06.05.75
DESCRIPTION
Fall River, M~ss., Thursday, June Vol.19,No.23 © 1975TheAnchor Hundredth AnniverSary of the Great Apparition of the' Sacred Heart of Jesus to Saint Margaret Mary, and it is being observed with special Eucharistic devotions in all parishes of the Diocese. Bishop Cronin, who will be principal concelebrant oftheFirstFridayMassattheCathedral,willcommend the entire Diocese and all its members to the special protection oftheSacredHeartofJesus. 5, 1975 $5.00 'I" 'II' MONSIGNOR STANTON I'RICE15cTRANSCRIPT
Dedicate, Diocese to Sacred HeartHis Excellency, the Most Reverend Daniel A.
Cronin, Bishop of Fall River, will consecrate the Dioceseof Fall River to the Sacred Heart of Jesus on Friday,June 6, 1975, in rites celebrated in conjunction with thenoon-time Mass at Saint Mary's Cathedral in Fall River.
Friday, the First Friday of June, is the Feast ofthe Sacred Heart of Jesus. The Feast marks the Three
Hundredth AnniverSary of the Great Apparition of the'Sacred Heart of Jesus to Saint Margaret Mary, and itis being observed with special Eucharistic devotions inall parishes of the Diocese.
Bishop Cronin, who will be principal concelebrantof the First Friday Mass at the Cathedral, will commendthe entire Diocese and all its members to the specialprotection of the Sacred Heart of Jesus.
On Saturday afternoon, June7 at 1:30, the Sister MaureenHanley, R.S.M. Home at 782Rock St., Fall River will be dedicated.
At this occasion, tribute willbe paid to Sister Maureen ofNazareth Hall, Fall River, in recognition of her years of serviceto exceptional and emotionallydisturbed children in this area.
Sister Maureen, a native of St.Patrick's Parish, Fall River, entered the Sisters of Mercy in1928.
'She taught in parochial schoolsTurn to Page Thr~e
S'r. M'aureen'Home OpensOn Saturday
MONSIGNOR STANTON
,in 1965 with the rank of Commander..
In the military, he received thePresidential Unit Citation for ac-
, tion against the enemy in Wonsan Harbor, No. Korea. Duringhis preparation, he had graduated as honor man in his class atthe Chaplains' School, Newport.
A most interesting experiencein his life, Msgr. Stanton recalled, was his role as Naval Reserve Chaplain in efforts to locate the nuclear submarine USSThresher, lost 260 miles off Prov-
Turn to Page Nine
DeaconsPriests,Receiving assignments in the
diocesan diaconate program are:Rev. Mr. Stanley Barney, as deacon at Sacred Heart Parish, FallRiver; Rev. Mr. Gerald P. Barnwell, as deacon at St. Mary Parish, Mansfield; Rev. Mr. StephenA. Fernandes, as deacon at St.John ,the Evangelist Parish, Attleboro; Rev. Mr. Edmund Rego,as deacon at St. John the Baptist Parish, New Bedford.
Msgr. StantonThe son of the late Daniel A.
and the late Dorothy LynchStanton, Rev. Msgr. Robert L.Stanton was born in Taunton' onSept. 10, 1917.
After graduating from Immaculate 'Conception Parish andTaunton High School, Msgr.Stanton attended Boston College. He prepared for the priesthood' at St. Bernard Seminary,Rochester, N. Y. and St. MarySeminary, Baltimore, Md.
Most Rev. James E. Cassidyordained him to the priesthoodat St. Mary's Cathedral on Nov.27, 1943.
Following seven years ofpriestly ministry at St. MaryParish, No. Attleboro, he enteredthe Chaplain Corps of the U.S.Navy and served in the PacificTheater during the Korean Conflict.
Following his active militaryservice, he was assigned to Immaculate Conception Parish, FallRiver, as assistant pastor, butremained asa Chaplain in theU.S. Navy Reserves. He eventually did retire from the military
Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin,S.T.D., Bishop of Fall River, hasannounced the retirement of apastor, the, appointment of onepastor, the assignment of an assistant pastor and four deacons.
Rev. James 'F. McDermott,pastor of St. Patrick' Parish,Somerset, has retired as pastorof the Somerset par,ish.
Rev. Msgr. Robert L. Stantonhas been appointed to succeedFather McDermott at St. PatrickParish, Somerset, as pastor.
The effective date of the retirement and pastoral appointment was Monday, June I, 1975.
Rev. Philip J. Higgins, assistant pastor at St. George Parish,Westport, has been transferredto St. Peter the Apostle Parish,Provincetown, with Wednesday,June 18, 1975, as the effectivedate.
Assigns
Cathedral CampsOpen HouseOn Sunday
Plans are rapidly progressingfor the start of the 1975 seasonat the Cathedral Camps. TIreCamps', now comprised of Cathe-
'dral Boys' Day Camp and OurLady of the Lake Girl's Campare operated by the RomanCatholic Diocese of Fall Riverand are located on the shoresof Long Pond in East Freetown.
The first camping period startson June 30th and campers may
Turn to Page Three
5, 1975I'RICE 15c
$5.00 'I" 'II'
D.D., Third Bishop of Fall Rive!,ordained him to the priesthoodin St. Mary's Cathedral, FallRiver, on May 21, '1932.
Father McDermott served asassistant pastor at St. Josephand Immaculate ConceptionParishes in Fall River, 'and HolyName Parish, New Bedford.
While in New Bedford, FatherMcDermott was the initiator ofthe Miraculous Medal Novenas.His eloquent talks and stirringsinging filled the church beyondcapacity at three scheduled Monday services conducted for somefour years.
Bishop James L. Connolly,D.D., D. Sc. Rist., Fourth Bishopof Fall River, appointed FatherMcDermott as Administrator ofSt. Peter Parish, Dighton, in1956.
Two years 'later, he appointedhim as the founding pastor ofOur Lady of Fatima Parish,Swansea-a new parish formedfrom territory that once was thatof St. Thomas More Parish, Somerset, and St. Michael Parish,Ocean Grove.
'Father McDermott saw morethan simply a new church, newrectory, expanded parking lot inSwansea. Under his leadershipthe parish became more thana child of parent parishes. Wellinspired, guided and organized,the Swansea parishioners became leaders in their own right.
In 1966, Father McDenndttmoved to the neighboring townand took up his duties as pastorof St. Patrick Parish, Somerset.Experiencing tremendous. growthover the years, the Somerset
Turn to Page Three
Fall River, M~ss., Thursday, JuneVol. 19, No. 23 © 1975 The Anchor
Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin,S.T.D., Bishop of Fall River, hasaccepted the resignation of Rev.James F. McDermott, pastor ofSt. Patrick Parish, Somerset, forreasons of health.
Pastor of the Somerset parishsince March, 1966, Father McDermott was born in Tauntonon June 22, 1907. He is the sonof the late Bernard and the lateMargaret (Lynch) McDermott.
After attending Weir Schooland Taunton High School hepursued his studies at BostonCollege. He prepared for thepriesthood at St. Bernard Seminary, Rochester, N.Y.
Most Rev. James E. Cassidy,
Thee,..'-&.ANCHOR
Father James F. McDermottResigns Somerset Parish
FATHER MeDERl'tIOIT
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COMMEMORATION OF VOCATION DAY AT MT. CARMEL PARISH~ As the entireDiocese celebrated Vocation Day over the weekend, 200 high schoolers and 85 altar boysattended a special Mass for Vocations at 10:45 in Mt. Carmel Church, New Bedford. Onthe right, Rev. George S. Almeida, celebrant, with Rev. Mr. Edmund Rego from the parish,on the celebrant's right as deacon. Far left, Rev. Msgr. LUlz G. Mendonca, V.G., pastor and
. homilist at the Mass with Raymond Cambra, an acolyte from the parish, on the homilist'sleft.
NecrologyJUNE 13
Rev. Edward F. Donahue, S.J.,1974, Taunton
JUNE 18Rev. James M. coffey, P.R.,
1935, Pastor, St. Mary, Taunton
JUNE 19Rev. Hormisdas Deslauriers,
1916, F'Ounder, St. Anthony,New Bedford
....UNE 20Rev. Msgr. James J. Coyle,
P.R., LL.D., 1931, Pastor, St.Mary, Taunton
An air conditioned parish hallin the basement of the buildingfeatures an auditorium withdance floor, a kitchen and ameeting room. A mural of stylesfrom the turn of the century tothe present enhances the dancearea and is the work of MissKathleen Walsh, a member ofthe parish.
Along with Father Coady, pastor, and Rev.' Ronald A. Tosti,assistant pastor, CO-Chairmen ofthe open house are Edward Tyrrell, William Hyland Jr., parishtr.ustees; Mrs. Stanley Janick,Mrs. Edward Forgette and Mrs.William T. Marum, past president and president respectivelyof the SS. Peter and Paul Women's Club; Mrs. William Hyland,Jr. and Mrs. Robert Latinville,past president and president respectively of the SS. Peter andPaul Home and School Association.
All Invited to Open House
At New SSe Peter & Paul
2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., June 5, 1975
Bishop of Fall River
ASSIGNMENTRev. Phi-lip J. Higgins, as 'Assistant, Saint Petcr the
Apostle Parish, Provincetown, effective June 18, 1975.
DEACON ASSIGNMENTSRev. Mr. H. Stanley Barney, as Deacon at Sacred Heart
Parish, Fall River,. effective June 2, 1975.Rev. Mr. Gerald P. Barnwell, as Deacon at St. Mary's
Parish, Mansfield, .effective June 18, 1975.Rev. Mr. Stephen A. Fernandes, as Deacon at Saint
John the Evangelist Parish, Attleboro, effective June 18, 1975.Rev. Mr. Edmund Rego, as Deacon at Saint John the
Baptist Parish, New Bedford, effective June 18, 1975.
RETIREMENTRev. James F. McDermott, from Pastorate of Saint Patrick's
Parish, Somerset, effective June 2, 1975.
DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER
OFFICIAL
APPOINTMENTRcv. Msgr. Robcrt L. Stanton, as Pastor of Saint Patrick's
Parish, Somerset, 'effective June 2, 1975.
:rHE ANCHORSecond Class Postage Paid at Fall River,
Mass. Published every Thursday at 410Highland Avenue, Fall River, Mass. 02722by the Catholic Press of the Diocese of FallRiver. Subscription price by mail, postpaid'S.OO per year.
Rev. Francis M. Caady, pastor of SS. Peter and PaulChurch, Fall River, extends aninvitation to all in the dioceseto attend an open house at therecently completed parish com·plex from 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday.
Members of the parish Women's Club and Home and SchoolOrganization will host the eventand refresments will be servedin the new parish hall. Entranceto the building will be throughthe courtyard and main doors onDover Street. Ample parking isavailable both in the new parking lot on Dover and SnellStreets and the school yard onBenton Street. .
The parish complex, dedicatedApril 27 by Bishop Cronin, includes the church, seaNng 600and equipped with air conditioning, carpeting and total facilitiesfor handicapped persons. Stainedglass windows in the nave of thechurch greatly enhance its beauty.
New SchoolOn the second and third
floors of the building is a completely new school facility witha library, teachers' lounge and
. offices. Sr. Anne Marie McTague, RSM, principal, togetherwith members of the faculty,will host all visitors to theschool.
All-Night Vigil to Commemorate Feast
3
Continued from Page One
regi!>ter for either a two weekperJod or for the entire 8 weekseason.
Open House"Open House" will be held at
the Camps on Sunday, June 8thbetween 2 and 4 p.m. This willprovide 1)oth former and prospective campers a chance to visit the Camps and see the newaotivities that are being prepared.
In addition to the regular departments with all sorts ofwaterfront and athletic events,plus riflery, archery and Indiancraft, there will be a new Artsand Crafts center serving bothCamps based on the 'open classroom' concept.
An attraction for older campers will be the new Golf Program with a Driving Range.
Animal lovers w.ill feel rightat home on "Old MaoDonald'sFarm" where the youngsters willlearn to care for and learn tolove a great variety of animalpets.
For more information theCamp office ,can be reached bycalling 763-8874 or hy writingto Box 438, East Freetown, Mass.02717.
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Holy Scripture comes alive foryou as you walk the Way of theCross in a Jerusalem which looksalmost as it did when Jesus was
crucified.Your faith forever takes a deeper
meaning as. you pray where stoodthe' stable in Bethlehem or kneel
in the Garden of Gethsemane.You will gaze out over the Jor
dan valley from atop the Mountof Jericho. visit Nazareth, Cana,the Mount of Beatitudes. and many. other holy places.
PAPAL AUDIENCECome to the Holy Land! On
your way you'll stop for your holyyear pilgrun's blessing and homilyby the Holy Father and a thorough holy year tour of the Vatican
BQd Rome.On your return you'lI trace the
steps of St. Paul at Athens andCorinth in Greece.
The first slep is to send in thiscoupon today, By return mail yOUwill receive a fact-packed folde,which tells you what yOU can expectevery momenl of an unforgettable,. experience. ,
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51. Mary'S Parish.New Bedford
THE ANCHOR-Thurs., June 5, 1975
Cathedral Camp
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Vigil themes coincided withthose of the Holy Year: renewaland reconciliation.
