03.17.66

20
Additional Concessions of English In Mass Start Sunday, March. 27 Bishop Connolly announced· today the additional con- cessions of English for use in the celebration Mass through- out the Diocese of Fall River. Based on a rescript issued Oct. 15, 1965 by the Commission for the Implementation of the Constitution of the At High Mass the prayers at Sacred Liturgy and confirm- the foot of the altar and the ed by a decision of the dialogue (Orate, Fratres) are Bishops of the United States, said by the celebrant and his The all Masses celebrated in the servers, while the people sing Diocese, whenever offered with the Introit, Offertory or appro- the people present, will have the priate hymns. following prays in English. Similarly, these prayers should The embolism of the Lord's Turn to Page Twenty Prayer (Libera Nos); the Col- lect, prayer over the offerings (Secret Prayer), postcommunion ANCHOR Panorama prayer, and the prayer over the faithful. Also, the prayers at the foot Interest of the altar, the preface, and the dialogue (Orate, Fratres). Mounts Secondly, the Bishop has di- rected that the following be used Interest in the Chris- PRICE 10c regularly in the Diocese of Fall tian Pan 0 l' a m a exhibit, River. Vol. 10, No. 11 «D 1966 The Anchor $4.00 per Year to be held the March 25 NEW COADJUTOR: weekend at Bishop 'Cassidy Msgr. Peter L. Gerety, New High School, Taunton, is mount- Bi$hop Connollv t" Address Haven, Conn., pastor, has Resets Plan ing throughout the Diocese. Rev. James Buckley, coordinator of been appointed by Pope Paul the program, has announced that with of Reliaiogs Coadjutor Bishop the For Prevost the Cape area is striving for a right of succession to Bishop. Brother Henry Vanasse, F.I.C., large contingent to visit the ex- Bishop Connolly will preside and speak at the convo- Daniel J. Feeney of provincial of the Brothers of hibit on Saturday, March 26. eation of all religious men and women, not vested with the Christian Instruction, announced Maine. NC Photo. Rev. Thomas J. Harrington, holy priesthood, scheduled for 3 Laetare Sunday afternoon, on Tuesday night a reconsider- Cape and Islands CYO Director, ation of the recent announce- is arranging for bus transporta- March 20 at the Bishop Stang High School Auditorium, ment concerning the phasing out tion from the many communi- North Dartmouth. The Con- . .... of the Christian Brothers in ties on the Cape to" Taunton. Leaion Acies eilim' Decree· on Adaptation Each Religious in the Diocese three years at Prevost High This will mark Saturday as Cape and Renewal of Religious received from the Bishop a copy School, Fall River. Cod Day. Father Harrington Life will be explained and of the Decree in order that they At Cathedral He announced that a re-assess- quickly reassures all other interpreted. Furthermore, it will will be prepared beforehand on ment of their manpower situa- groups, however, that this does serve as an occasion to answer the topics considered at the tion has enabled the Order to not mean other areas are to be On Sunday questions and hopefully solve Council andbe ready with ques- re-arrange the situation and excluded. problems of those who have read tions on any point not thorough- Bishop Connolly.will pre- now ami n i mum guarantee In planning this group from the Decree. ly understood. has been given that the fresh- the Cape, Father Harrington side at the annual Legion of man class entering this Septem- said: "It is our hope that other Mary Acies program, to be ber will be graduated in the areas will be represented in held at 1 :30 Sunday after- , class of 1970 from Msgr. Prevost large numbers because we feel Chqrity for 'Needy Yields noon, March 20 iil St. Mary's High School. Turn to Page Four Cathedral, Fall River. The Acies, a ceremony during which active and auxiliary Mpny Times Base Gift "\Vhat you do for one in need, you do for me. I, the True Ecumenism Permeates Leg ion members rededicate Lord, am your neighbor," the Most Reverend Bishop has themselves to their spiritual reminded his flock in a pastoral letter asking for help for apostolate, is a Latin term, Open House o'n Sunday meaning "an ,army ranged in the world's indigent poor. The almual Bishop's Relief col- battle array." - Modeled on the Two parishes in the Diocese will conduct open house lection will be taken up at that of Cain. What does a press- organization of an army, the programs Sunday afternoon, March 20. Both have invited all churches of the diocese ing cry for alms from "Asia, Af- Legion takes its nomenclature their non-Catholic neighbors to tour church buildings with next Sunday. Turn to Page Turn to, Page Twelve parishioners as guide's, St. Joseph's Church, Fairhaven, will "The German people are be open from 2 to 4 Sunday m.ore generous than we are," the afternoon; while the hours Ordinary reminded the faithful Greater 'New Bedford 4,ttorney Chosen as he pointed out that "We are, at St. Michael's, Swansea, indeed, and, in fact, our brother's will be from 2 to 4 :30. keepers." st. Joseph's To Head Catholic Charities Appeal Bishop Conoolly's plea for a Ministers and congregations of more generous response this Attorney William H. Garey lege and the BC Law School. County, Boston and American churches in Fairhaven, Acush-' veal' than ever before follows: of Fairhaven will serve as A practicing attorney for 15 Bar Associations. net and Mattapoisett have re- "Am I my brother's keeper" years, Mr.' Carey is a member He is counsel for the Towns ceived special invitations to St. chairman of the 1966 Catho- (Genesis IV: 9) of the New Bedford, Bristol of Fairhaven and Marion, the Joseph's program, said the pas- lic Charities Appeal, Most Beloved in Christ, New Bedford-Cape Cod Stand- tm', Rev. John J. Brennan, SS.CC. Rev. James L. Connolly, Bishop The words we have chosen as ard Times and radio stations They will be taken in small eur go to story of Fall River, announced today. groups to view altars, sacred of Creation. They spoken, One of the better known mem- text back the WNBH in New Bedford and vessels, vestments, confessionals The new Catholic Charities and the baptistry. The new paro- WOCB in South Yarmouth. brazenly, to the Lord Himself, bers of the Bristol County Bar Appeal chairman is vice-presi- chial school will also be included by Cain, eldest son of Adam and Association, the 40-year old law- in the tour. dent and a member of the Board killed his brother Abel, who College and the Boston College Eve. In a fit of jealousy, Cain yer is a graduate of Providence Mrs. Earl J. Dias, chairman of seemed preferred by God. The Law' School. He is most active of Directors -of E. Anthony & tour guides, will be assisted by Thomas Aridrade, president of Sons, Inc. and also president, treasurer and a member of the is Abel, your brother?" Cain re- Serra Club. Lord questioned Cain: "Where in affairs of the New Bedford the parish CYO, and young peo- Board of Directors of WTEV ple of the parish. plied: "I do not know. Am I (Channel 6) Television, Inc. A co-owner of the law firm St. Michael's my brother's keeper?" Who The son of Mary E. (Doherty) of Desmarais & Carey of New At St. Michael, Msgr. .Tflsepb would not agree that never be- Carey and the late James F. Bedford, the 1966 chairman is a fore, or seldom since, has man Carey, the lay Appeal chairman Turn to Page Fourteen Fall River native. He is married reached such a depth of ig- is a member of the Family Life to the former Virginia A. Kelley nominy? Bureau· of New Bedford and a of Fall River and they are the Jubilee Mass Yet, there are more than a former president' ot' the Fall parents of six childt'en, four boys River Clover Club. The fourth Pontifical Jubilee few Cains in the world today. and two girls. . They may not say what he said. His wife is a graduate of the Mass commemorating the clos- But they kill with their indif- Born in SS. Peter and Paul's Massachusetts General Hospital ing of Vatican Council II will be ference to human need. They parish in Fall River, Atty. Carey School of Nursing. Atty. and Mrs. offered on Sunday afternoon at degrade themselves, and society attended St. Joseph's elementary Carey are the parents of Susan, 3 in St. Francis Xavier Church, as well, by shrugging off respon- school, the James Madison Mor- William Jr., Robert, Gregory, Hyannis, by Bishop Gerrard. sibility for a brother in need. tion Junior High and B.M.C. Christopher and Paula. Rev. Francis L. Mahoney, as- They do not murder in cold Durfee High in Fall River. He , "To work through you for the sistant at St, Margaret's Church, But theii' attitude is like then went on to Providence Col- Turn to Page Fourteen Buzzards Bay. will preach. Fall River, Mass., Thursday, March 11, 1966 A'll'TlY. 'WILLIAM lBI. CARlEY

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my brother's keeper?" Who The son of Mary E. (Doherty) of Desmarais & Carey of New At St. Michael, Msgr. .Tflsepb would not agree that never be­ Carey and the late James F. Bedford, the 1966 chairman is a fore, or seldom since, has man Carey, the lay Appeal chairman Turn to Page Fourteen Fall River native. He is married reached such a depth of ig­ is a member of the Family Life to the former Virginia A. Kelley nominy? Bureau· of New Bedford and a of Fall River and they are the with ....

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 03.17.66

Additional Concessions of English In Mass Start Sunday, March. 27

Bishop Connolly announced· today the additional con­cessions of English for use in the celebration Mass through­out the Diocese of Fall River. Based on a rescript issued Oct. 15, 1965 by the Commission for the Implementation of the Constitution of the

At High Mass the prayers atSacred Liturgy and confirm­the foot of the altar and the

ed by a decision of the dialogue (Orate, Fratres) are Bishops of the United States, said by the celebrant and hisThe all Masses celebrated in the servers, while the people sing Diocese, whenever offered with the Introit, Offertory or appro­the people present, will have the priate hymns. following prays in English. Similarly, these prayers should

The embolism of the Lord's Turn to Page Twenty Prayer (Libera Nos); the Col­lect, prayer over the offerings (Secret Prayer), postcommunionANCHOR Panoramaprayer, and the prayer over the faithful.

Also, the prayers at the foot Interest of the altar, the preface, and the dialogue (Orate, Fratres). MountsSecondly, the Bishop has di­rected that the following be used Interest in the Chris­PRICE 10c regularly in the Diocese of Fall tian Pan 0 l' a m a exhibit,River.Vol. 10, No. 11 «D 1966 The Anchor $4.00 per Year

to be held the March 25 NEW COADJUTOR: weekend at Bishop 'Cassidy

Msgr. Peter L. Gerety, New High School, Taunton, is mount­Bi$hop Connollv t" Address Haven, Conn., pastor, has Resets Plan ing throughout the Diocese. Rev. James Buckley, coordinator ofbeen appointed by Pope Paul the program, has announced thatwithCOl1vocati~n of Reliaiogs Coadjutor Bishop the For Prevost the Cape area is striving for a

right of succession to Bishop. Brother Henry Vanasse, F.I.C., large contingent to visit the ex­Bishop Connolly will preside and speak at the convo­ Daniel J. Feeney of Port1~nd, provincial of the Brothers of hibit on Saturday, March 26.eation of all religious men and women, not vested with the Christian Instruction, announcedMaine. NC Photo. Rev. Thomas J. Harrington,holy priesthood, scheduled for 3 Laetare Sunday afternoon, on Tuesday night a reconsider­ Cape and Islands CYO Director,

ation of the recent announce­ is arranging for bus transporta­March 20 at the Bishop Stang High School Auditorium, ment concerning the phasing out tion from the many communi­North Dartmouth. The Con- . .... of the Christian Brothers in ties on the Cape to" Taunton.Leaion Acieseilim' Decree· on Adaptation Each Religious in the Diocese three years at Prevost High This will mark Saturday as Cape

and Renewal of Religious received from the Bishop a copy School, Fall River. Cod Day. Father Harrington Life will be explained and of the Decree in order that they At Cathedral He announced that a re-assess­ quickly reassures all other interpreted. Furthermore, it will will be prepared beforehand on ment of their manpower situa­ groups, however, that this does serve as an occasion to answer the topics considered at the tion has enabled the Order to not mean other areas are to beOn Sundayquestions and hopefully solve Council andbe ready with ques­ re-arrange the situation and excluded. problems of those who have read tions on any point not thorough­ Bishop Connolly.will pre­ now ami n i mum guarantee In planning this group from the Decree. ly understood. has been given that the fresh­ the Cape, Father Harringtonside at the annual Legion of

man class entering this Septem­ said: "It is our hope that otherMary Acies program, to be ber will be graduated in the areas will be represented in held at 1 :30 Sunday after­ , class of 1970 from Msgr. Prevost large numbers because we feelChqrity for 'Needy Yields noon, March 20 iil St. Mary's High School. Turn to Page Four Cathedral, Fall River.

The Acies, a ceremony during which active and auxiliary

Mpny Times Base Gift "\Vhat you do for one in need, you do for me. I, the True Ecumenism Permeates

Leg ion members rededicate Lord, am your neighbor," the Most Reverend Bishop has themselves to their spiritual reminded his flock in a pastoral letter asking for help for apostolate, is a Latin term, Open House o'n Sunday

meaning "an ,army ranged inthe world's indigent poor. The almual Bishop's Relief col­ battle array." - Modeled on the Two parishes in the Diocese will conduct open house lection will be taken up at

that of Cain. What does a press­ organization of an army, the programs Sunday afternoon, March 20. Both have invitedall churches of the diocese ing cry for alms from "Asia, Af­ Legion takes its nomenclature their non-Catholic neighbors to tour church buildings with next Sunday. Turn to Page l~ighteen Turn to, Page Twelve parishioners as guide's, St. Joseph's Church, Fairhaven, will

"The German people are be open from 2 to 4 Sunday m.ore generous than we are," the afternoon; while the hoursOrdinary reminded the faithful Greater 'New Bedford 4,ttorney Chosen as he pointed out that "We are, at St. Michael's, Swansea, indeed, and, in fact, our brother's will be from 2 to 4 :30. keepers." st. Joseph'sTo Head Catholic Charities Appeal

Bishop Conoolly's plea for a Ministers and congregations of more generous response this Attorney William H. Garey lege and the BC Law School. County, Boston and American churches in Fairhaven, Acush-' veal' than ever before follows: of Fairhaven will serve as A practicing attorney for 15 Bar Associations. net and Mattapoisett have re­

"Am I my brother's keeper" years, Mr.' Carey is a member He is counsel for the Towns ceived special invitations to St.chairman of the 1966 Catho­(Genesis IV: 9) of the New Bedford, Bristol of Fairhaven and Marion, the Joseph's program, said the pas­

lic Charities Appeal, MostBeloved in Christ, New Bedford-Cape Cod Stand­ tm', Rev. John J. Brennan, SS.CC. Rev. James L. Connolly, BishopThe words we have chosen as ard Times and radio stations They will be taken in small

eur go to story of Fall River, announced today. groups to view altars, sacred of Creation. They we~e spoken, One of the better known mem­

text back the WNBH in New Bedford and vessels, vestments, confessionals

The new Catholic Charities and the baptistry. The new paro­WOCB in South Yarmouth.

brazenly, to the Lord Himself, bers of the Bristol County Bar Appeal chairman is vice-presi­ chial school will also be includedby Cain, eldest son of Adam and Association, the 40-year old law­

in the tour.dent and a member of the Board killed his brother Abel, who College and the Boston College Eve. In a fit of jealousy, Cain yer is a graduate of Providence

Mrs. Earl J. Dias, chairman of seemed preferred by God. The Law' School. He is most active

of Directors -of E. Anthony & tour guides, will be assisted by Thomas Aridrade, president of

Sons, Inc. and also president, treasurer and a member of the

is Abel, your brother?" Cain re­ Serra Club. Lord questioned Cain: "Where in affairs of the New Bedford

the parish CYO, and young peo­Board of Directors of WTEV ple of the parish.plied: "I do not know. Am I (Channel 6) Television, Inc.A co-owner of the law firm St. Michael'smy brother's keeper?" Who The son of Mary E. (Doherty)

of Desmarais & Carey of New At St. Michael, Msgr. .Tflsepbwould not agree that never be­ Carey and the late James F.Bedford, the 1966 chairman is afore, or seldom since, has man Carey, the lay Appeal chairman Turn to Page Fourteen Fall River native. He is marriedreached such a depth of ig­ is a member of the Family Life to the former Virginia A. Kelleynominy? Bureau· of New Bedford and aof Fall River and they are the Jubilee Mass Yet, there are more than a former president' ot' the Fall parents of six childt'en, four boys River Clover Club. The fourth Pontifical Jubileefew Cains in the world today. and two girls.. They may not say what he said. His wife is a graduate of the Mass commemorating the clos­

But they kill with their indif­ Born in SS. Peter and Paul's Massachusetts General Hospital ing of Vatican Council II will be ference to human need. They parish in Fall River, Atty. Carey School of Nursing. Atty. and Mrs. offered on Sunday afternoon at degrade themselves, and society attended St. Joseph's elementary Carey are the parents of Susan, 3 in St. Francis Xavier Church, as well, by shrugging off respon­ school, the James Madison Mor­ William Jr., Robert, Gregory, Hyannis, by Bishop Gerrard. sibility for a brother in need. tion Junior High and B.M.C. Christopher and Paula. Rev. Francis L. Mahoney, as­They do not murder in cold Durfee High in Fall River. He , "To work through you for the sistant at St, Margaret's Church, ~llood. But theii' attitude is like then went on to Providence Col- Turn to Page Fourteen Buzzards Bay. will preach.

Fall River, Mass., Thursday, March 11, 1966

A'll'TlY. 'WILLIAM lBI. CARlEY

Page 2: 03.17.66

•••

2 THE ANCHOR-O>iocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 17, 1966

Proper of the Mass For Fouo-tft.t Sunday in l..enl

INTROIT: Rejoice, 0 Jerusalem, and come together, an you who love her: rejoice with joy, you who have been. in sorrow: that you may exult, and be filled ·from the breasts of your consol.l!-tion. I rejoiced because they said to me: "We will go up to the house of the Lord." Glory be to the Father. Rejoice, o Jerusalem, .and come together, all you who love her: rejoice with joy, you who have been in sorrow: that you may exult, and be filll~d from ·the breasts of your conso~at~on.

GRADUAL: I renoice because they said to me, "We will go up to the house of the Lord." May peace be within your wans, prosperity in your buildings.

" TRACT: They who trust in the Lord are like Mount, Sion, which is immovable; which' forever stands. Moun­tains are round about Jerusalem; so the Lord is round about his people, both now and forever.

OFFERTORY: Praise the Lord, for he in good; sing. praise to his name, for he is sweet; all that he wills he does in heaven and on earth..

COMMUNION: Jerusalem, built as a city, with eom­pact unity: to it the tribes go up, the tribes of the Lord, to give thanks to yOUfl' name. 0 Lord. '

Please Clip anCl'l Bring to Church on Sunday

t:~~~",~.",wn I"tive.~;ty Autho..ities ple........e lll..Jo".~Q%i·Che~rl~a(linq

NEW YORK (NC) - Cheer­leading at basketb3n gmr.es is designed to mspire home teams to greater heights as well as demoralize the enemy. '

Sometimes it leads to a sticky situation, as Georgetown Uni­versity of Washington, D, C., has learned. When the Boyan took the floor to face New Yorl~ Uni­versity in Madison Square: Gar­den here the Georgetown cheer­ing section w& minus a "Seig Heil" .cheerleader dressec' as a nazi soldier and another dressed as an Arab.

The costumed cheerleaders were in evidence., previo..~1..

""'Y when the same two teams met in

,Washington and Georgetown dealt NYU a 104-73 walloping.

NYU students interpreted the nazi-Arab type cheering as a re­flection against the large num­ber of Jewish students at NYU. Hershel Fink, an NYU student manager of the basketball team, said he protested the cheering to Tom my O'Keefe, Georgetown eoach, and several Hoya students at the scormg table. He said: ''The coach didn't reply aIlld the students reacted as if it were a big joke."

Father Anthony J. Zeits, S.J;, . Georgetown ·directorof student

personnel, dispatched F r a D k Keating, student body president, and Thomas Kane, campus pres­ident, hereto apologize to NYU students and assure the nazl-Arab cheerleaders would be eon­spicuous by their -absence at future Hoya-NYU encounters.

FORTY HOURS DEVOTION,

Mar.20-St. Joseph, Nor t·b Dighton..

Espirito SaD to, ,Fall River.

Mar. 27-Dur Lady of Perpet­ual Help, New Bedf.ord.

St. ~tel. Dighton. April 3-Our Lady of the Im­

maculate Conception, Fall River.

St. Boniface, New Bed­ford.

tilt .HeHlIl sm:olioC~ss o'ost/l~ PalO at Fan Rlvei; .

Mass. ~ubhsheO eve" Thursday 1.1 410 Hlgllianollvenue.. 11Il1Rlve, Mass. 02722 bY tile ~tbollc fJres>, ~, tlieDlocese of'l1In

Father ZeUs denied the na2i-Arab cheerleading was intended' to be anti-Semitic. He termed it "a parody, a mockery - some.., thing you would find, on a grade-D late· show on TV." He added "they Were merely clown-:­ing."

"Anti - Semitism is a g a ins t Catholic teachings." Father Zeits said. "We have alumni, teachers and deans who are Jewish and we have friends who are' Jewish people. Georgetown would be acting against itself if it were' anti-Semitic."

. Father Zeits said the "nazi" cheerleader had appeared at past Georgetown games and Will appeal at some future ones, but never again at an NYU game. He said l;~~ cheerleading student hasn't d.awn a single' protest from any of Georgetown's 600 Jewish students.

MOd' ass lr 0

FRIDAY-Friday of III Week of Lent. III Class. ·Violet. MaSs Proper; No Glory or Creed; 2nd Prayer St. Cyril of Jeru­salem, Bit;hOp, Confessor and Doctor of the Church; Pref­ace of Lent

SATURDAY-St. Joseph, Spouse of the :9lessed Virgin Mary and Patron of tiDe Universal Church. I Class. White. Mass Proper; Glory; 2nd Prayer Saturday of ill Week of Lent.I Class. Rose or Violet. Mass Proper, Nc Glory; Cre2Ci; Prefaee of Lent.

SUNDAY-Laetare Sunday, IV . Sunday of Lent. ![ Class. Rose 'or Violent. Mass Proper. No GI C

ory. reed; Preface of Lent.

MONDAY-Monday of ,IV Week

COUNC,IL JUBILEE MASS IN ATTLEBORO: Lead­ing figures at third Jubilee area Mass in the Diocese held Sunday at St, John's Church, Attleboro, were left to right:

.. Rt. Rev. Thomas F. Walsh, pastor of St. John's: Bishop Connolly, celebrant: Rev. Donald Bowen, assistant at St. Mary's, Norton and preacher at the' Mass.

