12.08.66

19
The .ANCHOR fall River, Mass., Thursday, Dec. 8, 1966 $4.00 per Yeg Vol. 10, No. 49 1966 The Anchor PRICE ICc Pope' Paul Grateful Expresses Appreciation' to Bishop Connolly .For Peter's Contribution ,Rl'. REV. MSGH. .JOHN H. HACKETT,'J.C.Dfhe Most Reverend Bishop has received through the Vatican Secretariate of State the appreciation of Pope Paul 'of the Peter's Pence offerings sent to him from the faithful of the Fall River Diocese. The letter from Cardinal .. Cicognani, Secretary of State to the Holy Father, is as follows: DAL VATICANO November 23,1966 SEGRETERIA DI STATO DJ SUA SANTITA Your Excellency, The Holy Father has gracious- ly commanded me to acknowl- edge receipt of the Peter's Pence offering from the Diocese of Fall River for the year 1966. By this generous testimony of devotion and loyalty to the See of Peter, Your Excellency and the clergy, religious and laity of the Diocese ot Fall River have ,given a most commendable eK- ample of that filial solidarity w h i c h binds the faithful ,throughout the world to the centre of Catholic unity. The ,Supreme Pontiff is sincerely , grateful for such ready co-oper- 'ation, as the. ungrudging charity 'which Your Excellency's flock have contributed during the past year enables Him to carryon in fuller measure that mission of social beneficence conducted by the Holy See through the centul'ies. As a pledge of His heartfelt , gratitude for this token of filial 'love and devotion, His Holi'ness . cordially imparts to Your Excel- lency, and to all His beloved children in Christ committed to your' watchfut" pastoral care, His , paternal Apostolic Blessing. Gladly renewing the' assurance of my high esteem and cordial personal i'egard, I Yours sincerely in Christ, A. G. Card. Cicognani State Colleges "Will At'tract, Most Catholic Students BOSTON ,Cushing speculated that most Catholic students soon will be obtaining, their higher education at state universities and because of financial- difficulties besetting the Catholic educational svstem. The Boston Arch- . bishop told a meeting 'of the the press for 'money is so acute, the Cardinal added. New' England region of the "The charity dollar can never National Catholic keep up with the tax dollar," al Association's college and urii- . Cardinal Cushing commented. versity department· here there The new emphasis is on sci- was. need for the federal, gov- ence and new science buildings ernment to extend its largesse to ,have been built at Emmanuel lay teachers who choose church- ,College and Boston College here, schools in which to teach. . he said.' The Cardinal said he had' dis- "We can't be accused of con- cussed this problem with the late centrating 'solely -on the humani- President John F. Kennedy. He ,ties,"JCardinal Cushing observed. asserted: "I asked President ."But I am of the opinon' that the Kennedy to propose more aid for greatest accomplishments of the lay teachers and he told me to future will be made through the wait until his second term. spirit of 'man." "The high cost of education is He added: "Science will never forcing curtailment of· school end war; Science will never pre- programs at all levels of the vent two-thirds of the human Boston archdiocese;" the Cardinal family going to bed hungry: Sci- said. ence will never teach us to love "We have stopped building ..one ,another." elementary schools.' We can't keep good lay teachers unless . Postponement we pay them salaries comparable to other schools," he· declared. The Confraternity of Christian "Most, of our parishes are in Doctrine Leadership Day Pro- debt today. Their normal income gram scheduled for Saturday at is not enough to keep up. Our Bishop Stang High, No. Dart- own cathedral of the Holy Cross mouth, has been postponed due is losing $1,500 every Sunday to the death of Monsignor because of rising expenses." Hackett. The archdiocese is gradually I-t has been re-scheduled for selling school properties located Saturday, Dec. 17 at Bishop Cas- iio. redevelopment areas because sidy Taunton. Diocesan Laity and Religio ... ,s Mourn Death of Chancellor, Msgr. John H. Hackett Rt. Rev. Msgr. John H. Hackett, chan- cellor of the diocese of Fall River for the past seven months both vice-chancellor and episcopal secretary for six yearR, died Tuesday afternoon in St. Anpe's Hospital, Fall River. A' solemn pontifical Masi> of Requiem will be celebrated by BiRhop Connolly at St. Mary's Cathedral at 10 Saturday morning. 'l'he youngeRt priest ever appointed a Domestic Prelate in the 62-year hiRtor,\' of the diocese succumbed after an illness of several months. The late beloved chancellor was elevated to the rank of Domestic Prelate with the title of Right Reverend Monsignor on Dec. 2 last year while attending the closing ceremonies of the Second Vatican Council 'in Rome . Msgr. Hackett was one of the most highly esteemed members of the diocesan clergy. His opinions and judgments were widely sought and acknowledged by the veteran as well as the younger members of the clerg)' in and out of the diocese. The late canonist was close and always available to the laity as a curate, chaplain, Bishop's secretary and chancellor. The 40-year old prelate manifeRted his priestly zeal as he found time from the busy chancery office schedule to serve as chaplain and religion instructor at the Sacred Hea,rts Academy in Fall River. Turn to Page Three Clothing Pickup Nets 128 Tons In Diocese Rev. John F. Hogan, ad- ministrator of St. John the Baptist Church, Central Vil- lage, Catholic Welfare Direc- tor of New Bedford, and director of the Annual Clothing Drive an- nouncedtoday that this year's ,diocesan appeal netted just over "128 toris of usable 'clothing, bed- di!1g and shoes. The drive which took place the first week of November came in time to give ,immediate help to the victims "of the floods in Italy as clothes from this drive were sent to Florence and' Venice' where thousands lost all their posses- sions in floods still afflicting the area. The clothes were shipped, to the sorting and shipping center in Long Island though the cour- tesy 'If Hemingway Transporta- tion Company of New Bedford. There they were re-sorted, proc- essed apd baled and on ships headed for Italy at the first call Turn to Page Four Salvation Army Honors Prelate NEW YORK (NC)-The Sal- vation Army Association of New York has awarded its 1966 Cita- tion of Merit to Francis Cardina,l Spellman in recognition of his "half century of Christ-like ser- , vice to all mankind." The presentation of the asso- ciation's highest award was made by Commissioner William E. Davidson, commander of the Army's ll-state eastern territory, at the association's 19th annual luncheon meeting yesterday. New Bedford LaSalette's Ordination. Rev. Mr.J. Marcel La- flamme, M.S. son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Laflamme of 94 Hillman Street, New Bed- ford, will' 'be ordained to the priesthood Sunday, Dec. 18, in the' chapel 'of Our Lady of La Sale"tte International Colleee in Rome where he has· been studying for a: licentiate in the- ology at pominican Univer- sity, the Angelicum. His parents have'left for Rome to attend the ordination, accom- panied by their daughter, Sister M. Marcel of the Trinity, C,S.C.; two' aunts ,0rRev. Mr. -Laflamme, .Sister St. Julienne of the Sisters of Charity, Fall River, and Miss Rollande Laflamme of the New Turn to Page Four REV. MR. J. 1\1. LAFLAMMIE Four of Younger Priests Now In Senate Four new members of the Priests Senate of the Fall River Diocese were recently elected by respective ordination classes, The Senate, all the pastors, assistants and chaplains of the Diocese, voted at its first meeting to enlarge its group to include four priests from among the younger clergy of the Diocese.' Elected by the 1957-1961 ordi- nation group were Rev. John P. Cronin, director of St. Vincent's home, Fall River, and adminis- trator of Bernard's Parish, Assonet; and Rev. John J. Smith, assistant at St. Patrick's Church, Wareham, Elected by the 1962-1966 ordi- nation group were Rev. Thomas J. Harrington, assistant at St. Francis Xavier Church,. Hyannis, and Rev. Peter N. Graziano, as':' sistant a. Holy Name' Church, Fall River. Pontiff Rejects R'esignation LISBON (NC)-Pope Paul VI, in a personal letter, has refused the resignation of Manuel Cardi- nal Goncalves Cerejeira, 78, pa- triarch of Lisbon since 192'9. The Pope did accept the resig- nation of Bishop Manuel de Me- deiros Guerreiro of Nampula, Mozambique, who is 75. Bishop Medeiros Guerreiro has been made a titular bishop and will continue to govern the ,dioces<a of Nampula until the appoint- ment .of a successor. The resignation of BishoID Joao da Silva Campos Neves, 77 of Lamego was also refused by the Pope. ,.

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that most Catholic students soon will be obtaining,their higher education at state universities and col~eges because of financial- difficulties besetting the Catholic educational svstem. The Boston Arch- . veteran as well as the younger members Rev. Mr.J. Marcel La­ flamme, M.S. son of Mr. and Connolly at St. Mary's Cathedral at 10 ,Rl'. REV. MSGH. .JOHN H. HACKETT,'J.C.D• 'l'he youngeRt priest ever appointed a Mrs. Albert Laflamme of 94 Requiem will be celebrated by BiRhop $4.00 per Yeg

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Page 1: 12.08.66

The .ANCHOR

fall River, Mass., Thursday, Dec. 8, 1966 $4.00 per YegVol. 10, No. 49 ~ 1966 The Anchor PRICE ICc

Pope' Paul Grateful Expresses Appreciation' to Bishop Connolly

.For Peter's P~nce Contribution

,Rl'. REV. MSGH. .JOHN H. HACKETT,'J.C.D•

fhe Most Reverend Bishop has received through the Vatican Secretariate of State the appreciation of Pope Paul

'of the Peter's Pence offerings sent to him from the faithful of the Fall River Diocese.

The letter from Cardinal .. Cicognani, Secretary of State to

the Holy Father, is as follows:

DAL VATICANO November 23,1966

SEGRETERIA DI STATO DJ SUA SANTITA Your Excellency,

The Holy Father has gracious­ly commanded me to acknowl­edge receipt of the Peter's Pence offering from the Diocese of Fall River for the year 1966.

By this generous testimony of devotion and loyalty to the See of Peter, Your Excellency and the clergy, religious and laity of the Diocese ot Fall River have

,given a most commendable eK­

ample of that filial solidarity w h i c h binds the faithful

,throughout the world to the centre of Catholic unity. The

,Supreme Pontiff is sincerely , grateful for such ready co-oper­'ation, as the. ungrudging charity 'which Your Excellency's flock have contributed during the past year enables Him to carryon in fuller measure that mission of social beneficence conducted by the Holy See through the centul'ies.

As a pledge of His heartfelt , gratitude for this token of filial 'love and devotion, His Holi'ness . cordially imparts to Your Excel­lency, and to all His beloved children in Christ committed to your' watchfut" pastoral care, His

, paternal Apostolic Blessing. Gladly renewing the' assurance

of my high esteem and cordial personal i'egard, I r~main

Yours sincerely in Christ, A. G. Card. Cicognani

State Colleges "Will At'tract, Most Catholic Students

BOSTON (NC)~Richard C~irdinai ,Cushing speculated that most Catholic students soon will be obtaining, their higher education at state universities and col~eges because of financial- difficulties besetting the Catholic educational svstem. The Boston Arch- . bishop told a meeting 'of the the press for 'money is so acute,

the Cardinal added. New' England region of the "The charity dollar can never National Catholic Education~ keep up with the tax dollar," al Association's college and urii- . Cardinal Cushing commented. versity department· here there The new emphasis is on sci­was. need for the federal, gov- ence and new science buildings ernment to extend its largesse to ,have been built at Emmanuel lay teachers who choose church- ,College and Boston College here, r~lated schools in which to teach. . he said.'

The Cardinal said he had' dis- "We can't be accused of con­cussed this problem with the late centrating 'solely -on the humani­President John F. Kennedy. He ,ties,"JCardinal Cushing observed. asserted: "I asked President ."But I am of the opinon' that the Kennedy to propose more aid for greatest accomplishments of the lay teachers and he told me to future will be made through the wait until his second term. spirit of 'man."

"The high cost of education is He added: "Science will never forcing curtailment of· school end war; Science will never pre­programs at all levels of the vent two-thirds of the human Boston archdiocese;" the Cardinal family going to bed hungry: Sci­said. ence will never teach us to love

"We have stopped building ..one ,another." elementary schools.' We can't keep good lay teachers unless . Postponementwe pay them salaries comparable to other schools," he· declared. The Confraternity of Christian

"Most, of our parishes are in Doctrine Leadership Day Pro­debt today. Their normal income gram scheduled for Saturday at is not enough to keep up. Our Bishop Stang High, No. Dart­own cathedral of the Holy Cross mouth, has been postponed due is losing $1,500 every Sunday to the death of Monsignor because of rising expenses." Hackett.

The archdiocese is gradually I-t has been re-scheduled for selling school properties located Saturday, Dec. 17 at Bishop Cas­iio. redevelopment areas because sidy Hi~h, Taunton.

Diocesan Laity and Religio...,s Mourn Death of Chancellor, Msgr. John H. Hackett

Rt. Rev. Msgr. John H. Hackett, chan­cellor of the diocese of Fall River for the past seven months ~ind both vice-chancellor and episcopal secretary for six yearR, died Tuesday afternoon in St. Anpe's Hospital, Fall River. A' solemn pontifical Masi> of Requiem will be celebrated by BiRhop Connolly at St. Mary's Cathedral at 10 Saturday morning.

'l'he youngeRt priest ever appointed a Domestic Prelate in the 62-year hiRtor,\' of the diocese succumbed after an illness of several months.

The late beloved chancellor was elevated to the rank of Domestic Prelate with the title of Right Reverend Monsignor on Dec. 2 last year while attending the closing ceremonies of the Second Vatican Council

'in Rome.

Msgr. Hackett was one of the most highly esteemed members of the diocesan clergy. His opinions and judgments were widely sought and acknowledged by the veteran as well as the younger members of the clerg)' in and out of the diocese. The late canonist was close and always available to the laity as a curate, chaplain, Bishop's secretary and chancellor.

The 40-year old prelate manifeRted his priestly zeal as he found time from the busy chancery office schedule to serve as chaplain and religion instructor at the Sacred Hea,rts Academy in Fall River.

Turn to Page Three

Clothing Pickup Nets 128 Tons In Diocese

Rev. John F. Hogan, ad­ministrator of St. John the Baptist Church, Central Vil­lage, Catholic Welfare Direc­tor of New Bedford, and director of the Annual Clothing Drive an­nouncedtoday that this year's

,diocesan appeal netted just over "128 toris of usable 'clothing, bed­

di!1g and shoes. The drive which took place the first week of November came in time to give

,immediate help to the victims "of the floods in Italy as clothes from this drive were sent to Florence and' Venice' where thousands lost all their posses­sions in floods still afflicting the area.

The clothes were shipped, to the sorting and shipping center in Long Island though the cour­tesy 'If Hemingway Transporta­tion Company of New Bedford. There they were re-sorted, proc­essed apd baled and on ships headed for Italy at the first call

Turn to Page Four

Salvation Army Honors Prelate

NEW YORK (NC)-The Sal­vation Army Association of New York has awarded its 1966 Cita­tion of Merit to Francis Cardina,l Spellman in recognition of his "half century of Christ-like ser­

, vice to all mankind."

The presentation of the asso­ciation's highest award was made by Commissioner William E. Davidson, commander of the Army's ll-state eastern territory, at the association's 19th annual luncheon meeting yesterday.

New Bedford LaSalette's Ordination. Rev. Mr.J. Marcel La­

flamme, M.S. son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Laflamme of 94 Hillman Street, New Bed­ford, will' 'be ordained to the priesthood Sunday, Dec. 18, in the' chapel 'of Our Lady of La Sale"tte International Colleee in Rome where he has· been studying for a: licentiate in the­ology at t~e pominican Univer­sity, the Angelicum.

His parents have'left for Rome to attend the ordination, accom­panied by their daughter, Sister M. Marcel of the Trinity, C,S.C.; two' aunts ,0rRev. Mr. -Laflamme, .Sister St. Julienne of the Sisters of Charity, Fall River, and Miss Rollande Laflamme of the New

Turn to Page Four

REV. MR. J. 1\1. LAFLAMMIE

Four of Younger Priests Now In Senate

Four new members of the Priests Senate of the Fall River Diocese were recently elected by th~ir respective ordination classes, The Senate, all the pastors, assistants and chaplains of the Diocese, voted at its first meeting to enlarge its group to include four priests from among the younger clergy of the Diocese.'

Elected by the 1957-1961 ordi­nation group were Rev. John P. Cronin, director of St. Vincent's home, Fall River, and adminis­trator of S~. Bernard's Parish, Assonet; and Rev. John J. Smith, assistant at St. Patrick's Church, Wareham,

Elected by the 1962-1966 ordi­nation group were Rev. Thomas J. Harrington, assistant at St. Francis Xavier Church,. Hyannis, and Rev. Peter N. Graziano, as':' sistant a. Holy Name' Church, Fall River.

Pontiff Rejects R'esignation

LISBON (NC)-Pope Paul VI, in a personal letter, has refused the resignation of Manuel Cardi­nal Goncalves Cerejeira, 78, pa­triarch of Lisbon since 192'9.

The Pope did accept the resig­nation of Bishop Manuel de Me­deiros Guerreiro of Nampula, Mozambique, who is 75. Bishop Medeiros Guerreiro has been made a titular bishop and will continue to govern the ,dioces<a of Nampula until the appoint­ment .of a successor.

The resignation of BishoID Joao da Silva Campos Neves, 77 of Lamego was also refused by the Pope.

,.

Page 2: 12.08.66

2 ":''''f;~[V:~ I'! ·Sing New' M~ss __--""'_~_-'-'..L-.,~~..:-----~--=-----"--'--....:.;.--'_:_,..

1, ;'In Providence '-Fish Sti1'1 Very Po'pular J The newly eomposed' "Mas!!!

for Joy" by C. Alexander PeleoFor Meo,t.on~Fridays quin will be heard for the firsi$ time at a Cathedral Festival ~WASHINGTON (NC)-A. spot change-that in addition, to fish, be held at 8:15 Wednesday nigh\check across the nation in the meat was served, as it was in JDec. 14 in the Cathedral of s£).wake of the first meat-on-Friday past years for non-Catholic stu­Peter and Paul, Providence. M1?ofor Catholics under the new dents. ' Peloquin is music director at thO,Church rule disclosed fish deal­ Officials of fish and seafood cathedral and is also director ClfIers didn't fare too 'badly. associations have said that dealers

In advance of the big day, Dec. can 'look for a drop in sales dur­ the internationally known Pele=> q~in Chorale.2, fish and seafood dealers were ing the ea~ly Fridays under the

expecting a drop of 10 per cen~ new Church rule: They point The Mass, dedicated to Amerfl., or more in sales. But the habits out that in Canada where the can youth, was written, notoo of years are not easily discarded., meat-on-Friday rule went- into the composer, "to shpw 'too the check-up Showed, and gener­ 'effect earlier in the year, sales Strength of joy in the Church.t!l ally it was business-as-usual for dipped 25 per cent but since The melody is folk, harmon... the fish dealers; have recovered. They said the "cany the Mass Is' jazz and !btl

For instance, in the great sea­ same conditions might be ex-. rhythm is rock and roll., food, city of Boston, waterfront peeted in the United states.

Providing guitar backgrouni5ldealers reported no' noticeable for the new Mass will be t\WlBlump in business. One popular Prelates Revise Catholic priests, two Anglicalliiseafood restaurant reported the PAPAL AWARD: Lt. Col. Eleazor Parmly of Gaine.s­ priests and a layman. The 400Friday sales were up 2,') per cent Penance Laws ville, Fla., a convert, receives the "Benemerenti" medal aJ.ld voice festival choir will be mad~ over those of a year ago. scroll fl-om the visiting Deputy Chief of Chaplains, Brig. up of the Peloquin 'Chorale, anG!

0n the other side of the coun­ COLOMBO (NC) - Ceylon's. 1 f f D M' f try, in another city where sea-, bishops have ruled that the.obli- Gen. (Msgr.) Francis L. Sampson, e t, 0 .es omes, or students from Boston College"

Providence College, St. Mary'l!)food is popular, San Francisco, gation to abstain from meat on recognition of 'his participation in Catholic religious pro­Academy-Bay View, St. Xavier'1Vdealers and restaurant owners Friday can be fulfilled in luture grams for the military in Vetnam. Academy, the Rliode Island Boys"reported no falling off in busi­ by "an equivalent act of charity Choir and' St. Charles Higlliness. or prayer." Sebool. Also participating wimJIn their second joint pastoralBut here and there~ a drop-off Grave~ Duty be professional singers and IDletter in less than a month, tbein fish and seafood sales was 50-member orchestra.bishops also proclaimed that

restaurant operators reported only those between 21 and 00 Judge Explains Seriou~' Responsibility , Fan River Members running out of steaks during the years of age shall be bound by Jil addition to the Mass, ;Bach'1l

reported. In Indianapolis, a few

lunch period. In Buffalo, N. Y'; the law of fasting and abstinence Rn ·Sentencing Criminals "'Sleepers Awake" and Britten" fish sales were reported down on Ash' Wednesday and Good . .... 1

BAY CITY (NC)-The grave sentencing judge 1n a cnmma "St. N«:holas" will be heard.10 per cent. . Friday. , . '.

The pastoral said the bishops responsibility which falls to a case has four alternatIves-JlD­ , Peloquin morale members frODll . But brisk business-as-usual in

J'urist in sentencing a person . prisonment, fine, suspended sen­especially recommend giving, d d Fall River are Cecile CumminBflothe Friday fish line were the alms to the poor iIi place of ab- convicted of crime was outlined . tence and probation, he ad e " reports from places like Mi,lmi, Chal'lotte Lavoie, Jeanni'ne st.

stinence on ordinary Fridays. l>y Circuit Court Judge Leon R.' In imposing sentef;lc~, JudgeFla., Washington, D. C., Chicago Laurent, Horace Travassos, NOi'­Other acts listed hi a note at the Dardas here in Michigan in a Dardas "said a jurist must con- ..and St. Louis. . end of the pastoral '.included a talk at a Holy Name Society sider "what sentence will best manti Gingras and B~rbaro

At La Salle College, conducted substantial donation to parish meeting. ' . protect society" and "'what sen": .Owen. Miss Cummings' and Miss by the Christian Brothers in charities, and abStaining from "There'is no more anxious task Philadelphia, where there have smoking, drinking or movies and in society than that of a sentenc­been some protests· over food giving the money thus saved to iog .judge--and very few moreservice, the cafeteria operator the poor. important ones," the jurist said.averted unpleasantness by serv­ The bishops said the period of His advice to parents foring meat .as well as fish. Lent retains its penitential char- avoiding the pitfalls of crime

1'he general report from II aeter and declared that "the was: "Know w~o your children number of other Catholic uni­ spirit of penance must animate are with at all tImes-and know versities and colleges was no the life of a Christian more who are their friends~"

llirongly during this period." Justice has come a Jong way Tbe pastoral letter began with· since the day~ o.f Commol L.awMass Ordo , an, elucidation of the continued~, when 80 convIctIon for steahng

importance attached ,by the ealled f~r cutting off t~e .hand ofFRlDAY~Mass of previous Sun­. flay. HI Class. Violet. Mass ' €hlH'ch to penance.' the thIef, and convICtion lor Proper; No Glory or Creed: \/laliphemy called for cutting out Common Preface. . tbe offendel"s tongue, the juristOrdination in Rome

SATURDAY-M'aSsof 'previous' said. But tbe sentencing judge con-Sunday. DI Class. Violet. Mass For Ed. Krause. Jr.

stantly mU~lt keep in mind thatProper; No,. G~ry or Creed; NOTRE DAME (NC)'-'---Edward be is dealing with "liberty, our2nd Prayer St. Melchiades, C. ,Krause, C.S.C., son ,of NO,be most sacred. gift under ~ andPope and Martyr: CommoJi" Dame University athletics diree­ the Constitution."Preface., ' ,tor Ed "Moose" KraWle,, will be Judge Dardas said jurists are SUNDAY-Gaudete Sunday, nt, ordained ·to the priesthood i·n the .well aware of the. current crit!-:

Sunday of Advent. I Class. Congregati0l! of ~oly, Cross cism ,that some sentences are,Rose or Violet. Mass Proper; saturday, Dec. 17 in tbe ehapel, too .severe, others t{)() lenient. ' No Preface' ofGlory;' Creed; of Holy CrOSs College iiI Rome. The sentencing judge, must be ' Trinity. ' Father Krause will offer bis , concerned with a deterrence of

MONDAY-M ass of previous first Mass the following day in crime and rehabilitation of the Sunday. III Class. Violet. Mall8 the chapel of the Holy 'Cross criminal, the jurist said. The Proper; No Glory :cr Creed; Fathers and Brothers generalate Common Preface. ' in Rome. He will return to the Toys Needed

U. S. to offer his first solemnTUESDAY-St. Lucy, Virgin and South End Council; Fall RiverMass in Sacred Heart parish hereMartyr. III Class. R~. Mass Knights of Columbus, requestsnext July. ' Proper; Glory; 2nd Prayer of the public to leave unwantedFather Krause' was born Sept.previous Sunday; no Creed; toys at any fire station,Knights11, 1940, in Worcester, where hisCommon Preface. will repair the toys for distri ­father was football line coachWEDNESDAY-Ember Wednes­ bution to needy children Idand head basketball coach at theday: in Advent. II Class. Vio­ Christmas.Jesuit-operated Holy Cross Col-Jet. Mass Proper; No Glory or - lege. He attended grammarCreed; Couunon Preface. No school and high school in Southfast or Abstinence. Bend before joining the HolyTHURSDAY - Mass 'of previous Cross Fathers at Notre Dame

Sunday. II Class. 'Violet. Mass University in 1958. Proper; No Glory or Cl'eed; Preface.