The program will be conducted under the auspices of theMen of the Sacred Heart. Coffee and refreshments will beavailable for the duration of thevigil. All members of the dioceseare welcome to participate in allor part of the planned events,especially the Masses.
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British audiences do not as arule go to lectures to be entertained. They go more or less asstudents, to acquire information.Therefore very few of them go.
-Kaye-Smith
Lecture
ment will be exposed. Other observances wiU include Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament, D
solemn procession, recitation ofthe rosary, Stations of the Cross,a Holy Hour and conferences.
Of special note is that tomorrow marks the 300th anniversary of the apparition of theSacred Heart to St. MargaretMary at Paray-de-Monial, France.Further, the two days spannedby the vigil include the Solemnities of the Sacred Heart andthe Immaculate Heart of Mary,thus increasing the importanceof this particular Fdrst Friday.
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New Bedford
BLESSING OF NEW K OF C HOME: Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin, S.T.D., Bishop ofthe Diocese of Fall River, blessed the new Knights of Columbus Home of Fall River Council No. 86, 1492 Columbus Drive, on Thursday evening and was principal concelebrantand homilist at the Mass of Dedication. Among the concelebrants Rev. Roger L. Gagne,council chaplain; Rev. Michel Doran, O.P., prior at St. Anne's, Rev. Jean Louis Bouchard,O.P., a member of the council; Rev. Armando Annunziato, Rev. Maffeo Lombardi, O.F.M.and Rev. Bruce M. Neylon.
An all-night vigil of reparation, renewal, and reconciliation'in honor of the Sacred Heart ofJesus and the Immaculate Heartof Mary will be held tomorrowat St. Mary's Church, NorthFairhaven beginning with Massin honor of the Sacred Heart ofJesus at 8 p.m. and concludingwith Mass in honor of the Immaculate Heart of Mary at 7a.m. Saturday.
During the period betweenthese Masses, the Blessed Sacra-
Sister MaureenContinued fro'm Page One
of Fall River, New Bedford andNo. Attleboro.
Previous to teaching at Nazareth Hall for exceptional children, she taught the emotionallydisturbed children at St. Vincent's Home, Fall River.
Instrumental in organizing theCamp Fire Girls, Boy Scouts andGirl Scouts troops for developmentally disabled children, sincethe late 50s has been dedicatedto these children.
She was named the first principal of Nazareth Hall, FallRiver in 1957.
This new center is owned andmanaged by People Inc. through
.the cooperative effort with theMassachusetts Dept. of MentalHealth.
Gerald Lawton, vice-presidentof People Inc. is chainnan of theopen house. Clay Oliver is executive director and Rev. MerriU ispresident.
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New Auxiliary BishopWASHINGTON (NC) - Pope
Paul VI has named FatherGeorge K. Fitzsimmons, 46, vicar general and chancellor of theKansas City-St. Joseph, Mo.,diocese, to be auxiliary bishop ofKansas City-St. Joseph. A nativeof Kansas City, Mo., he studiedat Rockhurst College there andat Immaculate Conception Seminary in Conception, Mo. He wasordained by Cardinal John Codyof Chicago in 1961.
Fr. McDermottContinued from Page One
parish has attempted to keeppace with the many interests ofmore involved and dedicatedlaity.
Father McDermott brought theliturgical directives of the Second Vatican Council' into thelives of his parishioners with abeautifully restored villagechurch with its inspiring newstained glass windows.
Because he has been afflictedwith increasingly ill health overthe past few years, Father McDermott, knowing the growingneeds of his large parish, tendered his resignation from theactive ministry. He will be succeeded by Rev. Msgr. Robert L.Stanton.
A five-hour vigil commemorating the 300th anniversary ofthe Feast of the Sacred Heartwill be held from 7 o'clock until midnight on' Friday nighl,June 6 in Mt. Cannel Church,New Bedford.
Rev. Luiz G. Mendonca, V.G.,pastor of Mt. Carmel, has announced the following schedulefor the evening's celebration.
A concelebrated Mass of theSacred Heart (English) will openthe evening's celebration. Following the Mass, Rev. Andre A.Patenaude, MS, of the La Salette Fathers will conduct a HolyHour in English from 8:15 to9:15.
Rev. Jose M. Souza, C.S.Sp.,a Holy Ghost Father from Portugal will conduct a Holy Hourin Portuguese from 9:30 until10:30.
A thirty-minute period of private adoration will be affordedall from 10:30 to 11 o'clock.
At 11 o'clock, Benediction ofthe Blessed Sacrament will begiven and ·the concluding servicewill start at 11:15 and consist ina concelebrated Mass of theSacred Heart in Portuguese.
Confessions will be heard during the Holy Hour.
Coffee and pastry will beserved in the church basementthroughout the evening for thoseattending the Vigil.
ToObserve300thAnniversaryOf Feast
Best Advice
4 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., June 5, 1975
strange reason this !lation hasbeen lulled into thinking that"detent" has brought peace tothe world; that Russia and Chinahave no hostile intent or warlikepurpose. We have been led to believe that these nations are nownothing more than new placesto visit'on the grand tour. Inturn the CIA and not the intelligence gathering agencies ofRussia and China has the badimage. The reason for this isthat so much of the new commentary about the agency hasbeen openly adverse and antagonistic. To some minds of the
.press room crowd anything thatis of its nature secret, must besinister.
Whether we like it or not, theOIA has a role to play in thesecur,ity defense of this nation.At the present time the centralquestion that must be determined is the role that a secretinstitution plays in a free society. In turn each one of usshould ask ourselves can a freesociety retain its freedom in today's world without the kind ofsecret organization that the CIAmust be in order to do its work~~ecV\!eIYll~d.eff~JJ)I{:'
~."'.:, ~':~A'~..ft.,\ f·:~~'? ..ft).\.!t-,;~j.,~..,'j :.''';';..,:,'' /',
-Maritain
Sacred HeartTo choose the heart for em
blem is to dedicate oneself tothe only heart which does notHe, and it is encircled withthorns.
Two DiocesansTo Be PresentAt CHA Parley
David Reidy, administrativeassistant, and Rev. Edmund Fitzgerald, director of pastoral careat St. Anne's Hospital, FallRiver, will be among more than1200 Sisters, priests and laymenin attendance at the fourth an·nual Catholic Health Assemblyto be held in San FranciscoSunday through Thursday, June1 to 5.
Sponsored by the CatholicHospital Association (CHA), themeeting will have as its theme"Health and Social Responsibility." Program topics will includethe importance of health in society, the social responsibilitiesof hospitals and physicians, thesurvival of the voluntary systemand comprehensive health planning.
Keynote speaker will be thcformer U. S. surgeon general Dr.Luther L. Terry, who now servesas president-director of University Associates, Washington,D. C. His topic is "The Impor·tance of Health 'in the Fabric ofSociety."
During the final session unThursday, former director of theFederal Energy Admmistration,John C. Sawhill, who was recently named president-designateof New York University, willexplain "Health Services anj theEnergy Crisis."
Sister of Mercy Mary KiernanHarney of Omaha, Ne:J. vicechairman of the association, willbe installed as the group's 1975chairwoman. She will succeedSister of Charity Grace MarieHiltz of Cincinnati.
With headquarters in St.Louis, CHA represents 870 CathoNc-sponsored health care facilities throughout the UnitedStates.
51. William's Church
To do otherwise would be selfdestructive and suicidal.
Can you imagine for a moment what would happen if theespionage activities of Russiaand China were left completelyun~hecked? All evidence indicates that these nations havenot only increased their covertactivities but they have beeneven more audacious and zealous in the execution of such activities. Yet for some very.,
If the CIA is indeed guilty ofany violation of the constitutional rights and guarantees ofany American citizen, it shouldbe admonished, chastized anddisciplined by the due processof law. If, for any reason, suchan agency becomes the tool ofa ,particular political party inthis nation then it should be dissolved.
. attitude. The alleged excesses. of
. surveillance and the extrememethods of espionage employedas political tools in a free society are to be censured and condemned. A free person in a freesociety cannot maintain freedomif he or she is to be harrassedand treated as an enemy agentfor the purpose of political revenge.
C.I.A.
REV. JOHN F. MOORE
themOOQln,4
However, the covert and secret activities of the CIA wouldhave little reason for existenceif the world returned to the pris- .tine state of the Garden ofEden. From ordinary observations it should be very plain tosee that we do not live in a paradise. Given the temper of thetimes on this planet earth, thisnation still must retain and support the international activitiesC?f..'\~l agency such as the C.LA.
"The squeeze is on!"
Not Living in Paradise
During the past few wee.ks a tremendous amount ofnewsreel footage and newspaper print has dealt with theCongressional investigation of the Central Intelligence Agency. In an almost hysterical atmosphere, the doves and theisolationists of Congresshave attempted not only aninvestigation of CIA activities but also have tried toreduce the effectiveness of suchan agency to the level of one oftheir own committees. Seemingly many members of Congresshave read too many James Bondnovels and they themselves haveassumed a super sleuth mentality in an Alice in Wonderlandatmosphere. As a result of thisside-show attitUde,' the efif-ectiveness of one of the most important agencies of government,given the international complications of our day, is being diminished and weakened.
To be sure, it has become quiteclear that over the years as theCIA grew in scope and size italso developed a "big brother"
Rev. John R. Foister
~Leary Pres~-Fall Riv~:
lIe'l. John P. Driscoll
Signs for Optimism
PUBLISHERMost Rev. Daniel A. Cronin, D.O., S.T.D.
I;ENEIIAL MANAGER FINANCIAL ADMINISTRATORRev. Msgr. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. Msgr. John J. Regan
ASSISTANT MANAGERS
OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVERpublished weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River
410 Highland AvenueFall River Mass. 02722675-7151
@rhe ANCHOR
A high level of international statesmanship in the mostprofound meaning of that phrase is being shown these daysin the Middle East. President Sadat of Egypt is w.alking amoderate course and seems sincerely intent upon findinga solution that will allow for co-existence with Israel withno significant step in thinning out the Suez Canal frontin what is an unprecedented movement for peace and thatsame co-existence.
It is heartening to know that statesmanlike conduct isbeing shown on both sides and may work its way through'to an equitable settlement.'
The presence of the moderate Hussein of Jordan andthe Shah of Iran who seems determined to play a strongand stabilizing role in the whole area bode well for thefuture.
The United States would do well not to try any heavyhanded approach or even to decide what is good for thearea but, rather, to serve as the honest broker trying toassist the parties to arrive at a form~la that will providefor all the elements involved - Israel's existence andsecurity, the plight of the Palestinian refugees, the Arabborders, use of the Suez Canal, balance of military power.The approach this nation must use is that of a worldfriend to all parties offering its offices to achieve the peacethat the parties themselves must want and must find waysto secure. The arm-twisting days of diplomacy are gone.The attempt to tell others what is good for them will notwork.
But the statesmanlike postures that recent days haveshown are positive signs for optimism.
These are the days when graduates on· all levels ofeducational achievement are receiving all sorts of goodadvice from all sorts of worthy and ad~irable speakers.
The fact probably still remains true, however, that,as Cicero once observed, "The best advice one receives isthat which he gives to himself."
.That may not be the best advice, of course, but humannature will take it as the best advice. So one' can onlyhope that the advice one gives oneself will be sound andsensible and rooted in values that are true.
And that is what education tries to accomplish-toprovide a student with the truth and with the insight andwith the values that will enable him to give good adviceto himself.
A wise man seeks advice. But sooner or later he must'come to a decision. And this is a decision that has consequences for himself and for others.
The Church knows that' some consequences havedimensions in time but many consequences have eternalimpact. That is why the Bishop's pastoral, "To Teach AsJesus Did," urged all Catholic education to recognize its
·purpose-to give the truth, to build up a Godly community,to reach out in service to others.
A student imbued with this philosophy is well equippedto give advice to himself. And the advice cannot help buttake human resources and opportunity and shoot these·through with God's truth and the ultimate purposes of life.
Such advice has consequences for time and eternity.
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., June 5, 1975 5
JUNE IS GRADUATION MONTH: Three of the eighttiigh schools of the Diocese have representatives photographed by The Anchor as the end of their Catholic SecondaryEducation is completed. Top photo: Three members of thesenior class of St. Anthony High School, New Bedford, represent the class of 36 boys and 38 girls in a pledge of loyaltyto their Alma Mater. Left to right: Paul Oullet, left, and Jeanette Bousquet, right, both members of St. Anthony's Parish,and Brian Pepin, center, from St. Francis Xavier Parish,Acushnet. Middle photo: Following the baccalaureate Massfor the 67 boys and 54 girls of the class of 1975 at CoyleCassidy High School, Taunton, three seniors stopped forThe Anchor photographer: Patricia McGrath, left and Patricia Walsh, right, both members of the Immaculate Conception Parish and John Pimenta, center, Our Lady of LourdesParish. Botton photo: Three seniors from a class of 72 boysand 133 girls from Bishop Stang High School, No. DartmouthRegional Diocesan Co-educational High School, exchangeautographs prior to final week before graduation exerciseslast night at which Bishop Cronin distributed diplomas. Leftto right: Anthony Falco, St. Mary's Parish; Maria Gomes, St.John the Baptist Parish and Cinday Barboza, Our Lady ofMt. Carmel Parish, all in New Bedford.
or
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Holy Father PraisesLabors of Caritas
VATICAN CITY (NC)-Theworks of charity and direct helpto the needy and suffering per- .formed by Caritas Internationalis, the international federationof Catholic Charities organizations, and its national counterparts received recognition andpraise from Pope Paul VI onMay 16.
