08.25.66

20
The , ANCHOR . lFaU River, Mass., Thursday, Aug. 25, 1966 $4.00 per Year Vot 10, No. 34 © 1966 The Anchor , PRICE lOe . ,Favors . , Lay Retreat 'Movement Advertising ExecutiVe Tells CAPE: RE<;TORY BLESSED:' Rev. :'Joseph C. Nolin, M.S., pastor of Our Lady of the Cape, West Brewster; Mrs. Mary Mc Cormack, parishioner; Bishop Connolly, Mr. Mrs. Harold Ellis, parishioners, meet in the new Cape Cod rectory following the bless- ing on Sunday. Harold Ellis and Mrs. Mary McCormack broke the ground for the Chul'ch in 1963. ' ," ' ' Boston Conclaye Attendants' .Plans New Consultative Body. Bos'rON (NC)-An advertising executive predicts a -----------------=- R.l'ight future for the Roman lay retreflt movement if di- , JPectors revamp the format to fulfill a contemporarY need. James O. of New York, speaking at the l.1st biennial convention of the National Catholic Lay- men's Retreat Conference here in the Bay State's cap- ital city, said the movement , should be merchandised like Q' product in the commercial mar- ket. The conference brought near-' .,. ,2,000 Catholic laymen to Bos- from more than 200 retreat houses throughout the, nation. Fifteen bishops and scores of !)riests attended. ' Taunton Prelate Retreat Ma ster . . for Vincentians' :Rt. Rev. Charles J , f'anty, pastor of St. Paul's Church, Taunton, will duct the annual weekend re- treat fOI members of the St. Vincent de Paul Society from councils of the Diocese. Scheduled for the weekend of Sept. 24-25 at Cathedral Camp, ][.,akeville, registration and as- signment of rooms will take lPlace between 4-5 on Saturday afternoon; Sept. 2-1. Tbe order of exercises wilD. 'faollow the pattern' of former re- keats. . Monsignor Canty, was ordained May 26, 1934 in St. Miuy!s thedral the late Most Rev. E. Cassidy, D.D., fOllow-:' . Turn to' Page Bishop Connolly of Fall River served as moderator at the Fri- day morning session entitled "Retreats in the Light of Parish Life" and gave a resume and' 'comments at the conclusion' of the session. I' Referring to the retreat move- ment as though it were lI' pro- duct and divorced from spirit- ualcontact, Wickersham anal- yzed it mtichthe wayan adver- , tising man would' approach a bar of soap or any other market- able product. There is need for drastic ,changes in the retreat movement, , opiried the New York execuiive, Ordinary to Establish Senate in Diocese The Diocese of Fall River will have a Senate of clergy, which ','in due course :t :It $ will be expanded," Most Rev. James L. Connolly, Bishop of -Fall River, announced today• S f Other dioceses throughout the world also are' in the process of organizing enates or ;heir Sees. Bishop. Connolly, revealed that the new consultative body will consider " the pastoral duties', of Most Reverend asserted ' priests, the priestly ministry;, In addition, the will review sUch matters "as the the Senate "will review the priestly preparl,ltion and ap- call of the faitliful, the 'people matter of salaries of teaching propriate renewal of the l:e- . of God,' to' bear witness and, Sisters, ;lnd Brothers, with iii ligious life." share in 'our 'responsibilities, as view to raise them realistically.'" . who is making a study to point' . also the whole matter of Catho- Patterned after the Senate of out its deficiencies and how they : lic education." the' Bishop said. , Bishops announced by Pope Paull . call be eliminated; Wickersham the alrea!iY an- ,toward ,the end of the Second Education··Board, stated there· has been no serious nounced synod," the Turn to Page Two decline in the laymen's move- Io Study School ment but there 'should be great- er gains in the light of an in- .Salary Schedule Plans 'for Diocesan Synod creased national economy, in- crease in available time for par- The Diocesan Board of Ed- ticipants and other 'factors. ucation, comprising seven Are Nearing Completion Bishop ,John J. Wright of members of the laity and six Pittsburgh, the keynoter, assert- Voluminous preparatory 'work for the convocation of ed the declaration of purpose of members of the clergy,' will the approaching .diocesan synod, announced in April by the Second Vatican Council is ,will meet with thE' Most Rev. the, declaration of purpose of the . James L. Connolly, .Bishop of reached the stage that will permit a complete outline of a}] Turn to Page Fifteen Turn to Page Two reached th estage that will permit a complete outline of all ' · B' I· · Diacesan Priest' Serves' In,' 0 'IV.la . . Jan:i'es' Mu;phy ' . Fcirtnfir ",Assistant In Fall Riyer . A day in the life of a mission- ary priest 'in'South America is vividly described in a 'communi- cation'to The, Anchor; from Father, James E. Murphy, for- merly assistant at St. Patrick's, Fall River and the first priest from the Diocese to serve with the St. James Missionary group working in South America. From Santa Cruz, Bolivia, Father Murphy writes: It is a very beautiful day in out village of LaGuardia-about 20 kilometres outside the city of Santa Cruz in Bolivia. Although we are still in Winter, the past few days we have had warm Spring weather. After our series of cold weather storms from the South these days are a welcome relief. The warm air made my trip to Describes Journey To' Sma'" Village, To Oller, Moss' pleasant. Tuiquipaya is a little village about 25 kilometres from' , LaGuardia.' The purpose: of , , trip was to celebrate Mass'for a deceased person, who. had died nine days ago. ' ' Funeral \Masses are rare'down here. Instead, the person'is buried very soon after death for nine evenings in a row all the neighbors gather in the home of the family of the deceased. I suppose that this custom could have started at a time when it would' have taken that long for the family to contact the priest and have him travel out to ... 'the village. Now things may be done a'little more rapidly since our main Church is just off the main "highway" from Santa Cruz to Coch;lbamba. The people in the villages are matters to be discussed at the diocese's own Vatican II. An extensive inquiry into the actual diocesan and par- ochial programs-and their real effectiveness-is about complete. Each priest of the diocese has been given the oportunity to scrutinize the present and make, ,Tqrn to Page Two , Expect Cap':1city Throng at· Polish Millennium Mass A PontifiCal Low Mass will be offered tomorrow night at 7:30 in the Bishop Stang High School Auditor- ium, No. Dartmouth, Most Rev. James L. Connolly, com- memorating the millelWlium of Christianity in Poland. Rt. Rev. Stanislaus 3ypek, m native of Our Lady of Perpet- ual Help Parish, New Bedford, and a professor at Emanuel Cm- lege, Boston, will be the preach. er. JlSGK.C.I.. CANTY Tiquipaya this morning verT REV. lAMES E. Turn to Page Four Turn to Page Two .

Upload: the-anchor

Post on 06-Mar-2016

227 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Other dioceses throughout the world also are' in the process of organizing enates or ;heir Sees. Bishop. Connolly, revealed that the new dioc~san consultative body will consider " the pastoral duties', of The Diocese of Fall River will have a Senate of clergy, which ','in due course :t :It $ will be expanded," Most Rev. James L. Connolly, Bishop of -Fall River, announced today• S In addition, the S~nate will review sUch matters "as the the Senate "will review the JlSGK.C.I.. CANTY ket. . .

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 08.25.66

The

ANCHOR

lFaU River Mass Thursday Aug 25 1966

$400 per Year Vot 10 No 34 copy 1966 The Anchor PRICE lOe

Favors Merch~ndi$ing

Lay Retreat Movement Advertising ExecutiVe Tells

CAPE REltTORY BLESSED Rev Joseph C Nolin MS pastor of Our Lady of the Cape West Brewster Mrs Mary Mc Cormack parishioner Bishop Connolly Mr ~nd Mrs Harold Ellis parishioners meet in the new Cape Cod rectory following the blessshying on Sunday Harold Ellis and Mrs Mary McCormack broke the ground for the Chulch in 1963

Boston Conclaye Attendants Plans New Consultative Body BosrON (NC)-An advertising executive predicts a -----------------=shy

Rlight future for the Roman lay retreflt movement if di- JPectors revamp the format to fulfill a contemporarY need

James O Wick~rsham of New York speaking at the l1st biennial convention of the National Catholic Layshymens Retreat Conference here in the Bay States capshyital city said the movement

should be merchandised like Q

product in the commercial marshyket

The conference brought near- 2000 Catholic laymen to Bosshy~n from more than 200 retreat houses throughout the nation Fifteen bishops and scores of )riests attended

Taunton Prelate Retreat Master for Vincentians

Rt Rev Charles J os~ph fanty pastor of St Pauls

Church Taunton will con~ duct the annual weekend reshytreat fOI members of the St Vincent de Paul Society from bull councils of the Diocese

Scheduled for the weekend of Sept 24-25 at Cathedral Camp ][akeville registration and asshysignment of rooms will take lPlace between 4-5 on Saturday afternoon Sept 2-1

Tbe order of exercises wilD faollow the pattern of former reshykeats

Monsignor Canty was ordained May 26 1934 in St Miuys C~shythedral b~ the late Most Rev I~lmes E Cassidy DD fOllow-

Turn to Page Se~enteen

Bishop Connolly of Fall River served as moderator at the Fri shyday morning session entitled Retreats in the Light of Parish Life and gave a resume and

comments at the conclusion of the session I

Referring to the retreat moveshyment as though it were lI proshyduct and divorced from spirit shyualcontact Wickersham analshyyzed it mtichthe wayan advershy

tising man would approach a bar of soap or any other marketshyable product

There is need for drastic changes in the retreat movement opiried the New York execuiive

Ordinary to Establish Senate in Diocese

The Diocese of Fall River will have a Senate of clergy which in due course t It $

will be expanded Most Rev James L Connolly Bishop of -Fall River announced todaybull S f

Other dioceses throughout the world also are in the process of organizing enates or heir Sees Bishop Connolly revealed that the new dioc~san consultative body will consider the pastoral duties of

Most Reverend B~shop asserted priests the priestly ministry In addition the S~nate will review sUch matters as the the Senate will review the

priestly preparlltion and ap- call of the faitliful the people matter of salaries of teaching propriate renewal of the le- of God to bear witness and Sisters lnd Brothers with iii

ligious life share in our responsibilities as view to raise them realistically who is making a study to point also the whole matter of Catho- Patterned after the Senate of out its deficiencies and how they lic education the Bishop said Bishops announced by Pope Paull

call be eliminated Wickersham Anticjpa~ing the alreaiY anshy toward the end of the SecondEducationmiddotmiddot Board stated theremiddot has been no serious nounced di~cesan synod the Turn to Page Two decline in the laymens moveshy Io Study School ment but there should be greatshyer gains in the light of an inshy Salary Schedule Plans for Diocesan Synod creased national economy inshycrease in available time for parshy The Diocesan Board of Edshyticipants and other factors ucation comprising seven Are Nearing Completion Bishop John J Wright of

members of the laity and six Pittsburgh the keynoter assert shy Voluminous preparatory work for the convocation of ed the declaration of purpose of members of the clergy will the approaching diocesan synod announced in April bythe Second Vatican Council is will meet with thE Most Rev the declaration of purpose of the James L Connolly Bishop of t~e reached the stage that will permit a complete outline of a]

Turn to Page Fifteen Turn to Page Two reached th estage that will permit a complete outline of all

middot B Imiddot middotDiacesan Priest Serves In 0 IVla

~iJanies Muphy FcirtnfirAssistant

In Fall Riyer A day in the life of a missionshy

ary priest inSouth America is vividly described in a communishycationto The Anchor from Father James E Murphy forshymerly assistant at St Patricks Fall River and the first priest from the Diocese to serve with the St James Missionary group working in South America

From Santa Cruz Bolivia Father Murphy writes

It is a very beautiful day in out village of LaGuardia-about 20 kilometres outside the city of Santa Cruz in Bolivia Although we are still in Winter the past few days we have had warm Spring weather After our series of cold weather storms from the South these days are a welcome relief

The warm air made my trip to

Describes Journey To Sma Village To Oller Moss

pleasant Tuiquipaya is a little village about 25 kilometres from

LaGuardia The purpose of th~ trip was to celebrate Massfor a deceased person who had died nine days ago

Funeral Masses are raredown here Instead the personis buried very soon after death a~d for nine evenings in a row all the neighbors gather in the home of the family of the deceased

I suppose that this custom could have started at a time when it would have taken that long for the family to contact the priest and have him travel out to

the village Now things may be done alittle more rapidly since our main Church is just off the main highway from Santa Cruz to Cochlbamba

The people in the villages are

matters to be discussed at the dioceses own Vatican II

An extensive inquiry into the actual diocesan and parshyochial programs-and their real effectiveness-is about complete Each priest of the diocese has been given the oportunity to scrutinize the present and make

Tqrn to Page Two

Expect Cap1city Throng atmiddot Polish Millennium Mass

A PontifiCal Low Mass will be offered tomorrow night at 7 30 in the Bishop Stang High School Auditorshyium No Dartmouth b~ Most Rev James L Connolly comshymemorating the millelWlium of Christianity in Poland

Rt Rev Stanislaus 3ypek m native of Our Lady of Perpetshyual Help Parish New Bedford and a professor at Emanuel Cmshylege Boston will be the preach er

JlSGKCI CANTY Tiquipaya this morning verT REV lAMES E MURP~ Turn to Page Four Turn to Page Two

2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 01

Plans for Synod Irmp~lrndDg I

Continued from Page One

suggestions for the future in the light of Vatican II

Every phase of religiotis lifeshyas found in the Diocese - has come understudy Now the ~shysuIts of such a conscientious study is to be melted into the prospective program of the Secshyond Synod of the Fall River Diocese

The countless opinions and suggestions at a more Clruitful and effective Christian life and witness in all fields of human endeavor shall now be comshy

middotpared scrutinized and weighed according to the increaed good for the people of the diocese and also according to the generosity

of response to the inspiring dishyrectives of the Second Vatican

Council For this a Senate of Priestsshy

soon to be named-and various Commission will begin to do the

sorting and comparing work of in a sense rewriting the laws and practices f)f the Diocese of Fall River in the light of the middotVatican Council

Diocesan Synods are to be middot eonv9ke periodically so as to bnng the Churchs many proshymiddot grams to bear mere effectively in solving the contemporary

problems the people of the di~shyeese must live with

The last such synod inmiddot the history of Fall River was held

middot at 3t Marys Cathedral Fall bull River by Bishop William Stang

Magr DeBlanc will celebrate midnight Mass for the families of the world

The pilgrims are scheduled to have an audience ~ith Pope Paul VI during a VISIt to Rome They will leave Paris for home Jan 3

Picket CathedraO NEW YORK (NC)-Some 20

demonstrators picketed st~ Patshyricks Cathedral here ca1ling upon the Catholic Church to reshyverse its ban or artificial methshyods of birth control The demshyonstration las led by William R Baiid a non-Catholic

FORTY HOURS

DEVOTION

Aug 28--St John the Baptist Central Village

Out Lady of Grace- No Westport

Sept 4--Our Lady of the AsshysumptionNew Bedshyford

Our Lady of Mount Carshymel Seekonk

Sept ~ur Lady of the Assumption New Bed-

THE dCMOI

S8coml Clau Posmge PalO It Fall Rive Mass Publlshel eve l1Iursda) a1 41a Hlllhlana Avenue Fall Rive Mass 02722 oy tile catholic Pres 01 the Diocese 01 FaA Rive SubscrlptlOll price IIlI IIIlIU IIOSlPGlIImiddot $4D0 lI8I

to better the educationdl charshyitable and religiouE life of the Diocese the Second Vatican Council has launched a great re ligious crusade and provided the churches with the means to suc- _ cessfully live as the Mystical Body in b world such as this

The study thathas been inaushygurated at the bidding of the Most Reverend Bishop and middotthe call gtf Vatican II will now betranslated into more effective programs Here again Fall River is among thefirst to put the

hopes of the Council and Pope into effect

Sthedule Annual Labor Day Mass

WASHINGTON (NC) -Archshybishop Patrick A OBoyle of Washington will preside at the annual Labor Day Mass offered for labor management and goYshyernment at the Shrine of the Sacred Heart here Sept 5

Auxiliary Bishop Edward J Herrmann of Washington will offer the Mass which is sponshysored by the Archdiocesan Union

of Holy Name Societies Coadjutor Bishop Peter J

Gerety of Portland Me wfill

preach the sermon A wreath-laying ceJemony hon()ring the memory of James Cardinal Gibbons will followthe

M t h dial statue 1IlI ass a e car ns bull

Mi~lenniumMass ~iPR][MATES ~EPRESENT~TIVE Bisho~liadiShus r~t e~~u~~h~middotmiddot g-~~ Co~ti~u~ f~omigt~g~ o~~~ubjil Auxiliary ~lShOpto ~ardmalWyszyp~ki()f PoIand ~ashi~gtonCentralLabor COUll-

Assisting Bishop middotConnollywill gtiU~e~comed on ~l~ f-lrrlval m ther pmiddotS~ by B1StlOPWY~lSIo ~l wIll speak be Rev John BainboI middotOFM of ChIcago and he w111 middotrepresent theCardmaI at the ()bserv-I conv an~Ite~Fe1iCian Plicbtaahceof the Millenriium of PolishChrisianit~~ to Eheld in Fa II Rover Sister OFM Conv Chicago on Sunday Jhshop Rubm vlsIted hiS fnend Rev

Presenlat the Mass Will be Ad~Ibert A SzkIanhy 1ssistant at St Patricks Church In High Office Most Rev James J Gerrard F 11 R 1963 d ted he e g in in October Auxiliary Bishop 01 the Dicxe~e a Iver m an IS expec r a a NEWARK (NC) -Sister Car-Chaplains to the Bj~hopwill be melindaSciscento a native 01 Rev Joachim Dembeck OFM Fe t ~ Fall River has been named Conv and Rev~ Matthew Kot- Irsmiddot AmeriCa general econome or financiall~lClshykowskiOFM ConY _ Visor of the Religious Teatl1en

Re~~cii~~~ ~~a~~il1a~ Brother Charl~s Henry New SuperiorGIB~eral~rs~Ucarme~asu~e~~~ Mr WalterGltisciminskiwill be Of286-Year old Christicin TeaChEIS St bull FrancisXavie~s eonvent the organist

LAFAYETTE (NC)-Brother IE II t Charles Henry FSC firstS hC _00 nro menmiddot American elected siperiorgen-

ReCllches 941 000 eral of the 286-Year old Brothelll

of the Christian Schools pre-ROCKVILLE CENTER (HC) senteel habits to new Brothers

-Enrollment in diocesan schools here on the 40th anniversary of here onLong Islandwill reach his own reception of the habiton May 12 1905 a record total of more than 94- The ceremOnY marked someThough the Fall River Diocese 000 students when the new school

has conceived many programs firsts for the Brothers here For year begins in September the first time the new Brothers

The opening of four new high retained their family names slmiddotana Prelate high schools and two new el- rather than choosing a religiousLoul ementary schools is principally name and at the end of the

To Leadlt4PIlgrIOmage responsible for the numerical ceremony they filed out flanked growth It brings the total ofLAKE CHARLES (NC)-Msgr by their parents rather than byschools to 123

Irving A DeBlanc pastor of Our already professed Brothers f Haven parish Teaching personnel also on Brother Charles Henry said heL d Qa Y ueen 0 e the increase will number about

h 11 I d an around theere WI es 2225 with lay teachers comshyworld piigrimage Nov 28 to prising about one-third of the Jan 3 i total Thepilgrim~ge will inClude

attendance at the Interna~onal M ~middotO d Union of Family Organizations ass r 0

conference in r-rew- De~ India FRIDAYMasso~ previo~Sunshy Dec 12 t~ 16 and m7etin~ WIth _ day IV Class Green Mass family lif~ spec1gtllists m~ Proper No Gloryor Creei

countnes Islted Chnstmas WIll 2nd Prayer St Zephyrinus be spent m Bethlehem where Common middotPreface

OR St Zephyrinus Popea~d Marshy

does not believe the teaching Brothers apostolate will disshy appear Catholic education is here to

~taY~The people desir~ iti~ ill

bull bull tyro Red Glory no Creed New TUitIon middotGrants

CommonPreface LANSING (NC)-Nearly 1000 SATURDAY -St- Joseph Cala- private college freshmen already

sanctius Confessor III Class have applied for state tuition White Mass Proper Glory grants under a new Mi~higan no Creed Corunon Preface law

SUNDAY-XIIImiddot Sunday A f t e r Dr Leon Fill vice-president Pentecost II Class Green afthe State Board of EducashyMass Proper ~ Glory Creed tion saidabo~t 6000 freshmen Preface of Trinity who plan to enroll in private

MONDA --Bcentheading of Stbullbull colleges in September areexshyJohn the Baptist III Class pected to apply fo~ grants whiCh Red Mass Proper Glory 2nd range from $50 to $250 per Prayer st Sabina Martyr no Creed Common Preface

TUESDAY- St Rose of Lima Virgin III Class White Mass Proper Glory 2nd Prayer SS Felix and Adauctus Martyrs no Creed Common Preface

WEDNESDAY - St Raymond Nonnatus Confessor III Class White Mass Proper Glory no

Creed Common Preface THURSDAY - Mass of previous

Sunday IV Class Green Mass Proper No Glory or Creea 2nd Prayer St Giles 3rd Frayer Twelve~olyBrothers Martyrs Common Preface

OR st Giles Abbot White Glory 2nd Prayer Twelve HoI y

Brothers liartyrsno middotCr~ ~omn1onPreface One Votive Massmiddothi honorof Jesus ChriSt the Eteniaf High Pnest permitted Glory 2nd Prayer St Giles 3rd Prayermiddotmiddot Twelve Holy Brothers Martyrs no Creed Commpn Pr~ace

semester depending on the stu- dents family income

The new Tuition Grant Proshygram ias approved in June by the state Legislature and signed into law last month by Gov GeOrge Romney The Legislature appropriated $31 million for the first year of the program

Necrology SEPT 3

Rev Thomas J McGee DD 1912 Pastor Sacred Heart Taunshyton

SEPT 11 Rev JosephmiddotPTallon 1864

Pastormiddot St MarY New Bedford Rey Johp J Maguire 1894 Found~r st Peter Provincetown

SEPT 15 nev Napole6n A Messier

1948 middotPastor St Matthew FlllJ1 River

SEPT 8 Rev Thomas Sheehan 1_

Founder Holy Trinity W Hallshywich

bull benihas been a member of the icism if it helps us to improve community for 36 years anti a our techniques developing bet-ieoJnmunity supervisor in middotmiddotthe tel teacher training programs Newark archdiocese for ifoaw

yearsFirstmiddot Senate umiddot middot S ff Continued from Pag4~ One

VaticanCouncil the Senate of Priests willalsl be of great help to the Bishop

T his group of appointed priests will stud3r questions conshycerning parish and diocesan life closely and then after matured lib ti tak uIta e era on E on a cons shyti t Th d i f th e vo e IS ec SlOn 0 e S te sh uId _nect to the ena 0 -u Bishop and other authorities

f f di iwhat the eelmg 0 ocesans s

Th fi al t f th p en vo eo erlesS te 11 t a1 ena WI m no way ~ aJee

nlverslty ta Rmiddot bull S

eslgnatlons oar BUENOS AIRES (NC)-D-

~ igI1ations of personn~l at BuenOll Aires University have run intoshy

the thoustands Faculty and staff members protesting the governshyments closing of-the school are

leaving m droves despite g01 shyernment promises to restore autonomy

Resignationshave comefrom deans from the ranks of the schools 2000 professors and~88shy

dec~sllm but only asugg~~tion sociates and from f1ecretari~ w~ch ~ been fOrmE~tafter TheJuly 29middot closing enfolleed ~tu~yand de~beratioJl bythegovernmept toweecLout

C needed and it is goq4 fo~ ~oc~ty The~tial Vorkoftrue~~nJlte communists among the facul~ in general of ~~sts~ the Diocelle orJall and student body has bro~gbt a

Criticism he added can be Rivershallbe tostudythe PIob- storm of Universal protest a blessing in disguise if we l~~swhichth~ Dioc~aJllS~od Teachers atthc Argentinemiddot Cathshyprofit fromit We welcomeCrit-iqofac~~riew~~S~gg~stions olic ViuverSityunlffect~ by

offered b~ the DIocese s pri~sts the order closmg down state pnishy1 000 Fr~shmen Ask an_d fo~~atethEir olnsu~ges-middotmiddot v~rsitfesisSuea a tetter e1lpreashy

middotti~nsfoi this official revie~~dmiddotmiddot ing theirdeep concernfottbe ~~gio~amento o~ diocesan future of the Argentine~tudent

laws community

School Board Continued from Page One

Diocese and Rev Patrick J ONeill Diocesan SupeJiI1tendshyent of Schools- at 2 Friday after- noon in the Bishops Residence Highland Avenue FalllUver

the purpose of this meetirig is to discuss the salaries of the teaching sisters and brattiers throughout the Diocese of Fall River bull

OIROURKE Funeral Home

571 Second StrEte~

Fall -River Mass os 9-6072

MICHAEL J McMAHCgtN Licei5ed FuneraB Director Regi~red Ernbalmbullbullr

DmiddotOLAN~SAXOI~middot

Funeral Horne 123 Broadwa

TAUNTOIII YA 4-5ClJGO

JEFFREYLSULLIVAN uneral Bonae

550 Locust Str Fall River Mass

shy OS 2-239

ampose E Sa1Uvan ~y E Sullivan - -

BROOKLAWN FUNERAL HOME INC

II Marce Ray - 6 LarraltlG IIoJ Roger laFrance

FUN~IlAL DIRECTQRS 15 Irvington Ct

995-5166 New Bedford

D D Sullivan ampSons FUNERAL HOME 469 LOCUST STREET

FALLRIVEit MA$L os 2-33

WUfred Co James l shy DriscollmiddotSullivanJr

3 Maryknon Cuts Makes Room lor Jet Set THE ANCHOR~

Thurs Aug 25 1966 Superiors Term ~ Congress ProbesTo Six Years Fr Morris lU Semi-Retirement

Luther TeachingMARYKNOLL (NC) HELSINKI (NC) - LutherPermission to reduce the scholars from all over the worldFall River MaryknoUer 52 Years in Priesthood

terms of superiors general met here in Finland to discuss from 10 to six years has been the impact of modern scholarshyMaryknoll Father John E MQrris may be one of the few priests in the world who (JIven to the Catholic Foreign ship on the traditional undershy

can say his mission was bumped by the Jet Age And indeed it was The Fall RiverMiSSion Society of America standing of themedieval reform-OMaryknoll Fathers) by theConshy missioner was stationed in Hawaii where he wo~ked for 12 years until his parish bordershy er gregation for the Propagation of ing Honolulus International Airport was engulfed by runways lengthened to a~commo- Discussing hIs spirituality tile Faith philosophy and ecclesiology thedate new jet aircraft That

The change in the constitution scholars attempted to relate theholm in a prisoner-of-war exshywas in 1956 FatherMorrisldso includes a provision for sucshy reformers thought with modernehangecelebrated his 77th birthdayession by the societys vicar Protestantism and ecumenism general if the superior general OR Jan 1 of this year and In Hawaii Jl Years This years congress the first ceases to hold office for the currently is semi-retired from to be held in Helsinki is the thirdIn 1944 Father Morris was as aemaining term of office Preshy mission work and resides at the LUther congress in 10 yearssigned to the missions of Hashy

rheological preparation wasw-ously an extraordinary ehapshy Maryknoll seminary in Mounshy waii where he worked for the was dope by the Lutheran World6er had to be called to elect a tata yiew Calif next 12 years until the incident Federationccessor with the extensien of the runshyJI)iocesa~ PriestGreater Flexibility way in 1959

The shorter term becomes He was ordained for the DioshyReturning to the conti1entat Fr E L Dickinsoneffective immediately and will cese of FalRiver in 1914 joined

U S he was appointed Regionalo acffect the terms of office of the Maryknoll in 1921 and left for Director of Maryknoli activities Testimonial Sept 11superior general and four memshy the missions in Korea in October in the Pacific Northwest with Two thousand friends and 85shybers of the general council whose M 1923 his residence in Seattle Washshy sociatesof Rev Father Edmondelections are currently on the After 13 years in Korea where ington He held this post until L Dickinson who served the_apter agenda he served as Prefect Apostolic his second assignment to Koreamiddot Sacred HeaIi parish in ~orthMaryknolls constitution has be was transferred to Kyoto to in 1959 Attleboro for 28 years will1Ied for 10-year terms of ofshy work among the large Korean His assignment to Mountain gather at the King Philip onBee since itwas written in i929 population living in that city View after 43 years of mission Sunday Sept 11 for a testimonial ~ue subject of shorter terms was

With the outbreak of World work was made in August of banquet War II he was interned by the

Gliscussed at the last chapter in 1965 He jokingly commented General chairman of the 31- 1~56 but gelegates at th~ titne at the time 1 have to mke fair is L Bancroft Austin wIthJapanese and repatriated to the ~ted to de~er action on it

U S aboard the SS Grips- REV JOHN IE MORRIS MM oroom for the jet set hcmoJary chairman Rev J OmerA chapter spokesman declared Lussier pastor of Sacred Heart

u~ six-year term will alow Church Co-chairman is Roiandgreater flexibility and conformshyFregtault and treasurer Rev(tv wHh rapidlychanging times Tells Knights Renew Temporal Order Roger Leduc The general comshyAdditionally it will allow mittee comprises Joseph Vedlshymore frequent opportunity for

major planning re-evaluashy McDevitt Stresses COuncil Directive leux Mrs Ralph Patunoff Franshyand cis Ouellette Norman Deschenestion of society work and permit

the possibility of re-elections MIAMI BEACH (NC) - Themiddot l~ading Christian body iIi the Manifestly our wealth in Pauline Paquin Mr and Mrs Trend 01 Times chief executive officer of the land numbers talent and resources Normand LHomme Gerard

Maryknoll is one of several Knight of Columbus called on Our order has spread through calls on us to reach out to the Achin Albert Desilets Mrs Paul lJOCi~ties in recent years to seek the organizationsI200OOO mem- the length and breadth of North community and like Christ LaTamee Daniel Cardin Romeo d receive permission from the bers to be in the foregroundof America It now counts in its seek to serve rather than be Villemaire Mrs Donna Gilmore Holy See to reduce the terms of tlltose who respond to the direc- ranks the intellectual economic served and Al Houde office Among these were the tive of the Second Vatican and political cream of society Tum Outward Oblate Fathers and the Mission- Council that laymen tmust take he said Evidently our eyes whicl1 for Nuns InstitutellIies of Ss Peter and Paul up the renewal of the temporal It is high time that we years we returned inward (PIME) who have reduced their order as their own special abandon the concept of our toward oui self-defense now NOTRE DAME (NC)-Notre generals terms to six years obligation order as mainly a fortress to must turn outward for opportushy Dame Uiversitys 13th annual Election of Maryknolls super- Speaking at the States Dinner protect us from a hostile world nities to defend and help others theological institute for local

lot general and four-member 01 the 84th annual meeting of Under such an outlook what And it is in this new role as superiors closed after 1700 nuns teeneral counci is expected at the 9rders supreme council served as a fortress of protection we direct our attention to the from aU o)r America discussed iMenary sessions after Aug U John Wi McDevitt said the yesterday could become a prison community at large that we th~ impact of the Second Vati shyIHampt it is possible the discussion ~nights of Columbus constitute barring us from opportunity toshy can carry out the challenges can Council on womens reUshyiIould be introduced earliermiddot the largest most effectively or- day and ~ dungeon dooming us given us by the Second Vatican gious lommunities

ganiBed and most highly equip- to 9wg~ation tomorrow Council Ped body of Catholic laymen on McDevitt said a good outline~m~niails to Hav4 the American continent He of what Vatican II expects of the

stated this constitutes Dot only ~amsey Resigns People of God and particularly Building Contractor Gwn Rite Service

bull prestige arid honor but also reshy PHILADELPHIA (NC) - Dr of the laity is given in the Passhy

TORONTO (NC) - Catholics SpOnsibility 3lck Ramsey one of the most toral Constitution on the Church Masonryelf the Armenian rite in Canada succeSSful coaches in modern in the Modern WorldMcDevm added that circUmshywill soon have regular Services college basketball history has He rEmommended that allstances have changed drasticallyIII their own language and litur- VICTORresigned as coach and athletic councils with the aid of their liIinee the order was founded 84

~ars director at St Josephs College chaplains their bishop andagoArchbishop Georges Layek of here to become general manager other qualified authorities unshyIn those less mature days ofA1eppo in Syri~ said this is the of pro Philadelphia 7Gers of the dertake an immediate in-depth FLEURENTAmerican d~velopment he saidPurpose of this tour of North National Basketball Association study of the council documents

America implementing one of 0 Church was regarded susshy Ramsey also taught social scishy particularly those relating to 7 JEANmE STREETpiCiously as a southern Europeanamphe desires of the Vatican counshy ence at St Josephs where he the responsibilities and opporshyiii He is acting as delegate for bodr foreign to American soil ~as a star and captain on the tunities of Catholic laymen in t FAIRHAVEN WY 4-7321

Our members were largely imshyAomenian Patriarch Ignace~ Hawkss 1948-49 basketball team the world todayP4erre of Beirut migrants still at the bottom of

Archbishop Layek announced the social and economic ladder ~tt~+imMilli1W(regiBMWf~ifW~)ll~41~~~KKKampiEffimw~NmW~lMliiit1f(n))Iltjlt~~1li~

priests wiil be authorized to Gar order served principally as care for the small groups of Ar- a fortress where members could

gather and find mutual encourshyenian Catholics in Toronto agement and strength against theand Ottawa Larger parishes slings of a society still hostile towill be established in the United bull BACKmiddotTOmiddot(OLLEGE SERVICES bullboth their religion and their nashyStates Archbishop Layek said tionality

Understandably many early~etroit University efforts of the order were direcshy lOW-COST HELP LOANSDorm for Women ted at preserving the heritageof 001 faith and protectingDETROIT (NC) - The Unishy members from unjust discrimishyversity of Detroit has opened its SPIECIAL STUDENT CHECKING ACCOUNTSnation Because the order WaBfirst residence for women The small and weak its principal acshy lleW residence hal1 is the former tivities were directed inwardPalmer Hotel It has been eomshy towBlrd self-preservation

pletely refurnished and will 1I1JIJ1lDifferent Today~use 150 women students

But what striking differencesThe new dorm has been named today McDevitt continuedIDr Father Joseph A Foley S3 The Catholic Church has taken-udent chaplain for some 30 fia1a root and has become the-ears before his death in 1965 FIRST

Blocks Suicide College Inaugural MADRID (NC)-5ister Conshy LORETTO Pa (NC)-Geneshy

elo clung to the legs of a 28 vieve Blatt Secretary of Intershy JJMfIMBANKrear-old patient for more than nal Affairs of Pennsylvania was aeven minutes to prevent the mall guest speaker at St Francis Colshy

fiom jumping from the eighth lege here yesterday when Father GREATER NEW BEDFORDS FAMUn BANK fOR DOLLARS FOR SCHOLARS floor of the general hospital Vincent R Negherbon TOR ~xe waa inaugurated 8Ii president

4 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Ault 066 Italia~CJl~nguage

Paper O~ CanadQlFormer_FaU Ruvell A$$D$ih~Jm1fr MONTREAL -(NC) - Domam

(Tomorrow) an Italian-languageServes in flo1ivia MDSSDO~ Catholic weekly newspaper beshyContinued from Page One are also many homes throughout gan publication here for Itaiianshy

able to catch the local bus and the woods so 1 find it more prushy speaking Canadians with an i~

we can reach most of our vil shy dent not to ask where they got tial printing of 20QOO cQpies

lages by jeep The custom still the grapefruits The altar boys The paper founded and edited prevails however so this mornshy take advantage of the rest of the by Father A Paoletti OFM ing 1 started out for Tiquipaya waiting period to get washed in Cap is published- by the ItaliaD

the river 0) with two assistances The altar Nathmal Parishes of Montreai boys from the 7 oclock (more People Appear under the general direction of or less) Mass have the morning The opposite bank of the ri ver Auxiliary Bishop Adrian Cimishyto help the Padres since Ue seems to be a solid wall of green cheBa OMI of Montreal boys do not have class until the but slowly the people begin tp Father Paoletti said the paper afternoon appear on the bank It looks like will deal with general news as

At 9-More or Less bull the chiItlren omiddotfmiddot Israel comiJig well as Catholic news StaH Classes for the girls begin at through the Red Sea - except members are all Italian laymen

830 more or less The girls begin this sea does not part in the midshy with journalistic experience in to arrive at the rectory from dIe The babies are quite secure - Italy 730 on so that they can borrow on the backs of their mothers Father Paoletti recently spentthe two volley balls and jump and all proceed to dimb into the 19 years in Australia where he ropes for an hour or so before jeep truc~ fo~ a short trip to founded La Fiammamiddot (Thegoing to schoof The public the small opening in the woods Flame) an Italian-languageschool is just across the street whele the men have set up an paper published twice weekly in

The Mass in Tiquipaya is at altar Sydney9 oclock-m~e or less so after As Mass begins there are greeting all the little girls with about 75 people present By the a Buenos Dias and Como time Mas~ is over a few more ReoctlioDO SllDrprsSesestas and a couple of turns people have appeared-onlyGod withltthejump rope we start out knows fom where Probably Vermolilll Glaquoraquovernor for the village Besides being a they have been attracted by ST ALBANS (NC)-Vermonts very beautiful Spring-like day it Alejandros very loud and very Gov Philip Hoff disclosed one is also a very lazy day and the bad singing of the surprises of his legislativeanimals arE the first to feel the After Mass isa fine time for career in a talk at the dedicashylaziness in thE air The trip is a catechism class baptisms and tion of new Central Catholic slowed down considerably by anointing of any sick if there High SChool which will be openshymany very slow moying animals are any As 1 am leaving in the cd in September on the highway-oxen cows truck 1 get the usual question When 1 came out in favor ofhorses pigs burros chickens When are you coming again federal aid to private educationThis afternoon they will have Padre The usual answer We the governor said 1 expected tea little more life because there hae many other villages to go receive complaints and protestsbull is a wind statting to pick up to but if 1 am able in three Actually 1 did not receive oneOfficial Hymn Leader weeks--more or less letter or telephone call aboutWe have one stop along the

the statement ~ way Alejandro will be waiting on the road at Santa Rita Alshy T1e school built at a cost 0152 Missionaries

$1 million was made possible phones in this area Alejandro by gifts from a number of pershythough we do not have any teleshy

To Leave US some of comshy sons including many non-Cathshymust have means APPPRENTlCEmiddotINDJAN STYLE At a technical school

munication with someone here in ST COLUMBANS (NC) olics The school was dedicatedfor orphaned boys~ established by_ Bishop Francis Xavier LaGuardia who lets him know Fifty-two Columban missionaries by Bishop Robert F Joyce of

Muthappa of Coimbatore India this yopng apprentice ~~jeswhen we leave the house He is will leave for six mission counshy Burlington Vt who charactershyalways waiting on the road for tries this Fall eut some carpenters tools NC Photo ized the building as a memerial us when we go by Santa Rita Father Daniel Boland SSC 9pound love

Alejandro is our 17 year old director of the Columban Fashyself-made catechist and our offi shy thers in North and South Amershycial hymn leader a~ ltlll the Masses ica said The only mission Another Degree in the villages from Santa Rita country that will not be bolstershyto the end of the parish A real ed by this influx of missionaries Parap~egic in Wheel Chair Studies

good boy-with no education is Burma as visas cannot be obshy c One more stop I almost forgot tained for missionaries tp enter Clhemistry at Notre Dame

about A fiveminute stop-more that counrty MONTHLY CHURCHmiddotNOTRE DAME (NC)-One of he took second place in the freeshyor less-in Jorochito to tell Guil shy Father ~oland added There the 140 high school chemistry style the back crawl and thelermo that he is to inform all are now more than 200 Columshy breast stroke BUDG~T ENVELOPESteachers who attended Notrethe village that there will be a bans in the Philippines and 100

Dame Universitys s umiddotm mer I dont think Im so uniqueBible service at the chapel at 8 plus in both Japan and Korea PRINTED AND MAILEDmiddotchemistry institute here was a he said There were about 100more or less if the evening with the remainder in Burma man who has received the lastGuillermt is easy to find He the Fijis Peru and Chile other paraplegics down at the Write or Phone 672-1322 rites of the Church five timeslives in the sacristy and is a full Of the 887 Columban priests University of Illinois when I was Ed Quinn 28 has been a parashy there so you know Im not unshy 234 Second Street - Fall River time catechist We pay him $10 a some 600 are actively engaged in plegic for 11 years but durihgmonth i Inissionary work oversea~ Total usual that time has earned a bilchelorSince the day is so beautiful membership of the missionary of science degree in physiologymany of the women are doing society of secular priests is 1175 and a master of science degreetheir wash today There are in biology from ~hc University ofmany puddles from the rains IIllinoisalong the road I will never unshy Prelate to Address

If he attends the next fourderstand how the clothes can I ST~ JUDEPolish Organization summer institutes at Notrebe so clean coming out of such Idirty water PITTSBURGH (NC)-Bishop Dame he will also receive a i

Greeted by Children John J WLight of Pittsburgh will master of science degree in SOLEMN NOVI~A OF 9 THURSDAYSchemistryBy now I feel like General be the principal speaker at the Quinn has been a paraplegic

New York during the Korean servance of Polands millennium since he was in an auto accident MacArthur when he returned to Polish Falcons of AIl1~rica obshy

In PreporoHon ~~o Feast - Octobe 28th shortly before his high school

way are doing everything but The plOgram inculding field War The children all along the of Christianity

graduation in 1955 standing on their heads so that events and gymnastics by the Although he needs a wheelshy Begins Thursday bullSeptpmber 1sf the Padre will wave to them Falcons and the Slovak Gymshy ehair to move around he won

We arrive at Tiquipaya at 9 nastic Union will be held at three silver medals in 1962 at Preacher Fr Cosmas F Timlin OFM to find only one man People do West View Park Sunday Sept the Para Olympics in Stoke not come to Mass until the Pad re 4 OtheL attractions include a Mandeville England As a memshyarrives It is I little different Polish kitchen and folk dancing ber of the US swimming team today however Mot of the peoshyple live acrbss the river so it is necessary to drivethe two miles to the n ver bunk and blow the horn so that they will know that I have arrived

The river is very beautiful Very wila 100king Actually this area is considered jungle-cershytainly not like the Tarzan movies It is very beautiful al shythough dangerous at night beshycause of tC many snakes

We have half an hour to wait fOL the people to arrive so the altar boys and Alejandro disapshypear into the thicker woods They return with very laIge grllpefllit~ Thmiddotr le many fruit ttees in the area but there

llIANUFAC1URERS NATIONAL BANK

of BRISlOI~ COUNIY

THE AREAS MOST ACCOMMODATING BANK

NORTH ATTLESORO bull MANSFIELD ATTLEBORO FALLS

CHAPEL DEVOTIONS 1000 AM - 1210 Noon - 510 7 and 8 PM

NOVENA WJDA-Boston-1300 on Dial-II 05 AM WPLM-Plymouth--1390 on Dial-9 15 PM

Write for Booklet and Medal

Franciiscan Fathers 600 Pleasant Sheet New Eledford Mass~ _

5 THE ANCHOR-Catholic Mission Philosopher-Priest Visiting North Dartmouth Thurs Aug 25 1966

Societies Meet Also Sculptor Painter Housebuilder CIErgymen oStudyIn Washington

WASHINGTON (NC) A philosopher who is also a part-time sculptor painteralcl honse-builder-thats Mental Health The 17th annual meeting of Rev Herman Reith CSC who is spending the Summer at St Josephs Hall North Dartshy WASHINGTON (NC) - Ten US Catholic mission secishy mouth As co-author of a textbook Psychology for Nurses he spoke this month to Catholic priests and Brothers

middot participated in a mental healtheties will be held here Sept students at St Annes Hospital Fall River discussing the motivation a nurse should workshop held this Summer at1 to 21 with some 1000 priests have in her profession The Georgetown University ThelReligious and lay persons acti ve address was an interlude in middot program was designed to proshyfin Catholic mission work exshy

a busy Summer which the vide them with additional skillspected to attend The Worldmission Award Holy Cross priestmiddot has deshy in dealing with mental health

problemsgiven annually to a layman who voted mainly to work on a book They heard lectures frommakes an outstanding contribushy scheduled for Spring publication

more than 40 psychiatrists psyshycention to mission work will be by the University of Notre Dame chologists anthropologists edushy]tresented to James J Fahey Press Titled A Light to the cators and other clergymenWaltham Mass garbage man Nations Essays on the Intellecshy

The participants also workedand author of Pacific War tual Mission of the Church it with patients in psychiatric andDiary 1942-45 All proceeds is described by Father Reith aS general hospita~ wards and withfrom his book are going to build an attempt in the direction of representatives of social and edshybull church in South India a theology of the Church in modshyucational agencies of the DistrictAmong speakers at the meetshy eln times of Columbia areaing will be Auxiliary Bishop - He is grappling in its pages

A spokesman for the grouIJlFulton J Sheen of New York with redefinitions of key conshysaid they were given the opporshydirector of the National Society cepts such as the nature of the tunity to talk with persons withfur the Propagation of the Faith priesthood the Church herself widely varying pro b 1 emsAuxiliary Bishop Harold R and such terms as mission and They observed alcoholics inPerry SVD of New Orleans witness s 1um neighborhoods traveledMsgr Joseph Gremillion direcshy Religious laity and priests with probation officers whotor of the socio-economic divishy are all wondering who they are work wit delinquent youthsion Catholic Relief Servicesshy and what their roles are in toshyand visited homes for unweltilNational Catholic Welfare Conshy days Church he said My mothers shyference Bishop Frederick Hall stress is on Christ as the Logos The program was financed byMHM retired bishop of Kisushy Christs mission t~ the world is Georgetown University No govshyrna Kenya Sister M Olivette that of enlightenment and all his ernment funds were involvedWhalen councilor general of the wOIk was a witnessing to the

Sisters of the Holy Cross Notre truth Dame Ind and Father Gerrard Logos in Time Bay Staters ServeP Fredericks MSSST supeshy His book will discuss the Ilior general of Trinity Missions Poor in Canadafounding of the Church under Silver Spring Md the heading of The Logos in COMBERMERE (NC)-More

Theme of the meeting will be TIme and will develop the conshy than 100 international volunteersPoverty and the Missions-the cept that Christ must unfold are serving the poor in one ofDemands of Justice and Charshy through history in human fashshy Canadas depressed rural aleasity ion the Madawaska Valley

Degrading Misery The book six years in the They are from New MexicoBesides general sessions the writing took rise said Father Arizona Wisconsin Kentuckythree-day meeting will also inshy Reith from his attempts to exshy Georgia Alabama Illinois Michshy

elude a number of simultaneous plain to seminarians that teachshy igan PennsylvalTia New Yorkseparate sessions for various ing is as priestly a role as adshy Massachusetts and Canada Theygroups including mens and ministering the sacraments He come to Madonna House for awomens major superiors procshy quoted St Paul But as the week to a month and some theurators and promoters men and Lord hath distributed to every entire Summer to work in thewomens training directors and one as God hath called every apostolatev 0 cat ion directors editors one so let him walk And so in Many volunteers spend theirBrothers educators and lay all churches I teach time at the Madonna Housegroups Father Reith will not be forshy inarians on an expedition toFrom this beginning he went farm S1 Benedicts Acres OthshyThe Mission Secretariat is a gotten at St Josephs however Mexico where they built houses on to consider the role of the ers help at the summer recreashyelearing house for information He is leaving a very tangible for shack-dwellers And whereintellectual in the Church tionl programs for childern inand services to aid American memento of his presence in the did he pick up his manual laborShoulltl we be Christians or inshy middot two isolated settlementsCatholic foreign mission work form of a middotlife-size sculpture of know-how I came from a famshytellectuals he asks in his openshy Some help in the summerwith headquarters in Washingshy the Holy Family which will be ily of 10 children he explaineding chapter and ends by explainshy Christmas program cleanington Father Frederick A Mcshy

ing its not erected on a15 foot pedestal on and my mother adopted fourthat an eitheror and repairing toys sent hereGuire CM a former missionary the North Dartmouth grounds more There was always lots ofproposition but rather a both from all parts of North Americalin China is executive secretary work to doTo Leave Mementoand one for distribution this WinterThe delegates to this years Of steel the modernistic sculpshy One more item on this SumshyIn his closing chapters he exshymeeting represent more than ture is being welded in r-rew mers agenda every Sundayamines the roles of religious and7600 United States missionades Bedford by Father Reith during Father Reith flies to the islandlaity in the Church explainingstaffing overseas missions hours taken from his writing of Cuttyhunk to say Mass for CASA BLANCAparenthetically that he saves theIn a pre-convention stateshy project Summer residents The island Just Across Thelayman for last in line with thement Father McGuire said It is is actually part of St MarysThe versatile philosopher alsogospel comment Thou hast Coggeshall St Bridge a truism to say that we are livshy paints for relaxation leaning South Dartmouth he said andsaved the best wine till last Fairhaven Massing in an era of explosi ve towards oils and pastels I like Father Considine the pastor

change We also living in Other Books Holy Fathers Finest Variety ofare a semi-abstractions he said but asked the Cross whose Other books by the author inshycountry affluence has I always try to get some figures tltl be responsible for Summer SEAFOODnever been equaled in the hisshy clude An Introduction to Phil shy in my pictures Masses

tory of the world osophical Psychology and The Among the priests friends in Served Anywhere - AlsoThe house - building That We are at the same time Metaphysics of St Thomas came two Summers ago when the Diocese is Dr John E Manshy STEAKS-CHaPS-CHICKEN

Hving in a world where degrad Aquinas Also to be published ning Fall River pediatricianFather Reith led a group of ing misery envelops half of all next Spring is Frederick His Notre Dame students and sem- who arranged this months lecshyGods children We in the United Writings part of a series Oll ture at St Annes Hospital States accept as our due all the Marxist writings of which Fr eomforts and conveniences of Reith will be general editor FOl Vermonts Divorce Where Athis affluent society the while his doctoral degree earned at we push from our conscious Laval University he concenshy Rate Al110ng Lowest DONAT BOISVERT GOOD NAMEMlinking the agony of uncounted trated on Marxist philosophy BURLINGTO (NC) - Vershy

INSURANCE AGENCY INCmillions He gives credit to St Josephs monts divorce rate continues to Hall for providing the peace remain among the lowest among Means A96 WILLIAM STREETand leisure necessary to writing the 50 states of the nation

NEW BEDFORD~ MASSEight Irish Sisters Most of my books have been GREAT DEAL statistics disclosed it has been written there he said For Ie fairly stable during the last 26 WY 8-5153 WY 7-9167Arrive in Montana years he was chairman of the years - about 15 divorces per

BILLINGS (NC)-Eight Irish department of philosophy at the PERSONAL SERVICE1000 populationSisters of Mercy arrived here University of Notre Dame and Sociologists claim the stable~ work at St Vincents Hosshy he is now teaching in the deshy GEO OHARAlow rate results from the largepital and in parochial schools partment Theres no time fOll Catholic population of the stateTwo others are scheduled to arshy my own writing during the tllCshy -some 135000 Catholics in mIrive in September ademic year he says total population of some 393000 Six axe teachers and four are In the Spring however he IIlurses Bishop William J Conshy will leave Notre Dame for

ELECTRICAL Contractors

944 County St New Bedford

CHEVROLETdon of Great Falls invited the Makerere University in Kamshy St FrancisIIluns here last November when pala Uganda where he expects he visited their motherhouse in to teach for the next five years Residence

lOCH Kings Hwy lBallyshannon euroounty Donegal We have many Holy Cross FOR YOUNG WOMEN missions in Uganda he saiell U96 IIhippie St Fall RvellCOllllsecrcltaon Oct )5 and the Bishop there feels that NEW BEDfORDConducted by franciscanRICHMOND (NC)-Auxiliary the Church should be involved

Missionaries Ill~ MarvBishop-designate J Louis Flahshy in the growth of African educil shyerty of Richmond will be conseshy tion He therefore volunteered ROOMS - MEALS

OVERNIGHT HOSPITALITY crated in Sacred Heart cathedrall for the faculty of the lIIakereJlla Inquiro OS 3-289here on Wednesday Oct 5 Btate university

PHILOSOPHER-SCULPTOR Rev Herman Reith CSC works on Holy Family group which will be erected on outdoor pedestal at St Joseph Hall North Dartmouth Father Reith has been spending Summers at North Dartshymouth house working on books in field of philosophy but will teach in African university for next few years

6 mE ANCHOR-Di9cese of Fan River-Th~rs Aug 25 l~66

The oC1tQice i

A fascirlating chooice i~ shaphlg up as a cOrOn~ry to th~ present crowded condition in the pa~hial school system

0

Those in authority in the Church are faced with the possibility that lower grades of the Oatholic schoQI system must be sacrificed to provid~ the space and teachers for those in the upper grades The Gatholic high school and college must expand at the expense of the elementary school

- And the oungsters f~m th~se lower grades tnust tum to the public~chOoISyate_mof ~ducation

Hereis where the choice coin~s in

If these young-sters p~esent tllemselves at the do()rs of the over-crowded public schools the community must find

space and teachers for them That hits the whol~ comshymunity in the pocketbook

The onlyaIternative seems to be increased aid from publk tax funds for the parochial school system to assist itmiddot to educ~te every child who wants an ~ducation in a Catholic iChOol

CriticS of the pa-roehial school system must choos~beshytween expaIlding the public school system at a prohibitive eost or swallowing their harsh words and grant tomiddot parents the right to educate their children in a system not less capable and democratic than the public school system and in assisting the chil~ to receive an education in the system of his parents choosing

Modern Lorelei

A survey of _two thousand pupils in the Chicago area produced some revealing staticS about their televisionshyviewing habits

Elementary school students spend an average of twenty-one hours a week with television

High -school students average fourteen hours aweek

Parents of those middotquestioned admitted to watChing television about twenty hours a week and their teachers

saw it twelve hours

Television is here to stay No on~ would decrie its great entertainment and educational value Already it is being used as a supplement to classroom teachings

- But like any other thing it inust be used and middotnot abused the used and not the user

It is quite possible for people to become hypnotized by thecathode eye and spend hour afterhour in an electronicshycontrolled -trance

Since such viewing is essEmtiatally passive it bodes no good for the creative mind And the student can easily come to grief by middotspending too much time caught in the trap qf this twentieth century Lorelei

A students life is one of application to lessons and work He has no more excuse from those responsibilities than his father has to refuse to work his mother to ignore the making o~ meals and duties of housekeeping

Study costs an effo~t It is not always pleasant ltis a sacrifice Arid in this age of high living standards when children are brought up with very little sacrifice in their lives surrounded by everything that money can buy they must learn control and discipline to assure s~holastic sucshycess

Control of television watching is just such a discipline of spirit

And with schools soon to open it is a discipline that should be decided upon by parents for their children and insisted upon as the school year goes along

regrheANCHOR

Sword of the Spirit C -c -n

By Edward P McDonagb

CCD and CFM The fourth Biennial eon

- vention of the New EnglaBCl Area Christian Family Moveshy

middotrilent concluded its three day session on August 14th The ~

WlS the lovely campus ~f tbe Newton College of the Sacred Heartand CFM couples from all over the New England Sta~ gathered there to increase th~ understanding of the movemeilli

middotand to chartmiddot new areas of A~ tolic Action

The theme of the Christi_ FamUy Movement is For Hap pier Families and cgtuples bull the organization seek that goal by applying the Observe JUd~

and Act technique in their own ho~es the neighborhood the

parish and the ~orld at large The purpose of all this is to fo~

~

Gap StUImiddot Exists Study Suggests More Than Busing Needled

In EdllllcGtioll1lEquality-lntegration WASHINGTON (NC)~A reshy

port prepared by the US Ofshyfice of Education says that the present s~t-up of the nations public school system serves to

- perpetuate the social and ecoshynomic gap between most Negroes and whites

Although it challenges the eoncept of n e i g h b 0 rb 9 0 d

schools the report warns tha integration andmiddot edu~ational equality cannot be attained by busing alone

The 737-page report on Equal- ity oj Educational Opportunity has been published by the Ofshyfice of Education Earlier the office isued a summary of the two-year study called for by Congress under terms of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

Senator Abraham Ribkoff of Connecticut has accused the 00shymiddotministration of playing down the report because it contains explosive political implkations

I think the time has come for us not to be satisfied with cliches Ribic9ff told John W

GaTdner SecretarYcent Healtl) Education and Welfare M 11 Senate sub-committee hearing on urban problems A lot of the concepts are loaded with political dynamite

James S Colemlm author of the report agreed that the adshyministration - issul~iI summary was fllt and over--cautious He said that might have stemmed from uneasiness about findings that may have political lreper cussions

Planes Help Enable Proests to Cover Large TerritClraquorfl

In PerfolTmOlftceof Apostolic Work LOCKPORT (NC)3-A priest years ending with the rank of

who has twice flown at the speed of sound believes a plane can be a useful tool iii apostolic labor especially inmiddot far-flung fields

Father Richard E Spellman pastor of Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary parish in Albuquershyque began to fly when he saw ranchers in New Mexico using planes to get- around their ranches

If the ranchers can do it why cant a priest he asked I found out that in my little plane I was able to get around quickly to mission schools in New Mexico to teach catechism to children

He has used his plane too to d~liver medicine to Catholic missions in Mexico

Father Spellman who served

major was here in Illinois for the third annllal conventioJl of the National Association of

Priest Pilots He learned to fly here hi~

he was seminarian He said I was a good enough pilot that the Archbishop of Santa Fe tnJsted me to take him around the Archshydiocese in my plane

Some 150 priests belong to the association said Father Rich~rd

Skriba the conventions genshyeral chairman and asistant pas~ tor of St Simon parish in Chishycago Altogether there are over 400 priests and Brothers in the always understoodUS who are pliots he added Similarly CCD Discussion

Groups have in some casesSays Priests R~Ue been difficult to start and main-I S 11 tain where CFM is active InJust pirituOID rare instances competition

BOGOTA (NC)-Father C~ - rather than cooperation has

Catholic Lay Leaders and from all the evidence it succeeds veq well middot Significantly one of the wenshyattended workshops at the rec~Di convention covered the compleshymentary nature of CFM and CCD Chaired by Rev William 1 Downs of Newton the wideshyranging discussion period higbshylighted several areas where CCD and CFM have worked well toshygeth~er and some where the have not

Wordng Together Couplesfrom several localities

- indicated that CCDs Paren1oshyEducator units are natural ou1oshylets for those seeking to proshymote happier famiiies Manr CFM couples are working iQ

-Parish Parent-Educator groups and~ in doing so are finding solid recruits for CFM among the young married couples that they visit T~is is a perfect eJl shyample of how the two organiza tions can help each other lv working together

Other examples cited by parti shycipants were the use of CFlII couples as guest lecturers and discussion leaders in CCD classes covering questions marriage- and sex Fall River CFMers noted the participation of CFM couples as discussion moderators in the CCD leadeJio ship day programs Manyothel8 recounted incidents of CCD Elishyecutive Boards being formed o of CFM groups middot Father Downs who is both bull CFM Chaplain and a CCD Parish Director noted that priests will contittue to look to CFM for leaderS middotto staff CCDunits and otlier parishorganizations Not to provide for CFM in a parish would mean that a prime source of committed laymen a Jl d women would be cut off

There are a few problems too Several areas have eXJerienced difficulty in obtaining permisshysion to start CFM because CCD Discussion Groups already exshyisted Apparently the distinction between the two groups is not

as an Air Force chaplain for 10 cilo de Lora one of the direc- been the guiding spirit with unshyOFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RiVER tors of the Latin American bish- fortunate results for both

ops educational department af- The lesson learned from thed1O Highland Avenue Retain PriiDege firmelt here that the role Of the workshop )Nas this Where CeDFoil River Mass 02722 675-7151 MADRID (NC)-Spains bishshy priest is exclusively spiritual and CFM people get ~ know ops following their annual conshy In the past he said prieSts each other and take the time toPUBLISHER ference announced that they had an authority and prestige understand each others proshy

Most Rev James L -Connolly DO PhD will retain the privilege of eating beyond the religious but ilow grams the results can be imshymeat on Friday The dispensa- we have to recogniZ4~ that the pressive CFM has the happy

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER tion from the regular law dates times have changed andtl)at our knack of producing commi~ted Rt Rev DanielF Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll back several centuriell and came middotmiddotmiSsion is rust spiritual Father gtCalholics who are willing r~

MANAGi~G E[gtITOR ~ orginal1y as a reward for sershy de Lora spoke during aconJer- - act -and CCD continues to off vices to the Church and for ence at Bogotas arl~hdiocesan almost unlimited opportunitiee

H~gh J Golden Spanish wars against infidels curia here in Colombia for action

THe ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 7 Priests Respond Generously 1Ciitymiddot ExpressVariety of Opinions

Bishop Asks for Suggestions--shyj

YOUNGSTOWN (NC)-I-Wed- There was a call for a study of ltmngs and ftinerals in the eve- the~hoie questioriof the Caih- Brm R~~~ie$ fr~ QM~~15~~~o[jreg ming wholesaie revamp~~g of o~(~~ool system versus CCD VICTORIA (NC) - Give the Latin and Oriental rites larish organizations retire~ent JElimination of raffles collec- larm~alliopp~rtuni~yto speak On the ne~Ci~ive sidEiI 418 felt f priests at age 6s-these were tronSand all o~her fUli9-raising his mmd on the results of the that there was a great need of sorrie suggestions for updating gimlnicks was proposed for Second Vatican Council the better adult edUcation~ There advanced by the Youngstown Catholic schools One priest liturgy ecumenism and the was overwhelming concern for ltt1Iioceses 262 priests lamented the lack of dialogue Church and hell say plenty better Catholic education more The Ohio priests responded between parents pastor and Bishop Remi de Roo of Vic- religious instruction for Catholic generously to a request by school principal and suggested toria here in British Colombia children not in Catholic schools lBishop James W Malone apos- the establishment of q parish discovered tbis when 600 parish- more Catholic youth activities tolie administrator of the diocese s~nate whose members would ioners filled out a comprehen- and efforts to build a strongerlior suggestions The bishop now sit in on school faculty meetings sive questionnaire and returned family life Inadequate teachers lltas called on the laity of the Also present was the limitation it to the chancery office Two- and poorly trained teachers also aliocese to make suggestions The of all classes to a maximum 6f thirds of them signed their came under fire llle~ IS-member pastoral com- 40 students names but this was not required Other tOPIcs which turned up

mission will study all suggestions Their comments went far beyond in the survey but which were) ~ and make recommendatioQs to the questions asked not put as questions included

BiShOP Maione ~ooamprm~ [L~~ A $~udYof the an~wers reveals creination pullfigpting marshy~ Th new liJurgy econli~ics

thatjwlJi1~ mo~etlJan two-thirds riageof c1Ergym~n children ~ryshy

ond parish orgllnizations were O~ Greg~reg[jcr of the people were pleased with ing in church nuris habits povshy lto~llQrig t1Je most popular are~s of new deveWpments in the erty arid the clergys ability as ) ltilCmment by th~ priests SAIGON (NC)-General Jos- Church the remaining admitted businessmen

To enhance singing at IYJass eph W Stillwell lost during a being mildly or very disturbed atere were suggestions for each plane flight from San Francisco Fifty pel cent agreed that the

iParish to mime a minister of to Honolulu is prayeclully reshy council 1 hadmiddot deepened their CoIQmbilaquoli CFM Has JlIllusectic to teach liturgical music membered by grateful lepers Faith and btou~ht them closer National Structure ~ parishioners and for establish- Sisters and their chaplain in St to the Church but 105 stated ment or strengthening of mixed Joseph~s28 miles ~rom Saigon vOSEPH MICHAUD that they had been left confused BOGOTA (NC) -The Chrisshymoirs to e1)courage others to They recall how on April 5 Fifty PeJ cent answered that tian Family Movement which Cak~ part 1964 when Viet Cong activities the liturgical reforms had helped has been functioning on a someshy

Another priest asked for had resulted in cutting off the Michaud Shrine them pray better Fifty per cent what independent basis in 17 ~ilwre patience in implement- leper hospital from all supplies said they felt the Church could dioceses in this country now has

lIDg the changes because thebt road Gen Stillwell and his Music Director be improvedmiddot Two-thirds felt the structure of a national lleW forms of participating are d~uty Col John L Klingen- that theChur~ should concern organization

lIlot appealing to all Ther~was Jiagen of St LOUis came to the WA~HiINGTON (NC)-Joseph itself wore with the internashy The first national meeting of ~plea also for a return to the rescue They brought food and Michaud has been appointedmiddot tionalsituation soCial and ecoshy the CFM was convoked in the holy and dignified liturgical other necessities in a series of music director of the National nomic problems last part of July by Bishop Pabshy

music imd elimination of folk helicopter fliglits carried out lgty Shrine of the Immaculate Oonshy Asked specifically where the lo Correa Leon of Cucuta presishy oongs and modem swing music the U S Support Command of ception here Msgr Thomas J Church should be more involved dent of the Episcopal Commisshy

Another priest urged that ~4ee- which Gen Stillwell was com- Grady director of the Shrine the answers voried from rehabili shy sion for the Lay Apostolate in dom of experimentation in the mander announced tation of drug addicts the labor order to organize CFM on a nashy

1Iiturgyshouldbe encouraged Ben San has about 280 leper Michaud will develop and su- movement and the emerging tional scale nations A board of directors of the Changes in Vestments~ patients in the care of the pervise the music program at the

national CFM was named andThere were requests to elim Daughtersof Charity of St Vin- Shrine assemble and train a Most Important The majorit~ considered the includes five married couples mate or -review Forty Hours de- cent de Paul chortis vf mixed voices evenshy

three from the Bogota archdioshyYotions and similar celebra- -Mrs faillwell durfug her st~y tuallyadd a choir of men and five most important questions tions for daily evening Masses in Vietnam was one of the boys and supervise the care of cese and one each from the archshy

the Church and fellow Chrisshydiscu~ed at the council to be

dioceses of Cali and Medellinma parishes where there are two American women who sponsored all organs and the carillon tians birth control active sharshy These five couples in cooperashy

CI more priests and for smaller the new center for undernour- A native of Sumas Wash ing in the iturgy the sharing of tion with Father Enrique Acosta

~onfirmation classes with ~he ished children also conducted by Michaud has served churches responsibility in the Church are In charge of extending the

IIIlX prIests who are deans bemg the Sisters of Charity in Saigon and schools in Seattle San Franshyand religious liberty Prefer- CFM throughout the entire

Gi~legated by the bIShop to ad- We are praying fo~ the be~ cisco Portland Ore Detroit countryences at the bottom of the listBlumster the sacrament reaved family Father Vict Pittsburgh and Mt Lebanon Pa Be or H h were worl~ populition atheismOther suggestions called for a C MH h d

~ 1 l hts th rset chaplam at Ben IS c Olrs ave appeare on international government and_~cussion on Vlgl Ig e San wrote network radio broadcasts gave l)rlests breviary changes 10 the premiere presentation of Mass vestments and merits of Alexander Peloquins Missa Na- SAVE MONEY ONEstablishes Specialgroup confessions in which lPiJiest Plans Homes tiVitatis with the Pittsburgh penitents attend a Bible service Symphony over the CBS net- Tourists Parish to to confession and receiveab- middotfor Working Grls work iIi 1962 and in December YOUR OILHEATCOLOGN]i (NC) - Colognessolution private~y and then per~ TECHNY (NC) ~ Father Ed- 1955~ sang in Menottis Ahmal Joseph Cardinal Frings has apshySform a community penance such wiu-di Wojniak SVD Chi- an~ the ~nght Visitors WYmanpointed a multilihgual Dutch ~eatt as recitation of a prayer to c~go-born Society of the Divine 3-6592priest to establish a special tourshy

tether Word mlssionary is oft the verge A~d R f W k ists parish on the Autobahn nearOne writer suggested that the of seeing his dream come true Imiddot 5 e ugee or CHARLES IF VARGASDusseldorf llrishop offer Sunday Mass at a bull ltiliff rent ish church each He has ben VISItIng throu~h- Of German Knights Although several churches are 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

~ par raut the Umted States seekmg located 01_ th~ famous German ~ee h h Id b t d d the aid of busineSs firms which BONN (NC) - The German highway none provides special NEW IalEfPlFqitD ~SS

Tl~ l~g S P e l~ ro u~ h have interests in Formosa to aid government has provided three tourist services The new parish la prIes v~o h a~~ ~s w lCll him in his pet project----to erect jeeps tnd three ambulances for besides the church will have a Opt t~ngfs ~u I r~p11 hostels for factory giriS present- the work being done by the Ger- hot~J restaurant theater and

~ngo reds es IVdi~ s e c 1 ly forced to live in squalid man Knights of Malta for refushy chiIdr~ns pla~~rounds ~IOt~eSan ahn Idnonb- tockesan fCO - c~owded unhealthful and prim- gees in South Vietnam ec IOns s ou e a en rom T dt d t cae proceeds of the tithing sys- 1 lVe con 1 IOns angerouso f team ~f about 25 Germa~s C2 only to their phYSical well bemg- wl1 work m refugee camps In

m but also to their moral well Hoi in the QuangNam province r~oD~D~i~=~i~~~~i HUe]) lllen~ Poor being in ilentral Vietnam

Others suggested rich par~shes The hostels will be non-de- The Germar government will n _ See Us should help poor parIshes nominational and will provide contrilmte about $250000 annushy ~ -Abou~ ij~rough a commo fund that quar~ers in pleasant surround- ally for the work of this counshy

o each ~arish establIsh a fma~ce iilgs at $3 per month In addition tt-ys Knights of Malta in Vietshy ~ ~t17 (~~~OuTI]OUceouureg [ commlttee and the ~lOcese hire toa home it will provide edu-nam ~(jrtamp euroleiJcp(]ip C1

a fulltJme profeSSional fund eational and recreational facili- llaiser for parishes that need his ties Father Wojniak said The ~1lIIilllliJllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllm ~ ~~~~[HJA~ ~ aervices first hostel will be built at Tai~ - shy

as pilot with DRY - E SAVINGS BANK I epei a project E CLIEANNG Says Gift of Tools Father Wojniak as director of ~ and ~

Wareham falmouth J f =rst Class MIracle Taiwan Hostels Inc which will ~ fUR STORAGE ~ -y 5-3800 IltI 8-3000 HEATING OIL

w be run on a noh-profit basis E D == 4-o_a_C1_a~~D__o-o-BOGOTA (NC) -Shop stu- E ERMODY ~

dents at Bogotas Colegio San f R ClEANERS ~ Viator reclved a windfall of lIanCISCans etaln == ryyYYyy~

~~~C1Jm~d~~~~ B~r~~(N~~m~ty iEE

nCohan ~~~ l bullC~~o~A~~~~~E~RT ~ 4lIlllira~le by one of the students two newly received Franciscan ~JIIIIII1I1I11I11I11I11I11I11I1I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I1I1I11I11I11Ii ~ nncluded a large variety and Sisters of Perpetual Adoration ~ Spaeious Fireproof Sleeping Quart~rs-BoysI to 14 yrs Old quantity of hand tools and two retained their baptismal names Six-week season June 26 to Aueust G ch of severallarge power tOQls with the title of Sister at their GRmiddotACIA BmiddotROS t Register for z or 4 or 6 weeks Free Tutoring it desired 4Father John Stafford CSV reception into the community ia ehicago provincial supervising St Joseph the Workman Cathe- bull i THE BROTHERS OF THE SACRED HEART

tile Viatorians Bogota mission draI here in ~7isconsin _ ~ eommented that the gift worth tVlot~er General Ann Marie of Excavating SACRED HEART SCHOOL

$6000 in the United States is ~ Rose convent said the name C worth five times that in Colom- policy change was the first ill ontractors r t SBAltON MASSACHUSETTS ~

twa He added that the tOok itleU6~year history of the com- ~ bull (I~SS 5T~FAIRHAViH A Reside~t School for BoYS Grammar Gra~es ~-li-6-1- ~ would probably give the school muOityAt the same ceremollTthebest~lIuipped shop ~ tiampe~ Sistels made ~rst-year pN-l WYman 2-4862 = CAMP 0amp SCHOOL TeL 1171845162 4 ~~tlY ~YOWi- ~ampamp~

bull I 1bull

bull ~ I I bull I bullbull I ~

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 Parish to Serve Wide Community

PATERSON (NC)-With the end of its vacation religiolli school St Josephs parish heICI

Lucis V~ew of Marriage Seen Delig~tfuny O~d-fashioned~ in New Jersey has turned ~

serve a wider communityBy Mary Tinley Daly Priests Sisters seminarianpound Never it is said have so many million words been and student volunteers haw

written about a marriage as the reportage of the Luci taken a $200 budget given by the Catholicmiddot Interracial Council andJohnson-Patrick Nugent nuptials-TH WEDDING in put on a program of field triP8Dpopular terminology Its over in all its impressive dignity arts and crafts athletics and

with an ele~ance wor~hy ~f honestly state that thei ambishy story-telling for 120 youngstem the marrIage of a PresIdent s tion is to grow up get married The children mostly Negro

had no opportunity to be part ofdaughter Yet like every and have babifs any other summer program sowedding great or small it Somewhere along the line edshy Father Nicholas Molinari steppedearried its message of identifica- ucatlOnally or other~se they in to help themtionto the millions viewing it are shunted career-WIse or preshy Our objec~ father said on the screen tend to bemiddot They of course to impress the children witlait n d to those want to marry but this is in~ love They dont understan~itreading about cidental they ~avent ~xperienced it We

it At our house AlulDDae middotNotes want to break down their selfshy~ ve n a s ~ t Loo~ ~t you~ Alumnae h~ite concept We want to make vou~s t~at no~- ~otes Bii( deal is ~ gal who them realize tha~ they are goodoshy

middot ~l~c Idenbfi has her masters working on catlOn was pres- the doctorate il physics mathe- t Ik Sisters of Christian en now ex matics Russian or whatever actly ho LUCI And the proud boast of a college feels squealed imany of our graduates are no~ Charity Elect America

PADERBORN (NC) - Sister bride as the TV fathers our most recent making more money than their

M Augustilde Giesen of Jersey showed the radiant Luci on her Into these same alumnae notes City has been elected the first fathers arm comes a confession humbly American superior General 0If

And I know how ~~rvous written from Betty B that she is the Sisters of Christian Charit Pat was at that moment cm- still just a housewife has a here in Germany mented the most recent bnde- family and recently was electesl Sister Augustilde former PJOogtNURSERY FRiENDS Sister Marie Patrice RSM Br~om president of the local PTA vincial of the province headshy

director of Holy Angels Nursery for Exceptional Children grooms of years ago author has expressed herself Belmont NC cuddles one of the 69children in her care was director of the provinces

To go further back an eon against the discontented femi junior sisters attending Marillae

Me too from bndes and Phyllis McGinley talented quartered at Mendham N J

most of whom because of their disabilities require roundshyor two even th ~ea~ of the nine mystique of searching for Sisters Formation College at thethe-clock attention NC Photo House and hIS bnde shared fullfillment outside of the home time of her election the g~ose pImples So have others The 2200-member congregashy

Behmd the pomp and ClrcUJI1- As an addendum we find 1lI tion founded in Germany ~

stance sket~h~s of gowns held 10 quote from Rep Emmanuel Celmiddot Disclaimsmiddot New Breed 1849 moved to the United States somewhat ndiculous top secrecy ler (D-NY) apropos prohibiting in 1873 during the anti-Catholic as though they were plans for discrimination against wom~ franciscan Nun Biology Professor Says Kulturkampf compaign of Gershym~on shots was the forthrIght serving on juries man chancellor Otto von BisshyattItude of thIS l~-year-old brIde There are women who work Primary Apostolate Is Prayer- marck

Sh~ wants th~s to be a goo~ because they have to others who marnage andw111 try to make It work because they want to and BUFFALO (NC)-Dr M Re- My whole life I trust is givshy New Secretary 10 there is the lazy kind whO gin~ L~gan associat~ profes~ ing witness to Christ she anshy CHICAGO (NC)-The Nationshy ~er father the PresIdent ~o cleans washes irons cooks sor of bIOlogy and chaIrman of swered I am a biology profes al Catholic Conference for Intershyma~t~r how you regard hUll chauffeurs mend1l binds lIP ~e biology concentration at sor whose prime role is twoshy racial jUstice haS announced the~lltlc~lly you must alknow~~ wounds nurses cloctors middotand Rosary Hill College here conshy fold first in edu(ation proper appointinfmt of Margaret Cshyedgeexpres~edfath~rly ~onfl~ shops and has conSequently So tends there is no such thing u and second in research middottomiddot fur Roach to its program staff Millli

middot dencewen he said of fat little to do aD day why Should bull new breed of nuns ther the education of my stushy Roach haB been social actioaN~gent LUCI look~ up to him she not 1e obligated NrM _ The sCientist HI as qualified dents~ _ secretarY for the National CO~with great r~spect eep ~~c OIl ju~es as anybody else to know She However she noted many ell ai Catholicmiddot Women iIinoetion a~d confIdence 10 hlll It has been a Franciscan nUll for people think th-at by taking offMs go~ng to b~ ~ good ~arrIage 28 years and she iilsists the the reUgio~ garl or by drop~Dunn~ the s~me mtervlew Urges ~ UnmiddotderstClnding OSF middotcomes before the PhDbull ping the religious title we Call1he President recalled that Luci

be more effective This is not so had been a deep1y reiigious girl Of Other Churches I dont think Sisters have all of her life even before her SPOKANE (NC)-We me ehanged she said People are As a nun my primary aposshyConversion to Catholicism More- not take the positioJl that the jUst beginning to llotice what tolate is prayer to give God the over he did not believe middotshe other Christian coinmunitiesaM weve beeJ doing all along love and adoration that the would ever become active in simply in error Bishop Ber- With 11 biological papers pubshy modem world often neg1Eicts to politics but would concentrate nard J Topel has advised priests llIshed and nine read with the give In the present day discusshyon home-inak~ng raisin~ a fam- of the Spokane diocese in a Get eredit of being first to isolate sion of the nun in the modern

middot lyen and followm~ her faIth of interim ecumenical JUide-- tile bacteria Desulfovibrio desul- world attention should be foshyFather not politician was lines furicans and with the institution cused on her existlmce nc)t the

apeak~g ~hen Bishop Topel urged priesbl i= of a trail-blazing method of preshy garb she wears she said middot LU~I s VIew of ~arriage IS re- avoid expressions judgmenu menting a college biology curricshyfreshmg and dellghtfully old- and actions which do not repre- ulum the Franciscan who drinks

196= -

JANSONS Pharmacy

Arthur Janson Reg Phcim DIABETIC AND SICK ROQM

SUPPLIES 204ASHL~ BOULEVARD

New Bedford WY 3middot8405

fashioned middotin the mid-twenti~th sent the condition of oui sepa- ber ~offee black is fully a pro century when so many gIrls rated brethren with truth ad fessional in science toohave their sights set on the split-personality syndrome mar- fairness and 110 make mutual She has be~n awarded $81000 BISA~ILLONSriage plus individual freedom relations with them more cWI- llra grants-m-rod for her reseach

ficult th g ma career and assuming at once He said full eucharistic ecm on e pernICIOUS m1cro~r ams a plar- in the forefront of out- ~~t has ~ knack for rummg oill GARAGEside activities munion is the ultimate lioal laquoIi dnlling ngs

Most little girls are disarming- the ecumenical movement WitnGS8 b Christ ly frank (see Art Linkletters 24our Wreck~r Service program or talk wit~ 7 8 and C I H bull 0 H d How does her commI~ent Ie Iyear-olds you know) The 0 bull olsgton eo s ~erstudents and co~CCmltantl

W A C to ber research (she 18 also II 653 WashinJton Street Fclirhaven omen s rmy orps iOOnsultant at Oak Ridge National HoldYou~g Christian WASHINGTON(NC) - A Laboratory the group leader of WYman 4middot5058 h b I e s s i ng followed traditional aCivil Defense fixed monitorin ~bullbullbullbull middotStudent Works OFgt 8wearingin ceremonipounds here for Station mici a ~part fliine seamshy N0TRE DAME (NC) - The Col Elizabet~ P Hoisington the_ bullreSs) Bel With h1el commit- ~IMtlIIIIIIHIIIItIIIIIIIIItImiJlHililjJlniRiiillntJiliIllNtiJtIlIHII~

Reoild annuai Young Christian new director 01 the Women mentu a Biofei6ec ~ = - _ Student apostolic workshop Wall Army Coorps Christ ~ li5

middotheld here thisweeKformiddot~Brade ~Themiddot middotblessing was giVeIlE D p SAlES middotANDmiddot middotSEmiddotRVICE ~ oionhoolmmiddotode~~torsfromparochial MsgrCKennethGStackaper-middot sect middotcmiddot bull - bullbull j bull iL

bullbull L~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull0bullbullbullbullbullbullbull middot _ IIand public school groUpsas weB s~Ia1frierid of the woman Armgt II Ill [He c E

as parishes ~ le~de~onher request afters~ bull J B II i ~ middotmiddotmiddotmiddotltThe Iconference coordinated had taken heroath of office ani 8 8 I FR sect - 1(JImiddotDmiddotmiddotAmiddotmiddotIREshy by the Catholic Action Office of beeli pi6moted from lieutenant 8 bull -1 l =

Notre DamemiddotUniversity was beld e9Jonelmiddotmiddotmiddot II LUMBER CO == I~

On t~e universitys campus middotCQlol)~I)loisington ~lPadu = 8 il RIEF ~IIG_ ~RATIOmiddot sect~ong ilP~a~er~ wer~raJherlilte_oftbe C0Uege oI~ou So Dartmouth bull IE ~ i

middot LOUISJPutz cS~_reltor of Da~eaalti~or~ Md JOlDeG II bull~ e h~p~~~~orauli1~~~h~ ~e~~n~~~~2~t~e~~~sLe~middot a~ Hyannis I 0 APPLIANCES I natioI)alltJirectoro(t~~ Gabrie(CIllsterthe Bronze Star ~So Dartmouth WY of$84 55 middot IR middotCO~IDmiddotITIOIG 5 Richard Institute and the Rev CroiX de Guerre with silver 1Rm bull i A ~ ~ n ~

middot Ja~es Neuman pastor of Hum- and the American and ~uropeaJll IMjaRwia 29211 == boldt Pa~ United BrethreJll Jheater ribbons of Wo~ld Wall bull ~ 363SECONDSomiddot FALL RIVER MASS~ ~

_ r middot9~~Imiddot~~ R~-pound~~~ -P-t rmiddotmiddot - gt gt bull IllbullbullIIIbullbull_1118 middotIiIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIHIUlllIIUIUIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIII1I1II1IIlIlUIIIIIIUllIIIIIIIIIIIUlIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIUU_ _

9 ~Swooned Priest Eggplant Dish U$ong Legendary P~r$ey P~~B1)t

By Joseph amI MarilYllll Roderick The cool weather where ~gain and with it the grass

has begun to break donnancy and send up little green shoots which means that the lawn mowers which have been restshying for a few weeks have got to be brought back to action

The drought that we had uperienced for the past three Summers has raised havoc with lawns and it doesnt seem much good can be done this season in areas still under water restrictions Howshyever in those that are not theremiddotre a few thingsmiddotwhich can be done middotbetween now and 1hetirst -bst to help lawns along To begin with this is amiddot good

middottime to apply itmiddot weed killer of some kin to I prefer tousecomshybination weed killer and fertil shyzer as this saves time and does el good job This should help dear up the lawn and start the grass out of dormancy Follow this with a good raking to disshylodge some of the matted grass and you are well on your way

to a healthy lawn in the Spring The next step is to buy a good grass seed if your lawn is well established and to apply it at ab04t half the rate or less sugshymiddotgested on the packageThe idea behind this is to fill in places where the lawn is thin or where weeds have been killed Incishydentally it is a good idea to wait two or three weeks aftermiddot

middot you have applied weed killer middotbefore you start new grass seed

It is important that your seed be a good brand and quality A eheap seed contains many coarse ~escues and annual graSses which will do the lawn very little good over the long run Jetter to buy a very good seed in small amounts than an iJlexshypensive seed which will cause you more trouble than it will do good

The only job left af~er middotthis is ~ keep themiddot lawn moistsq~bat

snippedt up the flavor would be stronger

Well I cooked my recipe and it was quite delicious but a few sprigs of the green shoots reshymained on the counter and as Joe was helping me clean up he inquired why Ihad been picking carrot tops Needless to say at that moment I rseolved to learn a great deal more about parsley in all its varieties The things I found out in my research on the parlsley plant were quite fascinating and even it bit frightening if youre the superstitious type Did you know that it was thought to be such a plant of the devil that it could only be sown on Good Friday if it were to flourish at all In anciert times the Greek$ decked their tombs with it for they fully believed that it sprang from the blood of one of their dead heroes It was also th9ught only the wicked could grow parsley successfully

Feeling that its merits must far outweigh its supposed curses I searched further to discover that one of the beliefs that surshyrounded it was that wherever it flourished the missus is master This could provide a good reason for cultivating it

Getting away from the P4rely theoretical and into the practical I learned that parsley is la h~rdy biennial normally flowering and going to seed in the Spring -after sowing though in a hot dry year it may bolt and go to seed in late Summer (this is what happened to Ti Tias parsshyley bed) Seed may be planted inmiddot April and May fOf a Summer and early Autumn crop andmiddots

the n~wgtseed has amiddotchlUlce tos~cpnd s~~ing JWlde ~lllate~uly germinate If you are succ~ pr August for tbe next ~pring and the lawn does take it is im-~pd SumDler n

middot perative tbat you keep the n~wpar~le~ steJfis have fiir~ore grasscut at about two inches So~avor than the leayes and ~e

that it makesmiddot sorneroot growth French often use only the stem before the coIf weather sets in where taste is more important

Mostlawns should bereseededmiddotthan appearance They are full iJdHis vaVeach year pIefetabiyof chlorophyll (thatgreeliishIn late Augustor eatlySeptem- property lthat was so popular a

ber Seeding is outmiddot of the ques- fewmiddot years ago) andmiddot when tion however where water re- crushed ~intmiddot mayonnaise aod

strictions are still in effect So other sauces a lovely shade of if you are allowed to water only green If you do happen tomiddot be one or two hours a week you wicked enough to have pars- will have to suffer your poor ley flourish in your yard the hlwq or at least another season four most popular ways of storshy

h the Kitchen ing it in your refrigerator are 1 With the stems kept ina

I realize that I have a great glass of water deal to learn concerning both 2 Washed water shaken off the kitchen and garden but my sealed in a glass jar or plastictack of knowledge was undershy bag

Jined the other day when I was 3 Unwashed in a plastic bamiddotg preparing to cook the recipe 4 Washed and folded intoa

- yentat Irrt ~sing in this eeks cloth the clothmiddot absorbs the ~olumn As I readmiddot the hst of dampness ~ee~ed Ig~edlents I only gave I found the following recipe iilSSmg notce to t~e paryleyas ~elicious even J~oJlgh graced

have always gathered It fr~s~ with carrot top~ instead of parsshy rom a large bed over In 1-1 Tla s -- ley The unusw name may refer ya~d howev~r when I wet to sltmelllenlbero(th~-cleigy over to pick It I found that In who fainted with joy at the flashya s~ort span of a few days most vor he enjoyeo

0pound It bad gone to seed - middotmiddot middotmiddotmiddotmiddot SWo()nedPri~stmiddot~lmiddotmiddot

Suddenly I see~ed to recall 1 eggplant peeled and sliced ~hat Joe ~admentIoned that he h inch thick had planted some of theltalian 2 large onions sliced _ Vanety llear our raspberry 3 large tomatoes sliced ~ushes ah the day was saved salt and pepper That must be it I said to 1 small bunch of fresh pa~ middotmyself as I spied sOllIe feqthery ley minced green shoots along the fence it 2 Tab)e~pouns oil didnt smell very much like 2 cloves of garlic sliced

middot parsley but ther again it was 1) Arrange eggplant onionsmiddot supposed to be a different va- and tomatoes in alternate layen lriety and perhaps when I in a large frying pan sprinkling

each layer with salt pepper ahd 1 00 R the minced parsley u v eglster 2) Add 1fJ cup hot water the

NEW YORK (NC) - More oil and garlic

than 1000 person have regis- 3) Cover tightly -andmiddot simm1r ~7~~d to at~end the ei~J1th n~- for about 30 minutes or u~til ~lonal CursI110 Movement eon-iiquia Is reducedt~aricl1 gravY iention now in session here Remove garlic before serving

PRE-CONVENTION ARRANGEMENTS BY DCCW DELEGATES Among the delegates from the Diocese who met recently for arrangements to attend the 33rd National Convention of Catholic Women in Miami Beach Oct 5-8 were left to right Mrs James E Williams St Josephs No Dighton Miss Angela Medeiros Mt CarmelSeekonk Mrs Theophane Lavoie St Jeim the Baptiste Fall River Mrs John Smith Sk Marys South Dartmouth Thursday Sept I is the closing date for registration of delegates from the Diocese to the Convention

Nuns Health Insurance Econoniist Tells Superiors Life Expectancy

Justifies C~operative Plan MILWAUKEE (NC)-Kuni- encountered by ri~ns thlo~ghQut erlliy o~payton ecqnonll~ ~r~ their lifetime ~essor Wbo~peciali~es i~m~g- Medical Passports ic~l statisectticl(or~seesalow-c~ To c~nect data FecheidEl~ised be~lthi~u~an~e~lan a~~ a~ni- a medlqal i4e~tification card 1fiect )rgra~ 0 n1edlcal and whichiiecalIi a medical pass-h~spltal facllitiesfr Am~can middotPOrtHe said these cards carshynuns under the admlm~tratlOrt~f ryingrecords of current disabili shythe Conference of MaJor Supe- tiesmiddotmiddot eouldaid in accumulating

middot riors of Wmen medical information to help Addressmg t~e conferepCemiddot ~t middotnuns qualify for lower cost Its annual meetmg he~e COli Jhealth insurance and to organize Fecher s~ldmiddot ~ooperativeplaQsan eventual program of comshy~or ~ns m thIS country canbe JustIfIed by the longer life exshypectancy ~nd better health of women relIgiOUS Fecher presented d~ta Q~ a

fIve-year study on disabIlItIes among 3)000 nuns He has made many previous statistical studies on ~he nuns long~vity

Smce nuns lIve In what Fec~er calls a contrlled life studIes ~f thelmiddot medlcal sta~us can prOVide medical SCIence WIth ~nf~rtn~tion relvatgt-t to 0-lher q~e1 But mo~t PTllvI~ts stuq~es have conc~Iltrat~~~m rn~rtalItybull s~tI~tl~s~l1d w~re coJcerI)edW~~ lteaJh apd I~ causes Fec~eT s rece~t ~~S centered around the dIsabIlIties

Christrtras Bazaar Advance preparations fire beshy

middot ing made for a Christmas bazaar slated for the weekend of Nov 25 through 27 in the basement of Sacred Hearts Church Nolth Fatrhaven Meetings are being held in the rectory at 730 each

middot MOhday night and parishioners who cannot come at this time

middot are mged to volunteer home services byknitting sewing or making fthEir articles for sale

Materials will be furnished and dondticins iire laquo iHsifoeing reshyquested 101 a white elephant table Gerierafdiairman Mrs Roland Larocque announcesmiddot that

prOfits will benefit the school improvement fund

bined health care They might also be of value to physicians treating future illnesses he said

The five-year survey tended to support the adage your health mirrors your environ ment Abstinence fromalcohol and ~igarettes a well-balanced diet adequat~ housing secure

bull communa livi and celibacy apparently do iow down the aging process Fecher said

He cautioned however that this does not ~ecessarilYmean that areligious life promotes longevity and that a similar am6tirlt of work-day schoolshy

day orreligiflus-day sefvice 10sseser be applied to each and every religious community in tbecountrymiddot

Fecher said that data collected over the past 40 years shows that the health middotcare programs of reshyligious are very uneven

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Aug 25 1966

Approves Loco ~

School Boards BURLINGTON (NC) - The

appointment of four local Cathshyolic school boards brings a new method of Catholic school manshyagement to 25 per cent of the diocesan schools here in Vershymont

At the regular monthly meetshying of the Burlington Diocesan School Board Father John A Lynch diocesan superintendent of schools reported that consti shytutions for four schools had been approved making a total of 25middot per cent of the schools operating under policy-malting boards approved by the diocesan board

~he diocesan statutes e~c6urshya~ebut do not demand the formatior of 10 c a l schoOl boards he said

Father Lynch also announced that a study would be made of school costs in the hope to find ways to avoid increasing tuition and parish assessments The study of education costs will be made by George Fortune acshycounting consultant to the diocshyesan school system

Good Counsel College Gets Loan for Dorm

WASHINGTON (NC) - A $1180000 college housing loan for Good Counsel College for women in White Plains NY to build a new dormitory has been approved Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Robert C Weaver announced here

The dorm is planned to acshycommodate 192 students The college conducted by the Sisters of Divine Compassion has an ellrollment of some poo students

Some students required to live on campus are in overcrowded middotfacilitiesmiddot Mother M Dolores president said lack of housing will foree themiddot college to deny admission middottoa number of stushydents middotthis fall she said The COllege enrollment is expected to reach 650 in five years and

800 in 10 years

Ce~tervilfe Guild New officers of Our Lady of

Victory Womens Guild Centershyville are Mrs StephenB OBrien Jr president Mrs John J Pendergast Jr and Mrs James Murphy vice-presidents Mrs ~oger Carlson treasurer Mrs Francis McKenna and Mrs Edward ONeill secretaries

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

middotOPENDAllY FORTHIE SEASON AFTERNOON and NIGHT

niE ANCHOR $as~ Vocationsmiddot10 Thurs Aug 25 1966 COnCern ofAIi

Employer U rges ST LOUIS (NC) - Speaking at the third annual Vocation Mass in St Louis cathedral

middot here Joseph Cardinal Ritter said middotvocations in the Church should

Workers to Vote For Teamsters

be the concern of every Roman SAN FRANCISCO (NC) Catholic

-The Di Giorgio Corporashy The cardinal told 397 men and women preparing to enter semishytion is recommending that naries and convents in the Fanits farm workers vote to afshy that religious vocation is not

filiate with the Teamsters FaTm middot merely a concern for the arch-Workers Union if they wish middot diocesan director a union the company announced It is a matter of solicitudeshy

Robert Di Giorgio president for each and everyone of us A of the company said therecomshy vocation is a divine thing but mendationmiddot is in accordance with it is a thing which God will not National Labor Relations BoaTd w~thhold from His peopleprocedures The recommendashy Cardinal Ritter continuedtion was made in letters sent to Bymiddot manifesting a concern employes eligible to vote in the about and an interest in vocashyunion election scheduled Ifor tiols we truly show that we Tuesday Aug 30 middot are the People of God

Opposing the Teamsters will be the National Farm Workers Association (NFWA) and the Seeks Assistance Agricultural Workers Organshy For Congo Churchizing Committee AFL-CIO (AW OC) which have merged since WASHINGTON (NC) - A they began the long Delano Congolese senator visiting the strike United States on a State Departshy

The Teamsters won the originshy ment tour program for foreign al election for union representashy government officials hopes to tion but charges of fraud make his two-month visit serve brought a new election a double purpose

Di Giolgio said the corporashy Senator Gaston Diomi wants tion is recommending a vote to speak with Catholic laymen for the Teamsters because middotand members of the clergy per-

The Teamsters won the preshy haps address audiences at vious electionmiddot Catholic institutions in his hope

The Teltlmsters while they to bring the Church iri the light hard in their members Congo to the eyes of American behalf are fair arid responshy ~ Catholics

And the senator has a planesible he wants to set up sharing proshyCompany Union middotFeels Adults Need Religious grams throughout the United

The competing union on tne States programs in which an ballot the Nationa Farm Workshy More So Than Children Nun Declares American diocese would adopt z ers AssoCiation has achieved Congolese diocese an American tentative recognition with oniy LOVELAND (NC)-Religious JI1ost rigidly formed in the old program to meet its needs--part religious order adopt a Congoshytwo growers the larger of which

education is needed for aduits system to see the new vision of which could be a parish lese order an American orphan-this year shifted production from school age adopt a Congolese orphanmore than for children and a of themiddot Churchand of Christian~ble grapes to wine tnus elimshy Flexibility and the wiUing- agebetter term for it would be life middotsetmiddot forth by the Secondinating a great many jobs ness tomiddot try a variety 01 ap- The American governmentmiddotsomething like shared growth Vatican Council Cesar Chavez head of the N iIi Christian middotlifemiddotmiddotmiddot This is 8 hard ~ask Sister prOdches ought to be the mmk of has such sharing programs the FWA called the Teamsters a an effectivereligious education senator pointed out WhyThis is the estimate of Sis admitted for adult educationcompany union and said it

tel 114 Charles Borromeo former demands new approaches and program she asserted empha- shouldnt the Church have the has entered into a partnership sizing thatmiddotit should have a so- same The Church that is Cath-head of the theology school at cannot be imposedwith Di Giorgio in a commonmiddot cia1 and an ecumenical dimen- olic the Church that is definedSt Marys College conducted by Each Ones Missionplot agabnst the farm workers sionmiddot QY the Second Vatican CouncilHoly Cross Sisters at Notre She wouldnt abandon chil-He said the companys recom- Built into each program middotas a missionary Church- whyDame Ind She recently joined drens education JOwever Shemendation confirmed that the should be a growirig aW8leness shouldnt this Church and tierthe faculty of St Xavier Col-middot saidTeamstens came to Delano to

lege Chicago as theology pro- What Id like to se~ IS emh of e~ch ones mission in the members share even more readshytlrganize workers at the invita- Church-an outgoing mismiddotsion to ily than government~ifessor set up a total religiou educationiion o~

PROFESSION CEREMONY AT WAREHAM The Chapel in the Woods of the Noshyvitiate of the Sacred Heart Fathers vas the scene Saturday morning as four novices

iere profe~sed by Bishop CoimolIyLeft to right Bro JudeMohan Bro Joseph ONeill Master of Novices Rev Andrew Jahn Bishop Connolly Very Rev Daniel J McCarthy

Prodncial who offered the Mass Bro Paul Daly and Bro Martin Lucia

the corporation New Approaches reach others and to build the

Speaking at the Summer lec- middot social patterns needed in our Oppose Intervening ture series at Grailville herein Quote Pope Pauls world

middot1 PImiddot Ohio USheaqquarters of the A 1 f IP Issues of TimesIn Fami y annlnglt international Grail movement ppea oreace middot She warneq against lookingMILWAUKEE (NC)-The ex- Sister Charles Borromeo aC- BERLIN (NC)-Fiye hundred for textbooks with all thE anshy

ecutive committee of the ad- knowledged that the Church in letters quoting the flppeal of swers or for fOllliulas thatvisory ioard of the Milwauke~ this country has placed most of Pope Paul VI for peace in Vietshy might take the place of decisiOlishyArchdioce~an Family Life Pro- its resources atmiddot the service of nam were sent persons in East rilaking by individual wnsci- gram has adopted a resolution childrens education Germany by the Social Demoshy encesmiddot

opposing government interven But the most urge~t need for cratic Party (SPD) The East Religiousteaching should inshynon in family planning giving religiousmiddot education she said Germans had asked the SPD volve a di~logue she su-ggestunanimousmiddot approval to a 13- if to helpadults especially those why the free world had not ed addi~g that in the past therepoint resolution which insists made imy efforts to end the war has been toomuch sttess on aushythat the matter of family plan- d in Vietnam thorityin teaching rid~otning is a private affair not a Sche u ~ Reopening The letter sent by the Social

bulle~o~gh on sharingChrisliarieoncern of the government Of Chi Smiddot h 1 Democratsmiddot pointed out that the gr()wthmiddot

Frank Stabb chairman of at 0 IC C 00 peace efforts of the pope the Thequesiion is not so ~lUcbtheCatholic board statedthat MTmiddot REPOSE (NC)-A Cath- World Council of Churches and

~hat to tea~h she ()pined butsince it has become increasingly olic school here in Ohio for of the governments of the how will we produce ~he Chrisshyapparentmiddot tilat our federalgov some 250 children will reopen in United States Great Britain (ian experience in litUlgy andernment ans to use taxinoiiey September due to efforts of in- Sweden India France and Itrly

for the spreading of birthcon-middot (lividuai citizens civic and Pro had all middotbeen rejected by the soci~l actionJn th~ great issues trol it becomes the obUgation of testantchurch groups in the communists The letter also of our times ~

NO JOBTOq BIG NONE TOO SMALL

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTE~S

MainOHice and Plant 95 Bridge St lowell M~bullbull

Tet 4586333

Auxiliary Plarits

BOSTON CAMDEN NJ OCEANPORT N~J

MIAMI PAWTUCKET R1 PHILADELPHIA

this family apostolate to speak area the Milford Chamber of middotstressedmiddot the SPDs view that out vigorously in oPllOsition tomiddota Commerce and parishioners of war can no longer be an instru shypolicy which has absolutely no St Andrews church Milford ment in solving political probshyvalidity The Elizabeth Seton School a lems middot He went on to say that when rural outpost of St Andrews Rltidio television and newsshyariy government agency tells parish was established seven paper ieports iil Eastmiddot Germany

middotpoor married couples whether years ago and con tin 11 a llY have given the impression thatmiddot they should have children or plagued by sewage dIsposal no one middotincluding the Pope has

hownfany to have the govern- problems The school wasmiddot closed made any efforts to seek peace ment is making a mighty pre- by court order in the Sumrtler in Vietnam sumptuous intrusion into a most of 1965 but r~openeq last year i J

sacred element of huin~nlife) with an arrangement fo~ haul- Stamiddotmiddotr 0n middotIImiddotmiddotOmiddotftmiddotmiddotammiddotP

middot ing sewge to MilfordmiddotmiddotWhenmiddot ~ middotV 1 t Cmiddoth 1 forcedtostop usingtheMilford DAVENP0RT (NC)~Seven-

eel) members of religious coni 0 un eermiddot apalnmiddot sewage systemlastJanuary t PHILADELPHIA (NCfFa-middot classes were dfscontinueiigt mutlities in theuilitedmiddot middotStates

ther JjRobert Falabella SJ The Closhlg spalked if coin- were among the graduates at the 36 instr~ctor in theolOgyat St mlinity effort led by the Buck- annual mid~Summermiddotcommence

Josephs College here has vol- wheat-middotTaxpayers Associationw ment of St Ambrose College uteered for extended adive aidthemiddotschoolmiddotA fUrid drive for her~in Illwa middotParticipating in duty witp theUS Army Re $250((to pay formiddot new tihiinage the ceremonies was Margheritiimiddot serve s a chaplain in the Vietmiddot f~cilities was ~ledby th~ Mil- Roberti a~ native of Davenportmiddot mam combat zone ford Chamber Of Commerce a leading dramatic sopranQ~

CONVEmiddotNImiddotENT BANKING WITHOUT TRAFFIC PARKING PROBLEMS

at the -

5LADE~S FERRr-r~USJmiddotCOMPANY SOMERSET MASS

j ~ - bullbullbull ~~ ~ bull ) bullbullbull lt

ThemOflt friendlymiddot dmocrt~ lANK oHering

-_~9npi~lC)h$topmiddot~cirliing middotmiddotf bullbullbullClubmiddot Accoul1Its - Auto middotLoa -

Checking Accounts ~ Business boris Savings Accounts~ ~ ~ Ieaj Estate loOns 1 -

- ~Atmiddot S~~~rs~tS~~ppi~~ Ar~a=-~igh~~a 5 ~t~due Me~ber FeCieral I)epositmiddot ri~urance Corporation

I

11 Cardinal Cushing Hits Imbalance In Schools

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing deplored that very little has been oone to relieve racial imshybalance in Bostons public schools in his first public address since his recent illness and conshyvalescence

The Boston prelate told an ecshyumenical meetingmiddot in All Saints Lutheran church here that al shythough very littlemiddot has been done to make a year-old law work we are not discouraged and we are very far from giving up hope that we will have reshyBults before long

He referred to the Racial 1m balance Law aimed at promotshying racial integration in Massashychusetts public schools The meeting marked the first annishyversary of the law The measure will deprive Boston public schools of $30 million in state subsidies until the citys school committee submits an integrashytion plan acceptable to the state board of education Until now the city committee has not subshymitted an acceptable plan

A school that is heavily imshybalanc~d racially cannot provide the best education that should be available for our children Even with the most devoted teachers and the most upto-date proshygrams-and we have both o( these in Boston-a predomiJ)antshyly Negro school suffers from an isolation from the general comshymunity which cannot fail to be harmful~ he said

Scores Slum Landlords In a similar way we can say

that an all white scJ100l fails to reflect the true nature of the radally mixed communitymiddot in which we live and so deprives white youngsters of theexperi ence of living and studying with their neighbors of a different race Ourideal should be to live and workand study and pray side by side in mutual respect and common affection

There hav~ been several proposalsmade during the last year to al~rest imbalance iit the schools of our center city Carshydinal Cushing said None of these has been accepted by those who hove been elected to make these decisions in the schooi srstem Of course we know that no immediate proshygram will solve all our problems but we can make li beginning

The cardinal also criticized slum landlords for the inhuman conditions in which so many here must live and work alid bring JP their families He called for a crash program of assistance for the deprived

State Uses Vacant Catholic School

BURLINGTON (NC)-The re- cently closed Don Bosco Schoolmiddot for BoyS here will Soon befilled up again with teenage boys this time as temporary quarters for Vermonts pilot residential treatshyment center for youthful first shyoffender lawbreakers

In announcing the acceptance of the proposal by Bishop RobertF Joyce of Burlington and the Verm 0 n t Catholic Charities board State Institutiolls Com-

PROFESSION AND CtOTHING CEREMONIES Principals in the ceremonies conshyducted for the Sisters of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts in Fall River on Monday were seated Sr Mary Dolores Sr John Veronica Bishop Gerrard who presided Sr Karen Dolores Sr Mary Catherine Standing Sr Margaret Edward Sr Joseph Maureen Sr Stephen David Sr James Constance Sr Celestine Regis Sr Anne Robert Sr Vinshycent Dolores

Report Says Cold War More Intense Peaceful Coexistence Now Strategic Offensive

WASHINGTON (NC) -Some tegic Studies at Georgetown jarring statements are made in University a Jesuit-conducted a significant news report whose school here

It is an in-depth analysisprivate but highly responsible sponsors call it the resultmiddot ofmiddot quality research It reminds for example that the so-called cold war is not

over and warns that as of now it may be entering a more danshy

gerous phase Th e ~peaceful coexistence

slogan it says was once a comshymuhist defensive stalling tacshytic but now it signifies the communists have gone over to

the strategic offensive The great paradox of our

times the document asserts may well turn out to be our inability to recognize that the cold war has in reality become more intel1se despite the increasshying appearance of peace

The goals of the presentmas~ tels of the Kremlin are no dif- ferent from tho~e of Khrushshychev Stalin or Mao Tse-Tung and to the Krtmlin peac~ful coshyexistence is a strategy not an end in itself it declares

The study entitled Peace or Pea c e f u1 Coexistence was

sponsored by the Committee on Education Against CommUllism of the American Bar Association It was unveiled in New York just before the ABA began its annual meeting in Montreal but it was prepared by Richard V Allen a specialist on Sino-Soviet affairs at the Center for Stra-

K of c Plan Socoal

Action I itia tive

missioner John Y Woodhull MIAMI BEACH (-NC) - The stated I think this is one (f the top official of the Knights of finest ecumenical testures of Columbus announced plans for faith and charity that I have a new initiiitive in the ecumenshyknown i -i~al and soCial action field

The eenter ill ~ ~provide a through a partnership with theO

home for 16 to 20 b(iys aged HI John LaFarge Institute ill New to 18 who are referrecl by the York ~ - eourls as first offenders Toile In additior W financial assist shyboys will work loeal du-in ancethe LaFllg~jnstitute will

the day and return to the center reeeive suggestifmsand recomshyin the ~venin1 for intensive mendations frOJll the official roup t~erapy eonducted b) rep-~~entationand plJrticipatiOll

Btaff III ~ix bull Ule K bull C

based onmiddot more than 3000 articles and documents of the internashytiOllal communist movement more than 90 per cent of which material is dated after the Cushyban Missile crisis of October 1962 Allen admits that the commushy

nists have used the coexistence slogan in ihepast and with sfme success but he directs atshytention to the fact that it now signifies a strategic offensive rather than a stal~ing tactic

The study notes that the Cushyjail build-up the erection of the Berliil Wall and the armed iilvasi~n of South Yietnam all occurred during the most in- tense pedod of peaceful coshyexistence ~ It~~~inds that Khrushchev in 19t1lddiiled coexistence as a form of intense ecoitomic pOlitshyical and ideological struggle gaii1s~ the aggressive forces of imperialism hi the international arena it aiso says that in their 3tshy

tempt to create wha bull they call the New ComIJlunist Man the communists have systematically presented a vicious and thor oughly distorted picture of the

Nuns to Construct Health Care Facility

SANDUSKY (NC)-The Franshyciscan Sisters who operate Providence Hospital here in Ohio will construct a new 100shybed $1250000 healthcare fashycility separate ftom thehospital

It will serve Medicare patients of the area during posthospital care and Qther convalescents who do not requir~f~l~-scalehospital care Sister Lucia -administrator 81lid it will relievemiddot pressure ~ hospital beds in the area

There wiII be ari appeal to th~ public lor about $900000 The -remainder of the funds will

btl supplied by the Federalgovshyerllment

West in general and the United States in particular It need not be emphasi~ed

the study states that the overshywhelming sentiment of the free world is to live in peace But tQ mistake the illusion of peace for genuine peacemiddot would be a profoundly dangerous perhaps fatal mistake In a foreword t the book

Bertram D Wolfe a Stanford University expert on commushy~lism warns that we have been prone to read the idea of live and let live into the phase of peaceful C 0 e x imiddots ten ce Our hopes and our longings are likeshyly to betray us again and again into a readiness to be deceived by those who have sworn the d~struction of all we stand for

fnjoymiddot Dining IN THE

JOLLY WHALER --AND--

SPOUTIRINN RESTAURANTS

Always Free Parking

New Bedford Hotel

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Aug 25 1966

Cassidymiddot Seniors Attend Work$hop

Three members of the incomshying senior class at Cassidy High School Taunton will complete tomorrow a five day Workshop in Leadership conducted at the University of Massachusetts under th~ sponsorship of the Massachussetts Association of Student Councils

Mis s Rosemary McKenna~ president of the senior class Miss Nancy Thomas president of the National Honor Society and Miss Christine Victoria coshyeditor of the Cassidy school paper are attending Miss Victoria is secretary of the Southeastern Association of Student Councils and will serv~ in that capacity with the other officers Jerry Flanagan presishydent Feehan High Marsha Boyd vice-president Attleboro High Luke Boyd treasurer West Bridgewater High

Cassidy GIllaquoIltiluCllle Wins Elkso AWtlDd

Miss Pauline Lee daughter ox Mrs Harry Lee and the late Harry Lee of 7 Dean Ave Taunshyton has Qeen named the recipishyent of a $600 Massachusetts Elks Lead~rship Award granted by the Elks National Scholarship Fund

A member of the 1966 gradushyating class of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton Miss Lee was in the top ten of a class of 108 and maintained a scholastie honors record throughout bell four year Miss Lee will attend Nortn- eastern University Boston

Schools Merge BAY CITY (NC)-TwO wes~

side Catholic high schools here hi Michigan will merge Sept I

to becomeWest Catholic CentraU High School The decision te merge was made by an intershyarish lay study committee tv provide more efficient use of the staff and facilities The schooU will be staffed by the ReligioUl Sisters of Mercy of Detroit

BIG DIVIDEND NEWS

a SYSTEMATIC550 year SAVINGS

INVESTMEIfJ500 a year SAVINGS

8 REGULAR450 year SAVINGS

Bass River SovinQs Bank bull SOUTH YARMOUTH bull DENNIS PORT

bull YANNIS bull fARMOiJTH SHOPPING PLAZA

bull OSTERVILLE

-1111

WHITE middotmiddotmiddotSPA CATERERS

- BANQUETSmiddot -WEDDINGS - PARTIES

~ COMMUNION BREAKFASTS 1343PlEASANT STREET FAll RIVER

OSb~rne 3-7780

--h-- ~

12

i

THE ANCHOROlocese of Fall River-Th~s Aug 25 1966

~regW ~reg~tfJ ~lYJ~~ TtUUY1)[fi)l[

Of R~dD~~~csm Amcm)gYW]fr~ lJy Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy

Phillip Abbott Luces The New Left (McKay 119 W 40th New York $450) attempts to explain the resurgence of radicalism among American students Its author is a

of the New Left wIth as many con u e y lcal ideas while at MissisSippi non-joiners on the peripherY day even~ng Aug 27 at S lD ~ at~~ fi~t he~-d ~~ ~h~ ~erBtlt its impact- is smd tohave Mlll~aret s Kinderlctarten aaU i Left whIle at Ohio State and l Prizes WIll be awarded and reshy

tgrt~ritotcOtmiddotmiddotgthmiddotevecJ1 amm~-~W1lS~~tttedpa~~y ~xten~e~ tots about200OQP co h~~hriients served o nl~ge ~u en ~~ i - ltGUiLD OF TillE VIsITATION Iil1961heifioved~to NewmiddotYork It ~S ~l1ena lza1I~~~eme~t i iNO EASTilrAM ~ ~

_and came closer tothe Commti- in the country What alarms Mr ih alb t ofthe Dist Party Llitef he joined Pro- Luce is not its existence or its G1 ~~ h 3que wed gressiveLa]gto~aiI~ edited its size but the fact and the in- W WI e e on nesshymiddot monthly magazine _ cre~sing extent of Comrnamst q1Y~ 4-~ 3~ a~ the PiJ~~ middot -domination~ He gives -instances Springs Restaurant No TflJro Visited _C~~ro-S Cuba R t cl Sunday

in proof thatsuch dO minatioD-i8 A e~e2 rva~o1l os on It was Progressive Labor ug s

which arJanged- for fmeric~ indeed an actuality SACRED HEARTS

young man who won some leader of the New Left and when he broke with Proshygressive Labor which he eharges was organiz~d by -formermembenlof theSoVfeishycontrolled Communist Pa rt y USA and is now aPekingor~eh tated Commu~

D1st group Mx Luce has an ex tremely Impor- middottant subject one which is both timely and crit shyleal Because of his experience he should be especially qualshyified to set it out But the fac~ is that he is at best a mediocre writer He has no notion as to how to

organize a book marshal his materials and to ten his story iIi a consecutive way and with cushymulative force This is a dull alld muddled treatment of a very middotvitai topic~ not heipedat all by crude blundersin English usage Mr Luces personal histog has to be pieced together fro~ bits strewn through the book

middotlike the debris after a hurricane He is an Ohioan bornmiddotin 1935

notice both when he was a the lives of the rising generation Youth is repelled by parental attitudes and aspirations which are seen as mostly narrow negshyative sterile College is a bore

offeriiig no incentive or oppOJshytUnity for youth to direct its enshyergies into crucial causes

A mood of rebellion has devel- ~ped and a chance to express it has been pr~sentedby the civil rights struggie and the unpopu~ lar and beclouded war in Vietshynam Nor does the prospect of fighting authority in each case dim the attraction of these causes quite the reverse Hence the New Left

JLists Organizations Communist organizations of

various stripes have attemptec to sieze control of the New Left and to exploit the mood of reshybellion wi~h an eye to changing it into participation in revolushy

tion

Mr Luce lists and desribes the Communist organizations so engaged The one he knows best of course is Progresectsive Labor But he gives much space to the Du Bois Clubs which are the instruments of the Communist Party Then tlmre are the Trot-middot

the son of middle-class Repub- skyite splinter groups of which lican parents H~ start~d college four strains are identified (inshyat Miami University in Ohio left cluding middotone that is pro-Negro to see the Souih finished ~t Mis and anti-Semitic) I

sissippi State and did graduate Mr Luce estimates that some k t Oh St t 12000 YOung AmericanS are wor a 10 a e _ t 1 t 1 b He became interested in rad- ac ua orgamza Ion~ mem ers

APPOINTEE- Bishop Josshyeph Bmiddot Brunini Auxiliary since 1957 to Bishop Richard O Gerow of Natchez-Jackshyson middotMiss has -been appointshyed by Pope Paul VI to be Apostolic Administrator of the diocese NC Photo

The Parish Parade

ST 1lgtYS TillED mn ov= =shylFALL RJrVER

The parish will sponsor a one day pilgrimage to the Shrine of the North American Martyrs Auriesville N Y on Sunday Oct 2

Interested partles may obtaIn full particulars by contacting Mrs Laurence Coyle Mrs Wilshyliam Blythe or Mrs George Boitano S8 MARGARET-MARY GUILD BUZZARDS BAY

A bl hitmiddot middotU be pu IC W S paL 0 WI d ct d b the guild on Saturshy

studeritsto visit Cuoain 1963 middot and 1961 In defiance of our middotState Department~sban on travel

there Mr Luce made the trip says that most of the students

middot were unaware of Progressive Labors sponsorship and control The money came from Castro And Progressive Labor members planned and staged the wild scenes at a Congressional hea~

ing concerning the middotproject By late 1964 Mr Luce was

enti~ely dissillusioned abo u t Progressive Labor andmiddot by Febshyruary of 1965 h~ pad left it to

bemiddot quickly expelled upon his

Stresses Strength NO FAIRHAVEN He insists that somethin~(must Registration for the kiridershy

be done to prevent Communist garten pre-primary and the capture of the movement He eight eJement~ry grades are beshywants everyone to wake up to ing held daily during the month the existence and the strength of Augus of the New Left Pupils may register with SJ

We must realize he urges how Marie Henriette SSCC at the disenchanted with our society Sacred Hearts Academy 332 the young people ~re what hos- Main Street Fairhaven any 8poundshytility they feel what a gulf ternoon from 1-5 RegistratioDfl yawns between them and their are also being accepted by Rev elders and hcgtw impervious th~YAlexis Wyggers SSCC at the are to ideas and language which ReCtory 382 Main street Fairshyi

figure in their eldErs attempts haven to communicate with them The Association of St Anne

No one he maintains is S~-Will receive corporate CoinmUshyI~ departure and sayagE(l~ Yim~~~~ Jiously trying to reach the hiorton Sunday at the 8 ocloek middot He left because he says Pro gressive Labor is a middotMaoist Comshymunist tool because itmiddotadlrQcates imd take steps to implelrtent armed insurrection because- no personal freedam is allowed to members an4 lill- deQisionsmiddot are made by a few dictatorial leadshy~ril 1ecausemembersareJnshyvolved in programs of Whose

eonsequences totge country and to themselvestIey have no idea lt~

lFe~ls lF~tts~rated Mr fL~ced6es- notmiddot contend

middot that the New Leis Goromunistshy

young rebel to understand him Mass to speak to him intelligibly and effectively Co~unJ~t errorsmiddot J~edB~ MeU1lMe~tmiddot propaganda hypocnsy mUst be SCHWYZ (NC) - Catholicrelentlessly exposed in a way movie and television experts which the young people will met here iil ~fwitieriand for imcomprehend international exchange of ~He is strong_ for a Freedom riiques iiI the useof Tv anellAeademy- which would provipe films in religious educationmiddotmiddot expert practical education conshy - cerning CommunislJlmiddotAnd he stressestheneed of a placefor

ltloltiinated -Hescent~B it -as8 phe- PITTSB~1RGH(Nt) - The bull I bull ~ bull bull bull bull bull

honidon whlc~ came ~bout Pittsburgh Catholi( Interracial Commercialmiddot 15 Industrid spontaneously an eX~IJ1Pre of- Council has endorsed home rule Institutionalyouth in rebellion - for the District of Columbia asshy

Youth he holds~ hils amiddotpoundeeling sertingthattooibng have many painting ~nd~ D_~~o~qtig of -frustrationmiddot with American of the-importanLdecisionaffectshy Fall River OSborne 2-1I9H$ociety its tone and its values ing (the District of CohJmbia) -yoiith~es~rtt~rhaving rio say inb~erlmadtd)ycongrpoundpoundssiriehftoin ~ 74v~hllia rnson Str~e~

the making of decisions affecting hundreds of miles away

~~Gr~ayK BJ Most Rev FUUOlll J Sheeillp Dll)

If my neighbor is stronger than 1 I fear him if he lsweaker than I I despise bim Such is the modem judgement of the psyshychiatrist Dr Jean de Rougemont Earlier the Psalmist speaks ~ the arrogance of those who have much and the despisal of those who are proud How can the rich avoid feeling superior to the poor How can the poor avoid being humiliated The answer is that vices but can the) give up cigarettes for a week to help the poor the strong must see their weakness and the rich must see~eifto poverty How realJly strong are the strong Theymay avoid great Are thfiY suc~ masters of themselves tbatthey can turn down the third cocktail (or give up the first) and use the money instea4 to ~uy sulfone ~or a i~~r~ liqw r~ch_ ar~the rich Let them look inside themselves IIi whatvirtue are they rich Rich in cb~ty Rich i~ char~ti Ri~)n f~th

Onc~t~~ ~i~rhty see th~mseiv~ asnothiDi a~d therl~h see the~selv~ as i~poverislledth~ they wui lov~ ihe we~~ as their brothersilDd the peor IllS their

fellow beggars for thetrrace of God ifmiddot the strong middotlove middotmiddotthemselves despite all theirweaknes5~ then why not lovltil weaknesses in others u the rich love themselves despitG middottheir inner nakedshyness then why nCllt love a lesser ]lJOVshy

erty in others That i~ why Our Lord told us to love ourneighbor as ourseU ~y not more than self Because iii ]I

love myself-knowing myself as ]I do knowing how utterb weak ]I am2-then I have the measure of how J[ am to pour out love to others

We live in a world divided between the rich and the poor We live in that kinol of a church-pOor parishes and rich parishes Even bishops an~ priestsmiddot speak of a parish being good when they mean it is economicaily rich Somehow or other we have ~

get qut of this slavish standard of affluence which is so opposed to the lross of Christ To that end we make the folloWing proposal that you or your middotparishclub school or office undertake the sponsorshjp of one of the poor areas of the world which has been investigated by the Apostolic delegate Write to us and we will send you middotthe name of this diocese its location the number of priests catechists and faithful it has Thus you will be sure that you have a middotneedy (Ibject for sacrifice and service and n9t one based on a haphazard -appeal middotfroin an uninvestigated source The Church will not alloW you to sponsor this diocese for more than one year becausemiddot thtlre are so many poor parishes in the world Look into your weakness and you will love the weakness of o~heJ8 Look into your poyeny stricken soul and you willserVe poverty stricken bodies Write to -mpGod Love You

~~~ middot~middotGOD~middotLOVE YCllJmiddot tomiddot~SMLgtO~middot ~$5 middotto A~RCtor $sO~ For your1nissionUorkIeanthelp eve~one andmiddotyou ~o tltosem most meed bullbull tchJMBfcn $20 to Anon lor $1000 middotsentmiddotWithlteommnbull ~ 11

bullbull bull ~l

The GOD LOVE YOU~ medal lovely cameo medal of the Madonna of tIle worldiS one you would be proud to give ormiddotde shy

lighted tci reC~iVEt DesIgned bi the world-renowned jeweler Harry winSton aildbltessed by Bishlgtp Sheen the GOD LOVE YOU medal is available inmiddotcl~icF~oreritinegold firiishor pure sterlingsilver aod may be obtained by sending your request and corresPondirtg offering to The Socieb for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth AvenueNew York NY 10061 $2 Sinall sterling silver $3 small

11gtk goid fiiled $5 large sterling silver $10 large 10k gold filled

Cut out this colullnn pln your sacrifice to It and mali It to Most RevbullFultom J Sheen National Director of The Society for the Propagation of thl~ Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or to your Dioclesan Director Rt Rev Msgr Raymond Jr Considine 363 North ll1ain Street Falll River Massachusetts

bull j 7 Perry IQur fI~~fng

~v~-t~e OilsMake Taunt~B1l~ Mass - Worm FriendsmiddotVA 2-2282

------------------ ~

genuinely democratic radicalism ON CAPE CODlbONNlEllyin o~r Iociety _

]OHoo ~~~(Kl~Ymiddotmiddot amp SON (~ofP~n~T~UnCG Rigt - flJ1 ml n

crepound ormiddotentireiyCommuist- 9llaquoIIlaquo ~$ lf1J Ilililte ~fYl U ~ I~raquo8L[)~NG MAmiddoth~linAL$middotmiddotmiddot~~~V~C~ 6

S~~ri~gj 1$100 4~~YARMUlrH ROA~)

middottYA~MBSmiddot AMPLE PARKING

iIIIIOCIIJIjIWUllJmllIllDOCImIWlDIllmIlXlWll(lJfi

- -

THE ANCHOR-Jesuit Educators Members of PAVLA Maintain Missionary Thurs Aug 25 1966 13

Ponder Students Record of Fall River Diocese Area G~~s SocoaCynical ~ttitQJJde

LOS ANGELES (NC) shy lLong outstanding for the missionary work of its priests Sisters and Brothers the ~elvD~e ~elrllfrer A top Jesuit educator dispenshy Fa~ River Diocese is fast becoming noted for its outstanding Papal Volunteers for Latin CLEVELAND (NC) - OUX sed advice here on how to eombat the attitude of some high schoolers who consider the world and the religion of their middotparents as phony

Father Edward J Sponga 8J of Baltimore in the keynote adshydress at the 1966 Jesuit Educashytional Association Workshop on Christian Formation at Loyola University here called for a dialogue with everyone conshycerned to emphasize the good crying to be released

Speaking to delegates from 52 Jesuit high schools in the nation Father Sponga chairman of the board of the Jesuit Educational Association declared

Menace to Freedom If the young men of our

schools consider the world and the religion of their parents as phony and a menace to their freedom then we must be ruthshyless in seeing how and why this is and in entering into dialogue with everyone who is willing to do so in order that we may be able to release the g09d that is crying to be released

During the 12 days of research and discussion 125 school adshyministrators and teachers evalushyated the effect that religion courses academic curriculum spiritual exercises and personal guidance have had on the charshyacters of the 35000 teenagers in U S Jesuit high schools

The delegates particularly were concerned about the loss of religious faith in the adolesshycent who is becoming increasshyingly sophisticated and critical

Middle Class Values Father Joseph H Fichter SJ

Stillman professor of sociology at Harvard Universitys divinity school criticized Jesuit high schools for not challenging the middle class values of many of their students for not paying sufficient att~rition to the social sciencesmiddot and for not drawing more of their students irom among the poor

Dr Alexander A Schneiders graduate professor of psychology at Boston College stressed the commitment of Faith that must be made within the scopemiddot of inshytellectual independence He arshygued against compelling students to make annual retreats or assist at religious exercises

Other delegates suggested esshytablishing pilot programs in 1l)ner-city high schools with nationwide cooperation and the sending of Jesuit teachers to work in community schools outshyllide the regular Jesuit system

Ho~es for Negroes Goal of Campaign

WORCESTER (NC) A camshypaign to secure better housing for Negroes in the Greater Worcester Area is growing

In a letter to some 1200 pershyS0l1S who last Aprii signed an

open letter newspaper adshyvertisement regarding fair hous ins John J Concordia Duman rights committee chairman of the Diocesan Council of Catholic M~~ ~sked sig~atories of the

open -letter to volunteer to ~adopt members of a Negro family am actively assist them inmiddotproC1Jri~g decent housing to titheir ~ne~ds

In 8 statement by an intershy fa(thmiddoteommittee on housing middotwfii~IlJs all out-growth of a

siniilar committee formed last year by the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women a call was made for construction of housshying for middotmiddotpoor and lower middle d~ss f ami ie It ixlcludins

Ne8J~s

bull bull r~ ~

America These young men and women doing Christs work in some of the worlds needshy Lady of Futima parish hat3 opened a social service centeliiest areas are a credit to the parishes and toowns from which they come Letest PAVLA here in the midst of the Houghassignments in the Diocese area scene of Clevelands recent

are those of Lucille Lebeau rioting of St Annes parish New The center housed in an 18-gt Bedford and Anthony Gomes room former apartment buildo St John of God parish Somershy ing was dedicated by Archo set bishop Paul J Hallinan of~ At-gt

Actually Lucille isnt a new lanta while he was visiting iii PAVLA hand She was the first Cleveland~bis native diocese Diocesan enlistee in the organishy The center will be staffed by zation going to Brazil as a four Sisters of Charity of St nurse-social worker in August Augustine who along with lay1963 She returned from her volunteers have been working three year assignment in July in the area since Aprilmiddot1965 but volunteered to serve an The center will middotprovide C9uri extra year in Brazil She will re seling nursing medical supplie tum there in November and pre-natal care -

Anthony veteran of a middotyears The building which standt work in Florida with the fedshy next to the parish rectory waserai governments VISTA proshy purchased bymiddot the parish seveR gram will teach English in a years ago when it was aba~ Mexican minor seminary He has doned as an apartment buildingalready completed a PAVLA

Early last year Father Alberitraining course at Catholic Unishy Albert Koklowsky MSSSTversity in Washington D C and pastor of Our Lady of Fatimawill leave in September for launched a campaign through aMexico City and an intensive column in the Catholic Universefour and a half month course in Bulletin Cleveland diocesanSpanish language and culture newspaper to explain Houghsbefore beginning his assignment poverty to metropolitan resiltshyin the mountain town of Tacomshydentsbaro in the state of Michoacan

Housing was a major themePioneer Work Resulting donations from unishy

Lucille bubbles over with enshy verse Bulletin readers and 11thusiasm for PAVLA and its acshy matching gift from Coadjutorcomplishments She has just reshy middotBishop Clarence Issenmann of turned from a trip to the Washshy Cleveland enabled Father Kokshyington training course attended lowsky to renovate the buildingby Tony Gomes where incishydentally she met him for the first time She talked to new Work for Needy enlistees individually and in LIMA (NC) - Sixty me~bers groups seeking to picture for af the St Rose CYO hert gavethem the new life theyd be enshy volunteer aid to projects for thetering needy this Summer Most as~

Their enthusiasm was a boostshy slsted in a federally financed er shot for meshe said educati~nal program for cultu~

This week the New Bedford rally deprived students from nurse is inmiddot the Chicago area PAVLA ENLISTEES Revmiddot James w Clark Diocesan ~nderglirtenmiddot to sixij1 grad~visting PAVLA headquarters Directormiddot of Papal Volunteenlmiddot for Latin America with Othershelp1 a~ amiddot day camn f~there and friends she made ill retarded cbildren andmiddot Qne asAnthony Gltgtmes bound for teaching assignment in Mexico~ Brazil including the doctor with Ns~ed at a eerebral palsy c~mpwhom she worked when me and Lucille Lebeau who has already spent three years m first went to the Latin American Brazil as nurse-social worker will return in Novemberfor eountry He is now in practice additional year in Waukegan lll FAIRHAVEN

When I first went to Brazil urgy eommunitY needs and was to leave in each parish IIshe 8a14 I worked for a little LUMBERhealth needs team similar to their own toover a year at a hospital in Salshy cOMPANY carry on as far as possible thevador Bahia My job was mlinly Most of the help that an area

training Brazilian aides and received came from the people work in liturgy catecheticsmiddot and community and health needssetting up hospital routines themselves t h r 0 ugh their Complete line

After the year was over Brazil shy awakened sense of community We would return to the comshyian doctors and medical students said -ucille Actual government munities where we had given Building Materials took over the hospital routines or material aid was hampered by this course as often as possible were runing smoothly and I political economic and social said Lucille anu each time we 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVEN felt that I could go on to public complications of many kinds eould set them growing spiritushyhealth work in areas where there The team played it by ear ally WYman 3-2611 was no nursing care at all avail- in deciding how to approach a Turn to Page Nineteen able particular parish Lucille and

Lucille joined an apostolic the nun on the team who was shy ~

team organized by Bishop Eushy also a nurse tried to work genio de Araujo Sales Apostolic through community midwives Administrator of Salvador Toshy who were sadly in need of techshy JEREMIAH COHOLAN gether with a priest a nun two nical instruction The infant Brazilian lay apostles and what mortality rate in most areas was would bt the equivalent af an very high said Lucille due iD PLUMING amp HEATING I American social worker she large part to umbilical tetanus visited areas of the Diocese preshy caused by unsanitary delivery viously all but unreached by the techniques

Church Another technique was organ- I Aim of the team she explainshy ization of one-week parish Wy 3 0911 699 B II II A

ed wail to change dormant parshy courses centered around the idea man - e VI emiddotmiddot ven~ ishes into Christian communishy of Christian cominunity Lucille Nwamp~fQrd ties Seventeen parishes were said middotshe would start the course I visited in the course of a year by trying to explain the concept lImiddottI-IIIlII_middot tI-II--tl- __ __ __ _-IIllIIIiImiddotllIlI_-IIllII~ -~~ ~--middot- ~ and a half rmging from mem- of Christians as people of God - - shy

berships of 20000 souls to 75000 then would set up discussion ~ItIIIIHtHIIIIIDIIIIUIIIIHlIIIIIIIiIllIIlHKHHIIItIIIIUIIIIIIIUllllliillllllllllIJllilllllllllllllilllllllll~ The 75OOO-member parish said Ioupsmiddot en suchmiddot subjects asmiddot~ -_sect_Lucille had only one priestmiddot 10 What ismiddota person-Person to ~ middotY 5 hmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot meet its needs person relationships~ and Dif- sect E we ayemiddot ~

Plan 01 AetiOll ferences between ordinary eom- ~ == The apostolic teamsaid Lushy munities andthe parish sect LARGE LIVEmiddot ~

eille would first survey condishy This would lead to a discussion sect ~ ~=_=_ tions and decide what most of the function of Christians and sect needed doing then plan an edushy what iii Christian community sect shycational program Three or fo~rmiddot should be lIke Theil leaders ~ while they la5~ - ~ natural leaders in each parish were ready to ask the parishion ~ sect= were chosen and arrangements ers if any were ready to coin- ~ were made to get them to an mit themselves as parish team sect Macleans SemiddotQmiddot F d ~ Archdiocesan training center for members to a stronger expres- ~ 00 S == a one month leadership training sian of their Christian fellow- sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN Tel 997-9358 sect eourse wverins lIlatechetics lit ooip Go~ of the lipQBtolie tea iulHIHlIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIJlIIIUillIIJlmIllUiJiillJillnililunJililillliiihIUllllIIlIilill(IIUJIIIJ1I1llIJllliinillllllltuE

- ~ - -~_middotmiddotij_Uimiddotmiddot ~ _

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 An Exce1lent Lcte Summer Activity J VI SIT-middot

Louisiari ~copyfrish A~~ampmpli~~~sect r~bull ~T[T uiH~Dfro[j1) fr ~rtilfrreg~[(frDIri)middot middot~~rrfr~~~Q~t~~~~~~~JJ~~tt$

MADISONVILLE (NC)--+wo cently used for ~~gt~es~was wears ago in this quiet jural torn down Its blue I green~and ~ J~lf ~ town the single square block white stained grass riow frames

ltContaining Catholic ch u r c h the huge rear wIndow ~ ~t buildings symbolized the old era Anselms church - - [f~[LL lRlt OV~~middot ~now it stands for the new This Spring St Catherines

Two years ago two churches also came down Gone too are stood 200 feet apart on this he cOl-vents and bullone school More than 280000 people havle cilrElody been aboard iUO ~he past ys[ioblock--St~ Catherine wh ere The other school building was

whites worshipped and St retained for parish meetings and Francis Xavier where Negroes the now-integrated Confratershy

worshipped The rectory with fiity of Christian Doctrine its one priest to serve both par- classes ishes s too d between theC rhe 100 or so school children

centhtirches moremiddot as a symbol of - arenow transported to elemEmshythe psychological gap thac asan tilt-y and high schools in nearby

actual separation covirigton arid Mandeville middot A fence stood between the two CCD instructions have been

eonventS on the block~riefor givengtySfsters qfChristian the Negro nuns who taughtCharityandtheirstudEints from

Negro children in the ~e~ro ~~njpirClncy at FolsoM La and IIchool the other for the wfitte byseminariaris fromarby St IllUns who taught white children i-Jolieph seminarY Butmiddot tpeseiii the whHe school diities are being taken over by

Now there is one church onemiddot tlie parishs integrated CCD orshyrectory and one small classroom ganizatiorinow being trained

building -- and one parish St The pastor Father John J Anselm DenDulk is prouder of the

Although wee k day Masses smooth transition than he is of were said in only onemiddot of the the physical change shytwo old churches Masses and Participation in worship has ether services on Sundays and increased since the new church major feast days were said in w~ built he says and he has

middot both Midnight Masses on Christ- the best commentators in the mas were celebrated concurrent- whl)le world

Iv in the two churches AIthougb there are only 260 But the buildings weremiddot badly families in the parish the new

Qn need of repair So in 1964 the ~church is already more than half lttId frame church of St Francis paid for and the parish topped

middot Xavier whose parish records go its quota in the archdiocesan back to 1863 and which was re- education expansion drive

bull ~ I bull

Bishop Pmiddoterry Says New Orleans Has Healthy Racial Climate

DENVER (NC) - Auxiliary still has more influence thaa Bishop Harold R Perry SyD any other Negro in the civil of New Odeans first AmeJican rights movement Catholic Negro bishop in this He (Bishop Perry) has been

lt1lentury said here a hea~thy very favorably received in New racial climate will exist wher- Orleans eve~ the Negro has a chan~ to Some Cannot WaU voice his grievances He said there will undoubtedshy

Bisnop Perry dted New 9r- ly be some civil rights groups lleans as an example sayipg the who disapprove lt)f non-violence racial climate there is healthy and occasional demonstrationS

because of an interracial council by those who cannot wait appointed by Louisiana~ov Of course I am a Negro and

John J McKeithen to help splve we have been waiting a long rmcial problems time If you take the long view I There are no demonstra~ions complete equality cant come too and riots and very little picket- quickly he added~

lng he said The cotiJlc~1 i-e- He said he has been received lieves tensions and if the Negro very well even enthusiastically has a forum to talk over his con- in New Orleans Picketing outshyeerns he will not demonstrate side the church where he was

Schools Integrated ~onsecrated he s3id Was DOt typical of the general feeling in

The 50-year-old prelate said New Orleans be is proud New Orleans has in- As an evidence of his popushytegrated all Its schools Its a larity he said he spoke at ninemiddot large percentage not just token graduations in June and has ofshyhe added ficiated at Confirmation in 24

He said Catholics are doing parishes their part to advance equality of opportunity in his citymiddot 1 think [EceQJl1illeIJilD~~ CCrrnDDOdegthere has been Ii united effort tl)Ir If

by all faiths and we would like ~~ ~DcopyQJIJilampIbgtD~~~DIJil to keep it that way he de- CRANSTON (NC) I hdared - n a s ow The New Orleans bishop also of the ecumenical spirit lea4ers ~ommented on ~ wide range of of major religious faiths in this

area took part in a combined eivil rights issues saying

The new militancy shown by bull religious and groundbreaking Visit the BClI~~ie$Mp anldllode alIeplica of the Old iFal~middot River Bill1e~ middottmiddotsom~ civi~ rights groups is a service on the site of the proshy

posed Church of the Annunciashypassing phase tion Greek Orth()dox lours start every 30 minutes

The majority of Negroes are Archbishop lakovo primate lJympathetic to the non-violent of the Greek Orthodox Church Opeill aU year round - 9 AM to Sunsetphilosophy of the Rev Dr Mar- of North and South America of tin Luther King and Dr King ficiated at the open air hierar- For Group Arrangements Call 678-1100 chal Divine Liturgy service at-

Serra Meeting tended by more than 500 pershy l)OOOO()ooOOC)ooOOClOOC)ooOOC)OO~IOOl sons

THIS MESSAGE Sp()NSORED IV lHE FOllOWING INDIVIDUALSATLANTIC CITY (NC) - A Participants in the groundshyeonference for members of Ser- breaking ceremony included AND BUSINESS CONCERNS IN GREATER FALL RIVERlIa Clubs in the New York-New Catholic Bishop Russell J MoshyJersey - eastern Pennsyivania Vinney of Igtrovidence Archshy ANN DALE PRODUCTS INC MACKIENZIE amp WINSLOW INC area will be held here Sept 23 deacon William L Kite represhy II~DY ELECTRIC SUPPLY COMASON FURNITURE SHOWROOMS tKi 25 Msgr William Noe Field senting the Rt Rev John Seville CASCADE DRUG CO GERALD E McNALLY CONTRACTOItiff Seton Hall University South Higgins Episcopal Bishop of GLOBE MANUFACTURING CO SOBILC)FF BROTHERS Orange NJ will give the key- Rhode Island Dr Wayne ~is

~~TGHINSON OIL COa~te address Sept 24 apoundter a executive director ofmiddot the Rhode STERUllIG BEVERAGES INC

~A Mc~HIRR ~9MPANY TEXTIU WORKERS UNION Of AMERICAeOncelebrated Mass at which the 1s~and Council of Churches ~nd ~rE~~ATIQNALV4DIES GARMENT 1 bull AlL~tO - principal concelebrant will be Rabbi Jerome Smiddot Gurland Gf

WORKERS UNION (EUOW CAI COMPANY Bishop George W Ahr of Tren~ ~telligtl~ Sinai 1epresentingthe ton Bhode Island Board of Rabbiamp bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull0 MssSelbullbull

~ ~ ~ - bull bull bull bull I ~ j

- ~

_-- -

0

WomenB~ Job Corps Members middotAid Youngsters Improve Reading

OMAHA (NC)-Omaha Wom- chesne Mother Moody found a ens Job Corps members joined benefactor to supply ihe a11shywith five graduates of Duchesne importlnt incentive program College and Academy of the Thanks to a generous racetrack

Sacred Heart here to upgrade bettor Who won the daily double the reading level of local public there was enough money for school youngsters candy bar prizes and two picnics

The progra~ ca]]edProject An indication or- the success of Upstart was first conceIved by the program was found in the Mother Helen Condon dean of reaction of the students A reshythe Nebraska co]]eg~ Mother cent visitor asked one of the Rosemary Moody aSsIstant pro- young boys Why are you here fessor o~ ~sYChology volunteer~ Did someone make you come to adminIster and execute themiddot program

The original plans were to take a group of seventh graders from Horace Mann Junior High School and tutor them in develshyopmental reading and study skills It soon became apparent that some rather basic instrucshytion was required some of the ehildren were still reading at the second grade level

Duchesnes elementary school was offered for use by Mother Helen Sheahan superior An Omaha public school official suggested that the Omaha Wom- ens Job Corps be contacted to see if they could furnish high school graduates as tutors Robshyert Bathke Job Corps education director soon put five young ladies at Mother Moodys disshyposal

Five recent Duchesne gradushyates volunteered to train the tutors for two weeks before the program actually began The Duchesne alumnae eventualiy elected to stay on for the entire program

Mother Moodymiddot was so imshypressed with the potential of the Job Corps enro]]ees that she exshytended their sessions through the rest of the summer and made college preparatory work avail shyable to them

Student Reaction Perha~s one of the more unshy

usual aspects of the entire Upshystart program was its lack of financing The only real subsidy (about $500) was from the OMaha Public School system the bulk of which went to the Omah~ Transit Company for bus service

The equipment used in the classrooms was borrowed from the public schools the Omaha Womens Job Corps and Du-

Plan to Supplement History Books

SAN FRANCISCO (NC) shyA supplementary text showing the contributions of minority groups in United States history will be added to history and social science books already in use in archdiocesan schools here

The supplement containing some 150 pages will deal chroshynologica]]y with the contribu- tions of Jews Negroes Orientais and various nationalities from southern Europe

It is being prepared by a speshycial studly committee which illl evaluating current textbooks found need for more thorough material on the part minority

groups have played in the OOUDshytry1s history

Leave Providence For Mission Work

PROVIDENCE (NC) - Four Capuchin priest and two layshymen left New York by plane for mission work in the Santa Rosa de Copan diocese Honduras

Father Ad ria n Holzmeister OFM Cap provincial of tile Capuchins St Mary province with headquarters here said the six will work among some 50000 persons in Mlree parishes in the state of Ocotepeque He said

other mjssionersmiddotas they become ayailabie wiD be sent to aid Bishop Jose Canama CbampvezCli tile diocese

He looked up and said Im here because I want to learn to read and I like it Two girls who missed the morning bus to Duchesne gave another exain-ple of determination to learn Jhey undertook a two-hour five mile walk rather than miss a day of class

L R oy etreats Contlnu~d from Page Six

laymens convention-an effort to provide some figure of speech some image to suggest to those in the Church and to those out-

side what is the inner nature of the Church

Alluding to Scriptures refershyences to the Church in terms of sheep and shepherds the former Hub Auxiliary Bishop asked How many people in Boston have ever seen a sheep Sheep and shepherds say little to youngstersmiddot in housing projects or even in the suburbs

The Bishop who is epiScopal advisor for the NCLRC officiashyted at the lighting of an eightshyfoot candle which symbolized the

conference theme-uThe Light of Chr~st The candle burned throughout the convention

Speakers stressed the retreat program is geared to demOJishystrate to the world that the way of Christ can become more meaningiful to men of our time

Bishop Ernest J Primeau of Manchester reminded delegates of recent profound changes withshyin the Church

If the lay retreat movement is to remain vital and relevant

he said it cannot be static It must be in harmony with the times at all times

Honest Call1Se

Our retreat houses could 00-middot eome so to speak the equipment and training centers for the apostolates of the laity he adshydect

Bishop Primeau urged laymei to learn from modern science particularly in the field of hushyman psychology He said there is an opportunity as well to learn from other organizations both secular and religious He added The youth of today are un-

selfish and in large numbers they are seeking for an honest cause to which they can dedicate themshyselves as witness their devotion to the Peace Corps and the civil rights movement

Modernize AncEtenlt Puerto Rico CIl1llLmlrch

SAN JUAN (NC) =- A lPJt8shyyear-old church one of the most popularmiddot in this capital city~ ~

going modern Archbishop Luis Aponte of

San Juan has inaugurated middotal campaign for funds for restorashytion of St Anns a public orashytory now badly illl need of Jeshypairs

1ft addition to restoration the ehurch also Will be equipped with air conditioning The eburch is the archdiocesan ceDltgt ~r for the Confraternity Gi Christian Doctrine and perpetual adoration of the Blessed Sacrashyment Built ill 184B the cburch weplaced an edifice which dated )Iaek iG tile lWi century

PROFESSION ANJ)) RECEPTION Four postulants beshycame canonical novices and two prof~ssed their vows as Sisters of St Joseph at ceremonies at the Blessed Sacrashyment Church Fall River Left column top to bottom Sr Gerard Marie (first vows) Sr Anne Therese Sr Rita Josshyeph Bishop Connolly who received the sisters Right colshyumn Sr Anne Denise Sr St Paul and Sr Alfred Marie (renewed temporary vow-s)

Specialmiddot Education Priests Visi~ PaJ~ents Homes to ExplOJon

SignificOJlI1lce off Baptismal Ritual

Thurs Aug 25 1966

Governor Balks

ST JEAN (NC)-Sunday bapshytisms are prece~ed by Saturday nights special educational proshygrams in a number of Catholic homes here in Quebec

The program to prepare the whole family for baptism through a home visit was deshyvised three years ago by a group of pries~s working togeth~r as a pastoral team

central idea of the program ~s that it is good for the priest to be with his people at imporshytant times in their lives~ Atmiddot these times people are dispOSed to receive the message of Christ

as it applies to their circumshystances the developers of the plan reported

The visiting priest explains the lOOremonies of the next day and the symbolic meaning of various parts of the baptismal ritual

Pilgrims Wctmlk TORONTO (NC) -The 10th

annual walking pilgrimage to the Canadian Martyrs shrine at Midland Ont will begin here Wednesday Organized by the Guild of St John de la Lande the pilgrimage will cover the 100 miles to the shrine in five days a~riving there Sunday Sept 4

LEMIEUX PLUMBING amp HEATING INC

fof Oomestic l~ andmiddot Industrial ~ Sales and Service

Oil Burners WY 5-1631

2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE NEW BEDFORD

Relatives neighbors or the prospective gorlparents may be presentbut themiddot home visit usually involves just the parents and their children

The ide is to make the preshybaptism vsit an oppodunity for dialogue between the priest and the parents rather than a conshyference

Ten parishes in the St Jean diocese have adopted the praeshytice along with l few Montreal parishes Father Marcil Brillon secretary of the St Jean litur- gical commission said he exshypects the practice to spread

FALSE TEETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass Many wearers of false teeth suJIer

embarrassment Qecause their platesdrop Blip or wobble at Just the wrong time Dont live In fear of thts happening to you Just sprinkle a little FASTEErH the non-acid powder on your plates Holds false teeth more firmly so they feel more comfortable Checks denture breath Dentures that fit are essential to health See your dentist regularlyGet FASTEETH at all drug counters

At Proposals MONTPELIER (NC) - Vershy

monts Gov Philip Hoff said he bas extreme reservations conshycerning abortion and sterilizashytion proposals contained in a reshyport of an adivsory committee on the mental retardation situshyation in the middotstate

The report called for legal sanctioning of induced abortion in cases where there appears to be a high risk of mental retarshydation of an unborn child

Thereport also contained a suggestion concerning steriliza shytion of the mentally retarded

Apart from the recommenda~ tions on legalized abortion and sterilization of the mentally reshytarded I must S4ly it was II good report Gov Hoff said He said lie will study the report with utmost care before taking any action 0

Expresses Thanks To Holy Father

VATICAN CITY (NC) -The vice prime minister of Vietnam has paid a visit to Pope Paul VI to thank him for his peace efshyforts and generous help to reshylieve the suffering of the Vietshynamese people General Nguyen Huu Co vice prime minister and secretary of state for national defense of Vietnam visited privately withshythe Pope for 30 minutes Accord- ing to a Vatican Press Office bulletin

The vice prime minister in the name of South Vietnam exshypressed profound gratitude for the valid support always given by the head of the Catholic Church and of the Holy See in the cause of peace and for the generous assistance sent by the Holy Father to relieve the sufshyfering of those persons torshymented by war The distinguishshyed visitor then continued tomiddot deshyclare that the intentions of South Vietnam are directed only toward an affirmation of the liberty of its own nation and Wgt arriving at a just peace in honor and concord

Complete

BANKING SERVICE

for Bristol County

Bristol County Trust Company

TAUNTON MASS

THE ~ANK ON TAUNTON GREEN

Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Bristol Community College Offers Evening Classes

64 Durfee St Fall River Credit classes begin September 19 1966

Register Now Mondays thrrough Thursdays 200-500 PM Courses for college credit or self improvement are offered ill

The arts languages and literature Behavioral and social sciences accounting business

administration and secretarial scieRCe Mathematics science engineering and electro-mechanical technology

Advisors Availabie During ~egistration Hours

16 THE AI~ ~-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

C~nsiders Instability Causes In Latin American lamds

From Social R-evolution in the New Latin Ameriea Edited by John J Considine MM

There are many causes of instability in Latin America Some have said in the past that it is an inheritance frQm

Spain They feel that the years of Spanishauthoritarianism rendered the colonies incapable of integrating themselves into a more balanced social system Because they had there exists the problem of low

denSity of population with a lackpreviously lacked indepenshyof internal communication In-dent creole authority the many cases there is even a lanshy

colonies were unprepared to acshy guage barrier eept a more democratic authorshy The problem of an underdeshyity In his book veloped economy has also beenBetween Freeshy a factor in forming Latin Anlershy clom and Fear ican social structureGerman Arcinshy On the social level the eleshyiegas draws a ments I have mentioned favorcomparison beshy an internal lack of class strucshytween the Enshy ture that involves a juxtaposishyglish and Spanshy tion rather than a social organi shyish governments zation and integration Democshyin the Americas racy on the other hand presupshyIn ihe north the poses a large scale integrationcolonists came in of the people in the politicalshysearch of freeshy economic-social life of thedom IIi the end nationthe founding of the Nodh The masses of -illiterates inAmerican colonies was only the Latin America who do not parshyobvious culmination of a process ticipate in these areas have noalready begun It was the reafshy iilterest in government thoughfirmation of customs already inshy their interest and loyalty maygrained in the social milieu It be enlisted by the demagoguewas an evolution not a real revshyolution for these settlers were Formation or Dictatorships accustomed to autonomy The A dictatorship takes form

authority pf their governors was when one or more pressure more democratic since they groups unchallenged seizes the worked closely with the popular power of governmentassemblies From the beginshy In order to better understand ning the keenest concern of the the types of dictatorship found North American colonist was for in Latin America let us elCamshyfreedom of worship and his hosshy ine the different forms of revoshytility to the Church of England lution and the various ways in was evident which the pressure groups

On the contrary Latin Amershy bring their influence to bearIca was part of an empire The Kalmal1 Silvert distinguishesSpaniards came to dominate and these types in his book Reaction evangelize The viceroy represhy and Revolution in Latin Amershysented the king who was an abshy ica which is written in -Englishsolute monarch The role of Silvert shows the relationshipshyassembly in Latin America was between dictatorships and the secondary arid represented exshy extreme indivdualism found in tremely liIIlited power these countries

Independence in the Latin The first type of revolution American nations entailed a real named is what Silvert calls the revolution since from the beginshy simple brracks revolt Most of ning they were forced tb look for the outbreaks especially in the new political and social forms past century have been of this

Religiousliberty did not elCshy kind The barracks revolt occurs ist in the Latin American coloshy typically in a big class society nies since all were obliged to It is carried out by the amlY

membership in the Cathoiic sompoundtimes in its own name and Church sometimes in behalf of a chosen

Unassimilated Groups leader This type of revolution - rarely calses widesprelld publicThis comparison will help in

disturbance since it representsunderstanding the Latin Amershymerely a switch in governmentican problem though it will not from one general to anotherfully explain -it We must acshy

knowledge that the political The second type the peasant phenomeinon has a direct COIshy revolt is generally of little sigshyrelatio~1 with demographic probshy nificance and limited in effect lems such as the existence of to a locality though the Mexican large unassitnilated groups as revolution at the beginning of well as masses of mestizos un this century would perhaps fall derdeveloped and deprived who in this category can scarcely be said to partici shy Third the regional revolt pate in twentieth century chili shy commcn in the early days of zation Although these groups Latin American independence form a part of the nation they Here _the caudillo strove to put are not integrated either socially down provincial revolts and to eulturally or politically centralize power in an authorishy

Despite the over-all demoshy tarian I e g i () n a I government g~aphic explosion in some areas Typical of the caudillos who led

regional revolts was Rosas of Argentina

Plans Participation The fourth a more modern type of revolution Silvert callsIn Liturgical Week the complicated barracks revolt

HOUSTON (NC) - The 1966 This is an insurrection that inshyLiturgical Week here fOI the -volves civilian as well as mili shyfirst time in its 25-year history tary groups with widespread will have a full scale program military action for those interested in the The issues are ideological and Eastern Church relate to political parties as well

As part of the Liturgical Week as _ other interest groups The program the Divine Liturgy Cuban revolution in its beginshy(Mass) of St John Chrysostom nings might be considered -an will be celebrated entirely in example Although this is the English and Communion will be most prevalent type ainong modshydjstributed under both species ernday revolutions excetions Chief celebrant of the Liturgy are the revolts which overthrew will be Archbishop Paul Achkar Peron in Argentina Perez-JimeshyGreek Catholic ~-chbishop of nez in Venezuela and -Rojas Lattaquia in Syua Pinilla in Colombia

SISTER AMBROSE

Says SOo Africa Needs Americans

WASHINGTON (NC)-Yanshykee come over a statement which would do much to boost the morale of Americans in sevshyeral parts of the world could well summarize what an Irish missionary nun to South Africa

-has been saying during a visit here _

The wonderful hospitality of theAmerican people has imshypressed Sister Ambrose Harty Gf the Sisters of the Holy Family She lamens the fact that opporshytunities to receive Americans in a like manner have been few and far between during her 20 years in South Africa

Youve got such a lot to give she said here in an ~ntershyview during which she expressed a strong desire to see greatly inshycreased people-to-people relashytio~s between the country where she serves and the United States

Sister Ambrose was particushylarly interested in the Peace Corps ann reported that its purshyposes and work are hardly known by the people of Soutli Africa I haVent heard it disshycussed at all she said (The Peace Corps has not been invited into the country) (

With words of praise for the missionary work being done iii the South African Republic by Oblate arid Paulist missionaries from the United States she also expressed regret at the general paucity of missioners from this country There particularly is an almost total lack of nuns she said Only 71 Catholic missionshyaries from the United States inshycluding 16 nuns are serving ilm South Africa

Married Priests AMSTERDAM (NC)-A

Dutch public opinion poli h8lll shown that 11 per cent of the Netherlands p e 0 pIe woulci rather have III married Catholi4l clergy than a celibate clergy The poll including members ai all and no denominations

-showed that 68 per cent of the Catholics queried preferred III married clergy

~~

(DEBROSS OIL ( ~ co ( ~ Heating Oils

~ and BMIIJUrs ~

~ 365 NORYIoli IFROIlir SUEampll ( rJ NEW IBIEDIFOR

~ WYmafi 2middot5534 (

I~~~

Parishes Share DETROIT (NC) - Twentyshy

nine urban parishes here have decided to help one another meet the rising cost of education

At the elementary level parshyepts will pay $50 per family $75 per family for non-Catholic parishioners and $75 per student

Danish Catholic COPENHAGEN (NC) -Thereshy

are 11321 Catholics in the Danish capitalaccording to a report issued by the Copenhagen statistical office They consti shytute the second largest religious entity there next to the Luthershyans members of the State Church The total number of Catholics in Denmark is approxshyimately 26000 Total population is 35 lllillion

Education Costs for Catholics outside the parish

At the high school level the tuition cost is $H)O per student in or out of the parish With the exception of textbooks this amount eliminates aU extra fee charged up to now

Father Norman P Thomas director of the Urban Parisll Apostolate said the greatest efshyfect of the joint effort will be experienced by the pastor who sends parish youngsters to a higll school operated by any of the 2 participating parishes

In this instance the students parishes will be expected to pay the difference between the tui shytion charged and the actual cost per student The latter fee laM been set by the parochial school office at over $200 per year

ETHIOPIA- THE NEW AFRICA

- HOLY FATlftRB MIBBIIDN AID TO THI DRIENTAL OHURCH

- BROTHER What happens In Ethiopia when an American MICHAEL Christian Brother (he could be your son brother

REYNOLDS nephew) Is told to upgrade Catholic schools He FROM borrows a Jeep (or a mule) visits the schools

PROVIDENCE RI one by one writes home for pencils and better REPORTS textbooks and then beginsbullbull This is the new

fROM Africa Brother Michael Reynolds reports enshyADDIS thusiasticallyfrom Addis Ababa It can be a BABJpeacefuf progressive Christian Africa tom~rmiddot

row Just give us schools give us time and with Gods help the job will De donel bull bullThe schools are for villages like Aressa Aiga Biers Wartll8~

-which have no school The youngsters know that knowledge i~ their only chance theyll go without food to learnbullbullbull What does It cost to build a schoolf Only $2950 says Brother Michael for the villagers snd the children give their laborfreemiddotofmiddotcharge We can train a catemiddot chlst for only $40 bullbullbull In thanksgiving to God for what you know will you do what you can ($100 $75 $50 $25 $15 $10 $5 $2) to give these youngsters a chance The school will be named for your favorite saint and the children will pray for your loved ones daily If you build It all byyourself ($2950) School will open late this year-but better late than never-If you Vlrit~ to us right now

WHAT Our priests there who receive no othor income IELSE for food and clothing will offer promptly the

FOR Masses you request Well forward your Mass ETHOPIAr Inten~ons through the Holy Fathers officebull

40 young lads studying for the priesthood In Decamere lose their football when It goes Into a nelghbers garden A large field can be bought ~velled and mede safe for sports fer $975

MAKINQ ~~IOOOO will ovfde bull OOfDj)lete parjstlplantA (Ohuroh rectory convent andscbool) In southshy

WiW ImIAdla In memorybullbullbullbull $600 will ttiln a native lrfHt1SOO bull native Sfster Our legal tltI Cl~1HOUO NWt lAir WIUAH AHOCIAnONo

_-------------~shytt coINIILOIIlt IUMIIIND ~ bullbull la IJIIr bull _1OIt~=-=_==-=

PI _UM~gt

Mum ClO1IIponwith your mt__=-~~_ _ ~i offrtnt ~~ erryen 8TAlI-lPCODI_

HI IATHaLl1 RIIiAR 811 WILAbullbull AIaDIATaN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS IRANCUS CARDINAL SPELLMAN President MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretal)f Write OATHOLIO NfIAR IiAST WELFARE Assoo 1)80 MadlsolJ Avenuomiddot New York NY 10017 -felGpilonel 212YUkon 6middot6840

Dormitory Proves Stonehill Permanently Coeducational

Way back in 1951 when the first girl enrolled in Stoneshyhill College no one could have imagined that a girls dormishytory would ever be built onmiddot the campus But the sound of steam shovels and hammers filling the air over the lovely grounds in Easton is proof

and two girls from the seniorthat the long planned for daslr-assisting the housemothergirls dorm will soon be a Mrs Grace Callahan

reality When Stonehill was The experiment worked so founded in 1948 as a mens colshy well in fact that this coming lege the fledgling school had Fall both the freshman and just gotten off to a good start sophomore girls will be housed when the Korean War came this way leaving only the junior along and emptied the classshy and senior girls still renting Yooms as the young men went quarters in private homes chosen into the services by the college as all the nonshy

That was the year that many commuting girls have done in small colleges had to close their the past gates forever But at Stonehill That typical campus situation the Holy Cross order was detershy -the sorority house-is not in mined to hold onto this new the picture at Stonehill-or frashyschool that they had planned for ternity houses either for that so long matter No sororities or fraternishy

What could they do to keep ties are allowed on the campus the college operating until the There is a cl11b however that war was over and the boys came is the girls own - the Crosier back Of course Open their Club Mrs Yosgandes is the gates to girl students clubs faculty advisor and she deshy

Faculty Pleased scribes it as the organization What started out as a temposhy for women studentE who want

rary expediency somehow over to contribute in their own parshythe years has acquired a happy middotticular way as women to their permanancy No one could be college more pleased about this turn of Through their annualmusical events than the Stonehill faculty Crosier Curtain Calls theyitself raise money to acquire manymiddot

Helping out in Jhe ground things that add beauty and breaking ceremony for the new charm to campus life This yeardorm Mrs Virginia Yosgandes they purchased two very lovelythe Dean of Women at the colshy silver tea and coffee services lege saiei I guess everyone will Any official group at the collegereally believe that the girls are is allowed to borrow the sets and here til stay they have already been used in

Mrs Yosgandes says that since many functions she first came to the Stonehill New Signfaculty in 1958 rumors have

Mrs Yosgandes says Thebeen popping up that Stonehill girls will be very pleased whenwill soon return to its original they come back th~~ Fallto seestatus as an all male school The the beautiful new sign theynew dorm she says will be visshybought for the college installedible proof of the permanancy of on Route No 138 women on the beautiful campus

Its very easy to picture theThe $1150000 building deshyvery charming Dean presidingsigned to accommodate 200 girls

graciously at a faculty tea Aand proctors will be three stories parishioner of Immaculate Conshyof red brick Architects W Chesshyception chulCh in Easton she ister arown and Associates and in ~rivate life an enthusiasticwntractors C A Batson and homemaker anc the mother of aCompany are planning to comshy13 year old daughter Christineplete work on the dorm in time Her husband John is assistantfor the opening of classes in principal at Franklin JuniorSeptember 1967 It will be the High first unit of a five dormitory

She speaks with great convicshycomplex planned fo the women on tion about college girls holdingcampus

onto feminine ideals while surshyKitchen ~pace rounded-and at Stonjhill outshyMrs Yosgandes is happy about numbered 3 to 1- by menthe fact that the new dorm will While were encoulaging themhave a kitchenette on each floor to be acdve in thpound communitywhere the girls can cook small and the church and in politicsmeals and entertain guests Shes and encouragint them to deshyhoping that the dorms built after

more velop their abilities to the full shythis me will providtgt even est-we never fail to take intokitchen space for the girls to account the fact that they arepractice the culinary arts women and in this competitiveM a n~ tImes homemaking world theyll have to -fight toskills come to a complete halt maintain their feminine idenshywhen a girl goes to college she tity says Apparently all classroom

work and rio cooking make Jane Coed Actiiti~s

Coed a dull girl in the room When she fi rst came to the where shell be spending a great college she sltys the girls were deal of time after graduationshy mainly interested in strictlythe dtchen feminine extra curricular activishy

Mrs Yosgandes says A great ties-fastion shows teas gids many cCJlleges have been workshy sports Bd this has changed radshying witt this problem and wonshy ically in the last few years and dering what to do about it Beshy now the girls are much more inshycause theyve had no living terested in the coed acti vitiesshyquarters for girls on campus the newspapers the debating Stonehiiil has had to do out of team the drama club Stonehill necessit) what many other colshy is noted a~ one of a small handshyleges have chosen to do recently ful gtf Catholic colleges where The Dean describp~ an experishy girls are middotactive in every part of ment that the collFge tJied last college life Every coure at yeal tha has worked out exshy StonehHj is opel to girls tremely well We still havent had a woman

Experiment Successful president of our student governshyThe college leased a grollp of ing body the Senate Mrs

rooms il an apartmelt building Yosgandes says Now girls in Brockton last Fall where all what are yOIi waiting for the freshman girls who were not commuters-55 of them-lived in housekeeping apartments In Red Groups There were four girls in each BERLIN (NC)-Over 85 per apartment all sharing the reshy (ent of East German children sponsibilities of housekeeping between the ltlges of 6 and 14 are

The girls hat two sets of mCl11)ers of communist youth 1)IoctOS - two aIumni wumen ~nIUps

lrt-OE ANCH0) 17 Thurs Aug 25 1966

PriestCuod Goal Of Top Skater

GREAT FALLS (NC)-A good many folks in this Montana toWlll will attest that teenager J Mishlll Petkevich is a pretty good skate -on or oH the ice

The affable blond youngster 17 topped a field of 136 pershyformers in the three-day Lake Placid N Y international free style competition sanctioned by the U S and Canadian Figure Skating Assoclations The Great Falls lad was the judges unamiddot1ishymous choice for the mens gold medal in the finals

But Petkevich doesnt lose his cool off the ice His classmates and teachers at Great Falls Censhytral 3igh School claim hes liIl

winner in every event He spends more than 40 hours 11 week in skating training but carries the full load of class studies and consistently turns Up on the schools honor roll Hes a member of the National Honor Society

The school supported me ami the way Everyone has beeEl wonderfUl to me the modest youngster saia Hes been -skatshying since he was 2 He credit his achievements to his Catholic Faith the sacrifices of his parshyents and of Arthur Bourke senshyiormiddot professional of the Great Falls Figure Skating Club He said All I did was skatemiddotGROUND-BREAKING The Very Rev John T Corr

I hope some day to become~esc president of Stonehill College turns a shovelful of priest Petkevich said wbeilearth to mark start of construction 0pound a 200-student dormshy a~ked his ambition I hope 14gt itory for women on the Stonehill campus Watching the proshy attend Notre Dame for at leasa celtlures are left to right Mrs Virginia Yosgandes dean af two years and then I h9pe to gf)

to the Catholic University fl4women John C Doody 66 Alumni fund chairman Robert AmericaBatson contractor Harold Bonvie ass~iate of the archishytect

Msgr Canty Continued from Page OneRussian Schools ing studies at S1 Marys High

Taunton Boston- College and S1 Bernards Seminary RochesshyChristian Brother Lauds Students terN Y

nespect for Intellectuols He served as assistant at Our Lady 01 the Isle NantucketCHICAGO (NC)-Students in to foreign languages than Amershy Holy Family Taunton St

schools behind the Iron Curtain icans Most students take a Marys Barrowsville and Stgo at their studies with a passhy seven-year sequence of English Johns Attleboro He was apshysion said Brother Kevin Mark German or French English he pointed to the Chaplains CorPJFSC who toured Russia and added is the most popular lanshy of the United States Navy infour satellite countries with 19 guage and more emphasis is January 1942 and retiredwitbother U S rducatois placeltl on reading and speaking the rank of captain in Decemshy

Brothel Mark who is princishy than on writing it ber 196gt Pope John XXIII pal 9f St Mels high school here Brother Mark said that there elevated him to the rank of attributed much of their motivashy is almost nothing that he would Domestil Prelate with the title tion to the students attitude that lift from the Soviet school sysshy of Right Reverend Monsignor iI What I do does contribute to tem and apply in the U S May 1962 the welfare of the state He admitted however that Bishop Connolly named Monshy

Brother said he felt that stushy they do get results They have a signor Canty pastor of St Paulsdents in this country lack motishy tremendous capacity for conshy Taunt-ln in December 1963 vation because were spoiled centration when they set their Industrial improvements have sights for example their space made it that a young man can program Its not all a matter go into a trade and make very of being chained to a lab table good money BLUE RIBBON

In the Soviet Union he said there seems to be a great reshyspect for intellectuals and the LAlnNDRY student is thought of as a proshy

01 STOPfessional schJlar 273 CE~RAl AVE~UIIG CfflTERTeaching is considered a proshy

fession and remunelated accordshy e Television C FmiddotI ure illgly WY 2-6216o r-cerv

St Mels principal observed on IlA Allen St Newhdfordhis tour that there was little NEW BEDFORD questioning on the part of the students

The chSSloom situation he said is very much teacher ori shyented that is study in depth is 21 DAY PILGRIMAGES TO EUROPE done on the teachers inspiration

rou~ 1-Legion of Mary Pilgrimage leaving Sept 12th with Truth in such areas as history Father Edward A Oi-viera will visit Killarney Dublin Paris

cllld literature is accepted as a Lourdes Rome Madrid Lisbon and Fatima - Tour 2shyforegone conclusion and stushyHoly Cross Fathers Pilgrimage leaving Oct 10th with Frdents just memorize what has

already been discovered ----- lobert E McDonnell will wsit lisbon Fatima 1odrid Rome Lourdes Paris and londonIike F)rc~gn Linutges -cota cost is $82900 - Time PaymentsmiddotIn the area of science howshy arranged ever the situation is difterent

()Ii TOUR tOLDERS CONTACT STEolfEN A MARIIEYhe pont~d out because in scishyence there is an attitude of I n~ust discover Catholic Travel

-Office

The R1~middotmiddotmiddotO p oth-r Mark ~ltk St New Befl- -ass 02748

said ~ ve 11111j Ill)le auention

BURNERS

BUrntlr Service

Famous Reading HARDCQAl

NEW ENGLAND COKE

t8 THE ~NCHOR-Dioceseof fo Rivef-Thurs Aug 25 1966 J~sut I)riest Says Some Public I b M t EmploYE~~S Have Right to Strike

-

Urges uO or ovemen S NEW (NC) -Public however YORK Government hasmiddot h C employees in certain fields have been expanding its cQncern andIn Heml$p ere ooperate the right to strike against the has beenmoving into ar~as of government a priest declared transportation education recre-

By MsgrGooJrge C Higgins (Director Socian Actiolll Dept NCWC)

The relationship between the American labor moveshyment and the Latin American Confed~ration of Christian Trade Unions (CLASC) leaves much to be desired as we

middot thO d th 1- have aready noted severa1 t Imes m IS co umn urmg e

past four or five years The two movements are deeply different things to different peoshy

auspicious of one another and just when they seem to be on the verge of settling or at least -patching up their differshyences they go at it again and recklesslystart hurling insults at one another

To jUdge from What they sayIi b 0 u t on e another publicshy1yen as well as privately on e would t h ink that they were natural-born enshyemies whe~eas in fact they have much in common-much inore than they seem to realizeshyand for obvious reasons ought violent MisS Duncan was an officer of The fourth public member Harshyto be c60p~rating With onean- Moreo~er at least one promi~theSodality a cheerleader for vardlaw school professorVern ether as closely as pOSSible nent spokesman for the AFL- four years a member of the Ten- Countryman half ci-itiCized the This writer has learn~ci the hard WR and muc~ to hiS so~-row that any outSider who 18

fOolish enough totryto mediatek f

~tween them JS as mg or troouble

C f t Gommun same If for example one suggests

as I have done on more than one Occasion that soine of the anti U S propaganda emanating from CLASCsources revealS atremely harmful to the cause of n a i v e misunderstanding of Amerlcan trade unionism and American capitalism andor ari $ver-simplification of Catholic Social teaching he runs the risk 9f being written off as a blind -not tOsay reactionary apologist for so-called Yanqui ~mperial-

iBm If on the other hand oneslig

gests that some of the anti- CLASC propaganda enianating

fro m AFL-CI0 sources is equally naive and unsoPllisti shyeatedhe runs the same Sort of risk in reverse That is to say he is likely to be told--v~ry politely of course -that if he were to take off his Catholic blinkers and look at the record objectively he would quickly come to realize that CLASC is in reality playing t~ecipal rival in Latin America) riages in their mission parishes communist game in Latin Amer- there is a gEirierous mixture of Msgr Milia stated Since the iea superficial appearances to cultural chauvinism and envy Ogdensburg mission was opened the contrary notwithstanding that accompanies the most legit- a modern new church bas been

Both CaD Learn imate misgivings built under its direction in the Be that as it may I still think Even the Latinos middotthemselve~ seaport ofMatararii two mission

~t CLASC has a lot to learn he points out will admit on ac- churches have oeen completed about _ and from American casion that their consumirig fear and a lalge parish church and trade unionism And if that of Yanqui imperialism is often center are currently under conshymakes me a reactionary Yankee irrational But there it is he re- struction in Mollendo ehauvinist so be it minds us and the basic prob-

By the same token however aiso think that the American

labor movement has much to learn about -- and from - the Christian trade union movement in Latin America The first thing it has to learn is that the Am~r-leap philosophy of pure-andshysimple bread-~d-butter union ism which all things considshyered has worked satisfactorily in this country is not necessarily well adapted to the present-day Deeds of Latin America

Meaning of Revolution Another way of saying the

same thing is that American iabor representativesworking on Latin America problemswm have to reconcile themselves to the fact that a social revolu-Uon is called for in Latin American labor federation that doesnt subscribe to a revolushytionary ideology is probably doomed to failure

The word revolution meaos J-

pIe of course To the leaders of CLASC it means a sweeping program of socioeconomic and political reform which goes far beyond the limited goals of bread-and-butter unionism

The leaders of CLASC are convinced that such a revolushytioo is demanded bythe Chrisshytian social ethic to which they subscribe and from which they derive their ideology

Perceptive Critique Some U S Labor repshy

resentatives are skeptical to say the least~bout the allegedly Christian content of CLASCs militant ideology They admit theneed for a peaceful revolushytion in Latin Americn butthey are convinced thatCLASC wants this revolution to be Feehan High School Attleboro alties in a letter tc therimes

lem is how to insure con~ PAVlA V I tlnuing cooperation between 0 untee rs Yanqui and Latino in spite of Complete TlIainirigit

Such cooperation Dr Hawkins WASHINGTON (NC)-Fortyshyconcludes will be impossible unshyless the leaders of the American labor movement positively indi~

cete their acceptance of social revolution in Latin America This will require he says

more than the generous transshyfusions of economic aid the stimulation under United States

labors auspices of leadership training programs for workers

and other cooperative ventures Need Broader View

What is required he insists ltCia a broader view-an ability on the part of the American la bor statemen to adopt policies that will not always accord with OUI own value~ and more speshy

cificall~ the tempering of (their) hosannas to free entershyprUie ___

inter-American labor unity I fully agree in this respect with Dr Carroll Hawkins Associate

Professor of Political Science at Michigan State University who recently published a most pershyceptive critique of American trade union policy in Latin- Catholics in Mollendo Peru the

America (The 0RIT and Amer diocesan missions director reshyican Trade Unions Conflicting ported Perspectives Industrial Rela- The New York priests were tionsand Social Changes in sent to Peru after Pope Paul Latin America University of vi -asked that more priests be Florida Press) pr9vjd~d fOr the people opoundSouth

Basic Problem America Msgr Anthony A Mi-Dr Hawkins admits of course lia said He estimated more than

that in all the Latin American 90 percent of the priests in criticism of United States unioniperu are from other countries in the ORIT (the Latin Ameli can regional unit of the Interna In 1965 the priests from Ogshytional Confederation of Free denburg administered 445 bap-Trade Unions and CLASCs prin tisms and perfoImed 64 mar-

CIOhas publicly charged in ej_ nis Club for two years and a suggested penaltiel fect that CLASCs ideology three yeaT member of the FU- owes more to Marxism than it ture Nurses club Father Carey sl~id the ~ays does to Christianity He finds it when pay and working condi-

An instructor in the Confra- tions for men and women inhard he says to accept the fact ternity of Christian Doctrine that the Christian labor move- civil service were determine4 byproglam in Our Lady of Mt I g I t d d t t

t middot A e IS a Ive It n a minIS ra Ive ment 0f L a In merIca IS non- Carmel Parish Seekonk the fiat have pas ed a d Communist s n we now

In my judgment this kind of criticism of CLASC by spokesshymen fltr the AFL-CIO is ex

three volunteers have completed the Second National Training Session sponsored by the Papal Volunteers for Latin America and received assignments in some ten Latin American coun- tries

Special ceremonies ended the six-week training session at the Catholic University of America where volunteers studied the apostolic work of the Church the laymans role in the aposshytolate and principles of spiritual life as well as the religion ecoshynomics and culture of Latin America

Before leavillg for their asshysignments the volunteers will take intensive four-month lanshy

guage anl culture courses in a Latin American language centerbull

eighth winner of this scholarship plumeoursElves that we share will enter the Childrens Hosshypital School of Nursing Boston in Septembel-

Ogdensburg Priests

SellYe Peru Mission OGDENSBURG (NC) -- Four

Ogdensburg priests currently are ministering to the n~eds of_13OOO

~ere

Father Philip Carey sJ exshyecutive director of the Xavier Institute of Industrial Relations acknowledged t hat certain strikes aJre intolerable But he said that when the governmentacts in a proprietary function it must follow the same rules it prescribes for private enterprise

In a letter to the New York Times Father Carey criticized ~y implication a proposed state -llw that wetulltilincrease the penalties to be imposed on strikshying union of public employees

MlISS LHNDA DUNCAN Th~proposedlaw grew out of recommendations of a five-man

Feehan Alumna task force named by Gov Nel son Rockefeller to study the

Receives Award problem after a 19-day transit strike crippled Newmiddot York City

Miss Linda Duncan daughter in January of Mrs George Duncan and the - NeCeSSBlry for Bargaining late George Duncan 61 Sykes Father Carey one of four Rd Seekonk has been awarded pubiic members of the mayors the eighth annual scholarship of committee that helped settle the the Attleboro Area Nurses strike disagreed with two other Chapter publlc memlgters Vh_o had previshyA 1966 graduate of Bishop ously supported the stiffer pen-

and internal concord a str~ke against itconstitutes mutiny and rebellion (UCLA) Sister Muriel a native

Pgbllsh Gudelnes For Ecumenisn

ALLENTOWN (NC) - The commission of ecumenism of the Allentown diocese here in Pennshysylvania has published a 22-page booklet of ecumenical guidelines to aid priests in guiding the laity The guidelines include general

permission for non-Catholics to serve as witnesses at Catholic weddings for Catholics to serve as witnesses at non-Catholic weddings and for burial of non-Catholics in Catholic ceremonies with a priest or a non-Catholic clergyman cltmducting graveside eeremonies

SHELL DADSON OIL

24-Hollr Oil

GLE COAL amp OIL CO IncI

640 Pleasant Street Tel WY 6-8271 New Bedford

this decision-making with the working p E~ 0 P Ie themselves through the process of collective bargaining

If collective bargaining is to be the rule he said we must agree to grant the right to strike~ Without this right he said there is no union and no coll~ctive balmiddotgaining

Expands Concern-in considering strikes by pu~ lie employees he dedared one muSt distinguishb~tween the state as a sovereign and the g()vernment acting in a proprishyetary function When the state aets as the defender of the peace or the promoter of justice

of Corning Iajoined the Sisters of the Humility of Mary in 1930 In recent years she has been ehairman of professionafarts deshypartment and college registrar

ation and a host of other services formerly performed by privategroups he continued

These activities are ancillary and economic and here the state in acting in a proprishyetry function When it so acts it ought to be subject tl) the same rules of conduct the government prescribes for private entershy

prise Strikes by firefighters and powerhouse uti lit y workers would be wrong however he said because it is difficult to imagine anY benefit they might gain to counterbalance the fear- fut harm such a l strike would impose on the community Buys Banners For Memorial

CHICAGO (NC)-A Chicago advertising executive has bought 44 brightly-colored religious ~anners tat -hung in the Nashy

tlOnal Srme of the Im~aculate ConceptIon during Luci Johnshysons wed(iin~ -

Earle Ludgin a trustee of the University of Chicago said he will donate the banners to the

university~ Rockefeller Memoshyrial Chapel in memory of his late wife

The banners for which Ludgin reportedly paid more than $40000 were originally created for the Vatlcan PavIIIon at the New York World Fair

A group of Washington D C residents bought ttie banners when the fair closed and arshyranged to have them exhibited in the Shrine until they could be sold Lugdin bought themin April but agreed at the request of Shrine officials to leave them in the Shrine until after Lucia wedding

lame College Head

OTTUMWA (NC) Sis t er

Muriel Hogan has been named the third presi4ent of Ottumwa Heights College here in Iowa She succeeds Sister Marie Anshy

ciue Kennedy woo win engagem graduate study in oominunishy

eations at the University of California Los Angeles branch

Offering You 3 Savings Plans

Home Financing

WAREHAM CO-OPERATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mabull

Telephone 295-2400 Banll SerVice YlIIIIIII

I

Ask Court Bar Use of Church Propertyfor Public SchoQ~middot WHITE ~S (MC) - A the cl883rooms ~ut Church

group of some 25 citizens repre- npokesman reporte~ that in line sented by the American Jewish with New York archdiocesan Congress has asked the New York State Supreme Court here to restrain the board of Ramapo School District 2 Rockland County from holding public school classes in property leased from religious bodies

The school board faced with severe-overcrowding planned to lease eight rooms from St Josephs Catholic Church and five from lem~e Beth El in Spring Valley The action was approved by 8tateEducation Commissioner Jame$ EAllen Jr

A ComllllJJlt served 0ill the rlChool board by the AJC charged the acti~n o~ld ~otateChurchshyState separation guaranteed by the First Amendment to the Constitution as well as other provisions of the state constitushytion

It is believed to be the first wch challenge made regarding

the use of religiO18 facilities for public school use

lhe st Josephproperty conshysists of an eightclasSroom school building adjacent to but sepashyrated from the chureh It is Ill good condition but will not be used by the p8rish thismiddot year because it has bUilt a new bUildshying for expanding its acbool to 141 classes

All religioUs ~bols had Ileen removed from the oder building in preparation for its use as a public school

The district school board had offered a fair market rent for

PAV~A deg Missionary Record Continued from Page Thirteen

A nurse from Chicago baa taken Lucillellpla~on the aposshytolic team and ber purpose in returning is to help her successhy80r work into the project smoothly It takes so long to get into 11 she Aid so II dont WJmt Il~r to spendtbree

years j~ g~tting organized~

Benedictine Marks 80th Anniversary

ST JOSEPHmiddot (NC)-The oldshyest Benedictine nun in Minneshysota-and one of the oldest m the world~marked the 80th anshyniversary of her entrance into the order ma Mass for all Beneshydictine jubil~tians held at St Benedicts convent here

Sister Sophia Zimmer was 1~ years old Dec 2 1965 She Wall

born in a log cabin about 1 block away from the convent An open house for her relatives and friends was held at the conv~nt

Receives Students cAsTELGANDOLFO (NC)shyPoPe Paul vI received in audishyence at his Summer home here students frOm 34 nations includshying many non-Catholics who are taking Summer courses in the ItaUaa language aDd culture sponsored by the Rome branch of the Catholic University fII IWaD

policy the properly would be made available for public school use at a token dollar-a-year rental

cmOS Cmpetes C~~ege ~rr(l))g~m

WASHINGTON (NC)-A class of 97 under-privileged high school students was graduated on completion of an eight-week Summer college orientation proshy

gram at Georgetown University The exercises i attended by faculty and parents Qf the stushydents involved students who had completed their Sophomore year in District of Colwnbia high schools They were chosen for the special course because teachers and counselors believed they have the ~billty to do colshylege work alihoug~ their presshyent high school records indicate little likelihood of college acshyceptance Ninoty-fiveOf the 97 students were Negroes md the ratio of males to females was aboutmiddot tbree-to-two ~

The pro~~~~Ch began in 1965 is financed by the NaUonal science Fowidationmiddot the District of Columbia public school sysshy

tem and Georgetown In addition to academic work

the students were given cltgtUrsetl in reading improvement and counseling gUidance Athletie and cultural events underwrit shyten by the program were also bKluded in their schedules

nearly 42 years Bishop Gerow churches degespeciallY Negro said Of late I have feltmiddotthat X houses of worshIp which middotWere have not the stamina to caJTY I bombedmiddot and burned

on as I have done in the past Whena p~ttern of destn1c~ion This load should be borne by 1 develops as It has m our state youngerman then it sincumbent upon all ntereston Yoiit

Cathollc lnereaSe m~n ~ ~ood ~i~ througho~t MiSSISSIPPI to Jom hands m Savings

The ~venth bishop of~edio- helpingthe affectedmiddot churches 0 Invested In cesemiddotwhlch was founded ID 1~37 and in showing clearly our con- and encompasses 111 of Missls- demnation at all acts of violencemiddot CATHOLIC CHURCH sippi Bishop Gerow h8ll s~ lawlessness and destruction the Catholic population IJOw from 31264 to 75000 in his 41 years of office The number of priests in the diocese grew from 63 to 220 and churches md misshysions from 108 to 243

The last few years of llacial violence perhaps were the most troub1d for Bishop Gerows long ad inistration middotHemiddot met the challenge with courage

In the face of many-sided opshyposition Bishop Gerow in 1964 directed the first grades of Cathshyolicmiddot schools in the state to be racially integrated The next

Missionaries Move Seminar to Ohio

DAYTON (NC) -The White Fathers a missionary society which bas served in Africa for nearly a century is llloving its U S seminary to Dayton

St Josephs Seminary which had been in operation at Onshydliota N Y near Saranac Lake will re-open under the same

name in four residences near the campus of the University of

Dayton The buildings have been rented from the university

Eventually the White Fathers plan to build their own seminary

middotfacilities somewhere in ~e area according to Fatber Paul lo1e1le WF~

THE ANCHOR- middot19 Thurs Aug 25 1966

KC Melll1il~er~~ip

At AJ~Tome e~~gh MIAMI BEACH (NC)-In his

report at the 84th annual meetshying of the Supreme Council of the Knights of Columbus Sushypreme Knight John W McDevitt made these points

Membership on June 30 1966 stood at an all-time high of 1183896 The orders insurance covershyage passed the $15 billion mark during the year

The orders assets reached III

neW plateau of $28122840028 at the end of the fiscal year

The society i~ continuing its support of the campaign to st~m p(gtrnography

Revise Ceremonial Progress is being made onthe

re_Vision of the orders cerempnshyial to give it a total family middotclishymate and make it consistent with moder day philosophy of social justice and religious pracshytice

The K of C have undertaken distribution of copies of the 1~ew Testament to Catholic gradllates

COURAGE PERSONIFIED John St Marie of B~YQ of the Naval Offilaquoer CandfClatE port Minn CQnfined to a wheelchair since a 1953 pOlio ~chool in Newport R I an(J ill

~dying the question of proshyattack has received a scholarship to the University of viding a similar servilte ~orMinnesota law school atter successfully maintaining an Ashy Catholic graduatell of the Qffi shyminus average in undergraduate work at the College of cers Candidate School of ihe St Thomas St Paul Minn irQ Photo Canadian Navy

It saluted Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York on biI

Welcomes Successor Naming of Apostolic Administrato

Pleases Bishop Gerow 81 JACKSON (NC)-Mississippll1 year he followed with a direeshy

courageous 81-year-old Bihop tive that Catholic schools be deshyOliver Gerow welcomed his suc- segregated completely ceSSor Bishop Joseph B Bruni- Helps Restore Churches ni 55 as spiritual head of the Despite reported threats ofmiddot Natchez-Jacklon diocese as one violence fro m segregationist who is active vigorous and has ranks the aged prelate was good sound judgment among leaders of an interfaith

X am very happy in being groupmiddot which formed the Comshyrelieved of the heavy responSl- mittee of middotConcernmiddot soHcited middotbillty that I have borne for money labor and materIals for

middotthe bishop stated in a letterred AND in every Catholic church in the INSTITUTIONAL BONDSstate

His appeal for $300000 to re-middot I Umiddot f $500 M store more than 30 d~stroyed n nits 0 or ore and damaged churches brought Keenan amp CImiddotarey bie contributions to the Committee 9f Concern from various sections Minneapolis Minnesota of the country

0

M~ntle Plumbing amp ~ating Co Inc~

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET Fall River OS 57497

for detailed information write to

CHARLES A~ MURPHY Registered Representative

145 Pond $treet Winchester Mass

PA 9-2696 And

Name bullbullbull ~ Address A

City _

50 years in the priesthood payshying tribute to him not only beshycause of his dignity as a pi-iest and cardinal but also because he 1S a great and wholesome mail

Relic Stolen NEW YORK (NC)-A reputed

relic of the cross on which Chtist died has been stolen from the Church of the Most Holy Reshydeemer here It was removed from a side altar tabernacle

where it had been placed shortshyly after the churchs establishshy

ment by the Redemptoriad Fathers some 125 years ago

~

GULF HILL DAIRY so DARTMOUTH MASS

RO THE ANCHO~-Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

1

RELIGIOUS SUPERIORS INSTITUTE ON STONEHILTJ CAMPUS SMS Guadalcanal Solomon Islands Standing Sr Florita DP King Sr Mary LUk~ St about to enter the hall for her lecture Center Some ston Mass Sr Mary of Bathany SP Holyoke Sr Mary de Sales F$SJ r the sisters who attended Sister Lukes talk were Sr Josepha SC Conshy Holyoke Right Mrs Mary Virginia Yosgandes h-ouse mother wavesgood ent Station NJ Sr Mary Kenneth Amityville NY Sr Mary (fheresa bye tothe departing nuns I

Brooklyn Church Hopes Nuns Move Into Cent~r of Lij~e Criticizes Irish lribunal Lacks By Dorothy Eastman -Social Security

When in the third year of Vatican II the momentous decision was made toinvitewO- dmiddot LIMERICK (NC) - FatherJ men observers to audit a Council forthe first ~ime to represent all J~remiah Newman professor ofuris ICtlon the Sister chosen BROOKLYN (NC)-Msgr the nuns in America was Sister Mary Luke Tobin Mother General of the Sisters of Lor- sociology at Irelands Maynooth

IlAarion J Reinhardt pre- etto When shewasasked recently while visiting the Fall River Diocese what impressed College criticizedprivate agenshyJ~L h t b t th C 1 cies and the national governshyIdlng Judge of the Trlblillal er mos a ou e oune) h t b t h h d k ment for their failure to increaseshe said with a wry smile We aVe 0 e rna ure enoug er own or er was wor mg(1)f the Diocese of Brooklyn h to live in insecurity toward these ends She told of all subsidies to families Iltas announced that the bill of The fact that we were t ere Will these changes be easy experiment soine of her Sisters After insisting that it would $Omplaint of 15 former teachers at all I The Sister is too much of a have been engllged in for the be best for private agencies and of St Johns Un~versity had to At a Stonehill College institute realist to give that impression past twu years in Pueblo Colo- local governments to administer be dismissed because of lack of Sister Luke spoke of her many Its going to be fraught with rado Although most of the 1100 social security Father Newman jurisdiction on the part of the other impressions of the Council difficulties she warns but Sisters of Lorettv are teachers said that since they seemed unshy

ecclesiastical court _ where she and seven other Sis- what isnt this small group of Sisters in willing or unable to do this the The Brooklyn ecclesiastical tels were auditresses for the last There are more than a few Pueblo 1s doing no t~aching-in job had to be done by the natshy

$Ourt which operates under two years of Vatican II Over Sisters who are troubled and schools anyway They simply jonal government ~llnon law said it is pmited in 450 Mothers Superior from 55 sometimes shocked these days live among the poor as good He said that according to jurisdiction to only spiritual different Orders were gathered by many of the changes hi their neighbors he 1pin jg wherever Catholic soCial teaching there ltuestions at the Easton campus for the communities The Mother Gen- they cllD leading discussion was no limit to the amount of Charge Contralaquot Breach five day Institute directed by eral would warn them that its groups counselling etc government aid that is permis-

The 5000 word document Rev William FHogan CSC pointless for them to say Thill Asked to comment on the re- sibie and desirable if governshypointed out that the decree of Sister Luke was one of a group is not the community I entered cent experiment in Milwaukee mEmt aid was the Qnly practical Giisrriissalis without prejudice to of noteliltspeakers who talked When it comes to that she says where30 School Sisters of St (sbl~tion to poverty problems lbhe merits of the case to the superiors on the subject we all might say This is not the Francis left their convents for

If the Metropolitan Tribunal of the I Sister in the modern Church Iwas baptized into or three weekstO work in secular If the archdiocese of New York world this is not the world I was b()rn jobs - oneSister wa3 assigned

T b 1 f the Sacred into Change is a fact of life S t~ the rI una 0 Adapting a line from Charles as a newspaper reporer- IS er Roman Rota reversesthe decree Dickens to describe this contro she points out~ and we can~t keep Luke predicted a great deal the casewiil be returned to the versial post Council age Sister things as they are or say Stop more~ of this kind of liniited Tribunal of the Diocese of the World-I want to get off f i t th I w ld ]Brooklyn for adjudications upon t~ees sa~~iSTi~iSt~eth~o~r Role of Superiors ~~~re ~o di~~a~~c~i~t n~~ Ms merits it was stated times She paintedavivid ver- The role the Superiors will she said

The petition of complaint bal picture of the world that lies play in the formation of what Since her own Order founded filed by Father Peter OReilly ahead for Sisters She said it has been called The New Nun in 1812 is quite new all religious

s~f Chicago on behalf of himself would certainly be a challenging Lwuakeouattlintheed fs~roeh~ ~~s~~~t~ orders go and is the liirst comshylind the other ousted teachers one and that conventlife inthe munity founded in America charged he university which is future is certain to undergo She urged them to create a cli- without European ties the Sisshyeonducted by theVincentian many radical changes mate where Sisters can liveters of Loretto weal habits more Fathers with breach of contract community life at its best She -modern than most But itsstill

The Superior~ were told that entreated them to keep thls cli-The dispute has been marked bY d bl d ff t the dress of 1812 not 1966 so it d k t f an m Ispensa e gUl e me ec - mate free from legallsm andlitudent unrest an pIC e mg 0 th hmiddotmiddot th will soon be changed As soon I mg ese c anges IS e map survelmiddotllance Ie schoo s campuses f th f t th t th C 1 as the all-mlll Congregation

or e u ure a e ounCl A community should be a of Religious in Rome approv~sMoral Issue Fatners drew up for the Church place where there- is safety for She called the CouncII Decrees the Sisters new design that is About 30 teachers were fired fl t d f t f dff

Rost December in a dispute over the documentS ofhighest au- cop IC an sa e y or J er- Tliey have submitted one de~ign rlty We should all have ~nes apd s~fety to cultiv~te that the fathers turnEd downadministration-faculty relation- tho d t h d Sh f I the mInd of Vatlcan II and then lverSI y s ~ sal e ee s lihey thought it was too modshyships and other issues They t I th t th h ld be

b b f we c~n move Into actlon she s rongy a ere ~u r -ern Sister Luke says UWhat anwere joined y anum er 0 I t I g I fe ther teachers In a strike that told her healers - 1Jloe ~o~a IY In re 1 J~)Us 1 incredible thing for US to ask shy --uAfterall were not Trap- that we choose our own clothes has continued since January Whi~h Way psts

l she adds with a laughThe court found that tpe How will the Sisters know in Warning that the time has S t Lk tl - b

uteceniontractual controversy was not whicli direction they should come for a re-evaluation of the _ IS ~rth y e~mt~ a spiritual mattelin a canoliical move in the manyarells so(in to true meaning of community she ne oIl e d~rs wo~~ ever ~ llense of the word spiritual change cExperiment Sister told the Superiors that commu- bo~a h a sre~t a f ~gUS aild that there was no allegation Luke advises so often its almost nity doesnt mean conformity or 0 y e oCle ~ o anon ef a violation of an ecclesiastical her motto We really cannot a hotel life either or even a Lawyrs Does thIS mian that law arid that the time was not move into change without ex-lot of happy t9getherness th~ SI~ters may at last have a opportune for a decision of perimentation she says and around the television set voIce 111 the formatIon of canon moral responsibility because the we will be engaged in tremen- A ~ital new aspect of commu- la-at least th~ laws that rUI~ secular courts would first have dous experiments from now on- nity is the idea of what Sister thel~ O~derS SIster Luke deshyto determine whether there was to adapt religious life to the Luke calls sub communities- vout y opes so a breach of contractual duty times in which we live the convents immediate neigh- Its certain that the future for

The church court found as a The revisions that lie ahead borhood the parish the civic the Sisters will be a very differshymatter of law that St Johns for religious orders will bring commumty lay people 111 the ent one than anyone could have 141 NO MAINUniversity as a corporation Sisters into the mainstream of same profession as the Sister- imagined a few short years ago J~ formed under the law of the modern life Sister Luke for for instance other nurses or The Holy Father has urged them iii FALL RIVER State of w York did not have one has no doubts that this is tElachers We have allowed too the~ to move from the margin e the ecclesiastical privilege of where they belong We ought great a gap to exist between our- of life to the center of life~ 873 COUNTY demanding that suits against it to be willing to take the risks) selves and the laity she says Will the move be successful SOMERSETbe heard in an ecclesiasticalmiddot that gO along with this plunge In an interviewmiddot following her Sister Luke says We can only CDOurt into the mainstream she says talk Sister ~uke was asked how know by taking a ChanCE

Feai makes the wolf bigger than be is

Rer Bankings Already D~ne

~jI--~1 W

tt-~~gt_ri~

~j F~ p ~tl Iim F-ilNgt

~l i

ll 11 ~~

W = ~

~gtltl ~

-~ ~~ StIesaves I lot of alunle Mtime forso maily other thinlS ~i She banks by mail at Te ~ OLD R D8 KI h 7reg E AN W at about you

liii FREE mall forms ~1 The mOld Red Bank W

$ Fall River Savings Bankjilll q

Page 2: 08.25.66

2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 01

Plans for Synod Irmp~lrndDg I

Continued from Page One

suggestions for the future in the light of Vatican II

Every phase of religiotis lifeshyas found in the Diocese - has come understudy Now the ~shysuIts of such a conscientious study is to be melted into the prospective program of the Secshyond Synod of the Fall River Diocese

The countless opinions and suggestions at a more Clruitful and effective Christian life and witness in all fields of human endeavor shall now be comshy

middotpared scrutinized and weighed according to the increaed good for the people of the diocese and also according to the generosity

of response to the inspiring dishyrectives of the Second Vatican

Council For this a Senate of Priestsshy

soon to be named-and various Commission will begin to do the

sorting and comparing work of in a sense rewriting the laws and practices f)f the Diocese of Fall River in the light of the middotVatican Council

Diocesan Synods are to be middot eonv9ke periodically so as to bnng the Churchs many proshymiddot grams to bear mere effectively in solving the contemporary

problems the people of the di~shyeese must live with

The last such synod inmiddot the history of Fall River was held

middot at 3t Marys Cathedral Fall bull River by Bishop William Stang

Magr DeBlanc will celebrate midnight Mass for the families of the world

The pilgrims are scheduled to have an audience ~ith Pope Paul VI during a VISIt to Rome They will leave Paris for home Jan 3

Picket CathedraO NEW YORK (NC)-Some 20

demonstrators picketed st~ Patshyricks Cathedral here ca1ling upon the Catholic Church to reshyverse its ban or artificial methshyods of birth control The demshyonstration las led by William R Baiid a non-Catholic

FORTY HOURS

DEVOTION

Aug 28--St John the Baptist Central Village

Out Lady of Grace- No Westport

Sept 4--Our Lady of the AsshysumptionNew Bedshyford

Our Lady of Mount Carshymel Seekonk

Sept ~ur Lady of the Assumption New Bed-

THE dCMOI

S8coml Clau Posmge PalO It Fall Rive Mass Publlshel eve l1Iursda) a1 41a Hlllhlana Avenue Fall Rive Mass 02722 oy tile catholic Pres 01 the Diocese 01 FaA Rive SubscrlptlOll price IIlI IIIlIU IIOSlPGlIImiddot $4D0 lI8I

to better the educationdl charshyitable and religiouE life of the Diocese the Second Vatican Council has launched a great re ligious crusade and provided the churches with the means to suc- _ cessfully live as the Mystical Body in b world such as this

The study thathas been inaushygurated at the bidding of the Most Reverend Bishop and middotthe call gtf Vatican II will now betranslated into more effective programs Here again Fall River is among thefirst to put the

hopes of the Council and Pope into effect

Sthedule Annual Labor Day Mass

WASHINGTON (NC) -Archshybishop Patrick A OBoyle of Washington will preside at the annual Labor Day Mass offered for labor management and goYshyernment at the Shrine of the Sacred Heart here Sept 5

Auxiliary Bishop Edward J Herrmann of Washington will offer the Mass which is sponshysored by the Archdiocesan Union

of Holy Name Societies Coadjutor Bishop Peter J

Gerety of Portland Me wfill

preach the sermon A wreath-laying ceJemony hon()ring the memory of James Cardinal Gibbons will followthe

M t h dial statue 1IlI ass a e car ns bull

Mi~lenniumMass ~iPR][MATES ~EPRESENT~TIVE Bisho~liadiShus r~t e~~u~~h~middotmiddot g-~~ Co~ti~u~ f~omigt~g~ o~~~ubjil Auxiliary ~lShOpto ~ardmalWyszyp~ki()f PoIand ~ashi~gtonCentralLabor COUll-

Assisting Bishop middotConnollywill gtiU~e~comed on ~l~ f-lrrlval m ther pmiddotS~ by B1StlOPWY~lSIo ~l wIll speak be Rev John BainboI middotOFM of ChIcago and he w111 middotrepresent theCardmaI at the ()bserv-I conv an~Ite~Fe1iCian Plicbtaahceof the Millenriium of PolishChrisianit~~ to Eheld in Fa II Rover Sister OFM Conv Chicago on Sunday Jhshop Rubm vlsIted hiS fnend Rev

Presenlat the Mass Will be Ad~Ibert A SzkIanhy 1ssistant at St Patricks Church In High Office Most Rev James J Gerrard F 11 R 1963 d ted he e g in in October Auxiliary Bishop 01 the Dicxe~e a Iver m an IS expec r a a NEWARK (NC) -Sister Car-Chaplains to the Bj~hopwill be melindaSciscento a native 01 Rev Joachim Dembeck OFM Fe t ~ Fall River has been named Conv and Rev~ Matthew Kot- Irsmiddot AmeriCa general econome or financiall~lClshykowskiOFM ConY _ Visor of the Religious Teatl1en

Re~~cii~~~ ~~a~~il1a~ Brother Charl~s Henry New SuperiorGIB~eral~rs~Ucarme~asu~e~~~ Mr WalterGltisciminskiwill be Of286-Year old Christicin TeaChEIS St bull FrancisXavie~s eonvent the organist

LAFAYETTE (NC)-Brother IE II t Charles Henry FSC firstS hC _00 nro menmiddot American elected siperiorgen-

ReCllches 941 000 eral of the 286-Year old Brothelll

of the Christian Schools pre-ROCKVILLE CENTER (HC) senteel habits to new Brothers

-Enrollment in diocesan schools here on the 40th anniversary of here onLong Islandwill reach his own reception of the habiton May 12 1905 a record total of more than 94- The ceremOnY marked someThough the Fall River Diocese 000 students when the new school

has conceived many programs firsts for the Brothers here For year begins in September the first time the new Brothers

The opening of four new high retained their family names slmiddotana Prelate high schools and two new el- rather than choosing a religiousLoul ementary schools is principally name and at the end of the

To Leadlt4PIlgrIOmage responsible for the numerical ceremony they filed out flanked growth It brings the total ofLAKE CHARLES (NC)-Msgr by their parents rather than byschools to 123

Irving A DeBlanc pastor of Our already professed Brothers f Haven parish Teaching personnel also on Brother Charles Henry said heL d Qa Y ueen 0 e the increase will number about

h 11 I d an around theere WI es 2225 with lay teachers comshyworld piigrimage Nov 28 to prising about one-third of the Jan 3 i total Thepilgrim~ge will inClude

attendance at the Interna~onal M ~middotO d Union of Family Organizations ass r 0

conference in r-rew- De~ India FRIDAYMasso~ previo~Sunshy Dec 12 t~ 16 and m7etin~ WIth _ day IV Class Green Mass family lif~ spec1gtllists m~ Proper No Gloryor Creei

countnes Islted Chnstmas WIll 2nd Prayer St Zephyrinus be spent m Bethlehem where Common middotPreface

OR St Zephyrinus Popea~d Marshy

does not believe the teaching Brothers apostolate will disshy appear Catholic education is here to

~taY~The people desir~ iti~ ill

bull bull tyro Red Glory no Creed New TUitIon middotGrants

CommonPreface LANSING (NC)-Nearly 1000 SATURDAY -St- Joseph Cala- private college freshmen already

sanctius Confessor III Class have applied for state tuition White Mass Proper Glory grants under a new Mi~higan no Creed Corunon Preface law

SUNDAY-XIIImiddot Sunday A f t e r Dr Leon Fill vice-president Pentecost II Class Green afthe State Board of EducashyMass Proper ~ Glory Creed tion saidabo~t 6000 freshmen Preface of Trinity who plan to enroll in private

MONDA --Bcentheading of Stbullbull colleges in September areexshyJohn the Baptist III Class pected to apply fo~ grants whiCh Red Mass Proper Glory 2nd range from $50 to $250 per Prayer st Sabina Martyr no Creed Common Preface

TUESDAY- St Rose of Lima Virgin III Class White Mass Proper Glory 2nd Prayer SS Felix and Adauctus Martyrs no Creed Common Preface

WEDNESDAY - St Raymond Nonnatus Confessor III Class White Mass Proper Glory no

Creed Common Preface THURSDAY - Mass of previous

Sunday IV Class Green Mass Proper No Glory or Creea 2nd Prayer St Giles 3rd Frayer Twelve~olyBrothers Martyrs Common Preface

OR st Giles Abbot White Glory 2nd Prayer Twelve HoI y

Brothers liartyrsno middotCr~ ~omn1onPreface One Votive Massmiddothi honorof Jesus ChriSt the Eteniaf High Pnest permitted Glory 2nd Prayer St Giles 3rd Prayermiddotmiddot Twelve Holy Brothers Martyrs no Creed Commpn Pr~ace

semester depending on the stu- dents family income

The new Tuition Grant Proshygram ias approved in June by the state Legislature and signed into law last month by Gov GeOrge Romney The Legislature appropriated $31 million for the first year of the program

Necrology SEPT 3

Rev Thomas J McGee DD 1912 Pastor Sacred Heart Taunshyton

SEPT 11 Rev JosephmiddotPTallon 1864

Pastormiddot St MarY New Bedford Rey Johp J Maguire 1894 Found~r st Peter Provincetown

SEPT 15 nev Napole6n A Messier

1948 middotPastor St Matthew FlllJ1 River

SEPT 8 Rev Thomas Sheehan 1_

Founder Holy Trinity W Hallshywich

bull benihas been a member of the icism if it helps us to improve community for 36 years anti a our techniques developing bet-ieoJnmunity supervisor in middotmiddotthe tel teacher training programs Newark archdiocese for ifoaw

yearsFirstmiddot Senate umiddot middot S ff Continued from Pag4~ One

VaticanCouncil the Senate of Priests willalsl be of great help to the Bishop

T his group of appointed priests will stud3r questions conshycerning parish and diocesan life closely and then after matured lib ti tak uIta e era on E on a cons shyti t Th d i f th e vo e IS ec SlOn 0 e S te sh uId _nect to the ena 0 -u Bishop and other authorities

f f di iwhat the eelmg 0 ocesans s

Th fi al t f th p en vo eo erlesS te 11 t a1 ena WI m no way ~ aJee

nlverslty ta Rmiddot bull S

eslgnatlons oar BUENOS AIRES (NC)-D-

~ igI1ations of personn~l at BuenOll Aires University have run intoshy

the thoustands Faculty and staff members protesting the governshyments closing of-the school are

leaving m droves despite g01 shyernment promises to restore autonomy

Resignationshave comefrom deans from the ranks of the schools 2000 professors and~88shy

dec~sllm but only asugg~~tion sociates and from f1ecretari~ w~ch ~ been fOrmE~tafter TheJuly 29middot closing enfolleed ~tu~yand de~beratioJl bythegovernmept toweecLout

C needed and it is goq4 fo~ ~oc~ty The~tial Vorkoftrue~~nJlte communists among the facul~ in general of ~~sts~ the Diocelle orJall and student body has bro~gbt a

Criticism he added can be Rivershallbe tostudythe PIob- storm of Universal protest a blessing in disguise if we l~~swhichth~ Dioc~aJllS~od Teachers atthc Argentinemiddot Cathshyprofit fromit We welcomeCrit-iqofac~~riew~~S~gg~stions olic ViuverSityunlffect~ by

offered b~ the DIocese s pri~sts the order closmg down state pnishy1 000 Fr~shmen Ask an_d fo~~atethEir olnsu~ges-middotmiddot v~rsitfesisSuea a tetter e1lpreashy

middotti~nsfoi this official revie~~dmiddotmiddot ing theirdeep concernfottbe ~~gio~amento o~ diocesan future of the Argentine~tudent

laws community

School Board Continued from Page One

Diocese and Rev Patrick J ONeill Diocesan SupeJiI1tendshyent of Schools- at 2 Friday after- noon in the Bishops Residence Highland Avenue FalllUver

the purpose of this meetirig is to discuss the salaries of the teaching sisters and brattiers throughout the Diocese of Fall River bull

OIROURKE Funeral Home

571 Second StrEte~

Fall -River Mass os 9-6072

MICHAEL J McMAHCgtN Licei5ed FuneraB Director Regi~red Ernbalmbullbullr

DmiddotOLAN~SAXOI~middot

Funeral Horne 123 Broadwa

TAUNTOIII YA 4-5ClJGO

JEFFREYLSULLIVAN uneral Bonae

550 Locust Str Fall River Mass

shy OS 2-239

ampose E Sa1Uvan ~y E Sullivan - -

BROOKLAWN FUNERAL HOME INC

II Marce Ray - 6 LarraltlG IIoJ Roger laFrance

FUN~IlAL DIRECTQRS 15 Irvington Ct

995-5166 New Bedford

D D Sullivan ampSons FUNERAL HOME 469 LOCUST STREET

FALLRIVEit MA$L os 2-33

WUfred Co James l shy DriscollmiddotSullivanJr

3 Maryknon Cuts Makes Room lor Jet Set THE ANCHOR~

Thurs Aug 25 1966 Superiors Term ~ Congress ProbesTo Six Years Fr Morris lU Semi-Retirement

Luther TeachingMARYKNOLL (NC) HELSINKI (NC) - LutherPermission to reduce the scholars from all over the worldFall River MaryknoUer 52 Years in Priesthood

terms of superiors general met here in Finland to discuss from 10 to six years has been the impact of modern scholarshyMaryknoll Father John E MQrris may be one of the few priests in the world who (JIven to the Catholic Foreign ship on the traditional undershy

can say his mission was bumped by the Jet Age And indeed it was The Fall RiverMiSSion Society of America standing of themedieval reform-OMaryknoll Fathers) by theConshy missioner was stationed in Hawaii where he wo~ked for 12 years until his parish bordershy er gregation for the Propagation of ing Honolulus International Airport was engulfed by runways lengthened to a~commo- Discussing hIs spirituality tile Faith philosophy and ecclesiology thedate new jet aircraft That

The change in the constitution scholars attempted to relate theholm in a prisoner-of-war exshywas in 1956 FatherMorrisldso includes a provision for sucshy reformers thought with modernehangecelebrated his 77th birthdayession by the societys vicar Protestantism and ecumenism general if the superior general OR Jan 1 of this year and In Hawaii Jl Years This years congress the first ceases to hold office for the currently is semi-retired from to be held in Helsinki is the thirdIn 1944 Father Morris was as aemaining term of office Preshy mission work and resides at the LUther congress in 10 yearssigned to the missions of Hashy

rheological preparation wasw-ously an extraordinary ehapshy Maryknoll seminary in Mounshy waii where he worked for the was dope by the Lutheran World6er had to be called to elect a tata yiew Calif next 12 years until the incident Federationccessor with the extensien of the runshyJI)iocesa~ PriestGreater Flexibility way in 1959

The shorter term becomes He was ordained for the DioshyReturning to the conti1entat Fr E L Dickinsoneffective immediately and will cese of FalRiver in 1914 joined

U S he was appointed Regionalo acffect the terms of office of the Maryknoll in 1921 and left for Director of Maryknoli activities Testimonial Sept 11superior general and four memshy the missions in Korea in October in the Pacific Northwest with Two thousand friends and 85shybers of the general council whose M 1923 his residence in Seattle Washshy sociatesof Rev Father Edmondelections are currently on the After 13 years in Korea where ington He held this post until L Dickinson who served the_apter agenda he served as Prefect Apostolic his second assignment to Koreamiddot Sacred HeaIi parish in ~orthMaryknolls constitution has be was transferred to Kyoto to in 1959 Attleboro for 28 years will1Ied for 10-year terms of ofshy work among the large Korean His assignment to Mountain gather at the King Philip onBee since itwas written in i929 population living in that city View after 43 years of mission Sunday Sept 11 for a testimonial ~ue subject of shorter terms was

With the outbreak of World work was made in August of banquet War II he was interned by the

Gliscussed at the last chapter in 1965 He jokingly commented General chairman of the 31- 1~56 but gelegates at th~ titne at the time 1 have to mke fair is L Bancroft Austin wIthJapanese and repatriated to the ~ted to de~er action on it

U S aboard the SS Grips- REV JOHN IE MORRIS MM oroom for the jet set hcmoJary chairman Rev J OmerA chapter spokesman declared Lussier pastor of Sacred Heart

u~ six-year term will alow Church Co-chairman is Roiandgreater flexibility and conformshyFregtault and treasurer Rev(tv wHh rapidlychanging times Tells Knights Renew Temporal Order Roger Leduc The general comshyAdditionally it will allow mittee comprises Joseph Vedlshymore frequent opportunity for

major planning re-evaluashy McDevitt Stresses COuncil Directive leux Mrs Ralph Patunoff Franshyand cis Ouellette Norman Deschenestion of society work and permit

the possibility of re-elections MIAMI BEACH (NC) - Themiddot l~ading Christian body iIi the Manifestly our wealth in Pauline Paquin Mr and Mrs Trend 01 Times chief executive officer of the land numbers talent and resources Normand LHomme Gerard

Maryknoll is one of several Knight of Columbus called on Our order has spread through calls on us to reach out to the Achin Albert Desilets Mrs Paul lJOCi~ties in recent years to seek the organizationsI200OOO mem- the length and breadth of North community and like Christ LaTamee Daniel Cardin Romeo d receive permission from the bers to be in the foregroundof America It now counts in its seek to serve rather than be Villemaire Mrs Donna Gilmore Holy See to reduce the terms of tlltose who respond to the direc- ranks the intellectual economic served and Al Houde office Among these were the tive of the Second Vatican and political cream of society Tum Outward Oblate Fathers and the Mission- Council that laymen tmust take he said Evidently our eyes whicl1 for Nuns InstitutellIies of Ss Peter and Paul up the renewal of the temporal It is high time that we years we returned inward (PIME) who have reduced their order as their own special abandon the concept of our toward oui self-defense now NOTRE DAME (NC)-Notre generals terms to six years obligation order as mainly a fortress to must turn outward for opportushy Dame Uiversitys 13th annual Election of Maryknolls super- Speaking at the States Dinner protect us from a hostile world nities to defend and help others theological institute for local

lot general and four-member 01 the 84th annual meeting of Under such an outlook what And it is in this new role as superiors closed after 1700 nuns teeneral counci is expected at the 9rders supreme council served as a fortress of protection we direct our attention to the from aU o)r America discussed iMenary sessions after Aug U John Wi McDevitt said the yesterday could become a prison community at large that we th~ impact of the Second Vati shyIHampt it is possible the discussion ~nights of Columbus constitute barring us from opportunity toshy can carry out the challenges can Council on womens reUshyiIould be introduced earliermiddot the largest most effectively or- day and ~ dungeon dooming us given us by the Second Vatican gious lommunities

ganiBed and most highly equip- to 9wg~ation tomorrow Council Ped body of Catholic laymen on McDevitt said a good outline~m~niails to Hav4 the American continent He of what Vatican II expects of the

stated this constitutes Dot only ~amsey Resigns People of God and particularly Building Contractor Gwn Rite Service

bull prestige arid honor but also reshy PHILADELPHIA (NC) - Dr of the laity is given in the Passhy

TORONTO (NC) - Catholics SpOnsibility 3lck Ramsey one of the most toral Constitution on the Church Masonryelf the Armenian rite in Canada succeSSful coaches in modern in the Modern WorldMcDevm added that circUmshywill soon have regular Services college basketball history has He rEmommended that allstances have changed drasticallyIII their own language and litur- VICTORresigned as coach and athletic councils with the aid of their liIinee the order was founded 84

~ars director at St Josephs College chaplains their bishop andagoArchbishop Georges Layek of here to become general manager other qualified authorities unshyIn those less mature days ofA1eppo in Syri~ said this is the of pro Philadelphia 7Gers of the dertake an immediate in-depth FLEURENTAmerican d~velopment he saidPurpose of this tour of North National Basketball Association study of the council documents

America implementing one of 0 Church was regarded susshy Ramsey also taught social scishy particularly those relating to 7 JEANmE STREETpiCiously as a southern Europeanamphe desires of the Vatican counshy ence at St Josephs where he the responsibilities and opporshyiii He is acting as delegate for bodr foreign to American soil ~as a star and captain on the tunities of Catholic laymen in t FAIRHAVEN WY 4-7321

Our members were largely imshyAomenian Patriarch Ignace~ Hawkss 1948-49 basketball team the world todayP4erre of Beirut migrants still at the bottom of

Archbishop Layek announced the social and economic ladder ~tt~+imMilli1W(regiBMWf~ifW~)ll~41~~~KKKampiEffimw~NmW~lMliiit1f(n))Iltjlt~~1li~

priests wiil be authorized to Gar order served principally as care for the small groups of Ar- a fortress where members could

gather and find mutual encourshyenian Catholics in Toronto agement and strength against theand Ottawa Larger parishes slings of a society still hostile towill be established in the United bull BACKmiddotTOmiddot(OLLEGE SERVICES bullboth their religion and their nashyStates Archbishop Layek said tionality

Understandably many early~etroit University efforts of the order were direcshy lOW-COST HELP LOANSDorm for Women ted at preserving the heritageof 001 faith and protectingDETROIT (NC) - The Unishy members from unjust discrimishyversity of Detroit has opened its SPIECIAL STUDENT CHECKING ACCOUNTSnation Because the order WaBfirst residence for women The small and weak its principal acshy lleW residence hal1 is the former tivities were directed inwardPalmer Hotel It has been eomshy towBlrd self-preservation

pletely refurnished and will 1I1JIJ1lDifferent Today~use 150 women students

But what striking differencesThe new dorm has been named today McDevitt continuedIDr Father Joseph A Foley S3 The Catholic Church has taken-udent chaplain for some 30 fia1a root and has become the-ears before his death in 1965 FIRST

Blocks Suicide College Inaugural MADRID (NC)-5ister Conshy LORETTO Pa (NC)-Geneshy

elo clung to the legs of a 28 vieve Blatt Secretary of Intershy JJMfIMBANKrear-old patient for more than nal Affairs of Pennsylvania was aeven minutes to prevent the mall guest speaker at St Francis Colshy

fiom jumping from the eighth lege here yesterday when Father GREATER NEW BEDFORDS FAMUn BANK fOR DOLLARS FOR SCHOLARS floor of the general hospital Vincent R Negherbon TOR ~xe waa inaugurated 8Ii president

4 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Ault 066 Italia~CJl~nguage

Paper O~ CanadQlFormer_FaU Ruvell A$$D$ih~Jm1fr MONTREAL -(NC) - Domam

(Tomorrow) an Italian-languageServes in flo1ivia MDSSDO~ Catholic weekly newspaper beshyContinued from Page One are also many homes throughout gan publication here for Itaiianshy

able to catch the local bus and the woods so 1 find it more prushy speaking Canadians with an i~

we can reach most of our vil shy dent not to ask where they got tial printing of 20QOO cQpies

lages by jeep The custom still the grapefruits The altar boys The paper founded and edited prevails however so this mornshy take advantage of the rest of the by Father A Paoletti OFM ing 1 started out for Tiquipaya waiting period to get washed in Cap is published- by the ItaliaD

the river 0) with two assistances The altar Nathmal Parishes of Montreai boys from the 7 oclock (more People Appear under the general direction of or less) Mass have the morning The opposite bank of the ri ver Auxiliary Bishop Adrian Cimishyto help the Padres since Ue seems to be a solid wall of green cheBa OMI of Montreal boys do not have class until the but slowly the people begin tp Father Paoletti said the paper afternoon appear on the bank It looks like will deal with general news as

At 9-More or Less bull the chiItlren omiddotfmiddot Israel comiJig well as Catholic news StaH Classes for the girls begin at through the Red Sea - except members are all Italian laymen

830 more or less The girls begin this sea does not part in the midshy with journalistic experience in to arrive at the rectory from dIe The babies are quite secure - Italy 730 on so that they can borrow on the backs of their mothers Father Paoletti recently spentthe two volley balls and jump and all proceed to dimb into the 19 years in Australia where he ropes for an hour or so before jeep truc~ fo~ a short trip to founded La Fiammamiddot (Thegoing to schoof The public the small opening in the woods Flame) an Italian-languageschool is just across the street whele the men have set up an paper published twice weekly in

The Mass in Tiquipaya is at altar Sydney9 oclock-m~e or less so after As Mass begins there are greeting all the little girls with about 75 people present By the a Buenos Dias and Como time Mas~ is over a few more ReoctlioDO SllDrprsSesestas and a couple of turns people have appeared-onlyGod withltthejump rope we start out knows fom where Probably Vermolilll Glaquoraquovernor for the village Besides being a they have been attracted by ST ALBANS (NC)-Vermonts very beautiful Spring-like day it Alejandros very loud and very Gov Philip Hoff disclosed one is also a very lazy day and the bad singing of the surprises of his legislativeanimals arE the first to feel the After Mass isa fine time for career in a talk at the dedicashylaziness in thE air The trip is a catechism class baptisms and tion of new Central Catholic slowed down considerably by anointing of any sick if there High SChool which will be openshymany very slow moying animals are any As 1 am leaving in the cd in September on the highway-oxen cows truck 1 get the usual question When 1 came out in favor ofhorses pigs burros chickens When are you coming again federal aid to private educationThis afternoon they will have Padre The usual answer We the governor said 1 expected tea little more life because there hae many other villages to go receive complaints and protestsbull is a wind statting to pick up to but if 1 am able in three Actually 1 did not receive oneOfficial Hymn Leader weeks--more or less letter or telephone call aboutWe have one stop along the

the statement ~ way Alejandro will be waiting on the road at Santa Rita Alshy T1e school built at a cost 0152 Missionaries

$1 million was made possible phones in this area Alejandro by gifts from a number of pershythough we do not have any teleshy

To Leave US some of comshy sons including many non-Cathshymust have means APPPRENTlCEmiddotINDJAN STYLE At a technical school

munication with someone here in ST COLUMBANS (NC) olics The school was dedicatedfor orphaned boys~ established by_ Bishop Francis Xavier LaGuardia who lets him know Fifty-two Columban missionaries by Bishop Robert F Joyce of

Muthappa of Coimbatore India this yopng apprentice ~~jeswhen we leave the house He is will leave for six mission counshy Burlington Vt who charactershyalways waiting on the road for tries this Fall eut some carpenters tools NC Photo ized the building as a memerial us when we go by Santa Rita Father Daniel Boland SSC 9pound love

Alejandro is our 17 year old director of the Columban Fashyself-made catechist and our offi shy thers in North and South Amershycial hymn leader a~ ltlll the Masses ica said The only mission Another Degree in the villages from Santa Rita country that will not be bolstershyto the end of the parish A real ed by this influx of missionaries Parap~egic in Wheel Chair Studies

good boy-with no education is Burma as visas cannot be obshy c One more stop I almost forgot tained for missionaries tp enter Clhemistry at Notre Dame

about A fiveminute stop-more that counrty MONTHLY CHURCHmiddotNOTRE DAME (NC)-One of he took second place in the freeshyor less-in Jorochito to tell Guil shy Father ~oland added There the 140 high school chemistry style the back crawl and thelermo that he is to inform all are now more than 200 Columshy breast stroke BUDG~T ENVELOPESteachers who attended Notrethe village that there will be a bans in the Philippines and 100

Dame Universitys s umiddotm mer I dont think Im so uniqueBible service at the chapel at 8 plus in both Japan and Korea PRINTED AND MAILEDmiddotchemistry institute here was a he said There were about 100more or less if the evening with the remainder in Burma man who has received the lastGuillermt is easy to find He the Fijis Peru and Chile other paraplegics down at the Write or Phone 672-1322 rites of the Church five timeslives in the sacristy and is a full Of the 887 Columban priests University of Illinois when I was Ed Quinn 28 has been a parashy there so you know Im not unshy 234 Second Street - Fall River time catechist We pay him $10 a some 600 are actively engaged in plegic for 11 years but durihgmonth i Inissionary work oversea~ Total usual that time has earned a bilchelorSince the day is so beautiful membership of the missionary of science degree in physiologymany of the women are doing society of secular priests is 1175 and a master of science degreetheir wash today There are in biology from ~hc University ofmany puddles from the rains IIllinoisalong the road I will never unshy Prelate to Address

If he attends the next fourderstand how the clothes can I ST~ JUDEPolish Organization summer institutes at Notrebe so clean coming out of such Idirty water PITTSBURGH (NC)-Bishop Dame he will also receive a i

Greeted by Children John J WLight of Pittsburgh will master of science degree in SOLEMN NOVI~A OF 9 THURSDAYSchemistryBy now I feel like General be the principal speaker at the Quinn has been a paraplegic

New York during the Korean servance of Polands millennium since he was in an auto accident MacArthur when he returned to Polish Falcons of AIl1~rica obshy

In PreporoHon ~~o Feast - Octobe 28th shortly before his high school

way are doing everything but The plOgram inculding field War The children all along the of Christianity

graduation in 1955 standing on their heads so that events and gymnastics by the Although he needs a wheelshy Begins Thursday bullSeptpmber 1sf the Padre will wave to them Falcons and the Slovak Gymshy ehair to move around he won

We arrive at Tiquipaya at 9 nastic Union will be held at three silver medals in 1962 at Preacher Fr Cosmas F Timlin OFM to find only one man People do West View Park Sunday Sept the Para Olympics in Stoke not come to Mass until the Pad re 4 OtheL attractions include a Mandeville England As a memshyarrives It is I little different Polish kitchen and folk dancing ber of the US swimming team today however Mot of the peoshyple live acrbss the river so it is necessary to drivethe two miles to the n ver bunk and blow the horn so that they will know that I have arrived

The river is very beautiful Very wila 100king Actually this area is considered jungle-cershytainly not like the Tarzan movies It is very beautiful al shythough dangerous at night beshycause of tC many snakes

We have half an hour to wait fOL the people to arrive so the altar boys and Alejandro disapshypear into the thicker woods They return with very laIge grllpefllit~ Thmiddotr le many fruit ttees in the area but there

llIANUFAC1URERS NATIONAL BANK

of BRISlOI~ COUNIY

THE AREAS MOST ACCOMMODATING BANK

NORTH ATTLESORO bull MANSFIELD ATTLEBORO FALLS

CHAPEL DEVOTIONS 1000 AM - 1210 Noon - 510 7 and 8 PM

NOVENA WJDA-Boston-1300 on Dial-II 05 AM WPLM-Plymouth--1390 on Dial-9 15 PM

Write for Booklet and Medal

Franciiscan Fathers 600 Pleasant Sheet New Eledford Mass~ _

5 THE ANCHOR-Catholic Mission Philosopher-Priest Visiting North Dartmouth Thurs Aug 25 1966

Societies Meet Also Sculptor Painter Housebuilder CIErgymen oStudyIn Washington

WASHINGTON (NC) A philosopher who is also a part-time sculptor painteralcl honse-builder-thats Mental Health The 17th annual meeting of Rev Herman Reith CSC who is spending the Summer at St Josephs Hall North Dartshy WASHINGTON (NC) - Ten US Catholic mission secishy mouth As co-author of a textbook Psychology for Nurses he spoke this month to Catholic priests and Brothers

middot participated in a mental healtheties will be held here Sept students at St Annes Hospital Fall River discussing the motivation a nurse should workshop held this Summer at1 to 21 with some 1000 priests have in her profession The Georgetown University ThelReligious and lay persons acti ve address was an interlude in middot program was designed to proshyfin Catholic mission work exshy

a busy Summer which the vide them with additional skillspected to attend The Worldmission Award Holy Cross priestmiddot has deshy in dealing with mental health

problemsgiven annually to a layman who voted mainly to work on a book They heard lectures frommakes an outstanding contribushy scheduled for Spring publication

more than 40 psychiatrists psyshycention to mission work will be by the University of Notre Dame chologists anthropologists edushy]tresented to James J Fahey Press Titled A Light to the cators and other clergymenWaltham Mass garbage man Nations Essays on the Intellecshy

The participants also workedand author of Pacific War tual Mission of the Church it with patients in psychiatric andDiary 1942-45 All proceeds is described by Father Reith aS general hospita~ wards and withfrom his book are going to build an attempt in the direction of representatives of social and edshybull church in South India a theology of the Church in modshyucational agencies of the DistrictAmong speakers at the meetshy eln times of Columbia areaing will be Auxiliary Bishop - He is grappling in its pages

A spokesman for the grouIJlFulton J Sheen of New York with redefinitions of key conshysaid they were given the opporshydirector of the National Society cepts such as the nature of the tunity to talk with persons withfur the Propagation of the Faith priesthood the Church herself widely varying pro b 1 emsAuxiliary Bishop Harold R and such terms as mission and They observed alcoholics inPerry SVD of New Orleans witness s 1um neighborhoods traveledMsgr Joseph Gremillion direcshy Religious laity and priests with probation officers whotor of the socio-economic divishy are all wondering who they are work wit delinquent youthsion Catholic Relief Servicesshy and what their roles are in toshyand visited homes for unweltilNational Catholic Welfare Conshy days Church he said My mothers shyference Bishop Frederick Hall stress is on Christ as the Logos The program was financed byMHM retired bishop of Kisushy Christs mission t~ the world is Georgetown University No govshyrna Kenya Sister M Olivette that of enlightenment and all his ernment funds were involvedWhalen councilor general of the wOIk was a witnessing to the

Sisters of the Holy Cross Notre truth Dame Ind and Father Gerrard Logos in Time Bay Staters ServeP Fredericks MSSST supeshy His book will discuss the Ilior general of Trinity Missions Poor in Canadafounding of the Church under Silver Spring Md the heading of The Logos in COMBERMERE (NC)-More

Theme of the meeting will be TIme and will develop the conshy than 100 international volunteersPoverty and the Missions-the cept that Christ must unfold are serving the poor in one ofDemands of Justice and Charshy through history in human fashshy Canadas depressed rural aleasity ion the Madawaska Valley

Degrading Misery The book six years in the They are from New MexicoBesides general sessions the writing took rise said Father Arizona Wisconsin Kentuckythree-day meeting will also inshy Reith from his attempts to exshy Georgia Alabama Illinois Michshy

elude a number of simultaneous plain to seminarians that teachshy igan PennsylvalTia New Yorkseparate sessions for various ing is as priestly a role as adshy Massachusetts and Canada Theygroups including mens and ministering the sacraments He come to Madonna House for awomens major superiors procshy quoted St Paul But as the week to a month and some theurators and promoters men and Lord hath distributed to every entire Summer to work in thewomens training directors and one as God hath called every apostolatev 0 cat ion directors editors one so let him walk And so in Many volunteers spend theirBrothers educators and lay all churches I teach time at the Madonna Housegroups Father Reith will not be forshy inarians on an expedition toFrom this beginning he went farm S1 Benedicts Acres OthshyThe Mission Secretariat is a gotten at St Josephs however Mexico where they built houses on to consider the role of the ers help at the summer recreashyelearing house for information He is leaving a very tangible for shack-dwellers And whereintellectual in the Church tionl programs for childern inand services to aid American memento of his presence in the did he pick up his manual laborShoulltl we be Christians or inshy middot two isolated settlementsCatholic foreign mission work form of a middotlife-size sculpture of know-how I came from a famshytellectuals he asks in his openshy Some help in the summerwith headquarters in Washingshy the Holy Family which will be ily of 10 children he explaineding chapter and ends by explainshy Christmas program cleanington Father Frederick A Mcshy

ing its not erected on a15 foot pedestal on and my mother adopted fourthat an eitheror and repairing toys sent hereGuire CM a former missionary the North Dartmouth grounds more There was always lots ofproposition but rather a both from all parts of North Americalin China is executive secretary work to doTo Leave Mementoand one for distribution this WinterThe delegates to this years Of steel the modernistic sculpshy One more item on this SumshyIn his closing chapters he exshymeeting represent more than ture is being welded in r-rew mers agenda every Sundayamines the roles of religious and7600 United States missionades Bedford by Father Reith during Father Reith flies to the islandlaity in the Church explainingstaffing overseas missions hours taken from his writing of Cuttyhunk to say Mass for CASA BLANCAparenthetically that he saves theIn a pre-convention stateshy project Summer residents The island Just Across Thelayman for last in line with thement Father McGuire said It is is actually part of St MarysThe versatile philosopher alsogospel comment Thou hast Coggeshall St Bridge a truism to say that we are livshy paints for relaxation leaning South Dartmouth he said andsaved the best wine till last Fairhaven Massing in an era of explosi ve towards oils and pastels I like Father Considine the pastor

change We also living in Other Books Holy Fathers Finest Variety ofare a semi-abstractions he said but asked the Cross whose Other books by the author inshycountry affluence has I always try to get some figures tltl be responsible for Summer SEAFOODnever been equaled in the hisshy clude An Introduction to Phil shy in my pictures Masses

tory of the world osophical Psychology and The Among the priests friends in Served Anywhere - AlsoThe house - building That We are at the same time Metaphysics of St Thomas came two Summers ago when the Diocese is Dr John E Manshy STEAKS-CHaPS-CHICKEN

Hving in a world where degrad Aquinas Also to be published ning Fall River pediatricianFather Reith led a group of ing misery envelops half of all next Spring is Frederick His Notre Dame students and sem- who arranged this months lecshyGods children We in the United Writings part of a series Oll ture at St Annes Hospital States accept as our due all the Marxist writings of which Fr eomforts and conveniences of Reith will be general editor FOl Vermonts Divorce Where Athis affluent society the while his doctoral degree earned at we push from our conscious Laval University he concenshy Rate Al110ng Lowest DONAT BOISVERT GOOD NAMEMlinking the agony of uncounted trated on Marxist philosophy BURLINGTO (NC) - Vershy

INSURANCE AGENCY INCmillions He gives credit to St Josephs monts divorce rate continues to Hall for providing the peace remain among the lowest among Means A96 WILLIAM STREETand leisure necessary to writing the 50 states of the nation

NEW BEDFORD~ MASSEight Irish Sisters Most of my books have been GREAT DEAL statistics disclosed it has been written there he said For Ie fairly stable during the last 26 WY 8-5153 WY 7-9167Arrive in Montana years he was chairman of the years - about 15 divorces per

BILLINGS (NC)-Eight Irish department of philosophy at the PERSONAL SERVICE1000 populationSisters of Mercy arrived here University of Notre Dame and Sociologists claim the stable~ work at St Vincents Hosshy he is now teaching in the deshy GEO OHARAlow rate results from the largepital and in parochial schools partment Theres no time fOll Catholic population of the stateTwo others are scheduled to arshy my own writing during the tllCshy -some 135000 Catholics in mIrive in September ademic year he says total population of some 393000 Six axe teachers and four are In the Spring however he IIlurses Bishop William J Conshy will leave Notre Dame for

ELECTRICAL Contractors

944 County St New Bedford

CHEVROLETdon of Great Falls invited the Makerere University in Kamshy St FrancisIIluns here last November when pala Uganda where he expects he visited their motherhouse in to teach for the next five years Residence

lOCH Kings Hwy lBallyshannon euroounty Donegal We have many Holy Cross FOR YOUNG WOMEN missions in Uganda he saiell U96 IIhippie St Fall RvellCOllllsecrcltaon Oct )5 and the Bishop there feels that NEW BEDfORDConducted by franciscanRICHMOND (NC)-Auxiliary the Church should be involved

Missionaries Ill~ MarvBishop-designate J Louis Flahshy in the growth of African educil shyerty of Richmond will be conseshy tion He therefore volunteered ROOMS - MEALS

OVERNIGHT HOSPITALITY crated in Sacred Heart cathedrall for the faculty of the lIIakereJlla Inquiro OS 3-289here on Wednesday Oct 5 Btate university

PHILOSOPHER-SCULPTOR Rev Herman Reith CSC works on Holy Family group which will be erected on outdoor pedestal at St Joseph Hall North Dartmouth Father Reith has been spending Summers at North Dartshymouth house working on books in field of philosophy but will teach in African university for next few years

6 mE ANCHOR-Di9cese of Fan River-Th~rs Aug 25 l~66

The oC1tQice i

A fascirlating chooice i~ shaphlg up as a cOrOn~ry to th~ present crowded condition in the pa~hial school system

0

Those in authority in the Church are faced with the possibility that lower grades of the Oatholic schoQI system must be sacrificed to provid~ the space and teachers for those in the upper grades The Gatholic high school and college must expand at the expense of the elementary school

- And the oungsters f~m th~se lower grades tnust tum to the public~chOoISyate_mof ~ducation

Hereis where the choice coin~s in

If these young-sters p~esent tllemselves at the do()rs of the over-crowded public schools the community must find

space and teachers for them That hits the whol~ comshymunity in the pocketbook

The onlyaIternative seems to be increased aid from publk tax funds for the parochial school system to assist itmiddot to educ~te every child who wants an ~ducation in a Catholic iChOol

CriticS of the pa-roehial school system must choos~beshytween expaIlding the public school system at a prohibitive eost or swallowing their harsh words and grant tomiddot parents the right to educate their children in a system not less capable and democratic than the public school system and in assisting the chil~ to receive an education in the system of his parents choosing

Modern Lorelei

A survey of _two thousand pupils in the Chicago area produced some revealing staticS about their televisionshyviewing habits

Elementary school students spend an average of twenty-one hours a week with television

High -school students average fourteen hours aweek

Parents of those middotquestioned admitted to watChing television about twenty hours a week and their teachers

saw it twelve hours

Television is here to stay No on~ would decrie its great entertainment and educational value Already it is being used as a supplement to classroom teachings

- But like any other thing it inust be used and middotnot abused the used and not the user

It is quite possible for people to become hypnotized by thecathode eye and spend hour afterhour in an electronicshycontrolled -trance

Since such viewing is essEmtiatally passive it bodes no good for the creative mind And the student can easily come to grief by middotspending too much time caught in the trap qf this twentieth century Lorelei

A students life is one of application to lessons and work He has no more excuse from those responsibilities than his father has to refuse to work his mother to ignore the making o~ meals and duties of housekeeping

Study costs an effo~t It is not always pleasant ltis a sacrifice Arid in this age of high living standards when children are brought up with very little sacrifice in their lives surrounded by everything that money can buy they must learn control and discipline to assure s~holastic sucshycess

Control of television watching is just such a discipline of spirit

And with schools soon to open it is a discipline that should be decided upon by parents for their children and insisted upon as the school year goes along

regrheANCHOR

Sword of the Spirit C -c -n

By Edward P McDonagb

CCD and CFM The fourth Biennial eon

- vention of the New EnglaBCl Area Christian Family Moveshy

middotrilent concluded its three day session on August 14th The ~

WlS the lovely campus ~f tbe Newton College of the Sacred Heartand CFM couples from all over the New England Sta~ gathered there to increase th~ understanding of the movemeilli

middotand to chartmiddot new areas of A~ tolic Action

The theme of the Christi_ FamUy Movement is For Hap pier Families and cgtuples bull the organization seek that goal by applying the Observe JUd~

and Act technique in their own ho~es the neighborhood the

parish and the ~orld at large The purpose of all this is to fo~

~

Gap StUImiddot Exists Study Suggests More Than Busing Needled

In EdllllcGtioll1lEquality-lntegration WASHINGTON (NC)~A reshy

port prepared by the US Ofshyfice of Education says that the present s~t-up of the nations public school system serves to

- perpetuate the social and ecoshynomic gap between most Negroes and whites

Although it challenges the eoncept of n e i g h b 0 rb 9 0 d

schools the report warns tha integration andmiddot edu~ational equality cannot be attained by busing alone

The 737-page report on Equal- ity oj Educational Opportunity has been published by the Ofshyfice of Education Earlier the office isued a summary of the two-year study called for by Congress under terms of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

Senator Abraham Ribkoff of Connecticut has accused the 00shymiddotministration of playing down the report because it contains explosive political implkations

I think the time has come for us not to be satisfied with cliches Ribic9ff told John W

GaTdner SecretarYcent Healtl) Education and Welfare M 11 Senate sub-committee hearing on urban problems A lot of the concepts are loaded with political dynamite

James S Colemlm author of the report agreed that the adshyministration - issul~iI summary was fllt and over--cautious He said that might have stemmed from uneasiness about findings that may have political lreper cussions

Planes Help Enable Proests to Cover Large TerritClraquorfl

In PerfolTmOlftceof Apostolic Work LOCKPORT (NC)3-A priest years ending with the rank of

who has twice flown at the speed of sound believes a plane can be a useful tool iii apostolic labor especially inmiddot far-flung fields

Father Richard E Spellman pastor of Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary parish in Albuquershyque began to fly when he saw ranchers in New Mexico using planes to get- around their ranches

If the ranchers can do it why cant a priest he asked I found out that in my little plane I was able to get around quickly to mission schools in New Mexico to teach catechism to children

He has used his plane too to d~liver medicine to Catholic missions in Mexico

Father Spellman who served

major was here in Illinois for the third annllal conventioJl of the National Association of

Priest Pilots He learned to fly here hi~

he was seminarian He said I was a good enough pilot that the Archbishop of Santa Fe tnJsted me to take him around the Archshydiocese in my plane

Some 150 priests belong to the association said Father Rich~rd

Skriba the conventions genshyeral chairman and asistant pas~ tor of St Simon parish in Chishycago Altogether there are over 400 priests and Brothers in the always understoodUS who are pliots he added Similarly CCD Discussion

Groups have in some casesSays Priests R~Ue been difficult to start and main-I S 11 tain where CFM is active InJust pirituOID rare instances competition

BOGOTA (NC)-Father C~ - rather than cooperation has

Catholic Lay Leaders and from all the evidence it succeeds veq well middot Significantly one of the wenshyattended workshops at the rec~Di convention covered the compleshymentary nature of CFM and CCD Chaired by Rev William 1 Downs of Newton the wideshyranging discussion period higbshylighted several areas where CCD and CFM have worked well toshygeth~er and some where the have not

Wordng Together Couplesfrom several localities

- indicated that CCDs Paren1oshyEducator units are natural ou1oshylets for those seeking to proshymote happier famiiies Manr CFM couples are working iQ

-Parish Parent-Educator groups and~ in doing so are finding solid recruits for CFM among the young married couples that they visit T~is is a perfect eJl shyample of how the two organiza tions can help each other lv working together

Other examples cited by parti shycipants were the use of CFlII couples as guest lecturers and discussion leaders in CCD classes covering questions marriage- and sex Fall River CFMers noted the participation of CFM couples as discussion moderators in the CCD leadeJio ship day programs Manyothel8 recounted incidents of CCD Elishyecutive Boards being formed o of CFM groups middot Father Downs who is both bull CFM Chaplain and a CCD Parish Director noted that priests will contittue to look to CFM for leaderS middotto staff CCDunits and otlier parishorganizations Not to provide for CFM in a parish would mean that a prime source of committed laymen a Jl d women would be cut off

There are a few problems too Several areas have eXJerienced difficulty in obtaining permisshysion to start CFM because CCD Discussion Groups already exshyisted Apparently the distinction between the two groups is not

as an Air Force chaplain for 10 cilo de Lora one of the direc- been the guiding spirit with unshyOFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RiVER tors of the Latin American bish- fortunate results for both

ops educational department af- The lesson learned from thed1O Highland Avenue Retain PriiDege firmelt here that the role Of the workshop )Nas this Where CeDFoil River Mass 02722 675-7151 MADRID (NC)-Spains bishshy priest is exclusively spiritual and CFM people get ~ know ops following their annual conshy In the past he said prieSts each other and take the time toPUBLISHER ference announced that they had an authority and prestige understand each others proshy

Most Rev James L -Connolly DO PhD will retain the privilege of eating beyond the religious but ilow grams the results can be imshymeat on Friday The dispensa- we have to recogniZ4~ that the pressive CFM has the happy

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER tion from the regular law dates times have changed andtl)at our knack of producing commi~ted Rt Rev DanielF Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll back several centuriell and came middotmiddotmiSsion is rust spiritual Father gtCalholics who are willing r~

MANAGi~G E[gtITOR ~ orginal1y as a reward for sershy de Lora spoke during aconJer- - act -and CCD continues to off vices to the Church and for ence at Bogotas arl~hdiocesan almost unlimited opportunitiee

H~gh J Golden Spanish wars against infidels curia here in Colombia for action

THe ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 7 Priests Respond Generously 1Ciitymiddot ExpressVariety of Opinions

Bishop Asks for Suggestions--shyj

YOUNGSTOWN (NC)-I-Wed- There was a call for a study of ltmngs and ftinerals in the eve- the~hoie questioriof the Caih- Brm R~~~ie$ fr~ QM~~15~~~o[jreg ming wholesaie revamp~~g of o~(~~ool system versus CCD VICTORIA (NC) - Give the Latin and Oriental rites larish organizations retire~ent JElimination of raffles collec- larm~alliopp~rtuni~yto speak On the ne~Ci~ive sidEiI 418 felt f priests at age 6s-these were tronSand all o~her fUli9-raising his mmd on the results of the that there was a great need of sorrie suggestions for updating gimlnicks was proposed for Second Vatican Council the better adult edUcation~ There advanced by the Youngstown Catholic schools One priest liturgy ecumenism and the was overwhelming concern for ltt1Iioceses 262 priests lamented the lack of dialogue Church and hell say plenty better Catholic education more The Ohio priests responded between parents pastor and Bishop Remi de Roo of Vic- religious instruction for Catholic generously to a request by school principal and suggested toria here in British Colombia children not in Catholic schools lBishop James W Malone apos- the establishment of q parish discovered tbis when 600 parish- more Catholic youth activities tolie administrator of the diocese s~nate whose members would ioners filled out a comprehen- and efforts to build a strongerlior suggestions The bishop now sit in on school faculty meetings sive questionnaire and returned family life Inadequate teachers lltas called on the laity of the Also present was the limitation it to the chancery office Two- and poorly trained teachers also aliocese to make suggestions The of all classes to a maximum 6f thirds of them signed their came under fire llle~ IS-member pastoral com- 40 students names but this was not required Other tOPIcs which turned up

mission will study all suggestions Their comments went far beyond in the survey but which were) ~ and make recommendatioQs to the questions asked not put as questions included

BiShOP Maione ~ooamprm~ [L~~ A $~udYof the an~wers reveals creination pullfigpting marshy~ Th new liJurgy econli~ics

thatjwlJi1~ mo~etlJan two-thirds riageof c1Ergym~n children ~ryshy

ond parish orgllnizations were O~ Greg~reg[jcr of the people were pleased with ing in church nuris habits povshy lto~llQrig t1Je most popular are~s of new deveWpments in the erty arid the clergys ability as ) ltilCmment by th~ priests SAIGON (NC)-General Jos- Church the remaining admitted businessmen

To enhance singing at IYJass eph W Stillwell lost during a being mildly or very disturbed atere were suggestions for each plane flight from San Francisco Fifty pel cent agreed that the

iParish to mime a minister of to Honolulu is prayeclully reshy council 1 hadmiddot deepened their CoIQmbilaquoli CFM Has JlIllusectic to teach liturgical music membered by grateful lepers Faith and btou~ht them closer National Structure ~ parishioners and for establish- Sisters and their chaplain in St to the Church but 105 stated ment or strengthening of mixed Joseph~s28 miles ~rom Saigon vOSEPH MICHAUD that they had been left confused BOGOTA (NC) -The Chrisshymoirs to e1)courage others to They recall how on April 5 Fifty PeJ cent answered that tian Family Movement which Cak~ part 1964 when Viet Cong activities the liturgical reforms had helped has been functioning on a someshy

Another priest asked for had resulted in cutting off the Michaud Shrine them pray better Fifty per cent what independent basis in 17 ~ilwre patience in implement- leper hospital from all supplies said they felt the Church could dioceses in this country now has

lIDg the changes because thebt road Gen Stillwell and his Music Director be improvedmiddot Two-thirds felt the structure of a national lleW forms of participating are d~uty Col John L Klingen- that theChur~ should concern organization

lIlot appealing to all Ther~was Jiagen of St LOUis came to the WA~HiINGTON (NC)-Joseph itself wore with the internashy The first national meeting of ~plea also for a return to the rescue They brought food and Michaud has been appointedmiddot tionalsituation soCial and ecoshy the CFM was convoked in the holy and dignified liturgical other necessities in a series of music director of the National nomic problems last part of July by Bishop Pabshy

music imd elimination of folk helicopter fliglits carried out lgty Shrine of the Immaculate Oonshy Asked specifically where the lo Correa Leon of Cucuta presishy oongs and modem swing music the U S Support Command of ception here Msgr Thomas J Church should be more involved dent of the Episcopal Commisshy

Another priest urged that ~4ee- which Gen Stillwell was com- Grady director of the Shrine the answers voried from rehabili shy sion for the Lay Apostolate in dom of experimentation in the mander announced tation of drug addicts the labor order to organize CFM on a nashy

1Iiturgyshouldbe encouraged Ben San has about 280 leper Michaud will develop and su- movement and the emerging tional scale nations A board of directors of the Changes in Vestments~ patients in the care of the pervise the music program at the

national CFM was named andThere were requests to elim Daughtersof Charity of St Vin- Shrine assemble and train a Most Important The majorit~ considered the includes five married couples mate or -review Forty Hours de- cent de Paul chortis vf mixed voices evenshy

three from the Bogota archdioshyYotions and similar celebra- -Mrs faillwell durfug her st~y tuallyadd a choir of men and five most important questions tions for daily evening Masses in Vietnam was one of the boys and supervise the care of cese and one each from the archshy

the Church and fellow Chrisshydiscu~ed at the council to be

dioceses of Cali and Medellinma parishes where there are two American women who sponsored all organs and the carillon tians birth control active sharshy These five couples in cooperashy

CI more priests and for smaller the new center for undernour- A native of Sumas Wash ing in the iturgy the sharing of tion with Father Enrique Acosta

~onfirmation classes with ~he ished children also conducted by Michaud has served churches responsibility in the Church are In charge of extending the

IIIlX prIests who are deans bemg the Sisters of Charity in Saigon and schools in Seattle San Franshyand religious liberty Prefer- CFM throughout the entire

Gi~legated by the bIShop to ad- We are praying fo~ the be~ cisco Portland Ore Detroit countryences at the bottom of the listBlumster the sacrament reaved family Father Vict Pittsburgh and Mt Lebanon Pa Be or H h were worl~ populition atheismOther suggestions called for a C MH h d

~ 1 l hts th rset chaplam at Ben IS c Olrs ave appeare on international government and_~cussion on Vlgl Ig e San wrote network radio broadcasts gave l)rlests breviary changes 10 the premiere presentation of Mass vestments and merits of Alexander Peloquins Missa Na- SAVE MONEY ONEstablishes Specialgroup confessions in which lPiJiest Plans Homes tiVitatis with the Pittsburgh penitents attend a Bible service Symphony over the CBS net- Tourists Parish to to confession and receiveab- middotfor Working Grls work iIi 1962 and in December YOUR OILHEATCOLOGN]i (NC) - Colognessolution private~y and then per~ TECHNY (NC) ~ Father Ed- 1955~ sang in Menottis Ahmal Joseph Cardinal Frings has apshySform a community penance such wiu-di Wojniak SVD Chi- an~ the ~nght Visitors WYmanpointed a multilihgual Dutch ~eatt as recitation of a prayer to c~go-born Society of the Divine 3-6592priest to establish a special tourshy

tether Word mlssionary is oft the verge A~d R f W k ists parish on the Autobahn nearOne writer suggested that the of seeing his dream come true Imiddot 5 e ugee or CHARLES IF VARGASDusseldorf llrishop offer Sunday Mass at a bull ltiliff rent ish church each He has ben VISItIng throu~h- Of German Knights Although several churches are 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

