07.08.65

19
CCD Evidences £cumenism Spirit The ANCHOR Fall PRICE 10c Vol. 9, No. 27 @ 1965 The Anchor $4.00 per Year River, Mass., Thursday, July 8, 1965 'Notable, Capable Nurse 'Community Superior Mother Marie Ascension has been named suPerior of ,the Dominican Sisters of Charity of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary, the community which staffs St. -Anne's Hospital in Fall River. Mother Pierre Marie is Vice-Provincial of the United Mother Marie Ascension has a States Province and admin- 'Bachelor of Science degree in istrator of the hospital. Nursing from Boston College Mother Marie Ascension .and has been aclinical instruc- was born in Avignon,' France tor at St. Anne's for the past six years. and studied at Ecole Superieure de Carpentras where she ob- She attended the" General tained Brevet Superieur. After Chapter of the Order May 16 training at Ste. Marthe School in Rome and then made a retreat of Nursing she obtained' French 'at the Mother House in Tours State Board. prior to her new 'assignment. She entered the Sisters of the In addition to St. Anne's Presentation in November, 1945 Hospital, Mother Pierre Marie and made her first profession has also under her charge Mar- in 1947. She taught fi,rst grade ian Manor in Taunton, Madonna, at the school of Christ Roi near Manor that will open this Fall Tours and came to the United in Attleboro, and the Order'. liiaw. ill lG48. Novitiate in NEW SUPERIOR: Mother Marie Pierre, seated, vice- provindal of the Dominican Sisters of Charity of the Pre- sentation of the Blessed Virgin in the United States dis- cusses the spiritual phase of the Sisters' lives with her successor as superior of tba Mother Marie ' WORCESTER MINISTER TO SPEAK, AT AUGUST REGIONAL CONGRESS Rev. Joseph L. Powers, Diocesan Director of the COD and general chairman of the Congress, has announced that Rev. Kenneth E. Bath, pastor of Greendale People's Church of Worcester, a non-denominational Church, and an observer at the second and third ses- sions of Vatican Council 11, will address the Saturday evening, Aug. 28, General Sessioa of the 19th New Engl'and Congress of the Confrater- nity of Christian Doctrine Answers at Bishop Stang High School, No. Dartmouth. His topic will be "Vatican II: Dialogue and the Apostolate of Council Good Will." Rev. Bath received his edu- cation at Suffolk Law School, the Andover-Newton and Union Critics Theological Seminaries with special graduate work at the The Vatican ..... ..-what American Institute of Religion it has decided; what it shan and Psychiatry. He is now in or shall not decide-provided his 24th year as pastor of the ,council news for this week. Worcester Church. Controversy concerning the im- The Greendale Church, having plementation of the liturgical grown from a membership of reforms, the proposed religioQ 200 to 1200 during Mr. Bath's liberty statement and birth con- pastorate, is pioneering in the care The trol decisions all occupied coun- of' elderly. Church cil spotlights. operates a rest home for the aged, and is negotiatirig for the Some so-called "traditional- ,construction of a 70' bed nursing ists" have taken the positioa - home with future 'expansion to that many liturgical reforms 88 111 beds. they are being put into practice A past president of the Na- in the U.S. were not actually tional Council of Community intended by the Council but were Churches and its delegates to rather devised by council ex- the founding assembly of the Perts on their own authority. World Council of Churches in These self-named conservatives ,Amsterdam in 1948, and its have objected to the introduction Solemn Mass Third Assembly in 1961 at New of the vernacular in the Mass, it. Deihi, India, Mr. Bath is at offering facing the people and present chairman of the Ecume- demand parish self-determina';' On Sunday nical Relations Department and tion in liturgical affairs. Some The Rev. George W. Cole- represents the Com m u nit y eve n picketed the Liturgical man, son of Mr. and Mrs. Church on the General Board Conference recently held in of the National Council of Baltimore, Md. George W. Coleman, Sr., 150 Churches and the consultation Rev. Frederick R. McManus, High Street; Somerset, will on Church Union. ' secretary of the U.S. Bishops' sing his first solemn Mass Sun- As president of the Commu-' Commission on the Liturgical day afternoon at 5 o'clock in nity Travel Seminar, he has Apostolate-himself directly ac- St. Patrick Church, Somerset. visited the Middle East three cused by the Traditionlist Move- Officers of the Mass will be: times and gone around the ment--cleared some of the air ,Rev. Raymond W. McCarthy, world Once in the last nine of controversy. The decrees of Deacon; Rev. Peter J. Mullen, years, leading a travel study the Vatican Council, he pointed Sub-deacon; Rev. Daniel J. group of professional and, civic out, are not the work of specia- leaders. ' en. Master of Ceremonies; Rev. lists or experts but that of the A: McCarthy, preacher. Father Powers is encouraging Pope and the Bishops. A reception will follow at 6:30 all to attend the Congress be.,. , It took four years to frame at the K of C Hall, Swansea. cause of the world import of the the council liturgical document, :rather Coleman, who was or- Ecumenical Movement started by thorough debate by the world'. dained to the Priesthood in Rome Pope John XXIII. Turn to Page Six OIl December 16, 1964, was born In Somerset on Feb. 3, 1939. Following graduation from Mass on Saturday Monsignor Coyle High in Taun- ton, he took his classical course at Holy Cross College in Wor- For Father James E. Lynch eester. Rev. James E. Lynch, pastor of St. Joan of Are Church. Turn to Page Twelve Orleans, for 18 years, died Wednesday morning after a long illness. His body will lie in state in St. Joan of Are Canon Lawyer Church, Orleans from Thursday afternoon until it will be . transferred 0 n Saturday Explains Vow morning at 9 :45 to Our Lady of the Visitation Mission Of Obedience Church, No. Eastham, where WEST DE PERE (NC) - the first Nocturn of the Office Religious obedience imposes for the Dead will be chanted. obligations on superior and Following the Office for the Dead a Pontifical High Mass of subject alike, a canon lawyer Requiem will be celebrated at said here. , 10 o'clock. Criticizing those who feel Interment will be in St. Pa- they should have a voice in tricks Cemetery, Fall River. "practicaily all decisions and in the determination of means Father Lynch was born Feb. 2- to carry out the decisions,.. 1898 in Fall River, the son of the Father Francis N. Korth, S.J., late James and the late Mrs. theology professor at Marquette Teresa Barry Lynch. He was University, told the Conference graduated from St Mary's Paro- of Major Superiors of Men here chial School and B. M. C. Dur- in Wisconsin that the vow of fee High School and attended obedience taken by members Holy Cross College for two of religious communities "ex- years. plicitly and implicity includes ,He studied philosophy and the carrying' out of the just theology at St. Mary's and the commands of the authority Sulpician Seminary, Ba!timore, necessary in any society." and was ordained June 6, 1925 Religious life, he said, "must in St. Mary's Cathedral by the Inspire a willingness to carry late Bishop Feehan. Turi} to Page FoUl' Tum tQ ;pase Twent¥. REV. KENNETH E. BATII REV. JAMES E. L"fNCB

Upload: the-anchor

Post on 11-Mar-2016

225 views

Category:

Documents


4 download

DESCRIPTION

NEW SUPERIOR: Mother Marie Pierre, seated, vice­ provindal of the Dominican Sisters of Charity of the Pre­ sentation of the Blessed Virgin in the United States dis­ cusses the spiritual phase of the Sisters' lives with her successor as superior of tba Mmm!JD'j~ Mother Marie ~llo Worcester Church. Controversy concerning the im­ The Greendale Church, having plementation of the liturgical Fall High Street; Somerset, will on Church Union. No. Dartmouth. His topic will be "Vatican II: eester. '

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 07.08.65

CCD Evidences £cumenism Spirit

The ANCHOR

Fall

PRICE 10cVol. 9, No. 27 @ 1965 The Anchor $4.00 per Year

River, Mass., Thursday, July 8, 1965

'Notable, Capable Nurse 'Community Superior

Mother Marie Ascension has been named suPerior of ,the Dominican Sisters of Charity of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary, the community which staffs St.

-Anne's Hospital in Fall River. Mother Pierre Marie is Vice-Provincial of the United Mother Marie Ascension has aStates Province and admin­ 'Bachelor of Science degree in istrator of the hospital. Nursing from Boston College

Mother Marie Ascension .and has been aclinical instruc­was born in Avignon,' France tor at St. Anne's for the past six

years.and studied at Ecole Superieure de Carpentras where she ob­ She attended the" General tained Brevet Superieur. After Chapter of the Order May 16 training at Ste. Marthe School in Rome and then made a retreat of Nursing she obtained' French 'at the Mother House in Tours State Board. prior to her new 'assignment.

She entered the Sisters of the In addition to St. Anne's Presentation in November, 1945 Hospital, Mother Pierre Marie and made her first profession has also under her charge Mar­in 1947. She taught fi,rst grade ian Manor in Taunton, Madonna, at the school of Christ Roi near Manor that will open this Fall Tours and came to the United in Attleboro, and the Order'. liiaw. ill lG48. Novitiate in Diihto~

NEW SUPERIOR: Mother Marie Pierre, seated, vice­provindal of the Dominican Sisters of Charity of the Pre­sentation of the Blessed Virgin in the United States dis­cusses the spiritual phase of the Sisters' lives with her successor as superior of tba Mmm!JD'j~ Mother Marie ~llo '

WORCESTER MINISTER TO SPEAK, AT AUGUST REGIONAL CONGRESS

Rev. Joseph L. Powers, Diocesan Director of the COD and general chairman of the Congress, has announced that Rev. Kenneth E. Bath, pastor of Greendale People's Church of Worcester, a non-denominational Church, and an observer at the second and third ses­sions of Vatican Council 11, will address the Saturday evening, Aug. 28, General Sessioa

of the 19th New Engl'and Congress of the Confrater­nity of Christian Doctrine Answersat Bishop Stang High School, No. Dartmouth.

His topic will be "Vatican II: Dialogue and the Apostolate of Council Good Will."

Rev. Bath received his edu­cation at Suffolk Law School, the Andover-Newton and Union Critics Theological Seminaries with special graduate work at the The Vatican Coun~n.......-what American Institute of Religion it has decided; what it shan and Psychiatry. He is now in or shall not decide-providedhis 24th year as pastor of the

,council news for this week.Worcester Church. Controversy concerning the im­The Greendale Church, having plementation of the liturgicalgrown from a membership of reforms, the proposed religioQ200 to 1200 during Mr. Bath's liberty statement and birth con­pastorate, is pioneering in the

care The trol decisions all occupied coun­of' elderly. Church cil spotlights.operates a rest home for the

aged, and is negotiatirig for the Some so-called "traditional­,construction of a 70' bed nursing ists" have taken the positioa

­ home with future 'expansion to that many liturgical reforms 88

111 beds. they are being put into practice A past president of the Na­ in the U.S. were not actually

tional Council of Community intended by the Council but were Churches and its delegates to rather devised by council ex­the founding assembly of the Perts on their own authority. World Council of Churches in These self-named conservatives ,Amsterdam in 1948, and its have objected to the introductionSolemn Mass Third Assembly in 1961 at New of the vernacular in the Mass, it. Deihi, India, Mr. Bath is at offering facing the people and present chairman of the Ecume­ demand parish self-determina';'On Sunday nical Relations Department and tion in liturgical affairs. Some

The Rev. George W. Cole­ represents the Com m u nit y eve n picketed the Liturgical man, son of Mr. and Mrs. Church on the General Board Conference recently held in

of the National Council of Baltimore, Md.George W. Coleman, Sr., 150 Churches and the consultation Rev. Frederick R. McManus,High Street; Somerset, will on Church Union. ' secretary of the U.S. Bishops'sing his first solemn Mass Sun­ As president of the Commu-' Commission on the Liturgicalday afternoon at 5 o'clock in nity Travel Seminar, he has Apostolate-himself directly ac­St. Patrick Church, Somerset. visited the Middle East three cused by the Traditionlist Move­Officers of the Mass will be: times and gone around the ment--cleared some of the air

,Rev. Raymond W. McCarthy, world Once in the last nine of controversy. The decrees of Deacon; Rev. Peter J. Mullen, years, leading a travel study the Vatican Council, he pointedSub-deacon; Rev. Daniel J. Bow~ group of professional and, civic out, are not the work of specia­leaders. ' en. Master of Ceremonies; Rev. lists or experts but that of the Fra~cis A: McCarthy, preacher. Father Powers is encouraging Pope and the Bishops.

A reception will follow at 6:30 all to attend the Congress be.,. , It took four years to frame at the K of C Hall, Swansea. cause of the world import of the the council liturgical document,

:rather Coleman, who was or­ Ecumenical Movement started by thorough debate by the world'. dained to the Priesthood in Rome Pope John XXIII. Turn to Page Six OIl December 16, 1964, was born In Somerset on Feb. 3, 1939.

Following graduation from Requie~ Mass on Saturday Monsignor Coyle High in Taun­ton, he took his classical course at Holy Cross College in Wor­ For Father James E. Lyncheester. Rev. James E. Lynch, pastor of St. Joan of Are Church.

Turn to Page Twelve Orleans, for 18 years, died Wednesday morning after a long illness. His body will lie in state in St. Joan of Are

Canon Lawyer Church, Orleans from Thursday afternoon until it will be . transferred 0 n SaturdayExplains Vow ==~'W morning at 9 :45 to Our Lady

of the Visitation MissionOf Obedience Church, No. Eastham, where WEST DE PERE (NC) ­ the first Nocturn of the Office

Religious obedience imposes for the Dead will be chanted. obligations on superior and Following the Office for the

Dead a Pontifical High Mass ofsubject alike, a canon lawyer Requiem will be celebrated atsaid here. , 10 o'clock. Criticizing those who feel

Interment will be in St. Pa­they should have a voice in tricks Cemetery, Fall River."practicaily all decisions and

in the determination of means Father Lynch was born Feb. 2­to carry out the decisions,.. 1898 in Fall River, the son of the Father Francis N. Korth, S.J., late James and the late Mrs. theology professor at Marquette Teresa Barry Lynch. He was University, told the Conference graduated from St Mary's Paro­of Major Superiors of Men here chial School and B. M. C. Dur­in Wisconsin that the vow of fee High School and attended obedience taken by members Holy Cross College for two of religious communities "ex­ years. plicitly and implicity includes ,He studied philosophy and the carrying' out of the just theology at St. Mary's and the commands of the authority Sulpician Seminary, Ba!timore, necessary in any society." and was ordained June 6, 1925

Religious life, he said, "must in St. Mary's Cathedral by the Inspire a willingness to carry late Bishop Feehan.

Turi} to Page FoUl' Tum tQ ;pase Twent¥.

REV. KENNETH E. BATII

REV. JAMES E. L"fNCB

Page 2: 07.08.65

THE ANCHqR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs.. July 8, 1965. I 2

Proper of the Mass For Fifth Sunday After Pentecost

INTROIT: PS, 26, 7 and 9 Hear, 0 Lord, the sound of my call; be my helper; forsake me not: despise me not, o God my savior. Ps. ibid., 1 The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom should I fear? Glory be to the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit, as it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be world without end. Amen. Hear, o Lord, the 8()und of my call; be my helper; forsake me not: despise me not, 0 God my savior.

GRADUALE: Ps. 83, 10 and 9 Behold, 0 God, our protector, and look on your servants. V. 0 Lord, God of hosts, hear the prayers of your servants.

Alleluia, alleluia. Ps. 20, 1 0 Lord, in your strength the kind is glad; in your viotory how greatly he rejoices! Alleluia.

OFFERTORY: Ps. 15, 7 and 8 I bless the Lord, who eounsels me; I set God ever before me; with him at my right hand I shall not be disturbed. .

COMMUNION: Ps. 26, 4 One thing I ask of the Lord; this I seek: to dwell in the house of the Lord all· the days of my life.

Says First Mass Of CI·ergl'-Laity

MIAMI BEACH (NC) - The first Mass offered in what is now the United States was a "shining example" of clergy­laity cooperation, Bishop Cole­man F. Carroll of Miami said here.

Bishop Carroll said that the Mass, offered 400 years ago at the site of the present-day St. Augustine, Fla., showed "how a zealous layman and a dedi­cated priest lived out the con­viction that they were co-labor­ers with Christ."

He recalled that in 1565, 55 years before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock, Spaniards

Mass Ordo J'RIDAY-M ass of previoQS

Sunday. IV Class. Green. Mass Proper: No Gloria or Creed; Common Preface.

SATURDAY-The Seven Holy Brothers, Martyrs, and SS. Rufina and Secunda, Virgins and Martyrs. III Class. Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; No Creed; Common Preface.

SUNDAY-V Sunday after Pen­tecost. II Class. Green. Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed; Pre­face of Trinity.

MONDAY-St..Tohn Gaulbert, Abbot. m Class. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; 2nd ColI. SS. Nabor and Felix, Martyrs; no Creed; CoIIllIlon Preface.

TUESDAY-Mass of Previous Sunday. IV Class. Green. Mass Proper; No Gloria or Creed Common Preface.

WEDNESDAY - S t. Bonaven­ture, Bishop, Confessor and Doctor of the Church. III Class. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; No Creed; Common Preface.

THURSDAY-St. Henry, Em­peror and Confessor. III Class: White. Mass Proper; Gloria; No Creed; Common Preface.

FORTY HOURS DEVOTION

July 11-St. Hyacinth, New· Bedford.

St. Mary, So. Dartmouth. July 18-St. Pius X, South

Yarmouth. St. Stephen, Dodgeville.

JULY 18-St. Pius X, South Yarmouth

St. Stephen, Dodgeville.

THE AHCHOI Second Class Postage Paid at Fall RIver.

Mass. Published every Thursday at 410 tllghlana Avenue Fall River Mass. .by tile Catholic Press 01 the Diocese of Fall River. Subscription IIrlca bJ mall, f05tpald $4.00 D8f vear•.

in U. S. Example Cooperation

established the first permanent Christian settlement in the coun­try at St. Augustine

"Father Francisco Lopez de Mendoza Grajales was chaplain of the fleet of 19 ships com­manded by Don Pedro Menen­dez de Aviles," he continued.

"When a landing was made after increduble 'hardships, on the· feast of the NativitY of Our'Lady at a 'site now .known as St. Augustine, the first of­ficial act of priest and layman was to offer the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass on the beach .••

Love of Neighbor "Don Pedro brought to this:

partnership his extraordinary qualities o~ mind ~d pody, and. combined his natural virtues of courage and foresight with.the supernatural gifts of faith and· love of neighbor. He looked to the priest for the Bread of Life and the light of Christ's truths and the strength which can be found nowhere except in Christ.

"Father Lopez in tum needed Don Pedro's amazing skill in the temporal order to find his mis­sionary land; to make the Holy Sacrifice possible on this soil; to win a hearing for the· Faith through their example and rev­erence; to break trails over which countless priests and lay­men 'carried the twin torches of Christianity and civilization in-' to the trackless continent' 400 years ago,"

Legislator Praises Archbishop Cody

WASHINGTON (NC) - Rep. Hale Boggs of Louisiana, in a $tatement in the Congressional ,Record has hailed the appoint~

ment of Archbishop John P. Cody of ·New Orleans to head the Archdiocese of Chicago.

Boggs said Archbishop Cody "deserves the plaudits of all Americans" for giving impetus to "the cause of all mankind-that we learn to live together as men of good .changing

will and world."

justice in a

Necrology

Rev. JULY

Bernard 16 Percot, O.P.,

1937, Founder, St. Do::ninie, Swansea.

JULy 1'7 Rev. William J. Smith, 1960,

Pastor, St. James, Taunton. .

JULY 19 Most Rev. Daniel F. Feehan,

D.D., 1934, 2nd Bishep of Fall River. 190'1-340 .