Necrology DEC. ZO .

.Rev.'· Manuel S. Trav8ss08,fORTY HOURS 1953, Pastor, Espirito Santo, Fall River. 'DEVOTION

Dec. 11-8t. Anthony of Pa­dua, Fall River.

St. Mary, Fairhaven. Dec. 18--0ur Lady of Health,

Fall River. St. Louis, Fall River.

THE lIIlCHOI , SecollCl Class POStage Pula at Fall RI_~ ,

Mass Dub Ilshlh evel) Thuradn) at ~lu Itlghlano 'IvenU8" Fall fllvel 'Moss: 02722 ;)y. ttle Ilat/loJlc ..res. tile Diocese 01 FilIIen.

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tence 'wil accomplish the most" Owens are in charge of ticket in behalf of the defendant. 8a-les f&r the Fall River area.

When circumstances warrant, Judge Dardas continued, he pre­fers to place a defendant on pro­bation. He said this is less ex.;; pensive than imprisonment; the offender is given opportunity to make restitution' the offender's life can be resha~ed;and the im::. paet of prison life where there' illl a oonstant hatred of s6eiei.y" ill avoided. ", '

"Imprisonment is the' only ~ " lotion,jn some cases;'l' Jud,ge Bardas, said. "With some' dan­gerQI>lS' individuals there' ,is riel eholc,e })ut to put'.the offender' away. We have to ,protect'yoll--'"' , aut we must ,avoid being 'vindie"" . tive." .. ' J <

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Page 3: 12.08.66

.. THE ANCHOR-' 3 Thurs., Dec. 8, W66

Jesuit Author Defends Pop'e

NEW YORK (NC)-An Israeli author and journalist character­ized "The Deputy," the contro­'versial play by German author Rolf Hochhuth produced in this country three years ago, as tendentious in its selectivity and patchy facts."

The play criticized Pope Pius XII for failing to do all he could to aid the Jews during the nazi persecution of World War II.

Speaking at a press conference here at the Institute of Human Relations of the American Jew­ish Comrtlittee, Pinchas E. La­pide, a former Israeli consul in Milan, Italy, stated that· '~the al­leged silence of Pius XII was never as complete or as austere as the post-Hochhutch silence."

Lapide, who is active in the Israeli interreligious movement, ' is in the U. S. lecturing and making arrangements for publi ­cation of his book, "The Last Three Popes and the Jews." He explained he could not have written a book about Pius XII alone without including his pre­decessor, Pius XI, who he feels was "Europe's most zealous anti ­nazi", or his successor, John XXIII.

Detroit f?ar!sh Has Mass Bell Latin

DETROIT (NC)':'-A regularly scheduled Mass in, Latin, in­tended primarily for visitors 'to Detroit "who would feel more at'''We no longer have the per­ PJLAN NEW SOUTH YARMOUTH CHURCH: Arrangements are complete for the home ~ith it," has been inaugu­Sonnel," the Archbishop con­

tinued. "Sisters also will tell you eonstructio~ of a new St. Pius X Church in South Yarmouth on Cape Cod. The new brick rated by Archbishop John F. Dearden of Detroit.that. Our priests at the present edifice, "which will seat 1180, will be erected north of the present church on Station

time are completely unable to The Mass will be offered inAvenue in South Yarmouth. meet your demands. - St. Aloysius' Church in down­

"Lay people must not only town Detroit a~joining the arch­diocesan chancery office.

1Zecognize the for priests Solemn Pont=f:cal Mass onneedbut there must be recognition of II II In establishing the Latin Mass,Saturdaythe tremendous vacancy they'J;e the archbishop said he hoped to

provide for the needs of touristsgoing to fill. The best influen~ Bishop Conn.oily to Officiate _at CatheCiralin reaching students is fellow who would have difficulty in students. We need a lot of help Continued from Page 'One sharing meaningfully in the was appointed Secretary to the Burns, thurifer; Rev. Thomas E,kom our lay people." English liturgy.I

Urges' . Newman Chaplains Seek Ai'd of. fL~ fity

MILWAUKEE (NC) Archbishop William E~ Coua­lins of Milwaukee told New­man chaplains here they are "missing the point" unless they make greater attempts to gain the help of the laity in their apostolate.

The archbishop made the com­ment when two priests requested more members of the clergy be assigned as fulltime chaplains at state universities. At present only two priests serve fulltime as Newman chaplains in Wiscon-' sin.

Thirteen chaplains reported to Archbishop Cousins at· the Uni­versityof Wisconsin-Milwaukee Newman Center as part of Ii national program to examine and . reevaluate the' Newman aposto­late. Some members of the par­ish clergy also attended.

Two priests, Father Raymond H. Kriege, full-time chaplain at the center, and Father Thomas Schmitz, a curate at St. James parish, Kenosha, suggested an add;tional priest be assJgned to the center, and that two more be appointed to serve schools in the Kenosha-Racine area by 1972 and four by 1980. '

Lack lP'ersonneU "A good bit of this is projec­

tion," Archbishop Cousins re­plied, "but all of you are miss­mg the point. You should think m terms of lay men and women because somewhere there has to be a move on the part Of the laity.

His chancery p6sition also Bishop in 1958. He received his Morrissey, book bearer; Rev. Use of Facilities 'broUght the Monsignor to all the degree, of Doctor of Canon Law Manuel Ferreira, candle bearer;

When some priests aske4,. parishes and' institutions 'of the from Catholic University on Rev. Peter Graziano, gremiale'about the advisability -oJ using. diocese as he served as diocesan June 7, 1959. bearer; Rev. Vincent Diaferio, facilities owned by other denom- Master of Ceremonies 'for pon­ The dissertation written by mitre bearer. inations, Archbishop Cousins . tifical ceremonies., the late chancellor for his doe­ The Masters of Ceremonies forcounseled long-term rentals in In addition, the late Msgr. torate was entitled: "The Con­ the funeral Mass will' be Rev.preference to verbal agreements Hackett also ,·devoted his, kind ce~t of Public Order." . ' John P. Driscoll and Rev. Paul flo use other churches. and priestly' talents to the New- The beloved Monsignor leaves F. McCarrick.

"With a Methodist minister it man Club members as· chaplain one brother, Dr. Robert S. The ell1pgist for the Mass formight be an act of benevolence at tlhe former Bradford Durfee . Hackett, Fall River;' an aunt, Msgr. Hackett will be Most Rev.flo let you use his church. But if Textile Institute in Fall River Mrs. Harold L: Creamer, Fall James L. Connolly.a minister moves, you don't before that educational institu. ­ River; and several nieces and The Office of the Dead, to beknow how his successor might Uon was merged with the New nephews. chanted on Friday afternoon,f<eel about it," the' archbishop 'Bedford Institute to form the

- Officers of Mass will be presided oVer by Mostexplained. nucleus for the new Southeast­ Rev. James J. Gerrard, Auxil­Assisting B ish 0 p Connolly,. Father Kriege asked what em. Massachusetts Technological iary -Bishop of Fall River. The oSaturday morning, will be Rt.eould be done with the liturgy Institute. chanters of the lessons will be:'Rev. Msgr. Raymond T. Consi­to "make it come alive" through Msgr. Hackett also served for Rt. Rev. Msgr. Daniel Shalloo,dine, Assistant Priest; Rev. Cor­adaptation to the mentality of the past'13 years as an official Rev. Lester Hull and Bishopnelius O'Neill and Rev. Francisthe students. Archbishop Cousins of the Diocesan Marriage Tribu­ Gerrard.Connors, Deacons of Honor.:replied that experimentation nal. On Sept. 28, 1953, he was The deacon of the Mass willwith the liturgy is forbidden by appointed Notary. He became be Rev. Reginald M. Barrette,decree. "Any experiments must Defender of the Bond on Nov. Circular Churchwhile Rev. Daniel Freitas willbe' approved in Rome,'" he said. 28, 1958 and has also served as CEDAR RAPIDS (NC)-Theserve as subdeacon.,Synodal Judge. ,first circular Catholic church to

The late Chancellor was born ·be constructed' in Iowa was dedi­Other servers at the Pontifical

Requiem Mass will be: Rev. Jo­UIr~ies All to Work in .Fall River 011 May 12,. 1926, seph' Powers and Rev.' ·Roger cated at All Saints parish here. the son of the late Dr. John H. The church, constructed at a cost'F©Hi' WorM Unity Poirier, acolytes; Rev. EdwardHackett and the late Madeline of some $650,000, accommodates

SUDBURY (NC) - Christians Mary Martin; graduated from 850 people, all of whom can beshould recognize the need for Monsignor Coyle High School, ~®W R@fi';rtemetl'il~S seated within nine rows from theand work toward world unity, Taunton; ~ttellded st. Charles altar.Archbishop Sergio Pignedoli, College, Catonville, Maryland; ~x[p)®ctedJ irrJW'@~~nd apostolic delegate in Can~da, and studied Philosop.hy and \ BONN' (NC) - The Church'sBaid, here. Theology at St. John's Seminary, worldwide emphasis on retiring'

Cultivation of "the spirit of Brighton. bishops and priests at the age of llmiversality," he said, is the first Monsignor Hackett was or­ 75 will have little effect in duty of Christians in today's dained on June 3, 1950, by Poland, according to a Polish. world. They must become, 'he 'Bishop Connolly in St. Mary's trade. union publication received said, "less and less Canadians, or Cathedral, Fall River. here in Germany.Americans, or English, or Ital ­ Upon ordination, he was as­ The periodical, Glos Pracy,fan" and "more 'and more citizens signed as assistant at St. Thomas examining the ages of the coun­~ the world." More Church, Somerset. He try's bishops,. finds only seven

"This is what is said in the remained there until the Fall who are over 75. The youthful Bible," Archbishop Pignedoli of 1955 when he went to the character of the Polish body of said, "God created a unique School of Canon Law at Catholic priests is seen in statistics show­world-one world. It is we men University, Washington, D. C. ing that only 930 of the total of who created the countries, the Having returned from Catholic 17,000 are over.70, and that 11,000 thbes and the people." Vniversity, Monsignor Hackett are below the age of 50..

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Page 4: 12.08.66

4 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs., Dec. 8,'1966

OUR' JLADY OIF THIE CAJ!>IE, BRIEWS'II'lElIt

The parish will host all Sisters of Cape Cod at 2 Sunday after­noon, Dec. 11 in the church' hall. for a day of recollection. Con­ference master will be Rev. Ar­mand Proulx, M.S., superior of La Salette College.in Worcester. Dinner will be served by women of the parish. .

Choir rehearsal for Chrlstmas Midnight Mass will be held for girls on Monday nights at 8:30 and for women on· Tuesday nights at 7:30. Men' arid . boys choir will,rehearse at 7:30 Friday night, Dec. 9 at La Sa.1ette Sem~

inary, East Brewster.

ST. JOSEPlIll. FAJLJL RIVlElIt

CYO seniors will attend a Communion 'breakfast ,following 9:30 Mass Suoday morning, Dec. 11. Tickets are available from Thomas Thompson and Ellen Charbonneau.

Members of the Men's Club and Worrien's Guild will elect 'lep~esentatives to the parish coun<;il this week. The guild will hold. its monthly meeting' follow­ing 7:30 Mass tonight. A Christmas party will fe.atul'e the program.

ST. JEAN BAPTISTE. FALL RIVER

The Couricil of Catholic WOmal

will hold its annual Christmas party jointly with the Holy Name Saciety at 7 Saturday night, Dec. 10 at Red Angus restaurant, Tiverton. Louis Bouchard and Mrs. Roger Caron are co-chair­men.

Clothing 'Drive Contii1Ued from Page One

for clothes for those in need there. .

The breakdown of clothes by diocesan areas is as follows:

'Fall River Area - 51,000 ,pOunds.

New Bedford Area -~O;OOO

f)Qunds. Taunton Area--45,.OOO pounds. Cape Cod A re a -.45,500

pOunds. Somerset-Swansea .A rea ­

21~000 pounds. :Attleboro A rea - 18,000

'. pounds. 'North. Attleboro Area-lQ;060

.pounds. Mansfield Area-6,500 pounds.

Rome' Ordination Continued from Page One

Bedford address, and two cous­ins, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bel'nier of' Delmas. Sask.

Born in Delmas, Rev.' Mr. Laflamme was graduated from Sacred Heart School, New Bed­ford and studied at La Salette seminaries in.Enfield" N. H. East Brewster and- -Center Harbor, N~ H., completing his studies in

, philosophy and theology at the major seminary in Attleboro.

,He will return ~o New Bedfot'd iii July to celebrate his li'irst· Solemn Mass at Sacred Heart Church.

Cardinal Spellinan .To Visit· Vietnam

NEW YORK (NC) - Francis Cardinal Spellman, al'chbishop of New York and Military Vicar of the U. S. armed forces, will

. again visit the troops in South Vietnam during the Christmas season.

,It will be his 16th consecutive Christmas visit with U. S. armt..>d forces abroad and his 21st over­seas trip .as spiritual shepher.<J <)f Catholics in the U. S. armt.."<I. forces, it was announced bere.

Details concerning the itiner­.ry of the 77-year-old prelate are. now bo.ing wot'ked out, it was ,announced.

lHlOJLS{ IitIEJ!)IlElElWlElIt, CIHlA1rIHlAlW

The Holy Name Society will, hold a breakfast meeting follow­ing 8 o'clock Mass Sunday morn­ing, Dec. 11.

SACRED HEARTS, NORTH FAIRHAVEN

Ladies of St. Anne who have made Christmas party reserva­tions will meet in the schoolyard at 5:45 Sunday evening, Dec. 11 for payment of reservations and transportation to ·the. event at Town and Country House, Free­town. One dollar gifts will be APPOINTJE:E: Father Ed- " exchanged. .'

win Neill, member of.' the

c,;:ompany of St. Paul, a sec-HOJLY GlllIOS'll', ular institute, has joined theA'JI"ll'JLlElROllW staff "of the U.S. CatholicMembers of the Women's

• Cf)hference (fOl'merly Nat-Guild will receive corporate Communion at the 7 o'clock eve­ ional Catholic. \Velfare Con­

oning Mass to~ight. A Christmas fere.nce) , Washington; where party, featuring a buffet, wilt be_

he will serve as sec.retary toheld in the parish hall immedi­ately after Mass. Bishop. Paul F. Tanner, gt'm-'

Members of the Guild -.and , eral secr~tary of tlle Bishops' . their guests will then ·participate ~ecretariat. NCPhoto. in a Yankee Gift Sw,ap.

Mrs. James Doyle.and 'Mrs. :AI-. fred Elshantare serving .as -00'" Says Code 'paves chairmenofreserv.atioas.

Parents un Do:rk NEWARK (NC) - A cautionNational Unity .about the ofeffectiveness the

new movie production code wasAma%es -EditOl' voiced here by the Cht'istian.· Communications .Apostolate <)f

visiting African journalist -ob­ the Newark archdiocese. served: "The most-striking ,first

NEW ORLEANS (NC) --' A

In its monthly newsletter, impression of the United States Communications Report, t h -e . is that it is so truly oi1e nation." apostolate said parents will "still

be in the dark" about the suit ­;Justin Mendy of Senegal, ability. of certain movies forWest Afpca,' .associateeditor -of vi'ewing by children.' An un­Afrique Nouvelle, who stopped signed editorial in the agency'shere during a two mO,nth visit newsletter said the labeling ofin the United States, said Africa' certain films as "Suggested foris a continent of more than three Mature Audiences," does I1<It,dozen countries, marked ·byal­solve the problem,'most countless varieties in lan­

"The lack of this tag," it said,guage, race, religion, customs, and social and economic rback_ could mean that the film is ap­

proved lor children or simplygrounds. that the producer is not a partyTh~ weekly paper with which to the ¢ '" ., classification system."

he' 'is associated serves eight Only merobers of the Motiensmall' countries that formerly Pictur.e Association of America

made up French West Aft:ica. subicribe to the corle, not theirAfrique 'Nouvelle -is Catholic in

subsidiaries or independent andorigin and is, headed ·by a Cath­ foreign, film makers. .olic layman, Simon Kiba, but it Furthermore, the editorial said,devotes only a fraction ·of its the "mature: audience" line isreporting to religious news. mandatory only :in first-run, ads.

The eight bishops of the new "Anything- beyond that would ·be o nations on the west coast ·of out of control of the code au­Africa .are all native' Africans, thority," the editorial said, and he said. They continue to spon­ so "parents would still be in the sor Afrique Nouvele to involve dark at the gras:; roots level." the Church in the lives of the faithful, who form ,about H) per cent of the population. Lenflets' 0111 P,n.rked

Cars Bring Fine .Ask World Boycott CmCAGO (NC) - A Baptist

rninister here has been foundOf Passion Play guilty and lined ~i25 fOf violatingNEW YORK (NC)-A' world the city's anti-littering ordinance

boycott' of the next presentation by placing religious tracts under of' the Oberammergau Passion the windshield wipers oJ parkedPlay, schedu1ed for 1970, was cars.

;ealled for here .by the American The Rev. 'Vernon C. Lyons,Jewish Congress, which main- ­ pastor of the Ashburn Baptisttairis that the play is "intensely Church, was convicted in Circuit <Inti-Semitic." Court and denied a motion f~r',a

Attention has been directed' to new trial. 'He had been arrested the play by the mid-October in June for p1acing leaflets quot- . resignation of its director, Hans ing ,the' Bible under the wind­Schwaighofer, after a rejection shield wipers of cal'S in a city ­of his efforts to eUmi nate what parking lot. he called an,ti-Semitism, in its The minister's lawyer SCiid that presentation. S c·h w a i g h 0 f·e r tte clergyman's fr'eedom of reli ­sought to substitute'.'a new text gilH1 had been denied .ane' that for the one used during the past he will appeal to the Illinois century, but he was told 'by the Supreme Court. Oberammergau council that most of the villagers wanted to' keep the old text. Zulu Decree'

The Jewish organization was ,PRETORIA (NC J - The Soutb joined by 10 authors an'd actors" Africa11 Bishops' ConferCilcehas including Arthur Miller. Alfred published the Second" Vatican Kaziri a-hd Eli Wallach; in the' Council's Decree on Ecumenism appeal, which said that "as al't ­ in the Zulu language. This is the ists and performel:s ourselves,: first document to be soli-ans-· we must noth~ ~;l",nt Whf>l, the lated, ::. ~~ .. ~-version' will ·be arts are useli to ~xalt ·hatred." I?ublished later.

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PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A .of tlle happiness for which ~ Roman Catholic:. bishop, a Negro, '..created them - which illl;ludes a .

. said here that integration has.- cer~ain amount· of happiness. become the white American's problem.

Die-hard white segregationists . are faced witb the problem 00 how they can salvage their seJf­respect .after so many decades (If disrespecting a rather large group of their fellow men, Auxiliary Bishop Harold R. Perry,' S.V.D., of New Orleans stated. But the problem of the Negro, he continued, is ·how ..to fight the battle that must be fought and yet remain truly Christian."

Bishop Perry preached the homily ata Mass sponsored here' by Archbishop John J: Krol's ,Commission on Human Rela­tions. About 2,000 persons parti ­cipated, in the Mass at the Cathedral of Saints Peter and Paul, presided over by Arch- .• bishop Casimir Morcillo of Madrid who' is visiting Arch­bishop Krol in Philadelphia.

"We must not win recognition ·of <our rights at the risk ,<)f losing, -our soul," Bishop Perry said. "'Yet neither may we f<)neit .oar right!> ..as if this were .a ~­~timi <)f: -oUr' -salvation.

'"'On ·,the contrary," he M­tinued, ,"the very meaning ef rights _ entails salvation, 'Since human rights ... facilitate mal'S

.arriving at his goal, God Him': ·self. •

"The upper.most question should not be' so 'much how we shall attain our rights .as how we shall defend God's right'to invite all men to take possession

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,. gro. The concerns of Negroes in

connection with integration in­elude, according to Bishop Perry, "how' to' be humble without being obsequious, how 'to hate

• injustice without hating unjust men, and bow to .fight for jus­tice, without losing charity."

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5

675-7829

.Vatican Renders Decisions On Mass, Communion" Si,te

VATICAN CITY (NC) -The proper place t9 distribute Holy Communion to the faithful is still at the edge of the sanctuary area and special care must be taken in accepting a sung MasS 8tipend for a concelebrated Mass. These were the latest decisions of the postconciliar liturgy com­mission and the Congregation of tile Council.

The current issue of "Notl­tiae," the Latin publication of the Vatican Commission for the Implementation of the Council's Constitution on the Liturgy, put~

forth the following opinions. "It d~s not seem proper to de­

part from the traditional custom according to which the faithful offer gifts (for Mass) -at the gates of the sanctuary and there ReCeive Communion," the deci­sion stated. References were made to the Roman Ritual, tit. V, lllos.2-4.

The opinion-"not proper"­was given in answer to questions l!'aised, by a custom growing in some places of making a "table" fur the distribution of Holy Communion. This attempt, it was ¢hought, would "highlight par­ticipation in the same sacrifice'!!

Under such' circumstances; the Jiaithful would receive Holy Comll'!union from the priest llcross the altar while he stands iin the S;8P1e' place in which he @lelebrates Mass. The Vatican Commission favors the reception of Communion. by the faithful at the edge of tbe sanctuary, at the Communion rail, wherever the faithful also offer their gifts.

Sung llllass . It . is understood that every

priest who joins in a concele­brated Mass may accept a sti ­!lKlnd for offering that sacrifice.

.Priest's Sermon Closes Forum

DETROIT (NC) -A Catholic priest here delivered the final oormon in a seven-week pro­(.lram sponsored by five Episco­pal parishes and designed te. bring together "the world and tile altar." ' .

The series explored the needs of men in the areas of poverty, 1l'1lCe, housing and employment.

Msgr. Clement H. Kern, pastor <til. Most Holy Trinity Catholic eburch, well known for his go­

cial action ·endeavors, preached Ute final sermon in the Episcopal Church ()f the Messiah.

"The presence of Msgr. Kern" points out our ecumenical Chris­tian interdependence," said the Rev". John F. Dahl, rectOl' of Messiah church.