Speaking in French, English,German and Spanish at a privateaudience to members of CaritasInternationalis, who had met hereto elect a new president, Msgr.George Huessler, Pope Paul said:
",It is a holy year f.or you too.This is the 25th anniversary ofyour founding.... With you wegive thanks to the Lord for thepast, the present and the futureof Caritas Internationalis.
"We 'reiterate our deep con·viction: your charitable instiution has accomplished a f:onsiderable work which honors theChurch. The name of Caritas ishenceforth attached to assistance of all kinds (or those inthe most varied kinds of distress."
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PRAYING SCRIPTURES: Praying the Scriptures was the theme for a two-day prayerworkshop held at Dominican Academy, Fall River, for Sisters of the Congregation of St.Catherine of Siena. Among participants, left to right: Sister Joanne Bonville, St. Dominic's Convent, Plattsburgh, N.Y., program chairman; Sister Sheila Russell, St. Rose Convent, Acushnet; Rev. James L. Prest, D.P., St. Stephen's Priory, Dover; Sister ElizabethMenard, directress of novices at the community's Dartmouth novitiate; Sister Sheila Pendergast,' St. Stephen's Priory, Dover, workshop director; Sister Angele Morin, superiorat Fall River motherhouse; Sister Ann Mildred Brown, Holy Ghost Convent, Tiverton;Sister Anita Pauline Desrochers, prioress general; ~ister Donna Brunei, superior at St.Bernadette's Convent, New Haven, Conn. . . . . . .. . : ..
or getting involved in politicalor social processes," she said.
Sister Arlene entered the Sisters of Mercy in 1951 and is agraduate of Salve Regina College, Newport. Recently, she received her law degree from Boston College.
"I was interested in studyingconsumer law," she said. "I actuaHy studied everything fromsecurities to corporate law. Ichose Boston College becausethey maintain one of the majorconsumer law centers in thenation."
Inner City WorkerSister Arlene has a long his
tory of meeting the needs of thecommunity. She served in theinner city apostolate in SouthProvidence, she was a teacherand three years ago she was theoriginal director of the local Social Action Conference of Mercy.
She said she entered the legalprofession with the idea of effectuating changes in the lawthat would minimize injustice.She planned to do this either bydrafting legislation or by takingcases that would change somelaws.
"So many complaints - 750to 1,000 per month - come intothe attorney general's office,that it is a good place to findout what is happening to theRhode Island consumer," SisterArlene said.
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to sell him a black and whitefor the same price. It's the old"bait and switch" trick againand Mercy Sister Arlene Violetgoes to work.
Sister Arlene, 31, is the firstRhode Island nun to earn a lawdegree and was recently appointed an assistant state attorney general. She is a ·legal counsel for the civil division of Attorney General Julius C. Michaelson's office and special attorneygeneral for consumer protection.
Right now she is wendingthrough a backlog of 1,000 consumer complaints, familiarizingherself with her new job.
"As a Religious woman, andespecially as a Sister of Mercy," she said. "I am committedto witness the presence of Godby responding to unmet needs.One of these needs is ·to challenge social and economic structures that run counter to theprjnciples of the Gospel."
Sister Arlene's way of meeting this need is "by enforcing ordevising certain laws that willminimize injustices."
She is one of an increasingnumber of nuns who have foundalternative ways of serving theChurch.
"We are all ReHgious women.This is my way of witnessingthe presence of God., For someit is being a teacher, for othersit is becoming a doctor or lawyer
Providence Sister of Mercy Is NamedAssist~nt State Attorney.General
BY RICHARD E. AGAJANIAN
PROVIDENCE (NC) - In acrowded fourth floor office ofthe Providence County CourtHouse the telephone. rings.
"Hello. Yes, sir, can I helpyou?"
A man complains that a colortelevision a store advertiseddoesn't exist. The salesman tried
.DOMINICAN ACADEMY CELEBRATES BI-CENTENNIAL OF NATION: Under thesponsorship of the seventh and eighth grade students of the Fall River academy, commemorated the 200th birthday of our nation by illustrating examples from our historyin order to increase the virtue of patriotism in the lives of the academy students.
NCAN also asked the bishop,who is a member of the boardof directors of Trinity School, topersuade the board to withdrawits appeal of a U.S. DistrictCourt decision last Novemberruling against "Trinity's effortsto prevent the building of low-.rent housing in the urban renewal area in which the school islocated."
A spokeswoman for Bishop'Moore said that he is draftinga reply to the NCAN letter andthat he has already publiclyasked Trinity's board not to appeal the court decision.
The spokeswoman said alsothat Bishop Moore, who is noton the board of MorningsideHouse, has in the past expressedconcern for the squatters. Shesaid, however, that the housesin which they are squatting areold and in poor condition andthat preventing the squatters'eviction may not really be aservice to them.
Sister Ann Brotherton, adjunctprofessor of sociology at GeorgiaState University in Atlanta,NCAN spokeswoman on the issue, who studied the area inquestion during doctoral studiesat Fordham University, said thatlow-income tenants occupyingthe site contested in the suit byTrinity School had refused tomove until they were given assurances by urban renewal authorities that provision wouldbe made to house them in thesame area.
Appeal to Bishops
Adoption Aid BillWASHINGTON (NC) - Sen.
Alan Cranston (D.-Calif.) has introduced legislation which wouldaid in the adoption of childrenwith "special needs." Citing theAmerican response to Vietnamese orphans, Cranston said,"That concern, ironically, hasforced us to further probe ournational conscience regardingthe 120,000 young Americans inneed of adoption.
CHICAGO (NC) - The National _Coalition of American Nuns(NCAN) has appealed to Episcopal Bishop 'Paul Moore Jr. ofNew York to take action to prevent the eviction of a group ofsquatters and to remove opposi.tion to the construction of lowrent housing near an Episcopalschool.
NCAN, whose national secretariat is based here, urged Bishop Moore to use his influencein persuading Morningside HouseInc., and independent agency historically linked to the EpiscopalChurch, to withdraw its evictionsuit against 80 families of squatter-tenants who have, for fiveyears, been occupying threeapartment buildings across fromthe Cathedral of St. John theDivine in New York City.
NCAN also asked "that a reasonable attempt be made at d'irect, out-of-court negotiations,for which the squatters have petitioned since 1970."
6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., June 5, 1975
Coalition of Nuns Urges ActionFor Low Income Housing
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Pil'Qrim ThrongsRejoice Pontiff .
VATICAN CITY (NC)-At anextraordinary public audience onMay 10, Pope Paul VI expressedhis joy at the increasing numberof pilgrims pouring into Romefor the Holy Year.
"Audiences multiply thesedays, little by little as the HolyYear, which began -immediatelyunder most promising auspices,advances into better weather,"said the Pope.
"In this way we have the joyof seeing ever more numerousgroups of pilgrims corning fromeverywhere. Like the waves ofthe sea, they spill over Romewithout staying long and sweepinto this Basilica, by the glorious sepulchre of Peter theApostle, as into the other basilicas."
THE ANCHOR- 7Thurs., June 5, 1975
There is so much unhappiness and misery inour worldtoday... so much suffering ...yet it takes so little to help.
But it also takes love!Christ has no other hands but ours to bring His love
and consolation to the needy. Share your love today withall the missionaries and the poor they serve by sendinga sacrifice for the missions. SEND IT TODAY... SO THEYCAN EAT TOMORROW!
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PRIZE WINNERS: Of six citywide awards made by theNew Bedford Free Public Library in a National LibraryWeek essay and drawing contest for children, three, including first prize, were won by pupils at St. Joseph's School.From left, Donald Lamarre; Daniel Charbonneau, first prizewinner; Ronald Jacques.
daughter is often frustrating andnervewracking but this summerclothes are pretty and colorful,while at the same time quitefeminine. However, no one willbe able to tell you how to answer your daughter's appeal for·approval on her painter's pants!
Vietnamese TotsFind New Lif,e
WESTFIELD (NC)-There hasbeen a dramatic increase in thesize of the Edward Konopka family. Instead of four children, theKonopkas now have seven, thelatest additions being three Viet-
. namese brothers.The three-Nguyen Van Vinh,
Nguyen Van Thi and Nguyen ThiThuy-were part of a group of31 children being resetttiedthrough Associated CatholicCharities of the Newark archdiocese. And they are already settled into their new horne, evento the extent of attempting toanswer the telephone, as callersare finding out.
Speaking of the new familymembers, Edward Konopka said:"They are just fine. They areeating well and making themselves right at home. They seemmore mature than their givenages, which are 5 through 7."
"The oldest," he added, "underst~nds some English. We haveno trouble making them understand." All of them write in theirown language.
Explaining how he happenedto wind up with three children,Konopka said that he and hiswife had put in an adoption application in December after talking with some friends who hadadopted a- Korean youngster."We said that we would take anolder child or children in casethere was a need to place a family group."
Which is how Catholic Charities called the Konopka residence upon learning that threebrothers from one family wereamong those coming to Newark.
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Really Fashionabl,e Teens
Opt for Paint,er's' PantsWould you have thought, even five years ago, that
the height of fashion for the younger set would be painter'spants? True, they don't have a bib but they have all the·pockets and holders necessary to the- trade. While I tryto be open-minded as far asmy children's taste in clothesis concerned, I find it difricult to frame an answerwhy my 14-year-older tries ona pair of the aforementionedpants and asks "Well Mom, howdo they look?"
Even when the warmerweather rolls around 1 predictthis style will remain a big teenhit because some fashion housesare showing it in a short ver:;ion, this one with bib. The longlength ones have to be boughtin men's or boys' department, asdo most of our gals' jeans, butI must admit that I like themmuch better than the tiresomelook of jeans and also they fit theheavier teen-ager much betterthan, say, stretch pants.
Terry, Halters
For the young the summer isspent either at the beach or ata part-time job, so their clothesneeds are minimal. This summercolorful terry will be as important a part of the teen wardrobeas denim, especially when it topsa bathing suit. Even the hatsshading their youthfUl' eyes willbe made of this durable material.
When they do consent to dressthey'll choose colorful halterdresses or sun-backs worn withplatform pumps very reminiscent of the early forties. Gownsfor proms and summer partiesare just lovely this year-feminine, la·cy and ruffled. One ofthe loveliest is of natural linenwith a squared off neckline,edged in heavy handmade lace.Dotted swiss, organdy, and eyelet cotton are also part of theeve~ing scene.
Shopping with a teen-age
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Anative of Wilmington, Mass,.Rev. Philip J. Higgins is the sonof James L. and. Hulda (Anderson) Higgins.
A teacher in the Norton andMansfield Public Schools fornine years, he was educated atRandall G. Moriss School, WestRoxbury; Boston Technical HighSchool and Boston College.
He prepared for the priesthoodat St. John's Seminary andserved as deacon at Holy NameParish, Fall River.
He was ordained a priest byMost ~ev. Daniel A. CroninS.T.D., Fifth Bishop of Fall River, on May 13, 1973.
Since his ordination, FatherHiggins has served as assistantpastor at ~t. George Parish,Westport.
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., June 5, 1975 9
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Assigns Priests, DeaconsContinued from Page One
incetown with 129 men aboardin 1963.
At the completion of the mission, Msgr. Stanton boarded thesubmarine USS Dogfish and wasentrusted with a 12-foot steeltubing that had been brought upfrom the bottom of the oceanwitb m'lrkings of the Thresheron it.
Accompanied by another officer, Msgr. Stanton delivered thefinding to the New London basefor transportation to Washington.
Besides the Immaculate Conception Parish, Fall River, Msgr.Stanton has also served as Rector of St. Mary's Cathedral, FallRiver, and pastor of St. PatrickParish, Wareham.
For 14 years the new Somerset pastor was instructor of Ethicsand Medical Ethics at St.Anne Hospital's School of Nursing and instructor in Dogma,Moral and History at the Presentation Novitiate in Dighton.
He has also served as chaplainto the Fall River CatholicNurses' Guild.
In July 1967, Pope Paul VInamed Father Stanton a Domes-
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Masses
NORTH TRURO
OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HELPMasses: Sunday-8:00, 9:00, 10:00 and 11 :00 A.M.
Saturday Eve.-6:00 P.M.
WEST HARWICH
HOLY TRINITYMasses: Sunday-7:30, 9:00, 10:30, 12:00 noon
Saturday Eve.-5:00 & 7:00 P.M.Daily-9:00 A.M.First Friday-Mass and Exposition 11:00A.M. and Benediction 2:00 P.M.
Confessions: Saturday 4:00 and 7:45 P.M.
DENNISPORTUPPER COUNTY ROAD
OUR LADY OF THE ANNUNCIATIONMasses: Sunday-7:00, 8:30, 10:00, 11:30 A.M.
Saturday Eve.-4:30 P.M.