~ par raut the Umted States seekmg located 01_ th~ famous German ~ee h h Id b t d d the aid of busineSs firms which BONN (NC) - The German highway none provides special NEW IalEfPlFqitD ~SS

Tl~ l~g S P e l~ ro u~ h have interests in Formosa to aid government has provided three tourist services The new parish la prIes v~o h a~~ ~s w lCll him in his pet project----to erect jeeps tnd three ambulances for besides the church will have a Opt t~ngfs ~u I r~p11 hostels for factory giriS present- the work being done by the Ger- hot~J restaurant theater and

~ngo reds es IVdi~ s e c 1 ly forced to live in squalid man Knights of Malta for refushy chiIdr~ns pla~~rounds ~IOt~eSan ahn Idnonb- tockesan fCO - c~owded unhealthful and prim- gees in South Vietnam ec IOns s ou e a en rom T dt d t cae proceeds of the tithing sys- 1 lVe con 1 IOns angerouso f team ~f about 25 Germa~s C2 only to their phYSical well bemg- wl1 work m refugee camps In

m but also to their moral well Hoi in the QuangNam province r~oD~D~i~=~i~~~~i HUe]) lllen~ Poor being in ilentral Vietnam

Others suggested rich par~shes The hostels will be non-de- The Germar government will n _ See Us should help poor parIshes nominational and will provide contrilmte about $250000 annushy ~ -Abou~ ij~rough a commo fund that quar~ers in pleasant surround- ally for the work of this counshy

o each ~arish establIsh a fma~ce iilgs at $3 per month In addition tt-ys Knights of Malta in Vietshy ~ ~t17 (~~~OuTI]OUceouureg [ commlttee and the ~lOcese hire toa home it will provide edu-nam ~(jrtamp euroleiJcp(]ip C1

a fulltJme profeSSional fund eational and recreational facili- llaiser for parishes that need his ties Father Wojniak said The ~1lIIilllliJllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllm ~ ~~~~[HJA~ ~ aervices first hostel will be built at Tai~ - shy

as pilot with DRY - E SAVINGS BANK I epei a project E CLIEANNG Says Gift of Tools Father Wojniak as director of ~ and ~

Wareham falmouth J f =rst Class MIracle Taiwan Hostels Inc which will ~ fUR STORAGE ~ -y 5-3800 IltI 8-3000 HEATING OIL

w be run on a noh-profit basis E D == 4-o_a_C1_a~~D__o-o-BOGOTA (NC) -Shop stu- E ERMODY ~

dents at Bogotas Colegio San f R ClEANERS ~ Viator reclved a windfall of lIanCISCans etaln == ryyYYyy~

~~~C1Jm~d~~~~ B~r~~(N~~m~ty iEE

nCohan ~~~ l bullC~~o~A~~~~~E~RT ~ 4lIlllira~le by one of the students two newly received Franciscan ~JIIIIII1I1I11I11I11I11I11I11I1I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I1I1I11I11I11Ii ~ nncluded a large variety and Sisters of Perpetual Adoration ~ Spaeious Fireproof Sleeping Quart~rs-BoysI to 14 yrs Old quantity of hand tools and two retained their baptismal names Six-week season June 26 to Aueust G ch of severallarge power tOQls with the title of Sister at their GRmiddotACIA BmiddotROS t Register for z or 4 or 6 weeks Free Tutoring it desired 4Father John Stafford CSV reception into the community ia ehicago provincial supervising St Joseph the Workman Cathe- bull i THE BROTHERS OF THE SACRED HEART

tile Viatorians Bogota mission draI here in ~7isconsin _ ~ eommented that the gift worth tVlot~er General Ann Marie of Excavating SACRED HEART SCHOOL

$6000 in the United States is ~ Rose convent said the name C worth five times that in Colom- policy change was the first ill ontractors r t SBAltON MASSACHUSETTS ~

twa He added that the tOok itleU6~year history of the com- ~ bull (I~SS 5T~FAIRHAViH A Reside~t School for BoYS Grammar Gra~es ~-li-6-1- ~ would probably give the school muOityAt the same ceremollTthebest~lIuipped shop ~ tiampe~ Sistels made ~rst-year pN-l WYman 2-4862 = CAMP 0amp SCHOOL TeL 1171845162 4 ~~tlY ~YOWi- ~ampamp~

bull I 1bull

bull ~ I I bull I bullbull I ~

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 Parish to Serve Wide Community

PATERSON (NC)-With the end of its vacation religiolli school St Josephs parish heICI

Lucis V~ew of Marriage Seen Delig~tfuny O~d-fashioned~ in New Jersey has turned ~

serve a wider communityBy Mary Tinley Daly Priests Sisters seminarianpound Never it is said have so many million words been and student volunteers haw

written about a marriage as the reportage of the Luci taken a $200 budget given by the Catholicmiddot Interracial Council andJohnson-Patrick Nugent nuptials-TH WEDDING in put on a program of field triP8Dpopular terminology Its over in all its impressive dignity arts and crafts athletics and

with an ele~ance wor~hy ~f honestly state that thei ambishy story-telling for 120 youngstem the marrIage of a PresIdent s tion is to grow up get married The children mostly Negro

had no opportunity to be part ofdaughter Yet like every and have babifs any other summer program sowedding great or small it Somewhere along the line edshy Father Nicholas Molinari steppedearried its message of identifica- ucatlOnally or other~se they in to help themtionto the millions viewing it are shunted career-WIse or preshy Our objec~ father said on the screen tend to bemiddot They of course to impress the children witlait n d to those want to marry but this is in~ love They dont understan~itreading about cidental they ~avent ~xperienced it We

it At our house AlulDDae middotNotes want to break down their selfshy~ ve n a s ~ t Loo~ ~t you~ Alumnae h~ite concept We want to make vou~s t~at no~- ~otes Bii( deal is ~ gal who them realize tha~ they are goodoshy

middot ~l~c Idenbfi has her masters working on catlOn was pres- the doctorate il physics mathe- t Ik Sisters of Christian en now ex matics Russian or whatever actly ho LUCI And the proud boast of a college feels squealed imany of our graduates are no~ Charity Elect America

PADERBORN (NC) - Sister bride as the TV fathers our most recent making more money than their

M Augustilde Giesen of Jersey showed the radiant Luci on her Into these same alumnae notes City has been elected the first fathers arm comes a confession humbly American superior General 0If

And I know how ~~rvous written from Betty B that she is the Sisters of Christian Charit Pat was at that moment cm- still just a housewife has a here in Germany mented the most recent bnde- family and recently was electesl Sister Augustilde former PJOogtNURSERY FRiENDS Sister Marie Patrice RSM Br~om president of the local PTA vincial of the province headshy

director of Holy Angels Nursery for Exceptional Children grooms of years ago author has expressed herself Belmont NC cuddles one of the 69children in her care was director of the provinces

To go further back an eon against the discontented femi junior sisters attending Marillae

Me too from bndes and Phyllis McGinley talented quartered at Mendham N J

most of whom because of their disabilities require roundshyor two even th ~ea~ of the nine mystique of searching for Sisters Formation College at thethe-clock attention NC Photo House and hIS bnde shared fullfillment outside of the home time of her election the g~ose pImples So have others The 2200-member congregashy

Behmd the pomp and ClrcUJI1- As an addendum we find 1lI tion founded in Germany ~

stance sket~h~s of gowns held 10 quote from Rep Emmanuel Celmiddot Disclaimsmiddot New Breed 1849 moved to the United States somewhat ndiculous top secrecy ler (D-NY) apropos prohibiting in 1873 during the anti-Catholic as though they were plans for discrimination against wom~ franciscan Nun Biology Professor Says Kulturkampf compaign of Gershym~on shots was the forthrIght serving on juries man chancellor Otto von BisshyattItude of thIS l~-year-old brIde There are women who work Primary Apostolate Is Prayer- marck

Sh~ wants th~s to be a goo~ because they have to others who marnage andw111 try to make It work because they want to and BUFFALO (NC)-Dr M Re- My whole life I trust is givshy New Secretary 10 there is the lazy kind whO gin~ L~gan associat~ profes~ ing witness to Christ she anshy CHICAGO (NC)-The Nationshy ~er father the PresIdent ~o cleans washes irons cooks sor of bIOlogy and chaIrman of swered I am a biology profes al Catholic Conference for Intershyma~t~r how you regard hUll chauffeurs mend1l binds lIP ~e biology concentration at sor whose prime role is twoshy racial jUstice haS announced the~lltlc~lly you must alknow~~ wounds nurses cloctors middotand Rosary Hill College here conshy fold first in edu(ation proper appointinfmt of Margaret Cshyedgeexpres~edfath~rly ~onfl~ shops and has conSequently So tends there is no such thing u and second in research middottomiddot fur Roach to its program staff Millli

middot dencewen he said of fat little to do aD day why Should bull new breed of nuns ther the education of my stushy Roach haB been social actioaN~gent LUCI look~ up to him she not 1e obligated NrM _ The sCientist HI as qualified dents~ _ secretarY for the National CO~with great r~spect eep ~~c OIl ju~es as anybody else to know She However she noted many ell ai Catholicmiddot Women iIinoetion a~d confIdence 10 hlll It has been a Franciscan nUll for people think th-at by taking offMs go~ng to b~ ~ good ~arrIage 28 years and she iilsists the the reUgio~ garl or by drop~Dunn~ the s~me mtervlew Urges ~ UnmiddotderstClnding OSF middotcomes before the PhDbull ping the religious title we Call1he President recalled that Luci

be more effective This is not so had been a deep1y reiigious girl Of Other Churches I dont think Sisters have all of her life even before her SPOKANE (NC)-We me ehanged she said People are As a nun my primary aposshyConversion to Catholicism More- not take the positioJl that the jUst beginning to llotice what tolate is prayer to give God the over he did not believe middotshe other Christian coinmunitiesaM weve beeJ doing all along love and adoration that the would ever become active in simply in error Bishop Ber- With 11 biological papers pubshy modem world often neg1Eicts to politics but would concentrate nard J Topel has advised priests llIshed and nine read with the give In the present day discusshyon home-inak~ng raisin~ a fam- of the Spokane diocese in a Get eredit of being first to isolate sion of the nun in the modern

middot lyen and followm~ her faIth of interim ecumenical JUide-- tile bacteria Desulfovibrio desul- world attention should be foshyFather not politician was lines furicans and with the institution cused on her existlmce nc)t the

apeak~g ~hen Bishop Topel urged priesbl i= of a trail-blazing method of preshy garb she wears she said middot LU~I s VIew of ~arriage IS re- avoid expressions judgmenu menting a college biology curricshyfreshmg and dellghtfully old- and actions which do not repre- ulum the Franciscan who drinks

196= -

JANSONS Pharmacy

Arthur Janson Reg Phcim DIABETIC AND SICK ROQM

SUPPLIES 204ASHL~ BOULEVARD

New Bedford WY 3middot8405

fashioned middotin the mid-twenti~th sent the condition of oui sepa- ber ~offee black is fully a pro century when so many gIrls rated brethren with truth ad fessional in science toohave their sights set on the split-personality syndrome mar- fairness and 110 make mutual She has be~n awarded $81000 BISA~ILLONSriage plus individual freedom relations with them more cWI- llra grants-m-rod for her reseach

ficult th g ma career and assuming at once He said full eucharistic ecm on e pernICIOUS m1cro~r ams a plar- in the forefront of out- ~~t has ~ knack for rummg oill GARAGEside activities munion is the ultimate lioal laquoIi dnlling ngs

Most little girls are disarming- the ecumenical movement WitnGS8 b Christ ly frank (see Art Linkletters 24our Wreck~r Service program or talk wit~ 7 8 and C I H bull 0 H d How does her commI~ent Ie Iyear-olds you know) The 0 bull olsgton eo s ~erstudents and co~CCmltantl

W A C to ber research (she 18 also II 653 WashinJton Street Fclirhaven omen s rmy orps iOOnsultant at Oak Ridge National HoldYou~g Christian WASHINGTON(NC) - A Laboratory the group leader of WYman 4middot5058 h b I e s s i ng followed traditional aCivil Defense fixed monitorin ~bullbullbullbull middotStudent Works OFgt 8wearingin ceremonipounds here for Station mici a ~part fliine seamshy N0TRE DAME (NC) - The Col Elizabet~ P Hoisington the_ bullreSs) Bel With h1el commit- ~IMtlIIIIIIHIIIItIIIIIIIIItImiJlHililjJlniRiiillntJiliIllNtiJtIlIHII~

Reoild annuai Young Christian new director 01 the Women mentu a Biofei6ec ~ = - _ Student apostolic workshop Wall Army Coorps Christ ~ li5

middotheld here thisweeKformiddot~Brade ~Themiddot middotblessing was giVeIlE D p SAlES middotANDmiddot middotSEmiddotRVICE ~ oionhoolmmiddotode~~torsfromparochial MsgrCKennethGStackaper-middot sect middotcmiddot bull - bullbull j bull iL

bullbull L~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull0bullbullbullbullbullbullbull middot _ IIand public school groUpsas weB s~Ia1frierid of the woman Armgt II Ill [He c E

as parishes ~ le~de~onher request afters~ bull J B II i ~ middotmiddotmiddotmiddotltThe Iconference coordinated had taken heroath of office ani 8 8 I FR sect - 1(JImiddotDmiddotmiddotAmiddotmiddotIREshy by the Catholic Action Office of beeli pi6moted from lieutenant 8 bull -1 l =

Notre DamemiddotUniversity was beld e9Jonelmiddotmiddotmiddot II LUMBER CO == I~

On t~e universitys campus middotCQlol)~I)loisington ~lPadu = 8 il RIEF ~IIG_ ~RATIOmiddot sect~ong ilP~a~er~ wer~raJherlilte_oftbe C0Uege oI~ou So Dartmouth bull IE ~ i

middot LOUISJPutz cS~_reltor of Da~eaalti~or~ Md JOlDeG II bull~ e h~p~~~~orauli1~~~h~ ~e~~n~~~~2~t~e~~~sLe~middot a~ Hyannis I 0 APPLIANCES I natioI)alltJirectoro(t~~ Gabrie(CIllsterthe Bronze Star ~So Dartmouth WY of$84 55 middot IR middotCO~IDmiddotITIOIG 5 Richard Institute and the Rev CroiX de Guerre with silver 1Rm bull i A ~ ~ n ~

middot Ja~es Neuman pastor of Hum- and the American and ~uropeaJll IMjaRwia 29211 == boldt Pa~ United BrethreJll Jheater ribbons of Wo~ld Wall bull ~ 363SECONDSomiddot FALL RIVER MASS~ ~

_ r middot9~~Imiddot~~ R~-pound~~~ -P-t rmiddotmiddot - gt gt bull IllbullbullIIIbullbull_1118 middotIiIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIHIUlllIIUIUIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIII1I1II1IIlIlUIIIIIIUllIIIIIIIIIIIUlIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIUU_ _

9 ~Swooned Priest Eggplant Dish U$ong Legendary P~r$ey P~~B1)t

By Joseph amI MarilYllll Roderick The cool weather where ~gain and with it the grass

has begun to break donnancy and send up little green shoots which means that the lawn mowers which have been restshying for a few weeks have got to be brought back to action

The drought that we had uperienced for the past three Summers has raised havoc with lawns and it doesnt seem much good can be done this season in areas still under water restrictions Howshyever in those that are not theremiddotre a few thingsmiddotwhich can be done middotbetween now and 1hetirst -bst to help lawns along To begin with this is amiddot good

middottime to apply itmiddot weed killer of some kin to I prefer tousecomshybination weed killer and fertil shyzer as this saves time and does el good job This should help dear up the lawn and start the grass out of dormancy Follow this with a good raking to disshylodge some of the matted grass and you are well on your way

to a healthy lawn in the Spring The next step is to buy a good grass seed if your lawn is well established and to apply it at ab04t half the rate or less sugshymiddotgested on the packageThe idea behind this is to fill in places where the lawn is thin or where weeds have been killed Incishydentally it is a good idea to wait two or three weeks aftermiddot

middot you have applied weed killer middotbefore you start new grass seed

It is important that your seed be a good brand and quality A eheap seed contains many coarse ~escues and annual graSses which will do the lawn very little good over the long run Jetter to buy a very good seed in small amounts than an iJlexshypensive seed which will cause you more trouble than it will do good

The only job left af~er middotthis is ~ keep themiddot lawn moistsq~bat

snippedt up the flavor would be stronger

Well I cooked my recipe and it was quite delicious but a few sprigs of the green shoots reshymained on the counter and as Joe was helping me clean up he inquired why Ihad been picking carrot tops Needless to say at that moment I rseolved to learn a great deal more about parsley in all its varieties The things I found out in my research on the parlsley plant were quite fascinating and even it bit frightening if youre the superstitious type Did you know that it was thought to be such a plant of the devil that it could only be sown on Good Friday if it were to flourish at all In anciert times the Greek$ decked their tombs with it for they fully believed that it sprang from the blood of one of their dead heroes It was also th9ught only the wicked could grow parsley successfully

Feeling that its merits must far outweigh its supposed curses I searched further to discover that one of the beliefs that surshyrounded it was that wherever it flourished the missus is master This could provide a good reason for cultivating it

Getting away from the P4rely theoretical and into the practical I learned that parsley is la h~rdy biennial normally flowering and going to seed in the Spring -after sowing though in a hot dry year it may bolt and go to seed in late Summer (this is what happened to Ti Tias parsshyley bed) Seed may be planted inmiddot April and May fOf a Summer and early Autumn crop andmiddots

the n~wgtseed has amiddotchlUlce tos~cpnd s~~ing JWlde ~lllate~uly germinate If you are succ~ pr August for tbe next ~pring and the lawn does take it is im-~pd SumDler n

middot perative tbat you keep the n~wpar~le~ steJfis have fiir~ore grasscut at about two inches So~avor than the leayes and ~e

that it makesmiddot sorneroot growth French often use only the stem before the coIf weather sets in where taste is more important

Mostlawns should bereseededmiddotthan appearance They are full iJdHis vaVeach year pIefetabiyof chlorophyll (thatgreeliishIn late Augustor eatlySeptem- property lthat was so popular a

ber Seeding is outmiddot of the ques- fewmiddot years ago) andmiddot when tion however where water re- crushed ~intmiddot mayonnaise aod

strictions are still in effect So other sauces a lovely shade of if you are allowed to water only green If you do happen tomiddot be one or two hours a week you wicked enough to have pars- will have to suffer your poor ley flourish in your yard the hlwq or at least another season four most popular ways of storshy

h the Kitchen ing it in your refrigerator are 1 With the stems kept ina

I realize that I have a great glass of water deal to learn concerning both 2 Washed water shaken off the kitchen and garden but my sealed in a glass jar or plastictack of knowledge was undershy bag

Jined the other day when I was 3 Unwashed in a plastic bamiddotg preparing to cook the recipe 4 Washed and folded intoa

- yentat Irrt ~sing in this eeks cloth the clothmiddot absorbs the ~olumn As I readmiddot the hst of dampness ~ee~ed Ig~edlents I only gave I found the following recipe iilSSmg notce to t~e paryleyas ~elicious even J~oJlgh graced

have always gathered It fr~s~ with carrot top~ instead of parsshy rom a large bed over In 1-1 Tla s -- ley The unusw name may refer ya~d howev~r when I wet to sltmelllenlbero(th~-cleigy over to pick It I found that In who fainted with joy at the flashya s~ort span of a few days most vor he enjoyeo

0pound It bad gone to seed - middotmiddot middotmiddotmiddotmiddot SWo()nedPri~stmiddot~lmiddotmiddot

Suddenly I see~ed to recall 1 eggplant peeled and sliced ~hat Joe ~admentIoned that he h inch thick had planted some of theltalian 2 large onions sliced _ Vanety llear our raspberry 3 large tomatoes sliced ~ushes ah the day was saved salt and pepper That must be it I said to 1 small bunch of fresh pa~ middotmyself as I spied sOllIe feqthery ley minced green shoots along the fence it 2 Tab)e~pouns oil didnt smell very much like 2 cloves of garlic sliced

middot parsley but ther again it was 1) Arrange eggplant onionsmiddot supposed to be a different va- and tomatoes in alternate layen lriety and perhaps when I in a large frying pan sprinkling

each layer with salt pepper ahd 1 00 R the minced parsley u v eglster 2) Add 1fJ cup hot water the

NEW YORK (NC) - More oil and garlic

than 1000 person have regis- 3) Cover tightly -andmiddot simm1r ~7~~d to at~end the ei~J1th n~- for about 30 minutes or u~til ~lonal CursI110 Movement eon-iiquia Is reducedt~aricl1 gravY iention now in session here Remove garlic before serving

PRE-CONVENTION ARRANGEMENTS BY DCCW DELEGATES Among the delegates from the Diocese who met recently for arrangements to attend the 33rd National Convention of Catholic Women in Miami Beach Oct 5-8 were left to right Mrs James E Williams St Josephs No Dighton Miss Angela Medeiros Mt CarmelSeekonk Mrs Theophane Lavoie St Jeim the Baptiste Fall River Mrs John Smith Sk Marys South Dartmouth Thursday Sept I is the closing date for registration of delegates from the Diocese to the Convention

Nuns Health Insurance Econoniist Tells Superiors Life Expectancy

Justifies C~operative Plan MILWAUKEE (NC)-Kuni- encountered by ri~ns thlo~ghQut erlliy o~payton ecqnonll~ ~r~ their lifetime ~essor Wbo~peciali~es i~m~g- Medical Passports ic~l statisectticl(or~seesalow-c~ To c~nect data FecheidEl~ised be~lthi~u~an~e~lan a~~ a~ni- a medlqal i4e~tification card 1fiect )rgra~ 0 n1edlcal and whichiiecalIi a medical pass-h~spltal facllitiesfr Am~can middotPOrtHe said these cards carshynuns under the admlm~tratlOrt~f ryingrecords of current disabili shythe Conference of MaJor Supe- tiesmiddotmiddot eouldaid in accumulating

middot riors of Wmen medical information to help Addressmg t~e conferepCemiddot ~t middotnuns qualify for lower cost Its annual meetmg he~e COli Jhealth insurance and to organize Fecher s~ldmiddot ~ooperativeplaQsan eventual program of comshy~or ~ns m thIS country canbe JustIfIed by the longer life exshypectancy ~nd better health of women relIgiOUS Fecher presented d~ta Q~ a

fIve-year study on disabIlItIes among 3)000 nuns He has made many previous statistical studies on ~he nuns long~vity

Smce nuns lIve In what Fec~er calls a contrlled life studIes ~f thelmiddot medlcal sta~us can prOVide medical SCIence WIth ~nf~rtn~tion relvatgt-t to 0-lher q~e1 But mo~t PTllvI~ts stuq~es have conc~Iltrat~~~m rn~rtalItybull s~tI~tl~s~l1d w~re coJcerI)edW~~ lteaJh apd I~ causes Fec~eT s rece~t ~~S centered around the dIsabIlIties

Christrtras Bazaar Advance preparations fire beshy

middot ing made for a Christmas bazaar slated for the weekend of Nov 25 through 27 in the basement of Sacred Hearts Church Nolth Fatrhaven Meetings are being held in the rectory at 730 each

middot MOhday night and parishioners who cannot come at this time

middot are mged to volunteer home services byknitting sewing or making fthEir articles for sale

Materials will be furnished and dondticins iire laquo iHsifoeing reshyquested 101 a white elephant table Gerierafdiairman Mrs Roland Larocque announcesmiddot that

prOfits will benefit the school improvement fund

bined health care They might also be of value to physicians treating future illnesses he said

The five-year survey tended to support the adage your health mirrors your environ ment Abstinence fromalcohol and ~igarettes a well-balanced diet adequat~ housing secure

bull communa livi and celibacy apparently do iow down the aging process Fecher said

He cautioned however that this does not ~ecessarilYmean that areligious life promotes longevity and that a similar am6tirlt of work-day schoolshy

day orreligiflus-day sefvice 10sseser be applied to each and every religious community in tbecountrymiddot

Fecher said that data collected over the past 40 years shows that the health middotcare programs of reshyligious are very uneven

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Aug 25 1966

Approves Loco ~

School Boards BURLINGTON (NC) - The

appointment of four local Cathshyolic school boards brings a new method of Catholic school manshyagement to 25 per cent of the diocesan schools here in Vershymont

At the regular monthly meetshying of the Burlington Diocesan School Board Father John A Lynch diocesan superintendent of schools reported that consti shytutions for four schools had been approved making a total of 25middot per cent of the schools operating under policy-malting boards approved by the diocesan board

~he diocesan statutes e~c6urshya~ebut do not demand the formatior of 10 c a l schoOl boards he said

Father Lynch also announced that a study would be made of school costs in the hope to find ways to avoid increasing tuition and parish assessments The study of education costs will be made by George Fortune acshycounting consultant to the diocshyesan school system

Good Counsel College Gets Loan for Dorm

WASHINGTON (NC) - A $1180000 college housing loan for Good Counsel College for women in White Plains NY to build a new dormitory has been approved Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Robert C Weaver announced here

The dorm is planned to acshycommodate 192 students The college conducted by the Sisters of Divine Compassion has an ellrollment of some poo students

Some students required to live on campus are in overcrowded middotfacilitiesmiddot Mother M Dolores president said lack of housing will foree themiddot college to deny admission middottoa number of stushydents middotthis fall she said The COllege enrollment is expected to reach 650 in five years and

800 in 10 years

Ce~tervilfe Guild New officers of Our Lady of

Victory Womens Guild Centershyville are Mrs StephenB OBrien Jr president Mrs John J Pendergast Jr and Mrs James Murphy vice-presidents Mrs ~oger Carlson treasurer Mrs Francis McKenna and Mrs Edward ONeill secretaries

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

middotOPENDAllY FORTHIE SEASON AFTERNOON and NIGHT

niE ANCHOR $as~ Vocationsmiddot10 Thurs Aug 25 1966 COnCern ofAIi

Employer U rges ST LOUIS (NC) - Speaking at the third annual Vocation Mass in St Louis cathedral

middot here Joseph Cardinal Ritter said middotvocations in the Church should

Workers to Vote For Teamsters

be the concern of every Roman SAN FRANCISCO (NC) Catholic

-The Di Giorgio Corporashy The cardinal told 397 men and women preparing to enter semishytion is recommending that naries and convents in the Fanits farm workers vote to afshy that religious vocation is not

filiate with the Teamsters FaTm middot merely a concern for the arch-Workers Union if they wish middot diocesan director a union the company announced It is a matter of solicitudeshy

Robert Di Giorgio president for each and everyone of us A of the company said therecomshy vocation is a divine thing but mendationmiddot is in accordance with it is a thing which God will not National Labor Relations BoaTd w~thhold from His peopleprocedures The recommendashy Cardinal Ritter continuedtion was made in letters sent to Bymiddot manifesting a concern employes eligible to vote in the about and an interest in vocashyunion election scheduled Ifor tiols we truly show that we Tuesday Aug 30 middot are the People of God

Opposing the Teamsters will be the National Farm Workers Association (NFWA) and the Seeks Assistance Agricultural Workers Organshy For Congo Churchizing Committee AFL-CIO (AW OC) which have merged since WASHINGTON (NC) - A they began the long Delano Congolese senator visiting the strike United States on a State Departshy

The Teamsters won the originshy ment tour program for foreign al election for union representashy government officials hopes to tion but charges of fraud make his two-month visit serve brought a new election a double purpose

Di Giolgio said the corporashy Senator Gaston Diomi wants tion is recommending a vote to speak with Catholic laymen for the Teamsters because middotand members of the clergy per-

The Teamsters won the preshy haps address audiences at vious electionmiddot Catholic institutions in his hope

The Teltlmsters while they to bring the Church iri the light hard in their members Congo to the eyes of American behalf are fair arid responshy ~ Catholics

And the senator has a planesible he wants to set up sharing proshyCompany Union middotFeels Adults Need Religious grams throughout the United

The competing union on tne States programs in which an ballot the Nationa Farm Workshy More So Than Children Nun Declares American diocese would adopt z ers AssoCiation has achieved Congolese diocese an American tentative recognition with oniy LOVELAND (NC)-Religious JI1ost rigidly formed in the old program to meet its needs--part religious order adopt a Congoshytwo growers the larger of which

education is needed for aduits system to see the new vision of which could be a parish lese order an American orphan-this year shifted production from school age adopt a Congolese orphanmore than for children and a of themiddot Churchand of Christian~ble grapes to wine tnus elimshy Flexibility and the wiUing- agebetter term for it would be life middotsetmiddot forth by the Secondinating a great many jobs ness tomiddot try a variety 01 ap- The American governmentmiddotsomething like shared growth Vatican Council Cesar Chavez head of the N iIi Christian middotlifemiddotmiddotmiddot This is 8 hard ~ask Sister prOdches ought to be the mmk of has such sharing programs the FWA called the Teamsters a an effectivereligious education senator pointed out WhyThis is the estimate of Sis admitted for adult educationcompany union and said it

tel 114 Charles Borromeo former demands new approaches and program she asserted empha- shouldnt the Church have the has entered into a partnership sizing thatmiddotit should have a so- same The Church that is Cath-head of the theology school at cannot be imposedwith Di Giorgio in a commonmiddot cia1 and an ecumenical dimen- olic the Church that is definedSt Marys College conducted by Each Ones Missionplot agabnst the farm workers sionmiddot QY the Second Vatican CouncilHoly Cross Sisters at Notre She wouldnt abandon chil-He said the companys recom- Built into each program middotas a missionary Church- whyDame Ind She recently joined drens education JOwever Shemendation confirmed that the should be a growirig aW8leness shouldnt this Church and tierthe faculty of St Xavier Col-middot saidTeamstens came to Delano to

lege Chicago as theology pro- What Id like to se~ IS emh of e~ch ones mission in the members share even more readshytlrganize workers at the invita- Church-an outgoing mismiddotsion to ily than government~ifessor set up a total religiou educationiion o~

PROFESSION CEREMONY AT WAREHAM The Chapel in the Woods of the Noshyvitiate of the Sacred Heart Fathers vas the scene Saturday morning as four novices

iere profe~sed by Bishop CoimolIyLeft to right Bro JudeMohan Bro Joseph ONeill Master of Novices Rev Andrew Jahn Bishop Connolly Very Rev Daniel J McCarthy

Prodncial who offered the Mass Bro Paul Daly and Bro Martin Lucia

the corporation New Approaches reach others and to build the

Speaking at the Summer lec- middot social patterns needed in our Oppose Intervening ture series at Grailville herein Quote Pope Pauls world

middot1 PImiddot Ohio USheaqquarters of the A 1 f IP Issues of TimesIn Fami y annlnglt international Grail movement ppea oreace middot She warneq against lookingMILWAUKEE (NC)-The ex- Sister Charles Borromeo aC- BERLIN (NC)-Fiye hundred for textbooks with all thE anshy

ecutive committee of the ad- knowledged that the Church in letters quoting the flppeal of swers or for fOllliulas thatvisory ioard of the Milwauke~ this country has placed most of Pope Paul VI for peace in Vietshy might take the place of decisiOlishyArchdioce~an Family Life Pro- its resources atmiddot the service of nam were sent persons in East rilaking by individual wnsci- gram has adopted a resolution childrens education Germany by the Social Demoshy encesmiddot

opposing government interven But the most urge~t need for cratic Party (SPD) The East Religiousteaching should inshynon in family planning giving religiousmiddot education she said Germans had asked the SPD volve a di~logue she su-ggestunanimousmiddot approval to a 13- if to helpadults especially those why the free world had not ed addi~g that in the past therepoint resolution which insists made imy efforts to end the war has been toomuch sttess on aushythat the matter of family plan- d in Vietnam thorityin teaching rid~otning is a private affair not a Sche u ~ Reopening The letter sent by the Social

bulle~o~gh on sharingChrisliarieoncern of the government Of Chi Smiddot h 1 Democratsmiddot pointed out that the gr()wthmiddot

Frank Stabb chairman of at 0 IC C 00 peace efforts of the pope the Thequesiion is not so ~lUcbtheCatholic board statedthat MTmiddot REPOSE (NC)-A Cath- World Council of Churches and

~hat to tea~h she ()pined butsince it has become increasingly olic school here in Ohio for of the governments of the how will we produce ~he Chrisshyapparentmiddot tilat our federalgov some 250 children will reopen in United States Great Britain (ian experience in litUlgy andernment ans to use taxinoiiey September due to efforts of in- Sweden India France and Itrly

for the spreading of birthcon-middot (lividuai citizens civic and Pro had all middotbeen rejected by the soci~l actionJn th~ great issues trol it becomes the obUgation of testantchurch groups in the communists The letter also of our times ~

NO JOBTOq BIG NONE TOO SMALL

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTE~S

MainOHice and Plant 95 Bridge St lowell M~bullbull

Tet 4586333

Auxiliary Plarits

BOSTON CAMDEN NJ OCEANPORT N~J

MIAMI PAWTUCKET R1 PHILADELPHIA

this family apostolate to speak area the Milford Chamber of middotstressedmiddot the SPDs view that out vigorously in oPllOsition tomiddota Commerce and parishioners of war can no longer be an instru shypolicy which has absolutely no St Andrews church Milford ment in solving political probshyvalidity The Elizabeth Seton School a lems middot He went on to say that when rural outpost of St Andrews Rltidio television and newsshyariy government agency tells parish was established seven paper ieports iil Eastmiddot Germany

middotpoor married couples whether years ago and con tin 11 a llY have given the impression thatmiddot they should have children or plagued by sewage dIsposal no one middotincluding the Pope has

hownfany to have the govern- problems The school wasmiddot closed made any efforts to seek peace ment is making a mighty pre- by court order in the Sumrtler in Vietnam sumptuous intrusion into a most of 1965 but r~openeq last year i J

sacred element of huin~nlife) with an arrangement fo~ haul- Stamiddotmiddotr 0n middotIImiddotmiddotOmiddotftmiddotmiddotammiddotP

middot ing sewge to MilfordmiddotmiddotWhenmiddot ~ middotV 1 t Cmiddoth 1 forcedtostop usingtheMilford DAVENP0RT (NC)~Seven-

eel) members of religious coni 0 un eermiddot apalnmiddot sewage systemlastJanuary t PHILADELPHIA (NCfFa-middot classes were dfscontinueiigt mutlities in theuilitedmiddot middotStates

ther JjRobert Falabella SJ The Closhlg spalked if coin- were among the graduates at the 36 instr~ctor in theolOgyat St mlinity effort led by the Buck- annual mid~Summermiddotcommence

Josephs College here has vol- wheat-middotTaxpayers Associationw ment of St Ambrose College uteered for extended adive aidthemiddotschoolmiddotA fUrid drive for her~in Illwa middotParticipating in duty witp theUS Army Re $250((to pay formiddot new tihiinage the ceremonies was Margheritiimiddot serve s a chaplain in the Vietmiddot f~cilities was ~ledby th~ Mil- Roberti a~ native of Davenportmiddot mam combat zone ford Chamber Of Commerce a leading dramatic sopranQ~

CONVEmiddotNImiddotENT BANKING WITHOUT TRAFFIC PARKING PROBLEMS

at the -

5LADE~S FERRr-r~USJmiddotCOMPANY SOMERSET MASS

j ~ - bullbullbull ~~ ~ bull ) bullbullbull lt

ThemOflt friendlymiddot dmocrt~ lANK oHering

-_~9npi~lC)h$topmiddot~cirliing middotmiddotf bullbullbullClubmiddot Accoul1Its - Auto middotLoa -

Checking Accounts ~ Business boris Savings Accounts~ ~ ~ Ieaj Estate loOns 1 -

- ~Atmiddot S~~~rs~tS~~ppi~~ Ar~a=-~igh~~a 5 ~t~due Me~ber FeCieral I)epositmiddot ri~urance Corporation

I

11 Cardinal Cushing Hits Imbalance In Schools

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing deplored that very little has been oone to relieve racial imshybalance in Bostons public schools in his first public address since his recent illness and conshyvalescence

The Boston prelate told an ecshyumenical meetingmiddot in All Saints Lutheran church here that al shythough very littlemiddot has been done to make a year-old law work we are not discouraged and we are very far from giving up hope that we will have reshyBults before long

He referred to the Racial 1m balance Law aimed at promotshying racial integration in Massashychusetts public schools The meeting marked the first annishyversary of the law The measure will deprive Boston public schools of $30 million in state subsidies until the citys school committee submits an integrashytion plan acceptable to the state board of education Until now the city committee has not subshymitted an acceptable plan

A school that is heavily imshybalanc~d racially cannot provide the best education that should be available for our children Even with the most devoted teachers and the most upto-date proshygrams-and we have both o( these in Boston-a predomiJ)antshyly Negro school suffers from an isolation from the general comshymunity which cannot fail to be harmful~ he said

Scores Slum Landlords In a similar way we can say

that an all white scJ100l fails to reflect the true nature of the radally mixed communitymiddot in which we live and so deprives white youngsters of theexperi ence of living and studying with their neighbors of a different race Ourideal should be to live and workand study and pray side by side in mutual respect and common affection

There hav~ been several proposalsmade during the last year to al~rest imbalance iit the schools of our center city Carshydinal Cushing said None of these has been accepted by those who hove been elected to make these decisions in the schooi srstem Of course we know that no immediate proshygram will solve all our problems but we can make li beginning

The cardinal also criticized slum landlords for the inhuman conditions in which so many here must live and work alid bring JP their families He called for a crash program of assistance for the deprived

State Uses Vacant Catholic School

BURLINGTON (NC)-The re- cently closed Don Bosco Schoolmiddot for BoyS here will Soon befilled up again with teenage boys this time as temporary quarters for Vermonts pilot residential treatshyment center for youthful first shyoffender lawbreakers

In announcing the acceptance of the proposal by Bishop RobertF Joyce of Burlington and the Verm 0 n t Catholic Charities board State Institutiolls Com-

PROFESSION AND CtOTHING CEREMONIES Principals in the ceremonies conshyducted for the Sisters of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts in Fall River on Monday were seated Sr Mary Dolores Sr John Veronica Bishop Gerrard who presided Sr Karen Dolores Sr Mary Catherine Standing Sr Margaret Edward Sr Joseph Maureen Sr Stephen David Sr James Constance Sr Celestine Regis Sr Anne Robert Sr Vinshycent Dolores

Report Says Cold War More Intense Peaceful Coexistence Now Strategic Offensive

WASHINGTON (NC) -Some tegic Studies at Georgetown jarring statements are made in University a Jesuit-conducted a significant news report whose school here

It is an in-depth analysisprivate but highly responsible sponsors call it the resultmiddot ofmiddot quality research It reminds for example that the so-called cold war is not

over and warns that as of now it may be entering a more danshy

gerous phase Th e ~peaceful coexistence

slogan it says was once a comshymuhist defensive stalling tacshytic but now it signifies the communists have gone over to

the strategic offensive The great paradox of our

times the document asserts may well turn out to be our inability to recognize that the cold war has in reality become more intel1se despite the increasshying appearance of peace

The goals of the presentmas~ tels of the Kremlin are no dif- ferent from tho~e of Khrushshychev Stalin or Mao Tse-Tung and to the Krtmlin peac~ful coshyexistence is a strategy not an end in itself it declares

The study entitled Peace or Pea c e f u1 Coexistence was

sponsored by the Committee on Education Against CommUllism of the American Bar Association It was unveiled in New York just before the ABA began its annual meeting in Montreal but it was prepared by Richard V Allen a specialist on Sino-Soviet affairs at the Center for Stra-

K of c Plan Socoal

Action I itia tive

missioner John Y Woodhull MIAMI BEACH (-NC) - The stated I think this is one (f the top official of the Knights of finest ecumenical testures of Columbus announced plans for faith and charity that I have a new initiiitive in the ecumenshyknown i -i~al and soCial action field

The eenter ill ~ ~provide a through a partnership with theO

home for 16 to 20 b(iys aged HI John LaFarge Institute ill New to 18 who are referrecl by the York ~ - eourls as first offenders Toile In additior W financial assist shyboys will work loeal du-in ancethe LaFllg~jnstitute will

the day and return to the center reeeive suggestifmsand recomshyin the ~venin1 for intensive mendations frOJll the official roup t~erapy eonducted b) rep-~~entationand plJrticipatiOll

Btaff III ~ix bull Ule K bull C

based onmiddot more than 3000 articles and documents of the internashytiOllal communist movement more than 90 per cent of which material is dated after the Cushyban Missile crisis of October 1962 Allen admits that the commushy

nists have used the coexistence slogan in ihepast and with sfme success but he directs atshytention to the fact that it now signifies a strategic offensive rather than a stal~ing tactic

The study notes that the Cushyjail build-up the erection of the Berliil Wall and the armed iilvasi~n of South Yietnam all occurred during the most in- tense pedod of peaceful coshyexistence ~ It~~~inds that Khrushchev in 19t1lddiiled coexistence as a form of intense ecoitomic pOlitshyical and ideological struggle gaii1s~ the aggressive forces of imperialism hi the international arena it aiso says that in their 3tshy

tempt to create wha bull they call the New ComIJlunist Man the communists have systematically presented a vicious and thor oughly distorted picture of the

Nuns to Construct Health Care Facility

SANDUSKY (NC)-The Franshyciscan Sisters who operate Providence Hospital here in Ohio will construct a new 100shybed $1250000 healthcare fashycility separate ftom thehospital

It will serve Medicare patients of the area during posthospital care and Qther convalescents who do not requir~f~l~-scalehospital care Sister Lucia -administrator 81lid it will relievemiddot pressure ~ hospital beds in the area

There wiII be ari appeal to th~ public lor about $900000 The -remainder of the funds will

btl supplied by the Federalgovshyerllment

West in general and the United States in particular It need not be emphasi~ed

the study states that the overshywhelming sentiment of the free world is to live in peace But tQ mistake the illusion of peace for genuine peacemiddot would be a profoundly dangerous perhaps fatal mistake In a foreword t the book

Bertram D Wolfe a Stanford University expert on commushy~lism warns that we have been prone to read the idea of live and let live into the phase of peaceful C 0 e x imiddots ten ce Our hopes and our longings are likeshyly to betray us again and again into a readiness to be deceived by those who have sworn the d~struction of all we stand for

fnjoymiddot Dining IN THE

JOLLY WHALER --AND--

SPOUTIRINN RESTAURANTS

Always Free Parking

New Bedford Hotel

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Aug 25 1966

Cassidymiddot Seniors Attend Work$hop

Three members of the incomshying senior class at Cassidy High School Taunton will complete tomorrow a five day Workshop in Leadership conducted at the University of Massachusetts under th~ sponsorship of the Massachussetts Association of Student Councils

Mis s Rosemary McKenna~ president of the senior class Miss Nancy Thomas president of the National Honor Society and Miss Christine Victoria coshyeditor of the Cassidy school paper are attending Miss Victoria is secretary of the Southeastern Association of Student Councils and will serv~ in that capacity with the other officers Jerry Flanagan presishydent Feehan High Marsha Boyd vice-president Attleboro High Luke Boyd treasurer West Bridgewater High

Cassidy GIllaquoIltiluCllle Wins Elkso AWtlDd

Miss Pauline Lee daughter ox Mrs Harry Lee and the late Harry Lee of 7 Dean Ave Taunshyton has Qeen named the recipishyent of a $600 Massachusetts Elks Lead~rship Award granted by the Elks National Scholarship Fund

A member of the 1966 gradushyating class of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton Miss Lee was in the top ten of a class of 108 and maintained a scholastie honors record throughout bell four year Miss Lee will attend Nortn- eastern University Boston

Schools Merge BAY CITY (NC)-TwO wes~

side Catholic high schools here hi Michigan will merge Sept I

to becomeWest Catholic CentraU High School The decision te merge was made by an intershyarish lay study committee tv provide more efficient use of the staff and facilities The schooU will be staffed by the ReligioUl Sisters of Mercy of Detroit

BIG DIVIDEND NEWS

a SYSTEMATIC550 year SAVINGS

INVESTMEIfJ500 a year SAVINGS

8 REGULAR450 year SAVINGS

Bass River SovinQs Bank bull SOUTH YARMOUTH bull DENNIS PORT

bull YANNIS bull fARMOiJTH SHOPPING PLAZA

bull OSTERVILLE

-1111

WHITE middotmiddotmiddotSPA CATERERS

- BANQUETSmiddot -WEDDINGS - PARTIES

~ COMMUNION BREAKFASTS 1343PlEASANT STREET FAll RIVER

OSb~rne 3-7780

--h-- ~

12

i

THE ANCHOROlocese of Fall River-Th~s Aug 25 1966

~regW ~reg~tfJ ~lYJ~~ TtUUY1)[fi)l[

Of R~dD~~~csm Amcm)gYW]fr~ lJy Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy

Phillip Abbott Luces The New Left (McKay 119 W 40th New York $450) attempts to explain the resurgence of radicalism among American students Its author is a

of the New Left wIth as many con u e y lcal ideas while at MissisSippi non-joiners on the peripherY day even~ng Aug 27 at S lD ~ at~~ fi~t he~-d ~~ ~h~ ~erBtlt its impact- is smd tohave Mlll~aret s Kinderlctarten aaU i Left whIle at Ohio State and l Prizes WIll be awarded and reshy

tgrt~ritotcOtmiddotmiddotgthmiddotevecJ1 amm~-~W1lS~~tttedpa~~y ~xten~e~ tots about200OQP co h~~hriients served o nl~ge ~u en ~~ i - ltGUiLD OF TillE VIsITATION Iil1961heifioved~to NewmiddotYork It ~S ~l1ena lza1I~~~eme~t i iNO EASTilrAM ~ ~

_and came closer tothe Commti- in the country What alarms Mr ih alb t ofthe Dist Party Llitef he joined Pro- Luce is not its existence or its G1 ~~ h 3que wed gressiveLa]gto~aiI~ edited its size but the fact and the in- W WI e e on nesshymiddot monthly magazine _ cre~sing extent of Comrnamst q1Y~ 4-~ 3~ a~ the PiJ~~ middot -domination~ He gives -instances Springs Restaurant No TflJro Visited _C~~ro-S Cuba R t cl Sunday

in proof thatsuch dO minatioD-i8 A e~e2 rva~o1l os on It was Progressive Labor ug s

which arJanged- for fmeric~ indeed an actuality SACRED HEARTS

young man who won some leader of the New Left and when he broke with Proshygressive Labor which he eharges was organiz~d by -formermembenlof theSoVfeishycontrolled Communist Pa rt y USA and is now aPekingor~eh tated Commu~

D1st group Mx Luce has an ex tremely Impor- middottant subject one which is both timely and crit shyleal Because of his experience he should be especially qualshyified to set it out But the fac~ is that he is at best a mediocre writer He has no notion as to how to

organize a book marshal his materials and to ten his story iIi a consecutive way and with cushymulative force This is a dull alld muddled treatment of a very middotvitai topic~ not heipedat all by crude blundersin English usage Mr Luces personal histog has to be pieced together fro~ bits strewn through the book

middotlike the debris after a hurricane He is an Ohioan bornmiddotin 1935

notice both when he was a the lives of the rising generation Youth is repelled by parental attitudes and aspirations which are seen as mostly narrow negshyative sterile College is a bore

offeriiig no incentive or oppOJshytUnity for youth to direct its enshyergies into crucial causes

A mood of rebellion has devel- ~ped and a chance to express it has been pr~sentedby the civil rights struggie and the unpopu~ lar and beclouded war in Vietshynam Nor does the prospect of fighting authority in each case dim the attraction of these causes quite the reverse Hence the New Left

JLists Organizations Communist organizations of

various stripes have attemptec to sieze control of the New Left and to exploit the mood of reshybellion wi~h an eye to changing it into participation in revolushy

tion

Mr Luce lists and desribes the Communist organizations so engaged The one he knows best of course is Progresectsive Labor But he gives much space to the Du Bois Clubs which are the instruments of the Communist Party Then tlmre are the Trot-middot

the son of middle-class Repub- skyite splinter groups of which lican parents H~ start~d college four strains are identified (inshyat Miami University in Ohio left cluding middotone that is pro-Negro to see the Souih finished ~t Mis and anti-Semitic) I

sissippi State and did graduate Mr Luce estimates that some k t Oh St t 12000 YOung AmericanS are wor a 10 a e _ t 1 t 1 b He became interested in rad- ac ua orgamza Ion~ mem ers

APPOINTEE- Bishop Josshyeph Bmiddot Brunini Auxiliary since 1957 to Bishop Richard O Gerow of Natchez-Jackshyson middotMiss has -been appointshyed by Pope Paul VI to be Apostolic Administrator of the diocese NC Photo

The Parish Parade

ST 1lgtYS TillED mn ov= =shylFALL RJrVER

The parish will sponsor a one day pilgrimage to the Shrine of the North American Martyrs Auriesville N Y on Sunday Oct 2

Interested partles may obtaIn full particulars by contacting Mrs Laurence Coyle Mrs Wilshyliam Blythe or Mrs George Boitano S8 MARGARET-MARY GUILD BUZZARDS BAY

A bl hitmiddot middotU be pu IC W S paL 0 WI d ct d b the guild on Saturshy

studeritsto visit Cuoain 1963 middot and 1961 In defiance of our middotState Department~sban on travel

there Mr Luce made the trip says that most of the students

middot were unaware of Progressive Labors sponsorship and control The money came from Castro And Progressive Labor members planned and staged the wild scenes at a Congressional hea~

ing concerning the middotproject By late 1964 Mr Luce was

enti~ely dissillusioned abo u t Progressive Labor andmiddot by Febshyruary of 1965 h~ pad left it to

bemiddot quickly expelled upon his

Stresses Strength NO FAIRHAVEN He insists that somethin~(must Registration for the kiridershy

be done to prevent Communist garten pre-primary and the capture of the movement He eight eJement~ry grades are beshywants everyone to wake up to ing held daily during the month the existence and the strength of Augus of the New Left Pupils may register with SJ

We must realize he urges how Marie Henriette SSCC at the disenchanted with our society Sacred Hearts Academy 332 the young people ~re what hos- Main Street Fairhaven any 8poundshytility they feel what a gulf ternoon from 1-5 RegistratioDfl yawns between them and their are also being accepted by Rev elders and hcgtw impervious th~YAlexis Wyggers SSCC at the are to ideas and language which ReCtory 382 Main street Fairshyi

figure in their eldErs attempts haven to communicate with them The Association of St Anne

No one he maintains is S~-Will receive corporate CoinmUshyI~ departure and sayagE(l~ Yim~~~~ Jiously trying to reach the hiorton Sunday at the 8 ocloek middot He left because he says Pro gressive Labor is a middotMaoist Comshymunist tool because itmiddotadlrQcates imd take steps to implelrtent armed insurrection because- no personal freedam is allowed to members an4 lill- deQisionsmiddot are made by a few dictatorial leadshy~ril 1ecausemembersareJnshyvolved in programs of Whose

eonsequences totge country and to themselvestIey have no idea lt~

lFe~ls lF~tts~rated Mr fL~ced6es- notmiddot contend

middot that the New Leis Goromunistshy

young rebel to understand him Mass to speak to him intelligibly and effectively Co~unJ~t errorsmiddot J~edB~ MeU1lMe~tmiddot propaganda hypocnsy mUst be SCHWYZ (NC) - Catholicrelentlessly exposed in a way movie and television experts which the young people will met here iil ~fwitieriand for imcomprehend international exchange of ~He is strong_ for a Freedom riiques iiI the useof Tv anellAeademy- which would provipe films in religious educationmiddotmiddot expert practical education conshy - cerning CommunislJlmiddotAnd he stressestheneed of a placefor

ltloltiinated -Hescent~B it -as8 phe- PITTSB~1RGH(Nt) - The bull I bull ~ bull bull bull bull bull

honidon whlc~ came ~bout Pittsburgh Catholi( Interracial Commercialmiddot 15 Industrid spontaneously an eX~IJ1Pre of- Council has endorsed home rule Institutionalyouth in rebellion - for the District of Columbia asshy

Youth he holds~ hils amiddotpoundeeling sertingthattooibng have many painting ~nd~ D_~~o~qtig of -frustrationmiddot with American of the-importanLdecisionaffectshy Fall River OSborne 2-1I9H$ociety its tone and its values ing (the District of CohJmbia) -yoiith~es~rtt~rhaving rio say inb~erlmadtd)ycongrpoundpoundssiriehftoin ~ 74v~hllia rnson Str~e~

the making of decisions affecting hundreds of miles away

~~Gr~ayK BJ Most Rev FUUOlll J Sheeillp Dll)

If my neighbor is stronger than 1 I fear him if he lsweaker than I I despise bim Such is the modem judgement of the psyshychiatrist Dr Jean de Rougemont Earlier the Psalmist speaks ~ the arrogance of those who have much and the despisal of those who are proud How can the rich avoid feeling superior to the poor How can the poor avoid being humiliated The answer is that vices but can the) give up cigarettes for a week to help the poor the strong must see their weakness and the rich must see~eifto poverty How realJly strong are the strong Theymay avoid great Are thfiY suc~ masters of themselves tbatthey can turn down the third cocktail (or give up the first) and use the money instea4 to ~uy sulfone ~or a i~~r~ liqw r~ch_ ar~the rich Let them look inside themselves IIi whatvirtue are they rich Rich in cb~ty Rich i~ char~ti Ri~)n f~th

Onc~t~~ ~i~rhty see th~mseiv~ asnothiDi a~d therl~h see the~selv~ as i~poverislledth~ they wui lov~ ihe we~~ as their brothersilDd the peor IllS their

fellow beggars for thetrrace of God ifmiddot the strong middotlove middotmiddotthemselves despite all theirweaknes5~ then why not lovltil weaknesses in others u the rich love themselves despitG middottheir inner nakedshyness then why nCllt love a lesser ]lJOVshy

erty in others That i~ why Our Lord told us to love ourneighbor as ourseU ~y not more than self Because iii ]I

love myself-knowing myself as ]I do knowing how utterb weak ]I am2-then I have the measure of how J[ am to pour out love to others

We live in a world divided between the rich and the poor We live in that kinol of a church-pOor parishes and rich parishes Even bishops an~ priestsmiddot speak of a parish being good when they mean it is economicaily rich Somehow or other we have ~

get qut of this slavish standard of affluence which is so opposed to the lross of Christ To that end we make the folloWing proposal that you or your middotparishclub school or office undertake the sponsorshjp of one of the poor areas of the world which has been investigated by the Apostolic delegate Write to us and we will send you middotthe name of this diocese its location the number of priests catechists and faithful it has Thus you will be sure that you have a middotneedy (Ibject for sacrifice and service and n9t one based on a haphazard -appeal middotfroin an uninvestigated source The Church will not alloW you to sponsor this diocese for more than one year becausemiddot thtlre are so many poor parishes in the world Look into your weakness and you will love the weakness of o~heJ8 Look into your poyeny stricken soul and you willserVe poverty stricken bodies Write to -mpGod Love You

~~~ middot~middotGOD~middotLOVE YCllJmiddot tomiddot~SMLgtO~middot ~$5 middotto A~RCtor $sO~ For your1nissionUorkIeanthelp eve~one andmiddotyou ~o tltosem most meed bullbull tchJMBfcn $20 to Anon lor $1000 middotsentmiddotWithlteommnbull ~ 11

bullbull bull ~l

The GOD LOVE YOU~ medal lovely cameo medal of the Madonna of tIle worldiS one you would be proud to give ormiddotde shy

lighted tci reC~iVEt DesIgned bi the world-renowned jeweler Harry winSton aildbltessed by Bishlgtp Sheen the GOD LOVE YOU medal is available inmiddotcl~icF~oreritinegold firiishor pure sterlingsilver aod may be obtained by sending your request and corresPondirtg offering to The Socieb for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth AvenueNew York NY 10061 $2 Sinall sterling silver $3 small

11gtk goid fiiled $5 large sterling silver $10 large 10k gold filled

Cut out this colullnn pln your sacrifice to It and mali It to Most RevbullFultom J Sheen National Director of The Society for the Propagation of thl~ Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or to your Dioclesan Director Rt Rev Msgr Raymond Jr Considine 363 North ll1ain Street Falll River Massachusetts

bull j 7 Perry IQur fI~~fng

~v~-t~e OilsMake Taunt~B1l~ Mass - Worm FriendsmiddotVA 2-2282

------------------ ~

genuinely democratic radicalism ON CAPE CODlbONNlEllyin o~r Iociety _

]OHoo ~~~(Kl~Ymiddotmiddot amp SON (~ofP~n~T~UnCG Rigt - flJ1 ml n

crepound ormiddotentireiyCommuist- 9llaquoIIlaquo ~$ lf1J Ilililte ~fYl U ~ I~raquo8L[)~NG MAmiddoth~linAL$middotmiddotmiddot~~~V~C~ 6

S~~ri~gj 1$100 4~~YARMUlrH ROA~)

middottYA~MBSmiddot AMPLE PARKING

iIIIIOCIIJIjIWUllJmllIllDOCImIWlDIllmIlXlWll(lJfi

- -

THE ANCHOR-Jesuit Educators Members of PAVLA Maintain Missionary Thurs Aug 25 1966 13

Ponder Students Record of Fall River Diocese Area G~~s SocoaCynical ~ttitQJJde

LOS ANGELES (NC) shy lLong outstanding for the missionary work of its priests Sisters and Brothers the ~elvD~e ~elrllfrer A top Jesuit educator dispenshy Fa~ River Diocese is fast becoming noted for its outstanding Papal Volunteers for Latin CLEVELAND (NC) - OUX sed advice here on how to eombat the attitude of some high schoolers who consider the world and the religion of their middotparents as phony

Father Edward J Sponga 8J of Baltimore in the keynote adshydress at the 1966 Jesuit Educashytional Association Workshop on Christian Formation at Loyola University here called for a dialogue with everyone conshycerned to emphasize the good crying to be released

Speaking to delegates from 52 Jesuit high schools in the nation Father Sponga chairman of the board of the Jesuit Educational Association declared

Menace to Freedom If the young men of our

schools consider the world and the religion of their parents as phony and a menace to their freedom then we must be ruthshyless in seeing how and why this is and in entering into dialogue with everyone who is willing to do so in order that we may be able to release the g09d that is crying to be released

During the 12 days of research and discussion 125 school adshyministrators and teachers evalushyated the effect that religion courses academic curriculum spiritual exercises and personal guidance have had on the charshyacters of the 35000 teenagers in U S Jesuit high schools

The delegates particularly were concerned about the loss of religious faith in the adolesshycent who is becoming increasshyingly sophisticated and critical

Middle Class Values Father Joseph H Fichter SJ

Stillman professor of sociology at Harvard Universitys divinity school criticized Jesuit high schools for not challenging the middle class values of many of their students for not paying sufficient att~rition to the social sciencesmiddot and for not drawing more of their students irom among the poor

Dr Alexander A Schneiders graduate professor of psychology at Boston College stressed the commitment of Faith that must be made within the scopemiddot of inshytellectual independence He arshygued against compelling students to make annual retreats or assist at religious exercises

Other delegates suggested esshytablishing pilot programs in 1l)ner-city high schools with nationwide cooperation and the sending of Jesuit teachers to work in community schools outshyllide the regular Jesuit system

Ho~es for Negroes Goal of Campaign

WORCESTER (NC) A camshypaign to secure better housing for Negroes in the Greater Worcester Area is growing

In a letter to some 1200 pershyS0l1S who last Aprii signed an

open letter newspaper adshyvertisement regarding fair hous ins John J Concordia Duman rights committee chairman of the Diocesan Council of Catholic M~~ ~sked sig~atories of the

open -letter to volunteer to ~adopt members of a Negro family am actively assist them inmiddotproC1Jri~g decent housing to titheir ~ne~ds

In 8 statement by an intershy fa(thmiddoteommittee on housing middotwfii~IlJs all out-growth of a

siniilar committee formed last year by the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women a call was made for construction of housshying for middotmiddotpoor and lower middle d~ss f ami ie It ixlcludins

Ne8J~s

bull bull r~ ~

America These young men and women doing Christs work in some of the worlds needshy Lady of Futima parish hat3 opened a social service centeliiest areas are a credit to the parishes and toowns from which they come Letest PAVLA here in the midst of the Houghassignments in the Diocese area scene of Clevelands recent

are those of Lucille Lebeau rioting of St Annes parish New The center housed in an 18-gt Bedford and Anthony Gomes room former apartment buildo St John of God parish Somershy ing was dedicated by Archo set bishop Paul J Hallinan of~ At-gt

Actually Lucille isnt a new lanta while he was visiting iii PAVLA hand She was the first Cleveland~bis native diocese Diocesan enlistee in the organishy The center will be staffed by zation going to Brazil as a four Sisters of Charity of St nurse-social worker in August Augustine who along with lay1963 She returned from her volunteers have been working three year assignment in July in the area since Aprilmiddot1965 but volunteered to serve an The center will middotprovide C9uri extra year in Brazil She will re seling nursing medical supplie tum there in November and pre-natal care -

Anthony veteran of a middotyears The building which standt work in Florida with the fedshy next to the parish rectory waserai governments VISTA proshy purchased bymiddot the parish seveR gram will teach English in a years ago when it was aba~ Mexican minor seminary He has doned as an apartment buildingalready completed a PAVLA

Early last year Father Alberitraining course at Catholic Unishy Albert Koklowsky MSSSTversity in Washington D C and pastor of Our Lady of Fatimawill leave in September for launched a campaign through aMexico City and an intensive column in the Catholic Universefour and a half month course in Bulletin Cleveland diocesanSpanish language and culture newspaper to explain Houghsbefore beginning his assignment poverty to metropolitan resiltshyin the mountain town of Tacomshydentsbaro in the state of Michoacan

Housing was a major themePioneer Work Resulting donations from unishy

Lucille bubbles over with enshy verse Bulletin readers and 11thusiasm for PAVLA and its acshy matching gift from Coadjutorcomplishments She has just reshy middotBishop Clarence Issenmann of turned from a trip to the Washshy Cleveland enabled Father Kokshyington training course attended lowsky to renovate the buildingby Tony Gomes where incishydentally she met him for the first time She talked to new Work for Needy enlistees individually and in LIMA (NC) - Sixty me~bers groups seeking to picture for af the St Rose CYO hert gavethem the new life theyd be enshy volunteer aid to projects for thetering needy this Summer Most as~

Their enthusiasm was a boostshy slsted in a federally financed er shot for meshe said educati~nal program for cultu~

This week the New Bedford rally deprived students from nurse is inmiddot the Chicago area PAVLA ENLISTEES Revmiddot James w Clark Diocesan ~nderglirtenmiddot to sixij1 grad~visting PAVLA headquarters Directormiddot of Papal Volunteenlmiddot for Latin America with Othershelp1 a~ amiddot day camn f~there and friends she made ill retarded cbildren andmiddot Qne asAnthony Gltgtmes bound for teaching assignment in Mexico~ Brazil including the doctor with Ns~ed at a eerebral palsy c~mpwhom she worked when me and Lucille Lebeau who has already spent three years m first went to the Latin American Brazil as nurse-social worker will return in Novemberfor eountry He is now in practice additional year in Waukegan lll FAIRHAVEN

When I first went to Brazil urgy eommunitY needs and was to leave in each parish IIshe 8a14 I worked for a little LUMBERhealth needs team similar to their own toover a year at a hospital in Salshy cOMPANY carry on as far as possible thevador Bahia My job was mlinly Most of the help that an area

training Brazilian aides and received came from the people work in liturgy catecheticsmiddot and community and health needssetting up hospital routines themselves t h r 0 ugh their Complete line

After the year was over Brazil shy awakened sense of community We would return to the comshyian doctors and medical students said -ucille Actual government munities where we had given Building Materials took over the hospital routines or material aid was hampered by this course as often as possible were runing smoothly and I political economic and social said Lucille anu each time we 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVEN felt that I could go on to public complications of many kinds eould set them growing spiritushyhealth work in areas where there The team played it by ear ally WYman 3-2611 was no nursing care at all avail- in deciding how to approach a Turn to Page Nineteen able particular parish Lucille and

Lucille joined an apostolic the nun on the team who was shy ~

team organized by Bishop Eushy also a nurse tried to work genio de Araujo Sales Apostolic through community midwives Administrator of Salvador Toshy who were sadly in need of techshy JEREMIAH COHOLAN gether with a priest a nun two nical instruction The infant Brazilian lay apostles and what mortality rate in most areas was would bt the equivalent af an very high said Lucille due iD PLUMING amp HEATING I American social worker she large part to umbilical tetanus visited areas of the Diocese preshy caused by unsanitary delivery viously all but unreached by the techniques

Church Another technique was organ- I Aim of the team she explainshy ization of one-week parish Wy 3 0911 699 B II II A

ed wail to change dormant parshy courses centered around the idea man - e VI emiddotmiddot ven~ ishes into Christian communishy of Christian cominunity Lucille Nwamp~fQrd ties Seventeen parishes were said middotshe would start the course I visited in the course of a year by trying to explain the concept lImiddottI-IIIlII_middot tI-II--tl- __ __ __ _-IIllIIIiImiddotllIlI_-IIllII~ -~~ ~--middot- ~ and a half rmging from mem- of Christians as people of God - - shy

berships of 20000 souls to 75000 then would set up discussion ~ItIIIIHtHIIIIIDIIIIUIIIIHlIIIIIIIiIllIIlHKHHIIItIIIIUIIIIIIIUllllliillllllllllIJllilllllllllllllilllllllll~ The 75OOO-member parish said Ioupsmiddot en suchmiddot subjects asmiddot~ -_sect_Lucille had only one priestmiddot 10 What ismiddota person-Person to ~ middotY 5 hmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot meet its needs person relationships~ and Dif- sect E we ayemiddot ~

Plan 01 AetiOll ferences between ordinary eom- ~ == The apostolic teamsaid Lushy munities andthe parish sect LARGE LIVEmiddot ~

eille would first survey condishy This would lead to a discussion sect ~ ~=_=_ tions and decide what most of the function of Christians and sect needed doing then plan an edushy what iii Christian community sect shycational program Three or fo~rmiddot should be lIke Theil leaders ~ while they la5~ - ~ natural leaders in each parish were ready to ask the parishion ~ sect= were chosen and arrangements ers if any were ready to coin- ~ were made to get them to an mit themselves as parish team sect Macleans SemiddotQmiddot F d ~ Archdiocesan training center for members to a stronger expres- ~ 00 S == a one month leadership training sian of their Christian fellow- sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN Tel 997-9358 sect eourse wverins lIlatechetics lit ooip Go~ of the lipQBtolie tea iulHIHlIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIJlIIIUillIIJlmIllUiJiillJillnililunJililillliiihIUllllIIlIilill(IIUJIIIJ1I1llIJllliinillllllltuE

- ~ - -~_middotmiddotij_Uimiddotmiddot ~ _

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 An Exce1lent Lcte Summer Activity J VI SIT-middot

Louisiari ~copyfrish A~~ampmpli~~~sect r~bull ~T[T uiH~Dfro[j1) fr ~rtilfrreg~[(frDIri)middot middot~~rrfr~~~Q~t~~~~~~~JJ~~tt$

MADISONVILLE (NC)--+wo cently used for ~~gt~es~was wears ago in this quiet jural torn down Its blue I green~and ~ J~lf ~ town the single square block white stained grass riow frames

ltContaining Catholic ch u r c h the huge rear wIndow ~ ~t buildings symbolized the old era Anselms church - - [f~[LL lRlt OV~~middot ~now it stands for the new This Spring St Catherines

Two years ago two churches also came down Gone too are stood 200 feet apart on this he cOl-vents and bullone school More than 280000 people havle cilrElody been aboard iUO ~he past ys[ioblock--St~ Catherine wh ere The other school building was

whites worshipped and St retained for parish meetings and Francis Xavier where Negroes the now-integrated Confratershy

worshipped The rectory with fiity of Christian Doctrine its one priest to serve both par- classes ishes s too d between theC rhe 100 or so school children

centhtirches moremiddot as a symbol of - arenow transported to elemEmshythe psychological gap thac asan tilt-y and high schools in nearby

actual separation covirigton arid Mandeville middot A fence stood between the two CCD instructions have been

eonventS on the block~riefor givengtySfsters qfChristian the Negro nuns who taughtCharityandtheirstudEints from

Negro children in the ~e~ro ~~njpirClncy at FolsoM La and IIchool the other for the wfitte byseminariaris fromarby St IllUns who taught white children i-Jolieph seminarY Butmiddot tpeseiii the whHe school diities are being taken over by

Now there is one church onemiddot tlie parishs integrated CCD orshyrectory and one small classroom ganizatiorinow being trained

building -- and one parish St The pastor Father John J Anselm DenDulk is prouder of the

Although wee k day Masses smooth transition than he is of were said in only onemiddot of the the physical change shytwo old churches Masses and Participation in worship has ether services on Sundays and increased since the new church major feast days were said in w~ built he says and he has

middot both Midnight Masses on Christ- the best commentators in the mas were celebrated concurrent- whl)le world

Iv in the two churches AIthougb there are only 260 But the buildings weremiddot badly families in the parish the new

Qn need of repair So in 1964 the ~church is already more than half lttId frame church of St Francis paid for and the parish topped

middot Xavier whose parish records go its quota in the archdiocesan back to 1863 and which was re- education expansion drive

bull ~ I bull

Bishop Pmiddoterry Says New Orleans Has Healthy Racial Climate

DENVER (NC) - Auxiliary still has more influence thaa Bishop Harold R Perry SyD any other Negro in the civil of New Odeans first AmeJican rights movement Catholic Negro bishop in this He (Bishop Perry) has been

lt1lentury said here a hea~thy very favorably received in New racial climate will exist wher- Orleans eve~ the Negro has a chan~ to Some Cannot WaU voice his grievances He said there will undoubtedshy

Bisnop Perry dted New 9r- ly be some civil rights groups lleans as an example sayipg the who disapprove lt)f non-violence racial climate there is healthy and occasional demonstrationS

because of an interracial council by those who cannot wait appointed by Louisiana~ov Of course I am a Negro and

John J McKeithen to help splve we have been waiting a long rmcial problems time If you take the long view I There are no demonstra~ions complete equality cant come too and riots and very little picket- quickly he added~

lng he said The cotiJlc~1 i-e- He said he has been received lieves tensions and if the Negro very well even enthusiastically has a forum to talk over his con- in New Orleans Picketing outshyeerns he will not demonstrate side the church where he was

Schools Integrated ~onsecrated he s3id Was DOt typical of the general feeling in

The 50-year-old prelate said New Orleans be is proud New Orleans has in- As an evidence of his popushytegrated all Its schools Its a larity he said he spoke at ninemiddot large percentage not just token graduations in June and has ofshyhe added ficiated at Confirmation in 24

He said Catholics are doing parishes their part to advance equality of opportunity in his citymiddot 1 think [EceQJl1illeIJilD~~ CCrrnDDOdegthere has been Ii united effort tl)Ir If

by all faiths and we would like ~~ ~DcopyQJIJilampIbgtD~~~DIJil to keep it that way he de- CRANSTON (NC) I hdared - n a s ow The New Orleans bishop also of the ecumenical spirit lea4ers ~ommented on ~ wide range of of major religious faiths in this

area took part in a combined eivil rights issues saying

The new militancy shown by bull religious and groundbreaking Visit the BClI~~ie$Mp anldllode alIeplica of the Old iFal~middot River Bill1e~ middottmiddotsom~ civi~ rights groups is a service on the site of the proshy

posed Church of the Annunciashypassing phase tion Greek Orth()dox lours start every 30 minutes

The majority of Negroes are Archbishop lakovo primate lJympathetic to the non-violent of the Greek Orthodox Church Opeill aU year round - 9 AM to Sunsetphilosophy of the Rev Dr Mar- of North and South America of tin Luther King and Dr King ficiated at the open air hierar- For Group Arrangements Call 678-1100 chal Divine Liturgy service at-

Serra Meeting tended by more than 500 pershy l)OOOO()ooOOC)ooOOClOOC)ooOOC)OO~IOOl sons

THIS MESSAGE Sp()NSORED IV lHE FOllOWING INDIVIDUALSATLANTIC CITY (NC) - A Participants in the groundshyeonference for members of Ser- breaking ceremony included AND BUSINESS CONCERNS IN GREATER FALL RIVERlIa Clubs in the New York-New Catholic Bishop Russell J MoshyJersey - eastern Pennsyivania Vinney of Igtrovidence Archshy ANN DALE PRODUCTS INC MACKIENZIE amp WINSLOW INC area will be held here Sept 23 deacon William L Kite represhy II~DY ELECTRIC SUPPLY COMASON FURNITURE SHOWROOMS tKi 25 Msgr William Noe Field senting the Rt Rev John Seville CASCADE DRUG CO GERALD E McNALLY CONTRACTOItiff Seton Hall University South Higgins Episcopal Bishop of GLOBE MANUFACTURING CO SOBILC)FF BROTHERS Orange NJ will give the key- Rhode Island Dr Wayne ~is

~~TGHINSON OIL COa~te address Sept 24 apoundter a executive director ofmiddot the Rhode STERUllIG BEVERAGES INC

~A Mc~HIRR ~9MPANY TEXTIU WORKERS UNION Of AMERICAeOncelebrated Mass at which the 1s~and Council of Churches ~nd ~rE~~ATIQNALV4DIES GARMENT 1 bull AlL~tO - principal concelebrant will be Rabbi Jerome Smiddot Gurland Gf

WORKERS UNION (EUOW CAI COMPANY Bishop George W Ahr of Tren~ ~telligtl~ Sinai 1epresentingthe ton Bhode Island Board of Rabbiamp bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull0 MssSelbullbull

~ ~ ~ - bull bull bull bull I ~ j

- ~

_-- -

0

WomenB~ Job Corps Members middotAid Youngsters Improve Reading

OMAHA (NC)-Omaha Wom- chesne Mother Moody found a ens Job Corps members joined benefactor to supply ihe a11shywith five graduates of Duchesne importlnt incentive program College and Academy of the Thanks to a generous racetrack

Sacred Heart here to upgrade bettor Who won the daily double the reading level of local public there was enough money for school youngsters candy bar prizes and two picnics

The progra~ ca]]edProject An indication or- the success of Upstart was first conceIved by the program was found in the Mother Helen Condon dean of reaction of the students A reshythe Nebraska co]]eg~ Mother cent visitor asked one of the Rosemary Moody aSsIstant pro- young boys Why are you here fessor o~ ~sYChology volunteer~ Did someone make you come to adminIster and execute themiddot program

The original plans were to take a group of seventh graders from Horace Mann Junior High School and tutor them in develshyopmental reading and study skills It soon became apparent that some rather basic instrucshytion was required some of the ehildren were still reading at the second grade level

Duchesnes elementary school was offered for use by Mother Helen Sheahan superior An Omaha public school official suggested that the Omaha Wom- ens Job Corps be contacted to see if they could furnish high school graduates as tutors Robshyert Bathke Job Corps education director soon put five young ladies at Mother Moodys disshyposal

Five recent Duchesne gradushyates volunteered to train the tutors for two weeks before the program actually began The Duchesne alumnae eventualiy elected to stay on for the entire program

Mother Moodymiddot was so imshypressed with the potential of the Job Corps enro]]ees that she exshytended their sessions through the rest of the summer and made college preparatory work avail shyable to them

Student Reaction Perha~s one of the more unshy

usual aspects of the entire Upshystart program was its lack of financing The only real subsidy (about $500) was from the OMaha Public School system the bulk of which went to the Omah~ Transit Company for bus service

The equipment used in the classrooms was borrowed from the public schools the Omaha Womens Job Corps and Du-

Plan to Supplement History Books

SAN FRANCISCO (NC) shyA supplementary text showing the contributions of minority groups in United States history will be added to history and social science books already in use in archdiocesan schools here

The supplement containing some 150 pages will deal chroshynologica]]y with the contribu- tions of Jews Negroes Orientais and various nationalities from southern Europe

It is being prepared by a speshycial studly committee which illl evaluating current textbooks found need for more thorough material on the part minority

groups have played in the OOUDshytry1s history

Leave Providence For Mission Work

PROVIDENCE (NC) - Four Capuchin priest and two layshymen left New York by plane for mission work in the Santa Rosa de Copan diocese Honduras

Father Ad ria n Holzmeister OFM Cap provincial of tile Capuchins St Mary province with headquarters here said the six will work among some 50000 persons in Mlree parishes in the state of Ocotepeque He said

other mjssionersmiddotas they become ayailabie wiD be sent to aid Bishop Jose Canama CbampvezCli tile diocese

He looked up and said Im here because I want to learn to read and I like it Two girls who missed the morning bus to Duchesne gave another exain-ple of determination to learn Jhey undertook a two-hour five mile walk rather than miss a day of class

L R oy etreats Contlnu~d from Page Six

laymens convention-an effort to provide some figure of speech some image to suggest to those in the Church and to those out-

side what is the inner nature of the Church

Alluding to Scriptures refershyences to the Church in terms of sheep and shepherds the former Hub Auxiliary Bishop asked How many people in Boston have ever seen a sheep Sheep and shepherds say little to youngstersmiddot in housing projects or even in the suburbs

The Bishop who is epiScopal advisor for the NCLRC officiashyted at the lighting of an eightshyfoot candle which symbolized the

conference theme-uThe Light of Chr~st The candle burned throughout the convention

Speakers stressed the retreat program is geared to demOJishystrate to the world that the way of Christ can become more meaningiful to men of our time

Bishop Ernest J Primeau of Manchester reminded delegates of recent profound changes withshyin the Church

If the lay retreat movement is to remain vital and relevant

he said it cannot be static It must be in harmony with the times at all times

Honest Call1Se

Our retreat houses could 00-middot eome so to speak the equipment and training centers for the apostolates of the laity he adshydect

Bishop Primeau urged laymei to learn from modern science particularly in the field of hushyman psychology He said there is an opportunity as well to learn from other organizations both secular and religious He added The youth of today are un-

selfish and in large numbers they are seeking for an honest cause to which they can dedicate themshyselves as witness their devotion to the Peace Corps and the civil rights movement

Modernize AncEtenlt Puerto Rico CIl1llLmlrch

SAN JUAN (NC) =- A lPJt8shyyear-old church one of the most popularmiddot in this capital city~ ~

going modern Archbishop Luis Aponte of

San Juan has inaugurated middotal campaign for funds for restorashytion of St Anns a public orashytory now badly illl need of Jeshypairs

1ft addition to restoration the ehurch also Will be equipped with air conditioning The eburch is the archdiocesan ceDltgt ~r for the Confraternity Gi Christian Doctrine and perpetual adoration of the Blessed Sacrashyment Built ill 184B the cburch weplaced an edifice which dated )Iaek iG tile lWi century

PROFESSION ANJ)) RECEPTION Four postulants beshycame canonical novices and two prof~ssed their vows as Sisters of St Joseph at ceremonies at the Blessed Sacrashyment Church Fall River Left column top to bottom Sr Gerard Marie (first vows) Sr Anne Therese Sr Rita Josshyeph Bishop Connolly who received the sisters Right colshyumn Sr Anne Denise Sr St Paul and Sr Alfred Marie (renewed temporary vow-s)

Specialmiddot Education Priests Visi~ PaJ~ents Homes to ExplOJon

SignificOJlI1lce off Baptismal Ritual

Thurs Aug 25 1966

Governor Balks

ST JEAN (NC)-Sunday bapshytisms are prece~ed by Saturday nights special educational proshygrams in a number of Catholic homes here in Quebec

The program to prepare the whole family for baptism through a home visit was deshyvised three years ago by a group of pries~s working togeth~r as a pastoral team

central idea of the program ~s that it is good for the priest to be with his people at imporshytant times in their lives~ Atmiddot these times people are dispOSed to receive the message of Christ

as it applies to their circumshystances the developers of the plan reported

The visiting priest explains the lOOremonies of the next day and the symbolic meaning of various parts of the baptismal ritual

Pilgrims Wctmlk TORONTO (NC) -The 10th

annual walking pilgrimage to the Canadian Martyrs shrine at Midland Ont will begin here Wednesday Organized by the Guild of St John de la Lande the pilgrimage will cover the 100 miles to the shrine in five days a~riving there Sunday Sept 4

LEMIEUX PLUMBING amp HEATING INC

fof Oomestic l~ andmiddot Industrial ~ Sales and Service

Oil Burners WY 5-1631

2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE NEW BEDFORD

Relatives neighbors or the prospective gorlparents may be presentbut themiddot home visit usually involves just the parents and their children

The ide is to make the preshybaptism vsit an oppodunity for dialogue between the priest and the parents rather than a conshyference

Ten parishes in the St Jean diocese have adopted the praeshytice along with l few Montreal parishes Father Marcil Brillon secretary of the St Jean litur- gical commission said he exshypects the practice to spread

FALSE TEETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass Many wearers of false teeth suJIer

embarrassment Qecause their platesdrop Blip or wobble at Just the wrong time Dont live In fear of thts happening to you Just sprinkle a little FASTEErH the non-acid powder on your plates Holds false teeth more firmly so they feel more comfortable Checks denture breath Dentures that fit are essential to health See your dentist regularlyGet FASTEETH at all drug counters

At Proposals MONTPELIER (NC) - Vershy

monts Gov Philip Hoff said he bas extreme reservations conshycerning abortion and sterilizashytion proposals contained in a reshyport of an adivsory committee on the mental retardation situshyation in the middotstate

The report called for legal sanctioning of induced abortion in cases where there appears to be a high risk of mental retarshydation of an unborn child

Thereport also contained a suggestion concerning steriliza shytion of the mentally retarded

Apart from the recommenda~ tions on legalized abortion and sterilization of the mentally reshytarded I must S4ly it was II good report Gov Hoff said He said lie will study the report with utmost care before taking any action 0

Expresses Thanks To Holy Father

VATICAN CITY (NC) -The vice prime minister of Vietnam has paid a visit to Pope Paul VI to thank him for his peace efshyforts and generous help to reshylieve the suffering of the Vietshynamese people General Nguyen Huu Co vice prime minister and secretary of state for national defense of Vietnam visited privately withshythe Pope for 30 minutes Accord- ing to a Vatican Press Office bulletin

The vice prime minister in the name of South Vietnam exshypressed profound gratitude for the valid support always given by the head of the Catholic Church and of the Holy See in the cause of peace and for the generous assistance sent by the Holy Father to relieve the sufshyfering of those persons torshymented by war The distinguishshyed visitor then continued tomiddot deshyclare that the intentions of South Vietnam are directed only toward an affirmation of the liberty of its own nation and Wgt arriving at a just peace in honor and concord

Complete

BANKING SERVICE

for Bristol County

Bristol County Trust Company

TAUNTON MASS

THE ~ANK ON TAUNTON GREEN

Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Bristol Community College Offers Evening Classes

64 Durfee St Fall River Credit classes begin September 19 1966

Register Now Mondays thrrough Thursdays 200-500 PM Courses for college credit or self improvement are offered ill

The arts languages and literature Behavioral and social sciences accounting business

administration and secretarial scieRCe Mathematics science engineering and electro-mechanical technology

Advisors Availabie During ~egistration Hours

16 THE AI~ ~-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

C~nsiders Instability Causes In Latin American lamds

From Social R-evolution in the New Latin Ameriea Edited by John J Considine MM

There are many causes of instability in Latin America Some have said in the past that it is an inheritance frQm

Spain They feel that the years of Spanishauthoritarianism rendered the colonies incapable of integrating themselves into a more balanced social system Because they had there exists the problem of low

denSity of population with a lackpreviously lacked indepenshyof internal communication In-dent creole authority the many cases there is even a lanshy

colonies were unprepared to acshy guage barrier eept a more democratic authorshy The problem of an underdeshyity In his book veloped economy has also beenBetween Freeshy a factor in forming Latin Anlershy clom and Fear ican social structureGerman Arcinshy On the social level the eleshyiegas draws a ments I have mentioned favorcomparison beshy an internal lack of class strucshytween the Enshy ture that involves a juxtaposishyglish and Spanshy tion rather than a social organi shyish governments zation and integration Democshyin the Americas racy on the other hand presupshyIn ihe north the poses a large scale integrationcolonists came in of the people in the politicalshysearch of freeshy economic-social life of thedom IIi the end nationthe founding of the Nodh The masses of -illiterates inAmerican colonies was only the Latin America who do not parshyobvious culmination of a process ticipate in these areas have noalready begun It was the reafshy iilterest in government thoughfirmation of customs already inshy their interest and loyalty maygrained in the social milieu It be enlisted by the demagoguewas an evolution not a real revshyolution for these settlers were Formation or Dictatorships accustomed to autonomy The A dictatorship takes form

authority pf their governors was when one or more pressure more democratic since they groups unchallenged seizes the worked closely with the popular power of governmentassemblies From the beginshy In order to better understand ning the keenest concern of the the types of dictatorship found North American colonist was for in Latin America let us elCamshyfreedom of worship and his hosshy ine the different forms of revoshytility to the Church of England lution and the various ways in was evident which the pressure groups

On the contrary Latin Amershy bring their influence to bearIca was part of an empire The Kalmal1 Silvert distinguishesSpaniards came to dominate and these types in his book Reaction evangelize The viceroy represhy and Revolution in Latin Amershysented the king who was an abshy ica which is written in -Englishsolute monarch The role of Silvert shows the relationshipshyassembly in Latin America was between dictatorships and the secondary arid represented exshy extreme indivdualism found in tremely liIIlited power these countries

Independence in the Latin The first type of revolution American nations entailed a real named is what Silvert calls the revolution since from the beginshy simple brracks revolt Most of ning they were forced tb look for the outbreaks especially in the new political and social forms past century have been of this

Religiousliberty did not elCshy kind The barracks revolt occurs ist in the Latin American coloshy typically in a big class society nies since all were obliged to It is carried out by the amlY

membership in the Cathoiic sompoundtimes in its own name and Church sometimes in behalf of a chosen

Unassimilated Groups leader This type of revolution - rarely calses widesprelld publicThis comparison will help in

disturbance since it representsunderstanding the Latin Amershymerely a switch in governmentican problem though it will not from one general to anotherfully explain -it We must acshy

knowledge that the political The second type the peasant phenomeinon has a direct COIshy revolt is generally of little sigshyrelatio~1 with demographic probshy nificance and limited in effect lems such as the existence of to a locality though the Mexican large unassitnilated groups as revolution at the beginning of well as masses of mestizos un this century would perhaps fall derdeveloped and deprived who in this category can scarcely be said to partici shy Third the regional revolt pate in twentieth century chili shy commcn in the early days of zation Although these groups Latin American independence form a part of the nation they Here _the caudillo strove to put are not integrated either socially down provincial revolts and to eulturally or politically centralize power in an authorishy

Despite the over-all demoshy tarian I e g i () n a I government g~aphic explosion in some areas Typical of the caudillos who led

regional revolts was Rosas of Argentina

Plans Participation The fourth a more modern type of revolution Silvert callsIn Liturgical Week the complicated barracks revolt

HOUSTON (NC) - The 1966 This is an insurrection that inshyLiturgical Week here fOI the -volves civilian as well as mili shyfirst time in its 25-year history tary groups with widespread will have a full scale program military action for those interested in the The issues are ideological and Eastern Church relate to political parties as well

As part of the Liturgical Week as _ other interest groups The program the Divine Liturgy Cuban revolution in its beginshy(Mass) of St John Chrysostom nings might be considered -an will be celebrated entirely in example Although this is the English and Communion will be most prevalent type ainong modshydjstributed under both species ernday revolutions excetions Chief celebrant of the Liturgy are the revolts which overthrew will be Archbishop Paul Achkar Peron in Argentina Perez-JimeshyGreek Catholic ~-chbishop of nez in Venezuela and -Rojas Lattaquia in Syua Pinilla in Colombia

SISTER AMBROSE

Says SOo Africa Needs Americans

WASHINGTON (NC)-Yanshykee come over a statement which would do much to boost the morale of Americans in sevshyeral parts of the world could well summarize what an Irish missionary nun to South Africa

-has been saying during a visit here _

The wonderful hospitality of theAmerican people has imshypressed Sister Ambrose Harty Gf the Sisters of the Holy Family She lamens the fact that opporshytunities to receive Americans in a like manner have been few and far between during her 20 years in South Africa

Youve got such a lot to give she said here in an ~ntershyview during which she expressed a strong desire to see greatly inshycreased people-to-people relashytio~s between the country where she serves and the United States

Sister Ambrose was particushylarly interested in the Peace Corps ann reported that its purshyposes and work are hardly known by the people of Soutli Africa I haVent heard it disshycussed at all she said (The Peace Corps has not been invited into the country) (

With words of praise for the missionary work being done iii the South African Republic by Oblate arid Paulist missionaries from the United States she also expressed regret at the general paucity of missioners from this country There particularly is an almost total lack of nuns she said Only 71 Catholic missionshyaries from the United States inshycluding 16 nuns are serving ilm South Africa

Married Priests AMSTERDAM (NC)-A

Dutch public opinion poli h8lll shown that 11 per cent of the Netherlands p e 0 pIe woulci rather have III married Catholi4l clergy than a celibate clergy The poll including members ai all and no denominations

-showed that 68 per cent of the Catholics queried preferred III married clergy

~~

(DEBROSS OIL ( ~ co ( ~ Heating Oils

~ and BMIIJUrs ~

~ 365 NORYIoli IFROIlir SUEampll ( rJ NEW IBIEDIFOR

~ WYmafi 2middot5534 (

I~~~

Parishes Share DETROIT (NC) - Twentyshy

nine urban parishes here have decided to help one another meet the rising cost of education

At the elementary level parshyepts will pay $50 per family $75 per family for non-Catholic parishioners and $75 per student

Danish Catholic COPENHAGEN (NC) -Thereshy

are 11321 Catholics in the Danish capitalaccording to a report issued by the Copenhagen statistical office They consti shytute the second largest religious entity there next to the Luthershyans members of the State Church The total number of Catholics in Denmark is approxshyimately 26000 Total population is 35 lllillion

Education Costs for Catholics outside the parish

At the high school level the tuition cost is $H)O per student in or out of the parish With the exception of textbooks this amount eliminates aU extra fee charged up to now

Father Norman P Thomas director of the Urban Parisll Apostolate said the greatest efshyfect of the joint effort will be experienced by the pastor who sends parish youngsters to a higll school operated by any of the 2 participating parishes

In this instance the students parishes will be expected to pay the difference between the tui shytion charged and the actual cost per student The latter fee laM been set by the parochial school office at over $200 per year

ETHIOPIA- THE NEW AFRICA

- HOLY FATlftRB MIBBIIDN AID TO THI DRIENTAL OHURCH

- BROTHER What happens In Ethiopia when an American MICHAEL Christian Brother (he could be your son brother

REYNOLDS nephew) Is told to upgrade Catholic schools He FROM borrows a Jeep (or a mule) visits the schools

PROVIDENCE RI one by one writes home for pencils and better REPORTS textbooks and then beginsbullbull This is the new

fROM Africa Brother Michael Reynolds reports enshyADDIS thusiasticallyfrom Addis Ababa It can be a BABJpeacefuf progressive Christian Africa tom~rmiddot

row Just give us schools give us time and with Gods help the job will De donel bull bullThe schools are for villages like Aressa Aiga Biers Wartll8~

-which have no school The youngsters know that knowledge i~ their only chance theyll go without food to learnbullbullbull What does It cost to build a schoolf Only $2950 says Brother Michael for the villagers snd the children give their laborfreemiddotofmiddotcharge We can train a catemiddot chlst for only $40 bullbullbull In thanksgiving to God for what you know will you do what you can ($100 $75 $50 $25 $15 $10 $5 $2) to give these youngsters a chance The school will be named for your favorite saint and the children will pray for your loved ones daily If you build It all byyourself ($2950) School will open late this year-but better late than never-If you Vlrit~ to us right now

WHAT Our priests there who receive no othor income IELSE for food and clothing will offer promptly the

FOR Masses you request Well forward your Mass ETHOPIAr Inten~ons through the Holy Fathers officebull

40 young lads studying for the priesthood In Decamere lose their football when It goes Into a nelghbers garden A large field can be bought ~velled and mede safe for sports fer $975

MAKINQ ~~IOOOO will ovfde bull OOfDj)lete parjstlplantA (Ohuroh rectory convent andscbool) In southshy

WiW ImIAdla In memorybullbullbullbull $600 will ttiln a native lrfHt1SOO bull native Sfster Our legal tltI Cl~1HOUO NWt lAir WIUAH AHOCIAnONo

_-------------~shytt coINIILOIIlt IUMIIIND ~ bullbull la IJIIr bull _1OIt~=-=_==-=

PI _UM~gt

Mum ClO1IIponwith your mt__=-~~_ _ ~i offrtnt ~~ erryen 8TAlI-lPCODI_

HI IATHaLl1 RIIiAR 811 WILAbullbull AIaDIATaN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS IRANCUS CARDINAL SPELLMAN President MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretal)f Write OATHOLIO NfIAR IiAST WELFARE Assoo 1)80 MadlsolJ Avenuomiddot New York NY 10017 -felGpilonel 212YUkon 6middot6840

Dormitory Proves Stonehill Permanently Coeducational

Way back in 1951 when the first girl enrolled in Stoneshyhill College no one could have imagined that a girls dormishytory would ever be built onmiddot the campus But the sound of steam shovels and hammers filling the air over the lovely grounds in Easton is proof

and two girls from the seniorthat the long planned for daslr-assisting the housemothergirls dorm will soon be a Mrs Grace Callahan

reality When Stonehill was The experiment worked so founded in 1948 as a mens colshy well in fact that this coming lege the fledgling school had Fall both the freshman and just gotten off to a good start sophomore girls will be housed when the Korean War came this way leaving only the junior along and emptied the classshy and senior girls still renting Yooms as the young men went quarters in private homes chosen into the services by the college as all the nonshy

That was the year that many commuting girls have done in small colleges had to close their the past gates forever But at Stonehill That typical campus situation the Holy Cross order was detershy -the sorority house-is not in mined to hold onto this new the picture at Stonehill-or frashyschool that they had planned for ternity houses either for that so long matter No sororities or fraternishy

What could they do to keep ties are allowed on the campus the college operating until the There is a cl11b however that war was over and the boys came is the girls own - the Crosier back Of course Open their Club Mrs Yosgandes is the gates to girl students clubs faculty advisor and she deshy

Faculty Pleased scribes it as the organization What started out as a temposhy for women studentE who want

rary expediency somehow over to contribute in their own parshythe years has acquired a happy middotticular way as women to their permanancy No one could be college more pleased about this turn of Through their annualmusical events than the Stonehill faculty Crosier Curtain Calls theyitself raise money to acquire manymiddot

Helping out in Jhe ground things that add beauty and breaking ceremony for the new charm to campus life This yeardorm Mrs Virginia Yosgandes they purchased two very lovelythe Dean of Women at the colshy silver tea and coffee services lege saiei I guess everyone will Any official group at the collegereally believe that the girls are is allowed to borrow the sets and here til stay they have already been used in

Mrs Yosgandes says that since many functions she first came to the Stonehill New Signfaculty in 1958 rumors have

Mrs Yosgandes says Thebeen popping up that Stonehill girls will be very pleased whenwill soon return to its original they come back th~~ Fallto seestatus as an all male school The the beautiful new sign theynew dorm she says will be visshybought for the college installedible proof of the permanancy of on Route No 138 women on the beautiful campus

Its very easy to picture theThe $1150000 building deshyvery charming Dean presidingsigned to accommodate 200 girls

graciously at a faculty tea Aand proctors will be three stories parishioner of Immaculate Conshyof red brick Architects W Chesshyception chulCh in Easton she ister arown and Associates and in ~rivate life an enthusiasticwntractors C A Batson and homemaker anc the mother of aCompany are planning to comshy13 year old daughter Christineplete work on the dorm in time Her husband John is assistantfor the opening of classes in principal at Franklin JuniorSeptember 1967 It will be the High first unit of a five dormitory

She speaks with great convicshycomplex planned fo the women on tion about college girls holdingcampus

onto feminine ideals while surshyKitchen ~pace rounded-and at Stonjhill outshyMrs Yosgandes is happy about numbered 3 to 1- by menthe fact that the new dorm will While were encoulaging themhave a kitchenette on each floor to be acdve in thpound communitywhere the girls can cook small and the church and in politicsmeals and entertain guests Shes and encouragint them to deshyhoping that the dorms built after

more velop their abilities to the full shythis me will providtgt even est-we never fail to take intokitchen space for the girls to account the fact that they arepractice the culinary arts women and in this competitiveM a n~ tImes homemaking world theyll have to -fight toskills come to a complete halt maintain their feminine idenshywhen a girl goes to college she tity says Apparently all classroom

work and rio cooking make Jane Coed Actiiti~s

Coed a dull girl in the room When she fi rst came to the where shell be spending a great college she sltys the girls were deal of time after graduationshy mainly interested in strictlythe dtchen feminine extra curricular activishy

Mrs Yosgandes says A great ties-fastion shows teas gids many cCJlleges have been workshy sports Bd this has changed radshying witt this problem and wonshy ically in the last few years and dering what to do about it Beshy now the girls are much more inshycause theyve had no living terested in the coed acti vitiesshyquarters for girls on campus the newspapers the debating Stonehiiil has had to do out of team the drama club Stonehill necessit) what many other colshy is noted a~ one of a small handshyleges have chosen to do recently ful gtf Catholic colleges where The Dean describp~ an experishy girls are middotactive in every part of ment that the collFge tJied last college life Every coure at yeal tha has worked out exshy StonehHj is opel to girls tremely well We still havent had a woman

Experiment Successful president of our student governshyThe college leased a grollp of ing body the Senate Mrs

rooms il an apartmelt building Yosgandes says Now girls in Brockton last Fall where all what are yOIi waiting for the freshman girls who were not commuters-55 of them-lived in housekeeping apartments In Red Groups There were four girls in each BERLIN (NC)-Over 85 per apartment all sharing the reshy (ent of East German children sponsibilities of housekeeping between the ltlges of 6 and 14 are

The girls hat two sets of mCl11)ers of communist youth 1)IoctOS - two aIumni wumen ~nIUps

lrt-OE ANCH0) 17 Thurs Aug 25 1966

PriestCuod Goal Of Top Skater

GREAT FALLS (NC)-A good many folks in this Montana toWlll will attest that teenager J Mishlll Petkevich is a pretty good skate -on or oH the ice

The affable blond youngster 17 topped a field of 136 pershyformers in the three-day Lake Placid N Y international free style competition sanctioned by the U S and Canadian Figure Skating Assoclations The Great Falls lad was the judges unamiddot1ishymous choice for the mens gold medal in the finals

But Petkevich doesnt lose his cool off the ice His classmates and teachers at Great Falls Censhytral 3igh School claim hes liIl

winner in every event He spends more than 40 hours 11 week in skating training but carries the full load of class studies and consistently turns Up on the schools honor roll Hes a member of the National Honor Society

The school supported me ami the way Everyone has beeEl wonderfUl to me the modest youngster saia Hes been -skatshying since he was 2 He credit his achievements to his Catholic Faith the sacrifices of his parshyents and of Arthur Bourke senshyiormiddot professional of the Great Falls Figure Skating Club He said All I did was skatemiddotGROUND-BREAKING The Very Rev John T Corr

I hope some day to become~esc president of Stonehill College turns a shovelful of priest Petkevich said wbeilearth to mark start of construction 0pound a 200-student dormshy a~ked his ambition I hope 14gt itory for women on the Stonehill campus Watching the proshy attend Notre Dame for at leasa celtlures are left to right Mrs Virginia Yosgandes dean af two years and then I h9pe to gf)

to the Catholic University fl4women John C Doody 66 Alumni fund chairman Robert AmericaBatson contractor Harold Bonvie ass~iate of the archishytect

Msgr Canty Continued from Page OneRussian Schools ing studies at S1 Marys High

Taunton Boston- College and S1 Bernards Seminary RochesshyChristian Brother Lauds Students terN Y

nespect for Intellectuols He served as assistant at Our Lady 01 the Isle NantucketCHICAGO (NC)-Students in to foreign languages than Amershy Holy Family Taunton St

schools behind the Iron Curtain icans Most students take a Marys Barrowsville and Stgo at their studies with a passhy seven-year sequence of English Johns Attleboro He was apshysion said Brother Kevin Mark German or French English he pointed to the Chaplains CorPJFSC who toured Russia and added is the most popular lanshy of the United States Navy infour satellite countries with 19 guage and more emphasis is January 1942 and retiredwitbother U S rducatois placeltl on reading and speaking the rank of captain in Decemshy

Brothel Mark who is princishy than on writing it ber 196gt Pope John XXIII pal 9f St Mels high school here Brother Mark said that there elevated him to the rank of attributed much of their motivashy is almost nothing that he would Domestil Prelate with the title tion to the students attitude that lift from the Soviet school sysshy of Right Reverend Monsignor iI What I do does contribute to tem and apply in the U S May 1962 the welfare of the state He admitted however that Bishop Connolly named Monshy

Brother said he felt that stushy they do get results They have a signor Canty pastor of St Paulsdents in this country lack motishy tremendous capacity for conshy Taunt-ln in December 1963 vation because were spoiled centration when they set their Industrial improvements have sights for example their space made it that a young man can program Its not all a matter go into a trade and make very of being chained to a lab table good money BLUE RIBBON

In the Soviet Union he said there seems to be a great reshyspect for intellectuals and the LAlnNDRY student is thought of as a proshy

01 STOPfessional schJlar 273 CE~RAl AVE~UIIG CfflTERTeaching is considered a proshy

fession and remunelated accordshy e Television C FmiddotI ure illgly WY 2-6216o r-cerv

St Mels principal observed on IlA Allen St Newhdfordhis tour that there was little NEW BEDFORD questioning on the part of the students

The chSSloom situation he said is very much teacher ori shyented that is study in depth is 21 DAY PILGRIMAGES TO EUROPE done on the teachers inspiration

rou~ 1-Legion of Mary Pilgrimage leaving Sept 12th with Truth in such areas as history Father Edward A Oi-viera will visit Killarney Dublin Paris

cllld literature is accepted as a Lourdes Rome Madrid Lisbon and Fatima - Tour 2shyforegone conclusion and stushyHoly Cross Fathers Pilgrimage leaving Oct 10th with Frdents just memorize what has

already been discovered ----- lobert E McDonnell will wsit lisbon Fatima 1odrid Rome Lourdes Paris and londonIike F)rc~gn Linutges -cota cost is $82900 - Time PaymentsmiddotIn the area of science howshy arranged ever the situation is difterent

()Ii TOUR tOLDERS CONTACT STEolfEN A MARIIEYhe pont~d out because in scishyence there is an attitude of I n~ust discover Catholic Travel

-Office

The R1~middotmiddotmiddotO p oth-r Mark ~ltk St New Befl- -ass 02748

said ~ ve 11111j Ill)le auention

BURNERS

BUrntlr Service

Famous Reading HARDCQAl

NEW ENGLAND COKE

t8 THE ~NCHOR-Dioceseof fo Rivef-Thurs Aug 25 1966 J~sut I)riest Says Some Public I b M t EmploYE~~S Have Right to Strike

-

Urges uO or ovemen S NEW (NC) -Public however YORK Government hasmiddot h C employees in certain fields have been expanding its cQncern andIn Heml$p ere ooperate the right to strike against the has beenmoving into ar~as of government a priest declared transportation education recre-

By MsgrGooJrge C Higgins (Director Socian Actiolll Dept NCWC)

The relationship between the American labor moveshyment and the Latin American Confed~ration of Christian Trade Unions (CLASC) leaves much to be desired as we

middot thO d th 1- have aready noted severa1 t Imes m IS co umn urmg e

past four or five years The two movements are deeply different things to different peoshy

auspicious of one another and just when they seem to be on the verge of settling or at least -patching up their differshyences they go at it again and recklesslystart hurling insults at one another

To jUdge from What they sayIi b 0 u t on e another publicshy1yen as well as privately on e would t h ink that they were natural-born enshyemies whe~eas in fact they have much in common-much inore than they seem to realizeshyand for obvious reasons ought violent MisS Duncan was an officer of The fourth public member Harshyto be c60p~rating With onean- Moreo~er at least one promi~theSodality a cheerleader for vardlaw school professorVern ether as closely as pOSSible nent spokesman for the AFL- four years a member of the Ten- Countryman half ci-itiCized the This writer has learn~ci the hard WR and muc~ to hiS so~-row that any outSider who 18

fOolish enough totryto mediatek f

~tween them JS as mg or troouble

C f t Gommun same If for example one suggests

as I have done on more than one Occasion that soine of the anti U S propaganda emanating from CLASCsources revealS atremely harmful to the cause of n a i v e misunderstanding of Amerlcan trade unionism and American capitalism andor ari $ver-simplification of Catholic Social teaching he runs the risk 9f being written off as a blind -not tOsay reactionary apologist for so-called Yanqui ~mperial-

iBm If on the other hand oneslig

gests that some of the anti- CLASC propaganda enianating

fro m AFL-CI0 sources is equally naive and unsoPllisti shyeatedhe runs the same Sort of risk in reverse That is to say he is likely to be told--v~ry politely of course -that if he were to take off his Catholic blinkers and look at the record objectively he would quickly come to realize that CLASC is in reality playing t~ecipal rival in Latin America) riages in their mission parishes communist game in Latin Amer- there is a gEirierous mixture of Msgr Milia stated Since the iea superficial appearances to cultural chauvinism and envy Ogdensburg mission was opened the contrary notwithstanding that accompanies the most legit- a modern new church bas been

Both CaD Learn imate misgivings built under its direction in the Be that as it may I still think Even the Latinos middotthemselve~ seaport ofMatararii two mission

~t CLASC has a lot to learn he points out will admit on ac- churches have oeen completed about _ and from American casion that their consumirig fear and a lalge parish church and trade unionism And if that of Yanqui imperialism is often center are currently under conshymakes me a reactionary Yankee irrational But there it is he re- struction in Mollendo ehauvinist so be it minds us and the basic prob-

By the same token however aiso think that the American

labor movement has much to learn about -- and from - the Christian trade union movement in Latin America The first thing it has to learn is that the Am~r-leap philosophy of pure-andshysimple bread-~d-butter union ism which all things considshyered has worked satisfactorily in this country is not necessarily well adapted to the present-day Deeds of Latin America

Meaning of Revolution Another way of saying the

same thing is that American iabor representativesworking on Latin America problemswm have to reconcile themselves to the fact that a social revolu-Uon is called for in Latin American labor federation that doesnt subscribe to a revolushytionary ideology is probably doomed to failure

The word revolution meaos J-

pIe of course To the leaders of CLASC it means a sweeping program of socioeconomic and political reform which goes far beyond the limited goals of bread-and-butter unionism

The leaders of CLASC are convinced that such a revolushytioo is demanded bythe Chrisshytian social ethic to which they subscribe and from which they derive their ideology

Perceptive Critique Some U S Labor repshy

resentatives are skeptical to say the least~bout the allegedly Christian content of CLASCs militant ideology They admit theneed for a peaceful revolushytion in Latin Americn butthey are convinced thatCLASC wants this revolution to be Feehan High School Attleboro alties in a letter tc therimes

lem is how to insure con~ PAVlA V I tlnuing cooperation between 0 untee rs Yanqui and Latino in spite of Complete TlIainirigit

Such cooperation Dr Hawkins WASHINGTON (NC)-Fortyshyconcludes will be impossible unshyless the leaders of the American labor movement positively indi~

cete their acceptance of social revolution in Latin America This will require he says

more than the generous transshyfusions of economic aid the stimulation under United States

labors auspices of leadership training programs for workers

and other cooperative ventures Need Broader View

What is required he insists ltCia a broader view-an ability on the part of the American la bor statemen to adopt policies that will not always accord with OUI own value~ and more speshy

cificall~ the tempering of (their) hosannas to free entershyprUie ___

inter-American labor unity I fully agree in this respect with Dr Carroll Hawkins Associate

Professor of Political Science at Michigan State University who recently published a most pershyceptive critique of American trade union policy in Latin- Catholics in Mollendo Peru the

America (The 0RIT and Amer diocesan missions director reshyican Trade Unions Conflicting ported Perspectives Industrial Rela- The New York priests were tionsand Social Changes in sent to Peru after Pope Paul Latin America University of vi -asked that more priests be Florida Press) pr9vjd~d fOr the people opoundSouth

Basic Problem America Msgr Anthony A Mi-Dr Hawkins admits of course lia said He estimated more than

that in all the Latin American 90 percent of the priests in criticism of United States unioniperu are from other countries in the ORIT (the Latin Ameli can regional unit of the Interna In 1965 the priests from Ogshytional Confederation of Free denburg administered 445 bap-Trade Unions and CLASCs prin tisms and perfoImed 64 mar-

CIOhas publicly charged in ej_ nis Club for two years and a suggested penaltiel fect that CLASCs ideology three yeaT member of the FU- owes more to Marxism than it ture Nurses club Father Carey sl~id the ~ays does to Christianity He finds it when pay and working condi-

An instructor in the Confra- tions for men and women inhard he says to accept the fact ternity of Christian Doctrine that the Christian labor move- civil service were determine4 byproglam in Our Lady of Mt I g I t d d t t

t middot A e IS a Ive It n a minIS ra Ive ment 0f L a In merIca IS non- Carmel Parish Seekonk the fiat have pas ed a d Communist s n we now

In my judgment this kind of criticism of CLASC by spokesshymen fltr the AFL-CIO is ex

three volunteers have completed the Second National Training Session sponsored by the Papal Volunteers for Latin America and received assignments in some ten Latin American coun- tries

Special ceremonies ended the six-week training session at the Catholic University of America where volunteers studied the apostolic work of the Church the laymans role in the aposshytolate and principles of spiritual life as well as the religion ecoshynomics and culture of Latin America

Before leavillg for their asshysignments the volunteers will take intensive four-month lanshy

guage anl culture courses in a Latin American language centerbull

eighth winner of this scholarship plumeoursElves that we share will enter the Childrens Hosshypital School of Nursing Boston in Septembel-

Ogdensburg Priests

SellYe Peru Mission OGDENSBURG (NC) -- Four

Ogdensburg priests currently are ministering to the n~eds of_13OOO

~ere

Father Philip Carey sJ exshyecutive director of the Xavier Institute of Industrial Relations acknowledged t hat certain strikes aJre intolerable But he said that when the governmentacts in a proprietary function it must follow the same rules it prescribes for private enterprise

In a letter to the New York Times Father Carey criticized ~y implication a proposed state -llw that wetulltilincrease the penalties to be imposed on strikshying union of public employees

MlISS LHNDA DUNCAN Th~proposedlaw grew out of recommendations of a five-man

Feehan Alumna task force named by Gov Nel son Rockefeller to study the

Receives Award problem after a 19-day transit strike crippled Newmiddot York City

Miss Linda Duncan daughter in January of Mrs George Duncan and the - NeCeSSBlry for Bargaining late George Duncan 61 Sykes Father Carey one of four Rd Seekonk has been awarded pubiic members of the mayors the eighth annual scholarship of committee that helped settle the the Attleboro Area Nurses strike disagreed with two other Chapter publlc memlgters Vh_o had previshyA 1966 graduate of Bishop ously supported the stiffer pen-

and internal concord a str~ke against itconstitutes mutiny and rebellion (UCLA) Sister Muriel a native

Pgbllsh Gudelnes For Ecumenisn

ALLENTOWN (NC) - The commission of ecumenism of the Allentown diocese here in Pennshysylvania has published a 22-page booklet of ecumenical guidelines to aid priests in guiding the laity The guidelines include general

permission for non-Catholics to serve as witnesses at Catholic weddings for Catholics to serve as witnesses at non-Catholic weddings and for burial of non-Catholics in Catholic ceremonies with a priest or a non-Catholic clergyman cltmducting graveside eeremonies

SHELL DADSON OIL

24-Hollr Oil

GLE COAL amp OIL CO IncI

640 Pleasant Street Tel WY 6-8271 New Bedford

this decision-making with the working p E~ 0 P Ie themselves through the process of collective bargaining

If collective bargaining is to be the rule he said we must agree to grant the right to strike~ Without this right he said there is no union and no coll~ctive balmiddotgaining

Expands Concern-in considering strikes by pu~ lie employees he dedared one muSt distinguishb~tween the state as a sovereign and the g()vernment acting in a proprishyetary function When the state aets as the defender of the peace or the promoter of justice

of Corning Iajoined the Sisters of the Humility of Mary in 1930 In recent years she has been ehairman of professionafarts deshypartment and college registrar

ation and a host of other services formerly performed by privategroups he continued

These activities are ancillary and economic and here the state in acting in a proprishyetry function When it so acts it ought to be subject tl) the same rules of conduct the government prescribes for private entershy

prise Strikes by firefighters and powerhouse uti lit y workers would be wrong however he said because it is difficult to imagine anY benefit they might gain to counterbalance the fear- fut harm such a l strike would impose on the community Buys Banners For Memorial

CHICAGO (NC)-A Chicago advertising executive has bought 44 brightly-colored religious ~anners tat -hung in the Nashy

tlOnal Srme of the Im~aculate ConceptIon during Luci Johnshysons wed(iin~ -

Earle Ludgin a trustee of the University of Chicago said he will donate the banners to the

university~ Rockefeller Memoshyrial Chapel in memory of his late wife

The banners for which Ludgin reportedly paid more than $40000 were originally created for the Vatlcan PavIIIon at the New York World Fair

A group of Washington D C residents bought ttie banners when the fair closed and arshyranged to have them exhibited in the Shrine until they could be sold Lugdin bought themin April but agreed at the request of Shrine officials to leave them in the Shrine until after Lucia wedding

lame College Head

OTTUMWA (NC) Sis t er

Muriel Hogan has been named the third presi4ent of Ottumwa Heights College here in Iowa She succeeds Sister Marie Anshy

ciue Kennedy woo win engagem graduate study in oominunishy

eations at the University of California Los Angeles branch

Offering You 3 Savings Plans

Home Financing

WAREHAM CO-OPERATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mabull

Telephone 295-2400 Banll SerVice YlIIIIIII

I

Ask Court Bar Use of Church Propertyfor Public SchoQ~middot WHITE ~S (MC) - A the cl883rooms ~ut Church

group of some 25 citizens repre- npokesman reporte~ that in line sented by the American Jewish with New York archdiocesan Congress has asked the New York State Supreme Court here to restrain the board of Ramapo School District 2 Rockland County from holding public school classes in property leased from religious bodies

The school board faced with severe-overcrowding planned to lease eight rooms from St Josephs Catholic Church and five from lem~e Beth El in Spring Valley The action was approved by 8tateEducation Commissioner Jame$ EAllen Jr

A ComllllJJlt served 0ill the rlChool board by the AJC charged the acti~n o~ld ~otateChurchshyState separation guaranteed by the First Amendment to the Constitution as well as other provisions of the state constitushytion

It is believed to be the first wch challenge made regarding

the use of religiO18 facilities for public school use

lhe st Josephproperty conshysists of an eightclasSroom school building adjacent to but sepashyrated from the chureh It is Ill good condition but will not be used by the p8rish thismiddot year because it has bUilt a new bUildshying for expanding its acbool to 141 classes

All religioUs ~bols had Ileen removed from the oder building in preparation for its use as a public school

The district school board had offered a fair market rent for

PAV~A deg Missionary Record Continued from Page Thirteen

A nurse from Chicago baa taken Lucillellpla~on the aposshytolic team and ber purpose in returning is to help her successhy80r work into the project smoothly It takes so long to get into 11 she Aid so II dont WJmt Il~r to spendtbree

years j~ g~tting organized~

Benedictine Marks 80th Anniversary

ST JOSEPHmiddot (NC)-The oldshyest Benedictine nun in Minneshysota-and one of the oldest m the world~marked the 80th anshyniversary of her entrance into the order ma Mass for all Beneshydictine jubil~tians held at St Benedicts convent here

Sister Sophia Zimmer was 1~ years old Dec 2 1965 She Wall

born in a log cabin about 1 block away from the convent An open house for her relatives and friends was held at the conv~nt

Receives Students cAsTELGANDOLFO (NC)shyPoPe Paul vI received in audishyence at his Summer home here students frOm 34 nations includshying many non-Catholics who are taking Summer courses in the ItaUaa language aDd culture sponsored by the Rome branch of the Catholic University fII IWaD

policy the properly would be made available for public school use at a token dollar-a-year rental

cmOS Cmpetes C~~ege ~rr(l))g~m

WASHINGTON (NC)-A class of 97 under-privileged high school students was graduated on completion of an eight-week Summer college orientation proshy

gram at Georgetown University The exercises i attended by faculty and parents Qf the stushydents involved students who had completed their Sophomore year in District of Colwnbia high schools They were chosen for the special course because teachers and counselors believed they have the ~billty to do colshylege work alihoug~ their presshyent high school records indicate little likelihood of college acshyceptance Ninoty-fiveOf the 97 students were Negroes md the ratio of males to females was aboutmiddot tbree-to-two ~

The pro~~~~Ch began in 1965 is financed by the NaUonal science Fowidationmiddot the District of Columbia public school sysshy

tem and Georgetown In addition to academic work

the students were given cltgtUrsetl in reading improvement and counseling gUidance Athletie and cultural events underwrit shyten by the program were also bKluded in their schedules

nearly 42 years Bishop Gerow churches degespeciallY Negro said Of late I have feltmiddotthat X houses of worshIp which middotWere have not the stamina to caJTY I bombedmiddot and burned

on as I have done in the past Whena p~ttern of destn1c~ion This load should be borne by 1 develops as It has m our state youngerman then it sincumbent upon all ntereston Yoiit

Cathollc lnereaSe m~n ~ ~ood ~i~ througho~t MiSSISSIPPI to Jom hands m Savings

The ~venth bishop of~edio- helpingthe affectedmiddot churches 0 Invested In cesemiddotwhlch was founded ID 1~37 and in showing clearly our con- and encompasses 111 of Missls- demnation at all acts of violencemiddot CATHOLIC CHURCH sippi Bishop Gerow h8ll s~ lawlessness and destruction the Catholic population IJOw from 31264 to 75000 in his 41 years of office The number of priests in the diocese grew from 63 to 220 and churches md misshysions from 108 to 243

The last few years of llacial violence perhaps were the most troub1d for Bishop Gerows long ad inistration middotHemiddot met the challenge with courage

In the face of many-sided opshyposition Bishop Gerow in 1964 directed the first grades of Cathshyolicmiddot schools in the state to be racially integrated The next

Missionaries Move Seminar to Ohio

DAYTON (NC) -The White Fathers a missionary society which bas served in Africa for nearly a century is llloving its U S seminary to Dayton

St Josephs Seminary which had been in operation at Onshydliota N Y near Saranac Lake will re-open under the same

name in four residences near the campus of the University of

Dayton The buildings have been rented from the university

Eventually the White Fathers plan to build their own seminary

middotfacilities somewhere in ~e area according to Fatber Paul lo1e1le WF~

THE ANCHOR- middot19 Thurs Aug 25 1966

KC Melll1il~er~~ip

At AJ~Tome e~~gh MIAMI BEACH (NC)-In his

report at the 84th annual meetshying of the Supreme Council of the Knights of Columbus Sushypreme Knight John W McDevitt made these points

Membership on June 30 1966 stood at an all-time high of 1183896 The orders insurance covershyage passed the $15 billion mark during the year

The orders assets reached III

neW plateau of $28122840028 at the end of the fiscal year

The society i~ continuing its support of the campaign to st~m p(gtrnography

Revise Ceremonial Progress is being made onthe

re_Vision of the orders cerempnshyial to give it a total family middotclishymate and make it consistent with moder day philosophy of social justice and religious pracshytice

The K of C have undertaken distribution of copies of the 1~ew Testament to Catholic gradllates

COURAGE PERSONIFIED John St Marie of B~YQ of the Naval Offilaquoer CandfClatE port Minn CQnfined to a wheelchair since a 1953 pOlio ~chool in Newport R I an(J ill

~dying the question of proshyattack has received a scholarship to the University of viding a similar servilte ~orMinnesota law school atter successfully maintaining an Ashy Catholic graduatell of the Qffi shyminus average in undergraduate work at the College of cers Candidate School of ihe St Thomas St Paul Minn irQ Photo Canadian Navy

It saluted Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York on biI

Welcomes Successor Naming of Apostolic Administrato

Pleases Bishop Gerow 81 JACKSON (NC)-Mississippll1 year he followed with a direeshy

courageous 81-year-old Bihop tive that Catholic schools be deshyOliver Gerow welcomed his suc- segregated completely ceSSor Bishop Joseph B Bruni- Helps Restore Churches ni 55 as spiritual head of the Despite reported threats ofmiddot Natchez-Jacklon diocese as one violence fro m segregationist who is active vigorous and has ranks the aged prelate was good sound judgment among leaders of an interfaith

X am very happy in being groupmiddot which formed the Comshyrelieved of the heavy responSl- mittee of middotConcernmiddot soHcited middotbillty that I have borne for money labor and materIals for

middotthe bishop stated in a letterred AND in every Catholic church in the INSTITUTIONAL BONDSstate

His appeal for $300000 to re-middot I Umiddot f $500 M store more than 30 d~stroyed n nits 0 or ore and damaged churches brought Keenan amp CImiddotarey bie contributions to the Committee 9f Concern from various sections Minneapolis Minnesota of the country

0

M~ntle Plumbing amp ~ating Co Inc~

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET Fall River OS 57497

for detailed information write to

CHARLES A~ MURPHY Registered Representative

145 Pond $treet Winchester Mass

PA 9-2696 And

Name bullbullbull ~ Address A

City _

50 years in the priesthood payshying tribute to him not only beshycause of his dignity as a pi-iest and cardinal but also because he 1S a great and wholesome mail

Relic Stolen NEW YORK (NC)-A reputed

relic of the cross on which Chtist died has been stolen from the Church of the Most Holy Reshydeemer here It was removed from a side altar tabernacle

where it had been placed shortshyly after the churchs establishshy

ment by the Redemptoriad Fathers some 125 years ago

~

GULF HILL DAIRY so DARTMOUTH MASS

RO THE ANCHO~-Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

1

RELIGIOUS SUPERIORS INSTITUTE ON STONEHILTJ CAMPUS SMS Guadalcanal Solomon Islands Standing Sr Florita DP King Sr Mary LUk~ St about to enter the hall for her lecture Center Some ston Mass Sr Mary of Bathany SP Holyoke Sr Mary de Sales F$SJ r the sisters who attended Sister Lukes talk were Sr Josepha SC Conshy Holyoke Right Mrs Mary Virginia Yosgandes h-ouse mother wavesgood ent Station NJ Sr Mary Kenneth Amityville NY Sr Mary (fheresa bye tothe departing nuns I

Brooklyn Church Hopes Nuns Move Into Cent~r of Lij~e Criticizes Irish lribunal Lacks By Dorothy Eastman -Social Security

When in the third year of Vatican II the momentous decision was made toinvitewO- dmiddot LIMERICK (NC) - FatherJ men observers to audit a Council forthe first ~ime to represent all J~remiah Newman professor ofuris ICtlon the Sister chosen BROOKLYN (NC)-Msgr the nuns in America was Sister Mary Luke Tobin Mother General of the Sisters of Lor- sociology at Irelands Maynooth

IlAarion J Reinhardt pre- etto When shewasasked recently while visiting the Fall River Diocese what impressed College criticizedprivate agenshyJ~L h t b t th C 1 cies and the national governshyIdlng Judge of the Trlblillal er mos a ou e oune) h t b t h h d k ment for their failure to increaseshe said with a wry smile We aVe 0 e rna ure enoug er own or er was wor mg(1)f the Diocese of Brooklyn h to live in insecurity toward these ends She told of all subsidies to families Iltas announced that the bill of The fact that we were t ere Will these changes be easy experiment soine of her Sisters After insisting that it would $Omplaint of 15 former teachers at all I The Sister is too much of a have been engllged in for the be best for private agencies and of St Johns Un~versity had to At a Stonehill College institute realist to give that impression past twu years in Pueblo Colo- local governments to administer be dismissed because of lack of Sister Luke spoke of her many Its going to be fraught with rado Although most of the 1100 social security Father Newman jurisdiction on the part of the other impressions of the Council difficulties she warns but Sisters of Lorettv are teachers said that since they seemed unshy

ecclesiastical court _ where she and seven other Sis- what isnt this small group of Sisters in willing or unable to do this the The Brooklyn ecclesiastical tels were auditresses for the last There are more than a few Pueblo 1s doing no t~aching-in job had to be done by the natshy

$Ourt which operates under two years of Vatican II Over Sisters who are troubled and schools anyway They simply jonal government ~llnon law said it is pmited in 450 Mothers Superior from 55 sometimes shocked these days live among the poor as good He said that according to jurisdiction to only spiritual different Orders were gathered by many of the changes hi their neighbors he 1pin jg wherever Catholic soCial teaching there ltuestions at the Easton campus for the communities The Mother Gen- they cllD leading discussion was no limit to the amount of Charge Contralaquot Breach five day Institute directed by eral would warn them that its groups counselling etc government aid that is permis-

The 5000 word document Rev William FHogan CSC pointless for them to say Thill Asked to comment on the re- sibie and desirable if governshypointed out that the decree of Sister Luke was one of a group is not the community I entered cent experiment in Milwaukee mEmt aid was the Qnly practical Giisrriissalis without prejudice to of noteliltspeakers who talked When it comes to that she says where30 School Sisters of St (sbl~tion to poverty problems lbhe merits of the case to the superiors on the subject we all might say This is not the Francis left their convents for

If the Metropolitan Tribunal of the I Sister in the modern Church Iwas baptized into or three weekstO work in secular If the archdiocese of New York world this is not the world I was b()rn jobs - oneSister wa3 assigned

T b 1 f the Sacred into Change is a fact of life S t~ the rI una 0 Adapting a line from Charles as a newspaper reporer- IS er Roman Rota reversesthe decree Dickens to describe this contro she points out~ and we can~t keep Luke predicted a great deal the casewiil be returned to the versial post Council age Sister things as they are or say Stop more~ of this kind of liniited Tribunal of the Diocese of the World-I want to get off f i t th I w ld ]Brooklyn for adjudications upon t~ees sa~~iSTi~iSt~eth~o~r Role of Superiors ~~~re ~o di~~a~~c~i~t n~~ Ms merits it was stated times She paintedavivid ver- The role the Superiors will she said

The petition of complaint bal picture of the world that lies play in the formation of what Since her own Order founded filed by Father Peter OReilly ahead for Sisters She said it has been called The New Nun in 1812 is quite new all religious

s~f Chicago on behalf of himself would certainly be a challenging Lwuakeouattlintheed fs~roeh~ ~~s~~~t~ orders go and is the liirst comshylind the other ousted teachers one and that conventlife inthe munity founded in America charged he university which is future is certain to undergo She urged them to create a cli- without European ties the Sisshyeonducted by theVincentian many radical changes mate where Sisters can liveters of Loretto weal habits more Fathers with breach of contract community life at its best She -modern than most But itsstill

The Superior~ were told that entreated them to keep thls cli-The dispute has been marked bY d bl d ff t the dress of 1812 not 1966 so it d k t f an m Ispensa e gUl e me ec - mate free from legallsm andlitudent unrest an pIC e mg 0 th hmiddotmiddot th will soon be changed As soon I mg ese c anges IS e map survelmiddotllance Ie schoo s campuses f th f t th t th C 1 as the all-mlll Congregation

or e u ure a e ounCl A community should be a of Religious in Rome approv~sMoral Issue Fatners drew up for the Church place where there- is safety for She called the CouncII Decrees the Sisters new design that is About 30 teachers were fired fl t d f t f dff

Rost December in a dispute over the documentS ofhighest au- cop IC an sa e y or J er- Tliey have submitted one de~ign rlty We should all have ~nes apd s~fety to cultiv~te that the fathers turnEd downadministration-faculty relation- tho d t h d Sh f I the mInd of Vatlcan II and then lverSI y s ~ sal e ee s lihey thought it was too modshyships and other issues They t I th t th h ld be

b b f we c~n move Into actlon she s rongy a ere ~u r -ern Sister Luke says UWhat anwere joined y anum er 0 I t I g I fe ther teachers In a strike that told her healers - 1Jloe ~o~a IY In re 1 J~)Us 1 incredible thing for US to ask shy --uAfterall were not Trap- that we choose our own clothes has continued since January Whi~h Way psts

l she adds with a laughThe court found that tpe How will the Sisters know in Warning that the time has S t Lk tl - b

uteceniontractual controversy was not whicli direction they should come for a re-evaluation of the _ IS ~rth y e~mt~ a spiritual mattelin a canoliical move in the manyarells so(in to true meaning of community she ne oIl e d~rs wo~~ ever ~ llense of the word spiritual change cExperiment Sister told the Superiors that commu- bo~a h a sre~t a f ~gUS aild that there was no allegation Luke advises so often its almost nity doesnt mean conformity or 0 y e oCle ~ o anon ef a violation of an ecclesiastical her motto We really cannot a hotel life either or even a Lawyrs Does thIS mian that law arid that the time was not move into change without ex-lot of happy t9getherness th~ SI~ters may at last have a opportune for a decision of perimentation she says and around the television set voIce 111 the formatIon of canon moral responsibility because the we will be engaged in tremen- A ~ital new aspect of commu- la-at least th~ laws that rUI~ secular courts would first have dous experiments from now on- nity is the idea of what Sister thel~ O~derS SIster Luke deshyto determine whether there was to adapt religious life to the Luke calls sub communities- vout y opes so a breach of contractual duty times in which we live the convents immediate neigh- Its certain that the future for

The church court found as a The revisions that lie ahead borhood the parish the civic the Sisters will be a very differshymatter of law that St Johns for religious orders will bring commumty lay people 111 the ent one than anyone could have 141 NO MAINUniversity as a corporation Sisters into the mainstream of same profession as the Sister- imagined a few short years ago J~ formed under the law of the modern life Sister Luke for for instance other nurses or The Holy Father has urged them iii FALL RIVER State of w York did not have one has no doubts that this is tElachers We have allowed too the~ to move from the margin e the ecclesiastical privilege of where they belong We ought great a gap to exist between our- of life to the center of life~ 873 COUNTY demanding that suits against it to be willing to take the risks) selves and the laity she says Will the move be successful SOMERSETbe heard in an ecclesiasticalmiddot that gO along with this plunge In an interviewmiddot following her Sister Luke says We can only CDOurt into the mainstream she says talk Sister ~uke was asked how know by taking a ChanCE

Feai makes the wolf bigger than be is

Rer Bankings Already D~ne

~jI--~1 W

tt-~~gt_ri~

~j F~ p ~tl Iim F-ilNgt

~l i

ll 11 ~~

W = ~

~gtltl ~

-~ ~~ StIesaves I lot of alunle Mtime forso maily other thinlS ~i She banks by mail at Te ~ OLD R D8 KI h 7reg E AN W at about you

liii FREE mall forms ~1 The mOld Red Bank W

$ Fall River Savings Bankjilll q

Page 3: 08.25.66

3 Maryknon Cuts Makes Room lor Jet Set THE ANCHOR~

Thurs Aug 25 1966 Superiors Term ~ Congress ProbesTo Six Years Fr Morris lU Semi-Retirement

Luther TeachingMARYKNOLL (NC) HELSINKI (NC) - LutherPermission to reduce the scholars from all over the worldFall River MaryknoUer 52 Years in Priesthood

terms of superiors general met here in Finland to discuss from 10 to six years has been the impact of modern scholarshyMaryknoll Father John E MQrris may be one of the few priests in the world who (JIven to the Catholic Foreign ship on the traditional undershy

can say his mission was bumped by the Jet Age And indeed it was The Fall RiverMiSSion Society of America standing of themedieval reform-OMaryknoll Fathers) by theConshy missioner was stationed in Hawaii where he wo~ked for 12 years until his parish bordershy er gregation for the Propagation of ing Honolulus International Airport was engulfed by runways lengthened to a~commo- Discussing hIs spirituality tile Faith philosophy and ecclesiology thedate new jet aircraft That

The change in the constitution scholars attempted to relate theholm in a prisoner-of-war exshywas in 1956 FatherMorrisldso includes a provision for sucshy reformers thought with modernehangecelebrated his 77th birthdayession by the societys vicar Protestantism and ecumenism general if the superior general OR Jan 1 of this year and In Hawaii Jl Years This years congress the first ceases to hold office for the currently is semi-retired from to be held in Helsinki is the thirdIn 1944 Father Morris was as aemaining term of office Preshy mission work and resides at the LUther congress in 10 yearssigned to the missions of Hashy

rheological preparation wasw-ously an extraordinary ehapshy Maryknoll seminary in Mounshy waii where he worked for the was dope by the Lutheran World6er had to be called to elect a tata yiew Calif next 12 years until the incident Federationccessor with the extensien of the runshyJI)iocesa~ PriestGreater Flexibility way in 1959

The shorter term becomes He was ordained for the DioshyReturning to the conti1entat Fr E L Dickinsoneffective immediately and will cese of FalRiver in 1914 joined

U S he was appointed Regionalo acffect the terms of office of the Maryknoll in 1921 and left for Director of Maryknoli activities Testimonial Sept 11superior general and four memshy the missions in Korea in October in the Pacific Northwest with Two thousand friends and 85shybers of the general council whose M 1923 his residence in Seattle Washshy sociatesof Rev Father Edmondelections are currently on the After 13 years in Korea where ington He held this post until L Dickinson who served the_apter agenda he served as Prefect Apostolic his second assignment to Koreamiddot Sacred HeaIi parish in ~orthMaryknolls constitution has be was transferred to Kyoto to in 1959 Attleboro for 28 years will1Ied for 10-year terms of ofshy work among the large Korean His assignment to Mountain gather at the King Philip onBee since itwas written in i929 population living in that city View after 43 years of mission Sunday Sept 11 for a testimonial ~ue subject of shorter terms was

With the outbreak of World work was made in August of banquet War II he was interned by the

Gliscussed at the last chapter in 1965 He jokingly commented General chairman of the 31- 1~56 but gelegates at th~ titne at the time 1 have to mke fair is L Bancroft Austin wIthJapanese and repatriated to the ~ted to de~er action on it

U S aboard the SS Grips- REV JOHN IE MORRIS MM oroom for the jet set hcmoJary chairman Rev J OmerA chapter spokesman declared Lussier pastor of Sacred Heart

u~ six-year term will alow Church Co-chairman is Roiandgreater flexibility and conformshyFregtault and treasurer Rev(tv wHh rapidlychanging times Tells Knights Renew Temporal Order Roger Leduc The general comshyAdditionally it will allow mittee comprises Joseph Vedlshymore frequent opportunity for

major planning re-evaluashy McDevitt Stresses COuncil Directive leux Mrs Ralph Patunoff Franshyand cis Ouellette Norman Deschenestion of society work and permit

the possibility of re-elections MIAMI BEACH (NC) - Themiddot l~ading Christian body iIi the Manifestly our wealth in Pauline Paquin Mr and Mrs Trend 01 Times chief executive officer of the land numbers talent and resources Normand LHomme Gerard

Maryknoll is one of several Knight of Columbus called on Our order has spread through calls on us to reach out to the Achin Albert Desilets Mrs Paul lJOCi~ties in recent years to seek the organizationsI200OOO mem- the length and breadth of North community and like Christ LaTamee Daniel Cardin Romeo d receive permission from the bers to be in the foregroundof America It now counts in its seek to serve rather than be Villemaire Mrs Donna Gilmore Holy See to reduce the terms of tlltose who respond to the direc- ranks the intellectual economic served and Al Houde office Among these were the tive of the Second Vatican and political cream of society Tum Outward Oblate Fathers and the Mission- Council that laymen tmust take he said Evidently our eyes whicl1 for Nuns InstitutellIies of Ss Peter and Paul up the renewal of the temporal It is high time that we years we returned inward (PIME) who have reduced their order as their own special abandon the concept of our toward oui self-defense now NOTRE DAME (NC)-Notre generals terms to six years obligation order as mainly a fortress to must turn outward for opportushy Dame Uiversitys 13th annual Election of Maryknolls super- Speaking at the States Dinner protect us from a hostile world nities to defend and help others theological institute for local

lot general and four-member 01 the 84th annual meeting of Under such an outlook what And it is in this new role as superiors closed after 1700 nuns teeneral counci is expected at the 9rders supreme council served as a fortress of protection we direct our attention to the from aU o)r America discussed iMenary sessions after Aug U John Wi McDevitt said the yesterday could become a prison community at large that we th~ impact of the Second Vati shyIHampt it is possible the discussion ~nights of Columbus constitute barring us from opportunity toshy can carry out the challenges can Council on womens reUshyiIould be introduced earliermiddot the largest most effectively or- day and ~ dungeon dooming us given us by the Second Vatican gious lommunities

ganiBed and most highly equip- to 9wg~ation tomorrow Council Ped body of Catholic laymen on McDevitt said a good outline~m~niails to Hav4 the American continent He of what Vatican II expects of the

stated this constitutes Dot only ~amsey Resigns People of God and particularly Building Contractor Gwn Rite Service

bull prestige arid honor but also reshy PHILADELPHIA (NC) - Dr of the laity is given in the Passhy

TORONTO (NC) - Catholics SpOnsibility 3lck Ramsey one of the most toral Constitution on the Church Masonryelf the Armenian rite in Canada succeSSful coaches in modern in the Modern WorldMcDevm added that circUmshywill soon have regular Services college basketball history has He rEmommended that allstances have changed drasticallyIII their own language and litur- VICTORresigned as coach and athletic councils with the aid of their liIinee the order was founded 84

~ars director at St Josephs College chaplains their bishop andagoArchbishop Georges Layek of here to become general manager other qualified authorities unshyIn those less mature days ofA1eppo in Syri~ said this is the of pro Philadelphia 7Gers of the dertake an immediate in-depth FLEURENTAmerican d~velopment he saidPurpose of this tour of North National Basketball Association study of the council documents

America implementing one of 0 Church was regarded susshy Ramsey also taught social scishy particularly those relating to 7 JEANmE STREETpiCiously as a southern Europeanamphe desires of the Vatican counshy ence at St Josephs where he the responsibilities and opporshyiii He is acting as delegate for bodr foreign to American soil ~as a star and captain on the tunities of Catholic laymen in t FAIRHAVEN WY 4-7321

Our members were largely imshyAomenian Patriarch Ignace~ Hawkss 1948-49 basketball team the world todayP4erre of Beirut migrants still at the bottom of

Archbishop Layek announced the social and economic ladder ~tt~+imMilli1W(regiBMWf~ifW~)ll~41~~~KKKampiEffimw~NmW~lMliiit1f(n))Iltjlt~~1li~

priests wiil be authorized to Gar order served principally as care for the small groups of Ar- a fortress where members could

gather and find mutual encourshyenian Catholics in Toronto agement and strength against theand Ottawa Larger parishes slings of a society still hostile towill be established in the United bull BACKmiddotTOmiddot(OLLEGE SERVICES bullboth their religion and their nashyStates Archbishop Layek said tionality

Understandably many early~etroit University efforts of the order were direcshy lOW-COST HELP LOANSDorm for Women ted at preserving the heritageof 001 faith and protectingDETROIT (NC) - The Unishy members from unjust discrimishyversity of Detroit has opened its SPIECIAL STUDENT CHECKING ACCOUNTSnation Because the order WaBfirst residence for women The small and weak its principal acshy lleW residence hal1 is the former tivities were directed inwardPalmer Hotel It has been eomshy towBlrd self-preservation

pletely refurnished and will 1I1JIJ1lDifferent Today~use 150 women students

But what striking differencesThe new dorm has been named today McDevitt continuedIDr Father Joseph A Foley S3 The Catholic Church has taken-udent chaplain for some 30 fia1a root and has become the-ears before his death in 1965 FIRST

Blocks Suicide College Inaugural MADRID (NC)-5ister Conshy LORETTO Pa (NC)-Geneshy

elo clung to the legs of a 28 vieve Blatt Secretary of Intershy JJMfIMBANKrear-old patient for more than nal Affairs of Pennsylvania was aeven minutes to prevent the mall guest speaker at St Francis Colshy

fiom jumping from the eighth lege here yesterday when Father GREATER NEW BEDFORDS FAMUn BANK fOR DOLLARS FOR SCHOLARS floor of the general hospital Vincent R Negherbon TOR ~xe waa inaugurated 8Ii president

4 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Ault 066 Italia~CJl~nguage

Paper O~ CanadQlFormer_FaU Ruvell A$$D$ih~Jm1fr MONTREAL -(NC) - Domam

(Tomorrow) an Italian-languageServes in flo1ivia MDSSDO~ Catholic weekly newspaper beshyContinued from Page One are also many homes throughout gan publication here for Itaiianshy

able to catch the local bus and the woods so 1 find it more prushy speaking Canadians with an i~

we can reach most of our vil shy dent not to ask where they got tial printing of 20QOO cQpies

lages by jeep The custom still the grapefruits The altar boys The paper founded and edited prevails however so this mornshy take advantage of the rest of the by Father A Paoletti OFM ing 1 started out for Tiquipaya waiting period to get washed in Cap is published- by the ItaliaD

the river 0) with two assistances The altar Nathmal Parishes of Montreai boys from the 7 oclock (more People Appear under the general direction of or less) Mass have the morning The opposite bank of the ri ver Auxiliary Bishop Adrian Cimishyto help the Padres since Ue seems to be a solid wall of green cheBa OMI of Montreal boys do not have class until the but slowly the people begin tp Father Paoletti said the paper afternoon appear on the bank It looks like will deal with general news as

At 9-More or Less bull the chiItlren omiddotfmiddot Israel comiJig well as Catholic news StaH Classes for the girls begin at through the Red Sea - except members are all Italian laymen

830 more or less The girls begin this sea does not part in the midshy with journalistic experience in to arrive at the rectory from dIe The babies are quite secure - Italy 730 on so that they can borrow on the backs of their mothers Father Paoletti recently spentthe two volley balls and jump and all proceed to dimb into the 19 years in Australia where he ropes for an hour or so before jeep truc~ fo~ a short trip to founded La Fiammamiddot (Thegoing to schoof The public the small opening in the woods Flame) an Italian-languageschool is just across the street whele the men have set up an paper published twice weekly in

The Mass in Tiquipaya is at altar Sydney9 oclock-m~e or less so after As Mass begins there are greeting all the little girls with about 75 people present By the a Buenos Dias and Como time Mas~ is over a few more ReoctlioDO SllDrprsSesestas and a couple of turns people have appeared-onlyGod withltthejump rope we start out knows fom where Probably Vermolilll Glaquoraquovernor for the village Besides being a they have been attracted by ST ALBANS (NC)-Vermonts very beautiful Spring-like day it Alejandros very loud and very Gov Philip Hoff disclosed one is also a very lazy day and the bad singing of the surprises of his legislativeanimals arE the first to feel the After Mass isa fine time for career in a talk at the dedicashylaziness in thE air The trip is a catechism class baptisms and tion of new Central Catholic slowed down considerably by anointing of any sick if there High SChool which will be openshymany very slow moying animals are any As 1 am leaving in the cd in September on the highway-oxen cows truck 1 get the usual question When 1 came out in favor ofhorses pigs burros chickens When are you coming again federal aid to private educationThis afternoon they will have Padre The usual answer We the governor said 1 expected tea little more life because there hae many other villages to go receive complaints and protestsbull is a wind statting to pick up to but if 1 am able in three Actually 1 did not receive oneOfficial Hymn Leader weeks--more or less letter or telephone call aboutWe have one stop along the

the statement ~ way Alejandro will be waiting on the road at Santa Rita Alshy T1e school built at a cost 0152 Missionaries

$1 million was made possible phones in this area Alejandro by gifts from a number of pershythough we do not have any teleshy

To Leave US some of comshy sons including many non-Cathshymust have means APPPRENTlCEmiddotINDJAN STYLE At a technical school

munication with someone here in ST COLUMBANS (NC) olics The school was dedicatedfor orphaned boys~ established by_ Bishop Francis Xavier LaGuardia who lets him know Fifty-two Columban missionaries by Bishop Robert F Joyce of

Muthappa of Coimbatore India this yopng apprentice ~~jeswhen we leave the house He is will leave for six mission counshy Burlington Vt who charactershyalways waiting on the road for tries this Fall eut some carpenters tools NC Photo ized the building as a memerial us when we go by Santa Rita Father Daniel Boland SSC 9pound love

Alejandro is our 17 year old director of the Columban Fashyself-made catechist and our offi shy thers in North and South Amershycial hymn leader a~ ltlll the Masses ica said The only mission Another Degree in the villages from Santa Rita country that will not be bolstershyto the end of the parish A real ed by this influx of missionaries Parap~egic in Wheel Chair Studies

good boy-with no education is Burma as visas cannot be obshy c One more stop I almost forgot tained for missionaries tp enter Clhemistry at Notre Dame

about A fiveminute stop-more that counrty MONTHLY CHURCHmiddotNOTRE DAME (NC)-One of he took second place in the freeshyor less-in Jorochito to tell Guil shy Father ~oland added There the 140 high school chemistry style the back crawl and thelermo that he is to inform all are now more than 200 Columshy breast stroke BUDG~T ENVELOPESteachers who attended Notrethe village that there will be a bans in the Philippines and 100

Dame Universitys s umiddotm mer I dont think Im so uniqueBible service at the chapel at 8 plus in both Japan and Korea PRINTED AND MAILEDmiddotchemistry institute here was a he said There were about 100more or less if the evening with the remainder in Burma man who has received the lastGuillermt is easy to find He the Fijis Peru and Chile other paraplegics down at the Write or Phone 672-1322 rites of the Church five timeslives in the sacristy and is a full Of the 887 Columban priests University of Illinois when I was Ed Quinn 28 has been a parashy there so you know Im not unshy 234 Second Street - Fall River time catechist We pay him $10 a some 600 are actively engaged in plegic for 11 years but durihgmonth i Inissionary work oversea~ Total usual that time has earned a bilchelorSince the day is so beautiful membership of the missionary of science degree in physiologymany of the women are doing society of secular priests is 1175 and a master of science degreetheir wash today There are in biology from ~hc University ofmany puddles from the rains IIllinoisalong the road I will never unshy Prelate to Address

If he attends the next fourderstand how the clothes can I ST~ JUDEPolish Organization summer institutes at Notrebe so clean coming out of such Idirty water PITTSBURGH (NC)-Bishop Dame he will also receive a i

Greeted by Children John J WLight of Pittsburgh will master of science degree in SOLEMN NOVI~A OF 9 THURSDAYSchemistryBy now I feel like General be the principal speaker at the Quinn has been a paraplegic

New York during the Korean servance of Polands millennium since he was in an auto accident MacArthur when he returned to Polish Falcons of AIl1~rica obshy

In PreporoHon ~~o Feast - Octobe 28th shortly before his high school

way are doing everything but The plOgram inculding field War The children all along the of Christianity

graduation in 1955 standing on their heads so that events and gymnastics by the Although he needs a wheelshy Begins Thursday bullSeptpmber 1sf the Padre will wave to them Falcons and the Slovak Gymshy ehair to move around he won

We arrive at Tiquipaya at 9 nastic Union will be held at three silver medals in 1962 at Preacher Fr Cosmas F Timlin OFM to find only one man People do West View Park Sunday Sept the Para Olympics in Stoke not come to Mass until the Pad re 4 OtheL attractions include a Mandeville England As a memshyarrives It is I little different Polish kitchen and folk dancing ber of the US swimming team today however Mot of the peoshyple live acrbss the river so it is necessary to drivethe two miles to the n ver bunk and blow the horn so that they will know that I have arrived

The river is very beautiful Very wila 100king Actually this area is considered jungle-cershytainly not like the Tarzan movies It is very beautiful al shythough dangerous at night beshycause of tC many snakes

We have half an hour to wait fOL the people to arrive so the altar boys and Alejandro disapshypear into the thicker woods They return with very laIge grllpefllit~ Thmiddotr le many fruit ttees in the area but there

llIANUFAC1URERS NATIONAL BANK

of BRISlOI~ COUNIY

THE AREAS MOST ACCOMMODATING BANK

NORTH ATTLESORO bull MANSFIELD ATTLEBORO FALLS

CHAPEL DEVOTIONS 1000 AM - 1210 Noon - 510 7 and 8 PM

NOVENA WJDA-Boston-1300 on Dial-II 05 AM WPLM-Plymouth--1390 on Dial-9 15 PM

Write for Booklet and Medal

Franciiscan Fathers 600 Pleasant Sheet New Eledford Mass~ _

5 THE ANCHOR-Catholic Mission Philosopher-Priest Visiting North Dartmouth Thurs Aug 25 1966

Societies Meet Also Sculptor Painter Housebuilder CIErgymen oStudyIn Washington

WASHINGTON (NC) A philosopher who is also a part-time sculptor painteralcl honse-builder-thats Mental Health The 17th annual meeting of Rev Herman Reith CSC who is spending the Summer at St Josephs Hall North Dartshy WASHINGTON (NC) - Ten US Catholic mission secishy mouth As co-author of a textbook Psychology for Nurses he spoke this month to Catholic priests and Brothers

middot participated in a mental healtheties will be held here Sept students at St Annes Hospital Fall River discussing the motivation a nurse should workshop held this Summer at1 to 21 with some 1000 priests have in her profession The Georgetown University ThelReligious and lay persons acti ve address was an interlude in middot program was designed to proshyfin Catholic mission work exshy

a busy Summer which the vide them with additional skillspected to attend The Worldmission Award Holy Cross priestmiddot has deshy in dealing with mental health

problemsgiven annually to a layman who voted mainly to work on a book They heard lectures frommakes an outstanding contribushy scheduled for Spring publication

more than 40 psychiatrists psyshycention to mission work will be by the University of Notre Dame chologists anthropologists edushy]tresented to James J Fahey Press Titled A Light to the cators and other clergymenWaltham Mass garbage man Nations Essays on the Intellecshy

The participants also workedand author of Pacific War tual Mission of the Church it with patients in psychiatric andDiary 1942-45 All proceeds is described by Father Reith aS general hospita~ wards and withfrom his book are going to build an attempt in the direction of representatives of social and edshybull church in South India a theology of the Church in modshyucational agencies of the DistrictAmong speakers at the meetshy eln times of Columbia areaing will be Auxiliary Bishop - He is grappling in its pages

A spokesman for the grouIJlFulton J Sheen of New York with redefinitions of key conshysaid they were given the opporshydirector of the National Society cepts such as the nature of the tunity to talk with persons withfur the Propagation of the Faith priesthood the Church herself widely varying pro b 1 emsAuxiliary Bishop Harold R and such terms as mission and They observed alcoholics inPerry SVD of New Orleans witness s 1um neighborhoods traveledMsgr Joseph Gremillion direcshy Religious laity and priests with probation officers whotor of the socio-economic divishy are all wondering who they are work wit delinquent youthsion Catholic Relief Servicesshy and what their roles are in toshyand visited homes for unweltilNational Catholic Welfare Conshy days Church he said My mothers shyference Bishop Frederick Hall stress is on Christ as the Logos The program was financed byMHM retired bishop of Kisushy Christs mission t~ the world is Georgetown University No govshyrna Kenya Sister M Olivette that of enlightenment and all his ernment funds were involvedWhalen councilor general of the wOIk was a witnessing to the

Sisters of the Holy Cross Notre truth Dame Ind and Father Gerrard Logos in Time Bay Staters ServeP Fredericks MSSST supeshy His book will discuss the Ilior general of Trinity Missions Poor in Canadafounding of the Church under Silver Spring Md the heading of The Logos in COMBERMERE (NC)-More

Theme of the meeting will be TIme and will develop the conshy than 100 international volunteersPoverty and the Missions-the cept that Christ must unfold are serving the poor in one ofDemands of Justice and Charshy through history in human fashshy Canadas depressed rural aleasity ion the Madawaska Valley

Degrading Misery The book six years in the They are from New MexicoBesides general sessions the writing took rise said Father Arizona Wisconsin Kentuckythree-day meeting will also inshy Reith from his attempts to exshy Georgia Alabama Illinois Michshy

elude a number of simultaneous plain to seminarians that teachshy igan PennsylvalTia New Yorkseparate sessions for various ing is as priestly a role as adshy Massachusetts and Canada Theygroups including mens and ministering the sacraments He come to Madonna House for awomens major superiors procshy quoted St Paul But as the week to a month and some theurators and promoters men and Lord hath distributed to every entire Summer to work in thewomens training directors and one as God hath called every apostolatev 0 cat ion directors editors one so let him walk And so in Many volunteers spend theirBrothers educators and lay all churches I teach time at the Madonna Housegroups Father Reith will not be forshy inarians on an expedition toFrom this beginning he went farm S1 Benedicts Acres OthshyThe Mission Secretariat is a gotten at St Josephs however Mexico where they built houses on to consider the role of the ers help at the summer recreashyelearing house for information He is leaving a very tangible for shack-dwellers And whereintellectual in the Church tionl programs for childern inand services to aid American memento of his presence in the did he pick up his manual laborShoulltl we be Christians or inshy middot two isolated settlementsCatholic foreign mission work form of a middotlife-size sculpture of know-how I came from a famshytellectuals he asks in his openshy Some help in the summerwith headquarters in Washingshy the Holy Family which will be ily of 10 children he explaineding chapter and ends by explainshy Christmas program cleanington Father Frederick A Mcshy

ing its not erected on a15 foot pedestal on and my mother adopted fourthat an eitheror and repairing toys sent hereGuire CM a former missionary the North Dartmouth grounds more There was always lots ofproposition but rather a both from all parts of North Americalin China is executive secretary work to doTo Leave Mementoand one for distribution this WinterThe delegates to this years Of steel the modernistic sculpshy One more item on this SumshyIn his closing chapters he exshymeeting represent more than ture is being welded in r-rew mers agenda every Sundayamines the roles of religious and7600 United States missionades Bedford by Father Reith during Father Reith flies to the islandlaity in the Church explainingstaffing overseas missions hours taken from his writing of Cuttyhunk to say Mass for CASA BLANCAparenthetically that he saves theIn a pre-convention stateshy project Summer residents The island Just Across Thelayman for last in line with thement Father McGuire said It is is actually part of St MarysThe versatile philosopher alsogospel comment Thou hast Coggeshall St Bridge a truism to say that we are livshy paints for relaxation leaning South Dartmouth he said andsaved the best wine till last Fairhaven Massing in an era of explosi ve towards oils and pastels I like Father Considine the pastor

change We also living in Other Books Holy Fathers Finest Variety ofare a semi-abstractions he said but asked the Cross whose Other books by the author inshycountry affluence has I always try to get some figures tltl be responsible for Summer SEAFOODnever been equaled in the hisshy clude An Introduction to Phil shy in my pictures Masses

tory of the world osophical Psychology and The Among the priests friends in Served Anywhere - AlsoThe house - building That We are at the same time Metaphysics of St Thomas came two Summers ago when the Diocese is Dr John E Manshy STEAKS-CHaPS-CHICKEN

Hving in a world where degrad Aquinas Also to be published ning Fall River pediatricianFather Reith led a group of ing misery envelops half of all next Spring is Frederick His Notre Dame students and sem- who arranged this months lecshyGods children We in the United Writings part of a series Oll ture at St Annes Hospital States accept as our due all the Marxist writings of which Fr eomforts and conveniences of Reith will be general editor FOl Vermonts Divorce Where Athis affluent society the while his doctoral degree earned at we push from our conscious Laval University he concenshy Rate Al110ng Lowest DONAT BOISVERT GOOD NAMEMlinking the agony of uncounted trated on Marxist philosophy BURLINGTO (NC) - Vershy

INSURANCE AGENCY INCmillions He gives credit to St Josephs monts divorce rate continues to Hall for providing the peace remain among the lowest among Means A96 WILLIAM STREETand leisure necessary to writing the 50 states of the nation

NEW BEDFORD~ MASSEight Irish Sisters Most of my books have been GREAT DEAL statistics disclosed it has been written there he said For Ie fairly stable during the last 26 WY 8-5153 WY 7-9167Arrive in Montana years he was chairman of the years - about 15 divorces per

BILLINGS (NC)-Eight Irish department of philosophy at the PERSONAL SERVICE1000 populationSisters of Mercy arrived here University of Notre Dame and Sociologists claim the stable~ work at St Vincents Hosshy he is now teaching in the deshy GEO OHARAlow rate results from the largepital and in parochial schools partment Theres no time fOll Catholic population of the stateTwo others are scheduled to arshy my own writing during the tllCshy -some 135000 Catholics in mIrive in September ademic year he says total population of some 393000 Six axe teachers and four are In the Spring however he IIlurses Bishop William J Conshy will leave Notre Dame for

ELECTRICAL Contractors

944 County St New Bedford

CHEVROLETdon of Great Falls invited the Makerere University in Kamshy St FrancisIIluns here last November when pala Uganda where he expects he visited their motherhouse in to teach for the next five years Residence

lOCH Kings Hwy lBallyshannon euroounty Donegal We have many Holy Cross FOR YOUNG WOMEN missions in Uganda he saiell U96 IIhippie St Fall RvellCOllllsecrcltaon Oct )5 and the Bishop there feels that NEW BEDfORDConducted by franciscanRICHMOND (NC)-Auxiliary the Church should be involved

Missionaries Ill~ MarvBishop-designate J Louis Flahshy in the growth of African educil shyerty of Richmond will be conseshy tion He therefore volunteered ROOMS - MEALS

OVERNIGHT HOSPITALITY crated in Sacred Heart cathedrall for the faculty of the lIIakereJlla Inquiro OS 3-289here on Wednesday Oct 5 Btate university

PHILOSOPHER-SCULPTOR Rev Herman Reith CSC works on Holy Family group which will be erected on outdoor pedestal at St Joseph Hall North Dartmouth Father Reith has been spending Summers at North Dartshymouth house working on books in field of philosophy but will teach in African university for next few years

6 mE ANCHOR-Di9cese of Fan River-Th~rs Aug 25 l~66

The oC1tQice i

A fascirlating chooice i~ shaphlg up as a cOrOn~ry to th~ present crowded condition in the pa~hial school system

0

Those in authority in the Church are faced with the possibility that lower grades of the Oatholic schoQI system must be sacrificed to provid~ the space and teachers for those in the upper grades The Gatholic high school and college must expand at the expense of the elementary school

- And the oungsters f~m th~se lower grades tnust tum to the public~chOoISyate_mof ~ducation

Hereis where the choice coin~s in

If these young-sters p~esent tllemselves at the do()rs of the over-crowded public schools the community must find

space and teachers for them That hits the whol~ comshymunity in the pocketbook

The onlyaIternative seems to be increased aid from publk tax funds for the parochial school system to assist itmiddot to educ~te every child who wants an ~ducation in a Catholic iChOol

CriticS of the pa-roehial school system must choos~beshytween expaIlding the public school system at a prohibitive eost or swallowing their harsh words and grant tomiddot parents the right to educate their children in a system not less capable and democratic than the public school system and in assisting the chil~ to receive an education in the system of his parents choosing

Modern Lorelei

A survey of _two thousand pupils in the Chicago area produced some revealing staticS about their televisionshyviewing habits

Elementary school students spend an average of twenty-one hours a week with television

High -school students average fourteen hours aweek

Parents of those middotquestioned admitted to watChing television about twenty hours a week and their teachers

saw it twelve hours

Television is here to stay No on~ would decrie its great entertainment and educational value Already it is being used as a supplement to classroom teachings

- But like any other thing it inust be used and middotnot abused the used and not the user

It is quite possible for people to become hypnotized by thecathode eye and spend hour afterhour in an electronicshycontrolled -trance

Since such viewing is essEmtiatally passive it bodes no good for the creative mind And the student can easily come to grief by middotspending too much time caught in the trap qf this twentieth century Lorelei

A students life is one of application to lessons and work He has no more excuse from those responsibilities than his father has to refuse to work his mother to ignore the making o~ meals and duties of housekeeping

Study costs an effo~t It is not always pleasant ltis a sacrifice Arid in this age of high living standards when children are brought up with very little sacrifice in their lives surrounded by everything that money can buy they must learn control and discipline to assure s~holastic sucshycess

Control of television watching is just such a discipline of spirit

And with schools soon to open it is a discipline that should be decided upon by parents for their children and insisted upon as the school year goes along

regrheANCHOR

Sword of the Spirit C -c -n

By Edward P McDonagb

CCD and CFM The fourth Biennial eon

- vention of the New EnglaBCl Area Christian Family Moveshy

middotrilent concluded its three day session on August 14th The ~

WlS the lovely campus ~f tbe Newton College of the Sacred Heartand CFM couples from all over the New England Sta~ gathered there to increase th~ understanding of the movemeilli

middotand to chartmiddot new areas of A~ tolic Action

The theme of the Christi_ FamUy Movement is For Hap pier Families and cgtuples bull the organization seek that goal by applying the Observe JUd~

and Act technique in their own ho~es the neighborhood the

parish and the ~orld at large The purpose of all this is to fo~

~

Gap StUImiddot Exists Study Suggests More Than Busing Needled

In EdllllcGtioll1lEquality-lntegration WASHINGTON (NC)~A reshy

port prepared by the US Ofshyfice of Education says that the present s~t-up of the nations public school system serves to

- perpetuate the social and ecoshynomic gap between most Negroes and whites

Although it challenges the eoncept of n e i g h b 0 rb 9 0 d

schools the report warns tha integration andmiddot edu~ational equality cannot be attained by busing alone

The 737-page report on Equal- ity oj Educational Opportunity has been published by the Ofshyfice of Education Earlier the office isued a summary of the two-year study called for by Congress under terms of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

Senator Abraham Ribkoff of Connecticut has accused the 00shymiddotministration of playing down the report because it contains explosive political implkations

I think the time has come for us not to be satisfied with cliches Ribic9ff told John W

GaTdner SecretarYcent Healtl) Education and Welfare M 11 Senate sub-committee hearing on urban problems A lot of the concepts are loaded with political dynamite

James S Colemlm author of the report agreed that the adshyministration - issul~iI summary was fllt and over--cautious He said that might have stemmed from uneasiness about findings that may have political lreper cussions

Planes Help Enable Proests to Cover Large TerritClraquorfl

In PerfolTmOlftceof Apostolic Work LOCKPORT (NC)3-A priest years ending with the rank of

who has twice flown at the speed of sound believes a plane can be a useful tool iii apostolic labor especially inmiddot far-flung fields

Father Richard E Spellman pastor of Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary parish in Albuquershyque began to fly when he saw ranchers in New Mexico using planes to get- around their ranches

If the ranchers can do it why cant a priest he asked I found out that in my little plane I was able to get around quickly to mission schools in New Mexico to teach catechism to children

He has used his plane too to d~liver medicine to Catholic missions in Mexico

Father Spellman who served

major was here in Illinois for the third annllal conventioJl of the National Association of

Priest Pilots He learned to fly here hi~

he was seminarian He said I was a good enough pilot that the Archbishop of Santa Fe tnJsted me to take him around the Archshydiocese in my plane

Some 150 priests belong to the association said Father Rich~rd

Skriba the conventions genshyeral chairman and asistant pas~ tor of St Simon parish in Chishycago Altogether there are over 400 priests and Brothers in the always understoodUS who are pliots he added Similarly CCD Discussion

Groups have in some casesSays Priests R~Ue been difficult to start and main-I S 11 tain where CFM is active InJust pirituOID rare instances competition

BOGOTA (NC)-Father C~ - rather than cooperation has

Catholic Lay Leaders and from all the evidence it succeeds veq well middot Significantly one of the wenshyattended workshops at the rec~Di convention covered the compleshymentary nature of CFM and CCD Chaired by Rev William 1 Downs of Newton the wideshyranging discussion period higbshylighted several areas where CCD and CFM have worked well toshygeth~er and some where the have not

Wordng Together Couplesfrom several localities

- indicated that CCDs Paren1oshyEducator units are natural ou1oshylets for those seeking to proshymote happier famiiies Manr CFM couples are working iQ

-Parish Parent-Educator groups and~ in doing so are finding solid recruits for CFM among the young married couples that they visit T~is is a perfect eJl shyample of how the two organiza tions can help each other lv working together

Other examples cited by parti shycipants were the use of CFlII couples as guest lecturers and discussion leaders in CCD classes covering questions marriage- and sex Fall River CFMers noted the participation of CFM couples as discussion moderators in the CCD leadeJio ship day programs Manyothel8 recounted incidents of CCD Elishyecutive Boards being formed o of CFM groups middot Father Downs who is both bull CFM Chaplain and a CCD Parish Director noted that priests will contittue to look to CFM for leaderS middotto staff CCDunits and otlier parishorganizations Not to provide for CFM in a parish would mean that a prime source of committed laymen a Jl d women would be cut off

There are a few problems too Several areas have eXJerienced difficulty in obtaining permisshysion to start CFM because CCD Discussion Groups already exshyisted Apparently the distinction between the two groups is not

as an Air Force chaplain for 10 cilo de Lora one of the direc- been the guiding spirit with unshyOFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RiVER tors of the Latin American bish- fortunate results for both

ops educational department af- The lesson learned from thed1O Highland Avenue Retain PriiDege firmelt here that the role Of the workshop )Nas this Where CeDFoil River Mass 02722 675-7151 MADRID (NC)-Spains bishshy priest is exclusively spiritual and CFM people get ~ know ops following their annual conshy In the past he said prieSts each other and take the time toPUBLISHER ference announced that they had an authority and prestige understand each others proshy

Most Rev James L -Connolly DO PhD will retain the privilege of eating beyond the religious but ilow grams the results can be imshymeat on Friday The dispensa- we have to recogniZ4~ that the pressive CFM has the happy

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER tion from the regular law dates times have changed andtl)at our knack of producing commi~ted Rt Rev DanielF Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll back several centuriell and came middotmiddotmiSsion is rust spiritual Father gtCalholics who are willing r~

MANAGi~G E[gtITOR ~ orginal1y as a reward for sershy de Lora spoke during aconJer- - act -and CCD continues to off vices to the Church and for ence at Bogotas arl~hdiocesan almost unlimited opportunitiee

H~gh J Golden Spanish wars against infidels curia here in Colombia for action

THe ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 7 Priests Respond Generously 1Ciitymiddot ExpressVariety of Opinions

Bishop Asks for Suggestions--shyj

YOUNGSTOWN (NC)-I-Wed- There was a call for a study of ltmngs and ftinerals in the eve- the~hoie questioriof the Caih- Brm R~~~ie$ fr~ QM~~15~~~o[jreg ming wholesaie revamp~~g of o~(~~ool system versus CCD VICTORIA (NC) - Give the Latin and Oriental rites larish organizations retire~ent JElimination of raffles collec- larm~alliopp~rtuni~yto speak On the ne~Ci~ive sidEiI 418 felt f priests at age 6s-these were tronSand all o~her fUli9-raising his mmd on the results of the that there was a great need of sorrie suggestions for updating gimlnicks was proposed for Second Vatican Council the better adult edUcation~ There advanced by the Youngstown Catholic schools One priest liturgy ecumenism and the was overwhelming concern for ltt1Iioceses 262 priests lamented the lack of dialogue Church and hell say plenty better Catholic education more The Ohio priests responded between parents pastor and Bishop Remi de Roo of Vic- religious instruction for Catholic generously to a request by school principal and suggested toria here in British Colombia children not in Catholic schools lBishop James W Malone apos- the establishment of q parish discovered tbis when 600 parish- more Catholic youth activities tolie administrator of the diocese s~nate whose members would ioners filled out a comprehen- and efforts to build a strongerlior suggestions The bishop now sit in on school faculty meetings sive questionnaire and returned family life Inadequate teachers lltas called on the laity of the Also present was the limitation it to the chancery office Two- and poorly trained teachers also aliocese to make suggestions The of all classes to a maximum 6f thirds of them signed their came under fire llle~ IS-member pastoral com- 40 students names but this was not required Other tOPIcs which turned up

mission will study all suggestions Their comments went far beyond in the survey but which were) ~ and make recommendatioQs to the questions asked not put as questions included

BiShOP Maione ~ooamprm~ [L~~ A $~udYof the an~wers reveals creination pullfigpting marshy~ Th new liJurgy econli~ics

thatjwlJi1~ mo~etlJan two-thirds riageof c1Ergym~n children ~ryshy

ond parish orgllnizations were O~ Greg~reg[jcr of the people were pleased with ing in church nuris habits povshy lto~llQrig t1Je most popular are~s of new deveWpments in the erty arid the clergys ability as ) ltilCmment by th~ priests SAIGON (NC)-General Jos- Church the remaining admitted businessmen

To enhance singing at IYJass eph W Stillwell lost during a being mildly or very disturbed atere were suggestions for each plane flight from San Francisco Fifty pel cent agreed that the

iParish to mime a minister of to Honolulu is prayeclully reshy council 1 hadmiddot deepened their CoIQmbilaquoli CFM Has JlIllusectic to teach liturgical music membered by grateful lepers Faith and btou~ht them closer National Structure ~ parishioners and for establish- Sisters and their chaplain in St to the Church but 105 stated ment or strengthening of mixed Joseph~s28 miles ~rom Saigon vOSEPH MICHAUD that they had been left confused BOGOTA (NC) -The Chrisshymoirs to e1)courage others to They recall how on April 5 Fifty PeJ cent answered that tian Family Movement which Cak~ part 1964 when Viet Cong activities the liturgical reforms had helped has been functioning on a someshy

Another priest asked for had resulted in cutting off the Michaud Shrine them pray better Fifty per cent what independent basis in 17 ~ilwre patience in implement- leper hospital from all supplies said they felt the Church could dioceses in this country now has

lIDg the changes because thebt road Gen Stillwell and his Music Director be improvedmiddot Two-thirds felt the structure of a national lleW forms of participating are d~uty Col John L Klingen- that theChur~ should concern organization

lIlot appealing to all Ther~was Jiagen of St LOUis came to the WA~HiINGTON (NC)-Joseph itself wore with the internashy The first national meeting of ~plea also for a return to the rescue They brought food and Michaud has been appointedmiddot tionalsituation soCial and ecoshy the CFM was convoked in the holy and dignified liturgical other necessities in a series of music director of the National nomic problems last part of July by Bishop Pabshy

music imd elimination of folk helicopter fliglits carried out lgty Shrine of the Immaculate Oonshy Asked specifically where the lo Correa Leon of Cucuta presishy oongs and modem swing music the U S Support Command of ception here Msgr Thomas J Church should be more involved dent of the Episcopal Commisshy

Another priest urged that ~4ee- which Gen Stillwell was com- Grady director of the Shrine the answers voried from rehabili shy sion for the Lay Apostolate in dom of experimentation in the mander announced tation of drug addicts the labor order to organize CFM on a nashy

1Iiturgyshouldbe encouraged Ben San has about 280 leper Michaud will develop and su- movement and the emerging tional scale nations A board of directors of the Changes in Vestments~ patients in the care of the pervise the music program at the

national CFM was named andThere were requests to elim Daughtersof Charity of St Vin- Shrine assemble and train a Most Important The majorit~ considered the includes five married couples mate or -review Forty Hours de- cent de Paul chortis vf mixed voices evenshy

three from the Bogota archdioshyYotions and similar celebra- -Mrs faillwell durfug her st~y tuallyadd a choir of men and five most important questions tions for daily evening Masses in Vietnam was one of the boys and supervise the care of cese and one each from the archshy

the Church and fellow Chrisshydiscu~ed at the council to be

dioceses of Cali and Medellinma parishes where there are two American women who sponsored all organs and the carillon tians birth control active sharshy These five couples in cooperashy

CI more priests and for smaller the new center for undernour- A native of Sumas Wash ing in the iturgy the sharing of tion with Father Enrique Acosta

~onfirmation classes with ~he ished children also conducted by Michaud has served churches responsibility in the Church are In charge of extending the

IIIlX prIests who are deans bemg the Sisters of Charity in Saigon and schools in Seattle San Franshyand religious liberty Prefer- CFM throughout the entire

Gi~legated by the bIShop to ad- We are praying fo~ the be~ cisco Portland Ore Detroit countryences at the bottom of the listBlumster the sacrament reaved family Father Vict Pittsburgh and Mt Lebanon Pa Be or H h were worl~ populition atheismOther suggestions called for a C MH h d

~ 1 l hts th rset chaplam at Ben IS c Olrs ave appeare on international government and_~cussion on Vlgl Ig e San wrote network radio broadcasts gave l)rlests breviary changes 10 the premiere presentation of Mass vestments and merits of Alexander Peloquins Missa Na- SAVE MONEY ONEstablishes Specialgroup confessions in which lPiJiest Plans Homes tiVitatis with the Pittsburgh penitents attend a Bible service Symphony over the CBS net- Tourists Parish to to confession and receiveab- middotfor Working Grls work iIi 1962 and in December YOUR OILHEATCOLOGN]i (NC) - Colognessolution private~y and then per~ TECHNY (NC) ~ Father Ed- 1955~ sang in Menottis Ahmal Joseph Cardinal Frings has apshySform a community penance such wiu-di Wojniak SVD Chi- an~ the ~nght Visitors WYmanpointed a multilihgual Dutch ~eatt as recitation of a prayer to c~go-born Society of the Divine 3-6592priest to establish a special tourshy

tether Word mlssionary is oft the verge A~d R f W k ists parish on the Autobahn nearOne writer suggested that the of seeing his dream come true Imiddot 5 e ugee or CHARLES IF VARGASDusseldorf llrishop offer Sunday Mass at a bull ltiliff rent ish church each He has ben VISItIng throu~h- Of German Knights Although several churches are 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

~ par raut the Umted States seekmg located 01_ th~ famous German ~ee h h Id b t d d the aid of busineSs firms which BONN (NC) - The German highway none provides special NEW IalEfPlFqitD ~SS

Tl~ l~g S P e l~ ro u~ h have interests in Formosa to aid government has provided three tourist services The new parish la prIes v~o h a~~ ~s w lCll him in his pet project----to erect jeeps tnd three ambulances for besides the church will have a Opt t~ngfs ~u I r~p11 hostels for factory giriS present- the work being done by the Ger- hot~J restaurant theater and

~ngo reds es IVdi~ s e c 1 ly forced to live in squalid man Knights of Malta for refushy chiIdr~ns pla~~rounds ~IOt~eSan ahn Idnonb- tockesan fCO - c~owded unhealthful and prim- gees in South Vietnam ec IOns s ou e a en rom T dt d t cae proceeds of the tithing sys- 1 lVe con 1 IOns angerouso f team ~f about 25 Germa~s C2 only to their phYSical well bemg- wl1 work m refugee camps In

m but also to their moral well Hoi in the QuangNam province r~oD~D~i~=~i~~~~i HUe]) lllen~ Poor being in ilentral Vietnam

Others suggested rich par~shes The hostels will be non-de- The Germar government will n _ See Us should help poor parIshes nominational and will provide contrilmte about $250000 annushy ~ -Abou~ ij~rough a commo fund that quar~ers in pleasant surround- ally for the work of this counshy

o each ~arish establIsh a fma~ce iilgs at $3 per month In addition tt-ys Knights of Malta in Vietshy ~ ~t17 (~~~OuTI]OUceouureg [ commlttee and the ~lOcese hire toa home it will provide edu-nam ~(jrtamp euroleiJcp(]ip C1

a fulltJme profeSSional fund eational and recreational facili- llaiser for parishes that need his ties Father Wojniak said The ~1lIIilllliJllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllm ~ ~~~~[HJA~ ~ aervices first hostel will be built at Tai~ - shy

as pilot with DRY - E SAVINGS BANK I epei a project E CLIEANNG Says Gift of Tools Father Wojniak as director of ~ and ~

Wareham falmouth J f =rst Class MIracle Taiwan Hostels Inc which will ~ fUR STORAGE ~ -y 5-3800 IltI 8-3000 HEATING OIL

w be run on a noh-profit basis E D == 4-o_a_C1_a~~D__o-o-BOGOTA (NC) -Shop stu- E ERMODY ~

dents at Bogotas Colegio San f R ClEANERS ~ Viator reclved a windfall of lIanCISCans etaln == ryyYYyy~

~~~C1Jm~d~~~~ B~r~~(N~~m~ty iEE

nCohan ~~~ l bullC~~o~A~~~~~E~RT ~ 4lIlllira~le by one of the students two newly received Franciscan ~JIIIIII1I1I11I11I11I11I11I11I1I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I1I1I11I11I11Ii ~ nncluded a large variety and Sisters of Perpetual Adoration ~ Spaeious Fireproof Sleeping Quart~rs-BoysI to 14 yrs Old quantity of hand tools and two retained their baptismal names Six-week season June 26 to Aueust G ch of severallarge power tOQls with the title of Sister at their GRmiddotACIA BmiddotROS t Register for z or 4 or 6 weeks Free Tutoring it desired 4Father John Stafford CSV reception into the community ia ehicago provincial supervising St Joseph the Workman Cathe- bull i THE BROTHERS OF THE SACRED HEART

tile Viatorians Bogota mission draI here in ~7isconsin _ ~ eommented that the gift worth tVlot~er General Ann Marie of Excavating SACRED HEART SCHOOL

$6000 in the United States is ~ Rose convent said the name C worth five times that in Colom- policy change was the first ill ontractors r t SBAltON MASSACHUSETTS ~

twa He added that the tOok itleU6~year history of the com- ~ bull (I~SS 5T~FAIRHAViH A Reside~t School for BoYS Grammar Gra~es ~-li-6-1- ~ would probably give the school muOityAt the same ceremollTthebest~lIuipped shop ~ tiampe~ Sistels made ~rst-year pN-l WYman 2-4862 = CAMP 0amp SCHOOL TeL 1171845162 4 ~~tlY ~YOWi- ~ampamp~

bull I 1bull

bull ~ I I bull I bullbull I ~

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 Parish to Serve Wide Community

PATERSON (NC)-With the end of its vacation religiolli school St Josephs parish heICI

Lucis V~ew of Marriage Seen Delig~tfuny O~d-fashioned~ in New Jersey has turned ~

serve a wider communityBy Mary Tinley Daly Priests Sisters seminarianpound Never it is said have so many million words been and student volunteers haw

written about a marriage as the reportage of the Luci taken a $200 budget given by the Catholicmiddot Interracial Council andJohnson-Patrick Nugent nuptials-TH WEDDING in put on a program of field triP8Dpopular terminology Its over in all its impressive dignity arts and crafts athletics and

with an ele~ance wor~hy ~f honestly state that thei ambishy story-telling for 120 youngstem the marrIage of a PresIdent s tion is to grow up get married The children mostly Negro

had no opportunity to be part ofdaughter Yet like every and have babifs any other summer program sowedding great or small it Somewhere along the line edshy Father Nicholas Molinari steppedearried its message of identifica- ucatlOnally or other~se they in to help themtionto the millions viewing it are shunted career-WIse or preshy Our objec~ father said on the screen tend to bemiddot They of course to impress the children witlait n d to those want to marry but this is in~ love They dont understan~itreading about cidental they ~avent ~xperienced it We

it At our house AlulDDae middotNotes want to break down their selfshy~ ve n a s ~ t Loo~ ~t you~ Alumnae h~ite concept We want to make vou~s t~at no~- ~otes Bii( deal is ~ gal who them realize tha~ they are goodoshy

middot ~l~c Idenbfi has her masters working on catlOn was pres- the doctorate il physics mathe- t Ik Sisters of Christian en now ex matics Russian or whatever actly ho LUCI And the proud boast of a college feels squealed imany of our graduates are no~ Charity Elect America

PADERBORN (NC) - Sister bride as the TV fathers our most recent making more money than their

M Augustilde Giesen of Jersey showed the radiant Luci on her Into these same alumnae notes City has been elected the first fathers arm comes a confession humbly American superior General 0If

And I know how ~~rvous written from Betty B that she is the Sisters of Christian Charit Pat was at that moment cm- still just a housewife has a here in Germany mented the most recent bnde- family and recently was electesl Sister Augustilde former PJOogtNURSERY FRiENDS Sister Marie Patrice RSM Br~om president of the local PTA vincial of the province headshy

director of Holy Angels Nursery for Exceptional Children grooms of years ago author has expressed herself Belmont NC cuddles one of the 69children in her care was director of the provinces

To go further back an eon against the discontented femi junior sisters attending Marillae

Me too from bndes and Phyllis McGinley talented quartered at Mendham N J

most of whom because of their disabilities require roundshyor two even th ~ea~ of the nine mystique of searching for Sisters Formation College at thethe-clock attention NC Photo House and hIS bnde shared fullfillment outside of the home time of her election the g~ose pImples So have others The 2200-member congregashy

Behmd the pomp and ClrcUJI1- As an addendum we find 1lI tion founded in Germany ~

stance sket~h~s of gowns held 10 quote from Rep Emmanuel Celmiddot Disclaimsmiddot New Breed 1849 moved to the United States somewhat ndiculous top secrecy ler (D-NY) apropos prohibiting in 1873 during the anti-Catholic as though they were plans for discrimination against wom~ franciscan Nun Biology Professor Says Kulturkampf compaign of Gershym~on shots was the forthrIght serving on juries man chancellor Otto von BisshyattItude of thIS l~-year-old brIde There are women who work Primary Apostolate Is Prayer- marck

Sh~ wants th~s to be a goo~ because they have to others who marnage andw111 try to make It work because they want to and BUFFALO (NC)-Dr M Re- My whole life I trust is givshy New Secretary 10 there is the lazy kind whO gin~ L~gan associat~ profes~ ing witness to Christ she anshy CHICAGO (NC)-The Nationshy ~er father the PresIdent ~o cleans washes irons cooks sor of bIOlogy and chaIrman of swered I am a biology profes al Catholic Conference for Intershyma~t~r how you regard hUll chauffeurs mend1l binds lIP ~e biology concentration at sor whose prime role is twoshy racial jUstice haS announced the~lltlc~lly you must alknow~~ wounds nurses cloctors middotand Rosary Hill College here conshy fold first in edu(ation proper appointinfmt of Margaret Cshyedgeexpres~edfath~rly ~onfl~ shops and has conSequently So tends there is no such thing u and second in research middottomiddot fur Roach to its program staff Millli

middot dencewen he said of fat little to do aD day why Should bull new breed of nuns ther the education of my stushy Roach haB been social actioaN~gent LUCI look~ up to him she not 1e obligated NrM _ The sCientist HI as qualified dents~ _ secretarY for the National CO~with great r~spect eep ~~c OIl ju~es as anybody else to know She However she noted many ell ai Catholicmiddot Women iIinoetion a~d confIdence 10 hlll It has been a Franciscan nUll for people think th-at by taking offMs go~ng to b~ ~ good ~arrIage 28 years and she iilsists the the reUgio~ garl or by drop~Dunn~ the s~me mtervlew Urges ~ UnmiddotderstClnding OSF middotcomes before the PhDbull ping the religious title we Call1he President recalled that Luci

be more effective This is not so had been a deep1y reiigious girl Of Other Churches I dont think Sisters have all of her life even before her SPOKANE (NC)-We me ehanged she said People are As a nun my primary aposshyConversion to Catholicism More- not take the positioJl that the jUst beginning to llotice what tolate is prayer to give God the over he did not believe middotshe other Christian coinmunitiesaM weve beeJ doing all along love and adoration that the would ever become active in simply in error Bishop Ber- With 11 biological papers pubshy modem world often neg1Eicts to politics but would concentrate nard J Topel has advised priests llIshed and nine read with the give In the present day discusshyon home-inak~ng raisin~ a fam- of the Spokane diocese in a Get eredit of being first to isolate sion of the nun in the modern

middot lyen and followm~ her faIth of interim ecumenical JUide-- tile bacteria Desulfovibrio desul- world attention should be foshyFather not politician was lines furicans and with the institution cused on her existlmce nc)t the

apeak~g ~hen Bishop Topel urged priesbl i= of a trail-blazing method of preshy garb she wears she said middot LU~I s VIew of ~arriage IS re- avoid expressions judgmenu menting a college biology curricshyfreshmg and dellghtfully old- and actions which do not repre- ulum the Franciscan who drinks

196= -

JANSONS Pharmacy

Arthur Janson Reg Phcim DIABETIC AND SICK ROQM

SUPPLIES 204ASHL~ BOULEVARD

New Bedford WY 3middot8405

fashioned middotin the mid-twenti~th sent the condition of oui sepa- ber ~offee black is fully a pro century when so many gIrls rated brethren with truth ad fessional in science toohave their sights set on the split-personality syndrome mar- fairness and 110 make mutual She has be~n awarded $81000 BISA~ILLONSriage plus individual freedom relations with them more cWI- llra grants-m-rod for her reseach

ficult th g ma career and assuming at once He said full eucharistic ecm on e pernICIOUS m1cro~r ams a plar- in the forefront of out- ~~t has ~ knack for rummg oill GARAGEside activities munion is the ultimate lioal laquoIi dnlling ngs

Most little girls are disarming- the ecumenical movement WitnGS8 b Christ ly frank (see Art Linkletters 24our Wreck~r Service program or talk wit~ 7 8 and C I H bull 0 H d How does her commI~ent Ie Iyear-olds you know) The 0 bull olsgton eo s ~erstudents and co~CCmltantl

W A C to ber research (she 18 also II 653 WashinJton Street Fclirhaven omen s rmy orps iOOnsultant at Oak Ridge National HoldYou~g Christian WASHINGTON(NC) - A Laboratory the group leader of WYman 4middot5058 h b I e s s i ng followed traditional aCivil Defense fixed monitorin ~bullbullbullbull middotStudent Works OFgt 8wearingin ceremonipounds here for Station mici a ~part fliine seamshy N0TRE DAME (NC) - The Col Elizabet~ P Hoisington the_ bullreSs) Bel With h1el commit- ~IMtlIIIIIIHIIIItIIIIIIIIItImiJlHililjJlniRiiillntJiliIllNtiJtIlIHII~

Reoild annuai Young Christian new director 01 the Women mentu a Biofei6ec ~ = - _ Student apostolic workshop Wall Army Coorps Christ ~ li5

middotheld here thisweeKformiddot~Brade ~Themiddot middotblessing was giVeIlE D p SAlES middotANDmiddot middotSEmiddotRVICE ~ oionhoolmmiddotode~~torsfromparochial MsgrCKennethGStackaper-middot sect middotcmiddot bull - bullbull j bull iL

bullbull L~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull0bullbullbullbullbullbullbull middot _ IIand public school groUpsas weB s~Ia1frierid of the woman Armgt II Ill [He c E

as parishes ~ le~de~onher request afters~ bull J B II i ~ middotmiddotmiddotmiddotltThe Iconference coordinated had taken heroath of office ani 8 8 I FR sect - 1(JImiddotDmiddotmiddotAmiddotmiddotIREshy by the Catholic Action Office of beeli pi6moted from lieutenant 8 bull -1 l =

Notre DamemiddotUniversity was beld e9Jonelmiddotmiddotmiddot II LUMBER CO == I~

On t~e universitys campus middotCQlol)~I)loisington ~lPadu = 8 il RIEF ~IIG_ ~RATIOmiddot sect~ong ilP~a~er~ wer~raJherlilte_oftbe C0Uege oI~ou So Dartmouth bull IE ~ i

middot LOUISJPutz cS~_reltor of Da~eaalti~or~ Md JOlDeG II bull~ e h~p~~~~orauli1~~~h~ ~e~~n~~~~2~t~e~~~sLe~middot a~ Hyannis I 0 APPLIANCES I natioI)alltJirectoro(t~~ Gabrie(CIllsterthe Bronze Star ~So Dartmouth WY of$84 55 middot IR middotCO~IDmiddotITIOIG 5 Richard Institute and the Rev CroiX de Guerre with silver 1Rm bull i A ~ ~ n ~

middot Ja~es Neuman pastor of Hum- and the American and ~uropeaJll IMjaRwia 29211 == boldt Pa~ United BrethreJll Jheater ribbons of Wo~ld Wall bull ~ 363SECONDSomiddot FALL RIVER MASS~ ~

_ r middot9~~Imiddot~~ R~-pound~~~ -P-t rmiddotmiddot - gt gt bull IllbullbullIIIbullbull_1118 middotIiIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIHIUlllIIUIUIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIII1I1II1IIlIlUIIIIIIUllIIIIIIIIIIIUlIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIUU_ _

9 ~Swooned Priest Eggplant Dish U$ong Legendary P~r$ey P~~B1)t

By Joseph amI MarilYllll Roderick The cool weather where ~gain and with it the grass

has begun to break donnancy and send up little green shoots which means that the lawn mowers which have been restshying for a few weeks have got to be brought back to action

The drought that we had uperienced for the past three Summers has raised havoc with lawns and it doesnt seem much good can be done this season in areas still under water restrictions Howshyever in those that are not theremiddotre a few thingsmiddotwhich can be done middotbetween now and 1hetirst -bst to help lawns along To begin with this is amiddot good

middottime to apply itmiddot weed killer of some kin to I prefer tousecomshybination weed killer and fertil shyzer as this saves time and does el good job This should help dear up the lawn and start the grass out of dormancy Follow this with a good raking to disshylodge some of the matted grass and you are well on your way

to a healthy lawn in the Spring The next step is to buy a good grass seed if your lawn is well established and to apply it at ab04t half the rate or less sugshymiddotgested on the packageThe idea behind this is to fill in places where the lawn is thin or where weeds have been killed Incishydentally it is a good idea to wait two or three weeks aftermiddot

middot you have applied weed killer middotbefore you start new grass seed

It is important that your seed be a good brand and quality A eheap seed contains many coarse ~escues and annual graSses which will do the lawn very little good over the long run Jetter to buy a very good seed in small amounts than an iJlexshypensive seed which will cause you more trouble than it will do good

The only job left af~er middotthis is ~ keep themiddot lawn moistsq~bat

snippedt up the flavor would be stronger

Well I cooked my recipe and it was quite delicious but a few sprigs of the green shoots reshymained on the counter and as Joe was helping me clean up he inquired why Ihad been picking carrot tops Needless to say at that moment I rseolved to learn a great deal more about parsley in all its varieties The things I found out in my research on the parlsley plant were quite fascinating and even it bit frightening if youre the superstitious type Did you know that it was thought to be such a plant of the devil that it could only be sown on Good Friday if it were to flourish at all In anciert times the Greek$ decked their tombs with it for they fully believed that it sprang from the blood of one of their dead heroes It was also th9ught only the wicked could grow parsley successfully

Feeling that its merits must far outweigh its supposed curses I searched further to discover that one of the beliefs that surshyrounded it was that wherever it flourished the missus is master This could provide a good reason for cultivating it

Getting away from the P4rely theoretical and into the practical I learned that parsley is la h~rdy biennial normally flowering and going to seed in the Spring -after sowing though in a hot dry year it may bolt and go to seed in late Summer (this is what happened to Ti Tias parsshyley bed) Seed may be planted inmiddot April and May fOf a Summer and early Autumn crop andmiddots

the n~wgtseed has amiddotchlUlce tos~cpnd s~~ing JWlde ~lllate~uly germinate If you are succ~ pr August for tbe next ~pring and the lawn does take it is im-~pd SumDler n

middot perative tbat you keep the n~wpar~le~ steJfis have fiir~ore grasscut at about two inches So~avor than the leayes and ~e

that it makesmiddot sorneroot growth French often use only the stem before the coIf weather sets in where taste is more important

Mostlawns should bereseededmiddotthan appearance They are full iJdHis vaVeach year pIefetabiyof chlorophyll (thatgreeliishIn late Augustor eatlySeptem- property lthat was so popular a

ber Seeding is outmiddot of the ques- fewmiddot years ago) andmiddot when tion however where water re- crushed ~intmiddot mayonnaise aod

strictions are still in effect So other sauces a lovely shade of if you are allowed to water only green If you do happen tomiddot be one or two hours a week you wicked enough to have pars- will have to suffer your poor ley flourish in your yard the hlwq or at least another season four most popular ways of storshy

h the Kitchen ing it in your refrigerator are 1 With the stems kept ina

I realize that I have a great glass of water deal to learn concerning both 2 Washed water shaken off the kitchen and garden but my sealed in a glass jar or plastictack of knowledge was undershy bag

Jined the other day when I was 3 Unwashed in a plastic bamiddotg preparing to cook the recipe 4 Washed and folded intoa

- yentat Irrt ~sing in this eeks cloth the clothmiddot absorbs the ~olumn As I readmiddot the hst of dampness ~ee~ed Ig~edlents I only gave I found the following recipe iilSSmg notce to t~e paryleyas ~elicious even J~oJlgh graced

have always gathered It fr~s~ with carrot top~ instead of parsshy rom a large bed over In 1-1 Tla s -- ley The unusw name may refer ya~d howev~r when I wet to sltmelllenlbero(th~-cleigy over to pick It I found that In who fainted with joy at the flashya s~ort span of a few days most vor he enjoyeo

0pound It bad gone to seed - middotmiddot middotmiddotmiddotmiddot SWo()nedPri~stmiddot~lmiddotmiddot

Suddenly I see~ed to recall 1 eggplant peeled and sliced ~hat Joe ~admentIoned that he h inch thick had planted some of theltalian 2 large onions sliced _ Vanety llear our raspberry 3 large tomatoes sliced ~ushes ah the day was saved salt and pepper That must be it I said to 1 small bunch of fresh pa~ middotmyself as I spied sOllIe feqthery ley minced green shoots along the fence it 2 Tab)e~pouns oil didnt smell very much like 2 cloves of garlic sliced

middot parsley but ther again it was 1) Arrange eggplant onionsmiddot supposed to be a different va- and tomatoes in alternate layen lriety and perhaps when I in a large frying pan sprinkling

each layer with salt pepper ahd 1 00 R the minced parsley u v eglster 2) Add 1fJ cup hot water the

NEW YORK (NC) - More oil and garlic

than 1000 person have regis- 3) Cover tightly -andmiddot simm1r ~7~~d to at~end the ei~J1th n~- for about 30 minutes or u~til ~lonal CursI110 Movement eon-iiquia Is reducedt~aricl1 gravY iention now in session here Remove garlic before serving

PRE-CONVENTION ARRANGEMENTS BY DCCW DELEGATES Among the delegates from the Diocese who met recently for arrangements to attend the 33rd National Convention of Catholic Women in Miami Beach Oct 5-8 were left to right Mrs James E Williams St Josephs No Dighton Miss Angela Medeiros Mt CarmelSeekonk Mrs Theophane Lavoie St Jeim the Baptiste Fall River Mrs John Smith Sk Marys South Dartmouth Thursday Sept I is the closing date for registration of delegates from the Diocese to the Convention

Nuns Health Insurance Econoniist Tells Superiors Life Expectancy

Justifies C~operative Plan MILWAUKEE (NC)-Kuni- encountered by ri~ns thlo~ghQut erlliy o~payton ecqnonll~ ~r~ their lifetime ~essor Wbo~peciali~es i~m~g- Medical Passports ic~l statisectticl(or~seesalow-c~ To c~nect data FecheidEl~ised be~lthi~u~an~e~lan a~~ a~ni- a medlqal i4e~tification card 1fiect )rgra~ 0 n1edlcal and whichiiecalIi a medical pass-h~spltal facllitiesfr Am~can middotPOrtHe said these cards carshynuns under the admlm~tratlOrt~f ryingrecords of current disabili shythe Conference of MaJor Supe- tiesmiddotmiddot eouldaid in accumulating

middot riors of Wmen medical information to help Addressmg t~e conferepCemiddot ~t middotnuns qualify for lower cost Its annual meetmg he~e COli Jhealth insurance and to organize Fecher s~ldmiddot ~ooperativeplaQsan eventual program of comshy~or ~ns m thIS country canbe JustIfIed by the longer life exshypectancy ~nd better health of women relIgiOUS Fecher presented d~ta Q~ a

fIve-year study on disabIlItIes among 3)000 nuns He has made many previous statistical studies on ~he nuns long~vity

Smce nuns lIve In what Fec~er calls a contrlled life studIes ~f thelmiddot medlcal sta~us can prOVide medical SCIence WIth ~nf~rtn~tion relvatgt-t to 0-lher q~e1 But mo~t PTllvI~ts stuq~es have conc~Iltrat~~~m rn~rtalItybull s~tI~tl~s~l1d w~re coJcerI)edW~~ lteaJh apd I~ causes Fec~eT s rece~t ~~S centered around the dIsabIlIties

Christrtras Bazaar Advance preparations fire beshy

middot ing made for a Christmas bazaar slated for the weekend of Nov 25 through 27 in the basement of Sacred Hearts Church Nolth Fatrhaven Meetings are being held in the rectory at 730 each

middot MOhday night and parishioners who cannot come at this time

middot are mged to volunteer home services byknitting sewing or making fthEir articles for sale

Materials will be furnished and dondticins iire laquo iHsifoeing reshyquested 101 a white elephant table Gerierafdiairman Mrs Roland Larocque announcesmiddot that

prOfits will benefit the school improvement fund

bined health care They might also be of value to physicians treating future illnesses he said

The five-year survey tended to support the adage your health mirrors your environ ment Abstinence fromalcohol and ~igarettes a well-balanced diet adequat~ housing secure

bull communa livi and celibacy apparently do iow down the aging process Fecher said

He cautioned however that this does not ~ecessarilYmean that areligious life promotes longevity and that a similar am6tirlt of work-day schoolshy

day orreligiflus-day sefvice 10sseser be applied to each and every religious community in tbecountrymiddot

Fecher said that data collected over the past 40 years shows that the health middotcare programs of reshyligious are very uneven

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Aug 25 1966

Approves Loco ~

School Boards BURLINGTON (NC) - The

appointment of four local Cathshyolic school boards brings a new method of Catholic school manshyagement to 25 per cent of the diocesan schools here in Vershymont

At the regular monthly meetshying of the Burlington Diocesan School Board Father John A Lynch diocesan superintendent of schools reported that consti shytutions for four schools had been approved making a total of 25middot per cent of the schools operating under policy-malting boards approved by the diocesan board

~he diocesan statutes e~c6urshya~ebut do not demand the formatior of 10 c a l schoOl boards he said

Father Lynch also announced that a study would be made of school costs in the hope to find ways to avoid increasing tuition and parish assessments The study of education costs will be made by George Fortune acshycounting consultant to the diocshyesan school system

Good Counsel College Gets Loan for Dorm

WASHINGTON (NC) - A $1180000 college housing loan for Good Counsel College for women in White Plains NY to build a new dormitory has been approved Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Robert C Weaver announced here

The dorm is planned to acshycommodate 192 students The college conducted by the Sisters of Divine Compassion has an ellrollment of some poo students

Some students required to live on campus are in overcrowded middotfacilitiesmiddot Mother M Dolores president said lack of housing will foree themiddot college to deny admission middottoa number of stushydents middotthis fall she said The COllege enrollment is expected to reach 650 in five years and

800 in 10 years

Ce~tervilfe Guild New officers of Our Lady of

Victory Womens Guild Centershyville are Mrs StephenB OBrien Jr president Mrs John J Pendergast Jr and Mrs James Murphy vice-presidents Mrs ~oger Carlson treasurer Mrs Francis McKenna and Mrs Edward ONeill secretaries

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

middotOPENDAllY FORTHIE SEASON AFTERNOON and NIGHT

niE ANCHOR $as~ Vocationsmiddot10 Thurs Aug 25 1966 COnCern ofAIi

Employer U rges ST LOUIS (NC) - Speaking at the third annual Vocation Mass in St Louis cathedral

middot here Joseph Cardinal Ritter said middotvocations in the Church should

Workers to Vote For Teamsters

be the concern of every Roman SAN FRANCISCO (NC) Catholic

-The Di Giorgio Corporashy The cardinal told 397 men and women preparing to enter semishytion is recommending that naries and convents in the Fanits farm workers vote to afshy that religious vocation is not

filiate with the Teamsters FaTm middot merely a concern for the arch-Workers Union if they wish middot diocesan director a union the company announced It is a matter of solicitudeshy

Robert Di Giorgio president for each and everyone of us A of the company said therecomshy vocation is a divine thing but mendationmiddot is in accordance with it is a thing which God will not National Labor Relations BoaTd w~thhold from His peopleprocedures The recommendashy Cardinal Ritter continuedtion was made in letters sent to Bymiddot manifesting a concern employes eligible to vote in the about and an interest in vocashyunion election scheduled Ifor tiols we truly show that we Tuesday Aug 30 middot are the People of God

Opposing the Teamsters will be the National Farm Workers Association (NFWA) and the Seeks Assistance Agricultural Workers Organshy For Congo Churchizing Committee AFL-CIO (AW OC) which have merged since WASHINGTON (NC) - A they began the long Delano Congolese senator visiting the strike United States on a State Departshy

The Teamsters won the originshy ment tour program for foreign al election for union representashy government officials hopes to tion but charges of fraud make his two-month visit serve brought a new election a double purpose

Di Giolgio said the corporashy Senator Gaston Diomi wants tion is recommending a vote to speak with Catholic laymen for the Teamsters because middotand members of the clergy per-

The Teamsters won the preshy haps address audiences at vious electionmiddot Catholic institutions in his hope

The Teltlmsters while they to bring the Church iri the light hard in their members Congo to the eyes of American behalf are fair arid responshy ~ Catholics

And the senator has a planesible he wants to set up sharing proshyCompany Union middotFeels Adults Need Religious grams throughout the United

The competing union on tne States programs in which an ballot the Nationa Farm Workshy More So Than Children Nun Declares American diocese would adopt z ers AssoCiation has achieved Congolese diocese an American tentative recognition with oniy LOVELAND (NC)-Religious JI1ost rigidly formed in the old program to meet its needs--part religious order adopt a Congoshytwo growers the larger of which

education is needed for aduits system to see the new vision of which could be a parish lese order an American orphan-this year shifted production from school age adopt a Congolese orphanmore than for children and a of themiddot Churchand of Christian~ble grapes to wine tnus elimshy Flexibility and the wiUing- agebetter term for it would be life middotsetmiddot forth by the Secondinating a great many jobs ness tomiddot try a variety 01 ap- The American governmentmiddotsomething like shared growth Vatican Council Cesar Chavez head of the N iIi Christian middotlifemiddotmiddotmiddot This is 8 hard ~ask Sister prOdches ought to be the mmk of has such sharing programs the FWA called the Teamsters a an effectivereligious education senator pointed out WhyThis is the estimate of Sis admitted for adult educationcompany union and said it

tel 114 Charles Borromeo former demands new approaches and program she asserted empha- shouldnt the Church have the has entered into a partnership sizing thatmiddotit should have a so- same The Church that is Cath-head of the theology school at cannot be imposedwith Di Giorgio in a commonmiddot cia1 and an ecumenical dimen- olic the Church that is definedSt Marys College conducted by Each Ones Missionplot agabnst the farm workers sionmiddot QY the Second Vatican CouncilHoly Cross Sisters at Notre She wouldnt abandon chil-He said the companys recom- Built into each program middotas a missionary Church- whyDame Ind She recently joined drens education JOwever Shemendation confirmed that the should be a growirig aW8leness shouldnt this Church and tierthe faculty of St Xavier Col-middot saidTeamstens came to Delano to

lege Chicago as theology pro- What Id like to se~ IS emh of e~ch ones mission in the members share even more readshytlrganize workers at the invita- Church-an outgoing mismiddotsion to ily than government~ifessor set up a total religiou educationiion o~

PROFESSION CEREMONY AT WAREHAM The Chapel in the Woods of the Noshyvitiate of the Sacred Heart Fathers vas the scene Saturday morning as four novices

iere profe~sed by Bishop CoimolIyLeft to right Bro JudeMohan Bro Joseph ONeill Master of Novices Rev Andrew Jahn Bishop Connolly Very Rev Daniel J McCarthy

Prodncial who offered the Mass Bro Paul Daly and Bro Martin Lucia

the corporation New Approaches reach others and to build the

Speaking at the Summer lec- middot social patterns needed in our Oppose Intervening ture series at Grailville herein Quote Pope Pauls world

middot1 PImiddot Ohio USheaqquarters of the A 1 f IP Issues of TimesIn Fami y annlnglt international Grail movement ppea oreace middot She warneq against lookingMILWAUKEE (NC)-The ex- Sister Charles Borromeo aC- BERLIN (NC)-Fiye hundred for textbooks with all thE anshy

ecutive committee of the ad- knowledged that the Church in letters quoting the flppeal of swers or for fOllliulas thatvisory ioard of the Milwauke~ this country has placed most of Pope Paul VI for peace in Vietshy might take the place of decisiOlishyArchdioce~an Family Life Pro- its resources atmiddot the service of nam were sent persons in East rilaking by individual wnsci- gram has adopted a resolution childrens education Germany by the Social Demoshy encesmiddot

opposing government interven But the most urge~t need for cratic Party (SPD) The East Religiousteaching should inshynon in family planning giving religiousmiddot education she said Germans had asked the SPD volve a di~logue she su-ggestunanimousmiddot approval to a 13- if to helpadults especially those why the free world had not ed addi~g that in the past therepoint resolution which insists made imy efforts to end the war has been toomuch sttess on aushythat the matter of family plan- d in Vietnam thorityin teaching rid~otning is a private affair not a Sche u ~ Reopening The letter sent by the Social

bulle~o~gh on sharingChrisliarieoncern of the government Of Chi Smiddot h 1 Democratsmiddot pointed out that the gr()wthmiddot

Frank Stabb chairman of at 0 IC C 00 peace efforts of the pope the Thequesiion is not so ~lUcbtheCatholic board statedthat MTmiddot REPOSE (NC)-A Cath- World Council of Churches and

~hat to tea~h she ()pined butsince it has become increasingly olic school here in Ohio for of the governments of the how will we produce ~he Chrisshyapparentmiddot tilat our federalgov some 250 children will reopen in United States Great Britain (ian experience in litUlgy andernment ans to use taxinoiiey September due to efforts of in- Sweden India France and Itrly

for the spreading of birthcon-middot (lividuai citizens civic and Pro had all middotbeen rejected by the soci~l actionJn th~ great issues trol it becomes the obUgation of testantchurch groups in the communists The letter also of our times ~

NO JOBTOq BIG NONE TOO SMALL

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTE~S

MainOHice and Plant 95 Bridge St lowell M~bullbull

Tet 4586333

Auxiliary Plarits

BOSTON CAMDEN NJ OCEANPORT N~J

MIAMI PAWTUCKET R1 PHILADELPHIA

this family apostolate to speak area the Milford Chamber of middotstressedmiddot the SPDs view that out vigorously in oPllOsition tomiddota Commerce and parishioners of war can no longer be an instru shypolicy which has absolutely no St Andrews church Milford ment in solving political probshyvalidity The Elizabeth Seton School a lems middot He went on to say that when rural outpost of St Andrews Rltidio television and newsshyariy government agency tells parish was established seven paper ieports iil Eastmiddot Germany

middotpoor married couples whether years ago and con tin 11 a llY have given the impression thatmiddot they should have children or plagued by sewage dIsposal no one middotincluding the Pope has

hownfany to have the govern- problems The school wasmiddot closed made any efforts to seek peace ment is making a mighty pre- by court order in the Sumrtler in Vietnam sumptuous intrusion into a most of 1965 but r~openeq last year i J

sacred element of huin~nlife) with an arrangement fo~ haul- Stamiddotmiddotr 0n middotIImiddotmiddotOmiddotftmiddotmiddotammiddotP

middot ing sewge to MilfordmiddotmiddotWhenmiddot ~ middotV 1 t Cmiddoth 1 forcedtostop usingtheMilford DAVENP0RT (NC)~Seven-

eel) members of religious coni 0 un eermiddot apalnmiddot sewage systemlastJanuary t PHILADELPHIA (NCfFa-middot classes were dfscontinueiigt mutlities in theuilitedmiddot middotStates

ther JjRobert Falabella SJ The Closhlg spalked if coin- were among the graduates at the 36 instr~ctor in theolOgyat St mlinity effort led by the Buck- annual mid~Summermiddotcommence

Josephs College here has vol- wheat-middotTaxpayers Associationw ment of St Ambrose College uteered for extended adive aidthemiddotschoolmiddotA fUrid drive for her~in Illwa middotParticipating in duty witp theUS Army Re $250((to pay formiddot new tihiinage the ceremonies was Margheritiimiddot serve s a chaplain in the Vietmiddot f~cilities was ~ledby th~ Mil- Roberti a~ native of Davenportmiddot mam combat zone ford Chamber Of Commerce a leading dramatic sopranQ~

CONVEmiddotNImiddotENT BANKING WITHOUT TRAFFIC PARKING PROBLEMS

at the -

5LADE~S FERRr-r~USJmiddotCOMPANY SOMERSET MASS

j ~ - bullbullbull ~~ ~ bull ) bullbullbull lt

ThemOflt friendlymiddot dmocrt~ lANK oHering

-_~9npi~lC)h$topmiddot~cirliing middotmiddotf bullbullbullClubmiddot Accoul1Its - Auto middotLoa -

Checking Accounts ~ Business boris Savings Accounts~ ~ ~ Ieaj Estate loOns 1 -

- ~Atmiddot S~~~rs~tS~~ppi~~ Ar~a=-~igh~~a 5 ~t~due Me~ber FeCieral I)epositmiddot ri~urance Corporation

I

11 Cardinal Cushing Hits Imbalance In Schools

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing deplored that very little has been oone to relieve racial imshybalance in Bostons public schools in his first public address since his recent illness and conshyvalescence

The Boston prelate told an ecshyumenical meetingmiddot in All Saints Lutheran church here that al shythough very littlemiddot has been done to make a year-old law work we are not discouraged and we are very far from giving up hope that we will have reshyBults before long

He referred to the Racial 1m balance Law aimed at promotshying racial integration in Massashychusetts public schools The meeting marked the first annishyversary of the law The measure will deprive Boston public schools of $30 million in state subsidies until the citys school committee submits an integrashytion plan acceptable to the state board of education Until now the city committee has not subshymitted an acceptable plan

A school that is heavily imshybalanc~d racially cannot provide the best education that should be available for our children Even with the most devoted teachers and the most upto-date proshygrams-and we have both o( these in Boston-a predomiJ)antshyly Negro school suffers from an isolation from the general comshymunity which cannot fail to be harmful~ he said

Scores Slum Landlords In a similar way we can say

that an all white scJ100l fails to reflect the true nature of the radally mixed communitymiddot in which we live and so deprives white youngsters of theexperi ence of living and studying with their neighbors of a different race Ourideal should be to live and workand study and pray side by side in mutual respect and common affection

There hav~ been several proposalsmade during the last year to al~rest imbalance iit the schools of our center city Carshydinal Cushing said None of these has been accepted by those who hove been elected to make these decisions in the schooi srstem Of course we know that no immediate proshygram will solve all our problems but we can make li beginning

The cardinal also criticized slum landlords for the inhuman conditions in which so many here must live and work alid bring JP their families He called for a crash program of assistance for the deprived

State Uses Vacant Catholic School

BURLINGTON (NC)-The re- cently closed Don Bosco Schoolmiddot for BoyS here will Soon befilled up again with teenage boys this time as temporary quarters for Vermonts pilot residential treatshyment center for youthful first shyoffender lawbreakers

In announcing the acceptance of the proposal by Bishop RobertF Joyce of Burlington and the Verm 0 n t Catholic Charities board State Institutiolls Com-

PROFESSION AND CtOTHING CEREMONIES Principals in the ceremonies conshyducted for the Sisters of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts in Fall River on Monday were seated Sr Mary Dolores Sr John Veronica Bishop Gerrard who presided Sr Karen Dolores Sr Mary Catherine Standing Sr Margaret Edward Sr Joseph Maureen Sr Stephen David Sr James Constance Sr Celestine Regis Sr Anne Robert Sr Vinshycent Dolores

Report Says Cold War More Intense Peaceful Coexistence Now Strategic Offensive

WASHINGTON (NC) -Some tegic Studies at Georgetown jarring statements are made in University a Jesuit-conducted a significant news report whose school here

It is an in-depth analysisprivate but highly responsible sponsors call it the resultmiddot ofmiddot quality research It reminds for example that the so-called cold war is not

over and warns that as of now it may be entering a more danshy

gerous phase Th e ~peaceful coexistence

slogan it says was once a comshymuhist defensive stalling tacshytic but now it signifies the communists have gone over to

the strategic offensive The great paradox of our

times the document asserts may well turn out to be our inability to recognize that the cold war has in reality become more intel1se despite the increasshying appearance of peace

The goals of the presentmas~ tels of the Kremlin are no dif- ferent from tho~e of Khrushshychev Stalin or Mao Tse-Tung and to the Krtmlin peac~ful coshyexistence is a strategy not an end in itself it declares

The study entitled Peace or Pea c e f u1 Coexistence was

sponsored by the Committee on Education Against CommUllism of the American Bar Association It was unveiled in New York just before the ABA began its annual meeting in Montreal but it was prepared by Richard V Allen a specialist on Sino-Soviet affairs at the Center for Stra-

K of c Plan Socoal

Action I itia tive

missioner John Y Woodhull MIAMI BEACH (-NC) - The stated I think this is one (f the top official of the Knights of finest ecumenical testures of Columbus announced plans for faith and charity that I have a new initiiitive in the ecumenshyknown i -i~al and soCial action field

The eenter ill ~ ~provide a through a partnership with theO

home for 16 to 20 b(iys aged HI John LaFarge Institute ill New to 18 who are referrecl by the York ~ - eourls as first offenders Toile In additior W financial assist shyboys will work loeal du-in ancethe LaFllg~jnstitute will

the day and return to the center reeeive suggestifmsand recomshyin the ~venin1 for intensive mendations frOJll the official roup t~erapy eonducted b) rep-~~entationand plJrticipatiOll

Btaff III ~ix bull Ule K bull C

based onmiddot more than 3000 articles and documents of the internashytiOllal communist movement more than 90 per cent of which material is dated after the Cushyban Missile crisis of October 1962 Allen admits that the commushy

nists have used the coexistence slogan in ihepast and with sfme success but he directs atshytention to the fact that it now signifies a strategic offensive rather than a stal~ing tactic

The study notes that the Cushyjail build-up the erection of the Berliil Wall and the armed iilvasi~n of South Yietnam all occurred during the most in- tense pedod of peaceful coshyexistence ~ It~~~inds that Khrushchev in 19t1lddiiled coexistence as a form of intense ecoitomic pOlitshyical and ideological struggle gaii1s~ the aggressive forces of imperialism hi the international arena it aiso says that in their 3tshy

tempt to create wha bull they call the New ComIJlunist Man the communists have systematically presented a vicious and thor oughly distorted picture of the

Nuns to Construct Health Care Facility

SANDUSKY (NC)-The Franshyciscan Sisters who operate Providence Hospital here in Ohio will construct a new 100shybed $1250000 healthcare fashycility separate ftom thehospital

It will serve Medicare patients of the area during posthospital care and Qther convalescents who do not requir~f~l~-scalehospital care Sister Lucia -administrator 81lid it will relievemiddot pressure ~ hospital beds in the area

There wiII be ari appeal to th~ public lor about $900000 The -remainder of the funds will

btl supplied by the Federalgovshyerllment

West in general and the United States in particular It need not be emphasi~ed

the study states that the overshywhelming sentiment of the free world is to live in peace But tQ mistake the illusion of peace for genuine peacemiddot would be a profoundly dangerous perhaps fatal mistake In a foreword t the book

Bertram D Wolfe a Stanford University expert on commushy~lism warns that we have been prone to read the idea of live and let live into the phase of peaceful C 0 e x imiddots ten ce Our hopes and our longings are likeshyly to betray us again and again into a readiness to be deceived by those who have sworn the d~struction of all we stand for

fnjoymiddot Dining IN THE

JOLLY WHALER --AND--

SPOUTIRINN RESTAURANTS

Always Free Parking

New Bedford Hotel

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Aug 25 1966

Cassidymiddot Seniors Attend Work$hop

Three members of the incomshying senior class at Cassidy High School Taunton will complete tomorrow a five day Workshop in Leadership conducted at the University of Massachusetts under th~ sponsorship of the Massachussetts Association of Student Councils

Mis s Rosemary McKenna~ president of the senior class Miss Nancy Thomas president of the National Honor Society and Miss Christine Victoria coshyeditor of the Cassidy school paper are attending Miss Victoria is secretary of the Southeastern Association of Student Councils and will serv~ in that capacity with the other officers Jerry Flanagan presishydent Feehan High Marsha Boyd vice-president Attleboro High Luke Boyd treasurer West Bridgewater High

Cassidy GIllaquoIltiluCllle Wins Elkso AWtlDd

Miss Pauline Lee daughter ox Mrs Harry Lee and the late Harry Lee of 7 Dean Ave Taunshyton has Qeen named the recipishyent of a $600 Massachusetts Elks Lead~rship Award granted by the Elks National Scholarship Fund

A member of the 1966 gradushyating class of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton Miss Lee was in the top ten of a class of 108 and maintained a scholastie honors record throughout bell four year Miss Lee will attend Nortn- eastern University Boston

Schools Merge BAY CITY (NC)-TwO wes~

side Catholic high schools here hi Michigan will merge Sept I

to becomeWest Catholic CentraU High School The decision te merge was made by an intershyarish lay study committee tv provide more efficient use of the staff and facilities The schooU will be staffed by the ReligioUl Sisters of Mercy of Detroit

BIG DIVIDEND NEWS

a SYSTEMATIC550 year SAVINGS

INVESTMEIfJ500 a year SAVINGS

8 REGULAR450 year SAVINGS

Bass River SovinQs Bank bull SOUTH YARMOUTH bull DENNIS PORT

bull YANNIS bull fARMOiJTH SHOPPING PLAZA

bull OSTERVILLE

-1111

WHITE middotmiddotmiddotSPA CATERERS

- BANQUETSmiddot -WEDDINGS - PARTIES

~ COMMUNION BREAKFASTS 1343PlEASANT STREET FAll RIVER

OSb~rne 3-7780

--h-- ~

12

i

THE ANCHOROlocese of Fall River-Th~s Aug 25 1966

~regW ~reg~tfJ ~lYJ~~ TtUUY1)[fi)l[

Of R~dD~~~csm Amcm)gYW]fr~ lJy Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy

Phillip Abbott Luces The New Left (McKay 119 W 40th New York $450) attempts to explain the resurgence of radicalism among American students Its author is a

of the New Left wIth as many con u e y lcal ideas while at MissisSippi non-joiners on the peripherY day even~ng Aug 27 at S lD ~ at~~ fi~t he~-d ~~ ~h~ ~erBtlt its impact- is smd tohave Mlll~aret s Kinderlctarten aaU i Left whIle at Ohio State and l Prizes WIll be awarded and reshy

tgrt~ritotcOtmiddotmiddotgthmiddotevecJ1 amm~-~W1lS~~tttedpa~~y ~xten~e~ tots about200OQP co h~~hriients served o nl~ge ~u en ~~ i - ltGUiLD OF TillE VIsITATION Iil1961heifioved~to NewmiddotYork It ~S ~l1ena lza1I~~~eme~t i iNO EASTilrAM ~ ~

_and came closer tothe Commti- in the country What alarms Mr ih alb t ofthe Dist Party Llitef he joined Pro- Luce is not its existence or its G1 ~~ h 3que wed gressiveLa]gto~aiI~ edited its size but the fact and the in- W WI e e on nesshymiddot monthly magazine _ cre~sing extent of Comrnamst q1Y~ 4-~ 3~ a~ the PiJ~~ middot -domination~ He gives -instances Springs Restaurant No TflJro Visited _C~~ro-S Cuba R t cl Sunday

in proof thatsuch dO minatioD-i8 A e~e2 rva~o1l os on It was Progressive Labor ug s

which arJanged- for fmeric~ indeed an actuality SACRED HEARTS

young man who won some leader of the New Left and when he broke with Proshygressive Labor which he eharges was organiz~d by -formermembenlof theSoVfeishycontrolled Communist Pa rt y USA and is now aPekingor~eh tated Commu~

D1st group Mx Luce has an ex tremely Impor- middottant subject one which is both timely and crit shyleal Because of his experience he should be especially qualshyified to set it out But the fac~ is that he is at best a mediocre writer He has no notion as to how to

organize a book marshal his materials and to ten his story iIi a consecutive way and with cushymulative force This is a dull alld muddled treatment of a very middotvitai topic~ not heipedat all by crude blundersin English usage Mr Luces personal histog has to be pieced together fro~ bits strewn through the book

middotlike the debris after a hurricane He is an Ohioan bornmiddotin 1935

notice both when he was a the lives of the rising generation Youth is repelled by parental attitudes and aspirations which are seen as mostly narrow negshyative sterile College is a bore

offeriiig no incentive or oppOJshytUnity for youth to direct its enshyergies into crucial causes

A mood of rebellion has devel- ~ped and a chance to express it has been pr~sentedby the civil rights struggie and the unpopu~ lar and beclouded war in Vietshynam Nor does the prospect of fighting authority in each case dim the attraction of these causes quite the reverse Hence the New Left

JLists Organizations Communist organizations of

various stripes have attemptec to sieze control of the New Left and to exploit the mood of reshybellion wi~h an eye to changing it into participation in revolushy

tion

Mr Luce lists and desribes the Communist organizations so engaged The one he knows best of course is Progresectsive Labor But he gives much space to the Du Bois Clubs which are the instruments of the Communist Party Then tlmre are the Trot-middot

the son of middle-class Repub- skyite splinter groups of which lican parents H~ start~d college four strains are identified (inshyat Miami University in Ohio left cluding middotone that is pro-Negro to see the Souih finished ~t Mis and anti-Semitic) I

sissippi State and did graduate Mr Luce estimates that some k t Oh St t 12000 YOung AmericanS are wor a 10 a e _ t 1 t 1 b He became interested in rad- ac ua orgamza Ion~ mem ers

APPOINTEE- Bishop Josshyeph Bmiddot Brunini Auxiliary since 1957 to Bishop Richard O Gerow of Natchez-Jackshyson middotMiss has -been appointshyed by Pope Paul VI to be Apostolic Administrator of the diocese NC Photo

The Parish Parade

ST 1lgtYS TillED mn ov= =shylFALL RJrVER

The parish will sponsor a one day pilgrimage to the Shrine of the North American Martyrs Auriesville N Y on Sunday Oct 2

Interested partles may obtaIn full particulars by contacting Mrs Laurence Coyle Mrs Wilshyliam Blythe or Mrs George Boitano S8 MARGARET-MARY GUILD BUZZARDS BAY

A bl hitmiddot middotU be pu IC W S paL 0 WI d ct d b the guild on Saturshy

studeritsto visit Cuoain 1963 middot and 1961 In defiance of our middotState Department~sban on travel

there Mr Luce made the trip says that most of the students

middot were unaware of Progressive Labors sponsorship and control The money came from Castro And Progressive Labor members planned and staged the wild scenes at a Congressional hea~

ing concerning the middotproject By late 1964 Mr Luce was

enti~ely dissillusioned abo u t Progressive Labor andmiddot by Febshyruary of 1965 h~ pad left it to

bemiddot quickly expelled upon his

Stresses Strength NO FAIRHAVEN He insists that somethin~(must Registration for the kiridershy

be done to prevent Communist garten pre-primary and the capture of the movement He eight eJement~ry grades are beshywants everyone to wake up to ing held daily during the month the existence and the strength of Augus of the New Left Pupils may register with SJ

We must realize he urges how Marie Henriette SSCC at the disenchanted with our society Sacred Hearts Academy 332 the young people ~re what hos- Main Street Fairhaven any 8poundshytility they feel what a gulf ternoon from 1-5 RegistratioDfl yawns between them and their are also being accepted by Rev elders and hcgtw impervious th~YAlexis Wyggers SSCC at the are to ideas and language which ReCtory 382 Main street Fairshyi

figure in their eldErs attempts haven to communicate with them The Association of St Anne

No one he maintains is S~-Will receive corporate CoinmUshyI~ departure and sayagE(l~ Yim~~~~ Jiously trying to reach the hiorton Sunday at the 8 ocloek middot He left because he says Pro gressive Labor is a middotMaoist Comshymunist tool because itmiddotadlrQcates imd take steps to implelrtent armed insurrection because- no personal freedam is allowed to members an4 lill- deQisionsmiddot are made by a few dictatorial leadshy~ril 1ecausemembersareJnshyvolved in programs of Whose

eonsequences totge country and to themselvestIey have no idea lt~

lFe~ls lF~tts~rated Mr fL~ced6es- notmiddot contend

middot that the New Leis Goromunistshy

young rebel to understand him Mass to speak to him intelligibly and effectively Co~unJ~t errorsmiddot J~edB~ MeU1lMe~tmiddot propaganda hypocnsy mUst be SCHWYZ (NC) - Catholicrelentlessly exposed in a way movie and television experts which the young people will met here iil ~fwitieriand for imcomprehend international exchange of ~He is strong_ for a Freedom riiques iiI the useof Tv anellAeademy- which would provipe films in religious educationmiddotmiddot expert practical education conshy - cerning CommunislJlmiddotAnd he stressestheneed of a placefor

ltloltiinated -Hescent~B it -as8 phe- PITTSB~1RGH(Nt) - The bull I bull ~ bull bull bull bull bull

honidon whlc~ came ~bout Pittsburgh Catholi( Interracial Commercialmiddot 15 Industrid spontaneously an eX~IJ1Pre of- Council has endorsed home rule Institutionalyouth in rebellion - for the District of Columbia asshy

Youth he holds~ hils amiddotpoundeeling sertingthattooibng have many painting ~nd~ D_~~o~qtig of -frustrationmiddot with American of the-importanLdecisionaffectshy Fall River OSborne 2-1I9H$ociety its tone and its values ing (the District of CohJmbia) -yoiith~es~rtt~rhaving rio say inb~erlmadtd)ycongrpoundpoundssiriehftoin ~ 74v~hllia rnson Str~e~

the making of decisions affecting hundreds of miles away

~~Gr~ayK BJ Most Rev FUUOlll J Sheeillp Dll)

If my neighbor is stronger than 1 I fear him if he lsweaker than I I despise bim Such is the modem judgement of the psyshychiatrist Dr Jean de Rougemont Earlier the Psalmist speaks ~ the arrogance of those who have much and the despisal of those who are proud How can the rich avoid feeling superior to the poor How can the poor avoid being humiliated The answer is that vices but can the) give up cigarettes for a week to help the poor the strong must see their weakness and the rich must see~eifto poverty How realJly strong are the strong Theymay avoid great Are thfiY suc~ masters of themselves tbatthey can turn down the third cocktail (or give up the first) and use the money instea4 to ~uy sulfone ~or a i~~r~ liqw r~ch_ ar~the rich Let them look inside themselves IIi whatvirtue are they rich Rich in cb~ty Rich i~ char~ti Ri~)n f~th

Onc~t~~ ~i~rhty see th~mseiv~ asnothiDi a~d therl~h see the~selv~ as i~poverislledth~ they wui lov~ ihe we~~ as their brothersilDd the peor IllS their

fellow beggars for thetrrace of God ifmiddot the strong middotlove middotmiddotthemselves despite all theirweaknes5~ then why not lovltil weaknesses in others u the rich love themselves despitG middottheir inner nakedshyness then why nCllt love a lesser ]lJOVshy

erty in others That i~ why Our Lord told us to love ourneighbor as ourseU ~y not more than self Because iii ]I

love myself-knowing myself as ]I do knowing how utterb weak ]I am2-then I have the measure of how J[ am to pour out love to others

We live in a world divided between the rich and the poor We live in that kinol of a church-pOor parishes and rich parishes Even bishops an~ priestsmiddot speak of a parish being good when they mean it is economicaily rich Somehow or other we have ~

get qut of this slavish standard of affluence which is so opposed to the lross of Christ To that end we make the folloWing proposal that you or your middotparishclub school or office undertake the sponsorshjp of one of the poor areas of the world which has been investigated by the Apostolic delegate Write to us and we will send you middotthe name of this diocese its location the number of priests catechists and faithful it has Thus you will be sure that you have a middotneedy (Ibject for sacrifice and service and n9t one based on a haphazard -appeal middotfroin an uninvestigated source The Church will not alloW you to sponsor this diocese for more than one year becausemiddot thtlre are so many poor parishes in the world Look into your weakness and you will love the weakness of o~heJ8 Look into your poyeny stricken soul and you willserVe poverty stricken bodies Write to -mpGod Love You

~~~ middot~middotGOD~middotLOVE YCllJmiddot tomiddot~SMLgtO~middot ~$5 middotto A~RCtor $sO~ For your1nissionUorkIeanthelp eve~one andmiddotyou ~o tltosem most meed bullbull tchJMBfcn $20 to Anon lor $1000 middotsentmiddotWithlteommnbull ~ 11

bullbull bull ~l

The GOD LOVE YOU~ medal lovely cameo medal of the Madonna of tIle worldiS one you would be proud to give ormiddotde shy

lighted tci reC~iVEt DesIgned bi the world-renowned jeweler Harry winSton aildbltessed by Bishlgtp Sheen the GOD LOVE YOU medal is available inmiddotcl~icF~oreritinegold firiishor pure sterlingsilver aod may be obtained by sending your request and corresPondirtg offering to The Socieb for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth AvenueNew York NY 10061 $2 Sinall sterling silver $3 small

11gtk goid fiiled $5 large sterling silver $10 large 10k gold filled

Cut out this colullnn pln your sacrifice to It and mali It to Most RevbullFultom J Sheen National Director of The Society for the Propagation of thl~ Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or to your Dioclesan Director Rt Rev Msgr Raymond Jr Considine 363 North ll1ain Street Falll River Massachusetts

bull j 7 Perry IQur fI~~fng

~v~-t~e OilsMake Taunt~B1l~ Mass - Worm FriendsmiddotVA 2-2282

------------------ ~

genuinely democratic radicalism ON CAPE CODlbONNlEllyin o~r Iociety _

]OHoo ~~~(Kl~Ymiddotmiddot amp SON (~ofP~n~T~UnCG Rigt - flJ1 ml n

crepound ormiddotentireiyCommuist- 9llaquoIIlaquo ~$ lf1J Ilililte ~fYl U ~ I~raquo8L[)~NG MAmiddoth~linAL$middotmiddotmiddot~~~V~C~ 6

S~~ri~gj 1$100 4~~YARMUlrH ROA~)

middottYA~MBSmiddot AMPLE PARKING

iIIIIOCIIJIjIWUllJmllIllDOCImIWlDIllmIlXlWll(lJfi

- -

THE ANCHOR-Jesuit Educators Members of PAVLA Maintain Missionary Thurs Aug 25 1966 13

Ponder Students Record of Fall River Diocese Area G~~s SocoaCynical ~ttitQJJde

LOS ANGELES (NC) shy lLong outstanding for the missionary work of its priests Sisters and Brothers the ~elvD~e ~elrllfrer A top Jesuit educator dispenshy Fa~ River Diocese is fast becoming noted for its outstanding Papal Volunteers for Latin CLEVELAND (NC) - OUX sed advice here on how to eombat the attitude of some high schoolers who consider the world and the religion of their middotparents as phony

Father Edward J Sponga 8J of Baltimore in the keynote adshydress at the 1966 Jesuit Educashytional Association Workshop on Christian Formation at Loyola University here called for a dialogue with everyone conshycerned to emphasize the good crying to be released

Speaking to delegates from 52 Jesuit high schools in the nation Father Sponga chairman of the board of the Jesuit Educational Association declared

Menace to Freedom If the young men of our

schools consider the world and the religion of their parents as phony and a menace to their freedom then we must be ruthshyless in seeing how and why this is and in entering into dialogue with everyone who is willing to do so in order that we may be able to release the g09d that is crying to be released

During the 12 days of research and discussion 125 school adshyministrators and teachers evalushyated the effect that religion courses academic curriculum spiritual exercises and personal guidance have had on the charshyacters of the 35000 teenagers in U S Jesuit high schools

The delegates particularly were concerned about the loss of religious faith in the adolesshycent who is becoming increasshyingly sophisticated and critical

Middle Class Values Father Joseph H Fichter SJ

Stillman professor of sociology at Harvard Universitys divinity school criticized Jesuit high schools for not challenging the middle class values of many of their students for not paying sufficient att~rition to the social sciencesmiddot and for not drawing more of their students irom among the poor

Dr Alexander A Schneiders graduate professor of psychology at Boston College stressed the commitment of Faith that must be made within the scopemiddot of inshytellectual independence He arshygued against compelling students to make annual retreats or assist at religious exercises

Other delegates suggested esshytablishing pilot programs in 1l)ner-city high schools with nationwide cooperation and the sending of Jesuit teachers to work in community schools outshyllide the regular Jesuit system

Ho~es for Negroes Goal of Campaign

WORCESTER (NC) A camshypaign to secure better housing for Negroes in the Greater Worcester Area is growing

In a letter to some 1200 pershyS0l1S who last Aprii signed an

open letter newspaper adshyvertisement regarding fair hous ins John J Concordia Duman rights committee chairman of the Diocesan Council of Catholic M~~ ~sked sig~atories of the

open -letter to volunteer to ~adopt members of a Negro family am actively assist them inmiddotproC1Jri~g decent housing to titheir ~ne~ds

In 8 statement by an intershy fa(thmiddoteommittee on housing middotwfii~IlJs all out-growth of a

siniilar committee formed last year by the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women a call was made for construction of housshying for middotmiddotpoor and lower middle d~ss f ami ie It ixlcludins

Ne8J~s

bull bull r~ ~

America These young men and women doing Christs work in some of the worlds needshy Lady of Futima parish hat3 opened a social service centeliiest areas are a credit to the parishes and toowns from which they come Letest PAVLA here in the midst of the Houghassignments in the Diocese area scene of Clevelands recent

are those of Lucille Lebeau rioting of St Annes parish New The center housed in an 18-gt Bedford and Anthony Gomes room former apartment buildo St John of God parish Somershy ing was dedicated by Archo set bishop Paul J Hallinan of~ At-gt

Actually Lucille isnt a new lanta while he was visiting iii PAVLA hand She was the first Cleveland~bis native diocese Diocesan enlistee in the organishy The center will be staffed by zation going to Brazil as a four Sisters of Charity of St nurse-social worker in August Augustine who along with lay1963 She returned from her volunteers have been working three year assignment in July in the area since Aprilmiddot1965 but volunteered to serve an The center will middotprovide C9uri extra year in Brazil She will re seling nursing medical supplie tum there in November and pre-natal care -

Anthony veteran of a middotyears The building which standt work in Florida with the fedshy next to the parish rectory waserai governments VISTA proshy purchased bymiddot the parish seveR gram will teach English in a years ago when it was aba~ Mexican minor seminary He has doned as an apartment buildingalready completed a PAVLA

Early last year Father Alberitraining course at Catholic Unishy Albert Koklowsky MSSSTversity in Washington D C and pastor of Our Lady of Fatimawill leave in September for launched a campaign through aMexico City and an intensive column in the Catholic Universefour and a half month course in Bulletin Cleveland diocesanSpanish language and culture newspaper to explain Houghsbefore beginning his assignment poverty to metropolitan resiltshyin the mountain town of Tacomshydentsbaro in the state of Michoacan

Housing was a major themePioneer Work Resulting donations from unishy

Lucille bubbles over with enshy verse Bulletin readers and 11thusiasm for PAVLA and its acshy matching gift from Coadjutorcomplishments She has just reshy middotBishop Clarence Issenmann of turned from a trip to the Washshy Cleveland enabled Father Kokshyington training course attended lowsky to renovate the buildingby Tony Gomes where incishydentally she met him for the first time She talked to new Work for Needy enlistees individually and in LIMA (NC) - Sixty me~bers groups seeking to picture for af the St Rose CYO hert gavethem the new life theyd be enshy volunteer aid to projects for thetering needy this Summer Most as~

Their enthusiasm was a boostshy slsted in a federally financed er shot for meshe said educati~nal program for cultu~

This week the New Bedford rally deprived students from nurse is inmiddot the Chicago area PAVLA ENLISTEES Revmiddot James w Clark Diocesan ~nderglirtenmiddot to sixij1 grad~visting PAVLA headquarters Directormiddot of Papal Volunteenlmiddot for Latin America with Othershelp1 a~ amiddot day camn f~there and friends she made ill retarded cbildren andmiddot Qne asAnthony Gltgtmes bound for teaching assignment in Mexico~ Brazil including the doctor with Ns~ed at a eerebral palsy c~mpwhom she worked when me and Lucille Lebeau who has already spent three years m first went to the Latin American Brazil as nurse-social worker will return in Novemberfor eountry He is now in practice additional year in Waukegan lll FAIRHAVEN

When I first went to Brazil urgy eommunitY needs and was to leave in each parish IIshe 8a14 I worked for a little LUMBERhealth needs team similar to their own toover a year at a hospital in Salshy cOMPANY carry on as far as possible thevador Bahia My job was mlinly Most of the help that an area

training Brazilian aides and received came from the people work in liturgy catecheticsmiddot and community and health needssetting up hospital routines themselves t h r 0 ugh their Complete line

After the year was over Brazil shy awakened sense of community We would return to the comshyian doctors and medical students said -ucille Actual government munities where we had given Building Materials took over the hospital routines or material aid was hampered by this course as often as possible were runing smoothly and I political economic and social said Lucille anu each time we 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVEN felt that I could go on to public complications of many kinds eould set them growing spiritushyhealth work in areas where there The team played it by ear ally WYman 3-2611 was no nursing care at all avail- in deciding how to approach a Turn to Page Nineteen able particular parish Lucille and

Lucille joined an apostolic the nun on the team who was shy ~

team organized by Bishop Eushy also a nurse tried to work genio de Araujo Sales Apostolic through community midwives Administrator of Salvador Toshy who were sadly in need of techshy JEREMIAH COHOLAN gether with a priest a nun two nical instruction The infant Brazilian lay apostles and what mortality rate in most areas was would bt the equivalent af an very high said Lucille due iD PLUMING amp HEATING I American social worker she large part to umbilical tetanus visited areas of the Diocese preshy caused by unsanitary delivery viously all but unreached by the techniques

Church Another technique was organ- I Aim of the team she explainshy ization of one-week parish Wy 3 0911 699 B II II A

ed wail to change dormant parshy courses centered around the idea man - e VI emiddotmiddot ven~ ishes into Christian communishy of Christian cominunity Lucille Nwamp~fQrd ties Seventeen parishes were said middotshe would start the course I visited in the course of a year by trying to explain the concept lImiddottI-IIIlII_middot tI-II--tl- __ __ __ _-IIllIIIiImiddotllIlI_-IIllII~ -~~ ~--middot- ~ and a half rmging from mem- of Christians as people of God - - shy

berships of 20000 souls to 75000 then would set up discussion ~ItIIIIHtHIIIIIDIIIIUIIIIHlIIIIIIIiIllIIlHKHHIIItIIIIUIIIIIIIUllllliillllllllllIJllilllllllllllllilllllllll~ The 75OOO-member parish said Ioupsmiddot en suchmiddot subjects asmiddot~ -_sect_Lucille had only one priestmiddot 10 What ismiddota person-Person to ~ middotY 5 hmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot meet its needs person relationships~ and Dif- sect E we ayemiddot ~

Plan 01 AetiOll ferences between ordinary eom- ~ == The apostolic teamsaid Lushy munities andthe parish sect LARGE LIVEmiddot ~

eille would first survey condishy This would lead to a discussion sect ~ ~=_=_ tions and decide what most of the function of Christians and sect needed doing then plan an edushy what iii Christian community sect shycational program Three or fo~rmiddot should be lIke Theil leaders ~ while they la5~ - ~ natural leaders in each parish were ready to ask the parishion ~ sect= were chosen and arrangements ers if any were ready to coin- ~ were made to get them to an mit themselves as parish team sect Macleans SemiddotQmiddot F d ~ Archdiocesan training center for members to a stronger expres- ~ 00 S == a one month leadership training sian of their Christian fellow- sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN Tel 997-9358 sect eourse wverins lIlatechetics lit ooip Go~ of the lipQBtolie tea iulHIHlIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIJlIIIUillIIJlmIllUiJiillJillnililunJililillliiihIUllllIIlIilill(IIUJIIIJ1I1llIJllliinillllllltuE

- ~ - -~_middotmiddotij_Uimiddotmiddot ~ _

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 An Exce1lent Lcte Summer Activity J VI SIT-middot

Louisiari ~copyfrish A~~ampmpli~~~sect r~bull ~T[T uiH~Dfro[j1) fr ~rtilfrreg~[(frDIri)middot middot~~rrfr~~~Q~t~~~~~~~JJ~~tt$

MADISONVILLE (NC)--+wo cently used for ~~gt~es~was wears ago in this quiet jural torn down Its blue I green~and ~ J~lf ~ town the single square block white stained grass riow frames

ltContaining Catholic ch u r c h the huge rear wIndow ~ ~t buildings symbolized the old era Anselms church - - [f~[LL lRlt OV~~middot ~now it stands for the new This Spring St Catherines

Two years ago two churches also came down Gone too are stood 200 feet apart on this he cOl-vents and bullone school More than 280000 people havle cilrElody been aboard iUO ~he past ys[ioblock--St~ Catherine wh ere The other school building was

whites worshipped and St retained for parish meetings and Francis Xavier where Negroes the now-integrated Confratershy

worshipped The rectory with fiity of Christian Doctrine its one priest to serve both par- classes ishes s too d between theC rhe 100 or so school children

centhtirches moremiddot as a symbol of - arenow transported to elemEmshythe psychological gap thac asan tilt-y and high schools in nearby

actual separation covirigton arid Mandeville middot A fence stood between the two CCD instructions have been

eonventS on the block~riefor givengtySfsters qfChristian the Negro nuns who taughtCharityandtheirstudEints from

Negro children in the ~e~ro ~~njpirClncy at FolsoM La and IIchool the other for the wfitte byseminariaris fromarby St IllUns who taught white children i-Jolieph seminarY Butmiddot tpeseiii the whHe school diities are being taken over by

Now there is one church onemiddot tlie parishs integrated CCD orshyrectory and one small classroom ganizatiorinow being trained

building -- and one parish St The pastor Father John J Anselm DenDulk is prouder of the

Although wee k day Masses smooth transition than he is of were said in only onemiddot of the the physical change shytwo old churches Masses and Participation in worship has ether services on Sundays and increased since the new church major feast days were said in w~ built he says and he has

middot both Midnight Masses on Christ- the best commentators in the mas were celebrated concurrent- whl)le world

Iv in the two churches AIthougb there are only 260 But the buildings weremiddot badly families in the parish the new

Qn need of repair So in 1964 the ~church is already more than half lttId frame church of St Francis paid for and the parish topped

middot Xavier whose parish records go its quota in the archdiocesan back to 1863 and which was re- education expansion drive

bull ~ I bull

Bishop Pmiddoterry Says New Orleans Has Healthy Racial Climate

DENVER (NC) - Auxiliary still has more influence thaa Bishop Harold R Perry SyD any other Negro in the civil of New Odeans first AmeJican rights movement Catholic Negro bishop in this He (Bishop Perry) has been

lt1lentury said here a hea~thy very favorably received in New racial climate will exist wher- Orleans eve~ the Negro has a chan~ to Some Cannot WaU voice his grievances He said there will undoubtedshy

Bisnop Perry dted New 9r- ly be some civil rights groups lleans as an example sayipg the who disapprove lt)f non-violence racial climate there is healthy and occasional demonstrationS

because of an interracial council by those who cannot wait appointed by Louisiana~ov Of course I am a Negro and

John J McKeithen to help splve we have been waiting a long rmcial problems time If you take the long view I There are no demonstra~ions complete equality cant come too and riots and very little picket- quickly he added~

lng he said The cotiJlc~1 i-e- He said he has been received lieves tensions and if the Negro very well even enthusiastically has a forum to talk over his con- in New Orleans Picketing outshyeerns he will not demonstrate side the church where he was

Schools Integrated ~onsecrated he s3id Was DOt typical of the general feeling in

The 50-year-old prelate said New Orleans be is proud New Orleans has in- As an evidence of his popushytegrated all Its schools Its a larity he said he spoke at ninemiddot large percentage not just token graduations in June and has ofshyhe added ficiated at Confirmation in 24

He said Catholics are doing parishes their part to advance equality of opportunity in his citymiddot 1 think [EceQJl1illeIJilD~~ CCrrnDDOdegthere has been Ii united effort tl)Ir If

by all faiths and we would like ~~ ~DcopyQJIJilampIbgtD~~~DIJil to keep it that way he de- CRANSTON (NC) I hdared - n a s ow The New Orleans bishop also of the ecumenical spirit lea4ers ~ommented on ~ wide range of of major religious faiths in this

area took part in a combined eivil rights issues saying

The new militancy shown by bull religious and groundbreaking Visit the BClI~~ie$Mp anldllode alIeplica of the Old iFal~middot River Bill1e~ middottmiddotsom~ civi~ rights groups is a service on the site of the proshy

posed Church of the Annunciashypassing phase tion Greek Orth()dox lours start every 30 minutes

The majority of Negroes are Archbishop lakovo primate lJympathetic to the non-violent of the Greek Orthodox Church Opeill aU year round - 9 AM to Sunsetphilosophy of the Rev Dr Mar- of North and South America of tin Luther King and Dr King ficiated at the open air hierar- For Group Arrangements Call 678-1100 chal Divine Liturgy service at-

Serra Meeting tended by more than 500 pershy l)OOOO()ooOOC)ooOOClOOC)ooOOC)OO~IOOl sons

THIS MESSAGE Sp()NSORED IV lHE FOllOWING INDIVIDUALSATLANTIC CITY (NC) - A Participants in the groundshyeonference for members of Ser- breaking ceremony included AND BUSINESS CONCERNS IN GREATER FALL RIVERlIa Clubs in the New York-New Catholic Bishop Russell J MoshyJersey - eastern Pennsyivania Vinney of Igtrovidence Archshy ANN DALE PRODUCTS INC MACKIENZIE amp WINSLOW INC area will be held here Sept 23 deacon William L Kite represhy II~DY ELECTRIC SUPPLY COMASON FURNITURE SHOWROOMS tKi 25 Msgr William Noe Field senting the Rt Rev John Seville CASCADE DRUG CO GERALD E McNALLY CONTRACTOItiff Seton Hall University South Higgins Episcopal Bishop of GLOBE MANUFACTURING CO SOBILC)FF BROTHERS Orange NJ will give the key- Rhode Island Dr Wayne ~is

~~TGHINSON OIL COa~te address Sept 24 apoundter a executive director ofmiddot the Rhode STERUllIG BEVERAGES INC

~A Mc~HIRR ~9MPANY TEXTIU WORKERS UNION Of AMERICAeOncelebrated Mass at which the 1s~and Council of Churches ~nd ~rE~~ATIQNALV4DIES GARMENT 1 bull AlL~tO - principal concelebrant will be Rabbi Jerome Smiddot Gurland Gf

WORKERS UNION (EUOW CAI COMPANY Bishop George W Ahr of Tren~ ~telligtl~ Sinai 1epresentingthe ton Bhode Island Board of Rabbiamp bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull0 MssSelbullbull

~ ~ ~ - bull bull bull bull I ~ j

- ~

_-- -

0

WomenB~ Job Corps Members middotAid Youngsters Improve Reading

OMAHA (NC)-Omaha Wom- chesne Mother Moody found a ens Job Corps members joined benefactor to supply ihe a11shywith five graduates of Duchesne importlnt incentive program College and Academy of the Thanks to a generous racetrack

Sacred Heart here to upgrade bettor Who won the daily double the reading level of local public there was enough money for school youngsters candy bar prizes and two picnics

The progra~ ca]]edProject An indication or- the success of Upstart was first conceIved by the program was found in the Mother Helen Condon dean of reaction of the students A reshythe Nebraska co]]eg~ Mother cent visitor asked one of the Rosemary Moody aSsIstant pro- young boys Why are you here fessor o~ ~sYChology volunteer~ Did someone make you come to adminIster and execute themiddot program

The original plans were to take a group of seventh graders from Horace Mann Junior High School and tutor them in develshyopmental reading and study skills It soon became apparent that some rather basic instrucshytion was required some of the ehildren were still reading at the second grade level

Duchesnes elementary school was offered for use by Mother Helen Sheahan superior An Omaha public school official suggested that the Omaha Wom- ens Job Corps be contacted to see if they could furnish high school graduates as tutors Robshyert Bathke Job Corps education director soon put five young ladies at Mother Moodys disshyposal

Five recent Duchesne gradushyates volunteered to train the tutors for two weeks before the program actually began The Duchesne alumnae eventualiy elected to stay on for the entire program

Mother Moodymiddot was so imshypressed with the potential of the Job Corps enro]]ees that she exshytended their sessions through the rest of the summer and made college preparatory work avail shyable to them

Student Reaction Perha~s one of the more unshy

usual aspects of the entire Upshystart program was its lack of financing The only real subsidy (about $500) was from the OMaha Public School system the bulk of which went to the Omah~ Transit Company for bus service

The equipment used in the classrooms was borrowed from the public schools the Omaha Womens Job Corps and Du-

Plan to Supplement History Books

SAN FRANCISCO (NC) shyA supplementary text showing the contributions of minority groups in United States history will be added to history and social science books already in use in archdiocesan schools here

The supplement containing some 150 pages will deal chroshynologica]]y with the contribu- tions of Jews Negroes Orientais and various nationalities from southern Europe

It is being prepared by a speshycial studly committee which illl evaluating current textbooks found need for more thorough material on the part minority

groups have played in the OOUDshytry1s history

Leave Providence For Mission Work

PROVIDENCE (NC) - Four Capuchin priest and two layshymen left New York by plane for mission work in the Santa Rosa de Copan diocese Honduras

Father Ad ria n Holzmeister OFM Cap provincial of tile Capuchins St Mary province with headquarters here said the six will work among some 50000 persons in Mlree parishes in the state of Ocotepeque He said

other mjssionersmiddotas they become ayailabie wiD be sent to aid Bishop Jose Canama CbampvezCli tile diocese

He looked up and said Im here because I want to learn to read and I like it Two girls who missed the morning bus to Duchesne gave another exain-ple of determination to learn Jhey undertook a two-hour five mile walk rather than miss a day of class

L R oy etreats Contlnu~d from Page Six

laymens convention-an effort to provide some figure of speech some image to suggest to those in the Church and to those out-

side what is the inner nature of the Church

Alluding to Scriptures refershyences to the Church in terms of sheep and shepherds the former Hub Auxiliary Bishop asked How many people in Boston have ever seen a sheep Sheep and shepherds say little to youngstersmiddot in housing projects or even in the suburbs

The Bishop who is epiScopal advisor for the NCLRC officiashyted at the lighting of an eightshyfoot candle which symbolized the

conference theme-uThe Light of Chr~st The candle burned throughout the convention

Speakers stressed the retreat program is geared to demOJishystrate to the world that the way of Christ can become more meaningiful to men of our time

Bishop Ernest J Primeau of Manchester reminded delegates of recent profound changes withshyin the Church

If the lay retreat movement is to remain vital and relevant

he said it cannot be static It must be in harmony with the times at all times

Honest Call1Se

Our retreat houses could 00-middot eome so to speak the equipment and training centers for the apostolates of the laity he adshydect

Bishop Primeau urged laymei to learn from modern science particularly in the field of hushyman psychology He said there is an opportunity as well to learn from other organizations both secular and religious He added The youth of today are un-

selfish and in large numbers they are seeking for an honest cause to which they can dedicate themshyselves as witness their devotion to the Peace Corps and the civil rights movement

Modernize AncEtenlt Puerto Rico CIl1llLmlrch

SAN JUAN (NC) =- A lPJt8shyyear-old church one of the most popularmiddot in this capital city~ ~

going modern Archbishop Luis Aponte of

San Juan has inaugurated middotal campaign for funds for restorashytion of St Anns a public orashytory now badly illl need of Jeshypairs

1ft addition to restoration the ehurch also Will be equipped with air conditioning The eburch is the archdiocesan ceDltgt ~r for the Confraternity Gi Christian Doctrine and perpetual adoration of the Blessed Sacrashyment Built ill 184B the cburch weplaced an edifice which dated )Iaek iG tile lWi century

PROFESSION ANJ)) RECEPTION Four postulants beshycame canonical novices and two prof~ssed their vows as Sisters of St Joseph at ceremonies at the Blessed Sacrashyment Church Fall River Left column top to bottom Sr Gerard Marie (first vows) Sr Anne Therese Sr Rita Josshyeph Bishop Connolly who received the sisters Right colshyumn Sr Anne Denise Sr St Paul and Sr Alfred Marie (renewed temporary vow-s)

Specialmiddot Education Priests Visi~ PaJ~ents Homes to ExplOJon

SignificOJlI1lce off Baptismal Ritual

Thurs Aug 25 1966

Governor Balks

ST JEAN (NC)-Sunday bapshytisms are prece~ed by Saturday nights special educational proshygrams in a number of Catholic homes here in Quebec

The program to prepare the whole family for baptism through a home visit was deshyvised three years ago by a group of pries~s working togeth~r as a pastoral team

central idea of the program ~s that it is good for the priest to be with his people at imporshytant times in their lives~ Atmiddot these times people are dispOSed to receive the message of Christ

as it applies to their circumshystances the developers of the plan reported

The visiting priest explains the lOOremonies of the next day and the symbolic meaning of various parts of the baptismal ritual