ATTY. J. M. FITZGERALD

New Serra Head Calls for End Of he.l~u~t~ce

MIAl\II BEACH (NC) Catholic laymen "can be in­different no longer to the sodal, economic, racial and even sPiritual injustices that surround us," Attorney Joseph M. Fitzgerald of Miami empha­sized in his first talk as president of the ll,OOO-member Serra In- . ternational.

The father of five childr~.

who succeeds retiring president Thomas M. Coughlan of Man­kato, Minn. Fitzgerald asserted:

Halt Indifference "Historians of the future may

justifiably look upon our age as being one with paradoxical extremes.

"On the one hand, men have made sacrifices and achieved perfection and practicedvlliues. both in the temporal 8l).dspirit ­ual order which have been noth­ing less than heroic. On the other hand, great masses of people, again in both the tem­poral and spiritual order, have evidenced nothing but complete indifference.

"We have too often shown in­difference, in one degree or an­other, to the spiritual welfare and salvation of others. Even so- . called 'good Catholics' are in­different to the spiritual welfare of those around them. They offer no word of counselor prayer for the conversion of the atheist 'or the benign agnostic."

Seminary Students Rate High in Test

CINCINNATI (NC) - This year's sophomore class at St. GJ;'egofY's Minor Seminary here placed 73 per cent of its mem­b,ers in the top quarter 01 col­lege students of the nation tak­ing the Cooperative General Culture Test administered by the Educ~tional Testing service, Princetown, N.J.

In the field of liter~ture, 95 of St. Gregory's sophomorees were in the testing service's top quar­ter, a seminary spokesman said.

~"~~ ~ DEBROSS OIL \

Vatican Official Tells Laity Restore Christ to World

MIAMI BEACH (NC)-A top Vatican official told the 23rd annual Serra International eonvention here that tIM job of the Catholic layman today is "to bring Christ back into the world which has lost interest in religion." By see&­ing to foster vocations to the priesthood, Serra mem- BBYing that "every Catholic 11M

a share in the priesthood .. bers engage in "one of the Christ." most sublime forms of the "But a river must always hoa lay apostolate in the modem a source," Archbishop Staffa ad­world," declared Archbishop ded, "arid in the same way the Dino Staffa, secretary of the apostolate of the laity must de­Sacred Congregation of Semin- rive from the apostolate of the aries and Universities. priests and the hierar~hy."

Archbishop Staffa commended Noting the worldwide respoa­the delegates for their "profound sibilities of the United States, awareness of the divine value he expressed the belief that the and the pressing need for priest- "vocation" of its people is "lib ly vocations," and said the Sec- a biblical summons drawing the ond Vatican Council will "con- nation irresistibility to a clear~ firm the univeI'l'ality of this defined ideal, an ideal toward ~roblem and, implicite1y, the which your nation must lead and .lniversality of your mission." attract all other nations."

Most Vital Problem This ideal, he said, is "the ''The problem of the Catholic spread of liberty and justice and

priesthood," 'he said, "is the brotherhood and unity of an problem of the world's salva- mankind in a common quest 1M tion-the most vital, the most happiness and peace." urgent, the most immense of all problems. When you safeguard Special Mission ' priestly vocations you are safe- "American Catholics, ~md es­guarding the continuation and pecially the members of' Serra, vitality of Christ's work on know that this special mission earth." which falls to their natidn is .in

The Vatican official brought full harmony with their· relig­with him a letter from Amleto ious faith," Archbishop· Staffa Cardinal Cicognani, Papal Sec- said. retary of State, conveying the "Indeed, they know that it III good wishes of Pope Paul VI. C?n1y through their faith that the

Cardinal Oicognani said Pope nation can perfectly fulfill itll Paul "cherishes the efforts. of vocation, for the history ·of man­all those wh9 nourislj1 v?ca~ions". ldnd has i~ cen~er, its, climax, to the clerical and religious life, and the collaboration of Catha­lic laymen in promoting, this work, as emplified by Serra In­ternational, is a source of satis­faction and joy to his paternal heart."

Underlining the need for priests, Archbishop Staffa point­

. ed to the rising world population and asked: "If the supply Qf priests does not increase in p~

portion to the growth of popu­lation. what will Christianity mean to the billions of men who tomorrow will fill the earlh?'"

He noted the importance of the layman's role in the Church,

Thanks Authorities For Fair Treatment

NOTTINGHAM (NC) - Bis­hop Edward Ellis of Notting­ha,m expressed thanks to local authorities for the "very fair way" they treat Catholic edu­cational projects.

Bishop Ellis SpOke at the for­mal opening of a new $280,000 Catholic school, financed in large part by government grant.

"We represent a very small minority in England," the bishop said, ''but thanks to the local authorities we get equal treat­ment with all the other religioUs bodies ·who desire schools of '. their own,"

CENTER· Paint and Wallpaper

Dupont PaintlC!;;;;;:.. cor. Middle St.

• '22 Acush Ave.· Q"l::.till,t New Bedford

........ PARKING Rear of Store

~ co. C ) Heating Oils C ~ and Burners (

. : 365 NORTH FRONT STREET C· ~ NEW BEDR)RD

\ WYman 2·5534 (

,.t"..~~~

CORREIA &SONS ONE STOP

SHOPPING CENTER

- Television - Furniture • Appliances - Grocery .

104 Allen _St., New Bedford.

WYman 7-9354

its divine champion in Christ Our Lord, the eternal Higb Priest."

Missioners Missing In New Guinea

PORT MORESBY (NC)-Twie Catholic missionaries are miJl­sing and feared downed in • small plane in the mountainow New Guinea highlands.

The missing 'priests are lI'a­ther Joseph Walachy, S.V.D. 01 Trenton, N.J., stationed at the Divine Word mission at· AleJI­ishaven, and German-bora Father Joseph Bayer, S.VD. regional superior for the New Guinea Divine Word MissiODL.

Father Walachy's last radio message said he was approach­ing a mountain pass at 9500 feet and climbing.

The Best

For Your CC!r

Williams' Funeral Home

EST. 1870 1 Wcshington Square

NEW BEDFORD Reg. Funeral Director and

Embalmer PRlVl\TE PA'RKING Al:EA

TEl. WY 6-8098

Michael C. Austin Inc.

FUNERAL SFDVICE

NEW 'BEDR)RD, MASS.

549.COUNTY 5TREEr

Page 3: 07.08.65

3

America

Daniel

formerly

new

revamping publication decade.

MANCHOR-Thursday, July 8, 1965

Magazine Announces Changes

NEW YORK (NC) - Fathet' F. Flaherty, S.J., has

been appointed executive editor of America magazine published weekly here by the Jesuits. He

was book editor. The magazine has adopted a

format featuring typogra­phical changes, the first rna 'or

of the 56-year-old in more than a

TEACHING FOR GOD: At left, Rev. Leo J. Du·art. parishioner Judith Perry. Right, Mr. and MI'8. Donald Sul­pastor of St. Peter the Apostle parish, Provincetown, heal'8 livan, St. Pius X parish, South Yarmouth, show souvenir of (ASHabout her teaching experiences in Oklahoma City from time spent teaching in San Antonio, Texas.

•$20 Million Goal People of God tn Fall River Diocese Bear For Cleveland Him Witness as Teachers in Southwest Citizens WillSchool Drive

The people of ~ in the Fall River Diocese are bearing Him witness and none more CLEVELAND. (NC) - A

BO than five young laypeople who have just completed a year of teaching in mission schools $20 million fund raising cam­ in Oklahoma, New Mexico" and Texas. The five are Mr. and Mrs. Donald Sullivan of South Fix You Uppaign to build 11 new high Yarmouth; Judith Perry of Provincetown; Mary Jane Collins of Fan River; andschools in the Cleveland dio­ Marguerite Desjardins of cese and expand seven existing School in Oklahoma City. social workers and other work­Westport. For Mary Janeones has been announced by Co­ Judith, daughter of Dr. and· ers to the home missions of Texas With Cash adjutor Bishop Clarence G. Is­ and Marguerite, their teach­ Mrs. Thomas Perry of St. Peter and the Sullivans heard of it senmann. ing year led to a decision to the Apostle parish in Province­ through Rev. John Wilcox, for­

Bishop Issenmann described remain in their mission area. town, taught sixth grade at Im­ mer Newman Club chaplain at the campaign in a news confer­ Mary Jane, daughter of Mr. and maculate Conception school and Bridgewater State College, from For Home ence statement as "the most im­ Mrs. James H. Collins of Holy also gave some seventh and which both graduated. portant single step" ever taken Name parish, Fall River, taught eighth grade classes. "I loved They were married last year, by the diocese. high school classes at St. Pius every minute of it," she said. just before leaving for Texas

Auxiliary Bishop Clarence E. High School in Albuquerque. A Like Marguerite, she offered tu­ and they· spent their first year of Fix-Ups!Elwell, superintendent of schools graduate of Newton College of toring assistance to Negro young­ marriage teaching in St. Mon­was named clergy chairman for the Sacred Heart, ,she is taking sters. For the future, she hopes ica's school, San Antonio. Don­the drive, while Loran F. Ham­ education courses this Summer to teach in the Boston school ald was prinicipal and taught mett, a U.S. Steel executive, was at Tulane .University in New Or­ system. fifth and sixth grades, while named lay general chairman. leans. In the Fall she will return Mary Jane, Marguerite and Judy taught fourth grade and

Admission Demands to New Mexico as a teacher in Judith taught under auspices of also coached seventh and eighth • Ne Lo~er Rates the Sante Fe public school sys­ the Extension Lay Volunteers, a graders in cheerleading.Bishop Elwell said the fund

drive was made necessary by a tme, conducting catechism clas­ program headquartered in Chi­ Teaching conditions are very • Ne Need T. Be ses as an extra-curricular ac­ cago which is designed for lay­ primitive, said the Sullivans.·crisis" in Cleveland diocesan Jl Customer tivity. people wishing to give a year Their school was a convertedhigh schools caused by rising

of service to the home missions. Army barracks and blackboardsenrollments and increased de­ Newspaper Work Skills needed include teaching, were makeshift affairs paintedmands for admissions. During her year of teaching nursing, catechetical work, social by the school janitor. So pov­Since 1944, he said, enroll ­ third grade at Immaculate Con­ work and child care. Diocesan erty-stricken was the school thatment in the diocesan high schools ception School in. Oklahoma director of the program, as well one month the teachers donatedhas increased 2'7 per cent and City, Marguerite, daughter of as of the Papal Volunteers for their small salaries toward its LIFE INSURANCEfiuring the past school year to- Mr. and Mrs. Armand Desjar­ Latin America program, is Rev. upkeep.• led 26,25'7. dines of St. John the Baptist par­ James W. Clark, St. Joseph's They would probably have

At the same time, he said, di­ ish, Central Village, became' in­ INCLUDED, TOO'parish, Fall River. stayed longer at St. Monica's, ecesan high schools are educat­ grossed in youth work in the Teach in Texas noted the couple, but for theing only 33.5 per cent of the po­ Negro section of the city. Representatives of the Cath­ fact that they're expecting. a AT NO EXTRA CHARGEtential Catholic high school pop­ She has entered newspaper olic Lay Mission Corps are Mr. baby this month. In the future,ulation here. work in Oklahoma City and and Mrs. Donald Sullivan, who however, they hope to teach in

. plans to continue her activities"The demand for admission to are . spending the Summer in the Virgin Islands or in Europe.with youth. Judith Perry, whoeatholic high schools has stead­ South Yarmouth with Mrs. Sul­ The Virgin Islands project was,taught with her, and is now atBy mounted to a point where it livan's parents, Mr. and Mrs. once more, suggested by Father ..GttEATER FAll RIVershome in Provincetown, explain­now reaches a deafening roar," Joseph H. McNeill, St. Pius X Wilcox, now stationed there, and ed, "She learned to play a gui­ HEADQUARTERS FORBishop Elwell said. parish. aware of the Island's need of tar during the year and would The CLMC supplies teachers, teachers. HOME REPAIR CASH"go to a Negro youth center,

New President which she helped found, on Sat­urday mornings to play for theVery Rev. William Paul Haas, YOURS TO LOVE AND TO GIVE! children and also help them withf).P., has been named eighth the life of a DAUGHTER OF ST. PAUl. Love Godschoolwork. She will spend herpresident of Providence College. more, and give to souls knowledge and love ofweekends with the youngstersHe succeeds Very Rev. Vincent God by serving Him in a Mission which uses the and be available to help wher­ ~fess, Radio, Motion P~ures and TV, to bringe. Dore, O.P., who will remain ever needed." His Word to souls everywhere. Zealous youngat the college as chancellor. ~itizens :::::girls 14-23 years interested in this uniqueFormal inaugural ceremonies During the past academic year o so. MAl N ST. - 'lf1Cof-"Apostolate may write to:will be held in the Fall for Marguerite helped establish a ....... - .......... - ..REVEREND MOTHER SUPERIORFather Haas who, at 3'7, is the children's workshop for music

DAUGHTERS OF ST. PAUL;;.oungest mall ever named • and art and directed a student 50 ST. PAUL'S. AY.E. . BOSTON 30. MASS.~ post. Uleatre at Mt. St. Mary High

Page 4: 07.08.65

4 THE ANCHO~-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 8, 1965

The Parish Parade •First Jobs In Missions 1

26 Boston College Graduates to Serve As Teachers, Nurses

BOSTON (NC) - Twenty-six '"We pick up the tabs fur Boston College graduates will traveling and sustinence. One be paid $10 a week, with board plane fare to Iran is $550, • and room thrown in, to serve Alaska it is $450' and to J amaiea as volunteers in foreign mis­ we have to pay $165," Fatb. sions for tbe coming year. Cumiskey said.

The graduates of the Jesuit ­Tbe director said he contactsoperated college will work as

Boston College - graduates andteachers and nurses, giving tbe friends of the school for finan­first fruits of their education cial belp--and "somehow weto people in Iraq, Hawaii, Ja­;manage to balance the books.­maica, Petu, British Honduras,

and Wyoming. - Father Cumiskey said that The Catholic students are !'inee 1956 some 175 Boston Col­

members of the Boston College :ege graduates have spent one Lay Apostolate Program which ()1" more years in the apostolate is directed by Father David R. j:1"cgram and some 750 under­Cumiskey, S.J., a theology teach­ graduates also "chipped in" te er. };eep the program going.

ST. ANNE, FALL RIVER

Coming events for the Coun­til of Catholic Women will in­rlude a September cake sale, II dinner and a barbecued ehicken supper, both in October, and a whist party in November. Mrs. Cecile Cummings is pres­ident of the unit.

ST. STANISLAUS, FALL RIVER

The annual parish fe!ltival is scheduled for Saturday and Sun­day, July 24 and 25 at Urban's Grove, Tiverton. A bean supper, 'booths and entertainment win be featured and proceeds will benefit the school building fund.

ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA FALL RIVER

Parishioners plan a testimo­n;al at 7:30 Sunday night, July 18 at White's restaurant in honor of Rev. John C. Martins, former curate, now assigned to St. Anthony's Church, East Fal­mouth. In charge of arrange­ments is Robert B. Souza, aided by a large committee.

ST. PATRICK, Jf'ALL RIVER

_The parish will "resent Mrs. Joseph P. Kennedy in an illus­trated lecture at 8 Sunday night, July 18 in the school hall. With her will appear the parish chor­us.

ST. MARY, FAIRHAVEN

The eighth annual fiesta ()f the parish, now in progress, will benefit its bUIlding fund. Auc­tions are scheduled tomorrow and Sat'lrday nights and chil ­dren's rides, a toy sale and awarding of a special prize are to boe featured.

VIS1TATION GUILD, NORTH EASTHAM

Guild members will conduct z penny sale at 8 tomorrow night in the church hall. Doors will be open at 7. Co-chairmen are Mrs. Arthur Cestaro and Mrs. George Duffy Jr.

A supper will be held at the ball at 6 Wednesday night, July 21. Mrs. Edmond Hebert if! chairman.

Mrs. Leroy Babbitt, president, will conduct a meeting at bel' home on Nickerson Road in Eastham at 8 Monday night, July 26.

Former Makes

Sister Christiana Maria (Hon­ora Lucille Felix) of Attleboro has made her final vows as a Maryknoll Sister.

The daughter of Mrs. Henry A. Felix of 319 South Main St., Attleboro, Sister attended At­tleboro High School and Trinity College, 'Washington, before she began her missionary prepara­tion at Maryknoll in 1956.

A year after her first profess­ion of vows in 1959, Sister was assigned to the mission area of Middle America. After language study, she taught secondary classes at Maryknoll's modem school in Yucatan, Mexico, and 1ater joined the team of Mary­knoll Sisters who teach, and con­ciluct a far-reaching program of social work in Ancon, Canal Zone. _

Maryknoll Sisters are Ameri­can women dedicated to God in Catholic mission work. They come from practically every State and repre~ent American Catholics. There are also Sisters f:.-om the Orient and Latin Amer­ica.

Maryknoll Sisters are cate­chists, nurses, doctors, teachers, and domestic, social service and office workers-a cross-sectioD SISTER CHRISTIANA MARIA

KATHRYN M. KRUPOWICZ

Feehan Alumna Award Winner

Miss Kathryn M. Krupowicz, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Zygmunt, 315 West Ave., See­konk, has been awarded a par­tial scholarship by the Attleboro Area Catholic Nurses' Guild.

Miss Krupowiez, a member of the first graduating class at Bishop Feehan High School, Attleboro, was an honor stu­dent and activein the Sodality, Chorus, Development Reading and Dramatics,

An instructor in the CCD pro­gram of Our Lady of Mt, Carmel Parisb, Seekonk, the Feehan alumna will enter the Roger­Williams Hospital School of Nursing, Providence.

Obedience Vow Continued from Page One

out in any given instance the concrete actions, undertakings and renunciations which in the judgment of competent autho­rity are deemed necesary."

Superior's Obligations But the superior also has ob­

ligations, Father Korth stressed. He said: "It is not enough that commands be morally indiffer­ent. They must be morally good in their total context." They should be commands whicb un­cleI' other circumstances migbt be "less prudent, less good, less significant," he added.

Even "irrational and indefen­sible" commands, he said, do not excuse the subject from obedience. He declared: "Tbe. obedience which (the religious life) entails must be regarded as the will of God, even if til

particular command appears to be senseless," provided of course that "what is commanded is not immoral in itself."

Father Korth suggested that superiors help alleviate prob­lems stemming from disagree­ments by admitting that "in certain circumstances subjects know more than they do about certain matters." .

He urged superiors to avoid "age-old rituals involving de­mands of respect from subjects, secretiveness, manifestations of superiority, appeals of superiors to a higher wisdom, displays of condescension."

Tear Gas Disturbs Church Service

RIO DE JANEIRO (NC} A tear gas bomb was exploded inside the church of Our Lady of Candelaria here while a :'\I1ass was being .offered for the I:ealth of former President J:.rs­ce:ino Kubitschek. No one was fI"ijured and no one left the church.

Police were unable to find the person who planted the bomb. Kubitschek, who govern­ed Brazil from 1956 to 1961, bas been in exile in Paris.

INDIA: ANOTHER CHURCH BVMAIL?

THE HOLY FATHER'. MI..... A'. T. TIlE ....ENTAL CHUR.

NEAR EAST IVIIBSIDNS FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, President MSGR. JOSEPH T. RYAN, National Secretary

Write: CATHOl.IC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc. 330 Madison Avenue -New York, N.Y. 10017 Telephone: 212/YUkon 6·5840

ESPIRITO SANTO, FALL RIVER

The parish's annual chicken barbecue is set from 11 :30 to 2 Sunday, July 18. Heading a ] a r g e committee is Manuel Lopes.

1ll\IMACULATE CONCEPTION, FALL RIVER

Members of the Holy Name Society will receive Holy Com­Jmunion in a body at the '1 c'clock Mass on Sunday moriHng. The members will meet in the !nall before the Mass.