Explains Renewal Fath~p D~",~Dd F. Bowen of Norton Preaches

".n,=f11q J.. a..;I~e Mass .in Attleboro .The clergy and laity of the

Northenl Deanery of the Dio­eese gatherec.1 last Sunday in St. John's Church, Attleboro, participating if a Mass offered b·· Bishop Connolly and heard a sermon delivered by Rev. Donald F. Bowen, assistant at St. Mary's Ctiurch, Norton, on renewal in the Church as based on the decisions of Vatican Council IT. :

Father Bo~en reminded all that the call to the Council re­

. affirmed ~he fact that change and reform are always inherent elements .n Christ's Church, if

that Church is to grow and f\1l­fill His command to embrace all peoples of all times. . ­

' 'The aggiornamento-or: up­"'crating of ~he Church is not' a . betrayal of Our Lord", the Nor­ton assistant stated. "but rather a profession o~ fidelity to Him who is Christ yesterday, Christ today, and Christ tomorrow 04 •

'That call reinforced our confi­.dence that the Church In adjust­l'lg herself to modern times and conditions is net compromising with the world' any more than Christ Himself compromised His divinity by accommodating it to our humanity".

' Recalling thp, advances in sci­

d t ch 1 thence ·an e no,ogy as e cre­ti f 'f t riala on or a .~en or ma e

values and the rise of dangers of . .materialism and indifferentism, the preacher 'showed absolute' need of reneWal.

"New Bed.fordBlind The New Bedford CatnoUc

',Guild for the Blind will hold its regular mee~ tonight at 8 in

. the K of CBall. Mrs. Mildred

• DePierre, cbaiPnan, and Mrs.

~,~__......-, rJ.':~AMl~=~~~~~e~~~~~~;~~=M~#;~~eli!~J~~~",,",, ..

of Lent. In Class. Violet. l\IIass .' Dorothea Poyant, co-chairman, Proper; No Glory or Creed; ; will head the entertainment 2nd Prayer St. Benedict, Ab-: committee. The Guild's annual bot; Preface of LEnt. : cake sale will be held on Sator­

: day, March 26. TUESDAY - Tuesday of IV

Week of Lent. ill Class. Violet. Mass Proper; No Glo1')T .or Creed; Preface 01' Lent. CENTE~

WEDNESDAY.- Wednesday of Paint and' 'WallpaperIV Week of Lent. m Class. 'Violet. Mass Prop!llr; No Glory Dupont faint or 'Creed; Preface of Lent. cOr. Middle St.

THURSDAY - Thw:-sdayof IV . • " ~:l Acush Ave. .Week of Lent II:' Class Vio­ ,Q.e:",.,; N,ewBedford let. Mass Proper; No Glory or PARKlN~

Creed' 2nd Prayer' St. Gabrie1 Rear of 'Store' IJ

.; The answer found in the Council's discussions was "we cannot rest until we have awakened in our hearts and minds a greater consciousness of ourselves as members of Christ, living the life of Christ. We cannot feel secure until we have grown more sensitive to that community wh;ch binds us to­gether as a people of God."

"Know the mystery of Chr.iBt and His Churci.... • ... through the liturgy He has endowed the Church with a primary means of revealing to the world the, mystery of her iriner nature, and at the same time III • ... en­riching the spiritual life and faith of her members".

Father ~owell_ further stated, · '-:I"he work ot renewal would fall far short of its goal were it

·not to concern itself with 'the · ultiIDate union of all Christians and . non-Christian in the one fold .of Christ ....... The success of ecumenism will depend on the indivi..tua' witness we 'give it in our daily lives to the love of Christ".

, . Ecumenical Gift The church building fund of

St. Thomas More parish, Somer-: .set, is richer by $100, presented by its neighbor, the Congrega­tional Christian Church. The ecumenical gift was made to Rev. Howard A. Waldron, pastoroi ,to Thomas' More, by Rev. H.

'Merrill Emery Spiritual' leader oftht! Congregational ChriStiaiul.

LARIVIERE1S Pharmacy

Prescriptions called for and Delivered

LOFT CHOCOLATES

600 Cottage St. WY 4-7439 New Bedford

MonilePlumbing & 'Heating Co.,lne.

Reg. Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M. MONTLE

Over 35 Years' of Satisfied Service

.806 NO. MAIN STREET 'Fall River OS '5-7497

Sets Medicare Deadline

Only two weeks remain for those 65 and older to make ap­'plication for Medicare coverjlge. With this in mind, the social se­curity office in Fall River will be open to the public on Satur­day mornings, from 9 to 1 and Tuesday evenings from 5 to 8 until the end of March, an­nounced Lawrenct: M. O'Connell. social security district manager.

He explainec' that some older folks work Monday through Fri::­day and cannot visit the social security office during regular hours without losing time from their jobs. The Saturday morn­ing and Tuesday evening office

,hOUrs will also give young peo­. pIe a chance to take older rela­tives to the social security office wit~out losing time from work.

lliust Apply Now Residents, 65 or over before

1966, will have medJeal insur­ance protection when it' starts in July only If they sign up by March 31.

Other persons 65 or older who want to sign Ul for medical in­·surance and have nevet applied for social security benefits, be­cause they are working. full-time or do not have enough social security work credit to get ben­efits, should get in touch with the nearest social security office.

The Fall River social security Q~ce is located at 142 Second Street. Social security offices ill other parts of the Diocese will be found under united States go...... ernment listings in area tele­phone books.

Necrology MAlL 87

Rev. James W. Conlin, 1918, Pastor, St. Patrick, Somerset.

Rt. Rev. Antonio P. Vieira, 1964, Pastor, Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, New Bedford.

MAlL 28 1 Rt. Rev. Edward J. Moriarty,

1951, Pastor, St. Patrick, Fall River. . '.' Rev. 'Alfred J. Levesque, 196G, ~tor, St. James, Taunton. l. MAR. 19

.. :.llev. James H. Carr, S.T.L.. ~923, Assistant, St. Patrick, FaD ,River:'

MAlL 30 Rev. Aime Barre, 1963, On slet

lea\l8, Fall River. MAR. 31

Rt. Rev. George C. MaxweD. 1953, Pastor, 55. Peter & PaUl, Fall River.

CORREIA &SONS ONF STOP

SHOPPING CENTER • Television • Furniture

;,. A""li"nces • Grocery ;

104 Allen St., New Bedford

WYman 7-9354

,Michael C. Austin· Inc.

FUNERAL SERVICE

NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

549 COUNTY STREET

Williams' Funeral Home

EST 1870 1 Washington Square"

, . NEW BEDFORD . : 'Reg. Funeral Director and

. Embalmer ., PRIVATE flARKING. AREA

TfL .WV ' ".RnOR

Page 3: 03.17.66

3 Jesuit Says U.S. Vietnam· Policy Basically Correct

WASHINGTON (NC)-An authority on southeast Asia affairs told the House Foreign Affairs Committee here the U.S. policy in Vietnam "is basically correct;" "It is not only justifiable ,it is morally commendable," Fa.ther Daniel Lyons, S.J., told the legis­lators. "It is a combination of Christian charity and en­lightened self-defense. In the l!Nlst we failed to apply the Tru­man Doctrine to Asia, except for South Korea. The failure had hid to our problems there today."

.Father Lyons, now on leave hom Gonzaga University, Spo­kane, Wash., is director of' the Free Pacific Association and founder of the Asian SpeakerS BjJreau With headquarters in New York. He makes frequent vips to southeast Asia.

-Five other members of the twPeakers bureau testified before the . committee investigating the Vietnam and Asian· situation­Stephen C. Y. Pan of New York; Father Raymond J. de Jaegher from Formosa; Stefan Possony of Stanford University, and Maj. Gen. Thomas A. Lane, U. S. Army, retired, of this city.

Dangerous Errors Father Lyons said failure to

apply the Truman Doctrine tn Asia has resulted in "dangerous errors in varying degrees" in the present U.S. policy in southeast Asia He listed 22 "dangerous erro;s" which include the fol­lowing:

"Fear of Red China dominates an of our other policies, e.g., whether we should use the troops from Taiwan, and what target areas should be bombed."

"We think that weakne.ss, I1ather than strength, will dis­courage aggression."

"We let our diplomats over­ride such basic military deci­sions as blockading Haiphong."

"We underestimate the impor­tance of the cold war front .-ithin the United States."

Great Dangers "We base our policy on the

mistaken notion that communist Russia is secretly on our side. The testimony of ex-Ambassador (George F.) Kennan to the Ful­bright Committee on Feb. W, that it is more important to have a 'detente' with Russia than it is to win the war, is typical of this sad mistake."

"We think the UN Secretary General U Thant, is impartial, Utat he is really interested in working toward a just peace, and that he is against 'wars of liberation.' "

"We ·think that North Vietnam will give up easily, so we keep on granting sanctuary to Hai­phong and Hanot"

"We are under the illusion that a stalemate is somehow lDOing to make the enemy with-

Dispenses Students From Abstinence

BATON ROUGE (NC) - An students in elementary, junior and senior high schools who are 1'4 years of age or older, are dis­pensed during school hours from the law of Friday abstinence.

In a letter to all clergy of the diocese, Father Stanley J. Ott, ehancellor, said the dispensation applies to the students whether they provide their own meal M' "­

eat in the school cafeteria. He said the dispensation also applies to school personnel, including eafeteria 'Vorkers and faculty members, provided they eat in the school cafeteria on school days and during school hours only.

The chancellor said the dis­pensation was granted "in order to forestall practical difficulties ordering, preparing and servin!f _d inconvenieneea arisln, from .0001 luncbea.·

draw all of his troops, and give up all that he has been fighting for."

"We fail to realize the great danger of having other wars of liberation commence while this war drags on intenninably, even , though we are committed to de­fend 41 other nations at the same thne."

. "We fail to realize that only Soviet Russia has the power to destroy us, and that we tempt the Kremlin by prolonging the war."

Beginning of Enc1: "We fai: to realize that we can

win the war within a year, but we underestimate our enemy if we think that negotiations can be had just for the asking. On the other hand, it is foolish to think that we will grow tired, but that they never will."

"We fall to realize that if we eompromise in Vietnam, as we did in Laos in 1962, it will be the beginning of the end of the United States as the leader of the free world itself."

"We fail to see that recogni­tion of the Viet Cong means a postwar communist coalition government, something t hat would destroy all that we are fighting for."

"We fall to realize that the critics of our basic policy are either uninformed or unrealistic, or that they may have a differ­ent set of values. We fail to see that there is no reasonable al ­ternative to our basic policy in Vietnam. There will always be excuses for pulling out, or for not winning the war, but there are no good reasons for doing either one."

Mr. Kaszynski's Fu.neral Friday

A Solemn High Mass of Requi­em wHl be offered tOmorrow morning, Friday at 10 o'clock m St. Stanislaus Church, Fall Rlver,- for the repose of the soul of Chester S. Kaszynski, father of Rev. Robert S. Kaszynski, assistant at· the Fall River Parish.

Mr. Kaszynski was born ·in. Warren, the son of Stanislaw Kaszynski and tM late Alexan­dra (Cybbulski) Kaszynski, and has lived in New Bedford for the past 60 years. He was the husband of the late Genevieve Kalisz Kaszynski.

Jln addition to his father and son, he is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Dale Stetson of Fairhaven and Miss Janet Kas­~nski of New Bedford. Four brothers and two sisters also survive.

Burial will be in Sacred Heart Oemetery, New Bedford.

LEGION OF MARY ACIES Annual Consecration Ceremony

SUNDAY, MARCH 20

St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River

1:30 P.M.

His Excellency Bishop Connolly will preside All active and auxiliary members are to attend

See ClTUZENS for the cash you need for any worth­whi1e need-a car, home repairs, a vacation, education, furniture, medical and, dental bills, etc.

Public Invited

" PLAN CAPE DAY AT VOCATION PANORAMA: Preparations for the large contingent of Cape Cod youths on .Saturday, Mar. 26, at the Panorama at Cassidy High, Taunton, area being completed by, left to right: Phil Sul­livan, Rev. Philip A. Davignon, Regional ceo Director, St. Pius X Church, So. Yarmouth; Ron Dumont, Rev. Thomas J. Harrington, Regional CYO Director, St. Francis Xavier Ohurch, Hyannis.

Churchman of Year "

Religious Heritage Award for N. Y. Cardinal Spellman Scheduled June 23 .in Wa'shington

NEW YORK (NC) - Francis to the Cardinal by Dr. Norman Cardinal Spellman of New York Vincent Peale, president of the win be honored as the Church­ Protestant Council of the City man of the Year when Religious of New York and a previous H~ritage in America makes its winner. annual pilgrimage to Washing­ton on June 23. . Religious Heritage in America,

founded in 1951, is dedicated to increasing public awareness. of the nation's religious roots and

.THE ANCHOR-Thurs., March 17, 1966

Extensio!!'l Society Issues Collegium

Collegium, a new journal of pastoral research and apostolic development, will be sent to the hierarchy and pastors this month as a new service of the Catholic Church Extension Society.

The publication will be con­cerned exclusively with research and experimentation having a bearing on pastoral work in this country. It will not be offered for sale. Rt. Rev. Msgr. Kenneth G. Stack, Acting President of the Society, said six issues will ap­pear each year.

A sociological survey of reli ­gious attitudes in two Oklahoma communities will be featured in the first issue. The survey, spon­sored by Extension, was con­ducted by faculty and graduate students of the University of Notre Dame. Further material for Collegium will come from

. leading scholars and persons ac­tive in various phases of the apostolate. The publication will be edited by William J. Jacobs, Executive Secretary of Exten­sion Volunteers and public re­lations counsel to the society. . "Over the years, we· want

Collegium to become the voice of Extension's national apostolic training and research center,It Msgr. Stack said. The center, now being planned, will pro­vide training for clergy, reli ­gious and laity in up-to-the­minute apostolic approaches as well as continuing research re­lated to pastoral needs.

"We will concentrate on soci­ology, depth psychology and various phases of the social sci­ences which can teach us more about effective ways of preach­ing the Gospel to every crea­ture," Jacobs said. "We will also publish articles on communica­tions and various practical ap­plications of modern pastoral theology," he added.

New Paper CORPUS CHRISTI (NC)

The Gulf Coast Register, new official newspaper of this Texas diocese, will begin publication here May 6. _

to fostering cooperation among Catholics; Protestants and Jews.

Cardinal Spellman has been chosen because of his leadership CITIZENS HAPPILY ANNOUNCES in the ecumenical movement non-profit organization.

The award will be presented NEW PERSONAL LOANS UP TO Honor Foundress

DUBLIN (N C) - Ireland's Royal College of Surgeons has conferred an honorary fellow­ship on Sister Mary Martin, foundress and superior general of the Medical Missionaries of Mary. She was the first woman I so honored by the college. (WITH LIFE INSURANCE AT NO EXTRA COS"

Page 4: 03.17.66

4 ,'THE ANq-lOR-Diocese of Fali River-Thurs. Mar. 17, 1966

than the sentimental types ,of "dancing" we loved so much.

But there are some offshoots of "the twist" now, which are not quite in this same harmless category. "The surf," and "!he dog" are at least one _step lower than "the twist" could ever get. And there are others.

Real Purpose Actually, some of these off­

shoots of the twist compare quite favorably to the sort of dance which had previously been re­stricted to honky-tonks and strip joints, and where o~ly the most down-and':'ou,t of paid en­tertainers would attempt them. The obvious purpose of such dances was not "fun," or any­thing like it.

Every bald-headed paunchy customer, and every simple tourist who bought a ticket knew better than that. No, th,e purpose, as you and! I know so well, was simply to arouse pas­sion, and nothing else. The ,pr-o­fessional entertainer who did these dances couldn't have got­ten the job otherwise.

Another thing that gives me quite a chuckle is that these "fads" are started, not by life's successes, but by it!; failures­the drop-Quts, the guys with, nothing better to do, the charac­ters with no job and those who will never need a job, the "en­tertainer" who needs a gimmick to keep from extinction.

Innocent Little Girls It never ceases to ,amaze me

that these kids can indulge in the sort of dancing which all the old pros know is calculated only to arouse human passion, with.. out ever ,tumblin'g to this fact until it's too late.

Oh, the boys sense this, ,but some of these innocent little ,gifls seem 'to think they're ,only doing 'something cute but harm­less. If they only knew, huh? The ironical thing is that this seems to give them .a certain type of flattedng "popularity." If they could only 'hear the way this "popularity" is described in bull sessions, huh? '

Keep the real teens, the gen­uinely bright and maturing enes from being heard. You 'run across a lot of them who think like this girl writes for ,instance:

"I don't twist even though I like to dance fast. I can see

_ where it migh~ have possible bad effects on my partner or on any girl's partner. This wouldn't happen very likely in the milder forms of the twist; but one isn't considered a 'good twister, a champion twister unless ,one gets very twisty.

"The twistier one gets, ,the better 'twister he or llhe is; but the twistier ways ,ar{~ certain1,,: the suggestive w.ays. I' knO'lIV'

some 'of ,my best fri,ends, Giles who are ~xeelIent CatholiCs, see no wreng in twisting;

"Really;r think they.arenaive. They don't know, the 'score

about boys; Even the best, fellows , are ,stili human, an41 if they don't react at the way some girls twist, they ,.are either kidding tiiemselves, or, they' .;lren:t n.~r­~."., '," ,", , ",'

Keep that girl, ·out of the pape!.'s, Klinker! K-eep the hOIne fires, ~urning, Klinker, Gld boy.. And Mn't _let them ,know until it's to iate what a l'E~al fire is

,like, bub-!, " Sincerely,- ...

..:. , Aich

APOSTOlLJIC JEXARCH: Msgr. Justin Najmy, pastor of the Church .of St. Basil, C en t r a I Fall s, has been named by Pope Paul Titular Bishop of Augustopolis in Phrygia and Apostolic Ex­arch for' the Melkites in the U.S. Bishop-elect Najmy's 'exarchy will De a suffragan See of the ecclesiastical prov­inee ,of Boston. NC Photo.

Pa~'CJma , Continued from Page One

that much can be accomplished ,as ,our grammar and high school boys and girls rneet their fellow students from other parts of the diocese.

During the same interview, Rev. Philip Davignon, Cape Spiritual Director for the Con­fraternity of Christian Doctrine, added: "Some feel that the, Cape is really isolated but we trust that our CCD groups will meet -other groups from the Diocese and thus assure them that there is indeed a bond of unity which is truly present".

Scouts to .Attend Rev. Francis 'Mahoney, Chap­

lain for Boy and Girl Scou~s 'OIl

the Cape, announced that plans are in hand for a group of Girl Scouts from that area to attend the ,panorama on ,March 26. ' Plans ,are also being made to encourage 'area Boy Scouts to join the Cape Cod contingent and to have them meet others in the movement 'from throughout the Diocese.

In planning the Scout program, Rev. Walter Sullivan, Diocesan Chaplain, announced that the following would be in charge of their respective 'areas:

Fall River Area-Rev. John Andrews, Chaplain, Will i am Guillmette ,and Mrs. Harold B. Ward.

New Bedford Area-Rev. Wil­liam F. ,::>'ConneIl, Chaplain,

'aided by John Silvia, George F. Maciel, Mrs. Lawrence 1\:, Har­neY,and Mrs. Ernest R. Letoo­Eire.

Cape Cod Area-·Rev. Francis Mahoney, Chaplain, C h a I' 1 e's Walsh, Jos~ph Zloltar, Mrs. Ar­thur, Wills and J~rs. Charles Fuller.

Taunton-Attleboro,Area-R~v.·

~hn ~. Moqre, Chaplain" atde4 'by -Francis Frazier .and, Mrs. , Theooore J. ,AleiJco, Taunhm;' Mrs. Rober~ V. MeGowan, North Attleboro; and Mr: and 'Mrs. J.,­seph F. Murphy, Mansfield:

,,Honor':Priesct BURLINGTON (NC) - Msgr:­

, Edward J ..Fitzsimons, pastor ef' st; Monica's church, Barre, wi-ll be 'honored Saturday for his Vermont civil rights activities at a dinner of,' th.~ Burlington' ~haptet;-NationaLAHsociation fer

'the Ad,vancement '&f ,Colored ,People.:.,' "", , __,' .. . \

Catholic Relief Agency 5lj')~kesman

Sup~orr~s Food for Free<dl@rJ'tm Plan WASHINGTON (NC r - A tee and the House Agriculture

spokesman for the U. S. Catholic Committee in support of the overseas relief agency warmly pending $3.3 billion Food f(}ll! endorsed the administration's Freedom program. proposed Food for Freedom ,plan Food for Freedom is designed /

of foreign, agricultural aid in to extend and revise the U. S. testimony before two 'congres­ Food for Peace program, whose

.sional committees. legislative authorizatir;m, Pub­Msgr. John' F. McCarthy, as­ lic Law 480, expires at the end

sistant executive director of of this year. The new plan in­Catholic ReI i e f Services~Na­ cludes expanded U. S. foed'ship­tional Catholic Welfare Confer­ ments, capital and'technicalas­ence, said the agency "whole­ sistance, and encouragement 4Ilf heartedly supports" the proposal self-help efforts. aimed at meeting the gigantic Under Food for Peace, U. S. problem" of world hunger. government-to-government food

Msgr. Mc;Carthy also cited the aid valued at more than $12 ,overseas aid efforts of CR8­ billion has been sent abroad. NCWC and other voluntary In addition, more' than $1.6 agencies and said "we desire to billion worth of U. S. food has continue to participate in an been distributed free, to th'e even greater way * * * in the world's needy under the pro­struggle." gram through U. S. voluntary

The monsignor testified before agencies. Catholic Relief' Ser­the Senate Agriculture Commit- vices is the largest- of these.

HOW TO KEEP LENT

'THE- HOLY FATHER'. MISSION AID TO THI ORIENTAL OHURI"

THE Fasting Is not the only way to sacrifice. Total NEW generosity to the hungry overseas can ache like WAYan empty stomach.•.. In addition to prayer lind

abstinence. here's what we recommend for

"HOW CAN I KEEP LENT7" FEED Gin India this week priests and SisterS are sub· THE sistlng on oonces of rice each day so they Clan

HUNGRY ,share what they have with lepers and orphan•• $10 will feed s, family for several weeks at leaat. $50 wiH feed five families. $100, ten famllle•• . .. Only $975 gives 8 priest a two·acre 'model farm' te raise his awn food and teach his par· Ishioners haw to raise more food. ArchblshGp ~r Gregorios will write to thank you.

