02.29.68

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Lafrance Heads Charities Appeal Westport Businessman 10- Serve as 1968 Lay Chairman The ANCHOR faB River, Thursday feb. 29, 1968 PRICE 101: ® 1968 The Anchor Yot 12, No.9 $4.00 per Y_ Open to All Faiths Set CCD an-service Program For .Cape Cod on March 16 An In-service workshop for aU teachers of Ohristian in the Oape Cod Area win be conducted on Saturday. March ,16 in the Holy Trinity Parish, West Harwich. The warkshop wiU open at 9 :30 lin the morning and close with fJJne celebration of. the EtJI- in the afternoon in order to as- dnarist at 3 in the afternoon. sure part-time participants the Under the direCibion of the opportunrty of attending the es- reD Area Di:rec1;(mJ, Rev. sential sessions. liflonald A. Tosti of Our Lady Both the elemen:tary and big\ll the Assumption Parish, Oster- school levels will be covered. 'dlle, and Rev. Philip A. Davig- Father Tosti is available at llIoOn, assistant at St. Pius X Pal'- 428.,.2011 ilor anyone wishing Ili;;h, So. Yarmouth, the program inrormMi.on on the pro- II'l DPen to all, regardless of re- crram· affiliation. .Registration will be iiifty ' Sr. Joan Louise and three otb- and no adVan<le registration will1 sisters of the Victory Knon be necessary. Everyone attend- fJongregation of Sisters who must bring their oWlll box under the direction of Rev. lluneh, but beverages will be pro- ;Joseph L. Powers, Diocesan CCD vidoo. !l)i,rector, wiU conduct the pro- Tecbniquea, projects, film- i:1'llm. otri·Pll and the use of })l)Pulm' fte day will open with regiG- GOnglS 'in C C Jl) work will· be tmtion at 9:30, and there will be studied in addition. to demon- 6W1o sessions, Some of the morn- Gltration classes and question aoo workshops will be repeated answer periods. Pope ··Urges Catholic Pupils Aid World's Needy Children NEW YORK (NC)-Pope Paul VI urgOO. the llOOl"Ie ttmD i\.'ix million Oatholic school pupils m the United States ''to do everything you can to help ail those boys and. girl-a who live in countries where there is hunger. SVlffermg and sickness..lli> I'he Pope's plea was made The annwd Lentellll. eampaitJll yesterday in his annual Ash m 111. S. Catholic schools is tbe Wednesday message to Amer- Anitiai phase cd the 22nd mmual learn Oa.tholic school ehildrell Blsbopa' Overseas Aid Fund .bich opens the Catholic Blsh- Appeal!, The secoIMll phase Overseas Aid Fund AppeaL oonducted m the Catthollc pal'- \ftle Pope's address was broad- Wiles acl"Ofi the country, 1llCh .. east by.the nation's majoli' radio 1lI1ed this yeM from MareJn I'r to M, and climaxed by Ule tradie> ltioiaai I.lletw'le Sundlll:l7 eclllectliOlll' l1D. mil; plea, J»o ,Mareh M. !lorded illll VaticlIlJl Cit'ly. Pope Paul reminded American cb.iI- Proceeds Jerom the emnpangD that "through DO fault of 3UPPGri ¢be glIobal programs of Cheirs, these young people do Cathoiie Relief 8ervieell, O¥ellb I\Ot have enough to eat, man,y C!JZ seas aid aDd developma clbem have ,DO homes tmd 0DlF agenq America to wear, some have Of flbe $5 million. JIlllltionllll pili _ eaeh l"i!'8l!' _ the lilPP0lIIo lbeal[' fathers and mothers. <iWeIl Iheil[' whole families; they arow approlldmately $I. miWon iIIP ignorant and unedooated be=- llealbed Jmlm the ttallJ8e they bave DO schools, tmd donations. ",helIl they get sick, lllfJ the»' '!'he text rSi. Pope Pauh .. Dft;en do, tlllere are DO doctom dresu 00 h lJehoo1 3lAndentB jW.. li>r bospi tala or medileme. 1IrJww.l .-e them well o:aJA." Roland Aime Lafrance, member of St. John bhe Bap- tist parish, Central Village in Westport, will serve as Lay Chai!'man of the 1968 Cath- olic Charities Appeal, Most Rev. James L. Connolly, Bishop of Fall River, announced today. The 10-day Appeal will run from May 5 through 15. The new lay chairman is general manager of White's Family Restaurant· in North Westport and treasurer of La- france Restaurants, Inc. and Lafrance En terprises, Inc. A native of Fall River, Mr. Lafrance grew up in St. Jean Baptiste parish in the Maple- wood area. After graduation from Prevost High School, Fall River, the 1968 Catholic Chari- ties Appeal lay ch:airman at- tended Food Executive Seminars at Cornell University and the University of Massachusetts. His wife, the former Rita P. Fallon, a graduate of B. M. C. Durfee High School, Fall River, is affiliated with hei' husband in the restalll'ant business. The couple has one son, Richard L. Lafrance. a senior at the Uni- versity of Notre Dame. He will graduate next June 2. The many activties of the new Chairman include the director- ship of the Technical Fund of Boston, appointment by Gov- ernor John A. Volpe in 1966 to serve nine years on the SMTI Turn to Page Two Vatican Report Lists Increase Of 5.5 Million VATICAN CITY (NC) The Holy See, in a prepubli- cation view of its annual re- port 00 i·tg own activities. put the number of the world'tiI Catholics at 485 million in 1966, about 5.5 milli.on ,more than illil 11964. Other sbl'tistlcs for 1966' gave (lbe number of priests as 351,624, 1IJP almost 5,000 from two yearn previously. The number of sem- marians studying theology, de- clined by about 1,000 to about 25,000, while the number of sem- inarians studying philosophy de.:. clined atbout 200 to about 26,000. ,There were 1225 dioceses, more than in 1964. 'I'he book, entitled wActivitiCl!l of the Holy See in 1967," noted t'bat Pope Paul VI published. Tum to Page Eighteen ANSWERI'NG A QUESTION WHAl'S THIS ABOUT MY CONSCIENCE? 'lbere fa a great deal of talk today about conscience, and thw tw so in discussiooo ooncerning birth control. A person's conscience il; the lldtimatle guide of his actions- be InU.Ilt. before God rollow it. 'II.bIil!I mearul tb24 he is obliged to do what he sincerely believes with ceAlllinty is morally good, 8Dd he is likewise obligoo to .¥Did what he sincerely oerIlai1J1lty .ia morally evil. fta! i3 Ii elear-cUlt principle. .15very pari of it is important, Tum 00 Page Eishteen APPEAL Wl'rH A HEART: R,. Aime Lafrance of West- port, right, will serve as 1968 lay chairman of the di- ocesan Charities Appeal from May 5 through May 15. His wife, Mrs. Ri·ta P. Lafrance is seated and their son, Richard L., a University of Notre Dame senior, is at the !eft. Vatican Answers Bishops On Liturgy Suggestions for further changes in the liturgy-in the nature of adaptations to the American scene-which were forwarded to Rome after the U.S. Bishops' 1967 meeting, were answered this Like all requests, some were granted ; some were wrne were deferred. Among place, preferably during Lent. This leads up to the Easter re- the changes granted were: ception of "the Sacraments of PENANCE: 'l'he formula' Christian Initia.tion," Baptism, at spoken by the Confirmation and the Eucharist, priest in the administration of in a single service. the Sacramerut of Penance may INSTRUMENTS: Musical in- now reference ex- omit any to struments other than the organ eommunica·tions "unles there be may be used in liturgical ser- oome indication that a censure vices "provided they are played was incurred." in a manner suitable to public GOOD FRIDAY: The Congre- worship." ga.tion of Rites has authorized -Commenting on this provi- a shortening of the repetition of sion, Archbishop John F. Dear- the Good Friday service. don, president 9f the National EASTER VIGIL: The cele- Conference of Catholic Bishops, bmtion of the Easter Vigil ser- , added, "This decision deliber- vice may 'be held early E·aster ately refrains from singling out morning. specific instruments. Their use depends on circumstances, the BAPTISM RITE: An author- nature of the congregation, and ized experiment, with liturgical so on. , oorvices for the Baptism of -"In particular cases, if there adults will take place this Lent should be doubt as to the suit- m. about 20 American dioceses. , ability of the instruments, it will The new rite provides for sever- be the responsibility of the dio- al stages of prayer in prepara- cesa.ri bishop, hl consultation tion for Baptism. with his diocesan liturgical and -Once the initial period of in- music Commissions, to render a quiry by the prospective con- decision," vert is completed, a succession of simple rites-including bibli- OTHER HYMNS: Vernacular cal readings and prayers as well texts set to music but composed .. formal enro1l.meJlt - ia.k.e£ Turn to Pa.fl,e Eleven

description

dnarist at 3 in the afternoon. sure part-time participants the Under the direCibion of the opportunrty of attending the es­ Iheil[&#39; whole families; they arow approlldmately $I. miWon • Reque~ts for further changes in the liturgy-in the iIIP ignorant and unedooated be=­ llealbed Jmlm the ~ ~n that "through DO fault of 3UPPGri ¢be glIobal programs of I\Ot have enough to eat, man,y C!JZ seas aid aDd developma I&#39;he Pope&#39;s plea was made ~orks. .Registration will be iiifty ~e.nis &#39; $4.00 per Y_

Transcript of 02.29.68

Page 1: 02.29.68

Lafrance Heads Charities Appeal Westport Businessman 10- Serve as 1968 Lay Chairman

The ANCHOR

faB River M~ss Thursday feb 29 1968 PRICE 101reg 1968 The AnchorYot 12 No9 $400 per Y_

Open to All Faiths

Set CCD an-service Program For Cape Cod on March 16

An In-service workshop for aU teachers of Ohristian ~middotth in the Oape Cod Area win be conducted on Saturday March 16 in the Holy Trinity Parish West Harwich The warkshop wiU open at 9 30 lin the morning and close with fJJne celebration of the EtJIshy

in the afternoon in order to asshydnarist at 3 in the afternoon sure part-time participants theUnder the direCibion of the opportunrty of attending the esshyreD Area Direc1(mJ Rev sential sessions

liflonald A Tosti of Our Lady Both the elementary and bigll ~ the Assumption Parish Ostershy school levels will be covered dlle and Rev Philip A Davigshy Father Tosti is available at llIoOn assistant at St Pius X Pal shy 4282011 ilor anyone wishing Ilih So Yarmouth the program ~lth6i inrormMion on the proshyIIl DPen to all regardless of reshy crrammiddot ~ous affiliation Registration will be iiifty ~enis

Sr Joan Louise and three otbshy and no adVanltle registration will1 ~ sisters of the Victory Knon be necessary Everyone attendshyfJongregation of Sisters who ~ng must bring their oWlll box ~rk under the direction of Rev lluneh but beverages will be proshyJoseph L Powers Diocesan CCD vidoo l)irector wiU conduct the proshy Tecbniquea projects filmshyi1llm otrimiddotPll and the use of )l)Pulm

fte day will open with regiGshy GOnglS in C C Jl) work willmiddot be tmtion at 930 and there will be studied in addition to demonshy6W1o sessions Some of the mornshy Gltration classes and question aoo ~ workshops will be repeated answer periods

Pope middotmiddotUrges Catholic Pupils Aid Worlds Needy Children

NEW YORK (NC)-Pope Paul VI urgOO the llOOlIe ttmD iix million Oatholic school pupils mthe United States to do everything you can to help ail those boys and girl-a who live in countries where there is hunger SVlffermg and sicknesslligt

Ihe Popes plea was made The annwd Lentellll eampaitJllyesterday in his annual Ash m 111 S Catholic schools is tbeWednesday message to Amershy Anitiai phase cd the 22nd mmual

learn Oatholic school ehildrell Blsbopa Overseas Aid Fund bich opens the Catholic Blshshy Appeal The secoIMll phase bull ~ Overseas Aid Fund AppeaL oonducted m the Catthollc pal shyftle Popes address was broadshy Wiles aclOfi the country 1llCh east bythe nations majoli radio 1lI1ed this yeM from MareJn Ir to ~orks M and climaxed by Ule tradiegt

ltioiaai Illetwle Sundllll7 eclllectliOllll1D mil five-minu~ plea Jraquoo Mareh Mlorded illll VaticlIlJl Citly Pope

Paul reminded American cbiIshy Proceeds Jerom the emnpangD

~n that through DO fault of 3UPPGri centbe glIobal programs of Cheirs these young people do Cathoiie Relief 8ervieell Oyenellb

IOt have enough to eat many CJZ seas aid aDd developma clbem have DO homes tmd 0DlF agenq ~ America Ca~

~ to wear some have ~ Of flbe $5 million JIlllltionllll pili _ eaeh li8l _ the lilPP0lIIo

lbeal[ fathers and mothers ltiWeIl Iheil[ whole families they arow approlldmately $I miWon bull iIIP ignorant and unedooated be=shy llealbed Jmlm the ~

ttallJ8e they bave DO schools tmd donations helIl they get sick lllfJ theraquo he text rSi Pope Pauh Dften do tlllere are DO doctom dresu 00 h lJehoo1 3lAndentB jW

ligtr bospitala or medileme lraquo 1IrJwwl -e them well oaJA

Roland Aime Lafrance member of St John bhe Bapshytist parish Central Village in Westport will serve as Lay Chaiman of the 1968 Cathshyolic Charities Appeal Most Rev James L Connolly Bishop of Fall River announced today The 10-day Appeal will run from May 5 through 15

The new lay chairman is general manager of Whites Family Restaurantmiddot in North Westport and treasurer of Lashyfrance Restaurants Inc and Lafrance En terprises Inc

A native of Fall River Mr Lafrance grew up in St Jean Baptiste parish in the Mapleshywood area After graduation from Prevost High School Fall River the 1968 Catholic Charishyties Appeal lay chairman at shytended Food Executive Seminars at Cornell University and the University of Massachusetts

His wife the former Rita P Fallon a graduate of B M C Durfee High School Fall River is affiliated with hei husband in the restalllant business The couple has one son Richard L Lafrance a senior at the Unishyversity of Notre Dame He will graduate next June 2

The many activties of the new Chairman include the directorshyship of the Technical Fund of Boston appointment by Govshyernor John A Volpe in 1966 to serve nine years on the SMTI

Turn to Page Two

Vatican Report Lists Increase Of 55 Million

VATICAN CITY (NC) The Holy See in a prepublishycation view of its annual reshyport 00 imiddottg own activities put the number of the worldtiI Catholics at 485 million in 1966 about 55 million more than illil 11964

Other sbltistlcs for 1966 gave (lbe number of priests as 351624 1IJP almost 5000 from two yearn previously The number of semshymarians studying theology deshyclined by about 1000 to about 25000 while the number of semshyinarians studying philosophy de clined atbout 200 to about 26000

There were 1225 dioceses n~

more than in 1964 Ihe book entitled wActivitiCll

of the Holy See in 1967 noted tbat Pope Paul VI h~d published

Tum to Page Eighteen

mIIlillilllimmmI11l1nln1l111111111111lfIIIIIIII1l1l1~

~ ANSWERING A QUESTION ~ ~ ~

WHAlS THIS ABOUT MY CONSCIENCE

lbere fa a great deal of talk today about conscience and thw tw eqgteci~lly so in discussiooo ooncerning birth control

A persons conscience il the lldtimatle guide of his actionsshybe InUIlt before God rollow it IIbIilI mearul tb24 he is obliged to do what he sincerely believes with ceAlllinty is morally good 8Dd he is likewise obligoo to yenDid what he sincerely belie~

~ oerIlai1J1lty ia morally evil

fta i3 Ii elear-cUlt principle 15very pari of it is important

Tum 00 Page Eishteen

APPEAL WlrH A HEART R Aime Lafrance of Westshyport right will serve as th~ 1968 lay chairman of the dishyocesan Charities Appeal from May 5 through May 15 His wife Mrs Rimiddotta P Lafrance is seated and their son Richard L a University of Notre Dame senior is at the eft

Vatican Answers Bishops On Liturgy Suggestions

Reque~ts for further changes in the liturgy-in the nature of adaptations to the American scene-which were forwarded to Rome after the US Bishops 1967 meeting were answered this w~ek Like all requests some were granted some were (~enied wrne were deferred Among place preferably during Lent

This leads up to the Easter reshythe changes granted were ception of the Sacraments of

PENANCE lhe formula Christian Initiation Baptism at ~bsolution spoken by the Confirmation and the Eucharist priest in the administration of in a single service the Sacramerut of Penance may INSTRUMENTS Musical inshynow reference exshyomit any to struments other than the organeommunicamiddottions unles there be may be used in liturgical sershyoome indication that a censure vices provided they are played was incurred in a manner suitable to public

GOOD FRIDAY The Congreshy worship gation of Rites has authorized -Commenting on this provishya shortening of the repetition of sion Archbishop John F Dearshythe Good Friday service don president 9f the National

EASTER VIGIL The celeshy Conference of Catholic Bishops bmtion of the Easter Vigil ser- added This decision delibershyvice may be held early Emiddotaster ately refrains from singling out morning specific instruments Their use

depends on circumstances theBAPTISM RITE An authorshynature of the congregation andized experiment with liturgical so on oorvices for the Baptism of

-In particular cases if thereadults will take place this Lent should be doubt as to the suit shym about 20 American dioceses

ability of the instruments it willThe new rite provides for severshybe the responsibility of the dioshyal stages of prayer in preparashy cesari bishop hl consultationtion for Baptism with his diocesan liturgical and-Once the initial period of inshymusic Commissions to render aquiry by the prospective conshydecisionvert is completed a succession

of simple rites-including bibli shy OTHER HYMNS Vernacular cal readings and prayers as well texts set to music but composed formal enro1lmeJlt - iakepound Turn to Pafle Eleven

2

I

Continued from Page One Dear Boys and GirIs We are very happy to speak

to you once again on this first day of Lent as we have dQne every year since we middotbecame your Holy Father

We come to ask you to do everything you can to help all those boys and girls who live in countries where there is hunger suffering and sickness Their language and the color of their skin may be differentmiddot from yours but they are your age and they have the same needs and desires and hopes that you

hav~k Schools Me~~cinec CCA AREAD~RECTORS-plusmnhespeciagift phase of the Ca-thoiic Ch~1i~~Appeal will be hoodOO inthree areas by leftRev Eqward C Duffy assistant at St JamesChurch

However through nocfault ofmiddot R t t St Pt k F 1 th f th C theirs these young people do New ~~orQRev Jo~n J ean ai~lst~n a a rl~ sa mou ~r e ape not have enough to eat many of06d dIstrIct Rev John F Mltoreaamps~~tantatSt Josep~ s Taunton them have no homes and only rags to wear some have lost their fathers and mothers even their whole families they grow up ignorant and uneducated beshycause they have no schools and when they get sick as they often do there are no doctors or hospitals or medicines to make them well ~gain

If you could see them if you could see the misery and povshyerty in which they live we know that you would do everyshything possible to he1p them I

During Lent you can relieve the suffering of these boys and girls first by praying for them asking Our Lord to help and comfort them

Institute Geared ~o C(1]techist as Person

ceD I~~ans SMlmme~ Session (Q]t cu WASInNGTON (NC) - This liturgi(~ally oriented community

years CCD catechetica1 In expemiddotriences stitute will stress the devElop- The institute jointly spon- ment of the person of the c~ate- sored by the CCD National Censhy

chist according to FatherFrank ter the National Conference of Murphy institute director Diocesan Directors of the CCD

and the Catholic University ofFather Murphy said at the National Center of the Confra America will be ltheld at the ternity of Christian Doctrine universitY from July 3 to Aug

th t th tt t 14 here a e ms 1 u e s per- Father ~urphy said the in-sonal approach will be achitved bull allh h II t middott stitutemiddot~lrebe profession y

t ru~ sma g~oup S~~~I ni~ y middotgeared to ~the n~eeds-of people Second -by your little sacri~ traml~g techmqu~s-A pJ1est lt currently involved in CCD work

fices during this holy seasoDf a~d a ~oup dYJ)amlls~xpert iIi the United States and will yO u can put aSIde what youmiddot wIII faclIltate th~ smal1 gr(ups li

t h t II d challenJ~e the higher capabl shywouln spend on your own plcentas~ m preparmg ca e~ e ~c~r~ ties of diocesan and parish CCD ures and enjoyment to makemiddotal1 bull gt personne1~ offerip~ to the collection wlji~h Raise Tuition~ Three Areasshyyour bIshops hold each year in t bull bull - - bull

order to send food clotIUng ~d At p d Participantsrn the Catecheti- medicine to these poor childre~ roy en~e~ cal Insmute re~eive a certifi shyas you have always done so Vf~U PROVIDENCEmiddot(NC)-The tu- cate at ~~~ middoten~ of- th~ first

before iti6nincreaseeHeelivenext ~ep- summer arId middota dlplgtma at the

the professional and the pedashygogical Father Murphy stated

He said the professional area aims at insights drawn from theology Scripture liturgy anshythropo10gy psychology and soshyciology

The pedagogical he continshyued will be facilitated through small group work and divided according to the age ups and

6middot V

culturalmiddot backgrounds of the persons with whom the CCD catechists will be working

The latest teChniques ingroup-consciousness and the most effective Use of audioshyvisua1 materials including modshyem electioniceqwpment will be demonsrated in classroom

situations TJ1~ in~titute ~U1 include a

l~ture series a film festiv~ ~ completion of four summers and the production oLa mOvie

Whatever You Do -~ tEimher whIch PIovidence Co1- The certificated courses Win bYmiddot~eparlicipants inlipe with

R Aime Lafrance

Continued from Page One Building Authority ~dvisOl7 board of the Greater fall River Vocational School a~d Westshyport Chairman of the March Dimes

PromniDent iD Jrea Be is a member and past

Grand Commander of the Ordel of Alhambra - Leon CaravaD director and charter member 01 the Immaculate Conception ParshyIsh Credit Union ~all River membermiddot of the Knights of Coshylumbus Council 86 One Hunshydred Club of Massachusetts Exchange Club of Fall River International Union of Hotel and Restaurant Association and Southeastern Police Chiefs Aj

sociationmiddot Mr Lafrance is a imiinber

the Fall River and Westport Chamber of Coinmei~e an4

Lodge ofElks He is alSo affiIJshyBted with the Franco AinericlUi Civic League Club Calumet Amvets Post No 80 Franco American War Veterans au4 Eastern Sportsman Club

Grateful for Honor With this varied and wiltkl

background of experience Mr Lafrance said

To work with you BishOJi Connolly for the cause of Cathshyolic Charities tit the 1968 Appeal is a pleasure and an honor I thank your Excellency for the opportunity to become asseshyeiated with ~he clergy and laitJ in Qehalf of Catholic Charities

I appreciate this oppprtunity to serve youand the Diocese and I am looking forward with vigor and vitality to assure the

success of the 1968 Catholie Charities Appeal

N~crology JARCH 9

Rt Rev Henry J Noon VG 1947 Pastor St James New

Bedford 3rd Vicar General F~ River 193447

MARCH 12 You tememberthat JesuS middot lege announced a year ago villbe plahn~d aroiIiid the thretb the incre~ing importance re- RevAurelien L Moreau 1961

said Vhatever YOll doto the aO-0~ntto $150 beVeryltev main areas forcatechist forma- llgious educators attaeh to mass Pastor St Mathieu Fan Rivez littlesfof His dlildrenJt is the W111I~mPaut HlS~ lttPbullan lion todayIn addition to ~ ~edia ( I bull

( same as ifYo do itto Hi~ and He WIll reward you lor

lt YOurmiddotKil~d~esllli~dmiddotlo~~ng ~elp to ~uffe~mg boys an ~1rlS J~t ani He were poor andsltffermg

Himself arid you gave Hh~ your gIft ~f food ~nd clothing and shelter

We feel sure that you WIll be as generous as yOll can that is

your 0 ermgs n IS name we invoke upon you man-y graces and benefits aIidWe-send our apostolic blessing to your fathshy

( ers ~n4 motpers to your brothshyers and sisters YQllrmiddot classmates teachers the priests of your parish and to each and every one of you our very dear chil shydren Godbless you all-

FORTY HOUlS DEVOTION

Mar3--8t James New Bedshyford

St Anthony East Falshymouth

Our Lady of Lourdes Taunton

~arian MilDor Taunton

TIIpound MeHDe

n~c~d bull personall the) othermiddotareas are r The new tuition rates for Sep- (-

tember will be $1450 peryearW j C ~ -bull middotmiddotMassJ)rdO~ fur freshmen and sophomores Ol1nelJ1 5 ursl 0 j and $1350 for juniors and-Slen- FRIDA~--F~lday~~~~~ Aslll iors The rates differ b~ause the Stortrs Tonight ~~~~sday ~I9~ss-V101et lastmiddot increase did not effect upper classmen gt

Father Haaspoint~ out tiililt even with the increase astudent

why we speak to you directly in paying full tuition stiil willl~ay your ho~es and schools where less than half the cost of his lldshyyou are oved and cared for to ucation at PC ask you to share your happmess and comfort withmiddot others juSt Thec~ntnbuted servIceS of~ like you who have nltthing the DomInIcan Fathers and the

11 gifts of the alUmnI pareI tsB th G d e sure at 0 WI pay you I Gl G t M S di middot f friends businesses and Zoun(lab k h d d tac a un re Imes over or l shymiddot I H tions make it possible to operlteff gt

tlils way The president stated also that the increase was lim- ited because of the generCUS response to the new Parents Flmd the ever increasing anshynual-support of theAlumni Loy- alty Fund and management u onomies

Among Lowestmiddot

Despite the increases ttle total cost at Providence College is still among tbe lowest for private liberal arts colleges for men in New England the Digtshyminican explained

Providences total of $2450 ~)r tuition and room and board COnlshypares this way with some other Catholic New England Colleges for men Holy Cross $2830 Boshyton College $2650 Ass~ption $2500 The Cost at private colshyleges in R I are Barringt(ln College $2395 Brown $3230 Itltwas emphasised thattheiu erease will not prove a disadshy

second Class iostage Paid at Fall River vantage to any deserving 911shyMasbullublisheo ever) fIIursday at 410 dent Scholarship and loan pnlIghlanc ~venue allmiddot Rive Mass 02722 0) he ~ahol Press 0 he Diocese of Fall grams wili be exp~dedto ofj~- shy~oo ~~D~tlon price b mall postpaid set possible hardships

~ SATURDAY-8aturday aft e r A Curslllo for women Win _ Ash r Wednesday -Ill c1ass

start ton~gh~ ~t La S~lette ~e~- Violet c ter Qf (~hrl~l~n Jivmg Att1~ boro With 40 candidates itW StJNDAY7Fi~tSUndaY-of Lent continue until Sunday night di- 1 Class Violet Mass Proper reoted by Miss Eleanor Otta- Creed Preface of Lent viani St Marys parish Mansshyfield MONDAY-Monday of First Week of Lent nIClails Violet

Miss OttaVIani who with Rev I es enes center rec TUESDAY-TUesday of First

1 bmiddot Week of Lent III CJass Violettor wIle responSIble for theC 11 bull Ursl 0 progam head nurse WEDNESDAY-Ember Wednesshym the ~atemlty ward of Sturdy d~y in Lent n CI8sS~ Violet

Memonall Hospital Attleboro She served on 8 Diocesan preshysynodal CO~mISSl0n and has been actIve m the CursIllo moveshyment for three years She Is currently a member of the adshynti~istratilve board of the CurshysIllo movement in the Fall Rivshyer Diocese

The current Cursillo is the 23rd to be held in the Diocese At the StonehiU College and La Sa1ette cent~rs over 700 priests reli~ous and lay people have completed the threeday pro- gram in the past four yeanL

Set Reunion The fourth anniversary of the

Cursillo movement in the Di oeese will be marked at 730 Saturday night March 9 at a fiesta to be held In St Marys parish center Norton Themiddot pro-shygram will include reunions of Cursillo groups coiice1ebrated

THURSDAY-Thursday of Fint Week of Lent m Class Violet

M II PI be amp on e um IngH - Co

bull eallngmiddot shyOver 35 Years

of Satisfied ServiCe Reg Master Plumber 7023 JOSEPH IlAPOSA JR 806 0 MAIN STREET Fan Iiiver 675-7497

- - ------ shy

Il1l1l11l11l11l11l11l1l11lll11l1l11Ulltfllllilllllllllllllllll1m sect DRY CLEANING ~ ~ and ~ sect FUR STORAGE sect= = ~ sect=_=

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Catholic Educational Association Document Backs School System

WASHINGTON (NC)-A docshy the document emphasizes- the ument prepared from the recshy importance of the present Cathshyommendations of a high level olic school system despite preshyIIIYDlposium on Catholic educashy lJYDPDsium fears that some parshytion held here underscores the ticipants might advocate shutshycommitment of the Catholic ting down the present structure ehurch to maintaining its vast Nearly all symposium partici shyparochial school system pants were in accord with the

Despite calls by some Catholic general trend - if not all the mtics for a dismantling of the particulars - of the document eatholic school system the docshy according to Father Koob al shyument states that The Church though four participants chose will always maintain an insti shy to disassociate themselves from tutional base for educational it service an enduring but flexshy Among them were Auxiliary ible structure by which to place Bishop Mark J Hurley of San ber resources at the service of Francisco and author Mary Pershytoeiety kins Ryan-for widely differing

The document takes note of reasons Criticisms of the parochial Father Koob cited a remarkshyIIChools - including the charge able par a 11 e I between the that their operation puts a disshy NCEA document and the stateshyproportionate amount of money ment on education issued by the and manpower at the service of American bishops at their 1967 less than 50 per cent of Catholic annual meeting in Washington students-but concludes that it The bishops called Catholic eleshywould be premature to urge mentary and secondary schools massive redeployment of Cathshy indispensable and said we olic educational resources into will 010 our part to continue Dew patterns of Christian edushy improve and strengthen these mtion schools

Objective Studies The statement acknowledges

however the evident need for Urges Community well designed programs of reshysearch and experiment aimed at Fair E~ployment obtaining reliable data to guide PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Thedecisions about the most proshy initiative of John Cardinalductive use of resources Krols Commission on HumanThese studies should be scishy Relations in urging developmententific and objective should of a community fair employshyhave reasonable financial and ment practices program was apshypersonnel support and should proved unanimously by Philashybe guided by previously stated delphias 25-member Council ofcriteria of success it says Priests

The document is based on the The group representing diocshyrecommendations of more than esan and religious communities100 Catholic and non-Catholic of prjests of the Philadelphiaeducators writers representashy archdiocese voted after hearingtives of private agencies and a report by MsgrJohn J Noonegovernment officials who took archdiOcesan chancellor and a p~rt in a symposium on Catho- council member lic education sponsored here last Outlining the background ofFall by the National Catholic Project EQuality a CathollcshyEducational Association (NCEA) spOruored program designed tomiddot

Its reco~endatlons were use the Churchs employment~ade public in a preliminary power to influence employmentctraft last November and the practices Msgr Noone s81d the most noticeable difference in commission on human relations ~ definitive edi~ text Is a had recommended a governmentreduction in size according to agency check companies On fair a t he r C Albert Koob employment practices checkOPraem ellecutive secretary of their compliance with fair emshytile NCEA ployment norms and inform Remarkable Paraller purchasing glOUps - iJlcludingAt a press conference called the Church-about the fair emshyto pUb~icize the report Father ployment record of companiesKoob called the document a with which they do business Istoric one which highlighted Our commission Msgrbull basic unity of goals among Noone told the council of prieststhose interested in Catholic edshy had hoped that it might be aaeation total community effort He said it wan significant that A preliminar) proposal has

already been made public byCatholic Conference city officials he said and has been called the PhiladelphiaScores State Policy Plan

HARRISBURG (NC) - The The Philadelphia MsgrPennsylvania Catholic Confershy Noone explained is essentially ence publicly criticized Pennsylshy Project Equality except that vaninas new family planning the proposal is being impleshyprogram for persons on relief mented under secular rather

In a statement the PeC called than under religious auspicesthe new welfare policy an effort to implement population control Relief Unit SendsIlmong the poor

Putting the program to such Vaccine to Egyptuse the PCC statement deshy ROME (NC)-Carltas Intershyclared represents one of its nationalis has collected 100000WQrst dangers-the danger that units of anti-German measles the state will start by guiding Yaccine for use in Egypt some groups or classes to birth The medical assistance was limitations to select those it deshy asked by Archbishop Lino Zashysires to see propagated nim the Apostolic Delegate to

In this connection the stateshy the United Arab Republic in ment continued we are In full Cairo Thanks to assistance fromsympathy with the views reshy tile Holy See and Caritas organshycently expressed by the National Izations in France GermanyAssociation for the Advancement Switzerland and Holland an of Colored People concerning efshy initial shipment of 50000 units forts to push birth control among was sent in January and an addishyNegroes tional 50000 units in late Febru

aryCatholic Relief The prelate asked the worldshySYDNEY (NC) - Australian wide Catholic relief body for

Catholics contributed nearly help because of an epidemic of $400000 in 1967 to ald poor measles in Egypt ~he Egyptian eountries This sum supported 80 government middothas warmly welshylief projects which benefited comed the assistance of CarUM bull ~llion persona InternatioQalii and ~e ~oq See

SOURCE OF SOLACE ~i8 Chaplain Comfo~ing a wounded Marine awaiting evacuation from Hue Vietnam may be praying or looking liP in hope of sighting the helishycopter thatwill take his patient to a hospital Neither man is identified NC Photo

Drop to 364 Cleveland Bishop Issenmann Asks Hierarchy To Help Stem Catholic Magazine Decline NEW YORK (NC)-An appeal tension minus 145 and Sign

has been made to each U S minus 81 Bishop asking cooperation to While secular publications forestall the decline plaguing are growing Catholic magazines Catholic magazines are declining Bishop Issenshy

mann emphasized in his plea to The plea of Bishop Clarence each Bishop for concrete c0shy

G Issenmann of Cleveland operation by taking some acshychairman of the Press Departshy tion to halt the decline ment U S Catholic Conference

that 1967-68 Catholic Press Directory decline in the Catholic magazine field

underscores the bullbullbullbull GRACIA BROSshowing a continuing loss of

publications and circulation Excavating

From a high of 473 Catholic magazines in 1961 the new dishy Contractors rectory shQws only 364 Catholic magazines today Bishop Issenshy 9 CROSS ST FAIRHAVEfif mann has observed Despite the fact ot a growing population WYman 2middot4862 and expanding economy Cathshy ~~bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullyybullbullbull

olic magazines between 1957shy1967 lost 4634888 circulations

Notes Secular Gains

BishOp Issenmann supported his appeal by quoting statistics from the Audit Bureau of Cirshyculation indicating the trend of the top six Catholic publications in circulation The figures show the percentage gain or loss ~f

1966 over 1965 as follows

Columbia plus 08 Our Sunday Visitor minus 14 Young Catholic Messenger minus 43

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968

Churchmen Ease StudentTension

SANTO DOMINGO (NC) shySanto Domingos apostolic adshyministrator and the charge d shyaffaires at the apostolic nunciashyture here have intervened to ease tensions at the University of Santo Domingo following a threatened clash between unishyversity students and military forces

The administrator Bishop Hugo Polenco Brito and the nunciatures Msgr Gian Vincenshyzo Moreni negotiated a settleshyment between student leaders and military authorities after student annoyance at a proposed cut in the university budget led to picketing outside the countrys presidential palace

The settlement calls for two hundred of the demonstrations leaders to go home in return for an army promise that none of the demonstrators will be arshyrested

The cooling-off period proshyvided by the settlement may be even more important than it appears since some observers here report that the army frusshytrated in its attempts to break up the student demonstration threatened to turn on the govshyernment

Tension at the university has been running high because of the financial question and beshycause of the growing influence of left-wing students

A student government elecshytion at the beginning of FebrushyaiT gave 60 per cent of the votes for student body representativel to members of a leftist group running on a platform devoted 10 fighting Yankee imperialshyism

Nam~ Change COVINGTON (NC) - Villa

Madonna College here wiU change the name of the institushytion to Thomas More College The anno~ncement made bF Bishop Richard H Ackerman chairman of the board of trusshytees and Bishop of the Covingshyton diocese said the change wiD be effective June 15 next

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 Former Nun - Explains Reasons F~r Leaving Maryknoll Sisterspraises ~Robert Speaight~s WASHINGTON (NC)-MilrYshy men I feel I have now an iampshyknoll has ask~d me to leave beshy creased capacity to love cause I am involved in guerrila When I was asked to leaveBIograpl1y of fr$ Tei~hGirdl activities And yet by this inshy Guatemala because of our activshy

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kctnn12dy volvement I am trying to live ities I was not surprised I hatll up to my ideals and to what my already risked that in my decishyPierre- reilhaxd de ChMdin died in New Yorkmiddot City conscience demands of me Sisshy sion to work for a basic fundashy

on Easter- Sunday 1955~ His funeral wok place at St~ ter Marian Peter a former mental change in the social Ignatiils ~huleh two clays later There was a Tow Mass Maryknoll nun explained in a order that would ultimately in the presence of but a handful of people Buriat was t(l)middot letter to friends in the Maryshy provide justice and peace to the

knoll order main bulk of the populationbe at St Andrewrs Novitiate Sister- Marian Peter along Sister Marian Peter said

on the Hudson But the ~An element of pantheism couId with six other Catholic missionshy She ahributed the inability of

be~ discernedi in them Teilhaidground was s-tiU too hard for aries was asked to leave Guateshy the powers-that-be to undershyheld that only tmougll assis~Dgtg mala in December because ofthe digging of a grave The the world to its fulfiHment did involvement with the gucrillainterment had to wait foc a one came to Christ the head of movementgentler season When finally it all creatrOD

wa s possible With Father Thomas R Mel- Strangely for a palaeontolo-middot no m Our n er ville 37 to whom she is reshygist Tcilhard had little histori wftnessed i 1J portedly married and biscal sense and was UttIe interestmiddot Tllese facts aremiddot brother Father Arthur Melville _ ed in the past He loeked eOD- presentedin tIte 34 she defied orders to returnfidently joyfirlIy 00 the- fnture

to Maryknoll headquarters infinai paTagmlpll For him progress was inevit shyof Robert Speshy Ossining N Y and went inshyable and linea11~ He calledi for aightSmiddotTneLiife stead to Mexico after leavinga new Cllristianity forrmiddotthe- new of 1iei1hard de Guatemalaage andi a new spirituaIitl MeGONJIGAL In her letter dated Jan 2lVChardin CHalTshy Not SlTstematicmiddot and published here by the

Moreover his thought basp(ll and Row

Washington Post Sister Marian been ehallactel1ized as nat rl2al~

49l E 33rd St Jfesuit (hoploin Peter confirmed the fact thatNJew Y olIk ly a system of thaught but 8ltN Y 10016 she is married but did not name way of felling He was intuitive$8501) It is wrdmiddot to beliele ililed illTh Hue her husband believed to be the and mystical Toe idiom futthat so obscure and lonely an former Maryknoll priest ThomasHUE (NC) -- A Jesuit priestwlrich he wrote was rrhapsodic R Melvilleend wasmiddot the lot of a man who who eouldint stay away fromratlhell than coldly rationalin the 13_years since his dea~ The Maryknoll order has 20-his boys in the front lines- And what he said was sohas become so celebrated a fig nounced that the three are noClrossedmiddot the Perfume Riverintoacutely personal trliat it was obshyuee a thinker among the most longer members of our societythe bitter frghting around thesellVecE that it coufcr bemiddot prroperly influential of the present censhy and also stated that if reportsImperial Cittadel of this old proshyunderstood only by MOWing ofthe marriage between the nuntur~ vlnciaL capital and died therehirp (heDce the impoutance af aWhat we forget is that Teil shy and priest were true the couplewith a snipers bullet in hissound sensitive biegpaphy)hard had been in exile fOl 30 would be automatically excomshyfClIreheadIi the light of all tmS it isyears priOl to his death that municated from the CatholicThe priesi Father (Maj)scarcely surpuising that Tenhis- books were published only ChurchAloysius P MI~onigal of thehard had troubles with eccesi-middotposthumous1y risuits Maryland province Grateful- to Maryknollastical censos AJad it should IleMr Speaight has attemped badgered higher offkers to let In her letter Si6ter Mariannoted that scientists teo lookedthe diHicult task of combining him go to the front when he Peter explained that she had notaskance at his comiddotntentfons -Hean account of Teilharfs life rejected the ideal~ of Maryshylearned that a Marine unit wasspoke- of mystical sciencewith a hiStory of the developshy fiighting withollt a chaplain knoll I am grateful to the timethe science of Christ runningment of his thought as set out With permission given relucshy and training and friendship ][through all thiJngs as tithe onlyin his writings In the main he tantly Father McGonigal himshy lived in Maryknoll I am evensCience that really mattersismiddot successful self an Army chaplain then now the product of a sincereThis was bound to IDe suspect

Accepted ElOlution mDved into the combat zone facing up to what the deals I FiroJIlJ Rnme Restraint there acquired and -reinforced

Whiremiddot preparing for and after demand of me As anyone who has struggled His body was found in the

_with leilhards books knows rubble of Hue his _unbrokenattainiJilgmiddot illl 1922 his doctorate She continued For somehis thought defies easy compreshy glasses nearby at the Sorlbonne he taug)lt athensiom or summary Mr Speshy J1ather McGonigal a native of time I had begun to question the Institut Catholique He left Philadelphia was serving his the validity of many customsaight ha~middot made a laliantr effoet in 1923 for his first trip to that I found weighty and legalshyto give not onl an outline of it sewnd lnitch as an Army chapshyChina an expedition of geolo- istic and impending in the waybut alsm to trace its stagesmiddot arid lal n when he was killed Orshygical and paIaentologicalJ dis-shyfurther to examine it critically dained a Jesuit priest in 1953 of life of a Religious covel1Y Teilhancl wasmiddot born in 1881 in he had served as prefect of 1 particularly rejected the

He was to spend the gl1eater the Puuvengpe reg~on of France studies at Gonzaga High School apartness that it breeds between part of the remainder of histhe fourtru of 11 children oK a in Washington D C and taught the Religio~s and the peoplelife in China and very littlefamily which regarded nhe at Loyola High School in Balshy she should be one of Povshyof it in France There would al shyCatholic faith as itsmiddot most pre-middot timore He was Jinishing studies ertyparticularly bothered me so be stays in Africa lndi3 Jashycious possession amp 3J boy heshy fo) a doctoratamp at Georgetown We vowed and pretended to be

showed keen curiosity about va and the United States with UdveEsity when he reentered poor and we lived like the rich one brief visit to Rome in 1948 and mixed with th~m and arethe natunal vlon1dJ especially the service in June 1966

Me was not unknown instones and minerals He was of their friends Rome In fact there was an exshycourse to become a- pioneering Now I am tru1ypoor I have

geologist and pa1aentologist tensive dossier Gil h1m at the no security I am at the servicedQI~Y even liberally interpretedHoly Office As early as 19241 of the poorHe entered 3J Jesuit school iDl Extreme caution was celtainlyhe had IDen de~atedi to Rome- fO1 The 38-year-old former misshy1892 and ingt 1899l oecame 31 in order~his views on original siJm lFliom sionary explained that chastityJesuit novice His ordination to Rome came repeatedgt resirF3ints Excellent Likeness had also ceased to be meaningfulthemiddot priesthood took place inJ i1~ 1933 for example a pnohibishy At the same time one eanshy to her I wanted ttl love 3001911 Meanwhile in Iiis ~ears tioD inJ his accepting any ampfficia1 not but regret the manner in to love hUmanly The way weor preparution he had mOleltLmiddot posi tiOtb WI Parris in 1940bull a pliCgt-middot which it was exercised Teil shy were designed tfgt love ahoub fnOIll one Jesuit Iiouse to hib1tiOlL in his padicupation in hald sfloulQi na1e been given I foond that my wve fer a maJIanother in the isIand of fursey aOJ intel1poundctuaL congpess iIlJ New every opportunity ta explain lived fully has only made ~ in Egypt and in EngIandl AlIshy York in 1954 a pnohllb11liolll Olll and defend his ideas Aflony- more sensitive to the love ampf

read~ liemiddot haell takern up sciclltipoundi1 his writing a work of apoloshy mOtlS defation al~d reeeurolUlse1essresearch and already some of getics in reply to lcl1taiB scishy repression arrc ullworthy at deshythe main concenns oJ his life entists fenders ojj the truthwere eudent for example his Attractive Iinpressiille F01bidding Feilharcd to pubshylove of the universe and his acshyThese restraints caused Teil- lisfl may have b~n a gFievousceptance of evolution

hard great suffering He subshy mistakemiddot eveA in the interests of BewHifering Teacher mitted to tnem but prilately orthodoxy- For the publicatian

Asmiddot a resuit fie was engaged questioned their wisdom anell duxing his lifetime of books in teaching and as a teachei legitimacy Ee- neverrmiddot thought wlifch appeared only after bis he could be rather bewildering of leaving themiddot Chllllch and al shy d~a~h WOtltd have subjected bis He was in military service though he sometimes speculatedl views middotto dgorous criticfsm and throughout World War I (1914- as to the advisability at leaving prollably have compeUed him 1918) Elaquo waslt often in the fnont the Society of Jesus he always to- modr1iy and refine them lines attend~hgmiddot the wounded conclUded that his place was in atr Speaight is to be- com but it wal l)oth1 in) the fUlly and the society mended for an c~xceneAt likeshyin the lulls of the- conflict that Teilliaxd is an a ttracti ve pershy nes of an i-ntelrirgible synopsis his ideas ubout man and the sonality and an impressive one of his doctniJne aDd for an evenshyuniverse oegan to be formushy as Mr Speaight portrasl him handed appraisal of a controshylated 0ne cannot but be symoJj)athetic venliali Sttlgt~ eel

Durihg tfie war Ie wrote 13 with him as the restmiddotnictions laid essays which sougpt to tear upon him aremiddot recitceJ Aad ene away thc mask of atheism f~om admires his seurorupulous sub- VitcennaRSbullhgt Meet thesegt new lUIlrents ~ft thought mission to aullhollity Jlilll Bl1ten lialltlclJl1arr Counui~ and expose them as Christian~ But onc cann otJ condemn ampilcletYi of 511 VillceEl1i de- Paul

The crisis of Modernism was Church aUUltonWes out of handmiddot willI hold its moJLtIaJiy meeting then ver~ recent and the essays in this case Ueilhards hyposhy in st llatmicks Sclreol han 0Iil QJaduced misgjlihgs in somemiddot of theses are~ymiddot no mcans unshy Slade Street following Benedic- I1eilhardJs superiors WeIll they challengable They are novel t1on of the Most lBlessed Sacrashymight have They d iffe red from and daring They aJe oliten nGt ment in the upper church ~

conventional recei ved views readily reconcilable with outho- 745 Tllesday nimiddotght

BEfoRE YOU BUY -TRY

PARK MOTORS OLDSMOBilE

bull Oldsmobile-Peugot-Renoub 17 IfidiIIe StreetFllrtravea

stand the guerilla activities of(

the missionaries to a depenshydency that comes from too many interests that blinds people io the simplicity and nakedness of truth

Terrific Contrast

She stated When I came tJI) Guatemala in 1954 I came filled with the ideal of telling people Christs message of love A1l 1I became more and more familia~

with the situation in the countTY 1 became aware of a terrific contrast between the haves anell the have-nots those who are well-off satisfying their conshysciences on the one hand while using cheap manpower to mainshytain their wealth and position those who are poor sinking furshyther and further into a fatalism an undignified conformism 3IIl inhuman existence

When she concluded that gueshyrilla activity was the only way in which a state of justice can be reached she said she haell to take that road or else reject my conscience blind myseif anell become a hypocrite hiding beshyhind the easy facade of a woman dedicated to God

I liave become a woman dedicated to humanity and i~

loving men even to the degree of being willing to die for men I am loving God more truly more directly than ever

Sister Marian Peter who signed herself Margie for hell pre-Maryknoll name of Marshyjorie Bradford concluded Th~reis a revolution beginning lD CIvic soclety as well as in the Church The vanguard of any movement is fraught with danshyger personal danger and the danger of losing ones way but when the time comes to march we cannot be cowardly and hold back Circumstances have put us in the vanguard and we must march

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5 THE ANCHOR-Dominicans Plan Thurs feb 29 1968Sisters a1f Rose Hawtllorne Lathrop HomeChapter Meeting To Continue Care of Incurable Patients Urges Catholics In Chicago

CHICAGO (NC)-A JeDshy By Patricia McGowan Aid Immjgrants 9mJl ohapter meeting of the ~rldwide Order of Preachshyem (Dominicans) has been sdteduled tentatively to open Aug 20 at the Aquinas Institute euroJf Philosophy Dominican house Ilif ll~udies in suburban Rivet 1JGrest

Officials of the Dominicans a Albert the Great (Chica~)

province said Faiher Aniceto Wemandez OP Do min i can master general and his 12shymember cabinet from Rome 8lJ weUl as the heads of 40 Domin Qcan provinces throughout the IIVorld will attend the sessionll which may last until November

The general chapter is the lhft for the Dominicans since ilhe close of Vatican Council n lJ win be only the second timemiddot

flm the 760-year history of the Jl)ominicans that a general chapshytell is held in the United States

llhe Chicago officials esti shymated more than 100 delegates wm attend It was announced flnat each provincial will be acshyltrompanied by an expert in some ~se of Scripture theology jhilosophy or canon law

The Chicago officials said unshyamp2r the rules adopted by Vati shycun Council II the chapter has lnlthority to rewrite the DominshybSIll constitutions and make oweeping changes which could affect the lives and works of Qrz 10000 Dominican priests cmd Brothers in the world

The Chicago officials called Me scheduling of the chapter in t1ilre United States a symbolic ~reakthrough of recognition br American influence among ~e Dominicans

lZlIperimentall lLegnsnll~finn

Copies of the Final Report a1 the two-and-one-half year ceH-study of the midwest DoshylJlinicans-reported last Fall were distributed to provincialD OOld experts attending last Sepshy~bers preparatory meetings bll Rome and influenced their ~ecision to convene at River orest

Findings of the Chicago provshylzJrtes self-study are reflected in iilrst drafts of new experimental TIeglslation for the order being ~epared by a 28-man internashyilional commission for debate at ~ chapter

Spokesmen for the Chicago province indicate considerable Glecentralization of the orders government and apostolate as -the probable outcome of the ehapter with debate expected ~ center on specific areas of Ilmiformity or diversity

1 recent worldwide poll of Dominican sentiment shows Il

iOOffimon desire for a few realshyllstie laws and abolishing of arshychaic forms Specific proposals IO far have been most progresshypoundliye in tODe it was stated

Catholic Magazine Seized at Airport

SANTO DOMINGO (NC) ~

eopies of a Catholic magazine published in Uruguay have 1lleeIIl seized in the airport cusshytoms office here on the grounda Ibat they contain subversive material

Three packages eontainin[f OO copies of the January issue of Vispera published in MonteshyYideo by the Uruguayan brancll of Pax Romana international Catholic organization 01 stushy6entlgt and intellectuals were barred from delivery at tile Idiport

Various articles praising ErshyIleSW (Che) Guevara the Cuban communist leader killed ill (lUerrilla fighting in BoliVia Were said to have caused the ~scaUon

Visiting the Rose Hawthorne Lathrop Home in Fall River liist week wag the Mother General of the Dominican Sistern staffing the institution She is brisk ~nergetic Mother Mary Elizabeth who makes her headqualrters at the Hawthorne NY motberhouse of the community Once or twice yearly Mother Elizabeth makes the rounds of the seven homes operated by the Sisshyters an for the same purpose - the service of patients with incurable cancer She admits puzzlement at the situshyation in Fall River In Atlanta St Paul Cleveland Philadelshyphia and New York the Sisters homes are filled to capacity and usually have waiting lists of pashytients In Fall River tlle Rose Hawthorne Home has not been fiHed for several years

J1t isnt unfoMunately that cancer is on the decrease There seem ~ be several reasons for the low admission rate here One in some ways reflects favorably on New Englanders They seem less willing than people in other parts of the country to delegate flo others the care of infirm and aged parents and grandparents who make up the bulk of the homes patients although there are no age requirements

They are proud and the old people are proud said one obshyserver They dont want to acshycept help

- Not Always Good Thi3 isnt alwa~s a good atshy

titude however It can result in elderly people rllceiving poor care through lack of knowledge or fucilities in the home

Another reason for the patient lack might be the larger number of nursing homes in the New Enshygland area Another could 00 lack of public knowledge of the services the home stands ready to provide Still another say some is the full name of the Sisters Servants of Relief for Incurable Cancer

Today the name strikes a chill but in 1896 when the community was founded by Rose Hawthorne Lathrop daughter of Nathaniel Hawthorne it lit a beacon of hope for the suffering poor who had literally no place to go when striken with what was then reshygarded as a contagioUls disease

Now pointed out Mother Elizshyabeth patients have Medicare

Usually when they come flo the Sisters they are much sicker than they used to be having exhausted the resources Of modshyern medicine for treatment ampnell alleviation of cancer

They have usually exhausted their Medicare allowances too thus meeting the Sisters reshyquirement that their patients have no financial resources Cancer can be a long drawn out illness said -Mother Elizashybeth and use up all the savings of even a prosperous person

HaV0n of Peace Certainly if it were general1r

known what the Rose Hawshythorne Home offers it would be overrun with paUents as it WWl

A$k lPub~ic Hearings OIl1 Church Matters

BROOKLYN (NC)-A fOUllshyperson ad hoc committee has obtalnoo the signatures of 50 laymen priests and nUDS from

the Brooklyn diocese w a stateshyment calling on Church authorshyiti~ ~ hold pubUe hearinglJ onimportant Church affairs bull eluding selection of bishops T~ signers d tnle statemeDt

nncUllIl1ied Sol lay persons 24 ~riesta and two Sistem

There are approximately 1000 I)riests 5000 nuns and Brothers and 16 million laymen m tbe diocese llf Brooklyllho

_________~Llt _ VISITS EIORJE Sister Palll OP left and Mother

Mary Elizabeth OP view GOmmemorwtive plaque in cllapel of Rose Hawthorne Lathrop Home Fall River Sister Paul is superior at home Motlle Mary Elioobeth i3 mothezo genshyeral of the Dominican Sisters Servants of ReHef for Inshycurable Cancer She visited Fall River institution last week

in 1932 when it was founded at Sisters are one family she sumshythe urgent request of 1plusmne late =led up Bishop Cassidy Then there were Many patients worry about occupied beds even in the hall shy paying us said a Sister I al shyways today there are many empshy ways tell them You are paying ty beds in wards and private with your suffering Just pray rooms ~OT usmiddottt

We find that patients often Asked about dxanges the SisshyJive longer than the doctors had ters might make in their work expected when they come to in line with the renewal Us said Mother Elizabeth We Mother Elizabe1lh said she didnt think its because all thepreashy expect her communitys apostoshymires are removed They know tte ro change much There are that they wont have to leave w l2j professed Sisters in the comshyafter a certain number of days munitYshe said andshe has on We say to them TWs is Yillgtur hand many unfilled reltluests home you can stay as long as llrom bishops for the Sisters to you want The patient and the work in their Dioceses

80 the Sisters woork win reshy

r ~

Iv

- main that envisioned by Rose Hawthorne La1ihrop After all Love is -lot love whicb alteIS -when it alteration finds

Mothell Mary Elizabeth OP

SYDNEY (NC)-A statement on immigraticn aimed at enshycouraging Catholics to a wider acceptance of their duties toward immigrants was issued here by th~ Federal Catholic Immigrashytion Committee -of the Austrashylian Bishops Conference to be read in all cllulches on Immishygration Sundar

The statement said that Ausshytralia is failing to attract and keep immigrants An official inquiry it acJdetl indicated that psychological and social diffi shyculties rather than material and economic considerations influshyenced the departure of immishygrants

The statement called for a personal inquiry seeking to reshyveal whether our at tit u de toward newcomelS is one of inshydifference or even of hostility whether we lend support to the erecting of barriers against the legitimate economic and social aspirations of migrants whethshyer in fine we neglect our duty as Catholics as citizens of welshycoming and helping others of fulfilling our religious and soshycial obligations toward newshycomers

The statement quoted AustroshyIan Minister of Immigration BM Sneddon saying If we beshylieve Australia has 0 destiny and that destiny is linked with population then each of us has a duty to assist wherever pOSlt sible and become involved pershysonally with immigration ami migrants

Noting that immigration conshytributes lo the economy of a country the Catholic statemen~

stressed however that migrants are not to be valued simply ~

tools of production but as pershysons In the mind of the Church the whole process of migration is part of the matter of hum~n

redemption in a preparation fo-r life eternal

OOOO~~

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~--6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 291968

Women and the Postconciliar Church

Someone recently figured out that in the Catholic Ohurch today over fifty per c~t af its members are women These loyal followers of Christ are for the most part the victims of a subtle but very effective discrimination In theory of course the church grants equal rights for men and women In the Vatican Councils DOCUMENT ON THE CHURCH IN THE WORLD TODAY we read

With respect to the fundamental rights of the person every type of discrimination whether soshycial or cultural whether based on sex race color social condition language or religion is to be overshycome and eradicated as contrary to Gods intent

m theory the teaching is a fine piece af legislation In practice the question is simply ignored

Women may not be ordained Women are barred from officiating formally in the liturgy Their wice in church affairs is all but silenced A women is not allowed to serve Mass She may not functiol) as a lector If there are women in the parish choir-- they are more or less toleraJted only beshyeause there are not enough small boys or grown men in the parish available for the job

Father Johannes Neumann professor of Canon Law at the Universitr of Tubingen in Germany recently stated

A boy not even capable of fluent reading is adshymitted to the altar but an educated woman who could do a much better job is excluded as though only males were the children of God

The sam~ is true about parish choirs Women are easier to recruit more eager to sing and with few exceptions they

make a better noise than men Yet we still retain a cershytain nostalgia for the cult af the boy choir or the all Ilale choir as th~ summum bonum in litllrgical excellence

Ordination for women may well become one of the big issues in the c6ming years It may sound strange -to us--middot a woman functioning as a priest Yet however we may 0pshy

pose it we must admit that theologians have never put up a convincing case agdinst it It is also significantto note that the International Coniressof the Laimiddotty passed a resoshylution on the subject when it metmiddot in Rome last October

The principal objection to the ordination of women win not be so much theological as one of prejudice The tradition of the male priesthood is a long one and rooted deeply in the souls of Catholics Granted the priesthltgtltgtd is not on the immediatemiddot horizon for Catholic women However there are indications that the dimiddotaconate is certainly within their grasp Many European theologians argue that this Could

become a reality in two or three years This would mean that women could carry out such functions as preaching

distributing the Eucharist and burying the dead Already in certain circumstances women have been given permisshysionto distribute holy communion The Oblate Sisters of the Sacred Heart in Northern Alberta hav~ been allowed to do so since December 1966 when no priest is available The same is true in parts of Africa and South America

Truly these are excitipg times and exhilerating times All of us must be prepared fur more changes within the framework of the church Some we will welcome others will repell us The Churchs immediate task as always is to build up the people of God to meet the challenge of the day One positive way is to help in removing some of the anomalies that exist between laymen and laywomet

rhmiddotmiddotANCBOR e

OIIrll NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL IPVEI

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall Riv~

410 Highland Avenue

Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Ete Re~ Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P D~iscoll

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

the moolQlnq Rev John f Moore St Josephs Taunton

Why AILilfJg Hof Smmer t

Fe(QHf ~ litD Arson Murder DeWillEm] o$mtfive Contribution

Television commentators are warning the public Radio announcers m~e reaching the state of alarm The Federal

Government is preparing troops to meet the crisis Irrationshyill mdicals are whipping themselves into shape An are

waiting to face a promise of ~1 long hot Summer of civil tion to help the situation To

continuously hammer negativeriot and racial upheaval The and pessimistic fears into thetensions of this upheaval -is spirit of a nervous public only

already present Stokely Carshy creates a greater spirit of unrestmichael and Rap Brown have Suspicion and doubt are theachieved their goal They have sole frUit of such a policySl)wn lhe seeds of national fear America can certainly avoidFear of not fear of arson and such a diet fl~ar of murdEr are promised

American cities come the wann Added to this caldron of conshyweather This radic~ fonn of fusion we are now exposed to urban renewal will tear apart the rabble rousing antics of Dl ore cities of this country than llome so-called civil rights any fleet of cranes and bull shy leaders who dance to the tuneduzers of Hanoi What trueancl laSting

The public nE~WS media -is not _benefit can commentators leapmaking any jKlsitive contribu- from this barvest ~f hate

011I1 Vultures of Doom Benefit We do not deJIJr that there are

b1 gots and bulliies in American 8Ociety These people are 88

Wi~ong as their despoti~ llberal counterparts NEither group bas elt)ntriQuted much to the totality fJIf Americana

Most Americans want to do lonething to hE~lp their fellow eoilDtrymen wh) are long-sufshyfeling from the efforts of racial pr~judice They want to secure th4~ equal rights and opportunishyties of their less fortunate countrymen Thill they should do this theymiddot must achieve But no in fear bloodshed and riot

We must face the realities of thE racial issue ill truth and sinshyceIHy Most of tlS have become distant and impe~vious to the

trieil and laments of the preaecl minority Some have intombed themselves in an urban isc)lati~ others have fled to the camoushyflage of suburbia The majoriv just do DOtwan~ to become IDshyWOlved

Yet we mustbull

The I~rice for o~r lack of eonshylaquo7~ mIght be rumed ~erican Clties and dead AmerIcan dti shyzens We WIll we learn that only the vultures of dQom benefit

from ~e carnage of middotour dty streets

Now is the time for positive actio~ now is the time for re- sponsIble leadershIp

The question-Will either be forth coming

Change of Laws On Abortion Div$ive

OTTAWA (NC)-A ffigni ficant relaxation of Canada~ abortion laws could result Em a serious division betweem Catholic and non-Catholic hOampa pitals the Catholic Hospital AIP sociation of Canada told a Ie islative committee

In a brief to the Standin(g Committee on Health and Wellshyfare the association also warneclt that the feared division betweeili the hospitals could spill over into Canadian society at large

Canadas Parliament is now considering a bill to broaden the grounds for abortion which ill part of a general revision of tile nations criminal code Introshyduction of the abortion measure in the middle of a parlimentary probe of the question has -

ready driven a wedge between the government and the Churda in Canada

Feb 27 Meeting The nations bishops cancene4

a scheduled appearance befoN the Health and Welfare Comshymittee and instead issued a sharp pastoral letter opposing the abortion changes Later the] agreed to appear at a hearing Feb 27

The Hospital Association briei warned that refusal by Catholie hospi tals to perform abortiON may result in the other hospishy

tals being largely devoted talgt what is frankly regarded by doctors as a distasteful kind ClI2 work with less time and facili shyties for the more satisfying laquol life-giving aspect of hospitall work

The Catholic Hospital Ass~

tion represents 300 institutionB which provide 35 per cent CIIf

Canadas hospital services This kind of division d

labor with the consenting hosshypitals getting all the abortion work and the dissenting hospishytals getting nothing but satisshyfying work would quite likelv lead to an ever-deepening rift between the two groups of hOampa pitals extending to the commushynities they jointly serve the brief warned

Increase Dissension In an obvious reference to tJw

nations sensitive relations beshytween French-speaking - and largely Catholic-and Englishshyspeaking-largely Protestant-shyCanadians the association a1s noted

This does not seem to be Eiii opportune time to introduce anshyother cause of deep dissension by moving rapidly towards legalizing a practice which Q

large section of Canadian s0cishyety-perhaps a majQrity-abshyhors as strictly immoral

Archbishop lakoyos At Detroit Meeting

DETROIT (He) - ArchbiAshyorgt lakovos one of the bull presidents of the World COund of Churches participated bull _ interfaith meeting while helNi

on a four day Yisit The Greek prelate W8$

eompanied by 10 OrthodOE bishops and members of thcI archdiocesan council composed of clergy andmiddot laymen from parts of the country Thismiddot couashycil top eccesiastical body air Greek Orthodox church met here for two days

While here Archbishop lakOoo vos met with Roman CathoHc Archbishop John F Deardon at Detroit Episcopal Bishop Richshy

ard Emrich of Michigan aDd Bishop Archie Crowley preslo dent of the metropolitan J)e troit Council of Churches ~

meeting took place follo~ bull Vespers service at the Assumpo tion Greek Orthodox churcIL

f I

PAUL BARTKIEWICZ KATHERINE BOLINGER M~CHAB CORNElL SUSAN FAOiEUi STAN f~ HOLY fAMILY DOMSNllAJt

THE

ANCHOR

SALUTES

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~~~II1~~~

JANET LAFOND MICHAEL LOWNEY JWI POISSON ST JOSEPH PREP COYlpound PREVOST

Catholics to Pray For Assembly

STOCKHOLM (NC)-A prayer lor the fourth general assembly elf the World Council of Churches (WCC) to be said at Masses in all Catholic churches and chapels this Spring has been eomposed by the ecumenical commission of the diocese of Stockholm at the request ~ Bishop John E Taylor OMI

It will be distributed together with the bishops pastoral letter for Lent to all the parishes of the diocese The WCC assembly will be held at Uppsala Sweden m July

The prayer is an appeal whether his project can For all those who noW are a practical reality

Ir~paring the general assemblY He de~ribedl the proposed of the World Council of institute as an educational proshy

tliurches in dppsala and now gram aimed primarily at the avshy are pa~nfcil~y slJffering from the erage mllfi ~d ~he Inde~Ptivi

1 WsunitymiddotofChrisUans legedio stimulate creative middotJ-h t 11middot b h h f thinking and acting both for

-1 a JI mem er c urc es 0 I J cooperat - ilie WCC lfiarptepare this gen- middoty~~nalilmiddot ma~ ~wtIi aridfor -~ can ~ii 1

eralllssemqIjr in a willingness the commol1 goodmiddot Fattier RIvers a member of middotto coop~rate ~ arid in an honest ~taina ~e~ormed by first tatemiddot the Cii~iimati -archdiocesa~li shy

ielirch fori the Will of God artlsts WIll be at middotthe heart of thmiddotinstitntes actiVity with the ~qat they Ul oen mmds may pUlipose of stllnuliltingmiddotpro-middot receIve ~h~ 1~splratlons of the

HOly SPUIt and follow them without fear

That we middotmiddotall by prayer and penance may participate in the preparations of this general asshysembly conscious of being linked by the same Baptism

That even we Catholics may laquorow in our understanding of the separated brethren that we together with them may become llWare of the throes of disunity and be strengthened in our will to work in a practical Wlq _

~

Proposes Institute of Little Imagination Would Benefit Services -

CINCINNATI (NC) Father Clarence Josepb Rivers who has won an international repushytation for his fresh approach to liturgical music said he hopes to spur creative thinking among millons througb a National 10shysUtute of Ritual and Drama

Recently returned from gradshyuate studies in liturgy at the C81tholic University of Paris Father Rivers has launched a feasibility study to determine within the next few months

become

found reflection upon tliatexshyperience is fto be stimulated and directed by especially trained educator - philosophersl he added

Closed Setting He said he envisions touring

companies as part of the overall plan but the usual institute program will ~e place in a closed setting he said makshying it something like a secular retreat

Another lISgeCt of the insti shytute Father Rivers said will be ita concern with adaptinl the

skills and techniques and ereashytivity of the performing arts to the needs of various kinds of ritual---secular as well as reli shygious

Asked abolilt secular rituals Father Rivers spoke of flagshyraisings Fourth oj July celebrashytions and cornerstone layings He sahll The existing secular rituals suffer from the same deshyfeds all the religious ones and need just as urgently the touch of artistic imagination and skills

In~ure Ref1Ie~t~n Father Rivers said the insti shy

tue s~ould be broadly humanishyt~ria~ not SplJ1cifically Je~-glO~S provIdmg a~ area 10

WhICh Jile()ple of yarlOus beliefs

llurgical commission saidmiddot the

PfJ~fes~or A~pointed -~e~I1i ofL~w School

PITTSBURGH (NC)-Professhysor Louis L Manderino has been appointed dean of Duqueme Universitys Law School here Father Henry J McAnulty C5 Sp university presidgtent 80shynounced lIhe appointment is effective immediately

Prof ManderinO a graduate of Harvard University Law School in 1954 has been -a memshyber ofmiddot the Duquesne Law Scbool faculty since 195amp

ROWD GAMACHE SHlRtlM JANICK MAUREEN KENNEY $1 ANTHORY MOUNT ST MAIf CASSIDY

gtpi81F Iilt ilt

JACQUEUNE ROBOI JAHU~E ROBERTSHAW PETERlYM WOJTUSZEWSII JpoundSlJS IlARY AampADEIft SHA-FAU RIVER SHA- FAIRHAVEN

Ritual Drama

proposed mstitote~ program would go much further than those of existing professional or amateur acting companies beshycause it will not only provide the experience which is to be the basis of reflection but it also will insure as far as it is hmnanly possible the reflecshytion the work of the institute is only half done when the cur lain falls

It will difiler from the amashyteur companies and certain

_Moral Re-armament programs he continued esp~ciilly in terms Of artistic standards I dont believe lh2 institute can function effectively without achieving tlte highest possibIe success in artistic standards tehurch-goers of an denomshy

inati9fls he added generaUy

recognize that their Sunday and Sabbath services could benefit from ir little imaginatioZl once in it vyhilli r-----------shybull JEREMIAH COHOLANmiddot

PlUMBING 6- HEATING ~ntretors since ltH3

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State to Deny Aid To Large Families

LUCKNOW (NC)-The Uttar Pradesh state government here in India has decided to stop an govert1Illent concessions to famshyilies which have an additional child aiter the third one

The decision was taken in view of iii virtUal douampling of the states populatian--from 4a million in 19at to ga millionmiddot this year

The concessions to be withshydrawn presumably wiU include free treatment in governmmt hospila1s and allotment ~ waste lands

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bull Ill- tb GOrvlClll4

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THE ANCHORpiocese ~f Foil River---Thurs Feb 29 1968

European Tour Is Unlikely With New Travel Rules

By Mary Tinley Daly

Of all the role-playing the Head of the House and I have engaged in through the years the most recent ~ th8lt of- would-be European travellers This the year 1968 -rhe Year of the Monkey was to have seen us embark for foreign shores Ireland homeland of our forebears (would have been) mighty

helpful tooEngland a re-vimiddotsit for the Ginny our wardrobe consult shyHead of the House France

ant has been supervising theGermany and of course the clothing weve bought for theEternal City Spain and Greece past six months with an eye toperhaps if our easy packability convenientfeet and our washability and a mix-andshymoney held out match assortment o~ accessoriesAnd now this-shy for efficient travel Based on ~ h e proposed her own European experience of ~ax bi te on a couple of years ago GinnyiBternashy assures us such selection willU 0 n a I travel provide a minimum for totingSeems as though a maximum amount of space forweve been taxshy the pick-ups wed inevitablybitt e n pretty acquire on our journeybadly right here

the as ~truggle Now it seems theIn USA we bringshyonce more with IRS Form 1040 backs are down to next-toshy

Now some more of our $$$ to nothing A Iso day-by-day spending at this stage of the EX-CHAMP PREACHES LOVE Archie Moore formerhelp close that $21 billion travel

lap wilth a tax on American legislation seems based on an World light-heavy-weight champ who won a Freedoms intricate system full of loopshyspending outside _this hemi- Foundation award Feb 22 for conspicuous community sershyboles requiring an estimate ofaphere I voice in the civil rights field plays happily at home withtax liability on departu~e theWell its a wait-and-see propshy

h~8 own children Working with boys in underprivilegedmaking of a deposit and anotherOsition an aIr-dresSed-up-andshyreport pluspay-up on retUrn to areas Archie saymiddots he teachesthe lads to be constructiveIlO-Pla~eto-go feeling for us

lIS it is for many other armchair this country not destructive tao build not tear- down NC Photo travellers What we have not doncent yet-

Doml Homework and wont do unless the grand -----~

Oh weve been doing our bomework all right

Weve made lists of places we ~fpound~~~~~I~R~PMAR9J~p~1want to see in each country drivers license picture was badThe house is filled with travel folders travel magazines weve enough NEW SPRING COLORS become telephone pals with Bteamship and airline salesmen 113-Year-Old Aca~emy s much as I love color (anyshy April scene navy took a backoUr local library checks out

one who has ever visited my seat in the early sixties whenhooks in our name for all those Plans 69 Closing home or seen nile wearing the Jackie Kennedy made pink afaraway places with their glam- ROCHESTER (NC) ~ The m~ny bright shades that I adore must for all those who like toeur descriptions 113-year-old ~cademy Of the wnI agree with this) t must adshy feel that they are wearingWe have studied money rates Sacred Heart here will disconshy mi t this is going to be ~ grey whats in This season nothotel and transportation costs tinue operation after June 1969 flannel and navy Spring Oh only has navy returned in theinvestigated picking up a Officials announced reasonsshy thEre will be shades of shocking world of suits and daytime coatsVolkswagen Weve brushed up for closing were the mounting pirk high intensity yellow and it has become sophistic~tedon French going along with cost of education the inadeshy poison green upon the scene but enough to waltz into eveningThomas Hood quancy of present bUildings mostly in ac Jacques Tiffeau of TiffeauNever go to France unless the outlay needed to build and c e s S 0 r ies or and Busch has designed an ultray()U know the lingo If you do

maintain a school of the future playclothes For navy evening time dress that islike me you will repent by and the number of other cathoshy t hat special sleeveless and V-necked and ofjingo lic high schools in the area coat or that course wide belted Worn withWeve even learned basics in where openings are avlilable pearls it takes on all the dyshy0Italian and German such as be~utiful spring

namic quaiities that black hasshyThe academy is conducted byhow to order in restaurants For suB that could always had Because they lookthe Head of the House this the Religous of the Sacred tra vel as well so well with navy and grey themeans how to order pigs Heart of Jesus alolg the streets return of pearls is whats newknuckles sauerkraut UND beer of Ne~ York on the jewelry front for SpringJohnny has patiently demonshy Imiddot kO or the avenues and Summer The thirties influshyAutnoUize Pa Istan of Washingtonstrated perhaps for the hunshyence of the Bonnie and Clydedredth time just how to operate middot Ch the more con-LIturgy anges serrative colors are the stars flicker has brought back thehis camera which he will let us

take along LYALLPUR (NC)-Melbers Cne of the most elegant and long swinging chains of beads -of all Pakistans diocesan lilur- beautifully tailo1led suitsmiddot that I and nothing swings better than

Family Advisors gical commissions met here un- have viewed thus far in the long ropes of pearls-especially Markie who did her touring der the direction of Archbishop sealch for Spring clothes was a against navy or grey

on a budget and had a whee of Joseph M Cordeiro of Karachi maltilificent grey one by Gino a time so doing introduced us to discuss propolled liturgical Paoli Superbly tailored in a to her bi-ble Arthur From- changes in this country ricl knit material the smart mers invaluable Europe on Approved for experimental desi go was set off hy fresh $5 a Day with its practical use were two new baptismal touches of white guidelines based on first-hand rites in the Urdu limguage and Grey has always ~n a color dramaticallyexperience For instance who- a revised Urdu funeral rite thai I avoided like the plague ever would have thought of Authorized for publication was (ev~r since an experience with different8eeking inexpensive spotlessly the Punjabi version of the Can- a grey dress in eighth grade dean lodging in Italian con on of the Mass as well as an that made me look like an un vents Author Fro~mer gives Urdu edition 01- the Roman heaithy Corpse-of course that Sensational tastingnames addresses and prices 1ft missaL Was before eigh1lligirlS wore Hollywood Diet Breadduded also are Readers Sug Jilake-up)and I havent bought made from aestions helpful tips for vari- an item of grey 81)parel in years

places Youth in World Theme and years OIlS vegetable Boursl Markies own addenda will- Grey always seemed to beOfSpanish ~ial Work Your choice of color that looked good on someshy

vALLADoLJD (NC) ~ Offishy LIGHT or DARKCollege to ~ Admit Me cials of Spains ~nual Social redleads quite jiunior league one else-it was wonderful em

HollywoodIWeek have aimounced that r St Scholastica here in Minshy smad on white-skinned hrushy

DULUTH (NC)-The College on blondes and even looked Youth in the World will be Bakedby

the theme of the 17th week yournesota announced it will admit nett~s but since 1 failed to fan male students in 1969 ending planned for March 25-31 in this into any of these categories I Sunbeam

city56 years as a liberal arts colshy felt it was not for me This seashy Ballerlege exclusively for women Manuel Capelo Martinez Secshy son however the richness and Sister Mary Richard Boo colshy retary gener~l of the week said smaltnes of the grey shade deshylege president said the change We hope that the quiet atmoshy Signl may force IDe to change was made as a response to sphere of social week discussions my opinion - aidoo by some the needs of our time The basic will enable us to make some colorful makeup of course curriculum will remain the clear decisions about the many Navy RelmIlJIls IIame she said The college is problems of youth decisions Navy is the second color that eonducted by the Benedictme madein the light of the Churchs has returned to importance fornuns aocial teacJiingsmiddot Sprilig Always a must on Ule

Schools 10 Offer Sex Education

ROCHESTER (NC)-8ex edshyncathm will be integrated in tbe curriculum of 13 parochial schools of the Rochester diocese this Spring on an experimental basis

Father Daniel Brent assocllm d i 0 c e san superintendent at schools said the sex educatioD program will eventually be in effect throughout the 102 eleshymentary schools in the diocese

We are trying to create an attitude that sex is part of life and not a dark dirty secretmiddot Father Brent said

The classroom discussions will emphasize 1he family orientashytion of sex and parents will be asked to review topicswitln children before they are preshysented in the classroom hra added

Father Brent said the pro- gram ~lated to begin about April I will aim at developing respect for the opposite sex and the serious Qlbligations that go along with sex He emphasized the program will not constitute a separate course of study but will be integrated with other subjects and with sp07lJtanooUII questions as they arise

US Court to Hear Textbook ChaUenge

WASHINGTON (NC) - DIe U S Supreme Court has agreed to examine the constitutiorlality of a 1965 New York State law allowing the state to loan textshybooks to children in churchshyrelated schools

The law is being challenged by several local public school boardsln the state on the grounds that it violates the U So Constitutions First Amendment prohibition against establishshyment of religion

The New York law which was passedin 1965 and became effective in September 1966 aishylows the state to punhase textshyhooks and loan them to children in private schools - inclUding those operated by churches--iD graqes 7 through 12

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

9 Money-Eating House Puts Garde1n Needs in Shadle

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick Oh~ ~ Iye~rIlfor the return of Spring and an opporshy

innity to gel out of this D1Ollampter we can a house I cra1ll IOOr house a monster because it seems that it has an inshy8Qtiable appetite for money We recently fiIrlished OUlr second floor (whiClh took a year of

its about 6 above outside andplanning six months of on with the able assistance of a Mld off oonstruotion and 1mshy hardy Winter wind the weather believable sums of money) is urging us all to stay inside J(ow we must have 11 basement Its a perfect day to keep your IIOOm which ea1ls for more mess oven going and your kitchen a money filled with delectable smells

Now there are individuals rve been baking beans since have the desire and the early mom a container of

capacity to be handymen and brown bread is steaibing in a Cbere are those of us who deshy huge kettle OIl the top oJ1 themiddot pend on others to do their work jets and I just set a cinnamonshyI fall into the latter category filled Indian pudding into the -ad I am paying for it I am 80 oven along with the beans The tired of furring ceiling tile aromas are beginning to mingle Dghting fixtures floor tile sidshy and all seems right with the tog etc that I am half hoping world Chat everything comes to a Smalil Dinners lItandstill What appears to be

0

These dre2l1Y months of low the simplest job turns out to be temperatures and stay-homeiIbe most complicated involved days are the perfect time to eIll shyIlleSS imagin91ble tertain your friends X love

Plano Moving nothing more than planning a Take our piano Two years small dinner party for a few

ago we bought an old upright friends and look forward to a 110 that the children could bave couple of days of cooking and their piano lessons in the comshy planning The dinner menu fort of their own home without should be made out at least a baving to nui to my mothers week ahead of time (with pershyevery night to practice The haps a few alternatives in case piano is 11 five toot upright items you plan to serve are not JI~ch cost us 5 available at this moment in thia

When the movelll igtrolliht it area The last time I made a to the ~o~ they ~ere very dinner menu I planned to start careful not 10 hurt tb~ piano off with prosciutto and melon but they managea to sandwich (a delightful combination of Cbe back door scrape half the flavors) only to find out that all paper i~ the hallway and there wasnt a fresh melon avaDshydent the mo1ding wherever theJ able for 10Ve or mOll1ey anyshylraveled where in 1be city I1 you have

Now tbat we are planninl your menu made out befOIle yoa the basement we decided go grocery obopping you avoid put the pianio there where It the disheartening happening of would not be an eyesore and DI7 starting to make a dish only to wife and I would not have find you dont have all tllle ilnshylisten to our fledglings takinC middotgredienta tring into the musical world Desserts tbat rm going to

Simpler said than done One serve to guests are more ofteD mover on seeing the size of the than not the kind Ulat can be piano and the size of our bulkshy made the evening or day before bead said I hOpe you wont be and then thats one less item I offended if I tell you the truth -have to think about the cIay I would advise you to take an that Im going to entertain axe and break it up and bU7 Many desserts lend themselves yourself a new piano He didnt to early preparation and it gives marge for this advice but me a feeling of security to know neither did he move the piano I have one or two completed Now all we have to do is remove desserts already in my freezer n of the stairs in the bulkhead or relrigerator as the busy da~middot

ItO that the movers can drop of preparation begins the piano into the cellar enshy A timetable of projects for kance a job which will cost the day of y~ur ~inner party is ftnimagined amounts of money a great help and I even time I am half tempted to buy that eacb item on the menu SlO thatbullbull I know just when a certain dish

And so it goes Not so in the has to go into the oven AJlL prden where everything iii tbis pre-party preparation leaves lItraightforward and results are the evening free to enjoy yourather immediate Marilyn keeps guests and your own cookingmsisting that the day will come Of course in jolly old New Engshywhen we wont have to bleed bull land a blizzaro can mmr yoUII our bank account to feed our party plans but then your PurishyInsatiable monster but I dont tan adaptability can come to the believe it In the meantime I fore and you can either pack ~ll continue to budget infinishy everything in your Jlreezer for tesimal sums for the garden anotber evening or you and _ile the house is reconstructed your spouse can sit down to a

IN THE KITCHEN sumptuous repast Last weljlk because it was CorrectiD

Rbool vacation week we took Note In a S)taghett1l AUce tile children to the Science Mushy

recipe in the February l ADehorIIeWI1 in Boston As we wanshy two eaD5 l)f toaiato paste wendered among the wonders at

omittedman and his universe I paused Jl()POVEIRSbull moment in front of a case that

displayed a cut-away section of This is an easy but ~al

the earth during the Winter seashy looking quick-bread Contrary lIOn Chipmunk and fieldmouse to most peoples idea popoven IleBtled warmly in their cozy are espeCially easy to make anderground castles waiting for always bake mine in a very iUIe rigors of a blustery Winter badly darkened muffill1 pan to pass and I must admit that at perhaps this is the secret oil mtI Ibat instant I was a bit envious success of Mr Mouse and Mrs Chipshy 1 cup flour munk who could retire from the teaspoon salt hzen world with all its cares 3 eggs (beaten)

Most of us cant crawl into a 1 cup milk bole and hibernate when the 1 Tablespoon melted butter aorth winds blow but we caD 1) Melt the butter ancll set ~nd more time enjoying tile aside and put the greased mufshy

pleasures of our warm (on top fin pans in the oven ~ tAe ground) homeamp ~ a) MUt toueUler a1J1 the __

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968

Voters Approve Open Housing

FLINT (NC) - Flints voters have become the first in the nation to approve an open houSoo ing ordinance in a public refershyendum

The measure pushed strongly by Negro Mayor Floyd McCree and the local Council of Churches was passed by a 43-vote margin The unofficial tally was 20172 to 20129

The Flint City Council passed an open housing ordinance in 1967 but its opponents led by John Birch Society section leadshyer Gerald Spencer had no trouble in gathering 5000 signashytures on a petition to place the

issue before the voters The religious support of the

ordinance was organized by the local Council of Churches with which Catholic parishes coopshyerated Several sponsored pubshylic debates on the measure and more expressed support for it in parish bulletins

Recommends Elimnnating First Four Grades

SPOKANE (NC) - A special study committee here in theBans Sales State of Washington has recomshymended the gradual phasing outSpanish Tov~i~t Convention Forbids of the first four grades in some

diocesan schools and a totalSelling Churchs Artistic Treasures emphasis upward in religious

SEVILLE (NC)- Andalusia For some proof that their education Provincial Tourist Convention fear is valid came from a decishy The committee comp~sed of in a resolution announced at the SiOD to sell donations decorating eight diocesan educators and close of its meeting here has Zaragozas shrine to the Virgin headed by Father Michael emphasized that artistic treas- of Pilar Accumulating for ONeill diocesan superintendent urea- decorating the nations nearly 100 years many of the at education made its recomshychurches are the property of the gifts of the faithful are both mendations to Bishop Bernan people and maT not be sold by artistic and financial treasures J Topel of Spokane after study-Church officials without the ap- Proceeds from the sale of the ing education in the diocese proval of local civil authorities Pilar treasures will go to wbat since August 1967

Admitting that the cburches Zaragozas Archbishop Pedro Elimination of grades one are permanent depositories of Cantero Cuadrado described as through four would allow the nations art the resolution urgent social necessities schools to strengthen grades was aimed at Spanish churchshy five through eight - middle men who have proposed selling school-and offer increased edshyart treasures to finance social CRS Sends Penicillin ucational benefits to a greater action projects number of students at the sameFor Vietnam Casualties or less cost the committees IeshyThe combination of increased NEW YORK (NC) - Within port saidemph~sis on social justice and hours after being inforined thatchurch renovation resulting the Saigon airport was againfrom the liturgy decree of the in operation the U S CatholicSecond Vatican Council has led Offering YouRelief Services (CRS) shippedmany Spaniards to fear that the out by aid 100000 doses of fast shychurches would be denuded of 3 Savings P~ansaction penicillin for civllian casshyancient treasures ualties in Vietnam Home Financing

The penicillin is an urgent need in Vietnam and will be WARJMI~Plan Byzantine Rite used for the civllian casualties

Installation March 5 by the four Sisters who are on co-oprD4liVEthe CRS medical teams in thatPITTSBURGH (NC)-Bishop country Fulther shipments willStephen J Kocisko will be honshy BANKfollowored at a banquet here followshy 281 Main St Wareham Ma

ing his March 5 installation as The peniciUin was given to Telephone 295-2400Bishop of the Byzantine-rite dishy the CRS by the Catholic Medshy

BaDk-8U lIerfIa IftfIIMI ocese of Pittsburg ical Mission Boarcll

Speakers will include Archshybishop Luigi Raimondi Aposshytolic Delegate in the United States wbo will officiate at the

installation John Cardinal Krol of Philadelphia Bishop John J Wright of Pittsburgh and Msgr Edward V Rosack who has been apostolic ildmmistrator of the Byzantine-rite diocese of PitsQurgh

Bishop Kocisko succeedsArchshybishop Nicholas T Elko who reshyeigned as ordinary of the Pittsshyburgh diocese ill1 lOecember Bishop Kocisko has been head of the Byzantine diocese of Passhysillc and will continue as its administrator IIlDti a new bishshyop js named

maining ingredients anell then MOTHER PARKERSlldd the cooled butter 3) Beat the batter until it hl OLD FASHIONEDcompletely smooth 4) Fill the well-buttered pans

full Place in a 450middot degree DOUGHNUTS oven for 15 minutes Reduce heat to 350middot and continue bakshy Baked by your Sunbeam Baker ing 20 to 25 minutes

AWARD WINNERS Award winners at a Winter Carshynival sponsored by the Fall River area CYO are left Janice Feno Somerset High School named Miss Personality and right Carol Silvia Durfee High School carnival queen Holding trophies is Richard Lown Durfee High School carshynival co-chairman

AFamily Favorite

bullbull

THE ANCHOKshy10 Thurs Feb 29 1968

Urge Cergymen Attend Meltefring On Scfielrnce

WASHINGTON (NC)shyCatholic clergy throughout the country are being urged to attend the second annual conference on science for cler- gymem at the Oak Ridge (Tenn) Associated Universities Aug 5-16 in cooperation with Oak Ridge National Laboratory

The conference entitled The Impact of Science on Society is sponsored by the National Science Foundation and the Alshyfred P Sloan Foundation Purshypose of the conference is to proshyvide clergymen of all faiths with an understanding of the nature scope effects and trends

of contemporary science - parshyticularly nuclear science

Dr W W Grigorieff chairshyman of the conference said the conference series originated in the recognition that most clershygymen actively engaged in pas torat work have little training in and understanding of sci shyence but are confrOnted almost

daily with problems and deci aions arising from its implicashytions

Dr Grigorieff s~icj in an inter- view with NC Nevvs Service that experience gained through the 1967 conference indicated to the conference advisory comshymittee that religious leaders of all f~i ths not only need to be conversallt with the content and llOcial dynamics of science but also are extremely eager to take advantage of the opportunity to become more acquainted with modern science

The conference director stated that this year the conference will be open to some 90 parshyticipants-three times as many IllS attended the 1967 conference

He pointed out that Roman Catholic applications for last years conference were not nushymerous and said that those who had applied were for the most part overqualified - that is they possessed professional qualifications and advanced training in science The confershyence he emphasized is not pri shymarily for such specialists

Practicing Cnergy Dr Grigorieff stated that an

announcement has been sent to bishops of anlimber of dioceses

throughout -the country in air eHort to stimulate iriterest in the aims of the conference He added that an effort is also being made to contact diocesan priests senates

He explained that conference participants will be selected on a nationwide basis from appli shy

cants representing various reli shygious )lodies arid emphasized that the majority are expected to be praCticing clergy-those actively engaged in the minis- try rather than in teaching reshysearch etc

He said that a limited number of seminary educators deans heads of clergy-in-service and religious editorf will be acshycepted as observers

Speakers will include Dr William G Pollard executive director of Oak Ridge Associshyated Universities who is also an Episcopal priest associated with St Stephens Church Oak Ridge and the author of several books and Alvin M Weinberg director of Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Askeel to Withdraw MILWAUKEE (NC) - The

Milwaukee priests senate has passed a resolution urging 11 priests of the archdiocese to work for a chalige in tlie policy of clubs which are discriminashytory or tG withdlW as members

INTERFAITH SERVICE Bishop Fulton J Sheen center of Rochester NY at shywnded an interfaith service at Mount Neboh Congregation in Manhattan With- the Bishshyop are the Rev Philip Hiat right rahbi of the congregation and Cantor Albert l- Stur- mer holding chalice wh() prepared the ceremony at which Bishop Sheen received aspeshycial Brotherhood Award SC Photo

Archdiocese- to IBatmiddottle

Race Prejudice -

BusmlrAeSS Archbishop Says CINCINNATI (NC) - Ar(h-

bishop KarlJ A1t~r launched Project Commitment here with an appeal to the Christian comshymunity to appreciate the size and urgency of the problems of race relations and an insistence that the finding of Solutions is everybodys business

Speaking at a Mass in 1l Saints church the Cincinmtti archbishop emphasized not on ly right attitudes among Catholic people but also united comshymunity-wide organization and effort are necessary 10 me~t the problem

He said government pm-middot grams heretofore have been t(o late and too little and adVHshycated something like the Mal shyshall Plan which at the end HI the Second World War rescued Europe from misery and dEshy

spair -The Mass marked the openshy

ing of the projects pilot prll- gram which will continue wittl

seven workshops at Moeller HighSchool on specific aspects of- racial prejudice and lliscrim- ination Endorsed by the Archdiocesan

Pastoral Council and sponsored by the Catholic Commission 011

Human Relations Project Com mitment is described as a promiddot gram ~o help Catholic lay lead ers recognize their responsibii ities and prepare for theiJ proper roles in t~e field of inmiddotmiddot terracial justice

Seven VVeeks Program Dayton will be the second

area in which Project Commitshyment will be launthed The date has been set tentatively for April 9and the program will continue for seven weeks

Archbishop Alter said experishyence gained in the pilot pro-

Forty Hours Format ST LOUIS (Nc)-The St Louis

archdiocese has dropped its reshyquirement that Forty Hours deshyvotion must be held annually in each parish Pastoral guideshy

lines from the Archdiocesan Liturgical Commission noted that parishes were free and encouraged to continue Forty Hours and offered possible new formats which are based on Scripture readings and themes of Eucharist priesthood and church

gram would be used in organizshying similar efforts in the other deaneries

St Francis de Sales deanery in t~s area was chosen as the first for the experiment beshycause its Catholic population represents a cross-section of the entire community and if a-- project succeeds here it may well succeed anywhere else the archbishop said

It has been estimated that more than 500 persons from 31 of the deanerys 34 parishes would tale part in the project

The archbishop detailed the reason why the whole archdioshy

cese was to be involved when the problems are so diverse in the various regions of the 19 counties and When iincertain areas there is no racial conflict because of a totally homogeshyneous population

National Prohlem

The answer is that the prob- lem of harmonious race relashyJions is not a local problem but a national problem involving all communities everywhere and affccting all our public relashytions political economic and social There may not be racial conflict but there can be race prejudice he said

The problem has moreover definite religious and moral asshypects he said and there are questions of social justice and social charity which concern every Christian and for which

Pope Honors Gellman Protest(OInlt Leader

BONN (NC) -Pope Paul VI has awarded the Great Cross of the Order of St Sylvester to Dr Reinhold von ThaddenshyTrieglaff at German Protestant leader

Dr Von Thadden-Trieglaff is the founder and honorary presshyident of the Kirchentag the anshynual German Protestnt convenshytion -

In the document accompanyshying the award the Pope thanked Dr Von Thadden-Trieglaff for his work on behalf of ecumtmshyism and asked him to continue working in this spirit of recon-

ciliation and brotherhood Bishop Adolf Bolte of Fulda

presented the award

he will find the appropriate anshywer in the teachings of the Gospel

All our Catholic people he said are charged with the reshysponsibility of supporting adeshyquate remedial legislation and of creating social institutions which will eliminate discrimishynation and alleviate the burdens of sickness poverty and )gnoshyrance No one can stand aloof from a program of social bettershyment

Dutch Bishops Take Poll of Priests

moving toward onenessTHE HAGUE (NC) -- The cardinal saidDutch bishops in an effort to

measure the effectiveness and opinions of the nations priests Priest on Facultyhave distributed a list of 39 questions to all priests deacons LANCASTER (NC) - Fathell and subdeacons in the country William J Walsh SJ is the Several questhms deal with first Catholic priest to be apshypriestly celibacy pointed a fullitime member oil

the LancaSter Theological SemishyD~awnupto determine what nary conducted by the Unitecllp~iests think of the priesthood Church of Christ here Fathetandto measure the clergys acshyWalsh assistant theology proshyceptance of the celibacy Iegulashy

- essor at the Jesuit notiviatetion the questionnaire will be

CardinalCites Church Role InSlaquosety --CHICAGO (NC) - Jobm

Cardinal Cody asserted heq that the Church must involVil) fultlelf in social problems 00 be true to its fundamentetl works

The cardinal spoke at a sefib vice in the First Presbyteri~ church making its lOOth anm versary celebration

Those who contest involve-shyment by the Chruch in prolraquo lems of society Cardinal Co~

said take an indefensible stand He said personal sanctity whiclli

is conceded to be the ChurchD rightful concern cannot bd sepilrated from social responsi shybility

If the Church has nothing 00 say to us regarding our obligashytions to our fellow man it kJ sadly neglecting our personall holiness Cardinal Cody said

We sin by Injustice We sm by lack of charity We are sancshytified by giving all men thellf due he added

Move Toward Unity Cardinal Cody did not specishy

fically mention race relationll but he said society mistrea~

certain groups or individuals1ll

He said if church members aNI in any way party to this evill the Church must become i~

volved The cardinal said COIb-

cern for personal holiness forcelll the Chuxch into action

Let the Church in such cil shycumstances stand idly by and Q will lose all reason for exisshytence he declared

Cardinal Cody was introduceell to the congregation by the Rev Harold Blake Walker pastor Cltf the church When asked ahow his appearance in a Protestanll church following the service the cardinal said not long age it would have been unthinkshyable He added that the Holy Spirit is moving strongly anell speedily

We are not yet perfectly one as Christ prayed but we arll

th~

evaluated by the Pastoral Insti shytute of the Catholic Churchin the Netherlands and the Insti shytute for Applied Sociology of the Catholic Universiiy of Nijmegen

Introducing the questions the bishops commented that in a period of Church renewal it is unavoidable that priests be conshyfronted with serious problems They then recommend that the priests answer the questions carefully keeping in mind the teachings of the Church and the roie of the Church in modern society

Wernersville Pa will take ihe post of assistant church history professor at the 143~year-olcll

Protestant seminary on July L

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Black Power MINNEAPOLIS (NC) - nle

only un-Christian thing about power is the abuse of power Father James E Groppj Milshywaukees militant civil rights leader told a Lutheran layshymens conference here

Neither is the striving fox power by a minority group unshyAmerican the priest asserted It is rather part of the American tradition he said and cited past drives for political power by labor unions Italians in New York and the Irish in Boston

Father Groppi also said that the Milwaukee NAACP Youth Council which he advises has adopted black power tactics only after we had used every tactic eveiy means we could think of to take the yoke off black people and nothing had been effective

He said that one use the counshycil had made of black power was in a united Negro boycott of stores during Christmas The white man doesnt give us a housing bill we dont give him our dollar he explained

Discussing the role of the Christian Church in the black mans struggle for equal rights Father Groppi said that the Church has been involved by her non-involvemen1i By such non-involvement he said the Church has aggravat~d the Neshygros problem

Today he said I the use of prudence as an excuse for cowshyardice is the great sin of tile Church

Students Interrupt Strike to Mourn

PARIS (NC) - The strike launched by the guild of law students at the Catholic Unishyversity of Paris has been intershyrupted by its leaders out of resJect for the mourning of the diocese of Paris following the death of Pierre Cardinal Veuil shylot who was chancellor of the instittltion

The strike was called to proshytest a reform of the university decided U()(ln by the French bishops and put into effectmiddot by the rector Msgr Pierre Haubt- mann The reform is designed to avoid having the Catholic uni- versity compete systematically with middotthe state university In all secular studies

The bish~ps decided that in addition to teaching and re search in the area of religion the Catholic universtty must first of all be devQted to Chrisshytian reflection on secular matshyters

Pastoral Institute To Open at Quito

BOGOrA (NC)-A new Latin American Pastoral Institute will be opened in April at Quito Ecuador as a project of the Latin American Bishops Counshycil (CELAM)

The institute will be a unit of the CELAM pastoral departshyment

Purpose of the institute will be to train personnel from the whole continent in pastoral work applicable to Latin Amershyica The institute will offer seven-month courses and Euroshypean specialists in pastoral work will also serve on the faculty

Meeting on Cities NOTRE DAME (NC) - An

international conference entitled NCities in Context will be held March 31 through April 3 at the University of Notre Dames Center for Continuing Educashytion

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968

litu~~W Changes Continued from Page One

in earlier periods-even thou~

they do not conrorm in all deshytails with the approved versiOlil of contemporary liturgical texto -are authorized

TANTUM ERGO An apshyproved Eucharistic hymn ilill praise of the Blessed Sacrament may be used in Benediction oil the Blessed Sacrament in place of the Latin hymn Tantum Ershygo

PSALMS Approved are the texis of the Psalms as published by Englands Grail Society anell that found in the Jerusalem Bishyble

Suggestnol1Js Denied

The Vatican turned down two requests made by the US Bishshyops both dealing with liturgic011 experimentation

No was answered to the reshyquest that the US Bishops be permitted to designate acade~ic

centers to supervise litulgicall innovation

Also denied was the request that some experimentation be approved without examinatioD by the Holy See

-Presently the Vatican mu~

approve proposed liturgical inshynovations before experiment3shytion can begin

Archbishop Dearden explainshyed While the two major proshyposals concerning liturgical enshyperjmentation were not alPshyproved at the present time ~

is clear that the Consilium iJ open to the submission of rite and texts of li-turgical adaptioTll which have been drawn up anll presented prior to actual experishymental use

Concrete proposals of rHeIl 2nd texts may continue to be sent to the Bishops CommittCCl on the Liturgy

Matter Deferred

The permission to substitutfl h)mns or other sacled songtl fur the texts now used at the entran~e Offertory and Comshymunion of the Mass was defershyred

Such hymns now generally added to the official texts were approved in principle however by the delegates to the Rome Synod of Bishops October 1967

The Baptismal Rite describecll among the changes was n~

contained in the Vatican lettertl authoiizing the other changoo but was made public by Archshybishop Dearden at the same time as the announcement of 1ibe changes was released

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L_ PATRON 01 MARCH The month of March is dedicated to St Joseph watchful

guardian of the Son of God and patron and protector of the universal Church Dedicashytion of the month of the year to events in the life of Christ and to particular saints is a practice of the People of God rather than an official action of the Church It comfantly middotrecalls the power and love of God for mankind present at all times and in every place

Bishops Hit Penna Birth Control Policy Addsmiddot to Rather Thon Solve Problems of Poor

HARRISBURG (NC)-The Pennsylvania Welfare Depaytments new policy of acfi~ely promoting birth control among poor people is a major step in the direction of a newand dangerous life management bymiddot the state The Pennsylvania Oatholic Conferencehas criti shycized the Welfare pepartments decision to middotinitiltte discussions of birth control with their clients Under previous pol- stru~en~ for population con- the polic~ because it will add icy birth coiltrol adviceias trol saidmiddot the PCC to the p~oblems of the poor and Moreover many of these do nothmg to get at the root

Jren~l~red only If the welfare same spokesmen see it as an in- causes of poverty reCIpIent asked for It The strument to improve what they We are bound to protest sysshynew policY has been in effect call the quality of our popula- tematic governmental involveshysince mid-January The Con- tion Putting the program to ment in decisions of citizens reshyference which represents the suchmiddota use represents one of its specting family size as a major states Bishops in public affairs worst dangers the danger that step in the direction of a new has denied that Church teach- the state will start-=-by guiding and dangerous life management ing on contraception is a factor some groups or classes to birth by the state the statement emshyin its opposition limitation-to select the types it phasized

Invasion of Prhacy desires to see propagated Rather our concern is over Dangerous Management Varied Talents

the ef~ort of the state to i~fl~- The statement noted that its SPOKANE (NC)-The newly e~c~ many wa~ a pelson s view in this regard is shared formed Catholic Board of EdushychOIce of family size-our con- b th ptt b h b h f th h ht d h middottmiddot y e 1 s lIlg lanc 0 e cation for the Diocese of Sposhycern IS elg ene w en I IS National Association for the Adshy kane has elected members whothe poor whom the state seeks t f C I d P I to mfluence the Conference stat t sad

emen IThe Confelence called promoshy

tion of birth control an invashysion of privacy and asserted the state should play no role in attempting even indi rectly to manage tne most intimate domain of personal life

The statement also took issue with Welfare Depart~ent deshynialsmiddot that the program is inshytended to contlOl population

Negro Opposition

Chiefspokesmen for groups which have pressured for this program in our state say they IJee it and demand it as not just II medical service but as an inshy

vancemen 0 0 ore eop e include educators and non-edushyh h tl tt k d th w IC recen y a ac e e cators priests pastors ReligiousWelfare Department for trying and lay personst r t th th f th N 0 Iml e glOW 0 e egro

populatIOn The Conference also criticized

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a2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River--Thurs Feb 29 1968

The PaJrish Parade ~T MARYS CAlllllIlEJI)lItAL FALL RiVER

Mrs Hadley Lackey will serve as chaIrman of arrangements for the monthly meeting of the Womens Guild scheduled for a oclock on Monday night March 4 in the Shamrock Room of the Corky Row Club

Mrs John OConnor chairshyman of the Scholarola scheduled for April 1 requests that all pledges be brought to the March meeting of the Guild Committee members are avail shyable for all who wish their pledges collected at home

ST THERESA J80 ~-y gtltBORO

The ~ =middotaternity of Christian Mothers will hold thei~ regular monthly meeting on Monday evening March 4 following the Stations of the Cross

Rev Leo R Gravel OMI son of Mr and Mrs Raymond Gravel ofmiddotWestminister St So Attleshyboro will be the guest speaker

Members of the Confraternity will receive Comunion in a body at the 9 oclock Mass on Sunday morning March 3

88 PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Mothe~~ ~f Boy Scouts will bold a p1i1gtlic social at 730 toshynight Boy Scouts informatiOn classes for the Ad Mtare Dei award wiil be gtheld tonight and every T~ursday night during March and April

Junior High Camp Fire Girls plan a splash party at the YMCA from 530 to 7 Saturday night March 2 imd a cakesale in the IIChool hall from 8 to 11 30 Sun- ~y morniii~

The annual Cub Scout Pack IT Blue and Gold Banquet and charter presentation will take place at 630 Sunday night in the

school hall

SACRJED IllEART NOATlLEBORO

Starting on March 12 and conshytinuing for the next three conshysecutive Tuesday nights there will be an EcUmenical Worship Study conducted at Sacred Heart Church First Universalist Church First Methodist Church and the Grace Church

The service will begin at 730 and will be followed by a coffee hour and a discussion period in the church hall

The Sacred Heart Church will open the program on March 12 with a discussion of the Mass

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Womens Guild win reshyceive Holy Communion in a group at the 8 oclock Mass on Sunday morning March 3

The regular monthly meeting of the Guild will be held on Wednesday night March 6 at 730 in the school on Earle Street

ST PATRICK FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild announces an open meeting for Monday March 4 A jewelry demonstrashytion will be featured In charge of arrangements is Mrs Stanley Pitera aided by Mrs Joseph Fazzina

The unit will celebrate St Patricks day Saturday night March 16 with a smorgasbord supper and dance in the school auditorium Supper will be served at 7 and danCing will folshylow from 8 to midnight with music by the Moon Mists Resshyervations will close Sundq March 10 and may be made with guild officen or board memshybers

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

Plilrishoia books are to be distributed the weekend of

The WQmens Club announces March 2 and 3 Prizes will be bull pot luck supper for 630 Monshyday nigh1 Maich 4 Chairmen are Mrs William T Marum Jr and Miss Mary L Tyrrell

John F Keavy Jr president cl the US Model Railroad Assn will show films at a Boy Scout meeing slated for Tuesday night March 5

Theologians SllaquolIted As CU Spe(Q]~eis

WASHINGTON (NC) - Dr Ellie Mascall one of Englando most prominent Anglican theoshylogians and Father Hans Kung an outspoken advocate of reform in~~ the Catholic Church wilil speak at the Catholic University of America l1Ite in March

Dr Mascall a vigorous 0pshy

ponent of the so-called New Theology will give the Charles A Hart Memorial Lectures from March 24 to 29 His lectures will

deal sucessively with the quesshytions of God man Christ and the Church

Father Kung a Swiss theoloshygian who played an influential role at the Second Vatican Counshycil will speak on Sincerity in the Church on March 18

St louis Ceremony ST LOUIS (NC) - Bishop

John J Carberry of Columbus will be installed as Archbishop of St Louis on March 25 in cershyemonies at St Louis cathedral here

Archbishop Luigi Raimondi apostolic delegate to the United States will officiate The date of the cerem0I1-Y will be exactly three years after that on which Bishop Carberry was installed ordinary of Columbus

awarded to the three individuals selling the most books

The Mystibrook Singers of Bishop Stang High School will lead singing at the 815 Mass Sunday morning M~rch 3

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

A parish supper sponsored by the Womens Guild will be held from 530 to 730 Saturday night March 2 in the school hall Tickets are available from Mrs Frank Kingsley ticket chairman or any board member

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

During Lent Masses will be at 7 AM 4 PM and 7 PM

Confessions will be heard one half hour before each Mass Stashytions of the Cross will be held at 345 and 645 Friday aftershynoons and evenings Children are urged to attend Mass at 4 each afternoon The Children of Mary anshynounce a periby sale Friday March 15 A Portuguese parish mission will be preached by Rev Anshytonio Pinto CM from Sunday March 3 through Saturday March 9 Services will open Sunday night March 3 with rosary sernlon and Benediction at 7 I)clock and Mass and sershymon will be held every weekday night at 7

ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

The Association of the Sacred Hearts will sponsor a tea at 7 on Sunday night Mar 3 in the rectory in honor of the Sisters staffing the parish schooL

The monthly meeting C1f 1lhe Association will follow the tea

SAMOAN BISHOP The first native Polynesian memshyber of the hieraIl~hy Bishopshyelect Pio Taofinlllu (cq) S M will be consecrated at Apia Western Samoa on May 29 by Bosoon-born A r c h b ish 0 p George H Pearce SM of Suva The Bishop-eloot 44 made -his novitiate with the Marists on Staten Island ~C Photo

Hospital ~~urses

Return middotto Nork hi Covingtol1l

COVINGTON (NC) A nurses walkout which began in mid-November at 100shyyear-old St Eliz~~beth Hosshypital here has ended Nearly 100 of the 140 members of tine Registered Nurses tgtrganizati01l have indicated they will retum to their jobS The walkout stemmed from bull dispute over recognition of their organization and patient care policies Since the settlement hospital officials have been inshyterviewing nurse to expedite their reemployment and placeshyment

Restore Full Service Hospital spokesmen said the

nurses will be restored to posts they formerly held in so far as possible The nurses will lose no tenure as a result of their absence and if the positions they previously held have been filled they will be offered comshyparable posts or benext in line for selection to the positions

Administration officials exshypressed satisfaction with the prospect of the nurses return and voiced the earnest hope that we can move forward tel restore the 100 beds to service which had to be taliten out of availability by reason of the shortage of nurses to care for the patients

Officials estimate til1at four tie eight we~ks might t~ required 110 restore full bed service

Cite Achievements The nurses leaders said the7

had achieved at least 13 gains during the thteenionth dispute pointing to the fact that a doctor and a nurse have been apshypointed to the hospital board of trustees the establishment of bull patient care committee comshyposed or nurses electeli by those now employed by the hospital and equipment changes in the patient care area

Mrs Pat Tanner vice chait shyman also said the nurses unshyderstand that a lay heid will be appointed head of the hospital

Sister M Coronata adminisshytrator was assigned to) another post in the sisterhood earlier this month and Sister Mark Bernard has been serving u acting administrator I~he Franshyciscan Sisters of the Poor haft operated the hospitaL

Love Is An Active Verb We who bear the noble name of Christian arid who are io9shy

ingly called the faithful stand in awe of the Mystery of Christ and the Mystery of His Church More than the mystery of Obrist and of His Church is something we live It is then our duty JIlON

and more to experience the living reality of the Cbureh hershyself Cbristain tradition affirms that by her relatioJiship with Christ tlbe Redeemer the Church is a kind of sacrament or an efficacous sign of intimaJte union with God and indeed an efshyficacious sign cf the uni~ of all mankind

As members of the household of the faith we have heeD eaDmiddot ed by God and endowed with the precious gift 01 faithThereshyfore we m1ls truly experience a sense of urgency in brinampinK aD men to tun union with Christ Since mankind today is joined together more 1ll1osely than ever before in historY by bonds thaamp are social technical and eultural should it be ilenied the spirshyitual unity that springs from faith The Gospel is Ught Ii Is lIIewness it is energy it is rebirth it is salvation

Should DOt interest in our own salvation necessarily move us tID loving concern for the salvation of others If the Church is the Sacrament Of Salvation should we not as members of the Church eome to an eve- clearer awareness of our pari in her mission in the o1uty of evangelization in the missionary mandate in the apOstolic commiSsion Clearly our duty consonant withthe blessings I-eceived from Christ is that of spreading offering and announcing ~ faith to Others in order that we might be clble to acquit ourselves of Uiis Christian obligation The Society for the Propagation of the Faith eXiSts For-those who desire to be where the action is or 110 be iIivOlvoom wOrld mission the Church pr0shy

claims her own essential inissionlU) character Indeed the Cburdl ill J4ission and therefore aD of 118 are truly missionaries

fa tills Yeai IaItIl we eaa testify to Gaefldl uieDt 04 om- ATatitade to God for the bleilldDc of faWt by ma~ bull aerIfiee te TIle Society for the PropapUOn 01 the Faith lor tile works of the Chureh ill the service Df tile poor and underprholshy~ed We eamaot be Uke our Master III the fWlness of HIs Dlvinit7 nor caD we hoPe to experienCe thelrlory of His Transfigmratio bat there lis ODe way ill whieh we eaa resemble Rim and that Is ~ beeomtitamp- a oervant to His poor aDd His UWe ODes throughshyout the world

The native celrgy is the ho~ of the Chureb in Mission lands Many youngmen have heard the can but are sadly turned away for lack of facilities and funds $250 will provide a year of semshyinary training $1500 will cover the cost of complete education to the priesthood Wont you help us to help them by sending your offering to The Society of st Peter the Apostle 366 Fifth Avenue New York N Y 10001

SALVATION AND SERVICE are the work of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith Please cut out this eolumn and send your offering to Right Reverend Edward T OMeara Nashytional Direetor 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or directly to yoUr loeal Diocesan DirectOr Rt Rev Msgr Raymond T Considine 361 Norib MaiD Street FaD IUver Massaelnuse~ts 03720

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THE ANOiOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 13Missouri Diocesan Board Pondersmiddot Closing Consolidating Schools

KANSAS CITY (NC)-Tbe 1H girls They would be abshyKansas City-8t Joseph diocese sorbed into the school popushyis exploring the possibility of lations of Lillis high school and closing some of its schools and st Theresas academy forming n larger area school Although 120 persons attendshy Extension Volunteers bull bull bullwhich could upgrade the qualshy ed the school board meetingity of education for all pupils they were not petmitted tp

At 0 school board meeting speakFather John P Cole supershyinJtenden~ of schools reported on L - shyPTA Bead Plotes~

the possibility of setting up 11 Make Life Wortl IVngA motion-passed unanimousshycentral area grade school in ly by the board-was made to

mid-town Kansas City The continue exploration into conshysingle school would serve the solidation of the schools Thispopulations of three existing was opposed by John J Mcshygrade schools Donough a representativeFather Cole also suggested the elected by the Catholic PTApossibility of closing Redempshy Federation who will be seatedtorist high school now serving as a board member in July

McDonough was permitted to $~[]7reg~ 2~ Ifreg[[~ take part in the discussion but

had no vote

~~ ~~[[U IT)J He protested against the defe3ltist clique who let our

WASHINGTON (NC)-Bishop schools get picked off one byPaul F Tanner newly named one He charged that TheOrdinary of the diocese of St New Peltlple - the diocesanAugustine Fla is onfy the newspaper members of the dishyfourth priest to serve as general ocesan school office officials of secretary of the United States the Missouri Catholic Confershybishops secretariat in the nearshy ence Kansas City pastors andmiddotly half-century of its existence other Church officials share in

Bishop Tanner was the last an anti-Catholic school recshygeneral secretary of NCWC the ordoriginal secretariat He was also the first general secretary of ODe Operation both of is dual suc~essors-tne

McDonough said that theNational Conferenceof Catholic school superintendent shouldBishops and the United States be goingmiddot to the state legislashyCatholic Conference The NCCB ture and Governor Hearnes tois the bishops agency for dealshydemand tax relief instead ofing with purely splritual matshyconsidering consolidation andters the USCC Is their secreshyclosing of schoolstariat for dealing with secular

affairs Father Colemiddot maJntained that The prelate has served in the the reorganization would not

U S bishops secretariat 28 represent a cutback The area years longer than any precedshy school would be able to opshying general secretary Born in erate out of one blilding to Peoria TII in 1905 and ordained serve three parishes It would a priestmiddot of the Milw~ukee archshy provide the same educational diocese in 1931middot he came to experience for the same number Washington in 1940 ~as assistant of students plus advantages director of the Youth Departshy Cooperation would make posshyment NCWC He ~as assistant sible a highly developed model general secretary from 1945 to school staffed by Sisters from 1958 and has been general secshy three communities retary since then He said it would be irresponshy

He is the first bishop to serve sible to run three operations at as secretary to the bishops secshy all costs when the diocese retariat could have one operation run

The NCWC (as Council and it more efficiently do a better Conference) had been in exisshy educational job and provide opshytence 47 years when it formally portunity for a better deployshywent out of existence at the anshy ment of personnel nual meeting of the bishops in November 1966 Bishop Tanner who had served in the secretashy Urge Germaruls riat for more than half those years supervised the transition To Aid Vietnam to two separate organizationsshy

BONN (NC) - Two Germanthe NCCB and the USCC cardinals and two churchshyDuring Bishop Tanners secshy related relief organizations have

retaryship and in testimony to FALL RIVER PROVINCETOWN AND WESTPORT GIRLS WITHappealed to the German people

the growth of the work handled to collect money and to prayby the bishops secretariat an NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF EXTENSION VOIL~NTEERS DURINGfor the people of Vietnamimpressive addition to the headshy A week beore Mardi Gral lt- quarters building here was Joseph Cardinal Frings of Coshy THEIR YEAR OF VOLUNTEER WORK erected in 1960 logne asked the Catholics of his

archdiocese to cut down on Mardi Gras festivities and to donate magnanimously to the needy people of Vietnam Coshy These young college graduates have given a I year of their logne has long been known for its ampigtectacular Mardi Gras celeshy professional life to God in service in the South and West Are brations Citing the bombing Of North you willing to give twelve months of yourmiddotyouth to othersVietnam the plight of women and children caught between opposing forc~middot in the $()ut~ and the great number of refushygees Cardinal Frings asked how Catholics could watch pictures of these gravely distressing si~

WHY NOT ENROll AS ANuations on television and ceieshybrate Mardi Gras with a quiet The Spirit oj

Extension Volunteer HELPER middot$200 oconscience Alfred Cardinal Bengsch Of Extension Volunteer PROMOTER $500 o

Berlin asked for prayers for Sacrifice Extension Volunteer SPONSOR $1000 or more opeace in the world in a letter to the clergy of his diocese in which specifically mentioned AMOUNT ENCLOSED $ Vietnam as a name meaning Perfectlyblood and death RT REV RAYMOND T CONSIDINE PAIn a joint appeal Caritas the German Catholic relief organishy PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH OFFICE zation of Germanys Evangelical 368 NORTH MAIN STREETExemplifiedLutheran Church has asked for fALL RIVER MASS money to send food Md medishy

BISHOP P~VL F TANNU cine to the Children of Vietnam o

(-14 THf ANCHOR-Diocese of FaR Rfver-Th~rs Feb-29 1968 Two Objectives Jersey to Rehabilitate Young OffendersTells Jesuatts Engage in Deliberate

Help Increasing Spanish Group Attempts at lExperimentation UNION CITY (NC) - Two Hudson County Jan and in theST LOUIS (NC)-Deliber- carries its own reward he said area interfaith clergy groups youth house in Secaucus

iide attempts at experimenta- Now we must undertake new here in New Jersey are planning Father ThomasJ Murtha oftion with a readiness to accept forms some of which have a

joint action on the plightf West New York was named toall the risks that may be in- good chance to flop JIliserably youthful offenders housed m investigate means of setting UJltvolved were proposed for the An expert at the Second VatshyHudson County correctional in- a rehabilitation program t4ilSociet of Jesus at the close of ican Council Father Campion stitutions and to seek federal function after the release ~ III three-day session here on believes that the work of the assistance in meeting the needs youthful offendersbulllesuit renewal council has not yet begun to of Cuban refugeesFather Donald R Campion be absorbed within the Church

The joint session was held by The ~o groups will send a18J stressed at the renewal as a whole the North Hudson Clergy Coun- delegatIOn toWashIngton to askQession and in an interview This is not because it hasnt cU based here and the Chris- ~hat the area be declared anthat the Jesuits have both the been publicized enough or beshy tian Clergy United a West New Impacted area under the Cuban manpower and the resources to cause people havent read Y k Refugee Act and therefore beshy

engage in the type of expeii- enough or bishops havent talkshy or ~ro~p come eligible for special federal mentation which could serve ed enough he said But Vati shy A meetmg WIll be s()~ght WIth aid There are some 00000 tQdays Church Father Cam- can II opened up more areas the Hudson County Boar~ of Spanish~speakingpeople now m pion a sociologist and theolo- to discussion than it resolved Chosen Freeholders in an effort rth gian was recently named editor Among the sleep~rs in to establish a bettez climatefoi the ~o Hudson area and they cd America magazine council documents CIted by therehabiUtation of youthful continue to arrive at the rate of

Another speaker Fat her Father Campion was the conshy offenders now housed intne 200 to250 a month ~ 1 _

Avezy Dulles SJ stressed that cept of participation within the ~ doubt is a valuable and even Church Father Campionmiddot said lI1ecessary experience for the he believes collegiality is the Wide E~perience Christian in todays world most developed aspect in this

Fathers Campion and Dulles area and that some organization QU(lJD~ies Nu_ were two of the six main speak- has been given to it through the

UNITED- NATIONS (NC)ers at the closed meeting Some establishment of piie~ senates ltHQWCom pie t e devotion to theSSO Jesuits including 50 from But unless the idea of parti shyworlds needy children seemsCilutside the St Louis areaat-cipation is really the basis senshy a weighty task for a petite nun TDgtKEEPtended the sessions ates can become orgimizational

Father Campion said that Jes- gimmicks he said but a conversation with Sister Ullits as a group must face the Father Dulles discussing themiddot Kathl~eri Kelly MMmiddot provides LENmiddotTreassularice middotthat 20 years of make a significant contribution Church said ~ an interview diversified experience fact that their work should existence of doubt in todays

more to modern times that we have a radically differ- than qualifies her for the role

QUI IXIDPYFATHER lI MISSION jlUDTG me fllRlfaNTAL CHURCH

In the area of education It calIS for recasting the ex- wide Cath)lic charities organishy Need New Formula ent world view than in the past Caritas Internationalis worldshy

With the slason of Lent comes the qu~ionFather Campion called for con- pressions of the Christian messhy zation recently appointed Sisshy How can I beSt keep Lentl The answer ~s ~sideration of whether we are sage in terms of contemporary as observerter Kathleen its must make sacrifices on our own and nothing ISproviding the educational struc- knowledge if the message is to to the U N International GOOD III sacrifice unfess it hurts Whatwill be yo~rture for the new world have the impact it should Childrens Emergency Fun d WHIEN sacrifice bullbull Just think of the misslonlllne~ InIn the intellectual area Look Criticanny (UNICEF) Caritas Internationshy ITlf our 18 emerging countries who keep Lent allrather Campion noted that to- Doubt is not a bad thing he alis is one of 75 international HUmS year long Sacrifice something big this ye~rday more is needed than popu- said People should be looking and non-government organizashy When helping others hurts a bit you know you va larization of theology and phil- critically at the traditional forshy tions (NGOS) which enjoy conshy made a sacrifice()Sophy In a way we need a mulas and seeing what is revelashy sultative status with UNICEF whole new formula for making tion and what is a culturally

They represent oJer 4000csense of the world and life he conditioned formula which is affiliated private and non-profitfSaid now demanding reform

We should have men devoted Such adaptations are iD no organizations in more than 100 oOn his recent-trip through India 1V0~signor nations with a combined memshy Nolan saw priests and Sisters subSisting onto this single problem Their way a compromise of faith bership running into millions ounces of rice each day so they can share what own inner resources of security Father Dulles said We never they have with lepers and orphans $10 will feedmust be yery strong because to hear the divine message except Interviewed at the United Nashy FEED a family for several weeks at least $50 will feed

facethat kind of change is not III in terms of humans he said tions Sister Kathleen spoke of THE five families $100 ten families bullbullbull Only $975popular thing The Word of God comes her new rol~ at the international HUNGRY gives a priest 11 two-acre mode~ 18nn toraise

Council Opened Areas through man it is alW9YS tem- level and described how it his own food and teach his parishioners how to Father Campion said the can pered by man and it is this con~ evolved from her past activities raise more food Archbishop MalJ Gregorioa will

for experimentation W9S not ditioning which must change wrltetlo thank youI was in California andbased on inadequate work of Father Dulles said one value worked for 10 years in familyJesuits at the present time and of the death-of-God movement eounseling in the juvenile court IlJ Enable ~ girl to become a Sister For 41tl bullthat fact is part of the problem for Catholics is to shake _ I1tA1N day ($1250 a month $150 bull year $300 aleill foster lare and in otherMany times we have been suc- out of taking an uncritical with sa~ A together) you can pay In full fer her two-yeaIwork children sheeessful and being successful static view of God training have 8 Sister of your awnInthe last five years I moved SISTER

oat to community development and civil rights I was a member o For only $a5O a week ($10 a month $120 bull

year) you can make surethat an abandonedJesuit Seminarian Leads Campaign of a district council in bull San HELP Francisco - which subsequently A child has food clothing a blanket and love bullbullbull IAgainst Home Contract Firms was declared a poverty CHILD wen send you a photo of the boy or silt )011area

adoptCHICAGO (NC) - A Jesuit borne than its current market During my years there I waa Rminarian has launched a camshy value a member of the Catholic Intershy o Our priestS will offer promptly the Massespaign here against contractshy Following the exodus of racial Council and when I came MASSES you request Doyou wish to remember a loved holders of homes sold to Negro Lawndales white residents in back from Selma (she was on fOR one this Lent Your Mass offerings are usuallyfamilies at allegedly exorbitant the late 1950s thousands of of the persons selected to repshy LENT the only Incole our priests overseas receiverates homes were purchased by vari shy resent the archdiocese of san

