03.10.66

20
Provincetown Planning Parish ARCHITECTURAL DRAWING OF PROVINCETOWN PARISH ELEMENTARY SCHOOL School - .January Target Date Target date for opening' of a school in St. Peter the Apostle parish, Province- town, is January, 1967, says Rev. Leo J. Duart, pastor. Preliminary plans for the six- classroom school are complete, he said, and construction plans are now being prepared. It is expected that construction bids will be called for late this month. The classrooms, to date kindergarten and grades one through five, will be on the upper level of a split-level, Cape Cod style building designed by David M. Crawley and Associa- tes of Plymouth. Total building area will be 13,500 square feet. The lower level of the build .. Turn to Page Twenty The ANCHOR Fall River, Mass., Thursday, March 10, 1966 PRICE Vol. 10, No. 10 1966 The Anchor S4.00 po,' Yoar Bishops' Relief Fund Appeal Scheduled for March 13-20 NEW YORK (NC)-American Catholic relief work overseas has advanced to a new emphasis on helping the needy help themselves. The method of the new system and how it best can be brought to the attention of those Iwho contribute to it was • tile main topic of a one-day meeting of relief leaders :here. Francis' Cardinal Spell- man, with the "Peace Through Ch'arity", launched the 20th ann- ual Catholic Bishops' Overseas Relief Fund Appeal. Director of Deaf To Offer Mass Rev. James A. McCarthy, assistant at St. William's .Church, Fall :Jliver, and Dio- , cesan Director of Deaf, will be of Sunday's Mass . to be televised at 10 o'clock over Channel 6 WTEV, New Bedford. The congregation will be com- prised of members of Diocesan .rganizations of the Deaf. He addressed a luncheon at- tended by 73 priest-directors, sch 0 0 I superintendents and Catholic lay leaders from 38 dioceses of the eastern United States. Bishop Edward E. Swanstrom, executive director of Catholic Relief Services-National Catho- lic Welfare Conference, overseas aid agency of American Catho- lics, which sponsor the annual appeal, presided at the meeting and also spoke. The nationwide campaign to aid the needy overseas regard- less of race, color or creed is scheduled to begin March 13. It will culminate March 20, Lae- tare Sunday, with a special col- lection in the more than 17,500 U.S. parish churches., The nation's Catholic school children again this year will More Liturgical Changes In Vernacular March 27 Liturgical adaptation to the mind of Vatican II will take another step forward Ml March 27, the First Sunday of Passiontide. On that the use of the vernacular wil[ be extended to the priestly prayers of the Mass and to the Prefaces. Hence forth, the Col. lect, the Prayer over the Offerings (Secret), and the Post-Communion will be in English. Also translated into English will be the Libera nos, the prayer following the Our Father and explaining the Keen Interest I n Vocations ProQ'ram Interest continues to grow throughout the Diocese in the forthcoming Christian Panorama that will take place March 25, 26 and 27 in Bishop Cassidy High School in Taunton. Thirty-five booths will be on display showing the work of the diocesan priesthood, re- ligious orders of priests, broth- ers, sisters and the activities of lay people involved in apostolic works. Various groups within the Di- ocese are cooperating in this Panorama which has received widespread publicity over tele- vision and radio 'as well as in parishes and schools. Rev. Joseph Powers, Diocesan Director of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, has an- nounced that CCD groups throughout the Diocese are in- cluding the Christian Panorama in their schedule of activities in March. In making this announcement, Father Powers' stated: "Since the' Confraternity of Chdstian Doctrine is· the only parish devoted ex- clusively to the promotion of Turn to Page Twelve Pre-Cana "deliver us from evil". The Preface, the solemn in- troduction to the Canon of the Mass, will also be in English. The U.S. will also use four new prefaces especially composed for certain feasts and circum- stances. The use of the vernacular for the Prayers at the foot of the Altar and for the Orate Fratres has been left to' the decision of individual dioceses. Eng 1 ish used on at these moments of the Mass could well clash' with the practice of singing appropriate hyms as has been established by some dioceses. Latin will therefore remain the language peculiar to the solemn eucharistic prayer, the Canon, or also for those pray- ers which will become the priest's and servers' private prayers since' the congregatiollll is at that time singing an ap- propriate hymn. The use of four new prefaces. which had normally been used in certain countries, has been. extended to the United States. They are an Advent Preface, for the Sundays and Ferial days of that season; a Blessed Sacra- ment Preface, for Masses honor. ing the Blessed Eucharist. Also included is a All Saints and Patronal Saints Preface to be used on those respective days Turn to Page Eleven Bishop Announces Changes Affecting Two Curates Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of the Di. ocese of Fall River, announced today the re-assignment of two curates that will become effective on Friday, March 18, 1966. The changes are: Rev. John J. assistant at the Sacred Heart Church, Fall River for the past 12 years, to St. Patrick Church, Falmouth, as assistant. Rev. William G. Campbell, assistant at St. Patrick Church, Falmouth, to the Cathedral of St. Mary of the Assumption, Fall River,: as assistant. Father Regan Father Regan was' born June 16, 1927 in Taunton, the 'son ,of the late" Raymond J. Regan and 'the late Gertrude <;>'Neil ltegan. ' ; The n.ewly named at the Falmouth parish is a gradu- Connolly and was assigned to St. James Parish, New Bedford. In August of the same year, Father Regan was appointed curate at the Sacred Heart Church; Fall River, where hot has served since Aug. 1, 1953. Father Campbell Father Campbell was bOM Jan. '18, 1931 in Vineyard. Haven, the son of Manuel and. Gabriella Moniz Campbell Tum to Page Two Jubilee Mass The third Pontifical Jubi!eI Following the Mass, 11 Com- Il\union Breakfast will be served 1M: the Kennedy Center, New Bedford, at which time the eharter to the Christ the King Chapter No. 91 in the Interna- tional Catholic Deaf Associatiolll wi.U be make their own ,contribution all during Lent through daily and weekly offerings. Cardinal Spellman said the need for American Catholics' charity to the world's less fortu- nate would go on "forever," Turn to Page Twenty Pre-Cana Conferences for en- gaged couples of the Fall River Diocese will be held at 7 Sunday night, March 20 for the Fall River, New Bedford and Attle- boro areas and at 8 Sunday night, March 27, for the Taunton area in their respective dtiCil. ate of Coyle High School, Taun- ton, attended St. Charles Col- lege, Catonsville, and studied philosophy and theology at St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore. Father Regan was ordained on May 22, 1953 in St. Mary's Ca- thedral, Fall River. by Bishop Mass commemorating the clos- ing of Vatican Council II win be offered on Sunday after- noon in St. John's Church, Attleboro. Rev. Donald J. Bow. en, assistant at S t. M a l' y , s Church, Norton, will be the preacher.

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Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of the Di. ocese of Fall River, announced today the re-assignment of two curates that will become effective on Friday, March 18, 1966. The changes are: Rev. John J. R~gan, assistant at the Sacred Heart Church, Fall River for the past 12 assistant. Father Regan Father Regan was' born June 16, 1927 in Taunton, the 'son Interest continues to grow throughout the Diocese in the forthcoming Christian Panorama that will take The n.ewly named assistan~ at ~

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 03.10.66

Provincetown Planning Parish

ARCHITECTURAL DRAWING OF PROVINCETOWN PARISH ELEMENTARY SCHOOL

School -.January Target Date

Target date for opening' of a school in St. Peter the Apostle parish, Province­town, is January, 1967, says Rev. Leo J. Duart, pastor.

Preliminary plans for the six­classroom school are complete, he said, and construction plans are now being prepared. It is expected that construction bids will be called for late this month.

The classrooms, to accommo~

date kindergarten and grades one through five, will be on the upper level of a split-level, Cape Cod style building designed by David M. Crawley and Associa­tes of Plymouth. Total building area will be 13,500 square feet.

The lower level of the build.. Turn to Page Twenty

The ANCHOR

Fall River, Mass., Thursday, March 10, 1966

PRICE ~Oc

Vol. 10, No. 10 ~ 1966 The Anchor S4.00 po,' Yoar

• Bishops' Relief Fund Appeal Scheduled for March 13-20

NEW YORK (NC)-American Catholic relief work overseas has advanced to a new emphasis on helping the needy help themselves. The method of the new system and how it best can be brought to the attention of those Iwho contribute to it was

• tile main topic of a one-day meeting of relief leaders :here. Francis' Cardinal Spell­man, with the "Peace Through Ch'arity", launched the 20th ann­ual Catholic Bishops' Overseas Relief Fund Appeal.

Director of Deaf To Offer Mass

Rev. James A. McCarthy, assistant at St. William's

.Church, Fall :Jliver, and Dio- , cesan Director of Deaf, will be ~le9rant of Sunday's Mass . to be televised at 10 o'clock over Channel 6 WTEV, New Bedford.

The congregation will be com­prised of members of Diocesan .rganizations of the Deaf.

He addressed a luncheon at­tended by 73 priest-directors, s c h 0 0 I superintendents and Catholic lay leaders from 38 dioceses of the eastern United States.

Bishop Edward E. Swanstrom, executive director of Catholic Relief Services-National Catho­lic Welfare Conference, overseas aid agency of American Catho­lics, which sponsor the annual appeal, presided at the meeting and also spoke.

The nationwide campaign to aid the needy overseas regard­less of race, color or creed is scheduled to begin March 13. It will culminate March 20, Lae­tare Sunday, with a special col­lection in the more than 17,500 U.S. parish churches.,

The nation's Catholic school children again this year will

More Liturgical Changes In Vernacular March 27

Liturgical adaptation to the mind of Vatican II will take another step forward Ml March 27, the First Sunday of Passiontide. On that da~ the use of the vernacular wil[ be extended to the priestly prayers ofthe Mass and to the Prefaces. Hence forth, the Col. lect, the Prayer over the Offerings (Secret), and the Post-Communion will be in English. Also translated into English will be the Libera nos, the prayer following the Our Father and explaining the

Keen Interest In Vocations ProQ'ram

~

Interest continues to grow throughout the Diocese in the forthcoming Christian Panorama that will take place March 25, 26 and 27 in Bishop Cassidy High School in Taunton. Thirty-five booths will be on display showing the work of the diocesan priesthood, re­ligious orders of priests, broth­ers, sisters and the activities of lay people involved in apostolic works.

Various groups within the Di­ocese are cooperating in this Panorama which has received widespread publicity over tele­vision and radio 'as well as in parishes and schools.

Rev. Joseph Powers, Diocesan Director of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, has an­nounced that CCD groups throughout the Diocese are in­cluding the Christian Panorama in their schedule of activities in March.

In making this announcement, Father Powers' stated:

"Since the' Confraternity of Chdstian Doctrine is· the only parish orgalllzati~n devoted ex­clusively to the promotion of

Turn to Page Twelve

Pre-Cana

"deliver us from evil". The Preface, the solemn in­

troduction to the Canon of the Mass, will also be in English. The U.S. will also use four new prefaces especially composed for certain feasts and circum­stances.

The use of the vernacular for the Prayers at the foot of the Altar and for the Orate Fratres has been left to' the decision of individual dioceses. Eng 1ish used on at these moments of the Mass could well clash' with the practice of singing appropriate hyms as has been established by some dioceses.

Latin will therefore remain the language peculiar to the

solemn eucharistic prayer, the Canon, or also for those pray­ers which will become the priest's and servers' private prayers since' the congregatiollll is at that time singing an ap­propriate hymn.

The use of four new prefaces. which had normally been used in certain countries, has been. extended to the United States. They are an Advent Preface, for the Sundays and Ferial days of that season; a Blessed Sacra­ment Preface, for Masses honor. ing the Blessed Eucharist.

Also included is a All Saints and Patronal Saints Preface to be used on those respective days

Turn to Page Eleven

Bishop Announces Changes Affecting Two Curates

Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of the Di. ocese of Fall River, announced today the re-assignment of two curates that will become effective on Friday, March 18, 1966. The changes are: Rev. John J. R~gan, assistant at the Sacred Heart Church, Fall River for the past 12 years, to St. Patrick Church, Falmouth, as assistant. Rev. William G. Campbell, assistant at St. Patrick Church, Falmouth, to the Cathedral of St. Mary of the Assumption, Fall River,: as assistant.

Father Regan Father Regan was' born June

16, 1927 in Taunton, the 'son ,of the late" Raymond J. Regan and 'the late Gertrude <;>'Neil ltegan. ' ;

The n.ewly named assistan~ at the Falmouth parish is a gradu­

Connolly and was assigned to St. James Parish, New Bedford.

In August of the same year, Father Regan was appointed curate at the Sacred Heart Church; Fall River, where hot has served since Aug. 1, 1953.

Father Campbell Father Campbell was bOM

Jan. '18, 1931 in Vineyard. Haven, the son of Manuel and. Gabriella Moniz Campbell

Tum to Page Two

Jubilee Mass The third Pontifical Jubi!eI

Following the Mass, 11 Com­Il\union Breakfast will be served 1M: the Kennedy Center, New Bedford, at which time the eharter to the Christ the King Chapter No. 91 in the Interna­tional Catholic Deaf Associatiolll wi.U be ~resented.

make their own ,contribution all during Lent through daily and weekly offerings.

Cardinal Spellman said the need for American Catholics' charity to the world's less fortu­nate would go on "forever,"

Turn to Page Twenty

Pre-Cana Conferences for en­gaged couples of the Fall River Diocese will be held at 7 Sunday night, March 20 for the Fall River, New Bedford and Attle­boro areas and at 8 Sunday night, March 27, for the Taunton area in their respective dtiCil.

ate of Coyle High School, Taun­ton, attended St. Charles Col­lege, Catonsville, and studied philosophy and theology at St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore.

Father Regan was ordained on May 22, 1953 in St. Mary's Ca­thedral, Fall River. by Bishop

Mass commemorating the clos­ing of Vatican Council II win be offered on Sunday after­noon in St. John's Church, Attleboro. Rev. Donald J. Bow. en, assistant at S t. M a l' y , s Church, Norton, will be the preacher.

Page 2: 03.10.66

2 THE ANf:HOP-Diocese of Fall River·-Thurs., Mar. 10, 1966

.~

Diocese of Fall River'

.OFFICIAL

ASSIGNMENTS

Rev. John J. Regan, assistant at Sacred Heart Church. Fall River, to St. Patrick Church, Falmouth. as assistant.

Rev. William G. Campbell, B. Mus.. assistant at St. Patrick,Falmouth, to the Cathedral of St. Mary of the Assumption, Fall River, as assistant.