C TRAIN 0 YOlA share In the good SIsters do.••• In T.HI·

liSTERS cherry,souUl India, our Sisters of Mary "mmacu· FOR late sive fnle £are to the sick. The penn"•• THE Slster-s must buifd a small chapel ($1,8150) 1M

POOR their Slsters~iA·tr8inins now, however. Hame II for your favorite' saint, 1n your Joved ones' mem~

ory, 1f you build it a'''b'1 yourself. Write UI rlillt .way. ..

YOUR 0 Enable a ~irl, to become-. Sister. For 41t1 I 'OWN' day ($12.50 a month. $150 I year, $3001110·

'SISTER ~ethef) you am pay in-full for hertwo-yeartreln· ing, have. Sister 'of your own.'

•,TELL 0 Ther. are at least 4& mHlJon Catholica In th~ YOUR U.S.A. alone. If each-gave lO¢ on the 40 days of

FRIENDS Lent (only $4' per Catholic) the Holy Father ABOUT could give $16 miHion to,tile poor. turn tha

US wor:d upside down with goodnessl

C MA,KE ... 0 Ever wish you could>be 8 prlest7 For only 27 to YOUR. day you can·help 8 poor boy become 6 prl.., WISH His ,six-year training costa only $600 all told

COME TRUE ($8.50 8 month, $100 a year).

# FiNAL 0 For only $10,000 this Lent you can build m

THOUGHT India 11 oompJete 'parlsh plant' (church, rectory, school, ef>nvent}. Ellfr '..a' title Is CATHOLIC_IEAST WaFM. AnoctAllOR when you make,a wiJJ. '

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PfUu- "AMI_--: _

ralum eouponwith)'OUT' .TftlQ, _

off.lna

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FRANCl8,CARlHNAUINl.lMANt ~aIOnt MSGR. J()SfiPW T. RYAN. National S"r.~"

Wrltc;C"ni'lLKl NlAtt fMT WaYAR! Assoo. 330MaGisell~·New:York. N-.Y. UleW Tlteflhose: 212/Vl11Mm "!840

Page 5: 03.17.66

THE ANCHOR-SCites Opposition How Alre Diocesan Catho,lics Observing Lent Thurs., March 17, 1966

To Broadening In This First Non-Fasting Year? Board Advocates

AborH~~ Laws NEW YORK (Ne) - The Now that Lenting fasting has gone out Pope John's open window, what are Dio­ Red C'hena in UN

director of the New York cesan Catholics doing to mark the season of penance? Contrary to hopes expressed by ST. LOUIS (NC)-The gen­archdiocese's Family Life Bureau said here that "Cath­olics will object to any widening 0f the abortion laws."

Father William F. McManus made the statement as a commit"" tee of the New York Legislature opened hearings on a bill relax­mg the state's legal restrictions on abortion. He said the bill would be "no solution at all" to the problems it seeks to deal with.

Under present New York law, abortion is permitted when nec­essary to save the mother's life. The proposed legislation would permit abortion when the preg­nancy resulted from rape or in­cest; when there was substantial risk of grave impairment to the mother's physical or mental health; or 'when there was a substantial risk that the child would be born with a grave mental or physical defect.

Father McManus noted that flte proposal is "not something eooked up in the mind of a legis­lative committee" but is "a brainchild of the American Law Institute."

'Moral Ca]lousness' The ALI's model penal code,

section on' abortion is substan­tially the same as the proposal before the state legislature. Sim­ilar measures have been pro­posed in California, Illinois, Maryland, Minnesota and New Hampshire, but none has been enacted up to now.

Father McManus, noting the origin of the proposal, said it is "certainly not clear ¢ ¢ ¢ that the desire for change is based on any real consensu~ or grass roots movement in New York, despite the protestations of certain vocal groups and poorly mounted sur­veys made in other states."

"Of course Catholics will ob­ject to any widening of the abortion laws," he said. "It, be­eomes increasingly difficult to nnderstand as the hearing pro­gresses and the appalling silence about the unborn child's right to live. Abortion of a fetus is considered in the same category as removing an appendix. This !fl morlll callousness."

ReligioM~ ~~Mc~tion

In TheoG@@)f S~hool WASHINGTON (NC) - The

eatholic University of America bas announced relocation of its nationally recognized Depart­ment of Religious Education into its School of Sacred Theology.

Bishop William J. McDonald, ooctor of the university, said the action, unanimously approved by the academic senate, is a it t ric tl y administrative <me which will not affect the cur­ricula, degree offerings, faculty or heads of thf' two course offer­ings. '

Bishop McDonald said the move was made in accordance with article 86 of the univer­

--..sity's statutes which states:- ''The School of Sacred Theology is mot confined to the School of Theology, properly so called, but embraces also the courses in l!Ieligion in all of the schools."

~hurd~mglN of Year' WASHINGTON (NC)-Francis

eardinal Spellman of New York will 'be hj)nored as "Churchmail of the Ye'ar" here June 23 for lIlis ecumenical leadership by Religious H~ritage of America, Inc., an interfaith, nonprofit or­ganization. Dr. Norman Vincent Peale, president of the Protes": tant Council of the City of New' York, will present the award.

everyone from Pope Paul down that the mark of a mature Christian would be his wiIl­ingness to continue fasting as a free expression of sacrifice, some area Cat hoI i c s sheepishly admit that now they don't have to, they're doing not h i n g for Lent.

"They're probably the ones , who never did uast anyaway,"

commented one observer, while another gave the reluctant ones points for honesty, at least. "Some people talk a hard Lent, and that's all," he said.

There are many, however, who al'e continuing the tradi­tional fast, and some say they find it easier now it's a matter of choice. And non-1asters are find­ing other ways of doing penance. One woman, a two-pack-:a-day smoker, who never gave up cig­arettes when she fasted, is stay-... ing away from them now. "So far, so good," she reports trium­phantly.

No Rejoicing Another woman commented

on a surprising aspect of the lifting of fast regulations. "For­merly, there was so much talk before Lent of how hard it was going to be. But when the fast was taken away, no one said anything: You'd think they'd be dancing in the streets, but they were so casual about it."

As ever, the young fry have found original Lenten sacrifices. One child said solemnly, "I can't give up candy. All the Sisters said not to."

Upon surprised parental prob­ing, she elucidated. Seems that all the Sisters had said, "Do something positive, not some­thing negative like giving up candy." For t.his child, the "something positive" is definite­ly worthwhile - struggling out of bed and to seven o'clock Mass every morning.

Her little sister is going to Mass too, but has added, an ex­tra. She isn't watching "Dennis the Menace" during Lent-and let no one say this isn't a sacri ­fice, when all one's brothers and sisters are glued to the TV set.

On the subject of Mass-going: every priest informally polled said he had noticed an upswing in daily attendance this Lent, al ­though some felt that the con­venience of Mas!:: at late after­noon and early evening hours was also responsible for this.

On balance, an old saying comes to mind: he who refuses to suffer refuses to be crowned.

Sayss Church Needs Laity for Mission

SYDNEY (NC)-Joseph Car­(tinal Cardijn, the founder and head of the worldwide move­ment of Young Christian Work­ IT'S NOW O.K.: Between-meal refrigerator raids are ers, told about 700 young people o.k. this, Lent. Are many enjoying them 7 Read accompany­here in Australia that the Cath­ ing feature story to find out. olic Church cannot continue its mission in the world without the help of the laity.

The 83-year-old Belgian prel­ate challenged his l!.udience to bring Christ to the world by their daily example. "I cannot replace the worker in the office or in the factory," he said. "Nor can the Pope, the cardinals, the bishops or priests.

"It is the men and women who are there, and they are the Church. All have a divine mis­sion, ,and all workers are asso­ciated in thi!i, mission." .

. Senate 'of Pri'e'sts DUBUQUE (NC) - Ar~bishop

James. J. Byrne has established a senate of' priests to -serve him in a consultative capacity in im­plementing decisions of the Sec­ond VaticaIll Council for the Du­buque archdiocese. The Rnate _nsisti of 3G priem.

School to Study WASHINGTON (NC) - The

Georgetown University medical school here will become the first clinical laboratory 'for the Food and Drug Administration.

The FDA will pay the univer­sity up to $302,170 during the next year to study drug effects, develop improved drug testing techniques, and do laboratory and computei:' studies.

Dr. Christopher Martin of Georgetown will direct the new program, under which the med­ical school agreed to make all its medical departments available to the FDA. Martin said the pro­gram would become a part of every major research program now at Georgetown.

The study will consider the ethical aspects of cirue testiRi,

Drugs ,for FDA the use of drugs in heart disease, psychological studies on the un­born child, n~urological diseases, infectious diseases, metabolism and reproduction, kidney ail ­ments and cancer.

B!Jnquets • Testimo,nials Fashion Shows Special Parties

* WYman 9-6984 or ~Ercury 6-27~

eral board of the National ~oun­cil of Churches by a 90-to-3 vote advanced admission of Red China into the United Nations.

The board, which is the policy making arm of the council of 30 Protestant and 0 r tho d 0 x churches in this country, also recommended that the United States consider establishing dip­lomatic relations with Red Chiria, approve free, travel be­tween the two countries and permit sale of food and other "non-strategic" mat e ria 1 s to communist China through com­mercial channels.

The board's recommendations are not binding on the member organizations, and are expected to stir up some controversy among the affiliated church organizations.

The board's recommendation said it realized China is in the stage of communist development and organization, and has beer "outspokenly aggressive" whih: proposing peaceful co-existence,

"We opposed both these trends," the board said. The rec­ommendation said despite thE' trends the U. S. should develop a "new policy of support" fOl seating communist China in thE: UN.

Prelate Partici~ates

In Service for Qyeen KINGSTON (NC) - Bishop

John McEleney of Kingston too~' part in a Bible service attendef by Queen Elizabeth II at thE' famed resort of Montego Ba:y here in ,Jamaica.

Bishop McEleney read ~ Scripture lesson during the ser­vice held b ar_ Anglican church, Another lesson was read by thE' Duke of Edinburgh, and a ser­mon was preached by Anglicar Bishop Percival Gibson of Ja­maica.

Two days previously, Bishopf McEleney and Gibson werE' given places of honor in thE' chamber of the Jamaican par­liament which the Queen opened with solemn ceremonies,

Joint Reh'~lt1t DE KALB (NC)-A group of

l\;1ethodist, Luthern, Presbyte­rIan and Catholic students from Northern Illinois University held a joint retreat here on the theme, ''The Christian in the Modern World."

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Page 6: 03.17.66

6 THE ANCHOP-Diocese of F<;,II River-Th~rs. Mar. 17, 1966 . "Peacemakers Priest Becomes Staff Member.Letters Menning Love As PsychologistEver since the New Deal days of the H130~s, Ameri­

eans have become familiar with the "alphabet" agencies NEW YORK (NC) _ .... of the government, Thus children grow up eutting their PauJist priest has joined the teeth on such common ones as F.B.I. and C.I.A. and. are staff of the Ameriea~ Fo~ even at home with F.e.e.· and T.V.A. to say nothing of dation of ReligiOn and ps;..

ehiatry as a clinical'psyChologist. Dr. Norman Vincent· 'Pea-,

S.E.e. and NATO, SEATO a~d the rest. The theory is that it is· easier to' say and write a few letters than to

president and'eo-founder of thespend the time and effort pronouncing a jaw-breaking 29-year-old interfaith institutiOJli,all-explaining title. said Father Arthur F. Le Blane.

How many persons' would ·know what CRS·NCWC C.S.P., will serve 'on both tbi IItood for? . ' eJinical ~d trairuung staffs ai,

the foundation. '.Those outside the United States' and 8eeing these The 40-year-old priest, a ~letters on a bag of rice, a bundle of clothing, a package

tive of Lynn, ill a. veteran of theof medicine know that they mean life and health and 11. S. Air Force. He was grad~ the opportunity to live· yet a little while longer. ated from Norwich Universitv

American Catholics should Know that these letters in 1948 and was ordained • priest in 1956. ' .mean Catholic Relief Services-National Catholic Welfare

Father r.e Blanc served cliD­Conference. They mean that <:the Catholics of America leal internships at the Universiv are giving their Bishops and the Bishops' administrative of California, at the Los Angeles

agency-the National Catholic Welfare Conference-the Neuropsychiatric Hospital, a n·d means to combat hunger and disease and cold in every at the Columbus Psychiatrte eorner of the world. ' . . . Hospital in Ohio. While workilltJ

at the American Foundation, beAmerican Catholil:s should know that their support will commute weekly to Wash­

of the Bishops Relief Fund this Sunday means the CRS­ ington, D. C., to teach at st. NCWC can continue to do for another year the work it Paul's College, major semina. has done for fifteen years-perform the corporal works of the Paulist Fathers. of mercy which are and should be synonymous with Chris­ The American Foundation of!Hono', Primate

Religion and Psychiatry was settianity. -' up to provide trained pastoralAmerican Catholies should know that every dollar Niagara U to Award Honorary Degree eounselors for all faiths.

they give to the Bishops Relief Fund is multiplied eighteen To Polish Cardinal Wyszyns'ki in O~tobertimes in the amount of food it buys, in the amount' of drugs supplied.' . N I A GAR A UNIVERSITY lenium of Christianity of the Social Services

(~:C)-Stefan Cardinal Wyszyn- Polish people. PORTLAND (NC) - Blsh(JJAmerican Catholics should know that these letters ski, Primate of :Poland, will re- "We are conferring the honor . Daniel J. Feeney of Portland hasstand for the largest non-government voluntary :relief ceive an honorary doctorate of on Cardinal Wyszynski," said established a Diocesan Bureau of

agency in the world. . laws from Niagara University at Father Kenneth Slattery, C.M., Human Relations Services to co­American Catholics should further know that while a special convocation on Mon- university president, "for 11))­ ordinate Catholic social service

.they should look with, pride on what they have done day, Oct. 3. holding the dignity of man and programs in Maine. The b.ureau The convocation will be one . for preserving the right of the win serve as a liaison· betweenthrough CRS-NCWC, the Catholics of 'this affluent nation

Polish people and the' Roman Catholic . parishes, schools andgive individually little more than the equivalent price of of the focal points of the Buffalo Catholic Church in the face' of institutions and other ageneJee a package of .cigarettes, haraly the admission price to Diocesan observcIDce of the Mil- communiSt tyranny." ~d serviCe groups. . . a movie, about the priee of a hamburger' and soda.

But to those outside our nation these letters mean someone does care and this in the mime of religion.'

. These letters to them are an alphabet that means love.

Lenten ·Check ... .The days and. wee](s

. . of Lent are slipping by. as they

always and inevitably do. This is a Lent· that waS to be lived, according to the "aggiornamento" mentality of the Vatican Council' II Church, out of love rather than be­cause of law. Now. is a good time for Catholics to pause and ask themselves how they have measured up to the Council call for 'responsibility, Christian' maturity.

. Has their 'been more intense prayer, notieeable pen­ance, greater concern for· personal and corporate holi­ness? Or has there been a great deal of talk about the mature Christian with very little proof in acts of this?

There is always danger, when: the ,eh'urch 'under­'takes one of her periodic' reformations of the human ele­ment within herself, that there is great analysis, pene­trating diagnosis, ,splen.did planning 'for the future, and ]~ttle presept act. . .

It. is not enough 1m ;talk penance-it must be done,today. ' '.

It is not enough to talk of the assumption Of maturity in ,the Church-it ·ritustbe ~ show~ iii act, today.. '

It is not enough ,to hail the refoxmation that,is going on within Catholicism"":'·it must be evident· in Catholics; lives, today.

This Lent is a test of this. Is. it being met?

@rheANCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FJ,t.L RIVER-' . .' . Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocesel:W f,ol!:River

. . !, . " 41.0 Highland Avenue . . . . , Fall River, ..:Mass. 02722. ' ' ..675-71511 .,

.: .:. PUBLIS';'t:q "., ' ..

'.. ",j" .. - . , .. '. ·MoSt. Rev.)J~m~s L. Connoriy, D.D:, PhD;,"'" .'" , . '. GE"'r:~AL .MA~AGER ASST. G,fNERAL .MAN.(GER .It: ~v n"':';jel F; St1Q'lIoc. M.A. '. ·~ev. Joh" ... tt;iec'oll''.,' ""1 '.' , . '.. ' '. .. • •.. ,. , , ..",.

·,..:;~ANA~ING.EDfTOR,: " . . ...• "., :; , ::.' '., , .; :! HUlWh "J•. Golden' ".."',;!. ~ . -. '. ;,". ,.. -. h .. '.." . .-.

Priest:

i '

Prayer i)fthe· Fa~thful

The Lord be'with you. '

All: And with your spirit.

Priest: Let us pray. Beloved in Christ, God, our Father has brought us here together as his family. LetU$ now humbly ask him for our needs.

Lector: That you guide the young rilen and women of this Diocese in the choice of their vocation. .

AD: We beseech you; hea,r us.

Lector: That those you call 1;0 the Sacred Priest~ will courageously ae­.cept 'the challenge to share more fully.' in the vocatiqn of Christ.

AD~ We beseech you, hear uS. . \ Lector: That those yo~' ~ to.the religious :Jife wi)l' generously seek to

:fol]ow Christ' m.search. ofperfection~ " . . . .

All:. We beseech y.on, hear 1i~~

: Lect,Or; That mothenJ- and' fath~rs m~y rej~iee as -~u call their children to yo~r' s~iee, "

AU: We beseech you, hear uS. ' . ' Lector:-That yo:u may grant he.alth of soul an:d body to (N.N. and) the sick

. (of our parish). .. All: . We beseech you, hear us. "

Lector: 'rhat you may grant eternal rest to (N.N. imd) .all the faithful de­parted. . .

/ All:' We beseech you, hear us:

Lector: Christ, hear U8. .

A,J1:. , . <Christ,gr~ci~usly: hear, ~s.

. '.

- ' AD=--·

. ',:' Not~ ,

Priest: . God~ our refuge and .our;'str~n~th.an~ ~ouice of ali goodness, heed the'holy p~ayers of your Church and grant that we,fully,obtainwhat

.we ask fo~ ill faith. ThrOugh Christ 0ur Lord ' . . . . AmeD~" ";.' , ,

.~ ,~ 'recited at 'aJFMailse8 daii,.· ~urin. "V.tion ,Nove~a,-M~teh . 18-2'7~'1966. . I· - • , - ,

.... ~ ,~

., .., . ......' "-~

. j ..... ,

Page 7: 03.17.66

The Pari§h Parade 88. PETER AND PAlJL. "~:'; FALL RIVER , Sunday, April 17 is th~ ,date

set for the Woman's Club an­nual Com m u n ion bre~Fdast. Speaker will be Rev. William O'Connell, The unit will' hold a Il:ookie and candy sale following all Masses Sunday, Mauch, 20, and a meeting slated for Monday evening, April 4 will be 'pre­ceded at 7:30 by a living rosary in the church.

ST. ANNIE, FALL RllVEB.

The Council of Catholic Women announces a cake sale for"Sun­

, day, April 17. Member~ 'iVill hear the' parish boys' choir. at 'their meeting Monday, April 4.. " • !.:ll

IIOOR:IJ).CtlJII.Al'lI'fZ CONCIElP''Il'TI<l>N, lFAl1IL RHVIEE . ,,: " Holy Name Society and Wom­en's Guild members will co­sponsor a penny sale at 8 Mun­day night, March 28 in the church hall. The event win ben­efit the parish scholarship fund.

SANTO CHlltllS'll'O. F AJLIL lltlIVEIl

Corporate Communion will 'be received at 9 o'clock Sunday morning, March 20, by members of the Council of Catholic Women. Breakfast will follbw, with Mrs. Mary Faria in ch:hrge of arrangements. A potluck shp­per and silent auction are slated for Tuesday, April 19.

SA'(Cl1tIEJD HIEAR'Il', NlZW lBIEDrr:'Oml)

,New CCD officers are Edmund Lafl2mm2, president; Pie, r. I' e Paradis, vice-president; Mrs. Rita Lefrancois, secretary and treasure... Committee chairmen include Mr. and Mrs. Roger rv1enarcl, Edgar Boyer, Pierre Heb2rt, Lonaine Vanasse, Lio­nel Bouchard!, Bernard Landre­ville, Mrs. Edmund Laflamme,' and Rene LaFrance.' .

SAC11tlZD J!l'lZAB'lI', FALL RlVlE8.

Mrs. James H. Hoyle Jr. and, Mrs. Herbert B. Reid Jr. are chairmen of an open meeting planned by the Women's Guild for Monday, April 4, A penny sale will form part of the pro­gram.

OUR LADY OF ANGELS, FALL RIVER

Council of Catholic Women officers to be Installed at' 5 o'cloc!l; Mass Sunday afternoon, May 29 include Miss Clorinda Ventura. president; Mrs. Mary Mathews, vice-president; Mrs. Dorothea Almeida, treasurer; Mrs. Mary Correia and Mrs.' Mary Velozo, secretaries. .

Next council meeting is Wed­nesday, 'April 13 and also planned is the serving of break­fast to the parish confirmation class Sunday, April 17. A Com­munion breakfast is slated for Sunday, May l.

ST. ELIZABETH, Ji'ALL RIVER ,A ham whist Is scheduled by

tbe Women's Guild for 8 Satur­4ay night, March 26 in the par­ish hall. Chairmen are Mrs. Alice Correira and Mrs. Eva

CORPUS 'c.mlSn SANDWICH .

Corpus Chr:isti-St. Teresa Gund will hold a P1lnny sale Friday night,' March 25 at Father Clin­ton Hall, Sandwich. Mrs. Kath­erine M. Jones is chairman.

ST. JOAN OF ACe, OR14EAl\l:S

The Women';; Guild win sJXln­SOl' a social tomorrow night. lV1pm~rs have as a project the making of bed pads for Rose Hawthorne Lathrop Home.

S'll'. L;:IAIlY' CA'FllUEID>Il&JL, I:<&JLl1 mrVEU

The Women's Guild plans a cal{e sale for SUc1day morning, MarcIl' 20 in tcle school, starting at 8:~5 and following all subse­

- quenf Masses. Doughnuts and coffee will be available. Mrs. D~nnis Lynch is chairman.

oun LADY OP PGa~G'Il'UAJL ~ELW, NE~VBEDWOR&

A Women's Guild committee planning a post-Lenten dance will meet Wednesday, March 30 in the church h'all. Next regular meeting of the guHd will be held. at 6:30 Sunday night, April 3, also in the hall.