The Episcopal rector added IllOW that the areas of men's Ifteeds have been explored, "we 1Il0W move into the church to. ooek though prayer and worship, iihe theological guidelines and grace for Christian social action i\n the w()rld."

Ohio See to Have first Negro Priest

STEUBENVILLE (NC) - Au­t:Ustus Rutherford Taylor Jr., 26, will achieve the distinction Sat­urday of being the 'first Negro ordained for the priesthood ()f the Steubenville diocese.

Bishop John King Mussio will officiate at the ordination in Holy Name Cathedral. The fol­llowing day, Father Taylor will offer his first Solemn Mass in the Church of the Assumption, Cincinnati.

Eldest in a family ()f seven children, the priest-to-be is. a Dative ()f Lexington, Ky. ~ lItudied at Xavier University and Mount St. Mary's Seminary, Cio­einnati, and St. John Vianney

'Seminary, Bloominidale, Ohio.

. However, may a priest accept a Sttflg. Mass. stipend f()r a concele­brated sung. Mass?

T& this question, the Vatican Commissim1. of the Council ­which· authoritatively. 3ftswers Mass stipend questions - said "no."

The question had been 'asked b:y the Congregation ~ Rites (which deals with questions on the Sacraments) if.a sung Mass stipend could be accepted by each priest concelebrating a sung Mass. especially in thbse coun­tries where the custom prevails of giving a "special" stipend for a sung. Mass. . . _ "Unless the contrary is spe­cifically indicated," the Congre­gatiOfi answered, "a person who· offers a stipend for a sung Mass intends. this to be celebrated in­dividually." The pers()nmaking the offering to the priest would then have to specifically indicate "permissi()n for the priest to offer the requested s.ung Mass as a·concelebrant.

Wel'fare Agency Plans Expansion

NEWARK (NC)-A major ex­pansion program is planned for the· Mount Cflrmel Guild; social welfare agency of the Newark archdiocese.

Msgr. Joseph A. Dooling, di ­redor, said the guild will con­struct a diagnostic, treatment and· research center for speech and hearing; a mental health community center; a child-care center, and a rehabilitation' cen­ter with complete services f()r the blind.

Much of the money for the expansion will come through"e.

pro.visions of the federal aid to education act, the 1966 amend­ments of. which provide for edu­cation· of handicapped children, he said,

Msgr. Dooling disclosed, the expansion plan at the guild's an­nual report dinner, at which Philip H. Des Marais, deputy assistant secretary of the' U. S. Department of Health, ,Education and Welfare, was featured speaker, •

Des Marais said his department ifttends to. interpret' provisions f()ll' aid t() childrea in· private sehoo!s "liberally."

30 Chaplains'M'ork Attack Anniyersary

DUBUQUE (NC)-Thirty pres­ent and forme!'. Catholic chap­lains. of the U. S. armed forces fFom the Dubuque' archdiocese' met here yesterday' to- observe the 25th anniversary of the at ­tack on Pearl Harbor.

,They also paid tribute to the memory of Father Aloysius Schmitt. who died in that attaCk' as. the' first Catholic cliapiain to g~ve ms life in World War II.

ft. noon Mass was concelebrated· in the Chapel of Christ the King at Loras College by Msgr. Mau­rice S. Sheehy, retired rear ad­miral in the U. S. Navy Chaplain .corps, and chaplain classmates of Father Sc;hmitt. Archbishop James J. Byrne of Dubuque pre­sided. Bishop James V. Casey oil Lincoln, Neb., a former Navy chaplain, was preacher.

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PLEADS AGAIN FOR WORLD PEACE: Pope Paul, leader in the world quest for peace and racial amity, has

. again urged the heads of all governments to join in a con­cel'ted effort to effectuate. peace throughout the world.

Orthodox Priest, Rabbi 'on Faculty NOTRE DAME (NC) ­ Trinity Greek Orthodox church

in· Fort Wayne, Ind.The University of Notre Father Schlitzer said the p()l­Dame has a Chicago Rabbi

icy of bringing non-Catholicand a Greek Orthodox priest scholars to Notre Dame will be on, its theological faculty this continued. Next semester a semester. Princeton University prQfessor

Commenting on this; Father will lecture- at Notre Dame on Albert L. Schlitzer, C.S.C., head the- history of Protestant wor'" of the theology department, re­ ship:marked, "We Roman Catholics are just getting around to ad­mitting that we do not have a corner on theological insights."

Rabbi Samuel E. Karlf' and Father Eusebious A Stephanou, the new faculty members are­contributing much to the intra­faculty dialogues, Father Schlit ­zer said. Rabbi Karlf teaches a graduate course in Herbew lit ­erature. _ Fat her Stephanou teaches an undergraduate course in addition to a graduate course in Greek Orthodox theology. Rabbi Karff is of the Chicago Sinai Congregation and Father Stephanou is pastor of the Holy'

Diaconate RIO DE JANEIRO (NC)

Thirtee'n Brazilian men, drawn from the farms, offices and class­rooms, are preparing for ordina­tion as Brazil's first permanent deacons. They are now taking courses in theology, liturgy, scripture, sociolo,gy and history.

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THE ANCHOR­Thurs., Dec. 8, 1966

Court Dismisses Professors' Suit

ALBANY (NC) - The New York Court ()f Appeals has dis­missed a libel suit brought - by two associate professors ()f

. Queens College in New York City who had charged that anti ­Catholic prejudice had pre­vented their promotion.

The professors, Josef V. Lom­bard!) and Joseph P. Mullally, had sued Harold W. Stoke, for­mer president of the c()llege, and the New York City Higher Board of Education, because of their objection to comments by Mr.. Stoke about tbeir complaints.

Charges of anti-Catholic dis­crimination were first made pub­lic in the Tablet, ~he newspaper of the Brooklyn diocese, in May, 1953.

In 1960, after a two-year in­vestigation, the State Commis­s~n Against Discrmination said that administrators at the college resisted hiring Catholic teachers and discriminated,against Cath­olics in promoting those who did get on the staff.

In March this year, the New York State Commission for Hu­man Rights upheld the position of the Catholic faculty members and confirmed the findings of discrimination which the earlier investigation had made.

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Page 6: 12.08.66

--'The Middl~, Way , .~"'}¢

• L L. " I,. _, '

~ Man Senf by God As men measure a life-s'pan, the age of forty years,

six months and twenty-four days seems comparatively short. But this life-span of Right Reverend John H. Hackett, Chancellor of the Fall River Diocese, who died on Tuesday, encompassed a rare combination of talents, natural and

, developed and God-given, of virtues priestly and profound. , The measure of this, priest, beloved of God and men,

is seen in some of the last words he spoke as' life slipped ,slowly away from him-"God's Will· he .done-and soon." it is summed up in some of the last words he said on earth: "Jesus, MaIjT and Joseph, I give you my heart and my soul ... and my life ... and my life .. '. and my life." For 'give God his life he did., . '.

As a young manlJ,with eyes fixed firmly e:m the priest ­hood, as an assistant at St. Thomas More parish in Somerset,

'as a student priest at Catholic University of America, as 'episcopal Secretary and Vice Chancellor and Chancellor­.always in pis use of his grea:t abilities and his winning ,personality he gave him'stJlf to God. There was no mistake about it-God came first. He cared for people - in God. And he served them - in God.

During and after Vatican Council II he would f;lften :remark that the Christian world, in dealing with all its problems, needed abov~ all else patience and charity-vir­tues which he himself had in almost awesome degree.'

Q In his aealings with the faithful, with his fellow priests, with bishops, he was the man living his life for Christ-a

:man somewhat grave in demeanor, with a manner pleasant 'and easily responding to humor, tactfully and patiently and kindly helping others to serve God. And all the while his life was teaching, even more eloquently than his words.

,", On Monday evening one of 'Monsignor Hackett's friends'

'asked him if he were resigned to God's 'Will. And he an­:swered, with a, calm matter-of-factness, "I have n~ver re­'sisted God:s )Vill,'"

The "Gospel according to St. John tells us: "A man , '. ". H"

came, sent oy God. HIS na~e was John. , e·came as a WIt­, ness, as a witness ~o speak for the light, so that everyone : might believe through him." I

The same ,might in all truth be said of Monsignor Hackett-A nian came sent by God. His name was John.

, ' '. '. f r hHe came as a;wlt?eSS, as a WItness to speak or the }g t.

And so lie, dId.

9Amid War

It is reported from Viet Nam that the most peaceful place in the entire city of Saigon is the Saigon Zoo. '

, Here the open spaces occasionally echo with the distant :, sound of and explosion from the city or outside. But there

is none of the bustle, none of the noise,none of the frantic energy of a people try'ing to live with a war. Only the cries of little children, only the sounds of youngsters playing. And· here children stand outside cages and delight in watching the animals playing" together. '

It- is a tragic commentary on the human condition that 'children must observe the lesson of playing together from watching animals in a zoo. '

It is an indictment of humanity that peace is found within the confines of a zoo. That there is peace only'with animals behind bars., .

But man does not always act in a human way. And the decision has been made by those in a position to know,

. ,and those whom we have every reason to trust, that there ':in Viet Nam a stand must be taken against the forces of , Communism lest,the whole of Southeast Asia- fails to ,the

Reds-and the frontier 'of American defense beset up even eloser to this country. ' " ' ' "

, But one cannot-in the 'midst of war-keep from re­;'gretting that men must· find' i-place of peace Hi '.Ii zoo.', , '

@rheANCHOR "I:FICI~L NEWSPAPER OF tHE DIOCESE OF- F~U. PiVER Published w~ekly ~y The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River

410 Highland Avenue Fall River, Mass. 02722 675-7'151

.....

Liturgmst Says Holy Eucharist .Summnt of- Church Activity

ST. PAUL (NC) -A veteran community. The degree 'to which liturgist emphasized here that ,Christ is,operative in our midst the Eucharist is "the summit of 'is the degree to which we partic­the Church's activity, the font iilate in the Eucharist." " ,from which ali her, powers flow." The ultimate "drive for reform "F at her Godfrey, Diekmann, in the liturgy," Father Diekmann O.S.B., of St. John'Abbey, 'Col- said.; was to make "the expres­legeville, 'Minn., told a meeting sion of faith active, meaningful

. "of 80m: 2,000 nu~s here t~at the and easy." " Euchanst creates ~om~umty. He ' Tha diiemma over whetlie'r the added: "Gommumty IS renewed liturgy should be God-cerihired here or it is not renewed at all." or man-centered is a faise one,

The nuns also he~rd Father' he said. Pope Paul VI said the James A. Egan, S.J., of Dec~tur, liturgy is created for man l;Ind Ill., assert that hu~an. b~lfo1gs'- not man for the liturgy, that "only can be full ,~Ich mdlvl~- it's ','first objeCtive J;Ilust be man uals to the degree tl:1ey are m and not the solemnity of the communion with each ot~er. ritual." ,

Father Diekmann, edItor of Since the Eucharist is a memo-Worship magazine, said that rial of Christ's love, "each par­Christ. is and. becomes commu- ticipant is a memorial of perpet­nity through the Eucharistic cel-,ual charity," he added., "You

·ebration. "In the salvific plan of God He builds up His community through the Eucharist."

, The main concern of the early :Chu~ch writings was to express ',the oneness and unity of the ,Church based on the Eucharist, ,the Benedictine said.

It was not "cheap apologetics" for the pagans to relpark of the Christians, "Look how they love

"one another;" Father Diekmann said.

"The Church spread because of this example of love. The se­cret of Christian affection was contained within the Eucharist. For more .thanl,OOO years the Mystical Body and Eucharistic body were coterminous," he said.

"The Eucharist becomes con­crete in the local worshipping

Approve CanCJIdlian Nuns' Federation,

,TORONTO (NC)-The federa": tion 'and statutes' for 'merging the

,'Sfsier' of St. Joseph' of' Canada "have been approved officially by 'Ildebrando Cardinal Antoniutti,

prefect of the Congregatioll of Religious. ' , '

The federation will unite the six groups of sisters of St. Joseph with motherhouses ill TorontO, Hamilton, London, Peterborough, Pembroke and Sault Ste. Marie, all in Ontario. " While striving to achieve com­mon goals, the federation will

"recognize the juridical autonomy

.must ,live .love."

~90ard of EdlucCCIllfoon ,Has ,!Five lL~ymen

, PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Areh­bishop John J. Krol of Philadel-­phia has announced the reorgan­ization of the archdiocesan board of education, with the inclusion of five lay members.

The new 15-member board also includes five pastors, two Sisters, one Brother, a religious ' order priest not presently teach­ing in archdiocesan elementary or secondary schools, and a rep­resentative from one of the area Catholic colleges.

'.J;'he superintendent of archdi­ocesan schools will be ex-officio secretary of tlie board but will not be a voting member. The term of office for each board me~ber will 1>e three years, and members' may serve 'only two terms. After three years, a Cycle

.. of app~filtinentsw11i be arran'ge4 so that orie·,..thirdOf the board will be replaced each year. ThiS will insure 'continuity while making provision for new, mem­,bera. . , '

German Bish,ops Bar lng Orthodox, Conservative ..Converts' Rebaptism .Reform' congregations.

BONN (NC)-Bishop Joseph A motion to withdraw &e8I Hoeffner of Muenster has barred the Council was made from tIIII!I the conditional rebaptism of con­ floor at the Union's biennial c~ verts to Catholicism from the vention here but was opposed bf; Lutheran Church. 'A similar ban ',most Union leaders ,and·0""

,Jesuit Stresses, ,Human Element.In Ecumet'lism' ."

NEWARK (NO) - '11wi ,l:mman side of the Christiaft Jmity movement was un~

scored here in an address 10 a group of nunS when Fatha! David Bowman, S.J., first Caf;b., olic priest to work in the Na­tional Council of ehurches Jill 'New York, stressed~ "We musll 'riot forget that the Church is ~ a building, ,not an organizatioil, but people." .

At a seminar organized, by _ Newark Archdiocesan ApostoJie

. Committee, the' Jesuit asked the nuns: "Have you called' up tM Baptist minister In your neigh­'borhood lately to invite him an4 bis wife to dinner? Or perhallll 'the principal of the nearby pub\. 'lie schooi?, And if not why not?­" Father Bowman; when asked what steps of an e~,enical ~ 'tu're could be taken without sP0­'cific authorization, replied the.. are many areas, such as personal 'contacts, where the individual can act for himself or herself.

He said he agreed with the opinion that "when we go to III superior with every problem,

'we are asking him to take up the burden of our conscience,whicil may be why we have to wait S\lI

'long sometimes for an answe~w.

In Unity Division In an interview, Father Bo..

'man discussed his. own boOk 'with the NCC. He has been wIth the NeC since September, work;..

,jng in the faith and order 'de=> "partment of the church un'ity, division on a two-year leave ~

'absence from the Chicago prov­-'ince of ,the Society of Jesus. "

In ~ New Yock, he lives 2j 'Fordham University, "pays 'his rent" by teaching one class' 0 week.

"My coming t9 the NCC is ae­tually a proof of the Catholie interest in ecumenism," he said.

He ~aid he sits in on meetings, serves as a resource person far decisions on Christian unity and puts together the magazine

."Trends," a 16-page quarterJW mostly distributed to Churcla groups and libraries withotdJ

.'charge. : ..:1

Ch'gaU'ilize Committee. ,

fol/' Humesn Rig!hlU:' . PATERSON (NC) - Bish~ Lawr~nce B. Casey of Pater!i~n

.told a clergy meeting here t.,,~

in addition to a senate of pri~sts for the diocese, a committee tOll'

, human' rights is being organized. A IO-man committee to 00

elected by the priests will pre-­pare the outline for the senate. The committee is to be composed of four pastors, three assistant9 and three in non-pastoral assign­ments. _

,The committee for humalil rights will be made up of priests. Religious and laity, ~ncludins

women. Father John T. Catoir" moderator of the Catholic InteJla racial Council, is secretary.

Orthodox "Cont:inu. .,Council Membershi~ , WASHINGTON (NC) -,,'11111 , ' Union of Orthodox Jewish C.. ' ,gregatians of America will eee. iinue its membership in .. Synagogue Council of Ame~ a cooperative agency represeaa.;.

PUBLISHER of each branch, it 'was stated. For has been put on the rebaptism ,whelmingly defeated. , several years the Mothers, Gen­ , of Catholic converts to thp- Lu­ The convention also endoneilMost R~~, James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. eral of the six groups totaling theran Church by Oldenburg's United States policies in Vieto_GENERAL MANAGER, . ASST. GENERAl MANAGER some 3,000 members have been Lutheran bishop. The agreement and called for broad support cd!ftt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll discussing mutual problems' to grew out of a series of discus­ measures to assure equal rigbt8

MANAGING EDITOR unify their efforts 1In the aposto­ sions the two bishops held on to Negroes and other minori~ Hugh J. Gold&n- late eo;mmon problems. groups.

Page 7: 12.08.66

i

,Advent 'PrepcirOtions .:Hold Stage At .Diocesan 'High ·Schools As Teens Aid· Other~

, . Christmas is in the' wings, b'ut Advent is here and Diocesan teens are seriously entering. into the spirit of' the season. Advent wreaths keynote the spirit at ev~ry school and candle-lighting ceremonies are participated in by all. ':1'0 share the Yule spirit with others, students are engag­ing in such projects as carol­

· ing at hospitals and nursing homes, . collecting clothing for needy families and sponsoring parties for children' in ~rea

Q~hanages.,. . .... '.; B~yon'(kCh#stmas, tho",i~ts

·~ ~lreaQY tq,rning to the anri;u~l i S~ildent ,Government Day;. J,~n BOston, scheduled next ye~r for ~~ril: 7. Prevost High' SC~\QQ,rs ~presentat,ive. will be ,l'hili,p Sabra; Dominican Academy is

·SE!nding Terde Chouinard;' oTes~­.Mary wUl,send Alice Dumoulin; S~{,:red . Hearts. Fall River,' b~s celected Holly Cutting. Some schools made their choice by bal­loting, but at Jesus-Mary selec­tion was based on performance at a debate presented by all, ~n­terested candidates. Subject was "United States involvement in the Viet Nam war."·

, '. College Acceptances J! I

More and more students ',are getting' those magic "yes" letters from colleges of their choice; At AttlebO"ro's Feehan High Michael McGrath has been accepted 'Dy. the college of business adm1ms­trati()O at Boston College; Lois. Rhiliflger will study medical: technology at Marquette; Sharon.­Pist&lese will study at Endic9tt ,Junior College with a view fIowards becoming a.medical·sec­retaFY; and· our Anchor repol'ter .IIlJrie· Frantoni has her si~ts en the same career and will; pre­pare at Becker Junior College.

Kathie' Hayden of Dominican:· Academy has been accepted- ~ both Union Hospital and- St~'

Anne's Hospital schools of nu(:lj.o iIlg; and at SHA Fall River .J&­anne Desmond and Chal'lene Mitchell have been aecepted.-·at EmmQftuel College.

Guy Morin of Prevost -is re­joiciag- over acceptance- by 'Northeastern Uni,versity. He'D major in math.

Chi-istmas concerts. natuflally, are much· to· the forefront. DA girls .Me readying "Christmas Car()Uscl" for Sunday, L'lee. 1'8. Soph· Christine Fournier, sub­mitted' the concert title, thus winning the name-it contest held ftiy the glee club. At Feehan the oonc.ert is slated for Thursday, Dec. 15 and will be directed by Sister M. Paschaline. The Feehan band will also be heard on the program. "Christmas throughout the World" is the theme of JMA's concert, to be p'resented by the academy glee club under direction ~f Mother Mary ef Carmel.

Yearbook Preparatimt$ Students are also hard at work

41ft yea,rbook preparations..:At Feehan the Flashback staff is busy collecting subscriptions, and staffers, under Sister M. Bnda; are almost finished· wlth wOrk on the first section' oi the­

,. bOok~ k 'Memory Book HooteR­· annay-' at Dominican Aca~

'belped raise funds for the pre:j;­r l!et and 'was termed~'a great-·SIlC­

eess b:Y. aU itt attendaaee·P.h9-Mgraphers have been at··W6I'k _their part of memoty- books at D-A, SHA Fall River aRd-lIIt-. •. Ma-ry Aeadem,..; and at·~ amiors EWe also eonectifttf: patrons.

Debating team members' at

at Sishop Guertin High and an intl:;rmediate 'tourne~r at. Bay View Iligh:

Students are also' .prepping for the annual Voice of Democracy oratory contest. Preliminary try­outs iuive been held!. ,at HF and Daniel Larkin will represent the school in area competition. Final choice' at Jesus-Maiir will be be­tween es'says sUbn1it~dbY SU-. zanne . Lagarde 'arld Pauline Roppe.·

The National :gonorSociety at Mt. st.· .Mary has welcomed 18 new members;· and at; Jesus­Mary NHS memb~rs will· visit Taunton State Hosp.ital Sunday; De,c. 18, singing carols together with student council members. The NHS girls will also prepare. five food baskets fo~ needy fam­ilies at Christmas. Meanwhile back at the Mount, the NHS will

· sponsor a College Bowl' program for the student body and is fea­turing Chandler SchoOl in Bos­ton :n its College Corrier bulletin board· display.' Girls will make holiday .visits to Nazareth· Halland a home for the aged' and will 'aIso-' continue their tutoringser­vice-' f6r fellow-students. SRA

·hoDor society members are- in, cbai'ge of school bulletin b&ards.

<J1uisti_ ']l;oofh.

Christian Youth Movement members'at Prevost will visi-t St; Vincent~s Home Saturday, Dec. 11': A canned .goods. drive' is

· polaRfted for the Yuletide heRef-it Cff! need:y- families; and-.a Christ ­~ .get-together for members ,mil'be preceded by'. a Bibie-vIgiJ:o. Representatives of CYM· wiN: ai~· ~ present at a .8od&lit~

rfuion Day slated for SUftday:, Dee. ll.1 at Bishop Stang.

. 'Altogether it'll be a, busy. ,weekend' at Stantt- 'Stmc»Y" IJVliU' be- the union day; to- be- at ­teRded by representatives from· al~ Dioeesan higos. .

Intramurally lilt the N9I'th Dat'tmouth school, seniOl' class. officers have been elected-and­indude William Muldoon, pres­ident; Donna Severine, vice-' president; Terrence Barrett, president; Te l' l' en c e Bar.rett, treasurer; and Kathy Rose, .sec­retllry. All four seniors are col­lege-bound, with William plan.­ning a pr-e-med course at PC; Donna hoping to ,attend Fram­ingham, majoring in home ec and· interior decorating; Terrence expecting to go to UMass and major in veterinary medicine; and Kathy hoping to be a med­ical secretary aftel' attending

·'~ris~ol County Commun~ty Col­,.l~g.e. . .

SHA Fall River students had a ":surprise upon returning- from ,''J,'ltl,mksgiving. vacatioo. The Hoq­, U.~ioa·Sisters' habits, unchanged ;)G~:! o~~r~OO y~ars,.hlld-.-beelll­,,~~rnized. Changes. inc~u~.a .~rterskirt and more. tailored­,~~pular.

AIso- _at SHA Fan River fiBe· GeliRe8u Pll;ilms'-were stHtg- at­First Friday. -Mass, .together?W'i'tk.

. ~r hymns designed to.promote ,'the- Sfi)irit-of communitoy:wet;'Smp..

