06.05.69

20
their idealism seriously, an op- portunity to practice generosity in good causes, and a legitimate and meaningful participation in a society they want to improve." He listed the main elements of his own program as follows: A declaration by Congress and the President that "for the first time in the history of any nation on earth, all those young people who wanted further education beyond high school would have it available." The total cost, he added, would be only one- seventh of the federal tax share of the ann ual increase' in the na· tion's gross national product. In return for such federal as- sistance to students able and willing to do college work, allow them to pick the time, place and condition of service to others, here or abroad. "Allow it in ex- isting government programs, such as the Peace Corps or Vista, in secular or religious groups, formally or informally organized, in the inner city or Appalachia or in the university itself." The option of substituting this year of national service, with equal time requirements, for the obligation of military service. "We take the draft as our stand- ard and only form of obligated service, but for 90 per cent of our national history, there was no draft," he said. The granting of the vote at age .18. "Recent political history has taught us that young people even without the vote, can en- liven political campaigns and sharpen t he substantive issues involved," he said. "If they had the vote as well, then their valid questions would have to be an- swered by the candidates." Robert Thibault, valedictorian, . I and Richard Levesque, saluta- torian. Bishop Connolly will also pre- side and speak at Mt. St. Mary Academy ceremonies at 2 Sun- day afternoon. Patricia Ann 'Fal- bot will be valedictorian and diplomas will be conferred upon 101 girls and a Dominican Sis- ter of the Presentation. At ceremonies at 8 Sunday evening in St. Anthony High School auditorium, Bishop Con- nolly will present diplomas to 23 boys and 45 girls. The Bishop will also be principal speaker for the· program. Bishop Gerrard will preside and Rev. James Walsh, S.J. will be principal speaker at Holy Family High School ceremonies for 40 boys and 43 girls at 7:30 Sunday night· in St. Lawrence Church. Members of the last graduat- ing class of Sacred Hearts Aca- demy in Fairhaven will receive their diplomas at 2 Sunday after- noon in the academy chapel, with Rev. Cosmas Challoner, SS. CC. presiding and giving a grad- uation address. The academy will continue to operate its elemen- tary department, but the high school will close. Turn to Page Six Father O'Neill is aware of the prevelance of problems among the children in the schools. He envisions Sister Kathryn Mary as' a liaison person between the School Office and the personnel of the various towns and cities of the diocese. Sister will pro- vide diagnostic service and make referrals. "I feel that we need a specialist in the area of learn- ing disabilities to set up inter- views with the concerned princi- pal, the teacher, the parent and the child. Sister will be there to direct, support and encourage. Father O'Neill stated: "Chil- dren with Learning Disabilities present us with many types of concern. There are a few chil- dren with a complexity of learning disabilities who need special school services. Some have perceptual or aural handi- caps. Others are just slow learn- ers. Sister Kathryn Mary will provide the professional ap- proach in solving these prob- lems. We feel we are moving in the right direction by giving our children the advantages of this service." Give· .Year's Service For College Benefit in Notre Dame Church. Fifty- nine Prevos.t boys and 32 Jesus- Mary Academy girls will be graduated. Highest academic honors will be conferred upon ST. LOUIS (NC)-Father The- . odor M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., has suggested the U. S. government assure a college education to all citizens in return for a year' of national service. Father Hesburgh said a pro- gram allowing "the widest inter- . pretation of service" is needed as an alternative to the draft and to give youth "a means to take Disabi Iities Speciol ist S·ch'ool Staff SISTER KATHRYN MARY start Program of Newport, and has served on numerous state and regional for Newport County and the State of Rhode Isl,!nd. 1,237 To Graduate From High Schools Thirteen high schools of the Fall River Diocese will graduate 1237 students in ceremonies next week. One religious, 761 girls and 475 boys will receive diplomas, an in- crease of 4,9 graduates over last year. Eight schools will hold Sunday ceremonies, three will graduate on Monday, one on Tuesday, and one on Wednesday. Largest graduating class will be that of Bishop Feehan High School in Attleboro, where 77 boys and 190 girls will receive diplomas at 8 Tuesday night' in the school auditorium from Bish- op Connolly. Carol Ann Sabota will be valedictorian. The smallest class will be that of St. Joseph High School, Fall River, which will· graduate five girls at 2:30 Sunday afternoon in Blessed Sacrament parish hall at ceremonies presided over by Msgr. Henri Hamel, pastor of St. Jean Baptist Church, Fall River Rev. John J. Oliveira, assistant pastor at St. John of God Church, Somerset, will be prin- cipal speaker and Denise Beau- doin will be valedictorian. Other Sunday graduations will take place at Dominican Aca- demy, and Prevost High School in Fall -River; at St. Anthony and Holy Family High Schools in New Bedford; and at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fairhaven. Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill, Dioc- esan School Slleprintendent, will present 63 diplomas at Domini- can Academy's ceremonies, set for 3:30 Sunday afternoon in the school auditorium. Robert J. Nagle, Fall River School Super- intendent, will be the principal speaker. Highest honors for scho- lastic achievement will be award- ed Debra Lay. Bishop Connolly will preside and Rev. William Cullen, S.J. will be principal speaker .at joint ceremonies for Jesus-Mary Aca- demy and High School, . to be held at 4 Sunday afternoon' 5, 1969 PRICE $4.00 per Year Learning Joins Rev. Patrick .1. O'Neill, Superintendent of Schools, announced today the ap- pointment of Sister Kathryn Mary Murphy, R.S.M. as Learn- ing Disabilities Specialist for the diocesan schools. Sister Kathryn Mary will serve in a part time capacity this year ·and continue in her capacity as Assistant Professor of Special Education at Salve Regina College. Sister Kathryn Mary Murphy has a wide variety of experi- ences in elementary education in the Diocese. 'She has served as principal of the St. Maurice Day School in Bethesda, Md. from 1959 to 1966. During these years she also served as a consultant in Evaluation and Placement of children in special classes in Montgomery County, Md. In 1966 Sister Kathryn Mary was appointed the Directress of the Special Education Division of Salve Regina College and has served as Special Education Con- sultant for Newport Public Schools, Advisory Council Head- tinued. As young people ap- proach maturity they begin to ask the more difficult questions, the "long-range, ultimate ques- tions," he said. A student starts to ask "what is life all about, where am I going, am I a rea1 member of society or just a passive mem- ber, what do I have to contrib- ute, what do I want to do with my' life, what about girls and boys?" According to ·the Notre Dame president, such questions really come to life in high school. He added: "I would think that if there is going to be some special re- ligious guidance, high school would be the place where it might be given, where parental help might be supplemented somewhat by professionals." Religious values on both the elementary and secondary levels "ought to be coming from the home," he said. Classes in school can supplement the home, but teaching a child how to .pray, to make his first Commu- nion, to understand what prayer, truth, sacrifice and honesty are all about-"these are the things that parents ought to be con- Turn to Page Six © 1969 The 'Anchor The ANCHOR Father J. Powers Attleboro Fa lis Administrator His Excellency, the Most Reverend Bishop today an- nounced a sick leave for Rev. Raymond W. McCarthy, ad- ministrator of St. Mark Church Attleboro Falls, and the ment of Rev. Joseph L. Powers as administrator pro-tern of the same parish. Father Powers, chaplain of Turn to Page Eighteen Fall River, Mass., Thursday, June Vol. 13, No. 23 Dutch Postpone Ordination For Year UTRECHT (NC) -. The usual practice of ordaining a man after he has studied philosophy and theology and received some pastoral training will no longer be followed in this Dutch archdiocese. Instead, a man will be ordain- ed a priest only after he has completed at least a work in some pastoral position and then presents himself to his bishop for ordination. If he does not ask to be or- dained a priest, he may continue to work in his pastoral post. If the man desires to marry, how- ever, he must receive special permission to continue in the pastoral post because of the ad- ditional financial obligation the archdiocese would have toward a married employe. This new route to the priest- hood was worked out by the Turn to Page Six DAYTON (NC)-Formal reli- gious training seems to be more important on the high school level than in the elementary grades, in the opinion of Father Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., president of the University of Notre Dame. Asked here aoout priorities in the nation's Catholic school sys- tem during an era of financial crisis, Father Hesburgh said his background has been entirely in higher education, "which prob- ably gives me a bias toward high schools, because that's where we get our students." But it is on the high school hivel "where life begins to be- come meaningful or not mean- ingful to youngsters," he con- 'High Schoolers Need More Formal Training

description

Vol.13,No.23 5, 1969 Fall River, Mass., Thursday, June His Excellency, the Most Reverend Bishop today an- nouncedasickleaveforRev. RaymondW.McCarthy,ad- UTRECHT (NC) -.The usual practice of ordaining a man after he has studied philosophyandtheologyand Rev. Patrick .1. O'Neill, Superintendent of Schools, announced today the ap- pointmentofSisterKathryn Thirteen high schools of the Fall River Diocese will graduate 1237 students in ceremonies next week. One SISTER KATHRYN MARY © 1969 The'Anchor

Transcript of 06.05.69

Page 1: 06.05.69

their idealism seriously, an op­portunity to practice generosityin good causes, and a legitimateand meaningful participation ina society they want to improve."

He listed the main elementsof his own program as follows:

A declaration by Congress andthe President that "for the firsttime in the history of any nationon earth, all those young peoplewho wanted further educationbeyond high school would haveit available." The total cost, headded, would be only one­seventh of the federal tax shareof the ann ual increase' in the na·tion's gross national product.

In return for such federal as­sistance to students able andwilling to do college work, allowthem to pick the time, place andcondition of service to others,here or abroad. "Allow it in ex­isting government programs,such as the Peace Corps orVista, in secular or religiousgroups, formally or informallyorganized, in the inner city orAppalachia or in the universityitself."

The option of substituting thisyear of national service, withequal time requirements, for theobligation of military service."We take the draft as our stand­ard and only form of obligatedservice, but for 90 per cent ofour national history, there wasno draft," he said.

The granting of the vote atage .18. "Recent political historyhas taught us that young peopleeven without the vote, can en­liven political campaigns andsharpen t he substantive issuesinvolved," he said. "If they hadthe vote as well, then their validquestions would have to be an­swered by the candidates."

Robert Thibault, valedictorian,. I and Richard Levesque, saluta­

torian.Bishop Connolly will also pre­

side and speak at Mt. St. MaryAcademy ceremonies at 2 Sun­day afternoon. Patricia Ann 'Fal­bot will be valedictorian anddiplomas will be conferred upon101 girls and a Dominican Sis­ter of the Presentation.

At ceremonies at 8 Sundayevening in St. Anthony HighSchool auditorium, Bishop Con­nolly will present diplomas to23 boys and 45 girls. The Bishopwill also be principal speakerfor the· program.

Bishop Gerrard will presideand Rev. James Walsh, S.J. willbe principal speaker at HolyFamily High School ceremoniesfor 40 boys and 43 girls at 7:30Sunday night· in St. LawrenceChurch.

Members of the last graduat­ing class of Sacred Hearts Aca­demy in Fairhaven will receivetheir diplomas at 2 Sunday after­noon in the academy chapel,with Rev. Cosmas Challoner, SS.CC. presiding and giving a grad­uation address. The academy willcontinue to operate its elemen­tary department, but the highschool will close.

Turn to Page Six

Father O'Neill is aware of theprevelance of problems amongthe children in the schools. Heenvisions Sister Kathryn Maryas' a liaison person between theSchool Office and the personnelof the various towns and citiesof the diocese. Sister will pro­vide diagnostic service and makereferrals. "I feel that we needa specialist in the area of learn­ing disabilities to set up inter­views with the concerned princi­pal, the teacher, the parent andthe child. Sister will be there todirect, support and encourage.

Father O'Neill stated: "Chil­dren with Learning Disabilitiespresent us with many types ofconcern. There are a few chil­dren with a complexity oflearning disabilities who needspecial school services. Somehave perceptual or aural handi­caps. Others are just slow learn­ers. Sister Kathryn Mary willprovide the professional ap­proach in solving these prob­lems. We feel we are moving inthe right direction by giving ourchildren the advantages of thisservice."

Give· .Year's ServiceFor College Benefit

in Notre Dame Church. Fifty­nine Prevos.t boys and 32 Jesus­Mary Academy girls will begraduated. Highest academichonors will be conferred upon

ST. LOUIS (NC)-Father The-. odor M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., has

suggested the U. S. governmentassure a college education toall citizens in return for a year'of national service.

Father Hesburgh said a pro­gram allowing "the widest inter- .pretation of service" is neededas an alternative to the draft andto give youth "a means to take

Disabi Iities Speciol ist

S·ch'ool Staff

SISTER KATHRYN MARY

start Program of Newport, andhas served on numerous stateand regional committe~s forNewport County and the Stateof Rhode Isl,!nd.

1,237 To GraduateFrom High Schools

Thirteen high schools ofthe Fall River Diocese willgraduate 1237 students inceremonies next week. Onereligious, 761 girls and 475 boyswill receive diplomas, an in­crease of 4,9 graduates over lastyear. Eight schools will holdSunday ceremonies, three willgraduate on Monday, one onTuesday, and one on Wednesday.Largest graduating class will bethat of Bishop Feehan HighSchool in Attleboro, where 77boys and 190 girls will receivediplomas at 8 Tuesday night' inthe school auditorium from Bish­op Connolly. Carol Ann Sabotawill be valedictorian.

The smallest class will be thatof St. Joseph High School, FallRiver, which will· graduate fivegirls at 2:30 Sunday afternoonin Blessed Sacrament parish hallat ceremonies presided over byMsgr. Henri Hamel, pastor of St.Jean Baptist Church, Fall RiverRev. John J. Oliveira, assistantpastor at St. John of GodChurch, Somerset, will be prin­cipal speaker and Denise Beau­doin will be valedictorian.

Other Sunday graduations willtake place at Dominican Aca­demy, and Prevost High Schoolin Fall -River; at St. Anthonyand Holy Family High Schoolsin New Bedford; and at SacredHearts Academy, Fairhaven.

Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill, Dioc­esan School Slleprintendent, willpresent 63 diplomas at Domini­can Academy's ceremonies, setfor 3:30 Sunday afternoon in theschool auditorium. Robert J.Nagle, Fall River School Super­intendent, will be the principalspeaker. Highest honors for scho­lastic achievement will be award­ed Debra Lay.

Bishop Connolly will presideand Rev. William Cullen, S.J.will be principal speaker .at jointceremonies for Jesus-Mary Aca­demy and Prevo~t High School,

. to be held at 4 Sunday afternoon'

5, 1969PRICE 10~

$4.00 per Year

Learning

JoinsRev. Patrick .1. O'Neill,

Superintendent of Schools,announced today the ap­pointment of Sister KathrynMary Murphy, R.S.M. as Learn­ing Disabilities Specialist for thediocesan schools. Sister KathrynMary will serve in a part timecapacity this year ·and continuein her capacity as AssistantProfessor of Special Educationat Salve Regina College.

Sister Kathryn Mary Murphyhas a wide variety of experi­ences in elementary education inthe Diocese. 'She has served asprincipal of the St. Maurice DaySchool in Bethesda, Md. from1959 to 1966. During these yearsshe also served as a consultantin Evaluation and Placementof children in special classes inMontgomery County, Md.

In 1966 Sister Kathryn Marywas appointed the Directress ofthe Special Education Divisionof Salve Regina College and hasserved as Special Education Con­sultant for Newport PublicSchools, Advisory Council Head-

tinued. As young people ap­proach maturity they begin toask the more difficult questions,the "long-range, ultimate ques­tions," he said.

A student starts to ask "whatis life all about, where am Igoing, am I a rea1 member ofsociety or just a passive mem­ber, what do I have to contrib­ute, what do I want to do withmy' life, what about girls andboys?"

According to ·the Notre Damepresident, such questions reallycome to life in high school. Headded:

"I would think that if thereis going to be some special re­ligious guidance, high schoolwould be the place where itmight be given, where parentalhelp might be supplementedsomewhat by professionals."

Religious values on both theelementary and secondary levels"ought to be coming from thehome," he said. Classes inschool can supplement the home,but teaching a child how to

.pray, to make his first Commu-nion, to understand what prayer,truth, sacrifice and honesty areall about-"these are the thingsthat parents ought to be con-

Turn to Page Six

© 1969 The 'Anchor

TheANCHOR

Father J. PowersAttleboro Fa lisAdministrator

His Excellency, the MostReverend Bishop today an­nounced a sick leave for Rev.Raymond W. McCarthy, ad­ministrator of St. Mark ChurchAttleboro Falls, and the appoint~ment of Rev. Joseph L. Powersas administrator pro-tern of thesame parish.

Father Powers, chaplain ofTurn to Page Eighteen

Fall River, Mass., Thursday, June

Vol. 13, No. 23

Dutch PostponeOrdinationFor Year

UTRECHT (NC) -. Theusual practice of ordaininga man after he has studiedphilosophy and theology andreceived some pastoral trainingwill no longer be followed inthis Dutch archdiocese.

Instead, a man will be ordain­ed a priest only after he hascompleted at least a y~ar's

work in some pastoral positionand then presents himself to hisbishop for ordination.

If he does not ask to be or­dained a priest, he may continueto work in his pastoral post. Ifthe man desires to marry, how­ever, he must receive specialpermission to continue in thepastoral post because of the ad­ditional financial obligation thearchdiocese would have towarda married employe.

This new route to the priest­hood was worked out by the

Turn to Page Six

DAYTON (NC)-Formal reli­gious training seems to be moreimportant on the high schoollevel than in the elementarygrades, in the opinion of FatherTheodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C.,president of the University ofNotre Dame.

Asked here aoout priorities inthe nation's Catholic school sys­tem during an era of financialcrisis, Father Hesburgh said hisbackground has been entirely inhigher education, "which prob­ably gives me a bias toward highschools, because that's where weget our students."

But it is on the high schoolhivel "where life begins to be­come meaningful or not mean­ingful to youngsters," he con-

'High Schoolers NeedMore Formal Training

Page 2: 06.05.69

System

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The brief actually makes onlyone recommendation. It requests"a committee of the governmentbe immediately created to drawup and implement those admin­istrative and financial changesrequired to enable our schoolsto share fully in this modern de­velopmen:t" (of contim,lous edu­cation and reorganized school.administration structures).

SERVING ALL FAITHS

School

fUNERAL DIRECTOR'Owner & Director- The Waring Home

SUMNER JAMES WARING JR.

O'DONNELLAir·Conditioned

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448 County st. New Bedford

Two Private Parking Areas

Funeral ServiceEdward F. Carney'

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Serving the area' since 1921

Michael C. AustinInc.

Catholicseparate school boards. through­out the province is restricted toa kindergarten through grade 10program. For the remainingyears of high school, a studentmust either transfer to a privateCatholic high school or enter thepublic secondary school system.

The Ontario trustees, respon-. sible for .the education of more

Ulan 40,000 students. in -the sep- .Mate school system, are callingon the provincial government toend this second-class status forthe publicly-supported Catholicschools.

They want equality for Cath­olic children. In fact, so heavy isthe. emphasis on "equality thatthe word, or term of similarmeaning, is used 31 timesthroughout the brief.

• HYANNIS• HARWICHPORT• SOUTH YARMOUTH

Ask

Senate Meeting

PERRY F~tg~~L111 Dartmouth St. 993-2921

NEW, BEDFORD

Thomas "Timmy" Perry.Thomas H. Perry'

. ~iIIiam J. PerryFuneral Directors andRegistered Embalmers

A special meeting of the. Senate . (If Priests will be

held Friday afternoon, June13, at I :30 at the CatholicMemoriul Home in· FallRiver.

STONEHiLL COMMENCEMENT: Congresswoman Margaret M. Heckler, center, congratulatesMiss Paula Pettine, daughter of Atty. and Mrs. Raymond V. Pettine, Swansea, following Stone­hill College Commencement Sunday while Probate Court Judge Beatrice H. Mullaney looks onapprovingly. Miss ~ettine's father and Judge Mullaney are former law partneh. Mrs. Hecklerand Most Rev. Timothy J. Harrington, D.O., auiliary bishop of Worcester, received honorary de­grees.

TOOTELL

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Wm. A. Riley

NEW BEDFORD$400

Glen Coal & Oil Co., Inc.

MONUMENT WORKSMANUFACTURING. and DESIGNING

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Sundays and Evenings by Appointment

OPEN DAilY 8:30 ,to S:30

Cuckoo CallThe course of the seasons is a

piece of clockwork with acUCkoo to call when it is Spring.

-Licptenberg.

Taking the current povertystandard of a $3,300 a year in­

- come for a family of four, thevictims of. poverty are to befound among' all races.

Actually, they al'e nearly 70per cent, white, which surprisesmapy people, and embrace Ap­palachian whites, Negroes, Mex­ican-Americans, Puerto Rica!!sand other Spanish-speakingmin­orities, American Indians, andmigrant workers of various de­scents.

And, whe~e race and povertyconverge, the victims are doublyburdened.

The "tax break," if and whenenacted, will be helpful, ofcourse, but it will be far frombeing a solution to wh.at hasbeen called the "twin crises ofrace and poverty" in America.

Just about a year ago, mov-ing Ito meet, the challenge ofthese "twin crises," the Catho­lic bishops of the U.S. establish­ed a National Task Force within.the Division of Urban Life ofthe U.S. Catholic Conference.