VIISJi'Il'A nON G1!JITILD, NORTH lEASTlAlAM'

Guild membern will mee~ Thursday, April 14 at the home

, of Mrs. Edmund lIebert. Returns are requested before Friday, April ,I for the Easter Ham Din­ner Raffle. Drawing will be held that date.

0811 'II..&D)7 ilJlW 'll'lHIG C&lP'E. 'BlRlEWS'Il'lE13 '

CYO members will hold a public penny sale at 7:30 Wed­nee/ay night, March' 23 in the church hall. Proceeds will b?ne­fit a fund for a trip to Washing­ton'in April. Dcmations may be given to .members or left in the hall.

ST. JOSEPH. FALL RIVER

A parish mission with the theme "A Bible in every borne, a Missal in every hand," will be­gin Monday, Ma,rch 21 for wom­en and Monday, March 28 for' men.

A rumm21ge sale wUI be held from 6 to 9' tomorrow night and from 9 to noon Saturday in the Brightman Str~et parisb hall, Donations may be left at the hall from Z 10 9 today.

The Clover C~ub Choir will sing at 11 o'clock Mass Sunday morning, March 2(); and the Men's Club will serve its annual St. PatJrick's SUPpelI' from 6 to' 7:30 tonight.

HOLY NAME. FALL 'RIVER

A rummage sale will be held in the school hall from 6 to 8. Friday night, March 25 at the school hall. Donations may .be left at the schco·Y any afternoon from Tuesday, March 22 through Friday, the 25th

ST. WILLIAM, 'FALL RIVER

'lHIELP RETARDED: Student teacher from Marymount Manhattan College helps a retarded child to develop his vocabulary at the Kennedy Child Study Center, founded by the family of the late President John F. Kennedy. Sis-' ter Dymphna Leonard, RSHM; a' physican, is Director of the Department of Special Education at Marymount Manhattan. NC Photo.

~@U1fUmruD~ffiD@81 ~~U~~

Azevedo. A malassada breakfast Annual guildoIa of the Wom­and sale are planned to follow en's Guild is slated for Thursday, all Masses Sunday, March ~O, also in the hall. Next nigutar' duild meeting will be held at 7:30 Tuesday night, April 12.

April 14 Illt Fall River Grange Hall. Donations should Toe brought to the parish all-purpose room by Sunda37, April 10, ..

ST•. JOHN OF GOD. SOMERSET

Rev. John Foley, C.S.C., of the Holy Cross Mission Band, Will

:' NOTRE DAME, Members will be hostesses at give a mission for the women ,: FALL RIYER a meeting of the Guild for the of' the parish starting Sunliay,

Announcement is made of a Blind to be heIel Sunday, March ,March 20. :' parish bazaar to be held Satur­ 27 at St. Joseph's School hall.

.' day, March 26 and S3.turday, "ST. MICHAEL, S.EIAVING ": ,April 2, ' OOIEAN GROVU : QUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION. i The Catholic' Women's 'Club " FINE "ITALIAN fOOD;­,~OSTEItVIlLLE will sponsor la Spring hat party GO N' DOL A" :~ -: The wonien's Guild wm hold on Sunday from noon to 8 in the .. ' ";' .: It:3 anllual gr~ tea from,.a,tQ,5·! e.venjms in,the parish·halt.Mrs. '." RESTAUll.blNT and'(OUN~$. ; ~his afternoon in the church hall. .John LaFrance, chairman, and ., on tcike Sabbatia :" i '; 'tjckets wlll be available at the Mrs. Phil~p Durette, co-chairman, ' '. : Qoor, according to announcement have annpunced that admission 1094 Bay Street , .. " Made by Mrs. Roland Ashley and is free and refreshments w,ill be" TAUNTON _. .VA 4-8154,; Mrs. John Hehell'.ehal-rmcn.. -::'.' '." j;ervoo. " :" ~~

~D~®[Ji)C£@

The commission noted that the general' usage in the United States starting on Passion Sun­day permits English in almost all ,the priestly prayers said aloud or sung. Besides the col­lect-type pray'er, this includes the preface and the prayer for peace and deliverance from evil which concludes the Lord's Prayer, as well as an the dia­logue-tite salutations and re­sponses between priest and people.

Norris H. Tripp SHEEt METAL

J. TESER, Prop. INDUSTRIAL

RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL

253 Cedar ~t., New Bedford WY 3·3222

-Stu Il'teVGnt & Hook Est. 1897

Builders SuppUes ~, : ,2343 p",rch~se Street '

. " New 8edlord WY 6-5661'

THE ANCHOR- ,7 Thurs., March 17, 1966

Bishops Res~ttle

Cuft,C!ln Refu~~es WASHINGTON (NC) - Hap­

penings elsewhere in the world in recent weerts have somewhat overshadowed III humanitarian project which, in some aspects, is the greatest effort of its kind in this nation's history-the re­ception and relocation of Cuban refugees coming to the United States.

Just how many Cubans have come to the United States to es­cape fi-om communist Cuba c'an not be put down precisely. Since the program was more or less regularized and an airlift insti ­tuted on Dec. 1 more than 12,000 Cubans have entered thc coun­try.

But this has been reJat'vely recent, and long b2fore that Cubans came in smaH grOU[EJ in small boats, at their own consid­erable risf{, in what one author­ity on the matter has called "the Dunkirk of our day."

It can be said, however, that more than 70 ~r cent of all those resettled in this country have been placed in dioceses throughout the country by the Catholic bishops, acting through the Department of Immigration of the National Catholic We1:fare Conference.

W'@~® ~®I7ll@]~ "ir[j'(1!Jd~8

[?@U' I?@@dl ~[k@~G'@.C0'® e/

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Y1i. an audience "lith th~ prcsider.:: of the InternaUonal Catho~ic C:,a­rities organization, Pope Pau] VI made the first in a series of practical arran~emcnts for al ­leviating the famine crisis in India.

The Vatican City newspaper revealed that in addition to money Pope Paul sent (reported to 'be $100,000) he has made ar­rangements to send 90 trucks of various sizes to transport rice and grain in India. The Indian goyernment had previ­ously noted this was one of the most urgent items needed aside from food.

BEfORE YOU BUY-TRY

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Page 8: 03.17.66

" , j);...-O : ii 'n 'A .,';"., I~. 8,... !~~.A.N.C.~OR--D!o,:e5e.ofFotltti~~TThurs:Mo!":p, 19~~ . 'I ~ •••~~"~·;v,~·UAS· ,~, r'ene·WQ .... ':.\::. ":.1:": . ~ _. .. -< • ..." or • "', •.• , . •. '. •• •••••• j .... ,~: "_:... '-,", I "...-, ":. - . ., .-' .- '.

..., .. ~.. .. Seen 'Esse'riti,a I ~,it's Frusfratin'g, Interrnina'ble " CINCINNATI (NC)~A bis~ .here called oft nuns alld' otheT Religious to fan the flatpes ~Replacing Stole,n Wallet Cards 'renewal in the Catholic Churcbl.

By Mary Tinley Daly The Head of the House recalls a plane trip when, an

incoming passenger asked, before taking the seat beside him, "I beg your pardon, sir, but do you happen to be a grandfather?" Surprised, the Head of the House owned up to it. "But I don't carry Furthermore, you can't evenpictures," he added, noting stop to have a good cry when the stranger's bulging brief­ you discover the loss. There isn't case. "O.K.," the stranger time.

First you have to hop onto thetook his seat and spread· out his telephone, notify credit depart­papers. "Been stuck with too n ents of stores where you havem '" n y grand­accounts, the bank, the Depart­fathers." 'r l' i p ment of Vehicles and Traffic,proceeded in mu­Social Security-and the parentstually satisfied of your grandchildren. ' si·lence.Whether

Then you have to start writing CHARTER TO ])EAF COUNCIL: Following the TVagrandmothe.... eould exercise -endless letters corroborating Mass on Sunday morning, members of the Christ the King.

your p~niC-strick.eri telephonesue h restraint Chapter No. 91 of the International Catholic Deaf Associ-­calls, and endure' a hiat'-!s ofis' a moot ques­ ation receivnd their charter at a eomrrlUnion breakfast atcharge communication. Y o.ution, at least wonder, during this' hiatus, }f the Kenn~dy Center, New Bedford;' Left to r.ight: Mrs:not any of the

gr~lI1dmothers I you've spread the net complete:' Catherine Gallagher, vice-president of the ICDA; Rev. ly. Is sombod~ posing as youknow. Matter of James A. McCarthy, Diocesan Moderator; and Francis S.buying perhaps a mink stole?fact, I thoroughly enjoy seeing Motta, president of the Diocesan ·Chapter. Telephoning to Hong Kong?·pictures of other people's grand­Driving to San Francisco onchildren, a pleasure second only your gasoline? Showing pictures. to disp~aying my own gallery of

art. of your grandchilden and pass­ ~Exe~rcise More Influence' ing them off....as her own?So, when a friend, an acquaint­

Few Good Thievesance or even a fellow traveler Sister Mary luke Champions Women'sMeanwhile, you're promisingbrings out her fat red wallet St. Anthony all sorts of goodtes(and isn't it nearly always red?) Rights in Church Affairs for his poor, hoping against hopewe have a high old time compar­

ing, -the various family group­ DAYTON (NC)-The modem type of .discrimination, whetherthat yours is the Good Thief who

ings: will just take the money and' woma!,!, who has widened 'her. social or cultural, whether based "These four belong to. my -mail back the wallet or hide ·it in sphere of competence, must ex- I;m sex, race, social condition,.

oldest daughter. That littie fel ­ the bushes at YOllr house.:.--any­ ercise more influence in the language or religion, is to bething! ' .··low the one in the re~l' 'shirt, . modern Chureh, Sister. Mary overcome and eradicated as con­

wh; .his teacher says he i.s .the It can happen, ,but, doesn't , Luke of the Si,sters of Loretto trary to God's intent." . very ofteil. ._. brightest child she hall. ever ~!>~~ n~arly 1,50.0 .women of ~1l " €urrent sociological and· psy­

taught.'" . . The~,' the ,-,real'., you" has. to faiths at a meeting, here. ,'chologicl'll ,changes require that .. 'Then we seethe family of "my stand up and be idlmtifed' aU ..The firs~ America~.. woman to the' status of women in society

son George,'? hear all .about liitl~ over over again; start recon- serve as auditor :at the Second, be' properly respected she said.' . . Emily .. and how well she plays struction. ' : Vatican Co.uncil' and chairman _ "We can move forivard, not"

the piano, have a 'peek at a line­ '. To begin with, Y'ou have to get of the National Conference of. stridently or aggressively but up,in Fort Wortp, "taken outsid.e a' new .wallet, "and some new Major Superiors of Women Heli;' openly" to share in the rich'neSs t'he new home they've just built," money. Day by day, the' mail gious, Sister Mary Luke cham- of things to come to which botli---'" .and we're launcheq! brings duplicates--with adjusted pioned the rights o.f women from men and 'women Will contribute;

'. . Beware Red Wallet!;. numbers-of the cards. The the pulpit of St. Albert's church she said. Yes, we admit, we "just hap~ wallet starts extending its girth. here. .

pen" to have a few pictures. and This one, you vow, will not be- . There is a parallel between the out comes your own fat wallet" come as hefty as its predecessor.. civil rights movement and the Four Catholic' Colleges brown. Yes, brown, though its For instance, a deposit key and , movement for the exercise of predecessor had been red, a Social Security card can find woman's rightfl, she said. In Get Housing loans

We'd been of the red-wallet safer haven than in a portable civil rights there has developed' WASHIN'GTON (NC)-Collegeschool of thought-:-easier to find . and, liftable wallet. .'for some "an awareness of our housing loans have been ap­when you open your pursE', until prejudices whieh a few yearsNo, it will contain just the proved to four Catholic collegesrecently 'I< * * ago we didn't even know ex­necessities: money and the cards for construction of new build­

"Bet" it was red," said the po­ isted."you actually use constantly-and ings, the Community Facilities liceman when we reported the pictures of the grandchilden. "There are "many times when Administaration announced here. loss. "A clever thief can spot we aren't even conscious of the

Silver lining? The pictures are The loans went to Mountand lift a red wallet and be off prejudices against women," sheup-to-date! Mercy College, Pittsburgh, Pa.­

before you know it." said. "We need to become aware. $1,640,000 for a dormitory;Ever have this happen to you? When we do, We can go for­ Quincy (Ill.) College $1 million

It's a common occurrence in Assures Missioners ward in the Church." for a dormitory; St. Edward's I Rightful statureoffices, stores, libraries, even in University, Austin, Tex.-$661,­Of Ma.il From Home Catholics are going to have tochurch. 000 for a dormitory; and Rosary"absorb" the documents of -theAnd to replace the contents of JERSEY CITY (NC) - Mail Hill College, Buffalo, N. Y.­Vatican council before womenany wallet - ugh! Loss of the from home is one thing a couple $1,200,00 for a student uniongain their' rightful stature in themoney is bad enough-too bad­ of young lay medical mission­ buildIng.

Church, 'Sister Mary Luke said.but when you try mentally to aries won't lack while serving She singled out specifically areconstruct exactly what was in Malawi, Africa.

statement in the Constitution oncontained therein, you're in for They've been "adopted" by the the Church in the Modema frustrating experience. 'rhere freshman class at the Academy World, declaring that "everyare credit cards for department of St. Aloysius here where Mrs.. stores and gasoline; bank, club, Carole Gyula Speckhart was a hospitalization and "I am a· member of the class of 1956. The Women's Retreat Catholic" identification cards; class will undertake a letter:- The Diocesan Retreat LeagueSocial 'Security and library writin'g campaign .to Dr. -and will conduct a retreat for women cards; driver's license; a special . Mrs. Vincent J. Speckhart.:One the wee~e~4~f M.:ay,20, at Our .

" prayer; ~safety, deposit key--and of the freshman girls will write . Lady of Good Counsel Retreat the pictures 'of'the grandchildren.

: . -' . ,'. • . ~ evei-yihird day imtn the Speck;. ·i.:!ou,se, East.' F~~eto:Wll.. " Rev.i

ba~ts .return hom~ in ttiree y~ars.· . [email protected]. Sullivnn; retre,at· mas- . : Hospital Associafiorn. Dr. 'and AIrs. Speckhaii' are .te.r, ",:,ill pave ,as')lis ,topic, the,

members of the Mi!;sion' Doctors role ~fwomen;in' the world of.""':' Convention" June 1~ Association connected with' the Vatican' II. . " .,'ST:,LoiJiS (NC)-'-The C8tho­ Layl-ii'ssion Helpers of ·t~.e' LOi

: ']ic;Hospital Association's' annual ADgeles archdioceS4l. They. left convention' will . be :held from for their asSignmt'mt'in Alrica on'

, \ .:.1 June ia,to 16 iii the I)cw.Cleve­ Jan. 3; 'taking with them; aLseB :, ',~ ~l;iQ4', (OljiQ) Gonventlon CeJ.lt~r.. now five months. old. " , .;,. 'i '~~H1\<lle'ildquarterl!, he:re' said the ,,' " opening:cOrivention Mass'will be ·',':5S··t".h. '~a'r"v,

, June 12'iri: ·St. 'John!s..cathedral ,r , :. ; imd' that the convention theme A Mass;dinnet, and'recElf,tt:bft

::.:, ,i ~iJl:~e ~'tominitmentto·\Tal1Ues." 'honoring Bishop, ¢onnolly'win '.: ' ,Proeceding' thE> convention sea- be featUres of a program Sun­

. : Illions, the annual CHA purehas- day, May' 15 c~osing' the '55th ing: Institute wi!' be held June 11 year of :raIl ~iv(~r Catholic a~d 'a joint. meet~n~ of Major Woman's Club. The evening

:.: Superiors; 'Sistei' 'Hospital Con- . Mass Will be celebrated at 5 sultarits and CHA States Confer-' , o'clock, followed at· 6:30 by the

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···SC'HOOL····: .~!-li~~~n~'~, •~upplieS:' .

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, "Religious play such an' im:­portant role among the People of God that those flames are m danger of only smoldering u",", less they are enkindled by too witness and the stimulus of the Religious," Auxiliary Bishop Ed-­ward A. McCarthy of Cincinnatl said.

Emphasizing that "all the wo~ and documents of the council are important for you," Bishop Mc­Carthy continued: "In the past, we clergy and Religious have been guilty of a certain isol~

tionism, a kind of snobbery. Thitl led us to identify the things .. which we differ from the lait;' as being essential to the Chris.. tian way of life." ,

"We should appreciate th1i greater ,importance of that which we share with all, t~ People of God-baptisQl, super­natural life, redemption and OM eternal destiny. Neither the con­stitutions, nor the customs, nor the ascetic practices of religious life are of prime importance, but rather the liturgy, the Word of God and the love which aD Christians share," he declared.

Catholic Woman DodO; Subject of TV Study

NEW YORK (NC)-The dra­matic story of Dr. Patricia' Smith - an American Catholic - iR Vietnam-will be presented on the CBS 'television program~ "The Twentieth Cent'ury,''' March ' 20 ·at 6 P.M. :

An episode entitled "WomaD Doctor in Vietnam" will' shoW Dr. Smith treating natives 11u/'7 fering from a vast variety Cli diseases:· ' .

SHA Aiumnae A Sp'ring fashion show is

planned for 8 .Sunday night, March 20' at The Coachmen restaurant by alumnae of Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River. Jill charge of arrangements are Mrs. Patricia Hibbert and Miss Ann Petrillo. Commentator will be Miss Patricia Patricelli.

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Page 9: 03.17.66

M,er'yl:!s Ti,ps" fPf Sm~II' Cooks" ~,Guara'ot~.e,~, 'fo :,Please Mothers

By Joseph and !}farilyn Roderick There is a. line 'in My' Fair Lady which I am continually

.Quoting to my wife, "Why can·t a w~man be more like a man?" Sometimes when the children have been particularly exasperating I ask myself, "Why can't chil<dlren be like us?" I will spare the women now, but as for the children, "When they are good, they are· very, very good, but when they are bad they are horrid."

A horrId child in a garden is a nightmare. A destructive child can destroy 'years of labor in minutes. When George Washing- ' ,ton chopped down that cherry

· tree he chopped down 'patient · waiting for fruit. ,20 or so spray­'logs. hours of pruning and fer­",tilizing a,n d cross-pollination

and, worst of aU, years 'of, fruit · ,to come, I an afraid that had

he been my child, he would have !lotten spanked good and hard.

The only way I can find to make children and the garden compatible Is to allow them' to enjoy the garden and hope they

.. will come to respect it. But what , does a child enjoy? ,Certainly not

beauty. Children with aesthetic . ,appreciation are few, and" far

between.' , t.

I have found that· mine enjoy ,the food that comes 'from the garden. They can appreciate a strawberry and can be taught

,that if they mutilate llplant, : they will ,not have ,their straw­'. berry to eat. If theil" minds do ,-,lilot appreciate ,agardenl their ., stomachs do. And> as anyone who

deals with children knows, stomachs play a large part, in thei r activities. , .Of course some things have to

, be sacrificed. It is Impossible to _grow a beautiful lawn where

there are ebildren. Ugly rasp­herry bushes must be planted where the .children can get to them without trampling over prize roses. Everything must be

, planned so that it is within easy , reach of grasping fingers, other­

wise you cannot blame a child for destroying something valu­able in seeking a long, stalk :of rhubarb, for instance.

Just as one must sacrifice some beauty In It home with children, so must one make al­lowances in a garden. And yet what greater joy to a gardner than to see a child licking his red fingers after having had his fiU of raspberries, or smacking his lips with the tartness of cur­rants, or eating a crunchy half­ripe pear or baby cucumber right out of the garden.

In the Kitchen There is a magnetic attraction

for children when mother is eooking. They adore watching her, dipping their hands into the hatters, scraping the frosting from the mixing bowls and in general making a bit of nuisance of themselves. The natural curi ­osity of children combined with the aromas and tastes that are found in a kitchen matte this a perfect spot t(\ sta~ the very,

, very young' future homemaker on her way to competence.

You may say, in this' day of the modern caree'r girl, I want m~, daughter :to be ,a doctor Qr a lawyer or engage in some

'equally gIaniorous profession, not be: a plain old housewife-­but even: if she does succeed at

'Gome profession, she' win .stin have to run .some type· Of, home llUccessfuny;, .',. ..

DA Alumnae Ahminire of' li>oDti:mciin: Aea­

detny. Fall River. class .of 1946, will hold their 20th reunion at '1 Sunday nIght, May 22. at 'White's restaurant. In charge of reservations are Mrs. Lillian '(Allaire) Shannon and IInL. Pauline (Nacula) :Rosa.

In talking to a home econom­ics teacher recently about the pupils' background in cooking before they reach a school cook­ing class. I was antazed to learn that may have little, if any knowledge of even the most basic cooking techniques.

It seems thaf we· indulge our children with electric toy ovens, popcorn machines that really pop and lollypop machines that turn out tasty candy. but when it comes to picldng up the basic skills of the' kitchen. we become as possessive, of our domain as the Russians are with, their Sputniks.

H a vi n g children underfoot when you're cooking can be a nerve-wracking experience. but if you can spare perhaps an hour or so a week to share the kitchen. with them when your own work is done, you'll find it rewarding and they wiU leanl a great deal, along with fostering the,ir' nat­ural curiosity in this direction.

We have been letting our six­year-old Meryl do some cooking over the past few months, first with mixes, because they are quite simple and yet incorporate tnany of the basic techniques of eooking, and then with 'simple recipes. The results have been surprisingly good, although' we have had one or two' 'failures. She is never allowed to work in the ,kitchen alone, although we have found that lately we have to interfere very little.

The following are Meryl's tips for little cooks aged four up:

(1).) Wash your hands and be . sure to get all the soap off them.

(2.) Read the recipe and get everything out. Once daddy and I were cooking and we forgot vanilla and so our cookies did not taste so good. .

(3.) Before you start mixing things, start your oven.

(4.) Always have' a grownup help you, so you won't get burned or forget anything. '

(5.) Always have a towel on your lap or counter, so' you can wipe your hands when you need to.

