bostonheld the work of law enforceshyprovince delegate to a 29-memshyment officers and this was in ber ad hoc steering committeecontrast to the report of the for the convention When ill wasNew Jersey (()vernors Comshydecided 110 limicent the steeringmission on Civil Disorder commimiddotlltee 110 8 members thewhich was highly critical of the

police JJlQIlsignor was elected to this group then ohosen as chairmanWith some exceptions the

jury said police both local and Msgr MacDonald said the state together with National purposes of the proposed NashyGuardsmen acquitted themselves tional Federation of Priests with courage and restraint in Councils are to promote priestly the early stages of the riot brotherhood by faciJi1ating comshy

munion among priests councilsPoor Judgment to provide a forum for the disshyThe grand jury said the poshycussion of pastoral matters tolice were handicapped by lack enable priests councils to speakof training appropriate equipshywith a common representativement effective direction and voice to proD101e and collabshyexperience in dealing with the orate in programs of pastoraltype of situation in which they research and action to impleshywere involved ment the reriewal of priestlyThe jury did say that in the life to provide the means forlater stages of the disturbances priests councils united nationshythere were examples of poor ally to cooperate with the tityjudgment excessive use of fireshythe ~eligious the bishops andarms and D manifestation of with others in addressing thevindictiveness that eannot be needs of the Church in the modshytolerated in law enforceD1ent ern World and to do whateverpersonnel is necessary to carry out theseAD10ng the recommendations purposesit made was one that looting be

Members of the Priests Senshyeffectively controlled at its ate of the Diocese of Fall Riverearliest manifestations It also have sent suggestions regardingcalled for the improveD1ent and the proposed organization toupdating of equipment and said Monsignor MacDonaldthe use of chemicals and nonshy

lethal gases should be explored and considered Priests Paid SllEme

The jury called for improveshyment in police-community relashy Salary as Laborers tions and said there is no place PARIS (NC) - The averagefor abusive language or ill salary of priests in the Paris treatment of any group of citi shy region is about the saD1e as thatzens Like the governors COD1shy of an unskilled laborer accordshymission it deplored the use of ing to figures contained in thepersonally-owned weapons by first public budget report of thepolice Paris archdiocese

The anti-poverty agency crit shy The archdiocesan operatingicized was Newark Legal Servshybudget the report showed isices Project a branch of the $440000 a year most of whichUnited Community Corp which is for the salaries of 384 nonshyhelps ghetto residents with legal parish priests more than a thirdproblems

retired This indishyCharges Laxity of whoD1 are cates an average of less than $1-The jury accused it of failing 000 a year to cooperate in post-riot invesshy

Parishes pay direclly the 600tigations said the character of it taken were parish priests but their base salshystatements had

inadequate and ary is only about $50 a monthunprofesSional Honorariums for baptisms marshyriages and special Masses add

Receives Admiral about an equal amount to this VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope sum but pcrivate requests for

Paul VI received in audience Masses are declining Parish Adm Joseph Edet Akinwale priests send to the archdiocese Wey of the Nigerian Navy who the honorari~s of Masses they had told a press conference that coannot celebrate In 1964 this he hoped to present a message amounted to about 22000 Masses from the Nigerian government a year now it is only about three on the Biafra siiuatiolL ~middotfourmiddot thousand~

r THE ANCHORshyThursday May 2 1968

I

Schoo~s Exp~ore

Dual E~l~~rMJcemlt LOUISVILLE (NC)-Catholie

school officials here are trying to work out dual enrollment agreeD1entS with public schoo officials in two locations

If agreement is reached stushydents at Flaget High School here and at Bethlehem Academy may benefit next Fall from the proshygram

Moves toward the dual enrQllshyment concept were made possishyble when the Kentucky attorney general issued an opinion which said in effect that public schools might get state financial assistance for students enrolled part-time in public schools

Under the plan students in private schools could take some subjects in public schools and others in their own schools

Famiddotther Thomas P Casper Louisville diocesan superintendshyent of schools said he is submitshyting dual enrollment proposalpoundNEWMAN CLUBS MEET At oonferenee of Newman to the Louisville Bardstown andClubs from area colleges representatives of Fall River Dishy Nelson County boards of educa~

reese included from left Walter La Rosa Our Lady ill Mt tion Carmel parish Seekonk a student at Bristol Community While action on the roposaw College Lydia Rocha St Michaels Fall River BCC Rev is up U the public boards-the

attorney generals opinion grantvHarold J Wilson BOC Newman Club chaplain Morgan permission but does not force

Childs St Patricks Falmouth SMTL ootion-Father Casper said he if very pleased that there are possibilities open now for deshyveloping dual enrollD1entReturns to Moscow Final form of any dual enroll shyment effort is still to be decided

Fr Dion Assumption College President But one such method treated in the attorney generals opinion

Named Apostolic Administrator is the leasing of space in Cathshyolic schools by public schoom

WORCESTER (NC) - Father a visiting Russian churchman and the operation of this spaceLouis F Dion AA president here Father Bissonnette is now as public school classroomsof AssuD1ption College here will academic dean at Assumption resign his post June 30 to be- College COD1e apostolic administrator in Father Dion had to wait more New Jersey Bishopthe Soviet Union and chaplain than three years after Father to American Roman Catholics Bissonnettes expulsion before Asks United Action in Moscow obtaining a Soviet visa enabling ATLANTIC CITY (NC) shy

Father Dion held the same him to go to Moscow via Paris Bishop George H Guilfoyle of posts in Russia from 1959 to in January 1959 Camden issued a call for united 1961 He served as assistant to Father Dion said he is looking action on the part of all of WJ the president and registrar of forward to his return to the to 36Sist our fellow man as Assumption College from 1962 Moscow post He bad not specifshy he helped dedicate a HUD1aJ until his appointment as presi- ically requested the assignment Resources Center aiD1ed at job dent ill June 1964 he said but it was offered to develpoment for some of this

He replaces Father Eugene him and he accepted it willingly resort areas 50000 poor LaPlante AA who returns to Powers of Bishop This nation has made treshythe Assumptionist Fathers The duties of chaplain Father mendous strides in the fields opound AD1erican province for reassign- Dion explained are not con- science industry business and ment after a three-year term fined to American Catholics medicine he said It is shameshy

ful that in view of all this proshySeventh to Serve living in Moscow They include gress we still have millions ofFather Dion is the seventh he said the entire foreign colshypeople who live in poverty andAmerican priest-all Assump- ony - the diplomatic corps wanttionists-to serve in Moscow un- newspaper personnel and tour-

Bishop Guilfoyle said theder the terms of the 1933 Roose- ists Camden diocese will contributevelt-Litvinov agreement estab- Since there ar(~ no European

$1000 to the new center to belishing diploD1atic relations be- priests-or priests of any other nationality-in Moscow serving used for whatever program the

tween the U S and the USSR in the capacity of chaplain he board of directors decides hi He was replaced in 1961 by said the American chaplain needed Father Joseph Richard AA ministers to the spiritual needs who served four years in the of Catholics attached to the post staffs of embassies and legations

His iD1D1ediate predecessor accredited to the Soviet governshy FAIRHAVENwas Father Georges Bisslgtnnette ment AA who was expelled in The post of apostolic adminisshy LUMBERMaTch 1955 by the Soviet gov- trator Father Dion said inshy

COMPANYernment in retaliation for U S volves all the powers and funcshyrefusal to prolong the visa of tions of a bishop except ordina~

tion and consecration of bishops Complete line It is assigned to a priest usuallyAtlanta Archdiocese Building Materials in areas where there is DO

Joins Equal Housing hierarchy who is then dimiddotrectly responsible to the Holy See 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVENATLANTA (NC)-The lllChshy Father Dion expects to arrivediocese of Atl~lnta has joined in Moscow in early August he 993-2611more than 50 metropolitan At- said

lan-ta organizations and indi- viduals as co-spo~sors of the Atlanta Metropoli tan COmmit- bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull~

tee on Equal Opporunity ill Housing

HThe objective of the confer- BISAILLONS ence will be primarily educashytional Father Noel C Burtenshy GARAGEshaw ehancellor of the arch- diocese and member of the execu-tive committee said 24-Hour Wrecker

He added We expect this dialogue and interChange will establish middotnecessary communicashy 653 Washington Street Fairhaven tion and provide Some answers 994-5058~ the housing problems facing reater Atlanta bull

Thanks Catholics For Refugee Aid

VATICAN - CITY (NC)-NearMsgrEllis Relates Hist~ry middotmiddotEastmiddotwelfare work of U S Cathshyolics has been praised by Pope Paul VL0+ Training for Priesthood

Such a message in the Popes By Rt Rev Msgr Jobs S Kennedy

The publication of a book by Monsignor John Tracy Ellis founder and dean of a new school of American Cath~

lti)lic churchhistory is always a weloome event This is true even when the book is among his minor works SuCh is Essays in Seminary Educoshytion (Fides Notre Dame Inshydiana 46556 $595) amiddot 001shylection of papers and address-C2S There is some repetition in Chese essays which were preshyared for vari shyeus occasions But it does not illessen the imshyact of a book which shows us n keen critical in tell i g ence brought to beal OIl a subject of bas i c imporshylance The hand rDf the historian iIs seen throughshy~t the book The first three essays are specifically historical

The firsi deals with the trainshylog or preparation of priests from the apostolic age to the ~ncil of Trent the second with the same subject from the time of Trent to ~ 1960s The tird is todevoted diocesan theological seminaries in the American Middle West 1811shy1889

A survey such 00 the author Makes in the two opening chap $ers is of especial interest beshyeause it brings out tile implausshyible but incontestable fact that b about the fimiddotI9t 1500 years of its existence the Church did DOt have anything even regem- bling a standard ~m of edushy_tion for the priesfil100d

Monastie Schools fttere were no special schoobl

lor the clergy before the time Of

The medieval universitieQ were foundedmiddot by the Church amd the clery p~yed ~ im ~rtant part m them But theyWei b d al ~ ed ti e y no means I e Jormiddot ushy(l3 on for the pnesthood SInce2he the I g I kemelyq 1~~~y~middotou~emiddot~~U Iersi~ of P middotkmiddotlmiddot5middot6

-Y arlS n ovv or ~(fears to complete thedoCtOriite ill theology Hence few priestsbenefited f-rom 4--

~ UDlversI Effective Response

lhe POr estate of the clergy~ glarmgly a~parent in the ens of the Renalsance and the Bef~rmation and this middotis prj shy

manly llttutablello educashytional defiCiency And evea hen the reforming Council of lIrent was launched it took 1~ ~rs ~efore a dec~ on clerical educa~on was achieved and a long tlme thereafter before its proVISIonS were carned out in practice

Monsignor Elliss treatment of

ticularly the institutions founded by St Vincent de Paul and Jean-Jacques Olier

These men win the authors praise for their effective reshygponseto a vital need But he does IlQt hesitate to lay to them ~e responsibility for some of the anti-intellectual bias which chamcterizea too many seminashyli13 in subsequent centuries

incredible NWIIlber In the United States some

quite ancient history was reshylived as the bishops of new dioceses had cleriea schools of sorts in their own homes But in the days of the very first bishop John Oarroll a real

had b - -bli hed semmary een - 9when the Sulpichms came to Baltimore in 1791 and founded St Marys

Later developmen1s are sumshymarized by Monsignor Ellis with attention to the various types of seminaries and the growth m numbers from 50 in 1668 to 571 iIn 1964 Thi6 last incredible number is indicative 0If tile regre~le proliferation Which led to needless duplicashytiOD inadequacy in quality and waste of resources

A test of middotthe exeellence of American seminaries is proshyposed by the atrtbor how many men of enduring reputation ba~ flhey produced The anshyswerJs that tIhe fteonl is not distinguished And much of the lelIlainder of the book is given 110 probing for reasons m exshyplanation Of this

Routine Teaeldllamp at Augustine whomiddotbecame Ihi Anierican ~mi~ry of -ilJhop of Hippo in 396 His 1be ft refleCted _ national

_

LlIFE MEMBERS Msgr John E Boyd chaplain left and Dominick Maxwell Jr right Grand Knight of Fall River Council 86 of the Knights of Columbus i~vest Jerome D Foley and Dr Joseph Carvalho as life members

~

Rural Ireland Charge Farmers Lack Formal Training

In Agriculture ROSSLARE (NC)The need Wbat chance had the boy who

for priests to be more involved left school at 14 of making the in social problems was stressed grade at farming ~he excepshyby 9peakers at the annual meetshy tional lads made it The rest are

~ e9tablished and mairitaineCi~ - In the future he said until 4- disregard cif inteli~tualqua1itY this is rectified Ninety-five nAr ~ his own household and had In ~y instances ~ty mem- ~ imitators ~gt bera ere apPOint~~ t~eir ~t of e5ent-day farmers Thereafter came the mona~f)le positi - middotth m rd io ~v~ had IlQ post-primary edushySchools initiated by St BenediCt ons WIlifo ~ga r cation NinetYofive per cent ofin thmiddot th proper qlla Ications MuCh of farmers have had middotno formal esnr cent~ the~ fllie teaching was rolltine and~rting in middotligrlcultllredr~ and-middot eP1scqp~ Scboo~ an~ dun Collateral reading _n6t middot~JFlWle Awayampnally themiddot medieval UDlvenu- middot~~d lib ties middot - ~ampt~W1~ an nu-~ wer~ Fcaither qerinehy ~ncluded

~e )mperorPbariemaible ~~~poundreed ~tho~~laquo~ lt m the eigh~h ~turydecr~ miD not aencournt ~e~ch~Gt~~n6~llIIr~Watmiddot ilhat alLclencs m~be lble to middotwas virtuall uilkn a lj ~

ifead im~~ri~ J~d~ve ~m- faculties PU~Shed v~illi~~e iT ~~~t ~~t~Bltcs petence In ~h~~ )~1esslC~~Idu- Monsignor Ellis points tJ01 the BOGOTA (NC) _ Anglican tiaif~king ~ DllIllmum timidity which prevailed after Bishop David Benson Reed of

q I I~~ons they ~ere to be the eJcesses perpetrated in 1l1e BogOta offered accommodations e~ ~~ deprIved of repression of Modernism in the for~five Catholic bishops during me iectr~~ IS we can see w a fim part of the present centurY theforthcoming International

g ere had been He sees a change in the era of Eucharistic Congresss in August

ing of the Christu Rex Society an Irish organization for priestDmiddot engaged in pastoml work

Over 250 priests and represhysentatives of agriculturalorgan- izations attended the cOngress here on the theme Rural Ireshyland

Father Jerome Dennehy CC of Kenm2lre criticized the fail- ure of the Iri9h educational sysshytem to provide the farmer with the basic knowledge necessarY to enable him to profimiddott from advice from government agenshydes onfurming methods

No real progress can be made

Vatican II and happily notes and five Ecuadorian prelates aeshythe improvements already made cepted his invitation

lUld those-in prosPectmiddotmiddot He hJ They are Bishops Bernardo hopeful for the future Ech R f Amb to d

evern~ wz 0 a anlIJiteUktlllal A~lieDtmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot-middotCandiiiomiddotRada Cenosian of Guashybull - d middotmiddotd A 1 B h

in8 ConclUding ~y~ ran a liln UXIlary IS ops Priestmiddot as rntelleCtllal~~ v~rll9middotmiddotGabrieI1iazCueva Ernesto that abettereducated and mueh Alvarez ~liaVlcente CIsneros of

and ea r Gua allmoreaware enti laitrmiddotmiddot y qu demands a certainmiddotleveloflD-middot B~SbtPAnBeedli has JurCls~lctib~n

middotfellectual attainment and alivemiddot middot~v~r eo g cans In 0 om la its cl and Ecuador and has been an

~~ ooes ermeam that the ecumenical leader in these

now fading away with thei~

farms Father Eamonn Casey nashy

ijonal director of the catholic Housing Aid Society in London stressed the necessity for the priest to work with underprivishyleged members of -society Too often he said the theologians are on the periphery - they should come doWn to earth and mix with the people-who really

priest has to be a professional~untries ~ _ ~=====~_ intellectual such is not his _ Over 200 bis~ops a~ 1~ ~r-Etmiddotmiddot D ampD SALES AND SERVICE cation ltR does mean that he has dinals have saId they Wlll at-sect to maintain a genuiDe hifei-est end the EUcharistie Congress to - sect ill things intellectUal anq m Mbeid be~ sectpublic questions sect

Monsignor Ellismiddot chides sUPe- sect riors for their failure to eneour- p~iori ~ the minisky in sect age priests 110 use their ~cial teD-dayretreatS preceding or- sect talents skills and aptitudes dination Better than nothing sectAnd he urgeS priests 110 acquire one suPPoses sect( and retain habits of 9tudy It is In the lntervaJ there has sect to be hoped that both these cau- ~ great improvement But sect

name has been sent to lI1sgr John G Nolan president of the Pontifical lVlission for Palestine whose headquarters are in New Vork Written by Amleto Carshydinal Cicogilani Papal Secreshytary of State it referred to the

1 Missions 19 years service to ~ Palestinian refugees particushy

larly victims of the recent Arab-Israeli conflictto

It singled out as particularly praiseworthy the contribution of the Catholic Near East Welshyfare Association saying that middotthrough the unflagging genershyosi ty of the catholics of the United States of America it provided qlost of the means for the Missions work following the recent conflict

The papal letter declared No other agency surpasses the Pontifical Mission in length of

middot actualmiddot serviCe and its identifl shycapon with the paternal intershy~ and concern of the Holy Father merits his encourageshyment hismiddot blessing and his prayerful good wishes

Cardinal middotCicOgnanl wrote that Pope Paul out of paternal afshyfection for the homeless and of grateful esteem for the Pontifi shycal Mission bids memiddot send yOIll the enclosed check for $5000 Added to this was a furthell amount of money contributed

middot by the Congregation for the Oriental Churches

Msgr Nolan was asked that during his Easter visit to the refugee campS he kindly disshytribute the total sum in the Popes Dame to all the needyen

ar~~~stChneU~made adicbot-SAVE MONEY ON omy of man saying here is middotthe

body her~ is the soul-Iam YOUR middotOImiddotLmiddotHEATconCerned only with the soul bull bull bull bull Tmiddothe love of Christ is for the whole person and anything ~ -4~ WYman that concerns 1llieperson is of ~ US92 concern to middotChrist

He said thatmiddot the priest middotshould CHARLES F VARGAS selk tomiddotmiddot develop ~ature Ght-ls- tiMlS amongdsmiddotflockiuidcpre- 54 ROCKDALE AvENUE pare themmiddotforlife Th~ role of 1 the ~~esthe~dmiddotiftcl~desmiddotth~middot ~E~ BEDFORD MASS proVISIon Qfmiddotmiddot mformatlOn oo sexual and~ari~itLplmiddotobiehis 1

He stlggcentstJd middottbatmiddotmiddotmiddotPri~middot main~in cQJjt$C~ wjth~ those whlt emjgra~~mmiddottheir_ par- ish~ and follo~middotup middotthe middotcareers( of boys who are releasedmiddot from refprm schools t

1 bull bullbull - - ~_ _ - ~ ( ~

~ ~ lt

~III1I11I11I11I11I1UIIIIIIlIl1mlllllIII1I1I1I11I1I1I1I11II11I1I11I11I11IIIII11I1I11IIllIUIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~

tionary words win be wideiy~ OW measure canOOt be the poor sect AIR COmiddotIDmiddotImiddotTmiddotIO~IImiddot bullGmiddot

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REFRIGERATImiddotO~ ~

APPLIACES ~~

~ post-Tridentinemiddot seminaries bulland responsibly beard Performance of the past It sect I~ I~ I~ lis remarkably extensive but the It is hard 110 believe tb1Ilt as must be the imperious demands sect main focus is on those ofF~Ce ~ as the seventee~th centu~lt ~ the p~sent an4 ~~ fUture ~ 363 SECOND ST FALL RIVER MASSbull bull the seventeenth century Pal- fa France some clena lOt their ~IWIIIUIUIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIUUlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUUIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIUIiIUWlimllllli5

HE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 2 1968 1S

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs May 2 1968 Back Presidenills ~reg~reg ~~~1rf~Jreg~MO~ ~~~lliJO[[reg(gJ ~rntilO1fi)[[fr~ofr~r

CHICAGO (NC)-The Assoshy~~ ~~regramp~~ o[J1j [Q)1 W[J1lJ[[o ciation of Chicago Priests an

The record compiled 56 years ful Swamppodle a neighborshy unofficial group of some 1500 priests in the archdiocese ofago still stands in big league hood within sight of the U S

baseball annals-most runs al shy Capitol talked about Father Chioago has endorsed President Johnsons current efforts to]owed one game 24 Travers Travers band

fA J (Joe) Detroit Never before had the bandsshy negotiate a Settlement of the

Father Aloysius J Travers men performed like they did in Vietnam war The ACP in its fifth plenarygJ 75 who achieved the dubishy the 1919 May procession-never

ous pitching distinction died had such old favorites as Tis session here turned down a resolution prepared by its soshylast week in Misericordia Hosshy the Month of Our Mother and cial action subcommittee onpital Philadelphia He acquied 0 Mary We C~own Thee With

baseball immortality on May Blossoms Today been so spir shy peace calling for complete cesshy

112 1912 as pitcher for the One sation of U S bombing in Vietshyitedly played by Gonzaga bandsshynam to support the Presidents limited decrease in bombing

men as the procession windedlDay Wonders Detroits brawling Tigers were through Swampoodle streets glated to play Connie Macks After the procession was over and negotiation moves

Two other peace resolutionspOwerful Philadelphia As that the school rector called in recommended by the subcomshy_ daymiddotin old Shibe Park Detroits Father Travers and congratushy

Btar Ty Cobb had drawn a fine mittee were approved They

and two-day suspension for formance The rector added lated him on the bands pershy

put the ACP on record as favorshy

belting a heckling fan a few But high school musicians with ing draft law revisions so that a person might be exempt as a

lligers decided if Cobb couldnt mustaches Dont you think thatdays earlier in New York~ ~he

conscientious objector to a parshywas going a bit too far ticular war without necessarilyFather T~avers had recruitedplay they wouldnt either so being a conscientious objector

Famous llnfield a dozen or so members of thecenthey went on strike

to all war and so that a per

With the aid of Connie Mack crack Fort Myer Army Band

son could be exempt as a conshyfOm nearby Arlington Va scientious objector on humanishy

ed up a collection of Philadelshydressed them in cadet uniforms~e Detroit management roundshy

tarian as well as religioUlland put them in the school band groundsBesides teaching at Stphia sandlot players signed

The ACP also approved threeJosephs Prep and Gonzagathem to Detroit contracts and recommendations of its liturgy

as the Tigers sf Francis Xavier High in New committee York As a result the priests group

Father Travers also taught atfielded the One Day Wonders

Al Travers 19 fresh out of has urged the National Confershyat Josephs Prep School rho Disbands Hawks ence of Catholic Bishops to reshyhelped recruit the sandlotters One of his moSt heartbreaking submit two liturgical petitioJUloppointed himself pitcher He assignments was given him some to the Conglegation of Rites inctftein recalled I learned that 25 years ago He was sent back Rome The petitions which had e pitcher would collect-50 to St Josephs College where New Problem ~en turned down by the Vati shyeX-tra so I volunteered the battIe cry is The Hawk can congregation would allowThat day the As scored 24 will never die as moderator the establishment of experimenshyINns on 25 hits with io nuts of athletics Priest Urges F~ir labor Practices tal centers for the liturgycmearned against young Travshy His jOb-disband the Hawks For CatholicSchool Faculties throughout the country and limshy

erG The wonder is the score football team with a minimum ited experimentation with thewasnt higher for young Tra~~rs of uproar from students and SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-For betweell the school and the liturgy without prior approvalwas pitching against the best alumni since football had beshy as long as anyone can rememshy religious community of the Vaticanbalt team of the era-against come a moneymiddot losing sport at ber the Religious and lay peoshy Some experts says that the

PhiladelphiaS famous $100000 St Josephs and a number of nte third resolution called on-pie who serve on the faculties best solution to this problem is

infield of John Phelan (Stuffy) other Catholic colleges in ~those the NCCB to take concrete stepsof Catholic grammar and high to bar Religious from partici shy

McInni6 at first Eddie Collins days to implement proposals of itsschools have been the type of pating in labor organizations

lJeCOnd Jack Barry short and He did his job well directing liturgy committee for adaptashypeople who would never think But Father Reicher indicated

IPrank (Home Run) Baker third attention to St Joes basketball tion of the Mass to smaIl anelof going out on strike against this would only divide the Reshy special age groupsSaves Franchise team which has grown into one unfair labor practices since ligiousand lay faculty of schools

But young Travers and the of the nations powerhouses this would imply some sort of even more than they are dividedORe Day Wonders who had For the last 25 years Father guilt on the part of p~ors and now India to ReconsiderI2ever seen Detroit saved the Tlavers had been stationed at bishops Urging a period of experishybaseball franchise for the Tigers St Josephs Prep in semishy Well those days are gone forshy meritation to work out new Deporting Priestttlat day If they hadnt pl~yed retirement during recent years ever according to Chicagos forms of collective bargaining NEW DELHI (NC) - Indiantile As chances are the Amershy Requiem Mass for the colorful Father Robert Reicher and the Father Reicher concluded It ill Prime Minister Indira GandbJ1bean L~ague would have lifted one-day big leaguer was ofshy job now is to set up standards obvious that the right to barshy has promised reconsideration ofDetroits franchise because of fered Thursday at GeuChurch of fair labor practice and guidshy gain collectively is a natural the order expelling Jesuitthe players strike in Philadelphia ance for faculty members grievshy tight clearly defended time and Father Vincent Ferr r of theDespite the lopsided score procedures against Cathoshy agaiil ethically and morally Poona diocese Indiaance fromlPatJher Travers got several big lic school administrators But this right also implies an lleague offers as a result of his Canonist Cates Need The pmmise was made when

Speaking to participants at 8 obligation to know what colleCshy tlhree members of the Indiani pitching He turned them down secondary school department tive bargaining involves went to St Josephs College For Negro Prieds parliament met with Mrs Ganshy

meeting during the Nationalthen joined the Jesuits ATLANTIC CITY (Nch - A dhi here and asked her to get

National Catholic Educational the order cancelled and grantThe lesson he learned fmln plea for more Negro Catholic Bishops Ask PopeAssociation convention here Indian citizemihip to the priestthe unorthodox recruiting as a priests has been made at the Father Reicher outlined some ofone-day big leaguer stood him annual Easterri regional meeting To Visit Canada Father Ferrer founder of thethe problems facing Catholic in good stead a half-dozen years of the Canon Law Society of OTTAWA (NC) -Pope Paul Maharashtra Farmers Servicelabor - management relations

later when he was teaching at America here in New Jersey The pliest is chairman of the VI may visit Canada next month Society was scheduled for deshyGQnzaga High School in Washshy Msgr Thomas J Reese of Wilshy to attend the National Confershy portation last year but wasChicago archdiocesan Catholicington D C mington in the neighboring State ence on Poverty sponsored by granted several extensions ofCouncil on Working Life and a

Recruits Ringers of Delaware speaking on experishy jVell-known labor expert Christian Churches in Canada his stay He was accused by iiimiddot mental parishes accused the Hindu groupS ofanti-Indian acshyFather Travers was in charge Religious who teach in CatBshy Bishop Alexander Carter presshy

Church of racism and said that tivities and by the Maharashtraof the school b~llld which used olic schools pose a special diffi shy ident of the Canadian CatholicNegro Catholics prefer to - be state government of anti shyto master only about two or culty hi labor relations because Conference has acknowledged national activitiesselved by black priests of whom

CHURCHES UNITED Bishop Reuben H Mueller left of the Evangeli~al United Brethren Church and Methoshydist Bishop Lloyd C Wicke led representatives of their respective bodies at ceremonies in Dallas proclaiming the union of the two churches The new body is to be known as the United Methodist Churlth NC Photo

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IIlfllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIUIIIlIDutuUliUllllUiHlllllllllilllllllllllllllllilllUIIIIIIIIIIIIUII~given to the Washington arch we need black priests and we bid to raise the standards of diocese by Church spokesmen need them fast preaching in Australia and New here in Pennsylvania Zealand will be made shortly Lobster Boats Msgr Philip J Dowling execshy it was resolved at a meeting hereCapital Cityutive secretary of John Cardinal of leaders of religious orders

Krols Commission on Human VATICAN CITY (NC)-Qn The effort will inchide a fullyshyRelations noted that the Washshy the eighth anniversary of the otganized Pastoral Year obsershyington Archdiocesan Office of foundation of Brazils new capishy vance seminars for priests of all bull bull bull Urban Affairs has asked assist shy tal of Brasilia Pope Paul VI ages on updating preaching techshy s iz e s ance from Philadelphia and other sent a radio message of best niques the establishment of II bull bull bull dioceses In providing foOd es wishes in Portuguese and pressshy preaching center and the use pecially for those po)r who will ed a button that illumined a of a recorded service on techshy I Macleansreceive temporary housing in the cross on the cathedral of that niques of oral communicatiOil f8cilities of the Washington city The Pope performed the directedby the ObJates of MalT sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAYBt Tel 9979351 sect archdiocese oclemony in his private library Immaculate ~1I111111l111IHlUlnlllllllllllUllllllnIIllIUllllllUllllllllllllllIllltUIIllllllllllUluiuUWlUllllml~

three tunes a year In those of their obligation of obedience that feelers have been sent outthere are fewdays the school had a cadet Father Reicher pointed out to have the Pope corne to Monshy

If any institution can standeorps and one of its big annual What this means he added is teal for th~ May 26-29 meeting events was marching in the anshy that occasionally Religious mllYoondemned on the basis of the

It would be the first papalrecent Kerner Report on Civilnual parish-May procession be used to break a strike called visit to Canada Pope Paul visitedDisorders it is the CatholicFor years residents of color- by lay faculty members this country as a Cardinal in theChurch among others that is But more likely is the conflict early 19508guilty of white racism he trapping the individual Reli shyPlan to Help ~eed opined Bishop Carter said if a favorshygious whose loyalty is divided

Asserting that the number of able reply is reCeived from RomeCapital MCIl(lc61ers Negro clergy middotdoes not nearly the Canadian government would

PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A meet the needs of Negro Catho- Australia to Have extend an official invitation pledge of cooperation in feeding lies Msgr Reese said Pope Paul visited the United the poor who will gather in the If the Church is going to be Better Preaching Nations inNew York in 1965 nations capital in May has beell relevant to the black community SYDNEY (NC)-A concerted

I

Marian Awards Continued from Page Three

Fall River and has spent her entire religious life within the Diocese of Fall River

Sister has served as consult shyant with various education comshymittees in the diocese and bas promoted the educational proshygram of the Dominican Sisters

Sr Mary Pauline OP bead of the Science Department of

the Dominican Academy Fall River was one of the originatolll of the Region III Science Fair and has served as president of the regions Fair for two years

She is presently ooordinator of the Massachusetts state Scishyence Fair -

Sr Virginia CSC is presshyently chairman of the Th~logy

Department Notre Dame Colshylege Manchester N H and served from 1941 to ]958 as principal of St Anthonys New Bedford

She has always been a leader in new an innovative ideas in education

Sister Anne Denise SND presently principal of St Marys High School Lynn is well shyremembered as the first princishypal of Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth and has served in many administrative posts for the Sisters of Notre Dame

Sr Mary Aloysia SUSC is dean of the College of the Sashycred Hearts Fall River and has given outstanding service in coshyoperation with the Catholic School Department in planning in-service courses for the teachshyers of the diocesan schools

She also serves asmiddot coordinator of the educational program of the Sisters of the Holy Union

Sr John Elizabeth SUSC is Guidance Director at the Acadshyemy of the Sacred Hearts Fall River and has served in numershyous administrative positions atthe Fall River school

She was the first principal of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton and has served on committees of local and state educational organizations

Sr Mary Felicita RSM is now involved in the tutorial program at Mt St MaryS Acadshyemy Fall River and has served in the various sclIools of the diocese

For 26 years Sister served as Diocesan School Supervisor iD the Catholic School Office

Sr Miriam RSM is also in the tutorial program at the Sisshyters of Mercy Academy in Fall River A former teacher and principal in schools of the dioshycese Sister served for 26 yean

IN NEW POST Father Charles F Sheedy CSC former dean of arts and letshyterS has been appointed to the new post of dean of theoshylogical studies and institutes at the University of Nobe Dame NC Photo

to Educators tiS Diocesan Supervisor in the Catholic School Department

This year completes 50 years of service in the field of educashyto the Diocese of Fall River

Sister Maureen RSM is principal of Nazareth Hall Fall River She organized the proshygram and was the first principal of the Fall River school lor exshyceptional children a position she still holds

She is a consultant lind D member of city and state comshymittees for the mentlllly l1eshytarded

Sr Mary Urban RSM is Diocesan supervisor of schools and was the first principal at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

She is a member of state and city educational committees

Sr Mary Carmela RSM is a member of the English Departshyment of St Xaviers Academy Providence and was the first principal of Mt St Marys Academy Fall River

She is a consultant on secondshyary school curriculum planning

Sr Grace de Sales MSBT is presently superior of the Censhyacle of Our Lady of the Assumpshytion Osterville a position she also held at the Cenac1e of St Patricks Parish Wareham

Sister founded the kindergarshytens at Osterville and Wareham and has taught Chfistian Docshytrine classes on the elementary and secondary levels during her many years of selvice in the diocese

Sr Joan Louise OLVM is suPerior of the Victory Noll Convent in the Immaculate Conception Parish No Easton She has served as catechetical specialist in dioceses in Iowa and California and her present assignment is CCD supervisor for the Diocese of Fall River

Brother Albertus CSC is supervisor of Education for the Eastern Province of the Holy Cross Brothers and is professor of mathematics at Stonehill College No Easton He also ~ught mathematics and physics at Monsignor Coyle High School Taunton

Miss Mary Cabral of 1)69 Camshybridge Street Fall River is presently teaching at Espirito Santo School Fall River where she is completing 43 years of service as a lay teacher in ~e

Diocese of Fall Ri vcr

Whites to Solve White Problem

TOLEDO (NC)-Bishop Joon A Donovan has made a public request to whites to take up the white problem

He urged it for those lookshying for a modern up-Io-date apostolate for down-to-earth Christians who are at the same time dedicated Americans

middotSpeaking at a dinner of the northwestern Ohio district Fourth Degree Knights of Coshylumbus the Toledo bishop said

This ugly situation was fathered by injustice and is nourished by that subtle and insidious vice called prejudiCe

Need In this deplorable situation

in which the world ffinds itself today the pressing need is for those who call themselves Christians to think as Christians to form Christian attitudes and to live as Christians

Just as we cannot separate Christ from His Gospel so too we cannot separate love of GOO from love of our fellowmen without exception

The real Christian mlid the bishop does not live alongside but with others He constantly interprets anothers actions in the best possible light bying to remember always the way in which the Lord met loved and drew people to Himsel

SAIGON (NC) - The people wept and we wept everybody wept Sister Nicole said deshyscribing her teams departure after 16 days of relief work in Hue

She and two other Vietnamshy-ese Sisters Daughters of Charshyity of St Vincent de Paul with

The communImiddots1s T truce

17 girl students had gone to stricken Hue on a mission of mercy

offensive had left families in mourning houses in ruins ~nd people hungry and sick The government of Vietnam had inshyvited volunteers to bring help to the citys thousands of sufshyferers

The plane that brought tile Sisters and their students also brought 85 youths from Saigon~

The boys did manual work such as cleaning up the damaged hosshypital in Hues The Sisters team was divided into three groups one to give medical care anshyother to visit homes a third to l)ok after children

The 17 girls are some of those being trained by the Sisters as social workers for family assist shyance under a plan sponsored by a Vietnamese womens associashytion Five of the 17 are Cathshyolics The others are mostly Buddhists On April 12 all were fasting since it was the 15th day of the lunar month for the lBud-

Catholic Boy Scout Officials to Meet

WASHINGTON (NC)-About 150 leaders of CQtholic Boy Scout organizations will meet here to attend the 20th biennial oonference of the National Cathshyolic Committee OIl Scouting

The meeting will be a Iowshyday work session tor chairmen chaplains and other officioals cd the nations diocesan I seouiing ~ommittees The meeting will end with a banquet in honO Gl Patrick Cardinal OBoyle ol Washington

---- -----~

middot1FI

1

PRAYER CRUSADE _Danny Thomas has filmed n 10-minute color documentary on the value of family pray~r

to be used by Father Patrick Peyton CSC in his Camshypaign for Family Prayer Father Peyton said he expects 200000 people at a Milwailkee rally to be held Sunday May 12

IEverybody Weptl

Nun Describes Relief Teams Departure From Stricken Hue

dhims and Good Friday for the Catholics

The Asia Foundation here gave a grant to pay for the meals of the Sisters team dur ing their stay

- Before leaving Saigon the Sisters had collected medicines food soap and clothing from welfare agencies including Catholic Relief Services and

Vietnam Christian Service (Protestant) The United Nashytions Childrens Fund (UNICEF) provided milk powder which enabled the team to give milk to 450 children every day

Warn Medics LONDON (NC)-The day beshy

fore Britains new abortion law went into effect the nations 5500 CMholic doctors were warned by John Cardinal Heenan of WeBtminister that they should DOt perfom any abortions

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THE ANCHOR- 17 Thursday May 2 1968

Cufr ~t~1 Days Of orw~~~1ion

En C[[i~da OTTAWA (NC)-Chrietshy

mas and New Years Day now are the only holy days of obligation for Canadav estimated 8000000 Catholics

The Canadian Catholic Conshyference comprising Canadafl Bishops has announced thampa other holy days will be cellshyebrated on the Sunday nearem the holy day

The holy days affected aye Epiphany usually celebrat~

Jan 6 Ascension now falling on the 40th day after East~Ilp

All Saints now celebrated Nou I and the Immaculate ConcejilP tion now celebrated Dec 8

The Bishops said observance of the feast days on Sundayu means they will be celebratecll bull by a larger more relaxed anell accessible congregation of the faithful rather than a congreshygaUon of people constrained by the obligation of attending Maw in addition to their work

Canadas Bishops postwn~ until next Fall a decision Gil

wlether to restoremiddot the anciej~ office of permanent deacon m the Church The Bishops of the United States meeting simultashy

neously in St Louis hlst week ~ted to petition Pope Paul VJ for permission to restore ~

perinanent diaconate ror marshyried and unmarried men of ma ture years

Fish Sales Up SYDNEY (NC)-Best tilini)

that ever happened to the fisb industry said Mark J06eph chairman of the New SouUl -lales Fish Authority of the Churchs lifting of the ban CJ[l

Friday meat eating He has tb~ ligures to back up his verdictshya 25 per cent rise in fish e4)Dshy

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The Parish Parade New Jersey Suburbanites of All Faiths Aid Ghetto Arson Victims HOLY NAME OUR LADY OF ANGELS

FALL RIVER FALL RIVER NEWARK (NC) - Priest~ the citys anti-poverty agenCll Contemporary music will acshy

company the 11 oclock Mass Sunday morning May 5

First communicants will reshyeeive at a special Mass at 9 Saturday morning May 25 Mayshycrowning ceremonies will be held Sunday May 26 The Womens Guild announces

fts installation banquet for Tuesday night May 7 Tickets are available from all members

Catholic Charities collectors are asked to meet in the parish school at 730 tonight for dist~shyOOtion of contact cards

lIT MARGARET BUZZARDS BAY

SS Margltlret-Mary Guild of Buzzards Bay and Onset will Sponsor a rummage sale from 9 1lo 1 Saturday May 18 at St Margarets kindergarten hall Main Street Buzzards Bay Do iaations may be left at the hall during mornings of the precedshying week Chairman for the ~vent is Mrs William Brady

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild will reshyieive Holy CommuniOn in a bodyaf the815 Mass 00 Sunshydity morning A breakfast will follow in the school hall The icuest speaker will beRt Rev Anthony M Gomes Mrs Arthur Belanger gpiIshyftual chairman of the Guild is _ charge of the breakfast

81 JOSEPH AIRHAVEN Nominations and elections of officers for the Association of file Sacred middotHearts will be held at 630 on Sunday evening in the rectory ~ Dues are now payable to the tleasurer Mrs Jeannette Dushylude

IACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

Preprimary registration will be held from 2 to 4 Sunday afternoon May 5 in 1he school office Some openings also exist in first sixth and eighth grades

The CCD adult discussion group will meet at 8 Sunday night in the home of Mr and Mrs J G N Bonneau

So Easton Club Pledges

$5000 The newly formed Womens

Club of Holy Cross Parish So Easton has pledged $5000 toward the building fund acshycording to an announcement made today by Mrs Arthur J L Peterson the organizations first president The pledge will be paid at the rate of $1000 per year

This pledge has been added to The Second Mile Building Fund campaign now in progress under the chairmanship of Robshyert Dray and Louis A Lyne serving as director

The Altar Boys will sponSor a cake sale Sunday May 26

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a Communion breakshyfast following 8 oclock Mass this Sunday morning Installashytion of officers will be held at a banquet following 5 oclock Mass Sunday afternoon May 26

Children of Mary will attend a Communion breakfast followshying 8 oclock Mass Sunday mornshying May 12

The annual blessing of autoshymobiles will take place at 130 Sunday afternoon May 26 in the church parking lot

ST GEORGE WESTP~RT

A Maybasket whist is planned for 8 Saturday night May 4 hi

the school hall on Route 177 PrOCeeds will benefit the school fund and table and attendance prizes will be awarded

STMARY NORTH ATTLEBORO Parishioners are planning a

testimonial honoring Msgr Ed- ward B Booth Pastor at 7

Sunday night May 26 Tickets are now available

Christians Jews Combat Racism

NEW YORK (NC)The Nashytional Confeferice of Christians and Jews has launched a nation wide educational effort to conshyfront the problem of white racism in middotAmerica agency headquarters here announced

The NCeJ has given top prl~

ority to finding ways toimpleshyment the recommendations of the National Advisory Commisshysion on Civil Disorders The commission blamed white racshyism as the underlying cause of urban unrest

In a progress re-port to the NCCJ board of trustees meeting here Dr Samuel L Gandy dean of the Ho~ard University school of religion Washington D C and chairman of the NCCJ nashytional program ad7isory comshymittee stated

NCCJs 130 professional staff members in 70 cities are curshy~ntly engaged in developing programs with police business and labor leaders parents and teachers clergy and with youth and all of the various institutes workshops and dialogues which are being conducted are emphashysizing the findings of this reshyport

Dr Gandy quoted to the board a letter to President Lynshydon B Johnson from Dr Stershyling W Brown NCCJ presishydent in which the agency head said that NCCJ embraced the commission report as a sancshytion and guideline for our efshyforts in the private sectol

111I1111I11111111111111I1111I11I1111I1111111111I111111I111111I11I11I11I11I1111I111111111111I11111111I1111I111111I11I11I111111I111II11111111111D

ministers nuns and lay people of all denominations pitched in here to try and make Easter a dltty of joy for the more than 600 people burned out of their homes in a waveof arson which erupted in this city following the funeral of Dr Martin Luther King

Concerned citizens of surshyrounding suburban communishyties who only a week before had participated in a massive Wa 1k for Understanding through ghetto streets respondshyedspontaneously to the need

Without anymiddot special appeal going out people of all denomshyinations call e 11 inner-city churches to ask what they could do and they were directed to the United Community Corp

NEW LEADER Sister Rosemary Markham SSS is the new Superior General of the Sisters of Social Ser-

vice a Los Angeles based community engaged in social and catechetical work with missions in Formosa and Mexico NCPhoto