ST. JOSEPH, FALL RIVER

A Franciscan miss~onars' will sl;:Eak at Masses Sunday, July 11, cr.. behalf of the missions of his crder.

Senior CYO members will sponsor a cookout tonight, with reservations in charge of Mich­ael McNally.

Parochial school students cited for scholastic achievement are Michael Killoran, Joanne Hannafin, Timothy McDonald, Joseph Latessa, Donna Berube, Barabra Laliberte, M i c h a e 1 Power, Dawn Hannafin, Anne Marie Valcourt and Michael Jacques.

A country auction is planned for Saturday, July 31 in the schoolyard and a preparatory meeting will be held at 8 MOD'­day night, July 12. HOLY NAME, FALL RIVER

New altar boy cassocks will be purchased as a result of con­tributions to the Altar and Rosary Society.

Bishop Frederick Hall will be heard at all Masses Sunday, July 12, representing Bishop John de' Reeper of Kisumu, Kenya, Africa.

ST. JOHN BAPTIST, CENTRAL VILLAGE

A cbicken barbecue will be served by Ladies' Guild mem­bers from 5:30 to 7 Saturday night, July 10 in the parish ball.

SACRED HEART, ~.

NORTH ATTLEBORO St. Vincent de Paul conference

members are distributing pray­er leaflets in the interest of the canonization cause of Frederick Ozanam, their founder. Also available are medals of St. Vincent de Paul.

of Attleboro Final Vows

THE GOOD

YOU DO GOES

ON AND ON

TO HELP

.THEM HSEE'"

CHARrrt INA

CRISIS

otnET ARAB BOYS

Dear Monsignor Ryan:

Please

return couponwith your

offering

THE CATHOLIC

To convert the 25,000 non-catholics In CheI­lamkonam, south India, Father Thomas Vilayil must build • parish chun:h. "ff only we can have a church of our own, hundreds, then thousands, will come to be baptizedl", he says. ••• You are struck by what you see. For 28 years in this simmering, turbulent city, native Sisters have taught grownups as we~ as children how to read and write, to be useful, how to save their souls. "Need all this be wasted?", Father Thomas asks..•• The church he nElsdf; can be built for as little as $3,800. "But to col. lect $3.800 here is impossible:' he says. "The average family's income is less than $2 a week!"

' ••• You feel you must help this extrac"rdinary missionary. He can begin to build his church­next month if you (and other readers) will send him right now as much as you can ($100. $75, $50, $20, $10, $5, $2, $1).-Qr perhaps this 18­the church you will build all by yourself in your loved ones' memory, to honor your favorite saint? If you write to us today, father Thomas can have his church by mall!

... ­Servicemen In Korea last month gave $583 for the blind.••• Thanking God you can read this? The blind youngsters at the Pontifical Mission Center in Gaza need food,_ clothing, medical help. $11 will bUy lunch for. one year for a blind boy under 12.

When you tell us (now and In your last will) to use your gifts "where they're needed niost," you' enable the Holy Father to take care of mission emergencies promptly. Your gifts may buy blankets ($2 each) for flood-victims, medi­cines for lepers, food for refugees ($10 feeds a family for a month), and so forth. Stringless gifts are a Godsend. --Deaf·mute Noah Dabash, 10 years old, Is one of the 47 deaf-mute youngsters Father Ronald Roberts is teaching to talk In the mountains near Beirut, Lebanon. $10 a month pays Noah's expenses. Will you "adopt" him? Father Roberts will send you Noah's picture.

---_........_------------ENCLOSED PLEASE FIND $ _

FORf.._-: ­ ....,.,_------

NAME, _

STREET _

CITY STJlTE ZIP COD.E", _

NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION

Page 5: 07.08.65

5 Ttff: ANCHOR­PanamanianAsks St. Anthony Hig'" School Sophomore Rescues Thursday, July 8, 1965

Americans Avoid Little Girl from Near Tragedy Sees Choir Need Snap Judgments To Keep Music MIAMI BEACH (NC) ­ When Ronald Gamache was 8, he decided to be a doctor. Then he switched to nursing North Americans must be eareful to avoid quick judg­ments on Latin American situations, Bishop Mark Mc­Grath, C.S.C., of Santiago de Veraguas, Panama, has caution­ed the members' of Serra Ir.te;r ­national.

"We cannot apply economic, social and political formu1a~

made in the U.S.A. to La~i~

America without serious cor.s:d.­eration and adaptation.

Political Concept "We desire universal suffrage.

But it is one thing in New York eUy and quite another in rural areas of Bolivia, Guatemala and Panama, where illiteracy rates m.ay run well over 70 per cent."

Bishop McGrath emphasized Chat effective universal suffrage requires education - "not only .. principally in reading and writng but also and more so in. the meaning of civic and com­• unity responsibilty."

-The very concept of politicg and its function of service to the eommunity is vastly different in. • centuries-long aristocratic so­eiety where the cultured. few have considered it their duty and right to rule with a more or less enlightened paternalism which, crudely interpreted, means a greater or lesser dedica­tion to helping the masses, with­eut however endangering the privileges of a few," Bishop Mc­Grath declared.

European Contrast BIshop McGrath told the Ser­

NOS that a combination of fac­tol'S, mostly provoked by the United States and European na­aons, are forcing Latin America III a few generations. to rush Chrough social, economic, and po­litical changes which required eettturies in Europe."

"Many Americans," he noted, "Dve with the impression that lite United States is every year pouring untold billions into thankless Latin American econ­eenies."

-They are aware," Bishop Mc­erath emphasized, ·of the un­Jortunate economic balance these nations experience in their re­"tions with U.S. commercial in­terests; and that the economic Md given the Latin American nations since World War II· £s Yery small compared to what was poured in~ Europe, and that, furthermore, the bulk of what went into Europe was :in the form of outright grants, whereas most of what goes to Latin America is in the form of loans, whose interest sometimes almost equals whatever ad­ctitional help may be expected Irom year to year."

Messace of Rope -rite mission of Christianity

-.d of Christians in Latin Am­erica, H Bishop McGrath also Mid, "is not solely nor even primarily to fight communiBffi or ether forms of atheism.

"It is primarily to speak again ftrist's message of hope in mod­ern terms, or, if you will, in the terms of our people, who are .. are called to be people of Cod, building a better world here and now; as brothers, help­in« Gne another as Christ did. healing one another's iUs, bear­Ing one another's burdens, in our long march toward the lasting eity of God."

Heads Bureau JAKARTA (NC)-Mro. Ber­

nardine Kwari Sasrasumarta, a lIOCiologist who twice has served as chairman of the Catholic Wo­m.en's Association here, has been appointed auxiliary minister for Catholic affairs by. the Indones­laD. l:overnment.

..... because I have an uncle who's a male n ures, and two first cousins. My uncle says it's a good profession. The pay is good and you c an help people." You can "help people." That's the St. Anthony High School sophomore's approach to life. Because of it, an 8-year-old girl is safe at home today. "But it could have been so

Ronald, a 5 foot, 9 inch, much worse if Ronald hadn't 125-pound teenager, he'll be been there," Mrs. Beauregard 16 on August 12, is a news­ said.

At Cathedral Camp, the St.paperboy in New Bedford. Anthony High student-who :5Last week, after a "hectic" a licensed hunter-is an instr:xe­first day at Cathedral Camp. tor on the rifle range.where he is a junior counselor,

He hunts with his uncle "everyRonnie started his rounds with chance" he gets. He has a largehis newspapers. newspaper delivery route. HeLauretta Beauregard, 8, was is interested in car racing andrunning home from a neighbor­building model cars.hood store with a popsicle. In

In between his duties attypical small girl fashion, she Cathedral Camp, he admits,was not paying attention to he can "always get in a swim."where she was going.

She slammed into a fire hy­ Plans Nursing Career drant and was flipped over it Currently, Ronnie is applying into the street as a car rounded at several schools of nursing the comer. for information on courses. He

Ronnie dropped his papers, hopes eventually to work in a raced to where Lauretta lay State hospital and wantEi to on the street unable to move. specialize in anaesthesia.

"Can you get up?" he asked The other night, while de­her. The little girl "just kept livering his papers, he stoppedcrying her head-off," he said. in to visit Lauretta.

Ronald scooped her up and "Her leg was all bandagedcarried her into her house. up and she was kind of groggy,""She's been hurt," he told Lau­ he said, "but she was all right."retta's mother, Mrs. Louis L. He sounded happy.Beaurgard. Then he left to con­

tinue his newspaper rounds. That's the kind of young man Near Tra~dy he is.

An across-the-street neighbor Ronnie's parents, Mr. and Mrs. eaUed to ten Mrs. Beauregard Roland Gamache of 314 EarleLuke's Hospital for observatiOtt.her daughter had almost been Street, and his younger brother,and for treatment of an injuredhit by a car. Lauretta told her Roger, 13, obviously are proudleg.mother "I could see the ear al ­ CJf the hero in the family.Dlost on top of me." Ronnie himself doesn't have

"Thank God he was there," much time to think about it.Jesuits SuspendMn. Beauregard said after the He's too busy.excitement was over. Lauretta was kept overnight at St. General Chapter

ROME (NC) - The Jesuit Strike Puts Meat general chapter which recentlyLutherans Become elected Father Pedro Arrupe, On Friday Tables S.J., the order's new superi()l' PHILADELPHIA (NC)-SoftleBenedictine Noyices general voted (July 3} to suspend called it • "wildcat" strike.

STOCKHOLM (NC) - Two IIessions July 15, and to meet others a union "work holiday."e.wedish Lutherans have become again in September, 1966. But whatever it was that caused.!:ovices at the Catholic Benedic­

The overriding consideration members of the Teamsters Uniontine monastery of Kloster Erlach

in this decision, a weH-informe4 to walk away from their trucks near Linz, Austria. source reported, is that many of and leave stores without their

They have not been received the problems the chapter has usual supply of seafood and fish. into the Church but intend to been dealing with are still to it put meat on the tables for H.'main Lutherans. When they be discused at the Vatican coun­ Catholics in the Philadelphiatinish their novitiates they plan cil's fourth and final session this archdiocese and the Wilmington, to return to Sweden and start a autumn. Jesuit leaders are Del. diocese Friday.Lutheran religious community awaiting the council's word on Because of the emergency,tllat will follow the Benedictine these problems, he said. Archbishop John J. Krol of Phil ­rule. adelphia and Bishop Michael M.The central issue debated at

The two were received at the Hyle of Wilmington gave dis­the chapter has been how best monastery following an agree­ pensations from the law of ab­to put the society's institutions ment between Bishop Franz and its 36,000 members at the stinence for the day. The truck­Zauner of Linz and Lutheran ers walkout stemmed from pro-'service of the modem Churcll Bishop Olof Herrlin of V;isby, and the modem world. . tests over dismissals of four Sweden, who blessed the Bene­ union members by a major dictine habits the novices were trucking firm. rti ven on their reception at Abbot Says Laymen

RONALD GAMACHE'

Kloster Erlach. Consecrating World Rockefeller Signs LONDON (NC)-Catholic la" ELECTRICAL

people in their work and their ContradonAnti-Smut Measure recreation "are the Churcb, act­ ~ ALBANY (NC) - Gov. Rock­ ually permeating the human en­efeller has signed into law an vironment and consecrating it," ~ anti-obscenity measure barring according to Abbot Basil Chris­sale of objectionable material to topher Butler, O.S.B., of Down­children under the age of HI. side Abbey. ~

The New York Court of Ap­ Abbot Butler told a famil,. and peals last year struck down an­ social action conference in near­other state law on obscenity _ ~~ by Hoddesdon: "Every man of grounds of vagueness. A spokes­ good will is positively related to 944 County St. ~ man for Operation Yorkville, in­ New Bedfordthe Church and in some sense ter(eligious anti-obscenity ()l'­ already belongs to her. The ganization which supported the Church, then, is mankind so far new legislation, said it "leaves as he accepts his supernaturalvirtually nothing open to the destiny and is in process of ac­eharge of vagueness." cepting his redemption."

Editor Resigns BALTIMORE (NC) - David

B. Maguire, for the past four and a half years managing editor of Real Estate the Baltimore Catholic Review, has submitted his resignation Rene Poyant effective Friday, July 16. In

. a letter to the Review's publish­er, Lawrence Cardinal Shehan Hyannis Gf Baltimore, Maguire cited "compelling ancl personal eon­ 335 Winter St. SP 5-0079 aiderations.•

On High Plane ST. PAUL (NC) - Good

congregational singing re­quires the presence of a. choir says a music educator.

"If you're going to keep con­gregational singing on' a decent­ly high plane musically, you ~eed a choir," is the opinion of Father John Sweeney, professor of music at the St. Paul semi­nary.

"The choir is there to ser'fe the needs of the people of God, so the whole service is done well," Father Sweeney observed, noting that details have not been spelled out either by the ecu­menical council's liturgy consti ­tution or by the post consiliar liturgy commission.

Rubrics Quite Clear He said the constitution's .em­

phasis is "obviously toward the people getting involved" in the liturgy but their part is "flexi~

ble." Even those most strongly ill

favor of congregational particl ­patioR concede that choirs must take over the parts of the Mass the people cannot handle, Father Sweeney said.

On the other hand, the Minne­sota professor added, "there are som~ things that are obviously intended to be done by the pe0­

ple, and the rubrics are quite clear on these things."

The semi.nary priest asserted there is no doubt that the con­gregation should join in ling­in« the Sanctus-Benedictus. The Kyria and Agnus Dei "can well be alternated with the ehoir and people."

Present ProbleM As for the Creed, it is a pro­

fession of faith and {<since every­body believes these things, they ought to have a chance to fill" 30," he pointed out.

Father Sweeney said that since the proper paris of the Mass change daily, congregational participation in them is almost impossible at this time. "But in the future it may be that the propers will be so arranged that the people will have some part m them," he added.

NO JOB TOO BIG NONE TOO SMALL

SULLIVAN BROS. PRINTERS

Mai" OHice and pta'" . 95 Bridge St., Lowell, MOH.

Tef. 458-6333

Auxiliary Pia....

BOSTON CAMDEN, N. J. OCEANPORT, N. J. MIAMI PAWTUCKET, 1.1. PHILADElPHIA

WM. I. MANNING (0. WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE

AND

INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES GENERAL TIRES • DELCO..BATTERIE!

• PERFECT CIRClE RINGS

FAll RIVER - NEW BEDFORD - HYANNIS - NEWPORT

Page 6: 07.08.65

- ---

6

.......-

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., July 8, 1965 Councif Continued from Page OneNo Rapprochement bishops, and 100 distinct veteI

before the overwhelming and "As long as I live there shall be no rapprochement with practically unanimous approval

the Roman Catholic Church, and to this end I am prepared of the liturgical reforms in .. Council, and the approbaticeto sacrifice my life." A shocking statement, this, in this and urgings of Pope Panl VI, the

era of religious good fellowship, and all the more when Boston priest explained. one considers its source, Archbishop Chrysostomos of Further ,changes in liturgielll Athens. The prelate was the one high-ranking Orthodox reform-as concerns the' vernae- .'

ular-is a matter for nation"churchman who . opposed the noW historic meeting of the hierarchies to decide. RitualOrthodox ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras with Pope changes are brought about -..

Paul some eighteen months ago, and he has been speaking' a decree from the Pope hims~

in keeping with his action ever since. ,based on, the recommendatiOM This latest statemen·t was to the Greek Synod when of an international panel.

The liturgical changes m_the question of sending observers to the fourth session of be well prepared for and unda­the Vatican Council came up. stood, the secretary warned, '.

Despite the urging of the government's representative they will appear only as -. in the Synod, that it is "no sin for us to see what the new pattern of rigid forms .••w

If there is no popular partici ­Catholic Church is doing," the Archbishop's views prevailed pation in the new rites-oneand the matter was referred to the plenary session of the which is understood-"even ..

:hierarchy that meets in October, a tactic used last year blessed a sign of progress 88 with success to prevent the sending of observers, sioce Eucharistic concelebration eft

appear to be a new series ..lIuch a session was never convened. clericalized liturgy."The only point in discussing this matter is to bring

Progress .So Farto the fore the fact that "not everybody loves us." There The introduction of the va­is nQ need to be unduly pessimistic, but it would be the nacular in the liturgy in UMI

.height of naivete to think that the feeling of religious U.S. has'met "broadest success· brotherhood pervades every ar~a of the world. It is true and only "comparatively few"

have found the changes "reall7that certainly not in four centuries has there been so much difficult," Fr. McManus pointed

good will and cordiality among .various religious groups. out. It is likewise true that while a beginning has been made Youth Lacks· Information Mentioning the structure _ if! it just that-a beginning, with all that a beginning outline of the Mass, he sa-id

that clarification of this "hasimplies, chiefly that there is a .long way yet to go. About Labor Movement succeeded in those places, and apparently only in those places,Wearing, Thin By Msgr. George G. Higgins where Mass is regularly cele­

(Director, Social Action Dept.~ N.C.W.C.) rated with the priest facing theIt is strange that in this day and age people must feel people, and where, withoutGarry Wills, whose sprightly column appears side by:

vateful that there were no riots celebrating the Fourth comprise, the simple pattern ofside or across the page from The Yardstick in a number ofof July weekend but that is the prevailing mood in many sanctuary arrangement has bee. :.10:

diocesan papers, has come up with what he regards' as a accepted." "Ya resort area of New Enghind. 'There is something quite sure-fire way of telling "the older generation of Catholic This pattern; he continued, IIbarbarous in the thought of people waiting for the sense­ liberals from the younger!' "the seat for the priest who pre­~Sg outbreak of violence and. wanton destruction and hop­ presumably more enlightened' sides ovp.r the community as •The older liberals, he says,' jUliior~'~ither don't Seen t~'giveing that local authorities would be strong enough to contain prays and listens to God's word;

"stm think of labor unions a hoot, one way. Qr the other,. the lecturn or ambo for theand put down the rioters; as a sacred cause. Placidly abo~t trade unionism or, hl!ve reader ... the' altar where the,The very idea is sO 'repugnant' to decency and maturity m~llowiQg 'monsignori, if _they become' slightly cynical, much. priest presides at the Euchari-'. that it is a wonder, an' enraged public does· not wOrk itself: he~r cl,"itici*m of the unions; too early, in life, about an im-· the sacrificial meal of the Chr~ into a ~u~ter-frenzy ',¢ attack against ,those who would ' still get ,red por.!;mt social movement - ,t4! . tian people."

which. they owe .much more tllan Only Be~inning·dare to upset the peaCe an.d orde:r .ofa, community., No, under their they.realize an~/or are willing to The changes up uri til n&Wwhite Rom anf)ne would urge a return to vigilante justice but the courts,· a'droit. . have been only the beginning,collars, 'imd. be­

with their concern for individual, rights,must become ever - Fr.o.thipg "the rhetoric of the the priest forecast. Thp.re will more aware that the public demands ooncern for its,rights rhetQric of the

gin to froth the 30s has at least as much to rec- ' be a "total revision of all phblM

too. There are repeated instances of groups of citizens band-I. 30s. The cause ommend it as snickering or rites and services" directed br of labor was, for yawning-if it be not out of an international body of bishops.ing .together for protection of their' homes and families..:.­

characteJ: for a "placidly. mel­ This will be followed by "re­many of them,• group of baseball bat bearing mothers guarding a play­ lowing" monsignor to say so. 'gional adaptation and evoluti,pn­the Great Fight;ground, a network of radio-equipped automobiles patrolling One doesn't have to be.a'iabor' based on "cultural traditions, a neighborhood, and similar groups seeking the protection victorious vete­

and, like a 11 partisan of the type described backgrou'nds and patterns ia (or caricatured) by Mr. Wills to different count.ries."that the ordinary law-enforcement channels are supposed rans, they get lament the fact that so mimy , International Commissiona bit misty­to provide. young Americans enter the Pope Paul VI has expandedeyed and prosyThese are all indications that the public patience is the Roman Post-Conciliar Com­on the subject. working force these days with

wearing. thin. Perhaps the absence of outrageous incidents Like the battlehorse on the Book such a woeful lack of knowledge mission for the Implementation last weekend indicates that the hoods are becoming aware of Job, they snuff that old battle and interest in the labor move­ of the Liturgy Constitution.