Daily-8:00 A.M.Confessions: Saturday-3:45 P.M.
CHILMARK
COMMUNITY CENTERSchedule begins June 29
Masses: Sunday-7:oo P.M.
WAREHAMST. PATRICK
Masses: Sunday-7:00, 8:00, 9:00,10:00,11:30 A.M.and 5:00 P.M.
Saturday Eve.-4:00 and 6:00 P.M.Daily-7:00 A.M. and 9:00 A.M.Exposition of the Blessed Sacramentfollows the 7:00 A.M. Mass and continues
until 7:00. P.M.Confessions: % hour before Masses
Tuesday: Mass of Peace and Justice7:00 P.M.
Schedule fQT July and August
WEST WAREHAM
ST. ANTHONYMasses: Sunday-9:00. 10:30 A.M.
Saturday-7:00 P.M.Confessions: % hour before Masses
Schedule for July and August
WELLFLEETOUR LADY OF LOURDES
Masses: Sunday-8:00, 9:00, 10:00. 11:00 A.M.Saturday Eve.-6:00 and 7:30 P.M.Daily-7:30, 9:00 A.M.
TRUROSACRED HEART
Masses: Saturday-7:00 P.M.
, NORTH FALMOUTH (Megansett)IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
Masses: Sunday-8:00, 9:30. 11:00 A.M.Saturday Eve.-5:30 and 7:00 P.M.Daily-8:00 A.M. (9:00 A.M. Sat. only)
Confessions: % hour before Sunday Masses
WESTPORTST. GEORGE
Masses: Sunday-7:30, 8:45, 10:00, 11:30 A.M.Saturday Eve.-5:00 and 6:30 P.M.Daily-9:00 A.M.
WOODS HOLE
ST. JOSEPHMasses: Sunday-8:00, 9:30, 11:00 A.M.
Saturday Eve.-7:00 P.M.Daily-8:00 A.M. (9:00 A.M. Sat. only)
Confessions: % hour before Sunday Masses
Sponsor
Mass Schedule for Summer Season
MASHPEEQUEEN OF ALL SAINTS
Masses: Sunday-7:00, 8:30, 10:00, 11:30 A.M.Saturday Eve.-5:00 and 7:30 P.M.
Confessions: Saturday-4:15 - 5:00 P.M.
POCASSETST. JOHN THE EVANGELIST
Schedulo bogins June 22Masses: ..sunday-7:30, 8:30, 9:30,10:30,11:30 A.M.
Saturday Eve.-5:00 and 7:00 P.M.Daily-7:30 A.M.
Confessions: Saturday - 4:00 - 4:45 P.M. andfollowing 7:00 P.M. Mass for half-hour
PROVINCETOWNST. PETER THE APOSTLE
Masses: Sunday-7:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00 A.M.,7:00 P.M.
Saturday Eve.-7:00 P.M.Daily-7:00 A.M. and 5:30 P.M. (except
Saturday)Confessions: Saturday-4:00 - 5:00 P.M. and 6:45
P.M.
SANDWICHCORPUS CHRISTl
Masses: Sunday-8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00 A.M. and12 Noon
Saturday Eve.-5:00 and 7:00 P.M.Daily-9:00 A.M.
SAGAMOREST. THERESA
Masses: Sunday-8:30, 9:30, 10:30, 11:30 A.M.Saturday Eve.-6:00 P.M.
SOUTH DARTMOUTHST. MARY
Masses: Sunday-7:30, 9:00. 10:00, 11 :00 A.M. &. 7:30 P.M.
Saturday Eve.-5:15 P.M.Daily-7:00 A.M.Saturday only-8:00 A.M.
SOUTH YARMOUTHST. PIUS TENTH
Masses: Sunday-7:00, 9:00, 10:15, 11:30 A.M.5:00 P.M.
Saturday Eve.-4:00 and 7:00 P.M.Daily-7:00 and 9:00 A.M.(9:00 A.M. Mass Mon.-Fri. only)
BASS RIVEROUR LADY OF THE HIGHWAY
Masses: Sunday-8:30, 9:30, ·10:30 A.M.Daily-8:00 A.M. (July and Aug.)
'VINEYARD HAVENST. AUGUSTINE
Schedule begins June 14Masses: Sunday-8:00, 10:30 A.M.
Saturday Eve.-4:00 and 7:00 P.M.Daily-8:00 A.M. (Mon.-Fri.)
Confessions: Saturday-2:30 .·3:30P.M:
NORTH EASTHAMCHURCH OF THE VISITATION
Masses: Sunday-8:30, 9:30, 10:30, 11:30 A.M.Saturday Eve.-5:00 and 7:00 P.M.
OSTERVILLEOUR LADY OF THE ASSUMPTION
Masses: Sunday-7:00, 8:30, 10:00, 11:30 A.M.Saturday Eve.-5:00 and 7:30 P.M.Daily-7:00 A.M.
Confessions: Saturday-4:00 - 5:00 P.M.
SANTUITST. JUDE'S CHAPEL
Masses: Sunday-7:30, 9:00 and 10:30 A.M.Saturday-5:00 P.M.
Confessions: Saturday-4:15 - 5:00 P.M.
This Page Gladlyon
Directory of Churches and
MAnAPOlsm
ST. ANTHONYMasses: Sunday-7:30, 9:00. 10:00 (Folk Mass),
11 A.M. and 5:00 P.M.Satu·rday-8:00 A.M. - 4:30 and 7:00 P.M.Daily-8:00 and 9:00 A.M. (Mon.-Fri.)
NANTUCKETOUR LADY OF THE ISLE
Schedule starts weekend May 31
Masses: Sunday-7:30, 9:30, 11 :30 A.M. and
7:00 P.M.Saturday Eve.-5:00 and 7:00 P.M.
Daily-7:30 A.M. (Saturdays 9:00 A.M.)
Rosary before 7:30 A.M. Mass daily
SIASCONSET, MASS.UNION CHAPEL
Masses: Sunday-8:45 A.M. July and August
OAK BLUFFSSACRED HEART
Masses: Sunday-8:00, 9:15, 10:30 A.M.
Saturday Eve.-5:15 & 7:00 P.M.Daily-7:00 A.M.
ORLEANSST. JOAN OF ARC
Ma,!,3es: Sunday-8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00 A.M.
Saturday Eve.-5:00 and 7:00 P.M.Daily-8:00 A.M.
Our Lady of Perpetual Help Novena-WednesdayMorning Mass at 8:00 A.M.
Masses: Sunday-7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00,12:00 A.M. and 5:00 P.M.
Saturday Eve.-5:00 and 7:30 P.M.Daily-7:00 A.M. and 12:10 P.M.
YARMOUTHPORTSACRED HEART
Masses: Sunday-9:00 A.M. .Saturday Eve.-5:60 P.M.
MARIONST. RITA
Masses: Sunday-8:30, 10:00 A.M.
Saturday Eve.-5:00 P.M.Daily-8:30 A.M.
Friday-Benediction & Rosary 7:00 P.M.
EDGARTOWN
ST. -ELIZABETHSchedule begins June 14
Masses: Sunday-9:00, 10:30 A.M.Saturday Eve.-4:00 - 7:00 P.M.Daily-8:00 A.M. (Mon.-Fri.)Confessions-Saturday 2:30 - 3:30 P.M.
FALMOUTHST. PATRICK
Schedule effective weekend of June 28-29Masses: Sunday-7:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:15 and
5:30 P.M.Saturday Eve-5:30 and 7:00 P.M.Daily-7:00 A.M. - Saturdays 8:00 A.M.
FALMOUTH HEIGHTSST. THOMAS CHAPEL
Schedule effective weekend of June 28-29Masses: SundaY-8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:15 A.M.
Saturday-4:30 P.M.Daily-8:00 A.M.
HYANNISST. FRANCIS XAVIER
MerchantsThe
This Cape Cod
CHATHAMHOLY REDEEMER
Masses: Sunday-8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00 A.M.'Saturday Evening-5:00 P.M.Daily-8:00 A.M.
SOUTH CHATHAMOUR LADY OF GRACE
Masses: Sunday-8:30, 9:30, 10:30, 11:30 A.M.Saturday Eve.-7:00 P.M.
Daily-9:00 A.M.
EAST FALMOUTH
ST. ANTHONYMasses: Sunday-7:30, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00 A.M.
Saturday Eve.-5:00 & 7:30 P.M.,Daily-8:00 A.M.
EAST FREETOWNOUR LADY OF THE ASSUMPTION CHAPEL
Masses: Sunday-9:00,, 11:00 A.M.Saturday. ~ve.-6:30 P.M.Daily-8:00 A.M.
ONSETST. MARY-STAR OF THE SEA
I.1asses: Sunday-8:30, 9:30, 10:30, 11:30 A.M.Saturday-6:30 P.M.Daily 9:00 A.M.
Confessions: Saturday-3:30-4:30 P.M. and after6:30 P.M. Mass
CENTERVILLEOUR LO\DY OF VICTORY
Masses: Sunday-7:00, 8:15, 9:30, 10:45, 12 noonSat\lrday Eve.-5:00 and 7:30 P.M.Daily-7:00 and 9:00 A.M.
First Fridays-Ultreya-8:00 P.M.First Friday Masses at 7:00 and 9:00 A.M.
WEST BARNSTABLEOUR LADY OF HOPE
Masses: Sunday-8:45 and 10 A.M., Saturday Eve.-4:30 P.M.
CENTRAL VILLAGEST. JOHN THE BAPTIST
Masses: Sunday-8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00 A.M.Daily-9:00 A.M.
Sunday Masses Parish Hall: 9:30 and
10:30 A.M.
BREWSTER
OUR LADY OF THE CAPESchedule runs June 28 • Oct. 12
Masses: Sunday-8:30, 10:00, 11:30 A.M.Saturday Eve.-5:00 and 6:30 P.M.Daily-8:00 A.M. except Wed. 7:30 P.M.
Confessions: Saturday-4:00-5:00 P.M. and 6:00-6:30 P.M.
First Friday-7:00-7:30 P.M.
EAST BREWSTERIMMACULATE CONCEPTION
Schedule runs June 28 - Labor DayMasses: Sunday-8:00, 9:30, 11 :00 A.M.
Saturday Eve.-4:30 and 6:00- P.M.
BUZZARDS BAY
ST. MARGARETSMasses: Sunday-8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00
and 7:30 P.M.Saturday Eve.-5:00 and 6:30 P.M.Daily-8:00 A.M.
Confessions:, Saturday-4:00-5:00 and 7:00-8:00P.M.
Mass Schedule for Summer Season
Supreme Court
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the Ohio case back to the three:man lower court on May 27 forreconsideration in view of itsPennsylvania ruling.
"Since our Ohio plan is stillbefore the court, we are hopefUlof another favorable decision,"the archbifohop said. But he d€!elined further comment on theOhio case.
In denouncing the Pennsylvania decision, Archbishop Bernardin said it delivers "a seriousblow against free exercise .. .Itis disturbing insofar as it denieseducational benefits to childrenwhose parents are paying educational taxes. However, it is evenmore disturbing insofar as it reof1ects a new hostility towardreligion in our society."
The archbishop reaffirmed hisbelief in the need for religiouseducation "and in the need forcontinued existence of our Catholic S'Chools." And he echoedChief Justice Warren Burger'shope that the Court may foomeday reach a more tolerant v.iewtoward state aid to nonpubliceducation.
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CINCINNATI (NC) ~ "Hostility toward religion," is ref.lectedin the May 19 U. S. SupremeCourt ruling that most provisionsof a Pennsylvania nonpublic&Chool aid law are unconstit~
tional, Archbishop Joseph Bernardin of Cincinnati said recently.
The high court's decision upheld othe lending of textbooksto nonpublic schools. but rejected state aid in the form ofother auxiliary ·services, declaring such arrangements unconstitutional because they could leadto excessive entanglement between church and state.
Archbishop Bernardin, president of the National Conferenceof Catholic Bishops, denouncedthe ruling as "totally unacceptable," calling it a distortion ofthe First Amendment.
He issued his protest afterlearning that the Supreme Courthad set aside a lower federalcourt ruling, :issued last year.The .lower court had decided anOhio program for state aid tononpublic schools, similar to thePennsylvania law, was constitutional.
The U. S. Suprem'e Court sen~
...................
Fink said religious press associations worked hard to passthe 1974 law "because we knowhow vital this matter is forthe small, nonprofit religiouspress in his country."
In a reply to Shoemaker, Fink'said, "The only thing we ask isthat the President obey the lawthat is currently on the books."
The law passed last year, Finksaid, "mandates the additionalfunds.
"We believe that the Presidentis, in effect, ignoring the lawpassed by Congress and signedby him in 1974, choosing insteadto follow the (postal) law passedin 1970. Congress obviously feltthat the 1970 law 'was unsatisfactory or it would not haveamended it in 1974."
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The letter, from WhitneyShoemaker, acting assistant tothe director of public affair!"> inthe budget office, said thePresident believes that theshorter phasing·in period of newrates is adequate.
"To provide additional subsidies," Shoemaker wrote, "wouldonly delay the achievement ofa truly independent Postal Service and undermine the principleof self sufficiency" contained inthe 1970 postal reorganizationact.