Mective ~te Frida:v, March l8. llEl8.

~~~6Z-.d·' Bishop of Fall Rive1r .

Proper .of the ~~ass

. For the Third Sunday in Lent INTROIT: My eyes are ever. toward the' Lord, for he

will free my feet from the snare. Look toward me, and have pity on me, for I am alone and afflicted. To you I lift up my soul, 0 Lord. In you, Omy God, I trust; let me not be put to shame. Glory be to the Father.... My eyes are ever toward the Lord, for he will "free my feet from the snare. Look toward me, and have pity on me, for I am alone and afflicted.

GRADDAL: Rise, 0 Lord, let no man prevail; let the nations be judged iJl.--your presence. Beca!1se' my enemies are turned back, overthrown and destroyed before you.

TRACT: To you I lift up my eyes, who are enthroned in heaven. Beh(')ld, as the eyes of servants are on the' hands of 'her mistress, so are ollr eyes on the Lord our God, , ' till he have pity on us. Have pity on us, 0 Lord, have pity on us.

OFFERTORY: The precepts of the Lord are right, rejoicing the heart, and his ordinances are sweeter than syrup or honey from' the comb; therefore your servant is

.careful of th~m.

COMMUNION: The sparrow finds a home, and the swallow a ~nest il1l whiclt she puts her young; your altars, o Lord or" hosts, my. king an4 my God! Happy they who" dwell in your -house! continually they praise you.

Please OijJJ and Bring to Church an Sun~ay

Necrology MARCH 19

Bev. John J. McQuaide, lllO5., Assistant, St. Mary, Taunton.

MARCH ZOO Rev. Francis' A, Mrozinski,

1951, Pastor, St. Hedwig, New :Bedford.

MARCH 2% Rev. Joseph A. Martins, 1940,

Assistant, St. John Baptist, New Bedford.

FORTY HOURS DEVOTION

Mar. 13--St. Mary, Taunton. St. Francis X a vie r ,

Acushnet. . st. James, Tuunton.

Mar. 2Q-St. JOJ-eph, Nor t b Dighton.

Espirito . San to. Fall River.

Mar. 27-0ur Lady of Perpet­ual Help, New Bedford.

St. Pew, Dighton.

m ARCRO!l • SeeomJ crass Postage Pal:l at Fall Inwr,

Mas& "ublis!lecl 111e1J tbzndllJ .. 410 Hlihlana .vanua.. Fall RlYe~_ MlISI_ 02722 bJ .t!IlI C81J1cRc Pfl!SS 0> tile DI_ of Fall llver. SUbSl:rllltia IU- ~ -.II" PQItilaIli""eo 11" ­"ar.

Mass Orelo FRIDAY-Friday of n Week of

Lent. TIr Class. Violet. Mass Proper; No Glory or Creed; Preface of Lent.

SATURDAY - Saturday of n Week of Lent. Violet. Mass Proper; No Glory or Creed; 2nd Prayer St. Gregory I, Pope, Confessor and Doctor of the Churchi Preface of Lent.

SUNDAY-,-UI Sunday of Lent. I Class. Violet. Mass Proper; No Glory; Creed; Preface of Lent.

MONDAY-Monday of m' Week of Lent. In Class. Violet. Mass Proper; . No Glory or Creed; Preface of Lent.

TUli:SDAY .- Tuesday of m Week of Lent. in Class. Class Violet. Ma!;s Proper; No Glory or Creed; Preface of Lent.

WEDNESDAY - Wednesday of III Week. of Lent. ill Class. Violet. Mass Proper; No GlorT Or Creed; Preface oX Lent.

THURSDAY - Thursday of ·m Week of Lent. m Class. Violet.

. Mass Proper; No Glory or Creed; 2nd Prayer St; Patrick, Bishop and Ccmfessol'i ~ace 10( LeDt

FATHER REGAN FATHEIt CAMPBELL

Continued from Page One He attended the New England

Conservatory of Music, Boston, for four years and received the degree of B.Mus. in 1953..

From Sept. 1953 to Sept., 1956, at which time he entered St. Philip Neri School for Delayed Vocations, the new Cathedral curate ser'-ed as organj~t and choir director at the Fall River

Cathedral. Following philosophical and

theological studies at St. John's Seminary, :Brighton, Fat her Campbell was ordained on Feb.

. :'t, 1963 in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, by Bishop Connolly.

Prior· to his Falmouth assign­ment, Father Campbell served for a brief period 'in St. Mary's Church, Taunton.

'Necessary MOIl'il;9'~~G Prroed ~J~akes At~e~sm Field Study.

'As Much for Our Benefit as for Theirs8 .

WINNIPEG (NC)-A Russian­speaking Winnipeg priest, who fell in love with Moscow last Fall is now studying Chinese "at an intense pace" in antici ­pation of a Summer visit to China. .

Calling the "phenomenon of mOdern atheism" his keenest interest, Father Arthur Gibson has told local Knights of Co­lumbus "1 want to talk through to these atbeists and back from them to you." The only way a real dialogue can be established, he said, is if each side is con­vinced the other is composed of human beings.

Sense of Mission Father Gibson recalled that

he had "become fascinated" with the Russians he had met as a British official in. Germany, after World II. They were suspicious of him and afraid to speak frankly, but the future priest detected a certain "sense of mis­sion" and an enthusiasm for their socialist experiment."

Father Gibson says he thought: "If they are thus without God, what would they be with Christ?"

He later had an opportunity to study at ·the Russicum Semi­

, nary in Rome, before returning

. Benedictine Oblates Oblates of St. Benedict will

hold a day of recollection on· Sunday, March 20.at Portsmouth Priory, Rhode Isiand, beginning at 9 with a conventual Mass, followed by breakfast and a con­ference at 11 o'clock. Dinner will be served at 1:15 and after-­noon conferences will be given at 2:15 and 3:15. The day will close with Benediction. Oblates may bring guests and for further information should contact Mrs. Frank S. Moriarty, OS 2-1439, Fall River.

Tri-Ciiy Office Equip. 427 Second St. Cor. Morgan

Ed. McGinn, Prop.

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for ordination and incardination in the Archdiocese of Winnipeg.

For Our Benefit Last Fall he was invited to

attend the Vatican council ses­sion as a peritus, and before it began he paid a 'long-awaitedvisit to Moscow "as a simple

tourist." Father Gibson says he was gratified by the kindness and affability with which the Russian people greeted him on this occasion and noted that "their misconceptions about life here were at least as' great as any we may entertain .about life there." The Russians seemed especialiy interested in life in.,. Canada and America and especi­ally attached to' the memory of Pope John.

. The priest stressed to· the Knights the absolute necessity for continuing' this "dialogue

Report Decfine ~n Devotions To Mary

MILWAUKEE (NC) Changes in the Church brought about by the Van. can council have led to a decline in Marian devotions, the president of the Mariological Society of America said here.

Father William G. Most, pro­fessor of Latin at Loras College, Dubuque, Iowa, ,tJ8id devotions and novenas to the Blessed Mother were in the rise under Pius xn and during the Marie year of 1954.

"What brought about the de­· cline," he explained. "was the, · 1IJ)heaval occasioned by tbeeoundl. People 'were forecastina what manges would take' 'plaee and this provided a field da,' for an the bugs to propagate their stuff." he said. :

Father Most addressed the Milwaukee Serra Club. He later spoke to students at Dominicaa College , Racine, and to the D0­minican Sisters of Racine.

He said at least two instancetl are reported in which a priest. in the pulpit, held up a rosAry

· ,and tore it apart before the eyea of parishioners.

He said in some places statues of Mary have been removed from churches on the gr~unds that the council said: "Th~ au­thentic cult of the saints cOl~ists not so much i~ multiplying ex­ternal acts bu~ rather iri. the greater intensity of our active love • • .."

Father Most believes eveningMass and the new liturgy are the main reasons for the devotional decline.

Material Prosperity "Novenas were popular be­

cause there was participation,"the priest said. "Now that the Mass situation has changed it leaves novenas a bit out."

Citing material prosperity at!

another reason for the decline. he said Marian devotions, eu~ charistic devotions and nocturnal adoration are "going doWn to­gether."

Father Most' said that .along with this "severe depression" there also are attempts to ~:brm. clown the doctrinal side." ..

HI have read the actual decre~:) of the council and compared­them with previous theological

with the modem atheist," as' teachings," he explained. "Claima much for' our own benefit as for· . that all theolQgy must be i'e­his. That's Why Father Gibson' writtem are fraud." is adding Chinese to the six. other modern languages be speaks.

Ch~oel Award WASHINGTON (NC) - The

Chapel of Our M.other of SOl':" . rows in the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception here . has been selected for the Henry' Hering Memorial Award of the­American Sculpture, Society, . . Msgr. Thomas J. Grady, director of the shrine has announced. .

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Page 3: 03.10.66

3 THE ANCHOR-'Announce Three Jubilee .Speaker Asks Catholics See Christ Thurs., March 10, 1966

CeD Events The Confraternity of Christian When They Behold Mystery of The Church Discuss State,

Doctrine will hold a general meeting at 3 Sunday afternoon, March 13 at St. Francis Xavier parish hall, Hyannis. Also an­nounced by the CCD is an ad­dress by Msgr. Humberto S. Medeiros, S.T.D., Diocesan Chan­cellor. at 7:30 Wednesday night. March 16 at Bishop Feehan High School. Attleboro.

Msgr. Medeiros will discuss "Renewal in the CCD through Vatican II." A question period will follow his talk and refresh­ments will be served.

A vocation and mission exhib­fit, "Christian Panorama." at which the CCD will be repre­se~ted, will be held Friday through Sun day. Mar c h 25 through 27 at Cassidy High School, Taunton. Diocesan CCD Boat'd members will staff the Confraternity booth and it is hoped that all parish workers and students will attend.

N(\. Attleboro Y".··." ForUlms

A Youth Forum. "Youth Wit­nesses Christ", wlll be conducted at Bishop Feehan High School, Attleboro, for the teenagers of the area of the Northern Dean- . ery.

Father Roger LeDuc, assist­ant at Sacred Heart Parish, No. Attleboro, director of the area's Catholic Young Adults, has an­nounced that the first two talks will be given by Very Rev. john Grant ,assistant editor of the Boston Pilot, at 8 Sunday night, March 13, and by Clement Fenton of Framingham, long as­sociat'ed with the AA, on Sun­day night, March 20.

Speakers for the last two sessions will be announced next week.

St. Louis Uniyp.~sity

Receives $750,000 ST. LOUIS (NC)-The Dan­

forth Foundation has granted $750,000 to St. Louis University to be used primarily for strengthening teacher';' training programs, it has been announced by Father PauI C. Reinert, 5.J., 1IIliversity president.

The grant, one of the largest ever made by the St. Louis-based foundation, will be all 0 ca ted over a three-year period by the university for expansion of pro­grams in academic departments that most directly affect teacher training, he said.

He noted that the grant rep­resented a total investment in . the university's teacher-training program of $:",000,000, because it will apply toward the $15,000,­000 that the university must mise fro m non-governmental sources by Aug. 31, 1968, to re­eeive a $5,000,000 challenge grant from the Ford Fou'ndation.

Overwhelming Odds Face Maryknollers

Latest mission figures from the Maryknoll Fathers suggest they are working with some overwhelming odds:"

The Maryknollers, some 1000 strong in overseas work, serve 11 fold of nearly 14 mlllion persons in Latin America, Asia and Af­rica-about one priest to every 14,000 persons.

ThE: total Catholic population of the areas in which the Amer­ican missioners serve is nearly 2.5 million persons. Thus, even if the missioners were to devote all their time just to the faithful, fue odds still would be stagger­~ng-about one priest for every !liOO Catholics.

rr" the United States there ill ene priest for every 700 Cath­...

At the second Pontifical Mass in observance. of the Jubilee oommemor~i;ting the completion of the Second Vatican Ecumenieal Council celebrated by Most Rev. J'ames J. Gerrard, D.D., V.G., Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese, in St. Mar y , s Church, Taunton, Father Joseph P. Delaney, assistant at Sac·red Heart Church that city, the preacher, developed the Council Decree on the Constitution of the Church and the age of re­newal. When the bishops came to discuss the role the Church would have in the com­ing ages ,one question demanded an answer. The Fathers of the Council asked: What is the Church?" Who are we who be­long to the Church, who bear the name Christilm?". .

"Faced with the urgent ques­tion: "What is the Church?", the Fathers of the Council, under' the guidance of the Holy Spirit, prepared the dogmatic Constitu­tion on the Church, the most precious fruit of the Council. co ¢ '" Peering beyond the extern­al forms, we are given to see the Church as it really, is, the bride of Christ, his own Body of which we are the members. The key to the whole program of renewal which the Council pre­sents to us lies here. When we come to understand the divine reality of the Church, then we will be led to conform ourselves to the promise which Christ holds out to us".

Special Race "To understand fully the mys­

tery of the Church and our election as God's people", Fath-' er Delaney continued," we must go back to the Old ~restament.

God promised Abraham, Isaac and Jacob that their descendants would becoine a special race, a nation protected by his partic­ular love."

"Assembled at the foot of Mount Sinai, they received God's Law.. God spoke to them thr.ough Moses: 'If you hearken to my voke and keep my covenant, you shall be my special posses­sion, dearer to me than all other peoples, though all the eat:th is mine. You shall be to me a kingdom of priests, a holy na­tion." (Ex. 19)

The Sacred Heart assistant continued, ''They who before were nothing but a mass of dif­ferent clans and tribes became at that moment a new nation, a holy people, the people of God.. "'his was God's Church in its beginnings assembled at Sinai, wandering in the desert, settling in Canaan, watching and waiting for God's final salvation".

New Covenant "At the Last Supper, the night

before he died, Jesus Christ, Our Lord, the new Lawgiver, sat at table with his friends. When the supper had ended he took the cup of wine and gave it to them saying, "This cup is the new covenant in my blood."

''The next day on Mount Cal­vary that'new covenant was rat­ified in the shedding of his blood on the Cross. A new law was given, a new testament, a new compact between God and man was sealed not with the blood of goats or of ~eifers, as St. Paul reminds us, but with the precious blood of the Son of God With this new covenant ther~ was born out of the pierced side of Christ, a new nation, a new people, the people of God of the New Law-the Church of Christ".

Mystical BodY "In God's plan no man is

saved by himself. It is through membership in his Church that ~e are joined to Christ and brought by him into the family of the Father * Q * Saint Paul calls it the Mystical Body. This new Body of Christ is the Church. He is its head."

'. ''This is the great mystery of the Church: that you and! anti

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TAUNTON JUBILEE MASS: Rt. Rev. James Dolan, pastor of St. Mary's Church, Taunton, setting for Mass commemorating the closing of Vatican Council II; Bishop Gerrard, Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese, celebrant; Rev. Joseph P. Delaney, Sacred Heart assistant, Taunton, preach­er.

all other members who make up Christ's Body are the extensions in time of him: we are Christ in the world now: he lives in us, he acts in us, he loves through us. Men come to know Christ when the Church - that is when we - show Christ to them".

. ce•••• When we see the Church perhaps we see an organization, an association made up of men and women. In reality we are beholding Christ".

'·'Perhaps it is these things but it is so very much more: The Church is the people whose head is Christ, whose life is the spirit of God dwelling in their souls, whose boast is their adoption as children of the Father and brothers of Christ."

Renewal Continuing, Father Delaney,

developed the theme of the work of renewing the Church is in reality the making of the out­ward appearance of the Church conform ever more perfectly to the image of the perfect Christ, who lives within.

Thus, the very first fruit of the Council was by design the Constitution of the Liturgy.

"In all the Council's delibera­tions," Father' Delaney stated, "this intent WilS foremost: to re­new the Church in such a way that the divine reality of the people of God would become manifest to every Christian and to the whole world Q * '" It is the responsibility of each member to make real the effects of Christ's redemption in our own ·world".

Concluding, the preacher em­

phasized, "It is not for anything you or I have done that we have

. been given the parcel of inesti­mable price - our faith. It is because God has chosen us and has conferred this gift on us. Our actions and our words to­wards others must be worthy of him. Indeed, it is his own love that we must ever show toward all men who are sincerely seek­ing the truth."

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Church Issues WASHINGTON (NC) -Some

100 diocesan attorneys from many parts of the nation met here for talks on church-state issues and pending litigation.

The conference was the sec­ond national meeting of diocesan attorneys sponsored by the Legal Department of the Na­tional Catholic Welfare Confer­ence.

Talks centered on recent legal developments in the area of Church-State relations. The at­

. torneys also exchanged infor­mation on litigation in this f~eld

in several parts .of .the country, including Maryland and Mich­igan.

During the meeting a constitu­tional law specialist told the. at­torneys that the U. S. Supreme Court still has not dealt directly with the issue of federal aid to education programs that include stu den t s in church-related schools. .

However, said Father Charles M. Whelan, S.J., Fordham Uni­versity law professor, acceptance is growing in legal circles for the position in this issue argued in a study issued in 1961 by the NCWC Legal Department.

The study holds that the fed­eral government, as part of a comprehensive program to pro­mote educational excellence, can provide secular educational ben­efits to students in private non­profit schools.

., ~

"Men cast their shadows just before the sun sets.'

Page 4: 03.10.66

••

r" - ""1r.1..J""~ "':"cese of Fall River-Thurs., Mar. 10, 1966

w@&~ -r ITD~·~-,T@®dl}~ @!ru ~@@@1

To Se~otti1TI~rn1~'Y(}}trc!jJ~ Wtf®~~$ By Joseph T. McGloin, S. J.

IAlst week we published here the fir8t in a group of mysterious letters which had been' coughed up, strangely unhanned, from an incinerator. We still are not certain of the origin of the letters, nor of their amazing inde­

\

GERTRUDE J. STE. MARIE

Miss Gertrude J. Ste. Marie, daughter of Mrs. Leon Ste. Marie, 1289 South Main Street, Fall River, has been selected as a Woodrow Wilson Fellow for the year 1966-67, it was an­nounced today by Sister Mary Emily, R.S.M., president of Salve Regina College, where Miss Ste. Marie is a senior.

She is one of 1,408 new po­tential teachers for the nation's colleges and universities selected'

'. by the Woodrow Wilson Nation­al Fellowship Foundation from 380 different collegiate institu­tions in the United States and Canada.

Miss Ste. Marie is a major in Biology, the field' in which she will do graduate work in prep­aration for college teaching. Fel­lows under this program get one academic year of graduate edu­cation (with tuition and fees paid by the Foundation) and a

IItruetibility. Today we pub­lish a second letter from the groUJ>. Perhaps someone will SOOD be able to come up with clue as to their origin. De~r Klinker, Although you were originally

assigned to work with teen-agers I'd like to call your attention to another group, and to the pos­sible good you can do w!th them. I don't know why I always have to call your atten­tion to some­thing w hie b seems perfedly obvious, but that. is neither here nor there. (And I might add that it's lucky not to be here. ..Ha-ha-I mllst have

,my little .witticism now and then.).

As I say, Klinker, there is this whole group which is mOll! vUl­nerable just now. I'm referring, of course, to the pre-teen.

Dangerous Situation If you will only look around,

you will find that many of these pre-teens are in a situation so dangerous-and therefore so ad­vantageous k us-that only a slight nudge will be needed to get them gomg in the right di­rection. Give them a few years, in fact, and we won't even have to nudge, because so many of them give the almost certain promise of becoming pretty crummy teen-agt;. and adult ex­amples. The beauty of the thing is that they don't even realize t.he situation, and. for the most part, it isn't even their fault.

Now there'~. no use even con­sidering the many pr.~-teens

who give every promise of be­eoming great teens and even greater adults, because we can't do much wit~ them. No, the only ones we're interested in are those who are ,already so warped that they give reason­able promise of soon becoming total wrecks.

Basically, our' big advantage here is that so many pre-teens are trying to act like adults. In the process. of course, they easily become hopelessly con­fused and bogged down in prob­lems which not even many adults, with ;)11 their "maturity," could hope to handle success­fully.

Like Older Sisters I personally am delighted 'to

see FttIe girls already grotesque with makeup and with all the "props neecleCl to attract a

. 'man.' " Going with this, they get " so completely absorbed in boys­that this is all they talk about.

They chase the boys shame­lessly (very often with mother's approval, since she believes in her daughter's popularity at any cost), call them on the phone, flirt with tht·rr" and otherwise act like their older sisters in the "B" movies.

I am overjoyed to read, in the press down there of the "love af­fairs" of an eighth grade girl re­printed from her diary, and I am even happier to note her mother's helplessness and her father's indifference in the face f)f this literall~' horrible situa­tion.

I am happy to see a new-found 'ego in these kids, which has the boys traveling in packs, making themselves obnoxious in various

ways, and bl.'agging about their dates and conquests at this early stage, even though they seldom know yet /what they are talking about.

In a year or two, when it is too late, they will understand too -well. But in 'these days of adolescence and pre-adolescence they are already involved in adult situations which they do not try to understand at all, much less find themselves able to cope with.

Begins Innocently This all begins very innocent­

ly, of course, with something "cute'" like l\ kindergarten grad­uation complete with caps and gowns, dipl.Jmas, .and a prom. The cute kindergarten prom eventuall:' grows into the little-' league prom (also very cute), and fifth to eighth grade "steadies" (also very cute).

Soon the pre-teen graduates ·to a steady diet of parties and dances (whkh are just a little less cute), dud soon enough not even the kid's permissive par­ents are goin~ to think he's v€ry cute.

You know, Klinkel', the vast joke is that th· parents instinc­tively kno~' tlla~ all this is dyna­mite, this robbing a child of his or her childhood. But mother will stii! push her· girl or boy into early dating and dances because, harmful or not to the child, it isn't as bad as having mother's ego punctured by the "popularity" of that little girl next-door. And the really hilar­ious thin.:; is that such "popu­larity" so easily turns into tragedy.

I've said that this situation is not entirely the kids' fault, Klinker, and it isn't. They're

.supposed to bp kids, directed and ­helped by ~arents and teachers. And instead they are "permit-' ted." . rather than directed or, much less, ever "ordered."

There isn't a single student of social questi.ons of any worth whatsoever who will not tell them that thf troubles of these pre-teens are generally due to permissive or pushy parents. And yet, luckily for us, in the face of "social prestige," these forebodings of real tragedy are overlooked.

The fact is that the vast ma­jority of forced marriages do come from '=larly dating, and that there are an enormous number of unwed mothers around the ripe old age o~ 15. The final nail in this ,coffin is that there were all "good girls." A lovely piece of wood is gcod,too, but it takes a real 14-k'1rat fool to think it will stay that way if you stick it in a fire.

I despise people like Dale Francis, himsel~ a father, who comes out so bluntly with things like thfs: .

"It is 0I11y ar. aggressive few who manage to impose the early social life on childreiJ.It is time for the non-aggressive majority to stand up anCl resist these de­stroyers of childhood.

"So I'm willing. to take on those who think it is cute for little kids to dress up and act like grownups because I'm con­vinced I not only have right but the majority of parents on my side."

Men like thi~ Francis burn me, Klinker. (Excuse me.)

But to cover the entire sub­ject· of the pre-teen is impos­sible, Klinker. I'll :just have to

living stipend of $2,000. The winners this year are se­

lected .from over 11,000 students nominated by college professors across the country.

Mass at Sho'Oping Center in Lent

ATLANTA (NC) -Mass will be offered daily at 12:30 P.M. during Lent in a popular shop­ping center in this Georgia city.