Pilgrims Wctmlk TORONTO (NC) -The 10th

annual walking pilgrimage to the Canadian Martyrs shrine at Midland Ont will begin here Wednesday Organized by the Guild of St John de la Lande the pilgrimage will cover the 100 miles to the shrine in five days a~riving there Sunday Sept 4

LEMIEUX PLUMBING amp HEATING INC

fof Oomestic l~ andmiddot Industrial ~ Sales and Service

Oil Burners WY 5-1631

2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE NEW BEDFORD

Relatives neighbors or the prospective gorlparents may be presentbut themiddot home visit usually involves just the parents and their children

The ide is to make the preshybaptism vsit an oppodunity for dialogue between the priest and the parents rather than a conshyference

Ten parishes in the St Jean diocese have adopted the praeshytice along with l few Montreal parishes Father Marcil Brillon secretary of the St Jean litur- gical commission said he exshypects the practice to spread

FALSE TEETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass Many wearers of false teeth suJIer

embarrassment Qecause their platesdrop Blip or wobble at Just the wrong time Dont live In fear of thts happening to you Just sprinkle a little FASTEErH the non-acid powder on your plates Holds false teeth more firmly so they feel more comfortable Checks denture breath Dentures that fit are essential to health See your dentist regularlyGet FASTEETH at all drug counters

At Proposals MONTPELIER (NC) - Vershy

monts Gov Philip Hoff said he bas extreme reservations conshycerning abortion and sterilizashytion proposals contained in a reshyport of an adivsory committee on the mental retardation situshyation in the middotstate

The report called for legal sanctioning of induced abortion in cases where there appears to be a high risk of mental retarshydation of an unborn child

Thereport also contained a suggestion concerning steriliza shytion of the mentally retarded

Apart from the recommenda~ tions on legalized abortion and sterilization of the mentally reshytarded I must S4ly it was II good report Gov Hoff said He said lie will study the report with utmost care before taking any action 0

Expresses Thanks To Holy Father

VATICAN CITY (NC) -The vice prime minister of Vietnam has paid a visit to Pope Paul VI to thank him for his peace efshyforts and generous help to reshylieve the suffering of the Vietshynamese people General Nguyen Huu Co vice prime minister and secretary of state for national defense of Vietnam visited privately withshythe Pope for 30 minutes Accord- ing to a Vatican Press Office bulletin

The vice prime minister in the name of South Vietnam exshypressed profound gratitude for the valid support always given by the head of the Catholic Church and of the Holy See in the cause of peace and for the generous assistance sent by the Holy Father to relieve the sufshyfering of those persons torshymented by war The distinguishshyed visitor then continued tomiddot deshyclare that the intentions of South Vietnam are directed only toward an affirmation of the liberty of its own nation and Wgt arriving at a just peace in honor and concord

Complete

BANKING SERVICE

for Bristol County

Bristol County Trust Company

TAUNTON MASS

THE ~ANK ON TAUNTON GREEN

Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Bristol Community College Offers Evening Classes

64 Durfee St Fall River Credit classes begin September 19 1966

Register Now Mondays thrrough Thursdays 200-500 PM Courses for college credit or self improvement are offered ill

The arts languages and literature Behavioral and social sciences accounting business

administration and secretarial scieRCe Mathematics science engineering and electro-mechanical technology

Advisors Availabie During ~egistration Hours

16 THE AI~ ~-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

C~nsiders Instability Causes In Latin American lamds

From Social R-evolution in the New Latin Ameriea Edited by John J Considine MM

There are many causes of instability in Latin America Some have said in the past that it is an inheritance frQm

Spain They feel that the years of Spanishauthoritarianism rendered the colonies incapable of integrating themselves into a more balanced social system Because they had there exists the problem of low

denSity of population with a lackpreviously lacked indepenshyof internal communication In-dent creole authority the many cases there is even a lanshy

colonies were unprepared to acshy guage barrier eept a more democratic authorshy The problem of an underdeshyity In his book veloped economy has also beenBetween Freeshy a factor in forming Latin Anlershy clom and Fear ican social structureGerman Arcinshy On the social level the eleshyiegas draws a ments I have mentioned favorcomparison beshy an internal lack of class strucshytween the Enshy ture that involves a juxtaposishyglish and Spanshy tion rather than a social organi shyish governments zation and integration Democshyin the Americas racy on the other hand presupshyIn ihe north the poses a large scale integrationcolonists came in of the people in the politicalshysearch of freeshy economic-social life of thedom IIi the end nationthe founding of the Nodh The masses of -illiterates inAmerican colonies was only the Latin America who do not parshyobvious culmination of a process ticipate in these areas have noalready begun It was the reafshy iilterest in government thoughfirmation of customs already inshy their interest and loyalty maygrained in the social milieu It be enlisted by the demagoguewas an evolution not a real revshyolution for these settlers were Formation or Dictatorships accustomed to autonomy The A dictatorship takes form

authority pf their governors was when one or more pressure more democratic since they groups unchallenged seizes the worked closely with the popular power of governmentassemblies From the beginshy In order to better understand ning the keenest concern of the the types of dictatorship found North American colonist was for in Latin America let us elCamshyfreedom of worship and his hosshy ine the different forms of revoshytility to the Church of England lution and the various ways in was evident which the pressure groups

On the contrary Latin Amershy bring their influence to bearIca was part of an empire The Kalmal1 Silvert distinguishesSpaniards came to dominate and these types in his book Reaction evangelize The viceroy represhy and Revolution in Latin Amershysented the king who was an abshy ica which is written in -Englishsolute monarch The role of Silvert shows the relationshipshyassembly in Latin America was between dictatorships and the secondary arid represented exshy extreme indivdualism found in tremely liIIlited power these countries

Independence in the Latin The first type of revolution American nations entailed a real named is what Silvert calls the revolution since from the beginshy simple brracks revolt Most of ning they were forced tb look for the outbreaks especially in the new political and social forms past century have been of this

Religiousliberty did not elCshy kind The barracks revolt occurs ist in the Latin American coloshy typically in a big class society nies since all were obliged to It is carried out by the amlY

membership in the Cathoiic sompoundtimes in its own name and Church sometimes in behalf of a chosen

Unassimilated Groups leader This type of revolution - rarely calses widesprelld publicThis comparison will help in

disturbance since it representsunderstanding the Latin Amershymerely a switch in governmentican problem though it will not from one general to anotherfully explain -it We must acshy

knowledge that the political The second type the peasant phenomeinon has a direct COIshy revolt is generally of little sigshyrelatio~1 with demographic probshy nificance and limited in effect lems such as the existence of to a locality though the Mexican large unassitnilated groups as revolution at the beginning of well as masses of mestizos un this century would perhaps fall derdeveloped and deprived who in this category can scarcely be said to partici shy Third the regional revolt pate in twentieth century chili shy commcn in the early days of zation Although these groups Latin American independence form a part of the nation they Here _the caudillo strove to put are not integrated either socially down provincial revolts and to eulturally or politically centralize power in an authorishy

Despite the over-all demoshy tarian I e g i () n a I government g~aphic explosion in some areas Typical of the caudillos who led

regional revolts was Rosas of Argentina

Plans Participation The fourth a more modern type of revolution Silvert callsIn Liturgical Week the complicated barracks revolt

HOUSTON (NC) - The 1966 This is an insurrection that inshyLiturgical Week here fOI the -volves civilian as well as mili shyfirst time in its 25-year history tary groups with widespread will have a full scale program military action for those interested in the The issues are ideological and Eastern Church relate to political parties as well

As part of the Liturgical Week as _ other interest groups The program the Divine Liturgy Cuban revolution in its beginshy(Mass) of St John Chrysostom nings might be considered -an will be celebrated entirely in example Although this is the English and Communion will be most prevalent type ainong modshydjstributed under both species ernday revolutions excetions Chief celebrant of the Liturgy are the revolts which overthrew will be Archbishop Paul Achkar Peron in Argentina Perez-JimeshyGreek Catholic ~-chbishop of nez in Venezuela and -Rojas Lattaquia in Syua Pinilla in Colombia

SISTER AMBROSE

Says SOo Africa Needs Americans

WASHINGTON (NC)-Yanshykee come over a statement which would do much to boost the morale of Americans in sevshyeral parts of the world could well summarize what an Irish missionary nun to South Africa

-has been saying during a visit here _

The wonderful hospitality of theAmerican people has imshypressed Sister Ambrose Harty Gf the Sisters of the Holy Family She lamens the fact that opporshytunities to receive Americans in a like manner have been few and far between during her 20 years in South Africa

Youve got such a lot to give she said here in an ~ntershyview during which she expressed a strong desire to see greatly inshycreased people-to-people relashytio~s between the country where she serves and the United States

Sister Ambrose was particushylarly interested in the Peace Corps ann reported that its purshyposes and work are hardly known by the people of Soutli Africa I haVent heard it disshycussed at all she said (The Peace Corps has not been invited into the country) (

With words of praise for the missionary work being done iii the South African Republic by Oblate arid Paulist missionaries from the United States she also expressed regret at the general paucity of missioners from this country There particularly is an almost total lack of nuns she said Only 71 Catholic missionshyaries from the United States inshycluding 16 nuns are serving ilm South Africa

Married Priests AMSTERDAM (NC)-A

Dutch public opinion poli h8lll shown that 11 per cent of the Netherlands p e 0 pIe woulci rather have III married Catholi4l clergy than a celibate clergy The poll including members ai all and no denominations

-showed that 68 per cent of the Catholics queried preferred III married clergy

~~

(DEBROSS OIL ( ~ co ( ~ Heating Oils

~ and BMIIJUrs ~

~ 365 NORYIoli IFROIlir SUEampll ( rJ NEW IBIEDIFOR

~ WYmafi 2middot5534 (

I~~~

Parishes Share DETROIT (NC) - Twentyshy

nine urban parishes here have decided to help one another meet the rising cost of education

At the elementary level parshyepts will pay $50 per family $75 per family for non-Catholic parishioners and $75 per student

Danish Catholic COPENHAGEN (NC) -Thereshy

are 11321 Catholics in the Danish capitalaccording to a report issued by the Copenhagen statistical office They consti shytute the second largest religious entity there next to the Luthershyans members of the State Church The total number of Catholics in Denmark is approxshyimately 26000 Total population is 35 lllillion

Education Costs for Catholics outside the parish

At the high school level the tuition cost is $H)O per student in or out of the parish With the exception of textbooks this amount eliminates aU extra fee charged up to now

Father Norman P Thomas director of the Urban Parisll Apostolate said the greatest efshyfect of the joint effort will be experienced by the pastor who sends parish youngsters to a higll school operated by any of the 2 participating parishes

In this instance the students parishes will be expected to pay the difference between the tui shytion charged and the actual cost per student The latter fee laM been set by the parochial school office at over $200 per year

ETHIOPIA- THE NEW AFRICA

- HOLY FATlftRB MIBBIIDN AID TO THI DRIENTAL OHURCH

- BROTHER What happens In Ethiopia when an American MICHAEL Christian Brother (he could be your son brother

REYNOLDS nephew) Is told to upgrade Catholic schools He FROM borrows a Jeep (or a mule) visits the schools

PROVIDENCE RI one by one writes home for pencils and better REPORTS textbooks and then beginsbullbull This is the new

fROM Africa Brother Michael Reynolds reports enshyADDIS thusiasticallyfrom Addis Ababa It can be a BABJpeacefuf progressive Christian Africa tom~rmiddot

row Just give us schools give us time and with Gods help the job will De donel bull bullThe schools are for villages like Aressa Aiga Biers Wartll8~

-which have no school The youngsters know that knowledge i~ their only chance theyll go without food to learnbullbullbull What does It cost to build a schoolf Only $2950 says Brother Michael for the villagers snd the children give their laborfreemiddotofmiddotcharge We can train a catemiddot chlst for only $40 bullbullbull In thanksgiving to God for what you know will you do what you can ($100 $75 $50 $25 $15 $10 $5 $2) to give these youngsters a chance The school will be named for your favorite saint and the children will pray for your loved ones daily If you build It all byyourself ($2950) School will open late this year-but better late than never-If you Vlrit~ to us right now

WHAT Our priests there who receive no othor income IELSE for food and clothing will offer promptly the

FOR Masses you request Well forward your Mass ETHOPIAr Inten~ons through the Holy Fathers officebull

40 young lads studying for the priesthood In Decamere lose their football when It goes Into a nelghbers garden A large field can be bought ~velled and mede safe for sports fer $975

MAKINQ ~~IOOOO will ovfde bull OOfDj)lete parjstlplantA (Ohuroh rectory convent andscbool) In southshy

WiW ImIAdla In memorybullbullbullbull $600 will ttiln a native lrfHt1SOO bull native Sfster Our legal tltI Cl~1HOUO NWt lAir WIUAH AHOCIAnONo

_-------------~shytt coINIILOIIlt IUMIIIND ~ bullbull la IJIIr bull _1OIt~=-=_==-=

PI _UM~gt

Mum ClO1IIponwith your mt__=-~~_ _ ~i offrtnt ~~ erryen 8TAlI-lPCODI_

HI IATHaLl1 RIIiAR 811 WILAbullbull AIaDIATaN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS IRANCUS CARDINAL SPELLMAN President MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretal)f Write OATHOLIO NfIAR IiAST WELFARE Assoo 1)80 MadlsolJ Avenuomiddot New York NY 10017 -felGpilonel 212YUkon 6middot6840

Dormitory Proves Stonehill Permanently Coeducational

Way back in 1951 when the first girl enrolled in Stoneshyhill College no one could have imagined that a girls dormishytory would ever be built onmiddot the campus But the sound of steam shovels and hammers filling the air over the lovely grounds in Easton is proof

and two girls from the seniorthat the long planned for daslr-assisting the housemothergirls dorm will soon be a Mrs Grace Callahan

reality When Stonehill was The experiment worked so founded in 1948 as a mens colshy well in fact that this coming lege the fledgling school had Fall both the freshman and just gotten off to a good start sophomore girls will be housed when the Korean War came this way leaving only the junior along and emptied the classshy and senior girls still renting Yooms as the young men went quarters in private homes chosen into the services by the college as all the nonshy

That was the year that many commuting girls have done in small colleges had to close their the past gates forever But at Stonehill That typical campus situation the Holy Cross order was detershy -the sorority house-is not in mined to hold onto this new the picture at Stonehill-or frashyschool that they had planned for ternity houses either for that so long matter No sororities or fraternishy

What could they do to keep ties are allowed on the campus the college operating until the There is a cl11b however that war was over and the boys came is the girls own - the Crosier back Of course Open their Club Mrs Yosgandes is the gates to girl students clubs faculty advisor and she deshy

Faculty Pleased scribes it as the organization What started out as a temposhy for women studentE who want

rary expediency somehow over to contribute in their own parshythe years has acquired a happy middotticular way as women to their permanancy No one could be college more pleased about this turn of Through their annualmusical events than the Stonehill faculty Crosier Curtain Calls theyitself raise money to acquire manymiddot

Helping out in Jhe ground things that add beauty and breaking ceremony for the new charm to campus life This yeardorm Mrs Virginia Yosgandes they purchased two very lovelythe Dean of Women at the colshy silver tea and coffee services lege saiei I guess everyone will Any official group at the collegereally believe that the girls are is allowed to borrow the sets and here til stay they have already been used in

Mrs Yosgandes says that since many functions she first came to the Stonehill New Signfaculty in 1958 rumors have

Mrs Yosgandes says Thebeen popping up that Stonehill girls will be very pleased whenwill soon return to its original they come back th~~ Fallto seestatus as an all male school The the beautiful new sign theynew dorm she says will be visshybought for the college installedible proof of the permanancy of on Route No 138 women on the beautiful campus

Its very easy to picture theThe $1150000 building deshyvery charming Dean presidingsigned to accommodate 200 girls

graciously at a faculty tea Aand proctors will be three stories parishioner of Immaculate Conshyof red brick Architects W Chesshyception chulCh in Easton she ister arown and Associates and in ~rivate life an enthusiasticwntractors C A Batson and homemaker anc the mother of aCompany are planning to comshy13 year old daughter Christineplete work on the dorm in time Her husband John is assistantfor the opening of classes in principal at Franklin JuniorSeptember 1967 It will be the High first unit of a five dormitory

She speaks with great convicshycomplex planned fo the women on tion about college girls holdingcampus

onto feminine ideals while surshyKitchen ~pace rounded-and at Stonjhill outshyMrs Yosgandes is happy about numbered 3 to 1- by menthe fact that the new dorm will While were encoulaging themhave a kitchenette on each floor to be acdve in thpound communitywhere the girls can cook small and the church and in politicsmeals and entertain guests Shes and encouragint them to deshyhoping that the dorms built after

more velop their abilities to the full shythis me will providtgt even est-we never fail to take intokitchen space for the girls to account the fact that they arepractice the culinary arts women and in this competitiveM a n~ tImes homemaking world theyll have to -fight toskills come to a complete halt maintain their feminine idenshywhen a girl goes to college she tity says Apparently all classroom

work and rio cooking make Jane Coed Actiiti~s

Coed a dull girl in the room When she fi rst came to the where shell be spending a great college she sltys the girls were deal of time after graduationshy mainly interested in strictlythe dtchen feminine extra curricular activishy

Mrs Yosgandes says A great ties-fastion shows teas gids many cCJlleges have been workshy sports Bd this has changed radshying witt this problem and wonshy ically in the last few years and dering what to do about it Beshy now the girls are much more inshycause theyve had no living terested in the coed acti vitiesshyquarters for girls on campus the newspapers the debating Stonehiiil has had to do out of team the drama club Stonehill necessit) what many other colshy is noted a~ one of a small handshyleges have chosen to do recently ful gtf Catholic colleges where The Dean describp~ an experishy girls are middotactive in every part of ment that the collFge tJied last college life Every coure at yeal tha has worked out exshy StonehHj is opel to girls tremely well We still havent had a woman

Experiment Successful president of our student governshyThe college leased a grollp of ing body the Senate Mrs

rooms il an apartmelt building Yosgandes says Now girls in Brockton last Fall where all what are yOIi waiting for the freshman girls who were not commuters-55 of them-lived in housekeeping apartments In Red Groups There were four girls in each BERLIN (NC)-Over 85 per apartment all sharing the reshy (ent of East German children sponsibilities of housekeeping between the ltlges of 6 and 14 are

The girls hat two sets of mCl11)ers of communist youth 1)IoctOS - two aIumni wumen ~nIUps

lrt-OE ANCH0) 17 Thurs Aug 25 1966

PriestCuod Goal Of Top Skater

GREAT FALLS (NC)-A good many folks in this Montana toWlll will attest that teenager J Mishlll Petkevich is a pretty good skate -on or oH the ice

The affable blond youngster 17 topped a field of 136 pershyformers in the three-day Lake Placid N Y international free style competition sanctioned by the U S and Canadian Figure Skating Assoclations The Great Falls lad was the judges unamiddot1ishymous choice for the mens gold medal in the finals

But Petkevich doesnt lose his cool off the ice His classmates and teachers at Great Falls Censhytral 3igh School claim hes liIl

winner in every event He spends more than 40 hours 11 week in skating training but carries the full load of class studies and consistently turns Up on the schools honor roll Hes a member of the National Honor Society

The school supported me ami the way Everyone has beeEl wonderfUl to me the modest youngster saia Hes been -skatshying since he was 2 He credit his achievements to his Catholic Faith the sacrifices of his parshyents and of Arthur Bourke senshyiormiddot professional of the Great Falls Figure Skating Club He said All I did was skatemiddotGROUND-BREAKING The Very Rev John T Corr

I hope some day to become~esc president of Stonehill College turns a shovelful of priest Petkevich said wbeilearth to mark start of construction 0pound a 200-student dormshy a~ked his ambition I hope 14gt itory for women on the Stonehill campus Watching the proshy attend Notre Dame for at leasa celtlures are left to right Mrs Virginia Yosgandes dean af two years and then I h9pe to gf)

to the Catholic University fl4women John C Doody 66 Alumni fund chairman Robert AmericaBatson contractor Harold Bonvie ass~iate of the archishytect

Msgr Canty Continued from Page OneRussian Schools ing studies at S1 Marys High

Taunton Boston- College and S1 Bernards Seminary RochesshyChristian Brother Lauds Students terN Y

nespect for Intellectuols He served as assistant at Our Lady 01 the Isle NantucketCHICAGO (NC)-Students in to foreign languages than Amershy Holy Family Taunton St

schools behind the Iron Curtain icans Most students take a Marys Barrowsville and Stgo at their studies with a passhy seven-year sequence of English Johns Attleboro He was apshysion said Brother Kevin Mark German or French English he pointed to the Chaplains CorPJFSC who toured Russia and added is the most popular lanshy of the United States Navy infour satellite countries with 19 guage and more emphasis is January 1942 and retiredwitbother U S rducatois placeltl on reading and speaking the rank of captain in Decemshy

Brothel Mark who is princishy than on writing it ber 196gt Pope John XXIII pal 9f St Mels high school here Brother Mark said that there elevated him to the rank of attributed much of their motivashy is almost nothing that he would Domestil Prelate with the title tion to the students attitude that lift from the Soviet school sysshy of Right Reverend Monsignor iI What I do does contribute to tem and apply in the U S May 1962 the welfare of the state He admitted however that Bishop Connolly named Monshy

Brother said he felt that stushy they do get results They have a signor Canty pastor of St Paulsdents in this country lack motishy tremendous capacity for conshy Taunt-ln in December 1963 vation because were spoiled centration when they set their Industrial improvements have sights for example their space made it that a young man can program Its not all a matter go into a trade and make very of being chained to a lab table good money BLUE RIBBON

In the Soviet Union he said there seems to be a great reshyspect for intellectuals and the LAlnNDRY student is thought of as a proshy

01 STOPfessional schJlar 273 CE~RAl AVE~UIIG CfflTERTeaching is considered a proshy

fession and remunelated accordshy e Television C FmiddotI ure illgly WY 2-6216o r-cerv

St Mels principal observed on IlA Allen St Newhdfordhis tour that there was little NEW BEDFORD questioning on the part of the students

The chSSloom situation he said is very much teacher ori shyented that is study in depth is 21 DAY PILGRIMAGES TO EUROPE done on the teachers inspiration

rou~ 1-Legion of Mary Pilgrimage leaving Sept 12th with Truth in such areas as history Father Edward A Oi-viera will visit Killarney Dublin Paris

cllld literature is accepted as a Lourdes Rome Madrid Lisbon and Fatima - Tour 2shyforegone conclusion and stushyHoly Cross Fathers Pilgrimage leaving Oct 10th with Frdents just memorize what has

already been discovered ----- lobert E McDonnell will wsit lisbon Fatima 1odrid Rome Lourdes Paris and londonIike F)rc~gn Linutges -cota cost is $82900 - Time PaymentsmiddotIn the area of science howshy arranged ever the situation is difterent

()Ii TOUR tOLDERS CONTACT STEolfEN A MARIIEYhe pont~d out because in scishyence there is an attitude of I n~ust discover Catholic Travel

-Office

The R1~middotmiddotmiddotO p oth-r Mark ~ltk St New Befl- -ass 02748

said ~ ve 11111j Ill)le auention

BURNERS

BUrntlr Service

Famous Reading HARDCQAl

NEW ENGLAND COKE

t8 THE ~NCHOR-Dioceseof fo Rivef-Thurs Aug 25 1966 J~sut I)riest Says Some Public I b M t EmploYE~~S Have Right to Strike

-

Urges uO or ovemen S NEW (NC) -Public however YORK Government hasmiddot h C employees in certain fields have been expanding its cQncern andIn Heml$p ere ooperate the right to strike against the has beenmoving into ar~as of government a priest declared transportation education recre-

By MsgrGooJrge C Higgins (Director Socian Actiolll Dept NCWC)

The relationship between the American labor moveshyment and the Latin American Confed~ration of Christian Trade Unions (CLASC) leaves much to be desired as we

middot thO d th 1- have aready noted severa1 t Imes m IS co umn urmg e

past four or five years The two movements are deeply different things to different peoshy

auspicious of one another and just when they seem to be on the verge of settling or at least -patching up their differshyences they go at it again and recklesslystart hurling insults at one another

To jUdge from What they sayIi b 0 u t on e another publicshy1yen as well as privately on e would t h ink that they were natural-born enshyemies whe~eas in fact they have much in common-much inore than they seem to realizeshyand for obvious reasons ought violent MisS Duncan was an officer of The fourth public member Harshyto be c60p~rating With onean- Moreo~er at least one promi~theSodality a cheerleader for vardlaw school professorVern ether as closely as pOSSible nent spokesman for the AFL- four years a member of the Ten- Countryman half ci-itiCized the This writer has learn~ci the hard WR and muc~ to hiS so~-row that any outSider who 18

fOolish enough totryto mediatek f

~tween them JS as mg or troouble

C f t Gommun same If for example one suggests

as I have done on more than one Occasion that soine of the anti U S propaganda emanating from CLASCsources revealS atremely harmful to the cause of n a i v e misunderstanding of Amerlcan trade unionism and American capitalism andor ari $ver-simplification of Catholic Social teaching he runs the risk 9f being written off as a blind -not tOsay reactionary apologist for so-called Yanqui ~mperial-

iBm If on the other hand oneslig

gests that some of the anti- CLASC propaganda enianating

fro m AFL-CI0 sources is equally naive and unsoPllisti shyeatedhe runs the same Sort of risk in reverse That is to say he is likely to be told--v~ry politely of course -that if he were to take off his Catholic blinkers and look at the record objectively he would quickly come to realize that CLASC is in reality playing t~ecipal rival in Latin America) riages in their mission parishes communist game in Latin Amer- there is a gEirierous mixture of Msgr Milia stated Since the iea superficial appearances to cultural chauvinism and envy Ogdensburg mission was opened the contrary notwithstanding that accompanies the most legit- a modern new church bas been

Both CaD Learn imate misgivings built under its direction in the Be that as it may I still think Even the Latinos middotthemselve~ seaport ofMatararii two mission

~t CLASC has a lot to learn he points out will admit on ac- churches have oeen completed about _ and from American casion that their consumirig fear and a lalge parish church and trade unionism And if that of Yanqui imperialism is often center are currently under conshymakes me a reactionary Yankee irrational But there it is he re- struction in Mollendo ehauvinist so be it minds us and the basic prob-

By the same token however aiso think that the American

labor movement has much to learn about -- and from - the Christian trade union movement in Latin America The first thing it has to learn is that the Am~r-leap philosophy of pure-andshysimple bread-~d-butter union ism which all things considshyered has worked satisfactorily in this country is not necessarily well adapted to the present-day Deeds of Latin America

Meaning of Revolution Another way of saying the

same thing is that American iabor representativesworking on Latin America problemswm have to reconcile themselves to the fact that a social revolu-Uon is called for in Latin American labor federation that doesnt subscribe to a revolushytionary ideology is probably doomed to failure

The word revolution meaos J-

pIe of course To the leaders of CLASC it means a sweeping program of socioeconomic and political reform which goes far beyond the limited goals of bread-and-butter unionism

The leaders of CLASC are convinced that such a revolushytioo is demanded bythe Chrisshytian social ethic to which they subscribe and from which they derive their ideology

Perceptive Critique Some U S Labor repshy

resentatives are skeptical to say the least~bout the allegedly Christian content of CLASCs militant ideology They admit theneed for a peaceful revolushytion in Latin Americn butthey are convinced thatCLASC wants this revolution to be Feehan High School Attleboro alties in a letter tc therimes

lem is how to insure con~ PAVlA V I tlnuing cooperation between 0 untee rs Yanqui and Latino in spite of Complete TlIainirigit

Such cooperation Dr Hawkins WASHINGTON (NC)-Fortyshyconcludes will be impossible unshyless the leaders of the American labor movement positively indi~

cete their acceptance of social revolution in Latin America This will require he says

more than the generous transshyfusions of economic aid the stimulation under United States

labors auspices of leadership training programs for workers

and other cooperative ventures Need Broader View

What is required he insists ltCia a broader view-an ability on the part of the American la bor statemen to adopt policies that will not always accord with OUI own value~ and more speshy

cificall~ the tempering of (their) hosannas to free entershyprUie ___

inter-American labor unity I fully agree in this respect with Dr Carroll Hawkins Associate

Professor of Political Science at Michigan State University who recently published a most pershyceptive critique of American trade union policy in Latin- Catholics in Mollendo Peru the

America (The 0RIT and Amer diocesan missions director reshyican Trade Unions Conflicting ported Perspectives Industrial Rela- The New York priests were tionsand Social Changes in sent to Peru after Pope Paul Latin America University of vi -asked that more priests be Florida Press) pr9vjd~d fOr the people opoundSouth

Basic Problem America Msgr Anthony A Mi-Dr Hawkins admits of course lia said He estimated more than

that in all the Latin American 90 percent of the priests in criticism of United States unioniperu are from other countries in the ORIT (the Latin Ameli can regional unit of the Interna In 1965 the priests from Ogshytional Confederation of Free denburg administered 445 bap-Trade Unions and CLASCs prin tisms and perfoImed 64 mar-

CIOhas publicly charged in ej_ nis Club for two years and a suggested penaltiel fect that CLASCs ideology three yeaT member of the FU- owes more to Marxism than it ture Nurses club Father Carey sl~id the ~ays does to Christianity He finds it when pay and working condi-

An instructor in the Confra- tions for men and women inhard he says to accept the fact ternity of Christian Doctrine that the Christian labor move- civil service were determine4 byproglam in Our Lady of Mt I g I t d d t t

t middot A e IS a Ive It n a minIS ra Ive ment 0f L a In merIca IS non- Carmel Parish Seekonk the fiat have pas ed a d Communist s n we now

In my judgment this kind of criticism of CLASC by spokesshymen fltr the AFL-CIO is ex

three volunteers have completed the Second National Training Session sponsored by the Papal Volunteers for Latin America and received assignments in some ten Latin American coun- tries

Special ceremonies ended the six-week training session at the Catholic University of America where volunteers studied the apostolic work of the Church the laymans role in the aposshytolate and principles of spiritual life as well as the religion ecoshynomics and culture of Latin America

Before leavillg for their asshysignments the volunteers will take intensive four-month lanshy

guage anl culture courses in a Latin American language centerbull

eighth winner of this scholarship plumeoursElves that we share will enter the Childrens Hosshypital School of Nursing Boston in Septembel-

Ogdensburg Priests

SellYe Peru Mission OGDENSBURG (NC) -- Four

Ogdensburg priests currently are ministering to the n~eds of_13OOO

~ere

Father Philip Carey sJ exshyecutive director of the Xavier Institute of Industrial Relations acknowledged t hat certain strikes aJre intolerable But he said that when the governmentacts in a proprietary function it must follow the same rules it prescribes for private enterprise

In a letter to the New York Times Father Carey criticized ~y implication a proposed state -llw that wetulltilincrease the penalties to be imposed on strikshying union of public employees

MlISS LHNDA DUNCAN Th~proposedlaw grew out of recommendations of a five-man

Feehan Alumna task force named by Gov Nel son Rockefeller to study the

Receives Award problem after a 19-day transit strike crippled Newmiddot York City

Miss Linda Duncan daughter in January of Mrs George Duncan and the - NeCeSSBlry for Bargaining late George Duncan 61 Sykes Father Carey one of four Rd Seekonk has been awarded pubiic members of the mayors the eighth annual scholarship of committee that helped settle the the Attleboro Area Nurses strike disagreed with two other Chapter publlc memlgters Vh_o had previshyA 1966 graduate of Bishop ously supported the stiffer pen-

and internal concord a str~ke against itconstitutes mutiny and rebellion (UCLA) Sister Muriel a native

Pgbllsh Gudelnes For Ecumenisn

ALLENTOWN (NC) - The commission of ecumenism of the Allentown diocese here in Pennshysylvania has published a 22-page booklet of ecumenical guidelines to aid priests in guiding the laity The guidelines include general

permission for non-Catholics to serve as witnesses at Catholic weddings for Catholics to serve as witnesses at non-Catholic weddings and for burial of non-Catholics in Catholic ceremonies with a priest or a non-Catholic clergyman cltmducting graveside eeremonies

SHELL DADSON OIL

24-Hollr Oil

GLE COAL amp OIL CO IncI

640 Pleasant Street Tel WY 6-8271 New Bedford

this decision-making with the working p E~ 0 P Ie themselves through the process of collective bargaining

If collective bargaining is to be the rule he said we must agree to grant the right to strike~ Without this right he said there is no union and no coll~ctive balmiddotgaining

Expands Concern-in considering strikes by pu~ lie employees he dedared one muSt distinguishb~tween the state as a sovereign and the g()vernment acting in a proprishyetary function When the state aets as the defender of the peace or the promoter of justice

of Corning Iajoined the Sisters of the Humility of Mary in 1930 In recent years she has been ehairman of professionafarts deshypartment and college registrar

ation and a host of other services formerly performed by privategroups he continued

These activities are ancillary and economic and here the state in acting in a proprishyetry function When it so acts it ought to be subject tl) the same rules of conduct the government prescribes for private entershy

prise Strikes by firefighters and powerhouse uti lit y workers would be wrong however he said because it is difficult to imagine anY benefit they might gain to counterbalance the fear- fut harm such a l strike would impose on the community Buys Banners For Memorial

CHICAGO (NC)-A Chicago advertising executive has bought 44 brightly-colored religious ~anners tat -hung in the Nashy

tlOnal Srme of the Im~aculate ConceptIon during Luci Johnshysons wed(iin~ -

Earle Ludgin a trustee of the University of Chicago said he will donate the banners to the

university~ Rockefeller Memoshyrial Chapel in memory of his late wife

The banners for which Ludgin reportedly paid more than $40000 were originally created for the Vatlcan PavIIIon at the New York World Fair

A group of Washington D C residents bought ttie banners when the fair closed and arshyranged to have them exhibited in the Shrine until they could be sold Lugdin bought themin April but agreed at the request of Shrine officials to leave them in the Shrine until after Lucia wedding

lame College Head

OTTUMWA (NC) Sis t er

Muriel Hogan has been named the third presi4ent of Ottumwa Heights College here in Iowa She succeeds Sister Marie Anshy

ciue Kennedy woo win engagem graduate study in oominunishy

eations at the University of California Los Angeles branch

Offering You 3 Savings Plans

Home Financing

WAREHAM CO-OPERATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mabull

Telephone 295-2400 Banll SerVice YlIIIIIII

I

Ask Court Bar Use of Church Propertyfor Public SchoQ~middot WHITE ~S (MC) - A the cl883rooms ~ut Church

group of some 25 citizens repre- npokesman reporte~ that in line sented by the American Jewish with New York archdiocesan Congress has asked the New York State Supreme Court here to restrain the board of Ramapo School District 2 Rockland County from holding public school classes in property leased from religious bodies

The school board faced with severe-overcrowding planned to lease eight rooms from St Josephs Catholic Church and five from lem~e Beth El in Spring Valley The action was approved by 8tateEducation Commissioner Jame$ EAllen Jr

A ComllllJJlt served 0ill the rlChool board by the AJC charged the acti~n o~ld ~otateChurchshyState separation guaranteed by the First Amendment to the Constitution as well as other provisions of the state constitushytion

It is believed to be the first wch challenge made regarding

the use of religiO18 facilities for public school use

lhe st Josephproperty conshysists of an eightclasSroom school building adjacent to but sepashyrated from the chureh It is Ill good condition but will not be used by the p8rish thismiddot year because it has bUilt a new bUildshying for expanding its acbool to 141 classes

All religioUs ~bols had Ileen removed from the oder building in preparation for its use as a public school

The district school board had offered a fair market rent for

PAV~A deg Missionary Record Continued from Page Thirteen

A nurse from Chicago baa taken Lucillellpla~on the aposshytolic team and ber purpose in returning is to help her successhy80r work into the project smoothly It takes so long to get into 11 she Aid so II dont WJmt Il~r to spendtbree

years j~ g~tting organized~

Benedictine Marks 80th Anniversary

ST JOSEPHmiddot (NC)-The oldshyest Benedictine nun in Minneshysota-and one of the oldest m the world~marked the 80th anshyniversary of her entrance into the order ma Mass for all Beneshydictine jubil~tians held at St Benedicts convent here

Sister Sophia Zimmer was 1~ years old Dec 2 1965 She Wall

born in a log cabin about 1 block away from the convent An open house for her relatives and friends was held at the conv~nt

Receives Students cAsTELGANDOLFO (NC)shyPoPe Paul vI received in audishyence at his Summer home here students frOm 34 nations includshying many non-Catholics who are taking Summer courses in the ItaUaa language aDd culture sponsored by the Rome branch of the Catholic University fII IWaD

policy the properly would be made available for public school use at a token dollar-a-year rental

cmOS Cmpetes C~~ege ~rr(l))g~m

WASHINGTON (NC)-A class of 97 under-privileged high school students was graduated on completion of an eight-week Summer college orientation proshy

gram at Georgetown University The exercises i attended by faculty and parents Qf the stushydents involved students who had completed their Sophomore year in District of Colwnbia high schools They were chosen for the special course because teachers and counselors believed they have the ~billty to do colshylege work alihoug~ their presshyent high school records indicate little likelihood of college acshyceptance Ninoty-fiveOf the 97 students were Negroes md the ratio of males to females was aboutmiddot tbree-to-two ~

The pro~~~~Ch began in 1965 is financed by the NaUonal science Fowidationmiddot the District of Columbia public school sysshy

tem and Georgetown In addition to academic work

the students were given cltgtUrsetl in reading improvement and counseling gUidance Athletie and cultural events underwrit shyten by the program were also bKluded in their schedules

nearly 42 years Bishop Gerow churches degespeciallY Negro said Of late I have feltmiddotthat X houses of worshIp which middotWere have not the stamina to caJTY I bombedmiddot and burned

on as I have done in the past Whena p~ttern of destn1c~ion This load should be borne by 1 develops as It has m our state youngerman then it sincumbent upon all ntereston Yoiit

Cathollc lnereaSe m~n ~ ~ood ~i~ througho~t MiSSISSIPPI to Jom hands m Savings

The ~venth bishop of~edio- helpingthe affectedmiddot churches 0 Invested In cesemiddotwhlch was founded ID 1~37 and in showing clearly our con- and encompasses 111 of Missls- demnation at all acts of violencemiddot CATHOLIC CHURCH sippi Bishop Gerow h8ll s~ lawlessness and destruction the Catholic population IJOw from 31264 to 75000 in his 41 years of office The number of priests in the diocese grew from 63 to 220 and churches md misshysions from 108 to 243

The last few years of llacial violence perhaps were the most troub1d for Bishop Gerows long ad inistration middotHemiddot met the challenge with courage

In the face of many-sided opshyposition Bishop Gerow in 1964 directed the first grades of Cathshyolicmiddot schools in the state to be racially integrated The next

Missionaries Move Seminar to Ohio

DAYTON (NC) -The White Fathers a missionary society which bas served in Africa for nearly a century is llloving its U S seminary to Dayton

St Josephs Seminary which had been in operation at Onshydliota N Y near Saranac Lake will re-open under the same

name in four residences near the campus of the University of

Dayton The buildings have been rented from the university

Eventually the White Fathers plan to build their own seminary

middotfacilities somewhere in ~e area according to Fatber Paul lo1e1le WF~

THE ANCHOR- middot19 Thurs Aug 25 1966

KC Melll1il~er~~ip

At AJ~Tome e~~gh MIAMI BEACH (NC)-In his

report at the 84th annual meetshying of the Supreme Council of the Knights of Columbus Sushypreme Knight John W McDevitt made these points

Membership on June 30 1966 stood at an all-time high of 1183896 The orders insurance covershyage passed the $15 billion mark during the year

The orders assets reached III

neW plateau of $28122840028 at the end of the fiscal year

The society i~ continuing its support of the campaign to st~m p(gtrnography

Revise Ceremonial Progress is being made onthe

re_Vision of the orders cerempnshyial to give it a total family middotclishymate and make it consistent with moder day philosophy of social justice and religious pracshytice

The K of C have undertaken distribution of copies of the 1~ew Testament to Catholic gradllates

COURAGE PERSONIFIED John St Marie of B~YQ of the Naval Offilaquoer CandfClatE port Minn CQnfined to a wheelchair since a 1953 pOlio ~chool in Newport R I an(J ill

~dying the question of proshyattack has received a scholarship to the University of viding a similar servilte ~orMinnesota law school atter successfully maintaining an Ashy Catholic graduatell of the Qffi shyminus average in undergraduate work at the College of cers Candidate School of ihe St Thomas St Paul Minn irQ Photo Canadian Navy

It saluted Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York on biI

Welcomes Successor Naming of Apostolic Administrato

Pleases Bishop Gerow 81 JACKSON (NC)-Mississippll1 year he followed with a direeshy

courageous 81-year-old Bihop tive that Catholic schools be deshyOliver Gerow welcomed his suc- segregated completely ceSSor Bishop Joseph B Bruni- Helps Restore Churches ni 55 as spiritual head of the Despite reported threats ofmiddot Natchez-Jacklon diocese as one violence fro m segregationist who is active vigorous and has ranks the aged prelate was good sound judgment among leaders of an interfaith

X am very happy in being groupmiddot which formed the Comshyrelieved of the heavy responSl- mittee of middotConcernmiddot soHcited middotbillty that I have borne for money labor and materIals for

middotthe bishop stated in a letterred AND in every Catholic church in the INSTITUTIONAL BONDSstate

His appeal for $300000 to re-middot I Umiddot f $500 M store more than 30 d~stroyed n nits 0 or ore and damaged churches brought Keenan amp CImiddotarey bie contributions to the Committee 9f Concern from various sections Minneapolis Minnesota of the country

0

M~ntle Plumbing amp ~ating Co Inc~

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET Fall River OS 57497

for detailed information write to

CHARLES A~ MURPHY Registered Representative

145 Pond $treet Winchester Mass

PA 9-2696 And

Name bullbullbull ~ Address A

City _

50 years in the priesthood payshying tribute to him not only beshycause of his dignity as a pi-iest and cardinal but also because he 1S a great and wholesome mail

Relic Stolen NEW YORK (NC)-A reputed

relic of the cross on which Chtist died has been stolen from the Church of the Most Holy Reshydeemer here It was removed from a side altar tabernacle

where it had been placed shortshyly after the churchs establishshy

ment by the Redemptoriad Fathers some 125 years ago

~

GULF HILL DAIRY so DARTMOUTH MASS

RO THE ANCHO~-Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

1

RELIGIOUS SUPERIORS INSTITUTE ON STONEHILTJ CAMPUS SMS Guadalcanal Solomon Islands Standing Sr Florita DP King Sr Mary LUk~ St about to enter the hall for her lecture Center Some ston Mass Sr Mary of Bathany SP Holyoke Sr Mary de Sales F$SJ r the sisters who attended Sister Lukes talk were Sr Josepha SC Conshy Holyoke Right Mrs Mary Virginia Yosgandes h-ouse mother wavesgood ent Station NJ Sr Mary Kenneth Amityville NY Sr Mary (fheresa bye tothe departing nuns I

Brooklyn Church Hopes Nuns Move Into Cent~r of Lij~e Criticizes Irish lribunal Lacks By Dorothy Eastman -Social Security

When in the third year of Vatican II the momentous decision was made toinvitewO- dmiddot LIMERICK (NC) - FatherJ men observers to audit a Council forthe first ~ime to represent all J~remiah Newman professor ofuris ICtlon the Sister chosen BROOKLYN (NC)-Msgr the nuns in America was Sister Mary Luke Tobin Mother General of the Sisters of Lor- sociology at Irelands Maynooth

IlAarion J Reinhardt pre- etto When shewasasked recently while visiting the Fall River Diocese what impressed College criticizedprivate agenshyJ~L h t b t th C 1 cies and the national governshyIdlng Judge of the Trlblillal er mos a ou e oune) h t b t h h d k ment for their failure to increaseshe said with a wry smile We aVe 0 e rna ure enoug er own or er was wor mg(1)f the Diocese of Brooklyn h to live in insecurity toward these ends She told of all subsidies to families Iltas announced that the bill of The fact that we were t ere Will these changes be easy experiment soine of her Sisters After insisting that it would $Omplaint of 15 former teachers at all I The Sister is too much of a have been engllged in for the be best for private agencies and of St Johns Un~versity had to At a Stonehill College institute realist to give that impression past twu years in Pueblo Colo- local governments to administer be dismissed because of lack of Sister Luke spoke of her many Its going to be fraught with rado Although most of the 1100 social security Father Newman jurisdiction on the part of the other impressions of the Council difficulties she warns but Sisters of Lorettv are teachers said that since they seemed unshy

ecclesiastical court _ where she and seven other Sis- what isnt this small group of Sisters in willing or unable to do this the The Brooklyn ecclesiastical tels were auditresses for the last There are more than a few Pueblo 1s doing no t~aching-in job had to be done by the natshy

$Ourt which operates under two years of Vatican II Over Sisters who are troubled and schools anyway They simply jonal government ~llnon law said it is pmited in 450 Mothers Superior from 55 sometimes shocked these days live among the poor as good He said that according to jurisdiction to only spiritual different Orders were gathered by many of the changes hi their neighbors he 1pin jg wherever Catholic soCial teaching there ltuestions at the Easton campus for the communities The Mother Gen- they cllD leading discussion was no limit to the amount of Charge Contralaquot Breach five day Institute directed by eral would warn them that its groups counselling etc government aid that is permis-

The 5000 word document Rev William FHogan CSC pointless for them to say Thill Asked to comment on the re- sibie and desirable if governshypointed out that the decree of Sister Luke was one of a group is not the community I entered cent experiment in Milwaukee mEmt aid was the Qnly practical Giisrriissalis without prejudice to of noteliltspeakers who talked When it comes to that she says where30 School Sisters of St (sbl~tion to poverty problems lbhe merits of the case to the superiors on the subject we all might say This is not the Francis left their convents for

If the Metropolitan Tribunal of the I Sister in the modern Church Iwas baptized into or three weekstO work in secular If the archdiocese of New York world this is not the world I was b()rn jobs - oneSister wa3 assigned

T b 1 f the Sacred into Change is a fact of life S t~ the rI una 0 Adapting a line from Charles as a newspaper reporer- IS er Roman Rota reversesthe decree Dickens to describe this contro she points out~ and we can~t keep Luke predicted a great deal the casewiil be returned to the versial post Council age Sister things as they are or say Stop more~ of this kind of liniited Tribunal of the Diocese of the World-I want to get off f i t th I w ld ]Brooklyn for adjudications upon t~ees sa~~iSTi~iSt~eth~o~r Role of Superiors ~~~re ~o di~~a~~c~i~t n~~ Ms merits it was stated times She paintedavivid ver- The role the Superiors will she said

The petition of complaint bal picture of the world that lies play in the formation of what Since her own Order founded filed by Father Peter OReilly ahead for Sisters She said it has been called The New Nun in 1812 is quite new all religious

s~f Chicago on behalf of himself would certainly be a challenging Lwuakeouattlintheed fs~roeh~ ~~s~~~t~ orders go and is the liirst comshylind the other ousted teachers one and that conventlife inthe munity founded in America charged he university which is future is certain to undergo She urged them to create a cli- without European ties the Sisshyeonducted by theVincentian many radical changes mate where Sisters can liveters of Loretto weal habits more Fathers with breach of contract community life at its best She -modern than most But itsstill

The Superior~ were told that entreated them to keep thls cli-The dispute has been marked bY d bl d ff t the dress of 1812 not 1966 so it d k t f an m Ispensa e gUl e me ec - mate free from legallsm andlitudent unrest an pIC e mg 0 th hmiddotmiddot th will soon be changed As soon I mg ese c anges IS e map survelmiddotllance Ie schoo s campuses f th f t th t th C 1 as the all-mlll Congregation

or e u ure a e ounCl A community should be a of Religious in Rome approv~sMoral Issue Fatners drew up for the Church place where there- is safety for She called the CouncII Decrees the Sisters new design that is About 30 teachers were fired fl t d f t f dff

Rost December in a dispute over the documentS ofhighest au- cop IC an sa e y or J er- Tliey have submitted one de~ign rlty We should all have ~nes apd s~fety to cultiv~te that the fathers turnEd downadministration-faculty relation- tho d t h d Sh f I the mInd of Vatlcan II and then lverSI y s ~ sal e ee s lihey thought it was too modshyships and other issues They t I th t th h ld be

b b f we c~n move Into actlon she s rongy a ere ~u r -ern Sister Luke says UWhat anwere joined y anum er 0 I t I g I fe ther teachers In a strike that told her healers - 1Jloe ~o~a IY In re 1 J~)Us 1 incredible thing for US to ask shy --uAfterall were not Trap- that we choose our own clothes has continued since January Whi~h Way psts

l she adds with a laughThe court found that tpe How will the Sisters know in Warning that the time has S t Lk tl - b

uteceniontractual controversy was not whicli direction they should come for a re-evaluation of the _ IS ~rth y e~mt~ a spiritual mattelin a canoliical move in the manyarells so(in to true meaning of community she ne oIl e d~rs wo~~ ever ~ llense of the word spiritual change cExperiment Sister told the Superiors that commu- bo~a h a sre~t a f ~gUS aild that there was no allegation Luke advises so often its almost nity doesnt mean conformity or 0 y e oCle ~ o anon ef a violation of an ecclesiastical her motto We really cannot a hotel life either or even a Lawyrs Does thIS mian that law arid that the time was not move into change without ex-lot of happy t9getherness th~ SI~ters may at last have a opportune for a decision of perimentation she says and around the television set voIce 111 the formatIon of canon moral responsibility because the we will be engaged in tremen- A ~ital new aspect of commu- la-at least th~ laws that rUI~ secular courts would first have dous experiments from now on- nity is the idea of what Sister thel~ O~derS SIster Luke deshyto determine whether there was to adapt religious life to the Luke calls sub communities- vout y opes so a breach of contractual duty times in which we live the convents immediate neigh- Its certain that the future for

The church court found as a The revisions that lie ahead borhood the parish the civic the Sisters will be a very differshymatter of law that St Johns for religious orders will bring commumty lay people 111 the ent one than anyone could have 141 NO MAINUniversity as a corporation Sisters into the mainstream of same profession as the Sister- imagined a few short years ago J~ formed under the law of the modern life Sister Luke for for instance other nurses or The Holy Father has urged them iii FALL RIVER State of w York did not have one has no doubts that this is tElachers We have allowed too the~ to move from the margin e the ecclesiastical privilege of where they belong We ought great a gap to exist between our- of life to the center of life~ 873 COUNTY demanding that suits against it to be willing to take the risks) selves and the laity she says Will the move be successful SOMERSETbe heard in an ecclesiasticalmiddot that gO along with this plunge In an interviewmiddot following her Sister Luke says We can only CDOurt into the mainstream she says talk Sister ~uke was asked how know by taking a ChanCE

Feai makes the wolf bigger than be is

Rer Bankings Already D~ne

~jI--~1 W

tt-~~gt_ri~

~j F~ p ~tl Iim F-ilNgt

~l i

ll 11 ~~

W = ~

~gtltl ~

-~ ~~ StIesaves I lot of alunle Mtime forso maily other thinlS ~i She banks by mail at Te ~ OLD R D8 KI h 7reg E AN W at about you

liii FREE mall forms ~1 The mOld Red Bank W

$ Fall River Savings Bankjilll q

Page 4: 08.25.66

4 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Ault 066 Italia~CJl~nguage

Paper O~ CanadQlFormer_FaU Ruvell A$$D$ih~Jm1fr MONTREAL -(NC) - Domam

(Tomorrow) an Italian-languageServes in flo1ivia MDSSDO~ Catholic weekly newspaper beshyContinued from Page One are also many homes throughout gan publication here for Itaiianshy

able to catch the local bus and the woods so 1 find it more prushy speaking Canadians with an i~

we can reach most of our vil shy dent not to ask where they got tial printing of 20QOO cQpies

lages by jeep The custom still the grapefruits The altar boys The paper founded and edited prevails however so this mornshy take advantage of the rest of the by Father A Paoletti OFM ing 1 started out for Tiquipaya waiting period to get washed in Cap is published- by the ItaliaD

the river 0) with two assistances The altar Nathmal Parishes of Montreai boys from the 7 oclock (more People Appear under the general direction of or less) Mass have the morning The opposite bank of the ri ver Auxiliary Bishop Adrian Cimishyto help the Padres since Ue seems to be a solid wall of green cheBa OMI of Montreal boys do not have class until the but slowly the people begin tp Father Paoletti said the paper afternoon appear on the bank It looks like will deal with general news as

At 9-More or Less bull the chiItlren omiddotfmiddot Israel comiJig well as Catholic news StaH Classes for the girls begin at through the Red Sea - except members are all Italian laymen

830 more or less The girls begin this sea does not part in the midshy with journalistic experience in to arrive at the rectory from dIe The babies are quite secure - Italy 730 on so that they can borrow on the backs of their mothers Father Paoletti recently spentthe two volley balls and jump and all proceed to dimb into the 19 years in Australia where he ropes for an hour or so before jeep truc~ fo~ a short trip to founded La Fiammamiddot (Thegoing to schoof The public the small opening in the woods Flame) an Italian-languageschool is just across the street whele the men have set up an paper published twice weekly in

The Mass in Tiquipaya is at altar Sydney9 oclock-m~e or less so after As Mass begins there are greeting all the little girls with about 75 people present By the a Buenos Dias and Como time Mas~ is over a few more ReoctlioDO SllDrprsSesestas and a couple of turns people have appeared-onlyGod withltthejump rope we start out knows fom where Probably Vermolilll Glaquoraquovernor for the village Besides being a they have been attracted by ST ALBANS (NC)-Vermonts very beautiful Spring-like day it Alejandros very loud and very Gov Philip Hoff disclosed one is also a very lazy day and the bad singing of the surprises of his legislativeanimals arE the first to feel the After Mass isa fine time for career in a talk at the dedicashylaziness in thE air The trip is a catechism class baptisms and tion of new Central Catholic slowed down considerably by anointing of any sick if there High SChool which will be openshymany very slow moying animals are any As 1 am leaving in the cd in September on the highway-oxen cows truck 1 get the usual question When 1 came out in favor ofhorses pigs burros chickens When are you coming again federal aid to private educationThis afternoon they will have Padre The usual answer We the governor said 1 expected tea little more life because there hae many other villages to go receive complaints and protestsbull is a wind statting to pick up to but if 1 am able in three Actually 1 did not receive oneOfficial Hymn Leader weeks--more or less letter or telephone call aboutWe have one stop along the

the statement ~ way Alejandro will be waiting on the road at Santa Rita Alshy T1e school built at a cost 0152 Missionaries

$1 million was made possible phones in this area Alejandro by gifts from a number of pershythough we do not have any teleshy

To Leave US some of comshy sons including many non-Cathshymust have means APPPRENTlCEmiddotINDJAN STYLE At a technical school

munication with someone here in ST COLUMBANS (NC) olics The school was dedicatedfor orphaned boys~ established by_ Bishop Francis Xavier LaGuardia who lets him know Fifty-two Columban missionaries by Bishop Robert F Joyce of

Muthappa of Coimbatore India this yopng apprentice ~~jeswhen we leave the house He is will leave for six mission counshy Burlington Vt who charactershyalways waiting on the road for tries this Fall eut some carpenters tools NC Photo ized the building as a memerial us when we go by Santa Rita Father Daniel Boland SSC 9pound love

Alejandro is our 17 year old director of the Columban Fashyself-made catechist and our offi shy thers in North and South Amershycial hymn leader a~ ltlll the Masses ica said The only mission Another Degree in the villages from Santa Rita country that will not be bolstershyto the end of the parish A real ed by this influx of missionaries Parap~egic in Wheel Chair Studies

good boy-with no education is Burma as visas cannot be obshy c One more stop I almost forgot tained for missionaries tp enter Clhemistry at Notre Dame

about A fiveminute stop-more that counrty MONTHLY CHURCHmiddotNOTRE DAME (NC)-One of he took second place in the freeshyor less-in Jorochito to tell Guil shy Father ~oland added There the 140 high school chemistry style the back crawl and thelermo that he is to inform all are now more than 200 Columshy breast stroke BUDG~T ENVELOPESteachers who attended Notrethe village that there will be a bans in the Philippines and 100

Dame Universitys s umiddotm mer I dont think Im so uniqueBible service at the chapel at 8 plus in both Japan and Korea PRINTED AND MAILEDmiddotchemistry institute here was a he said There were about 100more or less if the evening with the remainder in Burma man who has received the lastGuillermt is easy to find He the Fijis Peru and Chile other paraplegics down at the Write or Phone 672-1322 rites of the Church five timeslives in the sacristy and is a full Of the 887 Columban priests University of Illinois when I was Ed Quinn 28 has been a parashy there so you know Im not unshy 234 Second Street - Fall River time catechist We pay him $10 a some 600 are actively engaged in plegic for 11 years but durihgmonth i Inissionary work oversea~ Total usual that time has earned a bilchelorSince the day is so beautiful membership of the missionary of science degree in physiologymany of the women are doing society of secular priests is 1175 and a master of science degreetheir wash today There are in biology from ~hc University ofmany puddles from the rains IIllinoisalong the road I will never unshy Prelate to Address

If he attends the next fourderstand how the clothes can I ST~ JUDEPolish Organization summer institutes at Notrebe so clean coming out of such Idirty water PITTSBURGH (NC)-Bishop Dame he will also receive a i

Greeted by Children John J WLight of Pittsburgh will master of science degree in SOLEMN NOVI~A OF 9 THURSDAYSchemistryBy now I feel like General be the principal speaker at the Quinn has been a paraplegic

New York during the Korean servance of Polands millennium since he was in an auto accident MacArthur when he returned to Polish Falcons of AIl1~rica obshy

In PreporoHon ~~o Feast - Octobe 28th shortly before his high school

way are doing everything but The plOgram inculding field War The children all along the of Christianity

graduation in 1955 standing on their heads so that events and gymnastics by the Although he needs a wheelshy Begins Thursday bullSeptpmber 1sf the Padre will wave to them Falcons and the Slovak Gymshy ehair to move around he won

We arrive at Tiquipaya at 9 nastic Union will be held at three silver medals in 1962 at Preacher Fr Cosmas F Timlin OFM to find only one man People do West View Park Sunday Sept the Para Olympics in Stoke not come to Mass until the Pad re 4 OtheL attractions include a Mandeville England As a memshyarrives It is I little different Polish kitchen and folk dancing ber of the US swimming team today however Mot of the peoshyple live acrbss the river so it is necessary to drivethe two miles to the n ver bunk and blow the horn so that they will know that I have arrived

The river is very beautiful Very wila 100king Actually this area is considered jungle-cershytainly not like the Tarzan movies It is very beautiful al shythough dangerous at night beshycause of tC many snakes

We have half an hour to wait fOL the people to arrive so the altar boys and Alejandro disapshypear into the thicker woods They return with very laIge grllpefllit~ Thmiddotr le many fruit ttees in the area but there

llIANUFAC1URERS NATIONAL BANK

of BRISlOI~ COUNIY

THE AREAS MOST ACCOMMODATING BANK

NORTH ATTLESORO bull MANSFIELD ATTLEBORO FALLS

CHAPEL DEVOTIONS 1000 AM - 1210 Noon - 510 7 and 8 PM

NOVENA WJDA-Boston-1300 on Dial-II 05 AM WPLM-Plymouth--1390 on Dial-9 15 PM

Write for Booklet and Medal

Franciiscan Fathers 600 Pleasant Sheet New Eledford Mass~ _

5 THE ANCHOR-Catholic Mission Philosopher-Priest Visiting North Dartmouth Thurs Aug 25 1966

Societies Meet Also Sculptor Painter Housebuilder CIErgymen oStudyIn Washington

WASHINGTON (NC) A philosopher who is also a part-time sculptor painteralcl honse-builder-thats Mental Health The 17th annual meeting of Rev Herman Reith CSC who is spending the Summer at St Josephs Hall North Dartshy WASHINGTON (NC) - Ten US Catholic mission secishy mouth As co-author of a textbook Psychology for Nurses he spoke this month to Catholic priests and Brothers

middot participated in a mental healtheties will be held here Sept students at St Annes Hospital Fall River discussing the motivation a nurse should workshop held this Summer at1 to 21 with some 1000 priests have in her profession The Georgetown University ThelReligious and lay persons acti ve address was an interlude in middot program was designed to proshyfin Catholic mission work exshy

a busy Summer which the vide them with additional skillspected to attend The Worldmission Award Holy Cross priestmiddot has deshy in dealing with mental health

problemsgiven annually to a layman who voted mainly to work on a book They heard lectures frommakes an outstanding contribushy scheduled for Spring publication

more than 40 psychiatrists psyshycention to mission work will be by the University of Notre Dame chologists anthropologists edushy]tresented to James J Fahey Press Titled A Light to the cators and other clergymenWaltham Mass garbage man Nations Essays on the Intellecshy

The participants also workedand author of Pacific War tual Mission of the Church it with patients in psychiatric andDiary 1942-45 All proceeds is described by Father Reith aS general hospita~ wards and withfrom his book are going to build an attempt in the direction of representatives of social and edshybull church in South India a theology of the Church in modshyucational agencies of the DistrictAmong speakers at the meetshy eln times of Columbia areaing will be Auxiliary Bishop - He is grappling in its pages

A spokesman for the grouIJlFulton J Sheen of New York with redefinitions of key conshysaid they were given the opporshydirector of the National Society cepts such as the nature of the tunity to talk with persons withfur the Propagation of the Faith priesthood the Church herself widely varying pro b 1 emsAuxiliary Bishop Harold R and such terms as mission and They observed alcoholics inPerry SVD of New Orleans witness s 1um neighborhoods traveledMsgr Joseph Gremillion direcshy Religious laity and priests with probation officers whotor of the socio-economic divishy are all wondering who they are work wit delinquent youthsion Catholic Relief Servicesshy and what their roles are in toshyand visited homes for unweltilNational Catholic Welfare Conshy days Church he said My mothers shyference Bishop Frederick Hall stress is on Christ as the Logos The program was financed byMHM retired bishop of Kisushy Christs mission t~ the world is Georgetown University No govshyrna Kenya Sister M Olivette that of enlightenment and all his ernment funds were involvedWhalen councilor general of the wOIk was a witnessing to the

Sisters of the Holy Cross Notre truth Dame Ind and Father Gerrard Logos in Time Bay Staters ServeP Fredericks MSSST supeshy His book will discuss the Ilior general of Trinity Missions Poor in Canadafounding of the Church under Silver Spring Md the heading of The Logos in COMBERMERE (NC)-More

Theme of the meeting will be TIme and will develop the conshy than 100 international volunteersPoverty and the Missions-the cept that Christ must unfold are serving the poor in one ofDemands of Justice and Charshy through history in human fashshy Canadas depressed rural aleasity ion the Madawaska Valley

Degrading Misery The book six years in the They are from New MexicoBesides general sessions the writing took rise said Father Arizona Wisconsin Kentuckythree-day meeting will also inshy Reith from his attempts to exshy Georgia Alabama Illinois Michshy

elude a number of simultaneous plain to seminarians that teachshy igan PennsylvalTia New Yorkseparate sessions for various ing is as priestly a role as adshy Massachusetts and Canada Theygroups including mens and ministering the sacraments He come to Madonna House for awomens major superiors procshy quoted St Paul But as the week to a month and some theurators and promoters men and Lord hath distributed to every entire Summer to work in thewomens training directors and one as God hath called every apostolatev 0 cat ion directors editors one so let him walk And so in Many volunteers spend theirBrothers educators and lay all churches I teach time at the Madonna Housegroups Father Reith will not be forshy inarians on an expedition toFrom this beginning he went farm S1 Benedicts Acres OthshyThe Mission Secretariat is a gotten at St Josephs however Mexico where they built houses on to consider the role of the ers help at the summer recreashyelearing house for information He is leaving a very tangible for shack-dwellers And whereintellectual in the Church tionl programs for childern inand services to aid American memento of his presence in the did he pick up his manual laborShoulltl we be Christians or inshy middot two isolated settlementsCatholic foreign mission work form of a middotlife-size sculpture of know-how I came from a famshytellectuals he asks in his openshy Some help in the summerwith headquarters in Washingshy the Holy Family which will be ily of 10 children he explaineding chapter and ends by explainshy Christmas program cleanington Father Frederick A Mcshy

ing its not erected on a15 foot pedestal on and my mother adopted fourthat an eitheror and repairing toys sent hereGuire CM a former missionary the North Dartmouth grounds more There was always lots ofproposition but rather a both from all parts of North Americalin China is executive secretary work to doTo Leave Mementoand one for distribution this WinterThe delegates to this years Of steel the modernistic sculpshy One more item on this SumshyIn his closing chapters he exshymeeting represent more than ture is being welded in r-rew mers agenda every Sundayamines the roles of religious and7600 United States missionades Bedford by Father Reith during Father Reith flies to the islandlaity in the Church explainingstaffing overseas missions hours taken from his writing of Cuttyhunk to say Mass for CASA BLANCAparenthetically that he saves theIn a pre-convention stateshy project Summer residents The island Just Across Thelayman for last in line with thement Father McGuire said It is is actually part of St MarysThe versatile philosopher alsogospel comment Thou hast Coggeshall St Bridge a truism to say that we are livshy paints for relaxation leaning South Dartmouth he said andsaved the best wine till last Fairhaven Massing in an era of explosi ve towards oils and pastels I like Father Considine the pastor

change We also living in Other Books Holy Fathers Finest Variety ofare a semi-abstractions he said but asked the Cross whose Other books by the author inshycountry affluence has I always try to get some figures tltl be responsible for Summer SEAFOODnever been equaled in the hisshy clude An Introduction to Phil shy in my pictures Masses

tory of the world osophical Psychology and The Among the priests friends in Served Anywhere - AlsoThe house - building That We are at the same time Metaphysics of St Thomas came two Summers ago when the Diocese is Dr John E Manshy STEAKS-CHaPS-CHICKEN

Hving in a world where degrad Aquinas Also to be published ning Fall River pediatricianFather Reith led a group of ing misery envelops half of all next Spring is Frederick His Notre Dame students and sem- who arranged this months lecshyGods children We in the United Writings part of a series Oll ture at St Annes Hospital States accept as our due all the Marxist writings of which Fr eomforts and conveniences of Reith will be general editor FOl Vermonts Divorce Where Athis affluent society the while his doctoral degree earned at we push from our conscious Laval University he concenshy Rate Al110ng Lowest DONAT BOISVERT GOOD NAMEMlinking the agony of uncounted trated on Marxist philosophy BURLINGTO (NC) - Vershy

INSURANCE AGENCY INCmillions He gives credit to St Josephs monts divorce rate continues to Hall for providing the peace remain among the lowest among Means A96 WILLIAM STREETand leisure necessary to writing the 50 states of the nation

NEW BEDFORD~ MASSEight Irish Sisters Most of my books have been GREAT DEAL statistics disclosed it has been written there he said For Ie fairly stable during the last 26 WY 8-5153 WY 7-9167Arrive in Montana years he was chairman of the years - about 15 divorces per

BILLINGS (NC)-Eight Irish department of philosophy at the PERSONAL SERVICE1000 populationSisters of Mercy arrived here University of Notre Dame and Sociologists claim the stable~ work at St Vincents Hosshy he is now teaching in the deshy GEO OHARAlow rate results from the largepital and in parochial schools partment Theres no time fOll Catholic population of the stateTwo others are scheduled to arshy my own writing during the tllCshy -some 135000 Catholics in mIrive in September ademic year he says total population of some 393000 Six axe teachers and four are In the Spring however he IIlurses Bishop William J Conshy will leave Notre Dame for

ELECTRICAL Contractors

944 County St New Bedford

CHEVROLETdon of Great Falls invited the Makerere University in Kamshy St FrancisIIluns here last November when pala Uganda where he expects he visited their motherhouse in to teach for the next five years Residence

lOCH Kings Hwy lBallyshannon euroounty Donegal We have many Holy Cross FOR YOUNG WOMEN missions in Uganda he saiell U96 IIhippie St Fall RvellCOllllsecrcltaon Oct )5 and the Bishop there feels that NEW BEDfORDConducted by franciscanRICHMOND (NC)-Auxiliary the Church should be involved

Missionaries Ill~ MarvBishop-designate J Louis Flahshy in the growth of African educil shyerty of Richmond will be conseshy tion He therefore volunteered ROOMS - MEALS

OVERNIGHT HOSPITALITY crated in Sacred Heart cathedrall for the faculty of the lIIakereJlla Inquiro OS 3-289here on Wednesday Oct 5 Btate university

PHILOSOPHER-SCULPTOR Rev Herman Reith CSC works on Holy Family group which will be erected on outdoor pedestal at St Joseph Hall North Dartmouth Father Reith has been spending Summers at North Dartshymouth house working on books in field of philosophy but will teach in African university for next few years

6 mE ANCHOR-Di9cese of Fan River-Th~rs Aug 25 l~66

The oC1tQice i

A fascirlating chooice i~ shaphlg up as a cOrOn~ry to th~ present crowded condition in the pa~hial school system

0

Those in authority in the Church are faced with the possibility that lower grades of the Oatholic schoQI system must be sacrificed to provid~ the space and teachers for those in the upper grades The Gatholic high school and college must expand at the expense of the elementary school

- And the oungsters f~m th~se lower grades tnust tum to the public~chOoISyate_mof ~ducation

Hereis where the choice coin~s in

If these young-sters p~esent tllemselves at the do()rs of the over-crowded public schools the community must find

space and teachers for them That hits the whol~ comshymunity in the pocketbook

The onlyaIternative seems to be increased aid from publk tax funds for the parochial school system to assist itmiddot to educ~te every child who wants an ~ducation in a Catholic iChOol

CriticS of the pa-roehial school system must choos~beshytween expaIlding the public school system at a prohibitive eost or swallowing their harsh words and grant tomiddot parents the right to educate their children in a system not less capable and democratic than the public school system and in assisting the chil~ to receive an education in the system of his parents choosing

Modern Lorelei

A survey of _two thousand pupils in the Chicago area produced some revealing staticS about their televisionshyviewing habits

Elementary school students spend an average of twenty-one hours a week with television

High -school students average fourteen hours aweek

Parents of those middotquestioned admitted to watChing television about twenty hours a week and their teachers

saw it twelve hours

Television is here to stay No on~ would decrie its great entertainment and educational value Already it is being used as a supplement to classroom teachings

- But like any other thing it inust be used and middotnot abused the used and not the user

It is quite possible for people to become hypnotized by thecathode eye and spend hour afterhour in an electronicshycontrolled -trance

Since such viewing is essEmtiatally passive it bodes no good for the creative mind And the student can easily come to grief by middotspending too much time caught in the trap qf this twentieth century Lorelei

A students life is one of application to lessons and work He has no more excuse from those responsibilities than his father has to refuse to work his mother to ignore the making o~ meals and duties of housekeeping

Study costs an effo~t It is not always pleasant ltis a sacrifice Arid in this age of high living standards when children are brought up with very little sacrifice in their lives surrounded by everything that money can buy they must learn control and discipline to assure s~holastic sucshycess

Control of television watching is just such a discipline of spirit

And with schools soon to open it is a discipline that should be decided upon by parents for their children and insisted upon as the school year goes along

regrheANCHOR

Sword of the Spirit C -c -n

By Edward P McDonagb

CCD and CFM The fourth Biennial eon

- vention of the New EnglaBCl Area Christian Family Moveshy

middotrilent concluded its three day session on August 14th The ~

WlS the lovely campus ~f tbe Newton College of the Sacred Heartand CFM couples from all over the New England Sta~ gathered there to increase th~ understanding of the movemeilli

middotand to chartmiddot new areas of A~ tolic Action

The theme of the Christi_ FamUy Movement is For Hap pier Families and cgtuples bull the organization seek that goal by applying the Observe JUd~

and Act technique in their own ho~es the neighborhood the

parish and the ~orld at large The purpose of all this is to fo~

~

Gap StUImiddot Exists Study Suggests More Than Busing Needled

In EdllllcGtioll1lEquality-lntegration WASHINGTON (NC)~A reshy

port prepared by the US Ofshyfice of Education says that the present s~t-up of the nations public school system serves to

- perpetuate the social and ecoshynomic gap between most Negroes and whites

Although it challenges the eoncept of n e i g h b 0 rb 9 0 d

schools the report warns tha integration andmiddot edu~ational equality cannot be attained by busing alone

The 737-page report on Equal- ity oj Educational Opportunity has been published by the Ofshyfice of Education Earlier the office isued a summary of the two-year study called for by Congress under terms of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

Senator Abraham Ribkoff of Connecticut has accused the 00shymiddotministration of playing down the report because it contains explosive political implkations

I think the time has come for us not to be satisfied with cliches Ribic9ff told John W

GaTdner SecretarYcent Healtl) Education and Welfare M 11 Senate sub-committee hearing on urban problems A lot of the concepts are loaded with political dynamite

James S Colemlm author of the report agreed that the adshyministration - issul~iI summary was fllt and over--cautious He said that might have stemmed from uneasiness about findings that may have political lreper cussions

Planes Help Enable Proests to Cover Large TerritClraquorfl

In PerfolTmOlftceof Apostolic Work LOCKPORT (NC)3-A priest years ending with the rank of

who has twice flown at the speed of sound believes a plane can be a useful tool iii apostolic labor especially inmiddot far-flung fields

Father Richard E Spellman pastor of Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary parish in Albuquershyque began to fly when he saw ranchers in New Mexico using planes to get- around their ranches

If the ranchers can do it why cant a priest he asked I found out that in my little plane I was able to get around quickly to mission schools in New Mexico to teach catechism to children

He has used his plane too to d~liver medicine to Catholic missions in Mexico

Father Spellman who served

major was here in Illinois for the third annllal conventioJl of the National Association of

Priest Pilots He learned to fly here hi~

he was seminarian He said I was a good enough pilot that the Archbishop of Santa Fe tnJsted me to take him around the Archshydiocese in my plane

Some 150 priests belong to the association said Father Rich~rd

Skriba the conventions genshyeral chairman and asistant pas~ tor of St Simon parish in Chishycago Altogether there are over 400 priests and Brothers in the always understoodUS who are pliots he added Similarly CCD Discussion

Groups have in some casesSays Priests R~Ue been difficult to start and main-I S 11 tain where CFM is active InJust pirituOID rare instances competition

BOGOTA (NC)-Father C~ - rather than cooperation has

Catholic Lay Leaders and from all the evidence it succeeds veq well middot Significantly one of the wenshyattended workshops at the rec~Di convention covered the compleshymentary nature of CFM and CCD Chaired by Rev William 1 Downs of Newton the wideshyranging discussion period higbshylighted several areas where CCD and CFM have worked well toshygeth~er and some where the have not

Wordng Together Couplesfrom several localities

- indicated that CCDs Paren1oshyEducator units are natural ou1oshylets for those seeking to proshymote happier famiiies Manr CFM couples are working iQ

-Parish Parent-Educator groups and~ in doing so are finding solid recruits for CFM among the young married couples that they visit T~is is a perfect eJl shyample of how the two organiza tions can help each other lv working together

Other examples cited by parti shycipants were the use of CFlII couples as guest lecturers and discussion leaders in CCD classes covering questions marriage- and sex Fall River CFMers noted the participation of CFM couples as discussion moderators in the CCD leadeJio ship day programs Manyothel8 recounted incidents of CCD Elishyecutive Boards being formed o of CFM groups middot Father Downs who is both bull CFM Chaplain and a CCD Parish Director noted that priests will contittue to look to CFM for leaderS middotto staff CCDunits and otlier parishorganizations Not to provide for CFM in a parish would mean that a prime source of committed laymen a Jl d women would be cut off

There are a few problems too Several areas have eXJerienced difficulty in obtaining permisshysion to start CFM because CCD Discussion Groups already exshyisted Apparently the distinction between the two groups is not

as an Air Force chaplain for 10 cilo de Lora one of the direc- been the guiding spirit with unshyOFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RiVER tors of the Latin American bish- fortunate results for both

ops educational department af- The lesson learned from thed1O Highland Avenue Retain PriiDege firmelt here that the role Of the workshop )Nas this Where CeDFoil River Mass 02722 675-7151 MADRID (NC)-Spains bishshy priest is exclusively spiritual and CFM people get ~ know ops following their annual conshy In the past he said prieSts each other and take the time toPUBLISHER ference announced that they had an authority and prestige understand each others proshy

Most Rev James L -Connolly DO PhD will retain the privilege of eating beyond the religious but ilow grams the results can be imshymeat on Friday The dispensa- we have to recogniZ4~ that the pressive CFM has the happy

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER tion from the regular law dates times have changed andtl)at our knack of producing commi~ted Rt Rev DanielF Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll back several centuriell and came middotmiddotmiSsion is rust spiritual Father gtCalholics who are willing r~

MANAGi~G E[gtITOR ~ orginal1y as a reward for sershy de Lora spoke during aconJer- - act -and CCD continues to off vices to the Church and for ence at Bogotas arl~hdiocesan almost unlimited opportunitiee

H~gh J Golden Spanish wars against infidels curia here in Colombia for action

THe ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 7 Priests Respond Generously 1Ciitymiddot ExpressVariety of Opinions

Bishop Asks for Suggestions--shyj

YOUNGSTOWN (NC)-I-Wed- There was a call for a study of ltmngs and ftinerals in the eve- the~hoie questioriof the Caih- Brm R~~~ie$ fr~ QM~~15~~~o[jreg ming wholesaie revamp~~g of o~(~~ool system versus CCD VICTORIA (NC) - Give the Latin and Oriental rites larish organizations retire~ent JElimination of raffles collec- larm~alliopp~rtuni~yto speak On the ne~Ci~ive sidEiI 418 felt f priests at age 6s-these were tronSand all o~her fUli9-raising his mmd on the results of the that there was a great need of sorrie suggestions for updating gimlnicks was proposed for Second Vatican Council the better adult edUcation~ There advanced by the Youngstown Catholic schools One priest liturgy ecumenism and the was overwhelming concern for ltt1Iioceses 262 priests lamented the lack of dialogue Church and hell say plenty better Catholic education more The Ohio priests responded between parents pastor and Bishop Remi de Roo of Vic- religious instruction for Catholic generously to a request by school principal and suggested toria here in British Colombia children not in Catholic schools lBishop James W Malone apos- the establishment of q parish discovered tbis when 600 parish- more Catholic youth activities tolie administrator of the diocese s~nate whose members would ioners filled out a comprehen- and efforts to build a strongerlior suggestions The bishop now sit in on school faculty meetings sive questionnaire and returned family life Inadequate teachers lltas called on the laity of the Also present was the limitation it to the chancery office Two- and poorly trained teachers also aliocese to make suggestions The of all classes to a maximum 6f thirds of them signed their came under fire llle~ IS-member pastoral com- 40 students names but this was not required Other tOPIcs which turned up

mission will study all suggestions Their comments went far beyond in the survey but which were) ~ and make recommendatioQs to the questions asked not put as questions included

BiShOP Maione ~ooamprm~ [L~~ A $~udYof the an~wers reveals creination pullfigpting marshy~ Th new liJurgy econli~ics

thatjwlJi1~ mo~etlJan two-thirds riageof c1Ergym~n children ~ryshy

ond parish orgllnizations were O~ Greg~reg[jcr of the people were pleased with ing in church nuris habits povshy lto~llQrig t1Je most popular are~s of new deveWpments in the erty arid the clergys ability as ) ltilCmment by th~ priests SAIGON (NC)-General Jos- Church the remaining admitted businessmen

To enhance singing at IYJass eph W Stillwell lost during a being mildly or very disturbed atere were suggestions for each plane flight from San Francisco Fifty pel cent agreed that the

iParish to mime a minister of to Honolulu is prayeclully reshy council 1 hadmiddot deepened their CoIQmbilaquoli CFM Has JlIllusectic to teach liturgical music membered by grateful lepers Faith and btou~ht them closer National Structure ~ parishioners and for establish- Sisters and their chaplain in St to the Church but 105 stated ment or strengthening of mixed Joseph~s28 miles ~rom Saigon vOSEPH MICHAUD that they had been left confused BOGOTA (NC) -The Chrisshymoirs to e1)courage others to They recall how on April 5 Fifty PeJ cent answered that tian Family Movement which Cak~ part 1964 when Viet Cong activities the liturgical reforms had helped has been functioning on a someshy

Another priest asked for had resulted in cutting off the Michaud Shrine them pray better Fifty per cent what independent basis in 17 ~ilwre patience in implement- leper hospital from all supplies said they felt the Church could dioceses in this country now has

lIDg the changes because thebt road Gen Stillwell and his Music Director be improvedmiddot Two-thirds felt the structure of a national lleW forms of participating are d~uty Col John L Klingen- that theChur~ should concern organization

lIlot appealing to all Ther~was Jiagen of St LOUis came to the WA~HiINGTON (NC)-Joseph itself wore with the internashy The first national meeting of ~plea also for a return to the rescue They brought food and Michaud has been appointedmiddot tionalsituation soCial and ecoshy the CFM was convoked in the holy and dignified liturgical other necessities in a series of music director of the National nomic problems last part of July by Bishop Pabshy

music imd elimination of folk helicopter fliglits carried out lgty Shrine of the Immaculate Oonshy Asked specifically where the lo Correa Leon of Cucuta presishy oongs and modem swing music the U S Support Command of ception here Msgr Thomas J Church should be more involved dent of the Episcopal Commisshy

Another priest urged that ~4ee- which Gen Stillwell was com- Grady director of the Shrine the answers voried from rehabili shy sion for the Lay Apostolate in dom of experimentation in the mander announced tation of drug addicts the labor order to organize CFM on a nashy

1Iiturgyshouldbe encouraged Ben San has about 280 leper Michaud will develop and su- movement and the emerging tional scale nations A board of directors of the Changes in Vestments~ patients in the care of the pervise the music program at the

national CFM was named andThere were requests to elim Daughtersof Charity of St Vin- Shrine assemble and train a Most Important The majorit~ considered the includes five married couples mate or -review Forty Hours de- cent de Paul chortis vf mixed voices evenshy

three from the Bogota archdioshyYotions and similar celebra- -Mrs faillwell durfug her st~y tuallyadd a choir of men and five most important questions tions for daily evening Masses in Vietnam was one of the boys and supervise the care of cese and one each from the archshy

the Church and fellow Chrisshydiscu~ed at the council to be

dioceses of Cali and Medellinma parishes where there are two American women who sponsored all organs and the carillon tians birth control active sharshy These five couples in cooperashy

CI more priests and for smaller the new center for undernour- A native of Sumas Wash ing in the iturgy the sharing of tion with Father Enrique Acosta

~onfirmation classes with ~he ished children also conducted by Michaud has served churches responsibility in the Church are In charge of extending the

IIIlX prIests who are deans bemg the Sisters of Charity in Saigon and schools in Seattle San Franshyand religious liberty Prefer- CFM throughout the entire

Gi~legated by the bIShop to ad- We are praying fo~ the be~ cisco Portland Ore Detroit countryences at the bottom of the listBlumster the sacrament reaved family Father Vict Pittsburgh and Mt Lebanon Pa Be or H h were worl~ populition atheismOther suggestions called for a C MH h d

~ 1 l hts th rset chaplam at Ben IS c Olrs ave appeare on international government and_~cussion on Vlgl Ig e San wrote network radio broadcasts gave l)rlests breviary changes 10 the premiere presentation of Mass vestments and merits of Alexander Peloquins Missa Na- SAVE MONEY ONEstablishes Specialgroup confessions in which lPiJiest Plans Homes tiVitatis with the Pittsburgh penitents attend a Bible service Symphony over the CBS net- Tourists Parish to to confession and receiveab- middotfor Working Grls work iIi 1962 and in December YOUR OILHEATCOLOGN]i (NC) - Colognessolution private~y and then per~ TECHNY (NC) ~ Father Ed- 1955~ sang in Menottis Ahmal Joseph Cardinal Frings has apshySform a community penance such wiu-di Wojniak SVD Chi- an~ the ~nght Visitors WYmanpointed a multilihgual Dutch ~eatt as recitation of a prayer to c~go-born Society of the Divine 3-6592priest to establish a special tourshy

tether Word mlssionary is oft the verge A~d R f W k ists parish on the Autobahn nearOne writer suggested that the of seeing his dream come true Imiddot 5 e ugee or CHARLES IF VARGASDusseldorf llrishop offer Sunday Mass at a bull ltiliff rent ish church each He has ben VISItIng throu~h- Of German Knights Although several churches are 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

~ par raut the Umted States seekmg located 01_ th~ famous German ~ee h h Id b t d d the aid of busineSs firms which BONN (NC) - The German highway none provides special NEW IalEfPlFqitD ~SS

Tl~ l~g S P e l~ ro u~ h have interests in Formosa to aid government has provided three tourist services The new parish la prIes v~o h a~~ ~s w lCll him in his pet project----to erect jeeps tnd three ambulances for besides the church will have a Opt t~ngfs ~u I r~p11 hostels for factory giriS present- the work being done by the Ger- hot~J restaurant theater and

~ngo reds es IVdi~ s e c 1 ly forced to live in squalid man Knights of Malta for refushy chiIdr~ns pla~~rounds ~IOt~eSan ahn Idnonb- tockesan fCO - c~owded unhealthful and prim- gees in South Vietnam ec IOns s ou e a en rom T dt d t cae proceeds of the tithing sys- 1 lVe con 1 IOns angerouso f team ~f about 25 Germa~s C2 only to their phYSical well bemg- wl1 work m refugee camps In

m but also to their moral well Hoi in the QuangNam province r~oD~D~i~=~i~~~~i HUe]) lllen~ Poor being in ilentral Vietnam

Others suggested rich par~shes The hostels will be non-de- The Germar government will n _ See Us should help poor parIshes nominational and will provide contrilmte about $250000 annushy ~ -Abou~ ij~rough a commo fund that quar~ers in pleasant surround- ally for the work of this counshy

o each ~arish establIsh a fma~ce iilgs at $3 per month In addition tt-ys Knights of Malta in Vietshy ~ ~t17 (~~~OuTI]OUceouureg [ commlttee and the ~lOcese hire toa home it will provide edu-nam ~(jrtamp euroleiJcp(]ip C1

a fulltJme profeSSional fund eational and recreational facili- llaiser for parishes that need his ties Father Wojniak said The ~1lIIilllliJllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllm ~ ~~~~[HJA~ ~ aervices first hostel will be built at Tai~ - shy

as pilot with DRY - E SAVINGS BANK I epei a project E CLIEANNG Says Gift of Tools Father Wojniak as director of ~ and ~

Wareham falmouth J f =rst Class MIracle Taiwan Hostels Inc which will ~ fUR STORAGE ~ -y 5-3800 IltI 8-3000 HEATING OIL

w be run on a noh-profit basis E D == 4-o_a_C1_a~~D__o-o-BOGOTA (NC) -Shop stu- E ERMODY ~

dents at Bogotas Colegio San f R ClEANERS ~ Viator reclved a windfall of lIanCISCans etaln == ryyYYyy~

~~~C1Jm~d~~~~ B~r~~(N~~m~ty iEE

nCohan ~~~ l bullC~~o~A~~~~~E~RT ~ 4lIlllira~le by one of the students two newly received Franciscan ~JIIIIII1I1I11I11I11I11I11I11I1I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I1I1I11I11I11Ii ~ nncluded a large variety and Sisters of Perpetual Adoration ~ Spaeious Fireproof Sleeping Quart~rs-BoysI to 14 yrs Old quantity of hand tools and two retained their baptismal names Six-week season June 26 to Aueust G ch of severallarge power tOQls with the title of Sister at their GRmiddotACIA BmiddotROS t Register for z or 4 or 6 weeks Free Tutoring it desired 4Father John Stafford CSV reception into the community ia ehicago provincial supervising St Joseph the Workman Cathe- bull i THE BROTHERS OF THE SACRED HEART

tile Viatorians Bogota mission draI here in ~7isconsin _ ~ eommented that the gift worth tVlot~er General Ann Marie of Excavating SACRED HEART SCHOOL

$6000 in the United States is ~ Rose convent said the name C worth five times that in Colom- policy change was the first ill ontractors r t SBAltON MASSACHUSETTS ~

twa He added that the tOok itleU6~year history of the com- ~ bull (I~SS 5T~FAIRHAViH A Reside~t School for BoYS Grammar Gra~es ~-li-6-1- ~ would probably give the school muOityAt the same ceremollTthebest~lIuipped shop ~ tiampe~ Sistels made ~rst-year pN-l WYman 2-4862 = CAMP 0amp SCHOOL TeL 1171845162 4 ~~tlY ~YOWi- ~ampamp~

bull I 1bull

bull ~ I I bull I bullbull I ~

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 Parish to Serve Wide Community

PATERSON (NC)-With the end of its vacation religiolli school St Josephs parish heICI

Lucis V~ew of Marriage Seen Delig~tfuny O~d-fashioned~ in New Jersey has turned ~

serve a wider communityBy Mary Tinley Daly Priests Sisters seminarianpound Never it is said have so many million words been and student volunteers haw

written about a marriage as the reportage of the Luci taken a $200 budget given by the Catholicmiddot Interracial Council andJohnson-Patrick Nugent nuptials-TH WEDDING in put on a program of field triP8Dpopular terminology Its over in all its impressive dignity arts and crafts athletics and

with an ele~ance wor~hy ~f honestly state that thei ambishy story-telling for 120 youngstem the marrIage of a PresIdent s tion is to grow up get married The children mostly Negro

had no opportunity to be part ofdaughter Yet like every and have babifs any other summer program sowedding great or small it Somewhere along the line edshy Father Nicholas Molinari steppedearried its message of identifica- ucatlOnally or other~se they in to help themtionto the millions viewing it are shunted career-WIse or preshy Our objec~ father said on the screen tend to bemiddot They of course to impress the children witlait n d to those want to marry but this is in~ love They dont understan~itreading about cidental they ~avent ~xperienced it We

it At our house AlulDDae middotNotes want to break down their selfshy~ ve n a s ~ t Loo~ ~t you~ Alumnae h~ite concept We want to make vou~s t~at no~- ~otes Bii( deal is ~ gal who them realize tha~ they are goodoshy

middot ~l~c Idenbfi has her masters working on catlOn was pres- the doctorate il physics mathe- t Ik Sisters of Christian en now ex matics Russian or whatever actly ho LUCI And the proud boast of a college feels squealed imany of our graduates are no~ Charity Elect America

PADERBORN (NC) - Sister bride as the TV fathers our most recent making more money than their

M Augustilde Giesen of Jersey showed the radiant Luci on her Into these same alumnae notes City has been elected the first fathers arm comes a confession humbly American superior General 0If

And I know how ~~rvous written from Betty B that she is the Sisters of Christian Charit Pat was at that moment cm- still just a housewife has a here in Germany mented the most recent bnde- family and recently was electesl Sister Augustilde former PJOogtNURSERY FRiENDS Sister Marie Patrice RSM Br~om president of the local PTA vincial of the province headshy

director of Holy Angels Nursery for Exceptional Children grooms of years ago author has expressed herself Belmont NC cuddles one of the 69children in her care was director of the provinces

To go further back an eon against the discontented femi junior sisters attending Marillae

Me too from bndes and Phyllis McGinley talented quartered at Mendham N J

most of whom because of their disabilities require roundshyor two even th ~ea~ of the nine mystique of searching for Sisters Formation College at thethe-clock attention NC Photo House and hIS bnde shared fullfillment outside of the home time of her election the g~ose pImples So have others The 2200-member congregashy

Behmd the pomp and ClrcUJI1- As an addendum we find 1lI tion founded in Germany ~

stance sket~h~s of gowns held 10 quote from Rep Emmanuel Celmiddot Disclaimsmiddot New Breed 1849 moved to the United States somewhat ndiculous top secrecy ler (D-NY) apropos prohibiting in 1873 during the anti-Catholic as though they were plans for discrimination against wom~ franciscan Nun Biology Professor Says Kulturkampf compaign of Gershym~on shots was the forthrIght serving on juries man chancellor Otto von BisshyattItude of thIS l~-year-old brIde There are women who work Primary Apostolate Is Prayer- marck

Sh~ wants th~s to be a goo~ because they have to others who marnage andw111 try to make It work because they want to and BUFFALO (NC)-Dr M Re- My whole life I trust is givshy New Secretary 10 there is the lazy kind whO gin~ L~gan associat~ profes~ ing witness to Christ she anshy CHICAGO (NC)-The Nationshy ~er father the PresIdent ~o cleans washes irons cooks sor of bIOlogy and chaIrman of swered I am a biology profes al Catholic Conference for Intershyma~t~r how you regard hUll chauffeurs mend1l binds lIP ~e biology concentration at sor whose prime role is twoshy racial jUstice haS announced the~lltlc~lly you must alknow~~ wounds nurses cloctors middotand Rosary Hill College here conshy fold first in edu(ation proper appointinfmt of Margaret Cshyedgeexpres~edfath~rly ~onfl~ shops and has conSequently So tends there is no such thing u and second in research middottomiddot fur Roach to its program staff Millli

middot dencewen he said of fat little to do aD day why Should bull new breed of nuns ther the education of my stushy Roach haB been social actioaN~gent LUCI look~ up to him she not 1e obligated NrM _ The sCientist HI as qualified dents~ _ secretarY for the National CO~with great r~spect eep ~~c OIl ju~es as anybody else to know She However she noted many ell ai Catholicmiddot Women iIinoetion a~d confIdence 10 hlll It has been a Franciscan nUll for people think th-at by taking offMs go~ng to b~ ~ good ~arrIage 28 years and she iilsists the the reUgio~ garl or by drop~Dunn~ the s~me mtervlew Urges ~ UnmiddotderstClnding OSF middotcomes before the PhDbull ping the religious title we Call1he President recalled that Luci

be more effective This is not so had been a deep1y reiigious girl Of Other Churches I dont think Sisters have all of her life even before her SPOKANE (NC)-We me ehanged she said People are As a nun my primary aposshyConversion to Catholicism More- not take the positioJl that the jUst beginning to llotice what tolate is prayer to give God the over he did not believe middotshe other Christian coinmunitiesaM weve beeJ doing all along love and adoration that the would ever become active in simply in error Bishop Ber- With 11 biological papers pubshy modem world often neg1Eicts to politics but would concentrate nard J Topel has advised priests llIshed and nine read with the give In the present day discusshyon home-inak~ng raisin~ a fam- of the Spokane diocese in a Get eredit of being first to isolate sion of the nun in the modern

middot lyen and followm~ her faIth of interim ecumenical JUide-- tile bacteria Desulfovibrio desul- world attention should be foshyFather not politician was lines furicans and with the institution cused on her existlmce nc)t the

apeak~g ~hen Bishop Topel urged priesbl i= of a trail-blazing method of preshy garb she wears she said middot LU~I s VIew of ~arriage IS re- avoid expressions judgmenu menting a college biology curricshyfreshmg and dellghtfully old- and actions which do not repre- ulum the Franciscan who drinks

196= -

JANSONS Pharmacy

Arthur Janson Reg Phcim DIABETIC AND SICK ROQM

SUPPLIES 204ASHL~ BOULEVARD

New Bedford WY 3middot8405

fashioned middotin the mid-twenti~th sent the condition of oui sepa- ber ~offee black is fully a pro century when so many gIrls rated brethren with truth ad fessional in science toohave their sights set on the split-personality syndrome mar- fairness and 110 make mutual She has be~n awarded $81000 BISA~ILLONSriage plus individual freedom relations with them more cWI- llra grants-m-rod for her reseach

ficult th g ma career and assuming at once He said full eucharistic ecm on e pernICIOUS m1cro~r ams a plar- in the forefront of out- ~~t has ~ knack for rummg oill GARAGEside activities munion is the ultimate lioal laquoIi dnlling ngs

Most little girls are disarming- the ecumenical movement WitnGS8 b Christ ly frank (see Art Linkletters 24our Wreck~r Service program or talk wit~ 7 8 and C I H bull 0 H d How does her commI~ent Ie Iyear-olds you know) The 0 bull olsgton eo s ~erstudents and co~CCmltantl

W A C to ber research (she 18 also II 653 WashinJton Street Fclirhaven omen s rmy orps iOOnsultant at Oak Ridge National HoldYou~g Christian WASHINGTON(NC) - A Laboratory the group leader of WYman 4middot5058 h b I e s s i ng followed traditional aCivil Defense fixed monitorin ~bullbullbullbull middotStudent Works OFgt 8wearingin ceremonipounds here for Station mici a ~part fliine seamshy N0TRE DAME (NC) - The Col Elizabet~ P Hoisington the_ bullreSs) Bel With h1el commit- ~IMtlIIIIIIHIIIItIIIIIIIIItImiJlHililjJlniRiiillntJiliIllNtiJtIlIHII~

Reoild annuai Young Christian new director 01 the Women mentu a Biofei6ec ~ = - _ Student apostolic workshop Wall Army Coorps Christ ~ li5

middotheld here thisweeKformiddot~Brade ~Themiddot middotblessing was giVeIlE D p SAlES middotANDmiddot middotSEmiddotRVICE ~ oionhoolmmiddotode~~torsfromparochial MsgrCKennethGStackaper-middot sect middotcmiddot bull - bullbull j bull iL

bullbull L~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull0bullbullbullbullbullbullbull middot _ IIand public school groUpsas weB s~Ia1frierid of the woman Armgt II Ill [He c E

as parishes ~ le~de~onher request afters~ bull J B II i ~ middotmiddotmiddotmiddotltThe Iconference coordinated had taken heroath of office ani 8 8 I FR sect - 1(JImiddotDmiddotmiddotAmiddotmiddotIREshy by the Catholic Action Office of beeli pi6moted from lieutenant 8 bull -1 l =

Notre DamemiddotUniversity was beld e9Jonelmiddotmiddotmiddot II LUMBER CO == I~

On t~e universitys campus middotCQlol)~I)loisington ~lPadu = 8 il RIEF ~IIG_ ~RATIOmiddot sect~ong ilP~a~er~ wer~raJherlilte_oftbe C0Uege oI~ou So Dartmouth bull IE ~ i

middot LOUISJPutz cS~_reltor of Da~eaalti~or~ Md JOlDeG II bull~ e h~p~~~~orauli1~~~h~ ~e~~n~~~~2~t~e~~~sLe~middot a~ Hyannis I 0 APPLIANCES I natioI)alltJirectoro(t~~ Gabrie(CIllsterthe Bronze Star ~So Dartmouth WY of$84 55 middot IR middotCO~IDmiddotITIOIG 5 Richard Institute and the Rev CroiX de Guerre with silver 1Rm bull i A ~ ~ n ~

middot Ja~es Neuman pastor of Hum- and the American and ~uropeaJll IMjaRwia 29211 == boldt Pa~ United BrethreJll Jheater ribbons of Wo~ld Wall bull ~ 363SECONDSomiddot FALL RIVER MASS~ ~

_ r middot9~~Imiddot~~ R~-pound~~~ -P-t rmiddotmiddot - gt gt bull IllbullbullIIIbullbull_1118 middotIiIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIHIUlllIIUIUIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIII1I1II1IIlIlUIIIIIIUllIIIIIIIIIIIUlIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIUU_ _

9 ~Swooned Priest Eggplant Dish U$ong Legendary P~r$ey P~~B1)t

By Joseph amI MarilYllll Roderick The cool weather where ~gain and with it the grass

has begun to break donnancy and send up little green shoots which means that the lawn mowers which have been restshying for a few weeks have got to be brought back to action

The drought that we had uperienced for the past three Summers has raised havoc with lawns and it doesnt seem much good can be done this season in areas still under water restrictions Howshyever in those that are not theremiddotre a few thingsmiddotwhich can be done middotbetween now and 1hetirst -bst to help lawns along To begin with this is amiddot good

middottime to apply itmiddot weed killer of some kin to I prefer tousecomshybination weed killer and fertil shyzer as this saves time and does el good job This should help dear up the lawn and start the grass out of dormancy Follow this with a good raking to disshylodge some of the matted grass and you are well on your way

to a healthy lawn in the Spring The next step is to buy a good grass seed if your lawn is well established and to apply it at ab04t half the rate or less sugshymiddotgested on the packageThe idea behind this is to fill in places where the lawn is thin or where weeds have been killed Incishydentally it is a good idea to wait two or three weeks aftermiddot

middot you have applied weed killer middotbefore you start new grass seed

It is important that your seed be a good brand and quality A eheap seed contains many coarse ~escues and annual graSses which will do the lawn very little good over the long run Jetter to buy a very good seed in small amounts than an iJlexshypensive seed which will cause you more trouble than it will do good

The only job left af~er middotthis is ~ keep themiddot lawn moistsq~bat

snippedt up the flavor would be stronger

Well I cooked my recipe and it was quite delicious but a few sprigs of the green shoots reshymained on the counter and as Joe was helping me clean up he inquired why Ihad been picking carrot tops Needless to say at that moment I rseolved to learn a great deal more about parsley in all its varieties The things I found out in my research on the parlsley plant were quite fascinating and even it bit frightening if youre the superstitious type Did you know that it was thought to be such a plant of the devil that it could only be sown on Good Friday if it were to flourish at all In anciert times the Greek$ decked their tombs with it for they fully believed that it sprang from the blood of one of their dead heroes It was also th9ught only the wicked could grow parsley successfully

Feeling that its merits must far outweigh its supposed curses I searched further to discover that one of the beliefs that surshyrounded it was that wherever it flourished the missus is master This could provide a good reason for cultivating it

Getting away from the P4rely theoretical and into the practical I learned that parsley is la h~rdy biennial normally flowering and going to seed in the Spring -after sowing though in a hot dry year it may bolt and go to seed in late Summer (this is what happened to Ti Tias parsshyley bed) Seed may be planted inmiddot April and May fOf a Summer and early Autumn crop andmiddots

the n~wgtseed has amiddotchlUlce tos~cpnd s~~ing JWlde ~lllate~uly germinate If you are succ~ pr August for tbe next ~pring and the lawn does take it is im-~pd SumDler n

middot perative tbat you keep the n~wpar~le~ steJfis have fiir~ore grasscut at about two inches So~avor than the leayes and ~e

that it makesmiddot sorneroot growth French often use only the stem before the coIf weather sets in where taste is more important

Mostlawns should bereseededmiddotthan appearance They are full iJdHis vaVeach year pIefetabiyof chlorophyll (thatgreeliishIn late Augustor eatlySeptem- property lthat was so popular a

ber Seeding is outmiddot of the ques- fewmiddot years ago) andmiddot when tion however where water re- crushed ~intmiddot mayonnaise aod

strictions are still in effect So other sauces a lovely shade of if you are allowed to water only green If you do happen tomiddot be one or two hours a week you wicked enough to have pars- will have to suffer your poor ley flourish in your yard the hlwq or at least another season four most popular ways of storshy

h the Kitchen ing it in your refrigerator are 1 With the stems kept ina

I realize that I have a great glass of water deal to learn concerning both 2 Washed water shaken off the kitchen and garden but my sealed in a glass jar or plastictack of knowledge was undershy bag

Jined the other day when I was 3 Unwashed in a plastic bamiddotg preparing to cook the recipe 4 Washed and folded intoa

- yentat Irrt ~sing in this eeks cloth the clothmiddot absorbs the ~olumn As I readmiddot the hst of dampness ~ee~ed Ig~edlents I only gave I found the following recipe iilSSmg notce to t~e paryleyas ~elicious even J~oJlgh graced

have always gathered It fr~s~ with carrot top~ instead of parsshy rom a large bed over In 1-1 Tla s -- ley The unusw name may refer ya~d howev~r when I wet to sltmelllenlbero(th~-cleigy over to pick It I found that In who fainted with joy at the flashya s~ort span of a few days most vor he enjoyeo

0pound It bad gone to seed - middotmiddot middotmiddotmiddotmiddot SWo()nedPri~stmiddot~lmiddotmiddot

Suddenly I see~ed to recall 1 eggplant peeled and sliced ~hat Joe ~admentIoned that he h inch thick had planted some of theltalian 2 large onions sliced _ Vanety llear our raspberry 3 large tomatoes sliced ~ushes ah the day was saved salt and pepper That must be it I said to 1 small bunch of fresh pa~ middotmyself as I spied sOllIe feqthery ley minced green shoots along the fence it 2 Tab)e~pouns oil didnt smell very much like 2 cloves of garlic sliced

middot parsley but ther again it was 1) Arrange eggplant onionsmiddot supposed to be a different va- and tomatoes in alternate layen lriety and perhaps when I in a large frying pan sprinkling

each layer with salt pepper ahd 1 00 R the minced parsley u v eglster 2) Add 1fJ cup hot water the

NEW YORK (NC) - More oil and garlic

than 1000 person have regis- 3) Cover tightly -andmiddot simm1r ~7~~d to at~end the ei~J1th n~- for about 30 minutes or u~til ~lonal CursI110 Movement eon-iiquia Is reducedt~aricl1 gravY iention now in session here Remove garlic before serving

PRE-CONVENTION ARRANGEMENTS BY DCCW DELEGATES Among the delegates from the Diocese who met recently for arrangements to attend the 33rd National Convention of Catholic Women in Miami Beach Oct 5-8 were left to right Mrs James E Williams St Josephs No Dighton Miss Angela Medeiros Mt CarmelSeekonk Mrs Theophane Lavoie St Jeim the Baptiste Fall River Mrs John Smith Sk Marys South Dartmouth Thursday Sept I is the closing date for registration of delegates from the Diocese to the Convention

Nuns Health Insurance Econoniist Tells Superiors Life Expectancy

Justifies C~operative Plan MILWAUKEE (NC)-Kuni- encountered by ri~ns thlo~ghQut erlliy o~payton ecqnonll~ ~r~ their lifetime ~essor Wbo~peciali~es i~m~g- Medical Passports ic~l statisectticl(or~seesalow-c~ To c~nect data FecheidEl~ised be~lthi~u~an~e~lan a~~ a~ni- a medlqal i4e~tification card 1fiect )rgra~ 0 n1edlcal and whichiiecalIi a medical pass-h~spltal facllitiesfr Am~can middotPOrtHe said these cards carshynuns under the admlm~tratlOrt~f ryingrecords of current disabili shythe Conference of MaJor Supe- tiesmiddotmiddot eouldaid in accumulating

middot riors of Wmen medical information to help Addressmg t~e conferepCemiddot ~t middotnuns qualify for lower cost Its annual meetmg he~e COli Jhealth insurance and to organize Fecher s~ldmiddot ~ooperativeplaQsan eventual program of comshy~or ~ns m thIS country canbe JustIfIed by the longer life exshypectancy ~nd better health of women relIgiOUS Fecher presented d~ta Q~ a

fIve-year study on disabIlItIes among 3)000 nuns He has made many previous statistical studies on ~he nuns long~vity

Smce nuns lIve In what Fec~er calls a contrlled life studIes ~f thelmiddot medlcal sta~us can prOVide medical SCIence WIth ~nf~rtn~tion relvatgt-t to 0-lher q~e1 But mo~t PTllvI~ts stuq~es have conc~Iltrat~~~m rn~rtalItybull s~tI~tl~s~l1d w~re coJcerI)edW~~ lteaJh apd I~ causes Fec~eT s rece~t ~~S centered around the dIsabIlIties

Christrtras Bazaar Advance preparations fire beshy

middot ing made for a Christmas bazaar slated for the weekend of Nov 25 through 27 in the basement of Sacred Hearts Church Nolth Fatrhaven Meetings are being held in the rectory at 730 each

middot MOhday night and parishioners who cannot come at this time

middot are mged to volunteer home services byknitting sewing or making fthEir articles for sale

Materials will be furnished and dondticins iire laquo iHsifoeing reshyquested 101 a white elephant table Gerierafdiairman Mrs Roland Larocque announcesmiddot that

prOfits will benefit the school improvement fund

bined health care They might also be of value to physicians treating future illnesses he said

The five-year survey tended to support the adage your health mirrors your environ ment Abstinence fromalcohol and ~igarettes a well-balanced diet adequat~ housing secure

bull communa livi and celibacy apparently do iow down the aging process Fecher said

He cautioned however that this does not ~ecessarilYmean that areligious life promotes longevity and that a similar am6tirlt of work-day schoolshy

day orreligiflus-day sefvice 10sseser be applied to each and every religious community in tbecountrymiddot

Fecher said that data collected over the past 40 years shows that the health middotcare programs of reshyligious are very uneven

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Aug 25 1966

Approves Loco ~

School Boards BURLINGTON (NC) - The

appointment of four local Cathshyolic school boards brings a new method of Catholic school manshyagement to 25 per cent of the diocesan schools here in Vershymont

At the regular monthly meetshying of the Burlington Diocesan School Board Father John A Lynch diocesan superintendent of schools reported that consti shytutions for four schools had been approved making a total of 25middot per cent of the schools operating under policy-malting boards approved by the diocesan board

~he diocesan statutes e~c6urshya~ebut do not demand the formatior of 10 c a l schoOl boards he said

Father Lynch also announced that a study would be made of school costs in the hope to find ways to avoid increasing tuition and parish assessments The study of education costs will be made by George Fortune acshycounting consultant to the diocshyesan school system

Good Counsel College Gets Loan for Dorm

WASHINGTON (NC) - A $1180000 college housing loan for Good Counsel College for women in White Plains NY to build a new dormitory has been approved Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Robert C Weaver announced here

The dorm is planned to acshycommodate 192 students The college conducted by the Sisters of Divine Compassion has an ellrollment of some poo students

Some students required to live on campus are in overcrowded middotfacilitiesmiddot Mother M Dolores president said lack of housing will foree themiddot college to deny admission middottoa number of stushydents middotthis fall she said The COllege enrollment is expected to reach 650 in five years and

800 in 10 years

Ce~tervilfe Guild New officers of Our Lady of

Victory Womens Guild Centershyville are Mrs StephenB OBrien Jr president Mrs John J Pendergast Jr and Mrs James Murphy vice-presidents Mrs ~oger Carlson treasurer Mrs Francis McKenna and Mrs Edward ONeill secretaries

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

middotOPENDAllY FORTHIE SEASON AFTERNOON and NIGHT

niE ANCHOR $as~ Vocationsmiddot10 Thurs Aug 25 1966 COnCern ofAIi

Employer U rges ST LOUIS (NC) - Speaking at the third annual Vocation Mass in St Louis cathedral

middot here Joseph Cardinal Ritter said middotvocations in the Church should

Workers to Vote For Teamsters

be the concern of every Roman SAN FRANCISCO (NC) Catholic

-The Di Giorgio Corporashy The cardinal told 397 men and women preparing to enter semishytion is recommending that naries and convents in the Fanits farm workers vote to afshy that religious vocation is not

filiate with the Teamsters FaTm middot merely a concern for the arch-Workers Union if they wish middot diocesan director a union the company announced It is a matter of solicitudeshy

Robert Di Giorgio president for each and everyone of us A of the company said therecomshy vocation is a divine thing but mendationmiddot is in accordance with it is a thing which God will not National Labor Relations BoaTd w~thhold from His peopleprocedures The recommendashy Cardinal Ritter continuedtion was made in letters sent to Bymiddot manifesting a concern employes eligible to vote in the about and an interest in vocashyunion election scheduled Ifor tiols we truly show that we Tuesday Aug 30 middot are the People of God

Opposing the Teamsters will be the National Farm Workers Association (NFWA) and the Seeks Assistance Agricultural Workers Organshy For Congo Churchizing Committee AFL-CIO (AW OC) which have merged since WASHINGTON (NC) - A they began the long Delano Congolese senator visiting the strike United States on a State Departshy

The Teamsters won the originshy ment tour program for foreign al election for union representashy government officials hopes to tion but charges of fraud make his two-month visit serve brought a new election a double purpose

Di Giolgio said the corporashy Senator Gaston Diomi wants tion is recommending a vote to speak with Catholic laymen for the Teamsters because middotand members of the clergy per-

The Teamsters won the preshy haps address audiences at vious electionmiddot Catholic institutions in his hope

The Teltlmsters while they to bring the Church iri the light hard in their members Congo to the eyes of American behalf are fair arid responshy ~ Catholics

And the senator has a planesible he wants to set up sharing proshyCompany Union middotFeels Adults Need Religious grams throughout the United

The competing union on tne States programs in which an ballot the Nationa Farm Workshy More So Than Children Nun Declares American diocese would adopt z ers AssoCiation has achieved Congolese diocese an American tentative recognition with oniy LOVELAND (NC)-Religious JI1ost rigidly formed in the old program to meet its needs--part religious order adopt a Congoshytwo growers the larger of which

education is needed for aduits system to see the new vision of which could be a parish lese order an American orphan-this year shifted production from school age adopt a Congolese orphanmore than for children and a of themiddot Churchand of Christian~ble grapes to wine tnus elimshy Flexibility and the wiUing- agebetter term for it would be life middotsetmiddot forth by the Secondinating a great many jobs ness tomiddot try a variety 01 ap- The American governmentmiddotsomething like shared growth Vatican Council Cesar Chavez head of the N iIi Christian middotlifemiddotmiddotmiddot This is 8 hard ~ask Sister prOdches ought to be the mmk of has such sharing programs the FWA called the Teamsters a an effectivereligious education senator pointed out WhyThis is the estimate of Sis admitted for adult educationcompany union and said it

tel 114 Charles Borromeo former demands new approaches and program she asserted empha- shouldnt the Church have the has entered into a partnership sizing thatmiddotit should have a so- same The Church that is Cath-head of the theology school at cannot be imposedwith Di Giorgio in a commonmiddot cia1 and an ecumenical dimen- olic the Church that is definedSt Marys College conducted by Each Ones Missionplot agabnst the farm workers sionmiddot QY the Second Vatican CouncilHoly Cross Sisters at Notre She wouldnt abandon chil-He said the companys recom- Built into each program middotas a missionary Church- whyDame Ind She recently joined drens education JOwever Shemendation confirmed that the should be a growirig aW8leness shouldnt this Church and tierthe faculty of St Xavier Col-middot saidTeamstens came to Delano to

lege Chicago as theology pro- What Id like to se~ IS emh of e~ch ones mission in the members share even more readshytlrganize workers at the invita- Church-an outgoing mismiddotsion to ily than government~ifessor set up a total religiou educationiion o~

PROFESSION CEREMONY AT WAREHAM The Chapel in the Woods of the Noshyvitiate of the Sacred Heart Fathers vas the scene Saturday morning as four novices

iere profe~sed by Bishop CoimolIyLeft to right Bro JudeMohan Bro Joseph ONeill Master of Novices Rev Andrew Jahn Bishop Connolly Very Rev Daniel J McCarthy

Prodncial who offered the Mass Bro Paul Daly and Bro Martin Lucia

the corporation New Approaches reach others and to build the

Speaking at the Summer lec- middot social patterns needed in our Oppose Intervening ture series at Grailville herein Quote Pope Pauls world

middot1 PImiddot Ohio USheaqquarters of the A 1 f IP Issues of TimesIn Fami y annlnglt international Grail movement ppea oreace middot She warneq against lookingMILWAUKEE (NC)-The ex- Sister Charles Borromeo aC- BERLIN (NC)-Fiye hundred for textbooks with all thE anshy

ecutive committee of the ad- knowledged that the Church in letters quoting the flppeal of swers or for fOllliulas thatvisory ioard of the Milwauke~ this country has placed most of Pope Paul VI for peace in Vietshy might take the place of decisiOlishyArchdioce~an Family Life Pro- its resources atmiddot the service of nam were sent persons in East rilaking by individual wnsci- gram has adopted a resolution childrens education Germany by the Social Demoshy encesmiddot

opposing government interven But the most urge~t need for cratic Party (SPD) The East Religiousteaching should inshynon in family planning giving religiousmiddot education she said Germans had asked the SPD volve a di~logue she su-ggestunanimousmiddot approval to a 13- if to helpadults especially those why the free world had not ed addi~g that in the past therepoint resolution which insists made imy efforts to end the war has been toomuch sttess on aushythat the matter of family plan- d in Vietnam thorityin teaching rid~otning is a private affair not a Sche u ~ Reopening The letter sent by the Social

bulle~o~gh on sharingChrisliarieoncern of the government Of Chi Smiddot h 1 Democratsmiddot pointed out that the gr()wthmiddot

Frank Stabb chairman of at 0 IC C 00 peace efforts of the pope the Thequesiion is not so ~lUcbtheCatholic board statedthat MTmiddot REPOSE (NC)-A Cath- World Council of Churches and

~hat to tea~h she ()pined butsince it has become increasingly olic school here in Ohio for of the governments of the how will we produce ~he Chrisshyapparentmiddot tilat our federalgov some 250 children will reopen in United States Great Britain (ian experience in litUlgy andernment ans to use taxinoiiey September due to efforts of in- Sweden India France and Itrly

for the spreading of birthcon-middot (lividuai citizens civic and Pro had all middotbeen rejected by the soci~l actionJn th~ great issues trol it becomes the obUgation of testantchurch groups in the communists The letter also of our times ~

NO JOBTOq BIG NONE TOO SMALL

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTE~S

MainOHice and Plant 95 Bridge St lowell M~bullbull

Tet 4586333

Auxiliary Plarits

BOSTON CAMDEN NJ OCEANPORT N~J

MIAMI PAWTUCKET R1 PHILADELPHIA

this family apostolate to speak area the Milford Chamber of middotstressedmiddot the SPDs view that out vigorously in oPllOsition tomiddota Commerce and parishioners of war can no longer be an instru shypolicy which has absolutely no St Andrews church Milford ment in solving political probshyvalidity The Elizabeth Seton School a lems middot He went on to say that when rural outpost of St Andrews Rltidio television and newsshyariy government agency tells parish was established seven paper ieports iil Eastmiddot Germany

middotpoor married couples whether years ago and con tin 11 a llY have given the impression thatmiddot they should have children or plagued by sewage dIsposal no one middotincluding the Pope has

hownfany to have the govern- problems The school wasmiddot closed made any efforts to seek peace ment is making a mighty pre- by court order in the Sumrtler in Vietnam sumptuous intrusion into a most of 1965 but r~openeq last year i J

sacred element of huin~nlife) with an arrangement fo~ haul- Stamiddotmiddotr 0n middotIImiddotmiddotOmiddotftmiddotmiddotammiddotP

middot ing sewge to MilfordmiddotmiddotWhenmiddot ~ middotV 1 t Cmiddoth 1 forcedtostop usingtheMilford DAVENP0RT (NC)~Seven-

eel) members of religious coni 0 un eermiddot apalnmiddot sewage systemlastJanuary t PHILADELPHIA (NCfFa-middot classes were dfscontinueiigt mutlities in theuilitedmiddot middotStates

ther JjRobert Falabella SJ The Closhlg spalked if coin- were among the graduates at the 36 instr~ctor in theolOgyat St mlinity effort led by the Buck- annual mid~Summermiddotcommence

Josephs College here has vol- wheat-middotTaxpayers Associationw ment of St Ambrose College uteered for extended adive aidthemiddotschoolmiddotA fUrid drive for her~in Illwa middotParticipating in duty witp theUS Army Re $250((to pay formiddot new tihiinage the ceremonies was Margheritiimiddot serve s a chaplain in the Vietmiddot f~cilities was ~ledby th~ Mil- Roberti a~ native of Davenportmiddot mam combat zone ford Chamber Of Commerce a leading dramatic sopranQ~

CONVEmiddotNImiddotENT BANKING WITHOUT TRAFFIC PARKING PROBLEMS

at the -

5LADE~S FERRr-r~USJmiddotCOMPANY SOMERSET MASS

j ~ - bullbullbull ~~ ~ bull ) bullbullbull lt

ThemOflt friendlymiddot dmocrt~ lANK oHering

-_~9npi~lC)h$topmiddot~cirliing middotmiddotf bullbullbullClubmiddot Accoul1Its - Auto middotLoa -

Checking Accounts ~ Business boris Savings Accounts~ ~ ~ Ieaj Estate loOns 1 -

- ~Atmiddot S~~~rs~tS~~ppi~~ Ar~a=-~igh~~a 5 ~t~due Me~ber FeCieral I)epositmiddot ri~urance Corporation

I

11 Cardinal Cushing Hits Imbalance In Schools

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing deplored that very little has been oone to relieve racial imshybalance in Bostons public schools in his first public address since his recent illness and conshyvalescence

The Boston prelate told an ecshyumenical meetingmiddot in All Saints Lutheran church here that al shythough very littlemiddot has been done to make a year-old law work we are not discouraged and we are very far from giving up hope that we will have reshyBults before long

He referred to the Racial 1m balance Law aimed at promotshying racial integration in Massashychusetts public schools The meeting marked the first annishyversary of the law The measure will deprive Boston public schools of $30 million in state subsidies until the citys school committee submits an integrashytion plan acceptable to the state board of education Until now the city committee has not subshymitted an acceptable plan

A school that is heavily imshybalanc~d racially cannot provide the best education that should be available for our children Even with the most devoted teachers and the most upto-date proshygrams-and we have both o( these in Boston-a predomiJ)antshyly Negro school suffers from an isolation from the general comshymunity which cannot fail to be harmful~ he said

Scores Slum Landlords In a similar way we can say

that an all white scJ100l fails to reflect the true nature of the radally mixed communitymiddot in which we live and so deprives white youngsters of theexperi ence of living and studying with their neighbors of a different race Ourideal should be to live and workand study and pray side by side in mutual respect and common affection

There hav~ been several proposalsmade during the last year to al~rest imbalance iit the schools of our center city Carshydinal Cushing said None of these has been accepted by those who hove been elected to make these decisions in the schooi srstem Of course we know that no immediate proshygram will solve all our problems but we can make li beginning

The cardinal also criticized slum landlords for the inhuman conditions in which so many here must live and work alid bring JP their families He called for a crash program of assistance for the deprived

State Uses Vacant Catholic School

BURLINGTON (NC)-The re- cently closed Don Bosco Schoolmiddot for BoyS here will Soon befilled up again with teenage boys this time as temporary quarters for Vermonts pilot residential treatshyment center for youthful first shyoffender lawbreakers

In announcing the acceptance of the proposal by Bishop RobertF Joyce of Burlington and the Verm 0 n t Catholic Charities board State Institutiolls Com-

PROFESSION AND CtOTHING CEREMONIES Principals in the ceremonies conshyducted for the Sisters of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts in Fall River on Monday were seated Sr Mary Dolores Sr John Veronica Bishop Gerrard who presided Sr Karen Dolores Sr Mary Catherine Standing Sr Margaret Edward Sr Joseph Maureen Sr Stephen David Sr James Constance Sr Celestine Regis Sr Anne Robert Sr Vinshycent Dolores

Report Says Cold War More Intense Peaceful Coexistence Now Strategic Offensive

WASHINGTON (NC) -Some tegic Studies at Georgetown jarring statements are made in University a Jesuit-conducted a significant news report whose school here

It is an in-depth analysisprivate but highly responsible sponsors call it the resultmiddot ofmiddot quality research It reminds for example that the so-called cold war is not

over and warns that as of now it may be entering a more danshy

gerous phase Th e ~peaceful coexistence

slogan it says was once a comshymuhist defensive stalling tacshytic but now it signifies the communists have gone over to

the strategic offensive The great paradox of our

times the document asserts may well turn out to be our inability to recognize that the cold war has in reality become more intel1se despite the increasshying appearance of peace

The goals of the presentmas~ tels of the Kremlin are no dif- ferent from tho~e of Khrushshychev Stalin or Mao Tse-Tung and to the Krtmlin peac~ful coshyexistence is a strategy not an end in itself it declares

The study entitled Peace or Pea c e f u1 Coexistence was

sponsored by the Committee on Education Against CommUllism of the American Bar Association It was unveiled in New York just before the ABA began its annual meeting in Montreal but it was prepared by Richard V Allen a specialist on Sino-Soviet affairs at the Center for Stra-

K of c Plan Socoal

Action I itia tive

missioner John Y Woodhull MIAMI BEACH (-NC) - The stated I think this is one (f the top official of the Knights of finest ecumenical testures of Columbus announced plans for faith and charity that I have a new initiiitive in the ecumenshyknown i -i~al and soCial action field

The eenter ill ~ ~provide a through a partnership with theO

home for 16 to 20 b(iys aged HI John LaFarge Institute ill New to 18 who are referrecl by the York ~ - eourls as first offenders Toile In additior W financial assist shyboys will work loeal du-in ancethe LaFllg~jnstitute will

the day and return to the center reeeive suggestifmsand recomshyin the ~venin1 for intensive mendations frOJll the official roup t~erapy eonducted b) rep-~~entationand plJrticipatiOll

Btaff III ~ix bull Ule K bull C

based onmiddot more than 3000 articles and documents of the internashytiOllal communist movement more than 90 per cent of which material is dated after the Cushyban Missile crisis of October 1962 Allen admits that the commushy

nists have used the coexistence slogan in ihepast and with sfme success but he directs atshytention to the fact that it now signifies a strategic offensive rather than a stal~ing tactic

The study notes that the Cushyjail build-up the erection of the Berliil Wall and the armed iilvasi~n of South Yietnam all occurred during the most in- tense pedod of peaceful coshyexistence ~ It~~~inds that Khrushchev in 19t1lddiiled coexistence as a form of intense ecoitomic pOlitshyical and ideological struggle gaii1s~ the aggressive forces of imperialism hi the international arena it aiso says that in their 3tshy

tempt to create wha bull they call the New ComIJlunist Man the communists have systematically presented a vicious and thor oughly distorted picture of the

Nuns to Construct Health Care Facility

SANDUSKY (NC)-The Franshyciscan Sisters who operate Providence Hospital here in Ohio will construct a new 100shybed $1250000 healthcare fashycility separate ftom thehospital

It will serve Medicare patients of the area during posthospital care and Qther convalescents who do not requir~f~l~-scalehospital care Sister Lucia -administrator 81lid it will relievemiddot pressure ~ hospital beds in the area

There wiII be ari appeal to th~ public lor about $900000 The -remainder of the funds will

btl supplied by the Federalgovshyerllment

West in general and the United States in particular It need not be emphasi~ed

the study states that the overshywhelming sentiment of the free world is to live in peace But tQ mistake the illusion of peace for genuine peacemiddot would be a profoundly dangerous perhaps fatal mistake In a foreword t the book

Bertram D Wolfe a Stanford University expert on commushy~lism warns that we have been prone to read the idea of live and let live into the phase of peaceful C 0 e x imiddots ten ce Our hopes and our longings are likeshyly to betray us again and again into a readiness to be deceived by those who have sworn the d~struction of all we stand for

fnjoymiddot Dining IN THE

JOLLY WHALER --AND--

SPOUTIRINN RESTAURANTS

Always Free Parking

New Bedford Hotel

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Aug 25 1966

Cassidymiddot Seniors Attend Work$hop

Three members of the incomshying senior class at Cassidy High School Taunton will complete tomorrow a five day Workshop in Leadership conducted at the University of Massachusetts under th~ sponsorship of the Massachussetts Association of Student Councils

Mis s Rosemary McKenna~ president of the senior class Miss Nancy Thomas president of the National Honor Society and Miss Christine Victoria coshyeditor of the Cassidy school paper are attending Miss Victoria is secretary of the Southeastern Association of Student Councils and will serv~ in that capacity with the other officers Jerry Flanagan presishydent Feehan High Marsha Boyd vice-president Attleboro High Luke Boyd treasurer West Bridgewater High

Cassidy GIllaquoIltiluCllle Wins Elkso AWtlDd

Miss Pauline Lee daughter ox Mrs Harry Lee and the late Harry Lee of 7 Dean Ave Taunshyton has Qeen named the recipishyent of a $600 Massachusetts Elks Lead~rship Award granted by the Elks National Scholarship Fund

A member of the 1966 gradushyating class of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton Miss Lee was in the top ten of a class of 108 and maintained a scholastie honors record throughout bell four year Miss Lee will attend Nortn- eastern University Boston

Schools Merge BAY CITY (NC)-TwO wes~

side Catholic high schools here hi Michigan will merge Sept I

to becomeWest Catholic CentraU High School The decision te merge was made by an intershyarish lay study committee tv provide more efficient use of the staff and facilities The schooU will be staffed by the ReligioUl Sisters of Mercy of Detroit

BIG DIVIDEND NEWS

a SYSTEMATIC550 year SAVINGS

INVESTMEIfJ500 a year SAVINGS

8 REGULAR450 year SAVINGS

Bass River SovinQs Bank bull SOUTH YARMOUTH bull DENNIS PORT

bull YANNIS bull fARMOiJTH SHOPPING PLAZA

bull OSTERVILLE

-1111

WHITE middotmiddotmiddotSPA CATERERS

- BANQUETSmiddot -WEDDINGS - PARTIES

~ COMMUNION BREAKFASTS 1343PlEASANT STREET FAll RIVER

OSb~rne 3-7780

--h-- ~

12

i

THE ANCHOROlocese of Fall River-Th~s Aug 25 1966

~regW ~reg~tfJ ~lYJ~~ TtUUY1)[fi)l[

Of R~dD~~~csm Amcm)gYW]fr~ lJy Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy

Phillip Abbott Luces The New Left (McKay 119 W 40th New York $450) attempts to explain the resurgence of radicalism among American students Its author is a

of the New Left wIth as many con u e y lcal ideas while at MissisSippi non-joiners on the peripherY day even~ng Aug 27 at S lD ~ at~~ fi~t he~-d ~~ ~h~ ~erBtlt its impact- is smd tohave Mlll~aret s Kinderlctarten aaU i Left whIle at Ohio State and l Prizes WIll be awarded and reshy

tgrt~ritotcOtmiddotmiddotgthmiddotevecJ1 amm~-~W1lS~~tttedpa~~y ~xten~e~ tots about200OQP co h~~hriients served o nl~ge ~u en ~~ i - ltGUiLD OF TillE VIsITATION Iil1961heifioved~to NewmiddotYork It ~S ~l1ena lza1I~~~eme~t i iNO EASTilrAM ~ ~

_and came closer tothe Commti- in the country What alarms Mr ih alb t ofthe Dist Party Llitef he joined Pro- Luce is not its existence or its G1 ~~ h 3que wed gressiveLa]gto~aiI~ edited its size but the fact and the in- W WI e e on nesshymiddot monthly magazine _ cre~sing extent of Comrnamst q1Y~ 4-~ 3~ a~ the PiJ~~ middot -domination~ He gives -instances Springs Restaurant No TflJro Visited _C~~ro-S Cuba R t cl Sunday

in proof thatsuch dO minatioD-i8 A e~e2 rva~o1l os on It was Progressive Labor ug s

which arJanged- for fmeric~ indeed an actuality SACRED HEARTS

young man who won some leader of the New Left and when he broke with Proshygressive Labor which he eharges was organiz~d by -formermembenlof theSoVfeishycontrolled Communist Pa rt y USA and is now aPekingor~eh tated Commu~

D1st group Mx Luce has an ex tremely Impor- middottant subject one which is both timely and crit shyleal Because of his experience he should be especially qualshyified to set it out But the fac~ is that he is at best a mediocre writer He has no notion as to how to

organize a book marshal his materials and to ten his story iIi a consecutive way and with cushymulative force This is a dull alld muddled treatment of a very middotvitai topic~ not heipedat all by crude blundersin English usage Mr Luces personal histog has to be pieced together fro~ bits strewn through the book

middotlike the debris after a hurricane He is an Ohioan bornmiddotin 1935

notice both when he was a the lives of the rising generation Youth is repelled by parental attitudes and aspirations which are seen as mostly narrow negshyative sterile College is a bore

offeriiig no incentive or oppOJshytUnity for youth to direct its enshyergies into crucial causes

A mood of rebellion has devel- ~ped and a chance to express it has been pr~sentedby the civil rights struggie and the unpopu~ lar and beclouded war in Vietshynam Nor does the prospect of fighting authority in each case dim the attraction of these causes quite the reverse Hence the New Left

JLists Organizations Communist organizations of

various stripes have attemptec to sieze control of the New Left and to exploit the mood of reshybellion wi~h an eye to changing it into participation in revolushy

tion

Mr Luce lists and desribes the Communist organizations so engaged The one he knows best of course is Progresectsive Labor But he gives much space to the Du Bois Clubs which are the instruments of the Communist Party Then tlmre are the Trot-middot

the son of middle-class Repub- skyite splinter groups of which lican parents H~ start~d college four strains are identified (inshyat Miami University in Ohio left cluding middotone that is pro-Negro to see the Souih finished ~t Mis and anti-Semitic) I

sissippi State and did graduate Mr Luce estimates that some k t Oh St t 12000 YOung AmericanS are wor a 10 a e _ t 1 t 1 b He became interested in rad- ac ua orgamza Ion~ mem ers

APPOINTEE- Bishop Josshyeph Bmiddot Brunini Auxiliary since 1957 to Bishop Richard O Gerow of Natchez-Jackshyson middotMiss has -been appointshyed by Pope Paul VI to be Apostolic Administrator of the diocese NC Photo

The Parish Parade

ST 1lgtYS TillED mn ov= =shylFALL RJrVER

The parish will sponsor a one day pilgrimage to the Shrine of the North American Martyrs Auriesville N Y on Sunday Oct 2

Interested partles may obtaIn full particulars by contacting Mrs Laurence Coyle Mrs Wilshyliam Blythe or Mrs George Boitano S8 MARGARET-MARY GUILD BUZZARDS BAY

A bl hitmiddot middotU be pu IC W S paL 0 WI d ct d b the guild on Saturshy

studeritsto visit Cuoain 1963 middot and 1961 In defiance of our middotState Department~sban on travel

there Mr Luce made the trip says that most of the students

middot were unaware of Progressive Labors sponsorship and control The money came from Castro And Progressive Labor members planned and staged the wild scenes at a Congressional hea~

ing concerning the middotproject By late 1964 Mr Luce was

enti~ely dissillusioned abo u t Progressive Labor andmiddot by Febshyruary of 1965 h~ pad left it to

bemiddot quickly expelled upon his

Stresses Strength NO FAIRHAVEN He insists that somethin~(must Registration for the kiridershy

be done to prevent Communist garten pre-primary and the capture of the movement He eight eJement~ry grades are beshywants everyone to wake up to ing held daily during the month the existence and the strength of Augus of the New Left Pupils may register with SJ

We must realize he urges how Marie Henriette SSCC at the disenchanted with our society Sacred Hearts Academy 332 the young people ~re what hos- Main Street Fairhaven any 8poundshytility they feel what a gulf ternoon from 1-5 RegistratioDfl yawns between them and their are also being accepted by Rev elders and hcgtw impervious th~YAlexis Wyggers SSCC at the are to ideas and language which ReCtory 382 Main street Fairshyi

figure in their eldErs attempts haven to communicate with them The Association of St Anne

No one he maintains is S~-Will receive corporate CoinmUshyI~ departure and sayagE(l~ Yim~~~~ Jiously trying to reach the hiorton Sunday at the 8 ocloek middot He left because he says Pro gressive Labor is a middotMaoist Comshymunist tool because itmiddotadlrQcates imd take steps to implelrtent armed insurrection because- no personal freedam is allowed to members an4 lill- deQisionsmiddot are made by a few dictatorial leadshy~ril 1ecausemembersareJnshyvolved in programs of Whose

eonsequences totge country and to themselvestIey have no idea lt~

lFe~ls lF~tts~rated Mr fL~ced6es- notmiddot contend

middot that the New Leis Goromunistshy

young rebel to understand him Mass to speak to him intelligibly and effectively Co~unJ~t errorsmiddot J~edB~ MeU1lMe~tmiddot propaganda hypocnsy mUst be SCHWYZ (NC) - Catholicrelentlessly exposed in a way movie and television experts which the young people will met here iil ~fwitieriand for imcomprehend international exchange of ~He is strong_ for a Freedom riiques iiI the useof Tv anellAeademy- which would provipe films in religious educationmiddotmiddot expert practical education conshy - cerning CommunislJlmiddotAnd he stressestheneed of a placefor

ltloltiinated -Hescent~B it -as8 phe- PITTSB~1RGH(Nt) - The bull I bull ~ bull bull bull bull bull

honidon whlc~ came ~bout Pittsburgh Catholi( Interracial Commercialmiddot 15 Industrid spontaneously an eX~IJ1Pre of- Council has endorsed home rule Institutionalyouth in rebellion - for the District of Columbia asshy

Youth he holds~ hils amiddotpoundeeling sertingthattooibng have many painting ~nd~ D_~~o~qtig of -frustrationmiddot with American of the-importanLdecisionaffectshy Fall River OSborne 2-1I9H$ociety its tone and its values ing (the District of CohJmbia) -yoiith~es~rtt~rhaving rio say inb~erlmadtd)ycongrpoundpoundssiriehftoin ~ 74v~hllia rnson Str~e~

the making of decisions affecting hundreds of miles away

~~Gr~ayK BJ Most Rev FUUOlll J Sheeillp Dll)

If my neighbor is stronger than 1 I fear him if he lsweaker than I I despise bim Such is the modem judgement of the psyshychiatrist Dr Jean de Rougemont Earlier the Psalmist speaks ~ the arrogance of those who have much and the despisal of those who are proud How can the rich avoid feeling superior to the poor How can the poor avoid being humiliated The answer is that vices but can the) give up cigarettes for a week to help the poor the strong must see their weakness and the rich must see~eifto poverty How realJly strong are the strong Theymay avoid great Are thfiY suc~ masters of themselves tbatthey can turn down the third cocktail (or give up the first) and use the money instea4 to ~uy sulfone ~or a i~~r~ liqw r~ch_ ar~the rich Let them look inside themselves IIi whatvirtue are they rich Rich in cb~ty Rich i~ char~ti Ri~)n f~th

Onc~t~~ ~i~rhty see th~mseiv~ asnothiDi a~d therl~h see the~selv~ as i~poverislledth~ they wui lov~ ihe we~~ as their brothersilDd the peor IllS their

fellow beggars for thetrrace of God ifmiddot the strong middotlove middotmiddotthemselves despite all theirweaknes5~ then why not lovltil weaknesses in others u the rich love themselves despitG middottheir inner nakedshyness then why nCllt love a lesser ]lJOVshy

erty in others That i~ why Our Lord told us to love ourneighbor as ourseU ~y not more than self Because iii ]I

love myself-knowing myself as ]I do knowing how utterb weak ]I am2-then I have the measure of how J[ am to pour out love to others

We live in a world divided between the rich and the poor We live in that kinol of a church-pOor parishes and rich parishes Even bishops an~ priestsmiddot speak of a parish being good when they mean it is economicaily rich Somehow or other we have ~

get qut of this slavish standard of affluence which is so opposed to the lross of Christ To that end we make the folloWing proposal that you or your middotparishclub school or office undertake the sponsorshjp of one of the poor areas of the world which has been investigated by the Apostolic delegate Write to us and we will send you middotthe name of this diocese its location the number of priests catechists and faithful it has Thus you will be sure that you have a middotneedy (Ibject for sacrifice and service and n9t one based on a haphazard -appeal middotfroin an uninvestigated source The Church will not alloW you to sponsor this diocese for more than one year becausemiddot thtlre are so many poor parishes in the world Look into your weakness and you will love the weakness of o~heJ8 Look into your poyeny stricken soul and you willserVe poverty stricken bodies Write to -mpGod Love You

~~~ middot~middotGOD~middotLOVE YCllJmiddot tomiddot~SMLgtO~middot ~$5 middotto A~RCtor $sO~ For your1nissionUorkIeanthelp eve~one andmiddotyou ~o tltosem most meed bullbull tchJMBfcn $20 to Anon lor $1000 middotsentmiddotWithlteommnbull ~ 11

bullbull bull ~l

The GOD LOVE YOU~ medal lovely cameo medal of the Madonna of tIle worldiS one you would be proud to give ormiddotde shy

lighted tci reC~iVEt DesIgned bi the world-renowned jeweler Harry winSton aildbltessed by Bishlgtp Sheen the GOD LOVE YOU medal is available inmiddotcl~icF~oreritinegold firiishor pure sterlingsilver aod may be obtained by sending your request and corresPondirtg offering to The Socieb for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth AvenueNew York NY 10061 $2 Sinall sterling silver $3 small

11gtk goid fiiled $5 large sterling silver $10 large 10k gold filled

Cut out this colullnn pln your sacrifice to It and mali It to Most RevbullFultom J Sheen National Director of The Society for the Propagation of thl~ Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or to your Dioclesan Director Rt Rev Msgr Raymond Jr Considine 363 North ll1ain Street Falll River Massachusetts

bull j 7 Perry IQur fI~~fng

~v~-t~e OilsMake Taunt~B1l~ Mass - Worm FriendsmiddotVA 2-2282

------------------ ~

genuinely democratic radicalism ON CAPE CODlbONNlEllyin o~r Iociety _

]OHoo ~~~(Kl~Ymiddotmiddot amp SON (~ofP~n~T~UnCG Rigt - flJ1 ml n

crepound ormiddotentireiyCommuist- 9llaquoIIlaquo ~$ lf1J Ilililte ~fYl U ~ I~raquo8L[)~NG MAmiddoth~linAL$middotmiddotmiddot~~~V~C~ 6

S~~ri~gj 1$100 4~~YARMUlrH ROA~)

middottYA~MBSmiddot AMPLE PARKING

iIIIIOCIIJIjIWUllJmllIllDOCImIWlDIllmIlXlWll(lJfi

- -

THE ANCHOR-Jesuit Educators Members of PAVLA Maintain Missionary Thurs Aug 25 1966 13

Ponder Students Record of Fall River Diocese Area G~~s SocoaCynical ~ttitQJJde

LOS ANGELES (NC) shy lLong outstanding for the missionary work of its priests Sisters and Brothers the ~elvD~e ~elrllfrer A top Jesuit educator dispenshy Fa~ River Diocese is fast becoming noted for its outstanding Papal Volunteers for Latin CLEVELAND (NC) - OUX sed advice here on how to eombat the attitude of some high schoolers who consider the world and the religion of their middotparents as phony

Father Edward J Sponga 8J of Baltimore in the keynote adshydress at the 1966 Jesuit Educashytional Association Workshop on Christian Formation at Loyola University here called for a dialogue with everyone conshycerned to emphasize the good crying to be released

Speaking to delegates from 52 Jesuit high schools in the nation Father Sponga chairman of the board of the Jesuit Educational Association declared

Menace to Freedom If the young men of our

schools consider the world and the religion of their parents as phony and a menace to their freedom then we must be ruthshyless in seeing how and why this is and in entering into dialogue with everyone who is willing to do so in order that we may be able to release the g09d that is crying to be released

During the 12 days of research and discussion 125 school adshyministrators and teachers evalushyated the effect that religion courses academic curriculum spiritual exercises and personal guidance have had on the charshyacters of the 35000 teenagers in U S Jesuit high schools

The delegates particularly were concerned about the loss of religious faith in the adolesshycent who is becoming increasshyingly sophisticated and critical

Middle Class Values Father Joseph H Fichter SJ

Stillman professor of sociology at Harvard Universitys divinity school criticized Jesuit high schools for not challenging the middle class values of many of their students for not paying sufficient att~rition to the social sciencesmiddot and for not drawing more of their students irom among the poor

Dr Alexander A Schneiders graduate professor of psychology at Boston College stressed the commitment of Faith that must be made within the scopemiddot of inshytellectual independence He arshygued against compelling students to make annual retreats or assist at religious exercises

Other delegates suggested esshytablishing pilot programs in 1l)ner-city high schools with nationwide cooperation and the sending of Jesuit teachers to work in community schools outshyllide the regular Jesuit system

Ho~es for Negroes Goal of Campaign

WORCESTER (NC) A camshypaign to secure better housing for Negroes in the Greater Worcester Area is growing

In a letter to some 1200 pershyS0l1S who last Aprii signed an

open letter newspaper adshyvertisement regarding fair hous ins John J Concordia Duman rights committee chairman of the Diocesan Council of Catholic M~~ ~sked sig~atories of the

open -letter to volunteer to ~adopt members of a Negro family am actively assist them inmiddotproC1Jri~g decent housing to titheir ~ne~ds

In 8 statement by an intershy fa(thmiddoteommittee on housing middotwfii~IlJs all out-growth of a

siniilar committee formed last year by the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women a call was made for construction of housshying for middotmiddotpoor and lower middle d~ss f ami ie It ixlcludins

Ne8J~s

bull bull r~ ~

America These young men and women doing Christs work in some of the worlds needshy Lady of Futima parish hat3 opened a social service centeliiest areas are a credit to the parishes and toowns from which they come Letest PAVLA here in the midst of the Houghassignments in the Diocese area scene of Clevelands recent

are those of Lucille Lebeau rioting of St Annes parish New The center housed in an 18-gt Bedford and Anthony Gomes room former apartment buildo St John of God parish Somershy ing was dedicated by Archo set bishop Paul J Hallinan of~ At-gt

Actually Lucille isnt a new lanta while he was visiting iii PAVLA hand She was the first Cleveland~bis native diocese Diocesan enlistee in the organishy The center will be staffed by zation going to Brazil as a four Sisters of Charity of St nurse-social worker in August Augustine who along with lay1963 She returned from her volunteers have been working three year assignment in July in the area since Aprilmiddot1965 but volunteered to serve an The center will middotprovide C9uri extra year in Brazil She will re seling nursing medical supplie tum there in November and pre-natal care -

Anthony veteran of a middotyears The building which standt work in Florida with the fedshy next to the parish rectory waserai governments VISTA proshy purchased bymiddot the parish seveR gram will teach English in a years ago when it was aba~ Mexican minor seminary He has doned as an apartment buildingalready completed a PAVLA

Early last year Father Alberitraining course at Catholic Unishy Albert Koklowsky MSSSTversity in Washington D C and pastor of Our Lady of Fatimawill leave in September for launched a campaign through aMexico City and an intensive column in the Catholic Universefour and a half month course in Bulletin Cleveland diocesanSpanish language and culture newspaper to explain Houghsbefore beginning his assignment poverty to metropolitan resiltshyin the mountain town of Tacomshydentsbaro in the state of Michoacan

Housing was a major themePioneer Work Resulting donations from unishy

Lucille bubbles over with enshy verse Bulletin readers and 11thusiasm for PAVLA and its acshy matching gift from Coadjutorcomplishments She has just reshy middotBishop Clarence Issenmann of turned from a trip to the Washshy Cleveland enabled Father Kokshyington training course attended lowsky to renovate the buildingby Tony Gomes where incishydentally she met him for the first time She talked to new Work for Needy enlistees individually and in LIMA (NC) - Sixty me~bers groups seeking to picture for af the St Rose CYO hert gavethem the new life theyd be enshy volunteer aid to projects for thetering needy this Summer Most as~

Their enthusiasm was a boostshy slsted in a federally financed er shot for meshe said educati~nal program for cultu~

This week the New Bedford rally deprived students from nurse is inmiddot the Chicago area PAVLA ENLISTEES Revmiddot James w Clark Diocesan ~nderglirtenmiddot to sixij1 grad~visting PAVLA headquarters Directormiddot of Papal Volunteenlmiddot for Latin America with Othershelp1 a~ amiddot day camn f~there and friends she made ill retarded cbildren andmiddot Qne asAnthony Gltgtmes bound for teaching assignment in Mexico~ Brazil including the doctor with Ns~ed at a eerebral palsy c~mpwhom she worked when me and Lucille Lebeau who has already spent three years m first went to the Latin American Brazil as nurse-social worker will return in Novemberfor eountry He is now in practice additional year in Waukegan lll FAIRHAVEN

When I first went to Brazil urgy eommunitY needs and was to leave in each parish IIshe 8a14 I worked for a little LUMBERhealth needs team similar to their own toover a year at a hospital in Salshy cOMPANY carry on as far as possible thevador Bahia My job was mlinly Most of the help that an area

training Brazilian aides and received came from the people work in liturgy catecheticsmiddot and community and health needssetting up hospital routines themselves t h r 0 ugh their Complete line

After the year was over Brazil shy awakened sense of community We would return to the comshyian doctors and medical students said -ucille Actual government munities where we had given Building Materials took over the hospital routines or material aid was hampered by this course as often as possible were runing smoothly and I political economic and social said Lucille anu each time we 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVEN felt that I could go on to public complications of many kinds eould set them growing spiritushyhealth work in areas where there The team played it by ear ally WYman 3-2611 was no nursing care at all avail- in deciding how to approach a Turn to Page Nineteen able particular parish Lucille and

Lucille joined an apostolic the nun on the team who was shy ~

team organized by Bishop Eushy also a nurse tried to work genio de Araujo Sales Apostolic through community midwives Administrator of Salvador Toshy who were sadly in need of techshy JEREMIAH COHOLAN gether with a priest a nun two nical instruction The infant Brazilian lay apostles and what mortality rate in most areas was would bt the equivalent af an very high said Lucille due iD PLUMING amp HEATING I American social worker she large part to umbilical tetanus visited areas of the Diocese preshy caused by unsanitary delivery viously all but unreached by the techniques

Church Another technique was organ- I Aim of the team she explainshy ization of one-week parish Wy 3 0911 699 B II II A

ed wail to change dormant parshy courses centered around the idea man - e VI emiddotmiddot ven~ ishes into Christian communishy of Christian cominunity Lucille Nwamp~fQrd ties Seventeen parishes were said middotshe would start the course I visited in the course of a year by trying to explain the concept lImiddottI-IIIlII_middot tI-II--tl- __ __ __ _-IIllIIIiImiddotllIlI_-IIllII~ -~~ ~--middot- ~ and a half rmging from mem- of Christians as people of God - - shy

berships of 20000 souls to 75000 then would set up discussion ~ItIIIIHtHIIIIIDIIIIUIIIIHlIIIIIIIiIllIIlHKHHIIItIIIIUIIIIIIIUllllliillllllllllIJllilllllllllllllilllllllll~ The 75OOO-member parish said Ioupsmiddot en suchmiddot subjects asmiddot~ -_sect_Lucille had only one priestmiddot 10 What ismiddota person-Person to ~ middotY 5 hmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot meet its needs person relationships~ and Dif- sect E we ayemiddot ~

Plan 01 AetiOll ferences between ordinary eom- ~ == The apostolic teamsaid Lushy munities andthe parish sect LARGE LIVEmiddot ~

eille would first survey condishy This would lead to a discussion sect ~ ~=_=_ tions and decide what most of the function of Christians and sect needed doing then plan an edushy what iii Christian community sect shycational program Three or fo~rmiddot should be lIke Theil leaders ~ while they la5~ - ~ natural leaders in each parish were ready to ask the parishion ~ sect= were chosen and arrangements ers if any were ready to coin- ~ were made to get them to an mit themselves as parish team sect Macleans SemiddotQmiddot F d ~ Archdiocesan training center for members to a stronger expres- ~ 00 S == a one month leadership training sian of their Christian fellow- sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN Tel 997-9358 sect eourse wverins lIlatechetics lit ooip Go~ of the lipQBtolie tea iulHIHlIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIJlIIIUillIIJlmIllUiJiillJillnililunJililillliiihIUllllIIlIilill(IIUJIIIJ1I1llIJllliinillllllltuE

- ~ - -~_middotmiddotij_Uimiddotmiddot ~ _

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 An Exce1lent Lcte Summer Activity J VI SIT-middot

Louisiari ~copyfrish A~~ampmpli~~~sect r~bull ~T[T uiH~Dfro[j1) fr ~rtilfrreg~[(frDIri)middot middot~~rrfr~~~Q~t~~~~~~~JJ~~tt$

MADISONVILLE (NC)--+wo cently used for ~~gt~es~was wears ago in this quiet jural torn down Its blue I green~and ~ J~lf ~ town the single square block white stained grass riow frames

ltContaining Catholic ch u r c h the huge rear wIndow ~ ~t buildings symbolized the old era Anselms church - - [f~[LL lRlt OV~~middot ~now it stands for the new This Spring St Catherines

Two years ago two churches also came down Gone too are stood 200 feet apart on this he cOl-vents and bullone school More than 280000 people havle cilrElody been aboard iUO ~he past ys[ioblock--St~ Catherine wh ere The other school building was

whites worshipped and St retained for parish meetings and Francis Xavier where Negroes the now-integrated Confratershy

worshipped The rectory with fiity of Christian Doctrine its one priest to serve both par- classes ishes s too d between theC rhe 100 or so school children

centhtirches moremiddot as a symbol of - arenow transported to elemEmshythe psychological gap thac asan tilt-y and high schools in nearby

actual separation covirigton arid Mandeville middot A fence stood between the two CCD instructions have been

eonventS on the block~riefor givengtySfsters qfChristian the Negro nuns who taughtCharityandtheirstudEints from

Negro children in the ~e~ro ~~njpirClncy at FolsoM La and IIchool the other for the wfitte byseminariaris fromarby St IllUns who taught white children i-Jolieph seminarY Butmiddot tpeseiii the whHe school diities are being taken over by

Now there is one church onemiddot tlie parishs integrated CCD orshyrectory and one small classroom ganizatiorinow being trained

building -- and one parish St The pastor Father John J Anselm DenDulk is prouder of the

Although wee k day Masses smooth transition than he is of were said in only onemiddot of the the physical change shytwo old churches Masses and Participation in worship has ether services on Sundays and increased since the new church major feast days were said in w~ built he says and he has

middot both Midnight Masses on Christ- the best commentators in the mas were celebrated concurrent- whl)le world

Iv in the two churches AIthougb there are only 260 But the buildings weremiddot badly families in the parish the new

Qn need of repair So in 1964 the ~church is already more than half lttId frame church of St Francis paid for and the parish topped

middot Xavier whose parish records go its quota in the archdiocesan back to 1863 and which was re- education expansion drive

bull ~ I bull

Bishop Pmiddoterry Says New Orleans Has Healthy Racial Climate

DENVER (NC) - Auxiliary still has more influence thaa Bishop Harold R Perry SyD any other Negro in the civil of New Odeans first AmeJican rights movement Catholic Negro bishop in this He (Bishop Perry) has been

lt1lentury said here a hea~thy very favorably received in New racial climate will exist wher- Orleans eve~ the Negro has a chan~ to Some Cannot WaU voice his grievances He said there will undoubtedshy

Bisnop Perry dted New 9r- ly be some civil rights groups lleans as an example sayipg the who disapprove lt)f non-violence racial climate there is healthy and occasional demonstrationS

because of an interracial council by those who cannot wait appointed by Louisiana~ov Of course I am a Negro and

John J McKeithen to help splve we have been waiting a long rmcial problems time If you take the long view I There are no demonstra~ions complete equality cant come too and riots and very little picket- quickly he added~

lng he said The cotiJlc~1 i-e- He said he has been received lieves tensions and if the Negro very well even enthusiastically has a forum to talk over his con- in New Orleans Picketing outshyeerns he will not demonstrate side the church where he was

Schools Integrated ~onsecrated he s3id Was DOt typical of the general feeling in

The 50-year-old prelate said New Orleans be is proud New Orleans has in- As an evidence of his popushytegrated all Its schools Its a larity he said he spoke at ninemiddot large percentage not just token graduations in June and has ofshyhe added ficiated at Confirmation in 24

He said Catholics are doing parishes their part to advance equality of opportunity in his citymiddot 1 think [EceQJl1illeIJilD~~ CCrrnDDOdegthere has been Ii united effort tl)Ir If

by all faiths and we would like ~~ ~DcopyQJIJilampIbgtD~~~DIJil to keep it that way he de- CRANSTON (NC) I hdared - n a s ow The New Orleans bishop also of the ecumenical spirit lea4ers ~ommented on ~ wide range of of major religious faiths in this

area took part in a combined eivil rights issues saying

The new militancy shown by bull religious and groundbreaking Visit the BClI~~ie$Mp anldllode alIeplica of the Old iFal~middot River Bill1e~ middottmiddotsom~ civi~ rights groups is a service on the site of the proshy

posed Church of the Annunciashypassing phase tion Greek Orth()dox lours start every 30 minutes

The majority of Negroes are Archbishop lakovo primate lJympathetic to the non-violent of the Greek Orthodox Church Opeill aU year round - 9 AM to Sunsetphilosophy of the Rev Dr Mar- of North and South America of tin Luther King and Dr King ficiated at the open air hierar- For Group Arrangements Call 678-1100 chal Divine Liturgy service at-

Serra Meeting tended by more than 500 pershy l)OOOO()ooOOC)ooOOClOOC)ooOOC)OO~IOOl sons

THIS MESSAGE Sp()NSORED IV lHE FOllOWING INDIVIDUALSATLANTIC CITY (NC) - A Participants in the groundshyeonference for members of Ser- breaking ceremony included AND BUSINESS CONCERNS IN GREATER FALL RIVERlIa Clubs in the New York-New Catholic Bishop Russell J MoshyJersey - eastern Pennsyivania Vinney of Igtrovidence Archshy ANN DALE PRODUCTS INC MACKIENZIE amp WINSLOW INC area will be held here Sept 23 deacon William L Kite represhy II~DY ELECTRIC SUPPLY COMASON FURNITURE SHOWROOMS tKi 25 Msgr William Noe Field senting the Rt Rev John Seville CASCADE DRUG CO GERALD E McNALLY CONTRACTOItiff Seton Hall University South Higgins Episcopal Bishop of GLOBE MANUFACTURING CO SOBILC)FF BROTHERS Orange NJ will give the key- Rhode Island Dr Wayne ~is

~~TGHINSON OIL COa~te address Sept 24 apoundter a executive director ofmiddot the Rhode STERUllIG BEVERAGES INC

~A Mc~HIRR ~9MPANY TEXTIU WORKERS UNION Of AMERICAeOncelebrated Mass at which the 1s~and Council of Churches ~nd ~rE~~ATIQNALV4DIES GARMENT 1 bull AlL~tO - principal concelebrant will be Rabbi Jerome Smiddot Gurland Gf

WORKERS UNION (EUOW CAI COMPANY Bishop George W Ahr of Tren~ ~telligtl~ Sinai 1epresentingthe ton Bhode Island Board of Rabbiamp bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull0 MssSelbullbull

~ ~ ~ - bull bull bull bull I ~ j

- ~

_-- -

0

WomenB~ Job Corps Members middotAid Youngsters Improve Reading

OMAHA (NC)-Omaha Wom- chesne Mother Moody found a ens Job Corps members joined benefactor to supply ihe a11shywith five graduates of Duchesne importlnt incentive program College and Academy of the Thanks to a generous racetrack

Sacred Heart here to upgrade bettor Who won the daily double the reading level of local public there was enough money for school youngsters candy bar prizes and two picnics

The progra~ ca]]edProject An indication or- the success of Upstart was first conceIved by the program was found in the Mother Helen Condon dean of reaction of the students A reshythe Nebraska co]]eg~ Mother cent visitor asked one of the Rosemary Moody aSsIstant pro- young boys Why are you here fessor o~ ~sYChology volunteer~ Did someone make you come to adminIster and execute themiddot program

The original plans were to take a group of seventh graders from Horace Mann Junior High School and tutor them in develshyopmental reading and study skills It soon became apparent that some rather basic instrucshytion was required some of the ehildren were still reading at the second grade level

Duchesnes elementary school was offered for use by Mother Helen Sheahan superior An Omaha public school official suggested that the Omaha Wom- ens Job Corps be contacted to see if they could furnish high school graduates as tutors Robshyert Bathke Job Corps education director soon put five young ladies at Mother Moodys disshyposal

Five recent Duchesne gradushyates volunteered to train the tutors for two weeks before the program actually began The Duchesne alumnae eventualiy elected to stay on for the entire program

Mother Moodymiddot was so imshypressed with the potential of the Job Corps enro]]ees that she exshytended their sessions through the rest of the summer and made college preparatory work avail shyable to them

Student Reaction Perha~s one of the more unshy

usual aspects of the entire Upshystart program was its lack of financing The only real subsidy (about $500) was from the OMaha Public School system the bulk of which went to the Omah~ Transit Company for bus service

The equipment used in the classrooms was borrowed from the public schools the Omaha Womens Job Corps and Du-

Plan to Supplement History Books

SAN FRANCISCO (NC) shyA supplementary text showing the contributions of minority groups in United States history will be added to history and social science books already in use in archdiocesan schools here

The supplement containing some 150 pages will deal chroshynologica]]y with the contribu- tions of Jews Negroes Orientais and various nationalities from southern Europe

It is being prepared by a speshycial studly committee which illl evaluating current textbooks found need for more thorough material on the part minority

groups have played in the OOUDshytry1s history

Leave Providence For Mission Work

PROVIDENCE (NC) - Four Capuchin priest and two layshymen left New York by plane for mission work in the Santa Rosa de Copan diocese Honduras

Father Ad ria n Holzmeister OFM Cap provincial of tile Capuchins St Mary province with headquarters here said the six will work among some 50000 persons in Mlree parishes in the state of Ocotepeque He said

other mjssionersmiddotas they become ayailabie wiD be sent to aid Bishop Jose Canama CbampvezCli tile diocese

He looked up and said Im here because I want to learn to read and I like it Two girls who missed the morning bus to Duchesne gave another exain-ple of determination to learn Jhey undertook a two-hour five mile walk rather than miss a day of class

L R oy etreats Contlnu~d from Page Six

laymens convention-an effort to provide some figure of speech some image to suggest to those in the Church and to those out-

side what is the inner nature of the Church

Alluding to Scriptures refershyences to the Church in terms of sheep and shepherds the former Hub Auxiliary Bishop asked How many people in Boston have ever seen a sheep Sheep and shepherds say little to youngstersmiddot in housing projects or even in the suburbs

The Bishop who is epiScopal advisor for the NCLRC officiashyted at the lighting of an eightshyfoot candle which symbolized the

conference theme-uThe Light of Chr~st The candle burned throughout the convention

Speakers stressed the retreat program is geared to demOJishystrate to the world that the way of Christ can become more meaningiful to men of our time

Bishop Ernest J Primeau of Manchester reminded delegates of recent profound changes withshyin the Church

If the lay retreat movement is to remain vital and relevant

he said it cannot be static It must be in harmony with the times at all times

Honest Call1Se

Our retreat houses could 00-middot eome so to speak the equipment and training centers for the apostolates of the laity he adshydect

Bishop Primeau urged laymei to learn from modern science particularly in the field of hushyman psychology He said there is an opportunity as well to learn from other organizations both secular and religious He added The youth of today are un-

selfish and in large numbers they are seeking for an honest cause to which they can dedicate themshyselves as witness their devotion to the Peace Corps and the civil rights movement

Modernize AncEtenlt Puerto Rico CIl1llLmlrch

SAN JUAN (NC) =- A lPJt8shyyear-old church one of the most popularmiddot in this capital city~ ~

going modern Archbishop Luis Aponte of

San Juan has inaugurated middotal campaign for funds for restorashytion of St Anns a public orashytory now badly illl need of Jeshypairs

1ft addition to restoration the ehurch also Will be equipped with air conditioning The eburch is the archdiocesan ceDltgt ~r for the Confraternity Gi Christian Doctrine and perpetual adoration of the Blessed Sacrashyment Built ill 184B the cburch weplaced an edifice which dated )Iaek iG tile lWi century

PROFESSION ANJ)) RECEPTION Four postulants beshycame canonical novices and two prof~ssed their vows as Sisters of St Joseph at ceremonies at the Blessed Sacrashyment Church Fall River Left column top to bottom Sr Gerard Marie (first vows) Sr Anne Therese Sr Rita Josshyeph Bishop Connolly who received the sisters Right colshyumn Sr Anne Denise Sr St Paul and Sr Alfred Marie (renewed temporary vow-s)

Specialmiddot Education Priests Visi~ PaJ~ents Homes to ExplOJon

SignificOJlI1lce off Baptismal Ritual

Thurs Aug 25 1966

Governor Balks

ST JEAN (NC)-Sunday bapshytisms are prece~ed by Saturday nights special educational proshygrams in a number of Catholic homes here in Quebec

The program to prepare the whole family for baptism through a home visit was deshyvised three years ago by a group of pries~s working togeth~r as a pastoral team

central idea of the program ~s that it is good for the priest to be with his people at imporshytant times in their lives~ Atmiddot these times people are dispOSed to receive the message of Christ

as it applies to their circumshystances the developers of the plan reported

The visiting priest explains the lOOremonies of the next day and the symbolic meaning of various parts of the baptismal ritual

Pilgrims Wctmlk TORONTO (NC) -The 10th

annual walking pilgrimage to the Canadian Martyrs shrine at Midland Ont will begin here Wednesday Organized by the Guild of St John de la Lande the pilgrimage will cover the 100 miles to the shrine in five days a~riving there Sunday Sept 4

LEMIEUX PLUMBING amp HEATING INC

fof Oomestic l~ andmiddot Industrial ~ Sales and Service

Oil Burners WY 5-1631

2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE NEW BEDFORD

Relatives neighbors or the prospective gorlparents may be presentbut themiddot home visit usually involves just the parents and their children

The ide is to make the preshybaptism vsit an oppodunity for dialogue between the priest and the parents rather than a conshyference

Ten parishes in the St Jean diocese have adopted the praeshytice along with l few Montreal parishes Father Marcil Brillon secretary of the St Jean litur- gical commission said he exshypects the practice to spread

FALSE TEETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass Many wearers of false teeth suJIer

embarrassment Qecause their platesdrop Blip or wobble at Just the wrong time Dont live In fear of thts happening to you Just sprinkle a little FASTEErH the non-acid powder on your plates Holds false teeth more firmly so they feel more comfortable Checks denture breath Dentures that fit are essential to health See your dentist regularlyGet FASTEETH at all drug counters

At Proposals MONTPELIER (NC) - Vershy

monts Gov Philip Hoff said he bas extreme reservations conshycerning abortion and sterilizashytion proposals contained in a reshyport of an adivsory committee on the mental retardation situshyation in the middotstate

The report called for legal sanctioning of induced abortion in cases where there appears to be a high risk of mental retarshydation of an unborn child

Thereport also contained a suggestion concerning steriliza shytion of the mentally retarded

Apart from the recommenda~ tions on legalized abortion and sterilization of the mentally reshytarded I must S4ly it was II good report Gov Hoff said He said lie will study the report with utmost care before taking any action 0

Expresses Thanks To Holy Father

VATICAN CITY (NC) -The vice prime minister of Vietnam has paid a visit to Pope Paul VI to thank him for his peace efshyforts and generous help to reshylieve the suffering of the Vietshynamese people General Nguyen Huu Co vice prime minister and secretary of state for national defense of Vietnam visited privately withshythe Pope for 30 minutes Accord- ing to a Vatican Press Office bulletin

The vice prime minister in the name of South Vietnam exshypressed profound gratitude for the valid support always given by the head of the Catholic Church and of the Holy See in the cause of peace and for the generous assistance sent by the Holy Father to relieve the sufshyfering of those persons torshymented by war The distinguishshyed visitor then continued tomiddot deshyclare that the intentions of South Vietnam are directed only toward an affirmation of the liberty of its own nation and Wgt arriving at a just peace in honor and concord

Complete

BANKING SERVICE

for Bristol County

Bristol County Trust Company

TAUNTON MASS

THE ~ANK ON TAUNTON GREEN

Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Bristol Community College Offers Evening Classes

64 Durfee St Fall River Credit classes begin September 19 1966

Register Now Mondays thrrough Thursdays 200-500 PM Courses for college credit or self improvement are offered ill

The arts languages and literature Behavioral and social sciences accounting business

administration and secretarial scieRCe Mathematics science engineering and electro-mechanical technology

Advisors Availabie During ~egistration Hours

16 THE AI~ ~-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

C~nsiders Instability Causes In Latin American lamds

From Social R-evolution in the New Latin Ameriea Edited by John J Considine MM

There are many causes of instability in Latin America Some have said in the past that it is an inheritance frQm

Spain They feel that the years of Spanishauthoritarianism rendered the colonies incapable of integrating themselves into a more balanced social system Because they had there exists the problem of low

denSity of population with a lackpreviously lacked indepenshyof internal communication In-dent creole authority the many cases there is even a lanshy

colonies were unprepared to acshy guage barrier eept a more democratic authorshy The problem of an underdeshyity In his book veloped economy has also beenBetween Freeshy a factor in forming Latin Anlershy clom and Fear ican social structureGerman Arcinshy On the social level the eleshyiegas draws a ments I have mentioned favorcomparison beshy an internal lack of class strucshytween the Enshy ture that involves a juxtaposishyglish and Spanshy tion rather than a social organi shyish governments zation and integration Democshyin the Americas racy on the other hand presupshyIn ihe north the poses a large scale integrationcolonists came in of the people in the politicalshysearch of freeshy economic-social life of thedom IIi the end nationthe founding of the Nodh The masses of -illiterates inAmerican colonies was only the Latin America who do not parshyobvious culmination of a process ticipate in these areas have noalready begun It was the reafshy iilterest in government thoughfirmation of customs already inshy their interest and loyalty maygrained in the social milieu It be enlisted by the demagoguewas an evolution not a real revshyolution for these settlers were Formation or Dictatorships accustomed to autonomy The A dictatorship takes form

authority pf their governors was when one or more pressure more democratic since they groups unchallenged seizes the worked closely with the popular power of governmentassemblies From the beginshy In order to better understand ning the keenest concern of the the types of dictatorship found North American colonist was for in Latin America let us elCamshyfreedom of worship and his hosshy ine the different forms of revoshytility to the Church of England lution and the various ways in was evident which the pressure groups

On the contrary Latin Amershy bring their influence to bearIca was part of an empire The Kalmal1 Silvert distinguishesSpaniards came to dominate and these types in his book Reaction evangelize The viceroy represhy and Revolution in Latin Amershysented the king who was an abshy ica which is written in -Englishsolute monarch The role of Silvert shows the relationshipshyassembly in Latin America was between dictatorships and the secondary arid represented exshy extreme indivdualism found in tremely liIIlited power these countries

Independence in the Latin The first type of revolution American nations entailed a real named is what Silvert calls the revolution since from the beginshy simple brracks revolt Most of ning they were forced tb look for the outbreaks especially in the new political and social forms past century have been of this

Religiousliberty did not elCshy kind The barracks revolt occurs ist in the Latin American coloshy typically in a big class society nies since all were obliged to It is carried out by the amlY

membership in the Cathoiic sompoundtimes in its own name and Church sometimes in behalf of a chosen

Unassimilated Groups leader This type of revolution - rarely calses widesprelld publicThis comparison will help in

disturbance since it representsunderstanding the Latin Amershymerely a switch in governmentican problem though it will not from one general to anotherfully explain -it We must acshy

knowledge that the political The second type the peasant phenomeinon has a direct COIshy revolt is generally of little sigshyrelatio~1 with demographic probshy nificance and limited in effect lems such as the existence of to a locality though the Mexican large unassitnilated groups as revolution at the beginning of well as masses of mestizos un this century would perhaps fall derdeveloped and deprived who in this category can scarcely be said to partici shy Third the regional revolt pate in twentieth century chili shy commcn in the early days of zation Although these groups Latin American independence form a part of the nation they Here _the caudillo strove to put are not integrated either socially down provincial revolts and to eulturally or politically centralize power in an authorishy

Despite the over-all demoshy tarian I e g i () n a I government g~aphic explosion in some areas Typical of the caudillos who led

regional revolts was Rosas of Argentina

Plans Participation The fourth a more modern type of revolution Silvert callsIn Liturgical Week the complicated barracks revolt

HOUSTON (NC) - The 1966 This is an insurrection that inshyLiturgical Week here fOI the -volves civilian as well as mili shyfirst time in its 25-year history tary groups with widespread will have a full scale program military action for those interested in the The issues are ideological and Eastern Church relate to political parties as well

As part of the Liturgical Week as _ other interest groups The program the Divine Liturgy Cuban revolution in its beginshy(Mass) of St John Chrysostom nings might be considered -an will be celebrated entirely in example Although this is the English and Communion will be most prevalent type ainong modshydjstributed under both species ernday revolutions excetions Chief celebrant of the Liturgy are the revolts which overthrew will be Archbishop Paul Achkar Peron in Argentina Perez-JimeshyGreek Catholic ~-chbishop of nez in Venezuela and -Rojas Lattaquia in Syua Pinilla in Colombia

SISTER AMBROSE

Says SOo Africa Needs Americans

WASHINGTON (NC)-Yanshykee come over a statement which would do much to boost the morale of Americans in sevshyeral parts of the world could well summarize what an Irish missionary nun to South Africa

-has been saying during a visit here _

The wonderful hospitality of theAmerican people has imshypressed Sister Ambrose Harty Gf the Sisters of the Holy Family She lamens the fact that opporshytunities to receive Americans in a like manner have been few and far between during her 20 years in South Africa

Youve got such a lot to give she said here in an ~ntershyview during which she expressed a strong desire to see greatly inshycreased people-to-people relashytio~s between the country where she serves and the United States

Sister Ambrose was particushylarly interested in the Peace Corps ann reported that its purshyposes and work are hardly known by the people of Soutli Africa I haVent heard it disshycussed at all she said (The Peace Corps has not been invited into the country) (

With words of praise for the missionary work being done iii the South African Republic by Oblate arid Paulist missionaries from the United States she also expressed regret at the general paucity of missioners from this country There particularly is an almost total lack of nuns she said Only 71 Catholic missionshyaries from the United States inshycluding 16 nuns are serving ilm South Africa

Married Priests AMSTERDAM (NC)-A

Dutch public opinion poli h8lll shown that 11 per cent of the Netherlands p e 0 pIe woulci rather have III married Catholi4l clergy than a celibate clergy The poll including members ai all and no denominations

-showed that 68 per cent of the Catholics queried preferred III married clergy

~~

(DEBROSS OIL ( ~ co ( ~ Heating Oils

~ and BMIIJUrs ~

~ 365 NORYIoli IFROIlir SUEampll ( rJ NEW IBIEDIFOR

~ WYmafi 2middot5534 (

I~~~

Parishes Share DETROIT (NC) - Twentyshy

nine urban parishes here have decided to help one another meet the rising cost of education

At the elementary level parshyepts will pay $50 per family $75 per family for non-Catholic parishioners and $75 per student

Danish Catholic COPENHAGEN (NC) -Thereshy

are 11321 Catholics in the Danish capitalaccording to a report issued by the Copenhagen statistical office They consti shytute the second largest religious entity there next to the Luthershyans members of the State Church The total number of Catholics in Denmark is approxshyimately 26000 Total population is 35 lllillion

Education Costs for Catholics outside the parish

At the high school level the tuition cost is $H)O per student in or out of the parish With the exception of textbooks this amount eliminates aU extra fee charged up to now

Father Norman P Thomas director of the Urban Parisll Apostolate said the greatest efshyfect of the joint effort will be experienced by the pastor who sends parish youngsters to a higll school operated by any of the 2 participating parishes

In this instance the students parishes will be expected to pay the difference between the tui shytion charged and the actual cost per student The latter fee laM been set by the parochial school office at over $200 per year

ETHIOPIA- THE NEW AFRICA

- HOLY FATlftRB MIBBIIDN AID TO THI DRIENTAL OHURCH

- BROTHER What happens In Ethiopia when an American MICHAEL Christian Brother (he could be your son brother

REYNOLDS nephew) Is told to upgrade Catholic schools He FROM borrows a Jeep (or a mule) visits the schools

PROVIDENCE RI one by one writes home for pencils and better REPORTS textbooks and then beginsbullbull This is the new

fROM Africa Brother Michael Reynolds reports enshyADDIS thusiasticallyfrom Addis Ababa It can be a BABJpeacefuf progressive Christian Africa tom~rmiddot

row Just give us schools give us time and with Gods help the job will De donel bull bullThe schools are for villages like Aressa Aiga Biers Wartll8~

-which have no school The youngsters know that knowledge i~ their only chance theyll go without food to learnbullbullbull What does It cost to build a schoolf Only $2950 says Brother Michael for the villagers snd the children give their laborfreemiddotofmiddotcharge We can train a catemiddot chlst for only $40 bullbullbull In thanksgiving to God for what you know will you do what you can ($100 $75 $50 $25 $15 $10 $5 $2) to give these youngsters a chance The school will be named for your favorite saint and the children will pray for your loved ones daily If you build It all byyourself ($2950) School will open late this year-but better late than never-If you Vlrit~ to us right now

WHAT Our priests there who receive no othor income IELSE for food and clothing will offer promptly the

FOR Masses you request Well forward your Mass ETHOPIAr Inten~ons through the Holy Fathers officebull

40 young lads studying for the priesthood In Decamere lose their football when It goes Into a nelghbers garden A large field can be bought ~velled and mede safe for sports fer $975

MAKINQ ~~IOOOO will ovfde bull OOfDj)lete parjstlplantA (Ohuroh rectory convent andscbool) In southshy

WiW ImIAdla In memorybullbullbullbull $600 will ttiln a native lrfHt1SOO bull native Sfster Our legal tltI Cl~1HOUO NWt lAir WIUAH AHOCIAnONo

_-------------~shytt coINIILOIIlt IUMIIIND ~ bullbull la IJIIr bull _1OIt~=-=_==-=

PI _UM~gt

Mum ClO1IIponwith your mt__=-~~_ _ ~i offrtnt ~~ erryen 8TAlI-lPCODI_

HI IATHaLl1 RIIiAR 811 WILAbullbull AIaDIATaN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS IRANCUS CARDINAL SPELLMAN President MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretal)f Write OATHOLIO NfIAR IiAST WELFARE Assoo 1)80 MadlsolJ Avenuomiddot New York NY 10017 -felGpilonel 212YUkon 6middot6840

Dormitory Proves Stonehill Permanently Coeducational

Way back in 1951 when the first girl enrolled in Stoneshyhill College no one could have imagined that a girls dormishytory would ever be built onmiddot the campus But the sound of steam shovels and hammers filling the air over the lovely grounds in Easton is proof

and two girls from the seniorthat the long planned for daslr-assisting the housemothergirls dorm will soon be a Mrs Grace Callahan

reality When Stonehill was The experiment worked so founded in 1948 as a mens colshy well in fact that this coming lege the fledgling school had Fall both the freshman and just gotten off to a good start sophomore girls will be housed when the Korean War came this way leaving only the junior along and emptied the classshy and senior girls still renting Yooms as the young men went quarters in private homes chosen into the services by the college as all the nonshy

That was the year that many commuting girls have done in small colleges had to close their the past gates forever But at Stonehill That typical campus situation the Holy Cross order was detershy -the sorority house-is not in mined to hold onto this new the picture at Stonehill-or frashyschool that they had planned for ternity houses either for that so long matter No sororities or fraternishy

What could they do to keep ties are allowed on the campus the college operating until the There is a cl11b however that war was over and the boys came is the girls own - the Crosier back Of course Open their Club Mrs Yosgandes is the gates to girl students clubs faculty advisor and she deshy

Faculty Pleased scribes it as the organization What started out as a temposhy for women studentE who want

rary expediency somehow over to contribute in their own parshythe years has acquired a happy middotticular way as women to their permanancy No one could be college more pleased about this turn of Through their annualmusical events than the Stonehill faculty Crosier Curtain Calls theyitself raise money to acquire manymiddot

Helping out in Jhe ground things that add beauty and breaking ceremony for the new charm to campus life This yeardorm Mrs Virginia Yosgandes they purchased two very lovelythe Dean of Women at the colshy silver tea and coffee services lege saiei I guess everyone will Any official group at the collegereally believe that the girls are is allowed to borrow the sets and here til stay they have already been used in

Mrs Yosgandes says that since many functions she first came to the Stonehill New Signfaculty in 1958 rumors have

Mrs Yosgandes says Thebeen popping up that Stonehill girls will be very pleased whenwill soon return to its original they come back th~~ Fallto seestatus as an all male school The the beautiful new sign theynew dorm she says will be visshybought for the college installedible proof of the permanancy of on Route No 138 women on the beautiful campus

Its very easy to picture theThe $1150000 building deshyvery charming Dean presidingsigned to accommodate 200 girls

graciously at a faculty tea Aand proctors will be three stories parishioner of Immaculate Conshyof red brick Architects W Chesshyception chulCh in Easton she ister arown and Associates and in ~rivate life an enthusiasticwntractors C A Batson and homemaker anc the mother of aCompany are planning to comshy13 year old daughter Christineplete work on the dorm in time Her husband John is assistantfor the opening of classes in principal at Franklin JuniorSeptember 1967 It will be the High first unit of a five dormitory

She speaks with great convicshycomplex planned fo the women on tion about college girls holdingcampus

onto feminine ideals while surshyKitchen ~pace rounded-and at Stonjhill outshyMrs Yosgandes is happy about numbered 3 to 1- by menthe fact that the new dorm will While were encoulaging themhave a kitchenette on each floor to be acdve in thpound communitywhere the girls can cook small and the church and in politicsmeals and entertain guests Shes and encouragint them to deshyhoping that the dorms built after

more velop their abilities to the full shythis me will providtgt even est-we never fail to take intokitchen space for the girls to account the fact that they arepractice the culinary arts women and in this competitiveM a n~ tImes homemaking world theyll have to -fight toskills come to a complete halt maintain their feminine idenshywhen a girl goes to college she tity says Apparently all classroom

work and rio cooking make Jane Coed Actiiti~s

Coed a dull girl in the room When she fi rst came to the where shell be spending a great college she sltys the girls were deal of time after graduationshy mainly interested in strictlythe dtchen feminine extra curricular activishy

Mrs Yosgandes says A great ties-fastion shows teas gids many cCJlleges have been workshy sports Bd this has changed radshying witt this problem and wonshy ically in the last few years and dering what to do about it Beshy now the girls are much more inshycause theyve had no living terested in the coed acti vitiesshyquarters for girls on campus the newspapers the debating Stonehiiil has had to do out of team the drama club Stonehill necessit) what many other colshy is noted a~ one of a small handshyleges have chosen to do recently ful gtf Catholic colleges where The Dean describp~ an experishy girls are middotactive in every part of ment that the collFge tJied last college life Every coure at yeal tha has worked out exshy StonehHj is opel to girls tremely well We still havent had a woman

Experiment Successful president of our student governshyThe college leased a grollp of ing body the Senate Mrs

rooms il an apartmelt building Yosgandes says Now girls in Brockton last Fall where all what are yOIi waiting for the freshman girls who were not commuters-55 of them-lived in housekeeping apartments In Red Groups There were four girls in each BERLIN (NC)-Over 85 per apartment all sharing the reshy (ent of East German children sponsibilities of housekeeping between the ltlges of 6 and 14 are

The girls hat two sets of mCl11)ers of communist youth 1)IoctOS - two aIumni wumen ~nIUps

lrt-OE ANCH0) 17 Thurs Aug 25 1966

PriestCuod Goal Of Top Skater

GREAT FALLS (NC)-A good many folks in this Montana toWlll will attest that teenager J Mishlll Petkevich is a pretty good skate -on or oH the ice

The affable blond youngster 17 topped a field of 136 pershyformers in the three-day Lake Placid N Y international free style competition sanctioned by the U S and Canadian Figure Skating Assoclations The Great Falls lad was the judges unamiddot1ishymous choice for the mens gold medal in the finals

But Petkevich doesnt lose his cool off the ice His classmates and teachers at Great Falls Censhytral 3igh School claim hes liIl

winner in every event He spends more than 40 hours 11 week in skating training but carries the full load of class studies and consistently turns Up on the schools honor roll Hes a member of the National Honor Society

The school supported me ami the way Everyone has beeEl wonderfUl to me the modest youngster saia Hes been -skatshying since he was 2 He credit his achievements to his Catholic Faith the sacrifices of his parshyents and of Arthur Bourke senshyiormiddot professional of the Great Falls Figure Skating Club He said All I did was skatemiddotGROUND-BREAKING The Very Rev John T Corr

I hope some day to become~esc president of Stonehill College turns a shovelful of priest Petkevich said wbeilearth to mark start of construction 0pound a 200-student dormshy a~ked his ambition I hope 14gt itory for women on the Stonehill campus Watching the proshy attend Notre Dame for at leasa celtlures are left to right Mrs Virginia Yosgandes dean af two years and then I h9pe to gf)

to the Catholic University fl4women John C Doody 66 Alumni fund chairman Robert AmericaBatson contractor Harold Bonvie ass~iate of the archishytect

Msgr Canty Continued from Page OneRussian Schools ing studies at S1 Marys High

Taunton Boston- College and S1 Bernards Seminary RochesshyChristian Brother Lauds Students terN Y

nespect for Intellectuols He served as assistant at Our Lady 01 the Isle NantucketCHICAGO (NC)-Students in to foreign languages than Amershy Holy Family Taunton St

schools behind the Iron Curtain icans Most students take a Marys Barrowsville and Stgo at their studies with a passhy seven-year sequence of English Johns Attleboro He was apshysion said Brother Kevin Mark German or French English he pointed to the Chaplains CorPJFSC who toured Russia and added is the most popular lanshy of the United States Navy infour satellite countries with 19 guage and more emphasis is January 1942 and retiredwitbother U S rducatois placeltl on reading and speaking the rank of captain in Decemshy

Brothel Mark who is princishy than on writing it ber 196gt Pope John XXIII pal 9f St Mels high school here Brother Mark said that there elevated him to the rank of attributed much of their motivashy is almost nothing that he would Domestil Prelate with the title tion to the students attitude that lift from the Soviet school sysshy of Right Reverend Monsignor iI What I do does contribute to tem and apply in the U S May 1962 the welfare of the state He admitted however that Bishop Connolly named Monshy

Brother said he felt that stushy they do get results They have a signor Canty pastor of St Paulsdents in this country lack motishy tremendous capacity for conshy Taunt-ln in December 1963 vation because were spoiled centration when they set their Industrial improvements have sights for example their space made it that a young man can program Its not all a matter go into a trade and make very of being chained to a lab table good money BLUE RIBBON

In the Soviet Union he said there seems to be a great reshyspect for intellectuals and the LAlnNDRY student is thought of as a proshy

01 STOPfessional schJlar 273 CE~RAl AVE~UIIG CfflTERTeaching is considered a proshy

fession and remunelated accordshy e Television C FmiddotI ure illgly WY 2-6216o r-cerv

St Mels principal observed on IlA Allen St Newhdfordhis tour that there was little NEW BEDFORD questioning on the part of the students

The chSSloom situation he said is very much teacher ori shyented that is study in depth is 21 DAY PILGRIMAGES TO EUROPE done on the teachers inspiration

rou~ 1-Legion of Mary Pilgrimage leaving Sept 12th with Truth in such areas as history Father Edward A Oi-viera will visit Killarney Dublin Paris

cllld literature is accepted as a Lourdes Rome Madrid Lisbon and Fatima - Tour 2shyforegone conclusion and stushyHoly Cross Fathers Pilgrimage leaving Oct 10th with Frdents just memorize what has

already been discovered ----- lobert E McDonnell will wsit lisbon Fatima 1odrid Rome Lourdes Paris and londonIike F)rc~gn Linutges -cota cost is $82900 - Time PaymentsmiddotIn the area of science howshy arranged ever the situation is difterent

()Ii TOUR tOLDERS CONTACT STEolfEN A MARIIEYhe pont~d out because in scishyence there is an attitude of I n~ust discover Catholic Travel

-Office

The R1~middotmiddotmiddotO p oth-r Mark ~ltk St New Befl- -ass 02748

said ~ ve 11111j Ill)le auention

BURNERS

BUrntlr Service

Famous Reading HARDCQAl

NEW ENGLAND COKE

t8 THE ~NCHOR-Dioceseof fo Rivef-Thurs Aug 25 1966 J~sut I)riest Says Some Public I b M t EmploYE~~S Have Right to Strike

-

Urges uO or ovemen S NEW (NC) -Public however YORK Government hasmiddot h C employees in certain fields have been expanding its cQncern andIn Heml$p ere ooperate the right to strike against the has beenmoving into ar~as of government a priest declared transportation education recre-

By MsgrGooJrge C Higgins (Director Socian Actiolll Dept NCWC)

The relationship between the American labor moveshyment and the Latin American Confed~ration of Christian Trade Unions (CLASC) leaves much to be desired as we

middot thO d th 1- have aready noted severa1 t Imes m IS co umn urmg e

past four or five years The two movements are deeply different things to different peoshy

auspicious of one another and just when they seem to be on the verge of settling or at least -patching up their differshyences they go at it again and recklesslystart hurling insults at one another

To jUdge from What they sayIi b 0 u t on e another publicshy1yen as well as privately on e would t h ink that they were natural-born enshyemies whe~eas in fact they have much in common-much inore than they seem to realizeshyand for obvious reasons ought violent MisS Duncan was an officer of The fourth public member Harshyto be c60p~rating With onean- Moreo~er at least one promi~theSodality a cheerleader for vardlaw school professorVern ether as closely as pOSSible nent spokesman for the AFL- four years a member of the Ten- Countryman half ci-itiCized the This writer has learn~ci the hard WR and muc~ to hiS so~-row that any outSider who 18

fOolish enough totryto mediatek f

~tween them JS as mg or troouble

C f t Gommun same If for example one suggests

as I have done on more than one Occasion that soine of the anti U S propaganda emanating from CLASCsources revealS atremely harmful to the cause of n a i v e misunderstanding of Amerlcan trade unionism and American capitalism andor ari $ver-simplification of Catholic Social teaching he runs the risk 9f being written off as a blind -not tOsay reactionary apologist for so-called Yanqui ~mperial-

iBm If on the other hand oneslig

gests that some of the anti- CLASC propaganda enianating

fro m AFL-CI0 sources is equally naive and unsoPllisti shyeatedhe runs the same Sort of risk in reverse That is to say he is likely to be told--v~ry politely of course -that if he were to take off his Catholic blinkers and look at the record objectively he would quickly come to realize that CLASC is in reality playing t~ecipal rival in Latin America) riages in their mission parishes communist game in Latin Amer- there is a gEirierous mixture of Msgr Milia stated Since the iea superficial appearances to cultural chauvinism and envy Ogdensburg mission was opened the contrary notwithstanding that accompanies the most legit- a modern new church bas been

Both CaD Learn imate misgivings built under its direction in the Be that as it may I still think Even the Latinos middotthemselve~ seaport ofMatararii two mission

~t CLASC has a lot to learn he points out will admit on ac- churches have oeen completed about _ and from American casion that their consumirig fear and a lalge parish church and trade unionism And if that of Yanqui imperialism is often center are currently under conshymakes me a reactionary Yankee irrational But there it is he re- struction in Mollendo ehauvinist so be it minds us and the basic prob-

By the same token however aiso think that the American

labor movement has much to learn about -- and from - the Christian trade union movement in Latin America The first thing it has to learn is that the Am~r-leap philosophy of pure-andshysimple bread-~d-butter union ism which all things considshyered has worked satisfactorily in this country is not necessarily well adapted to the present-day Deeds of Latin America

Meaning of Revolution Another way of saying the

same thing is that American iabor representativesworking on Latin America problemswm have to reconcile themselves to the fact that a social revolu-Uon is called for in Latin American labor federation that doesnt subscribe to a revolushytionary ideology is probably doomed to failure

The word revolution meaos J-

pIe of course To the leaders of CLASC it means a sweeping program of socioeconomic and political reform which goes far beyond the limited goals of bread-and-butter unionism

The leaders of CLASC are convinced that such a revolushytioo is demanded bythe Chrisshytian social ethic to which they subscribe and from which they derive their ideology

Perceptive Critique Some U S Labor repshy

resentatives are skeptical to say the least~bout the allegedly Christian content of CLASCs militant ideology They admit theneed for a peaceful revolushytion in Latin Americn butthey are convinced thatCLASC wants this revolution to be Feehan High School Attleboro alties in a letter tc therimes

lem is how to insure con~ PAVlA V I tlnuing cooperation between 0 untee rs Yanqui and Latino in spite of Complete TlIainirigit

Such cooperation Dr Hawkins WASHINGTON (NC)-Fortyshyconcludes will be impossible unshyless the leaders of the American labor movement positively indi~

cete their acceptance of social revolution in Latin America This will require he says

more than the generous transshyfusions of economic aid the stimulation under United States

labors auspices of leadership training programs for workers

and other cooperative ventures Need Broader View

What is required he insists ltCia a broader view-an ability on the part of the American la bor statemen to adopt policies that will not always accord with OUI own value~ and more speshy

cificall~ the tempering of (their) hosannas to free entershyprUie ___

inter-American labor unity I fully agree in this respect with Dr Carroll Hawkins Associate

Professor of Political Science at Michigan State University who recently published a most pershyceptive critique of American trade union policy in Latin- Catholics in Mollendo Peru the

America (The 0RIT and Amer diocesan missions director reshyican Trade Unions Conflicting ported Perspectives Industrial Rela- The New York priests were tionsand Social Changes in sent to Peru after Pope Paul Latin America University of vi -asked that more priests be Florida Press) pr9vjd~d fOr the people opoundSouth

Basic Problem America Msgr Anthony A Mi-Dr Hawkins admits of course lia said He estimated more than

that in all the Latin American 90 percent of the priests in criticism of United States unioniperu are from other countries in the ORIT (the Latin Ameli can regional unit of the Interna In 1965 the priests from Ogshytional Confederation of Free denburg administered 445 bap-Trade Unions and CLASCs prin tisms and perfoImed 64 mar-

CIOhas publicly charged in ej_ nis Club for two years and a suggested penaltiel fect that CLASCs ideology three yeaT member of the FU- owes more to Marxism than it ture Nurses club Father Carey sl~id the ~ays does to Christianity He finds it when pay and working condi-

An instructor in the Confra- tions for men and women inhard he says to accept the fact ternity of Christian Doctrine that the Christian labor move- civil service were determine4 byproglam in Our Lady of Mt I g I t d d t t

t middot A e IS a Ive It n a minIS ra Ive ment 0f L a In merIca IS non- Carmel Parish Seekonk the fiat have pas ed a d Communist s n we now

In my judgment this kind of criticism of CLASC by spokesshymen fltr the AFL-CIO is ex

three volunteers have completed the Second National Training Session sponsored by the Papal Volunteers for Latin America and received assignments in some ten Latin American coun- tries

Special ceremonies ended the six-week training session at the Catholic University of America where volunteers studied the apostolic work of the Church the laymans role in the aposshytolate and principles of spiritual life as well as the religion ecoshynomics and culture of Latin America

Before leavillg for their asshysignments the volunteers will take intensive four-month lanshy

guage anl culture courses in a Latin American language centerbull

eighth winner of this scholarship plumeoursElves that we share will enter the Childrens Hosshypital School of Nursing Boston in Septembel-

Ogdensburg Priests

SellYe Peru Mission OGDENSBURG (NC) -- Four

Ogdensburg priests currently are ministering to the n~eds of_13OOO

~ere

Father Philip Carey sJ exshyecutive director of the Xavier Institute of Industrial Relations acknowledged t hat certain strikes aJre intolerable But he said that when the governmentacts in a proprietary function it must follow the same rules it prescribes for private enterprise

In a letter to the New York Times Father Carey criticized ~y implication a proposed state -llw that wetulltilincrease the penalties to be imposed on strikshying union of public employees

MlISS LHNDA DUNCAN Th~proposedlaw grew out of recommendations of a five-man

Feehan Alumna task force named by Gov Nel son Rockefeller to study the

Receives Award problem after a 19-day transit strike crippled Newmiddot York City

Miss Linda Duncan daughter in January of Mrs George Duncan and the - NeCeSSBlry for Bargaining late George Duncan 61 Sykes Father Carey one of four Rd Seekonk has been awarded pubiic members of the mayors the eighth annual scholarship of committee that helped settle the the Attleboro Area Nurses strike disagreed with two other Chapter publlc memlgters Vh_o had previshyA 1966 graduate of Bishop ously supported the stiffer pen-

and internal concord a str~ke against itconstitutes mutiny and rebellion (UCLA) Sister Muriel a native

Pgbllsh Gudelnes For Ecumenisn

ALLENTOWN (NC) - The commission of ecumenism of the Allentown diocese here in Pennshysylvania has published a 22-page booklet of ecumenical guidelines to aid priests in guiding the laity The guidelines include general

permission for non-Catholics to serve as witnesses at Catholic weddings for Catholics to serve as witnesses at non-Catholic weddings and for burial of non-Catholics in Catholic ceremonies with a priest or a non-Catholic clergyman cltmducting graveside eeremonies

SHELL DADSON OIL

24-Hollr Oil

GLE COAL amp OIL CO IncI

640 Pleasant Street Tel WY 6-8271 New Bedford

this decision-making with the working p E~ 0 P Ie themselves through the process of collective bargaining

If collective bargaining is to be the rule he said we must agree to grant the right to strike~ Without this right he said there is no union and no coll~ctive balmiddotgaining

Expands Concern-in considering strikes by pu~ lie employees he dedared one muSt distinguishb~tween the state as a sovereign and the g()vernment acting in a proprishyetary function When the state aets as the defender of the peace or the promoter of justice

of Corning Iajoined the Sisters of the Humility of Mary in 1930 In recent years she has been ehairman of professionafarts deshypartment and college registrar

ation and a host of other services formerly performed by privategroups he continued

These activities are ancillary and economic and here the state in acting in a proprishyetry function When it so acts it ought to be subject tl) the same rules of conduct the government prescribes for private entershy

prise Strikes by firefighters and powerhouse uti lit y workers would be wrong however he said because it is difficult to imagine anY benefit they might gain to counterbalance the fear- fut harm such a l strike would impose on the community Buys Banners For Memorial

CHICAGO (NC)-A Chicago advertising executive has bought 44 brightly-colored religious ~anners tat -hung in the Nashy

tlOnal Srme of the Im~aculate ConceptIon during Luci Johnshysons wed(iin~ -

Earle Ludgin a trustee of the University of Chicago said he will donate the banners to the

university~ Rockefeller Memoshyrial Chapel in memory of his late wife

The banners for which Ludgin reportedly paid more than $40000 were originally created for the Vatlcan PavIIIon at the New York World Fair

A group of Washington D C residents bought ttie banners when the fair closed and arshyranged to have them exhibited in the Shrine until they could be sold Lugdin bought themin April but agreed at the request of Shrine officials to leave them in the Shrine until after Lucia wedding

lame College Head

OTTUMWA (NC) Sis t er

Muriel Hogan has been named the third presi4ent of Ottumwa Heights College here in Iowa She succeeds Sister Marie Anshy

ciue Kennedy woo win engagem graduate study in oominunishy

eations at the University of California Los Angeles branch

Offering You 3 Savings Plans

Home Financing

WAREHAM CO-OPERATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mabull

Telephone 295-2400 Banll SerVice YlIIIIIII

I

Ask Court Bar Use of Church Propertyfor Public SchoQ~middot WHITE ~S (MC) - A the cl883rooms ~ut Church

group of some 25 citizens repre- npokesman reporte~ that in line sented by the American Jewish with New York archdiocesan Congress has asked the New York State Supreme Court here to restrain the board of Ramapo School District 2 Rockland County from holding public school classes in property leased from religious bodies

The school board faced with severe-overcrowding planned to lease eight rooms from St Josephs Catholic Church and five from lem~e Beth El in Spring Valley The action was approved by 8tateEducation Commissioner Jame$ EAllen Jr

A ComllllJJlt served 0ill the rlChool board by the AJC charged the acti~n o~ld ~otateChurchshyState separation guaranteed by the First Amendment to the Constitution as well as other provisions of the state constitushytion

It is believed to be the first wch challenge made regarding

the use of religiO18 facilities for public school use

lhe st Josephproperty conshysists of an eightclasSroom school building adjacent to but sepashyrated from the chureh It is Ill good condition but will not be used by the p8rish thismiddot year because it has bUilt a new bUildshying for expanding its acbool to 141 classes

All religioUs ~bols had Ileen removed from the oder building in preparation for its use as a public school

The district school board had offered a fair market rent for

PAV~A deg Missionary Record Continued from Page Thirteen

A nurse from Chicago baa taken Lucillellpla~on the aposshytolic team and ber purpose in returning is to help her successhy80r work into the project smoothly It takes so long to get into 11 she Aid so II dont WJmt Il~r to spendtbree

years j~ g~tting organized~

Benedictine Marks 80th Anniversary

ST JOSEPHmiddot (NC)-The oldshyest Benedictine nun in Minneshysota-and one of the oldest m the world~marked the 80th anshyniversary of her entrance into the order ma Mass for all Beneshydictine jubil~tians held at St Benedicts convent here

Sister Sophia Zimmer was 1~ years old Dec 2 1965 She Wall

born in a log cabin about 1 block away from the convent An open house for her relatives and friends was held at the conv~nt

Receives Students cAsTELGANDOLFO (NC)shyPoPe Paul vI received in audishyence at his Summer home here students frOm 34 nations includshying many non-Catholics who are taking Summer courses in the ItaUaa language aDd culture sponsored by the Rome branch of the Catholic University fII IWaD

policy the properly would be made available for public school use at a token dollar-a-year rental

cmOS Cmpetes C~~ege ~rr(l))g~m

WASHINGTON (NC)-A class of 97 under-privileged high school students was graduated on completion of an eight-week Summer college orientation proshy

gram at Georgetown University The exercises i attended by faculty and parents Qf the stushydents involved students who had completed their Sophomore year in District of Colwnbia high schools They were chosen for the special course because teachers and counselors believed they have the ~billty to do colshylege work alihoug~ their presshyent high school records indicate little likelihood of college acshyceptance Ninoty-fiveOf the 97 students were Negroes md the ratio of males to females was aboutmiddot tbree-to-two ~

The pro~~~~Ch began in 1965 is financed by the NaUonal science Fowidationmiddot the District of Columbia public school sysshy

tem and Georgetown In addition to academic work

the students were given cltgtUrsetl in reading improvement and counseling gUidance Athletie and cultural events underwrit shyten by the program were also bKluded in their schedules

nearly 42 years Bishop Gerow churches degespeciallY Negro said Of late I have feltmiddotthat X houses of worshIp which middotWere have not the stamina to caJTY I bombedmiddot and burned

on as I have done in the past Whena p~ttern of destn1c~ion This load should be borne by 1 develops as It has m our state youngerman then it sincumbent upon all ntereston Yoiit

Cathollc lnereaSe m~n ~ ~ood ~i~ througho~t MiSSISSIPPI to Jom hands m Savings

The ~venth bishop of~edio- helpingthe affectedmiddot churches 0 Invested In cesemiddotwhlch was founded ID 1~37 and in showing clearly our con- and encompasses 111 of Missls- demnation at all acts of violencemiddot CATHOLIC CHURCH sippi Bishop Gerow h8ll s~ lawlessness and destruction the Catholic population IJOw from 31264 to 75000 in his 41 years of office The number of priests in the diocese grew from 63 to 220 and churches md misshysions from 108 to 243

The last few years of llacial violence perhaps were the most troub1d for Bishop Gerows long ad inistration middotHemiddot met the challenge with courage

In the face of many-sided opshyposition Bishop Gerow in 1964 directed the first grades of Cathshyolicmiddot schools in the state to be racially integrated The next

Missionaries Move Seminar to Ohio

DAYTON (NC) -The White Fathers a missionary society which bas served in Africa for nearly a century is llloving its U S seminary to Dayton

St Josephs Seminary which had been in operation at Onshydliota N Y near Saranac Lake will re-open under the same

name in four residences near the campus of the University of

Dayton The buildings have been rented from the university

Eventually the White Fathers plan to build their own seminary

middotfacilities somewhere in ~e area according to Fatber Paul lo1e1le WF~

THE ANCHOR- middot19 Thurs Aug 25 1966

KC Melll1il~er~~ip

At AJ~Tome e~~gh MIAMI BEACH (NC)-In his

report at the 84th annual meetshying of the Supreme Council of the Knights of Columbus Sushypreme Knight John W McDevitt made these points

Membership on June 30 1966 stood at an all-time high of 1183896 The orders insurance covershyage passed the $15 billion mark during the year

The orders assets reached III

neW plateau of $28122840028 at the end of the fiscal year

The society i~ continuing its support of the campaign to st~m p(gtrnography

Revise Ceremonial Progress is being made onthe

re_Vision of the orders cerempnshyial to give it a total family middotclishymate and make it consistent with moder day philosophy of social justice and religious pracshytice

The K of C have undertaken distribution of copies of the 1~ew Testament to Catholic gradllates

COURAGE PERSONIFIED John St Marie of B~YQ of the Naval Offilaquoer CandfClatE port Minn CQnfined to a wheelchair since a 1953 pOlio ~chool in Newport R I an(J ill

~dying the question of proshyattack has received a scholarship to the University of viding a similar servilte ~orMinnesota law school atter successfully maintaining an Ashy Catholic graduatell of the Qffi shyminus average in undergraduate work at the College of cers Candidate School of ihe St Thomas St Paul Minn irQ Photo Canadian Navy

It saluted Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York on biI

Welcomes Successor Naming of Apostolic Administrato

Pleases Bishop Gerow 81 JACKSON (NC)-Mississippll1 year he followed with a direeshy

courageous 81-year-old Bihop tive that Catholic schools be deshyOliver Gerow welcomed his suc- segregated completely ceSSor Bishop Joseph B Bruni- Helps Restore Churches ni 55 as spiritual head of the Despite reported threats ofmiddot Natchez-Jacklon diocese as one violence fro m segregationist who is active vigorous and has ranks the aged prelate was good sound judgment among leaders of an interfaith

X am very happy in being groupmiddot which formed the Comshyrelieved of the heavy responSl- mittee of middotConcernmiddot soHcited middotbillty that I have borne for money labor and materIals for

middotthe bishop stated in a letterred AND in every Catholic church in the INSTITUTIONAL BONDSstate

His appeal for $300000 to re-middot I Umiddot f $500 M store more than 30 d~stroyed n nits 0 or ore and damaged churches brought Keenan amp CImiddotarey bie contributions to the Committee 9f Concern from various sections Minneapolis Minnesota of the country

0

M~ntle Plumbing amp ~ating Co Inc~

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET Fall River OS 57497

for detailed information write to

CHARLES A~ MURPHY Registered Representative

145 Pond $treet Winchester Mass

PA 9-2696 And

Name bullbullbull ~ Address A

City _

50 years in the priesthood payshying tribute to him not only beshycause of his dignity as a pi-iest and cardinal but also because he 1S a great and wholesome mail

Relic Stolen NEW YORK (NC)-A reputed

relic of the cross on which Chtist died has been stolen from the Church of the Most Holy Reshydeemer here It was removed from a side altar tabernacle

where it had been placed shortshyly after the churchs establishshy

ment by the Redemptoriad Fathers some 125 years ago

~

GULF HILL DAIRY so DARTMOUTH MASS

RO THE ANCHO~-Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

1

RELIGIOUS SUPERIORS INSTITUTE ON STONEHILTJ CAMPUS SMS Guadalcanal Solomon Islands Standing Sr Florita DP King Sr Mary LUk~ St about to enter the hall for her lecture Center Some ston Mass Sr Mary of Bathany SP Holyoke Sr Mary de Sales F$SJ r the sisters who attended Sister Lukes talk were Sr Josepha SC Conshy Holyoke Right Mrs Mary Virginia Yosgandes h-ouse mother wavesgood ent Station NJ Sr Mary Kenneth Amityville NY Sr Mary (fheresa bye tothe departing nuns I

Brooklyn Church Hopes Nuns Move Into Cent~r of Lij~e Criticizes Irish lribunal Lacks By Dorothy Eastman -Social Security

When in the third year of Vatican II the momentous decision was made toinvitewO- dmiddot LIMERICK (NC) - FatherJ men observers to audit a Council forthe first ~ime to represent all J~remiah Newman professor ofuris ICtlon the Sister chosen BROOKLYN (NC)-Msgr the nuns in America was Sister Mary Luke Tobin Mother General of the Sisters of Lor- sociology at Irelands Maynooth

IlAarion J Reinhardt pre- etto When shewasasked recently while visiting the Fall River Diocese what impressed College criticizedprivate agenshyJ~L h t b t th C 1 cies and the national governshyIdlng Judge of the Trlblillal er mos a ou e oune) h t b t h h d k ment for their failure to increaseshe said with a wry smile We aVe 0 e rna ure enoug er own or er was wor mg(1)f the Diocese of Brooklyn h to live in insecurity toward these ends She told of all subsidies to families Iltas announced that the bill of The fact that we were t ere Will these changes be easy experiment soine of her Sisters After insisting that it would $Omplaint of 15 former teachers at all I The Sister is too much of a have been engllged in for the be best for private agencies and of St Johns Un~versity had to At a Stonehill College institute realist to give that impression past twu years in Pueblo Colo- local governments to administer be dismissed because of lack of Sister Luke spoke of her many Its going to be fraught with rado Although most of the 1100 social security Father Newman jurisdiction on the part of the other impressions of the Council difficulties she warns but Sisters of Lorettv are teachers said that since they seemed unshy

ecclesiastical court _ where she and seven other Sis- what isnt this small group of Sisters in willing or unable to do this the The Brooklyn ecclesiastical tels were auditresses for the last There are more than a few Pueblo 1s doing no t~aching-in job had to be done by the natshy

$Ourt which operates under two years of Vatican II Over Sisters who are troubled and schools anyway They simply jonal government ~llnon law said it is pmited in 450 Mothers Superior from 55 sometimes shocked these days live among the poor as good He said that according to jurisdiction to only spiritual different Orders were gathered by many of the changes hi their neighbors he 1pin jg wherever Catholic soCial teaching there ltuestions at the Easton campus for the communities The Mother Gen- they cllD leading discussion was no limit to the amount of Charge Contralaquot Breach five day Institute directed by eral would warn them that its groups counselling etc government aid that is permis-

The 5000 word document Rev William FHogan CSC pointless for them to say Thill Asked to comment on the re- sibie and desirable if governshypointed out that the decree of Sister Luke was one of a group is not the community I entered cent experiment in Milwaukee mEmt aid was the Qnly practical Giisrriissalis without prejudice to of noteliltspeakers who talked When it comes to that she says where30 School Sisters of St (sbl~tion to poverty problems lbhe merits of the case to the superiors on the subject we all might say This is not the Francis left their convents for

If the Metropolitan Tribunal of the I Sister in the modern Church Iwas baptized into or three weekstO work in secular If the archdiocese of New York world this is not the world I was b()rn jobs - oneSister wa3 assigned

T b 1 f the Sacred into Change is a fact of life S t~ the rI una 0 Adapting a line from Charles as a newspaper reporer- IS er Roman Rota reversesthe decree Dickens to describe this contro she points out~ and we can~t keep Luke predicted a great deal the casewiil be returned to the versial post Council age Sister things as they are or say Stop more~ of this kind of liniited Tribunal of the Diocese of the World-I want to get off f i t th I w ld ]Brooklyn for adjudications upon t~ees sa~~iSTi~iSt~eth~o~r Role of Superiors ~~~re ~o di~~a~~c~i~t n~~ Ms merits it was stated times She paintedavivid ver- The role the Superiors will she said

The petition of complaint bal picture of the world that lies play in the formation of what Since her own Order founded filed by Father Peter OReilly ahead for Sisters She said it has been called The New Nun in 1812 is quite new all religious

s~f Chicago on behalf of himself would certainly be a challenging Lwuakeouattlintheed fs~roeh~ ~~s~~~t~ orders go and is the liirst comshylind the other ousted teachers one and that conventlife inthe munity founded in America charged he university which is future is certain to undergo She urged them to create a cli- without European ties the Sisshyeonducted by theVincentian many radical changes mate where Sisters can liveters of Loretto weal habits more Fathers with breach of contract community life at its best She -modern than most But itsstill

The Superior~ were told that entreated them to keep thls cli-The dispute has been marked bY d bl d ff t the dress of 1812 not 1966 so it d k t f an m Ispensa e gUl e me ec - mate free from legallsm andlitudent unrest an pIC e mg 0 th hmiddotmiddot th will soon be changed As soon I mg ese c anges IS e map survelmiddotllance Ie schoo s campuses f th f t th t th C 1 as the all-mlll Congregation

or e u ure a e ounCl A community should be a of Religious in Rome approv~sMoral Issue Fatners drew up for the Church place where there- is safety for She called the CouncII Decrees the Sisters new design that is About 30 teachers were fired fl t d f t f dff

Rost December in a dispute over the documentS ofhighest au- cop IC an sa e y or J er- Tliey have submitted one de~ign rlty We should all have ~nes apd s~fety to cultiv~te that the fathers turnEd downadministration-faculty relation- tho d t h d Sh f I the mInd of Vatlcan II and then lverSI y s ~ sal e ee s lihey thought it was too modshyships and other issues They t I th t th h ld be

b b f we c~n move Into actlon she s rongy a ere ~u r -ern Sister Luke says UWhat anwere joined y anum er 0 I t I g I fe ther teachers In a strike that told her healers - 1Jloe ~o~a IY In re 1 J~)Us 1 incredible thing for US to ask shy --uAfterall were not Trap- that we choose our own clothes has continued since January Whi~h Way psts

l she adds with a laughThe court found that tpe How will the Sisters know in Warning that the time has S t Lk tl - b

uteceniontractual controversy was not whicli direction they should come for a re-evaluation of the _ IS ~rth y e~mt~ a spiritual mattelin a canoliical move in the manyarells so(in to true meaning of community she ne oIl e d~rs wo~~ ever ~ llense of the word spiritual change cExperiment Sister told the Superiors that commu- bo~a h a sre~t a f ~gUS aild that there was no allegation Luke advises so often its almost nity doesnt mean conformity or 0 y e oCle ~ o anon ef a violation of an ecclesiastical her motto We really cannot a hotel life either or even a Lawyrs Does thIS mian that law arid that the time was not move into change without ex-lot of happy t9getherness th~ SI~ters may at last have a opportune for a decision of perimentation she says and around the television set voIce 111 the formatIon of canon moral responsibility because the we will be engaged in tremen- A ~ital new aspect of commu- la-at least th~ laws that rUI~ secular courts would first have dous experiments from now on- nity is the idea of what Sister thel~ O~derS SIster Luke deshyto determine whether there was to adapt religious life to the Luke calls sub communities- vout y opes so a breach of contractual duty times in which we live the convents immediate neigh- Its certain that the future for

The church court found as a The revisions that lie ahead borhood the parish the civic the Sisters will be a very differshymatter of law that St Johns for religious orders will bring commumty lay people 111 the ent one than anyone could have 141 NO MAINUniversity as a corporation Sisters into the mainstream of same profession as the Sister- imagined a few short years ago J~ formed under the law of the modern life Sister Luke for for instance other nurses or The Holy Father has urged them iii FALL RIVER State of w York did not have one has no doubts that this is tElachers We have allowed too the~ to move from the margin e the ecclesiastical privilege of where they belong We ought great a gap to exist between our- of life to the center of life~ 873 COUNTY demanding that suits against it to be willing to take the risks) selves and the laity she says Will the move be successful SOMERSETbe heard in an ecclesiasticalmiddot that gO along with this plunge In an interviewmiddot following her Sister Luke says We can only CDOurt into the mainstream she says talk Sister ~uke was asked how know by taking a ChanCE

Feai makes the wolf bigger than be is

Rer Bankings Already D~ne

~jI--~1 W

tt-~~gt_ri~

~j F~ p ~tl Iim F-ilNgt

~l i

ll 11 ~~

W = ~

~gtltl ~

-~ ~~ StIesaves I lot of alunle Mtime forso maily other thinlS ~i She banks by mail at Te ~ OLD R D8 KI h 7reg E AN W at about you

liii FREE mall forms ~1 The mOld Red Bank W

$ Fall River Savings Bankjilll q

Page 5: 08.25.66

5 THE ANCHOR-Catholic Mission Philosopher-Priest Visiting North Dartmouth Thurs Aug 25 1966

Societies Meet Also Sculptor Painter Housebuilder CIErgymen oStudyIn Washington

WASHINGTON (NC) A philosopher who is also a part-time sculptor painteralcl honse-builder-thats Mental Health The 17th annual meeting of Rev Herman Reith CSC who is spending the Summer at St Josephs Hall North Dartshy WASHINGTON (NC) - Ten US Catholic mission secishy mouth As co-author of a textbook Psychology for Nurses he spoke this month to Catholic priests and Brothers

middot participated in a mental healtheties will be held here Sept students at St Annes Hospital Fall River discussing the motivation a nurse should workshop held this Summer at1 to 21 with some 1000 priests have in her profession The Georgetown University ThelReligious and lay persons acti ve address was an interlude in middot program was designed to proshyfin Catholic mission work exshy

a busy Summer which the vide them with additional skillspected to attend The Worldmission Award Holy Cross priestmiddot has deshy in dealing with mental health

problemsgiven annually to a layman who voted mainly to work on a book They heard lectures frommakes an outstanding contribushy scheduled for Spring publication

more than 40 psychiatrists psyshycention to mission work will be by the University of Notre Dame chologists anthropologists edushy]tresented to James J Fahey Press Titled A Light to the cators and other clergymenWaltham Mass garbage man Nations Essays on the Intellecshy

The participants also workedand author of Pacific War tual Mission of the Church it with patients in psychiatric andDiary 1942-45 All proceeds is described by Father Reith aS general hospita~ wards and withfrom his book are going to build an attempt in the direction of representatives of social and edshybull church in South India a theology of the Church in modshyucational agencies of the DistrictAmong speakers at the meetshy eln times of Columbia areaing will be Auxiliary Bishop - He is grappling in its pages

A spokesman for the grouIJlFulton J Sheen of New York with redefinitions of key conshysaid they were given the opporshydirector of the National Society cepts such as the nature of the tunity to talk with persons withfur the Propagation of the Faith priesthood the Church herself widely varying pro b 1 emsAuxiliary Bishop Harold R and such terms as mission and They observed alcoholics inPerry SVD of New Orleans witness s 1um neighborhoods traveledMsgr Joseph Gremillion direcshy Religious laity and priests with probation officers whotor of the socio-economic divishy are all wondering who they are work wit delinquent youthsion Catholic Relief Servicesshy and what their roles are in toshyand visited homes for unweltilNational Catholic Welfare Conshy days Church he said My mothers shyference Bishop Frederick Hall stress is on Christ as the Logos The program was financed byMHM retired bishop of Kisushy Christs mission t~ the world is Georgetown University No govshyrna Kenya Sister M Olivette that of enlightenment and all his ernment funds were involvedWhalen councilor general of the wOIk was a witnessing to the

Sisters of the Holy Cross Notre truth Dame Ind and Father Gerrard Logos in Time Bay Staters ServeP Fredericks MSSST supeshy His book will discuss the Ilior general of Trinity Missions Poor in Canadafounding of the Church under Silver Spring Md the heading of The Logos in COMBERMERE (NC)-More

Theme of the meeting will be TIme and will develop the conshy than 100 international volunteersPoverty and the Missions-the cept that Christ must unfold are serving the poor in one ofDemands of Justice and Charshy through history in human fashshy Canadas depressed rural aleasity ion the Madawaska Valley

Degrading Misery The book six years in the They are from New MexicoBesides general sessions the writing took rise said Father Arizona Wisconsin Kentuckythree-day meeting will also inshy Reith from his attempts to exshy Georgia Alabama Illinois Michshy

elude a number of simultaneous plain to seminarians that teachshy igan PennsylvalTia New Yorkseparate sessions for various ing is as priestly a role as adshy Massachusetts and Canada Theygroups including mens and ministering the sacraments He come to Madonna House for awomens major superiors procshy quoted St Paul But as the week to a month and some theurators and promoters men and Lord hath distributed to every entire Summer to work in thewomens training directors and one as God hath called every apostolatev 0 cat ion directors editors one so let him walk And so in Many volunteers spend theirBrothers educators and lay all churches I teach time at the Madonna Housegroups Father Reith will not be forshy inarians on an expedition toFrom this beginning he went farm S1 Benedicts Acres OthshyThe Mission Secretariat is a gotten at St Josephs however Mexico where they built houses on to consider the role of the ers help at the summer recreashyelearing house for information He is leaving a very tangible for shack-dwellers And whereintellectual in the Church tionl programs for childern inand services to aid American memento of his presence in the did he pick up his manual laborShoulltl we be Christians or inshy middot two isolated settlementsCatholic foreign mission work form of a middotlife-size sculpture of know-how I came from a famshytellectuals he asks in his openshy Some help in the summerwith headquarters in Washingshy the Holy Family which will be ily of 10 children he explaineding chapter and ends by explainshy Christmas program cleanington Father Frederick A Mcshy

ing its not erected on a15 foot pedestal on and my mother adopted fourthat an eitheror and repairing toys sent hereGuire CM a former missionary the North Dartmouth grounds more There was always lots ofproposition but rather a both from all parts of North Americalin China is executive secretary work to doTo Leave Mementoand one for distribution this WinterThe delegates to this years Of steel the modernistic sculpshy One more item on this SumshyIn his closing chapters he exshymeeting represent more than ture is being welded in r-rew mers agenda every Sundayamines the roles of religious and7600 United States missionades Bedford by Father Reith during Father Reith flies to the islandlaity in the Church explainingstaffing overseas missions hours taken from his writing of Cuttyhunk to say Mass for CASA BLANCAparenthetically that he saves theIn a pre-convention stateshy project Summer residents The island Just Across Thelayman for last in line with thement Father McGuire said It is is actually part of St MarysThe versatile philosopher alsogospel comment Thou hast Coggeshall St Bridge a truism to say that we are livshy paints for relaxation leaning South Dartmouth he said andsaved the best wine till last Fairhaven Massing in an era of explosi ve towards oils and pastels I like Father Considine the pastor

change We also living in Other Books Holy Fathers Finest Variety ofare a semi-abstractions he said but asked the Cross whose Other books by the author inshycountry affluence has I always try to get some figures tltl be responsible for Summer SEAFOODnever been equaled in the hisshy clude An Introduction to Phil shy in my pictures Masses

tory of the world osophical Psychology and The Among the priests friends in Served Anywhere - AlsoThe house - building That We are at the same time Metaphysics of St Thomas came two Summers ago when the Diocese is Dr John E Manshy STEAKS-CHaPS-CHICKEN

Hving in a world where degrad Aquinas Also to be published ning Fall River pediatricianFather Reith led a group of ing misery envelops half of all next Spring is Frederick His Notre Dame students and sem- who arranged this months lecshyGods children We in the United Writings part of a series Oll ture at St Annes Hospital States accept as our due all the Marxist writings of which Fr eomforts and conveniences of Reith will be general editor FOl Vermonts Divorce Where Athis affluent society the while his doctoral degree earned at we push from our conscious Laval University he concenshy Rate Al110ng Lowest DONAT BOISVERT GOOD NAMEMlinking the agony of uncounted trated on Marxist philosophy BURLINGTO (NC) - Vershy

INSURANCE AGENCY INCmillions He gives credit to St Josephs monts divorce rate continues to Hall for providing the peace remain among the lowest among Means A96 WILLIAM STREETand leisure necessary to writing the 50 states of the nation

NEW BEDFORD~ MASSEight Irish Sisters Most of my books have been GREAT DEAL statistics disclosed it has been written there he said For Ie fairly stable during the last 26 WY 8-5153 WY 7-9167Arrive in Montana years he was chairman of the years - about 15 divorces per

BILLINGS (NC)-Eight Irish department of philosophy at the PERSONAL SERVICE1000 populationSisters of Mercy arrived here University of Notre Dame and Sociologists claim the stable~ work at St Vincents Hosshy he is now teaching in the deshy GEO OHARAlow rate results from the largepital and in parochial schools partment Theres no time fOll Catholic population of the stateTwo others are scheduled to arshy my own writing during the tllCshy -some 135000 Catholics in mIrive in September ademic year he says total population of some 393000 Six axe teachers and four are In the Spring however he IIlurses Bishop William J Conshy will leave Notre Dame for

ELECTRICAL Contractors

944 County St New Bedford

CHEVROLETdon of Great Falls invited the Makerere University in Kamshy St FrancisIIluns here last November when pala Uganda where he expects he visited their motherhouse in to teach for the next five years Residence

lOCH Kings Hwy lBallyshannon euroounty Donegal We have many Holy Cross FOR YOUNG WOMEN missions in Uganda he saiell U96 IIhippie St Fall RvellCOllllsecrcltaon Oct )5 and the Bishop there feels that NEW BEDfORDConducted by franciscanRICHMOND (NC)-Auxiliary the Church should be involved

Missionaries Ill~ MarvBishop-designate J Louis Flahshy in the growth of African educil shyerty of Richmond will be conseshy tion He therefore volunteered ROOMS - MEALS

OVERNIGHT HOSPITALITY crated in Sacred Heart cathedrall for the faculty of the lIIakereJlla Inquiro OS 3-289here on Wednesday Oct 5 Btate university

PHILOSOPHER-SCULPTOR Rev Herman Reith CSC works on Holy Family group which will be erected on outdoor pedestal at St Joseph Hall North Dartmouth Father Reith has been spending Summers at North Dartshymouth house working on books in field of philosophy but will teach in African university for next few years

6 mE ANCHOR-Di9cese of Fan River-Th~rs Aug 25 l~66

The oC1tQice i

A fascirlating chooice i~ shaphlg up as a cOrOn~ry to th~ present crowded condition in the pa~hial school system

0

Those in authority in the Church are faced with the possibility that lower grades of the Oatholic schoQI system must be sacrificed to provid~ the space and teachers for those in the upper grades The Gatholic high school and college must expand at the expense of the elementary school

- And the oungsters f~m th~se lower grades tnust tum to the public~chOoISyate_mof ~ducation

Hereis where the choice coin~s in

If these young-sters p~esent tllemselves at the do()rs of the over-crowded public schools the community must find

space and teachers for them That hits the whol~ comshymunity in the pocketbook

The onlyaIternative seems to be increased aid from publk tax funds for the parochial school system to assist itmiddot to educ~te every child who wants an ~ducation in a Catholic iChOol

CriticS of the pa-roehial school system must choos~beshytween expaIlding the public school system at a prohibitive eost or swallowing their harsh words and grant tomiddot parents the right to educate their children in a system not less capable and democratic than the public school system and in assisting the chil~ to receive an education in the system of his parents choosing

Modern Lorelei

A survey of _two thousand pupils in the Chicago area produced some revealing staticS about their televisionshyviewing habits

Elementary school students spend an average of twenty-one hours a week with television

High -school students average fourteen hours aweek

Parents of those middotquestioned admitted to watChing television about twenty hours a week and their teachers

saw it twelve hours

Television is here to stay No on~ would decrie its great entertainment and educational value Already it is being used as a supplement to classroom teachings

- But like any other thing it inust be used and middotnot abused the used and not the user

It is quite possible for people to become hypnotized by thecathode eye and spend hour afterhour in an electronicshycontrolled -trance

Since such viewing is essEmtiatally passive it bodes no good for the creative mind And the student can easily come to grief by middotspending too much time caught in the trap qf this twentieth century Lorelei

A students life is one of application to lessons and work He has no more excuse from those responsibilities than his father has to refuse to work his mother to ignore the making o~ meals and duties of housekeeping

Study costs an effo~t It is not always pleasant ltis a sacrifice Arid in this age of high living standards when children are brought up with very little sacrifice in their lives surrounded by everything that money can buy they must learn control and discipline to assure s~holastic sucshycess

Control of television watching is just such a discipline of spirit

And with schools soon to open it is a discipline that should be decided upon by parents for their children and insisted upon as the school year goes along

regrheANCHOR

Sword of the Spirit C -c -n

By Edward P McDonagb

CCD and CFM The fourth Biennial eon

- vention of the New EnglaBCl Area Christian Family Moveshy

middotrilent concluded its three day session on August 14th The ~

WlS the lovely campus ~f tbe Newton College of the Sacred Heartand CFM couples from all over the New England Sta~ gathered there to increase th~ understanding of the movemeilli

middotand to chartmiddot new areas of A~ tolic Action

The theme of the Christi_ FamUy Movement is For Hap pier Families and cgtuples bull the organization seek that goal by applying the Observe JUd~

and Act technique in their own ho~es the neighborhood the

parish and the ~orld at large The purpose of all this is to fo~

~

Gap StUImiddot Exists Study Suggests More Than Busing Needled

In EdllllcGtioll1lEquality-lntegration WASHINGTON (NC)~A reshy

port prepared by the US Ofshyfice of Education says that the present s~t-up of the nations public school system serves to

- perpetuate the social and ecoshynomic gap between most Negroes and whites

Although it challenges the eoncept of n e i g h b 0 rb 9 0 d

schools the report warns tha integration andmiddot edu~ational equality cannot be attained by busing alone

The 737-page report on Equal- ity oj Educational Opportunity has been published by the Ofshyfice of Education Earlier the office isued a summary of the two-year study called for by Congress under terms of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

Senator Abraham Ribkoff of Connecticut has accused the 00shymiddotministration of playing down the report because it contains explosive political implkations

I think the time has come for us not to be satisfied with cliches Ribic9ff told John W

GaTdner SecretarYcent Healtl) Education and Welfare M 11 Senate sub-committee hearing on urban problems A lot of the concepts are loaded with political dynamite

James S Colemlm author of the report agreed that the adshyministration - issul~iI summary was fllt and over--cautious He said that might have stemmed from uneasiness about findings that may have political lreper cussions

Planes Help Enable Proests to Cover Large TerritClraquorfl

In PerfolTmOlftceof Apostolic Work LOCKPORT (NC)3-A priest years ending with the rank of

who has twice flown at the speed of sound believes a plane can be a useful tool iii apostolic labor especially inmiddot far-flung fields

Father Richard E Spellman pastor of Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary parish in Albuquershyque began to fly when he saw ranchers in New Mexico using planes to get- around their ranches

If the ranchers can do it why cant a priest he asked I found out that in my little plane I was able to get around quickly to mission schools in New Mexico to teach catechism to children

He has used his plane too to d~liver medicine to Catholic missions in Mexico

Father Spellman who served

major was here in Illinois for the third annllal conventioJl of the National Association of

Priest Pilots He learned to fly here hi~

he was seminarian He said I was a good enough pilot that the Archbishop of Santa Fe tnJsted me to take him around the Archshydiocese in my plane

Some 150 priests belong to the association said Father Rich~rd

Skriba the conventions genshyeral chairman and asistant pas~ tor of St Simon parish in Chishycago Altogether there are over 400 priests and Brothers in the always understoodUS who are pliots he added Similarly CCD Discussion

Groups have in some casesSays Priests R~Ue been difficult to start and main-I S 11 tain where CFM is active InJust pirituOID rare instances competition

BOGOTA (NC)-Father C~ - rather than cooperation has

Catholic Lay Leaders and from all the evidence it succeeds veq well middot Significantly one of the wenshyattended workshops at the rec~Di convention covered the compleshymentary nature of CFM and CCD Chaired by Rev William 1 Downs of Newton the wideshyranging discussion period higbshylighted several areas where CCD and CFM have worked well toshygeth~er and some where the have not

Wordng Together Couplesfrom several localities

- indicated that CCDs Paren1oshyEducator units are natural ou1oshylets for those seeking to proshymote happier famiiies Manr CFM couples are working iQ

-Parish Parent-Educator groups and~ in doing so are finding solid recruits for CFM among the young married couples that they visit T~is is a perfect eJl shyample of how the two organiza tions can help each other lv working together

Other examples cited by parti shycipants were the use of CFlII couples as guest lecturers and discussion leaders in CCD classes covering questions marriage- and sex Fall River CFMers noted the participation of CFM couples as discussion moderators in the CCD leadeJio ship day programs Manyothel8 recounted incidents of CCD Elishyecutive Boards being formed o of CFM groups middot Father Downs who is both bull CFM Chaplain and a CCD Parish Director noted that priests will contittue to look to CFM for leaderS middotto staff CCDunits and otlier parishorganizations Not to provide for CFM in a parish would mean that a prime source of committed laymen a Jl d women would be cut off

There are a few problems too Several areas have eXJerienced difficulty in obtaining permisshysion to start CFM because CCD Discussion Groups already exshyisted Apparently the distinction between the two groups is not

as an Air Force chaplain for 10 cilo de Lora one of the direc- been the guiding spirit with unshyOFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RiVER tors of the Latin American bish- fortunate results for both

ops educational department af- The lesson learned from thed1O Highland Avenue Retain PriiDege firmelt here that the role Of the workshop )Nas this Where CeDFoil River Mass 02722 675-7151 MADRID (NC)-Spains bishshy priest is exclusively spiritual and CFM people get ~ know ops following their annual conshy In the past he said prieSts each other and take the time toPUBLISHER ference announced that they had an authority and prestige understand each others proshy

Most Rev James L -Connolly DO PhD will retain the privilege of eating beyond the religious but ilow grams the results can be imshymeat on Friday The dispensa- we have to recogniZ4~ that the pressive CFM has the happy

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER tion from the regular law dates times have changed andtl)at our knack of producing commi~ted Rt Rev DanielF Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll back several centuriell and came middotmiddotmiSsion is rust spiritual Father gtCalholics who are willing r~

MANAGi~G E[gtITOR ~ orginal1y as a reward for sershy de Lora spoke during aconJer- - act -and CCD continues to off vices to the Church and for ence at Bogotas arl~hdiocesan almost unlimited opportunitiee

H~gh J Golden Spanish wars against infidels curia here in Colombia for action

THe ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 7 Priests Respond Generously 1Ciitymiddot ExpressVariety of Opinions

Bishop Asks for Suggestions--shyj

YOUNGSTOWN (NC)-I-Wed- There was a call for a study of ltmngs and ftinerals in the eve- the~hoie questioriof the Caih- Brm R~~~ie$ fr~ QM~~15~~~o[jreg ming wholesaie revamp~~g of o~(~~ool system versus CCD VICTORIA (NC) - Give the Latin and Oriental rites larish organizations retire~ent JElimination of raffles collec- larm~alliopp~rtuni~yto speak On the ne~Ci~ive sidEiI 418 felt f priests at age 6s-these were tronSand all o~her fUli9-raising his mmd on the results of the that there was a great need of sorrie suggestions for updating gimlnicks was proposed for Second Vatican Council the better adult edUcation~ There advanced by the Youngstown Catholic schools One priest liturgy ecumenism and the was overwhelming concern for ltt1Iioceses 262 priests lamented the lack of dialogue Church and hell say plenty better Catholic education more The Ohio priests responded between parents pastor and Bishop Remi de Roo of Vic- religious instruction for Catholic generously to a request by school principal and suggested toria here in British Colombia children not in Catholic schools lBishop James W Malone apos- the establishment of q parish discovered tbis when 600 parish- more Catholic youth activities tolie administrator of the diocese s~nate whose members would ioners filled out a comprehen- and efforts to build a strongerlior suggestions The bishop now sit in on school faculty meetings sive questionnaire and returned family life Inadequate teachers lltas called on the laity of the Also present was the limitation it to the chancery office Two- and poorly trained teachers also aliocese to make suggestions The of all classes to a maximum 6f thirds of them signed their came under fire llle~ IS-member pastoral com- 40 students names but this was not required Other tOPIcs which turned up

mission will study all suggestions Their comments went far beyond in the survey but which were) ~ and make recommendatioQs to the questions asked not put as questions included

BiShOP Maione ~ooamprm~ [L~~ A $~udYof the an~wers reveals creination pullfigpting marshy~ Th new liJurgy econli~ics

thatjwlJi1~ mo~etlJan two-thirds riageof c1Ergym~n children ~ryshy

ond parish orgllnizations were O~ Greg~reg[jcr of the people were pleased with ing in church nuris habits povshy lto~llQrig t1Je most popular are~s of new deveWpments in the erty arid the clergys ability as ) ltilCmment by th~ priests SAIGON (NC)-General Jos- Church the remaining admitted businessmen

To enhance singing at IYJass eph W Stillwell lost during a being mildly or very disturbed atere were suggestions for each plane flight from San Francisco Fifty pel cent agreed that the

iParish to mime a minister of to Honolulu is prayeclully reshy council 1 hadmiddot deepened their CoIQmbilaquoli CFM Has JlIllusectic to teach liturgical music membered by grateful lepers Faith and btou~ht them closer National Structure ~ parishioners and for establish- Sisters and their chaplain in St to the Church but 105 stated ment or strengthening of mixed Joseph~s28 miles ~rom Saigon vOSEPH MICHAUD that they had been left confused BOGOTA (NC) -The Chrisshymoirs to e1)courage others to They recall how on April 5 Fifty PeJ cent answered that tian Family Movement which Cak~ part 1964 when Viet Cong activities the liturgical reforms had helped has been functioning on a someshy

Another priest asked for had resulted in cutting off the Michaud Shrine them pray better Fifty per cent what independent basis in 17 ~ilwre patience in implement- leper hospital from all supplies said they felt the Church could dioceses in this country now has

lIDg the changes because thebt road Gen Stillwell and his Music Director be improvedmiddot Two-thirds felt the structure of a national lleW forms of participating are d~uty Col John L Klingen- that theChur~ should concern organization

lIlot appealing to all Ther~was Jiagen of St LOUis came to the WA~HiINGTON (NC)-Joseph itself wore with the internashy The first national meeting of ~plea also for a return to the rescue They brought food and Michaud has been appointedmiddot tionalsituation soCial and ecoshy the CFM was convoked in the holy and dignified liturgical other necessities in a series of music director of the National nomic problems last part of July by Bishop Pabshy

music imd elimination of folk helicopter fliglits carried out lgty Shrine of the Immaculate Oonshy Asked specifically where the lo Correa Leon of Cucuta presishy oongs and modem swing music the U S Support Command of ception here Msgr Thomas J Church should be more involved dent of the Episcopal Commisshy

Another priest urged that ~4ee- which Gen Stillwell was com- Grady director of the Shrine the answers voried from rehabili shy sion for the Lay Apostolate in dom of experimentation in the mander announced tation of drug addicts the labor order to organize CFM on a nashy

1Iiturgyshouldbe encouraged Ben San has about 280 leper Michaud will develop and su- movement and the emerging tional scale nations A board of directors of the Changes in Vestments~ patients in the care of the pervise the music program at the

national CFM was named andThere were requests to elim Daughtersof Charity of St Vin- Shrine assemble and train a Most Important The majorit~ considered the includes five married couples mate or -review Forty Hours de- cent de Paul chortis vf mixed voices evenshy

three from the Bogota archdioshyYotions and similar celebra- -Mrs faillwell durfug her st~y tuallyadd a choir of men and five most important questions tions for daily evening Masses in Vietnam was one of the boys and supervise the care of cese and one each from the archshy

the Church and fellow Chrisshydiscu~ed at the council to be

dioceses of Cali and Medellinma parishes where there are two American women who sponsored all organs and the carillon tians birth control active sharshy These five couples in cooperashy

CI more priests and for smaller the new center for undernour- A native of Sumas Wash ing in the iturgy the sharing of tion with Father Enrique Acosta

~onfirmation classes with ~he ished children also conducted by Michaud has served churches responsibility in the Church are In charge of extending the

IIIlX prIests who are deans bemg the Sisters of Charity in Saigon and schools in Seattle San Franshyand religious liberty Prefer- CFM throughout the entire

Gi~legated by the bIShop to ad- We are praying fo~ the be~ cisco Portland Ore Detroit countryences at the bottom of the listBlumster the sacrament reaved family Father Vict Pittsburgh and Mt Lebanon Pa Be or H h were worl~ populition atheismOther suggestions called for a C MH h d

~ 1 l hts th rset chaplam at Ben IS c Olrs ave appeare on international government and_~cussion on Vlgl Ig e San wrote network radio broadcasts gave l)rlests breviary changes 10 the premiere presentation of Mass vestments and merits of Alexander Peloquins Missa Na- SAVE MONEY ONEstablishes Specialgroup confessions in which lPiJiest Plans Homes tiVitatis with the Pittsburgh penitents attend a Bible service Symphony over the CBS net- Tourists Parish to to confession and receiveab- middotfor Working Grls work iIi 1962 and in December YOUR OILHEATCOLOGN]i (NC) - Colognessolution private~y and then per~ TECHNY (NC) ~ Father Ed- 1955~ sang in Menottis Ahmal Joseph Cardinal Frings has apshySform a community penance such wiu-di Wojniak SVD Chi- an~ the ~nght Visitors WYmanpointed a multilihgual Dutch ~eatt as recitation of a prayer to c~go-born Society of the Divine 3-6592priest to establish a special tourshy

tether Word mlssionary is oft the verge A~d R f W k ists parish on the Autobahn nearOne writer suggested that the of seeing his dream come true Imiddot 5 e ugee or CHARLES IF VARGASDusseldorf llrishop offer Sunday Mass at a bull ltiliff rent ish church each He has ben VISItIng throu~h- Of German Knights Although several churches are 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

~ par raut the Umted States seekmg located 01_ th~ famous German ~ee h h Id b t d d the aid of busineSs firms which BONN (NC) - The German highway none provides special NEW IalEfPlFqitD ~SS

Tl~ l~g S P e l~ ro u~ h have interests in Formosa to aid government has provided three tourist services The new parish la prIes v~o h a~~ ~s w lCll him in his pet project----to erect jeeps tnd three ambulances for besides the church will have a Opt t~ngfs ~u I r~p11 hostels for factory giriS present- the work being done by the Ger- hot~J restaurant theater and

~ngo reds es IVdi~ s e c 1 ly forced to live in squalid man Knights of Malta for refushy chiIdr~ns pla~~rounds ~IOt~eSan ahn Idnonb- tockesan fCO - c~owded unhealthful and prim- gees in South Vietnam ec IOns s ou e a en rom T dt d t cae proceeds of the tithing sys- 1 lVe con 1 IOns angerouso f team ~f about 25 Germa~s C2 only to their phYSical well bemg- wl1 work m refugee camps In

m but also to their moral well Hoi in the QuangNam province r~oD~D~i~=~i~~~~i HUe]) lllen~ Poor being in ilentral Vietnam

Others suggested rich par~shes The hostels will be non-de- The Germar government will n _ See Us should help poor parIshes nominational and will provide contrilmte about $250000 annushy ~ -Abou~ ij~rough a commo fund that quar~ers in pleasant surround- ally for the work of this counshy

o each ~arish establIsh a fma~ce iilgs at $3 per month In addition tt-ys Knights of Malta in Vietshy ~ ~t17 (~~~OuTI]OUceouureg [ commlttee and the ~lOcese hire toa home it will provide edu-nam ~(jrtamp euroleiJcp(]ip C1

a fulltJme profeSSional fund eational and recreational facili- llaiser for parishes that need his ties Father Wojniak said The ~1lIIilllliJllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllm ~ ~~~~[HJA~ ~ aervices first hostel will be built at Tai~ - shy

as pilot with DRY - E SAVINGS BANK I epei a project E CLIEANNG Says Gift of Tools Father Wojniak as director of ~ and ~