Christians Jews Discuss Diamiddotlogue

SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-The question of whether JewishshyChristian dialogue should be by speech or by action was the theme that ran through the talks and discussions at a Conference on Interfaith Dialogue sponsored by Catholic Protestant and Jewshyish organizations at Seton Hall University here

Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum director of interreligious affairs for the American Jewish Comshymittee was generally in favor of the action approach saying that the dialogue must avoid beshycoming a convenient conspiracy on the part of middle-class whites to buffer themselves against the realities of the inner city

Father Edward H Flannery executive secretary of the U S Catholic Bishops Secretariat for Catholic-Jewish Relations said that while he would be the last to cut off action in the realm of social justice and charity he also felt that Jews and Christians could not effectively present a common ftont to society until they have straightened out their own affairs

Father Flannery referred to statements that the -ChristianshyJewish dialogue had died in the wake of last Junes six-day war between Israel and Arab nations He said that it was not so much a matter of its dying but of its not having been tried yet

Over Holy Thursday Good Friday and Holy Saturday more than 10 tons of food and clothing were donated and the UCC staff was swamped with the task of sorting the materiaL

With schools and church ofshyfices closed priests and nuns made their way individually and in groups to UCC headshy

quarters to help with the task of unloading cars and station wagons and sorting and distribshyuting the clothing

At least 50 offers of assistance came in to Queen of Angels pariSh in the heart of the ghettc and the callers were asked to organize relief efforts in their own communities and then gd the material 110 the UCCbull

FEEL GOOD TODAY

THt HOLY fATHER MISSION AiD TD THlaRIENTAL DHURDH

Thlsoolumns happiest readers are the men

Te date this second phase bas listed 35 gifts totaling $12000 Combined with the initial campaign the Building Fund now lists 233 donors who haVe pledged a total of $117()00 The Womens Club that was founded less than six months ago has initiated a long range program for the spiritual cll1shytural and financial efforts of the parish

In addition to the regular methods of aiding the parish finandally the women have conducted teen-age projects and have assisted the Mens Club fu

i bull various progrlms

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9G-OAY NOTIC~

TIMENOW OPEN ACCOUNT5PAYS o bull bull Interest Compounded Quarterly

Offices in

NORTH ATTLEBORO MAINSIFDIEILlDgt AnUBORO FAUS

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women and children who know they~r needed The days were busiest helping others are the happiest days of our livesbullbullbull Who needs you most Surprisingly God needs you - for inmiddot stance to help art abandoned orphan become e Godloving responsible adult Lepers need you (there are still 15middotmillion lepers In the world) blind children need y~u ~ndlo do we bull bullbull Here In New York we are your agents tellin you where the Holy Father says your help Is needed and channeling your help promptlyand Oafely to the people iii needbullbullbull Want to feel good right now Do without something you want but do not need and send the money instead for one of the needs below Youll feel good especialiy if your gift is big enough to mean a sacrifice to you This is your chance to do something meaningful for the world - its Gods world - while youre still alive

D Only $850 gives our priests and SIsters i south India enough Dapsone miracle tablebamp for 43 lepers for a yearl D For only $250 a week ($10 a month $120 a year) you can make sure that an abandoned child has food clothing a blanket and love Well send you a photo of the child you adopt tell you something about him (or her) and ask the Sistermiddotinmiddotcharge to keep you Informed

D Your stringless gifts in any amount ($5000 MEET $1000 $500 $100 $50 $25 $10 $5 $2)

MISSION will help the neediest wherever they are - in EMERGENCIES india and he Hol~ Land for instance

D Only you can make your will-and do It this THINK week to be sure the poor will have your help

OF even after youre gone Our legal title CATHOLIO YOURSELF NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION Also our priests

TOO will offer promptly the Masses you provide for

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MEANINGfUL WHILE

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THE CATHOLIC

NAMIlR _

~ 8TREJa~ ~_

OITY 8TATI_IIP COD

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NEAR EAST MISSIONS MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretary Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoo 330 Madison Avenue New York N~Y 10017 Teephone 212YUkon 6middot5840

1 - ~

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Lawrence High of Falmouth Seeksmiddot State Track Tut~e

By PETER BARTEK Norton High Coach

The Capeway Conference track season has already begun but the handwriting is already on the wall This campaign like last years will be a battle for second place Admittedly notbing Short of a miracle can or will prevent Lawrence High of Falmouth from winning its second straight conference t rae k championship But fol Coach Jim Kalperis and his trackstersmiddot the league championship is only a Gtepping stone to the State C ham p io n - ship The goal of every athletic team in the state hi to earn the title of State Champion This is not beshyyond the grasp of the Falmouth Peier Clippers If hard Bartek work and dedication are the means to this end then Falshymouth will reign as State track champions

Success does not come easily em any endeavor and success batpound

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not come easily to the Falmouth tracksters They like all accomshyplished athletes have labored long and diligently to aChieve the measure of sUccess they now enjot lt

N1)t toomiddot many yearsato Lawshyrence High was just ~nother

sChool Participating in track But the efforts of many and the dedication of one IJ1im in parshyticular has brought immeasurshyable success to the Falmouth track scene That man is Jim Kalperis

Coach Kalperis haseombined

his knowledge af track his coaching ta1EntS aiiCl tirelessenergies middotto build a virtual track dynasty The latest noteworthy feat of middotliliitnickmen came in the forinof anotheriState title

Thisti~emiddotiS th~nivision IIi

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1

- BC~ and Norry Races Are Close 1

lbe format formiddot the St~te reo lays has been altered this ear with competition being held at four separate locations in East- em Massachusetts Weymouth captured the Division I crown the DiviSion n title went to

Andover and Williams corralled the laurels in Division IV

The meet drew ll5 schools in each of the four diviSions with over 2000 youngsters partici shypating in all classes

Enroute to its victory Falshymouth collected 51 points comshypared to runner-up Barnstable with 22Jh

Falmouth took first place in the discus high jump pole vault 440 yard run shuttle hurdles two mile run and the 880 -

With tbis type of success in state competition it is easy to see why the Capeway Confershyence title has been practically conceded to Falmouth

Sharing the spotlight with the trackmen at Falmouth are the diamondmen The Clippers who are in the thick of the loop baseball picture were given a

Mike Rainnie tossed amp no-hittel at Barnstable to gain a 1-0 vershydict

Its still much too early to predict with any accuracy

what will happen in the Cape wai baseball race But it ap- pears nomiddotclub will dominate th~t sport like Falmouth controIa track Falmouth Dartmouth Fairhaven and Barnstable are expected to fight it out through the entire season One close to the scene summed it up best when he said anyone in the league could win this thing

Close races are also developshying in the Bristol County and Narragansett Leagues

In the BCL both Bishop Fee han of Attleboro and Durfee High of Fall River encountered a few difficulties in early season play but seem to have found the range of late The clubs will meet in an important contest today in Fall River Late inning rallies have brought both clubS from the brink of defeat to vicshytory in previous outings The victor will have to be dubbed

shot in the arm last week as the team to beat

Brennan of Feehan D~est ill le~guej

Coach Tom Maccarone of Feeshyhan has had outstanding pershyfonnances from his pitching staff but the key to the Shamshyrocks success has been shortshystop Ty Blrennan Maccarone stated before the season that Brennan was his best player and perhaps the best in the whole Bristol County Judging from Brennans perfonnance to date one of the keys to stopping Feehan is stopping the classy shortstop

Coach Joe Lewis Hilltoppers play a brand of ball similar to his counterpart TOIJl Karams basketball club Make a mistake and the Fall Riverites will capshyitalize on it Durfees first two league victories came about beshycause of opponent miscues

The Hilltoppers have been playing steady ball throughout the early part of the campaign and are improving with every game Their ability 10 avoid costly mistakes eI tbeir -n

making and timely hitting has proven a winning combination

Come what may in todays contest the BCL llace has just begun

Not to be outdone by tile larger BCL and Capeway Conshyference the Narry loop is conshyducting a torrid race of its own At the end of the first week of action Seekonk and DightonshyRehoboth were tied for the top spot Following two weeks of play Gase of Swansea Dighton and Somerset were lodged In the first position The hectic lCampaign will probably find another change in the top spot at the conclusion of this weeks activity

From Cape Cod to Attleboro competition is keener this year than it bas been in many seashysons The road to the league championship is always diffJshycult to Davigate but this year it appears as though the road win be duttered wiill meR obstacles than ill quite

cone~~ lb~aders ConcllregrnmOB War In V~~It~IlJJm

NEW YORK (NC)-Stushydent government presidents and editors of campus newsshypapers at more than 500 colleges in 49 states have conshydemned the war in Vietnam as

lt immoral and unjust and said ~~ they believe they should not

~ i~~~~~~~ii ~~~b~~ shy --_ ~ and Laymen Convinced About

-- ~-__ Vietnnm Was coordirlated by shy _ -- shy ~ Rev RObert lVi Hundley lHullent

--lt--1 at Union Th~ological Snppary --J here and an associate pltISor at -- ~I th~ Congn~gationalChllrch hn ~_ Scarsdale N-Y He saiQ most

--middot1 students who signed the stateshy~-__-~~- ~~ -___- __~_~J ment havenot been active in

FINE ARTS FESTIVAL Making preparations for Fine Arts Festival at Bishop Stang High School North

Dartmouth are Paul Leahy and Margaret Polycarpo

~ Unmiddot-ty middotIs Chr-stlTs middotW-II

P Off W I E deg I pOi degI

ontl e comes cumenlca I grlmage From United Kingdom toHoly Lar-d

anti-war activities heretoforemiddot

Solicits Support

He added

Many of the student Itl~ders who have signed this sbtcment

recognize that they may be plaeshying their future caJeers illmiddotjeopshy~rdy and conceivably are riskshying punitive action being taken

against them by the capiicioWJ V~TICAN ~ITY (NC)~TO an Fathers Arthur Payton anSel~c~ve Sfdtvice Systerh~~~

I ecumenical pilgrimage oQ its Anglican who is director 01 ~ev Yi~am Sloan Cot~~1 Jr-) way to the Holy Land Pope interchurCh travel in LOndon bull aclive memjgter of Clergymiddot ~nd Paul VI recalled the words he Among its members were An- Laymen Concerned AboutbullVI~tshyspoke on his own pilgrimage glieans CatholiCs Oithodox and nam ~1dmiddota Yal~ U~Iverslt7

there in 1964 that unity is the will of Christ

He said that it was with parshyticular pleasure that we welshycome this ecumenical pilgrimshyage from the United Kingdom to the Holy LaRd You are aboUt to follow in the fOQtSteps af God made man in the country of His birth Hill mission and His blessed death for us men and for our salvation (NiceneCreed)

Your visit caUsto mind our own unforgettable pilgrimage to the Holy Places From the grotto of Bethlehem we then declared It npw appears clearly to all that the problem of unity cannot be eluded Today this will cif Christ is imposed upon our minds and demands th~t we undertake with wisdom and love every possible way of bringing all Christi~ns t6 enjoy the great benefit and supreme honor of the unity of the middotChurch

He also recalled his plea from Bethlehem that love of Christ and of the Church should inshyspire that every future moveshyment toward meeting and reshyconciliation

The pilgrimage was led by

DIOCESAN DIREC1OR First woman to serve as a diocesan director of radio-TV is Miss Patricia Smith of Pueblo Colo who is also a photo-journalist on the staff gf Dateline Colorado m cesan weekly newspaper

Protestants not only from Great Britain but from France and Germany as well

Msgi Gianfrancesco Arrighi undersecretary of the Secretashyriat for Promoting Christian Unity and Canon John Findlow representative of Anglican Archbishop Michael Ramsey of Canterbury at the Holy See accompanied middotthe pilgrims to the Vatican

Votes Moratorium On ChuDch Building

CHICAGO (NC)-The Chicago Conference of Laymen is urging Church authorities at both the archdiocesan and parish levels to declare a moratorium on 10- cal construction projects so that funds can be channeled to projshyects in the ghetto areas

The action was taken at the second annual meeting of the

ll200-member organization The 300 in attendance passed

some 50 resolutions half of them dealing with urban problems The membership said it will seek ways to alleviate white racism especially within the Catholic Church

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ch~plaJD saId The stand taken by these

y~ung men should serve to reshymmd Americans everywhere that the war in Vietnam 1s not over that American and Vietshy

namese boys are stillmiddotdying

He continued

These middotmen of conscience should be supported by eveQY priest minister and rabbi who cares about the sanctity of conshyscience

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Jesuit Comments Di~cordNormal Amon9 Catholics

RIO DE JANEIRO (NC)shylD i SC 0 r d among Catholics after the Second Vatican Council is perfectly normal but It is not normal for proshygressive or conservative Cathoshylics to refuse to accept the dishyrectives of the council and the pope Jesuit superior general said here Father Arrupe is in Brazil for 30 days to visit Jesuit houses in the country and to preside at the May 6 to 14 meeting here of all South Amershyican Jesuit provincials

He said that his visit is inshytended to adapt the order here flo the requirements of the agshygirnameJ1to or up-dating

The most important aggiorshy namento in our day he said

is that of the mind We have to ~nsider and respect human valshyues as such This was always the Churchs doctrine but now the Church is insisting on it more We ought not to consider the Churchs interest in human values as opportunism Our in tEmtion is only to serve mankin~ better)

Press Uses Images Dudng his stay here Father

Arrupe willmiddot visit 20 local(tiesWhere Jesuits are woikilg

ts B 1Ilhele are 1000 JesUl m razl~ bull

He said that he regarded as bull joke the Brazilian presss ref-

elences to him as ~the black l T Ch Pope cussion of he angmg a1middot

Because of my cassock hemiddot

tlaid I am black but I am not the Pope ~ understand that the press has to use images to exshylI)lain concepts more effectively

Honor Editor NEW YORK (NC) ~ Robert

6lmstead news editormiddot of the National Catholic Reporter weekly newspaper published in Kansas City Mo received honshyelable mention in the 1968 Paul Tobenkin Memolial Award Competition here

-

MEET IN ST LOUIS Bishop-elect Timothy J~ Harringshyth d f th Sf W 1 ft d

ton ~ orcester e leoscllfses ~ atn t ~ l~mg

ish a panel a~ the lQ68Presi dents Conference of the Nashytional Council of cat~olic yene~l

Role of CouDcil The parish will retairi its role

as a community of worship whose members go out ihto the world and bring it theeurohristjan

message Bernatd Lyons Ghishycago public relations ~onsultant saidmiddot

The pa~ish on the other hand mustmiddot become part of the world

alound it a wHr1e$S to the whole community and fake on roles not in relation only to -its

GUIDING CHURCH IN UNITED STATES More than 200 members of the hierarchy participated in the decisions of the annual Spring meeting of the National Conference

Predict Important Authorities Emphcisixe

WASHINGTON (NC)-Three members but to the world in authorities on parish life have agreed here that the parish basic organiz~tion iil the Church will have to undergo some lmportant changes if the ChUlch is goingto meet th~ needs of societyin the 20th censhy tury

But just how the parislt is going to change ~s far from setshytied they ~onceqed in a dis

which it exists Father John Corriga~ of this city a directozlt of the Nationalmiddot Liturgical Con ference asserted

Whatever it does the parish must becomemiddot a vital force in the cOlJlrnunity around it Father Geno Baroill execu~ive secretary Washington archdi

ocesan Office ~f Urpan Affairs declared

RIot ComparlmiddotsoDmiddot

Father Baroni whose work blings hini into constant contactmiddot with Negro problems in WaSh- laymen will inhibit soCial ac- ington saw~ astriking par~illel tion but added later this is a between the Churchs needs and risk wltirth taking

-those of thebiack ghetto Right now~ he observed - one of the mos~ urgent prob Society to Consider lems in the ghetto is that Of Sh fmiddot

community organization We 5 emnary I t arll learl1ing that pe~ple ri~t be CARTHAGENA CNC) _ The

cause they have beel- cut o~t ofSocieiy of the Precious Blood meaningful participation in so- ciety

In the ~hurch laymen have been cut out of this participa tion also They dont riot but they dont really concern them selves with the concerns of the Church unle~s thy ~ave t~i~ sense of partlclpatlcm he saId

New Resndemlce For US PIiDests

ROME (NC)-A new resident house for American priests working In the offices of the Roman Curia (the Churchs censhytral administrative offices) or on assignment in Rome for the US bishops has been opened to provide adequate economical lodgings and community surshyroundings

The residence called Villa Stritch after the late Samuel Cardinal Stritch of Chicago is composed of two apartment comshyplexes and is designed to meet the immediate needs of US priests already at work in Rome and to anticipate future housing needs as internationalization of the Roman Curia continues

In addition to American$ resshyident in Rome the villa is also expected to house priests on special assignments for the bishshyops in Rome bishops who come to Rome for work on var~ous

Church commissions or otherVatican offices or for such events as the synod of bishops and ma-Jor congresses In short it is hoped that the new villa wilL

will study the possibilities and implications of moving the or ders main theological school flOm St Charles Seminary here in Ohio to a university campus or urban center and of buildingmiddot an adequate program at St QJ1arles The Carthagena SChOt

has been the societys maJor seminary for over 100 years

Major superiors and middotelected delegates representing the soshycietys Cincinnati province voted to fOlm a committee to carry out the study during a provincial chapter meeting held at St Charles at which modernizing the training of candidates for the priesthood in the society Vas tqe chief subject of discussion

middotA report of the meeting in- dicated that the delegates were aware of trends in the Church 1-way from comparative isloationmiddot of seminary establishments to university campuses and urban centers

SPECIAL RATES FOR

Smiddot I O dcho0 utings an Picnics

of Catholic Bishops in St Louis last week An enormoUis amount of homework on position papers was approved ~

the Bishops NC Photo

I see the parish councils and their recognition of freedom asneceSsai-y to do this he added

Worth Risk They agreed they sha~e abull

feiling opound un~asin~ss _middotaboti~ these cOuncIls relatively new amQJ1g Cathol~cs pa~icula~lY their attitude t~ward SOCI~ issues

d Father Baroni sal he has ~

leery feeling about parishcouncils He declared there is

the danger that conservative

contribute to increased racial understanding and involvement

fur the people of the diOcese

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Parishes

Lyons author of th~ book middotParish Councils - Renewin the Parish Community said be

middotwas somewhat more optiniistici I donit think we are going to

solve these problems by 10~~1 at the dangers exclusively hie commented

Diocese to Discuss C~m~issi~n Rep~rt

LANSING (NC) - Catholics thoughout t~e Lansing diocese will participate in forums and home discussion groups 1as~ on the report of the National Acf visory Commission on Civil Disshyorders The program which begaa with public forums in six citie on April 29 was planned ~

middot three diocesanmiddot agencies-the Ofshyfice of Social and Community Service the Office of Renewal Through Vatican II and the adult education division of tne Education Department It was initiated in response to an appeal made by Bishop Alexshyander Zaleski The day following the death of Dr Martin Luther King Bishop Zaleski asked dishyocesan directors to plan an imshymediate program designed to

meetmg of heBIShops n erence WIt ISop e e~ros be a center of communi~y life CONTACT MANAGER - LINCOLN PARK of BrowI)svIlle Texas and fOtmiddotmer chancellor of the Fall for bishops arid priests with spe- 9996984 636-2744 ~iver Di~~~~lt __~gt -cilla~~gnrn~iitS~~o~~~ ~ Oc)QI~OC~)OQCIOC)oOOOCgtoc)OQltjIOcXllOOOCgtOC)oOC~)OIL)QOCgtOCPOoO

Page 13: 05.02.68

13 New Jersey Grand Jury Absolves Police of Deaths During Rioftong

NEWARK (NC) - A special and charged it with lcHrity m Essex Cotmty grand jury inves- permitting some of lots material tigating the deaths of 28 people to i1all into private hands which during rioting in this city last misused il Summer absolved po1dce laquol Reporting on the deaths it blame iO the deatbs in a pre- found that three were not conshysentment which rebuked an nected with the rioting that anti-poverty agency for failure eight resulted from wounds inshyto cooperate willi law enforce- curred while participating in ment agencies criminal acts that nine of those

The presentment was issued killed were apparently innocent after the jury had heard more bystanders that two apparently than 100 witnesses over an resulted from sniper fire that eight-week period It said there two were from accidental was insufficient evidence to shooting and that one could not warrant indictment in any of be classified the cases presented to it al- Another special grand jury is though an earlier trial resulted now being paneled to carry out hi the conviction of a man for an investigation of Newarks fatally shooting a woman municipal government This inshy

In the final analysis the vestigation was recommended ~ury concluded the responsi- by the governors commission bility for the loss of life and which reported a pervasive property that is the inevitable feeling of corruption in Newshyproduct of rioting and mass ark lawlessness cannot be placed upon those whose duty it is to enforce and protect the freedom Convention lliead of our society

Courage Restraint N E MonsignorIt rests squarely upon the

MANCHESTER (NC)-Msgrhoulders of those who for euroolin A MacDonald presidentwhatever purpose incite and of the Manchester diocese senateparticipate in riots and the of priests has been selected asflouting of law and order in chairman of the national con-complete disregard of the rights stiiutional convention of theand well-being of the vast mashyproposed U S priests councilsjority of our citizens organization 110 be held May 20Although the presentment and 21 in Chicago leveled some small criticisms at

I1he monsignor earlier hadpolice actions it generally upshybeen elected as the Bostonheld the work of law enforceshyprovince delegate to a 29-memshyment officers and this was in ber ad hoc steering committeecontrast to the report of the for the convention When ill wasNew Jersey (()vernors Comshydecided 110 limicent the steeringmission on Civil Disorder commimiddotlltee 110 8 members thewhich was highly critical of the

police JJlQIlsignor was elected to this group then ohosen as chairmanWith some exceptions the

jury said police both local and Msgr MacDonald said the state together with National purposes of the proposed NashyGuardsmen acquitted themselves tional Federation of Priests with courage and restraint in Councils are to promote priestly the early stages of the riot brotherhood by faciJi1ating comshy

munion among priests councilsPoor Judgment to provide a forum for the disshyThe grand jury said the poshycussion of pastoral matters tolice were handicapped by lack enable priests councils to speakof training appropriate equipshywith a common representativement effective direction and voice to proD101e and collabshyexperience in dealing with the orate in programs of pastoraltype of situation in which they research and action to impleshywere involved ment the reriewal of priestlyThe jury did say that in the life to provide the means forlater stages of the disturbances priests councils united nationshythere were examples of poor ally to cooperate with the tityjudgment excessive use of fireshythe ~eligious the bishops andarms and D manifestation of with others in addressing thevindictiveness that eannot be needs of the Church in the modshytolerated in law enforceD1ent ern World and to do whateverpersonnel is necessary to carry out theseAD10ng the recommendations purposesit made was one that looting be

Members of the Priests Senshyeffectively controlled at its ate of the Diocese of Fall Riverearliest manifestations It also have sent suggestions regardingcalled for the improveD1ent and the proposed organization toupdating of equipment and said Monsignor MacDonaldthe use of chemicals and nonshy

lethal gases should be explored and considered Priests Paid SllEme

The jury called for improveshyment in police-community relashy Salary as Laborers tions and said there is no place PARIS (NC) - The averagefor abusive language or ill salary of priests in the Paris treatment of any group of citi shy region is about the saD1e as thatzens Like the governors COD1shy of an unskilled laborer accordshymission it deplored the use of ing to figures contained in thepersonally-owned weapons by first public budget report of thepolice Paris archdiocese

The anti-poverty agency crit shy The archdiocesan operatingicized was Newark Legal Servshybudget the report showed isices Project a branch of the $440000 a year most of whichUnited Community Corp which is for the salaries of 384 nonshyhelps ghetto residents with legal parish priests more than a thirdproblems

retired This indishyCharges Laxity of whoD1 are cates an average of less than $1-The jury accused it of failing 000 a year to cooperate in post-riot invesshy

Parishes pay direclly the 600tigations said the character of it taken were parish priests but their base salshystatements had

inadequate and ary is only about $50 a monthunprofesSional Honorariums for baptisms marshyriages and special Masses add

Receives Admiral about an equal amount to this VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope sum but pcrivate requests for

Paul VI received in audience Masses are declining Parish Adm Joseph Edet Akinwale priests send to the archdiocese Wey of the Nigerian Navy who the honorari~s of Masses they had told a press conference that coannot celebrate In 1964 this he hoped to present a message amounted to about 22000 Masses from the Nigerian government a year now it is only about three on the Biafra siiuatiolL ~middotfourmiddot thousand~

r THE ANCHORshyThursday May 2 1968

I

Schoo~s Exp~ore

Dual E~l~~rMJcemlt LOUISVILLE (NC)-Catholie

school officials here are trying to work out dual enrollment agreeD1entS with public schoo officials in two locations

If agreement is reached stushydents at Flaget High School here and at Bethlehem Academy may benefit next Fall from the proshygram

Moves toward the dual enrQllshyment concept were made possishyble when the Kentucky attorney general issued an opinion which said in effect that public schools might get state financial assistance for students enrolled part-time in public schools

Under the plan students in private schools could take some subjects in public schools and others in their own schools

Famiddotther Thomas P Casper Louisville diocesan superintendshyent of schools said he is submitshyting dual enrollment proposalpoundNEWMAN CLUBS MEET At oonferenee of Newman to the Louisville Bardstown andClubs from area colleges representatives of Fall River Dishy Nelson County boards of educa~

reese included from left Walter La Rosa Our Lady ill Mt tion Carmel parish Seekonk a student at Bristol Community While action on the roposaw College Lydia Rocha St Michaels Fall River BCC Rev is up U the public boards-the

attorney generals opinion grantvHarold J Wilson BOC Newman Club chaplain Morgan permission but does not force

Childs St Patricks Falmouth SMTL ootion-Father Casper said he if very pleased that there are possibilities open now for deshyveloping dual enrollD1entReturns to Moscow Final form of any dual enroll shyment effort is still to be decided

Fr Dion Assumption College President But one such method treated in the attorney generals opinion

Named Apostolic Administrator is the leasing of space in Cathshyolic schools by public schoom

WORCESTER (NC) - Father a visiting Russian churchman and the operation of this spaceLouis F Dion AA president here Father Bissonnette is now as public school classroomsof AssuD1ption College here will academic dean at Assumption resign his post June 30 to be- College COD1e apostolic administrator in Father Dion had to wait more New Jersey Bishopthe Soviet Union and chaplain than three years after Father to American Roman Catholics Bissonnettes expulsion before Asks United Action in Moscow obtaining a Soviet visa enabling ATLANTIC CITY (NC) shy

Father Dion held the same him to go to Moscow via Paris Bishop George H Guilfoyle of posts in Russia from 1959 to in January 1959 Camden issued a call for united 1961 He served as assistant to Father Dion said he is looking action on the part of all of WJ the president and registrar of forward to his return to the to 36Sist our fellow man as Assumption College from 1962 Moscow post He bad not specifshy he helped dedicate a HUD1aJ until his appointment as presi- ically requested the assignment Resources Center aiD1ed at job dent ill June 1964 he said but it was offered to develpoment for some of this

He replaces Father Eugene him and he accepted it willingly resort areas 50000 poor LaPlante AA who returns to Powers of Bishop This nation has made treshythe Assumptionist Fathers The duties of chaplain Father mendous strides in the fields opound AD1erican province for reassign- Dion explained are not con- science industry business and ment after a three-year term fined to American Catholics medicine he said It is shameshy

ful that in view of all this proshySeventh to Serve living in Moscow They include gress we still have millions ofFather Dion is the seventh he said the entire foreign colshypeople who live in poverty andAmerican priest-all Assump- ony - the diplomatic corps wanttionists-to serve in Moscow un- newspaper personnel and tour-

Bishop Guilfoyle said theder the terms of the 1933 Roose- ists Camden diocese will contributevelt-Litvinov agreement estab- Since there ar(~ no European

$1000 to the new center to belishing diploD1atic relations be- priests-or priests of any other nationality-in Moscow serving used for whatever program the

tween the U S and the USSR in the capacity of chaplain he board of directors decides hi He was replaced in 1961 by said the American chaplain needed Father Joseph Richard AA ministers to the spiritual needs who served four years in the of Catholics attached to the post staffs of embassies and legations

His iD1D1ediate predecessor accredited to the Soviet governshy FAIRHAVENwas Father Georges Bisslgtnnette ment AA who was expelled in The post of apostolic adminisshy LUMBERMaTch 1955 by the Soviet gov- trator Father Dion said inshy

COMPANYernment in retaliation for U S volves all the powers and funcshyrefusal to prolong the visa of tions of a bishop except ordina~

tion and consecration of bishops Complete line It is assigned to a priest usuallyAtlanta Archdiocese Building Materials in areas where there is DO

Joins Equal Housing hierarchy who is then dimiddotrectly responsible to the Holy See 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVENATLANTA (NC)-The lllChshy Father Dion expects to arrivediocese of Atl~lnta has joined in Moscow in early August he 993-2611more than 50 metropolitan At- said

lan-ta organizations and indi- viduals as co-spo~sors of the Atlanta Metropoli tan COmmit- bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull~

tee on Equal Opporunity ill Housing

HThe objective of the confer- BISAILLONS ence will be primarily educashytional Father Noel C Burtenshy GARAGEshaw ehancellor of the arch- diocese and member of the execu-tive committee said 24-Hour Wrecker

He added We expect this dialogue and interChange will establish middotnecessary communicashy 653 Washington Street Fairhaven tion and provide Some answers 994-5058~ the housing problems facing reater Atlanta bull

Thanks Catholics For Refugee Aid

VATICAN - CITY (NC)-NearMsgrEllis Relates Hist~ry middotmiddotEastmiddotwelfare work of U S Cathshyolics has been praised by Pope Paul VL0+ Training for Priesthood

Such a message in the Popes By Rt Rev Msgr Jobs S Kennedy

The publication of a book by Monsignor John Tracy Ellis founder and dean of a new school of American Cath~

lti)lic churchhistory is always a weloome event This is true even when the book is among his minor works SuCh is Essays in Seminary Educoshytion (Fides Notre Dame Inshydiana 46556 $595) amiddot 001shylection of papers and address-C2S There is some repetition in Chese essays which were preshyared for vari shyeus occasions But it does not illessen the imshyact of a book which shows us n keen critical in tell i g ence brought to beal OIl a subject of bas i c imporshylance The hand rDf the historian iIs seen throughshy~t the book The first three essays are specifically historical

The firsi deals with the trainshylog or preparation of priests from the apostolic age to the ~ncil of Trent the second with the same subject from the time of Trent to ~ 1960s The tird is todevoted diocesan theological seminaries in the American Middle West 1811shy1889

A survey such 00 the author Makes in the two opening chap $ers is of especial interest beshyeause it brings out tile implausshyible but incontestable fact that b about the fimiddotI9t 1500 years of its existence the Church did DOt have anything even regem- bling a standard ~m of edushy_tion for the priesfil100d

Monastie Schools fttere were no special schoobl

lor the clergy before the time Of

The medieval universitieQ were foundedmiddot by the Church amd the clery p~yed ~ im ~rtant part m them But theyWei b d al ~ ed ti e y no means I e Jormiddot ushy(l3 on for the pnesthood SInce2he the I g I kemelyq 1~~~y~middotou~emiddot~~U Iersi~ of P middotkmiddotlmiddot5middot6

-Y arlS n ovv or ~(fears to complete thedoCtOriite ill theology Hence few priestsbenefited f-rom 4--

~ UDlversI Effective Response

lhe POr estate of the clergy~ glarmgly a~parent in the ens of the Renalsance and the Bef~rmation and this middotis prj shy

manly llttutablello educashytional defiCiency And evea hen the reforming Council of lIrent was launched it took 1~ ~rs ~efore a dec~ on clerical educa~on was achieved and a long tlme thereafter before its proVISIonS were carned out in practice

Monsignor Elliss treatment of

ticularly the institutions founded by St Vincent de Paul and Jean-Jacques Olier

These men win the authors praise for their effective reshygponseto a vital need But he does IlQt hesitate to lay to them ~e responsibility for some of the anti-intellectual bias which chamcterizea too many seminashyli13 in subsequent centuries

incredible NWIIlber In the United States some

quite ancient history was reshylived as the bishops of new dioceses had cleriea schools of sorts in their own homes But in the days of the very first bishop John Oarroll a real

had b - -bli hed semmary een - 9when the Sulpichms came to Baltimore in 1791 and founded St Marys

Later developmen1s are sumshymarized by Monsignor Ellis with attention to the various types of seminaries and the growth m numbers from 50 in 1668 to 571 iIn 1964 Thi6 last incredible number is indicative 0If tile regre~le proliferation Which led to needless duplicashytiOD inadequacy in quality and waste of resources

A test of middotthe exeellence of American seminaries is proshyposed by the atrtbor how many men of enduring reputation ba~ flhey produced The anshyswerJs that tIhe fteonl is not distinguished And much of the lelIlainder of the book is given 110 probing for reasons m exshyplanation Of this

Routine Teaeldllamp at Augustine whomiddotbecame Ihi Anierican ~mi~ry of -ilJhop of Hippo in 396 His 1be ft refleCted _ national

_

LlIFE MEMBERS Msgr John E Boyd chaplain left and Dominick Maxwell Jr right Grand Knight of Fall River Council 86 of the Knights of Columbus i~vest Jerome D Foley and Dr Joseph Carvalho as life members

~

Rural Ireland Charge Farmers Lack Formal Training

In Agriculture ROSSLARE (NC)The need Wbat chance had the boy who

for priests to be more involved left school at 14 of making the in social problems was stressed grade at farming ~he excepshyby 9peakers at the annual meetshy tional lads made it The rest are

~ e9tablished and mairitaineCi~ - In the future he said until 4- disregard cif inteli~tualqua1itY this is rectified Ninety-five nAr ~ his own household and had In ~y instances ~ty mem- ~ imitators ~gt bera ere apPOint~~ t~eir ~t of e5ent-day farmers Thereafter came the mona~f)le positi - middotth m rd io ~v~ had IlQ post-primary edushySchools initiated by St BenediCt ons WIlifo ~ga r cation NinetYofive per cent ofin thmiddot th proper qlla Ications MuCh of farmers have had middotno formal esnr cent~ the~ fllie teaching was rolltine and~rting in middotligrlcultllredr~ and-middot eP1scqp~ Scboo~ an~ dun Collateral reading _n6t middot~JFlWle Awayampnally themiddot medieval UDlvenu- middot~~d lib ties middot - ~ampt~W1~ an nu-~ wer~ Fcaither qerinehy ~ncluded

~e )mperorPbariemaible ~~~poundreed ~tho~~laquo~ lt m the eigh~h ~turydecr~ miD not aencournt ~e~ch~Gt~~n6~llIIr~Watmiddot ilhat alLclencs m~be lble to middotwas virtuall uilkn a lj ~

ifead im~~ri~ J~d~ve ~m- faculties PU~Shed v~illi~~e iT ~~~t ~~t~Bltcs petence In ~h~~ )~1esslC~~Idu- Monsignor Ellis points tJ01 the BOGOTA (NC) _ Anglican tiaif~king ~ DllIllmum timidity which prevailed after Bishop David Benson Reed of

q I I~~ons they ~ere to be the eJcesses perpetrated in 1l1e BogOta offered accommodations e~ ~~ deprIved of repression of Modernism in the for~five Catholic bishops during me iectr~~ IS we can see w a fim part of the present centurY theforthcoming International

g ere had been He sees a change in the era of Eucharistic Congresss in August

ing of the Christu Rex Society an Irish organization for priestDmiddot engaged in pastoml work

Over 250 priests and represhysentatives of agriculturalorgan- izations attended the cOngress here on the theme Rural Ireshyland

Father Jerome Dennehy CC of Kenm2lre criticized the fail- ure of the Iri9h educational sysshytem to provide the farmer with the basic knowledge necessarY to enable him to profimiddott from advice from government agenshydes onfurming methods

No real progress can be made

Vatican II and happily notes and five Ecuadorian prelates aeshythe improvements already made cepted his invitation

lUld those-in prosPectmiddotmiddot He hJ They are Bishops Bernardo hopeful for the future Ech R f Amb to d

evern~ wz 0 a anlIJiteUktlllal A~lieDtmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot-middotCandiiiomiddotRada Cenosian of Guashybull - d middotmiddotd A 1 B h

in8 ConclUding ~y~ ran a liln UXIlary IS ops Priestmiddot as rntelleCtllal~~ v~rll9middotmiddotGabrieI1iazCueva Ernesto that abettereducated and mueh Alvarez ~liaVlcente CIsneros of

and ea r Gua allmoreaware enti laitrmiddotmiddot y qu demands a certainmiddotleveloflD-middot B~SbtPAnBeedli has JurCls~lctib~n

middotfellectual attainment and alivemiddot middot~v~r eo g cans In 0 om la its cl and Ecuador and has been an

~~ ooes ermeam that the ecumenical leader in these

now fading away with thei~

farms Father Eamonn Casey nashy

ijonal director of the catholic Housing Aid Society in London stressed the necessity for the priest to work with underprivishyleged members of -society Too often he said the theologians are on the periphery - they should come doWn to earth and mix with the people-who really

priest has to be a professional~untries ~ _ ~=====~_ intellectual such is not his _ Over 200 bis~ops a~ 1~ ~r-Etmiddotmiddot D ampD SALES AND SERVICE cation ltR does mean that he has dinals have saId they Wlll at-sect to maintain a genuiDe hifei-est end the EUcharistie Congress to - sect ill things intellectUal anq m Mbeid be~ sectpublic questions sect

Monsignor Ellismiddot chides sUPe- sect riors for their failure to eneour- p~iori ~ the minisky in sect age priests 110 use their ~cial teD-dayretreatS preceding or- sect talents skills and aptitudes dination Better than nothing sectAnd he urgeS priests 110 acquire one suPPoses sect( and retain habits of 9tudy It is In the lntervaJ there has sect to be hoped that both these cau- ~ great improvement But sect

name has been sent to lI1sgr John G Nolan president of the Pontifical lVlission for Palestine whose headquarters are in New Vork Written by Amleto Carshydinal Cicogilani Papal Secreshytary of State it referred to the

1 Missions 19 years service to ~ Palestinian refugees particushy

larly victims of the recent Arab-Israeli conflictto

It singled out as particularly praiseworthy the contribution of the Catholic Near East Welshyfare Association saying that middotthrough the unflagging genershyosi ty of the catholics of the United States of America it provided qlost of the means for the Missions work following the recent conflict

The papal letter declared No other agency surpasses the Pontifical Mission in length of

middot actualmiddot serviCe and its identifl shycapon with the paternal intershy~ and concern of the Holy Father merits his encourageshyment hismiddot blessing and his prayerful good wishes

Cardinal middotCicOgnanl wrote that Pope Paul out of paternal afshyfection for the homeless and of grateful esteem for the Pontifi shycal Mission bids memiddot send yOIll the enclosed check for $5000 Added to this was a furthell amount of money contributed

middot by the Congregation for the Oriental Churches

Msgr Nolan was asked that during his Easter visit to the refugee campS he kindly disshytribute the total sum in the Popes Dame to all the needyen

ar~~~stChneU~made adicbot-SAVE MONEY ON omy of man saying here is middotthe

body her~ is the soul-Iam YOUR middotOImiddotLmiddotHEATconCerned only with the soul bull bull bull bull Tmiddothe love of Christ is for the whole person and anything ~ -4~ WYman that concerns 1llieperson is of ~ US92 concern to middotChrist

He said thatmiddot the priest middotshould CHARLES F VARGAS selk tomiddotmiddot develop ~ature Ght-ls- tiMlS amongdsmiddotflockiuidcpre- 54 ROCKDALE AvENUE pare themmiddotforlife Th~ role of 1 the ~~esthe~dmiddotiftcl~desmiddotth~middot ~E~ BEDFORD MASS proVISIon Qfmiddotmiddot mformatlOn oo sexual and~ari~itLplmiddotobiehis 1

He stlggcentstJd middottbatmiddotmiddotmiddotPri~middot main~in cQJjt$C~ wjth~ those whlt emjgra~~mmiddottheir_ par- ish~ and follo~middotup middotthe middotcareers( of boys who are releasedmiddot from refprm schools t

1 bull bullbull - - ~_ _ - ~ ( ~

~ ~ lt

~III1I11I11I11I11I1UIIIIIIlIl1mlllllIII1I1I1I11I1I1I1I11II11I1I11I11I11IIIII11I1I11IIllIUIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~

tionary words win be wideiy~ OW measure canOOt be the poor sect AIR COmiddotIDmiddotImiddotTmiddotIO~IImiddot bullGmiddot

c INC

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~ post-Tridentinemiddot seminaries bulland responsibly beard Performance of the past It sect I~ I~ I~ lis remarkably extensive but the It is hard 110 believe tb1Ilt as must be the imperious demands sect main focus is on those ofF~Ce ~ as the seventee~th centu~lt ~ the p~sent an4 ~~ fUture ~ 363 SECOND ST FALL RIVER MASSbull bull the seventeenth century Pal- fa France some clena lOt their ~IWIIIUIUIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIUUlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUUIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIUIiIUWlimllllli5

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16

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs May 2 1968 Back Presidenills ~reg~reg ~~~1rf~Jreg~MO~ ~~~lliJO[[reg(gJ ~rntilO1fi)[[fr~ofr~r

CHICAGO (NC)-The Assoshy~~ ~~regramp~~ o[J1j [Q)1 W[J1lJ[[o ciation of Chicago Priests an

The record compiled 56 years ful Swamppodle a neighborshy unofficial group of some 1500 priests in the archdiocese ofago still stands in big league hood within sight of the U S

baseball annals-most runs al shy Capitol talked about Father Chioago has endorsed President Johnsons current efforts to]owed one game 24 Travers Travers band

fA J (Joe) Detroit Never before had the bandsshy negotiate a Settlement of the

Father Aloysius J Travers men performed like they did in Vietnam war The ACP in its fifth plenarygJ 75 who achieved the dubishy the 1919 May procession-never

ous pitching distinction died had such old favorites as Tis session here turned down a resolution prepared by its soshylast week in Misericordia Hosshy the Month of Our Mother and cial action subcommittee onpital Philadelphia He acquied 0 Mary We C~own Thee With

baseball immortality on May Blossoms Today been so spir shy peace calling for complete cesshy

112 1912 as pitcher for the One sation of U S bombing in Vietshyitedly played by Gonzaga bandsshynam to support the Presidents limited decrease in bombing

men as the procession windedlDay Wonders Detroits brawling Tigers were through Swampoodle streets glated to play Connie Macks After the procession was over and negotiation moves

Two other peace resolutionspOwerful Philadelphia As that the school rector called in recommended by the subcomshy_ daymiddotin old Shibe Park Detroits Father Travers and congratushy

Btar Ty Cobb had drawn a fine mittee were approved They

and two-day suspension for formance The rector added lated him on the bands pershy

put the ACP on record as favorshy

belting a heckling fan a few But high school musicians with ing draft law revisions so that a person might be exempt as a

lligers decided if Cobb couldnt mustaches Dont you think thatdays earlier in New York~ ~he

conscientious objector to a parshywas going a bit too far ticular war without necessarilyFather T~avers had recruitedplay they wouldnt either so being a conscientious objector

Famous llnfield a dozen or so members of thecenthey went on strike

to all war and so that a per

With the aid of Connie Mack crack Fort Myer Army Band

son could be exempt as a conshyfOm nearby Arlington Va scientious objector on humanishy

ed up a collection of Philadelshydressed them in cadet uniforms~e Detroit management roundshy

tarian as well as religioUlland put them in the school band groundsBesides teaching at Stphia sandlot players signed

The ACP also approved threeJosephs Prep and Gonzagathem to Detroit contracts and recommendations of its liturgy

as the Tigers sf Francis Xavier High in New committee York As a result the priests group