(6.) If you have to use butter in your recipe, let It stay out of the refrigerator for a while so it will be soft when you use it. (I use margarine instead of but­ter.)

(7.) When you are all finished. clean up everything, because if you don't clean UP. your mother will never let you cook.

(8. ) If you make something and it does not come out well, don'! make your mother or father eat ft. O,nce I made, a mix and it was no ,good. so I threw It to the birds.

The above is in Meryl's words, but our spelling. " . Thi~ recip,e'is one: tha~ .Meryl

has made. quite successfully but , it: peeds the assiStance', of mother ·or··da~. . '. '

,.' TWin, Mouutain ,Muffins '. 1.4 cup ,hutter or margarine ~ cup sugar I, egg;. wen beaten 2 cUP& flour ' 4 teaspoons baking powder lk' teaspoon salt 1 cup milk 1. Cream the sbbrtening, arid

add the egg and sugar, mixiqgt'iell .. ' , ' .

~. Sift toget:i'ler, the· flour, baking powder ~md' salt.. ,

3'. Add the 'clry ingi-edients to the creamed mixture alternately With 'the mille, ~~ting weU:

4. Fill' greased muffin pans .halt fun. '

~. Bake ,In, a 3'15'" oven for ~ minutes or wID done.

, .. ." ...: ..'

BENEFIT FOR HOl\-IE: The Infant of Prague Guild New Bedford, will sponsor a sale on March 2it for the bene~ fit of the St. Mary's Home, that city, front: Richard Smith and Jean Smith of St. Mary's, direct your attention to their poster while, standing, Sr. Mary Cherubina, O.S.F., superior, and l\1rs. J. Arthur Sheehan, chairman, show some of the prizes.

Slow 'Pace Helsinki' Bishop Cobben Dedares Tradition Impedes Ecumenical M~vement in Finland

HALES C-ORNERS (NC)-The ecumenical 'movement may .be making great strides in other countries but it goes along at a slow pace in Finland according to Bishop William P. B. Cobben,

, S.C..r., of Helsinki. The reason. is that most Fin.

nish people belong to a state re­. ligloo. either Evangelical Luth­eran or OrthodoX', while Catho­lics number just about 3,000 in

; a total population, of 4,600.000,. ; the Bishop saiCi here in Wiscon·

sin. ' "If there is any movement in

the world it always comes late to Finland," the Bishop ob­served.

,Mostly young people are in­volved in ecumenism and the Bishop considers it "a big step" that the movement has started. SInce the Protestants have 400 years of tradition behind them,. it is difficult for them to under­stand Catholicis~ he com­mented.

"They are wen educated in their reHgion and it is not easy fo= them to set it aside," he said.

Paterson See Plans Co-ed High School

PATERSON (NC)-The Pat­erson diocese has purchased' Benedictine Academy here from the Benedictine Sisters of Eliz­abeth, N~ J., and will convert it

'Into a co-educational hi g h sc):lool. . ' , The academy' was founded' 'in 192a. .The present school will become a residence for the Ben­edictine .Sisters who will eon­'tiliue 'to staff 'the school, and' 11l 'new senooFbnilding win be oori­structed. ' ",' '

Hyad~th Crrcle Reservations for the annual

. Communion Qreakfast. of Hya­cinth CirCle,' New' . Bedford Daughter,s of Isabella, will clo~e

, Tuesday, March, 22. The brea~­fast will follow g; oreloelt Mass at

, Holy' Name Church' Sunday : morning. March 27, and will tie

served' in the parish han. AlSo on March 22" ,a social eYl'!ning featUring. a. talk on European tra.vels. by MISS Julia Perry will be held in the. organization'S

,club house.

"'Tbe idea of the Church with the Holy Father and the infalli ­bility of the Pope is not sq easy for them to understand. But at least we can talk about it."

THE ANCHOR- '9 Thurs., March 17, 1966

Atheist Oueries",

Law "Aakers WASHINGTON (NC) - l\'Us.

Madalyn Murray O'H::Iir, athpist who successfully challen~ed

prayer and Bible readin~ in public schools, has queried all members of the House on church-state issues.

Mrs. O'Hair, opel'ati,,~ from Austin under the name of Soci­ety of Separatists, said in a let ­ter that legislators who fail to respond will be thought of as opponents of the First Amend­ment to the Constitution.

This position, she warned, will be distributed in each Cdn­gressman'spome district "by our action groups there." .

." She c1ainf,ed 75 mHlion Am~r­, ieans do 'nbt go to church and

that 6,811,000 are "out-and-out . atheists." She' said ther.e is "u higher percentage of voters 'in this group than in any other strata of America."

She asked Congressmen's rJ­sltion on 1axation of chorch~, their income, "land give-aways" ,to chorches, "priceless" radio and TV time given church bodies 311~ "tax money to sup­POrt parochial schools."

Annual Convention. The annual convention of

Fall River Diocesan Council, of aatholic" Women will take place Saturday , April 30 at Mt. St. Mary . Academy, Fail River.

•,Making plans for the day are Mnl. James A. O'Brien Jr., Dio­cesan president and :M:rs. Michael J. McMahon, Diocesan Viee­president fOr District One.

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Page 10: 03.17.66

Follows Visit

Boom Pope's

JERUSALEM (NC)-The, pj~

grimage of Pope Paul VI to the Holy Land early in 1964 was ap­parently the spark of a new in­flux of tourists into Jordan, cre­ating a minor economic boom.

Every day new groups of tou~

ists fly here from Europe, the United States and elsewhere, even in the off season. Hotels are busy. Buses and toul'ist guides have more than enough work. Many of those who arl'ive declare they were prompted to visit the ancient Christian shrines here as a result of the Pope's trip.

The tourist influx has not only provided jobs, it has provided new funds for repair and mod­ernizing the Jordanian city~

Tourist facilities have been greatly expanded. Barren hill ­sides are l:.looming with houses, hotels and places of business. Newly paved roads are carrying a heavier burden of traffic.

Jerusalem is an important pilgrimage center for Islam, too. ­The Dome of the Rock mosque, built on the site of King Solo­mon's temple, is visited by thoU­

THE ANCHOR­, Thurs" March 17, 196.6

10

P~"'Oll't COJ""r~o~ic

CQUe~~S ~'Clt'~pt

Ne'-'''''o s.~~JtAl"':llnts WASHINGTON (NC) ­

A glimpse into the thoughts of Negro teenagers consider­ing applications to Catholic colleges and of the attitudes of the institutions is given in a re­port published here.

The unusual survey stems from questions which Negro teenagers asked two Josephite seminarians du'ring high school counseling sessions.

The teenagers wanted infor­mation beyond that available in co~lege catalogues. Questions such as: are there other Negro students on campus? Is there a significant Neg l' 0 community nearby? ,How welcome would I be? Is there special financial assistance for Negroes?

The two Josephites took note of the questions, put them in a letter and sent it off to the na­

'nation's Catholic colleges. The result of the effort by s'~mina­ sands of' fervent Moslems each rians James E. McLinden, S.S.J., COMMITTI:E MEMBERS FOR LAETAHE SUNDAY APPEAL: Meeting in New year. Unlike the wealthier '~L.J Jo'seph M. Doyle, S.S.,J., wIll York for arranging the annual Catholic Bishops' Overseas Relief Fund Appeal scheduled Christians, however, Moslem 'appear in the current NCEA pilgrims have contributed littlefor Sunday in aU parishes Of the Diocese are, left to right: Rev. Joseph P. Delaney, Asst. Bulletin, quarterly publication to Jordan's new prosperity.Superintendent of Diocesan Schools; Rev. Eugene E. McNamara from Boston; Cardinalof the National Catholic Educa­,tional Association here. ' Spellman, New York; Bishop Edward E. Swanstrom, executive director of Catholic Relief Interracial Justice :', 'iResponse was prompt and ex- Services'. ' ' , '

,·,tremely cooperative," the, au­ Post for McGuire thors report. Only, six of 2:19 col­ NEW ORLEANS (NC) -The leges failed to meet the deadline. ,'National Catholic Conference forSee lJ.S~·China Re~ationship .C:ru'c,ial, · Interracial Justice has an­

nounced aJ,1pointment of James; "~ Actively Recruit ", The r'e~tilts, which 'Ilst. ~ach Urg'e ,Religious Leaders Seek Answer,to Enmity J. McGuire as. associate director"college and a summary state-' '.', of its Southern Field Servieemlm' from its answers, show that based here.. all colleges' accept Negro stu- WASHING'I:'0N (NC).,.....-'P~rti­ aligl~ed themse1ve,s with the Na- . give and'love their enemies. The . McGuire, lYith a' backgrounddents.,Some of thein are actively cipants in the first .,National tiorialist government 'in the G<)spel messa'ge declares \hat the in educ,ation and intergroup re':recruiting Negro 'stud~nts. ' Inter-Religious .Conferenceon years 1945-49.' Th~y suffered makers of peilC;; are bles~ed 'be­ · lations' work,. has served witll.

'Many institl.~tions, i espl:ciallY Peace here were. told that the reoudiatiOli .. when the Chinese 'cause they' will .be called the · ,relations co.nferences in 'Catholicthe' big-city 'universities, said development of 'a. healthy rela­ communists came to power:" the sons of .G<!d.'." 'school systems in the Midwesttiiey could not report how many" 'tioriship with China is' the most "paper states.' " Quoting .the. Second-V~iican ,:uld. the fenn'sylv~a' State.Negroes were in attendan<:e be-, 'crucial problem' fadrig , the . "Nevertheless, the interest of 'Co\!ncil's decree 'On the Church, · Humari Relations Commission. cause registration forms ask no' United States in this century. American chUrt~~ .leaders, cut in the Modern.World,the,paper , McGuire will work with Johl1r/~· 9,li,estions 'a'oout race and there They were urged, as religious ?ff fr~m the ChTlst~an cl1Urch~s, Says that peace -is not merely the P. Sisson, director, of Souther.is no other way of ascertaining. leaders, to seek an answer to m Chma, hal! contmued.. Much . absence' .of war nor 'a balance: of, , Field Service, of the Chicago­/ . . '. bn the other hand, some col- "the errinity that has' grown up .as they (ieplor.e commul11st ex- power. '!It is likewise 'the fruit based NCCIJ, to expand consult..:J'i;ges' admit ch'at few Negro, l?tu- 'between China arid the U.S." ce.sses" ~merlCan churc~m~n, 'of love, which goes beyond what ,ant servJces to dioceses anddents have applied. Two general '. They ~were als'o advised to Wish <?hma and the Chmese justice can provide.''' Catholic human relations coun­'explanations emerged: high tui- recomment.. 'the admission 'of well," it asserts. cils in the ,$outh and to set \JP a·tion and other costs and' the Red China to the U.N. 'Feed, I'orgive' series of regional conferences forsmall number of Negro Catholics These comments were found ."Religious organizations today diocesan and lay leadership.Ask University Endin the nation. in a conference position paper are bound to try to seek ways . , Here are . exce'rpts from re- .drawn up in advance 'by Father 'of understanding and reconcili ­ OhliQotory Retreats Auschwitz Churchports of some of the colleges: Joseph Sebes, S.J., of George­ ation 'with' China ... * .~ Their MILWAUKEE (NC) -A' stu­.. College of Mount St. Vincent, town University, Eugene Board- ' scriptures are not devoid of COLOGNE (NC)-The weekI,.

dent committee has asked Mar­N.ew York: "01 the seven Negro man, professor of history, Uni­ guidance. The New Testament newspaper of the Cologne arch-' quette University to discontinuegirls enrolled. six of them are' versity of Wisconsin, and Eu­ diocese has urged Catholics herecalls on Christians to feed, £01' ­ its policy of compulsory retreats,Oil scholarships of varying g~ne Barnett,. former, general to contribute money towardcontending that the obligatoryamounts 0) 0:: " Our own high secretary of the National Com­ construction of a church at nature of the religious exercisess c h 0 -0 I principals are working mittee of the YMCA, Shanghai. Vincentian to Serve, . Auschwitz, Poland, as a symbolrenders them' "self-defeating andwith us in recognizing worthy The paper was sent t(\ conference of Polish-German reconciliation.disfunetional to the attainmentyoung Negro students." participants with the, under- In Liaison Position of moral excellence."Class Presi~etit standing that i' would be subject WASHINGTON (NC)-An ex.:.

Manhattan College, New York: . to revision during the three-day pert in canon law has been ap­ Marquette, the nation's largest ­"In the interest of interracial (Mar. 15 to 17) session here. pointed to serve in a liaison Jesuit university, has a long­

capacity between the Conference standing rule which requires alljustice, a scholarship is assigned Credits Missioners annually to a Negro student." The paper gives credit to for- 0" Major Superiors of Men, and full-time Catholic students to

the Canon Law Society of make a, retreat annually bySt. Michael's Coliege, Ver- mer American missionaries in ,mont: "The college oil oil *has suc- China for "leading the way" in America. Easter Sunday. Any student who 'ceeded in securing sufficient establishing institutes of higher Father' James W. Richardson, fails to meet this obligation may

education there: It c:redits them C.M" has been named to the forfeit the right to re-registerfunds to establish. two partial with' working to improve' the newly creat'ed position by Father for the next semester.' or, if a scholarships 0:: » During the status of Chinese women and0) James M. Darby, S.M., CMSM senior, may be deprived of hisSummer of 19611, six undergrad­

,uate students completed a tu- children.. It terms as "unfortu- president, of .Dayton. Father diploma. '/' - torial propect for" Negro high aate" the fact that "certain Richardson, 57, provincial of the The university's Student Com­

school students in Elizabeth American church leaders 'had Los Angeles' ,Vincentian. prov:­ mittee for Moral Excellence said City, to prepare them for co]]ege inr.e, has been chairman of the it was not opposed to a policy of admission and application. This encouraging retreats, as long asExplains Vatican II ~~:C°e\~~~. committee of CMSM project is planned to be a con­ the rule be altered and a mea­tinuuing operation on ,the part To Non-Catholics The' appointment of th,e reli- sure of "free choice be allowed." , of· the college." ALTOONA (NC) -- Bishop J. gious community priest follows

Marymount College,' Kansas: Carroll McCormick of Altoona- ' the naming in Ja,nu;:lry of Bishop V We have accepted Negro resi­ Johnstown met with members Ernest J. Primeau of Manchester Prayer igil dent (students) for many Yllars. of the Blair County Ministerium as the first episcopal liaison be- PHILADELPHIA (NC) - An In fact, the president of last to discuss the final session of the tween the U. S. bishops and the all-nightvigil of prayers for the year's freshman class was a Vatican council and to explain I 1,0oo-member Canon Law Soci- canonization of Blessed John Negro." new diocesan directives for hu- ety of Aml7r,ica. _ Neumann, the. fourth bishop of

man relations: and ecumenical PhiladeIP.l1i!l, will take place at• A d affairs. . , L St. Peter's <:hurch here Friday,Tertchlng, i. , .The Pennsylvania prelate also Women' ectors March 25. Members of nocturnal

"DUBLIN '(NC) ~ PermisBion discus'sed ,the council'with mem- ' HONG -KONG (NC):"-A group reparation societies in Maryland,

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,,.,fIIkk"""" for parishes here to havel\Iass bel'S of Temple Beth ,Israel at . of 80 Catholics, including 'a few Penni;ylvaii~;'New jerSey and once a week in the Irish 1an- another meeting., Since the first . nU,ns, and, priests, I:tave asked the DIstrict of Columbia will

, ' guage, "has removed' one 01 the sessio~o( th,e co'unciJ, Bishop "the diocesan 'liturgical: coinriiil?- participate.' 'The cause for the .~*3..gJ;eat" difficulties in rearing McCor.mick, Ms .m~iI!ta~nect ,as~~n hl'!r~to perini,t ~o~en to 'be . canonization 'of' Blessed, 'John, ' children as' Irish speakers," the continuing dialogue with mem:' . lectors at public, Masses. The firstU,'S:male citizen to, be ,be­gaelic weekly Inniu (Today) ,b~rs o(aH reHgi9,J.1~;;'~a.iJh,~J~'!he"" ~?mp1i!!.si9n:, h,~§ '~iili!> ~~r"~~cl~r1e4 atifie~, was', op~ned in Rome ill HI;ATINGOll: asserted. . ' choces~.,,~, ,. ,.. :\~o -comm~).1t ~r}n.~"J¢,llu~~t.,~ate"Ja,~~~~i;" ,;,:',. :.. ' ;., :,,, ,','

". D ~ o;J

I

Page 11: 03.17.66

••

Plan Swansea, Cana Meeting

A Cana Conference for mar­ried couples, sponsored jointly by the Holy Name Societies of St. Dominic's, Our Lady of Fa­tima, St. Louis De France, St. Michael's Parishes and the Bish­op Cassidy Council, Knights of Columbus, of Swansea, will be held Thursday evening, March 24 in the Knights of Columbus Hall, Old Warren .Road, Swan­sea. Admission is free

The speakers will b~ the Rev. Raymond McCarthy and Rev. John Driscoll of the Diocesan Family Life Bureau. The sub­ject-Parent-Child relations and Parent-Teenager relations. A question and answer period will follow.

All married couples through­out the Diocese are urged to attend this informative and interesting progl·am.

This will be the first time the Holy Name Societies and the Knights of Columbus have band­ed together in a Joint Program, and a large turnout is expected.

The Co-Chairmen for this event are Harvey Lenon, St. pominic's, Frank A. Cusick, Our Lady of Fatima, Herman

· ,Lapointe, St. Louis De France · and William C. O'Neil, St. Mi­chael's Churches, and John. Des­mond of Bishop Cassidy Council, K of C.

·Missiona ry - Says "Laitv Leads Way "'.' VANCOUVEF. (NC) - A ,mis­

sioner home here in Bi·itish · Columbia on. furlough after seven years in central Africa

'said laity ·leadership in the Church in Zambia is more ad­

· vanced than iil Caiiada or the · United States. .

FatheJ; Dennfs Bernardin, W.F., "whose mission headquarters is at

Our Lady of Lourdes church in 'Chilonga, Z a m b i a, estimated ,some 2,600 natives assist at two Sunday Masses. He said they use their kneelers ,also -for sitting,

'enabling a greater Mass attend­ance.

The natives sing hymns of their own choice from a variety of more than 200 native hymns, to the accompaniment of soft hand clapping and the rhythm of

. jungle drums, the White Father of Africa missioner said. He of­fers Mass in Cibenba, dialect of 'the Benba tribe which dominates the area.

Fat her Bernardin estimated that 18 per cent of the 15,000 native population of thc area are Catholics. There are some Protestants, Moslems and Hin­dus, but most of the people are pagans, he saic~, who live in mud huts with thatched roofs.

Chilonga's Catholics are ex­tremely'devout, but a Mass col­lection r a I' ely exceeds $2, F~ther Bernardin said.

,My Little Prayer' Is Big Success

CINCINNATI (NC) - One of the most successful prayers of modern times may be "My Little Prayer," written by the late Msgr, Raphael J. Markham, a former seminary professor here, and published by the Markham Prayer Card Apostolate here.

In the 35 years since Msgr. Markham wrote the prayer ­with its basic expressions of faith, hope, love and contrition -some 12 million copies have been distributed. It has been translated. into more than 40 languages, including pidgin En­glish, and is available in Braille.

Since Msgr. Markham's death in 1955, the prayer cards have been published bY the Francis­ean Sisters of the Poor,' St. Clare Convent, 00 Compton Rd.. CiA­einnaU.

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THE ANCHOR­ 11Thurs., March 17, 1966

Agency's Birth Control Policy Supporrt Hit

WASHINGTON (NC) The National Catholic We1­fare Conference Legal De--. partment has challenged the statutory authority of thc fed­eral antipoverty agency to sup­port birth control programs.

"It is entirely clear that the Office of Economic Opportunity had no power and has no power under the Economic Opportunity Act to fund, sponsor, endorse o:r otherwise support programs crl birth control or 'family plaJ1lc> ning,'" the department 'says i:n a legal mem'Jrandum.

