08.12.65

20
'The ANCHOR Fall River, Mass., Thursday, August 12, 1965 PRICE lOe Vol. 9, No. 32 © 1965·The Anchor $4.00 per Year CLOISTERED NUNS ACQUIRE DARTMOUTH PROPERTY Regional Congress to Hear New Community in Diocese:' Prominent CCD Speakers Two well known leaders in the Confraternity of Chris- tian Doctrine movement will be among the speakers at the Discalced Carmelite' Nuns Buy New England Regional CCD conclave which will be held at Bishop Stang High School, North Dartmouth, from North' Dartmouth Convent Site l\ugust 26 to 29. Rev. Wil- known in CCD circles, having liam B. Greenspun, C.S.P., of been a featured speaker at many At the invitation of the The event, note Carmelite su- Boston foundation. The cloig.. Washington, and Joseph F. meetings throughout the country. periors, will mark the 175th an- teredo nuns give themselves en- Most Reverend Bishop, ,the Reilly, now of Pennsylvania, He will talk at a priests' niversary of the coming of the tirely to a life of prayer and strictly enclosed Discalced speak at different sessions Mr. Reilly, a graduate of Holy nuns to the United States and sacrifice for the Church in gen- at the regional Congress. Cross College, will address the Carmelite Nuns will open a the 75th anniversary of their eral and for the priests and peo- 1.'he Paulist priest is widely laity. monastery in the Fall River Dio- ple of the Fall River Diocese in Turn to Page Seventeen cese this Fall. Eight Sisters and particular. several novices will come from Bishop to ·Offer Before their new residence is the Boston house of the commu- closed to visitors, several open nity to found the new monastery, Jubilee Mass house days will be announced. which will be located in the for- Thereafter conversation with the Highlighting the golden ju- mer Sol-e-mar Hospital, Dart- Sisters will be held through a bilee observance of Our Lady of mouth. grille and special visiting areas Angels parish, Fall River, will will be designated in the mon- be a solemn Pontifical Mass cel- astery. ebrated by Bishop Connolly at Legion of Mary 4:30 Sunday aftj'lrnoon, 'Aug. 22 The Discalced Carmelites were and a jubilee banquet at 6:30 founded in Spain by St. Teresa Outing Aug. 15 Sunday night at Dwelly Street of Avila 400 years ago. Their Armory. foundress is noted for her spir- Active members of the Legion itual writings which distinctive- of Mary from all parts of the In progress this week is the ly mix wit and wisdom. The Fall River Diocese, together with parish's annual feast and bazaar. order has monasteries through- their families, will hold their Tonight and tomorrow night en- out the world and numbers near- annual outing beginning at noon tertainment will be offered by ly 15,000 members. A famous Sunday, Aug. 15 at Lincoln Eddie Zack and his Dude Ranch- Carmelite of modern times was Woods, R. I. ers. Games, prizes, refreshments the Little Flower, St. Therese and food will be featured. The program will include of the Child Jesus. games and swimming. Outdoor Saturday morning, Aug. 14 The nuns explain that "dis- cooking facilities will be avail- will see the delivery of pencoes calced" means that they wear able. in gaily decorated trucks under sandals without stockings in- the chairmanship of David P. Rev. Edward A. Oliveira, as- stead. of shoes. The word comes Silvia, aided by a men's commit- sistant at Our Lady of Lourdes from the Latin "calceus," mean- tee and CYO boys. R.ectory, Taunton, is Diocesan ing shoe. Director of the Legion of Mary. Turn to Page Eighteen FATHER GREENS PUN, C.S.P. JOSEPH J. REILLY Fall River Native Holy Union Nuns Dedicate Harwich Church Sunday New Holy Union Elect American provincial Bishop Connolly Fr. D.J. McCarthy For Top Post At the general chapter The religious of the Holy Will Preside deacon, and Rev. James Keefe, Will Celebrate of the Religious of the Holy Union of the Sacred Reartl Union of the Sacred Hearts have elected their fir3' At Service Solemn Mass Mother Ann Joseph LaPlante America'll Mother General.. Turn to Page Five Bishop Connolly will sol- S8.CC., subdeacon. The preacher Turn t-o Page Twelve emly dedicate the new Holy will be Very Rev. Eugene R. Robitaille, SS.CC. Rev. John E. Trinity Church at West Har- Boyce , 58.CC. will be master of wich at 5 Sunday afternoon. ceremonies. A Solemn Mass of Dedication Chaplains to the Bishop will will follow with Very Rev. be Rev. Paul J. Price, SS.CC. and Daniel J. McCarthy, SS.CC.. Rev. Finbarr McAloon, S5.CC., provincial of the Congregation pastor of the church for the past of the Sacred Hearts, as cele- 13 years. brant. The new Cape Cod' Church Former pastors who will at- was built after fire destroyed tend are Rev. Thaddeus Bouhuy- the structure which had served sen, SS.CC. and· Rev. Dennis its parishioners 'and Summer Spykers, S8.CC. Music will be visitors for years. A tent had to by the Choir of Queen of Peace be used temporarily after the Mission Seminary, Jaffrey Cen- fire. ter, N.H. The new structure represents, Priests will assemble in the the charity of the year-round school at 4:30 and the procession parishioners who have worked to the church will begin at 4:45. diligently with Father Finbarr A dinner for all parishioners McAloon, SS.CC., pastor, to real- will be held immediately after ize one of the most beautiful the Mass in the new auditorium. houses of worship on quaint old Chairman of the dinl'l.er commit- Cape Cod. tee is Mrs. John O'Donnell of Fr. McCarthY at tba W. Harwich. (Photoa OIl PlUM ill MOTHER ANN THOMAS PROVINCIAL FR.FINBARR McALOON,SS.Co. MOTHER MARIE SUPEBJoa GENE&4I.

description

Fall River, Mass., Thursday, August 12, 1965 Before their new residence is the Boston house of the commu­ closed to visitors, several open nity to found the new monastery, l\ugust 26 to 29. Rev. Wil­ known in CCD circles, having liam B. Greenspun, C.S.P., of been a featured speaker at many At the invitation of the Most Reverend Bishop, ,the Reilly, now of Pennsylvania, He will talk at a priests' sessio~. cese this Fall. Eight Sisters and particular. several novices will come from PROVINCIAL

Transcript of 08.12.65

Page 1: 08.12.65

'The ANCHOR

Fall River, Mass., Thursday, August 12, 1965 PRICE lOeVol. 9, No. 32 © 1965·The Anchor $4.00 per Year

CLOISTERED NUNS ACQUIRE DARTMOUTH PROPERTY

Regional Congress to Hear New Community in Diocese:' Prominent CCD Speakers

Two well known leaders in the Confraternity of Chris­tian Doctrine movement will be among the speakers at the Discalced Carmelite' Nuns BuyNew England Regional CCD conclave which will be held at Bishop Stang High School, North Dartmouth, from North' Dartmouth Convent Site l\ugust 26 to 29. Rev. Wil­

known in CCD circles, havingliam B. Greenspun, C.S.P., of been a featured speaker at many At the invitation of the The event, note Carmelite su­ Boston foundation. The cloig..Washington, and Joseph F. meetings throughout the country. periors, will mark the 175th an­ teredo nuns give themselves en­Most Reverend Bishop, ,the Reilly, now of Pennsylvania, He will talk at a priests' sessio~. niversary of the coming of the tirely to a life of prayer andstrictly enclosed Discalced~ill speak at different sessions Mr. Reilly, a graduate of Holy nuns to the United States and sacrifice for the Church in gen­at the regional Congress. Cross College, will address the Carmelite Nuns will open a the 75th anniversary of their eral and for the priests and peo­

1.'he Paulist priest is widely laity. monastery in the Fall River Dio­ ple of the Fall River Diocese in Turn to Page Seventeen cese this Fall. Eight Sisters and particular.

several novices will come from Bishop to ·Offer Before their new residence is the Boston house of the commu­ closed to visitors, several opennity to found the new monastery, Jubilee Mass house days will be announced. which will be located in the for­ Thereafter conversation with theHighlighting the golden ju­mer Sol-e-mar Hospital, Dart­ Sisters will be held through abilee observance of Our Lady ofmouth. grille and special visiting areasAngels parish, Fall River, will

will be designated in the mon­be a solemn Pontifical Mass cel­astery.ebrated by Bishop Connolly atLegion of Mary

4:30 Sunday aftj'lrnoon, 'Aug. 22 The Discalced Carmelites were and a jubilee banquet at 6:30 founded in Spain by St. TeresaOuting Aug. 15 Sunday night at Dwelly Street of Avila 400 years ago. Their Armory. foundress is noted for her spir­Active members of the Legion itual writings which distinctive­of Mary from all parts of the In progress this week is the

ly mix wit and wisdom. TheFall River Diocese, together with parish's annual feast and bazaar. order has monasteries through­their families, will hold their Tonight and tomorrow night en­out the world and numbers near­annual outing beginning at noon tertainment will be offered by ly 15,000 members. A famousSunday, Aug. 15 at Lincoln Eddie Zack and his Dude Ranch­Carmelite of modern times wasWoods, R. I. ers. Games, prizes, refreshments the Little Flower, St. Thereseand food will be featured.The program will include of the Child Jesus.

games and swimming. Outdoor Saturday morning, Aug. 14 The nuns explain that "dis­cooking facilities will be avail ­ will see the delivery of pencoes

calced" means that they wearable. in gaily decorated trucks under sandals without stockings in­the chairmanship of David P.Rev. Edward A. Oliveira, as­ stead. of shoes. The word comesSilvia, aided by a men's commit­sistant at Our Lady of Lourdes from the Latin "calceus," mean­tee and CYO boys.R.ectory, Taunton, is Diocesan ing shoe.

Director of the Legion of Mary. Turn to Page EighteenFATHER GREENSPUN, C.S.P. JOSEPH J. REILLY

Fall River Native Holy Union Nuns Dedicate Harwich Church SundayNew Holy Union Elect American provincial Bishop Connolly ~~~~~o~~di~~~~~a~a~5~g~ ~ Fr. D.J. McCarthy For Top Post

At the general chapter The religious of the HolyWill Preside deacon, and Rev. James Keefe, Will Celebrate of the Religious of the Holy Union of the Sacred Reartl Union of the Sacred Hearts have elected their fir3'At Service Solemn MassMother Ann Joseph LaPlante America'll Mother General..

Turn to Page Five Bishop Connolly will sol­ S8.CC., subdeacon. The preacher Turn t-o Page Twelve emly dedicate the new Holy will be Very Rev. Eugene R.

Robitaille, SS.CC. Rev. John E.Trinity Church at West Har­Boyce , 58.CC. will be master ofwich at 5 Sunday afternoon. ceremonies.

A Solemn Mass of Dedication Chaplains to the Bishop willwill follow with Very Rev.

be Rev. Paul J. Price, SS.CC. andDaniel J. McCarthy, SS.CC.. Rev. Finbarr McAloon, S5.CC.,provincial of the Congregation pastor of the church for the pastof the Sacred Hearts, as cele­13 years.brant.

The new Cape Cod' Church Former pastors who will at ­was built after fire destroyed tend are Rev. Thaddeus Bouhuy­the structure which had served sen, SS.CC. and· Rev. Dennis its parishioners 'and Summer Spykers, S8.CC. Music will be visitors for years. A tent had to by the Choir of Queen of Peace be used temporarily after the Mission Seminary, Jaffrey Cen­fire. ter, N.H.

The new structure represents, Priests will assemble in the the charity of the year-round school at 4:30 and the procession parishioners who have worked to the church will begin at 4:45. diligently with Father Finbarr A dinner for all parishionersMcAloon, SS.CC., pastor, to real­ will be held immediately after ize one of the most beautiful the Mass in the new auditorium. houses of worship on quaint old Chairman of the dinl'l.er commit­Cape Cod. tee is Mrs. John O'Donnell of

Assistin~ Fr. McCarthY at tba W. Harwich. (Photoa OIl PlUM ill

MOTHER ANN THOMAS PROVINCIAL

FR.FINBARR McALOON,SS.Co. ~

MOTHER MARIE R~GIS SUPEBJoa GENE&4I.

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2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Aug. 12, 1965

Diocesan Ordinary Urges Laity to Participate In CeD Congress

The Nineteenth Annual New England Regional Con­gress of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine will be held at Bishop Stang High School, North Dartmouth, from Thursday, August 26th until Sunday evening, August 29th. It will begin with a Pontifical Dialogue Mass at 8 :00 P.M. on Thursday and close with a Pontifical Concelebrated· Mass on Sunday at 4:00 P.M.

Many distinguished bishops and religious leaders will address the Congress. There will be special sessiop.s for

the clergy and teachers of religion. Especially noteworthy is the fact that laymen and laywomen skilled in var­ious forms of religious education will gi~e us the benefit of their experience and counsel. This means that we will deal with a wide variety of subjects, such as teen age needs, and tHe de­mand for religious education in the home, the spiritual formation of the lay apostle, the measure of co-oper­ation between clergy and laity that makes for succesful parish programs. No one who assists at this Congress can fail 110 be inspired ·and helped in

.. . his work for Christ to make our world a better place to live in. While hoping and praying that all sessions will be well attended. I especially urge the faithful to assist at the General Sessions at 8 :00 P oM. on Thursday, Friday·and Saturday and at the concluding Session at 4:00 P.M. ,on Sunday, August 29th..

We are. a Catholic people, but we must not take too much for granted. We can learn to kno'}' our faith better. We should wish to live it better, to the point that every one of us, priest, religious and layman, becomes a more No­

sponsive means of bringing Christ to our world. The great Ecumenical Council in Rome addresses us as "The People of God.H It urges us to realize that· every baptized person should be an apostle of the word of God and so let his light shine that men who see good works done may come to know and glorify our heavenly Father. .

So let no one be prompted to excuse himself. There is much to do that is more important than the humdrum things of life. The basis for Confraternity work is to learn in order to better ourselves by teaching and doing for ~ love of GOO and our neighbor. . .

Believe me, with every devoted good wish . Faithfully yours in Christ,

. ~d!-;;5'" 8ilhop offoJl River

Proper of the .Mass For Feast of the, Assumption INTROIT: A great sign appeared in heaven: a woman

clothed with the sun, and the moon was under her feet, and upon her head a crown of twelve stars. Sing to the Lord a new song, for he has done wondrous deedS. Glory be to the Father, etc. A great sign has appeared in heaven: A woman clothed with the sun, and. the moon was.under her feet, and upon her head a' croWn of twelve stars.

GRADUAL: Hear, 0 daughter, and see; turn your ear; for the king shall desire your beauty. All glorious is the ki.ng's daughter as she enters; her raiment is threaded with spun gold. Alleluia, allelui,s. Mary has been taken up into heaven; the -choirs of the angels rejoice. Alleluia.

OFFERTORY: I will put enmity between TOU and the woman, between your seed and her seed.

COMMUNION: All generations shall call me .blessed; because he who is mighty has done great things for me.

Necrology FamilylPicnic Fall River Council, Knights of

Columbus, will hold its annualA'UG.U family picnic from noon till dark Rev. ,Thomas Clinton, 1895. Sunday, Aug. 22, at Urban's

St. Peter, Sandwich.- Grove, Tiverton. Prizes, food and refreshments will be fea­tured and families and friends

AUG." of knights are invited. In charge Rev. Peter J. B. Bedard, 1884, of 'arrangements are Matthew

Founder, Notre Dame, Fall River. L aborki and Robert Marques.

SPECIAL AUDIENCE ~ Pope Paul VI relaxed a rule against special audiences at his Castel Gandolfo Summer residence to receive the "king" of the Ashanti tribe on Ghana, Africa. Here the Pontiff greets Nana Otumfro Sir Ayoman Prempeh II Asantehene.The audience was con­ducted in English. N.C. Photo.

Louvain Student Sister Luc-GabrieJle, Famous 'Singing

Nun', Studies Theology BRUSSELS· (NC)-The Bel­

gium nun whose recording of "Dominique" sold more than a

, million' copies in the united States two years ago is quietly preparing for final examinatioI1ll at the University of Louvain..

Sister Luc-Gabrielle plans 10 finish her studies in theology this year. Next will come a year devoted to studying how to transmit the Gospel in the field of her special interest-audio­visu¥education. . Sister. Luc-Gabrielle became world famOWl two years ago after making a recording at Philips Studio here. The nun made the recording as a souvenir for a group of young retreatanta she had entertained during rec­reation at Fichermont Convent.

Weekend Bazaar In New Bedford

st. Casimir Church, New Bed­ford, will conduct its annual Summer bazaar this weekend, Friday through Sunday. on the Church grounds, Wood St., New Bedford.

Rev. Kazimir Kwiatkowski, who is heading the committee, has announced that the program wiUl''include a variety of booths, including a special gift booth and J!. children'. booth under the sponsorship of the Children of Mary Sodality. Spe~al prizeS will be awarded

Sunday evening. Both Polish and Americu

foods will be available from Friday noon on. Home-cooked paStries and cakes will be offer­ed in the "Pastry Shop."

Chrust or ao-ealled "Polish neckties" will also be available.

When Philips executives heard the recording they persuaded Sister Luc-Gabrielle to let them sell the .d.i.Sk, and the rest is his­t01"1'.Europeans and Americanl "hummed "Dominique," her bal­lad about the founder of the Dominican order, and newsmen from an over tbeworld inter­viewed the nun in the steel­rimmed glasses who became' TUESDAY-St. ~cintb, CoD­known as "Soeur Sourire"-Sia­ter Smile. I

FORTY HOURS DEVOTION

Aug. 15-0 u r Lad l' • f Lourdes, Wellfleet.

Sacred Heart, New Bed­ford.

Aug. 22-8t. Anthony of the Desert. Fall River.

St. Joseph,. Woods Hole. Aug. 29-&. John the Baptist,

Central Vilage. Our Lady of Grace, No.

Westport.

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Mass. PabJislled .lIllIY TIIursdlv .. 41u Jllghlllnd benue Fall limn Mna. bY 1111 Catholic Press of the Diocese of FaJl llIvar. Subscrlptlllll IIrlca 11, NIL IIll1tPalilM.lIO per year.

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Cloistered Nuns Speak on Radio

SPRINGFIELD (NC) - Two cloistered discalced Carmelite nuns spent an hour on KGBX

.radio herein Missouri answer-­ing questions phoned by listen­ers about the Carmelite order ad the new Carmelite monas­tery here.

Mother Mary Ann of the S\. Louis Carmel ana Mother :DL Gemma, new prioress of the monasteI7 here, were the first Carmelite nuns to be heard fill radio in the Springfield-Cape Girardeau diocese, where Catb­olicsmake .uP only 4 per cent ~ the population.

Open house is being held at the monastery until Aug. 14. when Joseph Cardinal Ritter of St. Louis will officiate at the enclosure ceremony.

Mass Ordo FRIDAY-Mass of pre vi 0 u-.

Sunday. IV Class. Green. May "Proper; No Gloria or Creed; 2nd ColI. SS.Hippolytus and Cassian, Martyrs; Com m o. Preface.

Or SS. Hippolytus lind Cassian, Martyrs. Red. Gloria; _. Creed; Common Preface.

SATUR.J?AY-VigU oftbe' ,.. SUDlption of the messed V.iJIoo gin Mary. II .Class. Violet.Ma. Proper; No Gloria. Creed; 2ncl con. st. Eusebi-.

Confessor. ~ Preface. .. SUNDAY-AsumptiOll of the

Blessed Virgin Mary. I .aa.. White. Mass Proper; Glom.; 2nd ColI. X Sunday after Pen-· . tec08t;Pxeface .01. Blessed V... gin•.

MONDAY-,St. Zoaehim, Fatb.. of the Blessed Virgin Mar.J. Confessor. II Class. W hit e. Mass Proper; Gloria; no·CreetI; Common Prefaee • fessor.m Class. Wbite~ Mal Proper; Gloria; DO Creed; Common Preface.

WEDNESDAY-Mus nf X Sua­da1' after Pen.tecost.IV C1MI. Green. Mass Proper; No Glo­na· or Creed; Znd Coll. 8L Agapitus, .J4alVr; Commca Preface.

Or St. A,gapitus, Martyr. Bed. Gloria; no Creed; Commca Preface.

THURSDAY-8t. J'ohn Eudetl, Confessor. m Class. Whit&. Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creec1; Common Prefaee.

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3 Cathonc: Schools. Oppose Laymen As Principals

WASHINGTON (NC) Most Catholic high school officials are willing to have lay persons teach religion eourses, but they are over­whelmingly opposeB to laymen serving in top administrative posts.