New 'Meician ..staH candidates h8¥e' been :annouDcedat Mt. St. MMy; Twenty:- girls made- the .group of aspiring journalists; and- 27 girls have been named te

Prevost-will journey to Meh'0se' , .the '66-'67 basketball team. for a practice debate Saturday; . . . ~

accompanied by Coach Daniel ,At Prevost High the candy Grace; and the Msgr. McKeon drive has ended, surpassing' its Debate Society at New Bedfordls goal of $6,000. Lot of sweet teeth Holy Family High participated· around. And the school paper in a weekend debate recently' at . spotlighted senior Richard Des­JBC. HF debaters are now pre­ rosiers in its most recent issue. parin& for a novice tournament He was cited especiallY !or oar-

PRETTY POWER STRUCTURE: Here's the pretty power structure at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fairhaven. From left, Estelle Smith, senior class president; Rosalind Bosse, senior class secretary; Nancy Langevin, student council secretary; Patricia LeDoux, student council treasarer; Lorraine Ferro, senior class .treasurer; Deborah Roderick, student council ..president .and- seni<5r class vice-president·; Margaret O'Neill, student coun­cil· vice-president.­

ticipation in school activities. A Christmas" play upcoming~ at -tile FaR· River boys' school wi!lJ: De. titled "The Santa's Little Help­er Affair."

-Art 1lppreciation studeR~ -at Dominican· Academy plan Ii tour to· Rhode Island School .at; De­sign· tomorrow; and Jesus-Mary students recently enjoyed-a- trip to-Cambridge'to view a ped0'l'Rl­ance- of "The Taming. ,of the Shrew."

Holiday Frolic

And at Jesus-Mary basketball team members will sp<msor 11 "Holiday Frolic" Wednesday, Dee. 28 in the school auditorium. The'Tikis will plaY for dancing. . A Spanish potluck supper was sponsored by the Spanish Club· members at Mt. St. Mary this week for faculty members. No doubt the Spanish-style cooks did well in the Homemakers' exam administered to all seniors the following day. The toprank­ing students in the annual test will receive a "Homemaker of the Year" award on Class Day.

Also at the Fall River Acad­emy the sixth Latin trophy since 1960 has been merited by Latin­ists. Three members of the class of '66 received gold medals for their efforts in the annual test.

Parents of Sacred Hearts FaIt River girls enjoyed a Christmas pa~ last Saturday, featured by «anCing 'and a gi'ft. exchange, and­.Patents 'were at .school agaia eari~Y!-thi:S month 'for a discl1ssion

"of: de'velopIDenttests !liken-~' their' daughters.

. 'Girls' basketball is in- fuft .swing ,at .Feehan -where: coaca. -Mrs. Sa.nq,J:8 Weintraub· and-bei' team· hope for an<>ther wiGni.tll: Ras6nthis year. Boysln'e ·a:ls&

"iH;acticirlifhard, ·.also inbopes. of an<undcleated year. Girl sodal­ists at the North AttleboI:6­school paid a- holiday .visit- tG-bhe residents of Madonna ManOi'.

Rev. Walter Sullivan, Diocesan director' of youth, was guest speaker, at a recent Juniper~

Club meeting at Holy ,Family High; and also at the New Bed­ford school seniors have receive&­their class pictures.

Honor roll toppers at SMA Fall ~v_ iDclude IWwe. n:.l ­

dusko, captain of the school, ·and St. Agnes' team members· ,Frol1y Cutting, Kathleen Medeiros, Jayne Darcy a n,d Michek Paquet.

St. 1WIlu:garet's -high· 'hoA&£s

winners 3l'e Ann Marie- Char­rette, Mal'Y A. :Mooney, Marily.n Riley_and Anne Cullen. In team· ~nts, the Agnes' girls pulled G8ead- of Margarefs, with: 45 Agnes members 611\. the heR&r Nll· as opposed to 32 .Mal'garets.

'l'he,:'re ·still glowing' at Fee­'!.'tan &ver their Thanksgiving-day football victory which made them undefeated champions of tile Bristol County League; The game also marked the first time an area footOall game has beeR' telev·ised.

Sister Mary Siena, R.S.M., of 'Feehan, has been doing research

.

en htgh school girls' activities. She· certainly has her facilities close at hand.and is interviewiRg juniors and seniors on a weeklY' basis.

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Page 8: 12.08.66

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., Dec. 8,1966. '. '.' .. . .' ";:.",. Charity Dinner C.ost1y Affair

: , 'I"

Mothers 'of· Students Relish BOGOTA (NC)-Rev. R~phaell Garcia Herreros, C.J.M., has iftoo vited some wealthy ColombianlilCollege Weekend, Adventure

'to dinner here in an attempt tei> , " . By Mary Tinley Daly raise money for a poverty pro~

ect. Each guest was charged [email protected]'s Day, )966, c,ame twj~e for this mother and for for a plate Of' soup and a' phice8Cores of her "classmates" as we attended Mother-Daughter of bread.' ' .. Weeken.d at the College of St. Elizabeth, Gonvent Station, "After all," Father Garcia saidr

, N: J: Had anyone imagined this would be but an extension "cannot the :rich eat for one day,

and . glorification of ever­famiiiarP-T~AJ~ieetings,she was 'due for a' pleasurable surprise. Living in ~ new dormitory with our own daugh­tel'S as roommates, each mother was bot h col­lege "girl" again and at the same tim e honored g u est of her daughter, the senior class and the college. In this environment each of us grew to know her own 'daughter better, rea II y know her as a person, a mature young lady among her peers, not II child in the family Hetting.

Arriving for the Friday ban­quet as rather shy sl rangers­"Mrs. This, Mrs. That"--by Sun­

, day breakfast our "class" was on, a first-name basis and were "Aunt Jane,. Aunt Lee, Aunt ,,,,,to St. E" C"'~ of 1967.

~lanned Resu!fl'How did ·this delightful result

'eome about? As the TV commer· cial says; "It was planned that"

-and how thoughtfully planned!':Following· the banquet came a joint Gle,e Glub. copcert with,the

'boys from the "University of Scranton; ,then a facuUy' recep­

. , ~ion of welcome; . Saturday· morning's cas u a'l

, breakfast, served by the 'girls to tileir mothers, sitting in informal groups ~nd clad in, bathrobes, further promoted, the, "getting

, to know you" spirit.· Whether, to , attend classes or to be a bit rakish and take a cut was up to ~ach of the elder classmates. The latter was' my own inclination upon learning that mine was to be a class in physics, of all things! Hadn't been with it in

. high school, still less in college; what hope of catching up now?,

"Come on,' Mom, you'll enjoy it," urged Ginny. "Besir!es, you don't have to take a tesL"

Nothing to lose, and what a lot to gain-a laugh a ininute and an ,actual understanding of the measure of time and of light as irrepressible Sister Margue­rite Francis proceeded with her experiments and her wry com­ments: "We'll put equations on the bl;lCkboard, make it look au­thentic"; "I'll tell you when the ball falls," accompanied by an almost deafening crash! Physics classes have improved * * *

Next, an inspiring and enlight­ening paper on the Christian Woman in the World by Sister Mary Juliul1, followed by Mass and a campus tour.

Group Singing Luncheon, bridge and a swing­

ing fashion show filled the after­noon, and' it was time to dress for Dinner on the Town when,

Nuns Conduct Reading Classes for Adults'

MILWAUKEE (NC) - Two Franciscan 8isters on the faculty of Cardinal Stritch College here are assisting adult- eq,ucation by wnducting reading classes for parents in inner city areas who bad little opportunity to obtain an adequate ~ducation.

Sisters M, Julietta, and M. Michaella, both of the college reading clinic staff, conduct' the dasses each Friday in St. Boni- . face parish auditorium, The adults generally are parents of

what the poor must eat always?"in groups .of 20, our daughters It is this philosophy ,that everytook us to gala restaurants. Re­ year brings )1undreds of wealthy.

assembling at the college, the Colombians, including the n;r.girls greeted us with arousing" Uon's highest civil and Churcli "Hello, Mothers!," parody .of 'officials, to Father Garcia's Ban­"Hello, Dolly!'" IntI'igued, we quet of Millions. watched the showing of a color Proceeds from the banquets---ofllm; "Campus Camera," beauti ­ $200,000 hoped for-are used t~ful, amusing aqd true-to-life· support and expand'the "Minutevignettes of the Class of '67 from of God", Ii planned communitythe first day of freshman year at 'that is' slowly replacing an areaSt. Elizabeth's. of slum dwellings that sheltei'Appropriab clos.ing for such a thousands of Colombians. Thefun-filled day? Group singing, "Minute of God", soon to houseof course: college songs, old fav­

7,000 people is a little town com­Ol'ites and· a quickly prepared, plete with homes, s~hools, ancll"Hello, Daughters!", churches. Residents include

Nor was that to be, the end of members of all faiths.the mother-daughter sing-along. Next morning in chapel, Father Leonard celebrated an "Ameri­ !Layman, Nun, Brotheli' can Mass" at which we sang AiDING REFUGEES: Key figure!;! in cOllverting a. folk-type hymns to tlle accom­ On .School Board community project to aid refugees in 'South Vietnam into a.paniment of three softly strum­ LOS ANGELES (NC)-A lay­national organization,the Vietnam Refugee and Informationmed guitars and participated in man, a nun and a Brother were the Mass perhaps more actively Services, are Mrs. Paul Ryan, left, national public relations appointed to the Archdiocesan than most of us had 'ever done director"and'Mrs. Thomas K. Engel, founder and organizer. Advisory Board of Education ,by before. James Francis Cardinal Mcln­

Fo' example; en.....n. .... ~~ . ~yre of Los Angeles. . chapel each put her unconse- They join a board of tweWORLD OF FASHION crated host into the chalice; we' . , ... . . bishops and 12 priests experi­

I received Holy Communion stand-", ' ,enced in school administration." 'ing. At the Prayers for the Liv­

ing, we were asked to mention aloud those we wished to be prayed for. A, young voice an­nounced clearly, "For our moth~ ers;" ,an older one, "For our daughters," then, "For all those fighting in Viet Nam;" "For the' family we ,left at home." At the Memento .for the Dead,· l;l8me,' softly murmured names of those gone to Got\,.

S y m b 0 l,i c of' community prayer, "Peace be with you," said the priest, encasing the fold­ed hands of two girls who had gone to the altar rail. "And with thy spirit," each responded. '

The girls then came to the congregation, one on each side of the aisle, and repeated' the ges­ture and the words to the person standing nearest, the aisle. This was passed on, from person. to person, from hands to folded l:ianls, at every pew. '

TLen the final priestly bless­ing: "May God almighty bless you: the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit." .

Slowly and quietly mothers and daughters filed out of the chapel,· in one accord with the summation of one of the moth­ers: "A truly moving experi-' ence."

Advocates Approaches To Housing Problem

RICHMOND (NC)-Two sepa­rate approaches to the problem· of discrimination in housing were advocated by Father Jolin F. Cronin, 8.S., assistant director of the Social Action Department of thk National Welfare Confer­ence, at an interfaith meeting here'in Virginia.

Addressing about 1,000 Virgin­ians representing Virtually every religious group in the state at a conference on "People, Religion and a Changing Virginia;" Father Cronin said that both persiIasion and legislation are necessary steps 'in the, establishment al­non-discriminatory housing pat­terns in Virginia. '

He noted the major importance of educating people to the will ­ing acceptance of' open occu-' pancy, and the s~condary but, vital need for 'legislation which both prevents discrimination and seeks to provide decent low m.

. ~By MARILYN RODERICK ~ The board works with schoolB.EAUTIFUL BOOTS 8uperintendents directing :WS

, George Eliot wrQte in ~857,

"'Boots arid shoes are the greatest trouble of my life. Everything else one can turn and turn about, and make old look 'like ,new; but there's 'no coaxing boots and shoes' to look better than the;)' are." This fa­mous aut hoI' wouldn't have this problem if (she lived today, for not only are boots an essen­tial fashion item, they are also generally wat.er­proof, scuff-re­sistant and can coaxed to, look at'least as good as they are.

An item of wearing apparel that lost its a,ppeal in the'twen­ties, thirties, forties' and fifties, boots have come: into their own in the sixties; in fact they, are really the stars of the footwear show. I look enviously at the

'teenagers in their trim, neat knee-high boots and remember my own teen' days when we dragged our feet in the ugliest, m 0 s t unfashionable galoshes imaginable.

True, our feet were dry, but that was about all you could say for them. Around my senior year in high schoQl,' a smattering of low, fleece lined leather booties appeared on the market, but they took so long to catch on, particularly in this area, that I remember vividly asking a local shoe 'clerk if be' had these' booties in stock only _to have him reply fHply - "pink _ blue"?

This same derk wouldn't be so apt, to treat the same question today with such flipness; instead he would eagerly display before his customer a la·rge selection cdl boots ranging ,in heights from thigh high boots of the softeS1\ suede to the wee little ankle. huggers that are so smart with the pant suits. The latter are kin to those I fruitlessly searched. for in my high. school days.

Zhivago lLOok . Co

·Boots have never been 80 eJ'i ­

item as they m:e this season. The short, 'above the knee skirt; and the military .look brought about by the movie Dr. Zhivago seem' to dema:.d'the finishing t01,lch, of knee-high footwear. .

Paris, where, most exciting ideas originate, has' come' up with the square toed and heeled boot with box like seams. The&e are designed by Roger Vivien

,elementary' and 81 high schoo)v of the archdiocese. - ,

The new ,board members a:re Paul Riley, a certified public ae­eOuntant' and father of four chii ­dren attending parochial school bere;Sister Loretta Rose Scott of the Holy Names nuns, an ele7 mentary school supervisor, and Christian Brother Eugene Ward, F.S.C.; eurricuhUIl coordinator.

and sell for the paltry sum of $175.00 a pair':""a bit high for most budgets, but the basic good shaping will be copied and used i'n the lower price market: To go along with the epaulettes and brass buttons of the Zhivago look are high officers' boots 'made of a shiny water \repellent material. These have high, squared-off heels and are as

. practical as they are pr~tty.

For tho~e of' us who have chosen'to live in New England', this footwear is an absolute nec­essity so we can be thankful to the designers for creating boots that not only keep us warm but give us a bit of dash as well. The problem now.in the sixties is not where to find an attractive boot but rath~r how. you can chQose among the many styles available a ~ h6w you can stretch your budget when you pick up that extra pair you couldn't resist. If you have great strength of char­acter and are able to limit,your­self to one pair, make sure they are comfortable, water repellent, and high enough for those huge snow drifts that always seem to appear righ,t outside your ear door. .

There Is No Greater Charityl

••• Ii+. Franciscan SisterrY GIVING YOURSELF to a life com·

pletelY dedicated +0 the salYation of souls ,through prayer, work. sac· rifice and joy", by using your tal· ents as a Nurse. Laboratory and X·RayTechnician. Secretary, Accountant, Dj·, etitian, Seamstress, Cook. as well as in other hospital departmenls and In a new extension of our work in Cate· chetical and Social Service Fields.

:What About You? ,.

(If you are ewer 16. write to SIster Mary Clarice.' O,S,F, Box 111. Catholic SIsters'

,College, WashIngton. D. C, 20017 for flu· tiler detaIls iln tills happy life.)

ON CAPE COD

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Page 9: 12.08.66

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Heads LibrariesWASHINGTON (NC) -Lloyd

Felix Wagner has been appointeddirector of libraries at the Cath­olic University of America here.Bi:dwp. William J. McDonald,University rector said. Wagner,who has been chief 04 the libraryservices division 9f the FE'deralAviation Agency, win take the\HIiversitypost Jan'. 1.

School FinanceNo. 1 Problem

CINCINNATI (NC) - Arch­Oi5hop Karl J. Alter said thE> fi~

nancial problems confrontingCatholie schools is the chief pas..toral concern of the Cincinnatiarchdiocese.

He spoke at the first meetingof the new Archditlc('sun Pasto­ral CounCil. Some 70 priests.Religious, and lay people tookpart.

Reviewing the financial needsof the schools, Archbishop Altersaid they' represented "a vastproblem" that required explora­tion.

___ ~.w~.,~~v" ~v ~u<;;:' .i.~e

in enrollment, doubled in thepast 15 years; the turnover in layteachers, in.volving repla<cpmpntof about one-third each year; thereduotion of class size two yearsago by setting thp maximumnumbf'r of pupils at 40, and therequirements of making teach­ers' salarie8 comparable withthose of public school teachers.

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Tic\tet Committe~: Mrs. JamesE, Williams, Mrs. Richard Paul­son, William J. Fagan, Camille~tlis, Lawrence Pivirotto.

N Qrmand Hamel, Jam e sBlount, 'Edward F. Kennedy,Robert Stratton, Edward Castle.

Mrs. Normand Hanel, Mrs.Mary Moitow, Mrs. Edward S.Franco, Mrs. Robert J. Silveira,Michael J. Welch.

James Tonry, Mrs. JosephRose. George Milot, Mrs, Ed­mend Paige, Mrs. Hector Demers.

Mrs. Leo Conroy, Mrs. ROlleNagle, Mi!lS Eunice Mowatt, Mrs.William Braga, Mrs. CliffonlSaehoy.

Mrs. William MacLean, Mf'S.R&bert Briand, Mrs. FrankLewis, MTS. Margaret Mulcahy,Mm. Stanley Baran.

Mrs. Harold TravjgIiGne, Mrs.Albert Giordano, Mrs. JohnTrucchi, Mrs. Daniel Gray,

Presentees: Miss Adri-efme Le­lIlieull.

Appoint Committees from Attleboro, Tauntonand New Bedford for January Social Event

Bishop's CharjtyBall

A'l'TI,EBORO AREA WORKERS: Serving OR theeQffimittel! for the annual Bi8hop's Charity Ball ()n Jan. 12,are: Mrs. Albert Jacksan, St. ·Mary's Mansfield; Rt. Rev.Thomas F. Walsh, pastor i>f St. John's, Attleboro, aIHiDioce,an Moderator of the DCCW; Mrs. George Whalen,St. Mary's, No. Attleboro; Mr•. John J. Mullaney, St. John'.,Attleboro.

Co-Chairmen Miss MargaretLahey and Mr. John Kane re­leased today an initial listing ofcommitteemen from the Attle­boro, New Bedford and Tauntonareas to serve in various capaci­ties for the 12th Annual Bishop'sCharity BaH scheduled for Jan.11, at the LincO-ln Park Ballroom,No, Dartmouth.

AttleberoHospitality Committee: Mrs.

John J. Mullaney, Mrs. AdrienPiette.

Decoratinc: Committee: Mrs.George Whalen, Mrs. John J.Mullaney, Mrs. Adrien Piette.Arthur Arcbambaull, Frank Mel­lo, Clifford Duclos.

Ticket Committee: Mr. Henry!»ew, Mrs.. Char-les L~ndry, UN.Albert Jackson, Mrs. EdwardGalligan, Mrs. George Bouza.

Mrs-. Francilil St. Pierre,. Mrs.Fred ThOl'pe.

Presentees: Mrs. Adrien Piette.

New BedfordHospitality Committee: MiSi

Kathleen Roche, Mr:.. EmmetAlmond, Miss Lydia Pacheco,Miss Helen McCoy, Mrs. GeorgeWhalen.

Mrs. John J. Maloney, Mrs.James Leith.

Decorating Committee: Mrs.Stanley J. Koczera, Mrs, EmmQtAlmond, Mrs. James Gleason,Mrs. Ernest Letendre, Miss Mar­garet Goggin.

Mrs. Leo A. Gallagher, Mrs.Gilbert Fosler, Miss Lydia Pa­checo, Mrs. John MaloneY.

Tickt't Cummittee: Miss Kath­leen Roche, Mrs. James Lelty,Mrs. Manuel G. DaSilva, MissHelen McCoy, Miss LeonoreLuiz.

Mrs. Daniel Flanagan. Mrs.William C. Lefavor.

Presentees: Mrs. James Leith..

TauntonH9spitality Committee: Mrs.

Aristides ,Andradre. Miss HelenShove.

Decorating Committee: MissAdrienne Lemieux, Mrs. AlfredLeonard, Miss flelen Shove

c _

1 cup e<>id_I cup eold""'"

:4 eggg... \0 Ieaspooo salt

% CUJ)B sifted all-purpose fleW:4- Tablespoons melted butter

(cooled)3 Tablespoona: cooking oil1)lf you are fortunate enough

to have a blender, put the milkand wate'rt eggs and saIt into· theblender contalDe~. Add flour'aud'theri butter. Cover and blendat top speed for one minute.Cover and refrigerate in contain­er for at least 2 hours.

%) If you do not have a blend­er, pUt the Dour and salt in alarge bowl and gradually blend.in the eggs -one by one. Beat inthe water ;md milk by theapoonful and then beat in thebutter. Strain the batter to getrid of any possible lumps. Justlike the batter that is made inth~ blender, this 5fho-uld be re­frigerated at least two hour.. be­fore usin«.

:I) The batter 8ho1tJd be Ukelight cream. If tlte OOIUJiatencyis heavier beat a \ait .r waterinte the b-atter a ~ful at •time,

4) Rub art. iroa 8kil1et .r atin,. frying pan (diamete-r 8.14 erT inches) with the cooking oil.If you have a pastry brush y.-.mllY brush the oil on.

5) Set over high heat untilthe frying pan is just beginning'to smoke.

. 6) Remove pan immediatelyfrom heat and pour just about %cup of batter into heated skillet.Quickly tilt the pan in aU dir~­

tions to cover the whole bottomof the pan with batter in a thinlayer. Pour any batter thatdoesn't stick to the pan backinto your bowl.

7) Return the pan to the heatfor 6() to 80 seconds. Shake pansharply back and forth and upand down to loosen the crepe.Lift the edges of the crepe witha spatula and if the bottom isa light brown turn crepe over.

8) Brown lightly on the sec~

ond side tor about. lh minute.The spcond side 19 never don~

as well as the first and can beused for the inside of the crepe.

9) Slide crepe Qnto a plate,regrease skillet, and then prQ­ceed as before. The crepes maybe kept warm in a slow ovenuntil everyone is ready to eat.

10) When ready to serve :6nwWl desired fllIin, and .<.11 :Ull·

Crepes. Prove Easy to Make'tn New Nonstic=k ·Utensils

By Joseph and Marilyn RllderiekOf the many plants as80ciated with Christm..... ()ne

of.the most popular is the mistletoe. A mistletoe twig (notleaves tied together or plastic mistletoe) is traditionallybound with nuts or fruits and hung over a doorway andany couple Jlinding theme the waffle one still remaius to.elves under it are expected he. resolved. .to embrace or exchange" a As one thing generally leadskiss. The women feel that to another the nonstick tinythis custom is romantia, bp.t'[ skillet became a perfect crepehave heard' that the mistletoe- pan.' Crepes, as you probably....as thought to be so powerful know, are a very delicate Frenchby.- the ancients that it was the pancake with a thIckness of1I01c agent for opening the gates 1/16th of an inch. They are quiteef Hades; this- should be enough difficult to make unless you haveef a warning for the men. the right pan and these nonstick

Mistletoe is a parasitic plant, skillets are certainly a crepe. t··tt. lover's handiest tool_"at is, one WhICh ob ams 1 A per:lect dish to serve CQm-DOUrISnment :rrom. another plan.Much mistletoe is gathered in pany, the crepe batter can beFrance where it is found ,011 made ahead, refrigerated and

prepared in front of your guests.poplars and apple trees.Just bring friends and family

Mistletoe was especially cher- into the kitchen and demonstrate·Ished by the pagans for its cura-' yout handiwork right in fronttive powers. The Druids, fol" io- of them, then let them pick out_Roce, believed that mistletoe their own fillings.wqich was found on an oak tree Jams, jellies, sour cream andwas capable of driving any dis- :fruit sauces make perfect fUI­ease from the body. With the ings for sweet crepet. Left­eoming of Christianity and the "'ver meat, such as your Christ­~futation of Witches and IIOr- mati turkey, with • dreued ...eery, moat: superstitions relating white sauce, can even turn theae60 plants were discarded. alit DOt delicate pancakes udo a mainthose conDected with mistletoe.• was stilllhoucbt wiee to hane diah.• twig of ml8tletoe ever ,themain entrance el 1:be' boMe' to.ard off disea8e.