No AutIllorfity

The memorandum reaches it<:! conclusion that the antipoverty· agency lacks authority to sup­port birth control through exam­ination of the Economic Opportunity Act, as adopted by Congress in 1964 and amendecll in 1965, and through a review of the legislative histol'y of t~ measure.YOUR SUNDAY OFFERING WILL FEED THESE CHILDREN: In 80 countries

The OEO is currently support­of Latin America, Africa, and Asia, 23 million poverty-stricken and hungry men women ing a number of birth contl'oj

and children receive U.S. surplus foods through the mass feeding programs of Catholic projects included in local Com-­Reli~f Services-NCWC. But the distribution of foods-as in Helvecia, Argentina-is munity Action Programs. It hae only .one phase of the worldwide charity carried on by the overseas aid 'agency of Amer­ provided about $750,000 for sucill

projects in 20 areas.ican Catholics. You can help with this global mercy program by contributing generously The memorandum on the OE~to the 20th annual Catholie Bishops' Overseas Relief Fund Appeal, on Sundav March

activities notes that there is ne20th. NC Photo . • , 'express language authorizinf) support of birth control in the Economic Opportunity Act.Urges Superintende'nts Update Courses Ineonceivable

The section of the' act dfl-.:Seek 'Advice From.: Experts, ·Prelate Says scribing the' Community Actiotll programs refers only' to "e,.. ployment, job training and COUfFST: LOUIS (NC) ----. Cathoiic Church in the Modern' World, the laity; whereas it means the

s c h 0 0 I superintendents setting' the most dangerous, least theo­ . sharing' of the laity of the work . seling, health, vocationalreh&­

bilitation, housing and homeup a new curriculum should be logical, most modern and prac­ of spreading the Gospel, and es­ management, welfare, and specschooled by subject matter ex­ tical of the .constitutions, has pecially the renewal of the tem­ cial remedial and other nOR->perts, modern social situations many ideas Which' the updated poral order." . curricular educational assi~and the Second Vatican Council, curriculum should contain," he The laity's work lies in many ance."a superintendents' workshop said. fields, such as parish work, the

was told here. Lay Apostolate J!1issions, f ami I y betterment, The memorandum says it JI!J About 60 priests and Religious youth work, education, local, "scarcely possible to assert" thlrt"The dignity of the humanattended the three-day work­ national and international or­ the omission of explicit refeI'~person, the community of man­shop 'on curriculum development, ganizations, he said. ence to family planning in thJtJ kind, the integrity of the humansponsored by the National section was "inadvertent or ul1>o> person, the role of the ChurchCatholic Educatiomil Associa­ intended."in the modern world, the mutualtion's department of school su­ Plane Flies Relief interpenetration of both-these It adds that it is "inconcei...perintendents and the educ'ation

are ideas which enter not only able, in view of the prominenc~department of St. Louis Univer­ To Viet Refugeesinto the course in religion but of the question, that had thflsity. SAIGON (NC) - A Britishothers as well," he said. Congress desired to enact a pro<>Auxiliary Bishop Clarence E. Royal Air Force plane cameThe decree on the Lay Apos­ gram of birth control, it wouldElwell of Cleveland, superin­ from Singapore to join U. S. andtolate, he said, is "of the greatest have left provision for it ~ tendent of tha~ clioc~se's schools, Vietnamese planes in transport­. importance." vague phraseology or to termi­said courses of study must be ing relief supplies to refugees nology under which discoverin(l"The lay apostolate needsupdated in order to remain rele­ and others in dire need in cen­ of its intent would .be a gue&'r>eareful explanation," Bishop El­vant. tral Vietnam. work." ....well said.Constitution on Church The loads carried by the plane,

bishop, who has Ph.D. . "Too many of our laity think a Beverley four-engineThe a tactical , it means the handing over of thefrom Harvard University .and transport aircraft, included 27,­ ""~.I"~

has guided Cleveland Catholic administration of the Church to 800 pounds of foodstuffs and schools for 20 years, said top­ clothing from Catholic Relief 'DEBROSS OIL level experts in the various aca­ Services-National Catholic Wel­demic disciplines are needed to Denies Reargument fare Conference. Stanley C. ~ co. advise on course content. Garnett of Kansas City, Mo., as­

"No one man, be he superin­ Of Exemption Suit sistant director of CRS-NCWC , Heating Oils tendent or curriculum director, ANNAPOLIS (NC) - The in Vietnam, accompanied the can possibly know all the newest Maryland Court of Appeals has shipment to two centers in the ~ and Burners information in the various turned down a request for' re­ highlands.

argument of a suit in which the ) 365 NORTH FRONT STREET (fields," he declared. The plan also carried relief Vatican U's documents and court upheld traditional prop­ goods given by the Red Cross, NEW BED~RD (

theological research should be erty tax exemptions on church­ Britain's OXFAM (Oxford Fam­owned property. ) WYman 2-5534felt in the Catholic school cur­ ine Relief), and War on Want, a

riculum, Bishop Elwell said. The court said in mid-Febru­ British charitable organization. \.""",,,,....,,1"The Constitution on the ary that tax exemptions are con­

stitutionat and a recognition of Priest Gets Jewish th~ contl'ibutions made by reli ­

gious organizations to the gen­ Check These Banking ServicesBrotherhood Award eral welfare. Atty. Leonard J.

AUGUSTA (NC)-Father John. Kerpelman of Baltimore asked Savings Bank life Insurance J. Curran, pastor of st. Augus­ for the reargument but the

Real Estate Loans tine's church, was presented the court turned down his motion. B'nai B'rith Brotherhood Award As usual, the court gave no rea­ Christmas and Vacation ClulN •at the 10th annual Augusta­ son for the' denial. Gardiner' Loci g e Brotherhood The sui t originally was Savings Accounts breakfast. brought by atheist Madalyn •

5 Convenient Locatio'"Maine Gov.john H. Reed, last · Murray O'Hair.She also initi ­ • year's award winner, made the ·atedthe .legal challenge which presentation. .f> 'Father, Curran resulted. in the U.S. Supreme NEW BEDFORD and paid tribute to the diversity · Court's decision that .Bible .f Father Curran's eontributiOni reading and., pr;lyers in; public .,IN·STITUTIONfor SAVINGS, tf» the eommunii,r. ... .. lIeboolli are unconstitutionaL

Page 12: 03.17.66

12 THE ANCHOR--Oioces,e of Fa 1,1 River-Thurs. Mar. 17, 1966 The "Poor ,in Spirit, <' .;.\ ' ~

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God,Love,You,Sa~'s' 'Ke'iith~" T:rev~ino" '$00k5 By Most Rev.' Funton J.' Sheen, D.O.

" In our press we hear mos~ly about the evil I.IlI th~ world. Break!Dg '8 commandment Is a surer way to become newsworthy

'Well,'Wrutten~ Iriter4~stlng' By lRt.Rev. :Msgr. John S.Kennledy , than practicing heroic virtue. And there is so much goodness

Two books by ladies with three-decker names are on in the world! Take the case of a sister who recentlY visited our library table this week. The first is Children of Allah our office; Deeply grieved at the number of people that she

saw dying of starvation in India, she decided to begin a religiousby Agnes Newton Keith' (Altantic-Little Brown, Boston. community based on absolute poverty; along with a fourth vow$6.95); the second, 'fhe Fourth Gift by Elizabeth Borton to spend oneself completely on one's neighbor. Two astounding

de Trevino (Doubled,ay, New things- happened. First, she a!ready has 260 members in her York. $4.50). Mrs. Keith's status and condition of women community and secondly, she has made 16,000 converts. Yes,

is being greatly altered. 16,000 in 14 years! She and, the other sisters gather those dyingbook is an account of her "The author has a packed treas­of starvation, most of them from the gutters, and do what theynine years in the little known ury of information about Libyan can to help them or ease their last moments.land of Libya; Mrs. de Trevino's, ways to pour out for us: social

,a novel laid in Mexico in the customs, food, attitudes toward How concerned is the, United States1920's. Neither life stemming from Moslem be­

about vocations and converts? We have , is a great book. lief, the quality of education, 'so very few. Yet this sister has bothbut both are political factors, and their

in abundance! Our converts in the Unitedwell done and clashes, th~ press and censorship, Statesaverage:two and one-half-per 'year,con s tan t - dress, arts, ant' so son. These she

: per priest! Yet this sister averages' about'ly' interesting.' deals out,with alavish and cun- ' seven a day, Our religious orders"place'Mrs. Keith will' ning hand. ,

, expensive' advertisementS' in, magazines'be remembered Desert, LaJJldscapes 'and newspapers and pray daily to stim­'for two previous ' Her' best writing,' however, is

; works: 'L and ,probably that ill. the sections ulatevocations. Yet young women, anxi~

Below thl:. Wind, dealing with travel in the Sahara. ous 'to embrace poverty as a mission, 'which told of ,Its rigors and its recompenses flock to this sister without any publicity. 'her life in Bor- she makes very vivid. She en- Why? Because the Lord blesses the poor neo, and Three abIes us to see'the strange desert in spirit. ­

,Came Home, which described landscapes, with their unusual her experiences in a Japanese range and combinations of color, Sharing'! Sacrificing! Loving the poor! These are the virtues internment camp. ' ' the sandstorms. the mirages, the tbat God blesses, Oh yes, we add up our daily Masses and COD\­

, , Her husband was assigned to oases, the spectacular night sky, monions, but is the onb' sacrifice we' offer that of Christ oD : Libya in 1955 as, a technical ex- the picturesque folk who live in tIre altar?' And is' our Communion never with Christ in the poor. pert with the FooC', and Agricul- this endless wilde:mess where' a the afflicted, the lepi'ous, the starving • the ignorant. our neigh­tural organization of the UN. She lone tree is a marvel. , bors? These should be our devotions, our prayerbooks." our

:'went with him. Libya, was then One can readil:V' credit MrS. novenas, our pities. With these we practice our faith~not in , 'an infant, nation, having been set 'Keith's regret when her hus~ 'Cllrist alone, but in Christ, in them! Our Lord Wmself said ; up in 1951. It was a poor country, band's assignment' in' Libya:' that we 'should leave' oargitt at' the altar and go to the brother , and, its chance" for survival did ended and thf. couple' prepared SOMEBO])1{'S 'HAPPY: with whom we have had a difficulty... .' . '. :

,Dot seem.very bright. to ieave for their home in Can- The world's woes may bother It comprised three ,areas, ,each .ada. She had come to, love Libya, , !\lay we 'plead here particulariy With'religJous houses, cQn­

others", but this lit~leiir1with a population initIall)7 ,hos- and its, people, The, reader who' , vents' and" momisteries to share their wealth with the poor, toin Mauila,' Gabon, central':lile'to 'those of' the otheR' 'two. spends a few hours with her iO:­ , liVe out the vow of PoverlY."May we, plead With 'priests to share

'These were Tripolitania, 'for~- formal, conversational, colorful Africa, is happily unaware their blessings with their needy brother priCllts and ~ishops. in " erly ari Italian colony, 'Cyrenad'a, ,book ,regrets coming to the' end ' 'of those adults matters. The Africa; Asia and Latin J\meriea, to increase our vocations in this

aild the Fezzan, entirely desert of it. , c6untIY.. ,¥ay we ,plead with the laity, in making your ~ll, not,band around her 'head sup­'country arid formei'1y under Mrs. Trevino is an American to leave your money to already rich institutions, leave it to ttteports her Qa.$.ket, while she 'French military administration. ,who. marJ;:ied a ,Mexican .and poor for t:~riSt iBin them. May we plead with all readers of

-' That the disparate p'arts haye went to live ir.. his country. She ,carries, a kerchief to shield this Column to remember that when you give to the Holy Father's managed to remain togetl~er to wrote about her niarrlage and ~her from hot African.. sun. Society for t,he Propagation of t~e Faith you are giving, to help

NC Photo~-become in 'some considerable her growing identification with the poor of the entire world, not jUst one area or one country. measure a nation, is largely at- Mexican life in My Heart Lies an~ that all your alms are spent on the poor, of the w~rld within tributable',to a remarkable man, South. In The Fourth Gift (the the year they ,are received. God, Love You! King Idris, who is a religious' as' reference is to the :fourth gift of LetJ~~n "eies --, ­well as a t>Olitical leader. The 'the Holy Spirit: fortitude), ,she ,~HF;RE:IS A FAMINE IN INDIA! GOD LOVE YOU '.to ,Libyans are l)redominantly Mos- has mgeniousl~' woven a' piece Continued: from Page orie Mrs. C.G. "S~lIce our personal finances at, present,will not allow ,lems. with Arab elements, Negro of fiction dealing with the perse­ from the, legions of ancient , us to send' much, of • contribution, please accept these pieceselements, Italians who' have cution of the Catholic Faith, in ,Rome. of jewelry. I'd much rather be storing up treasure in heaven stayed on, and even a few U1ou- Mexico, beginning in 1926. ' At the Cathedral ceremony, and trust Ulat tbis jewelry may help win jewels for His king.,.

.sand Jews. Proud Woman Rev. James Clt.rk of St. Joseph's ,dom." •.• to Anon. for $1,000 "This is my gift to God, sent in Sharp Observer The scene is the state of Jal- Church, Fall'River. will preach. adoration, in thanksgiving, reparation and suppliell.tion. Use as

The Keiths lived first in the isco and the town of Santa Eu­ Legion prayers will be led by you know. best. My name will be my secret with God."principal city, Tripoli; later lalia. The story centers in' the Rev. Joseph De!aney, Taunton moved to Benghazi, when the household ot the Valera. The Curia Director; and Rev. Albert Your old gold and jewelry-the bracelet or ring you no longerking insisted on making this head of a houSe i:; a man of Shovelton, New Bedford Curia wear, last year's gold eyeglass frames, the cuff links you nevermuch smaller city a second cap- means who has a devout wife, Director. Holy Family High liked anyway, you can give to the poor as ahns. We will resellital; then moved back to Tripoli 'an 'unadventurous elder son who School Glee Club of New Bed-­ them and use the money to aid Missions.. Your semi-preciouswhen, arbitrarily, the govern- has become a lawye:r, two much ford will' sing. stones will be winning precious souls for Christ. Our address: ment returned there, Mr. Keith's younger sons, and one daughter Diocesan chaplain and spir­

The Society for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue,work took him all -over the -Maria Graciela Manuela, fa­ itual director of the Fall River New York, N.Y. 10001. ' country, and he was more famil- miliarly known as Chela. Comitium of the Legion is Rev. iar with its severa! parts thail1 all Chela is a proud and beautiful Edward A. Oliveira. Diocesan

,but a few Libyans. On some of woman of 25 in 1926, a fine officers are Francis Lennon, ... , his travels, especially the desert horsewoman, a good shot, a president; Mary Moniz. vice­

journeys, he was accompanied fierce and daring spirit. She has president; Beatrice Capeto, sec­by his wife. not married because she be- retary; Thomas F.' Allen, treas­

Both in the 'cities and in the lieved that she wanted to give urer. desert, Mrs. Keith was a sharp ~er life to, God, whereas in fact The public is invited to attend observer, constantly took notes the self in her was 100 haughty the Cathedral ceremony. and made sketches, hence can ,to submit to anyone. ' provide us 'with an unprcce- President Calles ~Ittempts to Wins !HOl11ors: dented, picture of a section of ,enforce most rigorously the anti ­

BALTIMOR.E (NC) - ,T Ii e'North Africa where the latest ,religious laws enacted by the Catholic Review :has won five: technological, : developments in revolutionary ,government some awards' in the Maryland-Dela­'certain fields (e.g., th~, produc- time earlier. ,Churches are to be

': tion and transport, "of , oil) rub closel;i; :priests are to, be, driven ware PresS Association "Better Newspaper ConteSt: In competi­i eibo,,,,"s, sc:>to spea~,,'.wit~,meUow out, the practice of the Catholic

i ruins from 'the'Greek8:nd Roman .religionfs to be ,~oinpletely'ex­ tion with non-religioUs weeklies over' 10,000 'circulation,' the: times and artifacts' possibly hun_tirpated.

, ne\vspaper ,"of 'the Baltimore"dreds of thousands of years old. Seven Narratives archdio~ese took' 'two first-placeDiscovery of Oil The people of Santa Eulalia awarosfor" page one layout 'and; From being a poor country, immediat~IY resolve to; r.esil;!t, s p 0 r t s Writing, second-place, Libya .js~ on the ;Way ,to,l>econiing-, and, when, federal troops co~e

,prizes for co~unity sel'Vjce anda very -rich' country indeed, and to enforce the presid.ential de­, excellence, in ,typography a n:dthe reaso~,i~ tP'! discovery of oil, cree, the men of the area organ­

prodig~ou~ : CIuantlties 'Qf·: it, in , one for'" glierilla ~arlare. Wh~n : thinf-place honors for ed:itori~ , writing.1,959, ;1.',liis': has led: ~o· tjie:,setting, Cbela's: father ,is killed and mu­

up offiv~'pipelines ,carrying t~is tilated' ,by the federal troopS, liquld,,'wealth lrOm ilie desert- Chela, takes. over leatiel'sbip <Jf ,motives real and imagined, and to the'poit ar~as.:" the guerillas. 'the rise and fall of tJle perseeu­

With:" the discovery' of oil, "What 'ensues is 'pr(~sented in , tlon are compellingly 'presented. Libyan ,"ways have: 'begun to seven different narratives, each :Tbereare clements ,of'horror, as change; radically. For example, the story ofa different partici ­ ; well as elements of grandeur, ~ the people "are· 'dropping their' pant with his 'or her I!)~ point ,the story, but the author handles old, meagerly rewarding occu," of view. ' '. bbth, as well as the psychOlogical pations arid'skills to flock to tlhe', 'These accounts aTE~ artfu1lr ': differences among the eharae­cities and -:rowd into m;~~rabl~ ',woven togethe." sotha't the fates ,ters, With commendable 'and 'ef­shan.tYtowns . there. Also,' the 'Of the vanoua characleJ'8,' their "feetive restraint. :

Cut out this column. pin your slllCrifiee to It and, man It to Most Rev. Fulton' 3. Sheen. National Director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York. N.Y. 10001, or to your Diocesan Director, Re. Rev. MsRT. Raymond T. Considine. 368 North Main Street, Fall River, Massachusetts.

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Page 13: 03.17.66

,"~':Stience' Fair Winners· ·in': N~ws:~ -At biocesan .Hig·hs; Students To'. Enter Itegional Events

Science fair award'S are muchly in the news at Dio­cesan schools. Recipients of First Grant Awards in the senior division of the Mt. St. Mary Science Fair were Donna Ferreira, Veronica Plaziak, Denise St. Laurent Diane Vieira, Monica Polak, . ' Sonia Uchman and Julie Ur- wmners were Sandra Silvestre b J . d···· and Holly Cutting.

an. umor 'lVI~IOn wmners Baseball practice is due to be­were Joan MedeIros, Suzette gin at Prevost High in Fall Santerre and Denise Vezina. River; and also at Prevost sodal­These 10 girls will represent the ists held a Bible Vigil for pa­Fall River school at the upcom- tients at a Fall River convales­Ing Massachusetts Region III cent home, following the service Science Fall', to be held the with a glee club program of se­weekend of April 1 at the Dwel- lections from musical comedies. ly Street Armory in Fall River. In charge of the project was

At Dominican Academy, also Paul Carrier, sodality prefect. Fall River, senior. division win- At Coyle as at Prevost atten­ners include Beverly Stinton, tion has turned from basketball Joyce Macek, Sue Brodeur and to baseball. At the Taunton boys' Catherine Griffin; while junior school, James Burns will coach winners are Debra Lay, Danielle the ballplayers; and in charge of Desmarais, Denise Raymond and track, aIt'eady under way, will Denise Michaud. Seems your be Robert Lane, aided by first name had to begin with "D" Brother Harold Qualters. in that division. Coyle basketball isn't wholly

B ish 0 p Cassidy's scientists, finished, however, for intra­who'll join thp. Mount and DA murals are still in progress, with girls at the Dwelly Street Ar- freshman-sophomore and jun­mory, are Andrea Trzcinski, ior-senior divisions in action. Barbara O'Brien, and Maureen The toumarnent will conclude Kenny in the senior division; with a playoff for school cham­and Pamela Candee and Sandra pionship between the two divi­Lucey in the junior division. sion champs. Andrea, whose exhibit, "An ar- Medical Self-Help cheological and Geological In- Girls at St. Joseph'S-- Prep vestigation of an Early American School, Fall Rivl!r, are partici ­Pottery Works," was judged best pating in a medical self-help of show, will also represent the. course designed to enable them Taunton schooJ at the MIT Sci- to "stay alive for a two week ence Fair in May. period without the help of a'

Good News doctor or nurse" in case of. a" Scholarships and college 00- major disaster.

.eeptances'still abound. At Bishop The government - spOl180red Cassidy, Cornelia Duffy and course includes lessons on fall ­Linda Rihbany. have received out. and· shelter' needs, emer­$1200 tuition scholarships from gency living; al"tificial respira­Emmanuel College. Cornelia, a tion, first aid, infant and child foul'-year honor student, is 01'- care and emergency childbirth,' chestra club president, debate notes Josetta, the prep school's' club vicc-presidellt and a Stu- publication. . dent council member. Linda, also' Senior prom' chairmen at Bish­an honor student, is active in the op Feehan' in Attleboro are debate club and the CCD train- Donna Gamache and Fred ing program. Blythe. About 70 seniors will

And Pauline Lee of Cassidy lend eager assistance inplanning has been awarded a $2000 schol- for the big night, Saturday, May arship for the nursing program 21. at Northeastern University, re-' Cassidy girls viewed a film on newable annually depending up- ' the dangers of smoking, empha­on s c hoI a s tic achievement. sizing the message: "Everyone Pauline is in the National Honor can stop smoking and it's never Society, heads the debate club too late to stop." and is a member of the school IDelbat«! News orchestra. She's also a student Stang debaters are planning to councillor and secretary of the attend a weekend tournament Southeastern Mass. Stu den t at Seton Hall College, South Council Association, and, as a Orange, N. J. and have also, regional winner of a Girls' Club scheduled a varsity debate later essay contest, will go to Chicago in the Spring at Fitchburg. next month to compete on a na- Debaters at Feehan who have tional level. participated in at least 12 de-

And Cassldyite Carol Goldon- bates ~ill b: recognized with owicz has been awarded a nurs- approprIate pms. ing scholarship of $1175, also an Tryouts for varsity vol~eyban NDF loan of $500 from North- have ~een completed at SHA eastern She's active in the Fall RIver and the squad in­French' club and an honor stu- clude~ Judith Roberts, Joan dent. MedeIros, San d I' a Silvestre,

. Kathleen Coray, Linda Pomfret, At Holy F?mlly, New Bedford, Anne Marie Chase, Patricia

B~rry Harrmgto? has won:l McGuigan, Sandra Costa and sCIence scholarship under a pro- Stephanie Powers gram sponsored by p~ovidence Also Mary Beth Conlin, Chris­C~l~ege. The grant Will cover tine Sisson, Dian.e Dziduszko, ill1tlOn, board and bo?ks. Judith Sulliv:m, Jackie Proulx

. Junior prom; and Barbara' Pavao.·' The first . Sandra Silvestre is junior varsity gaJri~ 'came 'Tuesday prom committee· chairman at. against Dartmouth and Mt. St. Sacred HeartS Academy, Fall Mary.' . River. The prom is pianned for l!lebool .A,OOrediW .. Friday night, May 27.: St. Anthony High reports that . 'A performan~e, &fl William it's been elected to institutional ·Shakes~eaJ'e's"Twelft~ Night" at memberShip in ,the New England .; 'the Albee·Theatre in Rrovidence Associat!on ...of Colleges, and·" drew' students from hearly all Secondary. Schoolsf , and also' at lIr~a ~ighs, and also w,n a~end- SAH Anton.l\ndrl.lde will rep­

,~d. were concerts' by the Rhode resent· the s:tudent body in Boil.;.' . Island Civic Cliorale~ and the ton Friday, 'April i at 'Student Fa~l River SYmphony.: Government Day~

In n United Nations':sponsored Tony' is senior· class treasurer,

~ '..: .. , ,',", .'~ .'

.'~ ·ANoroR~'·~ :"13 Thurs., March 1'1, 1966

Union with Catholic Church Impossible

BERLIN (NC)-The LutherRJ!i bishops of Germany have ended a conference here by statin~ that union with the Catholic Church is impossible and that Martin Luther's reformation Is just 00

important in 1966 as it ever was. While praising some results o~

the Second Vatican Council, the bishops deplored that many facets of Catholic life are left unchanged. They remarked par­ticularly on the "scandal" of Catholic regulations pertaining to mixed marriages.