These facts emerge in a study ef the layman's role in Catholic secondary. schools released here by the National Catholic Educa­tional Association.

At the request of the NCEA's Secondary School Department, questions on lay teachers and administrators were included in tbe October, 1963, annual survey made by the Department of Ed­ucation of the National Catholic Welfare Conference. Responses eame largely. from principals of secondary schools.

Increase Since 1961 The study also reported that

15,062 or 30.6 per cent of the $1,038 teachers in Catholic sec­ondary schools in 1963, were lay men and women. This is an in­crease of more than 40 per cent snce 1961, the NCEA said.

The survey showed that near­IF 92 per cent of the 2,430 schools taking part in the survey had lay teachers in some sub­jects. The New England states were found to have the most liigh schools without lay teacb­et'S, a total of 18 per cent.

As for laymen teaching reli ­lion,. a 'comparatively new de­velopment in Catholic education, 18.2 per cent of the schools said &bey would employ lay persons in such posts and 28.8 per cent said they were doing it now.

Asked if they were opposed to • lay assistant principal and to • lay principal, the schools' re­~nse. . was overwhelmingly against giving these POSitiOWi to .y people.

N e&,atfve Poliey A total of about 83 per cent

said they were against lay as­,sistant principals and this nega­tive response rose to about 95 per cent on the question of a lay principal.

Many that reported lack of a policy or a negative one on lay­men as assistant principals or as principals cited financial inabil ­Ity or the absence of any reason to consider the question, said Mrs. Adelaide Casselberry, a re­search expert at the NCEA who earried out the study.

"'One principal stated that while her school had no defined policy, it was doubtful that a lay person could aspire to the position of principal or assistant principal. 'This is most unfortu­Rate,' she added. Another wrote, "It has not been done so far, but I think it would be a good thing," Mrs. Casselberry said.

Ohio Legislature Approves Bus Bill

COLUMBUS (NC) -A hotly fought battle over a "fair bus" bill ended in the Ohio legislature when the Senate overwhelming­ly- approved the measure by a vote of 29-1. Gov. James A. Rhodes was expected to sign the measure promptly.

The House passed the bill, 86­45, after making minor changes in the legislation which had been approved by the Senate June 29 by a vote of 25-5. The Senate then accepted the modified bill.

Under the legislation public school districts would be re­quired to provide bus transpor­tation to nonpublic school pupils living more than two miles fro:m school. Estimates put the cost of the program at $2 million yearly and the number of addi­tional pupils benefited at 68,000.

PRINCIPALS AT HYANNIS DIALOG: Very Rev. William D. Thomson, pastor of St. Francis Xavier Church, Hyannis, and Dean of Cape Cod Area; Bishop Fulton J. Sheen, D.D., National Director of the Propagatidn of the Faith, speaker; Rev. J. Robert Nelson, D.D., speaker and theologi>an at the Boston University School of Theology.

.Bishop Sheen, Dr. Nelson Explore Points Of Unity at Ecumenical Dialogue

Who would spend a warm Summer afternoon sitting in a warm auditorium listening' 1lo a religious discussion? More than 1,000 persons did Sunday. The occasion was the Eeumenical Dialogue sponsored by. the Cap"'e Cod Deanery of the Fall River Diocese and the Cape Cod Council of Churches at Barnstable High School, Hyannis. Every' seat was filled in the 750-seat audi­torium. Extra chairs were plaeed on stage and in the wings. Still others stood at the back of the auditorium and in the vestibule.

Religion proved Sunday it can be quite' a drawing card.

Speakers were Most Rev. Ful­ton J. Sheen, Auxiliary Bishop of New York and national direc­tor of the Propagation of the Faith, and Rev. J. Robert Nel­son, who has participated in ecumenical conferences in 32 nations and now holds the chair {)f theology at Boston Univer­sity School of Theology.

They presented, respectively, the Catholic and Protestant view ecumenicity.

Spirit of Brotherhood The spirit of brotherhood pre­

vailed even in the musical offer­ings which were presented by the Falmouth All-Faith Choir augmented by 12 members of the Oberlin College Gilbert and Sullivan Players.

Priests, ministers and laymen collaborated in arrangements for the afternoon program. Very Rev. William D. Thomson, pastor of St. Francis Xavier Church, Hyannis, and Rev. William T. Vandever, pastor of the Congre­gational Church of South Dennis and executive secretary of the Cape Cod Council of Churches, were co-chairmen.

The spirit that brought about the ecumenical meeting - the first such held in the Diocese­was epitomized in a comment by Wesley F. Rennie, president of the Cape Cod Council of Churches, in introducing Dr. Nelson.

Expressing the "great joy and happiness (of the Council of Churches) in being able to co­sponsor this meeting," Mr. Ren-

Cathedral Women St. Mary's Cathedral Women's

Guild, Fall River, will hold its first board meeting of the sea­son at 7:30 Monday night, Aug. 16 in the parish schooL

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs., Aug. 12, 1965

Marist Is First Priest to Head Ministerial Unit

BRATTLEBORO (NC)­An assistant here in Ver­mont has been elected presi­dent of one of this country's oldest ministerial unions.

Father Harold J. Feldman, O.M.I., is the first Catholic priest to hold the presidency of the Brattleboro Ministerial Union. Last year he was the first priest to hold any office in the asso­ciation when he served as sec­retary-treasurer.

The union, formed in 1775 while Brattleboro was still part of the State of New York, has members from 25 congregations in nine towns. Catholic priests only recently have begun parti ­cipating at the request of Bishop Robert F. Joyce of Burlington who consistently has encouraged such interfaith activities.

Meeting- Ground Father Feldman described the

union as "a clearinghouse for what you might call professional problems and a means of ex­changing ideas and working to­gether on interfaith projects, com m u nit y' relations and so forth.~

Right now, he !aid, union members are trying to find ways to help the war on pOverty. This, he hopes, will become "one of the common meeting grounds for ecumenical activity beween the churches... ·

. ,/

Austrian Charities Aid. Flood Victims

"VIENNA (NC)-The Austrian Catholic charities organization has sent $5,000 to aid victims of Hungarian floods.

It is the first time a Catholie charitable' group from the West has been able to send direct aid to communist-ruled Hungal',Y. By agreement with the Hungarian government, Hungary's bishops and Red Cross worked jointly to distribute the relief.

nie said he feels "that every Christian has a longing in his heart for greater unity - • ­

"The initiative of Pope John has reached through to that longing, touching our hearts and ghing us the hope that even in our lifetime we may see unity among Christians."

Sunday afternoon saw the first stirrings of that quest for "togetherness" among members

"that an 01. us are made brothers in Baptism," with the W87' "In which the non-Roman churches are being recognized as 'churches'" and with the di­

. rective that both clergy and laity "are to engage in the .work of ecumenism."

He also cited as encouraging the restoration of Biblical theol­

Turn to Page Eleven

of the Christian community of Cape Cod and neighbors from other sections of Southeastern Massachusetts.

Bishop Sheen and Dr. Nelson both stressed the aspects of Christianity on which members of all churches can agree. Both warned, in effect, that Christians must be united if the Christian church in general is to survive.

Three Fields

Bishop Sheen cited three fields in which he said Christians "are drawing closer and closer to­gether-the mission field, recog­nition of the Bible as the Word of God and a stressing of the humanity of Christ, the Son of the Living God.."

Dr. Nelson praised the reach­ing out of Pope John to all peoples and noted "more has

. been done in the last seven years" to promote healing be­tween the churches than in the previous 700 years.

He cited the "magnificence and magnanimity" of the Ecu­menical Council in accepting, its share of the blame for disunity and expressed "encouragement" with the church's recognition

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Page 4: 08.12.65

4 rm: AN~,;nVK-lJloceseot fan River-fhurs. Aug. 12, '965

Explains Girl's Obligations T()ward 'Widowed Mother

By John J. Kane, Ph.D. "What is a girl's responsibilities toward her mother

after marriage? She is always trying to run our home so that we will feel dependent upon her. It doesn't help my child to hear one thing from me, something else from my mother. We don't need her gifts. She is not wealthy but should keep what she has for herself. My husband is about to bar my mother from the home. This I want to prevent. What can I do?"

It may not help you to know this, but in effect, I can invite you "to join the club." What you des­cribe is the curse of most teenage m a r ­riages and even among some couples who marry later. It is simply disastrous. You are quite right in determining to take steps to change it.

At the outset, your obligation is to love and honor your mother. But you also have an obligation to your husband and child. When you marry you must cleave 'to your husband, and if this means a break-up with your mother, and I hope it doesn't, then it will have to be.

You don't mention'your father and from your letter I presume he is dead. I wonder how lonely your mother may be? Here is the first key, I presume, to the problem. She is looking for com­panionship, for a family life. You are close by and offer an inviting opportunity.

Annoys Husband But she is attempting to buy

her way into your home and your affections, a serious mis­take, because it is simply impos­sible. But, more than that, it is aggravating, especially to your husband. He, as a husband, wants to provide for you and your child. So to him, perhaps, your mother is trying to usurp his role.

,Then I suspect that you r mother is a somewhat dominant woman who has been accustom­ed to having her own way. You don't change people at her age. If you allowed her to dominate you most of your life, how hard it is for her to realize suddenly that this is over. In fact, she has not yet accepted the fact.

You are quite right about her interference with your efforts to rear your child. The most important aspect of child rearing and discipline is consistency. How can there be any consist ­ency when the child is given conflicting statements, perhaps conflicting values? Obviously, this must cease.

Drastic Solution Yet again, it is an indication

of what I already said. Your mother is starving for effection and hopes to obtain it from your child by being indulgent and generous.

India's Postmaster Acclaims Bro,ther

NEW DELHI (NC)-A Jesuit Brother has won the distinction of running India's best post of­fice.

The country's postmaster gen­eral here has acclaimed 'Brother Peter, S.J., 79, for his service as postmaster of India's clean­est and most efficient' post office.

Located at Shembaganur in }.1adras state, the office has been under the Brother's care for the

Your husband's solution to bar her from the home may have to be the ultimate one, although I hope not. It is too drastic at present. Only after all other approaches have failed, if they do, would I resort to this.

Let's begin with what is basic, your mother's loneliness. Why not encourage her to acquire SO!De friends of her own age? This is not difficult. There are many organizations within the parish, the community or per­haps the neighborhood which she might join. You 'will have to be a bit subtle in your approach, but it can be done.

Second, I suspect she finds time hanging heavily on her hands. Does she have any hob­bies? Perhaps you can suggest some and help her to get started.

Suggests Breathing Spell . Since she is not poor, why not suggest a trip for her? Again, approach this with care and don't create the impression you are trying to get rid of ,her, al ­though in reality you are-at least for a time. The Catholic papers are filled with European trips and others. Would these interest her, assuming she can afford one?

My strategy in all of this is to give you a breathing spell and hopefully provide new in­terests in life for your mother. It would also provide a period for your husband's frustrations to dissipate. But merely having her leave for a few weeks is not enough. Out of the trip I would hope for new ~riends.

Then there-are volunteer agen­cies, Red Cross, the Gray Ladies, and countless others always looking for help. Again, knowing your mother's interests, you J!lay suggest one of these. If time permits, you might even join temporarily to get her started,

Difficult Approaches It may be that none of these

suggestions will work. It may even be you tried them already and they failed to awaken her interest. I hope not, but if this is the case, then a little more diffcult approach is essential.

Ask her to restrict her gifts to Christmas and birthdays, ex­plaining that you and your hus­band are embarrassed by her extreme generosity. She mayor may not take the hint. If not, then it may require the sledge hammer approach.

Don't be home when she calls or ask that she telephone you first. Have engagements, if pos­sible, or make it clear that a visit at that time is not desired.

Difficult Situation I realize how hard this is for·

any good daughter to behave thus toward her mother. But your husband, your child and your whole family life may de­pend on it. You must be firm. Talk this over with one of the parish priests, because if it does come to this you are going to need some psychic support.

If none of these suggested techniques work, then you will have to have a showdown. I can only feel deep sympathy for your mother, as apparently you do too.

These situations are always sticky and difficult. But I think ][ can promise you that if the worst comes to be, your mother will eventually accept the situ­ation and be a better mother

MOURNED: Rev. Sera­phin Stachowicz, O. F. M. Conv., pastor of Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church, New Bedford, from 1961-63 died in Chicopee Wednesday and a SOlemn High Mass of Re­quiem was celebrated in St. Stanislaus' Church, Chico­pee, on Saturday morning.

Prelate Pro ises De Paul Society

BANYO (NC) - Archbishop Patrick M. O'Donnell of Bris­bane has praised the St. Vincent de Paul Society for its work in relieving "poverty of the mind and soul" as well as "poverty of the body."

In a speech tape-recorded for a meeting of the society here, the archbishop said the society's work is "pure spit'itual charity of high order and there are masses of people both Catholic and otherwise, who stand to benefit enormously from this vital phase of the society's role."

The Australian prelate praised the society's Literature Apostol­ate, which he terme<' "especially relevant" since August is Cath­olic Press Month in Australia.

"I offer you the reassurance," he said, "that all the effort you devote to this work, in conjunc­tion with your activities, is well spent."

Flood Easy to Take After Boy's Visit

PUEBLO (NC)-In the clean­up after the devastating floods which hit this part of the coun­try, Father James Kane, editor of the Southern Colorado Regis­ter, diocesan newspaper, un­ccvered a story which goes like this:

A worried Catholic couple played it safe aua. sent their toddler son to stay with an uncle in the westen: part of the state. A letter explaining the rea­son for the visit accompanied the boy. Several days later the par­ent.<; ,got a telegram from the uncle: "Am returning your boy. Send the flood."

Now••.helps solve denture wearers' 3biggest problems

Today scIence olfers a proven WIly that (1) helps keep your dentures trom slip­pIng or droppIng; (2) keeps dentures more comfortable; and (3) makes It Easler to eat and chew wIth your talse tEeth. The one discovery that does aU 3 Is FASTEETH Powder. FASTEE"I'S helpe hold teeth In place. You can laugh or speak Without embarrassment. It cushions tender=ilChecks denture breath.OetFAS Powder atdrUll

South Attleboro Religion School ., Shows Youngsters Like School

A "first" for St. Theresa's parish, South Attleboro, a Con­fraternity of Christian Doctrine­sponsored Summer School of Religion, has proved a resound­ing success, with nearly 100 youngsters from grades one through five attending a two week session. Running concur­

,rentIy was a special nursery class for children of lay teachers and helpers. Some 10 tot.<; took advantage of this service.

The program began with morning prayers, songs, Bible stories, class activity and recre­ation. Refreshments were fol­lowed by arts and crafts and closing prayers. The sessions ran daily from nine to noon.

The project was sponsored by

Mrs. Thelma Goff, president GI the parish CCD unit, and has _ chairmen Rev: Gerard Chabot, pastor,.. and Rev. Roger Gagne. curate.

A large committee workipC under Mrs. Goff handled teach­ing and such details as registra­tion, refreshments, and the _ ganization of teenage helpeJ'& The teenagers Were rewarded for their cooperation by a luncheon, followed by a splash party at the home of Mrs. Rose Hagopian. The grown-ups found 'their reward in the enthusiasm. of the participating children and in the gratitude of parents, who viewed their youngsters' accom­plishments at a visiting da,­which wound up the program.

'I"': Dear EttCLOSEO PLEASE ""0 $ M~nslgnor Ryan: FOR

Please IlAME

return coupoawith your ITREET'

offering CITV STATE

WHY PEOPLE BUILD CHUR·CHES·

- ' . I THE HOLY FATHER'S MISSION AID TO THE ,ORIENTAL CHURC"l

The'answer is easy: they welcome the oppor­tunity to do something needed where it's needed. Sometimes, besides, they build the church in memory of their Joved' ones, name,

YOU it for their favorite saint•••• Where is a new I CAN church needed? In hundreds of towns and

DO Villages in our IS-country mission world. In . IT Koom-pan-mala, south India, for instance••••

BY Koom-pan-mala, with 2,500 Catholics, has no : MAIL church or fuJI-time priest. The people are

pitiably poor: the average family earns less than $1 a week! ••• You cali build this church all by yourself for as little as $3,SOO, the rectory for only $1,200. You'll be doing some­thing needed, where it's needed, for Christ-I and for people who cannot do for themselvesl ••• Do something at least, as much as you can ($100, $75, $50, $25, $20, $15, $10, $5, $3, $1) to help build this church! Where the weekly income is only $1, even the change in your pocket will be a GocIsendl ••• In the coupon below write Koom-pan-mala.

~..,

11fANK YOU,

HOME­~UILDERSI

WHILE YOU CAN

Dear Mr. and Mrs. T.: For home"builders like you to build a

home for God must De especially re­warding. The new chapel, as you re­quest, wiU be dedicated to St. Agnes.

-Msgr. Ryano Tell your Jawyer, when you discuss your win, our legal title is CATHOUC NEAll EAsT WELFARI ASSOCIATION: o Stringless bequests are used where the Holy Father says they;re needed. o The Masses you arrange for will be offered by poor missionaries. o $600 will train a native priest, $300 a native Sister, who will pray for you always.o $10,000 will build a parish "plant'· (church, school, rectory, and convent) some. Where overseas ••• a memorial fo~ever!

---......._--...._-------­_

--_

_

_

ZIP CODE_

THE CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATIOM

_ 6. = NEAR EASTs. MISSIONS· - . FRANC'S CARDINAL SPELLMAN, PresidentI. ..' ~MSGR. JOSEPH T. RYAN, National Secreta.... ===. 0 = " ==-.. Write: CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc.

330 Madison Avenue· New York, N.Y. 10017 Telephone: 212/YUkon 6-5840

past 52- years. and mother-in-law for it. counteD eve17where. •• '" 1'· ,'11:.\ 1'\,1

'" t- •• 1'" \ ... , of \-,,- .'

Page 5: 08.12.65

5 THE ANCHOR-Priests Protest Sister Anne Denise Takes Many Memories Thurs., Aug. 12, 1965

.Pla.nt Closure As She Quits Stang High for New Post War on PovertyROSARIO (NC) - A group of Catholic priests have protested. a decision by company officials h close a meat packing plant employing about 4,000 personS.

The statement said the com.., pany's decision demonstrates '"the lack of sensitivity of those who are out of step with history and who cannot restrain their desire for profits in the interest ef social peace."

The business leaders, said the priest, warn of the dangers of eommunism without realizing they provide the communists with the best motives for rapid mobilization.

Declaring that they seek jus­tice, not charity, the priests called on the Argentinian gov­ernment to step in and prevent the closure of the Swift and Co. plant.

Sister and Brother Are Mother, Son

DA YTON (NC) - Brother Stanley G. Mathews, S.M., newly named principal of· Chaminade High School here in Ohio, lives c;nly a few miles from his mother -Sister Julia Agnes, superior at Villa Julienne, convent prima­rily for Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur teaching at Julienne High School.

Sister Julia Agnes also is on the faculty of the University of Dayton, conducted by the. Society of Mary, to which her son belongs.

She entered the convent after bel' husband died and after her son joined the Society of Mary and her daughter announced plans to marry. She has four gmndchildren who, while they were growing up, called her "Sister Grandma."

New Provincial Continued from Page One

daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph LaPlante of Taunton; and Mother Ann Thomas Higgins, daughter of Mrs. John Higgins, Fall River, were named to posi.., tions of responsibility.

Mother Ann Joseph was re­elected for a second term as a general council member; and Mother Ann Thomas will suc­ceed Mother MarY William Gib­lin as provincial of the Immacu­late Heart Province of the com": munity. This province includes the Fall River Diocese.

Mother Ann Thomas gradu­ated from Sacred Heart School and Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, and earned a bach­elor of arts degree summa cum laude at Stonehill College. She received a master of arts degree in English from Catholic Uni­versity and has also studied at Marquette University and Man­hattanville College of the Sacred Heart. .

The new provincial entered t'he Holy Union novitiate in Fall River in September, 1940. She bas taught at St. Mary's School, Taunton; Holy Union Prepara­tory School, Tiverton; and Sa­cred Hearts Academy and the College of the Sacred Hearts, rall River. She was superior at the Preparatory School and at the Holy Union Juniorate in Fall River. Prior to her appointment .as Provincial she was a provin­cial councillor. She will begin bel' new duties late this month Upon her return from Rome.