The task force has sincemoved to coordinate nationaland diocesan Catholic. efforts inthis field, to sustain the sense ofurgency and immediacy inmatching Catholic resources tothe needs of the poor and racial- TORONTO (NC)-The messageIy disadvantaged, and to relate to the Ontario government· isCatholic plans and programs to very simple: Canadian Catholicsothers with the same concerns. in the province want their pub-

Coordinate Services licly supported, separate schoolThe bishops' national task system to be on an equal footing

force has established 126 task with the public schools so thatforces (national and' diocesan) they ~an proyide the. mqst mod­

-throughout the country,' These ern education for their children.. have acted to coordinate tradi- This means a continuous,

tionaI Catholic services to the child-centered Catholic' educa-needy through parishes, schools, tion from kindergarten to thehospitals, homes for the aged, end of high school.etc., and are 'also stimulating The theme "equal opportu­the orientation of services to the nity" ran through the entirecommunity at large and on a brief, presented by the Ontariobroad scale. Separate School Trustees' Asso-

It has been the experience of ciation to Ontario Premier Johnthe bishops' task force that there Robarts and Education Ministeris an unawareness and apathy. William Davis. The brief wasin m~tters of ra(::ial injustice and also addressed to all memberseconomic poverty on the part .. of the provincial legislature.of average adults, in spite of past. At present, the jurisdiction ofand present turmoil. . '.

This indifference, it is beingfound, is not "racism" in thestrict sense, but an attitude thatpassively tolerates a social or­der with discrimination and pov­erty.

The "tax break," if and whenenacted, should not be permit­ted to add to this. general apathy.The "allowance'" will not solvethe problems of the poor by it­self. Much less will it solve the

. "twin crises" of race at:Jd povertyin America.

Will Help the Poor; .All Their Problems'

•••••••••• +

THE ANCHOR-:-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., June S, 1969

Day of PrayerJune 8-Blessed Sacrament,

F&lI River.. Holy Name, Fa'll River.St. Roch, Fall River.

June 15-C 0 l' pus Christi,Sandwich.

Holy Trinity, West Har­wich.

St. Mary, Norton.

• • • •• • ••••• • •• e •••••

2

THE ANCHOR

Second Class Postage Paid at Fall River,Mass. Published every Thursday at 410Highland Avenue, Fall River, Mass. 02722by the Catholic Press of the Diocese of FallRiver. Subscription price by mail, postpaid$4.00 per year.

'Tax. Break'Won't Solve

NecrologyJ,UNE 18

Rev. James M. Coffey, 1935,Pastor, St. Mary, Taunton.

JUNE 19Rev. Hormisdas Deslauriers,

1916,Founder" St. Anthony,' NewBedford. .

Mass Or~o

FRIDAY-St. Norbert, Bisho'p,Confessor. III Class. White.

SATURDAY - Mass of BlessedVirgin Mary (V). IV Class.White.

SUNDAY-Second Sunday AfterPentecost. III Class. Green.Mass Prop'er; Glory; - Creed;Preface of Trinity.

MONDAY - Mass of precedingSunday. IV Class. Green.

ORSS. Primus and Felician, Mar­tyrs. Red.

TUESDAY-St. Margaret, Queenof Scotland. III Class. White.Mass Proper; Glory; CommonPreface.

WEDNESDAY - St. Barnabas,Apostle. III Class. Red. MassProper; Glory; Creed; Prefaceof Apostles.

THURSDAY - St. John of SanFacundo, Confessor. III Class.White. .

ORSS. Basilides and Companions,Martyrs. Red.

WASHINGTON (NC) - Presi­dent Nixon's proposal to give a

."tax' break "to the "poor" mayrevive interest in ascertainingwho are the poor. It would befound that they are very numer­ous, and that they are in allraces in this country.

The President's "low-incomeallowance," as proposed in amessage· to Congress, wouldwork this way:

A single person earning $1,­700 a year, who pays a $117tax, would pay nothing; a mar­ried couple with an income of$2,300, who now pay $100, wouldpay nothing; a family of four

.would pay no tax on an income• below $3,500 a year. The present

cut-off point for a family offour is $3,300.

The President said the allow­ance "will offer genuine tax re­lief to the 'young, the elderly,the disadvantaged and the handi­capped."

But it is generally being re-.ferred to as a "tax break" forthe "poor." Many people have avery limited view of poverty,which is really quite extensive.For many, the poor are a rela­tively few persons within theirimmediate general environment.

Page 3: 06.05.69

FALL RIVER KNIGHTS: Fall River Knights of Columbus Council No. 86 observed its 75th Anni­versary Sunday. Shown, left to right, Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, D.O., V.G., Deputy NationalSupreme Knight Charles J. Ducey, Most Rev. James l. Connolly, D.O., Bishop of Fall River, GrandKnight Robert Petit, and Financial Secretary for 36 years Francis l. Lowne)(.

3

Sheed to KeynoteWanderer Forum

ST. PAUL (NC)-Dr. FrankSheed, internationally knownCatholic schOlar, will be keynotespeaker for the fifth NationalWanderer Forum here, June 20­22.

Sheed, one of the few laymento hold a honorary doctorate insacred theology from the HolySee, will speak in "The Roots ofOur Faith."

Theme of the forum is a state­ment by Pope Leo XIII: "Whena society is perishing, the trueadvice to give to those whowould restore it, is to recallit to the principles from whichit sprang."

The forum will feature ses­sions and talks upholding Cath­olic teaching and fidelity to thePope, and will answer attacksupon Catholic loyalty, accordingto Wanderer officials.

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., June 5, 1969

Stonehill ConfersHonor Degrees

Nearly 300 seniors graduatedfrom Stonehill College Sundayat exercises during which anhonorary degree of Doctor ofLaws and Letters was awardedRep. Margaret M. Heckler, com­mencement speaker.

Bishop Timothy J. Harrir.gton,auxiliary of the Worcester dio­cese, spoke at a baccalaureateMass and was also recipient ofan honorary doctorate in Lawsand Letters.

Rep. Heckler was recognizedfor her outstanding politicalcareer and Bishop Harringtonfor hjs years of social serviceactivities, during which he hasbuilt the Worcester CatholicCharities office into the largestprivate social service agency inWorcester County...

Expected Visit

Other parishioners took issuewith Price's companions, a manand a woman, ,in the rear of thechurch. As Price failed in his at­tempt to read the document, hismale companion began to reciteportions of it. About sevenparishioners restrained the trioand held them in the' churchvestibule until police arrivedabout 10 minutes later.

the manifesto. He refused thepriest's request not to proceed.

Father Gerdes reached for thecopy of the document and apushing scene ensued. Severalmembers of the congregationthen left their pews, grabbed.Price and escorted him out.

Three-Week BargainEURDPEAN HOLIDAYunder the· friendly leadership ofMsgr. George E. Sullivan

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Mark church after Mass by oneof a group of six blacks who vis­ited the church and presentedthe demand.

Interrupts Sermons

But here, the visitors appar­ently were not content to waituntil the conclusion of Mass.While Father Harry J. Gerdes,assistant pastor, was deliveringa sermon at the fron1 of thecenter aisle, Robert Price. amember of the Dayton Organiza­tion, a black action group, andtwo companions walked into thechurch and began distribution ofmimeographed copies of themanifesto.

Price walked to the front ofthe church and began reading

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Block Attempt to Read Black ManifestoPastor Files Charges -Against Militants

DAYTON (NC) - Charges ofdisruption of a lawful assemblyhave been filed against threeblack militants by Father RogerE. Griese, pastor of Sacred Heartparish here.

Parishioners of the downtownchurch ejected the three whodisrupted a Sunday Mass in anattempt to read the Black Mani­festo, a statement demanding$500 million from U. S. churchesand synagogues as "reparations"for blacks.

The charges were filed withthe approval of Archbishop KarlJ. Alter of Cincinnati, after aconference with legal advisors, itwas stated. .

In Cincinnati, the manifestowas read from the pulpit of St.

Vermont HouseRefuses to AidPorish Schoo~s

MONTPELIER (NC)-TheVermont House of Repre­sentatives refused to ac­cept a $100,000 appropria­tion request to help parochialschools hire more lay teachers'next year and thus offset schoolclosings.

The chamber voted 82-59against the money request whichhad been reduced from $250,­000.

The original amendment seek­ing the emergency funds wasoffered by Rep. Brian Burns. Hisproposal ran into oppositionfrom some lawmakers who ques­tioned the propriety of givingpublic aid to private institutions.

Earlier, the Burlington dio­cesan school board had issued astatement informing the legisla­ture that as much as $500,000might be required "to financethe cost of additional lay teach­ers for the 1969-70 school year."

No Further Notice"With this assistance," the

board said, "supplemented asnecessary by financial supportfrom diocesan funds and parishtuition, the diocesan board willbe in a position to commit itselfto the continued operation ofthe. parochial school system011 (0 0" Otherwise, it will haveto announce "that the contrac­tion of the system" will occur.

The diocesan board held aclosed meeting fol1owing thelegislative action but issued nostatement.

Paul Guare, a representativefor Catholic education at the'state legislature, said the Houserefusal of the appropriation re­quest had freed Catholic officialsfrom any obligation to give thepublic sector further notice .ofelementary and secondary paro­chial school closings.

Priests Give ViewsAbout New Bishop

LONDON (NC) - The priestsof the Brentwood diocese willhave a say as to what kind ofman they want to succeed Bish­op Bernard Wal1, who has re­tired at the age of 75. FatherGeorge Towler, a sociologistworking in the Brentwood dio­cese who drew up the question­naire, said both John CardinalHeenan and Auxiliary BishopChristopher Butler of Westmin­ster had expressE:d sympatheticinterest.

The priests have not beenasked to name any particularman whom they consider wouldmake a good bishop, or whetherthe choice should be confined tothe diocese. .

They have been asked to de­fine the kind of experience theythink their future bishop shouldhave and what kind of outlookand particular qualities he willneed.

Study BeatificationOf Fatima Children

FATIMA (NC)-Further stepswere taken toward the beatifi­cation of Francisco and JacintaMarto, two of the children asso­ciated with the Fatima appari­tions, on the .50th anniversary ofFrancisco's death.

The steps consisted of inter­views with several witnessestestifying to the virtues of thetwo children.

It is hoped that the canonicalproceedings toward beatificationcan soon move to Rome. AChurch tribunal has yet to de­cide on whether or not unap­proved veneration has beengiven to the children.

Page 4: 06.05.69

4 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-'-Thurs., June 5, 1969

Deplores MurderRECIFE (NC) - Archbishop

Helder Camara of Olinda andRecife has charged that reac­tionary groups in Brazil are re­sponsible for the murder of aclose priest-friend. The body .ofthe priest, Father Henrique Pe­reira Neto, was found hangingfrom a tree on the campus of theUniversity of Recife.

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Fast' Buck Lures Smut- Merchants;Disney Productions Make Millions

WASHINGTON (NC) - AlI added: "Not one of those kidsthings considered, perhaps the is old enough to buy a ticket."situation best may be summed Not old enough today, but thoseby paraphraSing that old vaude- kids will make up the adultville "wife" joke-"Now you and mature audience of tomor­take the entertainment business row-and kids have long mem--Please!" ories.

For the deceny-bent, the thea- But maybe - just maybe -ter, movies and, lately, TV are things aren't as bad as pictured.now a source of constant com- That's pased on a few observa­plaint. Nudity is blatant in thea- tions of the May 21 issue ofter and movies; there's an over- Variety, so-calIed bible of showabundance of plots on themes biz.formerly seldom discussed in Interesting Comparisonspolite society. TV is being knock- On page 1 there was a storyed for too much violence and off- with a typical Variety head,color material. "N.Y. Burlesque Theaters 'Appal-

As one observer aptly remark- led' By B.O. Decay Wrought byed-no longer does the cowboy Nudie Pix." And. w~en smuthero bashfully ignore the girl, merchants get to f~ghtm~ amongcaress his horse and ride off into themselves-welI, Just gIve themthe sunset; instead he gulps raw room. . .Iikker consorts with dance hall The ISSU~ carnes a 50 Topgals ~nd lets loose with vulgar- ~rossin~ Films char~ with. theseities and obscenties never in- mterestmg comparIsons: Thetended for tender, young ears. smutty "I Am Curious-Yellow,"

Jack Valenti, erstwhile White on the char~ 8 ~eeks, $902!53~:House aide tuil1ed movie czar, stac~ed agamst. Th~ Love Bug,has been making a .valiant ef- a DIsney famIly ~llm, also 8fort to check nudity and un1:a- ~eeks, ~,2,418,108. The smuttyvory themes on the now tarnish- Joanna, 2~ weeks, ~1,083,6~5,ed silver screen. stack~,d a~amst t~e Dlsne.y rels,:

The voluntary code adopted by sue" SWISS FamIly Robmson,the movie industry last November 10 weeks, $1,393,000..has been working-but a dearth And ,~he con~rov~~slal, poorlyof family-type pictures continues, acted 100 RI~les, 6 we~ks,while the restriCted "R" and "X" $1,117,718, agamst the famIly­movies mount. .No longer are type western sP.oo~: ','Supporthuman passions depicted by Your Local SherIff, 7 weeks,timeworn symbolic scenes of $1,6?7,120.flames suddenly leaping upward It s been remarked repeatedlyin a fireplace or mounting waves that smut merchants are luredbeating against a shoreline. In- by th.e "fast buck." It:s been s~b.stead, today it's like the old stantl~ted th~t famIly mo:,les,cigarette ,ad slogan-"Nature in espeCIally Dls~ey productIOns,the raw is seldom mild" seldom lost a dIme, usually made

. d . millions out of their products.Runmng Scare

When Valenti persuaded pro­ducers and distributors to adoptthe rating system, he admittedfrankly a substantial portion ofthe industry was running scaredof legislative censorship. 'Thatbugaboo seems to be growing,

'judging from uncomplimentaryobservations emanating fromCapitol Hill.

And now the youngsters have'taken up the cudgels against un­savory movies, Touched off by"Teens for Decency" rally of30,000, in Miami's Orange Bowlin March, youngsters in citiesand towns the country overhave been picketing and demon­strating for cleaner movies.

Here in the nation's capital,a couple dozen high school girlspicketed a theater showing an"X" movie. The near-sightedmanager remarked to a reporterit was good for business and

'Majar -SuperiorsElect, Secretary

WASHINGTON (NC) - SisterM. Claudia Zeller of the Sistersof St. Francis of Mary Immac­ulate, Joliet, 111., has been electedexecutive secretary for, 1969-71by the executive committee ofthe Conference of Major Relig­ious Superiors of Women's In­stitutes (CMSW).

Mother Mary Orner,' CMSWnational chairman, said SisterClaudia will begin her two-yearterm Aug. 1 at the conference'snational secretariat here. Shesucceeds Sister M. Rose Emman­uelIa, who has served since 1964and will return for assignmentto the California province of theSisters of the Holy Names ofJesus and Mary.

Sister Claudia, dean of theCollege of, St. Francis, Joliet,holds a doctorate in mathemat­ics from the University of Mich- .igan and is the author of three'articles iri' the New Catholic En­cyclopedia.

SISTER M. CLAUDIA

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Cites ImportanceOf Pope's VisitROME (NC)-The director gen­

eral of the International LaborOrganization has described PopePaul's forthcoming visit to hisorganization's h'eadquarters -inGeneva as "of historic import­ance not only for ILO but for,all the world's workers."

David Morse, who made hisremarks while passing throughRome, said:

"It is particularly significantfor me, as director general ofthe ILO, that the Pope shouldhave accepted the invitation tobe present on this occasion atthe side of all who strive to pro-

'mote peace and social justice atan international level.

"The decision of the Pope tomeet representatives of thosewho work in the factories, in themines, at sea, in the fields andin the offices of the whole world-and. to meet at the same timethe representatives of their em­ployers and of their governments-will give a new impulse to ourcontinual striving toward ourhigh goals."

Pope Paul is due to visitGeneva, Switzerland, in the firsthalf of June.

Propose School Closing, CutbacksIn Detroit, Chicago Archdioceses

WASHINGTON (NC) - by J~hn Cardinal Cody, who isSchool closings and pro now 10 Rome.

- A tentative plan to establish aposed cutbacks made news four-school district as the firstin two of the nation's largest major step in the consolidationdioceses, while extensive consol- of the 28 Catholi.c parochialidation plans were detailed in schools in the Dayton area wastwo others. . submitted at a meeting of the

John Cardinal Dearden of De- diocesan task force on qualitytrait, acting on reports dting ex- education and ~acial integration.treme costs to run' parochial First Phaseschools, announced that six The task force's area commit-Cath9lic high s~hools and nine tee on grouping of schools, head­elementary schools in the arch-' ed by Robert H. Meyer, proposeddiocese must close in June. that the first phase of the con-

Cardinal Dearden said it was solidation program involve fourwith "extreme regret" he made' parishes: St. James, an inner­the announcement affecting city black school; St. Mary, a1,600 high school and 1,80Q school with a dwindling enroll­grade school pupils in' the 15 ment on the edge of the innerschools. city; Holy Angels, near the' Uni-

The Detroit archdiocese started versity of Dayton; and St. AI­the, school year last FalI with 349 bert, in Kettering.elementary and high schools and Faculties, finances and physi­will finish the year in June with cal resources would be pooled in21 fewer' schools. Four other the new district. 'sc~ools have consolidated grades lYleyersaid, th~ plan is stillthIS year. open to modification but hope-

To Public Schools fully the, plan for the, first dis-"Alth h ff t '11 be trict will be implemented byoug e or s WI FilE' . h '1

made to take some of the stu- d~" xP~lrllebnces flO .t e PlOtd t t .. (C th I') IStrICt WI e use ullOa total

en s a survlvmg a 0 IC I'd' I f h .cho I . th '" hd' conso I atlOn p an or t e entIre

s 0 slOe area,' ~n a,~c 1- diocese, he added.ocesan statement saId, most M Ed d J G b Istudents are expected to be . sgr. mun.. oe e, su-added to public school lists in p~rmtendent of MIlwaukee arch­Detroit and suburbs." dlOces~n . schools, a~mounc~d

The decision to order the c1os- ~~nsoltd~tlOn .of educatIOn facll­ings came after a report was Itles whIch WIll affect seven ru-

. . . . ral area schools next Fall.submItted by Auxlltary BIshop Ab 't 1 000 '1 '11 b .Thomas J. Gumbleton, vicar au., pUpl s. WI e .10-general of the archdiocese. volved 10 both proJec~s whIch

Bishop GiImbleto 'd "E _ have been under mtenslve studyerything possible t~atsa~o~ld ~e by Catholic educational officialsdone has been done." ~or over a year. The schools are

According to the statement, 10 Fond du La~, Sheboygan and"Some 15 schools originally on Ozaukee countIes.the 'closing list' ~ere given tem- " Team Teachingporary extensions of life as a re- The main features of the plansuit- of extraordinary efforts by are: .parishes." Consolidation of schools under

In Chicago, meanwhile, the a single administration and' usearchdiocesan school board heard of multiple buildings.testimony from representatives Participation of four differentof 13 schools considering some religious orders of nuns alongform of curtailment. with lay faculty, and each proj-

A school board spokesman ect have a non-teaching nun assaid five of the elementary principal.schools, with a total enrollment Team teaching techniques, in­of 930, are seeking permission dividualized instruction and flex­to close outright. Four of the ible scheduling.schools want to close some Non-graded systems for lowerclassrooms while maintaining all grades and a departmentalizedeight grades; four others want approach for upper divisions.to eliminate kindergarten or the Establishment of a schoolfirst grade. board for each project, with

In Serious Difficulty membership including the pastor. and two lay representatives from

The 930 students who would each parish. The boards will setbe .affected by, the proposed policy and raise funds to supportc10smgs would be accommodated the scshoolsin neighboring Catholic schools, The ObIat' f St F . d. ' es 0 .' ranClS eaccordmg to the school board Sales of the Toledo-Detroit prov­spokesman. Some 680 students ince announced they will assumewho. would be affected by the direction of two more high

. partl.al cutbacks w~>uld go to schools, Aquinas in Southgate,pU~lhlc SChhOOls

l, bhe sda1d . k Mjch., and St. Joseph in Almeda

e sc 00, oar spo esman Cal 'said another 40 Chicago archdi- .ocesan schools "are in seriousfinancial difficulty, although Seeks More Planeseach of them is determined to 'stay open and meet expenses by' For Biafra Airliftdrawing on accumulated savings ROME (NC)-Bishop Edwardor borrowing against capital in- E. Swanstrom, executive directorvestment." of Catholic Relief Services has

He said the school board will cabled President Nixon to asknot announce its decisions on for more relief planes for 'thethe requested closings and cut- Joint Church Aid airlift intobacks until they are reviewed Biafra.

Bishop Swanstrom, in his ca­pacity as president of that inter­religious relief venture, toldPresident Nixon that a lack ofenough planes had "seriouslyhampered our operation in thepast few weeks."

He said the, airlift ,from SaoTome into encircled Biafrashould be built up since food ha'sbecome "so, tragically needed toease suffering and starvation inBiafra' at this moment."

Page 5: 06.05.69

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THE ANCHOR- 5Thurs., June 5, 1969

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lL@ym~tru [Q)~~@~@\i'®DETROIT lNC) - Phillip O.

Tanguay, 48, has been appointedby John Cardinal Dearden ofDetroit to be his delegate to the1,500,000 laymen in the eight­<:Dunty archdiocese, effectiveJuly 1.

The cardinal has two otherdelegates who are auxiliary bish­ops: Bishop Joseph M. Breiten­beck, delegate to members of re­ligious orders and Bishop WalterJ. Schoenherr, delegate topriests. .

Tanguay's work will includekeeping the cardinal and hisstaff aware of the needs and at­titudes of the laity as they relateto Church policy, and keepingthe laity up to date on Churchmatters affecting them. His liai­son role is expected to cut redtape for laymen seeking to pressgrievances, or to get fast actionfrom archdiocesan staff officeson matters of interest to them.

Appointment of Tanguay is animplementation of Vatican Coun­cil II's decree on the laity, whichurged that the role of laymen inChurch affairs be broadened andintensified.