Noting that the subsidy wouldbe paid for by the taxpayer,Shoemaker said: "The Presidentbelieves that it is inappropriateto require the taxpayer to paythese costs."
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Returns to AfricaMONTREAL (NC) - Cardinal
Paul Emile Leger, the formerarchbishop of Montreal who reosigned in 1967 to become a missionary among the poor and lepers of Africa, bas once again returned to his missions in Cameroon and Dahomey. The cardinal had been pastor of the parish of St. Madeline Sophie Barathere since last December.
Says Ford Ignores Postal Subsidy LawNEW YORK (NC)-The pres
ident of the Catholic Press Association, speaking for most U. S.religious press associations, hasaccused President Gerald Fordof "ignoring the law" in his refusal to budget $92 million fora subsidy for second class mailpostage, which affects mostreligious newspapers.
The SUbsidy was mandated bya 1974 law extending from 10to 16 years the phasing in ofnew, higher, second-class mailrates, according to CPA President John Fink. Fink andother religious press associationspokesmen had called on thePresident earlier to fund thesubsidy. But a letter from theOffice of Management andBudget said "The President be-
MARKS JUBILEE: Sister Bernadette Goulet of the Sisters of Charity of Quebec marksher golden jubilee in religious life with a gathering of her 10 living brothers and sistersat Mt. St. Joseph School, Fall River. From left, standing, Mrs. Josephine Perrault, ArthurFernand, Bernard, Napoleon, Julien, Joseph Goulet; seated, Sister Bernadett~, Sist~r
Ste. Madeleine, Miss Jeanne Goulet, Sister Marie Anne de L'Eucharistie. Two SIsters III
white are Little Sisters of th~ Poor.
Ethnicity Approved
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odorants. If you are as importantas Justus George Lawlor, youdon't have to provide documentation for your assertions. Ifthat's the way he says the newethnicists are, !!hen that's theway they are.
Is the new ethnicity, M!">. McCarthy asks, a right path or abyway? I wonder how manyother social phenomena are tobe subjected to such a simpleminded moral judgment? American society has been diversefrom the very beginning; it isstill diverse. And Ms. McCarthywonders whether that is a bypath or t'he "right" way.
Then the Lady Abigail turns toyour reluctant correspondent, relying on quotations from anewspaper article about a speechof mine. Now there is no reasonin the world why. she shouldfeel any need to refer to mywork, but at the risk of beingpetulant, I must say that if shedoes refer to it, the intellectuallyhonest thing to do would be terely on something more thannewspaper accounts of a lecture.I spent four yellrs working on atome, "Ethnidty in the UnitedStates." If Ms. McCarthy wantsto speak to my position, as she"puzzles" over the new ethnicity, she should at least do methe courtesy of reading the book.
Okay, so the Catholic intelc
lectuals don't want to read mybook. I write too much anyhow.Besides your typical armchairCatholic expert doesn't have thetime to pore over statisticaltables. But they could turn tothe new book by Nathan Glazerand Daniel P. Moynihan, "Ethnicity." It is a collection of essays by scholars from all overthe world. Maybe if the Catholiccritics of ethnicity realized thatthe book is published by theAmerican Academy of Arts andSciences and based on paperspresented at a meeting at Daedalus House, they will be impressed. If the American Academy approves ethnicity, maybeit will be all right for Catholicsto accept it.
Iy
REV.
ANDREW M.
GREELEY
There are distinct ativantages in the United States forbeing Jewish. One of the more important is that when amember of the Jewish cultural elite begins to speak nonsense, he gets clobbered from all sides. The people whowrite letters to "Commentary" magazine may not bethe most gentle and kindlysouls in the world, but atJcast they keep their friends .andneighbors honest. If you are alewish intellectual, you darnwell have to know what you're
Latins, Lawlor tells us, areurged to be ethnic by acting passionate, irrational, and lachrymose. The Irish expect to be bibulous, credulous, and uxorious.Slav!"> are supposed to be lusty,gutsy and liberated from de-
Chesterton SocietyOrganizes Here
SASKATOON (NC)-The yearold G.K. Chesterton Society isholding a series of organizational meetings this spring and fallin various North American cen~
ters, including Boston, Chicago,Los Angeles, Montreal, NewYork and Toronto.
Purpose of the meetings, ac- '<"~~~==""""'==~~==~
cording to Father Ian Boyd, ed- Montie Plum&ing &itor of a periodkal, "ChestertonReview," is to promote a critical Heating Co.interest in all aspects of Ches- Over 35 Yearsterton's work." Chesterton, a of Satisfied Serviceconvert to the Catholic faith, Reg. Master Plumber 7023was a poet, writer and critic who ~ JOSEPH RAPOSA, JR.exerted powerful innuence be· ~ 432 JEFFERSON STREETtween the two World Wars. He l Idied in 1936. ~ Fa I River 675·7496
...~':"".;.~.~":,.-.#~.~,:-#- -~~~.• _,.4"..'.~...:"..-:,.~...z;:;_;:: ..::;..-:..~.,~~~~
10 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., June 5, 1975
Declares Abigail McCart'hyMisunderstands Ethnicity
talking about.But if you are a Catholic in
tellectual, that's not necessary atall. You can write the most uninformed nonsense and get awaywith it, because Catholic intellectuals are sacred personagesabove and beyond criticism intheir own community. This en-
. abies them to write drivel andpretentious nonsense, and stillhave the pleasant feeling thatthey are saying sQmething important and significant. AbigailMcCarthy, a charming andgifted woman, I am told, hasrecently joined the ranks of theCatholic intelligentsia who arepontificating on the subject ofcthnicity.
The Lady Abigail grudginglyconcedes that there may be somegood things to say about ethnicity, but quotes with admiration the comments of JustusGeorge Lawlor on the ethnicrevival. No man to use mild andmodern language, he calls thenew ethnics "rebarbative andwitless"; and the ethnic traitsabout which he writes have beendredged up from the "cloaca ofprejudice and racist mythology."
That's the Way
I
Queries Cursory TreatmentOf Two Vital Subjects
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs., June 5, 1975 11
Jewish faith in his discussion ofreligious freedom is particul~rly
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self. This right of the humanperson to religious freedom isto be recognized in the constitutional law whereby society isgoverned. Thus it is to becomea civil right,"
I might add that Father Hardon's failure to mention the
II
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...BLESSES STATUE OF PATRONESS OF NO. DARTMOUTH PARISH: Most Rev.
Daniel A. Cronin, S.T.D., Bishop of the Diocese blesses the new statue of St. Julie Billiart,prior to the administration of the Sacrament of Confirmation to 207 young men and women of the parish. Left to right: Rev. John F. Hogan, pastor; the Ordinary of the Diocese;Rev. John J. Oliveira, secretary to Bishop Cronin; Rev. William P. Blottman, assistant atSt. Mary's, So Dartmouth; Rev. John J. Steakem, assistant at St. Julie'$; Rev. Mr. Edmund Rego, a'deacon of the Fall River Diocese; Rev. Msgr. Arthur G. Considine, pastor ofSt. Mary's, So. Dartmouth; George Ambrosio, Lawrence Weaver and Joseph Miniz, ushersat the ceremonies.
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may govern themselves according to their own norms .. ,"
Both Father Murray and Msgr.Pavan are very dear on thispoint-as i!'> the Declaration it·self.
In summary, I am extremelyuneasy about Father Hardon'streatment of religious freedom.He talks about it almost exclusively in terms of the Fights andprivileges of the Church, whereas the Council's Declaration discussed it primarily as a fundamental human right (of all people everywhere) which "has itsfoundation in the very revealedword of God and by reason it-
This is not to say that reli·gious "establishment" is alwaysand everywhere to be condemndas a matter of principle. But itshould be noted that when thebishops of the world debatedthis matter at Vatican lI, theytook great pains not to cananizethe principle of "establishment."Whereas Father Hardon's treatment of this subject leave theimpression that preferentialtreatment for the CatholicChurch is, objectively speaking,the "ideal" and non-preferentialtreatment is an exception which,though it can be tolerated, isobjectively unlawful, Vatican JIseems to say the opposite.
The Council's Declaration 0:1
Religious Freedom says thatwhile preferential treatment (or"establishment") is somethingthat may happen, by way of exception "in particular circum·stance," it is not required as <J
matter of principle. Father Murray's commentary on the Declaration's treatment of this problem reads in part: "... the Council wished to insinuate that establishment, at least from theCatholic point of view, is a matter of historical circumstance,not of theological doctri'ne. Forall these reasons the text dealswith the issue in conditionalterms,"
Msgr. Pietro Pavan, Rector ofthe Lateran University in Rome(who worked closely with FatherMurray on the Declaration onReligious Liberty), says substantially the same thing in his owncommentary on the Declaration("Commentary on the Documentsof Vatican II," Volume IV, Her·der and Herder).
So much for the separation ofChurch and state.
I woul~ also disagree with therestrictions which Father Hardon has arbitrarily placed on thescope of the application of theDeclaration on Religious Freedom. He says, for example, that"... Catholicism now speaks ofthe religious liberty not only ofprofessed Catholics but of allChr\stians. They share a common bond in their allegiance tothe Savior; and since the turn ofthe 20th century t-hey haveshared in great measure a common suffering for this allegianceat the hands of those who mistakenly 'suppose that s'omehowgood Christians cannot be goodcitizens."
divine law, the claim that sheshould be established as the rcligion of the state. Her claim i:ifreedom, nothing more.
No Canonization
Fundamental RightThis seems ta suggest that
religous freedom is to be grantedonly or especially to Christians.The, DeClaration on ReligiousFreedom clearly states, however,that the human person (everyhuman person, including nonChristians as well as atheists)has a right to religious freedom'and that religious bodies (all religious bodies, not just theChristian churches) "rightfullyclaim freedom in Qrder that they
By
MSGR.
GEORGE G.
HIGGINS
I cannot and do not claim any particular expertise intheology or catechetics. For this reason, I hesitate to takeissue with a new book by Father John A. Hardon, S.J.,"The Catholic Catechism," published by Doubleday with aPrefatory Note by John Cardinal Wright, Prefect of theVatican's' Congregation ofthe Clergy. In my opinion,however, Father Hardon's "contemporary Catechism of theteachings of the CatholicChurch," leaves much to be de-
~ired in its cursory treatment oftwo subjects in particular: Separation of Church and State andReligious Liberty.
Under the first of these twoheadings, Father Hardon takesthe position, if I have understoodhim correctly, that the RomanCatholic Church "objectively"and as a matter of principle'.' deserves preferential status beforethe law. He also says that whilethe Church, for pragmatic reasons, can tolerate deviationsfrom. this principle, s:,e nevertheless considers it objectively"unlawful to place various formsof divine worship on the samefooting as the true religion." Itwould appear that the latterquote is excerpted from PopeLeo XIII's encyclical, "Immortale DeL"
I take it that Father Hardonis restating the old thesishypothesis argument which thelate Msgr. Joseph Fenton andthe late Father Francis Connellheld to so firmly in their celebrated controversy during the1950's with Fr. John Courtney
.Murr~y. I realize that numerouspapal documents (in addition tothose which Father Hardonquoted) can be cited in supportof this argument. It is impor·tant to note, however, that anumber of more recent papaldocuments and conciliar statements at least appear to renounce any claim to preferentialtreatment for the CatholicChurch.
In his commentary on theVatican Council's Declaration onReligous Freedom, Father JohnCourtney Murray, cites for example, the following statementby Pope Paul VI addressed to agroup of political leaders: "Whatdoes the Church ask of you today? In one of the major textsof the Council she has told you:She asks of you nothing butfreedom-the freedom to believeand to preach her faith, thefreedom to love God and toserve Him, the freedom to liveand to bring to men her messageof life,"
Father Murray, whose soholarly input into the Declarationon Religious Freedom is a matter of Record, interprets thisstatement as "the renunciationby the Church of a condition oflegal privilege in society," Hesays that the Church does notmake, as a matter ofrjght or of
Jessamyn West ChroniclesFirst Justice for Indians
Installation ceremonies forWomen's Guild officers will beheld at a 6::30 p.m. Mass Wednesday, June 18, followed by abanquet at Rochambeau Restaurant, Portsmouth. Reservationsmay be made with Joann'e Polak.
"Rays of Sum;hine" will present "The Story of Roger Williams," a bicentennial musicalprogram, at 8:15 p.m. Saturday,June 14 in the school. Chorusmembers will previously sing atthe 7 p.m. Mass.
Holy Rosary SodaHsts will attend devotions in the church at1:30 p,m. Sunday, followed at2 p,m. by a ;meeting in theschool.
ST. HEDWIG,NEW BEDFORD
The Senior Citizens Club willsponsor a card ·party at 2 o'clockon Sunday afternoon, June 8 inthe church hall. Refreshmentswill be served.
ST. PIUS X,SOUTH YARMOUTH
The Women's GlJ'ild will holdits a,nnual communion supperTuesday, June 10, following 5p.m. Mass. A social hour (rom6 to 7 and the supper will takeplace at Elks' Lodge, BearsesWay, Hyannis.