American Delegates American delegates to the

general chapter, in addition to Mother Mary William, Mother Ann Thomas and Mother Marie Regis, included Sister John Elizabeth of the Immaculate Heart Province; Mother Inez Marie and Mother Claire Regis of the Sacred Heart Province; and Sister Marie Irene ClI. tile Cameroons iUb-prOVUlClto

By Patricia Francis Touch·es LivesIt was 8ix years and two months ago that Sister Anne Denise, S.N.D., spoke for the

first time to an entering class of Stang High School students. She recalls now she had Of Millions "just a few hours notice" before leaving Boston for the drive to the Kennedy· Youth ATLANTA (NC)-TheCenter in New Bedford. She was a new principal that day and her audience was com­ war on poverty "has alreadyprised' of "new' high scholl touched the lives of millionsstudents, the first Fresh­ of Americans," the assistant men class to enter Stang. director of the Office of Eco­As Sister Anne Denise spoke nomic Opportunity said here. to them that warm June day-" -:I'here have been problems;• • • with Bishop Connolly and there have been difficulties;Bishop 'Gerrard and my new there have been disappoint­superintendent of schools (the ments," H y man Bookbinderlate Rev. Edward J. Gorman) told the Southern Catholic Lead­sitting there '" .." workmen ers Conference on Social--Changestill were busy at the Dartmouth and Christian Response. "Butconstruction site getting the in what other major national en­Diocese's first regional high

deavor have we been free ofschool ready for its September problems and difficulties andopening. disappointments?"Stang's first principal ex­

plained to Stang's first students He continued: "Over half a the work of the Sisters of Notre million children ate now enroll ­Dame de Namur. She told them ed in Head Start... Over 300,­about other schools of the order. 000 young men and women are She set out the regulations they already involved in the Job would be expected to follow. Corps or the Neighborhood

Then the 5 feet 3 inch nun re­ Youth Corps or the collegework­turned to Boston to prepare for study program. Many of these the opening day of school. are being given their first real

On September 1, 1959, "the chance to escape from the pover­community" came to Stang's ty "into which they were born­Dartmouth convent, a brand new and to avoid starting another residence adjoining the brand generation of poor families. new school. ''The community" Local Effortsconsisted of Sister Anne Denise

"Almost 1,000 communitiesand six other nuns who were to have already been stimulated . staff the school in its infant year. into organizing their own localThe I),uns and the students and

.wars against poverty. And tens . . the community began to get ac- ~ of thousands of individuals arequainted. The acquaintance soon participating in the developmentblossomed into warm friendship.

totalled even more. This year's prom. and the implementation of theseMuch of the friendly relation­graduates received scholarships She cheered the first footban local programs."ship the school and the commu­

nity now enjoy is directly a re­ of· more than $100,000. team and monitored the first "The churches of America," sult of Sister Anne Denise's own This year, too, Stang set an report cards. Bookbinder added, "have al­

enviable record when two grad­warmth and interest - although She devoted six years to de­ ready given great evidence of she would be the first to deny uates were named to service veloping Stang High School into their determination to be active it. academies. John H. Keavy Jr. a school with proud traditions partners in this great crusade.

Infant Days and a proud name-and although This is one of the greatest fac­was appointed to the Naval

A graduate of Boston's Em­ Academy and Bernard F. King she would be embarrassed were tors in my confidence that we manuel College, also staffed by was named to the Military people to say it, she is an inte­ will win this war."

Academq. Both "friendly rivals" gral part of that tradition andthe Sisters of Notre Dame de are from Fall River-and their name.Namur, Sister earned her mas­ter's degree in religious guidance appointments added another Admitting it was "hard to say Iowa Priest Heads at Providence College. thrilling link to Sister's chain 'Goodby,'» she said she was Civil Rights Groupof memories. "glad" to "be able to make the ter's degree could prepare her Now six years have ended. sacrifice * • .. and I'm taking so DUBUQUE (NC) - FatherBut neither college nor a mas­

The infant that was Stang has Philip A. Hamilton, sociologymany good memories with me."adequately for ushering a brand grown into a healthy child and teacher at Loras College here,new high school through its She has left memories behind,Stang's "mother" has turned it _ was elected chairman at thefirst. six years of life. too, good memories of a slightover to other hands to nurture I~wa Civil Rights· Commission'That required love, common but strong woman with a softthrough another six years. organizational meeting in Des sense, a sense of humor and voice and a kind and under­Last Friday, Sister Anne Moines. He will serve for oneboundless faith in the Lord. Sis­ standing heart who devoted six: year.De-nise-along with other nunster Superior had all. She needed years to helping teen-agers of The seven-member commi~­of her order-received her as­them all. this area develop into young

There was laughter Stang signment for the coming year. men and women with a sense of sion was appointed by Gov. Har­at Stang has a new principal, old Hughes last May after it wasduring those first years. There responsibility to their God and

Sister Julie Marie, S.N.D., who authorized by the 1965 Legisla­were tears, too. "But Bishop their nation.' Connolly was always wonderful was formerly guidance director ture and provided with a budg­

Cutting the apron strings isat st. Mary High School, Lynn. et of $31,900 for its first year'sto us. Whenever we needed difficult, but Sister AnneSister Anne Denise was trans­ operation. Father Hamilton alsosomething, he was there. Denise's infant school has grown was chosen chairman of aferred to St. Mary's. Stang is sub­". • • And so many other peo­ into a healthy youngster nowlosing her. committee to hire a director forple helped us. We can never say -and its "mother" has other the commission.-rhank you' enough." Part of Memories duties scheduled. The school put down roots and

But in another way, Stang Tuesday she left for her new grew, adding a class each year never will lose Sister Anne assignment.

until therere were four. From Other Stang faculty members DONNELLYDenise. She is part of the mem­Its first year enrollment of 200, ories on which the school is transferred are Sister Paulait has expanded to more than built. She came before the last Julie, who will be principal and PAINTING

1,000 students. bricks were in place, before the superior at Bishop FenwickThe original seven nun-and­grass blanketed the. grounds. High, Peabody; Sister Aloysia, SERVICE

two-lay-member faculty has in­to be principal and superior atcreased to 24 nuns and 11 lay She opened the door to the Commercial • IndustrialNotre Dame Academy, Worces­teachers. first students and saw the first Institutional

get She re­ ter; Sister Magdalen Julie, re­Many ScholarshipS band. uniformed. Painting and' Decoratingturning to Emmanuel College;In 1963, the first class gradu­ ceived the first copy of the Sister William Mary, to Cardinalated from Stang. Members of school paper, the Stangscript, Fall River OSborne 2-1911Cushing High, South Boston'that class were awarded $90,000 admired the decorations that and Sister Mary Catherine, t~in scholarships for college study. transformed the gym into a 74. Williamson Street Notre Dame High, Hingham.Scholarships for last year's class fairyland for the school's first

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Page 6: 08.12.65

,.6 THE ANCHOR-:-Diocese of Foil River-:.Thurs. ~ug. 12, 1965 Sunday • The· Assumption'

cGood of Society CThe prestigious head of the American Bar Association,

Lewis F. Powell, has said at the Bar convention in Miami Beach that while "there must be no lessening of this con­ D cern for the constitutional rights of persons accused of

By Armand ~. Gouletcrime ... the first and foremost priority today must be a like concern for the rights of citizens to be free from For the past several eriminal molestation of their person and property." weeks, The Anchor and most

of the secular press in theThe whole field of law and rights is 80 vast it is dM>cese have publicized atmot to be wondered at that at various times one or an­length the events of the forth­other aspect is emphasized with the resulting lack of empha­ coming CCD Congress to be held

sis on other just as important' aspects. At this particular at Stang High School, North period of national history the emphasis has been on the Dortmouth on Aug. 26, 27, 28, rights of the accused. Now that his rights have been suf­ and 29. The many distiguished

speakers, the elaborate programficiently written about and insisted upon and safeguarded, covering all phases of CCD

the emphasis must be-for a while-on the rights of work, the untold number of society and of individuals to be free from the attacks of planning hours spent and the criminals.' And if society and individuals have been vic­ voluminous pages of notes used

by the planning committees fortimized, then they have the right to insist that the crim­the congress will all be in vaininal be punished both to discourage others of like mind if, after all is said and done, it

and to impress on the offender himself that crime does is found that very few people not and should not pay. from our diocese· had attended

This is not a spirit of vindictiveness. Rather it is the the congress or had not taken part in the activities.realistic appraisal that the crime situation is getting

The importance of this con­worse and that a strong way of checking is to make sure gress in the development of the that those who take to crime are punished swiftly and spiritual life 'of every Catholic severely for the good of society and for their own good. in our diocese cannot be over­

emphasized. The amount of good that a parish will derive fromHurt this congress will depend uponVoting Act the amount of effort expended

Under the newly-passed Voting Rights Act of 1965, in assuring that as high a per­centage of the parish population

Civil Rights Movement Federal registrars are now at work in several counties By Msgr. George G. Higgins attend the congress as possible.of Southern States, registering eligible Negroes. (Director, Social Action Dept., N.C.W.C.) Priest directors and parish ex­

It is unfortunate that the States themselves did not ecutive boards should call aSome weeks ago in this column we expressed the con­and, apparently, would not take this action themselves. meeting of all its members to fident hope that Martin L~ther King-for whose leadership plan a concerted effort to per­Of course, some Southern white politicians are delighted in the civil rights movement we have the highest possible sonally contact or phone eachto have the Federal government take the action which family of the parish. Parishion­admiration-will be repudiated if he is reckless enough toabsolves them from doing what they know, in their con­ ers, in turn, should invite the go ahead with his announc­sciences and from their sense of history, must be done. A spokesman for the party is remaining members of theired plan to drag the South­ quoted as saying that the Mc­ families, their friends and allIt has been said that the Congress can and does sense ern Christian Leadership Democratic those with whom they come inthe mind of the nation and that legislation follows upon Comb F r e e d 0 m Conference into the field of Party initially published· the contact during their working

this. The mind of the nation has been clear-every quali­ international relations and, un­ statement and, while the execu­ day, be they Catholic or not. fied American is equal before God and the law. And no der its auspices, to sponsor and tive committee of the F.n.p. . Non-Catholics Welcome gerrymandered qualifications must be introduced to dis­ promote mas s hadn't taken any action on it, the Since the Inter-Church Coun­

. top officers of the party decided cils have been invited to attend,enfranchise the Negro. protest meet­ings. a g a ins t to reprint it in the official news­ all non-Catholics will be wel­The Voting Rights Act was a necessary one. It came

letter for distributior across the comed to either participate inU.S. for e i g n about because it was right and because men and women policy in Viet­ State. the training sessions and confer­in the nation cried out for it, marched and protested for nam. Some of Appeal to Negroes ences or to merely come in to it, and suffered and went to jail for it. our rea d e r s observe.The statement, as reprinted in

were unhappy, Because of the huge crowdsLegislators are sensitive to the demands of the people. the newsletter, reads in' part: expected to attend, parish exec­not to say an­ "No Mississippi Negroes shouldIn this instance, it is fortunate that they are. utive boards that know of thosegry, about our be fighting in Vietnam for the who are attending the congresscriticism of Dr. white man's freedom, until all should pre-register as many asKing in this re­ the Negro" people are free inMicroscopes possible before. the opening daygard. So be it. Mississippi.

We are still of . of the congress.In a recent address to delegates of the Canadian the opinion, however, that,

"Negro boys should not honor In this way, last minute regis­the draft here in Mississippi.Dietetic Association, Dr. B. G. Gross of Chicago offered while King obviously has the tration lines and records proc­Mothers should encourage their

seven psychological microscopes for those interested in right and the duty to publicize sons not to go. essing will be kept to a mini­his own views on the Vietnam mum at the high school.self-diagnosis. A person looking at himself through these "We will gain respect and dig­conflict through any and every Last, but not least, attend an

microscopes will know better what kind of a person he is his disposal, he is de­ nity a sessions of the your­as only by forcing Congressracemeans ,~t and should be then inspired' to strive for improvement luding himself if he really thinks the United States Government self. See you there!

and the Mississippi governmentnot only for the sake of the "good life" but for the sake that his' acknowledged leader­to come with gUns, dogs, andship in the field of civil rightsof the "God-life" that is in him. trucks takecan be transferred automatically to our sons away Catholic University

Dr. Gross asked men to consider their adjustibility­ and be killed protecting Missi­to the field of internationalthe acceptance of life's unpleasant situations; attitudes­ ssippi, Alabama, Georgia, and Plans Construction

relations. acceptance of others as they are; emotional control; impulse Tempted to Overreach Louisiana. WASHINGTON (NC) - The

"No one has a right to ask us Catholic University of Americacontrol; one's own assets and liabilities; self-integrity; and A recent policy statement by to risk our lives and kill other has received $42,026 from thea local affiliate of the Freedomsensitivity-one's self and one's neighbor. colored people in Santo Domingo U. S. Department of Health, Ed­Democratic Party in MississippiIf this be done with the yardstick of spirituality, the and Vietnam, so that white ucation and Welfare towardurging Negroes to dodge the

results can be enlightening and can serve as a spur toward draft would seem to indicate that Americans can get richer. We construction of a new $601,019 will be looked upon as traitorsa higher way of life. Dr. King is not the only civil biology and nursing building. by all the colored people of the Bishop William J. McDonald,rights leader in this country world if the Negro people con­ university rector said the newwho is being tempted thus to tinue to fight and die without a three-story building scheduledoverreach himself. cause. for occupancy in 1966, will per­The July 31 issue of the -New

mit addition of 80 nursing stu­York Times reports that 'Negro Caricature Conflict dents, bringing nursing enrol­mothers are being urged by the In our judgment, the time has ment to 446; an increase 01 30McComb (Miss.) Freedom Dem­ come for the general civil rights undergraduate biology students,ocratic Party-which is made up movement to repudiate this kind for a total of 165 biology under­of a number of civil rights of demagoguery. To caricature@rheANCHOR graduates; and 24 new biologygroups-to keep their sons from the conflict in Vietnam and

for totalhonoring the draft and that Ne­ Sanito Domingo as a strugggle graduate students, a graduate enrolment in biologyOFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER groes in the armed forces are between colored natives and of 96.being urged to stage hunger white imperialists (when ·there

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River strikes' in protest against U. S. are natives fighting on both 410 Highland Avenue foreign policy in Vietnam and sides) is the cheapest kind of Amnesty in Spacn

Fall River, Mass. 675-7151 Santo Domingo. racism in reverse, and the soon­ MADRID (NC)-The Spanish The plea was made in a leaflet er other element!' in the civil· government has announced an

PUBLISHER distributed in Negro communi­ rights movement stand up and amnesty in honor of the current ties in Mississippi and was also say so-with no apologies and holy year of St. James the Apos­Most Rev. James L. Connolly, 0.0., PhD., reprinted in the monthly news­ with no ifs, ands, or buts-the tle, whose tomb is reputed to be

GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MA~!AGER letter of the Freedom Democrats. better it will be for the move­ in Santiago de Compostela. The Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Dris'!:oll According to the Times, copies ment itself and for the cause of amnesty calls for a reduction by

were exhibited on a bulletin interracial justice, not only in half of the sentences inflicted MANAGING EDITOR board in the party's headquar- the United States but throughout for most crimes, including those - Hugh J. Golden -ierli'in Jackson, Miss. the rest of the world as welL cd a "political" na...

Patroness of the Diocese

Mississippi Leaders

Page 7: 08.12.65

:' Asserts . Chilean ·:Changes N,~ded -In C:le'~g'yLag

SANTIAGO (NC)-8Weep.­·ing social changes and new apostolic methods must pre­eede any solution to Chile's religious vocation crisis, a crisis that has been deepening for more than a century. .

These are the conclusions 01. • survey just completed, by a ,.Jesuit sociologist, Father ~enato Poblete, who sampled att~tudes toward priestly vocations among Chilean high sehool students and seminarians. The results ~e ob­tained are not' optimistic and they probably' represent. the thinking of the young people in most Latin American countries.

Priests Backed Spain-Father Poblete's book, "Crisis

Sacerdotal" (The' Crisis in Priests), demonstrates that Chile is gripped by a widespread and serious shortage of priests. There are 2,449 priests in this country, or one for every 2,783 Catholics. A proper ratio would' be one

. for every 800 Catholics. The real voCation problem

that Chile faces is better delin­eated by other statistics. Fully one half of the priests working in this country are missionaries. 'l'he number of Chilean priests has increased by less than 500 In the past two centuries.

Stated another way, Chile has 4.2 priests for every 10,000 Cath­olics. The whole of Africa, on the other hand, has 5.8 priests for every 10,000 Catholics.

Father Poblete supplies sev­eral reasons for. the present crisis in vocations. Historically, he points out that the 1810 war of independence against Spain had an anti-clerical bent since most of the clergy supported the Spanish. The young' people en­thusiastically supported inde­pendence, and when it was ob­tained many Spanish mission­aries returned to their home country.

CUizeDIT View Politically, ever since the day

01. Spanish domination, common people in Chile have looked upon government as something carried out by the governing classes. Similarly, religious and moral problems were left to the clerics. They were of no concern to the average citizen..

On a cultural level, the Church has been characterized by young people as the cham­pion 0:( mediocrity in art and science. Until 'very recent years the charge has been true.

Cites Housing Need In Latin America

MEXICO CITY (NC) -Ade­quate low-cost housing is the most urgent need in Latin America, Christian F ami 1y Movement leaders said here.

Mr. and Mrs. Antonio Alcocer, vice-president of the Llltin American secretariat of CFM, commented on the findings of their recent tour of seven Latin American republics.

"We found that the problem requiring the most urgent atten­tion is that of adequate low-cost housing," Alcocer, an architect, said. "Families have a right to a roof over their heads, yet Latin America needs at least seven million homes and multiple dwellings to provide shelter for families in the lower economic levels."

Appoints Nun HARRISBURG (NC) - Gov.

William W. Scranton has ap­pointed Sister M. Lawrence Mc­Kenna of the Medical Mission Sisters to the Governor's Com­mission on the status of Women. Sister Lawrence is stationed at her order's headquarters in Phil­adelphia.

, -, J '.' • I I r·.' ~ ; , f • I - \L

THE ANC, HO.R- 1t"t65 7 Thurs., Aug. 12, 7'

->. .Prayer of t1W~ Faithful

our Father and the

Ribi'coff . Favors Aid to- Private

Priest: _~ Lord be with you. School PupilsAn: And with your spirit.

MINNEAPOLIS (NC)Priest: Let us pray. Beloved in Christ, since God is Sen. Abraham Ribicoff of

source of our life and our strength, let us call upon Him for assist­ Connecticut said here that ance in all our needs. giving federal aid to children

in nonpublic schools is "moreLector: That we may strive to restore all things in Christ through the than a question of fairness-it is Confraternity of Christian Doctrine. a question of national interest."

"The nonpublic school is aliAll: We beseech you, hear us. essential 'part of our country'.

educational system," RibicoffLector: That the People of God may ~ their light shine before men. told the annual convention of Citizens for Edu~ational Free­All: We beseech you, hear us. dom.

CEF is a non-sectarian nation­Lector: That every baptized person may be an, apostle of the Word of God. wide citizens'organization lie­

All: We beseech you, hear us. voted to securing, equal treat­ment for students in both pub­

Lector: That the Divine Teacher and also Pope St. Pius X may inspire lic and nonpublic schools in 'be allocation of public funds.us with the desire to teach others.

Ribicoff, a former secreta..,. of All: We beseech you, hear us. Health, Education and Welfare,

pointed to the large numbe.ftl of Lector: That we may prepare well for our apostolate by prayer and study. children in nonpublic schoolJl ia

many areas and said: ''The ex­AIl~ We beseech you, hear us. pense of replacing the nonpublio

system with compatable pubUcLector: That this celebration of the Eucharist may bring us these blessings. schools staggers the imagina­tion."All: We beseech you, hear us.

Future of Nation Lector: Christ, hear us. Nationwide, one out of every

10 students in U. S. elementa17All: Christ, graciously hear us. and secondary schools attends a

nonpublic institution, and iaPriest: 0 God, Who called the Apostles to become teachers and fishers of some places the figure is far men, now call your holy people, priests, religious, and laity, to par­ higher. ticipate in this New England Regional Congress of the Confraternity There are more children fa of Christian Doctrine so that their good works may glorify you, their nonpublic schools in New York

State, than in the public schoobheavenly Father. Through Christ Our Lord. of each of 34 states;' more chil ­

All: Amen. dren are in nonpublic schools in Chicago than in the publi.

,:t'o be recited on Sundays, August 15, 22, and 29 schools of Alaska, Delaware, Ver­mont and Wyoming combined.

"The education of each of these children means just as much to the strength and future of this nation as the education of every child in the publie schools," he said.