Jack Macnamara SJ who ous bankS mortgage loan and Francisco in the Alabama civil o Enroll yourself your family and friends InlIives and works in nearby real estate companies at low rights march) I was appointed this Association You will be helping Pope Paul Lawndale is acting withthe ap- prices and then resold on conshy to serve on the Human Rights

JOI~ in one of his most ambitious and heartfelt works proval of his Jesuit superio~ tractto Negro families atofteIi - Commission by the mayor of THIS while sharing In the blessings of thousands of

Nacnarnara and a dozen supshy ~lImON Masses (The offering for one year is $2 perdouble the original purchase San Francisco the nun stated porters including several other price the leaflet reported She was the first nun ever apshy person $10 for a family perpetual membership Jesuit seminarians picketed the Paid Race Tax ltpOinted to any kind of~~yt is $25 per person $100 for a family) Chicago address of one investshy Macnamara said these conshy inJSan Fraidsco _

Iment company which holds title tracts should be renegotiated at

~ several homes sold on conshy the most recent FHA appraisal tract to Negroes Pickets dis- price ~ If I1t e SAiliNGS

tributed leaflets explaining the c2J 0 dJ ~ t~~ year SYSTEMATICThe issuemiddot here is moral rathshypurpose of their campaign er than legal he declared Th~ MONTHLY DEPOSITS

The leaflet cites the case of III law does not provide a remedy II tfMltIa fNVE$iMENyhome purchased by an investshy for the type of injustice that is d) aV~ J((~ year SAVINGSment company in January 1959 operative in this contract

for $13000 and then three NOTICE ACCOUNTSThousands of Negroes inmonths later sold on contract to Chicago are suffering from this a Negro buyer for $23000 450 ar ~~~~

It states the investment corn continued ~In effect they paid pany received $2000 as a down II race tax of approximately

type of injustice Macnamara

BCJs~ liverpayment on thiS contract whic~ $10000 when they bought their stipulated that middotthe balance was homes because it was impossishy SavonJs Bonkflo be paid over 20 years at sevshy bleto obtain mortgages 4Il per cent interest at the rate This is a striking example of BanI By Mail of $20140 each month how our legal system does notmiddot We Pay The Postage

Last December it reported a adequately protect black people Federal Housing Administration or poor people he said It appraisal on this home listed its stems from the fact that the law bull YARMOUTH SHOPP8NC PUll value at $15025 This means it aims at protecting property inshy bull SOUTH UltMOm bull HYANJIISexplained that the Negro buyer stead of persons And this helpl bull DENNIS PlmRT bull OSTFllVIUlIII paying $8000 more for tbe bull cause urbaJl unreal

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offering CITY STATE ZIP ~DEE---

THO middotCATHDLIC NEAR EAST WELFRIASSOCIATION

NEAR EAST IVIISSIONS MSGR JOHN Go NOLAN National secretary Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAsT WELFARE Assoc 330 Madison Avenue bull New York NY 1001 Telephone 212YUkon 6-5840

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HUNGRYmiddot FOR GOD TOO ~

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 ltI

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Home Missions Collection in Your Church-March 3 19611

16 THE ANC )~-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968

New St LouimiddotsArchbi~hcp

PrOmilnent in Ecumen~$m Archbishop Jonh J Oarberry of St Louis well known

~()ng Oatholic leaders after 31 career that has taken him from a seminary classroom iii his natiYe Brooltl~ NCY~ to one of the nations MOse ~mpOOtallt archdiolaquoese1l is pershy

laaps evenmiddot better ~ownmiddot fJDlong Americas nom-Cafu6shylie religious leaders fon hisl work in ecumenism Cllair Ilillao of the Bishqps Commi~ee-Ibr Ecumenical and Intenrefi shyaious Affairs since th~ resigna Qion of Baltimores Lawrence Cardinal Shehan in November 11965 Bishop Carberry has au I9gtCrvised the massive catholic illllvoIvement in ecumeniCal ac-middot lli1 vities

He outlined his own entIliusishyeuroISm for ecumenism in a speech ~iven in January 1966 tolmemshy~rs of the Ohio (Protestant) lPastors Convention wheDI he aid

Common lHeritagel For years the general policY

(llln the Catholic Church) had ~en to stress the great chasm

which divides the euroatliolic Church and other Christian ehurches No effort was made m would seem on our part to Illave a meeting of minds A otudy of documents would seem ltD reveal that while we wera lbrayerfully disposed to) the ltecumenical movemerit nevershy1lheless the Catholic Church did lliittleto foster it

Bishop Carberry told the conshyvention that through the grace 0f God and the leadership or Pope John XXIII we became aware of the common heritage Which is ours

Has Great lHope

We began to realiZe~ how 18aptism unites us in ChriSt to Gee that the divinity of Christ is illhe cornerstone of all Christianshynay we began to real1ze the oommon treasure which we llnave in the Sacred Scripturesllikewise the common bondshyVhich exists with us in the

1lIIlissionary activities at the Church

There is great hope Bishopltearberry said that mrougb ~ialogue through prayerbull 1llluough respect for each others wiewpoint the grace of God may (i)Ile day in Gods divine provishy4llence bring about the- unitY which Christ prayed for at themiddot Last Supper

More recently members of ltOhios Protestant cliurches llllamed the bishop as OniosPbsshyoLr of Pas-tors the fl rst timmiddote hat bull

Grants Permis$ioll~

for SaturdayMass) SAN ANGELO (NC)-BiShop

Thomas TSchoepe of San Angelo lllas announced that the diocesan request for the Saturday Mass flaculty hagt been granted In the future the Sunday Mass 00shyltigation may be met by at shy~ndance at a Saturday aftershyllloon or evening Mass The pershylll1ission has been granted on an ~xperimental basis by the Vati shylttan for a period of five years

The diocese of San Argelo is 1lI Texas missionary diocese the bishop explained and there are areat dis tan c e s between churches and few priestswmiddot oerve the faithfuh ManYi ~llieSts

have two or morlt8 churclies tJ lllttend and will Be able- tQ give more time to the smaller ~urches with the Satucday Mass faculty Bishop TschoePe pointedi 9Ut Chat the faculty has been giVeth bull the whole diocese not just Ibo individual churches or areas Pastors who wish to make Usemiddot aJl the faculty must make formal application to the chancery ofshyillce

a~ statewide Protestant onganiza tion has presented its highest awa-rd 10 a eatho1iir clet1gymam A pla~J1e symbollZiDg the a~adi was~ glv~~ to the blShp at ~~~ Fenw~nIP Blmq~et on the Olbo PastollSgt ~onventi~m

DI~USS P~tilems U~dev Blsli~p~rlgte~rysl~d

er~hlPl laquoatholic ~elegations have ~et wl~h ~fflC1Blsbull and

tleolbglan~ of other- ChrIs~an churchesmiddot to dlSCUSS ecumemcal pooble~s r~~gmg from the pr~sshyence of Christ Ill tlie ~ucharlst to th-c nature of we prJes~ood

Before ta~mg cliarge of th Golumbusmiddot dIOcese on March 25 1965) Bishop euroarbery liadmiddot selved asmiddot coadjutor bishop and then bishop of Eafayette Ind Born in Brooklynj N~ Y Tulymiddot 31 1904 Bishop Carberry studied for the priestlioodi at Brooklyns Cathedral College or the Iin-middot maculate laquool1ception from 191ll to 1924 and at the North Amershyican College in Rome from 1924 to 1930

Oldained inmiddot Rome in 1929 tne bishop sfudiea canon law at the Catholic University of America in Washington D G and taught at Immaculate Conception Semshyinarl until Tune 1935 when he went on ldan to the diocese of Trenton N J He returned to BrooklYn in 1940 where hemiddotreshymained until being named coshyadjuror bishop of Lafayettemiddot in 19651

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CHICAGO (NC) - Tohn A McDllrmott has changed me mindL-he1li remain as execu middot tivedirector of the Chicago Cat1iolic Interracial Council

The veteran council worKer last October announced he would leave the office to beshy

come Mridwest regional- ciVil rightsdirector for the ms De-middotmiddot partment of Health Enucation andi Welfare

A number of problems hava arisen since th-e announcement on my appointmentt last 0ctbBerwhichl caused me to have serl

ousmiddot second l thoughts MilDer moW said iil his decision to re~ maio with the ltlrc He citedi m1 patrtcular~ personnel cutliaclts in HEW wJiich woulli Iiinit the Midwest negional operatiiul

fo accepting McDermotits de cisionj HEW the government agency requestedi liiin to serve asmiddot ai special chdl- rights consuU ant while working for the CIC and he a~reed

IIlt a letter to the Dutch biINumber of Fllel71ch ops members of Michaels re-

gion asked for curbs on the nlgtshySeminarians Dllops tions Catliolic liberals The PARIS (Ne)-Thenumber of meeting also registered disap-

French seminarians h~s dropped proval of the new Dutch Cateshyby about 180 a year for the last chism~ claiminJ~ that it does nocent four years according to 1iigures represent true Catholic teach~ provided in amiddot press conference Michaels Lel~ion is considered by Bishop Jean Sauvage 011 ampshy even more CJlnservative thlW necy member of the bishops Confrontation another Catholic commission on the clergy and conservative organization Conshyseminaries frontations complaints about

For the 1967~68 sc1iolastic the content of the new Dutch year the tdtal number of sliumiddot catechismmiddot are believed to hae dents iil major seminaries m been instTllmentai in having tbe~ FhlOce is 43583 comparedl with book exltlmined by the VatiCan~lJ

4536 for the previous year Doctrinal Congregation 4722 )n 1965-66 and 4953 in 1964-65

Moreover in France at pres- Approves Agency eol ttiere are aBout 200 adults LQND()N (NC)--Jolin Cardl~

WIIO are preIgtaring for tOe ~er nal Heenan of Westminster liJaa manent diaconate as restored by approveq establishment ocf 1m the Second Vatican Council The agency to help priests who want first ordinations to this permashy 10 leave the priesthood znGl nent diaconate could take place nuns who want to leave the this year religious life

1P~alrn le~tUlm~1rn~~G~

$1lll~7 GG1l I1DtJ Sim LONDON (NC)-A study on

the problems of ecumenism in Great Britain will be made by a joint working group of the British Council of Churches and the Caholic Church with the results to be reported next Autumn

The study was planned at a meetingmiddot held atmiddot the Vita et Pax Benedictine I~onvent and attendshyed by nine Catholic representashytives an- 14 representatives of the BeC -

The projected study is exshypected to analyze such topics an the extent I)f cooperatiGn beshytween Catjwlics and members of the BeC the dialogUes bemg held theologicaL differences and the non~theological obstacles to closer unitygt

Auxiliary BishoJ- Langton Fox of lfenevia Wales and

Auxiliary Bishop Basil Chrisshytopher Butlelr OSB of Westshyminster headed tOe CatOolie delegation at the meeting

~(i]$~~rlaquolJpoundfr1) A$1k lMl~illlW) ~ltoy~ IHh~)~Dnd

U11RECHm (NC) -Michaels Legion an organization of Dutch Catholic~ uaditionalists has sent a telegram to Pope Pault H ungintg him tD protect essential orthodoxy and to S81fe tne DutchChurch~

At 3- meeting here attended b~ some 600) Catholic conserva tives led by Eouis Knuvelder the legion condemned the Dutch Catholic daily press the~ Dutch Gatholic tellvisioncompany and the countrys Catholic radio station for being too progressive

Father Baum Regards Ecumenical Center Closing Sign of Success TORONTO (NC)-The closing gian Charles Davis-A Quesshy

of the Center for Ecumenical tion of Conscience Davis book Studies at St Michaels Collegegt exmiddotplains his renunciation of the here is a sign of the centersmiddot euroatholic priesthood and the success Church and asks Catholic theo-

This is the viewpoint of Father logians who intend to stay in GregllllY Ballm O~SA founder the~ eurohurch to reply to several of tJie centeI1 who has an- t1iaologjcal points nQunlaquoed that it will b~ Closed BelUef Unbelief

inl JUne Thats what Im doing FatlieJJBaum-explalnedthalhe Fatller Baum said His book a

founded the centeJ ill 19631 when replYJ to Davis questions conshyecum~llusrn may have~ been a ceming the credibility of the new Idea Its purpose lie- s~ld Church in todays world will be was to promote ecumemcall called The Credibility of the studies at St Michaels Church Today It will be pub-

Taday he neports ecumen mal stlUdi~s at S1l Michaels are a reality- 1lli~ schGolls theology depal1tment 18 fully mte~ ~thl Protestant and ~gIIcan lfupartmentsmiddot at the-Umversity

of Toronto [hUB lie said~ the eC-lmenical

centell has fulfilled its purpose Such fUlfillment he said wmiddot

common in academic circles where there has been an ecushymenlical reVOlution For exam pIe ne said where once som1shyone might have nied to foster ecumenism through building an ecumenical library it is now impossible tq build a theological lilgtrary without its being ecushymenical

Need flDZ Programsmiddot Father Baum added that he

does not believe tJie ecumenical movement has reached fruitien in circles outside the academia world~ He said that he sees a real need pound01 formal ecumenmiddot ical programs on the parish and on all levels of the Churdl which have not yet been reached He a150 disclosed that perSOll ally he lias moved Gn frOlll ecumenism to new fields of thought

The AuIDlStinian has written a new book in answer to the latest by the English theolo-

U[[$ W)jf[rll IfSMsjIID~

rnliJ kUD-WIh ol 1TW[jiJ KETTERING (Neuro) - The 1-7shy

member parish board 00 St Charles Church~ here unanishymousll1 adopted a resolution 5 favor Qf open nousing legiSlashytion for thiS (1)hio suburban community

The parish boards action S~ poIied- unequivocallymiddot passage 0amp an open housing ordinance in themiddot virtuallr aUi-wltite commw-middot nity 00l more than 600001 res dents Tames J Gilvay and Peter Donanue attOrneys anlL pariBhlmiddot boarc members pre sentedthe resolutJoDj wliiclli tbok- themiddot position that the ghett) condit1ollG ~Ilichl Negroes enshycure ilm nearby DaYton are mshyiuriOwil to the entire commUlshyDitTmiddot

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Aftei tee closing of the Center for Ecumenical Studies Father Baum will stay on at St MishychaeFs au a professor of theolshyogy He is also planning another ~~

It will concentrate on the idea oi God in modern thought and will be a clear sign that Father Baum has moved away from his prime in terest in ecumen- ism

Born of Jewish parents in Berlin and reared as an agnostic Father Baum said he has now turned his whole thought to the study of belief and unbelief He will record his findings in me book he is now writing

~oh~ laquotmm~~litl ~Od1[9)

[~ Ao~ i N~regIJ$ CAMDEN (NC) - Bishop

Tames L Schad administrator of the Camden diocese was =ong citizens honored here foT their efforts in furthering the interests of the Negro comshymunity

Bishop Schad who has been active in community action projects such as the War on Poverty committees was pre sented a scroll during a proshygram sponsored by the Tenth Street Baptist church here in observance of the 43rd annual Negro History Week This year marks the first time a Romaa Catholic prelate has been so honored

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17 Oppose Church Clergy Participation in Politics

By Jsgr George G Higgins

The New RepubJic-whIch in this writers judgment W one CYl the be3t of Ameriros weekly journals of opinion especially hl it3 arovezoage cfcurrent economic and political developments----thinks that the time has com~ for anti shyVietnam clergymen aul1ayshy Be that as it maY I am ioshymen to translate tu1eir cVZl clined to think that the editors m0r81 indignation oveuror Vietshy of the French periodical Inforshynam into effective political mations Catholique InternashyDction inasmuch as this is the tionales make considerably only way to effect long-term more sense than the editors cOf ehanges in the The New Republic 011 this issue policies of this of clerical involvement in the country So far so-called politics of peace as laymen are Though they are vigorously concerned this and unqualifiedly opposed ~il

would seem to tW war in Vietnam and like be a self - evishy tWeditors ()f The New Repubshydent proposition li( clearly recognize that the L1s perfectly establishment of leace in the obvious t hat world is a political problem concerned layshy which calls for the active mshymen ou~ht to volvement ofChcistians as ~-en

translate their as all other men of good will moral indi~nashy they do not think that themiddot tion over Vietnam - or any cleJgy who are responsible foy other significant issue of public the unity of the Church should policy-into effecti-re poiiticltll be expected to take on the role

of party politiciansaction Given the fact that their pubshySound Tradition

lication ~CI has been oJe 01 tileOn the other hnd I aJl Evt most outspoken European critics

sure understandthat I fully or of U S involvement in Vietnam completely agree vitb The New and one of the most vigorousRepublic when it says that fue advocates middotof a politics of peaceclergy ought tncv likewise their warning against the parshy

Traditionally a the NR itself ticipation of the clergy in parshypvints out the clergy-in this tisan politics is highly signifi shycountry at least - have rnied cant and deserves to be taken amy from such participation very seriously (Christians and

AJJ a long-time subscriher to the Struggle ior Peaee InforshyT~2 New Republic I had Dlshy mations Catholique Internashyways been under the imp~ssio~ tionales Jan 15 1965)that its editors thought that en Fl lialgs lrindplebalance this was a sound tradishy

Those American Catholicstion Apparently lwweer I was who may happen to have a speshy

cial interest in the pros and consmistaken in this regard fora of this highly controversial issuerecent Nell Republic editorial will also want to read whatnoten with satisfaction that Hans Kung has to say about itAJlerican clerGYmen now apshy

pear to be ready in large numshy in his forthcoming bookThe Churchbers to get involved at a preshy

cinct level and to play C1l Father Kung has lectured exshyactivist role in both parties tensively throughout the United (Clergy in Politics The New SUItes in recent years and is

currently with us again as a visshyRepublic Feb 17 1968) iting professor at Union Theoshy

QuestioIS Meaning logical Seminary in New York What does this mean in pracshy Seen in the light of the Gosshy

tical terma Does it mean that pel le writes in his new book ministers rabbis and priests the relntionshipof the Church should endorse ltor oppose) parshy to the world contains only one ticular candic1ates fqr politiell essential aspect its ministry 10 office starting at the precinct the world level Does it mean that they Ministry does not mean raisshythemselves should run for ofshy ing ones voice or putting an -oar flee if only as a last reiort in all secular qIes1ions middotof ecoshy

If so does it also mean that nomic political sodaI middotcultural other clergymen should run artistic and scientific life against them if they happen to T1e Churchclmnot solve disagree with what they stand the greJt problems of the ()rld for Or does it mean toot only neiih2r the problell1of hunger those clergymen who are anti shy nor that of the populaticn nor Administration should get inshy that of war nor thlt oanonFmshyT-olved at a precinct leel and ity of power Dor that -of race play an activist role within hatred What the Church both parties can do can be expressed quite

Sicnifieani WarnlDI simply in one phrase it must I have raised these questions exist for the world

lot to make light of The New ACrefS With lFTK1mgRepublics editorial CD the subshyject under discussion but Anyone who hal ever baG the merely to BUggest that clerical pleasure of meeting Faiher involvement ill partisan politics Kung middotor is familiar wi1bhis over the issue of Vietnam is at writings will know witheut best a rather tricky business being told that be is not a hawk and will almost inevitably lead and that he is cot advocating to certain consequences which a policy of Christian withdrawal upon further reflection even the from the world editors of The New Republie middotOn the eontrary be stroniJy might eonceivably wish tc foreshy favors lhe all-ltltit involvement tall of Christians in temporal affairs

and notably iii the ~lities Of peace

To Speak in Boston Nevertheless be does net Rev Anthony T Padovano think that the institutienal

Church-and its clerical minisshySTD theology professor at ters-should pretend that theyImmaculate Conception Semishy

nary Darlington N J will speak have all the answers tc the problems of the worldia the Christian Culture lecture

aries sponsored by the Paulist And neither eoes be thinkshyFathers at 815 Wednesday night if I read him correctly-that tbe March 6 in John Hancock Ha)) clergy in ~ exeTeise of their Boston Tickets are available mission of peace should get inshyfrom 5 Park Street Boston volved in partisan jl)olities Nor 02108 do L

WOKS LIKE FUN Yes but listen to what it requires The Georgetown University erew keeps in s-hape with ~

AM ~i~enies in the gym foHow~ by a two-niile run UJl and do-Wll Observatory Hil~on tJhecampus Its cold up there said Dave Harris a member of the lightweifht crew but by then youlewtired you do-nt care NC Phottgt

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 ~ 968

Prayer for Peace To Cm(O)se Games

MEXICO CITY (NC) - All ecumenical prR)er for peaCf) service is being planned for the end of the 19th Olympic Gam~

here next October The sponsor of the service w shy

the Ecumenical Commission fcrr Religious Services (ECRS) fe the Olympic Games The comshymission is composed of 73 ChrisshytiRn and Jewish leaders in thi~

city Promment spiritual leadshyers will be invited to speak

At middot8 meeting here the rn ECRS spiritual leaders discusse~

the facilities for athletes and visitors to attend their varioU7J reUgious services

iI1be iMC)Cican government hw aPPI)o~ed ECRS plans for the ~ction of at least tw- JaIige bullclings as nondenonYshynational chapels

The original pIlan toeonstrl1ell one large church has been IcHsshytlarded The present plan is build one large building with no religious I)rnamentllJtion of alltl7 kind on the outskirts of the Olympic Villa and a similar Oilif)

on tne outskirts of the Olympze

Project InterracialInterfaith Cooperation Cultural Villa

tin (Re~~(Jtion of CcUege m addition Archbishop MEshymiddotgut Dario MirlllDda y Gomez Gl

1I1IAMI (NC)~When Florida The Rev Edward T Graham Mexico City hBs authorizeQ Memorial College predominant a Baptist minister key person downtown Catholic churches to ly Negro middotliberal arts school is behind the project has had asshy permit non-Catholic services = moved here frOl1l St Augustine sistance from Mrs Athalie their premises if non-Catholie and opens next September the Range Miamis first NeglO City comgregations should request i project will be the result of unshy Commissoioner who is a Cathshyusual interracial and interfaith olic teamwork Organhzet3 rOthEHSIl

The largest single contribll shyNegroeswhites and Chinese tiou of private funds has oome flainirt~ ClI1ter

have joined hands with Cathoshy from a supermarket executive lLOUISVILLE (NC) - TkeIlics Protestants and Jews tv M Austin Davis a Methodist Franciscan Conventional OrdGcontribute money time advice laiamis Catholic Bishop Coleshy has opened a Brothers Trainincand leadership to realize the

manF Carroll is a member vl1 Center here in an attempt to givedevelopment of the college on l the advisory board as is Maushy Brothers three years of active$10 million complex here rice Ferre diocese of Miami lay apostolic work following theirr leader novitiate

RabbiIrving Lehrman presshy Father Sebastian Cunnil1flshyCouncil Seores ident cd the Greater Miami ham OFM director of tlw Rabbinical Association a n 4ll OOlilter said We felt we haCFactory Closing Jewish lay leaders are amoag an cbligation to give our man

LONDON (NC-The impend- active workers oome training outside contam ing elosingof a large industricl $ bull $ an idea of what was neeclshyJilseph Rodriguez of the plant has been criticized by ~ edfromthem in the outside Puerto Rican Democratic ChEb lay -eouncil of Our Lady Of _rl11 In the past he addeeurohas prepared 11 scholarship PieshyGrace parish in southeast Lsnshy we were not fWfilling ~ gram for -the collegedCD DeedS 1d ~veryoneliturgy

The council expressed its deep concern at the recent No Comlmentclosure of factories in middotthis area Completean4 in particular of the impendshy VATICAN (orry (NC)-Ibe ing shutdown of the Associ2ted Vatican had no comment -oJ1 11

ElectricaIIndustries (AEI) plant repolt that ~hbishop Agostincgt BANKING Casaroli secretary for extraershyIt callid upon the governmeJrt dinary ecclesiastical affairs ilf SERVICEand the -ehaiTmanof the oomshy the Papal Secretariat of statepany torevsrse the decision 10 eonterred with Dlembers of ~

c~ don the plant because Of tor BristOl CountyN-orth Vietnamese missi-on iJJthe middotmoral religious and 5Ocial Parisjn lJanuarylt n JUWWampleffeets iCaiJS2a by the ~veshythat Archbishop Casaroli Wallmen1 a1popl1ation absent from the Vatican fOll

Copies ltOf the councils motion several days nlenUy BrjstoICounty were sent 1amp Prime ~1inister

Harold Wilson MiJiister of Trust Company Labor RayJ Gunter President ampf the Board of Trade Douglas Sturteant (

TAUNTO~ MASSJay and company officials iHoOkAlthough the councils action was a surprise to the pastel Ed 1897 IIHE BANJ(ONFather Joseph seally AA ~ uiltl~rs SUppJies JAUNTONGRHNprist sroa that he agreed ith it ftll3 Purchase Street Member 01 Feileral ~

Faiher 8enlly sait[ centbert Aellad iNew Bedford IDsuranee CorporaamptoDJlOt~cteil p01itiealand elaquolshy 996-5661 nomic motions to eome from the council but pointed out You cannot separate Feligimtl from eveJ~ay life

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968 Capacity Audience at Holy Name Parish ~ihss

My Consciesect1ce Discusses The J)etached Americans In Educ~tion Continued from Page One

Do we care -for knowledge

what happens to other people Why do we strive for college educations or for money Are we so anxious to confor~l1 that we never dare to PITTSBURGH

tMrI

~VJI and it must be understood in a

t mear-cu way

A person following his ~con-~ence must be sincere He cannot play games with his mind but must be honest with himself

A person foilowing his con~ liCience must be correct It iSl10t ugh that he sincerely beshy~ Reves that something is good or evil-he must be sure that hiS judgement is a correct one

agrees with Gods view of the matter

Sometimes people make misshytakes in judgement-honest misshytakes to be sure but mistakes iwnetheless The oft-quoted exshyample is that of the African savshyrage deep in the jungle who may be sincerely following his con- ooience when it tells him to kill omd eat his enemy His conshyscience is a sincere one But it~ Is a mistaken one since it does IIlOt agree with Gods Will He ond every person must c~m-

liitantly review his judgements to lbe sure that they are correct ones and riot sincere mistaken Utes

A person following his conshy3Cience must be certain He can not act with doubt or uncertainshy~ about the rightness or wrong- mess of an act since he would be Announces Prize acting with the willingness to

takea cpance on being wrong For Best Plan ~ offendi~g God and this is aever~ validmiddot If there is uncer- PITTSinJRqH (NC)-Bishop t8inty the person must seek aid John J Wright of middotPittsburgh III arriving at a sure and correct haS annoutc~d il priz~ of$IOOOtor professor ina p1inor semshy tudgementmiddot - formiddot the architect who submitsmiddoth be I f - inary chapiainof a school dishyThe Christian acts with amiddotcon- ~ e st p an or a Jliljgtr renoshy ocesan chancellor and finally

lllilence ~rned by the prlnciples vation of the sanctuary of St vicar general tilChrlst This is where tliEi Pa~l~ cath~middot~al_h~remiddot~T~~e ~om- The P6pe a~o nam~d Father

aturchsteachers the Pope Iiiid P~tit~o~ IS ~p~nmiddot ~omiddotal archJtec~ Bienvenido TudtiJdto be auxil- a message toAfrica and a mes ishops ~nfer middotthe pi~ture to wl~hlD ~e bound~~l~~s~f the iary bishop of Dumaguete in the sage ~lling for peaCe

Illelp men make judgementsmiddot thatmiddot lire guided by Christ Sometimes ~ese j~dge~eptsgo a~intitmiddotnat-middot lIIIa1 inclinations and tendencies md this has always been thedif-

~ti~ty of ~ing a Christian-- Ghrist demands much of His llmiddotowmiddotmiddotermiddots middot IIIU

At present Catholics are askshyiDg tlie Pope to make a morai judgement about birth control d especlmiddotallymiddot the PlmiddotUmiddot Some_lire castigating him for not givshy g a qulck declslon or else they lliie telling people to forget about llrim and to make their own adgeme tsmiddot th ttmiddot w- n m e ma er The Pope in order to make a ilecision must make it on the basis of facts Scientists must provide him with the facts and In this matter there is much that k~epinglVith the general lin~s sition in favor I)f open housing complex The Pope has asked and is still asking theologians to evaluate the scientific facts in 4he light of Christian principles Not all moral issues are simple And then the Pope will apply the principles to the facts and 1ril1 make a decision about the morality of the matter

This will guide the Catholic in fllorming his conscience -- in arshyriving at a judgement that is sipcere that is the correct orie at lS artmiddot d t d ce am JU gemen anthatmiddot is Christian

K of C Convention 51ated for Houston

lAN MARCOS (NC) The

1970 national convention of the ~ights of Columbus will be held in Houston it was an-Bounced here at a conference of Texas officers of the interna- _ tional fraternalorder

The announcement of the seshylection of Houston for the con- v~ntion which will be held in

be different These were among questions discussed by a capacity audience at the second in a series on Christian Morality sponsored by the parish council of Holy Name Church Fall River Sparked by Sisshy

John AIIcIa SUS Cter some 30 people from all parts of themiddot Diocese viewed the film The Detached Amerishycans then broke into small groups for buzz sessions

Thesis of the film was that Americans wont become in volved with each other It dra- matically pointed its message with the true story of Kitty

Genovese murdered on a New York Street while 38 of her neighbors watched ffom winshy

bull dowS-o--and did nothing Also depicted were amarried

couple talkingto each other with neither really listening a student going thriugh school as on an assembly line with his sole goal the position he could

hope for as a college graduate and various other examples of non-involvement

What is life worth if we do not give it away questioned Harry Reasoner at the end of the film The Holy Name audishyence agreed that life sbould be

used for others but tended to feel that there wasnt the im-Personalitv in a smailer city

Jthat is found in a large metropshyolis One Sister countered howshyever with stories brought to

h t htschool by children s e aug This is right in Fall River she stressed Others cited examshypIes of personal involvement in affaIrs of others but agreed that much more could and

Pope I~aul Names Two Aluxiliaries VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VImiddot hail named Msgr Jose T Sanchez to be auxiliary bishop of Caceres in the Philipshypines He takes the titular See of Lesvi

Msgr 5anlhez was vicar genshyeral of Legazpi at the time of his nomination

He was born March 17 1920 atPandan in the Legazpi dioshycese He completed his philoshysophical and ordinary theologishycal studies at the diocesan semshyinary and obtained a licentiate in theology at the University of St Thomas in Manila He was ordained Marc~ 12 1946 and then worked as an assistant passhy

Pltts~urgpchap~er9rmiddottl~e Afner- ~ Philippines Father Tudtud who Pope Paul also delivered 264 ~can -Inst~tUtofAlth~te~ts was36ye~~I)]fat ~hcent time ~fsPeeches bull (~~)_(h~ch mclud~~ ~tIePoit~- his noniinatiOJl studied philos- burgb dlO~es~and three adJa-ophy and theology at St Johns

c~nt countIes SeminarY inmiddotBoston Fath~r roseph P- Larkin He was born March 22 1931

eOm~ission chaiIm~nmiddot ili1(I-a at Mabola inmiddotthe Cebu arch~ member of the diQcesan bU~lll- diocese He worked as assistant - bullbull

iIg commissligtn~ said the pur- pastor Editor ltit Cebus Caiholic pose of thereiiovlition is to pro weekl~ and finally pastor of the ville a ~mQte suitable sanctu- Church of thE Blessed Sacrashy

ary setting fof the liturgical re- inent in Cebu In addition atf orms Qrought into beingmiddot by the time of his nomination he Vatican Council II was vice-superior of the Misshy

Father Lmiddotai-kir said because slon Society of the Philippines the cathedral must architectu-middot r~lly and liturgically allow for Issues Sttement both episcopal mdparish ser-- U

vices ~~any structurai cihimge O H R h offers a unique chalienge to the n umalu ig ts designer~ and provision for the LA CROSSE (NC)-Tbe La

new liturgy must be made in Crosse diocese has taken a poshy

and spirit 01 the existing struc- integrated arid ildequate educashy t4re tion fair employment and the

- defense of the rights of minorshyities

Christians and J~ws Bishop Frederick W Frekshying of the Wisconsin diocese

Honor Clergymen and the diocesan central com-NEW YORK (NC)-Clergy- mission approvedmiddot apmiddot officiai

men from thefour major faiths statem~nt titled Human Reshyhave been honored here by the lations in the Diocese of La National Coiuerence of Chris- Crosse

tians anltt Jews The statement was prepared

the third week of August was the practice has spread middotto a made by Dr Josepb G Murphy number of other cities hesaid of La Marque a member of the interrelgious understanding hasmiddot boara- of- directors fortbe Cathprogressed tremendously middotiIi reshyeticmiddot meDs oganization middotc~nhyearsbull

-

Tbe clergymeri cited for by the subcommission of human relations of the diocesan cornshycourageous leadership in intershymissionon social action and apshy

creedal relations were proved by both before submisshy Rev Dr ~ohn C Bennett sion to the central commissiollll

president of Union Theological ) in January Seminary

Father Robert I Gannon SJ president emeritus of Fordham CONRAD SEGUIN University

Bishop Silas of the GreekOrshy BODY COJMPANY thodox archdiocese of Nortb and Aluminum or Steel South America 944 Countr Street

Samuel D Leisdorf New NEW BEDFORD MASSYork philanthropist pointed out

wy 2-6618that the NCCJ firstmiddot honored reshyligious leaders of four faiths in September -1966 Noting that

should be done by individuals parishes and municipaiities

There were no solutions ofshyfered to the problems posed bythe film We dont expect to have answers to these quesshytions warned Sister John Alicia at the beginning of the program They are too big for us The film WltlS strictly on the

human level and this was pointed out in one group No one can solve all problems it was agreed but surely each Christian canmiddot trust the Holy Spirit to lead him to the probshylems he is equipped to do someshything about no matter how small

There was another point on whichmiddot everyohe in the audience was in enthusiastic agreement that there be more such eveshynings as the one sponsored by Holllgt Namemiddot

Vatmiddotn Report~lIo

Continued from Page One two encyclicals The Developshymiddotment of Peoples and Priestly Celshyibacy four motu proprios inshyeluding one creating central a lay council and the Papal Comshymission on International Justice anp Peace and another restorshying the permanerit diacol1ate treeapostolic constitutions inshyelUding one reshaping the

Churchs c~iitral administlatioii two apostolic exhortations one apostolic letter and 78 other Wessagesmiddotand letterS inclQding

He reeeived eight ehiets Of state including U SPresident Lyndon B Johnson and United Nations Secretary General U T~ant and gave 16 audiences to

th lmiddottmiddot I0 er men 10 ~ 1 lca life in cluding U SVi~ President Hushy~rt H Humphrey Republican presidential hopeful Richard M N d N Ixon an ew Yorks Sen Robert F Kennedy

He received visits from four delegations of Orthodox churCh men including Orthodox Ecushymenicai Patriarcp Athenagoras I of Constantinople besides visit shying Patriarch Athenagoras in ~ tanbul

The book covering last yearli activities of the Holy See conshysists of 1680 pages plus about 2(10 photographs

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SolvcnorlCln Center WlllCOnaln 53061

Bishop John J Wright hasestablished a committee 1Jl)take a complete look at Oaampshy

olie education in the PittsburpD lOcese

The aim is fc dedde wha~ 1shyd t to tak tbe ~

lrec Ion e Dedecade for the best education of

all Catholics young and oldThe committee will evaluate all present Catholic educationshygrade and high schools eo egesConfraternity of Christian Doeshytrine classes adult education and other programs

The surveyors wiU 117 to deshyvise a plan based oa mstinl and potential resources in facll-Hies funds and Staff to guide the dioceses educational efforlll for the next 10 years or more

May Be FaI-lleaehiDg Among ideas eXpected to be

examined in the evaluation are proposals by some to cut back on Catholic schools or even til phase them out in place of an expanded adult education proshygram

Named head of the committee of educators priests and lay professionals is Father Vernon Gallagher CSSp former presishy

deht of Duquesne University here now serving as an official of the Holy Childhood Associashytion He also is a former proshyvincial of the Holy Gbost Fa~ ers eastern province

The committee Will be emshypowered to call before it di shyocesan officials to hold publlc meetingshire staff ~ring in exshyperts ThedioCege will finance the work

The committee Win make spe- eific recommendations to BishoP Wright after the study which 18 expected to take at least a yearbull

-Results are expected to have ~ar-reaching implicatiou fOr Catholic education here

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Two Unbeoten league Play f1fE ANCHOR-Diocese oTtall River-Ihurs feb 29 1968 19

Coach Says Sault Complete BallPlayerCape Cods NausetCompiles SMTB Playmaker Is Former Coyle $trBest Over-All Court Mark

BY JOE MIRANDA By PETER BARTEK

An excellent hall handler and Norton High Coach team player Is how Pat Sault of

Taunton is described by his Eleven of tile 12 aa-ea e1ubs with the best records in coach Phil Wetterland of the

their respective leagues are among those who will parshy Sou the a s t ern Massachu- setts Technogical Institute Inshyticipate in the March Tech basketball tournament in Boston stitute in North DartmouthFairhaven High of the Oapeway Conference and Nauset Sault a 19-year old freshman

of the Cape amp Island loop are is a former Coyle High hoopshythe only all-winning league a single league game while two ster who played four years for

went doWn to defeat In every the Warriors his final two underaggregations from this area encounter In which they were coach Jim Lanagan on the varshyin the Hub championship Involved Almost two-thirds 02 sityelimination tourney while Dartshy the Southeastern Mass teams

D)Quth High is the only one of Teaching CareerfinIshed wIth a 500 average OIlthe tOp dozen better Although young Pat has al shya 70 per cent coQlbines WIth

WIth 12 triumphs in the Cape ready made plans for the future league record amp Island competition Nauset which Include finishing his edshywhich failed to Regional also achieved the best ucation and pursuing a teachershyqualify an inshy over-all record winning 16 of coaching career dication t hat 11 encounters The Cape Cod Sault has not yet chosen a non-league school will be shooting for the major in college but according competition selshy Class D Tech title to his parents he is very much dom jeopardizes interested in teaching historyNew Bedford High 15 and and coaching They feel he willthe ultImate one in the Greater Boston Subshy be good at both as he alwaysgoal of most urban league finished with anschools Actual- Peter devoted his spare time to helpshy

over-all 17-2 mark for the Winshyly 311 per cent Bartek ing the younger neighborhoodter The Crimsons 937 average boys understand athletics moreof the 35 Southeastern Massashy captured its leagues pennant flag thoroughlychusetts school teamsmiddot have The Crimson Whalers are now Pat is the oldest son of Mrqualified for the Tech title play poised to annex the No 1 State and Mrs Charles A Sault and)let none managed an over-all honor by clinching the top one of four children A sisterundefeated season ranking Class A division in the Annette is a senior at BishopThree area clubs failed to win Boston title tourney Cassidy High James Michael

and Cheryl grammar school Representatives in Three B~ackets students at Mulcahey Schoof in

Taunton Fairhaven and Holy Family FamilYhas been eliminated in The family resides at 85 Mershy

HIgh of New Bedford aiming the Lawrence Catholic tourney rill Avenue In Taunton and are for the Class C Tech crown both Southeastern Mass does not members of St Pauls Parish fInished wIth an over-all 16-2 have one club among the Tech

Wetterland Commentsmark The latter Is still smart- Class B participants but th~re ing from its cliff-hanging defeat will be five area combinations Wetterland was high in his at the hands of Xavier in the -includIng Fairhaven and Holy praise of his five foot 11 inch State Catholic tourney Bill Family-in the Class C play and guard who tips the scales at Walshs two-pointer from the three-including Nauset-in the 160 pounds ~ssesses good speed floor which many thought Class D Hub competition and is a key in the Corsairs fast

meant victory at Lawrence was The other Class C contestants break offense nu1llfied by a travelling viola- patterns when SMTI is wurkshy a rest he should be in top conshySault lllsed strictly with thetion which cost the loss ofthe are Case High of Swansea Nar- iilg too quickly and making dition for the 1968-69 campaignvarsity was gaining valuablebasket resulting in a one-~Jnt ry co-champions Oliver Ames Dlistakes Sault gaIned his court savvy1 f tb of North Easton runners-up in experience and developing rapshy

The SMTI mentor continued from Lanagan at Coyle wheretiOs~~ e Narragnnsett~a~ theHockomock circuit and Den- bUy whep a knee Injury slowed he iii the complete ball player hemiddotstarted in his juJ)ior and senshyDis-Yarmouth of Cape Cod see his progress midway through

Durfee of Fall RIver and ond pI fi ish in tho C the campaiiPt but Wetterland noting that he can shoot but is Jor lieasons and was a Vital co Bishop Stang mgh of North ace n er e ape most --content setting Up his in the Warriors successduring DartmQutb are the other two middotNausetwill be joined by Mar- has turned in some excellent efshy teammates for easy pblnts He Ioth years I J

way loop said despite the handicap Pat

Is a team player and always sacshy As ~ Coyle High fr~hmanarea Class A representatives inmiddot thas VIneyard and Norton mib forts in a most successful SMTI rifices himself to help the club Pat was a member XJtb~ yearshythe Tecb toutnament ~e Fall in the Class D bracket The season

Sault possesses a good atti shy lings h09P team and al~Q~ parti shyRiver Hilltoppers willbe out Islanders finished second to Naushy Defensively Sault is cnitshytude is a tough competitor and cipated in track By hihSOphoshyto make amends for their nose- set in the Cape amp Island league standIng Offensively Sault is one of the players Wetterland is more year Saultcopfjned his dive finish in the Bristol COUl)ty while Norton was second in the the teams playmaker ana quarshyeounting on 1to help SMTI gain athlettc talents to basketbjlll andloop whIle Stang ~ke Ho17 Tri~Valley Conference terback 8Dlall college recognition in the turned in a cODlJPenlla))le acshyfuture Teallll Player coun~ o~ himself

Ifere~s How They Did hi LiBogue Play Played for Lanagan Sault also represented stWetterland said his outstandshyThere is doubt about his the hardwood

he following are the league 21 Bishop Feehan 7_1 ing worth to the Corsairs comes no Pauls on in the eourage said the Corsairs skipshy Taunton CYO and in the annual from the fact that he can slowrecords of the 35 Southeastem Msgr Coyle 7-1 after painful knee Easter tournament He playeddown the offense and set up per even a

Mass teams Ta~ton 7-7 injury Sault continued to jpve four years of Litue JeagueM N B Vocational 6-8 his all and attended every pracshy Baseball and one season in theK of C Masons1 Fairhaven 14-0 25 DIman Vocational 5-9 tice The injury has slowed him Pony League prior to ~ntetmamp

Nauset 12-0 Msgr Prevost 5-9 visibly but after the season and Coyle Higa 3 New Bedford 15-1 27 SandwIch 4-8 To Cooperate4 Holy Family 13-1 28 Nantucket 3-9

NOTRE DAME (NC) - lfashyCase 13-1 29 Old Rochester 4-10

30 tlonal leadellS of the Scottish6 Oliver Ames 12-2 West~rt 3-11 Bite Masons and the Knights ~oll another7 Marthas Vineyard ~ 31 Barnstable 2-12

of Columbus anno~ced memshy8 Bishop Stang 10~ 32 Dighton-Rehoboth 1-13 strike on~rs of their organizations wU1Dartmouth 104 33 Bourne 0-14 work together on domestic andDennis-Yarmouth 10-4 Chatham 0-12 the enerlY international problems faciolaquoDurfee 10-1 North AUleJooro 1-14

the nation12 Norton 105 you get George A Newbury soveshy13 Attleboro 9-5 Minister Officiates reign grand commander 01 from14 Harwich 7-5

Scottish Rite Masons In theProvIncetown 7-5 a slice ofDn Cathclic Church northern jurisdiction of the US18 Seekonk 8-6 MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-A Lu- and John W McDevitt supremeSomerset 86

theran mInister officiated at the knight of the Knights of ColumshyFalmouth 8-6 marriage of his son in Holy Cross bus made the announcementMansfield 8-6 Catholic church here at a dinner here s~nsoredWareham 8-6

Married were James H Graf jointly by the Masonic Lodge 29 L th and the Knights of Columbus

a u eran and CalTon Ann council in South Bend Episcopalian Rite Gutwinski 25 a Catholic The ceremony was rformed - Both praised the work of Fa-MINNEAPOLIS (NC)- Archshy ther John A OBrien of the

bishop Leo Binz and Coadjutor Grapoundfs fltthell the Rev Paul L University of Notre Dame for Archbishop ~ PY1)1e of the Graf pastor of Holy Trinity r better understanding among the Cafllolic archdIoceses of St Paul theran church two groups Minneapolis were present in the Permission for the Rev Gmt Father Theodore M Hesshysan~lary of St Marks Episcoshy to officiate at his sonB wedding burgh CSC president of the pal cathedral here for the inshy was granted by theSacred Con- University of Notre Dame said stallation of Bishop Philip F gregation for the Joctrine of This nIght marks a great step McNarry as coadjutor bishop of the Faitlh inl lWme in answer to ll forward and reflects the new the Epi6copal diocese of Minneshy J)etition by Archbishop Leo BiDz ~enical spirit which is unishysota of~ ~~-M~eapotis iing ~ople long separated-

PAT SAULT

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bull THE ANCHOR Dayton University Thurs Feb 29 196a Brief Religious on Ecumenism

Selects Advisors SOUTH ORANGE (NC) meanitigful dialogue should not tended not to lead to compro- DAYTON (NC)-An ll-mem-

Named resident Some 1000 mms and Brothers be confused with monologueshy mise but to conyergence ber advisory board of six stushyservfng in tli~ Newark archdi~shy or confrontation He added We talk now of our common dents two faculty members andSANTA CLARA (NC)-The cese were briefed on the basic we must be willing to be pershy belilefs he said not to com- three representatives of theboard of trustees of the Univershy principles of ecumenism in a suaded-we need an open mind promise each others faith but in community has been establishedlllity of Santa Clara has named program sponsored by the Newshy to seek out the truth wherever the hope that at some point in for the Office of Human Relashylrather Thomas D Terry SJ ark Archdiocese Commission for it might be shy the future we will converge tions at the University oJ Dayshy35th president of the Jesuit unishy Ecumenical Affairs

Ifersity Father Terry who sucshy Discussing the difficulties of As an example he pointed to tornSpeakers at the session ineeeds Father Patrick Donohoe establishing Christian-Jewish the wide divergence of views The board under the direcshySeton Hall University includeSJ recently appointed Califorshy dialogue he said we Christians regarding (he Mass and the Eu- tion of Charles Hirt director ofDr Leonard Swidler of Templeaia provinCial af the Society of are responsible for 2000 years charist that existed between the Office of Human RelationsUniversity Philadelphia aridJIesus has been academic vic~ of anti-Semitism and now_ we Martin Luther and the Council will be responsible for estabshyFather Thomas M McFadden ofpresident af Loyola University must overcome our mutual disshy of Trent Then he cited the re- lishing policy making programthe Brooklyn dioceseLos Angeles for the last year trust before dialogue can be cent statement on the Eucharist recommendations helping to

lllI1d a half Previous to that Swidler said dialogue with fruitful issued by Lutherans and Catho- alleviate campus racial probshyIIlIather Terry was dean of the others must be preceded by an lics to show how much closer lems and drawing up proposall ltWllege of arts and sciences at examination of Catholic attishy Father McFadden said diashy the two bodies have come since for implementation Santa Clara tudes In addition he said a logue among Christians is inshy that time

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Page 2: 02.29.68

2

I

Continued from Page One Dear Boys and GirIs We are very happy to speak

to you once again on this first day of Lent as we have dQne every year since we middotbecame your Holy Father

We come to ask you to do everything you can to help all those boys and girls who live in countries where there is hunger suffering and sickness Their language and the color of their skin may be differentmiddot from yours but they are your age and they have the same needs and desires and hopes that you

hav~k Schools Me~~cinec CCA AREAD~RECTORS-plusmnhespeciagift phase of the Ca-thoiic Ch~1i~~Appeal will be hoodOO inthree areas by leftRev Eqward C Duffy assistant at St JamesChurch

However through nocfault ofmiddot R t t St Pt k F 1 th f th C theirs these young people do New ~~orQRev Jo~n J ean ai~lst~n a a rl~ sa mou ~r e ape not have enough to eat many of06d dIstrIct Rev John F Mltoreaamps~~tantatSt Josep~ s Taunton them have no homes and only rags to wear some have lost their fathers and mothers even their whole families they grow up ignorant and uneducated beshycause they have no schools and when they get sick as they often do there are no doctors or hospitals or medicines to make them well ~gain

If you could see them if you could see the misery and povshyerty in which they live we know that you would do everyshything possible to he1p them I

During Lent you can relieve the suffering of these boys and girls first by praying for them asking Our Lord to help and comfort them

Institute Geared ~o C(1]techist as Person

ceD I~~ans SMlmme~ Session (Q]t cu WASInNGTON (NC) - This liturgi(~ally oriented community

years CCD catechetica1 In expemiddotriences stitute will stress the devElop- The institute jointly spon- ment of the person of the c~ate- sored by the CCD National Censhy

chist according to FatherFrank ter the National Conference of Murphy institute director Diocesan Directors of the CCD

and the Catholic University ofFather Murphy said at the National Center of the Confra America will be ltheld at the ternity of Christian Doctrine universitY from July 3 to Aug

th t th tt t 14 here a e ms 1 u e s per- Father ~urphy said the in-sonal approach will be achitved bull allh h II t middott stitutemiddot~lrebe profession y

t ru~ sma g~oup S~~~I ni~ y middotgeared to ~the n~eeds-of people Second -by your little sacri~ traml~g techmqu~s-A pJ1est lt currently involved in CCD work

fices during this holy seasoDf a~d a ~oup dYJ)amlls~xpert iIi the United States and will yO u can put aSIde what youmiddot wIII faclIltate th~ smal1 gr(ups li

t h t II d challenJ~e the higher capabl shywouln spend on your own plcentas~ m preparmg ca e~ e ~c~r~ ties of diocesan and parish CCD ures and enjoyment to makemiddotal1 bull gt personne1~ offerip~ to the collection wlji~h Raise Tuition~ Three Areasshyyour bIshops hold each year in t bull bull - - bull

order to send food clotIUng ~d At p d Participantsrn the Catecheti- medicine to these poor childre~ roy en~e~ cal Insmute re~eive a certifi shyas you have always done so Vf~U PROVIDENCEmiddot(NC)-The tu- cate at ~~~ middoten~ of- th~ first

before iti6nincreaseeHeelivenext ~ep- summer arId middota dlplgtma at the

the professional and the pedashygogical Father Murphy stated

He said the professional area aims at insights drawn from theology Scripture liturgy anshythropo10gy psychology and soshyciology

The pedagogical he continshyued will be facilitated through small group work and divided according to the age ups and

6middot V

culturalmiddot backgrounds of the persons with whom the CCD catechists will be working

The latest teChniques ingroup-consciousness and the most effective Use of audioshyvisua1 materials including modshyem electioniceqwpment will be demonsrated in classroom

situations TJ1~ in~titute ~U1 include a

l~ture series a film festiv~ ~ completion of four summers and the production oLa mOvie

Whatever You Do -~ tEimher whIch PIovidence Co1- The certificated courses Win bYmiddot~eparlicipants inlipe with

R Aime Lafrance

Continued from Page One Building Authority ~dvisOl7 board of the Greater fall River Vocational School a~d Westshyport Chairman of the March Dimes

PromniDent iD Jrea Be is a member and past

Grand Commander of the Ordel of Alhambra - Leon CaravaD director and charter member 01 the Immaculate Conception ParshyIsh Credit Union ~all River membermiddot of the Knights of Coshylumbus Council 86 One Hunshydred Club of Massachusetts Exchange Club of Fall River International Union of Hotel and Restaurant Association and Southeastern Police Chiefs Aj

sociationmiddot Mr Lafrance is a imiinber

the Fall River and Westport Chamber of Coinmei~e an4

Lodge ofElks He is alSo affiIJshyBted with the Franco AinericlUi Civic League Club Calumet Amvets Post No 80 Franco American War Veterans au4 Eastern Sportsman Club

Grateful for Honor With this varied and wiltkl

background of experience Mr Lafrance said

To work with you BishOJi Connolly for the cause of Cathshyolic Charities tit the 1968 Appeal is a pleasure and an honor I thank your Excellency for the opportunity to become asseshyeiated with ~he clergy and laitJ in Qehalf of Catholic Charities

I appreciate this oppprtunity to serve youand the Diocese and I am looking forward with vigor and vitality to assure the

success of the 1968 Catholie Charities Appeal

N~crology JARCH 9

Rt Rev Henry J Noon VG 1947 Pastor St James New

Bedford 3rd Vicar General F~ River 193447

MARCH 12 You tememberthat JesuS middot lege announced a year ago villbe plahn~d aroiIiid the thretb the incre~ing importance re- RevAurelien L Moreau 1961

said Vhatever YOll doto the aO-0~ntto $150 beVeryltev main areas forcatechist forma- llgious educators attaeh to mass Pastor St Mathieu Fan Rivez littlesfof His dlildrenJt is the W111I~mPaut HlS~ lttPbullan lion todayIn addition to ~ ~edia ( I bull

( same as ifYo do itto Hi~ and He WIll reward you lor

lt YOurmiddotKil~d~esllli~dmiddotlo~~ng ~elp to ~uffe~mg boys an ~1rlS J~t ani He were poor andsltffermg

Himself arid you gave Hh~ your gIft ~f food ~nd clothing and shelter

We feel sure that you WIll be as generous as yOll can that is

your 0 ermgs n IS name we invoke upon you man-y graces and benefits aIidWe-send our apostolic blessing to your fathshy

( ers ~n4 motpers to your brothshyers and sisters YQllrmiddot classmates teachers the priests of your parish and to each and every one of you our very dear chil shydren Godbless you all-

FORTY HOUlS DEVOTION

Mar3--8t James New Bedshyford

St Anthony East Falshymouth

Our Lady of Lourdes Taunton

~arian MilDor Taunton

TIIpound MeHDe

n~c~d bull personall the) othermiddotareas are r The new tuition rates for Sep- (-

tember will be $1450 peryearW j C ~ -bull middotmiddotMassJ)rdO~ fur freshmen and sophomores Ol1nelJ1 5 ursl 0 j and $1350 for juniors and-Slen- FRIDA~--F~lday~~~~~ Aslll iors The rates differ b~ause the Stortrs Tonight ~~~~sday ~I9~ss-V101et lastmiddot increase did not effect upper classmen gt

Father Haaspoint~ out tiililt even with the increase astudent

why we speak to you directly in paying full tuition stiil willl~ay your ho~es and schools where less than half the cost of his lldshyyou are oved and cared for to ucation at PC ask you to share your happmess and comfort withmiddot others juSt Thec~ntnbuted servIceS of~ like you who have nltthing the DomInIcan Fathers and the

11 gifts of the alUmnI pareI tsB th G d e sure at 0 WI pay you I Gl G t M S di middot f friends businesses and Zoun(lab k h d d tac a un re Imes over or l shymiddot I H tions make it possible to operlteff gt

tlils way The president stated also that the increase was lim- ited because of the generCUS response to the new Parents Flmd the ever increasing anshynual-support of theAlumni Loy- alty Fund and management u onomies

Among Lowestmiddot

Despite the increases ttle total cost at Providence College is still among tbe lowest for private liberal arts colleges for men in New England the Digtshyminican explained

Providences total of $2450 ~)r tuition and room and board COnlshypares this way with some other Catholic New England Colleges for men Holy Cross $2830 Boshyton College $2650 Ass~ption $2500 The Cost at private colshyleges in R I are Barringt(ln College $2395 Brown $3230 Itltwas emphasised thattheiu erease will not prove a disadshy

second Class iostage Paid at Fall River vantage to any deserving 911shyMasbullublisheo ever) fIIursday at 410 dent Scholarship and loan pnlIghlanc ~venue allmiddot Rive Mass 02722 0) he ~ahol Press 0 he Diocese of Fall grams wili be exp~dedto ofj~- shy~oo ~~D~tlon price b mall postpaid set possible hardships

~ SATURDAY-8aturday aft e r A Curslllo for women Win _ Ash r Wednesday -Ill c1ass

start ton~gh~ ~t La S~lette ~e~- Violet c ter Qf (~hrl~l~n Jivmg Att1~ boro With 40 candidates itW StJNDAY7Fi~tSUndaY-of Lent continue until Sunday night di- 1 Class Violet Mass Proper reoted by Miss Eleanor Otta- Creed Preface of Lent viani St Marys parish Mansshyfield MONDAY-Monday of First Week of Lent nIClails Violet

Miss OttaVIani who with Rev I es enes center rec TUESDAY-TUesday of First

1 bmiddot Week of Lent III CJass Violettor wIle responSIble for theC 11 bull Ursl 0 progam head nurse WEDNESDAY-Ember Wednesshym the ~atemlty ward of Sturdy d~y in Lent n CI8sS~ Violet

Memonall Hospital Attleboro She served on 8 Diocesan preshysynodal CO~mISSl0n and has been actIve m the CursIllo moveshyment for three years She Is currently a member of the adshynti~istratilve board of the CurshysIllo movement in the Fall Rivshyer Diocese

The current Cursillo is the 23rd to be held in the Diocese At the StonehiU College and La Sa1ette cent~rs over 700 priests reli~ous and lay people have completed the threeday pro- gram in the past four yeanL

Set Reunion The fourth anniversary of the

Cursillo movement in the Di oeese will be marked at 730 Saturday night March 9 at a fiesta to be held In St Marys parish center Norton Themiddot pro-shygram will include reunions of Cursillo groups coiice1ebrated

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Catholic Educational Association Document Backs School System

WASHINGTON (NC)-A docshy the document emphasizes- the ument prepared from the recshy importance of the present Cathshyommendations of a high level olic school system despite preshyIIIYDlposium on Catholic educashy lJYDPDsium fears that some parshytion held here underscores the ticipants might advocate shutshycommitment of the Catholic ting down the present structure ehurch to maintaining its vast Nearly all symposium partici shyparochial school system pants were in accord with the

Despite calls by some Catholic general trend - if not all the mtics for a dismantling of the particulars - of the document eatholic school system the docshy according to Father Koob al shyument states that The Church though four participants chose will always maintain an insti shy to disassociate themselves from tutional base for educational it service an enduring but flexshy Among them were Auxiliary ible structure by which to place Bishop Mark J Hurley of San ber resources at the service of Francisco and author Mary Pershytoeiety kins Ryan-for widely differing

The document takes note of reasons Criticisms of the parochial Father Koob cited a remarkshyIIChools - including the charge able par a 11 e I between the that their operation puts a disshy NCEA document and the stateshyproportionate amount of money ment on education issued by the and manpower at the service of American bishops at their 1967 less than 50 per cent of Catholic annual meeting in Washington students-but concludes that it The bishops called Catholic eleshywould be premature to urge mentary and secondary schools massive redeployment of Cathshy indispensable and said we olic educational resources into will 010 our part to continue Dew patterns of Christian edushy improve and strengthen these mtion schools

Objective Studies The statement acknowledges

however the evident need for Urges Community well designed programs of reshysearch and experiment aimed at Fair E~ployment obtaining reliable data to guide PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Thedecisions about the most proshy initiative of John Cardinalductive use of resources Krols Commission on HumanThese studies should be scishy Relations in urging developmententific and objective should of a community fair employshyhave reasonable financial and ment practices program was apshypersonnel support and should proved unanimously by Philashybe guided by previously stated delphias 25-member Council ofcriteria of success it says Priests

The document is based on the The group representing diocshyrecommendations of more than esan and religious communities100 Catholic and non-Catholic of prjests of the Philadelphiaeducators writers representashy archdiocese voted after hearingtives of private agencies and a report by MsgrJohn J Noonegovernment officials who took archdiOcesan chancellor and a p~rt in a symposium on Catho- council member lic education sponsored here last Outlining the background ofFall by the National Catholic Project EQuality a CathollcshyEducational Association (NCEA) spOruored program designed tomiddot

Its reco~endatlons were use the Churchs employment~ade public in a preliminary power to influence employmentctraft last November and the practices Msgr Noone s81d the most noticeable difference in commission on human relations ~ definitive edi~ text Is a had recommended a governmentreduction in size according to agency check companies On fair a t he r C Albert Koob employment practices checkOPraem ellecutive secretary of their compliance with fair emshytile NCEA ployment norms and inform Remarkable Paraller purchasing glOUps - iJlcludingAt a press conference called the Church-about the fair emshyto pUb~icize the report Father ployment record of companiesKoob called the document a with which they do business Istoric one which highlighted Our commission Msgrbull basic unity of goals among Noone told the council of prieststhose interested in Catholic edshy had hoped that it might be aaeation total community effort He said it wan significant that A preliminar) proposal has

already been made public byCatholic Conference city officials he said and has been called the PhiladelphiaScores State Policy Plan

HARRISBURG (NC) - The The Philadelphia MsgrPennsylvania Catholic Confershy Noone explained is essentially ence publicly criticized Pennsylshy Project Equality except that vaninas new family planning the proposal is being impleshyprogram for persons on relief mented under secular rather

In a statement the PeC called than under religious auspicesthe new welfare policy an effort to implement population control Relief Unit SendsIlmong the poor

Putting the program to such Vaccine to Egyptuse the PCC statement deshy ROME (NC)-Carltas Intershyclared represents one of its nationalis has collected 100000WQrst dangers-the danger that units of anti-German measles the state will start by guiding Yaccine for use in Egypt some groups or classes to birth The medical assistance was limitations to select those it deshy asked by Archbishop Lino Zashysires to see propagated nim the Apostolic Delegate to

In this connection the stateshy the United Arab Republic in ment continued we are In full Cairo Thanks to assistance fromsympathy with the views reshy tile Holy See and Caritas organshycently expressed by the National Izations in France GermanyAssociation for the Advancement Switzerland and Holland an of Colored People concerning efshy initial shipment of 50000 units forts to push birth control among was sent in January and an addishyNegroes tional 50000 units in late Febru

aryCatholic Relief The prelate asked the worldshySYDNEY (NC) - Australian wide Catholic relief body for

Catholics contributed nearly help because of an epidemic of $400000 in 1967 to ald poor measles in Egypt ~he Egyptian eountries This sum supported 80 government middothas warmly welshylief projects which benefited comed the assistance of CarUM bull ~llion persona InternatioQalii and ~e ~oq See

SOURCE OF SOLACE ~i8 Chaplain Comfo~ing a wounded Marine awaiting evacuation from Hue Vietnam may be praying or looking liP in hope of sighting the helishycopter thatwill take his patient to a hospital Neither man is identified NC Photo

Drop to 364 Cleveland Bishop Issenmann Asks Hierarchy To Help Stem Catholic Magazine Decline NEW YORK (NC)-An appeal tension minus 145 and Sign

has been made to each U S minus 81 Bishop asking cooperation to While secular publications forestall the decline plaguing are growing Catholic magazines Catholic magazines are declining Bishop Issenshy

mann emphasized in his plea to The plea of Bishop Clarence each Bishop for concrete c0shy

G Issenmann of Cleveland operation by taking some acshychairman of the Press Departshy tion to halt the decline ment U S Catholic Conference

that 1967-68 Catholic Press Directory decline in the Catholic magazine field

underscores the bullbullbullbull GRACIA BROSshowing a continuing loss of

publications and circulation Excavating

From a high of 473 Catholic magazines in 1961 the new dishy Contractors rectory shQws only 364 Catholic magazines today Bishop Issenshy 9 CROSS ST FAIRHAVEfif mann has observed Despite the fact ot a growing population WYman 2middot4862 and expanding economy Cathshy ~~bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullyybullbullbull

olic magazines between 1957shy1967 lost 4634888 circulations

Notes Secular Gains

BishOp Issenmann supported his appeal by quoting statistics from the Audit Bureau of Cirshyculation indicating the trend of the top six Catholic publications in circulation The figures show the percentage gain or loss ~f

1966 over 1965 as follows

Columbia plus 08 Our Sunday Visitor minus 14 Young Catholic Messenger minus 43

C~~ho1ic Digest J1hinUampI6 Ex-

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968

Churchmen Ease StudentTension

SANTO DOMINGO (NC) shySanto Domingos apostolic adshyministrator and the charge d shyaffaires at the apostolic nunciashyture here have intervened to ease tensions at the University of Santo Domingo following a threatened clash between unishyversity students and military forces

The administrator Bishop Hugo Polenco Brito and the nunciatures Msgr Gian Vincenshyzo Moreni negotiated a settleshyment between student leaders and military authorities after student annoyance at a proposed cut in the university budget led to picketing outside the countrys presidential palace

The settlement calls for two hundred of the demonstrations leaders to go home in return for an army promise that none of the demonstrators will be arshyrested

The cooling-off period proshyvided by the settlement may be even more important than it appears since some observers here report that the army frusshytrated in its attempts to break up the student demonstration threatened to turn on the govshyernment

Tension at the university has been running high because of the financial question and beshycause of the growing influence of left-wing students

A student government elecshytion at the beginning of FebrushyaiT gave 60 per cent of the votes for student body representativel to members of a leftist group running on a platform devoted 10 fighting Yankee imperialshyism

Nam~ Change COVINGTON (NC) - Villa

Madonna College here wiU change the name of the institushytion to Thomas More College The anno~ncement made bF Bishop Richard H Ackerman chairman of the board of trusshytees and Bishop of the Covingshyton diocese said the change wiD be effective June 15 next

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 Former Nun - Explains Reasons F~r Leaving Maryknoll Sisterspraises ~Robert Speaight~s WASHINGTON (NC)-MilrYshy men I feel I have now an iampshyknoll has ask~d me to leave beshy creased capacity to love cause I am involved in guerrila When I was asked to leaveBIograpl1y of fr$ Tei~hGirdl activities And yet by this inshy Guatemala because of our activshy

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kctnn12dy volvement I am trying to live ities I was not surprised I hatll up to my ideals and to what my already risked that in my decishyPierre- reilhaxd de ChMdin died in New Yorkmiddot City conscience demands of me Sisshy sion to work for a basic fundashy

on Easter- Sunday 1955~ His funeral wok place at St~ ter Marian Peter a former mental change in the social Ignatiils ~huleh two clays later There was a Tow Mass Maryknoll nun explained in a order that would ultimately in the presence of but a handful of people Buriat was t(l)middot letter to friends in the Maryshy provide justice and peace to the

knoll order main bulk of the populationbe at St Andrewrs Novitiate Sister- Marian Peter along Sister Marian Peter said

on the Hudson But the ~An element of pantheism couId with six other Catholic missionshy She ahributed the inability of

be~ discernedi in them Teilhaidground was s-tiU too hard for aries was asked to leave Guateshy the powers-that-be to undershyheld that only tmougll assis~Dgtg mala in December because ofthe digging of a grave The the world to its fulfiHment did involvement with the gucrillainterment had to wait foc a one came to Christ the head of movementgentler season When finally it all creatrOD

wa s possible With Father Thomas R Mel- Strangely for a palaeontolo-middot no m Our n er ville 37 to whom she is reshygist Tcilhard had little histori wftnessed i 1J portedly married and biscal sense and was UttIe interestmiddot Tllese facts aremiddot brother Father Arthur Melville _ ed in the past He loeked eOD- presentedin tIte 34 she defied orders to returnfidently joyfirlIy 00 the- fnture

to Maryknoll headquarters infinai paTagmlpll For him progress was inevit shyof Robert Speshy Ossining N Y and went inshyable and linea11~ He calledi for aightSmiddotTneLiife stead to Mexico after leavinga new Cllristianity forrmiddotthe- new of 1iei1hard de Guatemalaage andi a new spirituaIitl MeGONJIGAL In her letter dated Jan 2lVChardin CHalTshy Not SlTstematicmiddot and published here by the

Moreover his thought basp(ll and Row

Washington Post Sister Marian been ehallactel1ized as nat rl2al~

49l E 33rd St Jfesuit (hoploin Peter confirmed the fact thatNJew Y olIk ly a system of thaught but 8ltN Y 10016 she is married but did not name way of felling He was intuitive$8501) It is wrdmiddot to beliele ililed illTh Hue her husband believed to be the and mystical Toe idiom futthat so obscure and lonely an former Maryknoll priest ThomasHUE (NC) -- A Jesuit priestwlrich he wrote was rrhapsodic R Melvilleend wasmiddot the lot of a man who who eouldint stay away fromratlhell than coldly rationalin the 13_years since his dea~ The Maryknoll order has 20-his boys in the front lines- And what he said was sohas become so celebrated a fig nounced that the three are noClrossedmiddot the Perfume Riverintoacutely personal trliat it was obshyuee a thinker among the most longer members of our societythe bitter frghting around thesellVecE that it coufcr bemiddot prroperly influential of the present censhy and also stated that if reportsImperial Cittadel of this old proshyunderstood only by MOWing ofthe marriage between the nuntur~ vlnciaL capital and died therehirp (heDce the impoutance af aWhat we forget is that Teil shy and priest were true the couplewith a snipers bullet in hissound sensitive biegpaphy)hard had been in exile fOl 30 would be automatically excomshyfClIreheadIi the light of all tmS it isyears priOl to his death that municated from the CatholicThe priesi Father (Maj)scarcely surpuising that Tenhis- books were published only ChurchAloysius P MI~onigal of thehard had troubles with eccesi-middotposthumous1y risuits Maryland province Grateful- to Maryknollastical censos AJad it should IleMr Speaight has attemped badgered higher offkers to let In her letter Si6ter Mariannoted that scientists teo lookedthe diHicult task of combining him go to the front when he Peter explained that she had notaskance at his comiddotntentfons -Hean account of Teilharfs life rejected the ideal~ of Maryshylearned that a Marine unit wasspoke- of mystical sciencewith a hiStory of the developshy fiighting withollt a chaplain knoll I am grateful to the timethe science of Christ runningment of his thought as set out With permission given relucshy and training and friendship ][through all thiJngs as tithe onlyin his writings In the main he tantly Father McGonigal himshy lived in Maryknoll I am evensCience that really mattersismiddot successful self an Army chaplain then now the product of a sincereThis was bound to IDe suspect

Accepted ElOlution mDved into the combat zone facing up to what the deals I FiroJIlJ Rnme Restraint there acquired and -reinforced

Whiremiddot preparing for and after demand of me As anyone who has struggled His body was found in the

_with leilhards books knows rubble of Hue his _unbrokenattainiJilgmiddot illl 1922 his doctorate She continued For somehis thought defies easy compreshy glasses nearby at the Sorlbonne he taug)lt athensiom or summary Mr Speshy J1ather McGonigal a native of time I had begun to question the Institut Catholique He left Philadelphia was serving his the validity of many customsaight ha~middot made a laliantr effoet in 1923 for his first trip to that I found weighty and legalshyto give not onl an outline of it sewnd lnitch as an Army chapshyChina an expedition of geolo- istic and impending in the waybut alsm to trace its stagesmiddot arid lal n when he was killed Orshygical and paIaentologicalJ dis-shyfurther to examine it critically dained a Jesuit priest in 1953 of life of a Religious covel1Y Teilhancl wasmiddot born in 1881 in he had served as prefect of 1 particularly rejected the

He was to spend the gl1eater the Puuvengpe reg~on of France studies at Gonzaga High School apartness that it breeds between part of the remainder of histhe fourtru of 11 children oK a in Washington D C and taught the Religio~s and the peoplelife in China and very littlefamily which regarded nhe at Loyola High School in Balshy she should be one of Povshyof it in France There would al shyCatholic faith as itsmiddot most pre-middot timore He was Jinishing studies ertyparticularly bothered me so be stays in Africa lndi3 Jashycious possession amp 3J boy heshy fo) a doctoratamp at Georgetown We vowed and pretended to be

showed keen curiosity about va and the United States with UdveEsity when he reentered poor and we lived like the rich one brief visit to Rome in 1948 and mixed with th~m and arethe natunal vlon1dJ especially the service in June 1966

Me was not unknown instones and minerals He was of their friends Rome In fact there was an exshycourse to become a- pioneering Now I am tru1ypoor I have

geologist and pa1aentologist tensive dossier Gil h1m at the no security I am at the servicedQI~Y even liberally interpretedHoly Office As early as 19241 of the poorHe entered 3J Jesuit school iDl Extreme caution was celtainlyhe had IDen de~atedi to Rome- fO1 The 38-year-old former misshy1892 and ingt 1899l oecame 31 in order~his views on original siJm lFliom sionary explained that chastityJesuit novice His ordination to Rome came repeatedgt resirF3ints Excellent Likeness had also ceased to be meaningfulthemiddot priesthood took place inJ i1~ 1933 for example a pnohibishy At the same time one eanshy to her I wanted ttl love 3001911 Meanwhile in Iiis ~ears tioD inJ his accepting any ampfficia1 not but regret the manner in to love hUmanly The way weor preparution he had mOleltLmiddot posi tiOtb WI Parris in 1940bull a pliCgt-middot which it was exercised Teil shy were designed tfgt love ahoub fnOIll one Jesuit Iiouse to hib1tiOlL in his padicupation in hald sfloulQi na1e been given I foond that my wve fer a maJIanother in the isIand of fursey aOJ intel1poundctuaL congpess iIlJ New every opportunity ta explain lived fully has only made ~ in Egypt and in EngIandl AlIshy York in 1954 a pnohllb11liolll Olll and defend his ideas Aflony- more sensitive to the love ampf

read~ liemiddot haell takern up sciclltipoundi1 his writing a work of apoloshy mOtlS defation al~d reeeurolUlse1essresearch and already some of getics in reply to lcl1taiB scishy repression arrc ullworthy at deshythe main concenns oJ his life entists fenders ojj the truthwere eudent for example his Attractive Iinpressiille F01bidding Feilharcd to pubshylove of the universe and his acshyThese restraints caused Teil- lisfl may have b~n a gFievousceptance of evolution

hard great suffering He subshy mistakemiddot eveA in the interests of BewHifering Teacher mitted to tnem but prilately orthodoxy- For the publicatian

Asmiddot a resuit fie was engaged questioned their wisdom anell duxing his lifetime of books in teaching and as a teachei legitimacy Ee- neverrmiddot thought wlifch appeared only after bis he could be rather bewildering of leaving themiddot Chllllch and al shy d~a~h WOtltd have subjected bis He was in military service though he sometimes speculatedl views middotto dgorous criticfsm and throughout World War I (1914- as to the advisability at leaving prollably have compeUed him 1918) Elaquo waslt often in the fnont the Society of Jesus he always to- modr1iy and refine them lines attend~hgmiddot the wounded conclUded that his place was in atr Speaight is to be- com but it wal l)oth1 in) the fUlly and the society mended for an c~xceneAt likeshyin the lulls of the- conflict that Teilliaxd is an a ttracti ve pershy nes of an i-ntelrirgible synopsis his ideas ubout man and the sonality and an impressive one of his doctniJne aDd for an evenshyuniverse oegan to be formushy as Mr Speaight portrasl him handed appraisal of a controshylated 0ne cannot but be symoJj)athetic venliali Sttlgt~ eel

Durihg tfie war Ie wrote 13 with him as the restmiddotnictions laid essays which sougpt to tear upon him aremiddot recitceJ Aad ene away thc mask of atheism f~om admires his seurorupulous sub- VitcennaRSbullhgt Meet thesegt new lUIlrents ~ft thought mission to aullhollity Jlilll Bl1ten lialltlclJl1arr Counui~ and expose them as Christian~ But onc cann otJ condemn ampilcletYi of 511 VillceEl1i de- Paul

The crisis of Modernism was Church aUUltonWes out of handmiddot willI hold its moJLtIaJiy meeting then ver~ recent and the essays in this case Ueilhards hyposhy in st llatmicks Sclreol han 0Iil QJaduced misgjlihgs in somemiddot of theses are~ymiddot no mcans unshy Slade Street following Benedic- I1eilhardJs superiors WeIll they challengable They are novel t1on of the Most lBlessed Sacrashymight have They d iffe red from and daring They aJe oliten nGt ment in the upper church ~

conventional recei ved views readily reconcilable with outho- 745 Tllesday nimiddotght

BEfoRE YOU BUY -TRY

PARK MOTORS OLDSMOBilE

bull Oldsmobile-Peugot-Renoub 17 IfidiIIe StreetFllrtravea

stand the guerilla activities of(

the missionaries to a depenshydency that comes from too many interests that blinds people io the simplicity and nakedness of truth

Terrific Contrast

She stated When I came tJI) Guatemala in 1954 I came filled with the ideal of telling people Christs message of love A1l 1I became more and more familia~

with the situation in the countTY 1 became aware of a terrific contrast between the haves anell the have-nots those who are well-off satisfying their conshysciences on the one hand while using cheap manpower to mainshytain their wealth and position those who are poor sinking furshyther and further into a fatalism an undignified conformism 3IIl inhuman existence

When she concluded that gueshyrilla activity was the only way in which a state of justice can be reached she said she haell to take that road or else reject my conscience blind myseif anell become a hypocrite hiding beshyhind the easy facade of a woman dedicated to God

I liave become a woman dedicated to humanity and i~

loving men even to the degree of being willing to die for men I am loving God more truly more directly than ever

Sister Marian Peter who signed herself Margie for hell pre-Maryknoll name of Marshyjorie Bradford concluded Th~reis a revolution beginning lD CIvic soclety as well as in the Church The vanguard of any movement is fraught with danshyger personal danger and the danger of losing ones way but when the time comes to march we cannot be cowardly and hold back Circumstances have put us in the vanguard and we must march

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5 THE ANCHOR-Dominicans Plan Thurs feb 29 1968Sisters a1f Rose Hawtllorne Lathrop HomeChapter Meeting To Continue Care of Incurable Patients Urges Catholics In Chicago

CHICAGO (NC)-A JeDshy By Patricia McGowan Aid Immjgrants 9mJl ohapter meeting of the ~rldwide Order of Preachshyem (Dominicans) has been sdteduled tentatively to open Aug 20 at the Aquinas Institute euroJf Philosophy Dominican house Ilif ll~udies in suburban Rivet 1JGrest

Officials of the Dominicans a Albert the Great (Chica~)

province said Faiher Aniceto Wemandez OP Do min i can master general and his 12shymember cabinet from Rome 8lJ weUl as the heads of 40 Domin Qcan provinces throughout the IIVorld will attend the sessionll which may last until November

The general chapter is the lhft for the Dominicans since ilhe close of Vatican Council n lJ win be only the second timemiddot

flm the 760-year history of the Jl)ominicans that a general chapshytell is held in the United States

llhe Chicago officials esti shymated more than 100 delegates wm attend It was announced flnat each provincial will be acshyltrompanied by an expert in some ~se of Scripture theology jhilosophy or canon law

The Chicago officials said unshyamp2r the rules adopted by Vati shycun Council II the chapter has lnlthority to rewrite the DominshybSIll constitutions and make oweeping changes which could affect the lives and works of Qrz 10000 Dominican priests cmd Brothers in the world

The Chicago officials called Me scheduling of the chapter in t1ilre United States a symbolic ~reakthrough of recognition br American influence among ~e Dominicans

lZlIperimentall lLegnsnll~finn

Copies of the Final Report a1 the two-and-one-half year ceH-study of the midwest DoshylJlinicans-reported last Fall were distributed to provincialD OOld experts attending last Sepshy~bers preparatory meetings bll Rome and influenced their ~ecision to convene at River orest

Findings of the Chicago provshylzJrtes self-study are reflected in iilrst drafts of new experimental TIeglslation for the order being ~epared by a 28-man internashyilional commission for debate at ~ chapter

Spokesmen for the Chicago province indicate considerable Glecentralization of the orders government and apostolate as -the probable outcome of the ehapter with debate expected ~ center on specific areas of Ilmiformity or diversity

1 recent worldwide poll of Dominican sentiment shows Il

iOOffimon desire for a few realshyllstie laws and abolishing of arshychaic forms Specific proposals IO far have been most progresshypoundliye in tODe it was stated

Catholic Magazine Seized at Airport

SANTO DOMINGO (NC) ~

eopies of a Catholic magazine published in Uruguay have 1lleeIIl seized in the airport cusshytoms office here on the grounda Ibat they contain subversive material

Three packages eontainin[f OO copies of the January issue of Vispera published in MonteshyYideo by the Uruguayan brancll of Pax Romana international Catholic organization 01 stushy6entlgt and intellectuals were barred from delivery at tile Idiport

Various articles praising ErshyIleSW (Che) Guevara the Cuban communist leader killed ill (lUerrilla fighting in BoliVia Were said to have caused the ~scaUon

Visiting the Rose Hawthorne Lathrop Home in Fall River liist week wag the Mother General of the Dominican Sistern staffing the institution She is brisk ~nergetic Mother Mary Elizabeth who makes her headqualrters at the Hawthorne NY motberhouse of the community Once or twice yearly Mother Elizabeth makes the rounds of the seven homes operated by the Sisshyters an for the same purpose - the service of patients with incurable cancer She admits puzzlement at the situshyation in Fall River In Atlanta St Paul Cleveland Philadelshyphia and New York the Sisters homes are filled to capacity and usually have waiting lists of pashytients In Fall River tlle Rose Hawthorne Home has not been fiHed for several years

J1t isnt unfoMunately that cancer is on the decrease There seem ~ be several reasons for the low admission rate here One in some ways reflects favorably on New Englanders They seem less willing than people in other parts of the country to delegate flo others the care of infirm and aged parents and grandparents who make up the bulk of the homes patients although there are no age requirements

They are proud and the old people are proud said one obshyserver They dont want to acshycept help

- Not Always Good Thi3 isnt alwa~s a good atshy

titude however It can result in elderly people rllceiving poor care through lack of knowledge or fucilities in the home

Another reason for the patient lack might be the larger number of nursing homes in the New Enshygland area Another could 00 lack of public knowledge of the services the home stands ready to provide Still another say some is the full name of the Sisters Servants of Relief for Incurable Cancer

Today the name strikes a chill but in 1896 when the community was founded by Rose Hawthorne Lathrop daughter of Nathaniel Hawthorne it lit a beacon of hope for the suffering poor who had literally no place to go when striken with what was then reshygarded as a contagioUls disease

Now pointed out Mother Elizshyabeth patients have Medicare

Usually when they come flo the Sisters they are much sicker than they used to be having exhausted the resources Of modshyern medicine for treatment ampnell alleviation of cancer

They have usually exhausted their Medicare allowances too thus meeting the Sisters reshyquirement that their patients have no financial resources Cancer can be a long drawn out illness said -Mother Elizashybeth and use up all the savings of even a prosperous person

HaV0n of Peace Certainly if it were general1r

known what the Rose Hawshythorne Home offers it would be overrun with paUents as it WWl

A$k lPub~ic Hearings OIl1 Church Matters

BROOKLYN (NC)-A fOUllshyperson ad hoc committee has obtalnoo the signatures of 50 laymen priests and nUDS from

the Brooklyn diocese w a stateshyment calling on Church authorshyiti~ ~ hold pubUe hearinglJ onimportant Church affairs bull eluding selection of bishops T~ signers d tnle statemeDt

nncUllIl1ied Sol lay persons 24 ~riesta and two Sistem

There are approximately 1000 I)riests 5000 nuns and Brothers and 16 million laymen m tbe diocese llf Brooklyllho

_________~Llt _ VISITS EIORJE Sister Palll OP left and Mother

Mary Elizabeth OP view GOmmemorwtive plaque in cllapel of Rose Hawthorne Lathrop Home Fall River Sister Paul is superior at home Motlle Mary Elioobeth i3 mothezo genshyeral of the Dominican Sisters Servants of ReHef for Inshycurable Cancer She visited Fall River institution last week

in 1932 when it was founded at Sisters are one family she sumshythe urgent request of 1plusmne late =led up Bishop Cassidy Then there were Many patients worry about occupied beds even in the hall shy paying us said a Sister I al shyways today there are many empshy ways tell them You are paying ty beds in wards and private with your suffering Just pray rooms ~OT usmiddottt

We find that patients often Asked about dxanges the SisshyJive longer than the doctors had ters might make in their work expected when they come to in line with the renewal Us said Mother Elizabeth We Mother Elizabe1lh said she didnt think its because all thepreashy expect her communitys apostoshymires are removed They know tte ro change much There are that they wont have to leave w l2j professed Sisters in the comshyafter a certain number of days munitYshe said andshe has on We say to them TWs is Yillgtur hand many unfilled reltluests home you can stay as long as llrom bishops for the Sisters to you want The patient and the work in their Dioceses

80 the Sisters woork win reshy

r ~

Iv

- main that envisioned by Rose Hawthorne La1ihrop After all Love is -lot love whicb alteIS -when it alteration finds

Mothell Mary Elizabeth OP

SYDNEY (NC)-A statement on immigraticn aimed at enshycouraging Catholics to a wider acceptance of their duties toward immigrants was issued here by th~ Federal Catholic Immigrashytion Committee -of the Austrashylian Bishops Conference to be read in all cllulches on Immishygration Sundar

The statement said that Ausshytralia is failing to attract and keep immigrants An official inquiry it acJdetl indicated that psychological and social diffi shyculties rather than material and economic considerations influshyenced the departure of immishygrants

The statement called for a personal inquiry seeking to reshyveal whether our at tit u de toward newcomelS is one of inshydifference or even of hostility whether we lend support to the erecting of barriers against the legitimate economic and social aspirations of migrants whethshyer in fine we neglect our duty as Catholics as citizens of welshycoming and helping others of fulfilling our religious and soshycial obligations toward newshycomers

The statement quoted AustroshyIan Minister of Immigration BM Sneddon saying If we beshylieve Australia has 0 destiny and that destiny is linked with population then each of us has a duty to assist wherever pOSlt sible and become involved pershysonally with immigration ami migrants

Noting that immigration conshytributes lo the economy of a country the Catholic statemen~

stressed however that migrants are not to be valued simply ~

tools of production but as pershysons In the mind of the Church the whole process of migration is part of the matter of hum~n

redemption in a preparation fo-r life eternal

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~--6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 291968

Women and the Postconciliar Church

Someone recently figured out that in the Catholic Ohurch today over fifty per c~t af its members are women These loyal followers of Christ are for the most part the victims of a subtle but very effective discrimination In theory of course the church grants equal rights for men and women In the Vatican Councils DOCUMENT ON THE CHURCH IN THE WORLD TODAY we read

With respect to the fundamental rights of the person every type of discrimination whether soshycial or cultural whether based on sex race color social condition language or religion is to be overshycome and eradicated as contrary to Gods intent

m theory the teaching is a fine piece af legislation In practice the question is simply ignored

Women may not be ordained Women are barred from officiating formally in the liturgy Their wice in church affairs is all but silenced A women is not allowed to serve Mass She may not functiol) as a lector If there are women in the parish choir-- they are more or less toleraJted only beshyeause there are not enough small boys or grown men in the parish available for the job

Father Johannes Neumann professor of Canon Law at the Universitr of Tubingen in Germany recently stated

A boy not even capable of fluent reading is adshymitted to the altar but an educated woman who could do a much better job is excluded as though only males were the children of God

The sam~ is true about parish choirs Women are easier to recruit more eager to sing and with few exceptions they

make a better noise than men Yet we still retain a cershytain nostalgia for the cult af the boy choir or the all Ilale choir as th~ summum bonum in litllrgical excellence

Ordination for women may well become one of the big issues in the c6ming years It may sound strange -to us--middot a woman functioning as a priest Yet however we may 0pshy

pose it we must admit that theologians have never put up a convincing case agdinst it It is also significantto note that the International Coniressof the Laimiddotty passed a resoshylution on the subject when it metmiddot in Rome last October

The principal objection to the ordination of women win not be so much theological as one of prejudice The tradition of the male priesthood is a long one and rooted deeply in the souls of Catholics Granted the priesthltgtltgtd is not on the immediatemiddot horizon for Catholic women However there are indications that the dimiddotaconate is certainly within their grasp Many European theologians argue that this Could

become a reality in two or three years This would mean that women could carry out such functions as preaching

distributing the Eucharist and burying the dead Already in certain circumstances women have been given permisshysionto distribute holy communion The Oblate Sisters of the Sacred Heart in Northern Alberta hav~ been allowed to do so since December 1966 when no priest is available The same is true in parts of Africa and South America

Truly these are excitipg times and exhilerating times All of us must be prepared fur more changes within the framework of the church Some we will welcome others will repell us The Churchs immediate task as always is to build up the people of God to meet the challenge of the day One positive way is to help in removing some of the anomalies that exist between laymen and laywomet

rhmiddotmiddotANCBOR e

OIIrll NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL IPVEI

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall Riv~

410 Highland Avenue

Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Ete Re~ Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P D~iscoll

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

the moolQlnq Rev John f Moore St Josephs Taunton

Why AILilfJg Hof Smmer t

Fe(QHf ~ litD Arson Murder DeWillEm] o$mtfive Contribution

Television commentators are warning the public Radio announcers m~e reaching the state of alarm The Federal

Government is preparing troops to meet the crisis Irrationshyill mdicals are whipping themselves into shape An are

waiting to face a promise of ~1 long hot Summer of civil tion to help the situation To

continuously hammer negativeriot and racial upheaval The and pessimistic fears into thetensions of this upheaval -is spirit of a nervous public only

already present Stokely Carshy creates a greater spirit of unrestmichael and Rap Brown have Suspicion and doubt are theachieved their goal They have sole frUit of such a policySl)wn lhe seeds of national fear America can certainly avoidFear of not fear of arson and such a diet fl~ar of murdEr are promised

American cities come the wann Added to this caldron of conshyweather This radic~ fonn of fusion we are now exposed to urban renewal will tear apart the rabble rousing antics of Dl ore cities of this country than llome so-called civil rights any fleet of cranes and bull shy leaders who dance to the tuneduzers of Hanoi What trueancl laSting

The public nE~WS media -is not _benefit can commentators leapmaking any jKlsitive contribu- from this barvest ~f hate

011I1 Vultures of Doom Benefit We do not deJIJr that there are

b1 gots and bulliies in American 8Ociety These people are 88

Wi~ong as their despoti~ llberal counterparts NEither group bas elt)ntriQuted much to the totality fJIf Americana

Most Americans want to do lonething to hE~lp their fellow eoilDtrymen wh) are long-sufshyfeling from the efforts of racial pr~judice They want to secure th4~ equal rights and opportunishyties of their less fortunate countrymen Thill they should do this theymiddot must achieve But no in fear bloodshed and riot

We must face the realities of thE racial issue ill truth and sinshyceIHy Most of tlS have become distant and impe~vious to the

trieil and laments of the preaecl minority Some have intombed themselves in an urban isc)lati~ others have fled to the camoushyflage of suburbia The majoriv just do DOtwan~ to become IDshyWOlved

Yet we mustbull

The I~rice for o~r lack of eonshylaquo7~ mIght be rumed ~erican Clties and dead AmerIcan dti shyzens We WIll we learn that only the vultures of dQom benefit

from ~e carnage of middotour dty streets

Now is the time for positive actio~ now is the time for re- sponsIble leadershIp

The question-Will either be forth coming

Change of Laws On Abortion Div$ive

OTTAWA (NC)-A ffigni ficant relaxation of Canada~ abortion laws could result Em a serious division betweem Catholic and non-Catholic hOampa pitals the Catholic Hospital AIP sociation of Canada told a Ie islative committee

In a brief to the Standin(g Committee on Health and Wellshyfare the association also warneclt that the feared division betweeili the hospitals could spill over into Canadian society at large

Canadas Parliament is now considering a bill to broaden the grounds for abortion which ill part of a general revision of tile nations criminal code Introshyduction of the abortion measure in the middle of a parlimentary probe of the question has -

ready driven a wedge between the government and the Churda in Canada

Feb 27 Meeting The nations bishops cancene4

a scheduled appearance befoN the Health and Welfare Comshymittee and instead issued a sharp pastoral letter opposing the abortion changes Later the] agreed to appear at a hearing Feb 27

The Hospital Association briei warned that refusal by Catholie hospi tals to perform abortiON may result in the other hospishy

tals being largely devoted talgt what is frankly regarded by doctors as a distasteful kind ClI2 work with less time and facili shyties for the more satisfying laquol life-giving aspect of hospitall work

The Catholic Hospital Ass~

tion represents 300 institutionB which provide 35 per cent CIIf

Canadas hospital services This kind of division d

labor with the consenting hosshypitals getting all the abortion work and the dissenting hospishytals getting nothing but satisshyfying work would quite likelv lead to an ever-deepening rift between the two groups of hOampa pitals extending to the commushynities they jointly serve the brief warned

Increase Dissension In an obvious reference to tJw

nations sensitive relations beshytween French-speaking - and largely Catholic-and Englishshyspeaking-largely Protestant-shyCanadians the association a1s noted

This does not seem to be Eiii opportune time to introduce anshyother cause of deep dissension by moving rapidly towards legalizing a practice which Q

large section of Canadian s0cishyety-perhaps a majQrity-abshyhors as strictly immoral

Archbishop lakoyos At Detroit Meeting

DETROIT (He) - ArchbiAshyorgt lakovos one of the bull presidents of the World COund of Churches participated bull _ interfaith meeting while helNi

on a four day Yisit The Greek prelate W8$

eompanied by 10 OrthodOE bishops and members of thcI archdiocesan council composed of clergy andmiddot laymen from parts of the country Thismiddot couashycil top eccesiastical body air Greek Orthodox church met here for two days

While here Archbishop lakOoo vos met with Roman CathoHc Archbishop John F Deardon at Detroit Episcopal Bishop Richshy

ard Emrich of Michigan aDd Bishop Archie Crowley preslo dent of the metropolitan J)e troit Council of Churches ~

meeting took place follo~ bull Vespers service at the Assumpo tion Greek Orthodox churcIL