from far, off." ment and the problem of indus­ Originally, the Pope had namedof this too. This is such a simple, self-ex­ trial relations. 42 of the world's bishops to the

planatory, litmus-paper test that One reason for this, according commission. Four prelates havePapal Visit? one would think that even a to a recent study published by since died. Therefore, the Pope monsignor would be able to ap­ the New York School of Indus­ has added five new bishops--

The very possibility that the Holy Father may speak ply it successfully without any trial and Labor Relations at Cor­ . three English-speaking and two before the United Nations indicates the hope of the world advance training. Try as I will, nell University, is that "by and Spanish-speaking-to the com­

mission.in the prestige that the Pope can give that troubled body however, I can't seem to get the large students receive an inad­equate, often distorted, and Two of the three English­and the hopes that the Pope himself has in the ability of hang of it.

speaking bishops represent theirOlder .Liberals sometimes biased picture of thethat body to be a strong power for good in the world. countries on the nine-nation Of course, some Catholic groups will be embarrassed committee drawing up plans for

I have met my fair share of role of labor unions and the monsignori and have found even practice of industrial relations."

as there are those who look on the United Nations as a those who are not of the "placid­ Obviously our high schools· common texts for the Mass and the Sacraments for the English­weakening and un-American agency. ly mellowing" type to be, by and should not be expected to turn speaking world.But the Pope seems to feel, along with a good many large, rather likeable chaps. To out budding labor relations ex­

OIl, American representativesthe best of my knowledge, how­ perts, but they can be expected,others, that the United Nations, with all its faults and the commission are Joseph Car­ever, very few of them' ever I think, to provide their studentsweaknesses, is still a positive force in the world and worthy have anything to say in public with enough information and dinal Ritter, Archbishop of St. Louis, Mo., and Archbishop Paulof support and encouragement. about unions, and none of them enough sophistication to enable Hallinan of Atlanta. Ga. '.seems to fit Mr. Wills' pejorative them-as young men and 'women . Religious Libertydefinition of an older liberal. who are almost old enough to Pope Paul has previewed the

That doesn't necessarily mean, vote - to think reasonably religious liberty problems that of course, that Mr. Wills' defi ­ straight about labor-manage­ will occur:' the Bishops duringnition is inadequate. It may sim­ ment problems. the Fourth Session During his ply mean that he and I don't Presumably Mr. Wills will weekly audience, the Pope sum­agree with one another on the agree that this is not a very marized the text in this way:®rheANCHOR precise cannotationG of his heav­ healthy situation. "There exists, regarding the re­ily loaded expression, "froth­ ligious problem, a supreme ,re­OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER ing the rhetoric of the 30ths." sponsibility to which we must

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River Be that as it may, I can't see Releases Priests and ,can respond in one way 410 Highland Avenue myself losing any sleep over the PRAGUE (NC)-The commu­ only: freely, that is to say

real or alleged danger that a thrQugh love and with love.Fall River, Mass.. 675-7151 nist government of Czecho­tiny handful of has-beens in the not through force." .slovakia has released two priestsPUBLISHER ranks' of the monsignori are too as part of a general amnesty, . "Pay close attention. We are

Most Rev. James L Connolly, 0;0., PhD.; deeply committed to the cause of according to KNA, German at the center of the great prob­GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL M,A,'!AGER organized labor. lem of religious liberty, OIlCatholic news agency. Freed

Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll Don't Care were Frantisek Silhan, S.J.,. which the forthcoming session of the ecumenical council winMANAGING EDITOIl I am more concerned about Jesuit provincial in Prague.

Hwgh J. Golden the fa,ctthat so many of their and Father Otto Madr. Turn to Page Seven.

Page 7: 07.08.65

---- THE ANCHOR­Pontiff Defends I 7 .. "'to"",."'\'" '{""'" Thursday, July 8, 1965

Catholic Action !

\.' . ROME "(NC)~Pope ':p~ui VI 1 Assel!ts C'hutch ,defended t,lJ.e idea of, ,Catholic :, Action against a, mounting, atorm Inf!uence Stl10ng'of criticism, echoed even in

last Year~s ecumenical council In West Africa , discussions.

NEW ORLEANS (NC) Although, critics might hit the mark ,in aiming atparticu­ The influence of the Church Jar defects, "they do' not touch in northwest Africa "is truly the essence of your structure. remarkable" considering the They do not see the goodness, small minority of professedtruly Christian and' ecclesial, Catholics there, a French mis­of the principles on whlch your sionary priest said here. movement is founded," he told Though the Church is' notpresidents of Italian diocesan an arm of the government, it Catholic Action organizations is working within the frame­gathered in Rome fora' con­ work of what the new govern­

, ,·vention. ' ments are trying to accomplish, He said' he had such esteem added Father Joseph-Roger de

for Catholic action that he Benoist, W:F. was ready 'to defend it 'against Father de Benoist, a veteran critics "wRose voices often reach of 20 years in Africa,' said our 'ears." chances for' continued accept­

These critics suggest' it is an ance and growing importance O1'ganizati'on whIch "has had of the Church in this area; are

favorable." _Its day; ail old-fashioned form­ula; a movement entirely super­ The native of Paris, is elJitor ficial and mechanized, compli­ of the French edition of Vivante cated and burdensome 1n struc­ Afrique, White Fathers' publi ­ture; a s y s t e m completely cation. He is 'in this country

, dependent on discipline, where gathering .ideas for a proposed authority and obedience prevail mission magazine which would

be published jointly" by' 'all the" civer libertY and ,originality of I" expression; a network of: be­ INTERDIOCESAN MEETING FOR CONGRESS: Rev. Joseph u ·Powers~ Diocesan princIpal missionary comniUni­

nevolent 'projects, if you 'Will, CCD Director and general chairman of the CCD Congress scheduled for August~ presides ties working in western Africa. , but in fact economic, 'adriiinis­ at the meeting of teaching Sisters. Clockwise Sister M. Kilda, CSC, Manchester; Sr. M.

, , trative, buteaucratic, often con- Rosalie, CSSF, Hartford; Sr. M. Doklres, OLVM, Fall River; Sr. M. Emelina, SCI, Port­ Reverse Decision,eerned With particular and land; Sister Clara Mahoney, RC, Worcester, Standing, Sr. Marion O'Connor, RC, Boston; ., temporal affairs; a gathering of

. . doSed groups, for th9Se atttiped" and Sr. Mary Mercedes, RSM, Providence. ' ' Against Author ,., to clerical jargon, incapable of, VIENNA (NC) - A YugoSlav ," 'being open to new cUrrents of appeals eourt has reduced and

history, !lnd so on." ' , ' suspended the sentence imposedNo Problem Finding Lay Deacon,s on a young Christian author who ,wro~ critically of the Soviet

MIAMI (NC) -There, the F"...nights of Colwn1>us coun­ to baptize, to perform marriage, Union. ,Council cils, "where members are anx­ to assist the dying' and 'to bury,will be no problems finding Mihajlo Mihajlov, a univer­ious to serve." the dead.Continued from Page Six qualified laymen to serve as sity teacher and writer, 'wasBack-Hills Help· "Such deacons could be calledgive 'us valuable teachiQgs, , in- d' t ,sentenced April 30 to nine terpreting Christ's thought. He marr~ed dea~ons accor mg 0, Bishop Mendez, a long-time Deacons of the Sacraments, or months imprisionment on' char­iDvites us 'to the faith. He pro- ' a Latin Amerl~an prelate.. 'advocate of the married diacon­ perhaps subdeacons" he deciarect.

g~ of slandering th~ ,Sovietduces a moraloligation for'those . "In Puerto Rico, " said Bishop ate as a solution to Latin Amer­ They could be especially help-' Union. The charge was based who' receive' this lDvitation a" Alfred Mendez, C.S.C., of Are­ ica's priest shortage, will estab- ' ful in "the back-hills areas" on articles about the SoViet

'saving obligatiOn. But it does' abo, P ;R., :'there are some 500 lish a pilot project to train mar­ where priests can visit only rare-' 'Umon whlcb he wrote after not take away the physical' li- ex-senunarlans on the island. ried deacons in his diocese at , l7, be pointed out. living in Moscow last Summer. berty of man, who must dE!clde' If ~ too~ only the 100 who the end of the eoming session Flexible Pro&TaIll At the time of his trial. ,thefor himself, consciously, about studied philosophy or the 50 who of the Vatican council. . "FroID the Deacons o~ the ~­ Yugoslav press denouncecl.,;Mi­

'his destiny and his relations" reached theology, we would have 'He emphasized the need' for , eraments could later be chosen hajlov lor his criticism of the with God." , ', a nucleus of highly trained mar- "a 'crash program, not a length,. Deacons of the Word, fun de.':' Soviet Union, and for a letter

two-to-five year course- as en­visioned b,. some."

-.rhis pannount doctrine" can ded' men, 30 of whom could , cons, who would do the preach­ , in which he stated that be was . be sumlnarlzed in ~o propo- easily be fo~d to become mar­ ing." These, he noted" would re­ • Christian.

sitions, according to the Pope: ried deacons. Three-months' training would quire more training, "but e'Y'en' In an article written in his "'Regarding the faith. let no one Others, he believes, could be be enough, he feels, to train mar­ here short memorized sermons, own defense, Mihajlov said ibat be hindered, let no one be' drawn from the Serra Clubs ami ried Jnell to give Commwlion,' for a beginning, could be used "what is under discussion now

Ia that I haw dared to thinkforced." by the first or saeramental dea­with JIl7 own mind withoutBe continued: -rhis doctrine cons. Thus the sacramental dea­

Is completed by knowledge of Cardinal Warns on Innovations cons would be conduits of grace, asking authorization and that I have looked around with ID7the words of Christ ..• There and the Deacons of the Word,DAYTON (NC)-The prefect' duced which are opposed to the ' OWil eyes."conduits of truth."exists a divine eall, there exists of the Congregation of Religion spirit which should animate a universal vocation to the sal­ Married deacon programs win

has warned against introducing those who are consecrated tovation brought by Christ. There necessarily diHer from place to

reforms in the Church urtder the God." Renewal, he said, "is aexists a duty of spreading in­ place, the bishop admitted, but

guise of renewal. seductive word, and care must beformation and of informing "we can work out a basic pro­

In a letter to Father James M. taken that under the guise ofoneself. gram that can be adapted with

Darby, S.M., president of the this name reforms are not in­ variation to the needs of each"There exists an order to in­ Conference of Major Superiors troduced which could undermine specific area."struct and to instruct oneself. of Men, lldebrando Cardinal An­ the religious life . • • There exists, regarding the relig- , toniutti congratulated the CMSM "Renewal in the religious life'. ious problem, a supreme respon­ on its choice of the challenges means merely the modificationsibility to which we must and and opportunities of religious of what needs modifying in the can respoIid in one way only: life as the discussion topie for structure and in the external ac- ,freely, that is to say through love its annual meeting in this Ohio tivities of institutes in order toand with love, not through force. city. render them more efficient inChristianity is love." But, he said, "in some seeton their present day apostolate."

Birth Control Innovations have been intro-Dr. John R. Cavanaugh, a psy­

ehiatrist and member of the special papal commission study-' University Addition ing the birth, control problem, CHICAGO (NC) - Ground stated that when the Church ads , was broken here for DePaul Uni­in the continuing birth Control versity's new $4.5 million aca­Issue, Pope Paul VI, himself, and demie center by Father .John R. ,not the Second Vatican Council, Cortelyou, C.M., president, who will make, the pronouncement. pushed a button activating a 36­

inch wide ,driB. The five-storyBy appointing such a commis­building will occupy a blpcksion, Dr. Cavanaugh holds. the and is scheduled for occupancyPope withdrew the issue from in the Fall of 1966.Council and left it up to himself

to decide, Thus no council pro­'nouncement 'is expected.

Help Vic'tin"s GUATEMALA CITY (NO) ­

Catholics in Guatemala City , .. sent $1,100 to Archbishop Luis

Chavezy Gonzalez of San Sal­vador in neighboring El Salvador to help the victims of recent earthquakes.

Montie PlumbiiJft & Heatin.g COe!' Int.,

Reg. Master Plumber 2930, GEORGE M. MONTlE Over 3S Years

of Satisfied Service . 806 NO. MAIN STREET'

Fall River OS 5-7497

BEFORE YOU BUY-TRY

PARK MOTOR!. OLDSMOBILE

Oldsmohi l - ot-Renault 17 Middle Street, Fairbavell

RAMBLER,", ,

America's Economy ,Ki'ng For the Best Deal Come To

Broadway Rambler INC.

768 BROADWAY . RAYNHAM, MASS on Rt. t38 CHARLES J, DUMAIS. Pres.

-SEGUIN­, Truck Body Builders

Aluminum or Steel 944 County Street

NEW BEDFORD, MASS. WY 2-66J8

MONAGHAN ACCEPTANCE

CORP. THOMAS F. MONAGHAN JR.

142 SECOND STREET

OSborne 5·7856

FALL RIVER

('Save Wit'h" Safety"·· at

NEW BEDFORD-ACUSHNET CO-OPERATIVE BANK"

115 WILLIAM ST. NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

Page 8: 07.08.65

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of 'ofl Rlver"':"'rh.un.,.~I, 1~65

Lively New Breed of Sisters Displays. Diversity of Talents

By Mary Tinley Daly Time was, back in Chaucer's day, when he described a

BUn as "A Nonne ••• tha of hir smyling was iul simple and coy . . . "(in old English) going on (translated to modern English): '"Intoning through her nose, becoming: And fair she spoke her French, and fluently, After the school of Stratford-at­the:-Bow, For French of Paris was not hers to know." Today'. nuns would find it far from becoming to "intone through the i r noses," lind for most 01. them the I'rench of Paris Is theirs to lm~w. Many of lIB, far removed from Chaucer's time, remem­ber nuns of not too long ago, those whose very presence east a chill. Rather prissy and proper, they would elicit from their charges only a sacred, "Yes, S'ster"; "No, S'ster." In side­walk-long black gowns, they glided along' and we wondered if they even had feet. They were not allowed to eat with the girls in their own school, much less eat in a public res­taurant. Excellent teachers, yet their con t act with students ended with the school day, ex­eept for pre-arranged appoint­ment.

Bot Now A nun, A.D. 1965? Maybe U's the aggiornamento

el good Pope John. Perhaps it is because religious

communities are accepting gir18 born just prior to, during and after World War II.

Whatever the reas:on, you'd hardly find a nun nowadays able to hobble about without a cane who doen't know how to drive a car, swim and dive, fill out an income tax form, make a speech. plaY.8 musical instrument, enjoy a game of tennis, tutor the new math, converse about world affair&,

.and speak frankly to her super­ior-in a nice way of course.

Apropos, this quote from an article in the current Jubilee by Rev. Stafford Poole, C.M. Father Poole writes on "the new breed" in seminaries but it seems equally applicable in convents:

"There is now a growing reali ­zation that the monarchical and hierarchical nat u reo f the Church does no~ exclude con­sultation or the upward and downward communication be­tween superior and subject. The history of the exercise of papal power, from Gregory VII to John XXIII, is proof of this. The basic equality and freedom eI. all Christians are ~ot incom-

Says Justice, C~arity RQcial Harmony Key

. BUFFALO . (NC) -:- Bishop James A.McNulty Of Buffalo allid 'here tbe8ecret of success ia ta~'relatioiVJ .. jUstice pl. ~CbaritY. " .' i' ,

; ... in a pastoral mess8de. the pre­late Silid that ''it is: one thing to insist on what i8 legal. It ill 'another thing to insist· on what ill neighborly. This demands jui­tice plus charity. Th~ latter .. the secret to success in race re­lations." '

Bishop McNulty aimed most of his remarks at segregated pat­terns in housing. He noted that of the Buffalo area;s 80,000 Ne­groes, 73,000 are jammed into 11 of Erie County's 177 c:ensua tracta.

patible with hierarchical juris­diction."

Sisterly Guests A couple of "the new breed"

of nuns visted our house recent­ly. Friends of the family, they were in our town to attend a conference on guidance being held at a local university. Thril ­led with what they were learn­ing from experts, they were eager to be of still further service to the young people they would teach next Fall.

And a dinner with a family­ours--was, to their way of thinking, a fun by-product of being in our town.

''You do enough driving, Mrs. Daly," said Sister B. as we called to pick her and her companion up at the dormitory where they were staying. "Let me be the ebaffeur."

Like any young woman whO only occasionally has wheels at her command, Sister B. was itching to step on that accelera­tor, and she did, weaving ex­pertly through traffic.

"Could I go to the grocery store with you?" she asked wheD we suggested stopping for a forgotten few things for dinne~.

"I love to push a basket." And a very efficient basket­

pusher was Sister B., getting the royai treatment: customers letting us be first in line at the baked goods' counter, the "take-a-number" system mo­mentarily disregarded; a "Please, Sister, take my place" at the produce weighing-in and again at the check-out counter.

"Guess they never saw' a DUll

before," chuckled the tall, tan­ned young nun in her flowing black .robes, "at least not • a grocery store!" .

(Personally, we wished Sister would accompany WI every day).

At home, "the lively ones" were a help in the kitchen, sprightly conversationalists at dinner and folk-singers par ex­cellence as we gathered around the piano, Sister B. strurnmin. her guitar.

God bless "the new breed"­the Iively ones--say we!

Mexican Archbishop Backs Literacy Drive

MERIDA (NC)-Catholic 01' ­

ganizations have been urged to create teaching centers and to collaborate with the government agencies in the campaign to im­prove the literacy of. the Mexi­can people.

In a pastoral letter, Archbishop Fernando Ruiz y Solorano of Yucatan said: "Not a single Mex­lean should remain in the dark­ness of ignorance. Thll' ChurCh .. weB aware that an educated personeim live a more dignified life and 'f1!e1 a IItJ-Onger desire .. ~e~: himself."

. .

towa Sisters· of· Mercy .C"'OOMt·Mother,General .'"

CEDAR RAPIDS (NC).­Mother Maiy Eleanor Cashman, registrar of 'Mount· 'Mercy' 'Col­iege here for the past 20 years, was elected mother general of the Sisters of Mercy of Cedar Rapids'during theeOmmunity'8 general ebapter.

Mother Eleanor succeeds Moth­er Mary Lawrence 88 mother general of the community, whose members do teaching and nurs­ing work in Iowa, Montana and Minnesota.

PREPARING FOR CCD CONGRESS: Preparations for the 19th New England Regional Congress of the CCD tG be held in the Diocese Aug. 26-29 are being made by the following chairmen: Seated, left to right, Rev. Henry T. Munroe, luncheon; Rev. Michael P. McPartland, hotel res­ervations. Standing: Rev. Lucio Phillipino, exhibits; Rev. Luciano Perreira, transportation.

Oft" Fresh Daily

At YOUI'

Neighhorhood Store

PICN IC DAYS

Are

GOLD MEDAL Days

-Schedule Auet10n In East Marion

Art. auCtIon to benefit St. ... trick'. Scholarship Fund w01 be held rain or shine at 10:38 Saturday moming, July lO .. the Nowak bam, Point Road, East Marion. Directions for reaching the site given by MJ'lI. Hulot Haden, auction chairman, are "first bam on left after passing water tower."

In charge of refreshmentll will be Kathleen Ronni and a large committee will aid Mrs. Haden with other arrangements.