Wareham falmouth J f =rst Class MIracle Taiwan Hostels Inc which will ~ fUR STORAGE ~ -y 5-3800 IltI 8-3000 HEATING OIL

w be run on a noh-profit basis E D == 4-o_a_C1_a~~D__o-o-BOGOTA (NC) -Shop stu- E ERMODY ~

dents at Bogotas Colegio San f R ClEANERS ~ Viator reclved a windfall of lIanCISCans etaln == ryyYYyy~

~~~C1Jm~d~~~~ B~r~~(N~~m~ty iEE

nCohan ~~~ l bullC~~o~A~~~~~E~RT ~ 4lIlllira~le by one of the students two newly received Franciscan ~JIIIIII1I1I11I11I11I11I11I11I1I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I1I1I11I11I11Ii ~ nncluded a large variety and Sisters of Perpetual Adoration ~ Spaeious Fireproof Sleeping Quart~rs-BoysI to 14 yrs Old quantity of hand tools and two retained their baptismal names Six-week season June 26 to Aueust G ch of severallarge power tOQls with the title of Sister at their GRmiddotACIA BmiddotROS t Register for z or 4 or 6 weeks Free Tutoring it desired 4Father John Stafford CSV reception into the community ia ehicago provincial supervising St Joseph the Workman Cathe- bull i THE BROTHERS OF THE SACRED HEART

tile Viatorians Bogota mission draI here in ~7isconsin _ ~ eommented that the gift worth tVlot~er General Ann Marie of Excavating SACRED HEART SCHOOL

$6000 in the United States is ~ Rose convent said the name C worth five times that in Colom- policy change was the first ill ontractors r t SBAltON MASSACHUSETTS ~

twa He added that the tOok itleU6~year history of the com- ~ bull (I~SS 5T~FAIRHAViH A Reside~t School for BoYS Grammar Gra~es ~-li-6-1- ~ would probably give the school muOityAt the same ceremollTthebest~lIuipped shop ~ tiampe~ Sistels made ~rst-year pN-l WYman 2-4862 = CAMP 0amp SCHOOL TeL 1171845162 4 ~~tlY ~YOWi- ~ampamp~

bull I 1bull

bull ~ I I bull I bullbull I ~

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 Parish to Serve Wide Community

PATERSON (NC)-With the end of its vacation religiolli school St Josephs parish heICI

Lucis V~ew of Marriage Seen Delig~tfuny O~d-fashioned~ in New Jersey has turned ~

serve a wider communityBy Mary Tinley Daly Priests Sisters seminarianpound Never it is said have so many million words been and student volunteers haw

written about a marriage as the reportage of the Luci taken a $200 budget given by the Catholicmiddot Interracial Council andJohnson-Patrick Nugent nuptials-TH WEDDING in put on a program of field triP8Dpopular terminology Its over in all its impressive dignity arts and crafts athletics and

with an ele~ance wor~hy ~f honestly state that thei ambishy story-telling for 120 youngstem the marrIage of a PresIdent s tion is to grow up get married The children mostly Negro

had no opportunity to be part ofdaughter Yet like every and have babifs any other summer program sowedding great or small it Somewhere along the line edshy Father Nicholas Molinari steppedearried its message of identifica- ucatlOnally or other~se they in to help themtionto the millions viewing it are shunted career-WIse or preshy Our objec~ father said on the screen tend to bemiddot They of course to impress the children witlait n d to those want to marry but this is in~ love They dont understan~itreading about cidental they ~avent ~xperienced it We

it At our house AlulDDae middotNotes want to break down their selfshy~ ve n a s ~ t Loo~ ~t you~ Alumnae h~ite concept We want to make vou~s t~at no~- ~otes Bii( deal is ~ gal who them realize tha~ they are goodoshy

middot ~l~c Idenbfi has her masters working on catlOn was pres- the doctorate il physics mathe- t Ik Sisters of Christian en now ex matics Russian or whatever actly ho LUCI And the proud boast of a college feels squealed imany of our graduates are no~ Charity Elect America

PADERBORN (NC) - Sister bride as the TV fathers our most recent making more money than their

M Augustilde Giesen of Jersey showed the radiant Luci on her Into these same alumnae notes City has been elected the first fathers arm comes a confession humbly American superior General 0If

And I know how ~~rvous written from Betty B that she is the Sisters of Christian Charit Pat was at that moment cm- still just a housewife has a here in Germany mented the most recent bnde- family and recently was electesl Sister Augustilde former PJOogtNURSERY FRiENDS Sister Marie Patrice RSM Br~om president of the local PTA vincial of the province headshy

director of Holy Angels Nursery for Exceptional Children grooms of years ago author has expressed herself Belmont NC cuddles one of the 69children in her care was director of the provinces

To go further back an eon against the discontented femi junior sisters attending Marillae

Me too from bndes and Phyllis McGinley talented quartered at Mendham N J

most of whom because of their disabilities require roundshyor two even th ~ea~ of the nine mystique of searching for Sisters Formation College at thethe-clock attention NC Photo House and hIS bnde shared fullfillment outside of the home time of her election the g~ose pImples So have others The 2200-member congregashy

Behmd the pomp and ClrcUJI1- As an addendum we find 1lI tion founded in Germany ~

stance sket~h~s of gowns held 10 quote from Rep Emmanuel Celmiddot Disclaimsmiddot New Breed 1849 moved to the United States somewhat ndiculous top secrecy ler (D-NY) apropos prohibiting in 1873 during the anti-Catholic as though they were plans for discrimination against wom~ franciscan Nun Biology Professor Says Kulturkampf compaign of Gershym~on shots was the forthrIght serving on juries man chancellor Otto von BisshyattItude of thIS l~-year-old brIde There are women who work Primary Apostolate Is Prayer- marck

Sh~ wants th~s to be a goo~ because they have to others who marnage andw111 try to make It work because they want to and BUFFALO (NC)-Dr M Re- My whole life I trust is givshy New Secretary 10 there is the lazy kind whO gin~ L~gan associat~ profes~ ing witness to Christ she anshy CHICAGO (NC)-The Nationshy ~er father the PresIdent ~o cleans washes irons cooks sor of bIOlogy and chaIrman of swered I am a biology profes al Catholic Conference for Intershyma~t~r how you regard hUll chauffeurs mend1l binds lIP ~e biology concentration at sor whose prime role is twoshy racial jUstice haS announced the~lltlc~lly you must alknow~~ wounds nurses cloctors middotand Rosary Hill College here conshy fold first in edu(ation proper appointinfmt of Margaret Cshyedgeexpres~edfath~rly ~onfl~ shops and has conSequently So tends there is no such thing u and second in research middottomiddot fur Roach to its program staff Millli

middot dencewen he said of fat little to do aD day why Should bull new breed of nuns ther the education of my stushy Roach haB been social actioaN~gent LUCI look~ up to him she not 1e obligated NrM _ The sCientist HI as qualified dents~ _ secretarY for the National CO~with great r~spect eep ~~c OIl ju~es as anybody else to know She However she noted many ell ai Catholicmiddot Women iIinoetion a~d confIdence 10 hlll It has been a Franciscan nUll for people think th-at by taking offMs go~ng to b~ ~ good ~arrIage 28 years and she iilsists the the reUgio~ garl or by drop~Dunn~ the s~me mtervlew Urges ~ UnmiddotderstClnding OSF middotcomes before the PhDbull ping the religious title we Call1he President recalled that Luci

be more effective This is not so had been a deep1y reiigious girl Of Other Churches I dont think Sisters have all of her life even before her SPOKANE (NC)-We me ehanged she said People are As a nun my primary aposshyConversion to Catholicism More- not take the positioJl that the jUst beginning to llotice what tolate is prayer to give God the over he did not believe middotshe other Christian coinmunitiesaM weve beeJ doing all along love and adoration that the would ever become active in simply in error Bishop Ber- With 11 biological papers pubshy modem world often neg1Eicts to politics but would concentrate nard J Topel has advised priests llIshed and nine read with the give In the present day discusshyon home-inak~ng raisin~ a fam- of the Spokane diocese in a Get eredit of being first to isolate sion of the nun in the modern

middot lyen and followm~ her faIth of interim ecumenical JUide-- tile bacteria Desulfovibrio desul- world attention should be foshyFather not politician was lines furicans and with the institution cused on her existlmce nc)t the

apeak~g ~hen Bishop Topel urged priesbl i= of a trail-blazing method of preshy garb she wears she said middot LU~I s VIew of ~arriage IS re- avoid expressions judgmenu menting a college biology curricshyfreshmg and dellghtfully old- and actions which do not repre- ulum the Franciscan who drinks

196= -

JANSONS Pharmacy

Arthur Janson Reg Phcim DIABETIC AND SICK ROQM

SUPPLIES 204ASHL~ BOULEVARD

New Bedford WY 3middot8405

fashioned middotin the mid-twenti~th sent the condition of oui sepa- ber ~offee black is fully a pro century when so many gIrls rated brethren with truth ad fessional in science toohave their sights set on the split-personality syndrome mar- fairness and 110 make mutual She has be~n awarded $81000 BISA~ILLONSriage plus individual freedom relations with them more cWI- llra grants-m-rod for her reseach

ficult th g ma career and assuming at once He said full eucharistic ecm on e pernICIOUS m1cro~r ams a plar- in the forefront of out- ~~t has ~ knack for rummg oill GARAGEside activities munion is the ultimate lioal laquoIi dnlling ngs

Most little girls are disarming- the ecumenical movement WitnGS8 b Christ ly frank (see Art Linkletters 24our Wreck~r Service program or talk wit~ 7 8 and C I H bull 0 H d How does her commI~ent Ie Iyear-olds you know) The 0 bull olsgton eo s ~erstudents and co~CCmltantl

W A C to ber research (she 18 also II 653 WashinJton Street Fclirhaven omen s rmy orps iOOnsultant at Oak Ridge National HoldYou~g Christian WASHINGTON(NC) - A Laboratory the group leader of WYman 4middot5058 h b I e s s i ng followed traditional aCivil Defense fixed monitorin ~bullbullbullbull middotStudent Works OFgt 8wearingin ceremonipounds here for Station mici a ~part fliine seamshy N0TRE DAME (NC) - The Col Elizabet~ P Hoisington the_ bullreSs) Bel With h1el commit- ~IMtlIIIIIIHIIIItIIIIIIIIItImiJlHililjJlniRiiillntJiliIllNtiJtIlIHII~

Reoild annuai Young Christian new director 01 the Women mentu a Biofei6ec ~ = - _ Student apostolic workshop Wall Army Coorps Christ ~ li5

middotheld here thisweeKformiddot~Brade ~Themiddot middotblessing was giVeIlE D p SAlES middotANDmiddot middotSEmiddotRVICE ~ oionhoolmmiddotode~~torsfromparochial MsgrCKennethGStackaper-middot sect middotcmiddot bull - bullbull j bull iL

bullbull L~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull0bullbullbullbullbullbullbull middot _ IIand public school groUpsas weB s~Ia1frierid of the woman Armgt II Ill [He c E

as parishes ~ le~de~onher request afters~ bull J B II i ~ middotmiddotmiddotmiddotltThe Iconference coordinated had taken heroath of office ani 8 8 I FR sect - 1(JImiddotDmiddotmiddotAmiddotmiddotIREshy by the Catholic Action Office of beeli pi6moted from lieutenant 8 bull -1 l =

Notre DamemiddotUniversity was beld e9Jonelmiddotmiddotmiddot II LUMBER CO == I~

On t~e universitys campus middotCQlol)~I)loisington ~lPadu = 8 il RIEF ~IIG_ ~RATIOmiddot sect~ong ilP~a~er~ wer~raJherlilte_oftbe C0Uege oI~ou So Dartmouth bull IE ~ i

middot LOUISJPutz cS~_reltor of Da~eaalti~or~ Md JOlDeG II bull~ e h~p~~~~orauli1~~~h~ ~e~~n~~~~2~t~e~~~sLe~middot a~ Hyannis I 0 APPLIANCES I natioI)alltJirectoro(t~~ Gabrie(CIllsterthe Bronze Star ~So Dartmouth WY of$84 55 middot IR middotCO~IDmiddotITIOIG 5 Richard Institute and the Rev CroiX de Guerre with silver 1Rm bull i A ~ ~ n ~

middot Ja~es Neuman pastor of Hum- and the American and ~uropeaJll IMjaRwia 29211 == boldt Pa~ United BrethreJll Jheater ribbons of Wo~ld Wall bull ~ 363SECONDSomiddot FALL RIVER MASS~ ~

_ r middot9~~Imiddot~~ R~-pound~~~ -P-t rmiddotmiddot - gt gt bull IllbullbullIIIbullbull_1118 middotIiIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIHIUlllIIUIUIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIII1I1II1IIlIlUIIIIIIUllIIIIIIIIIIIUlIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIUU_ _

9 ~Swooned Priest Eggplant Dish U$ong Legendary P~r$ey P~~B1)t

By Joseph amI MarilYllll Roderick The cool weather where ~gain and with it the grass

has begun to break donnancy and send up little green shoots which means that the lawn mowers which have been restshying for a few weeks have got to be brought back to action

The drought that we had uperienced for the past three Summers has raised havoc with lawns and it doesnt seem much good can be done this season in areas still under water restrictions Howshyever in those that are not theremiddotre a few thingsmiddotwhich can be done middotbetween now and 1hetirst -bst to help lawns along To begin with this is amiddot good

middottime to apply itmiddot weed killer of some kin to I prefer tousecomshybination weed killer and fertil shyzer as this saves time and does el good job This should help dear up the lawn and start the grass out of dormancy Follow this with a good raking to disshylodge some of the matted grass and you are well on your way

to a healthy lawn in the Spring The next step is to buy a good grass seed if your lawn is well established and to apply it at ab04t half the rate or less sugshymiddotgested on the packageThe idea behind this is to fill in places where the lawn is thin or where weeds have been killed Incishydentally it is a good idea to wait two or three weeks aftermiddot

middot you have applied weed killer middotbefore you start new grass seed

It is important that your seed be a good brand and quality A eheap seed contains many coarse ~escues and annual graSses which will do the lawn very little good over the long run Jetter to buy a very good seed in small amounts than an iJlexshypensive seed which will cause you more trouble than it will do good

The only job left af~er middotthis is ~ keep themiddot lawn moistsq~bat

snippedt up the flavor would be stronger

Well I cooked my recipe and it was quite delicious but a few sprigs of the green shoots reshymained on the counter and as Joe was helping me clean up he inquired why Ihad been picking carrot tops Needless to say at that moment I rseolved to learn a great deal more about parsley in all its varieties The things I found out in my research on the parlsley plant were quite fascinating and even it bit frightening if youre the superstitious type Did you know that it was thought to be such a plant of the devil that it could only be sown on Good Friday if it were to flourish at all In anciert times the Greek$ decked their tombs with it for they fully believed that it sprang from the blood of one of their dead heroes It was also th9ught only the wicked could grow parsley successfully

Feeling that its merits must far outweigh its supposed curses I searched further to discover that one of the beliefs that surshyrounded it was that wherever it flourished the missus is master This could provide a good reason for cultivating it

Getting away from the P4rely theoretical and into the practical I learned that parsley is la h~rdy biennial normally flowering and going to seed in the Spring -after sowing though in a hot dry year it may bolt and go to seed in late Summer (this is what happened to Ti Tias parsshyley bed) Seed may be planted inmiddot April and May fOf a Summer and early Autumn crop andmiddots

the n~wgtseed has amiddotchlUlce tos~cpnd s~~ing JWlde ~lllate~uly germinate If you are succ~ pr August for tbe next ~pring and the lawn does take it is im-~pd SumDler n

middot perative tbat you keep the n~wpar~le~ steJfis have fiir~ore grasscut at about two inches So~avor than the leayes and ~e

that it makesmiddot sorneroot growth French often use only the stem before the coIf weather sets in where taste is more important

Mostlawns should bereseededmiddotthan appearance They are full iJdHis vaVeach year pIefetabiyof chlorophyll (thatgreeliishIn late Augustor eatlySeptem- property lthat was so popular a

ber Seeding is outmiddot of the ques- fewmiddot years ago) andmiddot when tion however where water re- crushed ~intmiddot mayonnaise aod

strictions are still in effect So other sauces a lovely shade of if you are allowed to water only green If you do happen tomiddot be one or two hours a week you wicked enough to have pars- will have to suffer your poor ley flourish in your yard the hlwq or at least another season four most popular ways of storshy

h the Kitchen ing it in your refrigerator are 1 With the stems kept ina

I realize that I have a great glass of water deal to learn concerning both 2 Washed water shaken off the kitchen and garden but my sealed in a glass jar or plastictack of knowledge was undershy bag

Jined the other day when I was 3 Unwashed in a plastic bamiddotg preparing to cook the recipe 4 Washed and folded intoa

- yentat Irrt ~sing in this eeks cloth the clothmiddot absorbs the ~olumn As I readmiddot the hst of dampness ~ee~ed Ig~edlents I only gave I found the following recipe iilSSmg notce to t~e paryleyas ~elicious even J~oJlgh graced

have always gathered It fr~s~ with carrot top~ instead of parsshy rom a large bed over In 1-1 Tla s -- ley The unusw name may refer ya~d howev~r when I wet to sltmelllenlbero(th~-cleigy over to pick It I found that In who fainted with joy at the flashya s~ort span of a few days most vor he enjoyeo

0pound It bad gone to seed - middotmiddot middotmiddotmiddotmiddot SWo()nedPri~stmiddot~lmiddotmiddot

Suddenly I see~ed to recall 1 eggplant peeled and sliced ~hat Joe ~admentIoned that he h inch thick had planted some of theltalian 2 large onions sliced _ Vanety llear our raspberry 3 large tomatoes sliced ~ushes ah the day was saved salt and pepper That must be it I said to 1 small bunch of fresh pa~ middotmyself as I spied sOllIe feqthery ley minced green shoots along the fence it 2 Tab)e~pouns oil didnt smell very much like 2 cloves of garlic sliced

middot parsley but ther again it was 1) Arrange eggplant onionsmiddot supposed to be a different va- and tomatoes in alternate layen lriety and perhaps when I in a large frying pan sprinkling

each layer with salt pepper ahd 1 00 R the minced parsley u v eglster 2) Add 1fJ cup hot water the

NEW YORK (NC) - More oil and garlic

than 1000 person have regis- 3) Cover tightly -andmiddot simm1r ~7~~d to at~end the ei~J1th n~- for about 30 minutes or u~til ~lonal CursI110 Movement eon-iiquia Is reducedt~aricl1 gravY iention now in session here Remove garlic before serving

PRE-CONVENTION ARRANGEMENTS BY DCCW DELEGATES Among the delegates from the Diocese who met recently for arrangements to attend the 33rd National Convention of Catholic Women in Miami Beach Oct 5-8 were left to right Mrs James E Williams St Josephs No Dighton Miss Angela Medeiros Mt CarmelSeekonk Mrs Theophane Lavoie St Jeim the Baptiste Fall River Mrs John Smith Sk Marys South Dartmouth Thursday Sept I is the closing date for registration of delegates from the Diocese to the Convention

Nuns Health Insurance Econoniist Tells Superiors Life Expectancy

Justifies C~operative Plan MILWAUKEE (NC)-Kuni- encountered by ri~ns thlo~ghQut erlliy o~payton ecqnonll~ ~r~ their lifetime ~essor Wbo~peciali~es i~m~g- Medical Passports ic~l statisectticl(or~seesalow-c~ To c~nect data FecheidEl~ised be~lthi~u~an~e~lan a~~ a~ni- a medlqal i4e~tification card 1fiect )rgra~ 0 n1edlcal and whichiiecalIi a medical pass-h~spltal facllitiesfr Am~can middotPOrtHe said these cards carshynuns under the admlm~tratlOrt~f ryingrecords of current disabili shythe Conference of MaJor Supe- tiesmiddotmiddot eouldaid in accumulating

middot riors of Wmen medical information to help Addressmg t~e conferepCemiddot ~t middotnuns qualify for lower cost Its annual meetmg he~e COli Jhealth insurance and to organize Fecher s~ldmiddot ~ooperativeplaQsan eventual program of comshy~or ~ns m thIS country canbe JustIfIed by the longer life exshypectancy ~nd better health of women relIgiOUS Fecher presented d~ta Q~ a

fIve-year study on disabIlItIes among 3)000 nuns He has made many previous statistical studies on ~he nuns long~vity

Smce nuns lIve In what Fec~er calls a contrlled life studIes ~f thelmiddot medlcal sta~us can prOVide medical SCIence WIth ~nf~rtn~tion relvatgt-t to 0-lher q~e1 But mo~t PTllvI~ts stuq~es have conc~Iltrat~~~m rn~rtalItybull s~tI~tl~s~l1d w~re coJcerI)edW~~ lteaJh apd I~ causes Fec~eT s rece~t ~~S centered around the dIsabIlIties

Christrtras Bazaar Advance preparations fire beshy

middot ing made for a Christmas bazaar slated for the weekend of Nov 25 through 27 in the basement of Sacred Hearts Church Nolth Fatrhaven Meetings are being held in the rectory at 730 each

middot MOhday night and parishioners who cannot come at this time

middot are mged to volunteer home services byknitting sewing or making fthEir articles for sale

Materials will be furnished and dondticins iire laquo iHsifoeing reshyquested 101 a white elephant table Gerierafdiairman Mrs Roland Larocque announcesmiddot that

prOfits will benefit the school improvement fund

bined health care They might also be of value to physicians treating future illnesses he said

The five-year survey tended to support the adage your health mirrors your environ ment Abstinence fromalcohol and ~igarettes a well-balanced diet adequat~ housing secure

bull communa livi and celibacy apparently do iow down the aging process Fecher said

He cautioned however that this does not ~ecessarilYmean that areligious life promotes longevity and that a similar am6tirlt of work-day schoolshy

day orreligiflus-day sefvice 10sseser be applied to each and every religious community in tbecountrymiddot

Fecher said that data collected over the past 40 years shows that the health middotcare programs of reshyligious are very uneven

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Aug 25 1966

Approves Loco ~

School Boards BURLINGTON (NC) - The

appointment of four local Cathshyolic school boards brings a new method of Catholic school manshyagement to 25 per cent of the diocesan schools here in Vershymont

At the regular monthly meetshying of the Burlington Diocesan School Board Father John A Lynch diocesan superintendent of schools reported that consti shytutions for four schools had been approved making a total of 25middot per cent of the schools operating under policy-malting boards approved by the diocesan board

~he diocesan statutes e~c6urshya~ebut do not demand the formatior of 10 c a l schoOl boards he said

Father Lynch also announced that a study would be made of school costs in the hope to find ways to avoid increasing tuition and parish assessments The study of education costs will be made by George Fortune acshycounting consultant to the diocshyesan school system

Good Counsel College Gets Loan for Dorm

WASHINGTON (NC) - A $1180000 college housing loan for Good Counsel College for women in White Plains NY to build a new dormitory has been approved Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Robert C Weaver announced here

The dorm is planned to acshycommodate 192 students The college conducted by the Sisters of Divine Compassion has an ellrollment of some poo students

Some students required to live on campus are in overcrowded middotfacilitiesmiddot Mother M Dolores president said lack of housing will foree themiddot college to deny admission middottoa number of stushydents middotthis fall she said The COllege enrollment is expected to reach 650 in five years and

800 in 10 years

Ce~tervilfe Guild New officers of Our Lady of

Victory Womens Guild Centershyville are Mrs StephenB OBrien Jr president Mrs John J Pendergast Jr and Mrs James Murphy vice-presidents Mrs ~oger Carlson treasurer Mrs Francis McKenna and Mrs Edward ONeill secretaries

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

middotOPENDAllY FORTHIE SEASON AFTERNOON and NIGHT

niE ANCHOR $as~ Vocationsmiddot10 Thurs Aug 25 1966 COnCern ofAIi

Employer U rges ST LOUIS (NC) - Speaking at the third annual Vocation Mass in St Louis cathedral

middot here Joseph Cardinal Ritter said middotvocations in the Church should

Workers to Vote For Teamsters

be the concern of every Roman SAN FRANCISCO (NC) Catholic

-The Di Giorgio Corporashy The cardinal told 397 men and women preparing to enter semishytion is recommending that naries and convents in the Fanits farm workers vote to afshy that religious vocation is not

filiate with the Teamsters FaTm middot merely a concern for the arch-Workers Union if they wish middot diocesan director a union the company announced It is a matter of solicitudeshy

Robert Di Giorgio president for each and everyone of us A of the company said therecomshy vocation is a divine thing but mendationmiddot is in accordance with it is a thing which God will not National Labor Relations BoaTd w~thhold from His peopleprocedures The recommendashy Cardinal Ritter continuedtion was made in letters sent to Bymiddot manifesting a concern employes eligible to vote in the about and an interest in vocashyunion election scheduled Ifor tiols we truly show that we Tuesday Aug 30 middot are the People of God

Opposing the Teamsters will be the National Farm Workers Association (NFWA) and the Seeks Assistance Agricultural Workers Organshy For Congo Churchizing Committee AFL-CIO (AW OC) which have merged since WASHINGTON (NC) - A they began the long Delano Congolese senator visiting the strike United States on a State Departshy

The Teamsters won the originshy ment tour program for foreign al election for union representashy government officials hopes to tion but charges of fraud make his two-month visit serve brought a new election a double purpose

Di Giolgio said the corporashy Senator Gaston Diomi wants tion is recommending a vote to speak with Catholic laymen for the Teamsters because middotand members of the clergy per-

The Teamsters won the preshy haps address audiences at vious electionmiddot Catholic institutions in his hope

The Teltlmsters while they to bring the Church iri the light hard in their members Congo to the eyes of American behalf are fair arid responshy ~ Catholics

And the senator has a planesible he wants to set up sharing proshyCompany Union middotFeels Adults Need Religious grams throughout the United

The competing union on tne States programs in which an ballot the Nationa Farm Workshy More So Than Children Nun Declares American diocese would adopt z ers AssoCiation has achieved Congolese diocese an American tentative recognition with oniy LOVELAND (NC)-Religious JI1ost rigidly formed in the old program to meet its needs--part religious order adopt a Congoshytwo growers the larger of which

education is needed for aduits system to see the new vision of which could be a parish lese order an American orphan-this year shifted production from school age adopt a Congolese orphanmore than for children and a of themiddot Churchand of Christian~ble grapes to wine tnus elimshy Flexibility and the wiUing- agebetter term for it would be life middotsetmiddot forth by the Secondinating a great many jobs ness tomiddot try a variety 01 ap- The American governmentmiddotsomething like shared growth Vatican Council Cesar Chavez head of the N iIi Christian middotlifemiddotmiddotmiddot This is 8 hard ~ask Sister prOdches ought to be the mmk of has such sharing programs the FWA called the Teamsters a an effectivereligious education senator pointed out WhyThis is the estimate of Sis admitted for adult educationcompany union and said it

tel 114 Charles Borromeo former demands new approaches and program she asserted empha- shouldnt the Church have the has entered into a partnership sizing thatmiddotit should have a so- same The Church that is Cath-head of the theology school at cannot be imposedwith Di Giorgio in a commonmiddot cia1 and an ecumenical dimen- olic the Church that is definedSt Marys College conducted by Each Ones Missionplot agabnst the farm workers sionmiddot QY the Second Vatican CouncilHoly Cross Sisters at Notre She wouldnt abandon chil-He said the companys recom- Built into each program middotas a missionary Church- whyDame Ind She recently joined drens education JOwever Shemendation confirmed that the should be a growirig aW8leness shouldnt this Church and tierthe faculty of St Xavier Col-middot saidTeamstens came to Delano to

lege Chicago as theology pro- What Id like to se~ IS emh of e~ch ones mission in the members share even more readshytlrganize workers at the invita- Church-an outgoing mismiddotsion to ily than government~ifessor set up a total religiou educationiion o~

PROFESSION CEREMONY AT WAREHAM The Chapel in the Woods of the Noshyvitiate of the Sacred Heart Fathers vas the scene Saturday morning as four novices

iere profe~sed by Bishop CoimolIyLeft to right Bro JudeMohan Bro Joseph ONeill Master of Novices Rev Andrew Jahn Bishop Connolly Very Rev Daniel J McCarthy

Prodncial who offered the Mass Bro Paul Daly and Bro Martin Lucia

the corporation New Approaches reach others and to build the

Speaking at the Summer lec- middot social patterns needed in our Oppose Intervening ture series at Grailville herein Quote Pope Pauls world

middot1 PImiddot Ohio USheaqquarters of the A 1 f IP Issues of TimesIn Fami y annlnglt international Grail movement ppea oreace middot She warneq against lookingMILWAUKEE (NC)-The ex- Sister Charles Borromeo aC- BERLIN (NC)-Fiye hundred for textbooks with all thE anshy

ecutive committee of the ad- knowledged that the Church in letters quoting the flppeal of swers or for fOllliulas thatvisory ioard of the Milwauke~ this country has placed most of Pope Paul VI for peace in Vietshy might take the place of decisiOlishyArchdioce~an Family Life Pro- its resources atmiddot the service of nam were sent persons in East rilaking by individual wnsci- gram has adopted a resolution childrens education Germany by the Social Demoshy encesmiddot

opposing government interven But the most urge~t need for cratic Party (SPD) The East Religiousteaching should inshynon in family planning giving religiousmiddot education she said Germans had asked the SPD volve a di~logue she su-ggestunanimousmiddot approval to a 13- if to helpadults especially those why the free world had not ed addi~g that in the past therepoint resolution which insists made imy efforts to end the war has been toomuch sttess on aushythat the matter of family plan- d in Vietnam thorityin teaching rid~otning is a private affair not a Sche u ~ Reopening The letter sent by the Social

bulle~o~gh on sharingChrisliarieoncern of the government Of Chi Smiddot h 1 Democratsmiddot pointed out that the gr()wthmiddot

Frank Stabb chairman of at 0 IC C 00 peace efforts of the pope the Thequesiion is not so ~lUcbtheCatholic board statedthat MTmiddot REPOSE (NC)-A Cath- World Council of Churches and

~hat to tea~h she ()pined butsince it has become increasingly olic school here in Ohio for of the governments of the how will we produce ~he Chrisshyapparentmiddot tilat our federalgov some 250 children will reopen in United States Great Britain (ian experience in litUlgy andernment ans to use taxinoiiey September due to efforts of in- Sweden India France and Itrly

for the spreading of birthcon-middot (lividuai citizens civic and Pro had all middotbeen rejected by the soci~l actionJn th~ great issues trol it becomes the obUgation of testantchurch groups in the communists The letter also of our times ~

NO JOBTOq BIG NONE TOO SMALL

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTE~S

MainOHice and Plant 95 Bridge St lowell M~bullbull

Tet 4586333

Auxiliary Plarits

BOSTON CAMDEN NJ OCEANPORT N~J

MIAMI PAWTUCKET R1 PHILADELPHIA

this family apostolate to speak area the Milford Chamber of middotstressedmiddot the SPDs view that out vigorously in oPllOsition tomiddota Commerce and parishioners of war can no longer be an instru shypolicy which has absolutely no St Andrews church Milford ment in solving political probshyvalidity The Elizabeth Seton School a lems middot He went on to say that when rural outpost of St Andrews Rltidio television and newsshyariy government agency tells parish was established seven paper ieports iil Eastmiddot Germany

middotpoor married couples whether years ago and con tin 11 a llY have given the impression thatmiddot they should have children or plagued by sewage dIsposal no one middotincluding the Pope has

hownfany to have the govern- problems The school wasmiddot closed made any efforts to seek peace ment is making a mighty pre- by court order in the Sumrtler in Vietnam sumptuous intrusion into a most of 1965 but r~openeq last year i J

sacred element of huin~nlife) with an arrangement fo~ haul- Stamiddotmiddotr 0n middotIImiddotmiddotOmiddotftmiddotmiddotammiddotP

middot ing sewge to MilfordmiddotmiddotWhenmiddot ~ middotV 1 t Cmiddoth 1 forcedtostop usingtheMilford DAVENP0RT (NC)~Seven-

eel) members of religious coni 0 un eermiddot apalnmiddot sewage systemlastJanuary t PHILADELPHIA (NCfFa-middot classes were dfscontinueiigt mutlities in theuilitedmiddot middotStates

ther JjRobert Falabella SJ The Closhlg spalked if coin- were among the graduates at the 36 instr~ctor in theolOgyat St mlinity effort led by the Buck- annual mid~Summermiddotcommence

Josephs College here has vol- wheat-middotTaxpayers Associationw ment of St Ambrose College uteered for extended adive aidthemiddotschoolmiddotA fUrid drive for her~in Illwa middotParticipating in duty witp theUS Army Re $250((to pay formiddot new tihiinage the ceremonies was Margheritiimiddot serve s a chaplain in the Vietmiddot f~cilities was ~ledby th~ Mil- Roberti a~ native of Davenportmiddot mam combat zone ford Chamber Of Commerce a leading dramatic sopranQ~

CONVEmiddotNImiddotENT BANKING WITHOUT TRAFFIC PARKING PROBLEMS

at the -

5LADE~S FERRr-r~USJmiddotCOMPANY SOMERSET MASS

j ~ - bullbullbull ~~ ~ bull ) bullbullbull lt

ThemOflt friendlymiddot dmocrt~ lANK oHering

-_~9npi~lC)h$topmiddot~cirliing middotmiddotf bullbullbullClubmiddot Accoul1Its - Auto middotLoa -

Checking Accounts ~ Business boris Savings Accounts~ ~ ~ Ieaj Estate loOns 1 -

- ~Atmiddot S~~~rs~tS~~ppi~~ Ar~a=-~igh~~a 5 ~t~due Me~ber FeCieral I)epositmiddot ri~urance Corporation

I

11 Cardinal Cushing Hits Imbalance In Schools

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing deplored that very little has been oone to relieve racial imshybalance in Bostons public schools in his first public address since his recent illness and conshyvalescence

The Boston prelate told an ecshyumenical meetingmiddot in All Saints Lutheran church here that al shythough very littlemiddot has been done to make a year-old law work we are not discouraged and we are very far from giving up hope that we will have reshyBults before long

He referred to the Racial 1m balance Law aimed at promotshying racial integration in Massashychusetts public schools The meeting marked the first annishyversary of the law The measure will deprive Boston public schools of $30 million in state subsidies until the citys school committee submits an integrashytion plan acceptable to the state board of education Until now the city committee has not subshymitted an acceptable plan

A school that is heavily imshybalanc~d racially cannot provide the best education that should be available for our children Even with the most devoted teachers and the most upto-date proshygrams-and we have both o( these in Boston-a predomiJ)antshyly Negro school suffers from an isolation from the general comshymunity which cannot fail to be harmful~ he said

Scores Slum Landlords In a similar way we can say

that an all white scJ100l fails to reflect the true nature of the radally mixed communitymiddot in which we live and so deprives white youngsters of theexperi ence of living and studying with their neighbors of a different race Ourideal should be to live and workand study and pray side by side in mutual respect and common affection

There hav~ been several proposalsmade during the last year to al~rest imbalance iit the schools of our center city Carshydinal Cushing said None of these has been accepted by those who hove been elected to make these decisions in the schooi srstem Of course we know that no immediate proshygram will solve all our problems but we can make li beginning

The cardinal also criticized slum landlords for the inhuman conditions in which so many here must live and work alid bring JP their families He called for a crash program of assistance for the deprived

State Uses Vacant Catholic School

BURLINGTON (NC)-The re- cently closed Don Bosco Schoolmiddot for BoyS here will Soon befilled up again with teenage boys this time as temporary quarters for Vermonts pilot residential treatshyment center for youthful first shyoffender lawbreakers

In announcing the acceptance of the proposal by Bishop RobertF Joyce of Burlington and the Verm 0 n t Catholic Charities board State Institutiolls Com-

PROFESSION AND CtOTHING CEREMONIES Principals in the ceremonies conshyducted for the Sisters of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts in Fall River on Monday were seated Sr Mary Dolores Sr John Veronica Bishop Gerrard who presided Sr Karen Dolores Sr Mary Catherine Standing Sr Margaret Edward Sr Joseph Maureen Sr Stephen David Sr James Constance Sr Celestine Regis Sr Anne Robert Sr Vinshycent Dolores

Report Says Cold War More Intense Peaceful Coexistence Now Strategic Offensive

WASHINGTON (NC) -Some tegic Studies at Georgetown jarring statements are made in University a Jesuit-conducted a significant news report whose school here

It is an in-depth analysisprivate but highly responsible sponsors call it the resultmiddot ofmiddot quality research It reminds for example that the so-called cold war is not

over and warns that as of now it may be entering a more danshy

gerous phase Th e ~peaceful coexistence

slogan it says was once a comshymuhist defensive stalling tacshytic but now it signifies the communists have gone over to

the strategic offensive The great paradox of our

times the document asserts may well turn out to be our inability to recognize that the cold war has in reality become more intel1se despite the increasshying appearance of peace

The goals of the presentmas~ tels of the Kremlin are no dif- ferent from tho~e of Khrushshychev Stalin or Mao Tse-Tung and to the Krtmlin peac~ful coshyexistence is a strategy not an end in itself it declares

The study entitled Peace or Pea c e f u1 Coexistence was

sponsored by the Committee on Education Against CommUllism of the American Bar Association It was unveiled in New York just before the ABA began its annual meeting in Montreal but it was prepared by Richard V Allen a specialist on Sino-Soviet affairs at the Center for Stra-

K of c Plan Socoal

Action I itia tive

missioner John Y Woodhull MIAMI BEACH (-NC) - The stated I think this is one (f the top official of the Knights of finest ecumenical testures of Columbus announced plans for faith and charity that I have a new initiiitive in the ecumenshyknown i -i~al and soCial action field

The eenter ill ~ ~provide a through a partnership with theO

home for 16 to 20 b(iys aged HI John LaFarge Institute ill New to 18 who are referrecl by the York ~ - eourls as first offenders Toile In additior W financial assist shyboys will work loeal du-in ancethe LaFllg~jnstitute will

the day and return to the center reeeive suggestifmsand recomshyin the ~venin1 for intensive mendations frOJll the official roup t~erapy eonducted b) rep-~~entationand plJrticipatiOll

Btaff III ~ix bull Ule K bull C

based onmiddot more than 3000 articles and documents of the internashytiOllal communist movement more than 90 per cent of which material is dated after the Cushyban Missile crisis of October 1962 Allen admits that the commushy

nists have used the coexistence slogan in ihepast and with sfme success but he directs atshytention to the fact that it now signifies a strategic offensive rather than a stal~ing tactic

The study notes that the Cushyjail build-up the erection of the Berliil Wall and the armed iilvasi~n of South Yietnam all occurred during the most in- tense pedod of peaceful coshyexistence ~ It~~~inds that Khrushchev in 19t1lddiiled coexistence as a form of intense ecoitomic pOlitshyical and ideological struggle gaii1s~ the aggressive forces of imperialism hi the international arena it aiso says that in their 3tshy

tempt to create wha bull they call the New ComIJlunist Man the communists have systematically presented a vicious and thor oughly distorted picture of the

Nuns to Construct Health Care Facility

SANDUSKY (NC)-The Franshyciscan Sisters who operate Providence Hospital here in Ohio will construct a new 100shybed $1250000 healthcare fashycility separate ftom thehospital

It will serve Medicare patients of the area during posthospital care and Qther convalescents who do not requir~f~l~-scalehospital care Sister Lucia -administrator 81lid it will relievemiddot pressure ~ hospital beds in the area

There wiII be ari appeal to th~ public lor about $900000 The -remainder of the funds will

btl supplied by the Federalgovshyerllment

West in general and the United States in particular It need not be emphasi~ed

the study states that the overshywhelming sentiment of the free world is to live in peace But tQ mistake the illusion of peace for genuine peacemiddot would be a profoundly dangerous perhaps fatal mistake In a foreword t the book

Bertram D Wolfe a Stanford University expert on commushy~lism warns that we have been prone to read the idea of live and let live into the phase of peaceful C 0 e x imiddots ten ce Our hopes and our longings are likeshyly to betray us again and again into a readiness to be deceived by those who have sworn the d~struction of all we stand for

fnjoymiddot Dining IN THE

JOLLY WHALER --AND--

SPOUTIRINN RESTAURANTS

Always Free Parking

New Bedford Hotel

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Aug 25 1966

Cassidymiddot Seniors Attend Work$hop

Three members of the incomshying senior class at Cassidy High School Taunton will complete tomorrow a five day Workshop in Leadership conducted at the University of Massachusetts under th~ sponsorship of the Massachussetts Association of Student Councils

Mis s Rosemary McKenna~ president of the senior class Miss Nancy Thomas president of the National Honor Society and Miss Christine Victoria coshyeditor of the Cassidy school paper are attending Miss Victoria is secretary of the Southeastern Association of Student Councils and will serv~ in that capacity with the other officers Jerry Flanagan presishydent Feehan High Marsha Boyd vice-president Attleboro High Luke Boyd treasurer West Bridgewater High

Cassidy GIllaquoIltiluCllle Wins Elkso AWtlDd

Miss Pauline Lee daughter ox Mrs Harry Lee and the late Harry Lee of 7 Dean Ave Taunshyton has Qeen named the recipishyent of a $600 Massachusetts Elks Lead~rship Award granted by the Elks National Scholarship Fund

A member of the 1966 gradushyating class of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton Miss Lee was in the top ten of a class of 108 and maintained a scholastie honors record throughout bell four year Miss Lee will attend Nortn- eastern University Boston

Schools Merge BAY CITY (NC)-TwO wes~

side Catholic high schools here hi Michigan will merge Sept I

to becomeWest Catholic CentraU High School The decision te merge was made by an intershyarish lay study committee tv provide more efficient use of the staff and facilities The schooU will be staffed by the ReligioUl Sisters of Mercy of Detroit

BIG DIVIDEND NEWS

a SYSTEMATIC550 year SAVINGS

INVESTMEIfJ500 a year SAVINGS

8 REGULAR450 year SAVINGS

Bass River SovinQs Bank bull SOUTH YARMOUTH bull DENNIS PORT

bull YANNIS bull fARMOiJTH SHOPPING PLAZA

bull OSTERVILLE

-1111

WHITE middotmiddotmiddotSPA CATERERS

- BANQUETSmiddot -WEDDINGS - PARTIES

~ COMMUNION BREAKFASTS 1343PlEASANT STREET FAll RIVER

OSb~rne 3-7780

--h-- ~

12

i

THE ANCHOROlocese of Fall River-Th~s Aug 25 1966

~regW ~reg~tfJ ~lYJ~~ TtUUY1)[fi)l[

Of R~dD~~~csm Amcm)gYW]fr~ lJy Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy

Phillip Abbott Luces The New Left (McKay 119 W 40th New York $450) attempts to explain the resurgence of radicalism among American students Its author is a

of the New Left wIth as many con u e y lcal ideas while at MissisSippi non-joiners on the peripherY day even~ng Aug 27 at S lD ~ at~~ fi~t he~-d ~~ ~h~ ~erBtlt its impact- is smd tohave Mlll~aret s Kinderlctarten aaU i Left whIle at Ohio State and l Prizes WIll be awarded and reshy

tgrt~ritotcOtmiddotmiddotgthmiddotevecJ1 amm~-~W1lS~~tttedpa~~y ~xten~e~ tots about200OQP co h~~hriients served o nl~ge ~u en ~~ i - ltGUiLD OF TillE VIsITATION Iil1961heifioved~to NewmiddotYork It ~S ~l1ena lza1I~~~eme~t i iNO EASTilrAM ~ ~

_and came closer tothe Commti- in the country What alarms Mr ih alb t ofthe Dist Party Llitef he joined Pro- Luce is not its existence or its G1 ~~ h 3que wed gressiveLa]gto~aiI~ edited its size but the fact and the in- W WI e e on nesshymiddot monthly magazine _ cre~sing extent of Comrnamst q1Y~ 4-~ 3~ a~ the PiJ~~ middot -domination~ He gives -instances Springs Restaurant No TflJro Visited _C~~ro-S Cuba R t cl Sunday

in proof thatsuch dO minatioD-i8 A e~e2 rva~o1l os on It was Progressive Labor ug s

which arJanged- for fmeric~ indeed an actuality SACRED HEARTS

young man who won some leader of the New Left and when he broke with Proshygressive Labor which he eharges was organiz~d by -formermembenlof theSoVfeishycontrolled Communist Pa rt y USA and is now aPekingor~eh tated Commu~

D1st group Mx Luce has an ex tremely Impor- middottant subject one which is both timely and crit shyleal Because of his experience he should be especially qualshyified to set it out But the fac~ is that he is at best a mediocre writer He has no notion as to how to

organize a book marshal his materials and to ten his story iIi a consecutive way and with cushymulative force This is a dull alld muddled treatment of a very middotvitai topic~ not heipedat all by crude blundersin English usage Mr Luces personal histog has to be pieced together fro~ bits strewn through the book

middotlike the debris after a hurricane He is an Ohioan bornmiddotin 1935

notice both when he was a the lives of the rising generation Youth is repelled by parental attitudes and aspirations which are seen as mostly narrow negshyative sterile College is a bore

offeriiig no incentive or oppOJshytUnity for youth to direct its enshyergies into crucial causes

A mood of rebellion has devel- ~ped and a chance to express it has been pr~sentedby the civil rights struggie and the unpopu~ lar and beclouded war in Vietshynam Nor does the prospect of fighting authority in each case dim the attraction of these causes quite the reverse Hence the New Left

JLists Organizations Communist organizations of

various stripes have attemptec to sieze control of the New Left and to exploit the mood of reshybellion wi~h an eye to changing it into participation in revolushy

tion

Mr Luce lists and desribes the Communist organizations so engaged The one he knows best of course is Progresectsive Labor But he gives much space to the Du Bois Clubs which are the instruments of the Communist Party Then tlmre are the Trot-middot

the son of middle-class Repub- skyite splinter groups of which lican parents H~ start~d college four strains are identified (inshyat Miami University in Ohio left cluding middotone that is pro-Negro to see the Souih finished ~t Mis and anti-Semitic) I

sissippi State and did graduate Mr Luce estimates that some k t Oh St t 12000 YOung AmericanS are wor a 10 a e _ t 1 t 1 b He became interested in rad- ac ua orgamza Ion~ mem ers

APPOINTEE- Bishop Josshyeph Bmiddot Brunini Auxiliary since 1957 to Bishop Richard O Gerow of Natchez-Jackshyson middotMiss has -been appointshyed by Pope Paul VI to be Apostolic Administrator of the diocese NC Photo

The Parish Parade

ST 1lgtYS TillED mn ov= =shylFALL RJrVER

The parish will sponsor a one day pilgrimage to the Shrine of the North American Martyrs Auriesville N Y on Sunday Oct 2

Interested partles may obtaIn full particulars by contacting Mrs Laurence Coyle Mrs Wilshyliam Blythe or Mrs George Boitano S8 MARGARET-MARY GUILD BUZZARDS BAY

A bl hitmiddot middotU be pu IC W S paL 0 WI d ct d b the guild on Saturshy

studeritsto visit Cuoain 1963 middot and 1961 In defiance of our middotState Department~sban on travel

there Mr Luce made the trip says that most of the students

middot were unaware of Progressive Labors sponsorship and control The money came from Castro And Progressive Labor members planned and staged the wild scenes at a Congressional hea~

ing concerning the middotproject By late 1964 Mr Luce was

enti~ely dissillusioned abo u t Progressive Labor andmiddot by Febshyruary of 1965 h~ pad left it to

bemiddot quickly expelled upon his

Stresses Strength NO FAIRHAVEN He insists that somethin~(must Registration for the kiridershy

be done to prevent Communist garten pre-primary and the capture of the movement He eight eJement~ry grades are beshywants everyone to wake up to ing held daily during the month the existence and the strength of Augus of the New Left Pupils may register with SJ

We must realize he urges how Marie Henriette SSCC at the disenchanted with our society Sacred Hearts Academy 332 the young people ~re what hos- Main Street Fairhaven any 8poundshytility they feel what a gulf ternoon from 1-5 RegistratioDfl yawns between them and their are also being accepted by Rev elders and hcgtw impervious th~YAlexis Wyggers SSCC at the are to ideas and language which ReCtory 382 Main street Fairshyi

figure in their eldErs attempts haven to communicate with them The Association of St Anne

No one he maintains is S~-Will receive corporate CoinmUshyI~ departure and sayagE(l~ Yim~~~~ Jiously trying to reach the hiorton Sunday at the 8 ocloek middot He left because he says Pro gressive Labor is a middotMaoist Comshymunist tool because itmiddotadlrQcates imd take steps to implelrtent armed insurrection because- no personal freedam is allowed to members an4 lill- deQisionsmiddot are made by a few dictatorial leadshy~ril 1ecausemembersareJnshyvolved in programs of Whose

eonsequences totge country and to themselvestIey have no idea lt~

lFe~ls lF~tts~rated Mr fL~ced6es- notmiddot contend

middot that the New Leis Goromunistshy

young rebel to understand him Mass to speak to him intelligibly and effectively Co~unJ~t errorsmiddot J~edB~ MeU1lMe~tmiddot propaganda hypocnsy mUst be SCHWYZ (NC) - Catholicrelentlessly exposed in a way movie and television experts which the young people will met here iil ~fwitieriand for imcomprehend international exchange of ~He is strong_ for a Freedom riiques iiI the useof Tv anellAeademy- which would provipe films in religious educationmiddotmiddot expert practical education conshy - cerning CommunislJlmiddotAnd he stressestheneed of a placefor

ltloltiinated -Hescent~B it -as8 phe- PITTSB~1RGH(Nt) - The bull I bull ~ bull bull bull bull bull

honidon whlc~ came ~bout Pittsburgh Catholi( Interracial Commercialmiddot 15 Industrid spontaneously an eX~IJ1Pre of- Council has endorsed home rule Institutionalyouth in rebellion - for the District of Columbia asshy

Youth he holds~ hils amiddotpoundeeling sertingthattooibng have many painting ~nd~ D_~~o~qtig of -frustrationmiddot with American of the-importanLdecisionaffectshy Fall River OSborne 2-1I9H$ociety its tone and its values ing (the District of CohJmbia) -yoiith~es~rtt~rhaving rio say inb~erlmadtd)ycongrpoundpoundssiriehftoin ~ 74v~hllia rnson Str~e~

the making of decisions affecting hundreds of miles away

~~Gr~ayK BJ Most Rev FUUOlll J Sheeillp Dll)

If my neighbor is stronger than 1 I fear him if he lsweaker than I I despise bim Such is the modem judgement of the psyshychiatrist Dr Jean de Rougemont Earlier the Psalmist speaks ~ the arrogance of those who have much and the despisal of those who are proud How can the rich avoid feeling superior to the poor How can the poor avoid being humiliated The answer is that vices but can the) give up cigarettes for a week to help the poor the strong must see their weakness and the rich must see~eifto poverty How realJly strong are the strong Theymay avoid great Are thfiY suc~ masters of themselves tbatthey can turn down the third cocktail (or give up the first) and use the money instea4 to ~uy sulfone ~or a i~~r~ liqw r~ch_ ar~the rich Let them look inside themselves IIi whatvirtue are they rich Rich in cb~ty Rich i~ char~ti Ri~)n f~th

Onc~t~~ ~i~rhty see th~mseiv~ asnothiDi a~d therl~h see the~selv~ as i~poverislledth~ they wui lov~ ihe we~~ as their brothersilDd the peor IllS their

fellow beggars for thetrrace of God ifmiddot the strong middotlove middotmiddotthemselves despite all theirweaknes5~ then why not lovltil weaknesses in others u the rich love themselves despitG middottheir inner nakedshyness then why nCllt love a lesser ]lJOVshy

erty in others That i~ why Our Lord told us to love ourneighbor as ourseU ~y not more than self Because iii ]I

love myself-knowing myself as ]I do knowing how utterb weak ]I am2-then I have the measure of how J[ am to pour out love to others

We live in a world divided between the rich and the poor We live in that kinol of a church-pOor parishes and rich parishes Even bishops an~ priestsmiddot speak of a parish being good when they mean it is economicaily rich Somehow or other we have ~

get qut of this slavish standard of affluence which is so opposed to the lross of Christ To that end we make the folloWing proposal that you or your middotparishclub school or office undertake the sponsorshjp of one of the poor areas of the world which has been investigated by the Apostolic delegate Write to us and we will send you middotthe name of this diocese its location the number of priests catechists and faithful it has Thus you will be sure that you have a middotneedy (Ibject for sacrifice and service and n9t one based on a haphazard -appeal middotfroin an uninvestigated source The Church will not alloW you to sponsor this diocese for more than one year becausemiddot thtlre are so many poor parishes in the world Look into your weakness and you will love the weakness of o~heJ8 Look into your poyeny stricken soul and you willserVe poverty stricken bodies Write to -mpGod Love You

~~~ middot~middotGOD~middotLOVE YCllJmiddot tomiddot~SMLgtO~middot ~$5 middotto A~RCtor $sO~ For your1nissionUorkIeanthelp eve~one andmiddotyou ~o tltosem most meed bullbull tchJMBfcn $20 to Anon lor $1000 middotsentmiddotWithlteommnbull ~ 11

bullbull bull ~l

The GOD LOVE YOU~ medal lovely cameo medal of the Madonna of tIle worldiS one you would be proud to give ormiddotde shy

lighted tci reC~iVEt DesIgned bi the world-renowned jeweler Harry winSton aildbltessed by Bishlgtp Sheen the GOD LOVE YOU medal is available inmiddotcl~icF~oreritinegold firiishor pure sterlingsilver aod may be obtained by sending your request and corresPondirtg offering to The Socieb for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth AvenueNew York NY 10061 $2 Sinall sterling silver $3 small

11gtk goid fiiled $5 large sterling silver $10 large 10k gold filled

Cut out this colullnn pln your sacrifice to It and mali It to Most RevbullFultom J Sheen National Director of The Society for the Propagation of thl~ Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or to your Dioclesan Director Rt Rev Msgr Raymond Jr Considine 363 North ll1ain Street Falll River Massachusetts

bull j 7 Perry IQur fI~~fng

~v~-t~e OilsMake Taunt~B1l~ Mass - Worm FriendsmiddotVA 2-2282

------------------ ~

genuinely democratic radicalism ON CAPE CODlbONNlEllyin o~r Iociety _

]OHoo ~~~(Kl~Ymiddotmiddot amp SON (~ofP~n~T~UnCG Rigt - flJ1 ml n

crepound ormiddotentireiyCommuist- 9llaquoIIlaquo ~$ lf1J Ilililte ~fYl U ~ I~raquo8L[)~NG MAmiddoth~linAL$middotmiddotmiddot~~~V~C~ 6

S~~ri~gj 1$100 4~~YARMUlrH ROA~)

middottYA~MBSmiddot AMPLE PARKING

iIIIIOCIIJIjIWUllJmllIllDOCImIWlDIllmIlXlWll(lJfi

- -

THE ANCHOR-Jesuit Educators Members of PAVLA Maintain Missionary Thurs Aug 25 1966 13

Ponder Students Record of Fall River Diocese Area G~~s SocoaCynical ~ttitQJJde

LOS ANGELES (NC) shy lLong outstanding for the missionary work of its priests Sisters and Brothers the ~elvD~e ~elrllfrer A top Jesuit educator dispenshy Fa~ River Diocese is fast becoming noted for its outstanding Papal Volunteers for Latin CLEVELAND (NC) - OUX sed advice here on how to eombat the attitude of some high schoolers who consider the world and the religion of their middotparents as phony

Father Edward J Sponga 8J of Baltimore in the keynote adshydress at the 1966 Jesuit Educashytional Association Workshop on Christian Formation at Loyola University here called for a dialogue with everyone conshycerned to emphasize the good crying to be released

Speaking to delegates from 52 Jesuit high schools in the nation Father Sponga chairman of the board of the Jesuit Educational Association declared

Menace to Freedom If the young men of our

schools consider the world and the religion of their parents as phony and a menace to their freedom then we must be ruthshyless in seeing how and why this is and in entering into dialogue with everyone who is willing to do so in order that we may be able to release the g09d that is crying to be released

During the 12 days of research and discussion 125 school adshyministrators and teachers evalushyated the effect that religion courses academic curriculum spiritual exercises and personal guidance have had on the charshyacters of the 35000 teenagers in U S Jesuit high schools

The delegates particularly were concerned about the loss of religious faith in the adolesshycent who is becoming increasshyingly sophisticated and critical

Middle Class Values Father Joseph H Fichter SJ

Stillman professor of sociology at Harvard Universitys divinity school criticized Jesuit high schools for not challenging the middle class values of many of their students for not paying sufficient att~rition to the social sciencesmiddot and for not drawing more of their students irom among the poor

Dr Alexander A Schneiders graduate professor of psychology at Boston College stressed the commitment of Faith that must be made within the scopemiddot of inshytellectual independence He arshygued against compelling students to make annual retreats or assist at religious exercises

Other delegates suggested esshytablishing pilot programs in 1l)ner-city high schools with nationwide cooperation and the sending of Jesuit teachers to work in community schools outshyllide the regular Jesuit system

Ho~es for Negroes Goal of Campaign

WORCESTER (NC) A camshypaign to secure better housing for Negroes in the Greater Worcester Area is growing

In a letter to some 1200 pershyS0l1S who last Aprii signed an

open letter newspaper adshyvertisement regarding fair hous ins John J Concordia Duman rights committee chairman of the Diocesan Council of Catholic M~~ ~sked sig~atories of the

open -letter to volunteer to ~adopt members of a Negro family am actively assist them inmiddotproC1Jri~g decent housing to titheir ~ne~ds

In 8 statement by an intershy fa(thmiddoteommittee on housing middotwfii~IlJs all out-growth of a

siniilar committee formed last year by the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women a call was made for construction of housshying for middotmiddotpoor and lower middle d~ss f ami ie It ixlcludins

Ne8J~s

bull bull r~ ~

America These young men and women doing Christs work in some of the worlds needshy Lady of Futima parish hat3 opened a social service centeliiest areas are a credit to the parishes and toowns from which they come Letest PAVLA here in the midst of the Houghassignments in the Diocese area scene of Clevelands recent

are those of Lucille Lebeau rioting of St Annes parish New The center housed in an 18-gt Bedford and Anthony Gomes room former apartment buildo St John of God parish Somershy ing was dedicated by Archo set bishop Paul J Hallinan of~ At-gt

Actually Lucille isnt a new lanta while he was visiting iii PAVLA hand She was the first Cleveland~bis native diocese Diocesan enlistee in the organishy The center will be staffed by zation going to Brazil as a four Sisters of Charity of St nurse-social worker in August Augustine who along with lay1963 She returned from her volunteers have been working three year assignment in July in the area since Aprilmiddot1965 but volunteered to serve an The center will middotprovide C9uri extra year in Brazil She will re seling nursing medical supplie tum there in November and pre-natal care -

Anthony veteran of a middotyears The building which standt work in Florida with the fedshy next to the parish rectory waserai governments VISTA proshy purchased bymiddot the parish seveR gram will teach English in a years ago when it was aba~ Mexican minor seminary He has doned as an apartment buildingalready completed a PAVLA

Early last year Father Alberitraining course at Catholic Unishy Albert Koklowsky MSSSTversity in Washington D C and pastor of Our Lady of Fatimawill leave in September for launched a campaign through aMexico City and an intensive column in the Catholic Universefour and a half month course in Bulletin Cleveland diocesanSpanish language and culture newspaper to explain Houghsbefore beginning his assignment poverty to metropolitan resiltshyin the mountain town of Tacomshydentsbaro in the state of Michoacan

Housing was a major themePioneer Work Resulting donations from unishy

Lucille bubbles over with enshy verse Bulletin readers and 11thusiasm for PAVLA and its acshy matching gift from Coadjutorcomplishments She has just reshy middotBishop Clarence Issenmann of turned from a trip to the Washshy Cleveland enabled Father Kokshyington training course attended lowsky to renovate the buildingby Tony Gomes where incishydentally she met him for the first time She talked to new Work for Needy enlistees individually and in LIMA (NC) - Sixty me~bers groups seeking to picture for af the St Rose CYO hert gavethem the new life theyd be enshy volunteer aid to projects for thetering needy this Summer Most as~

Their enthusiasm was a boostshy slsted in a federally financed er shot for meshe said educati~nal program for cultu~

This week the New Bedford rally deprived students from nurse is inmiddot the Chicago area PAVLA ENLISTEES Revmiddot James w Clark Diocesan ~nderglirtenmiddot to sixij1 grad~visting PAVLA headquarters Directormiddot of Papal Volunteenlmiddot for Latin America with Othershelp1 a~ amiddot day camn f~there and friends she made ill retarded cbildren andmiddot Qne asAnthony Gltgtmes bound for teaching assignment in Mexico~ Brazil including the doctor with Ns~ed at a eerebral palsy c~mpwhom she worked when me and Lucille Lebeau who has already spent three years m first went to the Latin American Brazil as nurse-social worker will return in Novemberfor eountry He is now in practice additional year in Waukegan lll FAIRHAVEN

When I first went to Brazil urgy eommunitY needs and was to leave in each parish IIshe 8a14 I worked for a little LUMBERhealth needs team similar to their own toover a year at a hospital in Salshy cOMPANY carry on as far as possible thevador Bahia My job was mlinly Most of the help that an area

training Brazilian aides and received came from the people work in liturgy catecheticsmiddot and community and health needssetting up hospital routines themselves t h r 0 ugh their Complete line

After the year was over Brazil shy awakened sense of community We would return to the comshyian doctors and medical students said -ucille Actual government munities where we had given Building Materials took over the hospital routines or material aid was hampered by this course as often as possible were runing smoothly and I political economic and social said Lucille anu each time we 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVEN felt that I could go on to public complications of many kinds eould set them growing spiritushyhealth work in areas where there The team played it by ear ally WYman 3-2611 was no nursing care at all avail- in deciding how to approach a Turn to Page Nineteen able particular parish Lucille and

Lucille joined an apostolic the nun on the team who was shy ~

team organized by Bishop Eushy also a nurse tried to work genio de Araujo Sales Apostolic through community midwives Administrator of Salvador Toshy who were sadly in need of techshy JEREMIAH COHOLAN gether with a priest a nun two nical instruction The infant Brazilian lay apostles and what mortality rate in most areas was would bt the equivalent af an very high said Lucille due iD PLUMING amp HEATING I American social worker she large part to umbilical tetanus visited areas of the Diocese preshy caused by unsanitary delivery viously all but unreached by the techniques

Church Another technique was organ- I Aim of the team she explainshy ization of one-week parish Wy 3 0911 699 B II II A

ed wail to change dormant parshy courses centered around the idea man - e VI emiddotmiddot ven~ ishes into Christian communishy of Christian cominunity Lucille Nwamp~fQrd ties Seventeen parishes were said middotshe would start the course I visited in the course of a year by trying to explain the concept lImiddottI-IIIlII_middot tI-II--tl- __ __ __ _-IIllIIIiImiddotllIlI_-IIllII~ -~~ ~--middot- ~ and a half rmging from mem- of Christians as people of God - - shy

berships of 20000 souls to 75000 then would set up discussion ~ItIIIIHtHIIIIIDIIIIUIIIIHlIIIIIIIiIllIIlHKHHIIItIIIIUIIIIIIIUllllliillllllllllIJllilllllllllllllilllllllll~ The 75OOO-member parish said Ioupsmiddot en suchmiddot subjects asmiddot~ -_sect_Lucille had only one priestmiddot 10 What ismiddota person-Person to ~ middotY 5 hmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot meet its needs person relationships~ and Dif- sect E we ayemiddot ~

Plan 01 AetiOll ferences between ordinary eom- ~ == The apostolic teamsaid Lushy munities andthe parish sect LARGE LIVEmiddot ~

eille would first survey condishy This would lead to a discussion sect ~ ~=_=_ tions and decide what most of the function of Christians and sect needed doing then plan an edushy what iii Christian community sect shycational program Three or fo~rmiddot should be lIke Theil leaders ~ while they la5~ - ~ natural leaders in each parish were ready to ask the parishion ~ sect= were chosen and arrangements ers if any were ready to coin- ~ were made to get them to an mit themselves as parish team sect Macleans SemiddotQmiddot F d ~ Archdiocesan training center for members to a stronger expres- ~ 00 S == a one month leadership training sian of their Christian fellow- sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN Tel 997-9358 sect eourse wverins lIlatechetics lit ooip Go~ of the lipQBtolie tea iulHIHlIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIJlIIIUillIIJlmIllUiJiillJillnililunJililillliiihIUllllIIlIilill(IIUJIIIJ1I1llIJllliinillllllltuE

- ~ - -~_middotmiddotij_Uimiddotmiddot ~ _

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 An Exce1lent Lcte Summer Activity J VI SIT-middot

Louisiari ~copyfrish A~~ampmpli~~~sect r~bull ~T[T uiH~Dfro[j1) fr ~rtilfrreg~[(frDIri)middot middot~~rrfr~~~Q~t~~~~~~~JJ~~tt$

MADISONVILLE (NC)--+wo cently used for ~~gt~es~was wears ago in this quiet jural torn down Its blue I green~and ~ J~lf ~ town the single square block white stained grass riow frames

ltContaining Catholic ch u r c h the huge rear wIndow ~ ~t buildings symbolized the old era Anselms church - - [f~[LL lRlt OV~~middot ~now it stands for the new This Spring St Catherines

Two years ago two churches also came down Gone too are stood 200 feet apart on this he cOl-vents and bullone school More than 280000 people havle cilrElody been aboard iUO ~he past ys[ioblock--St~ Catherine wh ere The other school building was

whites worshipped and St retained for parish meetings and Francis Xavier where Negroes the now-integrated Confratershy

worshipped The rectory with fiity of Christian Doctrine its one priest to serve both par- classes ishes s too d between theC rhe 100 or so school children

centhtirches moremiddot as a symbol of - arenow transported to elemEmshythe psychological gap thac asan tilt-y and high schools in nearby

actual separation covirigton arid Mandeville middot A fence stood between the two CCD instructions have been

eonventS on the block~riefor givengtySfsters qfChristian the Negro nuns who taughtCharityandtheirstudEints from

Negro children in the ~e~ro ~~njpirClncy at FolsoM La and IIchool the other for the wfitte byseminariaris fromarby St IllUns who taught white children i-Jolieph seminarY Butmiddot tpeseiii the whHe school diities are being taken over by

Now there is one church onemiddot tlie parishs integrated CCD orshyrectory and one small classroom ganizatiorinow being trained

building -- and one parish St The pastor Father John J Anselm DenDulk is prouder of the

Although wee k day Masses smooth transition than he is of were said in only onemiddot of the the physical change shytwo old churches Masses and Participation in worship has ether services on Sundays and increased since the new church major feast days were said in w~ built he says and he has

middot both Midnight Masses on Christ- the best commentators in the mas were celebrated concurrent- whl)le world

Iv in the two churches AIthougb there are only 260 But the buildings weremiddot badly families in the parish the new

Qn need of repair So in 1964 the ~church is already more than half lttId frame church of St Francis paid for and the parish topped

middot Xavier whose parish records go its quota in the archdiocesan back to 1863 and which was re- education expansion drive

bull ~ I bull

Bishop Pmiddoterry Says New Orleans Has Healthy Racial Climate

DENVER (NC) - Auxiliary still has more influence thaa Bishop Harold R Perry SyD any other Negro in the civil of New Odeans first AmeJican rights movement Catholic Negro bishop in this He (Bishop Perry) has been

lt1lentury said here a hea~thy very favorably received in New racial climate will exist wher- Orleans eve~ the Negro has a chan~ to Some Cannot WaU voice his grievances He said there will undoubtedshy

Bisnop Perry dted New 9r- ly be some civil rights groups lleans as an example sayipg the who disapprove lt)f non-violence racial climate there is healthy and occasional demonstrationS

because of an interracial council by those who cannot wait appointed by Louisiana~ov Of course I am a Negro and

John J McKeithen to help splve we have been waiting a long rmcial problems time If you take the long view I There are no demonstra~ions complete equality cant come too and riots and very little picket- quickly he added~

lng he said The cotiJlc~1 i-e- He said he has been received lieves tensions and if the Negro very well even enthusiastically has a forum to talk over his con- in New Orleans Picketing outshyeerns he will not demonstrate side the church where he was

Schools Integrated ~onsecrated he s3id Was DOt typical of the general feeling in

The 50-year-old prelate said New Orleans be is proud New Orleans has in- As an evidence of his popushytegrated all Its schools Its a larity he said he spoke at ninemiddot large percentage not just token graduations in June and has ofshyhe added ficiated at Confirmation in 24

He said Catholics are doing parishes their part to advance equality of opportunity in his citymiddot 1 think [EceQJl1illeIJilD~~ CCrrnDDOdegthere has been Ii united effort tl)Ir If

by all faiths and we would like ~~ ~DcopyQJIJilampIbgtD~~~DIJil to keep it that way he de- CRANSTON (NC) I hdared - n a s ow The New Orleans bishop also of the ecumenical spirit lea4ers ~ommented on ~ wide range of of major religious faiths in this

area took part in a combined eivil rights issues saying

The new militancy shown by bull religious and groundbreaking Visit the BClI~~ie$Mp anldllode alIeplica of the Old iFal~middot River Bill1e~ middottmiddotsom~ civi~ rights groups is a service on the site of the proshy

posed Church of the Annunciashypassing phase tion Greek Orth()dox lours start every 30 minutes

The majority of Negroes are Archbishop lakovo primate lJympathetic to the non-violent of the Greek Orthodox Church Opeill aU year round - 9 AM to Sunsetphilosophy of the Rev Dr Mar- of North and South America of tin Luther King and Dr King ficiated at the open air hierar- For Group Arrangements Call 678-1100 chal Divine Liturgy service at-

Serra Meeting tended by more than 500 pershy l)OOOO()ooOOC)ooOOClOOC)ooOOC)OO~IOOl sons

THIS MESSAGE Sp()NSORED IV lHE FOllOWING INDIVIDUALSATLANTIC CITY (NC) - A Participants in the groundshyeonference for members of Ser- breaking ceremony included AND BUSINESS CONCERNS IN GREATER FALL RIVERlIa Clubs in the New York-New Catholic Bishop Russell J MoshyJersey - eastern Pennsyivania Vinney of Igtrovidence Archshy ANN DALE PRODUCTS INC MACKIENZIE amp WINSLOW INC area will be held here Sept 23 deacon William L Kite represhy II~DY ELECTRIC SUPPLY COMASON FURNITURE SHOWROOMS tKi 25 Msgr William Noe Field senting the Rt Rev John Seville CASCADE DRUG CO GERALD E McNALLY CONTRACTOItiff Seton Hall University South Higgins Episcopal Bishop of GLOBE MANUFACTURING CO SOBILC)FF BROTHERS Orange NJ will give the key- Rhode Island Dr Wayne ~is

~~TGHINSON OIL COa~te address Sept 24 apoundter a executive director ofmiddot the Rhode STERUllIG BEVERAGES INC

~A Mc~HIRR ~9MPANY TEXTIU WORKERS UNION Of AMERICAeOncelebrated Mass at which the 1s~and Council of Churches ~nd ~rE~~ATIQNALV4DIES GARMENT 1 bull AlL~tO - principal concelebrant will be Rabbi Jerome Smiddot Gurland Gf

WORKERS UNION (EUOW CAI COMPANY Bishop George W Ahr of Tren~ ~telligtl~ Sinai 1epresentingthe ton Bhode Island Board of Rabbiamp bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull0 MssSelbullbull

~ ~ ~ - bull bull bull bull I ~ j

- ~

_-- -

0

WomenB~ Job Corps Members middotAid Youngsters Improve Reading

OMAHA (NC)-Omaha Wom- chesne Mother Moody found a ens Job Corps members joined benefactor to supply ihe a11shywith five graduates of Duchesne importlnt incentive program College and Academy of the Thanks to a generous racetrack

Sacred Heart here to upgrade bettor Who won the daily double the reading level of local public there was enough money for school youngsters candy bar prizes and two picnics

The progra~ ca]]edProject An indication or- the success of Upstart was first conceIved by the program was found in the Mother Helen Condon dean of reaction of the students A reshythe Nebraska co]]eg~ Mother cent visitor asked one of the Rosemary Moody aSsIstant pro- young boys Why are you here fessor o~ ~sYChology volunteer~ Did someone make you come to adminIster and execute themiddot program

The original plans were to take a group of seventh graders from Horace Mann Junior High School and tutor them in develshyopmental reading and study skills It soon became apparent that some rather basic instrucshytion was required some of the ehildren were still reading at the second grade level

Duchesnes elementary school was offered for use by Mother Helen Sheahan superior An Omaha public school official suggested that the Omaha Wom- ens Job Corps be contacted to see if they could furnish high school graduates as tutors Robshyert Bathke Job Corps education director soon put five young ladies at Mother Moodys disshyposal

Five recent Duchesne gradushyates volunteered to train the tutors for two weeks before the program actually began The Duchesne alumnae eventualiy elected to stay on for the entire program

Mother Moodymiddot was so imshypressed with the potential of the Job Corps enro]]ees that she exshytended their sessions through the rest of the summer and made college preparatory work avail shyable to them

Student Reaction Perha~s one of the more unshy

usual aspects of the entire Upshystart program was its lack of financing The only real subsidy (about $500) was from the OMaha Public School system the bulk of which went to the Omah~ Transit Company for bus service

The equipment used in the classrooms was borrowed from the public schools the Omaha Womens Job Corps and Du-

Plan to Supplement History Books

SAN FRANCISCO (NC) shyA supplementary text showing the contributions of minority groups in United States history will be added to history and social science books already in use in archdiocesan schools here

The supplement containing some 150 pages will deal chroshynologica]]y with the contribu- tions of Jews Negroes Orientais and various nationalities from southern Europe

It is being prepared by a speshycial studly committee which illl evaluating current textbooks found need for more thorough material on the part minority

groups have played in the OOUDshytry1s history

Leave Providence For Mission Work

PROVIDENCE (NC) - Four Capuchin priest and two layshymen left New York by plane for mission work in the Santa Rosa de Copan diocese Honduras

Father Ad ria n Holzmeister OFM Cap provincial of tile Capuchins St Mary province with headquarters here said the six will work among some 50000 persons in Mlree parishes in the state of Ocotepeque He said

other mjssionersmiddotas they become ayailabie wiD be sent to aid Bishop Jose Canama CbampvezCli tile diocese

He looked up and said Im here because I want to learn to read and I like it Two girls who missed the morning bus to Duchesne gave another exain-ple of determination to learn Jhey undertook a two-hour five mile walk rather than miss a day of class

L R oy etreats Contlnu~d from Page Six

laymens convention-an effort to provide some figure of speech some image to suggest to those in the Church and to those out-

side what is the inner nature of the Church

Alluding to Scriptures refershyences to the Church in terms of sheep and shepherds the former Hub Auxiliary Bishop asked How many people in Boston have ever seen a sheep Sheep and shepherds say little to youngstersmiddot in housing projects or even in the suburbs

The Bishop who is epiScopal advisor for the NCLRC officiashyted at the lighting of an eightshyfoot candle which symbolized the

conference theme-uThe Light of Chr~st The candle burned throughout the convention

Speakers stressed the retreat program is geared to demOJishystrate to the world that the way of Christ can become more meaningiful to men of our time

Bishop Ernest J Primeau of Manchester reminded delegates of recent profound changes withshyin the Church

If the lay retreat movement is to remain vital and relevant

he said it cannot be static It must be in harmony with the times at all times

Honest Call1Se

Our retreat houses could 00-middot eome so to speak the equipment and training centers for the apostolates of the laity he adshydect

Bishop Primeau urged laymei to learn from modern science particularly in the field of hushyman psychology He said there is an opportunity as well to learn from other organizations both secular and religious He added The youth of today are un-

selfish and in large numbers they are seeking for an honest cause to which they can dedicate themshyselves as witness their devotion to the Peace Corps and the civil rights movement

Modernize AncEtenlt Puerto Rico CIl1llLmlrch

SAN JUAN (NC) =- A lPJt8shyyear-old church one of the most popularmiddot in this capital city~ ~

going modern Archbishop Luis Aponte of

San Juan has inaugurated middotal campaign for funds for restorashytion of St Anns a public orashytory now badly illl need of Jeshypairs

1ft addition to restoration the ehurch also Will be equipped with air conditioning The eburch is the archdiocesan ceDltgt ~r for the Confraternity Gi Christian Doctrine and perpetual adoration of the Blessed Sacrashyment Built ill 184B the cburch weplaced an edifice which dated )Iaek iG tile lWi century

PROFESSION ANJ)) RECEPTION Four postulants beshycame canonical novices and two prof~ssed their vows as Sisters of St Joseph at ceremonies at the Blessed Sacrashyment Church Fall River Left column top to bottom Sr Gerard Marie (first vows) Sr Anne Therese Sr Rita Josshyeph Bishop Connolly who received the sisters Right colshyumn Sr Anne Denise Sr St Paul and Sr Alfred Marie (renewed temporary vow-s)

Specialmiddot Education Priests Visi~ PaJ~ents Homes to ExplOJon

SignificOJlI1lce off Baptismal Ritual

Thurs Aug 25 1966

Governor Balks

ST JEAN (NC)-Sunday bapshytisms are prece~ed by Saturday nights special educational proshygrams in a number of Catholic homes here in Quebec

The program to prepare the whole family for baptism through a home visit was deshyvised three years ago by a group of pries~s working togeth~r as a pastoral team

central idea of the program ~s that it is good for the priest to be with his people at imporshytant times in their lives~ Atmiddot these times people are dispOSed to receive the message of Christ

as it applies to their circumshystances the developers of the plan reported

The visiting priest explains the lOOremonies of the next day and the symbolic meaning of various parts of the baptismal ritual

Pilgrims Wctmlk TORONTO (NC) -The 10th

annual walking pilgrimage to the Canadian Martyrs shrine at Midland Ont will begin here Wednesday Organized by the Guild of St John de la Lande the pilgrimage will cover the 100 miles to the shrine in five days a~riving there Sunday Sept 4

LEMIEUX PLUMBING amp HEATING INC

fof Oomestic l~ andmiddot Industrial ~ Sales and Service

Oil Burners WY 5-1631

2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE NEW BEDFORD

Relatives neighbors or the prospective gorlparents may be presentbut themiddot home visit usually involves just the parents and their children

The ide is to make the preshybaptism vsit an oppodunity for dialogue between the priest and the parents rather than a conshyference

Ten parishes in the St Jean diocese have adopted the praeshytice along with l few Montreal parishes Father Marcil Brillon secretary of the St Jean litur- gical commission said he exshypects the practice to spread

FALSE TEETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass Many wearers of false teeth suJIer

embarrassment Qecause their platesdrop Blip or wobble at Just the wrong time Dont live In fear of thts happening to you Just sprinkle a little FASTEErH the non-acid powder on your plates Holds false teeth more firmly so they feel more comfortable Checks denture breath Dentures that fit are essential to health See your dentist regularlyGet FASTEETH at all drug counters

At Proposals MONTPELIER (NC) - Vershy

monts Gov Philip Hoff said he bas extreme reservations conshycerning abortion and sterilizashytion proposals contained in a reshyport of an adivsory committee on the mental retardation situshyation in the middotstate

The report called for legal sanctioning of induced abortion in cases where there appears to be a high risk of mental retarshydation of an unborn child

Thereport also contained a suggestion concerning steriliza shytion of the mentally retarded

Apart from the recommenda~ tions on legalized abortion and sterilization of the mentally reshytarded I must S4ly it was II good report Gov Hoff said He said lie will study the report with utmost care before taking any action 0

Expresses Thanks To Holy Father

VATICAN CITY (NC) -The vice prime minister of Vietnam has paid a visit to Pope Paul VI to thank him for his peace efshyforts and generous help to reshylieve the suffering of the Vietshynamese people General Nguyen Huu Co vice prime minister and secretary of state for national defense of Vietnam visited privately withshythe Pope for 30 minutes Accord- ing to a Vatican Press Office bulletin

The vice prime minister in the name of South Vietnam exshypressed profound gratitude for the valid support always given by the head of the Catholic Church and of the Holy See in the cause of peace and for the generous assistance sent by the Holy Father to relieve the sufshyfering of those persons torshymented by war The distinguishshyed visitor then continued tomiddot deshyclare that the intentions of South Vietnam are directed only toward an affirmation of the liberty of its own nation and Wgt arriving at a just peace in honor and concord

Complete

BANKING SERVICE

for Bristol County

Bristol County Trust Company

TAUNTON MASS

THE ~ANK ON TAUNTON GREEN

Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Bristol Community College Offers Evening Classes

64 Durfee St Fall River Credit classes begin September 19 1966

Register Now Mondays thrrough Thursdays 200-500 PM Courses for college credit or self improvement are offered ill

The arts languages and literature Behavioral and social sciences accounting business

administration and secretarial scieRCe Mathematics science engineering and electro-mechanical technology

Advisors Availabie During ~egistration Hours

16 THE AI~ ~-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

C~nsiders Instability Causes In Latin American lamds

From Social R-evolution in the New Latin Ameriea Edited by John J Considine MM

There are many causes of instability in Latin America Some have said in the past that it is an inheritance frQm

Spain They feel that the years of Spanishauthoritarianism rendered the colonies incapable of integrating themselves into a more balanced social system Because they had there exists the problem of low

denSity of population with a lackpreviously lacked indepenshyof internal communication In-dent creole authority the many cases there is even a lanshy

colonies were unprepared to acshy guage barrier eept a more democratic authorshy The problem of an underdeshyity In his book veloped economy has also beenBetween Freeshy a factor in forming Latin Anlershy clom and Fear ican social structureGerman Arcinshy On the social level the eleshyiegas draws a ments I have mentioned favorcomparison beshy an internal lack of class strucshytween the Enshy ture that involves a juxtaposishyglish and Spanshy tion rather than a social organi shyish governments zation and integration Democshyin the Americas racy on the other hand presupshyIn ihe north the poses a large scale integrationcolonists came in of the people in the politicalshysearch of freeshy economic-social life of thedom IIi the end nationthe founding of the Nodh The masses of -illiterates inAmerican colonies was only the Latin America who do not parshyobvious culmination of a process ticipate in these areas have noalready begun It was the reafshy iilterest in government thoughfirmation of customs already inshy their interest and loyalty maygrained in the social milieu It be enlisted by the demagoguewas an evolution not a real revshyolution for these settlers were Formation or Dictatorships accustomed to autonomy The A dictatorship takes form

authority pf their governors was when one or more pressure more democratic since they groups unchallenged seizes the worked closely with the popular power of governmentassemblies From the beginshy In order to better understand ning the keenest concern of the the types of dictatorship found North American colonist was for in Latin America let us elCamshyfreedom of worship and his hosshy ine the different forms of revoshytility to the Church of England lution and the various ways in was evident which the pressure groups

On the contrary Latin Amershy bring their influence to bearIca was part of an empire The Kalmal1 Silvert distinguishesSpaniards came to dominate and these types in his book Reaction evangelize The viceroy represhy and Revolution in Latin Amershysented the king who was an abshy ica which is written in -Englishsolute monarch The role of Silvert shows the relationshipshyassembly in Latin America was between dictatorships and the secondary arid represented exshy extreme indivdualism found in tremely liIIlited power these countries

Independence in the Latin The first type of revolution American nations entailed a real named is what Silvert calls the revolution since from the beginshy simple brracks revolt Most of ning they were forced tb look for the outbreaks especially in the new political and social forms past century have been of this

Religiousliberty did not elCshy kind The barracks revolt occurs ist in the Latin American coloshy typically in a big class society nies since all were obliged to It is carried out by the amlY

membership in the Cathoiic sompoundtimes in its own name and Church sometimes in behalf of a chosen

Unassimilated Groups leader This type of revolution - rarely calses widesprelld publicThis comparison will help in

disturbance since it representsunderstanding the Latin Amershymerely a switch in governmentican problem though it will not from one general to anotherfully explain -it We must acshy

knowledge that the political The second type the peasant phenomeinon has a direct COIshy revolt is generally of little sigshyrelatio~1 with demographic probshy nificance and limited in effect lems such as the existence of to a locality though the Mexican large unassitnilated groups as revolution at the beginning of well as masses of mestizos un this century would perhaps fall derdeveloped and deprived who in this category can scarcely be said to partici shy Third the regional revolt pate in twentieth century chili shy commcn in the early days of zation Although these groups Latin American independence form a part of the nation they Here _the caudillo strove to put are not integrated either socially down provincial revolts and to eulturally or politically centralize power in an authorishy

Despite the over-all demoshy tarian I e g i () n a I government g~aphic explosion in some areas Typical of the caudillos who led

regional revolts was Rosas of Argentina

Plans Participation The fourth a more modern type of revolution Silvert callsIn Liturgical Week the complicated barracks revolt

HOUSTON (NC) - The 1966 This is an insurrection that inshyLiturgical Week here fOI the -volves civilian as well as mili shyfirst time in its 25-year history tary groups with widespread will have a full scale program military action for those interested in the The issues are ideological and Eastern Church relate to political parties as well

As part of the Liturgical Week as _ other interest groups The program the Divine Liturgy Cuban revolution in its beginshy(Mass) of St John Chrysostom nings might be considered -an will be celebrated entirely in example Although this is the English and Communion will be most prevalent type ainong modshydjstributed under both species ernday revolutions excetions Chief celebrant of the Liturgy are the revolts which overthrew will be Archbishop Paul Achkar Peron in Argentina Perez-JimeshyGreek Catholic ~-chbishop of nez in Venezuela and -Rojas Lattaquia in Syua Pinilla in Colombia

SISTER AMBROSE

Says SOo Africa Needs Americans

WASHINGTON (NC)-Yanshykee come over a statement which would do much to boost the morale of Americans in sevshyeral parts of the world could well summarize what an Irish missionary nun to South Africa

-has been saying during a visit here _

The wonderful hospitality of theAmerican people has imshypressed Sister Ambrose Harty Gf the Sisters of the Holy Family She lamens the fact that opporshytunities to receive Americans in a like manner have been few and far between during her 20 years in South Africa

Youve got such a lot to give she said here in an ~ntershyview during which she expressed a strong desire to see greatly inshycreased people-to-people relashytio~s between the country where she serves and the United States

Sister Ambrose was particushylarly interested in the Peace Corps ann reported that its purshyposes and work are hardly known by the people of Soutli Africa I haVent heard it disshycussed at all she said (The Peace Corps has not been invited into the country) (

With words of praise for the missionary work being done iii the South African Republic by Oblate arid Paulist missionaries from the United States she also expressed regret at the general paucity of missioners from this country There particularly is an almost total lack of nuns she said Only 71 Catholic missionshyaries from the United States inshycluding 16 nuns are serving ilm South Africa

Married Priests AMSTERDAM (NC)-A

Dutch public opinion poli h8lll shown that 11 per cent of the Netherlands p e 0 pIe woulci rather have III married Catholi4l clergy than a celibate clergy The poll including members ai all and no denominations

-showed that 68 per cent of the Catholics queried preferred III married clergy

~~

(DEBROSS OIL ( ~ co ( ~ Heating Oils

~ and BMIIJUrs ~

~ 365 NORYIoli IFROIlir SUEampll ( rJ NEW IBIEDIFOR

~ WYmafi 2middot5534 (

I~~~

Parishes Share DETROIT (NC) - Twentyshy

nine urban parishes here have decided to help one another meet the rising cost of education

At the elementary level parshyepts will pay $50 per family $75 per family for non-Catholic parishioners and $75 per student

Danish Catholic COPENHAGEN (NC) -Thereshy

are 11321 Catholics in the Danish capitalaccording to a report issued by the Copenhagen statistical office They consti shytute the second largest religious entity there next to the Luthershyans members of the State Church The total number of Catholics in Denmark is approxshyimately 26000 Total population is 35 lllillion

Education Costs for Catholics outside the parish

At the high school level the tuition cost is $H)O per student in or out of the parish With the exception of textbooks this amount eliminates aU extra fee charged up to now

Father Norman P Thomas director of the Urban Parisll Apostolate said the greatest efshyfect of the joint effort will be experienced by the pastor who sends parish youngsters to a higll school operated by any of the 2 participating parishes

In this instance the students parishes will be expected to pay the difference between the tui shytion charged and the actual cost per student The latter fee laM been set by the parochial school office at over $200 per year

ETHIOPIA- THE NEW AFRICA

- HOLY FATlftRB MIBBIIDN AID TO THI DRIENTAL OHURCH

- BROTHER What happens In Ethiopia when an American MICHAEL Christian Brother (he could be your son brother

REYNOLDS nephew) Is told to upgrade Catholic schools He FROM borrows a Jeep (or a mule) visits the schools

PROVIDENCE RI one by one writes home for pencils and better REPORTS textbooks and then beginsbullbull This is the new

fROM Africa Brother Michael Reynolds reports enshyADDIS thusiasticallyfrom Addis Ababa It can be a BABJpeacefuf progressive Christian Africa tom~rmiddot

row Just give us schools give us time and with Gods help the job will De donel bull bullThe schools are for villages like Aressa Aiga Biers Wartll8~

-which have no school The youngsters know that knowledge i~ their only chance theyll go without food to learnbullbullbull What does It cost to build a schoolf Only $2950 says Brother Michael for the villagers snd the children give their laborfreemiddotofmiddotcharge We can train a catemiddot chlst for only $40 bullbullbull In thanksgiving to God for what you know will you do what you can ($100 $75 $50 $25 $15 $10 $5 $2) to give these youngsters a chance The school will be named for your favorite saint and the children will pray for your loved ones daily If you build It all byyourself ($2950) School will open late this year-but better late than never-If you Vlrit~ to us right now

WHAT Our priests there who receive no othor income IELSE for food and clothing will offer promptly the

FOR Masses you request Well forward your Mass ETHOPIAr Inten~ons through the Holy Fathers officebull

40 young lads studying for the priesthood In Decamere lose their football when It goes Into a nelghbers garden A large field can be bought ~velled and mede safe for sports fer $975

MAKINQ ~~IOOOO will ovfde bull OOfDj)lete parjstlplantA (Ohuroh rectory convent andscbool) In southshy

WiW ImIAdla In memorybullbullbullbull $600 will ttiln a native lrfHt1SOO bull native Sfster Our legal tltI Cl~1HOUO NWt lAir WIUAH AHOCIAnONo

_-------------~shytt coINIILOIIlt IUMIIIND ~ bullbull la IJIIr bull _1OIt~=-=_==-=

PI _UM~gt

Mum ClO1IIponwith your mt__=-~~_ _ ~i offrtnt ~~ erryen 8TAlI-lPCODI_

HI IATHaLl1 RIIiAR 811 WILAbullbull AIaDIATaN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS IRANCUS CARDINAL SPELLMAN President MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretal)f Write OATHOLIO NfIAR IiAST WELFARE Assoo 1)80 MadlsolJ Avenuomiddot New York NY 10017 -felGpilonel 212YUkon 6middot6840

Dormitory Proves Stonehill Permanently Coeducational

Way back in 1951 when the first girl enrolled in Stoneshyhill College no one could have imagined that a girls dormishytory would ever be built onmiddot the campus But the sound of steam shovels and hammers filling the air over the lovely grounds in Easton is proof

and two girls from the seniorthat the long planned for daslr-assisting the housemothergirls dorm will soon be a Mrs Grace Callahan

reality When Stonehill was The experiment worked so founded in 1948 as a mens colshy well in fact that this coming lege the fledgling school had Fall both the freshman and just gotten off to a good start sophomore girls will be housed when the Korean War came this way leaving only the junior along and emptied the classshy and senior girls still renting Yooms as the young men went quarters in private homes chosen into the services by the college as all the nonshy

That was the year that many commuting girls have done in small colleges had to close their the past gates forever But at Stonehill That typical campus situation the Holy Cross order was detershy -the sorority house-is not in mined to hold onto this new the picture at Stonehill-or frashyschool that they had planned for ternity houses either for that so long matter No sororities or fraternishy

What could they do to keep ties are allowed on the campus the college operating until the There is a cl11b however that war was over and the boys came is the girls own - the Crosier back Of course Open their Club Mrs Yosgandes is the gates to girl students clubs faculty advisor and she deshy

Faculty Pleased scribes it as the organization What started out as a temposhy for women studentE who want

rary expediency somehow over to contribute in their own parshythe years has acquired a happy middotticular way as women to their permanancy No one could be college more pleased about this turn of Through their annualmusical events than the Stonehill faculty Crosier Curtain Calls theyitself raise money to acquire manymiddot

Helping out in Jhe ground things that add beauty and breaking ceremony for the new charm to campus life This yeardorm Mrs Virginia Yosgandes they purchased two very lovelythe Dean of Women at the colshy silver tea and coffee services lege saiei I guess everyone will Any official group at the collegereally believe that the girls are is allowed to borrow the sets and here til stay they have already been used in

Mrs Yosgandes says that since many functions she first came to the Stonehill New Signfaculty in 1958 rumors have

Mrs Yosgandes says Thebeen popping up that Stonehill girls will be very pleased whenwill soon return to its original they come back th~~ Fallto seestatus as an all male school The the beautiful new sign theynew dorm she says will be visshybought for the college installedible proof of the permanancy of on Route No 138 women on the beautiful campus

Its very easy to picture theThe $1150000 building deshyvery charming Dean presidingsigned to accommodate 200 girls

graciously at a faculty tea Aand proctors will be three stories parishioner of Immaculate Conshyof red brick Architects W Chesshyception chulCh in Easton she ister arown and Associates and in ~rivate life an enthusiasticwntractors C A Batson and homemaker anc the mother of aCompany are planning to comshy13 year old daughter Christineplete work on the dorm in time Her husband John is assistantfor the opening of classes in principal at Franklin JuniorSeptember 1967 It will be the High first unit of a five dormitory

She speaks with great convicshycomplex planned fo the women on tion about college girls holdingcampus

onto feminine ideals while surshyKitchen ~pace rounded-and at Stonjhill outshyMrs Yosgandes is happy about numbered 3 to 1- by menthe fact that the new dorm will While were encoulaging themhave a kitchenette on each floor to be acdve in thpound communitywhere the girls can cook small and the church and in politicsmeals and entertain guests Shes and encouragint them to deshyhoping that the dorms built after

more velop their abilities to the full shythis me will providtgt even est-we never fail to take intokitchen space for the girls to account the fact that they arepractice the culinary arts women and in this competitiveM a n~ tImes homemaking world theyll have to -fight toskills come to a complete halt maintain their feminine idenshywhen a girl goes to college she tity says Apparently all classroom

work and rio cooking make Jane Coed Actiiti~s

Coed a dull girl in the room When she fi rst came to the where shell be spending a great college she sltys the girls were deal of time after graduationshy mainly interested in strictlythe dtchen feminine extra curricular activishy

Mrs Yosgandes says A great ties-fastion shows teas gids many cCJlleges have been workshy sports Bd this has changed radshying witt this problem and wonshy ically in the last few years and dering what to do about it Beshy now the girls are much more inshycause theyve had no living terested in the coed acti vitiesshyquarters for girls on campus the newspapers the debating Stonehiiil has had to do out of team the drama club Stonehill necessit) what many other colshy is noted a~ one of a small handshyleges have chosen to do recently ful gtf Catholic colleges where The Dean describp~ an experishy girls are middotactive in every part of ment that the collFge tJied last college life Every coure at yeal tha has worked out exshy StonehHj is opel to girls tremely well We still havent had a woman

Experiment Successful president of our student governshyThe college leased a grollp of ing body the Senate Mrs

rooms il an apartmelt building Yosgandes says Now girls in Brockton last Fall where all what are yOIi waiting for the freshman girls who were not commuters-55 of them-lived in housekeeping apartments In Red Groups There were four girls in each BERLIN (NC)-Over 85 per apartment all sharing the reshy (ent of East German children sponsibilities of housekeeping between the ltlges of 6 and 14 are

The girls hat two sets of mCl11)ers of communist youth 1)IoctOS - two aIumni wumen ~nIUps

lrt-OE ANCH0) 17 Thurs Aug 25 1966

PriestCuod Goal Of Top Skater

GREAT FALLS (NC)-A good many folks in this Montana toWlll will attest that teenager J Mishlll Petkevich is a pretty good skate -on or oH the ice

The affable blond youngster 17 topped a field of 136 pershyformers in the three-day Lake Placid N Y international free style competition sanctioned by the U S and Canadian Figure Skating Assoclations The Great Falls lad was the judges unamiddot1ishymous choice for the mens gold medal in the finals

But Petkevich doesnt lose his cool off the ice His classmates and teachers at Great Falls Censhytral 3igh School claim hes liIl

winner in every event He spends more than 40 hours 11 week in skating training but carries the full load of class studies and consistently turns Up on the schools honor roll Hes a member of the National Honor Society

The school supported me ami the way Everyone has beeEl wonderfUl to me the modest youngster saia Hes been -skatshying since he was 2 He credit his achievements to his Catholic Faith the sacrifices of his parshyents and of Arthur Bourke senshyiormiddot professional of the Great Falls Figure Skating Club He said All I did was skatemiddotGROUND-BREAKING The Very Rev John T Corr

I hope some day to become~esc president of Stonehill College turns a shovelful of priest Petkevich said wbeilearth to mark start of construction 0pound a 200-student dormshy a~ked his ambition I hope 14gt itory for women on the Stonehill campus Watching the proshy attend Notre Dame for at leasa celtlures are left to right Mrs Virginia Yosgandes dean af two years and then I h9pe to gf)

to the Catholic University fl4women John C Doody 66 Alumni fund chairman Robert AmericaBatson contractor Harold Bonvie ass~iate of the archishytect

Msgr Canty Continued from Page OneRussian Schools ing studies at S1 Marys High

Taunton Boston- College and S1 Bernards Seminary RochesshyChristian Brother Lauds Students terN Y

nespect for Intellectuols He served as assistant at Our Lady 01 the Isle NantucketCHICAGO (NC)-Students in to foreign languages than Amershy Holy Family Taunton St

schools behind the Iron Curtain icans Most students take a Marys Barrowsville and Stgo at their studies with a passhy seven-year sequence of English Johns Attleboro He was apshysion said Brother Kevin Mark German or French English he pointed to the Chaplains CorPJFSC who toured Russia and added is the most popular lanshy of the United States Navy infour satellite countries with 19 guage and more emphasis is January 1942 and retiredwitbother U S rducatois placeltl on reading and speaking the rank of captain in Decemshy

Brothel Mark who is princishy than on writing it ber 196gt Pope John XXIII pal 9f St Mels high school here Brother Mark said that there elevated him to the rank of attributed much of their motivashy is almost nothing that he would Domestil Prelate with the title tion to the students attitude that lift from the Soviet school sysshy of Right Reverend Monsignor iI What I do does contribute to tem and apply in the U S May 1962 the welfare of the state He admitted however that Bishop Connolly named Monshy

Brother said he felt that stushy they do get results They have a signor Canty pastor of St Paulsdents in this country lack motishy tremendous capacity for conshy Taunt-ln in December 1963 vation because were spoiled centration when they set their Industrial improvements have sights for example their space made it that a young man can program Its not all a matter go into a trade and make very of being chained to a lab table good money BLUE RIBBON

In the Soviet Union he said there seems to be a great reshyspect for intellectuals and the LAlnNDRY student is thought of as a proshy

01 STOPfessional schJlar 273 CE~RAl AVE~UIIG CfflTERTeaching is considered a proshy

fession and remunelated accordshy e Television C FmiddotI ure illgly WY 2-6216o r-cerv

St Mels principal observed on IlA Allen St Newhdfordhis tour that there was little NEW BEDFORD questioning on the part of the students

The chSSloom situation he said is very much teacher ori shyented that is study in depth is 21 DAY PILGRIMAGES TO EUROPE done on the teachers inspiration

rou~ 1-Legion of Mary Pilgrimage leaving Sept 12th with Truth in such areas as history Father Edward A Oi-viera will visit Killarney Dublin Paris

cllld literature is accepted as a Lourdes Rome Madrid Lisbon and Fatima - Tour 2shyforegone conclusion and stushyHoly Cross Fathers Pilgrimage leaving Oct 10th with Frdents just memorize what has

already been discovered ----- lobert E McDonnell will wsit lisbon Fatima 1odrid Rome Lourdes Paris and londonIike F)rc~gn Linutges -cota cost is $82900 - Time PaymentsmiddotIn the area of science howshy arranged ever the situation is difterent

()Ii TOUR tOLDERS CONTACT STEolfEN A MARIIEYhe pont~d out because in scishyence there is an attitude of I n~ust discover Catholic Travel

-Office

The R1~middotmiddotmiddotO p oth-r Mark ~ltk St New Befl- -ass 02748

said ~ ve 11111j Ill)le auention

BURNERS

BUrntlr Service

Famous Reading HARDCQAl

NEW ENGLAND COKE

t8 THE ~NCHOR-Dioceseof fo Rivef-Thurs Aug 25 1966 J~sut I)riest Says Some Public I b M t EmploYE~~S Have Right to Strike

-

Urges uO or ovemen S NEW (NC) -Public however YORK Government hasmiddot h C employees in certain fields have been expanding its cQncern andIn Heml$p ere ooperate the right to strike against the has beenmoving into ar~as of government a priest declared transportation education recre-

By MsgrGooJrge C Higgins (Director Socian Actiolll Dept NCWC)

The relationship between the American labor moveshyment and the Latin American Confed~ration of Christian Trade Unions (CLASC) leaves much to be desired as we

middot thO d th 1- have aready noted severa1 t Imes m IS co umn urmg e

past four or five years The two movements are deeply different things to different peoshy

auspicious of one another and just when they seem to be on the verge of settling or at least -patching up their differshyences they go at it again and recklesslystart hurling insults at one another

To jUdge from What they sayIi b 0 u t on e another publicshy1yen as well as privately on e would t h ink that they were natural-born enshyemies whe~eas in fact they have much in common-much inore than they seem to realizeshyand for obvious reasons ought violent MisS Duncan was an officer of The fourth public member Harshyto be c60p~rating With onean- Moreo~er at least one promi~theSodality a cheerleader for vardlaw school professorVern ether as closely as pOSSible nent spokesman for the AFL- four years a member of the Ten- Countryman half ci-itiCized the This writer has learn~ci the hard WR and muc~ to hiS so~-row that any outSider who 18

fOolish enough totryto mediatek f

~tween them JS as mg or troouble

C f t Gommun same If for example one suggests

as I have done on more than one Occasion that soine of the anti U S propaganda emanating from CLASCsources revealS atremely harmful to the cause of n a i v e misunderstanding of Amerlcan trade unionism and American capitalism andor ari $ver-simplification of Catholic Social teaching he runs the risk 9f being written off as a blind -not tOsay reactionary apologist for so-called Yanqui ~mperial-

iBm If on the other hand oneslig

gests that some of the anti- CLASC propaganda enianating

fro m AFL-CI0 sources is equally naive and unsoPllisti shyeatedhe runs the same Sort of risk in reverse That is to say he is likely to be told--v~ry politely of course -that if he were to take off his Catholic blinkers and look at the record objectively he would quickly come to realize that CLASC is in reality playing t~ecipal rival in Latin America) riages in their mission parishes communist game in Latin Amer- there is a gEirierous mixture of Msgr Milia stated Since the iea superficial appearances to cultural chauvinism and envy Ogdensburg mission was opened the contrary notwithstanding that accompanies the most legit- a modern new church bas been

Both CaD Learn imate misgivings built under its direction in the Be that as it may I still think Even the Latinos middotthemselve~ seaport ofMatararii two mission

~t CLASC has a lot to learn he points out will admit on ac- churches have oeen completed about _ and from American casion that their consumirig fear and a lalge parish church and trade unionism And if that of Yanqui imperialism is often center are currently under conshymakes me a reactionary Yankee irrational But there it is he re- struction in Mollendo ehauvinist so be it minds us and the basic prob-

By the same token however aiso think that the American

labor movement has much to learn about -- and from - the Christian trade union movement in Latin America The first thing it has to learn is that the Am~r-leap philosophy of pure-andshysimple bread-~d-butter union ism which all things considshyered has worked satisfactorily in this country is not necessarily well adapted to the present-day Deeds of Latin America

Meaning of Revolution Another way of saying the

same thing is that American iabor representativesworking on Latin America problemswm have to reconcile themselves to the fact that a social revolu-Uon is called for in Latin American labor federation that doesnt subscribe to a revolushytionary ideology is probably doomed to failure

The word revolution meaos J-

pIe of course To the leaders of CLASC it means a sweeping program of socioeconomic and political reform which goes far beyond the limited goals of bread-and-butter unionism

The leaders of CLASC are convinced that such a revolushytioo is demanded bythe Chrisshytian social ethic to which they subscribe and from which they derive their ideology

Perceptive Critique Some U S Labor repshy

resentatives are skeptical to say the least~bout the allegedly Christian content of CLASCs militant ideology They admit theneed for a peaceful revolushytion in Latin Americn butthey are convinced thatCLASC wants this revolution to be Feehan High School Attleboro alties in a letter tc therimes

lem is how to insure con~ PAVlA V I tlnuing cooperation between 0 untee rs Yanqui and Latino in spite of Complete TlIainirigit

Such cooperation Dr Hawkins WASHINGTON (NC)-Fortyshyconcludes will be impossible unshyless the leaders of the American labor movement positively indi~

cete their acceptance of social revolution in Latin America This will require he says

more than the generous transshyfusions of economic aid the stimulation under United States

labors auspices of leadership training programs for workers

and other cooperative ventures Need Broader View

What is required he insists ltCia a broader view-an ability on the part of the American la bor statemen to adopt policies that will not always accord with OUI own value~ and more speshy

cificall~ the tempering of (their) hosannas to free entershyprUie ___

inter-American labor unity I fully agree in this respect with Dr Carroll Hawkins Associate

Professor of Political Science at Michigan State University who recently published a most pershyceptive critique of American trade union policy in Latin- Catholics in Mollendo Peru the

America (The 0RIT and Amer diocesan missions director reshyican Trade Unions Conflicting ported Perspectives Industrial Rela- The New York priests were tionsand Social Changes in sent to Peru after Pope Paul Latin America University of vi -asked that more priests be Florida Press) pr9vjd~d fOr the people opoundSouth

Basic Problem America Msgr Anthony A Mi-Dr Hawkins admits of course lia said He estimated more than

that in all the Latin American 90 percent of the priests in criticism of United States unioniperu are from other countries in the ORIT (the Latin Ameli can regional unit of the Interna In 1965 the priests from Ogshytional Confederation of Free denburg administered 445 bap-Trade Unions and CLASCs prin tisms and perfoImed 64 mar-

CIOhas publicly charged in ej_ nis Club for two years and a suggested penaltiel fect that CLASCs ideology three yeaT member of the FU- owes more to Marxism than it ture Nurses club Father Carey sl~id the ~ays does to Christianity He finds it when pay and working condi-

An instructor in the Confra- tions for men and women inhard he says to accept the fact ternity of Christian Doctrine that the Christian labor move- civil service were determine4 byproglam in Our Lady of Mt I g I t d d t t

t middot A e IS a Ive It n a minIS ra Ive ment 0f L a In merIca IS non- Carmel Parish Seekonk the fiat have pas ed a d Communist s n we now

In my judgment this kind of criticism of CLASC by spokesshymen fltr the AFL-CIO is ex

three volunteers have completed the Second National Training Session sponsored by the Papal Volunteers for Latin America and received assignments in some ten Latin American coun- tries

Special ceremonies ended the six-week training session at the Catholic University of America where volunteers studied the apostolic work of the Church the laymans role in the aposshytolate and principles of spiritual life as well as the religion ecoshynomics and culture of Latin America

Before leavillg for their asshysignments the volunteers will take intensive four-month lanshy

guage anl culture courses in a Latin American language centerbull

eighth winner of this scholarship plumeoursElves that we share will enter the Childrens Hosshypital School of Nursing Boston in Septembel-

Ogdensburg Priests

SellYe Peru Mission OGDENSBURG (NC) -- Four

Ogdensburg priests currently are ministering to the n~eds of_13OOO

~ere

Father Philip Carey sJ exshyecutive director of the Xavier Institute of Industrial Relations acknowledged t hat certain strikes aJre intolerable But he said that when the governmentacts in a proprietary function it must follow the same rules it prescribes for private enterprise

In a letter to the New York Times Father Carey criticized ~y implication a proposed state -llw that wetulltilincrease the penalties to be imposed on strikshying union of public employees

MlISS LHNDA DUNCAN Th~proposedlaw grew out of recommendations of a five-man

Feehan Alumna task force named by Gov Nel son Rockefeller to study the

Receives Award problem after a 19-day transit strike crippled Newmiddot York City

Miss Linda Duncan daughter in January of Mrs George Duncan and the - NeCeSSBlry for Bargaining late George Duncan 61 Sykes Father Carey one of four Rd Seekonk has been awarded pubiic members of the mayors the eighth annual scholarship of committee that helped settle the the Attleboro Area Nurses strike disagreed with two other Chapter publlc memlgters Vh_o had previshyA 1966 graduate of Bishop ously supported the stiffer pen-

and internal concord a str~ke against itconstitutes mutiny and rebellion (UCLA) Sister Muriel a native

Pgbllsh Gudelnes For Ecumenisn

ALLENTOWN (NC) - The commission of ecumenism of the Allentown diocese here in Pennshysylvania has published a 22-page booklet of ecumenical guidelines to aid priests in guiding the laity The guidelines include general

permission for non-Catholics to serve as witnesses at Catholic weddings for Catholics to serve as witnesses at non-Catholic weddings and for burial of non-Catholics in Catholic ceremonies with a priest or a non-Catholic clergyman cltmducting graveside eeremonies

SHELL DADSON OIL

24-Hollr Oil

GLE COAL amp OIL CO IncI

640 Pleasant Street Tel WY 6-8271 New Bedford

this decision-making with the working p E~ 0 P Ie themselves through the process of collective bargaining

If collective bargaining is to be the rule he said we must agree to grant the right to strike~ Without this right he said there is no union and no coll~ctive balmiddotgaining

Expands Concern-in considering strikes by pu~ lie employees he dedared one muSt distinguishb~tween the state as a sovereign and the g()vernment acting in a proprishyetary function When the state aets as the defender of the peace or the promoter of justice

of Corning Iajoined the Sisters of the Humility of Mary in 1930 In recent years she has been ehairman of professionafarts deshypartment and college registrar

ation and a host of other services formerly performed by privategroups he continued

These activities are ancillary and economic and here the state in acting in a proprishyetry function When it so acts it ought to be subject tl) the same rules of conduct the government prescribes for private entershy

prise Strikes by firefighters and powerhouse uti lit y workers would be wrong however he said because it is difficult to imagine anY benefit they might gain to counterbalance the fear- fut harm such a l strike would impose on the community Buys Banners For Memorial

CHICAGO (NC)-A Chicago advertising executive has bought 44 brightly-colored religious ~anners tat -hung in the Nashy

tlOnal Srme of the Im~aculate ConceptIon during Luci Johnshysons wed(iin~ -

Earle Ludgin a trustee of the University of Chicago said he will donate the banners to the

university~ Rockefeller Memoshyrial Chapel in memory of his late wife

The banners for which Ludgin reportedly paid more than $40000 were originally created for the Vatlcan PavIIIon at the New York World Fair

A group of Washington D C residents bought ttie banners when the fair closed and arshyranged to have them exhibited in the Shrine until they could be sold Lugdin bought themin April but agreed at the request of Shrine officials to leave them in the Shrine until after Lucia wedding

lame College Head

OTTUMWA (NC) Sis t er

Muriel Hogan has been named the third presi4ent of Ottumwa Heights College here in Iowa She succeeds Sister Marie Anshy

ciue Kennedy woo win engagem graduate study in oominunishy

eations at the University of California Los Angeles branch

Offering You 3 Savings Plans

Home Financing

WAREHAM CO-OPERATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mabull

Telephone 295-2400 Banll SerVice YlIIIIIII

I

Ask Court Bar Use of Church Propertyfor Public SchoQ~middot WHITE ~S (MC) - A the cl883rooms ~ut Church

group of some 25 citizens repre- npokesman reporte~ that in line sented by the American Jewish with New York archdiocesan Congress has asked the New York State Supreme Court here to restrain the board of Ramapo School District 2 Rockland County from holding public school classes in property leased from religious bodies

The school board faced with severe-overcrowding planned to lease eight rooms from St Josephs Catholic Church and five from lem~e Beth El in Spring Valley The action was approved by 8tateEducation Commissioner Jame$ EAllen Jr

A ComllllJJlt served 0ill the rlChool board by the AJC charged the acti~n o~ld ~otateChurchshyState separation guaranteed by the First Amendment to the Constitution as well as other provisions of the state constitushytion

It is believed to be the first wch challenge made regarding

the use of religiO18 facilities for public school use

lhe st Josephproperty conshysists of an eightclasSroom school building adjacent to but sepashyrated from the chureh It is Ill good condition but will not be used by the p8rish thismiddot year because it has bUilt a new bUildshying for expanding its acbool to 141 classes

All religioUs ~bols had Ileen removed from the oder building in preparation for its use as a public school

The district school board had offered a fair market rent for

PAV~A deg Missionary Record Continued from Page Thirteen

A nurse from Chicago baa taken Lucillellpla~on the aposshytolic team and ber purpose in returning is to help her successhy80r work into the project smoothly It takes so long to get into 11 she Aid so II dont WJmt Il~r to spendtbree

years j~ g~tting organized~

Benedictine Marks 80th Anniversary

ST JOSEPHmiddot (NC)-The oldshyest Benedictine nun in Minneshysota-and one of the oldest m the world~marked the 80th anshyniversary of her entrance into the order ma Mass for all Beneshydictine jubil~tians held at St Benedicts convent here

Sister Sophia Zimmer was 1~ years old Dec 2 1965 She Wall

born in a log cabin about 1 block away from the convent An open house for her relatives and friends was held at the conv~nt

Receives Students cAsTELGANDOLFO (NC)shyPoPe Paul vI received in audishyence at his Summer home here students frOm 34 nations includshying many non-Catholics who are taking Summer courses in the ItaUaa language aDd culture sponsored by the Rome branch of the Catholic University fII IWaD

policy the properly would be made available for public school use at a token dollar-a-year rental

cmOS Cmpetes C~~ege ~rr(l))g~m

WASHINGTON (NC)-A class of 97 under-privileged high school students was graduated on completion of an eight-week Summer college orientation proshy

gram at Georgetown University The exercises i attended by faculty and parents Qf the stushydents involved students who had completed their Sophomore year in District of Colwnbia high schools They were chosen for the special course because teachers and counselors believed they have the ~billty to do colshylege work alihoug~ their presshyent high school records indicate little likelihood of college acshyceptance Ninoty-fiveOf the 97 students were Negroes md the ratio of males to females was aboutmiddot tbree-to-two ~

The pro~~~~Ch began in 1965 is financed by the NaUonal science Fowidationmiddot the District of Columbia public school sysshy

tem and Georgetown In addition to academic work

the students were given cltgtUrsetl in reading improvement and counseling gUidance Athletie and cultural events underwrit shyten by the program were also bKluded in their schedules

nearly 42 years Bishop Gerow churches degespeciallY Negro said Of late I have feltmiddotthat X houses of worshIp which middotWere have not the stamina to caJTY I bombedmiddot and burned

on as I have done in the past Whena p~ttern of destn1c~ion This load should be borne by 1 develops as It has m our state youngerman then it sincumbent upon all ntereston Yoiit

Cathollc lnereaSe m~n ~ ~ood ~i~ througho~t MiSSISSIPPI to Jom hands m Savings

The ~venth bishop of~edio- helpingthe affectedmiddot churches 0 Invested In cesemiddotwhlch was founded ID 1~37 and in showing clearly our con- and encompasses 111 of Missls- demnation at all acts of violencemiddot CATHOLIC CHURCH sippi Bishop Gerow h8ll s~ lawlessness and destruction the Catholic population IJOw from 31264 to 75000 in his 41 years of office The number of priests in the diocese grew from 63 to 220 and churches md misshysions from 108 to 243

The last few years of llacial violence perhaps were the most troub1d for Bishop Gerows long ad inistration middotHemiddot met the challenge with courage

In the face of many-sided opshyposition Bishop Gerow in 1964 directed the first grades of Cathshyolicmiddot schools in the state to be racially integrated The next

Missionaries Move Seminar to Ohio

DAYTON (NC) -The White Fathers a missionary society which bas served in Africa for nearly a century is llloving its U S seminary to Dayton

St Josephs Seminary which had been in operation at Onshydliota N Y near Saranac Lake will re-open under the same

name in four residences near the campus of the University of

Dayton The buildings have been rented from the university

Eventually the White Fathers plan to build their own seminary

middotfacilities somewhere in ~e area according to Fatber Paul lo1e1le WF~

THE ANCHOR- middot19 Thurs Aug 25 1966

KC Melll1il~er~~ip

At AJ~Tome e~~gh MIAMI BEACH (NC)-In his

report at the 84th annual meetshying of the Supreme Council of the Knights of Columbus Sushypreme Knight John W McDevitt made these points

Membership on June 30 1966 stood at an all-time high of 1183896 The orders insurance covershyage passed the $15 billion mark during the year

The orders assets reached III

neW plateau of $28122840028 at the end of the fiscal year

The society i~ continuing its support of the campaign to st~m p(gtrnography

Revise Ceremonial Progress is being made onthe

re_Vision of the orders cerempnshyial to give it a total family middotclishymate and make it consistent with moder day philosophy of social justice and religious pracshytice

The K of C have undertaken distribution of copies of the 1~ew Testament to Catholic gradllates

COURAGE PERSONIFIED John St Marie of B~YQ of the Naval Offilaquoer CandfClatE port Minn CQnfined to a wheelchair since a 1953 pOlio ~chool in Newport R I an(J ill

~dying the question of proshyattack has received a scholarship to the University of viding a similar servilte ~orMinnesota law school atter successfully maintaining an Ashy Catholic graduatell of the Qffi shyminus average in undergraduate work at the College of cers Candidate School of ihe St Thomas St Paul Minn irQ Photo Canadian Navy

It saluted Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York on biI

Welcomes Successor Naming of Apostolic Administrato

Pleases Bishop Gerow 81 JACKSON (NC)-Mississippll1 year he followed with a direeshy

courageous 81-year-old Bihop tive that Catholic schools be deshyOliver Gerow welcomed his suc- segregated completely ceSSor Bishop Joseph B Bruni- Helps Restore Churches ni 55 as spiritual head of the Despite reported threats ofmiddot Natchez-Jacklon diocese as one violence fro m segregationist who is active vigorous and has ranks the aged prelate was good sound judgment among leaders of an interfaith

X am very happy in being groupmiddot which formed the Comshyrelieved of the heavy responSl- mittee of middotConcernmiddot soHcited middotbillty that I have borne for money labor and materIals for

middotthe bishop stated in a letterred AND in every Catholic church in the INSTITUTIONAL BONDSstate

His appeal for $300000 to re-middot I Umiddot f $500 M store more than 30 d~stroyed n nits 0 or ore and damaged churches brought Keenan amp CImiddotarey bie contributions to the Committee 9f Concern from various sections Minneapolis Minnesota of the country

0

M~ntle Plumbing amp ~ating Co Inc~

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET Fall River OS 57497

for detailed information write to

CHARLES A~ MURPHY Registered Representative

145 Pond $treet Winchester Mass

PA 9-2696 And

Name bullbullbull ~ Address A

City _

50 years in the priesthood payshying tribute to him not only beshycause of his dignity as a pi-iest and cardinal but also because he 1S a great and wholesome mail

Relic Stolen NEW YORK (NC)-A reputed

relic of the cross on which Chtist died has been stolen from the Church of the Most Holy Reshydeemer here It was removed from a side altar tabernacle

where it had been placed shortshyly after the churchs establishshy

ment by the Redemptoriad Fathers some 125 years ago

~

GULF HILL DAIRY so DARTMOUTH MASS

RO THE ANCHO~-Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

1

RELIGIOUS SUPERIORS INSTITUTE ON STONEHILTJ CAMPUS SMS Guadalcanal Solomon Islands Standing Sr Florita DP King Sr Mary LUk~ St about to enter the hall for her lecture Center Some ston Mass Sr Mary of Bathany SP Holyoke Sr Mary de Sales F$SJ r the sisters who attended Sister Lukes talk were Sr Josepha SC Conshy Holyoke Right Mrs Mary Virginia Yosgandes h-ouse mother wavesgood ent Station NJ Sr Mary Kenneth Amityville NY Sr Mary (fheresa bye tothe departing nuns I

Brooklyn Church Hopes Nuns Move Into Cent~r of Lij~e Criticizes Irish lribunal Lacks By Dorothy Eastman -Social Security

When in the third year of Vatican II the momentous decision was made toinvitewO- dmiddot LIMERICK (NC) - FatherJ men observers to audit a Council forthe first ~ime to represent all J~remiah Newman professor ofuris ICtlon the Sister chosen BROOKLYN (NC)-Msgr the nuns in America was Sister Mary Luke Tobin Mother General of the Sisters of Lor- sociology at Irelands Maynooth

IlAarion J Reinhardt pre- etto When shewasasked recently while visiting the Fall River Diocese what impressed College criticizedprivate agenshyJ~L h t b t th C 1 cies and the national governshyIdlng Judge of the Trlblillal er mos a ou e oune) h t b t h h d k ment for their failure to increaseshe said with a wry smile We aVe 0 e rna ure enoug er own or er was wor mg(1)f the Diocese of Brooklyn h to live in insecurity toward these ends She told of all subsidies to families Iltas announced that the bill of The fact that we were t ere Will these changes be easy experiment soine of her Sisters After insisting that it would $Omplaint of 15 former teachers at all I The Sister is too much of a have been engllged in for the be best for private agencies and of St Johns Un~versity had to At a Stonehill College institute realist to give that impression past twu years in Pueblo Colo- local governments to administer be dismissed because of lack of Sister Luke spoke of her many Its going to be fraught with rado Although most of the 1100 social security Father Newman jurisdiction on the part of the other impressions of the Council difficulties she warns but Sisters of Lorettv are teachers said that since they seemed unshy

ecclesiastical court _ where she and seven other Sis- what isnt this small group of Sisters in willing or unable to do this the The Brooklyn ecclesiastical tels were auditresses for the last There are more than a few Pueblo 1s doing no t~aching-in job had to be done by the natshy

$Ourt which operates under two years of Vatican II Over Sisters who are troubled and schools anyway They simply jonal government ~llnon law said it is pmited in 450 Mothers Superior from 55 sometimes shocked these days live among the poor as good He said that according to jurisdiction to only spiritual different Orders were gathered by many of the changes hi their neighbors he 1pin jg wherever Catholic soCial teaching there ltuestions at the Easton campus for the communities The Mother Gen- they cllD leading discussion was no limit to the amount of Charge Contralaquot Breach five day Institute directed by eral would warn them that its groups counselling etc government aid that is permis-

The 5000 word document Rev William FHogan CSC pointless for them to say Thill Asked to comment on the re- sibie and desirable if governshypointed out that the decree of Sister Luke was one of a group is not the community I entered cent experiment in Milwaukee mEmt aid was the Qnly practical Giisrriissalis without prejudice to of noteliltspeakers who talked When it comes to that she says where30 School Sisters of St (sbl~tion to poverty problems lbhe merits of the case to the superiors on the subject we all might say This is not the Francis left their convents for

If the Metropolitan Tribunal of the I Sister in the modern Church Iwas baptized into or three weekstO work in secular If the archdiocese of New York world this is not the world I was b()rn jobs - oneSister wa3 assigned

T b 1 f the Sacred into Change is a fact of life S t~ the rI una 0 Adapting a line from Charles as a newspaper reporer- IS er Roman Rota reversesthe decree Dickens to describe this contro she points out~ and we can~t keep Luke predicted a great deal the casewiil be returned to the versial post Council age Sister things as they are or say Stop more~ of this kind of liniited Tribunal of the Diocese of the World-I want to get off f i t th I w ld ]Brooklyn for adjudications upon t~ees sa~~iSTi~iSt~eth~o~r Role of Superiors ~~~re ~o di~~a~~c~i~t n~~ Ms merits it was stated times She paintedavivid ver- The role the Superiors will she said

The petition of complaint bal picture of the world that lies play in the formation of what Since her own Order founded filed by Father Peter OReilly ahead for Sisters She said it has been called The New Nun in 1812 is quite new all religious

s~f Chicago on behalf of himself would certainly be a challenging Lwuakeouattlintheed fs~roeh~ ~~s~~~t~ orders go and is the liirst comshylind the other ousted teachers one and that conventlife inthe munity founded in America charged he university which is future is certain to undergo She urged them to create a cli- without European ties the Sisshyeonducted by theVincentian many radical changes mate where Sisters can liveters of Loretto weal habits more Fathers with breach of contract community life at its best She -modern than most But itsstill

The Superior~ were told that entreated them to keep thls cli-The dispute has been marked bY d bl d ff t the dress of 1812 not 1966 so it d k t f an m Ispensa e gUl e me ec - mate free from legallsm andlitudent unrest an pIC e mg 0 th hmiddotmiddot th will soon be changed As soon I mg ese c anges IS e map survelmiddotllance Ie schoo s campuses f th f t th t th C 1 as the all-mlll Congregation

or e u ure a e ounCl A community should be a of Religious in Rome approv~sMoral Issue Fatners drew up for the Church place where there- is safety for She called the CouncII Decrees the Sisters new design that is About 30 teachers were fired fl t d f t f dff

Rost December in a dispute over the documentS ofhighest au- cop IC an sa e y or J er- Tliey have submitted one de~ign rlty We should all have ~nes apd s~fety to cultiv~te that the fathers turnEd downadministration-faculty relation- tho d t h d Sh f I the mInd of Vatlcan II and then lverSI y s ~ sal e ee s lihey thought it was too modshyships and other issues They t I th t th h ld be

b b f we c~n move Into actlon she s rongy a ere ~u r -ern Sister Luke says UWhat anwere joined y anum er 0 I t I g I fe ther teachers In a strike that told her healers - 1Jloe ~o~a IY In re 1 J~)Us 1 incredible thing for US to ask shy --uAfterall were not Trap- that we choose our own clothes has continued since January Whi~h Way psts

l she adds with a laughThe court found that tpe How will the Sisters know in Warning that the time has S t Lk tl - b

uteceniontractual controversy was not whicli direction they should come for a re-evaluation of the _ IS ~rth y e~mt~ a spiritual mattelin a canoliical move in the manyarells so(in to true meaning of community she ne oIl e d~rs wo~~ ever ~ llense of the word spiritual change cExperiment Sister told the Superiors that commu- bo~a h a sre~t a f ~gUS aild that there was no allegation Luke advises so often its almost nity doesnt mean conformity or 0 y e oCle ~ o anon ef a violation of an ecclesiastical her motto We really cannot a hotel life either or even a Lawyrs Does thIS mian that law arid that the time was not move into change without ex-lot of happy t9getherness th~ SI~ters may at last have a opportune for a decision of perimentation she says and around the television set voIce 111 the formatIon of canon moral responsibility because the we will be engaged in tremen- A ~ital new aspect of commu- la-at least th~ laws that rUI~ secular courts would first have dous experiments from now on- nity is the idea of what Sister thel~ O~derS SIster Luke deshyto determine whether there was to adapt religious life to the Luke calls sub communities- vout y opes so a breach of contractual duty times in which we live the convents immediate neigh- Its certain that the future for

The church court found as a The revisions that lie ahead borhood the parish the civic the Sisters will be a very differshymatter of law that St Johns for religious orders will bring commumty lay people 111 the ent one than anyone could have 141 NO MAINUniversity as a corporation Sisters into the mainstream of same profession as the Sister- imagined a few short years ago J~ formed under the law of the modern life Sister Luke for for instance other nurses or The Holy Father has urged them iii FALL RIVER State of w York did not have one has no doubts that this is tElachers We have allowed too the~ to move from the margin e the ecclesiastical privilege of where they belong We ought great a gap to exist between our- of life to the center of life~ 873 COUNTY demanding that suits against it to be willing to take the risks) selves and the laity she says Will the move be successful SOMERSETbe heard in an ecclesiasticalmiddot that gO along with this plunge In an interviewmiddot following her Sister Luke says We can only CDOurt into the mainstream she says talk Sister ~uke was asked how know by taking a ChanCE

Feai makes the wolf bigger than be is

Rer Bankings Already D~ne

~jI--~1 W

tt-~~gt_ri~

~j F~ p ~tl Iim F-ilNgt

~l i

ll 11 ~~

W = ~

~gtltl ~

-~ ~~ StIesaves I lot of alunle Mtime forso maily other thinlS ~i She banks by mail at Te ~ OLD R D8 KI h 7reg E AN W at about you

liii FREE mall forms ~1 The mOld Red Bank W

$ Fall River Savings Bankjilll q

Page 6: 08.25.66

6 mE ANCHOR-Di9cese of Fan River-Th~rs Aug 25 l~66

The oC1tQice i

A fascirlating chooice i~ shaphlg up as a cOrOn~ry to th~ present crowded condition in the pa~hial school system

0

Those in authority in the Church are faced with the possibility that lower grades of the Oatholic schoQI system must be sacrificed to provid~ the space and teachers for those in the upper grades The Gatholic high school and college must expand at the expense of the elementary school

- And the oungsters f~m th~se lower grades tnust tum to the public~chOoISyate_mof ~ducation

Hereis where the choice coin~s in

If these young-sters p~esent tllemselves at the do()rs of the over-crowded public schools the community must find

space and teachers for them That hits the whol~ comshymunity in the pocketbook

The onlyaIternative seems to be increased aid from publk tax funds for the parochial school system to assist itmiddot to educ~te every child who wants an ~ducation in a Catholic iChOol

CriticS of the pa-roehial school system must choos~beshytween expaIlding the public school system at a prohibitive eost or swallowing their harsh words and grant tomiddot parents the right to educate their children in a system not less capable and democratic than the public school system and in assisting the chil~ to receive an education in the system of his parents choosing

Modern Lorelei

A survey of _two thousand pupils in the Chicago area produced some revealing staticS about their televisionshyviewing habits

Elementary school students spend an average of twenty-one hours a week with television

High -school students average fourteen hours aweek

Parents of those middotquestioned admitted to watChing television about twenty hours a week and their teachers

saw it twelve hours

Television is here to stay No on~ would decrie its great entertainment and educational value Already it is being used as a supplement to classroom teachings

- But like any other thing it inust be used and middotnot abused the used and not the user

It is quite possible for people to become hypnotized by thecathode eye and spend hour afterhour in an electronicshycontrolled -trance

Since such viewing is essEmtiatally passive it bodes no good for the creative mind And the student can easily come to grief by middotspending too much time caught in the trap qf this twentieth century Lorelei

A students life is one of application to lessons and work He has no more excuse from those responsibilities than his father has to refuse to work his mother to ignore the making o~ meals and duties of housekeeping

Study costs an effo~t It is not always pleasant ltis a sacrifice Arid in this age of high living standards when children are brought up with very little sacrifice in their lives surrounded by everything that money can buy they must learn control and discipline to assure s~holastic sucshycess

Control of television watching is just such a discipline of spirit

And with schools soon to open it is a discipline that should be decided upon by parents for their children and insisted upon as the school year goes along

regrheANCHOR

Sword of the Spirit C -c -n

By Edward P McDonagb

CCD and CFM The fourth Biennial eon

- vention of the New EnglaBCl Area Christian Family Moveshy

middotrilent concluded its three day session on August 14th The ~

WlS the lovely campus ~f tbe Newton College of the Sacred Heartand CFM couples from all over the New England Sta~ gathered there to increase th~ understanding of the movemeilli

middotand to chartmiddot new areas of A~ tolic Action

The theme of the Christi_ FamUy Movement is For Hap pier Families and cgtuples bull the organization seek that goal by applying the Observe JUd~

and Act technique in their own ho~es the neighborhood the

parish and the ~orld at large The purpose of all this is to fo~

~

Gap StUImiddot Exists Study Suggests More Than Busing Needled

In EdllllcGtioll1lEquality-lntegration WASHINGTON (NC)~A reshy

port prepared by the US Ofshyfice of Education says that the present s~t-up of the nations public school system serves to

- perpetuate the social and ecoshynomic gap between most Negroes and whites

Although it challenges the eoncept of n e i g h b 0 rb 9 0 d

schools the report warns tha integration andmiddot edu~ational equality cannot be attained by busing alone

The 737-page report on Equal- ity oj Educational Opportunity has been published by the Ofshyfice of Education Earlier the office isued a summary of the two-year study called for by Congress under terms of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

Senator Abraham Ribkoff of Connecticut has accused the 00shymiddotministration of playing down the report because it contains explosive political implkations

I think the time has come for us not to be satisfied with cliches Ribic9ff told John W

GaTdner SecretarYcent Healtl) Education and Welfare M 11 Senate sub-committee hearing on urban problems A lot of the concepts are loaded with political dynamite

James S Colemlm author of the report agreed that the adshyministration - issul~iI summary was fllt and over--cautious He said that might have stemmed from uneasiness about findings that may have political lreper cussions

Planes Help Enable Proests to Cover Large TerritClraquorfl

In PerfolTmOlftceof Apostolic Work LOCKPORT (NC)3-A priest years ending with the rank of

who has twice flown at the speed of sound believes a plane can be a useful tool iii apostolic labor especially inmiddot far-flung fields

Father Richard E Spellman pastor of Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary parish in Albuquershyque began to fly when he saw ranchers in New Mexico using planes to get- around their ranches

If the ranchers can do it why cant a priest he asked I found out that in my little plane I was able to get around quickly to mission schools in New Mexico to teach catechism to children

He has used his plane too to d~liver medicine to Catholic missions in Mexico

Father Spellman who served

major was here in Illinois for the third annllal conventioJl of the National Association of

Priest Pilots He learned to fly here hi~

he was seminarian He said I was a good enough pilot that the Archbishop of Santa Fe tnJsted me to take him around the Archshydiocese in my plane

Some 150 priests belong to the association said Father Rich~rd

Skriba the conventions genshyeral chairman and asistant pas~ tor of St Simon parish in Chishycago Altogether there are over 400 priests and Brothers in the always understoodUS who are pliots he added Similarly CCD Discussion

Groups have in some casesSays Priests R~Ue been difficult to start and main-I S 11 tain where CFM is active InJust pirituOID rare instances competition

BOGOTA (NC)-Father C~ - rather than cooperation has

Catholic Lay Leaders and from all the evidence it succeeds veq well middot Significantly one of the wenshyattended workshops at the rec~Di convention covered the compleshymentary nature of CFM and CCD Chaired by Rev William 1 Downs of Newton the wideshyranging discussion period higbshylighted several areas where CCD and CFM have worked well toshygeth~er and some where the have not

Wordng Together Couplesfrom several localities

- indicated that CCDs Paren1oshyEducator units are natural ou1oshylets for those seeking to proshymote happier famiiies Manr CFM couples are working iQ

-Parish Parent-Educator groups and~ in doing so are finding solid recruits for CFM among the young married couples that they visit T~is is a perfect eJl shyample of how the two organiza tions can help each other lv working together

Other examples cited by parti shycipants were the use of CFlII couples as guest lecturers and discussion leaders in CCD classes covering questions marriage- and sex Fall River CFMers noted the participation of CFM couples as discussion moderators in the CCD leadeJio ship day programs Manyothel8 recounted incidents of CCD Elishyecutive Boards being formed o of CFM groups middot Father Downs who is both bull CFM Chaplain and a CCD Parish Director noted that priests will contittue to look to CFM for leaderS middotto staff CCDunits and otlier parishorganizations Not to provide for CFM in a parish would mean that a prime source of committed laymen a Jl d women would be cut off

There are a few problems too Several areas have eXJerienced difficulty in obtaining permisshysion to start CFM because CCD Discussion Groups already exshyisted Apparently the distinction between the two groups is not

as an Air Force chaplain for 10 cilo de Lora one of the direc- been the guiding spirit with unshyOFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RiVER tors of the Latin American bish- fortunate results for both

ops educational department af- The lesson learned from thed1O Highland Avenue Retain PriiDege firmelt here that the role Of the workshop )Nas this Where CeDFoil River Mass 02722 675-7151 MADRID (NC)-Spains bishshy priest is exclusively spiritual and CFM people get ~ know ops following their annual conshy In the past he said prieSts each other and take the time toPUBLISHER ference announced that they had an authority and prestige understand each others proshy

Most Rev James L -Connolly DO PhD will retain the privilege of eating beyond the religious but ilow grams the results can be imshymeat on Friday The dispensa- we have to recogniZ4~ that the pressive CFM has the happy

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER tion from the regular law dates times have changed andtl)at our knack of producing commi~ted Rt Rev DanielF Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll back several centuriell and came middotmiddotmiSsion is rust spiritual Father gtCalholics who are willing r~

MANAGi~G E[gtITOR ~ orginal1y as a reward for sershy de Lora spoke during aconJer- - act -and CCD continues to off vices to the Church and for ence at Bogotas arl~hdiocesan almost unlimited opportunitiee

H~gh J Golden Spanish wars against infidels curia here in Colombia for action

THe ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 7 Priests Respond Generously 1Ciitymiddot ExpressVariety of Opinions

Bishop Asks for Suggestions--shyj

YOUNGSTOWN (NC)-I-Wed- There was a call for a study of ltmngs and ftinerals in the eve- the~hoie questioriof the Caih- Brm R~~~ie$ fr~ QM~~15~~~o[jreg ming wholesaie revamp~~g of o~(~~ool system versus CCD VICTORIA (NC) - Give the Latin and Oriental rites larish organizations retire~ent JElimination of raffles collec- larm~alliopp~rtuni~yto speak On the ne~Ci~ive sidEiI 418 felt f priests at age 6s-these were tronSand all o~her fUli9-raising his mmd on the results of the that there was a great need of sorrie suggestions for updating gimlnicks was proposed for Second Vatican Council the better adult edUcation~ There advanced by the Youngstown Catholic schools One priest liturgy ecumenism and the was overwhelming concern for ltt1Iioceses 262 priests lamented the lack of dialogue Church and hell say plenty better Catholic education more The Ohio priests responded between parents pastor and Bishop Remi de Roo of Vic- religious instruction for Catholic generously to a request by school principal and suggested toria here in British Colombia children not in Catholic schools lBishop James W Malone apos- the establishment of q parish discovered tbis when 600 parish- more Catholic youth activities tolie administrator of the diocese s~nate whose members would ioners filled out a comprehen- and efforts to build a strongerlior suggestions The bishop now sit in on school faculty meetings sive questionnaire and returned family life Inadequate teachers lltas called on the laity of the Also present was the limitation it to the chancery office Two- and poorly trained teachers also aliocese to make suggestions The of all classes to a maximum 6f thirds of them signed their came under fire llle~ IS-member pastoral com- 40 students names but this was not required Other tOPIcs which turned up

mission will study all suggestions Their comments went far beyond in the survey but which were) ~ and make recommendatioQs to the questions asked not put as questions included

BiShOP Maione ~ooamprm~ [L~~ A $~udYof the an~wers reveals creination pullfigpting marshy~ Th new liJurgy econli~ics

thatjwlJi1~ mo~etlJan two-thirds riageof c1Ergym~n children ~ryshy

ond parish orgllnizations were O~ Greg~reg[jcr of the people were pleased with ing in church nuris habits povshy lto~llQrig t1Je most popular are~s of new deveWpments in the erty arid the clergys ability as ) ltilCmment by th~ priests SAIGON (NC)-General Jos- Church the remaining admitted businessmen

To enhance singing at IYJass eph W Stillwell lost during a being mildly or very disturbed atere were suggestions for each plane flight from San Francisco Fifty pel cent agreed that the

iParish to mime a minister of to Honolulu is prayeclully reshy council 1 hadmiddot deepened their CoIQmbilaquoli CFM Has JlIllusectic to teach liturgical music membered by grateful lepers Faith and btou~ht them closer National Structure ~ parishioners and for establish- Sisters and their chaplain in St to the Church but 105 stated ment or strengthening of mixed Joseph~s28 miles ~rom Saigon vOSEPH MICHAUD that they had been left confused BOGOTA (NC) -The Chrisshymoirs to e1)courage others to They recall how on April 5 Fifty PeJ cent answered that tian Family Movement which Cak~ part 1964 when Viet Cong activities the liturgical reforms had helped has been functioning on a someshy

Another priest asked for had resulted in cutting off the Michaud Shrine them pray better Fifty per cent what independent basis in 17 ~ilwre patience in implement- leper hospital from all supplies said they felt the Church could dioceses in this country now has

lIDg the changes because thebt road Gen Stillwell and his Music Director be improvedmiddot Two-thirds felt the structure of a national lleW forms of participating are d~uty Col John L Klingen- that theChur~ should concern organization

lIlot appealing to all Ther~was Jiagen of St LOUis came to the WA~HiINGTON (NC)-Joseph itself wore with the internashy The first national meeting of ~plea also for a return to the rescue They brought food and Michaud has been appointedmiddot tionalsituation soCial and ecoshy the CFM was convoked in the holy and dignified liturgical other necessities in a series of music director of the National nomic problems last part of July by Bishop Pabshy

music imd elimination of folk helicopter fliglits carried out lgty Shrine of the Immaculate Oonshy Asked specifically where the lo Correa Leon of Cucuta presishy oongs and modem swing music the U S Support Command of ception here Msgr Thomas J Church should be more involved dent of the Episcopal Commisshy

Another priest urged that ~4ee- which Gen Stillwell was com- Grady director of the Shrine the answers voried from rehabili shy sion for the Lay Apostolate in dom of experimentation in the mander announced tation of drug addicts the labor order to organize CFM on a nashy

1Iiturgyshouldbe encouraged Ben San has about 280 leper Michaud will develop and su- movement and the emerging tional scale nations A board of directors of the Changes in Vestments~ patients in the care of the pervise the music program at the

national CFM was named andThere were requests to elim Daughtersof Charity of St Vin- Shrine assemble and train a Most Important The majorit~ considered the includes five married couples mate or -review Forty Hours de- cent de Paul chortis vf mixed voices evenshy

three from the Bogota archdioshyYotions and similar celebra- -Mrs faillwell durfug her st~y tuallyadd a choir of men and five most important questions tions for daily evening Masses in Vietnam was one of the boys and supervise the care of cese and one each from the archshy

the Church and fellow Chrisshydiscu~ed at the council to be

dioceses of Cali and Medellinma parishes where there are two American women who sponsored all organs and the carillon tians birth control active sharshy These five couples in cooperashy

CI more priests and for smaller the new center for undernour- A native of Sumas Wash ing in the iturgy the sharing of tion with Father Enrique Acosta

~onfirmation classes with ~he ished children also conducted by Michaud has served churches responsibility in the Church are In charge of extending the

IIIlX prIests who are deans bemg the Sisters of Charity in Saigon and schools in Seattle San Franshyand religious liberty Prefer- CFM throughout the entire

Gi~legated by the bIShop to ad- We are praying fo~ the be~ cisco Portland Ore Detroit countryences at the bottom of the listBlumster the sacrament reaved family Father Vict Pittsburgh and Mt Lebanon Pa Be or H h were worl~ populition atheismOther suggestions called for a C MH h d

~ 1 l hts th rset chaplam at Ben IS c Olrs ave appeare on international government and_~cussion on Vlgl Ig e San wrote network radio broadcasts gave l)rlests breviary changes 10 the premiere presentation of Mass vestments and merits of Alexander Peloquins Missa Na- SAVE MONEY ONEstablishes Specialgroup confessions in which lPiJiest Plans Homes tiVitatis with the Pittsburgh penitents attend a Bible service Symphony over the CBS net- Tourists Parish to to confession and receiveab- middotfor Working Grls work iIi 1962 and in December YOUR OILHEATCOLOGN]i (NC) - Colognessolution private~y and then per~ TECHNY (NC) ~ Father Ed- 1955~ sang in Menottis Ahmal Joseph Cardinal Frings has apshySform a community penance such wiu-di Wojniak SVD Chi- an~ the ~nght Visitors WYmanpointed a multilihgual Dutch ~eatt as recitation of a prayer to c~go-born Society of the Divine 3-6592priest to establish a special tourshy

tether Word mlssionary is oft the verge A~d R f W k ists parish on the Autobahn nearOne writer suggested that the of seeing his dream come true Imiddot 5 e ugee or CHARLES IF VARGASDusseldorf llrishop offer Sunday Mass at a bull ltiliff rent ish church each He has ben VISItIng throu~h- Of German Knights Although several churches are 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

~ par raut the Umted States seekmg located 01_ th~ famous German ~ee h h Id b t d d the aid of busineSs firms which BONN (NC) - The German highway none provides special NEW IalEfPlFqitD ~SS

Tl~ l~g S P e l~ ro u~ h have interests in Formosa to aid government has provided three tourist services The new parish la prIes v~o h a~~ ~s w lCll him in his pet project----to erect jeeps tnd three ambulances for besides the church will have a Opt t~ngfs ~u I r~p11 hostels for factory giriS present- the work being done by the Ger- hot~J restaurant theater and

~ngo reds es IVdi~ s e c 1 ly forced to live in squalid man Knights of Malta for refushy chiIdr~ns pla~~rounds ~IOt~eSan ahn Idnonb- tockesan fCO - c~owded unhealthful and prim- gees in South Vietnam ec IOns s ou e a en rom T dt d t cae proceeds of the tithing sys- 1 lVe con 1 IOns angerouso f team ~f about 25 Germa~s C2 only to their phYSical well bemg- wl1 work m refugee camps In

m but also to their moral well Hoi in the QuangNam province r~oD~D~i~=~i~~~~i HUe]) lllen~ Poor being in ilentral Vietnam

Others suggested rich par~shes The hostels will be non-de- The Germar government will n _ See Us should help poor parIshes nominational and will provide contrilmte about $250000 annushy ~ -Abou~ ij~rough a commo fund that quar~ers in pleasant surround- ally for the work of this counshy

o each ~arish establIsh a fma~ce iilgs at $3 per month In addition tt-ys Knights of Malta in Vietshy ~ ~t17 (~~~OuTI]OUceouureg [ commlttee and the ~lOcese hire toa home it will provide edu-nam ~(jrtamp euroleiJcp(]ip C1

a fulltJme profeSSional fund eational and recreational facili- llaiser for parishes that need his ties Father Wojniak said The ~1lIIilllliJllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllm ~ ~~~~[HJA~ ~ aervices first hostel will be built at Tai~ - shy

as pilot with DRY - E SAVINGS BANK I epei a project E CLIEANNG Says Gift of Tools Father Wojniak as director of ~ and ~

Wareham falmouth J f =rst Class MIracle Taiwan Hostels Inc which will ~ fUR STORAGE ~ -y 5-3800 IltI 8-3000 HEATING OIL

w be run on a noh-profit basis E D == 4-o_a_C1_a~~D__o-o-BOGOTA (NC) -Shop stu- E ERMODY ~

dents at Bogotas Colegio San f R ClEANERS ~ Viator reclved a windfall of lIanCISCans etaln == ryyYYyy~

~~~C1Jm~d~~~~ B~r~~(N~~m~ty iEE

nCohan ~~~ l bullC~~o~A~~~~~E~RT ~ 4lIlllira~le by one of the students two newly received Franciscan ~JIIIIII1I1I11I11I11I11I11I11I1I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I1I1I11I11I11Ii ~ nncluded a large variety and Sisters of Perpetual Adoration ~ Spaeious Fireproof Sleeping Quart~rs-BoysI to 14 yrs Old quantity of hand tools and two retained their baptismal names Six-week season June 26 to Aueust G ch of severallarge power tOQls with the title of Sister at their GRmiddotACIA BmiddotROS t Register for z or 4 or 6 weeks Free Tutoring it desired 4Father John Stafford CSV reception into the community ia ehicago provincial supervising St Joseph the Workman Cathe- bull i THE BROTHERS OF THE SACRED HEART

tile Viatorians Bogota mission draI here in ~7isconsin _ ~ eommented that the gift worth tVlot~er General Ann Marie of Excavating SACRED HEART SCHOOL

$6000 in the United States is ~ Rose convent said the name C worth five times that in Colom- policy change was the first ill ontractors r t SBAltON MASSACHUSETTS ~

twa He added that the tOok itleU6~year history of the com- ~ bull (I~SS 5T~FAIRHAViH A Reside~t School for BoYS Grammar Gra~es ~-li-6-1- ~ would probably give the school muOityAt the same ceremollTthebest~lIuipped shop ~ tiampe~ Sistels made ~rst-year pN-l WYman 2-4862 = CAMP 0amp SCHOOL TeL 1171845162 4 ~~tlY ~YOWi- ~ampamp~

bull I 1bull

bull ~ I I bull I bullbull I ~

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 Parish to Serve Wide Community

PATERSON (NC)-With the end of its vacation religiolli school St Josephs parish heICI

Lucis V~ew of Marriage Seen Delig~tfuny O~d-fashioned~ in New Jersey has turned ~

serve a wider communityBy Mary Tinley Daly Priests Sisters seminarianpound Never it is said have so many million words been and student volunteers haw

written about a marriage as the reportage of the Luci taken a $200 budget given by the Catholicmiddot Interracial Council andJohnson-Patrick Nugent nuptials-TH WEDDING in put on a program of field triP8Dpopular terminology Its over in all its impressive dignity arts and crafts athletics and

with an ele~ance wor~hy ~f honestly state that thei ambishy story-telling for 120 youngstem the marrIage of a PresIdent s tion is to grow up get married The children mostly Negro

had no opportunity to be part ofdaughter Yet like every and have babifs any other summer program sowedding great or small it Somewhere along the line edshy Father Nicholas Molinari steppedearried its message of identifica- ucatlOnally or other~se they in to help themtionto the millions viewing it are shunted career-WIse or preshy Our objec~ father said on the screen tend to bemiddot They of course to impress the children witlait n d to those want to marry but this is in~ love They dont understan~itreading about cidental they ~avent ~xperienced it We

it At our house AlulDDae middotNotes want to break down their selfshy~ ve n a s ~ t Loo~ ~t you~ Alumnae h~ite concept We want to make vou~s t~at no~- ~otes Bii( deal is ~ gal who them realize tha~ they are goodoshy

middot ~l~c Idenbfi has her masters working on catlOn was pres- the doctorate il physics mathe- t Ik Sisters of Christian en now ex matics Russian or whatever actly ho LUCI And the proud boast of a college feels squealed imany of our graduates are no~ Charity Elect America

PADERBORN (NC) - Sister bride as the TV fathers our most recent making more money than their

M Augustilde Giesen of Jersey showed the radiant Luci on her Into these same alumnae notes City has been elected the first fathers arm comes a confession humbly American superior General 0If

And I know how ~~rvous written from Betty B that she is the Sisters of Christian Charit Pat was at that moment cm- still just a housewife has a here in Germany mented the most recent bnde- family and recently was electesl Sister Augustilde former PJOogtNURSERY FRiENDS Sister Marie Patrice RSM Br~om president of the local PTA vincial of the province headshy

director of Holy Angels Nursery for Exceptional Children grooms of years ago author has expressed herself Belmont NC cuddles one of the 69children in her care was director of the provinces

To go further back an eon against the discontented femi junior sisters attending Marillae

Me too from bndes and Phyllis McGinley talented quartered at Mendham N J

most of whom because of their disabilities require roundshyor two even th ~ea~ of the nine mystique of searching for Sisters Formation College at thethe-clock attention NC Photo House and hIS bnde shared fullfillment outside of the home time of her election the g~ose pImples So have others The 2200-member congregashy

Behmd the pomp and ClrcUJI1- As an addendum we find 1lI tion founded in Germany ~

stance sket~h~s of gowns held 10 quote from Rep Emmanuel Celmiddot Disclaimsmiddot New Breed 1849 moved to the United States somewhat ndiculous top secrecy ler (D-NY) apropos prohibiting in 1873 during the anti-Catholic as though they were plans for discrimination against wom~ franciscan Nun Biology Professor Says Kulturkampf compaign of Gershym~on shots was the forthrIght serving on juries man chancellor Otto von BisshyattItude of thIS l~-year-old brIde There are women who work Primary Apostolate Is Prayer- marck

Sh~ wants th~s to be a goo~ because they have to others who marnage andw111 try to make It work because they want to and BUFFALO (NC)-Dr M Re- My whole life I trust is givshy New Secretary 10 there is the lazy kind whO gin~ L~gan associat~ profes~ ing witness to Christ she anshy CHICAGO (NC)-The Nationshy ~er father the PresIdent ~o cleans washes irons cooks sor of bIOlogy and chaIrman of swered I am a biology profes al Catholic Conference for Intershyma~t~r how you regard hUll chauffeurs mend1l binds lIP ~e biology concentration at sor whose prime role is twoshy racial jUstice haS announced the~lltlc~lly you must alknow~~ wounds nurses cloctors middotand Rosary Hill College here conshy fold first in edu(ation proper appointinfmt of Margaret Cshyedgeexpres~edfath~rly ~onfl~ shops and has conSequently So tends there is no such thing u and second in research middottomiddot fur Roach to its program staff Millli

middot dencewen he said of fat little to do aD day why Should bull new breed of nuns ther the education of my stushy Roach haB been social actioaN~gent LUCI look~ up to him she not 1e obligated NrM _ The sCientist HI as qualified dents~ _ secretarY for the National CO~with great r~spect eep ~~c OIl ju~es as anybody else to know She However she noted many ell ai Catholicmiddot Women iIinoetion a~d confIdence 10 hlll It has been a Franciscan nUll for people think th-at by taking offMs go~ng to b~ ~ good ~arrIage 28 years and she iilsists the the reUgio~ garl or by drop~Dunn~ the s~me mtervlew Urges ~ UnmiddotderstClnding OSF middotcomes before the PhDbull ping the religious title we Call1he President recalled that Luci

be more effective This is not so had been a deep1y reiigious girl Of Other Churches I dont think Sisters have all of her life even before her SPOKANE (NC)-We me ehanged she said People are As a nun my primary aposshyConversion to Catholicism More- not take the positioJl that the jUst beginning to llotice what tolate is prayer to give God the over he did not believe middotshe other Christian coinmunitiesaM weve beeJ doing all along love and adoration that the would ever become active in simply in error Bishop Ber- With 11 biological papers pubshy modem world often neg1Eicts to politics but would concentrate nard J Topel has advised priests llIshed and nine read with the give In the present day discusshyon home-inak~ng raisin~ a fam- of the Spokane diocese in a Get eredit of being first to isolate sion of the nun in the modern

middot lyen and followm~ her faIth of interim ecumenical JUide-- tile bacteria Desulfovibrio desul- world attention should be foshyFather not politician was lines furicans and with the institution cused on her existlmce nc)t the

apeak~g ~hen Bishop Topel urged priesbl i= of a trail-blazing method of preshy garb she wears she said middot LU~I s VIew of ~arriage IS re- avoid expressions judgmenu menting a college biology curricshyfreshmg and dellghtfully old- and actions which do not repre- ulum the Franciscan who drinks

196= -

JANSONS Pharmacy

Arthur Janson Reg Phcim DIABETIC AND SICK ROQM

SUPPLIES 204ASHL~ BOULEVARD

New Bedford WY 3middot8405

fashioned middotin the mid-twenti~th sent the condition of oui sepa- ber ~offee black is fully a pro century when so many gIrls rated brethren with truth ad fessional in science toohave their sights set on the split-personality syndrome mar- fairness and 110 make mutual She has be~n awarded $81000 BISA~ILLONSriage plus individual freedom relations with them more cWI- llra grants-m-rod for her reseach

ficult th g ma career and assuming at once He said full eucharistic ecm on e pernICIOUS m1cro~r ams a plar- in the forefront of out- ~~t has ~ knack for rummg oill GARAGEside activities munion is the ultimate lioal laquoIi dnlling ngs

Most little girls are disarming- the ecumenical movement WitnGS8 b Christ ly frank (see Art Linkletters 24our Wreck~r Service program or talk wit~ 7 8 and C I H bull 0 H d How does her commI~ent Ie Iyear-olds you know) The 0 bull olsgton eo s ~erstudents and co~CCmltantl

W A C to ber research (she 18 also II 653 WashinJton Street Fclirhaven omen s rmy orps iOOnsultant at Oak Ridge National HoldYou~g Christian WASHINGTON(NC) - A Laboratory the group leader of WYman 4middot5058 h b I e s s i ng followed traditional aCivil Defense fixed monitorin ~bullbullbullbull middotStudent Works OFgt 8wearingin ceremonipounds here for Station mici a ~part fliine seamshy N0TRE DAME (NC) - The Col Elizabet~ P Hoisington the_ bullreSs) Bel With h1el commit- ~IMtlIIIIIIHIIIItIIIIIIIIItImiJlHililjJlniRiiillntJiliIllNtiJtIlIHII~

Reoild annuai Young Christian new director 01 the Women mentu a Biofei6ec ~ = - _ Student apostolic workshop Wall Army Coorps Christ ~ li5

middotheld here thisweeKformiddot~Brade ~Themiddot middotblessing was giVeIlE D p SAlES middotANDmiddot middotSEmiddotRVICE ~ oionhoolmmiddotode~~torsfromparochial MsgrCKennethGStackaper-middot sect middotcmiddot bull - bullbull j bull iL

bullbull L~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull0bullbullbullbullbullbullbull middot _ IIand public school groUpsas weB s~Ia1frierid of the woman Armgt II Ill [He c E

as parishes ~ le~de~onher request afters~ bull J B II i ~ middotmiddotmiddotmiddotltThe Iconference coordinated had taken heroath of office ani 8 8 I FR sect - 1(JImiddotDmiddotmiddotAmiddotmiddotIREshy by the Catholic Action Office of beeli pi6moted from lieutenant 8 bull -1 l =

Notre DamemiddotUniversity was beld e9Jonelmiddotmiddotmiddot II LUMBER CO == I~

On t~e universitys campus middotCQlol)~I)loisington ~lPadu = 8 il RIEF ~IIG_ ~RATIOmiddot sect~ong ilP~a~er~ wer~raJherlilte_oftbe C0Uege oI~ou So Dartmouth bull IE ~ i

middot LOUISJPutz cS~_reltor of Da~eaalti~or~ Md JOlDeG II bull~ e h~p~~~~orauli1~~~h~ ~e~~n~~~~2~t~e~~~sLe~middot a~ Hyannis I 0 APPLIANCES I natioI)alltJirectoro(t~~ Gabrie(CIllsterthe Bronze Star ~So Dartmouth WY of$84 55 middot IR middotCO~IDmiddotITIOIG 5 Richard Institute and the Rev CroiX de Guerre with silver 1Rm bull i A ~ ~ n ~

middot Ja~es Neuman pastor of Hum- and the American and ~uropeaJll IMjaRwia 29211 == boldt Pa~ United BrethreJll Jheater ribbons of Wo~ld Wall bull ~ 363SECONDSomiddot FALL RIVER MASS~ ~

_ r middot9~~Imiddot~~ R~-pound~~~ -P-t rmiddotmiddot - gt gt bull IllbullbullIIIbullbull_1118 middotIiIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIHIUlllIIUIUIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIII1I1II1IIlIlUIIIIIIUllIIIIIIIIIIIUlIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIUU_ _

9 ~Swooned Priest Eggplant Dish U$ong Legendary P~r$ey P~~B1)t

By Joseph amI MarilYllll Roderick The cool weather where ~gain and with it the grass

has begun to break donnancy and send up little green shoots which means that the lawn mowers which have been restshying for a few weeks have got to be brought back to action

The drought that we had uperienced for the past three Summers has raised havoc with lawns and it doesnt seem much good can be done this season in areas still under water restrictions Howshyever in those that are not theremiddotre a few thingsmiddotwhich can be done middotbetween now and 1hetirst -bst to help lawns along To begin with this is amiddot good

middottime to apply itmiddot weed killer of some kin to I prefer tousecomshybination weed killer and fertil shyzer as this saves time and does el good job This should help dear up the lawn and start the grass out of dormancy Follow this with a good raking to disshylodge some of the matted grass and you are well on your way

to a healthy lawn in the Spring The next step is to buy a good grass seed if your lawn is well established and to apply it at ab04t half the rate or less sugshymiddotgested on the packageThe idea behind this is to fill in places where the lawn is thin or where weeds have been killed Incishydentally it is a good idea to wait two or three weeks aftermiddot

middot you have applied weed killer middotbefore you start new grass seed

It is important that your seed be a good brand and quality A eheap seed contains many coarse ~escues and annual graSses which will do the lawn very little good over the long run Jetter to buy a very good seed in small amounts than an iJlexshypensive seed which will cause you more trouble than it will do good

The only job left af~er middotthis is ~ keep themiddot lawn moistsq~bat

snippedt up the flavor would be stronger

Well I cooked my recipe and it was quite delicious but a few sprigs of the green shoots reshymained on the counter and as Joe was helping me clean up he inquired why Ihad been picking carrot tops Needless to say at that moment I rseolved to learn a great deal more about parsley in all its varieties The things I found out in my research on the parlsley plant were quite fascinating and even it bit frightening if youre the superstitious type Did you know that it was thought to be such a plant of the devil that it could only be sown on Good Friday if it were to flourish at all In anciert times the Greek$ decked their tombs with it for they fully believed that it sprang from the blood of one of their dead heroes It was also th9ught only the wicked could grow parsley successfully

Feeling that its merits must far outweigh its supposed curses I searched further to discover that one of the beliefs that surshyrounded it was that wherever it flourished the missus is master This could provide a good reason for cultivating it

Getting away from the P4rely theoretical and into the practical I learned that parsley is la h~rdy biennial normally flowering and going to seed in the Spring -after sowing though in a hot dry year it may bolt and go to seed in late Summer (this is what happened to Ti Tias parsshyley bed) Seed may be planted inmiddot April and May fOf a Summer and early Autumn crop andmiddots

the n~wgtseed has amiddotchlUlce tos~cpnd s~~ing JWlde ~lllate~uly germinate If you are succ~ pr August for tbe next ~pring and the lawn does take it is im-~pd SumDler n

middot perative tbat you keep the n~wpar~le~ steJfis have fiir~ore grasscut at about two inches So~avor than the leayes and ~e

that it makesmiddot sorneroot growth French often use only the stem before the coIf weather sets in where taste is more important

Mostlawns should bereseededmiddotthan appearance They are full iJdHis vaVeach year pIefetabiyof chlorophyll (thatgreeliishIn late Augustor eatlySeptem- property lthat was so popular a

ber Seeding is outmiddot of the ques- fewmiddot years ago) andmiddot when tion however where water re- crushed ~intmiddot mayonnaise aod

strictions are still in effect So other sauces a lovely shade of if you are allowed to water only green If you do happen tomiddot be one or two hours a week you wicked enough to have pars- will have to suffer your poor ley flourish in your yard the hlwq or at least another season four most popular ways of storshy

h the Kitchen ing it in your refrigerator are 1 With the stems kept ina

I realize that I have a great glass of water deal to learn concerning both 2 Washed water shaken off the kitchen and garden but my sealed in a glass jar or plastictack of knowledge was undershy bag

Jined the other day when I was 3 Unwashed in a plastic bamiddotg preparing to cook the recipe 4 Washed and folded intoa

- yentat Irrt ~sing in this eeks cloth the clothmiddot absorbs the ~olumn As I readmiddot the hst of dampness ~ee~ed Ig~edlents I only gave I found the following recipe iilSSmg notce to t~e paryleyas ~elicious even J~oJlgh graced

have always gathered It fr~s~ with carrot top~ instead of parsshy rom a large bed over In 1-1 Tla s -- ley The unusw name may refer ya~d howev~r when I wet to sltmelllenlbero(th~-cleigy over to pick It I found that In who fainted with joy at the flashya s~ort span of a few days most vor he enjoyeo

0pound It bad gone to seed - middotmiddot middotmiddotmiddotmiddot SWo()nedPri~stmiddot~lmiddotmiddot

Suddenly I see~ed to recall 1 eggplant peeled and sliced ~hat Joe ~admentIoned that he h inch thick had planted some of theltalian 2 large onions sliced _ Vanety llear our raspberry 3 large tomatoes sliced ~ushes ah the day was saved salt and pepper That must be it I said to 1 small bunch of fresh pa~ middotmyself as I spied sOllIe feqthery ley minced green shoots along the fence it 2 Tab)e~pouns oil didnt smell very much like 2 cloves of garlic sliced

middot parsley but ther again it was 1) Arrange eggplant onionsmiddot supposed to be a different va- and tomatoes in alternate layen lriety and perhaps when I in a large frying pan sprinkling

each layer with salt pepper ahd 1 00 R the minced parsley u v eglster 2) Add 1fJ cup hot water the

NEW YORK (NC) - More oil and garlic

than 1000 person have regis- 3) Cover tightly -andmiddot simm1r ~7~~d to at~end the ei~J1th n~- for about 30 minutes or u~til ~lonal CursI110 Movement eon-iiquia Is reducedt~aricl1 gravY iention now in session here Remove garlic before serving

PRE-CONVENTION ARRANGEMENTS BY DCCW DELEGATES Among the delegates from the Diocese who met recently for arrangements to attend the 33rd National Convention of Catholic Women in Miami Beach Oct 5-8 were left to right Mrs James E Williams St Josephs No Dighton Miss Angela Medeiros Mt CarmelSeekonk Mrs Theophane Lavoie St Jeim the Baptiste Fall River Mrs John Smith Sk Marys South Dartmouth Thursday Sept I is the closing date for registration of delegates from the Diocese to the Convention

Nuns Health Insurance Econoniist Tells Superiors Life Expectancy

Justifies C~operative Plan MILWAUKEE (NC)-Kuni- encountered by ri~ns thlo~ghQut erlliy o~payton ecqnonll~ ~r~ their lifetime ~essor Wbo~peciali~es i~m~g- Medical Passports ic~l statisectticl(or~seesalow-c~ To c~nect data FecheidEl~ised be~lthi~u~an~e~lan a~~ a~ni- a medlqal i4e~tification card 1fiect )rgra~ 0 n1edlcal and whichiiecalIi a medical pass-h~spltal facllitiesfr Am~can middotPOrtHe said these cards carshynuns under the admlm~tratlOrt~f ryingrecords of current disabili shythe Conference of MaJor Supe- tiesmiddotmiddot eouldaid in accumulating

middot riors of Wmen medical information to help Addressmg t~e conferepCemiddot ~t middotnuns qualify for lower cost Its annual meetmg he~e COli Jhealth insurance and to organize Fecher s~ldmiddot ~ooperativeplaQsan eventual program of comshy~or ~ns m thIS country canbe JustIfIed by the longer life exshypectancy ~nd better health of women relIgiOUS Fecher presented d~ta Q~ a

fIve-year study on disabIlItIes among 3)000 nuns He has made many previous statistical studies on ~he nuns long~vity

Smce nuns lIve In what Fec~er calls a contrlled life studIes ~f thelmiddot medlcal sta~us can prOVide medical SCIence WIth ~nf~rtn~tion relvatgt-t to 0-lher q~e1 But mo~t PTllvI~ts stuq~es have conc~Iltrat~~~m rn~rtalItybull s~tI~tl~s~l1d w~re coJcerI)edW~~ lteaJh apd I~ causes Fec~eT s rece~t ~~S centered around the dIsabIlIties

Christrtras Bazaar Advance preparations fire beshy

middot ing made for a Christmas bazaar slated for the weekend of Nov 25 through 27 in the basement of Sacred Hearts Church Nolth Fatrhaven Meetings are being held in the rectory at 730 each

middot MOhday night and parishioners who cannot come at this time

middot are mged to volunteer home services byknitting sewing or making fthEir articles for sale

Materials will be furnished and dondticins iire laquo iHsifoeing reshyquested 101 a white elephant table Gerierafdiairman Mrs Roland Larocque announcesmiddot that

prOfits will benefit the school improvement fund

bined health care They might also be of value to physicians treating future illnesses he said

The five-year survey tended to support the adage your health mirrors your environ ment Abstinence fromalcohol and ~igarettes a well-balanced diet adequat~ housing secure

bull communa livi and celibacy apparently do iow down the aging process Fecher said

He cautioned however that this does not ~ecessarilYmean that areligious life promotes longevity and that a similar am6tirlt of work-day schoolshy

day orreligiflus-day sefvice 10sseser be applied to each and every religious community in tbecountrymiddot

Fecher said that data collected over the past 40 years shows that the health middotcare programs of reshyligious are very uneven

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Aug 25 1966

Approves Loco ~

School Boards BURLINGTON (NC) - The

appointment of four local Cathshyolic school boards brings a new method of Catholic school manshyagement to 25 per cent of the diocesan schools here in Vershymont

At the regular monthly meetshying of the Burlington Diocesan School Board Father John A Lynch diocesan superintendent of schools reported that consti shytutions for four schools had been approved making a total of 25middot per cent of the schools operating under policy-malting boards approved by the diocesan board

~he diocesan statutes e~c6urshya~ebut do not demand the formatior of 10 c a l schoOl boards he said

Father Lynch also announced that a study would be made of school costs in the hope to find ways to avoid increasing tuition and parish assessments The study of education costs will be made by George Fortune acshycounting consultant to the diocshyesan school system

Good Counsel College Gets Loan for Dorm

WASHINGTON (NC) - A $1180000 college housing loan for Good Counsel College for women in White Plains NY to build a new dormitory has been approved Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Robert C Weaver announced here

The dorm is planned to acshycommodate 192 students The college conducted by the Sisters of Divine Compassion has an ellrollment of some poo students

Some students required to live on campus are in overcrowded middotfacilitiesmiddot Mother M Dolores president said lack of housing will foree themiddot college to deny admission middottoa number of stushydents middotthis fall she said The COllege enrollment is expected to reach 650 in five years and

800 in 10 years

Ce~tervilfe Guild New officers of Our Lady of

Victory Womens Guild Centershyville are Mrs StephenB OBrien Jr president Mrs John J Pendergast Jr and Mrs James Murphy vice-presidents Mrs ~oger Carlson treasurer Mrs Francis McKenna and Mrs Edward ONeill secretaries

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

middotOPENDAllY FORTHIE SEASON AFTERNOON and NIGHT

niE ANCHOR $as~ Vocationsmiddot10 Thurs Aug 25 1966 COnCern ofAIi

Employer U rges ST LOUIS (NC) - Speaking at the third annual Vocation Mass in St Louis cathedral

middot here Joseph Cardinal Ritter said middotvocations in the Church should

Workers to Vote For Teamsters

be the concern of every Roman SAN FRANCISCO (NC) Catholic

-The Di Giorgio Corporashy The cardinal told 397 men and women preparing to enter semishytion is recommending that naries and convents in the Fanits farm workers vote to afshy that religious vocation is not

filiate with the Teamsters FaTm middot merely a concern for the arch-Workers Union if they wish middot diocesan director a union the company announced It is a matter of solicitudeshy

Robert Di Giorgio president for each and everyone of us A of the company said therecomshy vocation is a divine thing but mendationmiddot is in accordance with it is a thing which God will not National Labor Relations BoaTd w~thhold from His peopleprocedures The recommendashy Cardinal Ritter continuedtion was made in letters sent to Bymiddot manifesting a concern employes eligible to vote in the about and an interest in vocashyunion election scheduled Ifor tiols we truly show that we Tuesday Aug 30 middot are the People of God

Opposing the Teamsters will be the National Farm Workers Association (NFWA) and the Seeks Assistance Agricultural Workers Organshy For Congo Churchizing Committee AFL-CIO (AW OC) which have merged since WASHINGTON (NC) - A they began the long Delano Congolese senator visiting the strike United States on a State Departshy

The Teamsters won the originshy ment tour program for foreign al election for union representashy government officials hopes to tion but charges of fraud make his two-month visit serve brought a new election a double purpose

Di Giolgio said the corporashy Senator Gaston Diomi wants tion is recommending a vote to speak with Catholic laymen for the Teamsters because middotand members of the clergy per-

The Teamsters won the preshy haps address audiences at vious electionmiddot Catholic institutions in his hope

The Teltlmsters while they to bring the Church iri the light hard in their members Congo to the eyes of American behalf are fair arid responshy ~ Catholics

And the senator has a planesible he wants to set up sharing proshyCompany Union middotFeels Adults Need Religious grams throughout the United

The competing union on tne States programs in which an ballot the Nationa Farm Workshy More So Than Children Nun Declares American diocese would adopt z ers AssoCiation has achieved Congolese diocese an American tentative recognition with oniy LOVELAND (NC)-Religious JI1ost rigidly formed in the old program to meet its needs--part religious order adopt a Congoshytwo growers the larger of which

education is needed for aduits system to see the new vision of which could be a parish lese order an American orphan-this year shifted production from school age adopt a Congolese orphanmore than for children and a of themiddot Churchand of Christian~ble grapes to wine tnus elimshy Flexibility and the wiUing- agebetter term for it would be life middotsetmiddot forth by the Secondinating a great many jobs ness tomiddot try a variety 01 ap- The American governmentmiddotsomething like shared growth Vatican Council Cesar Chavez head of the N iIi Christian middotlifemiddotmiddotmiddot This is 8 hard ~ask Sister prOdches ought to be the mmk of has such sharing programs the FWA called the Teamsters a an effectivereligious education senator pointed out WhyThis is the estimate of Sis admitted for adult educationcompany union and said it

tel 114 Charles Borromeo former demands new approaches and program she asserted empha- shouldnt the Church have the has entered into a partnership sizing thatmiddotit should have a so- same The Church that is Cath-head of the theology school at cannot be imposedwith Di Giorgio in a commonmiddot cia1 and an ecumenical dimen- olic the Church that is definedSt Marys College conducted by Each Ones Missionplot agabnst the farm workers sionmiddot QY the Second Vatican CouncilHoly Cross Sisters at Notre She wouldnt abandon chil-He said the companys recom- Built into each program middotas a missionary Church- whyDame Ind She recently joined drens education JOwever Shemendation confirmed that the should be a growirig aW8leness shouldnt this Church and tierthe faculty of St Xavier Col-middot saidTeamstens came to Delano to

lege Chicago as theology pro- What Id like to se~ IS emh of e~ch ones mission in the members share even more readshytlrganize workers at the invita- Church-an outgoing mismiddotsion to ily than government~ifessor set up a total religiou educationiion o~

PROFESSION CEREMONY AT WAREHAM The Chapel in the Woods of the Noshyvitiate of the Sacred Heart Fathers vas the scene Saturday morning as four novices

iere profe~sed by Bishop CoimolIyLeft to right Bro JudeMohan Bro Joseph ONeill Master of Novices Rev Andrew Jahn Bishop Connolly Very Rev Daniel J McCarthy

Prodncial who offered the Mass Bro Paul Daly and Bro Martin Lucia

the corporation New Approaches reach others and to build the

Speaking at the Summer lec- middot social patterns needed in our Oppose Intervening ture series at Grailville herein Quote Pope Pauls world

middot1 PImiddot Ohio USheaqquarters of the A 1 f IP Issues of TimesIn Fami y annlnglt international Grail movement ppea oreace middot She warneq against lookingMILWAUKEE (NC)-The ex- Sister Charles Borromeo aC- BERLIN (NC)-Fiye hundred for textbooks with all thE anshy

ecutive committee of the ad- knowledged that the Church in letters quoting the flppeal of swers or for fOllliulas thatvisory ioard of the Milwauke~ this country has placed most of Pope Paul VI for peace in Vietshy might take the place of decisiOlishyArchdioce~an Family Life Pro- its resources atmiddot the service of nam were sent persons in East rilaking by individual wnsci- gram has adopted a resolution childrens education Germany by the Social Demoshy encesmiddot

opposing government interven But the most urge~t need for cratic Party (SPD) The East Religiousteaching should inshynon in family planning giving religiousmiddot education she said Germans had asked the SPD volve a di~logue she su-ggestunanimousmiddot approval to a 13- if to helpadults especially those why the free world had not ed addi~g that in the past therepoint resolution which insists made imy efforts to end the war has been toomuch sttess on aushythat the matter of family plan- d in Vietnam thorityin teaching rid~otning is a private affair not a Sche u ~ Reopening The letter sent by the Social

bulle~o~gh on sharingChrisliarieoncern of the government Of Chi Smiddot h 1 Democratsmiddot pointed out that the gr()wthmiddot

Frank Stabb chairman of at 0 IC C 00 peace efforts of the pope the Thequesiion is not so ~lUcbtheCatholic board statedthat MTmiddot REPOSE (NC)-A Cath- World Council of Churches and

~hat to tea~h she ()pined butsince it has become increasingly olic school here in Ohio for of the governments of the how will we produce ~he Chrisshyapparentmiddot tilat our federalgov some 250 children will reopen in United States Great Britain (ian experience in litUlgy andernment ans to use taxinoiiey September due to efforts of in- Sweden India France and Itrly

for the spreading of birthcon-middot (lividuai citizens civic and Pro had all middotbeen rejected by the soci~l actionJn th~ great issues trol it becomes the obUgation of testantchurch groups in the communists The letter also of our times ~

NO JOBTOq BIG NONE TOO SMALL

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTE~S

MainOHice and Plant 95 Bridge St lowell M~bullbull

Tet 4586333

Auxiliary Plarits

BOSTON CAMDEN NJ OCEANPORT N~J

MIAMI PAWTUCKET R1 PHILADELPHIA

this family apostolate to speak area the Milford Chamber of middotstressedmiddot the SPDs view that out vigorously in oPllOsition tomiddota Commerce and parishioners of war can no longer be an instru shypolicy which has absolutely no St Andrews church Milford ment in solving political probshyvalidity The Elizabeth Seton School a lems middot He went on to say that when rural outpost of St Andrews Rltidio television and newsshyariy government agency tells parish was established seven paper ieports iil Eastmiddot Germany

middotpoor married couples whether years ago and con tin 11 a llY have given the impression thatmiddot they should have children or plagued by sewage dIsposal no one middotincluding the Pope has

hownfany to have the govern- problems The school wasmiddot closed made any efforts to seek peace ment is making a mighty pre- by court order in the Sumrtler in Vietnam sumptuous intrusion into a most of 1965 but r~openeq last year i J

sacred element of huin~nlife) with an arrangement fo~ haul- Stamiddotmiddotr 0n middotIImiddotmiddotOmiddotftmiddotmiddotammiddotP

middot ing sewge to MilfordmiddotmiddotWhenmiddot ~ middotV 1 t Cmiddoth 1 forcedtostop usingtheMilford DAVENP0RT (NC)~Seven-

eel) members of religious coni 0 un eermiddot apalnmiddot sewage systemlastJanuary t PHILADELPHIA (NCfFa-middot classes were dfscontinueiigt mutlities in theuilitedmiddot middotStates

ther JjRobert Falabella SJ The Closhlg spalked if coin- were among the graduates at the 36 instr~ctor in theolOgyat St mlinity effort led by the Buck- annual mid~Summermiddotcommence

Josephs College here has vol- wheat-middotTaxpayers Associationw ment of St Ambrose College uteered for extended adive aidthemiddotschoolmiddotA fUrid drive for her~in Illwa middotParticipating in duty witp theUS Army Re $250((to pay formiddot new tihiinage the ceremonies was Margheritiimiddot serve s a chaplain in the Vietmiddot f~cilities was ~ledby th~ Mil- Roberti a~ native of Davenportmiddot mam combat zone ford Chamber Of Commerce a leading dramatic sopranQ~

CONVEmiddotNImiddotENT BANKING WITHOUT TRAFFIC PARKING PROBLEMS

at the -

5LADE~S FERRr-r~USJmiddotCOMPANY SOMERSET MASS

j ~ - bullbullbull ~~ ~ bull ) bullbullbull lt

ThemOflt friendlymiddot dmocrt~ lANK oHering

-_~9npi~lC)h$topmiddot~cirliing middotmiddotf bullbullbullClubmiddot Accoul1Its - Auto middotLoa -

Checking Accounts ~ Business boris Savings Accounts~ ~ ~ Ieaj Estate loOns 1 -

- ~Atmiddot S~~~rs~tS~~ppi~~ Ar~a=-~igh~~a 5 ~t~due Me~ber FeCieral I)epositmiddot ri~urance Corporation

I

11 Cardinal Cushing Hits Imbalance In Schools

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing deplored that very little has been oone to relieve racial imshybalance in Bostons public schools in his first public address since his recent illness and conshyvalescence

The Boston prelate told an ecshyumenical meetingmiddot in All Saints Lutheran church here that al shythough very littlemiddot has been done to make a year-old law work we are not discouraged and we are very far from giving up hope that we will have reshyBults before long

He referred to the Racial 1m balance Law aimed at promotshying racial integration in Massashychusetts public schools The meeting marked the first annishyversary of the law The measure will deprive Boston public schools of $30 million in state subsidies until the citys school committee submits an integrashytion plan acceptable to the state board of education Until now the city committee has not subshymitted an acceptable plan

A school that is heavily imshybalanc~d racially cannot provide the best education that should be available for our children Even with the most devoted teachers and the most upto-date proshygrams-and we have both o( these in Boston-a predomiJ)antshyly Negro school suffers from an isolation from the general comshymunity which cannot fail to be harmful~ he said

Scores Slum Landlords In a similar way we can say

that an all white scJ100l fails to reflect the true nature of the radally mixed communitymiddot in which we live and so deprives white youngsters of theexperi ence of living and studying with their neighbors of a different race Ourideal should be to live and workand study and pray side by side in mutual respect and common affection

There hav~ been several proposalsmade during the last year to al~rest imbalance iit the schools of our center city Carshydinal Cushing said None of these has been accepted by those who hove been elected to make these decisions in the schooi srstem Of course we know that no immediate proshygram will solve all our problems but we can make li beginning

The cardinal also criticized slum landlords for the inhuman conditions in which so many here must live and work alid bring JP their families He called for a crash program of assistance for the deprived

State Uses Vacant Catholic School

BURLINGTON (NC)-The re- cently closed Don Bosco Schoolmiddot for BoyS here will Soon befilled up again with teenage boys this time as temporary quarters for Vermonts pilot residential treatshyment center for youthful first shyoffender lawbreakers

In announcing the acceptance of the proposal by Bishop RobertF Joyce of Burlington and the Verm 0 n t Catholic Charities board State Institutiolls Com-

PROFESSION AND CtOTHING CEREMONIES Principals in the ceremonies conshyducted for the Sisters of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts in Fall River on Monday were seated Sr Mary Dolores Sr John Veronica Bishop Gerrard who presided Sr Karen Dolores Sr Mary Catherine Standing Sr Margaret Edward Sr Joseph Maureen Sr Stephen David Sr James Constance Sr Celestine Regis Sr Anne Robert Sr Vinshycent Dolores

Report Says Cold War More Intense Peaceful Coexistence Now Strategic Offensive

WASHINGTON (NC) -Some tegic Studies at Georgetown jarring statements are made in University a Jesuit-conducted a significant news report whose school here

It is an in-depth analysisprivate but highly responsible sponsors call it the resultmiddot ofmiddot quality research It reminds for example that the so-called cold war is not

over and warns that as of now it may be entering a more danshy

gerous phase Th e ~peaceful coexistence

slogan it says was once a comshymuhist defensive stalling tacshytic but now it signifies the communists have gone over to

the strategic offensive The great paradox of our

times the document asserts may well turn out to be our inability to recognize that the cold war has in reality become more intel1se despite the increasshying appearance of peace

The goals of the presentmas~ tels of the Kremlin are no dif- ferent from tho~e of Khrushshychev Stalin or Mao Tse-Tung and to the Krtmlin peac~ful coshyexistence is a strategy not an end in itself it declares

The study entitled Peace or Pea c e f u1 Coexistence was

sponsored by the Committee on Education Against CommUllism of the American Bar Association It was unveiled in New York just before the ABA began its annual meeting in Montreal but it was prepared by Richard V Allen a specialist on Sino-Soviet affairs at the Center for Stra-

K of c Plan Socoal

Action I itia tive

missioner John Y Woodhull MIAMI BEACH (-NC) - The stated I think this is one (f the top official of the Knights of finest ecumenical testures of Columbus announced plans for faith and charity that I have a new initiiitive in the ecumenshyknown i -i~al and soCial action field

The eenter ill ~ ~provide a through a partnership with theO

home for 16 to 20 b(iys aged HI John LaFarge Institute ill New to 18 who are referrecl by the York ~ - eourls as first offenders Toile In additior W financial assist shyboys will work loeal du-in ancethe LaFllg~jnstitute will

the day and return to the center reeeive suggestifmsand recomshyin the ~venin1 for intensive mendations frOJll the official roup t~erapy eonducted b) rep-~~entationand plJrticipatiOll

Btaff III ~ix bull Ule K bull C

based onmiddot more than 3000 articles and documents of the internashytiOllal communist movement more than 90 per cent of which material is dated after the Cushyban Missile crisis of October 1962 Allen admits that the commushy

nists have used the coexistence slogan in ihepast and with sfme success but he directs atshytention to the fact that it now signifies a strategic offensive rather than a stal~ing tactic

The study notes that the Cushyjail build-up the erection of the Berliil Wall and the armed iilvasi~n of South Yietnam all occurred during the most in- tense pedod of peaceful coshyexistence ~ It~~~inds that Khrushchev in 19t1lddiiled coexistence as a form of intense ecoitomic pOlitshyical and ideological struggle gaii1s~ the aggressive forces of imperialism hi the international arena it aiso says that in their 3tshy

tempt to create wha bull they call the New ComIJlunist Man the communists have systematically presented a vicious and thor oughly distorted picture of the

Nuns to Construct Health Care Facility

SANDUSKY (NC)-The Franshyciscan Sisters who operate Providence Hospital here in Ohio will construct a new 100shybed $1250000 healthcare fashycility separate ftom thehospital

It will serve Medicare patients of the area during posthospital care and Qther convalescents who do not requir~f~l~-scalehospital care Sister Lucia -administrator 81lid it will relievemiddot pressure ~ hospital beds in the area

There wiII be ari appeal to th~ public lor about $900000 The -remainder of the funds will

btl supplied by the Federalgovshyerllment

West in general and the United States in particular It need not be emphasi~ed

the study states that the overshywhelming sentiment of the free world is to live in peace But tQ mistake the illusion of peace for genuine peacemiddot would be a profoundly dangerous perhaps fatal mistake In a foreword t the book

Bertram D Wolfe a Stanford University expert on commushy~lism warns that we have been prone to read the idea of live and let live into the phase of peaceful C 0 e x imiddots ten ce Our hopes and our longings are likeshyly to betray us again and again into a readiness to be deceived by those who have sworn the d~struction of all we stand for

fnjoymiddot Dining IN THE

JOLLY WHALER --AND--

SPOUTIRINN RESTAURANTS

Always Free Parking

New Bedford Hotel

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Aug 25 1966

Cassidymiddot Seniors Attend Work$hop

Three members of the incomshying senior class at Cassidy High School Taunton will complete tomorrow a five day Workshop in Leadership conducted at the University of Massachusetts under th~ sponsorship of the Massachussetts Association of Student Councils

Mis s Rosemary McKenna~ president of the senior class Miss Nancy Thomas president of the National Honor Society and Miss Christine Victoria coshyeditor of the Cassidy school paper are attending Miss Victoria is secretary of the Southeastern Association of Student Councils and will serv~ in that capacity with the other officers Jerry Flanagan presishydent Feehan High Marsha Boyd vice-president Attleboro High Luke Boyd treasurer West Bridgewater High

Cassidy GIllaquoIltiluCllle Wins Elkso AWtlDd

Miss Pauline Lee daughter ox Mrs Harry Lee and the late Harry Lee of 7 Dean Ave Taunshyton has Qeen named the recipishyent of a $600 Massachusetts Elks Lead~rship Award granted by the Elks National Scholarship Fund

A member of the 1966 gradushyating class of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton Miss Lee was in the top ten of a class of 108 and maintained a scholastie honors record throughout bell four year Miss Lee will attend Nortn- eastern University Boston

Schools Merge BAY CITY (NC)-TwO wes~

side Catholic high schools here hi Michigan will merge Sept I

to becomeWest Catholic CentraU High School The decision te merge was made by an intershyarish lay study committee tv provide more efficient use of the staff and facilities The schooU will be staffed by the ReligioUl Sisters of Mercy of Detroit

BIG DIVIDEND NEWS

a SYSTEMATIC550 year SAVINGS

INVESTMEIfJ500 a year SAVINGS

8 REGULAR450 year SAVINGS

Bass River SovinQs Bank bull SOUTH YARMOUTH bull DENNIS PORT

bull YANNIS bull fARMOiJTH SHOPPING PLAZA

bull OSTERVILLE

-1111

WHITE middotmiddotmiddotSPA CATERERS

- BANQUETSmiddot -WEDDINGS - PARTIES

~ COMMUNION BREAKFASTS 1343PlEASANT STREET FAll RIVER

OSb~rne 3-7780

--h-- ~

12

i

THE ANCHOROlocese of Fall River-Th~s Aug 25 1966

~regW ~reg~tfJ ~lYJ~~ TtUUY1)[fi)l[

Of R~dD~~~csm Amcm)gYW]fr~ lJy Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy

Phillip Abbott Luces The New Left (McKay 119 W 40th New York $450) attempts to explain the resurgence of radicalism among American students Its author is a

of the New Left wIth as many con u e y lcal ideas while at MissisSippi non-joiners on the peripherY day even~ng Aug 27 at S lD ~ at~~ fi~t he~-d ~~ ~h~ ~erBtlt its impact- is smd tohave Mlll~aret s Kinderlctarten aaU i Left whIle at Ohio State and l Prizes WIll be awarded and reshy

tgrt~ritotcOtmiddotmiddotgthmiddotevecJ1 amm~-~W1lS~~tttedpa~~y ~xten~e~ tots about200OQP co h~~hriients served o nl~ge ~u en ~~ i - ltGUiLD OF TillE VIsITATION Iil1961heifioved~to NewmiddotYork It ~S ~l1ena lza1I~~~eme~t i iNO EASTilrAM ~ ~

_and came closer tothe Commti- in the country What alarms Mr ih alb t ofthe Dist Party Llitef he joined Pro- Luce is not its existence or its G1 ~~ h 3que wed gressiveLa]gto~aiI~ edited its size but the fact and the in- W WI e e on nesshymiddot monthly magazine _ cre~sing extent of Comrnamst q1Y~ 4-~ 3~ a~ the PiJ~~ middot -domination~ He gives -instances Springs Restaurant No TflJro Visited _C~~ro-S Cuba R t cl Sunday

in proof thatsuch dO minatioD-i8 A e~e2 rva~o1l os on It was Progressive Labor ug s

which arJanged- for fmeric~ indeed an actuality SACRED HEARTS

young man who won some leader of the New Left and when he broke with Proshygressive Labor which he eharges was organiz~d by -formermembenlof theSoVfeishycontrolled Communist Pa rt y USA and is now aPekingor~eh tated Commu~

D1st group Mx Luce has an ex tremely Impor- middottant subject one which is both timely and crit shyleal Because of his experience he should be especially qualshyified to set it out But the fac~ is that he is at best a mediocre writer He has no notion as to how to

organize a book marshal his materials and to ten his story iIi a consecutive way and with cushymulative force This is a dull alld muddled treatment of a very middotvitai topic~ not heipedat all by crude blundersin English usage Mr Luces personal histog has to be pieced together fro~ bits strewn through the book

middotlike the debris after a hurricane He is an Ohioan bornmiddotin 1935

notice both when he was a the lives of the rising generation Youth is repelled by parental attitudes and aspirations which are seen as mostly narrow negshyative sterile College is a bore

offeriiig no incentive or oppOJshytUnity for youth to direct its enshyergies into crucial causes

A mood of rebellion has devel- ~ped and a chance to express it has been pr~sentedby the civil rights struggie and the unpopu~ lar and beclouded war in Vietshynam Nor does the prospect of fighting authority in each case dim the attraction of these causes quite the reverse Hence the New Left

JLists Organizations Communist organizations of

various stripes have attemptec to sieze control of the New Left and to exploit the mood of reshybellion wi~h an eye to changing it into participation in revolushy

tion

Mr Luce lists and desribes the Communist organizations so engaged The one he knows best of course is Progresectsive Labor But he gives much space to the Du Bois Clubs which are the instruments of the Communist Party Then tlmre are the Trot-middot

the son of middle-class Repub- skyite splinter groups of which lican parents H~ start~d college four strains are identified (inshyat Miami University in Ohio left cluding middotone that is pro-Negro to see the Souih finished ~t Mis and anti-Semitic) I

sissippi State and did graduate Mr Luce estimates that some k t Oh St t 12000 YOung AmericanS are wor a 10 a e _ t 1 t 1 b He became interested in rad- ac ua orgamza Ion~ mem ers

APPOINTEE- Bishop Josshyeph Bmiddot Brunini Auxiliary since 1957 to Bishop Richard O Gerow of Natchez-Jackshyson middotMiss has -been appointshyed by Pope Paul VI to be Apostolic Administrator of the diocese NC Photo

The Parish Parade

ST 1lgtYS TillED mn ov= =shylFALL RJrVER

The parish will sponsor a one day pilgrimage to the Shrine of the North American Martyrs Auriesville N Y on Sunday Oct 2

Interested partles may obtaIn full particulars by contacting Mrs Laurence Coyle Mrs Wilshyliam Blythe or Mrs George Boitano S8 MARGARET-MARY GUILD BUZZARDS BAY

A bl hitmiddot middotU be pu IC W S paL 0 WI d ct d b the guild on Saturshy

studeritsto visit Cuoain 1963 middot and 1961 In defiance of our middotState Department~sban on travel

there Mr Luce made the trip says that most of the students

middot were unaware of Progressive Labors sponsorship and control The money came from Castro And Progressive Labor members planned and staged the wild scenes at a Congressional hea~

ing concerning the middotproject By late 1964 Mr Luce was

enti~ely dissillusioned abo u t Progressive Labor andmiddot by Febshyruary of 1965 h~ pad left it to

bemiddot quickly expelled upon his

Stresses Strength NO FAIRHAVEN He insists that somethin~(must Registration for the kiridershy

be done to prevent Communist garten pre-primary and the capture of the movement He eight eJement~ry grades are beshywants everyone to wake up to ing held daily during the month the existence and the strength of Augus of the New Left Pupils may register with SJ

We must realize he urges how Marie Henriette SSCC at the disenchanted with our society Sacred Hearts Academy 332 the young people ~re what hos- Main Street Fairhaven any 8poundshytility they feel what a gulf ternoon from 1-5 RegistratioDfl yawns between them and their are also being accepted by Rev elders and hcgtw impervious th~YAlexis Wyggers SSCC at the are to ideas and language which ReCtory 382 Main street Fairshyi

figure in their eldErs attempts haven to communicate with them The Association of St Anne

No one he maintains is S~-Will receive corporate CoinmUshyI~ departure and sayagE(l~ Yim~~~~ Jiously trying to reach the hiorton Sunday at the 8 ocloek middot He left because he says Pro gressive Labor is a middotMaoist Comshymunist tool because itmiddotadlrQcates imd take steps to implelrtent armed insurrection because- no personal freedam is allowed to members an4 lill- deQisionsmiddot are made by a few dictatorial leadshy~ril 1ecausemembersareJnshyvolved in programs of Whose

eonsequences totge country and to themselvestIey have no idea lt~

lFe~ls lF~tts~rated Mr fL~ced6es- notmiddot contend

middot that the New Leis Goromunistshy

young rebel to understand him Mass to speak to him intelligibly and effectively Co~unJ~t errorsmiddot J~edB~ MeU1lMe~tmiddot propaganda hypocnsy mUst be SCHWYZ (NC) - Catholicrelentlessly exposed in a way movie and television experts which the young people will met here iil ~fwitieriand for imcomprehend international exchange of ~He is strong_ for a Freedom riiques iiI the useof Tv anellAeademy- which would provipe films in religious educationmiddotmiddot expert practical education conshy - cerning CommunislJlmiddotAnd he stressestheneed of a placefor

ltloltiinated -Hescent~B it -as8 phe- PITTSB~1RGH(Nt) - The bull I bull ~ bull bull bull bull bull

honidon whlc~ came ~bout Pittsburgh Catholi( Interracial Commercialmiddot 15 Industrid spontaneously an eX~IJ1Pre of- Council has endorsed home rule Institutionalyouth in rebellion - for the District of Columbia asshy

Youth he holds~ hils amiddotpoundeeling sertingthattooibng have many painting ~nd~ D_~~o~qtig of -frustrationmiddot with American of the-importanLdecisionaffectshy Fall River OSborne 2-1I9H$ociety its tone and its values ing (the District of CohJmbia) -yoiith~es~rtt~rhaving rio say inb~erlmadtd)ycongrpoundpoundssiriehftoin ~ 74v~hllia rnson Str~e~

the making of decisions affecting hundreds of miles away

~~Gr~ayK BJ Most Rev FUUOlll J Sheeillp Dll)

If my neighbor is stronger than 1 I fear him if he lsweaker than I I despise bim Such is the modem judgement of the psyshychiatrist Dr Jean de Rougemont Earlier the Psalmist speaks ~ the arrogance of those who have much and the despisal of those who are proud How can the rich avoid feeling superior to the poor How can the poor avoid being humiliated The answer is that vices but can the) give up cigarettes for a week to help the poor the strong must see their weakness and the rich must see~eifto poverty How realJly strong are the strong Theymay avoid great Are thfiY suc~ masters of themselves tbatthey can turn down the third cocktail (or give up the first) and use the money instea4 to ~uy sulfone ~or a i~~r~ liqw r~ch_ ar~the rich Let them look inside themselves IIi whatvirtue are they rich Rich in cb~ty Rich i~ char~ti Ri~)n f~th

Onc~t~~ ~i~rhty see th~mseiv~ asnothiDi a~d therl~h see the~selv~ as i~poverislledth~ they wui lov~ ihe we~~ as their brothersilDd the peor IllS their

fellow beggars for thetrrace of God ifmiddot the strong middotlove middotmiddotthemselves despite all theirweaknes5~ then why not lovltil weaknesses in others u the rich love themselves despitG middottheir inner nakedshyness then why nCllt love a lesser ]lJOVshy

erty in others That i~ why Our Lord told us to love ourneighbor as ourseU ~y not more than self Because iii ]I

love myself-knowing myself as ]I do knowing how utterb weak ]I am2-then I have the measure of how J[ am to pour out love to others

We live in a world divided between the rich and the poor We live in that kinol of a church-pOor parishes and rich parishes Even bishops an~ priestsmiddot speak of a parish being good when they mean it is economicaily rich Somehow or other we have ~

get qut of this slavish standard of affluence which is so opposed to the lross of Christ To that end we make the folloWing proposal that you or your middotparishclub school or office undertake the sponsorshjp of one of the poor areas of the world which has been investigated by the Apostolic delegate Write to us and we will send you middotthe name of this diocese its location the number of priests catechists and faithful it has Thus you will be sure that you have a middotneedy (Ibject for sacrifice and service and n9t one based on a haphazard -appeal middotfroin an uninvestigated source The Church will not alloW you to sponsor this diocese for more than one year becausemiddot thtlre are so many poor parishes in the world Look into your weakness and you will love the weakness of o~heJ8 Look into your poyeny stricken soul and you willserVe poverty stricken bodies Write to -mpGod Love You

~~~ middot~middotGOD~middotLOVE YCllJmiddot tomiddot~SMLgtO~middot ~$5 middotto A~RCtor $sO~ For your1nissionUorkIeanthelp eve~one andmiddotyou ~o tltosem most meed bullbull tchJMBfcn $20 to Anon lor $1000 middotsentmiddotWithlteommnbull ~ 11

bullbull bull ~l

The GOD LOVE YOU~ medal lovely cameo medal of the Madonna of tIle worldiS one you would be proud to give ormiddotde shy

lighted tci reC~iVEt DesIgned bi the world-renowned jeweler Harry winSton aildbltessed by Bishlgtp Sheen the GOD LOVE YOU medal is available inmiddotcl~icF~oreritinegold firiishor pure sterlingsilver aod may be obtained by sending your request and corresPondirtg offering to The Socieb for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth AvenueNew York NY 10061 $2 Sinall sterling silver $3 small

11gtk goid fiiled $5 large sterling silver $10 large 10k gold filled

Cut out this colullnn pln your sacrifice to It and mali It to Most RevbullFultom J Sheen National Director of The Society for the Propagation of thl~ Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or to your Dioclesan Director Rt Rev Msgr Raymond Jr Considine 363 North ll1ain Street Falll River Massachusetts

bull j 7 Perry IQur fI~~fng

~v~-t~e OilsMake Taunt~B1l~ Mass - Worm FriendsmiddotVA 2-2282

------------------ ~

genuinely democratic radicalism ON CAPE CODlbONNlEllyin o~r Iociety _

]OHoo ~~~(Kl~Ymiddotmiddot amp SON (~ofP~n~T~UnCG Rigt - flJ1 ml n

crepound ormiddotentireiyCommuist- 9llaquoIIlaquo ~$ lf1J Ilililte ~fYl U ~ I~raquo8L[)~NG MAmiddoth~linAL$middotmiddotmiddot~~~V~C~ 6

S~~ri~gj 1$100 4~~YARMUlrH ROA~)

middottYA~MBSmiddot AMPLE PARKING

iIIIIOCIIJIjIWUllJmllIllDOCImIWlDIllmIlXlWll(lJfi

- -

THE ANCHOR-Jesuit Educators Members of PAVLA Maintain Missionary Thurs Aug 25 1966 13

Ponder Students Record of Fall River Diocese Area G~~s SocoaCynical ~ttitQJJde

LOS ANGELES (NC) shy lLong outstanding for the missionary work of its priests Sisters and Brothers the ~elvD~e ~elrllfrer A top Jesuit educator dispenshy Fa~ River Diocese is fast becoming noted for its outstanding Papal Volunteers for Latin CLEVELAND (NC) - OUX sed advice here on how to eombat the attitude of some high schoolers who consider the world and the religion of their middotparents as phony

Father Edward J Sponga 8J of Baltimore in the keynote adshydress at the 1966 Jesuit Educashytional Association Workshop on Christian Formation at Loyola University here called for a dialogue with everyone conshycerned to emphasize the good crying to be released

Speaking to delegates from 52 Jesuit high schools in the nation Father Sponga chairman of the board of the Jesuit Educational Association declared

Menace to Freedom If the young men of our

schools consider the world and the religion of their parents as phony and a menace to their freedom then we must be ruthshyless in seeing how and why this is and in entering into dialogue with everyone who is willing to do so in order that we may be able to release the g09d that is crying to be released

During the 12 days of research and discussion 125 school adshyministrators and teachers evalushyated the effect that religion courses academic curriculum spiritual exercises and personal guidance have had on the charshyacters of the 35000 teenagers in U S Jesuit high schools

The delegates particularly were concerned about the loss of religious faith in the adolesshycent who is becoming increasshyingly sophisticated and critical

Middle Class Values Father Joseph H Fichter SJ

Stillman professor of sociology at Harvard Universitys divinity school criticized Jesuit high schools for not challenging the middle class values of many of their students for not paying sufficient att~rition to the social sciencesmiddot and for not drawing more of their students irom among the poor

Dr Alexander A Schneiders graduate professor of psychology at Boston College stressed the commitment of Faith that must be made within the scopemiddot of inshytellectual independence He arshygued against compelling students to make annual retreats or assist at religious exercises

Other delegates suggested esshytablishing pilot programs in 1l)ner-city high schools with nationwide cooperation and the sending of Jesuit teachers to work in community schools outshyllide the regular Jesuit system

Ho~es for Negroes Goal of Campaign

WORCESTER (NC) A camshypaign to secure better housing for Negroes in the Greater Worcester Area is growing

In a letter to some 1200 pershyS0l1S who last Aprii signed an

open letter newspaper adshyvertisement regarding fair hous ins John J Concordia Duman rights committee chairman of the Diocesan Council of Catholic M~~ ~sked sig~atories of the

open -letter to volunteer to ~adopt members of a Negro family am actively assist them inmiddotproC1Jri~g decent housing to titheir ~ne~ds

In 8 statement by an intershy fa(thmiddoteommittee on housing middotwfii~IlJs all out-growth of a

siniilar committee formed last year by the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women a call was made for construction of housshying for middotmiddotpoor and lower middle d~ss f ami ie It ixlcludins

Ne8J~s

bull bull r~ ~

America These young men and women doing Christs work in some of the worlds needshy Lady of Futima parish hat3 opened a social service centeliiest areas are a credit to the parishes and toowns from which they come Letest PAVLA here in the midst of the Houghassignments in the Diocese area scene of Clevelands recent

are those of Lucille Lebeau rioting of St Annes parish New The center housed in an 18-gt Bedford and Anthony Gomes room former apartment buildo St John of God parish Somershy ing was dedicated by Archo set bishop Paul J Hallinan of~ At-gt

Actually Lucille isnt a new lanta while he was visiting iii PAVLA hand She was the first Cleveland~bis native diocese Diocesan enlistee in the organishy The center will be staffed by zation going to Brazil as a four Sisters of Charity of St nurse-social worker in August Augustine who along with lay1963 She returned from her volunteers have been working three year assignment in July in the area since Aprilmiddot1965 but volunteered to serve an The center will middotprovide C9uri extra year in Brazil She will re seling nursing medical supplie tum there in November and pre-natal care -

Anthony veteran of a middotyears The building which standt work in Florida with the fedshy next to the parish rectory waserai governments VISTA proshy purchased bymiddot the parish seveR gram will teach English in a years ago when it was aba~ Mexican minor seminary He has doned as an apartment buildingalready completed a PAVLA

Early last year Father Alberitraining course at Catholic Unishy Albert Koklowsky MSSSTversity in Washington D C and pastor of Our Lady of Fatimawill leave in September for launched a campaign through aMexico City and an intensive column in the Catholic Universefour and a half month course in Bulletin Cleveland diocesanSpanish language and culture newspaper to explain Houghsbefore beginning his assignment poverty to metropolitan resiltshyin the mountain town of Tacomshydentsbaro in the state of Michoacan

Housing was a major themePioneer Work Resulting donations from unishy

Lucille bubbles over with enshy verse Bulletin readers and 11thusiasm for PAVLA and its acshy matching gift from Coadjutorcomplishments She has just reshy middotBishop Clarence Issenmann of turned from a trip to the Washshy Cleveland enabled Father Kokshyington training course attended lowsky to renovate the buildingby Tony Gomes where incishydentally she met him for the first time She talked to new Work for Needy enlistees individually and in LIMA (NC) - Sixty me~bers groups seeking to picture for af the St Rose CYO hert gavethem the new life theyd be enshy volunteer aid to projects for thetering needy this Summer Most as~

Their enthusiasm was a boostshy slsted in a federally financed er shot for meshe said educati~nal program for cultu~

This week the New Bedford rally deprived students from nurse is inmiddot the Chicago area PAVLA ENLISTEES Revmiddot James w Clark Diocesan ~nderglirtenmiddot to sixij1 grad~visting PAVLA headquarters Directormiddot of Papal Volunteenlmiddot for Latin America with Othershelp1 a~ amiddot day camn f~there and friends she made ill retarded cbildren andmiddot Qne asAnthony Gltgtmes bound for teaching assignment in Mexico~ Brazil including the doctor with Ns~ed at a eerebral palsy c~mpwhom she worked when me and Lucille Lebeau who has already spent three years m first went to the Latin American Brazil as nurse-social worker will return in Novemberfor eountry He is now in practice additional year in Waukegan lll FAIRHAVEN

When I first went to Brazil urgy eommunitY needs and was to leave in each parish IIshe 8a14 I worked for a little LUMBERhealth needs team similar to their own toover a year at a hospital in Salshy cOMPANY carry on as far as possible thevador Bahia My job was mlinly Most of the help that an area

training Brazilian aides and received came from the people work in liturgy catecheticsmiddot and community and health needssetting up hospital routines themselves t h r 0 ugh their Complete line

After the year was over Brazil shy awakened sense of community We would return to the comshyian doctors and medical students said -ucille Actual government munities where we had given Building Materials took over the hospital routines or material aid was hampered by this course as often as possible were runing smoothly and I political economic and social said Lucille anu each time we 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVEN felt that I could go on to public complications of many kinds eould set them growing spiritushyhealth work in areas where there The team played it by ear ally WYman 3-2611 was no nursing care at all avail- in deciding how to approach a Turn to Page Nineteen able particular parish Lucille and

Lucille joined an apostolic the nun on the team who was shy ~

team organized by Bishop Eushy also a nurse tried to work genio de Araujo Sales Apostolic through community midwives Administrator of Salvador Toshy who were sadly in need of techshy JEREMIAH COHOLAN gether with a priest a nun two nical instruction The infant Brazilian lay apostles and what mortality rate in most areas was would bt the equivalent af an very high said Lucille due iD PLUMING amp HEATING I American social worker she large part to umbilical tetanus visited areas of the Diocese preshy caused by unsanitary delivery viously all but unreached by the techniques

Church Another technique was organ- I Aim of the team she explainshy ization of one-week parish Wy 3 0911 699 B II II A

ed wail to change dormant parshy courses centered around the idea man - e VI emiddotmiddot ven~ ishes into Christian communishy of Christian cominunity Lucille Nwamp~fQrd ties Seventeen parishes were said middotshe would start the course I visited in the course of a year by trying to explain the concept lImiddottI-IIIlII_middot tI-II--tl- __ __ __ _-IIllIIIiImiddotllIlI_-IIllII~ -~~ ~--middot- ~ and a half rmging from mem- of Christians as people of God - - shy

berships of 20000 souls to 75000 then would set up discussion ~ItIIIIHtHIIIIIDIIIIUIIIIHlIIIIIIIiIllIIlHKHHIIItIIIIUIIIIIIIUllllliillllllllllIJllilllllllllllllilllllllll~ The 75OOO-member parish said Ioupsmiddot en suchmiddot subjects asmiddot~ -_sect_Lucille had only one priestmiddot 10 What ismiddota person-Person to ~ middotY 5 hmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot meet its needs person relationships~ and Dif- sect E we ayemiddot ~

Plan 01 AetiOll ferences between ordinary eom- ~ == The apostolic teamsaid Lushy munities andthe parish sect LARGE LIVEmiddot ~

eille would first survey condishy This would lead to a discussion sect ~ ~=_=_ tions and decide what most of the function of Christians and sect needed doing then plan an edushy what iii Christian community sect shycational program Three or fo~rmiddot should be lIke Theil leaders ~ while they la5~ - ~ natural leaders in each parish were ready to ask the parishion ~ sect= were chosen and arrangements ers if any were ready to coin- ~ were made to get them to an mit themselves as parish team sect Macleans SemiddotQmiddot F d ~ Archdiocesan training center for members to a stronger expres- ~ 00 S == a one month leadership training sian of their Christian fellow- sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN Tel 997-9358 sect eourse wverins lIlatechetics lit ooip Go~ of the lipQBtolie tea iulHIHlIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIJlIIIUillIIJlmIllUiJiillJillnililunJililillliiihIUllllIIlIilill(IIUJIIIJ1I1llIJllliinillllllltuE

- ~ - -~_middotmiddotij_Uimiddotmiddot ~ _

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 An Exce1lent Lcte Summer Activity J VI SIT-middot

Louisiari ~copyfrish A~~ampmpli~~~sect r~bull ~T[T uiH~Dfro[j1) fr ~rtilfrreg~[(frDIri)middot middot~~rrfr~~~Q~t~~~~~~~JJ~~tt$

MADISONVILLE (NC)--+wo cently used for ~~gt~es~was wears ago in this quiet jural torn down Its blue I green~and ~ J~lf ~ town the single square block white stained grass riow frames

ltContaining Catholic ch u r c h the huge rear wIndow ~ ~t buildings symbolized the old era Anselms church - - [f~[LL lRlt OV~~middot ~now it stands for the new This Spring St Catherines

Two years ago two churches also came down Gone too are stood 200 feet apart on this he cOl-vents and bullone school More than 280000 people havle cilrElody been aboard iUO ~he past ys[ioblock--St~ Catherine wh ere The other school building was

whites worshipped and St retained for parish meetings and Francis Xavier where Negroes the now-integrated Confratershy

worshipped The rectory with fiity of Christian Doctrine its one priest to serve both par- classes ishes s too d between theC rhe 100 or so school children

centhtirches moremiddot as a symbol of - arenow transported to elemEmshythe psychological gap thac asan tilt-y and high schools in nearby

actual separation covirigton arid Mandeville middot A fence stood between the two CCD instructions have been

eonventS on the block~riefor givengtySfsters qfChristian the Negro nuns who taughtCharityandtheirstudEints from

Negro children in the ~e~ro ~~njpirClncy at FolsoM La and IIchool the other for the wfitte byseminariaris fromarby St IllUns who taught white children i-Jolieph seminarY Butmiddot tpeseiii the whHe school diities are being taken over by

Now there is one church onemiddot tlie parishs integrated CCD orshyrectory and one small classroom ganizatiorinow being trained

building -- and one parish St The pastor Father John J Anselm DenDulk is prouder of the

Although wee k day Masses smooth transition than he is of were said in only onemiddot of the the physical change shytwo old churches Masses and Participation in worship has ether services on Sundays and increased since the new church major feast days were said in w~ built he says and he has

middot both Midnight Masses on Christ- the best commentators in the mas were celebrated concurrent- whl)le world

Iv in the two churches AIthougb there are only 260 But the buildings weremiddot badly families in the parish the new

Qn need of repair So in 1964 the ~church is already more than half lttId frame church of St Francis paid for and the parish topped

middot Xavier whose parish records go its quota in the archdiocesan back to 1863 and which was re- education expansion drive

bull ~ I bull

Bishop Pmiddoterry Says New Orleans Has Healthy Racial Climate

DENVER (NC) - Auxiliary still has more influence thaa Bishop Harold R Perry SyD any other Negro in the civil of New Odeans first AmeJican rights movement Catholic Negro bishop in this He (Bishop Perry) has been

lt1lentury said here a hea~thy very favorably received in New racial climate will exist wher- Orleans eve~ the Negro has a chan~ to Some Cannot WaU voice his grievances He said there will undoubtedshy

Bisnop Perry dted New 9r- ly be some civil rights groups lleans as an example sayipg the who disapprove lt)f non-violence racial climate there is healthy and occasional demonstrationS

because of an interracial council by those who cannot wait appointed by Louisiana~ov Of course I am a Negro and

John J McKeithen to help splve we have been waiting a long rmcial problems time If you take the long view I There are no demonstra~ions complete equality cant come too and riots and very little picket- quickly he added~

lng he said The cotiJlc~1 i-e- He said he has been received lieves tensions and if the Negro very well even enthusiastically has a forum to talk over his con- in New Orleans Picketing outshyeerns he will not demonstrate side the church where he was

Schools Integrated ~onsecrated he s3id Was DOt typical of the general feeling in

The 50-year-old prelate said New Orleans be is proud New Orleans has in- As an evidence of his popushytegrated all Its schools Its a larity he said he spoke at ninemiddot large percentage not just token graduations in June and has ofshyhe added ficiated at Confirmation in 24

He said Catholics are doing parishes their part to advance equality of opportunity in his citymiddot 1 think [EceQJl1illeIJilD~~ CCrrnDDOdegthere has been Ii united effort tl)Ir If

by all faiths and we would like ~~ ~DcopyQJIJilampIbgtD~~~DIJil to keep it that way he de- CRANSTON (NC) I hdared - n a s ow The New Orleans bishop also of the ecumenical spirit lea4ers ~ommented on ~ wide range of of major religious faiths in this

area took part in a combined eivil rights issues saying

The new militancy shown by bull religious and groundbreaking Visit the BClI~~ie$Mp anldllode alIeplica of the Old iFal~middot River Bill1e~ middottmiddotsom~ civi~ rights groups is a service on the site of the proshy

posed Church of the Annunciashypassing phase tion Greek Orth()dox lours start every 30 minutes

The majority of Negroes are Archbishop lakovo primate lJympathetic to the non-violent of the Greek Orthodox Church Opeill aU year round - 9 AM to Sunsetphilosophy of the Rev Dr Mar- of North and South America of tin Luther King and Dr King ficiated at the open air hierar- For Group Arrangements Call 678-1100 chal Divine Liturgy service at-

Serra Meeting tended by more than 500 pershy l)OOOO()ooOOC)ooOOClOOC)ooOOC)OO~IOOl sons

THIS MESSAGE Sp()NSORED IV lHE FOllOWING INDIVIDUALSATLANTIC CITY (NC) - A Participants in the groundshyeonference for members of Ser- breaking ceremony included AND BUSINESS CONCERNS IN GREATER FALL RIVERlIa Clubs in the New York-New Catholic Bishop Russell J MoshyJersey - eastern Pennsyivania Vinney of Igtrovidence Archshy ANN DALE PRODUCTS INC MACKIENZIE amp WINSLOW INC area will be held here Sept 23 deacon William L Kite represhy II~DY ELECTRIC SUPPLY COMASON FURNITURE SHOWROOMS tKi 25 Msgr William Noe Field senting the Rt Rev John Seville CASCADE DRUG CO GERALD E McNALLY CONTRACTOItiff Seton Hall University South Higgins Episcopal Bishop of GLOBE MANUFACTURING CO SOBILC)FF BROTHERS Orange NJ will give the key- Rhode Island Dr Wayne ~is

~~TGHINSON OIL COa~te address Sept 24 apoundter a executive director ofmiddot the Rhode STERUllIG BEVERAGES INC

~A Mc~HIRR ~9MPANY TEXTIU WORKERS UNION Of AMERICAeOncelebrated Mass at which the 1s~and Council of Churches ~nd ~rE~~ATIQNALV4DIES GARMENT 1 bull AlL~tO - principal concelebrant will be Rabbi Jerome Smiddot Gurland Gf

WORKERS UNION (EUOW CAI COMPANY Bishop George W Ahr of Tren~ ~telligtl~ Sinai 1epresentingthe ton Bhode Island Board of Rabbiamp bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull0 MssSelbullbull

~ ~ ~ - bull bull bull bull I ~ j

- ~

_-- -

0

WomenB~ Job Corps Members middotAid Youngsters Improve Reading

OMAHA (NC)-Omaha Wom- chesne Mother Moody found a ens Job Corps members joined benefactor to supply ihe a11shywith five graduates of Duchesne importlnt incentive program College and Academy of the Thanks to a generous racetrack

Sacred Heart here to upgrade bettor Who won the daily double the reading level of local public there was enough money for school youngsters candy bar prizes and two picnics

The progra~ ca]]edProject An indication or- the success of Upstart was first conceIved by the program was found in the Mother Helen Condon dean of reaction of the students A reshythe Nebraska co]]eg~ Mother cent visitor asked one of the Rosemary Moody aSsIstant pro- young boys Why are you here fessor o~ ~sYChology volunteer~ Did someone make you come to adminIster and execute themiddot program

The original plans were to take a group of seventh graders from Horace Mann Junior High School and tutor them in develshyopmental reading and study skills It soon became apparent that some rather basic instrucshytion was required some of the ehildren were still reading at the second grade level

Duchesnes elementary school was offered for use by Mother Helen Sheahan superior An Omaha public school official suggested that the Omaha Wom- ens Job Corps be contacted to see if they could furnish high school graduates as tutors Robshyert Bathke Job Corps education director soon put five young ladies at Mother Moodys disshyposal

Five recent Duchesne gradushyates volunteered to train the tutors for two weeks before the program actually began The Duchesne alumnae eventualiy elected to stay on for the entire program

Mother Moodymiddot was so imshypressed with the potential of the Job Corps enro]]ees that she exshytended their sessions through the rest of the summer and made college preparatory work avail shyable to them

Student Reaction Perha~s one of the more unshy

usual aspects of the entire Upshystart program was its lack of financing The only real subsidy (about $500) was from the OMaha Public School system the bulk of which went to the Omah~ Transit Company for bus service

The equipment used in the classrooms was borrowed from the public schools the Omaha Womens Job Corps and Du-

Plan to Supplement History Books

SAN FRANCISCO (NC) shyA supplementary text showing the contributions of minority groups in United States history will be added to history and social science books already in use in archdiocesan schools here

The supplement containing some 150 pages will deal chroshynologica]]y with the contribu- tions of Jews Negroes Orientais and various nationalities from southern Europe

It is being prepared by a speshycial studly committee which illl evaluating current textbooks found need for more thorough material on the part minority

groups have played in the OOUDshytry1s history

Leave Providence For Mission Work

PROVIDENCE (NC) - Four Capuchin priest and two layshymen left New York by plane for mission work in the Santa Rosa de Copan diocese Honduras

Father Ad ria n Holzmeister OFM Cap provincial of tile Capuchins St Mary province with headquarters here said the six will work among some 50000 persons in Mlree parishes in the state of Ocotepeque He said

other mjssionersmiddotas they become ayailabie wiD be sent to aid Bishop Jose Canama CbampvezCli tile diocese

He looked up and said Im here because I want to learn to read and I like it Two girls who missed the morning bus to Duchesne gave another exain-ple of determination to learn Jhey undertook a two-hour five mile walk rather than miss a day of class

L R oy etreats Contlnu~d from Page Six

laymens convention-an effort to provide some figure of speech some image to suggest to those in the Church and to those out-

side what is the inner nature of the Church

Alluding to Scriptures refershyences to the Church in terms of sheep and shepherds the former Hub Auxiliary Bishop asked How many people in Boston have ever seen a sheep Sheep and shepherds say little to youngstersmiddot in housing projects or even in the suburbs

The Bishop who is epiScopal advisor for the NCLRC officiashyted at the lighting of an eightshyfoot candle which symbolized the

conference theme-uThe Light of Chr~st The candle burned throughout the convention

Speakers stressed the retreat program is geared to demOJishystrate to the world that the way of Christ can become more meaningiful to men of our time

Bishop Ernest J Primeau of Manchester reminded delegates of recent profound changes withshyin the Church

If the lay retreat movement is to remain vital and relevant

he said it cannot be static It must be in harmony with the times at all times

Honest Call1Se

Our retreat houses could 00-middot eome so to speak the equipment and training centers for the apostolates of the laity he adshydect

Bishop Primeau urged laymei to learn from modern science particularly in the field of hushyman psychology He said there is an opportunity as well to learn from other organizations both secular and religious He added The youth of today are un-

selfish and in large numbers they are seeking for an honest cause to which they can dedicate themshyselves as witness their devotion to the Peace Corps and the civil rights movement

Modernize AncEtenlt Puerto Rico CIl1llLmlrch

SAN JUAN (NC) =- A lPJt8shyyear-old church one of the most popularmiddot in this capital city~ ~

going modern Archbishop Luis Aponte of

San Juan has inaugurated middotal campaign for funds for restorashytion of St Anns a public orashytory now badly illl need of Jeshypairs

1ft addition to restoration the ehurch also Will be equipped with air conditioning The eburch is the archdiocesan ceDltgt ~r for the Confraternity Gi Christian Doctrine and perpetual adoration of the Blessed Sacrashyment Built ill 184B the cburch weplaced an edifice which dated )Iaek iG tile lWi century

PROFESSION ANJ)) RECEPTION Four postulants beshycame canonical novices and two prof~ssed their vows as Sisters of St Joseph at ceremonies at the Blessed Sacrashyment Church Fall River Left column top to bottom Sr Gerard Marie (first vows) Sr Anne Therese Sr Rita Josshyeph Bishop Connolly who received the sisters Right colshyumn Sr Anne Denise Sr St Paul and Sr Alfred Marie (renewed temporary vow-s)

Specialmiddot Education Priests Visi~ PaJ~ents Homes to ExplOJon

SignificOJlI1lce off Baptismal Ritual

Thurs Aug 25 1966

Governor Balks

ST JEAN (NC)-Sunday bapshytisms are prece~ed by Saturday nights special educational proshygrams in a number of Catholic homes here in Quebec

The program to prepare the whole family for baptism through a home visit was deshyvised three years ago by a group of pries~s working togeth~r as a pastoral team

central idea of the program ~s that it is good for the priest to be with his people at imporshytant times in their lives~ Atmiddot these times people are dispOSed to receive the message of Christ

as it applies to their circumshystances the developers of the plan reported

The visiting priest explains the lOOremonies of the next day and the symbolic meaning of various parts of the baptismal ritual

Pilgrims Wctmlk TORONTO (NC) -The 10th

annual walking pilgrimage to the Canadian Martyrs shrine at Midland Ont will begin here Wednesday Organized by the Guild of St John de la Lande the pilgrimage will cover the 100 miles to the shrine in five days a~riving there Sunday Sept 4

LEMIEUX PLUMBING amp HEATING INC

fof Oomestic l~ andmiddot Industrial ~ Sales and Service

Oil Burners WY 5-1631

2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE NEW BEDFORD

Relatives neighbors or the prospective gorlparents may be presentbut themiddot home visit usually involves just the parents and their children

The ide is to make the preshybaptism vsit an oppodunity for dialogue between the priest and the parents rather than a conshyference

Ten parishes in the St Jean diocese have adopted the praeshytice along with l few Montreal parishes Father Marcil Brillon secretary of the St Jean litur- gical commission said he exshypects the practice to spread

FALSE TEETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass Many wearers of false teeth suJIer

embarrassment Qecause their platesdrop Blip or wobble at Just the wrong time Dont live In fear of thts happening to you Just sprinkle a little FASTEErH the non-acid powder on your plates Holds false teeth more firmly so they feel more comfortable Checks denture breath Dentures that fit are essential to health See your dentist regularlyGet FASTEETH at all drug counters

At Proposals MONTPELIER (NC) - Vershy

monts Gov Philip Hoff said he bas extreme reservations conshycerning abortion and sterilizashytion proposals contained in a reshyport of an adivsory committee on the mental retardation situshyation in the middotstate

The report called for legal sanctioning of induced abortion in cases where there appears to be a high risk of mental retarshydation of an unborn child

Thereport also contained a suggestion concerning steriliza shytion of the mentally retarded

Apart from the recommenda~ tions on legalized abortion and sterilization of the mentally reshytarded I must S4ly it was II good report Gov Hoff said He said lie will study the report with utmost care before taking any action 0

Expresses Thanks To Holy Father

VATICAN CITY (NC) -The vice prime minister of Vietnam has paid a visit to Pope Paul VI to thank him for his peace efshyforts and generous help to reshylieve the suffering of the Vietshynamese people General Nguyen Huu Co vice prime minister and secretary of state for national defense of Vietnam visited privately withshythe Pope for 30 minutes Accord- ing to a Vatican Press Office bulletin

The vice prime minister in the name of South Vietnam exshypressed profound gratitude for the valid support always given by the head of the Catholic Church and of the Holy See in the cause of peace and for the generous assistance sent by the Holy Father to relieve the sufshyfering of those persons torshymented by war The distinguishshyed visitor then continued tomiddot deshyclare that the intentions of South Vietnam are directed only toward an affirmation of the liberty of its own nation and Wgt arriving at a just peace in honor and concord

Complete

BANKING SERVICE

for Bristol County

Bristol County Trust Company

TAUNTON MASS

THE ~ANK ON TAUNTON GREEN

Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Bristol Community College Offers Evening Classes

64 Durfee St Fall River Credit classes begin September 19 1966

Register Now Mondays thrrough Thursdays 200-500 PM Courses for college credit or self improvement are offered ill

The arts languages and literature Behavioral and social sciences accounting business

administration and secretarial scieRCe Mathematics science engineering and electro-mechanical technology

Advisors Availabie During ~egistration Hours

16 THE AI~ ~-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

C~nsiders Instability Causes In Latin American lamds

From Social R-evolution in the New Latin Ameriea Edited by John J Considine MM

There are many causes of instability in Latin America Some have said in the past that it is an inheritance frQm

Spain They feel that the years of Spanishauthoritarianism rendered the colonies incapable of integrating themselves into a more balanced social system Because they had there exists the problem of low

denSity of population with a lackpreviously lacked indepenshyof internal communication In-dent creole authority the many cases there is even a lanshy

colonies were unprepared to acshy guage barrier eept a more democratic authorshy The problem of an underdeshyity In his book veloped economy has also beenBetween Freeshy a factor in forming Latin Anlershy clom and Fear ican social structureGerman Arcinshy On the social level the eleshyiegas draws a ments I have mentioned favorcomparison beshy an internal lack of class strucshytween the Enshy ture that involves a juxtaposishyglish and Spanshy tion rather than a social organi shyish governments zation and integration Democshyin the Americas racy on the other hand presupshyIn ihe north the poses a large scale integrationcolonists came in of the people in the politicalshysearch of freeshy economic-social life of thedom IIi the end nationthe founding of the Nodh The masses of -illiterates inAmerican colonies was only the Latin America who do not parshyobvious culmination of a process ticipate in these areas have noalready begun It was the reafshy iilterest in government thoughfirmation of customs already inshy their interest and loyalty maygrained in the social milieu It be enlisted by the demagoguewas an evolution not a real revshyolution for these settlers were Formation or Dictatorships accustomed to autonomy The A dictatorship takes form

authority pf their governors was when one or more pressure more democratic since they groups unchallenged seizes the worked closely with the popular power of governmentassemblies From the beginshy In order to better understand ning the keenest concern of the the types of dictatorship found North American colonist was for in Latin America let us elCamshyfreedom of worship and his hosshy ine the different forms of revoshytility to the Church of England lution and the various ways in was evident which the pressure groups

On the contrary Latin Amershy bring their influence to bearIca was part of an empire The Kalmal1 Silvert distinguishesSpaniards came to dominate and these types in his book Reaction evangelize The viceroy represhy and Revolution in Latin Amershysented the king who was an abshy ica which is written in -Englishsolute monarch The role of Silvert shows the relationshipshyassembly in Latin America was between dictatorships and the secondary arid represented exshy extreme indivdualism found in tremely liIIlited power these countries

Independence in the Latin The first type of revolution American nations entailed a real named is what Silvert calls the revolution since from the beginshy simple brracks revolt Most of ning they were forced tb look for the outbreaks especially in the new political and social forms past century have been of this

Religiousliberty did not elCshy kind The barracks revolt occurs ist in the Latin American coloshy typically in a big class society nies since all were obliged to It is carried out by the amlY

membership in the Cathoiic sompoundtimes in its own name and Church sometimes in behalf of a chosen

Unassimilated Groups leader This type of revolution - rarely calses widesprelld publicThis comparison will help in

disturbance since it representsunderstanding the Latin Amershymerely a switch in governmentican problem though it will not from one general to anotherfully explain -it We must acshy

knowledge that the political The second type the peasant phenomeinon has a direct COIshy revolt is generally of little sigshyrelatio~1 with demographic probshy nificance and limited in effect lems such as the existence of to a locality though the Mexican large unassitnilated groups as revolution at the beginning of well as masses of mestizos un this century would perhaps fall derdeveloped and deprived who in this category can scarcely be said to partici shy Third the regional revolt pate in twentieth century chili shy commcn in the early days of zation Although these groups Latin American independence form a part of the nation they Here _the caudillo strove to put are not integrated either socially down provincial revolts and to eulturally or politically centralize power in an authorishy

Despite the over-all demoshy tarian I e g i () n a I government g~aphic explosion in some areas Typical of the caudillos who led

regional revolts was Rosas of Argentina

Plans Participation The fourth a more modern type of revolution Silvert callsIn Liturgical Week the complicated barracks revolt

HOUSTON (NC) - The 1966 This is an insurrection that inshyLiturgical Week here fOI the -volves civilian as well as mili shyfirst time in its 25-year history tary groups with widespread will have a full scale program military action for those interested in the The issues are ideological and Eastern Church relate to political parties as well

As part of the Liturgical Week as _ other interest groups The program the Divine Liturgy Cuban revolution in its beginshy(Mass) of St John Chrysostom nings might be considered -an will be celebrated entirely in example Although this is the English and Communion will be most prevalent type ainong modshydjstributed under both species ernday revolutions excetions Chief celebrant of the Liturgy are the revolts which overthrew will be Archbishop Paul Achkar Peron in Argentina Perez-JimeshyGreek Catholic ~-chbishop of nez in Venezuela and -Rojas Lattaquia in Syua Pinilla in Colombia

SISTER AMBROSE

Says SOo Africa Needs Americans

WASHINGTON (NC)-Yanshykee come over a statement which would do much to boost the morale of Americans in sevshyeral parts of the world could well summarize what an Irish missionary nun to South Africa

-has been saying during a visit here _

The wonderful hospitality of theAmerican people has imshypressed Sister Ambrose Harty Gf the Sisters of the Holy Family She lamens the fact that opporshytunities to receive Americans in a like manner have been few and far between during her 20 years in South Africa

Youve got such a lot to give she said here in an ~ntershyview during which she expressed a strong desire to see greatly inshycreased people-to-people relashytio~s between the country where she serves and the United States

Sister Ambrose was particushylarly interested in the Peace Corps ann reported that its purshyposes and work are hardly known by the people of Soutli Africa I haVent heard it disshycussed at all she said (The Peace Corps has not been invited into the country) (

With words of praise for the missionary work being done iii the South African Republic by Oblate arid Paulist missionaries from the United States she also expressed regret at the general paucity of missioners from this country There particularly is an almost total lack of nuns she said Only 71 Catholic missionshyaries from the United States inshycluding 16 nuns are serving ilm South Africa

Married Priests AMSTERDAM (NC)-A

Dutch public opinion poli h8lll shown that 11 per cent of the Netherlands p e 0 pIe woulci rather have III married Catholi4l clergy than a celibate clergy The poll including members ai all and no denominations

-showed that 68 per cent of the Catholics queried preferred III married clergy

~~

(DEBROSS OIL ( ~ co ( ~ Heating Oils

~ and BMIIJUrs ~

~ 365 NORYIoli IFROIlir SUEampll ( rJ NEW IBIEDIFOR

~ WYmafi 2middot5534 (

I~~~

Parishes Share DETROIT (NC) - Twentyshy

nine urban parishes here have decided to help one another meet the rising cost of education

At the elementary level parshyepts will pay $50 per family $75 per family for non-Catholic parishioners and $75 per student

Danish Catholic COPENHAGEN (NC) -Thereshy

are 11321 Catholics in the Danish capitalaccording to a report issued by the Copenhagen statistical office They consti shytute the second largest religious entity there next to the Luthershyans members of the State Church The total number of Catholics in Denmark is approxshyimately 26000 Total population is 35 lllillion

Education Costs for Catholics outside the parish

At the high school level the tuition cost is $H)O per student in or out of the parish With the exception of textbooks this amount eliminates aU extra fee charged up to now

Father Norman P Thomas director of the Urban Parisll Apostolate said the greatest efshyfect of the joint effort will be experienced by the pastor who sends parish youngsters to a higll school operated by any of the 2 participating parishes

In this instance the students parishes will be expected to pay the difference between the tui shytion charged and the actual cost per student The latter fee laM been set by the parochial school office at over $200 per year

ETHIOPIA- THE NEW AFRICA

- HOLY FATlftRB MIBBIIDN AID TO THI DRIENTAL OHURCH

- BROTHER What happens In Ethiopia when an American MICHAEL Christian Brother (he could be your son brother

REYNOLDS nephew) Is told to upgrade Catholic schools He FROM borrows a Jeep (or a mule) visits the schools

PROVIDENCE RI one by one writes home for pencils and better REPORTS textbooks and then beginsbullbull This is the new

fROM Africa Brother Michael Reynolds reports enshyADDIS thusiasticallyfrom Addis Ababa It can be a BABJpeacefuf progressive Christian Africa tom~rmiddot

row Just give us schools give us time and with Gods help the job will De donel bull bullThe schools are for villages like Aressa Aiga Biers Wartll8~

-which have no school The youngsters know that knowledge i~ their only chance theyll go without food to learnbullbullbull What does It cost to build a schoolf Only $2950 says Brother Michael for the villagers snd the children give their laborfreemiddotofmiddotcharge We can train a catemiddot chlst for only $40 bullbullbull In thanksgiving to God for what you know will you do what you can ($100 $75 $50 $25 $15 $10 $5 $2) to give these youngsters a chance The school will be named for your favorite saint and the children will pray for your loved ones daily If you build It all byyourself ($2950) School will open late this year-but better late than never-If you Vlrit~ to us right now

WHAT Our priests there who receive no othor income IELSE for food and clothing will offer promptly the

FOR Masses you request Well forward your Mass ETHOPIAr Inten~ons through the Holy Fathers officebull

40 young lads studying for the priesthood In Decamere lose their football when It goes Into a nelghbers garden A large field can be bought ~velled and mede safe for sports fer $975

MAKINQ ~~IOOOO will ovfde bull OOfDj)lete parjstlplantA (Ohuroh rectory convent andscbool) In southshy

WiW ImIAdla In memorybullbullbullbull $600 will ttiln a native lrfHt1SOO bull native Sfster Our legal tltI Cl~1HOUO NWt lAir WIUAH AHOCIAnONo

_-------------~shytt coINIILOIIlt IUMIIIND ~ bullbull la IJIIr bull _1OIt~=-=_==-=

PI _UM~gt

Mum ClO1IIponwith your mt__=-~~_ _ ~i offrtnt ~~ erryen 8TAlI-lPCODI_

HI IATHaLl1 RIIiAR 811 WILAbullbull AIaDIATaN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS IRANCUS CARDINAL SPELLMAN President MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretal)f Write OATHOLIO NfIAR IiAST WELFARE Assoo 1)80 MadlsolJ Avenuomiddot New York NY 10017 -felGpilonel 212YUkon 6middot6840

Dormitory Proves Stonehill Permanently Coeducational

Way back in 1951 when the first girl enrolled in Stoneshyhill College no one could have imagined that a girls dormishytory would ever be built onmiddot the campus But the sound of steam shovels and hammers filling the air over the lovely grounds in Easton is proof

and two girls from the seniorthat the long planned for daslr-assisting the housemothergirls dorm will soon be a Mrs Grace Callahan

reality When Stonehill was The experiment worked so founded in 1948 as a mens colshy well in fact that this coming lege the fledgling school had Fall both the freshman and just gotten off to a good start sophomore girls will be housed when the Korean War came this way leaving only the junior along and emptied the classshy and senior girls still renting Yooms as the young men went quarters in private homes chosen into the services by the college as all the nonshy

That was the year that many commuting girls have done in small colleges had to close their the past gates forever But at Stonehill That typical campus situation the Holy Cross order was detershy -the sorority house-is not in mined to hold onto this new the picture at Stonehill-or frashyschool that they had planned for ternity houses either for that so long matter No sororities or fraternishy

What could they do to keep ties are allowed on the campus the college operating until the There is a cl11b however that war was over and the boys came is the girls own - the Crosier back Of course Open their Club Mrs Yosgandes is the gates to girl students clubs faculty advisor and she deshy

Faculty Pleased scribes it as the organization What started out as a temposhy for women studentE who want

rary expediency somehow over to contribute in their own parshythe years has acquired a happy middotticular way as women to their permanancy No one could be college more pleased about this turn of Through their annualmusical events than the Stonehill faculty Crosier Curtain Calls theyitself raise money to acquire manymiddot

Helping out in Jhe ground things that add beauty and breaking ceremony for the new charm to campus life This yeardorm Mrs Virginia Yosgandes they purchased two very lovelythe Dean of Women at the colshy silver tea and coffee services lege saiei I guess everyone will Any official group at the collegereally believe that the girls are is allowed to borrow the sets and here til stay they have already been used in

Mrs Yosgandes says that since many functions she first came to the Stonehill New Signfaculty in 1958 rumors have

Mrs Yosgandes says Thebeen popping up that Stonehill girls will be very pleased whenwill soon return to its original they come back th~~ Fallto seestatus as an all male school The the beautiful new sign theynew dorm she says will be visshybought for the college installedible proof of the permanancy of on Route No 138 women on the beautiful campus

Its very easy to picture theThe $1150000 building deshyvery charming Dean presidingsigned to accommodate 200 girls

graciously at a faculty tea Aand proctors will be three stories parishioner of Immaculate Conshyof red brick Architects W Chesshyception chulCh in Easton she ister arown and Associates and in ~rivate life an enthusiasticwntractors C A Batson and homemaker anc the mother of aCompany are planning to comshy13 year old daughter Christineplete work on the dorm in time Her husband John is assistantfor the opening of classes in principal at Franklin JuniorSeptember 1967 It will be the High first unit of a five dormitory

She speaks with great convicshycomplex planned fo the women on tion about college girls holdingcampus

onto feminine ideals while surshyKitchen ~pace rounded-and at Stonjhill outshyMrs Yosgandes is happy about numbered 3 to 1- by menthe fact that the new dorm will While were encoulaging themhave a kitchenette on each floor to be acdve in thpound communitywhere the girls can cook small and the church and in politicsmeals and entertain guests Shes and encouragint them to deshyhoping that the dorms built after

more velop their abilities to the full shythis me will providtgt even est-we never fail to take intokitchen space for the girls to account the fact that they arepractice the culinary arts women and in this competitiveM a n~ tImes homemaking world theyll have to -fight toskills come to a complete halt maintain their feminine idenshywhen a girl goes to college she tity says Apparently all classroom

work and rio cooking make Jane Coed Actiiti~s

Coed a dull girl in the room When she fi rst came to the where shell be spending a great college she sltys the girls were deal of time after graduationshy mainly interested in strictlythe dtchen feminine extra curricular activishy

Mrs Yosgandes says A great ties-fastion shows teas gids many cCJlleges have been workshy sports Bd this has changed radshying witt this problem and wonshy ically in the last few years and dering what to do about it Beshy now the girls are much more inshycause theyve had no living terested in the coed acti vitiesshyquarters for girls on campus the newspapers the debating Stonehiiil has had to do out of team the drama club Stonehill necessit) what many other colshy is noted a~ one of a small handshyleges have chosen to do recently ful gtf Catholic colleges where The Dean describp~ an experishy girls are middotactive in every part of ment that the collFge tJied last college life Every coure at yeal tha has worked out exshy StonehHj is opel to girls tremely well We still havent had a woman

Experiment Successful president of our student governshyThe college leased a grollp of ing body the Senate Mrs

rooms il an apartmelt building Yosgandes says Now girls in Brockton last Fall where all what are yOIi waiting for the freshman girls who were not commuters-55 of them-lived in housekeeping apartments In Red Groups There were four girls in each BERLIN (NC)-Over 85 per apartment all sharing the reshy (ent of East German children sponsibilities of housekeeping between the ltlges of 6 and 14 are

The girls hat two sets of mCl11)ers of communist youth 1)IoctOS - two aIumni wumen ~nIUps

lrt-OE ANCH0) 17 Thurs Aug 25 1966

PriestCuod Goal Of Top Skater

GREAT FALLS (NC)-A good many folks in this Montana toWlll will attest that teenager J Mishlll Petkevich is a pretty good skate -on or oH the ice

The affable blond youngster 17 topped a field of 136 pershyformers in the three-day Lake Placid N Y international free style competition sanctioned by the U S and Canadian Figure Skating Assoclations The Great Falls lad was the judges unamiddot1ishymous choice for the mens gold medal in the finals

But Petkevich doesnt lose his cool off the ice His classmates and teachers at Great Falls Censhytral 3igh School claim hes liIl

winner in every event He spends more than 40 hours 11 week in skating training but carries the full load of class studies and consistently turns Up on the schools honor roll Hes a member of the National Honor Society

The school supported me ami the way Everyone has beeEl wonderfUl to me the modest youngster saia Hes been -skatshying since he was 2 He credit his achievements to his Catholic Faith the sacrifices of his parshyents and of Arthur Bourke senshyiormiddot professional of the Great Falls Figure Skating Club He said All I did was skatemiddotGROUND-BREAKING The Very Rev John T Corr

I hope some day to become~esc president of Stonehill College turns a shovelful of priest Petkevich said wbeilearth to mark start of construction 0pound a 200-student dormshy a~ked his ambition I hope 14gt itory for women on the Stonehill campus Watching the proshy attend Notre Dame for at leasa celtlures are left to right Mrs Virginia Yosgandes dean af two years and then I h9pe to gf)

to the Catholic University fl4women John C Doody 66 Alumni fund chairman Robert AmericaBatson contractor Harold Bonvie ass~iate of the archishytect

Msgr Canty Continued from Page OneRussian Schools ing studies at S1 Marys High

Taunton Boston- College and S1 Bernards Seminary RochesshyChristian Brother Lauds Students terN Y

nespect for Intellectuols He served as assistant at Our Lady 01 the Isle NantucketCHICAGO (NC)-Students in to foreign languages than Amershy Holy Family Taunton St

schools behind the Iron Curtain icans Most students take a Marys Barrowsville and Stgo at their studies with a passhy seven-year sequence of English Johns Attleboro He was apshysion said Brother Kevin Mark German or French English he pointed to the Chaplains CorPJFSC who toured Russia and added is the most popular lanshy of the United States Navy infour satellite countries with 19 guage and more emphasis is January 1942 and retiredwitbother U S rducatois placeltl on reading and speaking the rank of captain in Decemshy

Brothel Mark who is princishy than on writing it ber 196gt Pope John XXIII pal 9f St Mels high school here Brother Mark said that there elevated him to the rank of attributed much of their motivashy is almost nothing that he would Domestil Prelate with the title tion to the students attitude that lift from the Soviet school sysshy of Right Reverend Monsignor iI What I do does contribute to tem and apply in the U S May 1962 the welfare of the state He admitted however that Bishop Connolly named Monshy

Brother said he felt that stushy they do get results They have a signor Canty pastor of St Paulsdents in this country lack motishy tremendous capacity for conshy Taunt-ln in December 1963 vation because were spoiled centration when they set their Industrial improvements have sights for example their space made it that a young man can program Its not all a matter go into a trade and make very of being chained to a lab table good money BLUE RIBBON

In the Soviet Union he said there seems to be a great reshyspect for intellectuals and the LAlnNDRY student is thought of as a proshy

01 STOPfessional schJlar 273 CE~RAl AVE~UIIG CfflTERTeaching is considered a proshy

fession and remunelated accordshy e Television C FmiddotI ure illgly WY 2-6216o r-cerv

St Mels principal observed on IlA Allen St Newhdfordhis tour that there was little NEW BEDFORD questioning on the part of the students

The chSSloom situation he said is very much teacher ori shyented that is study in depth is 21 DAY PILGRIMAGES TO EUROPE done on the teachers inspiration

rou~ 1-Legion of Mary Pilgrimage leaving Sept 12th with Truth in such areas as history Father Edward A Oi-viera will visit Killarney Dublin Paris

cllld literature is accepted as a Lourdes Rome Madrid Lisbon and Fatima - Tour 2shyforegone conclusion and stushyHoly Cross Fathers Pilgrimage leaving Oct 10th with Frdents just memorize what has

already been discovered ----- lobert E McDonnell will wsit lisbon Fatima 1odrid Rome Lourdes Paris and londonIike F)rc~gn Linutges -cota cost is $82900 - Time PaymentsmiddotIn the area of science howshy arranged ever the situation is difterent

()Ii TOUR tOLDERS CONTACT STEolfEN A MARIIEYhe pont~d out because in scishyence there is an attitude of I n~ust discover Catholic Travel

-Office

The R1~middotmiddotmiddotO p oth-r Mark ~ltk St New Befl- -ass 02748

said ~ ve 11111j Ill)le auention

BURNERS

BUrntlr Service

Famous Reading HARDCQAl

NEW ENGLAND COKE

t8 THE ~NCHOR-Dioceseof fo Rivef-Thurs Aug 25 1966 J~sut I)riest Says Some Public I b M t EmploYE~~S Have Right to Strike

-

Urges uO or ovemen S NEW (NC) -Public however YORK Government hasmiddot h C employees in certain fields have been expanding its cQncern andIn Heml$p ere ooperate the right to strike against the has beenmoving into ar~as of government a priest declared transportation education recre-

By MsgrGooJrge C Higgins (Director Socian Actiolll Dept NCWC)

The relationship between the American labor moveshyment and the Latin American Confed~ration of Christian Trade Unions (CLASC) leaves much to be desired as we

middot thO d th 1- have aready noted severa1 t Imes m IS co umn urmg e

past four or five years The two movements are deeply different things to different peoshy

auspicious of one another and just when they seem to be on the verge of settling or at least -patching up their differshyences they go at it again and recklesslystart hurling insults at one another

To jUdge from What they sayIi b 0 u t on e another publicshy1yen as well as privately on e would t h ink that they were natural-born enshyemies whe~eas in fact they have much in common-much inore than they seem to realizeshyand for obvious reasons ought violent MisS Duncan was an officer of The fourth public member Harshyto be c60p~rating With onean- Moreo~er at least one promi~theSodality a cheerleader for vardlaw school professorVern ether as closely as pOSSible nent spokesman for the AFL- four years a member of the Ten- Countryman half ci-itiCized the This writer has learn~ci the hard WR and muc~ to hiS so~-row that any outSider who 18

fOolish enough totryto mediatek f

~tween them JS as mg or troouble

C f t Gommun same If for example one suggests

as I have done on more than one Occasion that soine of the anti U S propaganda emanating from CLASCsources revealS atremely harmful to the cause of n a i v e misunderstanding of Amerlcan trade unionism and American capitalism andor ari $ver-simplification of Catholic Social teaching he runs the risk 9f being written off as a blind -not tOsay reactionary apologist for so-called Yanqui ~mperial-

iBm If on the other hand oneslig

gests that some of the anti- CLASC propaganda enianating

fro m AFL-CI0 sources is equally naive and unsoPllisti shyeatedhe runs the same Sort of risk in reverse That is to say he is likely to be told--v~ry politely of course -that if he were to take off his Catholic blinkers and look at the record objectively he would quickly come to realize that CLASC is in reality playing t~ecipal rival in Latin America) riages in their mission parishes communist game in Latin Amer- there is a gEirierous mixture of Msgr Milia stated Since the iea superficial appearances to cultural chauvinism and envy Ogdensburg mission was opened the contrary notwithstanding that accompanies the most legit- a modern new church bas been

Both CaD Learn imate misgivings built under its direction in the Be that as it may I still think Even the Latinos middotthemselve~ seaport ofMatararii two mission

~t CLASC has a lot to learn he points out will admit on ac- churches have oeen completed about _ and from American casion that their consumirig fear and a lalge parish church and trade unionism And if that of Yanqui imperialism is often center are currently under conshymakes me a reactionary Yankee irrational But there it is he re- struction in Mollendo ehauvinist so be it minds us and the basic prob-

By the same token however aiso think that the American

labor movement has much to learn about -- and from - the Christian trade union movement in Latin America The first thing it has to learn is that the Am~r-leap philosophy of pure-andshysimple bread-~d-butter union ism which all things considshyered has worked satisfactorily in this country is not necessarily well adapted to the present-day Deeds of Latin America

Meaning of Revolution Another way of saying the

same thing is that American iabor representativesworking on Latin America problemswm have to reconcile themselves to the fact that a social revolu-Uon is called for in Latin American labor federation that doesnt subscribe to a revolushytionary ideology is probably doomed to failure

The word revolution meaos J-

pIe of course To the leaders of CLASC it means a sweeping program of socioeconomic and political reform which goes far beyond the limited goals of bread-and-butter unionism

The leaders of CLASC are convinced that such a revolushytioo is demanded bythe Chrisshytian social ethic to which they subscribe and from which they derive their ideology

Perceptive Critique Some U S Labor repshy

resentatives are skeptical to say the least~bout the allegedly Christian content of CLASCs militant ideology They admit theneed for a peaceful revolushytion in Latin Americn butthey are convinced thatCLASC wants this revolution to be Feehan High School Attleboro alties in a letter tc therimes

lem is how to insure con~ PAVlA V I tlnuing cooperation between 0 untee rs Yanqui and Latino in spite of Complete TlIainirigit

Such cooperation Dr Hawkins WASHINGTON (NC)-Fortyshyconcludes will be impossible unshyless the leaders of the American labor movement positively indi~

cete their acceptance of social revolution in Latin America This will require he says

more than the generous transshyfusions of economic aid the stimulation under United States

labors auspices of leadership training programs for workers

and other cooperative ventures Need Broader View

What is required he insists ltCia a broader view-an ability on the part of the American la bor statemen to adopt policies that will not always accord with OUI own value~ and more speshy

cificall~ the tempering of (their) hosannas to free entershyprUie ___

inter-American labor unity I fully agree in this respect with Dr Carroll Hawkins Associate

Professor of Political Science at Michigan State University who recently published a most pershyceptive critique of American trade union policy in Latin- Catholics in Mollendo Peru the

America (The 0RIT and Amer diocesan missions director reshyican Trade Unions Conflicting ported Perspectives Industrial Rela- The New York priests were tionsand Social Changes in sent to Peru after Pope Paul Latin America University of vi -asked that more priests be Florida Press) pr9vjd~d fOr the people opoundSouth

Basic Problem America Msgr Anthony A Mi-Dr Hawkins admits of course lia said He estimated more than

that in all the Latin American 90 percent of the priests in criticism of United States unioniperu are from other countries in the ORIT (the Latin Ameli can regional unit of the Interna In 1965 the priests from Ogshytional Confederation of Free denburg administered 445 bap-Trade Unions and CLASCs prin tisms and perfoImed 64 mar-

CIOhas publicly charged in ej_ nis Club for two years and a suggested penaltiel fect that CLASCs ideology three yeaT member of the FU- owes more to Marxism than it ture Nurses club Father Carey sl~id the ~ays does to Christianity He finds it when pay and working condi-

An instructor in the Confra- tions for men and women inhard he says to accept the fact ternity of Christian Doctrine that the Christian labor move- civil service were determine4 byproglam in Our Lady of Mt I g I t d d t t

t middot A e IS a Ive It n a minIS ra Ive ment 0f L a In merIca IS non- Carmel Parish Seekonk the fiat have pas ed a d Communist s n we now

In my judgment this kind of criticism of CLASC by spokesshymen fltr the AFL-CIO is ex

three volunteers have completed the Second National Training Session sponsored by the Papal Volunteers for Latin America and received assignments in some ten Latin American coun- tries

Special ceremonies ended the six-week training session at the Catholic University of America where volunteers studied the apostolic work of the Church the laymans role in the aposshytolate and principles of spiritual life as well as the religion ecoshynomics and culture of Latin America

Before leavillg for their asshysignments the volunteers will take intensive four-month lanshy

guage anl culture courses in a Latin American language centerbull

eighth winner of this scholarship plumeoursElves that we share will enter the Childrens Hosshypital School of Nursing Boston in Septembel-

Ogdensburg Priests

SellYe Peru Mission OGDENSBURG (NC) -- Four

Ogdensburg priests currently are ministering to the n~eds of_13OOO

~ere

Father Philip Carey sJ exshyecutive director of the Xavier Institute of Industrial Relations acknowledged t hat certain strikes aJre intolerable But he said that when the governmentacts in a proprietary function it must follow the same rules it prescribes for private enterprise

In a letter to the New York Times Father Carey criticized ~y implication a proposed state -llw that wetulltilincrease the penalties to be imposed on strikshying union of public employees

MlISS LHNDA DUNCAN Th~proposedlaw grew out of recommendations of a five-man

Feehan Alumna task force named by Gov Nel son Rockefeller to study the

Receives Award problem after a 19-day transit strike crippled Newmiddot York City

Miss Linda Duncan daughter in January of Mrs George Duncan and the - NeCeSSBlry for Bargaining late George Duncan 61 Sykes Father Carey one of four Rd Seekonk has been awarded pubiic members of the mayors the eighth annual scholarship of committee that helped settle the the Attleboro Area Nurses strike disagreed with two other Chapter publlc memlgters Vh_o had previshyA 1966 graduate of Bishop ously supported the stiffer pen-

and internal concord a str~ke against itconstitutes mutiny and rebellion (UCLA) Sister Muriel a native

Pgbllsh Gudelnes For Ecumenisn

ALLENTOWN (NC) - The commission of ecumenism of the Allentown diocese here in Pennshysylvania has published a 22-page booklet of ecumenical guidelines to aid priests in guiding the laity The guidelines include general

permission for non-Catholics to serve as witnesses at Catholic weddings for Catholics to serve as witnesses at non-Catholic weddings and for burial of non-Catholics in Catholic ceremonies with a priest or a non-Catholic clergyman cltmducting graveside eeremonies

SHELL DADSON OIL

24-Hollr Oil

GLE COAL amp OIL CO IncI

640 Pleasant Street Tel WY 6-8271 New Bedford

this decision-making with the working p E~ 0 P Ie themselves through the process of collective bargaining

If collective bargaining is to be the rule he said we must agree to grant the right to strike~ Without this right he said there is no union and no coll~ctive balmiddotgaining

Expands Concern-in considering strikes by pu~ lie employees he dedared one muSt distinguishb~tween the state as a sovereign and the g()vernment acting in a proprishyetary function When the state aets as the defender of the peace or the promoter of justice

of Corning Iajoined the Sisters of the Humility of Mary in 1930 In recent years she has been ehairman of professionafarts deshypartment and college registrar

ation and a host of other services formerly performed by privategroups he continued

These activities are ancillary and economic and here the state in acting in a proprishyetry function When it so acts it ought to be subject tl) the same rules of conduct the government prescribes for private entershy

prise Strikes by firefighters and powerhouse uti lit y workers would be wrong however he said because it is difficult to imagine anY benefit they might gain to counterbalance the fear- fut harm such a l strike would impose on the community Buys Banners For Memorial

CHICAGO (NC)-A Chicago advertising executive has bought 44 brightly-colored religious ~anners tat -hung in the Nashy

tlOnal Srme of the Im~aculate ConceptIon during Luci Johnshysons wed(iin~ -

Earle Ludgin a trustee of the University of Chicago said he will donate the banners to the

university~ Rockefeller Memoshyrial Chapel in memory of his late wife

The banners for which Ludgin reportedly paid more than $40000 were originally created for the Vatlcan PavIIIon at the New York World Fair

A group of Washington D C residents bought ttie banners when the fair closed and arshyranged to have them exhibited in the Shrine until they could be sold Lugdin bought themin April but agreed at the request of Shrine officials to leave them in the Shrine until after Lucia wedding

lame College Head

OTTUMWA (NC) Sis t er

Muriel Hogan has been named the third presi4ent of Ottumwa Heights College here in Iowa She succeeds Sister Marie Anshy

ciue Kennedy woo win engagem graduate study in oominunishy

eations at the University of California Los Angeles branch

Offering You 3 Savings Plans

Home Financing

WAREHAM CO-OPERATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mabull

Telephone 295-2400 Banll SerVice YlIIIIIII

I

Ask Court Bar Use of Church Propertyfor Public SchoQ~middot WHITE ~S (MC) - A the cl883rooms ~ut Church

group of some 25 citizens repre- npokesman reporte~ that in line sented by the American Jewish with New York archdiocesan Congress has asked the New York State Supreme Court here to restrain the board of Ramapo School District 2 Rockland County from holding public school classes in property leased from religious bodies

The school board faced with severe-overcrowding planned to lease eight rooms from St Josephs Catholic Church and five from lem~e Beth El in Spring Valley The action was approved by 8tateEducation Commissioner Jame$ EAllen Jr

A ComllllJJlt served 0ill the rlChool board by the AJC charged the acti~n o~ld ~otateChurchshyState separation guaranteed by the First Amendment to the Constitution as well as other provisions of the state constitushytion

It is believed to be the first wch challenge made regarding

the use of religiO18 facilities for public school use

lhe st Josephproperty conshysists of an eightclasSroom school building adjacent to but sepashyrated from the chureh It is Ill good condition but will not be used by the p8rish thismiddot year because it has bUilt a new bUildshying for expanding its acbool to 141 classes

All religioUs ~bols had Ileen removed from the oder building in preparation for its use as a public school

The district school board had offered a fair market rent for

PAV~A deg Missionary Record Continued from Page Thirteen

A nurse from Chicago baa taken Lucillellpla~on the aposshytolic team and ber purpose in returning is to help her successhy80r work into the project smoothly It takes so long to get into 11 she Aid so II dont WJmt Il~r to spendtbree

years j~ g~tting organized~

Benedictine Marks 80th Anniversary

ST JOSEPHmiddot (NC)-The oldshyest Benedictine nun in Minneshysota-and one of the oldest m the world~marked the 80th anshyniversary of her entrance into the order ma Mass for all Beneshydictine jubil~tians held at St Benedicts convent here

Sister Sophia Zimmer was 1~ years old Dec 2 1965 She Wall

born in a log cabin about 1 block away from the convent An open house for her relatives and friends was held at the conv~nt

Receives Students cAsTELGANDOLFO (NC)shyPoPe Paul vI received in audishyence at his Summer home here students frOm 34 nations includshying many non-Catholics who are taking Summer courses in the ItaUaa language aDd culture sponsored by the Rome branch of the Catholic University fII IWaD

policy the properly would be made available for public school use at a token dollar-a-year rental

cmOS Cmpetes C~~ege ~rr(l))g~m

WASHINGTON (NC)-A class of 97 under-privileged high school students was graduated on completion of an eight-week Summer college orientation proshy

gram at Georgetown University The exercises i attended by faculty and parents Qf the stushydents involved students who had completed their Sophomore year in District of Colwnbia high schools They were chosen for the special course because teachers and counselors believed they have the ~billty to do colshylege work alihoug~ their presshyent high school records indicate little likelihood of college acshyceptance Ninoty-fiveOf the 97 students were Negroes md the ratio of males to females was aboutmiddot tbree-to-two ~

The pro~~~~Ch began in 1965 is financed by the NaUonal science Fowidationmiddot the District of Columbia public school sysshy

tem and Georgetown In addition to academic work

the students were given cltgtUrsetl in reading improvement and counseling gUidance Athletie and cultural events underwrit shyten by the program were also bKluded in their schedules

nearly 42 years Bishop Gerow churches degespeciallY Negro said Of late I have feltmiddotthat X houses of worshIp which middotWere have not the stamina to caJTY I bombedmiddot and burned

on as I have done in the past Whena p~ttern of destn1c~ion This load should be borne by 1 develops as It has m our state youngerman then it sincumbent upon all ntereston Yoiit

Cathollc lnereaSe m~n ~ ~ood ~i~ througho~t MiSSISSIPPI to Jom hands m Savings

The ~venth bishop of~edio- helpingthe affectedmiddot churches 0 Invested In cesemiddotwhlch was founded ID 1~37 and in showing clearly our con- and encompasses 111 of Missls- demnation at all acts of violencemiddot CATHOLIC CHURCH sippi Bishop Gerow h8ll s~ lawlessness and destruction the Catholic population IJOw from 31264 to 75000 in his 41 years of office The number of priests in the diocese grew from 63 to 220 and churches md misshysions from 108 to 243

The last few years of llacial violence perhaps were the most troub1d for Bishop Gerows long ad inistration middotHemiddot met the challenge with courage

In the face of many-sided opshyposition Bishop Gerow in 1964 directed the first grades of Cathshyolicmiddot schools in the state to be racially integrated The next

Missionaries Move Seminar to Ohio

DAYTON (NC) -The White Fathers a missionary society which bas served in Africa for nearly a century is llloving its U S seminary to Dayton

St Josephs Seminary which had been in operation at Onshydliota N Y near Saranac Lake will re-open under the same

name in four residences near the campus of the University of

Dayton The buildings have been rented from the university

Eventually the White Fathers plan to build their own seminary

middotfacilities somewhere in ~e area according to Fatber Paul lo1e1le WF~

THE ANCHOR- middot19 Thurs Aug 25 1966

KC Melll1il~er~~ip

At AJ~Tome e~~gh MIAMI BEACH (NC)-In his

report at the 84th annual meetshying of the Supreme Council of the Knights of Columbus Sushypreme Knight John W McDevitt made these points

Membership on June 30 1966 stood at an all-time high of 1183896 The orders insurance covershyage passed the $15 billion mark during the year

The orders assets reached III

neW plateau of $28122840028 at the end of the fiscal year

The society i~ continuing its support of the campaign to st~m p(gtrnography

Revise Ceremonial Progress is being made onthe

re_Vision of the orders cerempnshyial to give it a total family middotclishymate and make it consistent with moder day philosophy of social justice and religious pracshytice

The K of C have undertaken distribution of copies of the 1~ew Testament to Catholic gradllates

COURAGE PERSONIFIED John St Marie of B~YQ of the Naval Offilaquoer CandfClatE port Minn CQnfined to a wheelchair since a 1953 pOlio ~chool in Newport R I an(J ill

~dying the question of proshyattack has received a scholarship to the University of viding a similar servilte ~orMinnesota law school atter successfully maintaining an Ashy Catholic graduatell of the Qffi shyminus average in undergraduate work at the College of cers Candidate School of ihe St Thomas St Paul Minn irQ Photo Canadian Navy

It saluted Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York on biI

Welcomes Successor Naming of Apostolic Administrato

Pleases Bishop Gerow 81 JACKSON (NC)-Mississippll1 year he followed with a direeshy

courageous 81-year-old Bihop tive that Catholic schools be deshyOliver Gerow welcomed his suc- segregated completely ceSSor Bishop Joseph B Bruni- Helps Restore Churches ni 55 as spiritual head of the Despite reported threats ofmiddot Natchez-Jacklon diocese as one violence fro m segregationist who is active vigorous and has ranks the aged prelate was good sound judgment among leaders of an interfaith