The project, known as "Mass '. on the Mall," will be carried

out alternately on the weekdays by Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan of Atlanta and Father Noel Bur­tenshaw.

Carrying aMass kit, packing and .unpacking altar supplies, will be nothing new to Arch­bishop Hallinan, who served as an Army chaplain 'from 1943 to 1945, or Father Burtenshaw, who formerly served in the Georgia missions. The Mass will be offered daily in the audito­rium of the Lenox Square shop­ping center.

Food Dnll'll""'.:~n BOMBAY (NC)-The crew of

a Dutch ship donated about 3,000' tins of milk to a Catholic home here in India for destitute chil ­dren About 700 members of the crew of 8.S. Rotterdam con­tributed from their salary. The donation was- sent to 8t. Cath­erine's Home here.

caution .you to be on the alert for further lJossibilities. Be es­pecially wary, of course, of the

. courageous parent who won't go along with "the crowd" any more than he' or she will. allow the children t< go along with "the crowd" when "the crowd" is going the wrong way. '

It's not bun here these days, Klinker, about the same tem­perature as Texas.

, . Arch

~ Ge)l®~~~ rF@rrrroB~V TRENTON (NC) - Trenton's

anti-poverty agency has rejected a proposal to seek $60,000 in fed­eral funds for a farrwy planning pro g l' a m following vigorous Catholic objections.

The board of trustees of United Progress, Inc., sought the position of the Trenton Catholic diocese and was told the diocese opposed the proposal 'by the local Planned Parenthood Asso­

. ciation. The board voted 6 to 4 to re­

ject the plan that birth control information be brought to Tren­ton's low-income families with the aid of tax funds.

The Trenton diocese sent a communication to the board from Msgr. Theodore A. Opden­aker, executive director of the Catholic Welfare Bureau. He said the family plannning pro­posal was an invasion of privacy

and lacked legal authorization. "We firmly believe," the trust­

'ees were told, "t~at the govern­ment has no legal right to SPOJ!lc>

SOl' birth control programs, di­rectly or indirectly, through tbe granting of federal funds to

,private agencies. There is DC legal authority for the expendi­ture of government anti-pove~ funds for birth control pro­grams."

Charities Record CHICAG9 (NC) - Catholk

'Charities of the Chicago arch.,. diocese spent a record $14,010,758 through 107 agencies to serve 585,468 men, women and chil ­dren in 1965. The annual report said it was the largest budget in the organization's 48-year his­tory.

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H~ve you ever wished' your family had a nun! : Now you can have a 'nun of your own~-and· share forever W1 all the good she does•••• Who is she? A healthy wholesome, penniless girl in her teens or early twenties, she dreams, . of the day she can bring God's love to lepers, orphans, the aging...•. Help her become a Sister? To pay all her expenses this year and next she needs only $12.50 a month ($150 a year, $300 altogether). She'll write you.·to express her thanks, and she'll pray foryou at daily Mass. In just two years you'll have I 'Sister of your own'..•. We'll send, you bet' name on receipt of your first Lenten gift. (AR gifts are tax-deductible, of course.) IV. Ionl . as she lives yo~'11 know you are helping. the pitiable peoflle she cares for.... Please writII us today so she ean begin h"!r training. S~ prays SOitleOne will help.. ..h1 south India-afone, 473 Sisters-to-be need sponsors. $1,500 wiH train five of them•.••• Show this cohJmn toa friend. We'" send biN (or Mr) full information•.

I ­-Babies are meant tEl be cuddled in somefme" arms. In Poovaran;. south India; howeveJi Sister Augustine has no place for babies no· body wants.... Only $4,800 will build and equip the small orphanage she needs fOr 25 babies. Name it for your favorite saint (in lasting memory of your loved ones) If you build it all by yourself. Send Sister at least-a. much as you eaA ($100, $75, $50,. $25, $10, $5, $2). ....-Trained by readers of this column, 81 new priests will be ordained in India this week. Pray for them. They will pray for you.

For only $10,000 you can build a complete 'parish plant' (church, school, rectory and convent) in south India.... In memoryl

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Page 5: 03.10.66

Fr. Lov~nbury

Buried T~day Most Rev. James L. Connolly,

BIshop of the Diocese of Fall River, thIs morning celebrated a Solemn Pontifical Mass of Re­quIem in St. Patrick's Church, Fall River, for the repose of the soul of the late Rev. Joseph D. Lovenbury a native of the Fall River Parish and former chap­nain in the U. S. Army chaplain eorps.

Father Lovenbury was bom ~arch 7, 1922, in Fall River, the -oon of Mrs. Iv.:ary Phillips Lo­venbury and the late Arthur Lovenbury. He was educated at St. Patrick's School, Coyle High 5 c h 0 01, Taunton, Providence College, and St. Augustine's Seminary, Toronto,' Canada.

The late Army chaplain was oll'dained in the Immaculate Conception Cathedral, Burling­ton, by the late Most Rev. Mat­thew F. Brady, He served as an assistant in the Burlington Dio­eese until his entrance into the Army Chaplain Corps. Follow­ling servicp to the men of the armed services, he has served as a chaplain in Army Veteran Hospitals.

Father Lovenbury died sud­denly Tuesday mom}ng. In ad­dition to his mother, he is sur­vilved by two brothers, Ray­mond of So. Carolina, and Ar­thurof Fall River, and two sis­ters, Winifred of Toronto, Can­ada; -and Mrs. Theresa Wilkie of Fall River.

Assisting Bishop Connolly atthe Requiem Mass were:.Rt. Rev. Raymond T. Considine and Rt. Rev. Alfred J. Gendreau, assist:.. ant deacons; Rev. Joseph L. Powers, deacon of the Mass, an.d Rev. William E. Farland, sub­deacon. '

Also assisting were Rev. Ed­ward C. Duffy and Rev. Francis A; -Coady, acolytes; Rev. Daniel lLs.- Freitas, thurifer; Rev. Jo­ooph M. Ferreira, book-bearer.

~'Rev. 'Ralph D. Tetrault, can­<lIle;'bearer; Rev. Thomas' C. Lopes, gremiale bearer; Rev. Peter F. Mdlen, mitre-bearer.

Masters of ceremonies were Itt.' Rev. John H. Hackett and Rev. James P. Dalzell.

The eulogist was Rev. John lEo Boyd.

. The office of the dead was chanted on Wednesday after­noon with Most Rev. James J. Gerrard presiding and chanting the third lesson. The other les­sons were chanted by Rev. Wil­liam J. Shovelton and Father Boyd. Most Rev. Robert F. Joyce, lO.D., Bishop of the Diocese of­Burlington, also -attended the Mass.

Grat®{fMQ t~ Pope For fam~"e Aid

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pres­Hdent SarvepaUi Radhakrishnan of IndIa has told Pope Paul the Indian people are "deeply touched" by the help he has marshaled in the struggle against famIne ·In India.

The Indian leader sent the Pope a cablegram stating:

"Your Holiness' tender solici ­tude for the people who have been affectert by the conditions of scarcity prevailing in many -parts of our country has deeply touched us all. On their behalf and on behalf of the people of IndIa as a whole and on my own, II wish to convey to your Holi­DeSS our gratitude for your per­oonal generosity and for lending the weight of your immense in­ifluence in an appeal to nations ~ the world to help India.

The Vatican City daily, L'Os­lrervatore Rom&no, meanwhile revealed that the Pope's drive for funds for India had reached the equivalent of more tll.lm $I Millioa.

LEPER PRIEST: Two photographs of Father Damien de Veuster, SS. CC., whose cause for canonization is being forwarded, show him in 1873 at age 33 and in 1889, three months before his death from leprosy at age 49. A film on Father Damien's life will be featured at Christian Panorama the weekend of March 25 at Bishop Cassidy High School, Taunton.

THE ANCHf1?­ 5Thurs .. March 1O. 1966

Ctftl ~'M\'l.rl! ~ ~ ~ r~ ~M·1t ~

W@~k~!i'~ ~~nte

~ ~~~~ A ~~lfi«:a OTTAWA (NC) ---: There

aJ:e currently 1,777 Canad­,ian Catholics serving the Church in Latin America, representing ar: increase of 229 during the past 14 months, ac­cording to the Canadian Catholic Office for Latin America.

The Church in Canada under­took a special cooperation proj­ect with the Latin American Church in 1960. A marked in­crease in .the number of Cana­dian - sponsored foundations dates from then.

Seven new Canadian projects were undertaken in 1960, 19 in 1961, 33 in 1962, 15 in 1963, 28 in 1964 and \!4 last year.

At ~the end of 1961 there were 1,157 Canadian priests, Sisters and other Church volunteers in Latin American countries. This total was raised by 153 during 1962, 132 in J963, 106 in 1964 and 229 in 1965 to reach the new high of 1,777 persons.

These include six Canadian bishops, two prelates nullius in charge of dioceses, 474 priest members of Religious orders, 118 diocesan priests, 36 priests at ­tending Latin American colleges

'Two St. Patricks,' Says Professor Cites Fifth

DETROIT (NC) - A Detroit man says you can take the tales told about St. Patrick and cut them in half.

And to make it more humil­iating, his name is Mahoney and his family comes from Counties Cork and Kerry. lie is a leading scholar on Celtic lore.

"There were two Patricks," insists Dr. John Mahoney, a University of -Detroit professor. "The first probably did part of the work we credit to St. Pat­rick."

This theory was first pre­sented in academic circles around 1941 by a scholar appro- . priately named T. F. O'Rahilly, a member of the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, Mahoney said.

Supporters of the two st. Patricks thesis have as evidence annals and chronicles from the fifth century. "St. Patrick would have needed a-life span of 125 years to accomplish what the­records indicate." Mahoney said.

He cites as evidence the bap­tism of St. Germanus, an early epic hero, by a man named Pat­rick. To have baptized st. Ger­manus, and participated in other events attributed to him, St.

~ Fall River, Mass.

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and universities, 227 religiousCer8tury Annals as Evidence Patrick would have needed 125 years.

"We have documents of an­other Patrick far too early for the St. Patrick we now cele­brate," Mahoney said. He be­lieves the first Patrick was a man named Palladius, known in Ireland by his second name Uatrlcious, or Patrick.

'Big Legend' Chronicles of the period show

that in 431 Palladius was sent by Pope Celestine to fight heresy in Ireland. Irish annals note the arrival of a Patrick in Ireland in 432. "This was Palladius," Ma~

honey believes. While there is no precise birth date for St. Patrick, there are two reported dates of his death, 461 and 493..

The traditional view is that Palladius failed and was follow­ed immediately by St. Patrick, Mahoney said. "This view holds that St. Patrick' died in 461 and the other date is in error."

,The 36-year-old' professor be­lieves Palladius is the one who

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Brothers, 735 nuns, 68 members of secular institutes and 111 laydied in 461, and his work was volunteers.taken up by St. Patrick, who

died in 493. These Canadians are working in 31 different areas of South

By combining the lives and and Central America and theaccomplishments of the two Caribbean Islands, including 356 men, Mahoney said, history has in Haiti, 330 in Peru, 289;nc:oeated a "big legend." "You Brazil, 178 in Chile, 115 in Hon­must take the documents against duras, 109 in Bolivia and 89 ill the legend," said Mahoney. the Dominican Republic.

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Page 6: 03.10.66

THE ANeHOR-Diocese of F... II Di,,<>~_ Thurs .. Mm. , O. '9666 ,Aggiorriamento Pains cStil.l a Forte It is almost taken for granted that the way for lag­ C

ging book sales to be b~efed up is to get the book in question "banned in' Boston." Similarly, the idea is' held D'that a "Condemned'" rating by the old Legion of Decency -now functioning under the new name of National Cath­olic Office for Motion Pictures-is a good way to insure (News of parish Confraternity of'

Christian Doctrine activities is wel­increased attendance at· the film so labelled. comed for this column, as are sugges­The facts do not support this theory, however. tion of subjects for future columns.

The film industry is still quite sensitive to criticism Correspondence may be addressed to Edward P. McDonagh, 5 Hunting Street, North Attleboro. Mass, 02760J

of films, and examples are at hand where consultations between film executives and the Catholic Office have been seriously entered into with a view to making ad­ By Edward lI'. McDonagh justments in a film to change its Crating-Condemned HlEJLPERS ,-to B-Morally objectionable in part fol' 'all.

To illustrate the essentiaUUnder ordinary conditions, domestic films can count jobs that can' be done byon playing seven to nine thousand large commercial Helpers in the Parish CCDtheaters in the country. When a· picture receives a C unit, I have taken one theo­rating or is severely criticised by a review group such retical six-y~ar old and followedas the National Catholic Office for Motiim Pictures the him through his first year of

bookings are cut almost in half and the picture plays CCD training, In the first year, more often than not in the small, secondary theaters of the helper unit would come iill the nation. contact with this child on manY

occasions:All this is by way of praise for the many individuals Parent-educator records, keptin the country who insist that public entertainment ob­ by helpers, would indicate that

serve the standard:; of good taste and morality that mem­ the child is due for enrollment bers of a society set up. The facts indictate that if movie in the CCD grade school. A let ­

ter, typed, duplicated, addressedmakers set out to flaunt or to attack such standards, and mailed to the child's parentsthen movie-goers have the right-and, in large measure, by helpers, would anounce class

exercise it'--of rejecting what is offered them and making schedules and registration pro­~~~o~ngl .S~cresCC@[Mpaign'such fare financially unprofitable. People's standards of cedures. morality are higher than at times they are given credit At class registration, helpers

for having. The movie industry testifies to this. ~ [jI), [?@vor' of A~©[[frQ~n would fill out the permanent record card containing essentialSo the force of the National Office for Motion Pic­ ST. LOUIS (NC)-The current campaign for legalized information on our student. -At

tures must not be underemphasized or downgraded. And abortion is "international, national and local in its scope" the same time arrangemerlts the role of individual Catholics as members of this group, could be made for helpers toand is "complex and organized." This is the view of Msgr. willing and ready to support its judgements of, praise transport the child to and from . Paul V. Harrington, vice officialis of the metropolitan class, Once the semester has be­and criticism, is still an important one. ' tribunal of the Boston arch­ gun, our helpers will provide ameeting of the American Med­It would never do for people to' think otherwise. diocese and medico-moral variety of services that affectical Asociation, at which an ef­

the student.consultant to the National fort was ma:te tC' have the AMAlln~~r.u6ifeAtlJ»,~;f;m a proposal for relaxing They will prepare graphics forendorseFederation of Catholic' Phy­ use by the teacher in class. TheyFrightened articles from Russia and the calm as­ sicians' Guilds. abortion laws The suggestion often take attendance and actwas deferred.sessment of experts on religion op.tside that country in­ Writing in thetI,.inacre Quar­ as classroom assistants, thereby

dicate that the Soviet communist party is in the process terly, journal of the federation, He says it if' "disturbing'" * Q relieving the teacher of adminis­Msgr. Harrington says the drive that a medical society wouldof reappraising its campaign against religion in general trative duties. They will markfor legalized aboi·tion "has access even propose for serious discus­ tests and make out report cardsand the Russian Orthodox Church in particular. The much to all forms ~f publicity and ex­ 'siori that murder be legalized on students. The helpers, arevaunted communist boast that many believers are 'le~l.V­ posure -,intp.rnational and na­ through laws allowing abortion." used to hear the individual

ing the church and religion is just not squaring up with tional conferences, nationwide . He declares that a doctor who prayers of ;tudents and to per­television programs, extensivethe reality. The communist claim that the bulk of be­ performs a'n abortion or a direct . form coaching. In this way, help­newspaper coverage, regular ar- sterilization is "a disgrace to his ers regularly 'expose themselveslievers are among the, older age groups looks weak in the , ticles in the popular magazines." profession and his oath" and to'the classroom situation whereface of the fact that at least thirty per' cent of believers Distoritions says: , they gain confidence and tech­

in Russia are under the age of forty. "It has the involvement of "Medicine and physicians nique. Many of our best teachers In spite of the many' restrictions on religion, in the professional societies, 'govern­ should be imbued with a deep began their CCD apostolate, as

face of the 'stepped-up campaign against religion initiated ment sponsored conferences and understanding of the sanctity of helpers where they learned, by agency officials; it carefully life; an appreciation of the origin doing.under Khrushchev and continued since, there is ample omits from conside'ration and of life, consideration for the sole Back in the office, our l1elpers ' evidence that the Orthodox Church ,within Russia is like proper exposure the, position of and complete dominion of God are preparing a report for the

an iceberg and exists in large proportion underground. the Catholic Church; it openly over life; the right of the indi­ Fisher Unit of the Parish CCD. The government is now forced to take into account the' uses, in its propaganda, untruths, virdual to be born and his right It will tell the Fishers that our

half-truths, and distortions," he to continuance of life, and a ded­ , student was present (or absent)fact that religion, as the official newspaper of the Young charges. ication, by research and prac­ and that follow up is, or is not,Communists expressed it, "is not an idle fiction. Religion Msgr. Harrington's artiCle is tice, to the prolongation of life." necessary. Ot.hers are preparing

is a historical phenomenon that has existed for thousands the second on the abortion cam­ materials for the bulletin boards of years, up to and including the present." paign which he has published in which they maintain in the

New attacks on religion warn that the closing of the Linacre Quarterly. The first Hindu leader Lauds school. The parish CCD bulletiJi appeared last year. is prepared, and distributed byparishes is not making a the is t s of believers but is Catholic Sister

the new he the Helpers.In article notesstrengthening the attraction of religion for the people that pressure for legalized abor­ CALCUTTA (NC)-The Hindu Let's skip a little ahead and

and embittering their hearts against the government. chief minister in West Bengal say that our student is readytion was endorsed by some par­intelleetuals, govern­ has praised the work of a Cath­Russian already causing the ticipants in such recent meetings for graduation. The helpers or­

olic nun who has spent her life ganize the oroceedings and pre­ment trouble in the fields of art and literature, have as the world population confer­helping th.e poor of this country. pare the certificate which willturned 'their attention to religious philosophy and the held under United Nations aus­

P. C. Sen, the Hindu leader, be presented to our student.pices 'in Beigrade, Yugoslavia,works of Jean-Paul Sartre, the late Jesuit priest-scien­ even'last September, and the White spoke at a rally to raise funds They may prepare' and tist Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, and their own Russian House Confet'ence Health in for leprosy patients cared for by serve the refreshments. thaton religious philosopher Nikolai, Berdyaev have captured November. Mother Teresa and the Mission­ would be had at suchan event.

their respect. He also e:ites the November aries of Charity' that she From the recitation of tasks founded. Describing the Yugo­ outlined above, you can see thatAll in all, the position of atheism in Russia is not syavian-born nun as an "institu­ the CCD helpers have to be aSo secure as reportH once had it. Proh~dnnt .Council tion in herself," Sen urged versatile bunch capable of haB­people of all faiths to support 'dling almost any job. What'sUrges lenten Fast the fund· drive. more, there an: so many jobs

ST. LOUIS (NC)-At a time that there ,are never enoughMembers of the Religiouswhen fast and abstinence for helpers around to do all of them.community are distributingCatholics has been eased, the That's why your parish' needflsmall flags to donors. Miss Pad-' general board of the National you .now in the CCD Helpers.maja Maidu, governor' of West Council of Churches meeting You'll be welcomed with open@rheANCHOR Bengal, was given the first flaghere called on Protestants to arms.in CalCutta;' 'Two nuns gave' a observe ,a program· of LentenOCCICIAI. Jt.eewsPADER OF THIE DIOCESE OIF FAll RIVr=~ similar flag to Prime Minister Leonor Luiz, Diocesan Chair­

, , fast and abstinence similar to .Indira Gandhi in NeW-Delhi. man of Helpers for' the past,Published weel(l,y by, The Catholic Press ('If ·1,<;l,DiocElse of Fall River the one observed for centuries three, years, puts it .. this 'way:

4'0 Hio"'ond Avenue by' Catholics. "If you have any talent or skill, Fall River, Mass. 02722 675·j'151 The action' was taken in re­ Ht)~il);' Diplom'qt the CCD Helpers Unit in· your

PUBL.l5' '-"1 sponse to a recent appeal by 'BRONX (NC) ~The Nigerian' parish can, use you. If you don't tl:l~nk yqu have any use£ul skiD, Most Re,,: Jam~<; L. Connolly. 0.0.,01'0:, the .World Council of Churches, Ambassador, to the United Na­

which pointed out that through tions, Chief 'S: O. Adebo, was , we'11sho'w you that., yo~ do." '. '

. !3F' -'~,~' '·,·"'Ar.'':R ASST. GE "II:D A , U"''''.H~·ER J -fasting, 'abstinence, self-denial awarde!l' 'ari. honorary doctorate' Leonor' is a guidance, counselor

Rt. Rev. OanjelF. Sholloo, M.A. : "":'" John P.D~isco" and sacrifices assistance could at a juniqr higl:.. school. in New, of laws bY. Fordham UniversityMANAGING EDITOR , Bedforil. !,;he's heen, I:ioing CCDbe given to alleviate famine here~ by Father ,Leo McLaughlin;

: .... Hugh J. Golden' conditions in India'. ,. S.J., universi$y president. Turn ,to Page Seven

Page 7: 03.10.66

7 ST. MARGARET, BUZZAJtDS BAY

SS. Margaret-Mary G u i rd projects if1!:lude making afghans for St. Patrick's Cenac1e, Ware­ham, and layettes to be distrib­uted by the Catholic Welfare Bureau in Fall River. A monthly project is exchange of Cilthl,)lic ma~azines among members.

A public whist is announced for 8 Saturday night, March 26 in the kindergarten hall of the parish.

In charge of the altar this month are Miss Faith Finnerty and Mrs. Raymond Smith.

Forthcoming events include an executive board meeting at 8 Wednesday night, March 30, at the home of Mrs. Rose Brady; a reg u 1 a r meeting Wednesday, April 13, featuring a games party; and a rummage sale in May.

The annual penny sale will take place Thursday, July 7.

ST. .BOlliN BAPTllS'l', CENTRAL VILlLAGE

The Ladies' Guild will meet at 8 tonight in the parish hall. Members are requested to bring old sheets and other linens for use in making surgical dressings.

HOLY NAME, FALL RIVER

The Women's Guild will spon­,sor a meat pie supper from 5 to 7:30 Saturday night, March 12 in the school hall. In charge of arrangements are Mrs. William King and Mrs. Richard Wordell.

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, NEW BEDFORD

The senU-annual banquet of the Couples' Club is set for Sun­day evening, March 20 at the Rendezvous restaurant, follow­ing attendance by members at 5· o'clock Mass. Chairmen are Mr. and Mrs. Mitchel: Jansinski.

ST. MATHIEU, FALL RIVER

Missions in English and French will be held in the parish the weeks of March 20 through 25 and March 27 through April 1. A meeting of the Women's Guild is scheduled for 8:15 Mon­day night, March 28. Also planned by the guild are a Com­munion breakfast and a May­basket whist, both for May,

SS. PETER AND PAUL, FALL 'RIVER

The Cub Scout Commit~ is sponsoring an Easter' Millinery and Handbag Showing and Sale in the Church Hall tomorrow from 1 to 10 P.M. Free refresh­ments will be served at the Showing and Sale which is open to the public.

ST. MARY, NORTON .

The Catholic Wom'lln's Club Is sponsoring a St. Patrick's whist party at 8 Thursday night, March 17 in the parish center. Mrs. Michael Murphy is chair­man.

·Mrs. Charles Wickland is in "charge of arrangements for the elub's annual corporate Com­munion at 5 o'clock Mass Sun­day' evening, March 27. Mass will be followed by supper, also at the center. Rev. James F. Kelly, St. M!lry's parish, Mans­field, will speak.

OUR LADY OF ANGELS, FALL RIVER

Holy Rosary Sodality mem­• bets 'will sponsor a whist party