ST.- LOUIS,FALL RIVER
The Women's Guild wiU holda rummage sale and fIea marketfrom 10 A.M. to 3 P.M. on Saturday in the church hall on EagleSt.
Donations may be brought Lothe hall between 4 and 7 P.M.tomorrow.
HOLY NAME,FALL RIVER
New Women's Guild officersare Mrs. Deborah Dean, president; Mrs. Norma Nicoletti,vice-president; Mrs. Sheila Feitelberg, secretary; Mrs. JoyceDesmarais, treasurer. They willbe installed at a da'te to be announced.
The 1923 Club dinner dancewill take place at 7 p.m. Saturday, June 21 in the parish hall.
A graduation Mass for 40eighth graders will be celebratedat 7:30 p.m. Monday, May 9. Allparishioners are invited.
The annual parish family picnic is scheduled for Sunday,June 29 at St. Y'incent de PaulCamp, Westport.ST. STANISLAUS,FALL RIVER
Where TheEntire Family
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FORRESERVATIONS
PHONE
(617) 675-7185or
(617) 673-0821
The Parish ParadePublicity chairmen of Darish organizations
are ISked to submit news items for thiscolun:n to lhe Anchor, P. O. Box 7, FallRiver, 02722. Name of city or town shouldbe l~.cluded, as well as full dates of allactivities. Please send news of future ratherthan past events.
'OUR LADY OF ANGELS,FALL RIVER
The Children of Mary willhold a cake sale following allMasses the weekend of June 28and 29.
Holy Name Society memberswill attend a breakfast meeting fallowing 8 a.m. Mass Sunday, June 22.
The Feast of Espirito Santowill be celebrated by parishioners this weekend.ST. JOSEPH,FALL RIVER. The Women's Guild will spon
sor an Organ Concert by Carolyn Vadeboncoeur and the Low-·ryettes at 7:30 on Sunday evening, June 15 in the Auditoriumof the Diman Vocational HighSchool, Stonehaven Rd., FallRiver. Proceeds will be for thehenefit of the renovation projectof the church.
Tickets are $3.00 and may beobtained by caNing Dorothy Jeffat 2-4433 or the rectory at3-1123.OUR LADY OF PERPETUALHELP, NEW BEDFORD
New officers for the Our Ladyof Perpetual Help Society areMrs. Anna Galanek, president;Mrs. Genene Tracz, vice-president; Mrs. Pauline Amaral andMrs. Pauline Waclaurik, secretaries; Mrs. Bertha Fraga, treasurer.
Members will observe the society's silver jubilee the weekend of June 21 and 22 with adance Saturday night at PolishAmerican Veterans Hall, 1680Acushnet Ave., and a Mass ofThanksgiving at 11 a.m. Sunday,followed at 1 p.m. with a banquet at Thad's Steak House, 1313Acushnet Ave. Dance chairmanis Mrs. Tracz and Mrs. Galanekis in charge of banquet arrangements.SACRED HEART,FALL RIVER
Marking the First Friday ofJune and the 300th anniversaryof the apparition of the SacredHeart to St. Margaret Mary, allday exposition of the BlessedSacrament will take place tomorrow from 8 a.m. Mass to 6 p,m.,
. when members of ,the First Friday Club of Fall River wiH attend a special Mass concludingthe observance.
SCHOLAR: Susan L. Costa, 1971 graduate of Dominican Academy, Fall River, hasjust earned behavioral science degree at ~IT, spending junior year in Francewhere she studied theologyat the Parish Catholic Institute. In September she willbegin three-year~aster ofDivinty program at WestonCollege School of Theology,with a cross-registration atHarvard Divinity School.Her eventual aim is campusministry.
OUR LADY OF MT. CARMEL,SEEKONK
Co-sponsored by the Women'sGuild, the Holy Name Societyand the Knights of Columbus, afamily communion Sunday willtake place on Father',s Day,June 15. A dinner will follow10:30 a.m. Mass at which newofficers for the guild and theHoly Name Society will be installed.
They include, for the guild,Mrs. Mary Oliver, president;Mrs. Rose Soucy, vice-president;Mrs. Eleanor Whitney, secretary; Mrs. Linda Hall, treasurer.For the Holy Name Society theyare John Korkuc, president;George McGee, vice-president;William O'Neill, secretary; Antonio Alves, treasurer.
Tickets are available frommembers of participating organizations or at the rectory andreservations will close tomorrow.ST. JOSEPH,AITLEBORO
Mass and ~ommunion of reparation, followed by a litany andconsecration to the Sacred Heartwill take place at 9 a.m. and6:30 p.m. tomorrow, .the feastof the Sacred Heart.
Knights of the Altar w.ill holda family picnic at Finberg Fieldbeginning at 1 p.m. Sunday,June 8.
New officers of the parishcouncil are Robert Dubeau,president; Evelyn Boucher, vicepresident; Doris Dubuc, secretary; Rene Dubuc, financial secretary.ST. PATRICK,FALMOUTH
Rev. John Mulvehill, director ofthe Confraternity of ChristianDoctrine for the Boston Archdiocese, will speak at the annualcomhlUnion 'breakfast of theWomen's Guild, to follow 8:45a.m. Mass Sunday, June 8 andto be held at Coonamessett Inn.Members may bring guests andtickets are obtainable from MissAnne Viei~~, t.~,h:phone 548-2521or Mrs. William Drew, 548-8874.
mine that those who perpetratedthe murders shall be brought totrial. The very idea is astonishing to most whites. How shouldthe killing of Indians possibly beconsidered murder?
The trial is rich in dramaticdevelopments, in sudden turns,with great surprises. But thewhite jury brings in verdicts ofmurder 'in the first degree, andthe death sentence is pronouncedon the four defendants. In duecourse, it is carried out on threeof the men, hut the youngest isspared by the intervention of thegovernor.
AU this, although carefullyput together, is only the framework of the novel. Its substanceis the effect of the fateful eventson the people of Fall Creek.Miss West has fashioned characters with complication anddepth. They Hve for us, and wefeel with them as they undergoa scarifying ordeal.
No review of the book shouldfail to take note of Hannah,Caleb Cape's fiery, red-headeddaughter, whose blossoming intowomanhood occurs as the grimmain business of the novel proceeds.
Mention should be made, too,of the Christian faith of thepeople of Fall Creek. It is fundamentalist and strong and evidenced throughout. This factmakes it all the more tragic theinhumanity in one respect whichhas a hold on some of them.
Fantasy, Fun
Passing on to P. G. Wodehouse's novel, "The Cat-nappers"(Simon ·and Schuster, 630 FifthAve., New York, N. Y. 10020.190 pages. $6.95), one enters arealm of fantasy and fun. Theonly non-funny thing about itis that it is the last Wodehousebook, since the author died earlythis year.
It is fitting that in his finalwork Wodehouse brought backtwo of his best characters, BertieWooster, the marvelously sillyman about town and Jeeves,Bertie's incomparable manservant. The old master, whosehand never lost its cunning, putsthis pair through some hilariouspaces.
Bertie's doctor advises him toget some fresh country air, soBertie and Jeeves repair to acottage in the somnolent villageof Maiden EggesfOl:d, which iscertain to be a haven of peace.
Of course, it is not. Bertie immediately gets involved in conspiratorial doings, mostly concerned with a cat. It seems thatthis cat is the .inseparable stablemate of a nervy race horse.
Bertie's Aunt Dahlia has beta large sum on that horse's chiefrival in an imminent race. If thecat can be spirited away, thefirst horse will go to pieces andbe unfit for competition. Bertieis directed to purloin the cat.
There are other complicationsas well, but Wodehouse tripsthrough the complications withnary a stuinble or misstep.
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., June 5, 1975
By
RT. REV.
MSGR.
JOHN S.
KENNEDY
In 1824, Indiana was the scene of an unprecedentedmurder trial. Four white men were charged with the killing of nine Indians. They were found guilty, and threeof them were hanged. The fourth received a last-minutereprieve. The trial was unprecedented in that it marked the first time in Americanhistory that white men werebrought to justice and executedfor the killing of Indians.
The incident is the nucleus ofJessamyn West's new novel,
12
"The Massacre at Fall Creek"(Harcourt Brace Jovanivich, 757Third Ave., New York, N. Y.10017. 373 pages. $8.95). Four ofthe five historical figures whoappear in the novel have veryminor roles. The fifth, ColonelJohn Johnston, Indian agent forthe Northwest Territory, is morea moving force than a leadingactor. All the other charactersare Miss West's inventions.
Fall Creek is a tiny settlement in the wilderness. Its population numbers no more than10 or 12 white families. Theseare people who have made, andsometimes fought, their wayfrom the East, and along theway they have had bad. experiences with Indians. .
An influential man in thesettlement is Caleb Cape, who isa part-time preacher. There isno church in the settlement, butpeople come on Sunday' toCape's house, where he conductsan informal religious service ·forthem. He is a man of peace.
A rabid anti-Indian attitude isrepresented by George Benson,who, as a boy, saw his grandfather murdered hy Indians.Benson is always raging againstthe Indians and urging ruthlessextermination of them.
Indians Ambushed
Two Seneca braves, threesquaws, and ·four Indian chi·ldrenvisit the area, long familiar tothe.in, and set up a temporarycamp. They represent no menacein fact, but Benson is infuriatedby their presence. He a,nd threeother FaH Creek men ambushthe Indian men, then go to thecamp and slaughter the womenand children.
Caleb Cape is horrified by thisbutchery. He is also fearful thatit will bring down reprisal onthe little community. There areIndians in large numbers to theNorth, and it is likely that,learning of the fate of the nine,they wiH come in force andwreak revenge.
So Caleb sets out on a 200mile journey to inform the Indianagent, Colonel Johnston, of whathas happened and to get him topersuade the Indians not to raidthe settlement.··-'Fh'e'·ft!cf~r"lMMritres "d~tet;
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., June 5, 1975 13
t KNOW YOUR FAITH tEastern Orthodoxy Tearing Down the Walls to • •
Protestant-Catholic ,Ecumenism
RELIGIONS IN AMERICA: "We all believe that thereis and can be only One Church, the Catholic Church of theCreeds, yet we are confronted with the existence of manyChurches,whose members we recognize as brothers andsisters in Christ." Cincinnati's "spires of. Eighth Street"show the diversity of religious exper1ence in America.They include St. Peter in Chains Roman Catholic cathedral(left), a Presbyterian church and a t~mple. NC Photo.
BY MARY MAHER
Three years ago I spent thesummer in a New York Episcopalian seminary with EasternOrthodox Ohristians. It was agood and painfully insightfultime. What I thought were myliberal ecumenical gestures cameunder fire. We got to levels ofstrenuous dialogue that made myformer ecumenical ventures,such as dr.inking coffee with persons of varying traditions, seemrather cosmetic. I believe that itwas the truth about our differences during that time together that made us genuinelylove one another.
Yet the similarity betweenEastern Ort,hodox and RomanCatholics -is great. By and large,we do not differ theologicallyon most doctrinal matters. Theystress a sacramental, liturgicallife as we do, but obviouslywithin the needs of their culture.Their canon law, especially regarding marriage and celibacy,differs from ours in RomanCatholicism. Their liturgies aremore solemn than ours, yet therite is very similar. Their use ofincense, gold vessels and richlydecorated vestments makes liturgy most majestic. During Massthey do not share a great dealcommunally with each other; therite is centered on God beyond
IIBy REV. AVERY DULLES, S.J.
Father Avery Dulles, S.J., isa -professor of theology at theCatholic University of America.A member of the WoodstockCollege faculty since 1960, healso taught at the GregorianUniversity, Fordham University,Princeton Theological Seminary,Union Theological Seminary andWeston College, serving as visiting professor at the last three.Father Dulles is the author ofmore than 250 works. In 1970,he received the Catholic Theological Society of America'sCardinal Spellman Award for hisachievements in theology andcontributions to theologicalstudies.'
WHY SEPARATION OCCURRED
From the New Testament itis evident that the Church, asviewed by Paul and by John, isto be a sign of the unity of allthose who believe in Christ andconfess His name. In our time,however, this dream is a far cryfrom the reality. Christianity issplit by quarrels that occurredmany centuries ago. Even thoughthe issues over which the communities originally separated arein some cases no longer vital, noeffective method of overcomingthe inherited divisions has yetbeen devised.
The present state of Protestant-Catholic relations will beconsidered in this article. Thesplit goes back to the 16th century. Protestantism, generally
and therefore its tone is verytranscendent.
Spirituality of Hope'J1he Eastern Christians have
an ikon spirituality that is veryfull of hope. This spiritualitypresents man as a likeness (ikon)of his creator. Man is made andredeemed in the image of God.Ikons which are liturgically important in their churches aremore than art; they are not to be
, confused with Western statues.They are believed to be participations in the victory of Jesuswhich remind man of his gloryand his salvation. There is ajubilant sense of real victory inEastern Christianity. The mission of Jesus was not a touchand-go affair, partially complete.He did all; it was man who hasbeen less than faithful in his response to the Lord.