, We can well-imagine,the- earltebrlstisns 10: France aft. 'Btl...l!t..lridwhere mlstletoe....as .vlrit~able and in use, hanging .. piece... ·mi.tle~ ov~r their doors. Aiaejghbors made··theii calls espe-'eially at important "times of,"t;be.,ear such as Christmas,' they'..ould undoubtedly be g~eeted

at" the door with a bug or a kidjust as ·we do today. This Wasprob&uly hoW' the custom of'kissing under the misUetoeIJegan.

.As time went on, the mainpurpose of the mistletoe was toprevent sickness from enteringthe house, became secondary t&the more pleasant custGnl· ofkissing under its shadow.

Il1o th~ JUteJtenII you're thinkin, of givin&

any of the females 9fi yourChristmaa gift list • cookinglltensil, make sure it's treatedwith Mle of the new nonstickeoatings. J hadn't purchased an,.DeW pans until recently, • ...,.kltroducthm. to these marvel~

eoatiHgS is likewise recent, butI must admit to beine completelTwon over.

All I have 10 do now is hoard• y pennies 10 that I can buy allaew cookware. At the momentsuch prospects look quite dim,but I am going to whisper inthat bearded white gentleman'sear that 1 would like hfm totuck a coated waffle iron in hi.s.pack and deposit it on my sideef the Christmas tree.

Waffles and pancackes .arefavorites in our house. We oftenhave one or the other with baconfor a quick supper. They graceour breakfast table on weekendmornings and are always theperfect late snack if company4.rops !rl.

Sticking, though, is always aproblem with our waffle ironwhi~h I. inherited from mymother-in-law, who probablygot tired of scraping off the tiNttthree or four tries of everybatch, But since waffles are sucha favorite in our house We' en­clure the scraping and th.e stick­ing although it does leave one's~ste buds a bit frayed by tiletime one gets to eat a perfect....e.

With the purchase of two in­ex~ensive little skillets withaon-stick coatings, the pancakeIIituau()ft W, well Ja. hand b.,t

Page 10: 12.08.66

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YOURS TO LOVE AND TO GIVEItt1e life of a DAUGHTER Of Sl. PAuL LOYe Godmore aod give ta souls koowledge and love 01God bY serving HJm in a Mission which uses thePress, Radio. Motion Pictures !ltd TV. to brlngH!s Wont to s9Uls everywhere. !ealol* VOtInggirls: 14-23 years Interested '- this uniqueApostoJate may write to:

REVEREND "'OTHER SUPERIOROAUCHTERS OF ST. PAUl

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Old oat .... eol.......... ,.oar saer1floe to It r.u....ail it ...Ilotrt Rey. F.lte. J. Sheea. NatioD&l Direeier .f Tbe Socjeb' f.iIM' Prep.._"" of the FaKIl. 3" nfdl Aye.lle, New York, NewYork 10Ml, er to ,.oar Dleeesaa Director. at. Rev. Msc'r. a.,,­..... T. Ceneidiae, 368 Nortll MaiD Street, Fall River, M....

---'

Thinking Df Christmas gifts? Bishop Sheen's books mak~ perfectpresents {Dr Catholics and non-Catholics alike. Beautifully illustratedin color and black and White, CHRISTMAS INSPIRATIONS placesnew values and interpretations on the oldest story in the worhl.Price $1.00. In WALK WITH GOD, we are invited to take time outto think of the many roads open to WI in life. It offers a provocativeeommentary for livin« iaI Wday's world. Paperback $.75. Till:POWER OF LOVE, ORe of BiJJhop Sb"een's most popular books, isaV81ilable in a deluxe slipeased, hard.boWld edition lor $8,50. ItshOWI AoW love belongs in every major area of our lives; how itcan give .. direction in the complexities and distractions of. OW'

time. Any or all of these books make important contributions to,..our daily life and. those 10 whom yeu F¥~ Uletn. Write: The OrderDept., The Society for the PropaptiOR el. the Faith, ,3" Fi:HllAvenue, New York, N.Y. 1.0001.

O:b les.. Chrtat. Wb... we ".'eed aDd. are seeurdu. h"-.. to ..denbDd wh,. W'e are it .... he.1 oar seJtislm-.Fet..iYe ... as ~ poor aU lor a1er &ad we eaU t.r 'beeR.'.r«ne us .. the,. uk for a shaek chapel aDd we buUd two-miJlt..dollar ehurcbe., Fore-tv. _ .. milDo. I. tile MI8SioDl uk for·a sip fro. *the Chalice of Life ad we eaU -'or • paper cup f1lled.wlilt tbe elixir of a beat cenera.tlolil. Let as 1I0t, Lord, u' we seeThee crncified again in the misel'7 of the world, ask for a lance.Rather through Thy merits, let dt prove that we are Thiae,because we love o....r broUten. l offer the Mass every Sun'a,. .,.tltose who d.urin!:" Advent _bite t.h.emseJves ·with Christ erue.tiM"~a sacrifice to Ute Hob Father. God Love You!

The world of souls can be loved too little; the world with I.Prince of Evil can be loved 100 much. Christians are in dane-erof being influenced more by the worldthan they influence the world. Is thisDot beea,use we are Dloving away fromthe Cross, forgetful that onlY when ·Welive under its wooden wings do we

.' --. ~ - - ---.._~--~ - .."'....the first cells of the fetus of the Anti­Christ? Do not Ezechiel and st. PeterSay that jUdgm~nt will begin with theChurch-not with the. world! TheTemple of Jerusalem was bomed. tllenthe cit,. fell.

Are. W. Doers er Obserten?,God Love You'

By ~ost !le.... FuitOll J. Sheen. D.O.< Wl'hl! Ch.urch does not keep pac~-, -wi$h the world.'" So wrttH •

young woman from college, What is the reason for this? The Churchand the world are going in different directions; "l 'have taken youout of the world," said Our Lord, ·~therefore, the world will 'hateYOu." The world may be understood -in two senses. First as a cosmos,a dwelling place. for humanity, it is a blessed thing, "God so lOVedthe world that He sent His Only Begotten Son to redeem it." Butin the second sense, as a spirit; a mood. it. is evil. It was this thatOur Lord meant when He said: "r pray not for the world,"

When penance giveli way to pefl1\is­~veness, when atheists shriek, "God isdead," do we turn and look at a Crucifix and say, "Yes, He diedfor my sins"'! Do we prove that God is alive in our hearts bFhelping a missionary cttre for a family with five children who lacka$40, to buy a mack? Is there not a dime a week we could share te·preaeh the Gospel to over 2 thousand million who knoW" not Christ?I8 there not the equivalen.t of one package of cigarettes we eould.give to help the hundreds of religious orders serving the MissioN'tbroughout the worlel at the eonmlaDd of the HO)l Father? Theonly ones who read this column and no 30mething are those WHAY with Paul, ..{. lUll crucified witb. Christ; DOW not I live, tMKChrist lives with me," Be II leaven in the mass. Atone for tboee;who build bigger 'aDd richer bUildings without sharing a Mite for'the poor of the' world.

Fr. Robert: A. Mit<,.hell, 8.S.

New York EducatorNc>w at Fordham

NEW YORK (NC)-Dr. JohnB. King, former executive dep­uty superintendent of the NewYork City schools. has been ap­pointed visiting professor of edu­catIon at the ~ordhamUniversityschool of educatJon.

Oblates of MaryMark Anniversa",

WASHINGTON (NC)-A f ..r­-.1 dinner was held here toeommemorate the 50th aimi.er­Ial'7 of Oblate Cellege, a lIeftl­ina-ry conducted by the Oblatelof Mary Immaculate. The din­ner, spOllBOred by the seminary'sLay Board Gf Regents, aIMmarked the 100th anniversary ofthe founding of the Oblates inAix, France.

In the United States, theOblates teaeh in high schoolsand seminaries, conduct parishesand serve as chaplains in thearmed forces. They work in thearchdioceses of Denver, NewOrleans and, San Antonio, andthe dioceses of Austin. BatonRouge, Corpus Christi, Dallas­Fort Worth, Galveston-Houstonand San Angelo.

Oblate College's Lay Board ofRegents, officially brought intoexistence in 1962, was one of thefirst such boards in seminaryadministration. Twenty-five bus­iness and professional men cur­rently serve on the board whichmeets regularly to discuss theproblems and plans of the sem­inary.

BihleBook

brought up in India in the earlypart of this century.

Cornelius Ryan's The LastBattle (Simon and Schuster.$7,95) vividly depicts the battlefor Berlin at the Close oC WorldWar II in Europe. Perhaps themost publicized book of the yearis Truman Capote's III Cold

~!?~~. (~~~~~~..Jious~. t~·3l?.Lcrime in Kansas and its after­math.

Workinc PressSome Idea of what goes into

the gathering, writing, editing, 40-Year Old Jesuitand pUblishing of the news isprOVided by The Working Press New York Provincialby employes of the N~w York NEW YORK (NC) _ FatherTim e. (Putnam. $5.95). A Robert A. MitcheIi, S.J., 40, hasthoughtful, penetrating comn\en- been name{ provincial of thetary on one of the principal ill. New York Province of the Sowof the world is found in Nation- c.i.ety of Jesus (Nov. 28), suc­alism and Ideology by Barbara ceeding Father lohn J. McGinty,Ward (Norton. $3.75). 8.J.

In the field Gf history and bi.- Father Mitchell will superviseograpby, 'there is special merit aU Jesuit activities in t~ Newto Sir Arthur Bryant's The Fire York: and Newark Arcpdioeeses,and the Role (Doubleda,.. $4.95), the Brooklyn. RockVille Centrea wperbly fasp-ioned study of. ancl Paterson diocelieS and. illsolJ)e cieclslve- tnomentB in En- Nigeria and Puet1:o. l;\i~. ThegUsh hiatoty. largest Jesuit. province in. the

James . Thomas Flexner, in w.orld has 1,11~ pr~ests, BrothenGeorge Washington: The, Forge and scholastics. .o.f Experience (1732-1775) (Lit- It includes Fordham Univer­tle, Brown. $7.95) makes an im- sit)', St. Peter's College '\0 Jer..'pressive beginning on his ex w sey City, Loyola College andhaustive biography of Washing- Seminary at Shrub Oak., N. Y.,ton. Dorothy Meserve Kunhardt , and the Novitiate of St. Ahdrew­and Philip B~ Kunhardt, Jr. have ·on.,Hudson, ·Poughkeepsie.gathered rare photographs and. Father Mitchell has been rec­written an unusually interesting tor of Loyola Seminary, Shrubtext for Twenty Days '(Harper Oak, since last March 25. Pre­and Row. $11.95), which C'onsid- viously he was dt>..an and pro­en the events from Lincoln's a~- fessor of theology at LeMoynesassination to his burial. College, Syracuse. He was or-

Another huge project is got dained in Brussels, Belgium, 01\under way in Frederick A. Pot- July 31, 1956. Father McGintytle's James BOflwell: The Earlier has been provincial of the prov­Years (1740-1169) (McGraw- ince since 1960.Hill. $12.50), a definitive biog-raphy of the brilliant, volatileman who was Dr. Johnson'sbiographer.

Far leu formal are three setsof reminiscences: Pappa Hem~

ingw.,. (Random House. $5.95),A. 1:. Hotchner's recollections of.the last yean of Ernest Hem­ingway; Muzzy (Harper andRow. $4.95), Charles W. Thayer'suproarioUl memories·of his s0­

ciallY eminent but altogether un­conventional mother; and Abi­gail Adams Homan's EducatiOil.by Uncles (Houghton Mifflin.$4), a pleasantly unstuffy viewof some great Bostonians.

Spiritual BooksAmong spiritual bookS, there

are no rivals for Days of theLord (lterder and Herder. $3.95per volume), which providesknowledgeably chosen readingsfor the several liturgical seasoll$,and Dom Hubert van Zeller'sIdeas for Prayer (Templegate.

.$4.95), a treasury of inspirationand direction for one who wouldpray well.

Father Gerard S. Sloyan givesa clear and winning introductionto the revised liturgy in practicein Worship in a New Key (Her­dec and Herder. $3.95). Helpfulto any priest, especially to thosein parish work, is PastoralCouns~ling by Father RaymondHostie, S.J. (Sheed and Ward.$5). Of great help to the parishpriest throughout the year is abook with material for Sundayhomilies, Scanning the SundayGospel by Dominic Crossan,O.S.M. (Bruce. $3.50) .

If anyone is thinking of a giftfor the book columnist,. ho....about a pair of discarded eye...gla:sses?

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. john S. KennedyA list of books suggested for Christmas giving must

lead off with the mognificent Jerusalem Bible (Doubleday.$16.95). It is not one of those pseudo-artistic productionswith imitation leather binding and garish illustrations, buta handsome volume contain­in,g- an excellent new trans­lation of all the Scriptures,wit.h admirable note. andother helps to undel'standing.It js the best thing of its kindn () w avaHable.Another sightlyBible with awell-done trans-

, 2 THE "NCH~-D;OC<K<I of FQn River-Thun., Dec. So 1966

.--'--"----- ---------_._--

Oxford Anno-.tatcd Bible, Re­vised StandardVersion (OxfordUniversityPreRs. '$10.50).'I'his has an im­primatur fromCardinal Cush­ing and surpasses most Bibles inthe si ze and clearness af thetype 1n whieh it is set.

Informative • n d fascinatingfor its pictures is The Counciland the Future, with. probing es­aaYs by Father Mario YIiM'l GaUi.S,J '. and photographll by Bern..hard Moosbrugger (McGraw­Hill. $10.95).

A monumental work is'Docu­Ih.ents of Vatican II. (Guild PreSti,Amt'rlca Pre s s , ~~hon

Press), which comes in twosizes and prices. The largebound volume costs $10, and thepaperback edlition cO'sts 75 tent:;:.Xavier Rynne's commentary onVatican 11 concludes with TheFourth Session (Farrar, str<?ussand Giroux. $5.50).

Pope Jo.hn's MemoirsAdmirers of Pope John XXIII

cannot have enough of his writ­ings. The latest publication isMission to France: Memoirs of aNuncio (McGraw-Hill. $6.95), avery discreet selection from hispapers which disclosea no secretsbut lets us see something of theshaping of a future Pope,

Father John L. McKenue, S,J..,keats an important iubject in­cisively in Authority in theChurch (Sheed and Ward. $3.95),Which searches the New Testa­..ent for what it has to s.ay onthe subject and appliefl this. tothe present.

The fact and the .everity ofpoverty in the world today aretiemonstrated in The Starvedand the Silent by AloysiusSchwartz (Doubleday, $4.50),which deals with Korea,· and EatFrom God's Hand by DesmondO'Grady (Herder Book Center.$3.50), which describes FatherPaul Gauthier's apostolate to thedestitute in the Holy Land.

Experil7 WrittenIn Children of Allah (Atlantic­

Little. Brown. $6.95), AgnesNewton Keith draws on her ex­periences while Iiving amongthe Arabs of Libya, and BlaineLitell. in South of the Moon(HarPer and Row. $6.95) reportson his investigation of some of

• the new nations of Africa. Bothof these books are expertly writ­ten and acquaint uS with someof the dark-skinned people inwhose hands the world's futurelies.

More related to them thanmight at first appear is AlanMoorepead's The Fatal Impact(Harper and Row. $5.95), inwhich Captain Cook's voyages toTahiti, Australia, and the Ant­arctic are rehearsed, showing....hat our civilization has done tothese once Wltouched areas.

.A delightful reconstruction of_unished days is found in TwoYears· Under the Indian Sun(Knopf-Viking. $5.50) by Jon• Ad Rwner Godden, sisters

Suggests Jerusalem. As Christmas Gift

Page 11: 12.08.66

10 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil Rjv~r-Thurs., Dec. 8, 1966

,~-MAKE BOOKS A PART OFTHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs., Dec, 8, 1966

CHRISTMAS r>W£~V;iUJ

Presents

Beautiful (Morrow, $20), This isa grouping of 120 reproductionsin· full color of outstandingworks by native artist;,:, rangingfrom colonial times to today..Apprnpriate and brief prose orpoetry quotations accompanyeach picture.

Then there is ··The stOI".Y of St.Peter's" by Thea and RichardBergere (Dodd, Mead, $4.95), •not terribly costly but l"avish}J'ilustl'<lted history uf the cO'struction or the queen chun'h "'"'Cry.ristendom. Anyone planning apilgrimage to Rome could stud,.this book with profit <lnd pleas­ure; and for those not so fortu­nate, it. will supply a clear pie­ture of the centuries of work b1"man)' hands that resulted ill •da,y'g J".." ..;1: __

han's book inclUdes l)1)ok re­views and articles, essays andrejoinders. It is rare that onebook so lI1spires another, <lndit is intel"estipg to note thatmany discussion groups an"' us­i ng both bookl:l as a fruitfulsource of material.

A thorough account of theChurch's attitude tow<:lrds 1heJewish people is presented jll

"The Church and the JewishPeople" by Augustin CardinalBea (Harper and Row, $4.50).The Cardinal was mainly re­sponsible for the Declaration onthe Jewish People issued by theCoulleil Clnd this book is the fruj.'of his '·wisdom, couragt-· and pj_ollf"edng effort in the cause ofinh'rJ'eligious underst<:mding."

Tribute to the invin~ible peo­ple of Poland is paid by theire qua II y courageous pl"imate,Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski, ia"The Deeds of Faith" (Harperand Row, $5.95), a colleC'tion ofsermuns and addresses. In a typ­ical address he says to students:"Now that the nation has risenfrom its servitude and degrada­tion, you, the young, should notagain degrade it. Love the na­tion by giving thought to what

,you can do for it, not what yo.can get from it! When I c~me outof prison I said, and I ,<;ay .itagain: Poland today does notneed a sacrifice of blood; itneeds only a sacrifice of hones1phard work and self-contrul. Onlysuch work will give you realsatisfaction."

In "The Church is Different""by Robert Adolfs (Harper andRow, $3.95) a Dutch Augustin­ian examines the era of freedominto which the Church has en­ten~d. "The thought 'is slowlycreeping through," he points out,"that two thousand years ofChristianity do not guarantee awelI-e~tablished solidly strue­tured Church or an ensl..:onced,nicely defined and circumscribe4Christian religion."

ty: an End and a Beginning"(Macmillan, $4.95), edited byJohn Courtney Murray, S ..T., isa discussion by scholars of manyand no faiths of the Declarationof Religious Freedom issued bythe CounCil.

Father Murray was largely re­sponsible for the wording of theDedaration and was therefol'ein a uniquely qualified positionto edit this book. As a pre-emi­nent authority on church andstate relations, he has m}lde aninvaluable contribution to hisfi'eld.

"The Secular City" has beenone of the most discussed booksin l'eCeltlt religious literature. Ittreats of the emergence of urbancivilization and the accompany­ing breakdo .-Tn of organized andtradiHonal religion. The manyquestions it has raised are dis­cussed at length in "The SeCUlarCity Debate" edited by DanielCall a han (Macmillan, $5.95board, $1.45 paper). Mr. CaHa-

8cience, freedom, natural law,birth control and mixed mar­riages in the light of the "1':­giornamento of the VatieanCouncil; while "Religious Lj ber-

No Off-Limit TopicsIn Today's Church

Tn our open-,,,,'indO\ved (~hllrl'h of today there ~ecm nooff-limit subject!". Proof of thil"' i;-; six books, each examin­ing some facet of faith or mora]R. "Christian ]\1oralityToday" by Charles E. Curran (Fi,leR. $2.45) discus.~e, ':on-

He,re Are SpecialFor Special People

.Are you. rich and would you' like to give a sumptuousChrIst-maR gIft. t.o a ,pecial priest or Sister? Then t.rv 'The

Council" by Lothar Wolleh (Viking-, $:38.50). No, it's nota printer's error-the price is $38.50. But for the moneyyou get a whale of a lot ofbook, about. ten poundR of it.,bound in whit.e le"therett.ewith the title st.amped ingold, the whole encased in aplastic protective jacket. Inside,there's an abundance of heauti­fully reproduced color phot()­graphs, along with opulently­large type and heavy, shiny­coated paper, "This book is avivjd and moving record of ...a truly revolutionary Council"declares Francis Cardinal Spell­man in an introduetiml. You'dprobably better get a table too,to hold the book No commonbookcase could accommodate it.

American ArtLess splendiferous but also

quite expensive is "The Beautyof America in Great AmericanArt" by the editors of COWltry

Role of WomanSeen Confused

Two Haunting BooksBy, About Children

Here <:Ire two books, hauntingin any season, but coming atChristmas, the children's feast,they have an added poignancy."Miracles: Poems by Children ofthe English - Speaking World"(Simon and Schuster, $4.95) isthe result of a grant fromUNESCO enabling Ric h a I' d .Lewis to travel around the worldseeking poems by children.

"I found," he says, "that giventhe right encouragement and un­derstanding, children could anddid write poems that invited seri­ous attention as poetry. I hopethis book will demonstrate theartistry of which children arecapable; that i~ will serve as atestament to the power andvalue of the poetic vision that isan integral part of childhood;and finally that, as aU real

. Turn 'to Page Twenty

Jesuit HumoristPra ises III inois

The only quarrel One has withthis book, "The Quite PossibleShe" by Janet Golden (Herderand Herder, $4.50) is its title.The entire volume, a study of"today's C h r is t ian woman,"seems to contradict it. The au­thor sets forth clearly and forthe most part indisputably theproblems that face the womantrying to give Christian witnessin today's world, then gives afew general guidelines thatmay be of help in some cases,but the general tone is thatthings are hard indeed.

A better title, one feels, wouldhave been "The Very DifficultShe." This is not to low-rate thisbook or the service its author hasdone everyone who is strugglingto get into line with P()st-Con­('War thinking on the role of thelaity. Jt's really a good thing thatthe many unsolved problems ofthe distaff sid!:' of the Churchshould be thoroughly discussed:this in itself may h!:'lp to ironout some of them.

"Priest in Paradise; With Godto lJJjnois" by ..Bernard Basset,S.J. (Herder and Herder, $3.50)is in effect a pune¢yric to Illi­nuis. Says the noted EnglishJesuit, who came to the UnitedStates to gi ve a series of retreatsat a rnid-Western retreat house:"For Europeans the image ofAmerica for decades has beenpieced together from the frag­ments of broken homes. We havebeen fed on Hollywood starswith many spouses, on kids outof hand and teenage drug ad­dicts, v.mdalism and gangs.· Isaw something of such aberra­tions, but were these typical?There are gutters in every cityon both sides of the Atlantic andpictures of them give no fairimpression of, any town.

"Between retreats I saw thehomes of some I'ctreatants, onestage removed from Paradise.And Paradise for me is no long­er made up of color TV or elec­tric carvers but lies deep in thebewildering bond of affectionbetween parents and their brood.I found spontaneity, great hilar­ity and discipline."

This is a joyous, funny bookand a welcome antidote to themany volumes that look hardestat the "vulgClrities" of Americanlife.

Nurture•

Here

PierJ'C TeJUlaI'd. dc· OliardiM

MentalOffered

What is there to put belleaththe tree of the thinker? Threeamong the Fall crop of booksshould flatter the taste of bothgiver and recipient. Each offersfood for reflection that will per­sist long after the tree is a mem­ory and the tinsel is packed

away for next y:.;e~a:.;r.;.'-::,....,.,.......,,...."Conjectures of a Guilty By­

stander" by Thomas Merton(Doubleday, $4.95) is "an in­tensely contemporary assesstnentof both a single man's spiritualodyssey and of the most urgentmoral issues of the last 10 yeCll·s."Merton's dominant theme is thator individual responsibility, thenecessity for the individual tomake up his own mind in mat­ters of conscience.

Turn to Page Twenty

the English countryside to thos~ aboutBarsetshire. Here's another for her.afficionados,

The durable Bishop Sheen offers"Christmas Inspirations" . (Maco, $1),a collection of thoughts on the Christ.mas season illustrated by reproductionsof masterpieces and appropriate photo­graphs of Yuletide scenes.