University's, Size Cause of Difficulties Fai'lure to Adjust Brought on St. John's Crisis

NEW YORK (NC)-The fact Failure to adjust far enough and ministrative reorganization 01. that St. John's University, Ja­ fast enough brought on the crisis the university." SAVE MONEY ON maica, N. Y., is the largest Cath­ at St. John's, and may do the The fact. that st. .John's nowolic higher learning institution same at other Catholic universi ­ has a new president, Father Jo­In the nation is "precisely" why ties as well," Father Canavan seph T. Cahill, C.M.. "is a clear YOUR OIL HEAT!it experienced serious faculty­ states. indication that the universitystudent difficulties last March, He recalled that faculty mem­ intends to establish a new order .... Cj" WYman'• priest-editor here believes. bers last March campaigned for of faculty-administration rela­ ~m· fill 3-6592Father Francis Canavan, S.J., more adequate salaries, tenure, tions," Father Canavan states. In an article in the Aug. 7 issue pensions and greater voice in CHARLES F. VARGAS"The faculty will certainly notof America magazine, of which university policies. The faculty

get everything that it is asking 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE for. But it seems safe to say that

he is associate editor, asserts: demands were supported by "The root of St. John's difficul­ more than 500 students, who also NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

in the future the faculty willties lies precisely in the size of campaigned for greater freedom have a much greater role in thethe university. for themselves. government of St. John's Uni­"What was a small college Needs Reorganization versity than it had in the past,"owned and staffed by the Vin­ Fat her Canavan discussed the priest-editor declares.centian Fathers has grown in the views expressed by several ed­

present century into a university ucators on the St. John's situa­with an impressive campus at tion--one of which suggested it Jamaica, L.I., in addition to its may be necessary to "get the earlier one in Brooklyn. It now FAIRHAVENVincentians out of. S.t. John's has 13,000 students and a faculty altogether," and another that the of more than 600 (494 full-time), LUMBERuniversity authorities are pre­less than 10 per cent of whom pared to accept "a thorough ad- COMPANY are Vincentians.

"Such a change in sizs calls .,fl/1cktieD.""" for changes in the structure and Complete Line government of the university. DONAT BOISVERT Building Materials

INSURANCE AGENCY, INC. ·~ss~ Prelate, Senator 8 SPRING ST., FAIRHAVEN96 WILLIAM STREETDedicate Hospital HEATING OILNEW BEDFORD, MASS. WYman 3-2611

WATERVILLE (NC)-Bishop Daniel J. Feeney of Portland and WY 8-5153 WY 7-9167 U. S. Sen. Edmund S. Muskie helped dedicate the new $5.2 PERSONAL SERVICE million Elizabeth Ann Seton Hospital here in Maine.

Bishop Feeney laid the cor­nerstone and Muskie, who LEMIEUXserved as honorary chairman of

PLUMBING & HEATING, INC.the hospital fund-raising drive, delivered the principal address. for Ilomestic

--.A ~ and Industrial Sisters of Charity of St. Vincent

The hospital was built by the ~ Sales and service

OU Burnersde Paul and is named for the WY 5-1631founder of the sisterhood in this 2 ROLLER COASTERS - BIG NEW MIDWAY

country. It replaces Sisters Hos­ 2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE AMERICA'S fiNEST RIDES - AMUSEMENTSpital, which the communit)' has NEW BEDFORD Special Group Rates For Picnics - OutingsA{)erated since 1932.

. J: , dl' ; "'.•.•.• 1

~

* New England's Playground

Page 8: 08.12.65

.'- . THE ANCHOR-DIocese t:I Fall 1Hwr-'rhUN; Aut. 12~ 19ft'

u. S. Marine Parade' in Capital Gives Viewers Patriotic Thrill

By Mary Tinley Daly On Friday Summer evenings in Washington D.C.

visitors to the nation's capital and its residents have' awai~ ing them an unforgettable thrill. This is the Friday eve­Iling parade at Marine Barracks, 8th and Eye Sts., S.E., proud tradition of the oldest *" post of the United States scarlet-coated buglers blowing

. . a fanfare. Manne Corps. UnlIke attend- Then, as everyone rises to the ing an ordinary performance strains of The Star Spangled

Tri.City Office Equip. 427 Second St. Cor. Morgan

Ed. McGinn, Prop. ,

. OlIVETTI Calculators-Adding & AWi.

.', Machines

.We Do Duplicating Tel.

679~712, 675-7806 -78M

Am o·n I Summer graduates from Salve Regina College who will serve in the Fall River Dio­cese are Sister Mary Michael Anthony, Grade Four, St. Ma1'7 School, North Attleboro; Sister Marie Lourdes, Grade Four, st. Patrick School, Fall River; Sis­ter Marie Luke, Grade One, St. Mary School, North Attlebo~

Also Sister Madonna Marie, Grade One, Holy Family School, New Bedford; Sister Francis Mary, Grade One, st. Patrick, Fall River; Sister Maria Thom~

Grade Five, St. Mary SchooJ, North Attleboro; Sister DoJDinfe Marie, Grade Six, St. John Evangelist S c h 0 0 I, Attleboro; Sister Marie William, Grade Two, St. Mary School, NeW' Bedford; Sister Maria Immacu.­lata, St. Louis School, Fall Rivs.

Protestant. Cathone Nuns Rold Dialogue

DARMSTADT (NC) Germany's first dialogue be­tween Catholic and Protestant Sisters took place here when 140 Catholic nuns visited the Protestant Marian Sisters c0m­munity.

The Marian community .... started here 1ft 1944 when a group of Protesant girls wanted

· to make reparation for the war crimes of the German people. Their comm11Qity is patterned .. the Catholic Cannelite ordez, .

-Foot Pilgrimage

SANTANDER (:HC) - YoURI Jill Picerson, 22, a student from

· Sari Francisco; made a foot pi1­· grimage to Santiago de CompO&­

tela here in Spain because 'of the - ~antiago Holy Year. With M­

other girl, she took the old road ' , from BurgOs to Santiago ad · walked ever 550 mileti ill II

days.' .

. ,. IlEARING AIDS.• ZDUTH '. AC~ITICoM-. UNIlS , .. COSMETICS . ' .~~ ~O&ICAU ~ ~,YI1AMIIIS

.

women and girls in 470 houses in 4'1 countries. PrincipaI work of the nuns is in the field of reha­bilitating wayward girls.

The superior general, said here 'everywhere she· goes she .finds

"increased interest' in social work and a greater realization

' of its needs." That's why, she added, after

she visits the Good Shepherd house in Vancouver, B. C., she will journey to Tahiti to consid­the posibility of founding im establishment there.

1 •eall .6 ,.5-782-9

., ' . IRENE R. simA" PROP." , '

' PrOmpt, ". DeIIVet1l11, fAll RlY,EIL SOMERSEt· nYUTOII &'VICINI1t '. UllOCK ST. ,~ORNEl OF ~ SFJ ' ,ALL IIV..

INch as a theater or concert, where you buy a ticket and find • seat, every Bingle per son who enters the Bar rae k s

. tB made to feel like an honored guest. A hand-BOme Marine in the well-known D res s Blues greets you cor­

. dially at the gate, then a trim and smiling Lady Marine gives you a program and you are turned over to another hand­some Marine who finds a seat for you, takes you by the ann, if you're a lady, and helps you ascend the steps to the visitors' ~ewing stand.

With that kind of gallant treat­lIlent, with the stirring music of the 50-man Marine Band in your ears, and in a setting of a luxuri­ant garden, you are quite in the mood to enjoy a patriotic expe-' rience and wondrous entertain­

, ment. At ''Two Bells," I P.M. twi­

)[ght, Chesty III, the Barracks Mascot,is led across the parade Founds obviously proud of be­ing 'a canine :Marine.

EngrossiDC Sightll From then on, you are Bot

eonscious of· the passing of time , -just intrigued with the sights

and sounds' on that parade ground. In the visitors' stands are men and women of all races, children of all ages, from babies QJl up,but nobody ever seems bored or restless and seldom do even the babies cry.

In the kaleidoscopic panorama • passing before you, you see well ­

trained, strictly disciplined men, proud of being members of the United States Marine Corps.

. At one stage, the parade ground becomes alive wit h nearly 200 blue-coated Marines standing at attention, six pIa­toons of 30 men each. Each uni­form is impeccable, shoes shined to a patent-leather polish, white trousers wit h razor - sharp creases, guns on shoulders at ex­actly the same angle, white gloves making a uniform Une all the way down the field, hats forming an absolutely straight line. You wonder, are these men aU exactly the same height? Common sense tells you they eouldn't be, but so perfectly

, aligned are they that they seem 10.

At another stage, lights are lowered, spotlights· d ire c ted across the arcade to the roof of Ihe barracks where you see six

Nurse Gets Medal NEW DELHI (NC)-A Cath­

.uc nurse serving in the Indian anned forces has been awarded the Florence Nightingale medal by the international committee ~the Red Cross. Miss F. C. Watkins was cited for "outstand­tog devotion to the' cause of .ursing" during the Chinese eommunist invasion 01 India ill~ , ' ' .

' t S b' dSe morgas or Parishioners of St. Joseph'.,

Church, Fall River, will sponsor;~c::::::;~~~:~:o~5 to

Banner, on its first note Old Glory starts its dignified lower­ing, reaching the arms of wait ­ing Marines exactly on the final note. It would be hard to imagine any American not thrilling to this sight.

At still another stage, the 40­man Drum and. Bugle Corps in scarlet coats uphold their inter­national reputation for stirring music and precision drill. Part of this is the almost incredible "Slow March" as the musicians . march from one part of the vast parade ground to the other, never lifting their feet, just .sliding them - those glistening shoes catching the light, and never missing 8 note C1f musie.

Silent Drill After this, utter silence of the

audience, mentioned above, itI broken by "Oh's" and "Ab's" and now and then an "Ob, no!" dur.. ing performance. of the Silent Drill Platoon, "intricate. mane~­vers and variations of the man­ual of anns without command" ~ the program modestly puts it. The "intricate maneuvers" with ' those heaVy rifles must be seen to be b~lieved. No wonder this platoon III known as "8 parjlgo~' of military excellence" and in­vited for eross-country an t;l ove~seas. appearances, often in conJunction with the Drum and Bugle Corps.

When they all pass in revieVl, then ~rch o~ and the s~und of "T~ps. fades mto the distance, vislt~rsknow ~ey have had. a patnotic exp«;n~~ce"- making much ~f today s SIck entertain­ment su:!k-unto-death. Thoug~ ~re is ~o charge for

these Fnday evemng parades, their poP1,1la?t)' has grown 80 that reservations must be made well ahead. To re,*:rve tick~ts for some future Fnday, wnte Friday Evening Parade, Marine Barracks, ~ and Eye Streets,

.S.E., Washington, D. c., or call LI3-1601. ~d don't forget to take 'yoUI'

chlldrenl

Catholic Auxiliaries Get Matching Grant

EVANSTON (NC)-A match­ing grant has been awardetl to International Cat hoi t c AWl­iliaries by the W. Clement and Jesse V. Stone Foundation.

W. Clement Stone, president of the Combined Insurance Com­pany,of America, pledged to match whatever' funds the group can raise, up to $25,000, by Wed­nesday, Aug.' 4. Stone IBid the grant was made to encourage "the noble and humanitariail work that' your organization '. earrying on with such awond~ tul spirit of self-sacrifice." "

The 'ICA, an international OJ'­ganization' of laywomen, traiM volunteers and sends them over­

ROCKET NUN: Sist.er Alberta, O.S.~., prepares a rocket she made to be launched by D~. Elva Bailey of the ,National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Rev. ~ ward F. Jenkins, O.S.A.; chairman of Villanova University's Department of Astronomy organized a ten-tiay NASA

.sponsored space science workshop at Villanova, staffed by

.scientists from the Goddard SpaCe Flight Center, Gree»­belt, Maryland. NC Photo. '

,St.udy Expa~sion ' GOod Shepherd Nuns Consider Founding

. Of Establishment in Tahiti , ..

TORONTO (NC) - Mot her The GOod Shepherd nUDS now Mary of St. Thomas Aquinas, su-' e'are for more than 150,000

seas to provide technical and chairman of Juniors.professional assistance to loeal communities. (ASA BLAN(A

Switch to SuitS ' , " , JJRUSsELS (NC) _ Be'...&8Il Just Across The

~,Francillcans have' been . gtvenCoggeshall St. Bridge perinission' to wear black suits ,Fairhaven, Mass. ' instead of the1J' Jraclitional· ' • . ofb,rown':, ro"- ''''' pubUc. Tbe~ Finest Va.riety ....- _" must· wear a tau. crose· OIl the· SEAFOOD lapel, the T-shaped symbol of 'seed A' ...... AI

' =~r fo.under. St ,~raneil of M:' $T~KS.-C~S,:""C~CK:'

perior general Of the Religious of Our Lady of Charity of the Good Shepherd, said here the community is expandirig-again.

Mother Mary came to Canada for an inspection tour of the sis­terhood;s Canadian establish­ments. ·Headquarters of the 10,OOO-member community is in

. Anger, France. The sisterhood was founded in 1641 by St. Jean Eudes in eaen, France.

Junior CDA to Hold National Convention

CHICAGO (NC) - First na­tional convention of the Junior Catholic Daughters of America will be held here from ThJ1rsday, Aug. 12 to Sunday, Aug. 15. . The opening Pontifical Mass

will be offered by Bishop Vin­eent S. Waters of Raleigh, N. C;, CDA .national chaplain. Bishop William G. Connare of Greens­burg, Pa., episcopal moderator of the Junior CDA, will preach. Some 600 delegates are expected.

The convention theme, "Youth Leavens Society," will be stressed by speakers, including Msgr. Frederick J. Stevenson, director, Youth Department, Na­tional cathoUc Welfare Confer­ence, national director of the JumorCDA; Margaret ~. Buck­ley, C])A supreme regent; Joan Roberts, executive secretary 'of the Junior CDA, and Mrs. Ed­ward McGirr, nlinois • tat.

'.So:~ Groouates W·ill Serve ~re

~MHUn'-I1'flnn'lt'NI"iUt~4UU,:I.fl','UltlPI~k~ '-' -" ;~~,--- ~",' _ _ _'''!Pf'"l!ll''!!!'!l!!",....~· .....,.~"!!oP.~"""""b '!en ",~.~,~",,!". .... ........_--..... '~-'!'!!P

Page 9: 08.12.65

••••••••••••••••••••••••••

--

Lifl~$ ;~~iiea;'~qarclen Royalty. Co~m·and·Pricesto Match

By Joseph', and Marilyn Roderick .Ag the Fall of the year approaches, we once again

begin preparing for bulb planting. When most of U'lJ think of bulbs, daffodils and tulips come to mind because these are available everywhere we go that has flowers for sale. HoweVer, because of the in fact, are often downrightprice and supposed difficulty / nervewrackfng so that I am often in. growing lilies, we seldom think of these bulbs when planning Fall planting.

Lilies are' part of a select lJ'Oup of plants considered gar­den.. royalty. They are> truly magnificent. The one thing I cannot understand about lillies' Is why they are so expensive.· The . prices are staggering. ,Re­

willing to have at least one meal in. peace' and quiet. even in a hash house.

This philosophy has led me to discover many foods and meth.­ods of preparation which I would never have discovered otherwise had I stayed with the more common items on the menu. For example. one night

eentJY.I was browsing through . I was particularly adventurous one of the bulb catalogs and was and ordered conches as an appe­taken aback at prices. for some tizer (large sea snails) and en­of the newer varieties. One lily joyed them immensely. I men­~Id for $35 and prices of $5 to tioned this to niembers of Joe's $10 are not extraordinary. It goes' family who informed me that without saying that a specialist they had been picking them. for In lilies has a very large invest- years. This in. turn led me in my ment in his !iarden. search to purchase them to a

AS'a result of the prices they small gourmet shop in Newport eonunand, lilies are not normany that specializes in imported deli ­available in garden centers .and cacies and the most wonderful eertainly not iII· 'supermarkets, cheeses imaginable. This sort of 80 most must be purchased from· ,experience has been repeated catalogs. Not all·lilies..command! many times over and· heighteD.$ high plli~ however, and,:sorne .. ,the .excitement of eating out. are :within reach of most garden..... · The latest in· my" diScoveries '

. ers.·.. ,."; -','-.' '. " " .. :.:~vas Ii GrasShopper Pie whlchl All: ,?f these should be. planted·.: had_for dessert· at a good restau-

In the ,Fall. as: soon' as the,' are" ;rant:e.l was so: impllessed by ~, purchased'. LiIiesaredifferenUn"deliciqus finale; tOlil.heavymeaI, this respect from other bulbs. ~at on,retunlln~ hom~I ~er:-, '. They are never really dormant 81med'in my search for the rec-Golden,Jubi.:¢e, j and must'be treated as actively ipt: in all of my cook books and growing plants at all times, .an~" those at the public library, but Two Sisters of the Holy Union other reason why they are not in vain. My efforts were finally of'the'Sacred He~ celebrated readily available. .. . ~warded when, in talking to their fiftieth anniversary as

Like most bulbs lilies require' lood drainage.. I h~ve oIuya few .. myself, so. I take. extra precau.­tions with drainage. I usually dig a hole foUr or five iIlcli~ deeper th3n,.is necessary for' planting (most lilies should ~. planted at about three timeS their depth) and fill this with eoane sand to ensure that water will nat accumulate aroundtbe;. ~; fill ~ hole: with good '.on' 8Dd; mulch. with a layer of. .11" .atted manure. Lilies .Iike.J1lIl.. but; do bese if their base is Ifla~ed by Iowgrowiriir' plana.

,', IlL the, KiteheD .. loe always enjoys telling old ~ stories and this ~... a. »articular favorite of Diine be­cam,e it illusfrates' bow both he _d I approach restaurants.

When in Germany as; a G.L It was one of hk favorife paStimes to eat at local restaurants, try­fIl« any foGd that caught his eye· ..hether he knew the: ingredients .. not. One day as he sat ia a psti'taus e3IIed the Dre! Konige In Ct:ailsheim.. he .ran-his finget:.

erder at· randcm. The 'waitJ,'ess, 'WhO w_ wellt' aware:ot,the American G.I.'s taste in fbQd, Ihook her head vi'gorous!J' In all. attempt. to deter him frOm his ehoice•.l>ut he'~~e re:-- ' aalting entree, that· WaS 'PIac~ IJefcire 'him.. was a ring: of .raw Ilaniburg surrounded by ~toh-. Ilaise· and enclosing a ~ egg. ___.. .-. ~_ di'-'- .. _Q:U.le!S ....' say, "u wen. back to tbe kitdlen untouched.

A· more' cowardly or wiser soul 'WOuld have stopped ~furtlier experimentatiOn, but JOe kept

a local cook known for her ex- members of the Order at St. cenent .cuisine, ~ss Valerie.Tames Conv~nt, Nanaquake.1;,the

. :Jr?ley of st. Jo~eph s parish, Fan Summer reSIdence of the Sisters. River, I mentioned. my search. Sister Mary. Aloysia, SUSC, She immediately announced that dean of the College of the Sacred it was()D;e of her favorite com- Hearts, FaIl .River, ~d Mother . pany.. desserts and like .the true Marie Beatrlx, SUSC, of Buenos

.. good, .cook she. is was. more than, .·Aire$, Argentina, S·o. Ame~ca. .' will~g ~ sh~ the recipe ~tb: Sister Marf .4Ii;lysia. SUSq;the, me. fanner Katherine Sullivan,' was

mlAsSHOPP.EB" Pd.. ..' 'b~rn irall River OR .tune 26, . , .:.l,· :FiIiiuc' ·.i89't,ArteJ: her itllflliati{)R #o~';, '

1 eavelope. unfIavoredgeIattn,*' cup- sugar (divided iAhaK)'* :teaspoon. salt* eup eoold water­3 ega separated! lA.cuP greencremedementha*' euu white, creme de cacao 1 cup' ,heaV'Tcream. whipped..

Pte ShU :t~ cups ehocolate wafer

crumbs ~ cup sugar*' cup melted: butter or mar­. garlne L The night before or early in

the day that you plan too serve the pie, mix crumbs, sugar and melted shortening together.

.rown the menu and selected !iis2.. Press into 9 in. pie plate. . and bake at 400· ·for 5 minutes.'

Cool. 3. Conlbi'n.e gelatine, ¥4' cup of' Dean of,· ~ ~ollege of the.

tbesugal' and the salt in ijl,e top. of a dOuble boiler.