X am very happy in being groupmiddot which formed the Comshyrelieved of the heavy responSl- mittee of middotConcernmiddot soHcited middotbillty that I have borne for money labor and materIals for

middotthe bishop stated in a letterred AND in every Catholic church in the INSTITUTIONAL BONDSstate

His appeal for $300000 to re-middot I Umiddot f $500 M store more than 30 d~stroyed n nits 0 or ore and damaged churches brought Keenan amp CImiddotarey bie contributions to the Committee 9f Concern from various sections Minneapolis Minnesota of the country

0

M~ntle Plumbing amp ~ating Co Inc~

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET Fall River OS 57497

for detailed information write to

CHARLES A~ MURPHY Registered Representative

145 Pond $treet Winchester Mass

PA 9-2696 And

Name bullbullbull ~ Address A

City _

50 years in the priesthood payshying tribute to him not only beshycause of his dignity as a pi-iest and cardinal but also because he 1S a great and wholesome mail

Relic Stolen NEW YORK (NC)-A reputed

relic of the cross on which Chtist died has been stolen from the Church of the Most Holy Reshydeemer here It was removed from a side altar tabernacle

where it had been placed shortshyly after the churchs establishshy

ment by the Redemptoriad Fathers some 125 years ago

~

GULF HILL DAIRY so DARTMOUTH MASS

RO THE ANCHO~-Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

1

RELIGIOUS SUPERIORS INSTITUTE ON STONEHILTJ CAMPUS SMS Guadalcanal Solomon Islands Standing Sr Florita DP King Sr Mary LUk~ St about to enter the hall for her lecture Center Some ston Mass Sr Mary of Bathany SP Holyoke Sr Mary de Sales F$SJ r the sisters who attended Sister Lukes talk were Sr Josepha SC Conshy Holyoke Right Mrs Mary Virginia Yosgandes h-ouse mother wavesgood ent Station NJ Sr Mary Kenneth Amityville NY Sr Mary (fheresa bye tothe departing nuns I

Brooklyn Church Hopes Nuns Move Into Cent~r of Lij~e Criticizes Irish lribunal Lacks By Dorothy Eastman -Social Security

When in the third year of Vatican II the momentous decision was made toinvitewO- dmiddot LIMERICK (NC) - FatherJ men observers to audit a Council forthe first ~ime to represent all J~remiah Newman professor ofuris ICtlon the Sister chosen BROOKLYN (NC)-Msgr the nuns in America was Sister Mary Luke Tobin Mother General of the Sisters of Lor- sociology at Irelands Maynooth

IlAarion J Reinhardt pre- etto When shewasasked recently while visiting the Fall River Diocese what impressed College criticizedprivate agenshyJ~L h t b t th C 1 cies and the national governshyIdlng Judge of the Trlblillal er mos a ou e oune) h t b t h h d k ment for their failure to increaseshe said with a wry smile We aVe 0 e rna ure enoug er own or er was wor mg(1)f the Diocese of Brooklyn h to live in insecurity toward these ends She told of all subsidies to families Iltas announced that the bill of The fact that we were t ere Will these changes be easy experiment soine of her Sisters After insisting that it would $Omplaint of 15 former teachers at all I The Sister is too much of a have been engllged in for the be best for private agencies and of St Johns Un~versity had to At a Stonehill College institute realist to give that impression past twu years in Pueblo Colo- local governments to administer be dismissed because of lack of Sister Luke spoke of her many Its going to be fraught with rado Although most of the 1100 social security Father Newman jurisdiction on the part of the other impressions of the Council difficulties she warns but Sisters of Lorettv are teachers said that since they seemed unshy

ecclesiastical court _ where she and seven other Sis- what isnt this small group of Sisters in willing or unable to do this the The Brooklyn ecclesiastical tels were auditresses for the last There are more than a few Pueblo 1s doing no t~aching-in job had to be done by the natshy

$Ourt which operates under two years of Vatican II Over Sisters who are troubled and schools anyway They simply jonal government ~llnon law said it is pmited in 450 Mothers Superior from 55 sometimes shocked these days live among the poor as good He said that according to jurisdiction to only spiritual different Orders were gathered by many of the changes hi their neighbors he 1pin jg wherever Catholic soCial teaching there ltuestions at the Easton campus for the communities The Mother Gen- they cllD leading discussion was no limit to the amount of Charge Contralaquot Breach five day Institute directed by eral would warn them that its groups counselling etc government aid that is permis-

The 5000 word document Rev William FHogan CSC pointless for them to say Thill Asked to comment on the re- sibie and desirable if governshypointed out that the decree of Sister Luke was one of a group is not the community I entered cent experiment in Milwaukee mEmt aid was the Qnly practical Giisrriissalis without prejudice to of noteliltspeakers who talked When it comes to that she says where30 School Sisters of St (sbl~tion to poverty problems lbhe merits of the case to the superiors on the subject we all might say This is not the Francis left their convents for

If the Metropolitan Tribunal of the I Sister in the modern Church Iwas baptized into or three weekstO work in secular If the archdiocese of New York world this is not the world I was b()rn jobs - oneSister wa3 assigned

T b 1 f the Sacred into Change is a fact of life S t~ the rI una 0 Adapting a line from Charles as a newspaper reporer- IS er Roman Rota reversesthe decree Dickens to describe this contro she points out~ and we can~t keep Luke predicted a great deal the casewiil be returned to the versial post Council age Sister things as they are or say Stop more~ of this kind of liniited Tribunal of the Diocese of the World-I want to get off f i t th I w ld ]Brooklyn for adjudications upon t~ees sa~~iSTi~iSt~eth~o~r Role of Superiors ~~~re ~o di~~a~~c~i~t n~~ Ms merits it was stated times She paintedavivid ver- The role the Superiors will she said

The petition of complaint bal picture of the world that lies play in the formation of what Since her own Order founded filed by Father Peter OReilly ahead for Sisters She said it has been called The New Nun in 1812 is quite new all religious

s~f Chicago on behalf of himself would certainly be a challenging Lwuakeouattlintheed fs~roeh~ ~~s~~~t~ orders go and is the liirst comshylind the other ousted teachers one and that conventlife inthe munity founded in America charged he university which is future is certain to undergo She urged them to create a cli- without European ties the Sisshyeonducted by theVincentian many radical changes mate where Sisters can liveters of Loretto weal habits more Fathers with breach of contract community life at its best She -modern than most But itsstill

The Superior~ were told that entreated them to keep thls cli-The dispute has been marked bY d bl d ff t the dress of 1812 not 1966 so it d k t f an m Ispensa e gUl e me ec - mate free from legallsm andlitudent unrest an pIC e mg 0 th hmiddotmiddot th will soon be changed As soon I mg ese c anges IS e map survelmiddotllance Ie schoo s campuses f th f t th t th C 1 as the all-mlll Congregation

or e u ure a e ounCl A community should be a of Religious in Rome approv~sMoral Issue Fatners drew up for the Church place where there- is safety for She called the CouncII Decrees the Sisters new design that is About 30 teachers were fired fl t d f t f dff

Rost December in a dispute over the documentS ofhighest au- cop IC an sa e y or J er- Tliey have submitted one de~ign rlty We should all have ~nes apd s~fety to cultiv~te that the fathers turnEd downadministration-faculty relation- tho d t h d Sh f I the mInd of Vatlcan II and then lverSI y s ~ sal e ee s lihey thought it was too modshyships and other issues They t I th t th h ld be

b b f we c~n move Into actlon she s rongy a ere ~u r -ern Sister Luke says UWhat anwere joined y anum er 0 I t I g I fe ther teachers In a strike that told her healers - 1Jloe ~o~a IY In re 1 J~)Us 1 incredible thing for US to ask shy --uAfterall were not Trap- that we choose our own clothes has continued since January Whi~h Way psts

l she adds with a laughThe court found that tpe How will the Sisters know in Warning that the time has S t Lk tl - b

uteceniontractual controversy was not whicli direction they should come for a re-evaluation of the _ IS ~rth y e~mt~ a spiritual mattelin a canoliical move in the manyarells so(in to true meaning of community she ne oIl e d~rs wo~~ ever ~ llense of the word spiritual change cExperiment Sister told the Superiors that commu- bo~a h a sre~t a f ~gUS aild that there was no allegation Luke advises so often its almost nity doesnt mean conformity or 0 y e oCle ~ o anon ef a violation of an ecclesiastical her motto We really cannot a hotel life either or even a Lawyrs Does thIS mian that law arid that the time was not move into change without ex-lot of happy t9getherness th~ SI~ters may at last have a opportune for a decision of perimentation she says and around the television set voIce 111 the formatIon of canon moral responsibility because the we will be engaged in tremen- A ~ital new aspect of commu- la-at least th~ laws that rUI~ secular courts would first have dous experiments from now on- nity is the idea of what Sister thel~ O~derS SIster Luke deshyto determine whether there was to adapt religious life to the Luke calls sub communities- vout y opes so a breach of contractual duty times in which we live the convents immediate neigh- Its certain that the future for

The church court found as a The revisions that lie ahead borhood the parish the civic the Sisters will be a very differshymatter of law that St Johns for religious orders will bring commumty lay people 111 the ent one than anyone could have 141 NO MAINUniversity as a corporation Sisters into the mainstream of same profession as the Sister- imagined a few short years ago J~ formed under the law of the modern life Sister Luke for for instance other nurses or The Holy Father has urged them iii FALL RIVER State of w York did not have one has no doubts that this is tElachers We have allowed too the~ to move from the margin e the ecclesiastical privilege of where they belong We ought great a gap to exist between our- of life to the center of life~ 873 COUNTY demanding that suits against it to be willing to take the risks) selves and the laity she says Will the move be successful SOMERSETbe heard in an ecclesiasticalmiddot that gO along with this plunge In an interviewmiddot following her Sister Luke says We can only CDOurt into the mainstream she says talk Sister ~uke was asked how know by taking a ChanCE

Feai makes the wolf bigger than be is

Rer Bankings Already D~ne

~jI--~1 W

tt-~~gt_ri~

~j F~ p ~tl Iim F-ilNgt

~l i

ll 11 ~~

W = ~

~gtltl ~

-~ ~~ StIesaves I lot of alunle Mtime forso maily other thinlS ~i She banks by mail at Te ~ OLD R D8 KI h 7reg E AN W at about you

liii FREE mall forms ~1 The mOld Red Bank W

$ Fall River Savings Bankjilll q

Page 7: 08.25.66

THe ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 7 Priests Respond Generously 1Ciitymiddot ExpressVariety of Opinions

Bishop Asks for Suggestions--shyj

YOUNGSTOWN (NC)-I-Wed- There was a call for a study of ltmngs and ftinerals in the eve- the~hoie questioriof the Caih- Brm R~~~ie$ fr~ QM~~15~~~o[jreg ming wholesaie revamp~~g of o~(~~ool system versus CCD VICTORIA (NC) - Give the Latin and Oriental rites larish organizations retire~ent JElimination of raffles collec- larm~alliopp~rtuni~yto speak On the ne~Ci~ive sidEiI 418 felt f priests at age 6s-these were tronSand all o~her fUli9-raising his mmd on the results of the that there was a great need of sorrie suggestions for updating gimlnicks was proposed for Second Vatican Council the better adult edUcation~ There advanced by the Youngstown Catholic schools One priest liturgy ecumenism and the was overwhelming concern for ltt1Iioceses 262 priests lamented the lack of dialogue Church and hell say plenty better Catholic education more The Ohio priests responded between parents pastor and Bishop Remi de Roo of Vic- religious instruction for Catholic generously to a request by school principal and suggested toria here in British Colombia children not in Catholic schools lBishop James W Malone apos- the establishment of q parish discovered tbis when 600 parish- more Catholic youth activities tolie administrator of the diocese s~nate whose members would ioners filled out a comprehen- and efforts to build a strongerlior suggestions The bishop now sit in on school faculty meetings sive questionnaire and returned family life Inadequate teachers lltas called on the laity of the Also present was the limitation it to the chancery office Two- and poorly trained teachers also aliocese to make suggestions The of all classes to a maximum 6f thirds of them signed their came under fire llle~ IS-member pastoral com- 40 students names but this was not required Other tOPIcs which turned up

mission will study all suggestions Their comments went far beyond in the survey but which were) ~ and make recommendatioQs to the questions asked not put as questions included

BiShOP Maione ~ooamprm~ [L~~ A $~udYof the an~wers reveals creination pullfigpting marshy~ Th new liJurgy econli~ics

thatjwlJi1~ mo~etlJan two-thirds riageof c1Ergym~n children ~ryshy

ond parish orgllnizations were O~ Greg~reg[jcr of the people were pleased with ing in church nuris habits povshy lto~llQrig t1Je most popular are~s of new deveWpments in the erty arid the clergys ability as ) ltilCmment by th~ priests SAIGON (NC)-General Jos- Church the remaining admitted businessmen

To enhance singing at IYJass eph W Stillwell lost during a being mildly or very disturbed atere were suggestions for each plane flight from San Francisco Fifty pel cent agreed that the

iParish to mime a minister of to Honolulu is prayeclully reshy council 1 hadmiddot deepened their CoIQmbilaquoli CFM Has JlIllusectic to teach liturgical music membered by grateful lepers Faith and btou~ht them closer National Structure ~ parishioners and for establish- Sisters and their chaplain in St to the Church but 105 stated ment or strengthening of mixed Joseph~s28 miles ~rom Saigon vOSEPH MICHAUD that they had been left confused BOGOTA (NC) -The Chrisshymoirs to e1)courage others to They recall how on April 5 Fifty PeJ cent answered that tian Family Movement which Cak~ part 1964 when Viet Cong activities the liturgical reforms had helped has been functioning on a someshy

Another priest asked for had resulted in cutting off the Michaud Shrine them pray better Fifty per cent what independent basis in 17 ~ilwre patience in implement- leper hospital from all supplies said they felt the Church could dioceses in this country now has

lIDg the changes because thebt road Gen Stillwell and his Music Director be improvedmiddot Two-thirds felt the structure of a national lleW forms of participating are d~uty Col John L Klingen- that theChur~ should concern organization

lIlot appealing to all Ther~was Jiagen of St LOUis came to the WA~HiINGTON (NC)-Joseph itself wore with the internashy The first national meeting of ~plea also for a return to the rescue They brought food and Michaud has been appointedmiddot tionalsituation soCial and ecoshy the CFM was convoked in the holy and dignified liturgical other necessities in a series of music director of the National nomic problems last part of July by Bishop Pabshy

music imd elimination of folk helicopter fliglits carried out lgty Shrine of the Immaculate Oonshy Asked specifically where the lo Correa Leon of Cucuta presishy oongs and modem swing music the U S Support Command of ception here Msgr Thomas J Church should be more involved dent of the Episcopal Commisshy

Another priest urged that ~4ee- which Gen Stillwell was com- Grady director of the Shrine the answers voried from rehabili shy sion for the Lay Apostolate in dom of experimentation in the mander announced tation of drug addicts the labor order to organize CFM on a nashy

1Iiturgyshouldbe encouraged Ben San has about 280 leper Michaud will develop and su- movement and the emerging tional scale nations A board of directors of the Changes in Vestments~ patients in the care of the pervise the music program at the

national CFM was named andThere were requests to elim Daughtersof Charity of St Vin- Shrine assemble and train a Most Important The majorit~ considered the includes five married couples mate or -review Forty Hours de- cent de Paul chortis vf mixed voices evenshy

three from the Bogota archdioshyYotions and similar celebra- -Mrs faillwell durfug her st~y tuallyadd a choir of men and five most important questions tions for daily evening Masses in Vietnam was one of the boys and supervise the care of cese and one each from the archshy

the Church and fellow Chrisshydiscu~ed at the council to be

dioceses of Cali and Medellinma parishes where there are two American women who sponsored all organs and the carillon tians birth control active sharshy These five couples in cooperashy

CI more priests and for smaller the new center for undernour- A native of Sumas Wash ing in the iturgy the sharing of tion with Father Enrique Acosta

~onfirmation classes with ~he ished children also conducted by Michaud has served churches responsibility in the Church are In charge of extending the

IIIlX prIests who are deans bemg the Sisters of Charity in Saigon and schools in Seattle San Franshyand religious liberty Prefer- CFM throughout the entire

Gi~legated by the bIShop to ad- We are praying fo~ the be~ cisco Portland Ore Detroit countryences at the bottom of the listBlumster the sacrament reaved family Father Vict Pittsburgh and Mt Lebanon Pa Be or H h were worl~ populition atheismOther suggestions called for a C MH h d

~ 1 l hts th rset chaplam at Ben IS c Olrs ave appeare on international government and_~cussion on Vlgl Ig e San wrote network radio broadcasts gave l)rlests breviary changes 10 the premiere presentation of Mass vestments and merits of Alexander Peloquins Missa Na- SAVE MONEY ONEstablishes Specialgroup confessions in which lPiJiest Plans Homes tiVitatis with the Pittsburgh penitents attend a Bible service Symphony over the CBS net- Tourists Parish to to confession and receiveab- middotfor Working Grls work iIi 1962 and in December YOUR OILHEATCOLOGN]i (NC) - Colognessolution private~y and then per~ TECHNY (NC) ~ Father Ed- 1955~ sang in Menottis Ahmal Joseph Cardinal Frings has apshySform a community penance such wiu-di Wojniak SVD Chi- an~ the ~nght Visitors WYmanpointed a multilihgual Dutch ~eatt as recitation of a prayer to c~go-born Society of the Divine 3-6592priest to establish a special tourshy

tether Word mlssionary is oft the verge A~d R f W k ists parish on the Autobahn nearOne writer suggested that the of seeing his dream come true Imiddot 5 e ugee or CHARLES IF VARGASDusseldorf llrishop offer Sunday Mass at a bull ltiliff rent ish church each He has ben VISItIng throu~h- Of German Knights Although several churches are 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

~ par raut the Umted States seekmg located 01_ th~ famous German ~ee h h Id b t d d the aid of busineSs firms which BONN (NC) - The German highway none provides special NEW IalEfPlFqitD ~SS

Tl~ l~g S P e l~ ro u~ h have interests in Formosa to aid government has provided three tourist services The new parish la prIes v~o h a~~ ~s w lCll him in his pet project----to erect jeeps tnd three ambulances for besides the church will have a Opt t~ngfs ~u I r~p11 hostels for factory giriS present- the work being done by the Ger- hot~J restaurant theater and

~ngo reds es IVdi~ s e c 1 ly forced to live in squalid man Knights of Malta for refushy chiIdr~ns pla~~rounds ~IOt~eSan ahn Idnonb- tockesan fCO - c~owded unhealthful and prim- gees in South Vietnam ec IOns s ou e a en rom T dt d t cae proceeds of the tithing sys- 1 lVe con 1 IOns angerouso f team ~f about 25 Germa~s C2 only to their phYSical well bemg- wl1 work m refugee camps In

m but also to their moral well Hoi in the QuangNam province r~oD~D~i~=~i~~~~i HUe]) lllen~ Poor being in ilentral Vietnam

Others suggested rich par~shes The hostels will be non-de- The Germar government will n _ See Us should help poor parIshes nominational and will provide contrilmte about $250000 annushy ~ -Abou~ ij~rough a commo fund that quar~ers in pleasant surround- ally for the work of this counshy

o each ~arish establIsh a fma~ce iilgs at $3 per month In addition tt-ys Knights of Malta in Vietshy ~ ~t17 (~~~OuTI]OUceouureg [ commlttee and the ~lOcese hire toa home it will provide edu-nam ~(jrtamp euroleiJcp(]ip C1

a fulltJme profeSSional fund eational and recreational facili- llaiser for parishes that need his ties Father Wojniak said The ~1lIIilllliJllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllm ~ ~~~~[HJA~ ~ aervices first hostel will be built at Tai~ - shy

as pilot with DRY - E SAVINGS BANK I epei a project E CLIEANNG Says Gift of Tools Father Wojniak as director of ~ and ~

Wareham falmouth J f =rst Class MIracle Taiwan Hostels Inc which will ~ fUR STORAGE ~ -y 5-3800 IltI 8-3000 HEATING OIL

w be run on a noh-profit basis E D == 4-o_a_C1_a~~D__o-o-BOGOTA (NC) -Shop stu- E ERMODY ~

dents at Bogotas Colegio San f R ClEANERS ~ Viator reclved a windfall of lIanCISCans etaln == ryyYYyy~

~~~C1Jm~d~~~~ B~r~~(N~~m~ty iEE

nCohan ~~~ l bullC~~o~A~~~~~E~RT ~ 4lIlllira~le by one of the students two newly received Franciscan ~JIIIIII1I1I11I11I11I11I11I11I1I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I1I1I11I11I11Ii ~ nncluded a large variety and Sisters of Perpetual Adoration ~ Spaeious Fireproof Sleeping Quart~rs-BoysI to 14 yrs Old quantity of hand tools and two retained their baptismal names Six-week season June 26 to Aueust G ch of severallarge power tOQls with the title of Sister at their GRmiddotACIA BmiddotROS t Register for z or 4 or 6 weeks Free Tutoring it desired 4Father John Stafford CSV reception into the community ia ehicago provincial supervising St Joseph the Workman Cathe- bull i THE BROTHERS OF THE SACRED HEART

tile Viatorians Bogota mission draI here in ~7isconsin _ ~ eommented that the gift worth tVlot~er General Ann Marie of Excavating SACRED HEART SCHOOL

$6000 in the United States is ~ Rose convent said the name C worth five times that in Colom- policy change was the first ill ontractors r t SBAltON MASSACHUSETTS ~

twa He added that the tOok itleU6~year history of the com- ~ bull (I~SS 5T~FAIRHAViH A Reside~t School for BoYS Grammar Gra~es ~-li-6-1- ~ would probably give the school muOityAt the same ceremollTthebest~lIuipped shop ~ tiampe~ Sistels made ~rst-year pN-l WYman 2-4862 = CAMP 0amp SCHOOL TeL 1171845162 4 ~~tlY ~YOWi- ~ampamp~

bull I 1bull

bull ~ I I bull I bullbull I ~

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 Parish to Serve Wide Community

PATERSON (NC)-With the end of its vacation religiolli school St Josephs parish heICI

Lucis V~ew of Marriage Seen Delig~tfuny O~d-fashioned~ in New Jersey has turned ~

serve a wider communityBy Mary Tinley Daly Priests Sisters seminarianpound Never it is said have so many million words been and student volunteers haw

written about a marriage as the reportage of the Luci taken a $200 budget given by the Catholicmiddot Interracial Council andJohnson-Patrick Nugent nuptials-TH WEDDING in put on a program of field triP8Dpopular terminology Its over in all its impressive dignity arts and crafts athletics and

with an ele~ance wor~hy ~f honestly state that thei ambishy story-telling for 120 youngstem the marrIage of a PresIdent s tion is to grow up get married The children mostly Negro

had no opportunity to be part ofdaughter Yet like every and have babifs any other summer program sowedding great or small it Somewhere along the line edshy Father Nicholas Molinari steppedearried its message of identifica- ucatlOnally or other~se they in to help themtionto the millions viewing it are shunted career-WIse or preshy Our objec~ father said on the screen tend to bemiddot They of course to impress the children witlait n d to those want to marry but this is in~ love They dont understan~itreading about cidental they ~avent ~xperienced it We

it At our house AlulDDae middotNotes want to break down their selfshy~ ve n a s ~ t Loo~ ~t you~ Alumnae h~ite concept We want to make vou~s t~at no~- ~otes Bii( deal is ~ gal who them realize tha~ they are goodoshy

middot ~l~c Idenbfi has her masters working on catlOn was pres- the doctorate il physics mathe- t Ik Sisters of Christian en now ex matics Russian or whatever actly ho LUCI And the proud boast of a college feels squealed imany of our graduates are no~ Charity Elect America

PADERBORN (NC) - Sister bride as the TV fathers our most recent making more money than their

M Augustilde Giesen of Jersey showed the radiant Luci on her Into these same alumnae notes City has been elected the first fathers arm comes a confession humbly American superior General 0If

And I know how ~~rvous written from Betty B that she is the Sisters of Christian Charit Pat was at that moment cm- still just a housewife has a here in Germany mented the most recent bnde- family and recently was electesl Sister Augustilde former PJOogtNURSERY FRiENDS Sister Marie Patrice RSM Br~om president of the local PTA vincial of the province headshy

director of Holy Angels Nursery for Exceptional Children grooms of years ago author has expressed herself Belmont NC cuddles one of the 69children in her care was director of the provinces

To go further back an eon against the discontented femi junior sisters attending Marillae

Me too from bndes and Phyllis McGinley talented quartered at Mendham N J

most of whom because of their disabilities require roundshyor two even th ~ea~ of the nine mystique of searching for Sisters Formation College at thethe-clock attention NC Photo House and hIS bnde shared fullfillment outside of the home time of her election the g~ose pImples So have others The 2200-member congregashy

Behmd the pomp and ClrcUJI1- As an addendum we find 1lI tion founded in Germany ~

stance sket~h~s of gowns held 10 quote from Rep Emmanuel Celmiddot Disclaimsmiddot New Breed 1849 moved to the United States somewhat ndiculous top secrecy ler (D-NY) apropos prohibiting in 1873 during the anti-Catholic as though they were plans for discrimination against wom~ franciscan Nun Biology Professor Says Kulturkampf compaign of Gershym~on shots was the forthrIght serving on juries man chancellor Otto von BisshyattItude of thIS l~-year-old brIde There are women who work Primary Apostolate Is Prayer- marck

Sh~ wants th~s to be a goo~ because they have to others who marnage andw111 try to make It work because they want to and BUFFALO (NC)-Dr M Re- My whole life I trust is givshy New Secretary 10 there is the lazy kind whO gin~ L~gan associat~ profes~ ing witness to Christ she anshy CHICAGO (NC)-The Nationshy ~er father the PresIdent ~o cleans washes irons cooks sor of bIOlogy and chaIrman of swered I am a biology profes al Catholic Conference for Intershyma~t~r how you regard hUll chauffeurs mend1l binds lIP ~e biology concentration at sor whose prime role is twoshy racial jUstice haS announced the~lltlc~lly you must alknow~~ wounds nurses cloctors middotand Rosary Hill College here conshy fold first in edu(ation proper appointinfmt of Margaret Cshyedgeexpres~edfath~rly ~onfl~ shops and has conSequently So tends there is no such thing u and second in research middottomiddot fur Roach to its program staff Millli

middot dencewen he said of fat little to do aD day why Should bull new breed of nuns ther the education of my stushy Roach haB been social actioaN~gent LUCI look~ up to him she not 1e obligated NrM _ The sCientist HI as qualified dents~ _ secretarY for the National CO~with great r~spect eep ~~c OIl ju~es as anybody else to know She However she noted many ell ai Catholicmiddot Women iIinoetion a~d confIdence 10 hlll It has been a Franciscan nUll for people think th-at by taking offMs go~ng to b~ ~ good ~arrIage 28 years and she iilsists the the reUgio~ garl or by drop~Dunn~ the s~me mtervlew Urges ~ UnmiddotderstClnding OSF middotcomes before the PhDbull ping the religious title we Call1he President recalled that Luci

be more effective This is not so had been a deep1y reiigious girl Of Other Churches I dont think Sisters have all of her life even before her SPOKANE (NC)-We me ehanged she said People are As a nun my primary aposshyConversion to Catholicism More- not take the positioJl that the jUst beginning to llotice what tolate is prayer to give God the over he did not believe middotshe other Christian coinmunitiesaM weve beeJ doing all along love and adoration that the would ever become active in simply in error Bishop Ber- With 11 biological papers pubshy modem world often neg1Eicts to politics but would concentrate nard J Topel has advised priests llIshed and nine read with the give In the present day discusshyon home-inak~ng raisin~ a fam- of the Spokane diocese in a Get eredit of being first to isolate sion of the nun in the modern

middot lyen and followm~ her faIth of interim ecumenical JUide-- tile bacteria Desulfovibrio desul- world attention should be foshyFather not politician was lines furicans and with the institution cused on her existlmce nc)t the

apeak~g ~hen Bishop Topel urged priesbl i= of a trail-blazing method of preshy garb she wears she said middot LU~I s VIew of ~arriage IS re- avoid expressions judgmenu menting a college biology curricshyfreshmg and dellghtfully old- and actions which do not repre- ulum the Franciscan who drinks

196= -

JANSONS Pharmacy

Arthur Janson Reg Phcim DIABETIC AND SICK ROQM

SUPPLIES 204ASHL~ BOULEVARD

New Bedford WY 3middot8405

fashioned middotin the mid-twenti~th sent the condition of oui sepa- ber ~offee black is fully a pro century when so many gIrls rated brethren with truth ad fessional in science toohave their sights set on the split-personality syndrome mar- fairness and 110 make mutual She has be~n awarded $81000 BISA~ILLONSriage plus individual freedom relations with them more cWI- llra grants-m-rod for her reseach

ficult th g ma career and assuming at once He said full eucharistic ecm on e pernICIOUS m1cro~r ams a plar- in the forefront of out- ~~t has ~ knack for rummg oill GARAGEside activities munion is the ultimate lioal laquoIi dnlling ngs

Most little girls are disarming- the ecumenical movement WitnGS8 b Christ ly frank (see Art Linkletters 24our Wreck~r Service program or talk wit~ 7 8 and C I H bull 0 H d How does her commI~ent Ie Iyear-olds you know) The 0 bull olsgton eo s ~erstudents and co~CCmltantl

W A C to ber research (she 18 also II 653 WashinJton Street Fclirhaven omen s rmy orps iOOnsultant at Oak Ridge National HoldYou~g Christian WASHINGTON(NC) - A Laboratory the group leader of WYman 4middot5058 h b I e s s i ng followed traditional aCivil Defense fixed monitorin ~bullbullbullbull middotStudent Works OFgt 8wearingin ceremonipounds here for Station mici a ~part fliine seamshy N0TRE DAME (NC) - The Col Elizabet~ P Hoisington the_ bullreSs) Bel With h1el commit- ~IMtlIIIIIIHIIIItIIIIIIIIItImiJlHililjJlniRiiillntJiliIllNtiJtIlIHII~

Reoild annuai Young Christian new director 01 the Women mentu a Biofei6ec ~ = - _ Student apostolic workshop Wall Army Coorps Christ ~ li5

middotheld here thisweeKformiddot~Brade ~Themiddot middotblessing was giVeIlE D p SAlES middotANDmiddot middotSEmiddotRVICE ~ oionhoolmmiddotode~~torsfromparochial MsgrCKennethGStackaper-middot sect middotcmiddot bull - bullbull j bull iL

bullbull L~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull0bullbullbullbullbullbullbull middot _ IIand public school groUpsas weB s~Ia1frierid of the woman Armgt II Ill [He c E

as parishes ~ le~de~onher request afters~ bull J B II i ~ middotmiddotmiddotmiddotltThe Iconference coordinated had taken heroath of office ani 8 8 I FR sect - 1(JImiddotDmiddotmiddotAmiddotmiddotIREshy by the Catholic Action Office of beeli pi6moted from lieutenant 8 bull -1 l =

Notre DamemiddotUniversity was beld e9Jonelmiddotmiddotmiddot II LUMBER CO == I~

On t~e universitys campus middotCQlol)~I)loisington ~lPadu = 8 il RIEF ~IIG_ ~RATIOmiddot sect~ong ilP~a~er~ wer~raJherlilte_oftbe C0Uege oI~ou So Dartmouth bull IE ~ i

middot LOUISJPutz cS~_reltor of Da~eaalti~or~ Md JOlDeG II bull~ e h~p~~~~orauli1~~~h~ ~e~~n~~~~2~t~e~~~sLe~middot a~ Hyannis I 0 APPLIANCES I natioI)alltJirectoro(t~~ Gabrie(CIllsterthe Bronze Star ~So Dartmouth WY of$84 55 middot IR middotCO~IDmiddotITIOIG 5 Richard Institute and the Rev CroiX de Guerre with silver 1Rm bull i A ~ ~ n ~

middot Ja~es Neuman pastor of Hum- and the American and ~uropeaJll IMjaRwia 29211 == boldt Pa~ United BrethreJll Jheater ribbons of Wo~ld Wall bull ~ 363SECONDSomiddot FALL RIVER MASS~ ~

_ r middot9~~Imiddot~~ R~-pound~~~ -P-t rmiddotmiddot - gt gt bull IllbullbullIIIbullbull_1118 middotIiIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIHIUlllIIUIUIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIII1I1II1IIlIlUIIIIIIUllIIIIIIIIIIIUlIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIUU_ _

9 ~Swooned Priest Eggplant Dish U$ong Legendary P~r$ey P~~B1)t

By Joseph amI MarilYllll Roderick The cool weather where ~gain and with it the grass

has begun to break donnancy and send up little green shoots which means that the lawn mowers which have been restshying for a few weeks have got to be brought back to action

The drought that we had uperienced for the past three Summers has raised havoc with lawns and it doesnt seem much good can be done this season in areas still under water restrictions Howshyever in those that are not theremiddotre a few thingsmiddotwhich can be done middotbetween now and 1hetirst -bst to help lawns along To begin with this is amiddot good

middottime to apply itmiddot weed killer of some kin to I prefer tousecomshybination weed killer and fertil shyzer as this saves time and does el good job This should help dear up the lawn and start the grass out of dormancy Follow this with a good raking to disshylodge some of the matted grass and you are well on your way

to a healthy lawn in the Spring The next step is to buy a good grass seed if your lawn is well established and to apply it at ab04t half the rate or less sugshymiddotgested on the packageThe idea behind this is to fill in places where the lawn is thin or where weeds have been killed Incishydentally it is a good idea to wait two or three weeks aftermiddot

middot you have applied weed killer middotbefore you start new grass seed

It is important that your seed be a good brand and quality A eheap seed contains many coarse ~escues and annual graSses which will do the lawn very little good over the long run Jetter to buy a very good seed in small amounts than an iJlexshypensive seed which will cause you more trouble than it will do good

The only job left af~er middotthis is ~ keep themiddot lawn moistsq~bat

snippedt up the flavor would be stronger

Well I cooked my recipe and it was quite delicious but a few sprigs of the green shoots reshymained on the counter and as Joe was helping me clean up he inquired why Ihad been picking carrot tops Needless to say at that moment I rseolved to learn a great deal more about parsley in all its varieties The things I found out in my research on the parlsley plant were quite fascinating and even it bit frightening if youre the superstitious type Did you know that it was thought to be such a plant of the devil that it could only be sown on Good Friday if it were to flourish at all In anciert times the Greek$ decked their tombs with it for they fully believed that it sprang from the blood of one of their dead heroes It was also th9ught only the wicked could grow parsley successfully

Feeling that its merits must far outweigh its supposed curses I searched further to discover that one of the beliefs that surshyrounded it was that wherever it flourished the missus is master This could provide a good reason for cultivating it

Getting away from the P4rely theoretical and into the practical I learned that parsley is la h~rdy biennial normally flowering and going to seed in the Spring -after sowing though in a hot dry year it may bolt and go to seed in late Summer (this is what happened to Ti Tias parsshyley bed) Seed may be planted inmiddot April and May fOf a Summer and early Autumn crop andmiddots

the n~wgtseed has amiddotchlUlce tos~cpnd s~~ing JWlde ~lllate~uly germinate If you are succ~ pr August for tbe next ~pring and the lawn does take it is im-~pd SumDler n

middot perative tbat you keep the n~wpar~le~ steJfis have fiir~ore grasscut at about two inches So~avor than the leayes and ~e

that it makesmiddot sorneroot growth French often use only the stem before the coIf weather sets in where taste is more important

Mostlawns should bereseededmiddotthan appearance They are full iJdHis vaVeach year pIefetabiyof chlorophyll (thatgreeliishIn late Augustor eatlySeptem- property lthat was so popular a

ber Seeding is outmiddot of the ques- fewmiddot years ago) andmiddot when tion however where water re- crushed ~intmiddot mayonnaise aod

strictions are still in effect So other sauces a lovely shade of if you are allowed to water only green If you do happen tomiddot be one or two hours a week you wicked enough to have pars- will have to suffer your poor ley flourish in your yard the hlwq or at least another season four most popular ways of storshy

h the Kitchen ing it in your refrigerator are 1 With the stems kept ina

I realize that I have a great glass of water deal to learn concerning both 2 Washed water shaken off the kitchen and garden but my sealed in a glass jar or plastictack of knowledge was undershy bag

Jined the other day when I was 3 Unwashed in a plastic bamiddotg preparing to cook the recipe 4 Washed and folded intoa

- yentat Irrt ~sing in this eeks cloth the clothmiddot absorbs the ~olumn As I readmiddot the hst of dampness ~ee~ed Ig~edlents I only gave I found the following recipe iilSSmg notce to t~e paryleyas ~elicious even J~oJlgh graced

have always gathered It fr~s~ with carrot top~ instead of parsshy rom a large bed over In 1-1 Tla s -- ley The unusw name may refer ya~d howev~r when I wet to sltmelllenlbero(th~-cleigy over to pick It I found that In who fainted with joy at the flashya s~ort span of a few days most vor he enjoyeo

0pound It bad gone to seed - middotmiddot middotmiddotmiddotmiddot SWo()nedPri~stmiddot~lmiddotmiddot

Suddenly I see~ed to recall 1 eggplant peeled and sliced ~hat Joe ~admentIoned that he h inch thick had planted some of theltalian 2 large onions sliced _ Vanety llear our raspberry 3 large tomatoes sliced ~ushes ah the day was saved salt and pepper That must be it I said to 1 small bunch of fresh pa~ middotmyself as I spied sOllIe feqthery ley minced green shoots along the fence it 2 Tab)e~pouns oil didnt smell very much like 2 cloves of garlic sliced

middot parsley but ther again it was 1) Arrange eggplant onionsmiddot supposed to be a different va- and tomatoes in alternate layen lriety and perhaps when I in a large frying pan sprinkling

each layer with salt pepper ahd 1 00 R the minced parsley u v eglster 2) Add 1fJ cup hot water the

NEW YORK (NC) - More oil and garlic

than 1000 person have regis- 3) Cover tightly -andmiddot simm1r ~7~~d to at~end the ei~J1th n~- for about 30 minutes or u~til ~lonal CursI110 Movement eon-iiquia Is reducedt~aricl1 gravY iention now in session here Remove garlic before serving

PRE-CONVENTION ARRANGEMENTS BY DCCW DELEGATES Among the delegates from the Diocese who met recently for arrangements to attend the 33rd National Convention of Catholic Women in Miami Beach Oct 5-8 were left to right Mrs James E Williams St Josephs No Dighton Miss Angela Medeiros Mt CarmelSeekonk Mrs Theophane Lavoie St Jeim the Baptiste Fall River Mrs John Smith Sk Marys South Dartmouth Thursday Sept I is the closing date for registration of delegates from the Diocese to the Convention

Nuns Health Insurance Econoniist Tells Superiors Life Expectancy

Justifies C~operative Plan MILWAUKEE (NC)-Kuni- encountered by ri~ns thlo~ghQut erlliy o~payton ecqnonll~ ~r~ their lifetime ~essor Wbo~peciali~es i~m~g- Medical Passports ic~l statisectticl(or~seesalow-c~ To c~nect data FecheidEl~ised be~lthi~u~an~e~lan a~~ a~ni- a medlqal i4e~tification card 1fiect )rgra~ 0 n1edlcal and whichiiecalIi a medical pass-h~spltal facllitiesfr Am~can middotPOrtHe said these cards carshynuns under the admlm~tratlOrt~f ryingrecords of current disabili shythe Conference of MaJor Supe- tiesmiddotmiddot eouldaid in accumulating

middot riors of Wmen medical information to help Addressmg t~e conferepCemiddot ~t middotnuns qualify for lower cost Its annual meetmg he~e COli Jhealth insurance and to organize Fecher s~ldmiddot ~ooperativeplaQsan eventual program of comshy~or ~ns m thIS country canbe JustIfIed by the longer life exshypectancy ~nd better health of women relIgiOUS Fecher presented d~ta Q~ a

fIve-year study on disabIlItIes among 3)000 nuns He has made many previous statistical studies on ~he nuns long~vity

Smce nuns lIve In what Fec~er calls a contrlled life studIes ~f thelmiddot medlcal sta~us can prOVide medical SCIence WIth ~nf~rtn~tion relvatgt-t to 0-lher q~e1 But mo~t PTllvI~ts stuq~es have conc~Iltrat~~~m rn~rtalItybull s~tI~tl~s~l1d w~re coJcerI)edW~~ lteaJh apd I~ causes Fec~eT s rece~t ~~S centered around the dIsabIlIties

Christrtras Bazaar Advance preparations fire beshy

middot ing made for a Christmas bazaar slated for the weekend of Nov 25 through 27 in the basement of Sacred Hearts Church Nolth Fatrhaven Meetings are being held in the rectory at 730 each

middot MOhday night and parishioners who cannot come at this time

middot are mged to volunteer home services byknitting sewing or making fthEir articles for sale

Materials will be furnished and dondticins iire laquo iHsifoeing reshyquested 101 a white elephant table Gerierafdiairman Mrs Roland Larocque announcesmiddot that

prOfits will benefit the school improvement fund

bined health care They might also be of value to physicians treating future illnesses he said

The five-year survey tended to support the adage your health mirrors your environ ment Abstinence fromalcohol and ~igarettes a well-balanced diet adequat~ housing secure

bull communa livi and celibacy apparently do iow down the aging process Fecher said

He cautioned however that this does not ~ecessarilYmean that areligious life promotes longevity and that a similar am6tirlt of work-day schoolshy

day orreligiflus-day sefvice 10sseser be applied to each and every religious community in tbecountrymiddot

Fecher said that data collected over the past 40 years shows that the health middotcare programs of reshyligious are very uneven

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Aug 25 1966

Approves Loco ~

School Boards BURLINGTON (NC) - The

appointment of four local Cathshyolic school boards brings a new method of Catholic school manshyagement to 25 per cent of the diocesan schools here in Vershymont

At the regular monthly meetshying of the Burlington Diocesan School Board Father John A Lynch diocesan superintendent of schools reported that consti shytutions for four schools had been approved making a total of 25middot per cent of the schools operating under policy-malting boards approved by the diocesan board

~he diocesan statutes e~c6urshya~ebut do not demand the formatior of 10 c a l schoOl boards he said

Father Lynch also announced that a study would be made of school costs in the hope to find ways to avoid increasing tuition and parish assessments The study of education costs will be made by George Fortune acshycounting consultant to the diocshyesan school system

Good Counsel College Gets Loan for Dorm

WASHINGTON (NC) - A $1180000 college housing loan for Good Counsel College for women in White Plains NY to build a new dormitory has been approved Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Robert C Weaver announced here

The dorm is planned to acshycommodate 192 students The college conducted by the Sisters of Divine Compassion has an ellrollment of some poo students

Some students required to live on campus are in overcrowded middotfacilitiesmiddot Mother M Dolores president said lack of housing will foree themiddot college to deny admission middottoa number of stushydents middotthis fall she said The COllege enrollment is expected to reach 650 in five years and

800 in 10 years

Ce~tervilfe Guild New officers of Our Lady of

Victory Womens Guild Centershyville are Mrs StephenB OBrien Jr president Mrs John J Pendergast Jr and Mrs James Murphy vice-presidents Mrs ~oger Carlson treasurer Mrs Francis McKenna and Mrs Edward ONeill secretaries

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

middotOPENDAllY FORTHIE SEASON AFTERNOON and NIGHT

niE ANCHOR $as~ Vocationsmiddot10 Thurs Aug 25 1966 COnCern ofAIi

Employer U rges ST LOUIS (NC) - Speaking at the third annual Vocation Mass in St Louis cathedral

middot here Joseph Cardinal Ritter said middotvocations in the Church should

Workers to Vote For Teamsters

be the concern of every Roman SAN FRANCISCO (NC) Catholic

-The Di Giorgio Corporashy The cardinal told 397 men and women preparing to enter semishytion is recommending that naries and convents in the Fanits farm workers vote to afshy that religious vocation is not

filiate with the Teamsters FaTm middot merely a concern for the arch-Workers Union if they wish middot diocesan director a union the company announced It is a matter of solicitudeshy

Robert Di Giorgio president for each and everyone of us A of the company said therecomshy vocation is a divine thing but mendationmiddot is in accordance with it is a thing which God will not National Labor Relations BoaTd w~thhold from His peopleprocedures The recommendashy Cardinal Ritter continuedtion was made in letters sent to Bymiddot manifesting a concern employes eligible to vote in the about and an interest in vocashyunion election scheduled Ifor tiols we truly show that we Tuesday Aug 30 middot are the People of God

Opposing the Teamsters will be the National Farm Workers Association (NFWA) and the Seeks Assistance Agricultural Workers Organshy For Congo Churchizing Committee AFL-CIO (AW OC) which have merged since WASHINGTON (NC) - A they began the long Delano Congolese senator visiting the strike United States on a State Departshy

The Teamsters won the originshy ment tour program for foreign al election for union representashy government officials hopes to tion but charges of fraud make his two-month visit serve brought a new election a double purpose

Di Giolgio said the corporashy Senator Gaston Diomi wants tion is recommending a vote to speak with Catholic laymen for the Teamsters because middotand members of the clergy per-

The Teamsters won the preshy haps address audiences at vious electionmiddot Catholic institutions in his hope

The Teltlmsters while they to bring the Church iri the light hard in their members Congo to the eyes of American behalf are fair arid responshy ~ Catholics

And the senator has a planesible he wants to set up sharing proshyCompany Union middotFeels Adults Need Religious grams throughout the United

The competing union on tne States programs in which an ballot the Nationa Farm Workshy More So Than Children Nun Declares American diocese would adopt z ers AssoCiation has achieved Congolese diocese an American tentative recognition with oniy LOVELAND (NC)-Religious JI1ost rigidly formed in the old program to meet its needs--part religious order adopt a Congoshytwo growers the larger of which

education is needed for aduits system to see the new vision of which could be a parish lese order an American orphan-this year shifted production from school age adopt a Congolese orphanmore than for children and a of themiddot Churchand of Christian~ble grapes to wine tnus elimshy Flexibility and the wiUing- agebetter term for it would be life middotsetmiddot forth by the Secondinating a great many jobs ness tomiddot try a variety 01 ap- The American governmentmiddotsomething like shared growth Vatican Council Cesar Chavez head of the N iIi Christian middotlifemiddotmiddotmiddot This is 8 hard ~ask Sister prOdches ought to be the mmk of has such sharing programs the FWA called the Teamsters a an effectivereligious education senator pointed out WhyThis is the estimate of Sis admitted for adult educationcompany union and said it

tel 114 Charles Borromeo former demands new approaches and program she asserted empha- shouldnt the Church have the has entered into a partnership sizing thatmiddotit should have a so- same The Church that is Cath-head of the theology school at cannot be imposedwith Di Giorgio in a commonmiddot cia1 and an ecumenical dimen- olic the Church that is definedSt Marys College conducted by Each Ones Missionplot agabnst the farm workers sionmiddot QY the Second Vatican CouncilHoly Cross Sisters at Notre She wouldnt abandon chil-He said the companys recom- Built into each program middotas a missionary Church- whyDame Ind She recently joined drens education JOwever Shemendation confirmed that the should be a growirig aW8leness shouldnt this Church and tierthe faculty of St Xavier Col-middot saidTeamstens came to Delano to

lege Chicago as theology pro- What Id like to se~ IS emh of e~ch ones mission in the members share even more readshytlrganize workers at the invita- Church-an outgoing mismiddotsion to ily than government~ifessor set up a total religiou educationiion o~

PROFESSION CEREMONY AT WAREHAM The Chapel in the Woods of the Noshyvitiate of the Sacred Heart Fathers vas the scene Saturday morning as four novices

iere profe~sed by Bishop CoimolIyLeft to right Bro JudeMohan Bro Joseph ONeill Master of Novices Rev Andrew Jahn Bishop Connolly Very Rev Daniel J McCarthy

Prodncial who offered the Mass Bro Paul Daly and Bro Martin Lucia

the corporation New Approaches reach others and to build the

Speaking at the Summer lec- middot social patterns needed in our Oppose Intervening ture series at Grailville herein Quote Pope Pauls world

middot1 PImiddot Ohio USheaqquarters of the A 1 f IP Issues of TimesIn Fami y annlnglt international Grail movement ppea oreace middot She warneq against lookingMILWAUKEE (NC)-The ex- Sister Charles Borromeo aC- BERLIN (NC)-Fiye hundred for textbooks with all thE anshy

ecutive committee of the ad- knowledged that the Church in letters quoting the flppeal of swers or for fOllliulas thatvisory ioard of the Milwauke~ this country has placed most of Pope Paul VI for peace in Vietshy might take the place of decisiOlishyArchdioce~an Family Life Pro- its resources atmiddot the service of nam were sent persons in East rilaking by individual wnsci- gram has adopted a resolution childrens education Germany by the Social Demoshy encesmiddot

opposing government interven But the most urge~t need for cratic Party (SPD) The East Religiousteaching should inshynon in family planning giving religiousmiddot education she said Germans had asked the SPD volve a di~logue she su-ggestunanimousmiddot approval to a 13- if to helpadults especially those why the free world had not ed addi~g that in the past therepoint resolution which insists made imy efforts to end the war has been toomuch sttess on aushythat the matter of family plan- d in Vietnam thorityin teaching rid~otning is a private affair not a Sche u ~ Reopening The letter sent by the Social

bulle~o~gh on sharingChrisliarieoncern of the government Of Chi Smiddot h 1 Democratsmiddot pointed out that the gr()wthmiddot

Frank Stabb chairman of at 0 IC C 00 peace efforts of the pope the Thequesiion is not so ~lUcbtheCatholic board statedthat MTmiddot REPOSE (NC)-A Cath- World Council of Churches and

~hat to tea~h she ()pined butsince it has become increasingly olic school here in Ohio for of the governments of the how will we produce ~he Chrisshyapparentmiddot tilat our federalgov some 250 children will reopen in United States Great Britain (ian experience in litUlgy andernment ans to use taxinoiiey September due to efforts of in- Sweden India France and Itrly

for the spreading of birthcon-middot (lividuai citizens civic and Pro had all middotbeen rejected by the soci~l actionJn th~ great issues trol it becomes the obUgation of testantchurch groups in the communists The letter also of our times ~

NO JOBTOq BIG NONE TOO SMALL

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTE~S

MainOHice and Plant 95 Bridge St lowell M~bullbull

Tet 4586333

Auxiliary Plarits

BOSTON CAMDEN NJ OCEANPORT N~J

MIAMI PAWTUCKET R1 PHILADELPHIA

this family apostolate to speak area the Milford Chamber of middotstressedmiddot the SPDs view that out vigorously in oPllOsition tomiddota Commerce and parishioners of war can no longer be an instru shypolicy which has absolutely no St Andrews church Milford ment in solving political probshyvalidity The Elizabeth Seton School a lems middot He went on to say that when rural outpost of St Andrews Rltidio television and newsshyariy government agency tells parish was established seven paper ieports iil Eastmiddot Germany

middotpoor married couples whether years ago and con tin 11 a llY have given the impression thatmiddot they should have children or plagued by sewage dIsposal no one middotincluding the Pope has

hownfany to have the govern- problems The school wasmiddot closed made any efforts to seek peace ment is making a mighty pre- by court order in the Sumrtler in Vietnam sumptuous intrusion into a most of 1965 but r~openeq last year i J

sacred element of huin~nlife) with an arrangement fo~ haul- Stamiddotmiddotr 0n middotIImiddotmiddotOmiddotftmiddotmiddotammiddotP

middot ing sewge to MilfordmiddotmiddotWhenmiddot ~ middotV 1 t Cmiddoth 1 forcedtostop usingtheMilford DAVENP0RT (NC)~Seven-

eel) members of religious coni 0 un eermiddot apalnmiddot sewage systemlastJanuary t PHILADELPHIA (NCfFa-middot classes were dfscontinueiigt mutlities in theuilitedmiddot middotStates

ther JjRobert Falabella SJ The Closhlg spalked if coin- were among the graduates at the 36 instr~ctor in theolOgyat St mlinity effort led by the Buck- annual mid~Summermiddotcommence

Josephs College here has vol- wheat-middotTaxpayers Associationw ment of St Ambrose College uteered for extended adive aidthemiddotschoolmiddotA fUrid drive for her~in Illwa middotParticipating in duty witp theUS Army Re $250((to pay formiddot new tihiinage the ceremonies was Margheritiimiddot serve s a chaplain in the Vietmiddot f~cilities was ~ledby th~ Mil- Roberti a~ native of Davenportmiddot mam combat zone ford Chamber Of Commerce a leading dramatic sopranQ~

CONVEmiddotNImiddotENT BANKING WITHOUT TRAFFIC PARKING PROBLEMS

at the -

5LADE~S FERRr-r~USJmiddotCOMPANY SOMERSET MASS

j ~ - bullbullbull ~~ ~ bull ) bullbullbull lt

ThemOflt friendlymiddot dmocrt~ lANK oHering

-_~9npi~lC)h$topmiddot~cirliing middotmiddotf bullbullbullClubmiddot Accoul1Its - Auto middotLoa -

Checking Accounts ~ Business boris Savings Accounts~ ~ ~ Ieaj Estate loOns 1 -

- ~Atmiddot S~~~rs~tS~~ppi~~ Ar~a=-~igh~~a 5 ~t~due Me~ber FeCieral I)epositmiddot ri~urance Corporation

I

11 Cardinal Cushing Hits Imbalance In Schools

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing deplored that very little has been oone to relieve racial imshybalance in Bostons public schools in his first public address since his recent illness and conshyvalescence

The Boston prelate told an ecshyumenical meetingmiddot in All Saints Lutheran church here that al shythough very littlemiddot has been done to make a year-old law work we are not discouraged and we are very far from giving up hope that we will have reshyBults before long

He referred to the Racial 1m balance Law aimed at promotshying racial integration in Massashychusetts public schools The meeting marked the first annishyversary of the law The measure will deprive Boston public schools of $30 million in state subsidies until the citys school committee submits an integrashytion plan acceptable to the state board of education Until now the city committee has not subshymitted an acceptable plan

A school that is heavily imshybalanc~d racially cannot provide the best education that should be available for our children Even with the most devoted teachers and the most upto-date proshygrams-and we have both o( these in Boston-a predomiJ)antshyly Negro school suffers from an isolation from the general comshymunity which cannot fail to be harmful~ he said

Scores Slum Landlords In a similar way we can say

that an all white scJ100l fails to reflect the true nature of the radally mixed communitymiddot in which we live and so deprives white youngsters of theexperi ence of living and studying with their neighbors of a different race Ourideal should be to live and workand study and pray side by side in mutual respect and common affection

There hav~ been several proposalsmade during the last year to al~rest imbalance iit the schools of our center city Carshydinal Cushing said None of these has been accepted by those who hove been elected to make these decisions in the schooi srstem Of course we know that no immediate proshygram will solve all our problems but we can make li beginning

The cardinal also criticized slum landlords for the inhuman conditions in which so many here must live and work alid bring JP their families He called for a crash program of assistance for the deprived

State Uses Vacant Catholic School

BURLINGTON (NC)-The re- cently closed Don Bosco Schoolmiddot for BoyS here will Soon befilled up again with teenage boys this time as temporary quarters for Vermonts pilot residential treatshyment center for youthful first shyoffender lawbreakers

In announcing the acceptance of the proposal by Bishop RobertF Joyce of Burlington and the Verm 0 n t Catholic Charities board State Institutiolls Com-

PROFESSION AND CtOTHING CEREMONIES Principals in the ceremonies conshyducted for the Sisters of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts in Fall River on Monday were seated Sr Mary Dolores Sr John Veronica Bishop Gerrard who presided Sr Karen Dolores Sr Mary Catherine Standing Sr Margaret Edward Sr Joseph Maureen Sr Stephen David Sr James Constance Sr Celestine Regis Sr Anne Robert Sr Vinshycent Dolores

Report Says Cold War More Intense Peaceful Coexistence Now Strategic Offensive

WASHINGTON (NC) -Some tegic Studies at Georgetown jarring statements are made in University a Jesuit-conducted a significant news report whose school here

It is an in-depth analysisprivate but highly responsible sponsors call it the resultmiddot ofmiddot quality research It reminds for example that the so-called cold war is not

over and warns that as of now it may be entering a more danshy

gerous phase Th e ~peaceful coexistence

slogan it says was once a comshymuhist defensive stalling tacshytic but now it signifies the communists have gone over to

the strategic offensive The great paradox of our

times the document asserts may well turn out to be our inability to recognize that the cold war has in reality become more intel1se despite the increasshying appearance of peace

The goals of the presentmas~ tels of the Kremlin are no dif- ferent from tho~e of Khrushshychev Stalin or Mao Tse-Tung and to the Krtmlin peac~ful coshyexistence is a strategy not an end in itself it declares

The study entitled Peace or Pea c e f u1 Coexistence was

sponsored by the Committee on Education Against CommUllism of the American Bar Association It was unveiled in New York just before the ABA began its annual meeting in Montreal but it was prepared by Richard V Allen a specialist on Sino-Soviet affairs at the Center for Stra-

K of c Plan Socoal

Action I itia tive

missioner John Y Woodhull MIAMI BEACH (-NC) - The stated I think this is one (f the top official of the Knights of finest ecumenical testures of Columbus announced plans for faith and charity that I have a new initiiitive in the ecumenshyknown i -i~al and soCial action field

The eenter ill ~ ~provide a through a partnership with theO

home for 16 to 20 b(iys aged HI John LaFarge Institute ill New to 18 who are referrecl by the York ~ - eourls as first offenders Toile In additior W financial assist shyboys will work loeal du-in ancethe LaFllg~jnstitute will

the day and return to the center reeeive suggestifmsand recomshyin the ~venin1 for intensive mendations frOJll the official roup t~erapy eonducted b) rep-~~entationand plJrticipatiOll

Btaff III ~ix bull Ule K bull C

based onmiddot more than 3000 articles and documents of the internashytiOllal communist movement more than 90 per cent of which material is dated after the Cushyban Missile crisis of October 1962 Allen admits that the commushy

nists have used the coexistence slogan in ihepast and with sfme success but he directs atshytention to the fact that it now signifies a strategic offensive rather than a stal~ing tactic

The study notes that the Cushyjail build-up the erection of the Berliil Wall and the armed iilvasi~n of South Yietnam all occurred during the most in- tense pedod of peaceful coshyexistence ~ It~~~inds that Khrushchev in 19t1lddiiled coexistence as a form of intense ecoitomic pOlitshyical and ideological struggle gaii1s~ the aggressive forces of imperialism hi the international arena it aiso says that in their 3tshy

tempt to create wha bull they call the New ComIJlunist Man the communists have systematically presented a vicious and thor oughly distorted picture of the

Nuns to Construct Health Care Facility

SANDUSKY (NC)-The Franshyciscan Sisters who operate Providence Hospital here in Ohio will construct a new 100shybed $1250000 healthcare fashycility separate ftom thehospital

It will serve Medicare patients of the area during posthospital care and Qther convalescents who do not requir~f~l~-scalehospital care Sister Lucia -administrator 81lid it will relievemiddot pressure ~ hospital beds in the area

There wiII be ari appeal to th~ public lor about $900000 The -remainder of the funds will

btl supplied by the Federalgovshyerllment

West in general and the United States in particular It need not be emphasi~ed

the study states that the overshywhelming sentiment of the free world is to live in peace But tQ mistake the illusion of peace for genuine peacemiddot would be a profoundly dangerous perhaps fatal mistake In a foreword t the book

Bertram D Wolfe a Stanford University expert on commushy~lism warns that we have been prone to read the idea of live and let live into the phase of peaceful C 0 e x imiddots ten ce Our hopes and our longings are likeshyly to betray us again and again into a readiness to be deceived by those who have sworn the d~struction of all we stand for

fnjoymiddot Dining IN THE

JOLLY WHALER --AND--

SPOUTIRINN RESTAURANTS

Always Free Parking

New Bedford Hotel

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Aug 25 1966

Cassidymiddot Seniors Attend Work$hop

Three members of the incomshying senior class at Cassidy High School Taunton will complete tomorrow a five day Workshop in Leadership conducted at the University of Massachusetts under th~ sponsorship of the Massachussetts Association of Student Councils

Mis s Rosemary McKenna~ president of the senior class Miss Nancy Thomas president of the National Honor Society and Miss Christine Victoria coshyeditor of the Cassidy school paper are attending Miss Victoria is secretary of the Southeastern Association of Student Councils and will serv~ in that capacity with the other officers Jerry Flanagan presishydent Feehan High Marsha Boyd vice-president Attleboro High Luke Boyd treasurer West Bridgewater High

Cassidy GIllaquoIltiluCllle Wins Elkso AWtlDd

Miss Pauline Lee daughter ox Mrs Harry Lee and the late Harry Lee of 7 Dean Ave Taunshyton has Qeen named the recipishyent of a $600 Massachusetts Elks Lead~rship Award granted by the Elks National Scholarship Fund

A member of the 1966 gradushyating class of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton Miss Lee was in the top ten of a class of 108 and maintained a scholastie honors record throughout bell four year Miss Lee will attend Nortn- eastern University Boston

Schools Merge BAY CITY (NC)-TwO wes~

side Catholic high schools here hi Michigan will merge Sept I

to becomeWest Catholic CentraU High School The decision te merge was made by an intershyarish lay study committee tv provide more efficient use of the staff and facilities The schooU will be staffed by the ReligioUl Sisters of Mercy of Detroit

BIG DIVIDEND NEWS

a SYSTEMATIC550 year SAVINGS

INVESTMEIfJ500 a year SAVINGS

8 REGULAR450 year SAVINGS

Bass River SovinQs Bank bull SOUTH YARMOUTH bull DENNIS PORT

bull YANNIS bull fARMOiJTH SHOPPING PLAZA

bull OSTERVILLE

-1111

WHITE middotmiddotmiddotSPA CATERERS

- BANQUETSmiddot -WEDDINGS - PARTIES

~ COMMUNION BREAKFASTS 1343PlEASANT STREET FAll RIVER

OSb~rne 3-7780

--h-- ~

12

i

THE ANCHOROlocese of Fall River-Th~s Aug 25 1966

~regW ~reg~tfJ ~lYJ~~ TtUUY1)[fi)l[

Of R~dD~~~csm Amcm)gYW]fr~ lJy Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy

Phillip Abbott Luces The New Left (McKay 119 W 40th New York $450) attempts to explain the resurgence of radicalism among American students Its author is a

of the New Left wIth as many con u e y lcal ideas while at MissisSippi non-joiners on the peripherY day even~ng Aug 27 at S lD ~ at~~ fi~t he~-d ~~ ~h~ ~erBtlt its impact- is smd tohave Mlll~aret s Kinderlctarten aaU i Left whIle at Ohio State and l Prizes WIll be awarded and reshy

tgrt~ritotcOtmiddotmiddotgthmiddotevecJ1 amm~-~W1lS~~tttedpa~~y ~xten~e~ tots about200OQP co h~~hriients served o nl~ge ~u en ~~ i - ltGUiLD OF TillE VIsITATION Iil1961heifioved~to NewmiddotYork It ~S ~l1ena lza1I~~~eme~t i iNO EASTilrAM ~ ~

_and came closer tothe Commti- in the country What alarms Mr ih alb t ofthe Dist Party Llitef he joined Pro- Luce is not its existence or its G1 ~~ h 3que wed gressiveLa]gto~aiI~ edited its size but the fact and the in- W WI e e on nesshymiddot monthly magazine _ cre~sing extent of Comrnamst q1Y~ 4-~ 3~ a~ the PiJ~~ middot -domination~ He gives -instances Springs Restaurant No TflJro Visited _C~~ro-S Cuba R t cl Sunday

in proof thatsuch dO minatioD-i8 A e~e2 rva~o1l os on It was Progressive Labor ug s

which arJanged- for fmeric~ indeed an actuality SACRED HEARTS

young man who won some leader of the New Left and when he broke with Proshygressive Labor which he eharges was organiz~d by -formermembenlof theSoVfeishycontrolled Communist Pa rt y USA and is now aPekingor~eh tated Commu~

D1st group Mx Luce has an ex tremely Impor- middottant subject one which is both timely and crit shyleal Because of his experience he should be especially qualshyified to set it out But the fac~ is that he is at best a mediocre writer He has no notion as to how to

organize a book marshal his materials and to ten his story iIi a consecutive way and with cushymulative force This is a dull alld muddled treatment of a very middotvitai topic~ not heipedat all by crude blundersin English usage Mr Luces personal histog has to be pieced together fro~ bits strewn through the book

middotlike the debris after a hurricane He is an Ohioan bornmiddotin 1935

notice both when he was a the lives of the rising generation Youth is repelled by parental attitudes and aspirations which are seen as mostly narrow negshyative sterile College is a bore

offeriiig no incentive or oppOJshytUnity for youth to direct its enshyergies into crucial causes

A mood of rebellion has devel- ~ped and a chance to express it has been pr~sentedby the civil rights struggie and the unpopu~ lar and beclouded war in Vietshynam Nor does the prospect of fighting authority in each case dim the attraction of these causes quite the reverse Hence the New Left

JLists Organizations Communist organizations of

various stripes have attemptec to sieze control of the New Left and to exploit the mood of reshybellion wi~h an eye to changing it into participation in revolushy

tion

Mr Luce lists and desribes the Communist organizations so engaged The one he knows best of course is Progresectsive Labor But he gives much space to the Du Bois Clubs which are the instruments of the Communist Party Then tlmre are the Trot-middot

the son of middle-class Repub- skyite splinter groups of which lican parents H~ start~d college four strains are identified (inshyat Miami University in Ohio left cluding middotone that is pro-Negro to see the Souih finished ~t Mis and anti-Semitic) I

sissippi State and did graduate Mr Luce estimates that some k t Oh St t 12000 YOung AmericanS are wor a 10 a e _ t 1 t 1 b He became interested in rad- ac ua orgamza Ion~ mem ers

APPOINTEE- Bishop Josshyeph Bmiddot Brunini Auxiliary since 1957 to Bishop Richard O Gerow of Natchez-Jackshyson middotMiss has -been appointshyed by Pope Paul VI to be Apostolic Administrator of the diocese NC Photo

The Parish Parade

ST 1lgtYS TillED mn ov= =shylFALL RJrVER

The parish will sponsor a one day pilgrimage to the Shrine of the North American Martyrs Auriesville N Y on Sunday Oct 2

Interested partles may obtaIn full particulars by contacting Mrs Laurence Coyle Mrs Wilshyliam Blythe or Mrs George Boitano S8 MARGARET-MARY GUILD BUZZARDS BAY

A bl hitmiddot middotU be pu IC W S paL 0 WI d ct d b the guild on Saturshy

studeritsto visit Cuoain 1963 middot and 1961 In defiance of our middotState Department~sban on travel

there Mr Luce made the trip says that most of the students

middot were unaware of Progressive Labors sponsorship and control The money came from Castro And Progressive Labor members planned and staged the wild scenes at a Congressional hea~

ing concerning the middotproject By late 1964 Mr Luce was

enti~ely dissillusioned abo u t Progressive Labor andmiddot by Febshyruary of 1965 h~ pad left it to

bemiddot quickly expelled upon his

Stresses Strength NO FAIRHAVEN He insists that somethin~(must Registration for the kiridershy

be done to prevent Communist garten pre-primary and the capture of the movement He eight eJement~ry grades are beshywants everyone to wake up to ing held daily during the month the existence and the strength of Augus of the New Left Pupils may register with SJ

We must realize he urges how Marie Henriette SSCC at the disenchanted with our society Sacred Hearts Academy 332 the young people ~re what hos- Main Street Fairhaven any 8poundshytility they feel what a gulf ternoon from 1-5 RegistratioDfl yawns between them and their are also being accepted by Rev elders and hcgtw impervious th~YAlexis Wyggers SSCC at the are to ideas and language which ReCtory 382 Main street Fairshyi

figure in their eldErs attempts haven to communicate with them The Association of St Anne

No one he maintains is S~-Will receive corporate CoinmUshyI~ departure and sayagE(l~ Yim~~~~ Jiously trying to reach the hiorton Sunday at the 8 ocloek middot He left because he says Pro gressive Labor is a middotMaoist Comshymunist tool because itmiddotadlrQcates imd take steps to implelrtent armed insurrection because- no personal freedam is allowed to members an4 lill- deQisionsmiddot are made by a few dictatorial leadshy~ril 1ecausemembersareJnshyvolved in programs of Whose

eonsequences totge country and to themselvestIey have no idea lt~

lFe~ls lF~tts~rated Mr fL~ced6es- notmiddot contend

middot that the New Leis Goromunistshy

young rebel to understand him Mass to speak to him intelligibly and effectively Co~unJ~t errorsmiddot J~edB~ MeU1lMe~tmiddot propaganda hypocnsy mUst be SCHWYZ (NC) - Catholicrelentlessly exposed in a way movie and television experts which the young people will met here iil ~fwitieriand for imcomprehend international exchange of ~He is strong_ for a Freedom riiques iiI the useof Tv anellAeademy- which would provipe films in religious educationmiddotmiddot expert practical education conshy - cerning CommunislJlmiddotAnd he stressestheneed of a placefor

ltloltiinated -Hescent~B it -as8 phe- PITTSB~1RGH(Nt) - The bull I bull ~ bull bull bull bull bull

honidon whlc~ came ~bout Pittsburgh Catholi( Interracial Commercialmiddot 15 Industrid spontaneously an eX~IJ1Pre of- Council has endorsed home rule Institutionalyouth in rebellion - for the District of Columbia asshy

Youth he holds~ hils amiddotpoundeeling sertingthattooibng have many painting ~nd~ D_~~o~qtig of -frustrationmiddot with American of the-importanLdecisionaffectshy Fall River OSborne 2-1I9H$ociety its tone and its values ing (the District of CohJmbia) -yoiith~es~rtt~rhaving rio say inb~erlmadtd)ycongrpoundpoundssiriehftoin ~ 74v~hllia rnson Str~e~

the making of decisions affecting hundreds of miles away

~~Gr~ayK BJ Most Rev FUUOlll J Sheeillp Dll)

If my neighbor is stronger than 1 I fear him if he lsweaker than I I despise bim Such is the modem judgement of the psyshychiatrist Dr Jean de Rougemont Earlier the Psalmist speaks ~ the arrogance of those who have much and the despisal of those who are proud How can the rich avoid feeling superior to the poor How can the poor avoid being humiliated The answer is that vices but can the) give up cigarettes for a week to help the poor the strong must see their weakness and the rich must see~eifto poverty How realJly strong are the strong Theymay avoid great Are thfiY suc~ masters of themselves tbatthey can turn down the third cocktail (or give up the first) and use the money instea4 to ~uy sulfone ~or a i~~r~ liqw r~ch_ ar~the rich Let them look inside themselves IIi whatvirtue are they rich Rich in cb~ty Rich i~ char~ti Ri~)n f~th

Onc~t~~ ~i~rhty see th~mseiv~ asnothiDi a~d therl~h see the~selv~ as i~poverislledth~ they wui lov~ ihe we~~ as their brothersilDd the peor IllS their

fellow beggars for thetrrace of God ifmiddot the strong middotlove middotmiddotthemselves despite all theirweaknes5~ then why not lovltil weaknesses in others u the rich love themselves despitG middottheir inner nakedshyness then why nCllt love a lesser ]lJOVshy

erty in others That i~ why Our Lord told us to love ourneighbor as ourseU ~y not more than self Because iii ]I

love myself-knowing myself as ]I do knowing how utterb weak ]I am2-then I have the measure of how J[ am to pour out love to others

We live in a world divided between the rich and the poor We live in that kinol of a church-pOor parishes and rich parishes Even bishops an~ priestsmiddot speak of a parish being good when they mean it is economicaily rich Somehow or other we have ~

get qut of this slavish standard of affluence which is so opposed to the lross of Christ To that end we make the folloWing proposal that you or your middotparishclub school or office undertake the sponsorshjp of one of the poor areas of the world which has been investigated by the Apostolic delegate Write to us and we will send you middotthe name of this diocese its location the number of priests catechists and faithful it has Thus you will be sure that you have a middotneedy (Ibject for sacrifice and service and n9t one based on a haphazard -appeal middotfroin an uninvestigated source The Church will not alloW you to sponsor this diocese for more than one year becausemiddot thtlre are so many poor parishes in the world Look into your weakness and you will love the weakness of o~heJ8 Look into your poyeny stricken soul and you willserVe poverty stricken bodies Write to -mpGod Love You

~~~ middot~middotGOD~middotLOVE YCllJmiddot tomiddot~SMLgtO~middot ~$5 middotto A~RCtor $sO~ For your1nissionUorkIeanthelp eve~one andmiddotyou ~o tltosem most meed bullbull tchJMBfcn $20 to Anon lor $1000 middotsentmiddotWithlteommnbull ~ 11

bullbull bull ~l

The GOD LOVE YOU~ medal lovely cameo medal of the Madonna of tIle worldiS one you would be proud to give ormiddotde shy

lighted tci reC~iVEt DesIgned bi the world-renowned jeweler Harry winSton aildbltessed by Bishlgtp Sheen the GOD LOVE YOU medal is available inmiddotcl~icF~oreritinegold firiishor pure sterlingsilver aod may be obtained by sending your request and corresPondirtg offering to The Socieb for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth AvenueNew York NY 10061 $2 Sinall sterling silver $3 small

11gtk goid fiiled $5 large sterling silver $10 large 10k gold filled

Cut out this colullnn pln your sacrifice to It and mali It to Most RevbullFultom J Sheen National Director of The Society for the Propagation of thl~ Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or to your Dioclesan Director Rt Rev Msgr Raymond Jr Considine 363 North ll1ain Street Falll River Massachusetts

bull j 7 Perry IQur fI~~fng

~v~-t~e OilsMake Taunt~B1l~ Mass - Worm FriendsmiddotVA 2-2282

------------------ ~

genuinely democratic radicalism ON CAPE CODlbONNlEllyin o~r Iociety _

]OHoo ~~~(Kl~Ymiddotmiddot amp SON (~ofP~n~T~UnCG Rigt - flJ1 ml n

crepound ormiddotentireiyCommuist- 9llaquoIIlaquo ~$ lf1J Ilililte ~fYl U ~ I~raquo8L[)~NG MAmiddoth~linAL$middotmiddotmiddot~~~V~C~ 6

S~~ri~gj 1$100 4~~YARMUlrH ROA~)

middottYA~MBSmiddot AMPLE PARKING

iIIIIOCIIJIjIWUllJmllIllDOCImIWlDIllmIlXlWll(lJfi

- -

THE ANCHOR-Jesuit Educators Members of PAVLA Maintain Missionary Thurs Aug 25 1966 13

Ponder Students Record of Fall River Diocese Area G~~s SocoaCynical ~ttitQJJde

LOS ANGELES (NC) shy lLong outstanding for the missionary work of its priests Sisters and Brothers the ~elvD~e ~elrllfrer A top Jesuit educator dispenshy Fa~ River Diocese is fast becoming noted for its outstanding Papal Volunteers for Latin CLEVELAND (NC) - OUX sed advice here on how to eombat the attitude of some high schoolers who consider the world and the religion of their middotparents as phony

Father Edward J Sponga 8J of Baltimore in the keynote adshydress at the 1966 Jesuit Educashytional Association Workshop on Christian Formation at Loyola University here called for a dialogue with everyone conshycerned to emphasize the good crying to be released

Speaking to delegates from 52 Jesuit high schools in the nation Father Sponga chairman of the board of the Jesuit Educational Association declared

Menace to Freedom If the young men of our

schools consider the world and the religion of their parents as phony and a menace to their freedom then we must be ruthshyless in seeing how and why this is and in entering into dialogue with everyone who is willing to do so in order that we may be able to release the g09d that is crying to be released

During the 12 days of research and discussion 125 school adshyministrators and teachers evalushyated the effect that religion courses academic curriculum spiritual exercises and personal guidance have had on the charshyacters of the 35000 teenagers in U S Jesuit high schools

The delegates particularly were concerned about the loss of religious faith in the adolesshycent who is becoming increasshyingly sophisticated and critical

Middle Class Values Father Joseph H Fichter SJ

Stillman professor of sociology at Harvard Universitys divinity school criticized Jesuit high schools for not challenging the middle class values of many of their students for not paying sufficient att~rition to the social sciencesmiddot and for not drawing more of their students irom among the poor

Dr Alexander A Schneiders graduate professor of psychology at Boston College stressed the commitment of Faith that must be made within the scopemiddot of inshytellectual independence He arshygued against compelling students to make annual retreats or assist at religious exercises

Other delegates suggested esshytablishing pilot programs in 1l)ner-city high schools with nationwide cooperation and the sending of Jesuit teachers to work in community schools outshyllide the regular Jesuit system

Ho~es for Negroes Goal of Campaign

WORCESTER (NC) A camshypaign to secure better housing for Negroes in the Greater Worcester Area is growing

In a letter to some 1200 pershyS0l1S who last Aprii signed an

open letter newspaper adshyvertisement regarding fair hous ins John J Concordia Duman rights committee chairman of the Diocesan Council of Catholic M~~ ~sked sig~atories of the

open -letter to volunteer to ~adopt members of a Negro family am actively assist them inmiddotproC1Jri~g decent housing to titheir ~ne~ds

In 8 statement by an intershy fa(thmiddoteommittee on housing middotwfii~IlJs all out-growth of a

siniilar committee formed last year by the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women a call was made for construction of housshying for middotmiddotpoor and lower middle d~ss f ami ie It ixlcludins

Ne8J~s

bull bull r~ ~

America These young men and women doing Christs work in some of the worlds needshy Lady of Futima parish hat3 opened a social service centeliiest areas are a credit to the parishes and toowns from which they come Letest PAVLA here in the midst of the Houghassignments in the Diocese area scene of Clevelands recent

are those of Lucille Lebeau rioting of St Annes parish New The center housed in an 18-gt Bedford and Anthony Gomes room former apartment buildo St John of God parish Somershy ing was dedicated by Archo set bishop Paul J Hallinan of~ At-gt

Actually Lucille isnt a new lanta while he was visiting iii PAVLA hand She was the first Cleveland~bis native diocese Diocesan enlistee in the organishy The center will be staffed by zation going to Brazil as a four Sisters of Charity of St nurse-social worker in August Augustine who along with lay1963 She returned from her volunteers have been working three year assignment in July in the area since Aprilmiddot1965 but volunteered to serve an The center will middotprovide C9uri extra year in Brazil She will re seling nursing medical supplie tum there in November and pre-natal care -

Anthony veteran of a middotyears The building which standt work in Florida with the fedshy next to the parish rectory waserai governments VISTA proshy purchased bymiddot the parish seveR gram will teach English in a years ago when it was aba~ Mexican minor seminary He has doned as an apartment buildingalready completed a PAVLA

Early last year Father Alberitraining course at Catholic Unishy Albert Koklowsky MSSSTversity in Washington D C and pastor of Our Lady of Fatimawill leave in September for launched a campaign through aMexico City and an intensive column in the Catholic Universefour and a half month course in Bulletin Cleveland diocesanSpanish language and culture newspaper to explain Houghsbefore beginning his assignment poverty to metropolitan resiltshyin the mountain town of Tacomshydentsbaro in the state of Michoacan

Housing was a major themePioneer Work Resulting donations from unishy

Lucille bubbles over with enshy verse Bulletin readers and 11thusiasm for PAVLA and its acshy matching gift from Coadjutorcomplishments She has just reshy middotBishop Clarence Issenmann of turned from a trip to the Washshy Cleveland enabled Father Kokshyington training course attended lowsky to renovate the buildingby Tony Gomes where incishydentally she met him for the first time She talked to new Work for Needy enlistees individually and in LIMA (NC) - Sixty me~bers groups seeking to picture for af the St Rose CYO hert gavethem the new life theyd be enshy volunteer aid to projects for thetering needy this Summer Most as~

Their enthusiasm was a boostshy slsted in a federally financed er shot for meshe said educati~nal program for cultu~

This week the New Bedford rally deprived students from nurse is inmiddot the Chicago area PAVLA ENLISTEES Revmiddot James w Clark Diocesan ~nderglirtenmiddot to sixij1 grad~visting PAVLA headquarters Directormiddot of Papal Volunteenlmiddot for Latin America with Othershelp1 a~ amiddot day camn f~there and friends she made ill retarded cbildren andmiddot Qne asAnthony Gltgtmes bound for teaching assignment in Mexico~ Brazil including the doctor with Ns~ed at a eerebral palsy c~mpwhom she worked when me and Lucille Lebeau who has already spent three years m first went to the Latin American Brazil as nurse-social worker will return in Novemberfor eountry He is now in practice additional year in Waukegan lll FAIRHAVEN

When I first went to Brazil urgy eommunitY needs and was to leave in each parish IIshe 8a14 I worked for a little LUMBERhealth needs team similar to their own toover a year at a hospital in Salshy cOMPANY carry on as far as possible thevador Bahia My job was mlinly Most of the help that an area

training Brazilian aides and received came from the people work in liturgy catecheticsmiddot and community and health needssetting up hospital routines themselves t h r 0 ugh their Complete line

After the year was over Brazil shy awakened sense of community We would return to the comshyian doctors and medical students said -ucille Actual government munities where we had given Building Materials took over the hospital routines or material aid was hampered by this course as often as possible were runing smoothly and I political economic and social said Lucille anu each time we 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVEN felt that I could go on to public complications of many kinds eould set them growing spiritushyhealth work in areas where there The team played it by ear ally WYman 3-2611 was no nursing care at all avail- in deciding how to approach a Turn to Page Nineteen able particular parish Lucille and

Lucille joined an apostolic the nun on the team who was shy ~

team organized by Bishop Eushy also a nurse tried to work genio de Araujo Sales Apostolic through community midwives Administrator of Salvador Toshy who were sadly in need of techshy JEREMIAH COHOLAN gether with a priest a nun two nical instruction The infant Brazilian lay apostles and what mortality rate in most areas was would bt the equivalent af an very high said Lucille due iD PLUMING amp HEATING I American social worker she large part to umbilical tetanus visited areas of the Diocese preshy caused by unsanitary delivery viously all but unreached by the techniques

Church Another technique was organ- I Aim of the team she explainshy ization of one-week parish Wy 3 0911 699 B II II A

ed wail to change dormant parshy courses centered around the idea man - e VI emiddotmiddot ven~ ishes into Christian communishy of Christian cominunity Lucille Nwamp~fQrd ties Seventeen parishes were said middotshe would start the course I visited in the course of a year by trying to explain the concept lImiddottI-IIIlII_middot tI-II--tl- __ __ __ _-IIllIIIiImiddotllIlI_-IIllII~ -~~ ~--middot- ~ and a half rmging from mem- of Christians as people of God - - shy

berships of 20000 souls to 75000 then would set up discussion ~ItIIIIHtHIIIIIDIIIIUIIIIHlIIIIIIIiIllIIlHKHHIIItIIIIUIIIIIIIUllllliillllllllllIJllilllllllllllllilllllllll~ The 75OOO-member parish said Ioupsmiddot en suchmiddot subjects asmiddot~ -_sect_Lucille had only one priestmiddot 10 What ismiddota person-Person to ~ middotY 5 hmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot meet its needs person relationships~ and Dif- sect E we ayemiddot ~

Plan 01 AetiOll ferences between ordinary eom- ~ == The apostolic teamsaid Lushy munities andthe parish sect LARGE LIVEmiddot ~

eille would first survey condishy This would lead to a discussion sect ~ ~=_=_ tions and decide what most of the function of Christians and sect needed doing then plan an edushy what iii Christian community sect shycational program Three or fo~rmiddot should be lIke Theil leaders ~ while they la5~ - ~ natural leaders in each parish were ready to ask the parishion ~ sect= were chosen and arrangements ers if any were ready to coin- ~ were made to get them to an mit themselves as parish team sect Macleans SemiddotQmiddot F d ~ Archdiocesan training center for members to a stronger expres- ~ 00 S == a one month leadership training sian of their Christian fellow- sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN Tel 997-9358 sect eourse wverins lIlatechetics lit ooip Go~ of the lipQBtolie tea iulHIHlIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIJlIIIUillIIJlmIllUiJiillJillnililunJililillliiihIUllllIIlIilill(IIUJIIIJ1I1llIJllliinillllllltuE

- ~ - -~_middotmiddotij_Uimiddotmiddot ~ _

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 An Exce1lent Lcte Summer Activity J VI SIT-middot

Louisiari ~copyfrish A~~ampmpli~~~sect r~bull ~T[T uiH~Dfro[j1) fr ~rtilfrreg~[(frDIri)middot middot~~rrfr~~~Q~t~~~~~~~JJ~~tt$

MADISONVILLE (NC)--+wo cently used for ~~gt~es~was wears ago in this quiet jural torn down Its blue I green~and ~ J~lf ~ town the single square block white stained grass riow frames

ltContaining Catholic ch u r c h the huge rear wIndow ~ ~t buildings symbolized the old era Anselms church - - [f~[LL lRlt OV~~middot ~now it stands for the new This Spring St Catherines

Two years ago two churches also came down Gone too are stood 200 feet apart on this he cOl-vents and bullone school More than 280000 people havle cilrElody been aboard iUO ~he past ys[ioblock--St~ Catherine wh ere The other school building was

whites worshipped and St retained for parish meetings and Francis Xavier where Negroes the now-integrated Confratershy

worshipped The rectory with fiity of Christian Doctrine its one priest to serve both par- classes ishes s too d between theC rhe 100 or so school children

centhtirches moremiddot as a symbol of - arenow transported to elemEmshythe psychological gap thac asan tilt-y and high schools in nearby

actual separation covirigton arid Mandeville middot A fence stood between the two CCD instructions have been

eonventS on the block~riefor givengtySfsters qfChristian the Negro nuns who taughtCharityandtheirstudEints from

Negro children in the ~e~ro ~~njpirClncy at FolsoM La and IIchool the other for the wfitte byseminariaris fromarby St IllUns who taught white children i-Jolieph seminarY Butmiddot tpeseiii the whHe school diities are being taken over by

Now there is one church onemiddot tlie parishs integrated CCD orshyrectory and one small classroom ganizatiorinow being trained

building -- and one parish St The pastor Father John J Anselm DenDulk is prouder of the

Although wee k day Masses smooth transition than he is of were said in only onemiddot of the the physical change shytwo old churches Masses and Participation in worship has ether services on Sundays and increased since the new church major feast days were said in w~ built he says and he has

middot both Midnight Masses on Christ- the best commentators in the mas were celebrated concurrent- whl)le world

Iv in the two churches AIthougb there are only 260 But the buildings weremiddot badly families in the parish the new

Qn need of repair So in 1964 the ~church is already more than half lttId frame church of St Francis paid for and the parish topped

middot Xavier whose parish records go its quota in the archdiocesan back to 1863 and which was re- education expansion drive

bull ~ I bull

Bishop Pmiddoterry Says New Orleans Has Healthy Racial Climate

DENVER (NC) - Auxiliary still has more influence thaa Bishop Harold R Perry SyD any other Negro in the civil of New Odeans first AmeJican rights movement Catholic Negro bishop in this He (Bishop Perry) has been

lt1lentury said here a hea~thy very favorably received in New racial climate will exist wher- Orleans eve~ the Negro has a chan~ to Some Cannot WaU voice his grievances He said there will undoubtedshy

Bisnop Perry dted New 9r- ly be some civil rights groups lleans as an example sayipg the who disapprove lt)f non-violence racial climate there is healthy and occasional demonstrationS

because of an interracial council by those who cannot wait appointed by Louisiana~ov Of course I am a Negro and

John J McKeithen to help splve we have been waiting a long rmcial problems time If you take the long view I There are no demonstra~ions complete equality cant come too and riots and very little picket- quickly he added~

lng he said The cotiJlc~1 i-e- He said he has been received lieves tensions and if the Negro very well even enthusiastically has a forum to talk over his con- in New Orleans Picketing outshyeerns he will not demonstrate side the church where he was

Schools Integrated ~onsecrated he s3id Was DOt typical of the general feeling in

The 50-year-old prelate said New Orleans be is proud New Orleans has in- As an evidence of his popushytegrated all Its schools Its a larity he said he spoke at ninemiddot large percentage not just token graduations in June and has ofshyhe added ficiated at Confirmation in 24

He said Catholics are doing parishes their part to advance equality of opportunity in his citymiddot 1 think [EceQJl1illeIJilD~~ CCrrnDDOdegthere has been Ii united effort tl)Ir If

by all faiths and we would like ~~ ~DcopyQJIJilampIbgtD~~~DIJil to keep it that way he de- CRANSTON (NC) I hdared - n a s ow The New Orleans bishop also of the ecumenical spirit lea4ers ~ommented on ~ wide range of of major religious faiths in this

area took part in a combined eivil rights issues saying

The new militancy shown by bull religious and groundbreaking Visit the BClI~~ie$Mp anldllode alIeplica of the Old iFal~middot River Bill1e~ middottmiddotsom~ civi~ rights groups is a service on the site of the proshy

posed Church of the Annunciashypassing phase tion Greek Orth()dox lours start every 30 minutes

The majority of Negroes are Archbishop lakovo primate lJympathetic to the non-violent of the Greek Orthodox Church Opeill aU year round - 9 AM to Sunsetphilosophy of the Rev Dr Mar- of North and South America of tin Luther King and Dr King ficiated at the open air hierar- For Group Arrangements Call 678-1100 chal Divine Liturgy service at-

Serra Meeting tended by more than 500 pershy l)OOOO()ooOOC)ooOOClOOC)ooOOC)OO~IOOl sons

THIS MESSAGE Sp()NSORED IV lHE FOllOWING INDIVIDUALSATLANTIC CITY (NC) - A Participants in the groundshyeonference for members of Ser- breaking ceremony included AND BUSINESS CONCERNS IN GREATER FALL RIVERlIa Clubs in the New York-New Catholic Bishop Russell J MoshyJersey - eastern Pennsyivania Vinney of Igtrovidence Archshy ANN DALE PRODUCTS INC MACKIENZIE amp WINSLOW INC area will be held here Sept 23 deacon William L Kite represhy II~DY ELECTRIC SUPPLY COMASON FURNITURE SHOWROOMS tKi 25 Msgr William Noe Field senting the Rt Rev John Seville CASCADE DRUG CO GERALD E McNALLY CONTRACTOItiff Seton Hall University South Higgins Episcopal Bishop of GLOBE MANUFACTURING CO SOBILC)FF BROTHERS Orange NJ will give the key- Rhode Island Dr Wayne ~is

~~TGHINSON OIL COa~te address Sept 24 apoundter a executive director ofmiddot the Rhode STERUllIG BEVERAGES INC

~A Mc~HIRR ~9MPANY TEXTIU WORKERS UNION Of AMERICAeOncelebrated Mass at which the 1s~and Council of Churches ~nd ~rE~~ATIQNALV4DIES GARMENT 1 bull AlL~tO - principal concelebrant will be Rabbi Jerome Smiddot Gurland Gf

WORKERS UNION (EUOW CAI COMPANY Bishop George W Ahr of Tren~ ~telligtl~ Sinai 1epresentingthe ton Bhode Island Board of Rabbiamp bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull0 MssSelbullbull

~ ~ ~ - bull bull bull bull I ~ j

- ~

_-- -

0

WomenB~ Job Corps Members middotAid Youngsters Improve Reading

OMAHA (NC)-Omaha Wom- chesne Mother Moody found a ens Job Corps members joined benefactor to supply ihe a11shywith five graduates of Duchesne importlnt incentive program College and Academy of the Thanks to a generous racetrack

Sacred Heart here to upgrade bettor Who won the daily double the reading level of local public there was enough money for school youngsters candy bar prizes and two picnics

The progra~ ca]]edProject An indication or- the success of Upstart was first conceIved by the program was found in the Mother Helen Condon dean of reaction of the students A reshythe Nebraska co]]eg~ Mother cent visitor asked one of the Rosemary Moody aSsIstant pro- young boys Why are you here fessor o~ ~sYChology volunteer~ Did someone make you come to adminIster and execute themiddot program

The original plans were to take a group of seventh graders from Horace Mann Junior High School and tutor them in develshyopmental reading and study skills It soon became apparent that some rather basic instrucshytion was required some of the ehildren were still reading at the second grade level

Duchesnes elementary school was offered for use by Mother Helen Sheahan superior An Omaha public school official suggested that the Omaha Wom- ens Job Corps be contacted to see if they could furnish high school graduates as tutors Robshyert Bathke Job Corps education director soon put five young ladies at Mother Moodys disshyposal

Five recent Duchesne gradushyates volunteered to train the tutors for two weeks before the program actually began The Duchesne alumnae eventualiy elected to stay on for the entire program

Mother Moodymiddot was so imshypressed with the potential of the Job Corps enro]]ees that she exshytended their sessions through the rest of the summer and made college preparatory work avail shyable to them

Student Reaction Perha~s one of the more unshy

usual aspects of the entire Upshystart program was its lack of financing The only real subsidy (about $500) was from the OMaha Public School system the bulk of which went to the Omah~ Transit Company for bus service

The equipment used in the classrooms was borrowed from the public schools the Omaha Womens Job Corps and Du-

Plan to Supplement History Books

SAN FRANCISCO (NC) shyA supplementary text showing the contributions of minority groups in United States history will be added to history and social science books already in use in archdiocesan schools here

The supplement containing some 150 pages will deal chroshynologica]]y with the contribu- tions of Jews Negroes Orientais and various nationalities from southern Europe

It is being prepared by a speshycial studly committee which illl evaluating current textbooks found need for more thorough material on the part minority

groups have played in the OOUDshytry1s history

Leave Providence For Mission Work

PROVIDENCE (NC) - Four Capuchin priest and two layshymen left New York by plane for mission work in the Santa Rosa de Copan diocese Honduras

Father Ad ria n Holzmeister OFM Cap provincial of tile Capuchins St Mary province with headquarters here said the six will work among some 50000 persons in Mlree parishes in the state of Ocotepeque He said

other mjssionersmiddotas they become ayailabie wiD be sent to aid Bishop Jose Canama CbampvezCli tile diocese

He looked up and said Im here because I want to learn to read and I like it Two girls who missed the morning bus to Duchesne gave another exain-ple of determination to learn Jhey undertook a two-hour five mile walk rather than miss a day of class

L R oy etreats Contlnu~d from Page Six

laymens convention-an effort to provide some figure of speech some image to suggest to those in the Church and to those out-

side what is the inner nature of the Church

Alluding to Scriptures refershyences to the Church in terms of sheep and shepherds the former Hub Auxiliary Bishop asked How many people in Boston have ever seen a sheep Sheep and shepherds say little to youngstersmiddot in housing projects or even in the suburbs

The Bishop who is epiScopal advisor for the NCLRC officiashyted at the lighting of an eightshyfoot candle which symbolized the

conference theme-uThe Light of Chr~st The candle burned throughout the convention

Speakers stressed the retreat program is geared to demOJishystrate to the world that the way of Christ can become more meaningiful to men of our time

Bishop Ernest J Primeau of Manchester reminded delegates of recent profound changes withshyin the Church

If the lay retreat movement is to remain vital and relevant

he said it cannot be static It must be in harmony with the times at all times

Honest Call1Se

Our retreat houses could 00-middot eome so to speak the equipment and training centers for the apostolates of the laity he adshydect

Bishop Primeau urged laymei to learn from modern science particularly in the field of hushyman psychology He said there is an opportunity as well to learn from other organizations both secular and religious He added The youth of today are un-

selfish and in large numbers they are seeking for an honest cause to which they can dedicate themshyselves as witness their devotion to the Peace Corps and the civil rights movement

Modernize AncEtenlt Puerto Rico CIl1llLmlrch

SAN JUAN (NC) =- A lPJt8shyyear-old church one of the most popularmiddot in this capital city~ ~

going modern Archbishop Luis Aponte of

San Juan has inaugurated middotal campaign for funds for restorashytion of St Anns a public orashytory now badly illl need of Jeshypairs

1ft addition to restoration the ehurch also Will be equipped with air conditioning The eburch is the archdiocesan ceDltgt ~r for the Confraternity Gi Christian Doctrine and perpetual adoration of the Blessed Sacrashyment Built ill 184B the cburch weplaced an edifice which dated )Iaek iG tile lWi century

PROFESSION ANJ)) RECEPTION Four postulants beshycame canonical novices and two prof~ssed their vows as Sisters of St Joseph at ceremonies at the Blessed Sacrashyment Church Fall River Left column top to bottom Sr Gerard Marie (first vows) Sr Anne Therese Sr Rita Josshyeph Bishop Connolly who received the sisters Right colshyumn Sr Anne Denise Sr St Paul and Sr Alfred Marie (renewed temporary vow-s)

Specialmiddot Education Priests Visi~ PaJ~ents Homes to ExplOJon

SignificOJlI1lce off Baptismal Ritual

Thurs Aug 25 1966

Governor Balks

ST JEAN (NC)-Sunday bapshytisms are prece~ed by Saturday nights special educational proshygrams in a number of Catholic homes here in Quebec

The program to prepare the whole family for baptism through a home visit was deshyvised three years ago by a group of pries~s working togeth~r as a pastoral team

central idea of the program ~s that it is good for the priest to be with his people at imporshytant times in their lives~ Atmiddot these times people are dispOSed to receive the message of Christ

as it applies to their circumshystances the developers of the plan reported

The visiting priest explains the lOOremonies of the next day and the symbolic meaning of various parts of the baptismal ritual

Pilgrims Wctmlk TORONTO (NC) -The 10th

annual walking pilgrimage to the Canadian Martyrs shrine at Midland Ont will begin here Wednesday Organized by the Guild of St John de la Lande the pilgrimage will cover the 100 miles to the shrine in five days a~riving there Sunday Sept 4

LEMIEUX PLUMBING amp HEATING INC

fof Oomestic l~ andmiddot Industrial ~ Sales and Service

Oil Burners WY 5-1631

2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE NEW BEDFORD

Relatives neighbors or the prospective gorlparents may be presentbut themiddot home visit usually involves just the parents and their children

The ide is to make the preshybaptism vsit an oppodunity for dialogue between the priest and the parents rather than a conshyference

Ten parishes in the St Jean diocese have adopted the praeshytice along with l few Montreal parishes Father Marcil Brillon secretary of the St Jean litur- gical commission said he exshypects the practice to spread

FALSE TEETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass Many wearers of false teeth suJIer

embarrassment Qecause their platesdrop Blip or wobble at Just the wrong time Dont live In fear of thts happening to you Just sprinkle a little FASTEErH the non-acid powder on your plates Holds false teeth more firmly so they feel more comfortable Checks denture breath Dentures that fit are essential to health See your dentist regularlyGet FASTEETH at all drug counters

At Proposals MONTPELIER (NC) - Vershy

monts Gov Philip Hoff said he bas extreme reservations conshycerning abortion and sterilizashytion proposals contained in a reshyport of an adivsory committee on the mental retardation situshyation in the middotstate

The report called for legal sanctioning of induced abortion in cases where there appears to be a high risk of mental retarshydation of an unborn child

Thereport also contained a suggestion concerning steriliza shytion of the mentally retarded

Apart from the recommenda~ tions on legalized abortion and sterilization of the mentally reshytarded I must S4ly it was II good report Gov Hoff said He said lie will study the report with utmost care before taking any action 0

Expresses Thanks To Holy Father

VATICAN CITY (NC) -The vice prime minister of Vietnam has paid a visit to Pope Paul VI to thank him for his peace efshyforts and generous help to reshylieve the suffering of the Vietshynamese people General Nguyen Huu Co vice prime minister and secretary of state for national defense of Vietnam visited privately withshythe Pope for 30 minutes Accord- ing to a Vatican Press Office bulletin

The vice prime minister in the name of South Vietnam exshypressed profound gratitude for the valid support always given by the head of the Catholic Church and of the Holy See in the cause of peace and for the generous assistance sent by the Holy Father to relieve the sufshyfering of those persons torshymented by war The distinguishshyed visitor then continued tomiddot deshyclare that the intentions of South Vietnam are directed only toward an affirmation of the liberty of its own nation and Wgt arriving at a just peace in honor and concord

Complete

BANKING SERVICE

for Bristol County

Bristol County Trust Company

TAUNTON MASS

THE ~ANK ON TAUNTON GREEN

Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Bristol Community College Offers Evening Classes

64 Durfee St Fall River Credit classes begin September 19 1966

Register Now Mondays thrrough Thursdays 200-500 PM Courses for college credit or self improvement are offered ill

The arts languages and literature Behavioral and social sciences accounting business

administration and secretarial scieRCe Mathematics science engineering and electro-mechanical technology

Advisors Availabie During ~egistration Hours

16 THE AI~ ~-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

C~nsiders Instability Causes In Latin American lamds

From Social R-evolution in the New Latin Ameriea Edited by John J Considine MM

There are many causes of instability in Latin America Some have said in the past that it is an inheritance frQm

Spain They feel that the years of Spanishauthoritarianism rendered the colonies incapable of integrating themselves into a more balanced social system Because they had there exists the problem of low

denSity of population with a lackpreviously lacked indepenshyof internal communication In-dent creole authority the many cases there is even a lanshy

colonies were unprepared to acshy guage barrier eept a more democratic authorshy The problem of an underdeshyity In his book veloped economy has also beenBetween Freeshy a factor in forming Latin Anlershy clom and Fear ican social structureGerman Arcinshy On the social level the eleshyiegas draws a ments I have mentioned favorcomparison beshy an internal lack of class strucshytween the Enshy ture that involves a juxtaposishyglish and Spanshy tion rather than a social organi shyish governments zation and integration Democshyin the Americas racy on the other hand presupshyIn ihe north the poses a large scale integrationcolonists came in of the people in the politicalshysearch of freeshy economic-social life of thedom IIi the end nationthe founding of the Nodh The masses of -illiterates inAmerican colonies was only the Latin America who do not parshyobvious culmination of a process ticipate in these areas have noalready begun It was the reafshy iilterest in government thoughfirmation of customs already inshy their interest and loyalty maygrained in the social milieu It be enlisted by the demagoguewas an evolution not a real revshyolution for these settlers were Formation or Dictatorships accustomed to autonomy The A dictatorship takes form

authority pf their governors was when one or more pressure more democratic since they groups unchallenged seizes the worked closely with the popular power of governmentassemblies From the beginshy In order to better understand ning the keenest concern of the the types of dictatorship found North American colonist was for in Latin America let us elCamshyfreedom of worship and his hosshy ine the different forms of revoshytility to the Church of England lution and the various ways in was evident which the pressure groups

On the contrary Latin Amershy bring their influence to bearIca was part of an empire The Kalmal1 Silvert distinguishesSpaniards came to dominate and these types in his book Reaction evangelize The viceroy represhy and Revolution in Latin Amershysented the king who was an abshy ica which is written in -Englishsolute monarch The role of Silvert shows the relationshipshyassembly in Latin America was between dictatorships and the secondary arid represented exshy extreme indivdualism found in tremely liIIlited power these countries

Independence in the Latin The first type of revolution American nations entailed a real named is what Silvert calls the revolution since from the beginshy simple brracks revolt Most of ning they were forced tb look for the outbreaks especially in the new political and social forms past century have been of this

Religiousliberty did not elCshy kind The barracks revolt occurs ist in the Latin American coloshy typically in a big class society nies since all were obliged to It is carried out by the amlY

membership in the Cathoiic sompoundtimes in its own name and Church sometimes in behalf of a chosen

Unassimilated Groups leader This type of revolution - rarely calses widesprelld publicThis comparison will help in

disturbance since it representsunderstanding the Latin Amershymerely a switch in governmentican problem though it will not from one general to anotherfully explain -it We must acshy

knowledge that the political The second type the peasant phenomeinon has a direct COIshy revolt is generally of little sigshyrelatio~1 with demographic probshy nificance and limited in effect lems such as the existence of to a locality though the Mexican large unassitnilated groups as revolution at the beginning of well as masses of mestizos un this century would perhaps fall derdeveloped and deprived who in this category can scarcely be said to partici shy Third the regional revolt pate in twentieth century chili shy commcn in the early days of zation Although these groups Latin American independence form a part of the nation they Here _the caudillo strove to put are not integrated either socially down provincial revolts and to eulturally or politically centralize power in an authorishy

Despite the over-all demoshy tarian I e g i () n a I government g~aphic explosion in some areas Typical of the caudillos who led

regional revolts was Rosas of Argentina

Plans Participation The fourth a more modern type of revolution Silvert callsIn Liturgical Week the complicated barracks revolt

HOUSTON (NC) - The 1966 This is an insurrection that inshyLiturgical Week here fOI the -volves civilian as well as mili shyfirst time in its 25-year history tary groups with widespread will have a full scale program military action for those interested in the The issues are ideological and Eastern Church relate to political parties as well

As part of the Liturgical Week as _ other interest groups The program the Divine Liturgy Cuban revolution in its beginshy(Mass) of St John Chrysostom nings might be considered -an will be celebrated entirely in example Although this is the English and Communion will be most prevalent type ainong modshydjstributed under both species ernday revolutions excetions Chief celebrant of the Liturgy are the revolts which overthrew will be Archbishop Paul Achkar Peron in Argentina Perez-JimeshyGreek Catholic ~-chbishop of nez in Venezuela and -Rojas Lattaquia in Syua Pinilla in Colombia

SISTER AMBROSE

Says SOo Africa Needs Americans

WASHINGTON (NC)-Yanshykee come over a statement which would do much to boost the morale of Americans in sevshyeral parts of the world could well summarize what an Irish missionary nun to South Africa

-has been saying during a visit here _

The wonderful hospitality of theAmerican people has imshypressed Sister Ambrose Harty Gf the Sisters of the Holy Family She lamens the fact that opporshytunities to receive Americans in a like manner have been few and far between during her 20 years in South Africa

Youve got such a lot to give she said here in an ~ntershyview during which she expressed a strong desire to see greatly inshycreased people-to-people relashytio~s between the country where she serves and the United States

Sister Ambrose was particushylarly interested in the Peace Corps ann reported that its purshyposes and work are hardly known by the people of Soutli Africa I haVent heard it disshycussed at all she said (The Peace Corps has not been invited into the country) (

With words of praise for the missionary work being done iii the South African Republic by Oblate arid Paulist missionaries from the United States she also expressed regret at the general paucity of missioners from this country There particularly is an almost total lack of nuns she said Only 71 Catholic missionshyaries from the United States inshycluding 16 nuns are serving ilm South Africa

Married Priests AMSTERDAM (NC)-A

Dutch public opinion poli h8lll shown that 11 per cent of the Netherlands p e 0 pIe woulci rather have III married Catholi4l clergy than a celibate clergy The poll including members ai all and no denominations

-showed that 68 per cent of the Catholics queried preferred III married clergy

~~

(DEBROSS OIL ( ~ co ( ~ Heating Oils

~ and BMIIJUrs ~

~ 365 NORYIoli IFROIlir SUEampll ( rJ NEW IBIEDIFOR

~ WYmafi 2middot5534 (

I~~~

Parishes Share DETROIT (NC) - Twentyshy

nine urban parishes here have decided to help one another meet the rising cost of education

At the elementary level parshyepts will pay $50 per family $75 per family for non-Catholic parishioners and $75 per student

Danish Catholic COPENHAGEN (NC) -Thereshy

are 11321 Catholics in the Danish capitalaccording to a report issued by the Copenhagen statistical office They consti shytute the second largest religious entity there next to the Luthershyans members of the State Church The total number of Catholics in Denmark is approxshyimately 26000 Total population is 35 lllillion

Education Costs for Catholics outside the parish

At the high school level the tuition cost is $H)O per student in or out of the parish With the exception of textbooks this amount eliminates aU extra fee charged up to now

Father Norman P Thomas director of the Urban Parisll Apostolate said the greatest efshyfect of the joint effort will be experienced by the pastor who sends parish youngsters to a higll school operated by any of the 2 participating parishes

In this instance the students parishes will be expected to pay the difference between the tui shytion charged and the actual cost per student The latter fee laM been set by the parochial school office at over $200 per year

ETHIOPIA- THE NEW AFRICA

- HOLY FATlftRB MIBBIIDN AID TO THI DRIENTAL OHURCH

- BROTHER What happens In Ethiopia when an American MICHAEL Christian Brother (he could be your son brother

REYNOLDS nephew) Is told to upgrade Catholic schools He FROM borrows a Jeep (or a mule) visits the schools

PROVIDENCE RI one by one writes home for pencils and better REPORTS textbooks and then beginsbullbull This is the new

fROM Africa Brother Michael Reynolds reports enshyADDIS thusiasticallyfrom Addis Ababa It can be a BABJpeacefuf progressive Christian Africa tom~rmiddot

row Just give us schools give us time and with Gods help the job will De donel bull bullThe schools are for villages like Aressa Aiga Biers Wartll8~

-which have no school The youngsters know that knowledge i~ their only chance theyll go without food to learnbullbullbull What does It cost to build a schoolf Only $2950 says Brother Michael for the villagers snd the children give their laborfreemiddotofmiddotcharge We can train a catemiddot chlst for only $40 bullbullbull In thanksgiving to God for what you know will you do what you can ($100 $75 $50 $25 $15 $10 $5 $2) to give these youngsters a chance The school will be named for your favorite saint and the children will pray for your loved ones daily If you build It all byyourself ($2950) School will open late this year-but better late than never-If you Vlrit~ to us right now

WHAT Our priests there who receive no othor income IELSE for food and clothing will offer promptly the

FOR Masses you request Well forward your Mass ETHOPIAr Inten~ons through the Holy Fathers officebull

40 young lads studying for the priesthood In Decamere lose their football when It goes Into a nelghbers garden A large field can be bought ~velled and mede safe for sports fer $975

MAKINQ ~~IOOOO will ovfde bull OOfDj)lete parjstlplantA (Ohuroh rectory convent andscbool) In southshy

WiW ImIAdla In memorybullbullbullbull $600 will ttiln a native lrfHt1SOO bull native Sfster Our legal tltI Cl~1HOUO NWt lAir WIUAH AHOCIAnONo

_-------------~shytt coINIILOIIlt IUMIIIND ~ bullbull la IJIIr bull _1OIt~=-=_==-=

PI _UM~gt

Mum ClO1IIponwith your mt__=-~~_ _ ~i offrtnt ~~ erryen 8TAlI-lPCODI_

HI IATHaLl1 RIIiAR 811 WILAbullbull AIaDIATaN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS IRANCUS CARDINAL SPELLMAN President MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretal)f Write OATHOLIO NfIAR IiAST WELFARE Assoo 1)80 MadlsolJ Avenuomiddot New York NY 10017 -felGpilonel 212YUkon 6middot6840

Dormitory Proves Stonehill Permanently Coeducational

Way back in 1951 when the first girl enrolled in Stoneshyhill College no one could have imagined that a girls dormishytory would ever be built onmiddot the campus But the sound of steam shovels and hammers filling the air over the lovely grounds in Easton is proof

and two girls from the seniorthat the long planned for daslr-assisting the housemothergirls dorm will soon be a Mrs Grace Callahan

reality When Stonehill was The experiment worked so founded in 1948 as a mens colshy well in fact that this coming lege the fledgling school had Fall both the freshman and just gotten off to a good start sophomore girls will be housed when the Korean War came this way leaving only the junior along and emptied the classshy and senior girls still renting Yooms as the young men went quarters in private homes chosen into the services by the college as all the nonshy

That was the year that many commuting girls have done in small colleges had to close their the past gates forever But at Stonehill That typical campus situation the Holy Cross order was detershy -the sorority house-is not in mined to hold onto this new the picture at Stonehill-or frashyschool that they had planned for ternity houses either for that so long matter No sororities or fraternishy

What could they do to keep ties are allowed on the campus the college operating until the There is a cl11b however that war was over and the boys came is the girls own - the Crosier back Of course Open their Club Mrs Yosgandes is the gates to girl students clubs faculty advisor and she deshy

Faculty Pleased scribes it as the organization What started out as a temposhy for women studentE who want

rary expediency somehow over to contribute in their own parshythe years has acquired a happy middotticular way as women to their permanancy No one could be college more pleased about this turn of Through their annualmusical events than the Stonehill faculty Crosier Curtain Calls theyitself raise money to acquire manymiddot

Helping out in Jhe ground things that add beauty and breaking ceremony for the new charm to campus life This yeardorm Mrs Virginia Yosgandes they purchased two very lovelythe Dean of Women at the colshy silver tea and coffee services lege saiei I guess everyone will Any official group at the collegereally believe that the girls are is allowed to borrow the sets and here til stay they have already been used in

Mrs Yosgandes says that since many functions she first came to the Stonehill New Signfaculty in 1958 rumors have

Mrs Yosgandes says Thebeen popping up that Stonehill girls will be very pleased whenwill soon return to its original they come back th~~ Fallto seestatus as an all male school The the beautiful new sign theynew dorm she says will be visshybought for the college installedible proof of the permanancy of on Route No 138 women on the beautiful campus

Its very easy to picture theThe $1150000 building deshyvery charming Dean presidingsigned to accommodate 200 girls

graciously at a faculty tea Aand proctors will be three stories parishioner of Immaculate Conshyof red brick Architects W Chesshyception chulCh in Easton she ister arown and Associates and in ~rivate life an enthusiasticwntractors C A Batson and homemaker anc the mother of aCompany are planning to comshy13 year old daughter Christineplete work on the dorm in time Her husband John is assistantfor the opening of classes in principal at Franklin JuniorSeptember 1967 It will be the High first unit of a five dormitory

She speaks with great convicshycomplex planned fo the women on tion about college girls holdingcampus

onto feminine ideals while surshyKitchen ~pace rounded-and at Stonjhill outshyMrs Yosgandes is happy about numbered 3 to 1- by menthe fact that the new dorm will While were encoulaging themhave a kitchenette on each floor to be acdve in thpound communitywhere the girls can cook small and the church and in politicsmeals and entertain guests Shes and encouragint them to deshyhoping that the dorms built after

more velop their abilities to the full shythis me will providtgt even est-we never fail to take intokitchen space for the girls to account the fact that they arepractice the culinary arts women and in this competitiveM a n~ tImes homemaking world theyll have to -fight toskills come to a complete halt maintain their feminine idenshywhen a girl goes to college she tity says Apparently all classroom

work and rio cooking make Jane Coed Actiiti~s

Coed a dull girl in the room When she fi rst came to the where shell be spending a great college she sltys the girls were deal of time after graduationshy mainly interested in strictlythe dtchen feminine extra curricular activishy

Mrs Yosgandes says A great ties-fastion shows teas gids many cCJlleges have been workshy sports Bd this has changed radshying witt this problem and wonshy ically in the last few years and dering what to do about it Beshy now the girls are much more inshycause theyve had no living terested in the coed acti vitiesshyquarters for girls on campus the newspapers the debating Stonehiiil has had to do out of team the drama club Stonehill necessit) what many other colshy is noted a~ one of a small handshyleges have chosen to do recently ful gtf Catholic colleges where The Dean describp~ an experishy girls are middotactive in every part of ment that the collFge tJied last college life Every coure at yeal tha has worked out exshy StonehHj is opel to girls tremely well We still havent had a woman

Experiment Successful president of our student governshyThe college leased a grollp of ing body the Senate Mrs

rooms il an apartmelt building Yosgandes says Now girls in Brockton last Fall where all what are yOIi waiting for the freshman girls who were not commuters-55 of them-lived in housekeeping apartments In Red Groups There were four girls in each BERLIN (NC)-Over 85 per apartment all sharing the reshy (ent of East German children sponsibilities of housekeeping between the ltlges of 6 and 14 are

The girls hat two sets of mCl11)ers of communist youth 1)IoctOS - two aIumni wumen ~nIUps

lrt-OE ANCH0) 17 Thurs Aug 25 1966

PriestCuod Goal Of Top Skater

GREAT FALLS (NC)-A good many folks in this Montana toWlll will attest that teenager J Mishlll Petkevich is a pretty good skate -on or oH the ice

The affable blond youngster 17 topped a field of 136 pershyformers in the three-day Lake Placid N Y international free style competition sanctioned by the U S and Canadian Figure Skating Assoclations The Great Falls lad was the judges unamiddot1ishymous choice for the mens gold medal in the finals

But Petkevich doesnt lose his cool off the ice His classmates and teachers at Great Falls Censhytral 3igh School claim hes liIl

winner in every event He spends more than 40 hours 11 week in skating training but carries the full load of class studies and consistently turns Up on the schools honor roll Hes a member of the National Honor Society

The school supported me ami the way Everyone has beeEl wonderfUl to me the modest youngster saia Hes been -skatshying since he was 2 He credit his achievements to his Catholic Faith the sacrifices of his parshyents and of Arthur Bourke senshyiormiddot professional of the Great Falls Figure Skating Club He said All I did was skatemiddotGROUND-BREAKING The Very Rev John T Corr

I hope some day to become~esc president of Stonehill College turns a shovelful of priest Petkevich said wbeilearth to mark start of construction 0pound a 200-student dormshy a~ked his ambition I hope 14gt itory for women on the Stonehill campus Watching the proshy attend Notre Dame for at leasa celtlures are left to right Mrs Virginia Yosgandes dean af two years and then I h9pe to gf)

to the Catholic University fl4women John C Doody 66 Alumni fund chairman Robert AmericaBatson contractor Harold Bonvie ass~iate of the archishytect

Msgr Canty Continued from Page OneRussian Schools ing studies at S1 Marys High

Taunton Boston- College and S1 Bernards Seminary RochesshyChristian Brother Lauds Students terN Y

nespect for Intellectuols He served as assistant at Our Lady 01 the Isle NantucketCHICAGO (NC)-Students in to foreign languages than Amershy Holy Family Taunton St

schools behind the Iron Curtain icans Most students take a Marys Barrowsville and Stgo at their studies with a passhy seven-year sequence of English Johns Attleboro He was apshysion said Brother Kevin Mark German or French English he pointed to the Chaplains CorPJFSC who toured Russia and added is the most popular lanshy of the United States Navy infour satellite countries with 19 guage and more emphasis is January 1942 and retiredwitbother U S rducatois placeltl on reading and speaking the rank of captain in Decemshy

Brothel Mark who is princishy than on writing it ber 196gt Pope John XXIII pal 9f St Mels high school here Brother Mark said that there elevated him to the rank of attributed much of their motivashy is almost nothing that he would Domestil Prelate with the title tion to the students attitude that lift from the Soviet school sysshy of Right Reverend Monsignor iI What I do does contribute to tem and apply in the U S May 1962 the welfare of the state He admitted however that Bishop Connolly named Monshy

Brother said he felt that stushy they do get results They have a signor Canty pastor of St Paulsdents in this country lack motishy tremendous capacity for conshy Taunt-ln in December 1963 vation because were spoiled centration when they set their Industrial improvements have sights for example their space made it that a young man can program Its not all a matter go into a trade and make very of being chained to a lab table good money BLUE RIBBON

In the Soviet Union he said there seems to be a great reshyspect for intellectuals and the LAlnNDRY student is thought of as a proshy

01 STOPfessional schJlar 273 CE~RAl AVE~UIIG CfflTERTeaching is considered a proshy

fession and remunelated accordshy e Television C FmiddotI ure illgly WY 2-6216o r-cerv

St Mels principal observed on IlA Allen St Newhdfordhis tour that there was little NEW BEDFORD questioning on the part of the students

The chSSloom situation he said is very much teacher ori shyented that is study in depth is 21 DAY PILGRIMAGES TO EUROPE done on the teachers inspiration

rou~ 1-Legion of Mary Pilgrimage leaving Sept 12th with Truth in such areas as history Father Edward A Oi-viera will visit Killarney Dublin Paris

cllld literature is accepted as a Lourdes Rome Madrid Lisbon and Fatima - Tour 2shyforegone conclusion and stushyHoly Cross Fathers Pilgrimage leaving Oct 10th with Frdents just memorize what has

already been discovered ----- lobert E McDonnell will wsit lisbon Fatima 1odrid Rome Lourdes Paris and londonIike F)rc~gn Linutges -cota cost is $82900 - Time PaymentsmiddotIn the area of science howshy arranged ever the situation is difterent

()Ii TOUR tOLDERS CONTACT STEolfEN A MARIIEYhe pont~d out because in scishyence there is an attitude of I n~ust discover Catholic Travel

-Office

The R1~middotmiddotmiddotO p oth-r Mark ~ltk St New Befl- -ass 02748

said ~ ve 11111j Ill)le auention

BURNERS

BUrntlr Service

Famous Reading HARDCQAl

NEW ENGLAND COKE

t8 THE ~NCHOR-Dioceseof fo Rivef-Thurs Aug 25 1966 J~sut I)riest Says Some Public I b M t EmploYE~~S Have Right to Strike

-

Urges uO or ovemen S NEW (NC) -Public however YORK Government hasmiddot h C employees in certain fields have been expanding its cQncern andIn Heml$p ere ooperate the right to strike against the has beenmoving into ar~as of government a priest declared transportation education recre-

By MsgrGooJrge C Higgins (Director Socian Actiolll Dept NCWC)

The relationship between the American labor moveshyment and the Latin American Confed~ration of Christian Trade Unions (CLASC) leaves much to be desired as we

middot thO d th 1- have aready noted severa1 t Imes m IS co umn urmg e

past four or five years The two movements are deeply different things to different peoshy

auspicious of one another and just when they seem to be on the verge of settling or at least -patching up their differshyences they go at it again and recklesslystart hurling insults at one another

To jUdge from What they sayIi b 0 u t on e another publicshy1yen as well as privately on e would t h ink that they were natural-born enshyemies whe~eas in fact they have much in common-much inore than they seem to realizeshyand for obvious reasons ought violent MisS Duncan was an officer of The fourth public member Harshyto be c60p~rating With onean- Moreo~er at least one promi~theSodality a cheerleader for vardlaw school professorVern ether as closely as pOSSible nent spokesman for the AFL- four years a member of the Ten- Countryman half ci-itiCized the This writer has learn~ci the hard WR and muc~ to hiS so~-row that any outSider who 18

fOolish enough totryto mediatek f

~tween them JS as mg or troouble

C f t Gommun same If for example one suggests

as I have done on more than one Occasion that soine of the anti U S propaganda emanating from CLASCsources revealS atremely harmful to the cause of n a i v e misunderstanding of Amerlcan trade unionism and American capitalism andor ari $ver-simplification of Catholic Social teaching he runs the risk 9f being written off as a blind -not tOsay reactionary apologist for so-called Yanqui ~mperial-

iBm If on the other hand oneslig

gests that some of the anti- CLASC propaganda enianating

fro m AFL-CI0 sources is equally naive and unsoPllisti shyeatedhe runs the same Sort of risk in reverse That is to say he is likely to be told--v~ry politely of course -that if he were to take off his Catholic blinkers and look at the record objectively he would quickly come to realize that CLASC is in reality playing t~ecipal rival in Latin America) riages in their mission parishes communist game in Latin Amer- there is a gEirierous mixture of Msgr Milia stated Since the iea superficial appearances to cultural chauvinism and envy Ogdensburg mission was opened the contrary notwithstanding that accompanies the most legit- a modern new church bas been

Both CaD Learn imate misgivings built under its direction in the Be that as it may I still think Even the Latinos middotthemselve~ seaport ofMatararii two mission

~t CLASC has a lot to learn he points out will admit on ac- churches have oeen completed about _ and from American casion that their consumirig fear and a lalge parish church and trade unionism And if that of Yanqui imperialism is often center are currently under conshymakes me a reactionary Yankee irrational But there it is he re- struction in Mollendo ehauvinist so be it minds us and the basic prob-

By the same token however aiso think that the American

labor movement has much to learn about -- and from - the Christian trade union movement in Latin America The first thing it has to learn is that the Am~r-leap philosophy of pure-andshysimple bread-~d-butter union ism which all things considshyered has worked satisfactorily in this country is not necessarily well adapted to the present-day Deeds of Latin America

Meaning of Revolution Another way of saying the

same thing is that American iabor representativesworking on Latin America problemswm have to reconcile themselves to the fact that a social revolu-Uon is called for in Latin American labor federation that doesnt subscribe to a revolushytionary ideology is probably doomed to failure

The word revolution meaos J-

pIe of course To the leaders of CLASC it means a sweeping program of socioeconomic and political reform which goes far beyond the limited goals of bread-and-butter unionism

The leaders of CLASC are convinced that such a revolushytioo is demanded bythe Chrisshytian social ethic to which they subscribe and from which they derive their ideology

Perceptive Critique Some U S Labor repshy

resentatives are skeptical to say the least~bout the allegedly Christian content of CLASCs militant ideology They admit theneed for a peaceful revolushytion in Latin Americn butthey are convinced thatCLASC wants this revolution to be Feehan High School Attleboro alties in a letter tc therimes

lem is how to insure con~ PAVlA V I tlnuing cooperation between 0 untee rs Yanqui and Latino in spite of Complete TlIainirigit

Such cooperation Dr Hawkins WASHINGTON (NC)-Fortyshyconcludes will be impossible unshyless the leaders of the American labor movement positively indi~

cete their acceptance of social revolution in Latin America This will require he says

more than the generous transshyfusions of economic aid the stimulation under United States

labors auspices of leadership training programs for workers

and other cooperative ventures Need Broader View

What is required he insists ltCia a broader view-an ability on the part of the American la bor statemen to adopt policies that will not always accord with OUI own value~ and more speshy

cificall~ the tempering of (their) hosannas to free entershyprUie ___

inter-American labor unity I fully agree in this respect with Dr Carroll Hawkins Associate

Professor of Political Science at Michigan State University who recently published a most pershyceptive critique of American trade union policy in Latin- Catholics in Mollendo Peru the

America (The 0RIT and Amer diocesan missions director reshyican Trade Unions Conflicting ported Perspectives Industrial Rela- The New York priests were tionsand Social Changes in sent to Peru after Pope Paul Latin America University of vi -asked that more priests be Florida Press) pr9vjd~d fOr the people opoundSouth

Basic Problem America Msgr Anthony A Mi-Dr Hawkins admits of course lia said He estimated more than

that in all the Latin American 90 percent of the priests in criticism of United States unioniperu are from other countries in the ORIT (the Latin Ameli can regional unit of the Interna In 1965 the priests from Ogshytional Confederation of Free denburg administered 445 bap-Trade Unions and CLASCs prin tisms and perfoImed 64 mar-

CIOhas publicly charged in ej_ nis Club for two years and a suggested penaltiel fect that CLASCs ideology three yeaT member of the FU- owes more to Marxism than it ture Nurses club Father Carey sl~id the ~ays does to Christianity He finds it when pay and working condi-

An instructor in the Confra- tions for men and women inhard he says to accept the fact ternity of Christian Doctrine that the Christian labor move- civil service were determine4 byproglam in Our Lady of Mt I g I t d d t t

t middot A e IS a Ive It n a minIS ra Ive ment 0f L a In merIca IS non- Carmel Parish Seekonk the fiat have pas ed a d Communist s n we now

In my judgment this kind of criticism of CLASC by spokesshymen fltr the AFL-CIO is ex

three volunteers have completed the Second National Training Session sponsored by the Papal Volunteers for Latin America and received assignments in some ten Latin American coun- tries

Special ceremonies ended the six-week training session at the Catholic University of America where volunteers studied the apostolic work of the Church the laymans role in the aposshytolate and principles of spiritual life as well as the religion ecoshynomics and culture of Latin America

Before leavillg for their asshysignments the volunteers will take intensive four-month lanshy

guage anl culture courses in a Latin American language centerbull

eighth winner of this scholarship plumeoursElves that we share will enter the Childrens Hosshypital School of Nursing Boston in Septembel-

Ogdensburg Priests

SellYe Peru Mission OGDENSBURG (NC) -- Four

Ogdensburg priests currently are ministering to the n~eds of_13OOO

~ere

Father Philip Carey sJ exshyecutive director of the Xavier Institute of Industrial Relations acknowledged t hat certain strikes aJre intolerable But he said that when the governmentacts in a proprietary function it must follow the same rules it prescribes for private enterprise

In a letter to the New York Times Father Carey criticized ~y implication a proposed state -llw that wetulltilincrease the penalties to be imposed on strikshying union of public employees

MlISS LHNDA DUNCAN Th~proposedlaw grew out of recommendations of a five-man

Feehan Alumna task force named by Gov Nel son Rockefeller to study the

Receives Award problem after a 19-day transit strike crippled Newmiddot York City

Miss Linda Duncan daughter in January of Mrs George Duncan and the - NeCeSSBlry for Bargaining late George Duncan 61 Sykes Father Carey one of four Rd Seekonk has been awarded pubiic members of the mayors the eighth annual scholarship of committee that helped settle the the Attleboro Area Nurses strike disagreed with two other Chapter publlc memlgters Vh_o had previshyA 1966 graduate of Bishop ously supported the stiffer pen-

and internal concord a str~ke against itconstitutes mutiny and rebellion (UCLA) Sister Muriel a native

Pgbllsh Gudelnes For Ecumenisn

ALLENTOWN (NC) - The commission of ecumenism of the Allentown diocese here in Pennshysylvania has published a 22-page booklet of ecumenical guidelines to aid priests in guiding the laity The guidelines include general

permission for non-Catholics to serve as witnesses at Catholic weddings for Catholics to serve as witnesses at non-Catholic weddings and for burial of non-Catholics in Catholic ceremonies with a priest or a non-Catholic clergyman cltmducting graveside eeremonies

SHELL DADSON OIL

24-Hollr Oil

GLE COAL amp OIL CO IncI

640 Pleasant Street Tel WY 6-8271 New Bedford

this decision-making with the working p E~ 0 P Ie themselves through the process of collective bargaining

If collective bargaining is to be the rule he said we must agree to grant the right to strike~ Without this right he said there is no union and no coll~ctive balmiddotgaining

Expands Concern-in considering strikes by pu~ lie employees he dedared one muSt distinguishb~tween the state as a sovereign and the g()vernment acting in a proprishyetary function When the state aets as the defender of the peace or the promoter of justice

of Corning Iajoined the Sisters of the Humility of Mary in 1930 In recent years she has been ehairman of professionafarts deshypartment and college registrar

ation and a host of other services formerly performed by privategroups he continued

These activities are ancillary and economic and here the state in acting in a proprishyetry function When it so acts it ought to be subject tl) the same rules of conduct the government prescribes for private entershy

prise Strikes by firefighters and powerhouse uti lit y workers would be wrong however he said because it is difficult to imagine anY benefit they might gain to counterbalance the fear- fut harm such a l strike would impose on the community Buys Banners For Memorial

CHICAGO (NC)-A Chicago advertising executive has bought 44 brightly-colored religious ~anners tat -hung in the Nashy

tlOnal Srme of the Im~aculate ConceptIon during Luci Johnshysons wed(iin~ -

Earle Ludgin a trustee of the University of Chicago said he will donate the banners to the

university~ Rockefeller Memoshyrial Chapel in memory of his late wife

The banners for which Ludgin reportedly paid more than $40000 were originally created for the Vatlcan PavIIIon at the New York World Fair

A group of Washington D C residents bought ttie banners when the fair closed and arshyranged to have them exhibited in the Shrine until they could be sold Lugdin bought themin April but agreed at the request of Shrine officials to leave them in the Shrine until after Lucia wedding

lame College Head

OTTUMWA (NC) Sis t er

Muriel Hogan has been named the third presi4ent of Ottumwa Heights College here in Iowa She succeeds Sister Marie Anshy

ciue Kennedy woo win engagem graduate study in oominunishy

eations at the University of California Los Angeles branch

Offering You 3 Savings Plans

Home Financing

WAREHAM CO-OPERATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mabull

Telephone 295-2400 Banll SerVice YlIIIIIII

I

Ask Court Bar Use of Church Propertyfor Public SchoQ~middot WHITE ~S (MC) - A the cl883rooms ~ut Church

group of some 25 citizens repre- npokesman reporte~ that in line sented by the American Jewish with New York archdiocesan Congress has asked the New York State Supreme Court here to restrain the board of Ramapo School District 2 Rockland County from holding public school classes in property leased from religious bodies

The school board faced with severe-overcrowding planned to lease eight rooms from St Josephs Catholic Church and five from lem~e Beth El in Spring Valley The action was approved by 8tateEducation Commissioner Jame$ EAllen Jr

A ComllllJJlt served 0ill the rlChool board by the AJC charged the acti~n o~ld ~otateChurchshyState separation guaranteed by the First Amendment to the Constitution as well as other provisions of the state constitushytion

It is believed to be the first wch challenge made regarding

the use of religiO18 facilities for public school use

lhe st Josephproperty conshysists of an eightclasSroom school building adjacent to but sepashyrated from the chureh It is Ill good condition but will not be used by the p8rish thismiddot year because it has bUilt a new bUildshying for expanding its acbool to 141 classes

All religioUs ~bols had Ileen removed from the oder building in preparation for its use as a public school

The district school board had offered a fair market rent for

PAV~A deg Missionary Record Continued from Page Thirteen

A nurse from Chicago baa taken Lucillellpla~on the aposshytolic team and ber purpose in returning is to help her successhy80r work into the project smoothly It takes so long to get into 11 she Aid so II dont WJmt Il~r to spendtbree

years j~ g~tting organized~

Benedictine Marks 80th Anniversary

ST JOSEPHmiddot (NC)-The oldshyest Benedictine nun in Minneshysota-and one of the oldest m the world~marked the 80th anshyniversary of her entrance into the order ma Mass for all Beneshydictine jubil~tians held at St Benedicts convent here

Sister Sophia Zimmer was 1~ years old Dec 2 1965 She Wall

born in a log cabin about 1 block away from the convent An open house for her relatives and friends was held at the conv~nt

Receives Students cAsTELGANDOLFO (NC)shyPoPe Paul vI received in audishyence at his Summer home here students frOm 34 nations includshying many non-Catholics who are taking Summer courses in the ItaUaa language aDd culture sponsored by the Rome branch of the Catholic University fII IWaD

policy the properly would be made available for public school use at a token dollar-a-year rental

cmOS Cmpetes C~~ege ~rr(l))g~m

WASHINGTON (NC)-A class of 97 under-privileged high school students was graduated on completion of an eight-week Summer college orientation proshy

gram at Georgetown University The exercises i attended by faculty and parents Qf the stushydents involved students who had completed their Sophomore year in District of Colwnbia high schools They were chosen for the special course because teachers and counselors believed they have the ~billty to do colshylege work alihoug~ their presshyent high school records indicate little likelihood of college acshyceptance Ninoty-fiveOf the 97 students were Negroes md the ratio of males to females was aboutmiddot tbree-to-two ~

The pro~~~~Ch began in 1965 is financed by the NaUonal science Fowidationmiddot the District of Columbia public school sysshy

tem and Georgetown In addition to academic work

the students were given cltgtUrsetl in reading improvement and counseling gUidance Athletie and cultural events underwrit shyten by the program were also bKluded in their schedules

nearly 42 years Bishop Gerow churches degespeciallY Negro said Of late I have feltmiddotthat X houses of worshIp which middotWere have not the stamina to caJTY I bombedmiddot and burned

on as I have done in the past Whena p~ttern of destn1c~ion This load should be borne by 1 develops as It has m our state youngerman then it sincumbent upon all ntereston Yoiit

Cathollc lnereaSe m~n ~ ~ood ~i~ througho~t MiSSISSIPPI to Jom hands m Savings

The ~venth bishop of~edio- helpingthe affectedmiddot churches 0 Invested In cesemiddotwhlch was founded ID 1~37 and in showing clearly our con- and encompasses 111 of Missls- demnation at all acts of violencemiddot CATHOLIC CHURCH sippi Bishop Gerow h8ll s~ lawlessness and destruction the Catholic population IJOw from 31264 to 75000 in his 41 years of office The number of priests in the diocese grew from 63 to 220 and churches md misshysions from 108 to 243

The last few years of llacial violence perhaps were the most troub1d for Bishop Gerows long ad inistration middotHemiddot met the challenge with courage

In the face of many-sided opshyposition Bishop Gerow in 1964 directed the first grades of Cathshyolicmiddot schools in the state to be racially integrated The next

Missionaries Move Seminar to Ohio

DAYTON (NC) -The White Fathers a missionary society which bas served in Africa for nearly a century is llloving its U S seminary to Dayton

St Josephs Seminary which had been in operation at Onshydliota N Y near Saranac Lake will re-open under the same

name in four residences near the campus of the University of

Dayton The buildings have been rented from the university

Eventually the White Fathers plan to build their own seminary

middotfacilities somewhere in ~e area according to Fatber Paul lo1e1le WF~

THE ANCHOR- middot19 Thurs Aug 25 1966

KC Melll1il~er~~ip

At AJ~Tome e~~gh MIAMI BEACH (NC)-In his

report at the 84th annual meetshying of the Supreme Council of the Knights of Columbus Sushypreme Knight John W McDevitt made these points

Membership on June 30 1966 stood at an all-time high of 1183896 The orders insurance covershyage passed the $15 billion mark during the year

The orders assets reached III

neW plateau of $28122840028 at the end of the fiscal year

The society i~ continuing its support of the campaign to st~m p(gtrnography

Revise Ceremonial Progress is being made onthe

re_Vision of the orders cerempnshyial to give it a total family middotclishymate and make it consistent with moder day philosophy of social justice and religious pracshytice

The K of C have undertaken distribution of copies of the 1~ew Testament to Catholic gradllates

COURAGE PERSONIFIED John St Marie of B~YQ of the Naval Offilaquoer CandfClatE port Minn CQnfined to a wheelchair since a 1953 pOlio ~chool in Newport R I an(J ill

~dying the question of proshyattack has received a scholarship to the University of viding a similar servilte ~orMinnesota law school atter successfully maintaining an Ashy Catholic graduatell of the Qffi shyminus average in undergraduate work at the College of cers Candidate School of ihe St Thomas St Paul Minn irQ Photo Canadian Navy

It saluted Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York on biI

Welcomes Successor Naming of Apostolic Administrato

Pleases Bishop Gerow 81 JACKSON (NC)-Mississippll1 year he followed with a direeshy

courageous 81-year-old Bihop tive that Catholic schools be deshyOliver Gerow welcomed his suc- segregated completely ceSSor Bishop Joseph B Bruni- Helps Restore Churches ni 55 as spiritual head of the Despite reported threats ofmiddot Natchez-Jacklon diocese as one violence fro m segregationist who is active vigorous and has ranks the aged prelate was good sound judgment among leaders of an interfaith

X am very happy in being groupmiddot which formed the Comshyrelieved of the heavy responSl- mittee of middotConcernmiddot soHcited middotbillty that I have borne for money labor and materIals for

middotthe bishop stated in a letterred AND in every Catholic church in the INSTITUTIONAL BONDSstate

His appeal for $300000 to re-middot I Umiddot f $500 M store more than 30 d~stroyed n nits 0 or ore and damaged churches brought Keenan amp CImiddotarey bie contributions to the Committee 9f Concern from various sections Minneapolis Minnesota of the country

0

M~ntle Plumbing amp ~ating Co Inc~

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET Fall River OS 57497

for detailed information write to

CHARLES A~ MURPHY Registered Representative

145 Pond $treet Winchester Mass

PA 9-2696 And

Name bullbullbull ~ Address A

City _

50 years in the priesthood payshying tribute to him not only beshycause of his dignity as a pi-iest and cardinal but also because he 1S a great and wholesome mail

Relic Stolen NEW YORK (NC)-A reputed

relic of the cross on which Chtist died has been stolen from the Church of the Most Holy Reshydeemer here It was removed from a side altar tabernacle

where it had been placed shortshyly after the churchs establishshy

ment by the Redemptoriad Fathers some 125 years ago

~

GULF HILL DAIRY so DARTMOUTH MASS

RO THE ANCHO~-Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

1

RELIGIOUS SUPERIORS INSTITUTE ON STONEHILTJ CAMPUS SMS Guadalcanal Solomon Islands Standing Sr Florita DP King Sr Mary LUk~ St about to enter the hall for her lecture Center Some ston Mass Sr Mary of Bathany SP Holyoke Sr Mary de Sales F$SJ r the sisters who attended Sister Lukes talk were Sr Josepha SC Conshy Holyoke Right Mrs Mary Virginia Yosgandes h-ouse mother wavesgood ent Station NJ Sr Mary Kenneth Amityville NY Sr Mary (fheresa bye tothe departing nuns I

Brooklyn Church Hopes Nuns Move Into Cent~r of Lij~e Criticizes Irish lribunal Lacks By Dorothy Eastman -Social Security

When in the third year of Vatican II the momentous decision was made toinvitewO- dmiddot LIMERICK (NC) - FatherJ men observers to audit a Council forthe first ~ime to represent all J~remiah Newman professor ofuris ICtlon the Sister chosen BROOKLYN (NC)-Msgr the nuns in America was Sister Mary Luke Tobin Mother General of the Sisters of Lor- sociology at Irelands Maynooth

IlAarion J Reinhardt pre- etto When shewasasked recently while visiting the Fall River Diocese what impressed College criticizedprivate agenshyJ~L h t b t th C 1 cies and the national governshyIdlng Judge of the Trlblillal er mos a ou e oune) h t b t h h d k ment for their failure to increaseshe said with a wry smile We aVe 0 e rna ure enoug er own or er was wor mg(1)f the Diocese of Brooklyn h to live in insecurity toward these ends She told of all subsidies to families Iltas announced that the bill of The fact that we were t ere Will these changes be easy experiment soine of her Sisters After insisting that it would $Omplaint of 15 former teachers at all I The Sister is too much of a have been engllged in for the be best for private agencies and of St Johns Un~versity had to At a Stonehill College institute realist to give that impression past twu years in Pueblo Colo- local governments to administer be dismissed because of lack of Sister Luke spoke of her many Its going to be fraught with rado Although most of the 1100 social security Father Newman jurisdiction on the part of the other impressions of the Council difficulties she warns but Sisters of Lorettv are teachers said that since they seemed unshy

ecclesiastical court _ where she and seven other Sis- what isnt this small group of Sisters in willing or unable to do this the The Brooklyn ecclesiastical tels were auditresses for the last There are more than a few Pueblo 1s doing no t~aching-in job had to be done by the natshy

$Ourt which operates under two years of Vatican II Over Sisters who are troubled and schools anyway They simply jonal government ~llnon law said it is pmited in 450 Mothers Superior from 55 sometimes shocked these days live among the poor as good He said that according to jurisdiction to only spiritual different Orders were gathered by many of the changes hi their neighbors he 1pin jg wherever Catholic soCial teaching there ltuestions at the Easton campus for the communities The Mother Gen- they cllD leading discussion was no limit to the amount of Charge Contralaquot Breach five day Institute directed by eral would warn them that its groups counselling etc government aid that is permis-

The 5000 word document Rev William FHogan CSC pointless for them to say Thill Asked to comment on the re- sibie and desirable if governshypointed out that the decree of Sister Luke was one of a group is not the community I entered cent experiment in Milwaukee mEmt aid was the Qnly practical Giisrriissalis without prejudice to of noteliltspeakers who talked When it comes to that she says where30 School Sisters of St (sbl~tion to poverty problems lbhe merits of the case to the superiors on the subject we all might say This is not the Francis left their convents for

If the Metropolitan Tribunal of the I Sister in the modern Church Iwas baptized into or three weekstO work in secular If the archdiocese of New York world this is not the world I was b()rn jobs - oneSister wa3 assigned

T b 1 f the Sacred into Change is a fact of life S t~ the rI una 0 Adapting a line from Charles as a newspaper reporer- IS er Roman Rota reversesthe decree Dickens to describe this contro she points out~ and we can~t keep Luke predicted a great deal the casewiil be returned to the versial post Council age Sister things as they are or say Stop more~ of this kind of liniited Tribunal of the Diocese of the World-I want to get off f i t th I w ld ]Brooklyn for adjudications upon t~ees sa~~iSTi~iSt~eth~o~r Role of Superiors ~~~re ~o di~~a~~c~i~t n~~ Ms merits it was stated times She paintedavivid ver- The role the Superiors will she said

The petition of complaint bal picture of the world that lies play in the formation of what Since her own Order founded filed by Father Peter OReilly ahead for Sisters She said it has been called The New Nun in 1812 is quite new all religious

s~f Chicago on behalf of himself would certainly be a challenging Lwuakeouattlintheed fs~roeh~ ~~s~~~t~ orders go and is the liirst comshylind the other ousted teachers one and that conventlife inthe munity founded in America charged he university which is future is certain to undergo She urged them to create a cli- without European ties the Sisshyeonducted by theVincentian many radical changes mate where Sisters can liveters of Loretto weal habits more Fathers with breach of contract community life at its best She -modern than most But itsstill

The Superior~ were told that entreated them to keep thls cli-The dispute has been marked bY d bl d ff t the dress of 1812 not 1966 so it d k t f an m Ispensa e gUl e me ec - mate free from legallsm andlitudent unrest an pIC e mg 0 th hmiddotmiddot th will soon be changed As soon I mg ese c anges IS e map survelmiddotllance Ie schoo s campuses f th f t th t th C 1 as the all-mlll Congregation

or e u ure a e ounCl A community should be a of Religious in Rome approv~sMoral Issue Fatners drew up for the Church place where there- is safety for She called the CouncII Decrees the Sisters new design that is About 30 teachers were fired fl t d f t f dff

Rost December in a dispute over the documentS ofhighest au- cop IC an sa e y or J er- Tliey have submitted one de~ign rlty We should all have ~nes apd s~fety to cultiv~te that the fathers turnEd downadministration-faculty relation- tho d t h d Sh f I the mInd of Vatlcan II and then lverSI y s ~ sal e ee s lihey thought it was too modshyships and other issues They t I th t th h ld be

b b f we c~n move Into actlon she s rongy a ere ~u r -ern Sister Luke says UWhat anwere joined y anum er 0 I t I g I fe ther teachers In a strike that told her healers - 1Jloe ~o~a IY In re 1 J~)Us 1 incredible thing for US to ask shy --uAfterall were not Trap- that we choose our own clothes has continued since January Whi~h Way psts

l she adds with a laughThe court found that tpe How will the Sisters know in Warning that the time has S t Lk tl - b

uteceniontractual controversy was not whicli direction they should come for a re-evaluation of the _ IS ~rth y e~mt~ a spiritual mattelin a canoliical move in the manyarells so(in to true meaning of community she ne oIl e d~rs wo~~ ever ~ llense of the word spiritual change cExperiment Sister told the Superiors that commu- bo~a h a sre~t a f ~gUS aild that there was no allegation Luke advises so often its almost nity doesnt mean conformity or 0 y e oCle ~ o anon ef a violation of an ecclesiastical her motto We really cannot a hotel life either or even a Lawyrs Does thIS mian that law arid that the time was not move into change without ex-lot of happy t9getherness th~ SI~ters may at last have a opportune for a decision of perimentation she says and around the television set voIce 111 the formatIon of canon moral responsibility because the we will be engaged in tremen- A ~ital new aspect of commu- la-at least th~ laws that rUI~ secular courts would first have dous experiments from now on- nity is the idea of what Sister thel~ O~derS SIster Luke deshyto determine whether there was to adapt religious life to the Luke calls sub communities- vout y opes so a breach of contractual duty times in which we live the convents immediate neigh- Its certain that the future for

The church court found as a The revisions that lie ahead borhood the parish the civic the Sisters will be a very differshymatter of law that St Johns for religious orders will bring commumty lay people 111 the ent one than anyone could have 141 NO MAINUniversity as a corporation Sisters into the mainstream of same profession as the Sister- imagined a few short years ago J~ formed under the law of the modern life Sister Luke for for instance other nurses or The Holy Father has urged them iii FALL RIVER State of w York did not have one has no doubts that this is tElachers We have allowed too the~ to move from the margin e the ecclesiastical privilege of where they belong We ought great a gap to exist between our- of life to the center of life~ 873 COUNTY demanding that suits against it to be willing to take the risks) selves and the laity she says Will the move be successful SOMERSETbe heard in an ecclesiasticalmiddot that gO along with this plunge In an interviewmiddot following her Sister Luke says We can only CDOurt into the mainstream she says talk Sister ~uke was asked how know by taking a ChanCE

Feai makes the wolf bigger than be is

Rer Bankings Already D~ne

~jI--~1 W

tt-~~gt_ri~

~j F~ p ~tl Iim F-ilNgt

~l i

ll 11 ~~

W = ~

~gtltl ~

-~ ~~ StIesaves I lot of alunle Mtime forso maily other thinlS ~i She banks by mail at Te ~ OLD R D8 KI h 7reg E AN W at about you

liii FREE mall forms ~1 The mOld Red Bank W

$ Fall River Savings Bankjilll q

Page 8: 08.25.66

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 Parish to Serve Wide Community

PATERSON (NC)-With the end of its vacation religiolli school St Josephs parish heICI

Lucis V~ew of Marriage Seen Delig~tfuny O~d-fashioned~ in New Jersey has turned ~

serve a wider communityBy Mary Tinley Daly Priests Sisters seminarianpound Never it is said have so many million words been and student volunteers haw

written about a marriage as the reportage of the Luci taken a $200 budget given by the Catholicmiddot Interracial Council andJohnson-Patrick Nugent nuptials-TH WEDDING in put on a program of field triP8Dpopular terminology Its over in all its impressive dignity arts and crafts athletics and

with an ele~ance wor~hy ~f honestly state that thei ambishy story-telling for 120 youngstem the marrIage of a PresIdent s tion is to grow up get married The children mostly Negro

had no opportunity to be part ofdaughter Yet like every and have babifs any other summer program sowedding great or small it Somewhere along the line edshy Father Nicholas Molinari steppedearried its message of identifica- ucatlOnally or other~se they in to help themtionto the millions viewing it are shunted career-WIse or preshy Our objec~ father said on the screen tend to bemiddot They of course to impress the children witlait n d to those want to marry but this is in~ love They dont understan~itreading about cidental they ~avent ~xperienced it We

it At our house AlulDDae middotNotes want to break down their selfshy~ ve n a s ~ t Loo~ ~t you~ Alumnae h~ite concept We want to make vou~s t~at no~- ~otes Bii( deal is ~ gal who them realize tha~ they are goodoshy

middot ~l~c Idenbfi has her masters working on catlOn was pres- the doctorate il physics mathe- t Ik Sisters of Christian en now ex matics Russian or whatever actly ho LUCI And the proud boast of a college feels squealed imany of our graduates are no~ Charity Elect America

PADERBORN (NC) - Sister bride as the TV fathers our most recent making more money than their

M Augustilde Giesen of Jersey showed the radiant Luci on her Into these same alumnae notes City has been elected the first fathers arm comes a confession humbly American superior General 0If

And I know how ~~rvous written from Betty B that she is the Sisters of Christian Charit Pat was at that moment cm- still just a housewife has a here in Germany mented the most recent bnde- family and recently was electesl Sister Augustilde former PJOogtNURSERY FRiENDS Sister Marie Patrice RSM Br~om president of the local PTA vincial of the province headshy

director of Holy Angels Nursery for Exceptional Children grooms of years ago author has expressed herself Belmont NC cuddles one of the 69children in her care was director of the provinces

To go further back an eon against the discontented femi junior sisters attending Marillae

Me too from bndes and Phyllis McGinley talented quartered at Mendham N J

most of whom because of their disabilities require roundshyor two even th ~ea~ of the nine mystique of searching for Sisters Formation College at thethe-clock attention NC Photo House and hIS bnde shared fullfillment outside of the home time of her election the g~ose pImples So have others The 2200-member congregashy

Behmd the pomp and ClrcUJI1- As an addendum we find 1lI tion founded in Germany ~

stance sket~h~s of gowns held 10 quote from Rep Emmanuel Celmiddot Disclaimsmiddot New Breed 1849 moved to the United States somewhat ndiculous top secrecy ler (D-NY) apropos prohibiting in 1873 during the anti-Catholic as though they were plans for discrimination against wom~ franciscan Nun Biology Professor Says Kulturkampf compaign of Gershym~on shots was the forthrIght serving on juries man chancellor Otto von BisshyattItude of thIS l~-year-old brIde There are women who work Primary Apostolate Is Prayer- marck

Sh~ wants th~s to be a goo~ because they have to others who marnage andw111 try to make It work because they want to and BUFFALO (NC)-Dr M Re- My whole life I trust is givshy New Secretary 10 there is the lazy kind whO gin~ L~gan associat~ profes~ ing witness to Christ she anshy CHICAGO (NC)-The Nationshy ~er father the PresIdent ~o cleans washes irons cooks sor of bIOlogy and chaIrman of swered I am a biology profes al Catholic Conference for Intershyma~t~r how you regard hUll chauffeurs mend1l binds lIP ~e biology concentration at sor whose prime role is twoshy racial jUstice haS announced the~lltlc~lly you must alknow~~ wounds nurses cloctors middotand Rosary Hill College here conshy fold first in edu(ation proper appointinfmt of Margaret Cshyedgeexpres~edfath~rly ~onfl~ shops and has conSequently So tends there is no such thing u and second in research middottomiddot fur Roach to its program staff Millli

middot dencewen he said of fat little to do aD day why Should bull new breed of nuns ther the education of my stushy Roach haB been social actioaN~gent LUCI look~ up to him she not 1e obligated NrM _ The sCientist HI as qualified dents~ _ secretarY for the National CO~with great r~spect eep ~~c OIl ju~es as anybody else to know She However she noted many ell ai Catholicmiddot Women iIinoetion a~d confIdence 10 hlll It has been a Franciscan nUll for people think th-at by taking offMs go~ng to b~ ~ good ~arrIage 28 years and she iilsists the the reUgio~ garl or by drop~Dunn~ the s~me mtervlew Urges ~ UnmiddotderstClnding OSF middotcomes before the PhDbull ping the religious title we Call1he President recalled that Luci

be more effective This is not so had been a deep1y reiigious girl Of Other Churches I dont think Sisters have all of her life even before her SPOKANE (NC)-We me ehanged she said People are As a nun my primary aposshyConversion to Catholicism More- not take the positioJl that the jUst beginning to llotice what tolate is prayer to give God the over he did not believe middotshe other Christian coinmunitiesaM weve beeJ doing all along love and adoration that the would ever become active in simply in error Bishop Ber- With 11 biological papers pubshy modem world often neg1Eicts to politics but would concentrate nard J Topel has advised priests llIshed and nine read with the give In the present day discusshyon home-inak~ng raisin~ a fam- of the Spokane diocese in a Get eredit of being first to isolate sion of the nun in the modern

middot lyen and followm~ her faIth of interim ecumenical JUide-- tile bacteria Desulfovibrio desul- world attention should be foshyFather not politician was lines furicans and with the institution cused on her existlmce nc)t the

apeak~g ~hen Bishop Topel urged priesbl i= of a trail-blazing method of preshy garb she wears she said middot LU~I s VIew of ~arriage IS re- avoid expressions judgmenu menting a college biology curricshyfreshmg and dellghtfully old- and actions which do not repre- ulum the Franciscan who drinks

196= -

JANSONS Pharmacy

Arthur Janson Reg Phcim DIABETIC AND SICK ROQM

SUPPLIES 204ASHL~ BOULEVARD

New Bedford WY 3middot8405

fashioned middotin the mid-twenti~th sent the condition of oui sepa- ber ~offee black is fully a pro century when so many gIrls rated brethren with truth ad fessional in science toohave their sights set on the split-personality syndrome mar- fairness and 110 make mutual She has be~n awarded $81000 BISA~ILLONSriage plus individual freedom relations with them more cWI- llra grants-m-rod for her reseach

ficult th g ma career and assuming at once He said full eucharistic ecm on e pernICIOUS m1cro~r ams a plar- in the forefront of out- ~~t has ~ knack for rummg oill GARAGEside activities munion is the ultimate lioal laquoIi dnlling ngs

Most little girls are disarming- the ecumenical movement WitnGS8 b Christ ly frank (see Art Linkletters 24our Wreck~r Service program or talk wit~ 7 8 and C I H bull 0 H d How does her commI~ent Ie Iyear-olds you know) The 0 bull olsgton eo s ~erstudents and co~CCmltantl

W A C to ber research (she 18 also II 653 WashinJton Street Fclirhaven omen s rmy orps iOOnsultant at Oak Ridge National HoldYou~g Christian WASHINGTON(NC) - A Laboratory the group leader of WYman 4middot5058 h b I e s s i ng followed traditional aCivil Defense fixed monitorin ~bullbullbullbull middotStudent Works OFgt 8wearingin ceremonipounds here for Station mici a ~part fliine seamshy N0TRE DAME (NC) - The Col Elizabet~ P Hoisington the_ bullreSs) Bel With h1el commit- ~IMtlIIIIIIHIIIItIIIIIIIIItImiJlHililjJlniRiiillntJiliIllNtiJtIlIHII~

Reoild annuai Young Christian new director 01 the Women mentu a Biofei6ec ~ = - _ Student apostolic workshop Wall Army Coorps Christ ~ li5

middotheld here thisweeKformiddot~Brade ~Themiddot middotblessing was giVeIlE D p SAlES middotANDmiddot middotSEmiddotRVICE ~ oionhoolmmiddotode~~torsfromparochial MsgrCKennethGStackaper-middot sect middotcmiddot bull - bullbull j bull iL

bullbull L~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull0bullbullbullbullbullbullbull middot _ IIand public school groUpsas weB s~Ia1frierid of the woman Armgt II Ill [He c E

as parishes ~ le~de~onher request afters~ bull J B II i ~ middotmiddotmiddotmiddotltThe Iconference coordinated had taken heroath of office ani 8 8 I FR sect - 1(JImiddotDmiddotmiddotAmiddotmiddotIREshy by the Catholic Action Office of beeli pi6moted from lieutenant 8 bull -1 l =

Notre DamemiddotUniversity was beld e9Jonelmiddotmiddotmiddot II LUMBER CO == I~

On t~e universitys campus middotCQlol)~I)loisington ~lPadu = 8 il RIEF ~IIG_ ~RATIOmiddot sect~ong ilP~a~er~ wer~raJherlilte_oftbe C0Uege oI~ou So Dartmouth bull IE ~ i

middot LOUISJPutz cS~_reltor of Da~eaalti~or~ Md JOlDeG II bull~ e h~p~~~~orauli1~~~h~ ~e~~n~~~~2~t~e~~~sLe~middot a~ Hyannis I 0 APPLIANCES I natioI)alltJirectoro(t~~ Gabrie(CIllsterthe Bronze Star ~So Dartmouth WY of$84 55 middot IR middotCO~IDmiddotITIOIG 5 Richard Institute and the Rev CroiX de Guerre with silver 1Rm bull i A ~ ~ n ~

middot Ja~es Neuman pastor of Hum- and the American and ~uropeaJll IMjaRwia 29211 == boldt Pa~ United BrethreJll Jheater ribbons of Wo~ld Wall bull ~ 363SECONDSomiddot FALL RIVER MASS~ ~

_ r middot9~~Imiddot~~ R~-pound~~~ -P-t rmiddotmiddot - gt gt bull IllbullbullIIIbullbull_1118 middotIiIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIHIUlllIIUIUIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIII1I1II1IIlIlUIIIIIIUllIIIIIIIIIIIUlIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIUU_ _

9 ~Swooned Priest Eggplant Dish U$ong Legendary P~r$ey P~~B1)t

By Joseph amI MarilYllll Roderick The cool weather where ~gain and with it the grass

has begun to break donnancy and send up little green shoots which means that the lawn mowers which have been restshying for a few weeks have got to be brought back to action

The drought that we had uperienced for the past three Summers has raised havoc with lawns and it doesnt seem much good can be done this season in areas still under water restrictions Howshyever in those that are not theremiddotre a few thingsmiddotwhich can be done middotbetween now and 1hetirst -bst to help lawns along To begin with this is amiddot good

middottime to apply itmiddot weed killer of some kin to I prefer tousecomshybination weed killer and fertil shyzer as this saves time and does el good job This should help dear up the lawn and start the grass out of dormancy Follow this with a good raking to disshylodge some of the matted grass and you are well on your way

to a healthy lawn in the Spring The next step is to buy a good grass seed if your lawn is well established and to apply it at ab04t half the rate or less sugshymiddotgested on the packageThe idea behind this is to fill in places where the lawn is thin or where weeds have been killed Incishydentally it is a good idea to wait two or three weeks aftermiddot

middot you have applied weed killer middotbefore you start new grass seed

It is important that your seed be a good brand and quality A eheap seed contains many coarse ~escues and annual graSses which will do the lawn very little good over the long run Jetter to buy a very good seed in small amounts than an iJlexshypensive seed which will cause you more trouble than it will do good

The only job left af~er middotthis is ~ keep themiddot lawn moistsq~bat

snippedt up the flavor would be stronger

Well I cooked my recipe and it was quite delicious but a few sprigs of the green shoots reshymained on the counter and as Joe was helping me clean up he inquired why Ihad been picking carrot tops Needless to say at that moment I rseolved to learn a great deal more about parsley in all its varieties The things I found out in my research on the parlsley plant were quite fascinating and even it bit frightening if youre the superstitious type Did you know that it was thought to be such a plant of the devil that it could only be sown on Good Friday if it were to flourish at all In anciert times the Greek$ decked their tombs with it for they fully believed that it sprang from the blood of one of their dead heroes It was also th9ught only the wicked could grow parsley successfully

Feeling that its merits must far outweigh its supposed curses I searched further to discover that one of the beliefs that surshyrounded it was that wherever it flourished the missus is master This could provide a good reason for cultivating it

Getting away from the P4rely theoretical and into the practical I learned that parsley is la h~rdy biennial normally flowering and going to seed in the Spring -after sowing though in a hot dry year it may bolt and go to seed in late Summer (this is what happened to Ti Tias parsshyley bed) Seed may be planted inmiddot April and May fOf a Summer and early Autumn crop andmiddots

the n~wgtseed has amiddotchlUlce tos~cpnd s~~ing JWlde ~lllate~uly germinate If you are succ~ pr August for tbe next ~pring and the lawn does take it is im-~pd SumDler n

middot perative tbat you keep the n~wpar~le~ steJfis have fiir~ore grasscut at about two inches So~avor than the leayes and ~e

that it makesmiddot sorneroot growth French often use only the stem before the coIf weather sets in where taste is more important

Mostlawns should bereseededmiddotthan appearance They are full iJdHis vaVeach year pIefetabiyof chlorophyll (thatgreeliishIn late Augustor eatlySeptem- property lthat was so popular a

ber Seeding is outmiddot of the ques- fewmiddot years ago) andmiddot when tion however where water re- crushed ~intmiddot mayonnaise aod

strictions are still in effect So other sauces a lovely shade of if you are allowed to water only green If you do happen tomiddot be one or two hours a week you wicked enough to have pars- will have to suffer your poor ley flourish in your yard the hlwq or at least another season four most popular ways of storshy

h the Kitchen ing it in your refrigerator are 1 With the stems kept ina

I realize that I have a great glass of water deal to learn concerning both 2 Washed water shaken off the kitchen and garden but my sealed in a glass jar or plastictack of knowledge was undershy bag

Jined the other day when I was 3 Unwashed in a plastic bamiddotg preparing to cook the recipe 4 Washed and folded intoa

- yentat Irrt ~sing in this eeks cloth the clothmiddot absorbs the ~olumn As I readmiddot the hst of dampness ~ee~ed Ig~edlents I only gave I found the following recipe iilSSmg notce to t~e paryleyas ~elicious even J~oJlgh graced

have always gathered It fr~s~ with carrot top~ instead of parsshy rom a large bed over In 1-1 Tla s -- ley The unusw name may refer ya~d howev~r when I wet to sltmelllenlbero(th~-cleigy over to pick It I found that In who fainted with joy at the flashya s~ort span of a few days most vor he enjoyeo

0pound It bad gone to seed - middotmiddot middotmiddotmiddotmiddot SWo()nedPri~stmiddot~lmiddotmiddot

Suddenly I see~ed to recall 1 eggplant peeled and sliced ~hat Joe ~admentIoned that he h inch thick had planted some of theltalian 2 large onions sliced _ Vanety llear our raspberry 3 large tomatoes sliced ~ushes ah the day was saved salt and pepper That must be it I said to 1 small bunch of fresh pa~ middotmyself as I spied sOllIe feqthery ley minced green shoots along the fence it 2 Tab)e~pouns oil didnt smell very much like 2 cloves of garlic sliced

middot parsley but ther again it was 1) Arrange eggplant onionsmiddot supposed to be a different va- and tomatoes in alternate layen lriety and perhaps when I in a large frying pan sprinkling

each layer with salt pepper ahd 1 00 R the minced parsley u v eglster 2) Add 1fJ cup hot water the

NEW YORK (NC) - More oil and garlic

than 1000 person have regis- 3) Cover tightly -andmiddot simm1r ~7~~d to at~end the ei~J1th n~- for about 30 minutes or u~til ~lonal CursI110 Movement eon-iiquia Is reducedt~aricl1 gravY iention now in session here Remove garlic before serving

PRE-CONVENTION ARRANGEMENTS BY DCCW DELEGATES Among the delegates from the Diocese who met recently for arrangements to attend the 33rd National Convention of Catholic Women in Miami Beach Oct 5-8 were left to right Mrs James E Williams St Josephs No Dighton Miss Angela Medeiros Mt CarmelSeekonk Mrs Theophane Lavoie St Jeim the Baptiste Fall River Mrs John Smith Sk Marys South Dartmouth Thursday Sept I is the closing date for registration of delegates from the Diocese to the Convention

Nuns Health Insurance Econoniist Tells Superiors Life Expectancy

Justifies C~operative Plan MILWAUKEE (NC)-Kuni- encountered by ri~ns thlo~ghQut erlliy o~payton ecqnonll~ ~r~ their lifetime ~essor Wbo~peciali~es i~m~g- Medical Passports ic~l statisectticl(or~seesalow-c~ To c~nect data FecheidEl~ised be~lthi~u~an~e~lan a~~ a~ni- a medlqal i4e~tification card 1fiect )rgra~ 0 n1edlcal and whichiiecalIi a medical pass-h~spltal facllitiesfr Am~can middotPOrtHe said these cards carshynuns under the admlm~tratlOrt~f ryingrecords of current disabili shythe Conference of MaJor Supe- tiesmiddotmiddot eouldaid in accumulating

middot riors of Wmen medical information to help Addressmg t~e conferepCemiddot ~t middotnuns qualify for lower cost Its annual meetmg he~e COli Jhealth insurance and to organize Fecher s~ldmiddot ~ooperativeplaQsan eventual program of comshy~or ~ns m thIS country canbe JustIfIed by the longer life exshypectancy ~nd better health of women relIgiOUS Fecher presented d~ta Q~ a

fIve-year study on disabIlItIes among 3)000 nuns He has made many previous statistical studies on ~he nuns long~vity

Smce nuns lIve In what Fec~er calls a contrlled life studIes ~f thelmiddot medlcal sta~us can prOVide medical SCIence WIth ~nf~rtn~tion relvatgt-t to 0-lher q~e1 But mo~t PTllvI~ts stuq~es have conc~Iltrat~~~m rn~rtalItybull s~tI~tl~s~l1d w~re coJcerI)edW~~ lteaJh apd I~ causes Fec~eT s rece~t ~~S centered around the dIsabIlIties

Christrtras Bazaar Advance preparations fire beshy

middot ing made for a Christmas bazaar slated for the weekend of Nov 25 through 27 in the basement of Sacred Hearts Church Nolth Fatrhaven Meetings are being held in the rectory at 730 each

middot MOhday night and parishioners who cannot come at this time

middot are mged to volunteer home services byknitting sewing or making fthEir articles for sale

Materials will be furnished and dondticins iire laquo iHsifoeing reshyquested 101 a white elephant table Gerierafdiairman Mrs Roland Larocque announcesmiddot that

prOfits will benefit the school improvement fund

bined health care They might also be of value to physicians treating future illnesses he said

The five-year survey tended to support the adage your health mirrors your environ ment Abstinence fromalcohol and ~igarettes a well-balanced diet adequat~ housing secure

bull communa livi and celibacy apparently do iow down the aging process Fecher said

He cautioned however that this does not ~ecessarilYmean that areligious life promotes longevity and that a similar am6tirlt of work-day schoolshy

day orreligiflus-day sefvice 10sseser be applied to each and every religious community in tbecountrymiddot

Fecher said that data collected over the past 40 years shows that the health middotcare programs of reshyligious are very uneven

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Aug 25 1966

Approves Loco ~

School Boards BURLINGTON (NC) - The

appointment of four local Cathshyolic school boards brings a new method of Catholic school manshyagement to 25 per cent of the diocesan schools here in Vershymont

At the regular monthly meetshying of the Burlington Diocesan School Board Father John A Lynch diocesan superintendent of schools reported that consti shytutions for four schools had been approved making a total of 25middot per cent of the schools operating under policy-malting boards approved by the diocesan board

~he diocesan statutes e~c6urshya~ebut do not demand the formatior of 10 c a l schoOl boards he said

Father Lynch also announced that a study would be made of school costs in the hope to find ways to avoid increasing tuition and parish assessments The study of education costs will be made by George Fortune acshycounting consultant to the diocshyesan school system

Good Counsel College Gets Loan for Dorm

WASHINGTON (NC) - A $1180000 college housing loan for Good Counsel College for women in White Plains NY to build a new dormitory has been approved Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Robert C Weaver announced here

The dorm is planned to acshycommodate 192 students The college conducted by the Sisters of Divine Compassion has an ellrollment of some poo students

Some students required to live on campus are in overcrowded middotfacilitiesmiddot Mother M Dolores president said lack of housing will foree themiddot college to deny admission middottoa number of stushydents middotthis fall she said The COllege enrollment is expected to reach 650 in five years and

800 in 10 years

Ce~tervilfe Guild New officers of Our Lady of

Victory Womens Guild Centershyville are Mrs StephenB OBrien Jr president Mrs John J Pendergast Jr and Mrs James Murphy vice-presidents Mrs ~oger Carlson treasurer Mrs Francis McKenna and Mrs Edward ONeill secretaries

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

middotOPENDAllY FORTHIE SEASON AFTERNOON and NIGHT

niE ANCHOR $as~ Vocationsmiddot10 Thurs Aug 25 1966 COnCern ofAIi

Employer U rges ST LOUIS (NC) - Speaking at the third annual Vocation Mass in St Louis cathedral

middot here Joseph Cardinal Ritter said middotvocations in the Church should

Workers to Vote For Teamsters

be the concern of every Roman SAN FRANCISCO (NC) Catholic

-The Di Giorgio Corporashy The cardinal told 397 men and women preparing to enter semishytion is recommending that naries and convents in the Fanits farm workers vote to afshy that religious vocation is not

filiate with the Teamsters FaTm middot merely a concern for the arch-Workers Union if they wish middot diocesan director a union the company announced It is a matter of solicitudeshy

Robert Di Giorgio president for each and everyone of us A of the company said therecomshy vocation is a divine thing but mendationmiddot is in accordance with it is a thing which God will not National Labor Relations BoaTd w~thhold from His peopleprocedures The recommendashy Cardinal Ritter continuedtion was made in letters sent to Bymiddot manifesting a concern employes eligible to vote in the about and an interest in vocashyunion election scheduled Ifor tiols we truly show that we Tuesday Aug 30 middot are the People of God

Opposing the Teamsters will be the National Farm Workers Association (NFWA) and the Seeks Assistance Agricultural Workers Organshy For Congo Churchizing Committee AFL-CIO (AW OC) which have merged since WASHINGTON (NC) - A they began the long Delano Congolese senator visiting the strike United States on a State Departshy

The Teamsters won the originshy ment tour program for foreign al election for union representashy government officials hopes to tion but charges of fraud make his two-month visit serve brought a new election a double purpose

Di Giolgio said the corporashy Senator Gaston Diomi wants tion is recommending a vote to speak with Catholic laymen for the Teamsters because middotand members of the clergy per-

The Teamsters won the preshy haps address audiences at vious electionmiddot Catholic institutions in his hope

The Teltlmsters while they to bring the Church iri the light hard in their members Congo to the eyes of American behalf are fair arid responshy ~ Catholics

And the senator has a planesible he wants to set up sharing proshyCompany Union middotFeels Adults Need Religious grams throughout the United

The competing union on tne States programs in which an ballot the Nationa Farm Workshy More So Than Children Nun Declares American diocese would adopt z ers AssoCiation has achieved Congolese diocese an American tentative recognition with oniy LOVELAND (NC)-Religious JI1ost rigidly formed in the old program to meet its needs--part religious order adopt a Congoshytwo growers the larger of which

education is needed for aduits system to see the new vision of which could be a parish lese order an American orphan-this year shifted production from school age adopt a Congolese orphanmore than for children and a of themiddot Churchand of Christian~ble grapes to wine tnus elimshy Flexibility and the wiUing- agebetter term for it would be life middotsetmiddot forth by the Secondinating a great many jobs ness tomiddot try a variety 01 ap- The American governmentmiddotsomething like shared growth Vatican Council Cesar Chavez head of the N iIi Christian middotlifemiddotmiddotmiddot This is 8 hard ~ask Sister prOdches ought to be the mmk of has such sharing programs the FWA called the Teamsters a an effectivereligious education senator pointed out WhyThis is the estimate of Sis admitted for adult educationcompany union and said it

tel 114 Charles Borromeo former demands new approaches and program she asserted empha- shouldnt the Church have the has entered into a partnership sizing thatmiddotit should have a so- same The Church that is Cath-head of the theology school at cannot be imposedwith Di Giorgio in a commonmiddot cia1 and an ecumenical dimen- olic the Church that is definedSt Marys College conducted by Each Ones Missionplot agabnst the farm workers sionmiddot QY the Second Vatican CouncilHoly Cross Sisters at Notre She wouldnt abandon chil-He said the companys recom- Built into each program middotas a missionary Church- whyDame Ind She recently joined drens education JOwever Shemendation confirmed that the should be a growirig aW8leness shouldnt this Church and tierthe faculty of St Xavier Col-middot saidTeamstens came to Delano to

lege Chicago as theology pro- What Id like to se~ IS emh of e~ch ones mission in the members share even more readshytlrganize workers at the invita- Church-an outgoing mismiddotsion to ily than government~ifessor set up a total religiou educationiion o~

PROFESSION CEREMONY AT WAREHAM The Chapel in the Woods of the Noshyvitiate of the Sacred Heart Fathers vas the scene Saturday morning as four novices

iere profe~sed by Bishop CoimolIyLeft to right Bro JudeMohan Bro Joseph ONeill Master of Novices Rev Andrew Jahn Bishop Connolly Very Rev Daniel J McCarthy

Prodncial who offered the Mass Bro Paul Daly and Bro Martin Lucia

the corporation New Approaches reach others and to build the

Speaking at the Summer lec- middot social patterns needed in our Oppose Intervening ture series at Grailville herein Quote Pope Pauls world

middot1 PImiddot Ohio USheaqquarters of the A 1 f IP Issues of TimesIn Fami y annlnglt international Grail movement ppea oreace middot She warneq against lookingMILWAUKEE (NC)-The ex- Sister Charles Borromeo aC- BERLIN (NC)-Fiye hundred for textbooks with all thE anshy

ecutive committee of the ad- knowledged that the Church in letters quoting the flppeal of swers or for fOllliulas thatvisory ioard of the Milwauke~ this country has placed most of Pope Paul VI for peace in Vietshy might take the place of decisiOlishyArchdioce~an Family Life Pro- its resources atmiddot the service of nam were sent persons in East rilaking by individual wnsci- gram has adopted a resolution childrens education Germany by the Social Demoshy encesmiddot

opposing government interven But the most urge~t need for cratic Party (SPD) The East Religiousteaching should inshynon in family planning giving religiousmiddot education she said Germans had asked the SPD volve a di~logue she su-ggestunanimousmiddot approval to a 13- if to helpadults especially those why the free world had not ed addi~g that in the past therepoint resolution which insists made imy efforts to end the war has been toomuch sttess on aushythat the matter of family plan- d in Vietnam thorityin teaching rid~otning is a private affair not a Sche u ~ Reopening The letter sent by the Social

bulle~o~gh on sharingChrisliarieoncern of the government Of Chi Smiddot h 1 Democratsmiddot pointed out that the gr()wthmiddot

Frank Stabb chairman of at 0 IC C 00 peace efforts of the pope the Thequesiion is not so ~lUcbtheCatholic board statedthat MTmiddot REPOSE (NC)-A Cath- World Council of Churches and

~hat to tea~h she ()pined butsince it has become increasingly olic school here in Ohio for of the governments of the how will we produce ~he Chrisshyapparentmiddot tilat our federalgov some 250 children will reopen in United States Great Britain (ian experience in litUlgy andernment ans to use taxinoiiey September due to efforts of in- Sweden India France and Itrly

for the spreading of birthcon-middot (lividuai citizens civic and Pro had all middotbeen rejected by the soci~l actionJn th~ great issues trol it becomes the obUgation of testantchurch groups in the communists The letter also of our times ~

NO JOBTOq BIG NONE TOO SMALL

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTE~S

MainOHice and Plant 95 Bridge St lowell M~bullbull

Tet 4586333

Auxiliary Plarits

BOSTON CAMDEN NJ OCEANPORT N~J

MIAMI PAWTUCKET R1 PHILADELPHIA

this family apostolate to speak area the Milford Chamber of middotstressedmiddot the SPDs view that out vigorously in oPllOsition tomiddota Commerce and parishioners of war can no longer be an instru shypolicy which has absolutely no St Andrews church Milford ment in solving political probshyvalidity The Elizabeth Seton School a lems middot He went on to say that when rural outpost of St Andrews Rltidio television and newsshyariy government agency tells parish was established seven paper ieports iil Eastmiddot Germany

middotpoor married couples whether years ago and con tin 11 a llY have given the impression thatmiddot they should have children or plagued by sewage dIsposal no one middotincluding the Pope has

hownfany to have the govern- problems The school wasmiddot closed made any efforts to seek peace ment is making a mighty pre- by court order in the Sumrtler in Vietnam sumptuous intrusion into a most of 1965 but r~openeq last year i J

sacred element of huin~nlife) with an arrangement fo~ haul- Stamiddotmiddotr 0n middotIImiddotmiddotOmiddotftmiddotmiddotammiddotP

middot ing sewge to MilfordmiddotmiddotWhenmiddot ~ middotV 1 t Cmiddoth 1 forcedtostop usingtheMilford DAVENP0RT (NC)~Seven-

eel) members of religious coni 0 un eermiddot apalnmiddot sewage systemlastJanuary t PHILADELPHIA (NCfFa-middot classes were dfscontinueiigt mutlities in theuilitedmiddot middotStates

ther JjRobert Falabella SJ The Closhlg spalked if coin- were among the graduates at the 36 instr~ctor in theolOgyat St mlinity effort led by the Buck- annual mid~Summermiddotcommence

Josephs College here has vol- wheat-middotTaxpayers Associationw ment of St Ambrose College uteered for extended adive aidthemiddotschoolmiddotA fUrid drive for her~in Illwa middotParticipating in duty witp theUS Army Re $250((to pay formiddot new tihiinage the ceremonies was Margheritiimiddot serve s a chaplain in the Vietmiddot f~cilities was ~ledby th~ Mil- Roberti a~ native of Davenportmiddot mam combat zone ford Chamber Of Commerce a leading dramatic sopranQ~

CONVEmiddotNImiddotENT BANKING WITHOUT TRAFFIC PARKING PROBLEMS

at the -

5LADE~S FERRr-r~USJmiddotCOMPANY SOMERSET MASS

j ~ - bullbullbull ~~ ~ bull ) bullbullbull lt

ThemOflt friendlymiddot dmocrt~ lANK oHering

-_~9npi~lC)h$topmiddot~cirliing middotmiddotf bullbullbullClubmiddot Accoul1Its - Auto middotLoa -

Checking Accounts ~ Business boris Savings Accounts~ ~ ~ Ieaj Estate loOns 1 -

- ~Atmiddot S~~~rs~tS~~ppi~~ Ar~a=-~igh~~a 5 ~t~due Me~ber FeCieral I)epositmiddot ri~urance Corporation

I

11 Cardinal Cushing Hits Imbalance In Schools

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing deplored that very little has been oone to relieve racial imshybalance in Bostons public schools in his first public address since his recent illness and conshyvalescence

The Boston prelate told an ecshyumenical meetingmiddot in All Saints Lutheran church here that al shythough very littlemiddot has been done to make a year-old law work we are not discouraged and we are very far from giving up hope that we will have reshyBults before long

He referred to the Racial 1m balance Law aimed at promotshying racial integration in Massashychusetts public schools The meeting marked the first annishyversary of the law The measure will deprive Boston public schools of $30 million in state subsidies until the citys school committee submits an integrashytion plan acceptable to the state board of education Until now the city committee has not subshymitted an acceptable plan

A school that is heavily imshybalanc~d racially cannot provide the best education that should be available for our children Even with the most devoted teachers and the most upto-date proshygrams-and we have both o( these in Boston-a predomiJ)antshyly Negro school suffers from an isolation from the general comshymunity which cannot fail to be harmful~ he said

Scores Slum Landlords In a similar way we can say

that an all white scJ100l fails to reflect the true nature of the radally mixed communitymiddot in which we live and so deprives white youngsters of theexperi ence of living and studying with their neighbors of a different race Ourideal should be to live and workand study and pray side by side in mutual respect and common affection

There hav~ been several proposalsmade during the last year to al~rest imbalance iit the schools of our center city Carshydinal Cushing said None of these has been accepted by those who hove been elected to make these decisions in the schooi srstem Of course we know that no immediate proshygram will solve all our problems but we can make li beginning

The cardinal also criticized slum landlords for the inhuman conditions in which so many here must live and work alid bring JP their families He called for a crash program of assistance for the deprived

State Uses Vacant Catholic School

BURLINGTON (NC)-The re- cently closed Don Bosco Schoolmiddot for BoyS here will Soon befilled up again with teenage boys this time as temporary quarters for Vermonts pilot residential treatshyment center for youthful first shyoffender lawbreakers

In announcing the acceptance of the proposal by Bishop RobertF Joyce of Burlington and the Verm 0 n t Catholic Charities board State Institutiolls Com-

PROFESSION AND CtOTHING CEREMONIES Principals in the ceremonies conshyducted for the Sisters of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts in Fall River on Monday were seated Sr Mary Dolores Sr John Veronica Bishop Gerrard who presided Sr Karen Dolores Sr Mary Catherine Standing Sr Margaret Edward Sr Joseph Maureen Sr Stephen David Sr James Constance Sr Celestine Regis Sr Anne Robert Sr Vinshycent Dolores

Report Says Cold War More Intense Peaceful Coexistence Now Strategic Offensive

WASHINGTON (NC) -Some tegic Studies at Georgetown jarring statements are made in University a Jesuit-conducted a significant news report whose school here

It is an in-depth analysisprivate but highly responsible sponsors call it the resultmiddot ofmiddot quality research It reminds for example that the so-called cold war is not

over and warns that as of now it may be entering a more danshy

gerous phase Th e ~peaceful coexistence

slogan it says was once a comshymuhist defensive stalling tacshytic but now it signifies the communists have gone over to

the strategic offensive The great paradox of our

times the document asserts may well turn out to be our inability to recognize that the cold war has in reality become more intel1se despite the increasshying appearance of peace

The goals of the presentmas~ tels of the Kremlin are no dif- ferent from tho~e of Khrushshychev Stalin or Mao Tse-Tung and to the Krtmlin peac~ful coshyexistence is a strategy not an end in itself it declares

The study entitled Peace or Pea c e f u1 Coexistence was

sponsored by the Committee on Education Against CommUllism of the American Bar Association It was unveiled in New York just before the ABA began its annual meeting in Montreal but it was prepared by Richard V Allen a specialist on Sino-Soviet affairs at the Center for Stra-

K of c Plan Socoal

Action I itia tive

missioner John Y Woodhull MIAMI BEACH (-NC) - The stated I think this is one (f the top official of the Knights of finest ecumenical testures of Columbus announced plans for faith and charity that I have a new initiiitive in the ecumenshyknown i -i~al and soCial action field

The eenter ill ~ ~provide a through a partnership with theO

home for 16 to 20 b(iys aged HI John LaFarge Institute ill New to 18 who are referrecl by the York ~ - eourls as first offenders Toile In additior W financial assist shyboys will work loeal du-in ancethe LaFllg~jnstitute will

the day and return to the center reeeive suggestifmsand recomshyin the ~venin1 for intensive mendations frOJll the official roup t~erapy eonducted b) rep-~~entationand plJrticipatiOll

Btaff III ~ix bull Ule K bull C

based onmiddot more than 3000 articles and documents of the internashytiOllal communist movement more than 90 per cent of which material is dated after the Cushyban Missile crisis of October 1962 Allen admits that the commushy

nists have used the coexistence slogan in ihepast and with sfme success but he directs atshytention to the fact that it now signifies a strategic offensive rather than a stal~ing tactic

The study notes that the Cushyjail build-up the erection of the Berliil Wall and the armed iilvasi~n of South Yietnam all occurred during the most in- tense pedod of peaceful coshyexistence ~ It~~~inds that Khrushchev in 19t1lddiiled coexistence as a form of intense ecoitomic pOlitshyical and ideological struggle gaii1s~ the aggressive forces of imperialism hi the international arena it aiso says that in their 3tshy

tempt to create wha bull they call the New ComIJlunist Man the communists have systematically presented a vicious and thor oughly distorted picture of the

Nuns to Construct Health Care Facility

SANDUSKY (NC)-The Franshyciscan Sisters who operate Providence Hospital here in Ohio will construct a new 100shybed $1250000 healthcare fashycility separate ftom thehospital

It will serve Medicare patients of the area during posthospital care and Qther convalescents who do not requir~f~l~-scalehospital care Sister Lucia -administrator 81lid it will relievemiddot pressure ~ hospital beds in the area

There wiII be ari appeal to th~ public lor about $900000 The -remainder of the funds will

btl supplied by the Federalgovshyerllment

West in general and the United States in particular It need not be emphasi~ed

the study states that the overshywhelming sentiment of the free world is to live in peace But tQ mistake the illusion of peace for genuine peacemiddot would be a profoundly dangerous perhaps fatal mistake In a foreword t the book

Bertram D Wolfe a Stanford University expert on commushy~lism warns that we have been prone to read the idea of live and let live into the phase of peaceful C 0 e x imiddots ten ce Our hopes and our longings are likeshyly to betray us again and again into a readiness to be deceived by those who have sworn the d~struction of all we stand for

fnjoymiddot Dining IN THE

JOLLY WHALER --AND--

SPOUTIRINN RESTAURANTS

Always Free Parking

New Bedford Hotel

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Aug 25 1966

Cassidymiddot Seniors Attend Work$hop

Three members of the incomshying senior class at Cassidy High School Taunton will complete tomorrow a five day Workshop in Leadership conducted at the University of Massachusetts under th~ sponsorship of the Massachussetts Association of Student Councils

Mis s Rosemary McKenna~ president of the senior class Miss Nancy Thomas president of the National Honor Society and Miss Christine Victoria coshyeditor of the Cassidy school paper are attending Miss Victoria is secretary of the Southeastern Association of Student Councils and will serv~ in that capacity with the other officers Jerry Flanagan presishydent Feehan High Marsha Boyd vice-president Attleboro High Luke Boyd treasurer West Bridgewater High

Cassidy GIllaquoIltiluCllle Wins Elkso AWtlDd

Miss Pauline Lee daughter ox Mrs Harry Lee and the late Harry Lee of 7 Dean Ave Taunshyton has Qeen named the recipishyent of a $600 Massachusetts Elks Lead~rship Award granted by the Elks National Scholarship Fund

A member of the 1966 gradushyating class of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton Miss Lee was in the top ten of a class of 108 and maintained a scholastie honors record throughout bell four year Miss Lee will attend Nortn- eastern University Boston

Schools Merge BAY CITY (NC)-TwO wes~

side Catholic high schools here hi Michigan will merge Sept I

to becomeWest Catholic CentraU High School The decision te merge was made by an intershyarish lay study committee tv provide more efficient use of the staff and facilities The schooU will be staffed by the ReligioUl Sisters of Mercy of Detroit

BIG DIVIDEND NEWS

a SYSTEMATIC550 year SAVINGS

INVESTMEIfJ500 a year SAVINGS

8 REGULAR450 year SAVINGS

Bass River SovinQs Bank bull SOUTH YARMOUTH bull DENNIS PORT

bull YANNIS bull fARMOiJTH SHOPPING PLAZA

bull OSTERVILLE

-1111

WHITE middotmiddotmiddotSPA CATERERS

- BANQUETSmiddot -WEDDINGS - PARTIES

~ COMMUNION BREAKFASTS 1343PlEASANT STREET FAll RIVER

OSb~rne 3-7780

--h-- ~

12

i

THE ANCHOROlocese of Fall River-Th~s Aug 25 1966

~regW ~reg~tfJ ~lYJ~~ TtUUY1)[fi)l[

Of R~dD~~~csm Amcm)gYW]fr~ lJy Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy

Phillip Abbott Luces The New Left (McKay 119 W 40th New York $450) attempts to explain the resurgence of radicalism among American students Its author is a

of the New Left wIth as many con u e y lcal ideas while at MissisSippi non-joiners on the peripherY day even~ng Aug 27 at S lD ~ at~~ fi~t he~-d ~~ ~h~ ~erBtlt its impact- is smd tohave Mlll~aret s Kinderlctarten aaU i Left whIle at Ohio State and l Prizes WIll be awarded and reshy

tgrt~ritotcOtmiddotmiddotgthmiddotevecJ1 amm~-~W1lS~~tttedpa~~y ~xten~e~ tots about200OQP co h~~hriients served o nl~ge ~u en ~~ i - ltGUiLD OF TillE VIsITATION Iil1961heifioved~to NewmiddotYork It ~S ~l1ena lza1I~~~eme~t i iNO EASTilrAM ~ ~

_and came closer tothe Commti- in the country What alarms Mr ih alb t ofthe Dist Party Llitef he joined Pro- Luce is not its existence or its G1 ~~ h 3que wed gressiveLa]gto~aiI~ edited its size but the fact and the in- W WI e e on nesshymiddot monthly magazine _ cre~sing extent of Comrnamst q1Y~ 4-~ 3~ a~ the PiJ~~ middot -domination~ He gives -instances Springs Restaurant No TflJro Visited _C~~ro-S Cuba R t cl Sunday

in proof thatsuch dO minatioD-i8 A e~e2 rva~o1l os on It was Progressive Labor ug s

which arJanged- for fmeric~ indeed an actuality SACRED HEARTS

young man who won some leader of the New Left and when he broke with Proshygressive Labor which he eharges was organiz~d by -formermembenlof theSoVfeishycontrolled Communist Pa rt y USA and is now aPekingor~eh tated Commu~

D1st group Mx Luce has an ex tremely Impor- middottant subject one which is both timely and crit shyleal Because of his experience he should be especially qualshyified to set it out But the fac~ is that he is at best a mediocre writer He has no notion as to how to

organize a book marshal his materials and to ten his story iIi a consecutive way and with cushymulative force This is a dull alld muddled treatment of a very middotvitai topic~ not heipedat all by crude blundersin English usage Mr Luces personal histog has to be pieced together fro~ bits strewn through the book

middotlike the debris after a hurricane He is an Ohioan bornmiddotin 1935

notice both when he was a the lives of the rising generation Youth is repelled by parental attitudes and aspirations which are seen as mostly narrow negshyative sterile College is a bore

offeriiig no incentive or oppOJshytUnity for youth to direct its enshyergies into crucial causes

A mood of rebellion has devel- ~ped and a chance to express it has been pr~sentedby the civil rights struggie and the unpopu~ lar and beclouded war in Vietshynam Nor does the prospect of fighting authority in each case dim the attraction of these causes quite the reverse Hence the New Left

JLists Organizations Communist organizations of

various stripes have attemptec to sieze control of the New Left and to exploit the mood of reshybellion wi~h an eye to changing it into participation in revolushy

tion

Mr Luce lists and desribes the Communist organizations so engaged The one he knows best of course is Progresectsive Labor But he gives much space to the Du Bois Clubs which are the instruments of the Communist Party Then tlmre are the Trot-middot

the son of middle-class Repub- skyite splinter groups of which lican parents H~ start~d college four strains are identified (inshyat Miami University in Ohio left cluding middotone that is pro-Negro to see the Souih finished ~t Mis and anti-Semitic) I

sissippi State and did graduate Mr Luce estimates that some k t Oh St t 12000 YOung AmericanS are wor a 10 a e _ t 1 t 1 b He became interested in rad- ac ua orgamza Ion~ mem ers

APPOINTEE- Bishop Josshyeph Bmiddot Brunini Auxiliary since 1957 to Bishop Richard O Gerow of Natchez-Jackshyson middotMiss has -been appointshyed by Pope Paul VI to be Apostolic Administrator of the diocese NC Photo

The Parish Parade

ST 1lgtYS TillED mn ov= =shylFALL RJrVER

The parish will sponsor a one day pilgrimage to the Shrine of the North American Martyrs Auriesville N Y on Sunday Oct 2

Interested partles may obtaIn full particulars by contacting Mrs Laurence Coyle Mrs Wilshyliam Blythe or Mrs George Boitano S8 MARGARET-MARY GUILD BUZZARDS BAY

A bl hitmiddot middotU be pu IC W S paL 0 WI d ct d b the guild on Saturshy

studeritsto visit Cuoain 1963 middot and 1961 In defiance of our middotState Department~sban on travel

there Mr Luce made the trip says that most of the students

middot were unaware of Progressive Labors sponsorship and control The money came from Castro And Progressive Labor members planned and staged the wild scenes at a Congressional hea~

ing concerning the middotproject By late 1964 Mr Luce was

enti~ely dissillusioned abo u t Progressive Labor andmiddot by Febshyruary of 1965 h~ pad left it to

bemiddot quickly expelled upon his

Stresses Strength NO FAIRHAVEN He insists that somethin~(must Registration for the kiridershy

be done to prevent Communist garten pre-primary and the capture of the movement He eight eJement~ry grades are beshywants everyone to wake up to ing held daily during the month the existence and the strength of Augus of the New Left Pupils may register with SJ

We must realize he urges how Marie Henriette SSCC at the disenchanted with our society Sacred Hearts Academy 332 the young people ~re what hos- Main Street Fairhaven any 8poundshytility they feel what a gulf ternoon from 1-5 RegistratioDfl yawns between them and their are also being accepted by Rev elders and hcgtw impervious th~YAlexis Wyggers SSCC at the are to ideas and language which ReCtory 382 Main street Fairshyi

figure in their eldErs attempts haven to communicate with them The Association of St Anne

No one he maintains is S~-Will receive corporate CoinmUshyI~ departure and sayagE(l~ Yim~~~~ Jiously trying to reach the hiorton Sunday at the 8 ocloek middot He left because he says Pro gressive Labor is a middotMaoist Comshymunist tool because itmiddotadlrQcates imd take steps to implelrtent armed insurrection because- no personal freedam is allowed to members an4 lill- deQisionsmiddot are made by a few dictatorial leadshy~ril 1ecausemembersareJnshyvolved in programs of Whose

eonsequences totge country and to themselvestIey have no idea lt~

lFe~ls lF~tts~rated Mr fL~ced6es- notmiddot contend

middot that the New Leis Goromunistshy

young rebel to understand him Mass to speak to him intelligibly and effectively Co~unJ~t errorsmiddot J~edB~ MeU1lMe~tmiddot propaganda hypocnsy mUst be SCHWYZ (NC) - Catholicrelentlessly exposed in a way movie and television experts which the young people will met here iil ~fwitieriand for imcomprehend international exchange of ~He is strong_ for a Freedom riiques iiI the useof Tv anellAeademy- which would provipe films in religious educationmiddotmiddot expert practical education conshy - cerning CommunislJlmiddotAnd he stressestheneed of a placefor

ltloltiinated -Hescent~B it -as8 phe- PITTSB~1RGH(Nt) - The bull I bull ~ bull bull bull bull bull

honidon whlc~ came ~bout Pittsburgh Catholi( Interracial Commercialmiddot 15 Industrid spontaneously an eX~IJ1Pre of- Council has endorsed home rule Institutionalyouth in rebellion - for the District of Columbia asshy

Youth he holds~ hils amiddotpoundeeling sertingthattooibng have many painting ~nd~ D_~~o~qtig of -frustrationmiddot with American of the-importanLdecisionaffectshy Fall River OSborne 2-1I9H$ociety its tone and its values ing (the District of CohJmbia) -yoiith~es~rtt~rhaving rio say inb~erlmadtd)ycongrpoundpoundssiriehftoin ~ 74v~hllia rnson Str~e~

the making of decisions affecting hundreds of miles away

~~Gr~ayK BJ Most Rev FUUOlll J Sheeillp Dll)

If my neighbor is stronger than 1 I fear him if he lsweaker than I I despise bim Such is the modem judgement of the psyshychiatrist Dr Jean de Rougemont Earlier the Psalmist speaks ~ the arrogance of those who have much and the despisal of those who are proud How can the rich avoid feeling superior to the poor How can the poor avoid being humiliated The answer is that vices but can the) give up cigarettes for a week to help the poor the strong must see their weakness and the rich must see~eifto poverty How realJly strong are the strong Theymay avoid great Are thfiY suc~ masters of themselves tbatthey can turn down the third cocktail (or give up the first) and use the money instea4 to ~uy sulfone ~or a i~~r~ liqw r~ch_ ar~the rich Let them look inside themselves IIi whatvirtue are they rich Rich in cb~ty Rich i~ char~ti Ri~)n f~th

Onc~t~~ ~i~rhty see th~mseiv~ asnothiDi a~d therl~h see the~selv~ as i~poverislledth~ they wui lov~ ihe we~~ as their brothersilDd the peor IllS their

fellow beggars for thetrrace of God ifmiddot the strong middotlove middotmiddotthemselves despite all theirweaknes5~ then why not lovltil weaknesses in others u the rich love themselves despitG middottheir inner nakedshyness then why nCllt love a lesser ]lJOVshy

erty in others That i~ why Our Lord told us to love ourneighbor as ourseU ~y not more than self Because iii ]I

love myself-knowing myself as ]I do knowing how utterb weak ]I am2-then I have the measure of how J[ am to pour out love to others

We live in a world divided between the rich and the poor We live in that kinol of a church-pOor parishes and rich parishes Even bishops an~ priestsmiddot speak of a parish being good when they mean it is economicaily rich Somehow or other we have ~