f I

PAUL BARTKIEWICZ KATHERINE BOLINGER M~CHAB CORNElL SUSAN FAOiEUi STAN f~ HOLY fAMILY DOMSNllAJt

THE

ANCHOR

SALUTES

n)$

S(~OO~

~~~II1~~~

JANET LAFOND MICHAEL LOWNEY JWI POISSON ST JOSEPH PREP COYlpound PREVOST

Catholics to Pray For Assembly

STOCKHOLM (NC)-A prayer lor the fourth general assembly elf the World Council of Churches (WCC) to be said at Masses in all Catholic churches and chapels this Spring has been eomposed by the ecumenical commission of the diocese of Stockholm at the request ~ Bishop John E Taylor OMI

It will be distributed together with the bishops pastoral letter for Lent to all the parishes of the diocese The WCC assembly will be held at Uppsala Sweden m July

The prayer is an appeal whether his project can For all those who noW are a practical reality

Ir~paring the general assemblY He de~ribedl the proposed of the World Council of institute as an educational proshy

tliurches in dppsala and now gram aimed primarily at the avshy are pa~nfcil~y slJffering from the erage mllfi ~d ~he Inde~Ptivi

1 WsunitymiddotofChrisUans legedio stimulate creative middotJ-h t 11middot b h h f thinking and acting both for

-1 a JI mem er c urc es 0 I J cooperat - ilie WCC lfiarptepare this gen- middoty~~nalilmiddot ma~ ~wtIi aridfor -~ can ~ii 1

eralllssemqIjr in a willingness the commol1 goodmiddot Fattier RIvers a member of middotto coop~rate ~ arid in an honest ~taina ~e~ormed by first tatemiddot the Cii~iimati -archdiocesa~li shy

ielirch fori the Will of God artlsts WIll be at middotthe heart of thmiddotinstitntes actiVity with the ~qat they Ul oen mmds may pUlipose of stllnuliltingmiddotpro-middot receIve ~h~ 1~splratlons of the

HOly SPUIt and follow them without fear

That we middotmiddotall by prayer and penance may participate in the preparations of this general asshysembly conscious of being linked by the same Baptism

That even we Catholics may laquorow in our understanding of the separated brethren that we together with them may become llWare of the throes of disunity and be strengthened in our will to work in a practical Wlq _

~

Proposes Institute of Little Imagination Would Benefit Services -

CINCINNATI (NC) Father Clarence Josepb Rivers who has won an international repushytation for his fresh approach to liturgical music said he hopes to spur creative thinking among millons througb a National 10shysUtute of Ritual and Drama

Recently returned from gradshyuate studies in liturgy at the C81tholic University of Paris Father Rivers has launched a feasibility study to determine within the next few months

become

found reflection upon tliatexshyperience is fto be stimulated and directed by especially trained educator - philosophersl he added

Closed Setting He said he envisions touring

companies as part of the overall plan but the usual institute program will ~e place in a closed setting he said makshying it something like a secular retreat

Another lISgeCt of the insti shytute Father Rivers said will be ita concern with adaptinl the

skills and techniques and ereashytivity of the performing arts to the needs of various kinds of ritual---secular as well as reli shygious

Asked abolilt secular rituals Father Rivers spoke of flagshyraisings Fourth oj July celebrashytions and cornerstone layings He sahll The existing secular rituals suffer from the same deshyfeds all the religious ones and need just as urgently the touch of artistic imagination and skills

In~ure Ref1Ie~t~n Father Rivers said the insti shy

tue s~ould be broadly humanishyt~ria~ not SplJ1cifically Je~-glO~S provIdmg a~ area 10

WhICh Jile()ple of yarlOus beliefs

llurgical commission saidmiddot the

PfJ~fes~or A~pointed -~e~I1i ofL~w School

PITTSBURGH (NC)-Professhysor Louis L Manderino has been appointed dean of Duqueme Universitys Law School here Father Henry J McAnulty C5 Sp university presidgtent 80shynounced lIhe appointment is effective immediately

Prof ManderinO a graduate of Harvard University Law School in 1954 has been -a memshyber ofmiddot the Duquesne Law Scbool faculty since 195amp

ROWD GAMACHE SHlRtlM JANICK MAUREEN KENNEY $1 ANTHORY MOUNT ST MAIf CASSIDY

gtpi81F Iilt ilt

JACQUEUNE ROBOI JAHU~E ROBERTSHAW PETERlYM WOJTUSZEWSII JpoundSlJS IlARY AampADEIft SHA-FAU RIVER SHA- FAIRHAVEN

Ritual Drama

proposed mstitote~ program would go much further than those of existing professional or amateur acting companies beshycause it will not only provide the experience which is to be the basis of reflection but it also will insure as far as it is hmnanly possible the reflecshytion the work of the institute is only half done when the cur lain falls

It will difiler from the amashyteur companies and certain

_Moral Re-armament programs he continued esp~ciilly in terms Of artistic standards I dont believe lh2 institute can function effectively without achieving tlte highest possibIe success in artistic standards tehurch-goers of an denomshy

inati9fls he added generaUy

recognize that their Sunday and Sabbath services could benefit from ir little imaginatioZl once in it vyhilli r-----------shybull JEREMIAH COHOLANmiddot

PlUMBING 6- HEATING ~ntretors since ltH3

WYmal3-0911 699 Bellville Avenue New Bedford

State to Deny Aid To Large Families

LUCKNOW (NC)-The Uttar Pradesh state government here in India has decided to stop an govert1Illent concessions to famshyilies which have an additional child aiter the third one

The decision was taken in view of iii virtUal douampling of the states populatian--from 4a million in 19at to ga millionmiddot this year

The concessions to be withshydrawn presumably wiU include free treatment in governmmt hospila1s and allotment ~ waste lands

XAV(mA~ BRIHERS t ~~~~

bull Ill- tb GOrvlClll4

elf tiw Chm-cb ~ Wrl middotiilroehu Goy UKlil

601 WInebeDt StlleC1l Neon Ola~ llnss- (Om

THE ANCHORpiocese ~f Foil River---Thurs Feb 29 1968

European Tour Is Unlikely With New Travel Rules

By Mary Tinley Daly

Of all the role-playing the Head of the House and I have engaged in through the years the most recent ~ th8lt of- would-be European travellers This the year 1968 -rhe Year of the Monkey was to have seen us embark for foreign shores Ireland homeland of our forebears (would have been) mighty

helpful tooEngland a re-vimiddotsit for the Ginny our wardrobe consult shyHead of the House France

ant has been supervising theGermany and of course the clothing weve bought for theEternal City Spain and Greece past six months with an eye toperhaps if our easy packability convenientfeet and our washability and a mix-andshymoney held out match assortment o~ accessoriesAnd now this-shy for efficient travel Based on ~ h e proposed her own European experience of ~ax bi te on a couple of years ago GinnyiBternashy assures us such selection willU 0 n a I travel provide a minimum for totingSeems as though a maximum amount of space forweve been taxshy the pick-ups wed inevitablybitt e n pretty acquire on our journeybadly right here

the as ~truggle Now it seems theIn USA we bringshyonce more with IRS Form 1040 backs are down to next-toshy

Now some more of our $$$ to nothing A Iso day-by-day spending at this stage of the EX-CHAMP PREACHES LOVE Archie Moore formerhelp close that $21 billion travel

lap wilth a tax on American legislation seems based on an World light-heavy-weight champ who won a Freedoms intricate system full of loopshyspending outside _this hemi- Foundation award Feb 22 for conspicuous community sershyboles requiring an estimate ofaphere I voice in the civil rights field plays happily at home withtax liability on departu~e theWell its a wait-and-see propshy

h~8 own children Working with boys in underprivilegedmaking of a deposit and anotherOsition an aIr-dresSed-up-andshyreport pluspay-up on retUrn to areas Archie saymiddots he teachesthe lads to be constructiveIlO-Pla~eto-go feeling for us

lIS it is for many other armchair this country not destructive tao build not tear- down NC Photo travellers What we have not doncent yet-

Doml Homework and wont do unless the grand -----~

Oh weve been doing our bomework all right

Weve made lists of places we ~fpound~~~~~I~R~PMAR9J~p~1want to see in each country drivers license picture was badThe house is filled with travel folders travel magazines weve enough NEW SPRING COLORS become telephone pals with Bteamship and airline salesmen 113-Year-Old Aca~emy s much as I love color (anyshy April scene navy took a backoUr local library checks out

one who has ever visited my seat in the early sixties whenhooks in our name for all those Plans 69 Closing home or seen nile wearing the Jackie Kennedy made pink afaraway places with their glam- ROCHESTER (NC) ~ The m~ny bright shades that I adore must for all those who like toeur descriptions 113-year-old ~cademy Of the wnI agree with this) t must adshy feel that they are wearingWe have studied money rates Sacred Heart here will disconshy mi t this is going to be ~ grey whats in This season nothotel and transportation costs tinue operation after June 1969 flannel and navy Spring Oh only has navy returned in theinvestigated picking up a Officials announced reasonsshy thEre will be shades of shocking world of suits and daytime coatsVolkswagen Weve brushed up for closing were the mounting pirk high intensity yellow and it has become sophistic~tedon French going along with cost of education the inadeshy poison green upon the scene but enough to waltz into eveningThomas Hood quancy of present bUildings mostly in ac Jacques Tiffeau of TiffeauNever go to France unless the outlay needed to build and c e s S 0 r ies or and Busch has designed an ultray()U know the lingo If you do

maintain a school of the future playclothes For navy evening time dress that islike me you will repent by and the number of other cathoshy t hat special sleeveless and V-necked and ofjingo lic high schools in the area coat or that course wide belted Worn withWeve even learned basics in where openings are avlilable pearls it takes on all the dyshy0Italian and German such as be~utiful spring

namic quaiities that black hasshyThe academy is conducted byhow to order in restaurants For suB that could always had Because they lookthe Head of the House this the Religous of the Sacred tra vel as well so well with navy and grey themeans how to order pigs Heart of Jesus alolg the streets return of pearls is whats newknuckles sauerkraut UND beer of Ne~ York on the jewelry front for SpringJohnny has patiently demonshy Imiddot kO or the avenues and Summer The thirties influshyAutnoUize Pa Istan of Washingtonstrated perhaps for the hunshyence of the Bonnie and Clydedredth time just how to operate middot Ch the more con-LIturgy anges serrative colors are the stars flicker has brought back thehis camera which he will let us

take along LYALLPUR (NC)-Melbers Cne of the most elegant and long swinging chains of beads -of all Pakistans diocesan lilur- beautifully tailo1led suitsmiddot that I and nothing swings better than

Family Advisors gical commissions met here un- have viewed thus far in the long ropes of pearls-especially Markie who did her touring der the direction of Archbishop sealch for Spring clothes was a against navy or grey

on a budget and had a whee of Joseph M Cordeiro of Karachi maltilificent grey one by Gino a time so doing introduced us to discuss propolled liturgical Paoli Superbly tailored in a to her bi-ble Arthur From- changes in this country ricl knit material the smart mers invaluable Europe on Approved for experimental desi go was set off hy fresh $5 a Day with its practical use were two new baptismal touches of white guidelines based on first-hand rites in the Urdu limguage and Grey has always ~n a color dramaticallyexperience For instance who- a revised Urdu funeral rite thai I avoided like the plague ever would have thought of Authorized for publication was (ev~r since an experience with different8eeking inexpensive spotlessly the Punjabi version of the Can- a grey dress in eighth grade dean lodging in Italian con on of the Mass as well as an that made me look like an un vents Author Fro~mer gives Urdu edition 01- the Roman heaithy Corpse-of course that Sensational tastingnames addresses and prices 1ft missaL Was before eigh1lligirlS wore Hollywood Diet Breadduded also are Readers Sug Jilake-up)and I havent bought made from aestions helpful tips for vari- an item of grey 81)parel in years

places Youth in World Theme and years OIlS vegetable Boursl Markies own addenda will- Grey always seemed to beOfSpanish ~ial Work Your choice of color that looked good on someshy

vALLADoLJD (NC) ~ Offishy LIGHT or DARKCollege to ~ Admit Me cials of Spains ~nual Social redleads quite jiunior league one else-it was wonderful em

HollywoodIWeek have aimounced that r St Scholastica here in Minshy smad on white-skinned hrushy

DULUTH (NC)-The College on blondes and even looked Youth in the World will be Bakedby

the theme of the 17th week yournesota announced it will admit nett~s but since 1 failed to fan male students in 1969 ending planned for March 25-31 in this into any of these categories I Sunbeam

city56 years as a liberal arts colshy felt it was not for me This seashy Ballerlege exclusively for women Manuel Capelo Martinez Secshy son however the richness and Sister Mary Richard Boo colshy retary gener~l of the week said smaltnes of the grey shade deshylege president said the change We hope that the quiet atmoshy Signl may force IDe to change was made as a response to sphere of social week discussions my opinion - aidoo by some the needs of our time The basic will enable us to make some colorful makeup of course curriculum will remain the clear decisions about the many Navy RelmIlJIls IIame she said The college is problems of youth decisions Navy is the second color that eonducted by the Benedictme madein the light of the Churchs has returned to importance fornuns aocial teacJiingsmiddot Sprilig Always a must on Ule

Schools 10 Offer Sex Education

ROCHESTER (NC)-8ex edshyncathm will be integrated in tbe curriculum of 13 parochial schools of the Rochester diocese this Spring on an experimental basis

Father Daniel Brent assocllm d i 0 c e san superintendent at schools said the sex educatioD program will eventually be in effect throughout the 102 eleshymentary schools in the diocese

We are trying to create an attitude that sex is part of life and not a dark dirty secretmiddot Father Brent said

The classroom discussions will emphasize 1he family orientashytion of sex and parents will be asked to review topicswitln children before they are preshysented in the classroom hra added

Father Brent said the pro- gram ~lated to begin about April I will aim at developing respect for the opposite sex and the serious Qlbligations that go along with sex He emphasized the program will not constitute a separate course of study but will be integrated with other subjects and with sp07lJtanooUII questions as they arise

US Court to Hear Textbook ChaUenge

WASHINGTON (NC) - DIe U S Supreme Court has agreed to examine the constitutiorlality of a 1965 New York State law allowing the state to loan textshybooks to children in churchshyrelated schools

The law is being challenged by several local public school boardsln the state on the grounds that it violates the U So Constitutions First Amendment prohibition against establishshyment of religion

The New York law which was passedin 1965 and became effective in September 1966 aishylows the state to punhase textshyhooks and loan them to children in private schools - inclUding those operated by churches--iD graqes 7 through 12

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

9 Money-Eating House Puts Garde1n Needs in Shadle

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick Oh~ ~ Iye~rIlfor the return of Spring and an opporshy

innity to gel out of this D1Ollampter we can a house I cra1ll IOOr house a monster because it seems that it has an inshy8Qtiable appetite for money We recently fiIrlished OUlr second floor (whiClh took a year of

its about 6 above outside andplanning six months of on with the able assistance of a Mld off oonstruotion and 1mshy hardy Winter wind the weather believable sums of money) is urging us all to stay inside J(ow we must have 11 basement Its a perfect day to keep your IIOOm which ea1ls for more mess oven going and your kitchen a money filled with delectable smells

Now there are individuals rve been baking beans since have the desire and the early mom a container of

capacity to be handymen and brown bread is steaibing in a Cbere are those of us who deshy huge kettle OIl the top oJ1 themiddot pend on others to do their work jets and I just set a cinnamonshyI fall into the latter category filled Indian pudding into the -ad I am paying for it I am 80 oven along with the beans The tired of furring ceiling tile aromas are beginning to mingle Dghting fixtures floor tile sidshy and all seems right with the tog etc that I am half hoping world Chat everything comes to a Smalil Dinners lItandstill What appears to be

0

These dre2l1Y months of low the simplest job turns out to be temperatures and stay-homeiIbe most complicated involved days are the perfect time to eIll shyIlleSS imagin91ble tertain your friends X love

Plano Moving nothing more than planning a Take our piano Two years small dinner party for a few

ago we bought an old upright friends and look forward to a 110 that the children could bave couple of days of cooking and their piano lessons in the comshy planning The dinner menu fort of their own home without should be made out at least a baving to nui to my mothers week ahead of time (with pershyevery night to practice The haps a few alternatives in case piano is 11 five toot upright items you plan to serve are not JI~ch cost us 5 available at this moment in thia

When the movelll igtrolliht it area The last time I made a to the ~o~ they ~ere very dinner menu I planned to start careful not 10 hurt tb~ piano off with prosciutto and melon but they managea to sandwich (a delightful combination of Cbe back door scrape half the flavors) only to find out that all paper i~ the hallway and there wasnt a fresh melon avaDshydent the mo1ding wherever theJ able for 10Ve or mOll1ey anyshylraveled where in 1be city I1 you have

Now tbat we are planninl your menu made out befOIle yoa the basement we decided go grocery obopping you avoid put the pianio there where It the disheartening happening of would not be an eyesore and DI7 starting to make a dish only to wife and I would not have find you dont have all tllle ilnshylisten to our fledglings takinC middotgredienta tring into the musical world Desserts tbat rm going to

Simpler said than done One serve to guests are more ofteD mover on seeing the size of the than not the kind Ulat can be piano and the size of our bulkshy made the evening or day before bead said I hOpe you wont be and then thats one less item I offended if I tell you the truth -have to think about the cIay I would advise you to take an that Im going to entertain axe and break it up and bU7 Many desserts lend themselves yourself a new piano He didnt to early preparation and it gives marge for this advice but me a feeling of security to know neither did he move the piano I have one or two completed Now all we have to do is remove desserts already in my freezer n of the stairs in the bulkhead or relrigerator as the busy da~middot

ItO that the movers can drop of preparation begins the piano into the cellar enshy A timetable of projects for kance a job which will cost the day of y~ur ~inner party is ftnimagined amounts of money a great help and I even time I am half tempted to buy that eacb item on the menu SlO thatbullbull I know just when a certain dish

And so it goes Not so in the has to go into the oven AJlL prden where everything iii tbis pre-party preparation leaves lItraightforward and results are the evening free to enjoy yourather immediate Marilyn keeps guests and your own cookingmsisting that the day will come Of course in jolly old New Engshywhen we wont have to bleed bull land a blizzaro can mmr yoUII our bank account to feed our party plans but then your PurishyInsatiable monster but I dont tan adaptability can come to the believe it In the meantime I fore and you can either pack ~ll continue to budget infinishy everything in your Jlreezer for tesimal sums for the garden anotber evening or you and _ile the house is reconstructed your spouse can sit down to a

IN THE KITCHEN sumptuous repast Last weljlk because it was CorrectiD

Rbool vacation week we took Note In a S)taghett1l AUce tile children to the Science Mushy

recipe in the February l ADehorIIeWI1 in Boston As we wanshy two eaD5 l)f toaiato paste wendered among the wonders at

omittedman and his universe I paused Jl()POVEIRSbull moment in front of a case that

displayed a cut-away section of This is an easy but ~al

the earth during the Winter seashy looking quick-bread Contrary lIOn Chipmunk and fieldmouse to most peoples idea popoven IleBtled warmly in their cozy are espeCially easy to make anderground castles waiting for always bake mine in a very iUIe rigors of a blustery Winter badly darkened muffill1 pan to pass and I must admit that at perhaps this is the secret oil mtI Ibat instant I was a bit envious success of Mr Mouse and Mrs Chipshy 1 cup flour munk who could retire from the teaspoon salt hzen world with all its cares 3 eggs (beaten)

Most of us cant crawl into a 1 cup milk bole and hibernate when the 1 Tablespoon melted butter aorth winds blow but we caD 1) Melt the butter ancll set ~nd more time enjoying tile aside and put the greased mufshy

pleasures of our warm (on top fin pans in the oven ~ tAe ground) homeamp ~ a) MUt toueUler a1J1 the __

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968

Voters Approve Open Housing

FLINT (NC) - Flints voters have become the first in the nation to approve an open houSoo ing ordinance in a public refershyendum

The measure pushed strongly by Negro Mayor Floyd McCree and the local Council of Churches was passed by a 43-vote margin The unofficial tally was 20172 to 20129

The Flint City Council passed an open housing ordinance in 1967 but its opponents led by John Birch Society section leadshyer Gerald Spencer had no trouble in gathering 5000 signashytures on a petition to place the

issue before the voters The religious support of the

ordinance was organized by the local Council of Churches with which Catholic parishes coopshyerated Several sponsored pubshylic debates on the measure and more expressed support for it in parish bulletins

Recommends Elimnnating First Four Grades

SPOKANE (NC) - A special study committee here in theBans Sales State of Washington has recomshymended the gradual phasing outSpanish Tov~i~t Convention Forbids of the first four grades in some

diocesan schools and a totalSelling Churchs Artistic Treasures emphasis upward in religious

SEVILLE (NC)- Andalusia For some proof that their education Provincial Tourist Convention fear is valid came from a decishy The committee comp~sed of in a resolution announced at the SiOD to sell donations decorating eight diocesan educators and close of its meeting here has Zaragozas shrine to the Virgin headed by Father Michael emphasized that artistic treas- of Pilar Accumulating for ONeill diocesan superintendent urea- decorating the nations nearly 100 years many of the at education made its recomshychurches are the property of the gifts of the faithful are both mendations to Bishop Bernan people and maT not be sold by artistic and financial treasures J Topel of Spokane after study-Church officials without the ap- Proceeds from the sale of the ing education in the diocese proval of local civil authorities Pilar treasures will go to wbat since August 1967

Admitting that the cburches Zaragozas Archbishop Pedro Elimination of grades one are permanent depositories of Cantero Cuadrado described as through four would allow the nations art the resolution urgent social necessities schools to strengthen grades was aimed at Spanish churchshy five through eight - middle men who have proposed selling school-and offer increased edshyart treasures to finance social CRS Sends Penicillin ucational benefits to a greater action projects number of students at the sameFor Vietnam Casualties or less cost the committees IeshyThe combination of increased NEW YORK (NC) - Within port saidemph~sis on social justice and hours after being inforined thatchurch renovation resulting the Saigon airport was againfrom the liturgy decree of the in operation the U S CatholicSecond Vatican Council has led Offering YouRelief Services (CRS) shippedmany Spaniards to fear that the out by aid 100000 doses of fast shychurches would be denuded of 3 Savings P~ansaction penicillin for civllian casshyancient treasures ualties in Vietnam Home Financing

The penicillin is an urgent need in Vietnam and will be WARJMI~Plan Byzantine Rite used for the civllian casualties

Installation March 5 by the four Sisters who are on co-oprD4liVEthe CRS medical teams in thatPITTSBURGH (NC)-Bishop country Fulther shipments willStephen J Kocisko will be honshy BANKfollowored at a banquet here followshy 281 Main St Wareham Ma

ing his March 5 installation as The peniciUin was given to Telephone 295-2400Bishop of the Byzantine-rite dishy the CRS by the Catholic Medshy

BaDk-8U lIerfIa IftfIIMI ocese of Pittsburg ical Mission Boarcll

Speakers will include Archshybishop Luigi Raimondi Aposshytolic Delegate in the United States wbo will officiate at the

installation John Cardinal Krol of Philadelphia Bishop John J Wright of Pittsburgh and Msgr Edward V Rosack who has been apostolic ildmmistrator of the Byzantine-rite diocese of PitsQurgh

Bishop Kocisko succeedsArchshybishop Nicholas T Elko who reshyeigned as ordinary of the Pittsshyburgh diocese ill1 lOecember Bishop Kocisko has been head of the Byzantine diocese of Passhysillc and will continue as its administrator IIlDti a new bishshyop js named

maining ingredients anell then MOTHER PARKERSlldd the cooled butter 3) Beat the batter until it hl OLD FASHIONEDcompletely smooth 4) Fill the well-buttered pans

full Place in a 450middot degree DOUGHNUTS oven for 15 minutes Reduce heat to 350middot and continue bakshy Baked by your Sunbeam Baker ing 20 to 25 minutes

AWARD WINNERS Award winners at a Winter Carshynival sponsored by the Fall River area CYO are left Janice Feno Somerset High School named Miss Personality and right Carol Silvia Durfee High School carnival queen Holding trophies is Richard Lown Durfee High School carshynival co-chairman

AFamily Favorite

bullbull

THE ANCHOKshy10 Thurs Feb 29 1968

Urge Cergymen Attend Meltefring On Scfielrnce

WASHINGTON (NC)shyCatholic clergy throughout the country are being urged to attend the second annual conference on science for cler- gymem at the Oak Ridge (Tenn) Associated Universities Aug 5-16 in cooperation with Oak Ridge National Laboratory

The conference entitled The Impact of Science on Society is sponsored by the National Science Foundation and the Alshyfred P Sloan Foundation Purshypose of the conference is to proshyvide clergymen of all faiths with an understanding of the nature scope effects and trends

of contemporary science - parshyticularly nuclear science

Dr W W Grigorieff chairshyman of the conference said the conference series originated in the recognition that most clershygymen actively engaged in pas torat work have little training in and understanding of sci shyence but are confrOnted almost

daily with problems and deci aions arising from its implicashytions

Dr Grigorieff s~icj in an inter- view with NC Nevvs Service that experience gained through the 1967 conference indicated to the conference advisory comshymittee that religious leaders of all f~i ths not only need to be conversallt with the content and llOcial dynamics of science but also are extremely eager to take advantage of the opportunity to become more acquainted with modern science

The conference director stated that this year the conference will be open to some 90 parshyticipants-three times as many IllS attended the 1967 conference

He pointed out that Roman Catholic applications for last years conference were not nushymerous and said that those who had applied were for the most part overqualified - that is they possessed professional qualifications and advanced training in science The confershyence he emphasized is not pri shymarily for such specialists

Practicing Cnergy Dr Grigorieff stated that an

announcement has been sent to bishops of anlimber of dioceses

throughout -the country in air eHort to stimulate iriterest in the aims of the conference He added that an effort is also being made to contact diocesan priests senates

He explained that conference participants will be selected on a nationwide basis from appli shy

cants representing various reli shygious )lodies arid emphasized that the majority are expected to be praCticing clergy-those actively engaged in the minis- try rather than in teaching reshysearch etc

He said that a limited number of seminary educators deans heads of clergy-in-service and religious editorf will be acshycepted as observers

Speakers will include Dr William G Pollard executive director of Oak Ridge Associshyated Universities who is also an Episcopal priest associated with St Stephens Church Oak Ridge and the author of several books and Alvin M Weinberg director of Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Askeel to Withdraw MILWAUKEE (NC) - The

Milwaukee priests senate has passed a resolution urging 11 priests of the archdiocese to work for a chalige in tlie policy of clubs which are discriminashytory or tG withdlW as members

INTERFAITH SERVICE Bishop Fulton J Sheen center of Rochester NY at shywnded an interfaith service at Mount Neboh Congregation in Manhattan With- the Bishshyop are the Rev Philip Hiat right rahbi of the congregation and Cantor Albert l- Stur- mer holding chalice wh() prepared the ceremony at which Bishop Sheen received aspeshycial Brotherhood Award SC Photo

Archdiocese- to IBatmiddottle

Race Prejudice -

BusmlrAeSS Archbishop Says CINCINNATI (NC) - Ar(h-

bishop KarlJ A1t~r launched Project Commitment here with an appeal to the Christian comshymunity to appreciate the size and urgency of the problems of race relations and an insistence that the finding of Solutions is everybodys business

Speaking at a Mass in 1l Saints church the Cincinmtti archbishop emphasized not on ly right attitudes among Catholic people but also united comshymunity-wide organization and effort are necessary 10 me~t the problem

He said government pm-middot grams heretofore have been t(o late and too little and adVHshycated something like the Mal shyshall Plan which at the end HI the Second World War rescued Europe from misery and dEshy

spair -The Mass marked the openshy

ing of the projects pilot prll- gram which will continue wittl

seven workshops at Moeller HighSchool on specific aspects of- racial prejudice and lliscrim- ination Endorsed by the Archdiocesan

Pastoral Council and sponsored by the Catholic Commission 011

Human Relations Project Com mitment is described as a promiddot gram ~o help Catholic lay lead ers recognize their responsibii ities and prepare for theiJ proper roles in t~e field of inmiddotmiddot terracial justice

Seven VVeeks Program Dayton will be the second

area in which Project Commitshyment will be launthed The date has been set tentatively for April 9and the program will continue for seven weeks

Archbishop Alter said experishyence gained in the pilot pro-

Forty Hours Format ST LOUIS (Nc)-The St Louis

archdiocese has dropped its reshyquirement that Forty Hours deshyvotion must be held annually in each parish Pastoral guideshy

lines from the Archdiocesan Liturgical Commission noted that parishes were free and encouraged to continue Forty Hours and offered possible new formats which are based on Scripture readings and themes of Eucharist priesthood and church

gram would be used in organizshying similar efforts in the other deaneries

St Francis de Sales deanery in t~s area was chosen as the first for the experiment beshycause its Catholic population represents a cross-section of the entire community and if a-- project succeeds here it may well succeed anywhere else the archbishop said

It has been estimated that more than 500 persons from 31 of the deanerys 34 parishes would tale part in the project

The archbishop detailed the reason why the whole archdioshy

cese was to be involved when the problems are so diverse in the various regions of the 19 counties and When iincertain areas there is no racial conflict because of a totally homogeshyneous population

National Prohlem

The answer is that the prob- lem of harmonious race relashyJions is not a local problem but a national problem involving all communities everywhere and affccting all our public relashytions political economic and social There may not be racial conflict but there can be race prejudice he said

The problem has moreover definite religious and moral asshypects he said and there are questions of social justice and social charity which concern every Christian and for which

Pope Honors Gellman Protest(OInlt Leader

BONN (NC) -Pope Paul VI has awarded the Great Cross of the Order of St Sylvester to Dr Reinhold von ThaddenshyTrieglaff at German Protestant leader

Dr Von Thadden-Trieglaff is the founder and honorary presshyident of the Kirchentag the anshynual German Protestnt convenshytion -

In the document accompanyshying the award the Pope thanked Dr Von Thadden-Trieglaff for his work on behalf of ecumtmshyism and asked him to continue working in this spirit of recon-

ciliation and brotherhood Bishop Adolf Bolte of Fulda

presented the award

he will find the appropriate anshywer in the teachings of the Gospel

All our Catholic people he said are charged with the reshysponsibility of supporting adeshyquate remedial legislation and of creating social institutions which will eliminate discrimishynation and alleviate the burdens of sickness poverty and )gnoshyrance No one can stand aloof from a program of social bettershyment

Dutch Bishops Take Poll of Priests

moving toward onenessTHE HAGUE (NC) -- The cardinal saidDutch bishops in an effort to

measure the effectiveness and opinions of the nations priests Priest on Facultyhave distributed a list of 39 questions to all priests deacons LANCASTER (NC) - Fathell and subdeacons in the country William J Walsh SJ is the Several questhms deal with first Catholic priest to be apshypriestly celibacy pointed a fullitime member oil

the LancaSter Theological SemishyD~awnupto determine what nary conducted by the Unitecllp~iests think of the priesthood Church of Christ here Fathetandto measure the clergys acshyWalsh assistant theology proshyceptance of the celibacy Iegulashy

- essor at the Jesuit notiviatetion the questionnaire will be

CardinalCites Church Role InSlaquosety --CHICAGO (NC) - Jobm

Cardinal Cody asserted heq that the Church must involVil) fultlelf in social problems 00 be true to its fundamentetl works

The cardinal spoke at a sefib vice in the First Presbyteri~ church making its lOOth anm versary celebration

Those who contest involve-shyment by the Chruch in prolraquo lems of society Cardinal Co~

said take an indefensible stand He said personal sanctity whiclli

is conceded to be the ChurchD rightful concern cannot bd sepilrated from social responsi shybility

If the Church has nothing 00 say to us regarding our obligashytions to our fellow man it kJ sadly neglecting our personall holiness Cardinal Cody said

We sin by Injustice We sm by lack of charity We are sancshytified by giving all men thellf due he added

Move Toward Unity Cardinal Cody did not specishy

fically mention race relationll but he said society mistrea~

certain groups or individuals1ll

He said if church members aNI in any way party to this evill the Church must become i~

volved The cardinal said COIb-

cern for personal holiness forcelll the Chuxch into action

Let the Church in such cil shycumstances stand idly by and Q will lose all reason for exisshytence he declared

Cardinal Cody was introduceell to the congregation by the Rev Harold Blake Walker pastor Cltf the church When asked ahow his appearance in a Protestanll church following the service the cardinal said not long age it would have been unthinkshyable He added that the Holy Spirit is moving strongly anell speedily

We are not yet perfectly one as Christ prayed but we arll

th~

evaluated by the Pastoral Insti shytute of the Catholic Churchin the Netherlands and the Insti shytute for Applied Sociology of the Catholic Universiiy of Nijmegen

Introducing the questions the bishops commented that in a period of Church renewal it is unavoidable that priests be conshyfronted with serious problems They then recommend that the priests answer the questions carefully keeping in mind the teachings of the Church and the roie of the Church in modern society

Wernersville Pa will take ihe post of assistant church history professor at the 143~year-olcll

Protestant seminary on July L

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Black Power MINNEAPOLIS (NC) - nle

only un-Christian thing about power is the abuse of power Father James E Groppj Milshywaukees militant civil rights leader told a Lutheran layshymens conference here

Neither is the striving fox power by a minority group unshyAmerican the priest asserted It is rather part of the American tradition he said and cited past drives for political power by labor unions Italians in New York and the Irish in Boston

Father Groppi also said that the Milwaukee NAACP Youth Council which he advises has adopted black power tactics only after we had used every tactic eveiy means we could think of to take the yoke off black people and nothing had been effective

He said that one use the counshycil had made of black power was in a united Negro boycott of stores during Christmas The white man doesnt give us a housing bill we dont give him our dollar he explained

Discussing the role of the Christian Church in the black mans struggle for equal rights Father Groppi said that the Church has been involved by her non-involvemen1i By such non-involvement he said the Church has aggravat~d the Neshygros problem

Today he said I the use of prudence as an excuse for cowshyardice is the great sin of tile Church

Students Interrupt Strike to Mourn

PARIS (NC) - The strike launched by the guild of law students at the Catholic Unishyversity of Paris has been intershyrupted by its leaders out of resJect for the mourning of the diocese of Paris following the death of Pierre Cardinal Veuil shylot who was chancellor of the instittltion

The strike was called to proshytest a reform of the university decided U()(ln by the French bishops and put into effectmiddot by the rector Msgr Pierre Haubt- mann The reform is designed to avoid having the Catholic uni- versity compete systematically with middotthe state university In all secular studies

The bish~ps decided that in addition to teaching and re search in the area of religion the Catholic universtty must first of all be devQted to Chrisshytian reflection on secular matshyters

Pastoral Institute To Open at Quito

BOGOrA (NC)-A new Latin American Pastoral Institute will be opened in April at Quito Ecuador as a project of the Latin American Bishops Counshycil (CELAM)

The institute will be a unit of the CELAM pastoral departshyment

Purpose of the institute will be to train personnel from the whole continent in pastoral work applicable to Latin Amershyica The institute will offer seven-month courses and Euroshypean specialists in pastoral work will also serve on the faculty

Meeting on Cities NOTRE DAME (NC) - An

international conference entitled NCities in Context will be held March 31 through April 3 at the University of Notre Dames Center for Continuing Educashytion

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968

litu~~W Changes Continued from Page One

in earlier periods-even thou~

they do not conrorm in all deshytails with the approved versiOlil of contemporary liturgical texto -are authorized

TANTUM ERGO An apshyproved Eucharistic hymn ilill praise of the Blessed Sacrament may be used in Benediction oil the Blessed Sacrament in place of the Latin hymn Tantum Ershygo

PSALMS Approved are the texis of the Psalms as published by Englands Grail Society anell that found in the Jerusalem Bishyble

Suggestnol1Js Denied

The Vatican turned down two requests made by the US Bishshyops both dealing with liturgic011 experimentation

No was answered to the reshyquest that the US Bishops be permitted to designate acade~ic

centers to supervise litulgicall innovation

Also denied was the request that some experimentation be approved without examinatioD by the Holy See

-Presently the Vatican mu~

approve proposed liturgical inshynovations before experiment3shytion can begin

Archbishop Dearden explainshyed While the two major proshyposals concerning liturgical enshyperjmentation were not alPshyproved at the present time ~

is clear that the Consilium iJ open to the submission of rite and texts of li-turgical adaptioTll which have been drawn up anll presented prior to actual experishymental use

Concrete proposals of rHeIl 2nd texts may continue to be sent to the Bishops CommittCCl on the Liturgy

Matter Deferred

The permission to substitutfl h)mns or other sacled songtl fur the texts now used at the entran~e Offertory and Comshymunion of the Mass was defershyred

Such hymns now generally added to the official texts were approved in principle however by the delegates to the Rome Synod of Bishops October 1967

The Baptismal Rite describecll among the changes was n~

contained in the Vatican lettertl authoiizing the other changoo but was made public by Archshybishop Dearden at the same time as the announcement of 1ibe changes was released

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L_ PATRON 01 MARCH The month of March is dedicated to St Joseph watchful

guardian of the Son of God and patron and protector of the universal Church Dedicashytion of the month of the year to events in the life of Christ and to particular saints is a practice of the People of God rather than an official action of the Church It comfantly middotrecalls the power and love of God for mankind present at all times and in every place

Bishops Hit Penna Birth Control Policy Addsmiddot to Rather Thon Solve Problems of Poor

HARRISBURG (NC)-The Pennsylvania Welfare Depaytments new policy of acfi~ely promoting birth control among poor people is a major step in the direction of a newand dangerous life management bymiddot the state The Pennsylvania Oatholic Conferencehas criti shycized the Welfare pepartments decision to middotinitiltte discussions of birth control with their clients Under previous pol- stru~en~ for population con- the polic~ because it will add icy birth coiltrol adviceias trol saidmiddot the PCC to the p~oblems of the poor and Moreover many of these do nothmg to get at the root

Jren~l~red only If the welfare same spokesmen see it as an in- causes of poverty reCIpIent asked for It The strument to improve what they We are bound to protest sysshynew policY has been in effect call the quality of our popula- tematic governmental involveshysince mid-January The Con- tion Putting the program to ment in decisions of citizens reshyference which represents the suchmiddota use represents one of its specting family size as a major states Bishops in public affairs worst dangers the danger that step in the direction of a new has denied that Church teach- the state will start-=-by guiding and dangerous life management ing on contraception is a factor some groups or classes to birth by the state the statement emshyin its opposition limitation-to select the types it phasized

Invasion of Prhacy desires to see propagated Rather our concern is over Dangerous Management Varied Talents

the ef~ort of the state to i~fl~- The statement noted that its SPOKANE (NC)-The newly e~c~ many wa~ a pelson s view in this regard is shared formed Catholic Board of EdushychOIce of family size-our con- b th ptt b h b h f th h ht d h middottmiddot y e 1 s lIlg lanc 0 e cation for the Diocese of Sposhycern IS elg ene w en I IS National Association for the Adshy kane has elected members whothe poor whom the state seeks t f C I d P I to mfluence the Conference stat t sad

emen IThe Confelence called promoshy

tion of birth control an invashysion of privacy and asserted the state should play no role in attempting even indi rectly to manage tne most intimate domain of personal life

The statement also took issue with Welfare Depart~ent deshynialsmiddot that the program is inshytended to contlOl population

Negro Opposition

Chiefspokesmen for groups which have pressured for this program in our state say they IJee it and demand it as not just II medical service but as an inshy

vancemen 0 0 ore eop e include educators and non-edushyh h tl tt k d th w IC recen y a ac e e cators priests pastors ReligiousWelfare Department for trying and lay personst r t th th f th N 0 Iml e glOW 0 e egro

populatIOn The Conference also criticized

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a2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River--Thurs Feb 29 1968

The PaJrish Parade ~T MARYS CAlllllIlEJI)lItAL FALL RiVER

Mrs Hadley Lackey will serve as chaIrman of arrangements for the monthly meeting of the Womens Guild scheduled for a oclock on Monday night March 4 in the Shamrock Room of the Corky Row Club

Mrs John OConnor chairshyman of the Scholarola scheduled for April 1 requests that all pledges be brought to the March meeting of the Guild Committee members are avail shyable for all who wish their pledges collected at home

ST THERESA J80 ~-y gtltBORO

The ~ =middotaternity of Christian Mothers will hold thei~ regular monthly meeting on Monday evening March 4 following the Stations of the Cross

Rev Leo R Gravel OMI son of Mr and Mrs Raymond Gravel ofmiddotWestminister St So Attleshyboro will be the guest speaker

Members of the Confraternity will receive Comunion in a body at the 9 oclock Mass on Sunday morning March 3

88 PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Mothe~~ ~f Boy Scouts will bold a p1i1gtlic social at 730 toshynight Boy Scouts informatiOn classes for the Ad Mtare Dei award wiil be gtheld tonight and every T~ursday night during March and April

Junior High Camp Fire Girls plan a splash party at the YMCA from 530 to 7 Saturday night March 2 imd a cakesale in the IIChool hall from 8 to 11 30 Sun- ~y morniii~

The annual Cub Scout Pack IT Blue and Gold Banquet and charter presentation will take place at 630 Sunday night in the

school hall

SACRJED IllEART NOATlLEBORO

Starting on March 12 and conshytinuing for the next three conshysecutive Tuesday nights there will be an EcUmenical Worship Study conducted at Sacred Heart Church First Universalist Church First Methodist Church and the Grace Church

The service will begin at 730 and will be followed by a coffee hour and a discussion period in the church hall

The Sacred Heart Church will open the program on March 12 with a discussion of the Mass

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Womens Guild win reshyceive Holy Communion in a group at the 8 oclock Mass on Sunday morning March 3

The regular monthly meeting of the Guild will be held on Wednesday night March 6 at 730 in the school on Earle Street

ST PATRICK FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild announces an open meeting for Monday March 4 A jewelry demonstrashytion will be featured In charge of arrangements is Mrs Stanley Pitera aided by Mrs Joseph Fazzina

The unit will celebrate St Patricks day Saturday night March 16 with a smorgasbord supper and dance in the school auditorium Supper will be served at 7 and danCing will folshylow from 8 to midnight with music by the Moon Mists Resshyervations will close Sundq March 10 and may be made with guild officen or board memshybers

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

Plilrishoia books are to be distributed the weekend of

The WQmens Club announces March 2 and 3 Prizes will be bull pot luck supper for 630 Monshyday nigh1 Maich 4 Chairmen are Mrs William T Marum Jr and Miss Mary L Tyrrell

John F Keavy Jr president cl the US Model Railroad Assn will show films at a Boy Scout meeing slated for Tuesday night March 5

Theologians SllaquolIted As CU Spe(Q]~eis

WASHINGTON (NC) - Dr Ellie Mascall one of Englando most prominent Anglican theoshylogians and Father Hans Kung an outspoken advocate of reform in~~ the Catholic Church wilil speak at the Catholic University of America l1Ite in March

Dr Mascall a vigorous 0pshy

ponent of the so-called New Theology will give the Charles A Hart Memorial Lectures from March 24 to 29 His lectures will

deal sucessively with the quesshytions of God man Christ and the Church

Father Kung a Swiss theoloshygian who played an influential role at the Second Vatican Counshycil will speak on Sincerity in the Church on March 18

St louis Ceremony ST LOUIS (NC) - Bishop

John J Carberry of Columbus will be installed as Archbishop of St Louis on March 25 in cershyemonies at St Louis cathedral here

Archbishop Luigi Raimondi apostolic delegate to the United States will officiate The date of the cerem0I1-Y will be exactly three years after that on which Bishop Carberry was installed ordinary of Columbus

awarded to the three individuals selling the most books

The Mystibrook Singers of Bishop Stang High School will lead singing at the 815 Mass Sunday morning M~rch 3

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

A parish supper sponsored by the Womens Guild will be held from 530 to 730 Saturday night March 2 in the school hall Tickets are available from Mrs Frank Kingsley ticket chairman or any board member

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

During Lent Masses will be at 7 AM 4 PM and 7 PM

Confessions will be heard one half hour before each Mass Stashytions of the Cross will be held at 345 and 645 Friday aftershynoons and evenings Children are urged to attend Mass at 4 each afternoon The Children of Mary anshynounce a periby sale Friday March 15 A Portuguese parish mission will be preached by Rev Anshytonio Pinto CM from Sunday March 3 through Saturday March 9 Services will open Sunday night March 3 with rosary sernlon and Benediction at 7 I)clock and Mass and sershymon will be held every weekday night at 7

ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

The Association of the Sacred Hearts will sponsor a tea at 7 on Sunday night Mar 3 in the rectory in honor of the Sisters staffing the parish schooL

The monthly meeting C1f 1lhe Association will follow the tea

SAMOAN BISHOP The first native Polynesian memshyber of the hieraIl~hy Bishopshyelect Pio Taofinlllu (cq) S M will be consecrated at Apia Western Samoa on May 29 by Bosoon-born A r c h b ish 0 p George H Pearce SM of Suva The Bishop-eloot 44 made -his novitiate with the Marists on Staten Island ~C Photo

Hospital ~~urses

Return middotto Nork hi Covingtol1l

COVINGTON (NC) A nurses walkout which began in mid-November at 100shyyear-old St Eliz~~beth Hosshypital here has ended Nearly 100 of the 140 members of tine Registered Nurses tgtrganizati01l have indicated they will retum to their jobS The walkout stemmed from bull dispute over recognition of their organization and patient care policies Since the settlement hospital officials have been inshyterviewing nurse to expedite their reemployment and placeshyment

Restore Full Service Hospital spokesmen said the

nurses will be restored to posts they formerly held in so far as possible The nurses will lose no tenure as a result of their absence and if the positions they previously held have been filled they will be offered comshyparable posts or benext in line for selection to the positions

Administration officials exshypressed satisfaction with the prospect of the nurses return and voiced the earnest hope that we can move forward tel restore the 100 beds to service which had to be taliten out of availability by reason of the shortage of nurses to care for the patients

Officials estimate til1at four tie eight we~ks might t~ required 110 restore full bed service

Cite Achievements The nurses leaders said the7

had achieved at least 13 gains during the thteenionth dispute pointing to the fact that a doctor and a nurse have been apshypointed to the hospital board of trustees the establishment of bull patient care committee comshyposed or nurses electeli by those now employed by the hospital and equipment changes in the patient care area

Mrs Pat Tanner vice chait shyman also said the nurses unshyderstand that a lay heid will be appointed head of the hospital

Sister M Coronata adminisshytrator was assigned to) another post in the sisterhood earlier this month and Sister Mark Bernard has been serving u acting administrator I~he Franshyciscan Sisters of the Poor haft operated the hospitaL

Love Is An Active Verb We who bear the noble name of Christian arid who are io9shy

ingly called the faithful stand in awe of the Mystery of Christ and the Mystery of His Church More than the mystery of Obrist and of His Church is something we live It is then our duty JIlON

and more to experience the living reality of the Cbureh hershyself Cbristain tradition affirms that by her relatioJiship with Christ tlbe Redeemer the Church is a kind of sacrament or an efficacous sign of intimaJte union with God and indeed an efshyficacious sign cf the uni~ of all mankind

As members of the household of the faith we have heeD eaDmiddot ed by God and endowed with the precious gift 01 faithThereshyfore we m1ls truly experience a sense of urgency in brinampinK aD men to tun union with Christ Since mankind today is joined together more 1ll1osely than ever before in historY by bonds thaamp are social technical and eultural should it be ilenied the spirshyitual unity that springs from faith The Gospel is Ught Ii Is lIIewness it is energy it is rebirth it is salvation

Should DOt interest in our own salvation necessarily move us tID loving concern for the salvation of others If the Church is the Sacrament Of Salvation should we not as members of the Church eome to an eve- clearer awareness of our pari in her mission in the o1uty of evangelization in the missionary mandate in the apOstolic commiSsion Clearly our duty consonant withthe blessings I-eceived from Christ is that of spreading offering and announcing ~ faith to Others in order that we might be clble to acquit ourselves of Uiis Christian obligation The Society for the Propagation of the Faith eXiSts For-those who desire to be where the action is or 110 be iIivOlvoom wOrld mission the Church pr0shy

claims her own essential inissionlU) character Indeed the Cburdl ill J4ission and therefore aD of 118 are truly missionaries

fa tills Yeai IaItIl we eaa testify to Gaefldl uieDt 04 om- ATatitade to God for the bleilldDc of faWt by ma~ bull aerIfiee te TIle Society for the PropapUOn 01 the Faith lor tile works of the Chureh ill the service Df tile poor and underprholshy~ed We eamaot be Uke our Master III the fWlness of HIs Dlvinit7 nor caD we hoPe to experienCe thelrlory of His Transfigmratio bat there lis ODe way ill whieh we eaa resemble Rim and that Is ~ beeomtitamp- a oervant to His poor aDd His UWe ODes throughshyout the world

The native celrgy is the ho~ of the Chureb in Mission lands Many youngmen have heard the can but are sadly turned away for lack of facilities and funds $250 will provide a year of semshyinary training $1500 will cover the cost of complete education to the priesthood Wont you help us to help them by sending your offering to The Society of st Peter the Apostle 366 Fifth Avenue New York N Y 10001

SALVATION AND SERVICE are the work of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith Please cut out this eolumn and send your offering to Right Reverend Edward T OMeara Nashytional Direetor 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or directly to yoUr loeal Diocesan DirectOr Rt Rev Msgr Raymond T Considine 361 Norib MaiD Street FaD IUver Massaelnuse~ts 03720

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THE ANOiOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 13Missouri Diocesan Board Pondersmiddot Closing Consolidating Schools

KANSAS CITY (NC)-Tbe 1H girls They would be abshyKansas City-8t Joseph diocese sorbed into the school popushyis exploring the possibility of lations of Lillis high school and closing some of its schools and st Theresas academy forming n larger area school Although 120 persons attendshy Extension Volunteers bull bull bullwhich could upgrade the qualshy ed the school board meetingity of education for all pupils they were not petmitted tp

At 0 school board meeting speakFather John P Cole supershyinJtenden~ of schools reported on L - shyPTA Bead Plotes~

the possibility of setting up 11 Make Life Wortl IVngA motion-passed unanimousshycentral area grade school in ly by the board-was made to

mid-town Kansas City The continue exploration into conshysingle school would serve the solidation of the schools Thispopulations of three existing was opposed by John J Mcshygrade schools Donough a representativeFather Cole also suggested the elected by the Catholic PTApossibility of closing Redempshy Federation who will be seatedtorist high school now serving as a board member in July

McDonough was permitted to $~[]7reg~ 2~ Ifreg[[~ take part in the discussion but

had no vote

~~ ~~[[U IT)J He protested against the defe3ltist clique who let our

WASHINGTON (NC)-Bishop schools get picked off one byPaul F Tanner newly named one He charged that TheOrdinary of the diocese of St New Peltlple - the diocesanAugustine Fla is onfy the newspaper members of the dishyfourth priest to serve as general ocesan school office officials of secretary of the United States the Missouri Catholic Confershybishops secretariat in the nearshy ence Kansas City pastors andmiddotly half-century of its existence other Church officials share in

Bishop Tanner was the last an anti-Catholic school recshygeneral secretary of NCWC the ordoriginal secretariat He was also the first general secretary of ODe Operation both of is dual suc~essors-tne

McDonough said that theNational Conferenceof Catholic school superintendent shouldBishops and the United States be goingmiddot to the state legislashyCatholic Conference The NCCB ture and Governor Hearnes tois the bishops agency for dealshydemand tax relief instead ofing with purely splritual matshyconsidering consolidation andters the USCC Is their secreshyclosing of schoolstariat for dealing with secular

affairs Father Colemiddot maJntained that The prelate has served in the the reorganization would not

U S bishops secretariat 28 represent a cutback The area years longer than any precedshy school would be able to opshying general secretary Born in erate out of one blilding to Peoria TII in 1905 and ordained serve three parishes It would a priestmiddot of the Milw~ukee archshy provide the same educational diocese in 1931middot he came to experience for the same number Washington in 1940 ~as assistant of students plus advantages director of the Youth Departshy Cooperation would make posshyment NCWC He ~as assistant sible a highly developed model general secretary from 1945 to school staffed by Sisters from 1958 and has been general secshy three communities retary since then He said it would be irresponshy

He is the first bishop to serve sible to run three operations at as secretary to the bishops secshy all costs when the diocese retariat could have one operation run

The NCWC (as Council and it more efficiently do a better Conference) had been in exisshy educational job and provide opshytence 47 years when it formally portunity for a better deployshywent out of existence at the anshy ment of personnel nual meeting of the bishops in November 1966 Bishop Tanner who had served in the secretashy Urge Germaruls riat for more than half those years supervised the transition To Aid Vietnam to two separate organizationsshy

BONN (NC) - Two Germanthe NCCB and the USCC cardinals and two churchshyDuring Bishop Tanners secshy related relief organizations have

retaryship and in testimony to FALL RIVER PROVINCETOWN AND WESTPORT GIRLS WITHappealed to the German people

the growth of the work handled to collect money and to prayby the bishops secretariat an NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF EXTENSION VOIL~NTEERS DURINGfor the people of Vietnamimpressive addition to the headshy A week beore Mardi Gral lt- quarters building here was Joseph Cardinal Frings of Coshy THEIR YEAR OF VOLUNTEER WORK erected in 1960 logne asked the Catholics of his

archdiocese to cut down on Mardi Gras festivities and to donate magnanimously to the needy people of Vietnam Coshy These young college graduates have given a I year of their logne has long been known for its ampigtectacular Mardi Gras celeshy professional life to God in service in the South and West Are brations Citing the bombing Of North you willing to give twelve months of yourmiddotyouth to othersVietnam the plight of women and children caught between opposing forc~middot in the $()ut~ and the great number of refushygees Cardinal Frings asked how Catholics could watch pictures of these gravely distressing si~

WHY NOT ENROll AS ANuations on television and ceieshybrate Mardi Gras with a quiet The Spirit oj

Extension Volunteer HELPER middot$200 oconscience Alfred Cardinal Bengsch Of Extension Volunteer PROMOTER $500 o

Berlin asked for prayers for Sacrifice Extension Volunteer SPONSOR $1000 or more opeace in the world in a letter to the clergy of his diocese in which specifically mentioned AMOUNT ENCLOSED $ Vietnam as a name meaning Perfectlyblood and death RT REV RAYMOND T CONSIDINE PAIn a joint appeal Caritas the German Catholic relief organishy PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH OFFICE zation of Germanys Evangelical 368 NORTH MAIN STREETExemplifiedLutheran Church has asked for fALL RIVER MASS money to send food Md medishy

BISHOP P~VL F TANNU cine to the Children of Vietnam o

(-14 THf ANCHOR-Diocese of FaR Rfver-Th~rs Feb-29 1968 Two Objectives Jersey to Rehabilitate Young OffendersTells Jesuatts Engage in Deliberate

Help Increasing Spanish Group Attempts at lExperimentation UNION CITY (NC) - Two Hudson County Jan and in theST LOUIS (NC)-Deliber- carries its own reward he said area interfaith clergy groups youth house in Secaucus

iide attempts at experimenta- Now we must undertake new here in New Jersey are planning Father ThomasJ Murtha oftion with a readiness to accept forms some of which have a

joint action on the plightf West New York was named toall the risks that may be in- good chance to flop JIliserably youthful offenders housed m investigate means of setting UJltvolved were proposed for the An expert at the Second VatshyHudson County correctional in- a rehabilitation program t4ilSociet of Jesus at the close of ican Council Father Campion stitutions and to seek federal function after the release ~ III three-day session here on believes that the work of the assistance in meeting the needs youthful offendersbulllesuit renewal council has not yet begun to of Cuban refugeesFather Donald R Campion be absorbed within the Church

The joint session was held by The ~o groups will send a18J stressed at the renewal as a whole the North Hudson Clergy Coun- delegatIOn toWashIngton to askQession and in an interview This is not because it hasnt cU based here and the Chris- ~hat the area be declared anthat the Jesuits have both the been publicized enough or beshy tian Clergy United a West New Impacted area under the Cuban manpower and the resources to cause people havent read Y k Refugee Act and therefore beshy

engage in the type of expeii- enough or bishops havent talkshy or ~ro~p come eligible for special federal mentation which could serve ed enough he said But Vati shy A meetmg WIll be s()~ght WIth aid There are some 00000 tQdays Church Father Cam- can II opened up more areas the Hudson County Boar~ of Spanish~speakingpeople now m pion a sociologist and theolo- to discussion than it resolved Chosen Freeholders in an effort rth gian was recently named editor Among the sleep~rs in to establish a bettez climatefoi the ~o Hudson area and they cd America magazine council documents CIted by therehabiUtation of youthful continue to arrive at the rate of

Another speaker Fat her Father Campion was the conshy offenders now housed intne 200 to250 a month ~ 1 _

Avezy Dulles SJ stressed that cept of participation within the ~ doubt is a valuable and even Church Father Campionmiddot said lI1ecessary experience for the he believes collegiality is the Wide E~perience Christian in todays world most developed aspect in this

Fathers Campion and Dulles area and that some organization QU(lJD~ies Nu_ were two of the six main speak- has been given to it through the

UNITED- NATIONS (NC)ers at the closed meeting Some establishment of piie~ senates ltHQWCom pie t e devotion to theSSO Jesuits including 50 from But unless the idea of parti shyworlds needy children seemsCilutside the St Louis areaat-cipation is really the basis senshy a weighty task for a petite nun TDgtKEEPtended the sessions ates can become orgimizational

Father Campion said that Jes- gimmicks he said but a conversation with Sister Ullits as a group must face the Father Dulles discussing themiddot Kathl~eri Kelly MMmiddot provides LENmiddotTreassularice middotthat 20 years of make a significant contribution Church said ~ an interview diversified experience fact that their work should existence of doubt in todays

more to modern times that we have a radically differ- than qualifies her for the role

QUI IXIDPYFATHER lI MISSION jlUDTG me fllRlfaNTAL CHURCH

In the area of education It calIS for recasting the ex- wide Cath)lic charities organishy Need New Formula ent world view than in the past Caritas Internationalis worldshy

With the slason of Lent comes the qu~ionFather Campion called for con- pressions of the Christian messhy zation recently appointed Sisshy How can I beSt keep Lentl The answer ~s ~sideration of whether we are sage in terms of contemporary as observerter Kathleen its must make sacrifices on our own and nothing ISproviding the educational struc- knowledge if the message is to to the U N International GOOD III sacrifice unfess it hurts Whatwill be yo~rture for the new world have the impact it should Childrens Emergency Fun d WHIEN sacrifice bullbull Just think of the misslonlllne~ InIn the intellectual area Look Criticanny (UNICEF) Caritas Internationshy ITlf our 18 emerging countries who keep Lent allrather Campion noted that to- Doubt is not a bad thing he alis is one of 75 international HUmS year long Sacrifice something big this ye~rday more is needed than popu- said People should be looking and non-government organizashy When helping others hurts a bit you know you va larization of theology and phil- critically at the traditional forshy tions (NGOS) which enjoy conshy made a sacrifice()Sophy In a way we need a mulas and seeing what is revelashy sultative status with UNICEF whole new formula for making tion and what is a culturally

They represent oJer 4000csense of the world and life he conditioned formula which is affiliated private and non-profitfSaid now demanding reform

We should have men devoted Such adaptations are iD no organizations in more than 100 oOn his recent-trip through India 1V0~signor nations with a combined memshy Nolan saw priests and Sisters subSisting onto this single problem Their way a compromise of faith bership running into millions ounces of rice each day so they can share what own inner resources of security Father Dulles said We never they have with lepers and orphans $10 will feedmust be yery strong because to hear the divine message except Interviewed at the United Nashy FEED a family for several weeks at least $50 will feed

facethat kind of change is not III in terms of humans he said tions Sister Kathleen spoke of THE five families $100 ten families bullbullbull Only $975popular thing The Word of God comes her new rol~ at the international HUNGRY gives a priest 11 two-acre mode~ 18nn toraise

Council Opened Areas through man it is alW9YS tem- level and described how it his own food and teach his parishioners how to Father Campion said the can pered by man and it is this con~ evolved from her past activities raise more food Archbishop MalJ Gregorioa will

for experimentation W9S not ditioning which must change wrltetlo thank youI was in California andbased on inadequate work of Father Dulles said one value worked for 10 years in familyJesuits at the present time and of the death-of-God movement eounseling in the juvenile court IlJ Enable ~ girl to become a Sister For 41tl bullthat fact is part of the problem for Catholics is to shake _ I1tA1N day ($1250 a month $150 bull year $300 aleill foster lare and in otherMany times we have been suc- out of taking an uncritical with sa~ A together) you can pay In full fer her two-yeaIwork children sheeessful and being successful static view of God training have 8 Sister of your awnInthe last five years I moved SISTER

oat to community development and civil rights I was a member o For only $a5O a week ($10 a month $120 bull

year) you can make surethat an abandonedJesuit Seminarian Leads Campaign of a district council in bull San HELP Francisco - which subsequently A child has food clothing a blanket and love bullbullbull IAgainst Home Contract Firms was declared a poverty CHILD wen send you a photo of the boy or silt )011area

adoptCHICAGO (NC) - A Jesuit borne than its current market During my years there I waa Rminarian has launched a camshy value a member of the Catholic Intershy o Our priestS will offer promptly the Massespaign here against contractshy Following the exodus of racial Council and when I came MASSES you request Doyou wish to remember a loved holders of homes sold to Negro Lawndales white residents in back from Selma (she was on fOR one this Lent Your Mass offerings are usuallyfamilies at allegedly exorbitant the late 1950s thousands of of the persons selected to repshy LENT the only Incole our priests overseas receiverates homes were purchased by vari shy resent the archdiocese of san

Jack Macnamara SJ who ous bankS mortgage loan and Francisco in the Alabama civil o Enroll yourself your family and friends InlIives and works in nearby real estate companies at low rights march) I was appointed this Association You will be helping Pope Paul Lawndale is acting withthe ap- prices and then resold on conshy to serve on the Human Rights

JOI~ in one of his most ambitious and heartfelt works proval of his Jesuit superio~ tractto Negro families atofteIi - Commission by the mayor of THIS while sharing In the blessings of thousands of

Nacnarnara and a dozen supshy ~lImON Masses (The offering for one year is $2 perdouble the original purchase San Francisco the nun stated porters including several other price the leaflet reported She was the first nun ever apshy person $10 for a family perpetual membership Jesuit seminarians picketed the Paid Race Tax ltpOinted to any kind of~~yt is $25 per person $100 for a family) Chicago address of one investshy Macnamara said these conshy inJSan Fraidsco _

Iment company which holds title tracts should be renegotiated at

~ several homes sold on conshy the most recent FHA appraisal tract to Negroes Pickets dis- price ~ If I1t e SAiliNGS

tributed leaflets explaining the c2J 0 dJ ~ t~~ year SYSTEMATICThe issuemiddot here is moral rathshypurpose of their campaign er than legal he declared Th~ MONTHLY DEPOSITS

The leaflet cites the case of III law does not provide a remedy II tfMltIa fNVE$iMENyhome purchased by an investshy for the type of injustice that is d) aV~ J((~ year SAVINGSment company in January 1959 operative in this contract

for $13000 and then three NOTICE ACCOUNTSThousands of Negroes inmonths later sold on contract to Chicago are suffering from this a Negro buyer for $23000 450 ar ~~~~

It states the investment corn continued ~In effect they paid pany received $2000 as a down II race tax of approximately

type of injustice Macnamara

BCJs~ liverpayment on thiS contract whic~ $10000 when they bought their stipulated that middotthe balance was homes because it was impossishy SavonJs Bonkflo be paid over 20 years at sevshy bleto obtain mortgages 4Il per cent interest at the rate This is a striking example of BanI By Mail of $20140 each month how our legal system does notmiddot We Pay The Postage

Last December it reported a adequately protect black people Federal Housing Administration or poor people he said It appraisal on this home listed its stems from the fact that the law bull YARMOUTH SHOPP8NC PUll value at $15025 This means it aims at protecting property inshy bull SOUTH UltMOm bull HYANJIISexplained that the Negro buyer stead of persons And this helpl bull DENNIS PlmRT bull OSTFllVIUlIII paying $8000 more for tbe bull cause urbaJl unreal

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HUNGRYmiddot FOR GOD TOO ~

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 ltI

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16 THE ANC )~-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968

New St LouimiddotsArchbi~hcp

PrOmilnent in Ecumen~$m Archbishop Jonh J Oarberry of St Louis well known

~()ng Oatholic leaders after 31 career that has taken him from a seminary classroom iii his natiYe Brooltl~ NCY~ to one of the nations MOse ~mpOOtallt archdiolaquoese1l is pershy

laaps evenmiddot better ~ownmiddot fJDlong Americas nom-Cafu6shylie religious leaders fon hisl work in ecumenism Cllair Ilillao of the Bishqps Commi~ee-Ibr Ecumenical and Intenrefi shyaious Affairs since th~ resigna Qion of Baltimores Lawrence Cardinal Shehan in November 11965 Bishop Carberry has au I9gtCrvised the massive catholic illllvoIvement in ecumeniCal ac-middot lli1 vities

He outlined his own entIliusishyeuroISm for ecumenism in a speech ~iven in January 1966 tolmemshy~rs of the Ohio (Protestant) lPastors Convention wheDI he aid

Common lHeritagel For years the general policY

(llln the Catholic Church) had ~en to stress the great chasm

which divides the euroatliolic Church and other Christian ehurches No effort was made m would seem on our part to Illave a meeting of minds A otudy of documents would seem ltD reveal that while we wera lbrayerfully disposed to) the ltecumenical movemerit nevershy1lheless the Catholic Church did lliittleto foster it

Bishop Carberry told the conshyvention that through the grace 0f God and the leadership or Pope John XXIII we became aware of the common heritage Which is ours

Has Great lHope

We began to realiZe~ how 18aptism unites us in ChriSt to Gee that the divinity of Christ is illhe cornerstone of all Christianshynay we began to real1ze the oommon treasure which we llnave in the Sacred Scripturesllikewise the common bondshyVhich exists with us in the

1lIIlissionary activities at the Church

There is great hope Bishopltearberry said that mrougb ~ialogue through prayerbull 1llluough respect for each others wiewpoint the grace of God may (i)Ile day in Gods divine provishy4llence bring about the- unitY which Christ prayed for at themiddot Last Supper

More recently members of ltOhios Protestant cliurches llllamed the bishop as OniosPbsshyoLr of Pas-tors the fl rst timmiddote hat bull

Grants Permis$ioll~

for SaturdayMass) SAN ANGELO (NC)-BiShop

Thomas TSchoepe of San Angelo lllas announced that the diocesan request for the Saturday Mass flaculty hagt been granted In the future the Sunday Mass 00shyltigation may be met by at shy~ndance at a Saturday aftershyllloon or evening Mass The pershylll1ission has been granted on an ~xperimental basis by the Vati shylttan for a period of five years

The diocese of San Argelo is 1lI Texas missionary diocese the bishop explained and there are areat dis tan c e s between churches and few priestswmiddot oerve the faithfuh ManYi ~llieSts

have two or morlt8 churclies tJ lllttend and will Be able- tQ give more time to the smaller ~urches with the Satucday Mass faculty Bishop TschoePe pointedi 9Ut Chat the faculty has been giVeth bull the whole diocese not just Ibo individual churches or areas Pastors who wish to make Usemiddot aJl the faculty must make formal application to the chancery ofshyillce

a~ statewide Protestant onganiza tion has presented its highest awa-rd 10 a eatho1iir clet1gymam A pla~J1e symbollZiDg the a~adi was~ glv~~ to the blShp at ~~~ Fenw~nIP Blmq~et on the Olbo PastollSgt ~onventi~m

DI~USS P~tilems U~dev Blsli~p~rlgte~rysl~d

er~hlPl laquoatholic ~elegations have ~et wl~h ~fflC1Blsbull and

tleolbglan~ of other- ChrIs~an churchesmiddot to dlSCUSS ecumemcal pooble~s r~~gmg from the pr~sshyence of Christ Ill tlie ~ucharlst to th-c nature of we prJes~ood

Before ta~mg cliarge of th Golumbusmiddot dIOcese on March 25 1965) Bishop euroarbery liadmiddot selved asmiddot coadjutor bishop and then bishop of Eafayette Ind Born in Brooklynj N~ Y Tulymiddot 31 1904 Bishop Carberry studied for the priestlioodi at Brooklyns Cathedral College or the Iin-middot maculate laquool1ception from 191ll to 1924 and at the North Amershyican College in Rome from 1924 to 1930

Oldained inmiddot Rome in 1929 tne bishop sfudiea canon law at the Catholic University of America in Washington D G and taught at Immaculate Conception Semshyinarl until Tune 1935 when he went on ldan to the diocese of Trenton N J He returned to BrooklYn in 1940 where hemiddotreshymained until being named coshyadjuror bishop of Lafayettemiddot in 19651

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CHICAGO (NC) - Tohn A McDllrmott has changed me mindL-he1li remain as execu middot tivedirector of the Chicago Cat1iolic Interracial Council

The veteran council worKer last October announced he would leave the office to beshy

come Mridwest regional- ciVil rightsdirector for the ms De-middotmiddot partment of Health Enucation andi Welfare

A number of problems hava arisen since th-e announcement on my appointmentt last 0ctbBerwhichl caused me to have serl

ousmiddot second l thoughts MilDer moW said iil his decision to re~ maio with the ltlrc He citedi m1 patrtcular~ personnel cutliaclts in HEW wJiich woulli Iiinit the Midwest negional operatiiul

fo accepting McDermotits de cisionj HEW the government agency requestedi liiin to serve asmiddot ai special chdl- rights consuU ant while working for the CIC and he a~reed

IIlt a letter to the Dutch biINumber of Fllel71ch ops members of Michaels re-

gion asked for curbs on the nlgtshySeminarians Dllops tions Catliolic liberals The PARIS (Ne)-Thenumber of meeting also registered disap-

French seminarians h~s dropped proval of the new Dutch Cateshyby about 180 a year for the last chism~ claiminJ~ that it does nocent four years according to 1iigures represent true Catholic teach~ provided in amiddot press conference Michaels Lel~ion is considered by Bishop Jean Sauvage 011 ampshy even more CJlnservative thlW necy member of the bishops Confrontation another Catholic commission on the clergy and conservative organization Conshyseminaries frontations complaints about

For the 1967~68 sc1iolastic the content of the new Dutch year the tdtal number of sliumiddot catechismmiddot are believed to hae dents iil major seminaries m been instTllmentai in having tbe~ FhlOce is 43583 comparedl with book exltlmined by the VatiCan~lJ

4536 for the previous year Doctrinal Congregation 4722 )n 1965-66 and 4953 in 1964-65

Moreover in France at pres- Approves Agency eol ttiere are aBout 200 adults LQND()N (NC)--Jolin Cardl~

WIIO are preIgtaring for tOe ~er nal Heenan of Westminster liJaa manent diaconate as restored by approveq establishment ocf 1m the Second Vatican Council The agency to help priests who want first ordinations to this permashy 10 leave the priesthood znGl nent diaconate could take place nuns who want to leave the this year religious life

1P~alrn le~tUlm~1rn~~G~

$1lll~7 GG1l I1DtJ Sim LONDON (NC)-A study on

the problems of ecumenism in Great Britain will be made by a joint working group of the British Council of Churches and the Caholic Church with the results to be reported next Autumn

The study was planned at a meetingmiddot held atmiddot the Vita et Pax Benedictine I~onvent and attendshyed by nine Catholic representashytives an- 14 representatives of the BeC -

The projected study is exshypected to analyze such topics an the extent I)f cooperatiGn beshytween Catjwlics and members of the BeC the dialogUes bemg held theologicaL differences and the non~theological obstacles to closer unitygt

Auxiliary BishoJ- Langton Fox of lfenevia Wales and

Auxiliary Bishop Basil Chrisshytopher Butlelr OSB of Westshyminster headed tOe CatOolie delegation at the meeting

~(i]$~~rlaquolJpoundfr1) A$1k lMl~illlW) ~ltoy~ IHh~)~Dnd

U11RECHm (NC) -Michaels Legion an organization of Dutch Catholic~ uaditionalists has sent a telegram to Pope Pault H ungintg him tD protect essential orthodoxy and to S81fe tne DutchChurch~

At 3- meeting here attended b~ some 600) Catholic conserva tives led by Eouis Knuvelder the legion condemned the Dutch Catholic daily press the~ Dutch Gatholic tellvisioncompany and the countrys Catholic radio station for being too progressive

Father Baum Regards Ecumenical Center Closing Sign of Success TORONTO (NC)-The closing gian Charles Davis-A Quesshy

of the Center for Ecumenical tion of Conscience Davis book Studies at St Michaels Collegegt exmiddotplains his renunciation of the here is a sign of the centersmiddot euroatholic priesthood and the success Church and asks Catholic theo-

This is the viewpoint of Father logians who intend to stay in GregllllY Ballm O~SA founder the~ eurohurch to reply to several of tJie centeI1 who has an- t1iaologjcal points nQunlaquoed that it will b~ Closed BelUef Unbelief

inl JUne Thats what Im doing FatlieJJBaum-explalnedthalhe Fatller Baum said His book a

founded the centeJ ill 19631 when replYJ to Davis questions conshyecum~llusrn may have~ been a ceming the credibility of the new Idea Its purpose lie- s~ld Church in todays world will be was to promote ecumemcall called The Credibility of the studies at St Michaels Church Today It will be pub-

Taday he neports ecumen mal stlUdi~s at S1l Michaels are a reality- 1lli~ schGolls theology depal1tment 18 fully mte~ ~thl Protestant and ~gIIcan lfupartmentsmiddot at the-Umversity

of Toronto [hUB lie said~ the eC-lmenical

centell has fulfilled its purpose Such fUlfillment he said wmiddot

common in academic circles where there has been an ecushymenlical reVOlution For exam pIe ne said where once som1shyone might have nied to foster ecumenism through building an ecumenical library it is now impossible tq build a theological lilgtrary without its being ecushymenical

Need flDZ Programsmiddot Father Baum added that he

does not believe tJie ecumenical movement has reached fruitien in circles outside the academia world~ He said that he sees a real need pound01 formal ecumenmiddot ical programs on the parish and on all levels of the Churdl which have not yet been reached He a150 disclosed that perSOll ally he lias moved Gn frOlll ecumenism to new fields of thought

The AuIDlStinian has written a new book in answer to the latest by the English theolo-

U[[$ W)jf[rll IfSMsjIID~

rnliJ kUD-WIh ol 1TW[jiJ KETTERING (Neuro) - The 1-7shy

member parish board 00 St Charles Church~ here unanishymousll1 adopted a resolution 5 favor Qf open nousing legiSlashytion for thiS (1)hio suburban community

The parish boards action S~ poIied- unequivocallymiddot passage 0amp an open housing ordinance in themiddot virtuallr aUi-wltite commw-middot nity 00l more than 600001 res dents Tames J Gilvay and Peter Donanue attOrneys anlL pariBhlmiddot boarc members pre sentedthe resolutJoDj wliiclli tbok- themiddot position that the ghett) condit1ollG ~Ilichl Negroes enshycure ilm nearby DaYton are mshyiuriOwil to the entire commUlshyDitTmiddot

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Aftei tee closing of the Center for Ecumenical Studies Father Baum will stay on at St MishychaeFs au a professor of theolshyogy He is also planning another ~~

It will concentrate on the idea oi God in modern thought and will be a clear sign that Father Baum has moved away from his prime in terest in ecumen- ism

Born of Jewish parents in Berlin and reared as an agnostic Father Baum said he has now turned his whole thought to the study of belief and unbelief He will record his findings in me book he is now writing

~oh~ laquotmm~~litl ~Od1[9)

[~ Ao~ i N~regIJ$ CAMDEN (NC) - Bishop

Tames L Schad administrator of the Camden diocese was =ong citizens honored here foT their efforts in furthering the interests of the Negro comshymunity

Bishop Schad who has been active in community action projects such as the War on Poverty committees was pre sented a scroll during a proshygram sponsored by the Tenth Street Baptist church here in observance of the 43rd annual Negro History Week This year marks the first time a Romaa Catholic prelate has been so honored

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17 Oppose Church Clergy Participation in Politics

By Jsgr George G Higgins

The New RepubJic-whIch in this writers judgment W one CYl the be3t of Ameriros weekly journals of opinion especially hl it3 arovezoage cfcurrent economic and political developments----thinks that the time has com~ for anti shyVietnam clergymen aul1ayshy Be that as it maY I am ioshymen to translate tu1eir cVZl clined to think that the editors m0r81 indignation oveuror Vietshy of the French periodical Inforshynam into effective political mations Catholique InternashyDction inasmuch as this is the tionales make considerably only way to effect long-term more sense than the editors cOf ehanges in the The New Republic 011 this issue policies of this of clerical involvement in the country So far so-called politics of peace as laymen are Though they are vigorously concerned this and unqualifiedly opposed ~il

would seem to tW war in Vietnam and like be a self - evishy tWeditors ()f The New Repubshydent proposition li( clearly recognize that the L1s perfectly establishment of leace in the obvious t hat world is a political problem concerned layshy which calls for the active mshymen ou~ht to volvement ofChcistians as ~-en

translate their as all other men of good will moral indi~nashy they do not think that themiddot tion over Vietnam - or any cleJgy who are responsible foy other significant issue of public the unity of the Church should policy-into effecti-re poiiticltll be expected to take on the role

of party politiciansaction Given the fact that their pubshySound Tradition

lication ~CI has been oJe 01 tileOn the other hnd I aJl Evt most outspoken European critics

sure understandthat I fully or of U S involvement in Vietnam completely agree vitb The New and one of the most vigorousRepublic when it says that fue advocates middotof a politics of peaceclergy ought tncv likewise their warning against the parshy

Traditionally a the NR itself ticipation of the clergy in parshypvints out the clergy-in this tisan politics is highly signifi shycountry at least - have rnied cant and deserves to be taken amy from such participation very seriously (Christians and

AJJ a long-time subscriher to the Struggle ior Peaee InforshyT~2 New Republic I had Dlshy mations Catholique Internashyways been under the imp~ssio~ tionales Jan 15 1965)that its editors thought that en Fl lialgs lrindplebalance this was a sound tradishy

Those American Catholicstion Apparently lwweer I was who may happen to have a speshy

cial interest in the pros and consmistaken in this regard fora of this highly controversial issuerecent Nell Republic editorial will also want to read whatnoten with satisfaction that Hans Kung has to say about itAJlerican clerGYmen now apshy

pear to be ready in large numshy in his forthcoming bookThe Churchbers to get involved at a preshy

cinct level and to play C1l Father Kung has lectured exshyactivist role in both parties tensively throughout the United (Clergy in Politics The New SUItes in recent years and is

currently with us again as a visshyRepublic Feb 17 1968) iting professor at Union Theoshy

QuestioIS Meaning logical Seminary in New York What does this mean in pracshy Seen in the light of the Gosshy

tical terma Does it mean that pel le writes in his new book ministers rabbis and priests the relntionshipof the Church should endorse ltor oppose) parshy to the world contains only one ticular candic1ates fqr politiell essential aspect its ministry 10 office starting at the precinct the world level Does it mean that they Ministry does not mean raisshythemselves should run for ofshy ing ones voice or putting an -oar flee if only as a last reiort in all secular qIes1ions middotof ecoshy

If so does it also mean that nomic political sodaI middotcultural other clergymen should run artistic and scientific life against them if they happen to T1e Churchclmnot solve disagree with what they stand the greJt problems of the ()rld for Or does it mean toot only neiih2r the problell1of hunger those clergymen who are anti shy nor that of the populaticn nor Administration should get inshy that of war nor thlt oanonFmshyT-olved at a precinct leel and ity of power Dor that -of race play an activist role within hatred What the Church both parties can do can be expressed quite

Sicnifieani WarnlDI simply in one phrase it must I have raised these questions exist for the world

lot to make light of The New ACrefS With lFTK1mgRepublics editorial CD the subshyject under discussion but Anyone who hal ever baG the merely to BUggest that clerical pleasure of meeting Faiher involvement ill partisan politics Kung middotor is familiar wi1bhis over the issue of Vietnam is at writings will know witheut best a rather tricky business being told that be is not a hawk and will almost inevitably lead and that he is cot advocating to certain consequences which a policy of Christian withdrawal upon further reflection even the from the world editors of The New Republie middotOn the eontrary be stroniJy might eonceivably wish tc foreshy favors lhe all-ltltit involvement tall of Christians in temporal affairs

and notably iii the ~lities Of peace

To Speak in Boston Nevertheless be does net Rev Anthony T Padovano think that the institutienal

Church-and its clerical minisshySTD theology professor at ters-should pretend that theyImmaculate Conception Semishy

nary Darlington N J will speak have all the answers tc the problems of the worldia the Christian Culture lecture

aries sponsored by the Paulist And neither eoes be thinkshyFathers at 815 Wednesday night if I read him correctly-that tbe March 6 in John Hancock Ha)) clergy in ~ exeTeise of their Boston Tickets are available mission of peace should get inshyfrom 5 Park Street Boston volved in partisan jl)olities Nor 02108 do L

WOKS LIKE FUN Yes but listen to what it requires The Georgetown University erew keeps in s-hape with ~

AM ~i~enies in the gym foHow~ by a two-niile run UJl and do-Wll Observatory Hil~on tJhecampus Its cold up there said Dave Harris a member of the lightweifht crew but by then youlewtired you do-nt care NC Phottgt

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 ~ 968

Prayer for Peace To Cm(O)se Games

MEXICO CITY (NC) - All ecumenical prR)er for peaCf) service is being planned for the end of the 19th Olympic Gam~

here next October The sponsor of the service w shy

the Ecumenical Commission fcrr Religious Services (ECRS) fe the Olympic Games The comshymission is composed of 73 ChrisshytiRn and Jewish leaders in thi~

city Promment spiritual leadshyers will be invited to speak

At middot8 meeting here the rn ECRS spiritual leaders discusse~

the facilities for athletes and visitors to attend their varioU7J reUgious services

iI1be iMC)Cican government hw aPPI)o~ed ECRS plans for the ~ction of at least tw- JaIige bullclings as nondenonYshynational chapels

The original pIlan toeonstrl1ell one large church has been IcHsshytlarded The present plan is build one large building with no religious I)rnamentllJtion of alltl7 kind on the outskirts of the Olympic Villa and a similar Oilif)

on tne outskirts of the Olympze

Project InterracialInterfaith Cooperation Cultural Villa

tin (Re~~(Jtion of CcUege m addition Archbishop MEshymiddotgut Dario MirlllDda y Gomez Gl

1I1IAMI (NC)~When Florida The Rev Edward T Graham Mexico City hBs authorizeQ Memorial College predominant a Baptist minister key person downtown Catholic churches to ly Negro middotliberal arts school is behind the project has had asshy permit non-Catholic services = moved here frOl1l St Augustine sistance from Mrs Athalie their premises if non-Catholie and opens next September the Range Miamis first NeglO City comgregations should request i project will be the result of unshy Commissoioner who is a Cathshyusual interracial and interfaith olic teamwork Organhzet3 rOthEHSIl

The largest single contribll shyNegroeswhites and Chinese tiou of private funds has oome flainirt~ ClI1ter

have joined hands with Cathoshy from a supermarket executive lLOUISVILLE (NC) - TkeIlics Protestants and Jews tv M Austin Davis a Methodist Franciscan Conventional OrdGcontribute money time advice laiamis Catholic Bishop Coleshy has opened a Brothers Trainincand leadership to realize the

manF Carroll is a member vl1 Center here in an attempt to givedevelopment of the college on l the advisory board as is Maushy Brothers three years of active$10 million complex here rice Ferre diocese of Miami lay apostolic work following theirr leader novitiate

RabbiIrving Lehrman presshy Father Sebastian Cunnil1flshyCouncil Seores ident cd the Greater Miami ham OFM director of tlw Rabbinical Association a n 4ll OOlilter said We felt we haCFactory Closing Jewish lay leaders are amoag an cbligation to give our man

LONDON (NC-The impend- active workers oome training outside contam ing elosingof a large industricl $ bull $ an idea of what was neeclshyJilseph Rodriguez of the plant has been criticized by ~ edfromthem in the outside Puerto Rican Democratic ChEb lay -eouncil of Our Lady Of _rl11 In the past he addeeurohas prepared 11 scholarship PieshyGrace parish in southeast Lsnshy we were not fWfilling ~ gram for -the collegedCD DeedS 1d ~veryoneliturgy

The council expressed its deep concern at the recent No Comlmentclosure of factories in middotthis area Completean4 in particular of the impendshy VATICAN (orry (NC)-Ibe ing shutdown of the Associ2ted Vatican had no comment -oJ1 11

ElectricaIIndustries (AEI) plant repolt that ~hbishop Agostincgt BANKING Casaroli secretary for extraershyIt callid upon the governmeJrt dinary ecclesiastical affairs ilf SERVICEand the -ehaiTmanof the oomshy the Papal Secretariat of statepany torevsrse the decision 10 eonterred with Dlembers of ~

c~ don the plant because Of tor BristOl CountyN-orth Vietnamese missi-on iJJthe middotmoral religious and 5Ocial Parisjn lJanuarylt n JUWWampleffeets iCaiJS2a by the ~veshythat Archbishop Casaroli Wallmen1 a1popl1ation absent from the Vatican fOll

Copies ltOf the councils motion several days nlenUy BrjstoICounty were sent 1amp Prime ~1inister

Harold Wilson MiJiister of Trust Company Labor RayJ Gunter President ampf the Board of Trade Douglas Sturteant (

TAUNTO~ MASSJay and company officials iHoOkAlthough the councils action was a surprise to the pastel Ed 1897 IIHE BANJ(ONFather Joseph seally AA ~ uiltl~rs SUppJies JAUNTONGRHNprist sroa that he agreed ith it ftll3 Purchase Street Member 01 Feileral ~

Faiher 8enlly sait[ centbert Aellad iNew Bedford IDsuranee CorporaamptoDJlOt~cteil p01itiealand elaquolshy 996-5661 nomic motions to eome from the council but pointed out You cannot separate Feligimtl from eveJ~ay life

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968 Capacity Audience at Holy Name Parish ~ihss

My Consciesect1ce Discusses The J)etached Americans In Educ~tion Continued from Page One

Do we care -for knowledge

what happens to other people Why do we strive for college educations or for money Are we so anxious to confor~l1 that we never dare to PITTSBURGH

tMrI

~VJI and it must be understood in a

t mear-cu way

A person following his ~con-~ence must be sincere He cannot play games with his mind but must be honest with himself

A person foilowing his con~ liCience must be correct It iSl10t ugh that he sincerely beshy~ Reves that something is good or evil-he must be sure that hiS judgement is a correct one

agrees with Gods view of the matter

Sometimes people make misshytakes in judgement-honest misshytakes to be sure but mistakes iwnetheless The oft-quoted exshyample is that of the African savshyrage deep in the jungle who may be sincerely following his con- ooience when it tells him to kill omd eat his enemy His conshyscience is a sincere one But it~ Is a mistaken one since it does IIlOt agree with Gods Will He ond every person must c~m-

liitantly review his judgements to lbe sure that they are correct ones and riot sincere mistaken Utes

A person following his conshy3Cience must be certain He can not act with doubt or uncertainshy~ about the rightness or wrong- mess of an act since he would be Announces Prize acting with the willingness to

takea cpance on being wrong For Best Plan ~ offendi~g God and this is aever~ validmiddot If there is uncer- PITTSinJRqH (NC)-Bishop t8inty the person must seek aid John J Wright of middotPittsburgh III arriving at a sure and correct haS annoutc~d il priz~ of$IOOOtor professor ina p1inor semshy tudgementmiddot - formiddot the architect who submitsmiddoth be I f - inary chapiainof a school dishyThe Christian acts with amiddotcon- ~ e st p an or a Jliljgtr renoshy ocesan chancellor and finally

lllilence ~rned by the prlnciples vation of the sanctuary of St vicar general tilChrlst This is where tliEi Pa~l~ cath~middot~al_h~remiddot~T~~e ~om- The P6pe a~o nam~d Father

aturchsteachers the Pope Iiiid P~tit~o~ IS ~p~nmiddot ~omiddotal archJtec~ Bienvenido TudtiJdto be auxil- a message toAfrica and a mes ishops ~nfer middotthe pi~ture to wl~hlD ~e bound~~l~~s~f the iary bishop of Dumaguete in the sage ~lling for peaCe

Illelp men make judgementsmiddot thatmiddot lire guided by Christ Sometimes ~ese j~dge~eptsgo a~intitmiddotnat-middot lIIIa1 inclinations and tendencies md this has always been thedif-

~ti~ty of ~ing a Christian-- Ghrist demands much of His llmiddotowmiddotmiddotermiddots middot IIIU

At present Catholics are askshyiDg tlie Pope to make a morai judgement about birth control d especlmiddotallymiddot the PlmiddotUmiddot Some_lire castigating him for not givshy g a qulck declslon or else they lliie telling people to forget about llrim and to make their own adgeme tsmiddot th ttmiddot w- n m e ma er The Pope in order to make a ilecision must make it on the basis of facts Scientists must provide him with the facts and In this matter there is much that k~epinglVith the general lin~s sition in favor I)f open housing complex The Pope has asked and is still asking theologians to evaluate the scientific facts in 4he light of Christian principles Not all moral issues are simple And then the Pope will apply the principles to the facts and 1ril1 make a decision about the morality of the matter

This will guide the Catholic in fllorming his conscience -- in arshyriving at a judgement that is sipcere that is the correct orie at lS artmiddot d t d ce am JU gemen anthatmiddot is Christian

K of C Convention 51ated for Houston

lAN MARCOS (NC) The

1970 national convention of the ~ights of Columbus will be held in Houston it was an-Bounced here at a conference of Texas officers of the interna- _ tional fraternalorder

The announcement of the seshylection of Houston for the con- v~ntion which will be held in

be different These were among questions discussed by a capacity audience at the second in a series on Christian Morality sponsored by the parish council of Holy Name Church Fall River Sparked by Sisshy

John AIIcIa SUS Cter some 30 people from all parts of themiddot Diocese viewed the film The Detached Amerishycans then broke into small groups for buzz sessions

Thesis of the film was that Americans wont become in volved with each other It dra- matically pointed its message with the true story of Kitty

Genovese murdered on a New York Street while 38 of her neighbors watched ffom winshy

bull dowS-o--and did nothing Also depicted were amarried

couple talkingto each other with neither really listening a student going thriugh school as on an assembly line with his sole goal the position he could

hope for as a college graduate and various other examples of non-involvement

What is life worth if we do not give it away questioned Harry Reasoner at the end of the film The Holy Name audishyence agreed that life sbould be

used for others but tended to feel that there wasnt the im-Personalitv in a smailer city

Jthat is found in a large metropshyolis One Sister countered howshyever with stories brought to

h t htschool by children s e aug This is right in Fall River she stressed Others cited examshypIes of personal involvement in affaIrs of others but agreed that much more could and

Pope I~aul Names Two Aluxiliaries VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VImiddot hail named Msgr Jose T Sanchez to be auxiliary bishop of Caceres in the Philipshypines He takes the titular See of Lesvi

Msgr 5anlhez was vicar genshyeral of Legazpi at the time of his nomination

He was born March 17 1920 atPandan in the Legazpi dioshycese He completed his philoshysophical and ordinary theologishycal studies at the diocesan semshyinary and obtained a licentiate in theology at the University of St Thomas in Manila He was ordained Marc~ 12 1946 and then worked as an assistant passhy

Pltts~urgpchap~er9rmiddottl~e Afner- ~ Philippines Father Tudtud who Pope Paul also delivered 264 ~can -Inst~tUtofAlth~te~ts was36ye~~I)]fat ~hcent time ~fsPeeches bull (~~)_(h~ch mclud~~ ~tIePoit~- his noniinatiOJl studied philos- burgb dlO~es~and three adJa-ophy and theology at St Johns

c~nt countIes SeminarY inmiddotBoston Fath~r roseph P- Larkin He was born March 22 1931

eOm~ission chaiIm~nmiddot ili1(I-a at Mabola inmiddotthe Cebu arch~ member of the diQcesan bU~lll- diocese He worked as assistant - bullbull

iIg commissligtn~ said the pur- pastor Editor ltit Cebus Caiholic pose of thereiiovlition is to pro weekl~ and finally pastor of the ville a ~mQte suitable sanctu- Church of thE Blessed Sacrashy

ary setting fof the liturgical re- inent in Cebu In addition atf orms Qrought into beingmiddot by the time of his nomination he Vatican Council II was vice-superior of the Misshy

Father Lmiddotai-kir said because slon Society of the Philippines the cathedral must architectu-middot r~lly and liturgically allow for Issues Sttement both episcopal mdparish ser-- U

vices ~~any structurai cihimge O H R h offers a unique chalienge to the n umalu ig ts designer~ and provision for the LA CROSSE (NC)-Tbe La

new liturgy must be made in Crosse diocese has taken a poshy

and spirit 01 the existing struc- integrated arid ildequate educashy t4re tion fair employment and the

- defense of the rights of minorshyities

Christians and J~ws Bishop Frederick W Frekshying of the Wisconsin diocese

Honor Clergymen and the diocesan central com-NEW YORK (NC)-Clergy- mission approvedmiddot apmiddot officiai

men from thefour major faiths statem~nt titled Human Reshyhave been honored here by the lations in the Diocese of La National Coiuerence of Chris- Crosse

tians anltt Jews The statement was prepared

the third week of August was the practice has spread middotto a made by Dr Josepb G Murphy number of other cities hesaid of La Marque a member of the interrelgious understanding hasmiddot boara- of- directors fortbe Cathprogressed tremendously middotiIi reshyeticmiddot meDs oganization middotc~nhyearsbull

-

Tbe clergymeri cited for by the subcommission of human relations of the diocesan cornshycourageous leadership in intershymissionon social action and apshy

creedal relations were proved by both before submisshy Rev Dr ~ohn C Bennett sion to the central commissiollll

president of Union Theological ) in January Seminary

Father Robert I Gannon SJ president emeritus of Fordham CONRAD SEGUIN University

Bishop Silas of the GreekOrshy BODY COJMPANY thodox archdiocese of Nortb and Aluminum or Steel South America 944 Countr Street

Samuel D Leisdorf New NEW BEDFORD MASSYork philanthropist pointed out

wy 2-6618that the NCCJ firstmiddot honored reshyligious leaders of four faiths in September -1966 Noting that

should be done by individuals parishes and municipaiities

There were no solutions ofshyfered to the problems posed bythe film We dont expect to have answers to these quesshytions warned Sister John Alicia at the beginning of the program They are too big for us The film WltlS strictly on the

human level and this was pointed out in one group No one can solve all problems it was agreed but surely each Christian canmiddot trust the Holy Spirit to lead him to the probshylems he is equipped to do someshything about no matter how small

There was another point on whichmiddot everyohe in the audience was in enthusiastic agreement that there be more such eveshynings as the one sponsored by Holllgt Namemiddot

Vatmiddotn Report~lIo

Continued from Page One two encyclicals The Developshymiddotment of Peoples and Priestly Celshyibacy four motu proprios inshyeluding one creating central a lay council and the Papal Comshymission on International Justice anp Peace and another restorshying the permanerit diacol1ate treeapostolic constitutions inshyelUding one reshaping the

Churchs c~iitral administlatioii two apostolic exhortations one apostolic letter and 78 other Wessagesmiddotand letterS inclQding

He reeeived eight ehiets Of state including U SPresident Lyndon B Johnson and United Nations Secretary General U T~ant and gave 16 audiences to

th lmiddottmiddot I0 er men 10 ~ 1 lca life in cluding U SVi~ President Hushy~rt H Humphrey Republican presidential hopeful Richard M N d N Ixon an ew Yorks Sen Robert F Kennedy

He received visits from four delegations of Orthodox churCh men including Orthodox Ecushymenicai Patriarcp Athenagoras I of Constantinople besides visit shying Patriarch Athenagoras in ~ tanbul

The book covering last yearli activities of the Holy See conshysists of 1680 pages plus about 2(10 photographs

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SolvcnorlCln Center WlllCOnaln 53061

Bishop John J Wright hasestablished a committee 1Jl)take a complete look at Oaampshy

olie education in the PittsburpD lOcese

The aim is fc dedde wha~ 1shyd t to tak tbe ~

lrec Ion e Dedecade for the best education of

all Catholics young and oldThe committee will evaluate all present Catholic educationshygrade and high schools eo egesConfraternity of Christian Doeshytrine classes adult education and other programs

The surveyors wiU 117 to deshyvise a plan based oa mstinl and potential resources in facll-Hies funds and Staff to guide the dioceses educational efforlll for the next 10 years or more

May Be FaI-lleaehiDg Among ideas eXpected to be

examined in the evaluation are proposals by some to cut back on Catholic schools or even til phase them out in place of an expanded adult education proshygram

Named head of the committee of educators priests and lay professionals is Father Vernon Gallagher CSSp former presishy

deht of Duquesne University here now serving as an official of the Holy Childhood Associashytion He also is a former proshyvincial of the Holy Gbost Fa~ ers eastern province

The committee Will be emshypowered to call before it di shyocesan officials to hold publlc meetingshire staff ~ring in exshyperts ThedioCege will finance the work

The committee Win make spe- eific recommendations to BishoP Wright after the study which 18 expected to take at least a yearbull

-Results are expected to have ~ar-reaching implicatiou fOr Catholic education here

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Two Unbeoten league Play f1fE ANCHOR-Diocese oTtall River-Ihurs feb 29 1968 19

Coach Says Sault Complete BallPlayerCape Cods NausetCompiles SMTB Playmaker Is Former Coyle $trBest Over-All Court Mark

BY JOE MIRANDA By PETER BARTEK

An excellent hall handler and Norton High Coach team player Is how Pat Sault of

Taunton is described by his Eleven of tile 12 aa-ea e1ubs with the best records in coach Phil Wetterland of the

their respective leagues are among those who will parshy Sou the a s t ern Massachu- setts Technogical Institute Inshyticipate in the March Tech basketball tournament in Boston stitute in North DartmouthFairhaven High of the Oapeway Conference and Nauset Sault a 19-year old freshman

of the Cape amp Island loop are is a former Coyle High hoopshythe only all-winning league a single league game while two ster who played four years for

went doWn to defeat In every the Warriors his final two underaggregations from this area encounter In which they were coach Jim Lanagan on the varshyin the Hub championship Involved Almost two-thirds 02 sityelimination tourney while Dartshy the Southeastern Mass teams

D)Quth High is the only one of Teaching CareerfinIshed wIth a 500 average OIlthe tOp dozen better Although young Pat has al shya 70 per cent coQlbines WIth

WIth 12 triumphs in the Cape ready made plans for the future league record amp Island competition Nauset which Include finishing his edshywhich failed to Regional also achieved the best ucation and pursuing a teachershyqualify an inshy over-all record winning 16 of coaching career dication t hat 11 encounters The Cape Cod Sault has not yet chosen a non-league school will be shooting for the major in college but according competition selshy Class D Tech title to his parents he is very much dom jeopardizes interested in teaching historyNew Bedford High 15 and and coaching They feel he willthe ultImate one in the Greater Boston Subshy be good at both as he alwaysgoal of most urban league finished with anschools Actual- Peter devoted his spare time to helpshy

over-all 17-2 mark for the Winshyly 311 per cent Bartek ing the younger neighborhoodter The Crimsons 937 average boys understand athletics moreof the 35 Southeastern Massashy captured its leagues pennant flag thoroughlychusetts school teamsmiddot have The Crimson Whalers are now Pat is the oldest son of Mrqualified for the Tech title play poised to annex the No 1 State and Mrs Charles A Sault and)let none managed an over-all honor by clinching the top one of four children A sisterundefeated season ranking Class A division in the Annette is a senior at BishopThree area clubs failed to win Boston title tourney Cassidy High James Michael

and Cheryl grammar school Representatives in Three B~ackets students at Mulcahey Schoof in

Taunton Fairhaven and Holy Family FamilYhas been eliminated in The family resides at 85 Mershy

HIgh of New Bedford aiming the Lawrence Catholic tourney rill Avenue In Taunton and are for the Class C Tech crown both Southeastern Mass does not members of St Pauls Parish fInished wIth an over-all 16-2 have one club among the Tech

Wetterland Commentsmark The latter Is still smart- Class B participants but th~re ing from its cliff-hanging defeat will be five area combinations Wetterland was high in his at the hands of Xavier in the -includIng Fairhaven and Holy praise of his five foot 11 inch State Catholic tourney Bill Family-in the Class C play and guard who tips the scales at Walshs two-pointer from the three-including Nauset-in the 160 pounds ~ssesses good speed floor which many thought Class D Hub competition and is a key in the Corsairs fast

meant victory at Lawrence was The other Class C contestants break offense nu1llfied by a travelling viola- patterns when SMTI is wurkshy a rest he should be in top conshySault lllsed strictly with thetion which cost the loss ofthe are Case High of Swansea Nar- iilg too quickly and making dition for the 1968-69 campaignvarsity was gaining valuablebasket resulting in a one-~Jnt ry co-champions Oliver Ames Dlistakes Sault gaIned his court savvy1 f tb of North Easton runners-up in experience and developing rapshy

The SMTI mentor continued from Lanagan at Coyle wheretiOs~~ e Narragnnsett~a~ theHockomock circuit and Den- bUy whep a knee Injury slowed he iii the complete ball player hemiddotstarted in his juJ)ior and senshyDis-Yarmouth of Cape Cod see his progress midway through

Durfee of Fall RIver and ond pI fi ish in tho C the campaiiPt but Wetterland noting that he can shoot but is Jor lieasons and was a Vital co Bishop Stang mgh of North ace n er e ape most --content setting Up his in the Warriors successduring DartmQutb are the other two middotNausetwill be joined by Mar- has turned in some excellent efshy teammates for easy pblnts He Ioth years I J

way loop said despite the handicap Pat

Is a team player and always sacshy As ~ Coyle High fr~hmanarea Class A representatives inmiddot thas VIneyard and Norton mib forts in a most successful SMTI rifices himself to help the club Pat was a member XJtb~ yearshythe Tecb toutnament ~e Fall in the Class D bracket The season

Sault possesses a good atti shy lings h09P team and al~Q~ parti shyRiver Hilltoppers willbe out Islanders finished second to Naushy Defensively Sault is cnitshytude is a tough competitor and cipated in track By hihSOphoshyto make amends for their nose- set in the Cape amp Island league standIng Offensively Sault is one of the players Wetterland is more year Saultcopfjned his dive finish in the Bristol COUl)ty while Norton was second in the the teams playmaker ana quarshyeounting on 1to help SMTI gain athlettc talents to basketbjlll andloop whIle Stang ~ke Ho17 Tri~Valley Conference terback 8Dlall college recognition in the turned in a cODlJPenlla))le acshyfuture Teallll Player coun~ o~ himself

Ifere~s How They Did hi LiBogue Play Played for Lanagan Sault also represented stWetterland said his outstandshyThere is doubt about his the hardwood

he following are the league 21 Bishop Feehan 7_1 ing worth to the Corsairs comes no Pauls on in the eourage said the Corsairs skipshy Taunton CYO and in the annual from the fact that he can slowrecords of the 35 Southeastem Msgr Coyle 7-1 after painful knee Easter tournament He playeddown the offense and set up per even a

Mass teams Ta~ton 7-7 injury Sault continued to jpve four years of Litue JeagueM N B Vocational 6-8 his all and attended every pracshy Baseball and one season in theK of C Masons1 Fairhaven 14-0 25 DIman Vocational 5-9 tice The injury has slowed him Pony League prior to ~ntetmamp

Nauset 12-0 Msgr Prevost 5-9 visibly but after the season and Coyle Higa 3 New Bedford 15-1 27 SandwIch 4-8 To Cooperate4 Holy Family 13-1 28 Nantucket 3-9

NOTRE DAME (NC) - lfashyCase 13-1 29 Old Rochester 4-10

30 tlonal leadellS of the Scottish6 Oliver Ames 12-2 West~rt 3-11 Bite Masons and the Knights ~oll another7 Marthas Vineyard ~ 31 Barnstable 2-12

of Columbus anno~ced memshy8 Bishop Stang 10~ 32 Dighton-Rehoboth 1-13 strike on~rs of their organizations wU1Dartmouth 104 33 Bourne 0-14 work together on domestic andDennis-Yarmouth 10-4 Chatham 0-12 the enerlY international problems faciolaquoDurfee 10-1 North AUleJooro 1-14

the nation12 Norton 105 you get George A Newbury soveshy13 Attleboro 9-5 Minister Officiates reign grand commander 01 from14 Harwich 7-5

Scottish Rite Masons In theProvIncetown 7-5 a slice ofDn Cathclic Church northern jurisdiction of the US18 Seekonk 8-6 MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-A Lu- and John W McDevitt supremeSomerset 86

theran mInister officiated at the knight of the Knights of ColumshyFalmouth 8-6 marriage of his son in Holy Cross bus made the announcementMansfield 8-6 Catholic church here at a dinner here s~nsoredWareham 8-6

Married were James H Graf jointly by the Masonic Lodge 29 L th and the Knights of Columbus

a u eran and CalTon Ann council in South Bend Episcopalian Rite Gutwinski 25 a Catholic The ceremony was rformed - Both praised the work of Fa-MINNEAPOLIS (NC)- Archshy ther John A OBrien of the

bishop Leo Binz and Coadjutor Grapoundfs fltthell the Rev Paul L University of Notre Dame for Archbishop ~ PY1)1e of the Graf pastor of Holy Trinity r better understanding among the Cafllolic archdIoceses of St Paul theran church two groups Minneapolis were present in the Permission for the Rev Gmt Father Theodore M Hesshysan~lary of St Marks Episcoshy to officiate at his sonB wedding burgh CSC president of the pal cathedral here for the inshy was granted by theSacred Con- University of Notre Dame said stallation of Bishop Philip F gregation for the Joctrine of This nIght marks a great step McNarry as coadjutor bishop of the Faitlh inl lWme in answer to ll forward and reflects the new the Epi6copal diocese of Minneshy J)etition by Archbishop Leo BiDz ~enical spirit which is unishysota of~ ~~-M~eapotis iing ~ople long separated-

PAT SAULT

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bull THE ANCHOR Dayton University Thurs Feb 29 196a Brief Religious on Ecumenism

Selects Advisors SOUTH ORANGE (NC) meanitigful dialogue should not tended not to lead to compro- DAYTON (NC)-An ll-mem-

Named resident Some 1000 mms and Brothers be confused with monologueshy mise but to conyergence ber advisory board of six stushyservfng in tli~ Newark archdi~shy or confrontation He added We talk now of our common dents two faculty members andSANTA CLARA (NC)-The cese were briefed on the basic we must be willing to be pershy belilefs he said not to com- three representatives of theboard of trustees of the Univershy principles of ecumenism in a suaded-we need an open mind promise each others faith but in community has been establishedlllity of Santa Clara has named program sponsored by the Newshy to seek out the truth wherever the hope that at some point in for the Office of Human Relashylrather Thomas D Terry SJ ark Archdiocese Commission for it might be shy the future we will converge tions at the University oJ Dayshy35th president of the Jesuit unishy Ecumenical Affairs

Ifersity Father Terry who sucshy Discussing the difficulties of As an example he pointed to tornSpeakers at the session ineeeds Father Patrick Donohoe establishing Christian-Jewish the wide divergence of views The board under the direcshySeton Hall University includeSJ recently appointed Califorshy dialogue he said we Christians regarding (he Mass and the Eu- tion of Charles Hirt director ofDr Leonard Swidler of Templeaia provinCial af the Society of are responsible for 2000 years charist that existed between the Office of Human RelationsUniversity Philadelphia aridJIesus has been academic vic~ of anti-Semitism and now_ we Martin Luther and the Council will be responsible for estabshyFather Thomas M McFadden ofpresident af Loyola University must overcome our mutual disshy of Trent Then he cited the re- lishing policy making programthe Brooklyn dioceseLos Angeles for the last year trust before dialogue can be cent statement on the Eucharist recommendations helping to

lllI1d a half Previous to that Swidler said dialogue with fruitful issued by Lutherans and Catho- alleviate campus racial probshyIIlIather Terry was dean of the others must be preceded by an lics to show how much closer lems and drawing up proposall ltWllege of arts and sciences at examination of Catholic attishy Father McFadden said diashy the two bodies have come since for implementation Santa Clara tudes In addition he said a logue among Christians is inshy that time

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Page 3: 02.29.68

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Catholic Educational Association Document Backs School System

WASHINGTON (NC)-A docshy the document emphasizes- the ument prepared from the recshy importance of the present Cathshyommendations of a high level olic school system despite preshyIIIYDlposium on Catholic educashy lJYDPDsium fears that some parshytion held here underscores the ticipants might advocate shutshycommitment of the Catholic ting down the present structure ehurch to maintaining its vast Nearly all symposium partici shyparochial school system pants were in accord with the

Despite calls by some Catholic general trend - if not all the mtics for a dismantling of the particulars - of the document eatholic school system the docshy according to Father Koob al shyument states that The Church though four participants chose will always maintain an insti shy to disassociate themselves from tutional base for educational it service an enduring but flexshy Among them were Auxiliary ible structure by which to place Bishop Mark J Hurley of San ber resources at the service of Francisco and author Mary Pershytoeiety kins Ryan-for widely differing

The document takes note of reasons Criticisms of the parochial Father Koob cited a remarkshyIIChools - including the charge able par a 11 e I between the that their operation puts a disshy NCEA document and the stateshyproportionate amount of money ment on education issued by the and manpower at the service of American bishops at their 1967 less than 50 per cent of Catholic annual meeting in Washington students-but concludes that it The bishops called Catholic eleshywould be premature to urge mentary and secondary schools massive redeployment of Cathshy indispensable and said we olic educational resources into will 010 our part to continue Dew patterns of Christian edushy improve and strengthen these mtion schools

Objective Studies The statement acknowledges

however the evident need for Urges Community well designed programs of reshysearch and experiment aimed at Fair E~ployment obtaining reliable data to guide PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Thedecisions about the most proshy initiative of John Cardinalductive use of resources Krols Commission on HumanThese studies should be scishy Relations in urging developmententific and objective should of a community fair employshyhave reasonable financial and ment practices program was apshypersonnel support and should proved unanimously by Philashybe guided by previously stated delphias 25-member Council ofcriteria of success it says Priests

The document is based on the The group representing diocshyrecommendations of more than esan and religious communities100 Catholic and non-Catholic of prjests of the Philadelphiaeducators writers representashy archdiocese voted after hearingtives of private agencies and a report by MsgrJohn J Noonegovernment officials who took archdiOcesan chancellor and a p~rt in a symposium on Catho- council member lic education sponsored here last Outlining the background ofFall by the National Catholic Project EQuality a CathollcshyEducational Association (NCEA) spOruored program designed tomiddot

Its reco~endatlons were use the Churchs employment~ade public in a preliminary power to influence employmentctraft last November and the practices Msgr Noone s81d the most noticeable difference in commission on human relations ~ definitive edi~ text Is a had recommended a governmentreduction in size according to agency check companies On fair a t he r C Albert Koob employment practices checkOPraem ellecutive secretary of their compliance with fair emshytile NCEA ployment norms and inform Remarkable Paraller purchasing glOUps - iJlcludingAt a press conference called the Church-about the fair emshyto pUb~icize the report Father ployment record of companiesKoob called the document a with which they do business Istoric one which highlighted Our commission Msgrbull basic unity of goals among Noone told the council of prieststhose interested in Catholic edshy had hoped that it might be aaeation total community effort He said it wan significant that A preliminar) proposal has

already been made public byCatholic Conference city officials he said and has been called the PhiladelphiaScores State Policy Plan

HARRISBURG (NC) - The The Philadelphia MsgrPennsylvania Catholic Confershy Noone explained is essentially ence publicly criticized Pennsylshy Project Equality except that vaninas new family planning the proposal is being impleshyprogram for persons on relief mented under secular rather

In a statement the PeC called than under religious auspicesthe new welfare policy an effort to implement population control Relief Unit SendsIlmong the poor

Putting the program to such Vaccine to Egyptuse the PCC statement deshy ROME (NC)-Carltas Intershyclared represents one of its nationalis has collected 100000WQrst dangers-the danger that units of anti-German measles the state will start by guiding Yaccine for use in Egypt some groups or classes to birth The medical assistance was limitations to select those it deshy asked by Archbishop Lino Zashysires to see propagated nim the Apostolic Delegate to

In this connection the stateshy the United Arab Republic in ment continued we are In full Cairo Thanks to assistance fromsympathy with the views reshy tile Holy See and Caritas organshycently expressed by the National Izations in France GermanyAssociation for the Advancement Switzerland and Holland an of Colored People concerning efshy initial shipment of 50000 units forts to push birth control among was sent in January and an addishyNegroes tional 50000 units in late Febru

aryCatholic Relief The prelate asked the worldshySYDNEY (NC) - Australian wide Catholic relief body for

Catholics contributed nearly help because of an epidemic of $400000 in 1967 to ald poor measles in Egypt ~he Egyptian eountries This sum supported 80 government middothas warmly welshylief projects which benefited comed the assistance of CarUM bull ~llion persona InternatioQalii and ~e ~oq See

SOURCE OF SOLACE ~i8 Chaplain Comfo~ing a wounded Marine awaiting evacuation from Hue Vietnam may be praying or looking liP in hope of sighting the helishycopter thatwill take his patient to a hospital Neither man is identified NC Photo

Drop to 364 Cleveland Bishop Issenmann Asks Hierarchy To Help Stem Catholic Magazine Decline NEW YORK (NC)-An appeal tension minus 145 and Sign

has been made to each U S minus 81 Bishop asking cooperation to While secular publications forestall the decline plaguing are growing Catholic magazines Catholic magazines are declining Bishop Issenshy

mann emphasized in his plea to The plea of Bishop Clarence each Bishop for concrete c0shy

G Issenmann of Cleveland operation by taking some acshychairman of the Press Departshy tion to halt the decline ment U S Catholic Conference

that 1967-68 Catholic Press Directory decline in the Catholic magazine field

underscores the bullbullbullbull GRACIA BROSshowing a continuing loss of

publications and circulation Excavating

From a high of 473 Catholic magazines in 1961 the new dishy Contractors rectory shQws only 364 Catholic magazines today Bishop Issenshy 9 CROSS ST FAIRHAVEfif mann has observed Despite the fact ot a growing population WYman 2middot4862 and expanding economy Cathshy ~~bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullyybullbullbull

olic magazines between 1957shy1967 lost 4634888 circulations

Notes Secular Gains

BishOp Issenmann supported his appeal by quoting statistics from the Audit Bureau of Cirshyculation indicating the trend of the top six Catholic publications in circulation The figures show the percentage gain or loss ~f

1966 over 1965 as follows

Columbia plus 08 Our Sunday Visitor minus 14 Young Catholic Messenger minus 43

C~~ho1ic Digest J1hinUampI6 Ex-

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968

Churchmen Ease StudentTension

SANTO DOMINGO (NC) shySanto Domingos apostolic adshyministrator and the charge d shyaffaires at the apostolic nunciashyture here have intervened to ease tensions at the University of Santo Domingo following a threatened clash between unishyversity students and military forces

The administrator Bishop Hugo Polenco Brito and the nunciatures Msgr Gian Vincenshyzo Moreni negotiated a settleshyment between student leaders and military authorities after student annoyance at a proposed cut in the university budget led to picketing outside the countrys presidential palace

The settlement calls for two hundred of the demonstrations leaders to go home in return for an army promise that none of the demonstrators will be arshyrested

The cooling-off period proshyvided by the settlement may be even more important than it appears since some observers here report that the army frusshytrated in its attempts to break up the student demonstration threatened to turn on the govshyernment

Tension at the university has been running high because of the financial question and beshycause of the growing influence of left-wing students

A student government elecshytion at the beginning of FebrushyaiT gave 60 per cent of the votes for student body representativel to members of a leftist group running on a platform devoted 10 fighting Yankee imperialshyism

Nam~ Change COVINGTON (NC) - Villa

Madonna College here wiU change the name of the institushytion to Thomas More College The anno~ncement made bF Bishop Richard H Ackerman chairman of the board of trusshytees and Bishop of the Covingshyton diocese said the change wiD be effective June 15 next

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 Former Nun - Explains Reasons F~r Leaving Maryknoll Sisterspraises ~Robert Speaight~s WASHINGTON (NC)-MilrYshy men I feel I have now an iampshyknoll has ask~d me to leave beshy creased capacity to love cause I am involved in guerrila When I was asked to leaveBIograpl1y of fr$ Tei~hGirdl activities And yet by this inshy Guatemala because of our activshy

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kctnn12dy volvement I am trying to live ities I was not surprised I hatll up to my ideals and to what my already risked that in my decishyPierre- reilhaxd de ChMdin died in New Yorkmiddot City conscience demands of me Sisshy sion to work for a basic fundashy

on Easter- Sunday 1955~ His funeral wok place at St~ ter Marian Peter a former mental change in the social Ignatiils ~huleh two clays later There was a Tow Mass Maryknoll nun explained in a order that would ultimately in the presence of but a handful of people Buriat was t(l)middot letter to friends in the Maryshy provide justice and peace to the

knoll order main bulk of the populationbe at St Andrewrs Novitiate Sister- Marian Peter along Sister Marian Peter said

on the Hudson But the ~An element of pantheism couId with six other Catholic missionshy She ahributed the inability of

be~ discernedi in them Teilhaidground was s-tiU too hard for aries was asked to leave Guateshy the powers-that-be to undershyheld that only tmougll assis~Dgtg mala in December because ofthe digging of a grave The the world to its fulfiHment did involvement with the gucrillainterment had to wait foc a one came to Christ the head of movementgentler season When finally it all creatrOD

wa s possible With Father Thomas R Mel- Strangely for a palaeontolo-middot no m Our n er ville 37 to whom she is reshygist Tcilhard had little histori wftnessed i 1J portedly married and biscal sense and was UttIe interestmiddot Tllese facts aremiddot brother Father Arthur Melville _ ed in the past He loeked eOD- presentedin tIte 34 she defied orders to returnfidently joyfirlIy 00 the- fnture

to Maryknoll headquarters infinai paTagmlpll For him progress was inevit shyof Robert Speshy Ossining N Y and went inshyable and linea11~ He calledi for aightSmiddotTneLiife stead to Mexico after leavinga new Cllristianity forrmiddotthe- new of 1iei1hard de Guatemalaage andi a new spirituaIitl MeGONJIGAL In her letter dated Jan 2lVChardin CHalTshy Not SlTstematicmiddot and published here by the

Moreover his thought basp(ll and Row

Washington Post Sister Marian been ehallactel1ized as nat rl2al~

49l E 33rd St Jfesuit (hoploin Peter confirmed the fact thatNJew Y olIk ly a system of thaught but 8ltN Y 10016 she is married but did not name way of felling He was intuitive$8501) It is wrdmiddot to beliele ililed illTh Hue her husband believed to be the and mystical Toe idiom futthat so obscure and lonely an former Maryknoll priest ThomasHUE (NC) -- A Jesuit priestwlrich he wrote was rrhapsodic R Melvilleend wasmiddot the lot of a man who who eouldint stay away fromratlhell than coldly rationalin the 13_years since his dea~ The Maryknoll order has 20-his boys in the front lines- And what he said was sohas become so celebrated a fig nounced that the three are noClrossedmiddot the Perfume Riverintoacutely personal trliat it was obshyuee a thinker among the most longer members of our societythe bitter frghting around thesellVecE that it coufcr bemiddot prroperly influential of the present censhy and also stated that if reportsImperial Cittadel of this old proshyunderstood only by MOWing ofthe marriage between the nuntur~ vlnciaL capital and died therehirp (heDce the impoutance af aWhat we forget is that Teil shy and priest were true the couplewith a snipers bullet in hissound sensitive biegpaphy)hard had been in exile fOl 30 would be automatically excomshyfClIreheadIi the light of all tmS it isyears priOl to his death that municated from the CatholicThe priesi Father (Maj)scarcely surpuising that Tenhis- books were published only ChurchAloysius P MI~onigal of thehard had troubles with eccesi-middotposthumous1y risuits Maryland province Grateful- to Maryknollastical censos AJad it should IleMr Speaight has attemped badgered higher offkers to let In her letter Si6ter Mariannoted that scientists teo lookedthe diHicult task of combining him go to the front when he Peter explained that she had notaskance at his comiddotntentfons -Hean account of Teilharfs life rejected the ideal~ of Maryshylearned that a Marine unit wasspoke- of mystical sciencewith a hiStory of the developshy fiighting withollt a chaplain knoll I am grateful to the timethe science of Christ runningment of his thought as set out With permission given relucshy and training and friendship ][through all thiJngs as tithe onlyin his writings In the main he tantly Father McGonigal himshy lived in Maryknoll I am evensCience that really mattersismiddot successful self an Army chaplain then now the product of a sincereThis was bound to IDe suspect

Accepted ElOlution mDved into the combat zone facing up to what the deals I FiroJIlJ Rnme Restraint there acquired and -reinforced

Whiremiddot preparing for and after demand of me As anyone who has struggled His body was found in the

_with leilhards books knows rubble of Hue his _unbrokenattainiJilgmiddot illl 1922 his doctorate She continued For somehis thought defies easy compreshy glasses nearby at the Sorlbonne he taug)lt athensiom or summary Mr Speshy J1ather McGonigal a native of time I had begun to question the Institut Catholique He left Philadelphia was serving his the validity of many customsaight ha~middot made a laliantr effoet in 1923 for his first trip to that I found weighty and legalshyto give not onl an outline of it sewnd lnitch as an Army chapshyChina an expedition of geolo- istic and impending in the waybut alsm to trace its stagesmiddot arid lal n when he was killed Orshygical and paIaentologicalJ dis-shyfurther to examine it critically dained a Jesuit priest in 1953 of life of a Religious covel1Y Teilhancl wasmiddot born in 1881 in he had served as prefect of 1 particularly rejected the

He was to spend the gl1eater the Puuvengpe reg~on of France studies at Gonzaga High School apartness that it breeds between part of the remainder of histhe fourtru of 11 children oK a in Washington D C and taught the Religio~s and the peoplelife in China and very littlefamily which regarded nhe at Loyola High School in Balshy she should be one of Povshyof it in France There would al shyCatholic faith as itsmiddot most pre-middot timore He was Jinishing studies ertyparticularly bothered me so be stays in Africa lndi3 Jashycious possession amp 3J boy heshy fo) a doctoratamp at Georgetown We vowed and pretended to be

showed keen curiosity about va and the United States with UdveEsity when he reentered poor and we lived like the rich one brief visit to Rome in 1948 and mixed with th~m and arethe natunal vlon1dJ especially the service in June 1966

Me was not unknown instones and minerals He was of their friends Rome In fact there was an exshycourse to become a- pioneering Now I am tru1ypoor I have

geologist and pa1aentologist tensive dossier Gil h1m at the no security I am at the servicedQI~Y even liberally interpretedHoly Office As early as 19241 of the poorHe entered 3J Jesuit school iDl Extreme caution was celtainlyhe had IDen de~atedi to Rome- fO1 The 38-year-old former misshy1892 and ingt 1899l oecame 31 in order~his views on original siJm lFliom sionary explained that chastityJesuit novice His ordination to Rome came repeatedgt resirF3ints Excellent Likeness had also ceased to be meaningfulthemiddot priesthood took place inJ i1~ 1933 for example a pnohibishy At the same time one eanshy to her I wanted ttl love 3001911 Meanwhile in Iiis ~ears tioD inJ his accepting any ampfficia1 not but regret the manner in to love hUmanly The way weor preparution he had mOleltLmiddot posi tiOtb WI Parris in 1940bull a pliCgt-middot which it was exercised Teil shy were designed tfgt love ahoub fnOIll one Jesuit Iiouse to hib1tiOlL in his padicupation in hald sfloulQi na1e been given I foond that my wve fer a maJIanother in the isIand of fursey aOJ intel1poundctuaL congpess iIlJ New every opportunity ta explain lived fully has only made ~ in Egypt and in EngIandl AlIshy York in 1954 a pnohllb11liolll Olll and defend his ideas Aflony- more sensitive to the love ampf

read~ liemiddot haell takern up sciclltipoundi1 his writing a work of apoloshy mOtlS defation al~d reeeurolUlse1essresearch and already some of getics in reply to lcl1taiB scishy repression arrc ullworthy at deshythe main concenns oJ his life entists fenders ojj the truthwere eudent for example his Attractive Iinpressiille F01bidding Feilharcd to pubshylove of the universe and his acshyThese restraints caused Teil- lisfl may have b~n a gFievousceptance of evolution

hard great suffering He subshy mistakemiddot eveA in the interests of BewHifering Teacher mitted to tnem but prilately orthodoxy- For the publicatian

Asmiddot a resuit fie was engaged questioned their wisdom anell duxing his lifetime of books in teaching and as a teachei legitimacy Ee- neverrmiddot thought wlifch appeared only after bis he could be rather bewildering of leaving themiddot Chllllch and al shy d~a~h WOtltd have subjected bis He was in military service though he sometimes speculatedl views middotto dgorous criticfsm and throughout World War I (1914- as to the advisability at leaving prollably have compeUed him 1918) Elaquo waslt often in the fnont the Society of Jesus he always to- modr1iy and refine them lines attend~hgmiddot the wounded conclUded that his place was in atr Speaight is to be- com but it wal l)oth1 in) the fUlly and the society mended for an c~xceneAt likeshyin the lulls of the- conflict that Teilliaxd is an a ttracti ve pershy nes of an i-ntelrirgible synopsis his ideas ubout man and the sonality and an impressive one of his doctniJne aDd for an evenshyuniverse oegan to be formushy as Mr Speaight portrasl him handed appraisal of a controshylated 0ne cannot but be symoJj)athetic venliali Sttlgt~ eel

Durihg tfie war Ie wrote 13 with him as the restmiddotnictions laid essays which sougpt to tear upon him aremiddot recitceJ Aad ene away thc mask of atheism f~om admires his seurorupulous sub- VitcennaRSbullhgt Meet thesegt new lUIlrents ~ft thought mission to aullhollity Jlilll Bl1ten lialltlclJl1arr Counui~ and expose them as Christian~ But onc cann otJ condemn ampilcletYi of 511 VillceEl1i de- Paul

The crisis of Modernism was Church aUUltonWes out of handmiddot willI hold its moJLtIaJiy meeting then ver~ recent and the essays in this case Ueilhards hyposhy in st llatmicks Sclreol han 0Iil QJaduced misgjlihgs in somemiddot of theses are~ymiddot no mcans unshy Slade Street following Benedic- I1eilhardJs superiors WeIll they challengable They are novel t1on of the Most lBlessed Sacrashymight have They d iffe red from and daring They aJe oliten nGt ment in the upper church ~

conventional recei ved views readily reconcilable with outho- 745 Tllesday nimiddotght

BEfoRE YOU BUY -TRY

PARK MOTORS OLDSMOBilE

bull Oldsmobile-Peugot-Renoub 17 IfidiIIe StreetFllrtravea

stand the guerilla activities of(

the missionaries to a depenshydency that comes from too many interests that blinds people io the simplicity and nakedness of truth

Terrific Contrast

She stated When I came tJI) Guatemala in 1954 I came filled with the ideal of telling people Christs message of love A1l 1I became more and more familia~

with the situation in the countTY 1 became aware of a terrific contrast between the haves anell the have-nots those who are well-off satisfying their conshysciences on the one hand while using cheap manpower to mainshytain their wealth and position those who are poor sinking furshyther and further into a fatalism an undignified conformism 3IIl inhuman existence

When she concluded that gueshyrilla activity was the only way in which a state of justice can be reached she said she haell to take that road or else reject my conscience blind myseif anell become a hypocrite hiding beshyhind the easy facade of a woman dedicated to God

I liave become a woman dedicated to humanity and i~

loving men even to the degree of being willing to die for men I am loving God more truly more directly than ever

Sister Marian Peter who signed herself Margie for hell pre-Maryknoll name of Marshyjorie Bradford concluded Th~reis a revolution beginning lD CIvic soclety as well as in the Church The vanguard of any movement is fraught with danshyger personal danger and the danger of losing ones way but when the time comes to march we cannot be cowardly and hold back Circumstances have put us in the vanguard and we must march

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5 THE ANCHOR-Dominicans Plan Thurs feb 29 1968Sisters a1f Rose Hawtllorne Lathrop HomeChapter Meeting To Continue Care of Incurable Patients Urges Catholics In Chicago

CHICAGO (NC)-A JeDshy By Patricia McGowan Aid Immjgrants 9mJl ohapter meeting of the ~rldwide Order of Preachshyem (Dominicans) has been sdteduled tentatively to open Aug 20 at the Aquinas Institute euroJf Philosophy Dominican house Ilif ll~udies in suburban Rivet 1JGrest

Officials of the Dominicans a Albert the Great (Chica~)

province said Faiher Aniceto Wemandez OP Do min i can master general and his 12shymember cabinet from Rome 8lJ weUl as the heads of 40 Domin Qcan provinces throughout the IIVorld will attend the sessionll which may last until November

The general chapter is the lhft for the Dominicans since ilhe close of Vatican Council n lJ win be only the second timemiddot

flm the 760-year history of the Jl)ominicans that a general chapshytell is held in the United States

llhe Chicago officials esti shymated more than 100 delegates wm attend It was announced flnat each provincial will be acshyltrompanied by an expert in some ~se of Scripture theology jhilosophy or canon law

The Chicago officials said unshyamp2r the rules adopted by Vati shycun Council II the chapter has lnlthority to rewrite the DominshybSIll constitutions and make oweeping changes which could affect the lives and works of Qrz 10000 Dominican priests cmd Brothers in the world

The Chicago officials called Me scheduling of the chapter in t1ilre United States a symbolic ~reakthrough of recognition br American influence among ~e Dominicans

lZlIperimentall lLegnsnll~finn

Copies of the Final Report a1 the two-and-one-half year ceH-study of the midwest DoshylJlinicans-reported last Fall were distributed to provincialD OOld experts attending last Sepshy~bers preparatory meetings bll Rome and influenced their ~ecision to convene at River orest

Findings of the Chicago provshylzJrtes self-study are reflected in iilrst drafts of new experimental TIeglslation for the order being ~epared by a 28-man internashyilional commission for debate at ~ chapter

Spokesmen for the Chicago province indicate considerable Glecentralization of the orders government and apostolate as -the probable outcome of the ehapter with debate expected ~ center on specific areas of Ilmiformity or diversity

1 recent worldwide poll of Dominican sentiment shows Il

iOOffimon desire for a few realshyllstie laws and abolishing of arshychaic forms Specific proposals IO far have been most progresshypoundliye in tODe it was stated

Catholic Magazine Seized at Airport

SANTO DOMINGO (NC) ~

eopies of a Catholic magazine published in Uruguay have 1lleeIIl seized in the airport cusshytoms office here on the grounda Ibat they contain subversive material

Three packages eontainin[f OO copies of the January issue of Vispera published in MonteshyYideo by the Uruguayan brancll of Pax Romana international Catholic organization 01 stushy6entlgt and intellectuals were barred from delivery at tile Idiport

Various articles praising ErshyIleSW (Che) Guevara the Cuban communist leader killed ill (lUerrilla fighting in BoliVia Were said to have caused the ~scaUon

Visiting the Rose Hawthorne Lathrop Home in Fall River liist week wag the Mother General of the Dominican Sistern staffing the institution She is brisk ~nergetic Mother Mary Elizabeth who makes her headqualrters at the Hawthorne NY motberhouse of the community Once or twice yearly Mother Elizabeth makes the rounds of the seven homes operated by the Sisshyters an for the same purpose - the service of patients with incurable cancer She admits puzzlement at the situshyation in Fall River In Atlanta St Paul Cleveland Philadelshyphia and New York the Sisters homes are filled to capacity and usually have waiting lists of pashytients In Fall River tlle Rose Hawthorne Home has not been fiHed for several years

J1t isnt unfoMunately that cancer is on the decrease There seem ~ be several reasons for the low admission rate here One in some ways reflects favorably on New Englanders They seem less willing than people in other parts of the country to delegate flo others the care of infirm and aged parents and grandparents who make up the bulk of the homes patients although there are no age requirements

They are proud and the old people are proud said one obshyserver They dont want to acshycept help

- Not Always Good Thi3 isnt alwa~s a good atshy

titude however It can result in elderly people rllceiving poor care through lack of knowledge or fucilities in the home

Another reason for the patient lack might be the larger number of nursing homes in the New Enshygland area Another could 00 lack of public knowledge of the services the home stands ready to provide Still another say some is the full name of the Sisters Servants of Relief for Incurable Cancer

Today the name strikes a chill but in 1896 when the community was founded by Rose Hawthorne Lathrop daughter of Nathaniel Hawthorne it lit a beacon of hope for the suffering poor who had literally no place to go when striken with what was then reshygarded as a contagioUls disease

Now pointed out Mother Elizshyabeth patients have Medicare

Usually when they come flo the Sisters they are much sicker than they used to be having exhausted the resources Of modshyern medicine for treatment ampnell alleviation of cancer

They have usually exhausted their Medicare allowances too thus meeting the Sisters reshyquirement that their patients have no financial resources Cancer can be a long drawn out illness said -Mother Elizashybeth and use up all the savings of even a prosperous person

HaV0n of Peace Certainly if it were general1r

known what the Rose Hawshythorne Home offers it would be overrun with paUents as it WWl

A$k lPub~ic Hearings OIl1 Church Matters

BROOKLYN (NC)-A fOUllshyperson ad hoc committee has obtalnoo the signatures of 50 laymen priests and nUDS from

the Brooklyn diocese w a stateshyment calling on Church authorshyiti~ ~ hold pubUe hearinglJ onimportant Church affairs bull eluding selection of bishops T~ signers d tnle statemeDt

nncUllIl1ied Sol lay persons 24 ~riesta and two Sistem

There are approximately 1000 I)riests 5000 nuns and Brothers and 16 million laymen m tbe diocese llf Brooklyllho

_________~Llt _ VISITS EIORJE Sister Palll OP left and Mother

Mary Elizabeth OP view GOmmemorwtive plaque in cllapel of Rose Hawthorne Lathrop Home Fall River Sister Paul is superior at home Motlle Mary Elioobeth i3 mothezo genshyeral of the Dominican Sisters Servants of ReHef for Inshycurable Cancer She visited Fall River institution last week

in 1932 when it was founded at Sisters are one family she sumshythe urgent request of 1plusmne late =led up Bishop Cassidy Then there were Many patients worry about occupied beds even in the hall shy paying us said a Sister I al shyways today there are many empshy ways tell them You are paying ty beds in wards and private with your suffering Just pray rooms ~OT usmiddottt

We find that patients often Asked about dxanges the SisshyJive longer than the doctors had ters might make in their work expected when they come to in line with the renewal Us said Mother Elizabeth We Mother Elizabe1lh said she didnt think its because all thepreashy expect her communitys apostoshymires are removed They know tte ro change much There are that they wont have to leave w l2j professed Sisters in the comshyafter a certain number of days munitYshe said andshe has on We say to them TWs is Yillgtur hand many unfilled reltluests home you can stay as long as llrom bishops for the Sisters to you want The patient and the work in their Dioceses

80 the Sisters woork win reshy

r ~

Iv

- main that envisioned by Rose Hawthorne La1ihrop After all Love is -lot love whicb alteIS -when it alteration finds

Mothell Mary Elizabeth OP

SYDNEY (NC)-A statement on immigraticn aimed at enshycouraging Catholics to a wider acceptance of their duties toward immigrants was issued here by th~ Federal Catholic Immigrashytion Committee -of the Austrashylian Bishops Conference to be read in all cllulches on Immishygration Sundar

The statement said that Ausshytralia is failing to attract and keep immigrants An official inquiry it acJdetl indicated that psychological and social diffi shyculties rather than material and economic considerations influshyenced the departure of immishygrants

The statement called for a personal inquiry seeking to reshyveal whether our at tit u de toward newcomelS is one of inshydifference or even of hostility whether we lend support to the erecting of barriers against the legitimate economic and social aspirations of migrants whethshyer in fine we neglect our duty as Catholics as citizens of welshycoming and helping others of fulfilling our religious and soshycial obligations toward newshycomers

The statement quoted AustroshyIan Minister of Immigration BM Sneddon saying If we beshylieve Australia has 0 destiny and that destiny is linked with population then each of us has a duty to assist wherever pOSlt sible and become involved pershysonally with immigration ami migrants

Noting that immigration conshytributes lo the economy of a country the Catholic statemen~

stressed however that migrants are not to be valued simply ~

tools of production but as pershysons In the mind of the Church the whole process of migration is part of the matter of hum~n

redemption in a preparation fo-r life eternal

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~--6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 291968

Women and the Postconciliar Church

Someone recently figured out that in the Catholic Ohurch today over fifty per c~t af its members are women These loyal followers of Christ are for the most part the victims of a subtle but very effective discrimination In theory of course the church grants equal rights for men and women In the Vatican Councils DOCUMENT ON THE CHURCH IN THE WORLD TODAY we read

With respect to the fundamental rights of the person every type of discrimination whether soshycial or cultural whether based on sex race color social condition language or religion is to be overshycome and eradicated as contrary to Gods intent

m theory the teaching is a fine piece af legislation In practice the question is simply ignored

Women may not be ordained Women are barred from officiating formally in the liturgy Their wice in church affairs is all but silenced A women is not allowed to serve Mass She may not functiol) as a lector If there are women in the parish choir-- they are more or less toleraJted only beshyeause there are not enough small boys or grown men in the parish available for the job

Father Johannes Neumann professor of Canon Law at the Universitr of Tubingen in Germany recently stated

A boy not even capable of fluent reading is adshymitted to the altar but an educated woman who could do a much better job is excluded as though only males were the children of God

The sam~ is true about parish choirs Women are easier to recruit more eager to sing and with few exceptions they

make a better noise than men Yet we still retain a cershytain nostalgia for the cult af the boy choir or the all Ilale choir as th~ summum bonum in litllrgical excellence

Ordination for women may well become one of the big issues in the c6ming years It may sound strange -to us--middot a woman functioning as a priest Yet however we may 0pshy

pose it we must admit that theologians have never put up a convincing case agdinst it It is also significantto note that the International Coniressof the Laimiddotty passed a resoshylution on the subject when it metmiddot in Rome last October

The principal objection to the ordination of women win not be so much theological as one of prejudice The tradition of the male priesthood is a long one and rooted deeply in the souls of Catholics Granted the priesthltgtltgtd is not on the immediatemiddot horizon for Catholic women However there are indications that the dimiddotaconate is certainly within their grasp Many European theologians argue that this Could

become a reality in two or three years This would mean that women could carry out such functions as preaching

distributing the Eucharist and burying the dead Already in certain circumstances women have been given permisshysionto distribute holy communion The Oblate Sisters of the Sacred Heart in Northern Alberta hav~ been allowed to do so since December 1966 when no priest is available The same is true in parts of Africa and South America

Truly these are excitipg times and exhilerating times All of us must be prepared fur more changes within the framework of the church Some we will welcome others will repell us The Churchs immediate task as always is to build up the people of God to meet the challenge of the day One positive way is to help in removing some of the anomalies that exist between laymen and laywomet

rhmiddotmiddotANCBOR e

OIIrll NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL IPVEI

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall Riv~

410 Highland Avenue

Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Ete Re~ Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P D~iscoll

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

the moolQlnq Rev John f Moore St Josephs Taunton

Why AILilfJg Hof Smmer t

Fe(QHf ~ litD Arson Murder DeWillEm] o$mtfive Contribution

Television commentators are warning the public Radio announcers m~e reaching the state of alarm The Federal

Government is preparing troops to meet the crisis Irrationshyill mdicals are whipping themselves into shape An are

waiting to face a promise of ~1 long hot Summer of civil tion to help the situation To

continuously hammer negativeriot and racial upheaval The and pessimistic fears into thetensions of this upheaval -is spirit of a nervous public only

already present Stokely Carshy creates a greater spirit of unrestmichael and Rap Brown have Suspicion and doubt are theachieved their goal They have sole frUit of such a policySl)wn lhe seeds of national fear America can certainly avoidFear of not fear of arson and such a diet fl~ar of murdEr are promised

American cities come the wann Added to this caldron of conshyweather This radic~ fonn of fusion we are now exposed to urban renewal will tear apart the rabble rousing antics of Dl ore cities of this country than llome so-called civil rights any fleet of cranes and bull shy leaders who dance to the tuneduzers of Hanoi What trueancl laSting

The public nE~WS media -is not _benefit can commentators leapmaking any jKlsitive contribu- from this barvest ~f hate

011I1 Vultures of Doom Benefit We do not deJIJr that there are

b1 gots and bulliies in American 8Ociety These people are 88

Wi~ong as their despoti~ llberal counterparts NEither group bas elt)ntriQuted much to the totality fJIf Americana

Most Americans want to do lonething to hE~lp their fellow eoilDtrymen wh) are long-sufshyfeling from the efforts of racial pr~judice They want to secure th4~ equal rights and opportunishyties of their less fortunate countrymen Thill they should do this theymiddot must achieve But no in fear bloodshed and riot

We must face the realities of thE racial issue ill truth and sinshyceIHy Most of tlS have become distant and impe~vious to the

trieil and laments of the preaecl minority Some have intombed themselves in an urban isc)lati~ others have fled to the camoushyflage of suburbia The majoriv just do DOtwan~ to become IDshyWOlved

Yet we mustbull

The I~rice for o~r lack of eonshylaquo7~ mIght be rumed ~erican Clties and dead AmerIcan dti shyzens We WIll we learn that only the vultures of dQom benefit

from ~e carnage of middotour dty streets

Now is the time for positive actio~ now is the time for re- sponsIble leadershIp

The question-Will either be forth coming

Change of Laws On Abortion Div$ive

OTTAWA (NC)-A ffigni ficant relaxation of Canada~ abortion laws could result Em a serious division betweem Catholic and non-Catholic hOampa pitals the Catholic Hospital AIP sociation of Canada told a Ie islative committee

In a brief to the Standin(g Committee on Health and Wellshyfare the association also warneclt that the feared division betweeili the hospitals could spill over into Canadian society at large

Canadas Parliament is now considering a bill to broaden the grounds for abortion which ill part of a general revision of tile nations criminal code Introshyduction of the abortion measure in the middle of a parlimentary probe of the question has -

ready driven a wedge between the government and the Churda in Canada

Feb 27 Meeting The nations bishops cancene4

a scheduled appearance befoN the Health and Welfare Comshymittee and instead issued a sharp pastoral letter opposing the abortion changes Later the] agreed to appear at a hearing Feb 27

The Hospital Association briei warned that refusal by Catholie hospi tals to perform abortiON may result in the other hospishy

tals being largely devoted talgt what is frankly regarded by doctors as a distasteful kind ClI2 work with less time and facili shyties for the more satisfying laquol life-giving aspect of hospitall work

The Catholic Hospital Ass~

tion represents 300 institutionB which provide 35 per cent CIIf

Canadas hospital services This kind of division d

labor with the consenting hosshypitals getting all the abortion work and the dissenting hospishytals getting nothing but satisshyfying work would quite likelv lead to an ever-deepening rift between the two groups of hOampa pitals extending to the commushynities they jointly serve the brief warned

Increase Dissension In an obvious reference to tJw

nations sensitive relations beshytween French-speaking - and largely Catholic-and Englishshyspeaking-largely Protestant-shyCanadians the association a1s noted

This does not seem to be Eiii opportune time to introduce anshyother cause of deep dissension by moving rapidly towards legalizing a practice which Q

large section of Canadian s0cishyety-perhaps a majQrity-abshyhors as strictly immoral

Archbishop lakoyos At Detroit Meeting

DETROIT (He) - ArchbiAshyorgt lakovos one of the bull presidents of the World COund of Churches participated bull _ interfaith meeting while helNi

on a four day Yisit The Greek prelate W8$

eompanied by 10 OrthodOE bishops and members of thcI archdiocesan council composed of clergy andmiddot laymen from parts of the country Thismiddot couashycil top eccesiastical body air Greek Orthodox church met here for two days

While here Archbishop lakOoo vos met with Roman CathoHc Archbishop John F Deardon at Detroit Episcopal Bishop Richshy

ard Emrich of Michigan aDd Bishop Archie Crowley preslo dent of the metropolitan J)e troit Council of Churches ~

meeting took place follo~ bull Vespers service at the Assumpo tion Greek Orthodox churcIL

f I

PAUL BARTKIEWICZ KATHERINE BOLINGER M~CHAB CORNElL SUSAN FAOiEUi STAN f~ HOLY fAMILY DOMSNllAJt

THE

ANCHOR

SALUTES

n)$

S(~OO~

~~~II1~~~

JANET LAFOND MICHAEL LOWNEY JWI POISSON ST JOSEPH PREP COYlpound PREVOST

Catholics to Pray For Assembly

STOCKHOLM (NC)-A prayer lor the fourth general assembly elf the World Council of Churches (WCC) to be said at Masses in all Catholic churches and chapels this Spring has been eomposed by the ecumenical commission of the diocese of Stockholm at the request ~ Bishop John E Taylor OMI

It will be distributed together with the bishops pastoral letter for Lent to all the parishes of the diocese The WCC assembly will be held at Uppsala Sweden m July

The prayer is an appeal whether his project can For all those who noW are a practical reality

Ir~paring the general assemblY He de~ribedl the proposed of the World Council of institute as an educational proshy

tliurches in dppsala and now gram aimed primarily at the avshy are pa~nfcil~y slJffering from the erage mllfi ~d ~he Inde~Ptivi

1 WsunitymiddotofChrisUans legedio stimulate creative middotJ-h t 11middot b h h f thinking and acting both for

-1 a JI mem er c urc es 0 I J cooperat - ilie WCC lfiarptepare this gen- middoty~~nalilmiddot ma~ ~wtIi aridfor -~ can ~ii 1

eralllssemqIjr in a willingness the commol1 goodmiddot Fattier RIvers a member of middotto coop~rate ~ arid in an honest ~taina ~e~ormed by first tatemiddot the Cii~iimati -archdiocesa~li shy

ielirch fori the Will of God artlsts WIll be at middotthe heart of thmiddotinstitntes actiVity with the ~qat they Ul oen mmds may pUlipose of stllnuliltingmiddotpro-middot receIve ~h~ 1~splratlons of the

HOly SPUIt and follow them without fear

That we middotmiddotall by prayer and penance may participate in the preparations of this general asshysembly conscious of being linked by the same Baptism

That even we Catholics may laquorow in our understanding of the separated brethren that we together with them may become llWare of the throes of disunity and be strengthened in our will to work in a practical Wlq _

~

Proposes Institute of Little Imagination Would Benefit Services -

CINCINNATI (NC) Father Clarence Josepb Rivers who has won an international repushytation for his fresh approach to liturgical music said he hopes to spur creative thinking among millons througb a National 10shysUtute of Ritual and Drama

Recently returned from gradshyuate studies in liturgy at the C81tholic University of Paris Father Rivers has launched a feasibility study to determine within the next few months

become

found reflection upon tliatexshyperience is fto be stimulated and directed by especially trained educator - philosophersl he added

Closed Setting He said he envisions touring

companies as part of the overall plan but the usual institute program will ~e place in a closed setting he said makshying it something like a secular retreat

Another lISgeCt of the insti shytute Father Rivers said will be ita concern with adaptinl the

skills and techniques and ereashytivity of the performing arts to the needs of various kinds of ritual---secular as well as reli shygious

Asked abolilt secular rituals Father Rivers spoke of flagshyraisings Fourth oj July celebrashytions and cornerstone layings He sahll The existing secular rituals suffer from the same deshyfeds all the religious ones and need just as urgently the touch of artistic imagination and skills

In~ure Ref1Ie~t~n Father Rivers said the insti shy

tue s~ould be broadly humanishyt~ria~ not SplJ1cifically Je~-glO~S provIdmg a~ area 10

WhICh Jile()ple of yarlOus beliefs

llurgical commission saidmiddot the

PfJ~fes~or A~pointed -~e~I1i ofL~w School

PITTSBURGH (NC)-Professhysor Louis L Manderino has been appointed dean of Duqueme Universitys Law School here Father Henry J McAnulty C5 Sp university presidgtent 80shynounced lIhe appointment is effective immediately

Prof ManderinO a graduate of Harvard University Law School in 1954 has been -a memshyber ofmiddot the Duquesne Law Scbool faculty since 195amp

ROWD GAMACHE SHlRtlM JANICK MAUREEN KENNEY $1 ANTHORY MOUNT ST MAIf CASSIDY

gtpi81F Iilt ilt

JACQUEUNE ROBOI JAHU~E ROBERTSHAW PETERlYM WOJTUSZEWSII JpoundSlJS IlARY AampADEIft SHA-FAU RIVER SHA- FAIRHAVEN

Ritual Drama

proposed mstitote~ program would go much further than those of existing professional or amateur acting companies beshycause it will not only provide the experience which is to be the basis of reflection but it also will insure as far as it is hmnanly possible the reflecshytion the work of the institute is only half done when the cur lain falls

It will difiler from the amashyteur companies and certain

_Moral Re-armament programs he continued esp~ciilly in terms Of artistic standards I dont believe lh2 institute can function effectively without achieving tlte highest possibIe success in artistic standards tehurch-goers of an denomshy

inati9fls he added generaUy

recognize that their Sunday and Sabbath services could benefit from ir little imaginatioZl once in it vyhilli r-----------shybull JEREMIAH COHOLANmiddot

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State to Deny Aid To Large Families

LUCKNOW (NC)-The Uttar Pradesh state government here in India has decided to stop an govert1Illent concessions to famshyilies which have an additional child aiter the third one

The decision was taken in view of iii virtUal douampling of the states populatian--from 4a million in 19at to ga millionmiddot this year

The concessions to be withshydrawn presumably wiU include free treatment in governmmt hospila1s and allotment ~ waste lands

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THE ANCHORpiocese ~f Foil River---Thurs Feb 29 1968

European Tour Is Unlikely With New Travel Rules

By Mary Tinley Daly

Of all the role-playing the Head of the House and I have engaged in through the years the most recent ~ th8lt of- would-be European travellers This the year 1968 -rhe Year of the Monkey was to have seen us embark for foreign shores Ireland homeland of our forebears (would have been) mighty

helpful tooEngland a re-vimiddotsit for the Ginny our wardrobe consult shyHead of the House France

ant has been supervising theGermany and of course the clothing weve bought for theEternal City Spain and Greece past six months with an eye toperhaps if our easy packability convenientfeet and our washability and a mix-andshymoney held out match assortment o~ accessoriesAnd now this-shy for efficient travel Based on ~ h e proposed her own European experience of ~ax bi te on a couple of years ago GinnyiBternashy assures us such selection willU 0 n a I travel provide a minimum for totingSeems as though a maximum amount of space forweve been taxshy the pick-ups wed inevitablybitt e n pretty acquire on our journeybadly right here

the as ~truggle Now it seems theIn USA we bringshyonce more with IRS Form 1040 backs are down to next-toshy

Now some more of our $$$ to nothing A Iso day-by-day spending at this stage of the EX-CHAMP PREACHES LOVE Archie Moore formerhelp close that $21 billion travel

lap wilth a tax on American legislation seems based on an World light-heavy-weight champ who won a Freedoms intricate system full of loopshyspending outside _this hemi- Foundation award Feb 22 for conspicuous community sershyboles requiring an estimate ofaphere I voice in the civil rights field plays happily at home withtax liability on departu~e theWell its a wait-and-see propshy

h~8 own children Working with boys in underprivilegedmaking of a deposit and anotherOsition an aIr-dresSed-up-andshyreport pluspay-up on retUrn to areas Archie saymiddots he teachesthe lads to be constructiveIlO-Pla~eto-go feeling for us

lIS it is for many other armchair this country not destructive tao build not tear- down NC Photo travellers What we have not doncent yet-

Doml Homework and wont do unless the grand -----~

Oh weve been doing our bomework all right

Weve made lists of places we ~fpound~~~~~I~R~PMAR9J~p~1want to see in each country drivers license picture was badThe house is filled with travel folders travel magazines weve enough NEW SPRING COLORS become telephone pals with Bteamship and airline salesmen 113-Year-Old Aca~emy s much as I love color (anyshy April scene navy took a backoUr local library checks out

one who has ever visited my seat in the early sixties whenhooks in our name for all those Plans 69 Closing home or seen nile wearing the Jackie Kennedy made pink afaraway places with their glam- ROCHESTER (NC) ~ The m~ny bright shades that I adore must for all those who like toeur descriptions 113-year-old ~cademy Of the wnI agree with this) t must adshy feel that they are wearingWe have studied money rates Sacred Heart here will disconshy mi t this is going to be ~ grey whats in This season nothotel and transportation costs tinue operation after June 1969 flannel and navy Spring Oh only has navy returned in theinvestigated picking up a Officials announced reasonsshy thEre will be shades of shocking world of suits and daytime coatsVolkswagen Weve brushed up for closing were the mounting pirk high intensity yellow and it has become sophistic~tedon French going along with cost of education the inadeshy poison green upon the scene but enough to waltz into eveningThomas Hood quancy of present bUildings mostly in ac Jacques Tiffeau of TiffeauNever go to France unless the outlay needed to build and c e s S 0 r ies or and Busch has designed an ultray()U know the lingo If you do

maintain a school of the future playclothes For navy evening time dress that islike me you will repent by and the number of other cathoshy t hat special sleeveless and V-necked and ofjingo lic high schools in the area coat or that course wide belted Worn withWeve even learned basics in where openings are avlilable pearls it takes on all the dyshy0Italian and German such as be~utiful spring

namic quaiities that black hasshyThe academy is conducted byhow to order in restaurants For suB that could always had Because they lookthe Head of the House this the Religous of the Sacred tra vel as well so well with navy and grey themeans how to order pigs Heart of Jesus alolg the streets return of pearls is whats newknuckles sauerkraut UND beer of Ne~ York on the jewelry front for SpringJohnny has patiently demonshy Imiddot kO or the avenues and Summer The thirties influshyAutnoUize Pa Istan of Washingtonstrated perhaps for the hunshyence of the Bonnie and Clydedredth time just how to operate middot Ch the more con-LIturgy anges serrative colors are the stars flicker has brought back thehis camera which he will let us

take along LYALLPUR (NC)-Melbers Cne of the most elegant and long swinging chains of beads -of all Pakistans diocesan lilur- beautifully tailo1led suitsmiddot that I and nothing swings better than

Family Advisors gical commissions met here un- have viewed thus far in the long ropes of pearls-especially Markie who did her touring der the direction of Archbishop sealch for Spring clothes was a against navy or grey

on a budget and had a whee of Joseph M Cordeiro of Karachi maltilificent grey one by Gino a time so doing introduced us to discuss propolled liturgical Paoli Superbly tailored in a to her bi-ble Arthur From- changes in this country ricl knit material the smart mers invaluable Europe on Approved for experimental desi go was set off hy fresh $5 a Day with its practical use were two new baptismal touches of white guidelines based on first-hand rites in the Urdu limguage and Grey has always ~n a color dramaticallyexperience For instance who- a revised Urdu funeral rite thai I avoided like the plague ever would have thought of Authorized for publication was (ev~r since an experience with different8eeking inexpensive spotlessly the Punjabi version of the Can- a grey dress in eighth grade dean lodging in Italian con on of the Mass as well as an that made me look like an un vents Author Fro~mer gives Urdu edition 01- the Roman heaithy Corpse-of course that Sensational tastingnames addresses and prices 1ft missaL Was before eigh1lligirlS wore Hollywood Diet Breadduded also are Readers Sug Jilake-up)and I havent bought made from aestions helpful tips for vari- an item of grey 81)parel in years

places Youth in World Theme and years OIlS vegetable Boursl Markies own addenda will- Grey always seemed to beOfSpanish ~ial Work Your choice of color that looked good on someshy

vALLADoLJD (NC) ~ Offishy LIGHT or DARKCollege to ~ Admit Me cials of Spains ~nual Social redleads quite jiunior league one else-it was wonderful em

HollywoodIWeek have aimounced that r St Scholastica here in Minshy smad on white-skinned hrushy

DULUTH (NC)-The College on blondes and even looked Youth in the World will be Bakedby

the theme of the 17th week yournesota announced it will admit nett~s but since 1 failed to fan male students in 1969 ending planned for March 25-31 in this into any of these categories I Sunbeam

city56 years as a liberal arts colshy felt it was not for me This seashy Ballerlege exclusively for women Manuel Capelo Martinez Secshy son however the richness and Sister Mary Richard Boo colshy retary gener~l of the week said smaltnes of the grey shade deshylege president said the change We hope that the quiet atmoshy Signl may force IDe to change was made as a response to sphere of social week discussions my opinion - aidoo by some the needs of our time The basic will enable us to make some colorful makeup of course curriculum will remain the clear decisions about the many Navy RelmIlJIls IIame she said The college is problems of youth decisions Navy is the second color that eonducted by the Benedictme madein the light of the Churchs has returned to importance fornuns aocial teacJiingsmiddot Sprilig Always a must on Ule