I1t 8 Saturday night, March 19 in the 'church hall. Mrs. Gloria

. Benevides is chairman.

NOTRE DAME, ,FALL RIVER

'Newly-installed Holy Name 'Society officers are Romeo Par­ent, president; Joseph Valiquette and Bernard Comeau, vice-pres­idents; Gerard Berger and .Ron­aId Roy, secretaries; and Raoul Goye,tte" treasurer.

ST. JEAN BAPTISTE, FALL RrrVlER

The Council of Catholic Women will meet at 7:30 Monday night, lVIarch 14 in the church basl'l­ment. The program will feature a hobby and novelty night, fol­lowed by a social hour. All women of the parish are invited. Mrs. Remi Rinfret, chairman, will be aided by Mrs. Alfred Berube, co-chairman.

S'll'. MA\lRlY, NO. A\'l1"lI'ILlEISOlRO

St. Mary Parish Guild will hold regular meeting March 15 at 8:00 P.M. at the sl:hool hall. Guest speaker will be Dr. Carl J. De Prizioof Mansfield. Dr. De Prizio will show slide!? of a trip to the Holy Land. Mrs. Jo­seph Fontneau is chairman.

lHlOLlY GIIIIOS'll', &'ll''ll'ILlEISOlRO

The regular monthJly meeting of the Women's Guild scheduled for 8 on Friday night, March 11, in the church hall will feature a showing of cosmetics and skin care.

Refreshments will be served following the meeting.

Faculfl'y to Study P,on~sedChanqe

I

WASHINGTON (NC) - The Catholic University of America's academic senate has reversed a previous decision and agreed to refer to a faculty committee the question of the transfer of the department of religious educa­tion from the graduate school of arts and sciences to the school of sacred theology.

The original senate action in January unanimously approving the transfer was opposed by the school of theology, which ob­jected to the method of merger.

The faculty of the graduate school of arts and sciences then voted to ask that the senate re­view its approval of the transfer.

Bishop William J. McDonald, university rect9r and senate presiding officer, said the inves­tigating faculty comnUttee will be appointed by the .deans of the SChools involved.

, "This university is, of co~rse,

'fortunate that when such ques­tions-arise; we have a long es­t&blishoo' body; the academic senate,' in which a democratic solution can he sought by dis­cussion and voto of senators rep­resenting the entire faculty," the bishop said.

Diocesan CCD Continued Jirom Page Six

work at Our Lady of Mt. Car­mel Parish for over three years as a teacher and helper chair- , man.

The Mount Carmel program has been very successful and lLeonor is willing and able to help your parish in the same way. If you've got a Helper problem, let Leonor know either at the Diocesan CCD Office, 70 Holcott Drive, Attleboro or through this column at the ad­dress listed in the heading.

One other job the helpers have. They pray & lot.

~

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AT SPECIAL SHOWING OF "THE REDEEMER: Rt. Rev. Henri A. Hamel, pastor of St. Jean Baptiste Church; Sgt. Raymond McGuire of the Mass. State Police; Norman Zalkind, president of Strand Theater Corp.; and Bishop Connolly, Ordinary of the Diocese.

Power of Prayer Sustains Chief Executive in Facing Burdens

Of World's Gre~test Political Office WASHINGTON (NC)-Presl­

dent Johnson says he is sustain­ed by prayers in facing the bur­dens of his office-his own and those of his fellow Americans.

Speaking at the Presidential Prayer Breakfast sponsored by International Christian Leader­ship, Mr. Johnson said: '

"These are Lmes when I recall , the wisdom o~ that great leader,

Abraham Lincoln,when he said, '! have been driven to my knees when driven by the wisdom that I had nowhere else to go.'

Gold star Mother "But in these ,troubled times I

am sustained by much more than just my own prayers. I am sustained by the prayers of hundreds of other Americans who daily take the time to look up from their own problems to try to help' me and encourage me in mine."

Roes to India NEW YORK (NC) - Some

1,620,000 pO:.lnds of rice are ,be­in~ 'shipped tc India by Catholic Relief Services-National Cath­olic Welfare Conference. _._--------...,

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The President quoted a leiter from the mother of 'a service­'man killed in Vietnam, She 'said, "We ask God to bless you 'and your family and to guide you in all the terrible decisions you are called upon to make."

"In those words from that dear little mother are to be found the greatness of this nation and also the strength of its Presi­'dent," Mr. Johnson told his au­dience of leaders from govern­ment,business and labor.

Before he spoke evangelist Billy Graham tolcll the President that "in' these hours of decision that you have to make, you have our prayers, our love and sup­port."

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Thurs., March 10, 1966

A§S~Hr~s UN Seat f(J)'rRe@ C~otm@

T{i) ~o@l ~®~~® HONOLULU (NC)-"The

peace of the world is better served by admitting Red China" to the United Na­tions, Dr. Ralph Bunche has de­clared.

Bunche, UN Under-Secretary for Special Political Affairs and a Nobel Peace Prize winner, told students at St. Louis High School here:

"There is a growing recogni­tion that the UN cannot be fully effective unless all people are represented.

"The peace of the world is better served by admitting Red China even though we intensely dislike their form of govern­ment," he added.

"They have the'ability to ex­plode nuclear devices and it is better to have them in the UN and disarmed than out as mav­eriks. This is the thinking that is causing a gradual change in the UN on the seating of Red China," he said.

Old Nome BALTIMORE (NC)-The Bal­

timore archdiocesan newspaper has ended an experimental change of name to the Baltimore Catholic Review begun several months ago and will revert to the previous title, the Catholic Review.

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Page 8: 03.10.66

• •

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ment, health, creativity•.enmathy:. cherish!,!s and proudlywear.s ·his· Thomae More. . . ' imd inteJligence, .' '.-." , Phi Beta Kappa 'k;ey, who more- ...Gairi~ Educa'ti'on' . Post

Mrs..Schiller, lik~. other con~ over. k~el;>s' his intellect\.lai cu.ri~_. . . WASHINGTON '(NC) ',,:,- The . llCientiol.ls· paren~; feels: t~at, osity· keen;' his.. l!>,ve .of le~rriing ..Food. .1 s. .An.swe'r. National Catholic Educational

. , tt.w~ssaid 'that" puni,shment is .. sinliiar '~roiindwQrk' pf i:!le~eii- 18tion growth. as the greatest. giyen. exp~nse-paid .trilHl,het:e .. Waterl99; ..Osman ~nd' .;Bancroft,

. :.; ,.;;'8;",. .~r~rA":4CHO~~P,o(eS~'·~~dt:~·'~IY.e.r+r.+l~f~;;;;M~i:'.lp; 19~6,;':!'

Discipline' I"nvolves Rewards As Well as Punishments

lBy Mary Tinley Daly Discipline in the home, that widely discussed topic of

today, is of perennial interest and has beE!n ever since the time of our first parents, Adam and Eve. So believes Mrs. Patricia Schiller, clinical psychologist,. president of the Middle Atlantic Division of the American Associ·ation of Marriage Counsellors, and

herself mother of two chil­oren. With no striving to "keep up with the Joneses," the first A dam family had . its prob­lems, neverthe- . less. The eldest achieved per­petual, if unen­viable, distiIlc­tion by becom­jng the world's 1. irs t juvenile delinquent, "do­ing in" his brother AD e 1.

From the First Family of Par~ zdise Valley to the billions of: families living today, discipline. family upon other family·mem­le'ading eveniually to self-disCi:". bel's,' .and implied setting of pline, .signot real maturity, is' standards whereby a child ab­of prime importance. .... ,' sorbs by observation thevalu";:'

It can and 'should, accordmg,·; judgments of his parents. . to ·this ~uthority, build up com'"'" An example of the latter, she petences in· areas .includingdudg.... · . j)ointe<:l:: out' is .a father.' who

. . discipline .should .begin· at a y~ry · ..ea"ly age, making.!l c~~ld aw:are

.of· .acceptance,.:. "feeling ...goo.d . t,·about. .himself" . witfn nei her,

. ....... h' f ' .overprotection, ·"savinf(. 1m...rom· , '" '. respopsihilities, nor a harsh. re­

'. iti'ictive super,-ci'it~ca1 attitude~ .' . :., 'l\I1iatniselplhie Means

Citing 'a' survey' of what·. "dis­,. ~l>llne" 'means at'vadous' ages,

'the 'prenominaI1t factor noted to . ·tals....o.:a:rtij·'Phi. Beta 'Kappa: k~ys - 8Cientific' problem facing man ~ eompete ,for ,'~950 in s<:ho-,a' kiildergartener,··it' meal)t' a· must be'earned; no+borigbt. . today and agree~t'·that science larships and a~ardfl. '., ".

..: "Si>a·itkfng· 'when he pusi\ed hili •. Firmnes~ ·s·nt'·· cortsis'tency '1Ii' .lean make its biggest. contribu­" little' Sister 'nround; to a'highdisciplin:e"1Verfl~ressedby Mrs" tionbyd!lveloping,:w,:,ys,Of sup.. Summer'"Schedule ., Beh90~ 'stude;nt.·:·· depl'ivalof. t~~ "'sellill~r;':~'\li:~ornbi~edwit~.un,. plying enough .food . for the

ear "whei1:'1 stayed out'too.lBte·; ,.: ;- :to a collegestudent;c'UJ;tailm~nt

of 'allowanPoe for ,overspending; theprevioas. month; . Seldom, Mrs. Schiller' com- .. mented, is the use of· prais,es. and· rewarrl~regarded as a part, of.

. discipline, yet these two positive approaches in the parent-child relationship h a v e inestimable value.

~h"We've all heard • e eom­plaint, quite just to our way of thinking, "You hardly eve~ no­tice when I do things right, it's only when I mess 'em up, and then you jump me!". '.

Backing up the efficacy of the praise-and-reward aspect of dis­eipline, Mrs, Schiller. cited Il seven-year study sponsored. by the National Institutes of Health, and carried out by the Univer­Ilitr of California 'at Davis,'. OIl :

.. ~, .s.ugge$ts Moior, Fight' . .'. , 0 T' 0 " I 'd·0 ' • •

" - ~ ~'~."" n . ~O",)IC~ , .Isef.:1ses;:,. ''''~W :Y()R~ (NC)-Ja.ep:',Jo~',

.'1.: _:..:\~ . .:Z..··Fog~:.Qf,'Rh~4e~lan~~·, , bere ..tJ'I~.~.s.e1f~fl!C~.' lIlnd,,~~.,

". :;eeJ.:R:~(»r:;:e~C;~(Y.I'\,!u~1!.,~U~~ ~..,.r' joir,tpajrtol';ll l~r'Oft, the......... ' · '.gUire' Ui~·.U, s.. to 'l!lU~c;ll1,8;maJOI", ' j €et;"'sa!d . that ,'URticle'· .' "uilW •

.: ,:;fJg~ C:·'Qn.Jr9.~i~81;'·d!s,e~,·kDo"le(ige~.Cl.ir1me~~. '<',' ;. J :iht:0\l~??~~~~}le;~or.l~.. ,.-. ':.. " 1I~6oD.~,~~jriliise.:.~~'J~ Oth-'

~; "~ogarty .Clted .~gurell:~bQW1,~~ .ers;,atd,tG ,~yvictim.s-ef,trame . .'.: .,. that~ 10 . milliOn...peop'e.. ,~~~:.. ~cideJ)~;~ P~8ieal'~''''.

· Ar~~ lepi'o,sy,~ million·' are . ~ '.agilityo,-, ,::: ' .. <> .' . " ..bUnd .or.. ,going}blindllrom.tra- '.' ,,,: .<" ,',~.';' .. 'i •. , ..•.

,.; ehoma, ..and 140· million,. bave. . malaria'.,' ..' ,:' ,. -·fan·.RiverNJr~;·.'

"The . majority Of hUman be--'. ~aii .. *~~; ~h~li~'·.,N~, : tngsare . suffering;' righCnow, from a' Ilerious' infectioua "OIl'.

parasitic disease th~t pre'fentIJ them from leading a· i1ull life,III

he said in a talk at the dedica~ tion of the new Tropical' Disease Research Center at St. Clare" HosPital here.

~uild membeftl willll' IliltteOO • . Lenten: Con1<erence 'WedneaC:le,v' llligbt, M:arcl1 23 hs ~. ~pe1 G!t St. ~'8 llOapItal, ~an, liA_ ,

.Rev. lioben Sta,lltoD wm·~

and the guikll'e ~.~ will follow, \llYlcller, dllai~ "g :BiItIlL ,..... ....lIII..l'_

1,500 boys approximately 10 years of age. The study showed that far greater success was achieved by consistent, firm dis"" cipline combined with praise and reward than by the use of harsh punishment.

At your house and at ours, over the years, i n for m a I "studies" pr"bably bear this out. _~IHow nice your room looks

today. everything tidied up!" will achieve if not a tomorrow­and-tomorrow,·and-tomorrow re­sult; at least a tomorrow and day-after-tomorrow effect.

Standards by Example Another point made by psy­

chologist Schiller was twofold: the indirect effect of discipline applied" to one member of a

•alive:'Parents who enjoyread.-·. Association has appointed. Sister ing, iearning ~ndA~scl.lssip.gwitll . ". .. .. .' ,.. . ..

. their children interesting. t.opies . Youn·g·· Sc°len:tists .Stress, Greates.t Contrib.ution' Mary. '~lsa . Hitt:p.er,. FraiJ.cisc~n . '" . . ' from Iowa',. as' assistant 'as~6ciatedon't have to slave-drive· their' . . .' . . .. .. ." ,. '. .

' .. . ... ,.. '" .·..To· ·Il:x·· an'dOI·.ng.· ·.Popu·la··toIon'" ··s Abundan.t,· ,'So·u··.·pp·ly· ie.cretary· . 'of' its,elementary'.Yourigjjeo.ple 'eri~les'sly to ."get II;; p I .., . school 'department: .. _.' .. . . . ~t·you:rboo~s.":: ." :'. .' , '" . ., ,'. .. ., . • . . ,

'. Chil.~ren 'grurilblearid, eo~~ .WAS:fUNGTON '(NG) -:-. Stu,-" th.e. 25th Science Ta~el).t ~llr.ch, .". Sister j~l~a, .v.:h~ ~ii. j,ol~ .file . plain, of cOllrse;·abol.lt"dum)) GEmt finalistS. in 'th.e Westing-w~,re .chosen f.t:om. amQng mo.re· NCEA 'I)~xt ··S epte m be' r, h~~

. s'ttiff"btIt' they' 'sense::thilt Dad .house .. ScienCe, .Talent Search' ~han. 2p,OOQ.. st~d~nts,'eOJllpeJ~ng,. taught ~~dd;,rected. elementary and Moril'had at' 6ne time to lay,have singled.' 0t1~ r~pid, JlOPU-' ~om. al,l . 5(1 ~atel!.' ~ey . ~~r!:! .schOoI!! it:!: ~Qrtland .. Ore.\.~d. in..

derstanding and.tolerance.·''Trial· ·world.· ·.A b~ocliur~' desC~ibing 'Su~-. and ,error ·are·, implicit. in the The 40 young people eitecl'·. mer classes at SalveRe~na Col- '.' learnin·g~process,'''.·she.said,"lilnd BUch possible solutioDfl for ~i..;,' lege, Newport, 'is ·now available.' errors areta 'be ',expected~lse entitlc 'exploration as'improved Classes will begin Monday; June 'why do' we 'have 'eraserS: 011.' . methods of production for exist- . 27, eontinuirig. through 'FIjday, pe'ncils?'~:" '. ' .

Honest. dlfferencell of opinions,. . even among adUlts, are to be ex- • pect~d and n straightforWard ad':' m' .... ' ..m· of "1 was wrong" can dG a lot .to give a child perspective.

Discipline, t hat dictionary­defined. "state of order main­tained by training and eontrol,· is ,a m~ny-far.,eted thing. ·w-heft applied.to a home .situation but' one well ,worth. the effort. .

View Traffic SafetY As Moral Question

BRUSSELS (NC)-The btsh-. ops of Belgiuni bave eondemiled what they .~al1ed.Widespreadtr;' ~J)ons*~il.ity;'am~1)g aUU!llloblle

',driv,e;Tl!l;' ~ ,*liey .. 18~!~...ti'aHi!!' safety, .. basieaPlr •• QUestiOll' el . ~oJ,1ili~7. :~~·c..~e*el<oppieRt. ii .. .,~~~~~,<:,a,~l., .wged:.dri~· ..~_~ ;tb~r,; ~~e!!~:.f' .. ~~ ''''.'!'he' ',bishOpS, Who ~" '.

VOCATION ~AY PANELISTS: Leading the discussion. viduals found guilty of defam­on Vocations to be ·conductedat St~ Anne's Hospital, Fall ing racial, religious or ethnic River, on Sunday afternoon for all high school .seniors groups... interested' in . serving God as 'a hospital-sister are; left '. .

.00 right: Sr. MJ~hael Joseph, Sr. Rit~ Marie. and Sr. Mary., ·Iowa ·franciscan· Sister

ing food sources, . use of food· Aug. 5 and will. include .lan­sources,' such as sea plant . life, guage; hi~tory; religion, science; and the' development o! synthe- education and pbilosphy offer­tie foods. ings on the undergraduate level ..

d' k h inl'The 40 finalists,. 11 "':rls 'and an SIX wor sops, ma y In-. . 15' tended for teachers.» ~s; national winners •

!Lourdes Pilgrimage WAYNE {NC)-:-About $3,500

has been raised by. members. «Ii Immaculate Heart of Mary par­ish here in New Jersey to send three children afflicted with' eerebral palsy ~. the :Marian Shrine at .Lourdes, France, in the Spring. Mr.md Mrs. James Bolland . wHll mceompany their tbreeehAldren en ~. pil'rimege:..

' .

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::' L:Apph;)ws':'''~~Fdfr~:'' "- . Housing ~ow

• TRENTON' (NC)-The New Jersey Assembly has adopted Q

fair housing law affecting almost all rentals and sales. The meas­ure. goes to the Senate where the outlook is said to be bright.

The legislation is an amend­ment to a 1945 anti-discrmina­tion law. It was approved 48 to 1, with 11 abstentions. Sup­porters included' spokesmen for major religiouf' bodies.

The 1945 law banned discrim­ination in housing in principle, but was fillet: with loopholes. Exempted from the amendmen~ passed by the Assembly are single flats in a two-family, owner-occupied dwelling or single rooms in an owner­occupied, one-family dwelling.

The bill provides a maximum of a $500 fine or a year in jail for violations. It also empowers the state attorney general to bring' a complaint if a 45-day cooling off period fails to re­solve a dispute over .alleged dis­crimination.

In the meantime, an "anti-hattl bill" was introduced in the As­sembly to punish with ~ines anlll P.risonsentences groups 91' indi­

~.ll.in .Iqwl;l: 'She taught 10 y.earf/ " at the ,f9rmer .laboratory., sChool

. ,~f the Sisters 'of St;· F·rancis in Du9cuque,.Jowa. : ;.' . . .....

,~ She is :the"' dli'iJght~r ~of .Mri '.imd· Mrs,· W.B:mttner: of· Port­lend; Ore;

,'r"

: "Ask Ecisier Low . NEWARK (NC) "'- The 'Wew ;Jersey branch of the Amel'ican Medical Women's Association adopted a resolution' here asking the state to liberalize its laws against abortiono .

,e." AtDi • DNmt e

Page 9: 03.10.66

It's, Time 'to','Think of-Roses, CelebrateM'arch Feastdays

'By 'Joseph and Marilyn Roderick Although it may seem impossible, 'we are only a week

or so away from the time we may plant roses here in Massachusetts. Already potted roses (those that come in containers to which you add water) are on the market and it won't be long before

those of Irish descent celebratecom pan i e s specializing with parades. parties, corn beefin roses by -mail will send and cabbage dinners, green

them out for Spring planting beer, green clothing, shamrocks, (I usually get mine about the tall tales and more green beer. firm of April.) , Overshadowed by this colorful

There are so many lists of day is the traditional feast of good roses available that I will St. Joseph that is celebrated not attempt tc: list any here, al ­ with great 9')mp and reverence though if you are interested in in Italy but is quite overlooked obtaining such a list you may in America. St. Joseph is the write to the American Rose patron saint of families and in Society, 4048 Roselea Place, these trying times families cer­ColumblliJ 14, Ohio and they will tainly could use a little assist ­send you n free list of rated ance from Jesus' foster father. roses which you may find useful In Sicily a great buffet dinner in buying. Is enjoyed b) those honoring

I should likf' to comment on Mary~s husband and it is at this prices of roses. Yearly it aggra­ time that the rich of the Italian vates me to see people buying cities and towns share their good 99 cent packages of roses, think­ fortune with the poor and crip­ing that they are 'spending their pled. We in our family always money' in a worthwhile' way. take note of this day too be­ThiS is afoollsh waste. We have cause it Is ~e birthday of • always bought gOod healthy lovely young friend of ours, roses and have 'never lost' a sin... ' Sheila Josephine McGowan. ' gle one. Up until last Summ.er In Italy, 'St. JOseph's 'Day we had never spent less than woUld not, be' e6m'plete without $1.75 for, a rose nor more than, st. Jcisepli's, .Sfinge, 'a, 'large$3.5fi. ' , " ." , , ,,' round cream puff filled with

But last SQmII)er :1!'e deeided, sweet cheese and topped with to experiment. My father bought candied cherries and orange peel.fOur rose bargainS' at 89 'eertUl The following cream puff reci~

each: Of 'the four,'one' was"dead' is not from the Italians, but OBe

on' arrival. two "were 'quiCk to' I have enjoyed many times as joIn their departed friend, and' prepared by my, sister.,in-law, one ended up producing two Mrs. Robert Zimmerman, for­blooms for the Summer. This merly of St. Anthony of Padua was the famous Peace rose. A ' Parish, Fall River, and now of little reckoning shows that 'the Glencoe, nlinois. ' Peace rose really cost 89 cents' . Cream 'PUffs ' times four or $3.56. Actually we " -1 stick 'Of butter', B~ pound) , cou1d have bought two 'healthy­ cut into 8Jl1all pieces " Peace roses for the' price we' 1 cup water ' ' ended up paying for a very, 1 cup flour poor, weak plant 'which win 'be' \\ eggs luckY' if it' sm'vives 'the Winterl" pinch of salt

The real bargaln'is' to be hllli' % teallPoons sugar ' in "'the' good 'plant' 'which, 'hoi % teaspOon Vanilla "extraet healthy' 'OD' arrival' and, ,'Which.: 1) Put the' small' pieceS Of produces a volume of, bloom;,,, butter 1n the cup ',of: water in 'll" How much pleasure does two 2-quart saueepaa' and: bring 'to' donars afford today? It strikes a ,rolling boll'.: me as an' enigma" that ' with 2)' When the butter is melted ' money relatively"plentiful., peo­ remove froni' heat' anell add the'ple should make so much Gut of, CUJiof flour all at once. ' ,. ;" a ,plant which will produce:, for,

3) With a large spoop mix the·many years to come while they , flOur arid water quickiy together'will spend far more for a mctvie until it resembles ma~hed pota:-,and baby sitter. " toes, then retu.m' the pan to theAt any rate, when it comes to stove. Over moderate heat beatplants there is no denying the and mix the dough vigorously«tId cliche that you get what you for a minutP. O:r two or until itpay for, so don't try to get bar­becomes smooth, ,a,nd movesgains on roses or any other plant with the spoon. Remove fromunless you at"P willing to gamble heat.your money away.

4) Before the dough begins toIn the Kitehen cool make a depression in it with

Bleak February was bright­ the back of the spoon and dropened by only one highlight, St. one egg into it and beat vigor­Valentine's .day, but March is ously until a solid mass is fonnedresplendent with two outstl.\nd­ and then make, another inden­ing feast days, St. Patrick's Day tation before' c;lropping in the and two days l!1ter,on the 19th, second egg:,'~ntillue ,this pro­St. Joseph's Day. Usually during cedure until' all.four eggs are·the Lenten season these' two, beaten ,in and tine, dOUgh ',isdays were respites !rom the smooth ~1'}d shinY.', ' Itrlct fast, Put this yea:r with . . 5) B~iit' the saU,'sti,iar andthe new rules of faSt and ob­ vanilla into '~h.. ' dough.Stinence. they will have to be observed for themselves raftier , 6) Grease a cookie sheet 'With than for the: change ,from famme a light film, and drop ihe:doogh: to feast. by teaspoonS one' and '8 half

inches apart. ' " ,. ' Certaiply for any of the arell' $ibernl1ms, St. Patrick's' nay , ''1) Let the uncooked .puffs needs very ,little explanation. St. stand at room, temperature: fOr:

, hali, an houl;';: '..'l'atrick is 'the patron saint ot: Ireland and, it seems, 'of anY,one 9) Bake In' a 450· :oven. fQr Ii of Irish extraction' even, though nUitutes then tum 'hea~ down' ~ they have nev.er trod, OIl" the ,425?, for 10 ,to 'is miilUtes or until emerald sod. ,. , p'uffs areg9J,cien b~own. ; Starting as a day of fasting 9) Turn oft oven when puffs and prayer in early times; it are done and pierce the sides of became as the centuries passed each with' the point of a sharp a day honoring the political knife. Return them to the oven ideals of the Irish people, and' for 5 minutes to dry out the such leaders of tlie Irisb Rebe1­ insides. " " ' . , 100 as Parnell. At the present it 10) These may be filled with .. not onJ,y Ii religious feast da,. the swaet cheese" as in Italy or but <- great national holiday for served with whipped cream till.. the Irish people. In this countl7 in" and a chocolnte nauce. '

THE ANCHOR,- 9 Thurs., March 10, 1966

Colf.ege Aopoints Judge Mulloney

Philip Hemingway, Chairman of the Board of Advisers of Stonehill College, has named the Honorable Beatric H. Mul­laney of Fall River to be chair­man of the nominating commit­tee, succeeding the late Charles J. Lewin of New Bedford in this oosition. 0

Mr. Hemingway announced that Myer N. Sobiloff, also of Fall River, will continue aD chairman of the Stonehill Col­leger Citizens Seminar Commit­tee.

Serving with Judge Mullaney on the nominating committee of the board are Richard J. Potvin of Brockton and George Garrity, attorney, of Abington. The role of the Nominating Committee is to identify and select leaders in various fields in local communi­ties who are interested in pro­moting higher education and from among whom the Board of Advisers will select persons to be extended invitations by the President of Stonehill College for Board membership.Form' Vocatio.n Council Other committees now, active.' . " . . on the Board include the Plan­ning Committee. headed b7. Forty ,Communities~ooperote To Explain

. . ~.: . '. , Joseph E. Fernandes of Norton: Convent life to High Sc:hoolers a Finance Committee, headed b,.

John Drummey of Milton; and ~

NEWARK (NC)-Forty com­ with, 'high school juniors and Development ,Committee, chair­munities of nuns have formed seniors on "TbeChristian Wom- , manned by Robert McGowan of" the Siste~s' 'VOCation Council of an,u a 8pea~ers' bureau of Sis­ North Attleboro. the Newark archdiocese to ex­ ters who will talk to parents as- ' plain to girls what' SisteJ'l! are. sociations, ane a campaign fctr The first phase of the council's prayers for vocations. ,St. Patrick Assembly program, j1ist starting, is to send Junior Foresters of FaIl·The chief objectivl~ of the V'()­teams of five Sisters into each River's Our Lady of Fatimacation council is not specificall7girls' high school in the archdi()­ Court will present their19th an­an increase of religious voca­ease. There they conduct short nual St. Patrick's program at 8tions, but rather promoting un­general assemblies and visit each ' Tuesday night, March 15 in thederstanding .of the Sister's lifeclassroom, answering questionS Catholic Community Center. In­.and personality. Sister Elizabeth ' about convent life. By March,18, volved with the production are,Jose, 'vocations director of theeight, such teanu; will have vis­ Mrs. Frederick, Lindquist, Mrs.Sisters of Charity' of St. Eliza­ited 40 'high schools., John G. Mattey and Miss Cath­beth, the council's executive