Each Christmas bring-s it.s OWn harvest. of books and 1966 includest.wo t.hat. are likely to be favorit.es. "Village Christmas" by "Miss Read"(Hought.on Mifflin, $2.95) is a low-keyed book about. an Eng-Iish villaget.h»t doesn't .quit.e approve of newcomers, the Emery family who havedescended upon it from the vieinit.yof London. When t.he Emerys' newbaby arrives on ChristmaR day,howe,;er, everyone rRllies aroundto help and in the process discoversthat the ci ty intruders are reallyquite lovable people.

"Miss Read" has been likened toTrollope and her series of books about

By Carolyn J ackRon, Age 11From "Miracles: Poems by Children N­the English-Speaking World" (Simonand Schuster•.$4.90)

I DON'T MIND

Spirit of Christmas InstilledIn Seasonal ,Books

LIFE OF MARY: 'The Life of t.he Ble""ed Virgin Mal),H Is t.oldand illust.rated by Janet Bruce and Emile Probst. -in one of a new seriesof bookR for children published by Herder and Herder. Here st.ylizedshepherds come t.o worship the Child in a scene Byzant.ine in its int.ensity.

I {;arolyn .JackRon am a pure-blooded Neg-ro in soul and mind.My mother's from Nort.h Carolina and my fat.her's from Florida.I know when I g-o to that old wooden bed,Somewhere on t.he ot.her Ride of town, there is a child being- put t.o bed

in a soft cuddly neRt.But being a Neg-ro isn't so bad (if you know what'. g-oing on)Down South my cousin is being beat up-And Look There .... My aunt got. put in jail for drinking from a

white fountain.But. here I feel better because I have more freedomWhen I ride the train and sit. next. t.o a person of t.he opposit.e raceI feel like a ('row in a robin's nestAnd I feel dirty.I'm not prejudiced or anything ••If we g-o on a t.rip and they call me D8.....

I Don't. Mind.

Parental QueriesAnswered Here

Is there a time when parentsdon't want to know more, abouttheir children? The number ofbooks on the subject answers thequestion. And of recent years thetheories and practice of MariaMontessori have been gainingmore and more attention ,in theUnited States. So it is good newsthat at least one of her booksis now available in paperbackform ("The Secret of Child­hood," Fides, $2.95).

This book was the famous ed­ucator's first and it contains theaccount of. her discover)' of the"Montessori method," enlivenedwith many anecdotes of the chil­dren with whom it was origi­nally perfected. It wiII be inval­uable for conscientious parents

Turn to Page Twenty

bo())ks with "The Silent SpireSpeaks". (Bruce, $4.95), a spir­ited defense of the value of thecontemplative Hfe cast in theform of a series of conversationswith a questioning college stu­dent.

Christmas BooksFor Children

Biographies TooMore valuable than outright

Bpi ritual reading for many p~o­

pie are biographies of out:-;tand­ing Christians, which might betermed how-to-do-it manuals foraspirilJg strugglers. No_one couldqUf;'~tioll that Eric Gill, CharlesPeguy and Pope Paul VI arc out­standing,. and the shll'ks of thC'irthree very different lives are the:,ubjects of three )lew bOOKS.

Robert Speaight, lecturer, ac­tor and producer, has written"The Life of Eric Gill" (K:enedy,$6.95) and in it he thoroughlypictures the various, irrepres­sible, stranJ{e man that was Gill.The book, incidentally, is set in aGill-designed type fiolce, Per­pctua.

"Charles Peguy: A Study inIntegrity" is by Marjorie Villiers(Harper and Row, $6.50), Shedocuments the life of a man who"throughout his life refused tobe annexed. Time and again hesacrificed material comfort, am­baion, friendships and personalhappiness to the heroic integrityhe showed in his life OlE wen all

in his writings."In "Pope Paul VI" (Random

House, $5.95), Alden Hatch,well-known biographer of JohnXXIII turns his pen to the lifestory of quite another sort ofman, but succeeds equally wellin showing the reader whateve n t s and characteristics10rmed the present Pope. I n dis­cussing Paul's aloofness in con­trast to the warmth of John, henotes, in connection with thepapal visit to New YOt'k City,"In Yankee Stadium they werecheering not the Pope but a man,who in one long day had wontheir hearts. Somehow on hisapprenticeship as the servant of'the servants of God, he had atlast learned the secret of howto make known his love for hisfellow man."

For the youngest readers oreven the read-aloud-to's, Herderand Herder offer "The Life of St.Francis of Assisi" and "The Lifeof the Blessed Virgin Mary,"both by Janet Bruce with pic­tures by Emile Probst ($1.50each). Although the type seemsrather small for little children,the art work in thes,e books isbeautiful and striking and thetext is easy to understand.

"Come to the Family Meal" bySister Mary Cosma LaPlante,C.S.J., illustrated by Sister MaryJosita B~ccala, C.S.J. (Bruce,$1.25) is a Mass book for thesm<llIest churchgoers, emphasiz­ing that Mass is an action of thefamily of God and should be ap­proached as a "family meal." Itincludes simple explanations ofthe 10 commandments and abrief instruction on approachinl

..... -. )?~ Twenty

Are. ShownNovels

The author says, '''The Centudon'is more important to me thananything else I've ever w~itt(m."

God's Cr~atures

Sister Seraphim is a RUSSianOrthodox nun who lives in adesert convent in Arizona <andthere harbors as many animalsas the rest of her communitywill permit. Her book, "All God'sCreatures" (Dodd, Mead, $4.50),is a paean to the animal kingdomand her point of view is best ex­pressed in her own wOI'ds:

"Anyone who would be good toanimals was in a state of gra.ce,as far as I could see. Were (:Ineto live in a church, after themanner of the prophetess An na,in the temple of Jerusalem, ~nd

at the same time be cruel t() acat, then he were a long waylrom the heart eI g....J'"

it~elf.. "The Meaning of Success"by Michael Quoist ($1.25) dis­cusses man in himself, in his,ownlife, in his relations with others,'lOd finally in his Christ-life.Father Quoist is notably practi­cal in his advice, slanlcd TOilinlytowards young readers.

In a chapler titled "Huw NotTo Beo Bus}'," he counsl'~s: "Con­stantly tell yourself:. for thismoment 1 have only one pet'sonto deal with, and that's the onewho's rigll~ in front of me; Ihave only one letter to write, the,one I'm writing' now; I have (mlyone thing to do, what I'm doinghpre and now. In this way Ylm'llbe able to work more rapidly,more efficientlY, and with a lot1f'l's headaches."

"Love and Sacrament" by Al­phonse d'Heilly, S.J. ($2.25) is athoughtful examination of thevocation to marriage, consideredmainly in it~ spiritual aspects.

The· prolific Trappist author,Father M. Raymond, D.C.S.O.,

adds another to his list of l7

of FaithCurrent

FacesIn Two

I~ooked at rationally, Rpiritual bookR are among- the m().,t appropriate of all Chri~tmns

gift:-;; aml even from the most practical point of dew, books have an enduring value notshared by the more g-littering- t.rifleR t.hat. appear Linder mORt ChriRtmaR treeR. Still on t.hepractical side of Ole ledg-er, the post- Conciliar world, sO newly uncertain on many pointsthat u~ed to f\eem as funda­mental as the ten command·men1.R, is at lea,"\t agreed thatt.he Jiving- center of Catholiclife is the M<l.ss. ThereLore anybooks that help in its under­standing are of particular value.Two such are "Christ Now" byRev. "Henry Fehren (Kenedy,$3.95) and "Bread and theWord" by A. M. RoguC't (Mac­millan, $5.95).

We know at least one familythat has enthusiastically adopted"Christ Now" as Sflturday nightrea din g. Subtitled, Saturd<:lYNight Thoughts for SundayMass, it's just that, and in acOllple of pages per Mass man­ages to be thought-provoking,prayerflll and oftcn very funny.For today's feast of the Imma~­

ulate Conception, for in3hmcf?,Father Fehren muse;,:: "l\'li~.glljrl­

ed devotees of Mar;y use her toscare hell out of people and endup scaring hell into them, mak­ing them feel guilt and blamefor all thc evil in the world ifthey do not touch 11 simperingwooden Fatima statue beinglugged around the country 'getthe Rosary in' every day ('only

"takes ten minutes,' said onefamous crusader), believe themost bizarre 'revelations' ofsome women and children. andlike a shrewd peasant work upa drag with her by flattering herheart."

Mor~ }'ormalMore formal, but also struc­

tured to corresPond with Sun­days and feastdays is "Brcp,d andthe Word." The author, a FrenchDominican, has divided his bookinto three part..., ea<"h followingthe liturgical year; faith, the·Mass and the sacr.amelltal life.The emphasis is on the bread ofthe Eucharist and the livingword of God.

Two paperbacks, both pub­lished by Fid£'s. deal withthemes as fund;mwntal ;;IS life

Spiritual -Reading, BiographiesCan Aid Christian Growth

The fait.h has many faces. Two are illuminated intwo current novels: "All About. Brother Bird" by Cat.harinePlummer (Doubleday, $4.50) and "The Centurion" by Leon­ard Wibberley (Morrow, $4.50). Brot.her Bird is a monk whohas the g-ift. of levitation, but.far from being a Rource ofhappine~s to him, it is a~reat erOSR, since because ofhis habit of suddenly rising fromthe ground, he has never beenable to complete so much as oneMass. How his cross eventuallybecomes his crown through hisgreat love for a little boy dyingof leukemia is a touching story,reminiscent of "Brother Petr()c'sReturn" or "The World, theFlesh and Father Smith."

The Centurion," like uncount­ed other novels, tells the storyDf the passion of Christ, thisLime through the eyes of Lon­ginus, the Roman centurion whowas in charge of the crucifixion.Told as if the tale were new, the8tory of Christ crucified succeeds

·In strikill¢ thC' . reader afreshwith the enonnity of the deed.

Page 12: 12.08.66

o

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Parental ,Qu~riesContinued from Page Ten

who may wish to adapt marly ofits recommendationS to theirown family life.

. Tee.n Dialog'ue .Skipping from' early childhood

to the teens, Rev. Dennis J.Geaney, ,O.S.A. contributes a

. thoughtful, up to the minutestudy of relationships amongparents, teachers and teenagers("The Search foe Dialogue,"

'Fides, .95)."These are .tee!'!age times,"

writes Father Geaney. "Th{~re

was a time when there were onlychildren and adults. A new s;;g-

. ment of pumanity) which isneither child nor adult has sud­denly at this juncture of histotyinserted itself between both.".

His book, he says, "is writtenfor adults who are interested inteens developing themselves into'mature . and responsible layCatholics with a sense of theChurch's mission." It is all excel­lent, searching analysis of adol- ,escence and deserves re§pectful .attention from parents. .

Liturgical CalendarAn ide a 1 stocking~stuffer"

p.resent jor your youngster's Si~,~.tel' at school, or anyone who:sinterested in the day-to-day.li­turgical life of the Church is theChristian Life Callmdar (Bruce,$1.25). Now in its 32nd year, this,hang-up calendar is an indisperi:­sable companion in thousands of .Catholic homes. It combinesrubrics for daily Mass; directions .for the Div~ne'Officeand a daily'pithy commept seeking to relatethe liturgy to daily life. "Thereare sorrows in the Christianlife," the calendar' makers re­mind us, -"but they are nothingbeside the joys." ,

Between now and .the moment"when .~e reach the', biological,peak, whatever it is, tow'ardswhich evolutiol,1 is dl'iving us, ifanythirig eventually fails' us, itwill not be the ground that' we .stand ·on. In one or two or tore'e'million years the earth ~ill'cer~.tainly still .be there beneath' our

.feet-and still as habita-ble as it: 'is today both in its temperature,and its land-masses.. . ..' .From "The Appearance of Man'"by Pierre Teilhard' de Chardin '. .-

. TwC) TestsThere is a certain minimum

level of cooperation which maybe reasonably expected of anyable-bodied parishioner andmother of school childl·ell. 'Bu't

,beyond this mininmm she is'obliged, if only in the name of

, common' sense; to, suuject aU. -re'­quests to two brief tests: Is this. '.job that I am 'heing asked, to do'"worth doing in the first place?And if it is, am I the right sortof person to do it? 'From "The Quite Possible She".by Janet Go.lden·

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., Dec~ a. 1966

~o

-

Menfral NurtureContinued from Page ElevenThe topic of C. Douglas McGee

in "The Recov~ry of Meaning:An Essay on the Good HumanLife" (Random Hou!!e, $5,95) isto discover what actually consti­tutes a good and human life.Step by step he examines '·'clas­sic and contemporary philoso­phies," arriving at last at theconclusion that each. man's per­sonal experience must shape hisown notions of a satisfactory,justifying life. .

"We take our first a'nd lastingmodel of the world from thefamily," he writes. "When weare most open, it is our universe;our parents are· the SUil andmoon and climate, and they canmake the first world theirchildren know into a model ofwhat the world should be."

"The Appearance of Man" byPierre Teilhard de. Char'din(Harper and Row, $5) comple­ments "The Phenorhenon ofMan" and discusses the ,natureand spiritual signifieance of hu-.man evolution in terms of re­ceflt fossil discoveries, Mo.retechnical than many of Tell­hard's works, it nevertheles'sleads to his famous conclusionswjth '. regard to the "Omegapoint" and the noosphere, al­though with more scientific but­tressing than he deemed neces­sary in his more directly philo­sophical·books.

Two IHlCtlMntingjBooksContinued from Page Eleven

poetry does, it will gi ve delight."The poems in the book, di­

vided into categories such asMorning, P~aying, The Sea, Peo- 'pIe and Feelings, and comingfrom children between· the ages

~. of 5 and 13, do indeed ~i v~, de­light and many. sharp lIlslghts.

A sample is "War" by 10 yearold Sarah Mason of, the UnitedStates:

Lonely grief handed Qut to <l11.Not bad, but miserableDrenched in gray sadness

Dead ChildrenIn "The Cry of Rachel" (Ran­

dom House, $6), Sistel: MaryImmaculate, C.S.C. has assem':'bled a collection of elegies onchildren, ranging from earliesttimes to today. "Only beauty canfittingly commemorate tho s e

.at'ound whom heaven lies al­ways, and to it these elegies owetheir inception and being, To­gether they sharpen a neglectedfacet of the human condition;"she writes..

Christmas' BooksContinued from Page Ten

the sacrament of penance. Theauthor, a 'second grade teachel:in St. Louis, has' drawn on herexperience with children in pre­paring her book and .has accu­rately refiected the newest 'litur­gical changes.

Older ChildrenFor older children are "Ginnie

and the Cooking' CQntest·, and"Quesada of Colombia." Ginnieis a girls' story, about 11 yearold Ginnie Fellows and her ad­ventures in the course of nearly":winning a cooking contest (Mor­row, $3.25). "Quesada of Colom­bia" by Ronald Syme (Morrow,$3.25) is the true story of the16th . century . Spanish lawyerwho first explored Colombia.Full of excitement and adven­ture, this is a natural for boys.

. Unexpected Divinity• The world might have expect­

ed the Son of God to be born­if He were to be born at a11­in an inn. A stable would bethe last 'place in the world whereone would have looked for Him.Divinity. is always whel'e oneleast expects to find it.Fl.-om "Chri!,tmas Inspirations"by Bishop Fulton J. Sileen

-

Page 13: 12.08.66

13 THE ANCHOR-Cardinal Heenan Broth:er H~rold B17ings' Varied Background Thurs., Dec. 8, 1966

Asks Assistance To Assignme.nts at Coyle High School' Request UrbanoOf All Laity -By Dorothy Eastman LONDON· (NC) - John The casual observer might be hard put to find anything in common between the teen­ Renewal Funds

Cardinal Heenan of West­ age boys at Msgr. Coyle High School in ']'au nton, native boys in Uganda, Africa, and teen­minster told his people that age boys living in a New York institution for the emotionally disturbed. But Brother all the laity - not just the Harold QuaJ.ters, C.S.C., who has had experience with all three groups, says their com­

. )

clergy and a handful of devoted mon denominator is the ~eed parishioners - must cooperate for love and personal atten­in the work of their parishes.. tion. The-young Brother, nowThe cardinal's pastoral letter said: "This is the moment for a religion teacher at. the action. H the priesthood of the Taunton school, has had a varied faithful is to be more than a and exciting career since he pretty phrase, this priesthood joined the' Holy Cross Order must be put to the test. The upon graduating from Coyle in faithful must. begin their pas­ 1956. Some of his experiences toral work. They must show have been trying and some have themselves as anxious as their been harrowing, but with the bishops and priests to obey the ebullient good spirits for which decrees of the Second Vatican he is well known he can now CounciL" laugh at even these.

In an effort to draw all the He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. people of each parish more Harold Qualters of St. Mary's <closely into the life of the par­ parish in Mansfield, who are un­ish, Cardinal Heenan ordered a doubtedly happy to have him so survey to be taken of all Catho­ close to home after his two year lics. This survey, indicating the stay in Africa. . needs and wishes of the people, This year Brother Harold has would then be acted on by par­ been coaching the championship ish councils elected by all pa­ track team at Coyle, though he rishioners. wasn't athletically inclined while

Seeking complete honesty in a student. He was probably too the survey, the cardinal asked busy playing clarinet in the the people to "say if you think band for four years. more could be done for the old, Difficult Subject the young and the sick. Don't During the s~hool day Brother forget to say what changes Harold's academic specialty is should be made and how people the teaching of religion. Though who are doing nothing can be he admits this is a difficult sub­persuaded to work for Christ and ject to teach to· teen-age boys, he His Church. speaks with enthusiasm of the

'With Us Always' new approach to teaching reli ­"Priesthood begins at theal­ gion .as a joyful response to

tar," Cardinal Heenan continued, God's love. He· believes that the negative"but it does not stay there. 'rhe ­

Mass is not really over when the approach to teacbing ~eliglon is candles -are put out and we go still rampant and. he.is trying about our daily duties. ··The to overcome this· attitude in his meaning of the liturgy is that the classroom. His warm and.friend­Mass is with us always. We bring ly personality. and infectious

. the fruits· of the Mass to our sense of humor make his own homes and our 'places of .work presentation of religion ·positive and leisure." and dynamic:. .

Upon his, graduation, frl?mCardinal Heenan ended· bis Coyle he went to· the Holy Crosspastoral with an appeal for fi­ Novitiate, first at Valatie, N. Y.nancial help for "our Italian then at St. Joseph's in Indiana.friends and brothers" hit by the He then attended St. Edward'srecent floods. "The deplorable University in Austin, Texas,damage done to art is well ­ where he majored in education.known, but we must think, also Following a :rear of teaching

of those who have lost their at Our Lady of Mt. Carmelhomes in Florence," he said. School in the Bronx, he was sent

. "In the hospitals of this coun-· to Pius XII School for neglectedtry thous~nds of Italians are pro­ : boys in Chester, N. Y. This is ~ viding essential services. Let us· . school run··· by the Holy Crqss s how compassion for their . community that has 'had phe­stricken relatives and friends." nomenal success in rehabilitating

emotionally disturbed boys who . come from a poor home environ­!Pastol'S Study AJd

ment. Brother Harold lived in a for . Poor Parishes cottage on the school grounds

with 15 of the boys and he de­PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A s'cribes this year as "interestingseven-member comlll,ittee of pas­ and enlightening." He say's histors to study means of providing work with the boys gave himfinan"Cial aid for poor parishes is greater tolerance for the prob­being established under the di­ Rems and difficulties of tlnes0rection of Archbishop John J. troubled young people.KroI. It will be known ~ the His two years in Uganda addedArchbishop':. Committee for still more invaluable experience,Inter-Parochial Coope.r~tion. though of a quite different kind.

The archbishop said many pas­ St. Leo's College in Fort POI/,­tors "are. burdened heavily with tal, Uganda, is really a boardingfinancial obligations which are school for boys on the highimpossible to discharge under schoollevel,.but for some reason their straitened circumstances." high schools in that part 01f

"Justice and charity," he said, Africa are called colleges. "demanded the removal as It was at St. Leo's that Broth­quickly as possible of many of er Harold· spent two years teach­the economic imbalances ~at ing English literature 110 the. have been created by changing students for whom English' was a imltural and social structures, seeond language. The studeBri especially in the inner-citie6 «!If body was both ecumenical and Pbiladelphia and iChesteli'." multiracial. Most fIi tbe 003'8

were llJgandim lIlIatives, 1bough some were Indian. About 00 pel!'. P'arish Baptism ceent were Catholic and the rest

ROSARIO (NC) - ArchbisMt» PNltestant, Moslems and Hindus. Guillermo Bolatti .of Bosario. Running Start Argentina, bas requested 10­ '!"he future Coyle track ooacll )shes to hold communal baptisJml got bis ~rt - a good Jiwlning at certain times on fixed ~ start-in eoaching IJlt St. Leo's. .

The archbishop said that "Those JooYlll boo an mnate IIlbil\co "'whenever possible, Baptism as My to wn," be says. "'We bad a a private ceremony should be marnpionship e!'OSS COWlltl'y and avoided in order to foster bet'ter trJrack team." One of his ~ude1iJlw eommunity and spiriiual Ee)a., -"a tIl'emendous miler"-has'R­tions W. tb.~ arehdiooese. ~ 00 ;lIltilrle~ t00W01twfs~

1"ROM AFRICA TO COYI_E: Brother Harold Qualters, C.S.C., finds life it bit more peaceful at Coyle High School; Taunton, than he did in Africa where his experiences in­clu.ded stan~ing off a band of Simb~i wiirriors with a child's popgun. He and track team member/! inspect Mayor Des­marais' Road Race Trophy awarded by Fall River Jaycees. .From left, fJ,'ont, Mike Malone, Dave MeGovern, Glen Nieu­wenhuis; rear,· Paul Paquette, Ted Burgess, Jay O'Brien.

from SoUthern University in the United States this year.

According to the Brother, Christmas in Uganda could in no way compare to a New E·ngland· Christmas. Apparently our West­ern Christmas traditions have not penetrated to deepest Africa as yet, and Brother Harold notes that ou·r familiar Christmas cus­toms-gift giving, trees and dell ­orations, are completely un­known to the Ugandans.

, "We must remember that this part of Africa has only been Christianized for 60 years," the Brother says. .

Their religion means a great o deal to the Ugandans who are Christian, however, and they are particularly proud of their bap­tismal names, which are usually Western. There are no family names in Uganda, so when a child is born he is given an M­rican name that is descriptive of the time of year he was born, or a defeet he was born with or even a name that seems to de­scribe his personality. When he is baptized he acquires another lllame and a great deal of status because. he is now more like a Westerner.

''They're a simple, sincere peo­ple _. gracious and outgoing," Brother Harold .says.

At least most of them are. Brother had an unforgettable <!xperience with a group of most 1l!lngl'8cious natives - an experi­ence that he still recalls with un­Jjl>leasant emotions.

Though Uganda itself was rel ­atively quiet at the time, the Congo uprising was at its height and Uganda is separated fvom the Congolese territory by only III mountain range, the famous Mountains of the Moon.

The school. had a tractor and O!llC of Brother Harold's extra­

.wrricular activities was driving M out to one of the outlying mis­

, sMms to plow farming areas lIor lhe llla~v:es.

'High on Hemp' On this occasion, the mission

where Brother Harold wa·s plow­ing was only 30 miles from the Congolese. border and at the' foot of the mountains. On this morning, suddenly, out of the mountains charged a band of 51mba warriors. Dresssed in monkey skins, with a spear in each hand-"in case they missed with the right, they'd get you with the left" and "high on hemp," they advanced on the mission.

Brother Harold and the pastor were the only men there to de­fEmd the hysterical women and children from the terrorists who had butchered and ravaged the Congo..

"The pastor gave me a rifle," Brother Harold recalls, "but one look at 'the rust on it told me that I was the only person that rifle was likely to hurt if I shot it."