Schools 10 Offer Sex Education

ROCHESTER (NC)-8ex edshyncathm will be integrated in tbe curriculum of 13 parochial schools of the Rochester diocese this Spring on an experimental basis

Father Daniel Brent assocllm d i 0 c e san superintendent at schools said the sex educatioD program will eventually be in effect throughout the 102 eleshymentary schools in the diocese

We are trying to create an attitude that sex is part of life and not a dark dirty secretmiddot Father Brent said

The classroom discussions will emphasize 1he family orientashytion of sex and parents will be asked to review topicswitln children before they are preshysented in the classroom hra added

Father Brent said the pro- gram ~lated to begin about April I will aim at developing respect for the opposite sex and the serious Qlbligations that go along with sex He emphasized the program will not constitute a separate course of study but will be integrated with other subjects and with sp07lJtanooUII questions as they arise

US Court to Hear Textbook ChaUenge

WASHINGTON (NC) - DIe U S Supreme Court has agreed to examine the constitutiorlality of a 1965 New York State law allowing the state to loan textshybooks to children in churchshyrelated schools

The law is being challenged by several local public school boardsln the state on the grounds that it violates the U So Constitutions First Amendment prohibition against establishshyment of religion

The New York law which was passedin 1965 and became effective in September 1966 aishylows the state to punhase textshyhooks and loan them to children in private schools - inclUding those operated by churches--iD graqes 7 through 12

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

9 Money-Eating House Puts Garde1n Needs in Shadle

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick Oh~ ~ Iye~rIlfor the return of Spring and an opporshy

innity to gel out of this D1Ollampter we can a house I cra1ll IOOr house a monster because it seems that it has an inshy8Qtiable appetite for money We recently fiIrlished OUlr second floor (whiClh took a year of

its about 6 above outside andplanning six months of on with the able assistance of a Mld off oonstruotion and 1mshy hardy Winter wind the weather believable sums of money) is urging us all to stay inside J(ow we must have 11 basement Its a perfect day to keep your IIOOm which ea1ls for more mess oven going and your kitchen a money filled with delectable smells

Now there are individuals rve been baking beans since have the desire and the early mom a container of

capacity to be handymen and brown bread is steaibing in a Cbere are those of us who deshy huge kettle OIl the top oJ1 themiddot pend on others to do their work jets and I just set a cinnamonshyI fall into the latter category filled Indian pudding into the -ad I am paying for it I am 80 oven along with the beans The tired of furring ceiling tile aromas are beginning to mingle Dghting fixtures floor tile sidshy and all seems right with the tog etc that I am half hoping world Chat everything comes to a Smalil Dinners lItandstill What appears to be

0

These dre2l1Y months of low the simplest job turns out to be temperatures and stay-homeiIbe most complicated involved days are the perfect time to eIll shyIlleSS imagin91ble tertain your friends X love

Plano Moving nothing more than planning a Take our piano Two years small dinner party for a few

ago we bought an old upright friends and look forward to a 110 that the children could bave couple of days of cooking and their piano lessons in the comshy planning The dinner menu fort of their own home without should be made out at least a baving to nui to my mothers week ahead of time (with pershyevery night to practice The haps a few alternatives in case piano is 11 five toot upright items you plan to serve are not JI~ch cost us 5 available at this moment in thia

When the movelll igtrolliht it area The last time I made a to the ~o~ they ~ere very dinner menu I planned to start careful not 10 hurt tb~ piano off with prosciutto and melon but they managea to sandwich (a delightful combination of Cbe back door scrape half the flavors) only to find out that all paper i~ the hallway and there wasnt a fresh melon avaDshydent the mo1ding wherever theJ able for 10Ve or mOll1ey anyshylraveled where in 1be city I1 you have

Now tbat we are planninl your menu made out befOIle yoa the basement we decided go grocery obopping you avoid put the pianio there where It the disheartening happening of would not be an eyesore and DI7 starting to make a dish only to wife and I would not have find you dont have all tllle ilnshylisten to our fledglings takinC middotgredienta tring into the musical world Desserts tbat rm going to

Simpler said than done One serve to guests are more ofteD mover on seeing the size of the than not the kind Ulat can be piano and the size of our bulkshy made the evening or day before bead said I hOpe you wont be and then thats one less item I offended if I tell you the truth -have to think about the cIay I would advise you to take an that Im going to entertain axe and break it up and bU7 Many desserts lend themselves yourself a new piano He didnt to early preparation and it gives marge for this advice but me a feeling of security to know neither did he move the piano I have one or two completed Now all we have to do is remove desserts already in my freezer n of the stairs in the bulkhead or relrigerator as the busy da~middot

ItO that the movers can drop of preparation begins the piano into the cellar enshy A timetable of projects for kance a job which will cost the day of y~ur ~inner party is ftnimagined amounts of money a great help and I even time I am half tempted to buy that eacb item on the menu SlO thatbullbull I know just when a certain dish

And so it goes Not so in the has to go into the oven AJlL prden where everything iii tbis pre-party preparation leaves lItraightforward and results are the evening free to enjoy yourather immediate Marilyn keeps guests and your own cookingmsisting that the day will come Of course in jolly old New Engshywhen we wont have to bleed bull land a blizzaro can mmr yoUII our bank account to feed our party plans but then your PurishyInsatiable monster but I dont tan adaptability can come to the believe it In the meantime I fore and you can either pack ~ll continue to budget infinishy everything in your Jlreezer for tesimal sums for the garden anotber evening or you and _ile the house is reconstructed your spouse can sit down to a

IN THE KITCHEN sumptuous repast Last weljlk because it was CorrectiD

Rbool vacation week we took Note In a S)taghett1l AUce tile children to the Science Mushy

recipe in the February l ADehorIIeWI1 in Boston As we wanshy two eaD5 l)f toaiato paste wendered among the wonders at

omittedman and his universe I paused Jl()POVEIRSbull moment in front of a case that

displayed a cut-away section of This is an easy but ~al

the earth during the Winter seashy looking quick-bread Contrary lIOn Chipmunk and fieldmouse to most peoples idea popoven IleBtled warmly in their cozy are espeCially easy to make anderground castles waiting for always bake mine in a very iUIe rigors of a blustery Winter badly darkened muffill1 pan to pass and I must admit that at perhaps this is the secret oil mtI Ibat instant I was a bit envious success of Mr Mouse and Mrs Chipshy 1 cup flour munk who could retire from the teaspoon salt hzen world with all its cares 3 eggs (beaten)

Most of us cant crawl into a 1 cup milk bole and hibernate when the 1 Tablespoon melted butter aorth winds blow but we caD 1) Melt the butter ancll set ~nd more time enjoying tile aside and put the greased mufshy

pleasures of our warm (on top fin pans in the oven ~ tAe ground) homeamp ~ a) MUt toueUler a1J1 the __

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968

Voters Approve Open Housing

FLINT (NC) - Flints voters have become the first in the nation to approve an open houSoo ing ordinance in a public refershyendum

The measure pushed strongly by Negro Mayor Floyd McCree and the local Council of Churches was passed by a 43-vote margin The unofficial tally was 20172 to 20129

The Flint City Council passed an open housing ordinance in 1967 but its opponents led by John Birch Society section leadshyer Gerald Spencer had no trouble in gathering 5000 signashytures on a petition to place the

issue before the voters The religious support of the

ordinance was organized by the local Council of Churches with which Catholic parishes coopshyerated Several sponsored pubshylic debates on the measure and more expressed support for it in parish bulletins

Recommends Elimnnating First Four Grades

SPOKANE (NC) - A special study committee here in theBans Sales State of Washington has recomshymended the gradual phasing outSpanish Tov~i~t Convention Forbids of the first four grades in some

diocesan schools and a totalSelling Churchs Artistic Treasures emphasis upward in religious

SEVILLE (NC)- Andalusia For some proof that their education Provincial Tourist Convention fear is valid came from a decishy The committee comp~sed of in a resolution announced at the SiOD to sell donations decorating eight diocesan educators and close of its meeting here has Zaragozas shrine to the Virgin headed by Father Michael emphasized that artistic treas- of Pilar Accumulating for ONeill diocesan superintendent urea- decorating the nations nearly 100 years many of the at education made its recomshychurches are the property of the gifts of the faithful are both mendations to Bishop Bernan people and maT not be sold by artistic and financial treasures J Topel of Spokane after study-Church officials without the ap- Proceeds from the sale of the ing education in the diocese proval of local civil authorities Pilar treasures will go to wbat since August 1967

Admitting that the cburches Zaragozas Archbishop Pedro Elimination of grades one are permanent depositories of Cantero Cuadrado described as through four would allow the nations art the resolution urgent social necessities schools to strengthen grades was aimed at Spanish churchshy five through eight - middle men who have proposed selling school-and offer increased edshyart treasures to finance social CRS Sends Penicillin ucational benefits to a greater action projects number of students at the sameFor Vietnam Casualties or less cost the committees IeshyThe combination of increased NEW YORK (NC) - Within port saidemph~sis on social justice and hours after being inforined thatchurch renovation resulting the Saigon airport was againfrom the liturgy decree of the in operation the U S CatholicSecond Vatican Council has led Offering YouRelief Services (CRS) shippedmany Spaniards to fear that the out by aid 100000 doses of fast shychurches would be denuded of 3 Savings P~ansaction penicillin for civllian casshyancient treasures ualties in Vietnam Home Financing

The penicillin is an urgent need in Vietnam and will be WARJMI~Plan Byzantine Rite used for the civllian casualties

Installation March 5 by the four Sisters who are on co-oprD4liVEthe CRS medical teams in thatPITTSBURGH (NC)-Bishop country Fulther shipments willStephen J Kocisko will be honshy BANKfollowored at a banquet here followshy 281 Main St Wareham Ma

ing his March 5 installation as The peniciUin was given to Telephone 295-2400Bishop of the Byzantine-rite dishy the CRS by the Catholic Medshy

BaDk-8U lIerfIa IftfIIMI ocese of Pittsburg ical Mission Boarcll

Speakers will include Archshybishop Luigi Raimondi Aposshytolic Delegate in the United States wbo will officiate at the

installation John Cardinal Krol of Philadelphia Bishop John J Wright of Pittsburgh and Msgr Edward V Rosack who has been apostolic ildmmistrator of the Byzantine-rite diocese of PitsQurgh

Bishop Kocisko succeedsArchshybishop Nicholas T Elko who reshyeigned as ordinary of the Pittsshyburgh diocese ill1 lOecember Bishop Kocisko has been head of the Byzantine diocese of Passhysillc and will continue as its administrator IIlDti a new bishshyop js named

maining ingredients anell then MOTHER PARKERSlldd the cooled butter 3) Beat the batter until it hl OLD FASHIONEDcompletely smooth 4) Fill the well-buttered pans

full Place in a 450middot degree DOUGHNUTS oven for 15 minutes Reduce heat to 350middot and continue bakshy Baked by your Sunbeam Baker ing 20 to 25 minutes

AWARD WINNERS Award winners at a Winter Carshynival sponsored by the Fall River area CYO are left Janice Feno Somerset High School named Miss Personality and right Carol Silvia Durfee High School carnival queen Holding trophies is Richard Lown Durfee High School carshynival co-chairman

AFamily Favorite

bullbull

THE ANCHOKshy10 Thurs Feb 29 1968

Urge Cergymen Attend Meltefring On Scfielrnce

WASHINGTON (NC)shyCatholic clergy throughout the country are being urged to attend the second annual conference on science for cler- gymem at the Oak Ridge (Tenn) Associated Universities Aug 5-16 in cooperation with Oak Ridge National Laboratory

The conference entitled The Impact of Science on Society is sponsored by the National Science Foundation and the Alshyfred P Sloan Foundation Purshypose of the conference is to proshyvide clergymen of all faiths with an understanding of the nature scope effects and trends

of contemporary science - parshyticularly nuclear science

Dr W W Grigorieff chairshyman of the conference said the conference series originated in the recognition that most clershygymen actively engaged in pas torat work have little training in and understanding of sci shyence but are confrOnted almost

daily with problems and deci aions arising from its implicashytions

Dr Grigorieff s~icj in an inter- view with NC Nevvs Service that experience gained through the 1967 conference indicated to the conference advisory comshymittee that religious leaders of all f~i ths not only need to be conversallt with the content and llOcial dynamics of science but also are extremely eager to take advantage of the opportunity to become more acquainted with modern science

The conference director stated that this year the conference will be open to some 90 parshyticipants-three times as many IllS attended the 1967 conference

He pointed out that Roman Catholic applications for last years conference were not nushymerous and said that those who had applied were for the most part overqualified - that is they possessed professional qualifications and advanced training in science The confershyence he emphasized is not pri shymarily for such specialists

Practicing Cnergy Dr Grigorieff stated that an

announcement has been sent to bishops of anlimber of dioceses

throughout -the country in air eHort to stimulate iriterest in the aims of the conference He added that an effort is also being made to contact diocesan priests senates

He explained that conference participants will be selected on a nationwide basis from appli shy

cants representing various reli shygious )lodies arid emphasized that the majority are expected to be praCticing clergy-those actively engaged in the minis- try rather than in teaching reshysearch etc

He said that a limited number of seminary educators deans heads of clergy-in-service and religious editorf will be acshycepted as observers

Speakers will include Dr William G Pollard executive director of Oak Ridge Associshyated Universities who is also an Episcopal priest associated with St Stephens Church Oak Ridge and the author of several books and Alvin M Weinberg director of Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Askeel to Withdraw MILWAUKEE (NC) - The

Milwaukee priests senate has passed a resolution urging 11 priests of the archdiocese to work for a chalige in tlie policy of clubs which are discriminashytory or tG withdlW as members

INTERFAITH SERVICE Bishop Fulton J Sheen center of Rochester NY at shywnded an interfaith service at Mount Neboh Congregation in Manhattan With- the Bishshyop are the Rev Philip Hiat right rahbi of the congregation and Cantor Albert l- Stur- mer holding chalice wh() prepared the ceremony at which Bishop Sheen received aspeshycial Brotherhood Award SC Photo

Archdiocese- to IBatmiddottle

Race Prejudice -

BusmlrAeSS Archbishop Says CINCINNATI (NC) - Ar(h-

bishop KarlJ A1t~r launched Project Commitment here with an appeal to the Christian comshymunity to appreciate the size and urgency of the problems of race relations and an insistence that the finding of Solutions is everybodys business

Speaking at a Mass in 1l Saints church the Cincinmtti archbishop emphasized not on ly right attitudes among Catholic people but also united comshymunity-wide organization and effort are necessary 10 me~t the problem

He said government pm-middot grams heretofore have been t(o late and too little and adVHshycated something like the Mal shyshall Plan which at the end HI the Second World War rescued Europe from misery and dEshy

spair -The Mass marked the openshy

ing of the projects pilot prll- gram which will continue wittl

seven workshops at Moeller HighSchool on specific aspects of- racial prejudice and lliscrim- ination Endorsed by the Archdiocesan

Pastoral Council and sponsored by the Catholic Commission 011

Human Relations Project Com mitment is described as a promiddot gram ~o help Catholic lay lead ers recognize their responsibii ities and prepare for theiJ proper roles in t~e field of inmiddotmiddot terracial justice

Seven VVeeks Program Dayton will be the second

area in which Project Commitshyment will be launthed The date has been set tentatively for April 9and the program will continue for seven weeks

Archbishop Alter said experishyence gained in the pilot pro-

Forty Hours Format ST LOUIS (Nc)-The St Louis

archdiocese has dropped its reshyquirement that Forty Hours deshyvotion must be held annually in each parish Pastoral guideshy

lines from the Archdiocesan Liturgical Commission noted that parishes were free and encouraged to continue Forty Hours and offered possible new formats which are based on Scripture readings and themes of Eucharist priesthood and church

gram would be used in organizshying similar efforts in the other deaneries

St Francis de Sales deanery in t~s area was chosen as the first for the experiment beshycause its Catholic population represents a cross-section of the entire community and if a-- project succeeds here it may well succeed anywhere else the archbishop said

It has been estimated that more than 500 persons from 31 of the deanerys 34 parishes would tale part in the project

The archbishop detailed the reason why the whole archdioshy

cese was to be involved when the problems are so diverse in the various regions of the 19 counties and When iincertain areas there is no racial conflict because of a totally homogeshyneous population

National Prohlem

The answer is that the prob- lem of harmonious race relashyJions is not a local problem but a national problem involving all communities everywhere and affccting all our public relashytions political economic and social There may not be racial conflict but there can be race prejudice he said

The problem has moreover definite religious and moral asshypects he said and there are questions of social justice and social charity which concern every Christian and for which

Pope Honors Gellman Protest(OInlt Leader

BONN (NC) -Pope Paul VI has awarded the Great Cross of the Order of St Sylvester to Dr Reinhold von ThaddenshyTrieglaff at German Protestant leader

Dr Von Thadden-Trieglaff is the founder and honorary presshyident of the Kirchentag the anshynual German Protestnt convenshytion -

In the document accompanyshying the award the Pope thanked Dr Von Thadden-Trieglaff for his work on behalf of ecumtmshyism and asked him to continue working in this spirit of recon-

ciliation and brotherhood Bishop Adolf Bolte of Fulda

presented the award

he will find the appropriate anshywer in the teachings of the Gospel

All our Catholic people he said are charged with the reshysponsibility of supporting adeshyquate remedial legislation and of creating social institutions which will eliminate discrimishynation and alleviate the burdens of sickness poverty and )gnoshyrance No one can stand aloof from a program of social bettershyment

Dutch Bishops Take Poll of Priests

moving toward onenessTHE HAGUE (NC) -- The cardinal saidDutch bishops in an effort to

measure the effectiveness and opinions of the nations priests Priest on Facultyhave distributed a list of 39 questions to all priests deacons LANCASTER (NC) - Fathell and subdeacons in the country William J Walsh SJ is the Several questhms deal with first Catholic priest to be apshypriestly celibacy pointed a fullitime member oil

the LancaSter Theological SemishyD~awnupto determine what nary conducted by the Unitecllp~iests think of the priesthood Church of Christ here Fathetandto measure the clergys acshyWalsh assistant theology proshyceptance of the celibacy Iegulashy

- essor at the Jesuit notiviatetion the questionnaire will be

CardinalCites Church Role InSlaquosety --CHICAGO (NC) - Jobm

Cardinal Cody asserted heq that the Church must involVil) fultlelf in social problems 00 be true to its fundamentetl works

The cardinal spoke at a sefib vice in the First Presbyteri~ church making its lOOth anm versary celebration

Those who contest involve-shyment by the Chruch in prolraquo lems of society Cardinal Co~

said take an indefensible stand He said personal sanctity whiclli

is conceded to be the ChurchD rightful concern cannot bd sepilrated from social responsi shybility

If the Church has nothing 00 say to us regarding our obligashytions to our fellow man it kJ sadly neglecting our personall holiness Cardinal Cody said

We sin by Injustice We sm by lack of charity We are sancshytified by giving all men thellf due he added

Move Toward Unity Cardinal Cody did not specishy

fically mention race relationll but he said society mistrea~

certain groups or individuals1ll

He said if church members aNI in any way party to this evill the Church must become i~

volved The cardinal said COIb-

cern for personal holiness forcelll the Chuxch into action

Let the Church in such cil shycumstances stand idly by and Q will lose all reason for exisshytence he declared

Cardinal Cody was introduceell to the congregation by the Rev Harold Blake Walker pastor Cltf the church When asked ahow his appearance in a Protestanll church following the service the cardinal said not long age it would have been unthinkshyable He added that the Holy Spirit is moving strongly anell speedily

We are not yet perfectly one as Christ prayed but we arll

th~

evaluated by the Pastoral Insti shytute of the Catholic Churchin the Netherlands and the Insti shytute for Applied Sociology of the Catholic Universiiy of Nijmegen

Introducing the questions the bishops commented that in a period of Church renewal it is unavoidable that priests be conshyfronted with serious problems They then recommend that the priests answer the questions carefully keeping in mind the teachings of the Church and the roie of the Church in modern society

Wernersville Pa will take ihe post of assistant church history professor at the 143~year-olcll

Protestant seminary on July L

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Black Power MINNEAPOLIS (NC) - nle

only un-Christian thing about power is the abuse of power Father James E Groppj Milshywaukees militant civil rights leader told a Lutheran layshymens conference here

Neither is the striving fox power by a minority group unshyAmerican the priest asserted It is rather part of the American tradition he said and cited past drives for political power by labor unions Italians in New York and the Irish in Boston

Father Groppi also said that the Milwaukee NAACP Youth Council which he advises has adopted black power tactics only after we had used every tactic eveiy means we could think of to take the yoke off black people and nothing had been effective

He said that one use the counshycil had made of black power was in a united Negro boycott of stores during Christmas The white man doesnt give us a housing bill we dont give him our dollar he explained

Discussing the role of the Christian Church in the black mans struggle for equal rights Father Groppi said that the Church has been involved by her non-involvemen1i By such non-involvement he said the Church has aggravat~d the Neshygros problem

Today he said I the use of prudence as an excuse for cowshyardice is the great sin of tile Church

Students Interrupt Strike to Mourn

PARIS (NC) - The strike launched by the guild of law students at the Catholic Unishyversity of Paris has been intershyrupted by its leaders out of resJect for the mourning of the diocese of Paris following the death of Pierre Cardinal Veuil shylot who was chancellor of the instittltion

The strike was called to proshytest a reform of the university decided U()(ln by the French bishops and put into effectmiddot by the rector Msgr Pierre Haubt- mann The reform is designed to avoid having the Catholic uni- versity compete systematically with middotthe state university In all secular studies

The bish~ps decided that in addition to teaching and re search in the area of religion the Catholic universtty must first of all be devQted to Chrisshytian reflection on secular matshyters

Pastoral Institute To Open at Quito

BOGOrA (NC)-A new Latin American Pastoral Institute will be opened in April at Quito Ecuador as a project of the Latin American Bishops Counshycil (CELAM)

The institute will be a unit of the CELAM pastoral departshyment

Purpose of the institute will be to train personnel from the whole continent in pastoral work applicable to Latin Amershyica The institute will offer seven-month courses and Euroshypean specialists in pastoral work will also serve on the faculty

Meeting on Cities NOTRE DAME (NC) - An

international conference entitled NCities in Context will be held March 31 through April 3 at the University of Notre Dames Center for Continuing Educashytion

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968

litu~~W Changes Continued from Page One

in earlier periods-even thou~

they do not conrorm in all deshytails with the approved versiOlil of contemporary liturgical texto -are authorized

TANTUM ERGO An apshyproved Eucharistic hymn ilill praise of the Blessed Sacrament may be used in Benediction oil the Blessed Sacrament in place of the Latin hymn Tantum Ershygo

PSALMS Approved are the texis of the Psalms as published by Englands Grail Society anell that found in the Jerusalem Bishyble

Suggestnol1Js Denied

The Vatican turned down two requests made by the US Bishshyops both dealing with liturgic011 experimentation

No was answered to the reshyquest that the US Bishops be permitted to designate acade~ic

centers to supervise litulgicall innovation

Also denied was the request that some experimentation be approved without examinatioD by the Holy See

-Presently the Vatican mu~

approve proposed liturgical inshynovations before experiment3shytion can begin

Archbishop Dearden explainshyed While the two major proshyposals concerning liturgical enshyperjmentation were not alPshyproved at the present time ~

is clear that the Consilium iJ open to the submission of rite and texts of li-turgical adaptioTll which have been drawn up anll presented prior to actual experishymental use

Concrete proposals of rHeIl 2nd texts may continue to be sent to the Bishops CommittCCl on the Liturgy

Matter Deferred

The permission to substitutfl h)mns or other sacled songtl fur the texts now used at the entran~e Offertory and Comshymunion of the Mass was defershyred

Such hymns now generally added to the official texts were approved in principle however by the delegates to the Rome Synod of Bishops October 1967

The Baptismal Rite describecll among the changes was n~

contained in the Vatican lettertl authoiizing the other changoo but was made public by Archshybishop Dearden at the same time as the announcement of 1ibe changes was released

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L_ PATRON 01 MARCH The month of March is dedicated to St Joseph watchful

guardian of the Son of God and patron and protector of the universal Church Dedicashytion of the month of the year to events in the life of Christ and to particular saints is a practice of the People of God rather than an official action of the Church It comfantly middotrecalls the power and love of God for mankind present at all times and in every place

Bishops Hit Penna Birth Control Policy Addsmiddot to Rather Thon Solve Problems of Poor

HARRISBURG (NC)-The Pennsylvania Welfare Depaytments new policy of acfi~ely promoting birth control among poor people is a major step in the direction of a newand dangerous life management bymiddot the state The Pennsylvania Oatholic Conferencehas criti shycized the Welfare pepartments decision to middotinitiltte discussions of birth control with their clients Under previous pol- stru~en~ for population con- the polic~ because it will add icy birth coiltrol adviceias trol saidmiddot the PCC to the p~oblems of the poor and Moreover many of these do nothmg to get at the root

Jren~l~red only If the welfare same spokesmen see it as an in- causes of poverty reCIpIent asked for It The strument to improve what they We are bound to protest sysshynew policY has been in effect call the quality of our popula- tematic governmental involveshysince mid-January The Con- tion Putting the program to ment in decisions of citizens reshyference which represents the suchmiddota use represents one of its specting family size as a major states Bishops in public affairs worst dangers the danger that step in the direction of a new has denied that Church teach- the state will start-=-by guiding and dangerous life management ing on contraception is a factor some groups or classes to birth by the state the statement emshyin its opposition limitation-to select the types it phasized

Invasion of Prhacy desires to see propagated Rather our concern is over Dangerous Management Varied Talents

the ef~ort of the state to i~fl~- The statement noted that its SPOKANE (NC)-The newly e~c~ many wa~ a pelson s view in this regard is shared formed Catholic Board of EdushychOIce of family size-our con- b th ptt b h b h f th h ht d h middottmiddot y e 1 s lIlg lanc 0 e cation for the Diocese of Sposhycern IS elg ene w en I IS National Association for the Adshy kane has elected members whothe poor whom the state seeks t f C I d P I to mfluence the Conference stat t sad

emen IThe Confelence called promoshy

tion of birth control an invashysion of privacy and asserted the state should play no role in attempting even indi rectly to manage tne most intimate domain of personal life

The statement also took issue with Welfare Depart~ent deshynialsmiddot that the program is inshytended to contlOl population

Negro Opposition

Chiefspokesmen for groups which have pressured for this program in our state say they IJee it and demand it as not just II medical service but as an inshy

vancemen 0 0 ore eop e include educators and non-edushyh h tl tt k d th w IC recen y a ac e e cators priests pastors ReligiousWelfare Department for trying and lay personst r t th th f th N 0 Iml e glOW 0 e egro

populatIOn The Conference also criticized

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a2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River--Thurs Feb 29 1968

The PaJrish Parade ~T MARYS CAlllllIlEJI)lItAL FALL RiVER

Mrs Hadley Lackey will serve as chaIrman of arrangements for the monthly meeting of the Womens Guild scheduled for a oclock on Monday night March 4 in the Shamrock Room of the Corky Row Club

Mrs John OConnor chairshyman of the Scholarola scheduled for April 1 requests that all pledges be brought to the March meeting of the Guild Committee members are avail shyable for all who wish their pledges collected at home

ST THERESA J80 ~-y gtltBORO

The ~ =middotaternity of Christian Mothers will hold thei~ regular monthly meeting on Monday evening March 4 following the Stations of the Cross

Rev Leo R Gravel OMI son of Mr and Mrs Raymond Gravel ofmiddotWestminister St So Attleshyboro will be the guest speaker

Members of the Confraternity will receive Comunion in a body at the 9 oclock Mass on Sunday morning March 3

88 PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Mothe~~ ~f Boy Scouts will bold a p1i1gtlic social at 730 toshynight Boy Scouts informatiOn classes for the Ad Mtare Dei award wiil be gtheld tonight and every T~ursday night during March and April

Junior High Camp Fire Girls plan a splash party at the YMCA from 530 to 7 Saturday night March 2 imd a cakesale in the IIChool hall from 8 to 11 30 Sun- ~y morniii~

The annual Cub Scout Pack IT Blue and Gold Banquet and charter presentation will take place at 630 Sunday night in the

school hall

SACRJED IllEART NOATlLEBORO

Starting on March 12 and conshytinuing for the next three conshysecutive Tuesday nights there will be an EcUmenical Worship Study conducted at Sacred Heart Church First Universalist Church First Methodist Church and the Grace Church

The service will begin at 730 and will be followed by a coffee hour and a discussion period in the church hall

The Sacred Heart Church will open the program on March 12 with a discussion of the Mass

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Womens Guild win reshyceive Holy Communion in a group at the 8 oclock Mass on Sunday morning March 3

The regular monthly meeting of the Guild will be held on Wednesday night March 6 at 730 in the school on Earle Street

ST PATRICK FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild announces an open meeting for Monday March 4 A jewelry demonstrashytion will be featured In charge of arrangements is Mrs Stanley Pitera aided by Mrs Joseph Fazzina

The unit will celebrate St Patricks day Saturday night March 16 with a smorgasbord supper and dance in the school auditorium Supper will be served at 7 and danCing will folshylow from 8 to midnight with music by the Moon Mists Resshyervations will close Sundq March 10 and may be made with guild officen or board memshybers

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

Plilrishoia books are to be distributed the weekend of

The WQmens Club announces March 2 and 3 Prizes will be bull pot luck supper for 630 Monshyday nigh1 Maich 4 Chairmen are Mrs William T Marum Jr and Miss Mary L Tyrrell

John F Keavy Jr president cl the US Model Railroad Assn will show films at a Boy Scout meeing slated for Tuesday night March 5

Theologians SllaquolIted As CU Spe(Q]~eis

WASHINGTON (NC) - Dr Ellie Mascall one of Englando most prominent Anglican theoshylogians and Father Hans Kung an outspoken advocate of reform in~~ the Catholic Church wilil speak at the Catholic University of America l1Ite in March

Dr Mascall a vigorous 0pshy

ponent of the so-called New Theology will give the Charles A Hart Memorial Lectures from March 24 to 29 His lectures will

deal sucessively with the quesshytions of God man Christ and the Church

Father Kung a Swiss theoloshygian who played an influential role at the Second Vatican Counshycil will speak on Sincerity in the Church on March 18

St louis Ceremony ST LOUIS (NC) - Bishop

John J Carberry of Columbus will be installed as Archbishop of St Louis on March 25 in cershyemonies at St Louis cathedral here

Archbishop Luigi Raimondi apostolic delegate to the United States will officiate The date of the cerem0I1-Y will be exactly three years after that on which Bishop Carberry was installed ordinary of Columbus

awarded to the three individuals selling the most books

The Mystibrook Singers of Bishop Stang High School will lead singing at the 815 Mass Sunday morning M~rch 3

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

A parish supper sponsored by the Womens Guild will be held from 530 to 730 Saturday night March 2 in the school hall Tickets are available from Mrs Frank Kingsley ticket chairman or any board member

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

During Lent Masses will be at 7 AM 4 PM and 7 PM

Confessions will be heard one half hour before each Mass Stashytions of the Cross will be held at 345 and 645 Friday aftershynoons and evenings Children are urged to attend Mass at 4 each afternoon The Children of Mary anshynounce a periby sale Friday March 15 A Portuguese parish mission will be preached by Rev Anshytonio Pinto CM from Sunday March 3 through Saturday March 9 Services will open Sunday night March 3 with rosary sernlon and Benediction at 7 I)clock and Mass and sershymon will be held every weekday night at 7

ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

The Association of the Sacred Hearts will sponsor a tea at 7 on Sunday night Mar 3 in the rectory in honor of the Sisters staffing the parish schooL

The monthly meeting C1f 1lhe Association will follow the tea

SAMOAN BISHOP The first native Polynesian memshyber of the hieraIl~hy Bishopshyelect Pio Taofinlllu (cq) S M will be consecrated at Apia Western Samoa on May 29 by Bosoon-born A r c h b ish 0 p George H Pearce SM of Suva The Bishop-eloot 44 made -his novitiate with the Marists on Staten Island ~C Photo

Hospital ~~urses

Return middotto Nork hi Covingtol1l

COVINGTON (NC) A nurses walkout which began in mid-November at 100shyyear-old St Eliz~~beth Hosshypital here has ended Nearly 100 of the 140 members of tine Registered Nurses tgtrganizati01l have indicated they will retum to their jobS The walkout stemmed from bull dispute over recognition of their organization and patient care policies Since the settlement hospital officials have been inshyterviewing nurse to expedite their reemployment and placeshyment

Restore Full Service Hospital spokesmen said the

nurses will be restored to posts they formerly held in so far as possible The nurses will lose no tenure as a result of their absence and if the positions they previously held have been filled they will be offered comshyparable posts or benext in line for selection to the positions

Administration officials exshypressed satisfaction with the prospect of the nurses return and voiced the earnest hope that we can move forward tel restore the 100 beds to service which had to be taliten out of availability by reason of the shortage of nurses to care for the patients

Officials estimate til1at four tie eight we~ks might t~ required 110 restore full bed service

Cite Achievements The nurses leaders said the7

had achieved at least 13 gains during the thteenionth dispute pointing to the fact that a doctor and a nurse have been apshypointed to the hospital board of trustees the establishment of bull patient care committee comshyposed or nurses electeli by those now employed by the hospital and equipment changes in the patient care area

Mrs Pat Tanner vice chait shyman also said the nurses unshyderstand that a lay heid will be appointed head of the hospital

Sister M Coronata adminisshytrator was assigned to) another post in the sisterhood earlier this month and Sister Mark Bernard has been serving u acting administrator I~he Franshyciscan Sisters of the Poor haft operated the hospitaL

Love Is An Active Verb We who bear the noble name of Christian arid who are io9shy

ingly called the faithful stand in awe of the Mystery of Christ and the Mystery of His Church More than the mystery of Obrist and of His Church is something we live It is then our duty JIlON

and more to experience the living reality of the Cbureh hershyself Cbristain tradition affirms that by her relatioJiship with Christ tlbe Redeemer the Church is a kind of sacrament or an efficacous sign of intimaJte union with God and indeed an efshyficacious sign cf the uni~ of all mankind

As members of the household of the faith we have heeD eaDmiddot ed by God and endowed with the precious gift 01 faithThereshyfore we m1ls truly experience a sense of urgency in brinampinK aD men to tun union with Christ Since mankind today is joined together more 1ll1osely than ever before in historY by bonds thaamp are social technical and eultural should it be ilenied the spirshyitual unity that springs from faith The Gospel is Ught Ii Is lIIewness it is energy it is rebirth it is salvation

Should DOt interest in our own salvation necessarily move us tID loving concern for the salvation of others If the Church is the Sacrament Of Salvation should we not as members of the Church eome to an eve- clearer awareness of our pari in her mission in the o1uty of evangelization in the missionary mandate in the apOstolic commiSsion Clearly our duty consonant withthe blessings I-eceived from Christ is that of spreading offering and announcing ~ faith to Others in order that we might be clble to acquit ourselves of Uiis Christian obligation The Society for the Propagation of the Faith eXiSts For-those who desire to be where the action is or 110 be iIivOlvoom wOrld mission the Church pr0shy

claims her own essential inissionlU) character Indeed the Cburdl ill J4ission and therefore aD of 118 are truly missionaries

fa tills Yeai IaItIl we eaa testify to Gaefldl uieDt 04 om- ATatitade to God for the bleilldDc of faWt by ma~ bull aerIfiee te TIle Society for the PropapUOn 01 the Faith lor tile works of the Chureh ill the service Df tile poor and underprholshy~ed We eamaot be Uke our Master III the fWlness of HIs Dlvinit7 nor caD we hoPe to experienCe thelrlory of His Transfigmratio bat there lis ODe way ill whieh we eaa resemble Rim and that Is ~ beeomtitamp- a oervant to His poor aDd His UWe ODes throughshyout the world

The native celrgy is the ho~ of the Chureb in Mission lands Many youngmen have heard the can but are sadly turned away for lack of facilities and funds $250 will provide a year of semshyinary training $1500 will cover the cost of complete education to the priesthood Wont you help us to help them by sending your offering to The Society of st Peter the Apostle 366 Fifth Avenue New York N Y 10001

SALVATION AND SERVICE are the work of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith Please cut out this eolumn and send your offering to Right Reverend Edward T OMeara Nashytional Direetor 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or directly to yoUr loeal Diocesan DirectOr Rt Rev Msgr Raymond T Considine 361 Norib MaiD Street FaD IUver Massaelnuse~ts 03720

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THE ANOiOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 13Missouri Diocesan Board Pondersmiddot Closing Consolidating Schools

KANSAS CITY (NC)-Tbe 1H girls They would be abshyKansas City-8t Joseph diocese sorbed into the school popushyis exploring the possibility of lations of Lillis high school and closing some of its schools and st Theresas academy forming n larger area school Although 120 persons attendshy Extension Volunteers bull bull bullwhich could upgrade the qualshy ed the school board meetingity of education for all pupils they were not petmitted tp

At 0 school board meeting speakFather John P Cole supershyinJtenden~ of schools reported on L - shyPTA Bead Plotes~

the possibility of setting up 11 Make Life Wortl IVngA motion-passed unanimousshycentral area grade school in ly by the board-was made to

mid-town Kansas City The continue exploration into conshysingle school would serve the solidation of the schools Thispopulations of three existing was opposed by John J Mcshygrade schools Donough a representativeFather Cole also suggested the elected by the Catholic PTApossibility of closing Redempshy Federation who will be seatedtorist high school now serving as a board member in July

McDonough was permitted to $~[]7reg~ 2~ Ifreg[[~ take part in the discussion but

had no vote

~~ ~~[[U IT)J He protested against the defe3ltist clique who let our

WASHINGTON (NC)-Bishop schools get picked off one byPaul F Tanner newly named one He charged that TheOrdinary of the diocese of St New Peltlple - the diocesanAugustine Fla is onfy the newspaper members of the dishyfourth priest to serve as general ocesan school office officials of secretary of the United States the Missouri Catholic Confershybishops secretariat in the nearshy ence Kansas City pastors andmiddotly half-century of its existence other Church officials share in

Bishop Tanner was the last an anti-Catholic school recshygeneral secretary of NCWC the ordoriginal secretariat He was also the first general secretary of ODe Operation both of is dual suc~essors-tne

McDonough said that theNational Conferenceof Catholic school superintendent shouldBishops and the United States be goingmiddot to the state legislashyCatholic Conference The NCCB ture and Governor Hearnes tois the bishops agency for dealshydemand tax relief instead ofing with purely splritual matshyconsidering consolidation andters the USCC Is their secreshyclosing of schoolstariat for dealing with secular

affairs Father Colemiddot maJntained that The prelate has served in the the reorganization would not

U S bishops secretariat 28 represent a cutback The area years longer than any precedshy school would be able to opshying general secretary Born in erate out of one blilding to Peoria TII in 1905 and ordained serve three parishes It would a priestmiddot of the Milw~ukee archshy provide the same educational diocese in 1931middot he came to experience for the same number Washington in 1940 ~as assistant of students plus advantages director of the Youth Departshy Cooperation would make posshyment NCWC He ~as assistant sible a highly developed model general secretary from 1945 to school staffed by Sisters from 1958 and has been general secshy three communities retary since then He said it would be irresponshy

He is the first bishop to serve sible to run three operations at as secretary to the bishops secshy all costs when the diocese retariat could have one operation run

The NCWC (as Council and it more efficiently do a better Conference) had been in exisshy educational job and provide opshytence 47 years when it formally portunity for a better deployshywent out of existence at the anshy ment of personnel nual meeting of the bishops in November 1966 Bishop Tanner who had served in the secretashy Urge Germaruls riat for more than half those years supervised the transition To Aid Vietnam to two separate organizationsshy

BONN (NC) - Two Germanthe NCCB and the USCC cardinals and two churchshyDuring Bishop Tanners secshy related relief organizations have

retaryship and in testimony to FALL RIVER PROVINCETOWN AND WESTPORT GIRLS WITHappealed to the German people

the growth of the work handled to collect money and to prayby the bishops secretariat an NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF EXTENSION VOIL~NTEERS DURINGfor the people of Vietnamimpressive addition to the headshy A week beore Mardi Gral lt- quarters building here was Joseph Cardinal Frings of Coshy THEIR YEAR OF VOLUNTEER WORK erected in 1960 logne asked the Catholics of his

archdiocese to cut down on Mardi Gras festivities and to donate magnanimously to the needy people of Vietnam Coshy These young college graduates have given a I year of their logne has long been known for its ampigtectacular Mardi Gras celeshy professional life to God in service in the South and West Are brations Citing the bombing Of North you willing to give twelve months of yourmiddotyouth to othersVietnam the plight of women and children caught between opposing forc~middot in the $()ut~ and the great number of refushygees Cardinal Frings asked how Catholics could watch pictures of these gravely distressing si~

WHY NOT ENROll AS ANuations on television and ceieshybrate Mardi Gras with a quiet The Spirit oj

Extension Volunteer HELPER middot$200 oconscience Alfred Cardinal Bengsch Of Extension Volunteer PROMOTER $500 o

Berlin asked for prayers for Sacrifice Extension Volunteer SPONSOR $1000 or more opeace in the world in a letter to the clergy of his diocese in which specifically mentioned AMOUNT ENCLOSED $ Vietnam as a name meaning Perfectlyblood and death RT REV RAYMOND T CONSIDINE PAIn a joint appeal Caritas the German Catholic relief organishy PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH OFFICE zation of Germanys Evangelical 368 NORTH MAIN STREETExemplifiedLutheran Church has asked for fALL RIVER MASS money to send food Md medishy

BISHOP P~VL F TANNU cine to the Children of Vietnam o

(-14 THf ANCHOR-Diocese of FaR Rfver-Th~rs Feb-29 1968 Two Objectives Jersey to Rehabilitate Young OffendersTells Jesuatts Engage in Deliberate

Help Increasing Spanish Group Attempts at lExperimentation UNION CITY (NC) - Two Hudson County Jan and in theST LOUIS (NC)-Deliber- carries its own reward he said area interfaith clergy groups youth house in Secaucus

iide attempts at experimenta- Now we must undertake new here in New Jersey are planning Father ThomasJ Murtha oftion with a readiness to accept forms some of which have a

joint action on the plightf West New York was named toall the risks that may be in- good chance to flop JIliserably youthful offenders housed m investigate means of setting UJltvolved were proposed for the An expert at the Second VatshyHudson County correctional in- a rehabilitation program t4ilSociet of Jesus at the close of ican Council Father Campion stitutions and to seek federal function after the release ~ III three-day session here on believes that the work of the assistance in meeting the needs youthful offendersbulllesuit renewal council has not yet begun to of Cuban refugeesFather Donald R Campion be absorbed within the Church

The joint session was held by The ~o groups will send a18J stressed at the renewal as a whole the North Hudson Clergy Coun- delegatIOn toWashIngton to askQession and in an interview This is not because it hasnt cU based here and the Chris- ~hat the area be declared anthat the Jesuits have both the been publicized enough or beshy tian Clergy United a West New Impacted area under the Cuban manpower and the resources to cause people havent read Y k Refugee Act and therefore beshy

engage in the type of expeii- enough or bishops havent talkshy or ~ro~p come eligible for special federal mentation which could serve ed enough he said But Vati shy A meetmg WIll be s()~ght WIth aid There are some 00000 tQdays Church Father Cam- can II opened up more areas the Hudson County Boar~ of Spanish~speakingpeople now m pion a sociologist and theolo- to discussion than it resolved Chosen Freeholders in an effort rth gian was recently named editor Among the sleep~rs in to establish a bettez climatefoi the ~o Hudson area and they cd America magazine council documents CIted by therehabiUtation of youthful continue to arrive at the rate of

Another speaker Fat her Father Campion was the conshy offenders now housed intne 200 to250 a month ~ 1 _

Avezy Dulles SJ stressed that cept of participation within the ~ doubt is a valuable and even Church Father Campionmiddot said lI1ecessary experience for the he believes collegiality is the Wide E~perience Christian in todays world most developed aspect in this

Fathers Campion and Dulles area and that some organization QU(lJD~ies Nu_ were two of the six main speak- has been given to it through the

UNITED- NATIONS (NC)ers at the closed meeting Some establishment of piie~ senates ltHQWCom pie t e devotion to theSSO Jesuits including 50 from But unless the idea of parti shyworlds needy children seemsCilutside the St Louis areaat-cipation is really the basis senshy a weighty task for a petite nun TDgtKEEPtended the sessions ates can become orgimizational

Father Campion said that Jes- gimmicks he said but a conversation with Sister Ullits as a group must face the Father Dulles discussing themiddot Kathl~eri Kelly MMmiddot provides LENmiddotTreassularice middotthat 20 years of make a significant contribution Church said ~ an interview diversified experience fact that their work should existence of doubt in todays

more to modern times that we have a radically differ- than qualifies her for the role

QUI IXIDPYFATHER lI MISSION jlUDTG me fllRlfaNTAL CHURCH

In the area of education It calIS for recasting the ex- wide Cath)lic charities organishy Need New Formula ent world view than in the past Caritas Internationalis worldshy

With the slason of Lent comes the qu~ionFather Campion called for con- pressions of the Christian messhy zation recently appointed Sisshy How can I beSt keep Lentl The answer ~s ~sideration of whether we are sage in terms of contemporary as observerter Kathleen its must make sacrifices on our own and nothing ISproviding the educational struc- knowledge if the message is to to the U N International GOOD III sacrifice unfess it hurts Whatwill be yo~rture for the new world have the impact it should Childrens Emergency Fun d WHIEN sacrifice bullbull Just think of the misslonlllne~ InIn the intellectual area Look Criticanny (UNICEF) Caritas Internationshy ITlf our 18 emerging countries who keep Lent allrather Campion noted that to- Doubt is not a bad thing he alis is one of 75 international HUmS year long Sacrifice something big this ye~rday more is needed than popu- said People should be looking and non-government organizashy When helping others hurts a bit you know you va larization of theology and phil- critically at the traditional forshy tions (NGOS) which enjoy conshy made a sacrifice()Sophy In a way we need a mulas and seeing what is revelashy sultative status with UNICEF whole new formula for making tion and what is a culturally

They represent oJer 4000csense of the world and life he conditioned formula which is affiliated private and non-profitfSaid now demanding reform

We should have men devoted Such adaptations are iD no organizations in more than 100 oOn his recent-trip through India 1V0~signor nations with a combined memshy Nolan saw priests and Sisters subSisting onto this single problem Their way a compromise of faith bership running into millions ounces of rice each day so they can share what own inner resources of security Father Dulles said We never they have with lepers and orphans $10 will feedmust be yery strong because to hear the divine message except Interviewed at the United Nashy FEED a family for several weeks at least $50 will feed

facethat kind of change is not III in terms of humans he said tions Sister Kathleen spoke of THE five families $100 ten families bullbullbull Only $975popular thing The Word of God comes her new rol~ at the international HUNGRY gives a priest 11 two-acre mode~ 18nn toraise

Council Opened Areas through man it is alW9YS tem- level and described how it his own food and teach his parishioners how to Father Campion said the can pered by man and it is this con~ evolved from her past activities raise more food Archbishop MalJ Gregorioa will

for experimentation W9S not ditioning which must change wrltetlo thank youI was in California andbased on inadequate work of Father Dulles said one value worked for 10 years in familyJesuits at the present time and of the death-of-God movement eounseling in the juvenile court IlJ Enable ~ girl to become a Sister For 41tl bullthat fact is part of the problem for Catholics is to shake _ I1tA1N day ($1250 a month $150 bull year $300 aleill foster lare and in otherMany times we have been suc- out of taking an uncritical with sa~ A together) you can pay In full fer her two-yeaIwork children sheeessful and being successful static view of God training have 8 Sister of your awnInthe last five years I moved SISTER

oat to community development and civil rights I was a member o For only $a5O a week ($10 a month $120 bull

year) you can make surethat an abandonedJesuit Seminarian Leads Campaign of a district council in bull San HELP Francisco - which subsequently A child has food clothing a blanket and love bullbullbull IAgainst Home Contract Firms was declared a poverty CHILD wen send you a photo of the boy or silt )011area

adoptCHICAGO (NC) - A Jesuit borne than its current market During my years there I waa Rminarian has launched a camshy value a member of the Catholic Intershy o Our priestS will offer promptly the Massespaign here against contractshy Following the exodus of racial Council and when I came MASSES you request Doyou wish to remember a loved holders of homes sold to Negro Lawndales white residents in back from Selma (she was on fOR one this Lent Your Mass offerings are usuallyfamilies at allegedly exorbitant the late 1950s thousands of of the persons selected to repshy LENT the only Incole our priests overseas receiverates homes were purchased by vari shy resent the archdiocese of san

Jack Macnamara SJ who ous bankS mortgage loan and Francisco in the Alabama civil o Enroll yourself your family and friends InlIives and works in nearby real estate companies at low rights march) I was appointed this Association You will be helping Pope Paul Lawndale is acting withthe ap- prices and then resold on conshy to serve on the Human Rights

JOI~ in one of his most ambitious and heartfelt works proval of his Jesuit superio~ tractto Negro families atofteIi - Commission by the mayor of THIS while sharing In the blessings of thousands of

Nacnarnara and a dozen supshy ~lImON Masses (The offering for one year is $2 perdouble the original purchase San Francisco the nun stated porters including several other price the leaflet reported She was the first nun ever apshy person $10 for a family perpetual membership Jesuit seminarians picketed the Paid Race Tax ltpOinted to any kind of~~yt is $25 per person $100 for a family) Chicago address of one investshy Macnamara said these conshy inJSan Fraidsco _

Iment company which holds title tracts should be renegotiated at

~ several homes sold on conshy the most recent FHA appraisal tract to Negroes Pickets dis- price ~ If I1t e SAiliNGS

tributed leaflets explaining the c2J 0 dJ ~ t~~ year SYSTEMATICThe issuemiddot here is moral rathshypurpose of their campaign er than legal he declared Th~ MONTHLY DEPOSITS

The leaflet cites the case of III law does not provide a remedy II tfMltIa fNVE$iMENyhome purchased by an investshy for the type of injustice that is d) aV~ J((~ year SAVINGSment company in January 1959 operative in this contract

for $13000 and then three NOTICE ACCOUNTSThousands of Negroes inmonths later sold on contract to Chicago are suffering from this a Negro buyer for $23000 450 ar ~~~~

It states the investment corn continued ~In effect they paid pany received $2000 as a down II race tax of approximately

type of injustice Macnamara

BCJs~ liverpayment on thiS contract whic~ $10000 when they bought their stipulated that middotthe balance was homes because it was impossishy SavonJs Bonkflo be paid over 20 years at sevshy bleto obtain mortgages 4Il per cent interest at the rate This is a striking example of BanI By Mail of $20140 each month how our legal system does notmiddot We Pay The Postage

Last December it reported a adequately protect black people Federal Housing Administration or poor people he said It appraisal on this home listed its stems from the fact that the law bull YARMOUTH SHOPP8NC PUll value at $15025 This means it aims at protecting property inshy bull SOUTH UltMOm bull HYANJIISexplained that the Negro buyer stead of persons And this helpl bull DENNIS PlmRT bull OSTFllVIUlIII paying $8000 more for tbe bull cause urbaJl unreal

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16 THE ANC )~-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968

New St LouimiddotsArchbi~hcp

PrOmilnent in Ecumen~$m Archbishop Jonh J Oarberry of St Louis well known

~()ng Oatholic leaders after 31 career that has taken him from a seminary classroom iii his natiYe Brooltl~ NCY~ to one of the nations MOse ~mpOOtallt archdiolaquoese1l is pershy

laaps evenmiddot better ~ownmiddot fJDlong Americas nom-Cafu6shylie religious leaders fon hisl work in ecumenism Cllair Ilillao of the Bishqps Commi~ee-Ibr Ecumenical and Intenrefi shyaious Affairs since th~ resigna Qion of Baltimores Lawrence Cardinal Shehan in November 11965 Bishop Carberry has au I9gtCrvised the massive catholic illllvoIvement in ecumeniCal ac-middot lli1 vities

He outlined his own entIliusishyeuroISm for ecumenism in a speech ~iven in January 1966 tolmemshy~rs of the Ohio (Protestant) lPastors Convention wheDI he aid

Common lHeritagel For years the general policY

(llln the Catholic Church) had ~en to stress the great chasm

which divides the euroatliolic Church and other Christian ehurches No effort was made m would seem on our part to Illave a meeting of minds A otudy of documents would seem ltD reveal that while we wera lbrayerfully disposed to) the ltecumenical movemerit nevershy1lheless the Catholic Church did lliittleto foster it

Bishop Carberry told the conshyvention that through the grace 0f God and the leadership or Pope John XXIII we became aware of the common heritage Which is ours

Has Great lHope

We began to realiZe~ how 18aptism unites us in ChriSt to Gee that the divinity of Christ is illhe cornerstone of all Christianshynay we began to real1ze the oommon treasure which we llnave in the Sacred Scripturesllikewise the common bondshyVhich exists with us in the

1lIIlissionary activities at the Church

There is great hope Bishopltearberry said that mrougb ~ialogue through prayerbull 1llluough respect for each others wiewpoint the grace of God may (i)Ile day in Gods divine provishy4llence bring about the- unitY which Christ prayed for at themiddot Last Supper

More recently members of ltOhios Protestant cliurches llllamed the bishop as OniosPbsshyoLr of Pas-tors the fl rst timmiddote hat bull

Grants Permis$ioll~

for SaturdayMass) SAN ANGELO (NC)-BiShop

Thomas TSchoepe of San Angelo lllas announced that the diocesan request for the Saturday Mass flaculty hagt been granted In the future the Sunday Mass 00shyltigation may be met by at shy~ndance at a Saturday aftershyllloon or evening Mass The pershylll1ission has been granted on an ~xperimental basis by the Vati shylttan for a period of five years

The diocese of San Argelo is 1lI Texas missionary diocese the bishop explained and there are areat dis tan c e s between churches and few priestswmiddot oerve the faithfuh ManYi ~llieSts

have two or morlt8 churclies tJ lllttend and will Be able- tQ give more time to the smaller ~urches with the Satucday Mass faculty Bishop TschoePe pointedi 9Ut Chat the faculty has been giVeth bull the whole diocese not just Ibo individual churches or areas Pastors who wish to make Usemiddot aJl the faculty must make formal application to the chancery ofshyillce

a~ statewide Protestant onganiza tion has presented its highest awa-rd 10 a eatho1iir clet1gymam A pla~J1e symbollZiDg the a~adi was~ glv~~ to the blShp at ~~~ Fenw~nIP Blmq~et on the Olbo PastollSgt ~onventi~m

DI~USS P~tilems U~dev Blsli~p~rlgte~rysl~d

er~hlPl laquoatholic ~elegations have ~et wl~h ~fflC1Blsbull and

tleolbglan~ of other- ChrIs~an churchesmiddot to dlSCUSS ecumemcal pooble~s r~~gmg from the pr~sshyence of Christ Ill tlie ~ucharlst to th-c nature of we prJes~ood

Before ta~mg cliarge of th Golumbusmiddot dIOcese on March 25 1965) Bishop euroarbery liadmiddot selved asmiddot coadjutor bishop and then bishop of Eafayette Ind Born in Brooklynj N~ Y Tulymiddot 31 1904 Bishop Carberry studied for the priestlioodi at Brooklyns Cathedral College or the Iin-middot maculate laquool1ception from 191ll to 1924 and at the North Amershyican College in Rome from 1924 to 1930

Oldained inmiddot Rome in 1929 tne bishop sfudiea canon law at the Catholic University of America in Washington D G and taught at Immaculate Conception Semshyinarl until Tune 1935 when he went on ldan to the diocese of Trenton N J He returned to BrooklYn in 1940 where hemiddotreshymained until being named coshyadjuror bishop of Lafayettemiddot in 19651

~~~5IiTI$ nUilft~U[jTIfi)

Ccopy]JJi]dIT [Qjfr[~lcopy[j

CHICAGO (NC) - Tohn A McDllrmott has changed me mindL-he1li remain as execu middot tivedirector of the Chicago Cat1iolic Interracial Council

The veteran council worKer last October announced he would leave the office to beshy

come Mridwest regional- ciVil rightsdirector for the ms De-middotmiddot partment of Health Enucation andi Welfare

A number of problems hava arisen since th-e announcement on my appointmentt last 0ctbBerwhichl caused me to have serl

ousmiddot second l thoughts MilDer moW said iil his decision to re~ maio with the ltlrc He citedi m1 patrtcular~ personnel cutliaclts in HEW wJiich woulli Iiinit the Midwest negional operatiiul

fo accepting McDermotits de cisionj HEW the government agency requestedi liiin to serve asmiddot ai special chdl- rights consuU ant while working for the CIC and he a~reed

IIlt a letter to the Dutch biINumber of Fllel71ch ops members of Michaels re-

gion asked for curbs on the nlgtshySeminarians Dllops tions Catliolic liberals The PARIS (Ne)-Thenumber of meeting also registered disap-

French seminarians h~s dropped proval of the new Dutch Cateshyby about 180 a year for the last chism~ claiminJ~ that it does nocent four years according to 1iigures represent true Catholic teach~ provided in amiddot press conference Michaels Lel~ion is considered by Bishop Jean Sauvage 011 ampshy even more CJlnservative thlW necy member of the bishops Confrontation another Catholic commission on the clergy and conservative organization Conshyseminaries frontations complaints about

For the 1967~68 sc1iolastic the content of the new Dutch year the tdtal number of sliumiddot catechismmiddot are believed to hae dents iil major seminaries m been instTllmentai in having tbe~ FhlOce is 43583 comparedl with book exltlmined by the VatiCan~lJ

4536 for the previous year Doctrinal Congregation 4722 )n 1965-66 and 4953 in 1964-65

Moreover in France at pres- Approves Agency eol ttiere are aBout 200 adults LQND()N (NC)--Jolin Cardl~

WIIO are preIgtaring for tOe ~er nal Heenan of Westminster liJaa manent diaconate as restored by approveq establishment ocf 1m the Second Vatican Council The agency to help priests who want first ordinations to this permashy 10 leave the priesthood znGl nent diaconate could take place nuns who want to leave the this year religious life

1P~alrn le~tUlm~1rn~~G~

$1lll~7 GG1l I1DtJ Sim LONDON (NC)-A study on

the problems of ecumenism in Great Britain will be made by a joint working group of the British Council of Churches and the Caholic Church with the results to be reported next Autumn

The study was planned at a meetingmiddot held atmiddot the Vita et Pax Benedictine I~onvent and attendshyed by nine Catholic representashytives an- 14 representatives of the BeC -

The projected study is exshypected to analyze such topics an the extent I)f cooperatiGn beshytween Catjwlics and members of the BeC the dialogUes bemg held theologicaL differences and the non~theological obstacles to closer unitygt

Auxiliary BishoJ- Langton Fox of lfenevia Wales and

Auxiliary Bishop Basil Chrisshytopher Butlelr OSB of Westshyminster headed tOe CatOolie delegation at the meeting

~(i]$~~rlaquolJpoundfr1) A$1k lMl~illlW) ~ltoy~ IHh~)~Dnd

U11RECHm (NC) -Michaels Legion an organization of Dutch Catholic~ uaditionalists has sent a telegram to Pope Pault H ungintg him tD protect essential orthodoxy and to S81fe tne DutchChurch~

At 3- meeting here attended b~ some 600) Catholic conserva tives led by Eouis Knuvelder the legion condemned the Dutch Catholic daily press the~ Dutch Gatholic tellvisioncompany and the countrys Catholic radio station for being too progressive

Father Baum Regards Ecumenical Center Closing Sign of Success TORONTO (NC)-The closing gian Charles Davis-A Quesshy

of the Center for Ecumenical tion of Conscience Davis book Studies at St Michaels Collegegt exmiddotplains his renunciation of the here is a sign of the centersmiddot euroatholic priesthood and the success Church and asks Catholic theo-

This is the viewpoint of Father logians who intend to stay in GregllllY Ballm O~SA founder the~ eurohurch to reply to several of tJie centeI1 who has an- t1iaologjcal points nQunlaquoed that it will b~ Closed BelUef Unbelief

inl JUne Thats what Im doing FatlieJJBaum-explalnedthalhe Fatller Baum said His book a

founded the centeJ ill 19631 when replYJ to Davis questions conshyecum~llusrn may have~ been a ceming the credibility of the new Idea Its purpose lie- s~ld Church in todays world will be was to promote ecumemcall called The Credibility of the studies at St Michaels Church Today It will be pub-

Taday he neports ecumen mal stlUdi~s at S1l Michaels are a reality- 1lli~ schGolls theology depal1tment 18 fully mte~ ~thl Protestant and ~gIIcan lfupartmentsmiddot at the-Umversity

of Toronto [hUB lie said~ the eC-lmenical

centell has fulfilled its purpose Such fUlfillment he said wmiddot

common in academic circles where there has been an ecushymenlical reVOlution For exam pIe ne said where once som1shyone might have nied to foster ecumenism through building an ecumenical library it is now impossible tq build a theological lilgtrary without its being ecushymenical

Need flDZ Programsmiddot Father Baum added that he

does not believe tJie ecumenical movement has reached fruitien in circles outside the academia world~ He said that he sees a real need pound01 formal ecumenmiddot ical programs on the parish and on all levels of the Churdl which have not yet been reached He a150 disclosed that perSOll ally he lias moved Gn frOlll ecumenism to new fields of thought

The AuIDlStinian has written a new book in answer to the latest by the English theolo-

U[[$ W)jf[rll IfSMsjIID~

rnliJ kUD-WIh ol 1TW[jiJ KETTERING (Neuro) - The 1-7shy

member parish board 00 St Charles Church~ here unanishymousll1 adopted a resolution 5 favor Qf open nousing legiSlashytion for thiS (1)hio suburban community

The parish boards action S~ poIied- unequivocallymiddot passage 0amp an open housing ordinance in themiddot virtuallr aUi-wltite commw-middot nity 00l more than 600001 res dents Tames J Gilvay and Peter Donanue attOrneys anlL pariBhlmiddot boarc members pre sentedthe resolutJoDj wliiclli tbok- themiddot position that the ghett) condit1ollG ~Ilichl Negroes enshycure ilm nearby DaYton are mshyiuriOwil to the entire commUlshyDitTmiddot

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Aftei tee closing of the Center for Ecumenical Studies Father Baum will stay on at St MishychaeFs au a professor of theolshyogy He is also planning another ~~

It will concentrate on the idea oi God in modern thought and will be a clear sign that Father Baum has moved away from his prime in terest in ecumen- ism

Born of Jewish parents in Berlin and reared as an agnostic Father Baum said he has now turned his whole thought to the study of belief and unbelief He will record his findings in me book he is now writing

~oh~ laquotmm~~litl ~Od1[9)

[~ Ao~ i N~regIJ$ CAMDEN (NC) - Bishop

Tames L Schad administrator of the Camden diocese was =ong citizens honored here foT their efforts in furthering the interests of the Negro comshymunity

Bishop Schad who has been active in community action projects such as the War on Poverty committees was pre sented a scroll during a proshygram sponsored by the Tenth Street Baptist church here in observance of the 43rd annual Negro History Week This year marks the first time a Romaa Catholic prelate has been so honored

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17 Oppose Church Clergy Participation in Politics

By Jsgr George G Higgins

The New RepubJic-whIch in this writers judgment W one CYl the be3t of Ameriros weekly journals of opinion especially hl it3 arovezoage cfcurrent economic and political developments----thinks that the time has com~ for anti shyVietnam clergymen aul1ayshy Be that as it maY I am ioshymen to translate tu1eir cVZl clined to think that the editors m0r81 indignation oveuror Vietshy of the French periodical Inforshynam into effective political mations Catholique InternashyDction inasmuch as this is the tionales make considerably only way to effect long-term more sense than the editors cOf ehanges in the The New Republic 011 this issue policies of this of clerical involvement in the country So far so-called politics of peace as laymen are Though they are vigorously concerned this and unqualifiedly opposed ~il

would seem to tW war in Vietnam and like be a self - evishy tWeditors ()f The New Repubshydent proposition li( clearly recognize that the L1s perfectly establishment of leace in the obvious t hat world is a political problem concerned layshy which calls for the active mshymen ou~ht to volvement ofChcistians as ~-en

translate their as all other men of good will moral indi~nashy they do not think that themiddot tion over Vietnam - or any cleJgy who are responsible foy other significant issue of public the unity of the Church should policy-into effecti-re poiiticltll be expected to take on the role

of party politiciansaction Given the fact that their pubshySound Tradition

lication ~CI has been oJe 01 tileOn the other hnd I aJl Evt most outspoken European critics

sure understandthat I fully or of U S involvement in Vietnam completely agree vitb The New and one of the most vigorousRepublic when it says that fue advocates middotof a politics of peaceclergy ought tncv likewise their warning against the parshy

Traditionally a the NR itself ticipation of the clergy in parshypvints out the clergy-in this tisan politics is highly signifi shycountry at least - have rnied cant and deserves to be taken amy from such participation very seriously (Christians and

AJJ a long-time subscriher to the Struggle ior Peaee InforshyT~2 New Republic I had Dlshy mations Catholique Internashyways been under the imp~ssio~ tionales Jan 15 1965)that its editors thought that en Fl lialgs lrindplebalance this was a sound tradishy

Those American Catholicstion Apparently lwweer I was who may happen to have a speshy

cial interest in the pros and consmistaken in this regard fora of this highly controversial issuerecent Nell Republic editorial will also want to read whatnoten with satisfaction that Hans Kung has to say about itAJlerican clerGYmen now apshy

pear to be ready in large numshy in his forthcoming bookThe Churchbers to get involved at a preshy

cinct level and to play C1l Father Kung has lectured exshyactivist role in both parties tensively throughout the United (Clergy in Politics The New SUItes in recent years and is

currently with us again as a visshyRepublic Feb 17 1968) iting professor at Union Theoshy

QuestioIS Meaning logical Seminary in New York What does this mean in pracshy Seen in the light of the Gosshy

tical terma Does it mean that pel le writes in his new book ministers rabbis and priests the relntionshipof the Church should endorse ltor oppose) parshy to the world contains only one ticular candic1ates fqr politiell essential aspect its ministry 10 office starting at the precinct the world level Does it mean that they Ministry does not mean raisshythemselves should run for ofshy ing ones voice or putting an -oar flee if only as a last reiort in all secular qIes1ions middotof ecoshy

If so does it also mean that nomic political sodaI middotcultural other clergymen should run artistic and scientific life against them if they happen to T1e Churchclmnot solve disagree with what they stand the greJt problems of the ()rld for Or does it mean toot only neiih2r the problell1of hunger those clergymen who are anti shy nor that of the populaticn nor Administration should get inshy that of war nor thlt oanonFmshyT-olved at a precinct leel and ity of power Dor that -of race play an activist role within hatred What the Church both parties can do can be expressed quite

Sicnifieani WarnlDI simply in one phrase it must I have raised these questions exist for the world

lot to make light of The New ACrefS With lFTK1mgRepublics editorial CD the subshyject under discussion but Anyone who hal ever baG the merely to BUggest that clerical pleasure of meeting Faiher involvement ill partisan politics Kung middotor is familiar wi1bhis over the issue of Vietnam is at writings will know witheut best a rather tricky business being told that be is not a hawk and will almost inevitably lead and that he is cot advocating to certain consequences which a policy of Christian withdrawal upon further reflection even the from the world editors of The New Republie middotOn the eontrary be stroniJy might eonceivably wish tc foreshy favors lhe all-ltltit involvement tall of Christians in temporal affairs

and notably iii the ~lities Of peace

To Speak in Boston Nevertheless be does net Rev Anthony T Padovano think that the institutienal

Church-and its clerical minisshySTD theology professor at ters-should pretend that theyImmaculate Conception Semishy

nary Darlington N J will speak have all the answers tc the problems of the worldia the Christian Culture lecture

aries sponsored by the Paulist And neither eoes be thinkshyFathers at 815 Wednesday night if I read him correctly-that tbe March 6 in John Hancock Ha)) clergy in ~ exeTeise of their Boston Tickets are available mission of peace should get inshyfrom 5 Park Street Boston volved in partisan jl)olities Nor 02108 do L

WOKS LIKE FUN Yes but listen to what it requires The Georgetown University erew keeps in s-hape with ~

AM ~i~enies in the gym foHow~ by a two-niile run UJl and do-Wll Observatory Hil~on tJhecampus Its cold up there said Dave Harris a member of the lightweifht crew but by then youlewtired you do-nt care NC Phottgt

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 ~ 968

Prayer for Peace To Cm(O)se Games

MEXICO CITY (NC) - All ecumenical prR)er for peaCf) service is being planned for the end of the 19th Olympic Gam~

here next October The sponsor of the service w shy

the Ecumenical Commission fcrr Religious Services (ECRS) fe the Olympic Games The comshymission is composed of 73 ChrisshytiRn and Jewish leaders in thi~

city Promment spiritual leadshyers will be invited to speak

At middot8 meeting here the rn ECRS spiritual leaders discusse~

the facilities for athletes and visitors to attend their varioU7J reUgious services

iI1be iMC)Cican government hw aPPI)o~ed ECRS plans for the ~ction of at least tw- JaIige bullclings as nondenonYshynational chapels

The original pIlan toeonstrl1ell one large church has been IcHsshytlarded The present plan is build one large building with no religious I)rnamentllJtion of alltl7 kind on the outskirts of the Olympic Villa and a similar Oilif)

on tne outskirts of the Olympze

Project InterracialInterfaith Cooperation Cultural Villa

tin (Re~~(Jtion of CcUege m addition Archbishop MEshymiddotgut Dario MirlllDda y Gomez Gl

1I1IAMI (NC)~When Florida The Rev Edward T Graham Mexico City hBs authorizeQ Memorial College predominant a Baptist minister key person downtown Catholic churches to ly Negro middotliberal arts school is behind the project has had asshy permit non-Catholic services = moved here frOl1l St Augustine sistance from Mrs Athalie their premises if non-Catholie and opens next September the Range Miamis first NeglO City comgregations should request i project will be the result of unshy Commissoioner who is a Cathshyusual interracial and interfaith olic teamwork Organhzet3 rOthEHSIl

The largest single contribll shyNegroeswhites and Chinese tiou of private funds has oome flainirt~ ClI1ter

have joined hands with Cathoshy from a supermarket executive lLOUISVILLE (NC) - TkeIlics Protestants and Jews tv M Austin Davis a Methodist Franciscan Conventional OrdGcontribute money time advice laiamis Catholic Bishop Coleshy has opened a Brothers Trainincand leadership to realize the

manF Carroll is a member vl1 Center here in an attempt to givedevelopment of the college on l the advisory board as is Maushy Brothers three years of active$10 million complex here rice Ferre diocese of Miami lay apostolic work following theirr leader novitiate

RabbiIrving Lehrman presshy Father Sebastian Cunnil1flshyCouncil Seores ident cd the Greater Miami ham OFM director of tlw Rabbinical Association a n 4ll OOlilter said We felt we haCFactory Closing Jewish lay leaders are amoag an cbligation to give our man

LONDON (NC-The impend- active workers oome training outside contam ing elosingof a large industricl $ bull $ an idea of what was neeclshyJilseph Rodriguez of the plant has been criticized by ~ edfromthem in the outside Puerto Rican Democratic ChEb lay -eouncil of Our Lady Of _rl11 In the past he addeeurohas prepared 11 scholarship PieshyGrace parish in southeast Lsnshy we were not fWfilling ~ gram for -the collegedCD DeedS 1d ~veryoneliturgy

The council expressed its deep concern at the recent No Comlmentclosure of factories in middotthis area Completean4 in particular of the impendshy VATICAN (orry (NC)-Ibe ing shutdown of the Associ2ted Vatican had no comment -oJ1 11

ElectricaIIndustries (AEI) plant repolt that ~hbishop Agostincgt BANKING Casaroli secretary for extraershyIt callid upon the governmeJrt dinary ecclesiastical affairs ilf SERVICEand the -ehaiTmanof the oomshy the Papal Secretariat of statepany torevsrse the decision 10 eonterred with Dlembers of ~

c~ don the plant because Of tor BristOl CountyN-orth Vietnamese missi-on iJJthe middotmoral religious and 5Ocial Parisjn lJanuarylt n JUWWampleffeets iCaiJS2a by the ~veshythat Archbishop Casaroli Wallmen1 a1popl1ation absent from the Vatican fOll

Copies ltOf the councils motion several days nlenUy BrjstoICounty were sent 1amp Prime ~1inister

Harold Wilson MiJiister of Trust Company Labor RayJ Gunter President ampf the Board of Trade Douglas Sturteant (

TAUNTO~ MASSJay and company officials iHoOkAlthough the councils action was a surprise to the pastel Ed 1897 IIHE BANJ(ONFather Joseph seally AA ~ uiltl~rs SUppJies JAUNTONGRHNprist sroa that he agreed ith it ftll3 Purchase Street Member 01 Feileral ~

Faiher 8enlly sait[ centbert Aellad iNew Bedford IDsuranee CorporaamptoDJlOt~cteil p01itiealand elaquolshy 996-5661 nomic motions to eome from the council but pointed out You cannot separate Feligimtl from eveJ~ay life

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968 Capacity Audience at Holy Name Parish ~ihss

My Consciesect1ce Discusses The J)etached Americans In Educ~tion Continued from Page One

Do we care -for knowledge

what happens to other people Why do we strive for college educations or for money Are we so anxious to confor~l1 that we never dare to PITTSBURGH

tMrI

~VJI and it must be understood in a

t mear-cu way

A person following his ~con-~ence must be sincere He cannot play games with his mind but must be honest with himself

A person foilowing his con~ liCience must be correct It iSl10t ugh that he sincerely beshy~ Reves that something is good or evil-he must be sure that hiS judgement is a correct one

agrees with Gods view of the matter

Sometimes people make misshytakes in judgement-honest misshytakes to be sure but mistakes iwnetheless The oft-quoted exshyample is that of the African savshyrage deep in the jungle who may be sincerely following his con- ooience when it tells him to kill omd eat his enemy His conshyscience is a sincere one But it~ Is a mistaken one since it does IIlOt agree with Gods Will He ond every person must c~m-

liitantly review his judgements to lbe sure that they are correct ones and riot sincere mistaken Utes

A person following his conshy3Cience must be certain He can not act with doubt or uncertainshy~ about the rightness or wrong- mess of an act since he would be Announces Prize acting with the willingness to

takea cpance on being wrong For Best Plan ~ offendi~g God and this is aever~ validmiddot If there is uncer- PITTSinJRqH (NC)-Bishop t8inty the person must seek aid John J Wright of middotPittsburgh III arriving at a sure and correct haS annoutc~d il priz~ of$IOOOtor professor ina p1inor semshy tudgementmiddot - formiddot the architect who submitsmiddoth be I f - inary chapiainof a school dishyThe Christian acts with amiddotcon- ~ e st p an or a Jliljgtr renoshy ocesan chancellor and finally

lllilence ~rned by the prlnciples vation of the sanctuary of St vicar general tilChrlst This is where tliEi Pa~l~ cath~middot~al_h~remiddot~T~~e ~om- The P6pe a~o nam~d Father

aturchsteachers the Pope Iiiid P~tit~o~ IS ~p~nmiddot ~omiddotal archJtec~ Bienvenido TudtiJdto be auxil- a message toAfrica and a mes ishops ~nfer middotthe pi~ture to wl~hlD ~e bound~~l~~s~f the iary bishop of Dumaguete in the sage ~lling for peaCe

Illelp men make judgementsmiddot thatmiddot lire guided by Christ Sometimes ~ese j~dge~eptsgo a~intitmiddotnat-middot lIIIa1 inclinations and tendencies md this has always been thedif-

~ti~ty of ~ing a Christian-- Ghrist demands much of His llmiddotowmiddotmiddotermiddots middot IIIU

At present Catholics are askshyiDg tlie Pope to make a morai judgement about birth control d especlmiddotallymiddot the PlmiddotUmiddot Some_lire castigating him for not givshy g a qulck declslon or else they lliie telling people to forget about llrim and to make their own adgeme tsmiddot th ttmiddot w- n m e ma er The Pope in order to make a ilecision must make it on the basis of facts Scientists must provide him with the facts and In this matter there is much that k~epinglVith the general lin~s sition in favor I)f open housing complex The Pope has asked and is still asking theologians to evaluate the scientific facts in 4he light of Christian principles Not all moral issues are simple And then the Pope will apply the principles to the facts and 1ril1 make a decision about the morality of the matter

This will guide the Catholic in fllorming his conscience -- in arshyriving at a judgement that is sipcere that is the correct orie at lS artmiddot d t d ce am JU gemen anthatmiddot is Christian

K of C Convention 51ated for Houston

lAN MARCOS (NC) The

1970 national convention of the ~ights of Columbus will be held in Houston it was an-Bounced here at a conference of Texas officers of the interna- _ tional fraternalorder

The announcement of the seshylection of Houston for the con- v~ntion which will be held in

be different These were among questions discussed by a capacity audience at the second in a series on Christian Morality sponsored by the parish council of Holy Name Church Fall River Sparked by Sisshy

John AIIcIa SUS Cter some 30 people from all parts of themiddot Diocese viewed the film The Detached Amerishycans then broke into small groups for buzz sessions

Thesis of the film was that Americans wont become in volved with each other It dra- matically pointed its message with the true story of Kitty

Genovese murdered on a New York Street while 38 of her neighbors watched ffom winshy

bull dowS-o--and did nothing Also depicted were amarried

couple talkingto each other with neither really listening a student going thriugh school as on an assembly line with his sole goal the position he could

hope for as a college graduate and various other examples of non-involvement

What is life worth if we do not give it away questioned Harry Reasoner at the end of the film The Holy Name audishyence agreed that life sbould be

used for others but tended to feel that there wasnt the im-Personalitv in a smailer city

Jthat is found in a large metropshyolis One Sister countered howshyever with stories brought to

h t htschool by children s e aug This is right in Fall River she stressed Others cited examshypIes of personal involvement in affaIrs of others but agreed that much more could and

Pope I~aul Names Two Aluxiliaries VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VImiddot hail named Msgr Jose T Sanchez to be auxiliary bishop of Caceres in the Philipshypines He takes the titular See of Lesvi

Msgr 5anlhez was vicar genshyeral of Legazpi at the time of his nomination

He was born March 17 1920 atPandan in the Legazpi dioshycese He completed his philoshysophical and ordinary theologishycal studies at the diocesan semshyinary and obtained a licentiate in theology at the University of St Thomas in Manila He was ordained Marc~ 12 1946 and then worked as an assistant passhy

Pltts~urgpchap~er9rmiddottl~e Afner- ~ Philippines Father Tudtud who Pope Paul also delivered 264 ~can -Inst~tUtofAlth~te~ts was36ye~~I)]fat ~hcent time ~fsPeeches bull (~~)_(h~ch mclud~~ ~tIePoit~- his noniinatiOJl studied philos- burgb dlO~es~and three adJa-ophy and theology at St Johns

c~nt countIes SeminarY inmiddotBoston Fath~r roseph P- Larkin He was born March 22 1931

eOm~ission chaiIm~nmiddot ili1(I-a at Mabola inmiddotthe Cebu arch~ member of the diQcesan bU~lll- diocese He worked as assistant - bullbull

iIg commissligtn~ said the pur- pastor Editor ltit Cebus Caiholic pose of thereiiovlition is to pro weekl~ and finally pastor of the ville a ~mQte suitable sanctu- Church of thE Blessed Sacrashy

ary setting fof the liturgical re- inent in Cebu In addition atf orms Qrought into beingmiddot by the time of his nomination he Vatican Council II was vice-superior of the Misshy

Father Lmiddotai-kir said because slon Society of the Philippines the cathedral must architectu-middot r~lly and liturgically allow for Issues Sttement both episcopal mdparish ser-- U

vices ~~any structurai cihimge O H R h offers a unique chalienge to the n umalu ig ts designer~ and provision for the LA CROSSE (NC)-Tbe La

new liturgy must be made in Crosse diocese has taken a poshy

and spirit 01 the existing struc- integrated arid ildequate educashy t4re tion fair employment and the

- defense of the rights of minorshyities

Christians and J~ws Bishop Frederick W Frekshying of the Wisconsin diocese

Honor Clergymen and the diocesan central com-NEW YORK (NC)-Clergy- mission approvedmiddot apmiddot officiai

men from thefour major faiths statem~nt titled Human Reshyhave been honored here by the lations in the Diocese of La National Coiuerence of Chris- Crosse

tians anltt Jews The statement was prepared

the third week of August was the practice has spread middotto a made by Dr Josepb G Murphy number of other cities hesaid of La Marque a member of the interrelgious understanding hasmiddot boara- of- directors fortbe Cathprogressed tremendously middotiIi reshyeticmiddot meDs oganization middotc~nhyearsbull

-

Tbe clergymeri cited for by the subcommission of human relations of the diocesan cornshycourageous leadership in intershymissionon social action and apshy

creedal relations were proved by both before submisshy Rev Dr ~ohn C Bennett sion to the central commissiollll

president of Union Theological ) in January Seminary

Father Robert I Gannon SJ president emeritus of Fordham CONRAD SEGUIN University

Bishop Silas of the GreekOrshy BODY COJMPANY thodox archdiocese of Nortb and Aluminum or Steel South America 944 Countr Street

Samuel D Leisdorf New NEW BEDFORD MASSYork philanthropist pointed out

wy 2-6618that the NCCJ firstmiddot honored reshyligious leaders of four faiths in September -1966 Noting that

should be done by individuals parishes and municipaiities

There were no solutions ofshyfered to the problems posed bythe film We dont expect to have answers to these quesshytions warned Sister John Alicia at the beginning of the program They are too big for us The film WltlS strictly on the

human level and this was pointed out in one group No one can solve all problems it was agreed but surely each Christian canmiddot trust the Holy Spirit to lead him to the probshylems he is equipped to do someshything about no matter how small

There was another point on whichmiddot everyohe in the audience was in enthusiastic agreement that there be more such eveshynings as the one sponsored by Holllgt Namemiddot

Vatmiddotn Report~lIo

Continued from Page One two encyclicals The Developshymiddotment of Peoples and Priestly Celshyibacy four motu proprios inshyeluding one creating central a lay council and the Papal Comshymission on International Justice anp Peace and another restorshying the permanerit diacol1ate treeapostolic constitutions inshyelUding one reshaping the

Churchs c~iitral administlatioii two apostolic exhortations one apostolic letter and 78 other Wessagesmiddotand letterS inclQding

He reeeived eight ehiets Of state including U SPresident Lyndon B Johnson and United Nations Secretary General U T~ant and gave 16 audiences to

th lmiddottmiddot I0 er men 10 ~ 1 lca life in cluding U SVi~ President Hushy~rt H Humphrey Republican presidential hopeful Richard M N d N Ixon an ew Yorks Sen Robert F Kennedy

He received visits from four delegations of Orthodox churCh men including Orthodox Ecushymenicai Patriarcp Athenagoras I of Constantinople besides visit shying Patriarch Athenagoras in ~ tanbul

The book covering last yearli activities of the Holy See conshysists of 1680 pages plus about 2(10 photographs

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Bishop John J Wright hasestablished a committee 1Jl)take a complete look at Oaampshy

olie education in the PittsburpD lOcese

The aim is fc dedde wha~ 1shyd t to tak tbe ~

lrec Ion e Dedecade for the best education of

all Catholics young and oldThe committee will evaluate all present Catholic educationshygrade and high schools eo egesConfraternity of Christian Doeshytrine classes adult education and other programs

The surveyors wiU 117 to deshyvise a plan based oa mstinl and potential resources in facll-Hies funds and Staff to guide the dioceses educational efforlll for the next 10 years or more

May Be FaI-lleaehiDg Among ideas eXpected to be

examined in the evaluation are proposals by some to cut back on Catholic schools or even til phase them out in place of an expanded adult education proshygram

Named head of the committee of educators priests and lay professionals is Father Vernon Gallagher CSSp former presishy

deht of Duquesne University here now serving as an official of the Holy Childhood Associashytion He also is a former proshyvincial of the Holy Gbost Fa~ ers eastern province

The committee Will be emshypowered to call before it di shyocesan officials to hold publlc meetingshire staff ~ring in exshyperts ThedioCege will finance the work

The committee Win make spe- eific recommendations to BishoP Wright after the study which 18 expected to take at least a yearbull

-Results are expected to have ~ar-reaching implicatiou fOr Catholic education here

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Two Unbeoten league Play f1fE ANCHOR-Diocese oTtall River-Ihurs feb 29 1968 19

Coach Says Sault Complete BallPlayerCape Cods NausetCompiles SMTB Playmaker Is Former Coyle $trBest Over-All Court Mark

BY JOE MIRANDA By PETER BARTEK

An excellent hall handler and Norton High Coach team player Is how Pat Sault of

Taunton is described by his Eleven of tile 12 aa-ea e1ubs with the best records in coach Phil Wetterland of the

their respective leagues are among those who will parshy Sou the a s t ern Massachu- setts Technogical Institute Inshyticipate in the March Tech basketball tournament in Boston stitute in North DartmouthFairhaven High of the Oapeway Conference and Nauset Sault a 19-year old freshman

of the Cape amp Island loop are is a former Coyle High hoopshythe only all-winning league a single league game while two ster who played four years for

went doWn to defeat In every the Warriors his final two underaggregations from this area encounter In which they were coach Jim Lanagan on the varshyin the Hub championship Involved Almost two-thirds 02 sityelimination tourney while Dartshy the Southeastern Mass teams

D)Quth High is the only one of Teaching CareerfinIshed wIth a 500 average OIlthe tOp dozen better Although young Pat has al shya 70 per cent coQlbines WIth

WIth 12 triumphs in the Cape ready made plans for the future league record amp Island competition Nauset which Include finishing his edshywhich failed to Regional also achieved the best ucation and pursuing a teachershyqualify an inshy over-all record winning 16 of coaching career dication t hat 11 encounters The Cape Cod Sault has not yet chosen a non-league school will be shooting for the major in college but according competition selshy Class D Tech title to his parents he is very much dom jeopardizes interested in teaching historyNew Bedford High 15 and and coaching They feel he willthe ultImate one in the Greater Boston Subshy be good at both as he alwaysgoal of most urban league finished with anschools Actual- Peter devoted his spare time to helpshy

over-all 17-2 mark for the Winshyly 311 per cent Bartek ing the younger neighborhoodter The Crimsons 937 average boys understand athletics moreof the 35 Southeastern Massashy captured its leagues pennant flag thoroughlychusetts school teamsmiddot have The Crimson Whalers are now Pat is the oldest son of Mrqualified for the Tech title play poised to annex the No 1 State and Mrs Charles A Sault and)let none managed an over-all honor by clinching the top one of four children A sisterundefeated season ranking Class A division in the Annette is a senior at BishopThree area clubs failed to win Boston title tourney Cassidy High James Michael

and Cheryl grammar school Representatives in Three B~ackets students at Mulcahey Schoof in

Taunton Fairhaven and Holy Family FamilYhas been eliminated in The family resides at 85 Mershy

HIgh of New Bedford aiming the Lawrence Catholic tourney rill Avenue In Taunton and are for the Class C Tech crown both Southeastern Mass does not members of St Pauls Parish fInished wIth an over-all 16-2 have one club among the Tech

Wetterland Commentsmark The latter Is still smart- Class B participants but th~re ing from its cliff-hanging defeat will be five area combinations Wetterland was high in his at the hands of Xavier in the -includIng Fairhaven and Holy praise of his five foot 11 inch State Catholic tourney Bill Family-in the Class C play and guard who tips the scales at Walshs two-pointer from the three-including Nauset-in the 160 pounds ~ssesses good speed floor which many thought Class D Hub competition and is a key in the Corsairs fast

meant victory at Lawrence was The other Class C contestants break offense nu1llfied by a travelling viola- patterns when SMTI is wurkshy a rest he should be in top conshySault lllsed strictly with thetion which cost the loss ofthe are Case High of Swansea Nar- iilg too quickly and making dition for the 1968-69 campaignvarsity was gaining valuablebasket resulting in a one-~Jnt ry co-champions Oliver Ames Dlistakes Sault gaIned his court savvy1 f tb of North Easton runners-up in experience and developing rapshy

The SMTI mentor continued from Lanagan at Coyle wheretiOs~~ e Narragnnsett~a~ theHockomock circuit and Den- bUy whep a knee Injury slowed he iii the complete ball player hemiddotstarted in his juJ)ior and senshyDis-Yarmouth of Cape Cod see his progress midway through

Durfee of Fall RIver and ond pI fi ish in tho C the campaiiPt but Wetterland noting that he can shoot but is Jor lieasons and was a Vital co Bishop Stang mgh of North ace n er e ape most --content setting Up his in the Warriors successduring DartmQutb are the other two middotNausetwill be joined by Mar- has turned in some excellent efshy teammates for easy pblnts He Ioth years I J

way loop said despite the handicap Pat

Is a team player and always sacshy As ~ Coyle High fr~hmanarea Class A representatives inmiddot thas VIneyard and Norton mib forts in a most successful SMTI rifices himself to help the club Pat was a member XJtb~ yearshythe Tecb toutnament ~e Fall in the Class D bracket The season

Sault possesses a good atti shy lings h09P team and al~Q~ parti shyRiver Hilltoppers willbe out Islanders finished second to Naushy Defensively Sault is cnitshytude is a tough competitor and cipated in track By hihSOphoshyto make amends for their nose- set in the Cape amp Island league standIng Offensively Sault is one of the players Wetterland is more year Saultcopfjned his dive finish in the Bristol COUl)ty while Norton was second in the the teams playmaker ana quarshyeounting on 1to help SMTI gain athlettc talents to basketbjlll andloop whIle Stang ~ke Ho17 Tri~Valley Conference terback 8Dlall college recognition in the turned in a cODlJPenlla))le acshyfuture Teallll Player coun~ o~ himself

Ifere~s How They Did hi LiBogue Play Played for Lanagan Sault also represented stWetterland said his outstandshyThere is doubt about his the hardwood

he following are the league 21 Bishop Feehan 7_1 ing worth to the Corsairs comes no Pauls on in the eourage said the Corsairs skipshy Taunton CYO and in the annual from the fact that he can slowrecords of the 35 Southeastem Msgr Coyle 7-1 after painful knee Easter tournament He playeddown the offense and set up per even a

Mass teams Ta~ton 7-7 injury Sault continued to jpve four years of Litue JeagueM N B Vocational 6-8 his all and attended every pracshy Baseball and one season in theK of C Masons1 Fairhaven 14-0 25 DIman Vocational 5-9 tice The injury has slowed him Pony League prior to ~ntetmamp

Nauset 12-0 Msgr Prevost 5-9 visibly but after the season and Coyle Higa 3 New Bedford 15-1 27 SandwIch 4-8 To Cooperate4 Holy Family 13-1 28 Nantucket 3-9

NOTRE DAME (NC) - lfashyCase 13-1 29 Old Rochester 4-10

30 tlonal leadellS of the Scottish6 Oliver Ames 12-2 West~rt 3-11 Bite Masons and the Knights ~oll another7 Marthas Vineyard ~ 31 Barnstable 2-12

of Columbus anno~ced memshy8 Bishop Stang 10~ 32 Dighton-Rehoboth 1-13 strike on~rs of their organizations wU1Dartmouth 104 33 Bourne 0-14 work together on domestic andDennis-Yarmouth 10-4 Chatham 0-12 the enerlY international problems faciolaquoDurfee 10-1 North AUleJooro 1-14

the nation12 Norton 105 you get George A Newbury soveshy13 Attleboro 9-5 Minister Officiates reign grand commander 01 from14 Harwich 7-5

Scottish Rite Masons In theProvIncetown 7-5 a slice ofDn Cathclic Church northern jurisdiction of the US18 Seekonk 8-6 MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-A Lu- and John W McDevitt supremeSomerset 86

theran mInister officiated at the knight of the Knights of ColumshyFalmouth 8-6 marriage of his son in Holy Cross bus made the announcementMansfield 8-6 Catholic church here at a dinner here s~nsoredWareham 8-6

Married were James H Graf jointly by the Masonic Lodge 29 L th and the Knights of Columbus

a u eran and CalTon Ann council in South Bend Episcopalian Rite Gutwinski 25 a Catholic The ceremony was rformed - Both praised the work of Fa-MINNEAPOLIS (NC)- Archshy ther John A OBrien of the

bishop Leo Binz and Coadjutor Grapoundfs fltthell the Rev Paul L University of Notre Dame for Archbishop ~ PY1)1e of the Graf pastor of Holy Trinity r better understanding among the Cafllolic archdIoceses of St Paul theran church two groups Minneapolis were present in the Permission for the Rev Gmt Father Theodore M Hesshysan~lary of St Marks Episcoshy to officiate at his sonB wedding burgh CSC president of the pal cathedral here for the inshy was granted by theSacred Con- University of Notre Dame said stallation of Bishop Philip F gregation for the Joctrine of This nIght marks a great step McNarry as coadjutor bishop of the Faitlh inl lWme in answer to ll forward and reflects the new the Epi6copal diocese of Minneshy J)etition by Archbishop Leo BiDz ~enical spirit which is unishysota of~ ~~-M~eapotis iing ~ople long separated-

PAT SAULT

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bull THE ANCHOR Dayton University Thurs Feb 29 196a Brief Religious on Ecumenism

Selects Advisors SOUTH ORANGE (NC) meanitigful dialogue should not tended not to lead to compro- DAYTON (NC)-An ll-mem-

Named resident Some 1000 mms and Brothers be confused with monologueshy mise but to conyergence ber advisory board of six stushyservfng in tli~ Newark archdi~shy or confrontation He added We talk now of our common dents two faculty members andSANTA CLARA (NC)-The cese were briefed on the basic we must be willing to be pershy belilefs he said not to com- three representatives of theboard of trustees of the Univershy principles of ecumenism in a suaded-we need an open mind promise each others faith but in community has been establishedlllity of Santa Clara has named program sponsored by the Newshy to seek out the truth wherever the hope that at some point in for the Office of Human Relashylrather Thomas D Terry SJ ark Archdiocese Commission for it might be shy the future we will converge tions at the University oJ Dayshy35th president of the Jesuit unishy Ecumenical Affairs

Ifersity Father Terry who sucshy Discussing the difficulties of As an example he pointed to tornSpeakers at the session ineeeds Father Patrick Donohoe establishing Christian-Jewish the wide divergence of views The board under the direcshySeton Hall University includeSJ recently appointed Califorshy dialogue he said we Christians regarding (he Mass and the Eu- tion of Charles Hirt director ofDr Leonard Swidler of Templeaia provinCial af the Society of are responsible for 2000 years charist that existed between the Office of Human RelationsUniversity Philadelphia aridJIesus has been academic vic~ of anti-Semitism and now_ we Martin Luther and the Council will be responsible for estabshyFather Thomas M McFadden ofpresident af Loyola University must overcome our mutual disshy of Trent Then he cited the re- lishing policy making programthe Brooklyn dioceseLos Angeles for the last year trust before dialogue can be cent statement on the Eucharist recommendations helping to

lllI1d a half Previous to that Swidler said dialogue with fruitful issued by Lutherans and Catho- alleviate campus racial probshyIIlIather Terry was dean of the others must be preceded by an lics to show how much closer lems and drawing up proposall ltWllege of arts and sciences at examination of Catholic attishy Father McFadden said diashy the two bodies have come since for implementation Santa Clara tudes In addition he said a logue among Christians is inshy that time

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Page 4: 02.29.68

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 Former Nun - Explains Reasons F~r Leaving Maryknoll Sisterspraises ~Robert Speaight~s WASHINGTON (NC)-MilrYshy men I feel I have now an iampshyknoll has ask~d me to leave beshy creased capacity to love cause I am involved in guerrila When I was asked to leaveBIograpl1y of fr$ Tei~hGirdl activities And yet by this inshy Guatemala because of our activshy

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kctnn12dy volvement I am trying to live ities I was not surprised I hatll up to my ideals and to what my already risked that in my decishyPierre- reilhaxd de ChMdin died in New Yorkmiddot City conscience demands of me Sisshy sion to work for a basic fundashy

on Easter- Sunday 1955~ His funeral wok place at St~ ter Marian Peter a former mental change in the social Ignatiils ~huleh two clays later There was a Tow Mass Maryknoll nun explained in a order that would ultimately in the presence of but a handful of people Buriat was t(l)middot letter to friends in the Maryshy provide justice and peace to the

knoll order main bulk of the populationbe at St Andrewrs Novitiate Sister- Marian Peter along Sister Marian Peter said

on the Hudson But the ~An element of pantheism couId with six other Catholic missionshy She ahributed the inability of

be~ discernedi in them Teilhaidground was s-tiU too hard for aries was asked to leave Guateshy the powers-that-be to undershyheld that only tmougll assis~Dgtg mala in December because ofthe digging of a grave The the world to its fulfiHment did involvement with the gucrillainterment had to wait foc a one came to Christ the head of movementgentler season When finally it all creatrOD

wa s possible With Father Thomas R Mel- Strangely for a palaeontolo-middot no m Our n er ville 37 to whom she is reshygist Tcilhard had little histori wftnessed i 1J portedly married and biscal sense and was UttIe interestmiddot Tllese facts aremiddot brother Father Arthur Melville _ ed in the past He loeked eOD- presentedin tIte 34 she defied orders to returnfidently joyfirlIy 00 the- fnture

to Maryknoll headquarters infinai paTagmlpll For him progress was inevit shyof Robert Speshy Ossining N Y and went inshyable and linea11~ He calledi for aightSmiddotTneLiife stead to Mexico after leavinga new Cllristianity forrmiddotthe- new of 1iei1hard de Guatemalaage andi a new spirituaIitl MeGONJIGAL In her letter dated Jan 2lVChardin CHalTshy Not SlTstematicmiddot and published here by the

Moreover his thought basp(ll and Row

Washington Post Sister Marian been ehallactel1ized as nat rl2al~

49l E 33rd St Jfesuit (hoploin Peter confirmed the fact thatNJew Y olIk ly a system of thaught but 8ltN Y 10016 she is married but did not name way of felling He was intuitive$8501) It is wrdmiddot to beliele ililed illTh Hue her husband believed to be the and mystical Toe idiom futthat so obscure and lonely an former Maryknoll priest ThomasHUE (NC) -- A Jesuit priestwlrich he wrote was rrhapsodic R Melvilleend wasmiddot the lot of a man who who eouldint stay away fromratlhell than coldly rationalin the 13_years since his dea~ The Maryknoll order has 20-his boys in the front lines- And what he said was sohas become so celebrated a fig nounced that the three are noClrossedmiddot the Perfume Riverintoacutely personal trliat it was obshyuee a thinker among the most longer members of our societythe bitter frghting around thesellVecE that it coufcr bemiddot prroperly influential of the present censhy and also stated that if reportsImperial Cittadel of this old proshyunderstood only by MOWing ofthe marriage between the nuntur~ vlnciaL capital and died therehirp (heDce the impoutance af aWhat we forget is that Teil shy and priest were true the couplewith a snipers bullet in hissound sensitive biegpaphy)hard had been in exile fOl 30 would be automatically excomshyfClIreheadIi the light of all tmS it isyears priOl to his death that municated from the CatholicThe priesi Father (Maj)scarcely surpuising that Tenhis- books were published only ChurchAloysius P MI~onigal of thehard had troubles with eccesi-middotposthumous1y risuits Maryland province Grateful- to Maryknollastical censos AJad it should IleMr Speaight has attemped badgered higher offkers to let In her letter Si6ter Mariannoted that scientists teo lookedthe diHicult task of combining him go to the front when he Peter explained that she had notaskance at his comiddotntentfons -Hean account of Teilharfs life rejected the ideal~ of Maryshylearned that a Marine unit wasspoke- of mystical sciencewith a hiStory of the developshy fiighting withollt a chaplain knoll I am grateful to the timethe science of Christ runningment of his thought as set out With permission given relucshy and training and friendship ][through all thiJngs as tithe onlyin his writings In the main he tantly Father McGonigal himshy lived in Maryknoll I am evensCience that really mattersismiddot successful self an Army chaplain then now the product of a sincereThis was bound to IDe suspect

Accepted ElOlution mDved into the combat zone facing up to what the deals I FiroJIlJ Rnme Restraint there acquired and -reinforced

Whiremiddot preparing for and after demand of me As anyone who has struggled His body was found in the

_with leilhards books knows rubble of Hue his _unbrokenattainiJilgmiddot illl 1922 his doctorate She continued For somehis thought defies easy compreshy glasses nearby at the Sorlbonne he taug)lt athensiom or summary Mr Speshy J1ather McGonigal a native of time I had begun to question the Institut Catholique He left Philadelphia was serving his the validity of many customsaight ha~middot made a laliantr effoet in 1923 for his first trip to that I found weighty and legalshyto give not onl an outline of it sewnd lnitch as an Army chapshyChina an expedition of geolo- istic and impending in the waybut alsm to trace its stagesmiddot arid lal n when he was killed Orshygical and paIaentologicalJ dis-shyfurther to examine it critically dained a Jesuit priest in 1953 of life of a Religious covel1Y Teilhancl wasmiddot born in 1881 in he had served as prefect of 1 particularly rejected the

He was to spend the gl1eater the Puuvengpe reg~on of France studies at Gonzaga High School apartness that it breeds between part of the remainder of histhe fourtru of 11 children oK a in Washington D C and taught the Religio~s and the peoplelife in China and very littlefamily which regarded nhe at Loyola High School in Balshy she should be one of Povshyof it in France There would al shyCatholic faith as itsmiddot most pre-middot timore He was Jinishing studies ertyparticularly bothered me so be stays in Africa lndi3 Jashycious possession amp 3J boy heshy fo) a doctoratamp at Georgetown We vowed and pretended to be

showed keen curiosity about va and the United States with UdveEsity when he reentered poor and we lived like the rich one brief visit to Rome in 1948 and mixed with th~m and arethe natunal vlon1dJ especially the service in June 1966

Me was not unknown instones and minerals He was of their friends Rome In fact there was an exshycourse to become a- pioneering Now I am tru1ypoor I have

geologist and pa1aentologist tensive dossier Gil h1m at the no security I am at the servicedQI~Y even liberally interpretedHoly Office As early as 19241 of the poorHe entered 3J Jesuit school iDl Extreme caution was celtainlyhe had IDen de~atedi to Rome- fO1 The 38-year-old former misshy1892 and ingt 1899l oecame 31 in order~his views on original siJm lFliom sionary explained that chastityJesuit novice His ordination to Rome came repeatedgt resirF3ints Excellent Likeness had also ceased to be meaningfulthemiddot priesthood took place inJ i1~ 1933 for example a pnohibishy At the same time one eanshy to her I wanted ttl love 3001911 Meanwhile in Iiis ~ears tioD inJ his accepting any ampfficia1 not but regret the manner in to love hUmanly The way weor preparution he had mOleltLmiddot posi tiOtb WI Parris in 1940bull a pliCgt-middot which it was exercised Teil shy were designed tfgt love ahoub fnOIll one Jesuit Iiouse to hib1tiOlL in his padicupation in hald sfloulQi na1e been given I foond that my wve fer a maJIanother in the isIand of fursey aOJ intel1poundctuaL congpess iIlJ New every opportunity ta explain lived fully has only made ~ in Egypt and in EngIandl AlIshy York in 1954 a pnohllb11liolll Olll and defend his ideas Aflony- more sensitive to the love ampf

read~ liemiddot haell takern up sciclltipoundi1 his writing a work of apoloshy mOtlS defation al~d reeeurolUlse1essresearch and already some of getics in reply to lcl1taiB scishy repression arrc ullworthy at deshythe main concenns oJ his life entists fenders ojj the truthwere eudent for example his Attractive Iinpressiille F01bidding Feilharcd to pubshylove of the universe and his acshyThese restraints caused Teil- lisfl may have b~n a gFievousceptance of evolution

hard great suffering He subshy mistakemiddot eveA in the interests of BewHifering Teacher mitted to tnem but prilately orthodoxy- For the publicatian

Asmiddot a resuit fie was engaged questioned their wisdom anell duxing his lifetime of books in teaching and as a teachei legitimacy Ee- neverrmiddot thought wlifch appeared only after bis he could be rather bewildering of leaving themiddot Chllllch and al shy d~a~h WOtltd have subjected bis He was in military service though he sometimes speculatedl views middotto dgorous criticfsm and throughout World War I (1914- as to the advisability at leaving prollably have compeUed him 1918) Elaquo waslt often in the fnont the Society of Jesus he always to- modr1iy and refine them lines attend~hgmiddot the wounded conclUded that his place was in atr Speaight is to be- com but it wal l)oth1 in) the fUlly and the society mended for an c~xceneAt likeshyin the lulls of the- conflict that Teilliaxd is an a ttracti ve pershy nes of an i-ntelrirgible synopsis his ideas ubout man and the sonality and an impressive one of his doctniJne aDd for an evenshyuniverse oegan to be formushy as Mr Speaight portrasl him handed appraisal of a controshylated 0ne cannot but be symoJj)athetic venliali Sttlgt~ eel

Durihg tfie war Ie wrote 13 with him as the restmiddotnictions laid essays which sougpt to tear upon him aremiddot recitceJ Aad ene away thc mask of atheism f~om admires his seurorupulous sub- VitcennaRSbullhgt Meet thesegt new lUIlrents ~ft thought mission to aullhollity Jlilll Bl1ten lialltlclJl1arr Counui~ and expose them as Christian~ But onc cann otJ condemn ampilcletYi of 511 VillceEl1i de- Paul

The crisis of Modernism was Church aUUltonWes out of handmiddot willI hold its moJLtIaJiy meeting then ver~ recent and the essays in this case Ueilhards hyposhy in st llatmicks Sclreol han 0Iil QJaduced misgjlihgs in somemiddot of theses are~ymiddot no mcans unshy Slade Street following Benedic- I1eilhardJs superiors WeIll they challengable They are novel t1on of the Most lBlessed Sacrashymight have They d iffe red from and daring They aJe oliten nGt ment in the upper church ~

conventional recei ved views readily reconcilable with outho- 745 Tllesday nimiddotght

BEfoRE YOU BUY -TRY

PARK MOTORS OLDSMOBilE

bull Oldsmobile-Peugot-Renoub 17 IfidiIIe StreetFllrtravea

stand the guerilla activities of(

the missionaries to a depenshydency that comes from too many interests that blinds people io the simplicity and nakedness of truth

Terrific Contrast

She stated When I came tJI) Guatemala in 1954 I came filled with the ideal of telling people Christs message of love A1l 1I became more and more familia~

with the situation in the countTY 1 became aware of a terrific contrast between the haves anell the have-nots those who are well-off satisfying their conshysciences on the one hand while using cheap manpower to mainshytain their wealth and position those who are poor sinking furshyther and further into a fatalism an undignified conformism 3IIl inhuman existence

When she concluded that gueshyrilla activity was the only way in which a state of justice can be reached she said she haell to take that road or else reject my conscience blind myseif anell become a hypocrite hiding beshyhind the easy facade of a woman dedicated to God

I liave become a woman dedicated to humanity and i~

loving men even to the degree of being willing to die for men I am loving God more truly more directly than ever

Sister Marian Peter who signed herself Margie for hell pre-Maryknoll name of Marshyjorie Bradford concluded Th~reis a revolution beginning lD CIvic soclety as well as in the Church The vanguard of any movement is fraught with danshyger personal danger and the danger of losing ones way but when the time comes to march we cannot be cowardly and hold back Circumstances have put us in the vanguard and we must march

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5 THE ANCHOR-Dominicans Plan Thurs feb 29 1968Sisters a1f Rose Hawtllorne Lathrop HomeChapter Meeting To Continue Care of Incurable Patients Urges Catholics In Chicago

CHICAGO (NC)-A JeDshy By Patricia McGowan Aid Immjgrants 9mJl ohapter meeting of the ~rldwide Order of Preachshyem (Dominicans) has been sdteduled tentatively to open Aug 20 at the Aquinas Institute euroJf Philosophy Dominican house Ilif ll~udies in suburban Rivet 1JGrest

Officials of the Dominicans a Albert the Great (Chica~)

province said Faiher Aniceto Wemandez OP Do min i can master general and his 12shymember cabinet from Rome 8lJ weUl as the heads of 40 Domin Qcan provinces throughout the IIVorld will attend the sessionll which may last until November

The general chapter is the lhft for the Dominicans since ilhe close of Vatican Council n lJ win be only the second timemiddot

flm the 760-year history of the Jl)ominicans that a general chapshytell is held in the United States

llhe Chicago officials esti shymated more than 100 delegates wm attend It was announced flnat each provincial will be acshyltrompanied by an expert in some ~se of Scripture theology jhilosophy or canon law

The Chicago officials said unshyamp2r the rules adopted by Vati shycun Council II the chapter has lnlthority to rewrite the DominshybSIll constitutions and make oweeping changes which could affect the lives and works of Qrz 10000 Dominican priests cmd Brothers in the world

The Chicago officials called Me scheduling of the chapter in t1ilre United States a symbolic ~reakthrough of recognition br American influence among ~e Dominicans

lZlIperimentall lLegnsnll~finn

Copies of the Final Report a1 the two-and-one-half year ceH-study of the midwest DoshylJlinicans-reported last Fall were distributed to provincialD OOld experts attending last Sepshy~bers preparatory meetings bll Rome and influenced their ~ecision to convene at River orest

Findings of the Chicago provshylzJrtes self-study are reflected in iilrst drafts of new experimental TIeglslation for the order being ~epared by a 28-man internashyilional commission for debate at ~ chapter

Spokesmen for the Chicago province indicate considerable Glecentralization of the orders government and apostolate as -the probable outcome of the ehapter with debate expected ~ center on specific areas of Ilmiformity or diversity

1 recent worldwide poll of Dominican sentiment shows Il

iOOffimon desire for a few realshyllstie laws and abolishing of arshychaic forms Specific proposals IO far have been most progresshypoundliye in tODe it was stated

Catholic Magazine Seized at Airport

SANTO DOMINGO (NC) ~

eopies of a Catholic magazine published in Uruguay have 1lleeIIl seized in the airport cusshytoms office here on the grounda Ibat they contain subversive material

Three packages eontainin[f OO copies of the January issue of Vispera published in MonteshyYideo by the Uruguayan brancll of Pax Romana international Catholic organization 01 stushy6entlgt and intellectuals were barred from delivery at tile Idiport

Various articles praising ErshyIleSW (Che) Guevara the Cuban communist leader killed ill (lUerrilla fighting in BoliVia Were said to have caused the ~scaUon

Visiting the Rose Hawthorne Lathrop Home in Fall River liist week wag the Mother General of the Dominican Sistern staffing the institution She is brisk ~nergetic Mother Mary Elizabeth who makes her headqualrters at the Hawthorne NY motberhouse of the community Once or twice yearly Mother Elizabeth makes the rounds of the seven homes operated by the Sisshyters an for the same purpose - the service of patients with incurable cancer She admits puzzlement at the situshyation in Fall River In Atlanta St Paul Cleveland Philadelshyphia and New York the Sisters homes are filled to capacity and usually have waiting lists of pashytients In Fall River tlle Rose Hawthorne Home has not been fiHed for several years

J1t isnt unfoMunately that cancer is on the decrease There seem ~ be several reasons for the low admission rate here One in some ways reflects favorably on New Englanders They seem less willing than people in other parts of the country to delegate flo others the care of infirm and aged parents and grandparents who make up the bulk of the homes patients although there are no age requirements

They are proud and the old people are proud said one obshyserver They dont want to acshycept help

- Not Always Good Thi3 isnt alwa~s a good atshy

titude however It can result in elderly people rllceiving poor care through lack of knowledge or fucilities in the home

Another reason for the patient lack might be the larger number of nursing homes in the New Enshygland area Another could 00 lack of public knowledge of the services the home stands ready to provide Still another say some is the full name of the Sisters Servants of Relief for Incurable Cancer

Today the name strikes a chill but in 1896 when the community was founded by Rose Hawthorne Lathrop daughter of Nathaniel Hawthorne it lit a beacon of hope for the suffering poor who had literally no place to go when striken with what was then reshygarded as a contagioUls disease

Now pointed out Mother Elizshyabeth patients have Medicare

Usually when they come flo the Sisters they are much sicker than they used to be having exhausted the resources Of modshyern medicine for treatment ampnell alleviation of cancer

They have usually exhausted their Medicare allowances too thus meeting the Sisters reshyquirement that their patients have no financial resources Cancer can be a long drawn out illness said -Mother Elizashybeth and use up all the savings of even a prosperous person

HaV0n of Peace Certainly if it were general1r

known what the Rose Hawshythorne Home offers it would be overrun with paUents as it WWl

A$k lPub~ic Hearings OIl1 Church Matters

BROOKLYN (NC)-A fOUllshyperson ad hoc committee has obtalnoo the signatures of 50 laymen priests and nUDS from

the Brooklyn diocese w a stateshyment calling on Church authorshyiti~ ~ hold pubUe hearinglJ onimportant Church affairs bull eluding selection of bishops T~ signers d tnle statemeDt

nncUllIl1ied Sol lay persons 24 ~riesta and two Sistem

There are approximately 1000 I)riests 5000 nuns and Brothers and 16 million laymen m tbe diocese llf Brooklyllho

_________~Llt _ VISITS EIORJE Sister Palll OP left and Mother

Mary Elizabeth OP view GOmmemorwtive plaque in cllapel of Rose Hawthorne Lathrop Home Fall River Sister Paul is superior at home Motlle Mary Elioobeth i3 mothezo genshyeral of the Dominican Sisters Servants of ReHef for Inshycurable Cancer She visited Fall River institution last week

in 1932 when it was founded at Sisters are one family she sumshythe urgent request of 1plusmne late =led up Bishop Cassidy Then there were Many patients worry about occupied beds even in the hall shy paying us said a Sister I al shyways today there are many empshy ways tell them You are paying ty beds in wards and private with your suffering Just pray rooms ~OT usmiddottt

We find that patients often Asked about dxanges the SisshyJive longer than the doctors had ters might make in their work expected when they come to in line with the renewal Us said Mother Elizabeth We Mother Elizabe1lh said she didnt think its because all thepreashy expect her communitys apostoshymires are removed They know tte ro change much There are that they wont have to leave w l2j professed Sisters in the comshyafter a certain number of days munitYshe said andshe has on We say to them TWs is Yillgtur hand many unfilled reltluests home you can stay as long as llrom bishops for the Sisters to you want The patient and the work in their Dioceses

80 the Sisters woork win reshy

r ~

Iv

- main that envisioned by Rose Hawthorne La1ihrop After all Love is -lot love whicb alteIS -when it alteration finds

Mothell Mary Elizabeth OP

SYDNEY (NC)-A statement on immigraticn aimed at enshycouraging Catholics to a wider acceptance of their duties toward immigrants was issued here by th~ Federal Catholic Immigrashytion Committee -of the Austrashylian Bishops Conference to be read in all cllulches on Immishygration Sundar

The statement said that Ausshytralia is failing to attract and keep immigrants An official inquiry it acJdetl indicated that psychological and social diffi shyculties rather than material and economic considerations influshyenced the departure of immishygrants

The statement called for a personal inquiry seeking to reshyveal whether our at tit u de toward newcomelS is one of inshydifference or even of hostility whether we lend support to the erecting of barriers against the legitimate economic and social aspirations of migrants whethshyer in fine we neglect our duty as Catholics as citizens of welshycoming and helping others of fulfilling our religious and soshycial obligations toward newshycomers

The statement quoted AustroshyIan Minister of Immigration BM Sneddon saying If we beshylieve Australia has 0 destiny and that destiny is linked with population then each of us has a duty to assist wherever pOSlt sible and become involved pershysonally with immigration ami migrants

Noting that immigration conshytributes lo the economy of a country the Catholic statemen~

stressed however that migrants are not to be valued simply ~

tools of production but as pershysons In the mind of the Church the whole process of migration is part of the matter of hum~n

redemption in a preparation fo-r life eternal

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~--6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 291968

Women and the Postconciliar Church

Someone recently figured out that in the Catholic Ohurch today over fifty per c~t af its members are women These loyal followers of Christ are for the most part the victims of a subtle but very effective discrimination In theory of course the church grants equal rights for men and women In the Vatican Councils DOCUMENT ON THE CHURCH IN THE WORLD TODAY we read

With respect to the fundamental rights of the person every type of discrimination whether soshycial or cultural whether based on sex race color social condition language or religion is to be overshycome and eradicated as contrary to Gods intent

m theory the teaching is a fine piece af legislation In practice the question is simply ignored

Women may not be ordained Women are barred from officiating formally in the liturgy Their wice in church affairs is all but silenced A women is not allowed to serve Mass She may not functiol) as a lector If there are women in the parish choir-- they are more or less toleraJted only beshyeause there are not enough small boys or grown men in the parish available for the job

Father Johannes Neumann professor of Canon Law at the Universitr of Tubingen in Germany recently stated

A boy not even capable of fluent reading is adshymitted to the altar but an educated woman who could do a much better job is excluded as though only males were the children of God

The sam~ is true about parish choirs Women are easier to recruit more eager to sing and with few exceptions they

make a better noise than men Yet we still retain a cershytain nostalgia for the cult af the boy choir or the all Ilale choir as th~ summum bonum in litllrgical excellence

Ordination for women may well become one of the big issues in the c6ming years It may sound strange -to us--middot a woman functioning as a priest Yet however we may 0pshy

pose it we must admit that theologians have never put up a convincing case agdinst it It is also significantto note that the International Coniressof the Laimiddotty passed a resoshylution on the subject when it metmiddot in Rome last October

The principal objection to the ordination of women win not be so much theological as one of prejudice The tradition of the male priesthood is a long one and rooted deeply in the souls of Catholics Granted the priesthltgtltgtd is not on the immediatemiddot horizon for Catholic women However there are indications that the dimiddotaconate is certainly within their grasp Many European theologians argue that this Could

become a reality in two or three years This would mean that women could carry out such functions as preaching

distributing the Eucharist and burying the dead Already in certain circumstances women have been given permisshysionto distribute holy communion The Oblate Sisters of the Sacred Heart in Northern Alberta hav~ been allowed to do so since December 1966 when no priest is available The same is true in parts of Africa and South America

Truly these are excitipg times and exhilerating times All of us must be prepared fur more changes within the framework of the church Some we will welcome others will repell us The Churchs immediate task as always is to build up the people of God to meet the challenge of the day One positive way is to help in removing some of the anomalies that exist between laymen and laywomet

rhmiddotmiddotANCBOR e

OIIrll NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL IPVEI

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall Riv~

410 Highland Avenue

Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Ete Re~ Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P D~iscoll

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

the moolQlnq Rev John f Moore St Josephs Taunton

Why AILilfJg Hof Smmer t

Fe(QHf ~ litD Arson Murder DeWillEm] o$mtfive Contribution

Television commentators are warning the public Radio announcers m~e reaching the state of alarm The Federal

Government is preparing troops to meet the crisis Irrationshyill mdicals are whipping themselves into shape An are

waiting to face a promise of ~1 long hot Summer of civil tion to help the situation To

continuously hammer negativeriot and racial upheaval The and pessimistic fears into thetensions of this upheaval -is spirit of a nervous public only

already present Stokely Carshy creates a greater spirit of unrestmichael and Rap Brown have Suspicion and doubt are theachieved their goal They have sole frUit of such a policySl)wn lhe seeds of national fear America can certainly avoidFear of not fear of arson and such a diet fl~ar of murdEr are promised

American cities come the wann Added to this caldron of conshyweather This radic~ fonn of fusion we are now exposed to urban renewal will tear apart the rabble rousing antics of Dl ore cities of this country than llome so-called civil rights any fleet of cranes and bull shy leaders who dance to the tuneduzers of Hanoi What trueancl laSting

The public nE~WS media -is not _benefit can commentators leapmaking any jKlsitive contribu- from this barvest ~f hate

011I1 Vultures of Doom Benefit We do not deJIJr that there are

b1 gots and bulliies in American 8Ociety These people are 88

Wi~ong as their despoti~ llberal counterparts NEither group bas elt)ntriQuted much to the totality fJIf Americana

Most Americans want to do lonething to hE~lp their fellow eoilDtrymen wh) are long-sufshyfeling from the efforts of racial pr~judice They want to secure th4~ equal rights and opportunishyties of their less fortunate countrymen Thill they should do this theymiddot must achieve But no in fear bloodshed and riot

We must face the realities of thE racial issue ill truth and sinshyceIHy Most of tlS have become distant and impe~vious to the

trieil and laments of the preaecl minority Some have intombed themselves in an urban isc)lati~ others have fled to the camoushyflage of suburbia The majoriv just do DOtwan~ to become IDshyWOlved

Yet we mustbull

The I~rice for o~r lack of eonshylaquo7~ mIght be rumed ~erican Clties and dead AmerIcan dti shyzens We WIll we learn that only the vultures of dQom benefit

from ~e carnage of middotour dty streets

Now is the time for positive actio~ now is the time for re- sponsIble leadershIp

The question-Will either be forth coming

Change of Laws On Abortion Div$ive

OTTAWA (NC)-A ffigni ficant relaxation of Canada~ abortion laws could result Em a serious division betweem Catholic and non-Catholic hOampa pitals the Catholic Hospital AIP sociation of Canada told a Ie islative committee

In a brief to the Standin(g Committee on Health and Wellshyfare the association also warneclt that the feared division betweeili the hospitals could spill over into Canadian society at large

Canadas Parliament is now considering a bill to broaden the grounds for abortion which ill part of a general revision of tile nations criminal code Introshyduction of the abortion measure in the middle of a parlimentary probe of the question has -

ready driven a wedge between the government and the Churda in Canada

Feb 27 Meeting The nations bishops cancene4

a scheduled appearance befoN the Health and Welfare Comshymittee and instead issued a sharp pastoral letter opposing the abortion changes Later the] agreed to appear at a hearing Feb 27

The Hospital Association briei warned that refusal by Catholie hospi tals to perform abortiON may result in the other hospishy

tals being largely devoted talgt what is frankly regarded by doctors as a distasteful kind ClI2 work with less time and facili shyties for the more satisfying laquol life-giving aspect of hospitall work

The Catholic Hospital Ass~

tion represents 300 institutionB which provide 35 per cent CIIf

Canadas hospital services This kind of division d

labor with the consenting hosshypitals getting all the abortion work and the dissenting hospishytals getting nothing but satisshyfying work would quite likelv lead to an ever-deepening rift between the two groups of hOampa pitals extending to the commushynities they jointly serve the brief warned

Increase Dissension In an obvious reference to tJw

nations sensitive relations beshytween French-speaking - and largely Catholic-and Englishshyspeaking-largely Protestant-shyCanadians the association a1s noted

This does not seem to be Eiii opportune time to introduce anshyother cause of deep dissension by moving rapidly towards legalizing a practice which Q

large section of Canadian s0cishyety-perhaps a majQrity-abshyhors as strictly immoral

Archbishop lakoyos At Detroit Meeting

DETROIT (He) - ArchbiAshyorgt lakovos one of the bull presidents of the World COund of Churches participated bull _ interfaith meeting while helNi

on a four day Yisit The Greek prelate W8$

eompanied by 10 OrthodOE bishops and members of thcI archdiocesan council composed of clergy andmiddot laymen from parts of the country Thismiddot couashycil top eccesiastical body air Greek Orthodox church met here for two days

While here Archbishop lakOoo vos met with Roman CathoHc Archbishop John F Deardon at Detroit Episcopal Bishop Richshy

ard Emrich of Michigan aDd Bishop Archie Crowley preslo dent of the metropolitan J)e troit Council of Churches ~

meeting took place follo~ bull Vespers service at the Assumpo tion Greek Orthodox churcIL

f I

PAUL BARTKIEWICZ KATHERINE BOLINGER M~CHAB CORNElL SUSAN FAOiEUi STAN f~ HOLY fAMILY DOMSNllAJt

THE

ANCHOR

SALUTES

n)$

S(~OO~

~~~II1~~~

JANET LAFOND MICHAEL LOWNEY JWI POISSON ST JOSEPH PREP COYlpound PREVOST

Catholics to Pray For Assembly

STOCKHOLM (NC)-A prayer lor the fourth general assembly elf the World Council of Churches (WCC) to be said at Masses in all Catholic churches and chapels this Spring has been eomposed by the ecumenical commission of the diocese of Stockholm at the request ~ Bishop John E Taylor OMI

It will be distributed together with the bishops pastoral letter for Lent to all the parishes of the diocese The WCC assembly will be held at Uppsala Sweden m July

The prayer is an appeal whether his project can For all those who noW are a practical reality

Ir~paring the general assemblY He de~ribedl the proposed of the World Council of institute as an educational proshy

tliurches in dppsala and now gram aimed primarily at the avshy are pa~nfcil~y slJffering from the erage mllfi ~d ~he Inde~Ptivi

1 WsunitymiddotofChrisUans legedio stimulate creative middotJ-h t 11middot b h h f thinking and acting both for

-1 a JI mem er c urc es 0 I J cooperat - ilie WCC lfiarptepare this gen- middoty~~nalilmiddot ma~ ~wtIi aridfor -~ can ~ii 1

eralllssemqIjr in a willingness the commol1 goodmiddot Fattier RIvers a member of middotto coop~rate ~ arid in an honest ~taina ~e~ormed by first tatemiddot the Cii~iimati -archdiocesa~li shy

ielirch fori the Will of God artlsts WIll be at middotthe heart of thmiddotinstitntes actiVity with the ~qat they Ul oen mmds may pUlipose of stllnuliltingmiddotpro-middot receIve ~h~ 1~splratlons of the