4. Add cold wa~r and. egg~, :Jo~ (~ at a time), stirring well; '. . . 5. PI'ace-' mixture ov'er boiling. water and cook. stirring con­s*aD.tb', until gelatin is dissolved' and miXture: is slightly lhick­ened. about. 5 JDinutes. (Don't: allow the boiling water to touch the bottom of'the upper ·pan.)

'T" . H'"1 U" '. :S 0'"b . ' ... WO ;0y ,:nion· '·i~f~rs'· ser\te '.'

., I . C . .'In .'ongregat.ion

.~ Acade~ of" the Sl,lered ' . H'earts'in Jqne, 19J:ff.she entered.' ".

"the' Holy UniOn novitiate i'n. ~ tember- of the same· year. . siSter. rec:el~dfu!rB~cb~ of Arts. from Catholic University of AtD.erica an.d her .Master of Arts: at. Boston 'University. nur":

' ing the period th~ she was head.. of the Classics department at the Academy of the Sacred' Hearts,. Sister Mary Alo.ysia spent II' year, in European study and traveL

When the Sacred Heart School of Education. opened in 1934, Sister was :the first registrar. In. 1939 she bec;ame principal of the Academy of the Sacred Hearts and ,remained in that posltion . until 1953 when she became

Sacred, Hearts. in Fall River. .. In •addition to. membeship in,

the ClassiesAssociation, Sister: ~ary.Alo.ysia has. taken an, ae­five'part in. the: National Catho- .. lie Educational: Assodation OIl,

pal, the Aeadem:,.. of the Sacred,

....eo. collegi·a~-·· and onda-,.~.,

schoo!: leveL ' During her tenure as prlnci- ...

. Hearts· was' accredited. by the New England· Association of'·

and prior to this period of mis­sionary work, the jubilarian labored for 12 yean in the West Indies.

Born in New Bedford and baptized in St. Anthony's Church, her family moved to Cambridge when she was four years old. She entered the Order ~ Cambridge.

'i, '.' ,

Tf:fEANCHOR-. Thurs., Aug. 12, 1965

.Says Collegiality Shatters Myth

CHICAGO (NC)-Blind obe­dience to authority has vanished as a result of the new collegiality in the Church, an institute of the Sisters of Charity of the Blessed ~lrgin Mary has been told here.

Sister Mary Frances Patricia, ·general councilor of the congre­gation and director of the insti ­tute, said:

"Collegiality does not chal­lenge authority, but it does shat­·ter the myth of blind obedience, which asks a Sister's unreflect­ing agreement with what the superior orders.It

She also called for broad pon­des and flexible principles in planning for the future. ''Let us not become too definite so that future generations, or even our immediate successors, may be­come bogged down by customs, rules and directives which must be considered once they have become a matter of record'," she emphasized.

Use Parochial Schools ·For .Federal Proiect

TOLEDo (NC)-5chool facll ­!ties of five Catholic parislu!s ill.

.. Toledo are being used by 80m! of t~ i,400 pre-school chil~ here .taking part. in Operation

," Head' Start under the fed faL anti~o~rtypro~. . , Use. of. the ClaSsroollUl mat_ ~p part of the local eomml,lJuty>. 10 per cent share of the ,v"r--il cost of the program.

Announce Whist The Women's Guild of St.

William's Church,.. Fall m't'el'o will sponsor a whist party in the

. large church haIl on Stafford ' Road at 8 Tuesday night, Aug. 17. Mrs. Mary. Williams ia- ia

, Charge.of. .arrangements.. ,'.

'y.' BAI4I1NG IS MADE WIER FO.I YOU •••

at

q~.LM.ERC.·.H.A.NT.S.... . .'.. '_J.!~~~/J BA.N·'K·.. .

" ,

;

". -'. ,." .

with Conv~niently Locat~

6 '. NeighborhoOd Banks'

nght on rUnning his. finger do. 'wn: t!Iat menu in: RaIy, Frauee . ..."d· other EUropean countrielf .."d developirig a taste for' fooda

hi h t Wh · 'W c were differen. . en we • ...,'i:.-' ":''':11 d t· tIIlarpeu' ne re.,., e a my.~ ,-.

md-potatoes Irilih '~C' md' eonyerted: me into'-a 'meiui ex"'> Dlor'er ~hene\rer we dined out. , '

6. Remove .from heat and' stir in the creme de: cacao and the:: ereme de menthe. Chill, stirring'oc6asionally, Witil mixture is t.he, consistencj of unbeaten eg... · white..,; , . ..

.. '. ,.,:Beat the 3· egg .whites until.

tbe7 are stiff. but not dry, add

Colle"- and Seconda...... Schools. ..~~ -" '. A_ Dean of the College of the. ~

Sacred Hearts, she has worked: with the AffiIiafiGn Office of the Catholic: University of .Amemca and· the Offic'e of Education. 10'# the ComfttoRw'ealth of Kassa-ChusettB. ...... .... , ,sister Maria Im'm8.cu1aial'and

in" New.. Bedford ' AUT010AHS.~HOME IMPROVEMENT'

LOANS - PERSONAL LOANS' ~,.,

~"8ANK~~~:'", WilUam s~ .,~'.:' " NORtH 'ANK~~ .AVe•. cd Coffift Ave., "'..,

'AS a result I haYe II: J:estaunnt remaining.:IJI; cup of sugar and Sister Helen Lucy" sister ;and sOUTH ~~v. Sf.. at, Rod'My french IoMvtlnf phil/>sopby _ :fol.1mq: 'lIOn't continue beating until very stiff. nieCe ~'Ve1y of the jubi­ lUND'$. ~ER MNJ(-AcwhMt A"~ near' 1uBcI's ~ erd~r anyt;bing' 1 CIlIa ClOOk.at Fold geIatb;t mixtw:e into egg larian, are' alsO ReligiouS of the WIS'I" IAHfC-IC " a.t Mill StN4f . lIoDie asweJlor better. Oil, tlierewhites'and fIlen fold in whipped l(oly' Union. Another Sister is' DMTMOtfFIII MIIK ovtk SIrMt· ...... heW•.A¥&8I'etima 1irIIeIt thk J)IIilIaliOptiy cftaA.·- . . 1In:. MelZar'. Sam,j:Json of Pall. ~e.s. a· back aeat..Jror ~. t~ TIu'a ' eooWple·aheU Biver. ,.....' '.. c·', ; ·DRM-INsERYIcE AT All tANKs· '''''1 " aeals at hoee' with lIUIe eIdI'... lInel and <n - ,,_.- 8l'....... ; JIoUleJ: JorIade. Bi!iatmt' bU·~~ ' , ".~.. " ' ~ h: ..--. --. ..- ~__L, ...... 9 ••••••••••••IIi<i~·.~•••'(i"'·.··Iii·I.;IL'iI.·'ii'·.>ili,1.,.;·iI"''''-ltl·,.",·~n.,.... lItedt••'pIeasaatiacr.:·":!iVWaf6t~'!·:===-=::::':·- . t...::--:::~-.:-·:-~8tiQ:f5-y.eatS_~ I

\, I

Page 10: 08.12.65

10

CATHOLIC LEADERS IN SOUTH: Arch)ishop Paul J. Hallinan of Atlanta, center, talks with Dr. Benjamin I. Mays, president of Morehouse College, Atlanta, right, and Dom James Fox, a.c.s.a., abbot of the Trappist Abbey of Gethsemani, Kentucky, during the Southern Catholic Leaders Conference of Social Change and Christian Response held re­cently in Atlanta. NC Photo.

Little Brothers P'utLove in Charity Montreal Secular Institute Helps Aged

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., Aug. 12, 1965

Jesuit Explains New' Instruction On Cremation

WASHINGTON (NC) A change in the "overtones" associated with cremation led the Church to relax its opposition to the practice, ac­cording to a canon law profes­sor.

Whereas in the 19th century cremation was often an expres­sion of an "anti-Christian spirit" and was ~'equivalent to a chal­lenge thrown in the face of the Church," today it has "lost its historical overtones," according to Father JOhn Russell, S,J.

"It is 'so common and accepted a practice today that it no long­er serves a gesture of rebellion against the Church," he says' in explaining a Vatican instruction that "tolerates" cremation of Catholics.

Father Russell, a canon law professor at the Gregorian Uni­versity in Rome, gives these views in an article in the Amer­ican Ecclesiastical Review pub­lished here.'

Previous Legislation His article interprets an in­

struction on cremation sent by the Holy Office to local Ordin­aries in July, 1963, and made, public last Fall.

Under previous Church legis­lation, most of it developed in the 19th century in response to anti-clerical agitation in favor of crematio~, a Catholic who perse­vered up to death in a determin­ation to be cremated was refused the sacraments and Church bur­ial.

The new instruction allows a C!atholic who chooses cremation to be given the sacraments and receive Church burial, "unless of eourse, it is clear that the choice «If cremation was made from ir ­religious' motives," Father Rus­lell Says;

Prefers Burial However, he adds, it is still the

position of the Church that "she «Inly tolerates cremating of the bodies of her children." Burial is .till preferred; he" says. '

Father Russell says the local ,Ordinary's permission is not a condition for the "lawful choice" «If cremation.

"Bishops are encouraged to do all they can to preserve intact the Catholic tradition of inhum­ation-but by instruction and persuasion ... This is an exam­ple of the tendency today to show Catholics the positive value of following ecclesiastical pre­cepts, and not to force them into line through fear of the conse­quences of disobedience," he lays.

Biblical Association Schedules Meeting

NOTRE DAME (NC) - The Catholic Biblical Association of America will hold its 28th annu­al meeting at Notre Dame Uni­versity'here. Aug. 31 to Sept. 12.

Papers will be delivered on topics which include the current status of Scripture and tradition, the background of the New Tes­tament, and the relationship be­tween ecumenism and the Old Testament apocrypha, boo k s sometimes held to be part of Scripture but rejected as such by the Catholic Church.

Education Week WASHINGTON (NC)

-National Catholic Education Week will be observed this year Nov. 7-13, coinciding wit h American Education Week and having the same theme: "Invest in Learning."

Red Infiltration Of Universities Is 'Real Danger'

ST. LOUIS (NC) - The possibility of a concentrated effort by communists to "move into university cir­cles" constifutes a real "dan­ger," the president of St. Louis University told the Metropolitan St. Louis Press Club here.

Father Paul C. Reinert, S.J.. , said the nature of the audience -"immature undergraduates" or '!mature graduate students of political science"-should deter­mine. whether communists are invited to lecture at college campuses.

Cautioning against "overstate­ment" and "overgeneralization," he said he did not think at­tempted infiltration was "gen­eral," but said there is a "higher possibility" of it in urban cen­ters where there is "a wide range of diversity."

Faculty Members "We must be on guard," he

said. "We must be particularly careful of the quality of our faculty members, not just from the academic standpoint but as to the total character picture."

He urged greater care in de­termining the "kind of people" students are exposed to, "not just in the classroom, put the total campus atmosphere."

MONTREAL (NC)~There are "Have we brought happiness and f(~1'ponsible for establishment' of Order Considers five Little Brothers of the Poor gIven pleasure to the poor, a Montreal section. in Montreal-only 45 in the whose need in this respect often Their work is mainly with old Updating Changes

, world. is greater than their need for men who are poor and lead lone­ CHICAGO (NC) - Some 25/) The brotherhood is a secular food?" ly lives. They visit about 150 Sisters of Charity of the Blessed

institute in its formative years, Established in Montreal since such men each month, bringing Virgin Mary are meeting at not yet officially recognized by 1962 at 2112 Bleury StreQt, the parcels of butter, meat, vege­ Mundelein College here to dis­the Church - but the Brothers Little Brothers of the Poor also tables and preserves. Birthdays cuss common problems of the

- busily are working toward "try­ have establishments in France, are remembered with special eommunity. ing to put a little love into Belgium, Morocco, India, and in gifts-flowers, a cake, and even The Sisters are studying the charity." Chicago, Ill. The average age of a bottle of good wine. problems of current religious life

Hubert Ravinel, 31, was direc­ the Canadian members is only Then there are some 50 other with a view to updating the tor of the Montreal fraternity 27. old men, not in need of food but order. When the institute is com­and now in Paris, France, where Aid Old Men ;yearning for companionship. pleted, a recommendations com­he is general director of the in­ The y finance their work They are visited each month and mittee will assess the proceed­stitute for a term of six years. through the generosity of ben­ csn look forward to hours of , ings; and suggest changes and,

Dress as Laymen efactors ,and the public. The pleasant conversation or games. .adaptations. The Little Brothers of the local response as yet has not Some are expected to go into

Poor were formed by Armand beell sufficient to meet all needs, Salutes Priests effect immediately, while those Marquiset of France. ,He con­ so abotlt, two-thirds of, their :requiring major changes in the'RQME (NC) -Pope Paul VI ceived the idea in 1939 but it budget is, met, by the Paris' eommunity's constitution wiU besent" a message throug~ the was not until 1958 that it took h£·adquarters. considered during the next gen..'Vatican secretariat of state tell ­ , el'al ,chapter in December, 196'l.eoncrete form. Today at ~5 he Recruitment of members has ing' a group of sick Italian pX:ies~ is still active in the work. . not been ,rapid here. Seven Ca­ on pilgrimage to Lourdes that

The members dress as laymen. nadians joined in little more tneir "patient and loving suf­They lead a community life and than three years. One of them fering" gives good example to CAPE COD'Sannually renew· their promises, was a former well-known come­ other invalids, and helps the of poverty, obedience and chas-' dian, Roland Longpere, now Church "in this great and deci­ .LARGEST BANK tity. They do not folloW a rigic:L serving in Paris. He was partly sive hour of the Second Vatican rule but rather a rule which Council." I

"adapts itself to the individual" Basilica Progress and allows the institute to derive the greatest benefit from the in­ QUITO (NC) - Coadjutor 4J29b dividuality of each member. - Bishop Paolo Munoz Vega of ELECTRICAL per annum

They ask themselves each day: Quito officiated at the blessing of Contractors the apse, 17 chapels and the lat ­ Our Investment Savings Plan eral arches of the huge Gothic ~

Dividends Paid QuarterlyFlies to Vermont basilica of the Sacred Heart undei: construction here in Ecu­ ~ Festival of Music ador. It is hoped the Church, Bass River STOWE (NC)-Msgr. Franz started in 1923, will be complet­ ~ Wasner flew here from the Fiji ed in 1973, the centenary of the Savings BankIslands, .where he has been a consecration of Ecuador to the ?t4missionary since 1960, to attend Sacred Heart. SOUTH YARMOUTH a weeklong Festival of Music, in 944 County St. ~ Hyannis • Dennis Porthonor of the Trapp family sing-'

New Bedford Yarmouth Plazaers. Msgr. Wasner accompanied the Montie Plumbi.,11 &

Trapp Family as their chaplain and musical director when they Heating Co., Inc.

Reg. Master Plumber 2930fled to the United States after CONVENIENT BANKiNG GEORGE M. MONTlEGerman troops marched into

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SLADE/S FERRY TRUST COMPANYCharge Subversion SOMERSET, MASS.LISBON (NC)-Church offi ­

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ROUTE 6, HUTTLESON AVE. Checking Accounts Business Loans He is charged with using his Savings Accounts Real Estate Loan~ membership 'in the university

Near Fairhaven Drive-In Italian Dinners Our Specialty At Somerset Shopping Area-Brightman St. BridgeCatholic Action organization as

Service On Patioa cloak to hide alleged procom­ Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation munist activities.

Page 11: 08.12.65

• • • • • •

•• • • •

11 Bishop Supports Public Schools In Fund Crisis

PITTSBURGH. (NO) Bishop John J. Wright of Pittsgurgh and the diocese's Catholic School Board have pledged support for the city public schools' attempt to obtain increased state sUbsidies.

Bishop Wright and a repre­sentative of the Catholic School Board appearing before an emer­gency. meeting of the Pittsburgh Board of Public Education an­nounced their backing. Public school officials say they face a crisis in financing new buildings, new programs and increased staffs, and that local financing­measures have been exhausted. They are asking that the state aid formula be changed to pro­vide more funds for city schools.

Bishop Wright said· he appear­ed as a taxpayer, a member of the Council for Public Education in Pittsburgh (an independent civic group), and "as an edu­cator officially responsible for and personally 'deeply devoted to a non-tax supported system of schools sometimes thought of as competitive and falsely alleged to be indifferent to the worth, the progress, the need and the problems of the public schools."

He pledged "unqualified and maximum support" in all three capacities to the public schools' subsidy efforts.

Hyannis Dialog Continued from Page Three

ogy in the Catholic Church and the recognition "at last" of the role of the laity in the life of the church.

"Very pleasing to Protestant ears," he said, "is the pronounce­ment 'the Church of God's peo­ple must be continually reformed as it goes·its pilgrim way'" ....., ..

HumanUyof 'Christ Bishop Sheen, commenting

-. • • We' Catholics are not con­spicuous· as readers of -the Word of God,"· said Catholic theology has been' formed primarily on dogmas.

"We nOW are beginning to make our theology much more alive, thanks to them (Protestant churches)," he said.

"When you pick up the Scrip­tures," the first thought of God. is a reflex thought, 'Let Us make man.'

"The first thought of God re­corded was about us. The first question was, 'Where is man?' And the second question, 'Where is your neighbor?' "

Speaking of the new stress on the humanity of Christ, Bishop Sheen pointed out Christ in His humanity is representative of man.

"No one can ever say, 'Does God know what it is to suffer?' because He went throught it all. He bore our sickness and .our illnesses.

"If then in our theology we develop the theology of the humanity of Christ, the spirit will draw us together'" ... *"

Love of God, love of neighbor and a quest for better under­standing among all Christians­these are among the aims of the ecumenical movement.

Understanding, both Bishop Sheen and Dr. Nelson indicated, may be the key that will open the long-locked doors between the various Christian communi­ties.

Many people are interested. One thousand and more proved their interest Sunday afternoon.

Announce Whist Mrs. Armand Thiboutot heads

a large committee planning a whist for 7:30 Saturday night, Aug. 14 in the parish hall of St. .Jean Baptiste Church, Fall Rivu.

HOLY UNION JUBILARIANS: Celebrating 25 years in the Order of the Hoiy Union of the Sacred Hearts, are, left to right, Mother Therese Edna, Sr. Estelle Teresa, Sr. Paul­ine Louise, Sr. Claire Doris, Sr. Marie Estelle, Sr. Albina Marie Mother Celine Lucille, Sr. Eugenia Margaret, Sr. Rose Augustine, Mother Anne Thomas, the tenth member of the gr~un and new Provincial is still in Rome at the Order's chapter.

•Cites Obligations In Civil Rights Effort Cardinal Shehan Stresses Laymen's Role

MIAMI BEACH (NC) - The prime obligation of working ceaselessly on behalf of civil rights falls upon the laity, Bal­timore's Lawrence Car din a I Shehan asserted here.

Addressing the 55th National Conference of the U r ban League, the cardinal acknowl­edged that the obligation be­longs to all citizens, including priests and Religious. But priests and Religious, bound by vows and other obligations to eccle­siastical. authority, do not have

. the', .same fulness. of freedom possessed by the laity, he added.

Speaking on "The Essential Quest in a Great Society," Car-. dinal Shehan said the Catholic Church, as well as all other reli ­gious' bodies, has the obligation

. to strive for "those civil rights of the Negro which are guaranteed. by' our Constitution and ar~ an. integral ~art of rac~al jl,lstice." '

-Although religious bod i e S rnaYibe accused of having been s om e w h'a t slow in getting started," .. Carinal Shehan de­clared, "yet they must also prop­erly be said to have played an honorable, important, and even essential role, particularly dur­ing the past few years."

Have Definite Duty Discussing the role of priests

and Religious in demonstrations for civil rights, Cardinal She­han, who is a member of the

Pope Sends $10,000 NEW DELHI (NC) - Pope

Paul VI has sent a check for $10,000 to the Indian state of Gujerat to help "needy people" there. Recently, the state of Gujerat presented the Pope with two lion cubs in memory of his visit to India last year,

in such demonstrations, when they are, peaceful and not calcU'­lated to provoke violence and are held within the framework of the civil law-when, too, they are aimed at the correction of clear abuses of justice - priests and Religious do have a definite r 0 I e to play. The results achieved by some of these dem­instrations indicate that they ean be effective.

Individual Conscience ."But it must also be added

tbatpriestsand Religious, bound by .vows or obligations to. proper' ecclesiastical authority, have not. the SaDle ·fulness· of 'freedODl as do the laity," Cardinal Shehan asSerted.

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Governor Favors School Prayers

HARRISBURG (NC) - Penn­sylvania's Gov. William W. Scranton reiterated here strong feelings that prayers should be permitted in the public schools.