Father Travers also taught atfielded the One Day Wonders

Al Travers 19 fresh out of has urged the National Confershyat Josephs Prep School rho Disbands Hawks ence of Catholic Bishops to reshyhelped recruit the sandlotters One of his moSt heartbreaking submit two liturgical petitioJUloppointed himself pitcher He assignments was given him some to the Conglegation of Rites inctftein recalled I learned that 25 years ago He was sent back Rome The petitions which had e pitcher would collect-50 to St Josephs College where New Problem ~en turned down by the Vati shyeX-tra so I volunteered the battIe cry is The Hawk can congregation would allowThat day the As scored 24 will never die as moderator the establishment of experimenshyINns on 25 hits with io nuts of athletics Priest Urges F~ir labor Practices tal centers for the liturgycmearned against young Travshy His jOb-disband the Hawks For CatholicSchool Faculties throughout the country and limshy

erG The wonder is the score football team with a minimum ited experimentation with thewasnt higher for young Tra~~rs of uproar from students and SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-For betweell the school and the liturgy without prior approvalwas pitching against the best alumni since football had beshy as long as anyone can rememshy religious community of the Vaticanbalt team of the era-against come a moneymiddot losing sport at ber the Religious and lay peoshy Some experts says that the

PhiladelphiaS famous $100000 St Josephs and a number of nte third resolution called on-pie who serve on the faculties best solution to this problem is

infield of John Phelan (Stuffy) other Catholic colleges in ~those the NCCB to take concrete stepsof Catholic grammar and high to bar Religious from partici shy

McInni6 at first Eddie Collins days to implement proposals of itsschools have been the type of pating in labor organizations

lJeCOnd Jack Barry short and He did his job well directing liturgy committee for adaptashypeople who would never think But Father Reicher indicated

IPrank (Home Run) Baker third attention to St Joes basketball tion of the Mass to smaIl anelof going out on strike against this would only divide the Reshy special age groupsSaves Franchise team which has grown into one unfair labor practices since ligiousand lay faculty of schools

But young Travers and the of the nations powerhouses this would imply some sort of even more than they are dividedORe Day Wonders who had For the last 25 years Father guilt on the part of p~ors and now India to ReconsiderI2ever seen Detroit saved the Tlavers had been stationed at bishops Urging a period of experishybaseball franchise for the Tigers St Josephs Prep in semishy Well those days are gone forshy meritation to work out new Deporting Priestttlat day If they hadnt pl~yed retirement during recent years ever according to Chicagos forms of collective bargaining NEW DELHI (NC) - Indiantile As chances are the Amershy Requiem Mass for the colorful Father Robert Reicher and the Father Reicher concluded It ill Prime Minister Indira GandbJ1bean L~ague would have lifted one-day big leaguer was ofshy job now is to set up standards obvious that the right to barshy has promised reconsideration ofDetroits franchise because of fered Thursday at GeuChurch of fair labor practice and guidshy gain collectively is a natural the order expelling Jesuitthe players strike in Philadelphia ance for faculty members grievshy tight clearly defended time and Father Vincent Ferr r of theDespite the lopsided score procedures against Cathoshy agaiil ethically and morally Poona diocese Indiaance fromlPatJher Travers got several big lic school administrators But this right also implies an lleague offers as a result of his Canonist Cates Need The pmmise was made when

Speaking to participants at 8 obligation to know what colleCshy tlhree members of the Indiani pitching He turned them down secondary school department tive bargaining involves went to St Josephs College For Negro Prieds parliament met with Mrs Ganshy

meeting during the Nationalthen joined the Jesuits ATLANTIC CITY (Nch - A dhi here and asked her to get

National Catholic Educational the order cancelled and grantThe lesson he learned fmln plea for more Negro Catholic Bishops Ask PopeAssociation convention here Indian citizemihip to the priestthe unorthodox recruiting as a priests has been made at the Father Reicher outlined some ofone-day big leaguer stood him annual Easterri regional meeting To Visit Canada Father Ferrer founder of thethe problems facing Catholic in good stead a half-dozen years of the Canon Law Society of OTTAWA (NC) -Pope Paul Maharashtra Farmers Servicelabor - management relations

later when he was teaching at America here in New Jersey The pliest is chairman of the VI may visit Canada next month Society was scheduled for deshyGQnzaga High School in Washshy Msgr Thomas J Reese of Wilshy to attend the National Confershy portation last year but wasChicago archdiocesan Catholicington D C mington in the neighboring State ence on Poverty sponsored by granted several extensions ofCouncil on Working Life and a

Recruits Ringers of Delaware speaking on experishy jVell-known labor expert Christian Churches in Canada his stay He was accused by iiimiddot mental parishes accused the Hindu groupS ofanti-Indian acshyFather Travers was in charge Religious who teach in CatBshy Bishop Alexander Carter presshy

Church of racism and said that tivities and by the Maharashtraof the school b~llld which used olic schools pose a special diffi shy ident of the Canadian CatholicNegro Catholics prefer to - be state government of anti shyto master only about two or culty hi labor relations because Conference has acknowledged national activitiesselved by black priests of whom

CHURCHES UNITED Bishop Reuben H Mueller left of the Evangeli~al United Brethren Church and Methoshydist Bishop Lloyd C Wicke led representatives of their respective bodies at ceremonies in Dallas proclaiming the union of the two churches The new body is to be known as the United Methodist Churlth NC Photo

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IIlfllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIUIIIlIDutuUliUllllUiHlllllllllilllllllllllllllllilllUIIIIIIIIIIIIUII~given to the Washington arch we need black priests and we bid to raise the standards of diocese by Church spokesmen need them fast preaching in Australia and New here in Pennsylvania Zealand will be made shortly Lobster Boats Msgr Philip J Dowling execshy it was resolved at a meeting hereCapital Cityutive secretary of John Cardinal of leaders of religious orders

Krols Commission on Human VATICAN CITY (NC)-Qn The effort will inchide a fullyshyRelations noted that the Washshy the eighth anniversary of the otganized Pastoral Year obsershyington Archdiocesan Office of foundation of Brazils new capishy vance seminars for priests of all bull bull bull Urban Affairs has asked assist shy tal of Brasilia Pope Paul VI ages on updating preaching techshy s iz e s ance from Philadelphia and other sent a radio message of best niques the establishment of II bull bull bull dioceses In providing foOd es wishes in Portuguese and pressshy preaching center and the use pecially for those po)r who will ed a button that illumined a of a recorded service on techshy I Macleansreceive temporary housing in the cross on the cathedral of that niques of oral communicatiOil f8cilities of the Washington city The Pope performed the directedby the ObJates of MalT sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAYBt Tel 9979351 sect archdiocese oclemony in his private library Immaculate ~1I111111l111IHlUlnlllllllllllUllllllnIIllIUllllllUllllllllllllllIllltUIIllllllllllUluiuUWlUllllml~

three tunes a year In those of their obligation of obedience that feelers have been sent outthere are fewdays the school had a cadet Father Reicher pointed out to have the Pope corne to Monshy

If any institution can standeorps and one of its big annual What this means he added is teal for th~ May 26-29 meeting events was marching in the anshy that occasionally Religious mllYoondemned on the basis of the

It would be the first papalrecent Kerner Report on Civilnual parish-May procession be used to break a strike called visit to Canada Pope Paul visitedDisorders it is the CatholicFor years residents of color- by lay faculty members this country as a Cardinal in theChurch among others that is But more likely is the conflict early 19508guilty of white racism he trapping the individual Reli shyPlan to Help ~eed opined Bishop Carter said if a favorshygious whose loyalty is divided

Asserting that the number of able reply is reCeived from RomeCapital MCIl(lc61ers Negro clergy middotdoes not nearly the Canadian government would

PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A meet the needs of Negro Catho- Australia to Have extend an official invitation pledge of cooperation in feeding lies Msgr Reese said Pope Paul visited the United the poor who will gather in the If the Church is going to be Better Preaching Nations inNew York in 1965 nations capital in May has beell relevant to the black community SYDNEY (NC)-A concerted

I

Marian Awards Continued from Page Three

Fall River and has spent her entire religious life within the Diocese of Fall River

Sister has served as consult shyant with various education comshymittees in the diocese and bas promoted the educational proshygram of the Dominican Sisters

Sr Mary Pauline OP bead of the Science Department of

the Dominican Academy Fall River was one of the originatolll of the Region III Science Fair and has served as president of the regions Fair for two years

She is presently ooordinator of the Massachusetts state Scishyence Fair -

Sr Virginia CSC is presshyently chairman of the Th~logy

Department Notre Dame Colshylege Manchester N H and served from 1941 to ]958 as principal of St Anthonys New Bedford

She has always been a leader in new an innovative ideas in education

Sister Anne Denise SND presently principal of St Marys High School Lynn is well shyremembered as the first princishypal of Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth and has served in many administrative posts for the Sisters of Notre Dame

Sr Mary Aloysia SUSC is dean of the College of the Sashycred Hearts Fall River and has given outstanding service in coshyoperation with the Catholic School Department in planning in-service courses for the teachshyers of the diocesan schools

She also serves asmiddot coordinator of the educational program of the Sisters of the Holy Union

Sr John Elizabeth SUSC is Guidance Director at the Acadshyemy of the Sacred Hearts Fall River and has served in numershyous administrative positions atthe Fall River school

She was the first principal of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton and has served on committees of local and state educational organizations

Sr Mary Felicita RSM is now involved in the tutorial program at Mt St MaryS Acadshyemy Fall River and has served in the various sclIools of the diocese

For 26 years Sister served as Diocesan School Supervisor iD the Catholic School Office

Sr Miriam RSM is also in the tutorial program at the Sisshyters of Mercy Academy in Fall River A former teacher and principal in schools of the dioshycese Sister served for 26 yean

IN NEW POST Father Charles F Sheedy CSC former dean of arts and letshyterS has been appointed to the new post of dean of theoshylogical studies and institutes at the University of Nobe Dame NC Photo

to Educators tiS Diocesan Supervisor in the Catholic School Department

This year completes 50 years of service in the field of educashyto the Diocese of Fall River

Sister Maureen RSM is principal of Nazareth Hall Fall River She organized the proshygram and was the first principal of the Fall River school lor exshyceptional children a position she still holds

She is a consultant lind D member of city and state comshymittees for the mentlllly l1eshytarded

Sr Mary Urban RSM is Diocesan supervisor of schools and was the first principal at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

She is a member of state and city educational committees

Sr Mary Carmela RSM is a member of the English Departshyment of St Xaviers Academy Providence and was the first principal of Mt St Marys Academy Fall River

She is a consultant on secondshyary school curriculum planning

Sr Grace de Sales MSBT is presently superior of the Censhyacle of Our Lady of the Assumpshytion Osterville a position she also held at the Cenac1e of St Patricks Parish Wareham

Sister founded the kindergarshytens at Osterville and Wareham and has taught Chfistian Docshytrine classes on the elementary and secondary levels during her many years of selvice in the diocese

Sr Joan Louise OLVM is suPerior of the Victory Noll Convent in the Immaculate Conception Parish No Easton She has served as catechetical specialist in dioceses in Iowa and California and her present assignment is CCD supervisor for the Diocese of Fall River

Brother Albertus CSC is supervisor of Education for the Eastern Province of the Holy Cross Brothers and is professor of mathematics at Stonehill College No Easton He also ~ught mathematics and physics at Monsignor Coyle High School Taunton

Miss Mary Cabral of 1)69 Camshybridge Street Fall River is presently teaching at Espirito Santo School Fall River where she is completing 43 years of service as a lay teacher in ~e

Diocese of Fall Ri vcr

Whites to Solve White Problem

TOLEDO (NC)-Bishop Joon A Donovan has made a public request to whites to take up the white problem

He urged it for those lookshying for a modern up-Io-date apostolate for down-to-earth Christians who are at the same time dedicated Americans

middotSpeaking at a dinner of the northwestern Ohio district Fourth Degree Knights of Coshylumbus the Toledo bishop said

This ugly situation was fathered by injustice and is nourished by that subtle and insidious vice called prejudiCe

Need In this deplorable situation

in which the world ffinds itself today the pressing need is for those who call themselves Christians to think as Christians to form Christian attitudes and to live as Christians

Just as we cannot separate Christ from His Gospel so too we cannot separate love of GOO from love of our fellowmen without exception

The real Christian mlid the bishop does not live alongside but with others He constantly interprets anothers actions in the best possible light bying to remember always the way in which the Lord met loved and drew people to Himsel

SAIGON (NC) - The people wept and we wept everybody wept Sister Nicole said deshyscribing her teams departure after 16 days of relief work in Hue

She and two other Vietnamshy-ese Sisters Daughters of Charshyity of St Vincent de Paul with

The communImiddots1s T truce

17 girl students had gone to stricken Hue on a mission of mercy

offensive had left families in mourning houses in ruins ~nd people hungry and sick The government of Vietnam had inshyvited volunteers to bring help to the citys thousands of sufshyferers

The plane that brought tile Sisters and their students also brought 85 youths from Saigon~

The boys did manual work such as cleaning up the damaged hosshypital in Hues The Sisters team was divided into three groups one to give medical care anshyother to visit homes a third to l)ok after children

The 17 girls are some of those being trained by the Sisters as social workers for family assist shyance under a plan sponsored by a Vietnamese womens associashytion Five of the 17 are Cathshyolics The others are mostly Buddhists On April 12 all were fasting since it was the 15th day of the lunar month for the lBud-

Catholic Boy Scout Officials to Meet

WASHINGTON (NC)-About 150 leaders of CQtholic Boy Scout organizations will meet here to attend the 20th biennial oonference of the National Cathshyolic Committee OIl Scouting

The meeting will be a Iowshyday work session tor chairmen chaplains and other officioals cd the nations diocesan I seouiing ~ommittees The meeting will end with a banquet in honO Gl Patrick Cardinal OBoyle ol Washington

---- -----~

middot1FI

1

PRAYER CRUSADE _Danny Thomas has filmed n 10-minute color documentary on the value of family pray~r

to be used by Father Patrick Peyton CSC in his Camshypaign for Family Prayer Father Peyton said he expects 200000 people at a Milwailkee rally to be held Sunday May 12

IEverybody Weptl

Nun Describes Relief Teams Departure From Stricken Hue

dhims and Good Friday for the Catholics

The Asia Foundation here gave a grant to pay for the meals of the Sisters team dur ing their stay

- Before leaving Saigon the Sisters had collected medicines food soap and clothing from welfare agencies including Catholic Relief Services and

Vietnam Christian Service (Protestant) The United Nashytions Childrens Fund (UNICEF) provided milk powder which enabled the team to give milk to 450 children every day

Warn Medics LONDON (NC)-The day beshy

fore Britains new abortion law went into effect the nations 5500 CMholic doctors were warned by John Cardinal Heenan of WeBtminister that they should DOt perfom any abortions

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THE ANCHOR- 17 Thursday May 2 1968

Cufr ~t~1 Days Of orw~~~1ion

En C[[i~da OTTAWA (NC)-Chrietshy

mas and New Years Day now are the only holy days of obligation for Canadav estimated 8000000 Catholics

The Canadian Catholic Conshyference comprising Canadafl Bishops has announced thampa other holy days will be cellshyebrated on the Sunday nearem the holy day

The holy days affected aye Epiphany usually celebrat~

Jan 6 Ascension now falling on the 40th day after East~Ilp

All Saints now celebrated Nou I and the Immaculate ConcejilP tion now celebrated Dec 8

The Bishops said observance of the feast days on Sundayu means they will be celebratecll bull by a larger more relaxed anell accessible congregation of the faithful rather than a congreshygaUon of people constrained by the obligation of attending Maw in addition to their work

Canadas Bishops postwn~ until next Fall a decision Gil

wlether to restoremiddot the anciej~ office of permanent deacon m the Church The Bishops of the United States meeting simultashy

neously in St Louis hlst week ~ted to petition Pope Paul VJ for permission to restore ~

perinanent diaconate ror marshyried and unmarried men of ma ture years

Fish Sales Up SYDNEY (NC)-Best tilini)

that ever happened to the fisb industry said Mark J06eph chairman of the New SouUl -lales Fish Authority of the Churchs lifting of the ban CJ[l

Friday meat eating He has tb~ ligures to back up his verdictshya 25 per cent rise in fish e4)Dshy

slImption here since the ehlnge

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The Parish Parade New Jersey Suburbanites of All Faiths Aid Ghetto Arson Victims HOLY NAME OUR LADY OF ANGELS

FALL RIVER FALL RIVER NEWARK (NC) - Priest~ the citys anti-poverty agenCll Contemporary music will acshy

company the 11 oclock Mass Sunday morning May 5

First communicants will reshyeeive at a special Mass at 9 Saturday morning May 25 Mayshycrowning ceremonies will be held Sunday May 26 The Womens Guild announces

fts installation banquet for Tuesday night May 7 Tickets are available from all members

Catholic Charities collectors are asked to meet in the parish school at 730 tonight for dist~shyOOtion of contact cards

lIT MARGARET BUZZARDS BAY

SS Margltlret-Mary Guild of Buzzards Bay and Onset will Sponsor a rummage sale from 9 1lo 1 Saturday May 18 at St Margarets kindergarten hall Main Street Buzzards Bay Do iaations may be left at the hall during mornings of the precedshying week Chairman for the ~vent is Mrs William Brady

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild will reshyieive Holy CommuniOn in a bodyaf the815 Mass 00 Sunshydity morning A breakfast will follow in the school hall The icuest speaker will beRt Rev Anthony M Gomes Mrs Arthur Belanger gpiIshyftual chairman of the Guild is _ charge of the breakfast

81 JOSEPH AIRHAVEN Nominations and elections of officers for the Association of file Sacred middotHearts will be held at 630 on Sunday evening in the rectory ~ Dues are now payable to the tleasurer Mrs Jeannette Dushylude

IACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

Preprimary registration will be held from 2 to 4 Sunday afternoon May 5 in 1he school office Some openings also exist in first sixth and eighth grades

The CCD adult discussion group will meet at 8 Sunday night in the home of Mr and Mrs J G N Bonneau

So Easton Club Pledges

$5000 The newly formed Womens

Club of Holy Cross Parish So Easton has pledged $5000 toward the building fund acshycording to an announcement made today by Mrs Arthur J L Peterson the organizations first president The pledge will be paid at the rate of $1000 per year

This pledge has been added to The Second Mile Building Fund campaign now in progress under the chairmanship of Robshyert Dray and Louis A Lyne serving as director

The Altar Boys will sponSor a cake sale Sunday May 26

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a Communion breakshyfast following 8 oclock Mass this Sunday morning Installashytion of officers will be held at a banquet following 5 oclock Mass Sunday afternoon May 26

Children of Mary will attend a Communion breakfast followshying 8 oclock Mass Sunday mornshying May 12

The annual blessing of autoshymobiles will take place at 130 Sunday afternoon May 26 in the church parking lot

ST GEORGE WESTP~RT

A Maybasket whist is planned for 8 Saturday night May 4 hi

the school hall on Route 177 PrOCeeds will benefit the school fund and table and attendance prizes will be awarded

STMARY NORTH ATTLEBORO Parishioners are planning a

testimonial honoring Msgr Ed- ward B Booth Pastor at 7

Sunday night May 26 Tickets are now available

Christians Jews Combat Racism

NEW YORK (NC)The Nashytional Confeferice of Christians and Jews has launched a nation wide educational effort to conshyfront the problem of white racism in middotAmerica agency headquarters here announced

The NCeJ has given top prl~

ority to finding ways toimpleshyment the recommendations of the National Advisory Commisshysion on Civil Disorders The commission blamed white racshyism as the underlying cause of urban unrest

In a progress re-port to the NCCJ board of trustees meeting here Dr Samuel L Gandy dean of the Ho~ard University school of religion Washington D C and chairman of the NCCJ nashytional program ad7isory comshymittee stated

NCCJs 130 professional staff members in 70 cities are curshy~ntly engaged in developing programs with police business and labor leaders parents and teachers clergy and with youth and all of the various institutes workshops and dialogues which are being conducted are emphashysizing the findings of this reshyport

Dr Gandy quoted to the board a letter to President Lynshydon B Johnson from Dr Stershyling W Brown NCCJ presishydent in which the agency head said that NCCJ embraced the commission report as a sancshytion and guideline for our efshyforts in the private sectol

111I1111I11111111111111I1111I11I1111I1111111111I111111I111111I11I11I11I11I1111I111111111111I11111111I1111I111111I11I11I111111I111II11111111111D

ministers nuns and lay people of all denominations pitched in here to try and make Easter a dltty of joy for the more than 600 people burned out of their homes in a waveof arson which erupted in this city following the funeral of Dr Martin Luther King

Concerned citizens of surshyrounding suburban communishyties who only a week before had participated in a massive Wa 1k for Understanding through ghetto streets respondshyedspontaneously to the need

Without anymiddot special appeal going out people of all denomshyinations call e 11 inner-city churches to ask what they could do and they were directed to the United Community Corp

NEW LEADER Sister Rosemary Markham SSS is the new Superior General of the Sisters of Social Ser-

vice a Los Angeles based community engaged in social and catechetical work with missions in Formosa and Mexico NCPhoto

Christians Jews Discuss Diamiddotlogue

SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-The question of whether JewishshyChristian dialogue should be by speech or by action was the theme that ran through the talks and discussions at a Conference on Interfaith Dialogue sponsored by Catholic Protestant and Jewshyish organizations at Seton Hall University here

Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum director of interreligious affairs for the American Jewish Comshymittee was generally in favor of the action approach saying that the dialogue must avoid beshycoming a convenient conspiracy on the part of middle-class whites to buffer themselves against the realities of the inner city

Father Edward H Flannery executive secretary of the U S Catholic Bishops Secretariat for Catholic-Jewish Relations said that while he would be the last to cut off action in the realm of social justice and charity he also felt that Jews and Christians could not effectively present a common ftont to society until they have straightened out their own affairs

Father Flannery referred to statements that the -ChristianshyJewish dialogue had died in the wake of last Junes six-day war between Israel and Arab nations He said that it was not so much a matter of its dying but of its not having been tried yet

Over Holy Thursday Good Friday and Holy Saturday more than 10 tons of food and clothing were donated and the UCC staff was swamped with the task of sorting the materiaL

With schools and church ofshyfices closed priests and nuns made their way individually and in groups to UCC headshy

quarters to help with the task of unloading cars and station wagons and sorting and distribshyuting the clothing

At least 50 offers of assistance came in to Queen of Angels pariSh in the heart of the ghettc and the callers were asked to organize relief efforts in their own communities and then gd the material 110 the UCCbull

FEEL GOOD TODAY

THt HOLY fATHER MISSION AiD TD THlaRIENTAL DHURDH

Thlsoolumns happiest readers are the men

Te date this second phase bas listed 35 gifts totaling $12000 Combined with the initial campaign the Building Fund now lists 233 donors who haVe pledged a total of $117()00 The Womens Club that was founded less than six months ago has initiated a long range program for the spiritual cll1shytural and financial efforts of the parish

In addition to the regular methods of aiding the parish finandally the women have conducted teen-age projects and have assisted the Mens Club fu

i bull various progrlms

~MANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

BRISTOL COUNTY

9G-OAY NOTIC~

TIMENOW OPEN ACCOUNT5PAYS o bull bull Interest Compounded Quarterly

Offices in

NORTH ATTLEBORO MAINSIFDIEILlDgt AnUBORO FAUS

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women and children who know they~r needed The days were busiest helping others are the happiest days of our livesbullbullbull Who needs you most Surprisingly God needs you - for inmiddot stance to help art abandoned orphan become e Godloving responsible adult Lepers need you (there are still 15middotmillion lepers In the world) blind children need y~u ~ndlo do we bull bullbull Here In New York we are your agents tellin you where the Holy Father says your help Is needed and channeling your help promptlyand Oafely to the people iii needbullbullbull Want to feel good right now Do without something you want but do not need and send the money instead for one of the needs below Youll feel good especialiy if your gift is big enough to mean a sacrifice to you This is your chance to do something meaningful for the world - its Gods world - while youre still alive

D Only $850 gives our priests and SIsters i south India enough Dapsone miracle tablebamp for 43 lepers for a yearl D For only $250 a week ($10 a month $120 a year) you can make sure that an abandoned child has food clothing a blanket and love Well send you a photo of the child you adopt tell you something about him (or her) and ask the Sistermiddotinmiddotcharge to keep you Informed

D Your stringless gifts in any amount ($5000 MEET $1000 $500 $100 $50 $25 $10 $5 $2)

MISSION will help the neediest wherever they are - in EMERGENCIES india and he Hol~ Land for instance

D Only you can make your will-and do It this THINK week to be sure the poor will have your help

OF even after youre gone Our legal title CATHOLIO YOURSELF NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION Also our priests

TOO will offer promptly the Masses you provide for

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NEAR EAST MISSIONS MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretary Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoo 330 Madison Avenue New York N~Y 10017 Teephone 212YUkon 6middot5840

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Lawrence High of Falmouth Seeksmiddot State Track Tut~e

By PETER BARTEK Norton High Coach

The Capeway Conference track season has already begun but the handwriting is already on the wall This campaign like last years will be a battle for second place Admittedly notbing Short of a miracle can or will prevent Lawrence High of Falmouth from winning its second straight conference t rae k championship But fol Coach Jim Kalperis and his trackstersmiddot the league championship is only a Gtepping stone to the State C ham p io n - ship The goal of every athletic team in the state hi to earn the title of State Champion This is not beshyyond the grasp of the Falmouth Peier Clippers If hard Bartek work and dedication are the means to this end then Falshymouth will reign as State track champions

Success does not come easily em any endeavor and success batpound

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not come easily to the Falmouth tracksters They like all accomshyplished athletes have labored long and diligently to aChieve the measure of sUccess they now enjot lt

N1)t toomiddot many yearsato Lawshyrence High was just ~nother

sChool Participating in track But the efforts of many and the dedication of one IJ1im in parshyticular has brought immeasurshyable success to the Falmouth track scene That man is Jim Kalperis

Coach Kalperis haseombined

his knowledge af track his coaching ta1EntS aiiCl tirelessenergies middotto build a virtual track dynasty The latest noteworthy feat of middotliliitnickmen came in the forinof anotheriState title

Thisti~emiddotiS th~nivision IIi

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1

- BC~ and Norry Races Are Close 1

lbe format formiddot the St~te reo lays has been altered this ear with competition being held at four separate locations in East- em Massachusetts Weymouth captured the Division I crown the DiviSion n title went to

Andover and Williams corralled the laurels in Division IV

The meet drew ll5 schools in each of the four diviSions with over 2000 youngsters partici shypating in all classes

Enroute to its victory Falshymouth collected 51 points comshypared to runner-up Barnstable with 22Jh

Falmouth took first place in the discus high jump pole vault 440 yard run shuttle hurdles two mile run and the 880 -

With tbis type of success in state competition it is easy to see why the Capeway Confershyence title has been practically conceded to Falmouth

Sharing the spotlight with the trackmen at Falmouth are the diamondmen The Clippers who are in the thick of the loop baseball picture were given a

Mike Rainnie tossed amp no-hittel at Barnstable to gain a 1-0 vershydict

Its still much too early to predict with any accuracy

what will happen in the Cape wai baseball race But it ap- pears nomiddotclub will dominate th~t sport like Falmouth controIa track Falmouth Dartmouth Fairhaven and Barnstable are expected to fight it out through the entire season One close to the scene summed it up best when he said anyone in the league could win this thing

Close races are also developshying in the Bristol County and Narragansett Leagues

In the BCL both Bishop Fee han of Attleboro and Durfee High of Fall River encountered a few difficulties in early season play but seem to have found the range of late The clubs will meet in an important contest today in Fall River Late inning rallies have brought both clubS from the brink of defeat to vicshytory in previous outings The victor will have to be dubbed

shot in the arm last week as the team to beat

Brennan of Feehan D~est ill le~guej

Coach Tom Maccarone of Feeshyhan has had outstanding pershyfonnances from his pitching staff but the key to the Shamshyrocks success has been shortshystop Ty Blrennan Maccarone stated before the season that Brennan was his best player and perhaps the best in the whole Bristol County Judging from Brennans perfonnance to date one of the keys to stopping Feehan is stopping the classy shortstop

Coach Joe Lewis Hilltoppers play a brand of ball similar to his counterpart TOIJl Karams basketball club Make a mistake and the Fall Riverites will capshyitalize on it Durfees first two league victories came about beshycause of opponent miscues

The Hilltoppers have been playing steady ball throughout the early part of the campaign and are improving with every game Their ability 10 avoid costly mistakes eI tbeir -n

making and timely hitting has proven a winning combination

Come what may in todays contest the BCL llace has just begun

Not to be outdone by tile larger BCL and Capeway Conshyference the Narry loop is conshyducting a torrid race of its own At the end of the first week of action Seekonk and DightonshyRehoboth were tied for the top spot Following two weeks of play Gase of Swansea Dighton and Somerset were lodged In the first position The hectic lCampaign will probably find another change in the top spot at the conclusion of this weeks activity

From Cape Cod to Attleboro competition is keener this year than it bas been in many seashysons The road to the league championship is always diffJshycult to Davigate but this year it appears as though the road win be duttered wiill meR obstacles than ill quite

cone~~ lb~aders ConcllregrnmOB War In V~~It~IlJJm

NEW YORK (NC)-Stushydent government presidents and editors of campus newsshypapers at more than 500 colleges in 49 states have conshydemned the war in Vietnam as

lt immoral and unjust and said ~~ they believe they should not

~ i~~~~~~~ii ~~~b~~ shy --_ ~ and Laymen Convinced About

-- ~-__ Vietnnm Was coordirlated by shy _ -- shy ~ Rev RObert lVi Hundley lHullent

--lt--1 at Union Th~ological Snppary --J here and an associate pltISor at -- ~I th~ Congn~gationalChllrch hn ~_ Scarsdale N-Y He saiQ most

--middot1 students who signed the stateshy~-__-~~- ~~ -___- __~_~J ment havenot been active in

FINE ARTS FESTIVAL Making preparations for Fine Arts Festival at Bishop Stang High School North

Dartmouth are Paul Leahy and Margaret Polycarpo

~ Unmiddot-ty middotIs Chr-stlTs middotW-II

P Off W I E deg I pOi degI

ontl e comes cumenlca I grlmage From United Kingdom toHoly Lar-d

anti-war activities heretoforemiddot

Solicits Support

He added

Many of the student Itl~ders who have signed this sbtcment

recognize that they may be plaeshying their future caJeers illmiddotjeopshy~rdy and conceivably are riskshying punitive action being taken

against them by the capiicioWJ V~TICAN ~ITY (NC)~TO an Fathers Arthur Payton anSel~c~ve Sfdtvice Systerh~~~

I ecumenical pilgrimage oQ its Anglican who is director 01 ~ev Yi~am Sloan Cot~~1 Jr-) way to the Holy Land Pope interchurCh travel in LOndon bull aclive memjgter of Clergymiddot ~nd Paul VI recalled the words he Among its members were An- Laymen Concerned AboutbullVI~tshyspoke on his own pilgrimage glieans CatholiCs Oithodox and nam ~1dmiddota Yal~ U~Iverslt7

there in 1964 that unity is the will of Christ

He said that it was with parshyticular pleasure that we welshycome this ecumenical pilgrimshyage from the United Kingdom to the Holy LaRd You are aboUt to follow in the fOQtSteps af God made man in the country of His birth Hill mission and His blessed death for us men and for our salvation (NiceneCreed)

Your visit caUsto mind our own unforgettable pilgrimage to the Holy Places From the grotto of Bethlehem we then declared It npw appears clearly to all that the problem of unity cannot be eluded Today this will cif Christ is imposed upon our minds and demands th~t we undertake with wisdom and love every possible way of bringing all Christi~ns t6 enjoy the great benefit and supreme honor of the unity of the middotChurch

He also recalled his plea from Bethlehem that love of Christ and of the Church should inshyspire that every future moveshyment toward meeting and reshyconciliation

The pilgrimage was led by

DIOCESAN DIREC1OR First woman to serve as a diocesan director of radio-TV is Miss Patricia Smith of Pueblo Colo who is also a photo-journalist on the staff gf Dateline Colorado m cesan weekly newspaper

Protestants not only from Great Britain but from France and Germany as well

Msgi Gianfrancesco Arrighi undersecretary of the Secretashyriat for Promoting Christian Unity and Canon John Findlow representative of Anglican Archbishop Michael Ramsey of Canterbury at the Holy See accompanied middotthe pilgrims to the Vatican

Votes Moratorium On ChuDch Building

CHICAGO (NC)-The Chicago Conference of Laymen is urging Church authorities at both the archdiocesan and parish levels to declare a moratorium on 10- cal construction projects so that funds can be channeled to projshyects in the ghetto areas

The action was taken at the second annual meeting of the

ll200-member organization The 300 in attendance passed

some 50 resolutions half of them dealing with urban problems The membership said it will seek ways to alleviate white racism especially within the Catholic Church

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ch~plaJD saId The stand taken by these

y~ung men should serve to reshymmd Americans everywhere that the war in Vietnam 1s not over that American and Vietshy

namese boys are stillmiddotdying

He continued

These middotmen of conscience should be supported by eveQY priest minister and rabbi who cares about the sanctity of conshyscience

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Jesuit Comments Di~cordNormal Amon9 Catholics

RIO DE JANEIRO (NC)shylD i SC 0 r d among Catholics after the Second Vatican Council is perfectly normal but It is not normal for proshygressive or conservative Cathoshylics to refuse to accept the dishyrectives of the council and the pope Jesuit superior general said here Father Arrupe is in Brazil for 30 days to visit Jesuit houses in the country and to preside at the May 6 to 14 meeting here of all South Amershyican Jesuit provincials

He said that his visit is inshytended to adapt the order here flo the requirements of the agshygirnameJ1to or up-dating

The most important aggiorshy namento in our day he said

is that of the mind We have to ~nsider and respect human valshyues as such This was always the Churchs doctrine but now the Church is insisting on it more We ought not to consider the Churchs interest in human values as opportunism Our in tEmtion is only to serve mankin~ better)

Press Uses Images Dudng his stay here Father

Arrupe willmiddot visit 20 local(tiesWhere Jesuits are woikilg

ts B 1Ilhele are 1000 JesUl m razl~ bull

He said that he regarded as bull joke the Brazilian presss ref-

elences to him as ~the black l T Ch Pope cussion of he angmg a1middot

Because of my cassock hemiddot

tlaid I am black but I am not the Pope ~ understand that the press has to use images to exshylI)lain concepts more effectively

Honor Editor NEW YORK (NC) ~ Robert

6lmstead news editormiddot of the National Catholic Reporter weekly newspaper published in Kansas City Mo received honshyelable mention in the 1968 Paul Tobenkin Memolial Award Competition here

-

MEET IN ST LOUIS Bishop-elect Timothy J~ Harringshyth d f th Sf W 1 ft d

ton ~ orcester e leoscllfses ~ atn t ~ l~mg

ish a panel a~ the lQ68Presi dents Conference of the Nashytional Council of cat~olic yene~l

Role of CouDcil The parish will retairi its role

as a community of worship whose members go out ihto the world and bring it theeurohristjan

message Bernatd Lyons Ghishycago public relations ~onsultant saidmiddot

The pa~ish on the other hand mustmiddot become part of the world

alound it a wHr1e$S to the whole community and fake on roles not in relation only to -its

GUIDING CHURCH IN UNITED STATES More than 200 members of the hierarchy participated in the decisions of the annual Spring meeting of the National Conference

Predict Important Authorities Emphcisixe

WASHINGTON (NC)-Three members but to the world in authorities on parish life have agreed here that the parish basic organiz~tion iil the Church will have to undergo some lmportant changes if the ChUlch is goingto meet th~ needs of societyin the 20th censhy tury

But just how the parislt is going to change ~s far from setshytied they ~onceqed in a dis

which it exists Father John Corriga~ of this city a directozlt of the Nationalmiddot Liturgical Con ference asserted

Whatever it does the parish must becomemiddot a vital force in the cOlJlrnunity around it Father Geno Baroill execu~ive secretary Washington archdi

ocesan Office ~f Urpan Affairs declared

RIot ComparlmiddotsoDmiddot

Father Baroni whose work blings hini into constant contactmiddot with Negro problems in WaSh- laymen will inhibit soCial ac- ington saw~ astriking par~illel tion but added later this is a between the Churchs needs and risk wltirth taking

-those of thebiack ghetto Right now~ he observed - one of the mos~ urgent prob Society to Consider lems in the ghetto is that Of Sh fmiddot

community organization We 5 emnary I t arll learl1ing that pe~ple ri~t be CARTHAGENA CNC) _ The

cause they have beel- cut o~t ofSocieiy of the Precious Blood meaningful participation in so- ciety

In the ~hurch laymen have been cut out of this participa tion also They dont riot but they dont really concern them selves with the concerns of the Church unle~s thy ~ave t~i~ sense of partlclpatlcm he saId

New Resndemlce For US PIiDests

ROME (NC)-A new resident house for American priests working In the offices of the Roman Curia (the Churchs censhytral administrative offices) or on assignment in Rome for the US bishops has been opened to provide adequate economical lodgings and community surshyroundings

The residence called Villa Stritch after the late Samuel Cardinal Stritch of Chicago is composed of two apartment comshyplexes and is designed to meet the immediate needs of US priests already at work in Rome and to anticipate future housing needs as internationalization of the Roman Curia continues

In addition to American$ resshyident in Rome the villa is also expected to house priests on special assignments for the bishshyops in Rome bishops who come to Rome for work on var~ous

Church commissions or otherVatican offices or for such events as the synod of bishops and ma-Jor congresses In short it is hoped that the new villa wilL

will study the possibilities and implications of moving the or ders main theological school flOm St Charles Seminary here in Ohio to a university campus or urban center and of buildingmiddot an adequate program at St QJ1arles The Carthagena SChOt

has been the societys maJor seminary for over 100 years

Major superiors and middotelected delegates representing the soshycietys Cincinnati province voted to fOlm a committee to carry out the study during a provincial chapter meeting held at St Charles at which modernizing the training of candidates for the priesthood in the society Vas tqe chief subject of discussion

middotA report of the meeting in- dicated that the delegates were aware of trends in the Church 1-way from comparative isloationmiddot of seminary establishments to university campuses and urban centers

SPECIAL RATES FOR

Smiddot I O dcho0 utings an Picnics

of Catholic Bishops in St Louis last week An enormoUis amount of homework on position papers was approved ~

the Bishops NC Photo

I see the parish councils and their recognition of freedom asneceSsai-y to do this he added

Worth Risk They agreed they sha~e abull

feiling opound un~asin~ss _middotaboti~ these cOuncIls relatively new amQJ1g Cathol~cs pa~icula~lY their attitude t~ward SOCI~ issues

d Father Baroni sal he has ~

leery feeling about parishcouncils He declared there is

the danger that conservative

contribute to increased racial understanding and involvement

fur the people of the diOcese

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Parishes

Lyons author of th~ book middotParish Councils - Renewin the Parish Community said be

middotwas somewhat more optiniistici I donit think we are going to

solve these problems by 10~~1 at the dangers exclusively hie commented

Diocese to Discuss C~m~issi~n Rep~rt

LANSING (NC) - Catholics thoughout t~e Lansing diocese will participate in forums and home discussion groups 1as~ on the report of the National Acf visory Commission on Civil Disshyorders The program which begaa with public forums in six citie on April 29 was planned ~

middot three diocesanmiddot agencies-the Ofshyfice of Social and Community Service the Office of Renewal Through Vatican II and the adult education division of tne Education Department It was initiated in response to an appeal made by Bishop Alexshyander Zaleski The day following the death of Dr Martin Luther King Bishop Zaleski asked dishyocesan directors to plan an imshymediate program designed to

meetmg of heBIShops n erence WIt ISop e e~ros be a center of communi~y life CONTACT MANAGER - LINCOLN PARK of BrowI)svIlle Texas and fOtmiddotmer chancellor of the Fall for bishops arid priests with spe- 9996984 636-2744 ~iver Di~~~~lt __~gt -cilla~~gnrn~iitS~~o~~~ ~ Oc)QI~OC~)OQCIOC)oOOOCgtoc)OQltjIOcXllOOOCgtOC)oOC~)OIL)QOCgtOCPOoO

Page 14: 05.02.68

Thanks Catholics For Refugee Aid

VATICAN - CITY (NC)-NearMsgrEllis Relates Hist~ry middotmiddotEastmiddotwelfare work of U S Cathshyolics has been praised by Pope Paul VL0+ Training for Priesthood

Such a message in the Popes By Rt Rev Msgr Jobs S Kennedy

The publication of a book by Monsignor John Tracy Ellis founder and dean of a new school of American Cath~

lti)lic churchhistory is always a weloome event This is true even when the book is among his minor works SuCh is Essays in Seminary Educoshytion (Fides Notre Dame Inshydiana 46556 $595) amiddot 001shylection of papers and address-C2S There is some repetition in Chese essays which were preshyared for vari shyeus occasions But it does not illessen the imshyact of a book which shows us n keen critical in tell i g ence brought to beal OIl a subject of bas i c imporshylance The hand rDf the historian iIs seen throughshy~t the book The first three essays are specifically historical

The firsi deals with the trainshylog or preparation of priests from the apostolic age to the ~ncil of Trent the second with the same subject from the time of Trent to ~ 1960s The tird is todevoted diocesan theological seminaries in the American Middle West 1811shy1889

A survey such 00 the author Makes in the two opening chap $ers is of especial interest beshyeause it brings out tile implausshyible but incontestable fact that b about the fimiddotI9t 1500 years of its existence the Church did DOt have anything even regem- bling a standard ~m of edushy_tion for the priesfil100d

Monastie Schools fttere were no special schoobl

lor the clergy before the time Of

The medieval universitieQ were foundedmiddot by the Church amd the clery p~yed ~ im ~rtant part m them But theyWei b d al ~ ed ti e y no means I e Jormiddot ushy(l3 on for the pnesthood SInce2he the I g I kemelyq 1~~~y~middotou~emiddot~~U Iersi~ of P middotkmiddotlmiddot5middot6

-Y arlS n ovv or ~(fears to complete thedoCtOriite ill theology Hence few priestsbenefited f-rom 4--

~ UDlversI Effective Response

lhe POr estate of the clergy~ glarmgly a~parent in the ens of the Renalsance and the Bef~rmation and this middotis prj shy

manly llttutablello educashytional defiCiency And evea hen the reforming Council of lIrent was launched it took 1~ ~rs ~efore a dec~ on clerical educa~on was achieved and a long tlme thereafter before its proVISIonS were carned out in practice

Monsignor Elliss treatment of

ticularly the institutions founded by St Vincent de Paul and Jean-Jacques Olier

These men win the authors praise for their effective reshygponseto a vital need But he does IlQt hesitate to lay to them ~e responsibility for some of the anti-intellectual bias which chamcterizea too many seminashyli13 in subsequent centuries

incredible NWIIlber In the United States some

quite ancient history was reshylived as the bishops of new dioceses had cleriea schools of sorts in their own homes But in the days of the very first bishop John Oarroll a real

had b - -bli hed semmary een - 9when the Sulpichms came to Baltimore in 1791 and founded St Marys

Later developmen1s are sumshymarized by Monsignor Ellis with attention to the various types of seminaries and the growth m numbers from 50 in 1668 to 571 iIn 1964 Thi6 last incredible number is indicative 0If tile regre~le proliferation Which led to needless duplicashytiOD inadequacy in quality and waste of resources

A test of middotthe exeellence of American seminaries is proshyposed by the atrtbor how many men of enduring reputation ba~ flhey produced The anshyswerJs that tIhe fteonl is not distinguished And much of the lelIlainder of the book is given 110 probing for reasons m exshyplanation Of this

Routine Teaeldllamp at Augustine whomiddotbecame Ihi Anierican ~mi~ry of -ilJhop of Hippo in 396 His 1be ft refleCted _ national