HOly SPUIt and follow them without fear

That we middotmiddotall by prayer and penance may participate in the preparations of this general asshysembly conscious of being linked by the same Baptism

That even we Catholics may laquorow in our understanding of the separated brethren that we together with them may become llWare of the throes of disunity and be strengthened in our will to work in a practical Wlq _

~

Proposes Institute of Little Imagination Would Benefit Services -

CINCINNATI (NC) Father Clarence Josepb Rivers who has won an international repushytation for his fresh approach to liturgical music said he hopes to spur creative thinking among millons througb a National 10shysUtute of Ritual and Drama

Recently returned from gradshyuate studies in liturgy at the C81tholic University of Paris Father Rivers has launched a feasibility study to determine within the next few months

become

found reflection upon tliatexshyperience is fto be stimulated and directed by especially trained educator - philosophersl he added

Closed Setting He said he envisions touring

companies as part of the overall plan but the usual institute program will ~e place in a closed setting he said makshying it something like a secular retreat

Another lISgeCt of the insti shytute Father Rivers said will be ita concern with adaptinl the

skills and techniques and ereashytivity of the performing arts to the needs of various kinds of ritual---secular as well as reli shygious

Asked abolilt secular rituals Father Rivers spoke of flagshyraisings Fourth oj July celebrashytions and cornerstone layings He sahll The existing secular rituals suffer from the same deshyfeds all the religious ones and need just as urgently the touch of artistic imagination and skills

In~ure Ref1Ie~t~n Father Rivers said the insti shy

tue s~ould be broadly humanishyt~ria~ not SplJ1cifically Je~-glO~S provIdmg a~ area 10

WhICh Jile()ple of yarlOus beliefs

llurgical commission saidmiddot the

PfJ~fes~or A~pointed -~e~I1i ofL~w School

PITTSBURGH (NC)-Professhysor Louis L Manderino has been appointed dean of Duqueme Universitys Law School here Father Henry J McAnulty C5 Sp university presidgtent 80shynounced lIhe appointment is effective immediately

Prof ManderinO a graduate of Harvard University Law School in 1954 has been -a memshyber ofmiddot the Duquesne Law Scbool faculty since 195amp

ROWD GAMACHE SHlRtlM JANICK MAUREEN KENNEY $1 ANTHORY MOUNT ST MAIf CASSIDY

gtpi81F Iilt ilt

JACQUEUNE ROBOI JAHU~E ROBERTSHAW PETERlYM WOJTUSZEWSII JpoundSlJS IlARY AampADEIft SHA-FAU RIVER SHA- FAIRHAVEN

Ritual Drama

proposed mstitote~ program would go much further than those of existing professional or amateur acting companies beshycause it will not only provide the experience which is to be the basis of reflection but it also will insure as far as it is hmnanly possible the reflecshytion the work of the institute is only half done when the cur lain falls

It will difiler from the amashyteur companies and certain

_Moral Re-armament programs he continued esp~ciilly in terms Of artistic standards I dont believe lh2 institute can function effectively without achieving tlte highest possibIe success in artistic standards tehurch-goers of an denomshy

inati9fls he added generaUy

recognize that their Sunday and Sabbath services could benefit from ir little imaginatioZl once in it vyhilli r-----------shybull JEREMIAH COHOLANmiddot

PlUMBING 6- HEATING ~ntretors since ltH3

WYmal3-0911 699 Bellville Avenue New Bedford

State to Deny Aid To Large Families

LUCKNOW (NC)-The Uttar Pradesh state government here in India has decided to stop an govert1Illent concessions to famshyilies which have an additional child aiter the third one

The decision was taken in view of iii virtUal douampling of the states populatian--from 4a million in 19at to ga millionmiddot this year

The concessions to be withshydrawn presumably wiU include free treatment in governmmt hospila1s and allotment ~ waste lands

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THE ANCHORpiocese ~f Foil River---Thurs Feb 29 1968

European Tour Is Unlikely With New Travel Rules

By Mary Tinley Daly

Of all the role-playing the Head of the House and I have engaged in through the years the most recent ~ th8lt of- would-be European travellers This the year 1968 -rhe Year of the Monkey was to have seen us embark for foreign shores Ireland homeland of our forebears (would have been) mighty

helpful tooEngland a re-vimiddotsit for the Ginny our wardrobe consult shyHead of the House France

ant has been supervising theGermany and of course the clothing weve bought for theEternal City Spain and Greece past six months with an eye toperhaps if our easy packability convenientfeet and our washability and a mix-andshymoney held out match assortment o~ accessoriesAnd now this-shy for efficient travel Based on ~ h e proposed her own European experience of ~ax bi te on a couple of years ago GinnyiBternashy assures us such selection willU 0 n a I travel provide a minimum for totingSeems as though a maximum amount of space forweve been taxshy the pick-ups wed inevitablybitt e n pretty acquire on our journeybadly right here

the as ~truggle Now it seems theIn USA we bringshyonce more with IRS Form 1040 backs are down to next-toshy

Now some more of our $$$ to nothing A Iso day-by-day spending at this stage of the EX-CHAMP PREACHES LOVE Archie Moore formerhelp close that $21 billion travel

lap wilth a tax on American legislation seems based on an World light-heavy-weight champ who won a Freedoms intricate system full of loopshyspending outside _this hemi- Foundation award Feb 22 for conspicuous community sershyboles requiring an estimate ofaphere I voice in the civil rights field plays happily at home withtax liability on departu~e theWell its a wait-and-see propshy

h~8 own children Working with boys in underprivilegedmaking of a deposit and anotherOsition an aIr-dresSed-up-andshyreport pluspay-up on retUrn to areas Archie saymiddots he teachesthe lads to be constructiveIlO-Pla~eto-go feeling for us

lIS it is for many other armchair this country not destructive tao build not tear- down NC Photo travellers What we have not doncent yet-

Doml Homework and wont do unless the grand -----~

Oh weve been doing our bomework all right

Weve made lists of places we ~fpound~~~~~I~R~PMAR9J~p~1want to see in each country drivers license picture was badThe house is filled with travel folders travel magazines weve enough NEW SPRING COLORS become telephone pals with Bteamship and airline salesmen 113-Year-Old Aca~emy s much as I love color (anyshy April scene navy took a backoUr local library checks out

one who has ever visited my seat in the early sixties whenhooks in our name for all those Plans 69 Closing home or seen nile wearing the Jackie Kennedy made pink afaraway places with their glam- ROCHESTER (NC) ~ The m~ny bright shades that I adore must for all those who like toeur descriptions 113-year-old ~cademy Of the wnI agree with this) t must adshy feel that they are wearingWe have studied money rates Sacred Heart here will disconshy mi t this is going to be ~ grey whats in This season nothotel and transportation costs tinue operation after June 1969 flannel and navy Spring Oh only has navy returned in theinvestigated picking up a Officials announced reasonsshy thEre will be shades of shocking world of suits and daytime coatsVolkswagen Weve brushed up for closing were the mounting pirk high intensity yellow and it has become sophistic~tedon French going along with cost of education the inadeshy poison green upon the scene but enough to waltz into eveningThomas Hood quancy of present bUildings mostly in ac Jacques Tiffeau of TiffeauNever go to France unless the outlay needed to build and c e s S 0 r ies or and Busch has designed an ultray()U know the lingo If you do

maintain a school of the future playclothes For navy evening time dress that islike me you will repent by and the number of other cathoshy t hat special sleeveless and V-necked and ofjingo lic high schools in the area coat or that course wide belted Worn withWeve even learned basics in where openings are avlilable pearls it takes on all the dyshy0Italian and German such as be~utiful spring

namic quaiities that black hasshyThe academy is conducted byhow to order in restaurants For suB that could always had Because they lookthe Head of the House this the Religous of the Sacred tra vel as well so well with navy and grey themeans how to order pigs Heart of Jesus alolg the streets return of pearls is whats newknuckles sauerkraut UND beer of Ne~ York on the jewelry front for SpringJohnny has patiently demonshy Imiddot kO or the avenues and Summer The thirties influshyAutnoUize Pa Istan of Washingtonstrated perhaps for the hunshyence of the Bonnie and Clydedredth time just how to operate middot Ch the more con-LIturgy anges serrative colors are the stars flicker has brought back thehis camera which he will let us

take along LYALLPUR (NC)-Melbers Cne of the most elegant and long swinging chains of beads -of all Pakistans diocesan lilur- beautifully tailo1led suitsmiddot that I and nothing swings better than

Family Advisors gical commissions met here un- have viewed thus far in the long ropes of pearls-especially Markie who did her touring der the direction of Archbishop sealch for Spring clothes was a against navy or grey

on a budget and had a whee of Joseph M Cordeiro of Karachi maltilificent grey one by Gino a time so doing introduced us to discuss propolled liturgical Paoli Superbly tailored in a to her bi-ble Arthur From- changes in this country ricl knit material the smart mers invaluable Europe on Approved for experimental desi go was set off hy fresh $5 a Day with its practical use were two new baptismal touches of white guidelines based on first-hand rites in the Urdu limguage and Grey has always ~n a color dramaticallyexperience For instance who- a revised Urdu funeral rite thai I avoided like the plague ever would have thought of Authorized for publication was (ev~r since an experience with different8eeking inexpensive spotlessly the Punjabi version of the Can- a grey dress in eighth grade dean lodging in Italian con on of the Mass as well as an that made me look like an un vents Author Fro~mer gives Urdu edition 01- the Roman heaithy Corpse-of course that Sensational tastingnames addresses and prices 1ft missaL Was before eigh1lligirlS wore Hollywood Diet Breadduded also are Readers Sug Jilake-up)and I havent bought made from aestions helpful tips for vari- an item of grey 81)parel in years

places Youth in World Theme and years OIlS vegetable Boursl Markies own addenda will- Grey always seemed to beOfSpanish ~ial Work Your choice of color that looked good on someshy

vALLADoLJD (NC) ~ Offishy LIGHT or DARKCollege to ~ Admit Me cials of Spains ~nual Social redleads quite jiunior league one else-it was wonderful em

HollywoodIWeek have aimounced that r St Scholastica here in Minshy smad on white-skinned hrushy

DULUTH (NC)-The College on blondes and even looked Youth in the World will be Bakedby

the theme of the 17th week yournesota announced it will admit nett~s but since 1 failed to fan male students in 1969 ending planned for March 25-31 in this into any of these categories I Sunbeam

city56 years as a liberal arts colshy felt it was not for me This seashy Ballerlege exclusively for women Manuel Capelo Martinez Secshy son however the richness and Sister Mary Richard Boo colshy retary gener~l of the week said smaltnes of the grey shade deshylege president said the change We hope that the quiet atmoshy Signl may force IDe to change was made as a response to sphere of social week discussions my opinion - aidoo by some the needs of our time The basic will enable us to make some colorful makeup of course curriculum will remain the clear decisions about the many Navy RelmIlJIls IIame she said The college is problems of youth decisions Navy is the second color that eonducted by the Benedictme madein the light of the Churchs has returned to importance fornuns aocial teacJiingsmiddot Sprilig Always a must on Ule

Schools 10 Offer Sex Education

ROCHESTER (NC)-8ex edshyncathm will be integrated in tbe curriculum of 13 parochial schools of the Rochester diocese this Spring on an experimental basis

Father Daniel Brent assocllm d i 0 c e san superintendent at schools said the sex educatioD program will eventually be in effect throughout the 102 eleshymentary schools in the diocese

We are trying to create an attitude that sex is part of life and not a dark dirty secretmiddot Father Brent said

The classroom discussions will emphasize 1he family orientashytion of sex and parents will be asked to review topicswitln children before they are preshysented in the classroom hra added

Father Brent said the pro- gram ~lated to begin about April I will aim at developing respect for the opposite sex and the serious Qlbligations that go along with sex He emphasized the program will not constitute a separate course of study but will be integrated with other subjects and with sp07lJtanooUII questions as they arise

US Court to Hear Textbook ChaUenge

WASHINGTON (NC) - DIe U S Supreme Court has agreed to examine the constitutiorlality of a 1965 New York State law allowing the state to loan textshybooks to children in churchshyrelated schools

The law is being challenged by several local public school boardsln the state on the grounds that it violates the U So Constitutions First Amendment prohibition against establishshyment of religion

The New York law which was passedin 1965 and became effective in September 1966 aishylows the state to punhase textshyhooks and loan them to children in private schools - inclUding those operated by churches--iD graqes 7 through 12

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

9 Money-Eating House Puts Garde1n Needs in Shadle

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick Oh~ ~ Iye~rIlfor the return of Spring and an opporshy

innity to gel out of this D1Ollampter we can a house I cra1ll IOOr house a monster because it seems that it has an inshy8Qtiable appetite for money We recently fiIrlished OUlr second floor (whiClh took a year of

its about 6 above outside andplanning six months of on with the able assistance of a Mld off oonstruotion and 1mshy hardy Winter wind the weather believable sums of money) is urging us all to stay inside J(ow we must have 11 basement Its a perfect day to keep your IIOOm which ea1ls for more mess oven going and your kitchen a money filled with delectable smells

Now there are individuals rve been baking beans since have the desire and the early mom a container of

capacity to be handymen and brown bread is steaibing in a Cbere are those of us who deshy huge kettle OIl the top oJ1 themiddot pend on others to do their work jets and I just set a cinnamonshyI fall into the latter category filled Indian pudding into the -ad I am paying for it I am 80 oven along with the beans The tired of furring ceiling tile aromas are beginning to mingle Dghting fixtures floor tile sidshy and all seems right with the tog etc that I am half hoping world Chat everything comes to a Smalil Dinners lItandstill What appears to be

0

These dre2l1Y months of low the simplest job turns out to be temperatures and stay-homeiIbe most complicated involved days are the perfect time to eIll shyIlleSS imagin91ble tertain your friends X love

Plano Moving nothing more than planning a Take our piano Two years small dinner party for a few

ago we bought an old upright friends and look forward to a 110 that the children could bave couple of days of cooking and their piano lessons in the comshy planning The dinner menu fort of their own home without should be made out at least a baving to nui to my mothers week ahead of time (with pershyevery night to practice The haps a few alternatives in case piano is 11 five toot upright items you plan to serve are not JI~ch cost us 5 available at this moment in thia

When the movelll igtrolliht it area The last time I made a to the ~o~ they ~ere very dinner menu I planned to start careful not 10 hurt tb~ piano off with prosciutto and melon but they managea to sandwich (a delightful combination of Cbe back door scrape half the flavors) only to find out that all paper i~ the hallway and there wasnt a fresh melon avaDshydent the mo1ding wherever theJ able for 10Ve or mOll1ey anyshylraveled where in 1be city I1 you have

Now tbat we are planninl your menu made out befOIle yoa the basement we decided go grocery obopping you avoid put the pianio there where It the disheartening happening of would not be an eyesore and DI7 starting to make a dish only to wife and I would not have find you dont have all tllle ilnshylisten to our fledglings takinC middotgredienta tring into the musical world Desserts tbat rm going to

Simpler said than done One serve to guests are more ofteD mover on seeing the size of the than not the kind Ulat can be piano and the size of our bulkshy made the evening or day before bead said I hOpe you wont be and then thats one less item I offended if I tell you the truth -have to think about the cIay I would advise you to take an that Im going to entertain axe and break it up and bU7 Many desserts lend themselves yourself a new piano He didnt to early preparation and it gives marge for this advice but me a feeling of security to know neither did he move the piano I have one or two completed Now all we have to do is remove desserts already in my freezer n of the stairs in the bulkhead or relrigerator as the busy da~middot

ItO that the movers can drop of preparation begins the piano into the cellar enshy A timetable of projects for kance a job which will cost the day of y~ur ~inner party is ftnimagined amounts of money a great help and I even time I am half tempted to buy that eacb item on the menu SlO thatbullbull I know just when a certain dish

And so it goes Not so in the has to go into the oven AJlL prden where everything iii tbis pre-party preparation leaves lItraightforward and results are the evening free to enjoy yourather immediate Marilyn keeps guests and your own cookingmsisting that the day will come Of course in jolly old New Engshywhen we wont have to bleed bull land a blizzaro can mmr yoUII our bank account to feed our party plans but then your PurishyInsatiable monster but I dont tan adaptability can come to the believe it In the meantime I fore and you can either pack ~ll continue to budget infinishy everything in your Jlreezer for tesimal sums for the garden anotber evening or you and _ile the house is reconstructed your spouse can sit down to a

IN THE KITCHEN sumptuous repast Last weljlk because it was CorrectiD

Rbool vacation week we took Note In a S)taghett1l AUce tile children to the Science Mushy

recipe in the February l ADehorIIeWI1 in Boston As we wanshy two eaD5 l)f toaiato paste wendered among the wonders at

omittedman and his universe I paused Jl()POVEIRSbull moment in front of a case that

displayed a cut-away section of This is an easy but ~al

the earth during the Winter seashy looking quick-bread Contrary lIOn Chipmunk and fieldmouse to most peoples idea popoven IleBtled warmly in their cozy are espeCially easy to make anderground castles waiting for always bake mine in a very iUIe rigors of a blustery Winter badly darkened muffill1 pan to pass and I must admit that at perhaps this is the secret oil mtI Ibat instant I was a bit envious success of Mr Mouse and Mrs Chipshy 1 cup flour munk who could retire from the teaspoon salt hzen world with all its cares 3 eggs (beaten)

Most of us cant crawl into a 1 cup milk bole and hibernate when the 1 Tablespoon melted butter aorth winds blow but we caD 1) Melt the butter ancll set ~nd more time enjoying tile aside and put the greased mufshy

pleasures of our warm (on top fin pans in the oven ~ tAe ground) homeamp ~ a) MUt toueUler a1J1 the __

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968

Voters Approve Open Housing

FLINT (NC) - Flints voters have become the first in the nation to approve an open houSoo ing ordinance in a public refershyendum

The measure pushed strongly by Negro Mayor Floyd McCree and the local Council of Churches was passed by a 43-vote margin The unofficial tally was 20172 to 20129

The Flint City Council passed an open housing ordinance in 1967 but its opponents led by John Birch Society section leadshyer Gerald Spencer had no trouble in gathering 5000 signashytures on a petition to place the

issue before the voters The religious support of the

ordinance was organized by the local Council of Churches with which Catholic parishes coopshyerated Several sponsored pubshylic debates on the measure and more expressed support for it in parish bulletins

Recommends Elimnnating First Four Grades

SPOKANE (NC) - A special study committee here in theBans Sales State of Washington has recomshymended the gradual phasing outSpanish Tov~i~t Convention Forbids of the first four grades in some

diocesan schools and a totalSelling Churchs Artistic Treasures emphasis upward in religious

SEVILLE (NC)- Andalusia For some proof that their education Provincial Tourist Convention fear is valid came from a decishy The committee comp~sed of in a resolution announced at the SiOD to sell donations decorating eight diocesan educators and close of its meeting here has Zaragozas shrine to the Virgin headed by Father Michael emphasized that artistic treas- of Pilar Accumulating for ONeill diocesan superintendent urea- decorating the nations nearly 100 years many of the at education made its recomshychurches are the property of the gifts of the faithful are both mendations to Bishop Bernan people and maT not be sold by artistic and financial treasures J Topel of Spokane after study-Church officials without the ap- Proceeds from the sale of the ing education in the diocese proval of local civil authorities Pilar treasures will go to wbat since August 1967

Admitting that the cburches Zaragozas Archbishop Pedro Elimination of grades one are permanent depositories of Cantero Cuadrado described as through four would allow the nations art the resolution urgent social necessities schools to strengthen grades was aimed at Spanish churchshy five through eight - middle men who have proposed selling school-and offer increased edshyart treasures to finance social CRS Sends Penicillin ucational benefits to a greater action projects number of students at the sameFor Vietnam Casualties or less cost the committees IeshyThe combination of increased NEW YORK (NC) - Within port saidemph~sis on social justice and hours after being inforined thatchurch renovation resulting the Saigon airport was againfrom the liturgy decree of the in operation the U S CatholicSecond Vatican Council has led Offering YouRelief Services (CRS) shippedmany Spaniards to fear that the out by aid 100000 doses of fast shychurches would be denuded of 3 Savings P~ansaction penicillin for civllian casshyancient treasures ualties in Vietnam Home Financing

The penicillin is an urgent need in Vietnam and will be WARJMI~Plan Byzantine Rite used for the civllian casualties

Installation March 5 by the four Sisters who are on co-oprD4liVEthe CRS medical teams in thatPITTSBURGH (NC)-Bishop country Fulther shipments willStephen J Kocisko will be honshy BANKfollowored at a banquet here followshy 281 Main St Wareham Ma

ing his March 5 installation as The peniciUin was given to Telephone 295-2400Bishop of the Byzantine-rite dishy the CRS by the Catholic Medshy

BaDk-8U lIerfIa IftfIIMI ocese of Pittsburg ical Mission Boarcll

Speakers will include Archshybishop Luigi Raimondi Aposshytolic Delegate in the United States wbo will officiate at the

installation John Cardinal Krol of Philadelphia Bishop John J Wright of Pittsburgh and Msgr Edward V Rosack who has been apostolic ildmmistrator of the Byzantine-rite diocese of PitsQurgh

Bishop Kocisko succeedsArchshybishop Nicholas T Elko who reshyeigned as ordinary of the Pittsshyburgh diocese ill1 lOecember Bishop Kocisko has been head of the Byzantine diocese of Passhysillc and will continue as its administrator IIlDti a new bishshyop js named

maining ingredients anell then MOTHER PARKERSlldd the cooled butter 3) Beat the batter until it hl OLD FASHIONEDcompletely smooth 4) Fill the well-buttered pans

full Place in a 450middot degree DOUGHNUTS oven for 15 minutes Reduce heat to 350middot and continue bakshy Baked by your Sunbeam Baker ing 20 to 25 minutes

AWARD WINNERS Award winners at a Winter Carshynival sponsored by the Fall River area CYO are left Janice Feno Somerset High School named Miss Personality and right Carol Silvia Durfee High School carnival queen Holding trophies is Richard Lown Durfee High School carshynival co-chairman

AFamily Favorite

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THE ANCHOKshy10 Thurs Feb 29 1968

Urge Cergymen Attend Meltefring On Scfielrnce

WASHINGTON (NC)shyCatholic clergy throughout the country are being urged to attend the second annual conference on science for cler- gymem at the Oak Ridge (Tenn) Associated Universities Aug 5-16 in cooperation with Oak Ridge National Laboratory

The conference entitled The Impact of Science on Society is sponsored by the National Science Foundation and the Alshyfred P Sloan Foundation Purshypose of the conference is to proshyvide clergymen of all faiths with an understanding of the nature scope effects and trends

of contemporary science - parshyticularly nuclear science

Dr W W Grigorieff chairshyman of the conference said the conference series originated in the recognition that most clershygymen actively engaged in pas torat work have little training in and understanding of sci shyence but are confrOnted almost

daily with problems and deci aions arising from its implicashytions

Dr Grigorieff s~icj in an inter- view with NC Nevvs Service that experience gained through the 1967 conference indicated to the conference advisory comshymittee that religious leaders of all f~i ths not only need to be conversallt with the content and llOcial dynamics of science but also are extremely eager to take advantage of the opportunity to become more acquainted with modern science

The conference director stated that this year the conference will be open to some 90 parshyticipants-three times as many IllS attended the 1967 conference

He pointed out that Roman Catholic applications for last years conference were not nushymerous and said that those who had applied were for the most part overqualified - that is they possessed professional qualifications and advanced training in science The confershyence he emphasized is not pri shymarily for such specialists

Practicing Cnergy Dr Grigorieff stated that an

announcement has been sent to bishops of anlimber of dioceses

throughout -the country in air eHort to stimulate iriterest in the aims of the conference He added that an effort is also being made to contact diocesan priests senates

He explained that conference participants will be selected on a nationwide basis from appli shy

cants representing various reli shygious )lodies arid emphasized that the majority are expected to be praCticing clergy-those actively engaged in the minis- try rather than in teaching reshysearch etc

He said that a limited number of seminary educators deans heads of clergy-in-service and religious editorf will be acshycepted as observers

Speakers will include Dr William G Pollard executive director of Oak Ridge Associshyated Universities who is also an Episcopal priest associated with St Stephens Church Oak Ridge and the author of several books and Alvin M Weinberg director of Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Askeel to Withdraw MILWAUKEE (NC) - The

Milwaukee priests senate has passed a resolution urging 11 priests of the archdiocese to work for a chalige in tlie policy of clubs which are discriminashytory or tG withdlW as members

INTERFAITH SERVICE Bishop Fulton J Sheen center of Rochester NY at shywnded an interfaith service at Mount Neboh Congregation in Manhattan With- the Bishshyop are the Rev Philip Hiat right rahbi of the congregation and Cantor Albert l- Stur- mer holding chalice wh() prepared the ceremony at which Bishop Sheen received aspeshycial Brotherhood Award SC Photo

Archdiocese- to IBatmiddottle

Race Prejudice -

BusmlrAeSS Archbishop Says CINCINNATI (NC) - Ar(h-

bishop KarlJ A1t~r launched Project Commitment here with an appeal to the Christian comshymunity to appreciate the size and urgency of the problems of race relations and an insistence that the finding of Solutions is everybodys business

Speaking at a Mass in 1l Saints church the Cincinmtti archbishop emphasized not on ly right attitudes among Catholic people but also united comshymunity-wide organization and effort are necessary 10 me~t the problem

He said government pm-middot grams heretofore have been t(o late and too little and adVHshycated something like the Mal shyshall Plan which at the end HI the Second World War rescued Europe from misery and dEshy

spair -The Mass marked the openshy

ing of the projects pilot prll- gram which will continue wittl

seven workshops at Moeller HighSchool on specific aspects of- racial prejudice and lliscrim- ination Endorsed by the Archdiocesan

Pastoral Council and sponsored by the Catholic Commission 011

Human Relations Project Com mitment is described as a promiddot gram ~o help Catholic lay lead ers recognize their responsibii ities and prepare for theiJ proper roles in t~e field of inmiddotmiddot terracial justice

Seven VVeeks Program Dayton will be the second

area in which Project Commitshyment will be launthed The date has been set tentatively for April 9and the program will continue for seven weeks

Archbishop Alter said experishyence gained in the pilot pro-

Forty Hours Format ST LOUIS (Nc)-The St Louis

archdiocese has dropped its reshyquirement that Forty Hours deshyvotion must be held annually in each parish Pastoral guideshy

lines from the Archdiocesan Liturgical Commission noted that parishes were free and encouraged to continue Forty Hours and offered possible new formats which are based on Scripture readings and themes of Eucharist priesthood and church

gram would be used in organizshying similar efforts in the other deaneries

St Francis de Sales deanery in t~s area was chosen as the first for the experiment beshycause its Catholic population represents a cross-section of the entire community and if a-- project succeeds here it may well succeed anywhere else the archbishop said

It has been estimated that more than 500 persons from 31 of the deanerys 34 parishes would tale part in the project

The archbishop detailed the reason why the whole archdioshy

cese was to be involved when the problems are so diverse in the various regions of the 19 counties and When iincertain areas there is no racial conflict because of a totally homogeshyneous population

National Prohlem

The answer is that the prob- lem of harmonious race relashyJions is not a local problem but a national problem involving all communities everywhere and affccting all our public relashytions political economic and social There may not be racial conflict but there can be race prejudice he said

The problem has moreover definite religious and moral asshypects he said and there are questions of social justice and social charity which concern every Christian and for which

Pope Honors Gellman Protest(OInlt Leader

BONN (NC) -Pope Paul VI has awarded the Great Cross of the Order of St Sylvester to Dr Reinhold von ThaddenshyTrieglaff at German Protestant leader

Dr Von Thadden-Trieglaff is the founder and honorary presshyident of the Kirchentag the anshynual German Protestnt convenshytion -

In the document accompanyshying the award the Pope thanked Dr Von Thadden-Trieglaff for his work on behalf of ecumtmshyism and asked him to continue working in this spirit of recon-

ciliation and brotherhood Bishop Adolf Bolte of Fulda

presented the award

he will find the appropriate anshywer in the teachings of the Gospel

All our Catholic people he said are charged with the reshysponsibility of supporting adeshyquate remedial legislation and of creating social institutions which will eliminate discrimishynation and alleviate the burdens of sickness poverty and )gnoshyrance No one can stand aloof from a program of social bettershyment

Dutch Bishops Take Poll of Priests

moving toward onenessTHE HAGUE (NC) -- The cardinal saidDutch bishops in an effort to

measure the effectiveness and opinions of the nations priests Priest on Facultyhave distributed a list of 39 questions to all priests deacons LANCASTER (NC) - Fathell and subdeacons in the country William J Walsh SJ is the Several questhms deal with first Catholic priest to be apshypriestly celibacy pointed a fullitime member oil

the LancaSter Theological SemishyD~awnupto determine what nary conducted by the Unitecllp~iests think of the priesthood Church of Christ here Fathetandto measure the clergys acshyWalsh assistant theology proshyceptance of the celibacy Iegulashy

- essor at the Jesuit notiviatetion the questionnaire will be

CardinalCites Church Role InSlaquosety --CHICAGO (NC) - Jobm

Cardinal Cody asserted heq that the Church must involVil) fultlelf in social problems 00 be true to its fundamentetl works

The cardinal spoke at a sefib vice in the First Presbyteri~ church making its lOOth anm versary celebration

Those who contest involve-shyment by the Chruch in prolraquo lems of society Cardinal Co~

said take an indefensible stand He said personal sanctity whiclli

is conceded to be the ChurchD rightful concern cannot bd sepilrated from social responsi shybility

If the Church has nothing 00 say to us regarding our obligashytions to our fellow man it kJ sadly neglecting our personall holiness Cardinal Cody said

We sin by Injustice We sm by lack of charity We are sancshytified by giving all men thellf due he added

Move Toward Unity Cardinal Cody did not specishy

fically mention race relationll but he said society mistrea~

certain groups or individuals1ll

He said if church members aNI in any way party to this evill the Church must become i~

volved The cardinal said COIb-

cern for personal holiness forcelll the Chuxch into action

Let the Church in such cil shycumstances stand idly by and Q will lose all reason for exisshytence he declared

Cardinal Cody was introduceell to the congregation by the Rev Harold Blake Walker pastor Cltf the church When asked ahow his appearance in a Protestanll church following the service the cardinal said not long age it would have been unthinkshyable He added that the Holy Spirit is moving strongly anell speedily

We are not yet perfectly one as Christ prayed but we arll

th~

evaluated by the Pastoral Insti shytute of the Catholic Churchin the Netherlands and the Insti shytute for Applied Sociology of the Catholic Universiiy of Nijmegen

Introducing the questions the bishops commented that in a period of Church renewal it is unavoidable that priests be conshyfronted with serious problems They then recommend that the priests answer the questions carefully keeping in mind the teachings of the Church and the roie of the Church in modern society

Wernersville Pa will take ihe post of assistant church history professor at the 143~year-olcll

Protestant seminary on July L

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11 Priest DcfcsndJ~

Black Power MINNEAPOLIS (NC) - nle

only un-Christian thing about power is the abuse of power Father James E Groppj Milshywaukees militant civil rights leader told a Lutheran layshymens conference here

Neither is the striving fox power by a minority group unshyAmerican the priest asserted It is rather part of the American tradition he said and cited past drives for political power by labor unions Italians in New York and the Irish in Boston

Father Groppi also said that the Milwaukee NAACP Youth Council which he advises has adopted black power tactics only after we had used every tactic eveiy means we could think of to take the yoke off black people and nothing had been effective

He said that one use the counshycil had made of black power was in a united Negro boycott of stores during Christmas The white man doesnt give us a housing bill we dont give him our dollar he explained

Discussing the role of the Christian Church in the black mans struggle for equal rights Father Groppi said that the Church has been involved by her non-involvemen1i By such non-involvement he said the Church has aggravat~d the Neshygros problem

Today he said I the use of prudence as an excuse for cowshyardice is the great sin of tile Church

Students Interrupt Strike to Mourn

PARIS (NC) - The strike launched by the guild of law students at the Catholic Unishyversity of Paris has been intershyrupted by its leaders out of resJect for the mourning of the diocese of Paris following the death of Pierre Cardinal Veuil shylot who was chancellor of the instittltion

The strike was called to proshytest a reform of the university decided U()(ln by the French bishops and put into effectmiddot by the rector Msgr Pierre Haubt- mann The reform is designed to avoid having the Catholic uni- versity compete systematically with middotthe state university In all secular studies

The bish~ps decided that in addition to teaching and re search in the area of religion the Catholic universtty must first of all be devQted to Chrisshytian reflection on secular matshyters

Pastoral Institute To Open at Quito

BOGOrA (NC)-A new Latin American Pastoral Institute will be opened in April at Quito Ecuador as a project of the Latin American Bishops Counshycil (CELAM)

The institute will be a unit of the CELAM pastoral departshyment

Purpose of the institute will be to train personnel from the whole continent in pastoral work applicable to Latin Amershyica The institute will offer seven-month courses and Euroshypean specialists in pastoral work will also serve on the faculty

Meeting on Cities NOTRE DAME (NC) - An

international conference entitled NCities in Context will be held March 31 through April 3 at the University of Notre Dames Center for Continuing Educashytion

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968

litu~~W Changes Continued from Page One

in earlier periods-even thou~

they do not conrorm in all deshytails with the approved versiOlil of contemporary liturgical texto -are authorized

TANTUM ERGO An apshyproved Eucharistic hymn ilill praise of the Blessed Sacrament may be used in Benediction oil the Blessed Sacrament in place of the Latin hymn Tantum Ershygo

PSALMS Approved are the texis of the Psalms as published by Englands Grail Society anell that found in the Jerusalem Bishyble

Suggestnol1Js Denied

The Vatican turned down two requests made by the US Bishshyops both dealing with liturgic011 experimentation

No was answered to the reshyquest that the US Bishops be permitted to designate acade~ic

centers to supervise litulgicall innovation

Also denied was the request that some experimentation be approved without examinatioD by the Holy See

-Presently the Vatican mu~

approve proposed liturgical inshynovations before experiment3shytion can begin

Archbishop Dearden explainshyed While the two major proshyposals concerning liturgical enshyperjmentation were not alPshyproved at the present time ~

is clear that the Consilium iJ open to the submission of rite and texts of li-turgical adaptioTll which have been drawn up anll presented prior to actual experishymental use

Concrete proposals of rHeIl 2nd texts may continue to be sent to the Bishops CommittCCl on the Liturgy

Matter Deferred

The permission to substitutfl h)mns or other sacled songtl fur the texts now used at the entran~e Offertory and Comshymunion of the Mass was defershyred

Such hymns now generally added to the official texts were approved in principle however by the delegates to the Rome Synod of Bishops October 1967

The Baptismal Rite describecll among the changes was n~

contained in the Vatican lettertl authoiizing the other changoo but was made public by Archshybishop Dearden at the same time as the announcement of 1ibe changes was released

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L_ PATRON 01 MARCH The month of March is dedicated to St Joseph watchful

guardian of the Son of God and patron and protector of the universal Church Dedicashytion of the month of the year to events in the life of Christ and to particular saints is a practice of the People of God rather than an official action of the Church It comfantly middotrecalls the power and love of God for mankind present at all times and in every place

Bishops Hit Penna Birth Control Policy Addsmiddot to Rather Thon Solve Problems of Poor

HARRISBURG (NC)-The Pennsylvania Welfare Depaytments new policy of acfi~ely promoting birth control among poor people is a major step in the direction of a newand dangerous life management bymiddot the state The Pennsylvania Oatholic Conferencehas criti shycized the Welfare pepartments decision to middotinitiltte discussions of birth control with their clients Under previous pol- stru~en~ for population con- the polic~ because it will add icy birth coiltrol adviceias trol saidmiddot the PCC to the p~oblems of the poor and Moreover many of these do nothmg to get at the root

Jren~l~red only If the welfare same spokesmen see it as an in- causes of poverty reCIpIent asked for It The strument to improve what they We are bound to protest sysshynew policY has been in effect call the quality of our popula- tematic governmental involveshysince mid-January The Con- tion Putting the program to ment in decisions of citizens reshyference which represents the suchmiddota use represents one of its specting family size as a major states Bishops in public affairs worst dangers the danger that step in the direction of a new has denied that Church teach- the state will start-=-by guiding and dangerous life management ing on contraception is a factor some groups or classes to birth by the state the statement emshyin its opposition limitation-to select the types it phasized

Invasion of Prhacy desires to see propagated Rather our concern is over Dangerous Management Varied Talents

the ef~ort of the state to i~fl~- The statement noted that its SPOKANE (NC)-The newly e~c~ many wa~ a pelson s view in this regard is shared formed Catholic Board of EdushychOIce of family size-our con- b th ptt b h b h f th h ht d h middottmiddot y e 1 s lIlg lanc 0 e cation for the Diocese of Sposhycern IS elg ene w en I IS National Association for the Adshy kane has elected members whothe poor whom the state seeks t f C I d P I to mfluence the Conference stat t sad

emen IThe Confelence called promoshy

tion of birth control an invashysion of privacy and asserted the state should play no role in attempting even indi rectly to manage tne most intimate domain of personal life

The statement also took issue with Welfare Depart~ent deshynialsmiddot that the program is inshytended to contlOl population

Negro Opposition

Chiefspokesmen for groups which have pressured for this program in our state say they IJee it and demand it as not just II medical service but as an inshy

vancemen 0 0 ore eop e include educators and non-edushyh h tl tt k d th w IC recen y a ac e e cators priests pastors ReligiousWelfare Department for trying and lay personst r t th th f th N 0 Iml e glOW 0 e egro

populatIOn The Conference also criticized

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a2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River--Thurs Feb 29 1968

The PaJrish Parade ~T MARYS CAlllllIlEJI)lItAL FALL RiVER

Mrs Hadley Lackey will serve as chaIrman of arrangements for the monthly meeting of the Womens Guild scheduled for a oclock on Monday night March 4 in the Shamrock Room of the Corky Row Club

Mrs John OConnor chairshyman of the Scholarola scheduled for April 1 requests that all pledges be brought to the March meeting of the Guild Committee members are avail shyable for all who wish their pledges collected at home

ST THERESA J80 ~-y gtltBORO

The ~ =middotaternity of Christian Mothers will hold thei~ regular monthly meeting on Monday evening March 4 following the Stations of the Cross

Rev Leo R Gravel OMI son of Mr and Mrs Raymond Gravel ofmiddotWestminister St So Attleshyboro will be the guest speaker

Members of the Confraternity will receive Comunion in a body at the 9 oclock Mass on Sunday morning March 3

88 PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Mothe~~ ~f Boy Scouts will bold a p1i1gtlic social at 730 toshynight Boy Scouts informatiOn classes for the Ad Mtare Dei award wiil be gtheld tonight and every T~ursday night during March and April

Junior High Camp Fire Girls plan a splash party at the YMCA from 530 to 7 Saturday night March 2 imd a cakesale in the IIChool hall from 8 to 11 30 Sun- ~y morniii~

The annual Cub Scout Pack IT Blue and Gold Banquet and charter presentation will take place at 630 Sunday night in the

school hall

SACRJED IllEART NOATlLEBORO

Starting on March 12 and conshytinuing for the next three conshysecutive Tuesday nights there will be an EcUmenical Worship Study conducted at Sacred Heart Church First Universalist Church First Methodist Church and the Grace Church

The service will begin at 730 and will be followed by a coffee hour and a discussion period in the church hall

The Sacred Heart Church will open the program on March 12 with a discussion of the Mass

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Womens Guild win reshyceive Holy Communion in a group at the 8 oclock Mass on Sunday morning March 3

The regular monthly meeting of the Guild will be held on Wednesday night March 6 at 730 in the school on Earle Street

ST PATRICK FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild announces an open meeting for Monday March 4 A jewelry demonstrashytion will be featured In charge of arrangements is Mrs Stanley Pitera aided by Mrs Joseph Fazzina

The unit will celebrate St Patricks day Saturday night March 16 with a smorgasbord supper and dance in the school auditorium Supper will be served at 7 and danCing will folshylow from 8 to midnight with music by the Moon Mists Resshyervations will close Sundq March 10 and may be made with guild officen or board memshybers

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

Plilrishoia books are to be distributed the weekend of

The WQmens Club announces March 2 and 3 Prizes will be bull pot luck supper for 630 Monshyday nigh1 Maich 4 Chairmen are Mrs William T Marum Jr and Miss Mary L Tyrrell

John F Keavy Jr president cl the US Model Railroad Assn will show films at a Boy Scout meeing slated for Tuesday night March 5

Theologians SllaquolIted As CU Spe(Q]~eis

WASHINGTON (NC) - Dr Ellie Mascall one of Englando most prominent Anglican theoshylogians and Father Hans Kung an outspoken advocate of reform in~~ the Catholic Church wilil speak at the Catholic University of America l1Ite in March

Dr Mascall a vigorous 0pshy

ponent of the so-called New Theology will give the Charles A Hart Memorial Lectures from March 24 to 29 His lectures will

deal sucessively with the quesshytions of God man Christ and the Church

Father Kung a Swiss theoloshygian who played an influential role at the Second Vatican Counshycil will speak on Sincerity in the Church on March 18

St louis Ceremony ST LOUIS (NC) - Bishop

John J Carberry of Columbus will be installed as Archbishop of St Louis on March 25 in cershyemonies at St Louis cathedral here

Archbishop Luigi Raimondi apostolic delegate to the United States will officiate The date of the cerem0I1-Y will be exactly three years after that on which Bishop Carberry was installed ordinary of Columbus

awarded to the three individuals selling the most books

The Mystibrook Singers of Bishop Stang High School will lead singing at the 815 Mass Sunday morning M~rch 3

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

A parish supper sponsored by the Womens Guild will be held from 530 to 730 Saturday night March 2 in the school hall Tickets are available from Mrs Frank Kingsley ticket chairman or any board member

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

During Lent Masses will be at 7 AM 4 PM and 7 PM

Confessions will be heard one half hour before each Mass Stashytions of the Cross will be held at 345 and 645 Friday aftershynoons and evenings Children are urged to attend Mass at 4 each afternoon The Children of Mary anshynounce a periby sale Friday March 15 A Portuguese parish mission will be preached by Rev Anshytonio Pinto CM from Sunday March 3 through Saturday March 9 Services will open Sunday night March 3 with rosary sernlon and Benediction at 7 I)clock and Mass and sershymon will be held every weekday night at 7

ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

The Association of the Sacred Hearts will sponsor a tea at 7 on Sunday night Mar 3 in the rectory in honor of the Sisters staffing the parish schooL

The monthly meeting C1f 1lhe Association will follow the tea

SAMOAN BISHOP The first native Polynesian memshyber of the hieraIl~hy Bishopshyelect Pio Taofinlllu (cq) S M will be consecrated at Apia Western Samoa on May 29 by Bosoon-born A r c h b ish 0 p George H Pearce SM of Suva The Bishop-eloot 44 made -his novitiate with the Marists on Staten Island ~C Photo

Hospital ~~urses

Return middotto Nork hi Covingtol1l

COVINGTON (NC) A nurses walkout which began in mid-November at 100shyyear-old St Eliz~~beth Hosshypital here has ended Nearly 100 of the 140 members of tine Registered Nurses tgtrganizati01l have indicated they will retum to their jobS The walkout stemmed from bull dispute over recognition of their organization and patient care policies Since the settlement hospital officials have been inshyterviewing nurse to expedite their reemployment and placeshyment

Restore Full Service Hospital spokesmen said the

nurses will be restored to posts they formerly held in so far as possible The nurses will lose no tenure as a result of their absence and if the positions they previously held have been filled they will be offered comshyparable posts or benext in line for selection to the positions

Administration officials exshypressed satisfaction with the prospect of the nurses return and voiced the earnest hope that we can move forward tel restore the 100 beds to service which had to be taliten out of availability by reason of the shortage of nurses to care for the patients

Officials estimate til1at four tie eight we~ks might t~ required 110 restore full bed service

Cite Achievements The nurses leaders said the7

had achieved at least 13 gains during the thteenionth dispute pointing to the fact that a doctor and a nurse have been apshypointed to the hospital board of trustees the establishment of bull patient care committee comshyposed or nurses electeli by those now employed by the hospital and equipment changes in the patient care area

Mrs Pat Tanner vice chait shyman also said the nurses unshyderstand that a lay heid will be appointed head of the hospital

Sister M Coronata adminisshytrator was assigned to) another post in the sisterhood earlier this month and Sister Mark Bernard has been serving u acting administrator I~he Franshyciscan Sisters of the Poor haft operated the hospitaL

Love Is An Active Verb We who bear the noble name of Christian arid who are io9shy

ingly called the faithful stand in awe of the Mystery of Christ and the Mystery of His Church More than the mystery of Obrist and of His Church is something we live It is then our duty JIlON

and more to experience the living reality of the Cbureh hershyself Cbristain tradition affirms that by her relatioJiship with Christ tlbe Redeemer the Church is a kind of sacrament or an efficacous sign of intimaJte union with God and indeed an efshyficacious sign cf the uni~ of all mankind

As members of the household of the faith we have heeD eaDmiddot ed by God and endowed with the precious gift 01 faithThereshyfore we m1ls truly experience a sense of urgency in brinampinK aD men to tun union with Christ Since mankind today is joined together more 1ll1osely than ever before in historY by bonds thaamp are social technical and eultural should it be ilenied the spirshyitual unity that springs from faith The Gospel is Ught Ii Is lIIewness it is energy it is rebirth it is salvation

Should DOt interest in our own salvation necessarily move us tID loving concern for the salvation of others If the Church is the Sacrament Of Salvation should we not as members of the Church eome to an eve- clearer awareness of our pari in her mission in the o1uty of evangelization in the missionary mandate in the apOstolic commiSsion Clearly our duty consonant withthe blessings I-eceived from Christ is that of spreading offering and announcing ~ faith to Others in order that we might be clble to acquit ourselves of Uiis Christian obligation The Society for the Propagation of the Faith eXiSts For-those who desire to be where the action is or 110 be iIivOlvoom wOrld mission the Church pr0shy

claims her own essential inissionlU) character Indeed the Cburdl ill J4ission and therefore aD of 118 are truly missionaries

fa tills Yeai IaItIl we eaa testify to Gaefldl uieDt 04 om- ATatitade to God for the bleilldDc of faWt by ma~ bull aerIfiee te TIle Society for the PropapUOn 01 the Faith lor tile works of the Chureh ill the service Df tile poor and underprholshy~ed We eamaot be Uke our Master III the fWlness of HIs Dlvinit7 nor caD we hoPe to experienCe thelrlory of His Transfigmratio bat there lis ODe way ill whieh we eaa resemble Rim and that Is ~ beeomtitamp- a oervant to His poor aDd His UWe ODes throughshyout the world

The native celrgy is the ho~ of the Chureb in Mission lands Many youngmen have heard the can but are sadly turned away for lack of facilities and funds $250 will provide a year of semshyinary training $1500 will cover the cost of complete education to the priesthood Wont you help us to help them by sending your offering to The Society of st Peter the Apostle 366 Fifth Avenue New York N Y 10001

SALVATION AND SERVICE are the work of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith Please cut out this eolumn and send your offering to Right Reverend Edward T OMeara Nashytional Direetor 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or directly to yoUr loeal Diocesan DirectOr Rt Rev Msgr Raymond T Considine 361 Norib MaiD Street FaD IUver Massaelnuse~ts 03720

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THE ANOiOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 13Missouri Diocesan Board Pondersmiddot Closing Consolidating Schools

KANSAS CITY (NC)-Tbe 1H girls They would be abshyKansas City-8t Joseph diocese sorbed into the school popushyis exploring the possibility of lations of Lillis high school and closing some of its schools and st Theresas academy forming n larger area school Although 120 persons attendshy Extension Volunteers bull bull bullwhich could upgrade the qualshy ed the school board meetingity of education for all pupils they were not petmitted tp

At 0 school board meeting speakFather John P Cole supershyinJtenden~ of schools reported on L - shyPTA Bead Plotes~

the possibility of setting up 11 Make Life Wortl IVngA motion-passed unanimousshycentral area grade school in ly by the board-was made to

mid-town Kansas City The continue exploration into conshysingle school would serve the solidation of the schools Thispopulations of three existing was opposed by John J Mcshygrade schools Donough a representativeFather Cole also suggested the elected by the Catholic PTApossibility of closing Redempshy Federation who will be seatedtorist high school now serving as a board member in July

McDonough was permitted to $~[]7reg~ 2~ Ifreg[[~ take part in the discussion but

had no vote

~~ ~~[[U IT)J He protested against the defe3ltist clique who let our

WASHINGTON (NC)-Bishop schools get picked off one byPaul F Tanner newly named one He charged that TheOrdinary of the diocese of St New Peltlple - the diocesanAugustine Fla is onfy the newspaper members of the dishyfourth priest to serve as general ocesan school office officials of secretary of the United States the Missouri Catholic Confershybishops secretariat in the nearshy ence Kansas City pastors andmiddotly half-century of its existence other Church officials share in

Bishop Tanner was the last an anti-Catholic school recshygeneral secretary of NCWC the ordoriginal secretariat He was also the first general secretary of ODe Operation both of is dual suc~essors-tne

McDonough said that theNational Conferenceof Catholic school superintendent shouldBishops and the United States be goingmiddot to the state legislashyCatholic Conference The NCCB ture and Governor Hearnes tois the bishops agency for dealshydemand tax relief instead ofing with purely splritual matshyconsidering consolidation andters the USCC Is their secreshyclosing of schoolstariat for dealing with secular

affairs Father Colemiddot maJntained that The prelate has served in the the reorganization would not

U S bishops secretariat 28 represent a cutback The area years longer than any precedshy school would be able to opshying general secretary Born in erate out of one blilding to Peoria TII in 1905 and ordained serve three parishes It would a priestmiddot of the Milw~ukee archshy provide the same educational diocese in 1931middot he came to experience for the same number Washington in 1940 ~as assistant of students plus advantages director of the Youth Departshy Cooperation would make posshyment NCWC He ~as assistant sible a highly developed model general secretary from 1945 to school staffed by Sisters from 1958 and has been general secshy three communities retary since then He said it would be irresponshy

He is the first bishop to serve sible to run three operations at as secretary to the bishops secshy all costs when the diocese retariat could have one operation run

The NCWC (as Council and it more efficiently do a better Conference) had been in exisshy educational job and provide opshytence 47 years when it formally portunity for a better deployshywent out of existence at the anshy ment of personnel nual meeting of the bishops in November 1966 Bishop Tanner who had served in the secretashy Urge Germaruls riat for more than half those years supervised the transition To Aid Vietnam to two separate organizationsshy

BONN (NC) - Two Germanthe NCCB and the USCC cardinals and two churchshyDuring Bishop Tanners secshy related relief organizations have

retaryship and in testimony to FALL RIVER PROVINCETOWN AND WESTPORT GIRLS WITHappealed to the German people

the growth of the work handled to collect money and to prayby the bishops secretariat an NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF EXTENSION VOIL~NTEERS DURINGfor the people of Vietnamimpressive addition to the headshy A week beore Mardi Gral lt- quarters building here was Joseph Cardinal Frings of Coshy THEIR YEAR OF VOLUNTEER WORK erected in 1960 logne asked the Catholics of his

archdiocese to cut down on Mardi Gras festivities and to donate magnanimously to the needy people of Vietnam Coshy These young college graduates have given a I year of their logne has long been known for its ampigtectacular Mardi Gras celeshy professional life to God in service in the South and West Are brations Citing the bombing Of North you willing to give twelve months of yourmiddotyouth to othersVietnam the plight of women and children caught between opposing forc~middot in the $()ut~ and the great number of refushygees Cardinal Frings asked how Catholics could watch pictures of these gravely distressing si~

WHY NOT ENROll AS ANuations on television and ceieshybrate Mardi Gras with a quiet The Spirit oj

Extension Volunteer HELPER middot$200 oconscience Alfred Cardinal Bengsch Of Extension Volunteer PROMOTER $500 o

Berlin asked for prayers for Sacrifice Extension Volunteer SPONSOR $1000 or more opeace in the world in a letter to the clergy of his diocese in which specifically mentioned AMOUNT ENCLOSED $ Vietnam as a name meaning Perfectlyblood and death RT REV RAYMOND T CONSIDINE PAIn a joint appeal Caritas the German Catholic relief organishy PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH OFFICE zation of Germanys Evangelical 368 NORTH MAIN STREETExemplifiedLutheran Church has asked for fALL RIVER MASS money to send food Md medishy

BISHOP P~VL F TANNU cine to the Children of Vietnam o

(-14 THf ANCHOR-Diocese of FaR Rfver-Th~rs Feb-29 1968 Two Objectives Jersey to Rehabilitate Young OffendersTells Jesuatts Engage in Deliberate

Help Increasing Spanish Group Attempts at lExperimentation UNION CITY (NC) - Two Hudson County Jan and in theST LOUIS (NC)-Deliber- carries its own reward he said area interfaith clergy groups youth house in Secaucus

iide attempts at experimenta- Now we must undertake new here in New Jersey are planning Father ThomasJ Murtha oftion with a readiness to accept forms some of which have a

joint action on the plightf West New York was named toall the risks that may be in- good chance to flop JIliserably youthful offenders housed m investigate means of setting UJltvolved were proposed for the An expert at the Second VatshyHudson County correctional in- a rehabilitation program t4ilSociet of Jesus at the close of ican Council Father Campion stitutions and to seek federal function after the release ~ III three-day session here on believes that the work of the assistance in meeting the needs youthful offendersbulllesuit renewal council has not yet begun to of Cuban refugeesFather Donald R Campion be absorbed within the Church

The joint session was held by The ~o groups will send a18J stressed at the renewal as a whole the North Hudson Clergy Coun- delegatIOn toWashIngton to askQession and in an interview This is not because it hasnt cU based here and the Chris- ~hat the area be declared anthat the Jesuits have both the been publicized enough or beshy tian Clergy United a West New Impacted area under the Cuban manpower and the resources to cause people havent read Y k Refugee Act and therefore beshy

engage in the type of expeii- enough or bishops havent talkshy or ~ro~p come eligible for special federal mentation which could serve ed enough he said But Vati shy A meetmg WIll be s()~ght WIth aid There are some 00000 tQdays Church Father Cam- can II opened up more areas the Hudson County Boar~ of Spanish~speakingpeople now m pion a sociologist and theolo- to discussion than it resolved Chosen Freeholders in an effort rth gian was recently named editor Among the sleep~rs in to establish a bettez climatefoi the ~o Hudson area and they cd America magazine council documents CIted by therehabiUtation of youthful continue to arrive at the rate of

Another speaker Fat her Father Campion was the conshy offenders now housed intne 200 to250 a month ~ 1 _

Avezy Dulles SJ stressed that cept of participation within the ~ doubt is a valuable and even Church Father Campionmiddot said lI1ecessary experience for the he believes collegiality is the Wide E~perience Christian in todays world most developed aspect in this

Fathers Campion and Dulles area and that some organization QU(lJD~ies Nu_ were two of the six main speak- has been given to it through the

UNITED- NATIONS (NC)ers at the closed meeting Some establishment of piie~ senates ltHQWCom pie t e devotion to theSSO Jesuits including 50 from But unless the idea of parti shyworlds needy children seemsCilutside the St Louis areaat-cipation is really the basis senshy a weighty task for a petite nun TDgtKEEPtended the sessions ates can become orgimizational

Father Campion said that Jes- gimmicks he said but a conversation with Sister Ullits as a group must face the Father Dulles discussing themiddot Kathl~eri Kelly MMmiddot provides LENmiddotTreassularice middotthat 20 years of make a significant contribution Church said ~ an interview diversified experience fact that their work should existence of doubt in todays

more to modern times that we have a radically differ- than qualifies her for the role

QUI IXIDPYFATHER lI MISSION jlUDTG me fllRlfaNTAL CHURCH

In the area of education It calIS for recasting the ex- wide Cath)lic charities organishy Need New Formula ent world view than in the past Caritas Internationalis worldshy

With the slason of Lent comes the qu~ionFather Campion called for con- pressions of the Christian messhy zation recently appointed Sisshy How can I beSt keep Lentl The answer ~s ~sideration of whether we are sage in terms of contemporary as observerter Kathleen its must make sacrifices on our own and nothing ISproviding the educational struc- knowledge if the message is to to the U N International GOOD III sacrifice unfess it hurts Whatwill be yo~rture for the new world have the impact it should Childrens Emergency Fun d WHIEN sacrifice bullbull Just think of the misslonlllne~ InIn the intellectual area Look Criticanny (UNICEF) Caritas Internationshy ITlf our 18 emerging countries who keep Lent allrather Campion noted that to- Doubt is not a bad thing he alis is one of 75 international HUmS year long Sacrifice something big this ye~rday more is needed than popu- said People should be looking and non-government organizashy When helping others hurts a bit you know you va larization of theology and phil- critically at the traditional forshy tions (NGOS) which enjoy conshy made a sacrifice()Sophy In a way we need a mulas and seeing what is revelashy sultative status with UNICEF whole new formula for making tion and what is a culturally

They represent oJer 4000csense of the world and life he conditioned formula which is affiliated private and non-profitfSaid now demanding reform

We should have men devoted Such adaptations are iD no organizations in more than 100 oOn his recent-trip through India 1V0~signor nations with a combined memshy Nolan saw priests and Sisters subSisting onto this single problem Their way a compromise of faith bership running into millions ounces of rice each day so they can share what own inner resources of security Father Dulles said We never they have with lepers and orphans $10 will feedmust be yery strong because to hear the divine message except Interviewed at the United Nashy FEED a family for several weeks at least $50 will feed

facethat kind of change is not III in terms of humans he said tions Sister Kathleen spoke of THE five families $100 ten families bullbullbull Only $975popular thing The Word of God comes her new rol~ at the international HUNGRY gives a priest 11 two-acre mode~ 18nn toraise

Council Opened Areas through man it is alW9YS tem- level and described how it his own food and teach his parishioners how to Father Campion said the can pered by man and it is this con~ evolved from her past activities raise more food Archbishop MalJ Gregorioa will

for experimentation W9S not ditioning which must change wrltetlo thank youI was in California andbased on inadequate work of Father Dulles said one value worked for 10 years in familyJesuits at the present time and of the death-of-God movement eounseling in the juvenile court IlJ Enable ~ girl to become a Sister For 41tl bullthat fact is part of the problem for Catholics is to shake _ I1tA1N day ($1250 a month $150 bull year $300 aleill foster lare and in otherMany times we have been suc- out of taking an uncritical with sa~ A together) you can pay In full fer her two-yeaIwork children sheeessful and being successful static view of God training have 8 Sister of your awnInthe last five years I moved SISTER

oat to community development and civil rights I was a member o For only $a5O a week ($10 a month $120 bull

year) you can make surethat an abandonedJesuit Seminarian Leads Campaign of a district council in bull San HELP Francisco - which subsequently A child has food clothing a blanket and love bullbullbull IAgainst Home Contract Firms was declared a poverty CHILD wen send you a photo of the boy or silt )011area

adoptCHICAGO (NC) - A Jesuit borne than its current market During my years there I waa Rminarian has launched a camshy value a member of the Catholic Intershy o Our priestS will offer promptly the Massespaign here against contractshy Following the exodus of racial Council and when I came MASSES you request Doyou wish to remember a loved holders of homes sold to Negro Lawndales white residents in back from Selma (she was on fOR one this Lent Your Mass offerings are usuallyfamilies at allegedly exorbitant the late 1950s thousands of of the persons selected to repshy LENT the only Incole our priests overseas receiverates homes were purchased by vari shy resent the archdiocese of san

Jack Macnamara SJ who ous bankS mortgage loan and Francisco in the Alabama civil o Enroll yourself your family and friends InlIives and works in nearby real estate companies at low rights march) I was appointed this Association You will be helping Pope Paul Lawndale is acting withthe ap- prices and then resold on conshy to serve on the Human Rights

JOI~ in one of his most ambitious and heartfelt works proval of his Jesuit superio~ tractto Negro families atofteIi - Commission by the mayor of THIS while sharing In the blessings of thousands of

Nacnarnara and a dozen supshy ~lImON Masses (The offering for one year is $2 perdouble the original purchase San Francisco the nun stated porters including several other price the leaflet reported She was the first nun ever apshy person $10 for a family perpetual membership Jesuit seminarians picketed the Paid Race Tax ltpOinted to any kind of~~yt is $25 per person $100 for a family) Chicago address of one investshy Macnamara said these conshy inJSan Fraidsco _

Iment company which holds title tracts should be renegotiated at

~ several homes sold on conshy the most recent FHA appraisal tract to Negroes Pickets dis- price ~ If I1t e SAiliNGS

tributed leaflets explaining the c2J 0 dJ ~ t~~ year SYSTEMATICThe issuemiddot here is moral rathshypurpose of their campaign er than legal he declared Th~ MONTHLY DEPOSITS

The leaflet cites the case of III law does not provide a remedy II tfMltIa fNVE$iMENyhome purchased by an investshy for the type of injustice that is d) aV~ J((~ year SAVINGSment company in January 1959 operative in this contract

for $13000 and then three NOTICE ACCOUNTSThousands of Negroes inmonths later sold on contract to Chicago are suffering from this a Negro buyer for $23000 450 ar ~~~~

It states the investment corn continued ~In effect they paid pany received $2000 as a down II race tax of approximately

type of injustice Macnamara

BCJs~ liverpayment on thiS contract whic~ $10000 when they bought their stipulated that middotthe balance was homes because it was impossishy SavonJs Bonkflo be paid over 20 years at sevshy bleto obtain mortgages 4Il per cent interest at the rate This is a striking example of BanI By Mail of $20140 each month how our legal system does notmiddot We Pay The Postage

Last December it reported a adequately protect black people Federal Housing Administration or poor people he said It appraisal on this home listed its stems from the fact that the law bull YARMOUTH SHOPP8NC PUll value at $15025 This means it aims at protecting property inshy bull SOUTH UltMOm bull HYANJIISexplained that the Negro buyer stead of persons And this helpl bull DENNIS PlmRT bull OSTFllVIUlIII paying $8000 more for tbe bull cause urbaJl unreal

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 ltI

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16 THE ANC )~-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968

New St LouimiddotsArchbi~hcp

PrOmilnent in Ecumen~$m Archbishop Jonh J Oarberry of St Louis well known

~()ng Oatholic leaders after 31 career that has taken him from a seminary classroom iii his natiYe Brooltl~ NCY~ to one of the nations MOse ~mpOOtallt archdiolaquoese1l is pershy

laaps evenmiddot better ~ownmiddot fJDlong Americas nom-Cafu6shylie religious leaders fon hisl work in ecumenism Cllair Ilillao of the Bishqps Commi~ee-Ibr Ecumenical and Intenrefi shyaious Affairs since th~ resigna Qion of Baltimores Lawrence Cardinal Shehan in November 11965 Bishop Carberry has au I9gtCrvised the massive catholic illllvoIvement in ecumeniCal ac-middot lli1 vities

He outlined his own entIliusishyeuroISm for ecumenism in a speech ~iven in January 1966 tolmemshy~rs of the Ohio (Protestant) lPastors Convention wheDI he aid

Common lHeritagel For years the general policY

(llln the Catholic Church) had ~en to stress the great chasm

which divides the euroatliolic Church and other Christian ehurches No effort was made m would seem on our part to Illave a meeting of minds A otudy of documents would seem ltD reveal that while we wera lbrayerfully disposed to) the ltecumenical movemerit nevershy1lheless the Catholic Church did lliittleto foster it

Bishop Carberry told the conshyvention that through the grace 0f God and the leadership or Pope John XXIII we became aware of the common heritage Which is ours

Has Great lHope

We began to realiZe~ how 18aptism unites us in ChriSt to Gee that the divinity of Christ is illhe cornerstone of all Christianshynay we began to real1ze the oommon treasure which we llnave in the Sacred Scripturesllikewise the common bondshyVhich exists with us in the

1lIIlissionary activities at the Church

There is great hope Bishopltearberry said that mrougb ~ialogue through prayerbull 1llluough respect for each others wiewpoint the grace of God may (i)Ile day in Gods divine provishy4llence bring about the- unitY which Christ prayed for at themiddot Last Supper

More recently members of ltOhios Protestant cliurches llllamed the bishop as OniosPbsshyoLr of Pas-tors the fl rst timmiddote hat bull

Grants Permis$ioll~

for SaturdayMass) SAN ANGELO (NC)-BiShop

Thomas TSchoepe of San Angelo lllas announced that the diocesan request for the Saturday Mass flaculty hagt been granted In the future the Sunday Mass 00shyltigation may be met by at shy~ndance at a Saturday aftershyllloon or evening Mass The pershylll1ission has been granted on an ~xperimental basis by the Vati shylttan for a period of five years

The diocese of San Argelo is 1lI Texas missionary diocese the bishop explained and there are areat dis tan c e s between churches and few priestswmiddot oerve the faithfuh ManYi ~llieSts

have two or morlt8 churclies tJ lllttend and will Be able- tQ give more time to the smaller ~urches with the Satucday Mass faculty Bishop TschoePe pointedi 9Ut Chat the faculty has been giVeth bull the whole diocese not just Ibo individual churches or areas Pastors who wish to make Usemiddot aJl the faculty must make formal application to the chancery ofshyillce

a~ statewide Protestant onganiza tion has presented its highest awa-rd 10 a eatho1iir clet1gymam A pla~J1e symbollZiDg the a~adi was~ glv~~ to the blShp at ~~~ Fenw~nIP Blmq~et on the Olbo PastollSgt ~onventi~m

DI~USS P~tilems U~dev Blsli~p~rlgte~rysl~d

er~hlPl laquoatholic ~elegations have ~et wl~h ~fflC1Blsbull and

tleolbglan~ of other- ChrIs~an churchesmiddot to dlSCUSS ecumemcal pooble~s r~~gmg from the pr~sshyence of Christ Ill tlie ~ucharlst to th-c nature of we prJes~ood

Before ta~mg cliarge of th Golumbusmiddot dIOcese on March 25 1965) Bishop euroarbery liadmiddot selved asmiddot coadjutor bishop and then bishop of Eafayette Ind Born in Brooklynj N~ Y Tulymiddot 31 1904 Bishop Carberry studied for the priestlioodi at Brooklyns Cathedral College or the Iin-middot maculate laquool1ception from 191ll to 1924 and at the North Amershyican College in Rome from 1924 to 1930