Vocation Day at Mt. St. Mary Academy is planned for Tuesday. March 22. Novices and postu­lants from Mt. St. Rita Provin~

cial House of the Sisters of Mercy who are Mount alumnae will be special guests for the day's activities. And Mountiee' who are members of the school'lJ liturgical choir are rehearsine for Holy Week services at st. Mary's Cathedral.

At Holy Family, Mary Ann() Camillo, Elaine Trahan and! JoAnn Gallagher have received! Complete Theory Pins, a high achievement in the shol'thanGl field. And the HF glee club wiU sing at the annual Legion of Mary Acies ceremony, slated for this Sunday afternoon at st,

SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS: Senior officers at Sacred Mary's Cathedral,. Hearts Academy, Fairhayen, are, seated, Cheryl Hopkins, . Thrice weekly rehearsals are president; standing, from left, Janet Fortin, vice-president; the rule at SHA Fairhaven at!

glee club members prepare foJl'J~ouise Bishop, treasurer. Not· pictured, J'ane Lee Thomas; their annual Spring concent un~secretary. '. del'. direction of Sister Vitalienn£l, SS.CC. Club officers are JeannE

gram at the YMCA beginning. Fairhaven, Jean~e St. Onge wnt" St. Onge, president; Bette Bap.. Friday, April i. The course will represent the school at Student tiste, vice-president; Janet For~ be conducted py .Mrs. George Government .Day. in Boston. tin, seeretary-treasurer; Colleeil Snyder and should ·turn out pro­ ,Jeann.e is a BWOC on the Fair­ Murray, pianist. ficient mel'maids just in time for haven.campus, being a National'

The annual trip to Washing..Summer fun. . Merit Scholarship Finalist, and ton for Mt. St. Mary upperclass­And also at the Fall River one of the top 10 in the state in men is slated for Sunday, Aprltschool the new sodality paper the annual Homemaker of To­ I, through Wednesday, the 20th.Chi Rho, will be distributed morrow Contest. She's a Carmel­ Thirty-nine juniors and seniorlJmonthly to all sodalists. ette at Our Lady's Haven, stu­ will make the trip, with twoArt is on the Wednesday dent council treasurer and glee Sisters from the faculty.agenda at Prevost High. Brother elub president. . Celeste is offering a course to "Three Coins in the Fountain'"Congratulations to five Do­al' interested students during the is the theme for Holy Family'sminican Academy seniors who weekly activity period. junior class dance, which will 00have received letters from the

"Music Ma.n" held Friday, April 15 at KennedyCommonwealth of Massachusetts Coyle and Cassidy students Center.Division of Civil Service noti ­

have started work on their mus­ fying them they've passed a ical spectacular, "The Music test qualifying them for govel'11­Man." The Coyle band will sup­ ment work as junior clerks. The tAPE COD'Sply music for the production. five: . Diane Beauchesne, Sue

Future Nurses at Feehan will iLA~GEST BANKDeschenes, Colleen Desrosiers visit the Ladd School in Exeter Pauline Miranda and Cecil~ PAYSat month's end and on the April Thibault. agenda they've scheduled trips to Faulkner Hospital, Boston, and to Memorial Hospital, Paw­tucket. Also at the Attleboro 4~296 school, Bruce McDonald and !nterest Compounded and Peter Phippes have been named payable quarterly on OUi'co-captains of the basketball team Investment Savings Accountfor next year. Still on the sub­ject of basketball, the faculty Bass River will challenge senior hoopsters to a St. Patrick's game today in Savinos Bankthe school gym. falft~us for • SOIlTH YARMOUTH ~xecutive board meeting' of the

Cassidy High was host to. an • DENNIS PORT.QUALITY andSoutheastern' Mass.. Assn. of.Stu­ • HYANNIS

dent' COUl)Cilsrecently, ·in prep-. • YARMOUTH SHOPP'Nll nAZI -aration for the organization's S.ERVICEI • OSTERVILLESpring.' Conventio~ at' tast

. Brhlgewater' Monda;y, ~arch28; At Sacre(\ ·Hearls.. Academy; ,

, " ,.. ~ ;". SH:E,LL· "P,remium" .tleating Oils .,ATWO·O·D:··.: ., '·_DAD~~. Oti' 'WRNER$' . ~ri~""""''' ~,.v,~. :e. 2.4-HourOil 'Bu.·rn~r. S~vi~e ~ ~:O'IL' COM'PANY-­ " ,', ..,.~ HE -,

~amous:.Reading.HARD COAl:$ .. .. J • • ," I' .' • «:-,.·SoH·,. L.i., ,'.. ' , ,. • ~ e~'

. NEW ENGLAND COKE.· .. ' ~.~ ~ . . ,~~~:HEATI'NG'OJLS

examination Jo-Ann Weaver and debate club president, editor of. Armand G~dbois were St. An- the s(lhool paper, active in the $o.uth •. Sea' Streets . ,~thony High's top scorers. Their glee club and, certainly Dot least, GLEN COAL & OIL CO., Inc. test papers will go Erom New his school's' Anchor reporter. Bedford to Boston for regional SHA Fall River students wiD Hyanni.s' . Tel'. HY 81

.~ Plea,sant Street Tel. WY 6-8271 New Bedford~ eoinpetition. At SHA Foall River" attend m10. week swimminl pro­

Page 14: 03.17.66

-. THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait River-Thurs. Mar. 17, 1966

"'j 1,4 " , ., '.Lay Chairm~n

Continued 'frorihPage,OQe ca~se of Catholic Charitie~ in the forthcoming"'charities appeal, is indeed an unexpected and un-

Council Statement· Urges ·:deserved hcilior"-for. me/' ::Atty.

II Carey .today wrote' Bishop ·Con­Christian-Jewish Dialogue

By Msgr. George G. Riggin!; i nolly. . (Director, Social Action Dept., N.C.W.C.) , "To become associated with

It would appear that styles in night club el;J.tertain-. the clergy and the active l~ity of the diocese on behalf of Cath­ment change· almost' as rapidly and unexpectedly as the' olic Charities is. an opportuni.tystyle of sports cars or Women's hats. Currently, I gather, 1 am looking forward to. with

sophisicated and satirical lyrics on serious and sometimes eagerness and enthusiasm. eveJil sacred themes are def- be set straigh of course _ for "I assure you that I will be at initely "in." A number of Christians as well as for Jews­ your service at any time and these new songs are now before we car. hope to imple­ for any purpose to assure the

success of this appeal.available in hi-fi rec:ordings. ment the declaration's stated The only' one that I have heard purpose, which is to foster mu­ <<<-:'1 "I appreci::ite' the opportunity struck me as being a little on tual respect and 'understanding ( . to serve you' and the dioces'e in the "sicll;" side. between Christians and Jews by \~ . this work, 'and, I am looking 1 refer to a means of biblical and theological .forwa rd to' a 'very' successful cat c h y' ,little studies and also by means of charities appeal.'" .. ~, ,I:

number by the. fraternal dialogue. , famous Mitc;:hell If Jews mistakenly think that trio on the sub- the declaration was addressed to ject of Christian- them and was meant-insulting-Jewish relations. ly and condescendingly-to "ab- PLAN OPEN lHlOUSE: Planning open house at St.

Continued from Page OneThe irreve.rently solve" them from responsibility Michael's parish, Ocean Grove are, from left, Roger Lamode, satirical theme for the Crucifixion, they will A. Cournoyer. pastor, said, "Allgeneral' chairman and president - of parish unit of Con­of this particu- understandably be very reluc- our non-Catholic neighbors are

fraternity of Christian Doctrine; Hev. Richard P. Demers,lar song is that tant to enter into dialogue with invited to attend the open house Jews ca~ rela.x .~~ Christians. curate; and Rev. Rene J.Dawe, pastor of. the First Chris­ in order that they' may gain: a and get their '. And, by the same token, if tUm Congregational Church of Swansea, which will have practical insight into our parish first good night's slee(: in almost Christians fail to .understand a similar open house program Sunday', April- 17. facilities, our' liturgy, customs 2 000 years now that the Vatican that the declaration was meant' and beliefs." Council's Declaratior on Chris- to be a sincere examination of Honorary chairman' for the tian-Jewish relations have "ab- the Christian conscience-which. event is Francis McGonagle,and solved" them of responsibility has so much to answer ~or in this general chairman is Roger La­for the Crucifixion and has offi-' area-they wi!' be ill-prepared monde, president of the pariSh cially certifie~ that they are for the kind of dialogue which is' .Confraternity of Christian Doc­"clean." so strongly recommended, in .the. . trine, sponsoring organization.

Weird Caricature document. ' [Bl@fr'W®®Uil ~ @~ ~g AA~$@~$' Committees include speakers,As a'n'exercisl: in heavy-hand- See Turning Point ALTON '(NC) - A growing '" . hospitality, tOJ.1r guides, helpers,

ed sarcasm, this song is quite ef- fl'iE!lldship •. j;letween Knights of "Don't be' surprised from now !-,ec~ptiC!n, publicity, displa¥,fective":"- disconcertingly so, in Fortunately, however, popular Columbu's' and Masons, is a no- to find Knights of Columbus program, and registration ..fact. On' the other hanel, it ~s. misconceptions about th~ ~ature.' ticeable 'effect of the new' ecu- and Shrin.er!3, each in their own

The St. Michael's speakers will . d . 't of the Vatican . and purpose of the counCIl s dec- 'menicalsp'ltit, Michael J. How- regalia, in a common guard ofweir canca ure. . .:. I' t··o are gradually being h t 'bl' f t· " 'd explain and answer questions onCouncil's Declaration on Chns- ara In, lett, Illinois auditor of public. onor a pu IC unc lOns, sal

such church features as win­tian-Jewish Relations, ancl, given cleared up as time goes on. Al- accounts'; told a Catholic group Howlett. "I've already seen it, dows, statues, stations of thethe enormous popularity of the though the wording of the decla- here. at the civic dinner. welcoming Cross, the Mass, sacred vessels,Mitchell trio, I am afraid it will, ration leaves something to be . Howlett 'told a parents club the new ArchbishoP.John Patrick CCD work, vestments; baptistrydo a considerable amount of, desired, many Jews ,wQuld agree. 'meeting' hi S S . Pet e r and. Cody to Chicago. and confessionals. .

il~~Om1«llO$ ©~~od~~ ~ol/'~$ IF[j'O~ll'ildJSiI}nB~

harm. . . with Father Bauro When he says Paul church auditorium there "When a group of 40 students Unfortunately the nature and that it "may well turn out to are increasing signs of coopera- at a Catholic seminary in Indi­

purpose 'of th€' council's decla- be a turning point in the history tion among religious organiza-" ana volunteered to 'donate blood ration have been widely misin- of JewisI:r-Christian relations." tions of different faiths. k the Shrine Hospital for Crip­terpretea: ' . . In the four months which have pled Children in' Chicago, 12

As Father Gregory Bllum - elapsed since the docu.ment was Knights of Columbus' volun­who had a hand in the writing promulgated, there have been community and in due time, can teered for chauffeu(service," he of the decll:iration-points out in. numerous Christian-Jewish con- . be expected to issue a series of added. . the January-February issue of .ferences and sem.inars in the recommended guidelines for .di- "The Shrine, hospital always The Ecumenist, "the Council. United States, and, as Religious ocesan and-local programs aimed has ~reated crippled cbildren re­statement .was addressed' to. News S'ervice recently stated in at implementing the purpose of gardless of their religious belief. Christians;'It-intended to c:larify It round-up ~urvey of Christian;; ( : the·declar~tion. One of the seminarians who vol­Christian teaching in areas. Jewish relations, i.t now appears' Meanwhile American Catholics unteered his blood had.. been a where, in a more or less remote certain that the interreligious at all levels will want to bear patient in the hospital. as a past an anti-Jewish tone had de- approach to both common prob- in mind. that the declaration' is child." . ' formed the pure presentation of lems and theological questions. only the first step. the Gospel. The statement, there- . will continue to accelerate at . As Father. 'Baum points out in fore, was a Christian affair" and' grassroots as well as at national the article referred to above, "it represented "an examination of' and international levels. . now presents a challenge to the the Christian conscience." Challenge to Church Church. What counts in the fu-

Headlines Mislead Our own bishops are prepared ture is how soon the teaching of Misleading newspaper Tnead- to do everything they possibly the Council enters our institu­

lines to the contrary notwith- can to help the cause along. tions and the hearts of our peo­standing, the declaration did The Subcommittee on Christian- pIe, and how resourceful and en- . not "absolvp." the Jewish people Jewish Relations ot: their over- terprising'we shall be in giving of anything. That would have all Commission on Ecumenism visible ';expression to the spirit ­been an unconscionable insult to· has already begun to meet with ual bond,:that uni.tes the Church the Jewish.community. representatives of· the Jewish and the lews."

Moreover, as -Father .Baum eontinues in his excellent com­

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mentary on the declaration, the ... council "haa no intention of telling the Jewish people who. they are. There··would have been something aggressive, or at least condescending, about a Christian Church intending" to tell the Jews whether or in: what sense they were God's chosen peoPle.

"* * * If Jewish readers under­stood the text as addressed~~o '~__,.,...., . tbem, it is not suprising that some of them were disturbed and slightly insulted."

My ownexperience in meeting . on several occasiOns in re(:ent days with a representative cross­section of Jewish leaders leads, me to believe that some of them· . d. think that the declaration was addresse'd to the Jews•

.That's why I am a little dis­turbed about the Mitchell trio's satirical spoof of the declaration.

Foster Respe'ct I am afraid it will make it aU

the more difficult to set the r(~c­ord straight ­ at least in the short run. And the. record must

Page 15: 03.17.66

--

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. ~1. 1966Says Holy Name IS Men Anticipated Council Decrees

ATLANTA (NC) - The Seoond Vatican Council did :not make the Holy Name Society an anachronism. III fact, the society anticipated and even prompted some of the re­forms mapped out by the eouncil.

That was the view expressed by Louis C. Fink, special lay eonsultant to the society's na­tional headquarters, in an inter­-view here.

Fink, an Atlanta bank execu­tive, said the society was ready to adapt itself at the beginning of the council and was prepared to implement the council's de­erees as soon as they were pro­mulgated.

"The society had already en- . rolled the activists among Cath­olic men," he said, "some five million of them, accustomed to 'pouring out energies so that the divine message of redemption may be heard and welcomed by nil men everywhere,' as stated in the lay apostolate decree.

Work With Priests "Secondly, Holy Name men

were accustomed to working in harness with parish priests. which is also emphasized in the decree. This is the way the Holy Name Society has operated in modern times."

Fink said many bishops at the council already knew the needs and desires of the laity from the diocesan Holy Name unions around the country.

And as soon as the council ended, he said, the society began to interpret its decrees through regular parish and public meet­ings.

"A second action was to lend the vast manpower resources of Holy Name to implementing the decrees," he added. "For in­Btance, in hundreds of parishes. the pastor turned immediately to Holy Name men for lectors and commentators at Mass. So many Holy Name men became involved in this work, which in­eluded ushers and the choir, that in some small parishes attend­ance at corporate Communion was affected; the men were at other Masses."

Elect Six Priests To Diocese Board

RENO (NC) - Priests of the Reno diocese have elected six of their number as the diocese's board of consultors.

The ordinar:- method of form­ing a board of ~onsultors is by appointment, the practice fol- . Jowed today in the vaBt majority of U. S. dioceses. .

The vicar. general and the ehancellor of the diocese are ex officio members of the board. Of . the six elected, four are pastors, one heads Catholic Charities and other is an officialis of the dio­eese, according to Bishop Rob­ert J. Dwyer of Reno who an­nounced the results of the balloting.

-Author to Receive Culture Gold Medal

WINDSOR (NC)-John How­ard Griffin, author of "Black Like Me," has been chosen for the 1966 Christian Culture Award gold medal, given annu­ally by the Christian Culture Se'ries of Assu~p.tion University, now merged with the Vniversity

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Page 16: 03.17.66

16 'UiE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 17, 1966 .

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CICOP Should Be Property Of All UIIS. Catholic Groups

From "The Church in the New Latin America" Edited by John J. Considine, M.M.

The enthusiasm engendered at the 1964 Catholic Inter­American Cooperation Program conference prompted many

.a man present to seek an outlet for his exciting resolutions. Father Vincent Lovett of Kansas City, Missouri, and Father Albert Nevins of Maryknoll· ably set forth practical pro­grams for adaptation at ev­ery level from the national· quarters to the folksy grassroots community. Back in the year 1602, a little band of Jesuit mission­aries gathered at what is now Argentina to make plans for their Latin American apos­tolate. In their records, which are still extant, one of the preg­nant conclusions entered o~- the musty pages is the sentence, "The zeal of the apostle is, like the individual bravery of soldiers, to be, sub­ordinated to tactics." Those of us who today continue the plan­ning of the Salta Jesuits may well keep this sentence in mind. The Latin American apostolate deserves the careful subordina­tion of artless zeal to well pre­pared tactics.

Proposals from Mexico At the 1964 CICOF conference

in Chicago, the group of dele­gates from Mexico was particu­larly attentive in listing the out­comes which they felt should follow from the deliberations. Their suggestions are as follows:

1. The textbooks used in North American Catholic schools should be revised to give a truer picture of the peoples and the Church in Latin America. Sim­ilar objectives should be set by the Catholic press and other avenues of communications.

2. Adequate measures should be taken to propagate fuller knowledge of Latin America by the various career groups within the Catholic body, the clergy, the religious, the professional men, educators, nurses, social workers, editors, mass member­ship organizationlf, and the like.

3. Discussion groups, IlQt too large in size, should be insti ­tuted to deal with specific sub­jects aimed at determining the principles that can promote im­proved relations.

4. Future CICOP conference programs should be made avail ­able well in advance in order that both Latin American and United States participants may come better prepared to the annual assemblies.

5. CICOP should advocate a second program parallel to its own through which Latin Amer­icans would seek to create bet­ter understanding of North Americans among the peoples of the great world belew the Rio Grande.

BaskChurck Pro/:,ram Thus the· Mexicans found

themselves thinking awng the lines which had: prompted the Catholic bishops to initiate the movemest which, though for practical purposes' is labeled with the title CICOP, aims to f)rovide a program whereby the mass of Church members in the United States may as Christians achieve full e..r understanding, friendship and conCern ·f~r their fellow Clu:istians of Latin Amero: lea.

This prog,ram should belong t() every group of Catholies in the United· States. The bishops who initiated this movement will experience a sense {)f defeat it allY religious community, any MOJSS membership ercanization

in the Church assumes that CICOP is a particularistic in­strumentality reserved for some sPeCIal segment of the Catholic body.

The CICOP administrative unit possesses the mission under the bishops of the United States of laboring as a service unit, providing the sinews for acti ­vating a program which is the property of all who are inspired to employ it to forward Chris­tian understanding in the West­ern hemisphere.

Oltleration Understamlli.ng .The Catholic Inter··American

Cooperation Program (CICOP) was launched in 1963 by the U. S. Bishops' Committee for Inter­American Cooperation. It aims at mutulill understanding and friendship based on the princi­ple that, regardlesS of social or economic circumstances of life, Christian peoples, indeed all peoples should know and accept each other as people

The program is vi tal to the Church in the United States in its master plan to recognize its proper relations to the Church in Latin America.

The truth is that most U. S. Catholics, like their fellow-citi ­zens, possess an inadequate un­derstanding of the 200 million Latin Americans with whom they share this hemisphere.

In place of facts -- historical, social and religious facts - we have too often cherished myths and stereotypes. "The Latins are backward," we hear it said. "They won't practice their reli ­gion." "They're lazy!"

Such false though all too fa­miliar impressions prevent our coming to grips with the real Latin America.· Too often we lack an understanding of how each continent substantially in­fluences the life of the other.

This inhibits even our well ­intentioned attempts to labor to­gether with the Latin American peoples in resolving the com­mon problems of our hemisphere.

We must find! our way out of this fog of misinfonnation and misunderstanding. We owe it all in charity to our Latin

. neighbors and to ourselves. Their destinies and ours are

at stake; the future of our faith and the survival of our way of life are being decided now in Latin America.

Money enters into the matter, but it isn't the answer. It might only become an excuse for with­holding the most necessary gift of all, ourselves. Our minds must be penetrated as well as our purses;.our hearts stirred as well as our hands.

Te make people aware, t(l make them want to act, to point

'ways toward effective action, sUch is CICOP's purpose. Its

. structure is composed of mem­bers of the hierarchy, the clergy, the religious communities, and the laity who know Latin Amer­ica thoroughly and love it very much and wha have dedicated themselves in Ch'rlst's name to its cause.

. P,evost Alumni·· Alumni of Prevost High

School, Fall -River, will meet Saturday, April 23 at White's restaurant. Members of the class of 1945 will be specially lionored. The program will include dinner and dancing and will be under the chairm"n"hip of Raymond Do Dien and Robert ChOUinard.

THE ANCHOR- 17 Thurs.; March 17, 1966

Prel~te $~eaks

To Ori~~dox SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-The

reconciliation efforts begun be­tween the churches of the East and West were dramatized here when Msgr. Mark J. Hurley, as­sistant chancellor of the SaJl Francisco archdiocese, preache4 from the pulpit of a Greek 0. ­thodox church.

At the invitation of the paBm tor, he gave hiE blessing to an overflow congregation of OrthOo­dox faithful.

Emphasizing the mutual chafl­ity and fraternal spirit that marked a joint declaration made in Rome and Constantinople last Dec. 7 by Pope Paul VI and 01' ­thodox Patriarch Athenagoras II of Istanbul, which "committed to oblivion" the excommunica­tions which split East and West in 1054, Msgr. Hurley asked:

"Is it too fanciful to say we would like to reaffinn here what happened in Constanti ­nople and Rome? May we, in ow humble and sincere way, reaf­firm. here what was done 0iIll such a high level?"

Student Recruiting Small in State

HARRISBURG (NC)-A l'JlIo. IallQva University representative admitted here that neither hie school nor others in Pennsy~ vania do much recruiting fit either whites or Negroes.

John E. Hughes, chairman fJI Villanova's sociology depal1­ment, made the statement in aD interview after an official of the Pennsylvania Human Relation~ Commission suggested the state'~ colleges and universities should actively recruit Negro student&.

Elliott M. Shirk, the commJa.. sion's executive director, made the eall for recruitment at a con­ference on intergroup relatiollfl sponsored by the COmmissiom, the State Board of EducatiOit. and the Department of Publie Instruction.