_

LlIFE MEMBERS Msgr John E Boyd chaplain left and Dominick Maxwell Jr right Grand Knight of Fall River Council 86 of the Knights of Columbus i~vest Jerome D Foley and Dr Joseph Carvalho as life members

~

Rural Ireland Charge Farmers Lack Formal Training

In Agriculture ROSSLARE (NC)The need Wbat chance had the boy who

for priests to be more involved left school at 14 of making the in social problems was stressed grade at farming ~he excepshyby 9peakers at the annual meetshy tional lads made it The rest are

~ e9tablished and mairitaineCi~ - In the future he said until 4- disregard cif inteli~tualqua1itY this is rectified Ninety-five nAr ~ his own household and had In ~y instances ~ty mem- ~ imitators ~gt bera ere apPOint~~ t~eir ~t of e5ent-day farmers Thereafter came the mona~f)le positi - middotth m rd io ~v~ had IlQ post-primary edushySchools initiated by St BenediCt ons WIlifo ~ga r cation NinetYofive per cent ofin thmiddot th proper qlla Ications MuCh of farmers have had middotno formal esnr cent~ the~ fllie teaching was rolltine and~rting in middotligrlcultllredr~ and-middot eP1scqp~ Scboo~ an~ dun Collateral reading _n6t middot~JFlWle Awayampnally themiddot medieval UDlvenu- middot~~d lib ties middot - ~ampt~W1~ an nu-~ wer~ Fcaither qerinehy ~ncluded

~e )mperorPbariemaible ~~~poundreed ~tho~~laquo~ lt m the eigh~h ~turydecr~ miD not aencournt ~e~ch~Gt~~n6~llIIr~Watmiddot ilhat alLclencs m~be lble to middotwas virtuall uilkn a lj ~

ifead im~~ri~ J~d~ve ~m- faculties PU~Shed v~illi~~e iT ~~~t ~~t~Bltcs petence In ~h~~ )~1esslC~~Idu- Monsignor Ellis points tJ01 the BOGOTA (NC) _ Anglican tiaif~king ~ DllIllmum timidity which prevailed after Bishop David Benson Reed of

q I I~~ons they ~ere to be the eJcesses perpetrated in 1l1e BogOta offered accommodations e~ ~~ deprIved of repression of Modernism in the for~five Catholic bishops during me iectr~~ IS we can see w a fim part of the present centurY theforthcoming International

g ere had been He sees a change in the era of Eucharistic Congresss in August

ing of the Christu Rex Society an Irish organization for priestDmiddot engaged in pastoml work

Over 250 priests and represhysentatives of agriculturalorgan- izations attended the cOngress here on the theme Rural Ireshyland

Father Jerome Dennehy CC of Kenm2lre criticized the fail- ure of the Iri9h educational sysshytem to provide the farmer with the basic knowledge necessarY to enable him to profimiddott from advice from government agenshydes onfurming methods

No real progress can be made

Vatican II and happily notes and five Ecuadorian prelates aeshythe improvements already made cepted his invitation

lUld those-in prosPectmiddotmiddot He hJ They are Bishops Bernardo hopeful for the future Ech R f Amb to d

evern~ wz 0 a anlIJiteUktlllal A~lieDtmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot-middotCandiiiomiddotRada Cenosian of Guashybull - d middotmiddotd A 1 B h

in8 ConclUding ~y~ ran a liln UXIlary IS ops Priestmiddot as rntelleCtllal~~ v~rll9middotmiddotGabrieI1iazCueva Ernesto that abettereducated and mueh Alvarez ~liaVlcente CIsneros of

and ea r Gua allmoreaware enti laitrmiddotmiddot y qu demands a certainmiddotleveloflD-middot B~SbtPAnBeedli has JurCls~lctib~n

middotfellectual attainment and alivemiddot middot~v~r eo g cans In 0 om la its cl and Ecuador and has been an

~~ ooes ermeam that the ecumenical leader in these

now fading away with thei~

farms Father Eamonn Casey nashy

ijonal director of the catholic Housing Aid Society in London stressed the necessity for the priest to work with underprivishyleged members of -society Too often he said the theologians are on the periphery - they should come doWn to earth and mix with the people-who really

priest has to be a professional~untries ~ _ ~=====~_ intellectual such is not his _ Over 200 bis~ops a~ 1~ ~r-Etmiddotmiddot D ampD SALES AND SERVICE cation ltR does mean that he has dinals have saId they Wlll at-sect to maintain a genuiDe hifei-est end the EUcharistie Congress to - sect ill things intellectUal anq m Mbeid be~ sectpublic questions sect

Monsignor Ellismiddot chides sUPe- sect riors for their failure to eneour- p~iori ~ the minisky in sect age priests 110 use their ~cial teD-dayretreatS preceding or- sect talents skills and aptitudes dination Better than nothing sectAnd he urgeS priests 110 acquire one suPPoses sect( and retain habits of 9tudy It is In the lntervaJ there has sect to be hoped that both these cau- ~ great improvement But sect

name has been sent to lI1sgr John G Nolan president of the Pontifical lVlission for Palestine whose headquarters are in New Vork Written by Amleto Carshydinal Cicogilani Papal Secreshytary of State it referred to the

1 Missions 19 years service to ~ Palestinian refugees particushy

larly victims of the recent Arab-Israeli conflictto

It singled out as particularly praiseworthy the contribution of the Catholic Near East Welshyfare Association saying that middotthrough the unflagging genershyosi ty of the catholics of the United States of America it provided qlost of the means for the Missions work following the recent conflict

The papal letter declared No other agency surpasses the Pontifical Mission in length of

middot actualmiddot serviCe and its identifl shycapon with the paternal intershy~ and concern of the Holy Father merits his encourageshyment hismiddot blessing and his prayerful good wishes

Cardinal middotCicOgnanl wrote that Pope Paul out of paternal afshyfection for the homeless and of grateful esteem for the Pontifi shycal Mission bids memiddot send yOIll the enclosed check for $5000 Added to this was a furthell amount of money contributed

middot by the Congregation for the Oriental Churches

Msgr Nolan was asked that during his Easter visit to the refugee campS he kindly disshytribute the total sum in the Popes Dame to all the needyen

ar~~~stChneU~made adicbot-SAVE MONEY ON omy of man saying here is middotthe

body her~ is the soul-Iam YOUR middotOImiddotLmiddotHEATconCerned only with the soul bull bull bull bull Tmiddothe love of Christ is for the whole person and anything ~ -4~ WYman that concerns 1llieperson is of ~ US92 concern to middotChrist

He said thatmiddot the priest middotshould CHARLES F VARGAS selk tomiddotmiddot develop ~ature Ght-ls- tiMlS amongdsmiddotflockiuidcpre- 54 ROCKDALE AvENUE pare themmiddotforlife Th~ role of 1 the ~~esthe~dmiddotiftcl~desmiddotth~middot ~E~ BEDFORD MASS proVISIon Qfmiddotmiddot mformatlOn oo sexual and~ari~itLplmiddotobiehis 1

He stlggcentstJd middottbatmiddotmiddotmiddotPri~middot main~in cQJjt$C~ wjth~ those whlt emjgra~~mmiddottheir_ par- ish~ and follo~middotup middotthe middotcareers( of boys who are releasedmiddot from refprm schools t

1 bull bullbull - - ~_ _ - ~ ( ~

~ ~ lt

~III1I11I11I11I11I1UIIIIIIlIl1mlllllIII1I1I1I11I1I1I1I11II11I1I11I11I11IIIII11I1I11IIllIUIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~

tionary words win be wideiy~ OW measure canOOt be the poor sect AIR COmiddotIDmiddotImiddotTmiddotIO~IImiddot bullGmiddot

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~ post-Tridentinemiddot seminaries bulland responsibly beard Performance of the past It sect I~ I~ I~ lis remarkably extensive but the It is hard 110 believe tb1Ilt as must be the imperious demands sect main focus is on those ofF~Ce ~ as the seventee~th centu~lt ~ the p~sent an4 ~~ fUture ~ 363 SECOND ST FALL RIVER MASSbull bull the seventeenth century Pal- fa France some clena lOt their ~IWIIIUIUIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIUUlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUUIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIUIiIUWlimllllli5

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs May 2 1968 Back Presidenills ~reg~reg ~~~1rf~Jreg~MO~ ~~~lliJO[[reg(gJ ~rntilO1fi)[[fr~ofr~r

CHICAGO (NC)-The Assoshy~~ ~~regramp~~ o[J1j [Q)1 W[J1lJ[[o ciation of Chicago Priests an

The record compiled 56 years ful Swamppodle a neighborshy unofficial group of some 1500 priests in the archdiocese ofago still stands in big league hood within sight of the U S

baseball annals-most runs al shy Capitol talked about Father Chioago has endorsed President Johnsons current efforts to]owed one game 24 Travers Travers band

fA J (Joe) Detroit Never before had the bandsshy negotiate a Settlement of the

Father Aloysius J Travers men performed like they did in Vietnam war The ACP in its fifth plenarygJ 75 who achieved the dubishy the 1919 May procession-never

ous pitching distinction died had such old favorites as Tis session here turned down a resolution prepared by its soshylast week in Misericordia Hosshy the Month of Our Mother and cial action subcommittee onpital Philadelphia He acquied 0 Mary We C~own Thee With

baseball immortality on May Blossoms Today been so spir shy peace calling for complete cesshy

112 1912 as pitcher for the One sation of U S bombing in Vietshyitedly played by Gonzaga bandsshynam to support the Presidents limited decrease in bombing

men as the procession windedlDay Wonders Detroits brawling Tigers were through Swampoodle streets glated to play Connie Macks After the procession was over and negotiation moves

Two other peace resolutionspOwerful Philadelphia As that the school rector called in recommended by the subcomshy_ daymiddotin old Shibe Park Detroits Father Travers and congratushy

Btar Ty Cobb had drawn a fine mittee were approved They

and two-day suspension for formance The rector added lated him on the bands pershy

put the ACP on record as favorshy

belting a heckling fan a few But high school musicians with ing draft law revisions so that a person might be exempt as a

lligers decided if Cobb couldnt mustaches Dont you think thatdays earlier in New York~ ~he

conscientious objector to a parshywas going a bit too far ticular war without necessarilyFather T~avers had recruitedplay they wouldnt either so being a conscientious objector

Famous llnfield a dozen or so members of thecenthey went on strike

to all war and so that a per

With the aid of Connie Mack crack Fort Myer Army Band

son could be exempt as a conshyfOm nearby Arlington Va scientious objector on humanishy

ed up a collection of Philadelshydressed them in cadet uniforms~e Detroit management roundshy

tarian as well as religioUlland put them in the school band groundsBesides teaching at Stphia sandlot players signed

The ACP also approved threeJosephs Prep and Gonzagathem to Detroit contracts and recommendations of its liturgy

as the Tigers sf Francis Xavier High in New committee York As a result the priests group

Father Travers also taught atfielded the One Day Wonders

Al Travers 19 fresh out of has urged the National Confershyat Josephs Prep School rho Disbands Hawks ence of Catholic Bishops to reshyhelped recruit the sandlotters One of his moSt heartbreaking submit two liturgical petitioJUloppointed himself pitcher He assignments was given him some to the Conglegation of Rites inctftein recalled I learned that 25 years ago He was sent back Rome The petitions which had e pitcher would collect-50 to St Josephs College where New Problem ~en turned down by the Vati shyeX-tra so I volunteered the battIe cry is The Hawk can congregation would allowThat day the As scored 24 will never die as moderator the establishment of experimenshyINns on 25 hits with io nuts of athletics Priest Urges F~ir labor Practices tal centers for the liturgycmearned against young Travshy His jOb-disband the Hawks For CatholicSchool Faculties throughout the country and limshy

erG The wonder is the score football team with a minimum ited experimentation with thewasnt higher for young Tra~~rs of uproar from students and SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-For betweell the school and the liturgy without prior approvalwas pitching against the best alumni since football had beshy as long as anyone can rememshy religious community of the Vaticanbalt team of the era-against come a moneymiddot losing sport at ber the Religious and lay peoshy Some experts says that the

PhiladelphiaS famous $100000 St Josephs and a number of nte third resolution called on-pie who serve on the faculties best solution to this problem is

infield of John Phelan (Stuffy) other Catholic colleges in ~those the NCCB to take concrete stepsof Catholic grammar and high to bar Religious from partici shy

McInni6 at first Eddie Collins days to implement proposals of itsschools have been the type of pating in labor organizations

lJeCOnd Jack Barry short and He did his job well directing liturgy committee for adaptashypeople who would never think But Father Reicher indicated

IPrank (Home Run) Baker third attention to St Joes basketball tion of the Mass to smaIl anelof going out on strike against this would only divide the Reshy special age groupsSaves Franchise team which has grown into one unfair labor practices since ligiousand lay faculty of schools

But young Travers and the of the nations powerhouses this would imply some sort of even more than they are dividedORe Day Wonders who had For the last 25 years Father guilt on the part of p~ors and now India to ReconsiderI2ever seen Detroit saved the Tlavers had been stationed at bishops Urging a period of experishybaseball franchise for the Tigers St Josephs Prep in semishy Well those days are gone forshy meritation to work out new Deporting Priestttlat day If they hadnt pl~yed retirement during recent years ever according to Chicagos forms of collective bargaining NEW DELHI (NC) - Indiantile As chances are the Amershy Requiem Mass for the colorful Father Robert Reicher and the Father Reicher concluded It ill Prime Minister Indira GandbJ1bean L~ague would have lifted one-day big leaguer was ofshy job now is to set up standards obvious that the right to barshy has promised reconsideration ofDetroits franchise because of fered Thursday at GeuChurch of fair labor practice and guidshy gain collectively is a natural the order expelling Jesuitthe players strike in Philadelphia ance for faculty members grievshy tight clearly defended time and Father Vincent Ferr r of theDespite the lopsided score procedures against Cathoshy agaiil ethically and morally Poona diocese Indiaance fromlPatJher Travers got several big lic school administrators But this right also implies an lleague offers as a result of his Canonist Cates Need The pmmise was made when

Speaking to participants at 8 obligation to know what colleCshy tlhree members of the Indiani pitching He turned them down secondary school department tive bargaining involves went to St Josephs College For Negro Prieds parliament met with Mrs Ganshy

meeting during the Nationalthen joined the Jesuits ATLANTIC CITY (Nch - A dhi here and asked her to get

National Catholic Educational the order cancelled and grantThe lesson he learned fmln plea for more Negro Catholic Bishops Ask PopeAssociation convention here Indian citizemihip to the priestthe unorthodox recruiting as a priests has been made at the Father Reicher outlined some ofone-day big leaguer stood him annual Easterri regional meeting To Visit Canada Father Ferrer founder of thethe problems facing Catholic in good stead a half-dozen years of the Canon Law Society of OTTAWA (NC) -Pope Paul Maharashtra Farmers Servicelabor - management relations

later when he was teaching at America here in New Jersey The pliest is chairman of the VI may visit Canada next month Society was scheduled for deshyGQnzaga High School in Washshy Msgr Thomas J Reese of Wilshy to attend the National Confershy portation last year but wasChicago archdiocesan Catholicington D C mington in the neighboring State ence on Poverty sponsored by granted several extensions ofCouncil on Working Life and a

Recruits Ringers of Delaware speaking on experishy jVell-known labor expert Christian Churches in Canada his stay He was accused by iiimiddot mental parishes accused the Hindu groupS ofanti-Indian acshyFather Travers was in charge Religious who teach in CatBshy Bishop Alexander Carter presshy

Church of racism and said that tivities and by the Maharashtraof the school b~llld which used olic schools pose a special diffi shy ident of the Canadian CatholicNegro Catholics prefer to - be state government of anti shyto master only about two or culty hi labor relations because Conference has acknowledged national activitiesselved by black priests of whom

CHURCHES UNITED Bishop Reuben H Mueller left of the Evangeli~al United Brethren Church and Methoshydist Bishop Lloyd C Wicke led representatives of their respective bodies at ceremonies in Dallas proclaiming the union of the two churches The new body is to be known as the United Methodist Churlth NC Photo

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IIlfllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIUIIIlIDutuUliUllllUiHlllllllllilllllllllllllllllilllUIIIIIIIIIIIIUII~given to the Washington arch we need black priests and we bid to raise the standards of diocese by Church spokesmen need them fast preaching in Australia and New here in Pennsylvania Zealand will be made shortly Lobster Boats Msgr Philip J Dowling execshy it was resolved at a meeting hereCapital Cityutive secretary of John Cardinal of leaders of religious orders

Krols Commission on Human VATICAN CITY (NC)-Qn The effort will inchide a fullyshyRelations noted that the Washshy the eighth anniversary of the otganized Pastoral Year obsershyington Archdiocesan Office of foundation of Brazils new capishy vance seminars for priests of all bull bull bull Urban Affairs has asked assist shy tal of Brasilia Pope Paul VI ages on updating preaching techshy s iz e s ance from Philadelphia and other sent a radio message of best niques the establishment of II bull bull bull dioceses In providing foOd es wishes in Portuguese and pressshy preaching center and the use pecially for those po)r who will ed a button that illumined a of a recorded service on techshy I Macleansreceive temporary housing in the cross on the cathedral of that niques of oral communicatiOil f8cilities of the Washington city The Pope performed the directedby the ObJates of MalT sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAYBt Tel 9979351 sect archdiocese oclemony in his private library Immaculate ~1I111111l111IHlUlnlllllllllllUllllllnIIllIUllllllUllllllllllllllIllltUIIllllllllllUluiuUWlUllllml~

three tunes a year In those of their obligation of obedience that feelers have been sent outthere are fewdays the school had a cadet Father Reicher pointed out to have the Pope corne to Monshy

If any institution can standeorps and one of its big annual What this means he added is teal for th~ May 26-29 meeting events was marching in the anshy that occasionally Religious mllYoondemned on the basis of the

It would be the first papalrecent Kerner Report on Civilnual parish-May procession be used to break a strike called visit to Canada Pope Paul visitedDisorders it is the CatholicFor years residents of color- by lay faculty members this country as a Cardinal in theChurch among others that is But more likely is the conflict early 19508guilty of white racism he trapping the individual Reli shyPlan to Help ~eed opined Bishop Carter said if a favorshygious whose loyalty is divided

Asserting that the number of able reply is reCeived from RomeCapital MCIl(lc61ers Negro clergy middotdoes not nearly the Canadian government would

PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A meet the needs of Negro Catho- Australia to Have extend an official invitation pledge of cooperation in feeding lies Msgr Reese said Pope Paul visited the United the poor who will gather in the If the Church is going to be Better Preaching Nations inNew York in 1965 nations capital in May has beell relevant to the black community SYDNEY (NC)-A concerted

I

Marian Awards Continued from Page Three

Fall River and has spent her entire religious life within the Diocese of Fall River

Sister has served as consult shyant with various education comshymittees in the diocese and bas promoted the educational proshygram of the Dominican Sisters

Sr Mary Pauline OP bead of the Science Department of

the Dominican Academy Fall River was one of the originatolll of the Region III Science Fair and has served as president of the regions Fair for two years

She is presently ooordinator of the Massachusetts state Scishyence Fair -

Sr Virginia CSC is presshyently chairman of the Th~logy

Department Notre Dame Colshylege Manchester N H and served from 1941 to ]958 as principal of St Anthonys New Bedford

She has always been a leader in new an innovative ideas in education

Sister Anne Denise SND presently principal of St Marys High School Lynn is well shyremembered as the first princishypal of Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth and has served in many administrative posts for the Sisters of Notre Dame

Sr Mary Aloysia SUSC is dean of the College of the Sashycred Hearts Fall River and has given outstanding service in coshyoperation with the Catholic School Department in planning in-service courses for the teachshyers of the diocesan schools

She also serves asmiddot coordinator of the educational program of the Sisters of the Holy Union

Sr John Elizabeth SUSC is Guidance Director at the Acadshyemy of the Sacred Hearts Fall River and has served in numershyous administrative positions atthe Fall River school

She was the first principal of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton and has served on committees of local and state educational organizations

Sr Mary Felicita RSM is now involved in the tutorial program at Mt St MaryS Acadshyemy Fall River and has served in the various sclIools of the diocese

For 26 years Sister served as Diocesan School Supervisor iD the Catholic School Office

Sr Miriam RSM is also in the tutorial program at the Sisshyters of Mercy Academy in Fall River A former teacher and principal in schools of the dioshycese Sister served for 26 yean

IN NEW POST Father Charles F Sheedy CSC former dean of arts and letshyterS has been appointed to the new post of dean of theoshylogical studies and institutes at the University of Nobe Dame NC Photo

to Educators tiS Diocesan Supervisor in the Catholic School Department

This year completes 50 years of service in the field of educashyto the Diocese of Fall River

Sister Maureen RSM is principal of Nazareth Hall Fall River She organized the proshygram and was the first principal of the Fall River school lor exshyceptional children a position she still holds

She is a consultant lind D member of city and state comshymittees for the mentlllly l1eshytarded

Sr Mary Urban RSM is Diocesan supervisor of schools and was the first principal at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

She is a member of state and city educational committees

Sr Mary Carmela RSM is a member of the English Departshyment of St Xaviers Academy Providence and was the first principal of Mt St Marys Academy Fall River

She is a consultant on secondshyary school curriculum planning

Sr Grace de Sales MSBT is presently superior of the Censhyacle of Our Lady of the Assumpshytion Osterville a position she also held at the Cenac1e of St Patricks Parish Wareham

Sister founded the kindergarshytens at Osterville and Wareham and has taught Chfistian Docshytrine classes on the elementary and secondary levels during her many years of selvice in the diocese

Sr Joan Louise OLVM is suPerior of the Victory Noll Convent in the Immaculate Conception Parish No Easton She has served as catechetical specialist in dioceses in Iowa and California and her present assignment is CCD supervisor for the Diocese of Fall River

Brother Albertus CSC is supervisor of Education for the Eastern Province of the Holy Cross Brothers and is professor of mathematics at Stonehill College No Easton He also ~ught mathematics and physics at Monsignor Coyle High School Taunton

Miss Mary Cabral of 1)69 Camshybridge Street Fall River is presently teaching at Espirito Santo School Fall River where she is completing 43 years of service as a lay teacher in ~e

Diocese of Fall Ri vcr

Whites to Solve White Problem

TOLEDO (NC)-Bishop Joon A Donovan has made a public request to whites to take up the white problem

He urged it for those lookshying for a modern up-Io-date apostolate for down-to-earth Christians who are at the same time dedicated Americans

middotSpeaking at a dinner of the northwestern Ohio district Fourth Degree Knights of Coshylumbus the Toledo bishop said

This ugly situation was fathered by injustice and is nourished by that subtle and insidious vice called prejudiCe

Need In this deplorable situation

in which the world ffinds itself today the pressing need is for those who call themselves Christians to think as Christians to form Christian attitudes and to live as Christians

Just as we cannot separate Christ from His Gospel so too we cannot separate love of GOO from love of our fellowmen without exception

The real Christian mlid the bishop does not live alongside but with others He constantly interprets anothers actions in the best possible light bying to remember always the way in which the Lord met loved and drew people to Himsel

SAIGON (NC) - The people wept and we wept everybody wept Sister Nicole said deshyscribing her teams departure after 16 days of relief work in Hue

She and two other Vietnamshy-ese Sisters Daughters of Charshyity of St Vincent de Paul with

The communImiddots1s T truce

17 girl students had gone to stricken Hue on a mission of mercy

offensive had left families in mourning houses in ruins ~nd people hungry and sick The government of Vietnam had inshyvited volunteers to bring help to the citys thousands of sufshyferers

The plane that brought tile Sisters and their students also brought 85 youths from Saigon~

The boys did manual work such as cleaning up the damaged hosshypital in Hues The Sisters team was divided into three groups one to give medical care anshyother to visit homes a third to l)ok after children

The 17 girls are some of those being trained by the Sisters as social workers for family assist shyance under a plan sponsored by a Vietnamese womens associashytion Five of the 17 are Cathshyolics The others are mostly Buddhists On April 12 all were fasting since it was the 15th day of the lunar month for the lBud-

Catholic Boy Scout Officials to Meet

WASHINGTON (NC)-About 150 leaders of CQtholic Boy Scout organizations will meet here to attend the 20th biennial oonference of the National Cathshyolic Committee OIl Scouting

The meeting will be a Iowshyday work session tor chairmen chaplains and other officioals cd the nations diocesan I seouiing ~ommittees The meeting will end with a banquet in honO Gl Patrick Cardinal OBoyle ol Washington

---- -----~

middot1FI

1

PRAYER CRUSADE _Danny Thomas has filmed n 10-minute color documentary on the value of family pray~r

to be used by Father Patrick Peyton CSC in his Camshypaign for Family Prayer Father Peyton said he expects 200000 people at a Milwailkee rally to be held Sunday May 12

IEverybody Weptl

Nun Describes Relief Teams Departure From Stricken Hue

dhims and Good Friday for the Catholics

The Asia Foundation here gave a grant to pay for the meals of the Sisters team dur ing their stay

- Before leaving Saigon the Sisters had collected medicines food soap and clothing from welfare agencies including Catholic Relief Services and

Vietnam Christian Service (Protestant) The United Nashytions Childrens Fund (UNICEF) provided milk powder which enabled the team to give milk to 450 children every day

Warn Medics LONDON (NC)-The day beshy

fore Britains new abortion law went into effect the nations 5500 CMholic doctors were warned by John Cardinal Heenan of WeBtminister that they should DOt perfom any abortions

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THE ANCHOR- 17 Thursday May 2 1968

Cufr ~t~1 Days Of orw~~~1ion

En C[[i~da OTTAWA (NC)-Chrietshy

mas and New Years Day now are the only holy days of obligation for Canadav estimated 8000000 Catholics

The Canadian Catholic Conshyference comprising Canadafl Bishops has announced thampa other holy days will be cellshyebrated on the Sunday nearem the holy day

The holy days affected aye Epiphany usually celebrat~

Jan 6 Ascension now falling on the 40th day after East~Ilp

All Saints now celebrated Nou I and the Immaculate ConcejilP tion now celebrated Dec 8

The Bishops said observance of the feast days on Sundayu means they will be celebratecll bull by a larger more relaxed anell accessible congregation of the faithful rather than a congreshygaUon of people constrained by the obligation of attending Maw in addition to their work

Canadas Bishops postwn~ until next Fall a decision Gil

wlether to restoremiddot the anciej~ office of permanent deacon m the Church The Bishops of the United States meeting simultashy

neously in St Louis hlst week ~ted to petition Pope Paul VJ for permission to restore ~

perinanent diaconate ror marshyried and unmarried men of ma ture years

Fish Sales Up SYDNEY (NC)-Best tilini)

that ever happened to the fisb industry said Mark J06eph chairman of the New SouUl -lales Fish Authority of the Churchs lifting of the ban CJ[l

Friday meat eating He has tb~ ligures to back up his verdictshya 25 per cent rise in fish e4)Dshy

slImption here since the ehlnge

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The Parish Parade New Jersey Suburbanites of All Faiths Aid Ghetto Arson Victims HOLY NAME OUR LADY OF ANGELS

FALL RIVER FALL RIVER NEWARK (NC) - Priest~ the citys anti-poverty agenCll Contemporary music will acshy

company the 11 oclock Mass Sunday morning May 5

First communicants will reshyeeive at a special Mass at 9 Saturday morning May 25 Mayshycrowning ceremonies will be held Sunday May 26 The Womens Guild announces

fts installation banquet for Tuesday night May 7 Tickets are available from all members

Catholic Charities collectors are asked to meet in the parish school at 730 tonight for dist~shyOOtion of contact cards

lIT MARGARET BUZZARDS BAY

SS Margltlret-Mary Guild of Buzzards Bay and Onset will Sponsor a rummage sale from 9 1lo 1 Saturday May 18 at St Margarets kindergarten hall Main Street Buzzards Bay Do iaations may be left at the hall during mornings of the precedshying week Chairman for the ~vent is Mrs William Brady

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild will reshyieive Holy CommuniOn in a bodyaf the815 Mass 00 Sunshydity morning A breakfast will follow in the school hall The icuest speaker will beRt Rev Anthony M Gomes Mrs Arthur Belanger gpiIshyftual chairman of the Guild is _ charge of the breakfast

81 JOSEPH AIRHAVEN Nominations and elections of officers for the Association of file Sacred middotHearts will be held at 630 on Sunday evening in the rectory ~ Dues are now payable to the tleasurer Mrs Jeannette Dushylude

IACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

Preprimary registration will be held from 2 to 4 Sunday afternoon May 5 in 1he school office Some openings also exist in first sixth and eighth grades

The CCD adult discussion group will meet at 8 Sunday night in the home of Mr and Mrs J G N Bonneau

So Easton Club Pledges

$5000 The newly formed Womens

Club of Holy Cross Parish So Easton has pledged $5000 toward the building fund acshycording to an announcement made today by Mrs Arthur J L Peterson the organizations first president The pledge will be paid at the rate of $1000 per year

This pledge has been added to The Second Mile Building Fund campaign now in progress under the chairmanship of Robshyert Dray and Louis A Lyne serving as director

The Altar Boys will sponSor a cake sale Sunday May 26

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a Communion breakshyfast following 8 oclock Mass this Sunday morning Installashytion of officers will be held at a banquet following 5 oclock Mass Sunday afternoon May 26

Children of Mary will attend a Communion breakfast followshying 8 oclock Mass Sunday mornshying May 12

The annual blessing of autoshymobiles will take place at 130 Sunday afternoon May 26 in the church parking lot

ST GEORGE WESTP~RT

A Maybasket whist is planned for 8 Saturday night May 4 hi

the school hall on Route 177 PrOCeeds will benefit the school fund and table and attendance prizes will be awarded

STMARY NORTH ATTLEBORO Parishioners are planning a

testimonial honoring Msgr Ed- ward B Booth Pastor at 7

Sunday night May 26 Tickets are now available

Christians Jews Combat Racism

NEW YORK (NC)The Nashytional Confeferice of Christians and Jews has launched a nation wide educational effort to conshyfront the problem of white racism in middotAmerica agency headquarters here announced

The NCeJ has given top prl~

ority to finding ways toimpleshyment the recommendations of the National Advisory Commisshysion on Civil Disorders The commission blamed white racshyism as the underlying cause of urban unrest

In a progress re-port to the NCCJ board of trustees meeting here Dr Samuel L Gandy dean of the Ho~ard University school of religion Washington D C and chairman of the NCCJ nashytional program ad7isory comshymittee stated

NCCJs 130 professional staff members in 70 cities are curshy~ntly engaged in developing programs with police business and labor leaders parents and teachers clergy and with youth and all of the various institutes workshops and dialogues which are being conducted are emphashysizing the findings of this reshyport

Dr Gandy quoted to the board a letter to President Lynshydon B Johnson from Dr Stershyling W Brown NCCJ presishydent in which the agency head said that NCCJ embraced the commission report as a sancshytion and guideline for our efshyforts in the private sectol

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ministers nuns and lay people of all denominations pitched in here to try and make Easter a dltty of joy for the more than 600 people burned out of their homes in a waveof arson which erupted in this city following the funeral of Dr Martin Luther King

Concerned citizens of surshyrounding suburban communishyties who only a week before had participated in a massive Wa 1k for Understanding through ghetto streets respondshyedspontaneously to the need

Without anymiddot special appeal going out people of all denomshyinations call e 11 inner-city churches to ask what they could do and they were directed to the United Community Corp

NEW LEADER Sister Rosemary Markham SSS is the new Superior General of the Sisters of Social Ser-

vice a Los Angeles based community engaged in social and catechetical work with missions in Formosa and Mexico NCPhoto

Christians Jews Discuss Diamiddotlogue

SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-The question of whether JewishshyChristian dialogue should be by speech or by action was the theme that ran through the talks and discussions at a Conference on Interfaith Dialogue sponsored by Catholic Protestant and Jewshyish organizations at Seton Hall University here

Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum director of interreligious affairs for the American Jewish Comshymittee was generally in favor of the action approach saying that the dialogue must avoid beshycoming a convenient conspiracy on the part of middle-class whites to buffer themselves against the realities of the inner city

Father Edward H Flannery executive secretary of the U S Catholic Bishops Secretariat for Catholic-Jewish Relations said that while he would be the last to cut off action in the realm of social justice and charity he also felt that Jews and Christians could not effectively present a common ftont to society until they have straightened out their own affairs

Father Flannery referred to statements that the -ChristianshyJewish dialogue had died in the wake of last Junes six-day war between Israel and Arab nations He said that it was not so much a matter of its dying but of its not having been tried yet

Over Holy Thursday Good Friday and Holy Saturday more than 10 tons of food and clothing were donated and the UCC staff was swamped with the task of sorting the materiaL

With schools and church ofshyfices closed priests and nuns made their way individually and in groups to UCC headshy

quarters to help with the task of unloading cars and station wagons and sorting and distribshyuting the clothing

At least 50 offers of assistance came in to Queen of Angels pariSh in the heart of the ghettc and the callers were asked to organize relief efforts in their own communities and then gd the material 110 the UCCbull

FEEL GOOD TODAY

THt HOLY fATHER MISSION AiD TD THlaRIENTAL DHURDH

Thlsoolumns happiest readers are the men

Te date this second phase bas listed 35 gifts totaling $12000 Combined with the initial campaign the Building Fund now lists 233 donors who haVe pledged a total of $117()00 The Womens Club that was founded less than six months ago has initiated a long range program for the spiritual cll1shytural and financial efforts of the parish

In addition to the regular methods of aiding the parish finandally the women have conducted teen-age projects and have assisted the Mens Club fu

i bull various progrlms

~MANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

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Offices in

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women and children who know they~r needed The days were busiest helping others are the happiest days of our livesbullbullbull Who needs you most Surprisingly God needs you - for inmiddot stance to help art abandoned orphan become e Godloving responsible adult Lepers need you (there are still 15middotmillion lepers In the world) blind children need y~u ~ndlo do we bull bullbull Here In New York we are your agents tellin you where the Holy Father says your help Is needed and channeling your help promptlyand Oafely to the people iii needbullbullbull Want to feel good right now Do without something you want but do not need and send the money instead for one of the needs below Youll feel good especialiy if your gift is big enough to mean a sacrifice to you This is your chance to do something meaningful for the world - its Gods world - while youre still alive

D Only $850 gives our priests and SIsters i south India enough Dapsone miracle tablebamp for 43 lepers for a yearl D For only $250 a week ($10 a month $120 a year) you can make sure that an abandoned child has food clothing a blanket and love Well send you a photo of the child you adopt tell you something about him (or her) and ask the Sistermiddotinmiddotcharge to keep you Informed

D Your stringless gifts in any amount ($5000 MEET $1000 $500 $100 $50 $25 $10 $5 $2)

MISSION will help the neediest wherever they are - in EMERGENCIES india and he Hol~ Land for instance

D Only you can make your will-and do It this THINK week to be sure the poor will have your help

OF even after youre gone Our legal title CATHOLIO YOURSELF NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION Also our priests

TOO will offer promptly the Masses you provide for

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Lawrence High of Falmouth Seeksmiddot State Track Tut~e

By PETER BARTEK Norton High Coach

The Capeway Conference track season has already begun but the handwriting is already on the wall This campaign like last years will be a battle for second place Admittedly notbing Short of a miracle can or will prevent Lawrence High of Falmouth from winning its second straight conference t rae k championship But fol Coach Jim Kalperis and his trackstersmiddot the league championship is only a Gtepping stone to the State C ham p io n - ship The goal of every athletic team in the state hi to earn the title of State Champion This is not beshyyond the grasp of the Falmouth Peier Clippers If hard Bartek work and dedication are the means to this end then Falshymouth will reign as State track champions

Success does not come easily em any endeavor and success batpound

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not come easily to the Falmouth tracksters They like all accomshyplished athletes have labored long and diligently to aChieve the measure of sUccess they now enjot lt

N1)t toomiddot many yearsato Lawshyrence High was just ~nother

sChool Participating in track But the efforts of many and the dedication of one IJ1im in parshyticular has brought immeasurshyable success to the Falmouth track scene That man is Jim Kalperis

Coach Kalperis haseombined

his knowledge af track his coaching ta1EntS aiiCl tirelessenergies middotto build a virtual track dynasty The latest noteworthy feat of middotliliitnickmen came in the forinof anotheriState title

Thisti~emiddotiS th~nivision IIi

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- BC~ and Norry Races Are Close 1

lbe format formiddot the St~te reo lays has been altered this ear with competition being held at four separate locations in East- em Massachusetts Weymouth captured the Division I crown the DiviSion n title went to

Andover and Williams corralled the laurels in Division IV

The meet drew ll5 schools in each of the four diviSions with over 2000 youngsters partici shypating in all classes

Enroute to its victory Falshymouth collected 51 points comshypared to runner-up Barnstable with 22Jh

Falmouth took first place in the discus high jump pole vault 440 yard run shuttle hurdles two mile run and the 880 -

With tbis type of success in state competition it is easy to see why the Capeway Confershyence title has been practically conceded to Falmouth

Sharing the spotlight with the trackmen at Falmouth are the diamondmen The Clippers who are in the thick of the loop baseball picture were given a

Mike Rainnie tossed amp no-hittel at Barnstable to gain a 1-0 vershydict

Its still much too early to predict with any accuracy

what will happen in the Cape wai baseball race But it ap- pears nomiddotclub will dominate th~t sport like Falmouth controIa track Falmouth Dartmouth Fairhaven and Barnstable are expected to fight it out through the entire season One close to the scene summed it up best when he said anyone in the league could win this thing

Close races are also developshying in the Bristol County and Narragansett Leagues

In the BCL both Bishop Fee han of Attleboro and Durfee High of Fall River encountered a few difficulties in early season play but seem to have found the range of late The clubs will meet in an important contest today in Fall River Late inning rallies have brought both clubS from the brink of defeat to vicshytory in previous outings The victor will have to be dubbed

shot in the arm last week as the team to beat

Brennan of Feehan D~est ill le~guej

Coach Tom Maccarone of Feeshyhan has had outstanding pershyfonnances from his pitching staff but the key to the Shamshyrocks success has been shortshystop Ty Blrennan Maccarone stated before the season that Brennan was his best player and perhaps the best in the whole Bristol County Judging from Brennans perfonnance to date one of the keys to stopping Feehan is stopping the classy shortstop

Coach Joe Lewis Hilltoppers play a brand of ball similar to his counterpart TOIJl Karams basketball club Make a mistake and the Fall Riverites will capshyitalize on it Durfees first two league victories came about beshycause of opponent miscues

The Hilltoppers have been playing steady ball throughout the early part of the campaign and are improving with every game Their ability 10 avoid costly mistakes eI tbeir -n

making and timely hitting has proven a winning combination

Come what may in todays contest the BCL llace has just begun

Not to be outdone by tile larger BCL and Capeway Conshyference the Narry loop is conshyducting a torrid race of its own At the end of the first week of action Seekonk and DightonshyRehoboth were tied for the top spot Following two weeks of play Gase of Swansea Dighton and Somerset were lodged In the first position The hectic lCampaign will probably find another change in the top spot at the conclusion of this weeks activity

From Cape Cod to Attleboro competition is keener this year than it bas been in many seashysons The road to the league championship is always diffJshycult to Davigate but this year it appears as though the road win be duttered wiill meR obstacles than ill quite

cone~~ lb~aders ConcllregrnmOB War In V~~It~IlJJm

NEW YORK (NC)-Stushydent government presidents and editors of campus newsshypapers at more than 500 colleges in 49 states have conshydemned the war in Vietnam as

lt immoral and unjust and said ~~ they believe they should not

~ i~~~~~~~ii ~~~b~~ shy --_ ~ and Laymen Convinced About

-- ~-__ Vietnnm Was coordirlated by shy _ -- shy ~ Rev RObert lVi Hundley lHullent

--lt--1 at Union Th~ological Snppary --J here and an associate pltISor at -- ~I th~ Congn~gationalChllrch hn ~_ Scarsdale N-Y He saiQ most

--middot1 students who signed the stateshy~-__-~~- ~~ -___- __~_~J ment havenot been active in

FINE ARTS FESTIVAL Making preparations for Fine Arts Festival at Bishop Stang High School North

Dartmouth are Paul Leahy and Margaret Polycarpo

~ Unmiddot-ty middotIs Chr-stlTs middotW-II

P Off W I E deg I pOi degI

ontl e comes cumenlca I grlmage From United Kingdom toHoly Lar-d

anti-war activities heretoforemiddot

Solicits Support

He added

Many of the student Itl~ders who have signed this sbtcment

recognize that they may be plaeshying their future caJeers illmiddotjeopshy~rdy and conceivably are riskshying punitive action being taken

against them by the capiicioWJ V~TICAN ~ITY (NC)~TO an Fathers Arthur Payton anSel~c~ve Sfdtvice Systerh~~~

I ecumenical pilgrimage oQ its Anglican who is director 01 ~ev Yi~am Sloan Cot~~1 Jr-) way to the Holy Land Pope interchurCh travel in LOndon bull aclive memjgter of Clergymiddot ~nd Paul VI recalled the words he Among its members were An- Laymen Concerned AboutbullVI~tshyspoke on his own pilgrimage glieans CatholiCs Oithodox and nam ~1dmiddota Yal~ U~Iverslt7

there in 1964 that unity is the will of Christ

He said that it was with parshyticular pleasure that we welshycome this ecumenical pilgrimshyage from the United Kingdom to the Holy LaRd You are aboUt to follow in the fOQtSteps af God made man in the country of His birth Hill mission and His blessed death for us men and for our salvation (NiceneCreed)

Your visit caUsto mind our own unforgettable pilgrimage to the Holy Places From the grotto of Bethlehem we then declared It npw appears clearly to all that the problem of unity cannot be eluded Today this will cif Christ is imposed upon our minds and demands th~t we undertake with wisdom and love every possible way of bringing all Christi~ns t6 enjoy the great benefit and supreme honor of the unity of the middotChurch

He also recalled his plea from Bethlehem that love of Christ and of the Church should inshyspire that every future moveshyment toward meeting and reshyconciliation

The pilgrimage was led by

DIOCESAN DIREC1OR First woman to serve as a diocesan director of radio-TV is Miss Patricia Smith of Pueblo Colo who is also a photo-journalist on the staff gf Dateline Colorado m cesan weekly newspaper

Protestants not only from Great Britain but from France and Germany as well

Msgi Gianfrancesco Arrighi undersecretary of the Secretashyriat for Promoting Christian Unity and Canon John Findlow representative of Anglican Archbishop Michael Ramsey of Canterbury at the Holy See accompanied middotthe pilgrims to the Vatican

Votes Moratorium On ChuDch Building

CHICAGO (NC)-The Chicago Conference of Laymen is urging Church authorities at both the archdiocesan and parish levels to declare a moratorium on 10- cal construction projects so that funds can be channeled to projshyects in the ghetto areas

The action was taken at the second annual meeting of the

ll200-member organization The 300 in attendance passed

some 50 resolutions half of them dealing with urban problems The membership said it will seek ways to alleviate white racism especially within the Catholic Church

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ch~plaJD saId The stand taken by these

y~ung men should serve to reshymmd Americans everywhere that the war in Vietnam 1s not over that American and Vietshy

namese boys are stillmiddotdying

He continued

These middotmen of conscience should be supported by eveQY priest minister and rabbi who cares about the sanctity of conshyscience

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Jesuit Comments Di~cordNormal Amon9 Catholics

RIO DE JANEIRO (NC)shylD i SC 0 r d among Catholics after the Second Vatican Council is perfectly normal but It is not normal for proshygressive or conservative Cathoshylics to refuse to accept the dishyrectives of the council and the pope Jesuit superior general said here Father Arrupe is in Brazil for 30 days to visit Jesuit houses in the country and to preside at the May 6 to 14 meeting here of all South Amershyican Jesuit provincials