Oldained inmiddot Rome in 1929 tne bishop sfudiea canon law at the Catholic University of America in Washington D G and taught at Immaculate Conception Semshyinarl until Tune 1935 when he went on ldan to the diocese of Trenton N J He returned to BrooklYn in 1940 where hemiddotreshymained until being named coshyadjuror bishop of Lafayettemiddot in 19651

~~~5IiTI$ nUilft~U[jTIfi)

Ccopy]JJi]dIT [Qjfr[~lcopy[j

CHICAGO (NC) - Tohn A McDllrmott has changed me mindL-he1li remain as execu middot tivedirector of the Chicago Cat1iolic Interracial Council

The veteran council worKer last October announced he would leave the office to beshy

come Mridwest regional- ciVil rightsdirector for the ms De-middotmiddot partment of Health Enucation andi Welfare

A number of problems hava arisen since th-e announcement on my appointmentt last 0ctbBerwhichl caused me to have serl

ousmiddot second l thoughts MilDer moW said iil his decision to re~ maio with the ltlrc He citedi m1 patrtcular~ personnel cutliaclts in HEW wJiich woulli Iiinit the Midwest negional operatiiul

fo accepting McDermotits de cisionj HEW the government agency requestedi liiin to serve asmiddot ai special chdl- rights consuU ant while working for the CIC and he a~reed

IIlt a letter to the Dutch biINumber of Fllel71ch ops members of Michaels re-

gion asked for curbs on the nlgtshySeminarians Dllops tions Catliolic liberals The PARIS (Ne)-Thenumber of meeting also registered disap-

French seminarians h~s dropped proval of the new Dutch Cateshyby about 180 a year for the last chism~ claiminJ~ that it does nocent four years according to 1iigures represent true Catholic teach~ provided in amiddot press conference Michaels Lel~ion is considered by Bishop Jean Sauvage 011 ampshy even more CJlnservative thlW necy member of the bishops Confrontation another Catholic commission on the clergy and conservative organization Conshyseminaries frontations complaints about

For the 1967~68 sc1iolastic the content of the new Dutch year the tdtal number of sliumiddot catechismmiddot are believed to hae dents iil major seminaries m been instTllmentai in having tbe~ FhlOce is 43583 comparedl with book exltlmined by the VatiCan~lJ

4536 for the previous year Doctrinal Congregation 4722 )n 1965-66 and 4953 in 1964-65

Moreover in France at pres- Approves Agency eol ttiere are aBout 200 adults LQND()N (NC)--Jolin Cardl~

WIIO are preIgtaring for tOe ~er nal Heenan of Westminster liJaa manent diaconate as restored by approveq establishment ocf 1m the Second Vatican Council The agency to help priests who want first ordinations to this permashy 10 leave the priesthood znGl nent diaconate could take place nuns who want to leave the this year religious life

1P~alrn le~tUlm~1rn~~G~

$1lll~7 GG1l I1DtJ Sim LONDON (NC)-A study on

the problems of ecumenism in Great Britain will be made by a joint working group of the British Council of Churches and the Caholic Church with the results to be reported next Autumn

The study was planned at a meetingmiddot held atmiddot the Vita et Pax Benedictine I~onvent and attendshyed by nine Catholic representashytives an- 14 representatives of the BeC -

The projected study is exshypected to analyze such topics an the extent I)f cooperatiGn beshytween Catjwlics and members of the BeC the dialogUes bemg held theologicaL differences and the non~theological obstacles to closer unitygt

Auxiliary BishoJ- Langton Fox of lfenevia Wales and

Auxiliary Bishop Basil Chrisshytopher Butlelr OSB of Westshyminster headed tOe CatOolie delegation at the meeting

~(i]$~~rlaquolJpoundfr1) A$1k lMl~illlW) ~ltoy~ IHh~)~Dnd

U11RECHm (NC) -Michaels Legion an organization of Dutch Catholic~ uaditionalists has sent a telegram to Pope Pault H ungintg him tD protect essential orthodoxy and to S81fe tne DutchChurch~

At 3- meeting here attended b~ some 600) Catholic conserva tives led by Eouis Knuvelder the legion condemned the Dutch Catholic daily press the~ Dutch Gatholic tellvisioncompany and the countrys Catholic radio station for being too progressive

Father Baum Regards Ecumenical Center Closing Sign of Success TORONTO (NC)-The closing gian Charles Davis-A Quesshy

of the Center for Ecumenical tion of Conscience Davis book Studies at St Michaels Collegegt exmiddotplains his renunciation of the here is a sign of the centersmiddot euroatholic priesthood and the success Church and asks Catholic theo-

This is the viewpoint of Father logians who intend to stay in GregllllY Ballm O~SA founder the~ eurohurch to reply to several of tJie centeI1 who has an- t1iaologjcal points nQunlaquoed that it will b~ Closed BelUef Unbelief

inl JUne Thats what Im doing FatlieJJBaum-explalnedthalhe Fatller Baum said His book a

founded the centeJ ill 19631 when replYJ to Davis questions conshyecum~llusrn may have~ been a ceming the credibility of the new Idea Its purpose lie- s~ld Church in todays world will be was to promote ecumemcall called The Credibility of the studies at St Michaels Church Today It will be pub-

Taday he neports ecumen mal stlUdi~s at S1l Michaels are a reality- 1lli~ schGolls theology depal1tment 18 fully mte~ ~thl Protestant and ~gIIcan lfupartmentsmiddot at the-Umversity

of Toronto [hUB lie said~ the eC-lmenical

centell has fulfilled its purpose Such fUlfillment he said wmiddot

common in academic circles where there has been an ecushymenlical reVOlution For exam pIe ne said where once som1shyone might have nied to foster ecumenism through building an ecumenical library it is now impossible tq build a theological lilgtrary without its being ecushymenical

Need flDZ Programsmiddot Father Baum added that he

does not believe tJie ecumenical movement has reached fruitien in circles outside the academia world~ He said that he sees a real need pound01 formal ecumenmiddot ical programs on the parish and on all levels of the Churdl which have not yet been reached He a150 disclosed that perSOll ally he lias moved Gn frOlll ecumenism to new fields of thought

The AuIDlStinian has written a new book in answer to the latest by the English theolo-

U[[$ W)jf[rll IfSMsjIID~

rnliJ kUD-WIh ol 1TW[jiJ KETTERING (Neuro) - The 1-7shy

member parish board 00 St Charles Church~ here unanishymousll1 adopted a resolution 5 favor Qf open nousing legiSlashytion for thiS (1)hio suburban community

The parish boards action S~ poIied- unequivocallymiddot passage 0amp an open housing ordinance in themiddot virtuallr aUi-wltite commw-middot nity 00l more than 600001 res dents Tames J Gilvay and Peter Donanue attOrneys anlL pariBhlmiddot boarc members pre sentedthe resolutJoDj wliiclli tbok- themiddot position that the ghett) condit1ollG ~Ilichl Negroes enshycure ilm nearby DaYton are mshyiuriOwil to the entire commUlshyDitTmiddot

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Aftei tee closing of the Center for Ecumenical Studies Father Baum will stay on at St MishychaeFs au a professor of theolshyogy He is also planning another ~~

It will concentrate on the idea oi God in modern thought and will be a clear sign that Father Baum has moved away from his prime in terest in ecumen- ism

Born of Jewish parents in Berlin and reared as an agnostic Father Baum said he has now turned his whole thought to the study of belief and unbelief He will record his findings in me book he is now writing

~oh~ laquotmm~~litl ~Od1[9)

[~ Ao~ i N~regIJ$ CAMDEN (NC) - Bishop

Tames L Schad administrator of the Camden diocese was =ong citizens honored here foT their efforts in furthering the interests of the Negro comshymunity

Bishop Schad who has been active in community action projects such as the War on Poverty committees was pre sented a scroll during a proshygram sponsored by the Tenth Street Baptist church here in observance of the 43rd annual Negro History Week This year marks the first time a Romaa Catholic prelate has been so honored

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17 Oppose Church Clergy Participation in Politics

By Jsgr George G Higgins

The New RepubJic-whIch in this writers judgment W one CYl the be3t of Ameriros weekly journals of opinion especially hl it3 arovezoage cfcurrent economic and political developments----thinks that the time has com~ for anti shyVietnam clergymen aul1ayshy Be that as it maY I am ioshymen to translate tu1eir cVZl clined to think that the editors m0r81 indignation oveuror Vietshy of the French periodical Inforshynam into effective political mations Catholique InternashyDction inasmuch as this is the tionales make considerably only way to effect long-term more sense than the editors cOf ehanges in the The New Republic 011 this issue policies of this of clerical involvement in the country So far so-called politics of peace as laymen are Though they are vigorously concerned this and unqualifiedly opposed ~il

would seem to tW war in Vietnam and like be a self - evishy tWeditors ()f The New Repubshydent proposition li( clearly recognize that the L1s perfectly establishment of leace in the obvious t hat world is a political problem concerned layshy which calls for the active mshymen ou~ht to volvement ofChcistians as ~-en

translate their as all other men of good will moral indi~nashy they do not think that themiddot tion over Vietnam - or any cleJgy who are responsible foy other significant issue of public the unity of the Church should policy-into effecti-re poiiticltll be expected to take on the role

of party politiciansaction Given the fact that their pubshySound Tradition

lication ~CI has been oJe 01 tileOn the other hnd I aJl Evt most outspoken European critics

sure understandthat I fully or of U S involvement in Vietnam completely agree vitb The New and one of the most vigorousRepublic when it says that fue advocates middotof a politics of peaceclergy ought tncv likewise their warning against the parshy

Traditionally a the NR itself ticipation of the clergy in parshypvints out the clergy-in this tisan politics is highly signifi shycountry at least - have rnied cant and deserves to be taken amy from such participation very seriously (Christians and

AJJ a long-time subscriher to the Struggle ior Peaee InforshyT~2 New Republic I had Dlshy mations Catholique Internashyways been under the imp~ssio~ tionales Jan 15 1965)that its editors thought that en Fl lialgs lrindplebalance this was a sound tradishy

Those American Catholicstion Apparently lwweer I was who may happen to have a speshy

cial interest in the pros and consmistaken in this regard fora of this highly controversial issuerecent Nell Republic editorial will also want to read whatnoten with satisfaction that Hans Kung has to say about itAJlerican clerGYmen now apshy

pear to be ready in large numshy in his forthcoming bookThe Churchbers to get involved at a preshy

cinct level and to play C1l Father Kung has lectured exshyactivist role in both parties tensively throughout the United (Clergy in Politics The New SUItes in recent years and is

currently with us again as a visshyRepublic Feb 17 1968) iting professor at Union Theoshy

QuestioIS Meaning logical Seminary in New York What does this mean in pracshy Seen in the light of the Gosshy

tical terma Does it mean that pel le writes in his new book ministers rabbis and priests the relntionshipof the Church should endorse ltor oppose) parshy to the world contains only one ticular candic1ates fqr politiell essential aspect its ministry 10 office starting at the precinct the world level Does it mean that they Ministry does not mean raisshythemselves should run for ofshy ing ones voice or putting an -oar flee if only as a last reiort in all secular qIes1ions middotof ecoshy

If so does it also mean that nomic political sodaI middotcultural other clergymen should run artistic and scientific life against them if they happen to T1e Churchclmnot solve disagree with what they stand the greJt problems of the ()rld for Or does it mean toot only neiih2r the problell1of hunger those clergymen who are anti shy nor that of the populaticn nor Administration should get inshy that of war nor thlt oanonFmshyT-olved at a precinct leel and ity of power Dor that -of race play an activist role within hatred What the Church both parties can do can be expressed quite

Sicnifieani WarnlDI simply in one phrase it must I have raised these questions exist for the world

lot to make light of The New ACrefS With lFTK1mgRepublics editorial CD the subshyject under discussion but Anyone who hal ever baG the merely to BUggest that clerical pleasure of meeting Faiher involvement ill partisan politics Kung middotor is familiar wi1bhis over the issue of Vietnam is at writings will know witheut best a rather tricky business being told that be is not a hawk and will almost inevitably lead and that he is cot advocating to certain consequences which a policy of Christian withdrawal upon further reflection even the from the world editors of The New Republie middotOn the eontrary be stroniJy might eonceivably wish tc foreshy favors lhe all-ltltit involvement tall of Christians in temporal affairs

and notably iii the ~lities Of peace

To Speak in Boston Nevertheless be does net Rev Anthony T Padovano think that the institutienal

Church-and its clerical minisshySTD theology professor at ters-should pretend that theyImmaculate Conception Semishy

nary Darlington N J will speak have all the answers tc the problems of the worldia the Christian Culture lecture

aries sponsored by the Paulist And neither eoes be thinkshyFathers at 815 Wednesday night if I read him correctly-that tbe March 6 in John Hancock Ha)) clergy in ~ exeTeise of their Boston Tickets are available mission of peace should get inshyfrom 5 Park Street Boston volved in partisan jl)olities Nor 02108 do L

WOKS LIKE FUN Yes but listen to what it requires The Georgetown University erew keeps in s-hape with ~

AM ~i~enies in the gym foHow~ by a two-niile run UJl and do-Wll Observatory Hil~on tJhecampus Its cold up there said Dave Harris a member of the lightweifht crew but by then youlewtired you do-nt care NC Phottgt

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 ~ 968

Prayer for Peace To Cm(O)se Games

MEXICO CITY (NC) - All ecumenical prR)er for peaCf) service is being planned for the end of the 19th Olympic Gam~

here next October The sponsor of the service w shy

the Ecumenical Commission fcrr Religious Services (ECRS) fe the Olympic Games The comshymission is composed of 73 ChrisshytiRn and Jewish leaders in thi~

city Promment spiritual leadshyers will be invited to speak

At middot8 meeting here the rn ECRS spiritual leaders discusse~

the facilities for athletes and visitors to attend their varioU7J reUgious services

iI1be iMC)Cican government hw aPPI)o~ed ECRS plans for the ~ction of at least tw- JaIige bullclings as nondenonYshynational chapels

The original pIlan toeonstrl1ell one large church has been IcHsshytlarded The present plan is build one large building with no religious I)rnamentllJtion of alltl7 kind on the outskirts of the Olympic Villa and a similar Oilif)

on tne outskirts of the Olympze

Project InterracialInterfaith Cooperation Cultural Villa

tin (Re~~(Jtion of CcUege m addition Archbishop MEshymiddotgut Dario MirlllDda y Gomez Gl

1I1IAMI (NC)~When Florida The Rev Edward T Graham Mexico City hBs authorizeQ Memorial College predominant a Baptist minister key person downtown Catholic churches to ly Negro middotliberal arts school is behind the project has had asshy permit non-Catholic services = moved here frOl1l St Augustine sistance from Mrs Athalie their premises if non-Catholie and opens next September the Range Miamis first NeglO City comgregations should request i project will be the result of unshy Commissoioner who is a Cathshyusual interracial and interfaith olic teamwork Organhzet3 rOthEHSIl

The largest single contribll shyNegroeswhites and Chinese tiou of private funds has oome flainirt~ ClI1ter

have joined hands with Cathoshy from a supermarket executive lLOUISVILLE (NC) - TkeIlics Protestants and Jews tv M Austin Davis a Methodist Franciscan Conventional OrdGcontribute money time advice laiamis Catholic Bishop Coleshy has opened a Brothers Trainincand leadership to realize the

manF Carroll is a member vl1 Center here in an attempt to givedevelopment of the college on l the advisory board as is Maushy Brothers three years of active$10 million complex here rice Ferre diocese of Miami lay apostolic work following theirr leader novitiate

RabbiIrving Lehrman presshy Father Sebastian Cunnil1flshyCouncil Seores ident cd the Greater Miami ham OFM director of tlw Rabbinical Association a n 4ll OOlilter said We felt we haCFactory Closing Jewish lay leaders are amoag an cbligation to give our man

LONDON (NC-The impend- active workers oome training outside contam ing elosingof a large industricl $ bull $ an idea of what was neeclshyJilseph Rodriguez of the plant has been criticized by ~ edfromthem in the outside Puerto Rican Democratic ChEb lay -eouncil of Our Lady Of _rl11 In the past he addeeurohas prepared 11 scholarship PieshyGrace parish in southeast Lsnshy we were not fWfilling ~ gram for -the collegedCD DeedS 1d ~veryoneliturgy

The council expressed its deep concern at the recent No Comlmentclosure of factories in middotthis area Completean4 in particular of the impendshy VATICAN (orry (NC)-Ibe ing shutdown of the Associ2ted Vatican had no comment -oJ1 11

ElectricaIIndustries (AEI) plant repolt that ~hbishop Agostincgt BANKING Casaroli secretary for extraershyIt callid upon the governmeJrt dinary ecclesiastical affairs ilf SERVICEand the -ehaiTmanof the oomshy the Papal Secretariat of statepany torevsrse the decision 10 eonterred with Dlembers of ~

c~ don the plant because Of tor BristOl CountyN-orth Vietnamese missi-on iJJthe middotmoral religious and 5Ocial Parisjn lJanuarylt n JUWWampleffeets iCaiJS2a by the ~veshythat Archbishop Casaroli Wallmen1 a1popl1ation absent from the Vatican fOll

Copies ltOf the councils motion several days nlenUy BrjstoICounty were sent 1amp Prime ~1inister

Harold Wilson MiJiister of Trust Company Labor RayJ Gunter President ampf the Board of Trade Douglas Sturteant (

TAUNTO~ MASSJay and company officials iHoOkAlthough the councils action was a surprise to the pastel Ed 1897 IIHE BANJ(ONFather Joseph seally AA ~ uiltl~rs SUppJies JAUNTONGRHNprist sroa that he agreed ith it ftll3 Purchase Street Member 01 Feileral ~

Faiher 8enlly sait[ centbert Aellad iNew Bedford IDsuranee CorporaamptoDJlOt~cteil p01itiealand elaquolshy 996-5661 nomic motions to eome from the council but pointed out You cannot separate Feligimtl from eveJ~ay life

Notrre Dome St Vincent de Paul Store

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968 Capacity Audience at Holy Name Parish ~ihss

My Consciesect1ce Discusses The J)etached Americans In Educ~tion Continued from Page One

Do we care -for knowledge

what happens to other people Why do we strive for college educations or for money Are we so anxious to confor~l1 that we never dare to PITTSBURGH

tMrI

~VJI and it must be understood in a

t mear-cu way

A person following his ~con-~ence must be sincere He cannot play games with his mind but must be honest with himself

A person foilowing his con~ liCience must be correct It iSl10t ugh that he sincerely beshy~ Reves that something is good or evil-he must be sure that hiS judgement is a correct one

agrees with Gods view of the matter

Sometimes people make misshytakes in judgement-honest misshytakes to be sure but mistakes iwnetheless The oft-quoted exshyample is that of the African savshyrage deep in the jungle who may be sincerely following his con- ooience when it tells him to kill omd eat his enemy His conshyscience is a sincere one But it~ Is a mistaken one since it does IIlOt agree with Gods Will He ond every person must c~m-

liitantly review his judgements to lbe sure that they are correct ones and riot sincere mistaken Utes

A person following his conshy3Cience must be certain He can not act with doubt or uncertainshy~ about the rightness or wrong- mess of an act since he would be Announces Prize acting with the willingness to

takea cpance on being wrong For Best Plan ~ offendi~g God and this is aever~ validmiddot If there is uncer- PITTSinJRqH (NC)-Bishop t8inty the person must seek aid John J Wright of middotPittsburgh III arriving at a sure and correct haS annoutc~d il priz~ of$IOOOtor professor ina p1inor semshy tudgementmiddot - formiddot the architect who submitsmiddoth be I f - inary chapiainof a school dishyThe Christian acts with amiddotcon- ~ e st p an or a Jliljgtr renoshy ocesan chancellor and finally

lllilence ~rned by the prlnciples vation of the sanctuary of St vicar general tilChrlst This is where tliEi Pa~l~ cath~middot~al_h~remiddot~T~~e ~om- The P6pe a~o nam~d Father

aturchsteachers the Pope Iiiid P~tit~o~ IS ~p~nmiddot ~omiddotal archJtec~ Bienvenido TudtiJdto be auxil- a message toAfrica and a mes ishops ~nfer middotthe pi~ture to wl~hlD ~e bound~~l~~s~f the iary bishop of Dumaguete in the sage ~lling for peaCe

Illelp men make judgementsmiddot thatmiddot lire guided by Christ Sometimes ~ese j~dge~eptsgo a~intitmiddotnat-middot lIIIa1 inclinations and tendencies md this has always been thedif-

~ti~ty of ~ing a Christian-- Ghrist demands much of His llmiddotowmiddotmiddotermiddots middot IIIU

At present Catholics are askshyiDg tlie Pope to make a morai judgement about birth control d especlmiddotallymiddot the PlmiddotUmiddot Some_lire castigating him for not givshy g a qulck declslon or else they lliie telling people to forget about llrim and to make their own adgeme tsmiddot th ttmiddot w- n m e ma er The Pope in order to make a ilecision must make it on the basis of facts Scientists must provide him with the facts and In this matter there is much that k~epinglVith the general lin~s sition in favor I)f open housing complex The Pope has asked and is still asking theologians to evaluate the scientific facts in 4he light of Christian principles Not all moral issues are simple And then the Pope will apply the principles to the facts and 1ril1 make a decision about the morality of the matter

This will guide the Catholic in fllorming his conscience -- in arshyriving at a judgement that is sipcere that is the correct orie at lS artmiddot d t d ce am JU gemen anthatmiddot is Christian

K of C Convention 51ated for Houston

lAN MARCOS (NC) The

1970 national convention of the ~ights of Columbus will be held in Houston it was an-Bounced here at a conference of Texas officers of the interna- _ tional fraternalorder

The announcement of the seshylection of Houston for the con- v~ntion which will be held in

be different These were among questions discussed by a capacity audience at the second in a series on Christian Morality sponsored by the parish council of Holy Name Church Fall River Sparked by Sisshy

John AIIcIa SUS Cter some 30 people from all parts of themiddot Diocese viewed the film The Detached Amerishycans then broke into small groups for buzz sessions

Thesis of the film was that Americans wont become in volved with each other It dra- matically pointed its message with the true story of Kitty

Genovese murdered on a New York Street while 38 of her neighbors watched ffom winshy

bull dowS-o--and did nothing Also depicted were amarried

couple talkingto each other with neither really listening a student going thriugh school as on an assembly line with his sole goal the position he could

hope for as a college graduate and various other examples of non-involvement

What is life worth if we do not give it away questioned Harry Reasoner at the end of the film The Holy Name audishyence agreed that life sbould be

used for others but tended to feel that there wasnt the im-Personalitv in a smailer city

Jthat is found in a large metropshyolis One Sister countered howshyever with stories brought to

h t htschool by children s e aug This is right in Fall River she stressed Others cited examshypIes of personal involvement in affaIrs of others but agreed that much more could and

Pope I~aul Names Two Aluxiliaries VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VImiddot hail named Msgr Jose T Sanchez to be auxiliary bishop of Caceres in the Philipshypines He takes the titular See of Lesvi

Msgr 5anlhez was vicar genshyeral of Legazpi at the time of his nomination

He was born March 17 1920 atPandan in the Legazpi dioshycese He completed his philoshysophical and ordinary theologishycal studies at the diocesan semshyinary and obtained a licentiate in theology at the University of St Thomas in Manila He was ordained Marc~ 12 1946 and then worked as an assistant passhy

Pltts~urgpchap~er9rmiddottl~e Afner- ~ Philippines Father Tudtud who Pope Paul also delivered 264 ~can -Inst~tUtofAlth~te~ts was36ye~~I)]fat ~hcent time ~fsPeeches bull (~~)_(h~ch mclud~~ ~tIePoit~- his noniinatiOJl studied philos- burgb dlO~es~and three adJa-ophy and theology at St Johns

c~nt countIes SeminarY inmiddotBoston Fath~r roseph P- Larkin He was born March 22 1931

eOm~ission chaiIm~nmiddot ili1(I-a at Mabola inmiddotthe Cebu arch~ member of the diQcesan bU~lll- diocese He worked as assistant - bullbull

iIg commissligtn~ said the pur- pastor Editor ltit Cebus Caiholic pose of thereiiovlition is to pro weekl~ and finally pastor of the ville a ~mQte suitable sanctu- Church of thE Blessed Sacrashy

ary setting fof the liturgical re- inent in Cebu In addition atf orms Qrought into beingmiddot by the time of his nomination he Vatican Council II was vice-superior of the Misshy

Father Lmiddotai-kir said because slon Society of the Philippines the cathedral must architectu-middot r~lly and liturgically allow for Issues Sttement both episcopal mdparish ser-- U

vices ~~any structurai cihimge O H R h offers a unique chalienge to the n umalu ig ts designer~ and provision for the LA CROSSE (NC)-Tbe La

new liturgy must be made in Crosse diocese has taken a poshy

and spirit 01 the existing struc- integrated arid ildequate educashy t4re tion fair employment and the

- defense of the rights of minorshyities

Christians and J~ws Bishop Frederick W Frekshying of the Wisconsin diocese

Honor Clergymen and the diocesan central com-NEW YORK (NC)-Clergy- mission approvedmiddot apmiddot officiai

men from thefour major faiths statem~nt titled Human Reshyhave been honored here by the lations in the Diocese of La National Coiuerence of Chris- Crosse

tians anltt Jews The statement was prepared

the third week of August was the practice has spread middotto a made by Dr Josepb G Murphy number of other cities hesaid of La Marque a member of the interrelgious understanding hasmiddot boara- of- directors fortbe Cathprogressed tremendously middotiIi reshyeticmiddot meDs oganization middotc~nhyearsbull

-

Tbe clergymeri cited for by the subcommission of human relations of the diocesan cornshycourageous leadership in intershymissionon social action and apshy

creedal relations were proved by both before submisshy Rev Dr ~ohn C Bennett sion to the central commissiollll

president of Union Theological ) in January Seminary

Father Robert I Gannon SJ president emeritus of Fordham CONRAD SEGUIN University

Bishop Silas of the GreekOrshy BODY COJMPANY thodox archdiocese of Nortb and Aluminum or Steel South America 944 Countr Street

Samuel D Leisdorf New NEW BEDFORD MASSYork philanthropist pointed out

wy 2-6618that the NCCJ firstmiddot honored reshyligious leaders of four faiths in September -1966 Noting that

should be done by individuals parishes and municipaiities

There were no solutions ofshyfered to the problems posed bythe film We dont expect to have answers to these quesshytions warned Sister John Alicia at the beginning of the program They are too big for us The film WltlS strictly on the

human level and this was pointed out in one group No one can solve all problems it was agreed but surely each Christian canmiddot trust the Holy Spirit to lead him to the probshylems he is equipped to do someshything about no matter how small

There was another point on whichmiddot everyohe in the audience was in enthusiastic agreement that there be more such eveshynings as the one sponsored by Holllgt Namemiddot

Vatmiddotn Report~lIo

Continued from Page One two encyclicals The Developshymiddotment of Peoples and Priestly Celshyibacy four motu proprios inshyeluding one creating central a lay council and the Papal Comshymission on International Justice anp Peace and another restorshying the permanerit diacol1ate treeapostolic constitutions inshyelUding one reshaping the

Churchs c~iitral administlatioii two apostolic exhortations one apostolic letter and 78 other Wessagesmiddotand letterS inclQding

He reeeived eight ehiets Of state including U SPresident Lyndon B Johnson and United Nations Secretary General U T~ant and gave 16 audiences to

th lmiddottmiddot I0 er men 10 ~ 1 lca life in cluding U SVi~ President Hushy~rt H Humphrey Republican presidential hopeful Richard M N d N Ixon an ew Yorks Sen Robert F Kennedy

He received visits from four delegations of Orthodox churCh men including Orthodox Ecushymenicai Patriarcp Athenagoras I of Constantinople besides visit shying Patriarch Athenagoras in ~ tanbul

The book covering last yearli activities of the Holy See conshysists of 1680 pages plus about 2(10 photographs

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Bishop John J Wright hasestablished a committee 1Jl)take a complete look at Oaampshy

olie education in the PittsburpD lOcese

The aim is fc dedde wha~ 1shyd t to tak tbe ~

lrec Ion e Dedecade for the best education of

all Catholics young and oldThe committee will evaluate all present Catholic educationshygrade and high schools eo egesConfraternity of Christian Doeshytrine classes adult education and other programs

The surveyors wiU 117 to deshyvise a plan based oa mstinl and potential resources in facll-Hies funds and Staff to guide the dioceses educational efforlll for the next 10 years or more

May Be FaI-lleaehiDg Among ideas eXpected to be

examined in the evaluation are proposals by some to cut back on Catholic schools or even til phase them out in place of an expanded adult education proshygram

Named head of the committee of educators priests and lay professionals is Father Vernon Gallagher CSSp former presishy

deht of Duquesne University here now serving as an official of the Holy Childhood Associashytion He also is a former proshyvincial of the Holy Gbost Fa~ ers eastern province

The committee Will be emshypowered to call before it di shyocesan officials to hold publlc meetingshire staff ~ring in exshyperts ThedioCege will finance the work

The committee Win make spe- eific recommendations to BishoP Wright after the study which 18 expected to take at least a yearbull

-Results are expected to have ~ar-reaching implicatiou fOr Catholic education here

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Two Unbeoten league Play f1fE ANCHOR-Diocese oTtall River-Ihurs feb 29 1968 19

Coach Says Sault Complete BallPlayerCape Cods NausetCompiles SMTB Playmaker Is Former Coyle $trBest Over-All Court Mark

BY JOE MIRANDA By PETER BARTEK

An excellent hall handler and Norton High Coach team player Is how Pat Sault of

Taunton is described by his Eleven of tile 12 aa-ea e1ubs with the best records in coach Phil Wetterland of the

their respective leagues are among those who will parshy Sou the a s t ern Massachu- setts Technogical Institute Inshyticipate in the March Tech basketball tournament in Boston stitute in North DartmouthFairhaven High of the Oapeway Conference and Nauset Sault a 19-year old freshman

of the Cape amp Island loop are is a former Coyle High hoopshythe only all-winning league a single league game while two ster who played four years for

went doWn to defeat In every the Warriors his final two underaggregations from this area encounter In which they were coach Jim Lanagan on the varshyin the Hub championship Involved Almost two-thirds 02 sityelimination tourney while Dartshy the Southeastern Mass teams

D)Quth High is the only one of Teaching CareerfinIshed wIth a 500 average OIlthe tOp dozen better Although young Pat has al shya 70 per cent coQlbines WIth

WIth 12 triumphs in the Cape ready made plans for the future league record amp Island competition Nauset which Include finishing his edshywhich failed to Regional also achieved the best ucation and pursuing a teachershyqualify an inshy over-all record winning 16 of coaching career dication t hat 11 encounters The Cape Cod Sault has not yet chosen a non-league school will be shooting for the major in college but according competition selshy Class D Tech title to his parents he is very much dom jeopardizes interested in teaching historyNew Bedford High 15 and and coaching They feel he willthe ultImate one in the Greater Boston Subshy be good at both as he alwaysgoal of most urban league finished with anschools Actual- Peter devoted his spare time to helpshy

over-all 17-2 mark for the Winshyly 311 per cent Bartek ing the younger neighborhoodter The Crimsons 937 average boys understand athletics moreof the 35 Southeastern Massashy captured its leagues pennant flag thoroughlychusetts school teamsmiddot have The Crimson Whalers are now Pat is the oldest son of Mrqualified for the Tech title play poised to annex the No 1 State and Mrs Charles A Sault and)let none managed an over-all honor by clinching the top one of four children A sisterundefeated season ranking Class A division in the Annette is a senior at BishopThree area clubs failed to win Boston title tourney Cassidy High James Michael

and Cheryl grammar school Representatives in Three B~ackets students at Mulcahey Schoof in

Taunton Fairhaven and Holy Family FamilYhas been eliminated in The family resides at 85 Mershy

HIgh of New Bedford aiming the Lawrence Catholic tourney rill Avenue In Taunton and are for the Class C Tech crown both Southeastern Mass does not members of St Pauls Parish fInished wIth an over-all 16-2 have one club among the Tech

Wetterland Commentsmark The latter Is still smart- Class B participants but th~re ing from its cliff-hanging defeat will be five area combinations Wetterland was high in his at the hands of Xavier in the -includIng Fairhaven and Holy praise of his five foot 11 inch State Catholic tourney Bill Family-in the Class C play and guard who tips the scales at Walshs two-pointer from the three-including Nauset-in the 160 pounds ~ssesses good speed floor which many thought Class D Hub competition and is a key in the Corsairs fast

meant victory at Lawrence was The other Class C contestants break offense nu1llfied by a travelling viola- patterns when SMTI is wurkshy a rest he should be in top conshySault lllsed strictly with thetion which cost the loss ofthe are Case High of Swansea Nar- iilg too quickly and making dition for the 1968-69 campaignvarsity was gaining valuablebasket resulting in a one-~Jnt ry co-champions Oliver Ames Dlistakes Sault gaIned his court savvy1 f tb of North Easton runners-up in experience and developing rapshy

The SMTI mentor continued from Lanagan at Coyle wheretiOs~~ e Narragnnsett~a~ theHockomock circuit and Den- bUy whep a knee Injury slowed he iii the complete ball player hemiddotstarted in his juJ)ior and senshyDis-Yarmouth of Cape Cod see his progress midway through

Durfee of Fall RIver and ond pI fi ish in tho C the campaiiPt but Wetterland noting that he can shoot but is Jor lieasons and was a Vital co Bishop Stang mgh of North ace n er e ape most --content setting Up his in the Warriors successduring DartmQutb are the other two middotNausetwill be joined by Mar- has turned in some excellent efshy teammates for easy pblnts He Ioth years I J

way loop said despite the handicap Pat

Is a team player and always sacshy As ~ Coyle High fr~hmanarea Class A representatives inmiddot thas VIneyard and Norton mib forts in a most successful SMTI rifices himself to help the club Pat was a member XJtb~ yearshythe Tecb toutnament ~e Fall in the Class D bracket The season

Sault possesses a good atti shy lings h09P team and al~Q~ parti shyRiver Hilltoppers willbe out Islanders finished second to Naushy Defensively Sault is cnitshytude is a tough competitor and cipated in track By hihSOphoshyto make amends for their nose- set in the Cape amp Island league standIng Offensively Sault is one of the players Wetterland is more year Saultcopfjned his dive finish in the Bristol COUl)ty while Norton was second in the the teams playmaker ana quarshyeounting on 1to help SMTI gain athlettc talents to basketbjlll andloop whIle Stang ~ke Ho17 Tri~Valley Conference terback 8Dlall college recognition in the turned in a cODlJPenlla))le acshyfuture Teallll Player coun~ o~ himself

Ifere~s How They Did hi LiBogue Play Played for Lanagan Sault also represented stWetterland said his outstandshyThere is doubt about his the hardwood

he following are the league 21 Bishop Feehan 7_1 ing worth to the Corsairs comes no Pauls on in the eourage said the Corsairs skipshy Taunton CYO and in the annual from the fact that he can slowrecords of the 35 Southeastem Msgr Coyle 7-1 after painful knee Easter tournament He playeddown the offense and set up per even a

Mass teams Ta~ton 7-7 injury Sault continued to jpve four years of Litue JeagueM N B Vocational 6-8 his all and attended every pracshy Baseball and one season in theK of C Masons1 Fairhaven 14-0 25 DIman Vocational 5-9 tice The injury has slowed him Pony League prior to ~ntetmamp

Nauset 12-0 Msgr Prevost 5-9 visibly but after the season and Coyle Higa 3 New Bedford 15-1 27 SandwIch 4-8 To Cooperate4 Holy Family 13-1 28 Nantucket 3-9

NOTRE DAME (NC) - lfashyCase 13-1 29 Old Rochester 4-10

30 tlonal leadellS of the Scottish6 Oliver Ames 12-2 West~rt 3-11 Bite Masons and the Knights ~oll another7 Marthas Vineyard ~ 31 Barnstable 2-12

of Columbus anno~ced memshy8 Bishop Stang 10~ 32 Dighton-Rehoboth 1-13 strike on~rs of their organizations wU1Dartmouth 104 33 Bourne 0-14 work together on domestic andDennis-Yarmouth 10-4 Chatham 0-12 the enerlY international problems faciolaquoDurfee 10-1 North AUleJooro 1-14

the nation12 Norton 105 you get George A Newbury soveshy13 Attleboro 9-5 Minister Officiates reign grand commander 01 from14 Harwich 7-5

Scottish Rite Masons In theProvIncetown 7-5 a slice ofDn Cathclic Church northern jurisdiction of the US18 Seekonk 8-6 MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-A Lu- and John W McDevitt supremeSomerset 86

theran mInister officiated at the knight of the Knights of ColumshyFalmouth 8-6 marriage of his son in Holy Cross bus made the announcementMansfield 8-6 Catholic church here at a dinner here s~nsoredWareham 8-6

Married were James H Graf jointly by the Masonic Lodge 29 L th and the Knights of Columbus

a u eran and CalTon Ann council in South Bend Episcopalian Rite Gutwinski 25 a Catholic The ceremony was rformed - Both praised the work of Fa-MINNEAPOLIS (NC)- Archshy ther John A OBrien of the

bishop Leo Binz and Coadjutor Grapoundfs fltthell the Rev Paul L University of Notre Dame for Archbishop ~ PY1)1e of the Graf pastor of Holy Trinity r better understanding among the Cafllolic archdIoceses of St Paul theran church two groups Minneapolis were present in the Permission for the Rev Gmt Father Theodore M Hesshysan~lary of St Marks Episcoshy to officiate at his sonB wedding burgh CSC president of the pal cathedral here for the inshy was granted by theSacred Con- University of Notre Dame said stallation of Bishop Philip F gregation for the Joctrine of This nIght marks a great step McNarry as coadjutor bishop of the Faitlh inl lWme in answer to ll forward and reflects the new the Epi6copal diocese of Minneshy J)etition by Archbishop Leo BiDz ~enical spirit which is unishysota of~ ~~-M~eapotis iing ~ople long separated-

PAT SAULT

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bull THE ANCHOR Dayton University Thurs Feb 29 196a Brief Religious on Ecumenism

Selects Advisors SOUTH ORANGE (NC) meanitigful dialogue should not tended not to lead to compro- DAYTON (NC)-An ll-mem-

Named resident Some 1000 mms and Brothers be confused with monologueshy mise but to conyergence ber advisory board of six stushyservfng in tli~ Newark archdi~shy or confrontation He added We talk now of our common dents two faculty members andSANTA CLARA (NC)-The cese were briefed on the basic we must be willing to be pershy belilefs he said not to com- three representatives of theboard of trustees of the Univershy principles of ecumenism in a suaded-we need an open mind promise each others faith but in community has been establishedlllity of Santa Clara has named program sponsored by the Newshy to seek out the truth wherever the hope that at some point in for the Office of Human Relashylrather Thomas D Terry SJ ark Archdiocese Commission for it might be shy the future we will converge tions at the University oJ Dayshy35th president of the Jesuit unishy Ecumenical Affairs

Ifersity Father Terry who sucshy Discussing the difficulties of As an example he pointed to tornSpeakers at the session ineeeds Father Patrick Donohoe establishing Christian-Jewish the wide divergence of views The board under the direcshySeton Hall University includeSJ recently appointed Califorshy dialogue he said we Christians regarding (he Mass and the Eu- tion of Charles Hirt director ofDr Leonard Swidler of Templeaia provinCial af the Society of are responsible for 2000 years charist that existed between the Office of Human RelationsUniversity Philadelphia aridJIesus has been academic vic~ of anti-Semitism and now_ we Martin Luther and the Council will be responsible for estabshyFather Thomas M McFadden ofpresident af Loyola University must overcome our mutual disshy of Trent Then he cited the re- lishing policy making programthe Brooklyn dioceseLos Angeles for the last year trust before dialogue can be cent statement on the Eucharist recommendations helping to

lllI1d a half Previous to that Swidler said dialogue with fruitful issued by Lutherans and Catho- alleviate campus racial probshyIIlIather Terry was dean of the others must be preceded by an lics to show how much closer lems and drawing up proposall ltWllege of arts and sciences at examination of Catholic attishy Father McFadden said diashy the two bodies have come since for implementation Santa Clara tudes In addition he said a logue among Christians is inshy that time

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Page 5: 02.29.68

5 THE ANCHOR-Dominicans Plan Thurs feb 29 1968Sisters a1f Rose Hawtllorne Lathrop HomeChapter Meeting To Continue Care of Incurable Patients Urges Catholics In Chicago

CHICAGO (NC)-A JeDshy By Patricia McGowan Aid Immjgrants 9mJl ohapter meeting of the ~rldwide Order of Preachshyem (Dominicans) has been sdteduled tentatively to open Aug 20 at the Aquinas Institute euroJf Philosophy Dominican house Ilif ll~udies in suburban Rivet 1JGrest

Officials of the Dominicans a Albert the Great (Chica~)

province said Faiher Aniceto Wemandez OP Do min i can master general and his 12shymember cabinet from Rome 8lJ weUl as the heads of 40 Domin Qcan provinces throughout the IIVorld will attend the sessionll which may last until November

The general chapter is the lhft for the Dominicans since ilhe close of Vatican Council n lJ win be only the second timemiddot

flm the 760-year history of the Jl)ominicans that a general chapshytell is held in the United States

llhe Chicago officials esti shymated more than 100 delegates wm attend It was announced flnat each provincial will be acshyltrompanied by an expert in some ~se of Scripture theology jhilosophy or canon law

The Chicago officials said unshyamp2r the rules adopted by Vati shycun Council II the chapter has lnlthority to rewrite the DominshybSIll constitutions and make oweeping changes which could affect the lives and works of Qrz 10000 Dominican priests cmd Brothers in the world

The Chicago officials called Me scheduling of the chapter in t1ilre United States a symbolic ~reakthrough of recognition br American influence among ~e Dominicans

lZlIperimentall lLegnsnll~finn

Copies of the Final Report a1 the two-and-one-half year ceH-study of the midwest DoshylJlinicans-reported last Fall were distributed to provincialD OOld experts attending last Sepshy~bers preparatory meetings bll Rome and influenced their ~ecision to convene at River orest

Findings of the Chicago provshylzJrtes self-study are reflected in iilrst drafts of new experimental TIeglslation for the order being ~epared by a 28-man internashyilional commission for debate at ~ chapter

Spokesmen for the Chicago province indicate considerable Glecentralization of the orders government and apostolate as -the probable outcome of the ehapter with debate expected ~ center on specific areas of Ilmiformity or diversity

1 recent worldwide poll of Dominican sentiment shows Il

iOOffimon desire for a few realshyllstie laws and abolishing of arshychaic forms Specific proposals IO far have been most progresshypoundliye in tODe it was stated

Catholic Magazine Seized at Airport

SANTO DOMINGO (NC) ~

eopies of a Catholic magazine published in Uruguay have 1lleeIIl seized in the airport cusshytoms office here on the grounda Ibat they contain subversive material

Three packages eontainin[f OO copies of the January issue of Vispera published in MonteshyYideo by the Uruguayan brancll of Pax Romana international Catholic organization 01 stushy6entlgt and intellectuals were barred from delivery at tile Idiport

Various articles praising ErshyIleSW (Che) Guevara the Cuban communist leader killed ill (lUerrilla fighting in BoliVia Were said to have caused the ~scaUon

Visiting the Rose Hawthorne Lathrop Home in Fall River liist week wag the Mother General of the Dominican Sistern staffing the institution She is brisk ~nergetic Mother Mary Elizabeth who makes her headqualrters at the Hawthorne NY motberhouse of the community Once or twice yearly Mother Elizabeth makes the rounds of the seven homes operated by the Sisshyters an for the same purpose - the service of patients with incurable cancer She admits puzzlement at the situshyation in Fall River In Atlanta St Paul Cleveland Philadelshyphia and New York the Sisters homes are filled to capacity and usually have waiting lists of pashytients In Fall River tlle Rose Hawthorne Home has not been fiHed for several years

J1t isnt unfoMunately that cancer is on the decrease There seem ~ be several reasons for the low admission rate here One in some ways reflects favorably on New Englanders They seem less willing than people in other parts of the country to delegate flo others the care of infirm and aged parents and grandparents who make up the bulk of the homes patients although there are no age requirements

They are proud and the old people are proud said one obshyserver They dont want to acshycept help

- Not Always Good Thi3 isnt alwa~s a good atshy

titude however It can result in elderly people rllceiving poor care through lack of knowledge or fucilities in the home

Another reason for the patient lack might be the larger number of nursing homes in the New Enshygland area Another could 00 lack of public knowledge of the services the home stands ready to provide Still another say some is the full name of the Sisters Servants of Relief for Incurable Cancer

Today the name strikes a chill but in 1896 when the community was founded by Rose Hawthorne Lathrop daughter of Nathaniel Hawthorne it lit a beacon of hope for the suffering poor who had literally no place to go when striken with what was then reshygarded as a contagioUls disease

Now pointed out Mother Elizshyabeth patients have Medicare

Usually when they come flo the Sisters they are much sicker than they used to be having exhausted the resources Of modshyern medicine for treatment ampnell alleviation of cancer

They have usually exhausted their Medicare allowances too thus meeting the Sisters reshyquirement that their patients have no financial resources Cancer can be a long drawn out illness said -Mother Elizashybeth and use up all the savings of even a prosperous person

HaV0n of Peace Certainly if it were general1r

known what the Rose Hawshythorne Home offers it would be overrun with paUents as it WWl

A$k lPub~ic Hearings OIl1 Church Matters

BROOKLYN (NC)-A fOUllshyperson ad hoc committee has obtalnoo the signatures of 50 laymen priests and nUDS from

the Brooklyn diocese w a stateshyment calling on Church authorshyiti~ ~ hold pubUe hearinglJ onimportant Church affairs bull eluding selection of bishops T~ signers d tnle statemeDt

nncUllIl1ied Sol lay persons 24 ~riesta and two Sistem

There are approximately 1000 I)riests 5000 nuns and Brothers and 16 million laymen m tbe diocese llf Brooklyllho

_________~Llt _ VISITS EIORJE Sister Palll OP left and Mother

Mary Elizabeth OP view GOmmemorwtive plaque in cllapel of Rose Hawthorne Lathrop Home Fall River Sister Paul is superior at home Motlle Mary Elioobeth i3 mothezo genshyeral of the Dominican Sisters Servants of ReHef for Inshycurable Cancer She visited Fall River institution last week

in 1932 when it was founded at Sisters are one family she sumshythe urgent request of 1plusmne late =led up Bishop Cassidy Then there were Many patients worry about occupied beds even in the hall shy paying us said a Sister I al shyways today there are many empshy ways tell them You are paying ty beds in wards and private with your suffering Just pray rooms ~OT usmiddottt

We find that patients often Asked about dxanges the SisshyJive longer than the doctors had ters might make in their work expected when they come to in line with the renewal Us said Mother Elizabeth We Mother Elizabe1lh said she didnt think its because all thepreashy expect her communitys apostoshymires are removed They know tte ro change much There are that they wont have to leave w l2j professed Sisters in the comshyafter a certain number of days munitYshe said andshe has on We say to them TWs is Yillgtur hand many unfilled reltluests home you can stay as long as llrom bishops for the Sisters to you want The patient and the work in their Dioceses

80 the Sisters woork win reshy

r ~

Iv

- main that envisioned by Rose Hawthorne La1ihrop After all Love is -lot love whicb alteIS -when it alteration finds

Mothell Mary Elizabeth OP

SYDNEY (NC)-A statement on immigraticn aimed at enshycouraging Catholics to a wider acceptance of their duties toward immigrants was issued here by th~ Federal Catholic Immigrashytion Committee -of the Austrashylian Bishops Conference to be read in all cllulches on Immishygration Sundar

The statement said that Ausshytralia is failing to attract and keep immigrants An official inquiry it acJdetl indicated that psychological and social diffi shyculties rather than material and economic considerations influshyenced the departure of immishygrants

The statement called for a personal inquiry seeking to reshyveal whether our at tit u de toward newcomelS is one of inshydifference or even of hostility whether we lend support to the erecting of barriers against the legitimate economic and social aspirations of migrants whethshyer in fine we neglect our duty as Catholics as citizens of welshycoming and helping others of fulfilling our religious and soshycial obligations toward newshycomers

The statement quoted AustroshyIan Minister of Immigration BM Sneddon saying If we beshylieve Australia has 0 destiny and that destiny is linked with population then each of us has a duty to assist wherever pOSlt sible and become involved pershysonally with immigration ami migrants

Noting that immigration conshytributes lo the economy of a country the Catholic statemen~

stressed however that migrants are not to be valued simply ~

tools of production but as pershysons In the mind of the Church the whole process of migration is part of the matter of hum~n

redemption in a preparation fo-r life eternal

OOOO~~

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~--6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 291968

Women and the Postconciliar Church

Someone recently figured out that in the Catholic Ohurch today over fifty per c~t af its members are women These loyal followers of Christ are for the most part the victims of a subtle but very effective discrimination In theory of course the church grants equal rights for men and women In the Vatican Councils DOCUMENT ON THE CHURCH IN THE WORLD TODAY we read

With respect to the fundamental rights of the person every type of discrimination whether soshycial or cultural whether based on sex race color social condition language or religion is to be overshycome and eradicated as contrary to Gods intent

m theory the teaching is a fine piece af legislation In practice the question is simply ignored

Women may not be ordained Women are barred from officiating formally in the liturgy Their wice in church affairs is all but silenced A women is not allowed to serve Mass She may not functiol) as a lector If there are women in the parish choir-- they are more or less toleraJted only beshyeause there are not enough small boys or grown men in the parish available for the job

Father Johannes Neumann professor of Canon Law at the Universitr of Tubingen in Germany recently stated

A boy not even capable of fluent reading is adshymitted to the altar but an educated woman who could do a much better job is excluded as though only males were the children of God

The sam~ is true about parish choirs Women are easier to recruit more eager to sing and with few exceptions they

make a better noise than men Yet we still retain a cershytain nostalgia for the cult af the boy choir or the all Ilale choir as th~ summum bonum in litllrgical excellence

Ordination for women may well become one of the big issues in the c6ming years It may sound strange -to us--middot a woman functioning as a priest Yet however we may 0pshy

pose it we must admit that theologians have never put up a convincing case agdinst it It is also significantto note that the International Coniressof the Laimiddotty passed a resoshylution on the subject when it metmiddot in Rome last October

The principal objection to the ordination of women win not be so much theological as one of prejudice The tradition of the male priesthood is a long one and rooted deeply in the souls of Catholics Granted the priesthltgtltgtd is not on the immediatemiddot horizon for Catholic women However there are indications that the dimiddotaconate is certainly within their grasp Many European theologians argue that this Could

become a reality in two or three years This would mean that women could carry out such functions as preaching

distributing the Eucharist and burying the dead Already in certain circumstances women have been given permisshysionto distribute holy communion The Oblate Sisters of the Sacred Heart in Northern Alberta hav~ been allowed to do so since December 1966 when no priest is available The same is true in parts of Africa and South America

Truly these are excitipg times and exhilerating times All of us must be prepared fur more changes within the framework of the church Some we will welcome others will repell us The Churchs immediate task as always is to build up the people of God to meet the challenge of the day One positive way is to help in removing some of the anomalies that exist between laymen and laywomet

rhmiddotmiddotANCBOR e

OIIrll NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL IPVEI

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall Riv~

410 Highland Avenue

Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Ete Re~ Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P D~iscoll

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

the moolQlnq Rev John f Moore St Josephs Taunton

Why AILilfJg Hof Smmer t

Fe(QHf ~ litD Arson Murder DeWillEm] o$mtfive Contribution

Television commentators are warning the public Radio announcers m~e reaching the state of alarm The Federal

Government is preparing troops to meet the crisis Irrationshyill mdicals are whipping themselves into shape An are

waiting to face a promise of ~1 long hot Summer of civil tion to help the situation To

continuously hammer negativeriot and racial upheaval The and pessimistic fears into thetensions of this upheaval -is spirit of a nervous public only

already present Stokely Carshy creates a greater spirit of unrestmichael and Rap Brown have Suspicion and doubt are theachieved their goal They have sole frUit of such a policySl)wn lhe seeds of national fear America can certainly avoidFear of not fear of arson and such a diet fl~ar of murdEr are promised

American cities come the wann Added to this caldron of conshyweather This radic~ fonn of fusion we are now exposed to urban renewal will tear apart the rabble rousing antics of Dl ore cities of this country than llome so-called civil rights any fleet of cranes and bull shy leaders who dance to the tuneduzers of Hanoi What trueancl laSting

The public nE~WS media -is not _benefit can commentators leapmaking any jKlsitive contribu- from this barvest ~f hate

011I1 Vultures of Doom Benefit We do not deJIJr that there are

b1 gots and bulliies in American 8Ociety These people are 88

Wi~ong as their despoti~ llberal counterparts NEither group bas elt)ntriQuted much to the totality fJIf Americana

Most Americans want to do lonething to hE~lp their fellow eoilDtrymen wh) are long-sufshyfeling from the efforts of racial pr~judice They want to secure th4~ equal rights and opportunishyties of their less fortunate countrymen Thill they should do this theymiddot must achieve But no in fear bloodshed and riot

We must face the realities of thE racial issue ill truth and sinshyceIHy Most of tlS have become distant and impe~vious to the

trieil and laments of the preaecl minority Some have intombed themselves in an urban isc)lati~ others have fled to the camoushyflage of suburbia The majoriv just do DOtwan~ to become IDshyWOlved

Yet we mustbull

The I~rice for o~r lack of eonshylaquo7~ mIght be rumed ~erican Clties and dead AmerIcan dti shyzens We WIll we learn that only the vultures of dQom benefit

from ~e carnage of middotour dty streets

Now is the time for positive actio~ now is the time for re- sponsIble leadershIp

The question-Will either be forth coming

Change of Laws On Abortion Div$ive

OTTAWA (NC)-A ffigni ficant relaxation of Canada~ abortion laws could result Em a serious division betweem Catholic and non-Catholic hOampa pitals the Catholic Hospital AIP sociation of Canada told a Ie islative committee

In a brief to the Standin(g Committee on Health and Wellshyfare the association also warneclt that the feared division betweeili the hospitals could spill over into Canadian society at large

Canadas Parliament is now considering a bill to broaden the grounds for abortion which ill part of a general revision of tile nations criminal code Introshyduction of the abortion measure in the middle of a parlimentary probe of the question has -

ready driven a wedge between the government and the Churda in Canada

Feb 27 Meeting The nations bishops cancene4

a scheduled appearance befoN the Health and Welfare Comshymittee and instead issued a sharp pastoral letter opposing the abortion changes Later the] agreed to appear at a hearing Feb 27

The Hospital Association briei warned that refusal by Catholie hospi tals to perform abortiON may result in the other hospishy

tals being largely devoted talgt what is frankly regarded by doctors as a distasteful kind ClI2 work with less time and facili shyties for the more satisfying laquol life-giving aspect of hospitall work

The Catholic Hospital Ass~

tion represents 300 institutionB which provide 35 per cent CIIf

Canadas hospital services This kind of division d

labor with the consenting hosshypitals getting all the abortion work and the dissenting hospishytals getting nothing but satisshyfying work would quite likelv lead to an ever-deepening rift between the two groups of hOampa pitals extending to the commushynities they jointly serve the brief warned

Increase Dissension In an obvious reference to tJw

nations sensitive relations beshytween French-speaking - and largely Catholic-and Englishshyspeaking-largely Protestant-shyCanadians the association a1s noted

This does not seem to be Eiii opportune time to introduce anshyother cause of deep dissension by moving rapidly towards legalizing a practice which Q

large section of Canadian s0cishyety-perhaps a majQrity-abshyhors as strictly immoral

Archbishop lakoyos At Detroit Meeting

DETROIT (He) - ArchbiAshyorgt lakovos one of the bull presidents of the World COund of Churches participated bull _ interfaith meeting while helNi

on a four day Yisit The Greek prelate W8$

eompanied by 10 OrthodOE bishops and members of thcI archdiocesan council composed of clergy andmiddot laymen from parts of the country Thismiddot couashycil top eccesiastical body air Greek Orthodox church met here for two days

While here Archbishop lakOoo vos met with Roman CathoHc Archbishop John F Deardon at Detroit Episcopal Bishop Richshy

ard Emrich of Michigan aDd Bishop Archie Crowley preslo dent of the metropolitan J)e troit Council of Churches ~

meeting took place follo~ bull Vespers service at the Assumpo tion Greek Orthodox churcIL

f I

PAUL BARTKIEWICZ KATHERINE BOLINGER M~CHAB CORNElL SUSAN FAOiEUi STAN f~ HOLY fAMILY DOMSNllAJt

THE

ANCHOR

SALUTES

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~~~II1~~~

JANET LAFOND MICHAEL LOWNEY JWI POISSON ST JOSEPH PREP COYlpound PREVOST

Catholics to Pray For Assembly

STOCKHOLM (NC)-A prayer lor the fourth general assembly elf the World Council of Churches (WCC) to be said at Masses in all Catholic churches and chapels this Spring has been eomposed by the ecumenical commission of the diocese of Stockholm at the request ~ Bishop John E Taylor OMI

It will be distributed together with the bishops pastoral letter for Lent to all the parishes of the diocese The WCC assembly will be held at Uppsala Sweden m July

The prayer is an appeal whether his project can For all those who noW are a practical reality

Ir~paring the general assemblY He de~ribedl the proposed of the World Council of institute as an educational proshy

tliurches in dppsala and now gram aimed primarily at the avshy are pa~nfcil~y slJffering from the erage mllfi ~d ~he Inde~Ptivi

1 WsunitymiddotofChrisUans legedio stimulate creative middotJ-h t 11middot b h h f thinking and acting both for

-1 a JI mem er c urc es 0 I J cooperat - ilie WCC lfiarptepare this gen- middoty~~nalilmiddot ma~ ~wtIi aridfor -~ can ~ii 1

eralllssemqIjr in a willingness the commol1 goodmiddot Fattier RIvers a member of middotto coop~rate ~ arid in an honest ~taina ~e~ormed by first tatemiddot the Cii~iimati -archdiocesa~li shy

ielirch fori the Will of God artlsts WIll be at middotthe heart of thmiddotinstitntes actiVity with the ~qat they Ul oen mmds may pUlipose of stllnuliltingmiddotpro-middot receIve ~h~ 1~splratlons of the

HOly SPUIt and follow them without fear

That we middotmiddotall by prayer and penance may participate in the preparations of this general asshysembly conscious of being linked by the same Baptism

That even we Catholics may laquorow in our understanding of the separated brethren that we together with them may become llWare of the throes of disunity and be strengthened in our will to work in a practical Wlq _

~

Proposes Institute of Little Imagination Would Benefit Services -

CINCINNATI (NC) Father Clarence Josepb Rivers who has won an international repushytation for his fresh approach to liturgical music said he hopes to spur creative thinking among millons througb a National 10shysUtute of Ritual and Drama

Recently returned from gradshyuate studies in liturgy at the C81tholic University of Paris Father Rivers has launched a feasibility study to determine within the next few months

become

found reflection upon tliatexshyperience is fto be stimulated and directed by especially trained educator - philosophersl he added

Closed Setting He said he envisions touring

companies as part of the overall plan but the usual institute program will ~e place in a closed setting he said makshying it something like a secular retreat

Another lISgeCt of the insti shytute Father Rivers said will be ita concern with adaptinl the

skills and techniques and ereashytivity of the performing arts to the needs of various kinds of ritual---secular as well as reli shygious

Asked abolilt secular rituals Father Rivers spoke of flagshyraisings Fourth oj July celebrashytions and cornerstone layings He sahll The existing secular rituals suffer from the same deshyfeds all the religious ones and need just as urgently the touch of artistic imagination and skills

In~ure Ref1Ie~t~n Father Rivers said the insti shy

tue s~ould be broadly humanishyt~ria~ not SplJ1cifically Je~-glO~S provIdmg a~ area 10

WhICh Jile()ple of yarlOus beliefs

llurgical commission saidmiddot the

PfJ~fes~or A~pointed -~e~I1i ofL~w School

PITTSBURGH (NC)-Professhysor Louis L Manderino has been appointed dean of Duqueme Universitys Law School here Father Henry J McAnulty C5 Sp university presidgtent 80shynounced lIhe appointment is effective immediately

Prof ManderinO a graduate of Harvard University Law School in 1954 has been -a memshyber ofmiddot the Duquesne Law Scbool faculty since 195amp

ROWD GAMACHE SHlRtlM JANICK MAUREEN KENNEY $1 ANTHORY MOUNT ST MAIf CASSIDY

gtpi81F Iilt ilt

JACQUEUNE ROBOI JAHU~E ROBERTSHAW PETERlYM WOJTUSZEWSII JpoundSlJS IlARY AampADEIft SHA-FAU RIVER SHA- FAIRHAVEN

Ritual Drama

proposed mstitote~ program would go much further than those of existing professional or amateur acting companies beshycause it will not only provide the experience which is to be the basis of reflection but it also will insure as far as it is hmnanly possible the reflecshytion the work of the institute is only half done when the cur lain falls

It will difiler from the amashyteur companies and certain

_Moral Re-armament programs he continued esp~ciilly in terms Of artistic standards I dont believe lh2 institute can function effectively without achieving tlte highest possibIe success in artistic standards tehurch-goers of an denomshy

inati9fls he added generaUy

recognize that their Sunday and Sabbath services could benefit from ir little imaginatioZl once in it vyhilli r-----------shybull JEREMIAH COHOLANmiddot

PlUMBING 6- HEATING ~ntretors since ltH3

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State to Deny Aid To Large Families

LUCKNOW (NC)-The Uttar Pradesh state government here in India has decided to stop an govert1Illent concessions to famshyilies which have an additional child aiter the third one

The decision was taken in view of iii virtUal douampling of the states populatian--from 4a million in 19at to ga millionmiddot this year

The concessions to be withshydrawn presumably wiU include free treatment in governmmt hospila1s and allotment ~ waste lands

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THE ANCHORpiocese ~f Foil River---Thurs Feb 29 1968

European Tour Is Unlikely With New Travel Rules

By Mary Tinley Daly

Of all the role-playing the Head of the House and I have engaged in through the years the most recent ~ th8lt of- would-be European travellers This the year 1968 -rhe Year of the Monkey was to have seen us embark for foreign shores Ireland homeland of our forebears (would have been) mighty

helpful tooEngland a re-vimiddotsit for the Ginny our wardrobe consult shyHead of the House France

ant has been supervising theGermany and of course the clothing weve bought for theEternal City Spain and Greece past six months with an eye toperhaps if our easy packability convenientfeet and our washability and a mix-andshymoney held out match assortment o~ accessoriesAnd now this-shy for efficient travel Based on ~ h e proposed her own European experience of ~ax bi te on a couple of years ago GinnyiBternashy assures us such selection willU 0 n a I travel provide a minimum for totingSeems as though a maximum amount of space forweve been taxshy the pick-ups wed inevitablybitt e n pretty acquire on our journeybadly right here

the as ~truggle Now it seems theIn USA we bringshyonce more with IRS Form 1040 backs are down to next-toshy

Now some more of our $$$ to nothing A Iso day-by-day spending at this stage of the EX-CHAMP PREACHES LOVE Archie Moore formerhelp close that $21 billion travel

lap wilth a tax on American legislation seems based on an World light-heavy-weight champ who won a Freedoms intricate system full of loopshyspending outside _this hemi- Foundation award Feb 22 for conspicuous community sershyboles requiring an estimate ofaphere I voice in the civil rights field plays happily at home withtax liability on departu~e theWell its a wait-and-see propshy

h~8 own children Working with boys in underprivilegedmaking of a deposit and anotherOsition an aIr-dresSed-up-andshyreport pluspay-up on retUrn to areas Archie saymiddots he teachesthe lads to be constructiveIlO-Pla~eto-go feeling for us

lIS it is for many other armchair this country not destructive tao build not tear- down NC Photo travellers What we have not doncent yet-

Doml Homework and wont do unless the grand -----~

Oh weve been doing our bomework all right

Weve made lists of places we ~fpound~~~~~I~R~PMAR9J~p~1want to see in each country drivers license picture was badThe house is filled with travel folders travel magazines weve enough NEW SPRING COLORS become telephone pals with Bteamship and airline salesmen 113-Year-Old Aca~emy s much as I love color (anyshy April scene navy took a backoUr local library checks out

one who has ever visited my seat in the early sixties whenhooks in our name for all those Plans 69 Closing home or seen nile wearing the Jackie Kennedy made pink afaraway places with their glam- ROCHESTER (NC) ~ The m~ny bright shades that I adore must for all those who like toeur descriptions 113-year-old ~cademy Of the wnI agree with this) t must adshy feel that they are wearingWe have studied money rates Sacred Heart here will disconshy mi t this is going to be ~ grey whats in This season nothotel and transportation costs tinue operation after June 1969 flannel and navy Spring Oh only has navy returned in theinvestigated picking up a Officials announced reasonsshy thEre will be shades of shocking world of suits and daytime coatsVolkswagen Weve brushed up for closing were the mounting pirk high intensity yellow and it has become sophistic~tedon French going along with cost of education the inadeshy poison green upon the scene but enough to waltz into eveningThomas Hood quancy of present bUildings mostly in ac Jacques Tiffeau of TiffeauNever go to France unless the outlay needed to build and c e s S 0 r ies or and Busch has designed an ultray()U know the lingo If you do

maintain a school of the future playclothes For navy evening time dress that islike me you will repent by and the number of other cathoshy t hat special sleeveless and V-necked and ofjingo lic high schools in the area coat or that course wide belted Worn withWeve even learned basics in where openings are avlilable pearls it takes on all the dyshy0Italian and German such as be~utiful spring

namic quaiities that black hasshyThe academy is conducted byhow to order in restaurants For suB that could always had Because they lookthe Head of the House this the Religous of the Sacred tra vel as well so well with navy and grey themeans how to order pigs Heart of Jesus alolg the streets return of pearls is whats newknuckles sauerkraut UND beer of Ne~ York on the jewelry front for SpringJohnny has patiently demonshy Imiddot kO or the avenues and Summer The thirties influshyAutnoUize Pa Istan of Washingtonstrated perhaps for the hunshyence of the Bonnie and Clydedredth time just how to operate middot Ch the more con-LIturgy anges serrative colors are the stars flicker has brought back thehis camera which he will let us

take along LYALLPUR (NC)-Melbers Cne of the most elegant and long swinging chains of beads -of all Pakistans diocesan lilur- beautifully tailo1led suitsmiddot that I and nothing swings better than

Family Advisors gical commissions met here un- have viewed thus far in the long ropes of pearls-especially Markie who did her touring der the direction of Archbishop sealch for Spring clothes was a against navy or grey

on a budget and had a whee of Joseph M Cordeiro of Karachi maltilificent grey one by Gino a time so doing introduced us to discuss propolled liturgical Paoli Superbly tailored in a to her bi-ble Arthur From- changes in this country ricl knit material the smart mers invaluable Europe on Approved for experimental desi go was set off hy fresh $5 a Day with its practical use were two new baptismal touches of white guidelines based on first-hand rites in the Urdu limguage and Grey has always ~n a color dramaticallyexperience For instance who- a revised Urdu funeral rite thai I avoided like the plague ever would have thought of Authorized for publication was (ev~r since an experience with different8eeking inexpensive spotlessly the Punjabi version of the Can- a grey dress in eighth grade dean lodging in Italian con on of the Mass as well as an that made me look like an un vents Author Fro~mer gives Urdu edition 01- the Roman heaithy Corpse-of course that Sensational tastingnames addresses and prices 1ft missaL Was before eigh1lligirlS wore Hollywood Diet Breadduded also are Readers Sug Jilake-up)and I havent bought made from aestions helpful tips for vari- an item of grey 81)parel in years

places Youth in World Theme and years OIlS vegetable Boursl Markies own addenda will- Grey always seemed to beOfSpanish ~ial Work Your choice of color that looked good on someshy

vALLADoLJD (NC) ~ Offishy LIGHT or DARKCollege to ~ Admit Me cials of Spains ~nual Social redleads quite jiunior league one else-it was wonderful em

HollywoodIWeek have aimounced that r St Scholastica here in Minshy smad on white-skinned hrushy

DULUTH (NC)-The College on blondes and even looked Youth in the World will be Bakedby

the theme of the 17th week yournesota announced it will admit nett~s but since 1 failed to fan male students in 1969 ending planned for March 25-31 in this into any of these categories I Sunbeam

city56 years as a liberal arts colshy felt it was not for me This seashy Ballerlege exclusively for women Manuel Capelo Martinez Secshy son however the richness and Sister Mary Richard Boo colshy retary gener~l of the week said smaltnes of the grey shade deshylege president said the change We hope that the quiet atmoshy Signl may force IDe to change was made as a response to sphere of social week discussions my opinion - aidoo by some the needs of our time The basic will enable us to make some colorful makeup of course curriculum will remain the clear decisions about the many Navy RelmIlJIls IIame she said The college is problems of youth decisions Navy is the second color that eonducted by the Benedictme madein the light of the Churchs has returned to importance fornuns aocial teacJiingsmiddot Sprilig Always a must on Ule

Schools 10 Offer Sex Education

ROCHESTER (NC)-8ex edshyncathm will be integrated in tbe curriculum of 13 parochial schools of the Rochester diocese this Spring on an experimental basis

Father Daniel Brent assocllm d i 0 c e san superintendent at schools said the sex educatioD program will eventually be in effect throughout the 102 eleshymentary schools in the diocese

We are trying to create an attitude that sex is part of life and not a dark dirty secretmiddot Father Brent said

The classroom discussions will emphasize 1he family orientashytion of sex and parents will be asked to review topicswitln children before they are preshysented in the classroom hra added

Father Brent said the pro- gram ~lated to begin about April I will aim at developing respect for the opposite sex and the serious Qlbligations that go along with sex He emphasized the program will not constitute a separate course of study but will be integrated with other subjects and with sp07lJtanooUII questions as they arise

US Court to Hear Textbook ChaUenge

WASHINGTON (NC) - DIe U S Supreme Court has agreed to examine the constitutiorlality of a 1965 New York State law allowing the state to loan textshybooks to children in churchshyrelated schools

The law is being challenged by several local public school boardsln the state on the grounds that it violates the U So Constitutions First Amendment prohibition against establishshyment of religion

The New York law which was passedin 1965 and became effective in September 1966 aishylows the state to punhase textshyhooks and loan them to children in private schools - inclUding those operated by churches--iD graqes 7 through 12

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

9 Money-Eating House Puts Garde1n Needs in Shadle

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick Oh~ ~ Iye~rIlfor the return of Spring and an opporshy

innity to gel out of this D1Ollampter we can a house I cra1ll IOOr house a monster because it seems that it has an inshy8Qtiable appetite for money We recently fiIrlished OUlr second floor (whiClh took a year of

its about 6 above outside andplanning six months of on with the able assistance of a Mld off oonstruotion and 1mshy hardy Winter wind the weather believable sums of money) is urging us all to stay inside J(ow we must have 11 basement Its a perfect day to keep your IIOOm which ea1ls for more mess oven going and your kitchen a money filled with delectable smells

Now there are individuals rve been baking beans since have the desire and the early mom a container of

capacity to be handymen and brown bread is steaibing in a Cbere are those of us who deshy huge kettle OIl the top oJ1 themiddot pend on others to do their work jets and I just set a cinnamonshyI fall into the latter category filled Indian pudding into the -ad I am paying for it I am 80 oven along with the beans The tired of furring ceiling tile aromas are beginning to mingle Dghting fixtures floor tile sidshy and all seems right with the tog etc that I am half hoping world Chat everything comes to a Smalil Dinners lItandstill What appears to be

0

These dre2l1Y months of low the simplest job turns out to be temperatures and stay-homeiIbe most complicated involved days are the perfect time to eIll shyIlleSS imagin91ble tertain your friends X love

Plano Moving nothing more than planning a Take our piano Two years small dinner party for a few

ago we bought an old upright friends and look forward to a 110 that the children could bave couple of days of cooking and their piano lessons in the comshy planning The dinner menu fort of their own home without should be made out at least a baving to nui to my mothers week ahead of time (with pershyevery night to practice The haps a few alternatives in case piano is 11 five toot upright items you plan to serve are not JI~ch cost us 5 available at this moment in thia

When the movelll igtrolliht it area The last time I made a to the ~o~ they ~ere very dinner menu I planned to start careful not 10 hurt tb~ piano off with prosciutto and melon but they managea to sandwich (a delightful combination of Cbe back door scrape half the flavors) only to find out that all paper i~ the hallway and there wasnt a fresh melon avaDshydent the mo1ding wherever theJ able for 10Ve or mOll1ey anyshylraveled where in 1be city I1 you have

Now tbat we are planninl your menu made out befOIle yoa the basement we decided go grocery obopping you avoid put the pianio there where It the disheartening happening of would not be an eyesore and DI7 starting to make a dish only to wife and I would not have find you dont have all tllle ilnshylisten to our fledglings takinC middotgredienta tring into the musical world Desserts tbat rm going to

Simpler said than done One serve to guests are more ofteD mover on seeing the size of the than not the kind Ulat can be piano and the size of our bulkshy made the evening or day before bead said I hOpe you wont be and then thats one less item I offended if I tell you the truth -have to think about the cIay I would advise you to take an that Im going to entertain axe and break it up and bU7 Many desserts lend themselves yourself a new piano He didnt to early preparation and it gives marge for this advice but me a feeling of security to know neither did he move the piano I have one or two completed Now all we have to do is remove desserts already in my freezer n of the stairs in the bulkhead or relrigerator as the busy da~middot

ItO that the movers can drop of preparation begins the piano into the cellar enshy A timetable of projects for kance a job which will cost the day of y~ur ~inner party is ftnimagined amounts of money a great help and I even time I am half tempted to buy that eacb item on the menu SlO thatbullbull I know just when a certain dish

And so it goes Not so in the has to go into the oven AJlL prden where everything iii tbis pre-party preparation leaves lItraightforward and results are the evening free to enjoy yourather immediate Marilyn keeps guests and your own cookingmsisting that the day will come Of course in jolly old New Engshywhen we wont have to bleed bull land a blizzaro can mmr yoUII our bank account to feed our party plans but then your PurishyInsatiable monster but I dont tan adaptability can come to the believe it In the meantime I fore and you can either pack ~ll continue to budget infinishy everything in your Jlreezer for tesimal sums for the garden anotber evening or you and _ile the house is reconstructed your spouse can sit down to a

IN THE KITCHEN sumptuous repast Last weljlk because it was CorrectiD

Rbool vacation week we took Note In a S)taghett1l AUce tile children to the Science Mushy

recipe in the February l ADehorIIeWI1 in Boston As we wanshy two eaD5 l)f toaiato paste wendered among the wonders at

omittedman and his universe I paused Jl()POVEIRSbull moment in front of a case that

displayed a cut-away section of This is an easy but ~al

the earth during the Winter seashy looking quick-bread Contrary lIOn Chipmunk and fieldmouse to most peoples idea popoven IleBtled warmly in their cozy are espeCially easy to make anderground castles waiting for always bake mine in a very iUIe rigors of a blustery Winter badly darkened muffill1 pan to pass and I must admit that at perhaps this is the secret oil mtI Ibat instant I was a bit envious success of Mr Mouse and Mrs Chipshy 1 cup flour munk who could retire from the teaspoon salt hzen world with all its cares 3 eggs (beaten)

Most of us cant crawl into a 1 cup milk bole and hibernate when the 1 Tablespoon melted butter aorth winds blow but we caD 1) Melt the butter ancll set ~nd more time enjoying tile aside and put the greased mufshy

pleasures of our warm (on top fin pans in the oven ~ tAe ground) homeamp ~ a) MUt toueUler a1J1 the __

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968

Voters Approve Open Housing

FLINT (NC) - Flints voters have become the first in the nation to approve an open houSoo ing ordinance in a public refershyendum

The measure pushed strongly by Negro Mayor Floyd McCree and the local Council of Churches was passed by a 43-vote margin The unofficial tally was 20172 to 20129

The Flint City Council passed an open housing ordinance in 1967 but its opponents led by John Birch Society section leadshyer Gerald Spencer had no trouble in gathering 5000 signashytures on a petition to place the

issue before the voters The religious support of the

ordinance was organized by the local Council of Churches with which Catholic parishes coopshyerated Several sponsored pubshylic debates on the measure and more expressed support for it in parish bulletins

Recommends Elimnnating First Four Grades

SPOKANE (NC) - A special study committee here in theBans Sales State of Washington has recomshymended the gradual phasing outSpanish Tov~i~t Convention Forbids of the first four grades in some

diocesan schools and a totalSelling Churchs Artistic Treasures emphasis upward in religious

SEVILLE (NC)- Andalusia For some proof that their education Provincial Tourist Convention fear is valid came from a decishy The committee comp~sed of in a resolution announced at the SiOD to sell donations decorating eight diocesan educators and close of its meeting here has Zaragozas shrine to the Virgin headed by Father Michael emphasized that artistic treas- of Pilar Accumulating for ONeill diocesan superintendent urea- decorating the nations nearly 100 years many of the at education made its recomshychurches are the property of the gifts of the faithful are both mendations to Bishop Bernan people and maT not be sold by artistic and financial treasures J Topel of Spokane after study-Church officials without the ap- Proceeds from the sale of the ing education in the diocese proval of local civil authorities Pilar treasures will go to wbat since August 1967

Admitting that the cburches Zaragozas Archbishop Pedro Elimination of grades one are permanent depositories of Cantero Cuadrado described as through four would allow the nations art the resolution urgent social necessities schools to strengthen grades was aimed at Spanish churchshy five through eight - middle men who have proposed selling school-and offer increased edshyart treasures to finance social CRS Sends Penicillin ucational benefits to a greater action projects number of students at the sameFor Vietnam Casualties or less cost the committees IeshyThe combination of increased NEW YORK (NC) - Within port saidemph~sis on social justice and hours after being inforined thatchurch renovation resulting the Saigon airport was againfrom the liturgy decree of the in operation the U S CatholicSecond Vatican Council has led Offering YouRelief Services (CRS) shippedmany Spaniards to fear that the out by aid 100000 doses of fast shychurches would be denuded of 3 Savings P~ansaction penicillin for civllian casshyancient treasures ualties in Vietnam Home Financing

The penicillin is an urgent need in Vietnam and will be WARJMI~Plan Byzantine Rite used for the civllian casualties

Installation March 5 by the four Sisters who are on co-oprD4liVEthe CRS medical teams in thatPITTSBURGH (NC)-Bishop country Fulther shipments willStephen J Kocisko will be honshy BANKfollowored at a banquet here followshy 281 Main St Wareham Ma

ing his March 5 installation as The peniciUin was given to Telephone 295-2400Bishop of the Byzantine-rite dishy the CRS by the Catholic Medshy

BaDk-8U lIerfIa IftfIIMI ocese of Pittsburg ical Mission Boarcll

Speakers will include Archshybishop Luigi Raimondi Aposshytolic Delegate in the United States wbo will officiate at the

installation John Cardinal Krol of Philadelphia Bishop John J Wright of Pittsburgh and Msgr Edward V Rosack who has been apostolic ildmmistrator of the Byzantine-rite diocese of PitsQurgh

Bishop Kocisko succeedsArchshybishop Nicholas T Elko who reshyeigned as ordinary of the Pittsshyburgh diocese ill1 lOecember Bishop Kocisko has been head of the Byzantine diocese of Passhysillc and will continue as its administrator IIlDti a new bishshyop js named

maining ingredients anell then MOTHER PARKERSlldd the cooled butter 3) Beat the batter until it hl OLD FASHIONEDcompletely smooth 4) Fill the well-buttered pans

full Place in a 450middot degree DOUGHNUTS oven for 15 minutes Reduce heat to 350middot and continue bakshy Baked by your Sunbeam Baker ing 20 to 25 minutes

AWARD WINNERS Award winners at a Winter Carshynival sponsored by the Fall River area CYO are left Janice Feno Somerset High School named Miss Personality and right Carol Silvia Durfee High School carnival queen Holding trophies is Richard Lown Durfee High School carshynival co-chairman

AFamily Favorite

bullbull

THE ANCHOKshy10 Thurs Feb 29 1968

Urge Cergymen Attend Meltefring On Scfielrnce

WASHINGTON (NC)shyCatholic clergy throughout the country are being urged to attend the second annual conference on science for cler- gymem at the Oak Ridge (Tenn) Associated Universities Aug 5-16 in cooperation with Oak Ridge National Laboratory

The conference entitled The Impact of Science on Society is sponsored by the National Science Foundation and the Alshyfred P Sloan Foundation Purshypose of the conference is to proshyvide clergymen of all faiths with an understanding of the nature scope effects and trends

of contemporary science - parshyticularly nuclear science

Dr W W Grigorieff chairshyman of the conference said the conference series originated in the recognition that most clershygymen actively engaged in pas torat work have little training in and understanding of sci shyence but are confrOnted almost

daily with problems and deci aions arising from its implicashytions

Dr Grigorieff s~icj in an inter- view with NC Nevvs Service that experience gained through the 1967 conference indicated to the conference advisory comshymittee that religious leaders of all f~i ths not only need to be conversallt with the content and llOcial dynamics of science but also are extremely eager to take advantage of the opportunity to become more acquainted with modern science

The conference director stated that this year the conference will be open to some 90 parshyticipants-three times as many IllS attended the 1967 conference

He pointed out that Roman Catholic applications for last years conference were not nushymerous and said that those who had applied were for the most part overqualified - that is they possessed professional qualifications and advanced training in science The confershyence he emphasized is not pri shymarily for such specialists

Practicing Cnergy Dr Grigorieff stated that an

announcement has been sent to bishops of anlimber of dioceses

throughout -the country in air eHort to stimulate iriterest in the aims of the conference He added that an effort is also being made to contact diocesan priests senates

He explained that conference participants will be selected on a nationwide basis from appli shy

cants representing various reli shygious )lodies arid emphasized that the majority are expected to be praCticing clergy-those actively engaged in the minis- try rather than in teaching reshysearch etc

He said that a limited number of seminary educators deans heads of clergy-in-service and religious editorf will be acshycepted as observers

Speakers will include Dr William G Pollard executive director of Oak Ridge Associshyated Universities who is also an Episcopal priest associated with St Stephens Church Oak Ridge and the author of several books and Alvin M Weinberg director of Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Askeel to Withdraw MILWAUKEE (NC) - The

Milwaukee priests senate has passed a resolution urging 11 priests of the archdiocese to work for a chalige in tlie policy of clubs which are discriminashytory or tG withdlW as members

INTERFAITH SERVICE Bishop Fulton J Sheen center of Rochester NY at shywnded an interfaith service at Mount Neboh Congregation in Manhattan With- the Bishshyop are the Rev Philip Hiat right rahbi of the congregation and Cantor Albert l- Stur- mer holding chalice wh() prepared the ceremony at which Bishop Sheen received aspeshycial Brotherhood Award SC Photo

Archdiocese- to IBatmiddottle

Race Prejudice -

BusmlrAeSS Archbishop Says CINCINNATI (NC) - Ar(h-

bishop KarlJ A1t~r launched Project Commitment here with an appeal to the Christian comshymunity to appreciate the size and urgency of the problems of race relations and an insistence that the finding of Solutions is everybodys business

Speaking at a Mass in 1l Saints church the Cincinmtti archbishop emphasized not on ly right attitudes among Catholic people but also united comshymunity-wide organization and effort are necessary 10 me~t the problem

He said government pm-middot grams heretofore have been t(o late and too little and adVHshycated something like the Mal shyshall Plan which at the end HI the Second World War rescued Europe from misery and dEshy

spair -The Mass marked the openshy

ing of the projects pilot prll- gram which will continue wittl

seven workshops at Moeller HighSchool on specific aspects of- racial prejudice and lliscrim- ination Endorsed by the Archdiocesan

Pastoral Council and sponsored by the Catholic Commission 011

Human Relations Project Com mitment is described as a promiddot gram ~o help Catholic lay lead ers recognize their responsibii ities and prepare for theiJ proper roles in t~e field of inmiddotmiddot terracial justice

Seven VVeeks Program Dayton will be the second

area in which Project Commitshyment will be launthed The date has been set tentatively for April 9and the program will continue for seven weeks

Archbishop Alter said experishyence gained in the pilot pro-

Forty Hours Format ST LOUIS (Nc)-The St Louis

archdiocese has dropped its reshyquirement that Forty Hours deshyvotion must be held annually in each parish Pastoral guideshy

lines from the Archdiocesan Liturgical Commission noted that parishes were free and encouraged to continue Forty Hours and offered possible new formats which are based on Scripture readings and themes of Eucharist priesthood and church

gram would be used in organizshying similar efforts in the other deaneries

St Francis de Sales deanery in t~s area was chosen as the first for the experiment beshycause its Catholic population represents a cross-section of the entire community and if a-- project succeeds here it may well succeed anywhere else the archbishop said

It has been estimated that more than 500 persons from 31 of the deanerys 34 parishes would tale part in the project

The archbishop detailed the reason why the whole archdioshy

cese was to be involved when the problems are so diverse in the various regions of the 19 counties and When iincertain areas there is no racial conflict because of a totally homogeshyneous population

National Prohlem

The answer is that the prob- lem of harmonious race relashyJions is not a local problem but a national problem involving all communities everywhere and affccting all our public relashytions political economic and social There may not be racial conflict but there can be race prejudice he said

The problem has moreover definite religious and moral asshypects he said and there are questions of social justice and social charity which concern every Christian and for which

Pope Honors Gellman Protest(OInlt Leader

BONN (NC) -Pope Paul VI has awarded the Great Cross of the Order of St Sylvester to Dr Reinhold von ThaddenshyTrieglaff at German Protestant leader

Dr Von Thadden-Trieglaff is the founder and honorary presshyident of the Kirchentag the anshynual German Protestnt convenshytion -

In the document accompanyshying the award the Pope thanked Dr Von Thadden-Trieglaff for his work on behalf of ecumtmshyism and asked him to continue working in this spirit of recon-

ciliation and brotherhood Bishop Adolf Bolte of Fulda

presented the award

he will find the appropriate anshywer in the teachings of the Gospel

All our Catholic people he said are charged with the reshysponsibility of supporting adeshyquate remedial legislation and of creating social institutions which will eliminate discrimishynation and alleviate the burdens of sickness poverty and )gnoshyrance No one can stand aloof from a program of social bettershyment

Dutch Bishops Take Poll of Priests

moving toward onenessTHE HAGUE (NC) -- The cardinal saidDutch bishops in an effort to

measure the effectiveness and opinions of the nations priests Priest on Facultyhave distributed a list of 39 questions to all priests deacons LANCASTER (NC) - Fathell and subdeacons in the country William J Walsh SJ is the Several questhms deal with first Catholic priest to be apshypriestly celibacy pointed a fullitime member oil

the LancaSter Theological SemishyD~awnupto determine what nary conducted by the Unitecllp~iests think of the priesthood Church of Christ here Fathetandto measure the clergys acshyWalsh assistant theology proshyceptance of the celibacy Iegulashy

- essor at the Jesuit notiviatetion the questionnaire will be

CardinalCites Church Role InSlaquosety --CHICAGO (NC) - Jobm

Cardinal Cody asserted heq that the Church must involVil) fultlelf in social problems 00 be true to its fundamentetl works

The cardinal spoke at a sefib vice in the First Presbyteri~ church making its lOOth anm versary celebration

Those who contest involve-shyment by the Chruch in prolraquo lems of society Cardinal Co~

said take an indefensible stand He said personal sanctity whiclli

is conceded to be the ChurchD rightful concern cannot bd sepilrated from social responsi shybility

If the Church has nothing 00 say to us regarding our obligashytions to our fellow man it kJ sadly neglecting our personall holiness Cardinal Cody said

We sin by Injustice We sm by lack of charity We are sancshytified by giving all men thellf due he added

Move Toward Unity Cardinal Cody did not specishy

fically mention race relationll but he said society mistrea~

certain groups or individuals1ll

He said if church members aNI in any way party to this evill the Church must become i~

volved The cardinal said COIb-

cern for personal holiness forcelll the Chuxch into action

Let the Church in such cil shycumstances stand idly by and Q will lose all reason for exisshytence he declared

Cardinal Cody was introduceell to the congregation by the Rev Harold Blake Walker pastor Cltf the church When asked ahow his appearance in a Protestanll church following the service the cardinal said not long age it would have been unthinkshyable He added that the Holy Spirit is moving strongly anell speedily

We are not yet perfectly one as Christ prayed but we arll

th~

evaluated by the Pastoral Insti shytute of the Catholic Churchin the Netherlands and the Insti shytute for Applied Sociology of the Catholic Universiiy of Nijmegen

Introducing the questions the bishops commented that in a period of Church renewal it is unavoidable that priests be conshyfronted with serious problems They then recommend that the priests answer the questions carefully keeping in mind the teachings of the Church and the roie of the Church in modern society

Wernersville Pa will take ihe post of assistant church history professor at the 143~year-olcll

Protestant seminary on July L

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Black Power MINNEAPOLIS (NC) - nle

only un-Christian thing about power is the abuse of power Father James E Groppj Milshywaukees militant civil rights leader told a Lutheran layshymens conference here

Neither is the striving fox power by a minority group unshyAmerican the priest asserted It is rather part of the American tradition he said and cited past drives for political power by labor unions Italians in New York and the Irish in Boston

Father Groppi also said that the Milwaukee NAACP Youth Council which he advises has adopted black power tactics only after we had used every tactic eveiy means we could think of to take the yoke off black people and nothing had been effective

He said that one use the counshycil had made of black power was in a united Negro boycott of stores during Christmas The white man doesnt give us a housing bill we dont give him our dollar he explained

Discussing the role of the Christian Church in the black mans struggle for equal rights Father Groppi said that the Church has been involved by her non-involvemen1i By such non-involvement he said the Church has aggravat~d the Neshygros problem

Today he said I the use of prudence as an excuse for cowshyardice is the great sin of tile Church

Students Interrupt Strike to Mourn

PARIS (NC) - The strike launched by the guild of law students at the Catholic Unishyversity of Paris has been intershyrupted by its leaders out of resJect for the mourning of the diocese of Paris following the death of Pierre Cardinal Veuil shylot who was chancellor of the instittltion

The strike was called to proshytest a reform of the university decided U()(ln by the French bishops and put into effectmiddot by the rector Msgr Pierre Haubt- mann The reform is designed to avoid having the Catholic uni- versity compete systematically with middotthe state university In all secular studies

The bish~ps decided that in addition to teaching and re search in the area of religion the Catholic universtty must first of all be devQted to Chrisshytian reflection on secular matshyters

Pastoral Institute To Open at Quito

BOGOrA (NC)-A new Latin American Pastoral Institute will be opened in April at Quito Ecuador as a project of the Latin American Bishops Counshycil (CELAM)

The institute will be a unit of the CELAM pastoral departshyment

Purpose of the institute will be to train personnel from the whole continent in pastoral work applicable to Latin Amershyica The institute will offer seven-month courses and Euroshypean specialists in pastoral work will also serve on the faculty

Meeting on Cities NOTRE DAME (NC) - An

international conference entitled NCities in Context will be held March 31 through April 3 at the University of Notre Dames Center for Continuing Educashytion

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968

litu~~W Changes Continued from Page One

in earlier periods-even thou~

they do not conrorm in all deshytails with the approved versiOlil of contemporary liturgical texto -are authorized

TANTUM ERGO An apshyproved Eucharistic hymn ilill praise of the Blessed Sacrament may be used in Benediction oil the Blessed Sacrament in place of the Latin hymn Tantum Ershygo

PSALMS Approved are the texis of the Psalms as published by Englands Grail Society anell that found in the Jerusalem Bishyble

Suggestnol1Js Denied

The Vatican turned down two requests made by the US Bishshyops both dealing with liturgic011 experimentation

No was answered to the reshyquest that the US Bishops be permitted to designate acade~ic

centers to supervise litulgicall innovation

Also denied was the request that some experimentation be approved without examinatioD by the Holy See

-Presently the Vatican mu~

approve proposed liturgical inshynovations before experiment3shytion can begin

Archbishop Dearden explainshyed While the two major proshyposals concerning liturgical enshyperjmentation were not alPshyproved at the present time ~

is clear that the Consilium iJ open to the submission of rite and texts of li-turgical adaptioTll which have been drawn up anll presented prior to actual experishymental use

Concrete proposals of rHeIl 2nd texts may continue to be sent to the Bishops CommittCCl on the Liturgy

Matter Deferred

The permission to substitutfl h)mns or other sacled songtl fur the texts now used at the entran~e Offertory and Comshymunion of the Mass was defershyred

Such hymns now generally added to the official texts were approved in principle however by the delegates to the Rome Synod of Bishops October 1967

The Baptismal Rite describecll among the changes was n~

contained in the Vatican lettertl authoiizing the other changoo but was made public by Archshybishop Dearden at the same time as the announcement of 1ibe changes was released

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L_ PATRON 01 MARCH The month of March is dedicated to St Joseph watchful

guardian of the Son of God and patron and protector of the universal Church Dedicashytion of the month of the year to events in the life of Christ and to particular saints is a practice of the People of God rather than an official action of the Church It comfantly middotrecalls the power and love of God for mankind present at all times and in every place

Bishops Hit Penna Birth Control Policy Addsmiddot to Rather Thon Solve Problems of Poor

HARRISBURG (NC)-The Pennsylvania Welfare Depaytments new policy of acfi~ely promoting birth control among poor people is a major step in the direction of a newand dangerous life management bymiddot the state The Pennsylvania Oatholic Conferencehas criti shycized the Welfare pepartments decision to middotinitiltte discussions of birth control with their clients Under previous pol- stru~en~ for population con- the polic~ because it will add icy birth coiltrol adviceias trol saidmiddot the PCC to the p~oblems of the poor and Moreover many of these do nothmg to get at the root

Jren~l~red only If the welfare same spokesmen see it as an in- causes of poverty reCIpIent asked for It The strument to improve what they We are bound to protest sysshynew policY has been in effect call the quality of our popula- tematic governmental involveshysince mid-January The Con- tion Putting the program to ment in decisions of citizens reshyference which represents the suchmiddota use represents one of its specting family size as a major states Bishops in public affairs worst dangers the danger that step in the direction of a new has denied that Church teach- the state will start-=-by guiding and dangerous life management ing on contraception is a factor some groups or classes to birth by the state the statement emshyin its opposition limitation-to select the types it phasized

Invasion of Prhacy desires to see propagated Rather our concern is over Dangerous Management Varied Talents

the ef~ort of the state to i~fl~- The statement noted that its SPOKANE (NC)-The newly e~c~ many wa~ a pelson s view in this regard is shared formed Catholic Board of EdushychOIce of family size-our con- b th ptt b h b h f th h ht d h middottmiddot y e 1 s lIlg lanc 0 e cation for the Diocese of Sposhycern IS elg ene w en I IS National Association for the Adshy kane has elected members whothe poor whom the state seeks t f C I d P I to mfluence the Conference stat t sad

emen IThe Confelence called promoshy

tion of birth control an invashysion of privacy and asserted the state should play no role in attempting even indi rectly to manage tne most intimate domain of personal life

The statement also took issue with Welfare Depart~ent deshynialsmiddot that the program is inshytended to contlOl population

Negro Opposition

Chiefspokesmen for groups which have pressured for this program in our state say they IJee it and demand it as not just II medical service but as an inshy

vancemen 0 0 ore eop e include educators and non-edushyh h tl tt k d th w IC recen y a ac e e cators priests pastors ReligiousWelfare Department for trying and lay personst r t th th f th N 0 Iml e glOW 0 e egro

populatIOn The Conference also criticized

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a2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River--Thurs Feb 29 1968

The PaJrish Parade ~T MARYS CAlllllIlEJI)lItAL FALL RiVER

Mrs Hadley Lackey will serve as chaIrman of arrangements for the monthly meeting of the Womens Guild scheduled for a oclock on Monday night March 4 in the Shamrock Room of the Corky Row Club

Mrs John OConnor chairshyman of the Scholarola scheduled for April 1 requests that all pledges be brought to the March meeting of the Guild Committee members are avail shyable for all who wish their pledges collected at home

ST THERESA J80 ~-y gtltBORO

The ~ =middotaternity of Christian Mothers will hold thei~ regular monthly meeting on Monday evening March 4 following the Stations of the Cross

Rev Leo R Gravel OMI son of Mr and Mrs Raymond Gravel ofmiddotWestminister St So Attleshyboro will be the guest speaker

Members of the Confraternity will receive Comunion in a body at the 9 oclock Mass on Sunday morning March 3

88 PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Mothe~~ ~f Boy Scouts will bold a p1i1gtlic social at 730 toshynight Boy Scouts informatiOn classes for the Ad Mtare Dei award wiil be gtheld tonight and every T~ursday night during March and April

Junior High Camp Fire Girls plan a splash party at the YMCA from 530 to 7 Saturday night March 2 imd a cakesale in the IIChool hall from 8 to 11 30 Sun- ~y morniii~

The annual Cub Scout Pack IT Blue and Gold Banquet and charter presentation will take place at 630 Sunday night in the

school hall

SACRJED IllEART NOATlLEBORO

Starting on March 12 and conshytinuing for the next three conshysecutive Tuesday nights there will be an EcUmenical Worship Study conducted at Sacred Heart Church First Universalist Church First Methodist Church and the Grace Church

The service will begin at 730 and will be followed by a coffee hour and a discussion period in the church hall

The Sacred Heart Church will open the program on March 12 with a discussion of the Mass

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Womens Guild win reshyceive Holy Communion in a group at the 8 oclock Mass on Sunday morning March 3

The regular monthly meeting of the Guild will be held on Wednesday night March 6 at 730 in the school on Earle Street

ST PATRICK FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild announces an open meeting for Monday March 4 A jewelry demonstrashytion will be featured In charge of arrangements is Mrs Stanley Pitera aided by Mrs Joseph Fazzina

The unit will celebrate St Patricks day Saturday night March 16 with a smorgasbord supper and dance in the school auditorium Supper will be served at 7 and danCing will folshylow from 8 to midnight with music by the Moon Mists Resshyervations will close Sundq March 10 and may be made with guild officen or board memshybers

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

Plilrishoia books are to be distributed the weekend of

The WQmens Club announces March 2 and 3 Prizes will be bull pot luck supper for 630 Monshyday nigh1 Maich 4 Chairmen are Mrs William T Marum Jr and Miss Mary L Tyrrell

John F Keavy Jr president cl the US Model Railroad Assn will show films at a Boy Scout meeing slated for Tuesday night March 5

Theologians SllaquolIted As CU Spe(Q]~eis

WASHINGTON (NC) - Dr Ellie Mascall one of Englando most prominent Anglican theoshylogians and Father Hans Kung an outspoken advocate of reform in~~ the Catholic Church wilil speak at the Catholic University of America l1Ite in March

Dr Mascall a vigorous 0pshy

ponent of the so-called New Theology will give the Charles A Hart Memorial Lectures from March 24 to 29 His lectures will

deal sucessively with the quesshytions of God man Christ and the Church

Father Kung a Swiss theoloshygian who played an influential role at the Second Vatican Counshycil will speak on Sincerity in the Church on March 18

St louis Ceremony ST LOUIS (NC) - Bishop

John J Carberry of Columbus will be installed as Archbishop of St Louis on March 25 in cershyemonies at St Louis cathedral here

Archbishop Luigi Raimondi apostolic delegate to the United States will officiate The date of the cerem0I1-Y will be exactly three years after that on which Bishop Carberry was installed ordinary of Columbus

awarded to the three individuals selling the most books

The Mystibrook Singers of Bishop Stang High School will lead singing at the 815 Mass Sunday morning M~rch 3

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

A parish supper sponsored by the Womens Guild will be held from 530 to 730 Saturday night March 2 in the school hall Tickets are available from Mrs Frank Kingsley ticket chairman or any board member

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

During Lent Masses will be at 7 AM 4 PM and 7 PM

Confessions will be heard one half hour before each Mass Stashytions of the Cross will be held at 345 and 645 Friday aftershynoons and evenings Children are urged to attend Mass at 4 each afternoon The Children of Mary anshynounce a periby sale Friday March 15 A Portuguese parish mission will be preached by Rev Anshytonio Pinto CM from Sunday March 3 through Saturday March 9 Services will open Sunday night March 3 with rosary sernlon and Benediction at 7 I)clock and Mass and sershymon will be held every weekday night at 7

ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

The Association of the Sacred Hearts will sponsor a tea at 7 on Sunday night Mar 3 in the rectory in honor of the Sisters staffing the parish schooL

The monthly meeting C1f 1lhe Association will follow the tea

SAMOAN BISHOP The first native Polynesian memshyber of the hieraIl~hy Bishopshyelect Pio Taofinlllu (cq) S M will be consecrated at Apia Western Samoa on May 29 by Bosoon-born A r c h b ish 0 p George H Pearce SM of Suva The Bishop-eloot 44 made -his novitiate with the Marists on Staten Island ~C Photo

Hospital ~~urses

Return middotto Nork hi Covingtol1l

COVINGTON (NC) A nurses walkout which began in mid-November at 100shyyear-old St Eliz~~beth Hosshypital here has ended Nearly 100 of the 140 members of tine Registered Nurses tgtrganizati01l have indicated they will retum to their jobS The walkout stemmed from bull dispute over recognition of their organization and patient care policies Since the settlement hospital officials have been inshyterviewing nurse to expedite their reemployment and placeshyment

Restore Full Service Hospital spokesmen said the

nurses will be restored to posts they formerly held in so far as possible The nurses will lose no tenure as a result of their absence and if the positions they previously held have been filled they will be offered comshyparable posts or benext in line for selection to the positions

Administration officials exshypressed satisfaction with the prospect of the nurses return and voiced the earnest hope that we can move forward tel restore the 100 beds to service which had to be taliten out of availability by reason of the shortage of nurses to care for the patients

Officials estimate til1at four tie eight we~ks might t~ required 110 restore full bed service

Cite Achievements The nurses leaders said the7

had achieved at least 13 gains during the thteenionth dispute pointing to the fact that a doctor and a nurse have been apshypointed to the hospital board of trustees the establishment of bull patient care committee comshyposed or nurses electeli by those now employed by the hospital and equipment changes in the patient care area

Mrs Pat Tanner vice chait shyman also said the nurses unshyderstand that a lay heid will be appointed head of the hospital

Sister M Coronata adminisshytrator was assigned to) another post in the sisterhood earlier this month and Sister Mark Bernard has been serving u acting administrator I~he Franshyciscan Sisters of the Poor haft operated the hospitaL

Love Is An Active Verb We who bear the noble name of Christian arid who are io9shy

ingly called the faithful stand in awe of the Mystery of Christ and the Mystery of His Church More than the mystery of Obrist and of His Church is something we live It is then our duty JIlON

and more to experience the living reality of the Cbureh hershyself Cbristain tradition affirms that by her relatioJiship with Christ tlbe Redeemer the Church is a kind of sacrament or an efficacous sign of intimaJte union with God and indeed an efshyficacious sign cf the uni~ of all mankind

As members of the household of the faith we have heeD eaDmiddot ed by God and endowed with the precious gift 01 faithThereshyfore we m1ls truly experience a sense of urgency in brinampinK aD men to tun union with Christ Since mankind today is joined together more 1ll1osely than ever before in historY by bonds thaamp are social technical and eultural should it be ilenied the spirshyitual unity that springs from faith The Gospel is Ught Ii Is lIIewness it is energy it is rebirth it is salvation

Should DOt interest in our own salvation necessarily move us tID loving concern for the salvation of others If the Church is the Sacrament Of Salvation should we not as members of the Church eome to an eve- clearer awareness of our pari in her mission in the o1uty of evangelization in the missionary mandate in the apOstolic commiSsion Clearly our duty consonant withthe blessings I-eceived from Christ is that of spreading offering and announcing ~ faith to Others in order that we might be clble to acquit ourselves of Uiis Christian obligation The Society for the Propagation of the Faith eXiSts For-those who desire to be where the action is or 110 be iIivOlvoom wOrld mission the Church pr0shy

claims her own essential inissionlU) character Indeed the Cburdl ill J4ission and therefore aD of 118 are truly missionaries

fa tills Yeai IaItIl we eaa testify to Gaefldl uieDt 04 om- ATatitade to God for the bleilldDc of faWt by ma~ bull aerIfiee te TIle Society for the PropapUOn 01 the Faith lor tile works of the Chureh ill the service Df tile poor and underprholshy~ed We eamaot be Uke our Master III the fWlness of HIs Dlvinit7 nor caD we hoPe to experienCe thelrlory of His Transfigmratio bat there lis ODe way ill whieh we eaa resemble Rim and that Is ~ beeomtitamp- a oervant to His poor aDd His UWe ODes throughshyout the world

The native celrgy is the ho~ of the Chureb in Mission lands Many youngmen have heard the can but are sadly turned away for lack of facilities and funds $250 will provide a year of semshyinary training $1500 will cover the cost of complete education to the priesthood Wont you help us to help them by sending your offering to The Society of st Peter the Apostle 366 Fifth Avenue New York N Y 10001

SALVATION AND SERVICE are the work of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith Please cut out this eolumn and send your offering to Right Reverend Edward T OMeara Nashytional Direetor 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or directly to yoUr loeal Diocesan DirectOr Rt Rev Msgr Raymond T Considine 361 Norib MaiD Street FaD IUver Massaelnuse~ts 03720

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THE ANOiOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 13Missouri Diocesan Board Pondersmiddot Closing Consolidating Schools

KANSAS CITY (NC)-Tbe 1H girls They would be abshyKansas City-8t Joseph diocese sorbed into the school popushyis exploring the possibility of lations of Lillis high school and closing some of its schools and st Theresas academy forming n larger area school Although 120 persons attendshy Extension Volunteers bull bull bullwhich could upgrade the qualshy ed the school board meetingity of education for all pupils they were not petmitted tp

At 0 school board meeting speakFather John P Cole supershyinJtenden~ of schools reported on L - shyPTA Bead Plotes~

the possibility of setting up 11 Make Life Wortl IVngA motion-passed unanimousshycentral area grade school in ly by the board-was made to

mid-town Kansas City The continue exploration into conshysingle school would serve the solidation of the schools Thispopulations of three existing was opposed by John J Mcshygrade schools Donough a representativeFather Cole also suggested the elected by the Catholic PTApossibility of closing Redempshy Federation who will be seatedtorist high school now serving as a board member in July

McDonough was permitted to $~[]7reg~ 2~ Ifreg[[~ take part in the discussion but

had no vote

~~ ~~[[U IT)J He protested against the defe3ltist clique who let our

WASHINGTON (NC)-Bishop schools get picked off one byPaul F Tanner newly named one He charged that TheOrdinary of the diocese of St New Peltlple - the diocesanAugustine Fla is onfy the newspaper members of the dishyfourth priest to serve as general ocesan school office officials of secretary of the United States the Missouri Catholic Confershybishops secretariat in the nearshy ence Kansas City pastors andmiddotly half-century of its existence other Church officials share in

Bishop Tanner was the last an anti-Catholic school recshygeneral secretary of NCWC the ordoriginal secretariat He was also the first general secretary of ODe Operation both of is dual suc~essors-tne

McDonough said that theNational Conferenceof Catholic school superintendent shouldBishops and the United States be goingmiddot to the state legislashyCatholic Conference The NCCB ture and Governor Hearnes tois the bishops agency for dealshydemand tax relief instead ofing with purely splritual matshyconsidering consolidation andters the USCC Is their secreshyclosing of schoolstariat for dealing with secular

affairs Father Colemiddot maJntained that The prelate has served in the the reorganization would not

U S bishops secretariat 28 represent a cutback The area years longer than any precedshy school would be able to opshying general secretary Born in erate out of one blilding to Peoria TII in 1905 and ordained serve three parishes It would a priestmiddot of the Milw~ukee archshy provide the same educational diocese in 1931middot he came to experience for the same number Washington in 1940 ~as assistant of students plus advantages director of the Youth Departshy Cooperation would make posshyment NCWC He ~as assistant sible a highly developed model general secretary from 1945 to school staffed by Sisters from 1958 and has been general secshy three communities retary since then He said it would be irresponshy

He is the first bishop to serve sible to run three operations at as secretary to the bishops secshy all costs when the diocese retariat could have one operation run

The NCWC (as Council and it more efficiently do a better Conference) had been in exisshy educational job and provide opshytence 47 years when it formally portunity for a better deployshywent out of existence at the anshy ment of personnel nual meeting of the bishops in November 1966 Bishop Tanner who had served in the secretashy Urge Germaruls riat for more than half those years supervised the transition To Aid Vietnam to two separate organizationsshy

BONN (NC) - Two Germanthe NCCB and the USCC cardinals and two churchshyDuring Bishop Tanners secshy related relief organizations have

retaryship and in testimony to FALL RIVER PROVINCETOWN AND WESTPORT GIRLS WITHappealed to the German people

the growth of the work handled to collect money and to prayby the bishops secretariat an NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF EXTENSION VOIL~NTEERS DURINGfor the people of Vietnamimpressive addition to the headshy A week beore Mardi Gral lt- quarters building here was Joseph Cardinal Frings of Coshy THEIR YEAR OF VOLUNTEER WORK erected in 1960 logne asked the Catholics of his

archdiocese to cut down on Mardi Gras festivities and to donate magnanimously to the needy people of Vietnam Coshy These young college graduates have given a I year of their logne has long been known for its ampigtectacular Mardi Gras celeshy professional life to God in service in the South and West Are brations Citing the bombing Of North you willing to give twelve months of yourmiddotyouth to othersVietnam the plight of women and children caught between opposing forc~middot in the $()ut~ and the great number of refushygees Cardinal Frings asked how Catholics could watch pictures of these gravely distressing si~

WHY NOT ENROll AS ANuations on television and ceieshybrate Mardi Gras with a quiet The Spirit oj

Extension Volunteer HELPER middot$200 oconscience Alfred Cardinal Bengsch Of Extension Volunteer PROMOTER $500 o

Berlin asked for prayers for Sacrifice Extension Volunteer SPONSOR $1000 or more opeace in the world in a letter to the clergy of his diocese in which specifically mentioned AMOUNT ENCLOSED $ Vietnam as a name meaning Perfectlyblood and death RT REV RAYMOND T CONSIDINE PAIn a joint appeal Caritas the German Catholic relief organishy PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH OFFICE zation of Germanys Evangelical 368 NORTH MAIN STREETExemplifiedLutheran Church has asked for fALL RIVER MASS money to send food Md medishy

BISHOP P~VL F TANNU cine to the Children of Vietnam o

(-14 THf ANCHOR-Diocese of FaR Rfver-Th~rs Feb-29 1968 Two Objectives Jersey to Rehabilitate Young OffendersTells Jesuatts Engage in Deliberate

Help Increasing Spanish Group Attempts at lExperimentation UNION CITY (NC) - Two Hudson County Jan and in theST LOUIS (NC)-Deliber- carries its own reward he said area interfaith clergy groups youth house in Secaucus

iide attempts at experimenta- Now we must undertake new here in New Jersey are planning Father ThomasJ Murtha oftion with a readiness to accept forms some of which have a

joint action on the plightf West New York was named toall the risks that may be in- good chance to flop JIliserably youthful offenders housed m investigate means of setting UJltvolved were proposed for the An expert at the Second VatshyHudson County correctional in- a rehabilitation program t4ilSociet of Jesus at the close of ican Council Father Campion stitutions and to seek federal function after the release ~ III three-day session here on believes that the work of the assistance in meeting the needs youthful offendersbulllesuit renewal council has not yet begun to of Cuban refugeesFather Donald R Campion be absorbed within the Church

The joint session was held by The ~o groups will send a18J stressed at the renewal as a whole the North Hudson Clergy Coun- delegatIOn toWashIngton to askQession and in an interview This is not because it hasnt cU based here and the Chris- ~hat the area be declared anthat the Jesuits have both the been publicized enough or beshy tian Clergy United a West New Impacted area under the Cuban manpower and the resources to cause people havent read Y k Refugee Act and therefore beshy

engage in the type of expeii- enough or bishops havent talkshy or ~ro~p come eligible for special federal mentation which could serve ed enough he said But Vati shy A meetmg WIll be s()~ght WIth aid There are some 00000 tQdays Church Father Cam- can II opened up more areas the Hudson County Boar~ of Spanish~speakingpeople now m pion a sociologist and theolo- to discussion than it resolved Chosen Freeholders in an effort rth gian was recently named editor Among the sleep~rs in to establish a bettez climatefoi the ~o Hudson area and they cd America magazine council documents CIted by therehabiUtation of youthful continue to arrive at the rate of

Another speaker Fat her Father Campion was the conshy offenders now housed intne 200 to250 a month ~ 1 _

Avezy Dulles SJ stressed that cept of participation within the ~ doubt is a valuable and even Church Father Campionmiddot said lI1ecessary experience for the he believes collegiality is the Wide E~perience Christian in todays world most developed aspect in this

Fathers Campion and Dulles area and that some organization QU(lJD~ies Nu_ were two of the six main speak- has been given to it through the

UNITED- NATIONS (NC)ers at the closed meeting Some establishment of piie~ senates ltHQWCom pie t e devotion to theSSO Jesuits including 50 from But unless the idea of parti shyworlds needy children seemsCilutside the St Louis areaat-cipation is really the basis senshy a weighty task for a petite nun TDgtKEEPtended the sessions ates can become orgimizational

Father Campion said that Jes- gimmicks he said but a conversation with Sister Ullits as a group must face the Father Dulles discussing themiddot Kathl~eri Kelly MMmiddot provides LENmiddotTreassularice middotthat 20 years of make a significant contribution Church said ~ an interview diversified experience fact that their work should existence of doubt in todays

more to modern times that we have a radically differ- than qualifies her for the role

QUI IXIDPYFATHER lI MISSION jlUDTG me fllRlfaNTAL CHURCH

In the area of education It calIS for recasting the ex- wide Cath)lic charities organishy Need New Formula ent world view than in the past Caritas Internationalis worldshy

With the slason of Lent comes the qu~ionFather Campion called for con- pressions of the Christian messhy zation recently appointed Sisshy How can I beSt keep Lentl The answer ~s ~sideration of whether we are sage in terms of contemporary as observerter Kathleen its must make sacrifices on our own and nothing ISproviding the educational struc- knowledge if the message is to to the U N International GOOD III sacrifice unfess it hurts Whatwill be yo~rture for the new world have the impact it should Childrens Emergency Fun d WHIEN sacrifice bullbull Just think of the misslonlllne~ InIn the intellectual area Look Criticanny (UNICEF) Caritas Internationshy ITlf our 18 emerging countries who keep Lent allrather Campion noted that to- Doubt is not a bad thing he alis is one of 75 international HUmS year long Sacrifice something big this ye~rday more is needed than popu- said People should be looking and non-government organizashy When helping others hurts a bit you know you va larization of theology and phil- critically at the traditional forshy tions (NGOS) which enjoy conshy made a sacrifice()Sophy In a way we need a mulas and seeing what is revelashy sultative status with UNICEF whole new formula for making tion and what is a culturally

They represent oJer 4000csense of the world and life he conditioned formula which is affiliated private and non-profitfSaid now demanding reform

We should have men devoted Such adaptations are iD no organizations in more than 100 oOn his recent-trip through India 1V0~signor nations with a combined memshy Nolan saw priests and Sisters subSisting onto this single problem Their way a compromise of faith bership running into millions ounces of rice each day so they can share what own inner resources of security Father Dulles said We never they have with lepers and orphans $10 will feedmust be yery strong because to hear the divine message except Interviewed at the United Nashy FEED a family for several weeks at least $50 will feed

facethat kind of change is not III in terms of humans he said tions Sister Kathleen spoke of THE five families $100 ten families bullbullbull Only $975popular thing The Word of God comes her new rol~ at the international HUNGRY gives a priest 11 two-acre mode~ 18nn toraise

Council Opened Areas through man it is alW9YS tem- level and described how it his own food and teach his parishioners how to Father Campion said the can pered by man and it is this con~ evolved from her past activities raise more food Archbishop MalJ Gregorioa will

for experimentation W9S not ditioning which must change wrltetlo thank youI was in California andbased on inadequate work of Father Dulles said one value worked for 10 years in familyJesuits at the present time and of the death-of-God movement eounseling in the juvenile court IlJ Enable ~ girl to become a Sister For 41tl bullthat fact is part of the problem for Catholics is to shake _ I1tA1N day ($1250 a month $150 bull year $300 aleill foster lare and in otherMany times we have been suc- out of taking an uncritical with sa~ A together) you can pay In full fer her two-yeaIwork children sheeessful and being successful static view of God training have 8 Sister of your awnInthe last five years I moved SISTER

oat to community development and civil rights I was a member o For only $a5O a week ($10 a month $120 bull

year) you can make surethat an abandonedJesuit Seminarian Leads Campaign of a district council in bull San HELP Francisco - which subsequently A child has food clothing a blanket and love bullbullbull IAgainst Home Contract Firms was declared a poverty CHILD wen send you a photo of the boy or silt )011area

adoptCHICAGO (NC) - A Jesuit borne than its current market During my years there I waa Rminarian has launched a camshy value a member of the Catholic Intershy o Our priestS will offer promptly the Massespaign here against contractshy Following the exodus of racial Council and when I came MASSES you request Doyou wish to remember a loved holders of homes sold to Negro Lawndales white residents in back from Selma (she was on fOR one this Lent Your Mass offerings are usuallyfamilies at allegedly exorbitant the late 1950s thousands of of the persons selected to repshy LENT the only Incole our priests overseas receiverates homes were purchased by vari shy resent the archdiocese of san

Jack Macnamara SJ who ous bankS mortgage loan and Francisco in the Alabama civil o Enroll yourself your family and friends InlIives and works in nearby real estate companies at low rights march) I was appointed this Association You will be helping Pope Paul Lawndale is acting withthe ap- prices and then resold on conshy to serve on the Human Rights

JOI~ in one of his most ambitious and heartfelt works proval of his Jesuit superio~ tractto Negro families atofteIi - Commission by the mayor of THIS while sharing In the blessings of thousands of

Nacnarnara and a dozen supshy ~lImON Masses (The offering for one year is $2 perdouble the original purchase San Francisco the nun stated porters including several other price the leaflet reported She was the first nun ever apshy person $10 for a family perpetual membership Jesuit seminarians picketed the Paid Race Tax ltpOinted to any kind of~~yt is $25 per person $100 for a family) Chicago address of one investshy Macnamara said these conshy inJSan Fraidsco _

Iment company which holds title tracts should be renegotiated at

~ several homes sold on conshy the most recent FHA appraisal tract to Negroes Pickets dis- price ~ If I1t e SAiliNGS

tributed leaflets explaining the c2J 0 dJ ~ t~~ year SYSTEMATICThe issuemiddot here is moral rathshypurpose of their campaign er than legal he declared Th~ MONTHLY DEPOSITS

The leaflet cites the case of III law does not provide a remedy II tfMltIa fNVE$iMENyhome purchased by an investshy for the type of injustice that is d) aV~ J((~ year SAVINGSment company in January 1959 operative in this contract

for $13000 and then three NOTICE ACCOUNTSThousands of Negroes inmonths later sold on contract to Chicago are suffering from this a Negro buyer for $23000 450 ar ~~~~

It states the investment corn continued ~In effect they paid pany received $2000 as a down II race tax of approximately

type of injustice Macnamara

BCJs~ liverpayment on thiS contract whic~ $10000 when they bought their stipulated that middotthe balance was homes because it was impossishy SavonJs Bonkflo be paid over 20 years at sevshy bleto obtain mortgages 4Il per cent interest at the rate This is a striking example of BanI By Mail of $20140 each month how our legal system does notmiddot We Pay The Postage

Last December it reported a adequately protect black people Federal Housing Administration or poor people he said It appraisal on this home listed its stems from the fact that the law bull YARMOUTH SHOPP8NC PUll value at $15025 This means it aims at protecting property inshy bull SOUTH UltMOm bull HYANJIISexplained that the Negro buyer stead of persons And this helpl bull DENNIS PlmRT bull OSTFllVIUlIII paying $8000 more for tbe bull cause urbaJl unreal

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offering CITY STATE ZIP ~DEE---

THO middotCATHDLIC NEAR EAST WELFRIASSOCIATION

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 ltI

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Home Missions Collection in Your Church-March 3 19611

16 THE ANC )~-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968

New St LouimiddotsArchbi~hcp

PrOmilnent in Ecumen~$m Archbishop Jonh J Oarberry of St Louis well known

~()ng Oatholic leaders after 31 career that has taken him from a seminary classroom iii his natiYe Brooltl~ NCY~ to one of the nations MOse ~mpOOtallt archdiolaquoese1l is pershy

laaps evenmiddot better ~ownmiddot fJDlong Americas nom-Cafu6shylie religious leaders fon hisl work in ecumenism Cllair Ilillao of the Bishqps Commi~ee-Ibr Ecumenical and Intenrefi shyaious Affairs since th~ resigna Qion of Baltimores Lawrence Cardinal Shehan in November 11965 Bishop Carberry has au I9gtCrvised the massive catholic illllvoIvement in ecumeniCal ac-middot lli1 vities

He outlined his own entIliusishyeuroISm for ecumenism in a speech ~iven in January 1966 tolmemshy~rs of the Ohio (Protestant) lPastors Convention wheDI he aid

Common lHeritagel For years the general policY

(llln the Catholic Church) had ~en to stress the great chasm

which divides the euroatliolic Church and other Christian ehurches No effort was made m would seem on our part to Illave a meeting of minds A otudy of documents would seem ltD reveal that while we wera lbrayerfully disposed to) the ltecumenical movemerit nevershy1lheless the Catholic Church did lliittleto foster it

Bishop Carberry told the conshyvention that through the grace 0f God and the leadership or Pope John XXIII we became aware of the common heritage Which is ours

Has Great lHope

We began to realiZe~ how 18aptism unites us in ChriSt to Gee that the divinity of Christ is illhe cornerstone of all Christianshynay we began to real1ze the oommon treasure which we llnave in the Sacred Scripturesllikewise the common bondshyVhich exists with us in the

1lIIlissionary activities at the Church

There is great hope Bishopltearberry said that mrougb ~ialogue through prayerbull 1llluough respect for each others wiewpoint the grace of God may (i)Ile day in Gods divine provishy4llence bring about the- unitY which Christ prayed for at themiddot Last Supper

More recently members of ltOhios Protestant cliurches llllamed the bishop as OniosPbsshyoLr of Pas-tors the fl rst timmiddote hat bull

Grants Permis$ioll~

for SaturdayMass) SAN ANGELO (NC)-BiShop

Thomas TSchoepe of San Angelo lllas announced that the diocesan request for the Saturday Mass flaculty hagt been granted In the future the Sunday Mass 00shyltigation may be met by at shy~ndance at a Saturday aftershyllloon or evening Mass The pershylll1ission has been granted on an ~xperimental basis by the Vati shylttan for a period of five years

The diocese of San Argelo is 1lI Texas missionary diocese the bishop explained and there are areat dis tan c e s between churches and few priestswmiddot oerve the faithfuh ManYi ~llieSts

have two or morlt8 churclies tJ lllttend and will Be able- tQ give more time to the smaller ~urches with the Satucday Mass faculty Bishop TschoePe pointedi 9Ut Chat the faculty has been giVeth bull the whole diocese not just Ibo individual churches or areas Pastors who wish to make Usemiddot aJl the faculty must make formal application to the chancery ofshyillce

a~ statewide Protestant onganiza tion has presented its highest awa-rd 10 a eatho1iir clet1gymam A pla~J1e symbollZiDg the a~adi was~ glv~~ to the blShp at ~~~ Fenw~nIP Blmq~et on the Olbo PastollSgt ~onventi~m

DI~USS P~tilems U~dev Blsli~p~rlgte~rysl~d

er~hlPl laquoatholic ~elegations have ~et wl~h ~fflC1Blsbull and

tleolbglan~ of other- ChrIs~an churchesmiddot to dlSCUSS ecumemcal pooble~s r~~gmg from the pr~sshyence of Christ Ill tlie ~ucharlst to th-c nature of we prJes~ood

Before ta~mg cliarge of th Golumbusmiddot dIOcese on March 25 1965) Bishop euroarbery liadmiddot selved asmiddot coadjutor bishop and then bishop of Eafayette Ind Born in Brooklynj N~ Y Tulymiddot 31 1904 Bishop Carberry studied for the priestlioodi at Brooklyns Cathedral College or the Iin-middot maculate laquool1ception from 191ll to 1924 and at the North Amershyican College in Rome from 1924 to 1930

Oldained inmiddot Rome in 1929 tne bishop sfudiea canon law at the Catholic University of America in Washington D G and taught at Immaculate Conception Semshyinarl until Tune 1935 when he went on ldan to the diocese of Trenton N J He returned to BrooklYn in 1940 where hemiddotreshymained until being named coshyadjuror bishop of Lafayettemiddot in 19651

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CHICAGO (NC) - Tohn A McDllrmott has changed me mindL-he1li remain as execu middot tivedirector of the Chicago Cat1iolic Interracial Council

The veteran council worKer last October announced he would leave the office to beshy

come Mridwest regional- ciVil rightsdirector for the ms De-middotmiddot partment of Health Enucation andi Welfare

A number of problems hava arisen since th-e announcement on my appointmentt last 0ctbBerwhichl caused me to have serl

ousmiddot second l thoughts MilDer moW said iil his decision to re~ maio with the ltlrc He citedi m1 patrtcular~ personnel cutliaclts in HEW wJiich woulli Iiinit the Midwest negional operatiiul

fo accepting McDermotits de cisionj HEW the government agency requestedi liiin to serve asmiddot ai special chdl- rights consuU ant while working for the CIC and he a~reed

IIlt a letter to the Dutch biINumber of Fllel71ch ops members of Michaels re-

gion asked for curbs on the nlgtshySeminarians Dllops tions Catliolic liberals The PARIS (Ne)-Thenumber of meeting also registered disap-

French seminarians h~s dropped proval of the new Dutch Cateshyby about 180 a year for the last chism~ claiminJ~ that it does nocent four years according to 1iigures represent true Catholic teach~ provided in amiddot press conference Michaels Lel~ion is considered by Bishop Jean Sauvage 011 ampshy even more CJlnservative thlW necy member of the bishops Confrontation another Catholic commission on the clergy and conservative organization Conshyseminaries frontations complaints about

For the 1967~68 sc1iolastic the content of the new Dutch year the tdtal number of sliumiddot catechismmiddot are believed to hae dents iil major seminaries m been instTllmentai in having tbe~ FhlOce is 43583 comparedl with book exltlmined by the VatiCan~lJ

4536 for the previous year Doctrinal Congregation 4722 )n 1965-66 and 4953 in 1964-65

Moreover in France at pres- Approves Agency eol ttiere are aBout 200 adults LQND()N (NC)--Jolin Cardl~

WIIO are preIgtaring for tOe ~er nal Heenan of Westminster liJaa manent diaconate as restored by approveq establishment ocf 1m the Second Vatican Council The agency to help priests who want first ordinations to this permashy 10 leave the priesthood znGl nent diaconate could take place nuns who want to leave the this year religious life

1P~alrn le~tUlm~1rn~~G~

$1lll~7 GG1l I1DtJ Sim LONDON (NC)-A study on

the problems of ecumenism in Great Britain will be made by a joint working group of the British Council of Churches and the Caholic Church with the results to be reported next Autumn

The study was planned at a meetingmiddot held atmiddot the Vita et Pax Benedictine I~onvent and attendshyed by nine Catholic representashytives an- 14 representatives of the BeC -

The projected study is exshypected to analyze such topics an the extent I)f cooperatiGn beshytween Catjwlics and members of the BeC the dialogUes bemg held theologicaL differences and the non~theological obstacles to closer unitygt

Auxiliary BishoJ- Langton Fox of lfenevia Wales and

Auxiliary Bishop Basil Chrisshytopher Butlelr OSB of Westshyminster headed tOe CatOolie delegation at the meeting

~(i]$~~rlaquolJpoundfr1) A$1k lMl~illlW) ~ltoy~ IHh~)~Dnd

U11RECHm (NC) -Michaels Legion an organization of Dutch Catholic~ uaditionalists has sent a telegram to Pope Pault H ungintg him tD protect essential orthodoxy and to S81fe tne DutchChurch~

At 3- meeting here attended b~ some 600) Catholic conserva tives led by Eouis Knuvelder the legion condemned the Dutch Catholic daily press the~ Dutch Gatholic tellvisioncompany and the countrys Catholic radio station for being too progressive

Father Baum Regards Ecumenical Center Closing Sign of Success TORONTO (NC)-The closing gian Charles Davis-A Quesshy

of the Center for Ecumenical tion of Conscience Davis book Studies at St Michaels Collegegt exmiddotplains his renunciation of the here is a sign of the centersmiddot euroatholic priesthood and the success Church and asks Catholic theo-

This is the viewpoint of Father logians who intend to stay in GregllllY Ballm O~SA founder the~ eurohurch to reply to several of tJie centeI1 who has an- t1iaologjcal points nQunlaquoed that it will b~ Closed BelUef Unbelief

inl JUne Thats what Im doing FatlieJJBaum-explalnedthalhe Fatller Baum said His book a

founded the centeJ ill 19631 when replYJ to Davis questions conshyecum~llusrn may have~ been a ceming the credibility of the new Idea Its purpose lie- s~ld Church in todays world will be was to promote ecumemcall called The Credibility of the studies at St Michaels Church Today It will be pub-

Taday he neports ecumen mal stlUdi~s at S1l Michaels are a reality- 1lli~ schGolls theology depal1tment 18 fully mte~ ~thl Protestant and ~gIIcan lfupartmentsmiddot at the-Umversity

of Toronto [hUB lie said~ the eC-lmenical

centell has fulfilled its purpose Such fUlfillment he said wmiddot

common in academic circles where there has been an ecushymenlical reVOlution For exam pIe ne said where once som1shyone might have nied to foster ecumenism through building an ecumenical library it is now impossible tq build a theological lilgtrary without its being ecushymenical

Need flDZ Programsmiddot Father Baum added that he

does not believe tJie ecumenical movement has reached fruitien in circles outside the academia world~ He said that he sees a real need pound01 formal ecumenmiddot ical programs on the parish and on all levels of the Churdl which have not yet been reached He a150 disclosed that perSOll ally he lias moved Gn frOlll ecumenism to new fields of thought

The AuIDlStinian has written a new book in answer to the latest by the English theolo-

U[[$ W)jf[rll IfSMsjIID~

rnliJ kUD-WIh ol 1TW[jiJ KETTERING (Neuro) - The 1-7shy

member parish board 00 St Charles Church~ here unanishymousll1 adopted a resolution 5 favor Qf open nousing legiSlashytion for thiS (1)hio suburban community

The parish boards action S~ poIied- unequivocallymiddot passage 0amp an open housing ordinance in themiddot virtuallr aUi-wltite commw-middot nity 00l more than 600001 res dents Tames J Gilvay and Peter Donanue attOrneys anlL pariBhlmiddot boarc members pre sentedthe resolutJoDj wliiclli tbok- themiddot position that the ghett) condit1ollG ~Ilichl Negroes enshycure ilm nearby DaYton are mshyiuriOwil to the entire commUlshyDitTmiddot

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Aftei tee closing of the Center for Ecumenical Studies Father Baum will stay on at St MishychaeFs au a professor of theolshyogy He is also planning another ~~

It will concentrate on the idea oi God in modern thought and will be a clear sign that Father Baum has moved away from his prime in terest in ecumen- ism

Born of Jewish parents in Berlin and reared as an agnostic Father Baum said he has now turned his whole thought to the study of belief and unbelief He will record his findings in me book he is now writing

~oh~ laquotmm~~litl ~Od1[9)

[~ Ao~ i N~regIJ$ CAMDEN (NC) - Bishop

Tames L Schad administrator of the Camden diocese was =ong citizens honored here foT their efforts in furthering the interests of the Negro comshymunity

Bishop Schad who has been active in community action projects such as the War on Poverty committees was pre sented a scroll during a proshygram sponsored by the Tenth Street Baptist church here in observance of the 43rd annual Negro History Week This year marks the first time a Romaa Catholic prelate has been so honored

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17 Oppose Church Clergy Participation in Politics

By Jsgr George G Higgins

The New RepubJic-whIch in this writers judgment W one CYl the be3t of Ameriros weekly journals of opinion especially hl it3 arovezoage cfcurrent economic and political developments----thinks that the time has com~ for anti shyVietnam clergymen aul1ayshy Be that as it maY I am ioshymen to translate tu1eir cVZl clined to think that the editors m0r81 indignation oveuror Vietshy of the French periodical Inforshynam into effective political mations Catholique InternashyDction inasmuch as this is the tionales make considerably only way to effect long-term more sense than the editors cOf ehanges in the The New Republic 011 this issue policies of this of clerical involvement in the country So far so-called politics of peace as laymen are Though they are vigorously concerned this and unqualifiedly opposed ~il

would seem to tW war in Vietnam and like be a self - evishy tWeditors ()f The New Repubshydent proposition li( clearly recognize that the L1s perfectly establishment of leace in the obvious t hat world is a political problem concerned layshy which calls for the active mshymen ou~ht to volvement ofChcistians as ~-en

translate their as all other men of good will moral indi~nashy they do not think that themiddot tion over Vietnam - or any cleJgy who are responsible foy other significant issue of public the unity of the Church should policy-into effecti-re poiiticltll be expected to take on the role

of party politiciansaction Given the fact that their pubshySound Tradition

lication ~CI has been oJe 01 tileOn the other hnd I aJl Evt most outspoken European critics

sure understandthat I fully or of U S involvement in Vietnam completely agree vitb The New and one of the most vigorousRepublic when it says that fue advocates middotof a politics of peaceclergy ought tncv likewise their warning against the parshy

Traditionally a the NR itself ticipation of the clergy in parshypvints out the clergy-in this tisan politics is highly signifi shycountry at least - have rnied cant and deserves to be taken amy from such participation very seriously (Christians and

AJJ a long-time subscriher to the Struggle ior Peaee InforshyT~2 New Republic I had Dlshy mations Catholique Internashyways been under the imp~ssio~ tionales Jan 15 1965)that its editors thought that en Fl lialgs lrindplebalance this was a sound tradishy

Those American Catholicstion Apparently lwweer I was who may happen to have a speshy

cial interest in the pros and consmistaken in this regard fora of this highly controversial issuerecent Nell Republic editorial will also want to read whatnoten with satisfaction that Hans Kung has to say about itAJlerican clerGYmen now apshy

pear to be ready in large numshy in his forthcoming bookThe Churchbers to get involved at a preshy

cinct level and to play C1l Father Kung has lectured exshyactivist role in both parties tensively throughout the United (Clergy in Politics The New SUItes in recent years and is

currently with us again as a visshyRepublic Feb 17 1968) iting professor at Union Theoshy

QuestioIS Meaning logical Seminary in New York What does this mean in pracshy Seen in the light of the Gosshy

tical terma Does it mean that pel le writes in his new book ministers rabbis and priests the relntionshipof the Church should endorse ltor oppose) parshy to the world contains only one ticular candic1ates fqr politiell essential aspect its ministry 10 office starting at the precinct the world level Does it mean that they Ministry does not mean raisshythemselves should run for ofshy ing ones voice or putting an -oar flee if only as a last reiort in all secular qIes1ions middotof ecoshy

If so does it also mean that nomic political sodaI middotcultural other clergymen should run artistic and scientific life against them if they happen to T1e Churchclmnot solve disagree with what they stand the greJt problems of the ()rld for Or does it mean toot only neiih2r the problell1of hunger those clergymen who are anti shy nor that of the populaticn nor Administration should get inshy that of war nor thlt oanonFmshyT-olved at a precinct leel and ity of power Dor that -of race play an activist role within hatred What the Church both parties can do can be expressed quite

Sicnifieani WarnlDI simply in one phrase it must I have raised these questions exist for the world

lot to make light of The New ACrefS With lFTK1mgRepublics editorial CD the subshyject under discussion but Anyone who hal ever baG the merely to BUggest that clerical pleasure of meeting Faiher involvement ill partisan politics Kung middotor is familiar wi1bhis over the issue of Vietnam is at writings will know witheut best a rather tricky business being told that be is not a hawk and will almost inevitably lead and that he is cot advocating to certain consequences which a policy of Christian withdrawal upon further reflection even the from the world editors of The New Republie middotOn the eontrary be stroniJy might eonceivably wish tc foreshy favors lhe all-ltltit involvement tall of Christians in temporal affairs

and notably iii the ~lities Of peace

To Speak in Boston Nevertheless be does net Rev Anthony T Padovano think that the institutienal

Church-and its clerical minisshySTD theology professor at ters-should pretend that theyImmaculate Conception Semishy

nary Darlington N J will speak have all the answers tc the problems of the worldia the Christian Culture lecture

aries sponsored by the Paulist And neither eoes be thinkshyFathers at 815 Wednesday night if I read him correctly-that tbe March 6 in John Hancock Ha)) clergy in ~ exeTeise of their Boston Tickets are available mission of peace should get inshyfrom 5 Park Street Boston volved in partisan jl)olities Nor 02108 do L

WOKS LIKE FUN Yes but listen to what it requires The Georgetown University erew keeps in s-hape with ~

AM ~i~enies in the gym foHow~ by a two-niile run UJl and do-Wll Observatory Hil~on tJhecampus Its cold up there said Dave Harris a member of the lightweifht crew but by then youlewtired you do-nt care NC Phottgt

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 ~ 968

Prayer for Peace To Cm(O)se Games

MEXICO CITY (NC) - All ecumenical prR)er for peaCf) service is being planned for the end of the 19th Olympic Gam~

here next October The sponsor of the service w shy

the Ecumenical Commission fcrr Religious Services (ECRS) fe the Olympic Games The comshymission is composed of 73 ChrisshytiRn and Jewish leaders in thi~

city Promment spiritual leadshyers will be invited to speak

At middot8 meeting here the rn ECRS spiritual leaders discusse~

the facilities for athletes and visitors to attend their varioU7J reUgious services

iI1be iMC)Cican government hw aPPI)o~ed ECRS plans for the ~ction of at least tw- JaIige bullclings as nondenonYshynational chapels

The original pIlan toeonstrl1ell one large church has been IcHsshytlarded The present plan is build one large building with no religious I)rnamentllJtion of alltl7 kind on the outskirts of the Olympic Villa and a similar Oilif)

on tne outskirts of the Olympze

Project InterracialInterfaith Cooperation Cultural Villa

tin (Re~~(Jtion of CcUege m addition Archbishop MEshymiddotgut Dario MirlllDda y Gomez Gl

1I1IAMI (NC)~When Florida The Rev Edward T Graham Mexico City hBs authorizeQ Memorial College predominant a Baptist minister key person downtown Catholic churches to ly Negro middotliberal arts school is behind the project has had asshy permit non-Catholic services = moved here frOl1l St Augustine sistance from Mrs Athalie their premises if non-Catholie and opens next September the Range Miamis first NeglO City comgregations should request i project will be the result of unshy Commissoioner who is a Cathshyusual interracial and interfaith olic teamwork Organhzet3 rOthEHSIl

The largest single contribll shyNegroeswhites and Chinese tiou of private funds has oome flainirt~ ClI1ter

have joined hands with Cathoshy from a supermarket executive lLOUISVILLE (NC) - TkeIlics Protestants and Jews tv M Austin Davis a Methodist Franciscan Conventional OrdGcontribute money time advice laiamis Catholic Bishop Coleshy has opened a Brothers Trainincand leadership to realize the

manF Carroll is a member vl1 Center here in an attempt to givedevelopment of the college on l the advisory board as is Maushy Brothers three years of active$10 million complex here rice Ferre diocese of Miami lay apostolic work following theirr leader novitiate

RabbiIrving Lehrman presshy Father Sebastian Cunnil1flshyCouncil Seores ident cd the Greater Miami ham OFM director of tlw Rabbinical Association a n 4ll OOlilter said We felt we haCFactory Closing Jewish lay leaders are amoag an cbligation to give our man

LONDON (NC-The impend- active workers oome training outside contam ing elosingof a large industricl $ bull $ an idea of what was neeclshyJilseph Rodriguez of the plant has been criticized by ~ edfromthem in the outside Puerto Rican Democratic ChEb lay -eouncil of Our Lady Of _rl11 In the past he addeeurohas prepared 11 scholarship PieshyGrace parish in southeast Lsnshy we were not fWfilling ~ gram for -the collegedCD DeedS 1d ~veryoneliturgy

The council expressed its deep concern at the recent No Comlmentclosure of factories in middotthis area Completean4 in particular of the impendshy VATICAN (orry (NC)-Ibe ing shutdown of the Associ2ted Vatican had no comment -oJ1 11

ElectricaIIndustries (AEI) plant repolt that ~hbishop Agostincgt BANKING Casaroli secretary for extraershyIt callid upon the governmeJrt dinary ecclesiastical affairs ilf SERVICEand the -ehaiTmanof the oomshy the Papal Secretariat of statepany torevsrse the decision 10 eonterred with Dlembers of ~

c~ don the plant because Of tor BristOl CountyN-orth Vietnamese missi-on iJJthe middotmoral religious and 5Ocial Parisjn lJanuarylt n JUWWampleffeets iCaiJS2a by the ~veshythat Archbishop Casaroli Wallmen1 a1popl1ation absent from the Vatican fOll

Copies ltOf the councils motion several days nlenUy BrjstoICounty were sent 1amp Prime ~1inister

Harold Wilson MiJiister of Trust Company Labor RayJ Gunter President ampf the Board of Trade Douglas Sturteant (

TAUNTO~ MASSJay and company officials iHoOkAlthough the councils action was a surprise to the pastel Ed 1897 IIHE BANJ(ONFather Joseph seally AA ~ uiltl~rs SUppJies JAUNTONGRHNprist sroa that he agreed ith it ftll3 Purchase Street Member 01 Feileral ~

Faiher 8enlly sait[ centbert Aellad iNew Bedford IDsuranee CorporaamptoDJlOt~cteil p01itiealand elaquolshy 996-5661 nomic motions to eome from the council but pointed out You cannot separate Feligimtl from eveJ~ay life

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968 Capacity Audience at Holy Name Parish ~ihss

My Consciesect1ce Discusses The J)etached Americans In Educ~tion Continued from Page One

Do we care -for knowledge

what happens to other people Why do we strive for college educations or for money Are we so anxious to confor~l1 that we never dare to PITTSBURGH

tMrI

~VJI and it must be understood in a

t mear-cu way

A person following his ~con-~ence must be sincere He cannot play games with his mind but must be honest with himself

A person foilowing his con~ liCience must be correct It iSl10t ugh that he sincerely beshy~ Reves that something is good or evil-he must be sure that hiS judgement is a correct one

agrees with Gods view of the matter

Sometimes people make misshytakes in judgement-honest misshytakes to be sure but mistakes iwnetheless The oft-quoted exshyample is that of the African savshyrage deep in the jungle who may be sincerely following his con- ooience when it tells him to kill omd eat his enemy His conshyscience is a sincere one But it~ Is a mistaken one since it does IIlOt agree with Gods Will He ond every person must c~m-

liitantly review his judgements to lbe sure that they are correct ones and riot sincere mistaken Utes

A person following his conshy3Cience must be certain He can not act with doubt or uncertainshy~ about the rightness or wrong- mess of an act since he would be Announces Prize acting with the willingness to

takea cpance on being wrong For Best Plan ~ offendi~g God and this is aever~ validmiddot If there is uncer- PITTSinJRqH (NC)-Bishop t8inty the person must seek aid John J Wright of middotPittsburgh III arriving at a sure and correct haS annoutc~d il priz~ of$IOOOtor professor ina p1inor semshy tudgementmiddot - formiddot the architect who submitsmiddoth be I f - inary chapiainof a school dishyThe Christian acts with amiddotcon- ~ e st p an or a Jliljgtr renoshy ocesan chancellor and finally

lllilence ~rned by the prlnciples vation of the sanctuary of St vicar general tilChrlst This is where tliEi Pa~l~ cath~middot~al_h~remiddot~T~~e ~om- The P6pe a~o nam~d Father

aturchsteachers the Pope Iiiid P~tit~o~ IS ~p~nmiddot ~omiddotal archJtec~ Bienvenido TudtiJdto be auxil- a message toAfrica and a mes ishops ~nfer middotthe pi~ture to wl~hlD ~e bound~~l~~s~f the iary bishop of Dumaguete in the sage ~lling for peaCe

Illelp men make judgementsmiddot thatmiddot lire guided by Christ Sometimes ~ese j~dge~eptsgo a~intitmiddotnat-middot lIIIa1 inclinations and tendencies md this has always been thedif-

~ti~ty of ~ing a Christian-- Ghrist demands much of His llmiddotowmiddotmiddotermiddots middot IIIU

At present Catholics are askshyiDg tlie Pope to make a morai judgement about birth control d especlmiddotallymiddot the PlmiddotUmiddot Some_lire castigating him for not givshy g a qulck declslon or else they lliie telling people to forget about llrim and to make their own adgeme tsmiddot th ttmiddot w- n m e ma er The Pope in order to make a ilecision must make it on the basis of facts Scientists must provide him with the facts and In this matter there is much that k~epinglVith the general lin~s sition in favor I)f open housing complex The Pope has asked and is still asking theologians to evaluate the scientific facts in 4he light of Christian principles Not all moral issues are simple And then the Pope will apply the principles to the facts and 1ril1 make a decision about the morality of the matter

This will guide the Catholic in fllorming his conscience -- in arshyriving at a judgement that is sipcere that is the correct orie at lS artmiddot d t d ce am JU gemen anthatmiddot is Christian

K of C Convention 51ated for Houston

lAN MARCOS (NC) The

1970 national convention of the ~ights of Columbus will be held in Houston it was an-Bounced here at a conference of Texas officers of the interna- _ tional fraternalorder

The announcement of the seshylection of Houston for the con- v~ntion which will be held in

be different These were among questions discussed by a capacity audience at the second in a series on Christian Morality sponsored by the parish council of Holy Name Church Fall River Sparked by Sisshy

John AIIcIa SUS Cter some 30 people from all parts of themiddot Diocese viewed the film The Detached Amerishycans then broke into small groups for buzz sessions

Thesis of the film was that Americans wont become in volved with each other It dra- matically pointed its message with the true story of Kitty

Genovese murdered on a New York Street while 38 of her neighbors watched ffom winshy

bull dowS-o--and did nothing Also depicted were amarried

couple talkingto each other with neither really listening a student going thriugh school as on an assembly line with his sole goal the position he could

hope for as a college graduate and various other examples of non-involvement

What is life worth if we do not give it away questioned Harry Reasoner at the end of the film The Holy Name audishyence agreed that life sbould be

used for others but tended to feel that there wasnt the im-Personalitv in a smailer city

Jthat is found in a large metropshyolis One Sister countered howshyever with stories brought to

h t htschool by children s e aug This is right in Fall River she stressed Others cited examshypIes of personal involvement in affaIrs of others but agreed that much more could and

Pope I~aul Names Two Aluxiliaries VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VImiddot hail named Msgr Jose T Sanchez to be auxiliary bishop of Caceres in the Philipshypines He takes the titular See of Lesvi

Msgr 5anlhez was vicar genshyeral of Legazpi at the time of his nomination

He was born March 17 1920 atPandan in the Legazpi dioshycese He completed his philoshysophical and ordinary theologishycal studies at the diocesan semshyinary and obtained a licentiate in theology at the University of St Thomas in Manila He was ordained Marc~ 12 1946 and then worked as an assistant passhy

Pltts~urgpchap~er9rmiddottl~e Afner- ~ Philippines Father Tudtud who Pope Paul also delivered 264 ~can -Inst~tUtofAlth~te~ts was36ye~~I)]fat ~hcent time ~fsPeeches bull (~~)_(h~ch mclud~~ ~tIePoit~- his noniinatiOJl studied philos- burgb dlO~es~and three adJa-ophy and theology at St Johns

c~nt countIes SeminarY inmiddotBoston Fath~r roseph P- Larkin He was born March 22 1931

eOm~ission chaiIm~nmiddot ili1(I-a at Mabola inmiddotthe Cebu arch~ member of the diQcesan bU~lll- diocese He worked as assistant - bullbull

iIg commissligtn~ said the pur- pastor Editor ltit Cebus Caiholic pose of thereiiovlition is to pro weekl~ and finally pastor of the ville a ~mQte suitable sanctu- Church of thE Blessed Sacrashy

ary setting fof the liturgical re- inent in Cebu In addition atf orms Qrought into beingmiddot by the time of his nomination he Vatican Council II was vice-superior of the Misshy

Father Lmiddotai-kir said because slon Society of the Philippines the cathedral must architectu-middot r~lly and liturgically allow for Issues Sttement both episcopal mdparish ser-- U

vices ~~any structurai cihimge O H R h offers a unique chalienge to the n umalu ig ts designer~ and provision for the LA CROSSE (NC)-Tbe La

new liturgy must be made in Crosse diocese has taken a poshy

and spirit 01 the existing struc- integrated arid ildequate educashy t4re tion fair employment and the

- defense of the rights of minorshyities

Christians and J~ws Bishop Frederick W Frekshying of the Wisconsin diocese

Honor Clergymen and the diocesan central com-NEW YORK (NC)-Clergy- mission approvedmiddot apmiddot officiai

men from thefour major faiths statem~nt titled Human Reshyhave been honored here by the lations in the Diocese of La National Coiuerence of Chris- Crosse

tians anltt Jews The statement was prepared

the third week of August was the practice has spread middotto a made by Dr Josepb G Murphy number of other cities hesaid of La Marque a member of the interrelgious understanding hasmiddot boara- of- directors fortbe Cathprogressed tremendously middotiIi reshyeticmiddot meDs oganization middotc~nhyearsbull

-

Tbe clergymeri cited for by the subcommission of human relations of the diocesan cornshycourageous leadership in intershymissionon social action and apshy

creedal relations were proved by both before submisshy Rev Dr ~ohn C Bennett sion to the central commissiollll

president of Union Theological ) in January Seminary

Father Robert I Gannon SJ president emeritus of Fordham CONRAD SEGUIN University

Bishop Silas of the GreekOrshy BODY COJMPANY thodox archdiocese of Nortb and Aluminum or Steel South America 944 Countr Street

Samuel D Leisdorf New NEW BEDFORD MASSYork philanthropist pointed out

wy 2-6618that the NCCJ firstmiddot honored reshyligious leaders of four faiths in September -1966 Noting that

should be done by individuals parishes and municipaiities

There were no solutions ofshyfered to the problems posed bythe film We dont expect to have answers to these quesshytions warned Sister John Alicia at the beginning of the program They are too big for us The film WltlS strictly on the

human level and this was pointed out in one group No one can solve all problems it was agreed but surely each Christian canmiddot trust the Holy Spirit to lead him to the probshylems he is equipped to do someshything about no matter how small

There was another point on whichmiddot everyohe in the audience was in enthusiastic agreement that there be more such eveshynings as the one sponsored by Holllgt Namemiddot

Vatmiddotn Report~lIo

Continued from Page One two encyclicals The Developshymiddotment of Peoples and Priestly Celshyibacy four motu proprios inshyeluding one creating central a lay council and the Papal Comshymission on International Justice anp Peace and another restorshying the permanerit diacol1ate treeapostolic constitutions inshyelUding one reshaping the

Churchs c~iitral administlatioii two apostolic exhortations one apostolic letter and 78 other Wessagesmiddotand letterS inclQding

He reeeived eight ehiets Of state including U SPresident Lyndon B Johnson and United Nations Secretary General U T~ant and gave 16 audiences to

th lmiddottmiddot I0 er men 10 ~ 1 lca life in cluding U SVi~ President Hushy~rt H Humphrey Republican presidential hopeful Richard M N d N Ixon an ew Yorks Sen Robert F Kennedy

He received visits from four delegations of Orthodox churCh men including Orthodox Ecushymenicai Patriarcp Athenagoras I of Constantinople besides visit shying Patriarch Athenagoras in ~ tanbul

The book covering last yearli activities of the Holy See conshysists of 1680 pages plus about 2(10 photographs

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Bishop John J Wright hasestablished a committee 1Jl)take a complete look at Oaampshy

olie education in the PittsburpD lOcese

The aim is fc dedde wha~ 1shyd t to tak tbe ~

lrec Ion e Dedecade for the best education of

all Catholics young and oldThe committee will evaluate all present Catholic educationshygrade and high schools eo egesConfraternity of Christian Doeshytrine classes adult education and other programs

The surveyors wiU 117 to deshyvise a plan based oa mstinl and potential resources in facll-Hies funds and Staff to guide the dioceses educational efforlll for the next 10 years or more

May Be FaI-lleaehiDg Among ideas eXpected to be

examined in the evaluation are proposals by some to cut back on Catholic schools or even til phase them out in place of an expanded adult education proshygram

Named head of the committee of educators priests and lay professionals is Father Vernon Gallagher CSSp former presishy

deht of Duquesne University here now serving as an official of the Holy Childhood Associashytion He also is a former proshyvincial of the Holy Gbost Fa~ ers eastern province

The committee Will be emshypowered to call before it di shyocesan officials to hold publlc meetingshire staff ~ring in exshyperts ThedioCege will finance the work

The committee Win make spe- eific recommendations to BishoP Wright after the study which 18 expected to take at least a yearbull

-Results are expected to have ~ar-reaching implicatiou fOr Catholic education here

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Two Unbeoten league Play f1fE ANCHOR-Diocese oTtall River-Ihurs feb 29 1968 19

Coach Says Sault Complete BallPlayerCape Cods NausetCompiles SMTB Playmaker Is Former Coyle $trBest Over-All Court Mark

BY JOE MIRANDA By PETER BARTEK

An excellent hall handler and Norton High Coach team player Is how Pat Sault of

Taunton is described by his Eleven of tile 12 aa-ea e1ubs with the best records in coach Phil Wetterland of the

their respective leagues are among those who will parshy Sou the a s t ern Massachu- setts Technogical Institute Inshyticipate in the March Tech basketball tournament in Boston stitute in North DartmouthFairhaven High of the Oapeway Conference and Nauset Sault a 19-year old freshman

of the Cape amp Island loop are is a former Coyle High hoopshythe only all-winning league a single league game while two ster who played four years for

went doWn to defeat In every the Warriors his final two underaggregations from this area encounter In which they were coach Jim Lanagan on the varshyin the Hub championship Involved Almost two-thirds 02 sityelimination tourney while Dartshy the Southeastern Mass teams

D)Quth High is the only one of Teaching CareerfinIshed wIth a 500 average OIlthe tOp dozen better Although young Pat has al shya 70 per cent coQlbines WIth

WIth 12 triumphs in the Cape ready made plans for the future league record amp Island competition Nauset which Include finishing his edshywhich failed to Regional also achieved the best ucation and pursuing a teachershyqualify an inshy over-all record winning 16 of coaching career dication t hat 11 encounters The Cape Cod Sault has not yet chosen a non-league school will be shooting for the major in college but according competition selshy Class D Tech title to his parents he is very much dom jeopardizes interested in teaching historyNew Bedford High 15 and and coaching They feel he willthe ultImate one in the Greater Boston Subshy be good at both as he alwaysgoal of most urban league finished with anschools Actual- Peter devoted his spare time to helpshy

over-all 17-2 mark for the Winshyly 311 per cent Bartek ing the younger neighborhoodter The Crimsons 937 average boys understand athletics moreof the 35 Southeastern Massashy captured its leagues pennant flag thoroughlychusetts school teamsmiddot have The Crimson Whalers are now Pat is the oldest son of Mrqualified for the Tech title play poised to annex the No 1 State and Mrs Charles A Sault and)let none managed an over-all honor by clinching the top one of four children A sisterundefeated season ranking Class A division in the Annette is a senior at BishopThree area clubs failed to win Boston title tourney Cassidy High James Michael

and Cheryl grammar school Representatives in Three B~ackets students at Mulcahey Schoof in

Taunton Fairhaven and Holy Family FamilYhas been eliminated in The family resides at 85 Mershy

HIgh of New Bedford aiming the Lawrence Catholic tourney rill Avenue In Taunton and are for the Class C Tech crown both Southeastern Mass does not members of St Pauls Parish fInished wIth an over-all 16-2 have one club among the Tech

Wetterland Commentsmark The latter Is still smart- Class B participants but th~re ing from its cliff-hanging defeat will be five area combinations Wetterland was high in his at the hands of Xavier in the -includIng Fairhaven and Holy praise of his five foot 11 inch State Catholic tourney Bill Family-in the Class C play and guard who tips the scales at Walshs two-pointer from the three-including Nauset-in the 160 pounds ~ssesses good speed floor which many thought Class D Hub competition and is a key in the Corsairs fast

meant victory at Lawrence was The other Class C contestants break offense nu1llfied by a travelling viola- patterns when SMTI is wurkshy a rest he should be in top conshySault lllsed strictly with thetion which cost the loss ofthe are Case High of Swansea Nar- iilg too quickly and making dition for the 1968-69 campaignvarsity was gaining valuablebasket resulting in a one-~Jnt ry co-champions Oliver Ames Dlistakes Sault gaIned his court savvy1 f tb of North Easton runners-up in experience and developing rapshy

The SMTI mentor continued from Lanagan at Coyle wheretiOs~~ e Narragnnsett~a~ theHockomock circuit and Den- bUy whep a knee Injury slowed he iii the complete ball player hemiddotstarted in his juJ)ior and senshyDis-Yarmouth of Cape Cod see his progress midway through

Durfee of Fall RIver and ond pI fi ish in tho C the campaiiPt but Wetterland noting that he can shoot but is Jor lieasons and was a Vital co Bishop Stang mgh of North ace n er e ape most --content setting Up his in the Warriors successduring DartmQutb are the other two middotNausetwill be joined by Mar- has turned in some excellent efshy teammates for easy pblnts He Ioth years I J

way loop said despite the handicap Pat

Is a team player and always sacshy As ~ Coyle High fr~hmanarea Class A representatives inmiddot thas VIneyard and Norton mib forts in a most successful SMTI rifices himself to help the club Pat was a member XJtb~ yearshythe Tecb toutnament ~e Fall in the Class D bracket The season

Sault possesses a good atti shy lings h09P team and al~Q~ parti shyRiver Hilltoppers willbe out Islanders finished second to Naushy Defensively Sault is cnitshytude is a tough competitor and cipated in track By hihSOphoshyto make amends for their nose- set in the Cape amp Island league standIng Offensively Sault is one of the players Wetterland is more year Saultcopfjned his dive finish in the Bristol COUl)ty while Norton was second in the the teams playmaker ana quarshyeounting on 1to help SMTI gain athlettc talents to basketbjlll andloop whIle Stang ~ke Ho17 Tri~Valley Conference terback 8Dlall college recognition in the turned in a cODlJPenlla))le acshyfuture Teallll Player coun~ o~ himself

Ifere~s How They Did hi LiBogue Play Played for Lanagan Sault also represented stWetterland said his outstandshyThere is doubt about his the hardwood

he following are the league 21 Bishop Feehan 7_1 ing worth to the Corsairs comes no Pauls on in the eourage said the Corsairs skipshy Taunton CYO and in the annual from the fact that he can slowrecords of the 35 Southeastem Msgr Coyle 7-1 after painful knee Easter tournament He playeddown the offense and set up per even a

Mass teams Ta~ton 7-7 injury Sault continued to jpve four years of Litue JeagueM N B Vocational 6-8 his all and attended every pracshy Baseball and one season in theK of C Masons1 Fairhaven 14-0 25 DIman Vocational 5-9 tice The injury has slowed him Pony League prior to ~ntetmamp

Nauset 12-0 Msgr Prevost 5-9 visibly but after the season and Coyle Higa 3 New Bedford 15-1 27 SandwIch 4-8 To Cooperate4 Holy Family 13-1 28 Nantucket 3-9

NOTRE DAME (NC) - lfashyCase 13-1 29 Old Rochester 4-10

30 tlonal leadellS of the Scottish6 Oliver Ames 12-2 West~rt 3-11 Bite Masons and the Knights ~oll another7 Marthas Vineyard ~ 31 Barnstable 2-12

of Columbus anno~ced memshy8 Bishop Stang 10~ 32 Dighton-Rehoboth 1-13 strike on~rs of their organizations wU1Dartmouth 104 33 Bourne 0-14 work together on domestic andDennis-Yarmouth 10-4 Chatham 0-12 the enerlY international problems faciolaquoDurfee 10-1 North AUleJooro 1-14

the nation12 Norton 105 you get George A Newbury soveshy13 Attleboro 9-5 Minister Officiates reign grand commander 01 from14 Harwich 7-5

Scottish Rite Masons In theProvIncetown 7-5 a slice ofDn Cathclic Church northern jurisdiction of the US18 Seekonk 8-6 MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-A Lu- and John W McDevitt supremeSomerset 86

theran mInister officiated at the knight of the Knights of ColumshyFalmouth 8-6 marriage of his son in Holy Cross bus made the announcementMansfield 8-6 Catholic church here at a dinner here s~nsoredWareham 8-6

Married were James H Graf jointly by the Masonic Lodge 29 L th and the Knights of Columbus

a u eran and CalTon Ann council in South Bend Episcopalian Rite Gutwinski 25 a Catholic The ceremony was rformed - Both praised the work of Fa-MINNEAPOLIS (NC)- Archshy ther John A OBrien of the

bishop Leo Binz and Coadjutor Grapoundfs fltthell the Rev Paul L University of Notre Dame for Archbishop ~ PY1)1e of the Graf pastor of Holy Trinity r better understanding among the Cafllolic archdIoceses of St Paul theran church two groups Minneapolis were present in the Permission for the Rev Gmt Father Theodore M Hesshysan~lary of St Marks Episcoshy to officiate at his sonB wedding burgh CSC president of the pal cathedral here for the inshy was granted by theSacred Con- University of Notre Dame said stallation of Bishop Philip F gregation for the Joctrine of This nIght marks a great step McNarry as coadjutor bishop of the Faitlh inl lWme in answer to ll forward and reflects the new the Epi6copal diocese of Minneshy J)etition by Archbishop Leo BiDz ~enical spirit which is unishysota of~ ~~-M~eapotis iing ~ople long separated-

PAT SAULT

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bull THE ANCHOR Dayton University Thurs Feb 29 196a Brief Religious on Ecumenism

Selects Advisors SOUTH ORANGE (NC) meanitigful dialogue should not tended not to lead to compro- DAYTON (NC)-An ll-mem-

Named resident Some 1000 mms and Brothers be confused with monologueshy mise but to conyergence ber advisory board of six stushyservfng in tli~ Newark archdi~shy or confrontation He added We talk now of our common dents two faculty members andSANTA CLARA (NC)-The cese were briefed on the basic we must be willing to be pershy belilefs he said not to com- three representatives of theboard of trustees of the Univershy principles of ecumenism in a suaded-we need an open mind promise each others faith but in community has been establishedlllity of Santa Clara has named program sponsored by the Newshy to seek out the truth wherever the hope that at some point in for the Office of Human Relashylrather Thomas D Terry SJ ark Archdiocese Commission for it might be shy the future we will converge tions at the University oJ Dayshy35th president of the Jesuit unishy Ecumenical Affairs

Ifersity Father Terry who sucshy Discussing the difficulties of As an example he pointed to tornSpeakers at the session ineeeds Father Patrick Donohoe establishing Christian-Jewish the wide divergence of views The board under the direcshySeton Hall University includeSJ recently appointed Califorshy dialogue he said we Christians regarding (he Mass and the Eu- tion of Charles Hirt director ofDr Leonard Swidler of Templeaia provinCial af the Society of are responsible for 2000 years charist that existed between the Office of Human RelationsUniversity Philadelphia aridJIesus has been academic vic~ of anti-Semitism and now_ we Martin Luther and the Council will be responsible for estabshyFather Thomas M McFadden ofpresident af Loyola University must overcome our mutual disshy of Trent Then he cited the re- lishing policy making programthe Brooklyn dioceseLos Angeles for the last year trust before dialogue can be cent statement on the Eucharist recommendations helping to

lllI1d a half Previous to that Swidler said dialogue with fruitful issued by Lutherans and Catho- alleviate campus racial probshyIIlIather Terry was dean of the others must be preceded by an lics to show how much closer lems and drawing up proposall ltWllege of arts and sciences at examination of Catholic attishy Father McFadden said diashy the two bodies have come since for implementation Santa Clara tudes In addition he said a logue among Christians is inshy that time

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Page 6: 02.29.68

~--6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 291968

Women and the Postconciliar Church

Someone recently figured out that in the Catholic Ohurch today over fifty per c~t af its members are women These loyal followers of Christ are for the most part the victims of a subtle but very effective discrimination In theory of course the church grants equal rights for men and women In the Vatican Councils DOCUMENT ON THE CHURCH IN THE WORLD TODAY we read

With respect to the fundamental rights of the person every type of discrimination whether soshycial or cultural whether based on sex race color social condition language or religion is to be overshycome and eradicated as contrary to Gods intent

m theory the teaching is a fine piece af legislation In practice the question is simply ignored

Women may not be ordained Women are barred from officiating formally in the liturgy Their wice in church affairs is all but silenced A women is not allowed to serve Mass She may not functiol) as a lector If there are women in the parish choir-- they are more or less toleraJted only beshyeause there are not enough small boys or grown men in the parish available for the job

Father Johannes Neumann professor of Canon Law at the Universitr of Tubingen in Germany recently stated

A boy not even capable of fluent reading is adshymitted to the altar but an educated woman who could do a much better job is excluded as though only males were the children of God

The sam~ is true about parish choirs Women are easier to recruit more eager to sing and with few exceptions they

make a better noise than men Yet we still retain a cershytain nostalgia for the cult af the boy choir or the all Ilale choir as th~ summum bonum in litllrgical excellence

Ordination for women may well become one of the big issues in the c6ming years It may sound strange -to us--middot a woman functioning as a priest Yet however we may 0pshy

pose it we must admit that theologians have never put up a convincing case agdinst it It is also significantto note that the International Coniressof the Laimiddotty passed a resoshylution on the subject when it metmiddot in Rome last October

The principal objection to the ordination of women win not be so much theological as one of prejudice The tradition of the male priesthood is a long one and rooted deeply in the souls of Catholics Granted the priesthltgtltgtd is not on the immediatemiddot horizon for Catholic women However there are indications that the dimiddotaconate is certainly within their grasp Many European theologians argue that this Could

become a reality in two or three years This would mean that women could carry out such functions as preaching

distributing the Eucharist and burying the dead Already in certain circumstances women have been given permisshysionto distribute holy communion The Oblate Sisters of the Sacred Heart in Northern Alberta hav~ been allowed to do so since December 1966 when no priest is available The same is true in parts of Africa and South America

Truly these are excitipg times and exhilerating times All of us must be prepared fur more changes within the framework of the church Some we will welcome others will repell us The Churchs immediate task as always is to build up the people of God to meet the challenge of the day One positive way is to help in removing some of the anomalies that exist between laymen and laywomet

rhmiddotmiddotANCBOR e

OIIrll NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL IPVEI

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall Riv~

410 Highland Avenue

Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Ete Re~ Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P D~iscoll

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

the moolQlnq Rev John f Moore St Josephs Taunton

Why AILilfJg Hof Smmer t

Fe(QHf ~ litD Arson Murder DeWillEm] o$mtfive Contribution

Television commentators are warning the public Radio announcers m~e reaching the state of alarm The Federal

Government is preparing troops to meet the crisis Irrationshyill mdicals are whipping themselves into shape An are

waiting to face a promise of ~1 long hot Summer of civil tion to help the situation To

continuously hammer negativeriot and racial upheaval The and pessimistic fears into thetensions of this upheaval -is spirit of a nervous public only

already present Stokely Carshy creates a greater spirit of unrestmichael and Rap Brown have Suspicion and doubt are theachieved their goal They have sole frUit of such a policySl)wn lhe seeds of national fear America can certainly avoidFear of not fear of arson and such a diet fl~ar of murdEr are promised

American cities come the wann Added to this caldron of conshyweather This radic~ fonn of fusion we are now exposed to urban renewal will tear apart the rabble rousing antics of Dl ore cities of this country than llome so-called civil rights any fleet of cranes and bull shy leaders who dance to the tuneduzers of Hanoi What trueancl laSting

The public nE~WS media -is not _benefit can commentators leapmaking any jKlsitive contribu- from this barvest ~f hate

011I1 Vultures of Doom Benefit We do not deJIJr that there are

b1 gots and bulliies in American 8Ociety These people are 88

Wi~ong as their despoti~ llberal counterparts NEither group bas elt)ntriQuted much to the totality fJIf Americana

Most Americans want to do lonething to hE~lp their fellow eoilDtrymen wh) are long-sufshyfeling from the efforts of racial pr~judice They want to secure th4~ equal rights and opportunishyties of their less fortunate countrymen Thill they should do this theymiddot must achieve But no in fear bloodshed and riot

We must face the realities of thE racial issue ill truth and sinshyceIHy Most of tlS have become distant and impe~vious to the

trieil and laments of the preaecl minority Some have intombed themselves in an urban isc)lati~ others have fled to the camoushyflage of suburbia The majoriv just do DOtwan~ to become IDshyWOlved

Yet we mustbull

The I~rice for o~r lack of eonshylaquo7~ mIght be rumed ~erican Clties and dead AmerIcan dti shyzens We WIll we learn that only the vultures of dQom benefit

from ~e carnage of middotour dty streets

Now is the time for positive actio~ now is the time for re- sponsIble leadershIp

The question-Will either be forth coming

Change of Laws On Abortion Div$ive

OTTAWA (NC)-A ffigni ficant relaxation of Canada~ abortion laws could result Em a serious division betweem Catholic and non-Catholic hOampa pitals the Catholic Hospital AIP sociation of Canada told a Ie islative committee

In a brief to the Standin(g Committee on Health and Wellshyfare the association also warneclt that the feared division betweeili the hospitals could spill over into Canadian society at large

Canadas Parliament is now considering a bill to broaden the grounds for abortion which ill part of a general revision of tile nations criminal code Introshyduction of the abortion measure in the middle of a parlimentary probe of the question has -

ready driven a wedge between the government and the Churda in Canada

Feb 27 Meeting The nations bishops cancene4

a scheduled appearance befoN the Health and Welfare Comshymittee and instead issued a sharp pastoral letter opposing the abortion changes Later the] agreed to appear at a hearing Feb 27

The Hospital Association briei warned that refusal by Catholie hospi tals to perform abortiON may result in the other hospishy

tals being largely devoted talgt what is frankly regarded by doctors as a distasteful kind ClI2 work with less time and facili shyties for the more satisfying laquol life-giving aspect of hospitall work

The Catholic Hospital Ass~

tion represents 300 institutionB which provide 35 per cent CIIf

Canadas hospital services This kind of division d

labor with the consenting hosshypitals getting all the abortion work and the dissenting hospishytals getting nothing but satisshyfying work would quite likelv lead to an ever-deepening rift between the two groups of hOampa pitals extending to the commushynities they jointly serve the brief warned

Increase Dissension In an obvious reference to tJw

nations sensitive relations beshytween French-speaking - and largely Catholic-and Englishshyspeaking-largely Protestant-shyCanadians the association a1s noted

This does not seem to be Eiii opportune time to introduce anshyother cause of deep dissension by moving rapidly towards legalizing a practice which Q

large section of Canadian s0cishyety-perhaps a majQrity-abshyhors as strictly immoral

Archbishop lakoyos At Detroit Meeting

DETROIT (He) - ArchbiAshyorgt lakovos one of the bull presidents of the World COund of Churches participated bull _ interfaith meeting while helNi

on a four day Yisit The Greek prelate W8$

eompanied by 10 OrthodOE bishops and members of thcI archdiocesan council composed of clergy andmiddot laymen from parts of the country Thismiddot couashycil top eccesiastical body air Greek Orthodox church met here for two days

While here Archbishop lakOoo vos met with Roman CathoHc Archbishop John F Deardon at Detroit Episcopal Bishop Richshy

ard Emrich of Michigan aDd Bishop Archie Crowley preslo dent of the metropolitan J)e troit Council of Churches ~

meeting took place follo~ bull Vespers service at the Assumpo tion Greek Orthodox churcIL

f I

PAUL BARTKIEWICZ KATHERINE BOLINGER M~CHAB CORNElL SUSAN FAOiEUi STAN f~ HOLY fAMILY DOMSNllAJt

THE

ANCHOR

SALUTES

n)$

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~~~II1~~~

JANET LAFOND MICHAEL LOWNEY JWI POISSON ST JOSEPH PREP COYlpound PREVOST

Catholics to Pray For Assembly

STOCKHOLM (NC)-A prayer lor the fourth general assembly elf the World Council of Churches (WCC) to be said at Masses in all Catholic churches and chapels this Spring has been eomposed by the ecumenical commission of the diocese of Stockholm at the request ~ Bishop John E Taylor OMI

It will be distributed together with the bishops pastoral letter for Lent to all the parishes of the diocese The WCC assembly will be held at Uppsala Sweden m July

The prayer is an appeal whether his project can For all those who noW are a practical reality

Ir~paring the general assemblY He de~ribedl the proposed of the World Council of institute as an educational proshy

tliurches in dppsala and now gram aimed primarily at the avshy are pa~nfcil~y slJffering from the erage mllfi ~d ~he Inde~Ptivi

1 WsunitymiddotofChrisUans legedio stimulate creative middotJ-h t 11middot b h h f thinking and acting both for

-1 a JI mem er c urc es 0 I J cooperat - ilie WCC lfiarptepare this gen- middoty~~nalilmiddot ma~ ~wtIi aridfor -~ can ~ii 1

eralllssemqIjr in a willingness the commol1 goodmiddot Fattier RIvers a member of middotto coop~rate ~ arid in an honest ~taina ~e~ormed by first tatemiddot the Cii~iimati -archdiocesa~li shy

ielirch fori the Will of God artlsts WIll be at middotthe heart of thmiddotinstitntes actiVity with the ~qat they Ul oen mmds may pUlipose of stllnuliltingmiddotpro-middot receIve ~h~ 1~splratlons of the

HOly SPUIt and follow them without fear

That we middotmiddotall by prayer and penance may participate in the preparations of this general asshysembly conscious of being linked by the same Baptism

That even we Catholics may laquorow in our understanding of the separated brethren that we together with them may become llWare of the throes of disunity and be strengthened in our will to work in a practical Wlq _

~

Proposes Institute of Little Imagination Would Benefit Services -

CINCINNATI (NC) Father Clarence Josepb Rivers who has won an international repushytation for his fresh approach to liturgical music said he hopes to spur creative thinking among millons througb a National 10shysUtute of Ritual and Drama

Recently returned from gradshyuate studies in liturgy at the C81tholic University of Paris Father Rivers has launched a feasibility study to determine within the next few months

become

found reflection upon tliatexshyperience is fto be stimulated and directed by especially trained educator - philosophersl he added

Closed Setting He said he envisions touring

companies as part of the overall plan but the usual institute program will ~e place in a closed setting he said makshying it something like a secular retreat

Another lISgeCt of the insti shytute Father Rivers said will be ita concern with adaptinl the

skills and techniques and ereashytivity of the performing arts to the needs of various kinds of ritual---secular as well as reli shygious

Asked abolilt secular rituals Father Rivers spoke of flagshyraisings Fourth oj July celebrashytions and cornerstone layings He sahll The existing secular rituals suffer from the same deshyfeds all the religious ones and need just as urgently the touch of artistic imagination and skills

In~ure Ref1Ie~t~n Father Rivers said the insti shy

tue s~ould be broadly humanishyt~ria~ not SplJ1cifically Je~-glO~S provIdmg a~ area 10

WhICh Jile()ple of yarlOus beliefs

llurgical commission saidmiddot the

PfJ~fes~or A~pointed -~e~I1i ofL~w School

PITTSBURGH (NC)-Professhysor Louis L Manderino has been appointed dean of Duqueme Universitys Law School here Father Henry J McAnulty C5 Sp university presidgtent 80shynounced lIhe appointment is effective immediately

Prof ManderinO a graduate of Harvard University Law School in 1954 has been -a memshyber ofmiddot the Duquesne Law Scbool faculty since 195amp

ROWD GAMACHE SHlRtlM JANICK MAUREEN KENNEY $1 ANTHORY MOUNT ST MAIf CASSIDY

gtpi81F Iilt ilt

JACQUEUNE ROBOI JAHU~E ROBERTSHAW PETERlYM WOJTUSZEWSII JpoundSlJS IlARY AampADEIft SHA-FAU RIVER SHA- FAIRHAVEN

Ritual Drama

proposed mstitote~ program would go much further than those of existing professional or amateur acting companies beshycause it will not only provide the experience which is to be the basis of reflection but it also will insure as far as it is hmnanly possible the reflecshytion the work of the institute is only half done when the cur lain falls

It will difiler from the amashyteur companies and certain

_Moral Re-armament programs he continued esp~ciilly in terms Of artistic standards I dont believe lh2 institute can function effectively without achieving tlte highest possibIe success in artistic standards tehurch-goers of an denomshy

inati9fls he added generaUy

recognize that their Sunday and Sabbath services could benefit from ir little imaginatioZl once in it vyhilli r-----------shybull JEREMIAH COHOLANmiddot

PlUMBING 6- HEATING ~ntretors since ltH3

WYmal3-0911 699 Bellville Avenue New Bedford

State to Deny Aid To Large Families

LUCKNOW (NC)-The Uttar Pradesh state government here in India has decided to stop an govert1Illent concessions to famshyilies which have an additional child aiter the third one

The decision was taken in view of iii virtUal douampling of the states populatian--from 4a million in 19at to ga millionmiddot this year

The concessions to be withshydrawn presumably wiU include free treatment in governmmt hospila1s and allotment ~ waste lands

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THE ANCHORpiocese ~f Foil River---Thurs Feb 29 1968

European Tour Is Unlikely With New Travel Rules

By Mary Tinley Daly

Of all the role-playing the Head of the House and I have engaged in through the years the most recent ~ th8lt of- would-be European travellers This the year 1968 -rhe Year of the Monkey was to have seen us embark for foreign shores Ireland homeland of our forebears (would have been) mighty

helpful tooEngland a re-vimiddotsit for the Ginny our wardrobe consult shyHead of the House France

ant has been supervising theGermany and of course the clothing weve bought for theEternal City Spain and Greece past six months with an eye toperhaps if our easy packability convenientfeet and our washability and a mix-andshymoney held out match assortment o~ accessoriesAnd now this-shy for efficient travel Based on ~ h e proposed her own European experience of ~ax bi te on a couple of years ago GinnyiBternashy assures us such selection willU 0 n a I travel provide a minimum for totingSeems as though a maximum amount of space forweve been taxshy the pick-ups wed inevitablybitt e n pretty acquire on our journeybadly right here

the as ~truggle Now it seems theIn USA we bringshyonce more with IRS Form 1040 backs are down to next-toshy

Now some more of our $$$ to nothing A Iso day-by-day spending at this stage of the EX-CHAMP PREACHES LOVE Archie Moore formerhelp close that $21 billion travel

lap wilth a tax on American legislation seems based on an World light-heavy-weight champ who won a Freedoms intricate system full of loopshyspending outside _this hemi- Foundation award Feb 22 for conspicuous community sershyboles requiring an estimate ofaphere I voice in the civil rights field plays happily at home withtax liability on departu~e theWell its a wait-and-see propshy

h~8 own children Working with boys in underprivilegedmaking of a deposit and anotherOsition an aIr-dresSed-up-andshyreport pluspay-up on retUrn to areas Archie saymiddots he teachesthe lads to be constructiveIlO-Pla~eto-go feeling for us

lIS it is for many other armchair this country not destructive tao build not tear- down NC Photo travellers What we have not doncent yet-

Doml Homework and wont do unless the grand -----~

Oh weve been doing our bomework all right

Weve made lists of places we ~fpound~~~~~I~R~PMAR9J~p~1want to see in each country drivers license picture was badThe house is filled with travel folders travel magazines weve enough NEW SPRING COLORS become telephone pals with Bteamship and airline salesmen 113-Year-Old Aca~emy s much as I love color (anyshy April scene navy took a backoUr local library checks out

one who has ever visited my seat in the early sixties whenhooks in our name for all those Plans 69 Closing home or seen nile wearing the Jackie Kennedy made pink afaraway places with their glam- ROCHESTER (NC) ~ The m~ny bright shades that I adore must for all those who like toeur descriptions 113-year-old ~cademy Of the wnI agree with this) t must adshy feel that they are wearingWe have studied money rates Sacred Heart here will disconshy mi t this is going to be ~ grey whats in This season nothotel and transportation costs tinue operation after June 1969 flannel and navy Spring Oh only has navy returned in theinvestigated picking up a Officials announced reasonsshy thEre will be shades of shocking world of suits and daytime coatsVolkswagen Weve brushed up for closing were the mounting pirk high intensity yellow and it has become sophistic~tedon French going along with cost of education the inadeshy poison green upon the scene but enough to waltz into eveningThomas Hood quancy of present bUildings mostly in ac Jacques Tiffeau of TiffeauNever go to France unless the outlay needed to build and c e s S 0 r ies or and Busch has designed an ultray()U know the lingo If you do

maintain a school of the future playclothes For navy evening time dress that islike me you will repent by and the number of other cathoshy t hat special sleeveless and V-necked and ofjingo lic high schools in the area coat or that course wide belted Worn withWeve even learned basics in where openings are avlilable pearls it takes on all the dyshy0Italian and German such as be~utiful spring

namic quaiities that black hasshyThe academy is conducted byhow to order in restaurants For suB that could always had Because they lookthe Head of the House this the Religous of the Sacred tra vel as well so well with navy and grey themeans how to order pigs Heart of Jesus alolg the streets return of pearls is whats newknuckles sauerkraut UND beer of Ne~ York on the jewelry front for SpringJohnny has patiently demonshy Imiddot kO or the avenues and Summer The thirties influshyAutnoUize Pa Istan of Washingtonstrated perhaps for the hunshyence of the Bonnie and Clydedredth time just how to operate middot Ch the more con-LIturgy anges serrative colors are the stars flicker has brought back thehis camera which he will let us

take along LYALLPUR (NC)-Melbers Cne of the most elegant and long swinging chains of beads -of all Pakistans diocesan lilur- beautifully tailo1led suitsmiddot that I and nothing swings better than

Family Advisors gical commissions met here un- have viewed thus far in the long ropes of pearls-especially Markie who did her touring der the direction of Archbishop sealch for Spring clothes was a against navy or grey

on a budget and had a whee of Joseph M Cordeiro of Karachi maltilificent grey one by Gino a time so doing introduced us to discuss propolled liturgical Paoli Superbly tailored in a to her bi-ble Arthur From- changes in this country ricl knit material the smart mers invaluable Europe on Approved for experimental desi go was set off hy fresh $5 a Day with its practical use were two new baptismal touches of white guidelines based on first-hand rites in the Urdu limguage and Grey has always ~n a color dramaticallyexperience For instance who- a revised Urdu funeral rite thai I avoided like the plague ever would have thought of Authorized for publication was (ev~r since an experience with different8eeking inexpensive spotlessly the Punjabi version of the Can- a grey dress in eighth grade dean lodging in Italian con on of the Mass as well as an that made me look like an un vents Author Fro~mer gives Urdu edition 01- the Roman heaithy Corpse-of course that Sensational tastingnames addresses and prices 1ft missaL Was before eigh1lligirlS wore Hollywood Diet Breadduded also are Readers Sug Jilake-up)and I havent bought made from aestions helpful tips for vari- an item of grey 81)parel in years

places Youth in World Theme and years OIlS vegetable Boursl Markies own addenda will- Grey always seemed to beOfSpanish ~ial Work Your choice of color that looked good on someshy

vALLADoLJD (NC) ~ Offishy LIGHT or DARKCollege to ~ Admit Me cials of Spains ~nual Social redleads quite jiunior league one else-it was wonderful em

HollywoodIWeek have aimounced that r St Scholastica here in Minshy smad on white-skinned hrushy

DULUTH (NC)-The College on blondes and even looked Youth in the World will be Bakedby

the theme of the 17th week yournesota announced it will admit nett~s but since 1 failed to fan male students in 1969 ending planned for March 25-31 in this into any of these categories I Sunbeam

city56 years as a liberal arts colshy felt it was not for me This seashy Ballerlege exclusively for women Manuel Capelo Martinez Secshy son however the richness and Sister Mary Richard Boo colshy retary gener~l of the week said smaltnes of the grey shade deshylege president said the change We hope that the quiet atmoshy Signl may force IDe to change was made as a response to sphere of social week discussions my opinion - aidoo by some the needs of our time The basic will enable us to make some colorful makeup of course curriculum will remain the clear decisions about the many Navy RelmIlJIls IIame she said The college is problems of youth decisions Navy is the second color that eonducted by the Benedictme madein the light of the Churchs has returned to importance fornuns aocial teacJiingsmiddot Sprilig Always a must on Ule

Schools 10 Offer Sex Education

ROCHESTER (NC)-8ex edshyncathm will be integrated in tbe curriculum of 13 parochial schools of the Rochester diocese this Spring on an experimental basis

Father Daniel Brent assocllm d i 0 c e san superintendent at schools said the sex educatioD program will eventually be in effect throughout the 102 eleshymentary schools in the diocese

We are trying to create an attitude that sex is part of life and not a dark dirty secretmiddot Father Brent said

The classroom discussions will emphasize 1he family orientashytion of sex and parents will be asked to review topicswitln children before they are preshysented in the classroom hra added

Father Brent said the pro- gram ~lated to begin about April I will aim at developing respect for the opposite sex and the serious Qlbligations that go along with sex He emphasized the program will not constitute a separate course of study but will be integrated with other subjects and with sp07lJtanooUII questions as they arise

US Court to Hear Textbook ChaUenge

WASHINGTON (NC) - DIe U S Supreme Court has agreed to examine the constitutiorlality of a 1965 New York State law allowing the state to loan textshybooks to children in churchshyrelated schools

The law is being challenged by several local public school boardsln the state on the grounds that it violates the U So Constitutions First Amendment prohibition against establishshyment of religion

The New York law which was passedin 1965 and became effective in September 1966 aishylows the state to punhase textshyhooks and loan them to children in private schools - inclUding those operated by churches--iD graqes 7 through 12

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

9 Money-Eating House Puts Garde1n Needs in Shadle

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick Oh~ ~ Iye~rIlfor the return of Spring and an opporshy

innity to gel out of this D1Ollampter we can a house I cra1ll IOOr house a monster because it seems that it has an inshy8Qtiable appetite for money We recently fiIrlished OUlr second floor (whiClh took a year of

its about 6 above outside andplanning six months of on with the able assistance of a Mld off oonstruotion and 1mshy hardy Winter wind the weather believable sums of money) is urging us all to stay inside J(ow we must have 11 basement Its a perfect day to keep your IIOOm which ea1ls for more mess oven going and your kitchen a money filled with delectable smells

Now there are individuals rve been baking beans since have the desire and the early mom a container of

capacity to be handymen and brown bread is steaibing in a Cbere are those of us who deshy huge kettle OIl the top oJ1 themiddot pend on others to do their work jets and I just set a cinnamonshyI fall into the latter category filled Indian pudding into the -ad I am paying for it I am 80 oven along with the beans The tired of furring ceiling tile aromas are beginning to mingle Dghting fixtures floor tile sidshy and all seems right with the tog etc that I am half hoping world Chat everything comes to a Smalil Dinners lItandstill What appears to be

0

These dre2l1Y months of low the simplest job turns out to be temperatures and stay-homeiIbe most complicated involved days are the perfect time to eIll shyIlleSS imagin91ble tertain your friends X love

Plano Moving nothing more than planning a Take our piano Two years small dinner party for a few

ago we bought an old upright friends and look forward to a 110 that the children could bave couple of days of cooking and their piano lessons in the comshy planning The dinner menu fort of their own home without should be made out at least a baving to nui to my mothers week ahead of time (with pershyevery night to practice The haps a few alternatives in case piano is 11 five toot upright items you plan to serve are not JI~ch cost us 5 available at this moment in thia

When the movelll igtrolliht it area The last time I made a to the ~o~ they ~ere very dinner menu I planned to start careful not 10 hurt tb~ piano off with prosciutto and melon but they managea to sandwich (a delightful combination of Cbe back door scrape half the flavors) only to find out that all paper i~ the hallway and there wasnt a fresh melon avaDshydent the mo1ding wherever theJ able for 10Ve or mOll1ey anyshylraveled where in 1be city I1 you have

Now tbat we are planninl your menu made out befOIle yoa the basement we decided go grocery obopping you avoid put the pianio there where It the disheartening happening of would not be an eyesore and DI7 starting to make a dish only to wife and I would not have find you dont have all tllle ilnshylisten to our fledglings takinC middotgredienta tring into the musical world Desserts tbat rm going to

Simpler said than done One serve to guests are more ofteD mover on seeing the size of the than not the kind Ulat can be piano and the size of our bulkshy made the evening or day before bead said I hOpe you wont be and then thats one less item I offended if I tell you the truth -have to think about the cIay I would advise you to take an that Im going to entertain axe and break it up and bU7 Many desserts lend themselves yourself a new piano He didnt to early preparation and it gives marge for this advice but me a feeling of security to know neither did he move the piano I have one or two completed Now all we have to do is remove desserts already in my freezer n of the stairs in the bulkhead or relrigerator as the busy da~middot

ItO that the movers can drop of preparation begins the piano into the cellar enshy A timetable of projects for kance a job which will cost the day of y~ur ~inner party is ftnimagined amounts of money a great help and I even time I am half tempted to buy that eacb item on the menu SlO thatbullbull I know just when a certain dish

And so it goes Not so in the has to go into the oven AJlL prden where everything iii tbis pre-party preparation leaves lItraightforward and results are the evening free to enjoy yourather immediate Marilyn keeps guests and your own cookingmsisting that the day will come Of course in jolly old New Engshywhen we wont have to bleed bull land a blizzaro can mmr yoUII our bank account to feed our party plans but then your PurishyInsatiable monster but I dont tan adaptability can come to the believe it In the meantime I fore and you can either pack ~ll continue to budget infinishy everything in your Jlreezer for tesimal sums for the garden anotber evening or you and _ile the house is reconstructed your spouse can sit down to a

IN THE KITCHEN sumptuous repast Last weljlk because it was CorrectiD

Rbool vacation week we took Note In a S)taghett1l AUce tile children to the Science Mushy

recipe in the February l ADehorIIeWI1 in Boston As we wanshy two eaD5 l)f toaiato paste wendered among the wonders at

omittedman and his universe I paused Jl()POVEIRSbull moment in front of a case that

displayed a cut-away section of This is an easy but ~al

the earth during the Winter seashy looking quick-bread Contrary lIOn Chipmunk and fieldmouse to most peoples idea popoven IleBtled warmly in their cozy are espeCially easy to make anderground castles waiting for always bake mine in a very iUIe rigors of a blustery Winter badly darkened muffill1 pan to pass and I must admit that at perhaps this is the secret oil mtI Ibat instant I was a bit envious success of Mr Mouse and Mrs Chipshy 1 cup flour munk who could retire from the teaspoon salt hzen world with all its cares 3 eggs (beaten)

Most of us cant crawl into a 1 cup milk bole and hibernate when the 1 Tablespoon melted butter aorth winds blow but we caD 1) Melt the butter ancll set ~nd more time enjoying tile aside and put the greased mufshy

pleasures of our warm (on top fin pans in the oven ~ tAe ground) homeamp ~ a) MUt toueUler a1J1 the __

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968

Voters Approve Open Housing

FLINT (NC) - Flints voters have become the first in the nation to approve an open houSoo ing ordinance in a public refershyendum

The measure pushed strongly by Negro Mayor Floyd McCree and the local Council of Churches was passed by a 43-vote margin The unofficial tally was 20172 to 20129

The Flint City Council passed an open housing ordinance in 1967 but its opponents led by John Birch Society section leadshyer Gerald Spencer had no trouble in gathering 5000 signashytures on a petition to place the

issue before the voters The religious support of the

ordinance was organized by the local Council of Churches with which Catholic parishes coopshyerated Several sponsored pubshylic debates on the measure and more expressed support for it in parish bulletins

Recommends Elimnnating First Four Grades

SPOKANE (NC) - A special study committee here in theBans Sales State of Washington has recomshymended the gradual phasing outSpanish Tov~i~t Convention Forbids of the first four grades in some

diocesan schools and a totalSelling Churchs Artistic Treasures emphasis upward in religious

SEVILLE (NC)- Andalusia For some proof that their education Provincial Tourist Convention fear is valid came from a decishy The committee comp~sed of in a resolution announced at the SiOD to sell donations decorating eight diocesan educators and close of its meeting here has Zaragozas shrine to the Virgin headed by Father Michael emphasized that artistic treas- of Pilar Accumulating for ONeill diocesan superintendent urea- decorating the nations nearly 100 years many of the at education made its recomshychurches are the property of the gifts of the faithful are both mendations to Bishop Bernan people and maT not be sold by artistic and financial treasures J Topel of Spokane after study-Church officials without the ap- Proceeds from the sale of the ing education in the diocese proval of local civil authorities Pilar treasures will go to wbat since August 1967

Admitting that the cburches Zaragozas Archbishop Pedro Elimination of grades one are permanent depositories of Cantero Cuadrado described as through four would allow the nations art the resolution urgent social necessities schools to strengthen grades was aimed at Spanish churchshy five through eight - middle men who have proposed selling school-and offer increased edshyart treasures to finance social CRS Sends Penicillin ucational benefits to a greater action projects number of students at the sameFor Vietnam Casualties or less cost the committees IeshyThe combination of increased NEW YORK (NC) - Within port saidemph~sis on social justice and hours after being inforined thatchurch renovation resulting the Saigon airport was againfrom the liturgy decree of the in operation the U S CatholicSecond Vatican Council has led Offering YouRelief Services (CRS) shippedmany Spaniards to fear that the out by aid 100000 doses of fast shychurches would be denuded of 3 Savings P~ansaction penicillin for civllian casshyancient treasures ualties in Vietnam Home Financing

The penicillin is an urgent need in Vietnam and will be WARJMI~Plan Byzantine Rite used for the civllian casualties

Installation March 5 by the four Sisters who are on co-oprD4liVEthe CRS medical teams in thatPITTSBURGH (NC)-Bishop country Fulther shipments willStephen J Kocisko will be honshy BANKfollowored at a banquet here followshy 281 Main St Wareham Ma

ing his March 5 installation as The peniciUin was given to Telephone 295-2400Bishop of the Byzantine-rite dishy the CRS by the Catholic Medshy

BaDk-8U lIerfIa IftfIIMI ocese of Pittsburg ical Mission Boarcll

Speakers will include Archshybishop Luigi Raimondi Aposshytolic Delegate in the United States wbo will officiate at the

installation John Cardinal Krol of Philadelphia Bishop John J Wright of Pittsburgh and Msgr Edward V Rosack who has been apostolic ildmmistrator of the Byzantine-rite diocese of PitsQurgh

Bishop Kocisko succeedsArchshybishop Nicholas T Elko who reshyeigned as ordinary of the Pittsshyburgh diocese ill1 lOecember Bishop Kocisko has been head of the Byzantine diocese of Passhysillc and will continue as its administrator IIlDti a new bishshyop js named

maining ingredients anell then MOTHER PARKERSlldd the cooled butter 3) Beat the batter until it hl OLD FASHIONEDcompletely smooth 4) Fill the well-buttered pans

full Place in a 450middot degree DOUGHNUTS oven for 15 minutes Reduce heat to 350middot and continue bakshy Baked by your Sunbeam Baker ing 20 to 25 minutes

AWARD WINNERS Award winners at a Winter Carshynival sponsored by the Fall River area CYO are left Janice Feno Somerset High School named Miss Personality and right Carol Silvia Durfee High School carnival queen Holding trophies is Richard Lown Durfee High School carshynival co-chairman

AFamily Favorite

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THE ANCHOKshy10 Thurs Feb 29 1968

Urge Cergymen Attend Meltefring On Scfielrnce

WASHINGTON (NC)shyCatholic clergy throughout the country are being urged to attend the second annual conference on science for cler- gymem at the Oak Ridge (Tenn) Associated Universities Aug 5-16 in cooperation with Oak Ridge National Laboratory

The conference entitled The Impact of Science on Society is sponsored by the National Science Foundation and the Alshyfred P Sloan Foundation Purshypose of the conference is to proshyvide clergymen of all faiths with an understanding of the nature scope effects and trends

of contemporary science - parshyticularly nuclear science

Dr W W Grigorieff chairshyman of the conference said the conference series originated in the recognition that most clershygymen actively engaged in pas torat work have little training in and understanding of sci shyence but are confrOnted almost

daily with problems and deci aions arising from its implicashytions

Dr Grigorieff s~icj in an inter- view with NC Nevvs Service that experience gained through the 1967 conference indicated to the conference advisory comshymittee that religious leaders of all f~i ths not only need to be conversallt with the content and llOcial dynamics of science but also are extremely eager to take advantage of the opportunity to become more acquainted with modern science

The conference director stated that this year the conference will be open to some 90 parshyticipants-three times as many IllS attended the 1967 conference

He pointed out that Roman Catholic applications for last years conference were not nushymerous and said that those who had applied were for the most part overqualified - that is they possessed professional qualifications and advanced training in science The confershyence he emphasized is not pri shymarily for such specialists

Practicing Cnergy Dr Grigorieff stated that an

announcement has been sent to bishops of anlimber of dioceses

throughout -the country in air eHort to stimulate iriterest in the aims of the conference He added that an effort is also being made to contact diocesan priests senates

He explained that conference participants will be selected on a nationwide basis from appli shy

cants representing various reli shygious )lodies arid emphasized that the majority are expected to be praCticing clergy-those actively engaged in the minis- try rather than in teaching reshysearch etc

He said that a limited number of seminary educators deans heads of clergy-in-service and religious editorf will be acshycepted as observers

Speakers will include Dr William G Pollard executive director of Oak Ridge Associshyated Universities who is also an Episcopal priest associated with St Stephens Church Oak Ridge and the author of several books and Alvin M Weinberg director of Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Askeel to Withdraw MILWAUKEE (NC) - The

Milwaukee priests senate has passed a resolution urging 11 priests of the archdiocese to work for a chalige in tlie policy of clubs which are discriminashytory or tG withdlW as members

INTERFAITH SERVICE Bishop Fulton J Sheen center of Rochester NY at shywnded an interfaith service at Mount Neboh Congregation in Manhattan With- the Bishshyop are the Rev Philip Hiat right rahbi of the congregation and Cantor Albert l- Stur- mer holding chalice wh() prepared the ceremony at which Bishop Sheen received aspeshycial Brotherhood Award SC Photo

Archdiocese- to IBatmiddottle

Race Prejudice -

BusmlrAeSS Archbishop Says CINCINNATI (NC) - Ar(h-

bishop KarlJ A1t~r launched Project Commitment here with an appeal to the Christian comshymunity to appreciate the size and urgency of the problems of race relations and an insistence that the finding of Solutions is everybodys business

Speaking at a Mass in 1l Saints church the Cincinmtti archbishop emphasized not on ly right attitudes among Catholic people but also united comshymunity-wide organization and effort are necessary 10 me~t the problem

He said government pm-middot grams heretofore have been t(o late and too little and adVHshycated something like the Mal shyshall Plan which at the end HI the Second World War rescued Europe from misery and dEshy

spair -The Mass marked the openshy

ing of the projects pilot prll- gram which will continue wittl

seven workshops at Moeller HighSchool on specific aspects of- racial prejudice and lliscrim- ination Endorsed by the Archdiocesan

Pastoral Council and sponsored by the Catholic Commission 011

Human Relations Project Com mitment is described as a promiddot gram ~o help Catholic lay lead ers recognize their responsibii ities and prepare for theiJ proper roles in t~e field of inmiddotmiddot terracial justice

Seven VVeeks Program Dayton will be the second

area in which Project Commitshyment will be launthed The date has been set tentatively for April 9and the program will continue for seven weeks

Archbishop Alter said experishyence gained in the pilot pro-

Forty Hours Format ST LOUIS (Nc)-The St Louis

archdiocese has dropped its reshyquirement that Forty Hours deshyvotion must be held annually in each parish Pastoral guideshy

lines from the Archdiocesan Liturgical Commission noted that parishes were free and encouraged to continue Forty Hours and offered possible new formats which are based on Scripture readings and themes of Eucharist priesthood and church

gram would be used in organizshying similar efforts in the other deaneries

St Francis de Sales deanery in t~s area was chosen as the first for the experiment beshycause its Catholic population represents a cross-section of the entire community and if a-- project succeeds here it may well succeed anywhere else the archbishop said

It has been estimated that more than 500 persons from 31 of the deanerys 34 parishes would tale part in the project

The archbishop detailed the reason why the whole archdioshy

cese was to be involved when the problems are so diverse in the various regions of the 19 counties and When iincertain areas there is no racial conflict because of a totally homogeshyneous population

National Prohlem

The answer is that the prob- lem of harmonious race relashyJions is not a local problem but a national problem involving all communities everywhere and affccting all our public relashytions political economic and social There may not be racial conflict but there can be race prejudice he said

The problem has moreover definite religious and moral asshypects he said and there are questions of social justice and social charity which concern every Christian and for which

Pope Honors Gellman Protest(OInlt Leader

BONN (NC) -Pope Paul VI has awarded the Great Cross of the Order of St Sylvester to Dr Reinhold von ThaddenshyTrieglaff at German Protestant leader

Dr Von Thadden-Trieglaff is the founder and honorary presshyident of the Kirchentag the anshynual German Protestnt convenshytion -

In the document accompanyshying the award the Pope thanked Dr Von Thadden-Trieglaff for his work on behalf of ecumtmshyism and asked him to continue working in this spirit of recon-

ciliation and brotherhood Bishop Adolf Bolte of Fulda

presented the award

he will find the appropriate anshywer in the teachings of the Gospel

All our Catholic people he said are charged with the reshysponsibility of supporting adeshyquate remedial legislation and of creating social institutions which will eliminate discrimishynation and alleviate the burdens of sickness poverty and )gnoshyrance No one can stand aloof from a program of social bettershyment

Dutch Bishops Take Poll of Priests

moving toward onenessTHE HAGUE (NC) -- The cardinal saidDutch bishops in an effort to

measure the effectiveness and opinions of the nations priests Priest on Facultyhave distributed a list of 39 questions to all priests deacons LANCASTER (NC) - Fathell and subdeacons in the country William J Walsh SJ is the Several questhms deal with first Catholic priest to be apshypriestly celibacy pointed a fullitime member oil

the LancaSter Theological SemishyD~awnupto determine what nary conducted by the Unitecllp~iests think of the priesthood Church of Christ here Fathetandto measure the clergys acshyWalsh assistant theology proshyceptance of the celibacy Iegulashy

- essor at the Jesuit notiviatetion the questionnaire will be

CardinalCites Church Role InSlaquosety --CHICAGO (NC) - Jobm

Cardinal Cody asserted heq that the Church must involVil) fultlelf in social problems 00 be true to its fundamentetl works

The cardinal spoke at a sefib vice in the First Presbyteri~ church making its lOOth anm versary celebration

Those who contest involve-shyment by the Chruch in prolraquo lems of society Cardinal Co~

said take an indefensible stand He said personal sanctity whiclli

is conceded to be the ChurchD rightful concern cannot bd sepilrated from social responsi shybility

If the Church has nothing 00 say to us regarding our obligashytions to our fellow man it kJ sadly neglecting our personall holiness Cardinal Cody said

We sin by Injustice We sm by lack of charity We are sancshytified by giving all men thellf due he added

Move Toward Unity Cardinal Cody did not specishy

fically mention race relationll but he said society mistrea~

certain groups or individuals1ll

He said if church members aNI in any way party to this evill the Church must become i~

volved The cardinal said COIb-

cern for personal holiness forcelll the Chuxch into action

Let the Church in such cil shycumstances stand idly by and Q will lose all reason for exisshytence he declared

Cardinal Cody was introduceell to the congregation by the Rev Harold Blake Walker pastor Cltf the church When asked ahow his appearance in a Protestanll church following the service the cardinal said not long age it would have been unthinkshyable He added that the Holy Spirit is moving strongly anell speedily

We are not yet perfectly one as Christ prayed but we arll

th~

evaluated by the Pastoral Insti shytute of the Catholic Churchin the Netherlands and the Insti shytute for Applied Sociology of the Catholic Universiiy of Nijmegen

Introducing the questions the bishops commented that in a period of Church renewal it is unavoidable that priests be conshyfronted with serious problems They then recommend that the priests answer the questions carefully keeping in mind the teachings of the Church and the roie of the Church in modern society

Wernersville Pa will take ihe post of assistant church history professor at the 143~year-olcll

Protestant seminary on July L

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Black Power MINNEAPOLIS (NC) - nle

only un-Christian thing about power is the abuse of power Father James E Groppj Milshywaukees militant civil rights leader told a Lutheran layshymens conference here

Neither is the striving fox power by a minority group unshyAmerican the priest asserted It is rather part of the American tradition he said and cited past drives for political power by labor unions Italians in New York and the Irish in Boston

Father Groppi also said that the Milwaukee NAACP Youth Council which he advises has adopted black power tactics only after we had used every tactic eveiy means we could think of to take the yoke off black people and nothing had been effective

He said that one use the counshycil had made of black power was in a united Negro boycott of stores during Christmas The white man doesnt give us a housing bill we dont give him our dollar he explained

Discussing the role of the Christian Church in the black mans struggle for equal rights Father Groppi said that the Church has been involved by her non-involvemen1i By such non-involvement he said the Church has aggravat~d the Neshygros problem

Today he said I the use of prudence as an excuse for cowshyardice is the great sin of tile Church

Students Interrupt Strike to Mourn

PARIS (NC) - The strike launched by the guild of law students at the Catholic Unishyversity of Paris has been intershyrupted by its leaders out of resJect for the mourning of the diocese of Paris following the death of Pierre Cardinal Veuil shylot who was chancellor of the instittltion

The strike was called to proshytest a reform of the university decided U()(ln by the French bishops and put into effectmiddot by the rector Msgr Pierre Haubt- mann The reform is designed to avoid having the Catholic uni- versity compete systematically with middotthe state university In all secular studies

The bish~ps decided that in addition to teaching and re search in the area of religion the Catholic universtty must first of all be devQted to Chrisshytian reflection on secular matshyters

Pastoral Institute To Open at Quito

BOGOrA (NC)-A new Latin American Pastoral Institute will be opened in April at Quito Ecuador as a project of the Latin American Bishops Counshycil (CELAM)

The institute will be a unit of the CELAM pastoral departshyment

Purpose of the institute will be to train personnel from the whole continent in pastoral work applicable to Latin Amershyica The institute will offer seven-month courses and Euroshypean specialists in pastoral work will also serve on the faculty

Meeting on Cities NOTRE DAME (NC) - An

international conference entitled NCities in Context will be held March 31 through April 3 at the University of Notre Dames Center for Continuing Educashytion

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968

litu~~W Changes Continued from Page One

in earlier periods-even thou~

they do not conrorm in all deshytails with the approved versiOlil of contemporary liturgical texto -are authorized

TANTUM ERGO An apshyproved Eucharistic hymn ilill praise of the Blessed Sacrament may be used in Benediction oil the Blessed Sacrament in place of the Latin hymn Tantum Ershygo

PSALMS Approved are the texis of the Psalms as published by Englands Grail Society anell that found in the Jerusalem Bishyble

Suggestnol1Js Denied

The Vatican turned down two requests made by the US Bishshyops both dealing with liturgic011 experimentation

No was answered to the reshyquest that the US Bishops be permitted to designate acade~ic

centers to supervise litulgicall innovation

Also denied was the request that some experimentation be approved without examinatioD by the Holy See

-Presently the Vatican mu~

approve proposed liturgical inshynovations before experiment3shytion can begin

Archbishop Dearden explainshyed While the two major proshyposals concerning liturgical enshyperjmentation were not alPshyproved at the present time ~

is clear that the Consilium iJ open to the submission of rite and texts of li-turgical adaptioTll which have been drawn up anll presented prior to actual experishymental use

Concrete proposals of rHeIl 2nd texts may continue to be sent to the Bishops CommittCCl on the Liturgy

Matter Deferred

The permission to substitutfl h)mns or other sacled songtl fur the texts now used at the entran~e Offertory and Comshymunion of the Mass was defershyred

Such hymns now generally added to the official texts were approved in principle however by the delegates to the Rome Synod of Bishops October 1967

The Baptismal Rite describecll among the changes was n~

contained in the Vatican lettertl authoiizing the other changoo but was made public by Archshybishop Dearden at the same time as the announcement of 1ibe changes was released

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L_ PATRON 01 MARCH The month of March is dedicated to St Joseph watchful

guardian of the Son of God and patron and protector of the universal Church Dedicashytion of the month of the year to events in the life of Christ and to particular saints is a practice of the People of God rather than an official action of the Church It comfantly middotrecalls the power and love of God for mankind present at all times and in every place

Bishops Hit Penna Birth Control Policy Addsmiddot to Rather Thon Solve Problems of Poor

HARRISBURG (NC)-The Pennsylvania Welfare Depaytments new policy of acfi~ely promoting birth control among poor people is a major step in the direction of a newand dangerous life management bymiddot the state The Pennsylvania Oatholic Conferencehas criti shycized the Welfare pepartments decision to middotinitiltte discussions of birth control with their clients Under previous pol- stru~en~ for population con- the polic~ because it will add icy birth coiltrol adviceias trol saidmiddot the PCC to the p~oblems of the poor and Moreover many of these do nothmg to get at the root

Jren~l~red only If the welfare same spokesmen see it as an in- causes of poverty reCIpIent asked for It The strument to improve what they We are bound to protest sysshynew policY has been in effect call the quality of our popula- tematic governmental involveshysince mid-January The Con- tion Putting the program to ment in decisions of citizens reshyference which represents the suchmiddota use represents one of its specting family size as a major states Bishops in public affairs worst dangers the danger that step in the direction of a new has denied that Church teach- the state will start-=-by guiding and dangerous life management ing on contraception is a factor some groups or classes to birth by the state the statement emshyin its opposition limitation-to select the types it phasized

Invasion of Prhacy desires to see propagated Rather our concern is over Dangerous Management Varied Talents

the ef~ort of the state to i~fl~- The statement noted that its SPOKANE (NC)-The newly e~c~ many wa~ a pelson s view in this regard is shared formed Catholic Board of EdushychOIce of family size-our con- b th ptt b h b h f th h ht d h middottmiddot y e 1 s lIlg lanc 0 e cation for the Diocese of Sposhycern IS elg ene w en I IS National Association for the Adshy kane has elected members whothe poor whom the state seeks t f C I d P I to mfluence the Conference stat t sad

emen IThe Confelence called promoshy

tion of birth control an invashysion of privacy and asserted the state should play no role in attempting even indi rectly to manage tne most intimate domain of personal life

The statement also took issue with Welfare Depart~ent deshynialsmiddot that the program is inshytended to contlOl population

Negro Opposition

Chiefspokesmen for groups which have pressured for this program in our state say they IJee it and demand it as not just II medical service but as an inshy

vancemen 0 0 ore eop e include educators and non-edushyh h tl tt k d th w IC recen y a ac e e cators priests pastors ReligiousWelfare Department for trying and lay personst r t th th f th N 0 Iml e glOW 0 e egro

populatIOn The Conference also criticized

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a2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River--Thurs Feb 29 1968

The PaJrish Parade ~T MARYS CAlllllIlEJI)lItAL FALL RiVER

Mrs Hadley Lackey will serve as chaIrman of arrangements for the monthly meeting of the Womens Guild scheduled for a oclock on Monday night March 4 in the Shamrock Room of the Corky Row Club

Mrs John OConnor chairshyman of the Scholarola scheduled for April 1 requests that all pledges be brought to the March meeting of the Guild Committee members are avail shyable for all who wish their pledges collected at home

ST THERESA J80 ~-y gtltBORO

The ~ =middotaternity of Christian Mothers will hold thei~ regular monthly meeting on Monday evening March 4 following the Stations of the Cross

Rev Leo R Gravel OMI son of Mr and Mrs Raymond Gravel ofmiddotWestminister St So Attleshyboro will be the guest speaker

Members of the Confraternity will receive Comunion in a body at the 9 oclock Mass on Sunday morning March 3

88 PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Mothe~~ ~f Boy Scouts will bold a p1i1gtlic social at 730 toshynight Boy Scouts informatiOn classes for the Ad Mtare Dei award wiil be gtheld tonight and every T~ursday night during March and April

Junior High Camp Fire Girls plan a splash party at the YMCA from 530 to 7 Saturday night March 2 imd a cakesale in the IIChool hall from 8 to 11 30 Sun- ~y morniii~

The annual Cub Scout Pack IT Blue and Gold Banquet and charter presentation will take place at 630 Sunday night in the

school hall

SACRJED IllEART NOATlLEBORO

Starting on March 12 and conshytinuing for the next three conshysecutive Tuesday nights there will be an EcUmenical Worship Study conducted at Sacred Heart Church First Universalist Church First Methodist Church and the Grace Church

The service will begin at 730 and will be followed by a coffee hour and a discussion period in the church hall

The Sacred Heart Church will open the program on March 12 with a discussion of the Mass

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Womens Guild win reshyceive Holy Communion in a group at the 8 oclock Mass on Sunday morning March 3

The regular monthly meeting of the Guild will be held on Wednesday night March 6 at 730 in the school on Earle Street

ST PATRICK FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild announces an open meeting for Monday March 4 A jewelry demonstrashytion will be featured In charge of arrangements is Mrs Stanley Pitera aided by Mrs Joseph Fazzina

The unit will celebrate St Patricks day Saturday night March 16 with a smorgasbord supper and dance in the school auditorium Supper will be served at 7 and danCing will folshylow from 8 to midnight with music by the Moon Mists Resshyervations will close Sundq March 10 and may be made with guild officen or board memshybers

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

Plilrishoia books are to be distributed the weekend of

The WQmens Club announces March 2 and 3 Prizes will be bull pot luck supper for 630 Monshyday nigh1 Maich 4 Chairmen are Mrs William T Marum Jr and Miss Mary L Tyrrell

John F Keavy Jr president cl the US Model Railroad Assn will show films at a Boy Scout meeing slated for Tuesday night March 5

Theologians SllaquolIted As CU Spe(Q]~eis

WASHINGTON (NC) - Dr Ellie Mascall one of Englando most prominent Anglican theoshylogians and Father Hans Kung an outspoken advocate of reform in~~ the Catholic Church wilil speak at the Catholic University of America l1Ite in March

Dr Mascall a vigorous 0pshy

ponent of the so-called New Theology will give the Charles A Hart Memorial Lectures from March 24 to 29 His lectures will

deal sucessively with the quesshytions of God man Christ and the Church

Father Kung a Swiss theoloshygian who played an influential role at the Second Vatican Counshycil will speak on Sincerity in the Church on March 18

St louis Ceremony ST LOUIS (NC) - Bishop

John J Carberry of Columbus will be installed as Archbishop of St Louis on March 25 in cershyemonies at St Louis cathedral here

Archbishop Luigi Raimondi apostolic delegate to the United States will officiate The date of the cerem0I1-Y will be exactly three years after that on which Bishop Carberry was installed ordinary of Columbus

awarded to the three individuals selling the most books

The Mystibrook Singers of Bishop Stang High School will lead singing at the 815 Mass Sunday morning M~rch 3

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

A parish supper sponsored by the Womens Guild will be held from 530 to 730 Saturday night March 2 in the school hall Tickets are available from Mrs Frank Kingsley ticket chairman or any board member

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

During Lent Masses will be at 7 AM 4 PM and 7 PM

Confessions will be heard one half hour before each Mass Stashytions of the Cross will be held at 345 and 645 Friday aftershynoons and evenings Children are urged to attend Mass at 4 each afternoon The Children of Mary anshynounce a periby sale Friday March 15 A Portuguese parish mission will be preached by Rev Anshytonio Pinto CM from Sunday March 3 through Saturday March 9 Services will open Sunday night March 3 with rosary sernlon and Benediction at 7 I)clock and Mass and sershymon will be held every weekday night at 7

ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

The Association of the Sacred Hearts will sponsor a tea at 7 on Sunday night Mar 3 in the rectory in honor of the Sisters staffing the parish schooL

The monthly meeting C1f 1lhe Association will follow the tea

SAMOAN BISHOP The first native Polynesian memshyber of the hieraIl~hy Bishopshyelect Pio Taofinlllu (cq) S M will be consecrated at Apia Western Samoa on May 29 by Bosoon-born A r c h b ish 0 p George H Pearce SM of Suva The Bishop-eloot 44 made -his novitiate with the Marists on Staten Island ~C Photo

Hospital ~~urses

Return middotto Nork hi Covingtol1l

COVINGTON (NC) A nurses walkout which began in mid-November at 100shyyear-old St Eliz~~beth Hosshypital here has ended Nearly 100 of the 140 members of tine Registered Nurses tgtrganizati01l have indicated they will retum to their jobS The walkout stemmed from bull dispute over recognition of their organization and patient care policies Since the settlement hospital officials have been inshyterviewing nurse to expedite their reemployment and placeshyment

Restore Full Service Hospital spokesmen said the

nurses will be restored to posts they formerly held in so far as possible The nurses will lose no tenure as a result of their absence and if the positions they previously held have been filled they will be offered comshyparable posts or benext in line for selection to the positions

Administration officials exshypressed satisfaction with the prospect of the nurses return and voiced the earnest hope that we can move forward tel restore the 100 beds to service which had to be taliten out of availability by reason of the shortage of nurses to care for the patients

Officials estimate til1at four tie eight we~ks might t~ required 110 restore full bed service

Cite Achievements The nurses leaders said the7

had achieved at least 13 gains during the thteenionth dispute pointing to the fact that a doctor and a nurse have been apshypointed to the hospital board of trustees the establishment of bull patient care committee comshyposed or nurses electeli by those now employed by the hospital and equipment changes in the patient care area

Mrs Pat Tanner vice chait shyman also said the nurses unshyderstand that a lay heid will be appointed head of the hospital

Sister M Coronata adminisshytrator was assigned to) another post in the sisterhood earlier this month and Sister Mark Bernard has been serving u acting administrator I~he Franshyciscan Sisters of the Poor haft operated the hospitaL

Love Is An Active Verb We who bear the noble name of Christian arid who are io9shy

ingly called the faithful stand in awe of the Mystery of Christ and the Mystery of His Church More than the mystery of Obrist and of His Church is something we live It is then our duty JIlON

and more to experience the living reality of the Cbureh hershyself Cbristain tradition affirms that by her relatioJiship with Christ tlbe Redeemer the Church is a kind of sacrament or an efficacous sign of intimaJte union with God and indeed an efshyficacious sign cf the uni~ of all mankind

As members of the household of the faith we have heeD eaDmiddot ed by God and endowed with the precious gift 01 faithThereshyfore we m1ls truly experience a sense of urgency in brinampinK aD men to tun union with Christ Since mankind today is joined together more 1ll1osely than ever before in historY by bonds thaamp are social technical and eultural should it be ilenied the spirshyitual unity that springs from faith The Gospel is Ught Ii Is lIIewness it is energy it is rebirth it is salvation

Should DOt interest in our own salvation necessarily move us tID loving concern for the salvation of others If the Church is the Sacrament Of Salvation should we not as members of the Church eome to an eve- clearer awareness of our pari in her mission in the o1uty of evangelization in the missionary mandate in the apOstolic commiSsion Clearly our duty consonant withthe blessings I-eceived from Christ is that of spreading offering and announcing ~ faith to Others in order that we might be clble to acquit ourselves of Uiis Christian obligation The Society for the Propagation of the Faith eXiSts For-those who desire to be where the action is or 110 be iIivOlvoom wOrld mission the Church pr0shy

claims her own essential inissionlU) character Indeed the Cburdl ill J4ission and therefore aD of 118 are truly missionaries

fa tills Yeai IaItIl we eaa testify to Gaefldl uieDt 04 om- ATatitade to God for the bleilldDc of faWt by ma~ bull aerIfiee te TIle Society for the PropapUOn 01 the Faith lor tile works of the Chureh ill the service Df tile poor and underprholshy~ed We eamaot be Uke our Master III the fWlness of HIs Dlvinit7 nor caD we hoPe to experienCe thelrlory of His Transfigmratio bat there lis ODe way ill whieh we eaa resemble Rim and that Is ~ beeomtitamp- a oervant to His poor aDd His UWe ODes throughshyout the world

The native celrgy is the ho~ of the Chureb in Mission lands Many youngmen have heard the can but are sadly turned away for lack of facilities and funds $250 will provide a year of semshyinary training $1500 will cover the cost of complete education to the priesthood Wont you help us to help them by sending your offering to The Society of st Peter the Apostle 366 Fifth Avenue New York N Y 10001

SALVATION AND SERVICE are the work of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith Please cut out this eolumn and send your offering to Right Reverend Edward T OMeara Nashytional Direetor 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or directly to yoUr loeal Diocesan DirectOr Rt Rev Msgr Raymond T Considine 361 Norib MaiD Street FaD IUver Massaelnuse~ts 03720

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THE ANOiOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 13Missouri Diocesan Board Pondersmiddot Closing Consolidating Schools

KANSAS CITY (NC)-Tbe 1H girls They would be abshyKansas City-8t Joseph diocese sorbed into the school popushyis exploring the possibility of lations of Lillis high school and closing some of its schools and st Theresas academy forming n larger area school Although 120 persons attendshy Extension Volunteers bull bull bullwhich could upgrade the qualshy ed the school board meetingity of education for all pupils they were not petmitted tp

At 0 school board meeting speakFather John P Cole supershyinJtenden~ of schools reported on L - shyPTA Bead Plotes~

the possibility of setting up 11 Make Life Wortl IVngA motion-passed unanimousshycentral area grade school in ly by the board-was made to

mid-town Kansas City The continue exploration into conshysingle school would serve the solidation of the schools Thispopulations of three existing was opposed by John J Mcshygrade schools Donough a representativeFather Cole also suggested the elected by the Catholic PTApossibility of closing Redempshy Federation who will be seatedtorist high school now serving as a board member in July

McDonough was permitted to $~[]7reg~ 2~ Ifreg[[~ take part in the discussion but

had no vote

~~ ~~[[U IT)J He protested against the defe3ltist clique who let our

WASHINGTON (NC)-Bishop schools get picked off one byPaul F Tanner newly named one He charged that TheOrdinary of the diocese of St New Peltlple - the diocesanAugustine Fla is onfy the newspaper members of the dishyfourth priest to serve as general ocesan school office officials of secretary of the United States the Missouri Catholic Confershybishops secretariat in the nearshy ence Kansas City pastors andmiddotly half-century of its existence other Church officials share in

Bishop Tanner was the last an anti-Catholic school recshygeneral secretary of NCWC the ordoriginal secretariat He was also the first general secretary of ODe Operation both of is dual suc~essors-tne

McDonough said that theNational Conferenceof Catholic school superintendent shouldBishops and the United States be goingmiddot to the state legislashyCatholic Conference The NCCB ture and Governor Hearnes tois the bishops agency for dealshydemand tax relief instead ofing with purely splritual matshyconsidering consolidation andters the USCC Is their secreshyclosing of schoolstariat for dealing with secular

affairs Father Colemiddot maJntained that The prelate has served in the the reorganization would not

U S bishops secretariat 28 represent a cutback The area years longer than any precedshy school would be able to opshying general secretary Born in erate out of one blilding to Peoria TII in 1905 and ordained serve three parishes It would a priestmiddot of the Milw~ukee archshy provide the same educational diocese in 1931middot he came to experience for the same number Washington in 1940 ~as assistant of students plus advantages director of the Youth Departshy Cooperation would make posshyment NCWC He ~as assistant sible a highly developed model general secretary from 1945 to school staffed by Sisters from 1958 and has been general secshy three communities retary since then He said it would be irresponshy

He is the first bishop to serve sible to run three operations at as secretary to the bishops secshy all costs when the diocese retariat could have one operation run

The NCWC (as Council and it more efficiently do a better Conference) had been in exisshy educational job and provide opshytence 47 years when it formally portunity for a better deployshywent out of existence at the anshy ment of personnel nual meeting of the bishops in November 1966 Bishop Tanner who had served in the secretashy Urge Germaruls riat for more than half those years supervised the transition To Aid Vietnam to two separate organizationsshy

BONN (NC) - Two Germanthe NCCB and the USCC cardinals and two churchshyDuring Bishop Tanners secshy related relief organizations have

retaryship and in testimony to FALL RIVER PROVINCETOWN AND WESTPORT GIRLS WITHappealed to the German people

the growth of the work handled to collect money and to prayby the bishops secretariat an NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF EXTENSION VOIL~NTEERS DURINGfor the people of Vietnamimpressive addition to the headshy A week beore Mardi Gral lt- quarters building here was Joseph Cardinal Frings of Coshy THEIR YEAR OF VOLUNTEER WORK erected in 1960 logne asked the Catholics of his

archdiocese to cut down on Mardi Gras festivities and to donate magnanimously to the needy people of Vietnam Coshy These young college graduates have given a I year of their logne has long been known for its ampigtectacular Mardi Gras celeshy professional life to God in service in the South and West Are brations Citing the bombing Of North you willing to give twelve months of yourmiddotyouth to othersVietnam the plight of women and children caught between opposing forc~middot in the $()ut~ and the great number of refushygees Cardinal Frings asked how Catholics could watch pictures of these gravely distressing si~

WHY NOT ENROll AS ANuations on television and ceieshybrate Mardi Gras with a quiet The Spirit oj

Extension Volunteer HELPER middot$200 oconscience Alfred Cardinal Bengsch Of Extension Volunteer PROMOTER $500 o

Berlin asked for prayers for Sacrifice Extension Volunteer SPONSOR $1000 or more opeace in the world in a letter to the clergy of his diocese in which specifically mentioned AMOUNT ENCLOSED $ Vietnam as a name meaning Perfectlyblood and death RT REV RAYMOND T CONSIDINE PAIn a joint appeal Caritas the German Catholic relief organishy PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH OFFICE zation of Germanys Evangelical 368 NORTH MAIN STREETExemplifiedLutheran Church has asked for fALL RIVER MASS money to send food Md medishy

BISHOP P~VL F TANNU cine to the Children of Vietnam o

(-14 THf ANCHOR-Diocese of FaR Rfver-Th~rs Feb-29 1968 Two Objectives Jersey to Rehabilitate Young OffendersTells Jesuatts Engage in Deliberate

Help Increasing Spanish Group Attempts at lExperimentation UNION CITY (NC) - Two Hudson County Jan and in theST LOUIS (NC)-Deliber- carries its own reward he said area interfaith clergy groups youth house in Secaucus

iide attempts at experimenta- Now we must undertake new here in New Jersey are planning Father ThomasJ Murtha oftion with a readiness to accept forms some of which have a

joint action on the plightf West New York was named toall the risks that may be in- good chance to flop JIliserably youthful offenders housed m investigate means of setting UJltvolved were proposed for the An expert at the Second VatshyHudson County correctional in- a rehabilitation program t4ilSociet of Jesus at the close of ican Council Father Campion stitutions and to seek federal function after the release ~ III three-day session here on believes that the work of the assistance in meeting the needs youthful offendersbulllesuit renewal council has not yet begun to of Cuban refugeesFather Donald R Campion be absorbed within the Church

The joint session was held by The ~o groups will send a18J stressed at the renewal as a whole the North Hudson Clergy Coun- delegatIOn toWashIngton to askQession and in an interview This is not because it hasnt cU based here and the Chris- ~hat the area be declared anthat the Jesuits have both the been publicized enough or beshy tian Clergy United a West New Impacted area under the Cuban manpower and the resources to cause people havent read Y k Refugee Act and therefore beshy

engage in the type of expeii- enough or bishops havent talkshy or ~ro~p come eligible for special federal mentation which could serve ed enough he said But Vati shy A meetmg WIll be s()~ght WIth aid There are some 00000 tQdays Church Father Cam- can II opened up more areas the Hudson County Boar~ of Spanish~speakingpeople now m pion a sociologist and theolo- to discussion than it resolved Chosen Freeholders in an effort rth gian was recently named editor Among the sleep~rs in to establish a bettez climatefoi the ~o Hudson area and they cd America magazine council documents CIted by therehabiUtation of youthful continue to arrive at the rate of

Another speaker Fat her Father Campion was the conshy offenders now housed intne 200 to250 a month ~ 1 _

Avezy Dulles SJ stressed that cept of participation within the ~ doubt is a valuable and even Church Father Campionmiddot said lI1ecessary experience for the he believes collegiality is the Wide E~perience Christian in todays world most developed aspect in this

Fathers Campion and Dulles area and that some organization QU(lJD~ies Nu_ were two of the six main speak- has been given to it through the

UNITED- NATIONS (NC)ers at the closed meeting Some establishment of piie~ senates ltHQWCom pie t e devotion to theSSO Jesuits including 50 from But unless the idea of parti shyworlds needy children seemsCilutside the St Louis areaat-cipation is really the basis senshy a weighty task for a petite nun TDgtKEEPtended the sessions ates can become orgimizational

Father Campion said that Jes- gimmicks he said but a conversation with Sister Ullits as a group must face the Father Dulles discussing themiddot Kathl~eri Kelly MMmiddot provides LENmiddotTreassularice middotthat 20 years of make a significant contribution Church said ~ an interview diversified experience fact that their work should existence of doubt in todays

more to modern times that we have a radically differ- than qualifies her for the role

QUI IXIDPYFATHER lI MISSION jlUDTG me fllRlfaNTAL CHURCH

In the area of education It calIS for recasting the ex- wide Cath)lic charities organishy Need New Formula ent world view than in the past Caritas Internationalis worldshy

With the slason of Lent comes the qu~ionFather Campion called for con- pressions of the Christian messhy zation recently appointed Sisshy How can I beSt keep Lentl The answer ~s ~sideration of whether we are sage in terms of contemporary as observerter Kathleen its must make sacrifices on our own and nothing ISproviding the educational struc- knowledge if the message is to to the U N International GOOD III sacrifice unfess it hurts Whatwill be yo~rture for the new world have the impact it should Childrens Emergency Fun d WHIEN sacrifice bullbull Just think of the misslonlllne~ InIn the intellectual area Look Criticanny (UNICEF) Caritas Internationshy ITlf our 18 emerging countries who keep Lent allrather Campion noted that to- Doubt is not a bad thing he alis is one of 75 international HUmS year long Sacrifice something big this ye~rday more is needed than popu- said People should be looking and non-government organizashy When helping others hurts a bit you know you va larization of theology and phil- critically at the traditional forshy tions (NGOS) which enjoy conshy made a sacrifice()Sophy In a way we need a mulas and seeing what is revelashy sultative status with UNICEF whole new formula for making tion and what is a culturally

They represent oJer 4000csense of the world and life he conditioned formula which is affiliated private and non-profitfSaid now demanding reform

We should have men devoted Such adaptations are iD no organizations in more than 100 oOn his recent-trip through India 1V0~signor nations with a combined memshy Nolan saw priests and Sisters subSisting onto this single problem Their way a compromise of faith bership running into millions ounces of rice each day so they can share what own inner resources of security Father Dulles said We never they have with lepers and orphans $10 will feedmust be yery strong because to hear the divine message except Interviewed at the United Nashy FEED a family for several weeks at least $50 will feed

facethat kind of change is not III in terms of humans he said tions Sister Kathleen spoke of THE five families $100 ten families bullbullbull Only $975popular thing The Word of God comes her new rol~ at the international HUNGRY gives a priest 11 two-acre mode~ 18nn toraise

Council Opened Areas through man it is alW9YS tem- level and described how it his own food and teach his parishioners how to Father Campion said the can pered by man and it is this con~ evolved from her past activities raise more food Archbishop MalJ Gregorioa will

for experimentation W9S not ditioning which must change wrltetlo thank youI was in California andbased on inadequate work of Father Dulles said one value worked for 10 years in familyJesuits at the present time and of the death-of-God movement eounseling in the juvenile court IlJ Enable ~ girl to become a Sister For 41tl bullthat fact is part of the problem for Catholics is to shake _ I1tA1N day ($1250 a month $150 bull year $300 aleill foster lare and in otherMany times we have been suc- out of taking an uncritical with sa~ A together) you can pay In full fer her two-yeaIwork children sheeessful and being successful static view of God training have 8 Sister of your awnInthe last five years I moved SISTER

oat to community development and civil rights I was a member o For only $a5O a week ($10 a month $120 bull

year) you can make surethat an abandonedJesuit Seminarian Leads Campaign of a district council in bull San HELP Francisco - which subsequently A child has food clothing a blanket and love bullbullbull IAgainst Home Contract Firms was declared a poverty CHILD wen send you a photo of the boy or silt )011area

adoptCHICAGO (NC) - A Jesuit borne than its current market During my years there I waa Rminarian has launched a camshy value a member of the Catholic Intershy o Our priestS will offer promptly the Massespaign here against contractshy Following the exodus of racial Council and when I came MASSES you request Doyou wish to remember a loved holders of homes sold to Negro Lawndales white residents in back from Selma (she was on fOR one this Lent Your Mass offerings are usuallyfamilies at allegedly exorbitant the late 1950s thousands of of the persons selected to repshy LENT the only Incole our priests overseas receiverates homes were purchased by vari shy resent the archdiocese of san

Jack Macnamara SJ who ous bankS mortgage loan and Francisco in the Alabama civil o Enroll yourself your family and friends InlIives and works in nearby real estate companies at low rights march) I was appointed this Association You will be helping Pope Paul Lawndale is acting withthe ap- prices and then resold on conshy to serve on the Human Rights

JOI~ in one of his most ambitious and heartfelt works proval of his Jesuit superio~ tractto Negro families atofteIi - Commission by the mayor of THIS while sharing In the blessings of thousands of

Nacnarnara and a dozen supshy ~lImON Masses (The offering for one year is $2 perdouble the original purchase San Francisco the nun stated porters including several other price the leaflet reported She was the first nun ever apshy person $10 for a family perpetual membership Jesuit seminarians picketed the Paid Race Tax ltpOinted to any kind of~~yt is $25 per person $100 for a family) Chicago address of one investshy Macnamara said these conshy inJSan Fraidsco _

Iment company which holds title tracts should be renegotiated at

~ several homes sold on conshy the most recent FHA appraisal tract to Negroes Pickets dis- price ~ If I1t e SAiliNGS

tributed leaflets explaining the c2J 0 dJ ~ t~~ year SYSTEMATICThe issuemiddot here is moral rathshypurpose of their campaign er than legal he declared Th~ MONTHLY DEPOSITS

The leaflet cites the case of III law does not provide a remedy II tfMltIa fNVE$iMENyhome purchased by an investshy for the type of injustice that is d) aV~ J((~ year SAVINGSment company in January 1959 operative in this contract

for $13000 and then three NOTICE ACCOUNTSThousands of Negroes inmonths later sold on contract to Chicago are suffering from this a Negro buyer for $23000 450 ar ~~~~

It states the investment corn continued ~In effect they paid pany received $2000 as a down II race tax of approximately

type of injustice Macnamara

BCJs~ liverpayment on thiS contract whic~ $10000 when they bought their stipulated that middotthe balance was homes because it was impossishy SavonJs Bonkflo be paid over 20 years at sevshy bleto obtain mortgages 4Il per cent interest at the rate This is a striking example of BanI By Mail of $20140 each month how our legal system does notmiddot We Pay The Postage

Last December it reported a adequately protect black people Federal Housing Administration or poor people he said It appraisal on this home listed its stems from the fact that the law bull YARMOUTH SHOPP8NC PUll value at $15025 This means it aims at protecting property inshy bull SOUTH UltMOm bull HYANJIISexplained that the Negro buyer stead of persons And this helpl bull DENNIS PlmRT bull OSTFllVIUlIII paying $8000 more for tbe bull cause urbaJl unreal

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 ltI

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16 THE ANC )~-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968

New St LouimiddotsArchbi~hcp

PrOmilnent in Ecumen~$m Archbishop Jonh J Oarberry of St Louis well known

~()ng Oatholic leaders after 31 career that has taken him from a seminary classroom iii his natiYe Brooltl~ NCY~ to one of the nations MOse ~mpOOtallt archdiolaquoese1l is pershy

laaps evenmiddot better ~ownmiddot fJDlong Americas nom-Cafu6shylie religious leaders fon hisl work in ecumenism Cllair Ilillao of the Bishqps Commi~ee-Ibr Ecumenical and Intenrefi shyaious Affairs since th~ resigna Qion of Baltimores Lawrence Cardinal Shehan in November 11965 Bishop Carberry has au I9gtCrvised the massive catholic illllvoIvement in ecumeniCal ac-middot lli1 vities

He outlined his own entIliusishyeuroISm for ecumenism in a speech ~iven in January 1966 tolmemshy~rs of the Ohio (Protestant) lPastors Convention wheDI he aid

Common lHeritagel For years the general policY

(llln the Catholic Church) had ~en to stress the great chasm

which divides the euroatliolic Church and other Christian ehurches No effort was made m would seem on our part to Illave a meeting of minds A otudy of documents would seem ltD reveal that while we wera lbrayerfully disposed to) the ltecumenical movemerit nevershy1lheless the Catholic Church did lliittleto foster it

Bishop Carberry told the conshyvention that through the grace 0f God and the leadership or Pope John XXIII we became aware of the common heritage Which is ours

Has Great lHope

We began to realiZe~ how 18aptism unites us in ChriSt to Gee that the divinity of Christ is illhe cornerstone of all Christianshynay we began to real1ze the oommon treasure which we llnave in the Sacred Scripturesllikewise the common bondshyVhich exists with us in the

1lIIlissionary activities at the Church

There is great hope Bishopltearberry said that mrougb ~ialogue through prayerbull 1llluough respect for each others wiewpoint the grace of God may (i)Ile day in Gods divine provishy4llence bring about the- unitY which Christ prayed for at themiddot Last Supper

More recently members of ltOhios Protestant cliurches llllamed the bishop as OniosPbsshyoLr of Pas-tors the fl rst timmiddote hat bull

Grants Permis$ioll~

for SaturdayMass) SAN ANGELO (NC)-BiShop

Thomas TSchoepe of San Angelo lllas announced that the diocesan request for the Saturday Mass flaculty hagt been granted In the future the Sunday Mass 00shyltigation may be met by at shy~ndance at a Saturday aftershyllloon or evening Mass The pershylll1ission has been granted on an ~xperimental basis by the Vati shylttan for a period of five years

The diocese of San Argelo is 1lI Texas missionary diocese the bishop explained and there are areat dis tan c e s between churches and few priestswmiddot oerve the faithfuh ManYi ~llieSts

have two or morlt8 churclies tJ lllttend and will Be able- tQ give more time to the smaller ~urches with the Satucday Mass faculty Bishop TschoePe pointedi 9Ut Chat the faculty has been giVeth bull the whole diocese not just Ibo individual churches or areas Pastors who wish to make Usemiddot aJl the faculty must make formal application to the chancery ofshyillce

a~ statewide Protestant onganiza tion has presented its highest awa-rd 10 a eatho1iir clet1gymam A pla~J1e symbollZiDg the a~adi was~ glv~~ to the blShp at ~~~ Fenw~nIP Blmq~et on the Olbo PastollSgt ~onventi~m

DI~USS P~tilems U~dev Blsli~p~rlgte~rysl~d

er~hlPl laquoatholic ~elegations have ~et wl~h ~fflC1Blsbull and

tleolbglan~ of other- ChrIs~an churchesmiddot to dlSCUSS ecumemcal pooble~s r~~gmg from the pr~sshyence of Christ Ill tlie ~ucharlst to th-c nature of we prJes~ood

Before ta~mg cliarge of th Golumbusmiddot dIOcese on March 25 1965) Bishop euroarbery liadmiddot selved asmiddot coadjutor bishop and then bishop of Eafayette Ind Born in Brooklynj N~ Y Tulymiddot 31 1904 Bishop Carberry studied for the priestlioodi at Brooklyns Cathedral College or the Iin-middot maculate laquool1ception from 191ll to 1924 and at the North Amershyican College in Rome from 1924 to 1930

Oldained inmiddot Rome in 1929 tne bishop sfudiea canon law at the Catholic University of America in Washington D G and taught at Immaculate Conception Semshyinarl until Tune 1935 when he went on ldan to the diocese of Trenton N J He returned to BrooklYn in 1940 where hemiddotreshymained until being named coshyadjuror bishop of Lafayettemiddot in 19651