get qut of this slavish standard of affluence which is so opposed to the lross of Christ To that end we make the folloWing proposal that you or your middotparishclub school or office undertake the sponsorshjp of one of the poor areas of the world which has been investigated by the Apostolic delegate Write to us and we will send you middotthe name of this diocese its location the number of priests catechists and faithful it has Thus you will be sure that you have a middotneedy (Ibject for sacrifice and service and n9t one based on a haphazard -appeal middotfroin an uninvestigated source The Church will not alloW you to sponsor this diocese for more than one year becausemiddot thtlre are so many poor parishes in the world Look into your weakness and you will love the weakness of o~heJ8 Look into your poyeny stricken soul and you willserVe poverty stricken bodies Write to -mpGod Love You

~~~ middot~middotGOD~middotLOVE YCllJmiddot tomiddot~SMLgtO~middot ~$5 middotto A~RCtor $sO~ For your1nissionUorkIeanthelp eve~one andmiddotyou ~o tltosem most meed bullbull tchJMBfcn $20 to Anon lor $1000 middotsentmiddotWithlteommnbull ~ 11

bullbull bull ~l

The GOD LOVE YOU~ medal lovely cameo medal of the Madonna of tIle worldiS one you would be proud to give ormiddotde shy

lighted tci reC~iVEt DesIgned bi the world-renowned jeweler Harry winSton aildbltessed by Bishlgtp Sheen the GOD LOVE YOU medal is available inmiddotcl~icF~oreritinegold firiishor pure sterlingsilver aod may be obtained by sending your request and corresPondirtg offering to The Socieb for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth AvenueNew York NY 10061 $2 Sinall sterling silver $3 small

11gtk goid fiiled $5 large sterling silver $10 large 10k gold filled

Cut out this colullnn pln your sacrifice to It and mali It to Most RevbullFultom J Sheen National Director of The Society for the Propagation of thl~ Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or to your Dioclesan Director Rt Rev Msgr Raymond Jr Considine 363 North ll1ain Street Falll River Massachusetts

bull j 7 Perry IQur fI~~fng

~v~-t~e OilsMake Taunt~B1l~ Mass - Worm FriendsmiddotVA 2-2282

------------------ ~

genuinely democratic radicalism ON CAPE CODlbONNlEllyin o~r Iociety _

]OHoo ~~~(Kl~Ymiddotmiddot amp SON (~ofP~n~T~UnCG Rigt - flJ1 ml n

crepound ormiddotentireiyCommuist- 9llaquoIIlaquo ~$ lf1J Ilililte ~fYl U ~ I~raquo8L[)~NG MAmiddoth~linAL$middotmiddotmiddot~~~V~C~ 6

S~~ri~gj 1$100 4~~YARMUlrH ROA~)

middottYA~MBSmiddot AMPLE PARKING

iIIIIOCIIJIjIWUllJmllIllDOCImIWlDIllmIlXlWll(lJfi

- -

THE ANCHOR-Jesuit Educators Members of PAVLA Maintain Missionary Thurs Aug 25 1966 13

Ponder Students Record of Fall River Diocese Area G~~s SocoaCynical ~ttitQJJde

LOS ANGELES (NC) shy lLong outstanding for the missionary work of its priests Sisters and Brothers the ~elvD~e ~elrllfrer A top Jesuit educator dispenshy Fa~ River Diocese is fast becoming noted for its outstanding Papal Volunteers for Latin CLEVELAND (NC) - OUX sed advice here on how to eombat the attitude of some high schoolers who consider the world and the religion of their middotparents as phony

Father Edward J Sponga 8J of Baltimore in the keynote adshydress at the 1966 Jesuit Educashytional Association Workshop on Christian Formation at Loyola University here called for a dialogue with everyone conshycerned to emphasize the good crying to be released

Speaking to delegates from 52 Jesuit high schools in the nation Father Sponga chairman of the board of the Jesuit Educational Association declared

Menace to Freedom If the young men of our

schools consider the world and the religion of their parents as phony and a menace to their freedom then we must be ruthshyless in seeing how and why this is and in entering into dialogue with everyone who is willing to do so in order that we may be able to release the g09d that is crying to be released

During the 12 days of research and discussion 125 school adshyministrators and teachers evalushyated the effect that religion courses academic curriculum spiritual exercises and personal guidance have had on the charshyacters of the 35000 teenagers in U S Jesuit high schools

The delegates particularly were concerned about the loss of religious faith in the adolesshycent who is becoming increasshyingly sophisticated and critical

Middle Class Values Father Joseph H Fichter SJ

Stillman professor of sociology at Harvard Universitys divinity school criticized Jesuit high schools for not challenging the middle class values of many of their students for not paying sufficient att~rition to the social sciencesmiddot and for not drawing more of their students irom among the poor

Dr Alexander A Schneiders graduate professor of psychology at Boston College stressed the commitment of Faith that must be made within the scopemiddot of inshytellectual independence He arshygued against compelling students to make annual retreats or assist at religious exercises

Other delegates suggested esshytablishing pilot programs in 1l)ner-city high schools with nationwide cooperation and the sending of Jesuit teachers to work in community schools outshyllide the regular Jesuit system

Ho~es for Negroes Goal of Campaign

WORCESTER (NC) A camshypaign to secure better housing for Negroes in the Greater Worcester Area is growing

In a letter to some 1200 pershyS0l1S who last Aprii signed an

open letter newspaper adshyvertisement regarding fair hous ins John J Concordia Duman rights committee chairman of the Diocesan Council of Catholic M~~ ~sked sig~atories of the

open -letter to volunteer to ~adopt members of a Negro family am actively assist them inmiddotproC1Jri~g decent housing to titheir ~ne~ds

In 8 statement by an intershy fa(thmiddoteommittee on housing middotwfii~IlJs all out-growth of a

siniilar committee formed last year by the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women a call was made for construction of housshying for middotmiddotpoor and lower middle d~ss f ami ie It ixlcludins

Ne8J~s

bull bull r~ ~

America These young men and women doing Christs work in some of the worlds needshy Lady of Futima parish hat3 opened a social service centeliiest areas are a credit to the parishes and toowns from which they come Letest PAVLA here in the midst of the Houghassignments in the Diocese area scene of Clevelands recent

are those of Lucille Lebeau rioting of St Annes parish New The center housed in an 18-gt Bedford and Anthony Gomes room former apartment buildo St John of God parish Somershy ing was dedicated by Archo set bishop Paul J Hallinan of~ At-gt

Actually Lucille isnt a new lanta while he was visiting iii PAVLA hand She was the first Cleveland~bis native diocese Diocesan enlistee in the organishy The center will be staffed by zation going to Brazil as a four Sisters of Charity of St nurse-social worker in August Augustine who along with lay1963 She returned from her volunteers have been working three year assignment in July in the area since Aprilmiddot1965 but volunteered to serve an The center will middotprovide C9uri extra year in Brazil She will re seling nursing medical supplie tum there in November and pre-natal care -

Anthony veteran of a middotyears The building which standt work in Florida with the fedshy next to the parish rectory waserai governments VISTA proshy purchased bymiddot the parish seveR gram will teach English in a years ago when it was aba~ Mexican minor seminary He has doned as an apartment buildingalready completed a PAVLA

Early last year Father Alberitraining course at Catholic Unishy Albert Koklowsky MSSSTversity in Washington D C and pastor of Our Lady of Fatimawill leave in September for launched a campaign through aMexico City and an intensive column in the Catholic Universefour and a half month course in Bulletin Cleveland diocesanSpanish language and culture newspaper to explain Houghsbefore beginning his assignment poverty to metropolitan resiltshyin the mountain town of Tacomshydentsbaro in the state of Michoacan

Housing was a major themePioneer Work Resulting donations from unishy

Lucille bubbles over with enshy verse Bulletin readers and 11thusiasm for PAVLA and its acshy matching gift from Coadjutorcomplishments She has just reshy middotBishop Clarence Issenmann of turned from a trip to the Washshy Cleveland enabled Father Kokshyington training course attended lowsky to renovate the buildingby Tony Gomes where incishydentally she met him for the first time She talked to new Work for Needy enlistees individually and in LIMA (NC) - Sixty me~bers groups seeking to picture for af the St Rose CYO hert gavethem the new life theyd be enshy volunteer aid to projects for thetering needy this Summer Most as~

Their enthusiasm was a boostshy slsted in a federally financed er shot for meshe said educati~nal program for cultu~

This week the New Bedford rally deprived students from nurse is inmiddot the Chicago area PAVLA ENLISTEES Revmiddot James w Clark Diocesan ~nderglirtenmiddot to sixij1 grad~visting PAVLA headquarters Directormiddot of Papal Volunteenlmiddot for Latin America with Othershelp1 a~ amiddot day camn f~there and friends she made ill retarded cbildren andmiddot Qne asAnthony Gltgtmes bound for teaching assignment in Mexico~ Brazil including the doctor with Ns~ed at a eerebral palsy c~mpwhom she worked when me and Lucille Lebeau who has already spent three years m first went to the Latin American Brazil as nurse-social worker will return in Novemberfor eountry He is now in practice additional year in Waukegan lll FAIRHAVEN

When I first went to Brazil urgy eommunitY needs and was to leave in each parish IIshe 8a14 I worked for a little LUMBERhealth needs team similar to their own toover a year at a hospital in Salshy cOMPANY carry on as far as possible thevador Bahia My job was mlinly Most of the help that an area

training Brazilian aides and received came from the people work in liturgy catecheticsmiddot and community and health needssetting up hospital routines themselves t h r 0 ugh their Complete line

After the year was over Brazil shy awakened sense of community We would return to the comshyian doctors and medical students said -ucille Actual government munities where we had given Building Materials took over the hospital routines or material aid was hampered by this course as often as possible were runing smoothly and I political economic and social said Lucille anu each time we 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVEN felt that I could go on to public complications of many kinds eould set them growing spiritushyhealth work in areas where there The team played it by ear ally WYman 3-2611 was no nursing care at all avail- in deciding how to approach a Turn to Page Nineteen able particular parish Lucille and

Lucille joined an apostolic the nun on the team who was shy ~

team organized by Bishop Eushy also a nurse tried to work genio de Araujo Sales Apostolic through community midwives Administrator of Salvador Toshy who were sadly in need of techshy JEREMIAH COHOLAN gether with a priest a nun two nical instruction The infant Brazilian lay apostles and what mortality rate in most areas was would bt the equivalent af an very high said Lucille due iD PLUMING amp HEATING I American social worker she large part to umbilical tetanus visited areas of the Diocese preshy caused by unsanitary delivery viously all but unreached by the techniques

Church Another technique was organ- I Aim of the team she explainshy ization of one-week parish Wy 3 0911 699 B II II A

ed wail to change dormant parshy courses centered around the idea man - e VI emiddotmiddot ven~ ishes into Christian communishy of Christian cominunity Lucille Nwamp~fQrd ties Seventeen parishes were said middotshe would start the course I visited in the course of a year by trying to explain the concept lImiddottI-IIIlII_middot tI-II--tl- __ __ __ _-IIllIIIiImiddotllIlI_-IIllII~ -~~ ~--middot- ~ and a half rmging from mem- of Christians as people of God - - shy

berships of 20000 souls to 75000 then would set up discussion ~ItIIIIHtHIIIIIDIIIIUIIIIHlIIIIIIIiIllIIlHKHHIIItIIIIUIIIIIIIUllllliillllllllllIJllilllllllllllllilllllllll~ The 75OOO-member parish said Ioupsmiddot en suchmiddot subjects asmiddot~ -_sect_Lucille had only one priestmiddot 10 What ismiddota person-Person to ~ middotY 5 hmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot meet its needs person relationships~ and Dif- sect E we ayemiddot ~

Plan 01 AetiOll ferences between ordinary eom- ~ == The apostolic teamsaid Lushy munities andthe parish sect LARGE LIVEmiddot ~

eille would first survey condishy This would lead to a discussion sect ~ ~=_=_ tions and decide what most of the function of Christians and sect needed doing then plan an edushy what iii Christian community sect shycational program Three or fo~rmiddot should be lIke Theil leaders ~ while they la5~ - ~ natural leaders in each parish were ready to ask the parishion ~ sect= were chosen and arrangements ers if any were ready to coin- ~ were made to get them to an mit themselves as parish team sect Macleans SemiddotQmiddot F d ~ Archdiocesan training center for members to a stronger expres- ~ 00 S == a one month leadership training sian of their Christian fellow- sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN Tel 997-9358 sect eourse wverins lIlatechetics lit ooip Go~ of the lipQBtolie tea iulHIHlIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIJlIIIUillIIJlmIllUiJiillJillnililunJililillliiihIUllllIIlIilill(IIUJIIIJ1I1llIJllliinillllllltuE

- ~ - -~_middotmiddotij_Uimiddotmiddot ~ _

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 An Exce1lent Lcte Summer Activity J VI SIT-middot

Louisiari ~copyfrish A~~ampmpli~~~sect r~bull ~T[T uiH~Dfro[j1) fr ~rtilfrreg~[(frDIri)middot middot~~rrfr~~~Q~t~~~~~~~JJ~~tt$

MADISONVILLE (NC)--+wo cently used for ~~gt~es~was wears ago in this quiet jural torn down Its blue I green~and ~ J~lf ~ town the single square block white stained grass riow frames

ltContaining Catholic ch u r c h the huge rear wIndow ~ ~t buildings symbolized the old era Anselms church - - [f~[LL lRlt OV~~middot ~now it stands for the new This Spring St Catherines

Two years ago two churches also came down Gone too are stood 200 feet apart on this he cOl-vents and bullone school More than 280000 people havle cilrElody been aboard iUO ~he past ys[ioblock--St~ Catherine wh ere The other school building was

whites worshipped and St retained for parish meetings and Francis Xavier where Negroes the now-integrated Confratershy

worshipped The rectory with fiity of Christian Doctrine its one priest to serve both par- classes ishes s too d between theC rhe 100 or so school children

centhtirches moremiddot as a symbol of - arenow transported to elemEmshythe psychological gap thac asan tilt-y and high schools in nearby

actual separation covirigton arid Mandeville middot A fence stood between the two CCD instructions have been

eonventS on the block~riefor givengtySfsters qfChristian the Negro nuns who taughtCharityandtheirstudEints from

Negro children in the ~e~ro ~~njpirClncy at FolsoM La and IIchool the other for the wfitte byseminariaris fromarby St IllUns who taught white children i-Jolieph seminarY Butmiddot tpeseiii the whHe school diities are being taken over by

Now there is one church onemiddot tlie parishs integrated CCD orshyrectory and one small classroom ganizatiorinow being trained

building -- and one parish St The pastor Father John J Anselm DenDulk is prouder of the

Although wee k day Masses smooth transition than he is of were said in only onemiddot of the the physical change shytwo old churches Masses and Participation in worship has ether services on Sundays and increased since the new church major feast days were said in w~ built he says and he has

middot both Midnight Masses on Christ- the best commentators in the mas were celebrated concurrent- whl)le world

Iv in the two churches AIthougb there are only 260 But the buildings weremiddot badly families in the parish the new

Qn need of repair So in 1964 the ~church is already more than half lttId frame church of St Francis paid for and the parish topped

middot Xavier whose parish records go its quota in the archdiocesan back to 1863 and which was re- education expansion drive

bull ~ I bull

Bishop Pmiddoterry Says New Orleans Has Healthy Racial Climate

DENVER (NC) - Auxiliary still has more influence thaa Bishop Harold R Perry SyD any other Negro in the civil of New Odeans first AmeJican rights movement Catholic Negro bishop in this He (Bishop Perry) has been

lt1lentury said here a hea~thy very favorably received in New racial climate will exist wher- Orleans eve~ the Negro has a chan~ to Some Cannot WaU voice his grievances He said there will undoubtedshy

Bisnop Perry dted New 9r- ly be some civil rights groups lleans as an example sayipg the who disapprove lt)f non-violence racial climate there is healthy and occasional demonstrationS

because of an interracial council by those who cannot wait appointed by Louisiana~ov Of course I am a Negro and

John J McKeithen to help splve we have been waiting a long rmcial problems time If you take the long view I There are no demonstra~ions complete equality cant come too and riots and very little picket- quickly he added~

lng he said The cotiJlc~1 i-e- He said he has been received lieves tensions and if the Negro very well even enthusiastically has a forum to talk over his con- in New Orleans Picketing outshyeerns he will not demonstrate side the church where he was

Schools Integrated ~onsecrated he s3id Was DOt typical of the general feeling in

The 50-year-old prelate said New Orleans be is proud New Orleans has in- As an evidence of his popushytegrated all Its schools Its a larity he said he spoke at ninemiddot large percentage not just token graduations in June and has ofshyhe added ficiated at Confirmation in 24

He said Catholics are doing parishes their part to advance equality of opportunity in his citymiddot 1 think [EceQJl1illeIJilD~~ CCrrnDDOdegthere has been Ii united effort tl)Ir If

by all faiths and we would like ~~ ~DcopyQJIJilampIbgtD~~~DIJil to keep it that way he de- CRANSTON (NC) I hdared - n a s ow The New Orleans bishop also of the ecumenical spirit lea4ers ~ommented on ~ wide range of of major religious faiths in this

area took part in a combined eivil rights issues saying

The new militancy shown by bull religious and groundbreaking Visit the BClI~~ie$Mp anldllode alIeplica of the Old iFal~middot River Bill1e~ middottmiddotsom~ civi~ rights groups is a service on the site of the proshy

posed Church of the Annunciashypassing phase tion Greek Orth()dox lours start every 30 minutes

The majority of Negroes are Archbishop lakovo primate lJympathetic to the non-violent of the Greek Orthodox Church Opeill aU year round - 9 AM to Sunsetphilosophy of the Rev Dr Mar- of North and South America of tin Luther King and Dr King ficiated at the open air hierar- For Group Arrangements Call 678-1100 chal Divine Liturgy service at-

Serra Meeting tended by more than 500 pershy l)OOOO()ooOOC)ooOOClOOC)ooOOC)OO~IOOl sons

THIS MESSAGE Sp()NSORED IV lHE FOllOWING INDIVIDUALSATLANTIC CITY (NC) - A Participants in the groundshyeonference for members of Ser- breaking ceremony included AND BUSINESS CONCERNS IN GREATER FALL RIVERlIa Clubs in the New York-New Catholic Bishop Russell J MoshyJersey - eastern Pennsyivania Vinney of Igtrovidence Archshy ANN DALE PRODUCTS INC MACKIENZIE amp WINSLOW INC area will be held here Sept 23 deacon William L Kite represhy II~DY ELECTRIC SUPPLY COMASON FURNITURE SHOWROOMS tKi 25 Msgr William Noe Field senting the Rt Rev John Seville CASCADE DRUG CO GERALD E McNALLY CONTRACTOItiff Seton Hall University South Higgins Episcopal Bishop of GLOBE MANUFACTURING CO SOBILC)FF BROTHERS Orange NJ will give the key- Rhode Island Dr Wayne ~is

~~TGHINSON OIL COa~te address Sept 24 apoundter a executive director ofmiddot the Rhode STERUllIG BEVERAGES INC

~A Mc~HIRR ~9MPANY TEXTIU WORKERS UNION Of AMERICAeOncelebrated Mass at which the 1s~and Council of Churches ~nd ~rE~~ATIQNALV4DIES GARMENT 1 bull AlL~tO - principal concelebrant will be Rabbi Jerome Smiddot Gurland Gf

WORKERS UNION (EUOW CAI COMPANY Bishop George W Ahr of Tren~ ~telligtl~ Sinai 1epresentingthe ton Bhode Island Board of Rabbiamp bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull0 MssSelbullbull

~ ~ ~ - bull bull bull bull I ~ j

- ~

_-- -

0

WomenB~ Job Corps Members middotAid Youngsters Improve Reading

OMAHA (NC)-Omaha Wom- chesne Mother Moody found a ens Job Corps members joined benefactor to supply ihe a11shywith five graduates of Duchesne importlnt incentive program College and Academy of the Thanks to a generous racetrack

Sacred Heart here to upgrade bettor Who won the daily double the reading level of local public there was enough money for school youngsters candy bar prizes and two picnics

The progra~ ca]]edProject An indication or- the success of Upstart was first conceIved by the program was found in the Mother Helen Condon dean of reaction of the students A reshythe Nebraska co]]eg~ Mother cent visitor asked one of the Rosemary Moody aSsIstant pro- young boys Why are you here fessor o~ ~sYChology volunteer~ Did someone make you come to adminIster and execute themiddot program

The original plans were to take a group of seventh graders from Horace Mann Junior High School and tutor them in develshyopmental reading and study skills It soon became apparent that some rather basic instrucshytion was required some of the ehildren were still reading at the second grade level

Duchesnes elementary school was offered for use by Mother Helen Sheahan superior An Omaha public school official suggested that the Omaha Wom- ens Job Corps be contacted to see if they could furnish high school graduates as tutors Robshyert Bathke Job Corps education director soon put five young ladies at Mother Moodys disshyposal

Five recent Duchesne gradushyates volunteered to train the tutors for two weeks before the program actually began The Duchesne alumnae eventualiy elected to stay on for the entire program

Mother Moodymiddot was so imshypressed with the potential of the Job Corps enro]]ees that she exshytended their sessions through the rest of the summer and made college preparatory work avail shyable to them

Student Reaction Perha~s one of the more unshy

usual aspects of the entire Upshystart program was its lack of financing The only real subsidy (about $500) was from the OMaha Public School system the bulk of which went to the Omah~ Transit Company for bus service

The equipment used in the classrooms was borrowed from the public schools the Omaha Womens Job Corps and Du-

Plan to Supplement History Books

SAN FRANCISCO (NC) shyA supplementary text showing the contributions of minority groups in United States history will be added to history and social science books already in use in archdiocesan schools here

The supplement containing some 150 pages will deal chroshynologica]]y with the contribu- tions of Jews Negroes Orientais and various nationalities from southern Europe

It is being prepared by a speshycial studly committee which illl evaluating current textbooks found need for more thorough material on the part minority

groups have played in the OOUDshytry1s history

Leave Providence For Mission Work

PROVIDENCE (NC) - Four Capuchin priest and two layshymen left New York by plane for mission work in the Santa Rosa de Copan diocese Honduras

Father Ad ria n Holzmeister OFM Cap provincial of tile Capuchins St Mary province with headquarters here said the six will work among some 50000 persons in Mlree parishes in the state of Ocotepeque He said

other mjssionersmiddotas they become ayailabie wiD be sent to aid Bishop Jose Canama CbampvezCli tile diocese

He looked up and said Im here because I want to learn to read and I like it Two girls who missed the morning bus to Duchesne gave another exain-ple of determination to learn Jhey undertook a two-hour five mile walk rather than miss a day of class

L R oy etreats Contlnu~d from Page Six

laymens convention-an effort to provide some figure of speech some image to suggest to those in the Church and to those out-

side what is the inner nature of the Church

Alluding to Scriptures refershyences to the Church in terms of sheep and shepherds the former Hub Auxiliary Bishop asked How many people in Boston have ever seen a sheep Sheep and shepherds say little to youngstersmiddot in housing projects or even in the suburbs

The Bishop who is epiScopal advisor for the NCLRC officiashyted at the lighting of an eightshyfoot candle which symbolized the

conference theme-uThe Light of Chr~st The candle burned throughout the convention

Speakers stressed the retreat program is geared to demOJishystrate to the world that the way of Christ can become more meaningiful to men of our time

Bishop Ernest J Primeau of Manchester reminded delegates of recent profound changes withshyin the Church

If the lay retreat movement is to remain vital and relevant

he said it cannot be static It must be in harmony with the times at all times

Honest Call1Se

Our retreat houses could 00-middot eome so to speak the equipment and training centers for the apostolates of the laity he adshydect

Bishop Primeau urged laymei to learn from modern science particularly in the field of hushyman psychology He said there is an opportunity as well to learn from other organizations both secular and religious He added The youth of today are un-

selfish and in large numbers they are seeking for an honest cause to which they can dedicate themshyselves as witness their devotion to the Peace Corps and the civil rights movement

Modernize AncEtenlt Puerto Rico CIl1llLmlrch

SAN JUAN (NC) =- A lPJt8shyyear-old church one of the most popularmiddot in this capital city~ ~

going modern Archbishop Luis Aponte of

San Juan has inaugurated middotal campaign for funds for restorashytion of St Anns a public orashytory now badly illl need of Jeshypairs

1ft addition to restoration the ehurch also Will be equipped with air conditioning The eburch is the archdiocesan ceDltgt ~r for the Confraternity Gi Christian Doctrine and perpetual adoration of the Blessed Sacrashyment Built ill 184B the cburch weplaced an edifice which dated )Iaek iG tile lWi century

PROFESSION ANJ)) RECEPTION Four postulants beshycame canonical novices and two prof~ssed their vows as Sisters of St Joseph at ceremonies at the Blessed Sacrashyment Church Fall River Left column top to bottom Sr Gerard Marie (first vows) Sr Anne Therese Sr Rita Josshyeph Bishop Connolly who received the sisters Right colshyumn Sr Anne Denise Sr St Paul and Sr Alfred Marie (renewed temporary vow-s)

Specialmiddot Education Priests Visi~ PaJ~ents Homes to ExplOJon

SignificOJlI1lce off Baptismal Ritual

Thurs Aug 25 1966

Governor Balks

ST JEAN (NC)-Sunday bapshytisms are prece~ed by Saturday nights special educational proshygrams in a number of Catholic homes here in Quebec

The program to prepare the whole family for baptism through a home visit was deshyvised three years ago by a group of pries~s working togeth~r as a pastoral team

central idea of the program ~s that it is good for the priest to be with his people at imporshytant times in their lives~ Atmiddot these times people are dispOSed to receive the message of Christ

as it applies to their circumshystances the developers of the plan reported

The visiting priest explains the lOOremonies of the next day and the symbolic meaning of various parts of the baptismal ritual

Pilgrims Wctmlk TORONTO (NC) -The 10th

annual walking pilgrimage to the Canadian Martyrs shrine at Midland Ont will begin here Wednesday Organized by the Guild of St John de la Lande the pilgrimage will cover the 100 miles to the shrine in five days a~riving there Sunday Sept 4

LEMIEUX PLUMBING amp HEATING INC

fof Oomestic l~ andmiddot Industrial ~ Sales and Service

Oil Burners WY 5-1631

2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE NEW BEDFORD

Relatives neighbors or the prospective gorlparents may be presentbut themiddot home visit usually involves just the parents and their children

The ide is to make the preshybaptism vsit an oppodunity for dialogue between the priest and the parents rather than a conshyference

Ten parishes in the St Jean diocese have adopted the praeshytice along with l few Montreal parishes Father Marcil Brillon secretary of the St Jean litur- gical commission said he exshypects the practice to spread

FALSE TEETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass Many wearers of false teeth suJIer

embarrassment Qecause their platesdrop Blip or wobble at Just the wrong time Dont live In fear of thts happening to you Just sprinkle a little FASTEErH the non-acid powder on your plates Holds false teeth more firmly so they feel more comfortable Checks denture breath Dentures that fit are essential to health See your dentist regularlyGet FASTEETH at all drug counters

At Proposals MONTPELIER (NC) - Vershy

monts Gov Philip Hoff said he bas extreme reservations conshycerning abortion and sterilizashytion proposals contained in a reshyport of an adivsory committee on the mental retardation situshyation in the middotstate

The report called for legal sanctioning of induced abortion in cases where there appears to be a high risk of mental retarshydation of an unborn child

Thereport also contained a suggestion concerning steriliza shytion of the mentally retarded

Apart from the recommenda~ tions on legalized abortion and sterilization of the mentally reshytarded I must S4ly it was II good report Gov Hoff said He said lie will study the report with utmost care before taking any action 0

Expresses Thanks To Holy Father

VATICAN CITY (NC) -The vice prime minister of Vietnam has paid a visit to Pope Paul VI to thank him for his peace efshyforts and generous help to reshylieve the suffering of the Vietshynamese people General Nguyen Huu Co vice prime minister and secretary of state for national defense of Vietnam visited privately withshythe Pope for 30 minutes Accord- ing to a Vatican Press Office bulletin

The vice prime minister in the name of South Vietnam exshypressed profound gratitude for the valid support always given by the head of the Catholic Church and of the Holy See in the cause of peace and for the generous assistance sent by the Holy Father to relieve the sufshyfering of those persons torshymented by war The distinguishshyed visitor then continued tomiddot deshyclare that the intentions of South Vietnam are directed only toward an affirmation of the liberty of its own nation and Wgt arriving at a just peace in honor and concord

Complete

BANKING SERVICE

for Bristol County

Bristol County Trust Company

TAUNTON MASS

THE ~ANK ON TAUNTON GREEN

Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Bristol Community College Offers Evening Classes

64 Durfee St Fall River Credit classes begin September 19 1966

Register Now Mondays thrrough Thursdays 200-500 PM Courses for college credit or self improvement are offered ill

The arts languages and literature Behavioral and social sciences accounting business

administration and secretarial scieRCe Mathematics science engineering and electro-mechanical technology

Advisors Availabie During ~egistration Hours

16 THE AI~ ~-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

C~nsiders Instability Causes In Latin American lamds

From Social R-evolution in the New Latin Ameriea Edited by John J Considine MM

There are many causes of instability in Latin America Some have said in the past that it is an inheritance frQm

Spain They feel that the years of Spanishauthoritarianism rendered the colonies incapable of integrating themselves into a more balanced social system Because they had there exists the problem of low

denSity of population with a lackpreviously lacked indepenshyof internal communication In-dent creole authority the many cases there is even a lanshy

colonies were unprepared to acshy guage barrier eept a more democratic authorshy The problem of an underdeshyity In his book veloped economy has also beenBetween Freeshy a factor in forming Latin Anlershy clom and Fear ican social structureGerman Arcinshy On the social level the eleshyiegas draws a ments I have mentioned favorcomparison beshy an internal lack of class strucshytween the Enshy ture that involves a juxtaposishyglish and Spanshy tion rather than a social organi shyish governments zation and integration Democshyin the Americas racy on the other hand presupshyIn ihe north the poses a large scale integrationcolonists came in of the people in the politicalshysearch of freeshy economic-social life of thedom IIi the end nationthe founding of the Nodh The masses of -illiterates inAmerican colonies was only the Latin America who do not parshyobvious culmination of a process ticipate in these areas have noalready begun It was the reafshy iilterest in government thoughfirmation of customs already inshy their interest and loyalty maygrained in the social milieu It be enlisted by the demagoguewas an evolution not a real revshyolution for these settlers were Formation or Dictatorships accustomed to autonomy The A dictatorship takes form

authority pf their governors was when one or more pressure more democratic since they groups unchallenged seizes the worked closely with the popular power of governmentassemblies From the beginshy In order to better understand ning the keenest concern of the the types of dictatorship found North American colonist was for in Latin America let us elCamshyfreedom of worship and his hosshy ine the different forms of revoshytility to the Church of England lution and the various ways in was evident which the pressure groups

On the contrary Latin Amershy bring their influence to bearIca was part of an empire The Kalmal1 Silvert distinguishesSpaniards came to dominate and these types in his book Reaction evangelize The viceroy represhy and Revolution in Latin Amershysented the king who was an abshy ica which is written in -Englishsolute monarch The role of Silvert shows the relationshipshyassembly in Latin America was between dictatorships and the secondary arid represented exshy extreme indivdualism found in tremely liIIlited power these countries

Independence in the Latin The first type of revolution American nations entailed a real named is what Silvert calls the revolution since from the beginshy simple brracks revolt Most of ning they were forced tb look for the outbreaks especially in the new political and social forms past century have been of this

Religiousliberty did not elCshy kind The barracks revolt occurs ist in the Latin American coloshy typically in a big class society nies since all were obliged to It is carried out by the amlY

membership in the Cathoiic sompoundtimes in its own name and Church sometimes in behalf of a chosen

Unassimilated Groups leader This type of revolution - rarely calses widesprelld publicThis comparison will help in

disturbance since it representsunderstanding the Latin Amershymerely a switch in governmentican problem though it will not from one general to anotherfully explain -it We must acshy

knowledge that the political The second type the peasant phenomeinon has a direct COIshy revolt is generally of little sigshyrelatio~1 with demographic probshy nificance and limited in effect lems such as the existence of to a locality though the Mexican large unassitnilated groups as revolution at the beginning of well as masses of mestizos un this century would perhaps fall derdeveloped and deprived who in this category can scarcely be said to partici shy Third the regional revolt pate in twentieth century chili shy commcn in the early days of zation Although these groups Latin American independence form a part of the nation they Here _the caudillo strove to put are not integrated either socially down provincial revolts and to eulturally or politically centralize power in an authorishy

Despite the over-all demoshy tarian I e g i () n a I government g~aphic explosion in some areas Typical of the caudillos who led

regional revolts was Rosas of Argentina

Plans Participation The fourth a more modern type of revolution Silvert callsIn Liturgical Week the complicated barracks revolt

HOUSTON (NC) - The 1966 This is an insurrection that inshyLiturgical Week here fOI the -volves civilian as well as mili shyfirst time in its 25-year history tary groups with widespread will have a full scale program military action for those interested in the The issues are ideological and Eastern Church relate to political parties as well

As part of the Liturgical Week as _ other interest groups The program the Divine Liturgy Cuban revolution in its beginshy(Mass) of St John Chrysostom nings might be considered -an will be celebrated entirely in example Although this is the English and Communion will be most prevalent type ainong modshydjstributed under both species ernday revolutions excetions Chief celebrant of the Liturgy are the revolts which overthrew will be Archbishop Paul Achkar Peron in Argentina Perez-JimeshyGreek Catholic ~-chbishop of nez in Venezuela and -Rojas Lattaquia in Syua Pinilla in Colombia

SISTER AMBROSE

Says SOo Africa Needs Americans

WASHINGTON (NC)-Yanshykee come over a statement which would do much to boost the morale of Americans in sevshyeral parts of the world could well summarize what an Irish missionary nun to South Africa

-has been saying during a visit here _

The wonderful hospitality of theAmerican people has imshypressed Sister Ambrose Harty Gf the Sisters of the Holy Family She lamens the fact that opporshytunities to receive Americans in a like manner have been few and far between during her 20 years in South Africa

Youve got such a lot to give she said here in an ~ntershyview during which she expressed a strong desire to see greatly inshycreased people-to-people relashytio~s between the country where she serves and the United States

Sister Ambrose was particushylarly interested in the Peace Corps ann reported that its purshyposes and work are hardly known by the people of Soutli Africa I haVent heard it disshycussed at all she said (The Peace Corps has not been invited into the country) (

With words of praise for the missionary work being done iii the South African Republic by Oblate arid Paulist missionaries from the United States she also expressed regret at the general paucity of missioners from this country There particularly is an almost total lack of nuns she said Only 71 Catholic missionshyaries from the United States inshycluding 16 nuns are serving ilm South Africa

Married Priests AMSTERDAM (NC)-A

Dutch public opinion poli h8lll shown that 11 per cent of the Netherlands p e 0 pIe woulci rather have III married Catholi4l clergy than a celibate clergy The poll including members ai all and no denominations

-showed that 68 per cent of the Catholics queried preferred III married clergy

~~

(DEBROSS OIL ( ~ co ( ~ Heating Oils

~ and BMIIJUrs ~

~ 365 NORYIoli IFROIlir SUEampll ( rJ NEW IBIEDIFOR

~ WYmafi 2middot5534 (

I~~~

Parishes Share DETROIT (NC) - Twentyshy

nine urban parishes here have decided to help one another meet the rising cost of education

At the elementary level parshyepts will pay $50 per family $75 per family for non-Catholic parishioners and $75 per student

Danish Catholic COPENHAGEN (NC) -Thereshy

are 11321 Catholics in the Danish capitalaccording to a report issued by the Copenhagen statistical office They consti shytute the second largest religious entity there next to the Luthershyans members of the State Church The total number of Catholics in Denmark is approxshyimately 26000 Total population is 35 lllillion

Education Costs for Catholics outside the parish

At the high school level the tuition cost is $H)O per student in or out of the parish With the exception of textbooks this amount eliminates aU extra fee charged up to now

Father Norman P Thomas director of the Urban Parisll Apostolate said the greatest efshyfect of the joint effort will be experienced by the pastor who sends parish youngsters to a higll school operated by any of the 2 participating parishes

In this instance the students parishes will be expected to pay the difference between the tui shytion charged and the actual cost per student The latter fee laM been set by the parochial school office at over $200 per year

ETHIOPIA- THE NEW AFRICA

- HOLY FATlftRB MIBBIIDN AID TO THI DRIENTAL OHURCH

- BROTHER What happens In Ethiopia when an American MICHAEL Christian Brother (he could be your son brother

REYNOLDS nephew) Is told to upgrade Catholic schools He FROM borrows a Jeep (or a mule) visits the schools

PROVIDENCE RI one by one writes home for pencils and better REPORTS textbooks and then beginsbullbull This is the new

fROM Africa Brother Michael Reynolds reports enshyADDIS thusiasticallyfrom Addis Ababa It can be a BABJpeacefuf progressive Christian Africa tom~rmiddot

row Just give us schools give us time and with Gods help the job will De donel bull bullThe schools are for villages like Aressa Aiga Biers Wartll8~

-which have no school The youngsters know that knowledge i~ their only chance theyll go without food to learnbullbullbull What does It cost to build a schoolf Only $2950 says Brother Michael for the villagers snd the children give their laborfreemiddotofmiddotcharge We can train a catemiddot chlst for only $40 bullbullbull In thanksgiving to God for what you know will you do what you can ($100 $75 $50 $25 $15 $10 $5 $2) to give these youngsters a chance The school will be named for your favorite saint and the children will pray for your loved ones daily If you build It all byyourself ($2950) School will open late this year-but better late than never-If you Vlrit~ to us right now

WHAT Our priests there who receive no othor income IELSE for food and clothing will offer promptly the

FOR Masses you request Well forward your Mass ETHOPIAr Inten~ons through the Holy Fathers officebull

40 young lads studying for the priesthood In Decamere lose their football when It goes Into a nelghbers garden A large field can be bought ~velled and mede safe for sports fer $975

MAKINQ ~~IOOOO will ovfde bull OOfDj)lete parjstlplantA (Ohuroh rectory convent andscbool) In southshy

WiW ImIAdla In memorybullbullbullbull $600 will ttiln a native lrfHt1SOO bull native Sfster Our legal tltI Cl~1HOUO NWt lAir WIUAH AHOCIAnONo

_-------------~shytt coINIILOIIlt IUMIIIND ~ bullbull la IJIIr bull _1OIt~=-=_==-=

PI _UM~gt

Mum ClO1IIponwith your mt__=-~~_ _ ~i offrtnt ~~ erryen 8TAlI-lPCODI_

HI IATHaLl1 RIIiAR 811 WILAbullbull AIaDIATaN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS IRANCUS CARDINAL SPELLMAN President MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretal)f Write OATHOLIO NfIAR IiAST WELFARE Assoo 1)80 MadlsolJ Avenuomiddot New York NY 10017 -felGpilonel 212YUkon 6middot6840

Dormitory Proves Stonehill Permanently Coeducational

Way back in 1951 when the first girl enrolled in Stoneshyhill College no one could have imagined that a girls dormishytory would ever be built onmiddot the campus But the sound of steam shovels and hammers filling the air over the lovely grounds in Easton is proof

and two girls from the seniorthat the long planned for daslr-assisting the housemothergirls dorm will soon be a Mrs Grace Callahan

reality When Stonehill was The experiment worked so founded in 1948 as a mens colshy well in fact that this coming lege the fledgling school had Fall both the freshman and just gotten off to a good start sophomore girls will be housed when the Korean War came this way leaving only the junior along and emptied the classshy and senior girls still renting Yooms as the young men went quarters in private homes chosen into the services by the college as all the nonshy

That was the year that many commuting girls have done in small colleges had to close their the past gates forever But at Stonehill That typical campus situation the Holy Cross order was detershy -the sorority house-is not in mined to hold onto this new the picture at Stonehill-or frashyschool that they had planned for ternity houses either for that so long matter No sororities or fraternishy

What could they do to keep ties are allowed on the campus the college operating until the There is a cl11b however that war was over and the boys came is the girls own - the Crosier back Of course Open their Club Mrs Yosgandes is the gates to girl students clubs faculty advisor and she deshy

Faculty Pleased scribes it as the organization What started out as a temposhy for women studentE who want

rary expediency somehow over to contribute in their own parshythe years has acquired a happy middotticular way as women to their permanancy No one could be college more pleased about this turn of Through their annualmusical events than the Stonehill faculty Crosier Curtain Calls theyitself raise money to acquire manymiddot

Helping out in Jhe ground things that add beauty and breaking ceremony for the new charm to campus life This yeardorm Mrs Virginia Yosgandes they purchased two very lovelythe Dean of Women at the colshy silver tea and coffee services lege saiei I guess everyone will Any official group at the collegereally believe that the girls are is allowed to borrow the sets and here til stay they have already been used in

Mrs Yosgandes says that since many functions she first came to the Stonehill New Signfaculty in 1958 rumors have

Mrs Yosgandes says Thebeen popping up that Stonehill girls will be very pleased whenwill soon return to its original they come back th~~ Fallto seestatus as an all male school The the beautiful new sign theynew dorm she says will be visshybought for the college installedible proof of the permanancy of on Route No 138 women on the beautiful campus

Its very easy to picture theThe $1150000 building deshyvery charming Dean presidingsigned to accommodate 200 girls

graciously at a faculty tea Aand proctors will be three stories parishioner of Immaculate Conshyof red brick Architects W Chesshyception chulCh in Easton she ister arown and Associates and in ~rivate life an enthusiasticwntractors C A Batson and homemaker anc the mother of aCompany are planning to comshy13 year old daughter Christineplete work on the dorm in time Her husband John is assistantfor the opening of classes in principal at Franklin JuniorSeptember 1967 It will be the High first unit of a five dormitory

She speaks with great convicshycomplex planned fo the women on tion about college girls holdingcampus

onto feminine ideals while surshyKitchen ~pace rounded-and at Stonjhill outshyMrs Yosgandes is happy about numbered 3 to 1- by menthe fact that the new dorm will While were encoulaging themhave a kitchenette on each floor to be acdve in thpound communitywhere the girls can cook small and the church and in politicsmeals and entertain guests Shes and encouragint them to deshyhoping that the dorms built after

more velop their abilities to the full shythis me will providtgt even est-we never fail to take intokitchen space for the girls to account the fact that they arepractice the culinary arts women and in this competitiveM a n~ tImes homemaking world theyll have to -fight toskills come to a complete halt maintain their feminine idenshywhen a girl goes to college she tity says Apparently all classroom

work and rio cooking make Jane Coed Actiiti~s

Coed a dull girl in the room When she fi rst came to the where shell be spending a great college she sltys the girls were deal of time after graduationshy mainly interested in strictlythe dtchen feminine extra curricular activishy

Mrs Yosgandes says A great ties-fastion shows teas gids many cCJlleges have been workshy sports Bd this has changed radshying witt this problem and wonshy ically in the last few years and dering what to do about it Beshy now the girls are much more inshycause theyve had no living terested in the coed acti vitiesshyquarters for girls on campus the newspapers the debating Stonehiiil has had to do out of team the drama club Stonehill necessit) what many other colshy is noted a~ one of a small handshyleges have chosen to do recently ful gtf Catholic colleges where The Dean describp~ an experishy girls are middotactive in every part of ment that the collFge tJied last college life Every coure at yeal tha has worked out exshy StonehHj is opel to girls tremely well We still havent had a woman

Experiment Successful president of our student governshyThe college leased a grollp of ing body the Senate Mrs

rooms il an apartmelt building Yosgandes says Now girls in Brockton last Fall where all what are yOIi waiting for the freshman girls who were not commuters-55 of them-lived in housekeeping apartments In Red Groups There were four girls in each BERLIN (NC)-Over 85 per apartment all sharing the reshy (ent of East German children sponsibilities of housekeeping between the ltlges of 6 and 14 are

The girls hat two sets of mCl11)ers of communist youth 1)IoctOS - two aIumni wumen ~nIUps

lrt-OE ANCH0) 17 Thurs Aug 25 1966

PriestCuod Goal Of Top Skater

GREAT FALLS (NC)-A good many folks in this Montana toWlll will attest that teenager J Mishlll Petkevich is a pretty good skate -on or oH the ice

The affable blond youngster 17 topped a field of 136 pershyformers in the three-day Lake Placid N Y international free style competition sanctioned by the U S and Canadian Figure Skating Assoclations The Great Falls lad was the judges unamiddot1ishymous choice for the mens gold medal in the finals

But Petkevich doesnt lose his cool off the ice His classmates and teachers at Great Falls Censhytral 3igh School claim hes liIl

winner in every event He spends more than 40 hours 11 week in skating training but carries the full load of class studies and consistently turns Up on the schools honor roll Hes a member of the National Honor Society

The school supported me ami the way Everyone has beeEl wonderfUl to me the modest youngster saia Hes been -skatshying since he was 2 He credit his achievements to his Catholic Faith the sacrifices of his parshyents and of Arthur Bourke senshyiormiddot professional of the Great Falls Figure Skating Club He said All I did was skatemiddotGROUND-BREAKING The Very Rev John T Corr

I hope some day to become~esc president of Stonehill College turns a shovelful of priest Petkevich said wbeilearth to mark start of construction 0pound a 200-student dormshy a~ked his ambition I hope 14gt itory for women on the Stonehill campus Watching the proshy attend Notre Dame for at leasa celtlures are left to right Mrs Virginia Yosgandes dean af two years and then I h9pe to gf)

to the Catholic University fl4women John C Doody 66 Alumni fund chairman Robert AmericaBatson contractor Harold Bonvie ass~iate of the archishytect

Msgr Canty Continued from Page OneRussian Schools ing studies at S1 Marys High

Taunton Boston- College and S1 Bernards Seminary RochesshyChristian Brother Lauds Students terN Y

nespect for Intellectuols He served as assistant at Our Lady 01 the Isle NantucketCHICAGO (NC)-Students in to foreign languages than Amershy Holy Family Taunton St

schools behind the Iron Curtain icans Most students take a Marys Barrowsville and Stgo at their studies with a passhy seven-year sequence of English Johns Attleboro He was apshysion said Brother Kevin Mark German or French English he pointed to the Chaplains CorPJFSC who toured Russia and added is the most popular lanshy of the United States Navy infour satellite countries with 19 guage and more emphasis is January 1942 and retiredwitbother U S rducatois placeltl on reading and speaking the rank of captain in Decemshy

Brothel Mark who is princishy than on writing it ber 196gt Pope John XXIII pal 9f St Mels high school here Brother Mark said that there elevated him to the rank of attributed much of their motivashy is almost nothing that he would Domestil Prelate with the title tion to the students attitude that lift from the Soviet school sysshy of Right Reverend Monsignor iI What I do does contribute to tem and apply in the U S May 1962 the welfare of the state He admitted however that Bishop Connolly named Monshy

Brother said he felt that stushy they do get results They have a signor Canty pastor of St Paulsdents in this country lack motishy tremendous capacity for conshy Taunt-ln in December 1963 vation because were spoiled centration when they set their Industrial improvements have sights for example their space made it that a young man can program Its not all a matter go into a trade and make very of being chained to a lab table good money BLUE RIBBON

In the Soviet Union he said there seems to be a great reshyspect for intellectuals and the LAlnNDRY student is thought of as a proshy

01 STOPfessional schJlar 273 CE~RAl AVE~UIIG CfflTERTeaching is considered a proshy

fession and remunelated accordshy e Television C FmiddotI ure illgly WY 2-6216o r-cerv

St Mels principal observed on IlA Allen St Newhdfordhis tour that there was little NEW BEDFORD questioning on the part of the students

The chSSloom situation he said is very much teacher ori shyented that is study in depth is 21 DAY PILGRIMAGES TO EUROPE done on the teachers inspiration

rou~ 1-Legion of Mary Pilgrimage leaving Sept 12th with Truth in such areas as history Father Edward A Oi-viera will visit Killarney Dublin Paris

cllld literature is accepted as a Lourdes Rome Madrid Lisbon and Fatima - Tour 2shyforegone conclusion and stushyHoly Cross Fathers Pilgrimage leaving Oct 10th with Frdents just memorize what has

already been discovered ----- lobert E McDonnell will wsit lisbon Fatima 1odrid Rome Lourdes Paris and londonIike F)rc~gn Linutges -cota cost is $82900 - Time PaymentsmiddotIn the area of science howshy arranged ever the situation is difterent

()Ii TOUR tOLDERS CONTACT STEolfEN A MARIIEYhe pont~d out because in scishyence there is an attitude of I n~ust discover Catholic Travel

-Office

The R1~middotmiddotmiddotO p oth-r Mark ~ltk St New Befl- -ass 02748

said ~ ve 11111j Ill)le auention

BURNERS

BUrntlr Service

Famous Reading HARDCQAl

NEW ENGLAND COKE

t8 THE ~NCHOR-Dioceseof fo Rivef-Thurs Aug 25 1966 J~sut I)riest Says Some Public I b M t EmploYE~~S Have Right to Strike

-

Urges uO or ovemen S NEW (NC) -Public however YORK Government hasmiddot h C employees in certain fields have been expanding its cQncern andIn Heml$p ere ooperate the right to strike against the has beenmoving into ar~as of government a priest declared transportation education recre-

By MsgrGooJrge C Higgins (Director Socian Actiolll Dept NCWC)

The relationship between the American labor moveshyment and the Latin American Confed~ration of Christian Trade Unions (CLASC) leaves much to be desired as we

middot thO d th 1- have aready noted severa1 t Imes m IS co umn urmg e

past four or five years The two movements are deeply different things to different peoshy

auspicious of one another and just when they seem to be on the verge of settling or at least -patching up their differshyences they go at it again and recklesslystart hurling insults at one another

To jUdge from What they sayIi b 0 u t on e another publicshy1yen as well as privately on e would t h ink that they were natural-born enshyemies whe~eas in fact they have much in common-much inore than they seem to realizeshyand for obvious reasons ought violent MisS Duncan was an officer of The fourth public member Harshyto be c60p~rating With onean- Moreo~er at least one promi~theSodality a cheerleader for vardlaw school professorVern ether as closely as pOSSible nent spokesman for the AFL- four years a member of the Ten- Countryman half ci-itiCized the This writer has learn~ci the hard WR and muc~ to hiS so~-row that any outSider who 18

fOolish enough totryto mediatek f

~tween them JS as mg or troouble

C f t Gommun same If for example one suggests

as I have done on more than one Occasion that soine of the anti U S propaganda emanating from CLASCsources revealS atremely harmful to the cause of n a i v e misunderstanding of Amerlcan trade unionism and American capitalism andor ari $ver-simplification of Catholic Social teaching he runs the risk 9f being written off as a blind -not tOsay reactionary apologist for so-called Yanqui ~mperial-

iBm If on the other hand oneslig

gests that some of the anti- CLASC propaganda enianating

fro m AFL-CI0 sources is equally naive and unsoPllisti shyeatedhe runs the same Sort of risk in reverse That is to say he is likely to be told--v~ry politely of course -that if he were to take off his Catholic blinkers and look at the record objectively he would quickly come to realize that CLASC is in reality playing t~ecipal rival in Latin America) riages in their mission parishes communist game in Latin Amer- there is a gEirierous mixture of Msgr Milia stated Since the iea superficial appearances to cultural chauvinism and envy Ogdensburg mission was opened the contrary notwithstanding that accompanies the most legit- a modern new church bas been

Both CaD Learn imate misgivings built under its direction in the Be that as it may I still think Even the Latinos middotthemselve~ seaport ofMatararii two mission

~t CLASC has a lot to learn he points out will admit on ac- churches have oeen completed about _ and from American casion that their consumirig fear and a lalge parish church and trade unionism And if that of Yanqui imperialism is often center are currently under conshymakes me a reactionary Yankee irrational But there it is he re- struction in Mollendo ehauvinist so be it minds us and the basic prob-

By the same token however aiso think that the American

labor movement has much to learn about -- and from - the Christian trade union movement in Latin America The first thing it has to learn is that the Am~r-leap philosophy of pure-andshysimple bread-~d-butter union ism which all things considshyered has worked satisfactorily in this country is not necessarily well adapted to the present-day Deeds of Latin America

Meaning of Revolution Another way of saying the

same thing is that American iabor representativesworking on Latin America problemswm have to reconcile themselves to the fact that a social revolu-Uon is called for in Latin American labor federation that doesnt subscribe to a revolushytionary ideology is probably doomed to failure

The word revolution meaos J-

pIe of course To the leaders of CLASC it means a sweeping program of socioeconomic and political reform which goes far beyond the limited goals of bread-and-butter unionism

The leaders of CLASC are convinced that such a revolushytioo is demanded bythe Chrisshytian social ethic to which they subscribe and from which they derive their ideology

Perceptive Critique Some U S Labor repshy

resentatives are skeptical to say the least~bout the allegedly Christian content of CLASCs militant ideology They admit theneed for a peaceful revolushytion in Latin Americn butthey are convinced thatCLASC wants this revolution to be Feehan High School Attleboro alties in a letter tc therimes

lem is how to insure con~ PAVlA V I tlnuing cooperation between 0 untee rs Yanqui and Latino in spite of Complete TlIainirigit

Such cooperation Dr Hawkins WASHINGTON (NC)-Fortyshyconcludes will be impossible unshyless the leaders of the American labor movement positively indi~

cete their acceptance of social revolution in Latin America This will require he says

more than the generous transshyfusions of economic aid the stimulation under United States

labors auspices of leadership training programs for workers

and other cooperative ventures Need Broader View

What is required he insists ltCia a broader view-an ability on the part of the American la bor statemen to adopt policies that will not always accord with OUI own value~ and more speshy

cificall~ the tempering of (their) hosannas to free entershyprUie ___

inter-American labor unity I fully agree in this respect with Dr Carroll Hawkins Associate

Professor of Political Science at Michigan State University who recently published a most pershyceptive critique of American trade union policy in Latin- Catholics in Mollendo Peru the

America (The 0RIT and Amer diocesan missions director reshyican Trade Unions Conflicting ported Perspectives Industrial Rela- The New York priests were tionsand Social Changes in sent to Peru after Pope Paul Latin America University of vi -asked that more priests be Florida Press) pr9vjd~d fOr the people opoundSouth

Basic Problem America Msgr Anthony A Mi-Dr Hawkins admits of course lia said He estimated more than

that in all the Latin American 90 percent of the priests in criticism of United States unioniperu are from other countries in the ORIT (the Latin Ameli can regional unit of the Interna In 1965 the priests from Ogshytional Confederation of Free denburg administered 445 bap-Trade Unions and CLASCs prin tisms and perfoImed 64 mar-

CIOhas publicly charged in ej_ nis Club for two years and a suggested penaltiel fect that CLASCs ideology three yeaT member of the FU- owes more to Marxism than it ture Nurses club Father Carey sl~id the ~ays does to Christianity He finds it when pay and working condi-

An instructor in the Confra- tions for men and women inhard he says to accept the fact ternity of Christian Doctrine that the Christian labor move- civil service were determine4 byproglam in Our Lady of Mt I g I t d d t t

t middot A e IS a Ive It n a minIS ra Ive ment 0f L a In merIca IS non- Carmel Parish Seekonk the fiat have pas ed a d Communist s n we now

In my judgment this kind of criticism of CLASC by spokesshymen fltr the AFL-CIO is ex

three volunteers have completed the Second National Training Session sponsored by the Papal Volunteers for Latin America and received assignments in some ten Latin American coun- tries

Special ceremonies ended the six-week training session at the Catholic University of America where volunteers studied the apostolic work of the Church the laymans role in the aposshytolate and principles of spiritual life as well as the religion ecoshynomics and culture of Latin America

Before leavillg for their asshysignments the volunteers will take intensive four-month lanshy

guage anl culture courses in a Latin American language centerbull

eighth winner of this scholarship plumeoursElves that we share will enter the Childrens Hosshypital School of Nursing Boston in Septembel-

Ogdensburg Priests

SellYe Peru Mission OGDENSBURG (NC) -- Four

Ogdensburg priests currently are ministering to the n~eds of_13OOO

~ere

Father Philip Carey sJ exshyecutive director of the Xavier Institute of Industrial Relations acknowledged t hat certain strikes aJre intolerable But he said that when the governmentacts in a proprietary function it must follow the same rules it prescribes for private enterprise

In a letter to the New York Times Father Carey criticized ~y implication a proposed state -llw that wetulltilincrease the penalties to be imposed on strikshying union of public employees

MlISS LHNDA DUNCAN Th~proposedlaw grew out of recommendations of a five-man

Feehan Alumna task force named by Gov Nel son Rockefeller to study the

Receives Award problem after a 19-day transit strike crippled Newmiddot York City

Miss Linda Duncan daughter in January of Mrs George Duncan and the - NeCeSSBlry for Bargaining late George Duncan 61 Sykes Father Carey one of four Rd Seekonk has been awarded pubiic members of the mayors the eighth annual scholarship of committee that helped settle the the Attleboro Area Nurses strike disagreed with two other Chapter publlc memlgters Vh_o had previshyA 1966 graduate of Bishop ously supported the stiffer pen-

and internal concord a str~ke against itconstitutes mutiny and rebellion (UCLA) Sister Muriel a native

Pgbllsh Gudelnes For Ecumenisn

ALLENTOWN (NC) - The commission of ecumenism of the Allentown diocese here in Pennshysylvania has published a 22-page booklet of ecumenical guidelines to aid priests in guiding the laity The guidelines include general

permission for non-Catholics to serve as witnesses at Catholic weddings for Catholics to serve as witnesses at non-Catholic weddings and for burial of non-Catholics in Catholic ceremonies with a priest or a non-Catholic clergyman cltmducting graveside eeremonies

SHELL DADSON OIL

24-Hollr Oil

GLE COAL amp OIL CO IncI

640 Pleasant Street Tel WY 6-8271 New Bedford

this decision-making with the working p E~ 0 P Ie themselves through the process of collective bargaining

If collective bargaining is to be the rule he said we must agree to grant the right to strike~ Without this right he said there is no union and no coll~ctive balmiddotgaining

Expands Concern-in considering strikes by pu~ lie employees he dedared one muSt distinguishb~tween the state as a sovereign and the g()vernment acting in a proprishyetary function When the state aets as the defender of the peace or the promoter of justice

of Corning Iajoined the Sisters of the Humility of Mary in 1930 In recent years she has been ehairman of professionafarts deshypartment and college registrar

ation and a host of other services formerly performed by privategroups he continued

These activities are ancillary and economic and here the state in acting in a proprishyetry function When it so acts it ought to be subject tl) the same rules of conduct the government prescribes for private entershy

prise Strikes by firefighters and powerhouse uti lit y workers would be wrong however he said because it is difficult to imagine anY benefit they might gain to counterbalance the fear- fut harm such a l strike would impose on the community Buys Banners For Memorial

CHICAGO (NC)-A Chicago advertising executive has bought 44 brightly-colored religious ~anners tat -hung in the Nashy

tlOnal Srme of the Im~aculate ConceptIon during Luci Johnshysons wed(iin~ -

Earle Ludgin a trustee of the University of Chicago said he will donate the banners to the

university~ Rockefeller Memoshyrial Chapel in memory of his late wife

The banners for which Ludgin reportedly paid more than $40000 were originally created for the Vatlcan PavIIIon at the New York World Fair

A group of Washington D C residents bought ttie banners when the fair closed and arshyranged to have them exhibited in the Shrine until they could be sold Lugdin bought themin April but agreed at the request of Shrine officials to leave them in the Shrine until after Lucia wedding

lame College Head

OTTUMWA (NC) Sis t er

Muriel Hogan has been named the third presi4ent of Ottumwa Heights College here in Iowa She succeeds Sister Marie Anshy

ciue Kennedy woo win engagem graduate study in oominunishy

eations at the University of California Los Angeles branch

Offering You 3 Savings Plans

Home Financing

WAREHAM CO-OPERATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mabull

Telephone 295-2400 Banll SerVice YlIIIIIII

I

Ask Court Bar Use of Church Propertyfor Public SchoQ~middot WHITE ~S (MC) - A the cl883rooms ~ut Church

group of some 25 citizens repre- npokesman reporte~ that in line sented by the American Jewish with New York archdiocesan Congress has asked the New York State Supreme Court here to restrain the board of Ramapo School District 2 Rockland County from holding public school classes in property leased from religious bodies

The school board faced with severe-overcrowding planned to lease eight rooms from St Josephs Catholic Church and five from lem~e Beth El in Spring Valley The action was approved by 8tateEducation Commissioner Jame$ EAllen Jr

A ComllllJJlt served 0ill the rlChool board by the AJC charged the acti~n o~ld ~otateChurchshyState separation guaranteed by the First Amendment to the Constitution as well as other provisions of the state constitushytion

It is believed to be the first wch challenge made regarding

the use of religiO18 facilities for public school use

lhe st Josephproperty conshysists of an eightclasSroom school building adjacent to but sepashyrated from the chureh It is Ill good condition but will not be used by the p8rish thismiddot year because it has bUilt a new bUildshying for expanding its acbool to 141 classes

All religioUs ~bols had Ileen removed from the oder building in preparation for its use as a public school

The district school board had offered a fair market rent for

PAV~A deg Missionary Record Continued from Page Thirteen

A nurse from Chicago baa taken Lucillellpla~on the aposshytolic team and ber purpose in returning is to help her successhy80r work into the project smoothly It takes so long to get into 11 she Aid so II dont WJmt Il~r to spendtbree

years j~ g~tting organized~

Benedictine Marks 80th Anniversary

ST JOSEPHmiddot (NC)-The oldshyest Benedictine nun in Minneshysota-and one of the oldest m the world~marked the 80th anshyniversary of her entrance into the order ma Mass for all Beneshydictine jubil~tians held at St Benedicts convent here

Sister Sophia Zimmer was 1~ years old Dec 2 1965 She Wall

born in a log cabin about 1 block away from the convent An open house for her relatives and friends was held at the conv~nt

Receives Students cAsTELGANDOLFO (NC)shyPoPe Paul vI received in audishyence at his Summer home here students frOm 34 nations includshying many non-Catholics who are taking Summer courses in the ItaUaa language aDd culture sponsored by the Rome branch of the Catholic University fII IWaD

policy the properly would be made available for public school use at a token dollar-a-year rental

cmOS Cmpetes C~~ege ~rr(l))g~m

WASHINGTON (NC)-A class of 97 under-privileged high school students was graduated on completion of an eight-week Summer college orientation proshy

gram at Georgetown University The exercises i attended by faculty and parents Qf the stushydents involved students who had completed their Sophomore year in District of Colwnbia high schools They were chosen for the special course because teachers and counselors believed they have the ~billty to do colshylege work alihoug~ their presshyent high school records indicate little likelihood of college acshyceptance Ninoty-fiveOf the 97 students were Negroes md the ratio of males to females was aboutmiddot tbree-to-two ~

The pro~~~~Ch began in 1965 is financed by the NaUonal science Fowidationmiddot the District of Columbia public school sysshy

tem and Georgetown In addition to academic work

the students were given cltgtUrsetl in reading improvement and counseling gUidance Athletie and cultural events underwrit shyten by the program were also bKluded in their schedules

nearly 42 years Bishop Gerow churches degespeciallY Negro said Of late I have feltmiddotthat X houses of worshIp which middotWere have not the stamina to caJTY I bombedmiddot and burned

on as I have done in the past Whena p~ttern of destn1c~ion This load should be borne by 1 develops as It has m our state youngerman then it sincumbent upon all ntereston Yoiit

Cathollc lnereaSe m~n ~ ~ood ~i~ througho~t MiSSISSIPPI to Jom hands m Savings

The ~venth bishop of~edio- helpingthe affectedmiddot churches 0 Invested In cesemiddotwhlch was founded ID 1~37 and in showing clearly our con- and encompasses 111 of Missls- demnation at all acts of violencemiddot CATHOLIC CHURCH sippi Bishop Gerow h8ll s~ lawlessness and destruction the Catholic population IJOw from 31264 to 75000 in his 41 years of office The number of priests in the diocese grew from 63 to 220 and churches md misshysions from 108 to 243

The last few years of llacial violence perhaps were the most troub1d for Bishop Gerows long ad inistration middotHemiddot met the challenge with courage

In the face of many-sided opshyposition Bishop Gerow in 1964 directed the first grades of Cathshyolicmiddot schools in the state to be racially integrated The next

Missionaries Move Seminar to Ohio

DAYTON (NC) -The White Fathers a missionary society which bas served in Africa for nearly a century is llloving its U S seminary to Dayton

St Josephs Seminary which had been in operation at Onshydliota N Y near Saranac Lake will re-open under the same

name in four residences near the campus of the University of

Dayton The buildings have been rented from the university

Eventually the White Fathers plan to build their own seminary

middotfacilities somewhere in ~e area according to Fatber Paul lo1e1le WF~

THE ANCHOR- middot19 Thurs Aug 25 1966

KC Melll1il~er~~ip

At AJ~Tome e~~gh MIAMI BEACH (NC)-In his

report at the 84th annual meetshying of the Supreme Council of the Knights of Columbus Sushypreme Knight John W McDevitt made these points

Membership on June 30 1966 stood at an all-time high of 1183896 The orders insurance covershyage passed the $15 billion mark during the year

The orders assets reached III

neW plateau of $28122840028 at the end of the fiscal year

The society i~ continuing its support of the campaign to st~m p(gtrnography

Revise Ceremonial Progress is being made onthe

re_Vision of the orders cerempnshyial to give it a total family middotclishymate and make it consistent with moder day philosophy of social justice and religious pracshytice

The K of C have undertaken distribution of copies of the 1~ew Testament to Catholic gradllates

COURAGE PERSONIFIED John St Marie of B~YQ of the Naval Offilaquoer CandfClatE port Minn CQnfined to a wheelchair since a 1953 pOlio ~chool in Newport R I an(J ill

~dying the question of proshyattack has received a scholarship to the University of viding a similar servilte ~orMinnesota law school atter successfully maintaining an Ashy Catholic graduatell of the Qffi shyminus average in undergraduate work at the College of cers Candidate School of ihe St Thomas St Paul Minn irQ Photo Canadian Navy

It saluted Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York on biI

Welcomes Successor Naming of Apostolic Administrato

Pleases Bishop Gerow 81 JACKSON (NC)-Mississippll1 year he followed with a direeshy

courageous 81-year-old Bihop tive that Catholic schools be deshyOliver Gerow welcomed his suc- segregated completely ceSSor Bishop Joseph B Bruni- Helps Restore Churches ni 55 as spiritual head of the Despite reported threats ofmiddot Natchez-Jacklon diocese as one violence fro m segregationist who is active vigorous and has ranks the aged prelate was good sound judgment among leaders of an interfaith

X am very happy in being groupmiddot which formed the Comshyrelieved of the heavy responSl- mittee of middotConcernmiddot soHcited middotbillty that I have borne for money labor and materIals for

middotthe bishop stated in a letterred AND in every Catholic church in the INSTITUTIONAL BONDSstate

His appeal for $300000 to re-middot I Umiddot f $500 M store more than 30 d~stroyed n nits 0 or ore and damaged churches brought Keenan amp CImiddotarey bie contributions to the Committee 9f Concern from various sections Minneapolis Minnesota of the country

0

M~ntle Plumbing amp ~ating Co Inc~

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET Fall River OS 57497

for detailed information write to

CHARLES A~ MURPHY Registered Representative

145 Pond $treet Winchester Mass

PA 9-2696 And

Name bullbullbull ~ Address A

City _

50 years in the priesthood payshying tribute to him not only beshycause of his dignity as a pi-iest and cardinal but also because he 1S a great and wholesome mail

Relic Stolen NEW YORK (NC)-A reputed

relic of the cross on which Chtist died has been stolen from the Church of the Most Holy Reshydeemer here It was removed from a side altar tabernacle

where it had been placed shortshyly after the churchs establishshy

ment by the Redemptoriad Fathers some 125 years ago

~

GULF HILL DAIRY so DARTMOUTH MASS

RO THE ANCHO~-Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

1

RELIGIOUS SUPERIORS INSTITUTE ON STONEHILTJ CAMPUS SMS Guadalcanal Solomon Islands Standing Sr Florita DP King Sr Mary LUk~ St about to enter the hall for her lecture Center Some ston Mass Sr Mary of Bathany SP Holyoke Sr Mary de Sales F$SJ r the sisters who attended Sister Lukes talk were Sr Josepha SC Conshy Holyoke Right Mrs Mary Virginia Yosgandes h-ouse mother wavesgood ent Station NJ Sr Mary Kenneth Amityville NY Sr Mary (fheresa bye tothe departing nuns I

Brooklyn Church Hopes Nuns Move Into Cent~r of Lij~e Criticizes Irish lribunal Lacks By Dorothy Eastman -Social Security

When in the third year of Vatican II the momentous decision was made toinvitewO- dmiddot LIMERICK (NC) - FatherJ men observers to audit a Council forthe first ~ime to represent all J~remiah Newman professor ofuris ICtlon the Sister chosen BROOKLYN (NC)-Msgr the nuns in America was Sister Mary Luke Tobin Mother General of the Sisters of Lor- sociology at Irelands Maynooth

IlAarion J Reinhardt pre- etto When shewasasked recently while visiting the Fall River Diocese what impressed College criticizedprivate agenshyJ~L h t b t th C 1 cies and the national governshyIdlng Judge of the Trlblillal er mos a ou e oune) h t b t h h d k ment for their failure to increaseshe said with a wry smile We aVe 0 e rna ure enoug er own or er was wor mg(1)f the Diocese of Brooklyn h to live in insecurity toward these ends She told of all subsidies to families Iltas announced that the bill of The fact that we were t ere Will these changes be easy experiment soine of her Sisters After insisting that it would $Omplaint of 15 former teachers at all I The Sister is too much of a have been engllged in for the be best for private agencies and of St Johns Un~versity had to At a Stonehill College institute realist to give that impression past twu years in Pueblo Colo- local governments to administer be dismissed because of lack of Sister Luke spoke of her many Its going to be fraught with rado Although most of the 1100 social security Father Newman jurisdiction on the part of the other impressions of the Council difficulties she warns but Sisters of Lorettv are teachers said that since they seemed unshy

ecclesiastical court _ where she and seven other Sis- what isnt this small group of Sisters in willing or unable to do this the The Brooklyn ecclesiastical tels were auditresses for the last There are more than a few Pueblo 1s doing no t~aching-in job had to be done by the natshy

$Ourt which operates under two years of Vatican II Over Sisters who are troubled and schools anyway They simply jonal government ~llnon law said it is pmited in 450 Mothers Superior from 55 sometimes shocked these days live among the poor as good He said that according to jurisdiction to only spiritual different Orders were gathered by many of the changes hi their neighbors he 1pin jg wherever Catholic soCial teaching there ltuestions at the Easton campus for the communities The Mother Gen- they cllD leading discussion was no limit to the amount of Charge Contralaquot Breach five day Institute directed by eral would warn them that its groups counselling etc government aid that is permis-

The 5000 word document Rev William FHogan CSC pointless for them to say Thill Asked to comment on the re- sibie and desirable if governshypointed out that the decree of Sister Luke was one of a group is not the community I entered cent experiment in Milwaukee mEmt aid was the Qnly practical Giisrriissalis without prejudice to of noteliltspeakers who talked When it comes to that she says where30 School Sisters of St (sbl~tion to poverty problems lbhe merits of the case to the superiors on the subject we all might say This is not the Francis left their convents for

If the Metropolitan Tribunal of the I Sister in the modern Church Iwas baptized into or three weekstO work in secular If the archdiocese of New York world this is not the world I was b()rn jobs - oneSister wa3 assigned

T b 1 f the Sacred into Change is a fact of life S t~ the rI una 0 Adapting a line from Charles as a newspaper reporer- IS er Roman Rota reversesthe decree Dickens to describe this contro she points out~ and we can~t keep Luke predicted a great deal the casewiil be returned to the versial post Council age Sister things as they are or say Stop more~ of this kind of liniited Tribunal of the Diocese of the World-I want to get off f i t th I w ld ]Brooklyn for adjudications upon t~ees sa~~iSTi~iSt~eth~o~r Role of Superiors ~~~re ~o di~~a~~c~i~t n~~ Ms merits it was stated times She paintedavivid ver- The role the Superiors will she said

The petition of complaint bal picture of the world that lies play in the formation of what Since her own Order founded filed by Father Peter OReilly ahead for Sisters She said it has been called The New Nun in 1812 is quite new all religious

s~f Chicago on behalf of himself would certainly be a challenging Lwuakeouattlintheed fs~roeh~ ~~s~~~t~ orders go and is the liirst comshylind the other ousted teachers one and that conventlife inthe munity founded in America charged he university which is future is certain to undergo She urged them to create a cli- without European ties the Sisshyeonducted by theVincentian many radical changes mate where Sisters can liveters of Loretto weal habits more Fathers with breach of contract community life at its best She -modern than most But itsstill

The Superior~ were told that entreated them to keep thls cli-The dispute has been marked bY d bl d ff t the dress of 1812 not 1966 so it d k t f an m Ispensa e gUl e me ec - mate free from legallsm andlitudent unrest an pIC e mg 0 th hmiddotmiddot th will soon be changed As soon I mg ese c anges IS e map survelmiddotllance Ie schoo s campuses f th f t th t th C 1 as the all-mlll Congregation

or e u ure a e ounCl A community should be a of Religious in Rome approv~sMoral Issue Fatners drew up for the Church place where there- is safety for She called the CouncII Decrees the Sisters new design that is About 30 teachers were fired fl t d f t f dff

Rost December in a dispute over the documentS ofhighest au- cop IC an sa e y or J er- Tliey have submitted one de~ign rlty We should all have ~nes apd s~fety to cultiv~te that the fathers turnEd downadministration-faculty relation- tho d t h d Sh f I the mInd of Vatlcan II and then lverSI y s ~ sal e ee s lihey thought it was too modshyships and other issues They t I th t th h ld be

b b f we c~n move Into actlon she s rongy a ere ~u r -ern Sister Luke says UWhat anwere joined y anum er 0 I t I g I fe ther teachers In a strike that told her healers - 1Jloe ~o~a IY In re 1 J~)Us 1 incredible thing for US to ask shy --uAfterall were not Trap- that we choose our own clothes has continued since January Whi~h Way psts

l she adds with a laughThe court found that tpe How will the Sisters know in Warning that the time has S t Lk tl - b

uteceniontractual controversy was not whicli direction they should come for a re-evaluation of the _ IS ~rth y e~mt~ a spiritual mattelin a canoliical move in the manyarells so(in to true meaning of community she ne oIl e d~rs wo~~ ever ~ llense of the word spiritual change cExperiment Sister told the Superiors that commu- bo~a h a sre~t a f ~gUS aild that there was no allegation Luke advises so often its almost nity doesnt mean conformity or 0 y e oCle ~ o anon ef a violation of an ecclesiastical her motto We really cannot a hotel life either or even a Lawyrs Does thIS mian that law arid that the time was not move into change without ex-lot of happy t9getherness th~ SI~ters may at last have a opportune for a decision of perimentation she says and around the television set voIce 111 the formatIon of canon moral responsibility because the we will be engaged in tremen- A ~ital new aspect of commu- la-at least th~ laws that rUI~ secular courts would first have dous experiments from now on- nity is the idea of what Sister thel~ O~derS SIster Luke deshyto determine whether there was to adapt religious life to the Luke calls sub communities- vout y opes so a breach of contractual duty times in which we live the convents immediate neigh- Its certain that the future for

The church court found as a The revisions that lie ahead borhood the parish the civic the Sisters will be a very differshymatter of law that St Johns for religious orders will bring commumty lay people 111 the ent one than anyone could have 141 NO MAINUniversity as a corporation Sisters into the mainstream of same profession as the Sister- imagined a few short years ago J~ formed under the law of the modern life Sister Luke for for instance other nurses or The Holy Father has urged them iii FALL RIVER State of w York did not have one has no doubts that this is tElachers We have allowed too the~ to move from the margin e the ecclesiastical privilege of where they belong We ought great a gap to exist between our- of life to the center of life~ 873 COUNTY demanding that suits against it to be willing to take the risks) selves and the laity she says Will the move be successful SOMERSETbe heard in an ecclesiasticalmiddot that gO along with this plunge In an interviewmiddot following her Sister Luke says We can only CDOurt into the mainstream she says talk Sister ~uke was asked how know by taking a ChanCE

Feai makes the wolf bigger than be is

Rer Bankings Already D~ne

~jI--~1 W

tt-~~gt_ri~

~j F~ p ~tl Iim F-ilNgt

~l i

ll 11 ~~

W = ~

~gtltl ~

-~ ~~ StIesaves I lot of alunle Mtime forso maily other thinlS ~i She banks by mail at Te ~ OLD R D8 KI h 7reg E AN W at about you

liii FREE mall forms ~1 The mOld Red Bank W

$ Fall River Savings Bankjilll q

Page 9: 08.25.66

9 ~Swooned Priest Eggplant Dish U$ong Legendary P~r$ey P~~B1)t

By Joseph amI MarilYllll Roderick The cool weather where ~gain and with it the grass

has begun to break donnancy and send up little green shoots which means that the lawn mowers which have been restshying for a few weeks have got to be brought back to action

The drought that we had uperienced for the past three Summers has raised havoc with lawns and it doesnt seem much good can be done this season in areas still under water restrictions Howshyever in those that are not theremiddotre a few thingsmiddotwhich can be done middotbetween now and 1hetirst -bst to help lawns along To begin with this is amiddot good

middottime to apply itmiddot weed killer of some kin to I prefer tousecomshybination weed killer and fertil shyzer as this saves time and does el good job This should help dear up the lawn and start the grass out of dormancy Follow this with a good raking to disshylodge some of the matted grass and you are well on your way

to a healthy lawn in the Spring The next step is to buy a good grass seed if your lawn is well established and to apply it at ab04t half the rate or less sugshymiddotgested on the packageThe idea behind this is to fill in places where the lawn is thin or where weeds have been killed Incishydentally it is a good idea to wait two or three weeks aftermiddot

middot you have applied weed killer middotbefore you start new grass seed

It is important that your seed be a good brand and quality A eheap seed contains many coarse ~escues and annual graSses which will do the lawn very little good over the long run Jetter to buy a very good seed in small amounts than an iJlexshypensive seed which will cause you more trouble than it will do good

The only job left af~er middotthis is ~ keep themiddot lawn moistsq~bat

snippedt up the flavor would be stronger

Well I cooked my recipe and it was quite delicious but a few sprigs of the green shoots reshymained on the counter and as Joe was helping me clean up he inquired why Ihad been picking carrot tops Needless to say at that moment I rseolved to learn a great deal more about parsley in all its varieties The things I found out in my research on the parlsley plant were quite fascinating and even it bit frightening if youre the superstitious type Did you know that it was thought to be such a plant of the devil that it could only be sown on Good Friday if it were to flourish at all In anciert times the Greek$ decked their tombs with it for they fully believed that it sprang from the blood of one of their dead heroes It was also th9ught only the wicked could grow parsley successfully

Feeling that its merits must far outweigh its supposed curses I searched further to discover that one of the beliefs that surshyrounded it was that wherever it flourished the missus is master This could provide a good reason for cultivating it

Getting away from the P4rely theoretical and into the practical I learned that parsley is la h~rdy biennial normally flowering and going to seed in the Spring -after sowing though in a hot dry year it may bolt and go to seed in late Summer (this is what happened to Ti Tias parsshyley bed) Seed may be planted inmiddot April and May fOf a Summer and early Autumn crop andmiddots

the n~wgtseed has amiddotchlUlce tos~cpnd s~~ing JWlde ~lllate~uly germinate If you are succ~ pr August for tbe next ~pring and the lawn does take it is im-~pd SumDler n

middot perative tbat you keep the n~wpar~le~ steJfis have fiir~ore grasscut at about two inches So~avor than the leayes and ~e

that it makesmiddot sorneroot growth French often use only the stem before the coIf weather sets in where taste is more important

Mostlawns should bereseededmiddotthan appearance They are full iJdHis vaVeach year pIefetabiyof chlorophyll (thatgreeliishIn late Augustor eatlySeptem- property lthat was so popular a

ber Seeding is outmiddot of the ques- fewmiddot years ago) andmiddot when tion however where water re- crushed ~intmiddot mayonnaise aod

strictions are still in effect So other sauces a lovely shade of if you are allowed to water only green If you do happen tomiddot be one or two hours a week you wicked enough to have pars- will have to suffer your poor ley flourish in your yard the hlwq or at least another season four most popular ways of storshy

h the Kitchen ing it in your refrigerator are 1 With the stems kept ina

I realize that I have a great glass of water deal to learn concerning both 2 Washed water shaken off the kitchen and garden but my sealed in a glass jar or plastictack of knowledge was undershy bag

Jined the other day when I was 3 Unwashed in a plastic bamiddotg preparing to cook the recipe 4 Washed and folded intoa

- yentat Irrt ~sing in this eeks cloth the clothmiddot absorbs the ~olumn As I readmiddot the hst of dampness ~ee~ed Ig~edlents I only gave I found the following recipe iilSSmg notce to t~e paryleyas ~elicious even J~oJlgh graced

have always gathered It fr~s~ with carrot top~ instead of parsshy rom a large bed over In 1-1 Tla s -- ley The unusw name may refer ya~d howev~r when I wet to sltmelllenlbero(th~-cleigy over to pick It I found that In who fainted with joy at the flashya s~ort span of a few days most vor he enjoyeo

0pound It bad gone to seed - middotmiddot middotmiddotmiddotmiddot SWo()nedPri~stmiddot~lmiddotmiddot

Suddenly I see~ed to recall 1 eggplant peeled and sliced ~hat Joe ~admentIoned that he h inch thick had planted some of theltalian 2 large onions sliced _ Vanety llear our raspberry 3 large tomatoes sliced ~ushes ah the day was saved salt and pepper That must be it I said to 1 small bunch of fresh pa~ middotmyself as I spied sOllIe feqthery ley minced green shoots along the fence it 2 Tab)e~pouns oil didnt smell very much like 2 cloves of garlic sliced

middot parsley but ther again it was 1) Arrange eggplant onionsmiddot supposed to be a different va- and tomatoes in alternate layen lriety and perhaps when I in a large frying pan sprinkling

each layer with salt pepper ahd 1 00 R the minced parsley u v eglster 2) Add 1fJ cup hot water the

NEW YORK (NC) - More oil and garlic

than 1000 person have regis- 3) Cover tightly -andmiddot simm1r ~7~~d to at~end the ei~J1th n~- for about 30 minutes or u~til ~lonal CursI110 Movement eon-iiquia Is reducedt~aricl1 gravY iention now in session here Remove garlic before serving

PRE-CONVENTION ARRANGEMENTS BY DCCW DELEGATES Among the delegates from the Diocese who met recently for arrangements to attend the 33rd National Convention of Catholic Women in Miami Beach Oct 5-8 were left to right Mrs James E Williams St Josephs No Dighton Miss Angela Medeiros Mt CarmelSeekonk Mrs Theophane Lavoie St Jeim the Baptiste Fall River Mrs John Smith Sk Marys South Dartmouth Thursday Sept I is the closing date for registration of delegates from the Diocese to the Convention

Nuns Health Insurance Econoniist Tells Superiors Life Expectancy

Justifies C~operative Plan MILWAUKEE (NC)-Kuni- encountered by ri~ns thlo~ghQut erlliy o~payton ecqnonll~ ~r~ their lifetime ~essor Wbo~peciali~es i~m~g- Medical Passports ic~l statisectticl(or~seesalow-c~ To c~nect data FecheidEl~ised be~lthi~u~an~e~lan a~~ a~ni- a medlqal i4e~tification card 1fiect )rgra~ 0 n1edlcal and whichiiecalIi a medical pass-h~spltal facllitiesfr Am~can middotPOrtHe said these cards carshynuns under the admlm~tratlOrt~f ryingrecords of current disabili shythe Conference of MaJor Supe- tiesmiddotmiddot eouldaid in accumulating

middot riors of Wmen medical information to help Addressmg t~e conferepCemiddot ~t middotnuns qualify for lower cost Its annual meetmg he~e COli Jhealth insurance and to organize Fecher s~ldmiddot ~ooperativeplaQsan eventual program of comshy~or ~ns m thIS country canbe JustIfIed by the longer life exshypectancy ~nd better health of women relIgiOUS Fecher presented d~ta Q~ a

fIve-year study on disabIlItIes among 3)000 nuns He has made many previous statistical studies on ~he nuns long~vity

Smce nuns lIve In what Fec~er calls a contrlled life studIes ~f thelmiddot medlcal sta~us can prOVide medical SCIence WIth ~nf~rtn~tion relvatgt-t to 0-lher q~e1 But mo~t PTllvI~ts stuq~es have conc~Iltrat~~~m rn~rtalItybull s~tI~tl~s~l1d w~re coJcerI)edW~~ lteaJh apd I~ causes Fec~eT s rece~t ~~S centered around the dIsabIlIties

Christrtras Bazaar Advance preparations fire beshy

middot ing made for a Christmas bazaar slated for the weekend of Nov 25 through 27 in the basement of Sacred Hearts Church Nolth Fatrhaven Meetings are being held in the rectory at 730 each

middot MOhday night and parishioners who cannot come at this time

middot are mged to volunteer home services byknitting sewing or making fthEir articles for sale

Materials will be furnished and dondticins iire laquo iHsifoeing reshyquested 101 a white elephant table Gerierafdiairman Mrs Roland Larocque announcesmiddot that

prOfits will benefit the school improvement fund

bined health care They might also be of value to physicians treating future illnesses he said

The five-year survey tended to support the adage your health mirrors your environ ment Abstinence fromalcohol and ~igarettes a well-balanced diet adequat~ housing secure

bull communa livi and celibacy apparently do iow down the aging process Fecher said

He cautioned however that this does not ~ecessarilYmean that areligious life promotes longevity and that a similar am6tirlt of work-day schoolshy

day orreligiflus-day sefvice 10sseser be applied to each and every religious community in tbecountrymiddot

Fecher said that data collected over the past 40 years shows that the health middotcare programs of reshyligious are very uneven

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Aug 25 1966

Approves Loco ~

School Boards BURLINGTON (NC) - The

appointment of four local Cathshyolic school boards brings a new method of Catholic school manshyagement to 25 per cent of the diocesan schools here in Vershymont

At the regular monthly meetshying of the Burlington Diocesan School Board Father John A Lynch diocesan superintendent of schools reported that consti shytutions for four schools had been approved making a total of 25middot per cent of the schools operating under policy-malting boards approved by the diocesan board

~he diocesan statutes e~c6urshya~ebut do not demand the formatior of 10 c a l schoOl boards he said

Father Lynch also announced that a study would be made of school costs in the hope to find ways to avoid increasing tuition and parish assessments The study of education costs will be made by George Fortune acshycounting consultant to the diocshyesan school system

Good Counsel College Gets Loan for Dorm

WASHINGTON (NC) - A $1180000 college housing loan for Good Counsel College for women in White Plains NY to build a new dormitory has been approved Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Robert C Weaver announced here

The dorm is planned to acshycommodate 192 students The college conducted by the Sisters of Divine Compassion has an ellrollment of some poo students

Some students required to live on campus are in overcrowded middotfacilitiesmiddot Mother M Dolores president said lack of housing will foree themiddot college to deny admission middottoa number of stushydents middotthis fall she said The COllege enrollment is expected to reach 650 in five years and

800 in 10 years

Ce~tervilfe Guild New officers of Our Lady of

Victory Womens Guild Centershyville are Mrs StephenB OBrien Jr president Mrs John J Pendergast Jr and Mrs James Murphy vice-presidents Mrs ~oger Carlson treasurer Mrs Francis McKenna and Mrs Edward ONeill secretaries

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

middotOPENDAllY FORTHIE SEASON AFTERNOON and NIGHT

niE ANCHOR $as~ Vocationsmiddot10 Thurs Aug 25 1966 COnCern ofAIi

Employer U rges ST LOUIS (NC) - Speaking at the third annual Vocation Mass in St Louis cathedral

middot here Joseph Cardinal Ritter said middotvocations in the Church should

Workers to Vote For Teamsters

be the concern of every Roman SAN FRANCISCO (NC) Catholic

-The Di Giorgio Corporashy The cardinal told 397 men and women preparing to enter semishytion is recommending that naries and convents in the Fanits farm workers vote to afshy that religious vocation is not

filiate with the Teamsters FaTm middot merely a concern for the arch-Workers Union if they wish middot diocesan director a union the company announced It is a matter of solicitudeshy

Robert Di Giorgio president for each and everyone of us A of the company said therecomshy vocation is a divine thing but mendationmiddot is in accordance with it is a thing which God will not National Labor Relations BoaTd w~thhold from His peopleprocedures The recommendashy Cardinal Ritter continuedtion was made in letters sent to Bymiddot manifesting a concern employes eligible to vote in the about and an interest in vocashyunion election scheduled Ifor tiols we truly show that we Tuesday Aug 30 middot are the People of God

Opposing the Teamsters will be the National Farm Workers Association (NFWA) and the Seeks Assistance Agricultural Workers Organshy For Congo Churchizing Committee AFL-CIO (AW OC) which have merged since WASHINGTON (NC) - A they began the long Delano Congolese senator visiting the strike United States on a State Departshy

The Teamsters won the originshy ment tour program for foreign al election for union representashy government officials hopes to tion but charges of fraud make his two-month visit serve brought a new election a double purpose

Di Giolgio said the corporashy Senator Gaston Diomi wants tion is recommending a vote to speak with Catholic laymen for the Teamsters because middotand members of the clergy per-

The Teamsters won the preshy haps address audiences at vious electionmiddot Catholic institutions in his hope

The Teltlmsters while they to bring the Church iri the light hard in their members Congo to the eyes of American behalf are fair arid responshy ~ Catholics

And the senator has a planesible he wants to set up sharing proshyCompany Union middotFeels Adults Need Religious grams throughout the United

The competing union on tne States programs in which an ballot the Nationa Farm Workshy More So Than Children Nun Declares American diocese would adopt z ers AssoCiation has achieved Congolese diocese an American tentative recognition with oniy LOVELAND (NC)-Religious JI1ost rigidly formed in the old program to meet its needs--part religious order adopt a Congoshytwo growers the larger of which

education is needed for aduits system to see the new vision of which could be a parish lese order an American orphan-this year shifted production from school age adopt a Congolese orphanmore than for children and a of themiddot Churchand of Christian~ble grapes to wine tnus elimshy Flexibility and the wiUing- agebetter term for it would be life middotsetmiddot forth by the Secondinating a great many jobs ness tomiddot try a variety 01 ap- The American governmentmiddotsomething like shared growth Vatican Council Cesar Chavez head of the N iIi Christian middotlifemiddotmiddotmiddot This is 8 hard ~ask Sister prOdches ought to be the mmk of has such sharing programs the FWA called the Teamsters a an effectivereligious education senator pointed out WhyThis is the estimate of Sis admitted for adult educationcompany union and said it

tel 114 Charles Borromeo former demands new approaches and program she asserted empha- shouldnt the Church have the has entered into a partnership sizing thatmiddotit should have a so- same The Church that is Cath-head of the theology school at cannot be imposedwith Di Giorgio in a commonmiddot cia1 and an ecumenical dimen- olic the Church that is definedSt Marys College conducted by Each Ones Missionplot agabnst the farm workers sionmiddot QY the Second Vatican CouncilHoly Cross Sisters at Notre She wouldnt abandon chil-He said the companys recom- Built into each program middotas a missionary Church- whyDame Ind She recently joined drens education JOwever Shemendation confirmed that the should be a growirig aW8leness shouldnt this Church and tierthe faculty of St Xavier Col-middot saidTeamstens came to Delano to

lege Chicago as theology pro- What Id like to se~ IS emh of e~ch ones mission in the members share even more readshytlrganize workers at the invita- Church-an outgoing mismiddotsion to ily than government~ifessor set up a total religiou educationiion o~

PROFESSION CEREMONY AT WAREHAM The Chapel in the Woods of the Noshyvitiate of the Sacred Heart Fathers vas the scene Saturday morning as four novices

iere profe~sed by Bishop CoimolIyLeft to right Bro JudeMohan Bro Joseph ONeill Master of Novices Rev Andrew Jahn Bishop Connolly Very Rev Daniel J McCarthy

Prodncial who offered the Mass Bro Paul Daly and Bro Martin Lucia

the corporation New Approaches reach others and to build the

Speaking at the Summer lec- middot social patterns needed in our Oppose Intervening ture series at Grailville herein Quote Pope Pauls world

middot1 PImiddot Ohio USheaqquarters of the A 1 f IP Issues of TimesIn Fami y annlnglt international Grail movement ppea oreace middot She warneq against lookingMILWAUKEE (NC)-The ex- Sister Charles Borromeo aC- BERLIN (NC)-Fiye hundred for textbooks with all thE anshy

ecutive committee of the ad- knowledged that the Church in letters quoting the flppeal of swers or for fOllliulas thatvisory ioard of the Milwauke~ this country has placed most of Pope Paul VI for peace in Vietshy might take the place of decisiOlishyArchdioce~an Family Life Pro- its resources atmiddot the service of nam were sent persons in East rilaking by individual wnsci- gram has adopted a resolution childrens education Germany by the Social Demoshy encesmiddot

opposing government interven But the most urge~t need for cratic Party (SPD) The East Religiousteaching should inshynon in family planning giving religiousmiddot education she said Germans had asked the SPD volve a di~logue she su-ggestunanimousmiddot approval to a 13- if to helpadults especially those why the free world had not ed addi~g that in the past therepoint resolution which insists made imy efforts to end the war has been toomuch sttess on aushythat the matter of family plan- d in Vietnam thorityin teaching rid~otning is a private affair not a Sche u ~ Reopening The letter sent by the Social

bulle~o~gh on sharingChrisliarieoncern of the government Of Chi Smiddot h 1 Democratsmiddot pointed out that the gr()wthmiddot

Frank Stabb chairman of at 0 IC C 00 peace efforts of the pope the Thequesiion is not so ~lUcbtheCatholic board statedthat MTmiddot REPOSE (NC)-A Cath- World Council of Churches and

~hat to tea~h she ()pined butsince it has become increasingly olic school here in Ohio for of the governments of the how will we produce ~he Chrisshyapparentmiddot tilat our federalgov some 250 children will reopen in United States Great Britain (ian experience in litUlgy andernment ans to use taxinoiiey September due to efforts of in- Sweden India France and Itrly

for the spreading of birthcon-middot (lividuai citizens civic and Pro had all middotbeen rejected by the soci~l actionJn th~ great issues trol it becomes the obUgation of testantchurch groups in the communists The letter also of our times ~

NO JOBTOq BIG NONE TOO SMALL

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTE~S

MainOHice and Plant 95 Bridge St lowell M~bullbull

Tet 4586333

Auxiliary Plarits

BOSTON CAMDEN NJ OCEANPORT N~J

MIAMI PAWTUCKET R1 PHILADELPHIA

this family apostolate to speak area the Milford Chamber of middotstressedmiddot the SPDs view that out vigorously in oPllOsition tomiddota Commerce and parishioners of war can no longer be an instru shypolicy which has absolutely no St Andrews church Milford ment in solving political probshyvalidity The Elizabeth Seton School a lems middot He went on to say that when rural outpost of St Andrews Rltidio television and newsshyariy government agency tells parish was established seven paper ieports iil Eastmiddot Germany

middotpoor married couples whether years ago and con tin 11 a llY have given the impression thatmiddot they should have children or plagued by sewage dIsposal no one middotincluding the Pope has

hownfany to have the govern- problems The school wasmiddot closed made any efforts to seek peace ment is making a mighty pre- by court order in the Sumrtler in Vietnam sumptuous intrusion into a most of 1965 but r~openeq last year i J

sacred element of huin~nlife) with an arrangement fo~ haul- Stamiddotmiddotr 0n middotIImiddotmiddotOmiddotftmiddotmiddotammiddotP

middot ing sewge to MilfordmiddotmiddotWhenmiddot ~ middotV 1 t Cmiddoth 1 forcedtostop usingtheMilford DAVENP0RT (NC)~Seven-

eel) members of religious coni 0 un eermiddot apalnmiddot sewage systemlastJanuary t PHILADELPHIA (NCfFa-middot classes were dfscontinueiigt mutlities in theuilitedmiddot middotStates

ther JjRobert Falabella SJ The Closhlg spalked if coin- were among the graduates at the 36 instr~ctor in theolOgyat St mlinity effort led by the Buck- annual mid~Summermiddotcommence

Josephs College here has vol- wheat-middotTaxpayers Associationw ment of St Ambrose College uteered for extended adive aidthemiddotschoolmiddotA fUrid drive for her~in Illwa middotParticipating in duty witp theUS Army Re $250((to pay formiddot new tihiinage the ceremonies was Margheritiimiddot serve s a chaplain in the Vietmiddot f~cilities was ~ledby th~ Mil- Roberti a~ native of Davenportmiddot mam combat zone ford Chamber Of Commerce a leading dramatic sopranQ~

CONVEmiddotNImiddotENT BANKING WITHOUT TRAFFIC PARKING PROBLEMS

at the -

5LADE~S FERRr-r~USJmiddotCOMPANY SOMERSET MASS

j ~ - bullbullbull ~~ ~ bull ) bullbullbull lt

ThemOflt friendlymiddot dmocrt~ lANK oHering

-_~9npi~lC)h$topmiddot~cirliing middotmiddotf bullbullbullClubmiddot Accoul1Its - Auto middotLoa -

Checking Accounts ~ Business boris Savings Accounts~ ~ ~ Ieaj Estate loOns 1 -

- ~Atmiddot S~~~rs~tS~~ppi~~ Ar~a=-~igh~~a 5 ~t~due Me~ber FeCieral I)epositmiddot ri~urance Corporation

I

11 Cardinal Cushing Hits Imbalance In Schools

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing deplored that very little has been oone to relieve racial imshybalance in Bostons public schools in his first public address since his recent illness and conshyvalescence

The Boston prelate told an ecshyumenical meetingmiddot in All Saints Lutheran church here that al shythough very littlemiddot has been done to make a year-old law work we are not discouraged and we are very far from giving up hope that we will have reshyBults before long

He referred to the Racial 1m balance Law aimed at promotshying racial integration in Massashychusetts public schools The meeting marked the first annishyversary of the law The measure will deprive Boston public schools of $30 million in state subsidies until the citys school committee submits an integrashytion plan acceptable to the state board of education Until now the city committee has not subshymitted an acceptable plan

A school that is heavily imshybalanc~d racially cannot provide the best education that should be available for our children Even with the most devoted teachers and the most upto-date proshygrams-and we have both o( these in Boston-a predomiJ)antshyly Negro school suffers from an isolation from the general comshymunity which cannot fail to be harmful~ he said

Scores Slum Landlords In a similar way we can say

that an all white scJ100l fails to reflect the true nature of the radally mixed communitymiddot in which we live and so deprives white youngsters of theexperi ence of living and studying with their neighbors of a different race Ourideal should be to live and workand study and pray side by side in mutual respect and common affection

There hav~ been several proposalsmade during the last year to al~rest imbalance iit the schools of our center city Carshydinal Cushing said None of these has been accepted by those who hove been elected to make these decisions in the schooi srstem Of course we know that no immediate proshygram will solve all our problems but we can make li beginning

The cardinal also criticized slum landlords for the inhuman conditions in which so many here must live and work alid bring JP their families He called for a crash program of assistance for the deprived

State Uses Vacant Catholic School

BURLINGTON (NC)-The re- cently closed Don Bosco Schoolmiddot for BoyS here will Soon befilled up again with teenage boys this time as temporary quarters for Vermonts pilot residential treatshyment center for youthful first shyoffender lawbreakers

In announcing the acceptance of the proposal by Bishop RobertF Joyce of Burlington and the Verm 0 n t Catholic Charities board State Institutiolls Com-

PROFESSION AND CtOTHING CEREMONIES Principals in the ceremonies conshyducted for the Sisters of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts in Fall River on Monday were seated Sr Mary Dolores Sr John Veronica Bishop Gerrard who presided Sr Karen Dolores Sr Mary Catherine Standing Sr Margaret Edward Sr Joseph Maureen Sr Stephen David Sr James Constance Sr Celestine Regis Sr Anne Robert Sr Vinshycent Dolores

Report Says Cold War More Intense Peaceful Coexistence Now Strategic Offensive

WASHINGTON (NC) -Some tegic Studies at Georgetown jarring statements are made in University a Jesuit-conducted a significant news report whose school here

It is an in-depth analysisprivate but highly responsible sponsors call it the resultmiddot ofmiddot quality research It reminds for example that the so-called cold war is not

over and warns that as of now it may be entering a more danshy

gerous phase Th e ~peaceful coexistence

slogan it says was once a comshymuhist defensive stalling tacshytic but now it signifies the communists have gone over to

the strategic offensive The great paradox of our

times the document asserts may well turn out to be our inability to recognize that the cold war has in reality become more intel1se despite the increasshying appearance of peace

The goals of the presentmas~ tels of the Kremlin are no dif- ferent from tho~e of Khrushshychev Stalin or Mao Tse-Tung and to the Krtmlin peac~ful coshyexistence is a strategy not an end in itself it declares

The study entitled Peace or Pea c e f u1 Coexistence was

sponsored by the Committee on Education Against CommUllism of the American Bar Association It was unveiled in New York just before the ABA began its annual meeting in Montreal but it was prepared by Richard V Allen a specialist on Sino-Soviet affairs at the Center for Stra-

K of c Plan Socoal

Action I itia tive

missioner John Y Woodhull MIAMI BEACH (-NC) - The stated I think this is one (f the top official of the Knights of finest ecumenical testures of Columbus announced plans for faith and charity that I have a new initiiitive in the ecumenshyknown i -i~al and soCial action field

The eenter ill ~ ~provide a through a partnership with theO

home for 16 to 20 b(iys aged HI John LaFarge Institute ill New to 18 who are referrecl by the York ~ - eourls as first offenders Toile In additior W financial assist shyboys will work loeal du-in ancethe LaFllg~jnstitute will

the day and return to the center reeeive suggestifmsand recomshyin the ~venin1 for intensive mendations frOJll the official roup t~erapy eonducted b) rep-~~entationand plJrticipatiOll

Btaff III ~ix bull Ule K bull C

based onmiddot more than 3000 articles and documents of the internashytiOllal communist movement more than 90 per cent of which material is dated after the Cushyban Missile crisis of October 1962 Allen admits that the commushy

nists have used the coexistence slogan in ihepast and with sfme success but he directs atshytention to the fact that it now signifies a strategic offensive rather than a stal~ing tactic

The study notes that the Cushyjail build-up the erection of the Berliil Wall and the armed iilvasi~n of South Yietnam all occurred during the most in- tense pedod of peaceful coshyexistence ~ It~~~inds that Khrushchev in 19t1lddiiled coexistence as a form of intense ecoitomic pOlitshyical and ideological struggle gaii1s~ the aggressive forces of imperialism hi the international arena it aiso says that in their 3tshy

tempt to create wha bull they call the New ComIJlunist Man the communists have systematically presented a vicious and thor oughly distorted picture of the

Nuns to Construct Health Care Facility

SANDUSKY (NC)-The Franshyciscan Sisters who operate Providence Hospital here in Ohio will construct a new 100shybed $1250000 healthcare fashycility separate ftom thehospital

It will serve Medicare patients of the area during posthospital care and Qther convalescents who do not requir~f~l~-scalehospital care Sister Lucia -administrator 81lid it will relievemiddot pressure ~ hospital beds in the area

There wiII be ari appeal to th~ public lor about $900000 The -remainder of the funds will

btl supplied by the Federalgovshyerllment

West in general and the United States in particular It need not be emphasi~ed

the study states that the overshywhelming sentiment of the free world is to live in peace But tQ mistake the illusion of peace for genuine peacemiddot would be a profoundly dangerous perhaps fatal mistake In a foreword t the book

Bertram D Wolfe a Stanford University expert on commushy~lism warns that we have been prone to read the idea of live and let live into the phase of peaceful C 0 e x imiddots ten ce Our hopes and our longings are likeshyly to betray us again and again into a readiness to be deceived by those who have sworn the d~struction of all we stand for

fnjoymiddot Dining IN THE

JOLLY WHALER --AND--

SPOUTIRINN RESTAURANTS

Always Free Parking

New Bedford Hotel

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Aug 25 1966

Cassidymiddot Seniors Attend Work$hop

Three members of the incomshying senior class at Cassidy High School Taunton will complete tomorrow a five day Workshop in Leadership conducted at the University of Massachusetts under th~ sponsorship of the Massachussetts Association of Student Councils

Mis s Rosemary McKenna~ president of the senior class Miss Nancy Thomas president of the National Honor Society and Miss Christine Victoria coshyeditor of the Cassidy school paper are attending Miss Victoria is secretary of the Southeastern Association of Student Councils and will serv~ in that capacity with the other officers Jerry Flanagan presishydent Feehan High Marsha Boyd vice-president Attleboro High Luke Boyd treasurer West Bridgewater High

Cassidy GIllaquoIltiluCllle Wins Elkso AWtlDd

Miss Pauline Lee daughter ox Mrs Harry Lee and the late Harry Lee of 7 Dean Ave Taunshyton has Qeen named the recipishyent of a $600 Massachusetts Elks Lead~rship Award granted by the Elks National Scholarship Fund

A member of the 1966 gradushyating class of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton Miss Lee was in the top ten of a class of 108 and maintained a scholastie honors record throughout bell four year Miss Lee will attend Nortn- eastern University Boston

Schools Merge BAY CITY (NC)-TwO wes~

side Catholic high schools here hi Michigan will merge Sept I

to becomeWest Catholic CentraU High School The decision te merge was made by an intershyarish lay study committee tv provide more efficient use of the staff and facilities The schooU will be staffed by the ReligioUl Sisters of Mercy of Detroit

BIG DIVIDEND NEWS

a SYSTEMATIC550 year SAVINGS

INVESTMEIfJ500 a year SAVINGS

8 REGULAR450 year SAVINGS

Bass River SovinQs Bank bull SOUTH YARMOUTH bull DENNIS PORT

bull YANNIS bull fARMOiJTH SHOPPING PLAZA

bull OSTERVILLE

-1111

WHITE middotmiddotmiddotSPA CATERERS

- BANQUETSmiddot -WEDDINGS - PARTIES

~ COMMUNION BREAKFASTS 1343PlEASANT STREET FAll RIVER

OSb~rne 3-7780

--h-- ~

12

i

THE ANCHOROlocese of Fall River-Th~s Aug 25 1966

~regW ~reg~tfJ ~lYJ~~ TtUUY1)[fi)l[

Of R~dD~~~csm Amcm)gYW]fr~ lJy Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy

Phillip Abbott Luces The New Left (McKay 119 W 40th New York $450) attempts to explain the resurgence of radicalism among American students Its author is a

of the New Left wIth as many con u e y lcal ideas while at MissisSippi non-joiners on the peripherY day even~ng Aug 27 at S lD ~ at~~ fi~t he~-d ~~ ~h~ ~erBtlt its impact- is smd tohave Mlll~aret s Kinderlctarten aaU i Left whIle at Ohio State and l Prizes WIll be awarded and reshy

tgrt~ritotcOtmiddotmiddotgthmiddotevecJ1 amm~-~W1lS~~tttedpa~~y ~xten~e~ tots about200OQP co h~~hriients served o nl~ge ~u en ~~ i - ltGUiLD OF TillE VIsITATION Iil1961heifioved~to NewmiddotYork It ~S ~l1ena lza1I~~~eme~t i iNO EASTilrAM ~ ~

_and came closer tothe Commti- in the country What alarms Mr ih alb t ofthe Dist Party Llitef he joined Pro- Luce is not its existence or its G1 ~~ h 3que wed gressiveLa]gto~aiI~ edited its size but the fact and the in- W WI e e on nesshymiddot monthly magazine _ cre~sing extent of Comrnamst q1Y~ 4-~ 3~ a~ the PiJ~~ middot -domination~ He gives -instances Springs Restaurant No TflJro Visited _C~~ro-S Cuba R t cl Sunday

in proof thatsuch dO minatioD-i8 A e~e2 rva~o1l os on It was Progressive Labor ug s

which arJanged- for fmeric~ indeed an actuality SACRED HEARTS

young man who won some leader of the New Left and when he broke with Proshygressive Labor which he eharges was organiz~d by -formermembenlof theSoVfeishycontrolled Communist Pa rt y USA and is now aPekingor~eh tated Commu~

D1st group Mx Luce has an ex tremely Impor- middottant subject one which is both timely and crit shyleal Because of his experience he should be especially qualshyified to set it out But the fac~ is that he is at best a mediocre writer He has no notion as to how to

organize a book marshal his materials and to ten his story iIi a consecutive way and with cushymulative force This is a dull alld muddled treatment of a very middotvitai topic~ not heipedat all by crude blundersin English usage Mr Luces personal histog has to be pieced together fro~ bits strewn through the book

middotlike the debris after a hurricane He is an Ohioan bornmiddotin 1935

notice both when he was a the lives of the rising generation Youth is repelled by parental attitudes and aspirations which are seen as mostly narrow negshyative sterile College is a bore

offeriiig no incentive or oppOJshytUnity for youth to direct its enshyergies into crucial causes

A mood of rebellion has devel- ~ped and a chance to express it has been pr~sentedby the civil rights struggie and the unpopu~ lar and beclouded war in Vietshynam Nor does the prospect of fighting authority in each case dim the attraction of these causes quite the reverse Hence the New Left

JLists Organizations Communist organizations of

various stripes have attemptec to sieze control of the New Left and to exploit the mood of reshybellion wi~h an eye to changing it into participation in revolushy

tion

Mr Luce lists and desribes the Communist organizations so engaged The one he knows best of course is Progresectsive Labor But he gives much space to the Du Bois Clubs which are the instruments of the Communist Party Then tlmre are the Trot-middot

the son of middle-class Repub- skyite splinter groups of which lican parents H~ start~d college four strains are identified (inshyat Miami University in Ohio left cluding middotone that is pro-Negro to see the Souih finished ~t Mis and anti-Semitic) I

sissippi State and did graduate Mr Luce estimates that some k t Oh St t 12000 YOung AmericanS are wor a 10 a e _ t 1 t 1 b He became interested in rad- ac ua orgamza Ion~ mem ers

APPOINTEE- Bishop Josshyeph Bmiddot Brunini Auxiliary since 1957 to Bishop Richard O Gerow of Natchez-Jackshyson middotMiss has -been appointshyed by Pope Paul VI to be Apostolic Administrator of the diocese NC Photo

The Parish Parade

ST 1lgtYS TillED mn ov= =shylFALL RJrVER

The parish will sponsor a one day pilgrimage to the Shrine of the North American Martyrs Auriesville N Y on Sunday Oct 2

Interested partles may obtaIn full particulars by contacting Mrs Laurence Coyle Mrs Wilshyliam Blythe or Mrs George Boitano S8 MARGARET-MARY GUILD BUZZARDS BAY

A bl hitmiddot middotU be pu IC W S paL 0 WI d ct d b the guild on Saturshy

studeritsto visit Cuoain 1963 middot and 1961 In defiance of our middotState Department~sban on travel

there Mr Luce made the trip says that most of the students

middot were unaware of Progressive Labors sponsorship and control The money came from Castro And Progressive Labor members planned and staged the wild scenes at a Congressional hea~

ing concerning the middotproject By late 1964 Mr Luce was

enti~ely dissillusioned abo u t Progressive Labor andmiddot by Febshyruary of 1965 h~ pad left it to

bemiddot quickly expelled upon his

Stresses Strength NO FAIRHAVEN He insists that somethin~(must Registration for the kiridershy

be done to prevent Communist garten pre-primary and the capture of the movement He eight eJement~ry grades are beshywants everyone to wake up to ing held daily during the month the existence and the strength of Augus of the New Left Pupils may register with SJ

We must realize he urges how Marie Henriette SSCC at the disenchanted with our society Sacred Hearts Academy 332 the young people ~re what hos- Main Street Fairhaven any 8poundshytility they feel what a gulf ternoon from 1-5 RegistratioDfl yawns between them and their are also being accepted by Rev elders and hcgtw impervious th~YAlexis Wyggers SSCC at the are to ideas and language which ReCtory 382 Main street Fairshyi

figure in their eldErs attempts haven to communicate with them The Association of St Anne

No one he maintains is S~-Will receive corporate CoinmUshyI~ departure and sayagE(l~ Yim~~~~ Jiously trying to reach the hiorton Sunday at the 8 ocloek middot He left because he says Pro gressive Labor is a middotMaoist Comshymunist tool because itmiddotadlrQcates imd take steps to implelrtent armed insurrection because- no personal freedam is allowed to members an4 lill- deQisionsmiddot are made by a few dictatorial leadshy~ril 1ecausemembersareJnshyvolved in programs of Whose

eonsequences totge country and to themselvestIey have no idea lt~

lFe~ls lF~tts~rated Mr fL~ced6es- notmiddot contend

middot that the New Leis Goromunistshy

young rebel to understand him Mass to speak to him intelligibly and effectively Co~unJ~t errorsmiddot J~edB~ MeU1lMe~tmiddot propaganda hypocnsy mUst be SCHWYZ (NC) - Catholicrelentlessly exposed in a way movie and television experts which the young people will met here iil ~fwitieriand for imcomprehend international exchange of ~He is strong_ for a Freedom riiques iiI the useof Tv anellAeademy- which would provipe films in religious educationmiddotmiddot expert practical education conshy - cerning CommunislJlmiddotAnd he stressestheneed of a placefor

ltloltiinated -Hescent~B it -as8 phe- PITTSB~1RGH(Nt) - The bull I bull ~ bull bull bull bull bull

honidon whlc~ came ~bout Pittsburgh Catholi( Interracial Commercialmiddot 15 Industrid spontaneously an eX~IJ1Pre of- Council has endorsed home rule Institutionalyouth in rebellion - for the District of Columbia asshy

Youth he holds~ hils amiddotpoundeeling sertingthattooibng have many painting ~nd~ D_~~o~qtig of -frustrationmiddot with American of the-importanLdecisionaffectshy Fall River OSborne 2-1I9H$ociety its tone and its values ing (the District of CohJmbia) -yoiith~es~rtt~rhaving rio say inb~erlmadtd)ycongrpoundpoundssiriehftoin ~ 74v~hllia rnson Str~e~

the making of decisions affecting hundreds of miles away

~~Gr~ayK BJ Most Rev FUUOlll J Sheeillp Dll)

If my neighbor is stronger than 1 I fear him if he lsweaker than I I despise bim Such is the modem judgement of the psyshychiatrist Dr Jean de Rougemont Earlier the Psalmist speaks ~ the arrogance of those who have much and the despisal of those who are proud How can the rich avoid feeling superior to the poor How can the poor avoid being humiliated The answer is that vices but can the) give up cigarettes for a week to help the poor the strong must see their weakness and the rich must see~eifto poverty How realJly strong are the strong Theymay avoid great Are thfiY suc~ masters of themselves tbatthey can turn down the third cocktail (or give up the first) and use the money instea4 to ~uy sulfone ~or a i~~r~ liqw r~ch_ ar~the rich Let them look inside themselves IIi whatvirtue are they rich Rich in cb~ty Rich i~ char~ti Ri~)n f~th

Onc~t~~ ~i~rhty see th~mseiv~ asnothiDi a~d therl~h see the~selv~ as i~poverislledth~ they wui lov~ ihe we~~ as their brothersilDd the peor IllS their

fellow beggars for thetrrace of God ifmiddot the strong middotlove middotmiddotthemselves despite all theirweaknes5~ then why not lovltil weaknesses in others u the rich love themselves despitG middottheir inner nakedshyness then why nCllt love a lesser ]lJOVshy

erty in others That i~ why Our Lord told us to love ourneighbor as ourseU ~y not more than self Because iii ]I

love myself-knowing myself as ]I do knowing how utterb weak ]I am2-then I have the measure of how J[ am to pour out love to others

We live in a world divided between the rich and the poor We live in that kinol of a church-pOor parishes and rich parishes Even bishops an~ priestsmiddot speak of a parish being good when they mean it is economicaily rich Somehow or other we have ~

get qut of this slavish standard of affluence which is so opposed to the lross of Christ To that end we make the folloWing proposal that you or your middotparishclub school or office undertake the sponsorshjp of one of the poor areas of the world which has been investigated by the Apostolic delegate Write to us and we will send you middotthe name of this diocese its location the number of priests catechists and faithful it has Thus you will be sure that you have a middotneedy (Ibject for sacrifice and service and n9t one based on a haphazard -appeal middotfroin an uninvestigated source The Church will not alloW you to sponsor this diocese for more than one year becausemiddot thtlre are so many poor parishes in the world Look into your weakness and you will love the weakness of o~heJ8 Look into your poyeny stricken soul and you willserVe poverty stricken bodies Write to -mpGod Love You

~~~ middot~middotGOD~middotLOVE YCllJmiddot tomiddot~SMLgtO~middot ~$5 middotto A~RCtor $sO~ For your1nissionUorkIeanthelp eve~one andmiddotyou ~o tltosem most meed bullbull tchJMBfcn $20 to Anon lor $1000 middotsentmiddotWithlteommnbull ~ 11

bullbull bull ~l

The GOD LOVE YOU~ medal lovely cameo medal of the Madonna of tIle worldiS one you would be proud to give ormiddotde shy

lighted tci reC~iVEt DesIgned bi the world-renowned jeweler Harry winSton aildbltessed by Bishlgtp Sheen the GOD LOVE YOU medal is available inmiddotcl~icF~oreritinegold firiishor pure sterlingsilver aod may be obtained by sending your request and corresPondirtg offering to The Socieb for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth AvenueNew York NY 10061 $2 Sinall sterling silver $3 small

11gtk goid fiiled $5 large sterling silver $10 large 10k gold filled

Cut out this colullnn pln your sacrifice to It and mali It to Most RevbullFultom J Sheen National Director of The Society for the Propagation of thl~ Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or to your Dioclesan Director Rt Rev Msgr Raymond Jr Considine 363 North ll1ain Street Falll River Massachusetts

bull j 7 Perry IQur fI~~fng

~v~-t~e OilsMake Taunt~B1l~ Mass - Worm FriendsmiddotVA 2-2282

------------------ ~

genuinely democratic radicalism ON CAPE CODlbONNlEllyin o~r Iociety _

]OHoo ~~~(Kl~Ymiddotmiddot amp SON (~ofP~n~T~UnCG Rigt - flJ1 ml n

crepound ormiddotentireiyCommuist- 9llaquoIIlaquo ~$ lf1J Ilililte ~fYl U ~ I~raquo8L[)~NG MAmiddoth~linAL$middotmiddotmiddot~~~V~C~ 6

S~~ri~gj 1$100 4~~YARMUlrH ROA~)

middottYA~MBSmiddot AMPLE PARKING

iIIIIOCIIJIjIWUllJmllIllDOCImIWlDIllmIlXlWll(lJfi

- -

THE ANCHOR-Jesuit Educators Members of PAVLA Maintain Missionary Thurs Aug 25 1966 13

Ponder Students Record of Fall River Diocese Area G~~s SocoaCynical ~ttitQJJde

LOS ANGELES (NC) shy lLong outstanding for the missionary work of its priests Sisters and Brothers the ~elvD~e ~elrllfrer A top Jesuit educator dispenshy Fa~ River Diocese is fast becoming noted for its outstanding Papal Volunteers for Latin CLEVELAND (NC) - OUX sed advice here on how to eombat the attitude of some high schoolers who consider the world and the religion of their middotparents as phony

Father Edward J Sponga 8J of Baltimore in the keynote adshydress at the 1966 Jesuit Educashytional Association Workshop on Christian Formation at Loyola University here called for a dialogue with everyone conshycerned to emphasize the good crying to be released

Speaking to delegates from 52 Jesuit high schools in the nation Father Sponga chairman of the board of the Jesuit Educational Association declared

Menace to Freedom If the young men of our

schools consider the world and the religion of their parents as phony and a menace to their freedom then we must be ruthshyless in seeing how and why this is and in entering into dialogue with everyone who is willing to do so in order that we may be able to release the g09d that is crying to be released

During the 12 days of research and discussion 125 school adshyministrators and teachers evalushyated the effect that religion courses academic curriculum spiritual exercises and personal guidance have had on the charshyacters of the 35000 teenagers in U S Jesuit high schools

The delegates particularly were concerned about the loss of religious faith in the adolesshycent who is becoming increasshyingly sophisticated and critical

Middle Class Values Father Joseph H Fichter SJ

Stillman professor of sociology at Harvard Universitys divinity school criticized Jesuit high schools for not challenging the middle class values of many of their students for not paying sufficient att~rition to the social sciencesmiddot and for not drawing more of their students irom among the poor

Dr Alexander A Schneiders graduate professor of psychology at Boston College stressed the commitment of Faith that must be made within the scopemiddot of inshytellectual independence He arshygued against compelling students to make annual retreats or assist at religious exercises

Other delegates suggested esshytablishing pilot programs in 1l)ner-city high schools with nationwide cooperation and the sending of Jesuit teachers to work in community schools outshyllide the regular Jesuit system

Ho~es for Negroes Goal of Campaign

WORCESTER (NC) A camshypaign to secure better housing for Negroes in the Greater Worcester Area is growing

In a letter to some 1200 pershyS0l1S who last Aprii signed an

open letter newspaper adshyvertisement regarding fair hous ins John J Concordia Duman rights committee chairman of the Diocesan Council of Catholic M~~ ~sked sig~atories of the

open -letter to volunteer to ~adopt members of a Negro family am actively assist them inmiddotproC1Jri~g decent housing to titheir ~ne~ds

In 8 statement by an intershy fa(thmiddoteommittee on housing middotwfii~IlJs all out-growth of a

siniilar committee formed last year by the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women a call was made for construction of housshying for middotmiddotpoor and lower middle d~ss f ami ie It ixlcludins

Ne8J~s

bull bull r~ ~

America These young men and women doing Christs work in some of the worlds needshy Lady of Futima parish hat3 opened a social service centeliiest areas are a credit to the parishes and toowns from which they come Letest PAVLA here in the midst of the Houghassignments in the Diocese area scene of Clevelands recent

are those of Lucille Lebeau rioting of St Annes parish New The center housed in an 18-gt Bedford and Anthony Gomes room former apartment buildo St John of God parish Somershy ing was dedicated by Archo set bishop Paul J Hallinan of~ At-gt

Actually Lucille isnt a new lanta while he was visiting iii PAVLA hand She was the first Cleveland~bis native diocese Diocesan enlistee in the organishy The center will be staffed by zation going to Brazil as a four Sisters of Charity of St nurse-social worker in August Augustine who along with lay1963 She returned from her volunteers have been working three year assignment in July in the area since Aprilmiddot1965 but volunteered to serve an The center will middotprovide C9uri extra year in Brazil She will re seling nursing medical supplie tum there in November and pre-natal care -

Anthony veteran of a middotyears The building which standt work in Florida with the fedshy next to the parish rectory waserai governments VISTA proshy purchased bymiddot the parish seveR gram will teach English in a years ago when it was aba~ Mexican minor seminary He has doned as an apartment buildingalready completed a PAVLA

Early last year Father Alberitraining course at Catholic Unishy Albert Koklowsky MSSSTversity in Washington D C and pastor of Our Lady of Fatimawill leave in September for launched a campaign through aMexico City and an intensive column in the Catholic Universefour and a half month course in Bulletin Cleveland diocesanSpanish language and culture newspaper to explain Houghsbefore beginning his assignment poverty to metropolitan resiltshyin the mountain town of Tacomshydentsbaro in the state of Michoacan

Housing was a major themePioneer Work Resulting donations from unishy

Lucille bubbles over with enshy verse Bulletin readers and 11thusiasm for PAVLA and its acshy matching gift from Coadjutorcomplishments She has just reshy middotBishop Clarence Issenmann of turned from a trip to the Washshy Cleveland enabled Father Kokshyington training course attended lowsky to renovate the buildingby Tony Gomes where incishydentally she met him for the first time She talked to new Work for Needy enlistees individually and in LIMA (NC) - Sixty me~bers groups seeking to picture for af the St Rose CYO hert gavethem the new life theyd be enshy volunteer aid to projects for thetering needy this Summer Most as~

Their enthusiasm was a boostshy slsted in a federally financed er shot for meshe said educati~nal program for cultu~

This week the New Bedford rally deprived students from nurse is inmiddot the Chicago area PAVLA ENLISTEES Revmiddot James w Clark Diocesan ~nderglirtenmiddot to sixij1 grad~visting PAVLA headquarters Directormiddot of Papal Volunteenlmiddot for Latin America with Othershelp1 a~ amiddot day camn f~there and friends she made ill retarded cbildren andmiddot Qne asAnthony Gltgtmes bound for teaching assignment in Mexico~ Brazil including the doctor with Ns~ed at a eerebral palsy c~mpwhom she worked when me and Lucille Lebeau who has already spent three years m first went to the Latin American Brazil as nurse-social worker will return in Novemberfor eountry He is now in practice additional year in Waukegan lll FAIRHAVEN

When I first went to Brazil urgy eommunitY needs and was to leave in each parish IIshe 8a14 I worked for a little LUMBERhealth needs team similar to their own toover a year at a hospital in Salshy cOMPANY carry on as far as possible thevador Bahia My job was mlinly Most of the help that an area

training Brazilian aides and received came from the people work in liturgy catecheticsmiddot and community and health needssetting up hospital routines themselves t h r 0 ugh their Complete line

After the year was over Brazil shy awakened sense of community We would return to the comshyian doctors and medical students said -ucille Actual government munities where we had given Building Materials took over the hospital routines or material aid was hampered by this course as often as possible were runing smoothly and I political economic and social said Lucille anu each time we 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVEN felt that I could go on to public complications of many kinds eould set them growing spiritushyhealth work in areas where there The team played it by ear ally WYman 3-2611 was no nursing care at all avail- in deciding how to approach a Turn to Page Nineteen able particular parish Lucille and

Lucille joined an apostolic the nun on the team who was shy ~

team organized by Bishop Eushy also a nurse tried to work genio de Araujo Sales Apostolic through community midwives Administrator of Salvador Toshy who were sadly in need of techshy JEREMIAH COHOLAN gether with a priest a nun two nical instruction The infant Brazilian lay apostles and what mortality rate in most areas was would bt the equivalent af an very high said Lucille due iD PLUMING amp HEATING I American social worker she large part to umbilical tetanus visited areas of the Diocese preshy caused by unsanitary delivery viously all but unreached by the techniques

Church Another technique was organ- I Aim of the team she explainshy ization of one-week parish Wy 3 0911 699 B II II A

ed wail to change dormant parshy courses centered around the idea man - e VI emiddotmiddot ven~ ishes into Christian communishy of Christian cominunity Lucille Nwamp~fQrd ties Seventeen parishes were said middotshe would start the course I visited in the course of a year by trying to explain the concept lImiddottI-IIIlII_middot tI-II--tl- __ __ __ _-IIllIIIiImiddotllIlI_-IIllII~ -~~ ~--middot- ~ and a half rmging from mem- of Christians as people of God - - shy

berships of 20000 souls to 75000 then would set up discussion ~ItIIIIHtHIIIIIDIIIIUIIIIHlIIIIIIIiIllIIlHKHHIIItIIIIUIIIIIIIUllllliillllllllllIJllilllllllllllllilllllllll~ The 75OOO-member parish said Ioupsmiddot en suchmiddot subjects asmiddot~ -_sect_Lucille had only one priestmiddot 10 What ismiddota person-Person to ~ middotY 5 hmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot meet its needs person relationships~ and Dif- sect E we ayemiddot ~

Plan 01 AetiOll ferences between ordinary eom- ~ == The apostolic teamsaid Lushy munities andthe parish sect LARGE LIVEmiddot ~

eille would first survey condishy This would lead to a discussion sect ~ ~=_=_ tions and decide what most of the function of Christians and sect needed doing then plan an edushy what iii Christian community sect shycational program Three or fo~rmiddot should be lIke Theil leaders ~ while they la5~ - ~ natural leaders in each parish were ready to ask the parishion ~ sect= were chosen and arrangements ers if any were ready to coin- ~ were made to get them to an mit themselves as parish team sect Macleans SemiddotQmiddot F d ~ Archdiocesan training center for members to a stronger expres- ~ 00 S == a one month leadership training sian of their Christian fellow- sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN Tel 997-9358 sect eourse wverins lIlatechetics lit ooip Go~ of the lipQBtolie tea iulHIHlIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIJlIIIUillIIJlmIllUiJiillJillnililunJililillliiihIUllllIIlIilill(IIUJIIIJ1I1llIJllliinillllllltuE

- ~ - -~_middotmiddotij_Uimiddotmiddot ~ _

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 An Exce1lent Lcte Summer Activity J VI SIT-middot

Louisiari ~copyfrish A~~ampmpli~~~sect r~bull ~T[T uiH~Dfro[j1) fr ~rtilfrreg~[(frDIri)middot middot~~rrfr~~~Q~t~~~~~~~JJ~~tt$

MADISONVILLE (NC)--+wo cently used for ~~gt~es~was wears ago in this quiet jural torn down Its blue I green~and ~ J~lf ~ town the single square block white stained grass riow frames

ltContaining Catholic ch u r c h the huge rear wIndow ~ ~t buildings symbolized the old era Anselms church - - [f~[LL lRlt OV~~middot ~now it stands for the new This Spring St Catherines

Two years ago two churches also came down Gone too are stood 200 feet apart on this he cOl-vents and bullone school More than 280000 people havle cilrElody been aboard iUO ~he past ys[ioblock--St~ Catherine wh ere The other school building was

whites worshipped and St retained for parish meetings and Francis Xavier where Negroes the now-integrated Confratershy

worshipped The rectory with fiity of Christian Doctrine its one priest to serve both par- classes ishes s too d between theC rhe 100 or so school children

centhtirches moremiddot as a symbol of - arenow transported to elemEmshythe psychological gap thac asan tilt-y and high schools in nearby

actual separation covirigton arid Mandeville middot A fence stood between the two CCD instructions have been

eonventS on the block~riefor givengtySfsters qfChristian the Negro nuns who taughtCharityandtheirstudEints from

Negro children in the ~e~ro ~~njpirClncy at FolsoM La and IIchool the other for the wfitte byseminariaris fromarby St IllUns who taught white children i-Jolieph seminarY Butmiddot tpeseiii the whHe school diities are being taken over by

Now there is one church onemiddot tlie parishs integrated CCD orshyrectory and one small classroom ganizatiorinow being trained

building -- and one parish St The pastor Father John J Anselm DenDulk is prouder of the

Although wee k day Masses smooth transition than he is of were said in only onemiddot of the the physical change shytwo old churches Masses and Participation in worship has ether services on Sundays and increased since the new church major feast days were said in w~ built he says and he has

middot both Midnight Masses on Christ- the best commentators in the mas were celebrated concurrent- whl)le world

Iv in the two churches AIthougb there are only 260 But the buildings weremiddot badly families in the parish the new

Qn need of repair So in 1964 the ~church is already more than half lttId frame church of St Francis paid for and the parish topped

middot Xavier whose parish records go its quota in the archdiocesan back to 1863 and which was re- education expansion drive

bull ~ I bull

Bishop Pmiddoterry Says New Orleans Has Healthy Racial Climate

DENVER (NC) - Auxiliary still has more influence thaa Bishop Harold R Perry SyD any other Negro in the civil of New Odeans first AmeJican rights movement Catholic Negro bishop in this He (Bishop Perry) has been

lt1lentury said here a hea~thy very favorably received in New racial climate will exist wher- Orleans eve~ the Negro has a chan~ to Some Cannot WaU voice his grievances He said there will undoubtedshy

Bisnop Perry dted New 9r- ly be some civil rights groups lleans as an example sayipg the who disapprove lt)f non-violence racial climate there is healthy and occasional demonstrationS

because of an interracial council by those who cannot wait appointed by Louisiana~ov Of course I am a Negro and

John J McKeithen to help splve we have been waiting a long rmcial problems time If you take the long view I There are no demonstra~ions complete equality cant come too and riots and very little picket- quickly he added~

lng he said The cotiJlc~1 i-e- He said he has been received lieves tensions and if the Negro very well even enthusiastically has a forum to talk over his con- in New Orleans Picketing outshyeerns he will not demonstrate side the church where he was

Schools Integrated ~onsecrated he s3id Was DOt typical of the general feeling in

The 50-year-old prelate said New Orleans be is proud New Orleans has in- As an evidence of his popushytegrated all Its schools Its a larity he said he spoke at ninemiddot large percentage not just token graduations in June and has ofshyhe added ficiated at Confirmation in 24

He said Catholics are doing parishes their part to advance equality of opportunity in his citymiddot 1 think [EceQJl1illeIJilD~~ CCrrnDDOdegthere has been Ii united effort tl)Ir If

by all faiths and we would like ~~ ~DcopyQJIJilampIbgtD~~~DIJil to keep it that way he de- CRANSTON (NC) I hdared - n a s ow The New Orleans bishop also of the ecumenical spirit lea4ers ~ommented on ~ wide range of of major religious faiths in this

area took part in a combined eivil rights issues saying

The new militancy shown by bull religious and groundbreaking Visit the BClI~~ie$Mp anldllode alIeplica of the Old iFal~middot River Bill1e~ middottmiddotsom~ civi~ rights groups is a service on the site of the proshy

posed Church of the Annunciashypassing phase tion Greek Orth()dox lours start every 30 minutes

The majority of Negroes are Archbishop lakovo primate lJympathetic to the non-violent of the Greek Orthodox Church Opeill aU year round - 9 AM to Sunsetphilosophy of the Rev Dr Mar- of North and South America of tin Luther King and Dr King ficiated at the open air hierar- For Group Arrangements Call 678-1100 chal Divine Liturgy service at-

Serra Meeting tended by more than 500 pershy l)OOOO()ooOOC)ooOOClOOC)ooOOC)OO~IOOl sons

THIS MESSAGE Sp()NSORED IV lHE FOllOWING INDIVIDUALSATLANTIC CITY (NC) - A Participants in the groundshyeonference for members of Ser- breaking ceremony included AND BUSINESS CONCERNS IN GREATER FALL RIVERlIa Clubs in the New York-New Catholic Bishop Russell J MoshyJersey - eastern Pennsyivania Vinney of Igtrovidence Archshy ANN DALE PRODUCTS INC MACKIENZIE amp WINSLOW INC area will be held here Sept 23 deacon William L Kite represhy II~DY ELECTRIC SUPPLY COMASON FURNITURE SHOWROOMS tKi 25 Msgr William Noe Field senting the Rt Rev John Seville CASCADE DRUG CO GERALD E McNALLY CONTRACTOItiff Seton Hall University South Higgins Episcopal Bishop of GLOBE MANUFACTURING CO SOBILC)FF BROTHERS Orange NJ will give the key- Rhode Island Dr Wayne ~is

~~TGHINSON OIL COa~te address Sept 24 apoundter a executive director ofmiddot the Rhode STERUllIG BEVERAGES INC

~A Mc~HIRR ~9MPANY TEXTIU WORKERS UNION Of AMERICAeOncelebrated Mass at which the 1s~and Council of Churches ~nd ~rE~~ATIQNALV4DIES GARMENT 1 bull AlL~tO - principal concelebrant will be Rabbi Jerome Smiddot Gurland Gf

WORKERS UNION (EUOW CAI COMPANY Bishop George W Ahr of Tren~ ~telligtl~ Sinai 1epresentingthe ton Bhode Island Board of Rabbiamp bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull0 MssSelbullbull

~ ~ ~ - bull bull bull bull I ~ j

- ~

_-- -

0

WomenB~ Job Corps Members middotAid Youngsters Improve Reading

OMAHA (NC)-Omaha Wom- chesne Mother Moody found a ens Job Corps members joined benefactor to supply ihe a11shywith five graduates of Duchesne importlnt incentive program College and Academy of the Thanks to a generous racetrack

Sacred Heart here to upgrade bettor Who won the daily double the reading level of local public there was enough money for school youngsters candy bar prizes and two picnics

The progra~ ca]]edProject An indication or- the success of Upstart was first conceIved by the program was found in the Mother Helen Condon dean of reaction of the students A reshythe Nebraska co]]eg~ Mother cent visitor asked one of the Rosemary Moody aSsIstant pro- young boys Why are you here fessor o~ ~sYChology volunteer~ Did someone make you come to adminIster and execute themiddot program

The original plans were to take a group of seventh graders from Horace Mann Junior High School and tutor them in develshyopmental reading and study skills It soon became apparent that some rather basic instrucshytion was required some of the ehildren were still reading at the second grade level

Duchesnes elementary school was offered for use by Mother Helen Sheahan superior An Omaha public school official suggested that the Omaha Wom- ens Job Corps be contacted to see if they could furnish high school graduates as tutors Robshyert Bathke Job Corps education director soon put five young ladies at Mother Moodys disshyposal

Five recent Duchesne gradushyates volunteered to train the tutors for two weeks before the program actually began The Duchesne alumnae eventualiy elected to stay on for the entire program

Mother Moodymiddot was so imshypressed with the potential of the Job Corps enro]]ees that she exshytended their sessions through the rest of the summer and made college preparatory work avail shyable to them

Student Reaction Perha~s one of the more unshy

usual aspects of the entire Upshystart program was its lack of financing The only real subsidy (about $500) was from the OMaha Public School system the bulk of which went to the Omah~ Transit Company for bus service

The equipment used in the classrooms was borrowed from the public schools the Omaha Womens Job Corps and Du-

Plan to Supplement History Books

SAN FRANCISCO (NC) shyA supplementary text showing the contributions of minority groups in United States history will be added to history and social science books already in use in archdiocesan schools here

The supplement containing some 150 pages will deal chroshynologica]]y with the contribu- tions of Jews Negroes Orientais and various nationalities from southern Europe

It is being prepared by a speshycial studly committee which illl evaluating current textbooks found need for more thorough material on the part minority

groups have played in the OOUDshytry1s history

Leave Providence For Mission Work

PROVIDENCE (NC) - Four Capuchin priest and two layshymen left New York by plane for mission work in the Santa Rosa de Copan diocese Honduras

Father Ad ria n Holzmeister OFM Cap provincial of tile Capuchins St Mary province with headquarters here said the six will work among some 50000 persons in Mlree parishes in the state of Ocotepeque He said

other mjssionersmiddotas they become ayailabie wiD be sent to aid Bishop Jose Canama CbampvezCli tile diocese

He looked up and said Im here because I want to learn to read and I like it Two girls who missed the morning bus to Duchesne gave another exain-ple of determination to learn Jhey undertook a two-hour five mile walk rather than miss a day of class

L R oy etreats Contlnu~d from Page Six

laymens convention-an effort to provide some figure of speech some image to suggest to those in the Church and to those out-

side what is the inner nature of the Church

Alluding to Scriptures refershyences to the Church in terms of sheep and shepherds the former Hub Auxiliary Bishop asked How many people in Boston have ever seen a sheep Sheep and shepherds say little to youngstersmiddot in housing projects or even in the suburbs

The Bishop who is epiScopal advisor for the NCLRC officiashyted at the lighting of an eightshyfoot candle which symbolized the

conference theme-uThe Light of Chr~st The candle burned throughout the convention

Speakers stressed the retreat program is geared to demOJishystrate to the world that the way of Christ can become more meaningiful to men of our time

Bishop Ernest J Primeau of Manchester reminded delegates of recent profound changes withshyin the Church

If the lay retreat movement is to remain vital and relevant

he said it cannot be static It must be in harmony with the times at all times

Honest Call1Se

Our retreat houses could 00-middot eome so to speak the equipment and training centers for the apostolates of the laity he adshydect

Bishop Primeau urged laymei to learn from modern science particularly in the field of hushyman psychology He said there is an opportunity as well to learn from other organizations both secular and religious He added The youth of today are un-

selfish and in large numbers they are seeking for an honest cause to which they can dedicate themshyselves as witness their devotion to the Peace Corps and the civil rights movement

Modernize AncEtenlt Puerto Rico CIl1llLmlrch

SAN JUAN (NC) =- A lPJt8shyyear-old church one of the most popularmiddot in this capital city~ ~

going modern Archbishop Luis Aponte of

San Juan has inaugurated middotal campaign for funds for restorashytion of St Anns a public orashytory now badly illl need of Jeshypairs

1ft addition to restoration the ehurch also Will be equipped with air conditioning The eburch is the archdiocesan ceDltgt ~r for the Confraternity Gi Christian Doctrine and perpetual adoration of the Blessed Sacrashyment Built ill 184B the cburch weplaced an edifice which dated )Iaek iG tile lWi century

PROFESSION ANJ)) RECEPTION Four postulants beshycame canonical novices and two prof~ssed their vows as Sisters of St Joseph at ceremonies at the Blessed Sacrashyment Church Fall River Left column top to bottom Sr Gerard Marie (first vows) Sr Anne Therese Sr Rita Josshyeph Bishop Connolly who received the sisters Right colshyumn Sr Anne Denise Sr St Paul and Sr Alfred Marie (renewed temporary vow-s)

Specialmiddot Education Priests Visi~ PaJ~ents Homes to ExplOJon

SignificOJlI1lce off Baptismal Ritual

Thurs Aug 25 1966

Governor Balks

ST JEAN (NC)-Sunday bapshytisms are prece~ed by Saturday nights special educational proshygrams in a number of Catholic homes here in Quebec

The program to prepare the whole family for baptism through a home visit was deshyvised three years ago by a group of pries~s working togeth~r as a pastoral team

central idea of the program ~s that it is good for the priest to be with his people at imporshytant times in their lives~ Atmiddot these times people are dispOSed to receive the message of Christ

as it applies to their circumshystances the developers of the plan reported

The visiting priest explains the lOOremonies of the next day and the symbolic meaning of various parts of the baptismal ritual

Pilgrims Wctmlk TORONTO (NC) -The 10th

annual walking pilgrimage to the Canadian Martyrs shrine at Midland Ont will begin here Wednesday Organized by the Guild of St John de la Lande the pilgrimage will cover the 100 miles to the shrine in five days a~riving there Sunday Sept 4

LEMIEUX PLUMBING amp HEATING INC

fof Oomestic l~ andmiddot Industrial ~ Sales and Service

Oil Burners WY 5-1631

2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE NEW BEDFORD

Relatives neighbors or the prospective gorlparents may be presentbut themiddot home visit usually involves just the parents and their children

The ide is to make the preshybaptism vsit an oppodunity for dialogue between the priest and the parents rather than a conshyference

Ten parishes in the St Jean diocese have adopted the praeshytice along with l few Montreal parishes Father Marcil Brillon secretary of the St Jean litur- gical commission said he exshypects the practice to spread

FALSE TEETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass Many wearers of false teeth suJIer

embarrassment Qecause their platesdrop Blip or wobble at Just the wrong time Dont live In fear of thts happening to you Just sprinkle a little FASTEErH the non-acid powder on your plates Holds false teeth more firmly so they feel more comfortable Checks denture breath Dentures that fit are essential to health See your dentist regularlyGet FASTEETH at all drug counters

At Proposals MONTPELIER (NC) - Vershy

monts Gov Philip Hoff said he bas extreme reservations conshycerning abortion and sterilizashytion proposals contained in a reshyport of an adivsory committee on the mental retardation situshyation in the middotstate

The report called for legal sanctioning of induced abortion in cases where there appears to be a high risk of mental retarshydation of an unborn child

Thereport also contained a suggestion concerning steriliza shytion of the mentally retarded

Apart from the recommenda~ tions on legalized abortion and sterilization of the mentally reshytarded I must S4ly it was II good report Gov Hoff said He said lie will study the report with utmost care before taking any action 0

Expresses Thanks To Holy Father

VATICAN CITY (NC) -The vice prime minister of Vietnam has paid a visit to Pope Paul VI to thank him for his peace efshyforts and generous help to reshylieve the suffering of the Vietshynamese people General Nguyen Huu Co vice prime minister and secretary of state for national defense of Vietnam visited privately withshythe Pope for 30 minutes Accord- ing to a Vatican Press Office bulletin

The vice prime minister in the name of South Vietnam exshypressed profound gratitude for the valid support always given by the head of the Catholic Church and of the Holy See in the cause of peace and for the generous assistance sent by the Holy Father to relieve the sufshyfering of those persons torshymented by war The distinguishshyed visitor then continued tomiddot deshyclare that the intentions of South Vietnam are directed only toward an affirmation of the liberty of its own nation and Wgt arriving at a just peace in honor and concord

Complete

BANKING SERVICE

for Bristol County

Bristol County Trust Company

TAUNTON MASS

THE ~ANK ON TAUNTON GREEN

Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Bristol Community College Offers Evening Classes

64 Durfee St Fall River Credit classes begin September 19 1966

Register Now Mondays thrrough Thursdays 200-500 PM Courses for college credit or self improvement are offered ill

The arts languages and literature Behavioral and social sciences accounting business

administration and secretarial scieRCe Mathematics science engineering and electro-mechanical technology

Advisors Availabie During ~egistration Hours

16 THE AI~ ~-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

C~nsiders Instability Causes In Latin American lamds

From Social R-evolution in the New Latin Ameriea Edited by John J Considine MM

There are many causes of instability in Latin America Some have said in the past that it is an inheritance frQm

Spain They feel that the years of Spanishauthoritarianism rendered the colonies incapable of integrating themselves into a more balanced social system Because they had there exists the problem of low

denSity of population with a lackpreviously lacked indepenshyof internal communication In-dent creole authority the many cases there is even a lanshy

colonies were unprepared to acshy guage barrier eept a more democratic authorshy The problem of an underdeshyity In his book veloped economy has also beenBetween Freeshy a factor in forming Latin Anlershy clom and Fear ican social structureGerman Arcinshy On the social level the eleshyiegas draws a ments I have mentioned favorcomparison beshy an internal lack of class strucshytween the Enshy ture that involves a juxtaposishyglish and Spanshy tion rather than a social organi shyish governments zation and integration Democshyin the Americas racy on the other hand presupshyIn ihe north the poses a large scale integrationcolonists came in of the people in the politicalshysearch of freeshy economic-social life of thedom IIi the end nationthe founding of the Nodh The masses of -illiterates inAmerican colonies was only the Latin America who do not parshyobvious culmination of a process ticipate in these areas have noalready begun It was the reafshy iilterest in government thoughfirmation of customs already inshy their interest and loyalty maygrained in the social milieu It be enlisted by the demagoguewas an evolution not a real revshyolution for these settlers were Formation or Dictatorships accustomed to autonomy The A dictatorship takes form

authority pf their governors was when one or more pressure more democratic since they groups unchallenged seizes the worked closely with the popular power of governmentassemblies From the beginshy In order to better understand ning the keenest concern of the the types of dictatorship found North American colonist was for in Latin America let us elCamshyfreedom of worship and his hosshy ine the different forms of revoshytility to the Church of England lution and the various ways in was evident which the pressure groups

On the contrary Latin Amershy bring their influence to bearIca was part of an empire The Kalmal1 Silvert distinguishesSpaniards came to dominate and these types in his book Reaction evangelize The viceroy represhy and Revolution in Latin Amershysented the king who was an abshy ica which is written in -Englishsolute monarch The role of Silvert shows the relationshipshyassembly in Latin America was between dictatorships and the secondary arid represented exshy extreme indivdualism found in tremely liIIlited power these countries

Independence in the Latin The first type of revolution American nations entailed a real named is what Silvert calls the revolution since from the beginshy simple brracks revolt Most of ning they were forced tb look for the outbreaks especially in the new political and social forms past century have been of this

Religiousliberty did not elCshy kind The barracks revolt occurs ist in the Latin American coloshy typically in a big class society nies since all were obliged to It is carried out by the amlY

membership in the Cathoiic sompoundtimes in its own name and Church sometimes in behalf of a chosen

Unassimilated Groups leader This type of revolution - rarely calses widesprelld publicThis comparison will help in

disturbance since it representsunderstanding the Latin Amershymerely a switch in governmentican problem though it will not from one general to anotherfully explain -it We must acshy

knowledge that the political The second type the peasant phenomeinon has a direct COIshy revolt is generally of little sigshyrelatio~1 with demographic probshy nificance and limited in effect lems such as the existence of to a locality though the Mexican large unassitnilated groups as revolution at the beginning of well as masses of mestizos un this century would perhaps fall derdeveloped and deprived who in this category can scarcely be said to partici shy Third the regional revolt pate in twentieth century chili shy commcn in the early days of zation Although these groups Latin American independence form a part of the nation they Here _the caudillo strove to put are not integrated either socially down provincial revolts and to eulturally or politically centralize power in an authorishy

Despite the over-all demoshy tarian I e g i () n a I government g~aphic explosion in some areas Typical of the caudillos who led

regional revolts was Rosas of Argentina

Plans Participation The fourth a more modern type of revolution Silvert callsIn Liturgical Week the complicated barracks revolt

HOUSTON (NC) - The 1966 This is an insurrection that inshyLiturgical Week here fOI the -volves civilian as well as mili shyfirst time in its 25-year history tary groups with widespread will have a full scale program military action for those interested in the The issues are ideological and Eastern Church relate to political parties as well

As part of the Liturgical Week as _ other interest groups The program the Divine Liturgy Cuban revolution in its beginshy(Mass) of St John Chrysostom nings might be considered -an will be celebrated entirely in example Although this is the English and Communion will be most prevalent type ainong modshydjstributed under both species ernday revolutions excetions Chief celebrant of the Liturgy are the revolts which overthrew will be Archbishop Paul Achkar Peron in Argentina Perez-JimeshyGreek Catholic ~-chbishop of nez in Venezuela and -Rojas Lattaquia in Syua Pinilla in Colombia

SISTER AMBROSE

Says SOo Africa Needs Americans

WASHINGTON (NC)-Yanshykee come over a statement which would do much to boost the morale of Americans in sevshyeral parts of the world could well summarize what an Irish missionary nun to South Africa

-has been saying during a visit here _

The wonderful hospitality of theAmerican people has imshypressed Sister Ambrose Harty Gf the Sisters of the Holy Family She lamens the fact that opporshytunities to receive Americans in a like manner have been few and far between during her 20 years in South Africa

Youve got such a lot to give she said here in an ~ntershyview during which she expressed a strong desire to see greatly inshycreased people-to-people relashytio~s between the country where she serves and the United States

Sister Ambrose was particushylarly interested in the Peace Corps ann reported that its purshyposes and work are hardly known by the people of Soutli Africa I haVent heard it disshycussed at all she said (The Peace Corps has not been invited into the country) (

With words of praise for the missionary work being done iii the South African Republic by Oblate arid Paulist missionaries from the United States she also expressed regret at the general paucity of missioners from this country There particularly is an almost total lack of nuns she said Only 71 Catholic missionshyaries from the United States inshycluding 16 nuns are serving ilm South Africa

Married Priests AMSTERDAM (NC)-A

Dutch public opinion poli h8lll shown that 11 per cent of the Netherlands p e 0 pIe woulci rather have III married Catholi4l clergy than a celibate clergy The poll including members ai all and no denominations

-showed that 68 per cent of the Catholics queried preferred III married clergy

~~

(DEBROSS OIL ( ~ co ( ~ Heating Oils

~ and BMIIJUrs ~

~ 365 NORYIoli IFROIlir SUEampll ( rJ NEW IBIEDIFOR

~ WYmafi 2middot5534 (

I~~~

Parishes Share DETROIT (NC) - Twentyshy

nine urban parishes here have decided to help one another meet the rising cost of education

At the elementary level parshyepts will pay $50 per family $75 per family for non-Catholic parishioners and $75 per student

Danish Catholic COPENHAGEN (NC) -Thereshy

are 11321 Catholics in the Danish capitalaccording to a report issued by the Copenhagen statistical office They consti shytute the second largest religious entity there next to the Luthershyans members of the State Church The total number of Catholics in Denmark is approxshyimately 26000 Total population is 35 lllillion

Education Costs for Catholics outside the parish

At the high school level the tuition cost is $H)O per student in or out of the parish With the exception of textbooks this amount eliminates aU extra fee charged up to now

Father Norman P Thomas director of the Urban Parisll Apostolate said the greatest efshyfect of the joint effort will be experienced by the pastor who sends parish youngsters to a higll school operated by any of the 2 participating parishes

In this instance the students parishes will be expected to pay the difference between the tui shytion charged and the actual cost per student The latter fee laM been set by the parochial school office at over $200 per year

ETHIOPIA- THE NEW AFRICA

- HOLY FATlftRB MIBBIIDN AID TO THI DRIENTAL OHURCH

- BROTHER What happens In Ethiopia when an American MICHAEL Christian Brother (he could be your son brother

REYNOLDS nephew) Is told to upgrade Catholic schools He FROM borrows a Jeep (or a mule) visits the schools

PROVIDENCE RI one by one writes home for pencils and better REPORTS textbooks and then beginsbullbull This is the new

fROM Africa Brother Michael Reynolds reports enshyADDIS thusiasticallyfrom Addis Ababa It can be a BABJpeacefuf progressive Christian Africa tom~rmiddot

row Just give us schools give us time and with Gods help the job will De donel bull bullThe schools are for villages like Aressa Aiga Biers Wartll8~

-which have no school The youngsters know that knowledge i~ their only chance theyll go without food to learnbullbullbull What does It cost to build a schoolf Only $2950 says Brother Michael for the villagers snd the children give their laborfreemiddotofmiddotcharge We can train a catemiddot chlst for only $40 bullbullbull In thanksgiving to God for what you know will you do what you can ($100 $75 $50 $25 $15 $10 $5 $2) to give these youngsters a chance The school will be named for your favorite saint and the children will pray for your loved ones daily If you build It all byyourself ($2950) School will open late this year-but better late than never-If you Vlrit~ to us right now

WHAT Our priests there who receive no othor income IELSE for food and clothing will offer promptly the

FOR Masses you request Well forward your Mass ETHOPIAr Inten~ons through the Holy Fathers officebull

40 young lads studying for the priesthood In Decamere lose their football when It goes Into a nelghbers garden A large field can be bought ~velled and mede safe for sports fer $975

MAKINQ ~~IOOOO will ovfde bull OOfDj)lete parjstlplantA (Ohuroh rectory convent andscbool) In southshy

WiW ImIAdla In memorybullbullbullbull $600 will ttiln a native lrfHt1SOO bull native Sfster Our legal tltI Cl~1HOUO NWt lAir WIUAH AHOCIAnONo

_-------------~shytt coINIILOIIlt IUMIIIND ~ bullbull la IJIIr bull _1OIt~=-=_==-=

PI _UM~gt

Mum ClO1IIponwith your mt__=-~~_ _ ~i offrtnt ~~ erryen 8TAlI-lPCODI_

HI IATHaLl1 RIIiAR 811 WILAbullbull AIaDIATaN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS IRANCUS CARDINAL SPELLMAN President MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretal)f Write OATHOLIO NfIAR IiAST WELFARE Assoo 1)80 MadlsolJ Avenuomiddot New York NY 10017 -felGpilonel 212YUkon 6middot6840

Dormitory Proves Stonehill Permanently Coeducational

Way back in 1951 when the first girl enrolled in Stoneshyhill College no one could have imagined that a girls dormishytory would ever be built onmiddot the campus But the sound of steam shovels and hammers filling the air over the lovely grounds in Easton is proof

and two girls from the seniorthat the long planned for daslr-assisting the housemothergirls dorm will soon be a Mrs Grace Callahan

reality When Stonehill was The experiment worked so founded in 1948 as a mens colshy well in fact that this coming lege the fledgling school had Fall both the freshman and just gotten off to a good start sophomore girls will be housed when the Korean War came this way leaving only the junior along and emptied the classshy and senior girls still renting Yooms as the young men went quarters in private homes chosen into the services by the college as all the nonshy

That was the year that many commuting girls have done in small colleges had to close their the past gates forever But at Stonehill That typical campus situation the Holy Cross order was detershy -the sorority house-is not in mined to hold onto this new the picture at Stonehill-or frashyschool that they had planned for ternity houses either for that so long matter No sororities or fraternishy

What could they do to keep ties are allowed on the campus the college operating until the There is a cl11b however that war was over and the boys came is the girls own - the Crosier back Of course Open their Club Mrs Yosgandes is the gates to girl students clubs faculty advisor and she deshy

Faculty Pleased scribes it as the organization What started out as a temposhy for women studentE who want

rary expediency somehow over to contribute in their own parshythe years has acquired a happy middotticular way as women to their permanancy No one could be college more pleased about this turn of Through their annualmusical events than the Stonehill faculty Crosier Curtain Calls theyitself raise money to acquire manymiddot

Helping out in Jhe ground things that add beauty and breaking ceremony for the new charm to campus life This yeardorm Mrs Virginia Yosgandes they purchased two very lovelythe Dean of Women at the colshy silver tea and coffee services lege saiei I guess everyone will Any official group at the collegereally believe that the girls are is allowed to borrow the sets and here til stay they have already been used in

Mrs Yosgandes says that since many functions she first came to the Stonehill New Signfaculty in 1958 rumors have

Mrs Yosgandes says Thebeen popping up that Stonehill girls will be very pleased whenwill soon return to its original they come back th~~ Fallto seestatus as an all male school The the beautiful new sign theynew dorm she says will be visshybought for the college installedible proof of the permanancy of on Route No 138 women on the beautiful campus

Its very easy to picture theThe $1150000 building deshyvery charming Dean presidingsigned to accommodate 200 girls

graciously at a faculty tea Aand proctors will be three stories parishioner of Immaculate Conshyof red brick Architects W Chesshyception chulCh in Easton she ister arown and Associates and in ~rivate life an enthusiasticwntractors C A Batson and homemaker anc the mother of aCompany are planning to comshy13 year old daughter Christineplete work on the dorm in time Her husband John is assistantfor the opening of classes in principal at Franklin JuniorSeptember 1967 It will be the High first unit of a five dormitory

She speaks with great convicshycomplex planned fo the women on tion about college girls holdingcampus

onto feminine ideals while surshyKitchen ~pace rounded-and at Stonjhill outshyMrs Yosgandes is happy about numbered 3 to 1- by menthe fact that the new dorm will While were encoulaging themhave a kitchenette on each floor to be acdve in thpound communitywhere the girls can cook small and the church and in politicsmeals and entertain guests Shes and encouragint them to deshyhoping that the dorms built after

more velop their abilities to the full shythis me will providtgt even est-we never fail to take intokitchen space for the girls to account the fact that they arepractice the culinary arts women and in this competitiveM a n~ tImes homemaking world theyll have to -fight toskills come to a complete halt maintain their feminine idenshywhen a girl goes to college she tity says Apparently all classroom

work and rio cooking make Jane Coed Actiiti~s

Coed a dull girl in the room When she fi rst came to the where shell be spending a great college she sltys the girls were deal of time after graduationshy mainly interested in strictlythe dtchen feminine extra curricular activishy

Mrs Yosgandes says A great ties-fastion shows teas gids many cCJlleges have been workshy sports Bd this has changed radshying witt this problem and wonshy ically in the last few years and dering what to do about it Beshy now the girls are much more inshycause theyve had no living terested in the coed acti vitiesshyquarters for girls on campus the newspapers the debating Stonehiiil has had to do out of team the drama club Stonehill necessit) what many other colshy is noted a~ one of a small handshyleges have chosen to do recently ful gtf Catholic colleges where The Dean describp~ an experishy girls are middotactive in every part of ment that the collFge tJied last college life Every coure at yeal tha has worked out exshy StonehHj is opel to girls tremely well We still havent had a woman

Experiment Successful president of our student governshyThe college leased a grollp of ing body the Senate Mrs

rooms il an apartmelt building Yosgandes says Now girls in Brockton last Fall where all what are yOIi waiting for the freshman girls who were not commuters-55 of them-lived in housekeeping apartments In Red Groups There were four girls in each BERLIN (NC)-Over 85 per apartment all sharing the reshy (ent of East German children sponsibilities of housekeeping between the ltlges of 6 and 14 are

The girls hat two sets of mCl11)ers of communist youth 1)IoctOS - two aIumni wumen ~nIUps

lrt-OE ANCH0) 17 Thurs Aug 25 1966

PriestCuod Goal Of Top Skater

GREAT FALLS (NC)-A good many folks in this Montana toWlll will attest that teenager J Mishlll Petkevich is a pretty good skate -on or oH the ice

The affable blond youngster 17 topped a field of 136 pershyformers in the three-day Lake Placid N Y international free style competition sanctioned by the U S and Canadian Figure Skating Assoclations The Great Falls lad was the judges unamiddot1ishymous choice for the mens gold medal in the finals

But Petkevich doesnt lose his cool off the ice His classmates and teachers at Great Falls Censhytral 3igh School claim hes liIl

winner in every event He spends more than 40 hours 11 week in skating training but carries the full load of class studies and consistently turns Up on the schools honor roll Hes a member of the National Honor Society

The school supported me ami the way Everyone has beeEl wonderfUl to me the modest youngster saia Hes been -skatshying since he was 2 He credit his achievements to his Catholic Faith the sacrifices of his parshyents and of Arthur Bourke senshyiormiddot professional of the Great Falls Figure Skating Club He said All I did was skatemiddotGROUND-BREAKING The Very Rev John T Corr

I hope some day to become~esc president of Stonehill College turns a shovelful of priest Petkevich said wbeilearth to mark start of construction 0pound a 200-student dormshy a~ked his ambition I hope 14gt itory for women on the Stonehill campus Watching the proshy attend Notre Dame for at leasa celtlures are left to right Mrs Virginia Yosgandes dean af two years and then I h9pe to gf)

to the Catholic University fl4women John C Doody 66 Alumni fund chairman Robert AmericaBatson contractor Harold Bonvie ass~iate of the archishytect

Msgr Canty Continued from Page OneRussian Schools ing studies at S1 Marys High

Taunton Boston- College and S1 Bernards Seminary RochesshyChristian Brother Lauds Students terN Y

nespect for Intellectuols He served as assistant at Our Lady 01 the Isle NantucketCHICAGO (NC)-Students in to foreign languages than Amershy Holy Family Taunton St

schools behind the Iron Curtain icans Most students take a Marys Barrowsville and Stgo at their studies with a passhy seven-year sequence of English Johns Attleboro He was apshysion said Brother Kevin Mark German or French English he pointed to the Chaplains CorPJFSC who toured Russia and added is the most popular lanshy of the United States Navy infour satellite countries with 19 guage and more emphasis is January 1942 and retiredwitbother U S rducatois placeltl on reading and speaking the rank of captain in Decemshy

Brothel Mark who is princishy than on writing it ber 196gt Pope John XXIII pal 9f St Mels high school here Brother Mark said that there elevated him to the rank of attributed much of their motivashy is almost nothing that he would Domestil Prelate with the title tion to the students attitude that lift from the Soviet school sysshy of Right Reverend Monsignor iI What I do does contribute to tem and apply in the U S May 1962 the welfare of the state He admitted however that Bishop Connolly named Monshy

Brother said he felt that stushy they do get results They have a signor Canty pastor of St Paulsdents in this country lack motishy tremendous capacity for conshy Taunt-ln in December 1963 vation because were spoiled centration when they set their Industrial improvements have sights for example their space made it that a young man can program Its not all a matter go into a trade and make very of being chained to a lab table good money BLUE RIBBON

In the Soviet Union he said there seems to be a great reshyspect for intellectuals and the LAlnNDRY student is thought of as a proshy

01 STOPfessional schJlar 273 CE~RAl AVE~UIIG CfflTERTeaching is considered a proshy

fession and remunelated accordshy e Television C FmiddotI ure illgly WY 2-6216o r-cerv

St Mels principal observed on IlA Allen St Newhdfordhis tour that there was little NEW BEDFORD questioning on the part of the students

The chSSloom situation he said is very much teacher ori shyented that is study in depth is 21 DAY PILGRIMAGES TO EUROPE done on the teachers inspiration

rou~ 1-Legion of Mary Pilgrimage leaving Sept 12th with Truth in such areas as history Father Edward A Oi-viera will visit Killarney Dublin Paris

cllld literature is accepted as a Lourdes Rome Madrid Lisbon and Fatima - Tour 2shyforegone conclusion and stushyHoly Cross Fathers Pilgrimage leaving Oct 10th with Frdents just memorize what has

already been discovered ----- lobert E McDonnell will wsit lisbon Fatima 1odrid Rome Lourdes Paris and londonIike F)rc~gn Linutges -cota cost is $82900 - Time PaymentsmiddotIn the area of science howshy arranged ever the situation is difterent

()Ii TOUR tOLDERS CONTACT STEolfEN A MARIIEYhe pont~d out because in scishyence there is an attitude of I n~ust discover Catholic Travel

-Office

The R1~middotmiddotmiddotO p oth-r Mark ~ltk St New Befl- -ass 02748

said ~ ve 11111j Ill)le auention

BURNERS

BUrntlr Service

Famous Reading HARDCQAl

NEW ENGLAND COKE

t8 THE ~NCHOR-Dioceseof fo Rivef-Thurs Aug 25 1966 J~sut I)riest Says Some Public I b M t EmploYE~~S Have Right to Strike

-

Urges uO or ovemen S NEW (NC) -Public however YORK Government hasmiddot h C employees in certain fields have been expanding its cQncern andIn Heml$p ere ooperate the right to strike against the has beenmoving into ar~as of government a priest declared transportation education recre-

By MsgrGooJrge C Higgins (Director Socian Actiolll Dept NCWC)

The relationship between the American labor moveshyment and the Latin American Confed~ration of Christian Trade Unions (CLASC) leaves much to be desired as we

middot thO d th 1- have aready noted severa1 t Imes m IS co umn urmg e

past four or five years The two movements are deeply different things to different peoshy

auspicious of one another and just when they seem to be on the verge of settling or at least -patching up their differshyences they go at it again and recklesslystart hurling insults at one another

To jUdge from What they sayIi b 0 u t on e another publicshy1yen as well as privately on e would t h ink that they were natural-born enshyemies whe~eas in fact they have much in common-much inore than they seem to realizeshyand for obvious reasons ought violent MisS Duncan was an officer of The fourth public member Harshyto be c60p~rating With onean- Moreo~er at least one promi~theSodality a cheerleader for vardlaw school professorVern ether as closely as pOSSible nent spokesman for the AFL- four years a member of the Ten- Countryman half ci-itiCized the This writer has learn~ci the hard WR and muc~ to hiS so~-row that any outSider who 18

fOolish enough totryto mediatek f

~tween them JS as mg or troouble

C f t Gommun same If for example one suggests

as I have done on more than one Occasion that soine of the anti U S propaganda emanating from CLASCsources revealS atremely harmful to the cause of n a i v e misunderstanding of Amerlcan trade unionism and American capitalism andor ari $ver-simplification of Catholic Social teaching he runs the risk 9f being written off as a blind -not tOsay reactionary apologist for so-called Yanqui ~mperial-

iBm If on the other hand oneslig

gests that some of the anti- CLASC propaganda enianating

fro m AFL-CI0 sources is equally naive and unsoPllisti shyeatedhe runs the same Sort of risk in reverse That is to say he is likely to be told--v~ry politely of course -that if he were to take off his Catholic blinkers and look at the record objectively he would quickly come to realize that CLASC is in reality playing t~ecipal rival in Latin America) riages in their mission parishes communist game in Latin Amer- there is a gEirierous mixture of Msgr Milia stated Since the iea superficial appearances to cultural chauvinism and envy Ogdensburg mission was opened the contrary notwithstanding that accompanies the most legit- a modern new church bas been

Both CaD Learn imate misgivings built under its direction in the Be that as it may I still think Even the Latinos middotthemselve~ seaport ofMatararii two mission

~t CLASC has a lot to learn he points out will admit on ac- churches have oeen completed about _ and from American casion that their consumirig fear and a lalge parish church and trade unionism And if that of Yanqui imperialism is often center are currently under conshymakes me a reactionary Yankee irrational But there it is he re- struction in Mollendo ehauvinist so be it minds us and the basic prob-

By the same token however aiso think that the American

labor movement has much to learn about -- and from - the Christian trade union movement in Latin America The first thing it has to learn is that the Am~r-leap philosophy of pure-andshysimple bread-~d-butter union ism which all things considshyered has worked satisfactorily in this country is not necessarily well adapted to the present-day Deeds of Latin America

Meaning of Revolution Another way of saying the

same thing is that American iabor representativesworking on Latin America problemswm have to reconcile themselves to the fact that a social revolu-Uon is called for in Latin American labor federation that doesnt subscribe to a revolushytionary ideology is probably doomed to failure

The word revolution meaos J-

pIe of course To the leaders of CLASC it means a sweeping program of socioeconomic and political reform which goes far beyond the limited goals of bread-and-butter unionism

The leaders of CLASC are convinced that such a revolushytioo is demanded bythe Chrisshytian social ethic to which they subscribe and from which they derive their ideology

Perceptive Critique Some U S Labor repshy

resentatives are skeptical to say the least~bout the allegedly Christian content of CLASCs militant ideology They admit theneed for a peaceful revolushytion in Latin Americn butthey are convinced thatCLASC wants this revolution to be Feehan High School Attleboro alties in a letter tc therimes

lem is how to insure con~ PAVlA V I tlnuing cooperation between 0 untee rs Yanqui and Latino in spite of Complete TlIainirigit

Such cooperation Dr Hawkins WASHINGTON (NC)-Fortyshyconcludes will be impossible unshyless the leaders of the American labor movement positively indi~

cete their acceptance of social revolution in Latin America This will require he says

more than the generous transshyfusions of economic aid the stimulation under United States

labors auspices of leadership training programs for workers

and other cooperative ventures Need Broader View

What is required he insists ltCia a broader view-an ability on the part of the American la bor statemen to adopt policies that will not always accord with OUI own value~ and more speshy

cificall~ the tempering of (their) hosannas to free entershyprUie ___

inter-American labor unity I fully agree in this respect with Dr Carroll Hawkins Associate

Professor of Political Science at Michigan State University who recently published a most pershyceptive critique of American trade union policy in Latin- Catholics in Mollendo Peru the

America (The 0RIT and Amer diocesan missions director reshyican Trade Unions Conflicting ported Perspectives Industrial Rela- The New York priests were tionsand Social Changes in sent to Peru after Pope Paul Latin America University of vi -asked that more priests be Florida Press) pr9vjd~d fOr the people opoundSouth

Basic Problem America Msgr Anthony A Mi-Dr Hawkins admits of course lia said He estimated more than

that in all the Latin American 90 percent of the priests in criticism of United States unioniperu are from other countries in the ORIT (the Latin Ameli can regional unit of the Interna In 1965 the priests from Ogshytional Confederation of Free denburg administered 445 bap-Trade Unions and CLASCs prin tisms and perfoImed 64 mar-

CIOhas publicly charged in ej_ nis Club for two years and a suggested penaltiel fect that CLASCs ideology three yeaT member of the FU- owes more to Marxism than it ture Nurses club Father Carey sl~id the ~ays does to Christianity He finds it when pay and working condi-

An instructor in the Confra- tions for men and women inhard he says to accept the fact ternity of Christian Doctrine that the Christian labor move- civil service were determine4 byproglam in Our Lady of Mt I g I t d d t t

t middot A e IS a Ive It n a minIS ra Ive ment 0f L a In merIca IS non- Carmel Parish Seekonk the fiat have pas ed a d Communist s n we now

In my judgment this kind of criticism of CLASC by spokesshymen fltr the AFL-CIO is ex

three volunteers have completed the Second National Training Session sponsored by the Papal Volunteers for Latin America and received assignments in some ten Latin American coun- tries

Special ceremonies ended the six-week training session at the Catholic University of America where volunteers studied the apostolic work of the Church the laymans role in the aposshytolate and principles of spiritual life as well as the religion ecoshynomics and culture of Latin America

Before leavillg for their asshysignments the volunteers will take intensive four-month lanshy

guage anl culture courses in a Latin American language centerbull

eighth winner of this scholarship plumeoursElves that we share will enter the Childrens Hosshypital School of Nursing Boston in Septembel-

Ogdensburg Priests

SellYe Peru Mission OGDENSBURG (NC) -- Four

Ogdensburg priests currently are ministering to the n~eds of_13OOO

~ere

Father Philip Carey sJ exshyecutive director of the Xavier Institute of Industrial Relations acknowledged t hat certain strikes aJre intolerable But he said that when the governmentacts in a proprietary function it must follow the same rules it prescribes for private enterprise

In a letter to the New York Times Father Carey criticized ~y implication a proposed state -llw that wetulltilincrease the penalties to be imposed on strikshying union of public employees

MlISS LHNDA DUNCAN Th~proposedlaw grew out of recommendations of a five-man

Feehan Alumna task force named by Gov Nel son Rockefeller to study the

Receives Award problem after a 19-day transit strike crippled Newmiddot York City

Miss Linda Duncan daughter in January of Mrs George Duncan and the - NeCeSSBlry for Bargaining late George Duncan 61 Sykes Father Carey one of four Rd Seekonk has been awarded pubiic members of the mayors the eighth annual scholarship of committee that helped settle the the Attleboro Area Nurses strike disagreed with two other Chapter publlc memlgters Vh_o had previshyA 1966 graduate of Bishop ously supported the stiffer pen-

and internal concord a str~ke against itconstitutes mutiny and rebellion (UCLA) Sister Muriel a native

Pgbllsh Gudelnes For Ecumenisn

ALLENTOWN (NC) - The commission of ecumenism of the Allentown diocese here in Pennshysylvania has published a 22-page booklet of ecumenical guidelines to aid priests in guiding the laity The guidelines include general

permission for non-Catholics to serve as witnesses at Catholic weddings for Catholics to serve as witnesses at non-Catholic weddings and for burial of non-Catholics in Catholic ceremonies with a priest or a non-Catholic clergyman cltmducting graveside eeremonies

SHELL DADSON OIL

24-Hollr Oil

GLE COAL amp OIL CO IncI

640 Pleasant Street Tel WY 6-8271 New Bedford

this decision-making with the working p E~ 0 P Ie themselves through the process of collective bargaining

If collective bargaining is to be the rule he said we must agree to grant the right to strike~ Without this right he said there is no union and no coll~ctive balmiddotgaining

Expands Concern-in considering strikes by pu~ lie employees he dedared one muSt distinguishb~tween the state as a sovereign and the g()vernment acting in a proprishyetary function When the state aets as the defender of the peace or the promoter of justice

of Corning Iajoined the Sisters of the Humility of Mary in 1930 In recent years she has been ehairman of professionafarts deshypartment and college registrar

ation and a host of other services formerly performed by privategroups he continued

These activities are ancillary and economic and here the state in acting in a proprishyetry function When it so acts it ought to be subject tl) the same rules of conduct the government prescribes for private entershy

prise Strikes by firefighters and powerhouse uti lit y workers would be wrong however he said because it is difficult to imagine anY benefit they might gain to counterbalance the fear- fut harm such a l strike would impose on the community Buys Banners For Memorial

CHICAGO (NC)-A Chicago advertising executive has bought 44 brightly-colored religious ~anners tat -hung in the Nashy

tlOnal Srme of the Im~aculate ConceptIon during Luci Johnshysons wed(iin~ -

Earle Ludgin a trustee of the University of Chicago said he will donate the banners to the

university~ Rockefeller Memoshyrial Chapel in memory of his late wife

The banners for which Ludgin reportedly paid more than $40000 were originally created for the Vatlcan PavIIIon at the New York World Fair

A group of Washington D C residents bought ttie banners when the fair closed and arshyranged to have them exhibited in the Shrine until they could be sold Lugdin bought themin April but agreed at the request of Shrine officials to leave them in the Shrine until after Lucia wedding

lame College Head

OTTUMWA (NC) Sis t er

Muriel Hogan has been named the third presi4ent of Ottumwa Heights College here in Iowa She succeeds Sister Marie Anshy

ciue Kennedy woo win engagem graduate study in oominunishy

eations at the University of California Los Angeles branch

Offering You 3 Savings Plans

Home Financing

WAREHAM CO-OPERATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mabull

Telephone 295-2400 Banll SerVice YlIIIIIII

I

Ask Court Bar Use of Church Propertyfor Public SchoQ~middot WHITE ~S (MC) - A the cl883rooms ~ut Church

group of some 25 citizens repre- npokesman reporte~ that in line sented by the American Jewish with New York archdiocesan Congress has asked the New York State Supreme Court here to restrain the board of Ramapo School District 2 Rockland County from holding public school classes in property leased from religious bodies

The school board faced with severe-overcrowding planned to lease eight rooms from St Josephs Catholic Church and five from lem~e Beth El in Spring Valley The action was approved by 8tateEducation Commissioner Jame$ EAllen Jr

A ComllllJJlt served 0ill the rlChool board by the AJC charged the acti~n o~ld ~otateChurchshyState separation guaranteed by the First Amendment to the Constitution as well as other provisions of the state constitushytion

It is believed to be the first wch challenge made regarding

the use of religiO18 facilities for public school use

lhe st Josephproperty conshysists of an eightclasSroom school building adjacent to but sepashyrated from the chureh It is Ill good condition but will not be used by the p8rish thismiddot year because it has bUilt a new bUildshying for expanding its acbool to 141 classes

All religioUs ~bols had Ileen removed from the oder building in preparation for its use as a public school

The district school board had offered a fair market rent for

PAV~A deg Missionary Record Continued from Page Thirteen

A nurse from Chicago baa taken Lucillellpla~on the aposshytolic team and ber purpose in returning is to help her successhy80r work into the project smoothly It takes so long to get into 11 she Aid so II dont WJmt Il~r to spendtbree

years j~ g~tting organized~

Benedictine Marks 80th Anniversary

ST JOSEPHmiddot (NC)-The oldshyest Benedictine nun in Minneshysota-and one of the oldest m the world~marked the 80th anshyniversary of her entrance into the order ma Mass for all Beneshydictine jubil~tians held at St Benedicts convent here

Sister Sophia Zimmer was 1~ years old Dec 2 1965 She Wall

born in a log cabin about 1 block away from the convent An open house for her relatives and friends was held at the conv~nt

Receives Students cAsTELGANDOLFO (NC)shyPoPe Paul vI received in audishyence at his Summer home here students frOm 34 nations includshying many non-Catholics who are taking Summer courses in the ItaUaa language aDd culture sponsored by the Rome branch of the Catholic University fII IWaD

policy the properly would be made available for public school use at a token dollar-a-year rental

cmOS Cmpetes C~~ege ~rr(l))g~m

WASHINGTON (NC)-A class of 97 under-privileged high school students was graduated on completion of an eight-week Summer college orientation proshy

gram at Georgetown University The exercises i attended by faculty and parents Qf the stushydents involved students who had completed their Sophomore year in District of Colwnbia high schools They were chosen for the special course because teachers and counselors believed they have the ~billty to do colshylege work alihoug~ their presshyent high school records indicate little likelihood of college acshyceptance Ninoty-fiveOf the 97 students were Negroes md the ratio of males to females was aboutmiddot tbree-to-two ~

The pro~~~~Ch began in 1965 is financed by the NaUonal science Fowidationmiddot the District of Columbia public school sysshy

tem and Georgetown In addition to academic work

the students were given cltgtUrsetl in reading improvement and counseling gUidance Athletie and cultural events underwrit shyten by the program were also bKluded in their schedules

nearly 42 years Bishop Gerow churches degespeciallY Negro said Of late I have feltmiddotthat X houses of worshIp which middotWere have not the stamina to caJTY I bombedmiddot and burned

on as I have done in the past Whena p~ttern of destn1c~ion This load should be borne by 1 develops as It has m our state youngerman then it sincumbent upon all ntereston Yoiit

Cathollc lnereaSe m~n ~ ~ood ~i~ througho~t MiSSISSIPPI to Jom hands m Savings

The ~venth bishop of~edio- helpingthe affectedmiddot churches 0 Invested In cesemiddotwhlch was founded ID 1~37 and in showing clearly our con- and encompasses 111 of Missls- demnation at all acts of violencemiddot CATHOLIC CHURCH sippi Bishop Gerow h8ll s~ lawlessness and destruction the Catholic population IJOw from 31264 to 75000 in his 41 years of office The number of priests in the diocese grew from 63 to 220 and churches md misshysions from 108 to 243

The last few years of llacial violence perhaps were the most troub1d for Bishop Gerows long ad inistration middotHemiddot met the challenge with courage

In the face of many-sided opshyposition Bishop Gerow in 1964 directed the first grades of Cathshyolicmiddot schools in the state to be racially integrated The next

Missionaries Move Seminar to Ohio

DAYTON (NC) -The White Fathers a missionary society which bas served in Africa for nearly a century is llloving its U S seminary to Dayton

St Josephs Seminary which had been in operation at Onshydliota N Y near Saranac Lake will re-open under the same

name in four residences near the campus of the University of

Dayton The buildings have been rented from the university

Eventually the White Fathers plan to build their own seminary

middotfacilities somewhere in ~e area according to Fatber Paul lo1e1le WF~

THE ANCHOR- middot19 Thurs Aug 25 1966

KC Melll1il~er~~ip

At AJ~Tome e~~gh MIAMI BEACH (NC)-In his

report at the 84th annual meetshying of the Supreme Council of the Knights of Columbus Sushypreme Knight John W McDevitt made these points

Membership on June 30 1966 stood at an all-time high of 1183896 The orders insurance covershyage passed the $15 billion mark during the year

The orders assets reached III

neW plateau of $28122840028 at the end of the fiscal year

The society i~ continuing its support of the campaign to st~m p(gtrnography

Revise Ceremonial Progress is being made onthe

re_Vision of the orders cerempnshyial to give it a total family middotclishymate and make it consistent with moder day philosophy of social justice and religious pracshytice

The K of C have undertaken distribution of copies of the 1~ew Testament to Catholic gradllates

COURAGE PERSONIFIED John St Marie of B~YQ of the Naval Offilaquoer CandfClatE port Minn CQnfined to a wheelchair since a 1953 pOlio ~chool in Newport R I an(J ill

~dying the question of proshyattack has received a scholarship to the University of viding a similar servilte ~orMinnesota law school atter successfully maintaining an Ashy Catholic graduatell of the Qffi shyminus average in undergraduate work at the College of cers Candidate School of ihe St Thomas St Paul Minn irQ Photo Canadian Navy

It saluted Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York on biI

Welcomes Successor Naming of Apostolic Administrato

Pleases Bishop Gerow 81 JACKSON (NC)-Mississippll1 year he followed with a direeshy

courageous 81-year-old Bihop tive that Catholic schools be deshyOliver Gerow welcomed his suc- segregated completely ceSSor Bishop Joseph B Bruni- Helps Restore Churches ni 55 as spiritual head of the Despite reported threats ofmiddot Natchez-Jacklon diocese as one violence fro m segregationist who is active vigorous and has ranks the aged prelate was good sound judgment among leaders of an interfaith

X am very happy in being groupmiddot which formed the Comshyrelieved of the heavy responSl- mittee of middotConcernmiddot soHcited middotbillty that I have borne for money labor and materIals for

middotthe bishop stated in a letterred AND in every Catholic church in the INSTITUTIONAL BONDSstate

His appeal for $300000 to re-middot I Umiddot f $500 M store more than 30 d~stroyed n nits 0 or ore and damaged churches brought Keenan amp CImiddotarey bie contributions to the Committee 9f Concern from various sections Minneapolis Minnesota of the country

0

M~ntle Plumbing amp ~ating Co Inc~

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET Fall River OS 57497

for detailed information write to

CHARLES A~ MURPHY Registered Representative

145 Pond $treet Winchester Mass

PA 9-2696 And

Name bullbullbull ~ Address A

City _

50 years in the priesthood payshying tribute to him not only beshycause of his dignity as a pi-iest and cardinal but also because he 1S a great and wholesome mail

Relic Stolen NEW YORK (NC)-A reputed

relic of the cross on which Chtist died has been stolen from the Church of the Most Holy Reshydeemer here It was removed from a side altar tabernacle

where it had been placed shortshyly after the churchs establishshy

ment by the Redemptoriad Fathers some 125 years ago

~

GULF HILL DAIRY so DARTMOUTH MASS

RO THE ANCHO~-Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

1

RELIGIOUS SUPERIORS INSTITUTE ON STONEHILTJ CAMPUS SMS Guadalcanal Solomon Islands Standing Sr Florita DP King Sr Mary LUk~ St about to enter the hall for her lecture Center Some ston Mass Sr Mary of Bathany SP Holyoke Sr Mary de Sales F$SJ r the sisters who attended Sister Lukes talk were Sr Josepha SC Conshy Holyoke Right Mrs Mary Virginia Yosgandes h-ouse mother wavesgood ent Station NJ Sr Mary Kenneth Amityville NY Sr Mary (fheresa bye tothe departing nuns I

Brooklyn Church Hopes Nuns Move Into Cent~r of Lij~e Criticizes Irish lribunal Lacks By Dorothy Eastman -Social Security

When in the third year of Vatican II the momentous decision was made toinvitewO- dmiddot LIMERICK (NC) - FatherJ men observers to audit a Council forthe first ~ime to represent all J~remiah Newman professor ofuris ICtlon the Sister chosen BROOKLYN (NC)-Msgr the nuns in America was Sister Mary Luke Tobin Mother General of the Sisters of Lor- sociology at Irelands Maynooth

IlAarion J Reinhardt pre- etto When shewasasked recently while visiting the Fall River Diocese what impressed College criticizedprivate agenshyJ~L h t b t th C 1 cies and the national governshyIdlng Judge of the Trlblillal er mos a ou e oune) h t b t h h d k ment for their failure to increaseshe said with a wry smile We aVe 0 e rna ure enoug er own or er was wor mg(1)f the Diocese of Brooklyn h to live in insecurity toward these ends She told of all subsidies to families Iltas announced that the bill of The fact that we were t ere Will these changes be easy experiment soine of her Sisters After insisting that it would $Omplaint of 15 former teachers at all I The Sister is too much of a have been engllged in for the be best for private agencies and of St Johns Un~versity had to At a Stonehill College institute realist to give that impression past twu years in Pueblo Colo- local governments to administer be dismissed because of lack of Sister Luke spoke of her many Its going to be fraught with rado Although most of the 1100 social security Father Newman jurisdiction on the part of the other impressions of the Council difficulties she warns but Sisters of Lorettv are teachers said that since they seemed unshy

ecclesiastical court _ where she and seven other Sis- what isnt this small group of Sisters in willing or unable to do this the The Brooklyn ecclesiastical tels were auditresses for the last There are more than a few Pueblo 1s doing no t~aching-in job had to be done by the natshy

$Ourt which operates under two years of Vatican II Over Sisters who are troubled and schools anyway They simply jonal government ~llnon law said it is pmited in 450 Mothers Superior from 55 sometimes shocked these days live among the poor as good He said that according to jurisdiction to only spiritual different Orders were gathered by many of the changes hi their neighbors he 1pin jg wherever Catholic soCial teaching there ltuestions at the Easton campus for the communities The Mother Gen- they cllD leading discussion was no limit to the amount of Charge Contralaquot Breach five day Institute directed by eral would warn them that its groups counselling etc government aid that is permis-

The 5000 word document Rev William FHogan CSC pointless for them to say Thill Asked to comment on the re- sibie and desirable if governshypointed out that the decree of Sister Luke was one of a group is not the community I entered cent experiment in Milwaukee mEmt aid was the Qnly practical Giisrriissalis without prejudice to of noteliltspeakers who talked When it comes to that she says where30 School Sisters of St (sbl~tion to poverty problems lbhe merits of the case to the superiors on the subject we all might say This is not the Francis left their convents for

If the Metropolitan Tribunal of the I Sister in the modern Church Iwas baptized into or three weekstO work in secular If the archdiocese of New York world this is not the world I was b()rn jobs - oneSister wa3 assigned

T b 1 f the Sacred into Change is a fact of life S t~ the rI una 0 Adapting a line from Charles as a newspaper reporer- IS er Roman Rota reversesthe decree Dickens to describe this contro she points out~ and we can~t keep Luke predicted a great deal the casewiil be returned to the versial post Council age Sister things as they are or say Stop more~ of this kind of liniited Tribunal of the Diocese of the World-I want to get off f i t th I w ld ]Brooklyn for adjudications upon t~ees sa~~iSTi~iSt~eth~o~r Role of Superiors ~~~re ~o di~~a~~c~i~t n~~ Ms merits it was stated times She paintedavivid ver- The role the Superiors will she said

The petition of complaint bal picture of the world that lies play in the formation of what Since her own Order founded filed by Father Peter OReilly ahead for Sisters She said it has been called The New Nun in 1812 is quite new all religious

s~f Chicago on behalf of himself would certainly be a challenging Lwuakeouattlintheed fs~roeh~ ~~s~~~t~ orders go and is the liirst comshylind the other ousted teachers one and that conventlife inthe munity founded in America charged he university which is future is certain to undergo She urged them to create a cli- without European ties the Sisshyeonducted by theVincentian many radical changes mate where Sisters can liveters of Loretto weal habits more Fathers with breach of contract community life at its best She -modern than most But itsstill

The Superior~ were told that entreated them to keep thls cli-The dispute has been marked bY d bl d ff t the dress of 1812 not 1966 so it d k t f an m Ispensa e gUl e me ec - mate free from legallsm andlitudent unrest an pIC e mg 0 th hmiddotmiddot th will soon be changed As soon I mg ese c anges IS e map survelmiddotllance Ie schoo s campuses f th f t th t th C 1 as the all-mlll Congregation

or e u ure a e ounCl A community should be a of Religious in Rome approv~sMoral Issue Fatners drew up for the Church place where there- is safety for She called the CouncII Decrees the Sisters new design that is About 30 teachers were fired fl t d f t f dff

Rost December in a dispute over the documentS ofhighest au- cop IC an sa e y or J er- Tliey have submitted one de~ign rlty We should all have ~nes apd s~fety to cultiv~te that the fathers turnEd downadministration-faculty relation- tho d t h d Sh f I the mInd of Vatlcan II and then lverSI y s ~ sal e ee s lihey thought it was too modshyships and other issues They t I th t th h ld be

b b f we c~n move Into actlon she s rongy a ere ~u r -ern Sister Luke says UWhat anwere joined y anum er 0 I t I g I fe ther teachers In a strike that told her healers - 1Jloe ~o~a IY In re 1 J~)Us 1 incredible thing for US to ask shy --uAfterall were not Trap- that we choose our own clothes has continued since January Whi~h Way psts

l she adds with a laughThe court found that tpe How will the Sisters know in Warning that the time has S t Lk tl - b

uteceniontractual controversy was not whicli direction they should come for a re-evaluation of the _ IS ~rth y e~mt~ a spiritual mattelin a canoliical move in the manyarells so(in to true meaning of community she ne oIl e d~rs wo~~ ever ~ llense of the word spiritual change cExperiment Sister told the Superiors that commu- bo~a h a sre~t a f ~gUS aild that there was no allegation Luke advises so often its almost nity doesnt mean conformity or 0 y e oCle ~ o anon ef a violation of an ecclesiastical her motto We really cannot a hotel life either or even a Lawyrs Does thIS mian that law arid that the time was not move into change without ex-lot of happy t9getherness th~ SI~ters may at last have a opportune for a decision of perimentation she says and around the television set voIce 111 the formatIon of canon moral responsibility because the we will be engaged in tremen- A ~ital new aspect of commu- la-at least th~ laws that rUI~ secular courts would first have dous experiments from now on- nity is the idea of what Sister thel~ O~derS SIster Luke deshyto determine whether there was to adapt religious life to the Luke calls sub communities- vout y opes so a breach of contractual duty times in which we live the convents immediate neigh- Its certain that the future for

The church court found as a The revisions that lie ahead borhood the parish the civic the Sisters will be a very differshymatter of law that St Johns for religious orders will bring commumty lay people 111 the ent one than anyone could have 141 NO MAINUniversity as a corporation Sisters into the mainstream of same profession as the Sister- imagined a few short years ago J~ formed under the law of the modern life Sister Luke for for instance other nurses or The Holy Father has urged them iii FALL RIVER State of w York did not have one has no doubts that this is tElachers We have allowed too the~ to move from the margin e the ecclesiastical privilege of where they belong We ought great a gap to exist between our- of life to the center of life~ 873 COUNTY demanding that suits against it to be willing to take the risks) selves and the laity she says Will the move be successful SOMERSETbe heard in an ecclesiasticalmiddot that gO along with this plunge In an interviewmiddot following her Sister Luke says We can only CDOurt into the mainstream she says talk Sister ~uke was asked how know by taking a ChanCE

Feai makes the wolf bigger than be is

Rer Bankings Already D~ne

~jI--~1 W

tt-~~gt_ri~

~j F~ p ~tl Iim F-ilNgt

~l i

ll 11 ~~

W = ~

~gtltl ~

-~ ~~ StIesaves I lot of alunle Mtime forso maily other thinlS ~i She banks by mail at Te ~ OLD R D8 KI h 7reg E AN W at about you

liii FREE mall forms ~1 The mOld Red Bank W

$ Fall River Savings Bankjilll q

Page 10: 08.25.66

niE ANCHOR $as~ Vocationsmiddot10 Thurs Aug 25 1966 COnCern ofAIi

Employer U rges ST LOUIS (NC) - Speaking at the third annual Vocation Mass in St Louis cathedral

middot here Joseph Cardinal Ritter said middotvocations in the Church should

Workers to Vote For Teamsters

be the concern of every Roman SAN FRANCISCO (NC) Catholic

-The Di Giorgio Corporashy The cardinal told 397 men and women preparing to enter semishytion is recommending that naries and convents in the Fanits farm workers vote to afshy that religious vocation is not

filiate with the Teamsters FaTm middot merely a concern for the arch-Workers Union if they wish middot diocesan director a union the company announced It is a matter of solicitudeshy

Robert Di Giorgio president for each and everyone of us A of the company said therecomshy vocation is a divine thing but mendationmiddot is in accordance with it is a thing which God will not National Labor Relations BoaTd w~thhold from His peopleprocedures The recommendashy Cardinal Ritter continuedtion was made in letters sent to Bymiddot manifesting a concern employes eligible to vote in the about and an interest in vocashyunion election scheduled Ifor tiols we truly show that we Tuesday Aug 30 middot are the People of God

Opposing the Teamsters will be the National Farm Workers Association (NFWA) and the Seeks Assistance Agricultural Workers Organshy For Congo Churchizing Committee AFL-CIO (AW OC) which have merged since WASHINGTON (NC) - A they began the long Delano Congolese senator visiting the strike United States on a State Departshy

The Teamsters won the originshy ment tour program for foreign al election for union representashy government officials hopes to tion but charges of fraud make his two-month visit serve brought a new election a double purpose

Di Giolgio said the corporashy Senator Gaston Diomi wants tion is recommending a vote to speak with Catholic laymen for the Teamsters because middotand members of the clergy per-

The Teamsters won the preshy haps address audiences at vious electionmiddot Catholic institutions in his hope

The Teltlmsters while they to bring the Church iri the light hard in their members Congo to the eyes of American behalf are fair arid responshy ~ Catholics

And the senator has a planesible he wants to set up sharing proshyCompany Union middotFeels Adults Need Religious grams throughout the United

The competing union on tne States programs in which an ballot the Nationa Farm Workshy More So Than Children Nun Declares American diocese would adopt z ers AssoCiation has achieved Congolese diocese an American tentative recognition with oniy LOVELAND (NC)-Religious JI1ost rigidly formed in the old program to meet its needs--part religious order adopt a Congoshytwo growers the larger of which

education is needed for aduits system to see the new vision of which could be a parish lese order an American orphan-this year shifted production from school age adopt a Congolese orphanmore than for children and a of themiddot Churchand of Christian~ble grapes to wine tnus elimshy Flexibility and the wiUing- agebetter term for it would be life middotsetmiddot forth by the Secondinating a great many jobs ness tomiddot try a variety 01 ap- The American governmentmiddotsomething like shared growth Vatican Council Cesar Chavez head of the N iIi Christian middotlifemiddotmiddotmiddot This is 8 hard ~ask Sister prOdches ought to be the mmk of has such sharing programs the FWA called the Teamsters a an effectivereligious education senator pointed out WhyThis is the estimate of Sis admitted for adult educationcompany union and said it

tel 114 Charles Borromeo former demands new approaches and program she asserted empha- shouldnt the Church have the has entered into a partnership sizing thatmiddotit should have a so- same The Church that is Cath-head of the theology school at cannot be imposedwith Di Giorgio in a commonmiddot cia1 and an ecumenical dimen- olic the Church that is definedSt Marys College conducted by Each Ones Missionplot agabnst the farm workers sionmiddot QY the Second Vatican CouncilHoly Cross Sisters at Notre She wouldnt abandon chil-He said the companys recom- Built into each program middotas a missionary Church- whyDame Ind She recently joined drens education JOwever Shemendation confirmed that the should be a growirig aW8leness shouldnt this Church and tierthe faculty of St Xavier Col-middot saidTeamstens came to Delano to

lege Chicago as theology pro- What Id like to se~ IS emh of e~ch ones mission in the members share even more readshytlrganize workers at the invita- Church-an outgoing mismiddotsion to ily than government~ifessor set up a total religiou educationiion o~

PROFESSION CEREMONY AT WAREHAM The Chapel in the Woods of the Noshyvitiate of the Sacred Heart Fathers vas the scene Saturday morning as four novices

iere profe~sed by Bishop CoimolIyLeft to right Bro JudeMohan Bro Joseph ONeill Master of Novices Rev Andrew Jahn Bishop Connolly Very Rev Daniel J McCarthy

Prodncial who offered the Mass Bro Paul Daly and Bro Martin Lucia

the corporation New Approaches reach others and to build the

Speaking at the Summer lec- middot social patterns needed in our Oppose Intervening ture series at Grailville herein Quote Pope Pauls world

middot1 PImiddot Ohio USheaqquarters of the A 1 f IP Issues of TimesIn Fami y annlnglt international Grail movement ppea oreace middot She warneq against lookingMILWAUKEE (NC)-The ex- Sister Charles Borromeo aC- BERLIN (NC)-Fiye hundred for textbooks with all thE anshy

ecutive committee of the ad- knowledged that the Church in letters quoting the flppeal of swers or for fOllliulas thatvisory ioard of the Milwauke~ this country has placed most of Pope Paul VI for peace in Vietshy might take the place of decisiOlishyArchdioce~an Family Life Pro- its resources atmiddot the service of nam were sent persons in East rilaking by individual wnsci- gram has adopted a resolution childrens education Germany by the Social Demoshy encesmiddot

opposing government interven But the most urge~t need for cratic Party (SPD) The East Religiousteaching should inshynon in family planning giving religiousmiddot education she said Germans had asked the SPD volve a di~logue she su-ggestunanimousmiddot approval to a 13- if to helpadults especially those why the free world had not ed addi~g that in the past therepoint resolution which insists made imy efforts to end the war has been toomuch sttess on aushythat the matter of family plan- d in Vietnam thorityin teaching rid~otning is a private affair not a Sche u ~ Reopening The letter sent by the Social

bulle~o~gh on sharingChrisliarieoncern of the government Of Chi Smiddot h 1 Democratsmiddot pointed out that the gr()wthmiddot

Frank Stabb chairman of at 0 IC C 00 peace efforts of the pope the Thequesiion is not so ~lUcbtheCatholic board statedthat MTmiddot REPOSE (NC)-A Cath- World Council of Churches and

~hat to tea~h she ()pined butsince it has become increasingly olic school here in Ohio for of the governments of the how will we produce ~he Chrisshyapparentmiddot tilat our federalgov some 250 children will reopen in United States Great Britain (ian experience in litUlgy andernment ans to use taxinoiiey September due to efforts of in- Sweden India France and Itrly

for the spreading of birthcon-middot (lividuai citizens civic and Pro had all middotbeen rejected by the soci~l actionJn th~ great issues trol it becomes the obUgation of testantchurch groups in the communists The letter also of our times ~

NO JOBTOq BIG NONE TOO SMALL

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTE~S

MainOHice and Plant 95 Bridge St lowell M~bullbull

Tet 4586333

Auxiliary Plarits

BOSTON CAMDEN NJ OCEANPORT N~J

MIAMI PAWTUCKET R1 PHILADELPHIA

this family apostolate to speak area the Milford Chamber of middotstressedmiddot the SPDs view that out vigorously in oPllOsition tomiddota Commerce and parishioners of war can no longer be an instru shypolicy which has absolutely no St Andrews church Milford ment in solving political probshyvalidity The Elizabeth Seton School a lems middot He went on to say that when rural outpost of St Andrews Rltidio television and newsshyariy government agency tells parish was established seven paper ieports iil Eastmiddot Germany

middotpoor married couples whether years ago and con tin 11 a llY have given the impression thatmiddot they should have children or plagued by sewage dIsposal no one middotincluding the Pope has

hownfany to have the govern- problems The school wasmiddot closed made any efforts to seek peace ment is making a mighty pre- by court order in the Sumrtler in Vietnam sumptuous intrusion into a most of 1965 but r~openeq last year i J

sacred element of huin~nlife) with an arrangement fo~ haul- Stamiddotmiddotr 0n middotIImiddotmiddotOmiddotftmiddotmiddotammiddotP

middot ing sewge to MilfordmiddotmiddotWhenmiddot ~ middotV 1 t Cmiddoth 1 forcedtostop usingtheMilford DAVENP0RT (NC)~Seven-

eel) members of religious coni 0 un eermiddot apalnmiddot sewage systemlastJanuary t PHILADELPHIA (NCfFa-middot classes were dfscontinueiigt mutlities in theuilitedmiddot middotStates

ther JjRobert Falabella SJ The Closhlg spalked if coin- were among the graduates at the 36 instr~ctor in theolOgyat St mlinity effort led by the Buck- annual mid~Summermiddotcommence

Josephs College here has vol- wheat-middotTaxpayers Associationw ment of St Ambrose College uteered for extended adive aidthemiddotschoolmiddotA fUrid drive for her~in Illwa middotParticipating in duty witp theUS Army Re $250((to pay formiddot new tihiinage the ceremonies was Margheritiimiddot serve s a chaplain in the Vietmiddot f~cilities was ~ledby th~ Mil- Roberti a~ native of Davenportmiddot mam combat zone ford Chamber Of Commerce a leading dramatic sopranQ~

CONVEmiddotNImiddotENT BANKING WITHOUT TRAFFIC PARKING PROBLEMS

at the -

5LADE~S FERRr-r~USJmiddotCOMPANY SOMERSET MASS

j ~ - bullbullbull ~~ ~ bull ) bullbullbull lt

ThemOflt friendlymiddot dmocrt~ lANK oHering

-_~9npi~lC)h$topmiddot~cirliing middotmiddotf bullbullbullClubmiddot Accoul1Its - Auto middotLoa -

Checking Accounts ~ Business boris Savings Accounts~ ~ ~ Ieaj Estate loOns 1 -

- ~Atmiddot S~~~rs~tS~~ppi~~ Ar~a=-~igh~~a 5 ~t~due Me~ber FeCieral I)epositmiddot ri~urance Corporation

I

11 Cardinal Cushing Hits Imbalance In Schools

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing deplored that very little has been oone to relieve racial imshybalance in Bostons public schools in his first public address since his recent illness and conshyvalescence

The Boston prelate told an ecshyumenical meetingmiddot in All Saints Lutheran church here that al shythough very littlemiddot has been done to make a year-old law work we are not discouraged and we are very far from giving up hope that we will have reshyBults before long

He referred to the Racial 1m balance Law aimed at promotshying racial integration in Massashychusetts public schools The meeting marked the first annishyversary of the law The measure will deprive Boston public schools of $30 million in state subsidies until the citys school committee submits an integrashytion plan acceptable to the state board of education Until now the city committee has not subshymitted an acceptable plan

A school that is heavily imshybalanc~d racially cannot provide the best education that should be available for our children Even with the most devoted teachers and the most upto-date proshygrams-and we have both o( these in Boston-a predomiJ)antshyly Negro school suffers from an isolation from the general comshymunity which cannot fail to be harmful~ he said

Scores Slum Landlords In a similar way we can say

that an all white scJ100l fails to reflect the true nature of the radally mixed communitymiddot in which we live and so deprives white youngsters of theexperi ence of living and studying with their neighbors of a different race Ourideal should be to live and workand study and pray side by side in mutual respect and common affection

There hav~ been several proposalsmade during the last year to al~rest imbalance iit the schools of our center city Carshydinal Cushing said None of these has been accepted by those who hove been elected to make these decisions in the schooi srstem Of course we know that no immediate proshygram will solve all our problems but we can make li beginning

The cardinal also criticized slum landlords for the inhuman conditions in which so many here must live and work alid bring JP their families He called for a crash program of assistance for the deprived

State Uses Vacant Catholic School

BURLINGTON (NC)-The re- cently closed Don Bosco Schoolmiddot for BoyS here will Soon befilled up again with teenage boys this time as temporary quarters for Vermonts pilot residential treatshyment center for youthful first shyoffender lawbreakers

In announcing the acceptance of the proposal by Bishop RobertF Joyce of Burlington and the Verm 0 n t Catholic Charities board State Institutiolls Com-

PROFESSION AND CtOTHING CEREMONIES Principals in the ceremonies conshyducted for the Sisters of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts in Fall River on Monday were seated Sr Mary Dolores Sr John Veronica Bishop Gerrard who presided Sr Karen Dolores Sr Mary Catherine Standing Sr Margaret Edward Sr Joseph Maureen Sr Stephen David Sr James Constance Sr Celestine Regis Sr Anne Robert Sr Vinshycent Dolores

Report Says Cold War More Intense Peaceful Coexistence Now Strategic Offensive

WASHINGTON (NC) -Some tegic Studies at Georgetown jarring statements are made in University a Jesuit-conducted a significant news report whose school here

It is an in-depth analysisprivate but highly responsible sponsors call it the resultmiddot ofmiddot quality research It reminds for example that the so-called cold war is not

over and warns that as of now it may be entering a more danshy

gerous phase Th e ~peaceful coexistence

slogan it says was once a comshymuhist defensive stalling tacshytic but now it signifies the communists have gone over to

the strategic offensive The great paradox of our

times the document asserts may well turn out to be our inability to recognize that the cold war has in reality become more intel1se despite the increasshying appearance of peace

The goals of the presentmas~ tels of the Kremlin are no dif- ferent from tho~e of Khrushshychev Stalin or Mao Tse-Tung and to the Krtmlin peac~ful coshyexistence is a strategy not an end in itself it declares

The study entitled Peace or Pea c e f u1 Coexistence was

sponsored by the Committee on Education Against CommUllism of the American Bar Association It was unveiled in New York just before the ABA began its annual meeting in Montreal but it was prepared by Richard V Allen a specialist on Sino-Soviet affairs at the Center for Stra-

K of c Plan Socoal

Action I itia tive

missioner John Y Woodhull MIAMI BEACH (-NC) - The stated I think this is one (f the top official of the Knights of finest ecumenical testures of Columbus announced plans for faith and charity that I have a new initiiitive in the ecumenshyknown i -i~al and soCial action field

The eenter ill ~ ~provide a through a partnership with theO

home for 16 to 20 b(iys aged HI John LaFarge Institute ill New to 18 who are referrecl by the York ~ - eourls as first offenders Toile In additior W financial assist shyboys will work loeal du-in ancethe LaFllg~jnstitute will

the day and return to the center reeeive suggestifmsand recomshyin the ~venin1 for intensive mendations frOJll the official roup t~erapy eonducted b) rep-~~entationand plJrticipatiOll

Btaff III ~ix bull Ule K bull C

based onmiddot more than 3000 articles and documents of the internashytiOllal communist movement more than 90 per cent of which material is dated after the Cushyban Missile crisis of October 1962 Allen admits that the commushy

nists have used the coexistence slogan in ihepast and with sfme success but he directs atshytention to the fact that it now signifies a strategic offensive rather than a stal~ing tactic

The study notes that the Cushyjail build-up the erection of the Berliil Wall and the armed iilvasi~n of South Yietnam all occurred during the most in- tense pedod of peaceful coshyexistence ~ It~~~inds that Khrushchev in 19t1lddiiled coexistence as a form of intense ecoitomic pOlitshyical and ideological struggle gaii1s~ the aggressive forces of imperialism hi the international arena it aiso says that in their 3tshy

tempt to create wha bull they call the New ComIJlunist Man the communists have systematically presented a vicious and thor oughly distorted picture of the

Nuns to Construct Health Care Facility

SANDUSKY (NC)-The Franshyciscan Sisters who operate Providence Hospital here in Ohio will construct a new 100shybed $1250000 healthcare fashycility separate ftom thehospital

It will serve Medicare patients of the area during posthospital care and Qther convalescents who do not requir~f~l~-scalehospital care Sister Lucia -administrator 81lid it will relievemiddot pressure ~ hospital beds in the area

There wiII be ari appeal to th~ public lor about $900000 The -remainder of the funds will

btl supplied by the Federalgovshyerllment

West in general and the United States in particular It need not be emphasi~ed

the study states that the overshywhelming sentiment of the free world is to live in peace But tQ mistake the illusion of peace for genuine peacemiddot would be a profoundly dangerous perhaps fatal mistake In a foreword t the book

Bertram D Wolfe a Stanford University expert on commushy~lism warns that we have been prone to read the idea of live and let live into the phase of peaceful C 0 e x imiddots ten ce Our hopes and our longings are likeshyly to betray us again and again into a readiness to be deceived by those who have sworn the d~struction of all we stand for

fnjoymiddot Dining IN THE

JOLLY WHALER --AND--

SPOUTIRINN RESTAURANTS

Always Free Parking

New Bedford Hotel

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Aug 25 1966

Cassidymiddot Seniors Attend Work$hop

Three members of the incomshying senior class at Cassidy High School Taunton will complete tomorrow a five day Workshop in Leadership conducted at the University of Massachusetts under th~ sponsorship of the Massachussetts Association of Student Councils

Mis s Rosemary McKenna~ president of the senior class Miss Nancy Thomas president of the National Honor Society and Miss Christine Victoria coshyeditor of the Cassidy school paper are attending Miss Victoria is secretary of the Southeastern Association of Student Councils and will serv~ in that capacity with the other officers Jerry Flanagan presishydent Feehan High Marsha Boyd vice-president Attleboro High Luke Boyd treasurer West Bridgewater High

Cassidy GIllaquoIltiluCllle Wins Elkso AWtlDd

Miss Pauline Lee daughter ox Mrs Harry Lee and the late Harry Lee of 7 Dean Ave Taunshyton has Qeen named the recipishyent of a $600 Massachusetts Elks Lead~rship Award granted by the Elks National Scholarship Fund

A member of the 1966 gradushyating class of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton Miss Lee was in the top ten of a class of 108 and maintained a scholastie honors record throughout bell four year Miss Lee will attend Nortn- eastern University Boston

Schools Merge BAY CITY (NC)-TwO wes~

side Catholic high schools here hi Michigan will merge Sept I

to becomeWest Catholic CentraU High School The decision te merge was made by an intershyarish lay study committee tv provide more efficient use of the staff and facilities The schooU will be staffed by the ReligioUl Sisters of Mercy of Detroit

BIG DIVIDEND NEWS

a SYSTEMATIC550 year SAVINGS

INVESTMEIfJ500 a year SAVINGS

8 REGULAR450 year SAVINGS

Bass River SovinQs Bank bull SOUTH YARMOUTH bull DENNIS PORT

bull YANNIS bull fARMOiJTH SHOPPING PLAZA

bull OSTERVILLE

-1111

WHITE middotmiddotmiddotSPA CATERERS

- BANQUETSmiddot -WEDDINGS - PARTIES

~ COMMUNION BREAKFASTS 1343PlEASANT STREET FAll RIVER

OSb~rne 3-7780

--h-- ~

12

i

THE ANCHOROlocese of Fall River-Th~s Aug 25 1966

~regW ~reg~tfJ ~lYJ~~ TtUUY1)[fi)l[

Of R~dD~~~csm Amcm)gYW]fr~ lJy Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy

Phillip Abbott Luces The New Left (McKay 119 W 40th New York $450) attempts to explain the resurgence of radicalism among American students Its author is a

of the New Left wIth as many con u e y lcal ideas while at MissisSippi non-joiners on the peripherY day even~ng Aug 27 at S lD ~ at~~ fi~t he~-d ~~ ~h~ ~erBtlt its impact- is smd tohave Mlll~aret s Kinderlctarten aaU i Left whIle at Ohio State and l Prizes WIll be awarded and reshy

tgrt~ritotcOtmiddotmiddotgthmiddotevecJ1 amm~-~W1lS~~tttedpa~~y ~xten~e~ tots about200OQP co h~~hriients served o nl~ge ~u en ~~ i - ltGUiLD OF TillE VIsITATION Iil1961heifioved~to NewmiddotYork It ~S ~l1ena lza1I~~~eme~t i iNO EASTilrAM ~ ~

_and came closer tothe Commti- in the country What alarms Mr ih alb t ofthe Dist Party Llitef he joined Pro- Luce is not its existence or its G1 ~~ h 3que wed gressiveLa]gto~aiI~ edited its size but the fact and the in- W WI e e on nesshymiddot monthly magazine _ cre~sing extent of Comrnamst q1Y~ 4-~ 3~ a~ the PiJ~~ middot -domination~ He gives -instances Springs Restaurant No TflJro Visited _C~~ro-S Cuba R t cl Sunday

in proof thatsuch dO minatioD-i8 A e~e2 rva~o1l os on It was Progressive Labor ug s

which arJanged- for fmeric~ indeed an actuality SACRED HEARTS

young man who won some leader of the New Left and when he broke with Proshygressive Labor which he eharges was organiz~d by -formermembenlof theSoVfeishycontrolled Communist Pa rt y USA and is now aPekingor~eh tated Commu~

D1st group Mx Luce has an ex tremely Impor- middottant subject one which is both timely and crit shyleal Because of his experience he should be especially qualshyified to set it out But the fac~ is that he is at best a mediocre writer He has no notion as to how to

organize a book marshal his materials and to ten his story iIi a consecutive way and with cushymulative force This is a dull alld muddled treatment of a very middotvitai topic~ not heipedat all by crude blundersin English usage Mr Luces personal histog has to be pieced together fro~ bits strewn through the book

middotlike the debris after a hurricane He is an Ohioan bornmiddotin 1935

notice both when he was a the lives of the rising generation Youth is repelled by parental attitudes and aspirations which are seen as mostly narrow negshyative sterile College is a bore

offeriiig no incentive or oppOJshytUnity for youth to direct its enshyergies into crucial causes

A mood of rebellion has devel- ~ped and a chance to express it has been pr~sentedby the civil rights struggie and the unpopu~ lar and beclouded war in Vietshynam Nor does the prospect of fighting authority in each case dim the attraction of these causes quite the reverse Hence the New Left

JLists Organizations Communist organizations of

various stripes have attemptec to sieze control of the New Left and to exploit the mood of reshybellion wi~h an eye to changing it into participation in revolushy

tion

Mr Luce lists and desribes the Communist organizations so engaged The one he knows best of course is Progresectsive Labor But he gives much space to the Du Bois Clubs which are the instruments of the Communist Party Then tlmre are the Trot-middot

the son of middle-class Repub- skyite splinter groups of which lican parents H~ start~d college four strains are identified (inshyat Miami University in Ohio left cluding middotone that is pro-Negro to see the Souih finished ~t Mis and anti-Semitic) I

sissippi State and did graduate Mr Luce estimates that some k t Oh St t 12000 YOung AmericanS are wor a 10 a e _ t 1 t 1 b He became interested in rad- ac ua orgamza Ion~ mem ers

APPOINTEE- Bishop Josshyeph Bmiddot Brunini Auxiliary since 1957 to Bishop Richard O Gerow of Natchez-Jackshyson middotMiss has -been appointshyed by Pope Paul VI to be Apostolic Administrator of the diocese NC Photo

The Parish Parade

ST 1lgtYS TillED mn ov= =shylFALL RJrVER

The parish will sponsor a one day pilgrimage to the Shrine of the North American Martyrs Auriesville N Y on Sunday Oct 2

Interested partles may obtaIn full particulars by contacting Mrs Laurence Coyle Mrs Wilshyliam Blythe or Mrs George Boitano S8 MARGARET-MARY GUILD BUZZARDS BAY

A bl hitmiddot middotU be pu IC W S paL 0 WI d ct d b the guild on Saturshy

studeritsto visit Cuoain 1963 middot and 1961 In defiance of our middotState Department~sban on travel

there Mr Luce made the trip says that most of the students

middot were unaware of Progressive Labors sponsorship and control The money came from Castro And Progressive Labor members planned and staged the wild scenes at a Congressional hea~

ing concerning the middotproject By late 1964 Mr Luce was

enti~ely dissillusioned abo u t Progressive Labor andmiddot by Febshyruary of 1965 h~ pad left it to

bemiddot quickly expelled upon his

Stresses Strength NO FAIRHAVEN He insists that somethin~(must Registration for the kiridershy

be done to prevent Communist garten pre-primary and the capture of the movement He eight eJement~ry grades are beshywants everyone to wake up to ing held daily during the month the existence and the strength of Augus of the New Left Pupils may register with SJ

We must realize he urges how Marie Henriette SSCC at the disenchanted with our society Sacred Hearts Academy 332 the young people ~re what hos- Main Street Fairhaven any 8poundshytility they feel what a gulf ternoon from 1-5 RegistratioDfl yawns between them and their are also being accepted by Rev elders and hcgtw impervious th~YAlexis Wyggers SSCC at the are to ideas and language which ReCtory 382 Main street Fairshyi

figure in their eldErs attempts haven to communicate with them The Association of St Anne

No one he maintains is S~-Will receive corporate CoinmUshyI~ departure and sayagE(l~ Yim~~~~ Jiously trying to reach the hiorton Sunday at the 8 ocloek middot He left because he says Pro gressive Labor is a middotMaoist Comshymunist tool because itmiddotadlrQcates imd take steps to implelrtent armed insurrection because- no personal freedam is allowed to members an4 lill- deQisionsmiddot are made by a few dictatorial leadshy~ril 1ecausemembersareJnshyvolved in programs of Whose

eonsequences totge country and to themselvestIey have no idea lt~

lFe~ls lF~tts~rated Mr fL~ced6es- notmiddot contend

middot that the New Leis Goromunistshy

young rebel to understand him Mass to speak to him intelligibly and effectively Co~unJ~t errorsmiddot J~edB~ MeU1lMe~tmiddot propaganda hypocnsy mUst be SCHWYZ (NC) - Catholicrelentlessly exposed in a way movie and television experts which the young people will met here iil ~fwitieriand for imcomprehend international exchange of ~He is strong_ for a Freedom riiques iiI the useof Tv anellAeademy- which would provipe films in religious educationmiddotmiddot expert practical education conshy - cerning CommunislJlmiddotAnd he stressestheneed of a placefor

ltloltiinated -Hescent~B it -as8 phe- PITTSB~1RGH(Nt) - The bull I bull ~ bull bull bull bull bull

honidon whlc~ came ~bout Pittsburgh Catholi( Interracial Commercialmiddot 15 Industrid spontaneously an eX~IJ1Pre of- Council has endorsed home rule Institutionalyouth in rebellion - for the District of Columbia asshy

Youth he holds~ hils amiddotpoundeeling sertingthattooibng have many painting ~nd~ D_~~o~qtig of -frustrationmiddot with American of the-importanLdecisionaffectshy Fall River OSborne 2-1I9H$ociety its tone and its values ing (the District of CohJmbia) -yoiith~es~rtt~rhaving rio say inb~erlmadtd)ycongrpoundpoundssiriehftoin ~ 74v~hllia rnson Str~e~

the making of decisions affecting hundreds of miles away

~~Gr~ayK BJ Most Rev FUUOlll J Sheeillp Dll)

If my neighbor is stronger than 1 I fear him if he lsweaker than I I despise bim Such is the modem judgement of the psyshychiatrist Dr Jean de Rougemont Earlier the Psalmist speaks ~ the arrogance of those who have much and the despisal of those who are proud How can the rich avoid feeling superior to the poor How can the poor avoid being humiliated The answer is that vices but can the) give up cigarettes for a week to help the poor the strong must see their weakness and the rich must see~eifto poverty How realJly strong are the strong Theymay avoid great Are thfiY suc~ masters of themselves tbatthey can turn down the third cocktail (or give up the first) and use the money instea4 to ~uy sulfone ~or a i~~r~ liqw r~ch_ ar~the rich Let them look inside themselves IIi whatvirtue are they rich Rich in cb~ty Rich i~ char~ti Ri~)n f~th

Onc~t~~ ~i~rhty see th~mseiv~ asnothiDi a~d therl~h see the~selv~ as i~poverislledth~ they wui lov~ ihe we~~ as their brothersilDd the peor IllS their

fellow beggars for thetrrace of God ifmiddot the strong middotlove middotmiddotthemselves despite all theirweaknes5~ then why not lovltil weaknesses in others u the rich love themselves despitG middottheir inner nakedshyness then why nCllt love a lesser ]lJOVshy

erty in others That i~ why Our Lord told us to love ourneighbor as ourseU ~y not more than self Because iii ]I

love myself-knowing myself as ]I do knowing how utterb weak ]I am2-then I have the measure of how J[ am to pour out love to others

We live in a world divided between the rich and the poor We live in that kinol of a church-pOor parishes and rich parishes Even bishops an~ priestsmiddot speak of a parish being good when they mean it is economicaily rich Somehow or other we have ~

get qut of this slavish standard of affluence which is so opposed to the lross of Christ To that end we make the folloWing proposal that you or your middotparishclub school or office undertake the sponsorshjp of one of the poor areas of the world which has been investigated by the Apostolic delegate Write to us and we will send you middotthe name of this diocese its location the number of priests catechists and faithful it has Thus you will be sure that you have a middotneedy (Ibject for sacrifice and service and n9t one based on a haphazard -appeal middotfroin an uninvestigated source The Church will not alloW you to sponsor this diocese for more than one year becausemiddot thtlre are so many poor parishes in the world Look into your weakness and you will love the weakness of o~heJ8 Look into your poyeny stricken soul and you willserVe poverty stricken bodies Write to -mpGod Love You

~~~ middot~middotGOD~middotLOVE YCllJmiddot tomiddot~SMLgtO~middot ~$5 middotto A~RCtor $sO~ For your1nissionUorkIeanthelp eve~one andmiddotyou ~o tltosem most meed bullbull tchJMBfcn $20 to Anon lor $1000 middotsentmiddotWithlteommnbull ~ 11

bullbull bull ~l

The GOD LOVE YOU~ medal lovely cameo medal of the Madonna of tIle worldiS one you would be proud to give ormiddotde shy

lighted tci reC~iVEt DesIgned bi the world-renowned jeweler Harry winSton aildbltessed by Bishlgtp Sheen the GOD LOVE YOU medal is available inmiddotcl~icF~oreritinegold firiishor pure sterlingsilver aod may be obtained by sending your request and corresPondirtg offering to The Socieb for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth AvenueNew York NY 10061 $2 Sinall sterling silver $3 small

11gtk goid fiiled $5 large sterling silver $10 large 10k gold filled

Cut out this colullnn pln your sacrifice to It and mali It to Most RevbullFultom J Sheen National Director of The Society for the Propagation of thl~ Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or to your Dioclesan Director Rt Rev Msgr Raymond Jr Considine 363 North ll1ain Street Falll River Massachusetts

bull j 7 Perry IQur fI~~fng

~v~-t~e OilsMake Taunt~B1l~ Mass - Worm FriendsmiddotVA 2-2282

------------------ ~

genuinely democratic radicalism ON CAPE CODlbONNlEllyin o~r Iociety _

]OHoo ~~~(Kl~Ymiddotmiddot amp SON (~ofP~n~T~UnCG Rigt - flJ1 ml n

crepound ormiddotentireiyCommuist- 9llaquoIIlaquo ~$ lf1J Ilililte ~fYl U ~ I~raquo8L[)~NG MAmiddoth~linAL$middotmiddotmiddot~~~V~C~ 6

S~~ri~gj 1$100 4~~YARMUlrH ROA~)

middottYA~MBSmiddot AMPLE PARKING

iIIIIOCIIJIjIWUllJmllIllDOCImIWlDIllmIlXlWll(lJfi

- -

THE ANCHOR-Jesuit Educators Members of PAVLA Maintain Missionary Thurs Aug 25 1966 13

Ponder Students Record of Fall River Diocese Area G~~s SocoaCynical ~ttitQJJde

LOS ANGELES (NC) shy lLong outstanding for the missionary work of its priests Sisters and Brothers the ~elvD~e ~elrllfrer A top Jesuit educator dispenshy Fa~ River Diocese is fast becoming noted for its outstanding Papal Volunteers for Latin CLEVELAND (NC) - OUX sed advice here on how to eombat the attitude of some high schoolers who consider the world and the religion of their middotparents as phony

Father Edward J Sponga 8J of Baltimore in the keynote adshydress at the 1966 Jesuit Educashytional Association Workshop on Christian Formation at Loyola University here called for a dialogue with everyone conshycerned to emphasize the good crying to be released

Speaking to delegates from 52 Jesuit high schools in the nation Father Sponga chairman of the board of the Jesuit Educational Association declared

Menace to Freedom If the young men of our

schools consider the world and the religion of their parents as phony and a menace to their freedom then we must be ruthshyless in seeing how and why this is and in entering into dialogue with everyone who is willing to do so in order that we may be able to release the g09d that is crying to be released

During the 12 days of research and discussion 125 school adshyministrators and teachers evalushyated the effect that religion courses academic curriculum spiritual exercises and personal guidance have had on the charshyacters of the 35000 teenagers in U S Jesuit high schools

The delegates particularly were concerned about the loss of religious faith in the adolesshycent who is becoming increasshyingly sophisticated and critical

Middle Class Values Father Joseph H Fichter SJ

Stillman professor of sociology at Harvard Universitys divinity school criticized Jesuit high schools for not challenging the middle class values of many of their students for not paying sufficient att~rition to the social sciencesmiddot and for not drawing more of their students irom among the poor

Dr Alexander A Schneiders graduate professor of psychology at Boston College stressed the commitment of Faith that must be made within the scopemiddot of inshytellectual independence He arshygued against compelling students to make annual retreats or assist at religious exercises

Other delegates suggested esshytablishing pilot programs in 1l)ner-city high schools with nationwide cooperation and the sending of Jesuit teachers to work in community schools outshyllide the regular Jesuit system

Ho~es for Negroes Goal of Campaign

WORCESTER (NC) A camshypaign to secure better housing for Negroes in the Greater Worcester Area is growing

In a letter to some 1200 pershyS0l1S who last Aprii signed an

open letter newspaper adshyvertisement regarding fair hous ins John J Concordia Duman rights committee chairman of the Diocesan Council of Catholic M~~ ~sked sig~atories of the

open -letter to volunteer to ~adopt members of a Negro family am actively assist them inmiddotproC1Jri~g decent housing to titheir ~ne~ds

In 8 statement by an intershy fa(thmiddoteommittee on housing middotwfii~IlJs all out-growth of a

siniilar committee formed last year by the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women a call was made for construction of housshying for middotmiddotpoor and lower middle d~ss f ami ie It ixlcludins

Ne8J~s

bull bull r~ ~

America These young men and women doing Christs work in some of the worlds needshy Lady of Futima parish hat3 opened a social service centeliiest areas are a credit to the parishes and toowns from which they come Letest PAVLA here in the midst of the Houghassignments in the Diocese area scene of Clevelands recent

are those of Lucille Lebeau rioting of St Annes parish New The center housed in an 18-gt Bedford and Anthony Gomes room former apartment buildo St John of God parish Somershy ing was dedicated by Archo set bishop Paul J Hallinan of~ At-gt

Actually Lucille isnt a new lanta while he was visiting iii PAVLA hand She was the first Cleveland~bis native diocese Diocesan enlistee in the organishy The center will be staffed by zation going to Brazil as a four Sisters of Charity of St nurse-social worker in August Augustine who along with lay1963 She returned from her volunteers have been working three year assignment in July in the area since Aprilmiddot1965 but volunteered to serve an The center will middotprovide C9uri extra year in Brazil She will re seling nursing medical supplie tum there in November and pre-natal care -

Anthony veteran of a middotyears The building which standt work in Florida with the fedshy next to the parish rectory waserai governments VISTA proshy purchased bymiddot the parish seveR gram will teach English in a years ago when it was aba~ Mexican minor seminary He has doned as an apartment buildingalready completed a PAVLA

Early last year Father Alberitraining course at Catholic Unishy Albert Koklowsky MSSSTversity in Washington D C and pastor of Our Lady of Fatimawill leave in September for launched a campaign through aMexico City and an intensive column in the Catholic Universefour and a half month course in Bulletin Cleveland diocesanSpanish language and culture newspaper to explain Houghsbefore beginning his assignment poverty to metropolitan resiltshyin the mountain town of Tacomshydentsbaro in the state of Michoacan

Housing was a major themePioneer Work Resulting donations from unishy

Lucille bubbles over with enshy verse Bulletin readers and 11thusiasm for PAVLA and its acshy matching gift from Coadjutorcomplishments She has just reshy middotBishop Clarence Issenmann of turned from a trip to the Washshy Cleveland enabled Father Kokshyington training course attended lowsky to renovate the buildingby Tony Gomes where incishydentally she met him for the first time She talked to new Work for Needy enlistees individually and in LIMA (NC) - Sixty me~bers groups seeking to picture for af the St Rose CYO hert gavethem the new life theyd be enshy volunteer aid to projects for thetering needy this Summer Most as~

Their enthusiasm was a boostshy slsted in a federally financed er shot for meshe said educati~nal program for cultu~

This week the New Bedford rally deprived students from nurse is inmiddot the Chicago area PAVLA ENLISTEES Revmiddot James w Clark Diocesan ~nderglirtenmiddot to sixij1 grad~visting PAVLA headquarters Directormiddot of Papal Volunteenlmiddot for Latin America with Othershelp1 a~ amiddot day camn f~there and friends she made ill retarded cbildren andmiddot Qne asAnthony Gltgtmes bound for teaching assignment in Mexico~ Brazil including the doctor with Ns~ed at a eerebral palsy c~mpwhom she worked when me and Lucille Lebeau who has already spent three years m first went to the Latin American Brazil as nurse-social worker will return in Novemberfor eountry He is now in practice additional year in Waukegan lll FAIRHAVEN

When I first went to Brazil urgy eommunitY needs and was to leave in each parish IIshe 8a14 I worked for a little LUMBERhealth needs team similar to their own toover a year at a hospital in Salshy cOMPANY carry on as far as possible thevador Bahia My job was mlinly Most of the help that an area

training Brazilian aides and received came from the people work in liturgy catecheticsmiddot and community and health needssetting up hospital routines themselves t h r 0 ugh their Complete line

After the year was over Brazil shy awakened sense of community We would return to the comshyian doctors and medical students said -ucille Actual government munities where we had given Building Materials took over the hospital routines or material aid was hampered by this course as often as possible were runing smoothly and I political economic and social said Lucille anu each time we 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVEN felt that I could go on to public complications of many kinds eould set them growing spiritushyhealth work in areas where there The team played it by ear ally WYman 3-2611 was no nursing care at all avail- in deciding how to approach a Turn to Page Nineteen able particular parish Lucille and

Lucille joined an apostolic the nun on the team who was shy ~

team organized by Bishop Eushy also a nurse tried to work genio de Araujo Sales Apostolic through community midwives Administrator of Salvador Toshy who were sadly in need of techshy JEREMIAH COHOLAN gether with a priest a nun two nical instruction The infant Brazilian lay apostles and what mortality rate in most areas was would bt the equivalent af an very high said Lucille due iD PLUMING amp HEATING I American social worker she large part to umbilical tetanus visited areas of the Diocese preshy caused by unsanitary delivery viously all but unreached by the techniques

Church Another technique was organ- I Aim of the team she explainshy ization of one-week parish Wy 3 0911 699 B II II A

ed wail to change dormant parshy courses centered around the idea man - e VI emiddotmiddot ven~ ishes into Christian communishy of Christian cominunity Lucille Nwamp~fQrd ties Seventeen parishes were said middotshe would start the course I visited in the course of a year by trying to explain the concept lImiddottI-IIIlII_middot tI-II--tl- __ __ __ _-IIllIIIiImiddotllIlI_-IIllII~ -~~ ~--middot- ~ and a half rmging from mem- of Christians as people of God - - shy

berships of 20000 souls to 75000 then would set up discussion ~ItIIIIHtHIIIIIDIIIIUIIIIHlIIIIIIIiIllIIlHKHHIIItIIIIUIIIIIIIUllllliillllllllllIJllilllllllllllllilllllllll~ The 75OOO-member parish said Ioupsmiddot en suchmiddot subjects asmiddot~ -_sect_Lucille had only one priestmiddot 10 What ismiddota person-Person to ~ middotY 5 hmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot meet its needs person relationships~ and Dif- sect E we ayemiddot ~

Plan 01 AetiOll ferences between ordinary eom- ~ == The apostolic teamsaid Lushy munities andthe parish sect LARGE LIVEmiddot ~

eille would first survey condishy This would lead to a discussion sect ~ ~=_=_ tions and decide what most of the function of Christians and sect needed doing then plan an edushy what iii Christian community sect shycational program Three or fo~rmiddot should be lIke Theil leaders ~ while they la5~ - ~ natural leaders in each parish were ready to ask the parishion ~ sect= were chosen and arrangements ers if any were ready to coin- ~ were made to get them to an mit themselves as parish team sect Macleans SemiddotQmiddot F d ~ Archdiocesan training center for members to a stronger expres- ~ 00 S == a one month leadership training sian of their Christian fellow- sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN Tel 997-9358 sect eourse wverins lIlatechetics lit ooip Go~ of the lipQBtolie tea iulHIHlIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIJlIIIUillIIJlmIllUiJiillJillnililunJililillliiihIUllllIIlIilill(IIUJIIIJ1I1llIJllliinillllllltuE

- ~ - -~_middotmiddotij_Uimiddotmiddot ~ _

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 An Exce1lent Lcte Summer Activity J VI SIT-middot

Louisiari ~copyfrish A~~ampmpli~~~sect r~bull ~T[T uiH~Dfro[j1) fr ~rtilfrreg~[(frDIri)middot middot~~rrfr~~~Q~t~~~~~~~JJ~~tt$

MADISONVILLE (NC)--+wo cently used for ~~gt~es~was wears ago in this quiet jural torn down Its blue I green~and ~ J~lf ~ town the single square block white stained grass riow frames

ltContaining Catholic ch u r c h the huge rear wIndow ~ ~t buildings symbolized the old era Anselms church - - [f~[LL lRlt OV~~middot ~now it stands for the new This Spring St Catherines

Two years ago two churches also came down Gone too are stood 200 feet apart on this he cOl-vents and bullone school More than 280000 people havle cilrElody been aboard iUO ~he past ys[ioblock--St~ Catherine wh ere The other school building was

whites worshipped and St retained for parish meetings and Francis Xavier where Negroes the now-integrated Confratershy

worshipped The rectory with fiity of Christian Doctrine its one priest to serve both par- classes ishes s too d between theC rhe 100 or so school children

centhtirches moremiddot as a symbol of - arenow transported to elemEmshythe psychological gap thac asan tilt-y and high schools in nearby

actual separation covirigton arid Mandeville middot A fence stood between the two CCD instructions have been

eonventS on the block~riefor givengtySfsters qfChristian the Negro nuns who taughtCharityandtheirstudEints from

Negro children in the ~e~ro ~~njpirClncy at FolsoM La and IIchool the other for the wfitte byseminariaris fromarby St IllUns who taught white children i-Jolieph seminarY Butmiddot tpeseiii the whHe school diities are being taken over by

Now there is one church onemiddot tlie parishs integrated CCD orshyrectory and one small classroom ganizatiorinow being trained

building -- and one parish St The pastor Father John J Anselm DenDulk is prouder of the

Although wee k day Masses smooth transition than he is of were said in only onemiddot of the the physical change shytwo old churches Masses and Participation in worship has ether services on Sundays and increased since the new church major feast days were said in w~ built he says and he has

middot both Midnight Masses on Christ- the best commentators in the mas were celebrated concurrent- whl)le world

Iv in the two churches AIthougb there are only 260 But the buildings weremiddot badly families in the parish the new

Qn need of repair So in 1964 the ~church is already more than half lttId frame church of St Francis paid for and the parish topped

middot Xavier whose parish records go its quota in the archdiocesan back to 1863 and which was re- education expansion drive

bull ~ I bull

Bishop Pmiddoterry Says New Orleans Has Healthy Racial Climate

DENVER (NC) - Auxiliary still has more influence thaa Bishop Harold R Perry SyD any other Negro in the civil of New Odeans first AmeJican rights movement Catholic Negro bishop in this He (Bishop Perry) has been

lt1lentury said here a hea~thy very favorably received in New racial climate will exist wher- Orleans eve~ the Negro has a chan~ to Some Cannot WaU voice his grievances He said there will undoubtedshy

Bisnop Perry dted New 9r- ly be some civil rights groups lleans as an example sayipg the who disapprove lt)f non-violence racial climate there is healthy and occasional demonstrationS

because of an interracial council by those who cannot wait appointed by Louisiana~ov Of course I am a Negro and

John J McKeithen to help splve we have been waiting a long rmcial problems time If you take the long view I There are no demonstra~ions complete equality cant come too and riots and very little picket- quickly he added~

lng he said The cotiJlc~1 i-e- He said he has been received lieves tensions and if the Negro very well even enthusiastically has a forum to talk over his con- in New Orleans Picketing outshyeerns he will not demonstrate side the church where he was

Schools Integrated ~onsecrated he s3id Was DOt typical of the general feeling in

The 50-year-old prelate said New Orleans be is proud New Orleans has in- As an evidence of his popushytegrated all Its schools Its a larity he said he spoke at ninemiddot large percentage not just token graduations in June and has ofshyhe added ficiated at Confirmation in 24

He said Catholics are doing parishes their part to advance equality of opportunity in his citymiddot 1 think [EceQJl1illeIJilD~~ CCrrnDDOdegthere has been Ii united effort tl)Ir If

by all faiths and we would like ~~ ~DcopyQJIJilampIbgtD~~~DIJil to keep it that way he de- CRANSTON (NC) I hdared - n a s ow The New Orleans bishop also of the ecumenical spirit lea4ers ~ommented on ~ wide range of of major religious faiths in this

area took part in a combined eivil rights issues saying

The new militancy shown by bull religious and groundbreaking Visit the BClI~~ie$Mp anldllode alIeplica of the Old iFal~middot River Bill1e~ middottmiddotsom~ civi~ rights groups is a service on the site of the proshy

posed Church of the Annunciashypassing phase tion Greek Orth()dox lours start every 30 minutes

The majority of Negroes are Archbishop lakovo primate lJympathetic to the non-violent of the Greek Orthodox Church Opeill aU year round - 9 AM to Sunsetphilosophy of the Rev Dr Mar- of North and South America of tin Luther King and Dr King ficiated at the open air hierar- For Group Arrangements Call 678-1100 chal Divine Liturgy service at-

Serra Meeting tended by more than 500 pershy l)OOOO()ooOOC)ooOOClOOC)ooOOC)OO~IOOl sons

THIS MESSAGE Sp()NSORED IV lHE FOllOWING INDIVIDUALSATLANTIC CITY (NC) - A Participants in the groundshyeonference for members of Ser- breaking ceremony included AND BUSINESS CONCERNS IN GREATER FALL RIVERlIa Clubs in the New York-New Catholic Bishop Russell J MoshyJersey - eastern Pennsyivania Vinney of Igtrovidence Archshy ANN DALE PRODUCTS INC MACKIENZIE amp WINSLOW INC area will be held here Sept 23 deacon William L Kite represhy II~DY ELECTRIC SUPPLY COMASON FURNITURE SHOWROOMS tKi 25 Msgr William Noe Field senting the Rt Rev John Seville CASCADE DRUG CO GERALD E McNALLY CONTRACTOItiff Seton Hall University South Higgins Episcopal Bishop of GLOBE MANUFACTURING CO SOBILC)FF BROTHERS Orange NJ will give the key- Rhode Island Dr Wayne ~is

~~TGHINSON OIL COa~te address Sept 24 apoundter a executive director ofmiddot the Rhode STERUllIG BEVERAGES INC

~A Mc~HIRR ~9MPANY TEXTIU WORKERS UNION Of AMERICAeOncelebrated Mass at which the 1s~and Council of Churches ~nd ~rE~~ATIQNALV4DIES GARMENT 1 bull AlL~tO - principal concelebrant will be Rabbi Jerome Smiddot Gurland Gf

WORKERS UNION (EUOW CAI COMPANY Bishop George W Ahr of Tren~ ~telligtl~ Sinai 1epresentingthe ton Bhode Island Board of Rabbiamp bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull0 MssSelbullbull

~ ~ ~ - bull bull bull bull I ~ j

- ~

_-- -

0

WomenB~ Job Corps Members middotAid Youngsters Improve Reading

OMAHA (NC)-Omaha Wom- chesne Mother Moody found a ens Job Corps members joined benefactor to supply ihe a11shywith five graduates of Duchesne importlnt incentive program College and Academy of the Thanks to a generous racetrack

Sacred Heart here to upgrade bettor Who won the daily double the reading level of local public there was enough money for school youngsters candy bar prizes and two picnics

The progra~ ca]]edProject An indication or- the success of Upstart was first conceIved by the program was found in the Mother Helen Condon dean of reaction of the students A reshythe Nebraska co]]eg~ Mother cent visitor asked one of the Rosemary Moody aSsIstant pro- young boys Why are you here fessor o~ ~sYChology volunteer~ Did someone make you come to adminIster and execute themiddot program

The original plans were to take a group of seventh graders from Horace Mann Junior High School and tutor them in develshyopmental reading and study skills It soon became apparent that some rather basic instrucshytion was required some of the ehildren were still reading at the second grade level

Duchesnes elementary school was offered for use by Mother Helen Sheahan superior An Omaha public school official suggested that the Omaha Wom- ens Job Corps be contacted to see if they could furnish high school graduates as tutors Robshyert Bathke Job Corps education director soon put five young ladies at Mother Moodys disshyposal

Five recent Duchesne gradushyates volunteered to train the tutors for two weeks before the program actually began The Duchesne alumnae eventualiy elected to stay on for the entire program

Mother Moodymiddot was so imshypressed with the potential of the Job Corps enro]]ees that she exshytended their sessions through the rest of the summer and made college preparatory work avail shyable to them

Student Reaction Perha~s one of the more unshy

usual aspects of the entire Upshystart program was its lack of financing The only real subsidy (about $500) was from the OMaha Public School system the bulk of which went to the Omah~ Transit Company for bus service

The equipment used in the classrooms was borrowed from the public schools the Omaha Womens Job Corps and Du-

Plan to Supplement History Books

SAN FRANCISCO (NC) shyA supplementary text showing the contributions of minority groups in United States history will be added to history and social science books already in use in archdiocesan schools here

The supplement containing some 150 pages will deal chroshynologica]]y with the contribu- tions of Jews Negroes Orientais and various nationalities from southern Europe

It is being prepared by a speshycial studly committee which illl evaluating current textbooks found need for more thorough material on the part minority

groups have played in the OOUDshytry1s history

Leave Providence For Mission Work

PROVIDENCE (NC) - Four Capuchin priest and two layshymen left New York by plane for mission work in the Santa Rosa de Copan diocese Honduras

Father Ad ria n Holzmeister OFM Cap provincial of tile Capuchins St Mary province with headquarters here said the six will work among some 50000 persons in Mlree parishes in the state of Ocotepeque He said

other mjssionersmiddotas they become ayailabie wiD be sent to aid Bishop Jose Canama CbampvezCli tile diocese

He looked up and said Im here because I want to learn to read and I like it Two girls who missed the morning bus to Duchesne gave another exain-ple of determination to learn Jhey undertook a two-hour five mile walk rather than miss a day of class

L R oy etreats Contlnu~d from Page Six

laymens convention-an effort to provide some figure of speech some image to suggest to those in the Church and to those out-

side what is the inner nature of the Church

Alluding to Scriptures refershyences to the Church in terms of sheep and shepherds the former Hub Auxiliary Bishop asked How many people in Boston have ever seen a sheep Sheep and shepherds say little to youngstersmiddot in housing projects or even in the suburbs

The Bishop who is epiScopal advisor for the NCLRC officiashyted at the lighting of an eightshyfoot candle which symbolized the

conference theme-uThe Light of Chr~st The candle burned throughout the convention

Speakers stressed the retreat program is geared to demOJishystrate to the world that the way of Christ can become more meaningiful to men of our time

Bishop Ernest J Primeau of Manchester reminded delegates of recent profound changes withshyin the Church

If the lay retreat movement is to remain vital and relevant

he said it cannot be static It must be in harmony with the times at all times

Honest Call1Se

Our retreat houses could 00-middot eome so to speak the equipment and training centers for the apostolates of the laity he adshydect

Bishop Primeau urged laymei to learn from modern science particularly in the field of hushyman psychology He said there is an opportunity as well to learn from other organizations both secular and religious He added The youth of today are un-

selfish and in large numbers they are seeking for an honest cause to which they can dedicate themshyselves as witness their devotion to the Peace Corps and the civil rights movement

Modernize AncEtenlt Puerto Rico CIl1llLmlrch

SAN JUAN (NC) =- A lPJt8shyyear-old church one of the most popularmiddot in this capital city~ ~

going modern Archbishop Luis Aponte of

San Juan has inaugurated middotal campaign for funds for restorashytion of St Anns a public orashytory now badly illl need of Jeshypairs

1ft addition to restoration the ehurch also Will be equipped with air conditioning The eburch is the archdiocesan ceDltgt ~r for the Confraternity Gi Christian Doctrine and perpetual adoration of the Blessed Sacrashyment Built ill 184B the cburch weplaced an edifice which dated )Iaek iG tile lWi century

PROFESSION ANJ)) RECEPTION Four postulants beshycame canonical novices and two prof~ssed their vows as Sisters of St Joseph at ceremonies at the Blessed Sacrashyment Church Fall River Left column top to bottom Sr Gerard Marie (first vows) Sr Anne Therese Sr Rita Josshyeph Bishop Connolly who received the sisters Right colshyumn Sr Anne Denise Sr St Paul and Sr Alfred Marie (renewed temporary vow-s)

Specialmiddot Education Priests Visi~ PaJ~ents Homes to ExplOJon

SignificOJlI1lce off Baptismal Ritual

Thurs Aug 25 1966

Governor Balks

ST JEAN (NC)-Sunday bapshytisms are prece~ed by Saturday nights special educational proshygrams in a number of Catholic homes here in Quebec

The program to prepare the whole family for baptism through a home visit was deshyvised three years ago by a group of pries~s working togeth~r as a pastoral team

central idea of the program ~s that it is good for the priest to be with his people at imporshytant times in their lives~ Atmiddot these times people are dispOSed to receive the message of Christ

as it applies to their circumshystances the developers of the plan reported

The visiting priest explains the lOOremonies of the next day and the symbolic meaning of various parts of the baptismal ritual

Pilgrims Wctmlk TORONTO (NC) -The 10th

annual walking pilgrimage to the Canadian Martyrs shrine at Midland Ont will begin here Wednesday Organized by the Guild of St John de la Lande the pilgrimage will cover the 100 miles to the shrine in five days a~riving there Sunday Sept 4

LEMIEUX PLUMBING amp HEATING INC

fof Oomestic l~ andmiddot Industrial ~ Sales and Service

Oil Burners WY 5-1631

2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE NEW BEDFORD

Relatives neighbors or the prospective gorlparents may be presentbut themiddot home visit usually involves just the parents and their children

The ide is to make the preshybaptism vsit an oppodunity for dialogue between the priest and the parents rather than a conshyference

Ten parishes in the St Jean diocese have adopted the praeshytice along with l few Montreal parishes Father Marcil Brillon secretary of the St Jean litur- gical commission said he exshypects the practice to spread

FALSE TEETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass Many wearers of false teeth suJIer

embarrassment Qecause their platesdrop Blip or wobble at Just the wrong time Dont live In fear of thts happening to you Just sprinkle a little FASTEErH the non-acid powder on your plates Holds false teeth more firmly so they feel more comfortable Checks denture breath Dentures that fit are essential to health See your dentist regularlyGet FASTEETH at all drug counters

At Proposals MONTPELIER (NC) - Vershy

monts Gov Philip Hoff said he bas extreme reservations conshycerning abortion and sterilizashytion proposals contained in a reshyport of an adivsory committee on the mental retardation situshyation in the middotstate

The report called for legal sanctioning of induced abortion in cases where there appears to be a high risk of mental retarshydation of an unborn child

Thereport also contained a suggestion concerning steriliza shytion of the mentally retarded

Apart from the recommenda~ tions on legalized abortion and sterilization of the mentally reshytarded I must S4ly it was II good report Gov Hoff said He said lie will study the report with utmost care before taking any action 0

Expresses Thanks To Holy Father

VATICAN CITY (NC) -The vice prime minister of Vietnam has paid a visit to Pope Paul VI to thank him for his peace efshyforts and generous help to reshylieve the suffering of the Vietshynamese people General Nguyen Huu Co vice prime minister and secretary of state for national defense of Vietnam visited privately withshythe Pope for 30 minutes Accord- ing to a Vatican Press Office bulletin

The vice prime minister in the name of South Vietnam exshypressed profound gratitude for the valid support always given by the head of the Catholic Church and of the Holy See in the cause of peace and for the generous assistance sent by the Holy Father to relieve the sufshyfering of those persons torshymented by war The distinguishshyed visitor then continued tomiddot deshyclare that the intentions of South Vietnam are directed only toward an affirmation of the liberty of its own nation and Wgt arriving at a just peace in honor and concord

Complete

BANKING SERVICE

for Bristol County

Bristol County Trust Company

TAUNTON MASS

THE ~ANK ON TAUNTON GREEN

Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Bristol Community College Offers Evening Classes

64 Durfee St Fall River Credit classes begin September 19 1966

Register Now Mondays thrrough Thursdays 200-500 PM Courses for college credit or self improvement are offered ill

The arts languages and literature Behavioral and social sciences accounting business

administration and secretarial scieRCe Mathematics science engineering and electro-mechanical technology

Advisors Availabie During ~egistration Hours

16 THE AI~ ~-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

C~nsiders Instability Causes In Latin American lamds

From Social R-evolution in the New Latin Ameriea Edited by John J Considine MM

There are many causes of instability in Latin America Some have said in the past that it is an inheritance frQm

Spain They feel that the years of Spanishauthoritarianism rendered the colonies incapable of integrating themselves into a more balanced social system Because they had there exists the problem of low

denSity of population with a lackpreviously lacked indepenshyof internal communication In-dent creole authority the many cases there is even a lanshy

colonies were unprepared to acshy guage barrier eept a more democratic authorshy The problem of an underdeshyity In his book veloped economy has also beenBetween Freeshy a factor in forming Latin Anlershy clom and Fear ican social structureGerman Arcinshy On the social level the eleshyiegas draws a ments I have mentioned favorcomparison beshy an internal lack of class strucshytween the Enshy ture that involves a juxtaposishyglish and Spanshy tion rather than a social organi shyish governments zation and integration Democshyin the Americas racy on the other hand presupshyIn ihe north the poses a large scale integrationcolonists came in of the people in the politicalshysearch of freeshy economic-social life of thedom IIi the end nationthe founding of the Nodh The masses of -illiterates inAmerican colonies was only the Latin America who do not parshyobvious culmination of a process ticipate in these areas have noalready begun It was the reafshy iilterest in government thoughfirmation of customs already inshy their interest and loyalty maygrained in the social milieu It be enlisted by the demagoguewas an evolution not a real revshyolution for these settlers were Formation or Dictatorships accustomed to autonomy The A dictatorship takes form

authority pf their governors was when one or more pressure more democratic since they groups unchallenged seizes the worked closely with the popular power of governmentassemblies From the beginshy In order to better understand ning the keenest concern of the the types of dictatorship found North American colonist was for in Latin America let us elCamshyfreedom of worship and his hosshy ine the different forms of revoshytility to the Church of England lution and the various ways in was evident which the pressure groups

On the contrary Latin Amershy bring their influence to bearIca was part of an empire The Kalmal1 Silvert distinguishesSpaniards came to dominate and these types in his book Reaction evangelize The viceroy represhy and Revolution in Latin Amershysented the king who was an abshy ica which is written in -Englishsolute monarch The role of Silvert shows the relationshipshyassembly in Latin America was between dictatorships and the secondary arid represented exshy extreme indivdualism found in tremely liIIlited power these countries

Independence in the Latin The first type of revolution American nations entailed a real named is what Silvert calls the revolution since from the beginshy simple brracks revolt Most of ning they were forced tb look for the outbreaks especially in the new political and social forms past century have been of this

Religiousliberty did not elCshy kind The barracks revolt occurs ist in the Latin American coloshy typically in a big class society nies since all were obliged to It is carried out by the amlY

membership in the Cathoiic sompoundtimes in its own name and Church sometimes in behalf of a chosen

Unassimilated Groups leader This type of revolution - rarely calses widesprelld publicThis comparison will help in

disturbance since it representsunderstanding the Latin Amershymerely a switch in governmentican problem though it will not from one general to anotherfully explain -it We must acshy

knowledge that the political The second type the peasant phenomeinon has a direct COIshy revolt is generally of little sigshyrelatio~1 with demographic probshy nificance and limited in effect lems such as the existence of to a locality though the Mexican large unassitnilated groups as revolution at the beginning of well as masses of mestizos un this century would perhaps fall derdeveloped and deprived who in this category can scarcely be said to partici shy Third the regional revolt pate in twentieth century chili shy commcn in the early days of zation Although these groups Latin American independence form a part of the nation they Here _the caudillo strove to put are not integrated either socially down provincial revolts and to eulturally or politically centralize power in an authorishy

Despite the over-all demoshy tarian I e g i () n a I government g~aphic explosion in some areas Typical of the caudillos who led

regional revolts was Rosas of Argentina

Plans Participation The fourth a more modern type of revolution Silvert callsIn Liturgical Week the complicated barracks revolt

HOUSTON (NC) - The 1966 This is an insurrection that inshyLiturgical Week here fOI the -volves civilian as well as mili shyfirst time in its 25-year history tary groups with widespread will have a full scale program military action for those interested in the The issues are ideological and Eastern Church relate to political parties as well

As part of the Liturgical Week as _ other interest groups The program the Divine Liturgy Cuban revolution in its beginshy(Mass) of St John Chrysostom nings might be considered -an will be celebrated entirely in example Although this is the English and Communion will be most prevalent type ainong modshydjstributed under both species ernday revolutions excetions Chief celebrant of the Liturgy are the revolts which overthrew will be Archbishop Paul Achkar Peron in Argentina Perez-JimeshyGreek Catholic ~-chbishop of nez in Venezuela and -Rojas Lattaquia in Syua Pinilla in Colombia

SISTER AMBROSE

Says SOo Africa Needs Americans

WASHINGTON (NC)-Yanshykee come over a statement which would do much to boost the morale of Americans in sevshyeral parts of the world could well summarize what an Irish missionary nun to South Africa

-has been saying during a visit here _

The wonderful hospitality of theAmerican people has imshypressed Sister Ambrose Harty Gf the Sisters of the Holy Family She lamens the fact that opporshytunities to receive Americans in a like manner have been few and far between during her 20 years in South Africa

Youve got such a lot to give she said here in an ~ntershyview during which she expressed a strong desire to see greatly inshycreased people-to-people relashytio~s between the country where she serves and the United States

Sister Ambrose was particushylarly interested in the Peace Corps ann reported that its purshyposes and work are hardly known by the people of Soutli Africa I haVent heard it disshycussed at all she said (The Peace Corps has not been invited into the country) (

With words of praise for the missionary work being done iii the South African Republic by Oblate arid Paulist missionaries from the United States she also expressed regret at the general paucity of missioners from this country There particularly is an almost total lack of nuns she said Only 71 Catholic missionshyaries from the United States inshycluding 16 nuns are serving ilm South Africa

Married Priests AMSTERDAM (NC)-A

Dutch public opinion poli h8lll shown that 11 per cent of the Netherlands p e 0 pIe woulci rather have III married Catholi4l clergy than a celibate clergy The poll including members ai all and no denominations

-showed that 68 per cent of the Catholics queried preferred III married clergy

~~

(DEBROSS OIL ( ~ co ( ~ Heating Oils

~ and BMIIJUrs ~

~ 365 NORYIoli IFROIlir SUEampll ( rJ NEW IBIEDIFOR

~ WYmafi 2middot5534 (

I~~~

Parishes Share DETROIT (NC) - Twentyshy

nine urban parishes here have decided to help one another meet the rising cost of education

At the elementary level parshyepts will pay $50 per family $75 per family for non-Catholic parishioners and $75 per student

Danish Catholic COPENHAGEN (NC) -Thereshy

are 11321 Catholics in the Danish capitalaccording to a report issued by the Copenhagen statistical office They consti shytute the second largest religious entity there next to the Luthershyans members of the State Church The total number of Catholics in Denmark is approxshyimately 26000 Total population is 35 lllillion

Education Costs for Catholics outside the parish

At the high school level the tuition cost is $H)O per student in or out of the parish With the exception of textbooks this amount eliminates aU extra fee charged up to now

Father Norman P Thomas director of the Urban Parisll Apostolate said the greatest efshyfect of the joint effort will be experienced by the pastor who sends parish youngsters to a higll school operated by any of the 2 participating parishes

In this instance the students parishes will be expected to pay the difference between the tui shytion charged and the actual cost per student The latter fee laM been set by the parochial school office at over $200 per year

ETHIOPIA- THE NEW AFRICA

- HOLY FATlftRB MIBBIIDN AID TO THI DRIENTAL OHURCH

- BROTHER What happens In Ethiopia when an American MICHAEL Christian Brother (he could be your son brother

REYNOLDS nephew) Is told to upgrade Catholic schools He FROM borrows a Jeep (or a mule) visits the schools

PROVIDENCE RI one by one writes home for pencils and better REPORTS textbooks and then beginsbullbull This is the new

fROM Africa Brother Michael Reynolds reports enshyADDIS thusiasticallyfrom Addis Ababa It can be a BABJpeacefuf progressive Christian Africa tom~rmiddot

row Just give us schools give us time and with Gods help the job will De donel bull bullThe schools are for villages like Aressa Aiga Biers Wartll8~

-which have no school The youngsters know that knowledge i~ their only chance theyll go without food to learnbullbullbull What does It cost to build a schoolf Only $2950 says Brother Michael for the villagers snd the children give their laborfreemiddotofmiddotcharge We can train a catemiddot chlst for only $40 bullbullbull In thanksgiving to God for what you know will you do what you can ($100 $75 $50 $25 $15 $10 $5 $2) to give these youngsters a chance The school will be named for your favorite saint and the children will pray for your loved ones daily If you build It all byyourself ($2950) School will open late this year-but better late than never-If you Vlrit~ to us right now

WHAT Our priests there who receive no othor income IELSE for food and clothing will offer promptly the

FOR Masses you request Well forward your Mass ETHOPIAr Inten~ons through the Holy Fathers officebull

40 young lads studying for the priesthood In Decamere lose their football when It goes Into a nelghbers garden A large field can be bought ~velled and mede safe for sports fer $975

MAKINQ ~~IOOOO will ovfde bull OOfDj)lete parjstlplantA (Ohuroh rectory convent andscbool) In southshy

WiW ImIAdla In memorybullbullbullbull $600 will ttiln a native lrfHt1SOO bull native Sfster Our legal tltI Cl~1HOUO NWt lAir WIUAH AHOCIAnONo

_-------------~shytt coINIILOIIlt IUMIIIND ~ bullbull la IJIIr bull _1OIt~=-=_==-=

PI _UM~gt

Mum ClO1IIponwith your mt__=-~~_ _ ~i offrtnt ~~ erryen 8TAlI-lPCODI_

HI IATHaLl1 RIIiAR 811 WILAbullbull AIaDIATaN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS IRANCUS CARDINAL SPELLMAN President MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretal)f Write OATHOLIO NfIAR IiAST WELFARE Assoo 1)80 MadlsolJ Avenuomiddot New York NY 10017 -felGpilonel 212YUkon 6middot6840

Dormitory Proves Stonehill Permanently Coeducational

Way back in 1951 when the first girl enrolled in Stoneshyhill College no one could have imagined that a girls dormishytory would ever be built onmiddot the campus But the sound of steam shovels and hammers filling the air over the lovely grounds in Easton is proof

and two girls from the seniorthat the long planned for daslr-assisting the housemothergirls dorm will soon be a Mrs Grace Callahan

reality When Stonehill was The experiment worked so founded in 1948 as a mens colshy well in fact that this coming lege the fledgling school had Fall both the freshman and just gotten off to a good start sophomore girls will be housed when the Korean War came this way leaving only the junior along and emptied the classshy and senior girls still renting Yooms as the young men went quarters in private homes chosen into the services by the college as all the nonshy

That was the year that many commuting girls have done in small colleges had to close their the past gates forever But at Stonehill That typical campus situation the Holy Cross order was detershy -the sorority house-is not in mined to hold onto this new the picture at Stonehill-or frashyschool that they had planned for ternity houses either for that so long matter No sororities or fraternishy

What could they do to keep ties are allowed on the campus the college operating until the There is a cl11b however that war was over and the boys came is the girls own - the Crosier back Of course Open their Club Mrs Yosgandes is the gates to girl students clubs faculty advisor and she deshy

Faculty Pleased scribes it as the organization What started out as a temposhy for women studentE who want

rary expediency somehow over to contribute in their own parshythe years has acquired a happy middotticular way as women to their permanancy No one could be college more pleased about this turn of Through their annualmusical events than the Stonehill faculty Crosier Curtain Calls theyitself raise money to acquire manymiddot

Helping out in Jhe ground things that add beauty and breaking ceremony for the new charm to campus life This yeardorm Mrs Virginia Yosgandes they purchased two very lovelythe Dean of Women at the colshy silver tea and coffee services lege saiei I guess everyone will Any official group at the collegereally believe that the girls are is allowed to borrow the sets and here til stay they have already been used in

Mrs Yosgandes says that since many functions she first came to the Stonehill New Signfaculty in 1958 rumors have

Mrs Yosgandes says Thebeen popping up that Stonehill girls will be very pleased whenwill soon return to its original they come back th~~ Fallto seestatus as an all male school The the beautiful new sign theynew dorm she says will be visshybought for the college installedible proof of the permanancy of on Route No 138 women on the beautiful campus

Its very easy to picture theThe $1150000 building deshyvery charming Dean presidingsigned to accommodate 200 girls

graciously at a faculty tea Aand proctors will be three stories parishioner of Immaculate Conshyof red brick Architects W Chesshyception chulCh in Easton she ister arown and Associates and in ~rivate life an enthusiasticwntractors C A Batson and homemaker anc the mother of aCompany are planning to comshy13 year old daughter Christineplete work on the dorm in time Her husband John is assistantfor the opening of classes in principal at Franklin JuniorSeptember 1967 It will be the High first unit of a five dormitory

She speaks with great convicshycomplex planned fo the women on tion about college girls holdingcampus

onto feminine ideals while surshyKitchen ~pace rounded-and at Stonjhill outshyMrs Yosgandes is happy about numbered 3 to 1- by menthe fact that the new dorm will While were encoulaging themhave a kitchenette on each floor to be acdve in thpound communitywhere the girls can cook small and the church and in politicsmeals and entertain guests Shes and encouragint them to deshyhoping that the dorms built after

more velop their abilities to the full shythis me will providtgt even est-we never fail to take intokitchen space for the girls to account the fact that they arepractice the culinary arts women and in this competitiveM a n~ tImes homemaking world theyll have to -fight toskills come to a complete halt maintain their feminine idenshywhen a girl goes to college she tity says Apparently all classroom

work and rio cooking make Jane Coed Actiiti~s

Coed a dull girl in the room When she fi rst came to the where shell be spending a great college she sltys the girls were deal of time after graduationshy mainly interested in strictlythe dtchen feminine extra curricular activishy

Mrs Yosgandes says A great ties-fastion shows teas gids many cCJlleges have been workshy sports Bd this has changed radshying witt this problem and wonshy ically in the last few years and dering what to do about it Beshy now the girls are much more inshycause theyve had no living terested in the coed acti vitiesshyquarters for girls on campus the newspapers the debating Stonehiiil has had to do out of team the drama club Stonehill necessit) what many other colshy is noted a~ one of a small handshyleges have chosen to do recently ful gtf Catholic colleges where The Dean describp~ an experishy girls are middotactive in every part of ment that the collFge tJied last college life Every coure at yeal tha has worked out exshy StonehHj is opel to girls tremely well We still havent had a woman

Experiment Successful president of our student governshyThe college leased a grollp of ing body the Senate Mrs

rooms il an apartmelt building Yosgandes says Now girls in Brockton last Fall where all what are yOIi waiting for the freshman girls who were not commuters-55 of them-lived in housekeeping apartments In Red Groups There were four girls in each BERLIN (NC)-Over 85 per apartment all sharing the reshy (ent of East German children sponsibilities of housekeeping between the ltlges of 6 and 14 are

The girls hat two sets of mCl11)ers of communist youth 1)IoctOS - two aIumni wumen ~nIUps

lrt-OE ANCH0) 17 Thurs Aug 25 1966

PriestCuod Goal Of Top Skater

GREAT FALLS (NC)-A good many folks in this Montana toWlll will attest that teenager J Mishlll Petkevich is a pretty good skate -on or oH the ice

The affable blond youngster 17 topped a field of 136 pershyformers in the three-day Lake Placid N Y international free style competition sanctioned by the U S and Canadian Figure Skating Assoclations The Great Falls lad was the judges unamiddot1ishymous choice for the mens gold medal in the finals

But Petkevich doesnt lose his cool off the ice His classmates and teachers at Great Falls Censhytral 3igh School claim hes liIl

winner in every event He spends more than 40 hours 11 week in skating training but carries the full load of class studies and consistently turns Up on the schools honor roll Hes a member of the National Honor Society

The school supported me ami the way Everyone has beeEl wonderfUl to me the modest youngster saia Hes been -skatshying since he was 2 He credit his achievements to his Catholic Faith the sacrifices of his parshyents and of Arthur Bourke senshyiormiddot professional of the Great Falls Figure Skating Club He said All I did was skatemiddotGROUND-BREAKING The Very Rev John T Corr

I hope some day to become~esc president of Stonehill College turns a shovelful of priest Petkevich said wbeilearth to mark start of construction 0pound a 200-student dormshy a~ked his ambition I hope 14gt itory for women on the Stonehill campus Watching the proshy attend Notre Dame for at leasa celtlures are left to right Mrs Virginia Yosgandes dean af two years and then I h9pe to gf)

to the Catholic University fl4women John C Doody 66 Alumni fund chairman Robert AmericaBatson contractor Harold Bonvie ass~iate of the archishytect

Msgr Canty Continued from Page OneRussian Schools ing studies at S1 Marys High

Taunton Boston- College and S1 Bernards Seminary RochesshyChristian Brother Lauds Students terN Y

nespect for Intellectuols He served as assistant at Our Lady 01 the Isle NantucketCHICAGO (NC)-Students in to foreign languages than Amershy Holy Family Taunton St

schools behind the Iron Curtain icans Most students take a Marys Barrowsville and Stgo at their studies with a passhy seven-year sequence of English Johns Attleboro He was apshysion said Brother Kevin Mark German or French English he pointed to the Chaplains CorPJFSC who toured Russia and added is the most popular lanshy of the United States Navy infour satellite countries with 19 guage and more emphasis is January 1942 and retiredwitbother U S rducatois placeltl on reading and speaking the rank of captain in Decemshy

Brothel Mark who is princishy than on writing it ber 196gt Pope John XXIII pal 9f St Mels high school here Brother Mark said that there elevated him to the rank of attributed much of their motivashy is almost nothing that he would Domestil Prelate with the title tion to the students attitude that lift from the Soviet school sysshy of Right Reverend Monsignor iI What I do does contribute to tem and apply in the U S May 1962 the welfare of the state He admitted however that Bishop Connolly named Monshy

Brother said he felt that stushy they do get results They have a signor Canty pastor of St Paulsdents in this country lack motishy tremendous capacity for conshy Taunt-ln in December 1963 vation because were spoiled centration when they set their Industrial improvements have sights for example their space made it that a young man can program Its not all a matter go into a trade and make very of being chained to a lab table good money BLUE RIBBON

In the Soviet Union he said there seems to be a great reshyspect for intellectuals and the LAlnNDRY student is thought of as a proshy

01 STOPfessional schJlar 273 CE~RAl AVE~UIIG CfflTERTeaching is considered a proshy

fession and remunelated accordshy e Television C FmiddotI ure illgly WY 2-6216o r-cerv

St Mels principal observed on IlA Allen St Newhdfordhis tour that there was little NEW BEDFORD questioning on the part of the students

The chSSloom situation he said is very much teacher ori shyented that is study in depth is 21 DAY PILGRIMAGES TO EUROPE done on the teachers inspiration

rou~ 1-Legion of Mary Pilgrimage leaving Sept 12th with Truth in such areas as history Father Edward A Oi-viera will visit Killarney Dublin Paris

cllld literature is accepted as a Lourdes Rome Madrid Lisbon and Fatima - Tour 2shyforegone conclusion and stushyHoly Cross Fathers Pilgrimage leaving Oct 10th with Frdents just memorize what has

already been discovered ----- lobert E McDonnell will wsit lisbon Fatima 1odrid Rome Lourdes Paris and londonIike F)rc~gn Linutges -cota cost is $82900 - Time PaymentsmiddotIn the area of science howshy arranged ever the situation is difterent

()Ii TOUR tOLDERS CONTACT STEolfEN A MARIIEYhe pont~d out because in scishyence there is an attitude of I n~ust discover Catholic Travel

-Office

The R1~middotmiddotmiddotO p oth-r Mark ~ltk St New Befl- -ass 02748

said ~ ve 11111j Ill)le auention

BURNERS

BUrntlr Service

Famous Reading HARDCQAl

NEW ENGLAND COKE

t8 THE ~NCHOR-Dioceseof fo Rivef-Thurs Aug 25 1966 J~sut I)riest Says Some Public I b M t EmploYE~~S Have Right to Strike

-

Urges uO or ovemen S NEW (NC) -Public however YORK Government hasmiddot h C employees in certain fields have been expanding its cQncern andIn Heml$p ere ooperate the right to strike against the has beenmoving into ar~as of government a priest declared transportation education recre-

By MsgrGooJrge C Higgins (Director Socian Actiolll Dept NCWC)

The relationship between the American labor moveshyment and the Latin American Confed~ration of Christian Trade Unions (CLASC) leaves much to be desired as we

middot thO d th 1- have aready noted severa1 t Imes m IS co umn urmg e

past four or five years The two movements are deeply different things to different peoshy

auspicious of one another and just when they seem to be on the verge of settling or at least -patching up their differshyences they go at it again and recklesslystart hurling insults at one another

To jUdge from What they sayIi b 0 u t on e another publicshy1yen as well as privately on e would t h ink that they were natural-born enshyemies whe~eas in fact they have much in common-much inore than they seem to realizeshyand for obvious reasons ought violent MisS Duncan was an officer of The fourth public member Harshyto be c60p~rating With onean- Moreo~er at least one promi~theSodality a cheerleader for vardlaw school professorVern ether as closely as pOSSible nent spokesman for the AFL- four years a member of the Ten- Countryman half ci-itiCized the This writer has learn~ci the hard WR and muc~ to hiS so~-row that any outSider who 18

fOolish enough totryto mediatek f

~tween them JS as mg or troouble

C f t Gommun same If for example one suggests

as I have done on more than one Occasion that soine of the anti U S propaganda emanating from CLASCsources revealS atremely harmful to the cause of n a i v e misunderstanding of Amerlcan trade unionism and American capitalism andor ari $ver-simplification of Catholic Social teaching he runs the risk 9f being written off as a blind -not tOsay reactionary apologist for so-called Yanqui ~mperial-

iBm If on the other hand oneslig

gests that some of the anti- CLASC propaganda enianating

fro m AFL-CI0 sources is equally naive and unsoPllisti shyeatedhe runs the same Sort of risk in reverse That is to say he is likely to be told--v~ry politely of course -that if he were to take off his Catholic blinkers and look at the record objectively he would quickly come to realize that CLASC is in reality playing t~ecipal rival in Latin America) riages in their mission parishes communist game in Latin Amer- there is a gEirierous mixture of Msgr Milia stated Since the iea superficial appearances to cultural chauvinism and envy Ogdensburg mission was opened the contrary notwithstanding that accompanies the most legit- a modern new church bas been

Both CaD Learn imate misgivings built under its direction in the Be that as it may I still think Even the Latinos middotthemselve~ seaport ofMatararii two mission

~t CLASC has a lot to learn he points out will admit on ac- churches have oeen completed about _ and from American casion that their consumirig fear and a lalge parish church and trade unionism And if that of Yanqui imperialism is often center are currently under conshymakes me a reactionary Yankee irrational But there it is he re- struction in Mollendo ehauvinist so be it minds us and the basic prob-

By the same token however aiso think that the American

labor movement has much to learn about -- and from - the Christian trade union movement in Latin America The first thing it has to learn is that the Am~r-leap philosophy of pure-andshysimple bread-~d-butter union ism which all things considshyered has worked satisfactorily in this country is not necessarily well adapted to the present-day Deeds of Latin America

Meaning of Revolution Another way of saying the

same thing is that American iabor representativesworking on Latin America problemswm have to reconcile themselves to the fact that a social revolu-Uon is called for in Latin American labor federation that doesnt subscribe to a revolushytionary ideology is probably doomed to failure

The word revolution meaos J-

pIe of course To the leaders of CLASC it means a sweeping program of socioeconomic and political reform which goes far beyond the limited goals of bread-and-butter unionism

The leaders of CLASC are convinced that such a revolushytioo is demanded bythe Chrisshytian social ethic to which they subscribe and from which they derive their ideology

Perceptive Critique Some U S Labor repshy

resentatives are skeptical to say the least~bout the allegedly Christian content of CLASCs militant ideology They admit theneed for a peaceful revolushytion in Latin Americn butthey are convinced thatCLASC wants this revolution to be Feehan High School Attleboro alties in a letter tc therimes

lem is how to insure con~ PAVlA V I tlnuing cooperation between 0 untee rs Yanqui and Latino in spite of Complete TlIainirigit

Such cooperation Dr Hawkins WASHINGTON (NC)-Fortyshyconcludes will be impossible unshyless the leaders of the American labor movement positively indi~

cete their acceptance of social revolution in Latin America This will require he says

more than the generous transshyfusions of economic aid the stimulation under United States

labors auspices of leadership training programs for workers

and other cooperative ventures Need Broader View

What is required he insists ltCia a broader view-an ability on the part of the American la bor statemen to adopt policies that will not always accord with OUI own value~ and more speshy

cificall~ the tempering of (their) hosannas to free entershyprUie ___

inter-American labor unity I fully agree in this respect with Dr Carroll Hawkins Associate

Professor of Political Science at Michigan State University who recently published a most pershyceptive critique of American trade union policy in Latin- Catholics in Mollendo Peru the

America (The 0RIT and Amer diocesan missions director reshyican Trade Unions Conflicting ported Perspectives Industrial Rela- The New York priests were tionsand Social Changes in sent to Peru after Pope Paul Latin America University of vi -asked that more priests be Florida Press) pr9vjd~d fOr the people opoundSouth

Basic Problem America Msgr Anthony A Mi-Dr Hawkins admits of course lia said He estimated more than

that in all the Latin American 90 percent of the priests in criticism of United States unioniperu are from other countries in the ORIT (the Latin Ameli can regional unit of the Interna In 1965 the priests from Ogshytional Confederation of Free denburg administered 445 bap-Trade Unions and CLASCs prin tisms and perfoImed 64 mar-

CIOhas publicly charged in ej_ nis Club for two years and a suggested penaltiel fect that CLASCs ideology three yeaT member of the FU- owes more to Marxism than it ture Nurses club Father Carey sl~id the ~ays does to Christianity He finds it when pay and working condi-

An instructor in the Confra- tions for men and women inhard he says to accept the fact ternity of Christian Doctrine that the Christian labor move- civil service were determine4 byproglam in Our Lady of Mt I g I t d d t t

t middot A e IS a Ive It n a minIS ra Ive ment 0f L a In merIca IS non- Carmel Parish Seekonk the fiat have pas ed a d Communist s n we now

In my judgment this kind of criticism of CLASC by spokesshymen fltr the AFL-CIO is ex

three volunteers have completed the Second National Training Session sponsored by the Papal Volunteers for Latin America and received assignments in some ten Latin American coun- tries

Special ceremonies ended the six-week training session at the Catholic University of America where volunteers studied the apostolic work of the Church the laymans role in the aposshytolate and principles of spiritual life as well as the religion ecoshynomics and culture of Latin America

Before leavillg for their asshysignments the volunteers will take intensive four-month lanshy

guage anl culture courses in a Latin American language centerbull

eighth winner of this scholarship plumeoursElves that we share will enter the Childrens Hosshypital School of Nursing Boston in Septembel-

Ogdensburg Priests

SellYe Peru Mission OGDENSBURG (NC) -- Four

Ogdensburg priests currently are ministering to the n~eds of_13OOO

~ere

Father Philip Carey sJ exshyecutive director of the Xavier Institute of Industrial Relations acknowledged t hat certain strikes aJre intolerable But he said that when the governmentacts in a proprietary function it must follow the same rules it prescribes for private enterprise

In a letter to the New York Times Father Carey criticized ~y implication a proposed state -llw that wetulltilincrease the penalties to be imposed on strikshying union of public employees

MlISS LHNDA DUNCAN Th~proposedlaw grew out of recommendations of a five-man

Feehan Alumna task force named by Gov Nel son Rockefeller to study the

Receives Award problem after a 19-day transit strike crippled Newmiddot York City

Miss Linda Duncan daughter in January of Mrs George Duncan and the - NeCeSSBlry for Bargaining late George Duncan 61 Sykes Father Carey one of four Rd Seekonk has been awarded pubiic members of the mayors the eighth annual scholarship of committee that helped settle the the Attleboro Area Nurses strike disagreed with two other Chapter publlc memlgters Vh_o had previshyA 1966 graduate of Bishop ously supported the stiffer pen-

and internal concord a str~ke against itconstitutes mutiny and rebellion (UCLA) Sister Muriel a native

Pgbllsh Gudelnes For Ecumenisn

ALLENTOWN (NC) - The commission of ecumenism of the Allentown diocese here in Pennshysylvania has published a 22-page booklet of ecumenical guidelines to aid priests in guiding the laity The guidelines include general

permission for non-Catholics to serve as witnesses at Catholic weddings for Catholics to serve as witnesses at non-Catholic weddings and for burial of non-Catholics in Catholic ceremonies with a priest or a non-Catholic clergyman cltmducting graveside eeremonies

SHELL DADSON OIL

24-Hollr Oil

GLE COAL amp OIL CO IncI

640 Pleasant Street Tel WY 6-8271 New Bedford

this decision-making with the working p E~ 0 P Ie themselves through the process of collective bargaining

If collective bargaining is to be the rule he said we must agree to grant the right to strike~ Without this right he said there is no union and no coll~ctive balmiddotgaining

Expands Concern-in considering strikes by pu~ lie employees he dedared one muSt distinguishb~tween the state as a sovereign and the g()vernment acting in a proprishyetary function When the state aets as the defender of the peace or the promoter of justice

of Corning Iajoined the Sisters of the Humility of Mary in 1930 In recent years she has been ehairman of professionafarts deshypartment and college registrar

ation and a host of other services formerly performed by privategroups he continued

These activities are ancillary and economic and here the state in acting in a proprishyetry function When it so acts it ought to be subject tl) the same rules of conduct the government prescribes for private entershy

prise Strikes by firefighters and powerhouse uti lit y workers would be wrong however he said because it is difficult to imagine anY benefit they might gain to counterbalance the fear- fut harm such a l strike would impose on the community Buys Banners For Memorial

CHICAGO (NC)-A Chicago advertising executive has bought 44 brightly-colored religious ~anners tat -hung in the Nashy

tlOnal Srme of the Im~aculate ConceptIon during Luci Johnshysons wed(iin~ -

Earle Ludgin a trustee of the University of Chicago said he will donate the banners to the

university~ Rockefeller Memoshyrial Chapel in memory of his late wife

The banners for which Ludgin reportedly paid more than $40000 were originally created for the Vatlcan PavIIIon at the New York World Fair

A group of Washington D C residents bought ttie banners when the fair closed and arshyranged to have them exhibited in the Shrine until they could be sold Lugdin bought themin April but agreed at the request of Shrine officials to leave them in the Shrine until after Lucia wedding

lame College Head

OTTUMWA (NC) Sis t er

Muriel Hogan has been named the third presi4ent of Ottumwa Heights College here in Iowa She succeeds Sister Marie Anshy

ciue Kennedy woo win engagem graduate study in oominunishy

eations at the University of California Los Angeles branch

Offering You 3 Savings Plans

Home Financing

WAREHAM CO-OPERATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mabull

Telephone 295-2400 Banll SerVice YlIIIIIII

I

Ask Court Bar Use of Church Propertyfor Public SchoQ~middot WHITE ~S (MC) - A the cl883rooms ~ut Church

group of some 25 citizens repre- npokesman reporte~ that in line sented by the American Jewish with New York archdiocesan Congress has asked the New York State Supreme Court here to restrain the board of Ramapo School District 2 Rockland County from holding public school classes in property leased from religious bodies

The school board faced with severe-overcrowding planned to lease eight rooms from St Josephs Catholic Church and five from lem~e Beth El in Spring Valley The action was approved by 8tateEducation Commissioner Jame$ EAllen Jr

A ComllllJJlt served 0ill the rlChool board by the AJC charged the acti~n o~ld ~otateChurchshyState separation guaranteed by the First Amendment to the Constitution as well as other provisions of the state constitushytion

It is believed to be the first wch challenge made regarding

the use of religiO18 facilities for public school use

lhe st Josephproperty conshysists of an eightclasSroom school building adjacent to but sepashyrated from the chureh It is Ill good condition but will not be used by the p8rish thismiddot year because it has bUilt a new bUildshying for expanding its acbool to 141 classes

All religioUs ~bols had Ileen removed from the oder building in preparation for its use as a public school

The district school board had offered a fair market rent for

PAV~A deg Missionary Record Continued from Page Thirteen

A nurse from Chicago baa taken Lucillellpla~on the aposshytolic team and ber purpose in returning is to help her successhy80r work into the project smoothly It takes so long to get into 11 she Aid so II dont WJmt Il~r to spendtbree

years j~ g~tting organized~

Benedictine Marks 80th Anniversary

ST JOSEPHmiddot (NC)-The oldshyest Benedictine nun in Minneshysota-and one of the oldest m the world~marked the 80th anshyniversary of her entrance into the order ma Mass for all Beneshydictine jubil~tians held at St Benedicts convent here

Sister Sophia Zimmer was 1~ years old Dec 2 1965 She Wall

born in a log cabin about 1 block away from the convent An open house for her relatives and friends was held at the conv~nt

Receives Students cAsTELGANDOLFO (NC)shyPoPe Paul vI received in audishyence at his Summer home here students frOm 34 nations includshying many non-Catholics who are taking Summer courses in the ItaUaa language aDd culture sponsored by the Rome branch of the Catholic University fII IWaD

policy the properly would be made available for public school use at a token dollar-a-year rental

cmOS Cmpetes C~~ege ~rr(l))g~m

WASHINGTON (NC)-A class of 97 under-privileged high school students was graduated on completion of an eight-week Summer college orientation proshy

gram at Georgetown University The exercises i attended by faculty and parents Qf the stushydents involved students who had completed their Sophomore year in District of Colwnbia high schools They were chosen for the special course because teachers and counselors believed they have the ~billty to do colshylege work alihoug~ their presshyent high school records indicate little likelihood of college acshyceptance Ninoty-fiveOf the 97 students were Negroes md the ratio of males to females was aboutmiddot tbree-to-two ~

The pro~~~~Ch began in 1965 is financed by the NaUonal science Fowidationmiddot the District of Columbia public school sysshy

tem and Georgetown In addition to academic work

the students were given cltgtUrsetl in reading improvement and counseling gUidance Athletie and cultural events underwrit shyten by the program were also bKluded in their schedules

nearly 42 years Bishop Gerow churches degespeciallY Negro said Of late I have feltmiddotthat X houses of worshIp which middotWere have not the stamina to caJTY I bombedmiddot and burned

on as I have done in the past Whena p~ttern of destn1c~ion This load should be borne by 1 develops as It has m our state youngerman then it sincumbent upon all ntereston Yoiit

Cathollc lnereaSe m~n ~ ~ood ~i~ througho~t MiSSISSIPPI to Jom hands m Savings

The ~venth bishop of~edio- helpingthe affectedmiddot churches 0 Invested In cesemiddotwhlch was founded ID 1~37 and in showing clearly our con- and encompasses 111 of Missls- demnation at all acts of violencemiddot CATHOLIC CHURCH sippi Bishop Gerow h8ll s~ lawlessness and destruction the Catholic population IJOw from 31264 to 75000 in his 41 years of office The number of priests in the diocese grew from 63 to 220 and churches md misshysions from 108 to 243

The last few years of llacial violence perhaps were the most troub1d for Bishop Gerows long ad inistration middotHemiddot met the challenge with courage

In the face of many-sided opshyposition Bishop Gerow in 1964 directed the first grades of Cathshyolicmiddot schools in the state to be racially integrated The next

Missionaries Move Seminar to Ohio

DAYTON (NC) -The White Fathers a missionary society which bas served in Africa for nearly a century is llloving its U S seminary to Dayton

St Josephs Seminary which had been in operation at Onshydliota N Y near Saranac Lake will re-open under the same

name in four residences near the campus of the University of

Dayton The buildings have been rented from the university

Eventually the White Fathers plan to build their own seminary

middotfacilities somewhere in ~e area according to Fatber Paul lo1e1le WF~

THE ANCHOR- middot19 Thurs Aug 25 1966

KC Melll1il~er~~ip

At AJ~Tome e~~gh MIAMI BEACH (NC)-In his

report at the 84th annual meetshying of the Supreme Council of the Knights of Columbus Sushypreme Knight John W McDevitt made these points

Membership on June 30 1966 stood at an all-time high of 1183896 The orders insurance covershyage passed the $15 billion mark during the year

The orders assets reached III

neW plateau of $28122840028 at the end of the fiscal year

The society i~ continuing its support of the campaign to st~m p(gtrnography

Revise Ceremonial Progress is being made onthe

re_Vision of the orders cerempnshyial to give it a total family middotclishymate and make it consistent with moder day philosophy of social justice and religious pracshytice

The K of C have undertaken distribution of copies of the 1~ew Testament to Catholic gradllates

COURAGE PERSONIFIED John St Marie of B~YQ of the Naval Offilaquoer CandfClatE port Minn CQnfined to a wheelchair since a 1953 pOlio ~chool in Newport R I an(J ill

~dying the question of proshyattack has received a scholarship to the University of viding a similar servilte ~orMinnesota law school atter successfully maintaining an Ashy Catholic graduatell of the Qffi shyminus average in undergraduate work at the College of cers Candidate School of ihe St Thomas St Paul Minn irQ Photo Canadian Navy

It saluted Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York on biI

Welcomes Successor Naming of Apostolic Administrato

Pleases Bishop Gerow 81 JACKSON (NC)-Mississippll1 year he followed with a direeshy

courageous 81-year-old Bihop tive that Catholic schools be deshyOliver Gerow welcomed his suc- segregated completely ceSSor Bishop Joseph B Bruni- Helps Restore Churches ni 55 as spiritual head of the Despite reported threats ofmiddot Natchez-Jacklon diocese as one violence fro m segregationist who is active vigorous and has ranks the aged prelate was good sound judgment among leaders of an interfaith

X am very happy in being groupmiddot which formed the Comshyrelieved of the heavy responSl- mittee of middotConcernmiddot soHcited middotbillty that I have borne for money labor and materIals for

middotthe bishop stated in a letterred AND in every Catholic church in the INSTITUTIONAL BONDSstate

His appeal for $300000 to re-middot I Umiddot f $500 M store more than 30 d~stroyed n nits 0 or ore and damaged churches brought Keenan amp CImiddotarey bie contributions to the Committee 9f Concern from various sections Minneapolis Minnesota of the country

0

M~ntle Plumbing amp ~ating Co Inc~

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET Fall River OS 57497

for detailed information write to

CHARLES A~ MURPHY Registered Representative

145 Pond $treet Winchester Mass

PA 9-2696 And

Name bullbullbull ~ Address A

City _

50 years in the priesthood payshying tribute to him not only beshycause of his dignity as a pi-iest and cardinal but also because he 1S a great and wholesome mail

Relic Stolen NEW YORK (NC)-A reputed

relic of the cross on which Chtist died has been stolen from the Church of the Most Holy Reshydeemer here It was removed from a side altar tabernacle

where it had been placed shortshyly after the churchs establishshy

ment by the Redemptoriad Fathers some 125 years ago

~

GULF HILL DAIRY so DARTMOUTH MASS

RO THE ANCHO~-Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

1

RELIGIOUS SUPERIORS INSTITUTE ON STONEHILTJ CAMPUS SMS Guadalcanal Solomon Islands Standing Sr Florita DP King Sr Mary LUk~ St about to enter the hall for her lecture Center Some ston Mass Sr Mary of Bathany SP Holyoke Sr Mary de Sales F$SJ r the sisters who attended Sister Lukes talk were Sr Josepha SC Conshy Holyoke Right Mrs Mary Virginia Yosgandes h-ouse mother wavesgood ent Station NJ Sr Mary Kenneth Amityville NY Sr Mary (fheresa bye tothe departing nuns I

Brooklyn Church Hopes Nuns Move Into Cent~r of Lij~e Criticizes Irish lribunal Lacks By Dorothy Eastman -Social Security

When in the third year of Vatican II the momentous decision was made toinvitewO- dmiddot LIMERICK (NC) - FatherJ men observers to audit a Council forthe first ~ime to represent all J~remiah Newman professor ofuris ICtlon the Sister chosen BROOKLYN (NC)-Msgr the nuns in America was Sister Mary Luke Tobin Mother General of the Sisters of Lor- sociology at Irelands Maynooth

IlAarion J Reinhardt pre- etto When shewasasked recently while visiting the Fall River Diocese what impressed College criticizedprivate agenshyJ~L h t b t th C 1 cies and the national governshyIdlng Judge of the Trlblillal er mos a ou e oune) h t b t h h d k ment for their failure to increaseshe said with a wry smile We aVe 0 e rna ure enoug er own or er was wor mg(1)f the Diocese of Brooklyn h to live in insecurity toward these ends She told of all subsidies to families Iltas announced that the bill of The fact that we were t ere Will these changes be easy experiment soine of her Sisters After insisting that it would $Omplaint of 15 former teachers at all I The Sister is too much of a have been engllged in for the be best for private agencies and of St Johns Un~versity had to At a Stonehill College institute realist to give that impression past twu years in Pueblo Colo- local governments to administer be dismissed because of lack of Sister Luke spoke of her many Its going to be fraught with rado Although most of the 1100 social security Father Newman jurisdiction on the part of the other impressions of the Council difficulties she warns but Sisters of Lorettv are teachers said that since they seemed unshy

ecclesiastical court _ where she and seven other Sis- what isnt this small group of Sisters in willing or unable to do this the The Brooklyn ecclesiastical tels were auditresses for the last There are more than a few Pueblo 1s doing no t~aching-in job had to be done by the natshy

$Ourt which operates under two years of Vatican II Over Sisters who are troubled and schools anyway They simply jonal government ~llnon law said it is pmited in 450 Mothers Superior from 55 sometimes shocked these days live among the poor as good He said that according to jurisdiction to only spiritual different Orders were gathered by many of the changes hi their neighbors he 1pin jg wherever Catholic soCial teaching there ltuestions at the Easton campus for the communities The Mother Gen- they cllD leading discussion was no limit to the amount of Charge Contralaquot Breach five day Institute directed by eral would warn them that its groups counselling etc government aid that is permis-

The 5000 word document Rev William FHogan CSC pointless for them to say Thill Asked to comment on the re- sibie and desirable if governshypointed out that the decree of Sister Luke was one of a group is not the community I entered cent experiment in Milwaukee mEmt aid was the Qnly practical Giisrriissalis without prejudice to of noteliltspeakers who talked When it comes to that she says where30 School Sisters of St (sbl~tion to poverty problems lbhe merits of the case to the superiors on the subject we all might say This is not the Francis left their convents for

If the Metropolitan Tribunal of the I Sister in the modern Church Iwas baptized into or three weekstO work in secular If the archdiocese of New York world this is not the world I was b()rn jobs - oneSister wa3 assigned

T b 1 f the Sacred into Change is a fact of life S t~ the rI una 0 Adapting a line from Charles as a newspaper reporer- IS er Roman Rota reversesthe decree Dickens to describe this contro she points out~ and we can~t keep Luke predicted a great deal the casewiil be returned to the versial post Council age Sister things as they are or say Stop more~ of this kind of liniited Tribunal of the Diocese of the World-I want to get off f i t th I w ld ]Brooklyn for adjudications upon t~ees sa~~iSTi~iSt~eth~o~r Role of Superiors ~~~re ~o di~~a~~c~i~t n~~ Ms merits it was stated times She paintedavivid ver- The role the Superiors will she said

The petition of complaint bal picture of the world that lies play in the formation of what Since her own Order founded filed by Father Peter OReilly ahead for Sisters She said it has been called The New Nun in 1812 is quite new all religious

s~f Chicago on behalf of himself would certainly be a challenging Lwuakeouattlintheed fs~roeh~ ~~s~~~t~ orders go and is the liirst comshylind the other ousted teachers one and that conventlife inthe munity founded in America charged he university which is future is certain to undergo She urged them to create a cli- without European ties the Sisshyeonducted by theVincentian many radical changes mate where Sisters can liveters of Loretto weal habits more Fathers with breach of contract community life at its best She -modern than most But itsstill

The Superior~ were told that entreated them to keep thls cli-The dispute has been marked bY d bl d ff t the dress of 1812 not 1966 so it d k t f an m Ispensa e gUl e me ec - mate free from legallsm andlitudent unrest an pIC e mg 0 th hmiddotmiddot th will soon be changed As soon I mg ese c anges IS e map survelmiddotllance Ie schoo s campuses f th f t th t th C 1 as the all-mlll Congregation

or e u ure a e ounCl A community should be a of Religious in Rome approv~sMoral Issue Fatners drew up for the Church place where there- is safety for She called the CouncII Decrees the Sisters new design that is About 30 teachers were fired fl t d f t f dff

Rost December in a dispute over the documentS ofhighest au- cop IC an sa e y or J er- Tliey have submitted one de~ign rlty We should all have ~nes apd s~fety to cultiv~te that the fathers turnEd downadministration-faculty relation- tho d t h d Sh f I the mInd of Vatlcan II and then lverSI y s ~ sal e ee s lihey thought it was too modshyships and other issues They t I th t th h ld be

b b f we c~n move Into actlon she s rongy a ere ~u r -ern Sister Luke says UWhat anwere joined y anum er 0 I t I g I fe ther teachers In a strike that told her healers - 1Jloe ~o~a IY In re 1 J~)Us 1 incredible thing for US to ask shy --uAfterall were not Trap- that we choose our own clothes has continued since January Whi~h Way psts

l she adds with a laughThe court found that tpe How will the Sisters know in Warning that the time has S t Lk tl - b

uteceniontractual controversy was not whicli direction they should come for a re-evaluation of the _ IS ~rth y e~mt~ a spiritual mattelin a canoliical move in the manyarells so(in to true meaning of community she ne oIl e d~rs wo~~ ever ~ llense of the word spiritual change cExperiment Sister told the Superiors that commu- bo~a h a sre~t a f ~gUS aild that there was no allegation Luke advises so often its almost nity doesnt mean conformity or 0 y e oCle ~ o anon ef a violation of an ecclesiastical her motto We really cannot a hotel life either or even a Lawyrs Does thIS mian that law arid that the time was not move into change without ex-lot of happy t9getherness th~ SI~ters may at last have a opportune for a decision of perimentation she says and around the television set voIce 111 the formatIon of canon moral responsibility because the we will be engaged in tremen- A ~ital new aspect of commu- la-at least th~ laws that rUI~ secular courts would first have dous experiments from now on- nity is the idea of what Sister thel~ O~derS SIster Luke deshyto determine whether there was to adapt religious life to the Luke calls sub communities- vout y opes so a breach of contractual duty times in which we live the convents immediate neigh- Its certain that the future for

The church court found as a The revisions that lie ahead borhood the parish the civic the Sisters will be a very differshymatter of law that St Johns for religious orders will bring commumty lay people 111 the ent one than anyone could have 141 NO MAINUniversity as a corporation Sisters into the mainstream of same profession as the Sister- imagined a few short years ago J~ formed under the law of the modern life Sister Luke for for instance other nurses or The Holy Father has urged them iii FALL RIVER State of w York did not have one has no doubts that this is tElachers We have allowed too the~ to move from the margin e the ecclesiastical privilege of where they belong We ought great a gap to exist between our- of life to the center of life~ 873 COUNTY demanding that suits against it to be willing to take the risks) selves and the laity she says Will the move be successful SOMERSETbe heard in an ecclesiasticalmiddot that gO along with this plunge In an interviewmiddot following her Sister Luke says We can only CDOurt into the mainstream she says talk Sister ~uke was asked how know by taking a ChanCE

Feai makes the wolf bigger than be is

Rer Bankings Already D~ne

~jI--~1 W

tt-~~gt_ri~

~j F~ p ~tl Iim F-ilNgt

~l i

ll 11 ~~

W = ~

~gtltl ~

-~ ~~ StIesaves I lot of alunle Mtime forso maily other thinlS ~i She banks by mail at Te ~ OLD R D8 KI h 7reg E AN W at about you

liii FREE mall forms ~1 The mOld Red Bank W

$ Fall River Savings Bankjilll q

Page 11: 08.25.66

11 Cardinal Cushing Hits Imbalance In Schools

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing deplored that very little has been oone to relieve racial imshybalance in Bostons public schools in his first public address since his recent illness and conshyvalescence

The Boston prelate told an ecshyumenical meetingmiddot in All Saints Lutheran church here that al shythough very littlemiddot has been done to make a year-old law work we are not discouraged and we are very far from giving up hope that we will have reshyBults before long

He referred to the Racial 1m balance Law aimed at promotshying racial integration in Massashychusetts public schools The meeting marked the first annishyversary of the law The measure will deprive Boston public schools of $30 million in state subsidies until the citys school committee submits an integrashytion plan acceptable to the state board of education Until now the city committee has not subshymitted an acceptable plan

A school that is heavily imshybalanc~d racially cannot provide the best education that should be available for our children Even with the most devoted teachers and the most upto-date proshygrams-and we have both o( these in Boston-a predomiJ)antshyly Negro school suffers from an isolation from the general comshymunity which cannot fail to be harmful~ he said

Scores Slum Landlords In a similar way we can say

that an all white scJ100l fails to reflect the true nature of the radally mixed communitymiddot in which we live and so deprives white youngsters of theexperi ence of living and studying with their neighbors of a different race Ourideal should be to live and workand study and pray side by side in mutual respect and common affection

There hav~ been several proposalsmade during the last year to al~rest imbalance iit the schools of our center city Carshydinal Cushing said None of these has been accepted by those who hove been elected to make these decisions in the schooi srstem Of course we know that no immediate proshygram will solve all our problems but we can make li beginning

The cardinal also criticized slum landlords for the inhuman conditions in which so many here must live and work alid bring JP their families He called for a crash program of assistance for the deprived

State Uses Vacant Catholic School

BURLINGTON (NC)-The re- cently closed Don Bosco Schoolmiddot for BoyS here will Soon befilled up again with teenage boys this time as temporary quarters for Vermonts pilot residential treatshyment center for youthful first shyoffender lawbreakers

In announcing the acceptance of the proposal by Bishop RobertF Joyce of Burlington and the Verm 0 n t Catholic Charities board State Institutiolls Com-

PROFESSION AND CtOTHING CEREMONIES Principals in the ceremonies conshyducted for the Sisters of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts in Fall River on Monday were seated Sr Mary Dolores Sr John Veronica Bishop Gerrard who presided Sr Karen Dolores Sr Mary Catherine Standing Sr Margaret Edward Sr Joseph Maureen Sr Stephen David Sr James Constance Sr Celestine Regis Sr Anne Robert Sr Vinshycent Dolores

Report Says Cold War More Intense Peaceful Coexistence Now Strategic Offensive

WASHINGTON (NC) -Some tegic Studies at Georgetown jarring statements are made in University a Jesuit-conducted a significant news report whose school here

It is an in-depth analysisprivate but highly responsible sponsors call it the resultmiddot ofmiddot quality research It reminds for example that the so-called cold war is not

over and warns that as of now it may be entering a more danshy

gerous phase Th e ~peaceful coexistence

slogan it says was once a comshymuhist defensive stalling tacshytic but now it signifies the communists have gone over to

the strategic offensive The great paradox of our

times the document asserts may well turn out to be our inability to recognize that the cold war has in reality become more intel1se despite the increasshying appearance of peace

The goals of the presentmas~ tels of the Kremlin are no dif- ferent from tho~e of Khrushshychev Stalin or Mao Tse-Tung and to the Krtmlin peac~ful coshyexistence is a strategy not an end in itself it declares

The study entitled Peace or Pea c e f u1 Coexistence was

sponsored by the Committee on Education Against CommUllism of the American Bar Association It was unveiled in New York just before the ABA began its annual meeting in Montreal but it was prepared by Richard V Allen a specialist on Sino-Soviet affairs at the Center for Stra-

K of c Plan Socoal

Action I itia tive

missioner John Y Woodhull MIAMI BEACH (-NC) - The stated I think this is one (f the top official of the Knights of finest ecumenical testures of Columbus announced plans for faith and charity that I have a new initiiitive in the ecumenshyknown i -i~al and soCial action field

The eenter ill ~ ~provide a through a partnership with theO

home for 16 to 20 b(iys aged HI John LaFarge Institute ill New to 18 who are referrecl by the York ~ - eourls as first offenders Toile In additior W financial assist shyboys will work loeal du-in ancethe LaFllg~jnstitute will

the day and return to the center reeeive suggestifmsand recomshyin the ~venin1 for intensive mendations frOJll the official roup t~erapy eonducted b) rep-~~entationand plJrticipatiOll

Btaff III ~ix bull Ule K bull C

based onmiddot more than 3000 articles and documents of the internashytiOllal communist movement more than 90 per cent of which material is dated after the Cushyban Missile crisis of October 1962 Allen admits that the commushy

nists have used the coexistence slogan in ihepast and with sfme success but he directs atshytention to the fact that it now signifies a strategic offensive rather than a stal~ing tactic

The study notes that the Cushyjail build-up the erection of the Berliil Wall and the armed iilvasi~n of South Yietnam all occurred during the most in- tense pedod of peaceful coshyexistence ~ It~~~inds that Khrushchev in 19t1lddiiled coexistence as a form of intense ecoitomic pOlitshyical and ideological struggle gaii1s~ the aggressive forces of imperialism hi the international arena it aiso says that in their 3tshy

tempt to create wha bull they call the New ComIJlunist Man the communists have systematically presented a vicious and thor oughly distorted picture of the

Nuns to Construct Health Care Facility

SANDUSKY (NC)-The Franshyciscan Sisters who operate Providence Hospital here in Ohio will construct a new 100shybed $1250000 healthcare fashycility separate ftom thehospital

It will serve Medicare patients of the area during posthospital care and Qther convalescents who do not requir~f~l~-scalehospital care Sister Lucia -administrator 81lid it will relievemiddot pressure ~ hospital beds in the area

There wiII be ari appeal to th~ public lor about $900000 The -remainder of the funds will

btl supplied by the Federalgovshyerllment

West in general and the United States in particular It need not be emphasi~ed

the study states that the overshywhelming sentiment of the free world is to live in peace But tQ mistake the illusion of peace for genuine peacemiddot would be a profoundly dangerous perhaps fatal mistake In a foreword t the book

Bertram D Wolfe a Stanford University expert on commushy~lism warns that we have been prone to read the idea of live and let live into the phase of peaceful C 0 e x imiddots ten ce Our hopes and our longings are likeshyly to betray us again and again into a readiness to be deceived by those who have sworn the d~struction of all we stand for

fnjoymiddot Dining IN THE

JOLLY WHALER --AND--

SPOUTIRINN RESTAURANTS

Always Free Parking

New Bedford Hotel

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Aug 25 1966

Cassidymiddot Seniors Attend Work$hop

Three members of the incomshying senior class at Cassidy High School Taunton will complete tomorrow a five day Workshop in Leadership conducted at the University of Massachusetts under th~ sponsorship of the Massachussetts Association of Student Councils

Mis s Rosemary McKenna~ president of the senior class Miss Nancy Thomas president of the National Honor Society and Miss Christine Victoria coshyeditor of the Cassidy school paper are attending Miss Victoria is secretary of the Southeastern Association of Student Councils and will serv~ in that capacity with the other officers Jerry Flanagan presishydent Feehan High Marsha Boyd vice-president Attleboro High Luke Boyd treasurer West Bridgewater High

Cassidy GIllaquoIltiluCllle Wins Elkso AWtlDd

Miss Pauline Lee daughter ox Mrs Harry Lee and the late Harry Lee of 7 Dean Ave Taunshyton has Qeen named the recipishyent of a $600 Massachusetts Elks Lead~rship Award granted by the Elks National Scholarship Fund

A member of the 1966 gradushyating class of Bishop Cassidy High School Taunton Miss Lee was in the top ten of a class of 108 and maintained a scholastie honors record throughout bell four year Miss Lee will attend Nortn- eastern University Boston

Schools Merge BAY CITY (NC)-TwO wes~

side Catholic high schools here hi Michigan will merge Sept I

to becomeWest Catholic CentraU High School The decision te merge was made by an intershyarish lay study committee tv provide more efficient use of the staff and facilities The schooU will be staffed by the ReligioUl Sisters of Mercy of Detroit

BIG DIVIDEND NEWS

a SYSTEMATIC550 year SAVINGS

INVESTMEIfJ500 a year SAVINGS

8 REGULAR450 year SAVINGS

Bass River SovinQs Bank bull SOUTH YARMOUTH bull DENNIS PORT

bull YANNIS bull fARMOiJTH SHOPPING PLAZA

bull OSTERVILLE

-1111

WHITE middotmiddotmiddotSPA CATERERS

- BANQUETSmiddot -WEDDINGS - PARTIES

~ COMMUNION BREAKFASTS 1343PlEASANT STREET FAll RIVER

OSb~rne 3-7780

--h-- ~

12

i

THE ANCHOROlocese of Fall River-Th~s Aug 25 1966

~regW ~reg~tfJ ~lYJ~~ TtUUY1)[fi)l[

Of R~dD~~~csm Amcm)gYW]fr~ lJy Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy

Phillip Abbott Luces The New Left (McKay 119 W 40th New York $450) attempts to explain the resurgence of radicalism among American students Its author is a

of the New Left wIth as many con u e y lcal ideas while at MissisSippi non-joiners on the peripherY day even~ng Aug 27 at S lD ~ at~~ fi~t he~-d ~~ ~h~ ~erBtlt its impact- is smd tohave Mlll~aret s Kinderlctarten aaU i Left whIle at Ohio State and l Prizes WIll be awarded and reshy

tgrt~ritotcOtmiddotmiddotgthmiddotevecJ1 amm~-~W1lS~~tttedpa~~y ~xten~e~ tots about200OQP co h~~hriients served o nl~ge ~u en ~~ i - ltGUiLD OF TillE VIsITATION Iil1961heifioved~to NewmiddotYork It ~S ~l1ena lza1I~~~eme~t i iNO EASTilrAM ~ ~

_and came closer tothe Commti- in the country What alarms Mr ih alb t ofthe Dist Party Llitef he joined Pro- Luce is not its existence or its G1 ~~ h 3que wed gressiveLa]gto~aiI~ edited its size but the fact and the in- W WI e e on nesshymiddot monthly magazine _ cre~sing extent of Comrnamst q1Y~ 4-~ 3~ a~ the PiJ~~ middot -domination~ He gives -instances Springs Restaurant No TflJro Visited _C~~ro-S Cuba R t cl Sunday

in proof thatsuch dO minatioD-i8 A e~e2 rva~o1l os on It was Progressive Labor ug s

which arJanged- for fmeric~ indeed an actuality SACRED HEARTS

young man who won some leader of the New Left and when he broke with Proshygressive Labor which he eharges was organiz~d by -formermembenlof theSoVfeishycontrolled Communist Pa rt y USA and is now aPekingor~eh tated Commu~

D1st group Mx Luce has an ex tremely Impor- middottant subject one which is both timely and crit shyleal Because of his experience he should be especially qualshyified to set it out But the fac~ is that he is at best a mediocre writer He has no notion as to how to

organize a book marshal his materials and to ten his story iIi a consecutive way and with cushymulative force This is a dull alld muddled treatment of a very middotvitai topic~ not heipedat all by crude blundersin English usage Mr Luces personal histog has to be pieced together fro~ bits strewn through the book

middotlike the debris after a hurricane He is an Ohioan bornmiddotin 1935

notice both when he was a the lives of the rising generation Youth is repelled by parental attitudes and aspirations which are seen as mostly narrow negshyative sterile College is a bore

offeriiig no incentive or oppOJshytUnity for youth to direct its enshyergies into crucial causes

A mood of rebellion has devel- ~ped and a chance to express it has been pr~sentedby the civil rights struggie and the unpopu~ lar and beclouded war in Vietshynam Nor does the prospect of fighting authority in each case dim the attraction of these causes quite the reverse Hence the New Left

JLists Organizations Communist organizations of

various stripes have attemptec to sieze control of the New Left and to exploit the mood of reshybellion wi~h an eye to changing it into participation in revolushy

tion

Mr Luce lists and desribes the Communist organizations so engaged The one he knows best of course is Progresectsive Labor But he gives much space to the Du Bois Clubs which are the instruments of the Communist Party Then tlmre are the Trot-middot

the son of middle-class Repub- skyite splinter groups of which lican parents H~ start~d college four strains are identified (inshyat Miami University in Ohio left cluding middotone that is pro-Negro to see the Souih finished ~t Mis and anti-Semitic) I

sissippi State and did graduate Mr Luce estimates that some k t Oh St t 12000 YOung AmericanS are wor a 10 a e _ t 1 t 1 b He became interested in rad- ac ua orgamza Ion~ mem ers

APPOINTEE- Bishop Josshyeph Bmiddot Brunini Auxiliary since 1957 to Bishop Richard O Gerow of Natchez-Jackshyson middotMiss has -been appointshyed by Pope Paul VI to be Apostolic Administrator of the diocese NC Photo

The Parish Parade

ST 1lgtYS TillED mn ov= =shylFALL RJrVER

The parish will sponsor a one day pilgrimage to the Shrine of the North American Martyrs Auriesville N Y on Sunday Oct 2

Interested partles may obtaIn full particulars by contacting Mrs Laurence Coyle Mrs Wilshyliam Blythe or Mrs George Boitano S8 MARGARET-MARY GUILD BUZZARDS BAY

A bl hitmiddot middotU be pu IC W S paL 0 WI d ct d b the guild on Saturshy

studeritsto visit Cuoain 1963 middot and 1961 In defiance of our middotState Department~sban on travel

there Mr Luce made the trip says that most of the students

middot were unaware of Progressive Labors sponsorship and control The money came from Castro And Progressive Labor members planned and staged the wild scenes at a Congressional hea~

ing concerning the middotproject By late 1964 Mr Luce was

enti~ely dissillusioned abo u t Progressive Labor andmiddot by Febshyruary of 1965 h~ pad left it to

bemiddot quickly expelled upon his

Stresses Strength NO FAIRHAVEN He insists that somethin~(must Registration for the kiridershy

be done to prevent Communist garten pre-primary and the capture of the movement He eight eJement~ry grades are beshywants everyone to wake up to ing held daily during the month the existence and the strength of Augus of the New Left Pupils may register with SJ

We must realize he urges how Marie Henriette SSCC at the disenchanted with our society Sacred Hearts Academy 332 the young people ~re what hos- Main Street Fairhaven any 8poundshytility they feel what a gulf ternoon from 1-5 RegistratioDfl yawns between them and their are also being accepted by Rev elders and hcgtw impervious th~YAlexis Wyggers SSCC at the are to ideas and language which ReCtory 382 Main street Fairshyi

figure in their eldErs attempts haven to communicate with them The Association of St Anne

No one he maintains is S~-Will receive corporate CoinmUshyI~ departure and sayagE(l~ Yim~~~~ Jiously trying to reach the hiorton Sunday at the 8 ocloek middot He left because he says Pro gressive Labor is a middotMaoist Comshymunist tool because itmiddotadlrQcates imd take steps to implelrtent armed insurrection because- no personal freedam is allowed to members an4 lill- deQisionsmiddot are made by a few dictatorial leadshy~ril 1ecausemembersareJnshyvolved in programs of Whose

eonsequences totge country and to themselvestIey have no idea lt~

lFe~ls lF~tts~rated Mr fL~ced6es- notmiddot contend

middot that the New Leis Goromunistshy

young rebel to understand him Mass to speak to him intelligibly and effectively Co~unJ~t errorsmiddot J~edB~ MeU1lMe~tmiddot propaganda hypocnsy mUst be SCHWYZ (NC) - Catholicrelentlessly exposed in a way movie and television experts which the young people will met here iil ~fwitieriand for imcomprehend international exchange of ~He is strong_ for a Freedom riiques iiI the useof Tv anellAeademy- which would provipe films in religious educationmiddotmiddot expert practical education conshy - cerning CommunislJlmiddotAnd he stressestheneed of a placefor

ltloltiinated -Hescent~B it -as8 phe- PITTSB~1RGH(Nt) - The bull I bull ~ bull bull bull bull bull

honidon whlc~ came ~bout Pittsburgh Catholi( Interracial Commercialmiddot 15 Industrid spontaneously an eX~IJ1Pre of- Council has endorsed home rule Institutionalyouth in rebellion - for the District of Columbia asshy

Youth he holds~ hils amiddotpoundeeling sertingthattooibng have many painting ~nd~ D_~~o~qtig of -frustrationmiddot with American of the-importanLdecisionaffectshy Fall River OSborne 2-1I9H$ociety its tone and its values ing (the District of CohJmbia) -yoiith~es~rtt~rhaving rio say inb~erlmadtd)ycongrpoundpoundssiriehftoin ~ 74v~hllia rnson Str~e~

the making of decisions affecting hundreds of miles away

~~Gr~ayK BJ Most Rev FUUOlll J Sheeillp Dll)

If my neighbor is stronger than 1 I fear him if he lsweaker than I I despise bim Such is the modem judgement of the psyshychiatrist Dr Jean de Rougemont Earlier the Psalmist speaks ~ the arrogance of those who have much and the despisal of those who are proud How can the rich avoid feeling superior to the poor How can the poor avoid being humiliated The answer is that vices but can the) give up cigarettes for a week to help the poor the strong must see their weakness and the rich must see~eifto poverty How realJly strong are the strong Theymay avoid great Are thfiY suc~ masters of themselves tbatthey can turn down the third cocktail (or give up the first) and use the money instea4 to ~uy sulfone ~or a i~~r~ liqw r~ch_ ar~the rich Let them look inside themselves IIi whatvirtue are they rich Rich in cb~ty Rich i~ char~ti Ri~)n f~th

Onc~t~~ ~i~rhty see th~mseiv~ asnothiDi a~d therl~h see the~selv~ as i~poverislledth~ they wui lov~ ihe we~~ as their brothersilDd the peor IllS their

fellow beggars for thetrrace of God ifmiddot the strong middotlove middotmiddotthemselves despite all theirweaknes5~ then why not lovltil weaknesses in others u the rich love themselves despitG middottheir inner nakedshyness then why nCllt love a lesser ]lJOVshy

erty in others That i~ why Our Lord told us to love ourneighbor as ourseU ~y not more than self Because iii ]I

love myself-knowing myself as ]I do knowing how utterb weak ]I am2-then I have the measure of how J[ am to pour out love to others

We live in a world divided between the rich and the poor We live in that kinol of a church-pOor parishes and rich parishes Even bishops an~ priestsmiddot speak of a parish being good when they mean it is economicaily rich Somehow or other we have ~

get qut of this slavish standard of affluence which is so opposed to the lross of Christ To that end we make the folloWing proposal that you or your middotparishclub school or office undertake the sponsorshjp of one of the poor areas of the world which has been investigated by the Apostolic delegate Write to us and we will send you middotthe name of this diocese its location the number of priests catechists and faithful it has Thus you will be sure that you have a middotneedy (Ibject for sacrifice and service and n9t one based on a haphazard -appeal middotfroin an uninvestigated source The Church will not alloW you to sponsor this diocese for more than one year becausemiddot thtlre are so many poor parishes in the world Look into your weakness and you will love the weakness of o~heJ8 Look into your poyeny stricken soul and you willserVe poverty stricken bodies Write to -mpGod Love You