To be auctioned are antiques, rugs, dishes, pictures, books 8Il4l articles of furniture.

Chinese Nationalists Honor Catholic N""

TAIPEI (NC)-A Catholie BUD. was the only foreigner honored here in Formosa in the recent award ceremony of the Foul1ll United Social Service Campaign, which is sponsored by the Chinese Nationalist Party.

Sister Shih Tse-hua (CyprieBt of. the Immaculate Heart :Mis­sionary Sisters, a Belgian ~

birth, received a silver plaque from Shen Ch'ang-huan, minis­ter of foreign affairs, in recog­nition of her work among the poor here.

Become Students PROVIDENCE (NC) - S~

330 nuns from 60 religious com­munities are enrolled in the 18th annual Summer school of sacred theology for Religious Sisten .. Providence College here. Amoftg those enrolled are four nUDll from Uganda and two fI'o3a India. .

.. : .

Page 9: 07.08.65

GLEN COAL & OIL CO., Inc.

, ..QUAQ1:Y.~ ' ',".VlaI•• ~ ~ ,,!, ."•. , • ,,- • , ~ •

.....ala.........·

c' :~~"'~~1);!l,.'~~5,:,~~:

,~'setCounttr"'Fai'f3~$- 'At 'St."Ahne's:; .,~;f,._!

'., . 8Poo3ored by ~ ;FJj~ofthe P.resentatloa of:~ Noviti'­ate. aCounb7 ~air will be heldfIum • to , Saturday, .July 17 011the grounds of St. Anne's H0s­pital, Fall Biver. Proeeeds willbeDerit the aovitiate.

JIm. Bem7 Bertbiaume, dJajzI.• IDaDo wID. be aided by' ..

IIarpretParker _ eo-c:bilinDaD.

Bootba will tieatme 1yppemade8tIdes,~ plants. hamebakedeabI ... C!IIIldies. white eJe­JIhantlI ancI • ~ boaUque.Beln-nents will be 1IiIInelI'"

~-""'.'

.....~------~,"CAPE COD'S"

lARGEST BANePAYS

4'2%..Is..... C_pa_cIed ...payaWa ....IeIfr- ..

.............. Sen.... ~cc..... .

Bass ,ll~er ~- _.Savings.~"·.... ,.\ ....._....'-'.. "; """' .•• . , .~. ~.II••'>:.

... ·i1 •••• f .

Page 10: 07.08.65

· " ..

Self-Sufficiel1tY .GoalThey LOok to Us for Help

We read. in ,the Gospel how Christ wept . Church of Saint Peter i.n Gallicantu7 which Is theover Jerusalem. pI~ where St. Peter denied Our lord.

That spat is marked today by a tiny and very 'This is the Arab-Israeli border where for 16bea'utifuJ chapel called' Dominus Flevit. It is just nors soldiers'ha've been on 24-hour guard, eachbeneath the crest of the Mount of Olives, as it skle ready to shoot to kill anyone who dares walkdescends into the Cedron Volley. The altar is those short yards in eitherdirection.arranged so that the priest and people at Mass When, the Holy land yvas cutin two the ma-look through a wide window on a panorama of .ted losses to the Church were enormous. Muchthe city whose rejection' of Him caused Jesus to \~what had taken years in the buUding was lost.a" both sitles new churches, schools, hospitalsweep. • h edand ot er institutions of mercy were need . In

As the pilgrim JoOks out over the City from Israel the Catholics had now betome concentratedthis vantage point his thoughts are jarred b.v the in Galilee;.Jn Jordan the Catholic population was'evidence of hate made manifest here again in our almost doubled by those who fled in to the Oldown time-the destruction wrought by shells, bul- City for protection and who would never returnlets and grenades is clearly evident on both the to their homes. Poverty which had always beenCenacle, scene of the last Supper, and the Church .' widespread in the Holy land was replaced byof the Dormition built over the place where Our nflar destitution for bisho'ps, priests, religlous andBlessed Mother died. 'On the roofs of both these laity alike.shrines armed Israeli soldiers can be seen peer- His Holiness Pope Paul VI has appealed to

, ing alertly from behind sandbags. United States Catholics to assist him in caring forAnd as the pilgrim's gaze moves scant yards these unfortunate people who are enduring the

down ·hill-he sees a line of Jordanian soldiers of worst in their battle for survival. The .Cathoticthe Arab Legion, also armed and at the ready, in Near East Welfare Association is the Holy Father'sfront of their encampment on the grounds of the Mission aid to the Oriental Church.

tA!l Unitec1 NatiODa Photos)

Page 11: 07.08.65

,"

\~

•~

,.1

•c

,.'

ff'

l,~'(>~'

\.i',

.~i

\

-u a~ .... "ll,

I[i;:.~:

.~n.·..:

.t..·~.U.IJ

r..iH.!I;

d.:-•..·~)

.~if

iJ!HH

~i~1....••.~

I,.flJ

!;~il~

1a~h

~lifl,.ri.·.

I.·.s.·.I.i..

i.,!.,'.t·

i~H!

~ii~iH~

.'.~:'~'>

•.;'.?.,.·I~.,.;.i

§.111

~"::S'

r:'I'"

J~fiBlfi~'d

i-'ti"

J.rf~l

~ltl~'irlir,rfn

1~I!r·

2.ltl:

~,~'f5

::fII·

IIJI

,r..t=~t:.{m~[~~

m.,!:"

.if;d

rl;:

,,;;

tnll

l~1c

Unni

IU~r!l,1

dlr'l

r'hf~~IrU

Ir~.:;f.

;!~b'r

•.

.ih

dl,~

b.r~

·!;.

~

_II..':!

'f12,

'J'ltJ

;,(dr

J'l'h

:dr:tpJ.h~~~

fill:

.I~.tl

'H,

.•.•t".,H

,II·llr

~'.hiI

l-~ic.

tilf

~JlL.,,:

•••I;,~;

ftl~i,'Id

rllllr!

'11tf:

,>1:'1

IIE

I,IIr

illllll"

.,'II"

II'lilt

:II·,"I-

,'~

II,~••,

Qt,

ui,hr

rh>~h"

';r'ti

lt.n,l

rt,~lU

:.nU

hlu

,d

,.1I,ll

U",

r',t

JU

h~i:7~

~!,:,.

.'.·····

··JU,

..~JlflriHfifFi.

~~I:

r"JI

...__

--.

c,

",''.

1."

'""

....

.tf

~liI

~J

1'1l,

Qi

1....~..t·

..li.l

·1'.

1"S

!.",

(8,$

·'"!I

.f~

'J~'

II,.".,

..

I~II

'it

I'.~~

dSh

lid

.r1=

;111e'

;i·,

;;",

~"~l

"!l:

~:Jt

I~nJ

ill

I.Hi "

rh~·!HidJ.~;lldu,

nUh

~h:r~l~

,."

..

...'

.f~tf

..tt·n

Itl'f\I

""_.'r:

f"flt

nnra

ir[1

'1['I'r

ll~~~'~'

r-I~tll

!llf l

~.t.·

'n

..':1

{:'.I..".

>!..'.''.c.

'..'.

.".-._I

ri}.·,f

.;.§I'

trtll

:r.ir'·f

r.~if

.,!I!,

I"~llt

rr•.~t

•.•:.,1..•·.'

.&...,.1

.·.'.'."11

:rJI'.

1-1-.U

.\i\.

·..',~.i.

Ji.·

1;'j

;:i

..If

'lt.

~lss

ifI

'U

ii

a"~f

!t::

!'uI'I

1" 1

,1'.

'....

~,I

llr,Q

Ii..

.

....;;

~.,

I.

Itct

.1

Jai

I..=

!r

...-~

~~

~go

!../

II

.I'".

'.,.·..1.,

".',

,!'....1

'..

••=..

f;.:....,

,:!.

~.'~a

./s-i

=a§os

:gr

....•1

'11

•'1

''..1.

:1'

'rDI'

'';.I~

I.IlI:

",.,.·

.;.L

!.,

.,

Sill

!:of.

'Ii

':"I

,...

..C

'.~

~..

011.

../I

~S

:..

••II

IS~

/I..

.iJ

fIW

.~,.

.

iJ'

.'I'

!'-~

1I·1I81r~

1"""i~![rq~

IV'w

~~::I

ll'lt:i'

'''''''r

fI

II'

1,0

~.'J

iii''.

.''.'

a'lI-!2

t;41

!ia.

e:C

!Ir,.

,IF

'~,;.s-oi~;~J~·!!l1

·':0

"I"r

trl['I

't~·IrEi

-:'-

,!

-~.

,~&J~.

'·r

iifl

irl

"~ir'=lld~

~3.~

~'3l

il~ih

.'.

I'r~

'nh

','.;:"

.I.

,;~.·I·,

I""'"r

.l.r

r~t

J,r~

1t

9-

1,:~~·

~!r;~!

'~ISf~

MGII-

11.,'lo

_rr:;

~~':',11

'',;

.'

>~

z~

.r!'"

S"'1

";.

rdo

g'.'

Po..

.go

~l:i

.""

,~

,:,

)...:'

,

-I...

'""':'·1

.B!l

;lu,'~

nJlldt,~raJ:l

~fi!!~

hJ.

fwU.ll~,c

';~.it-

IIr1~

I!~t,1

'1'ii

rl!I

'iJ.I

;!tt

.r~h

:~ii

.,t

wIr

lo.t.

.1'.:;

,:":1

·".

rl'h

··dh

.Ji,J

hh~

unrL

!rd~

fr.&

,.,(

hlh

,to

i:

.i"

;..

'..

...'

....

..>;

.,':,'

...

..~~~

S;:

j'."

Page 12: 07.08.65

THE AHCHOR­Five-Polttt 'PICuI ChtistiiUi Family MtiVement 'of'Diocese· 'f'SThursday, July 8,)961

Plan, Full Program for Summer Whi1e most groupe eease to meet during the Summer months and only make ~eral

p'ans for their Fall and Winter activities, members of the Christian Family Movement are planning a rather full schedule. Most groups will not meet during the months <rf July and August, but all groups will be represented in a series of sessions geared for improved

For 6j.ittle Guy' In Society ...

ASPEN (NC)-A .JeeuIt, theologian outlined a five­point procedure ill whieh "the little guy" ean achieve his own peace lIBd freedom ill modem society.

Father William F. Lynch, S..J., of Jersey City, N.J., told the 15th annual Aspen International Design Conference here in C0l­orado: "I believe the more con­scious we are of the problem of modem living, the less likely awful things are to to happen.·

The first priest-theologiaa ever invited to the Aspen con­ferences, Father Lynch·was :re­ferring to urban problems, or­ganized crime, use and abuse of atomic power, automation, grow­ing influence of impersonal forces of technology over the in­dividual and the whirlwind pace of change in the world.

Stressing the need of human­izing modem society, he asked: "If the Church is willing to move into a wider concept of self-criticism and humanization, why can't those responsible for the direction of science and tech­nology do the same?"

Father Lynch gave this five­point outline for the "little gu~

bucking modem society. Participate actively in person­

al, family, and community re­lations "to insure against the

. feeling that one ill only being lISed by society."

Goals of Llv~ Integrate the "little lines" of

human values into the "big lines" ot business, industry, jobs, or other major everyday concerns.

Understand the alliance be­tween new mental sciences, such as psychoanalysis and psycho­therapy, and the arie and other scienceS.

Develop imagination with • eonscious awareness of facts. "Imagination is not fantasy,­said Father Lynch. "In fact, im­agination destroys fantasy.

''Use the imagination to stay ill touch with reality," he ad­

,vised the delegates. Re-evaluate the goals of liv­

ing, and attempt to integrate himself harmoniously with thea goals.

Pray for Peace, Pope Again Asks

VATICAN (NC)-Pope Paul VI spoke of the dangers to world peace and asked prayers that the threats will be over­come, as has become usual at his regular Sunday appearances to crowds in St. Peter's Square.

But he also encouraged the people to have a hopeful Chris­tian outlook.

He said that "there are twe ways of judging the way the ' world is going, especiany wbeIa the neWs is not eomforting. ,

"There ,ill the way of fa. listie! resignation whIch sees De remedies nor seeks them, .. eventB . themselves,. hoping that

, they will· right, theJil!ielves. . . -rhen there ia the' w61 Iff,

- hope, hope always hi the inter­.en~ of .Prov.idence, even •. 1his .in1ervciltion does not 81­WliY,., ~ing signs lUld Pl'odigieli. but 'appears llS the happy inter- , play of, human circumstances.' And there is hope m: the good will Qf leaders, ill· the JD~ fIf those who suffer· and Ia the effectiveness of those who pray.

"Therefore our, hope w1~ 1eaB evermore heavily upon our praye~ which is now becoDrlng more fervent and trustful. D

0"·

.-.FREE/KIT 1lI0l' fo'........to , •J. lESER" Prop. ,,i. •..,v"". ,~~ •Says Social ,Challge RESIDENTlA~', • . "J •

INDUSTRtAL,' . ,Laity'. Busine~~' - . , ., .' .' ... ., ,Cl)~ERCtAL . BOGOTA (MC) ,.- ~bisholt Alberto Uribe UrdanaetOl Call 'st·,Cedar ..., ,..••~. -,: ,,~-,.. --~-·-·-I·'" .,':", wt' 3i-3222'· .8aid he' is ~vin~..•at ~ Sf: .. Mo~~ ~~ ........CbU1'cll should, lel~ ~ .initia­tiVe ill bringing about lIOclal:',II...........__"""'"" ....__•.•' .. I ' Ci'Y---'''-~'~"''' .....~ , .' •••iiii.~.··.··"I'~AY 'OST~GI'.~eh:g~ interv~w llere ~~ .~. 'Whi.t.'.; FC..r.",-D~i,y l"" "olt-paid; Cletcl~••••d ...~tope~, ,~Cicly to _cilt· .lombia the arehbish,op warned, I II,sPEC.·iALM.'ILK.': .. however, that· . such' ~anges . 'should be made within • ~- , . FromOU,. 'Own. FIRST ,FEDERAL' 'SAVINGS' ditionally Catholie ~ork. :, Tested HerdH

ANO LOAN A5S0CIATtO"-rhe Church," he Iflid, "'III , h . WY • .......7

made up of hiel'8J'Chy and laity. Acul net, MatS. ,.--' OF FALL RIVERThe heirarchy bas the duty to • Special Milk teach, while the laity should act • Homogenized Vito P Milk Home OHice: 1 North Main St., Fall Riw,responsibly in accordance with • Buttermilk Somerset OHice: 149 G.A.R. Highway, Rte. 6their teaching. Political, econo- • lropicana Orange Juice

Nuns to Enter Newman Work

CINCINNATI (NC)-Two !!w­ters of Charity of Cincinnati will forsake traditional c0n­vent assignments here to take up work on a secular campus.

Sister Daniel Miriam, voca­tions director at the community's Mt. St. Joseph motherhouse, and Sister Christopher, Seton High School teacher, will join the staff of the student parish at Michigan State Universi~ in August. •

Father Robert E. Kavanau" is pastor of the parish, St. John's, and director of activities for itB nearly 7,000 student parishion­ers. He is assisted by tw4t Franciscan priests of the Cincin­nati province and two prieBill of the Lansing diocese.

The Sisters will live ill • small house on the campus, and will be available at the parish c­center from 3 to 11 P.M. The7 will eat with the students, go to lectures and club meetinp and sports events with them, and possibly enroll in a course of study at the university.

They said they expected te work especially with women students, providing "a woman's touch and influence" in Newman work at Michigan State.

Complete

BANKING SERVICE

'Of' Bristol County

Bristol County Trust Company

TAUNTON, MASS.

THE lANK ON TAUNTON GREEN

Member of Federal Depoell InllUranee Corporation

leadership in the Movement. Beginning the Week of

Sunday July 18 a Leader­ship Course will be held in three sections of the Diocese. The series of nine week courses will be held in North Attleboro and Plainville for couples from those towns; Attleboro and See­konk couples will meet in Attle­boro; couples from North Easton, Mansfield, Fall River, New Bed­ford and Taunton will meet ill Taunton.

The techniques of the course have been prepared by the Co­ordinating Committee of the Christian Family Movement. In each section of the Diocese of Fall River where the course it! being given, notes compiled by Mr. and Mrs. John Drisch will serve as the basis for sessions.

The course is intended for potential C F M Leaders, and leaders of other groups in vari ­ous parochial organizations. All CFM couples have been invited to take the course in view of developing greater knowledge of the general program of the Christian Family Movement.

Area Instructors Couples assigned to give this

eGurse themselves took an active part in an instn•.ctors' course given by a CFM couple in Ham­ilton, Mass. They include: Mr. and Mrs Robert Wessman, St. Mary's parish, North Attleboro; Mr. and Mrs. F.H.. Stelter, Jr. St. John's parish, Attleboro; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fyfe and Mr. and Mrs. Donald Blake, St. Mary's parish, North Seekonk.

Weather permitting, the ·CFM Federation Family Picnic win take pllice on Sunday, July 18 lit St. Vincent de Paul Camp, Westport. The day of family fun and fellowship is under the auspices of CFM groups of Notre Dame parish in Fall River. Mr. and Mrs.· Paul Dumais and Mr. and Mrs. Gerard Roussel are coordinating preparations.

Family Retreat The third annual family J'e­

treat is scheduled for the La Salette Retreat House in Attle­boro. Two weekends are avail ­able for this spiritual function -September 10 through 13 and September 1'1 through 19. Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Lockwood, St. Mary's parish, North See­konk, are in charge of regis­tration for this event. It is planned on a first come, first serve basis and children will be welcome. ,

In other Feder&tion news, Mr. and Mrs. William Crowle7. St. Mary's parish, North see­konk, are in charge of pnpara-

ACTIVE IN CFM: Dr. and Ml'I. Joseph Kerrins of At­tleboro, among Diocesan eouplea active in the Christian Family Movement.

tloos implementing the 1965-88 program based on "International Life and the Proper Use· of Leisure Time." Their research will aid groups adopting this program.

Couples from the Diocese are planning to be in attendance at a national meeting slated Wednesday through Sunday, Aug. 25 to 29, at the University 01. Notre Dame fa Indiana. -

Norris H. Tripp SHEET METAL

Your nearest mail box is a First federal "bra,nch office" that'S open 24 hours· a day to make Saving easy for you. No traffic, nO parking, no weather problem~.

Withdrawals 8rt just as simple .. savings payments.........

, •••••••• ,all Jove.bY·.

•••••• ~.~d "t thll COll'O" fl~:.lIo .to~I'"

eannot be disappointed since mic, and technical problems are • Coffee and Choc. Milk Both Offices Op~n Friday Evenings until 8it is directed to OUl' HeavenlJ" matters which should interest • Eggs _ Butter Somerset Drive-In Window Open Mon,-Thurs. 'til 4Mother.- 1a¥ CatholiCl, but not prieBta.­ ....................................