Tanguay will meet with allarchdiocesan administrators, in­cluding the cardinal, to keepthem acquainted with lay con­cerns; he will help lay organiza­tions avoid over-lapping of pro­grams; seek to help advance theplans of lay leaders, in archdioc­esan vicariates as well as in par­ishes; represent the cardinal atmeetings of laymen; seek to findmethods so that problems of in­dividuals can efficiently besolved, and give consultative and

'directional assistance to lay or­ganizations requesting it.

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In any case, Father Salmonemphasized,the principle stands.The amount of money due andthe organization to which it isgiven are only minor details.The important thing is that con­gregations recognize their obli­gation to aid blC!ck people.

He suggested that since "sec­ond collections" are taken up formany other causes, this wouldbe a good way for Catholic dio­ceses to "present a goodimage," even knowing the ideawould not be well accepted bysome of the faithful.

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NBEDC. has the sole right toinsist that reparation moneyis due them.

'Good mage'Father Salmon answered that

NBEDC has the right to claimthis money as much as anyother organization working forthe betterment of black people.However, NBEDC was the firstto make this claim and mostlikely others will wake up andstart demanding the same, eventhough they have not sufferedfrom the initial resistance to theidea as NBEDC has, he said.

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oysius J. Wycislo of Green Bayhas appointed five priests tothe diocesan personnel board,which will assist the bishop inmaking future appointments inthe diocese and will make rec­ommendations for appointmentsand transfer of clergy.

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. WASHINGTON (NC) - FatherHarold A. Salmon, pastor of St.Charles Borromeo church andvicariate delegate for the sevenCatholic parishes in Harlem,N.Y., defended James Formanand the National Black Eco­nomic Development Conference(NBEDC) with a suggestion thataIL churches take up a secondcollection for the support ofthis group.

The black priest spoke tomembers of the National Ad­visory Board of the U.S. Catho­lic Conference Task Force onUrban Problems and diocesanUrban Task Force coordinatorsassembled for a joint meetingat the University of Marylandin suburban College Park, Md.,as the two-day meet was com­ing to an end.

Father Gena Baroni, directorof the Urban Affairs Office inthe Washington archdiocese,chairman of the 15-member ex­ecutive committee which wasestablished at the meeting, askedFather Salmon to speak on theevents surrounding James For­man's disruption of servicesat Riverside interdenominationalProtestant church in New York.

Forman, representing NBEDC,had read a series of demandswhich included a "black mani­festo" calling on Americanchurches to pay $500 million in"reparation for injustices suffer­ed by blacks druing and sincethe slavery period."

In a question period followingFather Salmon's talk, he wasasked whether this group,

AT CONFIRMATION:· Bishop Connolly officiates at Confirmation ceremonies at Paul A. DeverState School, Taunton. Mrs. Edmund Sullivan is sponsor and Bishop's chaplain is Rev. WilliamH.O/Reilly.

A~k !r5'an&i!)c~rm~

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~@~® ~urdlefm$OAK BROOK (NC) - A

call for unity and concertedaction of all branches ofFranciscans was sounded ata meeting of 100 Midwest lead­ers representing more than 40,­000 Franciscan priests, Brothers,cloistered and convent Sisters,and laity.

The meeting at St. Francis Re­treat House here in Illinois wasorganized and led by FatherMark Hegener, O.F.M., provincialdirector of the Third Order.

Keynote speaker was FatherSergius Wroblewski, O.F.M., pro­fessor of theology at Christ theKing Seminary, West Chicago.To meet world changes and cQn"form with the Church's response,he urged a consensus of Fran­ciscan thought and action tospread certain values.I He listed such values as fra­ternity in an age of aloneness,use of creatures to serve menand glorify the Creator, a waragainst greed in time of starva­tion and poverty, nonviolence intime of strife, unceasing adora­tion amid growing atheism andagnosticism, dialogue with be­lievers and unbelievers,' andatonement for religious disunity.

Servant CommunityFather Wroblewski said the

world has been moving awayfrom the spiritual and, in re­sponse, the Church now offersitself as the "suffering servant."The Franciscans' part will be as aservant community, as St. Fran­cis himself had in mind, he con­tinued.

His community "tried to invitethe Church to empty herself ofwealth and power and becomepoor again, so as to truly ruleonly by love," he said.

Father Mark, in a homily dur­ing Mass at the beginning ofthe meeting, said the world ex­pects Franciscans to behavelike members of a single family,always ready to help one an­other and ease one another'sburdens. This dates back to theearly days of Christianity, hesaid.

"All branches of the Francis­can family are now at a histori­cal and religious ~atershed whendecisions must be made and anew spirit awakened. The callnow is for each member to en­gage himself to bring realizationof the type of fraternal commu­nity in the Church in the imageand likeness of its early NewTestament protoype. This is ourresolution," Father Mark said.

Ask Team A.pproachTo Parish Problems

CLEVELAND (NC) - Bettercommunications and more coop­eration between priests and Sis­ters in parishes were called forat a meeting of some 130 pas­tors and 120 nuns here.

They heard a "team approach"to parish problems urged byMother Annunciata, superior gen­eral of the Ursuline nuns ofCleveland, and Mother MaryEileen, mother general of theSisters of St. Dominic, Akron.

Mother Annunciata told thepastors that Sisters are ready,willing and available to becomeinvolved in significant activitiesrelated to their teaching aposto-'late, and that some communitieshave revised their rules to makethe Sisters more available.

She asked the pastors to initi­ate dialogue with Sisters andurged that each parish become"team oriented" with priests,Sisters and laity working to­gether.

Page 6: 06.05.69

., ,

, ., ~ .. , ..':," •• ,': .-; ; ~ • ';., I' : "

tHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Riv'e'r-'-Thurs., Jurie 5, 1969

F~[fmal Tr@8IillflHll~Continued from Page One

cerned about getting to theiryoungsters," the priest observed.

Father Hesburgh also sug­g~sted as a possibility a syst~m

in which all elementary and hIghschool children would take theirsecular subjects in public schoolSand receive formal religioustraining through some type ofreleased time arrangement.

The Catholic community would,under such a system, concen­trate attention on all of itsschool children. Only half 'theCatholic elementary' school chil­dren and a third of the highschool children are in Catholicschools at present, he said.

Such an arrangement couldapply to Protestant and Jewishchildren as well, and thus helpsupply the religious dimensionto modern society now s~dly ne-glected, he said. I

Giving his views at a pressconference, Father Hesburghsaid college students feel 'la kindof moral ambiguity about soci­ety,· a kind of spiritual' empti­ness about it."

The percentage of students"who want to destroy the placeas an initial move toward de­stroying society" which theythink is utterly corrupt is verysmall, but the .majority of stu­dents do have "some very seri­ous and real questions to ask"about American society, headded.

Gr~ater RoleHARRISBURG (NC)-A Prot­

estant leader asserted here thatthe church must pay an increas- .ingly greater role in secular af­fairs, particularly in quellingviolence, combatting racial in­justice and other inequities.

.Glrodua,tionContinued from Page One

Monday ceremonies will beheld by Sacred Hearts Aca·demy, Fall River, and Coyle andCassidy High Schools in Taun­ton.

At Sacred Hearts, 54 girlswill receive diplomas at 3 Mon­day afternoon from Bishop Ger­rard. Msgr. Daniel F. Shalloo,pastor of Holy Name Church,Fall River, will deliver an in­vocation and graduates wm bepresented by Sister Jane Ray­mond, S.U.S:C., principal. Themain speaker will be Rep. Mar­garet M. Heckler. Highest­ranking graduate' at the FallRiver academy is Marilyn F.Riley. ,

Bishop Connolly will presideat 4 o'clock ceremonies atBishop Cassidy High School,where 106 girls will graduate.Principal speaker will be Rev.John J. Smith, assistant past9rat St. James Church, New Bed­fore\.

One hundred and forty-threeboys will graduate from CoyleHigh School at 8 o'clock in theschool auditorium. ChristopherReid will be valedictorian andJames Phalen will be saluta­torian.

Bishop Connolly will conferdiplomas and speak, and schooloratorical contest winners willalso be heard.

On WednesdayClosing the commencement

season will be Bishop StangHigh School, North Dartmouth,where 133 boys and 110 girlswill graduate at 7:30 Wednes­day night. Bishop Connolly willpresent diplomas, Father O'Neillwill preside and the principalspeaker will be Professor Jo~n

O'Loughlin. Joseph Perry WIllbe cited as winner of NationalMerit and National Honor So­ciety schoiarships and alsq asa Notre Dame Scholar.

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Dutch Ordination

with secondary schools. He haskept out of trouble; and, lastFall, he enrolled in ,an experi­mental studies class conductedat ,the reformatory by Prof.Frank Wood of St. Norbert Col­lege.

"For the first time I read afew books that I enjoyed," Ar­nold said of the course,whichincluded readings on currentevents in. America and society.Though Arnold didn't completethe course, Wood and Arnold'ssocilil case worker, Delbert Cor­nette, felt he had the potentialto do college-level work.

Discussions between collegedean, Donaid King, and EdwinSybeldon, a social worker whoadministers 'the work releaseprogram at the reformatory, re­sulted in Arnold's enrollment asa student in an experimentalprogram. Arnold, as far as col­lege and reformatory officialsknow, is the first inmate to beenrolled as a full-time collegestudent in Wisconsin under thework release program.

Continued from Page Onearchdiocesan commission for thetraining of priests, in consulta­tion with Bernard Cardinal AI­frink of Utrecht.

Recently 7 to II candidatesfor the. priesthood in the Utrechtarchdiocese refused to acceptthe' celibacy requirement of thepriesthood.

The archdiocese commissionon the training of. priests saidthat the promise of celibacyshould be postponed until afterthe candidate had completed atleast' a year of prac~ical and su­pervised pastoral work.

The new arrangement will per­mit extensions of the period ofpastoral work. Although it willalso permit the waiving of theyear of pastoral work, this per­mission will be difficult to ob­tain, according to the commis­sion.

The new arrangement alsoprovides for the possibility oflay people being consulted be­fore a candidate is accepted forthe priesthood.

University HonorsSchool Civics Clubs

WASHINGTON (NC)-Awardsfor oufstanding achievementhave been bestowed on 61 Cath­olic school civics clubs by theCommission' on American Citi­zenship of the Catholic Unlver"sity of America.

Among the projects conductedby the winning clubs were cam­paigning for needed one-waystreets, neighborhood' clean-updrives, collecting books for theschool library, working with un­derprivileged children at play­grounds and day"care centers,collecting funds for hospitalsand food for the poor, and polit­ical propects related to the pres-idential ca';!1Paign. .

There are almost 3,000 activecivics clubs in U. S. parochialschools. The 1968-69 theme forthe clubs; set by the Commissionon American Citizenship was"Your Role in a 'Changing Amer·ica." .

Wisconsin 'Work-Release' PrisonerAttends Catholic College

WEST DE PERE (NC)-Thereis one freshman amo'ilg the morethan 1,600 students attending St.Norbert College here who live anunusual off-campus life. Harry'Arnold (a fictitious name) is aninmate at the Wisconsin StateReformatory'in .Green B<\y whenhe's not going to college under awork-release program patternedafter Wisconsin's Huber Law.

From 8 A.M. to' 5 P.M. Mono.>day through Friday he looks andacts like any other student, inhis tennis shoes, grey slacksand white knit shirt. He is study­ing business administration, En­glish and music.

Arnold's path to St. Norbertwas hardly the usual. one. , Oneday before he was planning todrop out of high .school in Mil­waukee, he was arrested on bur­glary charges,' convicted andsentenced to seven years at theState Reformatory. That was in,May, 1967.

Since then, Arnold's reforma­tory record has been a good oneand he has received a diplomafrom his high school in Milwau­kee through the reformatory'scooperative education progr~m

..,:.~ .. ....

of Danger,Cametraderae

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER

Published weekly, ~y The'Catholic Press of The Diocese of Fall River'. 410 Highland Avenue

Fall River, Mo~s. 02722 675-7151

. . . PUBLISHERMost Rev.. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD.

He([J!flfhy O1lflJdl W/h~ge8([}1lJ11J[!

Southeastern' Massachusetts with its fine highways,miles of beaches, ocean and many ponds provide oppor­tunities for relaxing and healthful vacationing ·for resi­dent~ and tourists.

Sadly, the area has already witnessed several tra­gedies of drowning and' boating mishaps and .highwaydeaths. And the vacation season has hardly' begun.

It is not too soon, then, to sound warnings about theSummer season.

The Church in the area has tried to provide everyopportunity for spiritual health with the multiplying ofMasses and the opportunity to fulfill the Sunday Massobligation by scheduling Masses on the vigil of Sunday,on Saturday evening.

The Church is also concerned about physical wel­fare, too. Those driving and boating and swilJ1ming areurged to recognize the moral implications of tpese health~

ful activities and to use all caution and prudence so thattheir Summer may be healthy physically and wholesomespiritually.

GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGERRt. Rev. Daniel F. Sholloo, M.A. 'Rev. John P. Driscoll

. -MANAGING EDITOR

Hugh. J. Golden, LL.B.~n Leary Press-fall River

@rhe·ANCHOR

Fred M. Hechinger, an editorial writer for The NewYork Times, has pointed out that one theme which runsthrough all student uprisings and which dare not !Je over­looked is that of cameraderie. After the occupatIOn of abuilding at Harvard a student reporter could write, "Whatwas most euphoric, however, was us and what we wereto each other. For those few hours we were brothers andsisters .... we were very together."

The poignancy of such a remark which is commonto so many student protests should not be lost ,or lightlybrushed aside.

Many students are lonely.' They are l~oking--for a to­getherness which perhaps they never had- in their ownfamilies and do not have in college. A protest, a rebellion,a cause-these things link them together, in a cameraderieof daring and danger. And they receive an emotional up­lift from banding together against an establishment or an

, institution.

College life puts a premium on individual effort andachievement and thus it encourages a loneliness. Studentsface exams and examiners one by one and stand or fallfor now and their whole future on what they know or onwhat they answer or fail to answer in test papers and re­ports.

This puts pressures on them. They are tempted to re­bel against the lonely life of reason and to give scopeto the emotions and especially if this can be done in union­with others of like loneliness and boredom and desire fortogetherness.

It is unfortunate that families and society and teach­ers have not prepared people. to be able, to be alone attimes without being lonely, dedicated to reason withoutbeing devoid o( emotions, at peace with the communityof one's fellows while able to be at peace within one­self.

Page 7: 06.05.69

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., June 5, 1969 7..~

TAUNTON CCO PROGRAM: To everyone's regret, a four-year experimentalCCO program invohcing four Taunton parishes is coming to an end, with theresignation of its director, Sister Rose Lamb, SUSC, who has accepted thepost of CCO supervisor at St. Ann's parish, Raynham. Left, Sister Rose and

Mrs. Robert Leonard, St. Mary's parish, Taunton, register student Rene Ouellette,Immaculate Conception parish. Center, teachers enjoy pre-class planning sessionover coffee. Right, class is in session with teachers Joseph Sikorski, St. Mary'sparish, left, and francis Frazier, St. Joseph's

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Prelate DiscussesNewspaper Policy

SPOKANE (NC) - A bishopcontended here that a diocesannewspaper' "must be open in ex-

'pressing views-views that maybe different from mine - viewsthat in some instances may con­tradict my own personal views."

Bishop Bernard J. Topel ofSpokane said a diocesan news­paper "is not an official news­paper, in the sense that every­thing in it without exception isofficial" and has explicit ap­proval.

As to the Spokane diocesanpaper, the Inland Register, theWashington bishop said it "wmnot and must not print onlythings of which I approve,"

Expressing his views in hiscolumn, "Your Bishop and You,"in the Inland Register on theeditorial policies of a diocesannewspaper, Bishop Topel stated"it is our explicit purpose to in­form our readers honestly andopenly,"

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the experimental program wasthe elective courses. The schoolyear was divided into three termsand students could choose acourse during each term.

Among offerings were: Catho­lics in American History, Chris­tian Careers and Messages inMusic.

"I think we proved, too, thatparishes can work together toprovide a program that willreach a good many students. Wecan provide a program no oneparish alone can do, at leastat present, because no projectcomes alive unless you can draw,on a variety of resources bothin terms of people and finances".

The stu den t s apparentlyagreed with Sister's evaluation.They liked the variety of courses,

. and the freedom to choose them.Most of all they liked the ideaof students from the four parish­es coming together, both for thecoffee and doughnuts served be­fore class, and for the exchangeof ideas that took place in class.

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Churches DiscussTheology, Marriage

CHARLESTON (NC) - Prob­lems concerning theology andmarriage were the bases for prin­cipal discussions at consultationshere between representatives ofthe Catholic and the Presbyterianand Reformed Churches.

Thirty-two persons took partin the dialogue, jointly sponsoredby the U.S. Catholic Bishops'Committee for Ecumenical andInterreligious Affairs and theNorth American Area Council ofthe World Alliance of ReformedChurches.

The consultation included twosections. Dr. James H. Nicholsof Princeton Theological Semi­nary presided at the theologysection, and Msgr. Henry Beck,Lyndhurst, N.J., the section onworship and mission.

A sophomore boy wrote thatSister Rose "has helped makethis the best year out of mytwo here and if she is leaving,the least we can do is to' tryto make it even half as good ifpossible."

Elective CoursesSister Rose, who is chairman

of the Teaching Sisters andBrothers Committee for CCO forthe diocese, is a science teach­er at Bishop Cassidy HighSchool. She has recently accept­ed the position of director of allCCO programs for St. Ann'sparish in Raynham.

One of the unique aspects of

CCD Experimental Program RevealsTeens Seek Sincerity, Variety in Classes

By Dorothy Eastman

All good things come to an end, even experimental CCO programs, as students andteachers from four Taunton parishes are discovering. Four years ago CCO groupsfrom St. Mary's, St. Joseph's, St. Anthony's and Immaculate Conception parishes em­barked on an experimental program to find out what advantages there might be inpooling their talents. Highschool students from thefour parishes began comingto Bishop Cassidy HighSchool on Sunday mornings forthe innovative program.

Sister Rose Lamb, the HolyUnion Sister who structuredand directed the courses, sat ata table in the foyer of theschool on the last day of classesand spoke of her regret at hav­ing to resign from the program.A delegation of teachers had justapproached her expressing theirdisappointment at its conclusion.

"I'm glad. they're disappoint­ed," Sister said, "because thatmeans it's been successful."

The stu den t s apparentlythought so too. Sister had ask­ed them to comment on theC.C.O. program and they re­sponded with candor and gener­ally with enthusiasm.

A freshman girl wrote withgreat warmth about her interestin the three courses she tookthis year, and commented on oneteacher who also happened to bethe prindpal of her school,Taunton High.

Speaking of her class withhim she said, "It gave me a bet­ter understanding of the kindof person he is. Not only a prin­cipal from my school, but areal true person who wanted tohave a better understanding andtrust of his students."

Another student, who was im­pressed by the qualities of theteachers, wrote ."The adultswere fine-not some kind ofreligious freaks but real peoplewho tried to have us benefitfrom their mistakes and mis­givings."

A freshman boy said "I didn'tmiss a week of this program. 1like it because it. expresses otherthought.s. You see. and know

Amore people through this."

Power wareness "The teachers and SistersLife is the faculty of sponta- really worked hard to make

neous activity, the awareness this program a success," a juniorthat we have powers. -Kant. girl remarked.

Starts July 31From the flying time allotted

the Pope's plane in the schedule,six and one-half hours fromRome to Entebbe, it seems un­likely that he will make any'stops along the way.

There had been talk that hemight stop in Alexandria, Egypt,at the invitation of Coptic Chris­tians there. And the Sudanesegovernment, since fallen in acoup d'etat,had invited him totouchdown at Khartoum.

The published schedule beginswith the Pope's departure fromRome's Fiumicino Airport at 7:30on the morning of Thursday,July 31. It ends with his depar­ture from Uganda at an unspeci­fied time in the evening of Sat­urday, Aug. 2, on the flight backto Rome.

Announce PlansFor Pope's TrmpTo Uganda

VATICAN CITY (NC)Pope Paui VI's African pil­grimage, taking up threefull days instead of the twoearlier anpounced, will includean ecumenical encounter at thehill where Catholic and AnglicanAfricans died together for theircommon fidelity. to Cprist.

The Pope will also meet theUgandan government: leadersand parliament, several hundredbishops from throughout Africa,and some of the neediest andmost deprived Africans in cen­ters of social assistance.

On the hill where 13 Catholicsand 15 Anglicans burned todeath in 1886 rather than denytheir Christian faith, the Popewill baptize a group of catechu­mens.

All this emerged from the pro­gram of the Pope's pilgrimagepublished by the Holy See.

Yet what may be the most sig­nificant encounter of all was notmentioned: his meeting along thecountry roads and in towns andcities with hundreds of thou­sands and perhaps millions ofAfricans who will see a Pope setfoot on the African continent forthe first time.

Page 8: 06.05.69

Ambition is the germ fromwhich all growth of noblenessproceeds. -English.

o

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Fall River 678-5677

Hospitals Decl ineIn Numbers

ST. LOUIS (NC)-While U. S.Catholic hospitals continue toincrease in total bed capacity,they are declining in numbers,it was reported in the 1968 sta­tistici:J1 profile published by theCatholic Hospital Association.

Total beds increased from156 838 in 1967 to 158,579 in1968. Over the same period, thenumber of hospitals drOppedfrom 834 to 815. During 1968,21 hospitals ceased operationsdue to mergers, closings, orwithdrawal of the religious con­gregation; two new Catholic hos­pitals opened.

The report also cited an in­crease in the number of lay ad­ministrators which jumped from70 in 1967 to 108 in 1968, anincrease of nearly 37 per cent.