He .gathered the women and children" behind him as the pas­tor approached the Simba with his equally rusty rifle. When the warriors were only 200 yards away, the Brother suddenly re­membered a toy popgun he was carrying in his pocket to give to one of the children. In despera­tion he whipped it out and. shot it. It went off with aa loud "POP" that so surprised and un­nerved the Simba that they scattered and ran back up into

.the mountains. Ugandan h'oops later cleared

them out and .the fierce Simba .may still be telling tales of the fearsome weapon carried by the young American Brother. "

Brother Harold remembers that the group looked as if they ranged in age from 16 to 19­

'still teen-agel's, but unlike any he had ever encountered in his classes.

I think he would agree that 1be Coyle "Warriors" are pretty ~e by comparison.

ST. PAUL (NC)-A CathoUe priest and two nuns joined aJ

group of 31 from this city on II recent trip to' Washington to petition the U. S. Department 0.1/ Housing and Urban Develop­ment for a federal grant of some $20 million for execution or' D proposed urbim renewal project here.

. The Summit-University proj­ect was initiated last year by. th<e St. Paul Housing and Redevelop­ment Authority but the city has not yet been able to obtain a pledge of federal funds.

They met in Washington with Donald Hummel, assistant secre­tary for renewal and housing assistance for HUD, and told him of the "urgent need" for renewal in the area .

They also read a telegram :t'rom Auxiliary Bishop Gerald O'Keefe of the St. Paul-Minne­apolis diocese (recently named bishop of Davenport) in support of the project. "This area," Bishop O'Keefe said, "is a won­derful one in which to live but is on the verge of becoming a blighted slum. This project must move· now."

Representing the 1,300-mem­bel' St: Peter Claver Church in the area was Father Edward FJahavan. The nuns in the dele­gation were Sister Carmen,· prin­dpal of St.' Luke's School, and Sister Mary Helen, principal o!I Cathedral School.

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Page 14: 12.08.66

C

I,::: ; • ~.... ',;'r...I 'j

THE' ANCHOg....DiOc:eSe of Fan. River-Thurs.,.'·&ec;.· t. 1966

Writer Sees Two· 'I'deologies :At Work In: ,Lat,in America

··1 '.1 :.,

. ~,; From "Social lRl2VO]ulltiOlll illl the New Latin Amernca" Edited hy John J. Coil1lsidiiUe, M.M.

. More and more, man feels hImselfto be 'a worlci-citi~en, writes Marina Bandeira. The problems" of Indonesia, Tan­gan~rika and Cuba can influence his life directly; and he is beginning to realize this. A~ the 'sanre time the inhabitant of Indonesia, Tanganyika.or will appear. Is it going_ to be a

- Cuba, is discovering tnat' he harmoniou s society reached can influence the destinies of'.: through an integral developrilE~nt" t~e whole world. The P()pti,;.'.>:¥t~,~o' ~ncour~ge11J:~nt;or P~-:'. lations of even thl:! poorest,coun~ ... sIve, . fnistrated . h.E!J'.cI~· .. This. /: tries demand> that their 'miVn I qtie!lU0n must be '. ailkE!d of interests be re::" spected a ri'd . consulted. The.y are beginning to sense that a true "international­ism" can only 1'- born if it rests. upon true and healthy na­tionallsm a n 'd that, therefore, internationalism embraces the interdependence of all national­isms :

When science is allowing us to" see the training of future inter­ptanetary pilots, we begin to· realize t: at we will not· render good service on other plaeets if; befQl'e arriving there, wed&- not learn to understand and: respect' IMle another on tbis- out own­planet. .

Thl"ough a' rewform of cosmG­poIitanism, capable' of respecting , integrating society and t)Hs. is. ­tl'te different cultures and back- toxicating experience provokes l:l'OUnds of one anothelz, II new' ..sheeks and tension. This is. a fact.. t,rpe'of attitude is beginniag.,w- Although there are ltther ill ­appear in men wh~ without ·de.. tel'pretations of this fact, I adopt sptsing or relinquishing the cui;. . the view that the-. tensiona be­ttire' af their own eountri~ are . Ul'een the. different social groups learning .D1)t to impose- but .18. in Latin America resolve them­eommunicate with men· wh9 00-: selves into two i4eof&gical' gioote from different back- groups, even if their views-are gF6tlnds, from other cultures, unconsciously expressed' 01', ·i.. even if materially thoee C61Hl- . som e instances, in~ve­

tries have not yet·put t@· lfSe- the' themSelves~ , latest technical resources. . The fintis the ideology ol

These new men dQ. e~st ·Mld. .' conservatism. of an those __ their. number' is mul~IHYing.' ue satiSfied witb tbe·statua:~· President Kennedy, was. "GIle' of them.. They· lIre sensible e~gh' not to, try 'and impose- their awa solUtions, their way of life on

. o~r countries because they know' they might have SI1CCess­ful immediate re~lts but, in UJ,e loA!: run, the artificial sohltions would not last.

Are there other clear t~ds? Are the trends which we' have mentioned wrong or incomplete? The important thing is- to have

. in mind the main tendenci~s of the whole world, whatever they are; when we examine a detail of the world: Latin America. 'Fhis is what we will try to do- now: Whither goes Latin America?

As We See It Latin America has embarked·

~n a course of. social" economic . these two fundamentally op­and political transformation atKl .. PO'sed, positions has· caused ~'.

the clock cannot be set back. . wound!! on. both sides and,. most . Profiting· by the' lesoons aS,',' ~o~imately, . thiS aJitag~isn{ 'I

other countries, there is· 'a:' '1&"10 'De found among Catholics, marked tendency in Latin Ametl' <, aniong Christians: ", I.. ':"

rea· today towards discovering 'm·,·l; , These :two ideologies. of COIl,:,·' DeW' form of "social .organizat.iea;:" se.~*ism. .. a n d·· tran~ti<Ja1,::, tbat does not.. submit either to· COrresPond to two main.histoF­tbe- materialism of the developed; _leal projects: the first ORe corre­aifluent countries' of the West, sponds to the ideals of t~ beRe-- , <H' the massificatioD of the Soviet fieiaries of the European Indus­'bloc. trial Revolution and'iits suceess-

May one ask: are ~ eiferts lui followers. ~ard a Latin Amet:icaa, self-, . The- ideology of tr.ansformatioR· expression valid? One tWng. k· oorreSpOnds to: tbe bistorimlii-· ..,tain: new' S4iIIl:ial stP~ttH'ei' • project of thOse whO. suffere<l thoe

. consequences of the unbridled-. prosperity' of the others. .

Gets Scholarship C 'These' definitions are not . NOVA SCOTIA (NC)-EmHe

Petre, a Roman Catholic' Papal Volunteer from Deweese, Neb., is studying at the Coady Inter- . national Institute here under a scholarship from the Bishop's ftInd in Germany to prepare for an assignment in Natal, Brazil.

the Christian, soci,al mClvements m' Latin· -hmerica.' "':., • .:,

Their role is-'not static: theIrs is .not "to. do .an~ die" as the poe,~ . SaId; theIrs IS to reason why

" and fight despe~atelY to, open.the way for man; fight for a SOCIety that can ?e a living test~~ny ,to the baSIC duty of a ChnstLan wfJ-i,ch is to love God and to help our neighbor come ~loser t~ the image of G~d~ phYSICally, mtel-:

I

who Point oW administrative and' politic~ corruptio& and immorality as the root of aI}

present evils. . I,

-For those the solution is more Ol"~r 'and' honesty:- anifI, the' pEoblems. will solve themselves and all will live INlppily ever after.. .. .

Those who oppose this view say that the evil has deeper roots: the structure of their countries will have to be modi-' fied in order to obtain a fair share of development for all, a better distribution of wealth and· new wealth that will benefit·all..

'This is the ideology of trans­formation, or the ideology of the social revolution. . 'The bitter antagonism between'

lectually, sptr~t,:allY. . .. What, ~en, .IS pll"even~ng us

from puttmg'· mto pra~ce the·; solutions which are deSired by millio~, of Christi:llns ~. L~tin Amenca at the present time'. Is there. a. ready answet"? .

Which are the clear altema- ,,:receive badly' needed clothing from your contributions t-0 ~ves placed before Latin Amer­lea. and. th~~~ore, lJ.ef~ the vanous ChnStlan 'SOCIal ID&Ve­

- meni$ in .our continent! Altel'Datives Opea

We are living. in a rapidly dis.­

·static. it i" Possible fIX conserv­ative groups to evolve, into trans- . formist positions and vice-versa. . It is notfrue tnat III clash' be- . ­tween the two .has been pl'e-: . detenninet:I" by" history. x: am' looking att.hem as' ~y' ·are··

.today;

the recent BishopS' Clothing Drive for the needy overseas~·

Concerlll Increases For Latin America PONCE (NC) - Many V" S. gious communities, Father James

Catholic religious communities F. ,McNiff said he had found are "steadily moving. fOrward l ' "expanding concern for the upi­tOw~· the JlIoint of haVing: five' versal Church and in particular per cent of their personnel serv­ for the Church in: Latin- America; ·ing:ift Latin America, the execu­ "Nearl,. all the- more- impoF­tive director of the Catholic Uni­ taM commtmities were making:versi£y of Puerto Rico's Inter­ definite contributions towardAmerican Center said here. . Reporting on .reCent meetings. building up- the Church' there

WhicR' he had in the U. S. with' 'aod anxious ,to fjnd tile- means. major superiOl's'oJ! some at reli- t& de mOre," Father McNiff said.

-

(I "

NEEDY ,OF KOREA: The poor of Seoul, Korea, are receiving m.ed,'icines at the Catholic Medical Center that is aided by the Catholic Relief Seryices-NCWC, and soon will

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GIVE HER AN .~ AUTOMATIC GAS· DRYER .: ; .., ." GAS 'dryer? • 0 because .. GAS•

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Ask :E~igrati~' OfSoyi~t' Jews

NEW YORK' (NC)-A panel of American civil' and religious personalities. has called o~. tlie leaders of the U.~.S.R. to permit iarge-scale emigration 'of Soviet Jews to Israel.

The call came in a "verdict" issued' by members of the Ad Hoc Commission on the Rights of Soviet Jews' based on testi ­mony and reports presented .at a public hearing,.here last March 18. . ' .. .

Bayard Rustin', Negro cnnl rights leader, chaired the ,tribu­nal and headed the list. of- signers who' made 'publici,their' findings today; They' are:John C. Benn.ett, 'president ·of Union Theologlcal Seminary; Father, George. ~. Ford; a Catholic ; priest, who. 18

pastor emeritus ·of Corpus Chns,­ti church;"Emil Mazey, sec.l;e,. taty..treasurer," United ,Automo,­bile Workers; Telford :raylo~, professor of law, .Columbla UO\­versity; 'and ,Norman .Tho~, veteran ·Socialist leader., ..

Mr. Rustin· said the CODUfilS­'sion would present its, findings to United Nations Secreta~­General'U Thant. The Third Committee of the U. N. General Assembly will soon begin a de­bate on draft documents 'out­lawin~ racial and religious bias.

Baltimore See Plans For Priests' Senate . BALTIMORE (NC)-Lawrence Cardinal Shehan bas sent a let­ter ,to priests in the Balt!more Mchdiocese announcing plans to form a senate of priests OI'gan­ized and "prepared· ~. functiea­as soon, as possible' after the fH'st of the year." '

Accompanying the letter. W81i.

an enclosure eJlplaining, possible ways for a senate to- be-elected; possible'matters. that suc~ a"~ might handle and exp~anatiofts of how such senates are- being. OI'ganized in other'dioceses.

.

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JltNHlIi.~~. ••• yOU SAVE MO~e

~

Includmg Saturdays . ...,p

This is pointed out in the an­nual repQrt of the U. S. Cath­olicS' overseas relief agency,

.which said its program in the year under report had a value of $181,714,276.60.

In the last fiscal year, CRS­NCWC dispatched to 77 coun­tries or areas 2,175 shipments of relief supplies having a gross weight of 1,500,565,035 pounds and valued at the highest annual

THE ANCHOR­Renef Services Citizen,~hrysostomM~dal for, Cardin~~ 18Thur.s., Dec. 8, 1966boLOGNA (HC)' --= The 'CitY'! -: Stress Self-Help eouncil of Bologna, Italy, has be­ WASHINGTON (NC) - Law­ archbishop of Constantinople instowed honorary citizenship Prelate Retiresrence Cardinal Shehan of Balti ­ the fourth century, and vene­upon its Genoese-born arch­In Aid Programs more was cited for his contribu­ rated by both Roman Catholic MIAMI BEACH (NC)-Msg£.

bishop, Giacomo Cardinal Ler­ tions to' the cause of reunion of and Orthodox Churches. William Barry, 80, has resignedWASHINGTON (NC) ­ earo' and decorated him with an the Eastern Orthodox and Ro­ The medal was presented by as pastor of St. Patrick's churchWhile continuing to supply award reserved for citizens who man Catholic' Churches at cere­ Bishop Justin Najmy, recently here after more than 40 yeamfood, clothing and medicines monies sponsored by the St. Paul named apostolic exarch for Mel-' in the post. He said he took thebave advanced the city's welfare. to millions of the poor in Center here. kite-rite Catholics in the United action in compliance with the

The decision of the communist-' various areas of the world, Cath­ Cardinal Shehan was the re­ States. Presiding was Archbishop papal directive for bishops and olic Relief services - National dominated council was unani­ cipient of the Chrysostom lVledal Patrick A. O'Boyle of Washing- . priests to retire after reaching Catholic Welfare Conference last mous. named for St. John Chrysostom, ton. age 75. year stressed development pro­grams designed to help people become self-sufficient and to take responsible roles in devei­ The Furniture Wonderland of the East ------------- .-~oping their own communities. Open qail~ 9 A.M. to 10 P.M. --r

total ever-$135,867,910.39. It was pointed out that U. S.

government - donated foodstuffs Id£til Gifts For The Music Lover . distributed by CRS-NCWC and

its counterparts overseas ac­counted for $96,668,950.41 of the total.

Since its establishment in 1943, CRS-NCWC has sent overseas foodstuffs, clothing, medicines and other relief supplies having a gross-'weight of 7,853,446 tons LANE(15,706,891,000 Ibs.) and valued at $1,617,333,555, for distribution to the needy without regard to race, color or creed.

AIn-Time IHIngb Record , For the sixth consecutive year, the 1965 Thanksgiving Clothing Campaign amassed an' all-time high-19,600,000 pounds of cloth­ Cabinets ing, shoes, bedding and blankets• .. During the 1966 program year, a total of 4,291,230 pounds of , Your Choke~edical 8Iid surgical supplies, valued at $9,395,137.88, was dis­tributed in 63 countries. . Also in the past year, $1,750,­000,000 was channeled through $79.95. CRS-NCWC to support socio­economic development projects. As in the past, most of the funds Cube Design, ContempQrary Walnut for these projects have been fur­ Walnut Finish Hold~,)50 LP's nished from. outside the United $54.95 $54.95 States, a total of $1,667,850.15 baving come from the German You have a choice mamffilentic design~panish bishops' relief organization, French, Contempor~.and Early American with lVIisereor; England,Oxfam of m-op fronts and sliding door styles with dividers and other fund-raising agencies so you can stand y~ :records upright and hold ..'in foreign' countries.

up to 150 LP albums. Graceful woodwork expertly finished. Crafted Taw.. JLaiOO makers of .famous

Lindsay Favo~$ Sweetheart Hope Chests. Make yOU1' selection ooon-a smail down payment will :resei"W yourOpen Program ehoice f.oo' Cblristm~·. deUv~

NEW YORK (NC) - Mayor John V. Lindsay of New York bas advocated a wide open birth control program-allowing we}.: fare workers to give birth con­trol information to clients, whether or not they ask for it. Designer' Styled Spinet

U tl d e r present regulations. welfare workers may give such hlformation only if a client re­ Pianos by Kimball ,quests it. The mayor said: "Ie: most eases the question is ne~ :Brand new :Designer-Styled ModeJs asked." . in your ehoice of wood finishes and Priced from'The mayor took his stand iii eoror' Combinations. Rich, golden.tone~an address at a luncheon' Of Ute fianned Parenthood ~ New. fo)J key bOard, 10 Yearmanufactur­York, He said that.be ~ Wid ere guarantee. Price includes initial' discussion' about the probl_ tmlinjr plus on~ additional tuning ana with Gov. Nelson Rockefeller fit )'REE DELIVERY.llew Yoork.

Jm Albany a spokesman for the ~vemor said br law aa:y dee­eions "on this subject are the eole J:esponsibility of 1be BoaJ'4, of &eial Welfare." The sPokes­ 'C eillent IutJget Ie-.JDaIl added: "This is not n matter ACRES OF ~ which he ('Mayor iokldsap) ,.. ....... ­ fR.EE PARKINGJaaa aDJ' jurisdiction."

-....i.JD ... 'sMew BectfoJd Gaild 'JIae monthly meeting fill tile -.Ae. En~ laqest Jurnitue8 Showroo....

IJew Bedford Guild tar the Und Bet1edulecl for tonig'lrt at 8 tn the •. \. .''','', ,', ,.- " .. --,'{"""""""'" _ ......:_,~ , ·,,·,·~f8~~.\/:a:::,: Ktnigbts o:f Colmnbus Hall win have all llm feature (1 Oh:natrmt:! rL.YN\OUTH I\VE. ot'ROD'MA.~J ST. FA_~~~~R ~ . I '. ....... . ".. . . __...._ ...... ;_ . • • ,

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Faff River-Thurs:, Dec. 8, 1966

.McCarthy Misunderstands Priests Association

By Msgr. George G. Higgins (Dnrector, Social Actieu Dept., NCWC) ,

When Father William DuBay of Los' Angeles first IIftnounced that he planned to arganize a priests' union, an 0IlterpHsing reporter inimea!ately corn:ered AFL-CIO Presi­dent George Meany and asked if he"would be prepared to gi'ant a charter to such 'an 4n.·ganization. My recollectian @f Mr.' Meany's characteris­tically blunt reply is rather hazy at the moment, but I seem· tOrecall that he dismissed Father ][)uBay's. pro- . posal ,out of hand and sug­gested no doubt with a twinkle in his eye ., that the matter of af­

filiation be re­ferred to Jimmy Hoffa, president of the Interna­tional Brother­hood of Team- . sters. I took it for granted at the time that President Meany was merely having a li ttle' innocent fun at Hoffa's expense. It never entered my mind that the Team­sters would take his suggestit)(\ seriously.

I ·am' now beginning to suspect, however, that perhaps I was being a little naive, for a reCent arti'cle oy·;r~ke McGarthY,',editor of tHe' Missouri. Teamster, pas­sionately supports' FatherDiJ­Bay's proposal and severely cag~

ligates those priests who, because of stupidity and/or craven ~r-.

vility, refuse to go along with it. It's entirely possible, then, that

llhe Teamsters would be willing to grant a charter to a priests union if one were ever estab­lished, unless, of course, Mr..Mc­Carthy (as I strongly suspect) was merely letting off a little post-conciliar steam unofficially mnd was speaking only for him­aelf, .

Angry Critic Be that as it may, McCarthy

e3mes through in hi!.! article ("Chicago Priests-A Union or lust an 'Association' ") as a very angry middle-aged Catholic whB

, is fed up right to here with the American hierarchy, who takes l'J.imself aad the labor movement much too seriously indeed, and who seems. to think that he knows considerably more ,about the Catholic clergy in the 'United States than' he actually ·does.

The immediate target of his ever-so-righteous indignation is the recently established Assecia- . tion of"Chicago Priests, of which this writer is proud to be a mem­ber and about which' he can claim to know a great deal more than Mr. McCarthy has taken the the trouble to learn.

The ACP, Mr. McCarthy states rather apodicticaUy, is really a union, but for some unaccount­able reason the exploited, and downtrodden priests of ChicagCl refuse to call it that.

'S·tupid, Cowardly' This,'he says, is rather stupid,

not to say cowardly, on their part, but, then, what difference does it really make in the ,long run, he asks rather indulgently in a rare moment of benign and almost patronizing tolerance.

After all, as Gertrude Stein taught us many years ago, a rose is a rose is a rose, no matter what you call it.. So, says' Mr. McCathy, "Who cares about words? 'Association' will do-it does for the International Asso­ciation of Machil'lists, ·for exam­ple." .

H Mr. McCarthy's unexpected tolerance on this particulaJ!' point is rather gratifying, it is alsO, alas, very short-lived. In tBe very next sentence he impatient­

ly reminds the priests of Chicago that ~'the problem is that the se­mantic game they are playi.ng with Church authorities contains two dangers:

'''I.) Tha.t in denying their own identity, they are dissipating their potential strength (unless they just wanted' t6 get some­thing off their chests), as if to say, 'look, boys, we really don't have any power and don't really want it.'

'Repudiate Concept' "2)' That in stating so force­

fully that 'we are not a union,' they deny their own Church's avowed teachirig that unions are a dignified and effective, indeed an essential, instrument of hu­man action to achieve redress'of grievances on the part of work­el'S, Why repudiate this concept? Why say 'we are above it'? Are they afraid some conservative parishioners will be scandalized, or that 'union' is a dirty word?" ,

"It seems to us," Mr. McCarthyadds for good measure,- "that if the Chicago priests waht 'success,

they must confront the burning 'problem iii their Chur.ch today­the problem of fear'. vs., con-' science and personal freedom for the clergy. After all, that's what it's aU about in the first place."

Mr, McCarthy is obviously en­titled to his own opinion on 'this matter, but if he had done any' homework at all on the origins and purposes of the Association Bf Chicago Prili!sts, he would know that its officers and rnem­bers don't agree with him, not because they are stupid or cow­ardly but simply because they

'happen to know more than he daesabout their 'specific role in the Church.

. ACP Pu!l'poses The purpo~es of the ACP are,

s~ated very. succinctly in ArticI'e"" bisl;iops continued, "that mem­II M its official Constitution:bers of the Church' of Ireland 1. To cooperate as an Association 'have consCiences also which can with the .Bishop in his pastoral be disturbed and scandalized in role; 2.. T,?promote effective th~s matter.; . . . , . cemmunication among priests; "" "It' is our-earnest hope that 8. To promote dialogue on .every th~se provisions will not be- al­level within the Christian com- lowed to become a permanent mUl!ity; 4: To seek common so:" obstacle in the way of that grad-' lutions to problems affecting the ual drawing together of the sun­el'\tire community. de'red parts of Christendom,"

Father Dennis Geaney, O.S.A., 'the pastoral letter concluded. who covered the ACP's constitu-' tional conven.tion for the weekly Catholic magazine, Ave Maria, likened to union-busting incus­

. and who knows t~e Chicago trial barons of an earlier period­clergy intimately, correctly in the history of Americancapi­points out that there is really a talism. difference in kind between such No wonder Mr. McCarthy is so an association and a labor union. wrought up about the ACP's· re­

"A labor union," he says, "ne­ fusal to ·call itself a union. Given gotiates; the ACP structures a his .analysis of the relationship­dialogue. A labor union uses between priests and bishops in strikes and work stoppages as the United States, his criticism of weapons; the ACP researches the the ACP is understandable. problem area, seeks to find a Jaundiced Approach consensus and presents its fine­ Again, of·course, he is entitled ings. to the archbishop. to his own opinion. But the rec­

Naked lI"ower , ord will show, I think, that he is "Since the 'whole thrust of·the merely ·giv!ng' vent to his own

council was to blur the status post-conciliar frustrations and is distinctions between God's holy not speaking for a majority of people, any thought of divisive': American priests or a majority ness would be abhorent to the of Catholic trade unionists and! ACP." . liberal Catholic laymen.