~~~5IiTI$ nUilft~U[jTIfi)

Ccopy]JJi]dIT [Qjfr[~lcopy[j

CHICAGO (NC) - Tohn A McDllrmott has changed me mindL-he1li remain as execu middot tivedirector of the Chicago Cat1iolic Interracial Council

The veteran council worKer last October announced he would leave the office to beshy

come Mridwest regional- ciVil rightsdirector for the ms De-middotmiddot partment of Health Enucation andi Welfare

A number of problems hava arisen since th-e announcement on my appointmentt last 0ctbBerwhichl caused me to have serl

ousmiddot second l thoughts MilDer moW said iil his decision to re~ maio with the ltlrc He citedi m1 patrtcular~ personnel cutliaclts in HEW wJiich woulli Iiinit the Midwest negional operatiiul

fo accepting McDermotits de cisionj HEW the government agency requestedi liiin to serve asmiddot ai special chdl- rights consuU ant while working for the CIC and he a~reed

IIlt a letter to the Dutch biINumber of Fllel71ch ops members of Michaels re-

gion asked for curbs on the nlgtshySeminarians Dllops tions Catliolic liberals The PARIS (Ne)-Thenumber of meeting also registered disap-

French seminarians h~s dropped proval of the new Dutch Cateshyby about 180 a year for the last chism~ claiminJ~ that it does nocent four years according to 1iigures represent true Catholic teach~ provided in amiddot press conference Michaels Lel~ion is considered by Bishop Jean Sauvage 011 ampshy even more CJlnservative thlW necy member of the bishops Confrontation another Catholic commission on the clergy and conservative organization Conshyseminaries frontations complaints about

For the 1967~68 sc1iolastic the content of the new Dutch year the tdtal number of sliumiddot catechismmiddot are believed to hae dents iil major seminaries m been instTllmentai in having tbe~ FhlOce is 43583 comparedl with book exltlmined by the VatiCan~lJ

4536 for the previous year Doctrinal Congregation 4722 )n 1965-66 and 4953 in 1964-65

Moreover in France at pres- Approves Agency eol ttiere are aBout 200 adults LQND()N (NC)--Jolin Cardl~

WIIO are preIgtaring for tOe ~er nal Heenan of Westminster liJaa manent diaconate as restored by approveq establishment ocf 1m the Second Vatican Council The agency to help priests who want first ordinations to this permashy 10 leave the priesthood znGl nent diaconate could take place nuns who want to leave the this year religious life

1P~alrn le~tUlm~1rn~~G~

$1lll~7 GG1l I1DtJ Sim LONDON (NC)-A study on

the problems of ecumenism in Great Britain will be made by a joint working group of the British Council of Churches and the Caholic Church with the results to be reported next Autumn

The study was planned at a meetingmiddot held atmiddot the Vita et Pax Benedictine I~onvent and attendshyed by nine Catholic representashytives an- 14 representatives of the BeC -

The projected study is exshypected to analyze such topics an the extent I)f cooperatiGn beshytween Catjwlics and members of the BeC the dialogUes bemg held theologicaL differences and the non~theological obstacles to closer unitygt

Auxiliary BishoJ- Langton Fox of lfenevia Wales and

Auxiliary Bishop Basil Chrisshytopher Butlelr OSB of Westshyminster headed tOe CatOolie delegation at the meeting

~(i]$~~rlaquolJpoundfr1) A$1k lMl~illlW) ~ltoy~ IHh~)~Dnd

U11RECHm (NC) -Michaels Legion an organization of Dutch Catholic~ uaditionalists has sent a telegram to Pope Pault H ungintg him tD protect essential orthodoxy and to S81fe tne DutchChurch~

At 3- meeting here attended b~ some 600) Catholic conserva tives led by Eouis Knuvelder the legion condemned the Dutch Catholic daily press the~ Dutch Gatholic tellvisioncompany and the countrys Catholic radio station for being too progressive

Father Baum Regards Ecumenical Center Closing Sign of Success TORONTO (NC)-The closing gian Charles Davis-A Quesshy

of the Center for Ecumenical tion of Conscience Davis book Studies at St Michaels Collegegt exmiddotplains his renunciation of the here is a sign of the centersmiddot euroatholic priesthood and the success Church and asks Catholic theo-

This is the viewpoint of Father logians who intend to stay in GregllllY Ballm O~SA founder the~ eurohurch to reply to several of tJie centeI1 who has an- t1iaologjcal points nQunlaquoed that it will b~ Closed BelUef Unbelief

inl JUne Thats what Im doing FatlieJJBaum-explalnedthalhe Fatller Baum said His book a

founded the centeJ ill 19631 when replYJ to Davis questions conshyecum~llusrn may have~ been a ceming the credibility of the new Idea Its purpose lie- s~ld Church in todays world will be was to promote ecumemcall called The Credibility of the studies at St Michaels Church Today It will be pub-

Taday he neports ecumen mal stlUdi~s at S1l Michaels are a reality- 1lli~ schGolls theology depal1tment 18 fully mte~ ~thl Protestant and ~gIIcan lfupartmentsmiddot at the-Umversity

of Toronto [hUB lie said~ the eC-lmenical

centell has fulfilled its purpose Such fUlfillment he said wmiddot

common in academic circles where there has been an ecushymenlical reVOlution For exam pIe ne said where once som1shyone might have nied to foster ecumenism through building an ecumenical library it is now impossible tq build a theological lilgtrary without its being ecushymenical

Need flDZ Programsmiddot Father Baum added that he

does not believe tJie ecumenical movement has reached fruitien in circles outside the academia world~ He said that he sees a real need pound01 formal ecumenmiddot ical programs on the parish and on all levels of the Churdl which have not yet been reached He a150 disclosed that perSOll ally he lias moved Gn frOlll ecumenism to new fields of thought

The AuIDlStinian has written a new book in answer to the latest by the English theolo-

U[[$ W)jf[rll IfSMsjIID~

rnliJ kUD-WIh ol 1TW[jiJ KETTERING (Neuro) - The 1-7shy

member parish board 00 St Charles Church~ here unanishymousll1 adopted a resolution 5 favor Qf open nousing legiSlashytion for thiS (1)hio suburban community

The parish boards action S~ poIied- unequivocallymiddot passage 0amp an open housing ordinance in themiddot virtuallr aUi-wltite commw-middot nity 00l more than 600001 res dents Tames J Gilvay and Peter Donanue attOrneys anlL pariBhlmiddot boarc members pre sentedthe resolutJoDj wliiclli tbok- themiddot position that the ghett) condit1ollG ~Ilichl Negroes enshycure ilm nearby DaYton are mshyiuriOwil to the entire commUlshyDitTmiddot

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Aftei tee closing of the Center for Ecumenical Studies Father Baum will stay on at St MishychaeFs au a professor of theolshyogy He is also planning another ~~

It will concentrate on the idea oi God in modern thought and will be a clear sign that Father Baum has moved away from his prime in terest in ecumen- ism

Born of Jewish parents in Berlin and reared as an agnostic Father Baum said he has now turned his whole thought to the study of belief and unbelief He will record his findings in me book he is now writing

~oh~ laquotmm~~litl ~Od1[9)

[~ Ao~ i N~regIJ$ CAMDEN (NC) - Bishop

Tames L Schad administrator of the Camden diocese was =ong citizens honored here foT their efforts in furthering the interests of the Negro comshymunity

Bishop Schad who has been active in community action projects such as the War on Poverty committees was pre sented a scroll during a proshygram sponsored by the Tenth Street Baptist church here in observance of the 43rd annual Negro History Week This year marks the first time a Romaa Catholic prelate has been so honored

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17 Oppose Church Clergy Participation in Politics

By Jsgr George G Higgins

The New RepubJic-whIch in this writers judgment W one CYl the be3t of Ameriros weekly journals of opinion especially hl it3 arovezoage cfcurrent economic and political developments----thinks that the time has com~ for anti shyVietnam clergymen aul1ayshy Be that as it maY I am ioshymen to translate tu1eir cVZl clined to think that the editors m0r81 indignation oveuror Vietshy of the French periodical Inforshynam into effective political mations Catholique InternashyDction inasmuch as this is the tionales make considerably only way to effect long-term more sense than the editors cOf ehanges in the The New Republic 011 this issue policies of this of clerical involvement in the country So far so-called politics of peace as laymen are Though they are vigorously concerned this and unqualifiedly opposed ~il

would seem to tW war in Vietnam and like be a self - evishy tWeditors ()f The New Repubshydent proposition li( clearly recognize that the L1s perfectly establishment of leace in the obvious t hat world is a political problem concerned layshy which calls for the active mshymen ou~ht to volvement ofChcistians as ~-en

translate their as all other men of good will moral indi~nashy they do not think that themiddot tion over Vietnam - or any cleJgy who are responsible foy other significant issue of public the unity of the Church should policy-into effecti-re poiiticltll be expected to take on the role

of party politiciansaction Given the fact that their pubshySound Tradition

lication ~CI has been oJe 01 tileOn the other hnd I aJl Evt most outspoken European critics

sure understandthat I fully or of U S involvement in Vietnam completely agree vitb The New and one of the most vigorousRepublic when it says that fue advocates middotof a politics of peaceclergy ought tncv likewise their warning against the parshy

Traditionally a the NR itself ticipation of the clergy in parshypvints out the clergy-in this tisan politics is highly signifi shycountry at least - have rnied cant and deserves to be taken amy from such participation very seriously (Christians and

AJJ a long-time subscriher to the Struggle ior Peaee InforshyT~2 New Republic I had Dlshy mations Catholique Internashyways been under the imp~ssio~ tionales Jan 15 1965)that its editors thought that en Fl lialgs lrindplebalance this was a sound tradishy

Those American Catholicstion Apparently lwweer I was who may happen to have a speshy

cial interest in the pros and consmistaken in this regard fora of this highly controversial issuerecent Nell Republic editorial will also want to read whatnoten with satisfaction that Hans Kung has to say about itAJlerican clerGYmen now apshy

pear to be ready in large numshy in his forthcoming bookThe Churchbers to get involved at a preshy

cinct level and to play C1l Father Kung has lectured exshyactivist role in both parties tensively throughout the United (Clergy in Politics The New SUItes in recent years and is

currently with us again as a visshyRepublic Feb 17 1968) iting professor at Union Theoshy

QuestioIS Meaning logical Seminary in New York What does this mean in pracshy Seen in the light of the Gosshy

tical terma Does it mean that pel le writes in his new book ministers rabbis and priests the relntionshipof the Church should endorse ltor oppose) parshy to the world contains only one ticular candic1ates fqr politiell essential aspect its ministry 10 office starting at the precinct the world level Does it mean that they Ministry does not mean raisshythemselves should run for ofshy ing ones voice or putting an -oar flee if only as a last reiort in all secular qIes1ions middotof ecoshy

If so does it also mean that nomic political sodaI middotcultural other clergymen should run artistic and scientific life against them if they happen to T1e Churchclmnot solve disagree with what they stand the greJt problems of the ()rld for Or does it mean toot only neiih2r the problell1of hunger those clergymen who are anti shy nor that of the populaticn nor Administration should get inshy that of war nor thlt oanonFmshyT-olved at a precinct leel and ity of power Dor that -of race play an activist role within hatred What the Church both parties can do can be expressed quite

Sicnifieani WarnlDI simply in one phrase it must I have raised these questions exist for the world

lot to make light of The New ACrefS With lFTK1mgRepublics editorial CD the subshyject under discussion but Anyone who hal ever baG the merely to BUggest that clerical pleasure of meeting Faiher involvement ill partisan politics Kung middotor is familiar wi1bhis over the issue of Vietnam is at writings will know witheut best a rather tricky business being told that be is not a hawk and will almost inevitably lead and that he is cot advocating to certain consequences which a policy of Christian withdrawal upon further reflection even the from the world editors of The New Republie middotOn the eontrary be stroniJy might eonceivably wish tc foreshy favors lhe all-ltltit involvement tall of Christians in temporal affairs

and notably iii the ~lities Of peace

To Speak in Boston Nevertheless be does net Rev Anthony T Padovano think that the institutienal

Church-and its clerical minisshySTD theology professor at ters-should pretend that theyImmaculate Conception Semishy

nary Darlington N J will speak have all the answers tc the problems of the worldia the Christian Culture lecture

aries sponsored by the Paulist And neither eoes be thinkshyFathers at 815 Wednesday night if I read him correctly-that tbe March 6 in John Hancock Ha)) clergy in ~ exeTeise of their Boston Tickets are available mission of peace should get inshyfrom 5 Park Street Boston volved in partisan jl)olities Nor 02108 do L

WOKS LIKE FUN Yes but listen to what it requires The Georgetown University erew keeps in s-hape with ~

AM ~i~enies in the gym foHow~ by a two-niile run UJl and do-Wll Observatory Hil~on tJhecampus Its cold up there said Dave Harris a member of the lightweifht crew but by then youlewtired you do-nt care NC Phottgt

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 ~ 968

Prayer for Peace To Cm(O)se Games

MEXICO CITY (NC) - All ecumenical prR)er for peaCf) service is being planned for the end of the 19th Olympic Gam~

here next October The sponsor of the service w shy

the Ecumenical Commission fcrr Religious Services (ECRS) fe the Olympic Games The comshymission is composed of 73 ChrisshytiRn and Jewish leaders in thi~

city Promment spiritual leadshyers will be invited to speak

At middot8 meeting here the rn ECRS spiritual leaders discusse~

the facilities for athletes and visitors to attend their varioU7J reUgious services

iI1be iMC)Cican government hw aPPI)o~ed ECRS plans for the ~ction of at least tw- JaIige bullclings as nondenonYshynational chapels

The original pIlan toeonstrl1ell one large church has been IcHsshytlarded The present plan is build one large building with no religious I)rnamentllJtion of alltl7 kind on the outskirts of the Olympic Villa and a similar Oilif)

on tne outskirts of the Olympze

Project InterracialInterfaith Cooperation Cultural Villa

tin (Re~~(Jtion of CcUege m addition Archbishop MEshymiddotgut Dario MirlllDda y Gomez Gl

1I1IAMI (NC)~When Florida The Rev Edward T Graham Mexico City hBs authorizeQ Memorial College predominant a Baptist minister key person downtown Catholic churches to ly Negro middotliberal arts school is behind the project has had asshy permit non-Catholic services = moved here frOl1l St Augustine sistance from Mrs Athalie their premises if non-Catholie and opens next September the Range Miamis first NeglO City comgregations should request i project will be the result of unshy Commissoioner who is a Cathshyusual interracial and interfaith olic teamwork Organhzet3 rOthEHSIl

The largest single contribll shyNegroeswhites and Chinese tiou of private funds has oome flainirt~ ClI1ter

have joined hands with Cathoshy from a supermarket executive lLOUISVILLE (NC) - TkeIlics Protestants and Jews tv M Austin Davis a Methodist Franciscan Conventional OrdGcontribute money time advice laiamis Catholic Bishop Coleshy has opened a Brothers Trainincand leadership to realize the

manF Carroll is a member vl1 Center here in an attempt to givedevelopment of the college on l the advisory board as is Maushy Brothers three years of active$10 million complex here rice Ferre diocese of Miami lay apostolic work following theirr leader novitiate

RabbiIrving Lehrman presshy Father Sebastian Cunnil1flshyCouncil Seores ident cd the Greater Miami ham OFM director of tlw Rabbinical Association a n 4ll OOlilter said We felt we haCFactory Closing Jewish lay leaders are amoag an cbligation to give our man

LONDON (NC-The impend- active workers oome training outside contam ing elosingof a large industricl $ bull $ an idea of what was neeclshyJilseph Rodriguez of the plant has been criticized by ~ edfromthem in the outside Puerto Rican Democratic ChEb lay -eouncil of Our Lady Of _rl11 In the past he addeeurohas prepared 11 scholarship PieshyGrace parish in southeast Lsnshy we were not fWfilling ~ gram for -the collegedCD DeedS 1d ~veryoneliturgy

The council expressed its deep concern at the recent No Comlmentclosure of factories in middotthis area Completean4 in particular of the impendshy VATICAN (orry (NC)-Ibe ing shutdown of the Associ2ted Vatican had no comment -oJ1 11

ElectricaIIndustries (AEI) plant repolt that ~hbishop Agostincgt BANKING Casaroli secretary for extraershyIt callid upon the governmeJrt dinary ecclesiastical affairs ilf SERVICEand the -ehaiTmanof the oomshy the Papal Secretariat of statepany torevsrse the decision 10 eonterred with Dlembers of ~

c~ don the plant because Of tor BristOl CountyN-orth Vietnamese missi-on iJJthe middotmoral religious and 5Ocial Parisjn lJanuarylt n JUWWampleffeets iCaiJS2a by the ~veshythat Archbishop Casaroli Wallmen1 a1popl1ation absent from the Vatican fOll

Copies ltOf the councils motion several days nlenUy BrjstoICounty were sent 1amp Prime ~1inister

Harold Wilson MiJiister of Trust Company Labor RayJ Gunter President ampf the Board of Trade Douglas Sturteant (

TAUNTO~ MASSJay and company officials iHoOkAlthough the councils action was a surprise to the pastel Ed 1897 IIHE BANJ(ONFather Joseph seally AA ~ uiltl~rs SUppJies JAUNTONGRHNprist sroa that he agreed ith it ftll3 Purchase Street Member 01 Feileral ~

Faiher 8enlly sait[ centbert Aellad iNew Bedford IDsuranee CorporaamptoDJlOt~cteil p01itiealand elaquolshy 996-5661 nomic motions to eome from the council but pointed out You cannot separate Feligimtl from eveJ~ay life

Notrre Dome St Vincent de Paul Store

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968 Capacity Audience at Holy Name Parish ~ihss

My Consciesect1ce Discusses The J)etached Americans In Educ~tion Continued from Page One

Do we care -for knowledge

what happens to other people Why do we strive for college educations or for money Are we so anxious to confor~l1 that we never dare to PITTSBURGH

tMrI

~VJI and it must be understood in a

t mear-cu way

A person following his ~con-~ence must be sincere He cannot play games with his mind but must be honest with himself

A person foilowing his con~ liCience must be correct It iSl10t ugh that he sincerely beshy~ Reves that something is good or evil-he must be sure that hiS judgement is a correct one

agrees with Gods view of the matter

Sometimes people make misshytakes in judgement-honest misshytakes to be sure but mistakes iwnetheless The oft-quoted exshyample is that of the African savshyrage deep in the jungle who may be sincerely following his con- ooience when it tells him to kill omd eat his enemy His conshyscience is a sincere one But it~ Is a mistaken one since it does IIlOt agree with Gods Will He ond every person must c~m-

liitantly review his judgements to lbe sure that they are correct ones and riot sincere mistaken Utes

A person following his conshy3Cience must be certain He can not act with doubt or uncertainshy~ about the rightness or wrong- mess of an act since he would be Announces Prize acting with the willingness to

takea cpance on being wrong For Best Plan ~ offendi~g God and this is aever~ validmiddot If there is uncer- PITTSinJRqH (NC)-Bishop t8inty the person must seek aid John J Wright of middotPittsburgh III arriving at a sure and correct haS annoutc~d il priz~ of$IOOOtor professor ina p1inor semshy tudgementmiddot - formiddot the architect who submitsmiddoth be I f - inary chapiainof a school dishyThe Christian acts with amiddotcon- ~ e st p an or a Jliljgtr renoshy ocesan chancellor and finally

lllilence ~rned by the prlnciples vation of the sanctuary of St vicar general tilChrlst This is where tliEi Pa~l~ cath~middot~al_h~remiddot~T~~e ~om- The P6pe a~o nam~d Father

aturchsteachers the Pope Iiiid P~tit~o~ IS ~p~nmiddot ~omiddotal archJtec~ Bienvenido TudtiJdto be auxil- a message toAfrica and a mes ishops ~nfer middotthe pi~ture to wl~hlD ~e bound~~l~~s~f the iary bishop of Dumaguete in the sage ~lling for peaCe

Illelp men make judgementsmiddot thatmiddot lire guided by Christ Sometimes ~ese j~dge~eptsgo a~intitmiddotnat-middot lIIIa1 inclinations and tendencies md this has always been thedif-

~ti~ty of ~ing a Christian-- Ghrist demands much of His llmiddotowmiddotmiddotermiddots middot IIIU

At present Catholics are askshyiDg tlie Pope to make a morai judgement about birth control d especlmiddotallymiddot the PlmiddotUmiddot Some_lire castigating him for not givshy g a qulck declslon or else they lliie telling people to forget about llrim and to make their own adgeme tsmiddot th ttmiddot w- n m e ma er The Pope in order to make a ilecision must make it on the basis of facts Scientists must provide him with the facts and In this matter there is much that k~epinglVith the general lin~s sition in favor I)f open housing complex The Pope has asked and is still asking theologians to evaluate the scientific facts in 4he light of Christian principles Not all moral issues are simple And then the Pope will apply the principles to the facts and 1ril1 make a decision about the morality of the matter

This will guide the Catholic in fllorming his conscience -- in arshyriving at a judgement that is sipcere that is the correct orie at lS artmiddot d t d ce am JU gemen anthatmiddot is Christian

K of C Convention 51ated for Houston

lAN MARCOS (NC) The

1970 national convention of the ~ights of Columbus will be held in Houston it was an-Bounced here at a conference of Texas officers of the interna- _ tional fraternalorder

The announcement of the seshylection of Houston for the con- v~ntion which will be held in

be different These were among questions discussed by a capacity audience at the second in a series on Christian Morality sponsored by the parish council of Holy Name Church Fall River Sparked by Sisshy

John AIIcIa SUS Cter some 30 people from all parts of themiddot Diocese viewed the film The Detached Amerishycans then broke into small groups for buzz sessions

Thesis of the film was that Americans wont become in volved with each other It dra- matically pointed its message with the true story of Kitty

Genovese murdered on a New York Street while 38 of her neighbors watched ffom winshy

bull dowS-o--and did nothing Also depicted were amarried

couple talkingto each other with neither really listening a student going thriugh school as on an assembly line with his sole goal the position he could

hope for as a college graduate and various other examples of non-involvement

What is life worth if we do not give it away questioned Harry Reasoner at the end of the film The Holy Name audishyence agreed that life sbould be

used for others but tended to feel that there wasnt the im-Personalitv in a smailer city

Jthat is found in a large metropshyolis One Sister countered howshyever with stories brought to

h t htschool by children s e aug This is right in Fall River she stressed Others cited examshypIes of personal involvement in affaIrs of others but agreed that much more could and

Pope I~aul Names Two Aluxiliaries VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VImiddot hail named Msgr Jose T Sanchez to be auxiliary bishop of Caceres in the Philipshypines He takes the titular See of Lesvi

Msgr 5anlhez was vicar genshyeral of Legazpi at the time of his nomination

He was born March 17 1920 atPandan in the Legazpi dioshycese He completed his philoshysophical and ordinary theologishycal studies at the diocesan semshyinary and obtained a licentiate in theology at the University of St Thomas in Manila He was ordained Marc~ 12 1946 and then worked as an assistant passhy

Pltts~urgpchap~er9rmiddottl~e Afner- ~ Philippines Father Tudtud who Pope Paul also delivered 264 ~can -Inst~tUtofAlth~te~ts was36ye~~I)]fat ~hcent time ~fsPeeches bull (~~)_(h~ch mclud~~ ~tIePoit~- his noniinatiOJl studied philos- burgb dlO~es~and three adJa-ophy and theology at St Johns

c~nt countIes SeminarY inmiddotBoston Fath~r roseph P- Larkin He was born March 22 1931

eOm~ission chaiIm~nmiddot ili1(I-a at Mabola inmiddotthe Cebu arch~ member of the diQcesan bU~lll- diocese He worked as assistant - bullbull

iIg commissligtn~ said the pur- pastor Editor ltit Cebus Caiholic pose of thereiiovlition is to pro weekl~ and finally pastor of the ville a ~mQte suitable sanctu- Church of thE Blessed Sacrashy

ary setting fof the liturgical re- inent in Cebu In addition atf orms Qrought into beingmiddot by the time of his nomination he Vatican Council II was vice-superior of the Misshy

Father Lmiddotai-kir said because slon Society of the Philippines the cathedral must architectu-middot r~lly and liturgically allow for Issues Sttement both episcopal mdparish ser-- U

vices ~~any structurai cihimge O H R h offers a unique chalienge to the n umalu ig ts designer~ and provision for the LA CROSSE (NC)-Tbe La

new liturgy must be made in Crosse diocese has taken a poshy

and spirit 01 the existing struc- integrated arid ildequate educashy t4re tion fair employment and the

- defense of the rights of minorshyities

Christians and J~ws Bishop Frederick W Frekshying of the Wisconsin diocese

Honor Clergymen and the diocesan central com-NEW YORK (NC)-Clergy- mission approvedmiddot apmiddot officiai

men from thefour major faiths statem~nt titled Human Reshyhave been honored here by the lations in the Diocese of La National Coiuerence of Chris- Crosse

tians anltt Jews The statement was prepared

the third week of August was the practice has spread middotto a made by Dr Josepb G Murphy number of other cities hesaid of La Marque a member of the interrelgious understanding hasmiddot boara- of- directors fortbe Cathprogressed tremendously middotiIi reshyeticmiddot meDs oganization middotc~nhyearsbull

-

Tbe clergymeri cited for by the subcommission of human relations of the diocesan cornshycourageous leadership in intershymissionon social action and apshy

creedal relations were proved by both before submisshy Rev Dr ~ohn C Bennett sion to the central commissiollll

president of Union Theological ) in January Seminary

Father Robert I Gannon SJ president emeritus of Fordham CONRAD SEGUIN University

Bishop Silas of the GreekOrshy BODY COJMPANY thodox archdiocese of Nortb and Aluminum or Steel South America 944 Countr Street

Samuel D Leisdorf New NEW BEDFORD MASSYork philanthropist pointed out

wy 2-6618that the NCCJ firstmiddot honored reshyligious leaders of four faiths in September -1966 Noting that

should be done by individuals parishes and municipaiities

There were no solutions ofshyfered to the problems posed bythe film We dont expect to have answers to these quesshytions warned Sister John Alicia at the beginning of the program They are too big for us The film WltlS strictly on the

human level and this was pointed out in one group No one can solve all problems it was agreed but surely each Christian canmiddot trust the Holy Spirit to lead him to the probshylems he is equipped to do someshything about no matter how small

There was another point on whichmiddot everyohe in the audience was in enthusiastic agreement that there be more such eveshynings as the one sponsored by Holllgt Namemiddot

Vatmiddotn Report~lIo

Continued from Page One two encyclicals The Developshymiddotment of Peoples and Priestly Celshyibacy four motu proprios inshyeluding one creating central a lay council and the Papal Comshymission on International Justice anp Peace and another restorshying the permanerit diacol1ate treeapostolic constitutions inshyelUding one reshaping the

Churchs c~iitral administlatioii two apostolic exhortations one apostolic letter and 78 other Wessagesmiddotand letterS inclQding

He reeeived eight ehiets Of state including U SPresident Lyndon B Johnson and United Nations Secretary General U T~ant and gave 16 audiences to

th lmiddottmiddot I0 er men 10 ~ 1 lca life in cluding U SVi~ President Hushy~rt H Humphrey Republican presidential hopeful Richard M N d N Ixon an ew Yorks Sen Robert F Kennedy

He received visits from four delegations of Orthodox churCh men including Orthodox Ecushymenicai Patriarcp Athenagoras I of Constantinople besides visit shying Patriarch Athenagoras in ~ tanbul

The book covering last yearli activities of the Holy See conshysists of 1680 pages plus about 2(10 photographs

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Bishop John J Wright hasestablished a committee 1Jl)take a complete look at Oaampshy

olie education in the PittsburpD lOcese

The aim is fc dedde wha~ 1shyd t to tak tbe ~

lrec Ion e Dedecade for the best education of

all Catholics young and oldThe committee will evaluate all present Catholic educationshygrade and high schools eo egesConfraternity of Christian Doeshytrine classes adult education and other programs

The surveyors wiU 117 to deshyvise a plan based oa mstinl and potential resources in facll-Hies funds and Staff to guide the dioceses educational efforlll for the next 10 years or more

May Be FaI-lleaehiDg Among ideas eXpected to be

examined in the evaluation are proposals by some to cut back on Catholic schools or even til phase them out in place of an expanded adult education proshygram

Named head of the committee of educators priests and lay professionals is Father Vernon Gallagher CSSp former presishy

deht of Duquesne University here now serving as an official of the Holy Childhood Associashytion He also is a former proshyvincial of the Holy Gbost Fa~ ers eastern province

The committee Will be emshypowered to call before it di shyocesan officials to hold publlc meetingshire staff ~ring in exshyperts ThedioCege will finance the work

The committee Win make spe- eific recommendations to BishoP Wright after the study which 18 expected to take at least a yearbull

-Results are expected to have ~ar-reaching implicatiou fOr Catholic education here

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Two Unbeoten league Play f1fE ANCHOR-Diocese oTtall River-Ihurs feb 29 1968 19

Coach Says Sault Complete BallPlayerCape Cods NausetCompiles SMTB Playmaker Is Former Coyle $trBest Over-All Court Mark

BY JOE MIRANDA By PETER BARTEK

An excellent hall handler and Norton High Coach team player Is how Pat Sault of

Taunton is described by his Eleven of tile 12 aa-ea e1ubs with the best records in coach Phil Wetterland of the

their respective leagues are among those who will parshy Sou the a s t ern Massachu- setts Technogical Institute Inshyticipate in the March Tech basketball tournament in Boston stitute in North DartmouthFairhaven High of the Oapeway Conference and Nauset Sault a 19-year old freshman

of the Cape amp Island loop are is a former Coyle High hoopshythe only all-winning league a single league game while two ster who played four years for

went doWn to defeat In every the Warriors his final two underaggregations from this area encounter In which they were coach Jim Lanagan on the varshyin the Hub championship Involved Almost two-thirds 02 sityelimination tourney while Dartshy the Southeastern Mass teams

D)Quth High is the only one of Teaching CareerfinIshed wIth a 500 average OIlthe tOp dozen better Although young Pat has al shya 70 per cent coQlbines WIth

WIth 12 triumphs in the Cape ready made plans for the future league record amp Island competition Nauset which Include finishing his edshywhich failed to Regional also achieved the best ucation and pursuing a teachershyqualify an inshy over-all record winning 16 of coaching career dication t hat 11 encounters The Cape Cod Sault has not yet chosen a non-league school will be shooting for the major in college but according competition selshy Class D Tech title to his parents he is very much dom jeopardizes interested in teaching historyNew Bedford High 15 and and coaching They feel he willthe ultImate one in the Greater Boston Subshy be good at both as he alwaysgoal of most urban league finished with anschools Actual- Peter devoted his spare time to helpshy

over-all 17-2 mark for the Winshyly 311 per cent Bartek ing the younger neighborhoodter The Crimsons 937 average boys understand athletics moreof the 35 Southeastern Massashy captured its leagues pennant flag thoroughlychusetts school teamsmiddot have The Crimson Whalers are now Pat is the oldest son of Mrqualified for the Tech title play poised to annex the No 1 State and Mrs Charles A Sault and)let none managed an over-all honor by clinching the top one of four children A sisterundefeated season ranking Class A division in the Annette is a senior at BishopThree area clubs failed to win Boston title tourney Cassidy High James Michael

and Cheryl grammar school Representatives in Three B~ackets students at Mulcahey Schoof in

Taunton Fairhaven and Holy Family FamilYhas been eliminated in The family resides at 85 Mershy

HIgh of New Bedford aiming the Lawrence Catholic tourney rill Avenue In Taunton and are for the Class C Tech crown both Southeastern Mass does not members of St Pauls Parish fInished wIth an over-all 16-2 have one club among the Tech

Wetterland Commentsmark The latter Is still smart- Class B participants but th~re ing from its cliff-hanging defeat will be five area combinations Wetterland was high in his at the hands of Xavier in the -includIng Fairhaven and Holy praise of his five foot 11 inch State Catholic tourney Bill Family-in the Class C play and guard who tips the scales at Walshs two-pointer from the three-including Nauset-in the 160 pounds ~ssesses good speed floor which many thought Class D Hub competition and is a key in the Corsairs fast

meant victory at Lawrence was The other Class C contestants break offense nu1llfied by a travelling viola- patterns when SMTI is wurkshy a rest he should be in top conshySault lllsed strictly with thetion which cost the loss ofthe are Case High of Swansea Nar- iilg too quickly and making dition for the 1968-69 campaignvarsity was gaining valuablebasket resulting in a one-~Jnt ry co-champions Oliver Ames Dlistakes Sault gaIned his court savvy1 f tb of North Easton runners-up in experience and developing rapshy

The SMTI mentor continued from Lanagan at Coyle wheretiOs~~ e Narragnnsett~a~ theHockomock circuit and Den- bUy whep a knee Injury slowed he iii the complete ball player hemiddotstarted in his juJ)ior and senshyDis-Yarmouth of Cape Cod see his progress midway through

Durfee of Fall RIver and ond pI fi ish in tho C the campaiiPt but Wetterland noting that he can shoot but is Jor lieasons and was a Vital co Bishop Stang mgh of North ace n er e ape most --content setting Up his in the Warriors successduring DartmQutb are the other two middotNausetwill be joined by Mar- has turned in some excellent efshy teammates for easy pblnts He Ioth years I J

way loop said despite the handicap Pat

Is a team player and always sacshy As ~ Coyle High fr~hmanarea Class A representatives inmiddot thas VIneyard and Norton mib forts in a most successful SMTI rifices himself to help the club Pat was a member XJtb~ yearshythe Tecb toutnament ~e Fall in the Class D bracket The season

Sault possesses a good atti shy lings h09P team and al~Q~ parti shyRiver Hilltoppers willbe out Islanders finished second to Naushy Defensively Sault is cnitshytude is a tough competitor and cipated in track By hihSOphoshyto make amends for their nose- set in the Cape amp Island league standIng Offensively Sault is one of the players Wetterland is more year Saultcopfjned his dive finish in the Bristol COUl)ty while Norton was second in the the teams playmaker ana quarshyeounting on 1to help SMTI gain athlettc talents to basketbjlll andloop whIle Stang ~ke Ho17 Tri~Valley Conference terback 8Dlall college recognition in the turned in a cODlJPenlla))le acshyfuture Teallll Player coun~ o~ himself

Ifere~s How They Did hi LiBogue Play Played for Lanagan Sault also represented stWetterland said his outstandshyThere is doubt about his the hardwood

he following are the league 21 Bishop Feehan 7_1 ing worth to the Corsairs comes no Pauls on in the eourage said the Corsairs skipshy Taunton CYO and in the annual from the fact that he can slowrecords of the 35 Southeastem Msgr Coyle 7-1 after painful knee Easter tournament He playeddown the offense and set up per even a

Mass teams Ta~ton 7-7 injury Sault continued to jpve four years of Litue JeagueM N B Vocational 6-8 his all and attended every pracshy Baseball and one season in theK of C Masons1 Fairhaven 14-0 25 DIman Vocational 5-9 tice The injury has slowed him Pony League prior to ~ntetmamp

Nauset 12-0 Msgr Prevost 5-9 visibly but after the season and Coyle Higa 3 New Bedford 15-1 27 SandwIch 4-8 To Cooperate4 Holy Family 13-1 28 Nantucket 3-9

NOTRE DAME (NC) - lfashyCase 13-1 29 Old Rochester 4-10

30 tlonal leadellS of the Scottish6 Oliver Ames 12-2 West~rt 3-11 Bite Masons and the Knights ~oll another7 Marthas Vineyard ~ 31 Barnstable 2-12

of Columbus anno~ced memshy8 Bishop Stang 10~ 32 Dighton-Rehoboth 1-13 strike on~rs of their organizations wU1Dartmouth 104 33 Bourne 0-14 work together on domestic andDennis-Yarmouth 10-4 Chatham 0-12 the enerlY international problems faciolaquoDurfee 10-1 North AUleJooro 1-14

the nation12 Norton 105 you get George A Newbury soveshy13 Attleboro 9-5 Minister Officiates reign grand commander 01 from14 Harwich 7-5

Scottish Rite Masons In theProvIncetown 7-5 a slice ofDn Cathclic Church northern jurisdiction of the US18 Seekonk 8-6 MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-A Lu- and John W McDevitt supremeSomerset 86

theran mInister officiated at the knight of the Knights of ColumshyFalmouth 8-6 marriage of his son in Holy Cross bus made the announcementMansfield 8-6 Catholic church here at a dinner here s~nsoredWareham 8-6

Married were James H Graf jointly by the Masonic Lodge 29 L th and the Knights of Columbus

a u eran and CalTon Ann council in South Bend Episcopalian Rite Gutwinski 25 a Catholic The ceremony was rformed - Both praised the work of Fa-MINNEAPOLIS (NC)- Archshy ther John A OBrien of the

bishop Leo Binz and Coadjutor Grapoundfs fltthell the Rev Paul L University of Notre Dame for Archbishop ~ PY1)1e of the Graf pastor of Holy Trinity r better understanding among the Cafllolic archdIoceses of St Paul theran church two groups Minneapolis were present in the Permission for the Rev Gmt Father Theodore M Hesshysan~lary of St Marks Episcoshy to officiate at his sonB wedding burgh CSC president of the pal cathedral here for the inshy was granted by theSacred Con- University of Notre Dame said stallation of Bishop Philip F gregation for the Joctrine of This nIght marks a great step McNarry as coadjutor bishop of the Faitlh inl lWme in answer to ll forward and reflects the new the Epi6copal diocese of Minneshy J)etition by Archbishop Leo BiDz ~enical spirit which is unishysota of~ ~~-M~eapotis iing ~ople long separated-

PAT SAULT

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bull THE ANCHOR Dayton University Thurs Feb 29 196a Brief Religious on Ecumenism

Selects Advisors SOUTH ORANGE (NC) meanitigful dialogue should not tended not to lead to compro- DAYTON (NC)-An ll-mem-

Named resident Some 1000 mms and Brothers be confused with monologueshy mise but to conyergence ber advisory board of six stushyservfng in tli~ Newark archdi~shy or confrontation He added We talk now of our common dents two faculty members andSANTA CLARA (NC)-The cese were briefed on the basic we must be willing to be pershy belilefs he said not to com- three representatives of theboard of trustees of the Univershy principles of ecumenism in a suaded-we need an open mind promise each others faith but in community has been establishedlllity of Santa Clara has named program sponsored by the Newshy to seek out the truth wherever the hope that at some point in for the Office of Human Relashylrather Thomas D Terry SJ ark Archdiocese Commission for it might be shy the future we will converge tions at the University oJ Dayshy35th president of the Jesuit unishy Ecumenical Affairs

Ifersity Father Terry who sucshy Discussing the difficulties of As an example he pointed to tornSpeakers at the session ineeeds Father Patrick Donohoe establishing Christian-Jewish the wide divergence of views The board under the direcshySeton Hall University includeSJ recently appointed Califorshy dialogue he said we Christians regarding (he Mass and the Eu- tion of Charles Hirt director ofDr Leonard Swidler of Templeaia provinCial af the Society of are responsible for 2000 years charist that existed between the Office of Human RelationsUniversity Philadelphia aridJIesus has been academic vic~ of anti-Semitism and now_ we Martin Luther and the Council will be responsible for estabshyFather Thomas M McFadden ofpresident af Loyola University must overcome our mutual disshy of Trent Then he cited the re- lishing policy making programthe Brooklyn dioceseLos Angeles for the last year trust before dialogue can be cent statement on the Eucharist recommendations helping to

lllI1d a half Previous to that Swidler said dialogue with fruitful issued by Lutherans and Catho- alleviate campus racial probshyIIlIather Terry was dean of the others must be preceded by an lics to show how much closer lems and drawing up proposall ltWllege of arts and sciences at examination of Catholic attishy Father McFadden said diashy the two bodies have come since for implementation Santa Clara tudes In addition he said a logue among Christians is inshy that time