The state chief executive ex­pressed his sentiment when que s t ion e d about House­approved legislation authorizing

. elective courses on religion in the state's public high schools. The bill gives students the op­tion of taking or rejecting the courses. Passed unanimously by the House, the bill was sent to the Senate.

The governor said he had not studied the bill, but indicated he ~. favors it.

"I feel strongly that we should have in this country the oppor­tunity to have prayers in schools and this kind of thing (as pro­vided in the bill), if' people vol­untarily want to have them," Scranton said.

He speculated that only a con­lltihl.tional amendment would permit prayers in public schools. He recalled in the U. S. House of Representatives, he sponsored such an amendment, Hbut it basn't gotten very far."

Planning Monument Of Father Serra

PALMA DE MALLORCA (NC) -A monument will be erected here to commemorate Father Junipero Serra, O.F.M., founder of the California missions, who was a native of this Spanish Mediterranean island. . Fray Junipero will be shown' with an Indian child whom 'he is instructing in the Faith.

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league's board of directors, em­phasized: "I do not undertake to speak for the Church or for the American hierachy, but express only my personal opinion.

"It seems to me, however, that

"Individual conscience «'foes have its important part to play in determining whether one is called upon to participate in a demonstration, but conscience is not freed from· the direction of that superior authority to which the individual has willingly bound himself.

"In general, however, one may !lay th~t in the absence of posi­tive law or its equivalent, the role and the duty of the priest or Religious is not essentially different from that of the Cath­clic layman," he continued.'

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Page 12: 08.12.65

Think About"Maldng -C;o""....." " "

Relates Events Preceding God Love You ~ Most KeY. Fultoll J. Sheen. D.D. First A-Bomb Explosion,

The zealous priesta of North America have many burdeM. .. By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy Some are pastors or curates of parishes with 1,000 famili~ a par­Still another book of the sarne general twe as Is Paris ochial school of about 700 pupils and the added responsibilitte. of

Burning?, but on a subject incomparably more important con.vert instruction and visiting the sick. We,. however, are e.ven more struck by the crosses of our missionaries. One who visitedis Day of Trinity by Lansing Lamont (Atheneum. $6.95): this office recently, runs- a parish of 10,000 square miles with '70It describes the antecedents of an event which happened mission chapels and schools teaching 3,000 children. He visits these

20 years ago, the explosion chapels twice a month and examines each child individually toef the first atomic bomb on so that it became a chain-react­ see if he is prepared fm: Holyl Communion. Baptisms in each. of theseing critical mass. the test range at Alamogor- This waa perbaps the most chapels have increased in the last 20 years trom 300 to 2,000. Once

he baptized 1.000 souls in one week. For most missioners. workdo, New Mexico. The code important decision. But there like this is done without the convenience of paved roads, decentdesignation for the site was were hundreds, if not thousands, cars and air conditioning. It is also work done among primitive­Trinity. It was chosen by Robert of others involved. Thus, the fin­thinking people with a non-Christian mentality, people who speakO p pen heimer ished bomb had at least 500 com­another language and often many different dialects.who,. when ask- ponent parts, and the fashioning

ed to supply a and delicate assembly of these name, recalled posed acute difficulties worked Despite these external clifficu1ties, priests wor~ In mls­so m e lines of out ~der nerve-rasping pres- sion lands find that their people have .. quicker and deeper

e Z 0 h n Don n e sure. Instinct for the truth than many "e1vil ­which he had Russians Informed bed" people. One mlssioDalT recounted 1ate 1y rea d, Nor were an the difficulties MONSIGNOR CORCORAN the story of Elizabeth. ''Elizabeth lived lines referring scientific or technological. The In '.. tiny mud and thatch hut in the to .the "three- living conditions for the scien- • mission compound. She' scraped a living person'd God." Msgr. Corcoran by- farming a plot landtists were primitive. These men smaD of and

Mr. Lamont and their families were confined caring for others' sheep. Converted late has interviewed in a remote area. with a climate In New Post bllife, sbe never missed Mass and Com­about a hun- which could be fierce. munion. In our poor mission church .. dred persons somehow connected There was also the question of WASHINGTON (NC) -Msgl'. cheap print of Our Lady of Sorrows, with the making of the bomb, secrecy. 'The very existence of Lawrence J. Corcoran, director framed in wood without,"1ass. hung on and has read newspapers. mag- the project was supposed to be of the Catholic Welfare Bureau .. wall near the altar. One Spring. when azines, and, 1:¥>0~ de,ali~ "wi~ un1p}own, a.nd se,curity measures , of Columbus, Ohio, Jias been ,white:washfng , tbe ,church. :the picture the matter. From such sources, were severe~ The scientists were" named secretary of the National , was badly splashed so I: totik it down. he has sought to reconstruct aD alwayi 'und~rclosE! 'obs'ervaiion. " ' C~nference Of Catholic Charities· ,', The ..ext, moniiDg-' after ':Mass, Ifobnd; that happened in the period be- Their homes were "bugged." The WIth headquarters here. EUzabeth sitting with her palnfuDy ulcerated legs stretched on tween the decisi.on topros,!:!~te ,most celebrated am,ong them had MSgr. Corcoran succeeds Bish- on the ground. She looked heartbroken, a.nd; with tears in her -"II ' the task 'and its sucCessful com- ' aliases.' ' , op-designafeRaymond J.Gal- sald,Tather, tlie photo ,of my mqmma is notlD chureh.· 1 told her pletion on ,July 16, 1945., .' For aD that,. however the lagher, who recently was, ruUDed " it· was' spoiled by- wln"tewash. She. would not be, comforted...

As most of Us know, it was.' Russians were kept info~ed of bishop of, Lafayette, Ind.,.and the,re was nothin&'-, to do bui .,lean it and put it b~ where: it sugges~on byAIb~;E~ ,the progress of the work. con- has been seeretary of the NCCC" ,belonged., U, was. .. real joy to see Elizab~th eve"" morning alter whicb fiJ:st inter,~ed Franklin "stantly and in full. In the con- since. September, 1961. that I'enufleet slowiy to Christ In tlie' Blessed SauamentaJid ' Roosevelt in the possibility of a, tigent of' British 'sCientists' was" ',Announcem:~mtof the apJ;loint-' then make a grave bow to the. photo. of'her ~pmma. I thoUdat: tremendously powerful bomb Klaus Fuchs, a Communist of ment was made by Bishop John" then, asl often do now. that this ailin&' old African woman' ill utilizing. a multiplying s~uence German origin hut holding En- J. Carberry of Columbus, and -much closer to God than L" ' . sf exploding atoms. Roosev.elt gUsh citizenship. Fuchs ha:d ac- Coadjutor Bishop Leo <;. Byrneappointed a committee to look cess to all data concerning the' of Wichita, Kan., honorary pres.. It is good for us to know about converts like this and about ' ' into the feasibility of the idea. bomb and handed it over to a ident of the,NCCC. The confer- the good priests who ,converted' them. It i~ even better, for 'those'

Abandon Project Soviet agent in the country. Also ence is the chief coordinating of us, priests and laity alike, who have, made a, few converts or An' urgent reason for the working in. Los AlamoS was agency for the Catholic social none at all, to think, about doing so. The surest, way is to send

'United States' undertaking such David Greenglass, brother-in- welfare programs in the U. S. the Holy Father a sacrifice so that missionaries can make con­a project was theknowledge that la~ of Julius Rosenberg, who. Ms/U. ,Corcoran, director of verts in your name. Every penny sent as almstaThe Society for the Nazis had scientistS engaged with his wife Ethel Greenglass the Columous Catholic Welf8re tJie Propagation of. the Faith is sent to the Missi()ns by, the Holt in soirleth.i.ng similar. They Were aosenberg;:' induced Gr'eeng}ass. 'Burea",' Since' 1960, , has :beeri,~ Father the same year i1iS,~ved. Nothing is invested., Remem­Ed to'h3'ge ali IS 'months' start, to pass' secret' information to siervii!g as'ch.iiirinan of priest-:

i

ber the17is DOIIUl'er way -10 ,get intq '1ie4~eni ~'~ ,briDe' ~ en our people, Much later 'it waa Barry ,Gold. .. sPyfoi'the soVi~ directors of the NCCC and is a ' crowd WIth youl " ," ., , ,,' , ; : discovered that'ibe GetJmm pro- ,ets'. mem1:U!r'ofits'bo2rd ofdirectO.rs; "~' jed; .hadcollapsed and been, Interest Cools, He was chairman. of the e:On- . GOD' LOVE: YOUfoR.B. for $'7 ..".is:aJi BQ' !dCa-bUlk'

' , " 1._ ",,' ' '~" ,.,. " ' ...,......;. ~' _vm.s and b~ mone!'-.,Please p ....... t1Ita&.'"I' will 'me, .'beco.

abandoned almost, at the ,outset.. That was w>q, when Truman., .Lo<.u::u~ pro/U3Dl.~""" .. . ­i

But the American project with told Stalin at Potsdam. iitJuly ; 1960..:61.' ' '" ,',',' JDfsaI.0aai'7 aomecJarl"~ ro to.~.·for'$100 "WIsh we could: pYa BritiSh participation, was earn- 114& that the United States had' aU we have to ezpress o1R'lTatitade. to~ what tile ~ood Lard estly; at times: aIIn.ost: frantically, perfected an unprecedented1,.' ' '·F. t A ' •. ' baa dven U& OIro_hHJs.1VODderfal Priests.~ • ' .• to P,O. for $I­pusb~ In September l!MZthe -powerful. weapon, Stalin showed Irs, ."erlcan, '"I eamedthls C1IftiD&' va&. After re~ BUON 1 want teoM' ri .;~ at aend It to you10 that. anoCller a-year-oid W~·t KG. to betlll1JDcqa­

anhattan Project was launched. no cu o.....,;~ .aD~ He knew aU ' Continued from' Page '~ , _',__ In : Oakrfd~e, Tennessee, sep- about it; 8IHI biiI people '. were She a' Mother Marie. ,Regis.' , Jncrease. 7QUi' knoWledge- and love of the. :Mlssioa b7 readme.

natiOn plants were set up to sift. using ,the infonnation 'supplied LaRoche of the Sacred Hearl MISSION, • pocket~ bi-DJ()n.thl7 magazille. edi1ed. Dy MGlIt the light uranium, atom (U-235) by Fuch& and Greenglas to hur­ ••• I!'ulton Z. SheeR. Keep. 7O'irself up-ta-date 011 mission actti'Y­from the heavier tT-238. 'At the ry: their own atomic bomb into Province of the' community,. whowas, ehosen at a general chapter iUea the world over~ Let _ put you on oar ~ptwa. liiit for .-me time, reactors were put in- ' production. in Rome- to sUcceed Mother' a:alT one dollar' a ;ye8rr ' to operation. at Eranforclt Wasb- Many of the scientists' iiIter':' Philomena Prendergast of tbe fngton, to produce the new art- est in, completing" the bomb pro- Anglo-Hibernian Province. tficial element,. plutonium, which ject cooled with the defeat of llssioned better than U-235. The the Nazis. They thought either The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. test bomb had a plutonium core, that the work should, be aban- Arthur LaRoche, Mother Marie as did that dropped on. Nagasaki; doned or. that there should be Regis. a a native of Cambridge, a bomb with a uranium. core was ,~nces the bomb W'Quld Mass., and a graduate of Nofre' 1IIed on Hiroshima. " ne'tPer be used. Dame High School, Cambridge.

Th ti and St. Mary College, Hooksett, Brj.gadier G en e ral > Lesli-e thoUgeh~cle°n.aredwaa tha~ al- N. H. '

GroVes was' placed hi charge of ~' out of al ­the project, and he appointed most the., whole ~acific; th~ Jap-' She has studied at Fordham Robert Op""",nheimer'tO head the' anese, would make a fanatical University and 'participatetl in

.I:'~ at d i their ho the Sister FormatiOn movement.scientific team., Tfl~ decided to an . n - me. bIands; and eoncentrate"'all the work' iii 'a tJ)at their defeat there woUld, cost Entered III 194J. Bingle new la1;x>ratmY center. a ha~ a million American cas- 'The new' Mother General en-

Arra,. of. Sclentlsta ' ualties whereas the- • t I> Di i e' tered the Holy Union' novitiate bomb would bring the' war to a in Fall ,River in September,

To it came a dazzling array of quick close, sparing miIliona of 1942. Sheha taught in NeW Rientific lights; many of the~ lives~ York City llnd Concord, Mass. Nobel laureates. to 'labor ,on ~ Two Bomblnp 'and served as superior at the problem of inducing two sub- But why were two bombs l£oly, Union Convent, Groton, eritical nuclear masses to collide dropped on Japan? A single Mass.; lind the BOse Hawtbome perfectly at the exact moment bomb might be considered by Convent, Concord. She haa also required to produce "cri~cality'·, ,the Japanese a trial weapon, with been provincial·' coUne1llor. and which is the chain reaction aet- no more available. But a follow- for the past year was proviDcial 1:ing off atomic explosion. ~p bombing would probably con- 'of the Sa~ Kean ProVince. "

At first, it was thought, ~at the ,vince them, that. whole arsenal As MQther General she win design of the bomb would have of such weapons was ready for ;visit. Boli ,Union houses. in itai7. to provide for gun assembly. use against them. ,France, Belgium, Irei!U'1dt.Waletr, 'rbat is, one chunk ot subcriU@l . So the. work vient- on. By early 'Spain, ,.A.rgentina and: the cam ' IDIClear material would be sIaot, .r~ 1945 it seemed impossible, ,eroons. Iir 'tJietl'iiit'ed: States: ... mmanother, thus producing e,r-, to complete.it r,y the appointed' : will vjsit hot1$es in the Archdio­pIosion. But a new, sorer, Ie. date. The complications encoun- :eeses ot"Bostolr; Ne.w York- atldi'" wastefulme,thod'was worked out, tered, the troubles. overcome; are BalUmore and the l)ioceses: of' that,of implosion.. In this a, sub- '. ~explored by Mr. La-ProYidenee".FOOk1)oB:R~, mtical nuclear core' was' sur- 'mont; lilid he pictures vivic:117 the Centlel; Alban".~ Catn~ ~-, morided: with, charges. of. exploa- testing: 1f'Ounda,. with tbeb: 500, .' ~ Raleigh. Han:isburL. fa ad-, Ift,;~hidt,'wolllcl-be defoRated., miles of,eords: and ~~ ~~.. ' alti_ tO'the pioneer foUZJ.datioM. ..... aDct-~''5c~:-.t:.. 'aI,f-'IIiiIlIr..........--' -. we-FaIFHIver-=-m-oeae;-.::----'

Cut O1It 01. column, pia ~our sacritlee to It and. IlIaD It Ie Most Rev. Fulton. J. SlIeen, National Director of The. SocletJ' for the Propal'ation 8f'tIIe raith, 366 FifiJr Aveim, New York. lIf. Y. 10001. er ta 70111:- Dioeesan DIrector. Rt. Ke.y. ~ml or. CoIl­1IIdiDe.,' 368 N~rill Hafil Street.. Fan River" Massaeliuse*­

, YOURS 'TO LOW,AND TO GfVEf ,the lifeot a DAUGHTER- OF ST. PAUL Love Geef ~, and givem SOU\$'. tnowfeda.t' aatf 18~ of

'God by serving Kim lit 3, Missimr which usa tile ' ,Press, Radii;, Motioit' Pfcfures .. TV, to, bring,,His Word to soul$ ever'YWhete.ZeaJOU$ young girls' 14-21' ye~ ,.lnterested II: tIiis-' Uniqu.Apostolate may write ~ " " ,

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Page 13: 08.12.65

DEDICATION SUNDAY OF HARWICH CHURCH: Left, view of entrance. Right, closeup of sanctuary. showing the Sr,eM eros. of Cbrisi tile sanctuary of tlhe new Holy Trinit, Church, Harwich, from main Ule Eternal Prie&t. ~tory OIl P1lge One,),' ,

Servite Fathen Plan Changes

CmCAGO (NC)-A reorgan­Ization along territorial lines or the two. U. S. provinces of the . Servite Fathers is planned in the near future, Father Joseph II.

. Loftus, a.S.M., first ~erican­born head of the 732-year-old eommunity, announced here,

Father Loftus detailed that the provinces are not now diYlded geographically. He said' ex­changes of personnel 'to imple­ment the reorganization nOw are taking. place. One province, Oui' Lady of Sorrow, fO\Ulded itl

, 1870, has headquarters here; the other, St; .Joseph, founded ill

, 1927, hu headquarters in Den­. ver. There are instances where

personnel from both provinces are assigned in the same city.

Father Loftus said that under the new set-up the Servite, 0p­

erations in the U. S. will be con­ducted through an eastern and a western province, each with definite territorial limits.

Beginning this Fall, Father Loftus said, Servite college level seminarians will take all their college studies at a Catholic uni­"ersity. He said three Servite priests and 55 students will at ­tend classes at St. Louis UniveJ'ooo lity.

Mexico Intensifies Pastoral Training

MEXICO CITY (NC) --' Some 150 priests, Brothers. and ,nuns hom all parts of Mexico are re­eeiving inte~sified pas tor a 1 preparation here at the Higher Institute of Catechetical Train­ing. '.. .

Father Jacques Audinet 01. the Paris Catholic Institute and o the r distinguished C,athollc clergymen have been brought here to aid in the' billhops' pro­gram'to foster vocationil to the priesthood and to improve the pastoral methods of pries_ working in parisheS.

UniversityC~"ter .ANTIGONISH. (NC) ...... 8L

}'rancis Xavier University here has announced plans to build ala auditorium-gynui1Isium-Stadium eomplex to serve both the. uni­'VeJ'Sity and eastern Nova Scotia. The structure will be named the Oland Center. after itlL donors, Col. Sidney C. Oland 8Rd tbe

Predict$ Vietnam Decision in February Fr. O'Connor' Says Reds Hope U.S. Withdraws

CHICAGO (NC)-Father Pat- .ened by reports of U. S. student rick O'Connor, Fat-East corre- protests, .teach-ins and ·the like, spondent for. N.C.W;C. Nevn that American determinism will Serviee, . said here there Is a weaken soon. good chance that. the war bl "We could reach •. decisive Vietnam may J:~ach a decishe ,point .around the Vietnamese point arolind l'eb.. i. :festival of Tete (the lunar DeW

During an biterview here,.the 3Jear around Feb. 1). . 1e a n 66-year-old Coiumban' Mast Continue priest was ukeel if there·was • "'If the eommuni8te ftelize, remote chance that the esc31a~ . however Slowly the U. S. may ing war would conie tOa halt. . eommit its forces, that theH Is· a

Father O'Connor, who h8a: dogged determination ill the been covering the Vietnam eon­fUet since 1952, replioo:

"'Let me put it this we51'. The eommunists' ;reat hope is that .the People of the Yn.ited StateS will grow weary and impatient with the fighting and force their govemment to withdraw its support of South' Vietnam.

"It .is quite possible-but tbU !II certainly not a prediction on my part-that the communists are now making their maximum efforts during this current rainy season. They probably have the hope, buoyed up and strength­

u. S.Sailon .Paint Missioner's Church,

MURORAN (NC) - SaiioN aboard the U.S.S. Walke de­

'llCended on this Japanese town but instead of painting it red, itley painted its .church white.

When· the destroyer pulled into port .for a week, its crew asked Father Donald C. Walsh, M.M., ~ there was any work they could do. .

It didn't take the Bronx, If. T.., priest long to think of his most pressing job, which the Na"" men accomplished with time enough to spare to tackle ibe ehurch's "tall steeple lUI' welL

16 Negro'Stude..... Get Scholarships

CLEVELAND (NC)-The JIl.; terracial ScnolarShip FOUndatioa laeB awarded fun on~year.aehoI­arshipe to area Cath0He Ialgh 1IC:lo618 to If . NegrO jrachaa* 01 Catholic grade scbools•.

The fOundatiOn, whicl1 ,.. established, by • .-ouP 01. Catb­olic lay persona, iaid It mtenclll to provi~lCholarshiPII to the· winnen fbrougho~ high ~

'American' people to see this . tJUng through, thea 'they JI18F

listen to reason. . , "But the U. S. milBt continue

. ~ big tbl'U$t. We must make

Honor DOIIIlnican BOGOTA (NC)-The superiOf

Jenera! of the Dominican order,. Father Aniceto'Fernandez, O.P., has been awarded the Cross of Boyaca, the highest Colombian state decoration, by President

.

, .