~~~ middot~middotGOD~middotLOVE YCllJmiddot tomiddot~SMLgtO~middot ~$5 middotto A~RCtor $sO~ For your1nissionUorkIeanthelp eve~one andmiddotyou ~o tltosem most meed bullbull tchJMBfcn $20 to Anon lor $1000 middotsentmiddotWithlteommnbull ~ 11

bullbull bull ~l

The GOD LOVE YOU~ medal lovely cameo medal of the Madonna of tIle worldiS one you would be proud to give ormiddotde shy

lighted tci reC~iVEt DesIgned bi the world-renowned jeweler Harry winSton aildbltessed by Bishlgtp Sheen the GOD LOVE YOU medal is available inmiddotcl~icF~oreritinegold firiishor pure sterlingsilver aod may be obtained by sending your request and corresPondirtg offering to The Socieb for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth AvenueNew York NY 10061 $2 Sinall sterling silver $3 small

11gtk goid fiiled $5 large sterling silver $10 large 10k gold filled

Cut out this colullnn pln your sacrifice to It and mali It to Most RevbullFultom J Sheen National Director of The Society for the Propagation of thl~ Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or to your Dioclesan Director Rt Rev Msgr Raymond Jr Considine 363 North ll1ain Street Falll River Massachusetts

bull j 7 Perry IQur fI~~fng

~v~-t~e OilsMake Taunt~B1l~ Mass - Worm FriendsmiddotVA 2-2282

------------------ ~

genuinely democratic radicalism ON CAPE CODlbONNlEllyin o~r Iociety _

]OHoo ~~~(Kl~Ymiddotmiddot amp SON (~ofP~n~T~UnCG Rigt - flJ1 ml n

crepound ormiddotentireiyCommuist- 9llaquoIIlaquo ~$ lf1J Ilililte ~fYl U ~ I~raquo8L[)~NG MAmiddoth~linAL$middotmiddotmiddot~~~V~C~ 6

S~~ri~gj 1$100 4~~YARMUlrH ROA~)

middottYA~MBSmiddot AMPLE PARKING

iIIIIOCIIJIjIWUllJmllIllDOCImIWlDIllmIlXlWll(lJfi

- -

THE ANCHOR-Jesuit Educators Members of PAVLA Maintain Missionary Thurs Aug 25 1966 13

Ponder Students Record of Fall River Diocese Area G~~s SocoaCynical ~ttitQJJde

LOS ANGELES (NC) shy lLong outstanding for the missionary work of its priests Sisters and Brothers the ~elvD~e ~elrllfrer A top Jesuit educator dispenshy Fa~ River Diocese is fast becoming noted for its outstanding Papal Volunteers for Latin CLEVELAND (NC) - OUX sed advice here on how to eombat the attitude of some high schoolers who consider the world and the religion of their middotparents as phony

Father Edward J Sponga 8J of Baltimore in the keynote adshydress at the 1966 Jesuit Educashytional Association Workshop on Christian Formation at Loyola University here called for a dialogue with everyone conshycerned to emphasize the good crying to be released

Speaking to delegates from 52 Jesuit high schools in the nation Father Sponga chairman of the board of the Jesuit Educational Association declared

Menace to Freedom If the young men of our

schools consider the world and the religion of their parents as phony and a menace to their freedom then we must be ruthshyless in seeing how and why this is and in entering into dialogue with everyone who is willing to do so in order that we may be able to release the g09d that is crying to be released

During the 12 days of research and discussion 125 school adshyministrators and teachers evalushyated the effect that religion courses academic curriculum spiritual exercises and personal guidance have had on the charshyacters of the 35000 teenagers in U S Jesuit high schools

The delegates particularly were concerned about the loss of religious faith in the adolesshycent who is becoming increasshyingly sophisticated and critical

Middle Class Values Father Joseph H Fichter SJ

Stillman professor of sociology at Harvard Universitys divinity school criticized Jesuit high schools for not challenging the middle class values of many of their students for not paying sufficient att~rition to the social sciencesmiddot and for not drawing more of their students irom among the poor

Dr Alexander A Schneiders graduate professor of psychology at Boston College stressed the commitment of Faith that must be made within the scopemiddot of inshytellectual independence He arshygued against compelling students to make annual retreats or assist at religious exercises

Other delegates suggested esshytablishing pilot programs in 1l)ner-city high schools with nationwide cooperation and the sending of Jesuit teachers to work in community schools outshyllide the regular Jesuit system

Ho~es for Negroes Goal of Campaign

WORCESTER (NC) A camshypaign to secure better housing for Negroes in the Greater Worcester Area is growing

In a letter to some 1200 pershyS0l1S who last Aprii signed an

open letter newspaper adshyvertisement regarding fair hous ins John J Concordia Duman rights committee chairman of the Diocesan Council of Catholic M~~ ~sked sig~atories of the

open -letter to volunteer to ~adopt members of a Negro family am actively assist them inmiddotproC1Jri~g decent housing to titheir ~ne~ds

In 8 statement by an intershy fa(thmiddoteommittee on housing middotwfii~IlJs all out-growth of a

siniilar committee formed last year by the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women a call was made for construction of housshying for middotmiddotpoor and lower middle d~ss f ami ie It ixlcludins

Ne8J~s

bull bull r~ ~

America These young men and women doing Christs work in some of the worlds needshy Lady of Futima parish hat3 opened a social service centeliiest areas are a credit to the parishes and toowns from which they come Letest PAVLA here in the midst of the Houghassignments in the Diocese area scene of Clevelands recent

are those of Lucille Lebeau rioting of St Annes parish New The center housed in an 18-gt Bedford and Anthony Gomes room former apartment buildo St John of God parish Somershy ing was dedicated by Archo set bishop Paul J Hallinan of~ At-gt

Actually Lucille isnt a new lanta while he was visiting iii PAVLA hand She was the first Cleveland~bis native diocese Diocesan enlistee in the organishy The center will be staffed by zation going to Brazil as a four Sisters of Charity of St nurse-social worker in August Augustine who along with lay1963 She returned from her volunteers have been working three year assignment in July in the area since Aprilmiddot1965 but volunteered to serve an The center will middotprovide C9uri extra year in Brazil She will re seling nursing medical supplie tum there in November and pre-natal care -

Anthony veteran of a middotyears The building which standt work in Florida with the fedshy next to the parish rectory waserai governments VISTA proshy purchased bymiddot the parish seveR gram will teach English in a years ago when it was aba~ Mexican minor seminary He has doned as an apartment buildingalready completed a PAVLA

Early last year Father Alberitraining course at Catholic Unishy Albert Koklowsky MSSSTversity in Washington D C and pastor of Our Lady of Fatimawill leave in September for launched a campaign through aMexico City and an intensive column in the Catholic Universefour and a half month course in Bulletin Cleveland diocesanSpanish language and culture newspaper to explain Houghsbefore beginning his assignment poverty to metropolitan resiltshyin the mountain town of Tacomshydentsbaro in the state of Michoacan

Housing was a major themePioneer Work Resulting donations from unishy

Lucille bubbles over with enshy verse Bulletin readers and 11thusiasm for PAVLA and its acshy matching gift from Coadjutorcomplishments She has just reshy middotBishop Clarence Issenmann of turned from a trip to the Washshy Cleveland enabled Father Kokshyington training course attended lowsky to renovate the buildingby Tony Gomes where incishydentally she met him for the first time She talked to new Work for Needy enlistees individually and in LIMA (NC) - Sixty me~bers groups seeking to picture for af the St Rose CYO hert gavethem the new life theyd be enshy volunteer aid to projects for thetering needy this Summer Most as~

Their enthusiasm was a boostshy slsted in a federally financed er shot for meshe said educati~nal program for cultu~

This week the New Bedford rally deprived students from nurse is inmiddot the Chicago area PAVLA ENLISTEES Revmiddot James w Clark Diocesan ~nderglirtenmiddot to sixij1 grad~visting PAVLA headquarters Directormiddot of Papal Volunteenlmiddot for Latin America with Othershelp1 a~ amiddot day camn f~there and friends she made ill retarded cbildren andmiddot Qne asAnthony Gltgtmes bound for teaching assignment in Mexico~ Brazil including the doctor with Ns~ed at a eerebral palsy c~mpwhom she worked when me and Lucille Lebeau who has already spent three years m first went to the Latin American Brazil as nurse-social worker will return in Novemberfor eountry He is now in practice additional year in Waukegan lll FAIRHAVEN

When I first went to Brazil urgy eommunitY needs and was to leave in each parish IIshe 8a14 I worked for a little LUMBERhealth needs team similar to their own toover a year at a hospital in Salshy cOMPANY carry on as far as possible thevador Bahia My job was mlinly Most of the help that an area

training Brazilian aides and received came from the people work in liturgy catecheticsmiddot and community and health needssetting up hospital routines themselves t h r 0 ugh their Complete line

After the year was over Brazil shy awakened sense of community We would return to the comshyian doctors and medical students said -ucille Actual government munities where we had given Building Materials took over the hospital routines or material aid was hampered by this course as often as possible were runing smoothly and I political economic and social said Lucille anu each time we 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVEN felt that I could go on to public complications of many kinds eould set them growing spiritushyhealth work in areas where there The team played it by ear ally WYman 3-2611 was no nursing care at all avail- in deciding how to approach a Turn to Page Nineteen able particular parish Lucille and

Lucille joined an apostolic the nun on the team who was shy ~

team organized by Bishop Eushy also a nurse tried to work genio de Araujo Sales Apostolic through community midwives Administrator of Salvador Toshy who were sadly in need of techshy JEREMIAH COHOLAN gether with a priest a nun two nical instruction The infant Brazilian lay apostles and what mortality rate in most areas was would bt the equivalent af an very high said Lucille due iD PLUMING amp HEATING I American social worker she large part to umbilical tetanus visited areas of the Diocese preshy caused by unsanitary delivery viously all but unreached by the techniques

Church Another technique was organ- I Aim of the team she explainshy ization of one-week parish Wy 3 0911 699 B II II A

ed wail to change dormant parshy courses centered around the idea man - e VI emiddotmiddot ven~ ishes into Christian communishy of Christian cominunity Lucille Nwamp~fQrd ties Seventeen parishes were said middotshe would start the course I visited in the course of a year by trying to explain the concept lImiddottI-IIIlII_middot tI-II--tl- __ __ __ _-IIllIIIiImiddotllIlI_-IIllII~ -~~ ~--middot- ~ and a half rmging from mem- of Christians as people of God - - shy

berships of 20000 souls to 75000 then would set up discussion ~ItIIIIHtHIIIIIDIIIIUIIIIHlIIIIIIIiIllIIlHKHHIIItIIIIUIIIIIIIUllllliillllllllllIJllilllllllllllllilllllllll~ The 75OOO-member parish said Ioupsmiddot en suchmiddot subjects asmiddot~ -_sect_Lucille had only one priestmiddot 10 What ismiddota person-Person to ~ middotY 5 hmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot meet its needs person relationships~ and Dif- sect E we ayemiddot ~

Plan 01 AetiOll ferences between ordinary eom- ~ == The apostolic teamsaid Lushy munities andthe parish sect LARGE LIVEmiddot ~

eille would first survey condishy This would lead to a discussion sect ~ ~=_=_ tions and decide what most of the function of Christians and sect needed doing then plan an edushy what iii Christian community sect shycational program Three or fo~rmiddot should be lIke Theil leaders ~ while they la5~ - ~ natural leaders in each parish were ready to ask the parishion ~ sect= were chosen and arrangements ers if any were ready to coin- ~ were made to get them to an mit themselves as parish team sect Macleans SemiddotQmiddot F d ~ Archdiocesan training center for members to a stronger expres- ~ 00 S == a one month leadership training sian of their Christian fellow- sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN Tel 997-9358 sect eourse wverins lIlatechetics lit ooip Go~ of the lipQBtolie tea iulHIHlIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIJlIIIUillIIJlmIllUiJiillJillnililunJililillliiihIUllllIIlIilill(IIUJIIIJ1I1llIJllliinillllllltuE

- ~ - -~_middotmiddotij_Uimiddotmiddot ~ _

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 An Exce1lent Lcte Summer Activity J VI SIT-middot

Louisiari ~copyfrish A~~ampmpli~~~sect r~bull ~T[T uiH~Dfro[j1) fr ~rtilfrreg~[(frDIri)middot middot~~rrfr~~~Q~t~~~~~~~JJ~~tt$

MADISONVILLE (NC)--+wo cently used for ~~gt~es~was wears ago in this quiet jural torn down Its blue I green~and ~ J~lf ~ town the single square block white stained grass riow frames

ltContaining Catholic ch u r c h the huge rear wIndow ~ ~t buildings symbolized the old era Anselms church - - [f~[LL lRlt OV~~middot ~now it stands for the new This Spring St Catherines

Two years ago two churches also came down Gone too are stood 200 feet apart on this he cOl-vents and bullone school More than 280000 people havle cilrElody been aboard iUO ~he past ys[ioblock--St~ Catherine wh ere The other school building was

whites worshipped and St retained for parish meetings and Francis Xavier where Negroes the now-integrated Confratershy

worshipped The rectory with fiity of Christian Doctrine its one priest to serve both par- classes ishes s too d between theC rhe 100 or so school children

centhtirches moremiddot as a symbol of - arenow transported to elemEmshythe psychological gap thac asan tilt-y and high schools in nearby

actual separation covirigton arid Mandeville middot A fence stood between the two CCD instructions have been

eonventS on the block~riefor givengtySfsters qfChristian the Negro nuns who taughtCharityandtheirstudEints from

Negro children in the ~e~ro ~~njpirClncy at FolsoM La and IIchool the other for the wfitte byseminariaris fromarby St IllUns who taught white children i-Jolieph seminarY Butmiddot tpeseiii the whHe school diities are being taken over by

Now there is one church onemiddot tlie parishs integrated CCD orshyrectory and one small classroom ganizatiorinow being trained

building -- and one parish St The pastor Father John J Anselm DenDulk is prouder of the

Although wee k day Masses smooth transition than he is of were said in only onemiddot of the the physical change shytwo old churches Masses and Participation in worship has ether services on Sundays and increased since the new church major feast days were said in w~ built he says and he has

middot both Midnight Masses on Christ- the best commentators in the mas were celebrated concurrent- whl)le world

Iv in the two churches AIthougb there are only 260 But the buildings weremiddot badly families in the parish the new

Qn need of repair So in 1964 the ~church is already more than half lttId frame church of St Francis paid for and the parish topped

middot Xavier whose parish records go its quota in the archdiocesan back to 1863 and which was re- education expansion drive

bull ~ I bull

Bishop Pmiddoterry Says New Orleans Has Healthy Racial Climate

DENVER (NC) - Auxiliary still has more influence thaa Bishop Harold R Perry SyD any other Negro in the civil of New Odeans first AmeJican rights movement Catholic Negro bishop in this He (Bishop Perry) has been

lt1lentury said here a hea~thy very favorably received in New racial climate will exist wher- Orleans eve~ the Negro has a chan~ to Some Cannot WaU voice his grievances He said there will undoubtedshy

Bisnop Perry dted New 9r- ly be some civil rights groups lleans as an example sayipg the who disapprove lt)f non-violence racial climate there is healthy and occasional demonstrationS

because of an interracial council by those who cannot wait appointed by Louisiana~ov Of course I am a Negro and

John J McKeithen to help splve we have been waiting a long rmcial problems time If you take the long view I There are no demonstra~ions complete equality cant come too and riots and very little picket- quickly he added~

lng he said The cotiJlc~1 i-e- He said he has been received lieves tensions and if the Negro very well even enthusiastically has a forum to talk over his con- in New Orleans Picketing outshyeerns he will not demonstrate side the church where he was

Schools Integrated ~onsecrated he s3id Was DOt typical of the general feeling in

The 50-year-old prelate said New Orleans be is proud New Orleans has in- As an evidence of his popushytegrated all Its schools Its a larity he said he spoke at ninemiddot large percentage not just token graduations in June and has ofshyhe added ficiated at Confirmation in 24

He said Catholics are doing parishes their part to advance equality of opportunity in his citymiddot 1 think [EceQJl1illeIJilD~~ CCrrnDDOdegthere has been Ii united effort tl)Ir If

by all faiths and we would like ~~ ~DcopyQJIJilampIbgtD~~~DIJil to keep it that way he de- CRANSTON (NC) I hdared - n a s ow The New Orleans bishop also of the ecumenical spirit lea4ers ~ommented on ~ wide range of of major religious faiths in this

area took part in a combined eivil rights issues saying

The new militancy shown by bull religious and groundbreaking Visit the BClI~~ie$Mp anldllode alIeplica of the Old iFal~middot River Bill1e~ middottmiddotsom~ civi~ rights groups is a service on the site of the proshy

posed Church of the Annunciashypassing phase tion Greek Orth()dox lours start every 30 minutes

The majority of Negroes are Archbishop lakovo primate lJympathetic to the non-violent of the Greek Orthodox Church Opeill aU year round - 9 AM to Sunsetphilosophy of the Rev Dr Mar- of North and South America of tin Luther King and Dr King ficiated at the open air hierar- For Group Arrangements Call 678-1100 chal Divine Liturgy service at-

Serra Meeting tended by more than 500 pershy l)OOOO()ooOOC)ooOOClOOC)ooOOC)OO~IOOl sons

THIS MESSAGE Sp()NSORED IV lHE FOllOWING INDIVIDUALSATLANTIC CITY (NC) - A Participants in the groundshyeonference for members of Ser- breaking ceremony included AND BUSINESS CONCERNS IN GREATER FALL RIVERlIa Clubs in the New York-New Catholic Bishop Russell J MoshyJersey - eastern Pennsyivania Vinney of Igtrovidence Archshy ANN DALE PRODUCTS INC MACKIENZIE amp WINSLOW INC area will be held here Sept 23 deacon William L Kite represhy II~DY ELECTRIC SUPPLY COMASON FURNITURE SHOWROOMS tKi 25 Msgr William Noe Field senting the Rt Rev John Seville CASCADE DRUG CO GERALD E McNALLY CONTRACTOItiff Seton Hall University South Higgins Episcopal Bishop of GLOBE MANUFACTURING CO SOBILC)FF BROTHERS Orange NJ will give the key- Rhode Island Dr Wayne ~is

~~TGHINSON OIL COa~te address Sept 24 apoundter a executive director ofmiddot the Rhode STERUllIG BEVERAGES INC

~A Mc~HIRR ~9MPANY TEXTIU WORKERS UNION Of AMERICAeOncelebrated Mass at which the 1s~and Council of Churches ~nd ~rE~~ATIQNALV4DIES GARMENT 1 bull AlL~tO - principal concelebrant will be Rabbi Jerome Smiddot Gurland Gf

WORKERS UNION (EUOW CAI COMPANY Bishop George W Ahr of Tren~ ~telligtl~ Sinai 1epresentingthe ton Bhode Island Board of Rabbiamp bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull0 MssSelbullbull

~ ~ ~ - bull bull bull bull I ~ j

- ~

_-- -

0

WomenB~ Job Corps Members middotAid Youngsters Improve Reading

OMAHA (NC)-Omaha Wom- chesne Mother Moody found a ens Job Corps members joined benefactor to supply ihe a11shywith five graduates of Duchesne importlnt incentive program College and Academy of the Thanks to a generous racetrack

Sacred Heart here to upgrade bettor Who won the daily double the reading level of local public there was enough money for school youngsters candy bar prizes and two picnics

The progra~ ca]]edProject An indication or- the success of Upstart was first conceIved by the program was found in the Mother Helen Condon dean of reaction of the students A reshythe Nebraska co]]eg~ Mother cent visitor asked one of the Rosemary Moody aSsIstant pro- young boys Why are you here fessor o~ ~sYChology volunteer~ Did someone make you come to adminIster and execute themiddot program

The original plans were to take a group of seventh graders from Horace Mann Junior High School and tutor them in develshyopmental reading and study skills It soon became apparent that some rather basic instrucshytion was required some of the ehildren were still reading at the second grade level

Duchesnes elementary school was offered for use by Mother Helen Sheahan superior An Omaha public school official suggested that the Omaha Wom- ens Job Corps be contacted to see if they could furnish high school graduates as tutors Robshyert Bathke Job Corps education director soon put five young ladies at Mother Moodys disshyposal

Five recent Duchesne gradushyates volunteered to train the tutors for two weeks before the program actually began The Duchesne alumnae eventualiy elected to stay on for the entire program

Mother Moodymiddot was so imshypressed with the potential of the Job Corps enro]]ees that she exshytended their sessions through the rest of the summer and made college preparatory work avail shyable to them

Student Reaction Perha~s one of the more unshy

usual aspects of the entire Upshystart program was its lack of financing The only real subsidy (about $500) was from the OMaha Public School system the bulk of which went to the Omah~ Transit Company for bus service

The equipment used in the classrooms was borrowed from the public schools the Omaha Womens Job Corps and Du-

Plan to Supplement History Books

SAN FRANCISCO (NC) shyA supplementary text showing the contributions of minority groups in United States history will be added to history and social science books already in use in archdiocesan schools here

The supplement containing some 150 pages will deal chroshynologica]]y with the contribu- tions of Jews Negroes Orientais and various nationalities from southern Europe

It is being prepared by a speshycial studly committee which illl evaluating current textbooks found need for more thorough material on the part minority

groups have played in the OOUDshytry1s history

Leave Providence For Mission Work

PROVIDENCE (NC) - Four Capuchin priest and two layshymen left New York by plane for mission work in the Santa Rosa de Copan diocese Honduras

Father Ad ria n Holzmeister OFM Cap provincial of tile Capuchins St Mary province with headquarters here said the six will work among some 50000 persons in Mlree parishes in the state of Ocotepeque He said

other mjssionersmiddotas they become ayailabie wiD be sent to aid Bishop Jose Canama CbampvezCli tile diocese

He looked up and said Im here because I want to learn to read and I like it Two girls who missed the morning bus to Duchesne gave another exain-ple of determination to learn Jhey undertook a two-hour five mile walk rather than miss a day of class

L R oy etreats Contlnu~d from Page Six

laymens convention-an effort to provide some figure of speech some image to suggest to those in the Church and to those out-

side what is the inner nature of the Church

Alluding to Scriptures refershyences to the Church in terms of sheep and shepherds the former Hub Auxiliary Bishop asked How many people in Boston have ever seen a sheep Sheep and shepherds say little to youngstersmiddot in housing projects or even in the suburbs

The Bishop who is epiScopal advisor for the NCLRC officiashyted at the lighting of an eightshyfoot candle which symbolized the

conference theme-uThe Light of Chr~st The candle burned throughout the convention

Speakers stressed the retreat program is geared to demOJishystrate to the world that the way of Christ can become more meaningiful to men of our time

Bishop Ernest J Primeau of Manchester reminded delegates of recent profound changes withshyin the Church

If the lay retreat movement is to remain vital and relevant

he said it cannot be static It must be in harmony with the times at all times

Honest Call1Se

Our retreat houses could 00-middot eome so to speak the equipment and training centers for the apostolates of the laity he adshydect

Bishop Primeau urged laymei to learn from modern science particularly in the field of hushyman psychology He said there is an opportunity as well to learn from other organizations both secular and religious He added The youth of today are un-

selfish and in large numbers they are seeking for an honest cause to which they can dedicate themshyselves as witness their devotion to the Peace Corps and the civil rights movement

Modernize AncEtenlt Puerto Rico CIl1llLmlrch

SAN JUAN (NC) =- A lPJt8shyyear-old church one of the most popularmiddot in this capital city~ ~

going modern Archbishop Luis Aponte of

San Juan has inaugurated middotal campaign for funds for restorashytion of St Anns a public orashytory now badly illl need of Jeshypairs

1ft addition to restoration the ehurch also Will be equipped with air conditioning The eburch is the archdiocesan ceDltgt ~r for the Confraternity Gi Christian Doctrine and perpetual adoration of the Blessed Sacrashyment Built ill 184B the cburch weplaced an edifice which dated )Iaek iG tile lWi century

PROFESSION ANJ)) RECEPTION Four postulants beshycame canonical novices and two prof~ssed their vows as Sisters of St Joseph at ceremonies at the Blessed Sacrashyment Church Fall River Left column top to bottom Sr Gerard Marie (first vows) Sr Anne Therese Sr Rita Josshyeph Bishop Connolly who received the sisters Right colshyumn Sr Anne Denise Sr St Paul and Sr Alfred Marie (renewed temporary vow-s)

Specialmiddot Education Priests Visi~ PaJ~ents Homes to ExplOJon

SignificOJlI1lce off Baptismal Ritual

Thurs Aug 25 1966

Governor Balks

ST JEAN (NC)-Sunday bapshytisms are prece~ed by Saturday nights special educational proshygrams in a number of Catholic homes here in Quebec

The program to prepare the whole family for baptism through a home visit was deshyvised three years ago by a group of pries~s working togeth~r as a pastoral team

central idea of the program ~s that it is good for the priest to be with his people at imporshytant times in their lives~ Atmiddot these times people are dispOSed to receive the message of Christ

as it applies to their circumshystances the developers of the plan reported

The visiting priest explains the lOOremonies of the next day and the symbolic meaning of various parts of the baptismal ritual

Pilgrims Wctmlk TORONTO (NC) -The 10th

annual walking pilgrimage to the Canadian Martyrs shrine at Midland Ont will begin here Wednesday Organized by the Guild of St John de la Lande the pilgrimage will cover the 100 miles to the shrine in five days a~riving there Sunday Sept 4

LEMIEUX PLUMBING amp HEATING INC

fof Oomestic l~ andmiddot Industrial ~ Sales and Service

Oil Burners WY 5-1631

2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE NEW BEDFORD

Relatives neighbors or the prospective gorlparents may be presentbut themiddot home visit usually involves just the parents and their children

The ide is to make the preshybaptism vsit an oppodunity for dialogue between the priest and the parents rather than a conshyference

Ten parishes in the St Jean diocese have adopted the praeshytice along with l few Montreal parishes Father Marcil Brillon secretary of the St Jean litur- gical commission said he exshypects the practice to spread

FALSE TEETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass Many wearers of false teeth suJIer

embarrassment Qecause their platesdrop Blip or wobble at Just the wrong time Dont live In fear of thts happening to you Just sprinkle a little FASTEErH the non-acid powder on your plates Holds false teeth more firmly so they feel more comfortable Checks denture breath Dentures that fit are essential to health See your dentist regularlyGet FASTEETH at all drug counters

At Proposals MONTPELIER (NC) - Vershy

monts Gov Philip Hoff said he bas extreme reservations conshycerning abortion and sterilizashytion proposals contained in a reshyport of an adivsory committee on the mental retardation situshyation in the middotstate

The report called for legal sanctioning of induced abortion in cases where there appears to be a high risk of mental retarshydation of an unborn child

Thereport also contained a suggestion concerning steriliza shytion of the mentally retarded

Apart from the recommenda~ tions on legalized abortion and sterilization of the mentally reshytarded I must S4ly it was II good report Gov Hoff said He said lie will study the report with utmost care before taking any action 0

Expresses Thanks To Holy Father

VATICAN CITY (NC) -The vice prime minister of Vietnam has paid a visit to Pope Paul VI to thank him for his peace efshyforts and generous help to reshylieve the suffering of the Vietshynamese people General Nguyen Huu Co vice prime minister and secretary of state for national defense of Vietnam visited privately withshythe Pope for 30 minutes Accord- ing to a Vatican Press Office bulletin

The vice prime minister in the name of South Vietnam exshypressed profound gratitude for the valid support always given by the head of the Catholic Church and of the Holy See in the cause of peace and for the generous assistance sent by the Holy Father to relieve the sufshyfering of those persons torshymented by war The distinguishshyed visitor then continued tomiddot deshyclare that the intentions of South Vietnam are directed only toward an affirmation of the liberty of its own nation and Wgt arriving at a just peace in honor and concord

Complete

BANKING SERVICE

for Bristol County

Bristol County Trust Company

TAUNTON MASS

THE ~ANK ON TAUNTON GREEN

Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Bristol Community College Offers Evening Classes

64 Durfee St Fall River Credit classes begin September 19 1966

Register Now Mondays thrrough Thursdays 200-500 PM Courses for college credit or self improvement are offered ill

The arts languages and literature Behavioral and social sciences accounting business

administration and secretarial scieRCe Mathematics science engineering and electro-mechanical technology

Advisors Availabie During ~egistration Hours

16 THE AI~ ~-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

C~nsiders Instability Causes In Latin American lamds

From Social R-evolution in the New Latin Ameriea Edited by John J Considine MM

There are many causes of instability in Latin America Some have said in the past that it is an inheritance frQm

Spain They feel that the years of Spanishauthoritarianism rendered the colonies incapable of integrating themselves into a more balanced social system Because they had there exists the problem of low

denSity of population with a lackpreviously lacked indepenshyof internal communication In-dent creole authority the many cases there is even a lanshy

colonies were unprepared to acshy guage barrier eept a more democratic authorshy The problem of an underdeshyity In his book veloped economy has also beenBetween Freeshy a factor in forming Latin Anlershy clom and Fear ican social structureGerman Arcinshy On the social level the eleshyiegas draws a ments I have mentioned favorcomparison beshy an internal lack of class strucshytween the Enshy ture that involves a juxtaposishyglish and Spanshy tion rather than a social organi shyish governments zation and integration Democshyin the Americas racy on the other hand presupshyIn ihe north the poses a large scale integrationcolonists came in of the people in the politicalshysearch of freeshy economic-social life of thedom IIi the end nationthe founding of the Nodh The masses of -illiterates inAmerican colonies was only the Latin America who do not parshyobvious culmination of a process ticipate in these areas have noalready begun It was the reafshy iilterest in government thoughfirmation of customs already inshy their interest and loyalty maygrained in the social milieu It be enlisted by the demagoguewas an evolution not a real revshyolution for these settlers were Formation or Dictatorships accustomed to autonomy The A dictatorship takes form

authority pf their governors was when one or more pressure more democratic since they groups unchallenged seizes the worked closely with the popular power of governmentassemblies From the beginshy In order to better understand ning the keenest concern of the the types of dictatorship found North American colonist was for in Latin America let us elCamshyfreedom of worship and his hosshy ine the different forms of revoshytility to the Church of England lution and the various ways in was evident which the pressure groups

On the contrary Latin Amershy bring their influence to bearIca was part of an empire The Kalmal1 Silvert distinguishesSpaniards came to dominate and these types in his book Reaction evangelize The viceroy represhy and Revolution in Latin Amershysented the king who was an abshy ica which is written in -Englishsolute monarch The role of Silvert shows the relationshipshyassembly in Latin America was between dictatorships and the secondary arid represented exshy extreme indivdualism found in tremely liIIlited power these countries

Independence in the Latin The first type of revolution American nations entailed a real named is what Silvert calls the revolution since from the beginshy simple brracks revolt Most of ning they were forced tb look for the outbreaks especially in the new political and social forms past century have been of this

Religiousliberty did not elCshy kind The barracks revolt occurs ist in the Latin American coloshy typically in a big class society nies since all were obliged to It is carried out by the amlY

membership in the Cathoiic sompoundtimes in its own name and Church sometimes in behalf of a chosen

Unassimilated Groups leader This type of revolution - rarely calses widesprelld publicThis comparison will help in

disturbance since it representsunderstanding the Latin Amershymerely a switch in governmentican problem though it will not from one general to anotherfully explain -it We must acshy

knowledge that the political The second type the peasant phenomeinon has a direct COIshy revolt is generally of little sigshyrelatio~1 with demographic probshy nificance and limited in effect lems such as the existence of to a locality though the Mexican large unassitnilated groups as revolution at the beginning of well as masses of mestizos un this century would perhaps fall derdeveloped and deprived who in this category can scarcely be said to partici shy Third the regional revolt pate in twentieth century chili shy commcn in the early days of zation Although these groups Latin American independence form a part of the nation they Here _the caudillo strove to put are not integrated either socially down provincial revolts and to eulturally or politically centralize power in an authorishy

Despite the over-all demoshy tarian I e g i () n a I government g~aphic explosion in some areas Typical of the caudillos who led

regional revolts was Rosas of Argentina

Plans Participation The fourth a more modern type of revolution Silvert callsIn Liturgical Week the complicated barracks revolt

HOUSTON (NC) - The 1966 This is an insurrection that inshyLiturgical Week here fOI the -volves civilian as well as mili shyfirst time in its 25-year history tary groups with widespread will have a full scale program military action for those interested in the The issues are ideological and Eastern Church relate to political parties as well

As part of the Liturgical Week as _ other interest groups The program the Divine Liturgy Cuban revolution in its beginshy(Mass) of St John Chrysostom nings might be considered -an will be celebrated entirely in example Although this is the English and Communion will be most prevalent type ainong modshydjstributed under both species ernday revolutions excetions Chief celebrant of the Liturgy are the revolts which overthrew will be Archbishop Paul Achkar Peron in Argentina Perez-JimeshyGreek Catholic ~-chbishop of nez in Venezuela and -Rojas Lattaquia in Syua Pinilla in Colombia

SISTER AMBROSE

Says SOo Africa Needs Americans

WASHINGTON (NC)-Yanshykee come over a statement which would do much to boost the morale of Americans in sevshyeral parts of the world could well summarize what an Irish missionary nun to South Africa

-has been saying during a visit here _

The wonderful hospitality of theAmerican people has imshypressed Sister Ambrose Harty Gf the Sisters of the Holy Family She lamens the fact that opporshytunities to receive Americans in a like manner have been few and far between during her 20 years in South Africa

Youve got such a lot to give she said here in an ~ntershyview during which she expressed a strong desire to see greatly inshycreased people-to-people relashytio~s between the country where she serves and the United States

Sister Ambrose was particushylarly interested in the Peace Corps ann reported that its purshyposes and work are hardly known by the people of Soutli Africa I haVent heard it disshycussed at all she said (The Peace Corps has not been invited into the country) (

With words of praise for the missionary work being done iii the South African Republic by Oblate arid Paulist missionaries from the United States she also expressed regret at the general paucity of missioners from this country There particularly is an almost total lack of nuns she said Only 71 Catholic missionshyaries from the United States inshycluding 16 nuns are serving ilm South Africa

Married Priests AMSTERDAM (NC)-A

Dutch public opinion poli h8lll shown that 11 per cent of the Netherlands p e 0 pIe woulci rather have III married Catholi4l clergy than a celibate clergy The poll including members ai all and no denominations

-showed that 68 per cent of the Catholics queried preferred III married clergy

~~

(DEBROSS OIL ( ~ co ( ~ Heating Oils

~ and BMIIJUrs ~

~ 365 NORYIoli IFROIlir SUEampll ( rJ NEW IBIEDIFOR

~ WYmafi 2middot5534 (

I~~~

Parishes Share DETROIT (NC) - Twentyshy

nine urban parishes here have decided to help one another meet the rising cost of education

At the elementary level parshyepts will pay $50 per family $75 per family for non-Catholic parishioners and $75 per student

Danish Catholic COPENHAGEN (NC) -Thereshy

are 11321 Catholics in the Danish capitalaccording to a report issued by the Copenhagen statistical office They consti shytute the second largest religious entity there next to the Luthershyans members of the State Church The total number of Catholics in Denmark is approxshyimately 26000 Total population is 35 lllillion

Education Costs for Catholics outside the parish

At the high school level the tuition cost is $H)O per student in or out of the parish With the exception of textbooks this amount eliminates aU extra fee charged up to now

Father Norman P Thomas director of the Urban Parisll Apostolate said the greatest efshyfect of the joint effort will be experienced by the pastor who sends parish youngsters to a higll school operated by any of the 2 participating parishes

In this instance the students parishes will be expected to pay the difference between the tui shytion charged and the actual cost per student The latter fee laM been set by the parochial school office at over $200 per year

ETHIOPIA- THE NEW AFRICA

- HOLY FATlftRB MIBBIIDN AID TO THI DRIENTAL OHURCH

- BROTHER What happens In Ethiopia when an American MICHAEL Christian Brother (he could be your son brother

REYNOLDS nephew) Is told to upgrade Catholic schools He FROM borrows a Jeep (or a mule) visits the schools

PROVIDENCE RI one by one writes home for pencils and better REPORTS textbooks and then beginsbullbull This is the new

fROM Africa Brother Michael Reynolds reports enshyADDIS thusiasticallyfrom Addis Ababa It can be a BABJpeacefuf progressive Christian Africa tom~rmiddot

row Just give us schools give us time and with Gods help the job will De donel bull bullThe schools are for villages like Aressa Aiga Biers Wartll8~

-which have no school The youngsters know that knowledge i~ their only chance theyll go without food to learnbullbullbull What does It cost to build a schoolf Only $2950 says Brother Michael for the villagers snd the children give their laborfreemiddotofmiddotcharge We can train a catemiddot chlst for only $40 bullbullbull In thanksgiving to God for what you know will you do what you can ($100 $75 $50 $25 $15 $10 $5 $2) to give these youngsters a chance The school will be named for your favorite saint and the children will pray for your loved ones daily If you build It all byyourself ($2950) School will open late this year-but better late than never-If you Vlrit~ to us right now

WHAT Our priests there who receive no othor income IELSE for food and clothing will offer promptly the

FOR Masses you request Well forward your Mass ETHOPIAr Inten~ons through the Holy Fathers officebull

40 young lads studying for the priesthood In Decamere lose their football when It goes Into a nelghbers garden A large field can be bought ~velled and mede safe for sports fer $975

MAKINQ ~~IOOOO will ovfde bull OOfDj)lete parjstlplantA (Ohuroh rectory convent andscbool) In southshy

WiW ImIAdla In memorybullbullbullbull $600 will ttiln a native lrfHt1SOO bull native Sfster Our legal tltI Cl~1HOUO NWt lAir WIUAH AHOCIAnONo

_-------------~shytt coINIILOIIlt IUMIIIND ~ bullbull la IJIIr bull _1OIt~=-=_==-=

PI _UM~gt

Mum ClO1IIponwith your mt__=-~~_ _ ~i offrtnt ~~ erryen 8TAlI-lPCODI_

HI IATHaLl1 RIIiAR 811 WILAbullbull AIaDIATaN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS IRANCUS CARDINAL SPELLMAN President MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretal)f Write OATHOLIO NfIAR IiAST WELFARE Assoo 1)80 MadlsolJ Avenuomiddot New York NY 10017 -felGpilonel 212YUkon 6middot6840

Dormitory Proves Stonehill Permanently Coeducational

Way back in 1951 when the first girl enrolled in Stoneshyhill College no one could have imagined that a girls dormishytory would ever be built onmiddot the campus But the sound of steam shovels and hammers filling the air over the lovely grounds in Easton is proof

and two girls from the seniorthat the long planned for daslr-assisting the housemothergirls dorm will soon be a Mrs Grace Callahan

reality When Stonehill was The experiment worked so founded in 1948 as a mens colshy well in fact that this coming lege the fledgling school had Fall both the freshman and just gotten off to a good start sophomore girls will be housed when the Korean War came this way leaving only the junior along and emptied the classshy and senior girls still renting Yooms as the young men went quarters in private homes chosen into the services by the college as all the nonshy

That was the year that many commuting girls have done in small colleges had to close their the past gates forever But at Stonehill That typical campus situation the Holy Cross order was detershy -the sorority house-is not in mined to hold onto this new the picture at Stonehill-or frashyschool that they had planned for ternity houses either for that so long matter No sororities or fraternishy

What could they do to keep ties are allowed on the campus the college operating until the There is a cl11b however that war was over and the boys came is the girls own - the Crosier back Of course Open their Club Mrs Yosgandes is the gates to girl students clubs faculty advisor and she deshy

Faculty Pleased scribes it as the organization What started out as a temposhy for women studentE who want

rary expediency somehow over to contribute in their own parshythe years has acquired a happy middotticular way as women to their permanancy No one could be college more pleased about this turn of Through their annualmusical events than the Stonehill faculty Crosier Curtain Calls theyitself raise money to acquire manymiddot

Helping out in Jhe ground things that add beauty and breaking ceremony for the new charm to campus life This yeardorm Mrs Virginia Yosgandes they purchased two very lovelythe Dean of Women at the colshy silver tea and coffee services lege saiei I guess everyone will Any official group at the collegereally believe that the girls are is allowed to borrow the sets and here til stay they have already been used in

Mrs Yosgandes says that since many functions she first came to the Stonehill New Signfaculty in 1958 rumors have

Mrs Yosgandes says Thebeen popping up that Stonehill girls will be very pleased whenwill soon return to its original they come back th~~ Fallto seestatus as an all male school The the beautiful new sign theynew dorm she says will be visshybought for the college installedible proof of the permanancy of on Route No 138 women on the beautiful campus

Its very easy to picture theThe $1150000 building deshyvery charming Dean presidingsigned to accommodate 200 girls

graciously at a faculty tea Aand proctors will be three stories parishioner of Immaculate Conshyof red brick Architects W Chesshyception chulCh in Easton she ister arown and Associates and in ~rivate life an enthusiasticwntractors C A Batson and homemaker anc the mother of aCompany are planning to comshy13 year old daughter Christineplete work on the dorm in time Her husband John is assistantfor the opening of classes in principal at Franklin JuniorSeptember 1967 It will be the High first unit of a five dormitory

She speaks with great convicshycomplex planned fo the women on tion about college girls holdingcampus

onto feminine ideals while surshyKitchen ~pace rounded-and at Stonjhill outshyMrs Yosgandes is happy about numbered 3 to 1- by menthe fact that the new dorm will While were encoulaging themhave a kitchenette on each floor to be acdve in thpound communitywhere the girls can cook small and the church and in politicsmeals and entertain guests Shes and encouragint them to deshyhoping that the dorms built after

more velop their abilities to the full shythis me will providtgt even est-we never fail to take intokitchen space for the girls to account the fact that they arepractice the culinary arts women and in this competitiveM a n~ tImes homemaking world theyll have to -fight toskills come to a complete halt maintain their feminine idenshywhen a girl goes to college she tity says Apparently all classroom

work and rio cooking make Jane Coed Actiiti~s

Coed a dull girl in the room When she fi rst came to the where shell be spending a great college she sltys the girls were deal of time after graduationshy mainly interested in strictlythe dtchen feminine extra curricular activishy

Mrs Yosgandes says A great ties-fastion shows teas gids many cCJlleges have been workshy sports Bd this has changed radshying witt this problem and wonshy ically in the last few years and dering what to do about it Beshy now the girls are much more inshycause theyve had no living terested in the coed acti vitiesshyquarters for girls on campus the newspapers the debating Stonehiiil has had to do out of team the drama club Stonehill necessit) what many other colshy is noted a~ one of a small handshyleges have chosen to do recently ful gtf Catholic colleges where The Dean describp~ an experishy girls are middotactive in every part of ment that the collFge tJied last college life Every coure at yeal tha has worked out exshy StonehHj is opel to girls tremely well We still havent had a woman

Experiment Successful president of our student governshyThe college leased a grollp of ing body the Senate Mrs

rooms il an apartmelt building Yosgandes says Now girls in Brockton last Fall where all what are yOIi waiting for the freshman girls who were not commuters-55 of them-lived in housekeeping apartments In Red Groups There were four girls in each BERLIN (NC)-Over 85 per apartment all sharing the reshy (ent of East German children sponsibilities of housekeeping between the ltlges of 6 and 14 are

The girls hat two sets of mCl11)ers of communist youth 1)IoctOS - two aIumni wumen ~nIUps

lrt-OE ANCH0) 17 Thurs Aug 25 1966

PriestCuod Goal Of Top Skater

GREAT FALLS (NC)-A good many folks in this Montana toWlll will attest that teenager J Mishlll Petkevich is a pretty good skate -on or oH the ice

The affable blond youngster 17 topped a field of 136 pershyformers in the three-day Lake Placid N Y international free style competition sanctioned by the U S and Canadian Figure Skating Assoclations The Great Falls lad was the judges unamiddot1ishymous choice for the mens gold medal in the finals

But Petkevich doesnt lose his cool off the ice His classmates and teachers at Great Falls Censhytral 3igh School claim hes liIl

winner in every event He spends more than 40 hours 11 week in skating training but carries the full load of class studies and consistently turns Up on the schools honor roll Hes a member of the National Honor Society

The school supported me ami the way Everyone has beeEl wonderfUl to me the modest youngster saia Hes been -skatshying since he was 2 He credit his achievements to his Catholic Faith the sacrifices of his parshyents and of Arthur Bourke senshyiormiddot professional of the Great Falls Figure Skating Club He said All I did was skatemiddotGROUND-BREAKING The Very Rev John T Corr

I hope some day to become~esc president of Stonehill College turns a shovelful of priest Petkevich said wbeilearth to mark start of construction 0pound a 200-student dormshy a~ked his ambition I hope 14gt itory for women on the Stonehill campus Watching the proshy attend Notre Dame for at leasa celtlures are left to right Mrs Virginia Yosgandes dean af two years and then I h9pe to gf)

to the Catholic University fl4women John C Doody 66 Alumni fund chairman Robert AmericaBatson contractor Harold Bonvie ass~iate of the archishytect

Msgr Canty Continued from Page OneRussian Schools ing studies at S1 Marys High

Taunton Boston- College and S1 Bernards Seminary RochesshyChristian Brother Lauds Students terN Y

nespect for Intellectuols He served as assistant at Our Lady 01 the Isle NantucketCHICAGO (NC)-Students in to foreign languages than Amershy Holy Family Taunton St

schools behind the Iron Curtain icans Most students take a Marys Barrowsville and Stgo at their studies with a passhy seven-year sequence of English Johns Attleboro He was apshysion said Brother Kevin Mark German or French English he pointed to the Chaplains CorPJFSC who toured Russia and added is the most popular lanshy of the United States Navy infour satellite countries with 19 guage and more emphasis is January 1942 and retiredwitbother U S rducatois placeltl on reading and speaking the rank of captain in Decemshy

Brothel Mark who is princishy than on writing it ber 196gt Pope John XXIII pal 9f St Mels high school here Brother Mark said that there elevated him to the rank of attributed much of their motivashy is almost nothing that he would Domestil Prelate with the title tion to the students attitude that lift from the Soviet school sysshy of Right Reverend Monsignor iI What I do does contribute to tem and apply in the U S May 1962 the welfare of the state He admitted however that Bishop Connolly named Monshy

Brother said he felt that stushy they do get results They have a signor Canty pastor of St Paulsdents in this country lack motishy tremendous capacity for conshy Taunt-ln in December 1963 vation because were spoiled centration when they set their Industrial improvements have sights for example their space made it that a young man can program Its not all a matter go into a trade and make very of being chained to a lab table good money BLUE RIBBON

In the Soviet Union he said there seems to be a great reshyspect for intellectuals and the LAlnNDRY student is thought of as a proshy

01 STOPfessional schJlar 273 CE~RAl AVE~UIIG CfflTERTeaching is considered a proshy

fession and remunelated accordshy e Television C FmiddotI ure illgly WY 2-6216o r-cerv

St Mels principal observed on IlA Allen St Newhdfordhis tour that there was little NEW BEDFORD questioning on the part of the students

The chSSloom situation he said is very much teacher ori shyented that is study in depth is 21 DAY PILGRIMAGES TO EUROPE done on the teachers inspiration

rou~ 1-Legion of Mary Pilgrimage leaving Sept 12th with Truth in such areas as history Father Edward A Oi-viera will visit Killarney Dublin Paris

cllld literature is accepted as a Lourdes Rome Madrid Lisbon and Fatima - Tour 2shyforegone conclusion and stushyHoly Cross Fathers Pilgrimage leaving Oct 10th with Frdents just memorize what has

already been discovered ----- lobert E McDonnell will wsit lisbon Fatima 1odrid Rome Lourdes Paris and londonIike F)rc~gn Linutges -cota cost is $82900 - Time PaymentsmiddotIn the area of science howshy arranged ever the situation is difterent

()Ii TOUR tOLDERS CONTACT STEolfEN A MARIIEYhe pont~d out because in scishyence there is an attitude of I n~ust discover Catholic Travel

-Office

The R1~middotmiddotmiddotO p oth-r Mark ~ltk St New Befl- -ass 02748

said ~ ve 11111j Ill)le auention

BURNERS

BUrntlr Service

Famous Reading HARDCQAl

NEW ENGLAND COKE

t8 THE ~NCHOR-Dioceseof fo Rivef-Thurs Aug 25 1966 J~sut I)riest Says Some Public I b M t EmploYE~~S Have Right to Strike

-

Urges uO or ovemen S NEW (NC) -Public however YORK Government hasmiddot h C employees in certain fields have been expanding its cQncern andIn Heml$p ere ooperate the right to strike against the has beenmoving into ar~as of government a priest declared transportation education recre-

By MsgrGooJrge C Higgins (Director Socian Actiolll Dept NCWC)

The relationship between the American labor moveshyment and the Latin American Confed~ration of Christian Trade Unions (CLASC) leaves much to be desired as we

middot thO d th 1- have aready noted severa1 t Imes m IS co umn urmg e

past four or five years The two movements are deeply different things to different peoshy

auspicious of one another and just when they seem to be on the verge of settling or at least -patching up their differshyences they go at it again and recklesslystart hurling insults at one another

To jUdge from What they sayIi b 0 u t on e another publicshy1yen as well as privately on e would t h ink that they were natural-born enshyemies whe~eas in fact they have much in common-much inore than they seem to realizeshyand for obvious reasons ought violent MisS Duncan was an officer of The fourth public member Harshyto be c60p~rating With onean- Moreo~er at least one promi~theSodality a cheerleader for vardlaw school professorVern ether as closely as pOSSible nent spokesman for the AFL- four years a member of the Ten- Countryman half ci-itiCized the This writer has learn~ci the hard WR and muc~ to hiS so~-row that any outSider who 18

fOolish enough totryto mediatek f

~tween them JS as mg or troouble

C f t Gommun same If for example one suggests

as I have done on more than one Occasion that soine of the anti U S propaganda emanating from CLASCsources revealS atremely harmful to the cause of n a i v e misunderstanding of Amerlcan trade unionism and American capitalism andor ari $ver-simplification of Catholic Social teaching he runs the risk 9f being written off as a blind -not tOsay reactionary apologist for so-called Yanqui ~mperial-

iBm If on the other hand oneslig

gests that some of the anti- CLASC propaganda enianating

fro m AFL-CI0 sources is equally naive and unsoPllisti shyeatedhe runs the same Sort of risk in reverse That is to say he is likely to be told--v~ry politely of course -that if he were to take off his Catholic blinkers and look at the record objectively he would quickly come to realize that CLASC is in reality playing t~ecipal rival in Latin America) riages in their mission parishes communist game in Latin Amer- there is a gEirierous mixture of Msgr Milia stated Since the iea superficial appearances to cultural chauvinism and envy Ogdensburg mission was opened the contrary notwithstanding that accompanies the most legit- a modern new church bas been

Both CaD Learn imate misgivings built under its direction in the Be that as it may I still think Even the Latinos middotthemselve~ seaport ofMatararii two mission

~t CLASC has a lot to learn he points out will admit on ac- churches have oeen completed about _ and from American casion that their consumirig fear and a lalge parish church and trade unionism And if that of Yanqui imperialism is often center are currently under conshymakes me a reactionary Yankee irrational But there it is he re- struction in Mollendo ehauvinist so be it minds us and the basic prob-

By the same token however aiso think that the American

labor movement has much to learn about -- and from - the Christian trade union movement in Latin America The first thing it has to learn is that the Am~r-leap philosophy of pure-andshysimple bread-~d-butter union ism which all things considshyered has worked satisfactorily in this country is not necessarily well adapted to the present-day Deeds of Latin America

Meaning of Revolution Another way of saying the

same thing is that American iabor representativesworking on Latin America problemswm have to reconcile themselves to the fact that a social revolu-Uon is called for in Latin American labor federation that doesnt subscribe to a revolushytionary ideology is probably doomed to failure

The word revolution meaos J-

pIe of course To the leaders of CLASC it means a sweeping program of socioeconomic and political reform which goes far beyond the limited goals of bread-and-butter unionism

The leaders of CLASC are convinced that such a revolushytioo is demanded bythe Chrisshytian social ethic to which they subscribe and from which they derive their ideology

Perceptive Critique Some U S Labor repshy

resentatives are skeptical to say the least~bout the allegedly Christian content of CLASCs militant ideology They admit theneed for a peaceful revolushytion in Latin Americn butthey are convinced thatCLASC wants this revolution to be Feehan High School Attleboro alties in a letter tc therimes

lem is how to insure con~ PAVlA V I tlnuing cooperation between 0 untee rs Yanqui and Latino in spite of Complete TlIainirigit

Such cooperation Dr Hawkins WASHINGTON (NC)-Fortyshyconcludes will be impossible unshyless the leaders of the American labor movement positively indi~

cete their acceptance of social revolution in Latin America This will require he says

more than the generous transshyfusions of economic aid the stimulation under United States

labors auspices of leadership training programs for workers

and other cooperative ventures Need Broader View

What is required he insists ltCia a broader view-an ability on the part of the American la bor statemen to adopt policies that will not always accord with OUI own value~ and more speshy

cificall~ the tempering of (their) hosannas to free entershyprUie ___

inter-American labor unity I fully agree in this respect with Dr Carroll Hawkins Associate

Professor of Political Science at Michigan State University who recently published a most pershyceptive critique of American trade union policy in Latin- Catholics in Mollendo Peru the

America (The 0RIT and Amer diocesan missions director reshyican Trade Unions Conflicting ported Perspectives Industrial Rela- The New York priests were tionsand Social Changes in sent to Peru after Pope Paul Latin America University of vi -asked that more priests be Florida Press) pr9vjd~d fOr the people opoundSouth

Basic Problem America Msgr Anthony A Mi-Dr Hawkins admits of course lia said He estimated more than

that in all the Latin American 90 percent of the priests in criticism of United States unioniperu are from other countries in the ORIT (the Latin Ameli can regional unit of the Interna In 1965 the priests from Ogshytional Confederation of Free denburg administered 445 bap-Trade Unions and CLASCs prin tisms and perfoImed 64 mar-

CIOhas publicly charged in ej_ nis Club for two years and a suggested penaltiel fect that CLASCs ideology three yeaT member of the FU- owes more to Marxism than it ture Nurses club Father Carey sl~id the ~ays does to Christianity He finds it when pay and working condi-

An instructor in the Confra- tions for men and women inhard he says to accept the fact ternity of Christian Doctrine that the Christian labor move- civil service were determine4 byproglam in Our Lady of Mt I g I t d d t t

t middot A e IS a Ive It n a minIS ra Ive ment 0f L a In merIca IS non- Carmel Parish Seekonk the fiat have pas ed a d Communist s n we now

In my judgment this kind of criticism of CLASC by spokesshymen fltr the AFL-CIO is ex

three volunteers have completed the Second National Training Session sponsored by the Papal Volunteers for Latin America and received assignments in some ten Latin American coun- tries

Special ceremonies ended the six-week training session at the Catholic University of America where volunteers studied the apostolic work of the Church the laymans role in the aposshytolate and principles of spiritual life as well as the religion ecoshynomics and culture of Latin America

Before leavillg for their asshysignments the volunteers will take intensive four-month lanshy

guage anl culture courses in a Latin American language centerbull

eighth winner of this scholarship plumeoursElves that we share will enter the Childrens Hosshypital School of Nursing Boston in Septembel-

Ogdensburg Priests

SellYe Peru Mission OGDENSBURG (NC) -- Four

Ogdensburg priests currently are ministering to the n~eds of_13OOO

~ere

Father Philip Carey sJ exshyecutive director of the Xavier Institute of Industrial Relations acknowledged t hat certain strikes aJre intolerable But he said that when the governmentacts in a proprietary function it must follow the same rules it prescribes for private enterprise

In a letter to the New York Times Father Carey criticized ~y implication a proposed state -llw that wetulltilincrease the penalties to be imposed on strikshying union of public employees

MlISS LHNDA DUNCAN Th~proposedlaw grew out of recommendations of a five-man

Feehan Alumna task force named by Gov Nel son Rockefeller to study the

Receives Award problem after a 19-day transit strike crippled Newmiddot York City

Miss Linda Duncan daughter in January of Mrs George Duncan and the - NeCeSSBlry for Bargaining late George Duncan 61 Sykes Father Carey one of four Rd Seekonk has been awarded pubiic members of the mayors the eighth annual scholarship of committee that helped settle the the Attleboro Area Nurses strike disagreed with two other Chapter publlc memlgters Vh_o had previshyA 1966 graduate of Bishop ously supported the stiffer pen-

and internal concord a str~ke against itconstitutes mutiny and rebellion (UCLA) Sister Muriel a native

Pgbllsh Gudelnes For Ecumenisn

ALLENTOWN (NC) - The commission of ecumenism of the Allentown diocese here in Pennshysylvania has published a 22-page booklet of ecumenical guidelines to aid priests in guiding the laity The guidelines include general

permission for non-Catholics to serve as witnesses at Catholic weddings for Catholics to serve as witnesses at non-Catholic weddings and for burial of non-Catholics in Catholic ceremonies with a priest or a non-Catholic clergyman cltmducting graveside eeremonies

SHELL DADSON OIL

24-Hollr Oil

GLE COAL amp OIL CO IncI

640 Pleasant Street Tel WY 6-8271 New Bedford

this decision-making with the working p E~ 0 P Ie themselves through the process of collective bargaining

If collective bargaining is to be the rule he said we must agree to grant the right to strike~ Without this right he said there is no union and no coll~ctive balmiddotgaining

Expands Concern-in considering strikes by pu~ lie employees he dedared one muSt distinguishb~tween the state as a sovereign and the g()vernment acting in a proprishyetary function When the state aets as the defender of the peace or the promoter of justice

of Corning Iajoined the Sisters of the Humility of Mary in 1930 In recent years she has been ehairman of professionafarts deshypartment and college registrar

ation and a host of other services formerly performed by privategroups he continued

These activities are ancillary and economic and here the state in acting in a proprishyetry function When it so acts it ought to be subject tl) the same rules of conduct the government prescribes for private entershy

prise Strikes by firefighters and powerhouse uti lit y workers would be wrong however he said because it is difficult to imagine anY benefit they might gain to counterbalance the fear- fut harm such a l strike would impose on the community Buys Banners For Memorial

CHICAGO (NC)-A Chicago advertising executive has bought 44 brightly-colored religious ~anners tat -hung in the Nashy

tlOnal Srme of the Im~aculate ConceptIon during Luci Johnshysons wed(iin~ -

Earle Ludgin a trustee of the University of Chicago said he will donate the banners to the

university~ Rockefeller Memoshyrial Chapel in memory of his late wife

The banners for which Ludgin reportedly paid more than $40000 were originally created for the Vatlcan PavIIIon at the New York World Fair

A group of Washington D C residents bought ttie banners when the fair closed and arshyranged to have them exhibited in the Shrine until they could be sold Lugdin bought themin April but agreed at the request of Shrine officials to leave them in the Shrine until after Lucia wedding

lame College Head

OTTUMWA (NC) Sis t er

Muriel Hogan has been named the third presi4ent of Ottumwa Heights College here in Iowa She succeeds Sister Marie Anshy

ciue Kennedy woo win engagem graduate study in oominunishy

eations at the University of California Los Angeles branch

Offering You 3 Savings Plans

Home Financing

WAREHAM CO-OPERATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mabull

Telephone 295-2400 Banll SerVice YlIIIIIII

I

Ask Court Bar Use of Church Propertyfor Public SchoQ~middot WHITE ~S (MC) - A the cl883rooms ~ut Church

group of some 25 citizens repre- npokesman reporte~ that in line sented by the American Jewish with New York archdiocesan Congress has asked the New York State Supreme Court here to restrain the board of Ramapo School District 2 Rockland County from holding public school classes in property leased from religious bodies

The school board faced with severe-overcrowding planned to lease eight rooms from St Josephs Catholic Church and five from lem~e Beth El in Spring Valley The action was approved by 8tateEducation Commissioner Jame$ EAllen Jr

A ComllllJJlt served 0ill the rlChool board by the AJC charged the acti~n o~ld ~otateChurchshyState separation guaranteed by the First Amendment to the Constitution as well as other provisions of the state constitushytion

It is believed to be the first wch challenge made regarding

the use of religiO18 facilities for public school use

lhe st Josephproperty conshysists of an eightclasSroom school building adjacent to but sepashyrated from the chureh It is Ill good condition but will not be used by the p8rish thismiddot year because it has bUilt a new bUildshying for expanding its acbool to 141 classes

All religioUs ~bols had Ileen removed from the oder building in preparation for its use as a public school

The district school board had offered a fair market rent for

PAV~A deg Missionary Record Continued from Page Thirteen

A nurse from Chicago baa taken Lucillellpla~on the aposshytolic team and ber purpose in returning is to help her successhy80r work into the project smoothly It takes so long to get into 11 she Aid so II dont WJmt Il~r to spendtbree

years j~ g~tting organized~

Benedictine Marks 80th Anniversary

ST JOSEPHmiddot (NC)-The oldshyest Benedictine nun in Minneshysota-and one of the oldest m the world~marked the 80th anshyniversary of her entrance into the order ma Mass for all Beneshydictine jubil~tians held at St Benedicts convent here

Sister Sophia Zimmer was 1~ years old Dec 2 1965 She Wall

born in a log cabin about 1 block away from the convent An open house for her relatives and friends was held at the conv~nt

Receives Students cAsTELGANDOLFO (NC)shyPoPe Paul vI received in audishyence at his Summer home here students frOm 34 nations includshying many non-Catholics who are taking Summer courses in the ItaUaa language aDd culture sponsored by the Rome branch of the Catholic University fII IWaD

policy the properly would be made available for public school use at a token dollar-a-year rental

cmOS Cmpetes C~~ege ~rr(l))g~m

WASHINGTON (NC)-A class of 97 under-privileged high school students was graduated on completion of an eight-week Summer college orientation proshy

gram at Georgetown University The exercises i attended by faculty and parents Qf the stushydents involved students who had completed their Sophomore year in District of Colwnbia high schools They were chosen for the special course because teachers and counselors believed they have the ~billty to do colshylege work alihoug~ their presshyent high school records indicate little likelihood of college acshyceptance Ninoty-fiveOf the 97 students were Negroes md the ratio of males to females was aboutmiddot tbree-to-two ~

The pro~~~~Ch began in 1965 is financed by the NaUonal science Fowidationmiddot the District of Columbia public school sysshy

tem and Georgetown In addition to academic work

the students were given cltgtUrsetl in reading improvement and counseling gUidance Athletie and cultural events underwrit shyten by the program were also bKluded in their schedules

nearly 42 years Bishop Gerow churches degespeciallY Negro said Of late I have feltmiddotthat X houses of worshIp which middotWere have not the stamina to caJTY I bombedmiddot and burned

on as I have done in the past Whena p~ttern of destn1c~ion This load should be borne by 1 develops as It has m our state youngerman then it sincumbent upon all ntereston Yoiit

Cathollc lnereaSe m~n ~ ~ood ~i~ througho~t MiSSISSIPPI to Jom hands m Savings

The ~venth bishop of~edio- helpingthe affectedmiddot churches 0 Invested In cesemiddotwhlch was founded ID 1~37 and in showing clearly our con- and encompasses 111 of Missls- demnation at all acts of violencemiddot CATHOLIC CHURCH sippi Bishop Gerow h8ll s~ lawlessness and destruction the Catholic population IJOw from 31264 to 75000 in his 41 years of office The number of priests in the diocese grew from 63 to 220 and churches md misshysions from 108 to 243

The last few years of llacial violence perhaps were the most troub1d for Bishop Gerows long ad inistration middotHemiddot met the challenge with courage

In the face of many-sided opshyposition Bishop Gerow in 1964 directed the first grades of Cathshyolicmiddot schools in the state to be racially integrated The next

Missionaries Move Seminar to Ohio

DAYTON (NC) -The White Fathers a missionary society which bas served in Africa for nearly a century is llloving its U S seminary to Dayton

St Josephs Seminary which had been in operation at Onshydliota N Y near Saranac Lake will re-open under the same

name in four residences near the campus of the University of

Dayton The buildings have been rented from the university

Eventually the White Fathers plan to build their own seminary

middotfacilities somewhere in ~e area according to Fatber Paul lo1e1le WF~

THE ANCHOR- middot19 Thurs Aug 25 1966

KC Melll1il~er~~ip

At AJ~Tome e~~gh MIAMI BEACH (NC)-In his

report at the 84th annual meetshying of the Supreme Council of the Knights of Columbus Sushypreme Knight John W McDevitt made these points

Membership on June 30 1966 stood at an all-time high of 1183896 The orders insurance covershyage passed the $15 billion mark during the year

The orders assets reached III

neW plateau of $28122840028 at the end of the fiscal year

The society i~ continuing its support of the campaign to st~m p(gtrnography

Revise Ceremonial Progress is being made onthe

re_Vision of the orders cerempnshyial to give it a total family middotclishymate and make it consistent with moder day philosophy of social justice and religious pracshytice

The K of C have undertaken distribution of copies of the 1~ew Testament to Catholic gradllates

COURAGE PERSONIFIED John St Marie of B~YQ of the Naval Offilaquoer CandfClatE port Minn CQnfined to a wheelchair since a 1953 pOlio ~chool in Newport R I an(J ill

~dying the question of proshyattack has received a scholarship to the University of viding a similar servilte ~orMinnesota law school atter successfully maintaining an Ashy Catholic graduatell of the Qffi shyminus average in undergraduate work at the College of cers Candidate School of ihe St Thomas St Paul Minn irQ Photo Canadian Navy

It saluted Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York on biI

Welcomes Successor Naming of Apostolic Administrato

Pleases Bishop Gerow 81 JACKSON (NC)-Mississippll1 year he followed with a direeshy

courageous 81-year-old Bihop tive that Catholic schools be deshyOliver Gerow welcomed his suc- segregated completely ceSSor Bishop Joseph B Bruni- Helps Restore Churches ni 55 as spiritual head of the Despite reported threats ofmiddot Natchez-Jacklon diocese as one violence fro m segregationist who is active vigorous and has ranks the aged prelate was good sound judgment among leaders of an interfaith

X am very happy in being groupmiddot which formed the Comshyrelieved of the heavy responSl- mittee of middotConcernmiddot soHcited middotbillty that I have borne for money labor and materIals for

middotthe bishop stated in a letterred AND in every Catholic church in the INSTITUTIONAL BONDSstate

His appeal for $300000 to re-middot I Umiddot f $500 M store more than 30 d~stroyed n nits 0 or ore and damaged churches brought Keenan amp CImiddotarey bie contributions to the Committee 9f Concern from various sections Minneapolis Minnesota of the country

0

M~ntle Plumbing amp ~ating Co Inc~

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET Fall River OS 57497

for detailed information write to

CHARLES A~ MURPHY Registered Representative

145 Pond $treet Winchester Mass

PA 9-2696 And

Name bullbullbull ~ Address A

City _

50 years in the priesthood payshying tribute to him not only beshycause of his dignity as a pi-iest and cardinal but also because he 1S a great and wholesome mail

Relic Stolen NEW YORK (NC)-A reputed

relic of the cross on which Chtist died has been stolen from the Church of the Most Holy Reshydeemer here It was removed from a side altar tabernacle

where it had been placed shortshyly after the churchs establishshy

ment by the Redemptoriad Fathers some 125 years ago

~

GULF HILL DAIRY so DARTMOUTH MASS

RO THE ANCHO~-Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

1

RELIGIOUS SUPERIORS INSTITUTE ON STONEHILTJ CAMPUS SMS Guadalcanal Solomon Islands Standing Sr Florita DP King Sr Mary LUk~ St about to enter the hall for her lecture Center Some ston Mass Sr Mary of Bathany SP Holyoke Sr Mary de Sales F$SJ r the sisters who attended Sister Lukes talk were Sr Josepha SC Conshy Holyoke Right Mrs Mary Virginia Yosgandes h-ouse mother wavesgood ent Station NJ Sr Mary Kenneth Amityville NY Sr Mary (fheresa bye tothe departing nuns I

Brooklyn Church Hopes Nuns Move Into Cent~r of Lij~e Criticizes Irish lribunal Lacks By Dorothy Eastman -Social Security

When in the third year of Vatican II the momentous decision was made toinvitewO- dmiddot LIMERICK (NC) - FatherJ men observers to audit a Council forthe first ~ime to represent all J~remiah Newman professor ofuris ICtlon the Sister chosen BROOKLYN (NC)-Msgr the nuns in America was Sister Mary Luke Tobin Mother General of the Sisters of Lor- sociology at Irelands Maynooth

IlAarion J Reinhardt pre- etto When shewasasked recently while visiting the Fall River Diocese what impressed College criticizedprivate agenshyJ~L h t b t th C 1 cies and the national governshyIdlng Judge of the Trlblillal er mos a ou e oune) h t b t h h d k ment for their failure to increaseshe said with a wry smile We aVe 0 e rna ure enoug er own or er was wor mg(1)f the Diocese of Brooklyn h to live in insecurity toward these ends She told of all subsidies to families Iltas announced that the bill of The fact that we were t ere Will these changes be easy experiment soine of her Sisters After insisting that it would $Omplaint of 15 former teachers at all I The Sister is too much of a have been engllged in for the be best for private agencies and of St Johns Un~versity had to At a Stonehill College institute realist to give that impression past twu years in Pueblo Colo- local governments to administer be dismissed because of lack of Sister Luke spoke of her many Its going to be fraught with rado Although most of the 1100 social security Father Newman jurisdiction on the part of the other impressions of the Council difficulties she warns but Sisters of Lorettv are teachers said that since they seemed unshy

ecclesiastical court _ where she and seven other Sis- what isnt this small group of Sisters in willing or unable to do this the The Brooklyn ecclesiastical tels were auditresses for the last There are more than a few Pueblo 1s doing no t~aching-in job had to be done by the natshy

$Ourt which operates under two years of Vatican II Over Sisters who are troubled and schools anyway They simply jonal government ~llnon law said it is pmited in 450 Mothers Superior from 55 sometimes shocked these days live among the poor as good He said that according to jurisdiction to only spiritual different Orders were gathered by many of the changes hi their neighbors he 1pin jg wherever Catholic soCial teaching there ltuestions at the Easton campus for the communities The Mother Gen- they cllD leading discussion was no limit to the amount of Charge Contralaquot Breach five day Institute directed by eral would warn them that its groups counselling etc government aid that is permis-

The 5000 word document Rev William FHogan CSC pointless for them to say Thill Asked to comment on the re- sibie and desirable if governshypointed out that the decree of Sister Luke was one of a group is not the community I entered cent experiment in Milwaukee mEmt aid was the Qnly practical Giisrriissalis without prejudice to of noteliltspeakers who talked When it comes to that she says where30 School Sisters of St (sbl~tion to poverty problems lbhe merits of the case to the superiors on the subject we all might say This is not the Francis left their convents for

If the Metropolitan Tribunal of the I Sister in the modern Church Iwas baptized into or three weekstO work in secular If the archdiocese of New York world this is not the world I was b()rn jobs - oneSister wa3 assigned

T b 1 f the Sacred into Change is a fact of life S t~ the rI una 0 Adapting a line from Charles as a newspaper reporer- IS er Roman Rota reversesthe decree Dickens to describe this contro she points out~ and we can~t keep Luke predicted a great deal the casewiil be returned to the versial post Council age Sister things as they are or say Stop more~ of this kind of liniited Tribunal of the Diocese of the World-I want to get off f i t th I w ld ]Brooklyn for adjudications upon t~ees sa~~iSTi~iSt~eth~o~r Role of Superiors ~~~re ~o di~~a~~c~i~t n~~ Ms merits it was stated times She paintedavivid ver- The role the Superiors will she said

The petition of complaint bal picture of the world that lies play in the formation of what Since her own Order founded filed by Father Peter OReilly ahead for Sisters She said it has been called The New Nun in 1812 is quite new all religious

s~f Chicago on behalf of himself would certainly be a challenging Lwuakeouattlintheed fs~roeh~ ~~s~~~t~ orders go and is the liirst comshylind the other ousted teachers one and that conventlife inthe munity founded in America charged he university which is future is certain to undergo She urged them to create a cli- without European ties the Sisshyeonducted by theVincentian many radical changes mate where Sisters can liveters of Loretto weal habits more Fathers with breach of contract community life at its best She -modern than most But itsstill

The Superior~ were told that entreated them to keep thls cli-The dispute has been marked bY d bl d ff t the dress of 1812 not 1966 so it d k t f an m Ispensa e gUl e me ec - mate free from legallsm andlitudent unrest an pIC e mg 0 th hmiddotmiddot th will soon be changed As soon I mg ese c anges IS e map survelmiddotllance Ie schoo s campuses f th f t th t th C 1 as the all-mlll Congregation

or e u ure a e ounCl A community should be a of Religious in Rome approv~sMoral Issue Fatners drew up for the Church place where there- is safety for She called the CouncII Decrees the Sisters new design that is About 30 teachers were fired fl t d f t f dff

Rost December in a dispute over the documentS ofhighest au- cop IC an sa e y or J er- Tliey have submitted one de~ign rlty We should all have ~nes apd s~fety to cultiv~te that the fathers turnEd downadministration-faculty relation- tho d t h d Sh f I the mInd of Vatlcan II and then lverSI y s ~ sal e ee s lihey thought it was too modshyships and other issues They t I th t th h ld be

b b f we c~n move Into actlon she s rongy a ere ~u r -ern Sister Luke says UWhat anwere joined y anum er 0 I t I g I fe ther teachers In a strike that told her healers - 1Jloe ~o~a IY In re 1 J~)Us 1 incredible thing for US to ask shy --uAfterall were not Trap- that we choose our own clothes has continued since January Whi~h Way psts

l she adds with a laughThe court found that tpe How will the Sisters know in Warning that the time has S t Lk tl - b

uteceniontractual controversy was not whicli direction they should come for a re-evaluation of the _ IS ~rth y e~mt~ a spiritual mattelin a canoliical move in the manyarells so(in to true meaning of community she ne oIl e d~rs wo~~ ever ~ llense of the word spiritual change cExperiment Sister told the Superiors that commu- bo~a h a sre~t a f ~gUS aild that there was no allegation Luke advises so often its almost nity doesnt mean conformity or 0 y e oCle ~ o anon ef a violation of an ecclesiastical her motto We really cannot a hotel life either or even a Lawyrs Does thIS mian that law arid that the time was not move into change without ex-lot of happy t9getherness th~ SI~ters may at last have a opportune for a decision of perimentation she says and around the television set voIce 111 the formatIon of canon moral responsibility because the we will be engaged in tremen- A ~ital new aspect of commu- la-at least th~ laws that rUI~ secular courts would first have dous experiments from now on- nity is the idea of what Sister thel~ O~derS SIster Luke deshyto determine whether there was to adapt religious life to the Luke calls sub communities- vout y opes so a breach of contractual duty times in which we live the convents immediate neigh- Its certain that the future for

The church court found as a The revisions that lie ahead borhood the parish the civic the Sisters will be a very differshymatter of law that St Johns for religious orders will bring commumty lay people 111 the ent one than anyone could have 141 NO MAINUniversity as a corporation Sisters into the mainstream of same profession as the Sister- imagined a few short years ago J~ formed under the law of the modern life Sister Luke for for instance other nurses or The Holy Father has urged them iii FALL RIVER State of w York did not have one has no doubts that this is tElachers We have allowed too the~ to move from the margin e the ecclesiastical privilege of where they belong We ought great a gap to exist between our- of life to the center of life~ 873 COUNTY demanding that suits against it to be willing to take the risks) selves and the laity she says Will the move be successful SOMERSETbe heard in an ecclesiasticalmiddot that gO along with this plunge In an interviewmiddot following her Sister Luke says We can only CDOurt into the mainstream she says talk Sister ~uke was asked how know by taking a ChanCE

Feai makes the wolf bigger than be is

Rer Bankings Already D~ne

~jI--~1 W

tt-~~gt_ri~

~j F~ p ~tl Iim F-ilNgt

~l i

ll 11 ~~

W = ~

~gtltl ~

-~ ~~ StIesaves I lot of alunle Mtime forso maily other thinlS ~i She banks by mail at Te ~ OLD R D8 KI h 7reg E AN W at about you

liii FREE mall forms ~1 The mOld Red Bank W

$ Fall River Savings Bankjilll q

Page 12: 08.25.66

12

i

THE ANCHOROlocese of Fall River-Th~s Aug 25 1966

~regW ~reg~tfJ ~lYJ~~ TtUUY1)[fi)l[

Of R~dD~~~csm Amcm)gYW]fr~ lJy Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy

Phillip Abbott Luces The New Left (McKay 119 W 40th New York $450) attempts to explain the resurgence of radicalism among American students Its author is a

of the New Left wIth as many con u e y lcal ideas while at MissisSippi non-joiners on the peripherY day even~ng Aug 27 at S lD ~ at~~ fi~t he~-d ~~ ~h~ ~erBtlt its impact- is smd tohave Mlll~aret s Kinderlctarten aaU i Left whIle at Ohio State and l Prizes WIll be awarded and reshy

tgrt~ritotcOtmiddotmiddotgthmiddotevecJ1 amm~-~W1lS~~tttedpa~~y ~xten~e~ tots about200OQP co h~~hriients served o nl~ge ~u en ~~ i - ltGUiLD OF TillE VIsITATION Iil1961heifioved~to NewmiddotYork It ~S ~l1ena lza1I~~~eme~t i iNO EASTilrAM ~ ~

_and came closer tothe Commti- in the country What alarms Mr ih alb t ofthe Dist Party Llitef he joined Pro- Luce is not its existence or its G1 ~~ h 3que wed gressiveLa]gto~aiI~ edited its size but the fact and the in- W WI e e on nesshymiddot monthly magazine _ cre~sing extent of Comrnamst q1Y~ 4-~ 3~ a~ the PiJ~~ middot -domination~ He gives -instances Springs Restaurant No TflJro Visited _C~~ro-S Cuba R t cl Sunday

in proof thatsuch dO minatioD-i8 A e~e2 rva~o1l os on It was Progressive Labor ug s

which arJanged- for fmeric~ indeed an actuality SACRED HEARTS

young man who won some leader of the New Left and when he broke with Proshygressive Labor which he eharges was organiz~d by -formermembenlof theSoVfeishycontrolled Communist Pa rt y USA and is now aPekingor~eh tated Commu~

D1st group Mx Luce has an ex tremely Impor- middottant subject one which is both timely and crit shyleal Because of his experience he should be especially qualshyified to set it out But the fac~ is that he is at best a mediocre writer He has no notion as to how to

organize a book marshal his materials and to ten his story iIi a consecutive way and with cushymulative force This is a dull alld muddled treatment of a very middotvitai topic~ not heipedat all by crude blundersin English usage Mr Luces personal histog has to be pieced together fro~ bits strewn through the book

middotlike the debris after a hurricane He is an Ohioan bornmiddotin 1935

notice both when he was a the lives of the rising generation Youth is repelled by parental attitudes and aspirations which are seen as mostly narrow negshyative sterile College is a bore

offeriiig no incentive or oppOJshytUnity for youth to direct its enshyergies into crucial causes

A mood of rebellion has devel- ~ped and a chance to express it has been pr~sentedby the civil rights struggie and the unpopu~ lar and beclouded war in Vietshynam Nor does the prospect of fighting authority in each case dim the attraction of these causes quite the reverse Hence the New Left

JLists Organizations Communist organizations of

various stripes have attemptec to sieze control of the New Left and to exploit the mood of reshybellion wi~h an eye to changing it into participation in revolushy

tion

Mr Luce lists and desribes the Communist organizations so engaged The one he knows best of course is Progresectsive Labor But he gives much space to the Du Bois Clubs which are the instruments of the Communist Party Then tlmre are the Trot-middot

the son of middle-class Repub- skyite splinter groups of which lican parents H~ start~d college four strains are identified (inshyat Miami University in Ohio left cluding middotone that is pro-Negro to see the Souih finished ~t Mis and anti-Semitic) I

sissippi State and did graduate Mr Luce estimates that some k t Oh St t 12000 YOung AmericanS are wor a 10 a e _ t 1 t 1 b He became interested in rad- ac ua orgamza Ion~ mem ers

APPOINTEE- Bishop Josshyeph Bmiddot Brunini Auxiliary since 1957 to Bishop Richard O Gerow of Natchez-Jackshyson middotMiss has -been appointshyed by Pope Paul VI to be Apostolic Administrator of the diocese NC Photo

The Parish Parade

ST 1lgtYS TillED mn ov= =shylFALL RJrVER

The parish will sponsor a one day pilgrimage to the Shrine of the North American Martyrs Auriesville N Y on Sunday Oct 2

Interested partles may obtaIn full particulars by contacting Mrs Laurence Coyle Mrs Wilshyliam Blythe or Mrs George Boitano S8 MARGARET-MARY GUILD BUZZARDS BAY

A bl hitmiddot middotU be pu IC W S paL 0 WI d ct d b the guild on Saturshy

studeritsto visit Cuoain 1963 middot and 1961 In defiance of our middotState Department~sban on travel

there Mr Luce made the trip says that most of the students

middot were unaware of Progressive Labors sponsorship and control The money came from Castro And Progressive Labor members planned and staged the wild scenes at a Congressional hea~

ing concerning the middotproject By late 1964 Mr Luce was

enti~ely dissillusioned abo u t Progressive Labor andmiddot by Febshyruary of 1965 h~ pad left it to

bemiddot quickly expelled upon his

Stresses Strength NO FAIRHAVEN He insists that somethin~(must Registration for the kiridershy

be done to prevent Communist garten pre-primary and the capture of the movement He eight eJement~ry grades are beshywants everyone to wake up to ing held daily during the month the existence and the strength of Augus of the New Left Pupils may register with SJ

We must realize he urges how Marie Henriette SSCC at the disenchanted with our society Sacred Hearts Academy 332 the young people ~re what hos- Main Street Fairhaven any 8poundshytility they feel what a gulf ternoon from 1-5 RegistratioDfl yawns between them and their are also being accepted by Rev elders and hcgtw impervious th~YAlexis Wyggers SSCC at the are to ideas and language which ReCtory 382 Main street Fairshyi

figure in their eldErs attempts haven to communicate with them The Association of St Anne

No one he maintains is S~-Will receive corporate CoinmUshyI~ departure and sayagE(l~ Yim~~~~ Jiously trying to reach the hiorton Sunday at the 8 ocloek middot He left because he says Pro gressive Labor is a middotMaoist Comshymunist tool because itmiddotadlrQcates imd take steps to implelrtent armed insurrection because- no personal freedam is allowed to members an4 lill- deQisionsmiddot are made by a few dictatorial leadshy~ril 1ecausemembersareJnshyvolved in programs of Whose

eonsequences totge country and to themselvestIey have no idea lt~

lFe~ls lF~tts~rated Mr fL~ced6es- notmiddot contend

middot that the New Leis Goromunistshy

young rebel to understand him Mass to speak to him intelligibly and effectively Co~unJ~t errorsmiddot J~edB~ MeU1lMe~tmiddot propaganda hypocnsy mUst be SCHWYZ (NC) - Catholicrelentlessly exposed in a way movie and television experts which the young people will met here iil ~fwitieriand for imcomprehend international exchange of ~He is strong_ for a Freedom riiques iiI the useof Tv anellAeademy- which would provipe films in religious educationmiddotmiddot expert practical education conshy - cerning CommunislJlmiddotAnd he stressestheneed of a placefor

ltloltiinated -Hescent~B it -as8 phe- PITTSB~1RGH(Nt) - The bull I bull ~ bull bull bull bull bull

honidon whlc~ came ~bout Pittsburgh Catholi( Interracial Commercialmiddot 15 Industrid spontaneously an eX~IJ1Pre of- Council has endorsed home rule Institutionalyouth in rebellion - for the District of Columbia asshy

Youth he holds~ hils amiddotpoundeeling sertingthattooibng have many painting ~nd~ D_~~o~qtig of -frustrationmiddot with American of the-importanLdecisionaffectshy Fall River OSborne 2-1I9H$ociety its tone and its values ing (the District of CohJmbia) -yoiith~es~rtt~rhaving rio say inb~erlmadtd)ycongrpoundpoundssiriehftoin ~ 74v~hllia rnson Str~e~

the making of decisions affecting hundreds of miles away

~~Gr~ayK BJ Most Rev FUUOlll J Sheeillp Dll)

If my neighbor is stronger than 1 I fear him if he lsweaker than I I despise bim Such is the modem judgement of the psyshychiatrist Dr Jean de Rougemont Earlier the Psalmist speaks ~ the arrogance of those who have much and the despisal of those who are proud How can the rich avoid feeling superior to the poor How can the poor avoid being humiliated The answer is that vices but can the) give up cigarettes for a week to help the poor the strong must see their weakness and the rich must see~eifto poverty How realJly strong are the strong Theymay avoid great Are thfiY suc~ masters of themselves tbatthey can turn down the third cocktail (or give up the first) and use the money instea4 to ~uy sulfone ~or a i~~r~ liqw r~ch_ ar~the rich Let them look inside themselves IIi whatvirtue are they rich Rich in cb~ty Rich i~ char~ti Ri~)n f~th

Onc~t~~ ~i~rhty see th~mseiv~ asnothiDi a~d therl~h see the~selv~ as i~poverislledth~ they wui lov~ ihe we~~ as their brothersilDd the peor IllS their

fellow beggars for thetrrace of God ifmiddot the strong middotlove middotmiddotthemselves despite all theirweaknes5~ then why not lovltil weaknesses in others u the rich love themselves despitG middottheir inner nakedshyness then why nCllt love a lesser ]lJOVshy

erty in others That i~ why Our Lord told us to love ourneighbor as ourseU ~y not more than self Because iii ]I

love myself-knowing myself as ]I do knowing how utterb weak ]I am2-then I have the measure of how J[ am to pour out love to others

We live in a world divided between the rich and the poor We live in that kinol of a church-pOor parishes and rich parishes Even bishops an~ priestsmiddot speak of a parish being good when they mean it is economicaily rich Somehow or other we have ~