Page 13: 07.08.65

I

THE ANCHO~-D.jocese·of Fan River-Thurs., July 8, 196514' Survey Shows Seminary Chur~h A~tive in Shoa>ing Dropout Rate Increasing

BALTIMORE (NC)-The dropout rate in the nation'slalen Social 'Justice Aims Catholic seminaries is increasing and this should prompt From "The Church in the New Latin America" restudy of entrance policies, discipline and teaching prac-

Edited by John -J. Considine, M.M. tices. This is the conclusion of a nationwide surVey conducted

The bishops of Brazil issued a pastoral on Brazil's by Father Cornelius Cuyler, . education With the first year of Labor Day, May 1,1963; which has attracted comment in 8.8., in cooperation with the ,college, the survey says. North and 80uth America. Drawing freely from Pacem in office of affiliation of' th~ The survey offers no recom-Terris and Mater .et l\iagistra, this statement is divided Catholic University of Amer- mendations, but says its statis­into sections treating, for' lea. tics ~verise to "manyques­

together highly qualified eco- Father Cuyler, a Sulpician, is tions."Brazil specifically, of rural . ts . 1 '.:. D f P ·tnomls , SOCIO OgIS"", agronom- dE'an of studies at St. ·Charles, ays 0 rospen y and land reform, business· ists, financial, research and a. minor seminary in suburban "Certainly, ,one cannot but and tax reform, administra- educational specialists. These Catonsville offering Wgh' school, worry about the number of those

.: ·tive, electoral and educational technical teams· analyze their and junior college education to entering the seminary; but one reform. The current contribution nation and region, diocese by ..::andidates for the· priesthood. does wonder if, in view of the of the Church diocese, village and hacienda, Father Cuyler's copy.rjghted ever-increasing· m<>rtality, many

· to the temporal slum by slum. Taking into ac- report centers on minor semin- . of those admitted should have , -order· of Latin count illiteracy, disease, land TITULAR BISHOP: Msgr. aries. But it includes statistics - been allowed to enter," it says. · 'America, the tenure, housing, unemployment, Loras J. Watters has been on. the perseverance, of candi- "But surely all the fault does

call for social and revolutionary movements b P be t th h' .. not lie With the candidates," it other than Chrl'stl'an, they plo·t named y Pope auI VI to a es roug maJor·. seml1'larIes. . .

justice is dif . It b t 100 000 . >adds. It says -that part of· the , ficult 'fo~ ~ out the reforms to be, promoted a?xiliary bishop to Arch- ari::~r:o~ ~:35 tp 'the, o~~=:· difficulty must be all that the ,North Ameri- by social action of Christian bIshop James J. Byrne of, tion class of 1964 in 143 semin- . world "ii'these days of pros­

, cans to grasp inspiration. Social action pro- Dubuque, Iowa. A .native of aries in 33 states and the District perity" has to offer. for the' simple grams already functioning are f C 0 1 b' Even this, however, it says, reason that we strengthened; needed m 0 v e-Dubuque, he served. ~rom 0 Of ~n~:' seminaries, he re- . may not be the whole story.

,of the United ments are initiated. 1956 to 1960 as a spIrItual ports that from 1935 to 1952, the "Perhaps there is also reason .States and Can- The various categories. 9f director at the North Ameri-. overall percentage of boys who for many in ·the seminary to ada have not national orgamzations like labor t fr th f" t f .. . listen attentively to some criti ­experienced a ,similar historical and farm leader formation, radio can College, Rome, where he' wen om e IrS year {) mlIlor . cisms being leveled <against it ­. h d t d' d' th I t 30 ,,~minary education to ordination

• ~le. ." ,. and basic education, coopera- a s u Ie In e a e s. is 16.6 per cent--a loss of 83.4" Maybe a further 'aggiornamento' On the whole, for the; past tives, agrarian reform, rural NC Photo. . per cent. 1r in order and some windows

,hundred and fifty y.ears N9rth extension, housing and technical of the seminary ought to be op­. : America has enjoyed .political schools are able to define their Theology Yea.rs . ened wider,'" Father Cuyler · ' stability and economic progress own goals, and to set up the The biggest loss Occurs,' the st t'W' • h P bl ,., .to a degree unmatched ir~"any mechanisms best suited to attain' elg ro em 'study says, in the first four years· a es.

other part of the globe, ,The these goals under the top tech- Of V t· of minor seminary education. In Church in Canada all-d, .the nical consultors of these survey oca Ions the 1935 to 1952. Period, an ave-' 'Bishops Discuss·' Aid United States as a spiritual arid planning eenters.· ). E I· d " rage of 28.9 pe~ cent of those, . F PD. body has been supported and· . It must be stressed that the" n n9 an, ,':, ".. . who entered J.llinor sem~~ary or Qor locese'S: nourished. by the naturBl life profeSsional centers dovetail 'LONDON (NC) ..,-- ,Arch_,"went on to the fir~t ~ear of,~~m- ,PARIS (NC)-An arrange­of the affluent society. their plans most closely with b· mary college. 'rIus IS a loss of ment under which rich dioceses

," Quite the opposite has op~ain- the socio-econ6rnic developQlent 16hop John Murphy of Oar-~ 'about 71 percent. ' .. ' would provide financial aid for 'oed 'in Latin America. The Church· programs of the nati.onal ,gov- diff asserted that' , the Father Cuyler's surVey also poor dioceses was discussed at ., has been battered aDd w~akened emments, regional bodiC$. the, Catholi« ehurch .in .~~gIand found a rising dropout. rate on, a meeting of. the permanent · '-by icieologi_cal~d'.pciWtical . 'Alliance for Progress and Com- and Wales is confronted both the theology level for'those ytho council of the French Bishops' , iltr~!e, by social and eCQ~pmic ,. ·mon Market initiati';'es. ,Indeed" by a skrinkage in the nUmber began their priestly stUdies in .Conference here., , , ·fossili:iatiori. In her h~an man- ' . some of these' center$, notablY of applicants for seminar~es,-and' the first year of the miiior sem-" Such a ..plan, it was pointed . itestations the Church. has DESAL (centro p~ra Desarrollo' a skrinkagem.persev:er~nc~. 'fnary. The··theology'yea,rs :are out, WQuld help the:material · shared the ills ('fthe clvi,c body Economico ·Social de America Writing in a special "v:ocations the final four years of a semin- _ situation of priests in a large

whose outmoded feudal .struc- Latiria) of Santiago;Chife, and issue" of the weekly, Catholic arian's preparation. ' , number. of French .dioceses. · tutes have at last collapsed to CIS (Centro de InvestigaCion H~rai.d here, the, archb~lll1oplnthe period 1935 to 1939, the The suggestion was l:On~ed

produce the crisis of our gen- Social) of 'Bogota, 'Colombia, said: "Where formerly a wastage dropout ra~ for these 'candi- in a report to the, meeting by eration. are now requeSted by 'govern- of 80 to 90 per cent in all dates in theology waS' '6.11··'pcr . ,Bishop Claude Flusin of Saint-

The high degree of social mental bodieS like the Inter- Clerical students was· inainl7' cent. By 1952, that figUre' had ...,Claude. ., , justice which now obtains in. American Development Bank confined to the juniOr seminary, 'riseD to 19 ·per eent.' Any decisiOn on the matter Western Europe an'd North and the Institute 01. Agnrian this wastage bas now spread to Ne¥ertheless, once they reach, ,must come :fr.om the plenary America is the slow maturing Reform to make surveys' and the senior seminaries whete we the college level young men who assembly of the Frencb bishOps. product of two centuries of plans for them under contract. would expect more certain Suc- begin their studies in high school struggle, marked by the high-· Modest Role In US. cess." minor seminary persevere "cOn­lights of the American and In the United States, Catliolie Archbishop Murphy held that siderably better" than those can-French Revolutions of the 17oo's, intellectual centers have played while there are many contribu- didates who begin their priestly the Jefferson-J!lc~on popu~ar but the slightest role in the ting factors to both the vOcationli movements and anti-trust legls- thinking planning and staffing shortage and the seminary drop­lation of the 1800'11, last century's of the' New Deal and New out rate, much of the problem Takes New Post Civil Wars, the struggles of labor Frontier in preparing social lies in parental attitudes. He BATON ROUGE (NC).:.....B·rianand farm organiza~ons,the New . security' and the banking sys- said: P. Daley has resign~ as editor Deal of.the d~presSlon years and tem, labor and fann legislation, "Vocations don't drop out of of the Catholic Commentator,the raCIal strIfe of our day. and international programs like the sky. They are labOriously diocesan newspaper, and will be­

In Latin America these basic' the Marshall Plan and Alliance home spun ... It is only when come managing editor of the advances, which required 'six for Progress. Our Catholic uni- father and mother deeply de­ Texas Catholic Herald, neWS­generations in the industrialized versities have not been creative sire a priest in the family as paper of the Houston-Galveston,North Atlantic Community, are contributors to these historic their first choice that the neces­ Tex., diocese. .... being squeezed into a decade social advances, except for an sary atmosphere of prayer and under the negative impact of associate role in the labor field. sacrifice is developed wWch today's Castro, under the posi- We and our nation have been not merely produces a vocation tive pressure of the people's the beneficiaries of Harvard, but helps to preserve'it." " SCHOOL demands for justice, and under Columbia and Chicago, and In a companion article in the Maintenance Suppliesthe stimulus of reform programs other universities, foundations Herald, A.E.C.W. Spencer, prom­like the Allia..'!ce for Progress. and institutes of social study. inent Catholic layman who is SWEEPERS· SOAPS

, Concrete Program While I do believe that these president of the International DISiNfECTANTS The Church has set up pro- new Christian inspired planning Conference on Religious Socio­

PIlE EXTINGUISHERSlessional centers for the survey centers In Latin America at- logy and senior research lecturer and planning of socio-economic ready show much accomplish- in sociology at the University DAHILL CO.·

.development, notably In Chile, ment and greater promise, it of London's Institute of Educa- '" Colombia. Venezuela and North- must be stressed that these are tion, denied that there is a true 1886 PURCHASE STREET east Brazil. This, techril'cal ser- young endeavors still subject to shortage of priestly VoeatiOM.. NEW BEDFORD vice, unlike anything under the judgment of the future. in England. Catholic auspices in Nor t b But lor the first time tit the "There is a shortage: only tr wy 3-3716 America. has been inspired by modem era, Christian social we take it for granted," IDe. """ ...1

per~ns like Fathers Lebre~, teaching enters the temporal said, "that all the things that , ,

w. H. RILEY: -& S~~~, Inc.

CITIES SERVICE DISTRIBUTORS

Gasoline Fuel and Range

OILS OIL BURNERS

For prompt delivery & Day & Night Service

G. E. BOILER BURNER UNITS

Rural Bottled Gas Service

61 COHANNET ST. TAUNTON

Attleboro - No. Attleboro Taunton

Houtart and Vekemans. and IS arena during the initial forma- priests and Religious do must _-------------------------.... strongly supported by MISERE- tive period of industrialization 01 their' nature be done ~ OR, the social deyelopment pro- instead of att4ching itself be- them and not by ~aity."

'gram of the ·German bishops, latedly to an ongoing system, · which supplies some four mil- as occurred ~n European and · lion dollars annually to the North American democratic · social action programs. of Latin social and technical develop­, America. ment of the past two centuries.

Latin' America clergy like ,Bishop Sales of Brazil, Father -Receives President Perez of Colombia. and 'MSgr.

Velasquez of Mexico, lay lefldeJ,'S VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope ,like Carlos Acedo Mendoza' of Paul VI received in private aud­V~nezuela, Sergio- Ossa ,and ience President Julius K. ,Nye­Ramo Venega, nr ("', ~ave in rere of the United Republic of the past three., ,)l"ought Tanzania, Africa.

ORTINS Ph~to S~pply

245 MAIN STREET FALMOUTH-KI8-1918 '

ARMAND ORTINS, Prop.

FOR FAMILY BANKING

FIRST NATIONAL BANK. . '". ." .,. '.'

ATTLEBORO

so. "AnLEBORO·....;, SEEKONK

MEMB~R FDIC

Page 14: 07.08.65

Says Superficial Thinking Confuses Many Youngsters

By Joseph T. McGloin, S.J. . Recently in this column, I tried to put across the fact

that it HI foolhardy to learn one's theology from TIME or NEWSWEEK, or even from the Catholic Press-which was never intended to be a theology teacher, something that every good Catholic editor that of ecumenism. Now this isreali,zes perfectly well. As an Cl tremendous movement, one we example of the confusion should aIr have close to our that can arise from such hearts. But it has sometimes been superficial coverage, we consid­ written and spoken of so care­ered some of the confusion which lessly that a teenager will oc­has resulted from the slanted or casionally ask, in all sincerity, carelessly headlined reports on "Well, why be a Catholic then, the medical and moral issues in­ since one religion seems to be volved in the various forms of as good as another." birth-control. Desire to Share

At the risk of This is, of course, the very seeming m 0 r e opposite of genuine ecumenism, negative t han which is essentially apostolicity, usual, I'd like . the desire to share· the "good to pursue the news" of God with others. examination of Our soft world, and our end­this idea of su­ 'less pursuit of material values perficial think­ are having their effect on the ing just a bit outlook of our young people far the r here. even in spiritual matters. The entire art ­ "To do anything 'extra,' dur­iclewill be ing Lent," one said recently, "ill based on actual hypocricy. We shouldn't do any examples of opinions advanced more then than at any other time recently by some teenagers on of the year-like going to MaSll various subjects. and Holy Communion more

Teenagers are people who see . often, for instance." black and white, not noticing Now a mature mind would much grey in any given picture. never come up 'with a blooper A thing is right or wrong, a guy like this, but it's a natural for is good or bad, a person is lik­ the immature thinker or non­able or despicable, and there are. thinker, no matter what his age. few distinctions to be made. And Hypocrisy is truly a thing hi lie it is that some teenagers are be avoided. But the logical way often lead farther astray by tc avoid it here is not to neglect warped news stories and propa­ the tremendous gifts of God in ganda than are some adults. our faith-such as the privilege

Sex Propalranda of attending Mass, and receiving Certainly anyone who has Christ in Holy Communion..

dealt with teenagers at <Ill must Life Is Test ~ave noth;ec;l that some of them The reasonable eourse of ae­have, quite .understandably, tion would be, rather, to be pay­swallowed whole today's propa­ ing so much attention to God'1Iganda that. sex is just about gifts during the whole year that eV,erything, certainly ·in mar.,. there would be little room for riage at least. But even an au­ adding on anything extra duringthority like Billy Rose hal! said Lent.that this is precisely.why mar­ But then,one doesn't gain theriages break up-because sex is habit of logic without hard ~udy the only criterion used in choos­ and solid learning. . ing a partner, and when the sex Above all, when we say we attraction turns. to "ho-hum," or "don't believe in this sackcloth goes out towards another, more and ashes" stuff, we are neitherattractive object, that's the end thinking of nor understandingof that marriage. the crucifixion. Among the other

The reason marriages break up lessons of the crucifixion wasis not because of a lack of "sex­ certainly the one that thereual compatibility" at all, but be­ would be hard things for Christ's cause the partners are simply followers to endure."not friends." Our very life is a' test, some­

Now once a young person thing it could not be withoutcveremphasizes sex in his own something to conquer. Life is amind, it is easy indeed for him fight-a joyful fight, but still a to become convinced, for exam­ fight. Fail this test, lose this bat­ple, that the moral law forbid­ tle, and you've failed completely.ding birth-control is "too hard." God doesn't give us a cross as

Old-Fashioned Word rough to bear as His own. He And then it will be an easy pads it for--us. But pad it your­

further step for him to reason self to the' point of completethat self-control of any sort is comfort and you've missed it. often "too hard," and that "con­ How you've missed it! trol" is an old-fashioned word, something which comes easy to celibates, and so they inconsid­ lutherans Approve erately and unthinkingly "im­ Private School Aid pose" this law on others.

If there are any priests or re­ DETROIT (NC)-Federal aid ligious who got back the gift of to nonpublic schools was nar­integrity with their vows or or­ rowly approved here by the dination, I wish they would 44th regular convention of the please write in, because nobody L u the ran Church-Missouri has told me about this. Synod on a vote of 291 to 252.

Take another subject, though- The issue had been tabled earlier in the convention by a vote of

Gets Papal Honor 411 to 200. Dr. John S. Choitz, presidentFor Saving Jews of the Michigan Lntheran Col­

BERLIN (NC) -An inhabi­ ]ege of Detroit and superinten­tant of the Soviet zone of Berlin dent of Detroit Lutheran High has been awarded the papal School, praised the (June 25) decoration of the· Order of St. passage of the bitterly fought Sylvester. school aid resolution as a "tri ­

It was given to Franz Preis­ umph for Lutheran children." sler of the diocese of Meissen The 2.75-million-member Mis­for saving the lives of Jews BOuri Synod, whOlre private during World War II. Ia 1942, school lIystem ill second in lDze Preissler refused to kil~ inno­ only to that of the Catholic rent Jews and was brought' to Church, maintains 1,381 parisb trial by a military eourt. elementary II c h 0 0 Is, 22 high

He was sentenced to the D&­ schools and It Doardine aebool ebau ~oncentratioD camp. academies.

BAZAAR FOR NOVITIATE: Plannmg the Country Fair to be held on Saturday, July 17, for the benefit of the Dighton Novitiate for the Sisters .serving St. Anne's Hos­pital, Fall River, are, seated:' Sister Beatrix and Mrs. Leo­dore Salois. Standing: Mrs. Emile Dozios and Mrs. Rejeanne St. Pierre.

THE ANCHOR- 15 Thursday, July 8, 1965

Predicts Growth Of Resistance To Council

CHICAGO (NC)-Resi~ ance to Second Vaticai Council decrees will grow, a priest predicted here, bot "slowly, surely and steadily" its constitutions and decrees "wiD filter down into the Catholic body."

"There will be, as there has already been a ripple caused b7 the Traditionalist Movement, • backlash, an entrenching, a ne~

Jigence in some quarters," F•• Vincent A. Yzermans, director of the Bureau of Information, Na­tional Catholic Welfare Confer­("nee, told the Religion News­writers Association here.

"But over and beyond that,· ........._"2£",, he added, "there will be the ful­

fillment of hopes and desil'ee pent up in Catholic hearts and minds for so long a time that the ( .. Catholic Church will be flooded with joy as her leaders and mem­bers enter into a new era of :re­newal and commitment."

Americap observers, Fatbe.­Yzermans said, expect the coun­cil's fourth session which con­Favorable Response venes Sept. 14, to be completM before Christmas, perhaps even

St. Louis Business Firms Cooperate in November. European obserY­fc'rs, he added, expect a 10ngeT

In Project Equality ge!l8ion, possibly lasting until April, 1966.

Jr. LOUIS (NC)-More than hailed the "almost complete And 800 business' firms have agreed enthusiastic support of both to cooperate in the ";Project church administrators and bus­ ~oodstock Rector Equality" equal employment inessmen" for the program.

BALTIMORE (HC) - Fatheropportunity program of the St. The program was launched in Felix Cardegna, S.J. has been ap­Louis archdiocese~ · the archdiocese ill mid':'May, pointed rector of nearby Wood­Thill is the· number of firms­ and the for,ms were mailed out stock C4)llege, theologate for Jee­ranging in. size from businessell two weeks' later to pastors and uits of the Maryland, New Yorkwith one or two employes te administrators who sent 'them and Buffalo provinces. FathMlia,nt . .national eorporations­ tG firms with which Uley do

which have returned complianee bUsiness. " Cardegna joined the' Jesuits '. 1946 after' he had served thrMforms' promising cooperation in Hire Nelrroetl years in the Army Signal Corps,the program. By signing the forms; bUlfi­following graduation from· theA spokesman for the arch­ nessmen agreed to take steps

diocese, announcing the response · to hire Negroes, maintain a University of Maryland.

policy promoting opportunitiesPlan· Latin America for Negroes at all job levels,

'eommunicate the policy within What About You?Leadership Center and outside the firm, and, upon CARTAGENA (NC)-The San request, give the archdiocese a

Francisco Social Center here, breakdown of their total labor which has been training Colom­ force by race and job category bian lay leaders for the past to make elevation of compliance eight years, will be expanded in­ possible. to a training center for all Latin Father Francis M. Doyle, America under plans recently executive secretary of the Arch­

. announced. diocesan Commission on Human · Rights, said .many of the re­The expanded center will be

turned forms were accompaniedcalled Leadership Formation In­by letters.stitute for Latin America.