Corni.ng projects iiiclude' open , erine P. Harrington. Forty chil~ ..chairman, says: "One' of' oUr dren ~ll perform,.howes in' all' convents, dialog~s' most urgent problems now is'

that people are asking more and ' more, .'Who are you people with

K,,; of C" Oppose Block, the ,long veils and funny dresses? What is this convent life and CASA BLANCASelling, of .M'agaz,i~es ' why does it exist?' Just Across The

MONTPELIER (NC) - T h -e, 'Coggeshall St. Bridge"The 'council," she said, "winKnights of, ,Columbus of .. ,Ver-, , Fairhaven, Mass. help us bettet face this problem.'mont have joined the Vermont, YOU' might almost say our pro­Citizens for ,Decent Literature Finest V~riety ofgram isailQe4 'at the girl whoin urging the legislature, to ap-, won't be a nuh, because it is SEAFOOD prove an amendment to the she who will nf'ver have the op-' Served Anywhere - Alsostate's obscenitY"law 'outlawing, portumty to !mow what a nUD mAKS-CHOPS-CH1CKENthe practice ot' blOCK selling of lB."magazines to news dealers.

Charles W. Jasman of Mont-. pelier, who said he represented 5,000 K. of C. members in Ver­mont, told the House Judiciary Committee: "We're crying for a 1%NEW HIGHER law whereby we can get a con­viction."

Ralph Guyette of RUtland. It I RATE OFmember of the Vermont Citizens for Decent Literature, said "this law 'will 'prevent 'a' dealer from insisting that Vermont stores 'INTERESTPH ANNUM' ~e'all· magazines in o-rder to get tbf'! ones they .want." 'PAID' 'QUARTERLY .ON~ PAID-UP

" SHARE 'CERTIFICATES Post~lent Dance , 'DepOsits Welcomed "In ,Multiples of

f The Woinen's Club of st. Isi ­$200.00 up' to $30,OOO-on Single and Joint Accountsdore Council, Knights of Colum­

~us; will, sponsor 'a post-Lenten Up to $60.000-foi' Corporations ­dance at 8'Saturday night, ~:pri1 ',DIVIDENDS pAID 4" TIMES A YEAR2$ at Stevenson's restaurant, ' North Partmouth, A preparatory February, 'May,' August and No~~mberzn.eeUqg"wl.ll bt.beld at· 8 Tues­day night, March 15. All Deposits !nsured, in Fun '

'TauntonDONAT "BOISVERT INSURANCE AGIENCY, ,INC. co-operaiive:",

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WONDERS OF BOOKS: Springtime is reading time proclaims the poster back of Mother Cyril, as she talks with pup.ils at the award-winning library of Holy Famliy parish, Portland, Ore., where the Sisters of the Holy Child introduce their students to the wonders of books. NC Photo.

Page 10: 03.10.66

ITHE ANCHOR­'10 Thurs., March 10, 1966 ..

Priest's-Hobby Onens Doors

LAXTON (NC) - Dominican Father' Arnold Plurrim~r, a sCi:­tmce teacher at·, Blackfriars '>chool' in Laxton, England, has II hobby that opens many doors

. for him. He picks locks. . Interested ir. locks since he was 10 years old, Father' Plum­mer said he is still attracted "by the sheer esthetic pl~asure of ."ercoming a piece, of compli­eated machinery." He is in fre­quent demand by townspeople iilnd has lectured to.a meeting of magicians in London.

"Advanced lock_picking re­,uires intelligence, concentration and' great patience -- qualities that are rare among petty crim­inals," he said. "The real work is done sitting in an armchair, thinking. The actual picking of a very complicated lock could take two days."

Father Plummer said his rec­(lrd for picking a Yale lock is 30 seconds. For people who want to guard their homes he has three words of advicI:: "Use a bolt."

Pre~ate Dissca.oSlses Jewish Statement

CHARLESTON (NC)-Bishop Ernest L. Unterkoefler of Charleston has told a Jewish eongregation here that Catholics ·'welcome any occasion to put the Vatican council's document on non-Christian religions into practice."

The bishop, a member of the U. S. bishops' commission on ecumenism, spoke to tbe broth­erhood of Beth' Elohim Temple. He professed the sinceri ty of the

. eouncil Fathers in' drawing up 'the decree, while' at the same time, he frankly admi tted the enormity of the task ahElad in its implementation.

The South Carolinan. ,cited , enormity of the task ahead in its emphasis in Catholic education ,to give a more positive Image of_ Jews and the Jewis~ religion to 1he young.

Gives Kiss of Peace To Syrian Leader

BOSTON (NC)-Richard Car­dinal Cushing gave the tradi­tional "kiss of peace," a symbol. e1 Christian unity, to Metro­politan Antony Bashir on the day the head of the Syrian An­tiochian Orthodox Church of North America died at New Eng­land Baptist Hospital here.

Metropolitan Bashir requested his aides to ask Cardinal Cushing to his bedside.

The Cardinal, who visited the. Orthodox leader privately for a short time in the hospital's in­tensive care uilit, said he asked "this good soul to pray for unity," and kissed him on the forehead.

The Cardinal lauded Metro­politan Bashir "as a great man • 0 <10 one with whom I always felt great esteem and love .;. * ... :We have always been good friends."

Britain Says Ind·jia's Answer More Food

DUBUQUE (NC) - A British economist believes that aid to. indian agriculture is a better solution to India's food. shortage ~an populatlOL control.

Colin Clark, director I)f the International StP.tistical Institute at Oxford University, feelJ: U. S. and European assistance to In­dian farmers,' particularly by supplying large quantities of ehemical fertilizer, would be "one of the most remunerative investments -0' the world as well as the most humanitarian."

Sister'Hortense Involved- in Educati~~~l'First~

.Wilj~ Teach "at Bridgewater·.State' College 'This month, for 'probably the first time in New Engl~nd, a CathOlic high' school

teacher arid it state college professor will .exchange classrooms. The teacher, one of the 'most outstanding in the .Diocese, is Sister Mary Hortense, S.U.S.C.,· head of ~he English, , department. at Bishop ·Cassidy High School, Taunton; The professor,' also from Taunton, is Associate Professor· Vir­,ginia Joki of·the State Col­

, .', ·~~ge.· at ,.B:r1 d.g .e w ate r.

BrIdgewater. wIll help fur­ther the ecumenical spirit this month," notes Campus Com­

· ment, the college l1Eiwspaper, in reporting the unusual exchange. Sister 'Hortense will explain techniques of" team t~ac,?ing to Professor JOkl s class In Teach­irig English in the' SecondarySc~ool" on Tuesday,. Ma~ch ~5; whIle Professor Jok1e WIll .d1S­cuss the works of two Amencan poets, Edward Arlington Robin­son, and E. E. Cummings, with Cassidy students Tuesday, March 22 and Tuesday, March 29.

Interchange Urged "This interehange between

college and secondary S"J1001s is urged by the National Council of Teachers of English," writes Miss Patricia Kelley, junior at Bridgewater and news editor for Campus Comment.

It is explained that contact wit h 'college-Ievel teaching give high school students a no­tion of y.ohat to expect when they begin their campus careers. On' the other hand, a teacher on the high school level can give future teachers a "firing-line re­port" on secondary school tech­

· ing. techniques. Miss Kelly reports that Sister

Hortense "wils a member of the first institute for English teach~ e;s sponsore~ by the Commis-Slon on EnglIsh of the CollegeEiltrance Board. She obtained her bachelor's degree from the Catholic Univer:,ity of America in Washington, ·D.C., and a Mas­tel' of Arts in Teaching at Bos­

' . sistant Professor Shirley Ko-

SISTER MARY HORTi:NSE

coanut Grove Holocaust," Red­book; "The Sacco-Venzetii Case. A Series of six Articles," Cleve­

'land Plain Dealer; "The Key to Karamu House: A Study of the Negro in the Creative Arts," Extension Magazine.

"At the request of Dr. Thomas Curtain, Deputy Commissioner of Education for the Common­wealth of Massachusetts, Mrs. Joki participated in a panel which was part of a television course on race relations. The st;i'ies was filmed on 'Channel Twa and shown in 10 state col­leges,' Northeastern University,' Boston University, Boston Col­

ton College. She has done grad-' lege, and Emmanuel College. At· uate work ' at Syracuse Urn·ver· t A- BrIdgewater, first, semes er,' S-'sity, Harvard University; and. Oxford University in England where she did special work on the metaphysical. poets;

Many' Articles "Mrs: Joki, a Radcliffe grad­

uate with a Master of Arts at,the' University, of Wisconsin, has taught at Quincy and, Taunton' H'igh Schools, and is a member of St.Paui's parish in Taunton. She has published numerous ar.,. ticles among which are a unit on the negro in the Journal of Education, Boston University; "Death' Went Dancing: The Co-

Pope' Honors Italian, Mi~ration Leader

NEW YORK (N'C):_: Father Caesar Donanzan, P.S.S.C., a leader,in the Italian migration to the U. S. field, has been honored by, Pope Paul VI with the Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice medal "in recognition of his yea,rs of ser­vice to'the Church and the papa.,. cy."

The Italian-born priest, 46, is provincial of the Society of St. Charles for the northeast U. S. and Canada, lie was ordained ti> the priesthood in 1943 and came to the U. S. in 1946.

The decoration was .presented to Father Donanzan by _Bishop Edward E.' Swanstrom, execu­tive director of Catholic Relief Services - National Catholic Welfare Conference, overseas relief agency of U.S. Catholics.

Open Tn All LOS ANGELES (NC) - To

implement the decrees of Vat:­ican Council II, tl1E~ Los Angeles chancery office has asked all pastors to arrange a series on religious subjects during Lent; open to both Catholics and non­Catholics without· casto! obli- , gation.

Famity Movement As'sl.sts' PAVLA

CHICAGO (NC) --'- The 'na­' tional office of the Christian'

Family Movement has taken' steps to cooperate actively in the current recruitment program of the Papal' Volunteers' for, Latin America..

According to Father Raymond -A. Kevane, national director of PAVLA, promotion and recruit ­ment materi8.l is now being sent from CFM's Chicago headquar­ters ,to couples heading the movement in 145 dioceses. 'In addition to spreading the

word about PAVLA among its presiding couple~ throughout the nation, CFM helps the Papal, Vohinteers program. in other·· ways, adds Father Kevane. "In some dioceses, parish CFM·, groups are sponsoring individual Papal Volunteers," he said.

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lack's class viewed the lectUl:es and panel discussions.

"Participating on the panel with Mrs. Joki were the Assist ­.>\>'1t Superintendent of Schools hI Cambridge, the principal of Springfield High School, ~nd' the Senior Editor of McGraw-Hill Publishing Co., Dr. Richard Smith. The new Civil Rights Bill provided the money for this series of programs.

"This year, as she did last year, Associate Professor Joki is participating in a program sug­gested by the Massachusetts State Commission for the Aca­demically Talented teaching, Creative Writing to academi­cally talented students iIi: Taun­ton."

S'ister Hortense

Sister Hortense was principal of Sacred Hearts Acade'my, Fall River, before her transfer to Bishop Cassidy. For eight years prior to that time she headed the Sacred Hearts English de­partment. Other teaching assign­ments have been at St. Mary's School, Taunton; Sacred Heart School, Lawrence; and Sacred Hearts Elementary School and the College of the Sacred Hearts, both ,.in Fall River.

Brown Universit.. To' Hear Theologian

PROVIDENCE (NC)-A .1ead­ing theologian, Father Bernard Haering, C.SS.R., will speak at a Brown University conference Tuesday; March 15 on "Respon­sible Parenthood". and "Con­science and Fre~dom."

In addition to his formaT talks. on these topics, the GermanRe­demptorist Will discuss his views with a panel of three theolo-" gians-a 'Protestant, a Jew and. another Catholic.

They are Dr. R. Paul Ramsey, Paine p'rofessor of religion at Prince~on 'University, Rabbi Eu­geneB. Borowitzof the New York School of Hebrew Union College, and Father John' C. Ford, S.J., of Catholic University of America. "

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·Ass·e'rts Mistrust CausesFailure'~ .Iii, ':Coop.eration"

piTTSBURGH '(NC) 1 ~ Bishop 'John J. Wright of Pittsburgh believes deep­seated mistrust is at. the' heart of many failures in coop­er~ti?n between groups' in the relIgiOUS and secular worlds.

Addressing representatives of the major faiths at an institute on "The Person and the Common Good" at Mount Mercy College here, the Pennsylvania prelate said: ,

"It is not that we do not ac­knowledge the moral impera­tives which should make us co­operative it'is simply that deep down we'so often plain distrust one another."

. . The best solution IS p~rson-to-

per~on contact, the Plttsbul'gh Ordmary declared.

"It is the way most likely to establish an atmosphere of mu­tual respect based on the knowl­edge which can serve as motiva­tion to live and thus can proquce a climate of lively confidence and mutual trust."

Bishop Wright blame(l the "phenomenon" of distrust on a growing lack of self-confidence within persons and groups, rath­er than on inherited histories.

"This in turn comes from a crisis in self-identity," he said. "Many of us no longer know who we are or what we are. Some of our religious and cul­tural groups appear to be suf­fering from a collective amnesia' they have forgotten their pur~ poses, their origins their per­sonalities. '

"The crisis of Western man is'" h' h h . i

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19 own entity, his own worth.

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Page 11: 03.10.66

11 Project Equality Staff Expands

.CHICAGO (NC) ,~,Th~ Nlh­.tional Catholic Conference for Inte,J:racial Justice· has an­nounced expansion of its staff to service' the rapidly growing "Project Equality" equal em­ployment opportunity program.

Curtis Heaston of Chicago has Joined the national interracial agency as associate director of the department of employment services and assistant national program director of the project.

Conference executive director Mathew Ahmann said the' ap­pointment was required by the growing number of requests for the ·"Project Equality" program loy Catholic, Protestant, Ortho­dox and Jewish jurisdictions in all parts of the United States. "Project Equality" is a program using the economic resources of religious institutions to fight discrimination in employment practices.

Heaston left a position as as­sistant attorney general for Illi ­nois to join the NCCIJ. Heaston is a graduate of Chicago's Loy­ola University school of business and received his law degree from the Loyola law school.

Shrene to Exhibit Re~ti~ioLils ~1iJI~ners'

WASHINGTON (NC)-A two­month exhibit of religious ban­ners from the Vatican Pavilion of the New York World's Fair will open tomorrow at the Na­tional Shrine of the Immaculate Conception.

The banners were executed by Norman Laliberte, an expo­nent of modern religious art. They portray events in the lives of Christ and the saints and highlights of the Church year.

liturgy Changes Continued from Page One

and a special Preface for the feast of the Dedication of a Church.

The decree of the Sacred Con­gregation of Rites, extending the use of these Prefaces, stated that the reason for this extension was "the greater emphasis on' the Preface as a prayer of· praise, 'blessing and thanksgiv­ing at the beginning of the .eu-" charlstic pray.er or Canon of' the Mas.s."

With more active particpation on the part of the people and ;Ii keener interest in the liturgical year, feasts, and the proper at ­titude of the people in regard to these, it was thought of ut­most importance that that pray­

. er which solemnly mentions the reasons for the particular feast be clearly proclaimed in the language of the people.

"New Missal'''' American printers and dis­

tributors are now hastily at work making available a "Sacra­mentary" which will contain the English translations for the above prayers and prefaces.

The new "missal" is designed primarilly for the celebrant of the Mass. It contains the prayers Ine recites or sings and gives both the Latin and English translations.

It is not a popular missal, te., one designed primarily for the use of the people. It eon­tains those prayers which the priest recites or chants for them while they listen and spiritually unite themselves to his announe­ed petitions.

Besides these prayers, the new missal also contains a new "Or­cllinary" which is drawn up 1ft accorance with all the latest changes and directives and ira nccordance with the restored rite of ConcelebraUon.

THE ANCHOR­CFM,.Leg·ion 01 Mary, Sacred' Hearts O d.. r ·er:. Thurs., March 10, 1966

Among Ex"!tibitors ,·at Christian Panorama ECu~'.:ll",=C'm Topic Plans are all hut complete for the Christian Panorama Vocation and Mission Exhibit For Educators '

to be held the weekend of March 25 at Bishop Cassidy High School; Taunton. Thirty-five religious communities and lay organizations will be represented at the exhibit, including from the Fall River, Diocese the Dioc.esan Clergy, the Confraternity of Christian Doc­trine, the Serra Club, the Christian Family Movement, PAVLA, the Legion of Mary, and the SoCiety of St. Vin-· cent de Paul.

In addition, the majority of the religious communities active in the Diocese will have booths, as well as a number of mission­ary orders.

Typical of lay and religious groups in the giant project are the Christian Family Movement and the Fathers of the Sacred Hearts.

Christian Families In February, 1943 seven young

men sat after hours in a Chicago office. Of diverse backgrounds and experience, they had one common insight: they knew that they must find ways to love the world better, ways to help bring the world-persons, things, insti';' tutions-to Christ.

In this meeting the seed of the Christian Family Movement was planted. From it have sprung the hundreds of thousands of ac­tions, big and small, that have made CFM a unique develop­ment of the Catholic Church.

CFM is an apostolic movement of, by and for married couples and their families. CFM helps members to be seven-day-a­week Christians. CFM creates a community spirit among like­minded families. CFM helps parents to improve their own family life. CFM gives couples a chance to grow together. CFM helps each person to know that he is' needed, and ,useful. CFM offers laymen and priests a pro- ' ductive way of coming to know, respect, and work together.

Some 100,000 couples are in­volved . in CFM and related' groups in many sections of the world. The number of couples becoming interested in this movement in the Diocese of Fall River is incrl~asing and as

.. a result many. things are being promoted which wm show forth the real spil'it of Christian living. ," .

Improves F2mily Life Because of CFM family -life is

improved since the movement offers couples a way to show love not only for, their families­but for all families. Parish life takes on a more personal mean­ing since it is ·a major force in shaping men and. women who realize their role in God's plan.

There are 125 couples partici ­pating in the CFM program in 13 parishes' in the' Diocese of Fall River. These groups are united for' greater action in what is termed the Federation. Rev. Edmo'nd L. Dickinson is Federation Chaplain and Mr. and Mrs. William Crowley, Seekonk, Federation President Couple.

"You are not wanted here!" Where were these words

spoken? It was in 1873 on Molo­kai in the Sandwich Islands, the former name for the Hawaiian Islands.

Who was the priest? Who were these people?

The priest was the 33-year-old Father Damien of the Fathers of the Sacred Hearts. He had been ordained only nine years previ­ously. The people were the un­fortunate ones who were dealt a heavy blow with leprosy.

Some may ask what induced this priest to seal himself off from the rest of the world and tend the flock at that leper col­ony? 'There was II tremendous amount of the love of God and the Blessed Mother in the heart of Father Damnen. He wanted to let this love flow out from ws own beart into 1~ lives ~ tm~

VOCATIONS EXHIBIT: Among the numerous priests assisting in readying the Christian Vocation Panorama scheduled for Cassidy High, Taunton, March 25-27, are, seated, left to right: Rev. Arl)lando A. Annunziato, No. Attleboro; Rev. James F. McCarthy, Attleboro. Standing: Rev. James F. Kelley, area CCD director, Mansfield; Rev. John J. Steakem, No. Easton.

afflicted people who would soon Home." This work was begun meet their judgment. He wanted by Father Matteo, SS.CC., a to make sure that when they met member of the same community their death that they would be as Father Damien, the leper in the hands of God, not Satan. priest. The Fathers, Brothers­

, But why should you only read and Sisters of the Sacred Hearts, about this Hero of Molokai? who have their provincial house Why not view the 30-minute, at One Main Street, Fairhaven, Damien film which will be invite you and your friends to shown at the Christian Pano­ visit our booth and view these rama exhibit. films. We will be looking for

. Also on view will be a self­ you. explanatory 30-minute color film, entitled ''The Enthrone­ment of the Sacred Heart in the DONNELLY

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GIVING YOURSElF to a life com­pletelv dedicated ·0 the salvation of souls .. through prayer. work. sac­rifice and joy ... by using your tal­ents as a Nurse. laboratory and X-RayTechnician. Secretary, Accountant, Di­etitian, Seamstress, Cook. as well as In other hospital departments and in II new extension of our work in Cate­chelical and Social Service Fields.

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~""1",,1 M~~":lI1g WASHINGTON (NCi ­

The National Catholk I'jdu­cational Association'~ 63rd annual convention h April will feature a general st:9<lion on Catholic education's rote in fos­tering ecumenism.

Fat her Colman ". Barr)', O.S.B.; chairman of the nati,Qnal Committee on EcuT .Ienism and Catholic Educatiot', will sI1eak at the NCEA's s!Econd general session on Tuesday, April 12, the second day of the conven­tion schedulecl, Lor Chicago A,prH 11 to 14.

Father Barry's remarks, the NCEA saidl here, will be fol­lowed by additional comments from three members of the com­mittee, Mrs. Eugene J. McCar­thy of Bethesda, Md., wife of the­U. S. Senator; Sister Mary Ida Gannon, president of Chicago's Mundelein College, and Philip Scharper, editor of Sheed and Ward publishers, New York.

The committee which Father Barry heads has held a series 011 meetings to explore how the en­'tire Catholic educational effort, from parochial schools to Con­fraternity of Christian Doctrine, can reflect a1d promote ecumen­ism.

The NCEA also said here that'; John Cogley, senior religion writer for the New York Times, will speak at the convention's

. closing general session.

Interracial Council Endorses Board

NEW YORK (NC) - The Catholic Interracial Council 011 New York has endorsed a pro­posal for a civilian review board to examine charges of miscon­duct by city police.

The Interracial Review, 'pub­lication of the council, said z properly constituted board could "assure a degree of justice and 'impartiality to all; civilian a!l

well as police."

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Page 12: 03.10.66

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Love Practice

God

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, GOD- LOVE YOU to the fiolends ;uu),customers.of the. Jolm Sheffield' Flower CompaDy' who collected $563 for tile Dol'; ,." Father's"PoOrof tbe worlel dUrin: 1965 • ,•• to SoM.B. for $1Il :. IOj, declil~a' at 'the last inlitute .to play. in. the :office pool, teUiDg, " myself if 1 won 'I' wOuld send'it to y.on. 1 /ruess the Missioll$i need' money' pretty baelly because bereft Is.",. '•. ·to W.T. & K.B. for$6.1'Jeollected t~m their' nintb grade clall8 ha' nickels, dlma aiDa" PeDDles. . . . , , ".

Cut out this column, pia yoUr sacrifice to It anel maO U to Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of The Soeiety for the Propagation of the Faltb, 366 IFifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. 10001 or to your diocesan director. IU. Rev. Magr. Raymond T. Considine, 368 ~ortll Main Street, Fall River, Massachusetts.

By Mosft Rev. ,Fulton J. Sheen.' D.D. I wonder if we are not getting away from the Cross. Is Pen­

ance becoming unpopular? Our Lord made it the subject of His first sermon and of His last sermon to the world. St. Peter chose it as the theme of his fidt Pentecostal sermon and St. Paul called himself "crucified." Indeed, some ancient rules of fasting and. abstinence are not suited for the whole world, such as India where one Catholic told a bishop that he ate a rat on Friday~

his 'first meat in six months. But is there not danger that the body "penance" may be thrown out with the water of "agglorna­mento"? When we do away, with fasting, we ask our people, "Though fasting is no longer a law, we want you to impose on yourself and practice self-denial." Is not the purpose of the law. to assure' a minimum of fasting among us poor mortals whose shoulders are better fitted for minks and wool than yokes 'and crosses? How many priests would read' the 'Breviary every day if it were not a law .and how many would do the ,equivalent of prayer and meditation as a substitute if left to their own. choice? Those who love Christ need no law, but how many of us can truly say with Peter: "Lord! Thou knowest that I' love Thee."!