Of the total 815 Catholic hos­pitals, 637 are general short-termcare, 138 are general short-termcare with long-term units, 10 arepsychiatric, eight are chro.nicconvalescent, seven are pediat­ric seven are maternity, two arerehabilitative, two are tuberciJ­losis, two are alcoholic, one iscancer and one is orthopedic.

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'Chaplain School AwardTo tu Professor

. WASHINGTON. (NC) - Thefirst award presented at the, AirForce Chaplain School of theUnited States Air Force Uni­versity went to Alphonse H,Clemens '''for excellent and meri­torious service to the Air Force* * * 'in his participation as avisiting professor over the past10 years."

Clemens, an associate profes­sor in the sociology departmentat the Catholic Univesrity ofAmerica here, has been conduct:.ing a seminar in human relationson the Alabama campus for thepast decade.

Special School Outings, Group Offer, $3.50-StudentOffer includes: Special Luncheon and $4. wort~ ofRide Tickets. For additional details or reservatlon~

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miles from the base, Weningersaid. '

Weninger, 38, operated asporting goods store in his home­town, Brownsville, Wis., until ~e

entered PAVLA in 1963. HISfirst full-time assignment-thecurrent one in Brazil-began in1966; and if his plane proj~ct

proves' sJ,lccessful he may Signup for a second three-year stintthere, he said.

Weninger learned .to fly whilean air force mechanic during theKorean war. Aviation remaineda hobby until he went to Ma­capa, capital of the Amapa ter­ritory served by the PIME Fa­thers. There he started bringingpriests to visit the dying,; sickmothers to a hospital; suppliesand equipment from Balem, 200miles away.

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ANNUAL MEETING: Fall River area Cursillistas gather forNight of Christian Joy at Sacred Hearts A~ademy. ConcelebratedMass was offered by Rev. Edw~rd J. Mltfhell, .Rev. Ronald A.Tosti, Rev. Peter Mullen and Rev. George Almeida.

Needs' New PlanePAVLA Worker Transports Missionaries

In Large Brazil TerritoryST. PAUL (NC)-Robert Wen­

inger, PAVLA worker who hasbeen taking missionaries by airto their people spread over aBrazilian territory the size ofWisconsin and Minnesota, is'now driving a truck in theUnited States to earn, money fora new, plane.

Weninger worked with thePIME Fathers in Brazil almost

. three years as a Eapal Volun­teer for Latin America.· He flewa single-engine mission planedaily-more than 1,000 hours ayear in good weather and bad­to enable 25 missioners to ,servesome 150,000 Brazilians in theroadless, river-dampened jungle.

But the aircraft, which wasshort on 'horsepower and long onwear, needed to be replaced, soWeninger is driving a truckalong Midwest highways andseeking contributions toward the$25,000 he needs to get back upinto the Brazilian air. .

While he's gone, the PIME(Pontifical Institute for ForeignMissions) Fathers can ,travel onlyby boat. And it requires weeksto get to one priest located 300

Lawyers Study lossOf Tax Exemption

WASHINGTON (NC) - Law­yers for Americans United for

. Separation of Church and Stateare investigating all possibilitiesin seeking a cours'e of action totake since the Internal RevenueService (IRS) took away its tax­exemption ·status.

The tax privileges were deniedAmericans United because, ac­cordirg to IRS, the organizationIs,an "action group."

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., June 5, 1969

Germ of Growth

8

'Bye Bye Birdie' DelightfulBroadway-Styl,e Production

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick

By the time this appears in print Marilyn and ! willhave suffered through' another recital. The sufferm.g Irefer to is the anguish which accompanies each re~ltal;

sitting in the audience while your child plays her piece,

expecti.ng any moment that palm of their hands from theshe will forget the whole opening curtain until the finalthing and run off the stage. standing ovation from theThis never seems to happen thrilled viewers. . .and no doubt the other parents .A cross between ~elhm, andpresent have the same feelings, Rlch~rd R.odgers, Sister (whobut we certainly suffer more studle~ wI~h \yalter Kerr atthan the childen in anticipation ~athohc l!mverslty and has ~eenf d' t mvolved m a Summer of fllm-

o B~:~s ~~rYI and Melissa are making. in HOlly'wo?d) gave thetaking lessons, so Marilyn and ~rodu~tlOn the magic touch t~at

I have a double taste of anxiety, hfted It from the ~eal~ of be~ngbut I suppose it is worth it in just another cutle httie highthe long run. Music lessons are s;hool end-of-the-year effort.worthwhile for the children in I ve seen Boston try-outs thata number of ways but I some- I~cked the zest, color and dow~­

times wonder what price we as right talent t~at marked thisd It second productIOn of, the Pros-a u spay.

I would like to have a nickel pect Players.for every time I have had to Enraptured Audienceremind. the girls to. practice and Originally I had planned toI certamly would hke some new take Meryl and Melissa to theargu~ents on. why the~ should musical because they had seencontmue playm~ (the ~It about the movie version and had been"YO~:ll. appr~clate this. some, humming and singing the tunesday, IS wearmg rather thm). around the house. Even Jason

Unique Aff~ir . kept chiming in with "I love youRecitals are a umque affair. Conrad, oh yes I do."

All the doting grandmothers are But I certainly wasn't lookingthere, not because they want to forward to the evening myself.be, but because their grand- However 10 and behold, thechildren would never forgive curtain hadn't been up morethem for missing their big night. than five minutes before myThere are always a number of tiredness vanished and I (alongyounger brothers and sisters' with my enraptured family andwho are being hushed, gagged everyone else in ,the audience)and dragged out of the hall by was caught up in the color,embarrassed parents right in the spirit, and youthful. exuberancemiddle of their child's perform- that unfolded qn that stage.ance. By the time this column gets

But best of all is the camera published there will have beenbug who snaps pictures of the many reviews written and muchchildren just as they ner~ou.sly praise given to the exceptionalcome on stage, thus blmdmg job everyone connected with thethem by what must seem to be production turned ,in. However,a multitude of flashing, lights. I want to add my own small

The anxiety of parents, note of thanks for a delightful'though, is nothing compared to evening' and a chance to viewthat of the teacher. It is she the talent and charm of thosewho has persevered with sour- members of the younger gener­notes, unrhythmical renditions of atkm that we can point to 'withbeautiful pieces, balking students, pride even though their exploitsand the high aspirations of don't make front-page news.parents with tone-deaf children. For' those nights when youIt is she who hears every bad - are' planning to go out .thenote, every mistake, and the following omelet recipe is a de­criticism.s of. parents who feel lightful and easy change,o{-pace.that their children are not mak- We had ours with sauted chick-ing sufficient progress.' en livers as a filling.

When it is all said and done .we can breathe a sigh of relief Puffy Omeletand take the Summer off, which 4 eggs, separatedson.ehow makes it all worth- 1,4 teaspoon cream of tartarwhile. I am sustained in the 1,4 teaspoon saltchildren's music lessons less by 2 Tablespoons butter or mar-the hope that someday the chil- garinedren wil. enjoy music thim by I) Preheat oven to 350•. In athe selfish dream that ~ome- large bowl with an electrjc mixerday som~one so~ewhere Will do beat the egg whites until foamy;away With recitals. add the cream of tartar, beating

In the Kitchen until stiff, but not dry. In a smallBroadway came to my home- bowl with the mixer at medium

town the other evening and I speed, beat yolks with 1,4 cupwas so pleased that I had the cold water and salt until veryopportunity to view it. It. didn't light and fluffy; Carefully foldcome in the form of a traveling yolk mixture in beaten white.s.stock company or even in the 2) In a 10-inch ovenproof skll­guise of a local little theatre let, heat butter. Add the egggroup' but surprisingly from a mixture and cook over a lowtalent filled production of "Bye 'heat 3 minutes or until puffy andBye Birdie" by the Prospect Play- golden on the underside, wheners under the direction of Sister lifted with a spatula. Then bakeJohn Alicia, S.U.S.C. 10 minutes in the oven until a

This group of "beautiful young light brown. ,people" from the Sacred Hearts 3) Run a spatula around sidesAcademy in Fall River and to .Ioosen omelet. Make a cutneighboring high schools and through center of omelet, onlycolleges held the audience in the part way through, perpendicular

to handle. Tip skillet at edge ofwarmed platter. With spatula,~~d om~ct in ~lf and 00 ~platter.-Spoon your favorite fill­ing into the omelet if you like.

Page 9: 06.05.69

Tots' Togs Changed RapidlyBut Not for Fashion's Sake

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs., June 5, 1969

Recruit MinorityGroup Students

WASHINGTON (NC)-A spotcheck of U. S. Catholic universi­ties found indications there arewidespread eft'orts in the mak·ing to recruit more black andother minority group students tothe campuses.

The survey also found tUs ef·fort is largely an individual oneon the part of each of theschools, with little coordinationamong them; that the schoolsare hampered here as elsewhereby a shortage of funds necessaryto do the job, and that the uni­versities may be faced by theadditional problem of competi­tion from older and richerschools, equally desirous of hav­ing more blacks and other tradi­tionally neglected members ofsociety in their academic flmks.

"We have made a concertedeffort this year to recruit moreblack and Puerto Rican studentsthrough all the regular recruit­ment procedures," said HandselMinyard, assistant to the execu­tive vice president of FordhamUniversity.

"Even to the extent of sendingour own black and Puerto Ricanstudents to recruit.' We havebeen successful in getting kidswho otherwise would not be go·ing to college."

Minyard, a Negro, believessimilar efforts are underway inother Catholic colleges and uni­versities but, like other officialscontacted, is not sure how many.He feels that "the amount of co­ordination or even communica­tion (among these schools) is notnearly as great as it should be,"and that the schools have notavailed themselves of the oppor­tunity to help one another inwhat should be a common con·cern.

Must IngredientInitiative is to success what a

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religious -study does not makeit ineligible, Reeher, explained.It is when the school mandatesthe study of religion that it isclassified as ineligible.

Reeher said that a student'smajoring in religion would not,of itself, bar him from receivingstate aid.

"This does not constitute the­ology," he said. "But we do haveto look at each individual schoolto determine eligibility.

"A priest or nun would be eli­gible for aid in a liberal artscourse, for example.

"In the ca~es where the pro­grams of study have been dis­qualified, it has been based onthe institution's requirement thata student enroll in a certainnumber pf required courses ofreligion or theology.. "It is important to note that inno case has there been a rulingconcerning a student who haselected to enroll in a religionmajor in schools other thanthose previously cited."

Only two of the 13 schools af­fected by the PHEAA ruling arelisted as Catholic institutions:Assumption College for Sisters,Mendham, N. J., and MaryknollCollege, Glenn Ellyn, III.

Clarifi,es RulingStude'nts in Church-Related Schools

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Papal Vicar StressesCivilization's Values

ROME (NC)-The papal vicarof Rome has called for a defenseof "the values of civilization"against pornography in the massmedia.

The appeal by Angelo CardinalDell'Acqua was addressed inparticular to ·pro.d,~cers, finan­ciers and artists ,in the communi­cations field, urging them not tobend their, energies to "low com­mercial purposes."

He asked them, and heads offamilies and educators, to "rejectmodes of living and thinkingwhich are alien to Christiantraditions. "

HARRISBURG (NC)-KennethR. Reeher, director of the Penn­sylvania Higher Education As­sistance Agency (PHEAA), saidstudents in some church-relatedcolleges are eligible to qualifyfor scholarships under the agen­cy's program.

Reeher said some misunder­standing had been caused by hisagency's recent ruling disquali·fying students attending somedozen church-related schools.mostly Protestant Bible colleges.

He said the law permitsPHEAA to grant aid to all stu­dents except those in seminariesand schools of theology. Earlyin 1967, counsel for the agencybegan making a list of schoolswhose students would no longer

'be eligible for scholarships.On May I, 1967, the agency

ruled that the Philadelphia Col­lege of the Bible was not on theeligible list for state scholarshipsor loans. Recently 12 additionalschools were added to the list.

The fact that a school offers

Participants to ChooseModerators, Directors

NEWARK (NC)-Participantsin family life programs in theNewark archdiocese will have adirect voice in the selection oftheir moderators and of the arch­diocesan priest director.

Under terms of a new consti­tution governing the work of theFamily Life Apostolate, priestsengaged in the work are to benamed by Archbishop Thomas A.Boland from a list of nomineeschosen by family life groups.

The archdiocesan director andassistant director are 'to benamed from among those ,priestsnominated by the executiveboard. Twelve laymen sit on theboard at present. ,

Also serving on the boardare moderators of the five or- ,ganizations or movements mak.ing up the Family Life Aposto­late. The moderators are to benamed from nominees selectedby laymen and clergy participat­ing in the movements, such asChristian Family Movement,Cana Conference program andthe Catholic One·Parent Organ.ization. '

Indiana Catholic College~Ians 1970 Closing

FERDINAND (NC)-St. Bene­dict College has announced itwill close at the end of theSu•.lmer session in 1970.

Mother M. Julia, O.S.B., chair­man of the college's board oftrustees, blamed lack of financialsupport as the major reason forthe closing.

St. Benedict College has beenoperated by the Benedictine Nunssince 1914, 'originally began forthe training of nuns in theirown community. In 1958 the col­lege began accepting lay womenand in 1967 it became coeduca­tional for the first time.

By Marilyn Roderick

Summer is just around the corner and with it thefour and five changes of clothes that our children averageon anyone balmy day. Polish up that iron, recover yourironing board, and have your serviceman, check out yourwasher and dryer for as thedays get warmer and longer Espirito Santo Feast Day Parade.

'II b . Fresh change of clothes allyou e usmg them more around (by this time I've un-and more. My dryer is al- earthed a pair of white shoes forready creaking and groaning in Melissa from last year that byanticipation of the overuse that some miracle still fit her).he'll get this Off we venture with everyoneSummer. Already sparkling like an ad for yourhis innards can favorite detergent, but alas wefeel the scratchy forget that at parades they sellgrains of sand cotton candy, ice cream andthat wet, soggy candy-apples; and before thebathing sui t s even passes by these tastywill spew forth snacks are adorning everyone'sand the weight dress or shirt front.of the never- Back to the joys of our homeending stream of laundry and this has to be infreshly washed march-time because the girls andsneakers. Wash I are going to a Confirmationand wear are that evening and Melissa hasmarvelous discoveries but like pink cotton candy on the fronteverythJng that is worn they get of the dress that: I want her todirty and thus another case for wear. By this point I'm thankingthe household appliances. God for that speedy helper the

Losing Battle dryer. From long experience IIt's a' losing battle trying to know that this day will be re­

keep everyone looking fresh and peated over and over again withbandbox neat when outdoor ac- just the settings changing buttivities are the order of the day. with the cast of characters (andJust this past Sunday I was their many outfits) remaining thetreated (if you can call it that) to same.a preview of what the Summer And after going through aholds in store for clothes care. goodly number of years of this

First one outfit for each of I never see a mother with athe girls for church and of lovely looking, 'well-groomedcourse it's never until you're group of youngsters in tow thatwalking down the front stairs I don't sil'ently pay tribute toand Dad's leaning impatiently on the perseverance, frayed nervesthe horn that you notice that and broken fingernails that wentMelissa's white patent leathers into this pretty picture.have suddenly come down witha case of the greys, especiallytheir cloth bows.

Of course at that point, shortof being late for Mass, there's noway you ca'. rectify the situa­tion, especially since they havenot yet come out with purse-sizebottles of white shoe polish. Noalternative exists except to sallyforth to church and hope no onenotices Melissa's shoes.

After church everyone changesinto sports outfits and mothergoes upstairs to throw up herhands in dismay when she findsthe aforementioned church out·fits tossed around in variousstages of wrinkles. Ironingboard, here we come.

Unwanted AccessoriesLater on in the afternoon we '

decide to take the children to the

Asks lay ResponsibilityFor Schools' Survival

BELMONT( NC)-Father Vir­gil Blum, S.J., placed 'the re­sponsibility for the survival ofCatholic schools squarely on theshoulders of laymen in a talkat the College of Notre Damehere in California.

He said, "I always feel I'vefailed when, after I've givena talk, parents come to me andwish me good luck."

Father Blum, from MarquetteUniversisty's political science de­partment, told an audience ofparents, nuns and priests thattax funds for non public schoolswill not be forthcoming unlessthere is strong grass roots sup­port to force policy makers toadopt the necessary legislation.

"Seven million children inchurch-related schools are po­litical orphans because thereare no large interest groups tospeak for them," he added. Thepriest noted that legislators reospond to pressure from interestgroups and called on parents toorganize to inflpence the govern­ment.

Page 10: 06.05.69

NOW-=FOR CATHOLICS OF ALL AGESAND CATHOLIC FAMILIES OF ALL SIZES-

New Hospital Plan for CathoUcs pays extra cash direct to you­on addition to any other insurance-group, individual or Medicare­'tax-free extra cash to use~ou please!

INDIVIDUAL PLAN$5.000 MAXIMUM

l·PARENT FAMILY PLAN$7,500 MAXIMUM

come 65, the following modest monthly in­crease applies. (This is the ollly increase thatcan ever be made as long as you continueyour policy in force):Female on AIl.Family or

Husband-Wife Plan ADD: $2.25Female on One·Parent Family

or Individual Plan ADD: $3.00Male on any Plan .....•••.... ADD: $3.00

, PAYS YOU: $100 weekly. ($14.28 daily) extra cash

.............. income while you are hos­pitalized.

If you aie living by yourself, or wish to coveronly one family member, you will want theIndividual Plan.

You pay only $3.25 a mo'nth and youget your first month for only $1.001

cover any accident immediately, the veryday YOllr policy goes into effect-and anynew sickness which begins after your policyis 30 days old. There are only these mini­mum necessary exceptions: pregnancy or'any consequence thereof (unless you havethe All-Family Plan), war, military service,nervous or mental disease or disorder, sui­cide, alcoholism or drug addiction, or con­ditions covered by Workmens Compensa­tion or Employers Liability Laws. You arefree to go to any hospital of your own choicethat makes a charge for room and board,with these exceptions only: nursing homes,convalescent or self-care units of hospitals,Federal hospitals, or any hospital primarilyfor treatment of tuberculosis, alcoholism,drug addiction, or nervous or mental dis­order.

limited Enrollment. Have the parent to beenrolled complete and sign the EnrollmentForm, but enter YOllr address clo your name.(Example: clo John Jones, 120 Main Street,Anytown, U.S.A.) We will send the policyand premium notices to you. Just enclose $1for the first month. .

(NOTE: See below for over·65 rates and how youmay enroll parents who are over 65.)

wish to name, subject to the maximum (Ag­gregate of Benefits) of your policy. Youmay, if you wish. name your parish as yourbeneficiary.

I'·.~:'"'' .,I~-:~"";' ~ PAYS YOU:. $100 weekly

l""f."-· ,=-'J:l ($14.28 daily) extra cash1:'. ....:.,.--,11 income while you are hos­pitalized. $50 weekly ($7.14 daily) for eacheligible child hospitalized.

If you are the only parent living with yourchildren, we suggest the One-Parent FamilyPlan. This covers you and all eligible chil­dren living at home between 3 months ofage and under 19. Under this plan, of course,future additions are not included since nomaternity benefit is provided in the One-Parent Family Plan. '

You pay only $5.95 a month and youget your first month for only $1.001

HUSBAND·WIFE PLAN$7,500 MAXIMUM

ALL·FAMILY PLAN$10,000 MAXIMUM

During this limited enrollment you can getthe extra cash protectioll needed to fill thegaps in Medicare simply by filling out theEnrollment Form on next page without allYother qllalifications! The Hospital Plan forCatholics not only accepts you regardless ofage, it gives you hard·to·find extra cash pro­tectioll during the high-risk senior years at acost withill your means.

If you are over 65 now, or when you be-

Even though your parents are covered byMedicare, a serious condition requiringlengthy hospitalization can mean the end oftheir reserves and loss of independence. Tohonor their independence and safeguardyour own reserves, enroll your parents inthe Hospital Plan for Catholics during this .

In the event of the accidental death (within90 days -of an accident) of any person cov~

ered under the Hospital Plan for Catholics,$500 will be paid to any beneficiary you

PAYS YOU: $100 weekly($14.28 daily) extra cashincome while you are hos­

pitalized. $75 weekly ($10.71 daily) whileyour wife is hospitalized.

If you have no children', or if your childrenare grown and no longer dependent on you,.you will want the Husband.Wife Plan.

You pay only $5.75 a month and youget your first month for only $1.001

CHOOSE THE PLAN THAT SUITS YOU BEST

On all plans, your cash benefits are -paidfrom the very first day you enter the hospi­tal, as long-and as many times-as you arehospitalized right up to the maximum (Ag­gregate of Benefits) of your plan.

IMPORTANT: Here is another real"plus"-if you have been told that anyonein your family is "uninsurable"! Even ifone of your covered family members hassuffered from chronic ailments in the past,the kinds of conditions that come back·again and again or are likely to recur, theHospital Plan for Catholics will covereach family member for these pre·existingconditions after he has been protected bythe policy for two years!

But whether or not you have had a chronicailment, the Hospital Plan for Catholics will

I PAYS YOU: $100 weeklyrrk- ($14.28 daily) extra cash(1/ - 'income while you are hos-pitalized. $75 weekly ($10.71 daily) whileyour wife is hospitalized. $50 weekly ($7.14

_daily) for each eligible child hospitalized.

If yours is a young growing family, we rec­-ommend the All-Family Plan. You and yourwife are covered at once for accidents, forsicknesses which begin after your policy is30 days old, and for maternity benefits afteryour policy has been in force for 10 months.And all your unmarried dependent childrenbetween 3 months of age and under 19 areincluded at no extra cost as long as they liveat home. (This includes not 'only your pres­ent children but any future additions.)