It is difficult for us who arcWesterns to grasp the full implications of the Eastern Christian belief in man. We have longstressed the intellectural side ofman as that which is -his greatest faith support. How often weuse . the following questions interchangeably: "What do youthink?" and "What do you believe?" Eastern Christians tendto be realistic about faith involving the whole man-his feelingsanguishes, joys as well as his
Turn to Page Fourteen
IIspeaking, stems from Martin Luther and from thinkers influenced by him. Luther had no desire to found a new Church, buthe wished to reform the oneChurch .in which he had· beenraised. He protested against certain abuses, such as the sale of·indulgences, and set forth somechallenging ideas concerning ourrelationship in faith to JesusChrist. On the basis of his reading of Paul's letters, he becameconvinced that we were to besaved not by good works but bygrace alone, and that consequently the essential was tomake a firm act of faith in Christas the source of forgiveness. Heargued, likewise, that all Christian doctrines should he provedby recoilrse to the Bible. In time,Lutheranism came to be sum·marized in certain brief formulassuch as "grace alone," "Christ·alone," and "the Bible alone."Because of their doctrinal positions, the Lutheran Churchescame to be separated from thePope. Many of them also organized themselves without bishops.
Break-offsIn the 16th and 17th centuries
there were bitter disputes overthe theological issues raised by
.Luther and his colleagues. TheCatholic Church rejected manyof Luther's teachings. Some other Protestant groups-such asthe Calvinists and the Anglicans-accepted them with modifications of their own. As a resultof new break-otfs in the next
Turn to Page.Fourteenl' _ • .:.<01." • ,,?.,. ~ •. -'~' ... ' \ ,.., ..,." .• ~,."",\", , -. "
BY LEONEL L. MITCHELL
Father Leonel L. Mitchell isan assistant professor of liturgyin the Department of Theologyof the University of Notre Dame.He is a priest of the EpiscopalChurch and serves as a Canonof St. James Cathedral (Episcopal) in South Bend, Ind. AtNotre Dame he is the chairmanof the theology and liturgy summer sessions. Father Mitchell isa frequent contributor to "Worship," "Studia Liturgia," and"Anglican Theological Review."
Every Sunday literally millionsof Christian people throughoutthe world join in the ringing affirmation of the Nicene Creed."We believe in one Holy Catholicand Apostolic Churah," yet theyare not themselves' obviouslymembers of a single Church.Many of those who profess their,faith in the One Church of JesusChrist will be Roman Catholicsmany others will be members ofone of the Eastern OrthodoxChurches, still others will beLutherans, Anglicans, or members of the Reformed or Presbyterian Churches, yet all can·sider themselves members of theHoly Catholic Church of JesusCh11ist. It is on'ly because wehave grown up with this situation that we do not consider. itboth paradoxical and absurd.
For many centuries Christiansfaced the problem of Christiandisunity by ignoring it. OtherChristians officially did not exist.They were false disciples, heretics, schismatics, idolators,wicked perverters of the Faithand of the faithful. If they couldnot actuaUy be eliminated, theycould at least be geographicallysegregated--: C{ltholic Italy, Orthodox Greece, Lutheran Sweden, Anglican England.
From the very begining, however, the United States has hadto deal with members of almostevery conceivable ChristianChurch living side by side in thesame country. Often our veryproximity has served only toharden differences and breeddistrust. It has also forced us towork together on a number ofpractical local concerns.
New Day of Ecumenism
The establishment of theWorld Council of Churches in1947 marked the institutionalfruition of the EcumenicalMovement. Even those who joyously participated in its founding recognized that there wasreal incongruity in a WorldCouncil of Churches which didnot include the two largestChristian Churches, the RomanCatholic and Russian Orthodox.In the 1960s the Roman Catholic Churoh, through the actionof Pope John XXIIl and VaticanCouncil II, officially committeditself to the Ecumenical' Movement, although without joiningthe World Council. This has inaugurated a new and radicallydifferent day on the ecumenicalscene.
Today, not only are Christianchup;hes ~or~.i~~ .~ogether on
common social action and community concerns, they are beginning to wrestle at all levels withthe hard theological questionsraised by divisions of the Church.National and international theologicalcommissions meet todeal "head on" with the theological issues separating Christians.It is not simply that RomanCatholics are talking theologywith Protestants. They are Catholic-Orthodox, Anglican-Orthodox, Lutheran-Reformed, Lutheran-Anglican dialogues. There are'also discussions between theEastern and the OrientalChurches which have been outof communion since the fifthcentury.
Finally Talking
If this were all that was happening, it would be significant,,but it is only one aspect. Localcongregations and individualChristians have begun to talkwith their opposite numbers inother Churches. l.f their conversations are 'not always prOductive, there is not need for discouragement. At least they aretalking! The separation of Eastern and Western Christendomhas lasted 900 years, the separation caused by the Reformationover 400 years ago. Deep inherited feelings are involved. Theattitudes of many generations,even more than theological differences, keep us apart.
My own situation as an Epis-. .. ,
copal priest teaching in the theology department of Notre Dameand writing for Roman Catholicnewspapers and magazines is avisible fruit of the new understanding that exists amongChristians of different Churches.Still, that very statement exposesthe heart of the problem. We allbelieve that there is and can beonly One Church, the CatholicChurch of the Creeds, yet we areconfronted with the existence ofmany Churches, whose memberswe recognize as brothers andsisters in Christ. It was theprayer of Christ at the LastSupper that we might all be one,·as He and the Father are one.It is toward this goal that we anmust press.
Willing to CooperateFull participation in the Ecu
menical Movement does notTurn to Page Fourteen
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14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., June 5, 1975
Protestant-Catholic Ecum'enism
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Tearing Walls ...Continued from Page Thirteen
mean that we believe that thedifferences between ChristianChurches are trivial, nor that"it doesn't matter what you bcIieve." It means that we are will·ing to work together in lovewith our fellow Christians,whenever, this is possible, and,that we will try to understandwhat it is that keeps us apart inother areas.
We cannot do this by seekinga least common denominator, byabandoning everything uponwhich we cannot agree, nor canwe negotiate our differences onthe model of a labor contract.Catholics cannot for example,give up belief in the Eucharisticsacrifice if Lutherans will acceptthe Papacy. To state this sobaldly is to show its impossibility. What we can do is to lookat the riches of Christ preservedand shown forth in otherchurches and share with themthe riches of our own tradition.
Certainly Protestants havemuch to learn from the Catholictradition: the liturgy, the sacraments, the joy of the Christianme. On the other hand Catholicscan learn from 400 years ofLutheran and, Anglican experience with a vernacular liturgyand Communion in both kinds.Baptists and Methodists havemuch to contribute in the fieldof preaching and ext~mpore
prayer. We can all learn fromthe Eastern Churches about theprayer of the heart and the lifeof the spirit. The list can beendlessly mUltiplied.
Perhaps, the agenda of thepresent generation of theologiansi<; to strip away the irrelevancies,so that we can expose what arethe real divisions which keep usfrom being one in Christ. Certainly, our agenda as Christiansmust be to create the environment of love and trust in whichwe can work together. The magnificent thing is that in this century God has removed the scalesfrom our eyes so that we can seethe working of the Spirit amongCbristian brethren with whomwe are not visibly united, andHe has put it into our hearts towork together to tear down thewalls we have built between us.
tians underwent. It is not a distant history either. There wereEastern Christians present thatsummer who were still bitterabout having to attend a RomanCatholic Church on Sunday aftertheir own liturgy so "they wouldget to a legal Mass."
Major Difference
The major area of differencebetween Orthodox and RomanCatholics centers around beliefin the Pope. They do not holdthe Pope to be the supreme pontiff of the Catholic churches.They hold that the Bishop ofRome is the patriarch of theWest, not the Bishop over bishops. Each church is subject toits local bishop; the main see isConstantinople, known. as "thefirst among equals." This theological issue is so deeply mixedwith political considerationsthrough the centuries that it isenormously difficult to knowwhen the churches were usingthe state or vice versa. The ecumenical venture of sifting outtlhe religious and cultural implications of our differences willnot be as easy as sorting applesfrom oranges. It will ask mucheffort (already advanced) on thepart of theologians and Christian neighbors alike. It will askan understanding of differences,I suspect, that is not unlike thatbetween two persons beforemarriage.
The greatest part of ecumenism will be healing the feelingsthat have widened the separation from our Orthodox brothersmore than doctrine ever could.It m,ay be time, as Pope Johnsuggested, to ask forgivenessfor not having understood thefree choice of other men. Thehopeful words of Kyr Maximos,who wrot~as patriarch of Antioch; will help us along: "WebelieV'e that Christians wouldlove one another more if they'knew one another better, thattheir mutual antagonisms arethe fruit more of ignorance thanof ill-will."
Continued from Page Thirteenmind: Affection is an essentialpart of their faith process.
It .is enlightening (and pain·ful) to know how the Westernchurches have assumed 'thatChristianity' is Western. Thehistory of this error is long andfilled with horror stori~s of thepersecution that Orthodox Chris-
MAJESTY IN LITURGY: "Their (Eastern Orthodox)use of incense, golden vessels and richly decorated vestments make liturgy most majestic." In the Church of theHoly Sepulchre in Jerusalem, Orthodox churchmen in richrobes carry rose petals from Calvary to the Tomb of Christ.The church is shared by five denominations. NC Photo.
Eastern Orthodoxy
is slow, and requires great patience. The whole enterprisecould be undercut by hastyagreements that would latcrprove unsound or unacceptableto the respective communions.'It would be unrealistic to expectthat the centuries-long heritageof misunderstanding and disagreement could be overcome ina decade by a'few dedicated theologians. But it seems certainthat, if there is a general willto restore the broken unity ofthe Christian Churches, thesescholarly eUorts will prove crucially import'ant.
The success of ecumenical theology could be thwarted not onlyby the impatience and carelessness of theologians but a,lso byother factors. For any practicalresults to follow, it is necessaryfor the theological effort to besupported by genuine eagernesson the part of the official leadership of the Churoh and the,faithful themselves. Such eagerness is not easily achieved. Onlyat certain r.aTe moments, such asthe period from World War IIto the end of the Second VaticanCouncil, has ecumenism beenrelatively popul'ar. Very oftenthe the ecumenical theologianmust be resigned to the fact thathe will be regarded with mistrustand suspicion; he will be suspected of seeking compromiseat tohe expense of truth. Butecumenism cannot let itself behalted by such false suspicions.Convinced that Christ wills theovercoming of dissension amongHis followers, ecumenists willdoggedly pursue their efforts toheal and to reconcile.
sideration, in this 'article weshall ,focus on the Anglican·Rorn..an Catholic and the Luther'an-Roman Catholic. What arethese dialogues seeking to accomplish, and what have theyactually achieved?
The Anglican-Roman Catholi::dialogue, through its International Commision, has pro·duced two remarkable consensus statements, one on the Eucharist, the other on Ministryand' Ordination. As a result oftheir common investigations,both the Anglican and the Catholic members of the Commissionhave sta,ted their conviction thatthey could agree on all essen·tial points of doctrine in thesetwo areas, and that consequently there is no good reason whythe doctrines of the Eucharist,Ministry and Ordination, so bitterly disputed since the 16th
, century, should be obstacles tofull communion between thesetwo major traditions. This isnot ,to say, of course, that thereare not other doctrinal barriers,such as, perhaps, the papacy orMariology. Thus continued dialogue is needed, and is actuaUyoccurring.
Study ReportsThe Anglican-Roman Catholic
Consultation in the United Statehas published important consensus statements that either paraBel or comment upon those ofthe International Commission. Ithas moved ahead of the International Commission in producing a general statement on thenature and conditions of doctrinal agreement.
T.lle Lutheran-Roman CatholicIntetnational Study Commissionproduced in 1972, as a result offive years' work, a far-rangingreport entitled, "The Gospel andthe Church." This report dea,ltprimarily with the nature of theGospel and its authority overthe Church, but it also took upquestions such as the mutualrecognition of ministries and thepossibility of allowing occasionalacts of intercommunion betweenthe Catholic and LutheranChurches.
The American-Lutheran-RomanCatholic dialogue has producedsince 1965 a series of five vol-,urnes of position papers andcommon statements. These volumes deal respectively with theNicene Creed as Dogma, withBaptism, with the Eucharist,with the Ministry, and with thePapacy. The dialogue is presently studying the teaching authority in the Church and particularly the question of papal infallibility. In the issues so far treated,the dialogue has succeeded inclearing up many lang-standingdisagreements and reachingvery significant partial agreements.
The Lutheran·Catholic consensus statements in the UnitedStates have sought to point outnot only the agreements reached.but also the issues on which,for one reason or another, doctrinal differences seem to remain.
Beware of ImitationsThe Anglican-Roman Catholic
and the Lutheran-Roman Catholic conversations are typical ofmany bilateral discussions nowtaking place not only betweenCatholics and Protestants butbetween other denominations.The work of theological dialogue
Continued from Page Thirteenfew centuries, Christianity in theWest was transformed into atragic spectacle of hundreds ofquarreling sects.
Early in the 20th century, primarily under Protestant auspices,a movement of reunion waslaunched. This "ecumenicalmovement," as it came to becalled, resulted in the foundation of the World Council ofChurches (1948). Hundreds ofProtestant denominations, aswell as the Orthodox, churches,belong to this 'body, but theCatholic Church is not yet amember.