Guillermo Leon Valencia. Father Fernandez was in Bogota for the gener81 congregation 01. the Do­minican order.

'What About YOtt?

.••• A Frcmcitcan Si...... GMNff YOuRSElF to .·Itfe eom·

pletelv. dedicated to ttIe' salvation of soul;, ; . througll prayer, work. &aCe rifice 8lld joy ••• by usmg your tal­ents as a' Nurse, Laboratory and X-Ray Technician, SecretaryJ._~ntant, Di· etitlan, ·Seamstress, \iOOI,1lS well as IfI other· hospital departments and III a new extension of our work III eat. eIletical ~. Social '~rvIce fields; .

..... No ........r CharItyt

(If ,. IN _ It, """ to Slater .." Clarlc:e, O.Sof. 80lI 111, CIttIoIIc Slaters' College, WHll!ftlltol, D. C. 10017 til' tIr·

• abiloluteiy elear that we 8ft' Dot going toback down and bow out. I canriot emphasize this too atrongly. If South Vietnam ill to be defended it is vital that the

· conimuriists be made aware that · we are not going to lose heart 01'

throw in the spontie in a hun)'." The . Catholic Press' "voice

· from Vietnam" underscored that · no one iii authority is Vying to · overthrow the' Hanoi l'egime,

';diBtasteful though it be, espe­· eieUi tor thoee livinS Under it."

Iuli..... Educatioll. DETROIT (NC)-8ister ROs­

alina, director of business edu­· eation at MarygroveCollege

llere, WlIIl elected president 01. . the .eentral unit, Catholic Business Education Association, wliich covers four Midwestern Btates. The association is de­"oted to inculcating the JOcial teachings of the Church into Heal of business and finanee.

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Helps Compose Rosary Hymn

PANAMA CITY (NC)-~ bishop, Tomas Clave! Mend8 .. Panama City helped compo8e ~ :Marian hymn. that I'8ther· P..

· rick ,Peyton, C.S.C., will ·uee ill his worldwide 1'_1,. BOsaIr.

· Crusade. ' · .. At the :request ot the ~

born priest, Archbishop CleM recruited Jose Riba, a comPote­01. popular songs ,m Panama, ... ereate a hymn :for the'crusade.,

Riba, Archbishop Clavel MMI J'ather' PeytOn worked a ~

evening on the song, and 1he · next day it was performed .'.

television program here. ·The arthb.shop W88 a me""

el tbeeborus. .

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Page 14: 08.12.65

• •

THE ANCHOR-:"iC)CeM of Faft II~er-;-Thurs •. Aug. 12, 1965 14..

Pastoral Planning 'Needed In Latin American Renewal

From UtJ'he Chur.ch in the New Latin Ameri~"

Edited by John J. Considine, M.M. Cardinal Cushing is at pains to quote at length the

news of the Church in Chile in justification of calling the Church's effort a Christian revolution: "To Christianize this revolution already on the march," Mensaje explains, "means to us to free it from

doubtedly breathe a sigh ofunjust vi ole n c e, resent­ satisfaction. He or she is awarements, hates, egostic selfish­ that in view of the desperateness. We don't stand for the shortages of personnel, planning suppression of freedom and the can result in more effective use rights of man. On the contf8ry, of the precious human elements we contend that aVailable. t his freedom For the story of the master and these rights plan we are privileged to have should not be the services of a master planner. the monopoly of This is Abbe Francois Houtart • small minor­ of Louvain and Bogota. director ity but should of the Belgian Centre de Re­be extended to cherches Socio-Religieuses and an Latin Amer­ secretary-general of the Inter­-. icans every­ national Federation of Catholic where." If not Institutes of Social and Socio­revolution,these Religious Research. He is inter­men ask, what nationally sought after for his other word excellence in religious sociology. might be used? Would It be In 1952-53 Abbe Houtart studied better to talk of evolution, of under a U. S. government fel ­restoration, of consecration to lowship at Indiana University­brotherly service? Such words, and the University of Chicago. they. .answer, just won't do. Through years of assignments in

."The fact is," they assert, '''that Latin America he has intimate a genuine revolution is now in knowledge of the C h u r c h progress in Latin America, mo­ throughout the continent. tivated by tremendous injustice. Pastoral Plans The people, with good reason, In several Latin American don't believe in evolutions or in countries pastoral plans have vague consecrations. ,They ask been prepared, elaborated and lor and need a radical, integral, put into practice. They include rapid change. Not to call it a the pastoral plans of Chile revolution seems to us," these (1961), the emergency plan 'of men declare, "to represent cate­ the Bra%ilian episcopate (1962), goric blindness. Therefore, we · the apostolic plan of the regional talk of revolution, though of bishops' conference of Northeast

- eourse in terms of Christian rev­ · Brazil and several diocesan elution." plans, such as those of Natal in

'Brazil, Riobamba in Ecuador,Enormous Problems San Jose de Mayo in Uruguay,In every field of life-the po- Girardot in Colombia. These ex­. lltical, the economic, the educa­ amples are already numerous.tional, the social, the .religious · Ther~ are also more particular-Latin America's problems of · plans applying to cities, regions.-eform are enormous. Into what­·or even urban divisions such as ever area we look, the tasks to south Bogota, which organized abe done are far .greater than remarkable parochial union inthose in similar fields of any 1957.other regionln the western

What Plan Is.orld. W~ aU have heard of planningWhat would I call this tremen­ in the economic sphere, so nec­dous movement for .change? I essary in areas under develop­would unhesitatingly name it,

ment. It means forecasting of theas did the Santiago group of different elements that makeprogressive priests and laity up a material enterprise in ordersupported. by their Cardinal

· that they may contribut~ in theArchbishop, "The Christian Rev­ most adequate fashion to itsolution in Latin America;" I successful operation. One maypray that you shall all be iden­ask if such a study may be pro­tified with it. Peaceful. construc­ vided for a project concernedtive and educational, it is the with pastoral care. The answeronly effective answer· to the · is in the affirmative though inCommunist threat. a different manner· than for anIn Latin America's task of so­ , economic or social project.eial reform, practically nothing

A pastoral plan concerns it ­·escapes today from the action of self with the task of evangeliza­the Church. The possibility for tion or other of the aspects ofits growth and development in parochial ·life. It requires in thethe' future will depend on the first placl;! an inventory of allefforts that Latin Americans the existing factors: number ofmake, but also, toa great extent, priests, religious, church institu­on the international solidarity tions; parish movements such asthat the more developed nations Catholic Action, the laity en­of Europe and North America gaged in the different sectors ofwill create and maintain. apostolic action, related organi­

Master Plans zations, such as schools, hospi-Master plans are the order of tals, social action. .

the day. The sophisticate groans in dismay when he hears that Ecumenical Tribute the idea lias actually invaded the sacred confines of the Church in' Latin America. The veteran priest or Sister who has pioneer­ed in Latin America will un-

Study in Spain SANTANDER (NC) - Ten

Irish seminarians have com­pleted a month-long language course in Spanish at the Menen­dez y Pelayo International Uni­versity here. After their ordina­tions in Ireland, the new priests will be sent to dioceses in Latin Am e ric a and southwesterl1 111lited States.

To Hitler's Foes BONN (NC) - Members of

Protestant and Catholic youth organizations met here in mem­ory of the men who unsuccess­fully opposed nazi leader Adolf Hitler in the attempted revolu­tion of July, 1944.

Father Stephen Pfurtner, O.P., praised the men for "leavitig the inner room of the Church to be­come active and responsible Christians in the world." Their common task enabled them to go beyond the narrow borders of their respective religions, he aid.

MIAMI (NC) - Luis Casas Martinez, whose 12-day voyage on a makeshift raft· was one of the most dramatic escapes yet from communist Cuba, is re­covering slowly from his ordeal in Jackson Memorial Hospital.

Casas, 34, was rescued by a Miami Beach couple- sailing their yacht in the Bahamas. Clad only in workshorts and with his mother's rosary around his neck when rescued, Casas was suffer­ing from exposure, dehydration and skin ulcers 'from the time spent drifting on his raft of inner tubes and planks.

Tattooed Cross A former Cuban provincial

governor who later was sen­tenced to 20 years imprisonment for anti-Castro activity, Casas was described by physicians as

Honor Msgr. Ryan For Leadership -

NEW YORK (NC) - Msgr. Patrick j. Ryan, former chief of Army chaplains, received the 1965 Audie Murphy Awa:rd at the yearly reunion here of the Third Infantry Division, Msgr. Ryan's original division.

The award is given to an out­standing American for' contri ­butions to the national life in the areas of citizenship and moral and spiritual leadership. Audie Murphy, America'9 most deco­rated soldier in World War II, was also a member of the Third Division.

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ESCAPED WITH ROSARY: Louis Casas Martinez, governor of Camaguey province for a short time after Fidel Castro took over Cuba, escaped. from the island by means of araft after five years in prison.' He was greeted by his sister, Graciela, as he arrived in Miami dressed in rags wearing a rosary around his neck. NC Photo

Escapee "Recovering too weak to speak with news­men.

He escaped from. a concentra­- tion camp in Piriar del Rio

province with only guava tropi­cal .fruit juice, condensed milk and water to sustain him.

He was met in Miami by his sister. Graciela, who escaped from Cuba in 1958.

Reporters noted that Casas . 'had tattooed on his chest a

cross encircled by dots. His sister said her brother had been threatened. with death so many times that he had the tattoo put on by a fellow inmate to challenge the communist firing squads.

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-Ang-lican Prelate Says Christian Unity Essential

PERTH (NC)-Christians must unite and provide a single pattern for the life of the world, an Anglican pre~ late said here.

In a speech at Westem Aus­tralian University, ArchbishOP' George Appleton of Perth said . countries seeking unity are con ~ tinually hampered by diversi ­fied Christian missions. "How can we expect countries like India to achive unity if Chris­tians present a disunited front," he asked.

He said he would welcome ac­ceptance of the discipline of the Catholic Church "for my own Church and for my own people," but before that is possible, he said, several points must be re­solved. Among these he listed the concept of infallibility, the validity of ministerial orders, the Catholic view of Our Lady, and authority and freedom.

Lauds Pope John He stressed, however, that

these di1ferences are not as in­surmountable as once thought, largely because of the faith and simplicity of Pope John XXIII. Where love and humility are ex­pressed, he said, people are drawn together far more than by agreements over faith and order.

Because of this, he added, "the whole Christian world owes a great debt to the work of the saintly Pope John."

CCD Course Sets Enrolment Record

WASHINGTON (NC) - The Confratemity of Christian Doc­trine leadership course at the Catholic University Qf America here has enrolled a record of 184 students, it was announced by Msgr. Russen J. Neighbor, associate director of the CCD national center•

Msgr. Neighbor said higher enrolments than ever before art1 also being reported by the severt other colleges around the coon­tl7 that offer the course.

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THE AN~HOR"-DiOcese of Fall River-Thu(s, Au~. 12,.1965 . 15·

New England Regional Congress Confraternity' of Christian Doctrine

August 26, 27, 28, 29 Members of the Diocesan CCD Board Assisting in Planni·ng The Congress

.* This Message is Sponsored

by the following Individuals

and Business Concerns in

Greater fall River:

• Duro Finishing Corp.

The Exterminator Co.

Fall River Electric Light Co.

Fall River Trust Co.

Globe Manufacturing Co.

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R. A. McWhirr Company

MacKenzie & Winslow, Inc.

Mason Furniture Showrooms

Mooney & Co., Inc.

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Plan to attend this four-day Congress with. other CeD members from. every Archdiocese and Diocese - in New England

: : J

Page 16: 08.12.65

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Aug. 12, 1965 16

Tells Teen-agers Christ's Kingdom Exists Right Now

By Joseph T. McGloin, S.J. I am not an avid reader of Ann and Abby, but I am

• regular reader, because, in general, their answers are most reasonable. It is noticeable, too, that there is II.

pattern to human problems, and a pattern to their various solutions. I doubt if either of these columnists has had an entirely new problem pre­sented to her in years. A regular correspondent to such columns is the teen-ager who is "ashamed" of his, or more often of her, parents. The old people have "defects," such as foreign accents, or an old car, or a h 0 use that is not as good as

-: that of 0 n e's friends. Now admittedly there can be serious situa­tions where a teen-ager actually does have good reason for some friction with his parents. But for the most part, the gripes are super­ficial, and most of them have something to do with material-. ism, as they want to brag about the family's new car, their beau­tiful home, and maybe even a servant or two.

Now I know very well indeed that this sort of "thinking" comes from a minority of teens. But the fact is, too, that even the good teen-ager is influenced by his surroundings, and our surroundings are all material.

Mexicans Happy Notice the clucks of sympathy

J"ou hear from the poor, benight­ed peoples of the world who do not match our absorbing Ameri­can ambition for material things.

,The poor people with no tele­Vision set, or no car, who have to walk everywhere they go or take a bus.

These sympathizers would be horrified with Mexico, for in­stance, where all the people have is about 90 per cent more happiness and peace than we have, even though they are blessed with only small amounts of money at anyone time. And they work with their own skills rather than pushing buttons. What a tragedy!

This is nothing new, this at ­titude. It goes back as far as recorded history, with even the most religious p e 0 pIe of the

... world having a hard time sepa­-~

rating their religion from mate­rial considerations.

Apostles Misunderstood Even when the early recipi­

ents of God's revelation began to get the right idea of Him, they still looked more for the material blessmgs He might bring them than the spiritual benefits the "g 0 0 d Dew s" of revelation r e·a 11 J" contained. When God spoke to them of "the Kingdom," they thought He

Laymen Start News Agency "in Africa

DAKAR (NC) - A group of laymen has set up a press service here to report on religious life in West Africa.

The first bulletin of the press service carried the following. statement by its editor, Simon Kiba, who is also the editor of the weekly Afrique Nouvelle.

"Africa is a continent in which religious life is quite varied. Re­porting on it is still irregular in many parts of the continent * * * We are going to try to .fill the V~ cant spots in West African re­ligious news with a service that will appear as regular as pos­.sible."

meant their own earthly power and prosperity.

This idea didn't stop with the Old Testament, either, not even with Christ's coming to earth and teaching. The Apostles were always asking Him when He would establish the Kingdom.

The mother of James and John wasn't above asking Him if her boys could hold prominent positions in that Kingdom. And at this, the rest of the Apostles would start fig h tin g among themselves.

As late as the Last Supper, Peter was ready with a sword to go out and help get "the king­dom" started. As a matter of fact, even after the crucifixion and resurrection, we have the disciples asking Christ, "Lord, now will you restore the king­dom to Israel?" It took the in­spiration of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost to finally set them right.

Gave Beatitudes Christ had told them often

enough that He was not con­cerned with a material kingdom, and that they were not supposed to be either. (And by saying He "told them," we mean, of course, that He "told us.") He had told them "My Kingdom is not of this world," and He had gi ven them the beatitudes, tell i n g them, "Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven," and even, "Blessed are the meek, for they shall possess the earth."

It's strange where understand­ing will come from, and we find one man understanding Christ's message under the most adverse circumstanceS possible. The good thief, Dismas, turned to Him in the midst of their sufferings and made a simple request, "Lord, remember me when you come iftto your Kingdom." Under the circumstances, Dismas, using His good will with the insI)lra­tion of the Holy Spirit, couldn't possibly have imagined that that Kingdom was a material, world­ly one.

It's a little easier for us today to understand what "the King­dom" is all about than it was for the Apostles before Pentecost, because we have the advantage of their Pentecost as well as our own, an advantage of hind­sight, where we can pro fit even from their very mistakes and misconceptions.

Live Christ'. Teachings The trouble is that we are 90

surrounded by worldiness and the pursuit of material things today that, even though we have a better chance of understanding the nature of "the Kingdom," we find it much harder to put our knowledge into practice.

We tend, for instance ,in rec­ognizing that "the Kingdom" is • spiritual one, to think that it will begin only with our en­trance into heaven, and that the thing to do now is concentrate on the material side of things.

But the truth is that Christ's Kingdom exists right now as well as in the life to come, and we are either part and parcel of -that Kingdom now, or else we are not. And if we are not part of it in this life"we are not going to be 'part of it, trium­phant, in the world to come. This mea n s that we must share Christ's life now, and live His teachings, a doctrine the direct o p p 0 sit e of the "ideala" QI. worldlineS5.

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THE ANCHOR-Brothers to Begin Novitiate 17Thurs., Aug. 12, 1965Have Confidence in Church,.

Papacy, Holy Father Urges ,Urges Churches CASTEL GANDOLFO (NC)-Pope Paul VI Called on Aid Gov·ernment

modern man troubled by doubts and anxieties to have con-. fidenee in the Church and the papacy. He told his weekly In Poverty War general audience that those who are worried about the pos­ NEW ORLEANS (NC)­sibility of applying unchang­ Government is a relative1erday, today and tomorrow.ing dogma to the changing "'This attitude does not weak­ newcomer to fighting pov­eonditions of modern times en souls, does not'preclude indi­ erty and it welcomes advice need "confidence in the vidual scientific investigation if from churches, Gillis W. LongChurch and particularly in this it is truly scientific, but indeed said here. ehair (of St. Peter) because of stimulates minds to think, make The assistant director of the the attitude it firmly and faith­ progress and pray. U. S. Office of Economic Oppor­fully maintains regarding the It is an attitude which does tunity noted that churches have religious truth it derives from not make us proud, as if we been helping the poor for centu­the revelation entrusted to it by were the fortunate and exclusive ries. Christ." . possessors of truth, but rather Long spoke at a dinner te

He described the Church's at ­ makes us strong and courageous rf.lise funds to meet a $190,000titude as "dogmatic, that is in defending it, prompted by deficit incurred in expansion of,founded not on its own learning love." Ozanam Inn here, a hospital·forbut on the word of God made Pope Paul told the crowd in homeless men. The Little Broth­understandable by the Holy the audience hall that his words ROGER LACROIX ROLAND LACROIX ers of the Good Shepherd staff Spirit and transmitted by teach­ were not meant for them per­ it and the St. Vincent de PaulRoger Lacroix, 21, and his 1961 and 1964 respectively, ~aching which derives its authority sonally. Society of the archdiocese ofbrother, Roland, 17, sons of Mr. made one year of studies atfrom" ,. ,. the only true teacher, He said he spoke to the~ "as New Orleans sponsors it.and Mrs. Louis Lacroix of 100 Walsh College, Canton, Ohio asChrist the Lord." rE'presentatives of your age and The nation, Long said, is nowLafayette Street, Fall River, will a postulant in the Order."It is an attitude," the Pope of the currents which agitate it, involved in a massive antipov- ..-:receive the habit in the Congre­ The Investiture marks the be­eontinued, "which does not al­ who make us think of the atti ­ erty program in which the gov­gation of the Brothers of Chris-­ ginning of their year as noviceslow ambiguity, subjective inter­ tude of uncertainty, criticism, ernment hopes to mobilize aDtian Instruction al1d begin their which will be spent at Notrepretation, confusion, corruption doubt, ideological intolerance, social resources, "and we wel­canonical year of novitiate at the Dame Novitiate in Alfred, Maine.or contradiction in the message agnosticism and even negativism come and encourage support andCeremony of Religious Investi ­ At this ceremony, they will re­of salvation. It is an attitude which characterizes many souls advice from our churches."ture to be held at Mount As­ ceive the cassock, their religiouswhich guarantees to each and ~ho today have become more

sumption Institute, Plattsburg. garb in the Congregation, and Total Maneveryone of the people of God sensitive, thoughtful and dis­N. Y. on Sunday, Aug. 22. the title of Brother and willthe same truth, the same secur­ turbed by the great innovations He noted that religious groups

ity and the same language yes- of modern life." Graduates of Msgr. Prevost make a promise of obedience to aU over the country are deep]y High School in Fall River in their superiors. involved in the government'.

anti-poverty program, and in­fluential church leaders serve on the national advisory council to

CCD Lists Well Known Speakers Disapprove LectorsContinued from Page One From September 1955 until the Office of Economic Oppor­November 1958 he was employ­Fr. William B. Greenspun, a tunity.

ment interviewer at William Crosier Fathers' Magazine Readersnative of New Haven, is a vet­ As public servants or as ren­Filene's Sons Company in Bos­eran of four years in the U. S. gious leaders, he continued, "weton. He joined the semi-conduc­ Reveal Opposition in Poll Army Air Corps during World ~ are engaged in our present jobstor division of Sylvania ElectricWar II. ONAMIA (NC) - The use of was support for putting the en­ because we wish to better thein November 1958 and advanced