get qut of this slavish standard of affluence which is so opposed to the lross of Christ To that end we make the folloWing proposal that you or your middotparishclub school or office undertake the sponsorshjp of one of the poor areas of the world which has been investigated by the Apostolic delegate Write to us and we will send you middotthe name of this diocese its location the number of priests catechists and faithful it has Thus you will be sure that you have a middotneedy (Ibject for sacrifice and service and n9t one based on a haphazard -appeal middotfroin an uninvestigated source The Church will not alloW you to sponsor this diocese for more than one year becausemiddot thtlre are so many poor parishes in the world Look into your weakness and you will love the weakness of o~heJ8 Look into your poyeny stricken soul and you willserVe poverty stricken bodies Write to -mpGod Love You

~~~ middot~middotGOD~middotLOVE YCllJmiddot tomiddot~SMLgtO~middot ~$5 middotto A~RCtor $sO~ For your1nissionUorkIeanthelp eve~one andmiddotyou ~o tltosem most meed bullbull tchJMBfcn $20 to Anon lor $1000 middotsentmiddotWithlteommnbull ~ 11

bullbull bull ~l

The GOD LOVE YOU~ medal lovely cameo medal of the Madonna of tIle worldiS one you would be proud to give ormiddotde shy

lighted tci reC~iVEt DesIgned bi the world-renowned jeweler Harry winSton aildbltessed by Bishlgtp Sheen the GOD LOVE YOU medal is available inmiddotcl~icF~oreritinegold firiishor pure sterlingsilver aod may be obtained by sending your request and corresPondirtg offering to The Socieb for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth AvenueNew York NY 10061 $2 Sinall sterling silver $3 small

11gtk goid fiiled $5 large sterling silver $10 large 10k gold filled

Cut out this colullnn pln your sacrifice to It and mali It to Most RevbullFultom J Sheen National Director of The Society for the Propagation of thl~ Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or to your Dioclesan Director Rt Rev Msgr Raymond Jr Considine 363 North ll1ain Street Falll River Massachusetts

bull j 7 Perry IQur fI~~fng

~v~-t~e OilsMake Taunt~B1l~ Mass - Worm FriendsmiddotVA 2-2282

------------------ ~

genuinely democratic radicalism ON CAPE CODlbONNlEllyin o~r Iociety _

]OHoo ~~~(Kl~Ymiddotmiddot amp SON (~ofP~n~T~UnCG Rigt - flJ1 ml n

crepound ormiddotentireiyCommuist- 9llaquoIIlaquo ~$ lf1J Ilililte ~fYl U ~ I~raquo8L[)~NG MAmiddoth~linAL$middotmiddotmiddot~~~V~C~ 6

S~~ri~gj 1$100 4~~YARMUlrH ROA~)

middottYA~MBSmiddot AMPLE PARKING

iIIIIOCIIJIjIWUllJmllIllDOCImIWlDIllmIlXlWll(lJfi

- -

THE ANCHOR-Jesuit Educators Members of PAVLA Maintain Missionary Thurs Aug 25 1966 13

Ponder Students Record of Fall River Diocese Area G~~s SocoaCynical ~ttitQJJde

LOS ANGELES (NC) shy lLong outstanding for the missionary work of its priests Sisters and Brothers the ~elvD~e ~elrllfrer A top Jesuit educator dispenshy Fa~ River Diocese is fast becoming noted for its outstanding Papal Volunteers for Latin CLEVELAND (NC) - OUX sed advice here on how to eombat the attitude of some high schoolers who consider the world and the religion of their middotparents as phony

Father Edward J Sponga 8J of Baltimore in the keynote adshydress at the 1966 Jesuit Educashytional Association Workshop on Christian Formation at Loyola University here called for a dialogue with everyone conshycerned to emphasize the good crying to be released

Speaking to delegates from 52 Jesuit high schools in the nation Father Sponga chairman of the board of the Jesuit Educational Association declared

Menace to Freedom If the young men of our

schools consider the world and the religion of their parents as phony and a menace to their freedom then we must be ruthshyless in seeing how and why this is and in entering into dialogue with everyone who is willing to do so in order that we may be able to release the g09d that is crying to be released

During the 12 days of research and discussion 125 school adshyministrators and teachers evalushyated the effect that religion courses academic curriculum spiritual exercises and personal guidance have had on the charshyacters of the 35000 teenagers in U S Jesuit high schools

The delegates particularly were concerned about the loss of religious faith in the adolesshycent who is becoming increasshyingly sophisticated and critical

Middle Class Values Father Joseph H Fichter SJ

Stillman professor of sociology at Harvard Universitys divinity school criticized Jesuit high schools for not challenging the middle class values of many of their students for not paying sufficient att~rition to the social sciencesmiddot and for not drawing more of their students irom among the poor

Dr Alexander A Schneiders graduate professor of psychology at Boston College stressed the commitment of Faith that must be made within the scopemiddot of inshytellectual independence He arshygued against compelling students to make annual retreats or assist at religious exercises

Other delegates suggested esshytablishing pilot programs in 1l)ner-city high schools with nationwide cooperation and the sending of Jesuit teachers to work in community schools outshyllide the regular Jesuit system

Ho~es for Negroes Goal of Campaign

WORCESTER (NC) A camshypaign to secure better housing for Negroes in the Greater Worcester Area is growing

In a letter to some 1200 pershyS0l1S who last Aprii signed an

open letter newspaper adshyvertisement regarding fair hous ins John J Concordia Duman rights committee chairman of the Diocesan Council of Catholic M~~ ~sked sig~atories of the

open -letter to volunteer to ~adopt members of a Negro family am actively assist them inmiddotproC1Jri~g decent housing to titheir ~ne~ds

In 8 statement by an intershy fa(thmiddoteommittee on housing middotwfii~IlJs all out-growth of a

siniilar committee formed last year by the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women a call was made for construction of housshying for middotmiddotpoor and lower middle d~ss f ami ie It ixlcludins

Ne8J~s

bull bull r~ ~

America These young men and women doing Christs work in some of the worlds needshy Lady of Futima parish hat3 opened a social service centeliiest areas are a credit to the parishes and toowns from which they come Letest PAVLA here in the midst of the Houghassignments in the Diocese area scene of Clevelands recent

are those of Lucille Lebeau rioting of St Annes parish New The center housed in an 18-gt Bedford and Anthony Gomes room former apartment buildo St John of God parish Somershy ing was dedicated by Archo set bishop Paul J Hallinan of~ At-gt

Actually Lucille isnt a new lanta while he was visiting iii PAVLA hand She was the first Cleveland~bis native diocese Diocesan enlistee in the organishy The center will be staffed by zation going to Brazil as a four Sisters of Charity of St nurse-social worker in August Augustine who along with lay1963 She returned from her volunteers have been working three year assignment in July in the area since Aprilmiddot1965 but volunteered to serve an The center will middotprovide C9uri extra year in Brazil She will re seling nursing medical supplie tum there in November and pre-natal care -

Anthony veteran of a middotyears The building which standt work in Florida with the fedshy next to the parish rectory waserai governments VISTA proshy purchased bymiddot the parish seveR gram will teach English in a years ago when it was aba~ Mexican minor seminary He has doned as an apartment buildingalready completed a PAVLA

Early last year Father Alberitraining course at Catholic Unishy Albert Koklowsky MSSSTversity in Washington D C and pastor of Our Lady of Fatimawill leave in September for launched a campaign through aMexico City and an intensive column in the Catholic Universefour and a half month course in Bulletin Cleveland diocesanSpanish language and culture newspaper to explain Houghsbefore beginning his assignment poverty to metropolitan resiltshyin the mountain town of Tacomshydentsbaro in the state of Michoacan

Housing was a major themePioneer Work Resulting donations from unishy

Lucille bubbles over with enshy verse Bulletin readers and 11thusiasm for PAVLA and its acshy matching gift from Coadjutorcomplishments She has just reshy middotBishop Clarence Issenmann of turned from a trip to the Washshy Cleveland enabled Father Kokshyington training course attended lowsky to renovate the buildingby Tony Gomes where incishydentally she met him for the first time She talked to new Work for Needy enlistees individually and in LIMA (NC) - Sixty me~bers groups seeking to picture for af the St Rose CYO hert gavethem the new life theyd be enshy volunteer aid to projects for thetering needy this Summer Most as~

Their enthusiasm was a boostshy slsted in a federally financed er shot for meshe said educati~nal program for cultu~

This week the New Bedford rally deprived students from nurse is inmiddot the Chicago area PAVLA ENLISTEES Revmiddot James w Clark Diocesan ~nderglirtenmiddot to sixij1 grad~visting PAVLA headquarters Directormiddot of Papal Volunteenlmiddot for Latin America with Othershelp1 a~ amiddot day camn f~there and friends she made ill retarded cbildren andmiddot Qne asAnthony Gltgtmes bound for teaching assignment in Mexico~ Brazil including the doctor with Ns~ed at a eerebral palsy c~mpwhom she worked when me and Lucille Lebeau who has already spent three years m first went to the Latin American Brazil as nurse-social worker will return in Novemberfor eountry He is now in practice additional year in Waukegan lll FAIRHAVEN

When I first went to Brazil urgy eommunitY needs and was to leave in each parish IIshe 8a14 I worked for a little LUMBERhealth needs team similar to their own toover a year at a hospital in Salshy cOMPANY carry on as far as possible thevador Bahia My job was mlinly Most of the help that an area

training Brazilian aides and received came from the people work in liturgy catecheticsmiddot and community and health needssetting up hospital routines themselves t h r 0 ugh their Complete line

After the year was over Brazil shy awakened sense of community We would return to the comshyian doctors and medical students said -ucille Actual government munities where we had given Building Materials took over the hospital routines or material aid was hampered by this course as often as possible were runing smoothly and I political economic and social said Lucille anu each time we 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVEN felt that I could go on to public complications of many kinds eould set them growing spiritushyhealth work in areas where there The team played it by ear ally WYman 3-2611 was no nursing care at all avail- in deciding how to approach a Turn to Page Nineteen able particular parish Lucille and

Lucille joined an apostolic the nun on the team who was shy ~

team organized by Bishop Eushy also a nurse tried to work genio de Araujo Sales Apostolic through community midwives Administrator of Salvador Toshy who were sadly in need of techshy JEREMIAH COHOLAN gether with a priest a nun two nical instruction The infant Brazilian lay apostles and what mortality rate in most areas was would bt the equivalent af an very high said Lucille due iD PLUMING amp HEATING I American social worker she large part to umbilical tetanus visited areas of the Diocese preshy caused by unsanitary delivery viously all but unreached by the techniques

Church Another technique was organ- I Aim of the team she explainshy ization of one-week parish Wy 3 0911 699 B II II A

ed wail to change dormant parshy courses centered around the idea man - e VI emiddotmiddot ven~ ishes into Christian communishy of Christian cominunity Lucille Nwamp~fQrd ties Seventeen parishes were said middotshe would start the course I visited in the course of a year by trying to explain the concept lImiddottI-IIIlII_middot tI-II--tl- __ __ __ _-IIllIIIiImiddotllIlI_-IIllII~ -~~ ~--middot- ~ and a half rmging from mem- of Christians as people of God - - shy

berships of 20000 souls to 75000 then would set up discussion ~ItIIIIHtHIIIIIDIIIIUIIIIHlIIIIIIIiIllIIlHKHHIIItIIIIUIIIIIIIUllllliillllllllllIJllilllllllllllllilllllllll~ The 75OOO-member parish said Ioupsmiddot en suchmiddot subjects asmiddot~ -_sect_Lucille had only one priestmiddot 10 What ismiddota person-Person to ~ middotY 5 hmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot meet its needs person relationships~ and Dif- sect E we ayemiddot ~

Plan 01 AetiOll ferences between ordinary eom- ~ == The apostolic teamsaid Lushy munities andthe parish sect LARGE LIVEmiddot ~

eille would first survey condishy This would lead to a discussion sect ~ ~=_=_ tions and decide what most of the function of Christians and sect needed doing then plan an edushy what iii Christian community sect shycational program Three or fo~rmiddot should be lIke Theil leaders ~ while they la5~ - ~ natural leaders in each parish were ready to ask the parishion ~ sect= were chosen and arrangements ers if any were ready to coin- ~ were made to get them to an mit themselves as parish team sect Macleans SemiddotQmiddot F d ~ Archdiocesan training center for members to a stronger expres- ~ 00 S == a one month leadership training sian of their Christian fellow- sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN Tel 997-9358 sect eourse wverins lIlatechetics lit ooip Go~ of the lipQBtolie tea iulHIHlIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIJlIIIUillIIJlmIllUiJiillJillnililunJililillliiihIUllllIIlIilill(IIUJIIIJ1I1llIJllliinillllllltuE

- ~ - -~_middotmiddotij_Uimiddotmiddot ~ _

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 An Exce1lent Lcte Summer Activity J VI SIT-middot

Louisiari ~copyfrish A~~ampmpli~~~sect r~bull ~T[T uiH~Dfro[j1) fr ~rtilfrreg~[(frDIri)middot middot~~rrfr~~~Q~t~~~~~~~JJ~~tt$

MADISONVILLE (NC)--+wo cently used for ~~gt~es~was wears ago in this quiet jural torn down Its blue I green~and ~ J~lf ~ town the single square block white stained grass riow frames

ltContaining Catholic ch u r c h the huge rear wIndow ~ ~t buildings symbolized the old era Anselms church - - [f~[LL lRlt OV~~middot ~now it stands for the new This Spring St Catherines

Two years ago two churches also came down Gone too are stood 200 feet apart on this he cOl-vents and bullone school More than 280000 people havle cilrElody been aboard iUO ~he past ys[ioblock--St~ Catherine wh ere The other school building was

whites worshipped and St retained for parish meetings and Francis Xavier where Negroes the now-integrated Confratershy

worshipped The rectory with fiity of Christian Doctrine its one priest to serve both par- classes ishes s too d between theC rhe 100 or so school children

centhtirches moremiddot as a symbol of - arenow transported to elemEmshythe psychological gap thac asan tilt-y and high schools in nearby

actual separation covirigton arid Mandeville middot A fence stood between the two CCD instructions have been

eonventS on the block~riefor givengtySfsters qfChristian the Negro nuns who taughtCharityandtheirstudEints from

Negro children in the ~e~ro ~~njpirClncy at FolsoM La and IIchool the other for the wfitte byseminariaris fromarby St IllUns who taught white children i-Jolieph seminarY Butmiddot tpeseiii the whHe school diities are being taken over by

Now there is one church onemiddot tlie parishs integrated CCD orshyrectory and one small classroom ganizatiorinow being trained

building -- and one parish St The pastor Father John J Anselm DenDulk is prouder of the

Although wee k day Masses smooth transition than he is of were said in only onemiddot of the the physical change shytwo old churches Masses and Participation in worship has ether services on Sundays and increased since the new church major feast days were said in w~ built he says and he has

middot both Midnight Masses on Christ- the best commentators in the mas were celebrated concurrent- whl)le world

Iv in the two churches AIthougb there are only 260 But the buildings weremiddot badly families in the parish the new

Qn need of repair So in 1964 the ~church is already more than half lttId frame church of St Francis paid for and the parish topped

middot Xavier whose parish records go its quota in the archdiocesan back to 1863 and which was re- education expansion drive

bull ~ I bull

Bishop Pmiddoterry Says New Orleans Has Healthy Racial Climate

DENVER (NC) - Auxiliary still has more influence thaa Bishop Harold R Perry SyD any other Negro in the civil of New Odeans first AmeJican rights movement Catholic Negro bishop in this He (Bishop Perry) has been

lt1lentury said here a hea~thy very favorably received in New racial climate will exist wher- Orleans eve~ the Negro has a chan~ to Some Cannot WaU voice his grievances He said there will undoubtedshy

Bisnop Perry dted New 9r- ly be some civil rights groups lleans as an example sayipg the who disapprove lt)f non-violence racial climate there is healthy and occasional demonstrationS

because of an interracial council by those who cannot wait appointed by Louisiana~ov Of course I am a Negro and

John J McKeithen to help splve we have been waiting a long rmcial problems time If you take the long view I There are no demonstra~ions complete equality cant come too and riots and very little picket- quickly he added~

lng he said The cotiJlc~1 i-e- He said he has been received lieves tensions and if the Negro very well even enthusiastically has a forum to talk over his con- in New Orleans Picketing outshyeerns he will not demonstrate side the church where he was

Schools Integrated ~onsecrated he s3id Was DOt typical of the general feeling in

The 50-year-old prelate said New Orleans be is proud New Orleans has in- As an evidence of his popushytegrated all Its schools Its a larity he said he spoke at ninemiddot large percentage not just token graduations in June and has ofshyhe added ficiated at Confirmation in 24

He said Catholics are doing parishes their part to advance equality of opportunity in his citymiddot 1 think [EceQJl1illeIJilD~~ CCrrnDDOdegthere has been Ii united effort tl)Ir If

by all faiths and we would like ~~ ~DcopyQJIJilampIbgtD~~~DIJil to keep it that way he de- CRANSTON (NC) I hdared - n a s ow The New Orleans bishop also of the ecumenical spirit lea4ers ~ommented on ~ wide range of of major religious faiths in this

area took part in a combined eivil rights issues saying

The new militancy shown by bull religious and groundbreaking Visit the BClI~~ie$Mp anldllode alIeplica of the Old iFal~middot River Bill1e~ middottmiddotsom~ civi~ rights groups is a service on the site of the proshy

posed Church of the Annunciashypassing phase tion Greek Orth()dox lours start every 30 minutes

The majority of Negroes are Archbishop lakovo primate lJympathetic to the non-violent of the Greek Orthodox Church Opeill aU year round - 9 AM to Sunsetphilosophy of the Rev Dr Mar- of North and South America of tin Luther King and Dr King ficiated at the open air hierar- For Group Arrangements Call 678-1100 chal Divine Liturgy service at-

Serra Meeting tended by more than 500 pershy l)OOOO()ooOOC)ooOOClOOC)ooOOC)OO~IOOl sons

THIS MESSAGE Sp()NSORED IV lHE FOllOWING INDIVIDUALSATLANTIC CITY (NC) - A Participants in the groundshyeonference for members of Ser- breaking ceremony included AND BUSINESS CONCERNS IN GREATER FALL RIVERlIa Clubs in the New York-New Catholic Bishop Russell J MoshyJersey - eastern Pennsyivania Vinney of Igtrovidence Archshy ANN DALE PRODUCTS INC MACKIENZIE amp WINSLOW INC area will be held here Sept 23 deacon William L Kite represhy II~DY ELECTRIC SUPPLY COMASON FURNITURE SHOWROOMS tKi 25 Msgr William Noe Field senting the Rt Rev John Seville CASCADE DRUG CO GERALD E McNALLY CONTRACTOItiff Seton Hall University South Higgins Episcopal Bishop of GLOBE MANUFACTURING CO SOBILC)FF BROTHERS Orange NJ will give the key- Rhode Island Dr Wayne ~is

~~TGHINSON OIL COa~te address Sept 24 apoundter a executive director ofmiddot the Rhode STERUllIG BEVERAGES INC

~A Mc~HIRR ~9MPANY TEXTIU WORKERS UNION Of AMERICAeOncelebrated Mass at which the 1s~and Council of Churches ~nd ~rE~~ATIQNALV4DIES GARMENT 1 bull AlL~tO - principal concelebrant will be Rabbi Jerome Smiddot Gurland Gf

WORKERS UNION (EUOW CAI COMPANY Bishop George W Ahr of Tren~ ~telligtl~ Sinai 1epresentingthe ton Bhode Island Board of Rabbiamp bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull0 MssSelbullbull

~ ~ ~ - bull bull bull bull I ~ j

- ~

_-- -

0

WomenB~ Job Corps Members middotAid Youngsters Improve Reading

OMAHA (NC)-Omaha Wom- chesne Mother Moody found a ens Job Corps members joined benefactor to supply ihe a11shywith five graduates of Duchesne importlnt incentive program College and Academy of the Thanks to a generous racetrack

Sacred Heart here to upgrade bettor Who won the daily double the reading level of local public there was enough money for school youngsters candy bar prizes and two picnics

The progra~ ca]]edProject An indication or- the success of Upstart was first conceIved by the program was found in the Mother Helen Condon dean of reaction of the students A reshythe Nebraska co]]eg~ Mother cent visitor asked one of the Rosemary Moody aSsIstant pro- young boys Why are you here fessor o~ ~sYChology volunteer~ Did someone make you come to adminIster and execute themiddot program

The original plans were to take a group of seventh graders from Horace Mann Junior High School and tutor them in develshyopmental reading and study skills It soon became apparent that some rather basic instrucshytion was required some of the ehildren were still reading at the second grade level

Duchesnes elementary school was offered for use by Mother Helen Sheahan superior An Omaha public school official suggested that the Omaha Wom- ens Job Corps be contacted to see if they could furnish high school graduates as tutors Robshyert Bathke Job Corps education director soon put five young ladies at Mother Moodys disshyposal

Five recent Duchesne gradushyates volunteered to train the tutors for two weeks before the program actually began The Duchesne alumnae eventualiy elected to stay on for the entire program

Mother Moodymiddot was so imshypressed with the potential of the Job Corps enro]]ees that she exshytended their sessions through the rest of the summer and made college preparatory work avail shyable to them

Student Reaction Perha~s one of the more unshy

usual aspects of the entire Upshystart program was its lack of financing The only real subsidy (about $500) was from the OMaha Public School system the bulk of which went to the Omah~ Transit Company for bus service

The equipment used in the classrooms was borrowed from the public schools the Omaha Womens Job Corps and Du-

Plan to Supplement History Books

SAN FRANCISCO (NC) shyA supplementary text showing the contributions of minority groups in United States history will be added to history and social science books already in use in archdiocesan schools here

The supplement containing some 150 pages will deal chroshynologica]]y with the contribu- tions of Jews Negroes Orientais and various nationalities from southern Europe

It is being prepared by a speshycial studly committee which illl evaluating current textbooks found need for more thorough material on the part minority

groups have played in the OOUDshytry1s history

Leave Providence For Mission Work

PROVIDENCE (NC) - Four Capuchin priest and two layshymen left New York by plane for mission work in the Santa Rosa de Copan diocese Honduras

Father Ad ria n Holzmeister OFM Cap provincial of tile Capuchins St Mary province with headquarters here said the six will work among some 50000 persons in Mlree parishes in the state of Ocotepeque He said

other mjssionersmiddotas they become ayailabie wiD be sent to aid Bishop Jose Canama CbampvezCli tile diocese

He looked up and said Im here because I want to learn to read and I like it Two girls who missed the morning bus to Duchesne gave another exain-ple of determination to learn Jhey undertook a two-hour five mile walk rather than miss a day of class

L R oy etreats Contlnu~d from Page Six

laymens convention-an effort to provide some figure of speech some image to suggest to those in the Church and to those out-

side what is the inner nature of the Church

Alluding to Scriptures refershyences to the Church in terms of sheep and shepherds the former Hub Auxiliary Bishop asked How many people in Boston have ever seen a sheep Sheep and shepherds say little to youngstersmiddot in housing projects or even in the suburbs

The Bishop who is epiScopal advisor for the NCLRC officiashyted at the lighting of an eightshyfoot candle which symbolized the

conference theme-uThe Light of Chr~st The candle burned throughout the convention

Speakers stressed the retreat program is geared to demOJishystrate to the world that the way of Christ can become more meaningiful to men of our time

Bishop Ernest J Primeau of Manchester reminded delegates of recent profound changes withshyin the Church

If the lay retreat movement is to remain vital and relevant

he said it cannot be static It must be in harmony with the times at all times

Honest Call1Se

Our retreat houses could 00-middot eome so to speak the equipment and training centers for the apostolates of the laity he adshydect

Bishop Primeau urged laymei to learn from modern science particularly in the field of hushyman psychology He said there is an opportunity as well to learn from other organizations both secular and religious He added The youth of today are un-

selfish and in large numbers they are seeking for an honest cause to which they can dedicate themshyselves as witness their devotion to the Peace Corps and the civil rights movement

Modernize AncEtenlt Puerto Rico CIl1llLmlrch

SAN JUAN (NC) =- A lPJt8shyyear-old church one of the most popularmiddot in this capital city~ ~

going modern Archbishop Luis Aponte of

San Juan has inaugurated middotal campaign for funds for restorashytion of St Anns a public orashytory now badly illl need of Jeshypairs

1ft addition to restoration the ehurch also Will be equipped with air conditioning The eburch is the archdiocesan ceDltgt ~r for the Confraternity Gi Christian Doctrine and perpetual adoration of the Blessed Sacrashyment Built ill 184B the cburch weplaced an edifice which dated )Iaek iG tile lWi century

PROFESSION ANJ)) RECEPTION Four postulants beshycame canonical novices and two prof~ssed their vows as Sisters of St Joseph at ceremonies at the Blessed Sacrashyment Church Fall River Left column top to bottom Sr Gerard Marie (first vows) Sr Anne Therese Sr Rita Josshyeph Bishop Connolly who received the sisters Right colshyumn Sr Anne Denise Sr St Paul and Sr Alfred Marie (renewed temporary vow-s)

Specialmiddot Education Priests Visi~ PaJ~ents Homes to ExplOJon

SignificOJlI1lce off Baptismal Ritual

Thurs Aug 25 1966

Governor Balks

ST JEAN (NC)-Sunday bapshytisms are prece~ed by Saturday nights special educational proshygrams in a number of Catholic homes here in Quebec

The program to prepare the whole family for baptism through a home visit was deshyvised three years ago by a group of pries~s working togeth~r as a pastoral team

central idea of the program ~s that it is good for the priest to be with his people at imporshytant times in their lives~ Atmiddot these times people are dispOSed to receive the message of Christ

as it applies to their circumshystances the developers of the plan reported

The visiting priest explains the lOOremonies of the next day and the symbolic meaning of various parts of the baptismal ritual

Pilgrims Wctmlk TORONTO (NC) -The 10th

annual walking pilgrimage to the Canadian Martyrs shrine at Midland Ont will begin here Wednesday Organized by the Guild of St John de la Lande the pilgrimage will cover the 100 miles to the shrine in five days a~riving there Sunday Sept 4

LEMIEUX PLUMBING amp HEATING INC

fof Oomestic l~ andmiddot Industrial ~ Sales and Service

Oil Burners WY 5-1631

2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE NEW BEDFORD

Relatives neighbors or the prospective gorlparents may be presentbut themiddot home visit usually involves just the parents and their children

The ide is to make the preshybaptism vsit an oppodunity for dialogue between the priest and the parents rather than a conshyference

Ten parishes in the St Jean diocese have adopted the praeshytice along with l few Montreal parishes Father Marcil Brillon secretary of the St Jean litur- gical commission said he exshypects the practice to spread

FALSE TEETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass Many wearers of false teeth suJIer

embarrassment Qecause their platesdrop Blip or wobble at Just the wrong time Dont live In fear of thts happening to you Just sprinkle a little FASTEErH the non-acid powder on your plates Holds false teeth more firmly so they feel more comfortable Checks denture breath Dentures that fit are essential to health See your dentist regularlyGet FASTEETH at all drug counters

At Proposals MONTPELIER (NC) - Vershy

monts Gov Philip Hoff said he bas extreme reservations conshycerning abortion and sterilizashytion proposals contained in a reshyport of an adivsory committee on the mental retardation situshyation in the middotstate

The report called for legal sanctioning of induced abortion in cases where there appears to be a high risk of mental retarshydation of an unborn child

Thereport also contained a suggestion concerning steriliza shytion of the mentally retarded

Apart from the recommenda~ tions on legalized abortion and sterilization of the mentally reshytarded I must S4ly it was II good report Gov Hoff said He said lie will study the report with utmost care before taking any action 0

Expresses Thanks To Holy Father

VATICAN CITY (NC) -The vice prime minister of Vietnam has paid a visit to Pope Paul VI to thank him for his peace efshyforts and generous help to reshylieve the suffering of the Vietshynamese people General Nguyen Huu Co vice prime minister and secretary of state for national defense of Vietnam visited privately withshythe Pope for 30 minutes Accord- ing to a Vatican Press Office bulletin

The vice prime minister in the name of South Vietnam exshypressed profound gratitude for the valid support always given by the head of the Catholic Church and of the Holy See in the cause of peace and for the generous assistance sent by the Holy Father to relieve the sufshyfering of those persons torshymented by war The distinguishshyed visitor then continued tomiddot deshyclare that the intentions of South Vietnam are directed only toward an affirmation of the liberty of its own nation and Wgt arriving at a just peace in honor and concord

Complete

BANKING SERVICE

for Bristol County

Bristol County Trust Company

TAUNTON MASS

THE ~ANK ON TAUNTON GREEN

Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Bristol Community College Offers Evening Classes

64 Durfee St Fall River Credit classes begin September 19 1966

Register Now Mondays thrrough Thursdays 200-500 PM Courses for college credit or self improvement are offered ill

The arts languages and literature Behavioral and social sciences accounting business

administration and secretarial scieRCe Mathematics science engineering and electro-mechanical technology

Advisors Availabie During ~egistration Hours

16 THE AI~ ~-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

C~nsiders Instability Causes In Latin American lamds

From Social R-evolution in the New Latin Ameriea Edited by John J Considine MM

There are many causes of instability in Latin America Some have said in the past that it is an inheritance frQm

Spain They feel that the years of Spanishauthoritarianism rendered the colonies incapable of integrating themselves into a more balanced social system Because they had there exists the problem of low

denSity of population with a lackpreviously lacked indepenshyof internal communication In-dent creole authority the many cases there is even a lanshy

colonies were unprepared to acshy guage barrier eept a more democratic authorshy The problem of an underdeshyity In his book veloped economy has also beenBetween Freeshy a factor in forming Latin Anlershy clom and Fear ican social structureGerman Arcinshy On the social level the eleshyiegas draws a ments I have mentioned favorcomparison beshy an internal lack of class strucshytween the Enshy ture that involves a juxtaposishyglish and Spanshy tion rather than a social organi shyish governments zation and integration Democshyin the Americas racy on the other hand presupshyIn ihe north the poses a large scale integrationcolonists came in of the people in the politicalshysearch of freeshy economic-social life of thedom IIi the end nationthe founding of the Nodh The masses of -illiterates inAmerican colonies was only the Latin America who do not parshyobvious culmination of a process ticipate in these areas have noalready begun It was the reafshy iilterest in government thoughfirmation of customs already inshy their interest and loyalty maygrained in the social milieu It be enlisted by the demagoguewas an evolution not a real revshyolution for these settlers were Formation or Dictatorships accustomed to autonomy The A dictatorship takes form

authority pf their governors was when one or more pressure more democratic since they groups unchallenged seizes the worked closely with the popular power of governmentassemblies From the beginshy In order to better understand ning the keenest concern of the the types of dictatorship found North American colonist was for in Latin America let us elCamshyfreedom of worship and his hosshy ine the different forms of revoshytility to the Church of England lution and the various ways in was evident which the pressure groups

On the contrary Latin Amershy bring their influence to bearIca was part of an empire The Kalmal1 Silvert distinguishesSpaniards came to dominate and these types in his book Reaction evangelize The viceroy represhy and Revolution in Latin Amershysented the king who was an abshy ica which is written in -Englishsolute monarch The role of Silvert shows the relationshipshyassembly in Latin America was between dictatorships and the secondary arid represented exshy extreme indivdualism found in tremely liIIlited power these countries

Independence in the Latin The first type of revolution American nations entailed a real named is what Silvert calls the revolution since from the beginshy simple brracks revolt Most of ning they were forced tb look for the outbreaks especially in the new political and social forms past century have been of this

Religiousliberty did not elCshy kind The barracks revolt occurs ist in the Latin American coloshy typically in a big class society nies since all were obliged to It is carried out by the amlY

membership in the Cathoiic sompoundtimes in its own name and Church sometimes in behalf of a chosen

Unassimilated Groups leader This type of revolution - rarely calses widesprelld publicThis comparison will help in

disturbance since it representsunderstanding the Latin Amershymerely a switch in governmentican problem though it will not from one general to anotherfully explain -it We must acshy

knowledge that the political The second type the peasant phenomeinon has a direct COIshy revolt is generally of little sigshyrelatio~1 with demographic probshy nificance and limited in effect lems such as the existence of to a locality though the Mexican large unassitnilated groups as revolution at the beginning of well as masses of mestizos un this century would perhaps fall derdeveloped and deprived who in this category can scarcely be said to partici shy Third the regional revolt pate in twentieth century chili shy commcn in the early days of zation Although these groups Latin American independence form a part of the nation they Here _the caudillo strove to put are not integrated either socially down provincial revolts and to eulturally or politically centralize power in an authorishy

Despite the over-all demoshy tarian I e g i () n a I government g~aphic explosion in some areas Typical of the caudillos who led

regional revolts was Rosas of Argentina

Plans Participation The fourth a more modern type of revolution Silvert callsIn Liturgical Week the complicated barracks revolt

HOUSTON (NC) - The 1966 This is an insurrection that inshyLiturgical Week here fOI the -volves civilian as well as mili shyfirst time in its 25-year history tary groups with widespread will have a full scale program military action for those interested in the The issues are ideological and Eastern Church relate to political parties as well

As part of the Liturgical Week as _ other interest groups The program the Divine Liturgy Cuban revolution in its beginshy(Mass) of St John Chrysostom nings might be considered -an will be celebrated entirely in example Although this is the English and Communion will be most prevalent type ainong modshydjstributed under both species ernday revolutions excetions Chief celebrant of the Liturgy are the revolts which overthrew will be Archbishop Paul Achkar Peron in Argentina Perez-JimeshyGreek Catholic ~-chbishop of nez in Venezuela and -Rojas Lattaquia in Syua Pinilla in Colombia

SISTER AMBROSE

Says SOo Africa Needs Americans

WASHINGTON (NC)-Yanshykee come over a statement which would do much to boost the morale of Americans in sevshyeral parts of the world could well summarize what an Irish missionary nun to South Africa

-has been saying during a visit here _

The wonderful hospitality of theAmerican people has imshypressed Sister Ambrose Harty Gf the Sisters of the Holy Family She lamens the fact that opporshytunities to receive Americans in a like manner have been few and far between during her 20 years in South Africa

Youve got such a lot to give she said here in an ~ntershyview during which she expressed a strong desire to see greatly inshycreased people-to-people relashytio~s between the country where she serves and the United States

Sister Ambrose was particushylarly interested in the Peace Corps ann reported that its purshyposes and work are hardly known by the people of Soutli Africa I haVent heard it disshycussed at all she said (The Peace Corps has not been invited into the country) (

With words of praise for the missionary work being done iii the South African Republic by Oblate arid Paulist missionaries from the United States she also expressed regret at the general paucity of missioners from this country There particularly is an almost total lack of nuns she said Only 71 Catholic missionshyaries from the United States inshycluding 16 nuns are serving ilm South Africa

Married Priests AMSTERDAM (NC)-A

Dutch public opinion poli h8lll shown that 11 per cent of the Netherlands p e 0 pIe woulci rather have III married Catholi4l clergy than a celibate clergy The poll including members ai all and no denominations

-showed that 68 per cent of the Catholics queried preferred III married clergy

~~

(DEBROSS OIL ( ~ co ( ~ Heating Oils

~ and BMIIJUrs ~

~ 365 NORYIoli IFROIlir SUEampll ( rJ NEW IBIEDIFOR

~ WYmafi 2middot5534 (

I~~~

Parishes Share DETROIT (NC) - Twentyshy

nine urban parishes here have decided to help one another meet the rising cost of education

At the elementary level parshyepts will pay $50 per family $75 per family for non-Catholic parishioners and $75 per student

Danish Catholic COPENHAGEN (NC) -Thereshy

are 11321 Catholics in the Danish capitalaccording to a report issued by the Copenhagen statistical office They consti shytute the second largest religious entity there next to the Luthershyans members of the State Church The total number of Catholics in Denmark is approxshyimately 26000 Total population is 35 lllillion

Education Costs for Catholics outside the parish

At the high school level the tuition cost is $H)O per student in or out of the parish With the exception of textbooks this amount eliminates aU extra fee charged up to now

Father Norman P Thomas director of the Urban Parisll Apostolate said the greatest efshyfect of the joint effort will be experienced by the pastor who sends parish youngsters to a higll school operated by any of the 2 participating parishes

In this instance the students parishes will be expected to pay the difference between the tui shytion charged and the actual cost per student The latter fee laM been set by the parochial school office at over $200 per year

ETHIOPIA- THE NEW AFRICA

- HOLY FATlftRB MIBBIIDN AID TO THI DRIENTAL OHURCH

- BROTHER What happens In Ethiopia when an American MICHAEL Christian Brother (he could be your son brother

REYNOLDS nephew) Is told to upgrade Catholic schools He FROM borrows a Jeep (or a mule) visits the schools

PROVIDENCE RI one by one writes home for pencils and better REPORTS textbooks and then beginsbullbull This is the new

fROM Africa Brother Michael Reynolds reports enshyADDIS thusiasticallyfrom Addis Ababa It can be a BABJpeacefuf progressive Christian Africa tom~rmiddot

row Just give us schools give us time and with Gods help the job will De donel bull bullThe schools are for villages like Aressa Aiga Biers Wartll8~

-which have no school The youngsters know that knowledge i~ their only chance theyll go without food to learnbullbullbull What does It cost to build a schoolf Only $2950 says Brother Michael for the villagers snd the children give their laborfreemiddotofmiddotcharge We can train a catemiddot chlst for only $40 bullbullbull In thanksgiving to God for what you know will you do what you can ($100 $75 $50 $25 $15 $10 $5 $2) to give these youngsters a chance The school will be named for your favorite saint and the children will pray for your loved ones daily If you build It all byyourself ($2950) School will open late this year-but better late than never-If you Vlrit~ to us right now

WHAT Our priests there who receive no othor income IELSE for food and clothing will offer promptly the

FOR Masses you request Well forward your Mass ETHOPIAr Inten~ons through the Holy Fathers officebull

40 young lads studying for the priesthood In Decamere lose their football when It goes Into a nelghbers garden A large field can be bought ~velled and mede safe for sports fer $975

MAKINQ ~~IOOOO will ovfde bull OOfDj)lete parjstlplantA (Ohuroh rectory convent andscbool) In southshy

WiW ImIAdla In memorybullbullbullbull $600 will ttiln a native lrfHt1SOO bull native Sfster Our legal tltI Cl~1HOUO NWt lAir WIUAH AHOCIAnONo

_-------------~shytt coINIILOIIlt IUMIIIND ~ bullbull la IJIIr bull _1OIt~=-=_==-=

PI _UM~gt

Mum ClO1IIponwith your mt__=-~~_ _ ~i offrtnt ~~ erryen 8TAlI-lPCODI_

HI IATHaLl1 RIIiAR 811 WILAbullbull AIaDIATaN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS IRANCUS CARDINAL SPELLMAN President MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretal)f Write OATHOLIO NfIAR IiAST WELFARE Assoo 1)80 MadlsolJ Avenuomiddot New York NY 10017 -felGpilonel 212YUkon 6middot6840

Dormitory Proves Stonehill Permanently Coeducational

Way back in 1951 when the first girl enrolled in Stoneshyhill College no one could have imagined that a girls dormishytory would ever be built onmiddot the campus But the sound of steam shovels and hammers filling the air over the lovely grounds in Easton is proof

and two girls from the seniorthat the long planned for daslr-assisting the housemothergirls dorm will soon be a Mrs Grace Callahan

reality When Stonehill was The experiment worked so founded in 1948 as a mens colshy well in fact that this coming lege the fledgling school had Fall both the freshman and just gotten off to a good start sophomore girls will be housed when the Korean War came this way leaving only the junior along and emptied the classshy and senior girls still renting Yooms as the young men went quarters in private homes chosen into the services by the college as all the nonshy

That was the year that many commuting girls have done in small colleges had to close their the past gates forever But at Stonehill That typical campus situation the Holy Cross order was detershy -the sorority house-is not in mined to hold onto this new the picture at Stonehill-or frashyschool that they had planned for ternity houses either for that so long matter No sororities or fraternishy

What could they do to keep ties are allowed on the campus the college operating until the There is a cl11b however that war was over and the boys came is the girls own - the Crosier back Of course Open their Club Mrs Yosgandes is the gates to girl students clubs faculty advisor and she deshy

Faculty Pleased scribes it as the organization What started out as a temposhy for women studentE who want

rary expediency somehow over to contribute in their own parshythe years has acquired a happy middotticular way as women to their permanancy No one could be college more pleased about this turn of Through their annualmusical events than the Stonehill faculty Crosier Curtain Calls theyitself raise money to acquire manymiddot

Helping out in Jhe ground things that add beauty and breaking ceremony for the new charm to campus life This yeardorm Mrs Virginia Yosgandes they purchased two very lovelythe Dean of Women at the colshy silver tea and coffee services lege saiei I guess everyone will Any official group at the collegereally believe that the girls are is allowed to borrow the sets and here til stay they have already been used in

Mrs Yosgandes says that since many functions she first came to the Stonehill New Signfaculty in 1958 rumors have

Mrs Yosgandes says Thebeen popping up that Stonehill girls will be very pleased whenwill soon return to its original they come back th~~ Fallto seestatus as an all male school The the beautiful new sign theynew dorm she says will be visshybought for the college installedible proof of the permanancy of on Route No 138 women on the beautiful campus

Its very easy to picture theThe $1150000 building deshyvery charming Dean presidingsigned to accommodate 200 girls

graciously at a faculty tea Aand proctors will be three stories parishioner of Immaculate Conshyof red brick Architects W Chesshyception chulCh in Easton she ister arown and Associates and in ~rivate life an enthusiasticwntractors C A Batson and homemaker anc the mother of aCompany are planning to comshy13 year old daughter Christineplete work on the dorm in time Her husband John is assistantfor the opening of classes in principal at Franklin JuniorSeptember 1967 It will be the High first unit of a five dormitory

She speaks with great convicshycomplex planned fo the women on tion about college girls holdingcampus

onto feminine ideals while surshyKitchen ~pace rounded-and at Stonjhill outshyMrs Yosgandes is happy about numbered 3 to 1- by menthe fact that the new dorm will While were encoulaging themhave a kitchenette on each floor to be acdve in thpound communitywhere the girls can cook small and the church and in politicsmeals and entertain guests Shes and encouragint them to deshyhoping that the dorms built after

more velop their abilities to the full shythis me will providtgt even est-we never fail to take intokitchen space for the girls to account the fact that they arepractice the culinary arts women and in this competitiveM a n~ tImes homemaking world theyll have to -fight toskills come to a complete halt maintain their feminine idenshywhen a girl goes to college she tity says Apparently all classroom

work and rio cooking make Jane Coed Actiiti~s

Coed a dull girl in the room When she fi rst came to the where shell be spending a great college she sltys the girls were deal of time after graduationshy mainly interested in strictlythe dtchen feminine extra curricular activishy

Mrs Yosgandes says A great ties-fastion shows teas gids many cCJlleges have been workshy sports Bd this has changed radshying witt this problem and wonshy ically in the last few years and dering what to do about it Beshy now the girls are much more inshycause theyve had no living terested in the coed acti vitiesshyquarters for girls on campus the newspapers the debating Stonehiiil has had to do out of team the drama club Stonehill necessit) what many other colshy is noted a~ one of a small handshyleges have chosen to do recently ful gtf Catholic colleges where The Dean describp~ an experishy girls are middotactive in every part of ment that the collFge tJied last college life Every coure at yeal tha has worked out exshy StonehHj is opel to girls tremely well We still havent had a woman

Experiment Successful president of our student governshyThe college leased a grollp of ing body the Senate Mrs

rooms il an apartmelt building Yosgandes says Now girls in Brockton last Fall where all what are yOIi waiting for the freshman girls who were not commuters-55 of them-lived in housekeeping apartments In Red Groups There were four girls in each BERLIN (NC)-Over 85 per apartment all sharing the reshy (ent of East German children sponsibilities of housekeeping between the ltlges of 6 and 14 are

The girls hat two sets of mCl11)ers of communist youth 1)IoctOS - two aIumni wumen ~nIUps

lrt-OE ANCH0) 17 Thurs Aug 25 1966

PriestCuod Goal Of Top Skater

GREAT FALLS (NC)-A good many folks in this Montana toWlll will attest that teenager J Mishlll Petkevich is a pretty good skate -on or oH the ice

The affable blond youngster 17 topped a field of 136 pershyformers in the three-day Lake Placid N Y international free style competition sanctioned by the U S and Canadian Figure Skating Assoclations The Great Falls lad was the judges unamiddot1ishymous choice for the mens gold medal in the finals

But Petkevich doesnt lose his cool off the ice His classmates and teachers at Great Falls Censhytral 3igh School claim hes liIl

winner in every event He spends more than 40 hours 11 week in skating training but carries the full load of class studies and consistently turns Up on the schools honor roll Hes a member of the National Honor Society

The school supported me ami the way Everyone has beeEl wonderfUl to me the modest youngster saia Hes been -skatshying since he was 2 He credit his achievements to his Catholic Faith the sacrifices of his parshyents and of Arthur Bourke senshyiormiddot professional of the Great Falls Figure Skating Club He said All I did was skatemiddotGROUND-BREAKING The Very Rev John T Corr

I hope some day to become~esc president of Stonehill College turns a shovelful of priest Petkevich said wbeilearth to mark start of construction 0pound a 200-student dormshy a~ked his ambition I hope 14gt itory for women on the Stonehill campus Watching the proshy attend Notre Dame for at leasa celtlures are left to right Mrs Virginia Yosgandes dean af two years and then I h9pe to gf)

to the Catholic University fl4women John C Doody 66 Alumni fund chairman Robert AmericaBatson contractor Harold Bonvie ass~iate of the archishytect

Msgr Canty Continued from Page OneRussian Schools ing studies at S1 Marys High

Taunton Boston- College and S1 Bernards Seminary RochesshyChristian Brother Lauds Students terN Y

nespect for Intellectuols He served as assistant at Our Lady 01 the Isle NantucketCHICAGO (NC)-Students in to foreign languages than Amershy Holy Family Taunton St

schools behind the Iron Curtain icans Most students take a Marys Barrowsville and Stgo at their studies with a passhy seven-year sequence of English Johns Attleboro He was apshysion said Brother Kevin Mark German or French English he pointed to the Chaplains CorPJFSC who toured Russia and added is the most popular lanshy of the United States Navy infour satellite countries with 19 guage and more emphasis is January 1942 and retiredwitbother U S rducatois placeltl on reading and speaking the rank of captain in Decemshy

Brothel Mark who is princishy than on writing it ber 196gt Pope John XXIII pal 9f St Mels high school here Brother Mark said that there elevated him to the rank of attributed much of their motivashy is almost nothing that he would Domestil Prelate with the title tion to the students attitude that lift from the Soviet school sysshy of Right Reverend Monsignor iI What I do does contribute to tem and apply in the U S May 1962 the welfare of the state He admitted however that Bishop Connolly named Monshy

Brother said he felt that stushy they do get results They have a signor Canty pastor of St Paulsdents in this country lack motishy tremendous capacity for conshy Taunt-ln in December 1963 vation because were spoiled centration when they set their Industrial improvements have sights for example their space made it that a young man can program Its not all a matter go into a trade and make very of being chained to a lab table good money BLUE RIBBON

In the Soviet Union he said there seems to be a great reshyspect for intellectuals and the LAlnNDRY student is thought of as a proshy

01 STOPfessional schJlar 273 CE~RAl AVE~UIIG CfflTERTeaching is considered a proshy

fession and remunelated accordshy e Television C FmiddotI ure illgly WY 2-6216o r-cerv

St Mels principal observed on IlA Allen St Newhdfordhis tour that there was little NEW BEDFORD questioning on the part of the students

The chSSloom situation he said is very much teacher ori shyented that is study in depth is 21 DAY PILGRIMAGES TO EUROPE done on the teachers inspiration

rou~ 1-Legion of Mary Pilgrimage leaving Sept 12th with Truth in such areas as history Father Edward A Oi-viera will visit Killarney Dublin Paris

cllld literature is accepted as a Lourdes Rome Madrid Lisbon and Fatima - Tour 2shyforegone conclusion and stushyHoly Cross Fathers Pilgrimage leaving Oct 10th with Frdents just memorize what has

already been discovered ----- lobert E McDonnell will wsit lisbon Fatima 1odrid Rome Lourdes Paris and londonIike F)rc~gn Linutges -cota cost is $82900 - Time PaymentsmiddotIn the area of science howshy arranged ever the situation is difterent

()Ii TOUR tOLDERS CONTACT STEolfEN A MARIIEYhe pont~d out because in scishyence there is an attitude of I n~ust discover Catholic Travel

-Office

The R1~middotmiddotmiddotO p oth-r Mark ~ltk St New Befl- -ass 02748

said ~ ve 11111j Ill)le auention

BURNERS

BUrntlr Service

Famous Reading HARDCQAl

NEW ENGLAND COKE

t8 THE ~NCHOR-Dioceseof fo Rivef-Thurs Aug 25 1966 J~sut I)riest Says Some Public I b M t EmploYE~~S Have Right to Strike

-

Urges uO or ovemen S NEW (NC) -Public however YORK Government hasmiddot h C employees in certain fields have been expanding its cQncern andIn Heml$p ere ooperate the right to strike against the has beenmoving into ar~as of government a priest declared transportation education recre-

By MsgrGooJrge C Higgins (Director Socian Actiolll Dept NCWC)

The relationship between the American labor moveshyment and the Latin American Confed~ration of Christian Trade Unions (CLASC) leaves much to be desired as we

middot thO d th 1- have aready noted severa1 t Imes m IS co umn urmg e

past four or five years The two movements are deeply different things to different peoshy

auspicious of one another and just when they seem to be on the verge of settling or at least -patching up their differshyences they go at it again and recklesslystart hurling insults at one another

To jUdge from What they sayIi b 0 u t on e another publicshy1yen as well as privately on e would t h ink that they were natural-born enshyemies whe~eas in fact they have much in common-much inore than they seem to realizeshyand for obvious reasons ought violent MisS Duncan was an officer of The fourth public member Harshyto be c60p~rating With onean- Moreo~er at least one promi~theSodality a cheerleader for vardlaw school professorVern ether as closely as pOSSible nent spokesman for the AFL- four years a member of the Ten- Countryman half ci-itiCized the This writer has learn~ci the hard WR and muc~ to hiS so~-row that any outSider who 18

fOolish enough totryto mediatek f

~tween them JS as mg or troouble

C f t Gommun same If for example one suggests

as I have done on more than one Occasion that soine of the anti U S propaganda emanating from CLASCsources revealS atremely harmful to the cause of n a i v e misunderstanding of Amerlcan trade unionism and American capitalism andor ari $ver-simplification of Catholic Social teaching he runs the risk 9f being written off as a blind -not tOsay reactionary apologist for so-called Yanqui ~mperial-

iBm If on the other hand oneslig

gests that some of the anti- CLASC propaganda enianating

fro m AFL-CI0 sources is equally naive and unsoPllisti shyeatedhe runs the same Sort of risk in reverse That is to say he is likely to be told--v~ry politely of course -that if he were to take off his Catholic blinkers and look at the record objectively he would quickly come to realize that CLASC is in reality playing t~ecipal rival in Latin America) riages in their mission parishes communist game in Latin Amer- there is a gEirierous mixture of Msgr Milia stated Since the iea superficial appearances to cultural chauvinism and envy Ogdensburg mission was opened the contrary notwithstanding that accompanies the most legit- a modern new church bas been

Both CaD Learn imate misgivings built under its direction in the Be that as it may I still think Even the Latinos middotthemselve~ seaport ofMatararii two mission

~t CLASC has a lot to learn he points out will admit on ac- churches have oeen completed about _ and from American casion that their consumirig fear and a lalge parish church and trade unionism And if that of Yanqui imperialism is often center are currently under conshymakes me a reactionary Yankee irrational But there it is he re- struction in Mollendo ehauvinist so be it minds us and the basic prob-

By the same token however aiso think that the American

labor movement has much to learn about -- and from - the Christian trade union movement in Latin America The first thing it has to learn is that the Am~r-leap philosophy of pure-andshysimple bread-~d-butter union ism which all things considshyered has worked satisfactorily in this country is not necessarily well adapted to the present-day Deeds of Latin America

Meaning of Revolution Another way of saying the

same thing is that American iabor representativesworking on Latin America problemswm have to reconcile themselves to the fact that a social revolu-Uon is called for in Latin American labor federation that doesnt subscribe to a revolushytionary ideology is probably doomed to failure

The word revolution meaos J-

pIe of course To the leaders of CLASC it means a sweeping program of socioeconomic and political reform which goes far beyond the limited goals of bread-and-butter unionism

The leaders of CLASC are convinced that such a revolushytioo is demanded bythe Chrisshytian social ethic to which they subscribe and from which they derive their ideology

Perceptive Critique Some U S Labor repshy

resentatives are skeptical to say the least~bout the allegedly Christian content of CLASCs militant ideology They admit theneed for a peaceful revolushytion in Latin Americn butthey are convinced thatCLASC wants this revolution to be Feehan High School Attleboro alties in a letter tc therimes

lem is how to insure con~ PAVlA V I tlnuing cooperation between 0 untee rs Yanqui and Latino in spite of Complete TlIainirigit

Such cooperation Dr Hawkins WASHINGTON (NC)-Fortyshyconcludes will be impossible unshyless the leaders of the American labor movement positively indi~

cete their acceptance of social revolution in Latin America This will require he says

more than the generous transshyfusions of economic aid the stimulation under United States

labors auspices of leadership training programs for workers

and other cooperative ventures Need Broader View

What is required he insists ltCia a broader view-an ability on the part of the American la bor statemen to adopt policies that will not always accord with OUI own value~ and more speshy

cificall~ the tempering of (their) hosannas to free entershyprUie ___

inter-American labor unity I fully agree in this respect with Dr Carroll Hawkins Associate

Professor of Political Science at Michigan State University who recently published a most pershyceptive critique of American trade union policy in Latin- Catholics in Mollendo Peru the

America (The 0RIT and Amer diocesan missions director reshyican Trade Unions Conflicting ported Perspectives Industrial Rela- The New York priests were tionsand Social Changes in sent to Peru after Pope Paul Latin America University of vi -asked that more priests be Florida Press) pr9vjd~d fOr the people opoundSouth

Basic Problem America Msgr Anthony A Mi-Dr Hawkins admits of course lia said He estimated more than

that in all the Latin American 90 percent of the priests in criticism of United States unioniperu are from other countries in the ORIT (the Latin Ameli can regional unit of the Interna In 1965 the priests from Ogshytional Confederation of Free denburg administered 445 bap-Trade Unions and CLASCs prin tisms and perfoImed 64 mar-

CIOhas publicly charged in ej_ nis Club for two years and a suggested penaltiel fect that CLASCs ideology three yeaT member of the FU- owes more to Marxism than it ture Nurses club Father Carey sl~id the ~ays does to Christianity He finds it when pay and working condi-

An instructor in the Confra- tions for men and women inhard he says to accept the fact ternity of Christian Doctrine that the Christian labor move- civil service were determine4 byproglam in Our Lady of Mt I g I t d d t t

t middot A e IS a Ive It n a minIS ra Ive ment 0f L a In merIca IS non- Carmel Parish Seekonk the fiat have pas ed a d Communist s n we now

In my judgment this kind of criticism of CLASC by spokesshymen fltr the AFL-CIO is ex

three volunteers have completed the Second National Training Session sponsored by the Papal Volunteers for Latin America and received assignments in some ten Latin American coun- tries

Special ceremonies ended the six-week training session at the Catholic University of America where volunteers studied the apostolic work of the Church the laymans role in the aposshytolate and principles of spiritual life as well as the religion ecoshynomics and culture of Latin America

Before leavillg for their asshysignments the volunteers will take intensive four-month lanshy

guage anl culture courses in a Latin American language centerbull

eighth winner of this scholarship plumeoursElves that we share will enter the Childrens Hosshypital School of Nursing Boston in Septembel-

Ogdensburg Priests

SellYe Peru Mission OGDENSBURG (NC) -- Four

Ogdensburg priests currently are ministering to the n~eds of_13OOO

~ere

Father Philip Carey sJ exshyecutive director of the Xavier Institute of Industrial Relations acknowledged t hat certain strikes aJre intolerable But he said that when the governmentacts in a proprietary function it must follow the same rules it prescribes for private enterprise

In a letter to the New York Times Father Carey criticized ~y implication a proposed state -llw that wetulltilincrease the penalties to be imposed on strikshying union of public employees

MlISS LHNDA DUNCAN Th~proposedlaw grew out of recommendations of a five-man

Feehan Alumna task force named by Gov Nel son Rockefeller to study the

Receives Award problem after a 19-day transit strike crippled Newmiddot York City

Miss Linda Duncan daughter in January of Mrs George Duncan and the - NeCeSSBlry for Bargaining late George Duncan 61 Sykes Father Carey one of four Rd Seekonk has been awarded pubiic members of the mayors the eighth annual scholarship of committee that helped settle the the Attleboro Area Nurses strike disagreed with two other Chapter publlc memlgters Vh_o had previshyA 1966 graduate of Bishop ously supported the stiffer pen-

and internal concord a str~ke against itconstitutes mutiny and rebellion (UCLA) Sister Muriel a native

Pgbllsh Gudelnes For Ecumenisn

ALLENTOWN (NC) - The commission of ecumenism of the Allentown diocese here in Pennshysylvania has published a 22-page booklet of ecumenical guidelines to aid priests in guiding the laity The guidelines include general

permission for non-Catholics to serve as witnesses at Catholic weddings for Catholics to serve as witnesses at non-Catholic weddings and for burial of non-Catholics in Catholic ceremonies with a priest or a non-Catholic clergyman cltmducting graveside eeremonies

SHELL DADSON OIL

24-Hollr Oil

GLE COAL amp OIL CO IncI

640 Pleasant Street Tel WY 6-8271 New Bedford

this decision-making with the working p E~ 0 P Ie themselves through the process of collective bargaining

If collective bargaining is to be the rule he said we must agree to grant the right to strike~ Without this right he said there is no union and no coll~ctive balmiddotgaining

Expands Concern-in considering strikes by pu~ lie employees he dedared one muSt distinguishb~tween the state as a sovereign and the g()vernment acting in a proprishyetary function When the state aets as the defender of the peace or the promoter of justice

of Corning Iajoined the Sisters of the Humility of Mary in 1930 In recent years she has been ehairman of professionafarts deshypartment and college registrar

ation and a host of other services formerly performed by privategroups he continued

These activities are ancillary and economic and here the state in acting in a proprishyetry function When it so acts it ought to be subject tl) the same rules of conduct the government prescribes for private entershy

prise Strikes by firefighters and powerhouse uti lit y workers would be wrong however he said because it is difficult to imagine anY benefit they might gain to counterbalance the fear- fut harm such a l strike would impose on the community Buys Banners For Memorial

CHICAGO (NC)-A Chicago advertising executive has bought 44 brightly-colored religious ~anners tat -hung in the Nashy

tlOnal Srme of the Im~aculate ConceptIon during Luci Johnshysons wed(iin~ -

Earle Ludgin a trustee of the University of Chicago said he will donate the banners to the

university~ Rockefeller Memoshyrial Chapel in memory of his late wife

The banners for which Ludgin reportedly paid more than $40000 were originally created for the Vatlcan PavIIIon at the New York World Fair

A group of Washington D C residents bought ttie banners when the fair closed and arshyranged to have them exhibited in the Shrine until they could be sold Lugdin bought themin April but agreed at the request of Shrine officials to leave them in the Shrine until after Lucia wedding

lame College Head

OTTUMWA (NC) Sis t er

Muriel Hogan has been named the third presi4ent of Ottumwa Heights College here in Iowa She succeeds Sister Marie Anshy

ciue Kennedy woo win engagem graduate study in oominunishy

eations at the University of California Los Angeles branch

Offering You 3 Savings Plans

Home Financing

WAREHAM CO-OPERATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mabull

Telephone 295-2400 Banll SerVice YlIIIIIII

I

Ask Court Bar Use of Church Propertyfor Public SchoQ~middot WHITE ~S (MC) - A the cl883rooms ~ut Church

group of some 25 citizens repre- npokesman reporte~ that in line sented by the American Jewish with New York archdiocesan Congress has asked the New York State Supreme Court here to restrain the board of Ramapo School District 2 Rockland County from holding public school classes in property leased from religious bodies

The school board faced with severe-overcrowding planned to lease eight rooms from St Josephs Catholic Church and five from lem~e Beth El in Spring Valley The action was approved by 8tateEducation Commissioner Jame$ EAllen Jr

A ComllllJJlt served 0ill the rlChool board by the AJC charged the acti~n o~ld ~otateChurchshyState separation guaranteed by the First Amendment to the Constitution as well as other provisions of the state constitushytion

It is believed to be the first wch challenge made regarding

the use of religiO18 facilities for public school use

lhe st Josephproperty conshysists of an eightclasSroom school building adjacent to but sepashyrated from the chureh It is Ill good condition but will not be used by the p8rish thismiddot year because it has bUilt a new bUildshying for expanding its acbool to 141 classes

All religioUs ~bols had Ileen removed from the oder building in preparation for its use as a public school

The district school board had offered a fair market rent for

PAV~A deg Missionary Record Continued from Page Thirteen

A nurse from Chicago baa taken Lucillellpla~on the aposshytolic team and ber purpose in returning is to help her successhy80r work into the project smoothly It takes so long to get into 11 she Aid so II dont WJmt Il~r to spendtbree

years j~ g~tting organized~

Benedictine Marks 80th Anniversary

ST JOSEPHmiddot (NC)-The oldshyest Benedictine nun in Minneshysota-and one of the oldest m the world~marked the 80th anshyniversary of her entrance into the order ma Mass for all Beneshydictine jubil~tians held at St Benedicts convent here

Sister Sophia Zimmer was 1~ years old Dec 2 1965 She Wall

born in a log cabin about 1 block away from the convent An open house for her relatives and friends was held at the conv~nt

Receives Students cAsTELGANDOLFO (NC)shyPoPe Paul vI received in audishyence at his Summer home here students frOm 34 nations includshying many non-Catholics who are taking Summer courses in the ItaUaa language aDd culture sponsored by the Rome branch of the Catholic University fII IWaD

policy the properly would be made available for public school use at a token dollar-a-year rental

cmOS Cmpetes C~~ege ~rr(l))g~m

WASHINGTON (NC)-A class of 97 under-privileged high school students was graduated on completion of an eight-week Summer college orientation proshy

gram at Georgetown University The exercises i attended by faculty and parents Qf the stushydents involved students who had completed their Sophomore year in District of Colwnbia high schools They were chosen for the special course because teachers and counselors believed they have the ~billty to do colshylege work alihoug~ their presshyent high school records indicate little likelihood of college acshyceptance Ninoty-fiveOf the 97 students were Negroes md the ratio of males to females was aboutmiddot tbree-to-two ~

The pro~~~~Ch began in 1965 is financed by the NaUonal science Fowidationmiddot the District of Columbia public school sysshy

tem and Georgetown In addition to academic work

the students were given cltgtUrsetl in reading improvement and counseling gUidance Athletie and cultural events underwrit shyten by the program were also bKluded in their schedules

nearly 42 years Bishop Gerow churches degespeciallY Negro said Of late I have feltmiddotthat X houses of worshIp which middotWere have not the stamina to caJTY I bombedmiddot and burned

on as I have done in the past Whena p~ttern of destn1c~ion This load should be borne by 1 develops as It has m our state youngerman then it sincumbent upon all ntereston Yoiit

Cathollc lnereaSe m~n ~ ~ood ~i~ througho~t MiSSISSIPPI to Jom hands m Savings

The ~venth bishop of~edio- helpingthe affectedmiddot churches 0 Invested In cesemiddotwhlch was founded ID 1~37 and in showing clearly our con- and encompasses 111 of Missls- demnation at all acts of violencemiddot CATHOLIC CHURCH sippi Bishop Gerow h8ll s~ lawlessness and destruction the Catholic population IJOw from 31264 to 75000 in his 41 years of office The number of priests in the diocese grew from 63 to 220 and churches md misshysions from 108 to 243

The last few years of llacial violence perhaps were the most troub1d for Bishop Gerows long ad inistration middotHemiddot met the challenge with courage

In the face of many-sided opshyposition Bishop Gerow in 1964 directed the first grades of Cathshyolicmiddot schools in the state to be racially integrated The next

Missionaries Move Seminar to Ohio

DAYTON (NC) -The White Fathers a missionary society which bas served in Africa for nearly a century is llloving its U S seminary to Dayton

St Josephs Seminary which had been in operation at Onshydliota N Y near Saranac Lake will re-open under the same

name in four residences near the campus of the University of

Dayton The buildings have been rented from the university

Eventually the White Fathers plan to build their own seminary

middotfacilities somewhere in ~e area according to Fatber Paul lo1e1le WF~

THE ANCHOR- middot19 Thurs Aug 25 1966

KC Melll1il~er~~ip

At AJ~Tome e~~gh MIAMI BEACH (NC)-In his

report at the 84th annual meetshying of the Supreme Council of the Knights of Columbus Sushypreme Knight John W McDevitt made these points

Membership on June 30 1966 stood at an all-time high of 1183896 The orders insurance covershyage passed the $15 billion mark during the year

The orders assets reached III

neW plateau of $28122840028 at the end of the fiscal year

The society i~ continuing its support of the campaign to st~m p(gtrnography

Revise Ceremonial Progress is being made onthe

re_Vision of the orders cerempnshyial to give it a total family middotclishymate and make it consistent with moder day philosophy of social justice and religious pracshytice

The K of C have undertaken distribution of copies of the 1~ew Testament to Catholic gradllates

COURAGE PERSONIFIED John St Marie of B~YQ of the Naval Offilaquoer CandfClatE port Minn CQnfined to a wheelchair since a 1953 pOlio ~chool in Newport R I an(J ill

~dying the question of proshyattack has received a scholarship to the University of viding a similar servilte ~orMinnesota law school atter successfully maintaining an Ashy Catholic graduatell of the Qffi shyminus average in undergraduate work at the College of cers Candidate School of ihe St Thomas St Paul Minn irQ Photo Canadian Navy

It saluted Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York on biI

Welcomes Successor Naming of Apostolic Administrato

Pleases Bishop Gerow 81 JACKSON (NC)-Mississippll1 year he followed with a direeshy

courageous 81-year-old Bihop tive that Catholic schools be deshyOliver Gerow welcomed his suc- segregated completely ceSSor Bishop Joseph B Bruni- Helps Restore Churches ni 55 as spiritual head of the Despite reported threats ofmiddot Natchez-Jacklon diocese as one violence fro m segregationist who is active vigorous and has ranks the aged prelate was good sound judgment among leaders of an interfaith

X am very happy in being groupmiddot which formed the Comshyrelieved of the heavy responSl- mittee of middotConcernmiddot soHcited middotbillty that I have borne for money labor and materIals for

middotthe bishop stated in a letterred AND in every Catholic church in the INSTITUTIONAL BONDSstate

His appeal for $300000 to re-middot I Umiddot f $500 M store more than 30 d~stroyed n nits 0 or ore and damaged churches brought Keenan amp CImiddotarey bie contributions to the Committee 9f Concern from various sections Minneapolis Minnesota of the country

0

M~ntle Plumbing amp ~ating Co Inc~

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET Fall River OS 57497

for detailed information write to

CHARLES A~ MURPHY Registered Representative

145 Pond $treet Winchester Mass

PA 9-2696 And

Name bullbullbull ~ Address A

City _

50 years in the priesthood payshying tribute to him not only beshycause of his dignity as a pi-iest and cardinal but also because he 1S a great and wholesome mail

Relic Stolen NEW YORK (NC)-A reputed

relic of the cross on which Chtist died has been stolen from the Church of the Most Holy Reshydeemer here It was removed from a side altar tabernacle

where it had been placed shortshyly after the churchs establishshy

ment by the Redemptoriad Fathers some 125 years ago

~

GULF HILL DAIRY so DARTMOUTH MASS

RO THE ANCHO~-Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

1

RELIGIOUS SUPERIORS INSTITUTE ON STONEHILTJ CAMPUS SMS Guadalcanal Solomon Islands Standing Sr Florita DP King Sr Mary LUk~ St about to enter the hall for her lecture Center Some ston Mass Sr Mary of Bathany SP Holyoke Sr Mary de Sales F$SJ r the sisters who attended Sister Lukes talk were Sr Josepha SC Conshy Holyoke Right Mrs Mary Virginia Yosgandes h-ouse mother wavesgood ent Station NJ Sr Mary Kenneth Amityville NY Sr Mary (fheresa bye tothe departing nuns I

Brooklyn Church Hopes Nuns Move Into Cent~r of Lij~e Criticizes Irish lribunal Lacks By Dorothy Eastman -Social Security

When in the third year of Vatican II the momentous decision was made toinvitewO- dmiddot LIMERICK (NC) - FatherJ men observers to audit a Council forthe first ~ime to represent all J~remiah Newman professor ofuris ICtlon the Sister chosen BROOKLYN (NC)-Msgr the nuns in America was Sister Mary Luke Tobin Mother General of the Sisters of Lor- sociology at Irelands Maynooth

IlAarion J Reinhardt pre- etto When shewasasked recently while visiting the Fall River Diocese what impressed College criticizedprivate agenshyJ~L h t b t th C 1 cies and the national governshyIdlng Judge of the Trlblillal er mos a ou e oune) h t b t h h d k ment for their failure to increaseshe said with a wry smile We aVe 0 e rna ure enoug er own or er was wor mg(1)f the Diocese of Brooklyn h to live in insecurity toward these ends She told of all subsidies to families Iltas announced that the bill of The fact that we were t ere Will these changes be easy experiment soine of her Sisters After insisting that it would $Omplaint of 15 former teachers at all I The Sister is too much of a have been engllged in for the be best for private agencies and of St Johns Un~versity had to At a Stonehill College institute realist to give that impression past twu years in Pueblo Colo- local governments to administer be dismissed because of lack of Sister Luke spoke of her many Its going to be fraught with rado Although most of the 1100 social security Father Newman jurisdiction on the part of the other impressions of the Council difficulties she warns but Sisters of Lorettv are teachers said that since they seemed unshy

ecclesiastical court _ where she and seven other Sis- what isnt this small group of Sisters in willing or unable to do this the The Brooklyn ecclesiastical tels were auditresses for the last There are more than a few Pueblo 1s doing no t~aching-in job had to be done by the natshy

$Ourt which operates under two years of Vatican II Over Sisters who are troubled and schools anyway They simply jonal government ~llnon law said it is pmited in 450 Mothers Superior from 55 sometimes shocked these days live among the poor as good He said that according to jurisdiction to only spiritual different Orders were gathered by many of the changes hi their neighbors he 1pin jg wherever Catholic soCial teaching there ltuestions at the Easton campus for the communities The Mother Gen- they cllD leading discussion was no limit to the amount of Charge Contralaquot Breach five day Institute directed by eral would warn them that its groups counselling etc government aid that is permis-

The 5000 word document Rev William FHogan CSC pointless for them to say Thill Asked to comment on the re- sibie and desirable if governshypointed out that the decree of Sister Luke was one of a group is not the community I entered cent experiment in Milwaukee mEmt aid was the Qnly practical Giisrriissalis without prejudice to of noteliltspeakers who talked When it comes to that she says where30 School Sisters of St (sbl~tion to poverty problems lbhe merits of the case to the superiors on the subject we all might say This is not the Francis left their convents for

If the Metropolitan Tribunal of the I Sister in the modern Church Iwas baptized into or three weekstO work in secular If the archdiocese of New York world this is not the world I was b()rn jobs - oneSister wa3 assigned

T b 1 f the Sacred into Change is a fact of life S t~ the rI una 0 Adapting a line from Charles as a newspaper reporer- IS er Roman Rota reversesthe decree Dickens to describe this contro she points out~ and we can~t keep Luke predicted a great deal the casewiil be returned to the versial post Council age Sister things as they are or say Stop more~ of this kind of liniited Tribunal of the Diocese of the World-I want to get off f i t th I w ld ]Brooklyn for adjudications upon t~ees sa~~iSTi~iSt~eth~o~r Role of Superiors ~~~re ~o di~~a~~c~i~t n~~ Ms merits it was stated times She paintedavivid ver- The role the Superiors will she said

The petition of complaint bal picture of the world that lies play in the formation of what Since her own Order founded filed by Father Peter OReilly ahead for Sisters She said it has been called The New Nun in 1812 is quite new all religious

s~f Chicago on behalf of himself would certainly be a challenging Lwuakeouattlintheed fs~roeh~ ~~s~~~t~ orders go and is the liirst comshylind the other ousted teachers one and that conventlife inthe munity founded in America charged he university which is future is certain to undergo She urged them to create a cli- without European ties the Sisshyeonducted by theVincentian many radical changes mate where Sisters can liveters of Loretto weal habits more Fathers with breach of contract community life at its best She -modern than most But itsstill

The Superior~ were told that entreated them to keep thls cli-The dispute has been marked bY d bl d ff t the dress of 1812 not 1966 so it d k t f an m Ispensa e gUl e me ec - mate free from legallsm andlitudent unrest an pIC e mg 0 th hmiddotmiddot th will soon be changed As soon I mg ese c anges IS e map survelmiddotllance Ie schoo s campuses f th f t th t th C 1 as the all-mlll Congregation

or e u ure a e ounCl A community should be a of Religious in Rome approv~sMoral Issue Fatners drew up for the Church place where there- is safety for She called the CouncII Decrees the Sisters new design that is About 30 teachers were fired fl t d f t f dff

Rost December in a dispute over the documentS ofhighest au- cop IC an sa e y or J er- Tliey have submitted one de~ign rlty We should all have ~nes apd s~fety to cultiv~te that the fathers turnEd downadministration-faculty relation- tho d t h d Sh f I the mInd of Vatlcan II and then lverSI y s ~ sal e ee s lihey thought it was too modshyships and other issues They t I th t th h ld be

b b f we c~n move Into actlon she s rongy a ere ~u r -ern Sister Luke says UWhat anwere joined y anum er 0 I t I g I fe ther teachers In a strike that told her healers - 1Jloe ~o~a IY In re 1 J~)Us 1 incredible thing for US to ask shy --uAfterall were not Trap- that we choose our own clothes has continued since January Whi~h Way psts

l she adds with a laughThe court found that tpe How will the Sisters know in Warning that the time has S t Lk tl - b

uteceniontractual controversy was not whicli direction they should come for a re-evaluation of the _ IS ~rth y e~mt~ a spiritual mattelin a canoliical move in the manyarells so(in to true meaning of community she ne oIl e d~rs wo~~ ever ~ llense of the word spiritual change cExperiment Sister told the Superiors that commu- bo~a h a sre~t a f ~gUS aild that there was no allegation Luke advises so often its almost nity doesnt mean conformity or 0 y e oCle ~ o anon ef a violation of an ecclesiastical her motto We really cannot a hotel life either or even a Lawyrs Does thIS mian that law arid that the time was not move into change without ex-lot of happy t9getherness th~ SI~ters may at last have a opportune for a decision of perimentation she says and around the television set voIce 111 the formatIon of canon moral responsibility because the we will be engaged in tremen- A ~ital new aspect of commu- la-at least th~ laws that rUI~ secular courts would first have dous experiments from now on- nity is the idea of what Sister thel~ O~derS SIster Luke deshyto determine whether there was to adapt religious life to the Luke calls sub communities- vout y opes so a breach of contractual duty times in which we live the convents immediate neigh- Its certain that the future for

The church court found as a The revisions that lie ahead borhood the parish the civic the Sisters will be a very differshymatter of law that St Johns for religious orders will bring commumty lay people 111 the ent one than anyone could have 141 NO MAINUniversity as a corporation Sisters into the mainstream of same profession as the Sister- imagined a few short years ago J~ formed under the law of the modern life Sister Luke for for instance other nurses or The Holy Father has urged them iii FALL RIVER State of w York did not have one has no doubts that this is tElachers We have allowed too the~ to move from the margin e the ecclesiastical privilege of where they belong We ought great a gap to exist between our- of life to the center of life~ 873 COUNTY demanding that suits against it to be willing to take the risks) selves and the laity she says Will the move be successful SOMERSETbe heard in an ecclesiasticalmiddot that gO along with this plunge In an interviewmiddot following her Sister Luke says We can only CDOurt into the mainstream she says talk Sister ~uke was asked how know by taking a ChanCE

Feai makes the wolf bigger than be is

Rer Bankings Already D~ne

~jI--~1 W

tt-~~gt_ri~

~j F~ p ~tl Iim F-ilNgt

~l i

ll 11 ~~

W = ~

~gtltl ~

-~ ~~ StIesaves I lot of alunle Mtime forso maily other thinlS ~i She banks by mail at Te ~ OLD R D8 KI h 7reg E AN W at about you

liii FREE mall forms ~1 The mOld Red Bank W

$ Fall River Savings Bankjilll q

Page 13: 08.25.66

- -

THE ANCHOR-Jesuit Educators Members of PAVLA Maintain Missionary Thurs Aug 25 1966 13

Ponder Students Record of Fall River Diocese Area G~~s SocoaCynical ~ttitQJJde

LOS ANGELES (NC) shy lLong outstanding for the missionary work of its priests Sisters and Brothers the ~elvD~e ~elrllfrer A top Jesuit educator dispenshy Fa~ River Diocese is fast becoming noted for its outstanding Papal Volunteers for Latin CLEVELAND (NC) - OUX sed advice here on how to eombat the attitude of some high schoolers who consider the world and the religion of their middotparents as phony

Father Edward J Sponga 8J of Baltimore in the keynote adshydress at the 1966 Jesuit Educashytional Association Workshop on Christian Formation at Loyola University here called for a dialogue with everyone conshycerned to emphasize the good crying to be released

Speaking to delegates from 52 Jesuit high schools in the nation Father Sponga chairman of the board of the Jesuit Educational Association declared

Menace to Freedom If the young men of our

schools consider the world and the religion of their parents as phony and a menace to their freedom then we must be ruthshyless in seeing how and why this is and in entering into dialogue with everyone who is willing to do so in order that we may be able to release the g09d that is crying to be released

During the 12 days of research and discussion 125 school adshyministrators and teachers evalushyated the effect that religion courses academic curriculum spiritual exercises and personal guidance have had on the charshyacters of the 35000 teenagers in U S Jesuit high schools

The delegates particularly were concerned about the loss of religious faith in the adolesshycent who is becoming increasshyingly sophisticated and critical

Middle Class Values Father Joseph H Fichter SJ

Stillman professor of sociology at Harvard Universitys divinity school criticized Jesuit high schools for not challenging the middle class values of many of their students for not paying sufficient att~rition to the social sciencesmiddot and for not drawing more of their students irom among the poor

Dr Alexander A Schneiders graduate professor of psychology at Boston College stressed the commitment of Faith that must be made within the scopemiddot of inshytellectual independence He arshygued against compelling students to make annual retreats or assist at religious exercises

Other delegates suggested esshytablishing pilot programs in 1l)ner-city high schools with nationwide cooperation and the sending of Jesuit teachers to work in community schools outshyllide the regular Jesuit system

Ho~es for Negroes Goal of Campaign

WORCESTER (NC) A camshypaign to secure better housing for Negroes in the Greater Worcester Area is growing

In a letter to some 1200 pershyS0l1S who last Aprii signed an

open letter newspaper adshyvertisement regarding fair hous ins John J Concordia Duman rights committee chairman of the Diocesan Council of Catholic M~~ ~sked sig~atories of the

open -letter to volunteer to ~adopt members of a Negro family am actively assist them inmiddotproC1Jri~g decent housing to titheir ~ne~ds

In 8 statement by an intershy fa(thmiddoteommittee on housing middotwfii~IlJs all out-growth of a

siniilar committee formed last year by the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women a call was made for construction of housshying for middotmiddotpoor and lower middle d~ss f ami ie It ixlcludins

Ne8J~s

bull bull r~ ~

America These young men and women doing Christs work in some of the worlds needshy Lady of Futima parish hat3 opened a social service centeliiest areas are a credit to the parishes and toowns from which they come Letest PAVLA here in the midst of the Houghassignments in the Diocese area scene of Clevelands recent

are those of Lucille Lebeau rioting of St Annes parish New The center housed in an 18-gt Bedford and Anthony Gomes room former apartment buildo St John of God parish Somershy ing was dedicated by Archo set bishop Paul J Hallinan of~ At-gt

Actually Lucille isnt a new lanta while he was visiting iii PAVLA hand She was the first Cleveland~bis native diocese Diocesan enlistee in the organishy The center will be staffed by zation going to Brazil as a four Sisters of Charity of St nurse-social worker in August Augustine who along with lay1963 She returned from her volunteers have been working three year assignment in July in the area since Aprilmiddot1965 but volunteered to serve an The center will middotprovide C9uri extra year in Brazil She will re seling nursing medical supplie tum there in November and pre-natal care -

Anthony veteran of a middotyears The building which standt work in Florida with the fedshy next to the parish rectory waserai governments VISTA proshy purchased bymiddot the parish seveR gram will teach English in a years ago when it was aba~ Mexican minor seminary He has doned as an apartment buildingalready completed a PAVLA

Early last year Father Alberitraining course at Catholic Unishy Albert Koklowsky MSSSTversity in Washington D C and pastor of Our Lady of Fatimawill leave in September for launched a campaign through aMexico City and an intensive column in the Catholic Universefour and a half month course in Bulletin Cleveland diocesanSpanish language and culture newspaper to explain Houghsbefore beginning his assignment poverty to metropolitan resiltshyin the mountain town of Tacomshydentsbaro in the state of Michoacan

Housing was a major themePioneer Work Resulting donations from unishy

Lucille bubbles over with enshy verse Bulletin readers and 11thusiasm for PAVLA and its acshy matching gift from Coadjutorcomplishments She has just reshy middotBishop Clarence Issenmann of turned from a trip to the Washshy Cleveland enabled Father Kokshyington training course attended lowsky to renovate the buildingby Tony Gomes where incishydentally she met him for the first time She talked to new Work for Needy enlistees individually and in LIMA (NC) - Sixty me~bers groups seeking to picture for af the St Rose CYO hert gavethem the new life theyd be enshy volunteer aid to projects for thetering needy this Summer Most as~

Their enthusiasm was a boostshy slsted in a federally financed er shot for meshe said educati~nal program for cultu~

This week the New Bedford rally deprived students from nurse is inmiddot the Chicago area PAVLA ENLISTEES Revmiddot James w Clark Diocesan ~nderglirtenmiddot to sixij1 grad~visting PAVLA headquarters Directormiddot of Papal Volunteenlmiddot for Latin America with Othershelp1 a~ amiddot day camn f~there and friends she made ill retarded cbildren andmiddot Qne asAnthony Gltgtmes bound for teaching assignment in Mexico~ Brazil including the doctor with Ns~ed at a eerebral palsy c~mpwhom she worked when me and Lucille Lebeau who has already spent three years m first went to the Latin American Brazil as nurse-social worker will return in Novemberfor eountry He is now in practice additional year in Waukegan lll FAIRHAVEN

When I first went to Brazil urgy eommunitY needs and was to leave in each parish IIshe 8a14 I worked for a little LUMBERhealth needs team similar to their own toover a year at a hospital in Salshy cOMPANY carry on as far as possible thevador Bahia My job was mlinly Most of the help that an area

training Brazilian aides and received came from the people work in liturgy catecheticsmiddot and community and health needssetting up hospital routines themselves t h r 0 ugh their Complete line

After the year was over Brazil shy awakened sense of community We would return to the comshyian doctors and medical students said -ucille Actual government munities where we had given Building Materials took over the hospital routines or material aid was hampered by this course as often as possible were runing smoothly and I political economic and social said Lucille anu each time we 8 SPRING ST FAIRHAVEN felt that I could go on to public complications of many kinds eould set them growing spiritushyhealth work in areas where there The team played it by ear ally WYman 3-2611 was no nursing care at all avail- in deciding how to approach a Turn to Page Nineteen able particular parish Lucille and

Lucille joined an apostolic the nun on the team who was shy ~

team organized by Bishop Eushy also a nurse tried to work genio de Araujo Sales Apostolic through community midwives Administrator of Salvador Toshy who were sadly in need of techshy JEREMIAH COHOLAN gether with a priest a nun two nical instruction The infant Brazilian lay apostles and what mortality rate in most areas was would bt the equivalent af an very high said Lucille due iD PLUMING amp HEATING I American social worker she large part to umbilical tetanus visited areas of the Diocese preshy caused by unsanitary delivery viously all but unreached by the techniques

Church Another technique was organ- I Aim of the team she explainshy ization of one-week parish Wy 3 0911 699 B II II A

ed wail to change dormant parshy courses centered around the idea man - e VI emiddotmiddot ven~ ishes into Christian communishy of Christian cominunity Lucille Nwamp~fQrd ties Seventeen parishes were said middotshe would start the course I visited in the course of a year by trying to explain the concept lImiddottI-IIIlII_middot tI-II--tl- __ __ __ _-IIllIIIiImiddotllIlI_-IIllII~ -~~ ~--middot- ~ and a half rmging from mem- of Christians as people of God - - shy

berships of 20000 souls to 75000 then would set up discussion ~ItIIIIHtHIIIIIDIIIIUIIIIHlIIIIIIIiIllIIlHKHHIIItIIIIUIIIIIIIUllllliillllllllllIJllilllllllllllllilllllllll~ The 75OOO-member parish said Ioupsmiddot en suchmiddot subjects asmiddot~ -_sect_Lucille had only one priestmiddot 10 What ismiddota person-Person to ~ middotY 5 hmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot meet its needs person relationships~ and Dif- sect E we ayemiddot ~

Plan 01 AetiOll ferences between ordinary eom- ~ == The apostolic teamsaid Lushy munities andthe parish sect LARGE LIVEmiddot ~

eille would first survey condishy This would lead to a discussion sect ~ ~=_=_ tions and decide what most of the function of Christians and sect needed doing then plan an edushy what iii Christian community sect shycational program Three or fo~rmiddot should be lIke Theil leaders ~ while they la5~ - ~ natural leaders in each parish were ready to ask the parishion ~ sect= were chosen and arrangements ers if any were ready to coin- ~ were made to get them to an mit themselves as parish team sect Macleans SemiddotQmiddot F d ~ Archdiocesan training center for members to a stronger expres- ~ 00 S == a one month leadership training sian of their Christian fellow- sect UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN Tel 997-9358 sect eourse wverins lIlatechetics lit ooip Go~ of the lipQBtolie tea iulHIHlIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIJlIIIUillIIJlmIllUiJiillJillnililunJililillliiihIUllllIIlIilill(IIUJIIIJ1I1llIJllliinillllllltuE

- ~ - -~_middotmiddotij_Uimiddotmiddot ~ _

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 An Exce1lent Lcte Summer Activity J VI SIT-middot

Louisiari ~copyfrish A~~ampmpli~~~sect r~bull ~T[T uiH~Dfro[j1) fr ~rtilfrreg~[(frDIri)middot middot~~rrfr~~~Q~t~~~~~~~JJ~~tt$

MADISONVILLE (NC)--+wo cently used for ~~gt~es~was wears ago in this quiet jural torn down Its blue I green~and ~ J~lf ~ town the single square block white stained grass riow frames

ltContaining Catholic ch u r c h the huge rear wIndow ~ ~t buildings symbolized the old era Anselms church - - [f~[LL lRlt OV~~middot ~now it stands for the new This Spring St Catherines

Two years ago two churches also came down Gone too are stood 200 feet apart on this he cOl-vents and bullone school More than 280000 people havle cilrElody been aboard iUO ~he past ys[ioblock--St~ Catherine wh ere The other school building was

whites worshipped and St retained for parish meetings and Francis Xavier where Negroes the now-integrated Confratershy

worshipped The rectory with fiity of Christian Doctrine its one priest to serve both par- classes ishes s too d between theC rhe 100 or so school children

centhtirches moremiddot as a symbol of - arenow transported to elemEmshythe psychological gap thac asan tilt-y and high schools in nearby

actual separation covirigton arid Mandeville middot A fence stood between the two CCD instructions have been

eonventS on the block~riefor givengtySfsters qfChristian the Negro nuns who taughtCharityandtheirstudEints from

Negro children in the ~e~ro ~~njpirClncy at FolsoM La and IIchool the other for the wfitte byseminariaris fromarby St IllUns who taught white children i-Jolieph seminarY Butmiddot tpeseiii the whHe school diities are being taken over by

Now there is one church onemiddot tlie parishs integrated CCD orshyrectory and one small classroom ganizatiorinow being trained

building -- and one parish St The pastor Father John J Anselm DenDulk is prouder of the

Although wee k day Masses smooth transition than he is of were said in only onemiddot of the the physical change shytwo old churches Masses and Participation in worship has ether services on Sundays and increased since the new church major feast days were said in w~ built he says and he has

middot both Midnight Masses on Christ- the best commentators in the mas were celebrated concurrent- whl)le world

Iv in the two churches AIthougb there are only 260 But the buildings weremiddot badly families in the parish the new

Qn need of repair So in 1964 the ~church is already more than half lttId frame church of St Francis paid for and the parish topped

middot Xavier whose parish records go its quota in the archdiocesan back to 1863 and which was re- education expansion drive

bull ~ I bull

Bishop Pmiddoterry Says New Orleans Has Healthy Racial Climate

DENVER (NC) - Auxiliary still has more influence thaa Bishop Harold R Perry SyD any other Negro in the civil of New Odeans first AmeJican rights movement Catholic Negro bishop in this He (Bishop Perry) has been

lt1lentury said here a hea~thy very favorably received in New racial climate will exist wher- Orleans eve~ the Negro has a chan~ to Some Cannot WaU voice his grievances He said there will undoubtedshy

Bisnop Perry dted New 9r- ly be some civil rights groups lleans as an example sayipg the who disapprove lt)f non-violence racial climate there is healthy and occasional demonstrationS

because of an interracial council by those who cannot wait appointed by Louisiana~ov Of course I am a Negro and

John J McKeithen to help splve we have been waiting a long rmcial problems time If you take the long view I There are no demonstra~ions complete equality cant come too and riots and very little picket- quickly he added~

lng he said The cotiJlc~1 i-e- He said he has been received lieves tensions and if the Negro very well even enthusiastically has a forum to talk over his con- in New Orleans Picketing outshyeerns he will not demonstrate side the church where he was

Schools Integrated ~onsecrated he s3id Was DOt typical of the general feeling in

The 50-year-old prelate said New Orleans be is proud New Orleans has in- As an evidence of his popushytegrated all Its schools Its a larity he said he spoke at ninemiddot large percentage not just token graduations in June and has ofshyhe added ficiated at Confirmation in 24

He said Catholics are doing parishes their part to advance equality of opportunity in his citymiddot 1 think [EceQJl1illeIJilD~~ CCrrnDDOdegthere has been Ii united effort tl)Ir If

by all faiths and we would like ~~ ~DcopyQJIJilampIbgtD~~~DIJil to keep it that way he de- CRANSTON (NC) I hdared - n a s ow The New Orleans bishop also of the ecumenical spirit lea4ers ~ommented on ~ wide range of of major religious faiths in this

area took part in a combined eivil rights issues saying

The new militancy shown by bull religious and groundbreaking Visit the BClI~~ie$Mp anldllode alIeplica of the Old iFal~middot River Bill1e~ middottmiddotsom~ civi~ rights groups is a service on the site of the proshy

posed Church of the Annunciashypassing phase tion Greek Orth()dox lours start every 30 minutes

The majority of Negroes are Archbishop lakovo primate lJympathetic to the non-violent of the Greek Orthodox Church Opeill aU year round - 9 AM to Sunsetphilosophy of the Rev Dr Mar- of North and South America of tin Luther King and Dr King ficiated at the open air hierar- For Group Arrangements Call 678-1100 chal Divine Liturgy service at-

Serra Meeting tended by more than 500 pershy l)OOOO()ooOOC)ooOOClOOC)ooOOC)OO~IOOl sons

THIS MESSAGE Sp()NSORED IV lHE FOllOWING INDIVIDUALSATLANTIC CITY (NC) - A Participants in the groundshyeonference for members of Ser- breaking ceremony included AND BUSINESS CONCERNS IN GREATER FALL RIVERlIa Clubs in the New York-New Catholic Bishop Russell J MoshyJersey - eastern Pennsyivania Vinney of Igtrovidence Archshy ANN DALE PRODUCTS INC MACKIENZIE amp WINSLOW INC area will be held here Sept 23 deacon William L Kite represhy II~DY ELECTRIC SUPPLY COMASON FURNITURE SHOWROOMS tKi 25 Msgr William Noe Field senting the Rt Rev John Seville CASCADE DRUG CO GERALD E McNALLY CONTRACTOItiff Seton Hall University South Higgins Episcopal Bishop of GLOBE MANUFACTURING CO SOBILC)FF BROTHERS Orange NJ will give the key- Rhode Island Dr Wayne ~is

~~TGHINSON OIL COa~te address Sept 24 apoundter a executive director ofmiddot the Rhode STERUllIG BEVERAGES INC

~A Mc~HIRR ~9MPANY TEXTIU WORKERS UNION Of AMERICAeOncelebrated Mass at which the 1s~and Council of Churches ~nd ~rE~~ATIQNALV4DIES GARMENT 1 bull AlL~tO - principal concelebrant will be Rabbi Jerome Smiddot Gurland Gf

WORKERS UNION (EUOW CAI COMPANY Bishop George W Ahr of Tren~ ~telligtl~ Sinai 1epresentingthe ton Bhode Island Board of Rabbiamp bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull0 MssSelbullbull

~ ~ ~ - bull bull bull bull I ~ j

- ~

_-- -

0

WomenB~ Job Corps Members middotAid Youngsters Improve Reading

OMAHA (NC)-Omaha Wom- chesne Mother Moody found a ens Job Corps members joined benefactor to supply ihe a11shywith five graduates of Duchesne importlnt incentive program College and Academy of the Thanks to a generous racetrack

Sacred Heart here to upgrade bettor Who won the daily double the reading level of local public there was enough money for school youngsters candy bar prizes and two picnics

The progra~ ca]]edProject An indication or- the success of Upstart was first conceIved by the program was found in the Mother Helen Condon dean of reaction of the students A reshythe Nebraska co]]eg~ Mother cent visitor asked one of the Rosemary Moody aSsIstant pro- young boys Why are you here fessor o~ ~sYChology volunteer~ Did someone make you come to adminIster and execute themiddot program

The original plans were to take a group of seventh graders from Horace Mann Junior High School and tutor them in develshyopmental reading and study skills It soon became apparent that some rather basic instrucshytion was required some of the ehildren were still reading at the second grade level

Duchesnes elementary school was offered for use by Mother Helen Sheahan superior An Omaha public school official suggested that the Omaha Wom- ens Job Corps be contacted to see if they could furnish high school graduates as tutors Robshyert Bathke Job Corps education director soon put five young ladies at Mother Moodys disshyposal

Five recent Duchesne gradushyates volunteered to train the tutors for two weeks before the program actually began The Duchesne alumnae eventualiy elected to stay on for the entire program

Mother Moodymiddot was so imshypressed with the potential of the Job Corps enro]]ees that she exshytended their sessions through the rest of the summer and made college preparatory work avail shyable to them

Student Reaction Perha~s one of the more unshy

usual aspects of the entire Upshystart program was its lack of financing The only real subsidy (about $500) was from the OMaha Public School system the bulk of which went to the Omah~ Transit Company for bus service

The equipment used in the classrooms was borrowed from the public schools the Omaha Womens Job Corps and Du-

Plan to Supplement History Books

SAN FRANCISCO (NC) shyA supplementary text showing the contributions of minority groups in United States history will be added to history and social science books already in use in archdiocesan schools here

The supplement containing some 150 pages will deal chroshynologica]]y with the contribu- tions of Jews Negroes Orientais and various nationalities from southern Europe

It is being prepared by a speshycial studly committee which illl evaluating current textbooks found need for more thorough material on the part minority

groups have played in the OOUDshytry1s history

Leave Providence For Mission Work

PROVIDENCE (NC) - Four Capuchin priest and two layshymen left New York by plane for mission work in the Santa Rosa de Copan diocese Honduras

Father Ad ria n Holzmeister OFM Cap provincial of tile Capuchins St Mary province with headquarters here said the six will work among some 50000 persons in Mlree parishes in the state of Ocotepeque He said

other mjssionersmiddotas they become ayailabie wiD be sent to aid Bishop Jose Canama CbampvezCli tile diocese

He looked up and said Im here because I want to learn to read and I like it Two girls who missed the morning bus to Duchesne gave another exain-ple of determination to learn Jhey undertook a two-hour five mile walk rather than miss a day of class

L R oy etreats Contlnu~d from Page Six

laymens convention-an effort to provide some figure of speech some image to suggest to those in the Church and to those out-

side what is the inner nature of the Church

Alluding to Scriptures refershyences to the Church in terms of sheep and shepherds the former Hub Auxiliary Bishop asked How many people in Boston have ever seen a sheep Sheep and shepherds say little to youngstersmiddot in housing projects or even in the suburbs

The Bishop who is epiScopal advisor for the NCLRC officiashyted at the lighting of an eightshyfoot candle which symbolized the

conference theme-uThe Light of Chr~st The candle burned throughout the convention

Speakers stressed the retreat program is geared to demOJishystrate to the world that the way of Christ can become more meaningiful to men of our time

Bishop Ernest J Primeau of Manchester reminded delegates of recent profound changes withshyin the Church

If the lay retreat movement is to remain vital and relevant

he said it cannot be static It must be in harmony with the times at all times

Honest Call1Se

Our retreat houses could 00-middot eome so to speak the equipment and training centers for the apostolates of the laity he adshydect

Bishop Primeau urged laymei to learn from modern science particularly in the field of hushyman psychology He said there is an opportunity as well to learn from other organizations both secular and religious He added The youth of today are un-

selfish and in large numbers they are seeking for an honest cause to which they can dedicate themshyselves as witness their devotion to the Peace Corps and the civil rights movement

Modernize AncEtenlt Puerto Rico CIl1llLmlrch

SAN JUAN (NC) =- A lPJt8shyyear-old church one of the most popularmiddot in this capital city~ ~

going modern Archbishop Luis Aponte of

San Juan has inaugurated middotal campaign for funds for restorashytion of St Anns a public orashytory now badly illl need of Jeshypairs

1ft addition to restoration the ehurch also Will be equipped with air conditioning The eburch is the archdiocesan ceDltgt ~r for the Confraternity Gi Christian Doctrine and perpetual adoration of the Blessed Sacrashyment Built ill 184B the cburch weplaced an edifice which dated )Iaek iG tile lWi century

PROFESSION ANJ)) RECEPTION Four postulants beshycame canonical novices and two prof~ssed their vows as Sisters of St Joseph at ceremonies at the Blessed Sacrashyment Church Fall River Left column top to bottom Sr Gerard Marie (first vows) Sr Anne Therese Sr Rita Josshyeph Bishop Connolly who received the sisters Right colshyumn Sr Anne Denise Sr St Paul and Sr Alfred Marie (renewed temporary vow-s)

Specialmiddot Education Priests Visi~ PaJ~ents Homes to ExplOJon

SignificOJlI1lce off Baptismal Ritual

Thurs Aug 25 1966

Governor Balks

ST JEAN (NC)-Sunday bapshytisms are prece~ed by Saturday nights special educational proshygrams in a number of Catholic homes here in Quebec

The program to prepare the whole family for baptism through a home visit was deshyvised three years ago by a group of pries~s working togeth~r as a pastoral team

central idea of the program ~s that it is good for the priest to be with his people at imporshytant times in their lives~ Atmiddot these times people are dispOSed to receive the message of Christ

as it applies to their circumshystances the developers of the plan reported

The visiting priest explains the lOOremonies of the next day and the symbolic meaning of various parts of the baptismal ritual

Pilgrims Wctmlk TORONTO (NC) -The 10th

annual walking pilgrimage to the Canadian Martyrs shrine at Midland Ont will begin here Wednesday Organized by the Guild of St John de la Lande the pilgrimage will cover the 100 miles to the shrine in five days a~riving there Sunday Sept 4

LEMIEUX PLUMBING amp HEATING INC

fof Oomestic l~ andmiddot Industrial ~ Sales and Service

Oil Burners WY 5-1631

2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE NEW BEDFORD

Relatives neighbors or the prospective gorlparents may be presentbut themiddot home visit usually involves just the parents and their children

The ide is to make the preshybaptism vsit an oppodunity for dialogue between the priest and the parents rather than a conshyference

Ten parishes in the St Jean diocese have adopted the praeshytice along with l few Montreal parishes Father Marcil Brillon secretary of the St Jean litur- gical commission said he exshypects the practice to spread

FALSE TEETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass Many wearers of false teeth suJIer

embarrassment Qecause their platesdrop Blip or wobble at Just the wrong time Dont live In fear of thts happening to you Just sprinkle a little FASTEErH the non-acid powder on your plates Holds false teeth more firmly so they feel more comfortable Checks denture breath Dentures that fit are essential to health See your dentist regularlyGet FASTEETH at all drug counters

At Proposals MONTPELIER (NC) - Vershy

monts Gov Philip Hoff said he bas extreme reservations conshycerning abortion and sterilizashytion proposals contained in a reshyport of an adivsory committee on the mental retardation situshyation in the middotstate

The report called for legal sanctioning of induced abortion in cases where there appears to be a high risk of mental retarshydation of an unborn child

Thereport also contained a suggestion concerning steriliza shytion of the mentally retarded

Apart from the recommenda~ tions on legalized abortion and sterilization of the mentally reshytarded I must S4ly it was II good report Gov Hoff said He said lie will study the report with utmost care before taking any action 0

Expresses Thanks To Holy Father

VATICAN CITY (NC) -The vice prime minister of Vietnam has paid a visit to Pope Paul VI to thank him for his peace efshyforts and generous help to reshylieve the suffering of the Vietshynamese people General Nguyen Huu Co vice prime minister and secretary of state for national defense of Vietnam visited privately withshythe Pope for 30 minutes Accord- ing to a Vatican Press Office bulletin

The vice prime minister in the name of South Vietnam exshypressed profound gratitude for the valid support always given by the head of the Catholic Church and of the Holy See in the cause of peace and for the generous assistance sent by the Holy Father to relieve the sufshyfering of those persons torshymented by war The distinguishshyed visitor then continued tomiddot deshyclare that the intentions of South Vietnam are directed only toward an affirmation of the liberty of its own nation and Wgt arriving at a just peace in honor and concord

Complete

BANKING SERVICE

for Bristol County

Bristol County Trust Company

TAUNTON MASS

THE ~ANK ON TAUNTON GREEN

Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Bristol Community College Offers Evening Classes

64 Durfee St Fall River Credit classes begin September 19 1966

Register Now Mondays thrrough Thursdays 200-500 PM Courses for college credit or self improvement are offered ill

The arts languages and literature Behavioral and social sciences accounting business

administration and secretarial scieRCe Mathematics science engineering and electro-mechanical technology

Advisors Availabie During ~egistration Hours

16 THE AI~ ~-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

C~nsiders Instability Causes In Latin American lamds

From Social R-evolution in the New Latin Ameriea Edited by John J Considine MM

There are many causes of instability in Latin America Some have said in the past that it is an inheritance frQm

Spain They feel that the years of Spanishauthoritarianism rendered the colonies incapable of integrating themselves into a more balanced social system Because they had there exists the problem of low

denSity of population with a lackpreviously lacked indepenshyof internal communication In-dent creole authority the many cases there is even a lanshy

colonies were unprepared to acshy guage barrier eept a more democratic authorshy The problem of an underdeshyity In his book veloped economy has also beenBetween Freeshy a factor in forming Latin Anlershy clom and Fear ican social structureGerman Arcinshy On the social level the eleshyiegas draws a ments I have mentioned favorcomparison beshy an internal lack of class strucshytween the Enshy ture that involves a juxtaposishyglish and Spanshy tion rather than a social organi shyish governments zation and integration Democshyin the Americas racy on the other hand presupshyIn ihe north the poses a large scale integrationcolonists came in of the people in the politicalshysearch of freeshy economic-social life of thedom IIi the end nationthe founding of the Nodh The masses of -illiterates inAmerican colonies was only the Latin America who do not parshyobvious culmination of a process ticipate in these areas have noalready begun It was the reafshy iilterest in government thoughfirmation of customs already inshy their interest and loyalty maygrained in the social milieu It be enlisted by the demagoguewas an evolution not a real revshyolution for these settlers were Formation or Dictatorships accustomed to autonomy The A dictatorship takes form

authority pf their governors was when one or more pressure more democratic since they groups unchallenged seizes the worked closely with the popular power of governmentassemblies From the beginshy In order to better understand ning the keenest concern of the the types of dictatorship found North American colonist was for in Latin America let us elCamshyfreedom of worship and his hosshy ine the different forms of revoshytility to the Church of England lution and the various ways in was evident which the pressure groups

On the contrary Latin Amershy bring their influence to bearIca was part of an empire The Kalmal1 Silvert distinguishesSpaniards came to dominate and these types in his book Reaction evangelize The viceroy represhy and Revolution in Latin Amershysented the king who was an abshy ica which is written in -Englishsolute monarch The role of Silvert shows the relationshipshyassembly in Latin America was between dictatorships and the secondary arid represented exshy extreme indivdualism found in tremely liIIlited power these countries

Independence in the Latin The first type of revolution American nations entailed a real named is what Silvert calls the revolution since from the beginshy simple brracks revolt Most of ning they were forced tb look for the outbreaks especially in the new political and social forms past century have been of this

Religiousliberty did not elCshy kind The barracks revolt occurs ist in the Latin American coloshy typically in a big class society nies since all were obliged to It is carried out by the amlY

membership in the Cathoiic sompoundtimes in its own name and Church sometimes in behalf of a chosen

Unassimilated Groups leader This type of revolution - rarely calses widesprelld publicThis comparison will help in

disturbance since it representsunderstanding the Latin Amershymerely a switch in governmentican problem though it will not from one general to anotherfully explain -it We must acshy

knowledge that the political The second type the peasant phenomeinon has a direct COIshy revolt is generally of little sigshyrelatio~1 with demographic probshy nificance and limited in effect lems such as the existence of to a locality though the Mexican large unassitnilated groups as revolution at the beginning of well as masses of mestizos un this century would perhaps fall derdeveloped and deprived who in this category can scarcely be said to partici shy Third the regional revolt pate in twentieth century chili shy commcn in the early days of zation Although these groups Latin American independence form a part of the nation they Here _the caudillo strove to put are not integrated either socially down provincial revolts and to eulturally or politically centralize power in an authorishy

Despite the over-all demoshy tarian I e g i () n a I government g~aphic explosion in some areas Typical of the caudillos who led

regional revolts was Rosas of Argentina

Plans Participation The fourth a more modern type of revolution Silvert callsIn Liturgical Week the complicated barracks revolt

HOUSTON (NC) - The 1966 This is an insurrection that inshyLiturgical Week here fOI the -volves civilian as well as mili shyfirst time in its 25-year history tary groups with widespread will have a full scale program military action for those interested in the The issues are ideological and Eastern Church relate to political parties as well

As part of the Liturgical Week as _ other interest groups The program the Divine Liturgy Cuban revolution in its beginshy(Mass) of St John Chrysostom nings might be considered -an will be celebrated entirely in example Although this is the English and Communion will be most prevalent type ainong modshydjstributed under both species ernday revolutions excetions Chief celebrant of the Liturgy are the revolts which overthrew will be Archbishop Paul Achkar Peron in Argentina Perez-JimeshyGreek Catholic ~-chbishop of nez in Venezuela and -Rojas Lattaquia in Syua Pinilla in Colombia

SISTER AMBROSE

Says SOo Africa Needs Americans

WASHINGTON (NC)-Yanshykee come over a statement which would do much to boost the morale of Americans in sevshyeral parts of the world could well summarize what an Irish missionary nun to South Africa

-has been saying during a visit here _

The wonderful hospitality of theAmerican people has imshypressed Sister Ambrose Harty Gf the Sisters of the Holy Family She lamens the fact that opporshytunities to receive Americans in a like manner have been few and far between during her 20 years in South Africa

Youve got such a lot to give she said here in an ~ntershyview during which she expressed a strong desire to see greatly inshycreased people-to-people relashytio~s between the country where she serves and the United States

Sister Ambrose was particushylarly interested in the Peace Corps ann reported that its purshyposes and work are hardly known by the people of Soutli Africa I haVent heard it disshycussed at all she said (The Peace Corps has not been invited into the country) (

With words of praise for the missionary work being done iii the South African Republic by Oblate arid Paulist missionaries from the United States she also expressed regret at the general paucity of missioners from this country There particularly is an almost total lack of nuns she said Only 71 Catholic missionshyaries from the United States inshycluding 16 nuns are serving ilm South Africa

Married Priests AMSTERDAM (NC)-A

Dutch public opinion poli h8lll shown that 11 per cent of the Netherlands p e 0 pIe woulci rather have III married Catholi4l clergy than a celibate clergy The poll including members ai all and no denominations

-showed that 68 per cent of the Catholics queried preferred III married clergy

~~

(DEBROSS OIL ( ~ co ( ~ Heating Oils

~ and BMIIJUrs ~

~ 365 NORYIoli IFROIlir SUEampll ( rJ NEW IBIEDIFOR

~ WYmafi 2middot5534 (

I~~~

Parishes Share DETROIT (NC) - Twentyshy

nine urban parishes here have decided to help one another meet the rising cost of education

At the elementary level parshyepts will pay $50 per family $75 per family for non-Catholic parishioners and $75 per student

Danish Catholic COPENHAGEN (NC) -Thereshy

are 11321 Catholics in the Danish capitalaccording to a report issued by the Copenhagen statistical office They consti shytute the second largest religious entity there next to the Luthershyans members of the State Church The total number of Catholics in Denmark is approxshyimately 26000 Total population is 35 lllillion

Education Costs for Catholics outside the parish

At the high school level the tuition cost is $H)O per student in or out of the parish With the exception of textbooks this amount eliminates aU extra fee charged up to now

Father Norman P Thomas director of the Urban Parisll Apostolate said the greatest efshyfect of the joint effort will be experienced by the pastor who sends parish youngsters to a higll school operated by any of the 2 participating parishes

In this instance the students parishes will be expected to pay the difference between the tui shytion charged and the actual cost per student The latter fee laM been set by the parochial school office at over $200 per year

ETHIOPIA- THE NEW AFRICA

- HOLY FATlftRB MIBBIIDN AID TO THI DRIENTAL OHURCH

- BROTHER What happens In Ethiopia when an American MICHAEL Christian Brother (he could be your son brother

REYNOLDS nephew) Is told to upgrade Catholic schools He FROM borrows a Jeep (or a mule) visits the schools

PROVIDENCE RI one by one writes home for pencils and better REPORTS textbooks and then beginsbullbull This is the new

fROM Africa Brother Michael Reynolds reports enshyADDIS thusiasticallyfrom Addis Ababa It can be a BABJpeacefuf progressive Christian Africa tom~rmiddot

row Just give us schools give us time and with Gods help the job will De donel bull bullThe schools are for villages like Aressa Aiga Biers Wartll8~

-which have no school The youngsters know that knowledge i~ their only chance theyll go without food to learnbullbullbull What does It cost to build a schoolf Only $2950 says Brother Michael for the villagers snd the children give their laborfreemiddotofmiddotcharge We can train a catemiddot chlst for only $40 bullbullbull In thanksgiving to God for what you know will you do what you can ($100 $75 $50 $25 $15 $10 $5 $2) to give these youngsters a chance The school will be named for your favorite saint and the children will pray for your loved ones daily If you build It all byyourself ($2950) School will open late this year-but better late than never-If you Vlrit~ to us right now

WHAT Our priests there who receive no othor income IELSE for food and clothing will offer promptly the

FOR Masses you request Well forward your Mass ETHOPIAr Inten~ons through the Holy Fathers officebull

40 young lads studying for the priesthood In Decamere lose their football when It goes Into a nelghbers garden A large field can be bought ~velled and mede safe for sports fer $975

MAKINQ ~~IOOOO will ovfde bull OOfDj)lete parjstlplantA (Ohuroh rectory convent andscbool) In southshy

WiW ImIAdla In memorybullbullbullbull $600 will ttiln a native lrfHt1SOO bull native Sfster Our legal tltI Cl~1HOUO NWt lAir WIUAH AHOCIAnONo

_-------------~shytt coINIILOIIlt IUMIIIND ~ bullbull la IJIIr bull _1OIt~=-=_==-=

PI _UM~gt

Mum ClO1IIponwith your mt__=-~~_ _ ~i offrtnt ~~ erryen 8TAlI-lPCODI_

HI IATHaLl1 RIIiAR 811 WILAbullbull AIaDIATaN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS IRANCUS CARDINAL SPELLMAN President MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretal)f Write OATHOLIO NfIAR IiAST WELFARE Assoo 1)80 MadlsolJ Avenuomiddot New York NY 10017 -felGpilonel 212YUkon 6middot6840

Dormitory Proves Stonehill Permanently Coeducational

Way back in 1951 when the first girl enrolled in Stoneshyhill College no one could have imagined that a girls dormishytory would ever be built onmiddot the campus But the sound of steam shovels and hammers filling the air over the lovely grounds in Easton is proof

and two girls from the seniorthat the long planned for daslr-assisting the housemothergirls dorm will soon be a Mrs Grace Callahan

reality When Stonehill was The experiment worked so founded in 1948 as a mens colshy well in fact that this coming lege the fledgling school had Fall both the freshman and just gotten off to a good start sophomore girls will be housed when the Korean War came this way leaving only the junior along and emptied the classshy and senior girls still renting Yooms as the young men went quarters in private homes chosen into the services by the college as all the nonshy

That was the year that many commuting girls have done in small colleges had to close their the past gates forever But at Stonehill That typical campus situation the Holy Cross order was detershy -the sorority house-is not in mined to hold onto this new the picture at Stonehill-or frashyschool that they had planned for ternity houses either for that so long matter No sororities or fraternishy

What could they do to keep ties are allowed on the campus the college operating until the There is a cl11b however that war was over and the boys came is the girls own - the Crosier back Of course Open their Club Mrs Yosgandes is the gates to girl students clubs faculty advisor and she deshy

Faculty Pleased scribes it as the organization What started out as a temposhy for women studentE who want

rary expediency somehow over to contribute in their own parshythe years has acquired a happy middotticular way as women to their permanancy No one could be college more pleased about this turn of Through their annualmusical events than the Stonehill faculty Crosier Curtain Calls theyitself raise money to acquire manymiddot

Helping out in Jhe ground things that add beauty and breaking ceremony for the new charm to campus life This yeardorm Mrs Virginia Yosgandes they purchased two very lovelythe Dean of Women at the colshy silver tea and coffee services lege saiei I guess everyone will Any official group at the collegereally believe that the girls are is allowed to borrow the sets and here til stay they have already been used in

Mrs Yosgandes says that since many functions she first came to the Stonehill New Signfaculty in 1958 rumors have

Mrs Yosgandes says Thebeen popping up that Stonehill girls will be very pleased whenwill soon return to its original they come back th~~ Fallto seestatus as an all male school The the beautiful new sign theynew dorm she says will be visshybought for the college installedible proof of the permanancy of on Route No 138 women on the beautiful campus

Its very easy to picture theThe $1150000 building deshyvery charming Dean presidingsigned to accommodate 200 girls

graciously at a faculty tea Aand proctors will be three stories parishioner of Immaculate Conshyof red brick Architects W Chesshyception chulCh in Easton she ister arown and Associates and in ~rivate life an enthusiasticwntractors C A Batson and homemaker anc the mother of aCompany are planning to comshy13 year old daughter Christineplete work on the dorm in time Her husband John is assistantfor the opening of classes in principal at Franklin JuniorSeptember 1967 It will be the High first unit of a five dormitory

She speaks with great convicshycomplex planned fo the women on tion about college girls holdingcampus

onto feminine ideals while surshyKitchen ~pace rounded-and at Stonjhill outshyMrs Yosgandes is happy about numbered 3 to 1- by menthe fact that the new dorm will While were encoulaging themhave a kitchenette on each floor to be acdve in thpound communitywhere the girls can cook small and the church and in politicsmeals and entertain guests Shes and encouragint them to deshyhoping that the dorms built after

more velop their abilities to the full shythis me will providtgt even est-we never fail to take intokitchen space for the girls to account the fact that they arepractice the culinary arts women and in this competitiveM a n~ tImes homemaking world theyll have to -fight toskills come to a complete halt maintain their feminine idenshywhen a girl goes to college she tity says Apparently all classroom

work and rio cooking make Jane Coed Actiiti~s

Coed a dull girl in the room When she fi rst came to the where shell be spending a great college she sltys the girls were deal of time after graduationshy mainly interested in strictlythe dtchen feminine extra curricular activishy

Mrs Yosgandes says A great ties-fastion shows teas gids many cCJlleges have been workshy sports Bd this has changed radshying witt this problem and wonshy ically in the last few years and dering what to do about it Beshy now the girls are much more inshycause theyve had no living terested in the coed acti vitiesshyquarters for girls on campus the newspapers the debating Stonehiiil has had to do out of team the drama club Stonehill necessit) what many other colshy is noted a~ one of a small handshyleges have chosen to do recently ful gtf Catholic colleges where The Dean describp~ an experishy girls are middotactive in every part of ment that the collFge tJied last college life Every coure at yeal tha has worked out exshy StonehHj is opel to girls tremely well We still havent had a woman

Experiment Successful president of our student governshyThe college leased a grollp of ing body the Senate Mrs

rooms il an apartmelt building Yosgandes says Now girls in Brockton last Fall where all what are yOIi waiting for the freshman girls who were not commuters-55 of them-lived in housekeeping apartments In Red Groups There were four girls in each BERLIN (NC)-Over 85 per apartment all sharing the reshy (ent of East German children sponsibilities of housekeeping between the ltlges of 6 and 14 are

The girls hat two sets of mCl11)ers of communist youth 1)IoctOS - two aIumni wumen ~nIUps

lrt-OE ANCH0) 17 Thurs Aug 25 1966

PriestCuod Goal Of Top Skater

GREAT FALLS (NC)-A good many folks in this Montana toWlll will attest that teenager J Mishlll Petkevich is a pretty good skate -on or oH the ice

The affable blond youngster 17 topped a field of 136 pershyformers in the three-day Lake Placid N Y international free style competition sanctioned by the U S and Canadian Figure Skating Assoclations The Great Falls lad was the judges unamiddot1ishymous choice for the mens gold medal in the finals

But Petkevich doesnt lose his cool off the ice His classmates and teachers at Great Falls Censhytral 3igh School claim hes liIl

winner in every event He spends more than 40 hours 11 week in skating training but carries the full load of class studies and consistently turns Up on the schools honor roll Hes a member of the National Honor Society

The school supported me ami the way Everyone has beeEl wonderfUl to me the modest youngster saia Hes been -skatshying since he was 2 He credit his achievements to his Catholic Faith the sacrifices of his parshyents and of Arthur Bourke senshyiormiddot professional of the Great Falls Figure Skating Club He said All I did was skatemiddotGROUND-BREAKING The Very Rev John T Corr

I hope some day to become~esc president of Stonehill College turns a shovelful of priest Petkevich said wbeilearth to mark start of construction 0pound a 200-student dormshy a~ked his ambition I hope 14gt itory for women on the Stonehill campus Watching the proshy attend Notre Dame for at leasa celtlures are left to right Mrs Virginia Yosgandes dean af two years and then I h9pe to gf)

to the Catholic University fl4women John C Doody 66 Alumni fund chairman Robert AmericaBatson contractor Harold Bonvie ass~iate of the archishytect

Msgr Canty Continued from Page OneRussian Schools ing studies at S1 Marys High

Taunton Boston- College and S1 Bernards Seminary RochesshyChristian Brother Lauds Students terN Y

nespect for Intellectuols He served as assistant at Our Lady 01 the Isle NantucketCHICAGO (NC)-Students in to foreign languages than Amershy Holy Family Taunton St

schools behind the Iron Curtain icans Most students take a Marys Barrowsville and Stgo at their studies with a passhy seven-year sequence of English Johns Attleboro He was apshysion said Brother Kevin Mark German or French English he pointed to the Chaplains CorPJFSC who toured Russia and added is the most popular lanshy of the United States Navy infour satellite countries with 19 guage and more emphasis is January 1942 and retiredwitbother U S rducatois placeltl on reading and speaking the rank of captain in Decemshy

Brothel Mark who is princishy than on writing it ber 196gt Pope John XXIII pal 9f St Mels high school here Brother Mark said that there elevated him to the rank of attributed much of their motivashy is almost nothing that he would Domestil Prelate with the title tion to the students attitude that lift from the Soviet school sysshy of Right Reverend Monsignor iI What I do does contribute to tem and apply in the U S May 1962 the welfare of the state He admitted however that Bishop Connolly named Monshy

Brother said he felt that stushy they do get results They have a signor Canty pastor of St Paulsdents in this country lack motishy tremendous capacity for conshy Taunt-ln in December 1963 vation because were spoiled centration when they set their Industrial improvements have sights for example their space made it that a young man can program Its not all a matter go into a trade and make very of being chained to a lab table good money BLUE RIBBON

In the Soviet Union he said there seems to be a great reshyspect for intellectuals and the LAlnNDRY student is thought of as a proshy

01 STOPfessional schJlar 273 CE~RAl AVE~UIIG CfflTERTeaching is considered a proshy

fession and remunelated accordshy e Television C FmiddotI ure illgly WY 2-6216o r-cerv

St Mels principal observed on IlA Allen St Newhdfordhis tour that there was little NEW BEDFORD questioning on the part of the students

The chSSloom situation he said is very much teacher ori shyented that is study in depth is 21 DAY PILGRIMAGES TO EUROPE done on the teachers inspiration

rou~ 1-Legion of Mary Pilgrimage leaving Sept 12th with Truth in such areas as history Father Edward A Oi-viera will visit Killarney Dublin Paris

cllld literature is accepted as a Lourdes Rome Madrid Lisbon and Fatima - Tour 2shyforegone conclusion and stushyHoly Cross Fathers Pilgrimage leaving Oct 10th with Frdents just memorize what has

already been discovered ----- lobert E McDonnell will wsit lisbon Fatima 1odrid Rome Lourdes Paris and londonIike F)rc~gn Linutges -cota cost is $82900 - Time PaymentsmiddotIn the area of science howshy arranged ever the situation is difterent

()Ii TOUR tOLDERS CONTACT STEolfEN A MARIIEYhe pont~d out because in scishyence there is an attitude of I n~ust discover Catholic Travel

-Office

The R1~middotmiddotmiddotO p oth-r Mark ~ltk St New Befl- -ass 02748

said ~ ve 11111j Ill)le auention

BURNERS

BUrntlr Service

Famous Reading HARDCQAl

NEW ENGLAND COKE

t8 THE ~NCHOR-Dioceseof fo Rivef-Thurs Aug 25 1966 J~sut I)riest Says Some Public I b M t EmploYE~~S Have Right to Strike

-

Urges uO or ovemen S NEW (NC) -Public however YORK Government hasmiddot h C employees in certain fields have been expanding its cQncern andIn Heml$p ere ooperate the right to strike against the has beenmoving into ar~as of government a priest declared transportation education recre-

By MsgrGooJrge C Higgins (Director Socian Actiolll Dept NCWC)

The relationship between the American labor moveshyment and the Latin American Confed~ration of Christian Trade Unions (CLASC) leaves much to be desired as we

middot thO d th 1- have aready noted severa1 t Imes m IS co umn urmg e

past four or five years The two movements are deeply different things to different peoshy

auspicious of one another and just when they seem to be on the verge of settling or at least -patching up their differshyences they go at it again and recklesslystart hurling insults at one another

To jUdge from What they sayIi b 0 u t on e another publicshy1yen as well as privately on e would t h ink that they were natural-born enshyemies whe~eas in fact they have much in common-much inore than they seem to realizeshyand for obvious reasons ought violent MisS Duncan was an officer of The fourth public member Harshyto be c60p~rating With onean- Moreo~er at least one promi~theSodality a cheerleader for vardlaw school professorVern ether as closely as pOSSible nent spokesman for the AFL- four years a member of the Ten- Countryman half ci-itiCized the This writer has learn~ci the hard WR and muc~ to hiS so~-row that any outSider who 18

fOolish enough totryto mediatek f

~tween them JS as mg or troouble

C f t Gommun same If for example one suggests

as I have done on more than one Occasion that soine of the anti U S propaganda emanating from CLASCsources revealS atremely harmful to the cause of n a i v e misunderstanding of Amerlcan trade unionism and American capitalism andor ari $ver-simplification of Catholic Social teaching he runs the risk 9f being written off as a blind -not tOsay reactionary apologist for so-called Yanqui ~mperial-

iBm If on the other hand oneslig

gests that some of the anti- CLASC propaganda enianating

fro m AFL-CI0 sources is equally naive and unsoPllisti shyeatedhe runs the same Sort of risk in reverse That is to say he is likely to be told--v~ry politely of course -that if he were to take off his Catholic blinkers and look at the record objectively he would quickly come to realize that CLASC is in reality playing t~ecipal rival in Latin America) riages in their mission parishes communist game in Latin Amer- there is a gEirierous mixture of Msgr Milia stated Since the iea superficial appearances to cultural chauvinism and envy Ogdensburg mission was opened the contrary notwithstanding that accompanies the most legit- a modern new church bas been

Both CaD Learn imate misgivings built under its direction in the Be that as it may I still think Even the Latinos middotthemselve~ seaport ofMatararii two mission

~t CLASC has a lot to learn he points out will admit on ac- churches have oeen completed about _ and from American casion that their consumirig fear and a lalge parish church and trade unionism And if that of Yanqui imperialism is often center are currently under conshymakes me a reactionary Yankee irrational But there it is he re- struction in Mollendo ehauvinist so be it minds us and the basic prob-

By the same token however aiso think that the American

labor movement has much to learn about -- and from - the Christian trade union movement in Latin America The first thing it has to learn is that the Am~r-leap philosophy of pure-andshysimple bread-~d-butter union ism which all things considshyered has worked satisfactorily in this country is not necessarily well adapted to the present-day Deeds of Latin America

Meaning of Revolution Another way of saying the

same thing is that American iabor representativesworking on Latin America problemswm have to reconcile themselves to the fact that a social revolu-Uon is called for in Latin American labor federation that doesnt subscribe to a revolushytionary ideology is probably doomed to failure

The word revolution meaos J-

pIe of course To the leaders of CLASC it means a sweeping program of socioeconomic and political reform which goes far beyond the limited goals of bread-and-butter unionism

The leaders of CLASC are convinced that such a revolushytioo is demanded bythe Chrisshytian social ethic to which they subscribe and from which they derive their ideology

Perceptive Critique Some U S Labor repshy

resentatives are skeptical to say the least~bout the allegedly Christian content of CLASCs militant ideology They admit theneed for a peaceful revolushytion in Latin Americn butthey are convinced thatCLASC wants this revolution to be Feehan High School Attleboro alties in a letter tc therimes

lem is how to insure con~ PAVlA V I tlnuing cooperation between 0 untee rs Yanqui and Latino in spite of Complete TlIainirigit

Such cooperation Dr Hawkins WASHINGTON (NC)-Fortyshyconcludes will be impossible unshyless the leaders of the American labor movement positively indi~

cete their acceptance of social revolution in Latin America This will require he says

more than the generous transshyfusions of economic aid the stimulation under United States

labors auspices of leadership training programs for workers

and other cooperative ventures Need Broader View

What is required he insists ltCia a broader view-an ability on the part of the American la bor statemen to adopt policies that will not always accord with OUI own value~ and more speshy

cificall~ the tempering of (their) hosannas to free entershyprUie ___

inter-American labor unity I fully agree in this respect with Dr Carroll Hawkins Associate

Professor of Political Science at Michigan State University who recently published a most pershyceptive critique of American trade union policy in Latin- Catholics in Mollendo Peru the

America (The 0RIT and Amer diocesan missions director reshyican Trade Unions Conflicting ported Perspectives Industrial Rela- The New York priests were tionsand Social Changes in sent to Peru after Pope Paul Latin America University of vi -asked that more priests be Florida Press) pr9vjd~d fOr the people opoundSouth

Basic Problem America Msgr Anthony A Mi-Dr Hawkins admits of course lia said He estimated more than

that in all the Latin American 90 percent of the priests in criticism of United States unioniperu are from other countries in the ORIT (the Latin Ameli can regional unit of the Interna In 1965 the priests from Ogshytional Confederation of Free denburg administered 445 bap-Trade Unions and CLASCs prin tisms and perfoImed 64 mar-

CIOhas publicly charged in ej_ nis Club for two years and a suggested penaltiel fect that CLASCs ideology three yeaT member of the FU- owes more to Marxism than it ture Nurses club Father Carey sl~id the ~ays does to Christianity He finds it when pay and working condi-

An instructor in the Confra- tions for men and women inhard he says to accept the fact ternity of Christian Doctrine that the Christian labor move- civil service were determine4 byproglam in Our Lady of Mt I g I t d d t t

t middot A e IS a Ive It n a minIS ra Ive ment 0f L a In merIca IS non- Carmel Parish Seekonk the fiat have pas ed a d Communist s n we now

In my judgment this kind of criticism of CLASC by spokesshymen fltr the AFL-CIO is ex

three volunteers have completed the Second National Training Session sponsored by the Papal Volunteers for Latin America and received assignments in some ten Latin American coun- tries

Special ceremonies ended the six-week training session at the Catholic University of America where volunteers studied the apostolic work of the Church the laymans role in the aposshytolate and principles of spiritual life as well as the religion ecoshynomics and culture of Latin America

Before leavillg for their asshysignments the volunteers will take intensive four-month lanshy

guage anl culture courses in a Latin American language centerbull

eighth winner of this scholarship plumeoursElves that we share will enter the Childrens Hosshypital School of Nursing Boston in Septembel-

Ogdensburg Priests

SellYe Peru Mission OGDENSBURG (NC) -- Four

Ogdensburg priests currently are ministering to the n~eds of_13OOO

~ere

Father Philip Carey sJ exshyecutive director of the Xavier Institute of Industrial Relations acknowledged t hat certain strikes aJre intolerable But he said that when the governmentacts in a proprietary function it must follow the same rules it prescribes for private enterprise

In a letter to the New York Times Father Carey criticized ~y implication a proposed state -llw that wetulltilincrease the penalties to be imposed on strikshying union of public employees

MlISS LHNDA DUNCAN Th~proposedlaw grew out of recommendations of a five-man

Feehan Alumna task force named by Gov Nel son Rockefeller to study the

Receives Award problem after a 19-day transit strike crippled Newmiddot York City

Miss Linda Duncan daughter in January of Mrs George Duncan and the - NeCeSSBlry for Bargaining late George Duncan 61 Sykes Father Carey one of four Rd Seekonk has been awarded pubiic members of the mayors the eighth annual scholarship of committee that helped settle the the Attleboro Area Nurses strike disagreed with two other Chapter publlc memlgters Vh_o had previshyA 1966 graduate of Bishop ously supported the stiffer pen-

and internal concord a str~ke against itconstitutes mutiny and rebellion (UCLA) Sister Muriel a native

Pgbllsh Gudelnes For Ecumenisn

ALLENTOWN (NC) - The commission of ecumenism of the Allentown diocese here in Pennshysylvania has published a 22-page booklet of ecumenical guidelines to aid priests in guiding the laity The guidelines include general

permission for non-Catholics to serve as witnesses at Catholic weddings for Catholics to serve as witnesses at non-Catholic weddings and for burial of non-Catholics in Catholic ceremonies with a priest or a non-Catholic clergyman cltmducting graveside eeremonies

SHELL DADSON OIL

24-Hollr Oil

GLE COAL amp OIL CO IncI

640 Pleasant Street Tel WY 6-8271 New Bedford

this decision-making with the working p E~ 0 P Ie themselves through the process of collective bargaining

If collective bargaining is to be the rule he said we must agree to grant the right to strike~ Without this right he said there is no union and no coll~ctive balmiddotgaining

Expands Concern-in considering strikes by pu~ lie employees he dedared one muSt distinguishb~tween the state as a sovereign and the g()vernment acting in a proprishyetary function When the state aets as the defender of the peace or the promoter of justice

of Corning Iajoined the Sisters of the Humility of Mary in 1930 In recent years she has been ehairman of professionafarts deshypartment and college registrar

ation and a host of other services formerly performed by privategroups he continued

These activities are ancillary and economic and here the state in acting in a proprishyetry function When it so acts it ought to be subject tl) the same rules of conduct the government prescribes for private entershy

prise Strikes by firefighters and powerhouse uti lit y workers would be wrong however he said because it is difficult to imagine anY benefit they might gain to counterbalance the fear- fut harm such a l strike would impose on the community Buys Banners For Memorial

CHICAGO (NC)-A Chicago advertising executive has bought 44 brightly-colored religious ~anners tat -hung in the Nashy

tlOnal Srme of the Im~aculate ConceptIon during Luci Johnshysons wed(iin~ -

Earle Ludgin a trustee of the University of Chicago said he will donate the banners to the

university~ Rockefeller Memoshyrial Chapel in memory of his late wife

The banners for which Ludgin reportedly paid more than $40000 were originally created for the Vatlcan PavIIIon at the New York World Fair

A group of Washington D C residents bought ttie banners when the fair closed and arshyranged to have them exhibited in the Shrine until they could be sold Lugdin bought themin April but agreed at the request of Shrine officials to leave them in the Shrine until after Lucia wedding

lame College Head

OTTUMWA (NC) Sis t er

Muriel Hogan has been named the third presi4ent of Ottumwa Heights College here in Iowa She succeeds Sister Marie Anshy

ciue Kennedy woo win engagem graduate study in oominunishy

eations at the University of California Los Angeles branch

Offering You 3 Savings Plans

Home Financing

WAREHAM CO-OPERATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mabull

Telephone 295-2400 Banll SerVice YlIIIIIII

I

Ask Court Bar Use of Church Propertyfor Public SchoQ~middot WHITE ~S (MC) - A the cl883rooms ~ut Church

group of some 25 citizens repre- npokesman reporte~ that in line sented by the American Jewish with New York archdiocesan Congress has asked the New York State Supreme Court here to restrain the board of Ramapo School District 2 Rockland County from holding public school classes in property leased from religious bodies

The school board faced with severe-overcrowding planned to lease eight rooms from St Josephs Catholic Church and five from lem~e Beth El in Spring Valley The action was approved by 8tateEducation Commissioner Jame$ EAllen Jr

A ComllllJJlt served 0ill the rlChool board by the AJC charged the acti~n o~ld ~otateChurchshyState separation guaranteed by the First Amendment to the Constitution as well as other provisions of the state constitushytion

It is believed to be the first wch challenge made regarding

the use of religiO18 facilities for public school use

lhe st Josephproperty conshysists of an eightclasSroom school building adjacent to but sepashyrated from the chureh It is Ill good condition but will not be used by the p8rish thismiddot year because it has bUilt a new bUildshying for expanding its acbool to 141 classes

All religioUs ~bols had Ileen removed from the oder building in preparation for its use as a public school

The district school board had offered a fair market rent for

PAV~A deg Missionary Record Continued from Page Thirteen

A nurse from Chicago baa taken Lucillellpla~on the aposshytolic team and ber purpose in returning is to help her successhy80r work into the project smoothly It takes so long to get into 11 she Aid so II dont WJmt Il~r to spendtbree

years j~ g~tting organized~

Benedictine Marks 80th Anniversary

ST JOSEPHmiddot (NC)-The oldshyest Benedictine nun in Minneshysota-and one of the oldest m the world~marked the 80th anshyniversary of her entrance into the order ma Mass for all Beneshydictine jubil~tians held at St Benedicts convent here

Sister Sophia Zimmer was 1~ years old Dec 2 1965 She Wall

born in a log cabin about 1 block away from the convent An open house for her relatives and friends was held at the conv~nt

Receives Students cAsTELGANDOLFO (NC)shyPoPe Paul vI received in audishyence at his Summer home here students frOm 34 nations includshying many non-Catholics who are taking Summer courses in the ItaUaa language aDd culture sponsored by the Rome branch of the Catholic University fII IWaD

policy the properly would be made available for public school use at a token dollar-a-year rental

cmOS Cmpetes C~~ege ~rr(l))g~m

WASHINGTON (NC)-A class of 97 under-privileged high school students was graduated on completion of an eight-week Summer college orientation proshy

gram at Georgetown University The exercises i attended by faculty and parents Qf the stushydents involved students who had completed their Sophomore year in District of Colwnbia high schools They were chosen for the special course because teachers and counselors believed they have the ~billty to do colshylege work alihoug~ their presshyent high school records indicate little likelihood of college acshyceptance Ninoty-fiveOf the 97 students were Negroes md the ratio of males to females was aboutmiddot tbree-to-two ~

The pro~~~~Ch began in 1965 is financed by the NaUonal science Fowidationmiddot the District of Columbia public school sysshy

tem and Georgetown In addition to academic work

the students were given cltgtUrsetl in reading improvement and counseling gUidance Athletie and cultural events underwrit shyten by the program were also bKluded in their schedules

nearly 42 years Bishop Gerow churches degespeciallY Negro said Of late I have feltmiddotthat X houses of worshIp which middotWere have not the stamina to caJTY I bombedmiddot and burned

on as I have done in the past Whena p~ttern of destn1c~ion This load should be borne by 1 develops as It has m our state youngerman then it sincumbent upon all ntereston Yoiit

Cathollc lnereaSe m~n ~ ~ood ~i~ througho~t MiSSISSIPPI to Jom hands m Savings

The ~venth bishop of~edio- helpingthe affectedmiddot churches 0 Invested In cesemiddotwhlch was founded ID 1~37 and in showing clearly our con- and encompasses 111 of Missls- demnation at all acts of violencemiddot CATHOLIC CHURCH sippi Bishop Gerow h8ll s~ lawlessness and destruction the Catholic population IJOw from 31264 to 75000 in his 41 years of office The number of priests in the diocese grew from 63 to 220 and churches md misshysions from 108 to 243

The last few years of llacial violence perhaps were the most troub1d for Bishop Gerows long ad inistration middotHemiddot met the challenge with courage

In the face of many-sided opshyposition Bishop Gerow in 1964 directed the first grades of Cathshyolicmiddot schools in the state to be racially integrated The next

Missionaries Move Seminar to Ohio

DAYTON (NC) -The White Fathers a missionary society which bas served in Africa for nearly a century is llloving its U S seminary to Dayton

St Josephs Seminary which had been in operation at Onshydliota N Y near Saranac Lake will re-open under the same

name in four residences near the campus of the University of

Dayton The buildings have been rented from the university

Eventually the White Fathers plan to build their own seminary

middotfacilities somewhere in ~e area according to Fatber Paul lo1e1le WF~

THE ANCHOR- middot19 Thurs Aug 25 1966

KC Melll1il~er~~ip

At AJ~Tome e~~gh MIAMI BEACH (NC)-In his

report at the 84th annual meetshying of the Supreme Council of the Knights of Columbus Sushypreme Knight John W McDevitt made these points

Membership on June 30 1966 stood at an all-time high of 1183896 The orders insurance covershyage passed the $15 billion mark during the year

The orders assets reached III

neW plateau of $28122840028 at the end of the fiscal year

The society i~ continuing its support of the campaign to st~m p(gtrnography

Revise Ceremonial Progress is being made onthe

re_Vision of the orders cerempnshyial to give it a total family middotclishymate and make it consistent with moder day philosophy of social justice and religious pracshytice

The K of C have undertaken distribution of copies of the 1~ew Testament to Catholic gradllates

COURAGE PERSONIFIED John St Marie of B~YQ of the Naval Offilaquoer CandfClatE port Minn CQnfined to a wheelchair since a 1953 pOlio ~chool in Newport R I an(J ill

~dying the question of proshyattack has received a scholarship to the University of viding a similar servilte ~orMinnesota law school atter successfully maintaining an Ashy Catholic graduatell of the Qffi shyminus average in undergraduate work at the College of cers Candidate School of ihe St Thomas St Paul Minn irQ Photo Canadian Navy

It saluted Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York on biI

Welcomes Successor Naming of Apostolic Administrato

Pleases Bishop Gerow 81 JACKSON (NC)-Mississippll1 year he followed with a direeshy

courageous 81-year-old Bihop tive that Catholic schools be deshyOliver Gerow welcomed his suc- segregated completely ceSSor Bishop Joseph B Bruni- Helps Restore Churches ni 55 as spiritual head of the Despite reported threats ofmiddot Natchez-Jacklon diocese as one violence fro m segregationist who is active vigorous and has ranks the aged prelate was good sound judgment among leaders of an interfaith

X am very happy in being groupmiddot which formed the Comshyrelieved of the heavy responSl- mittee of middotConcernmiddot soHcited middotbillty that I have borne for money labor and materIals for

middotthe bishop stated in a letterred AND in every Catholic church in the INSTITUTIONAL BONDSstate

His appeal for $300000 to re-middot I Umiddot f $500 M store more than 30 d~stroyed n nits 0 or ore and damaged churches brought Keenan amp CImiddotarey bie contributions to the Committee 9f Concern from various sections Minneapolis Minnesota of the country

0

M~ntle Plumbing amp ~ating Co Inc~

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET Fall River OS 57497

for detailed information write to

CHARLES A~ MURPHY Registered Representative

145 Pond $treet Winchester Mass

PA 9-2696 And

Name bullbullbull ~ Address A

City _

50 years in the priesthood payshying tribute to him not only beshycause of his dignity as a pi-iest and cardinal but also because he 1S a great and wholesome mail

Relic Stolen NEW YORK (NC)-A reputed

relic of the cross on which Chtist died has been stolen from the Church of the Most Holy Reshydeemer here It was removed from a side altar tabernacle

where it had been placed shortshyly after the churchs establishshy

ment by the Redemptoriad Fathers some 125 years ago

~

GULF HILL DAIRY so DARTMOUTH MASS

RO THE ANCHO~-Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

1

RELIGIOUS SUPERIORS INSTITUTE ON STONEHILTJ CAMPUS SMS Guadalcanal Solomon Islands Standing Sr Florita DP King Sr Mary LUk~ St about to enter the hall for her lecture Center Some ston Mass Sr Mary of Bathany SP Holyoke Sr Mary de Sales F$SJ r the sisters who attended Sister Lukes talk were Sr Josepha SC Conshy Holyoke Right Mrs Mary Virginia Yosgandes h-ouse mother wavesgood ent Station NJ Sr Mary Kenneth Amityville NY Sr Mary (fheresa bye tothe departing nuns I

Brooklyn Church Hopes Nuns Move Into Cent~r of Lij~e Criticizes Irish lribunal Lacks By Dorothy Eastman -Social Security

When in the third year of Vatican II the momentous decision was made toinvitewO- dmiddot LIMERICK (NC) - FatherJ men observers to audit a Council forthe first ~ime to represent all J~remiah Newman professor ofuris ICtlon the Sister chosen BROOKLYN (NC)-Msgr the nuns in America was Sister Mary Luke Tobin Mother General of the Sisters of Lor- sociology at Irelands Maynooth

IlAarion J Reinhardt pre- etto When shewasasked recently while visiting the Fall River Diocese what impressed College criticizedprivate agenshyJ~L h t b t th C 1 cies and the national governshyIdlng Judge of the Trlblillal er mos a ou e oune) h t b t h h d k ment for their failure to increaseshe said with a wry smile We aVe 0 e rna ure enoug er own or er was wor mg(1)f the Diocese of Brooklyn h to live in insecurity toward these ends She told of all subsidies to families Iltas announced that the bill of The fact that we were t ere Will these changes be easy experiment soine of her Sisters After insisting that it would $Omplaint of 15 former teachers at all I The Sister is too much of a have been engllged in for the be best for private agencies and of St Johns Un~versity had to At a Stonehill College institute realist to give that impression past twu years in Pueblo Colo- local governments to administer be dismissed because of lack of Sister Luke spoke of her many Its going to be fraught with rado Although most of the 1100 social security Father Newman jurisdiction on the part of the other impressions of the Council difficulties she warns but Sisters of Lorettv are teachers said that since they seemed unshy

ecclesiastical court _ where she and seven other Sis- what isnt this small group of Sisters in willing or unable to do this the The Brooklyn ecclesiastical tels were auditresses for the last There are more than a few Pueblo 1s doing no t~aching-in job had to be done by the natshy

$Ourt which operates under two years of Vatican II Over Sisters who are troubled and schools anyway They simply jonal government ~llnon law said it is pmited in 450 Mothers Superior from 55 sometimes shocked these days live among the poor as good He said that according to jurisdiction to only spiritual different Orders were gathered by many of the changes hi their neighbors he 1pin jg wherever Catholic soCial teaching there ltuestions at the Easton campus for the communities The Mother Gen- they cllD leading discussion was no limit to the amount of Charge Contralaquot Breach five day Institute directed by eral would warn them that its groups counselling etc government aid that is permis-

The 5000 word document Rev William FHogan CSC pointless for them to say Thill Asked to comment on the re- sibie and desirable if governshypointed out that the decree of Sister Luke was one of a group is not the community I entered cent experiment in Milwaukee mEmt aid was the Qnly practical Giisrriissalis without prejudice to of noteliltspeakers who talked When it comes to that she says where30 School Sisters of St (sbl~tion to poverty problems lbhe merits of the case to the superiors on the subject we all might say This is not the Francis left their convents for

If the Metropolitan Tribunal of the I Sister in the modern Church Iwas baptized into or three weekstO work in secular If the archdiocese of New York world this is not the world I was b()rn jobs - oneSister wa3 assigned

T b 1 f the Sacred into Change is a fact of life S t~ the rI una 0 Adapting a line from Charles as a newspaper reporer- IS er Roman Rota reversesthe decree Dickens to describe this contro she points out~ and we can~t keep Luke predicted a great deal the casewiil be returned to the versial post Council age Sister things as they are or say Stop more~ of this kind of liniited Tribunal of the Diocese of the World-I want to get off f i t th I w ld ]Brooklyn for adjudications upon t~ees sa~~iSTi~iSt~eth~o~r Role of Superiors ~~~re ~o di~~a~~c~i~t n~~ Ms merits it was stated times She paintedavivid ver- The role the Superiors will she said

The petition of complaint bal picture of the world that lies play in the formation of what Since her own Order founded filed by Father Peter OReilly ahead for Sisters She said it has been called The New Nun in 1812 is quite new all religious

s~f Chicago on behalf of himself would certainly be a challenging Lwuakeouattlintheed fs~roeh~ ~~s~~~t~ orders go and is the liirst comshylind the other ousted teachers one and that conventlife inthe munity founded in America charged he university which is future is certain to undergo She urged them to create a cli- without European ties the Sisshyeonducted by theVincentian many radical changes mate where Sisters can liveters of Loretto weal habits more Fathers with breach of contract community life at its best She -modern than most But itsstill

The Superior~ were told that entreated them to keep thls cli-The dispute has been marked bY d bl d ff t the dress of 1812 not 1966 so it d k t f an m Ispensa e gUl e me ec - mate free from legallsm andlitudent unrest an pIC e mg 0 th hmiddotmiddot th will soon be changed As soon I mg ese c anges IS e map survelmiddotllance Ie schoo s campuses f th f t th t th C 1 as the all-mlll Congregation

or e u ure a e ounCl A community should be a of Religious in Rome approv~sMoral Issue Fatners drew up for the Church place where there- is safety for She called the CouncII Decrees the Sisters new design that is About 30 teachers were fired fl t d f t f dff

Rost December in a dispute over the documentS ofhighest au- cop IC an sa e y or J er- Tliey have submitted one de~ign rlty We should all have ~nes apd s~fety to cultiv~te that the fathers turnEd downadministration-faculty relation- tho d t h d Sh f I the mInd of Vatlcan II and then lverSI y s ~ sal e ee s lihey thought it was too modshyships and other issues They t I th t th h ld be

b b f we c~n move Into actlon she s rongy a ere ~u r -ern Sister Luke says UWhat anwere joined y anum er 0 I t I g I fe ther teachers In a strike that told her healers - 1Jloe ~o~a IY In re 1 J~)Us 1 incredible thing for US to ask shy --uAfterall were not Trap- that we choose our own clothes has continued since January Whi~h Way psts

l she adds with a laughThe court found that tpe How will the Sisters know in Warning that the time has S t Lk tl - b

uteceniontractual controversy was not whicli direction they should come for a re-evaluation of the _ IS ~rth y e~mt~ a spiritual mattelin a canoliical move in the manyarells so(in to true meaning of community she ne oIl e d~rs wo~~ ever ~ llense of the word spiritual change cExperiment Sister told the Superiors that commu- bo~a h a sre~t a f ~gUS aild that there was no allegation Luke advises so often its almost nity doesnt mean conformity or 0 y e oCle ~ o anon ef a violation of an ecclesiastical her motto We really cannot a hotel life either or even a Lawyrs Does thIS mian that law arid that the time was not move into change without ex-lot of happy t9getherness th~ SI~ters may at last have a opportune for a decision of perimentation she says and around the television set voIce 111 the formatIon of canon moral responsibility because the we will be engaged in tremen- A ~ital new aspect of commu- la-at least th~ laws that rUI~ secular courts would first have dous experiments from now on- nity is the idea of what Sister thel~ O~derS SIster Luke deshyto determine whether there was to adapt religious life to the Luke calls sub communities- vout y opes so a breach of contractual duty times in which we live the convents immediate neigh- Its certain that the future for

The church court found as a The revisions that lie ahead borhood the parish the civic the Sisters will be a very differshymatter of law that St Johns for religious orders will bring commumty lay people 111 the ent one than anyone could have 141 NO MAINUniversity as a corporation Sisters into the mainstream of same profession as the Sister- imagined a few short years ago J~ formed under the law of the modern life Sister Luke for for instance other nurses or The Holy Father has urged them iii FALL RIVER State of w York did not have one has no doubts that this is tElachers We have allowed too the~ to move from the margin e the ecclesiastical privilege of where they belong We ought great a gap to exist between our- of life to the center of life~ 873 COUNTY demanding that suits against it to be willing to take the risks) selves and the laity she says Will the move be successful SOMERSETbe heard in an ecclesiasticalmiddot that gO along with this plunge In an interviewmiddot following her Sister Luke says We can only CDOurt into the mainstream she says talk Sister ~uke was asked how know by taking a ChanCE

Feai makes the wolf bigger than be is

Rer Bankings Already D~ne

~jI--~1 W

tt-~~gt_ri~

~j F~ p ~tl Iim F-ilNgt

~l i

ll 11 ~~

W = ~

~gtltl ~

-~ ~~ StIesaves I lot of alunle Mtime forso maily other thinlS ~i She banks by mail at Te ~ OLD R D8 KI h 7reg E AN W at about you

liii FREE mall forms ~1 The mOld Red Bank W

$ Fall River Savings Bankjilll q

Page 14: 08.25.66

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Aug 25 1966 An Exce1lent Lcte Summer Activity J VI SIT-middot

Louisiari ~copyfrish A~~ampmpli~~~sect r~bull ~T[T uiH~Dfro[j1) fr ~rtilfrreg~[(frDIri)middot middot~~rrfr~~~Q~t~~~~~~~JJ~~tt$

MADISONVILLE (NC)--+wo cently used for ~~gt~es~was wears ago in this quiet jural torn down Its blue I green~and ~ J~lf ~ town the single square block white stained grass riow frames

ltContaining Catholic ch u r c h the huge rear wIndow ~ ~t buildings symbolized the old era Anselms church - - [f~[LL lRlt OV~~middot ~now it stands for the new This Spring St Catherines

Two years ago two churches also came down Gone too are stood 200 feet apart on this he cOl-vents and bullone school More than 280000 people havle cilrElody been aboard iUO ~he past ys[ioblock--St~ Catherine wh ere The other school building was

whites worshipped and St retained for parish meetings and Francis Xavier where Negroes the now-integrated Confratershy

worshipped The rectory with fiity of Christian Doctrine its one priest to serve both par- classes ishes s too d between theC rhe 100 or so school children

centhtirches moremiddot as a symbol of - arenow transported to elemEmshythe psychological gap thac asan tilt-y and high schools in nearby

actual separation covirigton arid Mandeville middot A fence stood between the two CCD instructions have been

eonventS on the block~riefor givengtySfsters qfChristian the Negro nuns who taughtCharityandtheirstudEints from

Negro children in the ~e~ro ~~njpirClncy at FolsoM La and IIchool the other for the wfitte byseminariaris fromarby St IllUns who taught white children i-Jolieph seminarY Butmiddot tpeseiii the whHe school diities are being taken over by

Now there is one church onemiddot tlie parishs integrated CCD orshyrectory and one small classroom ganizatiorinow being trained

building -- and one parish St The pastor Father John J Anselm DenDulk is prouder of the

Although wee k day Masses smooth transition than he is of were said in only onemiddot of the the physical change shytwo old churches Masses and Participation in worship has ether services on Sundays and increased since the new church major feast days were said in w~ built he says and he has

middot both Midnight Masses on Christ- the best commentators in the mas were celebrated concurrent- whl)le world

Iv in the two churches AIthougb there are only 260 But the buildings weremiddot badly families in the parish the new

Qn need of repair So in 1964 the ~church is already more than half lttId frame church of St Francis paid for and the parish topped

middot Xavier whose parish records go its quota in the archdiocesan back to 1863 and which was re- education expansion drive

bull ~ I bull

Bishop Pmiddoterry Says New Orleans Has Healthy Racial Climate

DENVER (NC) - Auxiliary still has more influence thaa Bishop Harold R Perry SyD any other Negro in the civil of New Odeans first AmeJican rights movement Catholic Negro bishop in this He (Bishop Perry) has been

lt1lentury said here a hea~thy very favorably received in New racial climate will exist wher- Orleans eve~ the Negro has a chan~ to Some Cannot WaU voice his grievances He said there will undoubtedshy

Bisnop Perry dted New 9r- ly be some civil rights groups lleans as an example sayipg the who disapprove lt)f non-violence racial climate there is healthy and occasional demonstrationS

because of an interracial council by those who cannot wait appointed by Louisiana~ov Of course I am a Negro and

John J McKeithen to help splve we have been waiting a long rmcial problems time If you take the long view I There are no demonstra~ions complete equality cant come too and riots and very little picket- quickly he added~

lng he said The cotiJlc~1 i-e- He said he has been received lieves tensions and if the Negro very well even enthusiastically has a forum to talk over his con- in New Orleans Picketing outshyeerns he will not demonstrate side the church where he was

Schools Integrated ~onsecrated he s3id Was DOt typical of the general feeling in

The 50-year-old prelate said New Orleans be is proud New Orleans has in- As an evidence of his popushytegrated all Its schools Its a larity he said he spoke at ninemiddot large percentage not just token graduations in June and has ofshyhe added ficiated at Confirmation in 24

He said Catholics are doing parishes their part to advance equality of opportunity in his citymiddot 1 think [EceQJl1illeIJilD~~ CCrrnDDOdegthere has been Ii united effort tl)Ir If

by all faiths and we would like ~~ ~DcopyQJIJilampIbgtD~~~DIJil to keep it that way he de- CRANSTON (NC) I hdared - n a s ow The New Orleans bishop also of the ecumenical spirit lea4ers ~ommented on ~ wide range of of major religious faiths in this

area took part in a combined eivil rights issues saying

The new militancy shown by bull religious and groundbreaking Visit the BClI~~ie$Mp anldllode alIeplica of the Old iFal~middot River Bill1e~ middottmiddotsom~ civi~ rights groups is a service on the site of the proshy

posed Church of the Annunciashypassing phase tion Greek Orth()dox lours start every 30 minutes

The majority of Negroes are Archbishop lakovo primate lJympathetic to the non-violent of the Greek Orthodox Church Opeill aU year round - 9 AM to Sunsetphilosophy of the Rev Dr Mar- of North and South America of tin Luther King and Dr King ficiated at the open air hierar- For Group Arrangements Call 678-1100 chal Divine Liturgy service at-

Serra Meeting tended by more than 500 pershy l)OOOO()ooOOC)ooOOClOOC)ooOOC)OO~IOOl sons

THIS MESSAGE Sp()NSORED IV lHE FOllOWING INDIVIDUALSATLANTIC CITY (NC) - A Participants in the groundshyeonference for members of Ser- breaking ceremony included AND BUSINESS CONCERNS IN GREATER FALL RIVERlIa Clubs in the New York-New Catholic Bishop Russell J MoshyJersey - eastern Pennsyivania Vinney of Igtrovidence Archshy ANN DALE PRODUCTS INC MACKIENZIE amp WINSLOW INC area will be held here Sept 23 deacon William L Kite represhy II~DY ELECTRIC SUPPLY COMASON FURNITURE SHOWROOMS tKi 25 Msgr William Noe Field senting the Rt Rev John Seville CASCADE DRUG CO GERALD E McNALLY CONTRACTOItiff Seton Hall University South Higgins Episcopal Bishop of GLOBE MANUFACTURING CO SOBILC)FF BROTHERS Orange NJ will give the key- Rhode Island Dr Wayne ~is

~~TGHINSON OIL COa~te address Sept 24 apoundter a executive director ofmiddot the Rhode STERUllIG BEVERAGES INC

~A Mc~HIRR ~9MPANY TEXTIU WORKERS UNION Of AMERICAeOncelebrated Mass at which the 1s~and Council of Churches ~nd ~rE~~ATIQNALV4DIES GARMENT 1 bull AlL~tO - principal concelebrant will be Rabbi Jerome Smiddot Gurland Gf

WORKERS UNION (EUOW CAI COMPANY Bishop George W Ahr of Tren~ ~telligtl~ Sinai 1epresentingthe ton Bhode Island Board of Rabbiamp bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull0 MssSelbullbull

~ ~ ~ - bull bull bull bull I ~ j

- ~

_-- -

0

WomenB~ Job Corps Members middotAid Youngsters Improve Reading

OMAHA (NC)-Omaha Wom- chesne Mother Moody found a ens Job Corps members joined benefactor to supply ihe a11shywith five graduates of Duchesne importlnt incentive program College and Academy of the Thanks to a generous racetrack

Sacred Heart here to upgrade bettor Who won the daily double the reading level of local public there was enough money for school youngsters candy bar prizes and two picnics

The progra~ ca]]edProject An indication or- the success of Upstart was first conceIved by the program was found in the Mother Helen Condon dean of reaction of the students A reshythe Nebraska co]]eg~ Mother cent visitor asked one of the Rosemary Moody aSsIstant pro- young boys Why are you here fessor o~ ~sYChology volunteer~ Did someone make you come to adminIster and execute themiddot program

The original plans were to take a group of seventh graders from Horace Mann Junior High School and tutor them in develshyopmental reading and study skills It soon became apparent that some rather basic instrucshytion was required some of the ehildren were still reading at the second grade level

Duchesnes elementary school was offered for use by Mother Helen Sheahan superior An Omaha public school official suggested that the Omaha Wom- ens Job Corps be contacted to see if they could furnish high school graduates as tutors Robshyert Bathke Job Corps education director soon put five young ladies at Mother Moodys disshyposal

Five recent Duchesne gradushyates volunteered to train the tutors for two weeks before the program actually began The Duchesne alumnae eventualiy elected to stay on for the entire program

Mother Moodymiddot was so imshypressed with the potential of the Job Corps enro]]ees that she exshytended their sessions through the rest of the summer and made college preparatory work avail shyable to them

Student Reaction Perha~s one of the more unshy

usual aspects of the entire Upshystart program was its lack of financing The only real subsidy (about $500) was from the OMaha Public School system the bulk of which went to the Omah~ Transit Company for bus service

The equipment used in the classrooms was borrowed from the public schools the Omaha Womens Job Corps and Du-

Plan to Supplement History Books

SAN FRANCISCO (NC) shyA supplementary text showing the contributions of minority groups in United States history will be added to history and social science books already in use in archdiocesan schools here

The supplement containing some 150 pages will deal chroshynologica]]y with the contribu- tions of Jews Negroes Orientais and various nationalities from southern Europe

It is being prepared by a speshycial studly committee which illl evaluating current textbooks found need for more thorough material on the part minority

groups have played in the OOUDshytry1s history

Leave Providence For Mission Work

PROVIDENCE (NC) - Four Capuchin priest and two layshymen left New York by plane for mission work in the Santa Rosa de Copan diocese Honduras

Father Ad ria n Holzmeister OFM Cap provincial of tile Capuchins St Mary province with headquarters here said the six will work among some 50000 persons in Mlree parishes in the state of Ocotepeque He said

other mjssionersmiddotas they become ayailabie wiD be sent to aid Bishop Jose Canama CbampvezCli tile diocese

He looked up and said Im here because I want to learn to read and I like it Two girls who missed the morning bus to Duchesne gave another exain-ple of determination to learn Jhey undertook a two-hour five mile walk rather than miss a day of class

L R oy etreats Contlnu~d from Page Six

laymens convention-an effort to provide some figure of speech some image to suggest to those in the Church and to those out-

side what is the inner nature of the Church

Alluding to Scriptures refershyences to the Church in terms of sheep and shepherds the former Hub Auxiliary Bishop asked How many people in Boston have ever seen a sheep Sheep and shepherds say little to youngstersmiddot in housing projects or even in the suburbs

The Bishop who is epiScopal advisor for the NCLRC officiashyted at the lighting of an eightshyfoot candle which symbolized the

conference theme-uThe Light of Chr~st The candle burned throughout the convention

Speakers stressed the retreat program is geared to demOJishystrate to the world that the way of Christ can become more meaningiful to men of our time

Bishop Ernest J Primeau of Manchester reminded delegates of recent profound changes withshyin the Church

If the lay retreat movement is to remain vital and relevant

he said it cannot be static It must be in harmony with the times at all times

Honest Call1Se

Our retreat houses could 00-middot eome so to speak the equipment and training centers for the apostolates of the laity he adshydect

Bishop Primeau urged laymei to learn from modern science particularly in the field of hushyman psychology He said there is an opportunity as well to learn from other organizations both secular and religious He added The youth of today are un-

selfish and in large numbers they are seeking for an honest cause to which they can dedicate themshyselves as witness their devotion to the Peace Corps and the civil rights movement

Modernize AncEtenlt Puerto Rico CIl1llLmlrch

SAN JUAN (NC) =- A lPJt8shyyear-old church one of the most popularmiddot in this capital city~ ~

going modern Archbishop Luis Aponte of

San Juan has inaugurated middotal campaign for funds for restorashytion of St Anns a public orashytory now badly illl need of Jeshypairs

1ft addition to restoration the ehurch also Will be equipped with air conditioning The eburch is the archdiocesan ceDltgt ~r for the Confraternity Gi Christian Doctrine and perpetual adoration of the Blessed Sacrashyment Built ill 184B the cburch weplaced an edifice which dated )Iaek iG tile lWi century

PROFESSION ANJ)) RECEPTION Four postulants beshycame canonical novices and two prof~ssed their vows as Sisters of St Joseph at ceremonies at the Blessed Sacrashyment Church Fall River Left column top to bottom Sr Gerard Marie (first vows) Sr Anne Therese Sr Rita Josshyeph Bishop Connolly who received the sisters Right colshyumn Sr Anne Denise Sr St Paul and Sr Alfred Marie (renewed temporary vow-s)

Specialmiddot Education Priests Visi~ PaJ~ents Homes to ExplOJon

SignificOJlI1lce off Baptismal Ritual

Thurs Aug 25 1966

Governor Balks

ST JEAN (NC)-Sunday bapshytisms are prece~ed by Saturday nights special educational proshygrams in a number of Catholic homes here in Quebec

The program to prepare the whole family for baptism through a home visit was deshyvised three years ago by a group of pries~s working togeth~r as a pastoral team

central idea of the program ~s that it is good for the priest to be with his people at imporshytant times in their lives~ Atmiddot these times people are dispOSed to receive the message of Christ

as it applies to their circumshystances the developers of the plan reported

The visiting priest explains the lOOremonies of the next day and the symbolic meaning of various parts of the baptismal ritual

Pilgrims Wctmlk TORONTO (NC) -The 10th

annual walking pilgrimage to the Canadian Martyrs shrine at Midland Ont will begin here Wednesday Organized by the Guild of St John de la Lande the pilgrimage will cover the 100 miles to the shrine in five days a~riving there Sunday Sept 4

LEMIEUX PLUMBING amp HEATING INC

fof Oomestic l~ andmiddot Industrial ~ Sales and Service

Oil Burners WY 5-1631

2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE NEW BEDFORD

Relatives neighbors or the prospective gorlparents may be presentbut themiddot home visit usually involves just the parents and their children

The ide is to make the preshybaptism vsit an oppodunity for dialogue between the priest and the parents rather than a conshyference

Ten parishes in the St Jean diocese have adopted the praeshytice along with l few Montreal parishes Father Marcil Brillon secretary of the St Jean litur- gical commission said he exshypects the practice to spread

FALSE TEETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass Many wearers of false teeth suJIer

embarrassment Qecause their platesdrop Blip or wobble at Just the wrong time Dont live In fear of thts happening to you Just sprinkle a little FASTEErH the non-acid powder on your plates Holds false teeth more firmly so they feel more comfortable Checks denture breath Dentures that fit are essential to health See your dentist regularlyGet FASTEETH at all drug counters

At Proposals MONTPELIER (NC) - Vershy

monts Gov Philip Hoff said he bas extreme reservations conshycerning abortion and sterilizashytion proposals contained in a reshyport of an adivsory committee on the mental retardation situshyation in the middotstate

The report called for legal sanctioning of induced abortion in cases where there appears to be a high risk of mental retarshydation of an unborn child

Thereport also contained a suggestion concerning steriliza shytion of the mentally retarded

Apart from the recommenda~ tions on legalized abortion and sterilization of the mentally reshytarded I must S4ly it was II good report Gov Hoff said He said lie will study the report with utmost care before taking any action 0

Expresses Thanks To Holy Father

VATICAN CITY (NC) -The vice prime minister of Vietnam has paid a visit to Pope Paul VI to thank him for his peace efshyforts and generous help to reshylieve the suffering of the Vietshynamese people General Nguyen Huu Co vice prime minister and secretary of state for national defense of Vietnam visited privately withshythe Pope for 30 minutes Accord- ing to a Vatican Press Office bulletin

The vice prime minister in the name of South Vietnam exshypressed profound gratitude for the valid support always given by the head of the Catholic Church and of the Holy See in the cause of peace and for the generous assistance sent by the Holy Father to relieve the sufshyfering of those persons torshymented by war The distinguishshyed visitor then continued tomiddot deshyclare that the intentions of South Vietnam are directed only toward an affirmation of the liberty of its own nation and Wgt arriving at a just peace in honor and concord

Complete

BANKING SERVICE

for Bristol County

Bristol County Trust Company

TAUNTON MASS

THE ~ANK ON TAUNTON GREEN

Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Bristol Community College Offers Evening Classes

64 Durfee St Fall River Credit classes begin September 19 1966

Register Now Mondays thrrough Thursdays 200-500 PM Courses for college credit or self improvement are offered ill

The arts languages and literature Behavioral and social sciences accounting business

administration and secretarial scieRCe Mathematics science engineering and electro-mechanical technology

Advisors Availabie During ~egistration Hours

16 THE AI~ ~-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

C~nsiders Instability Causes In Latin American lamds

From Social R-evolution in the New Latin Ameriea Edited by John J Considine MM

There are many causes of instability in Latin America Some have said in the past that it is an inheritance frQm

Spain They feel that the years of Spanishauthoritarianism rendered the colonies incapable of integrating themselves into a more balanced social system Because they had there exists the problem of low

denSity of population with a lackpreviously lacked indepenshyof internal communication In-dent creole authority the many cases there is even a lanshy

colonies were unprepared to acshy guage barrier eept a more democratic authorshy The problem of an underdeshyity In his book veloped economy has also beenBetween Freeshy a factor in forming Latin Anlershy clom and Fear ican social structureGerman Arcinshy On the social level the eleshyiegas draws a ments I have mentioned favorcomparison beshy an internal lack of class strucshytween the Enshy ture that involves a juxtaposishyglish and Spanshy tion rather than a social organi shyish governments zation and integration Democshyin the Americas racy on the other hand presupshyIn ihe north the poses a large scale integrationcolonists came in of the people in the politicalshysearch of freeshy economic-social life of thedom IIi the end nationthe founding of the Nodh The masses of -illiterates inAmerican colonies was only the Latin America who do not parshyobvious culmination of a process ticipate in these areas have noalready begun It was the reafshy iilterest in government thoughfirmation of customs already inshy their interest and loyalty maygrained in the social milieu It be enlisted by the demagoguewas an evolution not a real revshyolution for these settlers were Formation or Dictatorships accustomed to autonomy The A dictatorship takes form

authority pf their governors was when one or more pressure more democratic since they groups unchallenged seizes the worked closely with the popular power of governmentassemblies From the beginshy In order to better understand ning the keenest concern of the the types of dictatorship found North American colonist was for in Latin America let us elCamshyfreedom of worship and his hosshy ine the different forms of revoshytility to the Church of England lution and the various ways in was evident which the pressure groups

On the contrary Latin Amershy bring their influence to bearIca was part of an empire The Kalmal1 Silvert distinguishesSpaniards came to dominate and these types in his book Reaction evangelize The viceroy represhy and Revolution in Latin Amershysented the king who was an abshy ica which is written in -Englishsolute monarch The role of Silvert shows the relationshipshyassembly in Latin America was between dictatorships and the secondary arid represented exshy extreme indivdualism found in tremely liIIlited power these countries

Independence in the Latin The first type of revolution American nations entailed a real named is what Silvert calls the revolution since from the beginshy simple brracks revolt Most of ning they were forced tb look for the outbreaks especially in the new political and social forms past century have been of this

Religiousliberty did not elCshy kind The barracks revolt occurs ist in the Latin American coloshy typically in a big class society nies since all were obliged to It is carried out by the amlY

membership in the Cathoiic sompoundtimes in its own name and Church sometimes in behalf of a chosen

Unassimilated Groups leader This type of revolution - rarely calses widesprelld publicThis comparison will help in

disturbance since it representsunderstanding the Latin Amershymerely a switch in governmentican problem though it will not from one general to anotherfully explain -it We must acshy

knowledge that the political The second type the peasant phenomeinon has a direct COIshy revolt is generally of little sigshyrelatio~1 with demographic probshy nificance and limited in effect lems such as the existence of to a locality though the Mexican large unassitnilated groups as revolution at the beginning of well as masses of mestizos un this century would perhaps fall derdeveloped and deprived who in this category can scarcely be said to partici shy Third the regional revolt pate in twentieth century chili shy commcn in the early days of zation Although these groups Latin American independence form a part of the nation they Here _the caudillo strove to put are not integrated either socially down provincial revolts and to eulturally or politically centralize power in an authorishy

Despite the over-all demoshy tarian I e g i () n a I government g~aphic explosion in some areas Typical of the caudillos who led

regional revolts was Rosas of Argentina

Plans Participation The fourth a more modern type of revolution Silvert callsIn Liturgical Week the complicated barracks revolt

HOUSTON (NC) - The 1966 This is an insurrection that inshyLiturgical Week here fOI the -volves civilian as well as mili shyfirst time in its 25-year history tary groups with widespread will have a full scale program military action for those interested in the The issues are ideological and Eastern Church relate to political parties as well

As part of the Liturgical Week as _ other interest groups The program the Divine Liturgy Cuban revolution in its beginshy(Mass) of St John Chrysostom nings might be considered -an will be celebrated entirely in example Although this is the English and Communion will be most prevalent type ainong modshydjstributed under both species ernday revolutions excetions Chief celebrant of the Liturgy are the revolts which overthrew will be Archbishop Paul Achkar Peron in Argentina Perez-JimeshyGreek Catholic ~-chbishop of nez in Venezuela and -Rojas Lattaquia in Syua Pinilla in Colombia

SISTER AMBROSE

Says SOo Africa Needs Americans

WASHINGTON (NC)-Yanshykee come over a statement which would do much to boost the morale of Americans in sevshyeral parts of the world could well summarize what an Irish missionary nun to South Africa

-has been saying during a visit here _

The wonderful hospitality of theAmerican people has imshypressed Sister Ambrose Harty Gf the Sisters of the Holy Family She lamens the fact that opporshytunities to receive Americans in a like manner have been few and far between during her 20 years in South Africa

Youve got such a lot to give she said here in an ~ntershyview during which she expressed a strong desire to see greatly inshycreased people-to-people relashytio~s between the country where she serves and the United States

Sister Ambrose was particushylarly interested in the Peace Corps ann reported that its purshyposes and work are hardly known by the people of Soutli Africa I haVent heard it disshycussed at all she said (The Peace Corps has not been invited into the country) (

With words of praise for the missionary work being done iii the South African Republic by Oblate arid Paulist missionaries from the United States she also expressed regret at the general paucity of missioners from this country There particularly is an almost total lack of nuns she said Only 71 Catholic missionshyaries from the United States inshycluding 16 nuns are serving ilm South Africa

Married Priests AMSTERDAM (NC)-A

Dutch public opinion poli h8lll shown that 11 per cent of the Netherlands p e 0 pIe woulci rather have III married Catholi4l clergy than a celibate clergy The poll including members ai all and no denominations

-showed that 68 per cent of the Catholics queried preferred III married clergy

~~

(DEBROSS OIL ( ~ co ( ~ Heating Oils

~ and BMIIJUrs ~

~ 365 NORYIoli IFROIlir SUEampll ( rJ NEW IBIEDIFOR

~ WYmafi 2middot5534 (

I~~~

Parishes Share DETROIT (NC) - Twentyshy

nine urban parishes here have decided to help one another meet the rising cost of education

At the elementary level parshyepts will pay $50 per family $75 per family for non-Catholic parishioners and $75 per student

Danish Catholic COPENHAGEN (NC) -Thereshy

are 11321 Catholics in the Danish capitalaccording to a report issued by the Copenhagen statistical office They consti shytute the second largest religious entity there next to the Luthershyans members of the State Church The total number of Catholics in Denmark is approxshyimately 26000 Total population is 35 lllillion

Education Costs for Catholics outside the parish

At the high school level the tuition cost is $H)O per student in or out of the parish With the exception of textbooks this amount eliminates aU extra fee charged up to now

Father Norman P Thomas director of the Urban Parisll Apostolate said the greatest efshyfect of the joint effort will be experienced by the pastor who sends parish youngsters to a higll school operated by any of the 2 participating parishes

In this instance the students parishes will be expected to pay the difference between the tui shytion charged and the actual cost per student The latter fee laM been set by the parochial school office at over $200 per year

ETHIOPIA- THE NEW AFRICA

- HOLY FATlftRB MIBBIIDN AID TO THI DRIENTAL OHURCH

- BROTHER What happens In Ethiopia when an American MICHAEL Christian Brother (he could be your son brother

REYNOLDS nephew) Is told to upgrade Catholic schools He FROM borrows a Jeep (or a mule) visits the schools

PROVIDENCE RI one by one writes home for pencils and better REPORTS textbooks and then beginsbullbull This is the new

fROM Africa Brother Michael Reynolds reports enshyADDIS thusiasticallyfrom Addis Ababa It can be a BABJpeacefuf progressive Christian Africa tom~rmiddot

row Just give us schools give us time and with Gods help the job will De donel bull bullThe schools are for villages like Aressa Aiga Biers Wartll8~

-which have no school The youngsters know that knowledge i~ their only chance theyll go without food to learnbullbullbull What does It cost to build a schoolf Only $2950 says Brother Michael for the villagers snd the children give their laborfreemiddotofmiddotcharge We can train a catemiddot chlst for only $40 bullbullbull In thanksgiving to God for what you know will you do what you can ($100 $75 $50 $25 $15 $10 $5 $2) to give these youngsters a chance The school will be named for your favorite saint and the children will pray for your loved ones daily If you build It all byyourself ($2950) School will open late this year-but better late than never-If you Vlrit~ to us right now

WHAT Our priests there who receive no othor income IELSE for food and clothing will offer promptly the

FOR Masses you request Well forward your Mass ETHOPIAr Inten~ons through the Holy Fathers officebull

40 young lads studying for the priesthood In Decamere lose their football when It goes Into a nelghbers garden A large field can be bought ~velled and mede safe for sports fer $975

MAKINQ ~~IOOOO will ovfde bull OOfDj)lete parjstlplantA (Ohuroh rectory convent andscbool) In southshy

WiW ImIAdla In memorybullbullbullbull $600 will ttiln a native lrfHt1SOO bull native Sfster Our legal tltI Cl~1HOUO NWt lAir WIUAH AHOCIAnONo

_-------------~shytt coINIILOIIlt IUMIIIND ~ bullbull la IJIIr bull _1OIt~=-=_==-=

PI _UM~gt

Mum ClO1IIponwith your mt__=-~~_ _ ~i offrtnt ~~ erryen 8TAlI-lPCODI_

HI IATHaLl1 RIIiAR 811 WILAbullbull AIaDIATaN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS IRANCUS CARDINAL SPELLMAN President MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretal)f Write OATHOLIO NfIAR IiAST WELFARE Assoo 1)80 MadlsolJ Avenuomiddot New York NY 10017 -felGpilonel 212YUkon 6middot6840

Dormitory Proves Stonehill Permanently Coeducational

Way back in 1951 when the first girl enrolled in Stoneshyhill College no one could have imagined that a girls dormishytory would ever be built onmiddot the campus But the sound of steam shovels and hammers filling the air over the lovely grounds in Easton is proof

and two girls from the seniorthat the long planned for daslr-assisting the housemothergirls dorm will soon be a Mrs Grace Callahan

reality When Stonehill was The experiment worked so founded in 1948 as a mens colshy well in fact that this coming lege the fledgling school had Fall both the freshman and just gotten off to a good start sophomore girls will be housed when the Korean War came this way leaving only the junior along and emptied the classshy and senior girls still renting Yooms as the young men went quarters in private homes chosen into the services by the college as all the nonshy

That was the year that many commuting girls have done in small colleges had to close their the past gates forever But at Stonehill That typical campus situation the Holy Cross order was detershy -the sorority house-is not in mined to hold onto this new the picture at Stonehill-or frashyschool that they had planned for ternity houses either for that so long matter No sororities or fraternishy

What could they do to keep ties are allowed on the campus the college operating until the There is a cl11b however that war was over and the boys came is the girls own - the Crosier back Of course Open their Club Mrs Yosgandes is the gates to girl students clubs faculty advisor and she deshy

Faculty Pleased scribes it as the organization What started out as a temposhy for women studentE who want

rary expediency somehow over to contribute in their own parshythe years has acquired a happy middotticular way as women to their permanancy No one could be college more pleased about this turn of Through their annualmusical events than the Stonehill faculty Crosier Curtain Calls theyitself raise money to acquire manymiddot

Helping out in Jhe ground things that add beauty and breaking ceremony for the new charm to campus life This yeardorm Mrs Virginia Yosgandes they purchased two very lovelythe Dean of Women at the colshy silver tea and coffee services lege saiei I guess everyone will Any official group at the collegereally believe that the girls are is allowed to borrow the sets and here til stay they have already been used in

Mrs Yosgandes says that since many functions she first came to the Stonehill New Signfaculty in 1958 rumors have

Mrs Yosgandes says Thebeen popping up that Stonehill girls will be very pleased whenwill soon return to its original they come back th~~ Fallto seestatus as an all male school The the beautiful new sign theynew dorm she says will be visshybought for the college installedible proof of the permanancy of on Route No 138 women on the beautiful campus

Its very easy to picture theThe $1150000 building deshyvery charming Dean presidingsigned to accommodate 200 girls

graciously at a faculty tea Aand proctors will be three stories parishioner of Immaculate Conshyof red brick Architects W Chesshyception chulCh in Easton she ister arown and Associates and in ~rivate life an enthusiasticwntractors C A Batson and homemaker anc the mother of aCompany are planning to comshy13 year old daughter Christineplete work on the dorm in time Her husband John is assistantfor the opening of classes in principal at Franklin JuniorSeptember 1967 It will be the High first unit of a five dormitory

She speaks with great convicshycomplex planned fo the women on tion about college girls holdingcampus

onto feminine ideals while surshyKitchen ~pace rounded-and at Stonjhill outshyMrs Yosgandes is happy about numbered 3 to 1- by menthe fact that the new dorm will While were encoulaging themhave a kitchenette on each floor to be acdve in thpound communitywhere the girls can cook small and the church and in politicsmeals and entertain guests Shes and encouragint them to deshyhoping that the dorms built after

more velop their abilities to the full shythis me will providtgt even est-we never fail to take intokitchen space for the girls to account the fact that they arepractice the culinary arts women and in this competitiveM a n~ tImes homemaking world theyll have to -fight toskills come to a complete halt maintain their feminine idenshywhen a girl goes to college she tity says Apparently all classroom

work and rio cooking make Jane Coed Actiiti~s

Coed a dull girl in the room When she fi rst came to the where shell be spending a great college she sltys the girls were deal of time after graduationshy mainly interested in strictlythe dtchen feminine extra curricular activishy

Mrs Yosgandes says A great ties-fastion shows teas gids many cCJlleges have been workshy sports Bd this has changed radshying witt this problem and wonshy ically in the last few years and dering what to do about it Beshy now the girls are much more inshycause theyve had no living terested in the coed acti vitiesshyquarters for girls on campus the newspapers the debating Stonehiiil has had to do out of team the drama club Stonehill necessit) what many other colshy is noted a~ one of a small handshyleges have chosen to do recently ful gtf Catholic colleges where The Dean describp~ an experishy girls are middotactive in every part of ment that the collFge tJied last college life Every coure at yeal tha has worked out exshy StonehHj is opel to girls tremely well We still havent had a woman

Experiment Successful president of our student governshyThe college leased a grollp of ing body the Senate Mrs

rooms il an apartmelt building Yosgandes says Now girls in Brockton last Fall where all what are yOIi waiting for the freshman girls who were not commuters-55 of them-lived in housekeeping apartments In Red Groups There were four girls in each BERLIN (NC)-Over 85 per apartment all sharing the reshy (ent of East German children sponsibilities of housekeeping between the ltlges of 6 and 14 are

The girls hat two sets of mCl11)ers of communist youth 1)IoctOS - two aIumni wumen ~nIUps

lrt-OE ANCH0) 17 Thurs Aug 25 1966

PriestCuod Goal Of Top Skater

GREAT FALLS (NC)-A good many folks in this Montana toWlll will attest that teenager J Mishlll Petkevich is a pretty good skate -on or oH the ice

The affable blond youngster 17 topped a field of 136 pershyformers in the three-day Lake Placid N Y international free style competition sanctioned by the U S and Canadian Figure Skating Assoclations The Great Falls lad was the judges unamiddot1ishymous choice for the mens gold medal in the finals

But Petkevich doesnt lose his cool off the ice His classmates and teachers at Great Falls Censhytral 3igh School claim hes liIl

winner in every event He spends more than 40 hours 11 week in skating training but carries the full load of class studies and consistently turns Up on the schools honor roll Hes a member of the National Honor Society

The school supported me ami the way Everyone has beeEl wonderfUl to me the modest youngster saia Hes been -skatshying since he was 2 He credit his achievements to his Catholic Faith the sacrifices of his parshyents and of Arthur Bourke senshyiormiddot professional of the Great Falls Figure Skating Club He said All I did was skatemiddotGROUND-BREAKING The Very Rev John T Corr

I hope some day to become~esc president of Stonehill College turns a shovelful of priest Petkevich said wbeilearth to mark start of construction 0pound a 200-student dormshy a~ked his ambition I hope 14gt itory for women on the Stonehill campus Watching the proshy attend Notre Dame for at leasa celtlures are left to right Mrs Virginia Yosgandes dean af two years and then I h9pe to gf)

to the Catholic University fl4women John C Doody 66 Alumni fund chairman Robert AmericaBatson contractor Harold Bonvie ass~iate of the archishytect

Msgr Canty Continued from Page OneRussian Schools ing studies at S1 Marys High

Taunton Boston- College and S1 Bernards Seminary RochesshyChristian Brother Lauds Students terN Y

nespect for Intellectuols He served as assistant at Our Lady 01 the Isle NantucketCHICAGO (NC)-Students in to foreign languages than Amershy Holy Family Taunton St

schools behind the Iron Curtain icans Most students take a Marys Barrowsville and Stgo at their studies with a passhy seven-year sequence of English Johns Attleboro He was apshysion said Brother Kevin Mark German or French English he pointed to the Chaplains CorPJFSC who toured Russia and added is the most popular lanshy of the United States Navy infour satellite countries with 19 guage and more emphasis is January 1942 and retiredwitbother U S rducatois placeltl on reading and speaking the rank of captain in Decemshy

Brothel Mark who is princishy than on writing it ber 196gt Pope John XXIII pal 9f St Mels high school here Brother Mark said that there elevated him to the rank of attributed much of their motivashy is almost nothing that he would Domestil Prelate with the title tion to the students attitude that lift from the Soviet school sysshy of Right Reverend Monsignor iI What I do does contribute to tem and apply in the U S May 1962 the welfare of the state He admitted however that Bishop Connolly named Monshy

Brother said he felt that stushy they do get results They have a signor Canty pastor of St Paulsdents in this country lack motishy tremendous capacity for conshy Taunt-ln in December 1963 vation because were spoiled centration when they set their Industrial improvements have sights for example their space made it that a young man can program Its not all a matter go into a trade and make very of being chained to a lab table good money BLUE RIBBON

In the Soviet Union he said there seems to be a great reshyspect for intellectuals and the LAlnNDRY student is thought of as a proshy

01 STOPfessional schJlar 273 CE~RAl AVE~UIIG CfflTERTeaching is considered a proshy

fession and remunelated accordshy e Television C FmiddotI ure illgly WY 2-6216o r-cerv

St Mels principal observed on IlA Allen St Newhdfordhis tour that there was little NEW BEDFORD questioning on the part of the students

The chSSloom situation he said is very much teacher ori shyented that is study in depth is 21 DAY PILGRIMAGES TO EUROPE done on the teachers inspiration

rou~ 1-Legion of Mary Pilgrimage leaving Sept 12th with Truth in such areas as history Father Edward A Oi-viera will visit Killarney Dublin Paris

cllld literature is accepted as a Lourdes Rome Madrid Lisbon and Fatima - Tour 2shyforegone conclusion and stushyHoly Cross Fathers Pilgrimage leaving Oct 10th with Frdents just memorize what has

already been discovered ----- lobert E McDonnell will wsit lisbon Fatima 1odrid Rome Lourdes Paris and londonIike F)rc~gn Linutges -cota cost is $82900 - Time PaymentsmiddotIn the area of science howshy arranged ever the situation is difterent

()Ii TOUR tOLDERS CONTACT STEolfEN A MARIIEYhe pont~d out because in scishyence there is an attitude of I n~ust discover Catholic Travel

-Office

The R1~middotmiddotmiddotO p oth-r Mark ~ltk St New Befl- -ass 02748

said ~ ve 11111j Ill)le auention

BURNERS

BUrntlr Service

Famous Reading HARDCQAl

NEW ENGLAND COKE

t8 THE ~NCHOR-Dioceseof fo Rivef-Thurs Aug 25 1966 J~sut I)riest Says Some Public I b M t EmploYE~~S Have Right to Strike

-

Urges uO or ovemen S NEW (NC) -Public however YORK Government hasmiddot h C employees in certain fields have been expanding its cQncern andIn Heml$p ere ooperate the right to strike against the has beenmoving into ar~as of government a priest declared transportation education recre-

By MsgrGooJrge C Higgins (Director Socian Actiolll Dept NCWC)

The relationship between the American labor moveshyment and the Latin American Confed~ration of Christian Trade Unions (CLASC) leaves much to be desired as we

middot thO d th 1- have aready noted severa1 t Imes m IS co umn urmg e

past four or five years The two movements are deeply different things to different peoshy

auspicious of one another and just when they seem to be on the verge of settling or at least -patching up their differshyences they go at it again and recklesslystart hurling insults at one another

To jUdge from What they sayIi b 0 u t on e another publicshy1yen as well as privately on e would t h ink that they were natural-born enshyemies whe~eas in fact they have much in common-much inore than they seem to realizeshyand for obvious reasons ought violent MisS Duncan was an officer of The fourth public member Harshyto be c60p~rating With onean- Moreo~er at least one promi~theSodality a cheerleader for vardlaw school professorVern ether as closely as pOSSible nent spokesman for the AFL- four years a member of the Ten- Countryman half ci-itiCized the This writer has learn~ci the hard WR and muc~ to hiS so~-row that any outSider who 18

fOolish enough totryto mediatek f

~tween them JS as mg or troouble

C f t Gommun same If for example one suggests

as I have done on more than one Occasion that soine of the anti U S propaganda emanating from CLASCsources revealS atremely harmful to the cause of n a i v e misunderstanding of Amerlcan trade unionism and American capitalism andor ari $ver-simplification of Catholic Social teaching he runs the risk 9f being written off as a blind -not tOsay reactionary apologist for so-called Yanqui ~mperial-

iBm If on the other hand oneslig

gests that some of the anti- CLASC propaganda enianating

fro m AFL-CI0 sources is equally naive and unsoPllisti shyeatedhe runs the same Sort of risk in reverse That is to say he is likely to be told--v~ry politely of course -that if he were to take off his Catholic blinkers and look at the record objectively he would quickly come to realize that CLASC is in reality playing t~ecipal rival in Latin America) riages in their mission parishes communist game in Latin Amer- there is a gEirierous mixture of Msgr Milia stated Since the iea superficial appearances to cultural chauvinism and envy Ogdensburg mission was opened the contrary notwithstanding that accompanies the most legit- a modern new church bas been

Both CaD Learn imate misgivings built under its direction in the Be that as it may I still think Even the Latinos middotthemselve~ seaport ofMatararii two mission

~t CLASC has a lot to learn he points out will admit on ac- churches have oeen completed about _ and from American casion that their consumirig fear and a lalge parish church and trade unionism And if that of Yanqui imperialism is often center are currently under conshymakes me a reactionary Yankee irrational But there it is he re- struction in Mollendo ehauvinist so be it minds us and the basic prob-

By the same token however aiso think that the American

labor movement has much to learn about -- and from - the Christian trade union movement in Latin America The first thing it has to learn is that the Am~r-leap philosophy of pure-andshysimple bread-~d-butter union ism which all things considshyered has worked satisfactorily in this country is not necessarily well adapted to the present-day Deeds of Latin America

Meaning of Revolution Another way of saying the

same thing is that American iabor representativesworking on Latin America problemswm have to reconcile themselves to the fact that a social revolu-Uon is called for in Latin American labor federation that doesnt subscribe to a revolushytionary ideology is probably doomed to failure

The word revolution meaos J-

pIe of course To the leaders of CLASC it means a sweeping program of socioeconomic and political reform which goes far beyond the limited goals of bread-and-butter unionism

The leaders of CLASC are convinced that such a revolushytioo is demanded bythe Chrisshytian social ethic to which they subscribe and from which they derive their ideology

Perceptive Critique Some U S Labor repshy

resentatives are skeptical to say the least~bout the allegedly Christian content of CLASCs militant ideology They admit theneed for a peaceful revolushytion in Latin Americn butthey are convinced thatCLASC wants this revolution to be Feehan High School Attleboro alties in a letter tc therimes

lem is how to insure con~ PAVlA V I tlnuing cooperation between 0 untee rs Yanqui and Latino in spite of Complete TlIainirigit

Such cooperation Dr Hawkins WASHINGTON (NC)-Fortyshyconcludes will be impossible unshyless the leaders of the American labor movement positively indi~

cete their acceptance of social revolution in Latin America This will require he says

more than the generous transshyfusions of economic aid the stimulation under United States

labors auspices of leadership training programs for workers

and other cooperative ventures Need Broader View

What is required he insists ltCia a broader view-an ability on the part of the American la bor statemen to adopt policies that will not always accord with OUI own value~ and more speshy

cificall~ the tempering of (their) hosannas to free entershyprUie ___

inter-American labor unity I fully agree in this respect with Dr Carroll Hawkins Associate

Professor of Political Science at Michigan State University who recently published a most pershyceptive critique of American trade union policy in Latin- Catholics in Mollendo Peru the

America (The 0RIT and Amer diocesan missions director reshyican Trade Unions Conflicting ported Perspectives Industrial Rela- The New York priests were tionsand Social Changes in sent to Peru after Pope Paul Latin America University of vi -asked that more priests be Florida Press) pr9vjd~d fOr the people opoundSouth

Basic Problem America Msgr Anthony A Mi-Dr Hawkins admits of course lia said He estimated more than

that in all the Latin American 90 percent of the priests in criticism of United States unioniperu are from other countries in the ORIT (the Latin Ameli can regional unit of the Interna In 1965 the priests from Ogshytional Confederation of Free denburg administered 445 bap-Trade Unions and CLASCs prin tisms and perfoImed 64 mar-

CIOhas publicly charged in ej_ nis Club for two years and a suggested penaltiel fect that CLASCs ideology three yeaT member of the FU- owes more to Marxism than it ture Nurses club Father Carey sl~id the ~ays does to Christianity He finds it when pay and working condi-

An instructor in the Confra- tions for men and women inhard he says to accept the fact ternity of Christian Doctrine that the Christian labor move- civil service were determine4 byproglam in Our Lady of Mt I g I t d d t t

t middot A e IS a Ive It n a minIS ra Ive ment 0f L a In merIca IS non- Carmel Parish Seekonk the fiat have pas ed a d Communist s n we now

In my judgment this kind of criticism of CLASC by spokesshymen fltr the AFL-CIO is ex

three volunteers have completed the Second National Training Session sponsored by the Papal Volunteers for Latin America and received assignments in some ten Latin American coun- tries

Special ceremonies ended the six-week training session at the Catholic University of America where volunteers studied the apostolic work of the Church the laymans role in the aposshytolate and principles of spiritual life as well as the religion ecoshynomics and culture of Latin America

Before leavillg for their asshysignments the volunteers will take intensive four-month lanshy

guage anl culture courses in a Latin American language centerbull

eighth winner of this scholarship plumeoursElves that we share will enter the Childrens Hosshypital School of Nursing Boston in Septembel-

Ogdensburg Priests

SellYe Peru Mission OGDENSBURG (NC) -- Four

Ogdensburg priests currently are ministering to the n~eds of_13OOO

~ere

Father Philip Carey sJ exshyecutive director of the Xavier Institute of Industrial Relations acknowledged t hat certain strikes aJre intolerable But he said that when the governmentacts in a proprietary function it must follow the same rules it prescribes for private enterprise

In a letter to the New York Times Father Carey criticized ~y implication a proposed state -llw that wetulltilincrease the penalties to be imposed on strikshying union of public employees

MlISS LHNDA DUNCAN Th~proposedlaw grew out of recommendations of a five-man

Feehan Alumna task force named by Gov Nel son Rockefeller to study the

Receives Award problem after a 19-day transit strike crippled Newmiddot York City

Miss Linda Duncan daughter in January of Mrs George Duncan and the - NeCeSSBlry for Bargaining late George Duncan 61 Sykes Father Carey one of four Rd Seekonk has been awarded pubiic members of the mayors the eighth annual scholarship of committee that helped settle the the Attleboro Area Nurses strike disagreed with two other Chapter publlc memlgters Vh_o had previshyA 1966 graduate of Bishop ously supported the stiffer pen-

and internal concord a str~ke against itconstitutes mutiny and rebellion (UCLA) Sister Muriel a native

Pgbllsh Gudelnes For Ecumenisn

ALLENTOWN (NC) - The commission of ecumenism of the Allentown diocese here in Pennshysylvania has published a 22-page booklet of ecumenical guidelines to aid priests in guiding the laity The guidelines include general

permission for non-Catholics to serve as witnesses at Catholic weddings for Catholics to serve as witnesses at non-Catholic weddings and for burial of non-Catholics in Catholic ceremonies with a priest or a non-Catholic clergyman cltmducting graveside eeremonies

SHELL DADSON OIL

24-Hollr Oil

GLE COAL amp OIL CO IncI

640 Pleasant Street Tel WY 6-8271 New Bedford

this decision-making with the working p E~ 0 P Ie themselves through the process of collective bargaining

If collective bargaining is to be the rule he said we must agree to grant the right to strike~ Without this right he said there is no union and no coll~ctive balmiddotgaining

Expands Concern-in considering strikes by pu~ lie employees he dedared one muSt distinguishb~tween the state as a sovereign and the g()vernment acting in a proprishyetary function When the state aets as the defender of the peace or the promoter of justice

of Corning Iajoined the Sisters of the Humility of Mary in 1930 In recent years she has been ehairman of professionafarts deshypartment and college registrar

ation and a host of other services formerly performed by privategroups he continued

These activities are ancillary and economic and here the state in acting in a proprishyetry function When it so acts it ought to be subject tl) the same rules of conduct the government prescribes for private entershy

prise Strikes by firefighters and powerhouse uti lit y workers would be wrong however he said because it is difficult to imagine anY benefit they might gain to counterbalance the fear- fut harm such a l strike would impose on the community Buys Banners For Memorial

CHICAGO (NC)-A Chicago advertising executive has bought 44 brightly-colored religious ~anners tat -hung in the Nashy

tlOnal Srme of the Im~aculate ConceptIon during Luci Johnshysons wed(iin~ -

Earle Ludgin a trustee of the University of Chicago said he will donate the banners to the

university~ Rockefeller Memoshyrial Chapel in memory of his late wife

The banners for which Ludgin reportedly paid more than $40000 were originally created for the Vatlcan PavIIIon at the New York World Fair

A group of Washington D C residents bought ttie banners when the fair closed and arshyranged to have them exhibited in the Shrine until they could be sold Lugdin bought themin April but agreed at the request of Shrine officials to leave them in the Shrine until after Lucia wedding

lame College Head

OTTUMWA (NC) Sis t er

Muriel Hogan has been named the third presi4ent of Ottumwa Heights College here in Iowa She succeeds Sister Marie Anshy

ciue Kennedy woo win engagem graduate study in oominunishy

eations at the University of California Los Angeles branch

Offering You 3 Savings Plans

Home Financing

WAREHAM CO-OPERATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mabull

Telephone 295-2400 Banll SerVice YlIIIIIII

I

Ask Court Bar Use of Church Propertyfor Public SchoQ~middot WHITE ~S (MC) - A the cl883rooms ~ut Church

group of some 25 citizens repre- npokesman reporte~ that in line sented by the American Jewish with New York archdiocesan Congress has asked the New York State Supreme Court here to restrain the board of Ramapo School District 2 Rockland County from holding public school classes in property leased from religious bodies

The school board faced with severe-overcrowding planned to lease eight rooms from St Josephs Catholic Church and five from lem~e Beth El in Spring Valley The action was approved by 8tateEducation Commissioner Jame$ EAllen Jr

A ComllllJJlt served 0ill the rlChool board by the AJC charged the acti~n o~ld ~otateChurchshyState separation guaranteed by the First Amendment to the Constitution as well as other provisions of the state constitushytion

It is believed to be the first wch challenge made regarding

the use of religiO18 facilities for public school use

lhe st Josephproperty conshysists of an eightclasSroom school building adjacent to but sepashyrated from the chureh It is Ill good condition but will not be used by the p8rish thismiddot year because it has bUilt a new bUildshying for expanding its acbool to 141 classes

All religioUs ~bols had Ileen removed from the oder building in preparation for its use as a public school

The district school board had offered a fair market rent for

PAV~A deg Missionary Record Continued from Page Thirteen

A nurse from Chicago baa taken Lucillellpla~on the aposshytolic team and ber purpose in returning is to help her successhy80r work into the project smoothly It takes so long to get into 11 she Aid so II dont WJmt Il~r to spendtbree

years j~ g~tting organized~

Benedictine Marks 80th Anniversary

ST JOSEPHmiddot (NC)-The oldshyest Benedictine nun in Minneshysota-and one of the oldest m the world~marked the 80th anshyniversary of her entrance into the order ma Mass for all Beneshydictine jubil~tians held at St Benedicts convent here

Sister Sophia Zimmer was 1~ years old Dec 2 1965 She Wall

born in a log cabin about 1 block away from the convent An open house for her relatives and friends was held at the conv~nt

Receives Students cAsTELGANDOLFO (NC)shyPoPe Paul vI received in audishyence at his Summer home here students frOm 34 nations includshying many non-Catholics who are taking Summer courses in the ItaUaa language aDd culture sponsored by the Rome branch of the Catholic University fII IWaD

policy the properly would be made available for public school use at a token dollar-a-year rental

cmOS Cmpetes C~~ege ~rr(l))g~m

WASHINGTON (NC)-A class of 97 under-privileged high school students was graduated on completion of an eight-week Summer college orientation proshy

gram at Georgetown University The exercises i attended by faculty and parents Qf the stushydents involved students who had completed their Sophomore year in District of Colwnbia high schools They were chosen for the special course because teachers and counselors believed they have the ~billty to do colshylege work alihoug~ their presshyent high school records indicate little likelihood of college acshyceptance Ninoty-fiveOf the 97 students were Negroes md the ratio of males to females was aboutmiddot tbree-to-two ~

The pro~~~~Ch began in 1965 is financed by the NaUonal science Fowidationmiddot the District of Columbia public school sysshy

tem and Georgetown In addition to academic work

the students were given cltgtUrsetl in reading improvement and counseling gUidance Athletie and cultural events underwrit shyten by the program were also bKluded in their schedules

nearly 42 years Bishop Gerow churches degespeciallY Negro said Of late I have feltmiddotthat X houses of worshIp which middotWere have not the stamina to caJTY I bombedmiddot and burned

on as I have done in the past Whena p~ttern of destn1c~ion This load should be borne by 1 develops as It has m our state youngerman then it sincumbent upon all ntereston Yoiit

Cathollc lnereaSe m~n ~ ~ood ~i~ througho~t MiSSISSIPPI to Jom hands m Savings

The ~venth bishop of~edio- helpingthe affectedmiddot churches 0 Invested In cesemiddotwhlch was founded ID 1~37 and in showing clearly our con- and encompasses 111 of Missls- demnation at all acts of violencemiddot CATHOLIC CHURCH sippi Bishop Gerow h8ll s~ lawlessness and destruction the Catholic population IJOw from 31264 to 75000 in his 41 years of office The number of priests in the diocese grew from 63 to 220 and churches md misshysions from 108 to 243

The last few years of llacial violence perhaps were the most troub1d for Bishop Gerows long ad inistration middotHemiddot met the challenge with courage

In the face of many-sided opshyposition Bishop Gerow in 1964 directed the first grades of Cathshyolicmiddot schools in the state to be racially integrated The next

Missionaries Move Seminar to Ohio

DAYTON (NC) -The White Fathers a missionary society which bas served in Africa for nearly a century is llloving its U S seminary to Dayton

St Josephs Seminary which had been in operation at Onshydliota N Y near Saranac Lake will re-open under the same

name in four residences near the campus of the University of

Dayton The buildings have been rented from the university

Eventually the White Fathers plan to build their own seminary

middotfacilities somewhere in ~e area according to Fatber Paul lo1e1le WF~

THE ANCHOR- middot19 Thurs Aug 25 1966

KC Melll1il~er~~ip

At AJ~Tome e~~gh MIAMI BEACH (NC)-In his

report at the 84th annual meetshying of the Supreme Council of the Knights of Columbus Sushypreme Knight John W McDevitt made these points

Membership on June 30 1966 stood at an all-time high of 1183896 The orders insurance covershyage passed the $15 billion mark during the year

The orders assets reached III

neW plateau of $28122840028 at the end of the fiscal year

The society i~ continuing its support of the campaign to st~m p(gtrnography

Revise Ceremonial Progress is being made onthe

re_Vision of the orders cerempnshyial to give it a total family middotclishymate and make it consistent with moder day philosophy of social justice and religious pracshytice

The K of C have undertaken distribution of copies of the 1~ew Testament to Catholic gradllates

COURAGE PERSONIFIED John St Marie of B~YQ of the Naval Offilaquoer CandfClatE port Minn CQnfined to a wheelchair since a 1953 pOlio ~chool in Newport R I an(J ill

~dying the question of proshyattack has received a scholarship to the University of viding a similar servilte ~orMinnesota law school atter successfully maintaining an Ashy Catholic graduatell of the Qffi shyminus average in undergraduate work at the College of cers Candidate School of ihe St Thomas St Paul Minn irQ Photo Canadian Navy

It saluted Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York on biI

Welcomes Successor Naming of Apostolic Administrato

Pleases Bishop Gerow 81 JACKSON (NC)-Mississippll1 year he followed with a direeshy

courageous 81-year-old Bihop tive that Catholic schools be deshyOliver Gerow welcomed his suc- segregated completely ceSSor Bishop Joseph B Bruni- Helps Restore Churches ni 55 as spiritual head of the Despite reported threats ofmiddot Natchez-Jacklon diocese as one violence fro m segregationist who is active vigorous and has ranks the aged prelate was good sound judgment among leaders of an interfaith

X am very happy in being groupmiddot which formed the Comshyrelieved of the heavy responSl- mittee of middotConcernmiddot soHcited middotbillty that I have borne for money labor and materIals for

middotthe bishop stated in a letterred AND in every Catholic church in the INSTITUTIONAL BONDSstate

His appeal for $300000 to re-middot I Umiddot f $500 M store more than 30 d~stroyed n nits 0 or ore and damaged churches brought Keenan amp CImiddotarey bie contributions to the Committee 9f Concern from various sections Minneapolis Minnesota of the country

0

M~ntle Plumbing amp ~ating Co Inc~

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET Fall River OS 57497

for detailed information write to

CHARLES A~ MURPHY Registered Representative

145 Pond $treet Winchester Mass

PA 9-2696 And

Name bullbullbull ~ Address A

City _

50 years in the priesthood payshying tribute to him not only beshycause of his dignity as a pi-iest and cardinal but also because he 1S a great and wholesome mail

Relic Stolen NEW YORK (NC)-A reputed

relic of the cross on which Chtist died has been stolen from the Church of the Most Holy Reshydeemer here It was removed from a side altar tabernacle

where it had been placed shortshyly after the churchs establishshy

ment by the Redemptoriad Fathers some 125 years ago

~

GULF HILL DAIRY so DARTMOUTH MASS

RO THE ANCHO~-Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

1

RELIGIOUS SUPERIORS INSTITUTE ON STONEHILTJ CAMPUS SMS Guadalcanal Solomon Islands Standing Sr Florita DP King Sr Mary LUk~ St about to enter the hall for her lecture Center Some ston Mass Sr Mary of Bathany SP Holyoke Sr Mary de Sales F$SJ r the sisters who attended Sister Lukes talk were Sr Josepha SC Conshy Holyoke Right Mrs Mary Virginia Yosgandes h-ouse mother wavesgood ent Station NJ Sr Mary Kenneth Amityville NY Sr Mary (fheresa bye tothe departing nuns I

Brooklyn Church Hopes Nuns Move Into Cent~r of Lij~e Criticizes Irish lribunal Lacks By Dorothy Eastman -Social Security

When in the third year of Vatican II the momentous decision was made toinvitewO- dmiddot LIMERICK (NC) - FatherJ men observers to audit a Council forthe first ~ime to represent all J~remiah Newman professor ofuris ICtlon the Sister chosen BROOKLYN (NC)-Msgr the nuns in America was Sister Mary Luke Tobin Mother General of the Sisters of Lor- sociology at Irelands Maynooth

IlAarion J Reinhardt pre- etto When shewasasked recently while visiting the Fall River Diocese what impressed College criticizedprivate agenshyJ~L h t b t th C 1 cies and the national governshyIdlng Judge of the Trlblillal er mos a ou e oune) h t b t h h d k ment for their failure to increaseshe said with a wry smile We aVe 0 e rna ure enoug er own or er was wor mg(1)f the Diocese of Brooklyn h to live in insecurity toward these ends She told of all subsidies to families Iltas announced that the bill of The fact that we were t ere Will these changes be easy experiment soine of her Sisters After insisting that it would $Omplaint of 15 former teachers at all I The Sister is too much of a have been engllged in for the be best for private agencies and of St Johns Un~versity had to At a Stonehill College institute realist to give that impression past twu years in Pueblo Colo- local governments to administer be dismissed because of lack of Sister Luke spoke of her many Its going to be fraught with rado Although most of the 1100 social security Father Newman jurisdiction on the part of the other impressions of the Council difficulties she warns but Sisters of Lorettv are teachers said that since they seemed unshy

ecclesiastical court _ where she and seven other Sis- what isnt this small group of Sisters in willing or unable to do this the The Brooklyn ecclesiastical tels were auditresses for the last There are more than a few Pueblo 1s doing no t~aching-in job had to be done by the natshy

$Ourt which operates under two years of Vatican II Over Sisters who are troubled and schools anyway They simply jonal government ~llnon law said it is pmited in 450 Mothers Superior from 55 sometimes shocked these days live among the poor as good He said that according to jurisdiction to only spiritual different Orders were gathered by many of the changes hi their neighbors he 1pin jg wherever Catholic soCial teaching there ltuestions at the Easton campus for the communities The Mother Gen- they cllD leading discussion was no limit to the amount of Charge Contralaquot Breach five day Institute directed by eral would warn them that its groups counselling etc government aid that is permis-

The 5000 word document Rev William FHogan CSC pointless for them to say Thill Asked to comment on the re- sibie and desirable if governshypointed out that the decree of Sister Luke was one of a group is not the community I entered cent experiment in Milwaukee mEmt aid was the Qnly practical Giisrriissalis without prejudice to of noteliltspeakers who talked When it comes to that she says where30 School Sisters of St (sbl~tion to poverty problems lbhe merits of the case to the superiors on the subject we all might say This is not the Francis left their convents for

If the Metropolitan Tribunal of the I Sister in the modern Church Iwas baptized into or three weekstO work in secular If the archdiocese of New York world this is not the world I was b()rn jobs - oneSister wa3 assigned

T b 1 f the Sacred into Change is a fact of life S t~ the rI una 0 Adapting a line from Charles as a newspaper reporer- IS er Roman Rota reversesthe decree Dickens to describe this contro she points out~ and we can~t keep Luke predicted a great deal the casewiil be returned to the versial post Council age Sister things as they are or say Stop more~ of this kind of liniited Tribunal of the Diocese of the World-I want to get off f i t th I w ld ]Brooklyn for adjudications upon t~ees sa~~iSTi~iSt~eth~o~r Role of Superiors ~~~re ~o di~~a~~c~i~t n~~ Ms merits it was stated times She paintedavivid ver- The role the Superiors will she said

The petition of complaint bal picture of the world that lies play in the formation of what Since her own Order founded filed by Father Peter OReilly ahead for Sisters She said it has been called The New Nun in 1812 is quite new all religious

s~f Chicago on behalf of himself would certainly be a challenging Lwuakeouattlintheed fs~roeh~ ~~s~~~t~ orders go and is the liirst comshylind the other ousted teachers one and that conventlife inthe munity founded in America charged he university which is future is certain to undergo She urged them to create a cli- without European ties the Sisshyeonducted by theVincentian many radical changes mate where Sisters can liveters of Loretto weal habits more Fathers with breach of contract community life at its best She -modern than most But itsstill

The Superior~ were told that entreated them to keep thls cli-The dispute has been marked bY d bl d ff t the dress of 1812 not 1966 so it d k t f an m Ispensa e gUl e me ec - mate free from legallsm andlitudent unrest an pIC e mg 0 th hmiddotmiddot th will soon be changed As soon I mg ese c anges IS e map survelmiddotllance Ie schoo s campuses f th f t th t th C 1 as the all-mlll Congregation

or e u ure a e ounCl A community should be a of Religious in Rome approv~sMoral Issue Fatners drew up for the Church place where there- is safety for She called the CouncII Decrees the Sisters new design that is About 30 teachers were fired fl t d f t f dff

Rost December in a dispute over the documentS ofhighest au- cop IC an sa e y or J er- Tliey have submitted one de~ign rlty We should all have ~nes apd s~fety to cultiv~te that the fathers turnEd downadministration-faculty relation- tho d t h d Sh f I the mInd of Vatlcan II and then lverSI y s ~ sal e ee s lihey thought it was too modshyships and other issues They t I th t th h ld be

b b f we c~n move Into actlon she s rongy a ere ~u r -ern Sister Luke says UWhat anwere joined y anum er 0 I t I g I fe ther teachers In a strike that told her healers - 1Jloe ~o~a IY In re 1 J~)Us 1 incredible thing for US to ask shy --uAfterall were not Trap- that we choose our own clothes has continued since January Whi~h Way psts

l she adds with a laughThe court found that tpe How will the Sisters know in Warning that the time has S t Lk tl - b

uteceniontractual controversy was not whicli direction they should come for a re-evaluation of the _ IS ~rth y e~mt~ a spiritual mattelin a canoliical move in the manyarells so(in to true meaning of community she ne oIl e d~rs wo~~ ever ~ llense of the word spiritual change cExperiment Sister told the Superiors that commu- bo~a h a sre~t a f ~gUS aild that there was no allegation Luke advises so often its almost nity doesnt mean conformity or 0 y e oCle ~ o anon ef a violation of an ecclesiastical her motto We really cannot a hotel life either or even a Lawyrs Does thIS mian that law arid that the time was not move into change without ex-lot of happy t9getherness th~ SI~ters may at last have a opportune for a decision of perimentation she says and around the television set voIce 111 the formatIon of canon moral responsibility because the we will be engaged in tremen- A ~ital new aspect of commu- la-at least th~ laws that rUI~ secular courts would first have dous experiments from now on- nity is the idea of what Sister thel~ O~derS SIster Luke deshyto determine whether there was to adapt religious life to the Luke calls sub communities- vout y opes so a breach of contractual duty times in which we live the convents immediate neigh- Its certain that the future for

The church court found as a The revisions that lie ahead borhood the parish the civic the Sisters will be a very differshymatter of law that St Johns for religious orders will bring commumty lay people 111 the ent one than anyone could have 141 NO MAINUniversity as a corporation Sisters into the mainstream of same profession as the Sister- imagined a few short years ago J~ formed under the law of the modern life Sister Luke for for instance other nurses or The Holy Father has urged them iii FALL RIVER State of w York did not have one has no doubts that this is tElachers We have allowed too the~ to move from the margin e the ecclesiastical privilege of where they belong We ought great a gap to exist between our- of life to the center of life~ 873 COUNTY demanding that suits against it to be willing to take the risks) selves and the laity she says Will the move be successful SOMERSETbe heard in an ecclesiasticalmiddot that gO along with this plunge In an interviewmiddot following her Sister Luke says We can only CDOurt into the mainstream she says talk Sister ~uke was asked how know by taking a ChanCE

Feai makes the wolf bigger than be is

Rer Bankings Already D~ne

~jI--~1 W

tt-~~gt_ri~

~j F~ p ~tl Iim F-ilNgt

~l i

ll 11 ~~

W = ~

~gtltl ~

-~ ~~ StIesaves I lot of alunle Mtime forso maily other thinlS ~i She banks by mail at Te ~ OLD R D8 KI h 7reg E AN W at about you

liii FREE mall forms ~1 The mOld Red Bank W

$ Fall River Savings Bankjilll q

Page 15: 08.25.66

0

WomenB~ Job Corps Members middotAid Youngsters Improve Reading

OMAHA (NC)-Omaha Wom- chesne Mother Moody found a ens Job Corps members joined benefactor to supply ihe a11shywith five graduates of Duchesne importlnt incentive program College and Academy of the Thanks to a generous racetrack

Sacred Heart here to upgrade bettor Who won the daily double the reading level of local public there was enough money for school youngsters candy bar prizes and two picnics

The progra~ ca]]edProject An indication or- the success of Upstart was first conceIved by the program was found in the Mother Helen Condon dean of reaction of the students A reshythe Nebraska co]]eg~ Mother cent visitor asked one of the Rosemary Moody aSsIstant pro- young boys Why are you here fessor o~ ~sYChology volunteer~ Did someone make you come to adminIster and execute themiddot program

The original plans were to take a group of seventh graders from Horace Mann Junior High School and tutor them in develshyopmental reading and study skills It soon became apparent that some rather basic instrucshytion was required some of the ehildren were still reading at the second grade level

Duchesnes elementary school was offered for use by Mother Helen Sheahan superior An Omaha public school official suggested that the Omaha Wom- ens Job Corps be contacted to see if they could furnish high school graduates as tutors Robshyert Bathke Job Corps education director soon put five young ladies at Mother Moodys disshyposal

Five recent Duchesne gradushyates volunteered to train the tutors for two weeks before the program actually began The Duchesne alumnae eventualiy elected to stay on for the entire program

Mother Moodymiddot was so imshypressed with the potential of the Job Corps enro]]ees that she exshytended their sessions through the rest of the summer and made college preparatory work avail shyable to them

Student Reaction Perha~s one of the more unshy

usual aspects of the entire Upshystart program was its lack of financing The only real subsidy (about $500) was from the OMaha Public School system the bulk of which went to the Omah~ Transit Company for bus service

The equipment used in the classrooms was borrowed from the public schools the Omaha Womens Job Corps and Du-

Plan to Supplement History Books

SAN FRANCISCO (NC) shyA supplementary text showing the contributions of minority groups in United States history will be added to history and social science books already in use in archdiocesan schools here

The supplement containing some 150 pages will deal chroshynologica]]y with the contribu- tions of Jews Negroes Orientais and various nationalities from southern Europe

It is being prepared by a speshycial studly committee which illl evaluating current textbooks found need for more thorough material on the part minority

groups have played in the OOUDshytry1s history

Leave Providence For Mission Work

PROVIDENCE (NC) - Four Capuchin priest and two layshymen left New York by plane for mission work in the Santa Rosa de Copan diocese Honduras

Father Ad ria n Holzmeister OFM Cap provincial of tile Capuchins St Mary province with headquarters here said the six will work among some 50000 persons in Mlree parishes in the state of Ocotepeque He said

other mjssionersmiddotas they become ayailabie wiD be sent to aid Bishop Jose Canama CbampvezCli tile diocese

He looked up and said Im here because I want to learn to read and I like it Two girls who missed the morning bus to Duchesne gave another exain-ple of determination to learn Jhey undertook a two-hour five mile walk rather than miss a day of class

L R oy etreats Contlnu~d from Page Six

laymens convention-an effort to provide some figure of speech some image to suggest to those in the Church and to those out-

side what is the inner nature of the Church

Alluding to Scriptures refershyences to the Church in terms of sheep and shepherds the former Hub Auxiliary Bishop asked How many people in Boston have ever seen a sheep Sheep and shepherds say little to youngstersmiddot in housing projects or even in the suburbs

The Bishop who is epiScopal advisor for the NCLRC officiashyted at the lighting of an eightshyfoot candle which symbolized the

conference theme-uThe Light of Chr~st The candle burned throughout the convention

Speakers stressed the retreat program is geared to demOJishystrate to the world that the way of Christ can become more meaningiful to men of our time

Bishop Ernest J Primeau of Manchester reminded delegates of recent profound changes withshyin the Church

If the lay retreat movement is to remain vital and relevant

he said it cannot be static It must be in harmony with the times at all times

Honest Call1Se

Our retreat houses could 00-middot eome so to speak the equipment and training centers for the apostolates of the laity he adshydect

Bishop Primeau urged laymei to learn from modern science particularly in the field of hushyman psychology He said there is an opportunity as well to learn from other organizations both secular and religious He added The youth of today are un-

selfish and in large numbers they are seeking for an honest cause to which they can dedicate themshyselves as witness their devotion to the Peace Corps and the civil rights movement

Modernize AncEtenlt Puerto Rico CIl1llLmlrch

SAN JUAN (NC) =- A lPJt8shyyear-old church one of the most popularmiddot in this capital city~ ~

going modern Archbishop Luis Aponte of

San Juan has inaugurated middotal campaign for funds for restorashytion of St Anns a public orashytory now badly illl need of Jeshypairs

1ft addition to restoration the ehurch also Will be equipped with air conditioning The eburch is the archdiocesan ceDltgt ~r for the Confraternity Gi Christian Doctrine and perpetual adoration of the Blessed Sacrashyment Built ill 184B the cburch weplaced an edifice which dated )Iaek iG tile lWi century

PROFESSION ANJ)) RECEPTION Four postulants beshycame canonical novices and two prof~ssed their vows as Sisters of St Joseph at ceremonies at the Blessed Sacrashyment Church Fall River Left column top to bottom Sr Gerard Marie (first vows) Sr Anne Therese Sr Rita Josshyeph Bishop Connolly who received the sisters Right colshyumn Sr Anne Denise Sr St Paul and Sr Alfred Marie (renewed temporary vow-s)

Specialmiddot Education Priests Visi~ PaJ~ents Homes to ExplOJon

SignificOJlI1lce off Baptismal Ritual

Thurs Aug 25 1966

Governor Balks

ST JEAN (NC)-Sunday bapshytisms are prece~ed by Saturday nights special educational proshygrams in a number of Catholic homes here in Quebec

The program to prepare the whole family for baptism through a home visit was deshyvised three years ago by a group of pries~s working togeth~r as a pastoral team

central idea of the program ~s that it is good for the priest to be with his people at imporshytant times in their lives~ Atmiddot these times people are dispOSed to receive the message of Christ

as it applies to their circumshystances the developers of the plan reported

The visiting priest explains the lOOremonies of the next day and the symbolic meaning of various parts of the baptismal ritual

Pilgrims Wctmlk TORONTO (NC) -The 10th

annual walking pilgrimage to the Canadian Martyrs shrine at Midland Ont will begin here Wednesday Organized by the Guild of St John de la Lande the pilgrimage will cover the 100 miles to the shrine in five days a~riving there Sunday Sept 4

LEMIEUX PLUMBING amp HEATING INC

fof Oomestic l~ andmiddot Industrial ~ Sales and Service

Oil Burners WY 5-1631

2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE NEW BEDFORD

Relatives neighbors or the prospective gorlparents may be presentbut themiddot home visit usually involves just the parents and their children

The ide is to make the preshybaptism vsit an oppodunity for dialogue between the priest and the parents rather than a conshyference

Ten parishes in the St Jean diocese have adopted the praeshytice along with l few Montreal parishes Father Marcil Brillon secretary of the St Jean litur- gical commission said he exshypects the practice to spread

FALSE TEETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass Many wearers of false teeth suJIer

embarrassment Qecause their platesdrop Blip or wobble at Just the wrong time Dont live In fear of thts happening to you Just sprinkle a little FASTEErH the non-acid powder on your plates Holds false teeth more firmly so they feel more comfortable Checks denture breath Dentures that fit are essential to health See your dentist regularlyGet FASTEETH at all drug counters

At Proposals MONTPELIER (NC) - Vershy

monts Gov Philip Hoff said he bas extreme reservations conshycerning abortion and sterilizashytion proposals contained in a reshyport of an adivsory committee on the mental retardation situshyation in the middotstate

The report called for legal sanctioning of induced abortion in cases where there appears to be a high risk of mental retarshydation of an unborn child

Thereport also contained a suggestion concerning steriliza shytion of the mentally retarded

Apart from the recommenda~ tions on legalized abortion and sterilization of the mentally reshytarded I must S4ly it was II good report Gov Hoff said He said lie will study the report with utmost care before taking any action 0

Expresses Thanks To Holy Father

VATICAN CITY (NC) -The vice prime minister of Vietnam has paid a visit to Pope Paul VI to thank him for his peace efshyforts and generous help to reshylieve the suffering of the Vietshynamese people General Nguyen Huu Co vice prime minister and secretary of state for national defense of Vietnam visited privately withshythe Pope for 30 minutes Accord- ing to a Vatican Press Office bulletin

The vice prime minister in the name of South Vietnam exshypressed profound gratitude for the valid support always given by the head of the Catholic Church and of the Holy See in the cause of peace and for the generous assistance sent by the Holy Father to relieve the sufshyfering of those persons torshymented by war The distinguishshyed visitor then continued tomiddot deshyclare that the intentions of South Vietnam are directed only toward an affirmation of the liberty of its own nation and Wgt arriving at a just peace in honor and concord

Complete

BANKING SERVICE

for Bristol County

Bristol County Trust Company

TAUNTON MASS

THE ~ANK ON TAUNTON GREEN

Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Bristol Community College Offers Evening Classes

64 Durfee St Fall River Credit classes begin September 19 1966

Register Now Mondays thrrough Thursdays 200-500 PM Courses for college credit or self improvement are offered ill

The arts languages and literature Behavioral and social sciences accounting business

administration and secretarial scieRCe Mathematics science engineering and electro-mechanical technology

Advisors Availabie During ~egistration Hours

16 THE AI~ ~-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

C~nsiders Instability Causes In Latin American lamds

From Social R-evolution in the New Latin Ameriea Edited by John J Considine MM

There are many causes of instability in Latin America Some have said in the past that it is an inheritance frQm

Spain They feel that the years of Spanishauthoritarianism rendered the colonies incapable of integrating themselves into a more balanced social system Because they had there exists the problem of low

denSity of population with a lackpreviously lacked indepenshyof internal communication In-dent creole authority the many cases there is even a lanshy

colonies were unprepared to acshy guage barrier eept a more democratic authorshy The problem of an underdeshyity In his book veloped economy has also beenBetween Freeshy a factor in forming Latin Anlershy clom and Fear ican social structureGerman Arcinshy On the social level the eleshyiegas draws a ments I have mentioned favorcomparison beshy an internal lack of class strucshytween the Enshy ture that involves a juxtaposishyglish and Spanshy tion rather than a social organi shyish governments zation and integration Democshyin the Americas racy on the other hand presupshyIn ihe north the poses a large scale integrationcolonists came in of the people in the politicalshysearch of freeshy economic-social life of thedom IIi the end nationthe founding of the Nodh The masses of -illiterates inAmerican colonies was only the Latin America who do not parshyobvious culmination of a process ticipate in these areas have noalready begun It was the reafshy iilterest in government thoughfirmation of customs already inshy their interest and loyalty maygrained in the social milieu It be enlisted by the demagoguewas an evolution not a real revshyolution for these settlers were Formation or Dictatorships accustomed to autonomy The A dictatorship takes form

authority pf their governors was when one or more pressure more democratic since they groups unchallenged seizes the worked closely with the popular power of governmentassemblies From the beginshy In order to better understand ning the keenest concern of the the types of dictatorship found North American colonist was for in Latin America let us elCamshyfreedom of worship and his hosshy ine the different forms of revoshytility to the Church of England lution and the various ways in was evident which the pressure groups

On the contrary Latin Amershy bring their influence to bearIca was part of an empire The Kalmal1 Silvert distinguishesSpaniards came to dominate and these types in his book Reaction evangelize The viceroy represhy and Revolution in Latin Amershysented the king who was an abshy ica which is written in -Englishsolute monarch The role of Silvert shows the relationshipshyassembly in Latin America was between dictatorships and the secondary arid represented exshy extreme indivdualism found in tremely liIIlited power these countries

Independence in the Latin The first type of revolution American nations entailed a real named is what Silvert calls the revolution since from the beginshy simple brracks revolt Most of ning they were forced tb look for the outbreaks especially in the new political and social forms past century have been of this

Religiousliberty did not elCshy kind The barracks revolt occurs ist in the Latin American coloshy typically in a big class society nies since all were obliged to It is carried out by the amlY

membership in the Cathoiic sompoundtimes in its own name and Church sometimes in behalf of a chosen

Unassimilated Groups leader This type of revolution - rarely calses widesprelld publicThis comparison will help in

disturbance since it representsunderstanding the Latin Amershymerely a switch in governmentican problem though it will not from one general to anotherfully explain -it We must acshy

knowledge that the political The second type the peasant phenomeinon has a direct COIshy revolt is generally of little sigshyrelatio~1 with demographic probshy nificance and limited in effect lems such as the existence of to a locality though the Mexican large unassitnilated groups as revolution at the beginning of well as masses of mestizos un this century would perhaps fall derdeveloped and deprived who in this category can scarcely be said to partici shy Third the regional revolt pate in twentieth century chili shy commcn in the early days of zation Although these groups Latin American independence form a part of the nation they Here _the caudillo strove to put are not integrated either socially down provincial revolts and to eulturally or politically centralize power in an authorishy

Despite the over-all demoshy tarian I e g i () n a I government g~aphic explosion in some areas Typical of the caudillos who led

regional revolts was Rosas of Argentina

Plans Participation The fourth a more modern type of revolution Silvert callsIn Liturgical Week the complicated barracks revolt

HOUSTON (NC) - The 1966 This is an insurrection that inshyLiturgical Week here fOI the -volves civilian as well as mili shyfirst time in its 25-year history tary groups with widespread will have a full scale program military action for those interested in the The issues are ideological and Eastern Church relate to political parties as well

As part of the Liturgical Week as _ other interest groups The program the Divine Liturgy Cuban revolution in its beginshy(Mass) of St John Chrysostom nings might be considered -an will be celebrated entirely in example Although this is the English and Communion will be most prevalent type ainong modshydjstributed under both species ernday revolutions excetions Chief celebrant of the Liturgy are the revolts which overthrew will be Archbishop Paul Achkar Peron in Argentina Perez-JimeshyGreek Catholic ~-chbishop of nez in Venezuela and -Rojas Lattaquia in Syua Pinilla in Colombia

SISTER AMBROSE

Says SOo Africa Needs Americans

WASHINGTON (NC)-Yanshykee come over a statement which would do much to boost the morale of Americans in sevshyeral parts of the world could well summarize what an Irish missionary nun to South Africa

-has been saying during a visit here _

The wonderful hospitality of theAmerican people has imshypressed Sister Ambrose Harty Gf the Sisters of the Holy Family She lamens the fact that opporshytunities to receive Americans in a like manner have been few and far between during her 20 years in South Africa

Youve got such a lot to give she said here in an ~ntershyview during which she expressed a strong desire to see greatly inshycreased people-to-people relashytio~s between the country where she serves and the United States

Sister Ambrose was particushylarly interested in the Peace Corps ann reported that its purshyposes and work are hardly known by the people of Soutli Africa I haVent heard it disshycussed at all she said (The Peace Corps has not been invited into the country) (

With words of praise for the missionary work being done iii the South African Republic by Oblate arid Paulist missionaries from the United States she also expressed regret at the general paucity of missioners from this country There particularly is an almost total lack of nuns she said Only 71 Catholic missionshyaries from the United States inshycluding 16 nuns are serving ilm South Africa

Married Priests AMSTERDAM (NC)-A

Dutch public opinion poli h8lll shown that 11 per cent of the Netherlands p e 0 pIe woulci rather have III married Catholi4l clergy than a celibate clergy The poll including members ai all and no denominations

-showed that 68 per cent of the Catholics queried preferred III married clergy

~~

(DEBROSS OIL ( ~ co ( ~ Heating Oils

~ and BMIIJUrs ~

~ 365 NORYIoli IFROIlir SUEampll ( rJ NEW IBIEDIFOR

~ WYmafi 2middot5534 (

I~~~

Parishes Share DETROIT (NC) - Twentyshy

nine urban parishes here have decided to help one another meet the rising cost of education

At the elementary level parshyepts will pay $50 per family $75 per family for non-Catholic parishioners and $75 per student

Danish Catholic COPENHAGEN (NC) -Thereshy

are 11321 Catholics in the Danish capitalaccording to a report issued by the Copenhagen statistical office They consti shytute the second largest religious entity there next to the Luthershyans members of the State Church The total number of Catholics in Denmark is approxshyimately 26000 Total population is 35 lllillion

Education Costs for Catholics outside the parish

At the high school level the tuition cost is $H)O per student in or out of the parish With the exception of textbooks this amount eliminates aU extra fee charged up to now

Father Norman P Thomas director of the Urban Parisll Apostolate said the greatest efshyfect of the joint effort will be experienced by the pastor who sends parish youngsters to a higll school operated by any of the 2 participating parishes

In this instance the students parishes will be expected to pay the difference between the tui shytion charged and the actual cost per student The latter fee laM been set by the parochial school office at over $200 per year

ETHIOPIA- THE NEW AFRICA

- HOLY FATlftRB MIBBIIDN AID TO THI DRIENTAL OHURCH

- BROTHER What happens In Ethiopia when an American MICHAEL Christian Brother (he could be your son brother

REYNOLDS nephew) Is told to upgrade Catholic schools He FROM borrows a Jeep (or a mule) visits the schools

PROVIDENCE RI one by one writes home for pencils and better REPORTS textbooks and then beginsbullbull This is the new

fROM Africa Brother Michael Reynolds reports enshyADDIS thusiasticallyfrom Addis Ababa It can be a BABJpeacefuf progressive Christian Africa tom~rmiddot

row Just give us schools give us time and with Gods help the job will De donel bull bullThe schools are for villages like Aressa Aiga Biers Wartll8~

-which have no school The youngsters know that knowledge i~ their only chance theyll go without food to learnbullbullbull What does It cost to build a schoolf Only $2950 says Brother Michael for the villagers snd the children give their laborfreemiddotofmiddotcharge We can train a catemiddot chlst for only $40 bullbullbull In thanksgiving to God for what you know will you do what you can ($100 $75 $50 $25 $15 $10 $5 $2) to give these youngsters a chance The school will be named for your favorite saint and the children will pray for your loved ones daily If you build It all byyourself ($2950) School will open late this year-but better late than never-If you Vlrit~ to us right now

WHAT Our priests there who receive no othor income IELSE for food and clothing will offer promptly the

FOR Masses you request Well forward your Mass ETHOPIAr Inten~ons through the Holy Fathers officebull

40 young lads studying for the priesthood In Decamere lose their football when It goes Into a nelghbers garden A large field can be bought ~velled and mede safe for sports fer $975

MAKINQ ~~IOOOO will ovfde bull OOfDj)lete parjstlplantA (Ohuroh rectory convent andscbool) In southshy

WiW ImIAdla In memorybullbullbullbull $600 will ttiln a native lrfHt1SOO bull native Sfster Our legal tltI Cl~1HOUO NWt lAir WIUAH AHOCIAnONo

_-------------~shytt coINIILOIIlt IUMIIIND ~ bullbull la IJIIr bull _1OIt~=-=_==-=

PI _UM~gt

Mum ClO1IIponwith your mt__=-~~_ _ ~i offrtnt ~~ erryen 8TAlI-lPCODI_

HI IATHaLl1 RIIiAR 811 WILAbullbull AIaDIATaN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS IRANCUS CARDINAL SPELLMAN President MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretal)f Write OATHOLIO NfIAR IiAST WELFARE Assoo 1)80 MadlsolJ Avenuomiddot New York NY 10017 -felGpilonel 212YUkon 6middot6840

Dormitory Proves Stonehill Permanently Coeducational

Way back in 1951 when the first girl enrolled in Stoneshyhill College no one could have imagined that a girls dormishytory would ever be built onmiddot the campus But the sound of steam shovels and hammers filling the air over the lovely grounds in Easton is proof

and two girls from the seniorthat the long planned for daslr-assisting the housemothergirls dorm will soon be a Mrs Grace Callahan

reality When Stonehill was The experiment worked so founded in 1948 as a mens colshy well in fact that this coming lege the fledgling school had Fall both the freshman and just gotten off to a good start sophomore girls will be housed when the Korean War came this way leaving only the junior along and emptied the classshy and senior girls still renting Yooms as the young men went quarters in private homes chosen into the services by the college as all the nonshy

That was the year that many commuting girls have done in small colleges had to close their the past gates forever But at Stonehill That typical campus situation the Holy Cross order was detershy -the sorority house-is not in mined to hold onto this new the picture at Stonehill-or frashyschool that they had planned for ternity houses either for that so long matter No sororities or fraternishy

What could they do to keep ties are allowed on the campus the college operating until the There is a cl11b however that war was over and the boys came is the girls own - the Crosier back Of course Open their Club Mrs Yosgandes is the gates to girl students clubs faculty advisor and she deshy

Faculty Pleased scribes it as the organization What started out as a temposhy for women studentE who want

rary expediency somehow over to contribute in their own parshythe years has acquired a happy middotticular way as women to their permanancy No one could be college more pleased about this turn of Through their annualmusical events than the Stonehill faculty Crosier Curtain Calls theyitself raise money to acquire manymiddot

Helping out in Jhe ground things that add beauty and breaking ceremony for the new charm to campus life This yeardorm Mrs Virginia Yosgandes they purchased two very lovelythe Dean of Women at the colshy silver tea and coffee services lege saiei I guess everyone will Any official group at the collegereally believe that the girls are is allowed to borrow the sets and here til stay they have already been used in

Mrs Yosgandes says that since many functions she first came to the Stonehill New Signfaculty in 1958 rumors have

Mrs Yosgandes says Thebeen popping up that Stonehill girls will be very pleased whenwill soon return to its original they come back th~~ Fallto seestatus as an all male school The the beautiful new sign theynew dorm she says will be visshybought for the college installedible proof of the permanancy of on Route No 138 women on the beautiful campus

Its very easy to picture theThe $1150000 building deshyvery charming Dean presidingsigned to accommodate 200 girls

graciously at a faculty tea Aand proctors will be three stories parishioner of Immaculate Conshyof red brick Architects W Chesshyception chulCh in Easton she ister arown and Associates and in ~rivate life an enthusiasticwntractors C A Batson and homemaker anc the mother of aCompany are planning to comshy13 year old daughter Christineplete work on the dorm in time Her husband John is assistantfor the opening of classes in principal at Franklin JuniorSeptember 1967 It will be the High first unit of a five dormitory

She speaks with great convicshycomplex planned fo the women on tion about college girls holdingcampus

onto feminine ideals while surshyKitchen ~pace rounded-and at Stonjhill outshyMrs Yosgandes is happy about numbered 3 to 1- by menthe fact that the new dorm will While were encoulaging themhave a kitchenette on each floor to be acdve in thpound communitywhere the girls can cook small and the church and in politicsmeals and entertain guests Shes and encouragint them to deshyhoping that the dorms built after

more velop their abilities to the full shythis me will providtgt even est-we never fail to take intokitchen space for the girls to account the fact that they arepractice the culinary arts women and in this competitiveM a n~ tImes homemaking world theyll have to -fight toskills come to a complete halt maintain their feminine idenshywhen a girl goes to college she tity says Apparently all classroom

work and rio cooking make Jane Coed Actiiti~s

Coed a dull girl in the room When she fi rst came to the where shell be spending a great college she sltys the girls were deal of time after graduationshy mainly interested in strictlythe dtchen feminine extra curricular activishy

Mrs Yosgandes says A great ties-fastion shows teas gids many cCJlleges have been workshy sports Bd this has changed radshying witt this problem and wonshy ically in the last few years and dering what to do about it Beshy now the girls are much more inshycause theyve had no living terested in the coed acti vitiesshyquarters for girls on campus the newspapers the debating Stonehiiil has had to do out of team the drama club Stonehill necessit) what many other colshy is noted a~ one of a small handshyleges have chosen to do recently ful gtf Catholic colleges where The Dean describp~ an experishy girls are middotactive in every part of ment that the collFge tJied last college life Every coure at yeal tha has worked out exshy StonehHj is opel to girls tremely well We still havent had a woman

Experiment Successful president of our student governshyThe college leased a grollp of ing body the Senate Mrs

rooms il an apartmelt building Yosgandes says Now girls in Brockton last Fall where all what are yOIi waiting for the freshman girls who were not commuters-55 of them-lived in housekeeping apartments In Red Groups There were four girls in each BERLIN (NC)-Over 85 per apartment all sharing the reshy (ent of East German children sponsibilities of housekeeping between the ltlges of 6 and 14 are

The girls hat two sets of mCl11)ers of communist youth 1)IoctOS - two aIumni wumen ~nIUps

lrt-OE ANCH0) 17 Thurs Aug 25 1966

PriestCuod Goal Of Top Skater

GREAT FALLS (NC)-A good many folks in this Montana toWlll will attest that teenager J Mishlll Petkevich is a pretty good skate -on or oH the ice

The affable blond youngster 17 topped a field of 136 pershyformers in the three-day Lake Placid N Y international free style competition sanctioned by the U S and Canadian Figure Skating Assoclations The Great Falls lad was the judges unamiddot1ishymous choice for the mens gold medal in the finals

But Petkevich doesnt lose his cool off the ice His classmates and teachers at Great Falls Censhytral 3igh School claim hes liIl

winner in every event He spends more than 40 hours 11 week in skating training but carries the full load of class studies and consistently turns Up on the schools honor roll Hes a member of the National Honor Society

The school supported me ami the way Everyone has beeEl wonderfUl to me the modest youngster saia Hes been -skatshying since he was 2 He credit his achievements to his Catholic Faith the sacrifices of his parshyents and of Arthur Bourke senshyiormiddot professional of the Great Falls Figure Skating Club He said All I did was skatemiddotGROUND-BREAKING The Very Rev John T Corr

I hope some day to become~esc president of Stonehill College turns a shovelful of priest Petkevich said wbeilearth to mark start of construction 0pound a 200-student dormshy a~ked his ambition I hope 14gt itory for women on the Stonehill campus Watching the proshy attend Notre Dame for at leasa celtlures are left to right Mrs Virginia Yosgandes dean af two years and then I h9pe to gf)

to the Catholic University fl4women John C Doody 66 Alumni fund chairman Robert AmericaBatson contractor Harold Bonvie ass~iate of the archishytect

Msgr Canty Continued from Page OneRussian Schools ing studies at S1 Marys High

Taunton Boston- College and S1 Bernards Seminary RochesshyChristian Brother Lauds Students terN Y

nespect for Intellectuols He served as assistant at Our Lady 01 the Isle NantucketCHICAGO (NC)-Students in to foreign languages than Amershy Holy Family Taunton St

schools behind the Iron Curtain icans Most students take a Marys Barrowsville and Stgo at their studies with a passhy seven-year sequence of English Johns Attleboro He was apshysion said Brother Kevin Mark German or French English he pointed to the Chaplains CorPJFSC who toured Russia and added is the most popular lanshy of the United States Navy infour satellite countries with 19 guage and more emphasis is January 1942 and retiredwitbother U S rducatois placeltl on reading and speaking the rank of captain in Decemshy

Brothel Mark who is princishy than on writing it ber 196gt Pope John XXIII pal 9f St Mels high school here Brother Mark said that there elevated him to the rank of attributed much of their motivashy is almost nothing that he would Domestil Prelate with the title tion to the students attitude that lift from the Soviet school sysshy of Right Reverend Monsignor iI What I do does contribute to tem and apply in the U S May 1962 the welfare of the state He admitted however that Bishop Connolly named Monshy

Brother said he felt that stushy they do get results They have a signor Canty pastor of St Paulsdents in this country lack motishy tremendous capacity for conshy Taunt-ln in December 1963 vation because were spoiled centration when they set their Industrial improvements have sights for example their space made it that a young man can program Its not all a matter go into a trade and make very of being chained to a lab table good money BLUE RIBBON

In the Soviet Union he said there seems to be a great reshyspect for intellectuals and the LAlnNDRY student is thought of as a proshy

01 STOPfessional schJlar 273 CE~RAl AVE~UIIG CfflTERTeaching is considered a proshy

fession and remunelated accordshy e Television C FmiddotI ure illgly WY 2-6216o r-cerv

St Mels principal observed on IlA Allen St Newhdfordhis tour that there was little NEW BEDFORD questioning on the part of the students

The chSSloom situation he said is very much teacher ori shyented that is study in depth is 21 DAY PILGRIMAGES TO EUROPE done on the teachers inspiration

rou~ 1-Legion of Mary Pilgrimage leaving Sept 12th with Truth in such areas as history Father Edward A Oi-viera will visit Killarney Dublin Paris

cllld literature is accepted as a Lourdes Rome Madrid Lisbon and Fatima - Tour 2shyforegone conclusion and stushyHoly Cross Fathers Pilgrimage leaving Oct 10th with Frdents just memorize what has

already been discovered ----- lobert E McDonnell will wsit lisbon Fatima 1odrid Rome Lourdes Paris and londonIike F)rc~gn Linutges -cota cost is $82900 - Time PaymentsmiddotIn the area of science howshy arranged ever the situation is difterent

()Ii TOUR tOLDERS CONTACT STEolfEN A MARIIEYhe pont~d out because in scishyence there is an attitude of I n~ust discover Catholic Travel

-Office

The R1~middotmiddotmiddotO p oth-r Mark ~ltk St New Befl- -ass 02748

said ~ ve 11111j Ill)le auention

BURNERS

BUrntlr Service

Famous Reading HARDCQAl

NEW ENGLAND COKE

t8 THE ~NCHOR-Dioceseof fo Rivef-Thurs Aug 25 1966 J~sut I)riest Says Some Public I b M t EmploYE~~S Have Right to Strike

-

Urges uO or ovemen S NEW (NC) -Public however YORK Government hasmiddot h C employees in certain fields have been expanding its cQncern andIn Heml$p ere ooperate the right to strike against the has beenmoving into ar~as of government a priest declared transportation education recre-

By MsgrGooJrge C Higgins (Director Socian Actiolll Dept NCWC)

The relationship between the American labor moveshyment and the Latin American Confed~ration of Christian Trade Unions (CLASC) leaves much to be desired as we

middot thO d th 1- have aready noted severa1 t Imes m IS co umn urmg e

past four or five years The two movements are deeply different things to different peoshy

auspicious of one another and just when they seem to be on the verge of settling or at least -patching up their differshyences they go at it again and recklesslystart hurling insults at one another

To jUdge from What they sayIi b 0 u t on e another publicshy1yen as well as privately on e would t h ink that they were natural-born enshyemies whe~eas in fact they have much in common-much inore than they seem to realizeshyand for obvious reasons ought violent MisS Duncan was an officer of The fourth public member Harshyto be c60p~rating With onean- Moreo~er at least one promi~theSodality a cheerleader for vardlaw school professorVern ether as closely as pOSSible nent spokesman for the AFL- four years a member of the Ten- Countryman half ci-itiCized the This writer has learn~ci the hard WR and muc~ to hiS so~-row that any outSider who 18

fOolish enough totryto mediatek f

~tween them JS as mg or troouble

C f t Gommun same If for example one suggests

as I have done on more than one Occasion that soine of the anti U S propaganda emanating from CLASCsources revealS atremely harmful to the cause of n a i v e misunderstanding of Amerlcan trade unionism and American capitalism andor ari $ver-simplification of Catholic Social teaching he runs the risk 9f being written off as a blind -not tOsay reactionary apologist for so-called Yanqui ~mperial-

iBm If on the other hand oneslig

gests that some of the anti- CLASC propaganda enianating

fro m AFL-CI0 sources is equally naive and unsoPllisti shyeatedhe runs the same Sort of risk in reverse That is to say he is likely to be told--v~ry politely of course -that if he were to take off his Catholic blinkers and look at the record objectively he would quickly come to realize that CLASC is in reality playing t~ecipal rival in Latin America) riages in their mission parishes communist game in Latin Amer- there is a gEirierous mixture of Msgr Milia stated Since the iea superficial appearances to cultural chauvinism and envy Ogdensburg mission was opened the contrary notwithstanding that accompanies the most legit- a modern new church bas been

Both CaD Learn imate misgivings built under its direction in the Be that as it may I still think Even the Latinos middotthemselve~ seaport ofMatararii two mission

~t CLASC has a lot to learn he points out will admit on ac- churches have oeen completed about _ and from American casion that their consumirig fear and a lalge parish church and trade unionism And if that of Yanqui imperialism is often center are currently under conshymakes me a reactionary Yankee irrational But there it is he re- struction in Mollendo ehauvinist so be it minds us and the basic prob-

By the same token however aiso think that the American

labor movement has much to learn about -- and from - the Christian trade union movement in Latin America The first thing it has to learn is that the Am~r-leap philosophy of pure-andshysimple bread-~d-butter union ism which all things considshyered has worked satisfactorily in this country is not necessarily well adapted to the present-day Deeds of Latin America

Meaning of Revolution Another way of saying the

same thing is that American iabor representativesworking on Latin America problemswm have to reconcile themselves to the fact that a social revolu-Uon is called for in Latin American labor federation that doesnt subscribe to a revolushytionary ideology is probably doomed to failure

The word revolution meaos J-

pIe of course To the leaders of CLASC it means a sweeping program of socioeconomic and political reform which goes far beyond the limited goals of bread-and-butter unionism

The leaders of CLASC are convinced that such a revolushytioo is demanded bythe Chrisshytian social ethic to which they subscribe and from which they derive their ideology

Perceptive Critique Some U S Labor repshy

resentatives are skeptical to say the least~bout the allegedly Christian content of CLASCs militant ideology They admit theneed for a peaceful revolushytion in Latin Americn butthey are convinced thatCLASC wants this revolution to be Feehan High School Attleboro alties in a letter tc therimes

lem is how to insure con~ PAVlA V I tlnuing cooperation between 0 untee rs Yanqui and Latino in spite of Complete TlIainirigit

Such cooperation Dr Hawkins WASHINGTON (NC)-Fortyshyconcludes will be impossible unshyless the leaders of the American labor movement positively indi~

cete their acceptance of social revolution in Latin America This will require he says

more than the generous transshyfusions of economic aid the stimulation under United States

labors auspices of leadership training programs for workers

and other cooperative ventures Need Broader View

What is required he insists ltCia a broader view-an ability on the part of the American la bor statemen to adopt policies that will not always accord with OUI own value~ and more speshy

cificall~ the tempering of (their) hosannas to free entershyprUie ___

inter-American labor unity I fully agree in this respect with Dr Carroll Hawkins Associate

Professor of Political Science at Michigan State University who recently published a most pershyceptive critique of American trade union policy in Latin- Catholics in Mollendo Peru the

America (The 0RIT and Amer diocesan missions director reshyican Trade Unions Conflicting ported Perspectives Industrial Rela- The New York priests were tionsand Social Changes in sent to Peru after Pope Paul Latin America University of vi -asked that more priests be Florida Press) pr9vjd~d fOr the people opoundSouth

Basic Problem America Msgr Anthony A Mi-Dr Hawkins admits of course lia said He estimated more than

that in all the Latin American 90 percent of the priests in criticism of United States unioniperu are from other countries in the ORIT (the Latin Ameli can regional unit of the Interna In 1965 the priests from Ogshytional Confederation of Free denburg administered 445 bap-Trade Unions and CLASCs prin tisms and perfoImed 64 mar-

CIOhas publicly charged in ej_ nis Club for two years and a suggested penaltiel fect that CLASCs ideology three yeaT member of the FU- owes more to Marxism than it ture Nurses club Father Carey sl~id the ~ays does to Christianity He finds it when pay and working condi-

An instructor in the Confra- tions for men and women inhard he says to accept the fact ternity of Christian Doctrine that the Christian labor move- civil service were determine4 byproglam in Our Lady of Mt I g I t d d t t

t middot A e IS a Ive It n a minIS ra Ive ment 0f L a In merIca IS non- Carmel Parish Seekonk the fiat have pas ed a d Communist s n we now

In my judgment this kind of criticism of CLASC by spokesshymen fltr the AFL-CIO is ex

three volunteers have completed the Second National Training Session sponsored by the Papal Volunteers for Latin America and received assignments in some ten Latin American coun- tries

Special ceremonies ended the six-week training session at the Catholic University of America where volunteers studied the apostolic work of the Church the laymans role in the aposshytolate and principles of spiritual life as well as the religion ecoshynomics and culture of Latin America

Before leavillg for their asshysignments the volunteers will take intensive four-month lanshy

guage anl culture courses in a Latin American language centerbull

eighth winner of this scholarship plumeoursElves that we share will enter the Childrens Hosshypital School of Nursing Boston in Septembel-

Ogdensburg Priests

SellYe Peru Mission OGDENSBURG (NC) -- Four

Ogdensburg priests currently are ministering to the n~eds of_13OOO

~ere

Father Philip Carey sJ exshyecutive director of the Xavier Institute of Industrial Relations acknowledged t hat certain strikes aJre intolerable But he said that when the governmentacts in a proprietary function it must follow the same rules it prescribes for private enterprise

In a letter to the New York Times Father Carey criticized ~y implication a proposed state -llw that wetulltilincrease the penalties to be imposed on strikshying union of public employees

MlISS LHNDA DUNCAN Th~proposedlaw grew out of recommendations of a five-man

Feehan Alumna task force named by Gov Nel son Rockefeller to study the

Receives Award problem after a 19-day transit strike crippled Newmiddot York City

Miss Linda Duncan daughter in January of Mrs George Duncan and the - NeCeSSBlry for Bargaining late George Duncan 61 Sykes Father Carey one of four Rd Seekonk has been awarded pubiic members of the mayors the eighth annual scholarship of committee that helped settle the the Attleboro Area Nurses strike disagreed with two other Chapter publlc memlgters Vh_o had previshyA 1966 graduate of Bishop ously supported the stiffer pen-

and internal concord a str~ke against itconstitutes mutiny and rebellion (UCLA) Sister Muriel a native

Pgbllsh Gudelnes For Ecumenisn

ALLENTOWN (NC) - The commission of ecumenism of the Allentown diocese here in Pennshysylvania has published a 22-page booklet of ecumenical guidelines to aid priests in guiding the laity The guidelines include general

permission for non-Catholics to serve as witnesses at Catholic weddings for Catholics to serve as witnesses at non-Catholic weddings and for burial of non-Catholics in Catholic ceremonies with a priest or a non-Catholic clergyman cltmducting graveside eeremonies

SHELL DADSON OIL

24-Hollr Oil

GLE COAL amp OIL CO IncI

640 Pleasant Street Tel WY 6-8271 New Bedford

this decision-making with the working p E~ 0 P Ie themselves through the process of collective bargaining

If collective bargaining is to be the rule he said we must agree to grant the right to strike~ Without this right he said there is no union and no coll~ctive balmiddotgaining

Expands Concern-in considering strikes by pu~ lie employees he dedared one muSt distinguishb~tween the state as a sovereign and the g()vernment acting in a proprishyetary function When the state aets as the defender of the peace or the promoter of justice

of Corning Iajoined the Sisters of the Humility of Mary in 1930 In recent years she has been ehairman of professionafarts deshypartment and college registrar

ation and a host of other services formerly performed by privategroups he continued

These activities are ancillary and economic and here the state in acting in a proprishyetry function When it so acts it ought to be subject tl) the same rules of conduct the government prescribes for private entershy

prise Strikes by firefighters and powerhouse uti lit y workers would be wrong however he said because it is difficult to imagine anY benefit they might gain to counterbalance the fear- fut harm such a l strike would impose on the community Buys Banners For Memorial

CHICAGO (NC)-A Chicago advertising executive has bought 44 brightly-colored religious ~anners tat -hung in the Nashy

tlOnal Srme of the Im~aculate ConceptIon during Luci Johnshysons wed(iin~ -

Earle Ludgin a trustee of the University of Chicago said he will donate the banners to the

university~ Rockefeller Memoshyrial Chapel in memory of his late wife

The banners for which Ludgin reportedly paid more than $40000 were originally created for the Vatlcan PavIIIon at the New York World Fair

A group of Washington D C residents bought ttie banners when the fair closed and arshyranged to have them exhibited in the Shrine until they could be sold Lugdin bought themin April but agreed at the request of Shrine officials to leave them in the Shrine until after Lucia wedding

lame College Head

OTTUMWA (NC) Sis t er

Muriel Hogan has been named the third presi4ent of Ottumwa Heights College here in Iowa She succeeds Sister Marie Anshy

ciue Kennedy woo win engagem graduate study in oominunishy

eations at the University of California Los Angeles branch

Offering You 3 Savings Plans

Home Financing

WAREHAM CO-OPERATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mabull

Telephone 295-2400 Banll SerVice YlIIIIIII

I

Ask Court Bar Use of Church Propertyfor Public SchoQ~middot WHITE ~S (MC) - A the cl883rooms ~ut Church

group of some 25 citizens repre- npokesman reporte~ that in line sented by the American Jewish with New York archdiocesan Congress has asked the New York State Supreme Court here to restrain the board of Ramapo School District 2 Rockland County from holding public school classes in property leased from religious bodies

The school board faced with severe-overcrowding planned to lease eight rooms from St Josephs Catholic Church and five from lem~e Beth El in Spring Valley The action was approved by 8tateEducation Commissioner Jame$ EAllen Jr

A ComllllJJlt served 0ill the rlChool board by the AJC charged the acti~n o~ld ~otateChurchshyState separation guaranteed by the First Amendment to the Constitution as well as other provisions of the state constitushytion

It is believed to be the first wch challenge made regarding

the use of religiO18 facilities for public school use

lhe st Josephproperty conshysists of an eightclasSroom school building adjacent to but sepashyrated from the chureh It is Ill good condition but will not be used by the p8rish thismiddot year because it has bUilt a new bUildshying for expanding its acbool to 141 classes

All religioUs ~bols had Ileen removed from the oder building in preparation for its use as a public school

The district school board had offered a fair market rent for

PAV~A deg Missionary Record Continued from Page Thirteen

A nurse from Chicago baa taken Lucillellpla~on the aposshytolic team and ber purpose in returning is to help her successhy80r work into the project smoothly It takes so long to get into 11 she Aid so II dont WJmt Il~r to spendtbree

years j~ g~tting organized~

Benedictine Marks 80th Anniversary

ST JOSEPHmiddot (NC)-The oldshyest Benedictine nun in Minneshysota-and one of the oldest m the world~marked the 80th anshyniversary of her entrance into the order ma Mass for all Beneshydictine jubil~tians held at St Benedicts convent here

Sister Sophia Zimmer was 1~ years old Dec 2 1965 She Wall

born in a log cabin about 1 block away from the convent An open house for her relatives and friends was held at the conv~nt

Receives Students cAsTELGANDOLFO (NC)shyPoPe Paul vI received in audishyence at his Summer home here students frOm 34 nations includshying many non-Catholics who are taking Summer courses in the ItaUaa language aDd culture sponsored by the Rome branch of the Catholic University fII IWaD

policy the properly would be made available for public school use at a token dollar-a-year rental

cmOS Cmpetes C~~ege ~rr(l))g~m

WASHINGTON (NC)-A class of 97 under-privileged high school students was graduated on completion of an eight-week Summer college orientation proshy

gram at Georgetown University The exercises i attended by faculty and parents Qf the stushydents involved students who had completed their Sophomore year in District of Colwnbia high schools They were chosen for the special course because teachers and counselors believed they have the ~billty to do colshylege work alihoug~ their presshyent high school records indicate little likelihood of college acshyceptance Ninoty-fiveOf the 97 students were Negroes md the ratio of males to females was aboutmiddot tbree-to-two ~

The pro~~~~Ch began in 1965 is financed by the NaUonal science Fowidationmiddot the District of Columbia public school sysshy

tem and Georgetown In addition to academic work

the students were given cltgtUrsetl in reading improvement and counseling gUidance Athletie and cultural events underwrit shyten by the program were also bKluded in their schedules

nearly 42 years Bishop Gerow churches degespeciallY Negro said Of late I have feltmiddotthat X houses of worshIp which middotWere have not the stamina to caJTY I bombedmiddot and burned

on as I have done in the past Whena p~ttern of destn1c~ion This load should be borne by 1 develops as It has m our state youngerman then it sincumbent upon all ntereston Yoiit

Cathollc lnereaSe m~n ~ ~ood ~i~ througho~t MiSSISSIPPI to Jom hands m Savings

The ~venth bishop of~edio- helpingthe affectedmiddot churches 0 Invested In cesemiddotwhlch was founded ID 1~37 and in showing clearly our con- and encompasses 111 of Missls- demnation at all acts of violencemiddot CATHOLIC CHURCH sippi Bishop Gerow h8ll s~ lawlessness and destruction the Catholic population IJOw from 31264 to 75000 in his 41 years of office The number of priests in the diocese grew from 63 to 220 and churches md misshysions from 108 to 243

The last few years of llacial violence perhaps were the most troub1d for Bishop Gerows long ad inistration middotHemiddot met the challenge with courage

In the face of many-sided opshyposition Bishop Gerow in 1964 directed the first grades of Cathshyolicmiddot schools in the state to be racially integrated The next

Missionaries Move Seminar to Ohio

DAYTON (NC) -The White Fathers a missionary society which bas served in Africa for nearly a century is llloving its U S seminary to Dayton

St Josephs Seminary which had been in operation at Onshydliota N Y near Saranac Lake will re-open under the same

name in four residences near the campus of the University of

Dayton The buildings have been rented from the university

Eventually the White Fathers plan to build their own seminary

middotfacilities somewhere in ~e area according to Fatber Paul lo1e1le WF~

THE ANCHOR- middot19 Thurs Aug 25 1966

KC Melll1il~er~~ip

At AJ~Tome e~~gh MIAMI BEACH (NC)-In his

report at the 84th annual meetshying of the Supreme Council of the Knights of Columbus Sushypreme Knight John W McDevitt made these points

Membership on June 30 1966 stood at an all-time high of 1183896 The orders insurance covershyage passed the $15 billion mark during the year

The orders assets reached III

neW plateau of $28122840028 at the end of the fiscal year

The society i~ continuing its support of the campaign to st~m p(gtrnography

Revise Ceremonial Progress is being made onthe

re_Vision of the orders cerempnshyial to give it a total family middotclishymate and make it consistent with moder day philosophy of social justice and religious pracshytice

The K of C have undertaken distribution of copies of the 1~ew Testament to Catholic gradllates

COURAGE PERSONIFIED John St Marie of B~YQ of the Naval Offilaquoer CandfClatE port Minn CQnfined to a wheelchair since a 1953 pOlio ~chool in Newport R I an(J ill

~dying the question of proshyattack has received a scholarship to the University of viding a similar servilte ~orMinnesota law school atter successfully maintaining an Ashy Catholic graduatell of the Qffi shyminus average in undergraduate work at the College of cers Candidate School of ihe St Thomas St Paul Minn irQ Photo Canadian Navy

It saluted Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York on biI

Welcomes Successor Naming of Apostolic Administrato

Pleases Bishop Gerow 81 JACKSON (NC)-Mississippll1 year he followed with a direeshy

courageous 81-year-old Bihop tive that Catholic schools be deshyOliver Gerow welcomed his suc- segregated completely ceSSor Bishop Joseph B Bruni- Helps Restore Churches ni 55 as spiritual head of the Despite reported threats ofmiddot Natchez-Jacklon diocese as one violence fro m segregationist who is active vigorous and has ranks the aged prelate was good sound judgment among leaders of an interfaith

X am very happy in being groupmiddot which formed the Comshyrelieved of the heavy responSl- mittee of middotConcernmiddot soHcited middotbillty that I have borne for money labor and materIals for

middotthe bishop stated in a letterred AND in every Catholic church in the INSTITUTIONAL BONDSstate

His appeal for $300000 to re-middot I Umiddot f $500 M store more than 30 d~stroyed n nits 0 or ore and damaged churches brought Keenan amp CImiddotarey bie contributions to the Committee 9f Concern from various sections Minneapolis Minnesota of the country

0

M~ntle Plumbing amp ~ating Co Inc~

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET Fall River OS 57497

for detailed information write to

CHARLES A~ MURPHY Registered Representative

145 Pond $treet Winchester Mass

PA 9-2696 And

Name bullbullbull ~ Address A

City _

50 years in the priesthood payshying tribute to him not only beshycause of his dignity as a pi-iest and cardinal but also because he 1S a great and wholesome mail

Relic Stolen NEW YORK (NC)-A reputed

relic of the cross on which Chtist died has been stolen from the Church of the Most Holy Reshydeemer here It was removed from a side altar tabernacle

where it had been placed shortshyly after the churchs establishshy

ment by the Redemptoriad Fathers some 125 years ago

~

GULF HILL DAIRY so DARTMOUTH MASS

RO THE ANCHO~-Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

1

RELIGIOUS SUPERIORS INSTITUTE ON STONEHILTJ CAMPUS SMS Guadalcanal Solomon Islands Standing Sr Florita DP King Sr Mary LUk~ St about to enter the hall for her lecture Center Some ston Mass Sr Mary of Bathany SP Holyoke Sr Mary de Sales F$SJ r the sisters who attended Sister Lukes talk were Sr Josepha SC Conshy Holyoke Right Mrs Mary Virginia Yosgandes h-ouse mother wavesgood ent Station NJ Sr Mary Kenneth Amityville NY Sr Mary (fheresa bye tothe departing nuns I

Brooklyn Church Hopes Nuns Move Into Cent~r of Lij~e Criticizes Irish lribunal Lacks By Dorothy Eastman -Social Security

When in the third year of Vatican II the momentous decision was made toinvitewO- dmiddot LIMERICK (NC) - FatherJ men observers to audit a Council forthe first ~ime to represent all J~remiah Newman professor ofuris ICtlon the Sister chosen BROOKLYN (NC)-Msgr the nuns in America was Sister Mary Luke Tobin Mother General of the Sisters of Lor- sociology at Irelands Maynooth

IlAarion J Reinhardt pre- etto When shewasasked recently while visiting the Fall River Diocese what impressed College criticizedprivate agenshyJ~L h t b t th C 1 cies and the national governshyIdlng Judge of the Trlblillal er mos a ou e oune) h t b t h h d k ment for their failure to increaseshe said with a wry smile We aVe 0 e rna ure enoug er own or er was wor mg(1)f the Diocese of Brooklyn h to live in insecurity toward these ends She told of all subsidies to families Iltas announced that the bill of The fact that we were t ere Will these changes be easy experiment soine of her Sisters After insisting that it would $Omplaint of 15 former teachers at all I The Sister is too much of a have been engllged in for the be best for private agencies and of St Johns Un~versity had to At a Stonehill College institute realist to give that impression past twu years in Pueblo Colo- local governments to administer be dismissed because of lack of Sister Luke spoke of her many Its going to be fraught with rado Although most of the 1100 social security Father Newman jurisdiction on the part of the other impressions of the Council difficulties she warns but Sisters of Lorettv are teachers said that since they seemed unshy

ecclesiastical court _ where she and seven other Sis- what isnt this small group of Sisters in willing or unable to do this the The Brooklyn ecclesiastical tels were auditresses for the last There are more than a few Pueblo 1s doing no t~aching-in job had to be done by the natshy

$Ourt which operates under two years of Vatican II Over Sisters who are troubled and schools anyway They simply jonal government ~llnon law said it is pmited in 450 Mothers Superior from 55 sometimes shocked these days live among the poor as good He said that according to jurisdiction to only spiritual different Orders were gathered by many of the changes hi their neighbors he 1pin jg wherever Catholic soCial teaching there ltuestions at the Easton campus for the communities The Mother Gen- they cllD leading discussion was no limit to the amount of Charge Contralaquot Breach five day Institute directed by eral would warn them that its groups counselling etc government aid that is permis-

The 5000 word document Rev William FHogan CSC pointless for them to say Thill Asked to comment on the re- sibie and desirable if governshypointed out that the decree of Sister Luke was one of a group is not the community I entered cent experiment in Milwaukee mEmt aid was the Qnly practical Giisrriissalis without prejudice to of noteliltspeakers who talked When it comes to that she says where30 School Sisters of St (sbl~tion to poverty problems lbhe merits of the case to the superiors on the subject we all might say This is not the Francis left their convents for

If the Metropolitan Tribunal of the I Sister in the modern Church Iwas baptized into or three weekstO work in secular If the archdiocese of New York world this is not the world I was b()rn jobs - oneSister wa3 assigned

T b 1 f the Sacred into Change is a fact of life S t~ the rI una 0 Adapting a line from Charles as a newspaper reporer- IS er Roman Rota reversesthe decree Dickens to describe this contro she points out~ and we can~t keep Luke predicted a great deal the casewiil be returned to the versial post Council age Sister things as they are or say Stop more~ of this kind of liniited Tribunal of the Diocese of the World-I want to get off f i t th I w ld ]Brooklyn for adjudications upon t~ees sa~~iSTi~iSt~eth~o~r Role of Superiors ~~~re ~o di~~a~~c~i~t n~~ Ms merits it was stated times She paintedavivid ver- The role the Superiors will she said

The petition of complaint bal picture of the world that lies play in the formation of what Since her own Order founded filed by Father Peter OReilly ahead for Sisters She said it has been called The New Nun in 1812 is quite new all religious

s~f Chicago on behalf of himself would certainly be a challenging Lwuakeouattlintheed fs~roeh~ ~~s~~~t~ orders go and is the liirst comshylind the other ousted teachers one and that conventlife inthe munity founded in America charged he university which is future is certain to undergo She urged them to create a cli- without European ties the Sisshyeonducted by theVincentian many radical changes mate where Sisters can liveters of Loretto weal habits more Fathers with breach of contract community life at its best She -modern than most But itsstill

The Superior~ were told that entreated them to keep thls cli-The dispute has been marked bY d bl d ff t the dress of 1812 not 1966 so it d k t f an m Ispensa e gUl e me ec - mate free from legallsm andlitudent unrest an pIC e mg 0 th hmiddotmiddot th will soon be changed As soon I mg ese c anges IS e map survelmiddotllance Ie schoo s campuses f th f t th t th C 1 as the all-mlll Congregation

or e u ure a e ounCl A community should be a of Religious in Rome approv~sMoral Issue Fatners drew up for the Church place where there- is safety for She called the CouncII Decrees the Sisters new design that is About 30 teachers were fired fl t d f t f dff

Rost December in a dispute over the documentS ofhighest au- cop IC an sa e y or J er- Tliey have submitted one de~ign rlty We should all have ~nes apd s~fety to cultiv~te that the fathers turnEd downadministration-faculty relation- tho d t h d Sh f I the mInd of Vatlcan II and then lverSI y s ~ sal e ee s lihey thought it was too modshyships and other issues They t I th t th h ld be

b b f we c~n move Into actlon she s rongy a ere ~u r -ern Sister Luke says UWhat anwere joined y anum er 0 I t I g I fe ther teachers In a strike that told her healers - 1Jloe ~o~a IY In re 1 J~)Us 1 incredible thing for US to ask shy --uAfterall were not Trap- that we choose our own clothes has continued since January Whi~h Way psts

l she adds with a laughThe court found that tpe How will the Sisters know in Warning that the time has S t Lk tl - b

uteceniontractual controversy was not whicli direction they should come for a re-evaluation of the _ IS ~rth y e~mt~ a spiritual mattelin a canoliical move in the manyarells so(in to true meaning of community she ne oIl e d~rs wo~~ ever ~ llense of the word spiritual change cExperiment Sister told the Superiors that commu- bo~a h a sre~t a f ~gUS aild that there was no allegation Luke advises so often its almost nity doesnt mean conformity or 0 y e oCle ~ o anon ef a violation of an ecclesiastical her motto We really cannot a hotel life either or even a Lawyrs Does thIS mian that law arid that the time was not move into change without ex-lot of happy t9getherness th~ SI~ters may at last have a opportune for a decision of perimentation she says and around the television set voIce 111 the formatIon of canon moral responsibility because the we will be engaged in tremen- A ~ital new aspect of commu- la-at least th~ laws that rUI~ secular courts would first have dous experiments from now on- nity is the idea of what Sister thel~ O~derS SIster Luke deshyto determine whether there was to adapt religious life to the Luke calls sub communities- vout y opes so a breach of contractual duty times in which we live the convents immediate neigh- Its certain that the future for

The church court found as a The revisions that lie ahead borhood the parish the civic the Sisters will be a very differshymatter of law that St Johns for religious orders will bring commumty lay people 111 the ent one than anyone could have 141 NO MAINUniversity as a corporation Sisters into the mainstream of same profession as the Sister- imagined a few short years ago J~ formed under the law of the modern life Sister Luke for for instance other nurses or The Holy Father has urged them iii FALL RIVER State of w York did not have one has no doubts that this is tElachers We have allowed too the~ to move from the margin e the ecclesiastical privilege of where they belong We ought great a gap to exist between our- of life to the center of life~ 873 COUNTY demanding that suits against it to be willing to take the risks) selves and the laity she says Will the move be successful SOMERSETbe heard in an ecclesiasticalmiddot that gO along with this plunge In an interviewmiddot following her Sister Luke says We can only CDOurt into the mainstream she says talk Sister ~uke was asked how know by taking a ChanCE

Feai makes the wolf bigger than be is

Rer Bankings Already D~ne

~jI--~1 W

tt-~~gt_ri~

~j F~ p ~tl Iim F-ilNgt

~l i

ll 11 ~~

W = ~

~gtltl ~

-~ ~~ StIesaves I lot of alunle Mtime forso maily other thinlS ~i She banks by mail at Te ~ OLD R D8 KI h 7reg E AN W at about you

liii FREE mall forms ~1 The mOld Red Bank W

$ Fall River Savings Bankjilll q

Page 16: 08.25.66

16 THE AI~ ~-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

C~nsiders Instability Causes In Latin American lamds

From Social R-evolution in the New Latin Ameriea Edited by John J Considine MM

There are many causes of instability in Latin America Some have said in the past that it is an inheritance frQm

Spain They feel that the years of Spanishauthoritarianism rendered the colonies incapable of integrating themselves into a more balanced social system Because they had there exists the problem of low

denSity of population with a lackpreviously lacked indepenshyof internal communication In-dent creole authority the many cases there is even a lanshy

colonies were unprepared to acshy guage barrier eept a more democratic authorshy The problem of an underdeshyity In his book veloped economy has also beenBetween Freeshy a factor in forming Latin Anlershy clom and Fear ican social structureGerman Arcinshy On the social level the eleshyiegas draws a ments I have mentioned favorcomparison beshy an internal lack of class strucshytween the Enshy ture that involves a juxtaposishyglish and Spanshy tion rather than a social organi shyish governments zation and integration Democshyin the Americas racy on the other hand presupshyIn ihe north the poses a large scale integrationcolonists came in of the people in the politicalshysearch of freeshy economic-social life of thedom IIi the end nationthe founding of the Nodh The masses of -illiterates inAmerican colonies was only the Latin America who do not parshyobvious culmination of a process ticipate in these areas have noalready begun It was the reafshy iilterest in government thoughfirmation of customs already inshy their interest and loyalty maygrained in the social milieu It be enlisted by the demagoguewas an evolution not a real revshyolution for these settlers were Formation or Dictatorships accustomed to autonomy The A dictatorship takes form

authority pf their governors was when one or more pressure more democratic since they groups unchallenged seizes the worked closely with the popular power of governmentassemblies From the beginshy In order to better understand ning the keenest concern of the the types of dictatorship found North American colonist was for in Latin America let us elCamshyfreedom of worship and his hosshy ine the different forms of revoshytility to the Church of England lution and the various ways in was evident which the pressure groups

On the contrary Latin Amershy bring their influence to bearIca was part of an empire The Kalmal1 Silvert distinguishesSpaniards came to dominate and these types in his book Reaction evangelize The viceroy represhy and Revolution in Latin Amershysented the king who was an abshy ica which is written in -Englishsolute monarch The role of Silvert shows the relationshipshyassembly in Latin America was between dictatorships and the secondary arid represented exshy extreme indivdualism found in tremely liIIlited power these countries

Independence in the Latin The first type of revolution American nations entailed a real named is what Silvert calls the revolution since from the beginshy simple brracks revolt Most of ning they were forced tb look for the outbreaks especially in the new political and social forms past century have been of this

Religiousliberty did not elCshy kind The barracks revolt occurs ist in the Latin American coloshy typically in a big class society nies since all were obliged to It is carried out by the amlY

membership in the Cathoiic sompoundtimes in its own name and Church sometimes in behalf of a chosen

Unassimilated Groups leader This type of revolution - rarely calses widesprelld publicThis comparison will help in

disturbance since it representsunderstanding the Latin Amershymerely a switch in governmentican problem though it will not from one general to anotherfully explain -it We must acshy

knowledge that the political The second type the peasant phenomeinon has a direct COIshy revolt is generally of little sigshyrelatio~1 with demographic probshy nificance and limited in effect lems such as the existence of to a locality though the Mexican large unassitnilated groups as revolution at the beginning of well as masses of mestizos un this century would perhaps fall derdeveloped and deprived who in this category can scarcely be said to partici shy Third the regional revolt pate in twentieth century chili shy commcn in the early days of zation Although these groups Latin American independence form a part of the nation they Here _the caudillo strove to put are not integrated either socially down provincial revolts and to eulturally or politically centralize power in an authorishy

Despite the over-all demoshy tarian I e g i () n a I government g~aphic explosion in some areas Typical of the caudillos who led

regional revolts was Rosas of Argentina

Plans Participation The fourth a more modern type of revolution Silvert callsIn Liturgical Week the complicated barracks revolt

HOUSTON (NC) - The 1966 This is an insurrection that inshyLiturgical Week here fOI the -volves civilian as well as mili shyfirst time in its 25-year history tary groups with widespread will have a full scale program military action for those interested in the The issues are ideological and Eastern Church relate to political parties as well

As part of the Liturgical Week as _ other interest groups The program the Divine Liturgy Cuban revolution in its beginshy(Mass) of St John Chrysostom nings might be considered -an will be celebrated entirely in example Although this is the English and Communion will be most prevalent type ainong modshydjstributed under both species ernday revolutions excetions Chief celebrant of the Liturgy are the revolts which overthrew will be Archbishop Paul Achkar Peron in Argentina Perez-JimeshyGreek Catholic ~-chbishop of nez in Venezuela and -Rojas Lattaquia in Syua Pinilla in Colombia

SISTER AMBROSE

Says SOo Africa Needs Americans

WASHINGTON (NC)-Yanshykee come over a statement which would do much to boost the morale of Americans in sevshyeral parts of the world could well summarize what an Irish missionary nun to South Africa

-has been saying during a visit here _

The wonderful hospitality of theAmerican people has imshypressed Sister Ambrose Harty Gf the Sisters of the Holy Family She lamens the fact that opporshytunities to receive Americans in a like manner have been few and far between during her 20 years in South Africa

Youve got such a lot to give she said here in an ~ntershyview during which she expressed a strong desire to see greatly inshycreased people-to-people relashytio~s between the country where she serves and the United States

Sister Ambrose was particushylarly interested in the Peace Corps ann reported that its purshyposes and work are hardly known by the people of Soutli Africa I haVent heard it disshycussed at all she said (The Peace Corps has not been invited into the country) (

With words of praise for the missionary work being done iii the South African Republic by Oblate arid Paulist missionaries from the United States she also expressed regret at the general paucity of missioners from this country There particularly is an almost total lack of nuns she said Only 71 Catholic missionshyaries from the United States inshycluding 16 nuns are serving ilm South Africa

Married Priests AMSTERDAM (NC)-A

Dutch public opinion poli h8lll shown that 11 per cent of the Netherlands p e 0 pIe woulci rather have III married Catholi4l clergy than a celibate clergy The poll including members ai all and no denominations

-showed that 68 per cent of the Catholics queried preferred III married clergy

~~

(DEBROSS OIL ( ~ co ( ~ Heating Oils

~ and BMIIJUrs ~

~ 365 NORYIoli IFROIlir SUEampll ( rJ NEW IBIEDIFOR

~ WYmafi 2middot5534 (

I~~~

Parishes Share DETROIT (NC) - Twentyshy

nine urban parishes here have decided to help one another meet the rising cost of education

At the elementary level parshyepts will pay $50 per family $75 per family for non-Catholic parishioners and $75 per student

Danish Catholic COPENHAGEN (NC) -Thereshy

are 11321 Catholics in the Danish capitalaccording to a report issued by the Copenhagen statistical office They consti shytute the second largest religious entity there next to the Luthershyans members of the State Church The total number of Catholics in Denmark is approxshyimately 26000 Total population is 35 lllillion

Education Costs for Catholics outside the parish

At the high school level the tuition cost is $H)O per student in or out of the parish With the exception of textbooks this amount eliminates aU extra fee charged up to now

Father Norman P Thomas director of the Urban Parisll Apostolate said the greatest efshyfect of the joint effort will be experienced by the pastor who sends parish youngsters to a higll school operated by any of the 2 participating parishes

In this instance the students parishes will be expected to pay the difference between the tui shytion charged and the actual cost per student The latter fee laM been set by the parochial school office at over $200 per year

ETHIOPIA- THE NEW AFRICA

- HOLY FATlftRB MIBBIIDN AID TO THI DRIENTAL OHURCH

- BROTHER What happens In Ethiopia when an American MICHAEL Christian Brother (he could be your son brother

REYNOLDS nephew) Is told to upgrade Catholic schools He FROM borrows a Jeep (or a mule) visits the schools

PROVIDENCE RI one by one writes home for pencils and better REPORTS textbooks and then beginsbullbull This is the new

fROM Africa Brother Michael Reynolds reports enshyADDIS thusiasticallyfrom Addis Ababa It can be a BABJpeacefuf progressive Christian Africa tom~rmiddot

row Just give us schools give us time and with Gods help the job will De donel bull bullThe schools are for villages like Aressa Aiga Biers Wartll8~

-which have no school The youngsters know that knowledge i~ their only chance theyll go without food to learnbullbullbull What does It cost to build a schoolf Only $2950 says Brother Michael for the villagers snd the children give their laborfreemiddotofmiddotcharge We can train a catemiddot chlst for only $40 bullbullbull In thanksgiving to God for what you know will you do what you can ($100 $75 $50 $25 $15 $10 $5 $2) to give these youngsters a chance The school will be named for your favorite saint and the children will pray for your loved ones daily If you build It all byyourself ($2950) School will open late this year-but better late than never-If you Vlrit~ to us right now

WHAT Our priests there who receive no othor income IELSE for food and clothing will offer promptly the

FOR Masses you request Well forward your Mass ETHOPIAr Inten~ons through the Holy Fathers officebull

40 young lads studying for the priesthood In Decamere lose their football when It goes Into a nelghbers garden A large field can be bought ~velled and mede safe for sports fer $975

MAKINQ ~~IOOOO will ovfde bull OOfDj)lete parjstlplantA (Ohuroh rectory convent andscbool) In southshy

WiW ImIAdla In memorybullbullbullbull $600 will ttiln a native lrfHt1SOO bull native Sfster Our legal tltI Cl~1HOUO NWt lAir WIUAH AHOCIAnONo

_-------------~shytt coINIILOIIlt IUMIIIND ~ bullbull la IJIIr bull _1OIt~=-=_==-=

PI _UM~gt

Mum ClO1IIponwith your mt__=-~~_ _ ~i offrtnt ~~ erryen 8TAlI-lPCODI_

HI IATHaLl1 RIIiAR 811 WILAbullbull AIaDIATaN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS IRANCUS CARDINAL SPELLMAN President MSGR JOHN G NOLAN National Secretal)f Write OATHOLIO NfIAR IiAST WELFARE Assoo 1)80 MadlsolJ Avenuomiddot New York NY 10017 -felGpilonel 212YUkon 6middot6840

Dormitory Proves Stonehill Permanently Coeducational

Way back in 1951 when the first girl enrolled in Stoneshyhill College no one could have imagined that a girls dormishytory would ever be built onmiddot the campus But the sound of steam shovels and hammers filling the air over the lovely grounds in Easton is proof

and two girls from the seniorthat the long planned for daslr-assisting the housemothergirls dorm will soon be a Mrs Grace Callahan

reality When Stonehill was The experiment worked so founded in 1948 as a mens colshy well in fact that this coming lege the fledgling school had Fall both the freshman and just gotten off to a good start sophomore girls will be housed when the Korean War came this way leaving only the junior along and emptied the classshy and senior girls still renting Yooms as the young men went quarters in private homes chosen into the services by the college as all the nonshy

That was the year that many commuting girls have done in small colleges had to close their the past gates forever But at Stonehill That typical campus situation the Holy Cross order was detershy -the sorority house-is not in mined to hold onto this new the picture at Stonehill-or frashyschool that they had planned for ternity houses either for that so long matter No sororities or fraternishy

What could they do to keep ties are allowed on the campus the college operating until the There is a cl11b however that war was over and the boys came is the girls own - the Crosier back Of course Open their Club Mrs Yosgandes is the gates to girl students clubs faculty advisor and she deshy

Faculty Pleased scribes it as the organization What started out as a temposhy for women studentE who want

rary expediency somehow over to contribute in their own parshythe years has acquired a happy middotticular way as women to their permanancy No one could be college more pleased about this turn of Through their annualmusical events than the Stonehill faculty Crosier Curtain Calls theyitself raise money to acquire manymiddot

Helping out in Jhe ground things that add beauty and breaking ceremony for the new charm to campus life This yeardorm Mrs Virginia Yosgandes they purchased two very lovelythe Dean of Women at the colshy silver tea and coffee services lege saiei I guess everyone will Any official group at the collegereally believe that the girls are is allowed to borrow the sets and here til stay they have already been used in

Mrs Yosgandes says that since many functions she first came to the Stonehill New Signfaculty in 1958 rumors have

Mrs Yosgandes says Thebeen popping up that Stonehill girls will be very pleased whenwill soon return to its original they come back th~~ Fallto seestatus as an all male school The the beautiful new sign theynew dorm she says will be visshybought for the college installedible proof of the permanancy of on Route No 138 women on the beautiful campus

Its very easy to picture theThe $1150000 building deshyvery charming Dean presidingsigned to accommodate 200 girls

graciously at a faculty tea Aand proctors will be three stories parishioner of Immaculate Conshyof red brick Architects W Chesshyception chulCh in Easton she ister arown and Associates and in ~rivate life an enthusiasticwntractors C A Batson and homemaker anc the mother of aCompany are planning to comshy13 year old daughter Christineplete work on the dorm in time Her husband John is assistantfor the opening of classes in principal at Franklin JuniorSeptember 1967 It will be the High first unit of a five dormitory

She speaks with great convicshycomplex planned fo the women on tion about college girls holdingcampus

onto feminine ideals while surshyKitchen ~pace rounded-and at Stonjhill outshyMrs Yosgandes is happy about numbered 3 to 1- by menthe fact that the new dorm will While were encoulaging themhave a kitchenette on each floor to be acdve in thpound communitywhere the girls can cook small and the church and in politicsmeals and entertain guests Shes and encouragint them to deshyhoping that the dorms built after

more velop their abilities to the full shythis me will providtgt even est-we never fail to take intokitchen space for the girls to account the fact that they arepractice the culinary arts women and in this competitiveM a n~ tImes homemaking world theyll have to -fight toskills come to a complete halt maintain their feminine idenshywhen a girl goes to college she tity says Apparently all classroom

work and rio cooking make Jane Coed Actiiti~s

Coed a dull girl in the room When she fi rst came to the where shell be spending a great college she sltys the girls were deal of time after graduationshy mainly interested in strictlythe dtchen feminine extra curricular activishy

Mrs Yosgandes says A great ties-fastion shows teas gids many cCJlleges have been workshy sports Bd this has changed radshying witt this problem and wonshy ically in the last few years and dering what to do about it Beshy now the girls are much more inshycause theyve had no living terested in the coed acti vitiesshyquarters for girls on campus the newspapers the debating Stonehiiil has had to do out of team the drama club Stonehill necessit) what many other colshy is noted a~ one of a small handshyleges have chosen to do recently ful gtf Catholic colleges where The Dean describp~ an experishy girls are middotactive in every part of ment that the collFge tJied last college life Every coure at yeal tha has worked out exshy StonehHj is opel to girls tremely well We still havent had a woman

Experiment Successful president of our student governshyThe college leased a grollp of ing body the Senate Mrs

rooms il an apartmelt building Yosgandes says Now girls in Brockton last Fall where all what are yOIi waiting for the freshman girls who were not commuters-55 of them-lived in housekeeping apartments In Red Groups There were four girls in each BERLIN (NC)-Over 85 per apartment all sharing the reshy (ent of East German children sponsibilities of housekeeping between the ltlges of 6 and 14 are

The girls hat two sets of mCl11)ers of communist youth 1)IoctOS - two aIumni wumen ~nIUps

lrt-OE ANCH0) 17 Thurs Aug 25 1966

PriestCuod Goal Of Top Skater

GREAT FALLS (NC)-A good many folks in this Montana toWlll will attest that teenager J Mishlll Petkevich is a pretty good skate -on or oH the ice

The affable blond youngster 17 topped a field of 136 pershyformers in the three-day Lake Placid N Y international free style competition sanctioned by the U S and Canadian Figure Skating Assoclations The Great Falls lad was the judges unamiddot1ishymous choice for the mens gold medal in the finals

But Petkevich doesnt lose his cool off the ice His classmates and teachers at Great Falls Censhytral 3igh School claim hes liIl

winner in every event He spends more than 40 hours 11 week in skating training but carries the full load of class studies and consistently turns Up on the schools honor roll Hes a member of the National Honor Society

The school supported me ami the way Everyone has beeEl wonderfUl to me the modest youngster saia Hes been -skatshying since he was 2 He credit his achievements to his Catholic Faith the sacrifices of his parshyents and of Arthur Bourke senshyiormiddot professional of the Great Falls Figure Skating Club He said All I did was skatemiddotGROUND-BREAKING The Very Rev John T Corr

I hope some day to become~esc president of Stonehill College turns a shovelful of priest Petkevich said wbeilearth to mark start of construction 0pound a 200-student dormshy a~ked his ambition I hope 14gt itory for women on the Stonehill campus Watching the proshy attend Notre Dame for at leasa celtlures are left to right Mrs Virginia Yosgandes dean af two years and then I h9pe to gf)

to the Catholic University fl4women John C Doody 66 Alumni fund chairman Robert AmericaBatson contractor Harold Bonvie ass~iate of the archishytect

Msgr Canty Continued from Page OneRussian Schools ing studies at S1 Marys High

Taunton Boston- College and S1 Bernards Seminary RochesshyChristian Brother Lauds Students terN Y

nespect for Intellectuols He served as assistant at Our Lady 01 the Isle NantucketCHICAGO (NC)-Students in to foreign languages than Amershy Holy Family Taunton St

schools behind the Iron Curtain icans Most students take a Marys Barrowsville and Stgo at their studies with a passhy seven-year sequence of English Johns Attleboro He was apshysion said Brother Kevin Mark German or French English he pointed to the Chaplains CorPJFSC who toured Russia and added is the most popular lanshy of the United States Navy infour satellite countries with 19 guage and more emphasis is January 1942 and retiredwitbother U S rducatois placeltl on reading and speaking the rank of captain in Decemshy

Brothel Mark who is princishy than on writing it ber 196gt Pope John XXIII pal 9f St Mels high school here Brother Mark said that there elevated him to the rank of attributed much of their motivashy is almost nothing that he would Domestil Prelate with the title tion to the students attitude that lift from the Soviet school sysshy of Right Reverend Monsignor iI What I do does contribute to tem and apply in the U S May 1962 the welfare of the state He admitted however that Bishop Connolly named Monshy

Brother said he felt that stushy they do get results They have a signor Canty pastor of St Paulsdents in this country lack motishy tremendous capacity for conshy Taunt-ln in December 1963 vation because were spoiled centration when they set their Industrial improvements have sights for example their space made it that a young man can program Its not all a matter go into a trade and make very of being chained to a lab table good money BLUE RIBBON

In the Soviet Union he said there seems to be a great reshyspect for intellectuals and the LAlnNDRY student is thought of as a proshy

01 STOPfessional schJlar 273 CE~RAl AVE~UIIG CfflTERTeaching is considered a proshy

fession and remunelated accordshy e Television C FmiddotI ure illgly WY 2-6216o r-cerv

St Mels principal observed on IlA Allen St Newhdfordhis tour that there was little NEW BEDFORD questioning on the part of the students

The chSSloom situation he said is very much teacher ori shyented that is study in depth is 21 DAY PILGRIMAGES TO EUROPE done on the teachers inspiration

rou~ 1-Legion of Mary Pilgrimage leaving Sept 12th with Truth in such areas as history Father Edward A Oi-viera will visit Killarney Dublin Paris

cllld literature is accepted as a Lourdes Rome Madrid Lisbon and Fatima - Tour 2shyforegone conclusion and stushyHoly Cross Fathers Pilgrimage leaving Oct 10th with Frdents just memorize what has

already been discovered ----- lobert E McDonnell will wsit lisbon Fatima 1odrid Rome Lourdes Paris and londonIike F)rc~gn Linutges -cota cost is $82900 - Time PaymentsmiddotIn the area of science howshy arranged ever the situation is difterent

()Ii TOUR tOLDERS CONTACT STEolfEN A MARIIEYhe pont~d out because in scishyence there is an attitude of I n~ust discover Catholic Travel

-Office

The R1~middotmiddotmiddotO p oth-r Mark ~ltk St New Befl- -ass 02748

said ~ ve 11111j Ill)le auention

BURNERS

BUrntlr Service

Famous Reading HARDCQAl

NEW ENGLAND COKE

t8 THE ~NCHOR-Dioceseof fo Rivef-Thurs Aug 25 1966 J~sut I)riest Says Some Public I b M t EmploYE~~S Have Right to Strike

-

Urges uO or ovemen S NEW (NC) -Public however YORK Government hasmiddot h C employees in certain fields have been expanding its cQncern andIn Heml$p ere ooperate the right to strike against the has beenmoving into ar~as of government a priest declared transportation education recre-

By MsgrGooJrge C Higgins (Director Socian Actiolll Dept NCWC)

The relationship between the American labor moveshyment and the Latin American Confed~ration of Christian Trade Unions (CLASC) leaves much to be desired as we

middot thO d th 1- have aready noted severa1 t Imes m IS co umn urmg e

past four or five years The two movements are deeply different things to different peoshy

auspicious of one another and just when they seem to be on the verge of settling or at least -patching up their differshyences they go at it again and recklesslystart hurling insults at one another

To jUdge from What they sayIi b 0 u t on e another publicshy1yen as well as privately on e would t h ink that they were natural-born enshyemies whe~eas in fact they have much in common-much inore than they seem to realizeshyand for obvious reasons ought violent MisS Duncan was an officer of The fourth public member Harshyto be c60p~rating With onean- Moreo~er at least one promi~theSodality a cheerleader for vardlaw school professorVern ether as closely as pOSSible nent spokesman for the AFL- four years a member of the Ten- Countryman half ci-itiCized the This writer has learn~ci the hard WR and muc~ to hiS so~-row that any outSider who 18

fOolish enough totryto mediatek f

~tween them JS as mg or troouble

C f t Gommun same If for example one suggests

as I have done on more than one Occasion that soine of the anti U S propaganda emanating from CLASCsources revealS atremely harmful to the cause of n a i v e misunderstanding of Amerlcan trade unionism and American capitalism andor ari $ver-simplification of Catholic Social teaching he runs the risk 9f being written off as a blind -not tOsay reactionary apologist for so-called Yanqui ~mperial-

iBm If on the other hand oneslig

gests that some of the anti- CLASC propaganda enianating

fro m AFL-CI0 sources is equally naive and unsoPllisti shyeatedhe runs the same Sort of risk in reverse That is to say he is likely to be told--v~ry politely of course -that if he were to take off his Catholic blinkers and look at the record objectively he would quickly come to realize that CLASC is in reality playing t~ecipal rival in Latin America) riages in their mission parishes communist game in Latin Amer- there is a gEirierous mixture of Msgr Milia stated Since the iea superficial appearances to cultural chauvinism and envy Ogdensburg mission was opened the contrary notwithstanding that accompanies the most legit- a modern new church bas been

Both CaD Learn imate misgivings built under its direction in the Be that as it may I still think Even the Latinos middotthemselve~ seaport ofMatararii two mission

~t CLASC has a lot to learn he points out will admit on ac- churches have oeen completed about _ and from American casion that their consumirig fear and a lalge parish church and trade unionism And if that of Yanqui imperialism is often center are currently under conshymakes me a reactionary Yankee irrational But there it is he re- struction in Mollendo ehauvinist so be it minds us and the basic prob-

By the same token however aiso think that the American

labor movement has much to learn about -- and from - the Christian trade union movement in Latin America The first thing it has to learn is that the Am~r-leap philosophy of pure-andshysimple bread-~d-butter union ism which all things considshyered has worked satisfactorily in this country is not necessarily well adapted to the present-day Deeds of Latin America

Meaning of Revolution Another way of saying the

same thing is that American iabor representativesworking on Latin America problemswm have to reconcile themselves to the fact that a social revolu-Uon is called for in Latin American labor federation that doesnt subscribe to a revolushytionary ideology is probably doomed to failure

The word revolution meaos J-

pIe of course To the leaders of CLASC it means a sweeping program of socioeconomic and political reform which goes far beyond the limited goals of bread-and-butter unionism

The leaders of CLASC are convinced that such a revolushytioo is demanded bythe Chrisshytian social ethic to which they subscribe and from which they derive their ideology

Perceptive Critique Some U S Labor repshy

resentatives are skeptical to say the least~bout the allegedly Christian content of CLASCs militant ideology They admit theneed for a peaceful revolushytion in Latin Americn butthey are convinced thatCLASC wants this revolution to be Feehan High School Attleboro alties in a letter tc therimes

lem is how to insure con~ PAVlA V I tlnuing cooperation between 0 untee rs Yanqui and Latino in spite of Complete TlIainirigit

Such cooperation Dr Hawkins WASHINGTON (NC)-Fortyshyconcludes will be impossible unshyless the leaders of the American labor movement positively indi~

cete their acceptance of social revolution in Latin America This will require he says

more than the generous transshyfusions of economic aid the stimulation under United States

labors auspices of leadership training programs for workers

and other cooperative ventures Need Broader View

What is required he insists ltCia a broader view-an ability on the part of the American la bor statemen to adopt policies that will not always accord with OUI own value~ and more speshy

cificall~ the tempering of (their) hosannas to free entershyprUie ___

inter-American labor unity I fully agree in this respect with Dr Carroll Hawkins Associate

Professor of Political Science at Michigan State University who recently published a most pershyceptive critique of American trade union policy in Latin- Catholics in Mollendo Peru the

America (The 0RIT and Amer diocesan missions director reshyican Trade Unions Conflicting ported Perspectives Industrial Rela- The New York priests were tionsand Social Changes in sent to Peru after Pope Paul Latin America University of vi -asked that more priests be Florida Press) pr9vjd~d fOr the people opoundSouth

Basic Problem America Msgr Anthony A Mi-Dr Hawkins admits of course lia said He estimated more than

that in all the Latin American 90 percent of the priests in criticism of United States unioniperu are from other countries in the ORIT (the Latin Ameli can regional unit of the Interna In 1965 the priests from Ogshytional Confederation of Free denburg administered 445 bap-Trade Unions and CLASCs prin tisms and perfoImed 64 mar-

CIOhas publicly charged in ej_ nis Club for two years and a suggested penaltiel fect that CLASCs ideology three yeaT member of the FU- owes more to Marxism than it ture Nurses club Father Carey sl~id the ~ays does to Christianity He finds it when pay and working condi-

An instructor in the Confra- tions for men and women inhard he says to accept the fact ternity of Christian Doctrine that the Christian labor move- civil service were determine4 byproglam in Our Lady of Mt I g I t d d t t

t middot A e IS a Ive It n a minIS ra Ive ment 0f L a In merIca IS non- Carmel Parish Seekonk the fiat have pas ed a d Communist s n we now

In my judgment this kind of criticism of CLASC by spokesshymen fltr the AFL-CIO is ex

three volunteers have completed the Second National Training Session sponsored by the Papal Volunteers for Latin America and received assignments in some ten Latin American coun- tries

Special ceremonies ended the six-week training session at the Catholic University of America where volunteers studied the apostolic work of the Church the laymans role in the aposshytolate and principles of spiritual life as well as the religion ecoshynomics and culture of Latin America

Before leavillg for their asshysignments the volunteers will take intensive four-month lanshy

guage anl culture courses in a Latin American language centerbull

eighth winner of this scholarship plumeoursElves that we share will enter the Childrens Hosshypital School of Nursing Boston in Septembel-

Ogdensburg Priests

SellYe Peru Mission OGDENSBURG (NC) -- Four

Ogdensburg priests currently are ministering to the n~eds of_13OOO

~ere

Father Philip Carey sJ exshyecutive director of the Xavier Institute of Industrial Relations acknowledged t hat certain strikes aJre intolerable But he said that when the governmentacts in a proprietary function it must follow the same rules it prescribes for private enterprise

In a letter to the New York Times Father Carey criticized ~y implication a proposed state -llw that wetulltilincrease the penalties to be imposed on strikshying union of public employees

MlISS LHNDA DUNCAN Th~proposedlaw grew out of recommendations of a five-man

Feehan Alumna task force named by Gov Nel son Rockefeller to study the

Receives Award problem after a 19-day transit strike crippled Newmiddot York City

Miss Linda Duncan daughter in January of Mrs George Duncan and the - NeCeSSBlry for Bargaining late George Duncan 61 Sykes Father Carey one of four Rd Seekonk has been awarded pubiic members of the mayors the eighth annual scholarship of committee that helped settle the the Attleboro Area Nurses strike disagreed with two other Chapter publlc memlgters Vh_o had previshyA 1966 graduate of Bishop ously supported the stiffer pen-

and internal concord a str~ke against itconstitutes mutiny and rebellion (UCLA) Sister Muriel a native

Pgbllsh Gudelnes For Ecumenisn

ALLENTOWN (NC) - The commission of ecumenism of the Allentown diocese here in Pennshysylvania has published a 22-page booklet of ecumenical guidelines to aid priests in guiding the laity The guidelines include general

permission for non-Catholics to serve as witnesses at Catholic weddings for Catholics to serve as witnesses at non-Catholic weddings and for burial of non-Catholics in Catholic ceremonies with a priest or a non-Catholic clergyman cltmducting graveside eeremonies

SHELL DADSON OIL

24-Hollr Oil

GLE COAL amp OIL CO IncI

640 Pleasant Street Tel WY 6-8271 New Bedford

this decision-making with the working p E~ 0 P Ie themselves through the process of collective bargaining

If collective bargaining is to be the rule he said we must agree to grant the right to strike~ Without this right he said there is no union and no coll~ctive balmiddotgaining

Expands Concern-in considering strikes by pu~ lie employees he dedared one muSt distinguishb~tween the state as a sovereign and the g()vernment acting in a proprishyetary function When the state aets as the defender of the peace or the promoter of justice

of Corning Iajoined the Sisters of the Humility of Mary in 1930 In recent years she has been ehairman of professionafarts deshypartment and college registrar

ation and a host of other services formerly performed by privategroups he continued

These activities are ancillary and economic and here the state in acting in a proprishyetry function When it so acts it ought to be subject tl) the same rules of conduct the government prescribes for private entershy

prise Strikes by firefighters and powerhouse uti lit y workers would be wrong however he said because it is difficult to imagine anY benefit they might gain to counterbalance the fear- fut harm such a l strike would impose on the community Buys Banners For Memorial

CHICAGO (NC)-A Chicago advertising executive has bought 44 brightly-colored religious ~anners tat -hung in the Nashy

tlOnal Srme of the Im~aculate ConceptIon during Luci Johnshysons wed(iin~ -

Earle Ludgin a trustee of the University of Chicago said he will donate the banners to the

university~ Rockefeller Memoshyrial Chapel in memory of his late wife

The banners for which Ludgin reportedly paid more than $40000 were originally created for the Vatlcan PavIIIon at the New York World Fair

A group of Washington D C residents bought ttie banners when the fair closed and arshyranged to have them exhibited in the Shrine until they could be sold Lugdin bought themin April but agreed at the request of Shrine officials to leave them in the Shrine until after Lucia wedding

lame College Head

OTTUMWA (NC) Sis t er

Muriel Hogan has been named the third presi4ent of Ottumwa Heights College here in Iowa She succeeds Sister Marie Anshy

ciue Kennedy woo win engagem graduate study in oominunishy

eations at the University of California Los Angeles branch

Offering You 3 Savings Plans

Home Financing

WAREHAM CO-OPERATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mabull

Telephone 295-2400 Banll SerVice YlIIIIIII

I

Ask Court Bar Use of Church Propertyfor Public SchoQ~middot WHITE ~S (MC) - A the cl883rooms ~ut Church

group of some 25 citizens repre- npokesman reporte~ that in line sented by the American Jewish with New York archdiocesan Congress has asked the New York State Supreme Court here to restrain the board of Ramapo School District 2 Rockland County from holding public school classes in property leased from religious bodies

The school board faced with severe-overcrowding planned to lease eight rooms from St Josephs Catholic Church and five from lem~e Beth El in Spring Valley The action was approved by 8tateEducation Commissioner Jame$ EAllen Jr

A ComllllJJlt served 0ill the rlChool board by the AJC charged the acti~n o~ld ~otateChurchshyState separation guaranteed by the First Amendment to the Constitution as well as other provisions of the state constitushytion

It is believed to be the first wch challenge made regarding

the use of religiO18 facilities for public school use

lhe st Josephproperty conshysists of an eightclasSroom school building adjacent to but sepashyrated from the chureh It is Ill good condition but will not be used by the p8rish thismiddot year because it has bUilt a new bUildshying for expanding its acbool to 141 classes

All religioUs ~bols had Ileen removed from the oder building in preparation for its use as a public school

The district school board had offered a fair market rent for

PAV~A deg Missionary Record Continued from Page Thirteen

A nurse from Chicago baa taken Lucillellpla~on the aposshytolic team and ber purpose in returning is to help her successhy80r work into the project smoothly It takes so long to get into 11 she Aid so II dont WJmt Il~r to spendtbree

years j~ g~tting organized~

Benedictine Marks 80th Anniversary

ST JOSEPHmiddot (NC)-The oldshyest Benedictine nun in Minneshysota-and one of the oldest m the world~marked the 80th anshyniversary of her entrance into the order ma Mass for all Beneshydictine jubil~tians held at St Benedicts convent here

Sister Sophia Zimmer was 1~ years old Dec 2 1965 She Wall

born in a log cabin about 1 block away from the convent An open house for her relatives and friends was held at the conv~nt

Receives Students cAsTELGANDOLFO (NC)shyPoPe Paul vI received in audishyence at his Summer home here students frOm 34 nations includshying many non-Catholics who are taking Summer courses in the ItaUaa language aDd culture sponsored by the Rome branch of the Catholic University fII IWaD

policy the properly would be made available for public school use at a token dollar-a-year rental

cmOS Cmpetes C~~ege ~rr(l))g~m

WASHINGTON (NC)-A class of 97 under-privileged high school students was graduated on completion of an eight-week Summer college orientation proshy

gram at Georgetown University The exercises i attended by faculty and parents Qf the stushydents involved students who had completed their Sophomore year in District of Colwnbia high schools They were chosen for the special course because teachers and counselors believed they have the ~billty to do colshylege work alihoug~ their presshyent high school records indicate little likelihood of college acshyceptance Ninoty-fiveOf the 97 students were Negroes md the ratio of males to females was aboutmiddot tbree-to-two ~

The pro~~~~Ch began in 1965 is financed by the NaUonal science Fowidationmiddot the District of Columbia public school sysshy

tem and Georgetown In addition to academic work

the students were given cltgtUrsetl in reading improvement and counseling gUidance Athletie and cultural events underwrit shyten by the program were also bKluded in their schedules

nearly 42 years Bishop Gerow churches degespeciallY Negro said Of late I have feltmiddotthat X houses of worshIp which middotWere have not the stamina to caJTY I bombedmiddot and burned

on as I have done in the past Whena p~ttern of destn1c~ion This load should be borne by 1 develops as It has m our state youngerman then it sincumbent upon all ntereston Yoiit

Cathollc lnereaSe m~n ~ ~ood ~i~ througho~t MiSSISSIPPI to Jom hands m Savings

The ~venth bishop of~edio- helpingthe affectedmiddot churches 0 Invested In cesemiddotwhlch was founded ID 1~37 and in showing clearly our con- and encompasses 111 of Missls- demnation at all acts of violencemiddot CATHOLIC CHURCH sippi Bishop Gerow h8ll s~ lawlessness and destruction the Catholic population IJOw from 31264 to 75000 in his 41 years of office The number of priests in the diocese grew from 63 to 220 and churches md misshysions from 108 to 243

The last few years of llacial violence perhaps were the most troub1d for Bishop Gerows long ad inistration middotHemiddot met the challenge with courage

In the face of many-sided opshyposition Bishop Gerow in 1964 directed the first grades of Cathshyolicmiddot schools in the state to be racially integrated The next

Missionaries Move Seminar to Ohio

DAYTON (NC) -The White Fathers a missionary society which bas served in Africa for nearly a century is llloving its U S seminary to Dayton

St Josephs Seminary which had been in operation at Onshydliota N Y near Saranac Lake will re-open under the same

name in four residences near the campus of the University of

Dayton The buildings have been rented from the university

Eventually the White Fathers plan to build their own seminary

middotfacilities somewhere in ~e area according to Fatber Paul lo1e1le WF~

THE ANCHOR- middot19 Thurs Aug 25 1966

KC Melll1il~er~~ip

At AJ~Tome e~~gh MIAMI BEACH (NC)-In his

report at the 84th annual meetshying of the Supreme Council of the Knights of Columbus Sushypreme Knight John W McDevitt made these points

Membership on June 30 1966 stood at an all-time high of 1183896 The orders insurance covershyage passed the $15 billion mark during the year

The orders assets reached III

neW plateau of $28122840028 at the end of the fiscal year

The society i~ continuing its support of the campaign to st~m p(gtrnography

Revise Ceremonial Progress is being made onthe

re_Vision of the orders cerempnshyial to give it a total family middotclishymate and make it consistent with moder day philosophy of social justice and religious pracshytice

The K of C have undertaken distribution of copies of the 1~ew Testament to Catholic gradllates

COURAGE PERSONIFIED John St Marie of B~YQ of the Naval Offilaquoer CandfClatE port Minn CQnfined to a wheelchair since a 1953 pOlio ~chool in Newport R I an(J ill

~dying the question of proshyattack has received a scholarship to the University of viding a similar servilte ~orMinnesota law school atter successfully maintaining an Ashy Catholic graduatell of the Qffi shyminus average in undergraduate work at the College of cers Candidate School of ihe St Thomas St Paul Minn irQ Photo Canadian Navy

It saluted Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York on biI

Welcomes Successor Naming of Apostolic Administrato

Pleases Bishop Gerow 81 JACKSON (NC)-Mississippll1 year he followed with a direeshy

courageous 81-year-old Bihop tive that Catholic schools be deshyOliver Gerow welcomed his suc- segregated completely ceSSor Bishop Joseph B Bruni- Helps Restore Churches ni 55 as spiritual head of the Despite reported threats ofmiddot Natchez-Jacklon diocese as one violence fro m segregationist who is active vigorous and has ranks the aged prelate was good sound judgment among leaders of an interfaith

X am very happy in being groupmiddot which formed the Comshyrelieved of the heavy responSl- mittee of middotConcernmiddot soHcited middotbillty that I have borne for money labor and materIals for

middotthe bishop stated in a letterred AND in every Catholic church in the INSTITUTIONAL BONDSstate

His appeal for $300000 to re-middot I Umiddot f $500 M store more than 30 d~stroyed n nits 0 or ore and damaged churches brought Keenan amp CImiddotarey bie contributions to the Committee 9f Concern from various sections Minneapolis Minnesota of the country

0

M~ntle Plumbing amp ~ating Co Inc~

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET Fall River OS 57497

for detailed information write to

CHARLES A~ MURPHY Registered Representative

145 Pond $treet Winchester Mass

PA 9-2696 And

Name bullbullbull ~ Address A

City _

50 years in the priesthood payshying tribute to him not only beshycause of his dignity as a pi-iest and cardinal but also because he 1S a great and wholesome mail

Relic Stolen NEW YORK (NC)-A reputed

relic of the cross on which Chtist died has been stolen from the Church of the Most Holy Reshydeemer here It was removed from a side altar tabernacle

where it had been placed shortshyly after the churchs establishshy

ment by the Redemptoriad Fathers some 125 years ago

~

GULF HILL DAIRY so DARTMOUTH MASS

RO THE ANCHO~-Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

1

RELIGIOUS SUPERIORS INSTITUTE ON STONEHILTJ CAMPUS SMS Guadalcanal Solomon Islands Standing Sr Florita DP King Sr Mary LUk~ St about to enter the hall for her lecture Center Some ston Mass Sr Mary of Bathany SP Holyoke Sr Mary de Sales F$SJ r the sisters who attended Sister Lukes talk were Sr Josepha SC Conshy Holyoke Right Mrs Mary Virginia Yosgandes h-ouse mother wavesgood ent Station NJ Sr Mary Kenneth Amityville NY Sr Mary (fheresa bye tothe departing nuns I

Brooklyn Church Hopes Nuns Move Into Cent~r of Lij~e Criticizes Irish lribunal Lacks By Dorothy Eastman -Social Security

When in the third year of Vatican II the momentous decision was made toinvitewO- dmiddot LIMERICK (NC) - FatherJ men observers to audit a Council forthe first ~ime to represent all J~remiah Newman professor ofuris ICtlon the Sister chosen BROOKLYN (NC)-Msgr the nuns in America was Sister Mary Luke Tobin Mother General of the Sisters of Lor- sociology at Irelands Maynooth

IlAarion J Reinhardt pre- etto When shewasasked recently while visiting the Fall River Diocese what impressed College criticizedprivate agenshyJ~L h t b t th C 1 cies and the national governshyIdlng Judge of the Trlblillal er mos a ou e oune) h t b t h h d k ment for their failure to increaseshe said with a wry smile We aVe 0 e rna ure enoug er own or er was wor mg(1)f the Diocese of Brooklyn h to live in insecurity toward these ends She told of all subsidies to families Iltas announced that the bill of The fact that we were t ere Will these changes be easy experiment soine of her Sisters After insisting that it would $Omplaint of 15 former teachers at all I The Sister is too much of a have been engllged in for the be best for private agencies and of St Johns Un~versity had to At a Stonehill College institute realist to give that impression past twu years in Pueblo Colo- local governments to administer be dismissed because of lack of Sister Luke spoke of her many Its going to be fraught with rado Although most of the 1100 social security Father Newman jurisdiction on the part of the other impressions of the Council difficulties she warns but Sisters of Lorettv are teachers said that since they seemed unshy

ecclesiastical court _ where she and seven other Sis- what isnt this small group of Sisters in willing or unable to do this the The Brooklyn ecclesiastical tels were auditresses for the last There are more than a few Pueblo 1s doing no t~aching-in job had to be done by the natshy

$Ourt which operates under two years of Vatican II Over Sisters who are troubled and schools anyway They simply jonal government ~llnon law said it is pmited in 450 Mothers Superior from 55 sometimes shocked these days live among the poor as good He said that according to jurisdiction to only spiritual different Orders were gathered by many of the changes hi their neighbors he 1pin jg wherever Catholic soCial teaching there ltuestions at the Easton campus for the communities The Mother Gen- they cllD leading discussion was no limit to the amount of Charge Contralaquot Breach five day Institute directed by eral would warn them that its groups counselling etc government aid that is permis-

The 5000 word document Rev William FHogan CSC pointless for them to say Thill Asked to comment on the re- sibie and desirable if governshypointed out that the decree of Sister Luke was one of a group is not the community I entered cent experiment in Milwaukee mEmt aid was the Qnly practical Giisrriissalis without prejudice to of noteliltspeakers who talked When it comes to that she says where30 School Sisters of St (sbl~tion to poverty problems lbhe merits of the case to the superiors on the subject we all might say This is not the Francis left their convents for

If the Metropolitan Tribunal of the I Sister in the modern Church Iwas baptized into or three weekstO work in secular If the archdiocese of New York world this is not the world I was b()rn jobs - oneSister wa3 assigned

T b 1 f the Sacred into Change is a fact of life S t~ the rI una 0 Adapting a line from Charles as a newspaper reporer- IS er Roman Rota reversesthe decree Dickens to describe this contro she points out~ and we can~t keep Luke predicted a great deal the casewiil be returned to the versial post Council age Sister things as they are or say Stop more~ of this kind of liniited Tribunal of the Diocese of the World-I want to get off f i t th I w ld ]Brooklyn for adjudications upon t~ees sa~~iSTi~iSt~eth~o~r Role of Superiors ~~~re ~o di~~a~~c~i~t n~~ Ms merits it was stated times She paintedavivid ver- The role the Superiors will she said

The petition of complaint bal picture of the world that lies play in the formation of what Since her own Order founded filed by Father Peter OReilly ahead for Sisters She said it has been called The New Nun in 1812 is quite new all religious

s~f Chicago on behalf of himself would certainly be a challenging Lwuakeouattlintheed fs~roeh~ ~~s~~~t~ orders go and is the liirst comshylind the other ousted teachers one and that conventlife inthe munity founded in America charged he university which is future is certain to undergo She urged them to create a cli- without European ties the Sisshyeonducted by theVincentian many radical changes mate where Sisters can liveters of Loretto weal habits more Fathers with breach of contract community life at its best She -modern than most But itsstill

The Superior~ were told that entreated them to keep thls cli-The dispute has been marked bY d bl d ff t the dress of 1812 not 1966 so it d k t f an m Ispensa e gUl e me ec - mate free from legallsm andlitudent unrest an pIC e mg 0 th hmiddotmiddot th will soon be changed As soon I mg ese c anges IS e map survelmiddotllance Ie schoo s campuses f th f t th t th C 1 as the all-mlll Congregation

or e u ure a e ounCl A community should be a of Religious in Rome approv~sMoral Issue Fatners drew up for the Church place where there- is safety for She called the CouncII Decrees the Sisters new design that is About 30 teachers were fired fl t d f t f dff

Rost December in a dispute over the documentS ofhighest au- cop IC an sa e y or J er- Tliey have submitted one de~ign rlty We should all have ~nes apd s~fety to cultiv~te that the fathers turnEd downadministration-faculty relation- tho d t h d Sh f I the mInd of Vatlcan II and then lverSI y s ~ sal e ee s lihey thought it was too modshyships and other issues They t I th t th h ld be

b b f we c~n move Into actlon she s rongy a ere ~u r -ern Sister Luke says UWhat anwere joined y anum er 0 I t I g I fe ther teachers In a strike that told her healers - 1Jloe ~o~a IY In re 1 J~)Us 1 incredible thing for US to ask shy --uAfterall were not Trap- that we choose our own clothes has continued since January Whi~h Way psts

l she adds with a laughThe court found that tpe How will the Sisters know in Warning that the time has S t Lk tl - b

uteceniontractual controversy was not whicli direction they should come for a re-evaluation of the _ IS ~rth y e~mt~ a spiritual mattelin a canoliical move in the manyarells so(in to true meaning of community she ne oIl e d~rs wo~~ ever ~ llense of the word spiritual change cExperiment Sister told the Superiors that commu- bo~a h a sre~t a f ~gUS aild that there was no allegation Luke advises so often its almost nity doesnt mean conformity or 0 y e oCle ~ o anon ef a violation of an ecclesiastical her motto We really cannot a hotel life either or even a Lawyrs Does thIS mian that law arid that the time was not move into change without ex-lot of happy t9getherness th~ SI~ters may at last have a opportune for a decision of perimentation she says and around the television set voIce 111 the formatIon of canon moral responsibility because the we will be engaged in tremen- A ~ital new aspect of commu- la-at least th~ laws that rUI~ secular courts would first have dous experiments from now on- nity is the idea of what Sister thel~ O~derS SIster Luke deshyto determine whether there was to adapt religious life to the Luke calls sub communities- vout y opes so a breach of contractual duty times in which we live the convents immediate neigh- Its certain that the future for

The church court found as a The revisions that lie ahead borhood the parish the civic the Sisters will be a very differshymatter of law that St Johns for religious orders will bring commumty lay people 111 the ent one than anyone could have 141 NO MAINUniversity as a corporation Sisters into the mainstream of same profession as the Sister- imagined a few short years ago J~ formed under the law of the modern life Sister Luke for for instance other nurses or The Holy Father has urged them iii FALL RIVER State of w York did not have one has no doubts that this is tElachers We have allowed too the~ to move from the margin e the ecclesiastical privilege of where they belong We ought great a gap to exist between our- of life to the center of life~ 873 COUNTY demanding that suits against it to be willing to take the risks) selves and the laity she says Will the move be successful SOMERSETbe heard in an ecclesiasticalmiddot that gO along with this plunge In an interviewmiddot following her Sister Luke says We can only CDOurt into the mainstream she says talk Sister ~uke was asked how know by taking a ChanCE

Feai makes the wolf bigger than be is

Rer Bankings Already D~ne

~jI--~1 W

tt-~~gt_ri~

~j F~ p ~tl Iim F-ilNgt

~l i

ll 11 ~~

W = ~

~gtltl ~

-~ ~~ StIesaves I lot of alunle Mtime forso maily other thinlS ~i She banks by mail at Te ~ OLD R D8 KI h 7reg E AN W at about you

liii FREE mall forms ~1 The mOld Red Bank W

$ Fall River Savings Bankjilll q

Page 17: 08.25.66

Dormitory Proves Stonehill Permanently Coeducational

Way back in 1951 when the first girl enrolled in Stoneshyhill College no one could have imagined that a girls dormishytory would ever be built onmiddot the campus But the sound of steam shovels and hammers filling the air over the lovely grounds in Easton is proof

and two girls from the seniorthat the long planned for daslr-assisting the housemothergirls dorm will soon be a Mrs Grace Callahan

reality When Stonehill was The experiment worked so founded in 1948 as a mens colshy well in fact that this coming lege the fledgling school had Fall both the freshman and just gotten off to a good start sophomore girls will be housed when the Korean War came this way leaving only the junior along and emptied the classshy and senior girls still renting Yooms as the young men went quarters in private homes chosen into the services by the college as all the nonshy

That was the year that many commuting girls have done in small colleges had to close their the past gates forever But at Stonehill That typical campus situation the Holy Cross order was detershy -the sorority house-is not in mined to hold onto this new the picture at Stonehill-or frashyschool that they had planned for ternity houses either for that so long matter No sororities or fraternishy

What could they do to keep ties are allowed on the campus the college operating until the There is a cl11b however that war was over and the boys came is the girls own - the Crosier back Of course Open their Club Mrs Yosgandes is the gates to girl students clubs faculty advisor and she deshy

Faculty Pleased scribes it as the organization What started out as a temposhy for women studentE who want

rary expediency somehow over to contribute in their own parshythe years has acquired a happy middotticular way as women to their permanancy No one could be college more pleased about this turn of Through their annualmusical events than the Stonehill faculty Crosier Curtain Calls theyitself raise money to acquire manymiddot

Helping out in Jhe ground things that add beauty and breaking ceremony for the new charm to campus life This yeardorm Mrs Virginia Yosgandes they purchased two very lovelythe Dean of Women at the colshy silver tea and coffee services lege saiei I guess everyone will Any official group at the collegereally believe that the girls are is allowed to borrow the sets and here til stay they have already been used in

Mrs Yosgandes says that since many functions she first came to the Stonehill New Signfaculty in 1958 rumors have

Mrs Yosgandes says Thebeen popping up that Stonehill girls will be very pleased whenwill soon return to its original they come back th~~ Fallto seestatus as an all male school The the beautiful new sign theynew dorm she says will be visshybought for the college installedible proof of the permanancy of on Route No 138 women on the beautiful campus

Its very easy to picture theThe $1150000 building deshyvery charming Dean presidingsigned to accommodate 200 girls

graciously at a faculty tea Aand proctors will be three stories parishioner of Immaculate Conshyof red brick Architects W Chesshyception chulCh in Easton she ister arown and Associates and in ~rivate life an enthusiasticwntractors C A Batson and homemaker anc the mother of aCompany are planning to comshy13 year old daughter Christineplete work on the dorm in time Her husband John is assistantfor the opening of classes in principal at Franklin JuniorSeptember 1967 It will be the High first unit of a five dormitory

She speaks with great convicshycomplex planned fo the women on tion about college girls holdingcampus

onto feminine ideals while surshyKitchen ~pace rounded-and at Stonjhill outshyMrs Yosgandes is happy about numbered 3 to 1- by menthe fact that the new dorm will While were encoulaging themhave a kitchenette on each floor to be acdve in thpound communitywhere the girls can cook small and the church and in politicsmeals and entertain guests Shes and encouragint them to deshyhoping that the dorms built after

more velop their abilities to the full shythis me will providtgt even est-we never fail to take intokitchen space for the girls to account the fact that they arepractice the culinary arts women and in this competitiveM a n~ tImes homemaking world theyll have to -fight toskills come to a complete halt maintain their feminine idenshywhen a girl goes to college she tity says Apparently all classroom

work and rio cooking make Jane Coed Actiiti~s

Coed a dull girl in the room When she fi rst came to the where shell be spending a great college she sltys the girls were deal of time after graduationshy mainly interested in strictlythe dtchen feminine extra curricular activishy

Mrs Yosgandes says A great ties-fastion shows teas gids many cCJlleges have been workshy sports Bd this has changed radshying witt this problem and wonshy ically in the last few years and dering what to do about it Beshy now the girls are much more inshycause theyve had no living terested in the coed acti vitiesshyquarters for girls on campus the newspapers the debating Stonehiiil has had to do out of team the drama club Stonehill necessit) what many other colshy is noted a~ one of a small handshyleges have chosen to do recently ful gtf Catholic colleges where The Dean describp~ an experishy girls are middotactive in every part of ment that the collFge tJied last college life Every coure at yeal tha has worked out exshy StonehHj is opel to girls tremely well We still havent had a woman

Experiment Successful president of our student governshyThe college leased a grollp of ing body the Senate Mrs

rooms il an apartmelt building Yosgandes says Now girls in Brockton last Fall where all what are yOIi waiting for the freshman girls who were not commuters-55 of them-lived in housekeeping apartments In Red Groups There were four girls in each BERLIN (NC)-Over 85 per apartment all sharing the reshy (ent of East German children sponsibilities of housekeeping between the ltlges of 6 and 14 are

The girls hat two sets of mCl11)ers of communist youth 1)IoctOS - two aIumni wumen ~nIUps

lrt-OE ANCH0) 17 Thurs Aug 25 1966

PriestCuod Goal Of Top Skater

GREAT FALLS (NC)-A good many folks in this Montana toWlll will attest that teenager J Mishlll Petkevich is a pretty good skate -on or oH the ice

The affable blond youngster 17 topped a field of 136 pershyformers in the three-day Lake Placid N Y international free style competition sanctioned by the U S and Canadian Figure Skating Assoclations The Great Falls lad was the judges unamiddot1ishymous choice for the mens gold medal in the finals

But Petkevich doesnt lose his cool off the ice His classmates and teachers at Great Falls Censhytral 3igh School claim hes liIl

winner in every event He spends more than 40 hours 11 week in skating training but carries the full load of class studies and consistently turns Up on the schools honor roll Hes a member of the National Honor Society

The school supported me ami the way Everyone has beeEl wonderfUl to me the modest youngster saia Hes been -skatshying since he was 2 He credit his achievements to his Catholic Faith the sacrifices of his parshyents and of Arthur Bourke senshyiormiddot professional of the Great Falls Figure Skating Club He said All I did was skatemiddotGROUND-BREAKING The Very Rev John T Corr

I hope some day to become~esc president of Stonehill College turns a shovelful of priest Petkevich said wbeilearth to mark start of construction 0pound a 200-student dormshy a~ked his ambition I hope 14gt itory for women on the Stonehill campus Watching the proshy attend Notre Dame for at leasa celtlures are left to right Mrs Virginia Yosgandes dean af two years and then I h9pe to gf)

to the Catholic University fl4women John C Doody 66 Alumni fund chairman Robert AmericaBatson contractor Harold Bonvie ass~iate of the archishytect

Msgr Canty Continued from Page OneRussian Schools ing studies at S1 Marys High

Taunton Boston- College and S1 Bernards Seminary RochesshyChristian Brother Lauds Students terN Y

nespect for Intellectuols He served as assistant at Our Lady 01 the Isle NantucketCHICAGO (NC)-Students in to foreign languages than Amershy Holy Family Taunton St

schools behind the Iron Curtain icans Most students take a Marys Barrowsville and Stgo at their studies with a passhy seven-year sequence of English Johns Attleboro He was apshysion said Brother Kevin Mark German or French English he pointed to the Chaplains CorPJFSC who toured Russia and added is the most popular lanshy of the United States Navy infour satellite countries with 19 guage and more emphasis is January 1942 and retiredwitbother U S rducatois placeltl on reading and speaking the rank of captain in Decemshy

Brothel Mark who is princishy than on writing it ber 196gt Pope John XXIII pal 9f St Mels high school here Brother Mark said that there elevated him to the rank of attributed much of their motivashy is almost nothing that he would Domestil Prelate with the title tion to the students attitude that lift from the Soviet school sysshy of Right Reverend Monsignor iI What I do does contribute to tem and apply in the U S May 1962 the welfare of the state He admitted however that Bishop Connolly named Monshy

Brother said he felt that stushy they do get results They have a signor Canty pastor of St Paulsdents in this country lack motishy tremendous capacity for conshy Taunt-ln in December 1963 vation because were spoiled centration when they set their Industrial improvements have sights for example their space made it that a young man can program Its not all a matter go into a trade and make very of being chained to a lab table good money BLUE RIBBON

In the Soviet Union he said there seems to be a great reshyspect for intellectuals and the LAlnNDRY student is thought of as a proshy

01 STOPfessional schJlar 273 CE~RAl AVE~UIIG CfflTERTeaching is considered a proshy

fession and remunelated accordshy e Television C FmiddotI ure illgly WY 2-6216o r-cerv

St Mels principal observed on IlA Allen St Newhdfordhis tour that there was little NEW BEDFORD questioning on the part of the students

The chSSloom situation he said is very much teacher ori shyented that is study in depth is 21 DAY PILGRIMAGES TO EUROPE done on the teachers inspiration

rou~ 1-Legion of Mary Pilgrimage leaving Sept 12th with Truth in such areas as history Father Edward A Oi-viera will visit Killarney Dublin Paris

cllld literature is accepted as a Lourdes Rome Madrid Lisbon and Fatima - Tour 2shyforegone conclusion and stushyHoly Cross Fathers Pilgrimage leaving Oct 10th with Frdents just memorize what has

already been discovered ----- lobert E McDonnell will wsit lisbon Fatima 1odrid Rome Lourdes Paris and londonIike F)rc~gn Linutges -cota cost is $82900 - Time PaymentsmiddotIn the area of science howshy arranged ever the situation is difterent

()Ii TOUR tOLDERS CONTACT STEolfEN A MARIIEYhe pont~d out because in scishyence there is an attitude of I n~ust discover Catholic Travel

-Office

The R1~middotmiddotmiddotO p oth-r Mark ~ltk St New Befl- -ass 02748

said ~ ve 11111j Ill)le auention

BURNERS

BUrntlr Service

Famous Reading HARDCQAl

NEW ENGLAND COKE

t8 THE ~NCHOR-Dioceseof fo Rivef-Thurs Aug 25 1966 J~sut I)riest Says Some Public I b M t EmploYE~~S Have Right to Strike

-

Urges uO or ovemen S NEW (NC) -Public however YORK Government hasmiddot h C employees in certain fields have been expanding its cQncern andIn Heml$p ere ooperate the right to strike against the has beenmoving into ar~as of government a priest declared transportation education recre-

By MsgrGooJrge C Higgins (Director Socian Actiolll Dept NCWC)

The relationship between the American labor moveshyment and the Latin American Confed~ration of Christian Trade Unions (CLASC) leaves much to be desired as we

middot thO d th 1- have aready noted severa1 t Imes m IS co umn urmg e

past four or five years The two movements are deeply different things to different peoshy

auspicious of one another and just when they seem to be on the verge of settling or at least -patching up their differshyences they go at it again and recklesslystart hurling insults at one another

To jUdge from What they sayIi b 0 u t on e another publicshy1yen as well as privately on e would t h ink that they were natural-born enshyemies whe~eas in fact they have much in common-much inore than they seem to realizeshyand for obvious reasons ought violent MisS Duncan was an officer of The fourth public member Harshyto be c60p~rating With onean- Moreo~er at least one promi~theSodality a cheerleader for vardlaw school professorVern ether as closely as pOSSible nent spokesman for the AFL- four years a member of the Ten- Countryman half ci-itiCized the This writer has learn~ci the hard WR and muc~ to hiS so~-row that any outSider who 18

fOolish enough totryto mediatek f

~tween them JS as mg or troouble

C f t Gommun same If for example one suggests

as I have done on more than one Occasion that soine of the anti U S propaganda emanating from CLASCsources revealS atremely harmful to the cause of n a i v e misunderstanding of Amerlcan trade unionism and American capitalism andor ari $ver-simplification of Catholic Social teaching he runs the risk 9f being written off as a blind -not tOsay reactionary apologist for so-called Yanqui ~mperial-

iBm If on the other hand oneslig

gests that some of the anti- CLASC propaganda enianating

fro m AFL-CI0 sources is equally naive and unsoPllisti shyeatedhe runs the same Sort of risk in reverse That is to say he is likely to be told--v~ry politely of course -that if he were to take off his Catholic blinkers and look at the record objectively he would quickly come to realize that CLASC is in reality playing t~ecipal rival in Latin America) riages in their mission parishes communist game in Latin Amer- there is a gEirierous mixture of Msgr Milia stated Since the iea superficial appearances to cultural chauvinism and envy Ogdensburg mission was opened the contrary notwithstanding that accompanies the most legit- a modern new church bas been

Both CaD Learn imate misgivings built under its direction in the Be that as it may I still think Even the Latinos middotthemselve~ seaport ofMatararii two mission

~t CLASC has a lot to learn he points out will admit on ac- churches have oeen completed about _ and from American casion that their consumirig fear and a lalge parish church and trade unionism And if that of Yanqui imperialism is often center are currently under conshymakes me a reactionary Yankee irrational But there it is he re- struction in Mollendo ehauvinist so be it minds us and the basic prob-

By the same token however aiso think that the American

labor movement has much to learn about -- and from - the Christian trade union movement in Latin America The first thing it has to learn is that the Am~r-leap philosophy of pure-andshysimple bread-~d-butter union ism which all things considshyered has worked satisfactorily in this country is not necessarily well adapted to the present-day Deeds of Latin America

Meaning of Revolution Another way of saying the

same thing is that American iabor representativesworking on Latin America problemswm have to reconcile themselves to the fact that a social revolu-Uon is called for in Latin American labor federation that doesnt subscribe to a revolushytionary ideology is probably doomed to failure

The word revolution meaos J-

pIe of course To the leaders of CLASC it means a sweeping program of socioeconomic and political reform which goes far beyond the limited goals of bread-and-butter unionism

The leaders of CLASC are convinced that such a revolushytioo is demanded bythe Chrisshytian social ethic to which they subscribe and from which they derive their ideology

Perceptive Critique Some U S Labor repshy

resentatives are skeptical to say the least~bout the allegedly Christian content of CLASCs militant ideology They admit theneed for a peaceful revolushytion in Latin Americn butthey are convinced thatCLASC wants this revolution to be Feehan High School Attleboro alties in a letter tc therimes

lem is how to insure con~ PAVlA V I tlnuing cooperation between 0 untee rs Yanqui and Latino in spite of Complete TlIainirigit

Such cooperation Dr Hawkins WASHINGTON (NC)-Fortyshyconcludes will be impossible unshyless the leaders of the American labor movement positively indi~

cete their acceptance of social revolution in Latin America This will require he says

more than the generous transshyfusions of economic aid the stimulation under United States

labors auspices of leadership training programs for workers

and other cooperative ventures Need Broader View

What is required he insists ltCia a broader view-an ability on the part of the American la bor statemen to adopt policies that will not always accord with OUI own value~ and more speshy

cificall~ the tempering of (their) hosannas to free entershyprUie ___

inter-American labor unity I fully agree in this respect with Dr Carroll Hawkins Associate

Professor of Political Science at Michigan State University who recently published a most pershyceptive critique of American trade union policy in Latin- Catholics in Mollendo Peru the

America (The 0RIT and Amer diocesan missions director reshyican Trade Unions Conflicting ported Perspectives Industrial Rela- The New York priests were tionsand Social Changes in sent to Peru after Pope Paul Latin America University of vi -asked that more priests be Florida Press) pr9vjd~d fOr the people opoundSouth

Basic Problem America Msgr Anthony A Mi-Dr Hawkins admits of course lia said He estimated more than

that in all the Latin American 90 percent of the priests in criticism of United States unioniperu are from other countries in the ORIT (the Latin Ameli can regional unit of the Interna In 1965 the priests from Ogshytional Confederation of Free denburg administered 445 bap-Trade Unions and CLASCs prin tisms and perfoImed 64 mar-

CIOhas publicly charged in ej_ nis Club for two years and a suggested penaltiel fect that CLASCs ideology three yeaT member of the FU- owes more to Marxism than it ture Nurses club Father Carey sl~id the ~ays does to Christianity He finds it when pay and working condi-

An instructor in the Confra- tions for men and women inhard he says to accept the fact ternity of Christian Doctrine that the Christian labor move- civil service were determine4 byproglam in Our Lady of Mt I g I t d d t t

t middot A e IS a Ive It n a minIS ra Ive ment 0f L a In merIca IS non- Carmel Parish Seekonk the fiat have pas ed a d Communist s n we now

In my judgment this kind of criticism of CLASC by spokesshymen fltr the AFL-CIO is ex

three volunteers have completed the Second National Training Session sponsored by the Papal Volunteers for Latin America and received assignments in some ten Latin American coun- tries

Special ceremonies ended the six-week training session at the Catholic University of America where volunteers studied the apostolic work of the Church the laymans role in the aposshytolate and principles of spiritual life as well as the religion ecoshynomics and culture of Latin America

Before leavillg for their asshysignments the volunteers will take intensive four-month lanshy

guage anl culture courses in a Latin American language centerbull

eighth winner of this scholarship plumeoursElves that we share will enter the Childrens Hosshypital School of Nursing Boston in Septembel-

Ogdensburg Priests

SellYe Peru Mission OGDENSBURG (NC) -- Four

Ogdensburg priests currently are ministering to the n~eds of_13OOO

~ere

Father Philip Carey sJ exshyecutive director of the Xavier Institute of Industrial Relations acknowledged t hat certain strikes aJre intolerable But he said that when the governmentacts in a proprietary function it must follow the same rules it prescribes for private enterprise

In a letter to the New York Times Father Carey criticized ~y implication a proposed state -llw that wetulltilincrease the penalties to be imposed on strikshying union of public employees

MlISS LHNDA DUNCAN Th~proposedlaw grew out of recommendations of a five-man

Feehan Alumna task force named by Gov Nel son Rockefeller to study the

Receives Award problem after a 19-day transit strike crippled Newmiddot York City

Miss Linda Duncan daughter in January of Mrs George Duncan and the - NeCeSSBlry for Bargaining late George Duncan 61 Sykes Father Carey one of four Rd Seekonk has been awarded pubiic members of the mayors the eighth annual scholarship of committee that helped settle the the Attleboro Area Nurses strike disagreed with two other Chapter publlc memlgters Vh_o had previshyA 1966 graduate of Bishop ously supported the stiffer pen-

and internal concord a str~ke against itconstitutes mutiny and rebellion (UCLA) Sister Muriel a native

Pgbllsh Gudelnes For Ecumenisn

ALLENTOWN (NC) - The commission of ecumenism of the Allentown diocese here in Pennshysylvania has published a 22-page booklet of ecumenical guidelines to aid priests in guiding the laity The guidelines include general

permission for non-Catholics to serve as witnesses at Catholic weddings for Catholics to serve as witnesses at non-Catholic weddings and for burial of non-Catholics in Catholic ceremonies with a priest or a non-Catholic clergyman cltmducting graveside eeremonies

SHELL DADSON OIL

24-Hollr Oil

GLE COAL amp OIL CO IncI

640 Pleasant Street Tel WY 6-8271 New Bedford

this decision-making with the working p E~ 0 P Ie themselves through the process of collective bargaining

If collective bargaining is to be the rule he said we must agree to grant the right to strike~ Without this right he said there is no union and no coll~ctive balmiddotgaining

Expands Concern-in considering strikes by pu~ lie employees he dedared one muSt distinguishb~tween the state as a sovereign and the g()vernment acting in a proprishyetary function When the state aets as the defender of the peace or the promoter of justice

of Corning Iajoined the Sisters of the Humility of Mary in 1930 In recent years she has been ehairman of professionafarts deshypartment and college registrar

ation and a host of other services formerly performed by privategroups he continued

These activities are ancillary and economic and here the state in acting in a proprishyetry function When it so acts it ought to be subject tl) the same rules of conduct the government prescribes for private entershy

prise Strikes by firefighters and powerhouse uti lit y workers would be wrong however he said because it is difficult to imagine anY benefit they might gain to counterbalance the fear- fut harm such a l strike would impose on the community Buys Banners For Memorial

CHICAGO (NC)-A Chicago advertising executive has bought 44 brightly-colored religious ~anners tat -hung in the Nashy

tlOnal Srme of the Im~aculate ConceptIon during Luci Johnshysons wed(iin~ -

Earle Ludgin a trustee of the University of Chicago said he will donate the banners to the

university~ Rockefeller Memoshyrial Chapel in memory of his late wife

The banners for which Ludgin reportedly paid more than $40000 were originally created for the Vatlcan PavIIIon at the New York World Fair

A group of Washington D C residents bought ttie banners when the fair closed and arshyranged to have them exhibited in the Shrine until they could be sold Lugdin bought themin April but agreed at the request of Shrine officials to leave them in the Shrine until after Lucia wedding

lame College Head

OTTUMWA (NC) Sis t er

Muriel Hogan has been named the third presi4ent of Ottumwa Heights College here in Iowa She succeeds Sister Marie Anshy

ciue Kennedy woo win engagem graduate study in oominunishy

eations at the University of California Los Angeles branch

Offering You 3 Savings Plans

Home Financing

WAREHAM CO-OPERATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mabull

Telephone 295-2400 Banll SerVice YlIIIIIII

I

Ask Court Bar Use of Church Propertyfor Public SchoQ~middot WHITE ~S (MC) - A the cl883rooms ~ut Church

group of some 25 citizens repre- npokesman reporte~ that in line sented by the American Jewish with New York archdiocesan Congress has asked the New York State Supreme Court here to restrain the board of Ramapo School District 2 Rockland County from holding public school classes in property leased from religious bodies

The school board faced with severe-overcrowding planned to lease eight rooms from St Josephs Catholic Church and five from lem~e Beth El in Spring Valley The action was approved by 8tateEducation Commissioner Jame$ EAllen Jr

A ComllllJJlt served 0ill the rlChool board by the AJC charged the acti~n o~ld ~otateChurchshyState separation guaranteed by the First Amendment to the Constitution as well as other provisions of the state constitushytion

It is believed to be the first wch challenge made regarding

the use of religiO18 facilities for public school use

lhe st Josephproperty conshysists of an eightclasSroom school building adjacent to but sepashyrated from the chureh It is Ill good condition but will not be used by the p8rish thismiddot year because it has bUilt a new bUildshying for expanding its acbool to 141 classes

All religioUs ~bols had Ileen removed from the oder building in preparation for its use as a public school

The district school board had offered a fair market rent for

PAV~A deg Missionary Record Continued from Page Thirteen

A nurse from Chicago baa taken Lucillellpla~on the aposshytolic team and ber purpose in returning is to help her successhy80r work into the project smoothly It takes so long to get into 11 she Aid so II dont WJmt Il~r to spendtbree

years j~ g~tting organized~

Benedictine Marks 80th Anniversary

ST JOSEPHmiddot (NC)-The oldshyest Benedictine nun in Minneshysota-and one of the oldest m the world~marked the 80th anshyniversary of her entrance into the order ma Mass for all Beneshydictine jubil~tians held at St Benedicts convent here

Sister Sophia Zimmer was 1~ years old Dec 2 1965 She Wall

born in a log cabin about 1 block away from the convent An open house for her relatives and friends was held at the conv~nt

Receives Students cAsTELGANDOLFO (NC)shyPoPe Paul vI received in audishyence at his Summer home here students frOm 34 nations includshying many non-Catholics who are taking Summer courses in the ItaUaa language aDd culture sponsored by the Rome branch of the Catholic University fII IWaD

policy the properly would be made available for public school use at a token dollar-a-year rental

cmOS Cmpetes C~~ege ~rr(l))g~m

WASHINGTON (NC)-A class of 97 under-privileged high school students was graduated on completion of an eight-week Summer college orientation proshy

gram at Georgetown University The exercises i attended by faculty and parents Qf the stushydents involved students who had completed their Sophomore year in District of Colwnbia high schools They were chosen for the special course because teachers and counselors believed they have the ~billty to do colshylege work alihoug~ their presshyent high school records indicate little likelihood of college acshyceptance Ninoty-fiveOf the 97 students were Negroes md the ratio of males to females was aboutmiddot tbree-to-two ~

The pro~~~~Ch began in 1965 is financed by the NaUonal science Fowidationmiddot the District of Columbia public school sysshy

tem and Georgetown In addition to academic work

the students were given cltgtUrsetl in reading improvement and counseling gUidance Athletie and cultural events underwrit shyten by the program were also bKluded in their schedules

nearly 42 years Bishop Gerow churches degespeciallY Negro said Of late I have feltmiddotthat X houses of worshIp which middotWere have not the stamina to caJTY I bombedmiddot and burned

on as I have done in the past Whena p~ttern of destn1c~ion This load should be borne by 1 develops as It has m our state youngerman then it sincumbent upon all ntereston Yoiit

Cathollc lnereaSe m~n ~ ~ood ~i~ througho~t MiSSISSIPPI to Jom hands m Savings

The ~venth bishop of~edio- helpingthe affectedmiddot churches 0 Invested In cesemiddotwhlch was founded ID 1~37 and in showing clearly our con- and encompasses 111 of Missls- demnation at all acts of violencemiddot CATHOLIC CHURCH sippi Bishop Gerow h8ll s~ lawlessness and destruction the Catholic population IJOw from 31264 to 75000 in his 41 years of office The number of priests in the diocese grew from 63 to 220 and churches md misshysions from 108 to 243

The last few years of llacial violence perhaps were the most troub1d for Bishop Gerows long ad inistration middotHemiddot met the challenge with courage

In the face of many-sided opshyposition Bishop Gerow in 1964 directed the first grades of Cathshyolicmiddot schools in the state to be racially integrated The next

Missionaries Move Seminar to Ohio

DAYTON (NC) -The White Fathers a missionary society which bas served in Africa for nearly a century is llloving its U S seminary to Dayton

St Josephs Seminary which had been in operation at Onshydliota N Y near Saranac Lake will re-open under the same

name in four residences near the campus of the University of

Dayton The buildings have been rented from the university

Eventually the White Fathers plan to build their own seminary

middotfacilities somewhere in ~e area according to Fatber Paul lo1e1le WF~

THE ANCHOR- middot19 Thurs Aug 25 1966

KC Melll1il~er~~ip

At AJ~Tome e~~gh MIAMI BEACH (NC)-In his

report at the 84th annual meetshying of the Supreme Council of the Knights of Columbus Sushypreme Knight John W McDevitt made these points

Membership on June 30 1966 stood at an all-time high of 1183896 The orders insurance covershyage passed the $15 billion mark during the year

The orders assets reached III

neW plateau of $28122840028 at the end of the fiscal year

The society i~ continuing its support of the campaign to st~m p(gtrnography

Revise Ceremonial Progress is being made onthe

re_Vision of the orders cerempnshyial to give it a total family middotclishymate and make it consistent with moder day philosophy of social justice and religious pracshytice

The K of C have undertaken distribution of copies of the 1~ew Testament to Catholic gradllates

COURAGE PERSONIFIED John St Marie of B~YQ of the Naval Offilaquoer CandfClatE port Minn CQnfined to a wheelchair since a 1953 pOlio ~chool in Newport R I an(J ill

~dying the question of proshyattack has received a scholarship to the University of viding a similar servilte ~orMinnesota law school atter successfully maintaining an Ashy Catholic graduatell of the Qffi shyminus average in undergraduate work at the College of cers Candidate School of ihe St Thomas St Paul Minn irQ Photo Canadian Navy

It saluted Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York on biI

Welcomes Successor Naming of Apostolic Administrato

Pleases Bishop Gerow 81 JACKSON (NC)-Mississippll1 year he followed with a direeshy

courageous 81-year-old Bihop tive that Catholic schools be deshyOliver Gerow welcomed his suc- segregated completely ceSSor Bishop Joseph B Bruni- Helps Restore Churches ni 55 as spiritual head of the Despite reported threats ofmiddot Natchez-Jacklon diocese as one violence fro m segregationist who is active vigorous and has ranks the aged prelate was good sound judgment among leaders of an interfaith

X am very happy in being groupmiddot which formed the Comshyrelieved of the heavy responSl- mittee of middotConcernmiddot soHcited middotbillty that I have borne for money labor and materIals for

middotthe bishop stated in a letterred AND in every Catholic church in the INSTITUTIONAL BONDSstate

His appeal for $300000 to re-middot I Umiddot f $500 M store more than 30 d~stroyed n nits 0 or ore and damaged churches brought Keenan amp CImiddotarey bie contributions to the Committee 9f Concern from various sections Minneapolis Minnesota of the country

0

M~ntle Plumbing amp ~ating Co Inc~

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET Fall River OS 57497

for detailed information write to

CHARLES A~ MURPHY Registered Representative

145 Pond $treet Winchester Mass

PA 9-2696 And

Name bullbullbull ~ Address A

City _

50 years in the priesthood payshying tribute to him not only beshycause of his dignity as a pi-iest and cardinal but also because he 1S a great and wholesome mail

Relic Stolen NEW YORK (NC)-A reputed

relic of the cross on which Chtist died has been stolen from the Church of the Most Holy Reshydeemer here It was removed from a side altar tabernacle

where it had been placed shortshyly after the churchs establishshy

ment by the Redemptoriad Fathers some 125 years ago

~

GULF HILL DAIRY so DARTMOUTH MASS

RO THE ANCHO~-Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

1

RELIGIOUS SUPERIORS INSTITUTE ON STONEHILTJ CAMPUS SMS Guadalcanal Solomon Islands Standing Sr Florita DP King Sr Mary LUk~ St about to enter the hall for her lecture Center Some ston Mass Sr Mary of Bathany SP Holyoke Sr Mary de Sales F$SJ r the sisters who attended Sister Lukes talk were Sr Josepha SC Conshy Holyoke Right Mrs Mary Virginia Yosgandes h-ouse mother wavesgood ent Station NJ Sr Mary Kenneth Amityville NY Sr Mary (fheresa bye tothe departing nuns I

Brooklyn Church Hopes Nuns Move Into Cent~r of Lij~e Criticizes Irish lribunal Lacks By Dorothy Eastman -Social Security

When in the third year of Vatican II the momentous decision was made toinvitewO- dmiddot LIMERICK (NC) - FatherJ men observers to audit a Council forthe first ~ime to represent all J~remiah Newman professor ofuris ICtlon the Sister chosen BROOKLYN (NC)-Msgr the nuns in America was Sister Mary Luke Tobin Mother General of the Sisters of Lor- sociology at Irelands Maynooth

IlAarion J Reinhardt pre- etto When shewasasked recently while visiting the Fall River Diocese what impressed College criticizedprivate agenshyJ~L h t b t th C 1 cies and the national governshyIdlng Judge of the Trlblillal er mos a ou e oune) h t b t h h d k ment for their failure to increaseshe said with a wry smile We aVe 0 e rna ure enoug er own or er was wor mg(1)f the Diocese of Brooklyn h to live in insecurity toward these ends She told of all subsidies to families Iltas announced that the bill of The fact that we were t ere Will these changes be easy experiment soine of her Sisters After insisting that it would $Omplaint of 15 former teachers at all I The Sister is too much of a have been engllged in for the be best for private agencies and of St Johns Un~versity had to At a Stonehill College institute realist to give that impression past twu years in Pueblo Colo- local governments to administer be dismissed because of lack of Sister Luke spoke of her many Its going to be fraught with rado Although most of the 1100 social security Father Newman jurisdiction on the part of the other impressions of the Council difficulties she warns but Sisters of Lorettv are teachers said that since they seemed unshy

ecclesiastical court _ where she and seven other Sis- what isnt this small group of Sisters in willing or unable to do this the The Brooklyn ecclesiastical tels were auditresses for the last There are more than a few Pueblo 1s doing no t~aching-in job had to be done by the natshy

$Ourt which operates under two years of Vatican II Over Sisters who are troubled and schools anyway They simply jonal government ~llnon law said it is pmited in 450 Mothers Superior from 55 sometimes shocked these days live among the poor as good He said that according to jurisdiction to only spiritual different Orders were gathered by many of the changes hi their neighbors he 1pin jg wherever Catholic soCial teaching there ltuestions at the Easton campus for the communities The Mother Gen- they cllD leading discussion was no limit to the amount of Charge Contralaquot Breach five day Institute directed by eral would warn them that its groups counselling etc government aid that is permis-

The 5000 word document Rev William FHogan CSC pointless for them to say Thill Asked to comment on the re- sibie and desirable if governshypointed out that the decree of Sister Luke was one of a group is not the community I entered cent experiment in Milwaukee mEmt aid was the Qnly practical Giisrriissalis without prejudice to of noteliltspeakers who talked When it comes to that she says where30 School Sisters of St (sbl~tion to poverty problems lbhe merits of the case to the superiors on the subject we all might say This is not the Francis left their convents for

If the Metropolitan Tribunal of the I Sister in the modern Church Iwas baptized into or three weekstO work in secular If the archdiocese of New York world this is not the world I was b()rn jobs - oneSister wa3 assigned

T b 1 f the Sacred into Change is a fact of life S t~ the rI una 0 Adapting a line from Charles as a newspaper reporer- IS er Roman Rota reversesthe decree Dickens to describe this contro she points out~ and we can~t keep Luke predicted a great deal the casewiil be returned to the versial post Council age Sister things as they are or say Stop more~ of this kind of liniited Tribunal of the Diocese of the World-I want to get off f i t th I w ld ]Brooklyn for adjudications upon t~ees sa~~iSTi~iSt~eth~o~r Role of Superiors ~~~re ~o di~~a~~c~i~t n~~ Ms merits it was stated times She paintedavivid ver- The role the Superiors will she said

The petition of complaint bal picture of the world that lies play in the formation of what Since her own Order founded filed by Father Peter OReilly ahead for Sisters She said it has been called The New Nun in 1812 is quite new all religious

s~f Chicago on behalf of himself would certainly be a challenging Lwuakeouattlintheed fs~roeh~ ~~s~~~t~ orders go and is the liirst comshylind the other ousted teachers one and that conventlife inthe munity founded in America charged he university which is future is certain to undergo She urged them to create a cli- without European ties the Sisshyeonducted by theVincentian many radical changes mate where Sisters can liveters of Loretto weal habits more Fathers with breach of contract community life at its best She -modern than most But itsstill

The Superior~ were told that entreated them to keep thls cli-The dispute has been marked bY d bl d ff t the dress of 1812 not 1966 so it d k t f an m Ispensa e gUl e me ec - mate free from legallsm andlitudent unrest an pIC e mg 0 th hmiddotmiddot th will soon be changed As soon I mg ese c anges IS e map survelmiddotllance Ie schoo s campuses f th f t th t th C 1 as the all-mlll Congregation

or e u ure a e ounCl A community should be a of Religious in Rome approv~sMoral Issue Fatners drew up for the Church place where there- is safety for She called the CouncII Decrees the Sisters new design that is About 30 teachers were fired fl t d f t f dff

Rost December in a dispute over the documentS ofhighest au- cop IC an sa e y or J er- Tliey have submitted one de~ign rlty We should all have ~nes apd s~fety to cultiv~te that the fathers turnEd downadministration-faculty relation- tho d t h d Sh f I the mInd of Vatlcan II and then lverSI y s ~ sal e ee s lihey thought it was too modshyships and other issues They t I th t th h ld be

b b f we c~n move Into actlon she s rongy a ere ~u r -ern Sister Luke says UWhat anwere joined y anum er 0 I t I g I fe ther teachers In a strike that told her healers - 1Jloe ~o~a IY In re 1 J~)Us 1 incredible thing for US to ask shy --uAfterall were not Trap- that we choose our own clothes has continued since January Whi~h Way psts

l she adds with a laughThe court found that tpe How will the Sisters know in Warning that the time has S t Lk tl - b

uteceniontractual controversy was not whicli direction they should come for a re-evaluation of the _ IS ~rth y e~mt~ a spiritual mattelin a canoliical move in the manyarells so(in to true meaning of community she ne oIl e d~rs wo~~ ever ~ llense of the word spiritual change cExperiment Sister told the Superiors that commu- bo~a h a sre~t a f ~gUS aild that there was no allegation Luke advises so often its almost nity doesnt mean conformity or 0 y e oCle ~ o anon ef a violation of an ecclesiastical her motto We really cannot a hotel life either or even a Lawyrs Does thIS mian that law arid that the time was not move into change without ex-lot of happy t9getherness th~ SI~ters may at last have a opportune for a decision of perimentation she says and around the television set voIce 111 the formatIon of canon moral responsibility because the we will be engaged in tremen- A ~ital new aspect of commu- la-at least th~ laws that rUI~ secular courts would first have dous experiments from now on- nity is the idea of what Sister thel~ O~derS SIster Luke deshyto determine whether there was to adapt religious life to the Luke calls sub communities- vout y opes so a breach of contractual duty times in which we live the convents immediate neigh- Its certain that the future for

The church court found as a The revisions that lie ahead borhood the parish the civic the Sisters will be a very differshymatter of law that St Johns for religious orders will bring commumty lay people 111 the ent one than anyone could have 141 NO MAINUniversity as a corporation Sisters into the mainstream of same profession as the Sister- imagined a few short years ago J~ formed under the law of the modern life Sister Luke for for instance other nurses or The Holy Father has urged them iii FALL RIVER State of w York did not have one has no doubts that this is tElachers We have allowed too the~ to move from the margin e the ecclesiastical privilege of where they belong We ought great a gap to exist between our- of life to the center of life~ 873 COUNTY demanding that suits against it to be willing to take the risks) selves and the laity she says Will the move be successful SOMERSETbe heard in an ecclesiasticalmiddot that gO along with this plunge In an interviewmiddot following her Sister Luke says We can only CDOurt into the mainstream she says talk Sister ~uke was asked how know by taking a ChanCE

Feai makes the wolf bigger than be is

Rer Bankings Already D~ne

~jI--~1 W

tt-~~gt_ri~

~j F~ p ~tl Iim F-ilNgt

~l i

ll 11 ~~

W = ~

~gtltl ~

-~ ~~ StIesaves I lot of alunle Mtime forso maily other thinlS ~i She banks by mail at Te ~ OLD R D8 KI h 7reg E AN W at about you

liii FREE mall forms ~1 The mOld Red Bank W

$ Fall River Savings Bankjilll q

Page 18: 08.25.66

BURNERS

BUrntlr Service

Famous Reading HARDCQAl

NEW ENGLAND COKE

t8 THE ~NCHOR-Dioceseof fo Rivef-Thurs Aug 25 1966 J~sut I)riest Says Some Public I b M t EmploYE~~S Have Right to Strike

-

Urges uO or ovemen S NEW (NC) -Public however YORK Government hasmiddot h C employees in certain fields have been expanding its cQncern andIn Heml$p ere ooperate the right to strike against the has beenmoving into ar~as of government a priest declared transportation education recre-

By MsgrGooJrge C Higgins (Director Socian Actiolll Dept NCWC)

The relationship between the American labor moveshyment and the Latin American Confed~ration of Christian Trade Unions (CLASC) leaves much to be desired as we

middot thO d th 1- have aready noted severa1 t Imes m IS co umn urmg e

past four or five years The two movements are deeply different things to different peoshy

auspicious of one another and just when they seem to be on the verge of settling or at least -patching up their differshyences they go at it again and recklesslystart hurling insults at one another

To jUdge from What they sayIi b 0 u t on e another publicshy1yen as well as privately on e would t h ink that they were natural-born enshyemies whe~eas in fact they have much in common-much inore than they seem to realizeshyand for obvious reasons ought violent MisS Duncan was an officer of The fourth public member Harshyto be c60p~rating With onean- Moreo~er at least one promi~theSodality a cheerleader for vardlaw school professorVern ether as closely as pOSSible nent spokesman for the AFL- four years a member of the Ten- Countryman half ci-itiCized the This writer has learn~ci the hard WR and muc~ to hiS so~-row that any outSider who 18

fOolish enough totryto mediatek f

~tween them JS as mg or troouble

C f t Gommun same If for example one suggests

as I have done on more than one Occasion that soine of the anti U S propaganda emanating from CLASCsources revealS atremely harmful to the cause of n a i v e misunderstanding of Amerlcan trade unionism and American capitalism andor ari $ver-simplification of Catholic Social teaching he runs the risk 9f being written off as a blind -not tOsay reactionary apologist for so-called Yanqui ~mperial-

iBm If on the other hand oneslig

gests that some of the anti- CLASC propaganda enianating

fro m AFL-CI0 sources is equally naive and unsoPllisti shyeatedhe runs the same Sort of risk in reverse That is to say he is likely to be told--v~ry politely of course -that if he were to take off his Catholic blinkers and look at the record objectively he would quickly come to realize that CLASC is in reality playing t~ecipal rival in Latin America) riages in their mission parishes communist game in Latin Amer- there is a gEirierous mixture of Msgr Milia stated Since the iea superficial appearances to cultural chauvinism and envy Ogdensburg mission was opened the contrary notwithstanding that accompanies the most legit- a modern new church bas been

Both CaD Learn imate misgivings built under its direction in the Be that as it may I still think Even the Latinos middotthemselve~ seaport ofMatararii two mission

~t CLASC has a lot to learn he points out will admit on ac- churches have oeen completed about _ and from American casion that their consumirig fear and a lalge parish church and trade unionism And if that of Yanqui imperialism is often center are currently under conshymakes me a reactionary Yankee irrational But there it is he re- struction in Mollendo ehauvinist so be it minds us and the basic prob-

By the same token however aiso think that the American

labor movement has much to learn about -- and from - the Christian trade union movement in Latin America The first thing it has to learn is that the Am~r-leap philosophy of pure-andshysimple bread-~d-butter union ism which all things considshyered has worked satisfactorily in this country is not necessarily well adapted to the present-day Deeds of Latin America

Meaning of Revolution Another way of saying the

same thing is that American iabor representativesworking on Latin America problemswm have to reconcile themselves to the fact that a social revolu-Uon is called for in Latin American labor federation that doesnt subscribe to a revolushytionary ideology is probably doomed to failure

The word revolution meaos J-

pIe of course To the leaders of CLASC it means a sweeping program of socioeconomic and political reform which goes far beyond the limited goals of bread-and-butter unionism

The leaders of CLASC are convinced that such a revolushytioo is demanded bythe Chrisshytian social ethic to which they subscribe and from which they derive their ideology

Perceptive Critique Some U S Labor repshy

resentatives are skeptical to say the least~bout the allegedly Christian content of CLASCs militant ideology They admit theneed for a peaceful revolushytion in Latin Americn butthey are convinced thatCLASC wants this revolution to be Feehan High School Attleboro alties in a letter tc therimes

lem is how to insure con~ PAVlA V I tlnuing cooperation between 0 untee rs Yanqui and Latino in spite of Complete TlIainirigit

Such cooperation Dr Hawkins WASHINGTON (NC)-Fortyshyconcludes will be impossible unshyless the leaders of the American labor movement positively indi~

cete their acceptance of social revolution in Latin America This will require he says

more than the generous transshyfusions of economic aid the stimulation under United States

labors auspices of leadership training programs for workers

and other cooperative ventures Need Broader View

What is required he insists ltCia a broader view-an ability on the part of the American la bor statemen to adopt policies that will not always accord with OUI own value~ and more speshy

cificall~ the tempering of (their) hosannas to free entershyprUie ___

inter-American labor unity I fully agree in this respect with Dr Carroll Hawkins Associate

Professor of Political Science at Michigan State University who recently published a most pershyceptive critique of American trade union policy in Latin- Catholics in Mollendo Peru the

America (The 0RIT and Amer diocesan missions director reshyican Trade Unions Conflicting ported Perspectives Industrial Rela- The New York priests were tionsand Social Changes in sent to Peru after Pope Paul Latin America University of vi -asked that more priests be Florida Press) pr9vjd~d fOr the people opoundSouth

Basic Problem America Msgr Anthony A Mi-Dr Hawkins admits of course lia said He estimated more than

that in all the Latin American 90 percent of the priests in criticism of United States unioniperu are from other countries in the ORIT (the Latin Ameli can regional unit of the Interna In 1965 the priests from Ogshytional Confederation of Free denburg administered 445 bap-Trade Unions and CLASCs prin tisms and perfoImed 64 mar-

CIOhas publicly charged in ej_ nis Club for two years and a suggested penaltiel fect that CLASCs ideology three yeaT member of the FU- owes more to Marxism than it ture Nurses club Father Carey sl~id the ~ays does to Christianity He finds it when pay and working condi-

An instructor in the Confra- tions for men and women inhard he says to accept the fact ternity of Christian Doctrine that the Christian labor move- civil service were determine4 byproglam in Our Lady of Mt I g I t d d t t

t middot A e IS a Ive It n a minIS ra Ive ment 0f L a In merIca IS non- Carmel Parish Seekonk the fiat have pas ed a d Communist s n we now

In my judgment this kind of criticism of CLASC by spokesshymen fltr the AFL-CIO is ex

three volunteers have completed the Second National Training Session sponsored by the Papal Volunteers for Latin America and received assignments in some ten Latin American coun- tries

Special ceremonies ended the six-week training session at the Catholic University of America where volunteers studied the apostolic work of the Church the laymans role in the aposshytolate and principles of spiritual life as well as the religion ecoshynomics and culture of Latin America

Before leavillg for their asshysignments the volunteers will take intensive four-month lanshy

guage anl culture courses in a Latin American language centerbull

eighth winner of this scholarship plumeoursElves that we share will enter the Childrens Hosshypital School of Nursing Boston in Septembel-

Ogdensburg Priests

SellYe Peru Mission OGDENSBURG (NC) -- Four

Ogdensburg priests currently are ministering to the n~eds of_13OOO

~ere

Father Philip Carey sJ exshyecutive director of the Xavier Institute of Industrial Relations acknowledged t hat certain strikes aJre intolerable But he said that when the governmentacts in a proprietary function it must follow the same rules it prescribes for private enterprise

In a letter to the New York Times Father Carey criticized ~y implication a proposed state -llw that wetulltilincrease the penalties to be imposed on strikshying union of public employees

MlISS LHNDA DUNCAN Th~proposedlaw grew out of recommendations of a five-man

Feehan Alumna task force named by Gov Nel son Rockefeller to study the

Receives Award problem after a 19-day transit strike crippled Newmiddot York City

Miss Linda Duncan daughter in January of Mrs George Duncan and the - NeCeSSBlry for Bargaining late George Duncan 61 Sykes Father Carey one of four Rd Seekonk has been awarded pubiic members of the mayors the eighth annual scholarship of committee that helped settle the the Attleboro Area Nurses strike disagreed with two other Chapter publlc memlgters Vh_o had previshyA 1966 graduate of Bishop ously supported the stiffer pen-

and internal concord a str~ke against itconstitutes mutiny and rebellion (UCLA) Sister Muriel a native

Pgbllsh Gudelnes For Ecumenisn

ALLENTOWN (NC) - The commission of ecumenism of the Allentown diocese here in Pennshysylvania has published a 22-page booklet of ecumenical guidelines to aid priests in guiding the laity The guidelines include general

permission for non-Catholics to serve as witnesses at Catholic weddings for Catholics to serve as witnesses at non-Catholic weddings and for burial of non-Catholics in Catholic ceremonies with a priest or a non-Catholic clergyman cltmducting graveside eeremonies

SHELL DADSON OIL

24-Hollr Oil

GLE COAL amp OIL CO IncI

640 Pleasant Street Tel WY 6-8271 New Bedford

this decision-making with the working p E~ 0 P Ie themselves through the process of collective bargaining

If collective bargaining is to be the rule he said we must agree to grant the right to strike~ Without this right he said there is no union and no coll~ctive balmiddotgaining

Expands Concern-in considering strikes by pu~ lie employees he dedared one muSt distinguishb~tween the state as a sovereign and the g()vernment acting in a proprishyetary function When the state aets as the defender of the peace or the promoter of justice

of Corning Iajoined the Sisters of the Humility of Mary in 1930 In recent years she has been ehairman of professionafarts deshypartment and college registrar

ation and a host of other services formerly performed by privategroups he continued

These activities are ancillary and economic and here the state in acting in a proprishyetry function When it so acts it ought to be subject tl) the same rules of conduct the government prescribes for private entershy

prise Strikes by firefighters and powerhouse uti lit y workers would be wrong however he said because it is difficult to imagine anY benefit they might gain to counterbalance the fear- fut harm such a l strike would impose on the community Buys Banners For Memorial

CHICAGO (NC)-A Chicago advertising executive has bought 44 brightly-colored religious ~anners tat -hung in the Nashy

tlOnal Srme of the Im~aculate ConceptIon during Luci Johnshysons wed(iin~ -

Earle Ludgin a trustee of the University of Chicago said he will donate the banners to the

university~ Rockefeller Memoshyrial Chapel in memory of his late wife

The banners for which Ludgin reportedly paid more than $40000 were originally created for the Vatlcan PavIIIon at the New York World Fair

A group of Washington D C residents bought ttie banners when the fair closed and arshyranged to have them exhibited in the Shrine until they could be sold Lugdin bought themin April but agreed at the request of Shrine officials to leave them in the Shrine until after Lucia wedding

lame College Head

OTTUMWA (NC) Sis t er

Muriel Hogan has been named the third presi4ent of Ottumwa Heights College here in Iowa She succeeds Sister Marie Anshy

ciue Kennedy woo win engagem graduate study in oominunishy

eations at the University of California Los Angeles branch

Offering You 3 Savings Plans

Home Financing

WAREHAM CO-OPERATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mabull

Telephone 295-2400 Banll SerVice YlIIIIIII

I

Ask Court Bar Use of Church Propertyfor Public SchoQ~middot WHITE ~S (MC) - A the cl883rooms ~ut Church

group of some 25 citizens repre- npokesman reporte~ that in line sented by the American Jewish with New York archdiocesan Congress has asked the New York State Supreme Court here to restrain the board of Ramapo School District 2 Rockland County from holding public school classes in property leased from religious bodies

The school board faced with severe-overcrowding planned to lease eight rooms from St Josephs Catholic Church and five from lem~e Beth El in Spring Valley The action was approved by 8tateEducation Commissioner Jame$ EAllen Jr

A ComllllJJlt served 0ill the rlChool board by the AJC charged the acti~n o~ld ~otateChurchshyState separation guaranteed by the First Amendment to the Constitution as well as other provisions of the state constitushytion

It is believed to be the first wch challenge made regarding

the use of religiO18 facilities for public school use

lhe st Josephproperty conshysists of an eightclasSroom school building adjacent to but sepashyrated from the chureh It is Ill good condition but will not be used by the p8rish thismiddot year because it has bUilt a new bUildshying for expanding its acbool to 141 classes

All religioUs ~bols had Ileen removed from the oder building in preparation for its use as a public school

The district school board had offered a fair market rent for

PAV~A deg Missionary Record Continued from Page Thirteen

A nurse from Chicago baa taken Lucillellpla~on the aposshytolic team and ber purpose in returning is to help her successhy80r work into the project smoothly It takes so long to get into 11 she Aid so II dont WJmt Il~r to spendtbree

years j~ g~tting organized~

Benedictine Marks 80th Anniversary

ST JOSEPHmiddot (NC)-The oldshyest Benedictine nun in Minneshysota-and one of the oldest m the world~marked the 80th anshyniversary of her entrance into the order ma Mass for all Beneshydictine jubil~tians held at St Benedicts convent here

Sister Sophia Zimmer was 1~ years old Dec 2 1965 She Wall

born in a log cabin about 1 block away from the convent An open house for her relatives and friends was held at the conv~nt

Receives Students cAsTELGANDOLFO (NC)shyPoPe Paul vI received in audishyence at his Summer home here students frOm 34 nations includshying many non-Catholics who are taking Summer courses in the ItaUaa language aDd culture sponsored by the Rome branch of the Catholic University fII IWaD

policy the properly would be made available for public school use at a token dollar-a-year rental

cmOS Cmpetes C~~ege ~rr(l))g~m

WASHINGTON (NC)-A class of 97 under-privileged high school students was graduated on completion of an eight-week Summer college orientation proshy

gram at Georgetown University The exercises i attended by faculty and parents Qf the stushydents involved students who had completed their Sophomore year in District of Colwnbia high schools They were chosen for the special course because teachers and counselors believed they have the ~billty to do colshylege work alihoug~ their presshyent high school records indicate little likelihood of college acshyceptance Ninoty-fiveOf the 97 students were Negroes md the ratio of males to females was aboutmiddot tbree-to-two ~

The pro~~~~Ch began in 1965 is financed by the NaUonal science Fowidationmiddot the District of Columbia public school sysshy

tem and Georgetown In addition to academic work

the students were given cltgtUrsetl in reading improvement and counseling gUidance Athletie and cultural events underwrit shyten by the program were also bKluded in their schedules

nearly 42 years Bishop Gerow churches degespeciallY Negro said Of late I have feltmiddotthat X houses of worshIp which middotWere have not the stamina to caJTY I bombedmiddot and burned

on as I have done in the past Whena p~ttern of destn1c~ion This load should be borne by 1 develops as It has m our state youngerman then it sincumbent upon all ntereston Yoiit

Cathollc lnereaSe m~n ~ ~ood ~i~ througho~t MiSSISSIPPI to Jom hands m Savings

The ~venth bishop of~edio- helpingthe affectedmiddot churches 0 Invested In cesemiddotwhlch was founded ID 1~37 and in showing clearly our con- and encompasses 111 of Missls- demnation at all acts of violencemiddot CATHOLIC CHURCH sippi Bishop Gerow h8ll s~ lawlessness and destruction the Catholic population IJOw from 31264 to 75000 in his 41 years of office The number of priests in the diocese grew from 63 to 220 and churches md misshysions from 108 to 243

The last few years of llacial violence perhaps were the most troub1d for Bishop Gerows long ad inistration middotHemiddot met the challenge with courage

In the face of many-sided opshyposition Bishop Gerow in 1964 directed the first grades of Cathshyolicmiddot schools in the state to be racially integrated The next

Missionaries Move Seminar to Ohio

DAYTON (NC) -The White Fathers a missionary society which bas served in Africa for nearly a century is llloving its U S seminary to Dayton

St Josephs Seminary which had been in operation at Onshydliota N Y near Saranac Lake will re-open under the same

name in four residences near the campus of the University of

Dayton The buildings have been rented from the university

Eventually the White Fathers plan to build their own seminary

middotfacilities somewhere in ~e area according to Fatber Paul lo1e1le WF~

THE ANCHOR- middot19 Thurs Aug 25 1966

KC Melll1il~er~~ip

At AJ~Tome e~~gh MIAMI BEACH (NC)-In his

report at the 84th annual meetshying of the Supreme Council of the Knights of Columbus Sushypreme Knight John W McDevitt made these points

Membership on June 30 1966 stood at an all-time high of 1183896 The orders insurance covershyage passed the $15 billion mark during the year

The orders assets reached III

neW plateau of $28122840028 at the end of the fiscal year

The society i~ continuing its support of the campaign to st~m p(gtrnography

Revise Ceremonial Progress is being made onthe

re_Vision of the orders cerempnshyial to give it a total family middotclishymate and make it consistent with moder day philosophy of social justice and religious pracshytice

The K of C have undertaken distribution of copies of the 1~ew Testament to Catholic gradllates

COURAGE PERSONIFIED John St Marie of B~YQ of the Naval Offilaquoer CandfClatE port Minn CQnfined to a wheelchair since a 1953 pOlio ~chool in Newport R I an(J ill

~dying the question of proshyattack has received a scholarship to the University of viding a similar servilte ~orMinnesota law school atter successfully maintaining an Ashy Catholic graduatell of the Qffi shyminus average in undergraduate work at the College of cers Candidate School of ihe St Thomas St Paul Minn irQ Photo Canadian Navy

It saluted Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York on biI

Welcomes Successor Naming of Apostolic Administrato

Pleases Bishop Gerow 81 JACKSON (NC)-Mississippll1 year he followed with a direeshy

courageous 81-year-old Bihop tive that Catholic schools be deshyOliver Gerow welcomed his suc- segregated completely ceSSor Bishop Joseph B Bruni- Helps Restore Churches ni 55 as spiritual head of the Despite reported threats ofmiddot Natchez-Jacklon diocese as one violence fro m segregationist who is active vigorous and has ranks the aged prelate was good sound judgment among leaders of an interfaith

X am very happy in being groupmiddot which formed the Comshyrelieved of the heavy responSl- mittee of middotConcernmiddot soHcited middotbillty that I have borne for money labor and materIals for

middotthe bishop stated in a letterred AND in every Catholic church in the INSTITUTIONAL BONDSstate

His appeal for $300000 to re-middot I Umiddot f $500 M store more than 30 d~stroyed n nits 0 or ore and damaged churches brought Keenan amp CImiddotarey bie contributions to the Committee 9f Concern from various sections Minneapolis Minnesota of the country

0

M~ntle Plumbing amp ~ating Co Inc~

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET Fall River OS 57497

for detailed information write to

CHARLES A~ MURPHY Registered Representative

145 Pond $treet Winchester Mass

PA 9-2696 And

Name bullbullbull ~ Address A

City _

50 years in the priesthood payshying tribute to him not only beshycause of his dignity as a pi-iest and cardinal but also because he 1S a great and wholesome mail

Relic Stolen NEW YORK (NC)-A reputed

relic of the cross on which Chtist died has been stolen from the Church of the Most Holy Reshydeemer here It was removed from a side altar tabernacle

where it had been placed shortshyly after the churchs establishshy

ment by the Redemptoriad Fathers some 125 years ago

~

GULF HILL DAIRY so DARTMOUTH MASS

RO THE ANCHO~-Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

1

RELIGIOUS SUPERIORS INSTITUTE ON STONEHILTJ CAMPUS SMS Guadalcanal Solomon Islands Standing Sr Florita DP King Sr Mary LUk~ St about to enter the hall for her lecture Center Some ston Mass Sr Mary of Bathany SP Holyoke Sr Mary de Sales F$SJ r the sisters who attended Sister Lukes talk were Sr Josepha SC Conshy Holyoke Right Mrs Mary Virginia Yosgandes h-ouse mother wavesgood ent Station NJ Sr Mary Kenneth Amityville NY Sr Mary (fheresa bye tothe departing nuns I

Brooklyn Church Hopes Nuns Move Into Cent~r of Lij~e Criticizes Irish lribunal Lacks By Dorothy Eastman -Social Security

When in the third year of Vatican II the momentous decision was made toinvitewO- dmiddot LIMERICK (NC) - FatherJ men observers to audit a Council forthe first ~ime to represent all J~remiah Newman professor ofuris ICtlon the Sister chosen BROOKLYN (NC)-Msgr the nuns in America was Sister Mary Luke Tobin Mother General of the Sisters of Lor- sociology at Irelands Maynooth

IlAarion J Reinhardt pre- etto When shewasasked recently while visiting the Fall River Diocese what impressed College criticizedprivate agenshyJ~L h t b t th C 1 cies and the national governshyIdlng Judge of the Trlblillal er mos a ou e oune) h t b t h h d k ment for their failure to increaseshe said with a wry smile We aVe 0 e rna ure enoug er own or er was wor mg(1)f the Diocese of Brooklyn h to live in insecurity toward these ends She told of all subsidies to families Iltas announced that the bill of The fact that we were t ere Will these changes be easy experiment soine of her Sisters After insisting that it would $Omplaint of 15 former teachers at all I The Sister is too much of a have been engllged in for the be best for private agencies and of St Johns Un~versity had to At a Stonehill College institute realist to give that impression past twu years in Pueblo Colo- local governments to administer be dismissed because of lack of Sister Luke spoke of her many Its going to be fraught with rado Although most of the 1100 social security Father Newman jurisdiction on the part of the other impressions of the Council difficulties she warns but Sisters of Lorettv are teachers said that since they seemed unshy

ecclesiastical court _ where she and seven other Sis- what isnt this small group of Sisters in willing or unable to do this the The Brooklyn ecclesiastical tels were auditresses for the last There are more than a few Pueblo 1s doing no t~aching-in job had to be done by the natshy

$Ourt which operates under two years of Vatican II Over Sisters who are troubled and schools anyway They simply jonal government ~llnon law said it is pmited in 450 Mothers Superior from 55 sometimes shocked these days live among the poor as good He said that according to jurisdiction to only spiritual different Orders were gathered by many of the changes hi their neighbors he 1pin jg wherever Catholic soCial teaching there ltuestions at the Easton campus for the communities The Mother Gen- they cllD leading discussion was no limit to the amount of Charge Contralaquot Breach five day Institute directed by eral would warn them that its groups counselling etc government aid that is permis-

The 5000 word document Rev William FHogan CSC pointless for them to say Thill Asked to comment on the re- sibie and desirable if governshypointed out that the decree of Sister Luke was one of a group is not the community I entered cent experiment in Milwaukee mEmt aid was the Qnly practical Giisrriissalis without prejudice to of noteliltspeakers who talked When it comes to that she says where30 School Sisters of St (sbl~tion to poverty problems lbhe merits of the case to the superiors on the subject we all might say This is not the Francis left their convents for

If the Metropolitan Tribunal of the I Sister in the modern Church Iwas baptized into or three weekstO work in secular If the archdiocese of New York world this is not the world I was b()rn jobs - oneSister wa3 assigned

T b 1 f the Sacred into Change is a fact of life S t~ the rI una 0 Adapting a line from Charles as a newspaper reporer- IS er Roman Rota reversesthe decree Dickens to describe this contro she points out~ and we can~t keep Luke predicted a great deal the casewiil be returned to the versial post Council age Sister things as they are or say Stop more~ of this kind of liniited Tribunal of the Diocese of the World-I want to get off f i t th I w ld ]Brooklyn for adjudications upon t~ees sa~~iSTi~iSt~eth~o~r Role of Superiors ~~~re ~o di~~a~~c~i~t n~~ Ms merits it was stated times She paintedavivid ver- The role the Superiors will she said

The petition of complaint bal picture of the world that lies play in the formation of what Since her own Order founded filed by Father Peter OReilly ahead for Sisters She said it has been called The New Nun in 1812 is quite new all religious

s~f Chicago on behalf of himself would certainly be a challenging Lwuakeouattlintheed fs~roeh~ ~~s~~~t~ orders go and is the liirst comshylind the other ousted teachers one and that conventlife inthe munity founded in America charged he university which is future is certain to undergo She urged them to create a cli- without European ties the Sisshyeonducted by theVincentian many radical changes mate where Sisters can liveters of Loretto weal habits more Fathers with breach of contract community life at its best She -modern than most But itsstill

The Superior~ were told that entreated them to keep thls cli-The dispute has been marked bY d bl d ff t the dress of 1812 not 1966 so it d k t f an m Ispensa e gUl e me ec - mate free from legallsm andlitudent unrest an pIC e mg 0 th hmiddotmiddot th will soon be changed As soon I mg ese c anges IS e map survelmiddotllance Ie schoo s campuses f th f t th t th C 1 as the all-mlll Congregation

or e u ure a e ounCl A community should be a of Religious in Rome approv~sMoral Issue Fatners drew up for the Church place where there- is safety for She called the CouncII Decrees the Sisters new design that is About 30 teachers were fired fl t d f t f dff

Rost December in a dispute over the documentS ofhighest au- cop IC an sa e y or J er- Tliey have submitted one de~ign rlty We should all have ~nes apd s~fety to cultiv~te that the fathers turnEd downadministration-faculty relation- tho d t h d Sh f I the mInd of Vatlcan II and then lverSI y s ~ sal e ee s lihey thought it was too modshyships and other issues They t I th t th h ld be

b b f we c~n move Into actlon she s rongy a ere ~u r -ern Sister Luke says UWhat anwere joined y anum er 0 I t I g I fe ther teachers In a strike that told her healers - 1Jloe ~o~a IY In re 1 J~)Us 1 incredible thing for US to ask shy --uAfterall were not Trap- that we choose our own clothes has continued since January Whi~h Way psts

l she adds with a laughThe court found that tpe How will the Sisters know in Warning that the time has S t Lk tl - b

uteceniontractual controversy was not whicli direction they should come for a re-evaluation of the _ IS ~rth y e~mt~ a spiritual mattelin a canoliical move in the manyarells so(in to true meaning of community she ne oIl e d~rs wo~~ ever ~ llense of the word spiritual change cExperiment Sister told the Superiors that commu- bo~a h a sre~t a f ~gUS aild that there was no allegation Luke advises so often its almost nity doesnt mean conformity or 0 y e oCle ~ o anon ef a violation of an ecclesiastical her motto We really cannot a hotel life either or even a Lawyrs Does thIS mian that law arid that the time was not move into change without ex-lot of happy t9getherness th~ SI~ters may at last have a opportune for a decision of perimentation she says and around the television set voIce 111 the formatIon of canon moral responsibility because the we will be engaged in tremen- A ~ital new aspect of commu- la-at least th~ laws that rUI~ secular courts would first have dous experiments from now on- nity is the idea of what Sister thel~ O~derS SIster Luke deshyto determine whether there was to adapt religious life to the Luke calls sub communities- vout y opes so a breach of contractual duty times in which we live the convents immediate neigh- Its certain that the future for

The church court found as a The revisions that lie ahead borhood the parish the civic the Sisters will be a very differshymatter of law that St Johns for religious orders will bring commumty lay people 111 the ent one than anyone could have 141 NO MAINUniversity as a corporation Sisters into the mainstream of same profession as the Sister- imagined a few short years ago J~ formed under the law of the modern life Sister Luke for for instance other nurses or The Holy Father has urged them iii FALL RIVER State of w York did not have one has no doubts that this is tElachers We have allowed too the~ to move from the margin e the ecclesiastical privilege of where they belong We ought great a gap to exist between our- of life to the center of life~ 873 COUNTY demanding that suits against it to be willing to take the risks) selves and the laity she says Will the move be successful SOMERSETbe heard in an ecclesiasticalmiddot that gO along with this plunge In an interviewmiddot following her Sister Luke says We can only CDOurt into the mainstream she says talk Sister ~uke was asked how know by taking a ChanCE

Feai makes the wolf bigger than be is

Rer Bankings Already D~ne

~jI--~1 W

tt-~~gt_ri~

~j F~ p ~tl Iim F-ilNgt

~l i

ll 11 ~~

W = ~

~gtltl ~

-~ ~~ StIesaves I lot of alunle Mtime forso maily other thinlS ~i She banks by mail at Te ~ OLD R D8 KI h 7reg E AN W at about you

liii FREE mall forms ~1 The mOld Red Bank W

$ Fall River Savings Bankjilll q

Page 19: 08.25.66

Ask Court Bar Use of Church Propertyfor Public SchoQ~middot WHITE ~S (MC) - A the cl883rooms ~ut Church

group of some 25 citizens repre- npokesman reporte~ that in line sented by the American Jewish with New York archdiocesan Congress has asked the New York State Supreme Court here to restrain the board of Ramapo School District 2 Rockland County from holding public school classes in property leased from religious bodies

The school board faced with severe-overcrowding planned to lease eight rooms from St Josephs Catholic Church and five from lem~e Beth El in Spring Valley The action was approved by 8tateEducation Commissioner Jame$ EAllen Jr

A ComllllJJlt served 0ill the rlChool board by the AJC charged the acti~n o~ld ~otateChurchshyState separation guaranteed by the First Amendment to the Constitution as well as other provisions of the state constitushytion

It is believed to be the first wch challenge made regarding

the use of religiO18 facilities for public school use

lhe st Josephproperty conshysists of an eightclasSroom school building adjacent to but sepashyrated from the chureh It is Ill good condition but will not be used by the p8rish thismiddot year because it has bUilt a new bUildshying for expanding its acbool to 141 classes

All religioUs ~bols had Ileen removed from the oder building in preparation for its use as a public school

The district school board had offered a fair market rent for

PAV~A deg Missionary Record Continued from Page Thirteen

A nurse from Chicago baa taken Lucillellpla~on the aposshytolic team and ber purpose in returning is to help her successhy80r work into the project smoothly It takes so long to get into 11 she Aid so II dont WJmt Il~r to spendtbree

years j~ g~tting organized~

Benedictine Marks 80th Anniversary

ST JOSEPHmiddot (NC)-The oldshyest Benedictine nun in Minneshysota-and one of the oldest m the world~marked the 80th anshyniversary of her entrance into the order ma Mass for all Beneshydictine jubil~tians held at St Benedicts convent here

Sister Sophia Zimmer was 1~ years old Dec 2 1965 She Wall

born in a log cabin about 1 block away from the convent An open house for her relatives and friends was held at the conv~nt

Receives Students cAsTELGANDOLFO (NC)shyPoPe Paul vI received in audishyence at his Summer home here students frOm 34 nations includshying many non-Catholics who are taking Summer courses in the ItaUaa language aDd culture sponsored by the Rome branch of the Catholic University fII IWaD

policy the properly would be made available for public school use at a token dollar-a-year rental

cmOS Cmpetes C~~ege ~rr(l))g~m

WASHINGTON (NC)-A class of 97 under-privileged high school students was graduated on completion of an eight-week Summer college orientation proshy

gram at Georgetown University The exercises i attended by faculty and parents Qf the stushydents involved students who had completed their Sophomore year in District of Colwnbia high schools They were chosen for the special course because teachers and counselors believed they have the ~billty to do colshylege work alihoug~ their presshyent high school records indicate little likelihood of college acshyceptance Ninoty-fiveOf the 97 students were Negroes md the ratio of males to females was aboutmiddot tbree-to-two ~

The pro~~~~Ch began in 1965 is financed by the NaUonal science Fowidationmiddot the District of Columbia public school sysshy

tem and Georgetown In addition to academic work

the students were given cltgtUrsetl in reading improvement and counseling gUidance Athletie and cultural events underwrit shyten by the program were also bKluded in their schedules

nearly 42 years Bishop Gerow churches degespeciallY Negro said Of late I have feltmiddotthat X houses of worshIp which middotWere have not the stamina to caJTY I bombedmiddot and burned

on as I have done in the past Whena p~ttern of destn1c~ion This load should be borne by 1 develops as It has m our state youngerman then it sincumbent upon all ntereston Yoiit

Cathollc lnereaSe m~n ~ ~ood ~i~ througho~t MiSSISSIPPI to Jom hands m Savings

The ~venth bishop of~edio- helpingthe affectedmiddot churches 0 Invested In cesemiddotwhlch was founded ID 1~37 and in showing clearly our con- and encompasses 111 of Missls- demnation at all acts of violencemiddot CATHOLIC CHURCH sippi Bishop Gerow h8ll s~ lawlessness and destruction the Catholic population IJOw from 31264 to 75000 in his 41 years of office The number of priests in the diocese grew from 63 to 220 and churches md misshysions from 108 to 243

The last few years of llacial violence perhaps were the most troub1d for Bishop Gerows long ad inistration middotHemiddot met the challenge with courage

In the face of many-sided opshyposition Bishop Gerow in 1964 directed the first grades of Cathshyolicmiddot schools in the state to be racially integrated The next

Missionaries Move Seminar to Ohio

DAYTON (NC) -The White Fathers a missionary society which bas served in Africa for nearly a century is llloving its U S seminary to Dayton

St Josephs Seminary which had been in operation at Onshydliota N Y near Saranac Lake will re-open under the same

name in four residences near the campus of the University of

Dayton The buildings have been rented from the university

Eventually the White Fathers plan to build their own seminary

middotfacilities somewhere in ~e area according to Fatber Paul lo1e1le WF~

THE ANCHOR- middot19 Thurs Aug 25 1966

KC Melll1il~er~~ip

At AJ~Tome e~~gh MIAMI BEACH (NC)-In his

report at the 84th annual meetshying of the Supreme Council of the Knights of Columbus Sushypreme Knight John W McDevitt made these points

Membership on June 30 1966 stood at an all-time high of 1183896 The orders insurance covershyage passed the $15 billion mark during the year

The orders assets reached III

neW plateau of $28122840028 at the end of the fiscal year

The society i~ continuing its support of the campaign to st~m p(gtrnography

Revise Ceremonial Progress is being made onthe

re_Vision of the orders cerempnshyial to give it a total family middotclishymate and make it consistent with moder day philosophy of social justice and religious pracshytice

The K of C have undertaken distribution of copies of the 1~ew Testament to Catholic gradllates

COURAGE PERSONIFIED John St Marie of B~YQ of the Naval Offilaquoer CandfClatE port Minn CQnfined to a wheelchair since a 1953 pOlio ~chool in Newport R I an(J ill

~dying the question of proshyattack has received a scholarship to the University of viding a similar servilte ~orMinnesota law school atter successfully maintaining an Ashy Catholic graduatell of the Qffi shyminus average in undergraduate work at the College of cers Candidate School of ihe St Thomas St Paul Minn irQ Photo Canadian Navy

It saluted Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York on biI

Welcomes Successor Naming of Apostolic Administrato

Pleases Bishop Gerow 81 JACKSON (NC)-Mississippll1 year he followed with a direeshy

courageous 81-year-old Bihop tive that Catholic schools be deshyOliver Gerow welcomed his suc- segregated completely ceSSor Bishop Joseph B Bruni- Helps Restore Churches ni 55 as spiritual head of the Despite reported threats ofmiddot Natchez-Jacklon diocese as one violence fro m segregationist who is active vigorous and has ranks the aged prelate was good sound judgment among leaders of an interfaith

X am very happy in being groupmiddot which formed the Comshyrelieved of the heavy responSl- mittee of middotConcernmiddot soHcited middotbillty that I have borne for money labor and materIals for

middotthe bishop stated in a letterred AND in every Catholic church in the INSTITUTIONAL BONDSstate

His appeal for $300000 to re-middot I Umiddot f $500 M store more than 30 d~stroyed n nits 0 or ore and damaged churches brought Keenan amp CImiddotarey bie contributions to the Committee 9f Concern from various sections Minneapolis Minnesota of the country

0

M~ntle Plumbing amp ~ating Co Inc~

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET Fall River OS 57497

for detailed information write to

CHARLES A~ MURPHY Registered Representative

145 Pond $treet Winchester Mass

PA 9-2696 And

Name bullbullbull ~ Address A

City _

50 years in the priesthood payshying tribute to him not only beshycause of his dignity as a pi-iest and cardinal but also because he 1S a great and wholesome mail

Relic Stolen NEW YORK (NC)-A reputed

relic of the cross on which Chtist died has been stolen from the Church of the Most Holy Reshydeemer here It was removed from a side altar tabernacle

where it had been placed shortshyly after the churchs establishshy

ment by the Redemptoriad Fathers some 125 years ago

~

GULF HILL DAIRY so DARTMOUTH MASS

RO THE ANCHO~-Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

1

RELIGIOUS SUPERIORS INSTITUTE ON STONEHILTJ CAMPUS SMS Guadalcanal Solomon Islands Standing Sr Florita DP King Sr Mary LUk~ St about to enter the hall for her lecture Center Some ston Mass Sr Mary of Bathany SP Holyoke Sr Mary de Sales F$SJ r the sisters who attended Sister Lukes talk were Sr Josepha SC Conshy Holyoke Right Mrs Mary Virginia Yosgandes h-ouse mother wavesgood ent Station NJ Sr Mary Kenneth Amityville NY Sr Mary (fheresa bye tothe departing nuns I

Brooklyn Church Hopes Nuns Move Into Cent~r of Lij~e Criticizes Irish lribunal Lacks By Dorothy Eastman -Social Security

When in the third year of Vatican II the momentous decision was made toinvitewO- dmiddot LIMERICK (NC) - FatherJ men observers to audit a Council forthe first ~ime to represent all J~remiah Newman professor ofuris ICtlon the Sister chosen BROOKLYN (NC)-Msgr the nuns in America was Sister Mary Luke Tobin Mother General of the Sisters of Lor- sociology at Irelands Maynooth

IlAarion J Reinhardt pre- etto When shewasasked recently while visiting the Fall River Diocese what impressed College criticizedprivate agenshyJ~L h t b t th C 1 cies and the national governshyIdlng Judge of the Trlblillal er mos a ou e oune) h t b t h h d k ment for their failure to increaseshe said with a wry smile We aVe 0 e rna ure enoug er own or er was wor mg(1)f the Diocese of Brooklyn h to live in insecurity toward these ends She told of all subsidies to families Iltas announced that the bill of The fact that we were t ere Will these changes be easy experiment soine of her Sisters After insisting that it would $Omplaint of 15 former teachers at all I The Sister is too much of a have been engllged in for the be best for private agencies and of St Johns Un~versity had to At a Stonehill College institute realist to give that impression past twu years in Pueblo Colo- local governments to administer be dismissed because of lack of Sister Luke spoke of her many Its going to be fraught with rado Although most of the 1100 social security Father Newman jurisdiction on the part of the other impressions of the Council difficulties she warns but Sisters of Lorettv are teachers said that since they seemed unshy

ecclesiastical court _ where she and seven other Sis- what isnt this small group of Sisters in willing or unable to do this the The Brooklyn ecclesiastical tels were auditresses for the last There are more than a few Pueblo 1s doing no t~aching-in job had to be done by the natshy

$Ourt which operates under two years of Vatican II Over Sisters who are troubled and schools anyway They simply jonal government ~llnon law said it is pmited in 450 Mothers Superior from 55 sometimes shocked these days live among the poor as good He said that according to jurisdiction to only spiritual different Orders were gathered by many of the changes hi their neighbors he 1pin jg wherever Catholic soCial teaching there ltuestions at the Easton campus for the communities The Mother Gen- they cllD leading discussion was no limit to the amount of Charge Contralaquot Breach five day Institute directed by eral would warn them that its groups counselling etc government aid that is permis-

The 5000 word document Rev William FHogan CSC pointless for them to say Thill Asked to comment on the re- sibie and desirable if governshypointed out that the decree of Sister Luke was one of a group is not the community I entered cent experiment in Milwaukee mEmt aid was the Qnly practical Giisrriissalis without prejudice to of noteliltspeakers who talked When it comes to that she says where30 School Sisters of St (sbl~tion to poverty problems lbhe merits of the case to the superiors on the subject we all might say This is not the Francis left their convents for

If the Metropolitan Tribunal of the I Sister in the modern Church Iwas baptized into or three weekstO work in secular If the archdiocese of New York world this is not the world I was b()rn jobs - oneSister wa3 assigned

T b 1 f the Sacred into Change is a fact of life S t~ the rI una 0 Adapting a line from Charles as a newspaper reporer- IS er Roman Rota reversesthe decree Dickens to describe this contro she points out~ and we can~t keep Luke predicted a great deal the casewiil be returned to the versial post Council age Sister things as they are or say Stop more~ of this kind of liniited Tribunal of the Diocese of the World-I want to get off f i t th I w ld ]Brooklyn for adjudications upon t~ees sa~~iSTi~iSt~eth~o~r Role of Superiors ~~~re ~o di~~a~~c~i~t n~~ Ms merits it was stated times She paintedavivid ver- The role the Superiors will she said

The petition of complaint bal picture of the world that lies play in the formation of what Since her own Order founded filed by Father Peter OReilly ahead for Sisters She said it has been called The New Nun in 1812 is quite new all religious

s~f Chicago on behalf of himself would certainly be a challenging Lwuakeouattlintheed fs~roeh~ ~~s~~~t~ orders go and is the liirst comshylind the other ousted teachers one and that conventlife inthe munity founded in America charged he university which is future is certain to undergo She urged them to create a cli- without European ties the Sisshyeonducted by theVincentian many radical changes mate where Sisters can liveters of Loretto weal habits more Fathers with breach of contract community life at its best She -modern than most But itsstill

The Superior~ were told that entreated them to keep thls cli-The dispute has been marked bY d bl d ff t the dress of 1812 not 1966 so it d k t f an m Ispensa e gUl e me ec - mate free from legallsm andlitudent unrest an pIC e mg 0 th hmiddotmiddot th will soon be changed As soon I mg ese c anges IS e map survelmiddotllance Ie schoo s campuses f th f t th t th C 1 as the all-mlll Congregation

or e u ure a e ounCl A community should be a of Religious in Rome approv~sMoral Issue Fatners drew up for the Church place where there- is safety for She called the CouncII Decrees the Sisters new design that is About 30 teachers were fired fl t d f t f dff

Rost December in a dispute over the documentS ofhighest au- cop IC an sa e y or J er- Tliey have submitted one de~ign rlty We should all have ~nes apd s~fety to cultiv~te that the fathers turnEd downadministration-faculty relation- tho d t h d Sh f I the mInd of Vatlcan II and then lverSI y s ~ sal e ee s lihey thought it was too modshyships and other issues They t I th t th h ld be

b b f we c~n move Into actlon she s rongy a ere ~u r -ern Sister Luke says UWhat anwere joined y anum er 0 I t I g I fe ther teachers In a strike that told her healers - 1Jloe ~o~a IY In re 1 J~)Us 1 incredible thing for US to ask shy --uAfterall were not Trap- that we choose our own clothes has continued since January Whi~h Way psts

l she adds with a laughThe court found that tpe How will the Sisters know in Warning that the time has S t Lk tl - b

uteceniontractual controversy was not whicli direction they should come for a re-evaluation of the _ IS ~rth y e~mt~ a spiritual mattelin a canoliical move in the manyarells so(in to true meaning of community she ne oIl e d~rs wo~~ ever ~ llense of the word spiritual change cExperiment Sister told the Superiors that commu- bo~a h a sre~t a f ~gUS aild that there was no allegation Luke advises so often its almost nity doesnt mean conformity or 0 y e oCle ~ o anon ef a violation of an ecclesiastical her motto We really cannot a hotel life either or even a Lawyrs Does thIS mian that law arid that the time was not move into change without ex-lot of happy t9getherness th~ SI~ters may at last have a opportune for a decision of perimentation she says and around the television set voIce 111 the formatIon of canon moral responsibility because the we will be engaged in tremen- A ~ital new aspect of commu- la-at least th~ laws that rUI~ secular courts would first have dous experiments from now on- nity is the idea of what Sister thel~ O~derS SIster Luke deshyto determine whether there was to adapt religious life to the Luke calls sub communities- vout y opes so a breach of contractual duty times in which we live the convents immediate neigh- Its certain that the future for

The church court found as a The revisions that lie ahead borhood the parish the civic the Sisters will be a very differshymatter of law that St Johns for religious orders will bring commumty lay people 111 the ent one than anyone could have 141 NO MAINUniversity as a corporation Sisters into the mainstream of same profession as the Sister- imagined a few short years ago J~ formed under the law of the modern life Sister Luke for for instance other nurses or The Holy Father has urged them iii FALL RIVER State of w York did not have one has no doubts that this is tElachers We have allowed too the~ to move from the margin e the ecclesiastical privilege of where they belong We ought great a gap to exist between our- of life to the center of life~ 873 COUNTY demanding that suits against it to be willing to take the risks) selves and the laity she says Will the move be successful SOMERSETbe heard in an ecclesiasticalmiddot that gO along with this plunge In an interviewmiddot following her Sister Luke says We can only CDOurt into the mainstream she says talk Sister ~uke was asked how know by taking a ChanCE

Feai makes the wolf bigger than be is

Rer Bankings Already D~ne

~jI--~1 W

tt-~~gt_ri~

~j F~ p ~tl Iim F-ilNgt

~l i

ll 11 ~~

W = ~

~gtltl ~

-~ ~~ StIesaves I lot of alunle Mtime forso maily other thinlS ~i She banks by mail at Te ~ OLD R D8 KI h 7reg E AN W at about you

liii FREE mall forms ~1 The mOld Red Bank W

$ Fall River Savings Bankjilll q

Page 20: 08.25.66

RO THE ANCHO~-Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs Aug 25 1966

1

RELIGIOUS SUPERIORS INSTITUTE ON STONEHILTJ CAMPUS SMS Guadalcanal Solomon Islands Standing Sr Florita DP King Sr Mary LUk~ St about to enter the hall for her lecture Center Some ston Mass Sr Mary of Bathany SP Holyoke Sr Mary de Sales F$SJ r the sisters who attended Sister Lukes talk were Sr Josepha SC Conshy Holyoke Right Mrs Mary Virginia Yosgandes h-ouse mother wavesgood ent Station NJ Sr Mary Kenneth Amityville NY Sr Mary (fheresa bye tothe departing nuns I

Brooklyn Church Hopes Nuns Move Into Cent~r of Lij~e Criticizes Irish lribunal Lacks By Dorothy Eastman -Social Security

When in the third year of Vatican II the momentous decision was made toinvitewO- dmiddot LIMERICK (NC) - FatherJ men observers to audit a Council forthe first ~ime to represent all J~remiah Newman professor ofuris ICtlon the Sister chosen BROOKLYN (NC)-Msgr the nuns in America was Sister Mary Luke Tobin Mother General of the Sisters of Lor- sociology at Irelands Maynooth

IlAarion J Reinhardt pre- etto When shewasasked recently while visiting the Fall River Diocese what impressed College criticizedprivate agenshyJ~L h t b t th C 1 cies and the national governshyIdlng Judge of the Trlblillal er mos a ou e oune) h t b t h h d k ment for their failure to increaseshe said with a wry smile We aVe 0 e rna ure enoug er own or er was wor mg(1)f the Diocese of Brooklyn h to live in insecurity toward these ends She told of all subsidies to families Iltas announced that the bill of The fact that we were t ere Will these changes be easy experiment soine of her Sisters After insisting that it would $Omplaint of 15 former teachers at all I The Sister is too much of a have been engllged in for the be best for private agencies and of St Johns Un~versity had to At a Stonehill College institute realist to give that impression past twu years in Pueblo Colo- local governments to administer be dismissed because of lack of Sister Luke spoke of her many Its going to be fraught with rado Although most of the 1100 social security Father Newman jurisdiction on the part of the other impressions of the Council difficulties she warns but Sisters of Lorettv are teachers said that since they seemed unshy

ecclesiastical court _ where she and seven other Sis- what isnt this small group of Sisters in willing or unable to do this the The Brooklyn ecclesiastical tels were auditresses for the last There are more than a few Pueblo 1s doing no t~aching-in job had to be done by the natshy

$Ourt which operates under two years of Vatican II Over Sisters who are troubled and schools anyway They simply jonal government ~llnon law said it is pmited in 450 Mothers Superior from 55 sometimes shocked these days live among the poor as good He said that according to jurisdiction to only spiritual different Orders were gathered by many of the changes hi their neighbors he 1pin jg wherever Catholic soCial teaching there ltuestions at the Easton campus for the communities The Mother Gen- they cllD leading discussion was no limit to the amount of Charge Contralaquot Breach five day Institute directed by eral would warn them that its groups counselling etc government aid that is permis-

The 5000 word document Rev William FHogan CSC pointless for them to say Thill Asked to comment on the re- sibie and desirable if governshypointed out that the decree of Sister Luke was one of a group is not the community I entered cent experiment in Milwaukee mEmt aid was the Qnly practical Giisrriissalis without prejudice to of noteliltspeakers who talked When it comes to that she says where30 School Sisters of St (sbl~tion to poverty problems lbhe merits of the case to the superiors on the subject we all might say This is not the Francis left their convents for

If the Metropolitan Tribunal of the I Sister in the modern Church Iwas baptized into or three weekstO work in secular If the archdiocese of New York world this is not the world I was b()rn jobs - oneSister wa3 assigned

T b 1 f the Sacred into Change is a fact of life S t~ the rI una 0 Adapting a line from Charles as a newspaper reporer- IS er Roman Rota reversesthe decree Dickens to describe this contro she points out~ and we can~t keep Luke predicted a great deal the casewiil be returned to the versial post Council age Sister things as they are or say Stop more~ of this kind of liniited Tribunal of the Diocese of the World-I want to get off f i t th I w ld ]Brooklyn for adjudications upon t~ees sa~~iSTi~iSt~eth~o~r Role of Superiors ~~~re ~o di~~a~~c~i~t n~~ Ms merits it was stated times She paintedavivid ver- The role the Superiors will she said

The petition of complaint bal picture of the world that lies play in the formation of what Since her own Order founded filed by Father Peter OReilly ahead for Sisters She said it has been called The New Nun in 1812 is quite new all religious

s~f Chicago on behalf of himself would certainly be a challenging Lwuakeouattlintheed fs~roeh~ ~~s~~~t~ orders go and is the liirst comshylind the other ousted teachers one and that conventlife inthe munity founded in America charged he university which is future is certain to undergo She urged them to create a cli- without European ties the Sisshyeonducted by theVincentian many radical changes mate where Sisters can liveters of Loretto weal habits more Fathers with breach of contract community life at its best She -modern than most But itsstill

The Superior~ were told that entreated them to keep thls cli-The dispute has been marked bY d bl d ff t the dress of 1812 not 1966 so it d k t f an m Ispensa e gUl e me ec - mate free from legallsm andlitudent unrest an pIC e mg 0 th hmiddotmiddot th will soon be changed As soon I mg ese c anges IS e map survelmiddotllance Ie schoo s campuses f th f t th t th C 1 as the all-mlll Congregation

or e u ure a e ounCl A community should be a of Religious in Rome approv~sMoral Issue Fatners drew up for the Church place where there- is safety for She called the CouncII Decrees the Sisters new design that is About 30 teachers were fired fl t d f t f dff

Rost December in a dispute over the documentS ofhighest au- cop IC an sa e y or J er- Tliey have submitted one de~ign rlty We should all have ~nes apd s~fety to cultiv~te that the fathers turnEd downadministration-faculty relation- tho d t h d Sh f I the mInd of Vatlcan II and then lverSI y s ~ sal e ee s lihey thought it was too modshyships and other issues They t I th t th h ld be

b b f we c~n move Into actlon she s rongy a ere ~u r -ern Sister Luke says UWhat anwere joined y anum er 0 I t I g I fe ther teachers In a strike that told her healers - 1Jloe ~o~a IY In re 1 J~)Us 1 incredible thing for US to ask shy --uAfterall were not Trap- that we choose our own clothes has continued since January Whi~h Way psts

l she adds with a laughThe court found that tpe How will the Sisters know in Warning that the time has S t Lk tl - b

uteceniontractual controversy was not whicli direction they should come for a re-evaluation of the _ IS ~rth y e~mt~ a spiritual mattelin a canoliical move in the manyarells so(in to true meaning of community she ne oIl e d~rs wo~~ ever ~ llense of the word spiritual change cExperiment Sister told the Superiors that commu- bo~a h a sre~t a f ~gUS aild that there was no allegation Luke advises so often its almost nity doesnt mean conformity or 0 y e oCle ~ o anon ef a violation of an ecclesiastical her motto We really cannot a hotel life either or even a Lawyrs Does thIS mian that law arid that the time was not move into change without ex-lot of happy t9getherness th~ SI~ters may at last have a opportune for a decision of perimentation she says and around the television set voIce 111 the formatIon of canon moral responsibility because the we will be engaged in tremen- A ~ital new aspect of commu- la-at least th~ laws that rUI~ secular courts would first have dous experiments from now on- nity is the idea of what Sister thel~ O~derS SIster Luke deshyto determine whether there was to adapt religious life to the Luke calls sub communities- vout y opes so a breach of contractual duty times in which we live the convents immediate neigh- Its certain that the future for

The church court found as a The revisions that lie ahead borhood the parish the civic the Sisters will be a very differshymatter of law that St Johns for religious orders will bring commumty lay people 111 the ent one than anyone could have 141 NO MAINUniversity as a corporation Sisters into the mainstream of same profession as the Sister- imagined a few short years ago J~ formed under the law of the modern life Sister Luke for for instance other nurses or The Holy Father has urged them iii FALL RIVER State of w York did not have one has no doubts that this is tElachers We have allowed too the~ to move from the margin e the ecclesiastical privilege of where they belong We ought great a gap to exist between our- of life to the center of life~ 873 COUNTY demanding that suits against it to be willing to take the risks) selves and the laity she says Will the move be successful SOMERSETbe heard in an ecclesiasticalmiddot that gO along with this plunge In an interviewmiddot following her Sister Luke says We can only CDOurt into the mainstream she says talk Sister ~uke was asked how know by taking a ChanCE

Feai makes the wolf bigger than be is

Rer Bankings Already D~ne

~jI--~1 W

tt-~~gt_ri~

~j F~ p ~tl Iim F-ilNgt

~l i

ll 11 ~~

W = ~

~gtltl ~

-~ ~~ StIesaves I lot of alunle Mtime forso maily other thinlS ~i She banks by mail at Te ~ OLD R D8 KI h 7reg E AN W at about you

liii FREE mall forms ~1 The mOld Red Bank W

$ Fall River Savings Bankjilll q