Some justify tbe decline of penance on the grounds that our life Is too hard -penitential in our daily round of duties, our commercial rush here and there, our daily struggle to make ends meet. Yet, how, until a few centuries ago, was It any less penitential to travel by donkey, to live In heat withoat air. conditioning, to' survive cold without· steam heat. to dleall oil lamPs, Insteadof toachlng Ii. switch and to IN!. a mother whO is tailor, midwife; nurse and teac'h­e,r, ~ well" all hoqaew:1te! "

',So~~. ,iais ,ofs,elf~discip1,ine need' modernization more than" abrogation.' Only lovers sacrlfi~, and bow many so 10've 1jbe 'Cru-'; cifl~"? Why, n,ot ~e ,it ..~po!l ourselves' to 'sUbstitute'a new law' instead ,of .. ju~t saying. "Oh!, We do "not' have to fast anymote~·' WIly, 'n9t, t~ke.'tlie amount that:, yoU' sav'e'dbyfaSting and' oblige' yo,urselfto give .it to' the. poor,...,..to feed the poor! This is important;" ~"n~t '~ve tQ t~e 'rieh,' Whetbe.r they be' persons or iristitutioM; do not give to anyone. who will invest your alms in stocks 01" real estate~ Give. it to the .poor bishops, priests, brothers,sisteri' and ,the' faithful in missi~n lands. This was, the mind of. the Cl1J.11"~h In. the beginning: fastilig was not just to impoverish the' body but to. enrich t~ poor by our savings. We have enough' divol\ccs ,alreacty, l~t us not, add the' Great Diverce of tearing' Christ 'from the Cross and throwing the Cross away, for until' the end of time we must be followers of, Christ' and Christ Cry';' cifled. Let me hear' from you during .Lent. GodLove Youl

Have yOU ever ,asked you~elf this question: "Why should t give my hard-earned money to those in mission lands?" Find' out why in' the 'wordS of the "missionaries living' and working On' the ~cene whe) Write' of their 'experiences in WORLDMISSION;, This quarterly. magaZine, edited by the Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, can be sent to you for only $5.00 a year. Write to WORLDMISSION, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10001.

FIR..'1T: Brother Anthony Ipsaro, S.M.,- has been ap­pointed Baltimore Archdio­c e san Superintendent 0 f Schools, believed to be the first, Brother 1;0 head a di­'OCesan school system.' NC Photo.

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Philade'~phia He're I Come I" ,

Admiroh~" 'Written Play By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy .

"No travels to bizarre places this year?" 'The question referred to articles in previous years about the hinter­lands of, for' exampl(~, Brazil or Morocco. The questiQner was obviously unawaJ'e that I had, only a few days before,

If none of this seems partic­ularly novel, the reason is not that Mr. Friel is echoing other plays, but thai he is drawing from life. innumerable people have been in the same situation in 'every age back through his­tory; it is a common if not uni­versal, experience. ,

The strength of a play lies not in the absolute originality of its subject matter (a flat impossi­bility) 'but In.the measure of In­sight and freshness which the author brings tc it, the inventive skill with which he sets it out.

Spiced Wi1:h Wit. These gifts Mr. Friel has, in

plenty. His play is admirably written, but not self-consciouslylite,rary. The dialogue is vibrant and unhackneyed; spiced with wit, . shot through with poetic touches, but' with none: of the'" 'I ' .". M' 'r It c tor i cal extravagance of . nteres. '. .. GUnts

visited Boston. While there,I read two newspaper pieces which quoted two authorities as saying, respectively: (1) that Boston is now 'in its golden age.•. a more splendid cultur~l center than it was a hundred years ago. anc. (2).that Boc;ton is n.o longer the Athens of Amer­ica. I 'm in no position to de-" cide w hie h is right, but I do 'know that this Athens, wllether waxing or wan­in~" does a. mis-. .' . erable job of. cleamng Its streets in the Winter. ... . '.

I had to skittElr over a grellt deal' of ice, leap 'over a greatde~l "ofimow, and' .slosh th~oUgh.:, •. 'great deal' of dirty water to get ,to the decrepit' .thea~lres In' . which two interesting new plays. were having" tryout perfortn;;.· ances before venturiilg into New York." : -' " ',' ",

b 'ne 'play "wa's" Philad.elp"hill, . Here I ConiebyBrian Frle~; a,n, Irish' writer who bas given lis' some Of )he most delightfull and exquisitely, ' fashio~ed. s h 0 r t

t Th thstories of recen years., ~,f! er. was James Goldman's The Lion -In''Winter, which attracted me because it' deals with that'pe~-ennialiy iJiterestingpersanage" Henry 11, King of En~land in the. twelfth century,

.OUght to,be Hit, . lIQw .. Philaqelphia, ..lier~ ..1. ..

Come .will fare ,in Ne~ YOlr~,. I, cannot'say. It deservescto .. be ·a, hit. J3,ut t~~gagged.,.1,lp, gilJ1.mi~kY.. comedY, or. thoe blac,k. comeCiY,,is ,.

• ,r. . ' ' ., Whll.tBroadw;ay goes ,f9r, and spo!te,~;,. Mr... Friel's· play is neithe'r ot,·' Brilli~ntA~t~r th9~e. It is a, genuine comedy,., Two . extraord~nary., . y 0 un g recognizably hux:nan in its eVery" Irish.actors ~rform these selves. aspec~ and lin~, immensely fun- : DOz:tlU, Donm;Uy.is hardly' short " ny' withou~ domg the least,viQ'" lepce; to lif~ or ;character, a~d touchingm. Its authentiC poignancy, whl,ch is neither sen,. . timental nor bitter~

It is, of course, laid in Ireland,· In the tiny town. of Ballybeg. And it focuses principally on young Garett. O'Donnell, who, ~ .Jhe, morrow, is to fly to America, live with his Aunt ~izzy in Philadelphia, and work m a hotel.

Gareth's mc-ther has been long dead. His father runs a COWltry store and is a county councillor. This slow, sile~t man, who had been much older than his wife, never has. anything to say to his

h . d'On. M0 51 o,tf e talking aroun tJ1e house is done .by .014Madg~, the housekeeper., . ;.',:

Universal Experienee Life in Ballybeg is dull, There

are "the boys," with whom Gl\reth has played football nnd done some mi1~ skylarking. And there is Kate Doogan, who had promised to'marrY Gareth, only to have her wishes overroled by her father (Il senator, no less)

O'Casey. Most impressive of allJs the"

adrtlitness with ~hicb M:r. Fri'el''' uses Ii device that Might easilY' ' have paralyzed the play. TWo" actOrs play Garetli. (j'Doniiell~ sf ""'''t' .. "1" 0·"· .'., .;:' ­mlU.aneous y .. ne represen~"l the' public Self, the other the private self.. 'Wh~n' the public.''' self is'speaking, th4~ pri'vate -self tells Us what he loeally means.'

. , .' . . 'The private self chides. ndicules tries to spur or restrain' the pUb-'lic self: .' ,

The effect is often hilarious, 'as" when, dur.hig 'the familyreeita-' tioti of the rosary the' priwite" self gives voice'to' the dtStrac:" tions running through Gareth's" mind. But the private self does" mo,re than get iiulghs(solne qf" tlHdnost'inoving moments iIi the plaY come frori;i his .speaking th't unspealtable or at least the' uri­

of brilliant ill the admittedly fat part of the private self. Pa~.,. trick Bedford, in. the less showy, ' but scarcely less demanding role.. of .the public self, is very good· indeed.

Other Irish actors demonstrate rare mastery ir. smaller parts. The cast has been rounded out with some American performers who, although passable simply do not have the accent, speech rhythms, and acquaintance with Irish, ways to match, the. ricb' perfectIon of the veterans of the' Abbey' or other Irish acting compariieS. .. .-,

Anyone with an Irish back­gro.und will esp.eel.a.lly e.iiJroy·'thls play. I doubt 'however that its excellence'wItl: be lost, oft·the non-Irish.,·"" :'.

How win it fare on :Broadway? Is there a place there for some- . thing -as ent!'ancingly human, as; . se!¢n!ll-y ,here. hi.. New,' )ef1JeY • commonplace or. the surface, but,: donate<i bl!Xid lor u. s. anp~', surgtclJlly probiIlg in its explo-') fo~.s.. in.Yietnaip. w~en, ~ .Red., ration of 'the heart, as unspec-( Cross bloodmobile visited the ~actl1arbut marvelously reward,;,: seDuna'ry. " ~," ," lng, as this? J just dOIl't know. '

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Goldman Play 'j

Continued from Page One, ligt i t ct" it "f n '

re ous ~ ;ru Ion· . 0 OWl: _that an exhibit such as Christla~'.

Panorama .muS' 'become ,~art 0 our·educ~tIonaLpro~ram.

The, dIocesan.. director has'__1__ .:1 . h . 'di t ~..:.. d . ~ eae . area rec or..... e-:-. Vl.Se a .. pian ~llerebY the Ccp groU?S in thelT section make it offiCially part .of the pro~r~. "More and.more emphasIS IS

I d f" . Id t;ip This ~ ace. .ndow. °tn 'ble dr.. s. th 18. alme a. roa emng. e child's knowle?ge of persons and places of speCIaI i?terest. Let 1JS t~~ make this dIsplay .a ."field triP': ~or our J.D~ny students. in Chns.ban ,po#nne classes b\lt csp,eclallY, #or.,~h.os~en~olled,Qn .. the. Jullior ",!Ilgh, .apd Hig"., Sc~o~l.levels:.. . " ';'.'~pm~uaI o,;Plr,ec.tors w~o ~Ill,.

act as coordmat9I'lr: of .~e..C~p,.effort ~or the vocation and mis­si61'i" exhi1:>it' are: .': .. ,' ".

Attleboro'A,i'ea -.:. Rev. James Kelley;' ':' ..., .. ,.. ,

Cape Cod,md. Islarid~Rev:" Philip Davignon." .""

Fall River :...- Rev.' RiCliard' Demers. . . .. . ,

New Bedford-aev. 'JohD Fol..; : ster.

Taunton-Rev. Thomas Neilan. In addition to the Area Spir­

itual Directors, the diocesan Ex­ecutive Board will take an active part in the promotion of this exhibit. Members of the Board include the following:

President, Edward Angelo, ' New B~dford; 'vice, President, .. Edward McDonagh, North At­Ueboro;, Recording ,Secretary, Claire Morissette, Swan)3ea;.Cor­responding. S~retary, Mrs. Lu.,.. cUle .Felix" Attleboro; Treasurer, M M N 'lle T trs.. .ary, eYl , aun 011•.

Blood To' Vi~tWar . " . -.... . . ~,

,DARLINGTON (NC) ~ Stu­derits at'lmmaculate Conception'

and mother. Kate is. now Mrs; .• In' The Lior in.' Winter, Mr~1 regal element in this monarch, King, '1nd no longer in Gareth's Goldman" a young American: or the genius which put together orbit. Gareth's routine, like that writer, is telling of Henry II at' s~methiIl~' ofa~,:eriilll,l1e,. ,.. of !the" town itself, nevel',·varies. the age of5(}.·.\1lt;ith·the murder of i , The':;plliy is more deb~te than"· from day to day. . '. St. Thomas -of Canterbury far! drama;iand the iJltrtcactes ofre~

Hence he is pleased by 1:he . behind, hi~, his rule in Englan<J,: latiomihips arepas~' understand';' ­prospect of leaving. But; with departure at. hand, he has second thoughts. He recalls incidents from the past, in which he made' ~istakes. Hit puts forth a final, desperat.e effort to bridge the ehasm between himself and Ills il:.Uler.

and throughout much of France: lng by6'ne 'noffamilfar with:This .,well establishedi' and the,cprob­ remote period of English.history. lem of the succession to the' As he_admits, ,Mr. Gold.plan has throne tormenting him. taken liberties with fact (for ex­

The roughness, the swagger, ' ample, where ,Eleano,,"'s religious and the bruta:. streak in Henry ~ews are concerned), but he has are caught ·b)/ Mr. Preston,' but· by no me'ans falsified ~haracter.,

the actor dOeiJnot slllggest the or major events.

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.THf ANCHOR­::",

'~:' ,:~ew, 'An~DiOceson,Bcindj:Or,ch6sfra, 13Thurll.; March 10, 1966

Chorus to Make First Appearance Set ClassroomAt Feehan High Concert May 29 . Limit at 40~~angele8s in a ch~nging world. That's the traditional

Do~I~Ica~ Ac~demy umform. Girls at the Fall River school, DETROIT (NC) - ClassrooM partICIpatmg In a. 8tud~nt council sponsored poll, voted size for all elementary schools

in the Detroit archdiocese· willthree to one to retam theIr navy bllle jumpers white blouses be limited to a maximum of 4eand varicolored class ribbons. ' pupils in September.Th' . th f debate team won two and lost

IS III e ace of plaids, four at tj'le recent Stonehill Col- In addition, all schools with checks and all manner of lege tournament. eight or more classrooms must blazers all over the Diocese. Sodality Projl!cts have a fulltime principal whlll

has no assigned teaching respon­Good for them, say we. New sodality projects getting sibilities.Maybe it won't boast 76 trom- under way at Sacred Hearts Fall

In a directive to all pastorsbones, but the newly forming River include a sodality bowling Archbishop John F. Dearde~All-Diocesan Ban d, Orchestra team and. a newspaper. Prefect spelled out policies which mustand Chorus is opening a new is Mary Ann Demetrius. be followed "in the interest ofera in Inter-school cooperation Names of varsity .volleyball improving the quality of ourir. the Diocese. The estab- team members have been an­education."lishment of a girls' chorus, nounced at Mt St. Mary. Sen­

"Obviously pupils now en­male chorus, mixed chorus, or- Iors. are Betty Misek, Marilyn rolled are not to be dismissed,'"chestra and band was announced StroJny, Lynne Chrupcala Mon­the archbishop's letter stated.this month by the Diocesan ica Polak, Linda Waite' Anne "However, should vacancies oc­High School Music Committee. Sullivan, Peggy Galfo;d and cur due to transfer, these placeDPurpose of the unit, say or- Julie Urban.•Juniors are Joanne are not to be filled if the class­ganizers, ul s to provide n, Chrupcala and Carol Morton' room load is 40 or more."broader performing experience and sophomore~ are Jean Mehl~

~an is possible in an individual mann and Barbara. Ganczarski. school. This can be accomplished At Bishop Cassidy teenageby providing more thorough in- journalists are preparing for in- state science fair and the other~, strumentation in band and 01'- d~ction ceremonies Sun day winners will exhibit at the re- " chestra than can be found in any mght, March 20 into the national gional fair in Fall River, with one scl;lool; also by offering the journalism soCiety, Quill and , CLASS PRE.SJDENTS: Class presidents at Jesus-Mary' the chance of going from there opportunity 01 participation in Scroll. To : become members: Ac d F 11 R to. state compet;tion. Ninth grade. .' P' t • ' a emy,. a Iver, are, seated from left, Paulette Caston-II mixed ch<?rus, again impossible awprlD s ~d~tor Barbara Mello WInner at SHA was Glenda Me­

,. lit many of the Diocesan schools." and yearbook, editors Angela guay, .semor; Charlotte Dube, junior jPauline Dugal, ilenior j deiros, "Mirror Images." , .T~e new group wiil present a' King and Kathleen Medeiros stall(~mg, Pau~ette Berube, freshmanj Christine Picard and Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Kerrins,of

. joint concert' at' Bishop Feehsfl Also being inducted win be nin~. ZenaIda IturvIde, sophomores. Attleboro, sppke to SHA Fall " l!igh In,.f\.ttIebOl;O ~l,lnday;, May, paper and 'yearbook staff mem- River parents, last week, and will ~, ~tude~t mus.icians are now', ibetrs and eight, junior probation- UMass; Ri c h a r'd' And I' e w s H' h S hi' address a Cassidy parents' audi~ , beVlg selec.ted ~nci. ~ractiee at', s s. , ' , " , . Bridgewater. Ig c 00, ,Brookline. His ence' Tuesday, Marcl1 15, Dr. individual '.lcho«;lls has begun. .' Awar~s o~. the .Hcreative wr.it- coach is Sister Francis Veronica Kerrins, an obstetrician and his' J:oint practices will.be schedulell mg key . wIll. be made. to Deb- Stang High Of North Dart-·· of the Stang faculty. wife discus~ed responsibilities' 01 nearer the concert date.' ,9;ra~' ~acL~,al) and, Betsy Mc- mouth 'comes up with awards for More Homemakers of Tomor- ' parents in sex education.

Coordinators for the various Carty and 1\farie .Malone will Joan 'Zieliilskl and' Janice Mc- row have been' named. Jesus-: Diane Dzidusko and Kathleen groups are: Girls' Chorus Sister receive anhonor.certlficate for' Kay. Joan, student council sec- Mary's gal is Janet Roy and Cas-' O'Connell are representing SHA Stephen 'Hellm, Bi~~op Cassidy; ca'rtoot,ting.. .', ". " . retary, bas been granted nearly sidy's ,is Barbara Batchelder. Fall River at a journalism 'con­'rllun,ton; M;al~. ~h9rus,', Sister PatrIck. CaJ,'lley~ S~ng' High $10,000 in' scholarships to date And, yearbooks are safely at ference, being held thro~gh.M~ry., Pascl!line, . Bishop Fee-' School studen~ counllil'pre~idimt, .arid pla,ns flo' attend EmmanUel, t~e ,printer!?, ,including DA's Saturday at Columbia Univer­

'. han;. Mix;ed Chor.us, Sister' Ger~ has been na:p1ed, by the Massa- which awarded ber' a $4800 Dominilog and' :the ' Prevost 'sity. Science, fair at Bishop Cas­trude".BiShop, S~apg,' North 1?art- . c~usetts .Elks:Asso,ciption as state . scholarship. 'J'.a n i c, e .McKay, Memory Book. 'In connection sidy opens today, and al~o at

, ~Quth; ,Orcbestra Sister Marie wmner lD. the boys'division of Stangscript co-editor, has also' with Prevost's bOok, 'the school Cassidy, debaters wili .travel on , LOJ,"~ain.•e;Mt. S;t. M~r.'y Aca~~my, " the ~lks ,. ~at~onal . Leadership rec'eivedan Emmanuel seholar- paper, Maple Leaf, wt-Irns that' Saturday. March 19' to De 1.2"a~l\ RIver; .and, .:a,and, "J;Jrother ; Co~test., He~lll receIve II $200 ship, 'hers for $2400. . "'some energetic young people . Salle at St. Catherine's iii. New­J.Ol)~l, Neidl, ,M~gr. Coyle. Hilih" s~vll1gs 'bon~ ··iit., recognition &f DO~i~i~.l;ln· Acad~my reports. have been soliciting ads for the' POrt for novie£' and junior var-Taunton. ' ' . hls,leadersh1P .qualities, which a~ceP.tances for Suzamie ,Vallee Memory 1I0ok. The unfortunate sity tournaments. .

',' Bro~her... Johri,' ]Dusic commit-, w~re shown, say~ reported Wil-' ~WI; Ma~~leine Souza; Merri~ . fact about the whole 'matter ill' At Bishop Stang, harriers are ~. and' concert' chairman ie- liam Sullivan" "in 8. 'brochure'of mack; Elizabeth Ann Ouellette" that there are no ads in the' preparing for the trackseasonjquest's"~chools wishing to ~arti~ news' clippings submitted to the. ~t, St.. Vincent and LadycliH; Memory Book thiR year." and at Prevost sodalists joined in~f)~~e in the pro'gram to contact, E~ks i~ comp~tition with other Beverly neMoura and Louise Also at Prevost; glee club of- Saturday evening services. at hint ". " . .' hlghschool.~tudents;" . .," Eaton, RIC;Claudetie Clouthir,' fieers ,..are George CamPeau,· Fall ~iver's Temple Beth-EI ;

. . Junio. Prom Aeceptan~eJl,.ScholarshipS Johnson' and Wales.' " president; Den n i s Tetreault, finding themselves quite at ho~ At' Bishop F'eehgn, eo-'chair.; . More and m0l'e bappyfaeee "And ~inajlY: at C,oyle: James vice-president;. Richard Silva,' ~ith re(litation of psalms.·

men Jerry FI~nagan" and ,Marie are see!). in ~iocesan school haUll l.amb, State Uni~ersity of Utah; secretary; Walter Mulyk, tr~as-' Coyle !Jo~s are preparing .fOO' .. Frat l1 are deep in plans for,the as word of college ,'acceptancei'J .rames ,.Andrews, :Northeastern; urer. ' their, ~rlDual Father-Son Com-,

o iJunior ·l'rom,. to be presented and. schola~Sl)~PfJ ,oontinuetl to, ]lobert Arguinand Russell Brad- 8elenee Fair munion breakfast, to take place .. in the school cafeteria Tuesday, reach students: ' shaw, Wentworth;' Richard' Bar- Science fair winners at SHA Sunday, March· 27 with Atty. April .19. Th~ir coIDml.ttees in- At. Mt..St: Mary: Susan .len- li'ington and Micbael Bernacchio Fall River are Deborah Powers' Gen. Edward Brooke as speaker. elude decorations, refreshments, kinson, full ,tuition scholarship, Johnson and Wales; Alan Bacb~ with ~ math project, "Experi~' And tonight at Coyle boys wiil band, tickets, and clean-up. renewable yearly, to Regis Col~ mann, Stonehill. ment In Notation"; Ellen Kro- hear a talk by Major R. Candin

WI'nners i- esssay t lege and one to Sal R gi ger, "Histological Stal'nl"ng m' of the Boston Selective ServI'ce •. , poe ry,' ve e nlll, Kennedy Lectlllre Bposter and author identification as well as a partial tuition scbol~ Mice"; Pat McGuigan, "Proper- oard. His topic: the student hill

contests held at Jesus-Mary Qrship, also ~newable, to Em- Diocesan highs were repre- ties of the Moebius Strip"; Linda ~ucation aud his milltary ~om-Academy, Fall River, in connec- manuel. Sonia Uchmann, trustee sented at a lecture in BQston's Pomfret, "Life on Venus"; and mltment. tion with Catholic Book Week scholarship to Northeastern UnA- Jraneuil Hall by Sen. Edward M. Sharon Haggerty, "Comparison we r e Michele Boule, essay; versity. ' Kennedy, chairman of the Sen- of Animal and Human Blood." ELECTRICAL

Contractors

·9.... Coun!y St. New Bedfordr---_--....--.....

Ch .st. 'P' d D At at subcommittee on refugees and rl me Icar, poem; iane Jesus-Mary: JQnet Roy escapees. He asked the high

Dugal, poster; and Suzanne Bryant; Rita Laflamme ClIlrdinaiLagarde, author identification. Cushing, Salve Re.ol'na n = .. school and college students pres­

6' co .. 1\& ent to collect items lor educatioft L ast year Intramural basket- U Mass; Pauline Dugal SMTX

ball teams at Dominican Acad~ l'/lDd UMass; Constance' Gagne =p~~alth kits 'm: these needy emy went to the dogs; this year SMTI; Sandra Blanchette Gil. J they're on the college level, wi.tll Lorraine T a I bot" Campbell'. At SRA Fall River volleyball team l1ames honoring Yale, ,Business School. tv'youts have been held, with. 12 RIC"BU." Pri~ceton, PC..St. Jo- At Holy Family: .Donna PI-, out of 80 aspirants being se­se h BC H d F th. .. ....'" lected. fOr the vanity team.

p. s',. an.d. .arvar . 'or, e, .,4800 scholarship from Regis and. Meanwhile at Dominican Acad­re~~r~~. Princeton beat Be in tM . the Mother Mary Matthew Doyle ~Y, junion .He planning a

,~r,les. o~ener. ' ~cholai'shil! ,jb'om" Salve Regina. m,~er-daughtell'.b a II k e t b -.11 . Attent,lon, seniors in FaU ·River " HI' Iltuden~'~,aeoopted .. SMTI' . higb schools: Fall ~ver Catholie ~. 'Paul BeJlii~'Ma . Eileil .~ Tuesday; ,Manm l15~

.. WOl'nan~s Club ,:ls . o~ring twe']few by ,EUulktil' i&7 .u " '. r.r~Clis W... B,u))~, ~. a~.,

. ~50 SCholarships ~ .gl.rlB w~~.' Elizabeth.. CaUahnn ; J'.~1l n'.. eemo~~d Bnll~~~ COullty !ha,JnP. . .mlStbers:aFe organi~~on'.lIlem~ ~()it,"AnthoJqr'.," .... " ~ ~ ,C?l'8torie~ -;ontest C!I'.• the bers..i.,AppUcatioft .l>l~nkll ; He, PeterAiar. ' ' ,;: '.' e~t1JtiOft sPonSored bt'theaval1l\bl~ at :eaci}. 8e;hoOJ. ' ',' ., " .' ,liieh,ei ~ ,. ' . .. '. ~ .. ' ~~I:l~~ .~~oD,ball .,o:ne. on. to ,

'At J;l0ly,Family, N~w Bedford, ,. ~e;' KB.tbleen ~~ii~S:t· . w~ ill acme eompet1t1on and will '. Rick .Jalbert .hliB been named ' .~hh ;.'M8l'1f\I'd "lIcl--:'~" eompete 011 tbe·1Jtate level··Sun­playeJ; .of the week. bY ,the stim~ . "; ,:.---'.-- March 1S .. AsilUmptiOB

dard-Times; He also :won 8 tre:.:. r""'!"'=::::~~~~'~' - ....--........- ...----........;;-----­phy atl most' valuab~ mass B Y,OURS TO,; Il.OVE; AND TO GIVEI player in the CathoUe TuUm....

, nament. The' school Itself.won • • tIle~. of i ~ Of •• PAIJllM' GOd trophy as it!! basketball team =e~y~rvt :.S::.~~=':=':

. won first place mClass 'B' mthe PreM, ~adlo, IIotIon Pictures _ lV, to bring Il8me tournament. HIs WOl'd to sOuls everywheN. ZealOu$ }IOlIN!

At Prevost the basketban R8- Ph U4-23 "am lIIterested .. we ~ IOn ended with the Maple LeafB Apcietolate IIlay Write to: ' " , PG!Iting a 1-11 record m Narry mEAt... , IIIOImr IUPDmI ' League competition; and aJso at ,DAU8111l'Ei1 or .,NUL tIMl Fail JUver bop' JIllb90ll .. • .. "'''.M. . 8OSTOII .. ~

. ': :.,

,-, ,":'" ;, "'~".,,;:-' ,~,~~1' \',," '": j:" ::"~~'_1:t,:':'$··'::-;l,;t.),~1·Jt:·.,,:·,,'~:\;.'l. )'~...'{:':}-;.;t.~ D ·1'v,

Deborab will continue to the ~

LEMIEUX PLUMBING & HEATING, INC.

for Ilomestie and Industrial

...... Sales and Service 011 Burne~

, WY 5-1631 .2283 ACUSHNET AvENuf

NEW BIEDFORD ' :.....

·.WHITE' ·:SPA .;. "·CA'.fERERS

,e BANQUETS • WEDDINGS .' PARTIES

, • COMMUNION BREA.KFASTS IMt PLEASANT ST. FALL IIVEI

0Sb0r... 3-7780

. -, ~ ',,,,, - .... ,~ _....

Page 14: 03.10.66

HiE ANCHOR~pioceseof Fall 'River-Th'Llr:s., Mar. 10, 1966 l4

Se~s Mi~imMm Wage law As M(DU'\(@[f @~ C@Q1)~(£g~~C@

By Msgr. 'George G. JBliggilIls· (Director. Social Actioll1l Dept., N.,C.W.C.)

, Poverty is often thought of as being synonomous with dnemployment.We tend to think that people are poor be­cause, for one re8,son or another, they are nOt gainfully employed. The record wiII show, however, that unemploy­ment is not the only cause of poverty. In 19613, of the approximately 7 .~l million American families living in poverty, some two mUlion were headed by a iulltime year-round wag e earner. A n additional 500,000 p 0 0 r families, had a breadwlll ­ner who worked more than three-fourt.hs of the year at a full - time job The s e people are known as the "workinf; poor." They are poor because their full time jobs, do not llrovide them with suffi- ' cient income.

Needless to say, a dispropor­tionately nigh percentage of them are Negroes.

. Figh\ 0111 Agafin The sad plight of the so-called

"working poor" highlights the crucial importance of the cur­rent debate ;n the Congress over proposed amendmentil to the Fair Labor Standards Act-the so-.called minimum wage law.

The present law provides' for a minimum wage of $1.25 --per hour. At the conclusion of the first session of the 89th Congress, the House Education nnd Labor Committee hait approved a bill (H.R. 10518) that would have raised the minimum, ll>y' stages, to $1.75 by 1968 for workers al ­ready covered, and w()uld have extended coverage to 7.9 million additional workers.