He has degrees in Sociology commentators and lectors in the t:re Mass in English (52 per human condition."to the position of supervisor offrom the University of Missouri vernacular Mass was opposed by cent). The concern of both state andpersonnel. He resigned in Au­and from Fordham University. readers of Today's Family mag- church, he saiO, "is the totalgust 1962. However, there were surprises

Since his ordination, Father azine. . man."At that time he joined Inter­ in the poll taken by the Crosier Greenspun has had a varied Fifty-four per cent of the He underlined the need fornational Telephone and Tele­ Fathers' mag a z i n e publishedcareer. He was parish director readers of the monthly who re­ close cooperation in overlappinggraph and advanced to the here in Minnesota. One wasof the CCD in a large New York sponded to a questionnaire on areas of the fight against pover­PWiition of assistant personnel strong opposition to the receiv­City parish, where he also the new liturgy said they did not ty. "Church and state can workmanager - world headquarters. ing of Holy Communion in aserved on several Interfaith like the use of commentators or harmoniously, without jeopard­In November 1964, he became standing position. A total of 64Community Councils. He has lectors. iZi.ng the position of either," beindustrial relations manager of per cent was opposed, 30 perpreached many Missions and In most respects, the poll SaId.Standard Pressed Steel Com- cent in favor. The remainderNovenas, is noted as a lecturer . pany's Precision Fastener Divi­ agreed with those taken recent­ marked no opinion.to non-Catholic groups and- is ly in other parts of the nation.sion in Jenkintown, Penn.presently the National Coordina­ In general, the new changes

There was also opposition to Peru Mission Mr. :Reilly has been active in en t ran c e processions (54 totor of the Apostolate of Good were approved (58 per cent), ST. MEINRAD (NC) - Twethe Confraternity of Christian 42 per. cent) and OffertoryWill for the Confraternity. noctrine since 1950. He has English was liked (77 per cent}y Benedictine priests of St. Mein­

processions (49 per cent toThe Apostolate is the arm of taught for 12 years, principally Mass facing the people was pre­ rad archabbey here in Indiana35 per cent).the Confraternity whose mission at the high school level. He bas ferred (67 per cent) and there will begin a new parish center

is to generate good. will and Broken down by age group­ in Lima, Peru, in September.been an assistant principal andChristian brotherhood. between later principal of a high school Put New Testament illgs, the poll by the magazine Named by Archabbot Bonaven­ourselves and the non-Catholic showed that those under 25 ture Knaebel, O.S.B., to startof religion.community-a vanguard of the In Viet Language years of age were most in favor t.he Latin American project areHe has spoken at the last sixmodern ecumenical movement BANMETHUOT (NC) - The of change. Second in enthusiasm Fathers David Duesing, O.S.B.,New England Regional Confer­in the Church. Protesant church of the province were those over 50 years of age. and Giles Heuer, O.S.B., who areences and this .June at the Na­Born in New York City, Mr. of Darlac held a solemn cere­ expected to erect an elementaJ'Ytional C.C.D. Workshop at Cath­ The 25 to 50 age bracket:Reilly graduateq from Xavier mony to mark completion O'f the and secondary school in addi­olic University. For a brief pe­ emerged as the group least will ­High School in 1949. He entered translation of the New Testa­ tion to a parish ·church on landriod, he was on the Executive ing to go along with the revi­Holy Cross College in Septem­ ment into the Rhade language. donated by the Peru govern­Board in the Archdiocese of sions. This category rejected theber 1951 and was granted' a Most of the Protestant mill ­ ment.Newark and is presently work­ changes in. general, Mass facingBachelor of Arts Degree in En­ sionary work in Vietnam b8lling with the Archdiocesan as the people, the use of commen­clish in .June 1955. been done among members ofModerator in Philadelphia to tators and lectors, the holding ofWhile at Holy Cross he was the Rhade tribe in south centralfurther CCD organization there. processions and standing to re­President of the Senior Class, a Vietnamese highlands. There are member of the National Jesuit While living in the Boston

some 30,000 Rhade Protestants. area, Mr. Reilly was a member of "The Purple", parish chair­ of the Holy Name Society man of C.C.D., President of the

Honor Society, Associate Editor

Speaker's Bureau and an Adult Interracial .Justice Club, Presi­ Advisor of the Archdiocesan dent of the Freshman Debating Chi Rho. He was a' frequent Team and active in other extra­ speaker before CYO, Rotary and eurricular organizations. various college groups.

For his youth work he received the Pro Deo et Juventute Medal

New Orleans Nuns in June of 1962. With his wife and six children,Start Peru M.ission he lives in Three Tuns--Ambler,

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Do­ Penn. minican nuns of the Congrega­tion of St. Mary, based here have established a mission on Lake

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The New Orleans' Dominican Sisters came here from Ireland HYANNIS a century ago. The Peruvian AMPLE PARKINGmission is their first foreign mia­aicm.

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THE ANCHOR­'8 'Information Bureau Mes~ages Attack Archbishop .Cody Laity· Give Sermons ­Thurs., AC g..12, 1965

Gets $25,000 Gift NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Re­ to have the recordings stopped, At Sunday Masses Paterson To Op~n Ad~~ict Hospital

PATERSON (NC)-St. Dismas Hospital, a 20-bed institution for narcotics addicts, will be opened here on Sept. 1 by the Mount earmel Guild.

The guild, a Paterson diocesan welfare agency, already con­tlucts a special hospital for al ­eoholics, the only one of its kind in the country. The new hospital will be opened in separate facil ­ities and will have its own staff, according to plans approved by Bishop James J. Navagh of Pat­erson.

Voluntary The hospital will accept pa­

tients· who commit themselves voluntarily. It will offer a three­month program starting with a

. period of physical withdrawal from drugs. This will be fol­lowed by a period of psycholog­ical appraisal and two months of ~ork therapy and job training.

Catholic and Protestant par­ishes and lay 'groups in the area will be .asked to cooperate in the rehabilitation phase of the prop­eet. 'rhe'y will be asked to obtain a job for one man each year.

Specialists Hospital personnel will in­

elude a medical director, a hos­pital superintendent, two spe­cialists in group therapy and a psychologist. Parents of addicts will '. take part in the therapy 8essi()lls. Once the program is under way, attempts will be ..adeto recruit recovered ad­tlic.ts. to help in the therapy pro­p-am.

A public education program will be conducted as an adjunct ., the rehabilitation work.

Jubilee Mass Continued from Page One

An auction will be in charge fIf. Lawrence Benevides and a tty Mrs. Gloria Benevides and a lerge committee. A kiddie day will take place from 1 to 4 Sat­urdlly afternoon, with Manuel '1'. Silvia and Mrs. Mary Ann CardeIH in charge of arrange­ments. They announces that en­tertainment will be provided by Major Mudd and Casper the FriendlY.Ghost.

A concert from 7 to 11 Satur­day I)ight will be given by the Cit~' Band of Taunton and Yaudeville acts by the Raymonds will" also be featured.

Sunday Program Sunday's program will begin

with a solemn Mass at .11:45, with sermon by Rev. Manuel Andrade, now curate of Espirito

•~anto Church, Fall River, and Iormerly assigned to Our Lady _ Angels. A solemn procession will see six statues carried in the line of march and five bands offering music. This event will begin at the parish hall grounds at 2.

From 3 to 11 Saturday night's program will be repeated. It is noted that foods available at the festivities will be prepared in the parish kitchens and will fea­ture American and Portuguese specialities.

General feast committee chair­m.an is John J. Souza and An­tone Michaels heads the golden j ubi 1e e planning committee. They are aided by large parish groups.

20 Ordained OPORTO (NC)-The largest

~Ug~~he:r o~:r~;::u~a~ef~;d~~~~ years-20-were admitted to the priesthood in the Oporto cathe­dral here. The apostplic admin­istrator of the Diocese of Oporto, Bishop Florentino de Andrade e Silva, officiated at the ordina­tion ceremony• ..,.

corded telephone messages at ­ have been unsuccessful. PUNO (NC)-Laymen replacedATLANTA (NC) - AUanta's tacking Archbishop John P. The messages have a strong priests "as preachers at SundayArchbishop Paul 'J. Hallinan Cody of New Orleans are still segregationist tone, and accuse Masses for the first time in this"nllounced a $25,000 gUt will being played here by a group the archbishop of such actions Peru city.enable establishment of an In:" calling itself "Parents and as: The laymen's sermons were information bureau in the Cathplic Friends of Catholic Children." Filling Catholic schools with preparation for Christian FamilyCenter for Lay Action here in The messages, not all of which "his favorite people-the colored, Day, being held in connectionGeorgia. attack the archbishop, are heard the Negro, these who do not pay with the National Eucharistic

The gift from the Frank J. by dialing a New Orleans tele­ for their education." Congress, scheduled in Huancayo Lewis Foundation was presented phone number. Efforts by Father Seizing "the funds from parish Aug. 27 to 30. to the archbishop by Philip D. Elmo L. Romagosa, executive treasuries to his general treas­ Bishop Julio Gonzalez Ruiz of

ury."Lewis, son of the Chicago phil ­ editor of the Clarion Herald, Puno said the sermons showed anthropist, during the r'ecent newspaper of the New Orleans "Destroying Catholicism in "the spiritual maturity attained Serra Internationa1 convention Archdiocese, to find out who our city by promoting brother by the local Catholic laity" in in Miami Beach, Fla. "Parents and Friends" are, and against brother, sister against in their "clear explanation, con­

sister, mother against father." cise * * * doctrine, and the quo­The archbishop said the bureau Kirby Ducote, head of the tatiQns from the Scriptures."

will have an ample library with Prayer Vigil archdiocesan bureau of informa­pamphlets and journals avail ­ WASHINGTON (NC) - The tion, said he makes transcriptsable. He said it will not be "a' Blue Army of Our Lady of Fat­ of the messages. They are then Korean Girls 'convert bureau,' but rather a ima, which claims five million shown to Archbishop Cody who, SEOUL (NC)-Five orphaned place where Catholic questions U. S. members, has joined with he said, is "not too concerned." Korean girls are on their way to may be asked by anyone and the Society of Reparation to the Archbishop Cody was recently new homes in the United States Catholic answers will be given Immaculate Heart of Mary in named Archbishop of Chicago, found for them by Catholic Re­by priests and laymen trained sponsoring a national vigil of succeeding the late Albert Car­ lief Services-National Catholic to do it." prayer Sept. 3 and 4. dinal :M,eyer. Welfare Conference.

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T+lE ANCHOR- 19 Thurs., Aug. 12, 1965

Morally Unobiectionable fo~ Everyone • Atragon Indian Paint Swingers Paradise Boy Ten Feet Tall Magnificent Men II Sword of Ali Baba Conquered City Aying Machines • Those Calloways FlBt Met! III UIe .. lIatI From Button Winiow Train fluffy Mara of the Wilderness Truth About Spri"l GIT Mediterranean Holiday Topo SigioGo, Go ManIa Murder Ahoy Up From the Beam Great Race Marietta VOfI Ryan's Express Greatest Stary&er tiki My Fair Lady Voyage to End Universe Hallelujah Trail Sandokan the Grell World of Abbott and Cosltllo Hercules. S8mpslMl" Seaside Swingers Yank in Viet Ham, A

Ulysse! Sergeants 3' YOD Have to Run FaSt~ lIICident at Phantall.. Shenandoah Zebra in the Kitchel

Unobiedionable for Adults, Adolescents Agony and Ecstasy Glory Guys 'Reward . Arizona Raiders Gorgon Secret of Blood Island Black Spurs Great Sioux Massacre Secret of Success Brigand of Kandahar Harvey Middleman, Frreman Seven Slaves Cat Ballou High Wind in Jamaica She Curse of 'the Ay Ipcress File 633 Squadron Curse of the Mullll1lY's Ivanhoe Donaldson Situation Hopeless

Tomb , i<"rmberle} Jim That Funny Feeli~ Oark Intruder King's Story Tickle Me ' Dr. Terror's House love and Kisses 36 Hours

of Horrors Masquerade Tomb of ligeiaFool Killer Mirage' Unsinkable~orly SrOWll Gunfighters of Casa Nobody Waved Goodbye World {If Henry Orient

Grande Overcoat Young Fury

Moran, Unobjedionable for A,dults ~8~ Cuide Ship of fook SMILING PONTIFF - Pope Paul VI greet!' peopleBackflf8 Having a Wild WeelIend Slave Trade ill tile Wortd Battle at 1IIe VIII, FiDrftI How to Murder Your Yflf' Today waiting outside the audience hall at Castlegandolfo after Bay fIf the ARaeIs . Hush, Husll. Sweet Strange -Bedfellows hie Wednesday audience. NC PhotoBebo'sGirJ Hysteria ThirdDa,y BJiJMI Corner JfBidone Umbrellas of Cherboura Iralftstonn R Successo Very Specia:Fnor •Crooked Road J Saw What '-DId West Side StDJy What's In a Name?Die, Die MY Dartilll La Til Tula Yfdd Affair

Notbing But ;I IIIIlI WQIlIIIIalStrllWFinnegllll's W"Once a Thief YCIlUWLo'Ierstrt:"KbaI Operation SnaIl I"ish Geologist Compiles Guide

For AduJts(With Reservations) To lrishSurnamel ThIs classiflClflonls JiveII :tD certahl films, Wbich." while not mOrally offeMIII

111 Ulemselve$. requlr. autimt and sOllte 'IIIlI1,sls and eXlllanation 2!i I protectiott BALTIMORE (NC) -Some Por Instance, there·. an enb7 to tbe _.informed qlinst wrollJ 1nter1ll'etatiollS and false conclusions. 150 'Years ago an· Englishman -x:eny (Mac Ceallaigh). A minor Anatomy of I MarrllllLBllb Suddenly last Summer Damed Wi Iii a m Shakespeare # .ept ·ofeast Connacht; now that8est Man 1Dve a fa ClIrte T8boosin the World asked: "What's "in a name?" the prefi.xesMacandO have ~ !ack like Me. Marriagll. :ItaIianStyla 1bis 'Sportil1l! life ffivorce: Itafllll Style Martin luther Under Yum YUIll Tree Now an Irlshmannamed 1:4- been.o widely dropped from Collector Organizer YlCtim ' ward MacLysaght has come up th,ese names, it is undistinguish­Cool World Nothi!lJ But the BeSt VISit, The with a one-word answer- able from O'Keny" And there'. Dr, ·StranRe1ove Pumpkin Eater Walk on Wild Side plenty. - sun i van (O'Suileabhain).Girt With till ClreeI.beI .Sky Above & Mud .Below Yellow. Rolls Royce Genealogist MacLysaght h.. There,wer~ several .ub-septs,Knack Strangers 1ft 1hI .city Youna~& Willing

eompDed a 248-page book, e.g. 0 Sullivan Beare, of thi8 -Guide ,to Irish Surnames;- leading ~ of the. :M~ Eog­Morally Objectionable in Part for Everyone which has been published here hanaeht. A sept, mCldental1y, •

Americanization of ·EnIIJJ Joy House Sex and the Single IlItI clan.Amorous Adventures Kitten :With A WhJD by the Genealogical Book Com- aSmall WOI'Id of SamIqJ ..... JNIllY. But folb like theReillys comeBlack Sabb~ lost World of .sInbatI The DeYJl and the

Blood lIIId 'Black \Me Les Abysses 10 CammaBdmenls An the way from -Abbott, all C'ff niceJ,y in MacL7Saght's book. CasIIIlMl 70 love. the ItafiaB WI/f 11Ie Sandpiper . d" There'. the notation: "Reill7

English name, m Irelan ~ee (0'Ba hallaigh) On of theCity of Fear M* HuRt TIIIItl Travelers the 14th century and now qw.te g . • e.Diary of I Bachelor Masque Df lhIRed Oellll Under Age numerous in Dublin" to Zorkin most numerous names In Ire­Diary of J CbambermeId MoRey Trap "ICe and V"u1JIe -"'this the onl,.Gaelie-Irish land; the head of the sept wu4 tor Texas Naked Prey tDUllg 'DiUinger

surn~e having an8ngucl.r.ed chief of Bre:ffny O'Reilly." C~cm1Get Yourself A ColI. GIrl Nutty. Naugbty ChatHa What A Wa"/ To GIl Girls on The BeacfI· ~ Party What's New, Pussycat form beginning with Z, ill a The author makes note of • j CO.' (Harlow Psyche 59 NhyBother to KnocII variant m Durkan" MacLysaght "'popular misconception, often ttouse Is Not J 80IIII Quic!\, Before It Mells Yesterday.' Today IIld plo~hs through' hundreda ~ held outside. Ireland, that all ) Heating Oils (How toStllff tWiIcl .Rnetng Fever Tomorrow Irish names, tnlcinl famil7 hi... .Mae names are Seottish - withBikini Raiders FrDlllBeneatll laRIblI

tol'J'. web well known Irish names .. .. illnII's WI/f the Sel ) ond Bu,rners ClMacCarthy, Macnamara, Mae­O'Keny, O'8111lln.1l' Mahon and MaeGuinness prom­Condemned The author earefully avoida inent an over the world." ,365 NORTHFRONTSTJtEET

BMlboJe let's Talii About WDIIIen Sweet IIld Sour picking the most popular of IrishCirde «Love love Goddesses Terrace And there's another entry ~NEW 8EDFORD Cnames, apparentl,. fu1l)o cogni­""l'lty Canvas fIIagnificent Cuckold To love which goes: (Mac) Lys8ght, Mac

zant of the donnybrook tenden­Eva New Angels Woman 1n the Dunes Giolla Iasachta. An offshoot of , WYman 2-5534 f Hili. Fidelity Monda ·Pizzo White Voices cies of the people about whom. the O'BrieDll of Thomond."

Silence he 18'dealing. ,~~"",~~ ,;"''''~'''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''' , ,,~,.""""'--~~--'------"---,---,---""--"~Present New Flag , ,1 '

, , : : FIVE-BOUR TRAINING -COURSES :To Serra Home ,, REGISTRATION ,, , , , Saturday 12 :30-2:00 and • :30-6 :OO'P.M. _

SOUTH SAN GABRIEL (NC) : Itth NEW ENGLAND REGIONAL CONGRESS :, , , ­-Anew American '~willsoon , , : Sunday 1 :30-3:30 P ;M. ~ , ,be ~ over the Mallorea , ,: CONFRATERNITY OF CHRISTIAN DOCTRINE :home of the·founderof the Cali ­ , , = keeutfve Soarda ,0 Fishel'll 0 Apostles. of. Coed 'W'J.D 0 :fornia missicms, Padre J'uniper-o : BISHOP STANG mGH SCHOOL, NO. DARTMOUTH. JIA88. = , ,Serra, as a gift. of the East :r.o. , , : DiIIc:u8aicm ~ ,0 Belpen 0 Parent-Educato1'8 0 :Angeles Serra Club. : A1JG1J8T 16-29. 1965 : , ,, ,The new flag wiD. replace an , ,

at Father , SpedaHzed CouneI for ElementaJ7 Teaeherr. ,outdated 43-5tar flag , ,Serra's .home in Petra. Mallorea.

, , Nanae ,

,: ' ', The Liturgf 0

Father Serra, a Spanish Fran­,, ,, ,, ' "

cillcan, lerved as a missionary in , Using .Scripture In Elementar)' RelIgious Instruction 0 : : Address ._..•...._..: , ,Mexico and California for 35 , , : Confirmation Catechetics forminc the Cbrim8ll Witness 0 : yean before his death in 1'184. , , , ,The Serra Club u an organiza­ : City __. .._ _ State :

tion of Catholic laymen who· , , : Specialized Counes for High School Teachers: : , , , ,p!'Omote vocations to the priest ­ , Parish . .._ _. .... Diocese _ , : Approach to .Dating, Courtship lind Marriage 0 :hood. , ,, , : Adolescent Psychology & CounseIlng 0 :, ,: Registration fee is $1.00 for adults and SOc for Religious and : , , ,Shrine Hostel

: ltudents. Fee enclosed : : You ma,. register for any ONE of. the abo'Ye courses. The :FATIMA (NC)-The women's , , branch of the St. Vincent de : registration fee ill SOC in addition to the ordinBl'J' Congresa :: Mail to: REV• .lOHN R. FOLSTER : , ,Paul Society in Portugal will

: 1359 Acushnet Ave., New Bedford, Mass. 02U6 : , registration fee. Fee enclosed ,build a hostel for poor pilgrims ~"", ", ,, '_1,: .' ,who come to this Marian shrine. ~ ,. .. ,. ,. l , - ...,.

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•Ecumenical Dialog In Hyannis Outstanding Success

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