Not so, it would seem, to Mr. In closing, may I make it per­McCarthy. On the contrary, he fectly clear that -this column is thinks of the ACP almost exclu­ not intended to be critical of sively in teI'JJll of naked. eco­ Father DuBay as an individual. nomic power and compares the He, too, has.a right to hi. own priests who belong to it - and opinion with :regard to the or­American priests in general-to ganization of clerical unions, ·but, indigeous natives strugglirig for to the extent that it, parallels their freedom and independence Ml'. McCarthy':; rather jaundiced against the exploitation and 0010­ approach to the same subject,

. nial domination of their bishops, I must respectful1¥ disagree with

. wbo, in another context, ;al"e it.

•Advises ,Laymen to 'Speak Up'

TOLEDO (NC)-A theologian' from John Carroll University, Cleveland, has advised the laity:· "You must speak up. Create a vivid, live public' opinion."

Father John D. Gerken, S.J., in a lecture here extracted pas,­

'sages from 'various Second Vati ­.can- Council docum.ents to but­tress·.his advice. He said the .best passages on the laity', perhaps are to be found in the Decree ,on the Missionary Activity of the Church, in which paragraph' 21 sums up the way a layman is to 'consider him'self in speaking of "a 'laity wo,rthy of the name working' along with the hier­archy."

FIRST: The first Negro priest for the diocese «;>f Steu­benville will be ordained here Saturday by· Bishop John K. Mussio: He is Father Augus­tus R. Taylor, Jr., a native of.

. Cincinnati and the oldest of

.seven children. NC ,Phoro.

0- d-t M- dIsere I axeM L . ~rriiOrge aws

DUBLIN (NC)"":'" Archbishops and bishops of the AnglicanChurch of Ireland. have issued..

a'~ pastoral letter strongly criti-. cizing the Catholic Church's re- ','vised rules for mixed marriage.

The 'past()r'a'1': .1·nsl·sts 'that' the

changes are only supedicial'and that the reaffirmation of the Catholic Church's traditional teaching '''came as a grave dis­appointment to Christians of many traditions." . .

Criticizing the Instruction on Mixed Marriages issued by the Vatican as· "unecumenical';' the pastoral added: .

"The instruction is unaccept­able because it requires as a con­dition of the marriage a promise from the Church of Ireland part ­ner whereby all' the children born of the marriage are claimed for the Roman Catholiy Church.!'

" "It-' ~s ne·ce·ssary. to say." the

He also stressed that the De­cree on Priestly Life and 'Minis­try states: "Priests must sin­cerely acknowledge and promote the dignity of th~ laity and the role which is proper to them in the missi9n of the Church. They . should scrupulously honor that

just freedom which is due every­one in this earthly city.

"They should listen· to the laity willingly, consider their wishes in a fraternal spirit, and recognize their experience and competence in the different areas of human activity, so- tha~ togther with them they will be able to read the signs of the times.

"You haven't got a true 'Church unless there is coopera­!ion of clergy and laity," Father Gerken said.

Farm Help ALBACETE (NC) - Peasant.

farmers stand to benefit from the decision of the Diocese- of Alba­cete, Spain, to reject the legacy

'of a "$166,000 farm. The farming' of the land has been the villag­ers' sole meims of support and they can now become proprieton of the land. \

T·H.E GIFT THATSAVS III LOVE VOU"

THE HOLY FATHER'S MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL CHURCH

WHAT Christmas. Is Christ's Birthday. To show Him YOU you love Him, sacrifice something for the.poori

DO' •.. In Chethipuzha, India, hundreds of young FOR Christians are being Christ all over again-no

OTHERS room for them at the 'DonBosco Catechetical YOU Institute. With over 2,QOO boys and girls wanting 'DO to learn about Christ, hundreds of them have-to FOR sit down out-of·doors for class. DiffiCUlt? Rain HIM and wind make these classes almost impossible.

Won't ,you bring them in for Christmas? Fatl1er Thomas Fe,lix writes, ,i• •• will someone ,open his heart? $2,850 wtll build the desper~ly needed classrooms." ..• In Jordan, not far from Bethlehem, Infants In makeshift 'Bedouin tents ,shiver In their sleep on the desert sand. $8 will buy four blankets. ... Refugee.'famllles in miserable camps can be kept in milk, che~

fleur, for only '$10 a month. Remind us, If you ·feed'8 family for.a month, to send you-8n Olive Wood Rosary 1151 our thank-you...• Christ's .Birthdayis just two weeks away. Your gift to­the missions say~ to Him, "/ love· You." ••• What ere "the missions"l They are peOple, not ·placena~s. They are lepers, cancer sufferers, the blind, the .aged, foundlings, homeless refu­gees. They ani th& people for whom Christ be­·came an infant, and' was. crucified. What you do for the hungJ;V, the shivarlng,the.abandoned, He said, you do for Him: .•. How to celebrat•. CI1rist'.s .Birthday? Do something for the ,poorl We'U1lend,your·g1fts (tax'deductlble,tnthaU~ &.. of cour,se)'to tha HvIy Father. He'11. use. ttIem ex~ctly'as YQU request.

0­\1ISSION -0 $lO;OOOwill build a parIsh "pfanf' campI.

GiFT -(church, schoo!, rectory, convent)· somewhe,. :HECK overseas. Name It 'for your ftworlte ulnt, In

lIsr .your lov~ ones' memOJY. . (l.A church can 'I» built for $8,800, e schoof' for .$3;26l>.· The 'Bishop In charge wUl write to you.­iJ The Holy Fattier USQ stringless glfta'ln any amount ($5,000,$1,500; $500, $100, $50; $2lt, $10,$5,$2) where they're needed most. ' o It costs only $8.:508 month ($100 a·yeai}to train a native priest. For·$l2.50 a month ($150 a year) you can tralna· native Sister. Payments at yourconvenienc€l, of course.

e \'. Dear UNCLOSED PLEA8tl fiND $

lIIonsignor Nolan: FORr

NAME,. Please return coupon

8TREETwith your offering

CITY' OTATlZ

CO ...:.- _

_

_

_

ZIP CODI:I_.

THB CATHOLIC NEAR \!I,ASt WELFARIl ASSOCIATI«JIII

NEAR EAST MISSIONS.. (

. FRANCIS CARDINAL SPEllMAN, President MSGR. JOHN G. NOLAN, National secretary WrIte: CATHoLle Nl!AR EAST ,WElfARE AssDC. /) 330 Madis~n Avenue.' New Yorn, N.Y. 10011 Telephone:212/YUkon 6'5840

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THE ANCH 17Spain Freedom Thurs., Dec. 3, 1966

In R®~~Q;@n C@~[fl? ·"·='CDC!f[®~MADRID (NC)-Spain took a

step toward religious :l:reedlom when the nation's chief of 1f~~V~G' - ~~ ~@J~® state, Generalissimo Francisco ALBANY (HC)-AttoYneys fOI Franco, announced the introduc:" New York s~de asked that a tion of laws liberalizing the controversial l.CW law wbich re­nation's religious and political quires public schools to lend life. textbooks to' parochial school

The new laws to be submitted pupils be uph::-!d. The case was to a referendum early in Decem­ argt::ed here before the state ber, grant government protection Appellate D·v·sion Court. to the principle of religious free­

On Aug. 19, Supreme Courtdom, in effect permitting the Justice T. Paul Kane I'1l!]ed thepractice of non-Catholic reli ­law violated both state and fed­gions. This marks the first time eral constituEonal provisions onsince the late 1930s that Spain separation of Church and State.has approved the practice of any

His ruling was stayed by thereligion except Roman Catholi ­Appellate D:v;si&n pending thecism. Even under the new laws, appeal. The state has proceededhowever, Catholicism will re­with the textbuol~ program,'main the official state religion.. which went into died Sept. 1. ..For several years, government

After' arguments before fiveenforcement of laws barring judges, the appellate di~isionother faiths has been relaxed took the case under advisement.and the piscreet practice of other It is held likely that regardlessreligions permitted. Even so, of the appellate division dee>many Spaniards were eager sion, the case will be appealed tofor the new laws and are the state's ~:ghest tribunal, thE'awaiting still other promised Court of Appeals, and the Su­laws that will specifically abol­preme ~:lUrt.ish old regulations limiting reli ­

gious ireedom. . "Fhe amended 19fi5 law, gives The liberalization of law.s re­ school districts up to $15- in

CHURCH AND UNICEF AT W-QRK IN SAIGON: A Sisler of Pr~vidence of Porl­ stat-e aid· for eacli pupil per yearlating to religion reflects the cautions reorganization begun ieux pOurs a cup of milk for a· young refugee at one of the many crowded refugee areas I-or three years to buy textbooks ,. by Franco to align Spain's pe­ Rear Saigon. 'l'he milk, sent by the UN Children's Fund, is distributed in eooperation' with .and ·lend them to p'.lpHs of noo-. ,. liticallife with the practices and publk -schools. The grants .applythe overseas Catholic Relief Services, agency of American Catlwlics. the beliefs of other Western w~r~ 7 to 12. 8ations.

Anxious to insure stability when he surrenders control or Reviews History· of Wo·men1s ·C'olle.ges dies, F I' a n.c 0 has carefully planned a withdrawal from one­man rule to' constitutional mon­ Je$uit Says Popularity Encouragi·ng Changearchy. In the course of his 27­ " . year rule, the Spanish leader has NEW YORK (NC)-The long schools are crowded with bril ­ telligence, conscience and taste engineered several laws designed struggle of women's colleges in liant women," he asserted. in the light of both reason and to shift the nation to another this country to the present pla­ Father Gannon said no college Revelation; studies that win form of government. teau of eminence was traced by can prepare its students for ev­ convince a girl after four years

The new revisions in the na­ a veteran Jesuit ~ducator here. ery-sort· of vocation "except of college work, that she has famous for ti{)n's political code are a step through the ancient way of the just begun her education, justFather Robert L Gannon, S.J., further in this modernization. president emeritus of Fordham wisdom studies-philosophy, lit ­ learned to handle the instru­ QUAL.ITY and Delivered by Franco in a 53­ erature, history, languages and ments,· just learned how to treat minute speech before the Cortes, the 50th anniversary cqlebration pure science-:;;tudies that liber­ a book so that she can go on SFPVICEI the country's parliament, the of St. Joseph's College for Wom­ ate the mind, that cultivate in- learning for the rest of her .life."

University, a chief speaker at

latest revisions create a premier, en in Brooklyn, recalled proph­chosen by the chief of state for ecies that colleges for women a. five-year term. Currently were a passing fad. He added . Franco holds both positions. that gradua.te schools today are

Other reforms include a wider erowded with brilliant women. popular vote for representatives "The present popularity 0fin the Cortes, the expansion 4)f worx:Jen's colleges in America isthe electorate to include an -e of the few .encouragingmarried women, the increase of changes that modern times canthe workers" voice in labor ufiiOll

b~. about," Father Gannon operations~ the limiting of the said. powers of the Falange, the na­tion'sonly legal political party, "A long time ago there were and the invitation from Franco seminaries for females, but here for dissent within the nation's in the United States women got political structure. in~ college first when they in­

This invitation may be ac­ vaded Oberlin as co-eds in 1t133 cepted by many of Franco's 0p­ -tiH'ee years before the Sisters ponents, formerly imprisoned by of S1. Joseph opened their firSt the Spanish chief and now re­ American school in Carondelet. turned to political life following "Vassar in 1861 was the first a general am'nesty issued in college set aside for women and October. Trinity in 1897, our first Cath­

, olic college for women-or was it Notre Dame of Maryland. We

Evolution Statement must let them settle that them­selves.Criticism Is Scored

"Even after the turn of theHARTFORD (NC) - Theolo­ century, Catholic public opinion

gians who condemn evolution was too firmly convinced on theout-of-hand were sharply critic­ desirability of such rigorous in­ized heer in Connecticut for tellectuality for women," hlolmaking a judgment in a field continued.about which they know little or nothing. "For example, The Catholic

Encyclopedia as late as 1911,Father John L. McKenzie, S.J., carried an article by a learnednotee. Scripture scholar, has told Redemptorist which sought toa gathering of priests, Sisters and reassure the troubled male -oflay people that theologians have the last generation. 'There is nObeen too willing to condemn need,' he Wrote, 'to fear theevolution "without really lmow­·over-crowding of the academicinganything about it." profession by women * " " Na­

Father McKt.nzie, currently ture has a- regulating power.' " visiting professor of Old Testa­

Stresses Liberal Artsm'ent at "he University of Notre Dame, said that the hypothesis "Th~ hope seemed to be that of evo' 'ion "I< no longer sub~ because of some quota arrangee mitted to the criticism of theolo­ by nature, the overwhelming gians, nor should it be, any more majority 'of females would fail than the conclusions of theolo­ in their studies. You know the gians should be submitted to the line, 'women have tremendous natural sciences for criticism. intuition but they can't think.' The fact is that neither knows As it turned out nature has enough ftbout the othe,"s field to fallen 'down rather badly fln the make a v·alid jud&:ment." job of re~ulating. Our graduate

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Page 18: 12.08.66

.11E ANCHOR-Diocese,of.M R'iver-1hlW~. Dec. 8, 1966

.AFRICAN ART: Adaptation of the Nativity· scene was . ~reated in the African manner at the Center of African . Sculpture in Serima; Rhodesia, in the diocese of Gwelo. NC .,, ,'e

for Congress • S~ciologist Sees C?IPPortunity. to Witness

For Ch[j'Dst, Help Educate' Polifricians MILWAUKEE (NC)-"I see'

DO reason why a nun could not run for Congress," a pdest-soci­owgist asserted here.

Father Raymond H. Potvin, associate sociology professor at the Catholic University of Amer­

. lea, Washington, D. C., told some. 1,800 nuns . at the M.ilwaukee

'.", 'archdiocesan teachers institute' , .. here, that in a secular activity". . sUch as running for Congress a

nun .can witness for Christ and "'maintain the basic function which remains religion's - the transmission of. ultimate values."

Father Potvin's address devel- . ,.ped three main t:lemes--secu­larization of "religion. increased loss of functions for. religious communities and -the" rise of an Ideology of f~eedpm. and activ­Ism.

o "All of these processes call for bnportant adjustments in' the role of the nun and the structure of 'religious communities,". he said.' .

He emphasized that secular or­ganizations now are handling. more 'activities previously re­served for" 'religious organiza­

. Foundatioi'il ~Ii'CDnts DETROIT (NC)-The Univer­

sity of Detroit ·has.received two National Sci en c e Foundation grants for. training higl1 school mathematics teachers, totaling $59,950. The two grants .bring to a total of $1,480,971 the amount .

o of National Science Foundation monies received by the universi ­Q.y's mathematics department.

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Dr. Charles' O'Reilly, sociolo­gist at the University of Wiscon­sin, seconded the idea of a nun running for Congress, and added nuns could do "a better job of . educating' politicians and office holders" in some fields.

O'Reilly urged nUllS to take active part in such controversial fields as civil rights and to fight for their rights as women.

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Page 19: 12.08.66

Fans Awalt Court C~mpaign! THE ANCHOR--Diocese of Fall River-'-Thurs.• Dec. 8. 1966' " 19

Roger p Prelontaine of. New BedlordDurfee and Coyle Loom Best . .

G~ard at" University of Mass•.In County Basketball loop By Peter Bartek Coach Lauds Determination @f Stang Grad Korioo Bleb Coaeh

BT JOE MIRANDAEight Bristol County scholastic league teams-which, An bonor student at Bishopo!m the whole, play aEl gOOd basketball as any in the. State:...-.

Stang Higt.t ·School, Roger Pre­are !ready to begin the 1966-67 campaign with an eye to :fontaine is pursuing a teachingnext March's Eastern Mass. cbampionship ·playoffs. and coaching career at the Uni­

The pennant aspirants will versity of Massachusetts in Am­plishments inasmuch es be isbe engaged in non-league herst and also played a promi-.considered potential m a j 0 I'

nent role on the football team incompetition, foll' the moat league material, will' combine 1966.part, until after the turn of with Gomes in the l!>ttempt to A 20-year old sophomore from the new year when they will overtake both Durfee and Coyle. New Bedford, he was the start ­Quintal, three-letter athlete,' isopen the i r 14-game league ing middle guard with the 'de­

2 versatile individual who willschedules. fensive unit at UMass, whichprobably work out of the backODe 01. :ROO was· outstanding in helping theeourt.Coach Tom Karam's elassy 0 •

Redmen to unbeaten 5-0 YankeeFour of last year's regulars areDurfee High quintet of Fall Conference championship andreturning for - action with theRiver will be out to duplicate 6-3 overall record.Bishop Feehan High quintet ofUs Eastern Mass. ehampionship Praised by FusiaAttleboro which, like Vocational,

gan's Ms·gr. Coyle High club of of last season. Coach. Jim Lana­

eould run off with the honors. Head coach Vic Fusia had high Dave Kirby and Jim Parker are pl'aise for Prefontaine, termingTaunton is the pre-season choice the returning forwards. Bruce the former Stang star, "a hardto wage the major competition

for the 0Ver-strong Fall River McDonald will be at center agai'n working, determined player who

Hilltoppers. Coyle,year in and this season and Pete Phipps will was a valuable ~performer for be in the. back court. ,the Redmen this FalL"year out, is represented by B

Fusia also .noted that Roger isfonnidable combination. Stang in Rematch a very coachable young man whoSix-foot, five-inch ErnieFlem­ Coach Jim Cassidy will have improved constantly each weeking looms as the tower of to look to last season's junior of th~ season and became an in­strength in the Karam camp. The varsity for his starting club at tegral part of our strong defen­:nurfee center, who was chosen Attleboro High. But this situa­ sive unit.":IS the most valuable player in· tion is not new to Cassidy who The son of Mr. and Mrs. Mar­} a s t Winter's Eastern Mass. has overcome the same problem cel Prefontaine of 90 Robeson.mampionship competition, is in the past with teams that have Street, Roger is one of four chil ­alml included among the 100 best kept the Jewelry City school dren and a member of Sacredhigh school cagers. in United high in the league standing. Heart Parish in New Bedford.States' by ,'il national basketball Coach John O'Brien, whose The five-foot, 10 inch, 210­publication. forecasts are more closely pountl lineman was indoctri ­Jack ~yle-quick, a smooth aligned with the gloomy predic­ Hated by Carlin Lynch, whenball handler· and so excellent tions of football' coaches, . has the latter was head footballplay maker-will lead the Durfee Craig Williams and Pat Desmond coach at· Stang, High.. Now themachine-like offensive unit ill. as the key players this season 'at a$Sist:lOt Ho~y Cross mentor,its bid to repeat last year's suc­ Bishop Stang High in North· Lynch talked of PrefontaineIless. Dartmouth. O'Brien's club which fondly.Doyle is a typical product of finished second to Durfee in the

1{aram who drills his club to BCL last season, . gives a good Roger is the second of'four avoid costly mistakes while cap­ children. An older brother Reneaccounting each campaign. Last italizing on the opposition's mis­ season, Stang reached the Q,uar- is manied and resides in Mon­

treal, a younger Robert is a~. It has been this talent that ..ter-finals in the Eastern Mass. has crowned the annual ·success­ junior and member of the foot­ehampionships and the finals in SUI efforts of the Fall River men­ the New England Catholic toUll'­ ball team at Stang -and a sister, ~ whose team looks like the Rachael is· a student at SacredIlament. AB II junior in 1962, Roger During the Fall sessions' :Pre-Heart School in New Bedford.top _tender tor league honors. Stang's get-away game irl started at guard for Stang and fontaine, an unknown th~ seHS~Tolle DaFk Horse . Dick Bresciani, assistant sports

scheduled tomorrow n i g h t was a member of the Spartans before in the UMass foo'tballlFreddy Martin, unquestionably information director at UMass·against Cardinal Spellman High unbeaten BCL champions. He setup, worked with the deferisive _ CIlf the best bigh school revealed that· Prefontaine was ;;of Brockton which' defeated the was awarded an honorable men- unit and won a starting bertbplayers in the entire state, will major cog with the Redmen de­O'Brien elan .i~ the N. E. Cath­ tion on the All-League squad. . prior to the opener ag~insnllJ)earhead the Coyle elub. Mar­ fense and was part of the unit,olic tournament fi!1allast season. , ' Great Desire· Maine at Amherst. .,that came through with 10-goal.

er and a defensive· stalwart, ill line stands in helping the team·. till, an extremely accurate shoot­

, Coach Bob Reedy ill his first·' Lynch told The Anchor· that· The Sacred Heart pal'isnionei" )'ear at ~ helm llt Taunton win its third Yankee Conference Prefontaine was a self made was ePlployed in a fact~ry if:!ti:le individual player upon whom High is eonfronted with exactly crown in four years: footb~Jl 'player who ·possessed 'ratmton last Summer, but man­vc.,ach Lanagan ·counts on to lead the saine Bltuation as Cassidy at tremendous desire, was quick·· ·aged tc find time to enjoy ·swim­h Taunton combine to the BCL Gl'acJuated with :R~norsAttleboro. He bas no', "regulars Bnd agile while at Stang. ' •.. ming, boating and water skiing

title. The 6:-2 forward will duo Prefontaine termiti"ted bis,returning and must build from The former Stang coach re- on Long Pond· in Freetownwith Harold Cromwell in the scholastic career in 1964 whenthe bottom up with last Winter's vealed that Prefontaine was tne· where his family spent P'a~·t oilfi-ont court.. Cromwell" a most graduated with boftors fromjunior varsity best. The lack of hardest working boy he had ever the vacation months. ",.;.'

ROGER PREFONTAINE

~pable pivotman, will provide ,. Stang. ,experience will probably keep eoached and loved the game oft ~ e all-important rebounding The New Bedford youth com­the Herringtown outfit-in the football. He was diligent andstrength 'that every team needs' ., pleted his, gridiron· . auties thelower part of the BeL standing. . ded,icated,Lynch added.·if it is to chalk-up II winning previous Fall helping Stang to

Injury Burts Nortb Roger is detennined to becomelIleason. finish its second season.of varsity a teach~r and coach following'Malden Catholic will meet the The loss of Steve'Stack, -caused football with au 8-1 record and his graduation from the Univer­Lanagan lads m" ·tile latter's by' an automobile injury, ·de­ second place in tlie Bristol sity of Massachusetts. He missed ' opening co,ntest at the Coyle prives North A.ttleboro High of County League. . i'ootball last year, but tried outHigh gym in Taunton at 1:30 one player upon whom it was His efforts earned him a start ­ for" the Redmen squad duringnelft Sunday afternoon. Coyle's counting to keep it in contention. ing berth at tackle on ·the All­ Spring drills and so impressedtim league encounter will be· stack was quarterback on the Bristol County League team. As Fusia that he was assigned.2against Durfee on Tuesday gridiron eleven when he was .n oonior he was described as a varsity uniform.night, Jan. 3 in the Fall River injured illl the mishap. North, big 180 pounds and one of the

Annory. which has officially denied alllY fastest interior linemen in the New Bedfol1'Q Vocational, intention of switching to the ai"ea.

which paid the price last season Hockomock League, looks to All BeL coaches agreed thatwhen it was building for the Ron Ouimet to pilot the Red Prefontaine was able at break­future, is definitely the league':! Rocketeers to a contending spot ing up plays when on defense dark-boll'SC this Winter. m the Bristol County loop. and ran interference for back­

Feehan Nucleus Stro08 The eight are mindful of the field teammates in a manner GomeG' has been a name repeti ­ importance of every contest in­ judged tops in-the loop.

tiously appearingon the scorecard asmuch as they must win at least !lImost every year IJt Vocational '10 per eent of their games to Dnd it win be a wery populaR' qualify for the Eastern Mass. name again this season. "in playoffs. Gomes will be out to duplicate ~e tremendous showing of his elder brothers wben they were lit the same secondary school. :nt was one of Vin's brothers who led Vocational to its last appear­ance in tile Tech tourney.

And, the word eaming out of ~ew :Bedford is that Vin is e~ery bit the equal of his brothenl.

John Quintal, probably best Jmo~' foil' 'hili ba5ebal! acooIDo>

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