He said that his visit is inshytended to adapt the order here flo the requirements of the agshygirnameJ1to or up-dating

The most important aggiorshy namento in our day he said

is that of the mind We have to ~nsider and respect human valshyues as such This was always the Churchs doctrine but now the Church is insisting on it more We ought not to consider the Churchs interest in human values as opportunism Our in tEmtion is only to serve mankin~ better)

Press Uses Images Dudng his stay here Father

Arrupe willmiddot visit 20 local(tiesWhere Jesuits are woikilg

ts B 1Ilhele are 1000 JesUl m razl~ bull

He said that he regarded as bull joke the Brazilian presss ref-

elences to him as ~the black l T Ch Pope cussion of he angmg a1middot

Because of my cassock hemiddot

tlaid I am black but I am not the Pope ~ understand that the press has to use images to exshylI)lain concepts more effectively

Honor Editor NEW YORK (NC) ~ Robert

6lmstead news editormiddot of the National Catholic Reporter weekly newspaper published in Kansas City Mo received honshyelable mention in the 1968 Paul Tobenkin Memolial Award Competition here

-

MEET IN ST LOUIS Bishop-elect Timothy J~ Harringshyth d f th Sf W 1 ft d

ton ~ orcester e leoscllfses ~ atn t ~ l~mg

ish a panel a~ the lQ68Presi dents Conference of the Nashytional Council of cat~olic yene~l

Role of CouDcil The parish will retairi its role

as a community of worship whose members go out ihto the world and bring it theeurohristjan

message Bernatd Lyons Ghishycago public relations ~onsultant saidmiddot

The pa~ish on the other hand mustmiddot become part of the world

alound it a wHr1e$S to the whole community and fake on roles not in relation only to -its

GUIDING CHURCH IN UNITED STATES More than 200 members of the hierarchy participated in the decisions of the annual Spring meeting of the National Conference

Predict Important Authorities Emphcisixe

WASHINGTON (NC)-Three members but to the world in authorities on parish life have agreed here that the parish basic organiz~tion iil the Church will have to undergo some lmportant changes if the ChUlch is goingto meet th~ needs of societyin the 20th censhy tury

But just how the parislt is going to change ~s far from setshytied they ~onceqed in a dis

which it exists Father John Corriga~ of this city a directozlt of the Nationalmiddot Liturgical Con ference asserted

Whatever it does the parish must becomemiddot a vital force in the cOlJlrnunity around it Father Geno Baroill execu~ive secretary Washington archdi

ocesan Office ~f Urpan Affairs declared

RIot ComparlmiddotsoDmiddot

Father Baroni whose work blings hini into constant contactmiddot with Negro problems in WaSh- laymen will inhibit soCial ac- ington saw~ astriking par~illel tion but added later this is a between the Churchs needs and risk wltirth taking

-those of thebiack ghetto Right now~ he observed - one of the mos~ urgent prob Society to Consider lems in the ghetto is that Of Sh fmiddot

community organization We 5 emnary I t arll learl1ing that pe~ple ri~t be CARTHAGENA CNC) _ The

cause they have beel- cut o~t ofSocieiy of the Precious Blood meaningful participation in so- ciety

In the ~hurch laymen have been cut out of this participa tion also They dont riot but they dont really concern them selves with the concerns of the Church unle~s thy ~ave t~i~ sense of partlclpatlcm he saId

New Resndemlce For US PIiDests

ROME (NC)-A new resident house for American priests working In the offices of the Roman Curia (the Churchs censhytral administrative offices) or on assignment in Rome for the US bishops has been opened to provide adequate economical lodgings and community surshyroundings

The residence called Villa Stritch after the late Samuel Cardinal Stritch of Chicago is composed of two apartment comshyplexes and is designed to meet the immediate needs of US priests already at work in Rome and to anticipate future housing needs as internationalization of the Roman Curia continues

In addition to American$ resshyident in Rome the villa is also expected to house priests on special assignments for the bishshyops in Rome bishops who come to Rome for work on var~ous

Church commissions or otherVatican offices or for such events as the synod of bishops and ma-Jor congresses In short it is hoped that the new villa wilL

will study the possibilities and implications of moving the or ders main theological school flOm St Charles Seminary here in Ohio to a university campus or urban center and of buildingmiddot an adequate program at St QJ1arles The Carthagena SChOt

has been the societys maJor seminary for over 100 years

Major superiors and middotelected delegates representing the soshycietys Cincinnati province voted to fOlm a committee to carry out the study during a provincial chapter meeting held at St Charles at which modernizing the training of candidates for the priesthood in the society Vas tqe chief subject of discussion

middotA report of the meeting in- dicated that the delegates were aware of trends in the Church 1-way from comparative isloationmiddot of seminary establishments to university campuses and urban centers

SPECIAL RATES FOR

Smiddot I O dcho0 utings an Picnics

of Catholic Bishops in St Louis last week An enormoUis amount of homework on position papers was approved ~

the Bishops NC Photo

I see the parish councils and their recognition of freedom asneceSsai-y to do this he added

Worth Risk They agreed they sha~e abull

feiling opound un~asin~ss _middotaboti~ these cOuncIls relatively new amQJ1g Cathol~cs pa~icula~lY their attitude t~ward SOCI~ issues

d Father Baroni sal he has ~

leery feeling about parishcouncils He declared there is

the danger that conservative

contribute to increased racial understanding and involvement

fur the people of the diOcese

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Parishes

Lyons author of th~ book middotParish Councils - Renewin the Parish Community said be

middotwas somewhat more optiniistici I donit think we are going to

solve these problems by 10~~1 at the dangers exclusively hie commented

Diocese to Discuss C~m~issi~n Rep~rt

LANSING (NC) - Catholics thoughout t~e Lansing diocese will participate in forums and home discussion groups 1as~ on the report of the National Acf visory Commission on Civil Disshyorders The program which begaa with public forums in six citie on April 29 was planned ~

middot three diocesanmiddot agencies-the Ofshyfice of Social and Community Service the Office of Renewal Through Vatican II and the adult education division of tne Education Department It was initiated in response to an appeal made by Bishop Alexshyander Zaleski The day following the death of Dr Martin Luther King Bishop Zaleski asked dishyocesan directors to plan an imshymediate program designed to

meetmg of heBIShops n erence WIt ISop e e~ros be a center of communi~y life CONTACT MANAGER - LINCOLN PARK of BrowI)svIlle Texas and fOtmiddotmer chancellor of the Fall for bishops arid priests with spe- 9996984 636-2744 ~iver Di~~~~lt __~gt -cilla~~gnrn~iitS~~o~~~ ~ Oc)QI~OC~)OQCIOC)oOOOCgtoc)OQltjIOcXllOOOCgtOC)oOC~)OIL)QOCgtOCPOoO

Page 15: 05.02.68

HE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 2 1968 1S

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs May 2 1968 Back Presidenills ~reg~reg ~~~1rf~Jreg~MO~ ~~~lliJO[[reg(gJ ~rntilO1fi)[[fr~ofr~r

CHICAGO (NC)-The Assoshy~~ ~~regramp~~ o[J1j [Q)1 W[J1lJ[[o ciation of Chicago Priests an

The record compiled 56 years ful Swamppodle a neighborshy unofficial group of some 1500 priests in the archdiocese ofago still stands in big league hood within sight of the U S

baseball annals-most runs al shy Capitol talked about Father Chioago has endorsed President Johnsons current efforts to]owed one game 24 Travers Travers band

fA J (Joe) Detroit Never before had the bandsshy negotiate a Settlement of the

Father Aloysius J Travers men performed like they did in Vietnam war The ACP in its fifth plenarygJ 75 who achieved the dubishy the 1919 May procession-never

ous pitching distinction died had such old favorites as Tis session here turned down a resolution prepared by its soshylast week in Misericordia Hosshy the Month of Our Mother and cial action subcommittee onpital Philadelphia He acquied 0 Mary We C~own Thee With

baseball immortality on May Blossoms Today been so spir shy peace calling for complete cesshy

112 1912 as pitcher for the One sation of U S bombing in Vietshyitedly played by Gonzaga bandsshynam to support the Presidents limited decrease in bombing

men as the procession windedlDay Wonders Detroits brawling Tigers were through Swampoodle streets glated to play Connie Macks After the procession was over and negotiation moves

Two other peace resolutionspOwerful Philadelphia As that the school rector called in recommended by the subcomshy_ daymiddotin old Shibe Park Detroits Father Travers and congratushy

Btar Ty Cobb had drawn a fine mittee were approved They

and two-day suspension for formance The rector added lated him on the bands pershy

put the ACP on record as favorshy

belting a heckling fan a few But high school musicians with ing draft law revisions so that a person might be exempt as a

lligers decided if Cobb couldnt mustaches Dont you think thatdays earlier in New York~ ~he

conscientious objector to a parshywas going a bit too far ticular war without necessarilyFather T~avers had recruitedplay they wouldnt either so being a conscientious objector

Famous llnfield a dozen or so members of thecenthey went on strike

to all war and so that a per

With the aid of Connie Mack crack Fort Myer Army Band

son could be exempt as a conshyfOm nearby Arlington Va scientious objector on humanishy

ed up a collection of Philadelshydressed them in cadet uniforms~e Detroit management roundshy

tarian as well as religioUlland put them in the school band groundsBesides teaching at Stphia sandlot players signed

The ACP also approved threeJosephs Prep and Gonzagathem to Detroit contracts and recommendations of its liturgy

as the Tigers sf Francis Xavier High in New committee York As a result the priests group

Father Travers also taught atfielded the One Day Wonders

Al Travers 19 fresh out of has urged the National Confershyat Josephs Prep School rho Disbands Hawks ence of Catholic Bishops to reshyhelped recruit the sandlotters One of his moSt heartbreaking submit two liturgical petitioJUloppointed himself pitcher He assignments was given him some to the Conglegation of Rites inctftein recalled I learned that 25 years ago He was sent back Rome The petitions which had e pitcher would collect-50 to St Josephs College where New Problem ~en turned down by the Vati shyeX-tra so I volunteered the battIe cry is The Hawk can congregation would allowThat day the As scored 24 will never die as moderator the establishment of experimenshyINns on 25 hits with io nuts of athletics Priest Urges F~ir labor Practices tal centers for the liturgycmearned against young Travshy His jOb-disband the Hawks For CatholicSchool Faculties throughout the country and limshy

erG The wonder is the score football team with a minimum ited experimentation with thewasnt higher for young Tra~~rs of uproar from students and SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-For betweell the school and the liturgy without prior approvalwas pitching against the best alumni since football had beshy as long as anyone can rememshy religious community of the Vaticanbalt team of the era-against come a moneymiddot losing sport at ber the Religious and lay peoshy Some experts says that the

PhiladelphiaS famous $100000 St Josephs and a number of nte third resolution called on-pie who serve on the faculties best solution to this problem is

infield of John Phelan (Stuffy) other Catholic colleges in ~those the NCCB to take concrete stepsof Catholic grammar and high to bar Religious from partici shy

McInni6 at first Eddie Collins days to implement proposals of itsschools have been the type of pating in labor organizations

lJeCOnd Jack Barry short and He did his job well directing liturgy committee for adaptashypeople who would never think But Father Reicher indicated

IPrank (Home Run) Baker third attention to St Joes basketball tion of the Mass to smaIl anelof going out on strike against this would only divide the Reshy special age groupsSaves Franchise team which has grown into one unfair labor practices since ligiousand lay faculty of schools

But young Travers and the of the nations powerhouses this would imply some sort of even more than they are dividedORe Day Wonders who had For the last 25 years Father guilt on the part of p~ors and now India to ReconsiderI2ever seen Detroit saved the Tlavers had been stationed at bishops Urging a period of experishybaseball franchise for the Tigers St Josephs Prep in semishy Well those days are gone forshy meritation to work out new Deporting Priestttlat day If they hadnt pl~yed retirement during recent years ever according to Chicagos forms of collective bargaining NEW DELHI (NC) - Indiantile As chances are the Amershy Requiem Mass for the colorful Father Robert Reicher and the Father Reicher concluded It ill Prime Minister Indira GandbJ1bean L~ague would have lifted one-day big leaguer was ofshy job now is to set up standards obvious that the right to barshy has promised reconsideration ofDetroits franchise because of fered Thursday at GeuChurch of fair labor practice and guidshy gain collectively is a natural the order expelling Jesuitthe players strike in Philadelphia ance for faculty members grievshy tight clearly defended time and Father Vincent Ferr r of theDespite the lopsided score procedures against Cathoshy agaiil ethically and morally Poona diocese Indiaance fromlPatJher Travers got several big lic school administrators But this right also implies an lleague offers as a result of his Canonist Cates Need The pmmise was made when

Speaking to participants at 8 obligation to know what colleCshy tlhree members of the Indiani pitching He turned them down secondary school department tive bargaining involves went to St Josephs College For Negro Prieds parliament met with Mrs Ganshy

meeting during the Nationalthen joined the Jesuits ATLANTIC CITY (Nch - A dhi here and asked her to get

National Catholic Educational the order cancelled and grantThe lesson he learned fmln plea for more Negro Catholic Bishops Ask PopeAssociation convention here Indian citizemihip to the priestthe unorthodox recruiting as a priests has been made at the Father Reicher outlined some ofone-day big leaguer stood him annual Easterri regional meeting To Visit Canada Father Ferrer founder of thethe problems facing Catholic in good stead a half-dozen years of the Canon Law Society of OTTAWA (NC) -Pope Paul Maharashtra Farmers Servicelabor - management relations

later when he was teaching at America here in New Jersey The pliest is chairman of the VI may visit Canada next month Society was scheduled for deshyGQnzaga High School in Washshy Msgr Thomas J Reese of Wilshy to attend the National Confershy portation last year but wasChicago archdiocesan Catholicington D C mington in the neighboring State ence on Poverty sponsored by granted several extensions ofCouncil on Working Life and a

Recruits Ringers of Delaware speaking on experishy jVell-known labor expert Christian Churches in Canada his stay He was accused by iiimiddot mental parishes accused the Hindu groupS ofanti-Indian acshyFather Travers was in charge Religious who teach in CatBshy Bishop Alexander Carter presshy

Church of racism and said that tivities and by the Maharashtraof the school b~llld which used olic schools pose a special diffi shy ident of the Canadian CatholicNegro Catholics prefer to - be state government of anti shyto master only about two or culty hi labor relations because Conference has acknowledged national activitiesselved by black priests of whom

CHURCHES UNITED Bishop Reuben H Mueller left of the Evangeli~al United Brethren Church and Methoshydist Bishop Lloyd C Wicke led representatives of their respective bodies at ceremonies in Dallas proclaiming the union of the two churches The new body is to be known as the United Methodist Churlth NC Photo

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IIlfllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIUIIIlIDutuUliUllllUiHlllllllllilllllllllllllllllilllUIIIIIIIIIIIIUII~given to the Washington arch we need black priests and we bid to raise the standards of diocese by Church spokesmen need them fast preaching in Australia and New here in Pennsylvania Zealand will be made shortly Lobster Boats Msgr Philip J Dowling execshy it was resolved at a meeting hereCapital Cityutive secretary of John Cardinal of leaders of religious orders

Krols Commission on Human VATICAN CITY (NC)-Qn The effort will inchide a fullyshyRelations noted that the Washshy the eighth anniversary of the otganized Pastoral Year obsershyington Archdiocesan Office of foundation of Brazils new capishy vance seminars for priests of all bull bull bull Urban Affairs has asked assist shy tal of Brasilia Pope Paul VI ages on updating preaching techshy s iz e s ance from Philadelphia and other sent a radio message of best niques the establishment of II bull bull bull dioceses In providing foOd es wishes in Portuguese and pressshy preaching center and the use pecially for those po)r who will ed a button that illumined a of a recorded service on techshy I Macleansreceive temporary housing in the cross on the cathedral of that niques of oral communicatiOil f8cilities of the Washington city The Pope performed the directedby the ObJates of MalT sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAYBt Tel 9979351 sect archdiocese oclemony in his private library Immaculate ~1I111111l111IHlUlnlllllllllllUllllllnIIllIUllllllUllllllllllllllIllltUIIllllllllllUluiuUWlUllllml~

three tunes a year In those of their obligation of obedience that feelers have been sent outthere are fewdays the school had a cadet Father Reicher pointed out to have the Pope corne to Monshy

If any institution can standeorps and one of its big annual What this means he added is teal for th~ May 26-29 meeting events was marching in the anshy that occasionally Religious mllYoondemned on the basis of the

It would be the first papalrecent Kerner Report on Civilnual parish-May procession be used to break a strike called visit to Canada Pope Paul visitedDisorders it is the CatholicFor years residents of color- by lay faculty members this country as a Cardinal in theChurch among others that is But more likely is the conflict early 19508guilty of white racism he trapping the individual Reli shyPlan to Help ~eed opined Bishop Carter said if a favorshygious whose loyalty is divided

Asserting that the number of able reply is reCeived from RomeCapital MCIl(lc61ers Negro clergy middotdoes not nearly the Canadian government would

PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A meet the needs of Negro Catho- Australia to Have extend an official invitation pledge of cooperation in feeding lies Msgr Reese said Pope Paul visited the United the poor who will gather in the If the Church is going to be Better Preaching Nations inNew York in 1965 nations capital in May has beell relevant to the black community SYDNEY (NC)-A concerted

I

Marian Awards Continued from Page Three

Fall River and has spent her entire religious life within the Diocese of Fall River

Sister has served as consult shyant with various education comshymittees in the diocese and bas promoted the educational proshygram of the Dominican Sisters

Sr Mary Pauline OP bead of the Science Department of

the Dominican Academy Fall River was one of the originatolll of the Region III Science Fair and has served as president of the regions Fair for two years

She is presently ooordinator of the Massachusetts state Scishyence Fair -

Sr Virginia CSC is presshyently chairman of the Th~logy

Department Notre Dame Colshylege Manchester N H and served from 1941 to ]958 as principal of St Anthonys New Bedford

She has always been a leader in new an innovative ideas in education

Sister Anne Denise SND presently principal of St Marys High School Lynn is well shyremembered as the first princishypal of Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth and has served in many administrative posts for the Sisters of Notre Dame

Sr Mary Aloysia SUSC is dean of the College of the Sashycred Hearts Fall River and has given outstanding service in coshyoperation with the Catholic School Department in planning in-service courses for the teachshyers of the diocesan schools

She also serves asmiddot coordinator of the educational program of the Sisters of the Holy Union

Sr John Elizabeth SUSC is Guidance Director at the Acadshyemy of the Sacred Hearts Fall River and has served in numershyous administrative positions atthe Fall River school

She was the first principal of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton and has served on committees of local and state educational organizations

Sr Mary Felicita RSM is now involved in the tutorial program at Mt St MaryS Acadshyemy Fall River and has served in the various sclIools of the diocese

For 26 years Sister served as Diocesan School Supervisor iD the Catholic School Office

Sr Miriam RSM is also in the tutorial program at the Sisshyters of Mercy Academy in Fall River A former teacher and principal in schools of the dioshycese Sister served for 26 yean

IN NEW POST Father Charles F Sheedy CSC former dean of arts and letshyterS has been appointed to the new post of dean of theoshylogical studies and institutes at the University of Nobe Dame NC Photo

to Educators tiS Diocesan Supervisor in the Catholic School Department

This year completes 50 years of service in the field of educashyto the Diocese of Fall River

Sister Maureen RSM is principal of Nazareth Hall Fall River She organized the proshygram and was the first principal of the Fall River school lor exshyceptional children a position she still holds

She is a consultant lind D member of city and state comshymittees for the mentlllly l1eshytarded

Sr Mary Urban RSM is Diocesan supervisor of schools and was the first principal at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

She is a member of state and city educational committees

Sr Mary Carmela RSM is a member of the English Departshyment of St Xaviers Academy Providence and was the first principal of Mt St Marys Academy Fall River

She is a consultant on secondshyary school curriculum planning

Sr Grace de Sales MSBT is presently superior of the Censhyacle of Our Lady of the Assumpshytion Osterville a position she also held at the Cenac1e of St Patricks Parish Wareham

Sister founded the kindergarshytens at Osterville and Wareham and has taught Chfistian Docshytrine classes on the elementary and secondary levels during her many years of selvice in the diocese

Sr Joan Louise OLVM is suPerior of the Victory Noll Convent in the Immaculate Conception Parish No Easton She has served as catechetical specialist in dioceses in Iowa and California and her present assignment is CCD supervisor for the Diocese of Fall River

Brother Albertus CSC is supervisor of Education for the Eastern Province of the Holy Cross Brothers and is professor of mathematics at Stonehill College No Easton He also ~ught mathematics and physics at Monsignor Coyle High School Taunton

Miss Mary Cabral of 1)69 Camshybridge Street Fall River is presently teaching at Espirito Santo School Fall River where she is completing 43 years of service as a lay teacher in ~e

Diocese of Fall Ri vcr

Whites to Solve White Problem

TOLEDO (NC)-Bishop Joon A Donovan has made a public request to whites to take up the white problem

He urged it for those lookshying for a modern up-Io-date apostolate for down-to-earth Christians who are at the same time dedicated Americans

middotSpeaking at a dinner of the northwestern Ohio district Fourth Degree Knights of Coshylumbus the Toledo bishop said

This ugly situation was fathered by injustice and is nourished by that subtle and insidious vice called prejudiCe

Need In this deplorable situation

in which the world ffinds itself today the pressing need is for those who call themselves Christians to think as Christians to form Christian attitudes and to live as Christians

Just as we cannot separate Christ from His Gospel so too we cannot separate love of GOO from love of our fellowmen without exception

The real Christian mlid the bishop does not live alongside but with others He constantly interprets anothers actions in the best possible light bying to remember always the way in which the Lord met loved and drew people to Himsel

SAIGON (NC) - The people wept and we wept everybody wept Sister Nicole said deshyscribing her teams departure after 16 days of relief work in Hue

She and two other Vietnamshy-ese Sisters Daughters of Charshyity of St Vincent de Paul with

The communImiddots1s T truce

17 girl students had gone to stricken Hue on a mission of mercy

offensive had left families in mourning houses in ruins ~nd people hungry and sick The government of Vietnam had inshyvited volunteers to bring help to the citys thousands of sufshyferers

The plane that brought tile Sisters and their students also brought 85 youths from Saigon~

The boys did manual work such as cleaning up the damaged hosshypital in Hues The Sisters team was divided into three groups one to give medical care anshyother to visit homes a third to l)ok after children

The 17 girls are some of those being trained by the Sisters as social workers for family assist shyance under a plan sponsored by a Vietnamese womens associashytion Five of the 17 are Cathshyolics The others are mostly Buddhists On April 12 all were fasting since it was the 15th day of the lunar month for the lBud-

Catholic Boy Scout Officials to Meet

WASHINGTON (NC)-About 150 leaders of CQtholic Boy Scout organizations will meet here to attend the 20th biennial oonference of the National Cathshyolic Committee OIl Scouting

The meeting will be a Iowshyday work session tor chairmen chaplains and other officioals cd the nations diocesan I seouiing ~ommittees The meeting will end with a banquet in honO Gl Patrick Cardinal OBoyle ol Washington

---- -----~

middot1FI

1

PRAYER CRUSADE _Danny Thomas has filmed n 10-minute color documentary on the value of family pray~r

to be used by Father Patrick Peyton CSC in his Camshypaign for Family Prayer Father Peyton said he expects 200000 people at a Milwailkee rally to be held Sunday May 12

IEverybody Weptl

Nun Describes Relief Teams Departure From Stricken Hue

dhims and Good Friday for the Catholics

The Asia Foundation here gave a grant to pay for the meals of the Sisters team dur ing their stay

- Before leaving Saigon the Sisters had collected medicines food soap and clothing from welfare agencies including Catholic Relief Services and

Vietnam Christian Service (Protestant) The United Nashytions Childrens Fund (UNICEF) provided milk powder which enabled the team to give milk to 450 children every day

Warn Medics LONDON (NC)-The day beshy

fore Britains new abortion law went into effect the nations 5500 CMholic doctors were warned by John Cardinal Heenan of WeBtminister that they should DOt perfom any abortions

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THE ANCHOR- 17 Thursday May 2 1968

Cufr ~t~1 Days Of orw~~~1ion

En C[[i~da OTTAWA (NC)-Chrietshy

mas and New Years Day now are the only holy days of obligation for Canadav estimated 8000000 Catholics

The Canadian Catholic Conshyference comprising Canadafl Bishops has announced thampa other holy days will be cellshyebrated on the Sunday nearem the holy day

The holy days affected aye Epiphany usually celebrat~

Jan 6 Ascension now falling on the 40th day after East~Ilp

All Saints now celebrated Nou I and the Immaculate ConcejilP tion now celebrated Dec 8

The Bishops said observance of the feast days on Sundayu means they will be celebratecll bull by a larger more relaxed anell accessible congregation of the faithful rather than a congreshygaUon of people constrained by the obligation of attending Maw in addition to their work

Canadas Bishops postwn~ until next Fall a decision Gil

wlether to restoremiddot the anciej~ office of permanent deacon m the Church The Bishops of the United States meeting simultashy

neously in St Louis hlst week ~ted to petition Pope Paul VJ for permission to restore ~

perinanent diaconate ror marshyried and unmarried men of ma ture years

Fish Sales Up SYDNEY (NC)-Best tilini)

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o

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The Parish Parade New Jersey Suburbanites of All Faiths Aid Ghetto Arson Victims HOLY NAME OUR LADY OF ANGELS

FALL RIVER FALL RIVER NEWARK (NC) - Priest~ the citys anti-poverty agenCll Contemporary music will acshy

company the 11 oclock Mass Sunday morning May 5

First communicants will reshyeeive at a special Mass at 9 Saturday morning May 25 Mayshycrowning ceremonies will be held Sunday May 26 The Womens Guild announces

fts installation banquet for Tuesday night May 7 Tickets are available from all members

Catholic Charities collectors are asked to meet in the parish school at 730 tonight for dist~shyOOtion of contact cards

lIT MARGARET BUZZARDS BAY

SS Margltlret-Mary Guild of Buzzards Bay and Onset will Sponsor a rummage sale from 9 1lo 1 Saturday May 18 at St Margarets kindergarten hall Main Street Buzzards Bay Do iaations may be left at the hall during mornings of the precedshying week Chairman for the ~vent is Mrs William Brady

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild will reshyieive Holy CommuniOn in a bodyaf the815 Mass 00 Sunshydity morning A breakfast will follow in the school hall The icuest speaker will beRt Rev Anthony M Gomes Mrs Arthur Belanger gpiIshyftual chairman of the Guild is _ charge of the breakfast

81 JOSEPH AIRHAVEN Nominations and elections of officers for the Association of file Sacred middotHearts will be held at 630 on Sunday evening in the rectory ~ Dues are now payable to the tleasurer Mrs Jeannette Dushylude

IACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

Preprimary registration will be held from 2 to 4 Sunday afternoon May 5 in 1he school office Some openings also exist in first sixth and eighth grades

The CCD adult discussion group will meet at 8 Sunday night in the home of Mr and Mrs J G N Bonneau

So Easton Club Pledges

$5000 The newly formed Womens

Club of Holy Cross Parish So Easton has pledged $5000 toward the building fund acshycording to an announcement made today by Mrs Arthur J L Peterson the organizations first president The pledge will be paid at the rate of $1000 per year

This pledge has been added to The Second Mile Building Fund campaign now in progress under the chairmanship of Robshyert Dray and Louis A Lyne serving as director

The Altar Boys will sponSor a cake sale Sunday May 26

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a Communion breakshyfast following 8 oclock Mass this Sunday morning Installashytion of officers will be held at a banquet following 5 oclock Mass Sunday afternoon May 26

Children of Mary will attend a Communion breakfast followshying 8 oclock Mass Sunday mornshying May 12

The annual blessing of autoshymobiles will take place at 130 Sunday afternoon May 26 in the church parking lot

ST GEORGE WESTP~RT

A Maybasket whist is planned for 8 Saturday night May 4 hi

the school hall on Route 177 PrOCeeds will benefit the school fund and table and attendance prizes will be awarded

STMARY NORTH ATTLEBORO Parishioners are planning a

testimonial honoring Msgr Ed- ward B Booth Pastor at 7

Sunday night May 26 Tickets are now available

Christians Jews Combat Racism

NEW YORK (NC)The Nashytional Confeferice of Christians and Jews has launched a nation wide educational effort to conshyfront the problem of white racism in middotAmerica agency headquarters here announced

The NCeJ has given top prl~

ority to finding ways toimpleshyment the recommendations of the National Advisory Commisshysion on Civil Disorders The commission blamed white racshyism as the underlying cause of urban unrest

In a progress re-port to the NCCJ board of trustees meeting here Dr Samuel L Gandy dean of the Ho~ard University school of religion Washington D C and chairman of the NCCJ nashytional program ad7isory comshymittee stated

NCCJs 130 professional staff members in 70 cities are curshy~ntly engaged in developing programs with police business and labor leaders parents and teachers clergy and with youth and all of the various institutes workshops and dialogues which are being conducted are emphashysizing the findings of this reshyport

Dr Gandy quoted to the board a letter to President Lynshydon B Johnson from Dr Stershyling W Brown NCCJ presishydent in which the agency head said that NCCJ embraced the commission report as a sancshytion and guideline for our efshyforts in the private sectol

111I1111I11111111111111I1111I11I1111I1111111111I111111I111111I11I11I11I11I1111I111111111111I11111111I1111I111111I11I11I111111I111II11111111111D

ministers nuns and lay people of all denominations pitched in here to try and make Easter a dltty of joy for the more than 600 people burned out of their homes in a waveof arson which erupted in this city following the funeral of Dr Martin Luther King

Concerned citizens of surshyrounding suburban communishyties who only a week before had participated in a massive Wa 1k for Understanding through ghetto streets respondshyedspontaneously to the need

Without anymiddot special appeal going out people of all denomshyinations call e 11 inner-city churches to ask what they could do and they were directed to the United Community Corp

NEW LEADER Sister Rosemary Markham SSS is the new Superior General of the Sisters of Social Ser-

vice a Los Angeles based community engaged in social and catechetical work with missions in Formosa and Mexico NCPhoto

Christians Jews Discuss Diamiddotlogue

SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-The question of whether JewishshyChristian dialogue should be by speech or by action was the theme that ran through the talks and discussions at a Conference on Interfaith Dialogue sponsored by Catholic Protestant and Jewshyish organizations at Seton Hall University here

Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum director of interreligious affairs for the American Jewish Comshymittee was generally in favor of the action approach saying that the dialogue must avoid beshycoming a convenient conspiracy on the part of middle-class whites to buffer themselves against the realities of the inner city

Father Edward H Flannery executive secretary of the U S Catholic Bishops Secretariat for Catholic-Jewish Relations said that while he would be the last to cut off action in the realm of social justice and charity he also felt that Jews and Christians could not effectively present a common ftont to society until they have straightened out their own affairs

Father Flannery referred to statements that the -ChristianshyJewish dialogue had died in the wake of last Junes six-day war between Israel and Arab nations He said that it was not so much a matter of its dying but of its not having been tried yet

Over Holy Thursday Good Friday and Holy Saturday more than 10 tons of food and clothing were donated and the UCC staff was swamped with the task of sorting the materiaL

With schools and church ofshyfices closed priests and nuns made their way individually and in groups to UCC headshy

quarters to help with the task of unloading cars and station wagons and sorting and distribshyuting the clothing

At least 50 offers of assistance came in to Queen of Angels pariSh in the heart of the ghettc and the callers were asked to organize relief efforts in their own communities and then gd the material 110 the UCCbull

FEEL GOOD TODAY

THt HOLY fATHER MISSION AiD TD THlaRIENTAL DHURDH

Thlsoolumns happiest readers are the men

Te date this second phase bas listed 35 gifts totaling $12000 Combined with the initial campaign the Building Fund now lists 233 donors who haVe pledged a total of $117()00 The Womens Club that was founded less than six months ago has initiated a long range program for the spiritual cll1shytural and financial efforts of the parish

In addition to the regular methods of aiding the parish finandally the women have conducted teen-age projects and have assisted the Mens Club fu

i bull various progrlms

~MANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

BRISTOL COUNTY

9G-OAY NOTIC~

TIMENOW OPEN ACCOUNT5PAYS o bull bull Interest Compounded Quarterly

Offices in

NORTH ATTLEBORO MAINSIFDIEILlDgt AnUBORO FAUS

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women and children who know they~r needed The days were busiest helping others are the happiest days of our livesbullbullbull Who needs you most Surprisingly God needs you - for inmiddot stance to help art abandoned orphan become e Godloving responsible adult Lepers need you (there are still 15middotmillion lepers In the world) blind children need y~u ~ndlo do we bull bullbull Here In New York we are your agents tellin you where the Holy Father says your help Is needed and channeling your help promptlyand Oafely to the people iii needbullbullbull Want to feel good right now Do without something you want but do not need and send the money instead for one of the needs below Youll feel good especialiy if your gift is big enough to mean a sacrifice to you This is your chance to do something meaningful for the world - its Gods world - while youre still alive

D Only $850 gives our priests and SIsters i south India enough Dapsone miracle tablebamp for 43 lepers for a yearl D For only $250 a week ($10 a month $120 a year) you can make sure that an abandoned child has food clothing a blanket and love Well send you a photo of the child you adopt tell you something about him (or her) and ask the Sistermiddotinmiddotcharge to keep you Informed

D Your stringless gifts in any amount ($5000 MEET $1000 $500 $100 $50 $25 $10 $5 $2)

MISSION will help the neediest wherever they are - in EMERGENCIES india and he Hol~ Land for instance

D Only you can make your will-and do It this THINK week to be sure the poor will have your help

OF even after youre gone Our legal title CATHOLIO YOURSELF NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION Also our priests

TOO will offer promptly the Masses you provide for

------~~-----co---GDear ENCLOSlD PLEASE FIND $ _ I MonsIgnor Nolan FOR _

DO SOMETHING

MEANINGfUL WHILE

YOURE STILL ALIVE

HELP LEPERS

CHILDREN NEED

YOU

Please

return coupon with your offerillB

THE CATHOLIC

NAMIlR _

~ 8TREJa~ ~_

OITY 8TATI_IIP COD

NBAR lAST WILPARI AbullbullaaIATID

NEAR EAST MISSIONS MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretary Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoo 330 Madison Avenue New York N~Y 10017 Teephone 212YUkon 6middot5840

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Lawrence High of Falmouth Seeksmiddot State Track Tut~e

By PETER BARTEK Norton High Coach

The Capeway Conference track season has already begun but the handwriting is already on the wall This campaign like last years will be a battle for second place Admittedly notbing Short of a miracle can or will prevent Lawrence High of Falmouth from winning its second straight conference t rae k championship But fol Coach Jim Kalperis and his trackstersmiddot the league championship is only a Gtepping stone to the State C ham p io n - ship The goal of every athletic team in the state hi to earn the title of State Champion This is not beshyyond the grasp of the Falmouth Peier Clippers If hard Bartek work and dedication are the means to this end then Falshymouth will reign as State track champions

Success does not come easily em any endeavor and success batpound

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not come easily to the Falmouth tracksters They like all accomshyplished athletes have labored long and diligently to aChieve the measure of sUccess they now enjot lt

N1)t toomiddot many yearsato Lawshyrence High was just ~nother

sChool Participating in track But the efforts of many and the dedication of one IJ1im in parshyticular has brought immeasurshyable success to the Falmouth track scene That man is Jim Kalperis

Coach Kalperis haseombined

his knowledge af track his coaching ta1EntS aiiCl tirelessenergies middotto build a virtual track dynasty The latest noteworthy feat of middotliliitnickmen came in the forinof anotheriState title

Thisti~emiddotiS th~nivision IIi

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1

- BC~ and Norry Races Are Close 1

lbe format formiddot the St~te reo lays has been altered this ear with competition being held at four separate locations in East- em Massachusetts Weymouth captured the Division I crown the DiviSion n title went to

Andover and Williams corralled the laurels in Division IV

The meet drew ll5 schools in each of the four diviSions with over 2000 youngsters partici shypating in all classes

Enroute to its victory Falshymouth collected 51 points comshypared to runner-up Barnstable with 22Jh

Falmouth took first place in the discus high jump pole vault 440 yard run shuttle hurdles two mile run and the 880 -

With tbis type of success in state competition it is easy to see why the Capeway Confershyence title has been practically conceded to Falmouth

Sharing the spotlight with the trackmen at Falmouth are the diamondmen The Clippers who are in the thick of the loop baseball picture were given a

Mike Rainnie tossed amp no-hittel at Barnstable to gain a 1-0 vershydict

Its still much too early to predict with any accuracy

what will happen in the Cape wai baseball race But it ap- pears nomiddotclub will dominate th~t sport like Falmouth controIa track Falmouth Dartmouth Fairhaven and Barnstable are expected to fight it out through the entire season One close to the scene summed it up best when he said anyone in the league could win this thing

Close races are also developshying in the Bristol County and Narragansett Leagues

In the BCL both Bishop Fee han of Attleboro and Durfee High of Fall River encountered a few difficulties in early season play but seem to have found the range of late The clubs will meet in an important contest today in Fall River Late inning rallies have brought both clubS from the brink of defeat to vicshytory in previous outings The victor will have to be dubbed

shot in the arm last week as the team to beat

Brennan of Feehan D~est ill le~guej

Coach Tom Maccarone of Feeshyhan has had outstanding pershyfonnances from his pitching staff but the key to the Shamshyrocks success has been shortshystop Ty Blrennan Maccarone stated before the season that Brennan was his best player and perhaps the best in the whole Bristol County Judging from Brennans perfonnance to date one of the keys to stopping Feehan is stopping the classy shortstop

Coach Joe Lewis Hilltoppers play a brand of ball similar to his counterpart TOIJl Karams basketball club Make a mistake and the Fall Riverites will capshyitalize on it Durfees first two league victories came about beshycause of opponent miscues

The Hilltoppers have been playing steady ball throughout the early part of the campaign and are improving with every game Their ability 10 avoid costly mistakes eI tbeir -n

making and timely hitting has proven a winning combination

Come what may in todays contest the BCL llace has just begun

Not to be outdone by tile larger BCL and Capeway Conshyference the Narry loop is conshyducting a torrid race of its own At the end of the first week of action Seekonk and DightonshyRehoboth were tied for the top spot Following two weeks of play Gase of Swansea Dighton and Somerset were lodged In the first position The hectic lCampaign will probably find another change in the top spot at the conclusion of this weeks activity

From Cape Cod to Attleboro competition is keener this year than it bas been in many seashysons The road to the league championship is always diffJshycult to Davigate but this year it appears as though the road win be duttered wiill meR obstacles than ill quite

cone~~ lb~aders ConcllregrnmOB War In V~~It~IlJJm

NEW YORK (NC)-Stushydent government presidents and editors of campus newsshypapers at more than 500 colleges in 49 states have conshydemned the war in Vietnam as

lt immoral and unjust and said ~~ they believe they should not

~ i~~~~~~~ii ~~~b~~ shy --_ ~ and Laymen Convinced About

-- ~-__ Vietnnm Was coordirlated by shy _ -- shy ~ Rev RObert lVi Hundley lHullent

--lt--1 at Union Th~ological Snppary --J here and an associate pltISor at -- ~I th~ Congn~gationalChllrch hn ~_ Scarsdale N-Y He saiQ most

--middot1 students who signed the stateshy~-__-~~- ~~ -___- __~_~J ment havenot been active in

FINE ARTS FESTIVAL Making preparations for Fine Arts Festival at Bishop Stang High School North

Dartmouth are Paul Leahy and Margaret Polycarpo

~ Unmiddot-ty middotIs Chr-stlTs middotW-II

P Off W I E deg I pOi degI

ontl e comes cumenlca I grlmage From United Kingdom toHoly Lar-d

anti-war activities heretoforemiddot

Solicits Support

He added

Many of the student Itl~ders who have signed this sbtcment

recognize that they may be plaeshying their future caJeers illmiddotjeopshy~rdy and conceivably are riskshying punitive action being taken

against them by the capiicioWJ V~TICAN ~ITY (NC)~TO an Fathers Arthur Payton anSel~c~ve Sfdtvice Systerh~~~

I ecumenical pilgrimage oQ its Anglican who is director 01 ~ev Yi~am Sloan Cot~~1 Jr-) way to the Holy Land Pope interchurCh travel in LOndon bull aclive memjgter of Clergymiddot ~nd Paul VI recalled the words he Among its members were An- Laymen Concerned AboutbullVI~tshyspoke on his own pilgrimage glieans CatholiCs Oithodox and nam ~1dmiddota Yal~ U~Iverslt7

there in 1964 that unity is the will of Christ

He said that it was with parshyticular pleasure that we welshycome this ecumenical pilgrimshyage from the United Kingdom to the Holy LaRd You are aboUt to follow in the fOQtSteps af God made man in the country of His birth Hill mission and His blessed death for us men and for our salvation (NiceneCreed)

Your visit caUsto mind our own unforgettable pilgrimage to the Holy Places From the grotto of Bethlehem we then declared It npw appears clearly to all that the problem of unity cannot be eluded Today this will cif Christ is imposed upon our minds and demands th~t we undertake with wisdom and love every possible way of bringing all Christi~ns t6 enjoy the great benefit and supreme honor of the unity of the middotChurch

He also recalled his plea from Bethlehem that love of Christ and of the Church should inshyspire that every future moveshyment toward meeting and reshyconciliation

The pilgrimage was led by

DIOCESAN DIREC1OR First woman to serve as a diocesan director of radio-TV is Miss Patricia Smith of Pueblo Colo who is also a photo-journalist on the staff gf Dateline Colorado m cesan weekly newspaper

Protestants not only from Great Britain but from France and Germany as well

Msgi Gianfrancesco Arrighi undersecretary of the Secretashyriat for Promoting Christian Unity and Canon John Findlow representative of Anglican Archbishop Michael Ramsey of Canterbury at the Holy See accompanied middotthe pilgrims to the Vatican

Votes Moratorium On ChuDch Building

CHICAGO (NC)-The Chicago Conference of Laymen is urging Church authorities at both the archdiocesan and parish levels to declare a moratorium on 10- cal construction projects so that funds can be channeled to projshyects in the ghetto areas

The action was taken at the second annual meeting of the

ll200-member organization The 300 in attendance passed

some 50 resolutions half of them dealing with urban problems The membership said it will seek ways to alleviate white racism especially within the Catholic Church

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ch~plaJD saId The stand taken by these

y~ung men should serve to reshymmd Americans everywhere that the war in Vietnam 1s not over that American and Vietshy

namese boys are stillmiddotdying

He continued

These middotmen of conscience should be supported by eveQY priest minister and rabbi who cares about the sanctity of conshyscience

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Jesuit Comments Di~cordNormal Amon9 Catholics

RIO DE JANEIRO (NC)shylD i SC 0 r d among Catholics after the Second Vatican Council is perfectly normal but It is not normal for proshygressive or conservative Cathoshylics to refuse to accept the dishyrectives of the council and the pope Jesuit superior general said here Father Arrupe is in Brazil for 30 days to visit Jesuit houses in the country and to preside at the May 6 to 14 meeting here of all South Amershyican Jesuit provincials

He said that his visit is inshytended to adapt the order here flo the requirements of the agshygirnameJ1to or up-dating

The most important aggiorshy namento in our day he said

is that of the mind We have to ~nsider and respect human valshyues as such This was always the Churchs doctrine but now the Church is insisting on it more We ought not to consider the Churchs interest in human values as opportunism Our in tEmtion is only to serve mankin~ better)