You pay only $7.95 a month and youget your first month for only $1.00/

Are Your Parents Senior Citizens?

Accidental Death Benefit On All Four Plans

Special Note If Y_ou Are Over 65

(Contin·ued on next page)

Your "Health-Bank Account"

Here's a wonderful benefit, no matterwhich plan yoti choose, almost like an ex­tra "Bank Account." When your policy isissued, your insurance provides up to$10,000, $7,500 or $5,000-according tothe Plan you choose. This is your "Health­Bank Account." Then, every month yourpolicy is in force, an amount equal 'to yourregular monthly pr_emiu!TI (including yourfirst month) is actuaIly added to your max­imum! When you have claims, your bene­fits are siml?ly· subtracted from your "ac-

[I you, as husband, father and breadwin­ner are suddenly hospitalized, your incomestops, your expenses go up. Even if youhave some kind of "salary .insurance" it

.probably won't come close to replacingyour full-time pay. If your wife is sudaenlyhospitalized, who will look after the fam­ily, do the laundry, the marketing, thecleaning? You may have to take time offfrom your job-or hire domestic help. Ifone of your children is hospitalized, you'llcertainly spare no expense. II you're a sen­ior.> citizen, with limited reserves, and arehospitalized, even with Medicare, wherewill the "extra" money you need comefrom?

Without any extra cash protection incase of a hospital emergency, debts may beincurred, savings may be lost, peace ofmind may be shattered-and even recoverycan be seriously delayed. -

How The Plan Protects You AndYour Family

Now, with the unique protection of theHospital Plan for Catholics you can avoidthese worries-because you can be assuredof extra cash income when you or any cov­ered family member goes to the hospital­to help keep you out of debt, to help keepyour savings intact, to speed recovery byeasing your worried mind! No matter howlarge your family, no matter what your ageor occupation and witliout any other qual­ifications whatsoever, you can choose anyof the lour low-cost plans shown at·right.

In addition to the important cash bene­fits, you get all these valuable "extra"features:

a<ecfidental death benefit(Payable on all plans. See details at right)

a week _while you are­h~spitalized (See all plans at right)

a week for each eligible chil~

hospitalized ,(See AIl·Family and One·Parent Family plans at right)

-a week while your wife ishospitaIized (See All-Family and Husband-Wife plans at right)

$50$500

REGARDLESS OF YOUR AGE OR THE SIZE O,F YOURFAMILY YOU CAN ENROLL FOR ONLY $1.00

Now, during this Llmltel!!l EIi'lIII'o8Uoment Period, YOIll CRIlIl 6mJIi'018 »,011.11I'0

It;\ell and all eligible lltJ1le1l!l'il1!!l811'~ oli'~Cll&lr family ~nthi IiilO Ii'e~ qe(9J~ QIfil@l

~nllllll(Q)&Ilt tilllil1f lllIllSSl81f1I<l:ml'iO@Iiilll> wlJillililo\1i«l>8W31r Iballt WOIli 1lliil118s1l fIll\lmnn V'«l>ll!Ili'~1iil1l'«l>DOmell\l~ ~orliiN 1I'iI<Q) O&ltl~1I' illJilGlIiil

fMJOllllllllSght, .July 8, 19l5ex

This could weIl be the most importantnews you've heard in years! Now you

may enjoy a special low-cost health protec­tion plan that pays "extra cash" direct toyou when unexpected sickness or accident.hospitalizes you-or a member of yourfamily!

Mutual Protective Insurance Company,specializing in health insurance for Cath­olics for over 35 years, has created a brand­new health plan especiaIly for Catholicslike yourself-the HOSPITAL PLAN FORCATHOLICS..

"Try" This Plan For Only $1

You can actuaIly "try" the plan under aspecial no strings "introductory" offer:

For only $1.00, you can enroIl yourselfand all eligible members of your family­without having to see a company represen­tative and without any red tape whatsoever-during this limited enroIlment period.

And, after you receive your policy, ifJor any reason you decide you don't want

. it, you may return it within 10 days andyour dollar will be promptly refunded!

Why You Need The Hospital Plan ForCatholics In Addition To Ordinary

Health Insurance

lBecause no matter what other insuranceyou now carry, it simply won't cover every•.thinr'! .

Think' fOr a moment-in these days ofrising medical costs, would your presentinsurance cover all your hospital bills? AIlyour surgical and in-hospital doctor's bills?AIl the medicines, drugs, supplies and themany other extras? Probably not.

And even if all your medical and hospi­tal bills were covered, what about all yourothe. expenses-the bills that keep pilingup at home-the tremendous and costly up­set to your budget, your reserves and yourfamily life?

Page 11: 06.05.69

18 Important Questions ·AnsweredABOUT THE NIEW HOSPITAL PLAN FOR CATHOLICS

1. What ;s the Hospital Plan for Catholics?The Hospital Plan for Catholics is a brand-new,low·cost health protection plan-created especiallyfor Catholics-that pays eXIra calh income direct t9you when covered accident or illness hospitalizesyou or a member of your family. .2. Why do I need the Hospital Plan for Cath·

olics in addition to my regular insurance?Probably your present hospital insurance won'tcover all your hospital expenses, but even if itdoes, you will llill need help to cover all yourhousehold expenses when you are hospitalized.3. Can I collect even though I carry other

health insurance?Yes, the Plan pays you in addition to any health in·surance you carry, whether individual or group­even Medicate! And all your benefits are tax·free!4. Is there a lot of red tape to Quali(y?None at all. Your only Qualification is to completeand mail your Enrollment Form by the deadlinedate shown on the fotm belo'f.

S. Which plan should I choose?You may choose any of lour low-cost plans-youcan actually select the exact plan that suits you best!

If yours is a young, growing family, we recom·mend the ALL-FAMILY PLAN. You and your wifeare covered at once for accidents, for ne\" sick­nesses which begin after your policy is 30 daysold, and for maternity benefits after your policyhas been in force for 10 months. All your un­married dependent children (and furure additions)between 3 months and under 19 are included, atno extra cost, as long as they live at home.

If you are the only parent living with your chil­dren, we suggest the ONE-PARENT FAMILYPLAN. This covers you and all eligible childrenliving at home between 3 months of age and under19. Under this plan, of course, furure additionsare not included since no maternity benefit isprovided in the ONE·PARENT FAMILY PLAN•.

If you have no children, or if your childrenare grown and no longer dependent on you, youwill want the HUSBAND·WlFE PLAN.

Or, if you are living by yourself, you will wanethe INDIVIDUAL PLAN.6. If [ become hospitalized, when do my bene·

fits begin?On all plans, your cash benefits are paid from thevery fim day you enter the hospital. for as long-and for as many times-as you are hospitalized,up to the maximum (Aggregate of Benefits) of theplan you choose. . .7. How much can I be paid in a Catholic hos·

pital?Each plan has its Own "Aggregate of Benefits,"what we call the maximum.

For example, under the ALL·FAMILY PLAN,the maximum iJ $10,000-$100 a week ($14.28a day) extra cash income while you are hospital­ized. $75 weekly ($10.71 daily) while your wifeis hospitalized. $50 weekly ($7.·14 daily) for eacheligible child hospitalized.

Under the ONE-PARENT FAMILY PLAN,themaxi",um iJ S7.500-SI00weekly ($14.28 daily)while you are hospitalized. $50 weekly ($7.14daily) for each eligible child hospitalized.

Under the HUSBAND-WIFE PLAN, the max­imu", is 57,500 - $100 weekly ($14.28 daily)while you are hospitalized. $75 weekly ($10.71daily) while your wife is hospitalized.

Under the INDIVIDUAL PLAN, Ihe maxi­mttm is $5,000 - $100 a week. ($14.28 a day)while you are hospitalized.8. Must I go to a Catholic hospital to collect

benefits?No, you will be covered in. any hospital of yourchoice that makes a charge for room and board,except nursing homes, .convalescent or self-careunits of hospitals, Federal hospitals. or any hospi­tal primarily for the treatment of tuberculosis, drugaddiction, alcoholism, or nervous or mental dis­order.

9. When does my policy go into force?

It becomes effective the very same day we receiveyour Enrollment Form. Accidents that occur on orafter that date are covered immediately. After yourpolicy is 30 days old, sicknesses which begin there­after are coveted. Under the ALL-FAMILY PLAN,childbirth or pregnancy or any consequence there­of is covered after your policy has been in forcefor 10 months.10. What if someone in my family has had a

health problem that may occur again?Any covered family member who has suffered fromchronic ailments ill the past will be covered forthese pre·existing conditions after he has been pro­tected by the policy for twO years.11. What conditions aren't covered?

Only these minimum necessary exceptions: preg­nancy or any consequence thereof (unless youhave the ALL-FAMILY PLAN), war, militaryservice, nervous or mental disease' or disorder,suicide, alcoholism or drug addiction, or any con­dition covered by Workmen's Compensation orEmployers Liability Laws.

12. Can I drop out any time? Can you dropme?

We will never cancel or refuse to renew yourpolicy for health reasons-for as lonl! as you liveand continue to pay your premiums. We guaranteethat we will never cancel, modify or terminateyour policy unless we decline renewal on all poli­cies of this type in your entire state or until themaximum (Aggregate of Benefits) of your policyhas been paid. You, of course, can drop your pol.icy on any renewal date.13. Why is the Hospital Plan for Catholics al-

most like having an extra "bank account"?

When your policy is issued, your insurance pro­vides up to $10,000, $7,500, or $5,OOO-depend­ing on the Aggregate of Benefits of the plan youchoose. This is your "Health-Bank Account."

Then, every month your policy is in force, anamount equal to your regular monthly premium(including your first month) is actually added toyour maximum. When you have claims, benefitsare simply subtracted from your "account."14. Are there any other unusual benefits?Yes. In the event of an accidental death (within90 days of an accident) of any person covered,$500 will be paid to the covered person's bene·ficiary (you may name your parish as beneficiaryif you wish) subject to the 'maximum (Aggregateof Benefits) of your policy.

15. Will my claims be handled promptly?Yes. With your policy, you will receive a simple,easy-to-use Claim Form. Your claims' will be proc­essed quickly and your checks sent directly to you.

16. Why are the premiums in the Hospital Planfor Catholics so low?

You actually get all these benefits-at such a lowcost-because this is a mass enrollment plan-andno sale~men are used. Our volume is higher andour sales costs are lower. .

17. How much does my first month cost?Only $1.00, regardless of your age, the size ofyour family or the plan you select. After the firstmonth, if you are under 65, you pay only these lowmonthly rates: only $7.95 a month for the ALL·FAMILY PLAN; only $5.95 a month for theONE-PARENT FAMILY PLAN; only $5.75 amonth for the HUSBAND·WIFE PLAN; only$3.25 a month for THE INDIVIDUAL PLAN.(When you are over 65. premiums increase. Seemodest increase in box at left.)18. Why should I enroll right now?Because an unexpected sickness or accident couldstrike without warning - and you will not becovered until your policy is in force. Remember,if for any reason you change your mind, you mayreturn your policy within 10 days and your $1.00will be refunded immediately.

count"-much like putting money in andtaking it out of the bank.

Peace Of Mind And SecurityFor as long as you live and continue to payyour premiums, we will never cancel orrefuse to renew your policy for health rea­sons-and we guarantee that we will nevercancel, modify or terminate your policyunless we decline renewal on all policies ofthis type in your entire state or until themaximum (Aggregate of Benefits) of yourpolicy has been paid.

Extra Cash In Addition To Other InsuranceYes, the Hospital Plan for Catholics paysyou in addition to any health insurance youcarry, whether individual or group-evenMedicare! Furthermore, all your benefitsare tax-free! Of course, you may carry onlyone like policy with Mutual Protective.

Surprisingly Low CostMembership in the Hospital Plan for Cath­olics costs considerably less than you might

expect. Regardless of your age, size of yourfamily, or the plan you select, you get yourfirst month for only $1.00. See box on pre­ceding page for low rate of plan that suitsyou best.

- How Can We Do It?How can we offer so much for so little?The answer is simple: We have lower totalsales costs! The Hospital Plan for Catho­lics is a mass enrollmellt plan-all businessis conducted directly between you and thecompany by mail. No salesmen are used.No costly investigations or extra fees. It alladds up to real savings we share with youby giving you top protection at lower cost.

A Respected CompanyIn addition to the exceptional advantagesof the Hospital Plan for Catholics-you getsomething even more valuable: Your pol­icy is backed by the resources and integrityof the Mutual Protective Insurance Com­pany, "The Catholic's Company," special:izing in low-cost protection for Catholics

all across America for over 35 years. Cath­olics everywhere, possibly right in yourown community (including many priests),know of us and may be insured by us.Many Catholic school children have foryears enjoyed Mutual Protection coverage.Serving policyholders throughout theUnited States direct by mail, Mutual Pro­tective has its headquarters in Omaha,Nebraska, where it is incorporated andlicensed.

No Red Tape-No Salesman Will CaliIf you enroll now, during this limited en­rollment period there are no other qualifi­cations other than to complete and mailthe Enrollment Form below. We will issueyour Hospital Plan for Catholics (FormP147 Seri~s) immediately-the same daywe receive your lForm. Along with yourpolicy, you will- receive an easy-to-useClaim Form. Any time you need your ben­efits, you can be sure that your claim willbe handled promptly.

Doesn't it make good sense for you tobe protected by the Hospital Plan forCatholics, should you or a member ofyour family be suddenly hospitalized?Why not take a moment now to fillout your Enrollment Form and mailit promptly with only $/.OO-"intro­duclory" cost for your first month'scoverage.

Monray·l3ack GuaranteeWhen you receive your policy, you'll seethat it is direct, honest, easy to understand.But if for any reason you change yourmind, you may return it within /0 daysand we will promptly refund your ·dollar.

Please Note: Because this is a limitedenrollment, we can only accept enroll­ments postmarked on or before the dateshown below, But please don't wait! Thesooner we receive your Form, the sooneryour Hospital Plan for Catholics will coveryou and your family. We cannot cover youif your policy is not in force!

INSURED'S NAME (Please Print) --:::--;- -;-;~:;;-:--;-:-;=;-----__;_=_::_------

First Middle Initial L.ast

Middle InitialI

Address

Wife's First Name

DATE OF I Month I Day I YearWIFE'S BIRTH:

If All,p,tmily or Htuband-W;fePlan is selected. give followinginformation on wife:

July 6, 1969

o -------:N~am-e-o-;f:-:B;:-e-n-e-::fi,..c....ia-ry-------

o The Catholic parish in which the covered person resides at the time of his death.

Signed .:;X:..... --:__-::-""'=',.--:-_--:=-:-:--;:::o:~==-===----Insured's Signature

IMPORTANT:This enrollment formmust be mailed no laterthan midnight of:

ADDRESS ~~-:----------=-'------__:=:_:_----~c::::_;:_;_:_-Street City State Zip No.

SEX: 0 Male 0 Female IMonth I Day I Year

AGE__DATE OF BIRTH. .. .

SELECT 0 AlI·Family Plan

PLAN 0 Husband·Wife PlanDESIRED:(Check One 0 One·Parent Family Plan

Only) 0 Individual PlanDo you carry other insurance in this Company? 0 No tl Yes (If "yes," please list policy ·numbers.) _

I have enclosed my first monthly premium of $1.00 and hereby apply to Mutual Protective Insurance Company, Omaha, Nebraska,for the Hospital Plan for Catholics Form P147 Series and Plan thereunder as selected above. I understand the policy is not in force untilactually issued. The beneficiaty for all persons covered under this policy shall be: Check one:

I,III " Please make Chec,:; money order payable to MUTUAL PROTEC::'VE, •l ~

r----~--------------~-----------------------IDon't delay-fill out and mail Enrollment Form today, with $1.00, to Mutual Protective Insurance Company,

3860 Leavenworth Street, Omaha, Nebraska 68105

I

IM~ORTANT

SPECiIAL- LIMITEDENROLLMENT PERIOD I EXPIRES

MIDNIG~T, JULY 6, 1969

If for any reason you decide you don't wantyour policy, you may return it In 10 daysand we will promptly refund your dollar!

MUTUAL PROTECTIVEINSURANCE COMPANY

3860 Leavenworth Street,Omaha, Nebraska 68105

Licensed by theCommonwealthof Massachusetts

Page 12: 06.05.69

l~.

Do you possess a spirit of adventure? Have you desired .attimes to conquer the world? Are you eager to share your ChriS­tian joy with the entire world? Are you so convinced. of the va~ue

of your Faith that you wish everyone possessed thiS great gift?In short, do you have a sense of mission?

The missionaries do! They seem to be caught up in the spiritof Christ's joy and concern for mankind. With enthusiaslm andlove, these generous men and women carry the message of Christto the far corners of the globe.

Often these missionaries' are beset by trials and difficulties.Lack of funds, insufficient personnel, deficiency of educatio!'aland medical facilities place extraordinary demands o~ the faith,hope and trust of the missionary.

In 'one Indian diocese, the average Sunday collection doesnot exceed one dollar in any mission center. Ninety-five percent of the Catholics there are farmers, and out of these seventy­five per cent never have enough to eat. A discouraging factorto the most zealous missionary!

In a certain area of this same diocese, a mission was startedby a single priest. No lay assistants! No fellow priests! He .needed 'the help of the Sisters to instruct the women folk and to super­vise the little children at the school. When the Sisters were finallyable to come, the missionary did not have a house to shelterthem. Se he decided to live in a hut and give his own house tothe Sisters. What a remarkable example of dedication and sacri­fice on the part of this priest!

Despite difficulties such as these, the missionary,...continuesto trust in the goodness of God and the generosity of Catholicsthroughout the world. His sense of mission, his belief in theimportance, of his work, carry him through the most severe trials.

Put your sense of mission to work. Sacrifice today so that amissionary can, c;ontinue his dedication of salvation and serviceto mankind.

The missionary gives up so MUCH. Can y~u give up a LITTLE?

SALVATION AND SERVICE are the work of The Soc'ietyfor the Propagation of the Faith. Please cut out this column andsend your offering to Reverend Monsignor Edward T. O'Meara,National Director, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10001,or directly to your local Diocesan Director, The Rev. Msgr. Ray­mond T. Considine, 368 North Main Street, Fall River, Massa­chusetts 02720.

DIRECTOR: 'Father WilliamPhilbin, a priest of the Chicagoarchdiocese, has been namedex~cutive director of the newlyestablished Secretariat for theBishops' Committ'ee on the Per­manent Diaconate, with head­quarters at the U.S. CatholicConference, Washington, D.C.

Lo,ud U.S. StandOn Korea Issue

ST. COLUMBANS (NC)':"'" AnAmerican-born archbishop serv­ing in Korea said: "North Korea,is ,trying, through piracy, tomake the United States lose facein South' Korea."

Arc'hbishop Harold Henry ofKwangju, during a visit here atU. S. headquarters of St. Colum­ban's Foreign Mission Society,'said South Koreans applaudedPresident Nixon's decision tosend' warships into the watersoff North Korea following thecommunist attack on a U. S. re­'connaissance aircraft.

"The South Koreans under­stood President Nixon's state­ment about big nations using re-,straint," the archbishop said. "Inspite of communist thrusts, theyregard North Korea as the up­start mouse which is seeking tochase away the patient Ameri­can cat."

Archbishop Henry stoppedhere on his way home fromRome where he attended cere­monies during which KoreanArchbishop Stephen Kim waselevated to the rank of cardinal.

Cardinal Kim is the firstKorean ever to be named a car­dinal and, at 47, is the youngestcardinal. He. is a long-time friendof Archbishop Henry, who wentto Korea in 1933 as a Columbanmissionary. '

Presidential CampaignA team of correspondents for

the London, Sunday Times hasjumped in ahead of Theodore . IN D ' H'White, the qU8,si-official chroni. otre ame onorscler of American presidential 'Robert McNamaracampaigns. Lewis Chester" God-frey Hodgson, and Bruce Page NOTRE DAME (NC)-Robertcover the latest of these in 'an S, McNamara, president of theenormous book called An Amer- World Bank and former U. S.ican Melodrama: The Presidential Secretary of Defense, warnedCampaign of lQ68: (Viking, 625, against the dangers of the' worldMadison Ave., New York, N.Y. population explosion in a speech10022, $10). ' at dedication c.eremonies for the

It is astonishingly good. One University of Notre Dame's newmight have expected Englishmen 'center for graduate business ed­to prove as inexpert at under-, ucation,standing' and interpreting the McNamara received an honor­peculiarly American process of a .ary doctor of laws degree at thenational election and its immedi- ' dedication of the new center. Heate antecedents as some English said he was "pleased to becomeauthors are at approximating the' an honorary alumnus of NotreAmerican idiom, But these three Da'me," and added:have closely studied our ways, "This 'university, over thegathered a gargantuan quantity years, has become a catalyticof information, and almost al- center of creative thought., Itways read the evidence shrewdly; does what universities do best:

,The book covers familiar mat- 'it probes. It probes the past forters, but always manages' to do what is most relevant to theso literately and sparklingly, Be- ,present. It probes the presentyond that, there are inside stor- for what is most formative ofies which have never before been the future. And it probes theput in print, an array of pleas- future for what will most en­urable anecdotes, and strokes of large man's freedom and fulfill­wit unusual in political writing. ment."

bling, his treatment straight­faced.

Reason for PovertyMr. Bridge is painfully re­

spectable. He' live's in a finehouse in a glossy suburb. He be­

, longs to the country club, andlunches daily with prominentfellow townsmen.

,He ·deplores Roosevelt and the 'New Deal, sure, that they areruining the country. The onlyreason people are in want isthat they are too lazy to work.Negroes should stay in theirplace and be content with it.