The present legislative situa­tion is in flux. There are pres­sures, for a SIn&Uer increase in the minimum wage and exten­sive cutbacks in coverage.

New Bill The bill that reaches the floor

Is expected to set a minimum wage of $1.40~ effective Sept. 1, 1966, .and $1.60, effective Sept. 1, 1968. It has also been reported in the press that members of the Labor Subcommittee and of the parent Education and Labor Committee have agreed infor-, mally to eliminate some two million workers from the ex­tended coverage.

The earlier bill would have provided minimum wage cover­age for approximately 1.3 mil­lion farm workers.

The new bill would also scale down extension of minimum wage coverage in other cate­gories, including retail trade, restaurants, hospitals, laun­

L@l~,8oard fro GMidl@ AbPoley"s E~iP>(!:Illl1sl;oan

ST. BENEDICT (NC)-A 14­man lay advisory board has been formed to guide the planned ex­pansion of Mount Angel Bene­dictine Abbey here in Oregon. Board members include both Catholics and Protestants.

The $7.1 million program will double the size of the abbey and seminary within 10 years. A new library, classroom building and gymnasium will be built, while the monastery and sem­inary facilities will be enlarged. There are currently, 280 fltudet;lts in the seminary

"Our needs' have long' since expanded beyond our IDriginal structures," Abbot Damian Jent­ges,O.S.B.;.sald.

dries, motion picture theaters, and the loggir.g industry.

OPPOS4l Cutbacks The AFL-CIO and the execu­

tive committee of the Citizens' Crusade Agamst Poverty-a na­tional body made up of a large number of labor, business, reli ­gious, and social welfare organ­izations-are strongly opposed to these cutbacks in the earlier bill reported out last year ,by the Labor Subcommittee.

Even without any cutpacks, this bill, in their opinion" would be inadequate. They favor a $2 minimum wage with the broad­est possible coverage, including agricultural workers, 50 per cent of whom nOw are earning less than $1 an hour, 41 percent less than $.75, and 23 per cent less than $.50.

Politics being what it is; tlie AFL-CIO and the Citizens' Cru­sade will probably have to' set­

'tle, in the end, for a compromise. This is unfortunate, in my opin­ion, for what they are asking for is little t'nough. in all con­science:

Nationall Moralitr . The word "conscience" is used here advisedly, for this is basically a moral issue. As Leon Keyserling,a former member of the President'" Council of Eco­nomic Advisers, remarks in a new study, I~he Role of Wages

'in a Great Society," "even while doing what we must on the in­ternational front, we have abun- ' dant economic capabilities to ac­celerate the war against poverty very greatly without delay; the only question 'is~hether we have the national , morality, or sense of justiCfl to give higher, priority to .this war than to some far less important ,things that compete for economic resources."

To say that millions of pov­erty-stricken workers cannot be ' helped because their employers are "too poor" to pay them more, Mr. Keyserling adds, impatiently' and with restrained indignation, "is to, argue, tha~: the war against. poverty, carinot move any faster. than: the 'poor! can afford to' fi..imceit.

Cheers for Mr. Keyserling. His impatience and his sense of moral indignaticln do him great, credit.

Apll'll'oves CITBft'8dsinI\l Of CtOlll'!m@1ic S(dIlC@~$ GAINESVILLI~ (NC)-The di­

rector of the Newman apostolate in the Dallas-Fort Worth diocese. credited outspoken critics of the' Catholic school system for many of its recent improvements.

Father John ':F. Meyers .told' 200 delegates to the 34th annual Southeastern Province Newman Convention at tb.e University of Florida. "It was a mistake to hide weaknesses in the, Catholic school .. sy:stern from th~ crytics. In the past two years the' system has been fair game for the ,crit ­ics, and many good effects have' , resulted from their studies."

Not only is Catholic education improving, Father Meyers added, but it is being led to adopt new organizatfonal ..and administra­tive procedures. He said: "Our:

- schools will need to be reap": praised' regularly. That means a continuing need :fol' good criti ­cism."

Brother Baltimore Schools Head

BALTIMORE (NC) -The ap­pointment of Brother Anthony Ipsaro S.M., as superintendent of schools for' the archdiocese, of Baltimore has been announced by Lawrence Cardinal Shehan.

it is believed to be the first time a Religious Brother has been named head of a U. S. dioc­esan school system.

Brother Anthony, a member of the Marianist Community, succeeds Msgr. James C. Dono­hue, who in January was named director of th€ Education De­partment of the National ,Cath­olic Welfare Conference in Washington.

Brother Anthony had been named associate superintendent of schools in Baltimore since last May. The archdiocesan system includes 75,552 children and 1,521 teachers in 151 schools.

GIFT TO POPE: Pope Paul holds balloon he was given by children during his visit· on the first Sunday of Lent, to their parish church, the basilica of San Pane. lio, in Rome. NC Photo.

Bell Tolling Clergy of Three FaJths Join to Symbolize

Protest of Vietnam 'Military Solution' NEW YORK (NC) - Three'

clergymen tolled the bell of' St. Mark's - in - the - Bouwerie' Episcopal church on Ash Wed­nesday 'to protest the war in' Vietnam. It was the first time the bell had rung since the death of President Kennedy.

A Catholic, JewiSh and Prot-' estant' clergyman-all members ~ of the Clergy Con~.erned About Vietnam-joined' in pulling-the· bell rope.

Urge Repetition Rev. Richard' J. Neuhaus,

Protestant co-chairman' of the clergy group, said the act Vl(as, meant to "symbolize our grief, for the, dead on both sides' in Vietnam,pray for peace and honor the concept that ,there is, not a military solution to all' 'created 'early this year. human problems." " Joining in the tolling were Rabbi Lloyd Tennenbaum of the Huntington Long Island Jewish Center' and Father.. Herbert Rogers, S.J., of Fordham U~­versity.

A ,210-word proclamation sent by the group to 145 associated organizations throughout the ' country urged Protestants and' Catholics to perform identical' ceremonies in their churches.

CleYe~(OJtnd Au'!iHttlr}f Oli'll 1U\l{hell'f~iil'h PQJne8 ,CLEVELANI;> (NC) - Auxil-

Iary Bishop John F. Whealort of: Cleveland participated wit h' Protestant and JewiSh religious leaders hi a discussion at Western Reserve University of "Religipn - .Ecumenism in :Action." . "

o the r panelists included Dr: Bernard Martin, associate professor 'of. Jewish studies: at,' Western Reserve; the Rev. B. ,Bruce Whittemore, executive di­,rector of the Cleveland Area Church Federation; and pr. Rol-­land Emerson Wolfe, Western Reserve· professor of biblical ' literature.

O,RTINSIi, .. ,i'! .,PbO:to Supply.;/ 24's MAIN· STREET

'. 'FAlMOUTM'-KI'8~1'91ill'J

ARMANb oR1tn~si' p~p~" '.1'.

They were asked to repeat the procedure at 3 P.M. every Fri- . day of Lent and daily during Holy Week.

Drop of Wine J~ws were asked to spill a,

drop of wine from the, kiddush cup in their synagogues and, homes through the first sabbath' of Passover to Symbolize the shedding of blood in Vietnam. Kiddush is a ceremony that pro­claims the holiness of a sabbath or festival. It consists of a bless- ' iug before the evening meal.,

Formed here last Fall, Clergy' ,Concerned About Vietnam fa-' vora immediate .negotiations on Vietnam and the gradual with- : d,rawalof United States forces;, A. parallel ',national group was,'

Barry College Pluns Social Work School

MIAMI SHORES (NC)-Anna E. King, former dean and pro­fessor emeritus at Fordham University School of Social Work, bas joined the ~aculty of' the Barry College school of so-· cial work which will open here in September.

She will serve as adjunct pro­fessor of social welfare, in the· school of social work which will be the first in the southeast un­der Catholic auspices.

R~Hm~ Esta{{'~ Re~(e Povant

.HYiUlnni$ 279 Barnstable Road

SP 5-0079

Fqcus Brother Anthony said his ap­

pointment "helps to put the role of the brotherhood in sharper focus."

He sees his task as superin­tendent as broadening "the scope of Catholic education in light of the recommendations of Vati ­can II."

There is a growing awareness, he said, that the idea of "every Catholic child in a ....Catholic school" is unrealistic and im­possible to achieve. The CCD, Newman Clubs and adult educa­tion programs will have to be given a greater role to play in this area in the future, he said.

During The Month Of May we- will announce­here a dramatic, amazingly simple new program to bring community particlpatiol in music and prayers to every mass. Music in which ••• for the first time in centuries ..• every parishioner will want to take part. Watch for it.

Benziger Brothers, I~C. 7ElalltSbtSt.,NowYork,l001:4

"Y9U Can' Whip Our Cream, but You Can't Beat Our Milk!"

Your Gulf Hill, Route Mon, ;s Alwaysq~),~I!r;-Ser,v;ce.,!'

FOR HOME DEliI'it:RY, C;ALL WY· 8-5691

GU'LF;:"'H:t'l:L: :D,AolRY so. DARTMOUTH, MASS.

Page 15: 03.10.66

"Follow The Call THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Mar. 10, 1966

of Christ" 15

Today If' You Shall Hear r>

His Voice" I-Iarden Not Your Hearts P§e 94, V. 8

"

'-.

..14 , ;

<J cv::< '.>

VISIT THE VOCATION· AND MISSION EXHIBIT CHRISTIAN PANORAMA - MARCH 25.27, 1966

BISHOP CASSIDY HIGH SCHOOL, TAUNTON

Thirty-five Booths repr~senting Pr~esthood, Sisterhood, Brotherhood Missions and Lay Apostolate.·

TIUs Message Is Sponsored By The Following Indi';iduals .

• ad Business Concerns in Greater Fall River:

Buncling Materials, 1M. .Glo~ Manufacturing Co. Duro Finishing Corp. R. A. McWhirr Company SobUoff Brothers' The ,Exterminator· Co. . Mac~enzie & Winslow, .Inc. Sterlinq Beverages, I.nc~

Fan Rivet' Electric Light Co. ,MasOn -Fumiture Showrooms textil~ W()rkers Union of . . u_.....__ &,..-: Inc:.Fall .. Trust Co. . ...,.,..y ...u.... America, AFL·CIO

Page 16: 03.10.66

------------------------------

THI= .' '~Ll()Q_

10, 1966 Turks Forbid Greek Primate' to .Offer Mass i-he

PaJfd§h Parade SACRED IlIEAlRTS, NORTH FA[RHAVEN

Registration for kindergarten and grade one win be held from 2:30 to 3:30 every school day afternoon this month. Parents should bring \)-.!"thJ or baptismal eertificates. For information on registratioT. in grades' two

- through eigh' for children not currently attending _the paro­chial school"Sister Marie Henri­ette, principal 01' the rectory may be contacted.

The- annual Spiring chicken dinner to benefit the school im­provement fund will be held Sunday. March 27. Tickets are now available.

A rummage sale is in process of organization. Donations of toys, clothes. dishes, furniture, and such items are requested. Donors may contact Mrs. Ed­ward Martin. 14 Springhill Street.

Daily Masses during Lent are at 7:50 in the mo.rning and 5:40 in the afternoon.

'j>

lIIOLY NAMIE. . ~EW BEDFORD

Third annual Men's Guest Night of the Women's Guild will take place Wednesday, March 30. A potluck supper will be served and Rev: Edward Mitcheil of

. Holy Name Church, Fall River, will .speak. . .' The guild and the Holy Name Society will cooperate in a penny sale.to be held Wedlnesday, April !O in the parish hall.

OUR LADY OF GRACE, NORTH WESTPORT

A public whist is planned for • Wednesday night, April 20 by the Council 0' Catholic Women, with Mrs. John Barzboza and Mrs. Gideon Banville in charge ~ arrangements.

ST. FRANCIS KAWIER, .IIYANNllS

A St. Patrick's.Day buffet and dance will be held from 8 to lZ Thursday night, March 17 in Elks Fraterna~ Center" Barn­stable Road. It is co':sponsored by the Women's Guild and Cou­ples' Club' ,of the parish, and deadline for ticket purchase is Monday, March 14.

ST. WIlLLiAM, lFALL RllV~R

The Women's Gulild will spon­sor' a public whist Tuesday, March 15 in the Plllrish all-pur­pose room. Mrs. Dlmald Hinch­eliff and Mrs. Josep~h Burns will be co-chairmen.

ST. STANllSlLAUS, FALl. RllVlEJr.

The Polish National Home will be the Sl'ene at 7:30 Satur­

, day night, March 19 of a public penny sale sponsored by the Women's.Guild Also planned by the guild are a meeting for Wed­nesday, April 3, a buffet dance in May; and a Communion breakfast in June.

SACRED IlIEART, NORTH ATTLEBORO

Holy Name Society membe1'll will receive corporate Commun­ion at 7 o'clock Mass Sunday morning, March 13. Servers

, from the society will be Nor­mand L'Homme and Gerard Deschenes.

ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISlr, NEW BlEDFORD

Women's Lea g u e members will be hostesses for a in~eting

of New Bedford district of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women Tuesaay. March 22. The next league meeting, to be held Thursday. Mal et 24, will ieature a products demonstration. A telephone et'~,uette film .will be shown attbe April meetinc.

c

LI

LI

(We reserve -the rlght tc limit qucmtltlas.)Prlcllfl .Hectl'lll III aD Sapormarkllte II!I tills vlclnhv.

Seafood Favorlto

Coel, Fillets lB 49c

10 to 14 1& Average

Oven Ready, Plump, Meaty, Broad-Breasted

6 to 7 Ib Average

Lean, Meaty, . Mildly Smoked

SMOKED

u~ S. GRADE A

SHOULDERS

Four Delicious Varieties ,

Rollerl's Cookies J~~ 29c Expertly Seasoned

Iletchup FINAS' 3 1~~~Z 7ge FINAST-Peo, Red ~idney, Yellow EYGl

·llakeei Beans 3 ~l'~s 79· Three Delicious Varieties

Welch's Canelies 3 :i8s'l Fine, Medium, .Wide

~ .ir.::5~~:::: :~: ::: Prices .eff~ctive in Fall River and SomeO'Sd!

The police said that no pres­sure was exerted. Rather, they claimed, the archbishop was simply obeying a law which bars the celebration of Mass in ch'lrches in Turkey by bishops wh61 are not Turkish nationals.

But a spokesman at the arch­bishop's -headquarters her e called. the action a matter of

...•

harassment. He said the Turk­ish law bars non-Turks from taking up a religious office in Turkey and does not apply to the conduct of worship by visitors. Archbishop Iakovos himself has celebrated the Liturgy at St. George's church in Istanbul in recent years without interfer­ence, he said.

NEW YORK (NC)-Thl;. ac­tion by Turkish police in pre­venting the celebration of Mass in Istanbul by the Greek Ortho­dox Primate of North and South America was labeled here as siIilply another example of "in­fringement of the religious lib­erty of the ecumenicai patriarch­ate."

The incident happened just as Archbishop Iakovos" was about to begin the celebration of the Divine Liturgy in the patriarch­ate's Church of St. George at the beginning of February. Turkish police in a statement 'in Istanbul said however that it was "of his own free will" that Archbishop Iakovos did not offer the Mass.

-4

Page 17: 03.10.66

Pontific~~ Commo~~i@rru Z)@if~ Gu~d®~;~e$ fer PAV[L~

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

Proof of the close cooperation desired between Latin American Church authorities and PAVLA is the provision in the statement of establishment for national centers of coordination. The Church in Chile has already set up such a national center. For in­

who are teachers in publicsurance of close cooperation, public schools so that, within thethe PAVLA National Secre­limitations of the law, they can

tariat in Chicago has named present Christian life and doc­three regional field assistants. trine to their students;One in Lima. Peru, will serve i) Teams for English languagethe non-Carib­ teaching, which are highly de­b e a n Spanish sired in many countries of Latin language coun­ America. tries of Sou t h Papal Support America, one il1 The areas of activity of Natal will serve PAVLA candidates are givenBrazil, while a extensive treatment in the doc­third 'vill serve ument, which concludes as fol- . the Caribbean lows: area. The Pon­ The Pontifical Commission, tifical Commis­ which has cal'efully studied this s ion proposes project, has approved it unani­the following mously, aW3re that the organi­on this subject: zation of the Papal Volunteers

In each country of Latin can prove a powerful instrument America, in ::lCcordance with the of apostolate in Latin America. development of the Papal Vol­ His Holiness Pope John. XXIII unteers, a national center, de­ has deigned t( grant His blessingpending on tile ecclesiastical au­ to the undertaking.thority, .will be established, Recently Cardinal ;Meyer of whose competency is: . Chicago made the comment, "In

a) to take care of the enroll ­ looking over Pope John's ency­ment of the local teams; clical Princtlps Pastorum once

b) to negotiate the admittance again the 'Jther day, I was into the country of the foreign startled by the fact that such a teams, to secure residence, substantial part of it is devoted board, operational and travel to emphasiz'.ng the necessity of expenses, and to make their as­ enlisting the cooperation of the signment; laymen."

c) to inform the Pontifical This is a characteristic ex­Commission of the .activities of perience of both the great andall groups. . the lowly in Christendom, the

Although thE' precise pUl'pose sense of surprise th~t .the Papacyof the organization is to train has in such categoric fashion Latin Americar. Christian lead­ called for a new laity. What ers, the Pa9al Volunteers may John proclaimed, Paul has re­dedicate themselves tt' various peated. "We are responsible for works, according to their quali ­ our times," our reigning Pontiff fication and capability, as for declared only recently, "for .the instance: life of our bt·others. We are re­

a) Technical teams for cate:' sponsible for our Christian con­chetical activities, for the train­ science <) <) 'I' Now is the hour of ing of speciab.sts in the teaching the laity. It is the hour of souls,of catechism and the instruction the hour of those who have un­of catechists; derstood that to be a Christian

b) Teams of married couples, involves a commitment, sincewho will dedicate themselves to they can take part directly. inspreading the principles of this ministry of salvation."Christian family life, the neces­sary basis for priestly vocations, and to trainir1g leaders in this Holy See Acceptsactivity;

e) Technical teams for Cath­ UN I.n.vitation olic Charities activities. Lay ex­ UNITED NATIONS (NC) ­perts will train both volunteers The Holy See has accepted a and paid staH workers in con­ United Nations invitation to ducting SOCir.l centers, house-to­ participate in a seminar on local house visitations, etc., on. the na­ administration and the promo­tional, diocesan and parochial tion of human rights to be held levels; in Budapest in communist-ruled

d) Technical teams for urban Hungry from June 14 to 27. and industrial problems, to be Thaddee Szmitkowski will trained and assigned to .heavily represent the Holy See and Miss Communist :1reas; Odile Roullet will serve as his

e) Technical teams for rural alternate, Msgr. Alberto Giovan­community betterment, to raise netti, the Holy See's permanent the economic level in backward UN observer, announced. areas, organIze cooperatives and The seminar is one of a regu­small industries, etc; lar series organized under the

f) Teams fOI leadership among UN program of advisory ser­university ~tlldents; vices in human rights. The agen­

g) Technical teams for mass da includes such items as poli ­communicatiom activities, such tical structures affecting citizen as press, cinema. radio, televi­ participation in local administra­sion, in order to tl'ain _techni­ tion, the role of voluntary agen": cians and lop-al leaders in these cies in. local administration, fields; means of ensuring citizen palti-'

h) Teams for guiding Catholic cipation through direct demo­teachers in p'Jblic schools. They cratic methods, equal rights to are needed to train Catholics benefits from public services,

citizen participation in working. out local and national develop­Tuit:on 8n.crease . ment plans and in administra­

EMMITSBURG (NC)-Mount tion of local economic, social St. Mary's College here in and cultural programs. Maryland has announced a $100 per year tuition increase for the academic year 1966-67, bringing Honor Student the cost to $450 per semester. Brother Harold Hathaway, The total cost for a fulltime res­ C.S.C., a graduate of Coyle High ident student will be $925 per School, Taunton, is among 55 8eDlester in September, accol'd­ students cited for superior first ing to Father Philip A. Barn~tt. semester) work at St. Edward's _asurer. University, Austin, Tex.

THE. ANCHOR­ 17Thurs., March 10, 1966

Blame$ ~@Mily

For Sh@I?{[(~~gj(e SAN JUAN (NC) - Sam

Juan's Arc h b ish 0 p Luis Aponte declared here the family is the chief obstacle in the path of vocations to tbe priesthood and religious life ill Puerto Rico.

The prelate, first native .. achieve the rank of archbishop, in an address before Serra Club members preparing for a reli ­gious vocations campaign m March, said: "The family is the principal cause of thi9 dilemmm. They generally believe it is an honor for their children to be n doctor or a lawyer but th'ere in no room for a priest."

-In the San Juan archdiocese, there are 150 priests, but only 1'1 native Puerto Ricans, the arch­bishop said. The 150 serve ap­proximately one million Catho-­lics, he said.

e'There should be at least one priest for each 5,000 souls," he said. "But there are only 56CD priests in the whole island Oof Puerto Rico and only 60 of them are native Puerto Ricans."

He said at the island's two seminaries, there are only 'Jfd students at Aibonito and ow)'Vietnam Conflict 70 at Ponce studying for the priesthood.

Nation"" Inter-Religious Peace Con.ference Pln,nning Three-Day Washington Session Honors Assembly

Stonehil1 College will hold itIJ NEW YORK (NC) - Leaders laying of a foundation for inter­ annual honors assembly today"

of the forthcoming National religious cooperation on peace with Dr. Jerrold R. Zacharias,Inter-Religious Conference on and the coordination of the work

pro~:lssor of physics at M~ Peace have agreed that the Viet­ of the churches and synagogues speaking on "Increasing the Re­nam conflict must enter into the in the elusive search for peace. sponsibility of the Students.'" discussions at the three-day con­ Some 500 persons are expected Awards for scholarship will be vocation in Washington, March to attend by invitation only. made and new members of Delta 15 to 17. '" Epsilon Sigma, national hono!'

But the Catholic, Protestant society, will be announced. Jb. and Jewish co-chairmen have Native Bishop Lauds Zacharias, in the course of 11 stressed that they do not want India's Democracy distinguished career, directetll the meeting to be confined to a work of engineers responsibleNEW ORLEANS (NC)-A na­single peace issue. The prime for the development of the atom.­ti\te Indian bishop said here thatgoal is th ~ determination of a ic bomb and was also instrumen­despite all its misfortunes Indiareligious consensus on complex tal in perfecting atomic clocks•.still remains the best exampleinternational peace issues, the

in Asia of the worth of a demo­cratic system.

'Retarded,' Child,ren Bishop Lawrence T. Picachy, 53A%S.J., of Jamshedpur, in northern

Are Only 'Depri"ved' India, cited thE: nation's consti ­ Interest. on Your tution, whicb has no religiousWASHINGTON (NC) - An prejudice and manages to give ~Qv;ngs

authority on work with the han­dicapped said here as many as representation to 480 million Invested In

people who speak 14 major lan­50,000 children classed as "re­tarded" today are in fact simply guages. CATHOl~C CHURCH

And not only is the new Prime"culturally deprived." Dr. Marvin A. Wirtz, director Minister, Indira Ghandi, well AND HOS'I.,.!\L BONDS

accepted - but there are 59of educational programs for the In Units of $500 or More women in India's parliament, hehandicapped, Department of said during a visit here.Health, Education and Welfare, Keenan & ('~rey, Inc.

in a talkgto Catholic University Minneapo'i~, Minnesota

of America students, called for for detailed informationexpanded research to provide

more knowledge of "perceptual write toBLUE RIBBONdifficulties" of children, to help end "dumping of children on the CHARLES £. MURPHY retarded heap." Registered R~"lI'esentativeLAUNDRYHe said there must be better

145 Pond Streetcommunication between the va­rious disciplines serving the Winche..ter. Mass. handicapped, retarded, and cul­

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lumbus, will hold its annual Irish Night Saturday, March 12 at the council home in Swansea. A corned beef and cabbage din­ner will be served, with dancing to follow. A television set will be awarded.

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Page 18: 03.10.66

_ _

18 THE AN-':hu ..-:'-·(;'cese of Fall River-Thllrs;, Mar. 10,1966

Five Schools ·Arf~. Represented 'on C!a~s A All-Star Team Wealth 'of Top·Fligh1~ T (J]~ent

Makes Ch@ucesHard Picking T·he Anchor [?~~ks

Sthoolboy (a·est· By Fred Bartek

The Anchor toda)' presents tWo all-star. schoolboy bas­ketball teams, One comprised of the Qhtstandi~g.'players on clubs w/lich competed ill the top ranking' Class' A circuits and theotJ1er composed of the' , .. stalwarts of the Class C loop

0. clubs. Five dif­ferent schools are represented on the Class A first team while fotir institutions have represen­tatives of the Class B aggre­gation: Hoi y . Family High of New Bedford, the area's only undefeated team during the regular season has. two on the Clas, B first club.