"Nearly all these were favor­Six-month courses in trade able, although we are not tryingunionism, cooperatives and com­to engage in a popularity con­munity development will be of­test," the priest said. ... A Franciscan Sister!fered. Programs for beginners

and advanced students and spec­ GIVING YOURSELF to a life com·ialized programs for urban and pletelv dedicated ~o the salvation of rural workers will be included, souls " through prayer, work. sac· as will basic Christian lIOcial rifice and joy .•. by using your tal·ATWOOD ents as a Nurse, Laboratory and X·Ray

Technician. Secretary, Accountant, Di­formation in all three fields.

etitian. Seamstress, Cook. as well as in other hospital departments and in a new extension of our work in Cate·

OIL COMPANY

SHELL chetical and Social Service Fields.HATHAWAY There Is No Greater Charity!HEATING OILS !" you are over 16, write to Sister MaryOIL CO. INC. South • Sea Streets Clarice, O.S.F. Box 111, Catholic Sisters' College, Washington, D. C. 20017 for fur· NEW BEDFORD Hyannis Tel. HY 81 ther details on this happy life,)

INDUSTRIAL OILS

HEATING OILS ON CAPE COD

TlMKEN JOHN HINCKLEY & SON CO.,OtL BURNERS

BUILDING MATERIALSSoles & Service

SPring 5-0700 501 COUNTY STREET 49 YARMOUTH ROAD

NEW BEDFORD HYANNIS AMPLE PARKINGWY 3-1751

Page 15: 07.08.65

16 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 8. 1965

Clois·tered Life Difficult For Laity to Understand

By John J. Kane, Ph.D. "Why are the rules of cloistered nuns so strict? who

originated these rules? To taik to a family member through a row of double bars makeg me dizzy. Can they help hu­manity when they are s€llarated from it? What is ~heit'

Get Plenty of Worthwhile Gifts, Tool

~Save Plaid Siamps!goal in life? Other Ol'U€T3

have been given more fre~­dom by Popes John and Pa:l~. Did they forget the c~o:s­tered nuns?" You have ra:5e5, SO many questions here, Bi!~t:;r.

Id btth t a oumoreIthcan do k

an . rna. e a beg Inn l!1g at an s w e r I n g. them. The CIOl­

stered nuns be­long to what are cal~ed con­templahve or­de r s. Perhaps the best k'1o~ ef the women s orders is the Carmelites, founded i~. 1492. This had a somewhat mitIgatedl rule: compared to the male C~r­tnehtes. But St. Teresa reformed!. the order with strict observance of the rule in 1562.

Another well known order Is the Poor Clares, which is the lJecon~ order .f?unded by St. FranCIS of ~ISl and St. Clare In 1212. I mIght add ~hat ther-e are several contemplative oroen. ef men as well. Nearly everyone has heard of the Trappists.

Highest Form Most of the orders and CO!'l ­

Il'egations founded centurie; ago were eontemplatives. When tbe great bishop, St Francis de Sales, founded the Visitatio~

Sisters, he suffered severe cri ­ticism. They were contemplative but would also visit the sick. At that time, such a thing was 1IIlheard of.

St. Bernard called contempla­tion the highest form of human worship. It consists in adoration of God and complete self-sur­~nder. You are quite right they are strict. But the strict rule has a purpose behind it. The true contemplative nun sepa­l'ates herself as completely as possible from the world. at least in one sense.

In order to come closer to Sod they take vows of poverty, ehastity and obedience, as other ~ligious do, but they live i.n a eloister, or enclosure, which cuts them off from almost all other persons not living within thei.r religious community.

Fast, Abstinence Most of them observe an al­

most perpetual silence, speaking only during a brief period of the day. Some have complete fast and abstinence. Many sing or recite the Divine Office in eommon, .some arising during the night to do so.

I recall once visiting a Car­melite convent before it was

. occupied by the Sisters. The ~fectory i.e. the room in which meals are eaten, was furnished most .sparingly. 1'ables were baee, benches replaced chai~s

and on the table of the Supen­.ress ·was a human skull.

These Sisters slept on boards and during penitential seasO!llJ the boards were turned over. Thc other side had ridges whicn must have made it even more tIIlcomforable. III each cen. teo

Names Jesuit DJAKARTA (NC) - Indone­

sia's President Sukarno has chosen a Jesuit priest to be :1

tnember of his supreme counciL He is Father Nicholaus Drijar­kara, dean of the Jesuit Fa­thers' Teachers' College at Sanata Dharma U"ivel'sity in eentral ·Java.

the room in which the Sisbrs slept, had a cross, not a crucifbc. It was ~xplained to me tllnis meant. the Sister was the victim for this cross.

. Greatest Be~efa~to~ . This very ascetic hfe IS dlf­

ficult for most of us to under­stand, perhaps more difficult for many Americans who live in relative comfort. In a wordly sense, it is nonsense. In a spir­itual sense, it is magnificieot. So try to view it through your spiritual lenses.

These religious have sacri ­ficed all worldly comfort for the love of Christ. But the love of God breeds love for mankind. These women men too for that matter who have literally noth­ing ar~ our greatest benefactors. Day and night they plead and make reparations for mankind.

Only God in His infinite wis­dom knows how much we aU. owe to the prayers and penances of the contemplative religious. How many souls have been able to resist temptation; how many have been given the grace ()f final penitence through theil1' sacrifices, can only be conjec­tured

. Salvation Goal Their goal in life is, as ()urs

should also be, salvation of <ml'

souls. But in their generosity they become their brothers' keepers by doing penance and praying for all mankind.

Of course, this is not the only way to salvation. Priests" non-contemplative orders and congregations of religious and laywomen, single or married. have states of life in which they can work out their salva­tion.

God calls each of us to ~

certain state of lif£.. Looked at objectively. some states of life are higher than others. The priesthood and contemplative life are certainly higher, in thia sense, than marriage. But there is another way to view it. The highest state of life for any particular person is for him, the one to whIch he has been called by God.

I think Americans tend to view the contemplative life, in so far as they even know about it, with mixed feelings. First,_ they are likely to consider it somewhat absurd. "How," they ask, "can any reasonable per­son enter into such a thing'~"

But' at the same time I believe they are a bit awed by the sacrifices of such religious.

When you visit your relat~ve

who is a contemplative nUR nex;t time, don't be annoyed by those bars. These are not really separating you from her or'

her from you. They are a sy~­bol of her life which is helping to bring you and me and all 0( 'us closer to God. They are not barriers at all.

Force of Habit CEDAR RAPIDS (NC)-Some

things just get to be a habit. It happened in Municipal

Court here in Iowa, where Judge Loren Hullinger, Jr.. was lecturing a 12-year-old Catholic school boy about bi~

cycle safety. "If I dismiss this charge,

will you promise you won't be back here again?" asked the black-robed judge.

Came the reply: "Yes, Sister." It broke up judge and spec­

tators alike. The court dismilt ­sed the charae.

CHICKEN SALE.\TA6lPI FRESH, T~NDER AND MEATY ••• BUY T~I PARTS YOU L1K& THe BEST

Wh I 2V2-3'tJ Pounds 33Coe Ready-to-Cook LB

Cut-up or SplilLB 37c

Leg Quarters LB 37c

Breast Quarters LB37c

Giblets L8 29c

2 TO 4 POUNDS

Live Lobsters LB 99c

I'AN~ IIR.£KliT FftMfT :lIT 59cCorned B.ef IITRAlaM Otff ~ 19c1 LI

Fresh Haddock FiII.1I La 59' Sliced Bacon All GGoe 21Il'Q 1.49 I LA Pl<G 77'

large 8-lnch

l1b80E

SSe !ach

(QUAl

TOTH' .Blot COST YOU LlSSI

turr~r .. Iv.. Deconted ....1......

100 OUR - Tta Bagl 9ff IONA - CUT

Orlt.. Bto. JIM.GA. If' ION" - CUT

Wax BtonI 1 1M.... J1C

AIJ>

liked Beetl

~x~ • Cup Dlspe.er w.,••aul'l'" DIXIf

I.fills l'OI.::o 100 :.It IUTCHl!N CHARM

Wax.d Paper ........ ue MARCAl - !OIl J-PlY SHEITI

Toilet Tls.ue 4 IIOllPtllC 4t

Legs U_U=,. •.. L~ 59C

Breasl LB 69c

Wings .......... LB 33c

Backs &Necks LB 10c

Livers ...... .... LB 69c

STEAKS for BARBECUE CHUCK STEAK .. 5~_III

CALIF. STEAK La 69°OlI1"",OUll_

RIB STEAK -.nNlOllf'Ul-_I.. La 99' LONDON BROIL I"OUlOQ mAIl La 99' BLADE STEAK _.. Ia 1.09 DELMONICO __ 1TUIl .. 1.79

CLUB STEAK _mM La 1.a9 CHUCK PlLln _ .. ITfAl( ... av

JANE PARKER

RHUBARB-APPLE PIE

SHRIMP I'lump .. M••ty

L8 8ge

RAISING Beef .. 99c

OMamon Crescent Cookl"I~O:~~ 2~ 7.. JANI PARK!R I'KG Of' • JAN! I'ARK" - CH!ttRY ICID

IIomtltyl. Donuts 2'" 59' Anpl Food Cak. ~«5s' JANI I'ARKIIl GOlD 01 MAR8lI JAN! "ARKER - I'IeAN CHERRY

Crtle.llt POUlld Cake "Icf Danish Cak. 14\oS. 59'

PEACHES Sweet, DeliciouI, c

Juicy and LUICIoul 4LBS49

Blueberries Plump, Juicy, 3 PINT SI·00 CULTIVATID BOXES

A&P - SOLID, WHITI 70Z 29<: CANTUNA' FISH

.'rozen WaHl.. IUNNYFtttD~:10· Dennll Boned Chicken IO~:I 59­

kt '. o..enll,·Aprklot. 1 qt 14 3ftC.reakfalt Coc al Orange-Pi"..p·\e oa _ ."

COCtC.TAIt QUAIIT 4 99&AppIe·Cranberry VIIlYPINI lOT POt

Delicia Sugar Wafers :':3 ~1..00 facial Tislue 100 ~eeT' 10­BOX

STRONGHMRT Hili's Dog FoocllllfwlthOIlAVY I:~~ 4 FOIl 9..Gog Foofl WISHBONI

SALAD DRESSING ITALIAN. RUSSIAN 01 8 az 3ft(: ,

LOW CAL ITALIAN lOT ." _ Prl.......... III tills lid IIO.....leelIlln w., "'" 10 'tfft<li•• at ALL A&P SUpelllartets la llII. _ltJ .... rtelallr.

TflHHt ....1.- "','IM••Ill...... 'It!' 'W.!f tlflr, ,

Page 16: 07.08.65

Negro Appointed Panama Bishop

VATICAN CITY (NC)-A Di­viDe Word priest whose hobby JaM been to keep track of every Negro Bishop in the Church's history will soon be included in their number.

He 111 Father Carlos Lewis, ItV.D., a Panama-born U.S. dtizen who will be auxiliary tic Archbishop Tomas Alberto Clavel Mendez of Panama. Pope Paul VI has named him titular bishop of Novapietra.

Bishop-elect Lewis, who was born in Panama, Nov. 2, 1918, has been vice-rector of the Col­lege of St. Peter the Apostle in Rome since 1964. For the three years prior, he was prefect of ~cholastics at the Divine Word International College in Rome, and before that taught dogma and morals at the Divine Word Seminary in Bay St. Louis, Miss. He has a doctorate in theology from Rome's Grego­rian University.

The Bishop-elect has publish­ed a book on the Church's Negro :Bishops w h i c h he recently brought up to date in a article / for a magazine published by the Divine Word Missionaries.

Doctors Oppose Low Relaxation

NEW YORK (:MC)-There are eoUd medical grounds as wen lIS moral reasons for opposing any relaxation of laws on abor­tion, the National Federation of Catholic Physicians' Guilds de­elared here at the conclusion of its 33rd annual meeting.

The federation took the posi­tion that practical problems would increase rather than de­crease if the legal permission for abortion were widened. It maintained that much of the present drive to change abortion laws is built on a false emotion­alism.

In another action, the Catho­lic doctor's group pledged tc help Catholic missions overseas, particularly in Latin America, in their medical assistance pro­grams. The first step will be tc raise funds to enable local doctors to make regular paid visits to mission institutions.

The federation \8 also parti ­eipating in discussions aimed at (lvercoming the licensing diffi ­culties that are preventing U.S. doctors from volunteering their services in many Latin Ameri­can nations.

Lauds Cooperation Of Church, State

ALTOONA (NC)-The mutual cooperation of church agencies and the state in caring for the needy was hailed here in Penn­f;ylvania by the State Commis­moner of the Aging, Elias Cohen.

He spoke at the formal dedi­fttion of 130-resident nursing home for the aged and infirm sponsored by the Diocese of Al­toona-Johnson and named for the diocese's first bishop, Eugene A. Garvey.

Cohen, whose department channeled federal funds and of­fered advice to builders of the new facility, said that "there are times when some would make it appear that the goals of Church and State are in opposition, while J1cthing could be further from the truth, since we have much in et)mmon."

Heads College ROME (NC)-A 36-year-old

American priest has been named rector of the international col­lege of the Society of the Divine Word here. Father Robert ~.

Flinn, S.V.D., is the first Ameri­can to hold that post. He was ordained in 1957. .

-~. . I

~1 ~ 1

SISTERS OF ST. DOROTHY: At reception and vow ceremonies at Villa Fatima, Taunton, are Sisters of St. Dorothy and their cRaplain, Rev. Maurice Souza, pastor of St. Anthony's Church, Taunton. From left, Sister Mary Fatima Simas, Immaculate Concep.­tion parish, New Bedford; Sister Cecelia Amaral, St. Francis Xavier, East Providence; Father Souza; Sister Nancy Harnois, St. Joseph's, Taunton; Sister Mary Anne Amaral, St. Patrick's, Staten Island, N.Y. Sister Mary Fatima, Sister Cecelia and Sister Mary Anne were received as novices and SIster Nancy made perpetual vows.

Calls Pope Paul Missioner to World WASHINGTON (NC) - Pope

Paul VI by his words and actions has become "Christ's missionary tc the world," the speaker at a Mass marking the second anni­versary of the Pope's coronation declared here.

Auxiliary Bishop Philip M. Hannan of Washington, preach­jng at the anniversary Mass in St. Matthew's cathedral, said

, "the extension of Christ's total work for the whole human fam­ily" is the special mark of Pope Paul's pontificate.

Personal Work

Bishop Hannan said that as a "missionary" Pope Paul seeks "to understand the family of man, to make men into the peo­ple of God, and to direct them into building the kingdom of

Urges Increase WEST DEPERE (NC)-A

deeper development of the spirituality of those living in eelibacy is urgently needed, ,. German Catholic theologian said here in Wisconsin.

Fr. Bernard Haering, C.SS.R., told the eighth assembly of the Conference of Major Superiors of Men here that those conse­crated to celibacy must always strive for grace through con­tinuous prayer, continuous thanksgiving and adoring grat­itude.

Serve People

"It is generally true for an Christians," he said, "that one cannot really love the invisible God if her does not love his vis­ible neighbor. It is in a very special way true for those living under the vows of virginal chas­tity that the fulfillment and

MR. FORMULA 7 Fuel Oil Booster

For No. 5 Fuel Oil Keeps Your Burner

Running Tip Top

BROKSTON CHEMICAL CO. BROCKTON, MASS.

God, personally and collective­ly."

He said this is not a task of crganization or administration alone, but "is at heart the per­sonal and direct work of Christ, the communication of grace tG the individual soul."

The bishop said Pope Paul's two historic journeys-to the Holy Land and to the Eucharis­tic Congress in Bombay, India­best represent the spirit of his pontificate.

He called the two journeys "dramatic but typical examples of the daily work of the Holy Father-to remind men always of his duality, that he must be a good citizen of this world to be a citizen of the everlasting world of heaven." .

The Pope, he said, "sees every

of Spirituality meaning of this vow depends on love of neighbor."

Poverty and humility are other necessary conditions of celibacy, he said. "Total and most immed­iate love of God and redeeming love of neighbor are not possible if man is seeking an earthly compensation for his renuncia­tion of marriage."

He added, "Celibacy obliges us to be always ready for aD people, to suffer with them, to bring them the good tidings with a loving and merciful heart:-

Sturtevant & Hook Est. 1897

Builders Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New.,Bedford WY 6-5661

BRUNO'S Business Supply Co.

SUPPLIES • PtlACHINES EQUIPMENT

OFFICE SYSTEMS ENGINEERS

1913 PURCHASE STREET New Bedford, Mass. Tel. WY""',.,n 9·6058

~ ~

element of this world as a great instrument of God, a vast sacra­ment, to help man achieve the welfare to his dignity in this world so that he can attain his everlasting destiny."

Love of Savior The "most delicate but de­

ma!1ding part of the Pope's mis­sion, the bishop continued, is to brjng the love of Our Savior even to those who may be fur­thest from it."

He said is was this fact which led to the establishment of the Vatican's new secretariat for n.on-believers.

Declaring that the work of the Pope "must be also our work and our concern," Bishop Hannan said: "Our loyalty must be in terms of faith in action."

• Above all," he said, "that :loyalty must consist in respect­Dng and following the words of Christ as conveyed by His vicar. We must not twist his words so that they serve our wills instead of molding them. The Holy Fa­ther alone is the Vicar of Christ. Let the Holy Father alone speak for Him. And may we join loyal­ly in serving Christ.-

Enjoy Dining IN THE

JOLLY WHALER -AND-

SPOUTER INN RESTAURANTS.

Always Free Parking

New Bedford Hotel

* New England's Playground 2 ROLLER COASl:ERS - BEG NEW MIDWAY AMERICA'S FINEST RiDES - AMUSEMENTS

Special Group Rales For Picnics - Outings

THE ANCHOR- 17 Thursday, July 8, 1965

Panama Prelates Support Crusade

PANAMA CITY (NC)-In a joint pastoral letter issued in connection with the Rosary cru­sade being conducted in all the natjon's dioceses, the bishops of Panama have denounced "the growing immorality which is reaching unsuspected and in­credible limits."

The pastoral said that in spite of many official and private ef­foTts to defend young people's morals, the situation is not at a1: encouraging.

"C:i:allenged by this alarming ~:tuation," the letter urged all priests "nd Religious to give ~nei;:o full cooperaEon to 'the c:-JEc<ie.

"Let us renew the family, let us ;:oe:1ew in our homes the ex­~lY.pIes of the family of Naza­reU:. By so doing we will have on t.and the most efficacious ffie:ms to make moral our child­ren, the youth and the nation," the letter concluded.

Ontario Begins Plan' To Modernize Laws

TORONTO (NC)-Every On­tari€> law touching family life if now being reviewed by a research team of four law pro­f,,"ssors, a law school dean arid twc women lawyers.

Former Ontario Chief Justice Jr. C. McRuer, who heads the commission directing the review, Faicl it is aimed at clarifying ]aws, making them easier to admir.ister with citizens' rights mQre clearly defined. Recom­mendations are expected by 1967.

"A Jot of our laws are based on the idea that woman is the servant of man. The philosophy behind them is different from the modem concept of equality of the sexes," he explained.

SAVE MONEY ON ,YOUR-OILHEAT! ..... ~n WYman .)_ '-TIll 3-6592

CHARLES F. VARGAS 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

'-'plci,elM"" ~.~~

HEATING OIL

*

", ­

,. ",'1/'!t." ~

Page 17: 07.08.65

-------- ---18 flU: ANCHOR­

Thursday. July 8, 1965

Says Missioners Will Keep Pace With Updating

DETROIT (~C)-Bishop

Aristide Pirovano, P.I.M.E., who emerged from the "green hell" jungles of Bra­zil to become superior general of the worldwide Pontifical In­stitute for Foreign Missions, dis­closed here that he plans to have his 1,500-member communit:r keep pace with the current up­dating of the Church.