He never discusses' religion,because it ,does not interest him.To please his wife, he goes tochurch four times a year, reluc­tantly. He looks down on theminister as a simpleton who cantake seriously the rigors of faith,hope, and charity.

Nothing to GiveMr. Bridge is not without

vestigial humanity. This is bestbrought out by his son. But inhis relationships with ,wife,daughters, son, and secretary, hegives little or nothing of himself.Perhaps there is little or nothingto give~ , ,

And what is there for him toget? What he is mainly seekingis self-satisfaction, a sense ofhis own integrity and' worth.This he does experience, butnever, he finally realizes, hasthere been any joy for, him.

This character could have been'montrous. But he engages the

reader's sympathy in some mea­sure. Mr. Bridge is a man smuglyimprisoned .in his own narrowand sterile limitations. He, hassome decent instincts, some prin­ciples, some spark of generosity.

But his mind is small, and hisheart is barren. Eventually, ashis children go off on their ownand he feels intimations of mor­tality, he gloomily concludesthat "all that he 'believed in andhad attempted to prove seemedmeager, all of his life waswasted." .

12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., June 5, 1969

Dunne Peers Into ComplexBusiness of Film-Making

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy

To read John Gregory Dunne's The Studio (Farra,Straus and Giroux, 19 Union Sq. West., New York, N.Y. '10003, $5.95) immediately after Mr. Bridge is to perceivefresh merit in the bromide that truth is stranger thanfiction. In The Studio, Mr.Dunne is giving us carefullyarranged sections of his ob­servations during a year of

,. peering into the complex andincredible business of film-mak­ing at the Twen­tieth C e n t u r yFox plant' inHollywood.

"I had the'fee lin g," hewrites, "that bywatching mo­tion pic t u r epeople at work,I could see andperhaps under­stand theirethic." , The r ewas, for example, the mysteryof why "failure escalated thepossibilities of success."

"You fail' upward here," hewas later told. "A guy makes aten-million-dollar bomb, the bigthing is' not that he made a'bomb, but that he put together a:ten-million-dollar picture. Nexttime out, they give him a twelve­million~dollar picture. It's crazy,bUt that's how it work's. Theworst thing that can happen toyou is to have a small success."

Mr. Dunne attended every sortof conference having to do withfilm production. He blandly look­ed and listened during meetingsand on the set, at meals and atpreviews.

Isolated From RealityThe result is as surgical, in­

formative, and damning a bookon the Hollywood industry asone can remember. Every degreeof the movie hierarchy is caughtin a pitiless lens and on a high

. fidelity sound track. Every speci­men, from the over-bearing bossto the quaking sycophant, isself-impaled.

The wonder'is that occasional­ly from the hands of these crude,conniving, foulmouthed peoplethere comes work which is trueand beautiful. The movie world,as here seen, appears to be iso­lated from, and different to, thereal world, in which its productis so powerful a social force.

It is doubtful that Mr. Dunnewill be invited back to TwentiethCentury Fox, but then again wemay read in tomorrow's paperthat the studio has bought hisbook for half a million dollars.

Mr. Bridge ,Is it possible to write a novel

about a dull man? Yes, of course.But there is always the risk that,with such a subject, the novelitself will be dull. Evan S. Con­nell;" Jr" took that chance whenhe began his latest work, Mr.Bridge (Knopf, 501 MadisonAve., New York, N.Y. 10022,$5.95). But, except for some fewhumdrum passages, he !'Jas suc­ceeded in avoiding dlJlIness,

The time is the 1930's, thescene mainly Kansas City, Wal­ter Bridge, 20 years married,is a respected prospering lawyer.He has three children; Ruth, Car­olyn, and Douglas. His wife, In­dia, was the focus of an earliernovel by Mr. Connell, Mrs.Bridge.

In this" as in its counterpart,Mr. Connell strings together def­initive events (or non-events) inthe life of the chief character.His tone is muted, almost mum-

Page 13: 06.05.69

OrdinaryCatholic

r

.'--

GIRLS' CAMPlei. 763·5~

of SS. Peter and Paul for an in­terfaith unity service at whicha Negro Baptist pastor and civicleader, Rev. Leon Sul1ivan,elicited cheers and applausewhen he bade the teenagers tobuild together toward religiousand racial harmony.

The June workshop will "'e at­tended by world ecumenicalleaders, including Jan CardinalWillebrands, president of the

Vatican Secretariat for Promot·ing Christian Unity. It is beingsponsored by the Cardinal'sCommission on Human RelationsMetropolitan Christian Council.

Trouble AheadMy own business always bores

me to death; I prefer other peo­ple's. -Wilde.

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., June 5, 1969 13

Unity March ~s HighlightPHILADELPHIA (NC-An

ecumenical outpouring 0 f10,000 young people on aone-mile Unity Walk willhighlight the five-day National_Workshop for Christian Unitywhich opens here on Sunday,June 15.

The Unity Walk will be heldon Monday, June 16.

Student participation in theUnity Walk is being solicitedthrough area Catholic highschools and through contactswith area pastors and the min­ister-directors of Protestantyouth groups.

A mid-Winter Youth-for-Unityrally brought an estimated 2,000young members of all faiths tocentral Philadelphia for a marchfrom City Hall to the cathedral

Diocesan Seminarian's - Col1ege Students -& Teachers Under directio~of a Diocesan Priest.

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DefendsHospital

much it would cost t.o updat.e thefacilities at Sacred Heart andAllentown Hospitals, the bishopsaid. Nor is there eviaence ofany projections which would in­dicate how many beds and whatfacilities will continue to be op­erated at each of these institu­tions, he continued.

"Two existing facilities whichfor over 50 years have earnedcommunity support are now tobe deprived of needed funds, col­lected for them," he said. How­ever, the inadequate funds "willbe diverted to a non-existentthird facility of enormous cost."

The bishop said the new hos­pital would cost $10 million.

It is regrettable, the bishopcontinued, "that differences ofopinion have arisen concerninghow we can best implement ourobjectives and make improvedand additional hospital facilitiesof high quality available for ourpeople."

Seek to CurbBlock-Busting

HILLSIDE (NC)--"-Attempts toencourage real-estate transac­tions here through either threatsor fabrications will be punish­able by fines of up to $200 or 30days in jailor both.

The penalties are contained inan unusual municipal ordinanceadopted by the Township Com­mittee in an effort to put an endto "block-busting" real estateoperations.

Hillside, a small communitybetween Newark and Elizabeth,has become the target for quick­buck real estate operators prey­ing on neighborhood fears as aresult of disturqances in theother two municipalities.

In addition to facing municipalprosecution, offenders would bereported to the New Jersey RealEstate Commission and face apossible loss of license as a re­sult of a recent court decision af­firming'the right of any munici­pality to protect' itself from"unethical" real estate transac­tions.

The usual block-busting tech­nique finds unscrupulous oper­ators driving the price of realestate down by preying on thefears of homeowners. 'Once theblock is "busted" through rapid­fire sales to minority-groupmembers at inflated prices, thepressure to sell is increased onthose remaining, with even low­er prices being offered.

H{j)[j'j)@!i'!) el~1i'9vme~

from Thfi'ee F(OJiG'hsNEW YORK (NC) - The Na­

ti011al Conference of Christiansand Jews will hO\1or three prom i­l1('nt clergymen, representativeof three major faiths, at a dinnerhere June 19.

Cited for "courageous leader­ship in intercreedal relations"arc Terrence Cardinal Cooke ofNew York; Presiding BishopJohn E. Hines of the EpiscopalChurch in the United States, andRabbi Jacob Philip Rudin, pres­idc'nt of the Synagogue Councilof America.

PennsylvaniaAutonomy of

ALLENTOWN (NC) - BishopJoseph McShea of Allentownsaid here he cannot give his ap­proval "to an approach to thehospital problem in the Allen­town area which does not pro­tect the integrity of SacredHeart Hospital as a Church­related institution."

He said he is convinced theapproach "is visionary and un­realistic from a financial pointof view."

The proposed plan providesfor a joint facility for AllentownHospital and Sacred Heart Hos­pital. The plan claims it "willlead to dramatic improvement"of existing hospitals in the area,including the two which willalso have joint facilities.

This plan was outlined in abrochure distributed by theAllentown Ah~ad campaign com­mittee which launched its funddrive in 1966.

The boards of trustees at bothhospitals approved the proposedmerger and construction of jointfacilities, and commissioned Ell­wyn Spiker as administrator ofthe proposed joint Allentown­Sacred Heart Hospital Center.Spiker began his duties in Marchafter $6 million was raised incontributions and pledges for theproposed improvements.

Bishop McShea said it is "ex­tremely difficult to foresee howit will be possible to finance theconstruction of a new facilityand at the same time update theobsolete facilities at both SacredHeart Hospital and AllentownHospital with the funds'in hand.The latter task was the originalpurpose of the Allentown Aheadcampaign."

Spiker, however, denies thiswas the original purpose of thecampaign.

Resigns From Board"Nowhere in the (campaign)

brochure does it say that thismoney will be for the hospitalsthemselves. No funds were setaside for improvement at theindividual hospitals," he said.Rather, the emphasis 'is placedon the proposed joint facility tobe constructed, he added.

Bishop McShea originally hadgiven his approval (last June) tothe fund drive with the reserva.tion that diocesan-owned Sa­cred Heart Hospital be assuredof keeping its identity and au­tonomy.

The Sacred Heart Hospitalboard of trustees (in November)requested the bishop's resigna­tion as hospital president, andsuggested he become chairmanof the board. However, the bish­op in turn refused the offer andresigned from the board entirely.

Since his resignation he, hadmade no public statements onthe matter until April 20. "1 nowfeel compelled as bishop of Al­lentown to state my views pub­li~ly," he said in announcing hisdIsapproval of construction ofthe joint faCility.

Non-Existent FacilityNo dependable figures have

been developed to indicate how

Page 14: 06.05.69

',~.,"

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs., June 5, ·1969

Wiser and SereneAll noble enthusiasms' pass

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-Channing.

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Up·DATED EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMTIMELY RELIGIOUS FORMATION

School Aid ProgramFaces Opposition

- HARRISBURG (NC) - Fifteencivil rights, religious and educa­tional organizations have an­nounced they will file suit inFederal court challenging theconstituti9n~,lity, of ~ennsylva-,

nia's nonpublic school aid 'pro­gram.

A spokesman said the some 15organizations are opposing abill in the state senate whichwould provide an additional $40million in state aid to nonpublicschools this year.

He said the suit, which will befiled in U. E. Eastern DistrictCourt in Philadelphia, will chal­lenge legislation enacted lastyear to provide $4.3 million instate funds to purchase educa­tional services from privateschools including church-relatedinstitutions.

OF TAUNTON

.~;,--"jl Expresses Views. On Church Unity

. l LONDON (NC)-The Angli-can Primate, Archbishop MichaelRamsey of Canterbury, declaredhere: "I see the Pope as havinga sort of providential leadershipwhich in a united Church Iwould be prepared to follow."The archbishop, speaking at an

open discussion at London Uni­versity's Catholic chaplain(.y,added: HI would never call the

, Pope head of the Church, as Isee Christ as the head."

Questions to the primate in agood-humored, relaxed, butnonetheless serious meeting, cen­tered mainly around Dr. Ram­sey's views on church unity.

When one student asked himif individuals should attend ser­vices of other religions, Arch­bishop Ramsey replied thatCatholics would be welcome to

, attend Anglican services and re­ceive communion there, but hewould remind such Catholicsthat receiving Anglican commu­nion was contrary to the teach­ing o~ their own Church.

Asked about women priests,he said: "I thik that the time willcome when both Anglicans andCatholics will have women aspriests, but," he added laughing­ly, "we won't have them untilyou do."

On worker-priests the primatesaid he believes in priests doingordinary jobs, but added that hesuspects the movement wouldnot go very far.

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and the establishment of a na­tional office for black Catholi­«ism in the U. ~.

Acting' GracefullyThe BSC has also been in

contact with the Black ClergyCaucus and was represented atthe recent BCC meeting in NewOrleans.

That meeting last August didmore than just bring about aself-examination for the nuns; itspurred them into action.

Of course, not all the reactionto the NBSC was favorable. Afew letters were received priorto the August meeting, accusingthe nuns of propagating separa­tism in the Church.

Sister Martin de Porres said:"1 do not believe in writing

statements in support of anypartic.ular political or Religiousconcern . involving racism be­cause I feel that acting grace­fully is more important thanwriting aggressively unless ac­tion were definitely going to fol­low the statement. The confer­ence itself will never issue astatement unless it is approvedby the' governing executive com­mittee and signed personally bythe president."

Currently Sister Martin dePorres and the executive com­mittee are planning the secondannual National Black Sisters'Conference to be held Aug. 6 to15 at the University of Dayton,Ohio.

THE GIFT: Sister Martin de Porres Grey of, Pittsburgh, stand­ing next to her charcoal drawing titled "The Gift: The Black·Man as Gift to Mankind,'! was an art major in college. Thedrawing now hangs in Sister's parents' home in Sewickley, Pa.

Find Common 'BondReaction to Black Nuns Conference

Mostly FavolI'ablePITTSBURGH (NC) - What

happens when black nuns organ- .ize? A quick and strong responseis heard-good and bad.

Late last AUJust, ISO blackSisters left here and scatteredthroughout' the country with anewly found common bondtheir blackness.

They had spent a week atMount Mercy College, listeningand talking about black prob­lems and black power' in thecountry, the .community and theChurch. .

From this' first meetingevolved the National Black Sis­ters Conference (NBSC)-one ofthe few recognized voices of thatsegment of the Catholic commu"nity in this country.

Encompassing more than 1,000black Sisters 'in the U. S., theNBSC has become a centralclearinghouse where priests whoare looking for black teachingnuns, nursing nuns, catechists orsocial workers can write for ad­vice and referrals. The addressis 3333 Fifth Ave., Pittsburgh,Pa., 15213.

Answer RequestsUntil ·NBSC's inception black

Sisters were distributed amongthe three predominantly blackcommunities of nuns' in this'country and others in predomi­nantly white Religious communi­ties which have only a handfulof black Sisters each..

According to Sister Martin dePorres Grey, 26, Pittsburgh Sis-ter of Mercy who organized thefirst meeting and is president of

. the NBSC, innumerable such re-quests have been received sinceAugust. One request came from ~

a midwest Confraternity ofChristian Doctrine office for helpin locating black people, nunsand lay people, to staff theirCCD programs in ghettoes.

The NBSC executive board hasmet with representatives of theNational Conference of CatholicBishops to discuss problems ofthe black Catholic community

Why Cities GrewThis leads to the third difficul­

ty. Large cities have grown upin Latin America, Africa andAsia latgely to serve the com­mercial needs of the Atlanticworld. They came· into beingbecause Europe and North·America had modernized andwanted to buy tea .and coffeeand tin and copper- overseas, notbecause the local economy hadbecome modern.

But these large cities now at:tract people from the stagnantcountryside and also keep aliv.e.all the babies born on the spot.So they are growing three andfour times as fast as the countryin general.

And this brings us to thefourth problem-how to employthese crowding millions in citieswhich have grown, no't as a re­sult of industrialization now, butbecause of earlier internationalcommerce. The migrants havearrived ahead of the jobs. Andmodern industry, with its elab­orate machines and computers,provides fewer jobs than it did50 years ago.

Yet simpler, more labor-usingtechnologies do not easily com­pete with modern internationalcorporations. Unemploymeritgrows. In many Cities, 20 to 30per cent of the young people areworkless. Crowded in slums,without skills or hopes, they arethe rebels of tomorrow-or, asin Southern Italy, the rebels oftoday.

But these interlocking prob­lems also suggest how a strategy.of aid might be. worked out. Allprograms of economic assistancedirected to (a) agricultural re­form and efficiency (b) stabilizingfamily size (c) building up awider variety of urban centersfor migration and (d) providingmore labor-intensive employ-

.ment in the towns and citieswould be dealing with the realproblems which delay and dis­tort development.

In all these strategies, extracapital has a key role to play.Thus the Pope's Fund recentlyset up in the Inter AmericanDevelopment Bank and dedi­cated to ·land reform is a symbolof the Church's attempt to grap­ple with the real issues of worldpoverty.

have noticed in this column be­fore-in many poor countries,agriculture is still either feudalor tribal or caught in a set offrustrating landlord-peasant rela-.tionships, all of which give littleor no. incentive to the cultivatorto produce more. All through thedeveloping world, food output is

. tending not to keep pace withthe growth of population.

This growth is the second fac-'tor. In the 19th century, publichealth and sanitation 'began sav­ing babies and extending lifeafter the establishment of a fullindustrial system. Today, thedeath rate is declining ahead ofmodernization.

Cities in Latin AmericaGrew Ahead of Need

By Barbara Ward .

Among all the different reasons given for not sup­porting economic assistance to the poorer countries, onefairly sophjsticated argumeflt is sometimes put forward.It is that we know really very little about the fundamentalneed of development. It fol­lows that we are most un­likely to give or lend ourcapital to the right projectsWe may have all the good willin the world. Our trouble isignorance andfrom it flowsthe "failur.e" ofso many efforts.But, in fact,af~er . 20 yearsof experimentand as manyyears reflectingon the meaningof the experi­ments, we doknow a lotmore about de­velopment than we used to and;if some things are going wrongwhich. they undoubtedly are-weare beginning to have a clearerunderstanding of the reasons forfailure.

In simplest terms, develop­ment, economic growth, modern­izatjon-call it what you like-isthe process whereby peoplecease to depend for 90 per centof their wealth upon agricultureand begin to move into manufac­turing, including in this sector,power and transport and alsointo services-banking, account­ancy, sales, advertising, tourismand' so on.

At the end of the process, per­haps not more than 10 per centof the people are left in agricul­ture. Perhaps 25 to 30 per centof the workers are in industry,the rest in services. And sincemanufacturing and a wholerange of services need peopleclustered together, moderniza­tion implies moving into urbanareas.

Industrialization and urbaniza­tion have always gone togetherand the stimulus, example, vari­ety, demonstration effects and"melting pot" aspects of the cityhave speeded up the process ofchange.

Balanced TnmsformationBut in the 19th and early 20th

century, these transformations­of rural people into city dwell­ers, of agricultural workers intoindustrial craftsmen or intoclerks and accountants andsalesmen-took place in a moreor less balanced way.' Peoplemoved out of farming because

. jobs were beginning to be of­fered in the textile mills' and ironfoundries of the new industrialsystem.

At the same time, better meth­ods in farming - fertilizing,metal ploughs, rotation of crops-increased food output in spiteof a decline in the labor .force.The towns offered jobs in manu­facturing, the countryside offer­ed food; the exchange betweenfood and manufactures helpedboth sectors to grow and mod­ernize.

The process was not painless.But it did succeed in drawingthe whole of society into an ex­panding economy.

But in the last half of the 20thcentury, this transformation isnot going ahead in the same rea­sonably balanced and successfulway. And there are at least fourreasons why the patter,n is dif­ferent. In the first place-as we

Page 15: 06.05.69

,-

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., June 5, 1969 15

.r.

GOLDEN JUBILEE: Rt. Rev. Albert Berube, P.A., pastor of St. Anthony'sChurch in New Bedford, observed 50 years in priesthood Sunday. Left photo,Msgr. Berube speaks with St. Anthony High School students Alfred Gauthierand Pauline Bergerson. Center, Monsignor's nephew Ghaslion A. Bernard ofQuebec discusses music at the fete with Raymond Boucher and Janet Bernier.

Right, Jubilarian is 'pictured with his brothers and sisters; seated, left to right,Bertha Berube, Monsignor, Mrs. Phillippe Bernard; standing, left to right, Mrs.Paul Desjardins, Mrs. Jean Tripanier, Gerard Berube, Mrs. Guy Malo and Mrs.Winston Bourque.

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Little ThingsAnd he recalls the little things

that epitomize the life to whichhe was called, and for whichhe is grateful.

In 1953, while on a visit toMontreal to help arrange a re­ception for a visiting cardinal,Msgr. Berube was stricken bya heart attack." For days, doctorsfeared for his life. Finally, aftera long recuperation he "camehome" to St. Anthony's' Rectory.

One day as he walked slowlyalong the sidewalk near the rec­tory, a youngster from the par­ish school marched up to him.

"Hi," the little boy said."Hello, yourself," said the

monsignor.

and there his nephew went to re- pointed pastor of Holy Rosarycuperate. He served as an assist· where there were "just 110 fam­ant to his uncle during his con- ilies."valescence and later served at Still lafer he served as pastorSt. George Church in Westport of St. Hyacinth for ·two years,from May 1922 until December, until being named pastor of St.when he was appointed an as- Anthony's in 1949.sistant at Notre Dame Church, Returning to the parish whereFall River, and director of the he had built up the elementaryparish school. school and opened the high

Focal Point school in 1940 was a "great joy"to Father Berube.

"My vocation was teaching," Then he started taking a long,he recalls. And in Fall River, ed-' hard look at St. Anthony'sucation became a focal point of Church, where little work hadhis religious life. been. done for many years.