Durfee Center Ernie Fleming of the cham­

pionship Durfee combine o~ Fall

DO!l'm;tory loon For S~«)~ehi~1

WASHINGTON (NC) - The Community Facilities Adminis­tration of the U. S. Dzpartment of Housing and Urban Develop­ment has announced loans total­ing nearly $8 million for dormi­tory construction projects on five Catholic campuseB. , Loans have been reserved for Stonehill College, Nort.h Easton, $1,320,000; Loyola' Universit~ of Chicago, $3,750,000; Lewis Col­lege, Lockport, Ill., $6110,000; St. Joseph's ColI e g e, Rensselaer, Ind., $800,000 and Good Coun­sel College in White .Plains, $1,180,000.

All college housing loans are made' pending final review. and approval by the administration. They are made as pa rt of the federal College Housing Loan Program which has lent millions to public and private institutions of higher education.

Education Cenfrer At Notre Dame

NOTRE DAME (NC)-Dedi­«:ation ceremonies for the Uni­versity of Notre Dame's new Center for Continuing Education will be held Sunday, March 20 in, . conjunction with formal opening of an international con­ference on theological issues of Vatican Council II.

Father Theodore M. Hesburgh, e.s.c.; Notre Dame president, wiU deliver. the dedicatory ad­dress and officiate at the bless­!~g of the continuing c:ducation facility which is the gift of the W. K. Kellogg Foundation, Bat­tle Creek, Mich.

Hew Camden Priest Former Counse~or , CAMDEN (NC) - A former

public school guidance counselor, who for the past two years has been studying at the famed Beda College 'for delayed vocations 'in Rome, will be ordained March 26 in Rome to serve in the Cam­

.den diocese. He is Rev. Mr. Carl A. Camp()J1(>Vo, 34, a Philadel­phia native.

Rivel' in the Bristol County League has been chosen for the center position on the Class A All-Star first team. The six-foot­four pivotman played a key role in the successful 17-3 season. racked up by Coach Tom Karam's Hilltoppers. Fleming's height plus hb agility proved' too much for most Durfee op­ponents. The only junior class member on The Anchor's fii'st; team roster is one reason why: the perenniC'A1 Boston Garde!i·.: competitors 'are now back com':' .... peting for the top honors in the Tech tournament in the Com­monwealth's capital city.

Fleming's ability to snare re­bounds made it possible· for him to maintain a double-figure scoring averag·. and this made ­him .an invaluable member of the first place BeL quintet.

Hardt and Matheson The Anchor has chosen Dave

Hardt of Coach Jim' Cassidy's Attleboro High team and Paul Matheson of Co a c h John O'Brien's Bishop Stang High club as the first team forwards on the Class A outfit

Hardt, unquestionably, the best "boardman" in the county loop, is the mair reason why the Jewelers scoreG seven victories in their last eight games of the

.regular season to qualify for a Tech tourney berth. Hardt, ex­plosive when he was anywhere near the foul line, was equally. as competent on defense. Game after game, night after night, he controlled the ball, almost as if he had a magnet to attract the coveted sphere.

Playing his fourth year as a starter, Paul Matheson of Bishop Stang High in North Dartmouth is one of the principal reasons for the Spai·tans' participation this year in both the New En­glana Catholic and Tech tour­naments.

Two R.epeaters. Matheson' IS equally at home

in either the front or the back. court. The six··foot-three sharp shooter demonstrated an out' ­

. standing ability under the boards. In' addition he was a' most capable ball handl~r and.

, playmaker on the outside. . The Anchor has two repeaters in the back court posts. They are Dave Loveridge of New Bedford Vocational and John Medas of Taunton High.

Pair Jl'rom Coyle Loveridge proved himself the

best scoFer in Voke hoop com­petition since the days of the well-known Gomes brothers. A fine outside shooter, Dave also showed the opposition .he could

() 'thread the needle' on a drive just as easily. His approaching graduation will leave a big hole in the Whaling City Trade school ranks.

CardinaWto Bless' University Centell'

BURLINGTON (NC) - Rich­ard Cardinal Cushing of Boston will dedicate the new $300,000 Catholic Center at the Univer­sity of Vermont here May 8:

The new chapel will be known as St. Augustine chapei. The re­mainder of the center will be known as Joyce House in honor of Bishop RobE:rt F. Joyce of Burlington. , .

When Bishop .Joyce was a stU­dent at the University of Vel'.. mont, h~ served as president of flhe Newman Apostolate he~

., ., ~

. ..

BARDA'" .

LEISEY

',.

SECOND

•MATHESON

TEAM

FLEMING

FIRST

HAR01l'

LOIJERIDGE

Taunton's Herringtown High hardwood squad will miss John Medas just as much as Voca": tional will miss Loveridge. A deadly shot from any spot.· Medas was exceptionally fast in getting off hir field goals. It· was this quickness that permit:.. ted him to accomplish high double-figure scoring efforts, avoiding blocked shots that other accurate2eyed players. ex­

. perienced.. Medas averaged more than 20

points a game for the last two seasons, a most 'commendable record for an unselfish player more interested in team success than personal glory.

Coach Jim Lanagan's Coyle High team captured two of the five places on the Class A sec­

MEOAS DEMPSEY

High and Fairhaven managed . one place each.

Barely Shaded The Anchor has picked Kevin

Creeden of Coyle' and Tom Baroa of New Bedford for the two for­ward spots on ~/1e second-team with Randy Leisey of Fairhaven at center. Bob Dempsey of Dur­fee and Jim Murphy of Coyle' are the back court defensive pair.

Creeden has bee'n for Lanagan what Matheson has been for

. O'Brien. Matheson played as ef­fectively inside as outside. So .did Creeden. Baroa, an excellent playmaker, was most adept with his moves under the boards as he lifted ·the Whaling City Crim­'son to a number of victories during the 'regular season.

ond club. Durfee, New Bedford The quick and sure-handed . 0

C).ass A All-Stars FIRST TEAM

Name Position 'School

IIIAVE HARDT _._._.__ Forward ; : ~ _ : Attleboro PAUL MATHESON Forward..: Bishop Stang ERNIE FLEMING ._ Center. _ Durfee DAVE LOVERIDGE :~ Guard N. B. Vocational BOHN MEDAS __..:_ _ Guard :

SECOND TEAM .K~VI8 CREEDEff _ :.Forward TOM BAROA _ .Forward RANDY LEISE'f _.__._ _ Center ~_ :. BOB OEMPSEY _ _ .._ Guard __._.._ _ BlM MURPHY ; _.__..__ Guard ~._ _ . " .

B@~@~&m~E MEMTI@N. .. lC~arlie llndrade, 1I'auntouu; Row. Borges, lalmton; Leo Charron;

.Attlebor@; ilIarold Cromwell, ICoyle; Paul Gillis, Bishop Stang; Tom ~omez, ~ew Bedford' VQcaiional; Tom Johnson, Fairhaven; Fred Martin, Coyle; Pete Phipps, ~ishop Feehan; Ron IRovzar, Attleboro; lEari Seligm~n, Durfee; Karl VandenBergh, Bishop Feehan; Bill Wheeler, . Io~ ~ttle~or@ ~nd ~reg W~Ii~ms, B~s~op ~tang. 0

:.Taunton

Coyle New Bedford

fairhaven Durfee Coyle

TEAM

MURPHY

Leisey was outstanding on the Fairhaven quintet. Dempsey was probably the finest field general in the county, and, equally good play-maker. Thf consistent Mur­

. phy proved a tower of strength in Coyle's backcourt from the start to' the conclusion of the season.

Turn to Page Nineteen

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Page 19: 03.10.66

• • • • • •

• •

19 Holy Family High Has Two FIRST

On Class B Hoop Combine North Easton. Norton High and Old Rochester regional of Mat­Court· Selections tapoisett.

Dennis Kennedy played aFrom 19 Schools monumental role in Holy

Continued from Page Eighteen Family's unbeaten season. He stepped into the shoes of the in-

The Anchor, acknowledging . eligible Steve Lawless' duringthe difficulty in several In­ the first scholastic marking pe­stances in picking one boy over riod to prove a most pleasantanother, has given honorable suprise for Nobrega. Swishingmention to 14 players for their KENNEDYthe twines for double figures in fine work throughout the Winter most contests, Kennedy provedBeason. his prowess under the steel

lIoly Family Duo flanges. He tossed in a total of Coach Jackie Nobrega's all ­ 242 points in the 16 Narry

winning Holy Family High of league encounters to finish with New Bedford I" the only team. a 15 point average per game. which has managed to place two Crafty Cacer players on the first dub In the Probably the easiest selectioa smaller school bracket. of all on the second team was

The other three first-team that of Manny Britto of Old p1aeeB 110 ~ Oliver Ames of Rochester who carried away the

top scoring h~oro in bis team's 11-5 over-all league season. Amassing a total of 360 points, he caged an. average of 22.5 points per game during the 16­

Handicapped Sue IRina

For School Aid game campaign. He was among

DETROIT (NC) - Thirty the leading individual scorershandicapped children of various during the previous court sea­religious faiths and their parents son. Britto was able to run upfiled motions in Federal Court his point scoring total because here to force the Detroit Board of his excellence in the rebound­of Education to comply with ing department.Michigan's Auxiliary Services Steve 'Prosky of Norton High,Act. on the northern peJiphery of the

The law, passed last year, ia diocese, is .::hosen to pair with Intended to guarantee to chil ­ Kennedy in the front court with dren enrolled in private and pa­ Britto as the center. rochial schools such services as Tossing in as many as .42 remedial reading, speech defect points in one game this season,correction, diagnosis and coun­ Prosky consistently netted be:­ sary talents for a stand-out de­seling of mentally handicapped tween 20 and 30 tallies in each fensive player. He is a ball-hawkand health 'lnd nursing services. encounter. Steve especially likes on defense, a good ball handler,

A month ago, the American to shoot from the outside, a feat clever playmaker and a consist ­Civll Libertie~ Union filed a he demonstrated excellently as ently good shooter; The secondBUit asking an injunction against his opponents will attest. But, leading individual scorer on bisthe application of the law on the tb n Norton High stalwart also team he manifested all four at ­grounds that it violates consti ­ showed he could 'go underneath' tributes repetitiously through­tutional guarantees of separation when the situation demanded. out the entire season to rankof Church and State. Prosky, like Matheson of Stang among the better area players.

Representing the 30 children netted more than 1,000 points Jalbert averaged 12 points perand their parents are John A. during his varsity career. . game.Feikens, a Detroit attorney and Tom Clay of Oliver Ames Five schools are representedco-chairman of the Michigan High in North Easton and Richie on The Anchor second team in Civil Rights Commission, and Jalbert of Holy Family are the the Class B group. They are: Stuart D. Hubbell, prosecuting back court selections on the Dig h t, 0 n-Rehoboth, Westport, attorney of Grand Traverse small-school first aggregation. Somerset, Case of Swansea and County. inspiring ]'Iayers Dartmouth.

,--In bis motion, Feikens con­ Clay is credited with provid­ Leading scorer Don Backlund tends that it is a denial of reli ­ ing the leadership that propelled of Dighton-Rehoboth and Swan­gious liberty to keep services the North Easton baske.teers to· sea's Mike Travis of Case Highfrom handicapped children be­ the Hockomock l:'eague cham-·, make up the front line of the

. cause of their parents' beliefs. pionship and the Tech tourney Class B second club selections competition. A junior, he aver- along with pivotman Frank Sil ­

.aged more thap. 20 points per via of Coach Charley Menard'sTeenagers at Mass game and dropped in as many Westport High quintet. as 30 points several times during Silvia, who corralled a totalFor Vietnam Peace the season. of 337 points to finish second to

BROOKLYN (NC) -Nearly Jalbert, the other back-court Britto with a 360-total, was2,000 young people attended a man, possessed the four neces- probably the outstanding playerteenagers' Mass for peace ia Vietnam and contributed spir- ' itual bouquets to be sent to U. S. servicemen in that country. Class BAIl-Stars

During the Mass the teenagers sang folk melodies with lyrics FIRST TEAMrewritten to suit the liturgy. They were accompanied by a Name Position SchoDIhigh school student playing' the guitar. DENNIS kENNEDY Forward ,.Holy Family

The Votive Mass for Peace­ . STEVE PROSKY. __.._ .Forward.: _ Norton the same as was offered by Pope MIKE BRITTO Center....__._ __ OId RochesterPaul VI last Oct. 4 in Yankee Stadium-was celebrated in the RICHIE JAlBERT. Guard M ~ Holy FamilyMM :

gymnasium of Nazareth High TOM CLAy __ Guard _ Oliver Ames School by Father Alfred Var­dale, school chaplain. The ob­servance was sponsored by the 'SE£OND TEAM Tablet, Brooklyn diocesan new&­paper. .. DON BACKLUND _M__ Forward .._ Dighton·Rehoboth

MIKE TRAVIS.., __._.__ Forward CaseM __ _.

laity and Sisters FRANK SILYIA _.._ , Center M Westport_

BOB DOUGLAS Guard __ ,..SomersetOn School Board JOHN MONlTEIRO _ _ Guard _ __ DartmouthYOUNGSTOWN (NC) - Two

laymen and two nuns have beeD. added to the Youngstown dioc­ HONORABLE MENTION esan board of education, which formerly consisted only of Larry. AbbrulZi, Case; AI Baker, Apponequet; Pete Bogle, Somer­priests. set; Wally Davis, Dighton·Rehoboth; Don Dorr, Old Rochester; PaulBishop James W. Malone, Ap­estolie Administrator, appointed Doucette, Prevost; Kevin Fallon, Mansfield; Brian Guimond, Prevost; 8ft attorney and a sales repre­ Glen Harris, Holy Family; Gerry Kay, Case; Walt Korzeniowski, Diman aentative, IllS well .. an Ursuline Vocational; Bob Pierce, Westport; BiD Spark, Old Rochester andSister anlt a Sister fill, &be IIo.J, BumilIQ> of 1iIaI7. .leU SwiDdeUs. Digbtoa·Rebobotb.

fH'E ANCHOR-Diocese ot fan River-Thurs., Mar. 10. 1966

-

TRAVIS

SILVIA

SECOND

DOUGLAS

BACKLUND

CLAY

PRom

TEAM TEAM

MONTEIRO

John Monteiro of Dartmautb· High to form the back court de­fensive unit.

Both Douglas and Montelre were exceptionally strong undell' the boards. The former more than made up for his lack of height with his formidable ago gressive play while Monteiro was recognized for his all ­around skill for Dartmouth wbich played an independent schedule.

Choices Difficult Admittedly. it was difficult to

make some Class B hairliJie se­lections as it was in Class A. We acknowledge the play of 14 others by awarding them Cla~

B honorable mention.

on the Westport club that lost a close opening round tilt ip the Tech Class C play. Silvia's scor­ing ability was the major reason, too, why the Central Village hoopsters compiled a successful 11-5 season's record in the Narry loop.

Steady Performances Buckland, who managed 215

points in 16 games for a better than 13-point average, was the stand-out member of the region­al outfit wbich finished with a 9-7 league record.

Garnering 186 points in the Swansea team's 16 Narry league contests, Travis also proved bimself an important cog in Case's strong passing game.

Dropping a total of 264 points through the hoop in 16 encoun­ters for an average of 16.5 points a game. Bob Douglas of Somer­set has been chosen along with

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Page 20: 03.10.66

20 THE ANCHOR,- Holy Cross CCD, Instructor Advocate3 Convert Requests Jewish Rite

Thurs., March 10, 1966

Drop Relig8on, Aflaption of L~ssons 'to Daily Life In Church Race COMtnlCOI ,By, Richard :D. Bannister, C.S.C. ST. ALBERT (NC) A

ST. LO',JlS (NC)-The three convert from Judaism who religious groups that founded Mil'. Bannister, a native of Bridl:"eport, is a seminarian of'the Holy Cross Fathers now is an Oblate of Mary the St. Louis Council on Religion studying philosophy at Stonehill C~Jlege. He has been teaching catechetics in Immaculate priest here in­and Race here two years ago parish(~s for the past two years. Alberta Province, Canada, hashave decided to withdl'aw their

'. I - . advocated a Jewish rite withinfinancial' support and close the If a major complaint about semiilai'Y t~ainii1g of the past is true, nflmely that it. the Catholic Church to give fullcouncil'~ office. was out of touch with reality, the same thing could be saidJandcan still besaidin large. recognition and expression to"Financial difficulties have al­

measure, I am afraid) about the reIigio\w training ~iven, ?ur- C~l~istian you~h~. T~is, the contributions of Jewish con­ways plagued the cOllncil," a former chairman of the board of trai~ing has often failed to take ~ccouIjlt of two major pomts: fIrst, the ChrIstIan hfe '. ve~t~. the l' Vincent Goldstein, directors commented. is precisely that, a way of i O.M.I., now preaching retreats

Hanlon said there is a possi­ life which must be a part of fact that so many students were at Star of the North Retreatbility the office and staff will willing to' sacrifice (and it was . tall the occupations of our House here, cautioned agamsr~main in operation under an­ a sacrifice since the film was' h f~' . . daily lives, not J'usta half- ope or maSSIVe converSIOnsother name and with support accidentally scheduled for the among Jewish people as a resultfl'om different sources. But he hour "obligation" which keeps week of final exams in the high of the closer Jewish-Catholic said it was too early to announce us from sleeping all Sunday schools) three hours of their relations. any details. morning; seccndly, CCD instruc- evening to coml to a CCD meet- A Jew who would like to

The three groups supplying tion has failed to realize that to- ing. This alone, even without come into the Catholic Church the council's $24,000 budget were day's teenagers are equipped such things as getting students 'with all its traditions also would the Archdiocese of st. Louis, the with reason.,- they can and do . who never 3aie. anything before not like betraying his past byMetropolitan Church Federation, think (or if they don't they to opel~ up and. dis~uss, or c1os-' adopting the modes of Catholics and the St. Louis Rabbinical should be made to do so.) ing the gap' of student-teacher in his area he said. Association. They want to see why this 'relationship which is' far too "I don't want to become an

h Id b d d th t should wide in religious instruction,s ou e one an a Irish Catholic," said Father not. They want to discuss prob- . this alone would have made the Goldstein.p.Town School lems, courses of action, etc., and . film worthwhile.

Continued from Page One see the reason behind. them The second film, "Cat on a Hot . where possibie. A mere thunder- Tin Roof", will be p:r;eviewed Delbarton Students'ling will include a multi··purpose ous "Thou shalt not'" * *" from a and discussed by teachers andal'ea convertible· into three

'teacher is poor psychology for parents 'on Sunday, March 13 in Aid Viet FamilieslClassrooms, toilets, a faculty instilling something as positive the school hall. in Stoughtop.room boiler and storage space, MORRISTOWN (NC) - Stu­as daily Christian living. Any interested CCD teachers or dents at Delbarton School heresaid the architects.

The building is expected to . CCD training, if it is to be . executive board members in ~he in New Jersey are doing theirI

oost a maximum of ~ quarter worthwhile, must be practical," area are invited to attend this bit to' help the United States' million dollars, noted Fatner down-to-earth, and readily, ap- MR. BANNISTER, c.S.C.previewing and discussion in the "win over" the people of-South Duart. Lower level construction plicable to daily life. Few if any, hopes that .other groups will be Vietnam. will be of concrete and the up-/ ·would deny that theology is a members, nU,ns, priests, parents, led to a more fruitful CCD pro- . They are' conducting a fund 'per floor will be steel frame body of knowledge which isnec- and students,~ gram 'through the use of all drive to provide clothing and an

essary tQ provl'de the foundation . I 1 available means of communica- .with concrete decks. Upper . The film brc.ught severa com- education for Vietnamese chil ­walls will be of cedar :;hingled for .this daily Christian living, plex problen\.s down to a level tions. , dren. Earlier, they sent funds to on the exterior and wood pan­ but if CCD instruction remains where the Students could see, Our responsibility as teachers . help educate the four children eled on the interior. only a body of knowledge, if it. evaluate, and discuss their daily in this apostolate is great. St. of a Vietnamese widow. The

The 1'00:£ will be constructed is never made applicable to daily relev·ance.ItI provided teachers James ·warns us, "Remember monthly cost of school in Viet­of exposed wood decking on life, in short; if our Christian with concret~ points of reference that we who are teachers will be nam is 500 piasters, less than $5. laminated wood bents; and win­ youths are never moved to' put in future' clasr discussions of judged by a much higher stand­ That information was givendows will be siiding tYl\le with it into practice dIue to its com- love, social !problems and the ard" (James 3, 1). We have an to the students by Fatheralminum frames and solar gray 'pletely theoretical nature, of Word of Godin daily living. immense task to perform. We Thomas Confroy, O.S.B., former

what use is it? This is one major ,The succesS which Immaculate must make Christ live for Delbarton teacher who is nowinsulating glass. our The school, on Holway Avenue complaint which many CCD Conception CCD enjoy.ed can be students and we must make our chaplain with the First Infantry

and Prince Street, will be at ­ teachers have to text' books measured to ~omeextent by the students live for Christ daily. Division at Bien Hoa, Vietnam.tached to and used' in conjunc­ which they are often compelled I

tion with the existing parish. to use in class. These books are I eenter, where nearly 100 pre­ so theoretical and. take so much primary and first grade pupils for granted, that they fail to are attending classes conducted arouse interest since the student by the Love of God Sist~~rs. . cannot find the doctrines (which, ..

Classes will continue in the 'again I emphasize, are neces­center until the school in ready sary) brought down to a readily REMODELI NG- SALE: . . for occupancy, said Father Duart, livable plan of action..... with grades to be added yearly.

Having encountered this lackThe Love of God Sisters will of 'interest, what can we do _ BUY NOW-and SAVEeontinue to staff the school. about it? In one of their earliest and least k;nown decrees, the Fathers of Vatican II stated that RangesRelief Appea~ all communication media could

Continued from Page One and should be used to spread the "Charity is our great opportu­ good news of Christ. I .

lIl.ity," he said in urging the dio­ " I~It was with this: in mind th'at ceesan leaders to "encourage all the teachers and executive board

,people to continue to. be Good of the Immaculate Conception',1f.;amaritans with America which CCD in Stoughton approved the

is the Good Samaritan of na­ rental of at least two 'films- .' tions." "Lost Weekend". a,nd "Cat on· a

The cardinal said a check of Hot Tin Roof"-to be used to the list of 80 countries helped supplement th > normal class­

. by CRS-N:CWC disclosed to him room work of· the, Senior High Clothes Dryers'that his travels have taken him School program. to all of them "except the Sey­

"Lost Weekend", a film on al­chelles Islands." He called it Icoholism starring Ray Milland,.. I. "one of the most consoling ex­

was shown in place of the Jan. Water' Heatersperiences of my life to see the 25 class. The film was followed VALUES GALORE good that my fellow American by light refreshments (providedCatholics have done." by CCD helpers) and a discus­"There may sometim()s by sion period of about an hour in .cynicism and misunderstanding IEmgth. During the discussionabout American aid," he observ­ small'gI:oupS of about five to ~O· You'll find our Main office.all ed, "but the people themselves students and a teac:her as a dis­ upset but you'll also discover ourwho benefit are grateful" and cussion moderator (moderator . prices on merchandise upset too.see America's name "embla­ not lecturer) dissected ~he film

zoned as the symbol of charity." Dryers, ranges; water heaters'along many Hnes. and room heaters have been

" . Each moderator was ·furnished. 'marked way down. Come in and.' Co~sole' Heater~-Churchman ofY'ea.. with a discussion outline plan' ' .. take advantage of oui-being up­. WASHINGTON (NC) -F~all­ drawnupa~~r a teacher· pr~. set by "e"ing .us ~et up ci modern_Cardinal Spellman of New viewing of the film. ~ach, how­ Gas appliance in your home.York will be .honored as ever, was free _to follow.·; any. .~ . . .' .' . . . "Churchman of the Year" here procedure he wanted. ·Before ·the clune 23 for his ecumenical lead­ end of the evening, a student Main Ofl'ice Open Saturdays 8 a.m. -5 p.m.ership by' Religious HeritQge of for each group summarized for America, Inc., an intel'faith, the benefit of the other groups nonprofit organization. Dr. Nor­ what his group had talked about. man Vincent Peale, president of The result? An unparalleled the Protestant Council of the amount of interest and enthusi-City of New York, will plresent asm which impressed all present IFALL RIVER GAS Comp"", I tb.e award. -teachers, executive boa r d

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