Press Uses Images Dudng his stay here Father

Arrupe willmiddot visit 20 local(tiesWhere Jesuits are woikilg

ts B 1Ilhele are 1000 JesUl m razl~ bull

He said that he regarded as bull joke the Brazilian presss ref-

elences to him as ~the black l T Ch Pope cussion of he angmg a1middot

Because of my cassock hemiddot

tlaid I am black but I am not the Pope ~ understand that the press has to use images to exshylI)lain concepts more effectively

Honor Editor NEW YORK (NC) ~ Robert

6lmstead news editormiddot of the National Catholic Reporter weekly newspaper published in Kansas City Mo received honshyelable mention in the 1968 Paul Tobenkin Memolial Award Competition here

-

MEET IN ST LOUIS Bishop-elect Timothy J~ Harringshyth d f th Sf W 1 ft d

ton ~ orcester e leoscllfses ~ atn t ~ l~mg

ish a panel a~ the lQ68Presi dents Conference of the Nashytional Council of cat~olic yene~l

Role of CouDcil The parish will retairi its role

as a community of worship whose members go out ihto the world and bring it theeurohristjan

message Bernatd Lyons Ghishycago public relations ~onsultant saidmiddot

The pa~ish on the other hand mustmiddot become part of the world

alound it a wHr1e$S to the whole community and fake on roles not in relation only to -its

GUIDING CHURCH IN UNITED STATES More than 200 members of the hierarchy participated in the decisions of the annual Spring meeting of the National Conference

Predict Important Authorities Emphcisixe

WASHINGTON (NC)-Three members but to the world in authorities on parish life have agreed here that the parish basic organiz~tion iil the Church will have to undergo some lmportant changes if the ChUlch is goingto meet th~ needs of societyin the 20th censhy tury

But just how the parislt is going to change ~s far from setshytied they ~onceqed in a dis

which it exists Father John Corriga~ of this city a directozlt of the Nationalmiddot Liturgical Con ference asserted

Whatever it does the parish must becomemiddot a vital force in the cOlJlrnunity around it Father Geno Baroill execu~ive secretary Washington archdi

ocesan Office ~f Urpan Affairs declared

RIot ComparlmiddotsoDmiddot

Father Baroni whose work blings hini into constant contactmiddot with Negro problems in WaSh- laymen will inhibit soCial ac- ington saw~ astriking par~illel tion but added later this is a between the Churchs needs and risk wltirth taking

-those of thebiack ghetto Right now~ he observed - one of the mos~ urgent prob Society to Consider lems in the ghetto is that Of Sh fmiddot

community organization We 5 emnary I t arll learl1ing that pe~ple ri~t be CARTHAGENA CNC) _ The

cause they have beel- cut o~t ofSocieiy of the Precious Blood meaningful participation in so- ciety

In the ~hurch laymen have been cut out of this participa tion also They dont riot but they dont really concern them selves with the concerns of the Church unle~s thy ~ave t~i~ sense of partlclpatlcm he saId

New Resndemlce For US PIiDests

ROME (NC)-A new resident house for American priests working In the offices of the Roman Curia (the Churchs censhytral administrative offices) or on assignment in Rome for the US bishops has been opened to provide adequate economical lodgings and community surshyroundings

The residence called Villa Stritch after the late Samuel Cardinal Stritch of Chicago is composed of two apartment comshyplexes and is designed to meet the immediate needs of US priests already at work in Rome and to anticipate future housing needs as internationalization of the Roman Curia continues

In addition to American$ resshyident in Rome the villa is also expected to house priests on special assignments for the bishshyops in Rome bishops who come to Rome for work on var~ous

Church commissions or otherVatican offices or for such events as the synod of bishops and ma-Jor congresses In short it is hoped that the new villa wilL

will study the possibilities and implications of moving the or ders main theological school flOm St Charles Seminary here in Ohio to a university campus or urban center and of buildingmiddot an adequate program at St QJ1arles The Carthagena SChOt

has been the societys maJor seminary for over 100 years

Major superiors and middotelected delegates representing the soshycietys Cincinnati province voted to fOlm a committee to carry out the study during a provincial chapter meeting held at St Charles at which modernizing the training of candidates for the priesthood in the society Vas tqe chief subject of discussion

middotA report of the meeting in- dicated that the delegates were aware of trends in the Church 1-way from comparative isloationmiddot of seminary establishments to university campuses and urban centers

SPECIAL RATES FOR

Smiddot I O dcho0 utings an Picnics

of Catholic Bishops in St Louis last week An enormoUis amount of homework on position papers was approved ~

the Bishops NC Photo

I see the parish councils and their recognition of freedom asneceSsai-y to do this he added

Worth Risk They agreed they sha~e abull

feiling opound un~asin~ss _middotaboti~ these cOuncIls relatively new amQJ1g Cathol~cs pa~icula~lY their attitude t~ward SOCI~ issues

d Father Baroni sal he has ~

leery feeling about parishcouncils He declared there is

the danger that conservative

contribute to increased racial understanding and involvement

fur the people of the diOcese

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Parishes

Lyons author of th~ book middotParish Councils - Renewin the Parish Community said be

middotwas somewhat more optiniistici I donit think we are going to

solve these problems by 10~~1 at the dangers exclusively hie commented

Diocese to Discuss C~m~issi~n Rep~rt

LANSING (NC) - Catholics thoughout t~e Lansing diocese will participate in forums and home discussion groups 1as~ on the report of the National Acf visory Commission on Civil Disshyorders The program which begaa with public forums in six citie on April 29 was planned ~

middot three diocesanmiddot agencies-the Ofshyfice of Social and Community Service the Office of Renewal Through Vatican II and the adult education division of tne Education Department It was initiated in response to an appeal made by Bishop Alexshyander Zaleski The day following the death of Dr Martin Luther King Bishop Zaleski asked dishyocesan directors to plan an imshymediate program designed to

meetmg of heBIShops n erence WIt ISop e e~ros be a center of communi~y life CONTACT MANAGER - LINCOLN PARK of BrowI)svIlle Texas and fOtmiddotmer chancellor of the Fall for bishops arid priests with spe- 9996984 636-2744 ~iver Di~~~~lt __~gt -cilla~~gnrn~iitS~~o~~~ ~ Oc)QI~OC~)OQCIOC)oOOOCgtoc)OQltjIOcXllOOOCgtOC)oOC~)OIL)QOCgtOCPOoO

Page 16: 05.02.68

16

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs May 2 1968 Back Presidenills ~reg~reg ~~~1rf~Jreg~MO~ ~~~lliJO[[reg(gJ ~rntilO1fi)[[fr~ofr~r

CHICAGO (NC)-The Assoshy~~ ~~regramp~~ o[J1j [Q)1 W[J1lJ[[o ciation of Chicago Priests an

The record compiled 56 years ful Swamppodle a neighborshy unofficial group of some 1500 priests in the archdiocese ofago still stands in big league hood within sight of the U S

baseball annals-most runs al shy Capitol talked about Father Chioago has endorsed President Johnsons current efforts to]owed one game 24 Travers Travers band

fA J (Joe) Detroit Never before had the bandsshy negotiate a Settlement of the

Father Aloysius J Travers men performed like they did in Vietnam war The ACP in its fifth plenarygJ 75 who achieved the dubishy the 1919 May procession-never

ous pitching distinction died had such old favorites as Tis session here turned down a resolution prepared by its soshylast week in Misericordia Hosshy the Month of Our Mother and cial action subcommittee onpital Philadelphia He acquied 0 Mary We C~own Thee With

baseball immortality on May Blossoms Today been so spir shy peace calling for complete cesshy

112 1912 as pitcher for the One sation of U S bombing in Vietshyitedly played by Gonzaga bandsshynam to support the Presidents limited decrease in bombing

men as the procession windedlDay Wonders Detroits brawling Tigers were through Swampoodle streets glated to play Connie Macks After the procession was over and negotiation moves

Two other peace resolutionspOwerful Philadelphia As that the school rector called in recommended by the subcomshy_ daymiddotin old Shibe Park Detroits Father Travers and congratushy

Btar Ty Cobb had drawn a fine mittee were approved They

and two-day suspension for formance The rector added lated him on the bands pershy

put the ACP on record as favorshy

belting a heckling fan a few But high school musicians with ing draft law revisions so that a person might be exempt as a

lligers decided if Cobb couldnt mustaches Dont you think thatdays earlier in New York~ ~he

conscientious objector to a parshywas going a bit too far ticular war without necessarilyFather T~avers had recruitedplay they wouldnt either so being a conscientious objector

Famous llnfield a dozen or so members of thecenthey went on strike

to all war and so that a per

With the aid of Connie Mack crack Fort Myer Army Band

son could be exempt as a conshyfOm nearby Arlington Va scientious objector on humanishy

ed up a collection of Philadelshydressed them in cadet uniforms~e Detroit management roundshy

tarian as well as religioUlland put them in the school band groundsBesides teaching at Stphia sandlot players signed

The ACP also approved threeJosephs Prep and Gonzagathem to Detroit contracts and recommendations of its liturgy

as the Tigers sf Francis Xavier High in New committee York As a result the priests group

Father Travers also taught atfielded the One Day Wonders

Al Travers 19 fresh out of has urged the National Confershyat Josephs Prep School rho Disbands Hawks ence of Catholic Bishops to reshyhelped recruit the sandlotters One of his moSt heartbreaking submit two liturgical petitioJUloppointed himself pitcher He assignments was given him some to the Conglegation of Rites inctftein recalled I learned that 25 years ago He was sent back Rome The petitions which had e pitcher would collect-50 to St Josephs College where New Problem ~en turned down by the Vati shyeX-tra so I volunteered the battIe cry is The Hawk can congregation would allowThat day the As scored 24 will never die as moderator the establishment of experimenshyINns on 25 hits with io nuts of athletics Priest Urges F~ir labor Practices tal centers for the liturgycmearned against young Travshy His jOb-disband the Hawks For CatholicSchool Faculties throughout the country and limshy

erG The wonder is the score football team with a minimum ited experimentation with thewasnt higher for young Tra~~rs of uproar from students and SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-For betweell the school and the liturgy without prior approvalwas pitching against the best alumni since football had beshy as long as anyone can rememshy religious community of the Vaticanbalt team of the era-against come a moneymiddot losing sport at ber the Religious and lay peoshy Some experts says that the

PhiladelphiaS famous $100000 St Josephs and a number of nte third resolution called on-pie who serve on the faculties best solution to this problem is

infield of John Phelan (Stuffy) other Catholic colleges in ~those the NCCB to take concrete stepsof Catholic grammar and high to bar Religious from partici shy

McInni6 at first Eddie Collins days to implement proposals of itsschools have been the type of pating in labor organizations

lJeCOnd Jack Barry short and He did his job well directing liturgy committee for adaptashypeople who would never think But Father Reicher indicated

IPrank (Home Run) Baker third attention to St Joes basketball tion of the Mass to smaIl anelof going out on strike against this would only divide the Reshy special age groupsSaves Franchise team which has grown into one unfair labor practices since ligiousand lay faculty of schools

But young Travers and the of the nations powerhouses this would imply some sort of even more than they are dividedORe Day Wonders who had For the last 25 years Father guilt on the part of p~ors and now India to ReconsiderI2ever seen Detroit saved the Tlavers had been stationed at bishops Urging a period of experishybaseball franchise for the Tigers St Josephs Prep in semishy Well those days are gone forshy meritation to work out new Deporting Priestttlat day If they hadnt pl~yed retirement during recent years ever according to Chicagos forms of collective bargaining NEW DELHI (NC) - Indiantile As chances are the Amershy Requiem Mass for the colorful Father Robert Reicher and the Father Reicher concluded It ill Prime Minister Indira GandbJ1bean L~ague would have lifted one-day big leaguer was ofshy job now is to set up standards obvious that the right to barshy has promised reconsideration ofDetroits franchise because of fered Thursday at GeuChurch of fair labor practice and guidshy gain collectively is a natural the order expelling Jesuitthe players strike in Philadelphia ance for faculty members grievshy tight clearly defended time and Father Vincent Ferr r of theDespite the lopsided score procedures against Cathoshy agaiil ethically and morally Poona diocese Indiaance fromlPatJher Travers got several big lic school administrators But this right also implies an lleague offers as a result of his Canonist Cates Need The pmmise was made when

Speaking to participants at 8 obligation to know what colleCshy tlhree members of the Indiani pitching He turned them down secondary school department tive bargaining involves went to St Josephs College For Negro Prieds parliament met with Mrs Ganshy

meeting during the Nationalthen joined the Jesuits ATLANTIC CITY (Nch - A dhi here and asked her to get

National Catholic Educational the order cancelled and grantThe lesson he learned fmln plea for more Negro Catholic Bishops Ask PopeAssociation convention here Indian citizemihip to the priestthe unorthodox recruiting as a priests has been made at the Father Reicher outlined some ofone-day big leaguer stood him annual Easterri regional meeting To Visit Canada Father Ferrer founder of thethe problems facing Catholic in good stead a half-dozen years of the Canon Law Society of OTTAWA (NC) -Pope Paul Maharashtra Farmers Servicelabor - management relations

later when he was teaching at America here in New Jersey The pliest is chairman of the VI may visit Canada next month Society was scheduled for deshyGQnzaga High School in Washshy Msgr Thomas J Reese of Wilshy to attend the National Confershy portation last year but wasChicago archdiocesan Catholicington D C mington in the neighboring State ence on Poverty sponsored by granted several extensions ofCouncil on Working Life and a

Recruits Ringers of Delaware speaking on experishy jVell-known labor expert Christian Churches in Canada his stay He was accused by iiimiddot mental parishes accused the Hindu groupS ofanti-Indian acshyFather Travers was in charge Religious who teach in CatBshy Bishop Alexander Carter presshy

Church of racism and said that tivities and by the Maharashtraof the school b~llld which used olic schools pose a special diffi shy ident of the Canadian CatholicNegro Catholics prefer to - be state government of anti shyto master only about two or culty hi labor relations because Conference has acknowledged national activitiesselved by black priests of whom

CHURCHES UNITED Bishop Reuben H Mueller left of the Evangeli~al United Brethren Church and Methoshydist Bishop Lloyd C Wicke led representatives of their respective bodies at ceremonies in Dallas proclaiming the union of the two churches The new body is to be known as the United Methodist Churlth NC Photo

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IIlfllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIUIIIlIDutuUliUllllUiHlllllllllilllllllllllllllllilllUIIIIIIIIIIIIUII~given to the Washington arch we need black priests and we bid to raise the standards of diocese by Church spokesmen need them fast preaching in Australia and New here in Pennsylvania Zealand will be made shortly Lobster Boats Msgr Philip J Dowling execshy it was resolved at a meeting hereCapital Cityutive secretary of John Cardinal of leaders of religious orders

Krols Commission on Human VATICAN CITY (NC)-Qn The effort will inchide a fullyshyRelations noted that the Washshy the eighth anniversary of the otganized Pastoral Year obsershyington Archdiocesan Office of foundation of Brazils new capishy vance seminars for priests of all bull bull bull Urban Affairs has asked assist shy tal of Brasilia Pope Paul VI ages on updating preaching techshy s iz e s ance from Philadelphia and other sent a radio message of best niques the establishment of II bull bull bull dioceses In providing foOd es wishes in Portuguese and pressshy preaching center and the use pecially for those po)r who will ed a button that illumined a of a recorded service on techshy I Macleansreceive temporary housing in the cross on the cathedral of that niques of oral communicatiOil f8cilities of the Washington city The Pope performed the directedby the ObJates of MalT sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAYBt Tel 9979351 sect archdiocese oclemony in his private library Immaculate ~1I111111l111IHlUlnlllllllllllUllllllnIIllIUllllllUllllllllllllllIllltUIIllllllllllUluiuUWlUllllml~

three tunes a year In those of their obligation of obedience that feelers have been sent outthere are fewdays the school had a cadet Father Reicher pointed out to have the Pope corne to Monshy

If any institution can standeorps and one of its big annual What this means he added is teal for th~ May 26-29 meeting events was marching in the anshy that occasionally Religious mllYoondemned on the basis of the

It would be the first papalrecent Kerner Report on Civilnual parish-May procession be used to break a strike called visit to Canada Pope Paul visitedDisorders it is the CatholicFor years residents of color- by lay faculty members this country as a Cardinal in theChurch among others that is But more likely is the conflict early 19508guilty of white racism he trapping the individual Reli shyPlan to Help ~eed opined Bishop Carter said if a favorshygious whose loyalty is divided

Asserting that the number of able reply is reCeived from RomeCapital MCIl(lc61ers Negro clergy middotdoes not nearly the Canadian government would

PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A meet the needs of Negro Catho- Australia to Have extend an official invitation pledge of cooperation in feeding lies Msgr Reese said Pope Paul visited the United the poor who will gather in the If the Church is going to be Better Preaching Nations inNew York in 1965 nations capital in May has beell relevant to the black community SYDNEY (NC)-A concerted

I

Marian Awards Continued from Page Three

Fall River and has spent her entire religious life within the Diocese of Fall River

Sister has served as consult shyant with various education comshymittees in the diocese and bas promoted the educational proshygram of the Dominican Sisters

Sr Mary Pauline OP bead of the Science Department of

the Dominican Academy Fall River was one of the originatolll of the Region III Science Fair and has served as president of the regions Fair for two years

She is presently ooordinator of the Massachusetts state Scishyence Fair -

Sr Virginia CSC is presshyently chairman of the Th~logy

Department Notre Dame Colshylege Manchester N H and served from 1941 to ]958 as principal of St Anthonys New Bedford

She has always been a leader in new an innovative ideas in education

Sister Anne Denise SND presently principal of St Marys High School Lynn is well shyremembered as the first princishypal of Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth and has served in many administrative posts for the Sisters of Notre Dame

Sr Mary Aloysia SUSC is dean of the College of the Sashycred Hearts Fall River and has given outstanding service in coshyoperation with the Catholic School Department in planning in-service courses for the teachshyers of the diocesan schools

She also serves asmiddot coordinator of the educational program of the Sisters of the Holy Union

Sr John Elizabeth SUSC is Guidance Director at the Acadshyemy of the Sacred Hearts Fall River and has served in numershyous administrative positions atthe Fall River school

She was the first principal of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton and has served on committees of local and state educational organizations

Sr Mary Felicita RSM is now involved in the tutorial program at Mt St MaryS Acadshyemy Fall River and has served in the various sclIools of the diocese

For 26 years Sister served as Diocesan School Supervisor iD the Catholic School Office

Sr Miriam RSM is also in the tutorial program at the Sisshyters of Mercy Academy in Fall River A former teacher and principal in schools of the dioshycese Sister served for 26 yean

IN NEW POST Father Charles F Sheedy CSC former dean of arts and letshyterS has been appointed to the new post of dean of theoshylogical studies and institutes at the University of Nobe Dame NC Photo

to Educators tiS Diocesan Supervisor in the Catholic School Department

This year completes 50 years of service in the field of educashyto the Diocese of Fall River

Sister Maureen RSM is principal of Nazareth Hall Fall River She organized the proshygram and was the first principal of the Fall River school lor exshyceptional children a position she still holds

She is a consultant lind D member of city and state comshymittees for the mentlllly l1eshytarded

Sr Mary Urban RSM is Diocesan supervisor of schools and was the first principal at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

She is a member of state and city educational committees

Sr Mary Carmela RSM is a member of the English Departshyment of St Xaviers Academy Providence and was the first principal of Mt St Marys Academy Fall River

She is a consultant on secondshyary school curriculum planning

Sr Grace de Sales MSBT is presently superior of the Censhyacle of Our Lady of the Assumpshytion Osterville a position she also held at the Cenac1e of St Patricks Parish Wareham

Sister founded the kindergarshytens at Osterville and Wareham and has taught Chfistian Docshytrine classes on the elementary and secondary levels during her many years of selvice in the diocese

Sr Joan Louise OLVM is suPerior of the Victory Noll Convent in the Immaculate Conception Parish No Easton She has served as catechetical specialist in dioceses in Iowa and California and her present assignment is CCD supervisor for the Diocese of Fall River

Brother Albertus CSC is supervisor of Education for the Eastern Province of the Holy Cross Brothers and is professor of mathematics at Stonehill College No Easton He also ~ught mathematics and physics at Monsignor Coyle High School Taunton

Miss Mary Cabral of 1)69 Camshybridge Street Fall River is presently teaching at Espirito Santo School Fall River where she is completing 43 years of service as a lay teacher in ~e

Diocese of Fall Ri vcr

Whites to Solve White Problem

TOLEDO (NC)-Bishop Joon A Donovan has made a public request to whites to take up the white problem

He urged it for those lookshying for a modern up-Io-date apostolate for down-to-earth Christians who are at the same time dedicated Americans

middotSpeaking at a dinner of the northwestern Ohio district Fourth Degree Knights of Coshylumbus the Toledo bishop said

This ugly situation was fathered by injustice and is nourished by that subtle and insidious vice called prejudiCe

Need In this deplorable situation

in which the world ffinds itself today the pressing need is for those who call themselves Christians to think as Christians to form Christian attitudes and to live as Christians

Just as we cannot separate Christ from His Gospel so too we cannot separate love of GOO from love of our fellowmen without exception

The real Christian mlid the bishop does not live alongside but with others He constantly interprets anothers actions in the best possible light bying to remember always the way in which the Lord met loved and drew people to Himsel

SAIGON (NC) - The people wept and we wept everybody wept Sister Nicole said deshyscribing her teams departure after 16 days of relief work in Hue

She and two other Vietnamshy-ese Sisters Daughters of Charshyity of St Vincent de Paul with

The communImiddots1s T truce

17 girl students had gone to stricken Hue on a mission of mercy

offensive had left families in mourning houses in ruins ~nd people hungry and sick The government of Vietnam had inshyvited volunteers to bring help to the citys thousands of sufshyferers

The plane that brought tile Sisters and their students also brought 85 youths from Saigon~

The boys did manual work such as cleaning up the damaged hosshypital in Hues The Sisters team was divided into three groups one to give medical care anshyother to visit homes a third to l)ok after children

The 17 girls are some of those being trained by the Sisters as social workers for family assist shyance under a plan sponsored by a Vietnamese womens associashytion Five of the 17 are Cathshyolics The others are mostly Buddhists On April 12 all were fasting since it was the 15th day of the lunar month for the lBud-

Catholic Boy Scout Officials to Meet

WASHINGTON (NC)-About 150 leaders of CQtholic Boy Scout organizations will meet here to attend the 20th biennial oonference of the National Cathshyolic Committee OIl Scouting

The meeting will be a Iowshyday work session tor chairmen chaplains and other officioals cd the nations diocesan I seouiing ~ommittees The meeting will end with a banquet in honO Gl Patrick Cardinal OBoyle ol Washington

---- -----~

middot1FI

1

PRAYER CRUSADE _Danny Thomas has filmed n 10-minute color documentary on the value of family pray~r

to be used by Father Patrick Peyton CSC in his Camshypaign for Family Prayer Father Peyton said he expects 200000 people at a Milwailkee rally to be held Sunday May 12

IEverybody Weptl

Nun Describes Relief Teams Departure From Stricken Hue

dhims and Good Friday for the Catholics

The Asia Foundation here gave a grant to pay for the meals of the Sisters team dur ing their stay

- Before leaving Saigon the Sisters had collected medicines food soap and clothing from welfare agencies including Catholic Relief Services and

Vietnam Christian Service (Protestant) The United Nashytions Childrens Fund (UNICEF) provided milk powder which enabled the team to give milk to 450 children every day

Warn Medics LONDON (NC)-The day beshy

fore Britains new abortion law went into effect the nations 5500 CMholic doctors were warned by John Cardinal Heenan of WeBtminister that they should DOt perfom any abortions

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THE ANCHOR- 17 Thursday May 2 1968

Cufr ~t~1 Days Of orw~~~1ion

En C[[i~da OTTAWA (NC)-Chrietshy

mas and New Years Day now are the only holy days of obligation for Canadav estimated 8000000 Catholics

The Canadian Catholic Conshyference comprising Canadafl Bishops has announced thampa other holy days will be cellshyebrated on the Sunday nearem the holy day

The holy days affected aye Epiphany usually celebrat~

Jan 6 Ascension now falling on the 40th day after East~Ilp

All Saints now celebrated Nou I and the Immaculate ConcejilP tion now celebrated Dec 8

The Bishops said observance of the feast days on Sundayu means they will be celebratecll bull by a larger more relaxed anell accessible congregation of the faithful rather than a congreshygaUon of people constrained by the obligation of attending Maw in addition to their work

Canadas Bishops postwn~ until next Fall a decision Gil

wlether to restoremiddot the anciej~ office of permanent deacon m the Church The Bishops of the United States meeting simultashy

neously in St Louis hlst week ~ted to petition Pope Paul VJ for permission to restore ~

perinanent diaconate ror marshyried and unmarried men of ma ture years

Fish Sales Up SYDNEY (NC)-Best tilini)

that ever happened to the fisb industry said Mark J06eph chairman of the New SouUl -lales Fish Authority of the Churchs lifting of the ban CJ[l

Friday meat eating He has tb~ ligures to back up his verdictshya 25 per cent rise in fish e4)Dshy

slImption here since the ehlnge

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The Parish Parade New Jersey Suburbanites of All Faiths Aid Ghetto Arson Victims HOLY NAME OUR LADY OF ANGELS

FALL RIVER FALL RIVER NEWARK (NC) - Priest~ the citys anti-poverty agenCll Contemporary music will acshy

company the 11 oclock Mass Sunday morning May 5

First communicants will reshyeeive at a special Mass at 9 Saturday morning May 25 Mayshycrowning ceremonies will be held Sunday May 26 The Womens Guild announces

fts installation banquet for Tuesday night May 7 Tickets are available from all members

Catholic Charities collectors are asked to meet in the parish school at 730 tonight for dist~shyOOtion of contact cards

lIT MARGARET BUZZARDS BAY

SS Margltlret-Mary Guild of Buzzards Bay and Onset will Sponsor a rummage sale from 9 1lo 1 Saturday May 18 at St Margarets kindergarten hall Main Street Buzzards Bay Do iaations may be left at the hall during mornings of the precedshying week Chairman for the ~vent is Mrs William Brady

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild will reshyieive Holy CommuniOn in a bodyaf the815 Mass 00 Sunshydity morning A breakfast will follow in the school hall The icuest speaker will beRt Rev Anthony M Gomes Mrs Arthur Belanger gpiIshyftual chairman of the Guild is _ charge of the breakfast

81 JOSEPH AIRHAVEN Nominations and elections of officers for the Association of file Sacred middotHearts will be held at 630 on Sunday evening in the rectory ~ Dues are now payable to the tleasurer Mrs Jeannette Dushylude

IACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

Preprimary registration will be held from 2 to 4 Sunday afternoon May 5 in 1he school office Some openings also exist in first sixth and eighth grades

The CCD adult discussion group will meet at 8 Sunday night in the home of Mr and Mrs J G N Bonneau

So Easton Club Pledges

$5000 The newly formed Womens

Club of Holy Cross Parish So Easton has pledged $5000 toward the building fund acshycording to an announcement made today by Mrs Arthur J L Peterson the organizations first president The pledge will be paid at the rate of $1000 per year

This pledge has been added to The Second Mile Building Fund campaign now in progress under the chairmanship of Robshyert Dray and Louis A Lyne serving as director

The Altar Boys will sponSor a cake sale Sunday May 26

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a Communion breakshyfast following 8 oclock Mass this Sunday morning Installashytion of officers will be held at a banquet following 5 oclock Mass Sunday afternoon May 26

Children of Mary will attend a Communion breakfast followshying 8 oclock Mass Sunday mornshying May 12

The annual blessing of autoshymobiles will take place at 130 Sunday afternoon May 26 in the church parking lot

ST GEORGE WESTP~RT

A Maybasket whist is planned for 8 Saturday night May 4 hi

the school hall on Route 177 PrOCeeds will benefit the school fund and table and attendance prizes will be awarded

STMARY NORTH ATTLEBORO Parishioners are planning a

testimonial honoring Msgr Ed- ward B Booth Pastor at 7

Sunday night May 26 Tickets are now available

Christians Jews Combat Racism

NEW YORK (NC)The Nashytional Confeferice of Christians and Jews has launched a nation wide educational effort to conshyfront the problem of white racism in middotAmerica agency headquarters here announced

The NCeJ has given top prl~

ority to finding ways toimpleshyment the recommendations of the National Advisory Commisshysion on Civil Disorders The commission blamed white racshyism as the underlying cause of urban unrest

In a progress re-port to the NCCJ board of trustees meeting here Dr Samuel L Gandy dean of the Ho~ard University school of religion Washington D C and chairman of the NCCJ nashytional program ad7isory comshymittee stated

NCCJs 130 professional staff members in 70 cities are curshy~ntly engaged in developing programs with police business and labor leaders parents and teachers clergy and with youth and all of the various institutes workshops and dialogues which are being conducted are emphashysizing the findings of this reshyport

Dr Gandy quoted to the board a letter to President Lynshydon B Johnson from Dr Stershyling W Brown NCCJ presishydent in which the agency head said that NCCJ embraced the commission report as a sancshytion and guideline for our efshyforts in the private sectol

111I1111I11111111111111I1111I11I1111I1111111111I111111I111111I11I11I11I11I1111I111111111111I11111111I1111I111111I11I11I111111I111II11111111111D

ministers nuns and lay people of all denominations pitched in here to try and make Easter a dltty of joy for the more than 600 people burned out of their homes in a waveof arson which erupted in this city following the funeral of Dr Martin Luther King

Concerned citizens of surshyrounding suburban communishyties who only a week before had participated in a massive Wa 1k for Understanding through ghetto streets respondshyedspontaneously to the need

Without anymiddot special appeal going out people of all denomshyinations call e 11 inner-city churches to ask what they could do and they were directed to the United Community Corp

NEW LEADER Sister Rosemary Markham SSS is the new Superior General of the Sisters of Social Ser-

vice a Los Angeles based community engaged in social and catechetical work with missions in Formosa and Mexico NCPhoto

Christians Jews Discuss Diamiddotlogue

SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-The question of whether JewishshyChristian dialogue should be by speech or by action was the theme that ran through the talks and discussions at a Conference on Interfaith Dialogue sponsored by Catholic Protestant and Jewshyish organizations at Seton Hall University here

Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum director of interreligious affairs for the American Jewish Comshymittee was generally in favor of the action approach saying that the dialogue must avoid beshycoming a convenient conspiracy on the part of middle-class whites to buffer themselves against the realities of the inner city

Father Edward H Flannery executive secretary of the U S Catholic Bishops Secretariat for Catholic-Jewish Relations said that while he would be the last to cut off action in the realm of social justice and charity he also felt that Jews and Christians could not effectively present a common ftont to society until they have straightened out their own affairs

Father Flannery referred to statements that the -ChristianshyJewish dialogue had died in the wake of last Junes six-day war between Israel and Arab nations He said that it was not so much a matter of its dying but of its not having been tried yet

Over Holy Thursday Good Friday and Holy Saturday more than 10 tons of food and clothing were donated and the UCC staff was swamped with the task of sorting the materiaL

With schools and church ofshyfices closed priests and nuns made their way individually and in groups to UCC headshy

quarters to help with the task of unloading cars and station wagons and sorting and distribshyuting the clothing

At least 50 offers of assistance came in to Queen of Angels pariSh in the heart of the ghettc and the callers were asked to organize relief efforts in their own communities and then gd the material 110 the UCCbull

FEEL GOOD TODAY

THt HOLY fATHER MISSION AiD TD THlaRIENTAL DHURDH

Thlsoolumns happiest readers are the men

Te date this second phase bas listed 35 gifts totaling $12000 Combined with the initial campaign the Building Fund now lists 233 donors who haVe pledged a total of $117()00 The Womens Club that was founded less than six months ago has initiated a long range program for the spiritual cll1shytural and financial efforts of the parish

In addition to the regular methods of aiding the parish finandally the women have conducted teen-age projects and have assisted the Mens Club fu

i bull various progrlms

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women and children who know they~r needed The days were busiest helping others are the happiest days of our livesbullbullbull Who needs you most Surprisingly God needs you - for inmiddot stance to help art abandoned orphan become e Godloving responsible adult Lepers need you (there are still 15middotmillion lepers In the world) blind children need y~u ~ndlo do we bull bullbull Here In New York we are your agents tellin you where the Holy Father says your help Is needed and channeling your help promptlyand Oafely to the people iii needbullbullbull Want to feel good right now Do without something you want but do not need and send the money instead for one of the needs below Youll feel good especialiy if your gift is big enough to mean a sacrifice to you This is your chance to do something meaningful for the world - its Gods world - while youre still alive

D Only $850 gives our priests and SIsters i south India enough Dapsone miracle tablebamp for 43 lepers for a yearl D For only $250 a week ($10 a month $120 a year) you can make sure that an abandoned child has food clothing a blanket and love Well send you a photo of the child you adopt tell you something about him (or her) and ask the Sistermiddotinmiddotcharge to keep you Informed

D Your stringless gifts in any amount ($5000 MEET $1000 $500 $100 $50 $25 $10 $5 $2)

MISSION will help the neediest wherever they are - in EMERGENCIES india and he Hol~ Land for instance

D Only you can make your will-and do It this THINK week to be sure the poor will have your help

OF even after youre gone Our legal title CATHOLIO YOURSELF NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION Also our priests

TOO will offer promptly the Masses you provide for

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THE CATHOLIC

NAMIlR _

~ 8TREJa~ ~_

OITY 8TATI_IIP COD

NBAR lAST WILPARI AbullbullaaIATID

NEAR EAST MISSIONS MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretary Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoo 330 Madison Avenue New York N~Y 10017 Teephone 212YUkon 6middot5840

1 - ~

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Lawrence High of Falmouth Seeksmiddot State Track Tut~e

By PETER BARTEK Norton High Coach

The Capeway Conference track season has already begun but the handwriting is already on the wall This campaign like last years will be a battle for second place Admittedly notbing Short of a miracle can or will prevent Lawrence High of Falmouth from winning its second straight conference t rae k championship But fol Coach Jim Kalperis and his trackstersmiddot the league championship is only a Gtepping stone to the State C ham p io n - ship The goal of every athletic team in the state hi to earn the title of State Champion This is not beshyyond the grasp of the Falmouth Peier Clippers If hard Bartek work and dedication are the means to this end then Falshymouth will reign as State track champions

Success does not come easily em any endeavor and success batpound

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not come easily to the Falmouth tracksters They like all accomshyplished athletes have labored long and diligently to aChieve the measure of sUccess they now enjot lt

N1)t toomiddot many yearsato Lawshyrence High was just ~nother

sChool Participating in track But the efforts of many and the dedication of one IJ1im in parshyticular has brought immeasurshyable success to the Falmouth track scene That man is Jim Kalperis

Coach Kalperis haseombined

his knowledge af track his coaching ta1EntS aiiCl tirelessenergies middotto build a virtual track dynasty The latest noteworthy feat of middotliliitnickmen came in the forinof anotheriState title

Thisti~emiddotiS th~nivision IIi

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- BC~ and Norry Races Are Close 1

lbe format formiddot the St~te reo lays has been altered this ear with competition being held at four separate locations in East- em Massachusetts Weymouth captured the Division I crown the DiviSion n title went to

Andover and Williams corralled the laurels in Division IV

The meet drew ll5 schools in each of the four diviSions with over 2000 youngsters partici shypating in all classes

Enroute to its victory Falshymouth collected 51 points comshypared to runner-up Barnstable with 22Jh

Falmouth took first place in the discus high jump pole vault 440 yard run shuttle hurdles two mile run and the 880 -

With tbis type of success in state competition it is easy to see why the Capeway Confershyence title has been practically conceded to Falmouth

Sharing the spotlight with the trackmen at Falmouth are the diamondmen The Clippers who are in the thick of the loop baseball picture were given a

Mike Rainnie tossed amp no-hittel at Barnstable to gain a 1-0 vershydict

Its still much too early to predict with any accuracy

what will happen in the Cape wai baseball race But it ap- pears nomiddotclub will dominate th~t sport like Falmouth controIa track Falmouth Dartmouth Fairhaven and Barnstable are expected to fight it out through the entire season One close to the scene summed it up best when he said anyone in the league could win this thing

Close races are also developshying in the Bristol County and Narragansett Leagues

In the BCL both Bishop Fee han of Attleboro and Durfee High of Fall River encountered a few difficulties in early season play but seem to have found the range of late The clubs will meet in an important contest today in Fall River Late inning rallies have brought both clubS from the brink of defeat to vicshytory in previous outings The victor will have to be dubbed

shot in the arm last week as the team to beat

Brennan of Feehan D~est ill le~guej

Coach Tom Maccarone of Feeshyhan has had outstanding pershyfonnances from his pitching staff but the key to the Shamshyrocks success has been shortshystop Ty Blrennan Maccarone stated before the season that Brennan was his best player and perhaps the best in the whole Bristol County Judging from Brennans perfonnance to date one of the keys to stopping Feehan is stopping the classy shortstop

Coach Joe Lewis Hilltoppers play a brand of ball similar to his counterpart TOIJl Karams basketball club Make a mistake and the Fall Riverites will capshyitalize on it Durfees first two league victories came about beshycause of opponent miscues

The Hilltoppers have been playing steady ball throughout the early part of the campaign and are improving with every game Their ability 10 avoid costly mistakes eI tbeir -n

making and timely hitting has proven a winning combination

Come what may in todays contest the BCL llace has just begun

Not to be outdone by tile larger BCL and Capeway Conshyference the Narry loop is conshyducting a torrid race of its own At the end of the first week of action Seekonk and DightonshyRehoboth were tied for the top spot Following two weeks of play Gase of Swansea Dighton and Somerset were lodged In the first position The hectic lCampaign will probably find another change in the top spot at the conclusion of this weeks activity

From Cape Cod to Attleboro competition is keener this year than it bas been in many seashysons The road to the league championship is always diffJshycult to Davigate but this year it appears as though the road win be duttered wiill meR obstacles than ill quite

cone~~ lb~aders ConcllregrnmOB War In V~~It~IlJJm

NEW YORK (NC)-Stushydent government presidents and editors of campus newsshypapers at more than 500 colleges in 49 states have conshydemned the war in Vietnam as

lt immoral and unjust and said ~~ they believe they should not

~ i~~~~~~~ii ~~~b~~ shy --_ ~ and Laymen Convinced About

-- ~-__ Vietnnm Was coordirlated by shy _ -- shy ~ Rev RObert lVi Hundley lHullent

--lt--1 at Union Th~ological Snppary --J here and an associate pltISor at -- ~I th~ Congn~gationalChllrch hn ~_ Scarsdale N-Y He saiQ most

--middot1 students who signed the stateshy~-__-~~- ~~ -___- __~_~J ment havenot been active in

FINE ARTS FESTIVAL Making preparations for Fine Arts Festival at Bishop Stang High School North

Dartmouth are Paul Leahy and Margaret Polycarpo

~ Unmiddot-ty middotIs Chr-stlTs middotW-II

P Off W I E deg I pOi degI

ontl e comes cumenlca I grlmage From United Kingdom toHoly Lar-d

anti-war activities heretoforemiddot

Solicits Support

He added

Many of the student Itl~ders who have signed this sbtcment

recognize that they may be plaeshying their future caJeers illmiddotjeopshy~rdy and conceivably are riskshying punitive action being taken

against them by the capiicioWJ V~TICAN ~ITY (NC)~TO an Fathers Arthur Payton anSel~c~ve Sfdtvice Systerh~~~

I ecumenical pilgrimage oQ its Anglican who is director 01 ~ev Yi~am Sloan Cot~~1 Jr-) way to the Holy Land Pope interchurCh travel in LOndon bull aclive memjgter of Clergymiddot ~nd Paul VI recalled the words he Among its members were An- Laymen Concerned AboutbullVI~tshyspoke on his own pilgrimage glieans CatholiCs Oithodox and nam ~1dmiddota Yal~ U~Iverslt7

there in 1964 that unity is the will of Christ

He said that it was with parshyticular pleasure that we welshycome this ecumenical pilgrimshyage from the United Kingdom to the Holy LaRd You are aboUt to follow in the fOQtSteps af God made man in the country of His birth Hill mission and His blessed death for us men and for our salvation (NiceneCreed)

Your visit caUsto mind our own unforgettable pilgrimage to the Holy Places From the grotto of Bethlehem we then declared It npw appears clearly to all that the problem of unity cannot be eluded Today this will cif Christ is imposed upon our minds and demands th~t we undertake with wisdom and love every possible way of bringing all Christi~ns t6 enjoy the great benefit and supreme honor of the unity of the middotChurch

He also recalled his plea from Bethlehem that love of Christ and of the Church should inshyspire that every future moveshyment toward meeting and reshyconciliation

The pilgrimage was led by

DIOCESAN DIREC1OR First woman to serve as a diocesan director of radio-TV is Miss Patricia Smith of Pueblo Colo who is also a photo-journalist on the staff gf Dateline Colorado m cesan weekly newspaper

Protestants not only from Great Britain but from France and Germany as well

Msgi Gianfrancesco Arrighi undersecretary of the Secretashyriat for Promoting Christian Unity and Canon John Findlow representative of Anglican Archbishop Michael Ramsey of Canterbury at the Holy See accompanied middotthe pilgrims to the Vatican

Votes Moratorium On ChuDch Building

CHICAGO (NC)-The Chicago Conference of Laymen is urging Church authorities at both the archdiocesan and parish levels to declare a moratorium on 10- cal construction projects so that funds can be channeled to projshyects in the ghetto areas

The action was taken at the second annual meeting of the

ll200-member organization The 300 in attendance passed

some 50 resolutions half of them dealing with urban problems The membership said it will seek ways to alleviate white racism especially within the Catholic Church

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ch~plaJD saId The stand taken by these

y~ung men should serve to reshymmd Americans everywhere that the war in Vietnam 1s not over that American and Vietshy

namese boys are stillmiddotdying

He continued

These middotmen of conscience should be supported by eveQY priest minister and rabbi who cares about the sanctity of conshyscience

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Jesuit Comments Di~cordNormal Amon9 Catholics

RIO DE JANEIRO (NC)shylD i SC 0 r d among Catholics after the Second Vatican Council is perfectly normal but It is not normal for proshygressive or conservative Cathoshylics to refuse to accept the dishyrectives of the council and the pope Jesuit superior general said here Father Arrupe is in Brazil for 30 days to visit Jesuit houses in the country and to preside at the May 6 to 14 meeting here of all South Amershyican Jesuit provincials

He said that his visit is inshytended to adapt the order here flo the requirements of the agshygirnameJ1to or up-dating

The most important aggiorshy namento in our day he said

is that of the mind We have to ~nsider and respect human valshyues as such This was always the Churchs doctrine but now the Church is insisting on it more We ought not to consider the Churchs interest in human values as opportunism Our in tEmtion is only to serve mankin~ better)

Press Uses Images Dudng his stay here Father

Arrupe willmiddot visit 20 local(tiesWhere Jesuits are woikilg

ts B 1Ilhele are 1000 JesUl m razl~ bull

He said that he regarded as bull joke the Brazilian presss ref-

elences to him as ~the black l T Ch Pope cussion of he angmg a1middot

Because of my cassock hemiddot

tlaid I am black but I am not the Pope ~ understand that the press has to use images to exshylI)lain concepts more effectively

Honor Editor NEW YORK (NC) ~ Robert

6lmstead news editormiddot of the National Catholic Reporter weekly newspaper published in Kansas City Mo received honshyelable mention in the 1968 Paul Tobenkin Memolial Award Competition here

-

MEET IN ST LOUIS Bishop-elect Timothy J~ Harringshyth d f th Sf W 1 ft d

ton ~ orcester e leoscllfses ~ atn t ~ l~mg

ish a panel a~ the lQ68Presi dents Conference of the Nashytional Council of cat~olic yene~l