"I like children and I love "Things were falling apart."teaching," he says, his voicetelling of his strong emotion. Massive Job

It was while he was at Notre A complete program of reno-Dame that Father Berube be- vations was conducted under hiscame instrumental in the estab- auspices - a massive job thatIishment of Prevost High School.· transformed St. Anthony's into

"I had 90 students graduating . one of the' most beautiful housesfrom elementary school and of worship in the state.there was no Catholic High Msgr. Berube - elevated toSchool for them to go into, so I that rank in 1952 - can talksaid to them, 'Let's pray to have by the hour about the beautiesa high school.'" of the church in which he has

He preached that message to spent so many hours of his life.the children, to parishioners at He recalls the days when theSunday Mass, to his pastor, the "church was filled" for novenalate Rev. Damase Robert. devotions and for the special

Prayer accomplished the im- evening services conducted dur-'possible and the late James E. ing the mOIJ.ths of May and·June.Cassidy, then bishop of the Fall Today, he admits sadly, "not asRiver Diocese, agreed to the es- many are there."tablishment of "one year" of . But then, he acknowledges,high school. "many things. have changed"

The next year, Msgr. Berube since that wonderful day whenrecalls humorously, "we added he dedicated his life to God.another grade. The pastor was "Some people say nothing isupset, because he said the bish- real any mote. Maybe that isop had said, 'one year.' But I why there is such unhappiness."said he meant one year at a Although mellowed by thetime. That must have been it, years, he takes sharp exceptionbecause when we had the first to those who express pity "forgraduation, Bishop Cassidy was all you fellows who have livedvery proud of the school." for nothing."

In 1933, Bishop Cassidy ap- Asked about the church's cur-pointed Father Berube adminis- rent struggles and dissensions,trator of St. Anthony's p'arish, he pauses to reflect a moment:where the pastor, the late Msgr. "Today, people look at thingsLouis A. Marchand was ill. For differently. Once you went intosix years, he served as adminis- the religious life expecting ittrator, until the appointment of would be hard, but thinking itthe Rev. Victor O. Masse as was worth whatever you gave.pastor, and then stayed on as as- up."sistant for several years. Where Is Prayer?

Then Father Berube was ap- "But the other day I saw an ad

Msgr. Albert Berube Looks Back on Fifty Years of Service. to Godfor nuns in a magazine. 'Love, "Are you all better now?"smile, dance, sing,' it said. I the little boy asked.never saw a world about praying "Oh, much better," Msgr. Ber-and prayer is the basic nourish- ube replied. .ment of a religious' spiritual "I knew you'd be all right,"life." the boy said, looking up at his

People "can stay in the world pastor, "because we prayed forand help the world," he says. "A you to get better." 'life of religion doesn't promise Then the youngster opened hishappiness to everyone, unless school bag and pulled out twothey have a real vocation." graham crackers. He handed

What about enforced celibacy? one to Msgr. Berube."When I was at Notre Dame "Here, you'd better cat this.

I had 1,300 children. 1 have 1,200 It's good for you."here. Why do I need to be mar- And the pastor and the youngried to have children and take student walked slowly aroundcare of them and love them? the corner, each munching on a

"There arc so many children broken graham cracked resur­who need love. I have cried with rected from the bottom of athem and tried to comfort school bag.them." Msgr. Berube's eyes were

As for his priesthood, "I love sparkling with what could. havebeing a priest. I don't regret one been uns~ed tears ~f happmess.minute. God has been very good That, . m part, IS what heto me." " means by "a life that is good."

He sits' behind the desk in hisstudy-a gentle man and a kindone, looking back over the yearsand thanking his Creator for the"hard luck and good luck" ,be­stowed on him.

Back to CanadaAlbert Berube attended St.

Hyacinth's School, where manyyears later he was to serve aspastor. Then "the big strike"came and there was no work, soin 1905, the Berube family re­turned to Canada.

Seminarian Berube studied forthe priesthood at Quebec Semi­nary, where officials decided"they wanted me to be a teach­er. He got a taste of teaching atthe seminary as an instructor inGreek, French literature andrhetoric.

The doors of further 'studyopened to him with the award ofa four-year scholarship for studyin Europe. There he become illand was forced to give up theuniversity and return to theUnited States.

At the time, the Rev. AntoineBerube had a parish in Attleboro

By Patricia Francis

When the Rev. Msgr. Albert Berube celebrated the golden anniversary of his or­dination Sunday, it was in St. Anthony's Church, New Bedford, where .he has served 32years, the last 20 as pastor. To the monsignor, "this is home." But then, that is, theway he feels about the priesthood, too. Fifty years ago, when he was ordained inCharny, P.Q., by the lateLouis Cardinal Begin, ayoung Albert Berbue deliv­ered his life into God'shands. He has absolutely no re­grets.

"I would start my life all overagain doing the same things.Sometimes you get discouraged,t-ut then you know God is takingcare of you the proper way," hesays.

"Everything in my life, Godtook care of. Why should Iworry?"

To Msgr. Berube, these are notidle words.

Born in the United States ofFrench-Cill1adian parentage, hehas known disappointment andstood on the threshold of death.

His father "came to Detroitwith the second wave of Cana·dian immigration," he recalls,and Albert Berube was born inAu Sable, Mich.

Then the family came to NewBedford where his father wasemployed in a textile mill. Anuncle, the Rev. Antoine Berube,had served two years in FallRiver and moved to New Bed­ford before his brother's familyarrived.

Page 16: 06.05.69

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, John Vianney Seminary l'ere.The Catholic University pro-

'fessors, mostly from the schoolof theology, initiated a state­ment of dissent from Pope Paul'sencyclical on birth control,Humanae Vitae.

A faculty board of inquirywhich investigated the case de­clared that the professors' dis­sent from the Pope's teachingwas proper and even necessary.In Buffalo, however, the dissent­ing seminary teachers weretransferred from their p<?sts.

Bishop McLaughlin, diocesanchancello.r, commented that theregulations of the American As­sociation of University Profes­sors (AAUP), on which theC~tholic University decision waslargely based, "are not exactlyrelevant to a theological school* * * as we have a Code ofCanon Law which also must betaken into consideration."

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Discourages FriendsArchbishop @f Cincdnnati Calls Bla~k

M(QJlnlo*~$t@ hiltemp~li'ate

CINCINNATI (NC)-Archbish- with the earlier condition ofop Karl J. Alter of Cincinnati in servitude simplyje()pardizes thea letter. to priests of the archdio- onward march of real progress.cese said the Black Manifesto is It should be well understood thatnothing short of a disaster, in indefensible demands for tributeview of the intemperate demands cannot promote the cause offor monetary reparations made s9cial justice and racial har­by a small group who are in no mony."way representative of the total Archbishop Alter expressedblack community. his confidence, however, that "in

He referred to the demand of spite of the Manifesto, the Chris­the National Black Economic De- tian churches will continue tovelopment Conference for $500 foster unity, peace, and radalmillion in "reparations" from the justice to the fullest extent ofnation's churches and syna- their resources."gogues.

At the same time the arch­bishop acknowledged that "anythoughtful person must recog­nize that peace and unity are theurgents demands of the moment

Law School Seeks in our struggle to achieve inter­racial justice."

Black Students "We can sympathize with thedesire of more rapid progress by

WASHINGTON (NC)-"George- the black community in this daytown and other law schools are of rising expectations," he con­not attracting enough minority tinued, "but it would be worsegroup law students," said than folly to encourage even theThomas C. Fischer, .law admis- small portion of their numbersions director at Georgetown who are members of the NBEDCUniversity. About one per cent to indulge in the kind of inter­of American lawyers are in mi- ference with divine wOl:shipnority groups, he noted, while which is not only self-defeating~he U. S. minorities population but disruptive of the good rela­IS 12 to 15 per cent. tions on' which progress de-

Fischer, a Georgetown law _ pends."professor, and two law students, Encourages Violenceone black, ?~e white,. recen.tly Commenting on the manifesto~om'ple~ed VISl.tS to n~ghbormg itself,' Archbishop Alter declared:mstltutlOns With largely Negro "When a document encouragesenrollments. tactics of intimidation and vio-

"We tried to erode some of lence such as are found in theth~ doubts, suspicion and antag- Manifesto, it alienates the goodomsm about law schools," Fisch- will that has been built up in re­el' explained. "But we know it's cent years and greatly discour­not likely to be a high-yield ages the Christian people, whoproposition. There is ,a distrust have been the best friends of theof the law among many black Black community's true inter­young ·peuple and little interest ests.in it as''-1 career." "The concept of collective

·Jeffrey Ramsey, black student guilt and hereditary responsibil­in first-year law at Georgetown, ity is repudiated by the facts ofagrees. He thinks blacks have history. To confuse the Churchpreferred teaching, social work, with the nation as a whole and .the military and the' ministry with its economic order, andover law "largely because many then single out its members forof them are afraid of law attack, is clearly provocative.schools. Legal study is an "To attempt at this time toenigma." associate the Churches today

long-awaited graduation. cere­monies at last take place. Mostgraduations are scheduled onSunday, with some coming Mon-

'day, Tuesday and Wednesday,and then seniors will be- freeto look towards their futures,and juniors to plan that big leapup to senior status.

At Feehan Sister Mary ThereseAntone will take over as princi­pal· froIji Sister Mary Mercy,who will hold an appointmentat the provincial house of theSisters of Mercy. Also at Fee­han, jour:nalism' students wereinducted last week into Quill

"and Scroll, international honorsociety for high 'school journal­ists.

And Feehan political clubmembers recently visited Wash­ington and had the opportunityof talking. to Rep. MargaretHeckler, Sen. Claiborne Pell andDemocratic National Committee­man Bristol.

Feehan sophomoI:e Joan Basilehas been honored by an invita­tion to membership on the YouthAdvisory Council of the stateDepartment of Education; 'andFeehan girls are following StangHigh dittoes in Qrganizing atrack team. Co-captains are Bar­bara Barrows and StephanieTheriault. Boys' track captain isDavid Skivington.

New at the f,\ttleboro highschool is the Peter Hinski Sci­ence and Mathematics. ResearchCenter, dedicated to. the memoryof freshman Peter Hinski,~lled last Summer in an acci­dent. A memorial plaque andpicture of Peter will mark thecenter, located on the third floorof the classroom building. Itsequipment will. include a loopprojector and various new mate­rials in science and mathe­matics. It will be used by stu­dents engaged in research proj­ects.

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of 'Fall River-Thurs., June 5, 196916Af~@ ~@fth@~o© If{]o@ltTI ~~[}u@@~~ $®~(§~U'

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[f@r ce@Ui1Hifi@ A~@cdI®Ulfi)O~ Y (§@[(.New Student Council officers, at Feehan High in At­

tleboro are Dennis Dolan, president; Michael Zito, vice-pres­ident; Francine Fournier, and Kathleen Donnelly, secretar­ies; and Paul Graveline, treasurer. At Holy Family in NewBedford they're Dana Que­rim, president; Edward Mc­Intyre, vice-president; The~resa Sirois, secretary; NancyScotti, treasurer: .

And Mt. St. Mary girls inFall River presented their annual.Spring concert recently, includ­ing classical, and show musicselections. The academy Commu­nity of Christian Living (theyused to call it Sodality, remem­ber?) sponsored a May Day pro­gram last week, with a Masscelebrated by Rev. William Cul­len, S.J. and crowning of theBlessed Mother by Jane Mac­Donald, CCL president. AtMount the new Student Councilofficers are Susan Pacheco, pres­ident; Diane Desmarais, vice­president; Jane Charette, secre­tary; Dawn Hannafin, treasurer.

Bishop Connolly High in FallRiver will have a breakfast forthe Loyola Club following a con­celebrated Mass at 8:30 Sundaymorning, June 8 in the schoolauditorium. Rev. Arthur J. Mc­Carthy, S.J., director of RoundHill Retreat House, South Dart­mouth, will speak at the break­fast and guitar music at theMass will be led by a group ofConnolly students, led by Fran­cis McManus, Jesuit scholastic.The event is co-sponsored by theConnolly student council and theLoyola Club.

Dedicate GymThe gym at Feehan High in

Attleboro has been dedicated tograduates who have served orare s~rving in the armed forcesand especially commemoratesthose who 'have lost their lives incombat. At dedicatory servicesheld last week the American flagused to. drape the .casket of

. Gary Flynn, a member of Fee­han's first graduating class, whodied in Viet Nam, was placed ina permanent position of honorin the gym.

The plaque dedicating the gymwas designed by senior HelenTurley, who also has to. hercredit the new school flag andseveral sets for Feehan produc­tions of "The Student Prince"and "Oliver." Of silver, theplaque measures 18 bv 20 inchesand includes an etching of mem­bers of the armed forces as wellas the dedicatory inscription.

The Mt. St. Mary NationalHonor Society chapter inductednew members today, and also atthe Mount a coffee house pro­gram held last Sunday night rep­resented the combined efforts ofarea high schools.

Graduations NextAlso last Sunday night, it was

Spring concert night at SacredHearts, Fall River, where Mrs.Tobias Monte directed glee clubmembers in selections from mu­sicals and other chora~ offerings.Soloists included Martha Boche­nek, Susan Cunningham andBethany Stile, while accompa­nists were Mary Frances Loganand Nancy Shea. .

Janel Lafon9 of St. JosephPrep, Fall River, has tied forfirst place for the second con­secu'tive year in a poetry contestsponsored by Classica I Outlook.Her verse dealt with Cupid andPsyche and "maidens, mod andmerry."

The next few days will bememorable for seniors as those

Page 17: 06.05.69

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Charges SovietsHarass Re'ligious

CHICAGO (NC)-Three lithu­anian priests are being harassedby Soviet authorities because of

. their signatures on a petition formore Lithuanian priests, accord­ing to exiled Auxiliary BishopVincent Brizgys of Kaunas,Lithuania.

Bishop Brizgys, who resideshere, said: "Lithuania now hasso few priests that even old andinvalid priests are being pressedinto service for pastoral work."

This, he explained, is becauseSoviet authorities permit onlyfive new priests to 1le ordained ayear, while 30 priests die annu­aHy. In an effort to correct thissllortage, a group of priestssigned a petition addressed togovernment authorities in Mos­cow asking that more prbsts bepermitted ordination in lithu­ania. Bishop' Brizgys continued.There were sufficient candidatesdesiring to enroll in the onlyremaining Lithuanian seminaryat Kaunas, he said.

Three priests took the petitionto Moscow, the exiled bishopcontinued, and "Moscow's replywas this." One of the priests isbeing called to trial for "allegedcriticism of Soviet authorities"and tile other two are forbiddento exercise their priestly duties,the bishop reported.

They have been given 30 daysto find civilian jobs or they willbe taken to a concentrationcamp for an indefinite period.,Bishop Brizgys said.

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ture Department's Low CostFood Plan, which estimates that$1,440 a year is necessary for afamily of four to purchase a nu­tritionally adequate diet.

"All recipients of food stampsshould receive a total amount ofcoupons adequate to 'the pur­chase of such a diet, regardlessof the purchase price they pay,"Father McCarthy said. "To pro­vide less would mock the pur­poses of the program."

He further suggested that noparticipating household shouldpay more than 25 per cent of itsincome for the stamps.

ing "recommend that the law re­quire that coupons be issued atleast twice a month, and thatevery area have several centersof distribution easily accessible.

"Certification and issuance pro­cedure for food stamps, FatherMcCarthy said, ought to be assimple and flexible as pos:;iblein order to reach and serve thosein need."

Better GuidelineOne of the most serious inade­

quacies of the present program.Father McCarthy said, is the val­ue of food coupons.

Even with the bonus cou­pons," he said, "most recipientsstill cannot afford to purchase anutritionally adequate diet."

He noted that President Nixonrecommended that all recipientsreceive allotments of $100 permonth. But a better guideline, hesuggested, would be the Agricul-

Bishop to AddressCFM Conventiol1l

CHICAGO (NC) - Bishop C.Edward Crowther, an Episcopalbishop in South Africa' untilbanned for his opposition toapartheid (policy of separation ofraces) there, will be one of thekeynote speakers at the 16th

.national convention of the Chris­tian Family Movement, to beheld Aug. 21 to 24 at the Uni­versity of Notre Dame, the CFMnational office here has an­nounced.

Bishop Crowther is currentlyexecutive director of OperationConnection, a national interfaithorganization of Protestant, Cath­olic and Jewish leaders seekingto open lines of communicationbetween fragmented groups inAmerica.

He also serves as a consultantto the Center for the Study ofDemocratic Institutions in Cali­fornia.

Emphasi%e Need for More Aid to HungryValu·e of Present Food Coupons Inadequate

WASHINGTON (NC) - "Thepolicy of this government shouldclearly state that no person shallbe denied an adequate diet forreason of poverty."

This declar.ation was deliveredto the Senate Agriculture andForestry Committee hearing tes­timony on proposals to modifythe Food Stamp Act of 1969.

Making the declaration wasFather John McCarthy, director,Division for Poverty, Social De­velopment, United States Catho­lic Conference. He was speakingfor USCC, the Union of Ameri­can Hebrew Congregations, andthe National Council ofChurches.

"The real test of any nation'scommitments," Father McCarthysaid, "lies not in its rhetoric butin its budget. A reformed foodstamp program must be ade­quately funded."

Father McCarthy said it is"morally outrageous ':' * * thathunger and malnutrition exist inthis country needlessly.

"For the religious person," hesaid, "the issue of hunger andmalnutrition existing in a landof plenty is primarily a moralissue."

He said it is the duty of thejust man to care for the needsof those more unfortunate thanhe and that "wealth is seen notas a private preserve; rather it isto be shared for the bettermentof all."

National StandardsFather McCarthy cited the

government's food stamp pro­gram as one of the means tohelp improve the diets of peoplewith inadequate incomes.

The food stamp' program, hesuggested, "ought to have na­tional eligibility standards," and~allowances would have to bemade for regional variations inthe cost-of-Iiving, of course."

Father McCarthy said thethree groups he was represent-

/ THEOLOGICAIl. FIRSTS: Donald Mulcahey of Rockford, III., is the first layma':l to obtain theS.T.D. degree (Ph.D. in Theology), and Sister Marie Egan of North Hollywood, Calif., is the firstnun to obtain the S.T.l. (M.A. in Theology) in the history of the Catholic University of America,Washington, D.C. He teaches theology at· Loyola University and Mt. St. Agnes College in Balti­more, while Sister Marie intends to teach in California after achieving her S.T.D. NC Photo.

City Deterioratioll1sMichigan Problem

LANSING (NC) - The Michi­gan Catholic Conference hasurged the Michigan legislatureto establish a Department ofCommunity Affairs to coordinateefforts to revitalize Michigan'scities.

Labels TorontoSmut CapitalOf America

TORONTO (NC)-It is es­timated that 30 million ob­scene books and magazinescome into Canada each year.And Toronto is rated as one ofthe biggest centers for pornogra­phic literature in North America.

"If there's ever a city that hasbeen taken by surprise by thisflood of books, it's Toronto,"criminal lawyer Garry K.C.Braund said. "People havelabeled Toronto, rightly orwrongly, as being the first orsecond center for pornographyon the continent. California hasbeen mentioned as the head andNew York has 'honorable men­tion,' but Toronto is a real cess­pool, not only for Americantrash coming in, but also fromDenmark and Sweden."

And parents and teachers arebeginning to worry. .

Easy AccessSister Marie Zelie, principal

of Our. Lady of Fatima School inScarborough, confiscated a num­ber of these obscene magazinesat school. She wrote letters toparents of 7th and 8th gradechildren, asking them to dosomething about it.

"Several parents have phonedto say how alarmed they are.Children have access to this typeof literature. Anybody can pickup this trash at certain stores,"the nun said.

Mrs. Ruth Harrington, Torontohousewife, tried to get her cor­ner druggist to stop selling suchmagazines, or place them out ofreach of children.

"I said to him, 'You wouldn'tput these on your coffee table athome for your children to lookat, would you?' He said hewouldn't. I said then why areyou then putting them in a placefor my children to look at? Hedidn't have much to say," sherelated.

"If he is selling these now,what will it be like, two to fiveyears from now?" she asked.

John Diefenbaker, former primeminister of Canada, recently tolda religious conference here thatchurches must unite to fight "aflood of filth and obscenity"reaching the Canadian public.He said Canada has no effectivelaw against obscenity, and filth"virtually enjoys an open sea­son."

"I think we are all a little bitlike ostriches." Mrs. Alice Durst,mother of nine, said. "If wedon't look at it, we think it willgo away. Parents see so much ofit around that they don't knowwhere to start. Even innocent­looking pocketbooks can curlyour hair. We housewives don'tlike to see an increase of thistype of magazine, but we all feela little bit futile. Many house­wives like me never stop to lookat these books, and if we did,we would feel embarrassed."

About eight years ago, theCatholic Women's League of theToronto archdiocese made an at­tempt to stop the smut traffic.Mrs. Evelyn Markle, president atthat time, recalled: "When Ithink back to those days, wewere complaining about thatwhich is comparatively mildtoday. Now it's just nauseating."

Page 18: 06.05.69

OUR LADY OF MT. CARMEL,NEW BEDFORD• A testimonial banquet at Gau­

dette's Pavilion at 6:30 Sundaynight, June 15, will honor theparish basketball team, 1968­1969 Junior CYO champions forHie Greater New Bedford area.Reservations are in charge ofMrs. Lucy Marks. Among speak­ers will be Jack Nobrega, HolyFamily High School coach; Dis­trict Attorney Edmund Dinis;and State Sen. George Men-·donca.

ST. JEAN BAPTISTE,FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Womenwill hold a candlelight installa­tion ceremony for officers andmembers of the board of direc­tors, all of whom have been re­elected, following 7:30 MassMonday evening, June 9. Re­freshments will follow in thechurch hall, with the installeesserving as the social committee.

. All parish women are invited.

ST. JOAN OF ARCORLEANS

Students, alumni, parents, pa­rishioners and friends are invitedto attend a Silver Tea and Re­ception from 3 to 5 Sundayafternoon, June 15, at St. Joanof Arc School. The event willhonor all Sisters of. Divine Provi­dence who have taught at theschool since its opening.

In honor of the prese'nt .>"hoo\faculty, a testimonial dinner willbe given MQnday night, June 16,at Orleans Inn. All parishionersand frien<!.s are invited. A socialhour from 6:30 to 7:30 will pre­cede the din ncr.