The tall, soft-spoken bishop who was elected head of the missionary community in Apr:: said he will direct his missioners to promote liturgical reforms among the. people they serve.

"We will also see what step;; can be taken to improve ou,:, seminary training. We want ou!' priests to be more than trained missionaries. We want them to be specialists in other fie~ds.

too," said Bishop Pirovano. "As engineers and doctors,

tbey will be able to go into underdeveloped countries and not only bring the Faith to the people but also help raise their standards of living," he said.

Recruiting _Program To bring the laity into a "more

active partnership" with the missionary in the field, the bish­ep said he is planning an in­tensive recruiting program for lay volunteers to work with PIME priests.

He said he also plans to es­tablish a "lend lease" type of program with the hierarchies of Canada, Italy, Spain and Ireland. _

As he envisions it, bishops of these countries would assign diocesan clergy to work for ill

specified periOd with PY"ME mis­sioners to help speed the train­ing of a native clergy.

Bishop Pirovano has the dis­tinction of being the first bishop consecrated in 1955 by Arch­bishop Giovanni Baptiste Mon­tini of Milan, now Pope Paul vr.

As a priest during World War n, Bishop Pirovano helped save the lives of hundreds of Jews fleeing the nazi army.

Sees Moral Duty To Support War

HOBART (NC) -Archbishop Guilford Young of Hobart has declared that Australia has ill

moral duty to fight communism in South Vietnam.

The archbishop's statement, the first by any Australian Catholic prelate on the subject, was issued a short time after this country sent a battalion of soldiers to take part in the Vie t n a m struggle. Australia maintains a force of about 1,000 troops in Vietnam.

Archbishop Young warned that a failure to battle communist aggression in Vietnam would en­danger other Asian and Pacific nations, including Australi!l.

"Peking and Hanoi have re­jected all proposals by the United States, the United Na­tions and neutrals for negotia­tions on Vie t n a m," he said. "They believe they can win in South Vietnam. Our choice is either to show they can't or to abandon the area and the people whose chances of progress to a betfer future we are pledged to maintain.

"To surrender in South Viet­nam reduces our credibility and increases our difficulty of any commitment in Thailand, Malay­sia, and so on until India is isolated and Australia is im­mediately under Pl·cSSUl'e."

Value of Religious Construction Rises

WASHINGTON (NC) - The value of new religious construc­tion in the United States durin~

the first five months of 1965 wac> $395 million, compared with $367 milion during the same period in 1964, according to a report by the Department of Commerce.

The value of all U.S. construc­tion in the first five months of 1965 was $24,664 million, as against $23,980 million for the same period last year.

Cardinal Lecturer LONDON (NC)-John Cardi­

nal H<!enan of Westminister will be one of the lecturer:; at an Anglican-sponsored hos­pital training course for theo­logical ~tudents and clergy. The course is intended to give students first hand exper'ence of ministry to the sick.

Emerging· Layman Archbishop HallinGn Adds Humorous Note

In Keynote Address to Serrans -MIAMI BEACH (NC)-With

a tongue-in-cheek tribute to the age of the laity, Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan of Atlanta, Ga., in his keynote address to the Serra International convention here skipped the traditional catalogue of salutations and ad­dressed the audience as "most emerging laymen, right emerg­ing layman and very emerging laymen."

" I hope in this way," the archbishop said, "to honor you more than if I were to begin by saying, 'Some of my best friends are laymen" or even, 'I am an ex-layman myself!'"

The arC'hbishop also recited a ditty credited only to "a colum­nist":

The layman's emerging-wh:> let him out?

He'll cause confusion-with­out a doubt.

Who taught that chap-to pray out loud?

He was easier to handle-in a nice quiet crowd.

Someone grab his missal­take his hymnbook too.

Push him off the lectem­back into the pew.

Submerge that layman-low­er that boom.

We'll get this place again­quiet as a tomb.

Wins Award CALCUTTA (NC)-The menu

card prepared for Pope Paul's flight to Bombay last year is among five government awards received by Air-India for :;>dnt and design.

___..a ,_

QUALITY, VARIETY, LOW PRICES, Jill STAMPS, TOO!

GENUINE SPRING Now at the Peak of Flavor

Oven Ready

Refuse Scholarships At Divinity Schools

WILMINGTON (NC) - The Delaware Scholarship Advisory Council has refused to approve state scholarships for students at divinity schools.

The policy was anounced here by William A. Carter of Mill3­boro, council chairman, who said the council obtained an informal opinion from Deputy Atty. Gen. James C. Sabo in setting the policy. Sabo said he did not be­lieve such scholarships would "stand the test of constitution­ality."

Carter said two Delaware students had applied for scholar­ships to attend divinity schools. The two students have the right of appeal to the Delaware Board of Education, Carter stressed. The question of such scholar·· ships was pending before the education board at its April meeting, but has not yet been acted upon.

Regular Dressed C

LB

LBCorned Beef LAYER CAKE MIXES - AU- Varieties

HB 2 oz PKGSDUNCAN· HINES 3

NEW ENGLAND'S LARGEST RETAILER OF FINE FOODS!

Same lo~ Self-Service Prices in An Stores in This Vicinity -' rN. Reserve tIie Right to limit QuanIiti'"

, ..ices effective iA foil liver and Somerset

Page 18: 07.08.65

-Prelate Stresses Church Asks Greater Sacrifices From Laymen

:MIAMI BEACH (NC) - The frustration. but he will keep Church today Is asking laymea trying each day-in his home, for greater sacrifices, Archbish,:, neighborhood, city, state and Of) Paul J. HaIlinllD told the 23rd world." annual convention of Berra In- The Church asks Catholics 'of ternational'here. today to act "'not from a timid,

In the keynote address to the beleagured position. identified convention, the archbishop of by warnings, suspicions and con-Atlanta, Ga., said: demnations," he added, "She asks '

"'Today the Church asks that that we walk toward the future_ you give yourselves, your eon- with confidence and boldness, cerns, your questions, your win in a real renewal of Christiall to speak up, to offer your own hope." initiatives . . • Every married man kows it is easy to give an anniversary gift or • birthday Interfaith Flood remembrance, but it is the ful ­ness of love to give your own Relief Operatesself.

PUEBLO (NC) - InterfaithOne of the most important cooperation in flood disasterdocuments for today's layman, relief efforts bas created a ma­the archbishop said, is the Con­jor aid program which includedstitution on the Church, "the nearly $50,000 worth of foodpresent homework for every and clothing for victims in theCatholic. lower Arkansas valley of Colo­"Chapter 4 on the laity is your rado.particular Magna Carta," Arch­

An aditional program suppliedbishop Hallinan told the Serrans. clothing and furniture for flood"Never have the roles of clergy victims in the Pueblo area.and laity, the rights and duties,

Cooperating in the programbeen spelled out more clearly ••• are the Allied Jewish Commu­Thrilling Challenge , nity Council of Pueblo, the Sal­"What a profound and thrill ­ vation Army, the St. Vincentingchallenge for the layman, for de Paul stores, and Catholic

his is properly the 'consecration Social Services of the diocesemundi,' the consecration of the of Pueblo.world. It will bring discomfort Distribution depots have beenand struggle, disappointment and established in Pueblo and in

St. Frances of Rome church, Holly, and St. Francis de SalesChicago Priests school, Lamar.

Distribution is supervised byHnt Red Char~e Capt. J.C. Bowen of the Salva­CHICAGO, (NC) - Eighteen tion Army and Miss Alice Lamb

priests here have. charged that of Catholic Social Services., Chicago's mayor has insulted ',the, ' character of particpants in the" downtown racial demonstrations High Court Upholds with his charges of communist Fair Housing Law infiltration.

The statement by the priests TRENTON (NC) - The New a from Jersey Supreme Court has un­followed comment the

administrator of the Chicago animously upheld the constitu­archdiocese who said the priests tionality of the state's fair hoUB­were on their own in their ing law. activities. The court rejected the argu­

Mayor Richard J Daley had ment that the 1961 law is uncon­commented that "many of the stitutional because it applies to' people marching are commu­ some but not all housing. The nists" and that "some" commu­ measure bars discrimination in nist money was being used to the sale of privately financed finance the almost daily protest homes in developments of 10 or marches and sit-downs near more houses and in rentingcity hall. apartments in apartment houses

The mayor's allegations, which with more than three units. he said were supported by poliee The challenge to the fairdepartment files, were heatedly housing law was brought by thedenied by Albert Raby, leader New Jersey Home Builders As­of the Coordinating Council of sociation and the New JerseyCommunity Organizations. The AssOciation of Real Est atecouncil has been demonstrating Boards.since May 27 against the re-hir­ing of school superintendent Benjamin Willis. Government Allows

The 18 priests said: As Cath­olic priests we regret that the Bishop to Confirm mayor has insulted the intelli ­ BONN (NC) - The apostolic gence and character of many administrator of the Praguepeople, including priests, clergy­ archdiocese, Bishop Frantisek mer,. and nuns, who are parti ­ Tomasek, has been given permis­cipants in the current demon­ sion by Czechoslovakia's com­strations." munist government to adminis­

ter confiI'lIlations after an inter­ruption of 10 years.Jewish Reception

The first confirmation, accord­for Belgian Priest' ing to KNA, German Catholic

NEW YORK {NC)-A Jewish news agency, was May 26. The congregation here held a -recep­ , government office for, religious tion in honor of a Belgian priest affairs did not allow Bishop who saved a Jewish family from Tomasek to confirm in· Prague's nazi persecution in Brussels dur­ St. Vitus cathedral, and confirm­ing World War II. ations are therefore taking place

Father Hubert Celis, who took in the church of Mary of the time off from his duties &8 a Angels. Brussels police chaplaIn to come Since' the confirmation dates here for a bar mitzvah ceremony, have become known, Bishop was guest of honor 'at a recep­ Tomasek is cheered on entering tion in the synagogue of Congre­ the church by crowds of Catho­gation Tifereth Israel. ' lic people.

One of the family of four he saved from the nazis in' 1942 is now Mrs. Isaac Wolbrom -of, this Gets Rome Post city. She has corresponded reg- WASHINGTON (NC) - Fr. ularly with the priest since com-, Paul Donovan, O.SS.T., principal ing to this country after the war:' . of DeMatha HignSchool in sUb­She said the bar mitzvah for her urban Hyattsville, Md., has been son, Norman, 13, wouldn't have appointed to serve in the office been complete if Father eelU of the definitor general of the had not been present. Trinitarian Fathera in Rome.

ries is only one of the many of Monterrey and the Archbis. ­attractions Mexico offers to the hop's Palace, also in Monterrey. " tourist. And the Mexican Church Growing numbers of tourists, now plans to help the tourist hearing of the religious sites Where A by issuing literature and oper­ and told not to miss special ating tours of major religious religious fiestas, have been GOOD NAME sites in the country. flocking to such celebrations as

the Day of the Dead (Nov. 1-2)The announcement here of Means A and the Day of the Virgin ofthe Church's plans was in keep­Guadalupe (Dec. 12).ing with a recent recommenda­ GREAT DEAL

tion of the Commission for Pas­ Now the Church here plans toral Work with Tourists meet­ to prepare special literature ing in Monte Carlo, which urged and tours for both the clergy exploitation of the opportunities and the lay public, to provide for contact with tourists, both not only physical and mental GEO. O'HARA­Catholic and 'non-Catholic, from relaxation and amusement, but other countries. also an 'opportunity for them

The ancient churches, cathe­ to fulfill their religious duties.,. drals, religious art and festivals of Mexico have made the coun­ CHEVROLETtry a long-time mecca for re­ DRY CLEANNG ligious travelers. Half of Mex­ and ico's foreIgn lncomeis from the' FUR STORAGE 565 MILt. STRF.ET,tourist trade, and tourism has consequently been a major pre- DERMODY

NEW BEDFORDCLEANERSHead~ Francisans 34-44 Cohannet Street Open EveningsCAIRO (NC)-Father August

Sepinski, O.F.M., minister gene­ Taunton - VA 2-6161 ra~ of the Friars Minor has named Father Raymond Abboud, O.F.M., a native of Syria, as the neW' superior of the Franciscans in Egypt. STORE HOURS:

MON., TUES., WED. 9:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.St. Francis

THURS., FRI., SAT. ' R~sidence

8:30 A.M. to 6:00 P.M.FOR YOUI\'G WOMEN 196 'Vhipple St., Fall River Closed all day Sund~C;:onducted by Franciscan ,

Missionaries of Mary ROOMS - MEALS Maclean's' 'Sea' Foods

OVERNIGHT HOSPITALITY UN'ON WHARF,' FAIRHA'yEN'''Quire OS 3-2m '

FORMER FIREMAN RETURNS: When Father Martin de Porres Clarke, O.F.M. Cap., visited the New York World's Fair firemen on duty gave him a special welcome. He was a member of the New York City fire department for seven' ,years before studying for the priesthood. The Francisc'an' 'said a Mass at the pavilion which members of the fire de:.' partment attended. Father Martin is now a missionary st~ tioned on Hirara Miyako ~ the Ryukyu Islands. NC Photo.

Plan Tourist Services Mexican Church Has Many' Attractions

In Cathedrals, Art, Festivals MEXICO CITY (NC)-A vis­ occupation of the government'

itor to Mexico can go to Mass for some time. every day for a year in the Despite this, however, there' city of Cholu1a and never enter have been few organized tours the same church twice. of such special sites as the

This ~ity with 365 churches Basilica of the Virgin of Guada­and chapels inside its bounda­ lupe in Chalma, the Cathedral

1He ANCHOR- 19 Thursday, July 8, 1965

Canadian M,~rist

Blasts African Race Division PETERBOROUGH (NC)­

A Catholic priest says he WM -ashamed of being a white -Iman" during a trip to Soutll Africa. , "'I felt as though I could,crawl into a hole in the ground'~ afte10 seeing apartheid, or enforced separation of the races, operate, Father J. H. Conway, O.M.I" told the Ontario English CathoUe Teachers Association here • Canada.

Vicious Program Father Conway, principal or

Catholic Central High School in London, Ontario, visited 10 Af­rican countries last year at the request of the world federatioa of teachers' organizations to of­fer help in organizing teacheJ'lll"' associations in Africa.

Some schools for non-whitel in Johannesburg, South Africa,· are "worse than the worst schools in the most primitive setup," he reported. ,

"Across the border in Basu­toland, the blacks may be poor

~~:J~;y are able to hol,d up, theh'

And in Southern Rhodesia, he ,added, "200,000 whites ate trying to control four milion blacks."

"There is no official apartheid system there but it is ,reallymore vicious than the apartheid

" sy$tem." Danger Signal'

.' Most countries turn down the , Chinese communist offer of free teachers, he said, because "they have a strong leaning toward Christianity." But he added that ~ithout the aid from the .West, these .co~ntries will eventually go communist. , "These countries aren't ready for our type of democrqcy. A one-party' government is better than a two-party government, according to the opinions of several responsible. citizens," said Father Conway.

Page 19: 07.08.65

-rHE: ANCHOR­20 Thursday, July 8, 1965

Publi~h Complete Ecumt!:!nical Guide For ~ichmond

RICHMOND (NC) - A guide to the clergy and laity of the Richmond diocese for the practice of ecumenism has been published here in Vir­f'inia, directing the diocesan Council of Catholic Men to pro­mote the formation of groups of men and women to study ecu­menical activity, and encourages aualified laymen to speak be­fore groups from other churches.

The 27-page guide was pre­pared by a 20-member Commis­sion on Christian Unity appoint­ed by Bishop John J. Russell of Richmond. It is believed here tlJ be the first comprehensive in­struction of its kind to come from a U.S. diocese. Directives covering individual aspects of the ecumenical movement have been issued previously in a num­ber of other dioces~.

The local action follows upOn the Vatican council's Decree Oft

Ecumenism issued last Novem­·ber. It came about simultaneous­ly with the issuance at Washing­ton by the U. S. Bi.shops' Com­mission for Ecumenical Affairs of interim guidelines onecumen­ical activity by U.S. Catholics.

Laity Activity The guide covers these sub­

jects: formation of Catholics in the principles and goals of ec­umenism, cooperation with other Christians and Jews in civic and social movements, dialogue and other efforts' for better religious understanding, and prayer and worship in common.

Bishop Russell particularly ~al1ed attention to the provisions on lay activity.

Father Lynch Continued from Page One

Father Lynch's parish assign­ments include Holy Name, New Bedford; St. Mary's, Taunton and Immaculate Conception, Taunton. He served as an Army· chaplain from February, 1942 until 1946 when he leturned tlJ Taunton to serve at Holy Family. He was named pastor of St. Joan of Arc in August, 1947.

Father Lynch has been the only pastor of st. Joan of Arc since Bishop Cassidy founded the parish in 1947. In 1952, he was instrumental in bringing the Sisters of Divine Providence into the Diocese and they started eatechetical work in the parish.

In November of the same year, the Orleans pastor broke ground for a new parochial school, the first on Cape Cod, with kinder­garten and the first two grades. There are now eight grade;:; and more than 170 pupIls-the limit allowed by the law.

Father Lynch established an­other milestone of parish his­tory in 1952, when a mission chapel was built in No. Eastham, which had once been a mission of Wellfleet. In 1961 an addition was added to the Mission Church of Our Lady of the Visitation so that the seating capacity was doubled.

One final building to complete the parish plant was added in 1957. It was a new convent con­taining 20 rooms and then Fa­ther LY'bch renovated the old convent for a pjlrish hall.

Father Lynch is survived by two sisters, the Misses Alice and Gertrude Lynch. He also had a brother, Rev. Raymond J. Lynch" who served in the Diocese until his death April 25, 1955.

Nuncio Says Dominican Strife Is Tragic Conflict SAN JUAN (NC)-The con­ Archbishop Emanuele Clarizio, the Dominicans, not only to suf­ pallium-symbol of episcopal

flict in the Dominican Republic who had played a major role in fer with all but also to help In­ authority-to Archbishop LuUi is one that pits "brothers against peacemaking efforts in the Do­ tensely to remedy needs and Martinez of San Juan, Puerto brothers, Christians against minican Republic. create an atmosphere of frater­ Rico's first native archbishop. Christians," the papal nuncio to Archbishop Clarizio said the nal understanding." .l\,rchbishop Clarizio also serve. that country said here in Puerto Church "has been present and The archbishop spoke at a cer­ as Apostolic Delegate to Puerte Rico. wants to be ever more present emony in the San Juan cathed­ Rico.

The comment was made by in the tragedy and suffering of ral at which he presented the

Open Daily 9 A.M. to lOP.M.The Furniture Wonderland of the East Including Saturdays

Another Carload Purchase f····~···jiili·ii:it:ii:····lDayslrom Dinettesl",,__, , , ~

KING-SIZE Rectangular or Oval Yahl. AT THIS ONE LOW PRICE . Only Mason's carload factory purchases combined with Mason's Low Rent Warehouse Location make values like this possible. You calli buy this Ki... Size 7 Piece Dinette with a bi. rectangular extension table (35x:5Ox7GI that includes two 10 inch leaves or a (42x:42x59) Oval Table with a 1.. ­17 inch Extension Leaf. Ma......roof Daystromite table tops .ncI handsome fabric-like vinyl Chairs that clecHI with the whisk of a damp doth. Y a choice of both dinettes at this one low price. They woa't be 011

long so better hurry while our supply lasts.

ha¥e ....

CONVENIENT BUDGEI' TERMS

UNew England's largest Furniture ShowrooM'" -

PLY, M Q<v,"

U T H A V ,

E. a t ______ ~.J.

ROD MAN 5 T.

TABLE and 6 CHAIRS

EXACTlY AS SHOWN

CIIoeee ...... !few ~

r.rs-est l!IeIeettoIl ..

Lawa, Porch, Beaeb. ..'

PatIo ·hrnfttuoe lit

Low Warehouse Prices

F All R I V E R ~