Role of CouDcil The parish will retairi its role

as a community of worship whose members go out ihto the world and bring it theeurohristjan

message Bernatd Lyons Ghishycago public relations ~onsultant saidmiddot

The pa~ish on the other hand mustmiddot become part of the world

alound it a wHr1e$S to the whole community and fake on roles not in relation only to -its

GUIDING CHURCH IN UNITED STATES More than 200 members of the hierarchy participated in the decisions of the annual Spring meeting of the National Conference

Predict Important Authorities Emphcisixe

WASHINGTON (NC)-Three members but to the world in authorities on parish life have agreed here that the parish basic organiz~tion iil the Church will have to undergo some lmportant changes if the ChUlch is goingto meet th~ needs of societyin the 20th censhy tury

But just how the parislt is going to change ~s far from setshytied they ~onceqed in a dis

which it exists Father John Corriga~ of this city a directozlt of the Nationalmiddot Liturgical Con ference asserted

Whatever it does the parish must becomemiddot a vital force in the cOlJlrnunity around it Father Geno Baroill execu~ive secretary Washington archdi

ocesan Office ~f Urpan Affairs declared

RIot ComparlmiddotsoDmiddot

Father Baroni whose work blings hini into constant contactmiddot with Negro problems in WaSh- laymen will inhibit soCial ac- ington saw~ astriking par~illel tion but added later this is a between the Churchs needs and risk wltirth taking

-those of thebiack ghetto Right now~ he observed - one of the mos~ urgent prob Society to Consider lems in the ghetto is that Of Sh fmiddot

community organization We 5 emnary I t arll learl1ing that pe~ple ri~t be CARTHAGENA CNC) _ The

cause they have beel- cut o~t ofSocieiy of the Precious Blood meaningful participation in so- ciety

In the ~hurch laymen have been cut out of this participa tion also They dont riot but they dont really concern them selves with the concerns of the Church unle~s thy ~ave t~i~ sense of partlclpatlcm he saId

New Resndemlce For US PIiDests

ROME (NC)-A new resident house for American priests working In the offices of the Roman Curia (the Churchs censhytral administrative offices) or on assignment in Rome for the US bishops has been opened to provide adequate economical lodgings and community surshyroundings

The residence called Villa Stritch after the late Samuel Cardinal Stritch of Chicago is composed of two apartment comshyplexes and is designed to meet the immediate needs of US priests already at work in Rome and to anticipate future housing needs as internationalization of the Roman Curia continues

In addition to American$ resshyident in Rome the villa is also expected to house priests on special assignments for the bishshyops in Rome bishops who come to Rome for work on var~ous

Church commissions or otherVatican offices or for such events as the synod of bishops and ma-Jor congresses In short it is hoped that the new villa wilL

will study the possibilities and implications of moving the or ders main theological school flOm St Charles Seminary here in Ohio to a university campus or urban center and of buildingmiddot an adequate program at St QJ1arles The Carthagena SChOt

has been the societys maJor seminary for over 100 years

Major superiors and middotelected delegates representing the soshycietys Cincinnati province voted to fOlm a committee to carry out the study during a provincial chapter meeting held at St Charles at which modernizing the training of candidates for the priesthood in the society Vas tqe chief subject of discussion

middotA report of the meeting in- dicated that the delegates were aware of trends in the Church 1-way from comparative isloationmiddot of seminary establishments to university campuses and urban centers

SPECIAL RATES FOR

Smiddot I O dcho0 utings an Picnics

of Catholic Bishops in St Louis last week An enormoUis amount of homework on position papers was approved ~

the Bishops NC Photo

I see the parish councils and their recognition of freedom asneceSsai-y to do this he added

Worth Risk They agreed they sha~e abull

feiling opound un~asin~ss _middotaboti~ these cOuncIls relatively new amQJ1g Cathol~cs pa~icula~lY their attitude t~ward SOCI~ issues

d Father Baroni sal he has ~

leery feeling about parishcouncils He declared there is

the danger that conservative

contribute to increased racial understanding and involvement

fur the people of the diOcese

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Parishes

Lyons author of th~ book middotParish Councils - Renewin the Parish Community said be

middotwas somewhat more optiniistici I donit think we are going to

solve these problems by 10~~1 at the dangers exclusively hie commented

Diocese to Discuss C~m~issi~n Rep~rt

LANSING (NC) - Catholics thoughout t~e Lansing diocese will participate in forums and home discussion groups 1as~ on the report of the National Acf visory Commission on Civil Disshyorders The program which begaa with public forums in six citie on April 29 was planned ~

middot three diocesanmiddot agencies-the Ofshyfice of Social and Community Service the Office of Renewal Through Vatican II and the adult education division of tne Education Department It was initiated in response to an appeal made by Bishop Alexshyander Zaleski The day following the death of Dr Martin Luther King Bishop Zaleski asked dishyocesan directors to plan an imshymediate program designed to

meetmg of heBIShops n erence WIt ISop e e~ros be a center of communi~y life CONTACT MANAGER - LINCOLN PARK of BrowI)svIlle Texas and fOtmiddotmer chancellor of the Fall for bishops arid priests with spe- 9996984 636-2744 ~iver Di~~~~lt __~gt -cilla~~gnrn~iitS~~o~~~ ~ Oc)QI~OC~)OQCIOC)oOOOCgtoc)OQltjIOcXllOOOCgtOC)oOC~)OIL)QOCgtOCPOoO

Page 17: 05.02.68

Marian Awards Continued from Page Three

Fall River and has spent her entire religious life within the Diocese of Fall River

Sister has served as consult shyant with various education comshymittees in the diocese and bas promoted the educational proshygram of the Dominican Sisters

Sr Mary Pauline OP bead of the Science Department of

the Dominican Academy Fall River was one of the originatolll of the Region III Science Fair and has served as president of the regions Fair for two years

She is presently ooordinator of the Massachusetts state Scishyence Fair -

Sr Virginia CSC is presshyently chairman of the Th~logy

Department Notre Dame Colshylege Manchester N H and served from 1941 to ]958 as principal of St Anthonys New Bedford

She has always been a leader in new an innovative ideas in education

Sister Anne Denise SND presently principal of St Marys High School Lynn is well shyremembered as the first princishypal of Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth and has served in many administrative posts for the Sisters of Notre Dame

Sr Mary Aloysia SUSC is dean of the College of the Sashycred Hearts Fall River and has given outstanding service in coshyoperation with the Catholic School Department in planning in-service courses for the teachshyers of the diocesan schools

She also serves asmiddot coordinator of the educational program of the Sisters of the Holy Union

Sr John Elizabeth SUSC is Guidance Director at the Acadshyemy of the Sacred Hearts Fall River and has served in numershyous administrative positions atthe Fall River school

She was the first principal of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton and has served on committees of local and state educational organizations

Sr Mary Felicita RSM is now involved in the tutorial program at Mt St MaryS Acadshyemy Fall River and has served in the various sclIools of the diocese

For 26 years Sister served as Diocesan School Supervisor iD the Catholic School Office

Sr Miriam RSM is also in the tutorial program at the Sisshyters of Mercy Academy in Fall River A former teacher and principal in schools of the dioshycese Sister served for 26 yean

IN NEW POST Father Charles F Sheedy CSC former dean of arts and letshyterS has been appointed to the new post of dean of theoshylogical studies and institutes at the University of Nobe Dame NC Photo

to Educators tiS Diocesan Supervisor in the Catholic School Department

This year completes 50 years of service in the field of educashyto the Diocese of Fall River

Sister Maureen RSM is principal of Nazareth Hall Fall River She organized the proshygram and was the first principal of the Fall River school lor exshyceptional children a position she still holds

She is a consultant lind D member of city and state comshymittees for the mentlllly l1eshytarded

Sr Mary Urban RSM is Diocesan supervisor of schools and was the first principal at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

She is a member of state and city educational committees

Sr Mary Carmela RSM is a member of the English Departshyment of St Xaviers Academy Providence and was the first principal of Mt St Marys Academy Fall River

She is a consultant on secondshyary school curriculum planning

Sr Grace de Sales MSBT is presently superior of the Censhyacle of Our Lady of the Assumpshytion Osterville a position she also held at the Cenac1e of St Patricks Parish Wareham

Sister founded the kindergarshytens at Osterville and Wareham and has taught Chfistian Docshytrine classes on the elementary and secondary levels during her many years of selvice in the diocese

Sr Joan Louise OLVM is suPerior of the Victory Noll Convent in the Immaculate Conception Parish No Easton She has served as catechetical specialist in dioceses in Iowa and California and her present assignment is CCD supervisor for the Diocese of Fall River

Brother Albertus CSC is supervisor of Education for the Eastern Province of the Holy Cross Brothers and is professor of mathematics at Stonehill College No Easton He also ~ught mathematics and physics at Monsignor Coyle High School Taunton

Miss Mary Cabral of 1)69 Camshybridge Street Fall River is presently teaching at Espirito Santo School Fall River where she is completing 43 years of service as a lay teacher in ~e

Diocese of Fall Ri vcr

Whites to Solve White Problem

TOLEDO (NC)-Bishop Joon A Donovan has made a public request to whites to take up the white problem

He urged it for those lookshying for a modern up-Io-date apostolate for down-to-earth Christians who are at the same time dedicated Americans

middotSpeaking at a dinner of the northwestern Ohio district Fourth Degree Knights of Coshylumbus the Toledo bishop said

This ugly situation was fathered by injustice and is nourished by that subtle and insidious vice called prejudiCe

Need In this deplorable situation

in which the world ffinds itself today the pressing need is for those who call themselves Christians to think as Christians to form Christian attitudes and to live as Christians

Just as we cannot separate Christ from His Gospel so too we cannot separate love of GOO from love of our fellowmen without exception

The real Christian mlid the bishop does not live alongside but with others He constantly interprets anothers actions in the best possible light bying to remember always the way in which the Lord met loved and drew people to Himsel

SAIGON (NC) - The people wept and we wept everybody wept Sister Nicole said deshyscribing her teams departure after 16 days of relief work in Hue

She and two other Vietnamshy-ese Sisters Daughters of Charshyity of St Vincent de Paul with

The communImiddots1s T truce

17 girl students had gone to stricken Hue on a mission of mercy

offensive had left families in mourning houses in ruins ~nd people hungry and sick The government of Vietnam had inshyvited volunteers to bring help to the citys thousands of sufshyferers

The plane that brought tile Sisters and their students also brought 85 youths from Saigon~

The boys did manual work such as cleaning up the damaged hosshypital in Hues The Sisters team was divided into three groups one to give medical care anshyother to visit homes a third to l)ok after children

The 17 girls are some of those being trained by the Sisters as social workers for family assist shyance under a plan sponsored by a Vietnamese womens associashytion Five of the 17 are Cathshyolics The others are mostly Buddhists On April 12 all were fasting since it was the 15th day of the lunar month for the lBud-

Catholic Boy Scout Officials to Meet

WASHINGTON (NC)-About 150 leaders of CQtholic Boy Scout organizations will meet here to attend the 20th biennial oonference of the National Cathshyolic Committee OIl Scouting

The meeting will be a Iowshyday work session tor chairmen chaplains and other officioals cd the nations diocesan I seouiing ~ommittees The meeting will end with a banquet in honO Gl Patrick Cardinal OBoyle ol Washington

---- -----~

middot1FI

1

PRAYER CRUSADE _Danny Thomas has filmed n 10-minute color documentary on the value of family pray~r

to be used by Father Patrick Peyton CSC in his Camshypaign for Family Prayer Father Peyton said he expects 200000 people at a Milwailkee rally to be held Sunday May 12

IEverybody Weptl

Nun Describes Relief Teams Departure From Stricken Hue

dhims and Good Friday for the Catholics

The Asia Foundation here gave a grant to pay for the meals of the Sisters team dur ing their stay

- Before leaving Saigon the Sisters had collected medicines food soap and clothing from welfare agencies including Catholic Relief Services and

Vietnam Christian Service (Protestant) The United Nashytions Childrens Fund (UNICEF) provided milk powder which enabled the team to give milk to 450 children every day

Warn Medics LONDON (NC)-The day beshy

fore Britains new abortion law went into effect the nations 5500 CMholic doctors were warned by John Cardinal Heenan of WeBtminister that they should DOt perfom any abortions

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THE ANCHOR- 17 Thursday May 2 1968

Cufr ~t~1 Days Of orw~~~1ion

En C[[i~da OTTAWA (NC)-Chrietshy

mas and New Years Day now are the only holy days of obligation for Canadav estimated 8000000 Catholics

The Canadian Catholic Conshyference comprising Canadafl Bishops has announced thampa other holy days will be cellshyebrated on the Sunday nearem the holy day

The holy days affected aye Epiphany usually celebrat~

Jan 6 Ascension now falling on the 40th day after East~Ilp

All Saints now celebrated Nou I and the Immaculate ConcejilP tion now celebrated Dec 8

The Bishops said observance of the feast days on Sundayu means they will be celebratecll bull by a larger more relaxed anell accessible congregation of the faithful rather than a congreshygaUon of people constrained by the obligation of attending Maw in addition to their work

Canadas Bishops postwn~ until next Fall a decision Gil

wlether to restoremiddot the anciej~ office of permanent deacon m the Church The Bishops of the United States meeting simultashy

neously in St Louis hlst week ~ted to petition Pope Paul VJ for permission to restore ~

perinanent diaconate ror marshyried and unmarried men of ma ture years

Fish Sales Up SYDNEY (NC)-Best tilini)

that ever happened to the fisb industry said Mark J06eph chairman of the New SouUl -lales Fish Authority of the Churchs lifting of the ban CJ[l

Friday meat eating He has tb~ ligures to back up his verdictshya 25 per cent rise in fish e4)Dshy

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The Parish Parade New Jersey Suburbanites of All Faiths Aid Ghetto Arson Victims HOLY NAME OUR LADY OF ANGELS

FALL RIVER FALL RIVER NEWARK (NC) - Priest~ the citys anti-poverty agenCll Contemporary music will acshy

company the 11 oclock Mass Sunday morning May 5

First communicants will reshyeeive at a special Mass at 9 Saturday morning May 25 Mayshycrowning ceremonies will be held Sunday May 26 The Womens Guild announces

fts installation banquet for Tuesday night May 7 Tickets are available from all members

Catholic Charities collectors are asked to meet in the parish school at 730 tonight for dist~shyOOtion of contact cards

lIT MARGARET BUZZARDS BAY

SS Margltlret-Mary Guild of Buzzards Bay and Onset will Sponsor a rummage sale from 9 1lo 1 Saturday May 18 at St Margarets kindergarten hall Main Street Buzzards Bay Do iaations may be left at the hall during mornings of the precedshying week Chairman for the ~vent is Mrs William Brady

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild will reshyieive Holy CommuniOn in a bodyaf the815 Mass 00 Sunshydity morning A breakfast will follow in the school hall The icuest speaker will beRt Rev Anthony M Gomes Mrs Arthur Belanger gpiIshyftual chairman of the Guild is _ charge of the breakfast

81 JOSEPH AIRHAVEN Nominations and elections of officers for the Association of file Sacred middotHearts will be held at 630 on Sunday evening in the rectory ~ Dues are now payable to the tleasurer Mrs Jeannette Dushylude

IACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

Preprimary registration will be held from 2 to 4 Sunday afternoon May 5 in 1he school office Some openings also exist in first sixth and eighth grades

The CCD adult discussion group will meet at 8 Sunday night in the home of Mr and Mrs J G N Bonneau

So Easton Club Pledges

$5000 The newly formed Womens

Club of Holy Cross Parish So Easton has pledged $5000 toward the building fund acshycording to an announcement made today by Mrs Arthur J L Peterson the organizations first president The pledge will be paid at the rate of $1000 per year

This pledge has been added to The Second Mile Building Fund campaign now in progress under the chairmanship of Robshyert Dray and Louis A Lyne serving as director

The Altar Boys will sponSor a cake sale Sunday May 26

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a Communion breakshyfast following 8 oclock Mass this Sunday morning Installashytion of officers will be held at a banquet following 5 oclock Mass Sunday afternoon May 26

Children of Mary will attend a Communion breakfast followshying 8 oclock Mass Sunday mornshying May 12

The annual blessing of autoshymobiles will take place at 130 Sunday afternoon May 26 in the church parking lot

ST GEORGE WESTP~RT

A Maybasket whist is planned for 8 Saturday night May 4 hi

the school hall on Route 177 PrOCeeds will benefit the school fund and table and attendance prizes will be awarded

STMARY NORTH ATTLEBORO Parishioners are planning a

testimonial honoring Msgr Ed- ward B Booth Pastor at 7

Sunday night May 26 Tickets are now available

Christians Jews Combat Racism

NEW YORK (NC)The Nashytional Confeferice of Christians and Jews has launched a nation wide educational effort to conshyfront the problem of white racism in middotAmerica agency headquarters here announced

The NCeJ has given top prl~

ority to finding ways toimpleshyment the recommendations of the National Advisory Commisshysion on Civil Disorders The commission blamed white racshyism as the underlying cause of urban unrest

In a progress re-port to the NCCJ board of trustees meeting here Dr Samuel L Gandy dean of the Ho~ard University school of religion Washington D C and chairman of the NCCJ nashytional program ad7isory comshymittee stated

NCCJs 130 professional staff members in 70 cities are curshy~ntly engaged in developing programs with police business and labor leaders parents and teachers clergy and with youth and all of the various institutes workshops and dialogues which are being conducted are emphashysizing the findings of this reshyport

Dr Gandy quoted to the board a letter to President Lynshydon B Johnson from Dr Stershyling W Brown NCCJ presishydent in which the agency head said that NCCJ embraced the commission report as a sancshytion and guideline for our efshyforts in the private sectol

111I1111I11111111111111I1111I11I1111I1111111111I111111I111111I11I11I11I11I1111I111111111111I11111111I1111I111111I11I11I111111I111II11111111111D

ministers nuns and lay people of all denominations pitched in here to try and make Easter a dltty of joy for the more than 600 people burned out of their homes in a waveof arson which erupted in this city following the funeral of Dr Martin Luther King

Concerned citizens of surshyrounding suburban communishyties who only a week before had participated in a massive Wa 1k for Understanding through ghetto streets respondshyedspontaneously to the need

Without anymiddot special appeal going out people of all denomshyinations call e 11 inner-city churches to ask what they could do and they were directed to the United Community Corp

NEW LEADER Sister Rosemary Markham SSS is the new Superior General of the Sisters of Social Ser-

vice a Los Angeles based community engaged in social and catechetical work with missions in Formosa and Mexico NCPhoto

Christians Jews Discuss Diamiddotlogue

SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-The question of whether JewishshyChristian dialogue should be by speech or by action was the theme that ran through the talks and discussions at a Conference on Interfaith Dialogue sponsored by Catholic Protestant and Jewshyish organizations at Seton Hall University here

Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum director of interreligious affairs for the American Jewish Comshymittee was generally in favor of the action approach saying that the dialogue must avoid beshycoming a convenient conspiracy on the part of middle-class whites to buffer themselves against the realities of the inner city

Father Edward H Flannery executive secretary of the U S Catholic Bishops Secretariat for Catholic-Jewish Relations said that while he would be the last to cut off action in the realm of social justice and charity he also felt that Jews and Christians could not effectively present a common ftont to society until they have straightened out their own affairs

Father Flannery referred to statements that the -ChristianshyJewish dialogue had died in the wake of last Junes six-day war between Israel and Arab nations He said that it was not so much a matter of its dying but of its not having been tried yet

Over Holy Thursday Good Friday and Holy Saturday more than 10 tons of food and clothing were donated and the UCC staff was swamped with the task of sorting the materiaL

With schools and church ofshyfices closed priests and nuns made their way individually and in groups to UCC headshy

quarters to help with the task of unloading cars and station wagons and sorting and distribshyuting the clothing

At least 50 offers of assistance came in to Queen of Angels pariSh in the heart of the ghettc and the callers were asked to organize relief efforts in their own communities and then gd the material 110 the UCCbull

FEEL GOOD TODAY

THt HOLY fATHER MISSION AiD TD THlaRIENTAL DHURDH

Thlsoolumns happiest readers are the men

Te date this second phase bas listed 35 gifts totaling $12000 Combined with the initial campaign the Building Fund now lists 233 donors who haVe pledged a total of $117()00 The Womens Club that was founded less than six months ago has initiated a long range program for the spiritual cll1shytural and financial efforts of the parish

In addition to the regular methods of aiding the parish finandally the women have conducted teen-age projects and have assisted the Mens Club fu

i bull various progrlms

~MANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

BRISTOL COUNTY

9G-OAY NOTIC~

TIMENOW OPEN ACCOUNT5PAYS o bull bull Interest Compounded Quarterly

Offices in

NORTH ATTLEBORO MAINSIFDIEILlDgt AnUBORO FAUS

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women and children who know they~r needed The days were busiest helping others are the happiest days of our livesbullbullbull Who needs you most Surprisingly God needs you - for inmiddot stance to help art abandoned orphan become e Godloving responsible adult Lepers need you (there are still 15middotmillion lepers In the world) blind children need y~u ~ndlo do we bull bullbull Here In New York we are your agents tellin you where the Holy Father says your help Is needed and channeling your help promptlyand Oafely to the people iii needbullbullbull Want to feel good right now Do without something you want but do not need and send the money instead for one of the needs below Youll feel good especialiy if your gift is big enough to mean a sacrifice to you This is your chance to do something meaningful for the world - its Gods world - while youre still alive

D Only $850 gives our priests and SIsters i south India enough Dapsone miracle tablebamp for 43 lepers for a yearl D For only $250 a week ($10 a month $120 a year) you can make sure that an abandoned child has food clothing a blanket and love Well send you a photo of the child you adopt tell you something about him (or her) and ask the Sistermiddotinmiddotcharge to keep you Informed

D Your stringless gifts in any amount ($5000 MEET $1000 $500 $100 $50 $25 $10 $5 $2)

MISSION will help the neediest wherever they are - in EMERGENCIES india and he Hol~ Land for instance

D Only you can make your will-and do It this THINK week to be sure the poor will have your help

OF even after youre gone Our legal title CATHOLIO YOURSELF NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION Also our priests

TOO will offer promptly the Masses you provide for

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DO SOMETHING

MEANINGfUL WHILE

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THE CATHOLIC

NAMIlR _

~ 8TREJa~ ~_

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NEAR EAST MISSIONS MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretary Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoo 330 Madison Avenue New York N~Y 10017 Teephone 212YUkon 6middot5840

1 - ~

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Lawrence High of Falmouth Seeksmiddot State Track Tut~e

By PETER BARTEK Norton High Coach

The Capeway Conference track season has already begun but the handwriting is already on the wall This campaign like last years will be a battle for second place Admittedly notbing Short of a miracle can or will prevent Lawrence High of Falmouth from winning its second straight conference t rae k championship But fol Coach Jim Kalperis and his trackstersmiddot the league championship is only a Gtepping stone to the State C ham p io n - ship The goal of every athletic team in the state hi to earn the title of State Champion This is not beshyyond the grasp of the Falmouth Peier Clippers If hard Bartek work and dedication are the means to this end then Falshymouth will reign as State track champions

Success does not come easily em any endeavor and success batpound

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not come easily to the Falmouth tracksters They like all accomshyplished athletes have labored long and diligently to aChieve the measure of sUccess they now enjot lt

N1)t toomiddot many yearsato Lawshyrence High was just ~nother

sChool Participating in track But the efforts of many and the dedication of one IJ1im in parshyticular has brought immeasurshyable success to the Falmouth track scene That man is Jim Kalperis

Coach Kalperis haseombined

his knowledge af track his coaching ta1EntS aiiCl tirelessenergies middotto build a virtual track dynasty The latest noteworthy feat of middotliliitnickmen came in the forinof anotheriState title

Thisti~emiddotiS th~nivision IIi

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- BC~ and Norry Races Are Close 1

lbe format formiddot the St~te reo lays has been altered this ear with competition being held at four separate locations in East- em Massachusetts Weymouth captured the Division I crown the DiviSion n title went to

Andover and Williams corralled the laurels in Division IV

The meet drew ll5 schools in each of the four diviSions with over 2000 youngsters partici shypating in all classes

Enroute to its victory Falshymouth collected 51 points comshypared to runner-up Barnstable with 22Jh

Falmouth took first place in the discus high jump pole vault 440 yard run shuttle hurdles two mile run and the 880 -

With tbis type of success in state competition it is easy to see why the Capeway Confershyence title has been practically conceded to Falmouth

Sharing the spotlight with the trackmen at Falmouth are the diamondmen The Clippers who are in the thick of the loop baseball picture were given a

Mike Rainnie tossed amp no-hittel at Barnstable to gain a 1-0 vershydict

Its still much too early to predict with any accuracy

what will happen in the Cape wai baseball race But it ap- pears nomiddotclub will dominate th~t sport like Falmouth controIa track Falmouth Dartmouth Fairhaven and Barnstable are expected to fight it out through the entire season One close to the scene summed it up best when he said anyone in the league could win this thing

Close races are also developshying in the Bristol County and Narragansett Leagues

In the BCL both Bishop Fee han of Attleboro and Durfee High of Fall River encountered a few difficulties in early season play but seem to have found the range of late The clubs will meet in an important contest today in Fall River Late inning rallies have brought both clubS from the brink of defeat to vicshytory in previous outings The victor will have to be dubbed

shot in the arm last week as the team to beat

Brennan of Feehan D~est ill le~guej

Coach Tom Maccarone of Feeshyhan has had outstanding pershyfonnances from his pitching staff but the key to the Shamshyrocks success has been shortshystop Ty Blrennan Maccarone stated before the season that Brennan was his best player and perhaps the best in the whole Bristol County Judging from Brennans perfonnance to date one of the keys to stopping Feehan is stopping the classy shortstop

Coach Joe Lewis Hilltoppers play a brand of ball similar to his counterpart TOIJl Karams basketball club Make a mistake and the Fall Riverites will capshyitalize on it Durfees first two league victories came about beshycause of opponent miscues

The Hilltoppers have been playing steady ball throughout the early part of the campaign and are improving with every game Their ability 10 avoid costly mistakes eI tbeir -n

making and timely hitting has proven a winning combination

Come what may in todays contest the BCL llace has just begun

Not to be outdone by tile larger BCL and Capeway Conshyference the Narry loop is conshyducting a torrid race of its own At the end of the first week of action Seekonk and DightonshyRehoboth were tied for the top spot Following two weeks of play Gase of Swansea Dighton and Somerset were lodged In the first position The hectic lCampaign will probably find another change in the top spot at the conclusion of this weeks activity

From Cape Cod to Attleboro competition is keener this year than it bas been in many seashysons The road to the league championship is always diffJshycult to Davigate but this year it appears as though the road win be duttered wiill meR obstacles than ill quite

cone~~ lb~aders ConcllregrnmOB War In V~~It~IlJJm

NEW YORK (NC)-Stushydent government presidents and editors of campus newsshypapers at more than 500 colleges in 49 states have conshydemned the war in Vietnam as

lt immoral and unjust and said ~~ they believe they should not

~ i~~~~~~~ii ~~~b~~ shy --_ ~ and Laymen Convinced About

-- ~-__ Vietnnm Was coordirlated by shy _ -- shy ~ Rev RObert lVi Hundley lHullent

--lt--1 at Union Th~ological Snppary --J here and an associate pltISor at -- ~I th~ Congn~gationalChllrch hn ~_ Scarsdale N-Y He saiQ most

--middot1 students who signed the stateshy~-__-~~- ~~ -___- __~_~J ment havenot been active in

FINE ARTS FESTIVAL Making preparations for Fine Arts Festival at Bishop Stang High School North

Dartmouth are Paul Leahy and Margaret Polycarpo

~ Unmiddot-ty middotIs Chr-stlTs middotW-II

P Off W I E deg I pOi degI

ontl e comes cumenlca I grlmage From United Kingdom toHoly Lar-d

anti-war activities heretoforemiddot

Solicits Support

He added

Many of the student Itl~ders who have signed this sbtcment

recognize that they may be plaeshying their future caJeers illmiddotjeopshy~rdy and conceivably are riskshying punitive action being taken

against them by the capiicioWJ V~TICAN ~ITY (NC)~TO an Fathers Arthur Payton anSel~c~ve Sfdtvice Systerh~~~

I ecumenical pilgrimage oQ its Anglican who is director 01 ~ev Yi~am Sloan Cot~~1 Jr-) way to the Holy Land Pope interchurCh travel in LOndon bull aclive memjgter of Clergymiddot ~nd Paul VI recalled the words he Among its members were An- Laymen Concerned AboutbullVI~tshyspoke on his own pilgrimage glieans CatholiCs Oithodox and nam ~1dmiddota Yal~ U~Iverslt7

there in 1964 that unity is the will of Christ

He said that it was with parshyticular pleasure that we welshycome this ecumenical pilgrimshyage from the United Kingdom to the Holy LaRd You are aboUt to follow in the fOQtSteps af God made man in the country of His birth Hill mission and His blessed death for us men and for our salvation (NiceneCreed)

Your visit caUsto mind our own unforgettable pilgrimage to the Holy Places From the grotto of Bethlehem we then declared It npw appears clearly to all that the problem of unity cannot be eluded Today this will cif Christ is imposed upon our minds and demands th~t we undertake with wisdom and love every possible way of bringing all Christi~ns t6 enjoy the great benefit and supreme honor of the unity of the middotChurch

He also recalled his plea from Bethlehem that love of Christ and of the Church should inshyspire that every future moveshyment toward meeting and reshyconciliation

The pilgrimage was led by

DIOCESAN DIREC1OR First woman to serve as a diocesan director of radio-TV is Miss Patricia Smith of Pueblo Colo who is also a photo-journalist on the staff gf Dateline Colorado m cesan weekly newspaper

Protestants not only from Great Britain but from France and Germany as well

Msgi Gianfrancesco Arrighi undersecretary of the Secretashyriat for Promoting Christian Unity and Canon John Findlow representative of Anglican Archbishop Michael Ramsey of Canterbury at the Holy See accompanied middotthe pilgrims to the Vatican

Votes Moratorium On ChuDch Building

CHICAGO (NC)-The Chicago Conference of Laymen is urging Church authorities at both the archdiocesan and parish levels to declare a moratorium on 10- cal construction projects so that funds can be channeled to projshyects in the ghetto areas

The action was taken at the second annual meeting of the

ll200-member organization The 300 in attendance passed

some 50 resolutions half of them dealing with urban problems The membership said it will seek ways to alleviate white racism especially within the Catholic Church

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ch~plaJD saId The stand taken by these

y~ung men should serve to reshymmd Americans everywhere that the war in Vietnam 1s not over that American and Vietshy

namese boys are stillmiddotdying

He continued

These middotmen of conscience should be supported by eveQY priest minister and rabbi who cares about the sanctity of conshyscience

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Jesuit Comments Di~cordNormal Amon9 Catholics

RIO DE JANEIRO (NC)shylD i SC 0 r d among Catholics after the Second Vatican Council is perfectly normal but It is not normal for proshygressive or conservative Cathoshylics to refuse to accept the dishyrectives of the council and the pope Jesuit superior general said here Father Arrupe is in Brazil for 30 days to visit Jesuit houses in the country and to preside at the May 6 to 14 meeting here of all South Amershyican Jesuit provincials

He said that his visit is inshytended to adapt the order here flo the requirements of the agshygirnameJ1to or up-dating

The most important aggiorshy namento in our day he said

is that of the mind We have to ~nsider and respect human valshyues as such This was always the Churchs doctrine but now the Church is insisting on it more We ought not to consider the Churchs interest in human values as opportunism Our in tEmtion is only to serve mankin~ better)

Press Uses Images Dudng his stay here Father

Arrupe willmiddot visit 20 local(tiesWhere Jesuits are woikilg

ts B 1Ilhele are 1000 JesUl m razl~ bull

He said that he regarded as bull joke the Brazilian presss ref-

elences to him as ~the black l T Ch Pope cussion of he angmg a1middot

Because of my cassock hemiddot

tlaid I am black but I am not the Pope ~ understand that the press has to use images to exshylI)lain concepts more effectively

Honor Editor NEW YORK (NC) ~ Robert

6lmstead news editormiddot of the National Catholic Reporter weekly newspaper published in Kansas City Mo received honshyelable mention in the 1968 Paul Tobenkin Memolial Award Competition here

-

MEET IN ST LOUIS Bishop-elect Timothy J~ Harringshyth d f th Sf W 1 ft d

ton ~ orcester e leoscllfses ~ atn t ~ l~mg

ish a panel a~ the lQ68Presi dents Conference of the Nashytional Council of cat~olic yene~l

Role of CouDcil The parish will retairi its role

as a community of worship whose members go out ihto the world and bring it theeurohristjan

message Bernatd Lyons Ghishycago public relations ~onsultant saidmiddot

The pa~ish on the other hand mustmiddot become part of the world

alound it a wHr1e$S to the whole community and fake on roles not in relation only to -its

GUIDING CHURCH IN UNITED STATES More than 200 members of the hierarchy participated in the decisions of the annual Spring meeting of the National Conference

Predict Important Authorities Emphcisixe

WASHINGTON (NC)-Three members but to the world in authorities on parish life have agreed here that the parish basic organiz~tion iil the Church will have to undergo some lmportant changes if the ChUlch is goingto meet th~ needs of societyin the 20th censhy tury

But just how the parislt is going to change ~s far from setshytied they ~onceqed in a dis

which it exists Father John Corriga~ of this city a directozlt of the Nationalmiddot Liturgical Con ference asserted

Whatever it does the parish must becomemiddot a vital force in the cOlJlrnunity around it Father Geno Baroill execu~ive secretary Washington archdi

ocesan Office ~f Urpan Affairs declared

RIot ComparlmiddotsoDmiddot

Father Baroni whose work blings hini into constant contactmiddot with Negro problems in WaSh- laymen will inhibit soCial ac- ington saw~ astriking par~illel tion but added later this is a between the Churchs needs and risk wltirth taking

-those of thebiack ghetto Right now~ he observed - one of the mos~ urgent prob Society to Consider lems in the ghetto is that Of Sh fmiddot

community organization We 5 emnary I t arll learl1ing that pe~ple ri~t be CARTHAGENA CNC) _ The

cause they have beel- cut o~t ofSocieiy of the Precious Blood meaningful participation in so- ciety

In the ~hurch laymen have been cut out of this participa tion also They dont riot but they dont really concern them selves with the concerns of the Church unle~s thy ~ave t~i~ sense of partlclpatlcm he saId

New Resndemlce For US PIiDests

ROME (NC)-A new resident house for American priests working In the offices of the Roman Curia (the Churchs censhytral administrative offices) or on assignment in Rome for the US bishops has been opened to provide adequate economical lodgings and community surshyroundings

The residence called Villa Stritch after the late Samuel Cardinal Stritch of Chicago is composed of two apartment comshyplexes and is designed to meet the immediate needs of US priests already at work in Rome and to anticipate future housing needs as internationalization of the Roman Curia continues

In addition to American$ resshyident in Rome the villa is also expected to house priests on special assignments for the bishshyops in Rome bishops who come to Rome for work on var~ous

Church commissions or otherVatican offices or for such events as the synod of bishops and ma-Jor congresses In short it is hoped that the new villa wilL

will study the possibilities and implications of moving the or ders main theological school flOm St Charles Seminary here in Ohio to a university campus or urban center and of buildingmiddot an adequate program at St QJ1arles The Carthagena SChOt

has been the societys maJor seminary for over 100 years

Major superiors and middotelected delegates representing the soshycietys Cincinnati province voted to fOlm a committee to carry out the study during a provincial chapter meeting held at St Charles at which modernizing the training of candidates for the priesthood in the society Vas tqe chief subject of discussion

middotA report of the meeting in- dicated that the delegates were aware of trends in the Church 1-way from comparative isloationmiddot of seminary establishments to university campuses and urban centers

SPECIAL RATES FOR

Smiddot I O dcho0 utings an Picnics

of Catholic Bishops in St Louis last week An enormoUis amount of homework on position papers was approved ~

the Bishops NC Photo

I see the parish councils and their recognition of freedom asneceSsai-y to do this he added

Worth Risk They agreed they sha~e abull

feiling opound un~asin~ss _middotaboti~ these cOuncIls relatively new amQJ1g Cathol~cs pa~icula~lY their attitude t~ward SOCI~ issues

d Father Baroni sal he has ~

leery feeling about parishcouncils He declared there is

the danger that conservative

contribute to increased racial understanding and involvement

fur the people of the diOcese

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Parishes

Lyons author of th~ book middotParish Councils - Renewin the Parish Community said be

middotwas somewhat more optiniistici I donit think we are going to

solve these problems by 10~~1 at the dangers exclusively hie commented

Diocese to Discuss C~m~issi~n Rep~rt

LANSING (NC) - Catholics thoughout t~e Lansing diocese will participate in forums and home discussion groups 1as~ on the report of the National Acf visory Commission on Civil Disshyorders The program which begaa with public forums in six citie on April 29 was planned ~

middot three diocesanmiddot agencies-the Ofshyfice of Social and Community Service the Office of Renewal Through Vatican II and the adult education division of tne Education Department It was initiated in response to an appeal made by Bishop Alexshyander Zaleski The day following the death of Dr Martin Luther King Bishop Zaleski asked dishyocesan directors to plan an imshymediate program designed to

meetmg of heBIShops n erence WIt ISop e e~ros be a center of communi~y life CONTACT MANAGER - LINCOLN PARK of BrowI)svIlle Texas and fOtmiddotmer chancellor of the Fall for bishops arid priests with spe- 9996984 636-2744 ~iver Di~~~~lt __~gt -cilla~~gnrn~iitS~~o~~~ ~ Oc)QI~OC~)OQCIOC)oOOOCgtoc)OQltjIOcXllOOOCgtOC)oOC~)OIL)QOCgtOCPOoO

Page 18: 05.02.68

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The Parish Parade New Jersey Suburbanites of All Faiths Aid Ghetto Arson Victims HOLY NAME OUR LADY OF ANGELS

FALL RIVER FALL RIVER NEWARK (NC) - Priest~ the citys anti-poverty agenCll Contemporary music will acshy

company the 11 oclock Mass Sunday morning May 5

First communicants will reshyeeive at a special Mass at 9 Saturday morning May 25 Mayshycrowning ceremonies will be held Sunday May 26 The Womens Guild announces

fts installation banquet for Tuesday night May 7 Tickets are available from all members

Catholic Charities collectors are asked to meet in the parish school at 730 tonight for dist~shyOOtion of contact cards

lIT MARGARET BUZZARDS BAY

SS Margltlret-Mary Guild of Buzzards Bay and Onset will Sponsor a rummage sale from 9 1lo 1 Saturday May 18 at St Margarets kindergarten hall Main Street Buzzards Bay Do iaations may be left at the hall during mornings of the precedshying week Chairman for the ~vent is Mrs William Brady

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild will reshyieive Holy CommuniOn in a bodyaf the815 Mass 00 Sunshydity morning A breakfast will follow in the school hall The icuest speaker will beRt Rev Anthony M Gomes Mrs Arthur Belanger gpiIshyftual chairman of the Guild is _ charge of the breakfast

81 JOSEPH AIRHAVEN Nominations and elections of officers for the Association of file Sacred middotHearts will be held at 630 on Sunday evening in the rectory ~ Dues are now payable to the tleasurer Mrs Jeannette Dushylude

IACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

Preprimary registration will be held from 2 to 4 Sunday afternoon May 5 in 1he school office Some openings also exist in first sixth and eighth grades

The CCD adult discussion group will meet at 8 Sunday night in the home of Mr and Mrs J G N Bonneau

So Easton Club Pledges

$5000 The newly formed Womens

Club of Holy Cross Parish So Easton has pledged $5000 toward the building fund acshycording to an announcement made today by Mrs Arthur J L Peterson the organizations first president The pledge will be paid at the rate of $1000 per year

This pledge has been added to The Second Mile Building Fund campaign now in progress under the chairmanship of Robshyert Dray and Louis A Lyne serving as director

The Altar Boys will sponSor a cake sale Sunday May 26

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a Communion breakshyfast following 8 oclock Mass this Sunday morning Installashytion of officers will be held at a banquet following 5 oclock Mass Sunday afternoon May 26

Children of Mary will attend a Communion breakfast followshying 8 oclock Mass Sunday mornshying May 12

The annual blessing of autoshymobiles will take place at 130 Sunday afternoon May 26 in the church parking lot

ST GEORGE WESTP~RT

A Maybasket whist is planned for 8 Saturday night May 4 hi

the school hall on Route 177 PrOCeeds will benefit the school fund and table and attendance prizes will be awarded

STMARY NORTH ATTLEBORO Parishioners are planning a

testimonial honoring Msgr Ed- ward B Booth Pastor at 7

Sunday night May 26 Tickets are now available

Christians Jews Combat Racism

NEW YORK (NC)The Nashytional Confeferice of Christians and Jews has launched a nation wide educational effort to conshyfront the problem of white racism in middotAmerica agency headquarters here announced

The NCeJ has given top prl~

ority to finding ways toimpleshyment the recommendations of the National Advisory Commisshysion on Civil Disorders The commission blamed white racshyism as the underlying cause of urban unrest

In a progress re-port to the NCCJ board of trustees meeting here Dr Samuel L Gandy dean of the Ho~ard University school of religion Washington D C and chairman of the NCCJ nashytional program ad7isory comshymittee stated

NCCJs 130 professional staff members in 70 cities are curshy~ntly engaged in developing programs with police business and labor leaders parents and teachers clergy and with youth and all of the various institutes workshops and dialogues which are being conducted are emphashysizing the findings of this reshyport

Dr Gandy quoted to the board a letter to President Lynshydon B Johnson from Dr Stershyling W Brown NCCJ presishydent in which the agency head said that NCCJ embraced the commission report as a sancshytion and guideline for our efshyforts in the private sectol

111I1111I11111111111111I1111I11I1111I1111111111I111111I111111I11I11I11I11I1111I111111111111I11111111I1111I111111I11I11I111111I111II11111111111D

ministers nuns and lay people of all denominations pitched in here to try and make Easter a dltty of joy for the more than 600 people burned out of their homes in a waveof arson which erupted in this city following the funeral of Dr Martin Luther King

Concerned citizens of surshyrounding suburban communishyties who only a week before had participated in a massive Wa 1k for Understanding through ghetto streets respondshyedspontaneously to the need

Without anymiddot special appeal going out people of all denomshyinations call e 11 inner-city churches to ask what they could do and they were directed to the United Community Corp

NEW LEADER Sister Rosemary Markham SSS is the new Superior General of the Sisters of Social Ser-

vice a Los Angeles based community engaged in social and catechetical work with missions in Formosa and Mexico NCPhoto

Christians Jews Discuss Diamiddotlogue

SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-The question of whether JewishshyChristian dialogue should be by speech or by action was the theme that ran through the talks and discussions at a Conference on Interfaith Dialogue sponsored by Catholic Protestant and Jewshyish organizations at Seton Hall University here

Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum director of interreligious affairs for the American Jewish Comshymittee was generally in favor of the action approach saying that the dialogue must avoid beshycoming a convenient conspiracy on the part of middle-class whites to buffer themselves against the realities of the inner city

Father Edward H Flannery executive secretary of the U S Catholic Bishops Secretariat for Catholic-Jewish Relations said that while he would be the last to cut off action in the realm of social justice and charity he also felt that Jews and Christians could not effectively present a common ftont to society until they have straightened out their own affairs

Father Flannery referred to statements that the -ChristianshyJewish dialogue had died in the wake of last Junes six-day war between Israel and Arab nations He said that it was not so much a matter of its dying but of its not having been tried yet

Over Holy Thursday Good Friday and Holy Saturday more than 10 tons of food and clothing were donated and the UCC staff was swamped with the task of sorting the materiaL