Pope John XXIU and VaticanCouncil II (1962-65) committedthe Catholic Church officially tothe ecumenical movement. TheCouncil's Decree on Ecumenismcalls upon Catholics to abandonl'hoeir defensive attitudes and tojoin wholeheartedly with otherChristian groups in 'promotingthe unity willed by Christ for hisChurch. As a result of thismandate, Catholic theologiansin many parts of the world havebeen working with their Protestant counterparts to overcomethe divisions brought about bythe Reformation.
"Conversion of Heart"For those who participate i!)
the ecumenical movement, theright attitudes are all-important.The Council speaks of a "conversion of heart" as being the"soul of the ecumenical movement." This change of outlookdemands in the first place thatwe should try to appreciatewhatever is good in communities other than our own, thanking God for what thoe grace ofthe Holy Spirit has done forthem and through them. Secondly, this ecumenical conversiondemands that we should be humble about our own community.The Council freely acknowledgesthat the Cathoiic Church, in itsactual history, has been very 'imperfect and has been partly responsible for some of the divisions within, Christianity. "Christsummons the Church, as shegoes her pilgrim way,. to thatcontinual reformation of whichshe always has need, insofar' asshe is an institution of men hereon earth" ("Decree on Ecumenism," 6).
On the other hand, we shouldavoitl the error of idealizing other branches of 'Christianity anddemeaning our own. To preserveand defend the good things inour heritage is a Christian andecumenical respOllSibility. Believers of any denomination shouldseek to build on this heritagerather than to dissolve it. Itwould be a false ecumenism forRoman Catholicism or any otherChristian communion to abandon what 'is sacred to it forthoe sake of unity. Whatever eachChurch has of truth and holinessit holds in trust for the good ofall Christians and, in the lastanalysis, for the good of thewhole world.
DialoguesFollowing the directives of
the second Vatican Council,many Catholic theologians since1965 have been seeking withtheir Protes.tant counterparts toovercome, through dialogue, thedoctrinal differences that sepa·rate their respective Churches~
Among the many dialogues wemay single out for special con-
Duke Ellington DesignatedAs Apostle to All Faiths
Vatican Radio Soothes Motorists CaughtIn Roman Traffic lams
NAUTICAL MEETING: Area board members of Upper Cape Confraternity of Christian Doctrine hold annual dinner meeting at Sacred Heart parish hall, Oak Bluffs, afterboat trip from Falmouth to Martha's Vineyard. From left, seated, Mrs. Fred Hausmann,Mrs. Arthur Amaral, Vineyard Haven; Mrs. John DeBettencourt, Oak Bluffs; Mrs. Laurence Mercier, Edgartown; Mrs. Keith Songer, Buzzards Bay. Standing, Rev. TimothyGoldrick, Buzzards Bay; Rev. Thomas Rita, East Falmouth; Mrs. John Regan, Onset;Mrs. Charles Bardelis, Falmouth; Sister Rita Pelletier, Fall River; Sister Theresa Sparrow,Fall River; Rev. John Magnani, Falmouth; Rev. James Clark, Oak Bluffs; Rev. JosephWiseman, Woods Hole.
IS
covered the program as theyhave switched on their carradios in frustration.
So much mail has come in thatFather St. George had to hiresomeone to handle it. Most letters are requests for free program guides.
"You help me to cook," iswhat housewives say.
So many listeners asked: "Canwe visit you?" that Father St.George and his associates nowrun tours through the stationevery Saturday.
"I don't consider broadcastingjust an extension of the pulpitor sanctuary, but it should represent the total concern of theChurch for the legitimate needsof people," Father St. George
.observed. One need is leisure.
"The driver caught in a trafficjam has needs. And we shouldbe using the stereo equipmentwe have at Vatican Radio for thepurpose for which it was designed, tlhat ,is, high qualitymusic."
INCORPORATED 1937
F. L. COLLINS & SONS•••••••••• t •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
GENERAL CONTRACTORSand ENGINEERS
dent, creative way. This makesit a disc jockey's heaven.
Mood MusicFather St. George, 54, is for
mer chairman of the Departmentof Communication Arts at Fordham University and former director of the university's FMstation, WFUV-FM. With Vatican Radio since 1966, he is anassistant to the sta'tion's generaldirector.
The evening show became sopopular, Father St. George related, that last September, anafternoon program, "Musica deRelax" was started. The themeis music from the movie "TheYear 2001" and the show consists entirely of good music,with a 40-second break midwayin the two hours for a shortScripture reading or a meditation.
The .program starts at 1 p.m.,just when frayed motorists arecaught in savage traffic jamson the way home to their noontime meal. Hundreds have dis-
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of fall River-Thurs.; June 5, 1975
JAMES H. COLLINS, C.E., Pres.Registered Civil and Structural Engineer
Member National Society Professional Engineers
FRANCIS L. COLLINS, JR., Treas.THOMAS K. COLLINS, Seey.
ACADEMY BUILDING FALL RIVER, MASS.................................................
By JO-ANN PRICE
A Jesuit from New York'sFordham Univ.ersity has becomethe Vatican's first disc jockey.
VaNcan Radio has startedbroadcasting good quality stereomusic in Rome, and the effect,has been '\sensational," the discjockey, Jesuit Father John A.St. George, said in an interviewhere.
The new sound in Rome isheard during two-hour segments,one in the afternoon siesta timeand the other .in the evening, theU. S. Jesuit said. The signalsnow reach only a 50-mile radiusof Vatican City, but a thirdhigh-quality music broadcast byshort wave to some Europeancountries will soon be introduced.
Father St. George's lead-offItalian announcer, Mauro Lorino,19, who broadcast simultaneously witlh the priest's comment inEnglish, is soon to be draftedfor military service, the pr-iestsaid. The replacement announcerwill be another "lirst" in thehistory of the 44-year-old station-a woman, Miss SimonettaMartinelli, 18, a university student and daughter of a widelyknown Italian sportsc,aster.
Romans at first could not believe their ears last June 2 whenthe evening show started, FatherSt. George said. Instead of hearingthe station's usual content offoreign-language stereo broadcasts of Church news, papal ceremonies, encyaUcal&l, the Angelus, the Rosary or Mass, tlheyheard quality music rangingfrom pop to symphonies to tiilmsound-track melodies.
Vatican Radio is the only station in Italy not under Italiangovernment control and therefore can innovate in an indepen-
Calls Mindszenty'Great Confessor'
LONDON (NC) - CardinalJozsef Mindszenty was "thegreatest confessor of the faithof the 20th century," CardinalJohn Heenan of Westminster declared in a public tribute.
"The greatest testimony Cardina'! Mindszenty received wasfrom the Nazi and Soviet invaders of his country," he added.
"If they regarded him as theirenemy it was because he soughtto be the protector of the Hun'garian people."
One of the last public statements made by Cardinal Mindszenty before his death May 6was an interview televised by theBritish Broadcasting' Corporation.
In it the cardinal told his interviewer that he felt no bitterness about the way he had beentreated by his persecutors andhis own Church.
"Rather I feel joyful that Istood for the truth," he added.
Father Popock visited Ellington several times during his finalmonths at a New York Cityhospital. He recalled that therewas a piano in Ellington's roomthroughout his stay.
In April 1973, on Ellington'sbirthday, the priest rememberssharing a few moments alonewith his dying friend. On thatoccasion, he said, "Duke told'me to pull a chair up to thepiano and I did. He got out ofbed, sat down at the piano andbegan playing something whichhe often played before a perforrance. It was a number called'Meditation,' a favorite of ours.
'Your Song'"Then he started playing
something else and asked me ifI knew its title. I wracked mybrain, but still couldn't remember what it was. Duke smiledand said 'Man, that's your song.That's the Our Father which Iwrote while in Paris.' He playedit through twice for me. I helpedhim back to bed and said goodnight."
On May 23, 1974, the night before Ellington died, Father Popock again was with his friend.
"I could see that it was theend of the road for Duke," hesaid. "We prayed to Our Fathertogether and then I left forMontreal. The next morningDuke's secretary phoned to tellme that he had died."
The American premiere of Ellington's Third Sacred Concert,entitled "The Majesty of God,"was held at Albany's Cathedralof the Immaculate ConceptionMay 24, tbe first anniversary ofthe composer's death.
The original Duke EllingtonOrchestra, conducted by thecomposer:S son Mercer, performed a repertoire of sacredmusic.
Names DominicanROME (NC) - Pope Paul VI
has named Father Vincent deCouesnongle, master general ofthe Dominicans, a member ofthe Vatican's Congregation forReligious. Father de Couesnongle, 58, is a native of Brittany inFrance. He was elected head ofthe Dominicans in August 1974.
Man o.f Prayer
The Canadian chaplain notedthat Ellington was "a deeply religious man, a man of prayer,"while pointing out that each ofthe sacred concerts were dearto his composer-friend.
"He looked 'upon his sacredworks both as a debt to God andas a way of praising God," hesaid.
Father Pocock disclosed thatmany who have witnessed thesacred concerts are also thosewho have avoided church services for years. "What broughtthem back," he said, "were DukeEllington's sacred works."
The Canadian priest said thathe met a singer who!told him ~hat
asa little girl she wore a crosswhich her mother had given toher. But when she broke intoshow business, the cross was removed, and religion was discarded.
"She told me that when shelistened to Duke praise God inhis sacred concert, her faith wasrestored," he said. "She has decided now to wear that crossuntil the day she dies."
He remarked: ..Duke .....ad hisown special apostolate for peopleof all faith~."
ALBANY (NC) - The words"God" and "love" formed a crosson the holy card that a Canadianpriest presented to Duke Ellington about one year prior to thecomposer's death. That card became the inspiration for one ofthe works included in Ellington's last sacred concert.
Father Gerald Pocock, who visited Albany for the May 24 performance of Ellington's Third Sacred Concert, told The Evangelist,the Albany diocesan weekly, that"Duke carried the card I gavehim wherever he went" and "hadit by his bedside when he died."
Father Pocock, chaplain at St.Mary's hospital, Montreal, wasa personal friend of Duke Ellington.
When the late jazz composerand his orchestra last appeared inMontreal, Father Pocock greetedhim at the air port and accompanied him to the hotel. It wasthen that Ellington told the priestthat he had written a song entitled, "Is God a Three-LetterWord. for Love, or Is Love aFour-Letter Word for God?"
Later that same day, whileEllington was napping, FatherPocock reflected on the songtitle and worked out his own lyrics in keeping with the theme.At dinnertime, the priest presented his lyrics to Ellington, who,after reading them, nodded hisapproval and tucked them awayin the medicine bag that he carried. The Canadian priest neverdreamed that some day he wouldhear those lyrics again.
By special invitation, FatherPocock traveled with Ellingtonand his orchestra to England forthe premiere of the Third SacredConcert at Westminster Abbey.He recalls that following the rendition of "Is God a Three-LetterWord for Love?" the choir quieted down as Tomy Watkins, amale vocalist, step~ed up to themicrophone. To Father Pocock'ssuprprise, Watkins proceeded torecite the lyrics that the priesthad given to Ellington in Montreal.
16 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., June 5,1975
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FIFTH GRADERS AT ST. PATRICK'S OBSERVE HI-CENTENNIAL:Under the direction of their teacher, Sr. Jessie, RSM, members of the fifthgrade class at St. Patrick's School, Fall River commemorate the 200thanniversary of the United States. Witl1 colonial dress-some of it fashioned
by the students themselves-five girls represented "Molly Pitcher" andfour boys attired as patriots. Left photo, the patriots: Curt Allan, DavidCorreia, Daniel Pare' and Neal Goncalo. The "Molly Pitchers": JohannForbes, Christine Frett, Kelly Saucier, Cathy Boscoe and Diane St. Pierre.
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Aids RefugeesNEW YORK (NC)-A float
ing refugee camp of 6,500 Vietname5e off the coast of Singapore, practically without foodsupplies, has been given emergency help by Chinese andAmerican Catholics.
Cyril Chew, executive, direi::tor of the Singapore CatholicWelfare Service, reported thatthe 6,500 refugees are aboard34 vessels off the coast of Singapore. They had fled Vietnamin late April and saqled northin 'scC\r<;h of safety.
Says Chile NeedsSocial Leaders
WASHINGTON (NC)-Chilc'sabout-face from extreme left tofar right has prompted Churchleaders to educate Catholics inresponsible leadcrship, according to the 5ecretary general ofthe Chilean Bishops' Conference.
Bishop Carlos Camus, here asa guest of the Department ofState, explained that the Chileanbishops consider such educationin leadership to be a key to reconciliation. The bishops havealso launched an orientationcampaign on the Church's socialdoctrine, and are making intensive use of communications.
The program "stems from ourlong experience of suffering,"Bishop Camus said.
Since 1970 Chile has beenruled by a Marxist governmentin conflict with landed and business groups; and a righti5t military regime that overthrew it 'in1973 in a bloody coup followedby imprisonment, torture andthe exile of leftist and even moderates. Chile now is in the throesof an economic crisis.
"There is a Christian and human way out of these troubles,"Bishop Camus told NC News.
"We are presenting alternatives to the extremes of communism and capitalism by offeringthe kind of social justice espoused by the Church."