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'New Type of Lent Toledo Bi~hop Rehring Recommends Total

Renewal of Private and Social Conduct

TOLEDO (NC)-Bishop George J. Rehring of Toledo has called on his flock to use a "new type of Lent" to bring about in themselves '01 total. renewal of private and social conduct. S pea kin g of the "greater personal responsibility" empha­sized throughout the Second Vatican CounciL the Ohio Ordi­nary said the mentality of pen­ance now should be broadened to include a complete "change in ourselves."

Alter Ourselves While the new regulations do

not diminish the old call for per­sonal mod~ration, Bishop Reh­ring stated, there has been added "another area in which one can fulfill the purpose of penance and at the same time improve oneself morally and religiously -the area of human relation­ships." He said

. "If we have failed against brotherhood, Christian charity, a

Three M.a;ne Clergy In· Unity Service

WATERVILLE (NC)-Father Robert Lavoie of St. John the Baptist Catholic church, Wins­low, joined with an Episcopalian and a Methodist pastor in a church unity service at the Pleasant Street Met hod i s t church here.

The other participants were the Rev.. David Montgomery, pastor of St. Mark's Episcopal church and the Rev. Leslie Howard, pastor of the Methodist chu~·ch.

The service climaxed Brother­hood Week, proclaimed by Waterville Mayor Malcolm J. Fortier.

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God-like love for others, now we are called upon to repent of our wrong doing, to fill up the gaps in our conduct, to alter our­selves, our thinking, our feel­ings, our attitudes, our conduct and our manner of acting."

Valuable Reward The Toledo Bishop has told his

people such change "will require us to cultivate kindness, consid­eration, love of fellowmen as God's children, a Christ-like charity, a genuine concern for the human needs of others. By introducing such change~ in ourselves, we will practice dis­cipline that will reward us in self-improvement and in a val­uable contribution to a more friendly neighborhood."

Then finally there will be "no room for grievances, protests agitation and demonstrations ,: the Bishop noted. "When mor;l obligations are fulfilled civil rights are respected ami made secure."

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Page 18: 03.17.66

18 THE ,ANCHOR- , Thurs., March 17, 1966 Defends' Church's 'Use of Sanctio'ns

MUNDELEIl'ir (NC)-A priest session of the two-day Semi­ its economic power against com­ archdiocese," he said.Indigenti' flo@r <!efended the Church's right to narians-Lay Apostolate Confer-­ panies which discriminate, add­ Another speaker, Father Jo­

use its economic power to battle ence (SLAC) at St. Mary of the ing that "no parish in the Chris­ seph H. Fichter, S.J., a sociole­Continued from Page One racial and othHr forms of dis­ Lake Seminary, Msgr. Egan tian community can claim that ,gi~t, said that the vigor of therica, South America, or even crimination. enunciated a strong. policy of the use of such a power would Catholic Church in the Midwest:hi" 'the slums of our dear

Church involvement in commu­ be meaningless." -and particularly in Chicago­land, mean to them? They shrug Msgr. John J. Egan of the Of­ nity problems. Msgr. Egan noted that he was is unique. He attributed this toit' off. "That's none of my busi­ ficeof Urban Affairs and a re­ "It is a matter of public policy speaking for himself, and would the wisdom of leaders who knowness. I' have troubles enough of cently named ,consultor of the that discriminatory practices are not forecast a "Project Equality" how t~ llhare responsibility.my own. Let others, my brothers" Chicago archdiocese argued that wrong," he said. "It would be program for Chicago similar to rather than trying to do every­ereatures of God, shIft for "the use of powl~r by the institu­ shamefacedly hypocritical for the one launched recently in thing themselves. "The Midwestthemselves." But what does the tional Church is inevitable," but the People ,of Go!! to refrain Detroit. ' hils been blessed, with 'vigilantLord say? "Thou shalt love thy that to use it "neutrally" can be ' from usi,ng economic sanctions "But I would hope that "Proj­ inactivity' on'the part of eccle- ,neighbor as thyself., What you morally wrong. ' fn support of public poliCY." ect' Equality' or some similar siastical authority," Father Fich­do for one' in need, you do for J:D an address to a general He advocated that parishes use plan would be,come policy in the ter said.me: I, the Lord, am your neigh­

bor." Golden Rule

'Suppose we were to put our­selves in the place of those that want. How indignant we would be to be passed by! How mu<::h we would insist on our brother­hood in Christ, on our right to be helped. "Is this, or is this not my brother? Could he not show me' the, charity he would want' for himself, were he in my

8 place? Where is the Golden Rule? What's all this about lov­ing one's neighbor as oneself?"

.Most generous souls respond flo all manner of appeals. Their mail is full of begging letters. Often, they are' victims of their Own generosity. The'more they

, give, the more is asked of them. , If such as these believe that all

demands have equal value, let' ,me try, please, to' set them straight.' There are beggIng let ­ters that originate from profes­sional sources who get a com-, mission on all they help gather in the way of charity. There are begging ,letters from ambitious GOuls who have fo'olishly gotten themselves in heavy debt, by building first, and trying to ,col­lect afterwards.

Brother's Keeper The Bishops Relief Collection

tl, nothing like this. It is not a UJ>rivate ,projec,t, handled by pro­110ssiorials, with guaranteed lists of names. It is universal in OlWpe. It takes in all men, re­aardiess of race, creed, or color. lll. has gOI1e on now for 15 years. I:t may go on, for 15 years more. :W~r as .long ,as there is hunger, disease and want in the world' we must conscientiously' d~

,Something about' it. We belie've ~e are generous to the'p~or,of the world .. The German' people 8l'e much more generous than' we are. 'Catholics in West Germany Dumber ,one-half of the Catholic population of 'the United States. Yet they give twice as much as ' we do. As long as need exists, we must continue dispensing' alms. We have no choice. The love of Christ urges us. We are, indeed, and in fact, our brother's keepers.

I have said many times before, and I am insistent on repeating it, because it is true: "Every

... YOU CAN BA,NK ON THE BES'T PERSONAL LOANS

dollar we give is worth eighteen times.its value, at the point of distribution, by t~e B'ishops AT :THE NATIO~AL BA:NKRelief Services." Does anyone here get such dividends on his ~vestments? Do they', increase In value, as much as twelve

~r8 you .eed with I temporary money prob1em1 Talk It overUmes; ,even 'in six' weeks or Sill: Bishops does. with an experienced Personal Loan officer at Fall River National~onths? Relief

No my beloved in Christ, if we Bank., He tail help you pay for medical e~peMeS ••• make thatwish to inves+ in .kindness,-if . we know we cannot,' in con­ Important purchase ..... and 'meet other n8eds for cash. ltIe

,

Ialience, 'neglect a neighbor ill cost II low ••• terms are arranged to fit into your b,l4dset •.• /.~eed, even though he live a long way off,---.,.then we cannot the ,ervloe Is fast and oompletelYGonfidentlal. You'D make do better, than invest in the ebarity that goes the farthest, short work- of that'money problem ••• and glt the beat'lp and does the most gOOd. PetsonalLoana ••• with 8 vIsttto f811 ~Iv&r Nation".

Charitable Diocese Together, we have done much

ewer the years to set a reputa­tion, for this Diocese, high ill the minds and hearts of mission­!try bishops, in all needy parts of the world. They live in the midst of squalor we do not see. It af-' feets all 'men in, their dioceses, pagans, Mohammedans, Budd­hists, Hindus, as well as various Christian denominations. They all benefit from what we do here. All mer.. are children' iJl

Tdfn ~ Paee TweDt)",

Page 19: 03.17.66

Durfee High Hoopsters Bid For State Schoolboy Crown

By Fred Bartek Good luck and best wishes to Coach Tom Karam and

his Durfee High basketeers in their quest for the State scholastic championship which they open tomorrow night at the Boston Garden against Springfield Catholic, victors in the Western Mass big-· school competition. Conceded If you see a jersey··and-trunks

clad youth running along aan excellent chance to cap­ country road during the nextture the enviable State title, few weeks you can be almost the Fall River Hilltoppers moved sure he is a high school runner into the all-state tourney by vir­ trying to round himself into tue of their easy condition for the approaching59-45 triumph Spring competition. over Coach Bill The trackmen have an advan­Kearns' Wey­ tage over the baseball playersmouth Hi gh inasmuch as the nmners needcourt combine only an extended surface toin the Eastern train on, be it covered in snow,Mass. Tech tour­ frozen by the weather or softnament fin a I . and soggy due to melting. TheDisplaying the basebaIlers must await more same determi­ propitious conditions b e for enation that car­ coaches will risk sore arms.ried them to a

It is unfortunate in this areanow 20-2 sea­that most teams get little oppor­son's record, the Bristol County tunity to work for any sustainedLeague champs squelched the period outdoors before theskeptics who earlier claimed that games start. It's one of the draw­this area's teams could not match backs for prospective majorthose of Greater Boston. leaguers who are domiciled inKaram Skill New EnglandD~rfee exhibited the best in

llChoolboy basketball in the Tech Lewismen LooD! Big' competition. It displayed well ­ It will surprise few if Durfee round club, equally proficient walks off with the baseball hon­on the attack as on defense. ors as it has just done in basket­Those who know this best are ball. The 'Hilltoppers are always the three clubs which succumbed tough and this season should be to the prowess of Karam's no exception. proteges. Coach 'Skip' Lewis will be

Karam's own hard and astute pOinting his stalwarts for the work has paid off. A most val­ June State championships. A uable Tech tourney winner him­ team must finish either first or self, the Providence College second in Its league to qualify alumnus has been recognized for a place in the State baseball in the coaching ranks as among playoffs. Hence the BCL, Narry, the best developers and teachers Hockomock and Cape leagues of eager, green aspirants. He will each send two clubs to the has a knack of spotting a 'dia­ playoffs. This differs from the mond-in-the-rough' and then 70 per cent winning mark a bringing him along to fit into a basketball club must achieve to notch with four other awkward rate a place In the Tech elimina­youths who will jell as a unit. tion competition.

Durfee basketball teams have Bishop Feehan High of Attle­qualified 23 times for the Tech boro and Bishop Stang High of tourney, five of which they won. North Dartmouth loom, on The Hilltoppers have been in paper, as the most likely to the title final on eight occasions. trouble the Hilltoppers. Taunton,

Fleming' Outstanding too, is a potential crown aspi­Nobody in Boston Garden last ~t. While i. is premature to

Saturday night knew the record make predictions these three and capabilities of the Fall River schools seem to have the re­

turning strength in the pitchingled and black any better than Kearns who piloted Somerset department to give them a shot

at the BCL first place berth.B:igh (across the river from Fall River) before he moved Talented Hurlers into a higher bracket at Wey­ Taunton's Art Kostka who mouth. spun several shut-outs last

Springfield Cathedral is 19-5 Spring, will bl' the stopper for on the season. the Herringtown club this year.

Big Ernie Fleming, who caged Mike Walsh and Robbie an average of slightly more than Poirier are the one-two pair of 20 point& a game In the Tech the Feehan slabsters while Paul competition, has proved that he Gillis of Stang may well turn Is the Durfee mainstay. Ernie, -out to -be the best southpaw in definitely, is the best 'big man' the Bristol County loop. in this area. He was chosen on The Oliver Ames Tigers of The Anchor's Class A all-star North Easton look like the class team last week. In the Hockomock circuit in the

Turin to Baseball northern Bristol. county while Several followers of this col­ Holy ralllily of New Bedford,

umn have written to Inquire Dighton-Rehoboth regional, caSe concerning the name of the of SWllnSea and Somerset will be Eastern Mass. tourney, more making a determined bid for the formally the Mass. Tech ToUr­ title in the Narry league. nament.

Originally, more than 30-odd Vermonters .Honor years ago, the Eastern Mass. competition was staged at the­ Burlin~toll1PrelateMIT gymnasium in Cambridge.

BURLINGTON (NC) ,- MoreEven though the games have moved into the Boston Garden, than 300 labor leaders, clergy­and have been played there for men and legislators honored many years now, the tourney Msgr. Edward J. Fitzsimons here directors have maintained the for his service to the civil rights .:>riginal name derived from the movement in Vermont. Institute of Technology. Speakers at the _testimonial

Now that all combines, except dinner included Bishop Robert Durfee, have wound-up the F. Joyce of Burlington, Gov. hardwood sport for the season, Philip Hoff and Cleveland Wil­attention turns to baseball, the liams of, St. Michael's College, national pastime. Battery candi­ Winooski Park. Bishop Joyce dates are already working out presented Ms'Jr. FitZsimons with' at many schools while the track .a -parchment· scroll.on behalf of and field athletes are drilllng the Burlington branch of the' in-doors, pwalUnl a break ID National Association for the the weather. AdvancemeDl of Colored People.

HEAD START: Kevin Brandy seems to have gotten a "head start" with Sister Jeanne Clare, O.P., fifth-grade teacher at Holy Redeemer parish, St. Louis, who taught a class recently in the Head Start program at St. Ann's parish, St. Louis. NC Photo.

Hits Demonstrations Senator Dirksen Chides Publicity-Seeking

Draft Card Burners NOTRE DAME (NC) - Sen. cross the lines of partisanship in

Everett M. Dirksen of Dlinois order to mstain--even as now­told a predominantly student our government in the terrible audience of ~.400 at the Univer­ times of crisis You strike us as sity of Notre 'J:)ame here that the senator of senators, noble, he "cannot condone" student eloquent, clleternlined, desirous of demonstrations a g a ins t the the resolution of the immense American war effort in Vietnam. conflicts, injustices and disorders

The Senate minority leader of our society." said that thosp who oppose the Dirksen said the a war d war "ought to go back to their "makes me feel good right down history books and see who pro­ to my toes." vided what we have today."

He chided draft card bu~ers,

who, he said, never burn their Loyola University cards "behind the barn or in the Plans Center, Dormbasement. There must always be a network camera nearby." CmCAGO (NC)-Loyola Uni­

versity will build a $5.3 millionDirksen spoke after receiving campus center and dormitory on

tbe 13th annual patriotism its Lake Shore campus here, theaward of Notre Dame's senior university has announced.class from clase president John

The U. S. Community Facili ­Bucks of Hereford, Tex. ties Administration has ap­

The citation accompanying proved a $3.75 million loan for the award to Dirksen said, in the project. The rest of its cost part: "Great in your own party, will be provided by the univer­you have never hesitated to sity.

The structure will be a two­section building. One sectionMaryknoll to Elect will house 685 students and their

Superior General counsellors, with offices for the dean of students, student healthMARYKNOLL (NC) - The services and a 299-seat theater.Catholic Foreign Mission Soci­ The other will be a two-storyety of America, more popularly campus center with dining andknown as Maryknoll, will con­ recreational facilities and a book vene its fifth general chapter store.

~eetlng Aug~ 1 at the society'~ major seminary here in New York.. K of C Ball

. The meeting, called eyery 10. The annual Easter. dinner and years to elect a superior general- ball of McMahon Assembly, New and governing· council and· dis"; Bedford Knights of Columbus, cuss society plans and policies, will take place Saturday night, will be attended by 55 members .. April 16 in New Bedford Hotel. from mission areas and the Dinner is scheduled for 7:30 with United States. dancing to follow from 9 to 12.

A two-week meeting to dis- Dress is fornlal, according to an­. cuss and examine current devel- . nouncement made by Harry A.

opments in missiology a n,d Sears, chairman. theology will be convened July

THE ANCHOR- 19 Thurs., March 17, 1966

Fun ~~@~[lQm Set for y ~""~~ ;. J.1M~t~

ForthCilming activities of the Attleboro area Catholic Young Adult Organization include ser­vice on the planning committee fo·r the Diocesan Vocational Ex­hibit, "Christian Panorama," to be held the weekend of March 25 at Bishop Cassidy High School, Taunton.

Sunday, March 27 members will attend the television Mass at Station WTEV, New Bedford. Celebrant will be Rev. Walter Sullivan, Diocesan Youth Direc­tor. Sunday ('vening, the young men and women will assist in arrangements for a whist partN to be held at St. John's -hall, Attleboro, for the benefit of the La Salette missions.

I;'uture Plans Future plans include attend­

illlee at the Diocesan CYAO con­vention, election of area officers ~ and a banquet to close the year's activities. For information about membership, young adults in the "ttleboro area are invited to contact Raymond Roy, Seekonk.

tist H;C7lh Honors . l.;'.

ft,-t ~"'~!""I\,e~ill Diocesan students recognized

at the annual Honors Assembly of Stonehill College include Gerald J. Cunniff, Taunton, who received the senior athlete scholar award; and Pauline A: Gagnon, Fall River; Christopher J. Lowrie, New Bedford, Bey­nard P .• Petit, Fall River; and Jeanne E. Poirier, Taunton, who were inducted as members of Delta Epsilon Sigma, n:ltional honor society.

Named to the Dean's List for the Fall semester were 106 stu­dents. Receiving high honorS with a grade average of 90 0. better were Marjorie A. Condon, Thomas P. Delaney, Pauline A. Gagnon and Umberto Latessa Jr: all of Fall River; Donald - N. Cloutier, New Bedford; and Michael Donohue. Taunton.

Fourteen from the Diocese were on the honors list, receiV­ing grade averages of 85 or b~

ter.

Receives Chemistry Society Medal .

NEW YORK (NC)-Dr. Frw. erick D. Rossini, dean of tlMi College of Science at the Uni­versity of Notre Dame, l'eceive<U the William H. Nichols Medal presented annually by the New York Section of the American .. Chemical Society.

Dean Rossini was cited f~ "outstanding contributions to the area of chemical thermodyn~ Ice througll research, writio" and o~ganization."

24t11

Record lrealllag

week EVES.-M:m. thru Ttlllrs. at 8:00 Fri.. Sat. Eves at 8:30 Sun. Eve. at 7:30 .Matinees: Fri.. Sat., Sun. andVJell.

at 2 P.M.

Phone F. R. 1-677-9357 l1ckets on Sale in New Bedford I_

.Merri Card Shop. ·834 Purchase StreetI

1. Prominent U. S. and European religious and lay scholars have been invited.

The new superior general would be the society's fifth. Currently in the post,elected in 1956, is Bishop John W. Comber,

. M.M.,: of .Lawrence, Mass. The second .~uperiorg~J;l~ral, Bishop James -E. Walsh, 'eleCted in 1936, Is now a prisoner of the Red Chinese in SbanghaL

~ 'Rendrtes

Page 20: 03.17.66

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs., March 17, 1966

H(!ID for Needy Continued from Page Eighteen

God. All are our brothers in the flesh. St. James the Greater writes as follow s: "If' a brother is ill-clad, or hungry, and one of you says to him: 'Go' in peace, be warmed, be. full;' and does nothing for him, what does it profit? Is this good for us? Are we ourselves not hurt. by such indifference?' All 'right to say we trust in Christ to take

'eare of everything. Bu~ ~hrist relies on us. He lives in us to the degree tha~' we love our neighbor, as He did, and does.

No need tc let everything hang on our faith in Him. If our conduct belies what we pro­fess. then we are not one in Christ. Faith without works is

'dead, really dead, just as dead' 3' Abel was. And that uncovers something of Cain in every cal­lous heart.

May the lovp. of Christ, then, find expression. in what. we do next Sunday for our neighbors ill need. It is an excellent in­vestment. It 1;Jays great divi­(jends, :l ot in money, but in gl'ace and growth in love of God. May we neve lose our sense, of

, pi·ty. For when that dies in the human heart, we, all die in a Sense.

Grateful for all that is done to further the Bishops Relief

'Programme, year by ~'ear, I remain.

Devotedly yours, JAMES L. 'CONNOLLY,

Bishop of Fall River.

Vep...tJcular Continued from Page. One

be said by the celebran t and servers at Low Mass, while the people recite the psalm or sing it hymn. But if at the Offertory, the psalm or hymn is finished, the people may join the servers in the'dialogue "Orate, Fratres". '. Thirdly, those who have per­mission to use a language other than English may take advan­tage of this extension of the use of '~macular prayers precisely to the degree that English is per:­~itted. However, ar.. apP'l'oved translation must be used,

Urges Catilolics Aid In Race Problem-

DAVENPORT (NC)-A bish­'ep c~utioned here that every Catholic has, a moral duty to ~!l}te a, sub:stantial ,contribution to. the solution of the interracial problem. , '

Bishop Ralph L. Haye,s of .... Davenport in' a pastoral letter

proclaiming Feb. 13 as "Inter­racial Justice Sunday" through­eut the diocese, reiterated his personal concern that Catholics become involv~d in doing some­thing to bring about racial jus­tice: ' , Racial justice;' the bishop noted, "'vill not be realized by good intentions and pious gener­alities; it demands a sound social order for all men. He called on, Catholics to "cooperate with all men of good will in removing from our communities the blight of racism and racial injustice."

Priest Heads City's Community Council

PORTLAND (NC)-F at her Francis J. Schaefers was named ~ head the Portland (Ore.) Community Council, supported by the United Good Neighboll'S. The rector of st. Mary's cathe­dral, succeeds William Campbell, l"cal attorney.

The council researches and

Jewish' Congress Calls for Federal Aid Tests' WASHINGTON '(NC)-A 1ation for this purpose is,needed The bill (S. 2097) would give Sen. Wayne Morse of Oregoll

spokesman for the AmericaJl to protect religious .liberty and taxpayers the right to challenge ,and is co-sponsored by Sens. Jo­. ' church-statEl ,separatIon. the constitutionality of the 1965, seph Clark of Pennsylvania and

JewIsh Congress urged here Pfeff'.!r testified as the leadoff federal aid to 'education act and Ralph Yarbor~ugh of Texas. , that Congress authorize tax- witne~s in hearings by the Sen­ other school aid measures, in­ , At present,. individual ·ia)l;­

payers to launch court tests, at Subcommittee on Constitu­ cluding any other program ad­ payers are prevented from chal­against federal aid to Church- tional Rights on a prop,osal to ministered by the Department of , lenging the constitutionality of related schools and antipoverty authorize judicial review of ni­ Health, Education and Welfare federal spending programs' un­programs. L. Pieffer, counsel of cent federal education and wel­ and enacted after Jan. 1, 1965. der the terms of a 1923 ruling by the AJC, contended th~t legis- fare legislation. ' , The ,bill was introduced by _ tpe U. S. Supreme Court.

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