With schools and church ofshyfices closed priests and nuns made their way individually and in groups to UCC headshy

quarters to help with the task of unloading cars and station wagons and sorting and distribshyuting the clothing

At least 50 offers of assistance came in to Queen of Angels pariSh in the heart of the ghettc and the callers were asked to organize relief efforts in their own communities and then gd the material 110 the UCCbull

FEEL GOOD TODAY

THt HOLY fATHER MISSION AiD TD THlaRIENTAL DHURDH

Thlsoolumns happiest readers are the men

Te date this second phase bas listed 35 gifts totaling $12000 Combined with the initial campaign the Building Fund now lists 233 donors who haVe pledged a total of $117()00 The Womens Club that was founded less than six months ago has initiated a long range program for the spiritual cll1shytural and financial efforts of the parish

In addition to the regular methods of aiding the parish finandally the women have conducted teen-age projects and have assisted the Mens Club fu

i bull various progrlms

~MANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

BRISTOL COUNTY

9G-OAY NOTIC~

TIMENOW OPEN ACCOUNT5PAYS o bull bull Interest Compounded Quarterly

Offices in

NORTH ATTLEBORO MAINSIFDIEILlDgt AnUBORO FAUS

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women and children who know they~r needed The days were busiest helping others are the happiest days of our livesbullbullbull Who needs you most Surprisingly God needs you - for inmiddot stance to help art abandoned orphan become e Godloving responsible adult Lepers need you (there are still 15middotmillion lepers In the world) blind children need y~u ~ndlo do we bull bullbull Here In New York we are your agents tellin you where the Holy Father says your help Is needed and channeling your help promptlyand Oafely to the people iii needbullbullbull Want to feel good right now Do without something you want but do not need and send the money instead for one of the needs below Youll feel good especialiy if your gift is big enough to mean a sacrifice to you This is your chance to do something meaningful for the world - its Gods world - while youre still alive

D Only $850 gives our priests and SIsters i south India enough Dapsone miracle tablebamp for 43 lepers for a yearl D For only $250 a week ($10 a month $120 a year) you can make sure that an abandoned child has food clothing a blanket and love Well send you a photo of the child you adopt tell you something about him (or her) and ask the Sistermiddotinmiddotcharge to keep you Informed

D Your stringless gifts in any amount ($5000 MEET $1000 $500 $100 $50 $25 $10 $5 $2)

MISSION will help the neediest wherever they are - in EMERGENCIES india and he Hol~ Land for instance

D Only you can make your will-and do It this THINK week to be sure the poor will have your help

OF even after youre gone Our legal title CATHOLIO YOURSELF NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION Also our priests

TOO will offer promptly the Masses you provide for

------~~-----co---GDear ENCLOSlD PLEASE FIND $ _ I MonsIgnor Nolan FOR _

DO SOMETHING

MEANINGfUL WHILE

YOURE STILL ALIVE

HELP LEPERS

CHILDREN NEED

YOU

Please

return coupon with your offerillB

THE CATHOLIC

NAMIlR _

~ 8TREJa~ ~_

OITY 8TATI_IIP COD

NBAR lAST WILPARI AbullbullaaIATID

NEAR EAST MISSIONS MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretary Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoo 330 Madison Avenue New York N~Y 10017 Teephone 212YUkon 6middot5840

1 - ~

Base~C~~~ptitfonKe~nlt i~t ~ bull bull bull ~ bullbull ~ bullbull bull bull c ~ ~~ ltgt J

Lawrence High of Falmouth Seeksmiddot State Track Tut~e

By PETER BARTEK Norton High Coach

The Capeway Conference track season has already begun but the handwriting is already on the wall This campaign like last years will be a battle for second place Admittedly notbing Short of a miracle can or will prevent Lawrence High of Falmouth from winning its second straight conference t rae k championship But fol Coach Jim Kalperis and his trackstersmiddot the league championship is only a Gtepping stone to the State C ham p io n - ship The goal of every athletic team in the state hi to earn the title of State Champion This is not beshyyond the grasp of the Falmouth Peier Clippers If hard Bartek work and dedication are the means to this end then Falshymouth will reign as State track champions

Success does not come easily em any endeavor and success batpound

j bullbullbull bullbull bull J bull

not come easily to the Falmouth tracksters They like all accomshyplished athletes have labored long and diligently to aChieve the measure of sUccess they now enjot lt

N1)t toomiddot many yearsato Lawshyrence High was just ~nother

sChool Participating in track But the efforts of many and the dedication of one IJ1im in parshyticular has brought immeasurshyable success to the Falmouth track scene That man is Jim Kalperis

Coach Kalperis haseombined

his knowledge af track his coaching ta1EntS aiiCl tirelessenergies middotto build a virtual track dynasty The latest noteworthy feat of middotliliitnickmen came in the forinof anotheriState title

Thisti~emiddotiS th~nivision IIi

~teRelayCha-D1P~~pshjp bull

1

- BC~ and Norry Races Are Close 1

lbe format formiddot the St~te reo lays has been altered this ear with competition being held at four separate locations in East- em Massachusetts Weymouth captured the Division I crown the DiviSion n title went to

Andover and Williams corralled the laurels in Division IV

The meet drew ll5 schools in each of the four diviSions with over 2000 youngsters partici shypating in all classes

Enroute to its victory Falshymouth collected 51 points comshypared to runner-up Barnstable with 22Jh

Falmouth took first place in the discus high jump pole vault 440 yard run shuttle hurdles two mile run and the 880 -

With tbis type of success in state competition it is easy to see why the Capeway Confershyence title has been practically conceded to Falmouth

Sharing the spotlight with the trackmen at Falmouth are the diamondmen The Clippers who are in the thick of the loop baseball picture were given a

Mike Rainnie tossed amp no-hittel at Barnstable to gain a 1-0 vershydict

Its still much too early to predict with any accuracy

what will happen in the Cape wai baseball race But it ap- pears nomiddotclub will dominate th~t sport like Falmouth controIa track Falmouth Dartmouth Fairhaven and Barnstable are expected to fight it out through the entire season One close to the scene summed it up best when he said anyone in the league could win this thing

Close races are also developshying in the Bristol County and Narragansett Leagues

In the BCL both Bishop Fee han of Attleboro and Durfee High of Fall River encountered a few difficulties in early season play but seem to have found the range of late The clubs will meet in an important contest today in Fall River Late inning rallies have brought both clubS from the brink of defeat to vicshytory in previous outings The victor will have to be dubbed

shot in the arm last week as the team to beat

Brennan of Feehan D~est ill le~guej

Coach Tom Maccarone of Feeshyhan has had outstanding pershyfonnances from his pitching staff but the key to the Shamshyrocks success has been shortshystop Ty Blrennan Maccarone stated before the season that Brennan was his best player and perhaps the best in the whole Bristol County Judging from Brennans perfonnance to date one of the keys to stopping Feehan is stopping the classy shortstop

Coach Joe Lewis Hilltoppers play a brand of ball similar to his counterpart TOIJl Karams basketball club Make a mistake and the Fall Riverites will capshyitalize on it Durfees first two league victories came about beshycause of opponent miscues

The Hilltoppers have been playing steady ball throughout the early part of the campaign and are improving with every game Their ability 10 avoid costly mistakes eI tbeir -n

making and timely hitting has proven a winning combination

Come what may in todays contest the BCL llace has just begun

Not to be outdone by tile larger BCL and Capeway Conshyference the Narry loop is conshyducting a torrid race of its own At the end of the first week of action Seekonk and DightonshyRehoboth were tied for the top spot Following two weeks of play Gase of Swansea Dighton and Somerset were lodged In the first position The hectic lCampaign will probably find another change in the top spot at the conclusion of this weeks activity

From Cape Cod to Attleboro competition is keener this year than it bas been in many seashysons The road to the league championship is always diffJshycult to Davigate but this year it appears as though the road win be duttered wiill meR obstacles than ill quite

cone~~ lb~aders ConcllregrnmOB War In V~~It~IlJJm

NEW YORK (NC)-Stushydent government presidents and editors of campus newsshypapers at more than 500 colleges in 49 states have conshydemned the war in Vietnam as

lt immoral and unjust and said ~~ they believe they should not

~ i~~~~~~~ii ~~~b~~ shy --_ ~ and Laymen Convinced About

-- ~-__ Vietnnm Was coordirlated by shy _ -- shy ~ Rev RObert lVi Hundley lHullent

--lt--1 at Union Th~ological Snppary --J here and an associate pltISor at -- ~I th~ Congn~gationalChllrch hn ~_ Scarsdale N-Y He saiQ most

--middot1 students who signed the stateshy~-__-~~- ~~ -___- __~_~J ment havenot been active in

FINE ARTS FESTIVAL Making preparations for Fine Arts Festival at Bishop Stang High School North

Dartmouth are Paul Leahy and Margaret Polycarpo

~ Unmiddot-ty middotIs Chr-stlTs middotW-II

P Off W I E deg I pOi degI

ontl e comes cumenlca I grlmage From United Kingdom toHoly Lar-d

anti-war activities heretoforemiddot

Solicits Support

He added

Many of the student Itl~ders who have signed this sbtcment

recognize that they may be plaeshying their future caJeers illmiddotjeopshy~rdy and conceivably are riskshying punitive action being taken

against them by the capiicioWJ V~TICAN ~ITY (NC)~TO an Fathers Arthur Payton anSel~c~ve Sfdtvice Systerh~~~

I ecumenical pilgrimage oQ its Anglican who is director 01 ~ev Yi~am Sloan Cot~~1 Jr-) way to the Holy Land Pope interchurCh travel in LOndon bull aclive memjgter of Clergymiddot ~nd Paul VI recalled the words he Among its members were An- Laymen Concerned AboutbullVI~tshyspoke on his own pilgrimage glieans CatholiCs Oithodox and nam ~1dmiddota Yal~ U~Iverslt7

there in 1964 that unity is the will of Christ

He said that it was with parshyticular pleasure that we welshycome this ecumenical pilgrimshyage from the United Kingdom to the Holy LaRd You are aboUt to follow in the fOQtSteps af God made man in the country of His birth Hill mission and His blessed death for us men and for our salvation (NiceneCreed)

Your visit caUsto mind our own unforgettable pilgrimage to the Holy Places From the grotto of Bethlehem we then declared It npw appears clearly to all that the problem of unity cannot be eluded Today this will cif Christ is imposed upon our minds and demands th~t we undertake with wisdom and love every possible way of bringing all Christi~ns t6 enjoy the great benefit and supreme honor of the unity of the middotChurch

He also recalled his plea from Bethlehem that love of Christ and of the Church should inshyspire that every future moveshyment toward meeting and reshyconciliation

The pilgrimage was led by

DIOCESAN DIREC1OR First woman to serve as a diocesan director of radio-TV is Miss Patricia Smith of Pueblo Colo who is also a photo-journalist on the staff gf Dateline Colorado m cesan weekly newspaper

Protestants not only from Great Britain but from France and Germany as well

Msgi Gianfrancesco Arrighi undersecretary of the Secretashyriat for Promoting Christian Unity and Canon John Findlow representative of Anglican Archbishop Michael Ramsey of Canterbury at the Holy See accompanied middotthe pilgrims to the Vatican

Votes Moratorium On ChuDch Building

CHICAGO (NC)-The Chicago Conference of Laymen is urging Church authorities at both the archdiocesan and parish levels to declare a moratorium on 10- cal construction projects so that funds can be channeled to projshyects in the ghetto areas

The action was taken at the second annual meeting of the

ll200-member organization The 300 in attendance passed

some 50 resolutions half of them dealing with urban problems The membership said it will seek ways to alleviate white racism especially within the Catholic Church

ANTONE S FEND JR DISPENSING OPTICIAN

Proscriptions for Eyoglasses

Filled

Office Houri 900500

except Wad

Frl Eve Dy ApptsaturdaY-l-3

197 BANK ST COR PURCHASE Sl OPP f R TRUST PARKING LOT 678-11412

ch~plaJD saId The stand taken by these

y~ung men should serve to reshymmd Americans everywhere that the war in Vietnam 1s not over that American and Vietshy

namese boys are stillmiddotdying

He continued

These middotmen of conscience should be supported by eveQY priest minister and rabbi who cares about the sanctity of conshyscience

ELECTRCAL Contractors

944 County St New Bedford -MONif~l 17 CH~R(H

B(Jn~~1r ~MVEln~ES

PRINur bIMD ~ MAILED

Write or ~~cUle 672-1322

234 Second SOri0et - Fall River

WEBB Olt (OM~ANY ~ TEXACO FUEL O~lLS

DOMESTIC amp HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERS

Sales - Service -Installation MAIN OFFICE - 10 DURFEE STREET FALL RIVER

Phone 675middot7484

bull

Jesuit Comments Di~cordNormal Amon9 Catholics

RIO DE JANEIRO (NC)shylD i SC 0 r d among Catholics after the Second Vatican Council is perfectly normal but It is not normal for proshygressive or conservative Cathoshylics to refuse to accept the dishyrectives of the council and the pope Jesuit superior general said here Father Arrupe is in Brazil for 30 days to visit Jesuit houses in the country and to preside at the May 6 to 14 meeting here of all South Amershyican Jesuit provincials

He said that his visit is inshytended to adapt the order here flo the requirements of the agshygirnameJ1to or up-dating

The most important aggiorshy namento in our day he said

is that of the mind We have to ~nsider and respect human valshyues as such This was always the Churchs doctrine but now the Church is insisting on it more We ought not to consider the Churchs interest in human values as opportunism Our in tEmtion is only to serve mankin~ better)

Press Uses Images Dudng his stay here Father

Arrupe willmiddot visit 20 local(tiesWhere Jesuits are woikilg

ts B 1Ilhele are 1000 JesUl m razl~ bull

He said that he regarded as bull joke the Brazilian presss ref-

elences to him as ~the black l T Ch Pope cussion of he angmg a1middot

Because of my cassock hemiddot

tlaid I am black but I am not the Pope ~ understand that the press has to use images to exshylI)lain concepts more effectively

Honor Editor NEW YORK (NC) ~ Robert

6lmstead news editormiddot of the National Catholic Reporter weekly newspaper published in Kansas City Mo received honshyelable mention in the 1968 Paul Tobenkin Memolial Award Competition here

-

MEET IN ST LOUIS Bishop-elect Timothy J~ Harringshyth d f th Sf W 1 ft d

ton ~ orcester e leoscllfses ~ atn t ~ l~mg

ish a panel a~ the lQ68Presi dents Conference of the Nashytional Council of cat~olic yene~l

Role of CouDcil The parish will retairi its role

as a community of worship whose members go out ihto the world and bring it theeurohristjan

message Bernatd Lyons Ghishycago public relations ~onsultant saidmiddot

The pa~ish on the other hand mustmiddot become part of the world

alound it a wHr1e$S to the whole community and fake on roles not in relation only to -its

GUIDING CHURCH IN UNITED STATES More than 200 members of the hierarchy participated in the decisions of the annual Spring meeting of the National Conference

Predict Important Authorities Emphcisixe

WASHINGTON (NC)-Three members but to the world in authorities on parish life have agreed here that the parish basic organiz~tion iil the Church will have to undergo some lmportant changes if the ChUlch is goingto meet th~ needs of societyin the 20th censhy tury

But just how the parislt is going to change ~s far from setshytied they ~onceqed in a dis

which it exists Father John Corriga~ of this city a directozlt of the Nationalmiddot Liturgical Con ference asserted

Whatever it does the parish must becomemiddot a vital force in the cOlJlrnunity around it Father Geno Baroill execu~ive secretary Washington archdi

ocesan Office ~f Urpan Affairs declared

RIot ComparlmiddotsoDmiddot

Father Baroni whose work blings hini into constant contactmiddot with Negro problems in WaSh- laymen will inhibit soCial ac- ington saw~ astriking par~illel tion but added later this is a between the Churchs needs and risk wltirth taking

-those of thebiack ghetto Right now~ he observed - one of the mos~ urgent prob Society to Consider lems in the ghetto is that Of Sh fmiddot

community organization We 5 emnary I t arll learl1ing that pe~ple ri~t be CARTHAGENA CNC) _ The

cause they have beel- cut o~t ofSocieiy of the Precious Blood meaningful participation in so- ciety

In the ~hurch laymen have been cut out of this participa tion also They dont riot but they dont really concern them selves with the concerns of the Church unle~s thy ~ave t~i~ sense of partlclpatlcm he saId

New Resndemlce For US PIiDests

ROME (NC)-A new resident house for American priests working In the offices of the Roman Curia (the Churchs censhytral administrative offices) or on assignment in Rome for the US bishops has been opened to provide adequate economical lodgings and community surshyroundings

The residence called Villa Stritch after the late Samuel Cardinal Stritch of Chicago is composed of two apartment comshyplexes and is designed to meet the immediate needs of US priests already at work in Rome and to anticipate future housing needs as internationalization of the Roman Curia continues

In addition to American$ resshyident in Rome the villa is also expected to house priests on special assignments for the bishshyops in Rome bishops who come to Rome for work on var~ous

Church commissions or otherVatican offices or for such events as the synod of bishops and ma-Jor congresses In short it is hoped that the new villa wilL

will study the possibilities and implications of moving the or ders main theological school flOm St Charles Seminary here in Ohio to a university campus or urban center and of buildingmiddot an adequate program at St QJ1arles The Carthagena SChOt

has been the societys maJor seminary for over 100 years

Major superiors and middotelected delegates representing the soshycietys Cincinnati province voted to fOlm a committee to carry out the study during a provincial chapter meeting held at St Charles at which modernizing the training of candidates for the priesthood in the society Vas tqe chief subject of discussion

middotA report of the meeting in- dicated that the delegates were aware of trends in the Church 1-way from comparative isloationmiddot of seminary establishments to university campuses and urban centers

SPECIAL RATES FOR

Smiddot I O dcho0 utings an Picnics

of Catholic Bishops in St Louis last week An enormoUis amount of homework on position papers was approved ~

the Bishops NC Photo

I see the parish councils and their recognition of freedom asneceSsai-y to do this he added

Worth Risk They agreed they sha~e abull

feiling opound un~asin~ss _middotaboti~ these cOuncIls relatively new amQJ1g Cathol~cs pa~icula~lY their attitude t~ward SOCI~ issues

d Father Baroni sal he has ~

leery feeling about parishcouncils He declared there is

the danger that conservative

contribute to increased racial understanding and involvement

fur the people of the diOcese

Montie Plumbing amp Heating Co Over 35 Years

of Satisfied Service Reg Master Plumber 7023

JOSEPH RAPOSA JR 806 NO MAIN SYREIET

Fall River 675-7497

Parishes

Lyons author of th~ book middotParish Councils - Renewin the Parish Community said be

middotwas somewhat more optiniistici I donit think we are going to

solve these problems by 10~~1 at the dangers exclusively hie commented

Diocese to Discuss C~m~issi~n Rep~rt

LANSING (NC) - Catholics thoughout t~e Lansing diocese will participate in forums and home discussion groups 1as~ on the report of the National Acf visory Commission on Civil Disshyorders The program which begaa with public forums in six citie on April 29 was planned ~

middot three diocesanmiddot agencies-the Ofshyfice of Social and Community Service the Office of Renewal Through Vatican II and the adult education division of tne Education Department It was initiated in response to an appeal made by Bishop Alexshyander Zaleski The day following the death of Dr Martin Luther King Bishop Zaleski asked dishyocesan directors to plan an imshymediate program designed to

meetmg of heBIShops n erence WIt ISop e e~ros be a center of communi~y life CONTACT MANAGER - LINCOLN PARK of BrowI)svIlle Texas and fOtmiddotmer chancellor of the Fall for bishops arid priests with spe- 9996984 636-2744 ~iver Di~~~~lt __~gt -cilla~~gnrn~iitS~~o~~~ ~ Oc)QI~OC~)OQCIOC)oOOOCgtoc)OQltjIOcXllOOOCgtOC)oOC~)OIL)QOCgtOCPOoO

Page 19: 05.02.68

Base~C~~~ptitfonKe~nlt i~t ~ bull bull bull ~ bullbull ~ bullbull bull bull c ~ ~~ ltgt J

Lawrence High of Falmouth Seeksmiddot State Track Tut~e

By PETER BARTEK Norton High Coach

The Capeway Conference track season has already begun but the handwriting is already on the wall This campaign like last years will be a battle for second place Admittedly notbing Short of a miracle can or will prevent Lawrence High of Falmouth from winning its second straight conference t rae k championship But fol Coach Jim Kalperis and his trackstersmiddot the league championship is only a Gtepping stone to the State C ham p io n - ship The goal of every athletic team in the state hi to earn the title of State Champion This is not beshyyond the grasp of the Falmouth Peier Clippers If hard Bartek work and dedication are the means to this end then Falshymouth will reign as State track champions

Success does not come easily em any endeavor and success batpound

j bullbullbull bullbull bull J bull

not come easily to the Falmouth tracksters They like all accomshyplished athletes have labored long and diligently to aChieve the measure of sUccess they now enjot lt

N1)t toomiddot many yearsato Lawshyrence High was just ~nother

sChool Participating in track But the efforts of many and the dedication of one IJ1im in parshyticular has brought immeasurshyable success to the Falmouth track scene That man is Jim Kalperis

Coach Kalperis haseombined

his knowledge af track his coaching ta1EntS aiiCl tirelessenergies middotto build a virtual track dynasty The latest noteworthy feat of middotliliitnickmen came in the forinof anotheriState title

Thisti~emiddotiS th~nivision IIi

~teRelayCha-D1P~~pshjp bull

1

- BC~ and Norry Races Are Close 1

lbe format formiddot the St~te reo lays has been altered this ear with competition being held at four separate locations in East- em Massachusetts Weymouth captured the Division I crown the DiviSion n title went to

Andover and Williams corralled the laurels in Division IV

The meet drew ll5 schools in each of the four diviSions with over 2000 youngsters partici shypating in all classes

Enroute to its victory Falshymouth collected 51 points comshypared to runner-up Barnstable with 22Jh

Falmouth took first place in the discus high jump pole vault 440 yard run shuttle hurdles two mile run and the 880 -

With tbis type of success in state competition it is easy to see why the Capeway Confershyence title has been practically conceded to Falmouth

Sharing the spotlight with the trackmen at Falmouth are the diamondmen The Clippers who are in the thick of the loop baseball picture were given a

Mike Rainnie tossed amp no-hittel at Barnstable to gain a 1-0 vershydict

Its still much too early to predict with any accuracy

what will happen in the Cape wai baseball race But it ap- pears nomiddotclub will dominate th~t sport like Falmouth controIa track Falmouth Dartmouth Fairhaven and Barnstable are expected to fight it out through the entire season One close to the scene summed it up best when he said anyone in the league could win this thing

Close races are also developshying in the Bristol County and Narragansett Leagues

In the BCL both Bishop Fee han of Attleboro and Durfee High of Fall River encountered a few difficulties in early season play but seem to have found the range of late The clubs will meet in an important contest today in Fall River Late inning rallies have brought both clubS from the brink of defeat to vicshytory in previous outings The victor will have to be dubbed

shot in the arm last week as the team to beat

Brennan of Feehan D~est ill le~guej

Coach Tom Maccarone of Feeshyhan has had outstanding pershyfonnances from his pitching staff but the key to the Shamshyrocks success has been shortshystop Ty Blrennan Maccarone stated before the season that Brennan was his best player and perhaps the best in the whole Bristol County Judging from Brennans perfonnance to date one of the keys to stopping Feehan is stopping the classy shortstop

Coach Joe Lewis Hilltoppers play a brand of ball similar to his counterpart TOIJl Karams basketball club Make a mistake and the Fall Riverites will capshyitalize on it Durfees first two league victories came about beshycause of opponent miscues

The Hilltoppers have been playing steady ball throughout the early part of the campaign and are improving with every game Their ability 10 avoid costly mistakes eI tbeir -n

making and timely hitting has proven a winning combination

Come what may in todays contest the BCL llace has just begun

Not to be outdone by tile larger BCL and Capeway Conshyference the Narry loop is conshyducting a torrid race of its own At the end of the first week of action Seekonk and DightonshyRehoboth were tied for the top spot Following two weeks of play Gase of Swansea Dighton and Somerset were lodged In the first position The hectic lCampaign will probably find another change in the top spot at the conclusion of this weeks activity

From Cape Cod to Attleboro competition is keener this year than it bas been in many seashysons The road to the league championship is always diffJshycult to Davigate but this year it appears as though the road win be duttered wiill meR obstacles than ill quite

cone~~ lb~aders ConcllregrnmOB War In V~~It~IlJJm

NEW YORK (NC)-Stushydent government presidents and editors of campus newsshypapers at more than 500 colleges in 49 states have conshydemned the war in Vietnam as

lt immoral and unjust and said ~~ they believe they should not

~ i~~~~~~~ii ~~~b~~ shy --_ ~ and Laymen Convinced About

-- ~-__ Vietnnm Was coordirlated by shy _ -- shy ~ Rev RObert lVi Hundley lHullent

--lt--1 at Union Th~ological Snppary --J here and an associate pltISor at -- ~I th~ Congn~gationalChllrch hn ~_ Scarsdale N-Y He saiQ most

--middot1 students who signed the stateshy~-__-~~- ~~ -___- __~_~J ment havenot been active in

FINE ARTS FESTIVAL Making preparations for Fine Arts Festival at Bishop Stang High School North

Dartmouth are Paul Leahy and Margaret Polycarpo

~ Unmiddot-ty middotIs Chr-stlTs middotW-II

P Off W I E deg I pOi degI

ontl e comes cumenlca I grlmage From United Kingdom toHoly Lar-d

anti-war activities heretoforemiddot

Solicits Support

He added

Many of the student Itl~ders who have signed this sbtcment

recognize that they may be plaeshying their future caJeers illmiddotjeopshy~rdy and conceivably are riskshying punitive action being taken

against them by the capiicioWJ V~TICAN ~ITY (NC)~TO an Fathers Arthur Payton anSel~c~ve Sfdtvice Systerh~~~

I ecumenical pilgrimage oQ its Anglican who is director 01 ~ev Yi~am Sloan Cot~~1 Jr-) way to the Holy Land Pope interchurCh travel in LOndon bull aclive memjgter of Clergymiddot ~nd Paul VI recalled the words he Among its members were An- Laymen Concerned AboutbullVI~tshyspoke on his own pilgrimage glieans CatholiCs Oithodox and nam ~1dmiddota Yal~ U~Iverslt7

there in 1964 that unity is the will of Christ

He said that it was with parshyticular pleasure that we welshycome this ecumenical pilgrimshyage from the United Kingdom to the Holy LaRd You are aboUt to follow in the fOQtSteps af God made man in the country of His birth Hill mission and His blessed death for us men and for our salvation (NiceneCreed)

Your visit caUsto mind our own unforgettable pilgrimage to the Holy Places From the grotto of Bethlehem we then declared It npw appears clearly to all that the problem of unity cannot be eluded Today this will cif Christ is imposed upon our minds and demands th~t we undertake with wisdom and love every possible way of bringing all Christi~ns t6 enjoy the great benefit and supreme honor of the unity of the middotChurch

He also recalled his plea from Bethlehem that love of Christ and of the Church should inshyspire that every future moveshyment toward meeting and reshyconciliation

The pilgrimage was led by

DIOCESAN DIREC1OR First woman to serve as a diocesan director of radio-TV is Miss Patricia Smith of Pueblo Colo who is also a photo-journalist on the staff gf Dateline Colorado m cesan weekly newspaper

Protestants not only from Great Britain but from France and Germany as well

Msgi Gianfrancesco Arrighi undersecretary of the Secretashyriat for Promoting Christian Unity and Canon John Findlow representative of Anglican Archbishop Michael Ramsey of Canterbury at the Holy See accompanied middotthe pilgrims to the Vatican

Votes Moratorium On ChuDch Building

CHICAGO (NC)-The Chicago Conference of Laymen is urging Church authorities at both the archdiocesan and parish levels to declare a moratorium on 10- cal construction projects so that funds can be channeled to projshyects in the ghetto areas

The action was taken at the second annual meeting of the

ll200-member organization The 300 in attendance passed

some 50 resolutions half of them dealing with urban problems The membership said it will seek ways to alleviate white racism especially within the Catholic Church

ANTONE S FEND JR DISPENSING OPTICIAN

Proscriptions for Eyoglasses

Filled

Office Houri 900500

except Wad

Frl Eve Dy ApptsaturdaY-l-3

197 BANK ST COR PURCHASE Sl OPP f R TRUST PARKING LOT 678-11412

ch~plaJD saId The stand taken by these

y~ung men should serve to reshymmd Americans everywhere that the war in Vietnam 1s not over that American and Vietshy

namese boys are stillmiddotdying

He continued

These middotmen of conscience should be supported by eveQY priest minister and rabbi who cares about the sanctity of conshyscience

ELECTRCAL Contractors

944 County St New Bedford -MONif~l 17 CH~R(H

B(Jn~~1r ~MVEln~ES

PRINur bIMD ~ MAILED

Write or ~~cUle 672-1322

234 Second SOri0et - Fall River

WEBB Olt (OM~ANY ~ TEXACO FUEL O~lLS

DOMESTIC amp HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERS

Sales - Service -Installation MAIN OFFICE - 10 DURFEE STREET FALL RIVER

Phone 675middot7484

bull

Jesuit Comments Di~cordNormal Amon9 Catholics

RIO DE JANEIRO (NC)shylD i SC 0 r d among Catholics after the Second Vatican Council is perfectly normal but It is not normal for proshygressive or conservative Cathoshylics to refuse to accept the dishyrectives of the council and the pope Jesuit superior general said here Father Arrupe is in Brazil for 30 days to visit Jesuit houses in the country and to preside at the May 6 to 14 meeting here of all South Amershyican Jesuit provincials

He said that his visit is inshytended to adapt the order here flo the requirements of the agshygirnameJ1to or up-dating

The most important aggiorshy namento in our day he said

is that of the mind We have to ~nsider and respect human valshyues as such This was always the Churchs doctrine but now the Church is insisting on it more We ought not to consider the Churchs interest in human values as opportunism Our in tEmtion is only to serve mankin~ better)

Press Uses Images Dudng his stay here Father

Arrupe willmiddot visit 20 local(tiesWhere Jesuits are woikilg

ts B 1Ilhele are 1000 JesUl m razl~ bull

He said that he regarded as bull joke the Brazilian presss ref-

elences to him as ~the black l T Ch Pope cussion of he angmg a1middot

Because of my cassock hemiddot

tlaid I am black but I am not the Pope ~ understand that the press has to use images to exshylI)lain concepts more effectively

Honor Editor NEW YORK (NC) ~ Robert

6lmstead news editormiddot of the National Catholic Reporter weekly newspaper published in Kansas City Mo received honshyelable mention in the 1968 Paul Tobenkin Memolial Award Competition here

-

MEET IN ST LOUIS Bishop-elect Timothy J~ Harringshyth d f th Sf W 1 ft d

ton ~ orcester e leoscllfses ~ atn t ~ l~mg

ish a panel a~ the lQ68Presi dents Conference of the Nashytional Council of cat~olic yene~l

Role of CouDcil The parish will retairi its role

as a community of worship whose members go out ihto the world and bring it theeurohristjan

message Bernatd Lyons Ghishycago public relations ~onsultant saidmiddot

The pa~ish on the other hand mustmiddot become part of the world

alound it a wHr1e$S to the whole community and fake on roles not in relation only to -its

GUIDING CHURCH IN UNITED STATES More than 200 members of the hierarchy participated in the decisions of the annual Spring meeting of the National Conference

Predict Important Authorities Emphcisixe

WASHINGTON (NC)-Three members but to the world in authorities on parish life have agreed here that the parish basic organiz~tion iil the Church will have to undergo some lmportant changes if the ChUlch is goingto meet th~ needs of societyin the 20th censhy tury

But just how the parislt is going to change ~s far from setshytied they ~onceqed in a dis

which it exists Father John Corriga~ of this city a directozlt of the Nationalmiddot Liturgical Con ference asserted

Whatever it does the parish must becomemiddot a vital force in the cOlJlrnunity around it Father Geno Baroill execu~ive secretary Washington archdi

ocesan Office ~f Urpan Affairs declared

RIot ComparlmiddotsoDmiddot

Father Baroni whose work blings hini into constant contactmiddot with Negro problems in WaSh- laymen will inhibit soCial ac- ington saw~ astriking par~illel tion but added later this is a between the Churchs needs and risk wltirth taking

-those of thebiack ghetto Right now~ he observed - one of the mos~ urgent prob Society to Consider lems in the ghetto is that Of Sh fmiddot

community organization We 5 emnary I t arll learl1ing that pe~ple ri~t be CARTHAGENA CNC) _ The

cause they have beel- cut o~t ofSocieiy of the Precious Blood meaningful participation in so- ciety

In the ~hurch laymen have been cut out of this participa tion also They dont riot but they dont really concern them selves with the concerns of the Church unle~s thy ~ave t~i~ sense of partlclpatlcm he saId

New Resndemlce For US PIiDests

ROME (NC)-A new resident house for American priests working In the offices of the Roman Curia (the Churchs censhytral administrative offices) or on assignment in Rome for the US bishops has been opened to provide adequate economical lodgings and community surshyroundings

The residence called Villa Stritch after the late Samuel Cardinal Stritch of Chicago is composed of two apartment comshyplexes and is designed to meet the immediate needs of US priests already at work in Rome and to anticipate future housing needs as internationalization of the Roman Curia continues

In addition to American$ resshyident in Rome the villa is also expected to house priests on special assignments for the bishshyops in Rome bishops who come to Rome for work on var~ous

Church commissions or otherVatican offices or for such events as the synod of bishops and ma-Jor congresses In short it is hoped that the new villa wilL

will study the possibilities and implications of moving the or ders main theological school flOm St Charles Seminary here in Ohio to a university campus or urban center and of buildingmiddot an adequate program at St QJ1arles The Carthagena SChOt

has been the societys maJor seminary for over 100 years

Major superiors and middotelected delegates representing the soshycietys Cincinnati province voted to fOlm a committee to carry out the study during a provincial chapter meeting held at St Charles at which modernizing the training of candidates for the priesthood in the society Vas tqe chief subject of discussion

middotA report of the meeting in- dicated that the delegates were aware of trends in the Church 1-way from comparative isloationmiddot of seminary establishments to university campuses and urban centers

SPECIAL RATES FOR

Smiddot I O dcho0 utings an Picnics

of Catholic Bishops in St Louis last week An enormoUis amount of homework on position papers was approved ~

the Bishops NC Photo

I see the parish councils and their recognition of freedom asneceSsai-y to do this he added

Worth Risk They agreed they sha~e abull

feiling opound un~asin~ss _middotaboti~ these cOuncIls relatively new amQJ1g Cathol~cs pa~icula~lY their attitude t~ward SOCI~ issues

d Father Baroni sal he has ~

leery feeling about parishcouncils He declared there is

the danger that conservative

contribute to increased racial understanding and involvement

fur the people of the diOcese

Montie Plumbing amp Heating Co Over 35 Years

of Satisfied Service Reg Master Plumber 7023

JOSEPH RAPOSA JR 806 NO MAIN SYREIET

Fall River 675-7497

Parishes

Lyons author of th~ book middotParish Councils - Renewin the Parish Community said be

middotwas somewhat more optiniistici I donit think we are going to

solve these problems by 10~~1 at the dangers exclusively hie commented

Diocese to Discuss C~m~issi~n Rep~rt

LANSING (NC) - Catholics thoughout t~e Lansing diocese will participate in forums and home discussion groups 1as~ on the report of the National Acf visory Commission on Civil Disshyorders The program which begaa with public forums in six citie on April 29 was planned ~

middot three diocesanmiddot agencies-the Ofshyfice of Social and Community Service the Office of Renewal Through Vatican II and the adult education division of tne Education Department It was initiated in response to an appeal made by Bishop Alexshyander Zaleski The day following the death of Dr Martin Luther King Bishop Zaleski asked dishyocesan directors to plan an imshymediate program designed to

meetmg of heBIShops n erence WIt ISop e e~ros be a center of communi~y life CONTACT MANAGER - LINCOLN PARK of BrowI)svIlle Texas and fOtmiddotmer chancellor of the Fall for bishops arid priests with spe- 9996984 636-2744 ~iver Di~~~~lt __~gt -cilla~~gnrn~iitS~~o~~~ ~ Oc)QI~OC~)OQCIOC)oOOOCgtoc)OQltjIOcXllOOOCgtOC)oOC~)OIL)QOCgtOCPOoO

Page 20: 05.02.68

bull

Jesuit Comments Di~cordNormal Amon9 Catholics

RIO DE JANEIRO (NC)shylD i SC 0 r d among Catholics after the Second Vatican Council is perfectly normal but It is not normal for proshygressive or conservative Cathoshylics to refuse to accept the dishyrectives of the council and the pope Jesuit superior general said here Father Arrupe is in Brazil for 30 days to visit Jesuit houses in the country and to preside at the May 6 to 14 meeting here of all South Amershyican Jesuit provincials

He said that his visit is inshytended to adapt the order here flo the requirements of the agshygirnameJ1to or up-dating

The most important aggiorshy namento in our day he said

is that of the mind We have to ~nsider and respect human valshyues as such This was always the Churchs doctrine but now the Church is insisting on it more We ought not to consider the Churchs interest in human values as opportunism Our in tEmtion is only to serve mankin~ better)

Press Uses Images Dudng his stay here Father

Arrupe willmiddot visit 20 local(tiesWhere Jesuits are woikilg

ts B 1Ilhele are 1000 JesUl m razl~ bull

He said that he regarded as bull joke the Brazilian presss ref-

elences to him as ~the black l T Ch Pope cussion of he angmg a1middot

Because of my cassock hemiddot

tlaid I am black but I am not the Pope ~ understand that the press has to use images to exshylI)lain concepts more effectively

Honor Editor NEW YORK (NC) ~ Robert

6lmstead news editormiddot of the National Catholic Reporter weekly newspaper published in Kansas City Mo received honshyelable mention in the 1968 Paul Tobenkin Memolial Award Competition here

-

MEET IN ST LOUIS Bishop-elect Timothy J~ Harringshyth d f th Sf W 1 ft d

ton ~ orcester e leoscllfses ~ atn t ~ l~mg

ish a panel a~ the lQ68Presi dents Conference of the Nashytional Council of cat~olic yene~l

Role of CouDcil The parish will retairi its role

as a community of worship whose members go out ihto the world and bring it theeurohristjan

message Bernatd Lyons Ghishycago public relations ~onsultant saidmiddot

The pa~ish on the other hand mustmiddot become part of the world

alound it a wHr1e$S to the whole community and fake on roles not in relation only to -its

GUIDING CHURCH IN UNITED STATES More than 200 members of the hierarchy participated in the decisions of the annual Spring meeting of the National Conference

Predict Important Authorities Emphcisixe

WASHINGTON (NC)-Three members but to the world in authorities on parish life have agreed here that the parish basic organiz~tion iil the Church will have to undergo some lmportant changes if the ChUlch is goingto meet th~ needs of societyin the 20th censhy tury

But just how the parislt is going to change ~s far from setshytied they ~onceqed in a dis

which it exists Father John Corriga~ of this city a directozlt of the Nationalmiddot Liturgical Con ference asserted

Whatever it does the parish must becomemiddot a vital force in the cOlJlrnunity around it Father Geno Baroill execu~ive secretary Washington archdi

ocesan Office ~f Urpan Affairs declared

RIot ComparlmiddotsoDmiddot

Father Baroni whose work blings hini into constant contactmiddot with Negro problems in WaSh- laymen will inhibit soCial ac- ington saw~ astriking par~illel tion but added later this is a between the Churchs needs and risk wltirth taking

-those of thebiack ghetto Right now~ he observed - one of the mos~ urgent prob Society to Consider lems in the ghetto is that Of Sh fmiddot

community organization We 5 emnary I t arll learl1ing that pe~ple ri~t be CARTHAGENA CNC) _ The

cause they have beel- cut o~t ofSocieiy of the Precious Blood meaningful participation in so- ciety

In the ~hurch laymen have been cut out of this participa tion also They dont riot but they dont really concern them selves with the concerns of the Church unle~s thy ~ave t~i~ sense of partlclpatlcm he saId

New Resndemlce For US PIiDests

ROME (NC)-A new resident house for American priests working In the offices of the Roman Curia (the Churchs censhytral administrative offices) or on assignment in Rome for the US bishops has been opened to provide adequate economical lodgings and community surshyroundings

The residence called Villa Stritch after the late Samuel Cardinal Stritch of Chicago is composed of two apartment comshyplexes and is designed to meet the immediate needs of US priests already at work in Rome and to anticipate future housing needs as internationalization of the Roman Curia continues

In addition to American$ resshyident in Rome the villa is also expected to house priests on special assignments for the bishshyops in Rome bishops who come to Rome for work on var~ous

Church commissions or otherVatican offices or for such events as the synod of bishops and ma-Jor congresses In short it is hoped that the new villa wilL

will study the possibilities and implications of moving the or ders main theological school flOm St Charles Seminary here in Ohio to a university campus or urban center and of buildingmiddot an adequate program at St QJ1arles The Carthagena SChOt

has been the societys maJor seminary for over 100 years

Major superiors and middotelected delegates representing the soshycietys Cincinnati province voted to fOlm a committee to carry out the study during a provincial chapter meeting held at St Charles at which modernizing the training of candidates for the priesthood in the society Vas tqe chief subject of discussion

middotA report of the meeting in- dicated that the delegates were aware of trends in the Church 1-way from comparative isloationmiddot of seminary establishments to university campuses and urban centers

SPECIAL RATES FOR

Smiddot I O dcho0 utings an Picnics

of Catholic Bishops in St Louis last week An enormoUis amount of homework on position papers was approved ~

the Bishops NC Photo

I see the parish councils and their recognition of freedom asneceSsai-y to do this he added

Worth Risk They agreed they sha~e abull

feiling opound un~asin~ss _middotaboti~ these cOuncIls relatively new amQJ1g Cathol~cs pa~icula~lY their attitude t~ward SOCI~ issues

d Father Baroni sal he has ~

leery feeling about parishcouncils He declared there is

the danger that conservative

contribute to increased racial understanding and involvement

fur the people of the diOcese

Montie Plumbing amp Heating Co Over 35 Years

of Satisfied Service Reg Master Plumber 7023

JOSEPH RAPOSA JR 806 NO MAIN SYREIET

Fall River 675-7497

Parishes

Lyons author of th~ book middotParish Councils - Renewin the Parish Community said be

middotwas somewhat more optiniistici I donit think we are going to

solve these problems by 10~~1 at the dangers exclusively hie commented

Diocese to Discuss C~m~issi~n Rep~rt

LANSING (NC) - Catholics thoughout t~e Lansing diocese will participate in forums and home discussion groups 1as~ on the report of the National Acf visory Commission on Civil Disshyorders The program which begaa with public forums in six citie on April 29 was planned ~

middot three diocesanmiddot agencies-the Ofshyfice of Social and Community Service the Office of Renewal Through Vatican II and the adult education division of tne Education Department It was initiated in response to an appeal made by Bishop Alexshyander Zaleski The day following the death of Dr Martin Luther King Bishop Zaleski asked dishyocesan directors to plan an imshymediate program designed to

meetmg of heBIShops n erence WIt ISop e e~ros be a center of communi~y life CONTACT MANAGER - LINCOLN PARK of BrowI)svIlle Texas and fOtmiddotmer chancellor of the Fall for bishops arid priests with spe- 9996984 636-2744 ~iver Di~~~~lt __~gt -cilla~~gnrn~iitS~~o~~~ ~ Oc)QI~OC~)OQCIOC)oOOOCgtoc)OQltjIOcXllOOOCgtOC)oOC~)OIL)QOCgtOCPOoO