ST. JOHN OF GOD,SOMERSET

First Friday Masses will becelebrated at 7 tomorrow morn­ing and 7 tomorrow night. HolyRosary Sodality members areurged to attend the eveningMass and a following businessmeeting with Mrs. Mary Velozoas guest speaker.

The Saturday Mass to fulfillthe Sunday obligation will be of­fered at 6' in the evening; andSunday evening Mass will bescheduled at 7 instead of 5 asheretofore.

Holy Name Society memberswill receive corporate Commu­nion at 8:30 Mass Sunday morn­ing, June 8.

Volunteers are requested tomeet on Tuesdays and Thurs­days to make preparations for a

'lawn party scheduled the week­end of July 25 through 27.

ST. JOSEPH,FALL RIVER

A Centennial Planning Fumlcollection will be taken up atall Masses this weekend.

School board members are Dr.Robert Hackett, Clement Dowl­ing, Dr. Ramsis G. Elias, JamesLenaghan, Robert Gagnon, Tim­othy Griffin, Fred Sherry, DanielBogan and Mrs. John J. Fitzger­ald Jr.

Donations for the parish auc­tion may be left at the rectory.

at

Publicity chairmen 'of parish or­ganizations are asked to submitnews items for this column to TheAnchor, P. O. Box 7, Fall River02722. \

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The Holy Rosary Sodality willmeet following 7 o'clock Masstomorrow night.

'A 6 o'clock Mass will be cele­brated Saturday evenings to ful­fill the Sunday Mass obligation'and the hour of the Sunday eve­ning Mass will be changed from5 to 7 o'clock.

. "Save With Safety"

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HOLY CROSS,SOUTH EASTON

The second annual New En­gland <:;Iambake sponsored by theMen's Club' of South Easton willbe held on Saturday, June 14,general chairman Ken Gorhamannounced this week.

The clam and lobster bake,feature of an all-day picnic andfield day at the church groundson Purchase Street, is open toall and visitors are welcome.Last year more than 350 peopleenjoyed the. real 'down-Maine'dinner cooked in a huge pit intraditional style.

Menu for the bake, supervisedby bakemaster Dick Boudro, willinclude clam chowder, clamcakes, whole lobster, steamedclams, haddock, potatoes, onions,sausage, corn on the cob. Lem­onade, coffee and water.melonwill top off the meal. For thosewho prefer to concentrate onclams, tickets are available forthe same meal without the lob­ster, and children's tickets arealso offered.

Clam \cakes and chowder willbe served starting at noon, withthe main bake scheduled for 3'o'clock. Tables will be set up onthe grounds for family-style en­joyment.

Reservations must be made bySunday, June 8. Tickets areavailable from any member ofthe Men's Club, or from ticketchairm~n Dennis Dugay.

OUR LADY OF ANGELS,FALL RIVER

Msgr. Anthony Gomes, pastor,will address the .Council of Cath­olic Women at their annual ban­quet and installation ceremonyto. be held at 6 Sunday night,June 15 at White's resta.urant:Reservations are .in charge ofIrene Furtado and Lillian Theo-dore. ,

Crowning ceremonies will' fol­low· all Masses Sunday, June 8.The Espirito Santo· processionthrough streets of the parish willtake place at I Sunday after­noon.

REV. JOSEPH L. POWERS

Fr. Powers

ST. PIUS TENTH,SOUTH YARMOUTH

At the June 10 meeting thenominating committee will pre­sent the slate of officers for thecoming year.

A rummage sale is to be con­ducted on Saturday, June 7 inthe Parish Cent'er with articlespriced at 10c to $ 1.00.

The Summer Bazaar on July16 will feature many beautifulhandknit items. Special empha-'sis is being placed on this boothas well as the dolls, many ofthem have been dressed in handmade and knit garments.

ST. STANISLAUS,FALL RIVER

A "Pre-Festival Lucky Seven­Penny Social" will be held at7:30 Saturday night, June 21 inthe school auditorium. Donationsof prizes suitable for children oradults are welcome. Donors maycontact Mrs. Helen Boyko, gen­eral chairman, or Mrs. AnnaKulpa.

An eighth anniversary memo­rial Mass for Rev. John Czer­wonka, late curate at St. Stanis­laus, will' be celebrated at 9Saturday morning, June 7.

The" parish youth council willmeet at 6:30 tonight in the lowerchurch.

Graduation exercises for paro­chial school eighth graders will(\J,ke ,pl'lc;e at .8:30 Mass Sundaymorning, June 8,

Parish Parade

Continued from Page OneBishop Feehan High School, At­tleboro, and Diocesan Directorof the Confraternity of Chris­tian Doctrine, will also continuein both posts.

Born in Providence, R.I., May21, 1922, the son of Mrs. Wil­liam Hurll of Fall River, thenew administrator attended St.Patrick School,. Fall River; Mon­signor Coyle High School, Taun­ton; Providence College and St.Mary Seminary, Baltimore, Mary-land. .

Ordained 'a priest by MostRev. James E. Cassidy on June15, 1946. Father Powers hasserved at St. Patrick Church,Falmouth; St. Joseph Church,

. Taunton; and has been chaplainat Bishop Stang and Bishop Fee­han High Schools.

Since the' founding of St.Mark Church, Attleboro Falls,Father Powers has assisted Rev.Raymond W. McCarthy in thepastoral work in that part ofthe Diocese.

he is not advocating a return oflaissez-faire in which the econ­omyis left alorie.

On the contrary, he insists, weneed a strong and very activegovernment. Indeed, he says, themain purpose of decentralization("reprivatization," as he prefersto call it)' "is to restore strengthand . performance capacity tosick and incapacitated govern­ment. ...

This it would do, he argues, byrestoring to the State its properfunctions-making fundamentaldecisions, focusing the politi­cal energie:> of the community,dramatizing issues, presentingfundamental choices, in a wordgoverning..

Decentralization, Mr. Druckerconcludes, . "would not be justanother form of 'federalism' inwhich local rather than centralgovernment discharges the 'do­ing' tasks. It would be a system­atic policy of using the other,the nongovernmental institutionsof the society of organizations,for the actual 'doi'1g', Le., forperformance, opera~ions, execu­tion."

Sensible AdviserI haven't any way of knowing

whether or to what extent theNixon Administration's an­nounced preference for a pro­gram of voluntaryism (decen­tralizatio)1 or reprivatization) isbased on Mr. Drucker's writings.

It would appear, however, thathis influen::e is being felt in theWhite House. For my own part,I am rather happy about this, forDrucker' is a sensible adviser inthe field of economic and socialpolicy. .

It would be most unfortunate,however, if the Administrationwere to base its own program ofvoluntaryism on a partial or dis­torted reading of Drucker's writ­ings on this ·subject.

His philosophy of decentrali­zation or reprivatization; asnoted above, starts from the as­sumption that we need a vigor­ous, a 'strong, and a very 'activegovernment and that decentrali­zation is a necessary means tothis end.

If the Administration's pro­gram of voluntaryism is basedon this same assumption, it de­s'erves to be given a fair trial. _

Voluntary AgenciesIf, on the other hand, it is

based on the opposite assump­tion that we can get along witha weak and negative govern­ment, it will predictably do moreharm than good, for voluntaryagencies cannot do It alone, asLeo Perl is, Director of the AFL-

- CIO Community Services Activi­ties, pointed out in a recentradio interview.. Vital JS they are to the over­

all effort, Mr. Perl is noted, vol­untary agencies are incapable ofproviding the tremendous sumsneeded to do the total . job.Funding, :le said, must be thefundamental responsibility ofgovernment.

I take it that ·Norman Maileranq Mr. Moynihan would agreewith this position. I am not sosure about the Wall Street Jour­nal, and. It's a little too early totell about the Administration.but I keep hoping for the best. -

..fII~~ilr· _. .

Government NeedP'rogram

THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFali River-Thurs., JU,ne 5, 196918

StrongIn 'Voluntaryism

By Msgr. Georg~ G. Higgins

Director, Division of Urban lLife, U.S.c.c.

lt has long been apparent that the terms "liberal" and"conservative" are of limited value, at best, when it comesto labeling or categorizing politicians, writers, editors, andother public figures in the United States. The cun:"entdebate over .. voluntaryism­i.e" the' decentralization of·government in the fields ofhealth, housing, job train­ing, etc.-can serve to illustratewhy this is so. The Wall. StreetJournal, which is generally re"garded as beinga conservativepaper and wouldprobably . wantto be known assuch in the trade,is very much infavor of volun­taryism. But soare NormanMailer andDaniel P. Moyn­inhan, both ofwhom are gen­erally thought of as being inliberal camp.

Mailer's commitment to thephilosophy of voluntaryism hastaken a very practical turn in re­cent weeks. To the suprise ofmany observers-and presum­ably to the dismay of others-hehas made the decentralization ofgovernment one of the principalplanks in his platform as a mav­erick candidate in the currentDemocratic primary for theoffice of Mayor in New YorkCity. .

In an article in the May 18issue of t.he New York TimesMagazine, cxplaining why he de­cided to run for Mayor of a cityin whicil "cverything is wrong,"he says that "the Conservativeshave been, altogether correctabout one enormous matter­which is that the. Federal gov­ernm~nt has no business what­ever in local affairs."

Call for DecentralizationI doubt that eve'n the Wall

Street Journal or Peter F. Druck­er, for example, would want togo quite th'at far, althoughDrucker, who is probably themost influential exponent of de­centralization 'writing at thepresent time, does say in hislatest book, "The Age of Discon­tinuity," that there is widespre'addisencharitment with govern­ment and that this disenchant­ment "cuts across national andideological grounds" ana "may

. well be the most profound dis­continuity in the world aroundus."

Why this disenchantment?Why is it that people of practi­cally all persuasions are nowcalling for the decentralization ofgovernment?

The principal reason, Mr.Drucker insists, is that the gov­ernment has not performed."The record over these last 30

, or 40 years," he says, "has beendismal. Government has proveditself capable of doing only twothings with great effectiveness.It can wage war. And it can in­flate the currency.

"Other things it can .promisebut only rarely accomplish ,;, ,;, '"Whether private enterprisewould have done worse is noteven relevant. For we expectedperfection from government ,;, ,;, ,;,Instead we only rarely obtainedeven below-average mediocrity."

Systematic PolicyMr. Drucker is at pains to em­

phasize that, in calling for thedecentralization of government,

Page 19: 06.05.69

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Pitcher Has 6-2 Record

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§ ~IColo,B=~:~::: B,o::::e:OOksI~ American Press, .Inc. ~

OFF SET - PRINTERS - LETTERPRESS

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., June 5, 1969 19

Phone 997-9421

Athlete

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FALSETEETHWith Little Worry

Do your false teeth annoy and em­barrtl.SS by slipping. dropping, or wob­bling when you eat. laugh or talk?'rhen sprinkle a IIttleFASTEETH onyour plates. FASTEETH holds den­tures firmer and more comfortably.Makes eating .easler. It·s alkallne­doesn't sour. No gummy, gooey.pasty taste or feel. Helps check plateodor. Dentures that fit are essentialto health. See your dentist regularly.Get FASTEETH at all drug counters.

As a senior, Bullet Bob com­piled an impressive 10-4 recordand led the Indians to theirfirst Capeway Conference Cdam­pionship and into the state com­petition.

During that memorable year,Thorley captured headlines bypitching the first no-hitter inCapeway history, a 2-0 gem overWareham High.

In 94 innings of flame-throw­ing, the Dartmouth ace struckout 117 and allowed only 24earned runs.

He was just as impressivewith the bat, leading Dartmouthin hitting (.371), in runs scored(14) and was second in runsbatted in with 12. On the baseshe was another threat, leadingthe club in total thefts.

In addition to baseball, Thpr­ley was also a fine running backon the Indian football team. Buthis sport was baseball.

As a freshman on the Bruins'squad, Bob had an incredible0.00 ERA in 19 complete inningsof, pitching. In that time he al­lowed only six hits, walked threeand fanned 22.

With the bat, Thorley com­piled a .361 batting average andwas a double threat, with thebat and on the mound, withWestport of the AmericanLegion.

Thorley is the son of Mr. andMrs. Franci3 Thorley, 207 Hix­ville Road, North Dartmouth andis an Economics Major.

Says Reds P[J'@tectReligious fre~dom

BONN (NC)-A German-lan­guage weekly in Budapest hasclaimed that the Hungarian com­munist regime is not only toler­ant. of religion but that it also

. seeks to incorporate the "reli­gious working masses" in thecountry's efforts to develop itssocialist life.

An article on "Marxists andCatholics in the Socialist State"in the Hungarian weekly Buda­pester Rundschau said that thegovernment guarantees the freeexercise of religion and at thesame time is "careful" that free­dom of conscience for non-reli­gious citizens is not violated.

School

New Bedford, Mass.

High

BOB THORLEY

1-17 'COFFIN AVENUE

Heads SchoolsSAN ANTONIO (NC) - Bro­

ther Edwin Goerdt, S.M., of St.Louis a 25-year veteran in schooladministrative work, has beennamed superintendent of schoolsfor the San Antonio archdiocese.He has served on the NationalCatholic Educational Associationsecondary school department ex­ecutive committee for severalyears. .

In what was perhaps his finestouting of the year, Thorleypitched 11 strong innings againstGeorge Washington Universityin which he allowed one earnedrun, struck out nine and walkedonly two although he did notfigure in the decision.

Joe White, assistant directorof sports information at theBruin school, rates Thorley oneof the finest prospects in manyyears. .

Thorley's success at Brownshould come as no surprise toDartmouth High School follow­ers.

OutstandingSophBrown

Secretary of LaborTo Attend Meeting

WASHINGTON (NC) - LaborSecretary George Shultz will flyto Geneva, Switzerland Tuesday,June 10 to attend a meeting ofthe International Labor Organi­zation during which Pope PaulVI will deliver an address.

Shultz's office did not knowif the Labor Secretary wouldmeet with the Pope during theGeneva gathering.

Bob Thorley of. No. 'Dartmouth

By Luke Sims

Bob Thorley, a native ofDartmouth and former Dart­mouth High School stand­out athlete, has enjoyed asuccessful season with theBrown University varsity base­ball team.

The 6-foot, 185-pound sopho­more righthander has a 6-2 rec­ord and a sparkling 1.61 earned­run average through the Bruins'1969 diamond campaign.

Bob started the season in animpressive fashion when hethrew a five-hitter in Brown's8-2 upset conquest of LongIsland University in the Bruins'second outing of an I I-gameSouthern trip.

A few days. later the strongrighthander hurled his secondfive-hitter as the Rhode Island­ers shocked defending AtlanticCoast Champion North CarolinaState, 9-2, in Raleigh. His two­game strikeout total registered11 and he had only six walks.In the first 28 innings Thorleyallowed only five earned runs,gave up 20 hifs, 11 walks andboasted 20 strikeouts.

Three Propos<l1sOnly the schools of canon

law, theology and philosophy,and possibly the department ofreligious education, would re­main under pontifical statutes,according to the present form ofthe committee's recommenda­tion. A chancellor would benamed for these schools.

The trustees will be asked tochoose among three proposalsconcerning the naming of achancellor for these schools, ac­cording to the university source.They are that John CardinalDearden of Detroit, president ofthe National Conference ofCatholic Bishops (NCCB) wouldbecome chancellor; that theNCCB appoint some bishopother than Cardinal Dearden tothe post; and that the archbishopof Washington, who at presentis ex officio chancellor of theentire university, remain chan­cellor for the schools involved.

The chancellor is responsiblefor safeguarding orthodoxy at apontifical institution.

Need Private DonorsThe university's budgeted in­

come from all sources this yearis $21.5 million, including tui­tion, . government' grants and anendowment fund.

Brother Nivard said it will benecessary for the university tofind more private donors tostrengthen the school's smallendowment fund if it is to sur­vive. It was reported that thenew president, Dr. Clarence C.Walton, who will assume officein the Fall, might spearhead amajor fund-raising drive.

In a related move, a CatholicU. source reported that thetrustees are expected at theirJune meeting to be asked by theStatutes Revision Committeeheaded by Lawrence CardinalShehan of Baltimore to altermost of the university's officialties with the Vatican. .

The Catholic University is apontifical institution, whichmeans it is officially charteredand recognized by the Holy Seein Rome.

Among· some 45 dioceseswhich. met or exceeded theirquotas, according to the reportgiven the bishops, were the fol­lowing:: New York, $185,000; Detroit,$175,000; Brooklyn, $160,000; St.Louis, $51,000; New Orleans,$62,500; Denver, $26,000; Hart­ford, $80,000; Richmond, $25,­500.

Also, Chic\lgo, $250,000, which~as 106 per cent of its quota;Washington, D. C., $44,000, 120per cent of quota; Louisville,$23,000, 116 per cent of its quo­ta; Columbus, $19,500, 108 percent of quota; Fall River, $30,­558, 107 per cent of quota; -Bur­lington, Vt., $15,539, 110 percent of quota; Saginaw, $19,570,112 per cent of quota; Atlanta,$5,000, 105 per cent of quota.

The Baltimore archdiocesegave $36,000, some 75 per centof its quota.

The Los Angeles archdiocesereportedly gave $20,390, or 12per cent of its $165,000 quota.The Philadelphia archdiocesecontributed $91,000 or 67 percent of $135,000. The Bostonarchdiocese had given only 25per cent of its $185,000 goal;and the Cleveland diocese, only28 per cent of an expected$86,500.

Among large dioceses reportedto have contributed nothing sofar this year were Newarkwhose quota was set at $160,~000; Pittsburgh, with a $95,000quota; Cincinnati, $53,000 quota; ,Miami, $44,000 quota; and Seat- &is) pt"y'C' Studall'l:lt~tie, $30,000 quota. ~U ..... ~ g ;;1)

M@breh gn Rev~ewST. BONAVENTURE (NC) ­

About 150 hippie-styled protest­ors gathered with signs at thewest' end of the St. BonaventureUniversity parade grounds, con­trasting with the 1,851 universityROTC students, well scrubbedand polished, who marched in re­view.

Perhaps the most strikingthing about the ceremony, how­ever, was the audience, esti­mated at anywhere from 1,000 to2,000, well above the usualturnout .Many of those attend­ing came from neighboringOlean to show s.upport for thepolicy on campus dissent adopt­ed by Father Reginald A. Red­lon, O.F.M., university president.

The protestors made no at­tempt to disrupt the annual.ROTC ceremony, possibly in de­ference to Father Redlon's

. warning that he would not tol­erate interference with the event.

The priest has also bannedthe campus unit of the leftistStudents for a Democratic So­ciety (SDS).

About 50' persons marchedthree miles from Olean afterMontgomery Shoemaker, a localbusinessman and American Le­gion leader, suggested a demon­stration of solidarity behind theFranciscan college president.

The only action from theyounger anti-ROTC demonstra­tors-many of them said to benon-students-came during theplaying of the Star SpangledBanner, when they raised clench­ed fists in a gesture of defiance.

Protestant ChurchHonors Archbishop

DENVER (NC) - ArchbishopJames V. Casey of Denver waspresented the Churchman of theYear award from the ColoradoConference United Church ofChrist. -

The award was made for thearchbishop's leadership in help­ing to provide medium and lowincome housing in the five­county metropolitan area andand for his contributions to theecumenical climate in Colorado.It is the first such award here bya Protcstant group to a Catholicleader.

The presentation was made bythe Rev. Robinson G. Lapp, aUnited Church of Christ minis­tcr who heads the Metro Den­vcr Fair Housing Center, Inc.,and who has worked with thearchbishop in housing efforts.The center, a non-profit com­munity service organization, hasacted as consultant to the arch­diocese in the housing undertak­ing.

Budget Cuts Necessary in CUScience, Engineering Schools

WASHINGTON (NC) ­Sources within the CatholicUniversity of America con­firmed that the university's'budget will be trimmed nextyear because the 1968 bishops'collection for the pontifical in­stitution fell more than $1.5 mil­lion short of its quota.

No precise figures were avail­able on the budget cuts, butsources said they would be feltmost heavily in the university'sscience and engineering schools.The schools of theology andphilosophy will be untouched bythe budget-paring measures.

The U. S. bishops, at theirsemi-annual meeting held inApril, 1968, established a $4.3million subsidy, a figure farhigher than had ever been raisedin the history of the university.For the first time each diocesewas assigned a set quota.

By April 4 of this year, some20 of the nation's dioceses hadfailed to contribute anything'towards their assigned quotas.Forty-five of the dioceses met orexceeded their quotas and about50 paid half or more of theirquotas, it. was reported.

Denies ReportThe total amount collected for

the university, according to fig­ure.s presented to the hierarchyat Its recent meeting in Houston,Tex., was $2,721,000. The bish­ops had assigned themselves thegoal of raising $4,377,000. Thesubsidy for the previous yearwas $2.3 million.

Last March Brother NivardS~heel, C.F.X., acting rector, de­nied a report that the universitywas suffering financially becausesome bishops anel .Iay Catholicswere concrned over the fact that20 Catholic U. faculty 'members,mostly theologians, initiated apublic statement of dissent fromthe papal encyclical on birthcontrol.

Nonetheless, sources withinthe university speculated thatsome bishops will end financialsupport of the university nowthat an inquiry board has exon­erated the faculty members andcriticized the board of trustees~or ordering an investigationInto whether the professors' dis­sent from the encyclical was inviolation of their commitment tothe pontifical school.

, Fall River IncreaseThe board of trustees with­

held approval of the inquiryboard's report and submitted itto a committee of its own mem­bers for further study and eval­uation.

Page 20: 06.05.69

20 IHE ANCHOR-Diocese of fall River-Thurs., Jl}.ne 5, J 969 .

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An opportunity to participate in Holy Mass IS

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A Field Trip is arranged once a week.

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Applications can also be picked up at

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