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Page 7: 02.29.68

f I

PAUL BARTKIEWICZ KATHERINE BOLINGER M~CHAB CORNElL SUSAN FAOiEUi STAN f~ HOLY fAMILY DOMSNllAJt

THE

ANCHOR

SALUTES

n)$

S(~OO~

~~~II1~~~

JANET LAFOND MICHAEL LOWNEY JWI POISSON ST JOSEPH PREP COYlpound PREVOST

Catholics to Pray For Assembly

STOCKHOLM (NC)-A prayer lor the fourth general assembly elf the World Council of Churches (WCC) to be said at Masses in all Catholic churches and chapels this Spring has been eomposed by the ecumenical commission of the diocese of Stockholm at the request ~ Bishop John E Taylor OMI

It will be distributed together with the bishops pastoral letter for Lent to all the parishes of the diocese The WCC assembly will be held at Uppsala Sweden m July

The prayer is an appeal whether his project can For all those who noW are a practical reality

Ir~paring the general assemblY He de~ribedl the proposed of the World Council of institute as an educational proshy

tliurches in dppsala and now gram aimed primarily at the avshy are pa~nfcil~y slJffering from the erage mllfi ~d ~he Inde~Ptivi

1 WsunitymiddotofChrisUans legedio stimulate creative middotJ-h t 11middot b h h f thinking and acting both for

-1 a JI mem er c urc es 0 I J cooperat - ilie WCC lfiarptepare this gen- middoty~~nalilmiddot ma~ ~wtIi aridfor -~ can ~ii 1

eralllssemqIjr in a willingness the commol1 goodmiddot Fattier RIvers a member of middotto coop~rate ~ arid in an honest ~taina ~e~ormed by first tatemiddot the Cii~iimati -archdiocesa~li shy

ielirch fori the Will of God artlsts WIll be at middotthe heart of thmiddotinstitntes actiVity with the ~qat they Ul oen mmds may pUlipose of stllnuliltingmiddotpro-middot receIve ~h~ 1~splratlons of the

HOly SPUIt and follow them without fear

That we middotmiddotall by prayer and penance may participate in the preparations of this general asshysembly conscious of being linked by the same Baptism

That even we Catholics may laquorow in our understanding of the separated brethren that we together with them may become llWare of the throes of disunity and be strengthened in our will to work in a practical Wlq _

~

Proposes Institute of Little Imagination Would Benefit Services -

CINCINNATI (NC) Father Clarence Josepb Rivers who has won an international repushytation for his fresh approach to liturgical music said he hopes to spur creative thinking among millons througb a National 10shysUtute of Ritual and Drama

Recently returned from gradshyuate studies in liturgy at the C81tholic University of Paris Father Rivers has launched a feasibility study to determine within the next few months

become

found reflection upon tliatexshyperience is fto be stimulated and directed by especially trained educator - philosophersl he added

Closed Setting He said he envisions touring

companies as part of the overall plan but the usual institute program will ~e place in a closed setting he said makshying it something like a secular retreat

Another lISgeCt of the insti shytute Father Rivers said will be ita concern with adaptinl the

skills and techniques and ereashytivity of the performing arts to the needs of various kinds of ritual---secular as well as reli shygious

Asked abolilt secular rituals Father Rivers spoke of flagshyraisings Fourth oj July celebrashytions and cornerstone layings He sahll The existing secular rituals suffer from the same deshyfeds all the religious ones and need just as urgently the touch of artistic imagination and skills

In~ure Ref1Ie~t~n Father Rivers said the insti shy

tue s~ould be broadly humanishyt~ria~ not SplJ1cifically Je~-glO~S provIdmg a~ area 10

WhICh Jile()ple of yarlOus beliefs

llurgical commission saidmiddot the

PfJ~fes~or A~pointed -~e~I1i ofL~w School

PITTSBURGH (NC)-Professhysor Louis L Manderino has been appointed dean of Duqueme Universitys Law School here Father Henry J McAnulty C5 Sp university presidgtent 80shynounced lIhe appointment is effective immediately

Prof ManderinO a graduate of Harvard University Law School in 1954 has been -a memshyber ofmiddot the Duquesne Law Scbool faculty since 195amp

ROWD GAMACHE SHlRtlM JANICK MAUREEN KENNEY $1 ANTHORY MOUNT ST MAIf CASSIDY

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JACQUEUNE ROBOI JAHU~E ROBERTSHAW PETERlYM WOJTUSZEWSII JpoundSlJS IlARY AampADEIft SHA-FAU RIVER SHA- FAIRHAVEN

Ritual Drama

proposed mstitote~ program would go much further than those of existing professional or amateur acting companies beshycause it will not only provide the experience which is to be the basis of reflection but it also will insure as far as it is hmnanly possible the reflecshytion the work of the institute is only half done when the cur lain falls

It will difiler from the amashyteur companies and certain

_Moral Re-armament programs he continued esp~ciilly in terms Of artistic standards I dont believe lh2 institute can function effectively without achieving tlte highest possibIe success in artistic standards tehurch-goers of an denomshy

inati9fls he added generaUy

recognize that their Sunday and Sabbath services could benefit from ir little imaginatioZl once in it vyhilli r-----------shybull JEREMIAH COHOLANmiddot

PlUMBING 6- HEATING ~ntretors since ltH3

WYmal3-0911 699 Bellville Avenue New Bedford

State to Deny Aid To Large Families

LUCKNOW (NC)-The Uttar Pradesh state government here in India has decided to stop an govert1Illent concessions to famshyilies which have an additional child aiter the third one

The decision was taken in view of iii virtUal douampling of the states populatian--from 4a million in 19at to ga millionmiddot this year

The concessions to be withshydrawn presumably wiU include free treatment in governmmt hospila1s and allotment ~ waste lands

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THE ANCHORpiocese ~f Foil River---Thurs Feb 29 1968

European Tour Is Unlikely With New Travel Rules

By Mary Tinley Daly

Of all the role-playing the Head of the House and I have engaged in through the years the most recent ~ th8lt of- would-be European travellers This the year 1968 -rhe Year of the Monkey was to have seen us embark for foreign shores Ireland homeland of our forebears (would have been) mighty

helpful tooEngland a re-vimiddotsit for the Ginny our wardrobe consult shyHead of the House France

ant has been supervising theGermany and of course the clothing weve bought for theEternal City Spain and Greece past six months with an eye toperhaps if our easy packability convenientfeet and our washability and a mix-andshymoney held out match assortment o~ accessoriesAnd now this-shy for efficient travel Based on ~ h e proposed her own European experience of ~ax bi te on a couple of years ago GinnyiBternashy assures us such selection willU 0 n a I travel provide a minimum for totingSeems as though a maximum amount of space forweve been taxshy the pick-ups wed inevitablybitt e n pretty acquire on our journeybadly right here

the as ~truggle Now it seems theIn USA we bringshyonce more with IRS Form 1040 backs are down to next-toshy

Now some more of our $$$ to nothing A Iso day-by-day spending at this stage of the EX-CHAMP PREACHES LOVE Archie Moore formerhelp close that $21 billion travel

lap wilth a tax on American legislation seems based on an World light-heavy-weight champ who won a Freedoms intricate system full of loopshyspending outside _this hemi- Foundation award Feb 22 for conspicuous community sershyboles requiring an estimate ofaphere I voice in the civil rights field plays happily at home withtax liability on departu~e theWell its a wait-and-see propshy

h~8 own children Working with boys in underprivilegedmaking of a deposit and anotherOsition an aIr-dresSed-up-andshyreport pluspay-up on retUrn to areas Archie saymiddots he teachesthe lads to be constructiveIlO-Pla~eto-go feeling for us

lIS it is for many other armchair this country not destructive tao build not tear- down NC Photo travellers What we have not doncent yet-

Doml Homework and wont do unless the grand -----~

Oh weve been doing our bomework all right

Weve made lists of places we ~fpound~~~~~I~R~PMAR9J~p~1want to see in each country drivers license picture was badThe house is filled with travel folders travel magazines weve enough NEW SPRING COLORS become telephone pals with Bteamship and airline salesmen 113-Year-Old Aca~emy s much as I love color (anyshy April scene navy took a backoUr local library checks out

one who has ever visited my seat in the early sixties whenhooks in our name for all those Plans 69 Closing home or seen nile wearing the Jackie Kennedy made pink afaraway places with their glam- ROCHESTER (NC) ~ The m~ny bright shades that I adore must for all those who like toeur descriptions 113-year-old ~cademy Of the wnI agree with this) t must adshy feel that they are wearingWe have studied money rates Sacred Heart here will disconshy mi t this is going to be ~ grey whats in This season nothotel and transportation costs tinue operation after June 1969 flannel and navy Spring Oh only has navy returned in theinvestigated picking up a Officials announced reasonsshy thEre will be shades of shocking world of suits and daytime coatsVolkswagen Weve brushed up for closing were the mounting pirk high intensity yellow and it has become sophistic~tedon French going along with cost of education the inadeshy poison green upon the scene but enough to waltz into eveningThomas Hood quancy of present bUildings mostly in ac Jacques Tiffeau of TiffeauNever go to France unless the outlay needed to build and c e s S 0 r ies or and Busch has designed an ultray()U know the lingo If you do

maintain a school of the future playclothes For navy evening time dress that islike me you will repent by and the number of other cathoshy t hat special sleeveless and V-necked and ofjingo lic high schools in the area coat or that course wide belted Worn withWeve even learned basics in where openings are avlilable pearls it takes on all the dyshy0Italian and German such as be~utiful spring

namic quaiities that black hasshyThe academy is conducted byhow to order in restaurants For suB that could always had Because they lookthe Head of the House this the Religous of the Sacred tra vel as well so well with navy and grey themeans how to order pigs Heart of Jesus alolg the streets return of pearls is whats newknuckles sauerkraut UND beer of Ne~ York on the jewelry front for SpringJohnny has patiently demonshy Imiddot kO or the avenues and Summer The thirties influshyAutnoUize Pa Istan of Washingtonstrated perhaps for the hunshyence of the Bonnie and Clydedredth time just how to operate middot Ch the more con-LIturgy anges serrative colors are the stars flicker has brought back thehis camera which he will let us

take along LYALLPUR (NC)-Melbers Cne of the most elegant and long swinging chains of beads -of all Pakistans diocesan lilur- beautifully tailo1led suitsmiddot that I and nothing swings better than

Family Advisors gical commissions met here un- have viewed thus far in the long ropes of pearls-especially Markie who did her touring der the direction of Archbishop sealch for Spring clothes was a against navy or grey

on a budget and had a whee of Joseph M Cordeiro of Karachi maltilificent grey one by Gino a time so doing introduced us to discuss propolled liturgical Paoli Superbly tailored in a to her bi-ble Arthur From- changes in this country ricl knit material the smart mers invaluable Europe on Approved for experimental desi go was set off hy fresh $5 a Day with its practical use were two new baptismal touches of white guidelines based on first-hand rites in the Urdu limguage and Grey has always ~n a color dramaticallyexperience For instance who- a revised Urdu funeral rite thai I avoided like the plague ever would have thought of Authorized for publication was (ev~r since an experience with different8eeking inexpensive spotlessly the Punjabi version of the Can- a grey dress in eighth grade dean lodging in Italian con on of the Mass as well as an that made me look like an un vents Author Fro~mer gives Urdu edition 01- the Roman heaithy Corpse-of course that Sensational tastingnames addresses and prices 1ft missaL Was before eigh1lligirlS wore Hollywood Diet Breadduded also are Readers Sug Jilake-up)and I havent bought made from aestions helpful tips for vari- an item of grey 81)parel in years

places Youth in World Theme and years OIlS vegetable Boursl Markies own addenda will- Grey always seemed to beOfSpanish ~ial Work Your choice of color that looked good on someshy

vALLADoLJD (NC) ~ Offishy LIGHT or DARKCollege to ~ Admit Me cials of Spains ~nual Social redleads quite jiunior league one else-it was wonderful em

HollywoodIWeek have aimounced that r St Scholastica here in Minshy smad on white-skinned hrushy

DULUTH (NC)-The College on blondes and even looked Youth in the World will be Bakedby

the theme of the 17th week yournesota announced it will admit nett~s but since 1 failed to fan male students in 1969 ending planned for March 25-31 in this into any of these categories I Sunbeam

city56 years as a liberal arts colshy felt it was not for me This seashy Ballerlege exclusively for women Manuel Capelo Martinez Secshy son however the richness and Sister Mary Richard Boo colshy retary gener~l of the week said smaltnes of the grey shade deshylege president said the change We hope that the quiet atmoshy Signl may force IDe to change was made as a response to sphere of social week discussions my opinion - aidoo by some the needs of our time The basic will enable us to make some colorful makeup of course curriculum will remain the clear decisions about the many Navy RelmIlJIls IIame she said The college is problems of youth decisions Navy is the second color that eonducted by the Benedictme madein the light of the Churchs has returned to importance fornuns aocial teacJiingsmiddot Sprilig Always a must on Ule

Schools 10 Offer Sex Education

ROCHESTER (NC)-8ex edshyncathm will be integrated in tbe curriculum of 13 parochial schools of the Rochester diocese this Spring on an experimental basis

Father Daniel Brent assocllm d i 0 c e san superintendent at schools said the sex educatioD program will eventually be in effect throughout the 102 eleshymentary schools in the diocese

We are trying to create an attitude that sex is part of life and not a dark dirty secretmiddot Father Brent said

The classroom discussions will emphasize 1he family orientashytion of sex and parents will be asked to review topicswitln children before they are preshysented in the classroom hra added

Father Brent said the pro- gram ~lated to begin about April I will aim at developing respect for the opposite sex and the serious Qlbligations that go along with sex He emphasized the program will not constitute a separate course of study but will be integrated with other subjects and with sp07lJtanooUII questions as they arise

US Court to Hear Textbook ChaUenge

WASHINGTON (NC) - DIe U S Supreme Court has agreed to examine the constitutiorlality of a 1965 New York State law allowing the state to loan textshybooks to children in churchshyrelated schools

The law is being challenged by several local public school boardsln the state on the grounds that it violates the U So Constitutions First Amendment prohibition against establishshyment of religion

The New York law which was passedin 1965 and became effective in September 1966 aishylows the state to punhase textshyhooks and loan them to children in private schools - inclUding those operated by churches--iD graqes 7 through 12

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

9 Money-Eating House Puts Garde1n Needs in Shadle

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick Oh~ ~ Iye~rIlfor the return of Spring and an opporshy

innity to gel out of this D1Ollampter we can a house I cra1ll IOOr house a monster because it seems that it has an inshy8Qtiable appetite for money We recently fiIrlished OUlr second floor (whiClh took a year of

its about 6 above outside andplanning six months of on with the able assistance of a Mld off oonstruotion and 1mshy hardy Winter wind the weather believable sums of money) is urging us all to stay inside J(ow we must have 11 basement Its a perfect day to keep your IIOOm which ea1ls for more mess oven going and your kitchen a money filled with delectable smells

Now there are individuals rve been baking beans since have the desire and the early mom a container of

capacity to be handymen and brown bread is steaibing in a Cbere are those of us who deshy huge kettle OIl the top oJ1 themiddot pend on others to do their work jets and I just set a cinnamonshyI fall into the latter category filled Indian pudding into the -ad I am paying for it I am 80 oven along with the beans The tired of furring ceiling tile aromas are beginning to mingle Dghting fixtures floor tile sidshy and all seems right with the tog etc that I am half hoping world Chat everything comes to a Smalil Dinners lItandstill What appears to be

0

These dre2l1Y months of low the simplest job turns out to be temperatures and stay-homeiIbe most complicated involved days are the perfect time to eIll shyIlleSS imagin91ble tertain your friends X love

Plano Moving nothing more than planning a Take our piano Two years small dinner party for a few

ago we bought an old upright friends and look forward to a 110 that the children could bave couple of days of cooking and their piano lessons in the comshy planning The dinner menu fort of their own home without should be made out at least a baving to nui to my mothers week ahead of time (with pershyevery night to practice The haps a few alternatives in case piano is 11 five toot upright items you plan to serve are not JI~ch cost us 5 available at this moment in thia

When the movelll igtrolliht it area The last time I made a to the ~o~ they ~ere very dinner menu I planned to start careful not 10 hurt tb~ piano off with prosciutto and melon but they managea to sandwich (a delightful combination of Cbe back door scrape half the flavors) only to find out that all paper i~ the hallway and there wasnt a fresh melon avaDshydent the mo1ding wherever theJ able for 10Ve or mOll1ey anyshylraveled where in 1be city I1 you have

Now tbat we are planninl your menu made out befOIle yoa the basement we decided go grocery obopping you avoid put the pianio there where It the disheartening happening of would not be an eyesore and DI7 starting to make a dish only to wife and I would not have find you dont have all tllle ilnshylisten to our fledglings takinC middotgredienta tring into the musical world Desserts tbat rm going to

Simpler said than done One serve to guests are more ofteD mover on seeing the size of the than not the kind Ulat can be piano and the size of our bulkshy made the evening or day before bead said I hOpe you wont be and then thats one less item I offended if I tell you the truth -have to think about the cIay I would advise you to take an that Im going to entertain axe and break it up and bU7 Many desserts lend themselves yourself a new piano He didnt to early preparation and it gives marge for this advice but me a feeling of security to know neither did he move the piano I have one or two completed Now all we have to do is remove desserts already in my freezer n of the stairs in the bulkhead or relrigerator as the busy da~middot

ItO that the movers can drop of preparation begins the piano into the cellar enshy A timetable of projects for kance a job which will cost the day of y~ur ~inner party is ftnimagined amounts of money a great help and I even time I am half tempted to buy that eacb item on the menu SlO thatbullbull I know just when a certain dish

And so it goes Not so in the has to go into the oven AJlL prden where everything iii tbis pre-party preparation leaves lItraightforward and results are the evening free to enjoy yourather immediate Marilyn keeps guests and your own cookingmsisting that the day will come Of course in jolly old New Engshywhen we wont have to bleed bull land a blizzaro can mmr yoUII our bank account to feed our party plans but then your PurishyInsatiable monster but I dont tan adaptability can come to the believe it In the meantime I fore and you can either pack ~ll continue to budget infinishy everything in your Jlreezer for tesimal sums for the garden anotber evening or you and _ile the house is reconstructed your spouse can sit down to a

IN THE KITCHEN sumptuous repast Last weljlk because it was CorrectiD

Rbool vacation week we took Note In a S)taghett1l AUce tile children to the Science Mushy

recipe in the February l ADehorIIeWI1 in Boston As we wanshy two eaD5 l)f toaiato paste wendered among the wonders at

omittedman and his universe I paused Jl()POVEIRSbull moment in front of a case that

displayed a cut-away section of This is an easy but ~al

the earth during the Winter seashy looking quick-bread Contrary lIOn Chipmunk and fieldmouse to most peoples idea popoven IleBtled warmly in their cozy are espeCially easy to make anderground castles waiting for always bake mine in a very iUIe rigors of a blustery Winter badly darkened muffill1 pan to pass and I must admit that at perhaps this is the secret oil mtI Ibat instant I was a bit envious success of Mr Mouse and Mrs Chipshy 1 cup flour munk who could retire from the teaspoon salt hzen world with all its cares 3 eggs (beaten)

Most of us cant crawl into a 1 cup milk bole and hibernate when the 1 Tablespoon melted butter aorth winds blow but we caD 1) Melt the butter ancll set ~nd more time enjoying tile aside and put the greased mufshy

pleasures of our warm (on top fin pans in the oven ~ tAe ground) homeamp ~ a) MUt toueUler a1J1 the __

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968

Voters Approve Open Housing

FLINT (NC) - Flints voters have become the first in the nation to approve an open houSoo ing ordinance in a public refershyendum

The measure pushed strongly by Negro Mayor Floyd McCree and the local Council of Churches was passed by a 43-vote margin The unofficial tally was 20172 to 20129

The Flint City Council passed an open housing ordinance in 1967 but its opponents led by John Birch Society section leadshyer Gerald Spencer had no trouble in gathering 5000 signashytures on a petition to place the

issue before the voters The religious support of the

ordinance was organized by the local Council of Churches with which Catholic parishes coopshyerated Several sponsored pubshylic debates on the measure and more expressed support for it in parish bulletins

Recommends Elimnnating First Four Grades

SPOKANE (NC) - A special study committee here in theBans Sales State of Washington has recomshymended the gradual phasing outSpanish Tov~i~t Convention Forbids of the first four grades in some

diocesan schools and a totalSelling Churchs Artistic Treasures emphasis upward in religious

SEVILLE (NC)- Andalusia For some proof that their education Provincial Tourist Convention fear is valid came from a decishy The committee comp~sed of in a resolution announced at the SiOD to sell donations decorating eight diocesan educators and close of its meeting here has Zaragozas shrine to the Virgin headed by Father Michael emphasized that artistic treas- of Pilar Accumulating for ONeill diocesan superintendent urea- decorating the nations nearly 100 years many of the at education made its recomshychurches are the property of the gifts of the faithful are both mendations to Bishop Bernan people and maT not be sold by artistic and financial treasures J Topel of Spokane after study-Church officials without the ap- Proceeds from the sale of the ing education in the diocese proval of local civil authorities Pilar treasures will go to wbat since August 1967

Admitting that the cburches Zaragozas Archbishop Pedro Elimination of grades one are permanent depositories of Cantero Cuadrado described as through four would allow the nations art the resolution urgent social necessities schools to strengthen grades was aimed at Spanish churchshy five through eight - middle men who have proposed selling school-and offer increased edshyart treasures to finance social CRS Sends Penicillin ucational benefits to a greater action projects number of students at the sameFor Vietnam Casualties or less cost the committees IeshyThe combination of increased NEW YORK (NC) - Within port saidemph~sis on social justice and hours after being inforined thatchurch renovation resulting the Saigon airport was againfrom the liturgy decree of the in operation the U S CatholicSecond Vatican Council has led Offering YouRelief Services (CRS) shippedmany Spaniards to fear that the out by aid 100000 doses of fast shychurches would be denuded of 3 Savings P~ansaction penicillin for civllian casshyancient treasures ualties in Vietnam Home Financing

The penicillin is an urgent need in Vietnam and will be WARJMI~Plan Byzantine Rite used for the civllian casualties

Installation March 5 by the four Sisters who are on co-oprD4liVEthe CRS medical teams in thatPITTSBURGH (NC)-Bishop country Fulther shipments willStephen J Kocisko will be honshy BANKfollowored at a banquet here followshy 281 Main St Wareham Ma

ing his March 5 installation as The peniciUin was given to Telephone 295-2400Bishop of the Byzantine-rite dishy the CRS by the Catholic Medshy

BaDk-8U lIerfIa IftfIIMI ocese of Pittsburg ical Mission Boarcll

Speakers will include Archshybishop Luigi Raimondi Aposshytolic Delegate in the United States wbo will officiate at the

installation John Cardinal Krol of Philadelphia Bishop John J Wright of Pittsburgh and Msgr Edward V Rosack who has been apostolic ildmmistrator of the Byzantine-rite diocese of PitsQurgh

Bishop Kocisko succeedsArchshybishop Nicholas T Elko who reshyeigned as ordinary of the Pittsshyburgh diocese ill1 lOecember Bishop Kocisko has been head of the Byzantine diocese of Passhysillc and will continue as its administrator IIlDti a new bishshyop js named

maining ingredients anell then MOTHER PARKERSlldd the cooled butter 3) Beat the batter until it hl OLD FASHIONEDcompletely smooth 4) Fill the well-buttered pans

full Place in a 450middot degree DOUGHNUTS oven for 15 minutes Reduce heat to 350middot and continue bakshy Baked by your Sunbeam Baker ing 20 to 25 minutes

AWARD WINNERS Award winners at a Winter Carshynival sponsored by the Fall River area CYO are left Janice Feno Somerset High School named Miss Personality and right Carol Silvia Durfee High School carnival queen Holding trophies is Richard Lown Durfee High School carshynival co-chairman

AFamily Favorite

bullbull

THE ANCHOKshy10 Thurs Feb 29 1968

Urge Cergymen Attend Meltefring On Scfielrnce

WASHINGTON (NC)shyCatholic clergy throughout the country are being urged to attend the second annual conference on science for cler- gymem at the Oak Ridge (Tenn) Associated Universities Aug 5-16 in cooperation with Oak Ridge National Laboratory

The conference entitled The Impact of Science on Society is sponsored by the National Science Foundation and the Alshyfred P Sloan Foundation Purshypose of the conference is to proshyvide clergymen of all faiths with an understanding of the nature scope effects and trends

of contemporary science - parshyticularly nuclear science

Dr W W Grigorieff chairshyman of the conference said the conference series originated in the recognition that most clershygymen actively engaged in pas torat work have little training in and understanding of sci shyence but are confrOnted almost

daily with problems and deci aions arising from its implicashytions

Dr Grigorieff s~icj in an inter- view with NC Nevvs Service that experience gained through the 1967 conference indicated to the conference advisory comshymittee that religious leaders of all f~i ths not only need to be conversallt with the content and llOcial dynamics of science but also are extremely eager to take advantage of the opportunity to become more acquainted with modern science

The conference director stated that this year the conference will be open to some 90 parshyticipants-three times as many IllS attended the 1967 conference

He pointed out that Roman Catholic applications for last years conference were not nushymerous and said that those who had applied were for the most part overqualified - that is they possessed professional qualifications and advanced training in science The confershyence he emphasized is not pri shymarily for such specialists

Practicing Cnergy Dr Grigorieff stated that an

announcement has been sent to bishops of anlimber of dioceses

throughout -the country in air eHort to stimulate iriterest in the aims of the conference He added that an effort is also being made to contact diocesan priests senates

He explained that conference participants will be selected on a nationwide basis from appli shy

cants representing various reli shygious )lodies arid emphasized that the majority are expected to be praCticing clergy-those actively engaged in the minis- try rather than in teaching reshysearch etc

He said that a limited number of seminary educators deans heads of clergy-in-service and religious editorf will be acshycepted as observers

Speakers will include Dr William G Pollard executive director of Oak Ridge Associshyated Universities who is also an Episcopal priest associated with St Stephens Church Oak Ridge and the author of several books and Alvin M Weinberg director of Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Askeel to Withdraw MILWAUKEE (NC) - The

Milwaukee priests senate has passed a resolution urging 11 priests of the archdiocese to work for a chalige in tlie policy of clubs which are discriminashytory or tG withdlW as members

INTERFAITH SERVICE Bishop Fulton J Sheen center of Rochester NY at shywnded an interfaith service at Mount Neboh Congregation in Manhattan With- the Bishshyop are the Rev Philip Hiat right rahbi of the congregation and Cantor Albert l- Stur- mer holding chalice wh() prepared the ceremony at which Bishop Sheen received aspeshycial Brotherhood Award SC Photo

Archdiocese- to IBatmiddottle

Race Prejudice -

BusmlrAeSS Archbishop Says CINCINNATI (NC) - Ar(h-

bishop KarlJ A1t~r launched Project Commitment here with an appeal to the Christian comshymunity to appreciate the size and urgency of the problems of race relations and an insistence that the finding of Solutions is everybodys business

Speaking at a Mass in 1l Saints church the Cincinmtti archbishop emphasized not on ly right attitudes among Catholic people but also united comshymunity-wide organization and effort are necessary 10 me~t the problem

He said government pm-middot grams heretofore have been t(o late and too little and adVHshycated something like the Mal shyshall Plan which at the end HI the Second World War rescued Europe from misery and dEshy

spair -The Mass marked the openshy

ing of the projects pilot prll- gram which will continue wittl

seven workshops at Moeller HighSchool on specific aspects of- racial prejudice and lliscrim- ination Endorsed by the Archdiocesan

Pastoral Council and sponsored by the Catholic Commission 011

Human Relations Project Com mitment is described as a promiddot gram ~o help Catholic lay lead ers recognize their responsibii ities and prepare for theiJ proper roles in t~e field of inmiddotmiddot terracial justice

Seven VVeeks Program Dayton will be the second

area in which Project Commitshyment will be launthed The date has been set tentatively for April 9and the program will continue for seven weeks

Archbishop Alter said experishyence gained in the pilot pro-

Forty Hours Format ST LOUIS (Nc)-The St Louis

archdiocese has dropped its reshyquirement that Forty Hours deshyvotion must be held annually in each parish Pastoral guideshy

lines from the Archdiocesan Liturgical Commission noted that parishes were free and encouraged to continue Forty Hours and offered possible new formats which are based on Scripture readings and themes of Eucharist priesthood and church

gram would be used in organizshying similar efforts in the other deaneries

St Francis de Sales deanery in t~s area was chosen as the first for the experiment beshycause its Catholic population represents a cross-section of the entire community and if a-- project succeeds here it may well succeed anywhere else the archbishop said

It has been estimated that more than 500 persons from 31 of the deanerys 34 parishes would tale part in the project

The archbishop detailed the reason why the whole archdioshy

cese was to be involved when the problems are so diverse in the various regions of the 19 counties and When iincertain areas there is no racial conflict because of a totally homogeshyneous population

National Prohlem

The answer is that the prob- lem of harmonious race relashyJions is not a local problem but a national problem involving all communities everywhere and affccting all our public relashytions political economic and social There may not be racial conflict but there can be race prejudice he said

The problem has moreover definite religious and moral asshypects he said and there are questions of social justice and social charity which concern every Christian and for which

Pope Honors Gellman Protest(OInlt Leader

BONN (NC) -Pope Paul VI has awarded the Great Cross of the Order of St Sylvester to Dr Reinhold von ThaddenshyTrieglaff at German Protestant leader

Dr Von Thadden-Trieglaff is the founder and honorary presshyident of the Kirchentag the anshynual German Protestnt convenshytion -

In the document accompanyshying the award the Pope thanked Dr Von Thadden-Trieglaff for his work on behalf of ecumtmshyism and asked him to continue working in this spirit of recon-

ciliation and brotherhood Bishop Adolf Bolte of Fulda

presented the award

he will find the appropriate anshywer in the teachings of the Gospel

All our Catholic people he said are charged with the reshysponsibility of supporting adeshyquate remedial legislation and of creating social institutions which will eliminate discrimishynation and alleviate the burdens of sickness poverty and )gnoshyrance No one can stand aloof from a program of social bettershyment

Dutch Bishops Take Poll of Priests

moving toward onenessTHE HAGUE (NC) -- The cardinal saidDutch bishops in an effort to

measure the effectiveness and opinions of the nations priests Priest on Facultyhave distributed a list of 39 questions to all priests deacons LANCASTER (NC) - Fathell and subdeacons in the country William J Walsh SJ is the Several questhms deal with first Catholic priest to be apshypriestly celibacy pointed a fullitime member oil

the LancaSter Theological SemishyD~awnupto determine what nary conducted by the Unitecllp~iests think of the priesthood Church of Christ here Fathetandto measure the clergys acshyWalsh assistant theology proshyceptance of the celibacy Iegulashy

- essor at the Jesuit notiviatetion the questionnaire will be

CardinalCites Church Role InSlaquosety --CHICAGO (NC) - Jobm

Cardinal Cody asserted heq that the Church must involVil) fultlelf in social problems 00 be true to its fundamentetl works

The cardinal spoke at a sefib vice in the First Presbyteri~ church making its lOOth anm versary celebration

Those who contest involve-shyment by the Chruch in prolraquo lems of society Cardinal Co~

said take an indefensible stand He said personal sanctity whiclli

is conceded to be the ChurchD rightful concern cannot bd sepilrated from social responsi shybility

If the Church has nothing 00 say to us regarding our obligashytions to our fellow man it kJ sadly neglecting our personall holiness Cardinal Cody said

We sin by Injustice We sm by lack of charity We are sancshytified by giving all men thellf due he added

Move Toward Unity Cardinal Cody did not specishy

fically mention race relationll but he said society mistrea~

certain groups or individuals1ll

He said if church members aNI in any way party to this evill the Church must become i~

volved The cardinal said COIb-

cern for personal holiness forcelll the Chuxch into action

Let the Church in such cil shycumstances stand idly by and Q will lose all reason for exisshytence he declared

Cardinal Cody was introduceell to the congregation by the Rev Harold Blake Walker pastor Cltf the church When asked ahow his appearance in a Protestanll church following the service the cardinal said not long age it would have been unthinkshyable He added that the Holy Spirit is moving strongly anell speedily

We are not yet perfectly one as Christ prayed but we arll

th~

evaluated by the Pastoral Insti shytute of the Catholic Churchin the Netherlands and the Insti shytute for Applied Sociology of the Catholic Universiiy of Nijmegen

Introducing the questions the bishops commented that in a period of Church renewal it is unavoidable that priests be conshyfronted with serious problems They then recommend that the priests answer the questions carefully keeping in mind the teachings of the Church and the roie of the Church in modern society

Wernersville Pa will take ihe post of assistant church history professor at the 143~year-olcll

Protestant seminary on July L

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Black Power MINNEAPOLIS (NC) - nle

only un-Christian thing about power is the abuse of power Father James E Groppj Milshywaukees militant civil rights leader told a Lutheran layshymens conference here

Neither is the striving fox power by a minority group unshyAmerican the priest asserted It is rather part of the American tradition he said and cited past drives for political power by labor unions Italians in New York and the Irish in Boston

Father Groppi also said that the Milwaukee NAACP Youth Council which he advises has adopted black power tactics only after we had used every tactic eveiy means we could think of to take the yoke off black people and nothing had been effective

He said that one use the counshycil had made of black power was in a united Negro boycott of stores during Christmas The white man doesnt give us a housing bill we dont give him our dollar he explained

Discussing the role of the Christian Church in the black mans struggle for equal rights Father Groppi said that the Church has been involved by her non-involvemen1i By such non-involvement he said the Church has aggravat~d the Neshygros problem

Today he said I the use of prudence as an excuse for cowshyardice is the great sin of tile Church

Students Interrupt Strike to Mourn

PARIS (NC) - The strike launched by the guild of law students at the Catholic Unishyversity of Paris has been intershyrupted by its leaders out of resJect for the mourning of the diocese of Paris following the death of Pierre Cardinal Veuil shylot who was chancellor of the instittltion

The strike was called to proshytest a reform of the university decided U()(ln by the French bishops and put into effectmiddot by the rector Msgr Pierre Haubt- mann The reform is designed to avoid having the Catholic uni- versity compete systematically with middotthe state university In all secular studies

The bish~ps decided that in addition to teaching and re search in the area of religion the Catholic universtty must first of all be devQted to Chrisshytian reflection on secular matshyters

Pastoral Institute To Open at Quito

BOGOrA (NC)-A new Latin American Pastoral Institute will be opened in April at Quito Ecuador as a project of the Latin American Bishops Counshycil (CELAM)

The institute will be a unit of the CELAM pastoral departshyment

Purpose of the institute will be to train personnel from the whole continent in pastoral work applicable to Latin Amershyica The institute will offer seven-month courses and Euroshypean specialists in pastoral work will also serve on the faculty

Meeting on Cities NOTRE DAME (NC) - An

international conference entitled NCities in Context will be held March 31 through April 3 at the University of Notre Dames Center for Continuing Educashytion

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968

litu~~W Changes Continued from Page One

in earlier periods-even thou~

they do not conrorm in all deshytails with the approved versiOlil of contemporary liturgical texto -are authorized

TANTUM ERGO An apshyproved Eucharistic hymn ilill praise of the Blessed Sacrament may be used in Benediction oil the Blessed Sacrament in place of the Latin hymn Tantum Ershygo

PSALMS Approved are the texis of the Psalms as published by Englands Grail Society anell that found in the Jerusalem Bishyble

Suggestnol1Js Denied

The Vatican turned down two requests made by the US Bishshyops both dealing with liturgic011 experimentation

No was answered to the reshyquest that the US Bishops be permitted to designate acade~ic

centers to supervise litulgicall innovation

Also denied was the request that some experimentation be approved without examinatioD by the Holy See

-Presently the Vatican mu~

approve proposed liturgical inshynovations before experiment3shytion can begin

Archbishop Dearden explainshyed While the two major proshyposals concerning liturgical enshyperjmentation were not alPshyproved at the present time ~

is clear that the Consilium iJ open to the submission of rite and texts of li-turgical adaptioTll which have been drawn up anll presented prior to actual experishymental use

Concrete proposals of rHeIl 2nd texts may continue to be sent to the Bishops CommittCCl on the Liturgy

Matter Deferred

The permission to substitutfl h)mns or other sacled songtl fur the texts now used at the entran~e Offertory and Comshymunion of the Mass was defershyred

Such hymns now generally added to the official texts were approved in principle however by the delegates to the Rome Synod of Bishops October 1967

The Baptismal Rite describecll among the changes was n~

contained in the Vatican lettertl authoiizing the other changoo but was made public by Archshybishop Dearden at the same time as the announcement of 1ibe changes was released

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L_ PATRON 01 MARCH The month of March is dedicated to St Joseph watchful

guardian of the Son of God and patron and protector of the universal Church Dedicashytion of the month of the year to events in the life of Christ and to particular saints is a practice of the People of God rather than an official action of the Church It comfantly middotrecalls the power and love of God for mankind present at all times and in every place

Bishops Hit Penna Birth Control Policy Addsmiddot to Rather Thon Solve Problems of Poor

HARRISBURG (NC)-The Pennsylvania Welfare Depaytments new policy of acfi~ely promoting birth control among poor people is a major step in the direction of a newand dangerous life management bymiddot the state The Pennsylvania Oatholic Conferencehas criti shycized the Welfare pepartments decision to middotinitiltte discussions of birth control with their clients Under previous pol- stru~en~ for population con- the polic~ because it will add icy birth coiltrol adviceias trol saidmiddot the PCC to the p~oblems of the poor and Moreover many of these do nothmg to get at the root

Jren~l~red only If the welfare same spokesmen see it as an in- causes of poverty reCIpIent asked for It The strument to improve what they We are bound to protest sysshynew policY has been in effect call the quality of our popula- tematic governmental involveshysince mid-January The Con- tion Putting the program to ment in decisions of citizens reshyference which represents the suchmiddota use represents one of its specting family size as a major states Bishops in public affairs worst dangers the danger that step in the direction of a new has denied that Church teach- the state will start-=-by guiding and dangerous life management ing on contraception is a factor some groups or classes to birth by the state the statement emshyin its opposition limitation-to select the types it phasized

Invasion of Prhacy desires to see propagated Rather our concern is over Dangerous Management Varied Talents

the ef~ort of the state to i~fl~- The statement noted that its SPOKANE (NC)-The newly e~c~ many wa~ a pelson s view in this regard is shared formed Catholic Board of EdushychOIce of family size-our con- b th ptt b h b h f th h ht d h middottmiddot y e 1 s lIlg lanc 0 e cation for the Diocese of Sposhycern IS elg ene w en I IS National Association for the Adshy kane has elected members whothe poor whom the state seeks t f C I d P I to mfluence the Conference stat t sad

emen IThe Confelence called promoshy

tion of birth control an invashysion of privacy and asserted the state should play no role in attempting even indi rectly to manage tne most intimate domain of personal life

The statement also took issue with Welfare Depart~ent deshynialsmiddot that the program is inshytended to contlOl population

Negro Opposition

Chiefspokesmen for groups which have pressured for this program in our state say they IJee it and demand it as not just II medical service but as an inshy

vancemen 0 0 ore eop e include educators and non-edushyh h tl tt k d th w IC recen y a ac e e cators priests pastors ReligiousWelfare Department for trying and lay personst r t th th f th N 0 Iml e glOW 0 e egro

populatIOn The Conference also criticized

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a2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River--Thurs Feb 29 1968

The PaJrish Parade ~T MARYS CAlllllIlEJI)lItAL FALL RiVER

Mrs Hadley Lackey will serve as chaIrman of arrangements for the monthly meeting of the Womens Guild scheduled for a oclock on Monday night March 4 in the Shamrock Room of the Corky Row Club

Mrs John OConnor chairshyman of the Scholarola scheduled for April 1 requests that all pledges be brought to the March meeting of the Guild Committee members are avail shyable for all who wish their pledges collected at home

ST THERESA J80 ~-y gtltBORO

The ~ =middotaternity of Christian Mothers will hold thei~ regular monthly meeting on Monday evening March 4 following the Stations of the Cross

Rev Leo R Gravel OMI son of Mr and Mrs Raymond Gravel ofmiddotWestminister St So Attleshyboro will be the guest speaker

Members of the Confraternity will receive Comunion in a body at the 9 oclock Mass on Sunday morning March 3

88 PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Mothe~~ ~f Boy Scouts will bold a p1i1gtlic social at 730 toshynight Boy Scouts informatiOn classes for the Ad Mtare Dei award wiil be gtheld tonight and every T~ursday night during March and April

Junior High Camp Fire Girls plan a splash party at the YMCA from 530 to 7 Saturday night March 2 imd a cakesale in the IIChool hall from 8 to 11 30 Sun- ~y morniii~

The annual Cub Scout Pack IT Blue and Gold Banquet and charter presentation will take place at 630 Sunday night in the

school hall

SACRJED IllEART NOATlLEBORO

Starting on March 12 and conshytinuing for the next three conshysecutive Tuesday nights there will be an EcUmenical Worship Study conducted at Sacred Heart Church First Universalist Church First Methodist Church and the Grace Church

The service will begin at 730 and will be followed by a coffee hour and a discussion period in the church hall

The Sacred Heart Church will open the program on March 12 with a discussion of the Mass

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Womens Guild win reshyceive Holy Communion in a group at the 8 oclock Mass on Sunday morning March 3

The regular monthly meeting of the Guild will be held on Wednesday night March 6 at 730 in the school on Earle Street

ST PATRICK FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild announces an open meeting for Monday March 4 A jewelry demonstrashytion will be featured In charge of arrangements is Mrs Stanley Pitera aided by Mrs Joseph Fazzina

The unit will celebrate St Patricks day Saturday night March 16 with a smorgasbord supper and dance in the school auditorium Supper will be served at 7 and danCing will folshylow from 8 to midnight with music by the Moon Mists Resshyervations will close Sundq March 10 and may be made with guild officen or board memshybers

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

Plilrishoia books are to be distributed the weekend of

The WQmens Club announces March 2 and 3 Prizes will be bull pot luck supper for 630 Monshyday nigh1 Maich 4 Chairmen are Mrs William T Marum Jr and Miss Mary L Tyrrell

John F Keavy Jr president cl the US Model Railroad Assn will show films at a Boy Scout meeing slated for Tuesday night March 5

Theologians SllaquolIted As CU Spe(Q]~eis

WASHINGTON (NC) - Dr Ellie Mascall one of Englando most prominent Anglican theoshylogians and Father Hans Kung an outspoken advocate of reform in~~ the Catholic Church wilil speak at the Catholic University of America l1Ite in March

Dr Mascall a vigorous 0pshy

ponent of the so-called New Theology will give the Charles A Hart Memorial Lectures from March 24 to 29 His lectures will

deal sucessively with the quesshytions of God man Christ and the Church

Father Kung a Swiss theoloshygian who played an influential role at the Second Vatican Counshycil will speak on Sincerity in the Church on March 18

St louis Ceremony ST LOUIS (NC) - Bishop

John J Carberry of Columbus will be installed as Archbishop of St Louis on March 25 in cershyemonies at St Louis cathedral here

Archbishop Luigi Raimondi apostolic delegate to the United States will officiate The date of the cerem0I1-Y will be exactly three years after that on which Bishop Carberry was installed ordinary of Columbus

awarded to the three individuals selling the most books

The Mystibrook Singers of Bishop Stang High School will lead singing at the 815 Mass Sunday morning M~rch 3

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

A parish supper sponsored by the Womens Guild will be held from 530 to 730 Saturday night March 2 in the school hall Tickets are available from Mrs Frank Kingsley ticket chairman or any board member

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

During Lent Masses will be at 7 AM 4 PM and 7 PM

Confessions will be heard one half hour before each Mass Stashytions of the Cross will be held at 345 and 645 Friday aftershynoons and evenings Children are urged to attend Mass at 4 each afternoon The Children of Mary anshynounce a periby sale Friday March 15 A Portuguese parish mission will be preached by Rev Anshytonio Pinto CM from Sunday March 3 through Saturday March 9 Services will open Sunday night March 3 with rosary sernlon and Benediction at 7 I)clock and Mass and sershymon will be held every weekday night at 7

ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

The Association of the Sacred Hearts will sponsor a tea at 7 on Sunday night Mar 3 in the rectory in honor of the Sisters staffing the parish schooL

The monthly meeting C1f 1lhe Association will follow the tea

SAMOAN BISHOP The first native Polynesian memshyber of the hieraIl~hy Bishopshyelect Pio Taofinlllu (cq) S M will be consecrated at Apia Western Samoa on May 29 by Bosoon-born A r c h b ish 0 p George H Pearce SM of Suva The Bishop-eloot 44 made -his novitiate with the Marists on Staten Island ~C Photo

Hospital ~~urses

Return middotto Nork hi Covingtol1l

COVINGTON (NC) A nurses walkout which began in mid-November at 100shyyear-old St Eliz~~beth Hosshypital here has ended Nearly 100 of the 140 members of tine Registered Nurses tgtrganizati01l have indicated they will retum to their jobS The walkout stemmed from bull dispute over recognition of their organization and patient care policies Since the settlement hospital officials have been inshyterviewing nurse to expedite their reemployment and placeshyment

Restore Full Service Hospital spokesmen said the

nurses will be restored to posts they formerly held in so far as possible The nurses will lose no tenure as a result of their absence and if the positions they previously held have been filled they will be offered comshyparable posts or benext in line for selection to the positions

Administration officials exshypressed satisfaction with the prospect of the nurses return and voiced the earnest hope that we can move forward tel restore the 100 beds to service which had to be taliten out of availability by reason of the shortage of nurses to care for the patients

Officials estimate til1at four tie eight we~ks might t~ required 110 restore full bed service

Cite Achievements The nurses leaders said the7

had achieved at least 13 gains during the thteenionth dispute pointing to the fact that a doctor and a nurse have been apshypointed to the hospital board of trustees the establishment of bull patient care committee comshyposed or nurses electeli by those now employed by the hospital and equipment changes in the patient care area

Mrs Pat Tanner vice chait shyman also said the nurses unshyderstand that a lay heid will be appointed head of the hospital

Sister M Coronata adminisshytrator was assigned to) another post in the sisterhood earlier this month and Sister Mark Bernard has been serving u acting administrator I~he Franshyciscan Sisters of the Poor haft operated the hospitaL

Love Is An Active Verb We who bear the noble name of Christian arid who are io9shy

ingly called the faithful stand in awe of the Mystery of Christ and the Mystery of His Church More than the mystery of Obrist and of His Church is something we live It is then our duty JIlON

and more to experience the living reality of the Cbureh hershyself Cbristain tradition affirms that by her relatioJiship with Christ tlbe Redeemer the Church is a kind of sacrament or an efficacous sign of intimaJte union with God and indeed an efshyficacious sign cf the uni~ of all mankind

As members of the household of the faith we have heeD eaDmiddot ed by God and endowed with the precious gift 01 faithThereshyfore we m1ls truly experience a sense of urgency in brinampinK aD men to tun union with Christ Since mankind today is joined together more 1ll1osely than ever before in historY by bonds thaamp are social technical and eultural should it be ilenied the spirshyitual unity that springs from faith The Gospel is Ught Ii Is lIIewness it is energy it is rebirth it is salvation

Should DOt interest in our own salvation necessarily move us tID loving concern for the salvation of others If the Church is the Sacrament Of Salvation should we not as members of the Church eome to an eve- clearer awareness of our pari in her mission in the o1uty of evangelization in the missionary mandate in the apOstolic commiSsion Clearly our duty consonant withthe blessings I-eceived from Christ is that of spreading offering and announcing ~ faith to Others in order that we might be clble to acquit ourselves of Uiis Christian obligation The Society for the Propagation of the Faith eXiSts For-those who desire to be where the action is or 110 be iIivOlvoom wOrld mission the Church pr0shy

claims her own essential inissionlU) character Indeed the Cburdl ill J4ission and therefore aD of 118 are truly missionaries

fa tills Yeai IaItIl we eaa testify to Gaefldl uieDt 04 om- ATatitade to God for the bleilldDc of faWt by ma~ bull aerIfiee te TIle Society for the PropapUOn 01 the Faith lor tile works of the Chureh ill the service Df tile poor and underprholshy~ed We eamaot be Uke our Master III the fWlness of HIs Dlvinit7 nor caD we hoPe to experienCe thelrlory of His Transfigmratio bat there lis ODe way ill whieh we eaa resemble Rim and that Is ~ beeomtitamp- a oervant to His poor aDd His UWe ODes throughshyout the world

The native celrgy is the ho~ of the Chureb in Mission lands Many youngmen have heard the can but are sadly turned away for lack of facilities and funds $250 will provide a year of semshyinary training $1500 will cover the cost of complete education to the priesthood Wont you help us to help them by sending your offering to The Society of st Peter the Apostle 366 Fifth Avenue New York N Y 10001

SALVATION AND SERVICE are the work of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith Please cut out this eolumn and send your offering to Right Reverend Edward T OMeara Nashytional Direetor 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or directly to yoUr loeal Diocesan DirectOr Rt Rev Msgr Raymond T Considine 361 Norib MaiD Street FaD IUver Massaelnuse~ts 03720

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THE ANOiOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 13Missouri Diocesan Board Pondersmiddot Closing Consolidating Schools

KANSAS CITY (NC)-Tbe 1H girls They would be abshyKansas City-8t Joseph diocese sorbed into the school popushyis exploring the possibility of lations of Lillis high school and closing some of its schools and st Theresas academy forming n larger area school Although 120 persons attendshy Extension Volunteers bull bull bullwhich could upgrade the qualshy ed the school board meetingity of education for all pupils they were not petmitted tp

At 0 school board meeting speakFather John P Cole supershyinJtenden~ of schools reported on L - shyPTA Bead Plotes~

the possibility of setting up 11 Make Life Wortl IVngA motion-passed unanimousshycentral area grade school in ly by the board-was made to

mid-town Kansas City The continue exploration into conshysingle school would serve the solidation of the schools Thispopulations of three existing was opposed by John J Mcshygrade schools Donough a representativeFather Cole also suggested the elected by the Catholic PTApossibility of closing Redempshy Federation who will be seatedtorist high school now serving as a board member in July

McDonough was permitted to $~[]7reg~ 2~ Ifreg[[~ take part in the discussion but

had no vote

~~ ~~[[U IT)J He protested against the defe3ltist clique who let our

WASHINGTON (NC)-Bishop schools get picked off one byPaul F Tanner newly named one He charged that TheOrdinary of the diocese of St New Peltlple - the diocesanAugustine Fla is onfy the newspaper members of the dishyfourth priest to serve as general ocesan school office officials of secretary of the United States the Missouri Catholic Confershybishops secretariat in the nearshy ence Kansas City pastors andmiddotly half-century of its existence other Church officials share in

Bishop Tanner was the last an anti-Catholic school recshygeneral secretary of NCWC the ordoriginal secretariat He was also the first general secretary of ODe Operation both of is dual suc~essors-tne

McDonough said that theNational Conferenceof Catholic school superintendent shouldBishops and the United States be goingmiddot to the state legislashyCatholic Conference The NCCB ture and Governor Hearnes tois the bishops agency for dealshydemand tax relief instead ofing with purely splritual matshyconsidering consolidation andters the USCC Is their secreshyclosing of schoolstariat for dealing with secular

affairs Father Colemiddot maJntained that The prelate has served in the the reorganization would not

U S bishops secretariat 28 represent a cutback The area years longer than any precedshy school would be able to opshying general secretary Born in erate out of one blilding to Peoria TII in 1905 and ordained serve three parishes It would a priestmiddot of the Milw~ukee archshy provide the same educational diocese in 1931middot he came to experience for the same number Washington in 1940 ~as assistant of students plus advantages director of the Youth Departshy Cooperation would make posshyment NCWC He ~as assistant sible a highly developed model general secretary from 1945 to school staffed by Sisters from 1958 and has been general secshy three communities retary since then He said it would be irresponshy

He is the first bishop to serve sible to run three operations at as secretary to the bishops secshy all costs when the diocese retariat could have one operation run

The NCWC (as Council and it more efficiently do a better Conference) had been in exisshy educational job and provide opshytence 47 years when it formally portunity for a better deployshywent out of existence at the anshy ment of personnel nual meeting of the bishops in November 1966 Bishop Tanner who had served in the secretashy Urge Germaruls riat for more than half those years supervised the transition To Aid Vietnam to two separate organizationsshy

BONN (NC) - Two Germanthe NCCB and the USCC cardinals and two churchshyDuring Bishop Tanners secshy related relief organizations have

retaryship and in testimony to FALL RIVER PROVINCETOWN AND WESTPORT GIRLS WITHappealed to the German people

the growth of the work handled to collect money and to prayby the bishops secretariat an NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF EXTENSION VOIL~NTEERS DURINGfor the people of Vietnamimpressive addition to the headshy A week beore Mardi Gral lt- quarters building here was Joseph Cardinal Frings of Coshy THEIR YEAR OF VOLUNTEER WORK erected in 1960 logne asked the Catholics of his

archdiocese to cut down on Mardi Gras festivities and to donate magnanimously to the needy people of Vietnam Coshy These young college graduates have given a I year of their logne has long been known for its ampigtectacular Mardi Gras celeshy professional life to God in service in the South and West Are brations Citing the bombing Of North you willing to give twelve months of yourmiddotyouth to othersVietnam the plight of women and children caught between opposing forc~middot in the $()ut~ and the great number of refushygees Cardinal Frings asked how Catholics could watch pictures of these gravely distressing si~

WHY NOT ENROll AS ANuations on television and ceieshybrate Mardi Gras with a quiet The Spirit oj

Extension Volunteer HELPER middot$200 oconscience Alfred Cardinal Bengsch Of Extension Volunteer PROMOTER $500 o

Berlin asked for prayers for Sacrifice Extension Volunteer SPONSOR $1000 or more opeace in the world in a letter to the clergy of his diocese in which specifically mentioned AMOUNT ENCLOSED $ Vietnam as a name meaning Perfectlyblood and death RT REV RAYMOND T CONSIDINE PAIn a joint appeal Caritas the German Catholic relief organishy PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH OFFICE zation of Germanys Evangelical 368 NORTH MAIN STREETExemplifiedLutheran Church has asked for fALL RIVER MASS money to send food Md medishy

BISHOP P~VL F TANNU cine to the Children of Vietnam o

(-14 THf ANCHOR-Diocese of FaR Rfver-Th~rs Feb-29 1968 Two Objectives Jersey to Rehabilitate Young OffendersTells Jesuatts Engage in Deliberate

Help Increasing Spanish Group Attempts at lExperimentation UNION CITY (NC) - Two Hudson County Jan and in theST LOUIS (NC)-Deliber- carries its own reward he said area interfaith clergy groups youth house in Secaucus

iide attempts at experimenta- Now we must undertake new here in New Jersey are planning Father ThomasJ Murtha oftion with a readiness to accept forms some of which have a

joint action on the plightf West New York was named toall the risks that may be in- good chance to flop JIliserably youthful offenders housed m investigate means of setting UJltvolved were proposed for the An expert at the Second VatshyHudson County correctional in- a rehabilitation program t4ilSociet of Jesus at the close of ican Council Father Campion stitutions and to seek federal function after the release ~ III three-day session here on believes that the work of the assistance in meeting the needs youthful offendersbulllesuit renewal council has not yet begun to of Cuban refugeesFather Donald R Campion be absorbed within the Church

The joint session was held by The ~o groups will send a18J stressed at the renewal as a whole the North Hudson Clergy Coun- delegatIOn toWashIngton to askQession and in an interview This is not because it hasnt cU based here and the Chris- ~hat the area be declared anthat the Jesuits have both the been publicized enough or beshy tian Clergy United a West New Impacted area under the Cuban manpower and the resources to cause people havent read Y k Refugee Act and therefore beshy

engage in the type of expeii- enough or bishops havent talkshy or ~ro~p come eligible for special federal mentation which could serve ed enough he said But Vati shy A meetmg WIll be s()~ght WIth aid There are some 00000 tQdays Church Father Cam- can II opened up more areas the Hudson County Boar~ of Spanish~speakingpeople now m pion a sociologist and theolo- to discussion than it resolved Chosen Freeholders in an effort rth gian was recently named editor Among the sleep~rs in to establish a bettez climatefoi the ~o Hudson area and they cd America magazine council documents CIted by therehabiUtation of youthful continue to arrive at the rate of

Another speaker Fat her Father Campion was the conshy offenders now housed intne 200 to250 a month ~ 1 _

Avezy Dulles SJ stressed that cept of participation within the ~ doubt is a valuable and even Church Father Campionmiddot said lI1ecessary experience for the he believes collegiality is the Wide E~perience Christian in todays world most developed aspect in this

Fathers Campion and Dulles area and that some organization QU(lJD~ies Nu_ were two of the six main speak- has been given to it through the

UNITED- NATIONS (NC)ers at the closed meeting Some establishment of piie~ senates ltHQWCom pie t e devotion to theSSO Jesuits including 50 from But unless the idea of parti shyworlds needy children seemsCilutside the St Louis areaat-cipation is really the basis senshy a weighty task for a petite nun TDgtKEEPtended the sessions ates can become orgimizational

Father Campion said that Jes- gimmicks he said but a conversation with Sister Ullits as a group must face the Father Dulles discussing themiddot Kathl~eri Kelly MMmiddot provides LENmiddotTreassularice middotthat 20 years of make a significant contribution Church said ~ an interview diversified experience fact that their work should existence of doubt in todays

more to modern times that we have a radically differ- than qualifies her for the role

QUI IXIDPYFATHER lI MISSION jlUDTG me fllRlfaNTAL CHURCH

In the area of education It calIS for recasting the ex- wide Cath)lic charities organishy Need New Formula ent world view than in the past Caritas Internationalis worldshy

With the slason of Lent comes the qu~ionFather Campion called for con- pressions of the Christian messhy zation recently appointed Sisshy How can I beSt keep Lentl The answer ~s ~sideration of whether we are sage in terms of contemporary as observerter Kathleen its must make sacrifices on our own and nothing ISproviding the educational struc- knowledge if the message is to to the U N International GOOD III sacrifice unfess it hurts Whatwill be yo~rture for the new world have the impact it should Childrens Emergency Fun d WHIEN sacrifice bullbull Just think of the misslonlllne~ InIn the intellectual area Look Criticanny (UNICEF) Caritas Internationshy ITlf our 18 emerging countries who keep Lent allrather Campion noted that to- Doubt is not a bad thing he alis is one of 75 international HUmS year long Sacrifice something big this ye~rday more is needed than popu- said People should be looking and non-government organizashy When helping others hurts a bit you know you va larization of theology and phil- critically at the traditional forshy tions (NGOS) which enjoy conshy made a sacrifice()Sophy In a way we need a mulas and seeing what is revelashy sultative status with UNICEF whole new formula for making tion and what is a culturally

They represent oJer 4000csense of the world and life he conditioned formula which is affiliated private and non-profitfSaid now demanding reform

We should have men devoted Such adaptations are iD no organizations in more than 100 oOn his recent-trip through India 1V0~signor nations with a combined memshy Nolan saw priests and Sisters subSisting onto this single problem Their way a compromise of faith bership running into millions ounces of rice each day so they can share what own inner resources of security Father Dulles said We never they have with lepers and orphans $10 will feedmust be yery strong because to hear the divine message except Interviewed at the United Nashy FEED a family for several weeks at least $50 will feed

facethat kind of change is not III in terms of humans he said tions Sister Kathleen spoke of THE five families $100 ten families bullbullbull Only $975popular thing The Word of God comes her new rol~ at the international HUNGRY gives a priest 11 two-acre mode~ 18nn toraise

Council Opened Areas through man it is alW9YS tem- level and described how it his own food and teach his parishioners how to Father Campion said the can pered by man and it is this con~ evolved from her past activities raise more food Archbishop MalJ Gregorioa will

for experimentation W9S not ditioning which must change wrltetlo thank youI was in California andbased on inadequate work of Father Dulles said one value worked for 10 years in familyJesuits at the present time and of the death-of-God movement eounseling in the juvenile court IlJ Enable ~ girl to become a Sister For 41tl bullthat fact is part of the problem for Catholics is to shake _ I1tA1N day ($1250 a month $150 bull year $300 aleill foster lare and in otherMany times we have been suc- out of taking an uncritical with sa~ A together) you can pay In full fer her two-yeaIwork children sheeessful and being successful static view of God training have 8 Sister of your awnInthe last five years I moved SISTER

oat to community development and civil rights I was a member o For only $a5O a week ($10 a month $120 bull

year) you can make surethat an abandonedJesuit Seminarian Leads Campaign of a district council in bull San HELP Francisco - which subsequently A child has food clothing a blanket and love bullbullbull IAgainst Home Contract Firms was declared a poverty CHILD wen send you a photo of the boy or silt )011area

adoptCHICAGO (NC) - A Jesuit borne than its current market During my years there I waa Rminarian has launched a camshy value a member of the Catholic Intershy o Our priestS will offer promptly the Massespaign here against contractshy Following the exodus of racial Council and when I came MASSES you request Doyou wish to remember a loved holders of homes sold to Negro Lawndales white residents in back from Selma (she was on fOR one this Lent Your Mass offerings are usuallyfamilies at allegedly exorbitant the late 1950s thousands of of the persons selected to repshy LENT the only Incole our priests overseas receiverates homes were purchased by vari shy resent the archdiocese of san

Jack Macnamara SJ who ous bankS mortgage loan and Francisco in the Alabama civil o Enroll yourself your family and friends InlIives and works in nearby real estate companies at low rights march) I was appointed this Association You will be helping Pope Paul Lawndale is acting withthe ap- prices and then resold on conshy to serve on the Human Rights

JOI~ in one of his most ambitious and heartfelt works proval of his Jesuit superio~ tractto Negro families atofteIi - Commission by the mayor of THIS while sharing In the blessings of thousands of

Nacnarnara and a dozen supshy ~lImON Masses (The offering for one year is $2 perdouble the original purchase San Francisco the nun stated porters including several other price the leaflet reported She was the first nun ever apshy person $10 for a family perpetual membership Jesuit seminarians picketed the Paid Race Tax ltpOinted to any kind of~~yt is $25 per person $100 for a family) Chicago address of one investshy Macnamara said these conshy inJSan Fraidsco _

Iment company which holds title tracts should be renegotiated at

~ several homes sold on conshy the most recent FHA appraisal tract to Negroes Pickets dis- price ~ If I1t e SAiliNGS

tributed leaflets explaining the c2J 0 dJ ~ t~~ year SYSTEMATICThe issuemiddot here is moral rathshypurpose of their campaign er than legal he declared Th~ MONTHLY DEPOSITS

The leaflet cites the case of III law does not provide a remedy II tfMltIa fNVE$iMENyhome purchased by an investshy for the type of injustice that is d) aV~ J((~ year SAVINGSment company in January 1959 operative in this contract

for $13000 and then three NOTICE ACCOUNTSThousands of Negroes inmonths later sold on contract to Chicago are suffering from this a Negro buyer for $23000 450 ar ~~~~

It states the investment corn continued ~In effect they paid pany received $2000 as a down II race tax of approximately

type of injustice Macnamara

BCJs~ liverpayment on thiS contract whic~ $10000 when they bought their stipulated that middotthe balance was homes because it was impossishy SavonJs Bonkflo be paid over 20 years at sevshy bleto obtain mortgages 4Il per cent interest at the rate This is a striking example of BanI By Mail of $20140 each month how our legal system does notmiddot We Pay The Postage

Last December it reported a adequately protect black people Federal Housing Administration or poor people he said It appraisal on this home listed its stems from the fact that the law bull YARMOUTH SHOPP8NC PUll value at $15025 This means it aims at protecting property inshy bull SOUTH UltMOm bull HYANJIISexplained that the Negro buyer stead of persons And this helpl bull DENNIS PlmRT bull OSTFllVIUlIII paying $8000 more for tbe bull cause urbaJl unreal

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 ltI

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16 THE ANC )~-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968

New St LouimiddotsArchbi~hcp

PrOmilnent in Ecumen~$m Archbishop Jonh J Oarberry of St Louis well known

~()ng Oatholic leaders after 31 career that has taken him from a seminary classroom iii his natiYe Brooltl~ NCY~ to one of the nations MOse ~mpOOtallt archdiolaquoese1l is pershy

laaps evenmiddot better ~ownmiddot fJDlong Americas nom-Cafu6shylie religious leaders fon hisl work in ecumenism Cllair Ilillao of the Bishqps Commi~ee-Ibr Ecumenical and Intenrefi shyaious Affairs since th~ resigna Qion of Baltimores Lawrence Cardinal Shehan in November 11965 Bishop Carberry has au I9gtCrvised the massive catholic illllvoIvement in ecumeniCal ac-middot lli1 vities

He outlined his own entIliusishyeuroISm for ecumenism in a speech ~iven in January 1966 tolmemshy~rs of the Ohio (Protestant) lPastors Convention wheDI he aid

Common lHeritagel For years the general policY

(llln the Catholic Church) had ~en to stress the great chasm

which divides the euroatliolic Church and other Christian ehurches No effort was made m would seem on our part to Illave a meeting of minds A otudy of documents would seem ltD reveal that while we wera lbrayerfully disposed to) the ltecumenical movemerit nevershy1lheless the Catholic Church did lliittleto foster it

Bishop Carberry told the conshyvention that through the grace 0f God and the leadership or Pope John XXIII we became aware of the common heritage Which is ours

Has Great lHope

We began to realiZe~ how 18aptism unites us in ChriSt to Gee that the divinity of Christ is illhe cornerstone of all Christianshynay we began to real1ze the oommon treasure which we llnave in the Sacred Scripturesllikewise the common bondshyVhich exists with us in the

1lIIlissionary activities at the Church

There is great hope Bishopltearberry said that mrougb ~ialogue through prayerbull 1llluough respect for each others wiewpoint the grace of God may (i)Ile day in Gods divine provishy4llence bring about the- unitY which Christ prayed for at themiddot Last Supper

More recently members of ltOhios Protestant cliurches llllamed the bishop as OniosPbsshyoLr of Pas-tors the fl rst timmiddote hat bull

Grants Permis$ioll~

for SaturdayMass) SAN ANGELO (NC)-BiShop

Thomas TSchoepe of San Angelo lllas announced that the diocesan request for the Saturday Mass flaculty hagt been granted In the future the Sunday Mass 00shyltigation may be met by at shy~ndance at a Saturday aftershyllloon or evening Mass The pershylll1ission has been granted on an ~xperimental basis by the Vati shylttan for a period of five years

The diocese of San Argelo is 1lI Texas missionary diocese the bishop explained and there are areat dis tan c e s between churches and few priestswmiddot oerve the faithfuh ManYi ~llieSts

have two or morlt8 churclies tJ lllttend and will Be able- tQ give more time to the smaller ~urches with the Satucday Mass faculty Bishop TschoePe pointedi 9Ut Chat the faculty has been giVeth bull the whole diocese not just Ibo individual churches or areas Pastors who wish to make Usemiddot aJl the faculty must make formal application to the chancery ofshyillce

a~ statewide Protestant onganiza tion has presented its highest awa-rd 10 a eatho1iir clet1gymam A pla~J1e symbollZiDg the a~adi was~ glv~~ to the blShp at ~~~ Fenw~nIP Blmq~et on the Olbo PastollSgt ~onventi~m

DI~USS P~tilems U~dev Blsli~p~rlgte~rysl~d

er~hlPl laquoatholic ~elegations have ~et wl~h ~fflC1Blsbull and

tleolbglan~ of other- ChrIs~an churchesmiddot to dlSCUSS ecumemcal pooble~s r~~gmg from the pr~sshyence of Christ Ill tlie ~ucharlst to th-c nature of we prJes~ood

Before ta~mg cliarge of th Golumbusmiddot dIOcese on March 25 1965) Bishop euroarbery liadmiddot selved asmiddot coadjutor bishop and then bishop of Eafayette Ind Born in Brooklynj N~ Y Tulymiddot 31 1904 Bishop Carberry studied for the priestlioodi at Brooklyns Cathedral College or the Iin-middot maculate laquool1ception from 191ll to 1924 and at the North Amershyican College in Rome from 1924 to 1930

Oldained inmiddot Rome in 1929 tne bishop sfudiea canon law at the Catholic University of America in Washington D G and taught at Immaculate Conception Semshyinarl until Tune 1935 when he went on ldan to the diocese of Trenton N J He returned to BrooklYn in 1940 where hemiddotreshymained until being named coshyadjuror bishop of Lafayettemiddot in 19651

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Ccopy]JJi]dIT [Qjfr[~lcopy[j

CHICAGO (NC) - Tohn A McDllrmott has changed me mindL-he1li remain as execu middot tivedirector of the Chicago Cat1iolic Interracial Council

The veteran council worKer last October announced he would leave the office to beshy

come Mridwest regional- ciVil rightsdirector for the ms De-middotmiddot partment of Health Enucation andi Welfare

A number of problems hava arisen since th-e announcement on my appointmentt last 0ctbBerwhichl caused me to have serl

ousmiddot second l thoughts MilDer moW said iil his decision to re~ maio with the ltlrc He citedi m1 patrtcular~ personnel cutliaclts in HEW wJiich woulli Iiinit the Midwest negional operatiiul

fo accepting McDermotits de cisionj HEW the government agency requestedi liiin to serve asmiddot ai special chdl- rights consuU ant while working for the CIC and he a~reed

IIlt a letter to the Dutch biINumber of Fllel71ch ops members of Michaels re-

gion asked for curbs on the nlgtshySeminarians Dllops tions Catliolic liberals The PARIS (Ne)-Thenumber of meeting also registered disap-

French seminarians h~s dropped proval of the new Dutch Cateshyby about 180 a year for the last chism~ claiminJ~ that it does nocent four years according to 1iigures represent true Catholic teach~ provided in amiddot press conference Michaels Lel~ion is considered by Bishop Jean Sauvage 011 ampshy even more CJlnservative thlW necy member of the bishops Confrontation another Catholic commission on the clergy and conservative organization Conshyseminaries frontations complaints about

For the 1967~68 sc1iolastic the content of the new Dutch year the tdtal number of sliumiddot catechismmiddot are believed to hae dents iil major seminaries m been instTllmentai in having tbe~ FhlOce is 43583 comparedl with book exltlmined by the VatiCan~lJ

4536 for the previous year Doctrinal Congregation 4722 )n 1965-66 and 4953 in 1964-65

Moreover in France at pres- Approves Agency eol ttiere are aBout 200 adults LQND()N (NC)--Jolin Cardl~

WIIO are preIgtaring for tOe ~er nal Heenan of Westminster liJaa manent diaconate as restored by approveq establishment ocf 1m the Second Vatican Council The agency to help priests who want first ordinations to this permashy 10 leave the priesthood znGl nent diaconate could take place nuns who want to leave the this year religious life

1P~alrn le~tUlm~1rn~~G~

$1lll~7 GG1l I1DtJ Sim LONDON (NC)-A study on

the problems of ecumenism in Great Britain will be made by a joint working group of the British Council of Churches and the Caholic Church with the results to be reported next Autumn

The study was planned at a meetingmiddot held atmiddot the Vita et Pax Benedictine I~onvent and attendshyed by nine Catholic representashytives an- 14 representatives of the BeC -

The projected study is exshypected to analyze such topics an the extent I)f cooperatiGn beshytween Catjwlics and members of the BeC the dialogUes bemg held theologicaL differences and the non~theological obstacles to closer unitygt

Auxiliary BishoJ- Langton Fox of lfenevia Wales and

Auxiliary Bishop Basil Chrisshytopher Butlelr OSB of Westshyminster headed tOe CatOolie delegation at the meeting

~(i]$~~rlaquolJpoundfr1) A$1k lMl~illlW) ~ltoy~ IHh~)~Dnd

U11RECHm (NC) -Michaels Legion an organization of Dutch Catholic~ uaditionalists has sent a telegram to Pope Pault H ungintg him tD protect essential orthodoxy and to S81fe tne DutchChurch~

At 3- meeting here attended b~ some 600) Catholic conserva tives led by Eouis Knuvelder the legion condemned the Dutch Catholic daily press the~ Dutch Gatholic tellvisioncompany and the countrys Catholic radio station for being too progressive

Father Baum Regards Ecumenical Center Closing Sign of Success TORONTO (NC)-The closing gian Charles Davis-A Quesshy

of the Center for Ecumenical tion of Conscience Davis book Studies at St Michaels Collegegt exmiddotplains his renunciation of the here is a sign of the centersmiddot euroatholic priesthood and the success Church and asks Catholic theo-

This is the viewpoint of Father logians who intend to stay in GregllllY Ballm O~SA founder the~ eurohurch to reply to several of tJie centeI1 who has an- t1iaologjcal points nQunlaquoed that it will b~ Closed BelUef Unbelief

inl JUne Thats what Im doing FatlieJJBaum-explalnedthalhe Fatller Baum said His book a

founded the centeJ ill 19631 when replYJ to Davis questions conshyecum~llusrn may have~ been a ceming the credibility of the new Idea Its purpose lie- s~ld Church in todays world will be was to promote ecumemcall called The Credibility of the studies at St Michaels Church Today It will be pub-

Taday he neports ecumen mal stlUdi~s at S1l Michaels are a reality- 1lli~ schGolls theology depal1tment 18 fully mte~ ~thl Protestant and ~gIIcan lfupartmentsmiddot at the-Umversity

of Toronto [hUB lie said~ the eC-lmenical

centell has fulfilled its purpose Such fUlfillment he said wmiddot

common in academic circles where there has been an ecushymenlical reVOlution For exam pIe ne said where once som1shyone might have nied to foster ecumenism through building an ecumenical library it is now impossible tq build a theological lilgtrary without its being ecushymenical

Need flDZ Programsmiddot Father Baum added that he

does not believe tJie ecumenical movement has reached fruitien in circles outside the academia world~ He said that he sees a real need pound01 formal ecumenmiddot ical programs on the parish and on all levels of the Churdl which have not yet been reached He a150 disclosed that perSOll ally he lias moved Gn frOlll ecumenism to new fields of thought

The AuIDlStinian has written a new book in answer to the latest by the English theolo-

U[[$ W)jf[rll IfSMsjIID~

rnliJ kUD-WIh ol 1TW[jiJ KETTERING (Neuro) - The 1-7shy

member parish board 00 St Charles Church~ here unanishymousll1 adopted a resolution 5 favor Qf open nousing legiSlashytion for thiS (1)hio suburban community

The parish boards action S~ poIied- unequivocallymiddot passage 0amp an open housing ordinance in themiddot virtuallr aUi-wltite commw-middot nity 00l more than 600001 res dents Tames J Gilvay and Peter Donanue attOrneys anlL pariBhlmiddot boarc members pre sentedthe resolutJoDj wliiclli tbok- themiddot position that the ghett) condit1ollG ~Ilichl Negroes enshycure ilm nearby DaYton are mshyiuriOwil to the entire commUlshyDitTmiddot

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Aftei tee closing of the Center for Ecumenical Studies Father Baum will stay on at St MishychaeFs au a professor of theolshyogy He is also planning another ~~

It will concentrate on the idea oi God in modern thought and will be a clear sign that Father Baum has moved away from his prime in terest in ecumen- ism

Born of Jewish parents in Berlin and reared as an agnostic Father Baum said he has now turned his whole thought to the study of belief and unbelief He will record his findings in me book he is now writing

~oh~ laquotmm~~litl ~Od1[9)

[~ Ao~ i N~regIJ$ CAMDEN (NC) - Bishop

Tames L Schad administrator of the Camden diocese was =ong citizens honored here foT their efforts in furthering the interests of the Negro comshymunity

Bishop Schad who has been active in community action projects such as the War on Poverty committees was pre sented a scroll during a proshygram sponsored by the Tenth Street Baptist church here in observance of the 43rd annual Negro History Week This year marks the first time a Romaa Catholic prelate has been so honored

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17 Oppose Church Clergy Participation in Politics

By Jsgr George G Higgins

The New RepubJic-whIch in this writers judgment W one CYl the be3t of Ameriros weekly journals of opinion especially hl it3 arovezoage cfcurrent economic and political developments----thinks that the time has com~ for anti shyVietnam clergymen aul1ayshy Be that as it maY I am ioshymen to translate tu1eir cVZl clined to think that the editors m0r81 indignation oveuror Vietshy of the French periodical Inforshynam into effective political mations Catholique InternashyDction inasmuch as this is the tionales make considerably only way to effect long-term more sense than the editors cOf ehanges in the The New Republic 011 this issue policies of this of clerical involvement in the country So far so-called politics of peace as laymen are Though they are vigorously concerned this and unqualifiedly opposed ~il

would seem to tW war in Vietnam and like be a self - evishy tWeditors ()f The New Repubshydent proposition li( clearly recognize that the L1s perfectly establishment of leace in the obvious t hat world is a political problem concerned layshy which calls for the active mshymen ou~ht to volvement ofChcistians as ~-en

translate their as all other men of good will moral indi~nashy they do not think that themiddot tion over Vietnam - or any cleJgy who are responsible foy other significant issue of public the unity of the Church should policy-into effecti-re poiiticltll be expected to take on the role

of party politiciansaction Given the fact that their pubshySound Tradition

lication ~CI has been oJe 01 tileOn the other hnd I aJl Evt most outspoken European critics

sure understandthat I fully or of U S involvement in Vietnam completely agree vitb The New and one of the most vigorousRepublic when it says that fue advocates middotof a politics of peaceclergy ought tncv likewise their warning against the parshy

Traditionally a the NR itself ticipation of the clergy in parshypvints out the clergy-in this tisan politics is highly signifi shycountry at least - have rnied cant and deserves to be taken amy from such participation very seriously (Christians and

AJJ a long-time subscriher to the Struggle ior Peaee InforshyT~2 New Republic I had Dlshy mations Catholique Internashyways been under the imp~ssio~ tionales Jan 15 1965)that its editors thought that en Fl lialgs lrindplebalance this was a sound tradishy

Those American Catholicstion Apparently lwweer I was who may happen to have a speshy

cial interest in the pros and consmistaken in this regard fora of this highly controversial issuerecent Nell Republic editorial will also want to read whatnoten with satisfaction that Hans Kung has to say about itAJlerican clerGYmen now apshy

pear to be ready in large numshy in his forthcoming bookThe Churchbers to get involved at a preshy

cinct level and to play C1l Father Kung has lectured exshyactivist role in both parties tensively throughout the United (Clergy in Politics The New SUItes in recent years and is

currently with us again as a visshyRepublic Feb 17 1968) iting professor at Union Theoshy

QuestioIS Meaning logical Seminary in New York What does this mean in pracshy Seen in the light of the Gosshy

tical terma Does it mean that pel le writes in his new book ministers rabbis and priests the relntionshipof the Church should endorse ltor oppose) parshy to the world contains only one ticular candic1ates fqr politiell essential aspect its ministry 10 office starting at the precinct the world level Does it mean that they Ministry does not mean raisshythemselves should run for ofshy ing ones voice or putting an -oar flee if only as a last reiort in all secular qIes1ions middotof ecoshy

If so does it also mean that nomic political sodaI middotcultural other clergymen should run artistic and scientific life against them if they happen to T1e Churchclmnot solve disagree with what they stand the greJt problems of the ()rld for Or does it mean toot only neiih2r the problell1of hunger those clergymen who are anti shy nor that of the populaticn nor Administration should get inshy that of war nor thlt oanonFmshyT-olved at a precinct leel and ity of power Dor that -of race play an activist role within hatred What the Church both parties can do can be expressed quite

Sicnifieani WarnlDI simply in one phrase it must I have raised these questions exist for the world

lot to make light of The New ACrefS With lFTK1mgRepublics editorial CD the subshyject under discussion but Anyone who hal ever baG the merely to BUggest that clerical pleasure of meeting Faiher involvement ill partisan politics Kung middotor is familiar wi1bhis over the issue of Vietnam is at writings will know witheut best a rather tricky business being told that be is not a hawk and will almost inevitably lead and that he is cot advocating to certain consequences which a policy of Christian withdrawal upon further reflection even the from the world editors of The New Republie middotOn the eontrary be stroniJy might eonceivably wish tc foreshy favors lhe all-ltltit involvement tall of Christians in temporal affairs

and notably iii the ~lities Of peace

To Speak in Boston Nevertheless be does net Rev Anthony T Padovano think that the institutienal

Church-and its clerical minisshySTD theology professor at ters-should pretend that theyImmaculate Conception Semishy

nary Darlington N J will speak have all the answers tc the problems of the worldia the Christian Culture lecture

aries sponsored by the Paulist And neither eoes be thinkshyFathers at 815 Wednesday night if I read him correctly-that tbe March 6 in John Hancock Ha)) clergy in ~ exeTeise of their Boston Tickets are available mission of peace should get inshyfrom 5 Park Street Boston volved in partisan jl)olities Nor 02108 do L

WOKS LIKE FUN Yes but listen to what it requires The Georgetown University erew keeps in s-hape with ~

AM ~i~enies in the gym foHow~ by a two-niile run UJl and do-Wll Observatory Hil~on tJhecampus Its cold up there said Dave Harris a member of the lightweifht crew but by then youlewtired you do-nt care NC Phottgt

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 ~ 968

Prayer for Peace To Cm(O)se Games

MEXICO CITY (NC) - All ecumenical prR)er for peaCf) service is being planned for the end of the 19th Olympic Gam~

here next October The sponsor of the service w shy

the Ecumenical Commission fcrr Religious Services (ECRS) fe the Olympic Games The comshymission is composed of 73 ChrisshytiRn and Jewish leaders in thi~

city Promment spiritual leadshyers will be invited to speak

At middot8 meeting here the rn ECRS spiritual leaders discusse~

the facilities for athletes and visitors to attend their varioU7J reUgious services

iI1be iMC)Cican government hw aPPI)o~ed ECRS plans for the ~ction of at least tw- JaIige bullclings as nondenonYshynational chapels

The original pIlan toeonstrl1ell one large church has been IcHsshytlarded The present plan is build one large building with no religious I)rnamentllJtion of alltl7 kind on the outskirts of the Olympic Villa and a similar Oilif)

on tne outskirts of the Olympze

Project InterracialInterfaith Cooperation Cultural Villa

tin (Re~~(Jtion of CcUege m addition Archbishop MEshymiddotgut Dario MirlllDda y Gomez Gl

1I1IAMI (NC)~When Florida The Rev Edward T Graham Mexico City hBs authorizeQ Memorial College predominant a Baptist minister key person downtown Catholic churches to ly Negro middotliberal arts school is behind the project has had asshy permit non-Catholic services = moved here frOl1l St Augustine sistance from Mrs Athalie their premises if non-Catholie and opens next September the Range Miamis first NeglO City comgregations should request i project will be the result of unshy Commissoioner who is a Cathshyusual interracial and interfaith olic teamwork Organhzet3 rOthEHSIl

The largest single contribll shyNegroeswhites and Chinese tiou of private funds has oome flainirt~ ClI1ter

have joined hands with Cathoshy from a supermarket executive lLOUISVILLE (NC) - TkeIlics Protestants and Jews tv M Austin Davis a Methodist Franciscan Conventional OrdGcontribute money time advice laiamis Catholic Bishop Coleshy has opened a Brothers Trainincand leadership to realize the

manF Carroll is a member vl1 Center here in an attempt to givedevelopment of the college on l the advisory board as is Maushy Brothers three years of active$10 million complex here rice Ferre diocese of Miami lay apostolic work following theirr leader novitiate

RabbiIrving Lehrman presshy Father Sebastian Cunnil1flshyCouncil Seores ident cd the Greater Miami ham OFM director of tlw Rabbinical Association a n 4ll OOlilter said We felt we haCFactory Closing Jewish lay leaders are amoag an cbligation to give our man

LONDON (NC-The impend- active workers oome training outside contam ing elosingof a large industricl $ bull $ an idea of what was neeclshyJilseph Rodriguez of the plant has been criticized by ~ edfromthem in the outside Puerto Rican Democratic ChEb lay -eouncil of Our Lady Of _rl11 In the past he addeeurohas prepared 11 scholarship PieshyGrace parish in southeast Lsnshy we were not fWfilling ~ gram for -the collegedCD DeedS 1d ~veryoneliturgy

The council expressed its deep concern at the recent No Comlmentclosure of factories in middotthis area Completean4 in particular of the impendshy VATICAN (orry (NC)-Ibe ing shutdown of the Associ2ted Vatican had no comment -oJ1 11

ElectricaIIndustries (AEI) plant repolt that ~hbishop Agostincgt BANKING Casaroli secretary for extraershyIt callid upon the governmeJrt dinary ecclesiastical affairs ilf SERVICEand the -ehaiTmanof the oomshy the Papal Secretariat of statepany torevsrse the decision 10 eonterred with Dlembers of ~

c~ don the plant because Of tor BristOl CountyN-orth Vietnamese missi-on iJJthe middotmoral religious and 5Ocial Parisjn lJanuarylt n JUWWampleffeets iCaiJS2a by the ~veshythat Archbishop Casaroli Wallmen1 a1popl1ation absent from the Vatican fOll

Copies ltOf the councils motion several days nlenUy BrjstoICounty were sent 1amp Prime ~1inister

Harold Wilson MiJiister of Trust Company Labor RayJ Gunter President ampf the Board of Trade Douglas Sturteant (

TAUNTO~ MASSJay and company officials iHoOkAlthough the councils action was a surprise to the pastel Ed 1897 IIHE BANJ(ONFather Joseph seally AA ~ uiltl~rs SUppJies JAUNTONGRHNprist sroa that he agreed ith it ftll3 Purchase Street Member 01 Feileral ~

Faiher 8enlly sait[ centbert Aellad iNew Bedford IDsuranee CorporaamptoDJlOt~cteil p01itiealand elaquolshy 996-5661 nomic motions to eome from the council but pointed out You cannot separate Feligimtl from eveJ~ay life

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968 Capacity Audience at Holy Name Parish ~ihss

My Consciesect1ce Discusses The J)etached Americans In Educ~tion Continued from Page One

Do we care -for knowledge

what happens to other people Why do we strive for college educations or for money Are we so anxious to confor~l1 that we never dare to PITTSBURGH

tMrI

~VJI and it must be understood in a

t mear-cu way

A person following his ~con-~ence must be sincere He cannot play games with his mind but must be honest with himself

A person foilowing his con~ liCience must be correct It iSl10t ugh that he sincerely beshy~ Reves that something is good or evil-he must be sure that hiS judgement is a correct one

agrees with Gods view of the matter

Sometimes people make misshytakes in judgement-honest misshytakes to be sure but mistakes iwnetheless The oft-quoted exshyample is that of the African savshyrage deep in the jungle who may be sincerely following his con- ooience when it tells him to kill omd eat his enemy His conshyscience is a sincere one But it~ Is a mistaken one since it does IIlOt agree with Gods Will He ond every person must c~m-

liitantly review his judgements to lbe sure that they are correct ones and riot sincere mistaken Utes

A person following his conshy3Cience must be certain He can not act with doubt or uncertainshy~ about the rightness or wrong- mess of an act since he would be Announces Prize acting with the willingness to

takea cpance on being wrong For Best Plan ~ offendi~g God and this is aever~ validmiddot If there is uncer- PITTSinJRqH (NC)-Bishop t8inty the person must seek aid John J Wright of middotPittsburgh III arriving at a sure and correct haS annoutc~d il priz~ of$IOOOtor professor ina p1inor semshy tudgementmiddot - formiddot the architect who submitsmiddoth be I f - inary chapiainof a school dishyThe Christian acts with amiddotcon- ~ e st p an or a Jliljgtr renoshy ocesan chancellor and finally

lllilence ~rned by the prlnciples vation of the sanctuary of St vicar general tilChrlst This is where tliEi Pa~l~ cath~middot~al_h~remiddot~T~~e ~om- The P6pe a~o nam~d Father

aturchsteachers the Pope Iiiid P~tit~o~ IS ~p~nmiddot ~omiddotal archJtec~ Bienvenido TudtiJdto be auxil- a message toAfrica and a mes ishops ~nfer middotthe pi~ture to wl~hlD ~e bound~~l~~s~f the iary bishop of Dumaguete in the sage ~lling for peaCe

Illelp men make judgementsmiddot thatmiddot lire guided by Christ Sometimes ~ese j~dge~eptsgo a~intitmiddotnat-middot lIIIa1 inclinations and tendencies md this has always been thedif-

~ti~ty of ~ing a Christian-- Ghrist demands much of His llmiddotowmiddotmiddotermiddots middot IIIU

At present Catholics are askshyiDg tlie Pope to make a morai judgement about birth control d especlmiddotallymiddot the PlmiddotUmiddot Some_lire castigating him for not givshy g a qulck declslon or else they lliie telling people to forget about llrim and to make their own adgeme tsmiddot th ttmiddot w- n m e ma er The Pope in order to make a ilecision must make it on the basis of facts Scientists must provide him with the facts and In this matter there is much that k~epinglVith the general lin~s sition in favor I)f open housing complex The Pope has asked and is still asking theologians to evaluate the scientific facts in 4he light of Christian principles Not all moral issues are simple And then the Pope will apply the principles to the facts and 1ril1 make a decision about the morality of the matter

This will guide the Catholic in fllorming his conscience -- in arshyriving at a judgement that is sipcere that is the correct orie at lS artmiddot d t d ce am JU gemen anthatmiddot is Christian

K of C Convention 51ated for Houston

lAN MARCOS (NC) The

1970 national convention of the ~ights of Columbus will be held in Houston it was an-Bounced here at a conference of Texas officers of the interna- _ tional fraternalorder

The announcement of the seshylection of Houston for the con- v~ntion which will be held in

be different These were among questions discussed by a capacity audience at the second in a series on Christian Morality sponsored by the parish council of Holy Name Church Fall River Sparked by Sisshy

John AIIcIa SUS Cter some 30 people from all parts of themiddot Diocese viewed the film The Detached Amerishycans then broke into small groups for buzz sessions

Thesis of the film was that Americans wont become in volved with each other It dra- matically pointed its message with the true story of Kitty

Genovese murdered on a New York Street while 38 of her neighbors watched ffom winshy

bull dowS-o--and did nothing Also depicted were amarried

couple talkingto each other with neither really listening a student going thriugh school as on an assembly line with his sole goal the position he could

hope for as a college graduate and various other examples of non-involvement

What is life worth if we do not give it away questioned Harry Reasoner at the end of the film The Holy Name audishyence agreed that life sbould be

used for others but tended to feel that there wasnt the im-Personalitv in a smailer city

Jthat is found in a large metropshyolis One Sister countered howshyever with stories brought to

h t htschool by children s e aug This is right in Fall River she stressed Others cited examshypIes of personal involvement in affaIrs of others but agreed that much more could and

Pope I~aul Names Two Aluxiliaries VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VImiddot hail named Msgr Jose T Sanchez to be auxiliary bishop of Caceres in the Philipshypines He takes the titular See of Lesvi

Msgr 5anlhez was vicar genshyeral of Legazpi at the time of his nomination

He was born March 17 1920 atPandan in the Legazpi dioshycese He completed his philoshysophical and ordinary theologishycal studies at the diocesan semshyinary and obtained a licentiate in theology at the University of St Thomas in Manila He was ordained Marc~ 12 1946 and then worked as an assistant passhy

Pltts~urgpchap~er9rmiddottl~e Afner- ~ Philippines Father Tudtud who Pope Paul also delivered 264 ~can -Inst~tUtofAlth~te~ts was36ye~~I)]fat ~hcent time ~fsPeeches bull (~~)_(h~ch mclud~~ ~tIePoit~- his noniinatiOJl studied philos- burgb dlO~es~and three adJa-ophy and theology at St Johns

c~nt countIes SeminarY inmiddotBoston Fath~r roseph P- Larkin He was born March 22 1931

eOm~ission chaiIm~nmiddot ili1(I-a at Mabola inmiddotthe Cebu arch~ member of the diQcesan bU~lll- diocese He worked as assistant - bullbull

iIg commissligtn~ said the pur- pastor Editor ltit Cebus Caiholic pose of thereiiovlition is to pro weekl~ and finally pastor of the ville a ~mQte suitable sanctu- Church of thE Blessed Sacrashy

ary setting fof the liturgical re- inent in Cebu In addition atf orms Qrought into beingmiddot by the time of his nomination he Vatican Council II was vice-superior of the Misshy

Father Lmiddotai-kir said because slon Society of the Philippines the cathedral must architectu-middot r~lly and liturgically allow for Issues Sttement both episcopal mdparish ser-- U

vices ~~any structurai cihimge O H R h offers a unique chalienge to the n umalu ig ts designer~ and provision for the LA CROSSE (NC)-Tbe La

new liturgy must be made in Crosse diocese has taken a poshy

and spirit 01 the existing struc- integrated arid ildequate educashy t4re tion fair employment and the

- defense of the rights of minorshyities

Christians and J~ws Bishop Frederick W Frekshying of the Wisconsin diocese

Honor Clergymen and the diocesan central com-NEW YORK (NC)-Clergy- mission approvedmiddot apmiddot officiai

men from thefour major faiths statem~nt titled Human Reshyhave been honored here by the lations in the Diocese of La National Coiuerence of Chris- Crosse

tians anltt Jews The statement was prepared

the third week of August was the practice has spread middotto a made by Dr Josepb G Murphy number of other cities hesaid of La Marque a member of the interrelgious understanding hasmiddot boara- of- directors fortbe Cathprogressed tremendously middotiIi reshyeticmiddot meDs oganization middotc~nhyearsbull

-

Tbe clergymeri cited for by the subcommission of human relations of the diocesan cornshycourageous leadership in intershymissionon social action and apshy

creedal relations were proved by both before submisshy Rev Dr ~ohn C Bennett sion to the central commissiollll

president of Union Theological ) in January Seminary

Father Robert I Gannon SJ president emeritus of Fordham CONRAD SEGUIN University

Bishop Silas of the GreekOrshy BODY COJMPANY thodox archdiocese of Nortb and Aluminum or Steel South America 944 Countr Street

Samuel D Leisdorf New NEW BEDFORD MASSYork philanthropist pointed out

wy 2-6618that the NCCJ firstmiddot honored reshyligious leaders of four faiths in September -1966 Noting that

should be done by individuals parishes and municipaiities

There were no solutions ofshyfered to the problems posed bythe film We dont expect to have answers to these quesshytions warned Sister John Alicia at the beginning of the program They are too big for us The film WltlS strictly on the

human level and this was pointed out in one group No one can solve all problems it was agreed but surely each Christian canmiddot trust the Holy Spirit to lead him to the probshylems he is equipped to do someshything about no matter how small

There was another point on whichmiddot everyohe in the audience was in enthusiastic agreement that there be more such eveshynings as the one sponsored by Holllgt Namemiddot

Vatmiddotn Report~lIo

Continued from Page One two encyclicals The Developshymiddotment of Peoples and Priestly Celshyibacy four motu proprios inshyeluding one creating central a lay council and the Papal Comshymission on International Justice anp Peace and another restorshying the permanerit diacol1ate treeapostolic constitutions inshyelUding one reshaping the

Churchs c~iitral administlatioii two apostolic exhortations one apostolic letter and 78 other Wessagesmiddotand letterS inclQding

He reeeived eight ehiets Of state including U SPresident Lyndon B Johnson and United Nations Secretary General U T~ant and gave 16 audiences to

th lmiddottmiddot I0 er men 10 ~ 1 lca life in cluding U SVi~ President Hushy~rt H Humphrey Republican presidential hopeful Richard M N d N Ixon an ew Yorks Sen Robert F Kennedy

He received visits from four delegations of Orthodox churCh men including Orthodox Ecushymenicai Patriarcp Athenagoras I of Constantinople besides visit shying Patriarch Athenagoras in ~ tanbul

The book covering last yearli activities of the Holy See conshysists of 1680 pages plus about 2(10 photographs

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Bishop John J Wright hasestablished a committee 1Jl)take a complete look at Oaampshy

olie education in the PittsburpD lOcese

The aim is fc dedde wha~ 1shyd t to tak tbe ~

lrec Ion e Dedecade for the best education of

all Catholics young and oldThe committee will evaluate all present Catholic educationshygrade and high schools eo egesConfraternity of Christian Doeshytrine classes adult education and other programs

The surveyors wiU 117 to deshyvise a plan based oa mstinl and potential resources in facll-Hies funds and Staff to guide the dioceses educational efforlll for the next 10 years or more

May Be FaI-lleaehiDg Among ideas eXpected to be

examined in the evaluation are proposals by some to cut back on Catholic schools or even til phase them out in place of an expanded adult education proshygram

Named head of the committee of educators priests and lay professionals is Father Vernon Gallagher CSSp former presishy

deht of Duquesne University here now serving as an official of the Holy Childhood Associashytion He also is a former proshyvincial of the Holy Gbost Fa~ ers eastern province

The committee Will be emshypowered to call before it di shyocesan officials to hold publlc meetingshire staff ~ring in exshyperts ThedioCege will finance the work

The committee Win make spe- eific recommendations to BishoP Wright after the study which 18 expected to take at least a yearbull

-Results are expected to have ~ar-reaching implicatiou fOr Catholic education here

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Two Unbeoten league Play f1fE ANCHOR-Diocese oTtall River-Ihurs feb 29 1968 19

Coach Says Sault Complete BallPlayerCape Cods NausetCompiles SMTB Playmaker Is Former Coyle $trBest Over-All Court Mark

BY JOE MIRANDA By PETER BARTEK

An excellent hall handler and Norton High Coach team player Is how Pat Sault of

Taunton is described by his Eleven of tile 12 aa-ea e1ubs with the best records in coach Phil Wetterland of the

their respective leagues are among those who will parshy Sou the a s t ern Massachu- setts Technogical Institute Inshyticipate in the March Tech basketball tournament in Boston stitute in North DartmouthFairhaven High of the Oapeway Conference and Nauset Sault a 19-year old freshman

of the Cape amp Island loop are is a former Coyle High hoopshythe only all-winning league a single league game while two ster who played four years for

went doWn to defeat In every the Warriors his final two underaggregations from this area encounter In which they were coach Jim Lanagan on the varshyin the Hub championship Involved Almost two-thirds 02 sityelimination tourney while Dartshy the Southeastern Mass teams

D)Quth High is the only one of Teaching CareerfinIshed wIth a 500 average OIlthe tOp dozen better Although young Pat has al shya 70 per cent coQlbines WIth

WIth 12 triumphs in the Cape ready made plans for the future league record amp Island competition Nauset which Include finishing his edshywhich failed to Regional also achieved the best ucation and pursuing a teachershyqualify an inshy over-all record winning 16 of coaching career dication t hat 11 encounters The Cape Cod Sault has not yet chosen a non-league school will be shooting for the major in college but according competition selshy Class D Tech title to his parents he is very much dom jeopardizes interested in teaching historyNew Bedford High 15 and and coaching They feel he willthe ultImate one in the Greater Boston Subshy be good at both as he alwaysgoal of most urban league finished with anschools Actual- Peter devoted his spare time to helpshy

over-all 17-2 mark for the Winshyly 311 per cent Bartek ing the younger neighborhoodter The Crimsons 937 average boys understand athletics moreof the 35 Southeastern Massashy captured its leagues pennant flag thoroughlychusetts school teamsmiddot have The Crimson Whalers are now Pat is the oldest son of Mrqualified for the Tech title play poised to annex the No 1 State and Mrs Charles A Sault and)let none managed an over-all honor by clinching the top one of four children A sisterundefeated season ranking Class A division in the Annette is a senior at BishopThree area clubs failed to win Boston title tourney Cassidy High James Michael

and Cheryl grammar school Representatives in Three B~ackets students at Mulcahey Schoof in

Taunton Fairhaven and Holy Family FamilYhas been eliminated in The family resides at 85 Mershy

HIgh of New Bedford aiming the Lawrence Catholic tourney rill Avenue In Taunton and are for the Class C Tech crown both Southeastern Mass does not members of St Pauls Parish fInished wIth an over-all 16-2 have one club among the Tech

Wetterland Commentsmark The latter Is still smart- Class B participants but th~re ing from its cliff-hanging defeat will be five area combinations Wetterland was high in his at the hands of Xavier in the -includIng Fairhaven and Holy praise of his five foot 11 inch State Catholic tourney Bill Family-in the Class C play and guard who tips the scales at Walshs two-pointer from the three-including Nauset-in the 160 pounds ~ssesses good speed floor which many thought Class D Hub competition and is a key in the Corsairs fast

meant victory at Lawrence was The other Class C contestants break offense nu1llfied by a travelling viola- patterns when SMTI is wurkshy a rest he should be in top conshySault lllsed strictly with thetion which cost the loss ofthe are Case High of Swansea Nar- iilg too quickly and making dition for the 1968-69 campaignvarsity was gaining valuablebasket resulting in a one-~Jnt ry co-champions Oliver Ames Dlistakes Sault gaIned his court savvy1 f tb of North Easton runners-up in experience and developing rapshy

The SMTI mentor continued from Lanagan at Coyle wheretiOs~~ e Narragnnsett~a~ theHockomock circuit and Den- bUy whep a knee Injury slowed he iii the complete ball player hemiddotstarted in his juJ)ior and senshyDis-Yarmouth of Cape Cod see his progress midway through

Durfee of Fall RIver and ond pI fi ish in tho C the campaiiPt but Wetterland noting that he can shoot but is Jor lieasons and was a Vital co Bishop Stang mgh of North ace n er e ape most --content setting Up his in the Warriors successduring DartmQutb are the other two middotNausetwill be joined by Mar- has turned in some excellent efshy teammates for easy pblnts He Ioth years I J

way loop said despite the handicap Pat

Is a team player and always sacshy As ~ Coyle High fr~hmanarea Class A representatives inmiddot thas VIneyard and Norton mib forts in a most successful SMTI rifices himself to help the club Pat was a member XJtb~ yearshythe Tecb toutnament ~e Fall in the Class D bracket The season

Sault possesses a good atti shy lings h09P team and al~Q~ parti shyRiver Hilltoppers willbe out Islanders finished second to Naushy Defensively Sault is cnitshytude is a tough competitor and cipated in track By hihSOphoshyto make amends for their nose- set in the Cape amp Island league standIng Offensively Sault is one of the players Wetterland is more year Saultcopfjned his dive finish in the Bristol COUl)ty while Norton was second in the the teams playmaker ana quarshyeounting on 1to help SMTI gain athlettc talents to basketbjlll andloop whIle Stang ~ke Ho17 Tri~Valley Conference terback 8Dlall college recognition in the turned in a cODlJPenlla))le acshyfuture Teallll Player coun~ o~ himself

Ifere~s How They Did hi LiBogue Play Played for Lanagan Sault also represented stWetterland said his outstandshyThere is doubt about his the hardwood

he following are the league 21 Bishop Feehan 7_1 ing worth to the Corsairs comes no Pauls on in the eourage said the Corsairs skipshy Taunton CYO and in the annual from the fact that he can slowrecords of the 35 Southeastem Msgr Coyle 7-1 after painful knee Easter tournament He playeddown the offense and set up per even a

Mass teams Ta~ton 7-7 injury Sault continued to jpve four years of Litue JeagueM N B Vocational 6-8 his all and attended every pracshy Baseball and one season in theK of C Masons1 Fairhaven 14-0 25 DIman Vocational 5-9 tice The injury has slowed him Pony League prior to ~ntetmamp

Nauset 12-0 Msgr Prevost 5-9 visibly but after the season and Coyle Higa 3 New Bedford 15-1 27 SandwIch 4-8 To Cooperate4 Holy Family 13-1 28 Nantucket 3-9

NOTRE DAME (NC) - lfashyCase 13-1 29 Old Rochester 4-10

30 tlonal leadellS of the Scottish6 Oliver Ames 12-2 West~rt 3-11 Bite Masons and the Knights ~oll another7 Marthas Vineyard ~ 31 Barnstable 2-12

of Columbus anno~ced memshy8 Bishop Stang 10~ 32 Dighton-Rehoboth 1-13 strike on~rs of their organizations wU1Dartmouth 104 33 Bourne 0-14 work together on domestic andDennis-Yarmouth 10-4 Chatham 0-12 the enerlY international problems faciolaquoDurfee 10-1 North AUleJooro 1-14

the nation12 Norton 105 you get George A Newbury soveshy13 Attleboro 9-5 Minister Officiates reign grand commander 01 from14 Harwich 7-5

Scottish Rite Masons In theProvIncetown 7-5 a slice ofDn Cathclic Church northern jurisdiction of the US18 Seekonk 8-6 MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-A Lu- and John W McDevitt supremeSomerset 86

theran mInister officiated at the knight of the Knights of ColumshyFalmouth 8-6 marriage of his son in Holy Cross bus made the announcementMansfield 8-6 Catholic church here at a dinner here s~nsoredWareham 8-6

Married were James H Graf jointly by the Masonic Lodge 29 L th and the Knights of Columbus

a u eran and CalTon Ann council in South Bend Episcopalian Rite Gutwinski 25 a Catholic The ceremony was rformed - Both praised the work of Fa-MINNEAPOLIS (NC)- Archshy ther John A OBrien of the

bishop Leo Binz and Coadjutor Grapoundfs fltthell the Rev Paul L University of Notre Dame for Archbishop ~ PY1)1e of the Graf pastor of Holy Trinity r better understanding among the Cafllolic archdIoceses of St Paul theran church two groups Minneapolis were present in the Permission for the Rev Gmt Father Theodore M Hesshysan~lary of St Marks Episcoshy to officiate at his sonB wedding burgh CSC president of the pal cathedral here for the inshy was granted by theSacred Con- University of Notre Dame said stallation of Bishop Philip F gregation for the Joctrine of This nIght marks a great step McNarry as coadjutor bishop of the Faitlh inl lWme in answer to ll forward and reflects the new the Epi6copal diocese of Minneshy J)etition by Archbishop Leo BiDz ~enical spirit which is unishysota of~ ~~-M~eapotis iing ~ople long separated-

PAT SAULT

c

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bull THE ANCHOR Dayton University Thurs Feb 29 196a Brief Religious on Ecumenism

Selects Advisors SOUTH ORANGE (NC) meanitigful dialogue should not tended not to lead to compro- DAYTON (NC)-An ll-mem-

Named resident Some 1000 mms and Brothers be confused with monologueshy mise but to conyergence ber advisory board of six stushyservfng in tli~ Newark archdi~shy or confrontation He added We talk now of our common dents two faculty members andSANTA CLARA (NC)-The cese were briefed on the basic we must be willing to be pershy belilefs he said not to com- three representatives of theboard of trustees of the Univershy principles of ecumenism in a suaded-we need an open mind promise each others faith but in community has been establishedlllity of Santa Clara has named program sponsored by the Newshy to seek out the truth wherever the hope that at some point in for the Office of Human Relashylrather Thomas D Terry SJ ark Archdiocese Commission for it might be shy the future we will converge tions at the University oJ Dayshy35th president of the Jesuit unishy Ecumenical Affairs

Ifersity Father Terry who sucshy Discussing the difficulties of As an example he pointed to tornSpeakers at the session ineeeds Father Patrick Donohoe establishing Christian-Jewish the wide divergence of views The board under the direcshySeton Hall University includeSJ recently appointed Califorshy dialogue he said we Christians regarding (he Mass and the Eu- tion of Charles Hirt director ofDr Leonard Swidler of Templeaia provinCial af the Society of are responsible for 2000 years charist that existed between the Office of Human RelationsUniversity Philadelphia aridJIesus has been academic vic~ of anti-Semitism and now_ we Martin Luther and the Council will be responsible for estabshyFather Thomas M McFadden ofpresident af Loyola University must overcome our mutual disshy of Trent Then he cited the re- lishing policy making programthe Brooklyn dioceseLos Angeles for the last year trust before dialogue can be cent statement on the Eucharist recommendations helping to

lllI1d a half Previous to that Swidler said dialogue with fruitful issued by Lutherans and Catho- alleviate campus racial probshyIIlIather Terry was dean of the others must be preceded by an lics to show how much closer lems and drawing up proposall ltWllege of arts and sciences at examination of Catholic attishy Father McFadden said diashy the two bodies have come since for implementation Santa Clara tudes In addition he said a logue among Christians is inshy that time

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Page 8: 02.29.68

THE ANCHORpiocese ~f Foil River---Thurs Feb 29 1968

European Tour Is Unlikely With New Travel Rules

By Mary Tinley Daly

Of all the role-playing the Head of the House and I have engaged in through the years the most recent ~ th8lt of- would-be European travellers This the year 1968 -rhe Year of the Monkey was to have seen us embark for foreign shores Ireland homeland of our forebears (would have been) mighty

helpful tooEngland a re-vimiddotsit for the Ginny our wardrobe consult shyHead of the House France

ant has been supervising theGermany and of course the clothing weve bought for theEternal City Spain and Greece past six months with an eye toperhaps if our easy packability convenientfeet and our washability and a mix-andshymoney held out match assortment o~ accessoriesAnd now this-shy for efficient travel Based on ~ h e proposed her own European experience of ~ax bi te on a couple of years ago GinnyiBternashy assures us such selection willU 0 n a I travel provide a minimum for totingSeems as though a maximum amount of space forweve been taxshy the pick-ups wed inevitablybitt e n pretty acquire on our journeybadly right here

the as ~truggle Now it seems theIn USA we bringshyonce more with IRS Form 1040 backs are down to next-toshy

Now some more of our $$$ to nothing A Iso day-by-day spending at this stage of the EX-CHAMP PREACHES LOVE Archie Moore formerhelp close that $21 billion travel

lap wilth a tax on American legislation seems based on an World light-heavy-weight champ who won a Freedoms intricate system full of loopshyspending outside _this hemi- Foundation award Feb 22 for conspicuous community sershyboles requiring an estimate ofaphere I voice in the civil rights field plays happily at home withtax liability on departu~e theWell its a wait-and-see propshy

h~8 own children Working with boys in underprivilegedmaking of a deposit and anotherOsition an aIr-dresSed-up-andshyreport pluspay-up on retUrn to areas Archie saymiddots he teachesthe lads to be constructiveIlO-Pla~eto-go feeling for us

lIS it is for many other armchair this country not destructive tao build not tear- down NC Photo travellers What we have not doncent yet-

Doml Homework and wont do unless the grand -----~

Oh weve been doing our bomework all right

Weve made lists of places we ~fpound~~~~~I~R~PMAR9J~p~1want to see in each country drivers license picture was badThe house is filled with travel folders travel magazines weve enough NEW SPRING COLORS become telephone pals with Bteamship and airline salesmen 113-Year-Old Aca~emy s much as I love color (anyshy April scene navy took a backoUr local library checks out

one who has ever visited my seat in the early sixties whenhooks in our name for all those Plans 69 Closing home or seen nile wearing the Jackie Kennedy made pink afaraway places with their glam- ROCHESTER (NC) ~ The m~ny bright shades that I adore must for all those who like toeur descriptions 113-year-old ~cademy Of the wnI agree with this) t must adshy feel that they are wearingWe have studied money rates Sacred Heart here will disconshy mi t this is going to be ~ grey whats in This season nothotel and transportation costs tinue operation after June 1969 flannel and navy Spring Oh only has navy returned in theinvestigated picking up a Officials announced reasonsshy thEre will be shades of shocking world of suits and daytime coatsVolkswagen Weve brushed up for closing were the mounting pirk high intensity yellow and it has become sophistic~tedon French going along with cost of education the inadeshy poison green upon the scene but enough to waltz into eveningThomas Hood quancy of present bUildings mostly in ac Jacques Tiffeau of TiffeauNever go to France unless the outlay needed to build and c e s S 0 r ies or and Busch has designed an ultray()U know the lingo If you do

maintain a school of the future playclothes For navy evening time dress that islike me you will repent by and the number of other cathoshy t hat special sleeveless and V-necked and ofjingo lic high schools in the area coat or that course wide belted Worn withWeve even learned basics in where openings are avlilable pearls it takes on all the dyshy0Italian and German such as be~utiful spring

namic quaiities that black hasshyThe academy is conducted byhow to order in restaurants For suB that could always had Because they lookthe Head of the House this the Religous of the Sacred tra vel as well so well with navy and grey themeans how to order pigs Heart of Jesus alolg the streets return of pearls is whats newknuckles sauerkraut UND beer of Ne~ York on the jewelry front for SpringJohnny has patiently demonshy Imiddot kO or the avenues and Summer The thirties influshyAutnoUize Pa Istan of Washingtonstrated perhaps for the hunshyence of the Bonnie and Clydedredth time just how to operate middot Ch the more con-LIturgy anges serrative colors are the stars flicker has brought back thehis camera which he will let us

take along LYALLPUR (NC)-Melbers Cne of the most elegant and long swinging chains of beads -of all Pakistans diocesan lilur- beautifully tailo1led suitsmiddot that I and nothing swings better than

Family Advisors gical commissions met here un- have viewed thus far in the long ropes of pearls-especially Markie who did her touring der the direction of Archbishop sealch for Spring clothes was a against navy or grey

on a budget and had a whee of Joseph M Cordeiro of Karachi maltilificent grey one by Gino a time so doing introduced us to discuss propolled liturgical Paoli Superbly tailored in a to her bi-ble Arthur From- changes in this country ricl knit material the smart mers invaluable Europe on Approved for experimental desi go was set off hy fresh $5 a Day with its practical use were two new baptismal touches of white guidelines based on first-hand rites in the Urdu limguage and Grey has always ~n a color dramaticallyexperience For instance who- a revised Urdu funeral rite thai I avoided like the plague ever would have thought of Authorized for publication was (ev~r since an experience with different8eeking inexpensive spotlessly the Punjabi version of the Can- a grey dress in eighth grade dean lodging in Italian con on of the Mass as well as an that made me look like an un vents Author Fro~mer gives Urdu edition 01- the Roman heaithy Corpse-of course that Sensational tastingnames addresses and prices 1ft missaL Was before eigh1lligirlS wore Hollywood Diet Breadduded also are Readers Sug Jilake-up)and I havent bought made from aestions helpful tips for vari- an item of grey 81)parel in years

places Youth in World Theme and years OIlS vegetable Boursl Markies own addenda will- Grey always seemed to beOfSpanish ~ial Work Your choice of color that looked good on someshy

vALLADoLJD (NC) ~ Offishy LIGHT or DARKCollege to ~ Admit Me cials of Spains ~nual Social redleads quite jiunior league one else-it was wonderful em

HollywoodIWeek have aimounced that r St Scholastica here in Minshy smad on white-skinned hrushy

DULUTH (NC)-The College on blondes and even looked Youth in the World will be Bakedby

the theme of the 17th week yournesota announced it will admit nett~s but since 1 failed to fan male students in 1969 ending planned for March 25-31 in this into any of these categories I Sunbeam

city56 years as a liberal arts colshy felt it was not for me This seashy Ballerlege exclusively for women Manuel Capelo Martinez Secshy son however the richness and Sister Mary Richard Boo colshy retary gener~l of the week said smaltnes of the grey shade deshylege president said the change We hope that the quiet atmoshy Signl may force IDe to change was made as a response to sphere of social week discussions my opinion - aidoo by some the needs of our time The basic will enable us to make some colorful makeup of course curriculum will remain the clear decisions about the many Navy RelmIlJIls IIame she said The college is problems of youth decisions Navy is the second color that eonducted by the Benedictme madein the light of the Churchs has returned to importance fornuns aocial teacJiingsmiddot Sprilig Always a must on Ule

Schools 10 Offer Sex Education

ROCHESTER (NC)-8ex edshyncathm will be integrated in tbe curriculum of 13 parochial schools of the Rochester diocese this Spring on an experimental basis

Father Daniel Brent assocllm d i 0 c e san superintendent at schools said the sex educatioD program will eventually be in effect throughout the 102 eleshymentary schools in the diocese

We are trying to create an attitude that sex is part of life and not a dark dirty secretmiddot Father Brent said

The classroom discussions will emphasize 1he family orientashytion of sex and parents will be asked to review topicswitln children before they are preshysented in the classroom hra added

Father Brent said the pro- gram ~lated to begin about April I will aim at developing respect for the opposite sex and the serious Qlbligations that go along with sex He emphasized the program will not constitute a separate course of study but will be integrated with other subjects and with sp07lJtanooUII questions as they arise

US Court to Hear Textbook ChaUenge

WASHINGTON (NC) - DIe U S Supreme Court has agreed to examine the constitutiorlality of a 1965 New York State law allowing the state to loan textshybooks to children in churchshyrelated schools

The law is being challenged by several local public school boardsln the state on the grounds that it violates the U So Constitutions First Amendment prohibition against establishshyment of religion

The New York law which was passedin 1965 and became effective in September 1966 aishylows the state to punhase textshyhooks and loan them to children in private schools - inclUding those operated by churches--iD graqes 7 through 12

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

9 Money-Eating House Puts Garde1n Needs in Shadle

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick Oh~ ~ Iye~rIlfor the return of Spring and an opporshy

innity to gel out of this D1Ollampter we can a house I cra1ll IOOr house a monster because it seems that it has an inshy8Qtiable appetite for money We recently fiIrlished OUlr second floor (whiClh took a year of

its about 6 above outside andplanning six months of on with the able assistance of a Mld off oonstruotion and 1mshy hardy Winter wind the weather believable sums of money) is urging us all to stay inside J(ow we must have 11 basement Its a perfect day to keep your IIOOm which ea1ls for more mess oven going and your kitchen a money filled with delectable smells

Now there are individuals rve been baking beans since have the desire and the early mom a container of

capacity to be handymen and brown bread is steaibing in a Cbere are those of us who deshy huge kettle OIl the top oJ1 themiddot pend on others to do their work jets and I just set a cinnamonshyI fall into the latter category filled Indian pudding into the -ad I am paying for it I am 80 oven along with the beans The tired of furring ceiling tile aromas are beginning to mingle Dghting fixtures floor tile sidshy and all seems right with the tog etc that I am half hoping world Chat everything comes to a Smalil Dinners lItandstill What appears to be

0

These dre2l1Y months of low the simplest job turns out to be temperatures and stay-homeiIbe most complicated involved days are the perfect time to eIll shyIlleSS imagin91ble tertain your friends X love

Plano Moving nothing more than planning a Take our piano Two years small dinner party for a few

ago we bought an old upright friends and look forward to a 110 that the children could bave couple of days of cooking and their piano lessons in the comshy planning The dinner menu fort of their own home without should be made out at least a baving to nui to my mothers week ahead of time (with pershyevery night to practice The haps a few alternatives in case piano is 11 five toot upright items you plan to serve are not JI~ch cost us 5 available at this moment in thia

When the movelll igtrolliht it area The last time I made a to the ~o~ they ~ere very dinner menu I planned to start careful not 10 hurt tb~ piano off with prosciutto and melon but they managea to sandwich (a delightful combination of Cbe back door scrape half the flavors) only to find out that all paper i~ the hallway and there wasnt a fresh melon avaDshydent the mo1ding wherever theJ able for 10Ve or mOll1ey anyshylraveled where in 1be city I1 you have

Now tbat we are planninl your menu made out befOIle yoa the basement we decided go grocery obopping you avoid put the pianio there where It the disheartening happening of would not be an eyesore and DI7 starting to make a dish only to wife and I would not have find you dont have all tllle ilnshylisten to our fledglings takinC middotgredienta tring into the musical world Desserts tbat rm going to

Simpler said than done One serve to guests are more ofteD mover on seeing the size of the than not the kind Ulat can be piano and the size of our bulkshy made the evening or day before bead said I hOpe you wont be and then thats one less item I offended if I tell you the truth -have to think about the cIay I would advise you to take an that Im going to entertain axe and break it up and bU7 Many desserts lend themselves yourself a new piano He didnt to early preparation and it gives marge for this advice but me a feeling of security to know neither did he move the piano I have one or two completed Now all we have to do is remove desserts already in my freezer n of the stairs in the bulkhead or relrigerator as the busy da~middot

ItO that the movers can drop of preparation begins the piano into the cellar enshy A timetable of projects for kance a job which will cost the day of y~ur ~inner party is ftnimagined amounts of money a great help and I even time I am half tempted to buy that eacb item on the menu SlO thatbullbull I know just when a certain dish

And so it goes Not so in the has to go into the oven AJlL prden where everything iii tbis pre-party preparation leaves lItraightforward and results are the evening free to enjoy yourather immediate Marilyn keeps guests and your own cookingmsisting that the day will come Of course in jolly old New Engshywhen we wont have to bleed bull land a blizzaro can mmr yoUII our bank account to feed our party plans but then your PurishyInsatiable monster but I dont tan adaptability can come to the believe it In the meantime I fore and you can either pack ~ll continue to budget infinishy everything in your Jlreezer for tesimal sums for the garden anotber evening or you and _ile the house is reconstructed your spouse can sit down to a

IN THE KITCHEN sumptuous repast Last weljlk because it was CorrectiD

Rbool vacation week we took Note In a S)taghett1l AUce tile children to the Science Mushy

recipe in the February l ADehorIIeWI1 in Boston As we wanshy two eaD5 l)f toaiato paste wendered among the wonders at

omittedman and his universe I paused Jl()POVEIRSbull moment in front of a case that

displayed a cut-away section of This is an easy but ~al

the earth during the Winter seashy looking quick-bread Contrary lIOn Chipmunk and fieldmouse to most peoples idea popoven IleBtled warmly in their cozy are espeCially easy to make anderground castles waiting for always bake mine in a very iUIe rigors of a blustery Winter badly darkened muffill1 pan to pass and I must admit that at perhaps this is the secret oil mtI Ibat instant I was a bit envious success of Mr Mouse and Mrs Chipshy 1 cup flour munk who could retire from the teaspoon salt hzen world with all its cares 3 eggs (beaten)

Most of us cant crawl into a 1 cup milk bole and hibernate when the 1 Tablespoon melted butter aorth winds blow but we caD 1) Melt the butter ancll set ~nd more time enjoying tile aside and put the greased mufshy

pleasures of our warm (on top fin pans in the oven ~ tAe ground) homeamp ~ a) MUt toueUler a1J1 the __

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968

Voters Approve Open Housing

FLINT (NC) - Flints voters have become the first in the nation to approve an open houSoo ing ordinance in a public refershyendum

The measure pushed strongly by Negro Mayor Floyd McCree and the local Council of Churches was passed by a 43-vote margin The unofficial tally was 20172 to 20129

The Flint City Council passed an open housing ordinance in 1967 but its opponents led by John Birch Society section leadshyer Gerald Spencer had no trouble in gathering 5000 signashytures on a petition to place the

issue before the voters The religious support of the

ordinance was organized by the local Council of Churches with which Catholic parishes coopshyerated Several sponsored pubshylic debates on the measure and more expressed support for it in parish bulletins

Recommends Elimnnating First Four Grades

SPOKANE (NC) - A special study committee here in theBans Sales State of Washington has recomshymended the gradual phasing outSpanish Tov~i~t Convention Forbids of the first four grades in some

diocesan schools and a totalSelling Churchs Artistic Treasures emphasis upward in religious

SEVILLE (NC)- Andalusia For some proof that their education Provincial Tourist Convention fear is valid came from a decishy The committee comp~sed of in a resolution announced at the SiOD to sell donations decorating eight diocesan educators and close of its meeting here has Zaragozas shrine to the Virgin headed by Father Michael emphasized that artistic treas- of Pilar Accumulating for ONeill diocesan superintendent urea- decorating the nations nearly 100 years many of the at education made its recomshychurches are the property of the gifts of the faithful are both mendations to Bishop Bernan people and maT not be sold by artistic and financial treasures J Topel of Spokane after study-Church officials without the ap- Proceeds from the sale of the ing education in the diocese proval of local civil authorities Pilar treasures will go to wbat since August 1967

Admitting that the cburches Zaragozas Archbishop Pedro Elimination of grades one are permanent depositories of Cantero Cuadrado described as through four would allow the nations art the resolution urgent social necessities schools to strengthen grades was aimed at Spanish churchshy five through eight - middle men who have proposed selling school-and offer increased edshyart treasures to finance social CRS Sends Penicillin ucational benefits to a greater action projects number of students at the sameFor Vietnam Casualties or less cost the committees IeshyThe combination of increased NEW YORK (NC) - Within port saidemph~sis on social justice and hours after being inforined thatchurch renovation resulting the Saigon airport was againfrom the liturgy decree of the in operation the U S CatholicSecond Vatican Council has led Offering YouRelief Services (CRS) shippedmany Spaniards to fear that the out by aid 100000 doses of fast shychurches would be denuded of 3 Savings P~ansaction penicillin for civllian casshyancient treasures ualties in Vietnam Home Financing

The penicillin is an urgent need in Vietnam and will be WARJMI~Plan Byzantine Rite used for the civllian casualties

Installation March 5 by the four Sisters who are on co-oprD4liVEthe CRS medical teams in thatPITTSBURGH (NC)-Bishop country Fulther shipments willStephen J Kocisko will be honshy BANKfollowored at a banquet here followshy 281 Main St Wareham Ma

ing his March 5 installation as The peniciUin was given to Telephone 295-2400Bishop of the Byzantine-rite dishy the CRS by the Catholic Medshy

BaDk-8U lIerfIa IftfIIMI ocese of Pittsburg ical Mission Boarcll

Speakers will include Archshybishop Luigi Raimondi Aposshytolic Delegate in the United States wbo will officiate at the

installation John Cardinal Krol of Philadelphia Bishop John J Wright of Pittsburgh and Msgr Edward V Rosack who has been apostolic ildmmistrator of the Byzantine-rite diocese of PitsQurgh

Bishop Kocisko succeedsArchshybishop Nicholas T Elko who reshyeigned as ordinary of the Pittsshyburgh diocese ill1 lOecember Bishop Kocisko has been head of the Byzantine diocese of Passhysillc and will continue as its administrator IIlDti a new bishshyop js named

maining ingredients anell then MOTHER PARKERSlldd the cooled butter 3) Beat the batter until it hl OLD FASHIONEDcompletely smooth 4) Fill the well-buttered pans

full Place in a 450middot degree DOUGHNUTS oven for 15 minutes Reduce heat to 350middot and continue bakshy Baked by your Sunbeam Baker ing 20 to 25 minutes

AWARD WINNERS Award winners at a Winter Carshynival sponsored by the Fall River area CYO are left Janice Feno Somerset High School named Miss Personality and right Carol Silvia Durfee High School carnival queen Holding trophies is Richard Lown Durfee High School carshynival co-chairman

AFamily Favorite

bullbull

THE ANCHOKshy10 Thurs Feb 29 1968

Urge Cergymen Attend Meltefring On Scfielrnce

WASHINGTON (NC)shyCatholic clergy throughout the country are being urged to attend the second annual conference on science for cler- gymem at the Oak Ridge (Tenn) Associated Universities Aug 5-16 in cooperation with Oak Ridge National Laboratory

The conference entitled The Impact of Science on Society is sponsored by the National Science Foundation and the Alshyfred P Sloan Foundation Purshypose of the conference is to proshyvide clergymen of all faiths with an understanding of the nature scope effects and trends

of contemporary science - parshyticularly nuclear science

Dr W W Grigorieff chairshyman of the conference said the conference series originated in the recognition that most clershygymen actively engaged in pas torat work have little training in and understanding of sci shyence but are confrOnted almost

daily with problems and deci aions arising from its implicashytions

Dr Grigorieff s~icj in an inter- view with NC Nevvs Service that experience gained through the 1967 conference indicated to the conference advisory comshymittee that religious leaders of all f~i ths not only need to be conversallt with the content and llOcial dynamics of science but also are extremely eager to take advantage of the opportunity to become more acquainted with modern science

The conference director stated that this year the conference will be open to some 90 parshyticipants-three times as many IllS attended the 1967 conference

He pointed out that Roman Catholic applications for last years conference were not nushymerous and said that those who had applied were for the most part overqualified - that is they possessed professional qualifications and advanced training in science The confershyence he emphasized is not pri shymarily for such specialists

Practicing Cnergy Dr Grigorieff stated that an

announcement has been sent to bishops of anlimber of dioceses

throughout -the country in air eHort to stimulate iriterest in the aims of the conference He added that an effort is also being made to contact diocesan priests senates

He explained that conference participants will be selected on a nationwide basis from appli shy

cants representing various reli shygious )lodies arid emphasized that the majority are expected to be praCticing clergy-those actively engaged in the minis- try rather than in teaching reshysearch etc

He said that a limited number of seminary educators deans heads of clergy-in-service and religious editorf will be acshycepted as observers

Speakers will include Dr William G Pollard executive director of Oak Ridge Associshyated Universities who is also an Episcopal priest associated with St Stephens Church Oak Ridge and the author of several books and Alvin M Weinberg director of Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Askeel to Withdraw MILWAUKEE (NC) - The

Milwaukee priests senate has passed a resolution urging 11 priests of the archdiocese to work for a chalige in tlie policy of clubs which are discriminashytory or tG withdlW as members

INTERFAITH SERVICE Bishop Fulton J Sheen center of Rochester NY at shywnded an interfaith service at Mount Neboh Congregation in Manhattan With- the Bishshyop are the Rev Philip Hiat right rahbi of the congregation and Cantor Albert l- Stur- mer holding chalice wh() prepared the ceremony at which Bishop Sheen received aspeshycial Brotherhood Award SC Photo

Archdiocese- to IBatmiddottle

Race Prejudice -

BusmlrAeSS Archbishop Says CINCINNATI (NC) - Ar(h-

bishop KarlJ A1t~r launched Project Commitment here with an appeal to the Christian comshymunity to appreciate the size and urgency of the problems of race relations and an insistence that the finding of Solutions is everybodys business

Speaking at a Mass in 1l Saints church the Cincinmtti archbishop emphasized not on ly right attitudes among Catholic people but also united comshymunity-wide organization and effort are necessary 10 me~t the problem

He said government pm-middot grams heretofore have been t(o late and too little and adVHshycated something like the Mal shyshall Plan which at the end HI the Second World War rescued Europe from misery and dEshy

spair -The Mass marked the openshy

ing of the projects pilot prll- gram which will continue wittl

seven workshops at Moeller HighSchool on specific aspects of- racial prejudice and lliscrim- ination Endorsed by the Archdiocesan

Pastoral Council and sponsored by the Catholic Commission 011

Human Relations Project Com mitment is described as a promiddot gram ~o help Catholic lay lead ers recognize their responsibii ities and prepare for theiJ proper roles in t~e field of inmiddotmiddot terracial justice

Seven VVeeks Program Dayton will be the second

area in which Project Commitshyment will be launthed The date has been set tentatively for April 9and the program will continue for seven weeks

Archbishop Alter said experishyence gained in the pilot pro-

Forty Hours Format ST LOUIS (Nc)-The St Louis

archdiocese has dropped its reshyquirement that Forty Hours deshyvotion must be held annually in each parish Pastoral guideshy

lines from the Archdiocesan Liturgical Commission noted that parishes were free and encouraged to continue Forty Hours and offered possible new formats which are based on Scripture readings and themes of Eucharist priesthood and church

gram would be used in organizshying similar efforts in the other deaneries

St Francis de Sales deanery in t~s area was chosen as the first for the experiment beshycause its Catholic population represents a cross-section of the entire community and if a-- project succeeds here it may well succeed anywhere else the archbishop said

It has been estimated that more than 500 persons from 31 of the deanerys 34 parishes would tale part in the project

The archbishop detailed the reason why the whole archdioshy

cese was to be involved when the problems are so diverse in the various regions of the 19 counties and When iincertain areas there is no racial conflict because of a totally homogeshyneous population

National Prohlem

The answer is that the prob- lem of harmonious race relashyJions is not a local problem but a national problem involving all communities everywhere and affccting all our public relashytions political economic and social There may not be racial conflict but there can be race prejudice he said

The problem has moreover definite religious and moral asshypects he said and there are questions of social justice and social charity which concern every Christian and for which

Pope Honors Gellman Protest(OInlt Leader

BONN (NC) -Pope Paul VI has awarded the Great Cross of the Order of St Sylvester to Dr Reinhold von ThaddenshyTrieglaff at German Protestant leader

Dr Von Thadden-Trieglaff is the founder and honorary presshyident of the Kirchentag the anshynual German Protestnt convenshytion -

In the document accompanyshying the award the Pope thanked Dr Von Thadden-Trieglaff for his work on behalf of ecumtmshyism and asked him to continue working in this spirit of recon-

ciliation and brotherhood Bishop Adolf Bolte of Fulda

presented the award

he will find the appropriate anshywer in the teachings of the Gospel

All our Catholic people he said are charged with the reshysponsibility of supporting adeshyquate remedial legislation and of creating social institutions which will eliminate discrimishynation and alleviate the burdens of sickness poverty and )gnoshyrance No one can stand aloof from a program of social bettershyment

Dutch Bishops Take Poll of Priests

moving toward onenessTHE HAGUE (NC) -- The cardinal saidDutch bishops in an effort to

measure the effectiveness and opinions of the nations priests Priest on Facultyhave distributed a list of 39 questions to all priests deacons LANCASTER (NC) - Fathell and subdeacons in the country William J Walsh SJ is the Several questhms deal with first Catholic priest to be apshypriestly celibacy pointed a fullitime member oil

the LancaSter Theological SemishyD~awnupto determine what nary conducted by the Unitecllp~iests think of the priesthood Church of Christ here Fathetandto measure the clergys acshyWalsh assistant theology proshyceptance of the celibacy Iegulashy

- essor at the Jesuit notiviatetion the questionnaire will be

CardinalCites Church Role InSlaquosety --CHICAGO (NC) - Jobm

Cardinal Cody asserted heq that the Church must involVil) fultlelf in social problems 00 be true to its fundamentetl works

The cardinal spoke at a sefib vice in the First Presbyteri~ church making its lOOth anm versary celebration

Those who contest involve-shyment by the Chruch in prolraquo lems of society Cardinal Co~

said take an indefensible stand He said personal sanctity whiclli

is conceded to be the ChurchD rightful concern cannot bd sepilrated from social responsi shybility

If the Church has nothing 00 say to us regarding our obligashytions to our fellow man it kJ sadly neglecting our personall holiness Cardinal Cody said

We sin by Injustice We sm by lack of charity We are sancshytified by giving all men thellf due he added

Move Toward Unity Cardinal Cody did not specishy

fically mention race relationll but he said society mistrea~

certain groups or individuals1ll

He said if church members aNI in any way party to this evill the Church must become i~

volved The cardinal said COIb-

cern for personal holiness forcelll the Chuxch into action

Let the Church in such cil shycumstances stand idly by and Q will lose all reason for exisshytence he declared

Cardinal Cody was introduceell to the congregation by the Rev Harold Blake Walker pastor Cltf the church When asked ahow his appearance in a Protestanll church following the service the cardinal said not long age it would have been unthinkshyable He added that the Holy Spirit is moving strongly anell speedily

We are not yet perfectly one as Christ prayed but we arll

th~

evaluated by the Pastoral Insti shytute of the Catholic Churchin the Netherlands and the Insti shytute for Applied Sociology of the Catholic Universiiy of Nijmegen

Introducing the questions the bishops commented that in a period of Church renewal it is unavoidable that priests be conshyfronted with serious problems They then recommend that the priests answer the questions carefully keeping in mind the teachings of the Church and the roie of the Church in modern society

Wernersville Pa will take ihe post of assistant church history professor at the 143~year-olcll

Protestant seminary on July L

CENTER Paint and Wallpaper

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11 Priest DcfcsndJ~

Black Power MINNEAPOLIS (NC) - nle

only un-Christian thing about power is the abuse of power Father James E Groppj Milshywaukees militant civil rights leader told a Lutheran layshymens conference here

Neither is the striving fox power by a minority group unshyAmerican the priest asserted It is rather part of the American tradition he said and cited past drives for political power by labor unions Italians in New York and the Irish in Boston

Father Groppi also said that the Milwaukee NAACP Youth Council which he advises has adopted black power tactics only after we had used every tactic eveiy means we could think of to take the yoke off black people and nothing had been effective

He said that one use the counshycil had made of black power was in a united Negro boycott of stores during Christmas The white man doesnt give us a housing bill we dont give him our dollar he explained

Discussing the role of the Christian Church in the black mans struggle for equal rights Father Groppi said that the Church has been involved by her non-involvemen1i By such non-involvement he said the Church has aggravat~d the Neshygros problem

Today he said I the use of prudence as an excuse for cowshyardice is the great sin of tile Church

Students Interrupt Strike to Mourn

PARIS (NC) - The strike launched by the guild of law students at the Catholic Unishyversity of Paris has been intershyrupted by its leaders out of resJect for the mourning of the diocese of Paris following the death of Pierre Cardinal Veuil shylot who was chancellor of the instittltion

The strike was called to proshytest a reform of the university decided U()(ln by the French bishops and put into effectmiddot by the rector Msgr Pierre Haubt- mann The reform is designed to avoid having the Catholic uni- versity compete systematically with middotthe state university In all secular studies

The bish~ps decided that in addition to teaching and re search in the area of religion the Catholic universtty must first of all be devQted to Chrisshytian reflection on secular matshyters

Pastoral Institute To Open at Quito

BOGOrA (NC)-A new Latin American Pastoral Institute will be opened in April at Quito Ecuador as a project of the Latin American Bishops Counshycil (CELAM)

The institute will be a unit of the CELAM pastoral departshyment

Purpose of the institute will be to train personnel from the whole continent in pastoral work applicable to Latin Amershyica The institute will offer seven-month courses and Euroshypean specialists in pastoral work will also serve on the faculty

Meeting on Cities NOTRE DAME (NC) - An

international conference entitled NCities in Context will be held March 31 through April 3 at the University of Notre Dames Center for Continuing Educashytion

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968

litu~~W Changes Continued from Page One

in earlier periods-even thou~

they do not conrorm in all deshytails with the approved versiOlil of contemporary liturgical texto -are authorized

TANTUM ERGO An apshyproved Eucharistic hymn ilill praise of the Blessed Sacrament may be used in Benediction oil the Blessed Sacrament in place of the Latin hymn Tantum Ershygo

PSALMS Approved are the texis of the Psalms as published by Englands Grail Society anell that found in the Jerusalem Bishyble

Suggestnol1Js Denied

The Vatican turned down two requests made by the US Bishshyops both dealing with liturgic011 experimentation

No was answered to the reshyquest that the US Bishops be permitted to designate acade~ic

centers to supervise litulgicall innovation

Also denied was the request that some experimentation be approved without examinatioD by the Holy See

-Presently the Vatican mu~

approve proposed liturgical inshynovations before experiment3shytion can begin

Archbishop Dearden explainshyed While the two major proshyposals concerning liturgical enshyperjmentation were not alPshyproved at the present time ~

is clear that the Consilium iJ open to the submission of rite and texts of li-turgical adaptioTll which have been drawn up anll presented prior to actual experishymental use

Concrete proposals of rHeIl 2nd texts may continue to be sent to the Bishops CommittCCl on the Liturgy

Matter Deferred

The permission to substitutfl h)mns or other sacled songtl fur the texts now used at the entran~e Offertory and Comshymunion of the Mass was defershyred

Such hymns now generally added to the official texts were approved in principle however by the delegates to the Rome Synod of Bishops October 1967

The Baptismal Rite describecll among the changes was n~

contained in the Vatican lettertl authoiizing the other changoo but was made public by Archshybishop Dearden at the same time as the announcement of 1ibe changes was released

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L_ PATRON 01 MARCH The month of March is dedicated to St Joseph watchful

guardian of the Son of God and patron and protector of the universal Church Dedicashytion of the month of the year to events in the life of Christ and to particular saints is a practice of the People of God rather than an official action of the Church It comfantly middotrecalls the power and love of God for mankind present at all times and in every place

Bishops Hit Penna Birth Control Policy Addsmiddot to Rather Thon Solve Problems of Poor

HARRISBURG (NC)-The Pennsylvania Welfare Depaytments new policy of acfi~ely promoting birth control among poor people is a major step in the direction of a newand dangerous life management bymiddot the state The Pennsylvania Oatholic Conferencehas criti shycized the Welfare pepartments decision to middotinitiltte discussions of birth control with their clients Under previous pol- stru~en~ for population con- the polic~ because it will add icy birth coiltrol adviceias trol saidmiddot the PCC to the p~oblems of the poor and Moreover many of these do nothmg to get at the root

Jren~l~red only If the welfare same spokesmen see it as an in- causes of poverty reCIpIent asked for It The strument to improve what they We are bound to protest sysshynew policY has been in effect call the quality of our popula- tematic governmental involveshysince mid-January The Con- tion Putting the program to ment in decisions of citizens reshyference which represents the suchmiddota use represents one of its specting family size as a major states Bishops in public affairs worst dangers the danger that step in the direction of a new has denied that Church teach- the state will start-=-by guiding and dangerous life management ing on contraception is a factor some groups or classes to birth by the state the statement emshyin its opposition limitation-to select the types it phasized

Invasion of Prhacy desires to see propagated Rather our concern is over Dangerous Management Varied Talents

the ef~ort of the state to i~fl~- The statement noted that its SPOKANE (NC)-The newly e~c~ many wa~ a pelson s view in this regard is shared formed Catholic Board of EdushychOIce of family size-our con- b th ptt b h b h f th h ht d h middottmiddot y e 1 s lIlg lanc 0 e cation for the Diocese of Sposhycern IS elg ene w en I IS National Association for the Adshy kane has elected members whothe poor whom the state seeks t f C I d P I to mfluence the Conference stat t sad

emen IThe Confelence called promoshy

tion of birth control an invashysion of privacy and asserted the state should play no role in attempting even indi rectly to manage tne most intimate domain of personal life

The statement also took issue with Welfare Depart~ent deshynialsmiddot that the program is inshytended to contlOl population

Negro Opposition

Chiefspokesmen for groups which have pressured for this program in our state say they IJee it and demand it as not just II medical service but as an inshy

vancemen 0 0 ore eop e include educators and non-edushyh h tl tt k d th w IC recen y a ac e e cators priests pastors ReligiousWelfare Department for trying and lay personst r t th th f th N 0 Iml e glOW 0 e egro

populatIOn The Conference also criticized

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a2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River--Thurs Feb 29 1968

The PaJrish Parade ~T MARYS CAlllllIlEJI)lItAL FALL RiVER

Mrs Hadley Lackey will serve as chaIrman of arrangements for the monthly meeting of the Womens Guild scheduled for a oclock on Monday night March 4 in the Shamrock Room of the Corky Row Club

Mrs John OConnor chairshyman of the Scholarola scheduled for April 1 requests that all pledges be brought to the March meeting of the Guild Committee members are avail shyable for all who wish their pledges collected at home

ST THERESA J80 ~-y gtltBORO

The ~ =middotaternity of Christian Mothers will hold thei~ regular monthly meeting on Monday evening March 4 following the Stations of the Cross

Rev Leo R Gravel OMI son of Mr and Mrs Raymond Gravel ofmiddotWestminister St So Attleshyboro will be the guest speaker

Members of the Confraternity will receive Comunion in a body at the 9 oclock Mass on Sunday morning March 3

88 PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Mothe~~ ~f Boy Scouts will bold a p1i1gtlic social at 730 toshynight Boy Scouts informatiOn classes for the Ad Mtare Dei award wiil be gtheld tonight and every T~ursday night during March and April

Junior High Camp Fire Girls plan a splash party at the YMCA from 530 to 7 Saturday night March 2 imd a cakesale in the IIChool hall from 8 to 11 30 Sun- ~y morniii~

The annual Cub Scout Pack IT Blue and Gold Banquet and charter presentation will take place at 630 Sunday night in the

school hall

SACRJED IllEART NOATlLEBORO

Starting on March 12 and conshytinuing for the next three conshysecutive Tuesday nights there will be an EcUmenical Worship Study conducted at Sacred Heart Church First Universalist Church First Methodist Church and the Grace Church

The service will begin at 730 and will be followed by a coffee hour and a discussion period in the church hall

The Sacred Heart Church will open the program on March 12 with a discussion of the Mass

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Womens Guild win reshyceive Holy Communion in a group at the 8 oclock Mass on Sunday morning March 3

The regular monthly meeting of the Guild will be held on Wednesday night March 6 at 730 in the school on Earle Street

ST PATRICK FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild announces an open meeting for Monday March 4 A jewelry demonstrashytion will be featured In charge of arrangements is Mrs Stanley Pitera aided by Mrs Joseph Fazzina

The unit will celebrate St Patricks day Saturday night March 16 with a smorgasbord supper and dance in the school auditorium Supper will be served at 7 and danCing will folshylow from 8 to midnight with music by the Moon Mists Resshyervations will close Sundq March 10 and may be made with guild officen or board memshybers

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

Plilrishoia books are to be distributed the weekend of

The WQmens Club announces March 2 and 3 Prizes will be bull pot luck supper for 630 Monshyday nigh1 Maich 4 Chairmen are Mrs William T Marum Jr and Miss Mary L Tyrrell

John F Keavy Jr president cl the US Model Railroad Assn will show films at a Boy Scout meeing slated for Tuesday night March 5

Theologians SllaquolIted As CU Spe(Q]~eis

WASHINGTON (NC) - Dr Ellie Mascall one of Englando most prominent Anglican theoshylogians and Father Hans Kung an outspoken advocate of reform in~~ the Catholic Church wilil speak at the Catholic University of America l1Ite in March

Dr Mascall a vigorous 0pshy

ponent of the so-called New Theology will give the Charles A Hart Memorial Lectures from March 24 to 29 His lectures will

deal sucessively with the quesshytions of God man Christ and the Church

Father Kung a Swiss theoloshygian who played an influential role at the Second Vatican Counshycil will speak on Sincerity in the Church on March 18

St louis Ceremony ST LOUIS (NC) - Bishop

John J Carberry of Columbus will be installed as Archbishop of St Louis on March 25 in cershyemonies at St Louis cathedral here

Archbishop Luigi Raimondi apostolic delegate to the United States will officiate The date of the cerem0I1-Y will be exactly three years after that on which Bishop Carberry was installed ordinary of Columbus

awarded to the three individuals selling the most books

The Mystibrook Singers of Bishop Stang High School will lead singing at the 815 Mass Sunday morning M~rch 3

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

A parish supper sponsored by the Womens Guild will be held from 530 to 730 Saturday night March 2 in the school hall Tickets are available from Mrs Frank Kingsley ticket chairman or any board member

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

During Lent Masses will be at 7 AM 4 PM and 7 PM

Confessions will be heard one half hour before each Mass Stashytions of the Cross will be held at 345 and 645 Friday aftershynoons and evenings Children are urged to attend Mass at 4 each afternoon The Children of Mary anshynounce a periby sale Friday March 15 A Portuguese parish mission will be preached by Rev Anshytonio Pinto CM from Sunday March 3 through Saturday March 9 Services will open Sunday night March 3 with rosary sernlon and Benediction at 7 I)clock and Mass and sershymon will be held every weekday night at 7

ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

The Association of the Sacred Hearts will sponsor a tea at 7 on Sunday night Mar 3 in the rectory in honor of the Sisters staffing the parish schooL

The monthly meeting C1f 1lhe Association will follow the tea

SAMOAN BISHOP The first native Polynesian memshyber of the hieraIl~hy Bishopshyelect Pio Taofinlllu (cq) S M will be consecrated at Apia Western Samoa on May 29 by Bosoon-born A r c h b ish 0 p George H Pearce SM of Suva The Bishop-eloot 44 made -his novitiate with the Marists on Staten Island ~C Photo

Hospital ~~urses

Return middotto Nork hi Covingtol1l

COVINGTON (NC) A nurses walkout which began in mid-November at 100shyyear-old St Eliz~~beth Hosshypital here has ended Nearly 100 of the 140 members of tine Registered Nurses tgtrganizati01l have indicated they will retum to their jobS The walkout stemmed from bull dispute over recognition of their organization and patient care policies Since the settlement hospital officials have been inshyterviewing nurse to expedite their reemployment and placeshyment

Restore Full Service Hospital spokesmen said the

nurses will be restored to posts they formerly held in so far as possible The nurses will lose no tenure as a result of their absence and if the positions they previously held have been filled they will be offered comshyparable posts or benext in line for selection to the positions

Administration officials exshypressed satisfaction with the prospect of the nurses return and voiced the earnest hope that we can move forward tel restore the 100 beds to service which had to be taliten out of availability by reason of the shortage of nurses to care for the patients

Officials estimate til1at four tie eight we~ks might t~ required 110 restore full bed service

Cite Achievements The nurses leaders said the7

had achieved at least 13 gains during the thteenionth dispute pointing to the fact that a doctor and a nurse have been apshypointed to the hospital board of trustees the establishment of bull patient care committee comshyposed or nurses electeli by those now employed by the hospital and equipment changes in the patient care area

Mrs Pat Tanner vice chait shyman also said the nurses unshyderstand that a lay heid will be appointed head of the hospital

Sister M Coronata adminisshytrator was assigned to) another post in the sisterhood earlier this month and Sister Mark Bernard has been serving u acting administrator I~he Franshyciscan Sisters of the Poor haft operated the hospitaL

Love Is An Active Verb We who bear the noble name of Christian arid who are io9shy

ingly called the faithful stand in awe of the Mystery of Christ and the Mystery of His Church More than the mystery of Obrist and of His Church is something we live It is then our duty JIlON

and more to experience the living reality of the Cbureh hershyself Cbristain tradition affirms that by her relatioJiship with Christ tlbe Redeemer the Church is a kind of sacrament or an efficacous sign of intimaJte union with God and indeed an efshyficacious sign cf the uni~ of all mankind

As members of the household of the faith we have heeD eaDmiddot ed by God and endowed with the precious gift 01 faithThereshyfore we m1ls truly experience a sense of urgency in brinampinK aD men to tun union with Christ Since mankind today is joined together more 1ll1osely than ever before in historY by bonds thaamp are social technical and eultural should it be ilenied the spirshyitual unity that springs from faith The Gospel is Ught Ii Is lIIewness it is energy it is rebirth it is salvation

Should DOt interest in our own salvation necessarily move us tID loving concern for the salvation of others If the Church is the Sacrament Of Salvation should we not as members of the Church eome to an eve- clearer awareness of our pari in her mission in the o1uty of evangelization in the missionary mandate in the apOstolic commiSsion Clearly our duty consonant withthe blessings I-eceived from Christ is that of spreading offering and announcing ~ faith to Others in order that we might be clble to acquit ourselves of Uiis Christian obligation The Society for the Propagation of the Faith eXiSts For-those who desire to be where the action is or 110 be iIivOlvoom wOrld mission the Church pr0shy

claims her own essential inissionlU) character Indeed the Cburdl ill J4ission and therefore aD of 118 are truly missionaries

fa tills Yeai IaItIl we eaa testify to Gaefldl uieDt 04 om- ATatitade to God for the bleilldDc of faWt by ma~ bull aerIfiee te TIle Society for the PropapUOn 01 the Faith lor tile works of the Chureh ill the service Df tile poor and underprholshy~ed We eamaot be Uke our Master III the fWlness of HIs Dlvinit7 nor caD we hoPe to experienCe thelrlory of His Transfigmratio bat there lis ODe way ill whieh we eaa resemble Rim and that Is ~ beeomtitamp- a oervant to His poor aDd His UWe ODes throughshyout the world

The native celrgy is the ho~ of the Chureb in Mission lands Many youngmen have heard the can but are sadly turned away for lack of facilities and funds $250 will provide a year of semshyinary training $1500 will cover the cost of complete education to the priesthood Wont you help us to help them by sending your offering to The Society of st Peter the Apostle 366 Fifth Avenue New York N Y 10001

SALVATION AND SERVICE are the work of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith Please cut out this eolumn and send your offering to Right Reverend Edward T OMeara Nashytional Direetor 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or directly to yoUr loeal Diocesan DirectOr Rt Rev Msgr Raymond T Considine 361 Norib MaiD Street FaD IUver Massaelnuse~ts 03720

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THE ANOiOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 13Missouri Diocesan Board Pondersmiddot Closing Consolidating Schools

KANSAS CITY (NC)-Tbe 1H girls They would be abshyKansas City-8t Joseph diocese sorbed into the school popushyis exploring the possibility of lations of Lillis high school and closing some of its schools and st Theresas academy forming n larger area school Although 120 persons attendshy Extension Volunteers bull bull bullwhich could upgrade the qualshy ed the school board meetingity of education for all pupils they were not petmitted tp

At 0 school board meeting speakFather John P Cole supershyinJtenden~ of schools reported on L - shyPTA Bead Plotes~

the possibility of setting up 11 Make Life Wortl IVngA motion-passed unanimousshycentral area grade school in ly by the board-was made to

mid-town Kansas City The continue exploration into conshysingle school would serve the solidation of the schools Thispopulations of three existing was opposed by John J Mcshygrade schools Donough a representativeFather Cole also suggested the elected by the Catholic PTApossibility of closing Redempshy Federation who will be seatedtorist high school now serving as a board member in July

McDonough was permitted to $~[]7reg~ 2~ Ifreg[[~ take part in the discussion but

had no vote

~~ ~~[[U IT)J He protested against the defe3ltist clique who let our

WASHINGTON (NC)-Bishop schools get picked off one byPaul F Tanner newly named one He charged that TheOrdinary of the diocese of St New Peltlple - the diocesanAugustine Fla is onfy the newspaper members of the dishyfourth priest to serve as general ocesan school office officials of secretary of the United States the Missouri Catholic Confershybishops secretariat in the nearshy ence Kansas City pastors andmiddotly half-century of its existence other Church officials share in

Bishop Tanner was the last an anti-Catholic school recshygeneral secretary of NCWC the ordoriginal secretariat He was also the first general secretary of ODe Operation both of is dual suc~essors-tne

McDonough said that theNational Conferenceof Catholic school superintendent shouldBishops and the United States be goingmiddot to the state legislashyCatholic Conference The NCCB ture and Governor Hearnes tois the bishops agency for dealshydemand tax relief instead ofing with purely splritual matshyconsidering consolidation andters the USCC Is their secreshyclosing of schoolstariat for dealing with secular

affairs Father Colemiddot maJntained that The prelate has served in the the reorganization would not

U S bishops secretariat 28 represent a cutback The area years longer than any precedshy school would be able to opshying general secretary Born in erate out of one blilding to Peoria TII in 1905 and ordained serve three parishes It would a priestmiddot of the Milw~ukee archshy provide the same educational diocese in 1931middot he came to experience for the same number Washington in 1940 ~as assistant of students plus advantages director of the Youth Departshy Cooperation would make posshyment NCWC He ~as assistant sible a highly developed model general secretary from 1945 to school staffed by Sisters from 1958 and has been general secshy three communities retary since then He said it would be irresponshy

He is the first bishop to serve sible to run three operations at as secretary to the bishops secshy all costs when the diocese retariat could have one operation run

The NCWC (as Council and it more efficiently do a better Conference) had been in exisshy educational job and provide opshytence 47 years when it formally portunity for a better deployshywent out of existence at the anshy ment of personnel nual meeting of the bishops in November 1966 Bishop Tanner who had served in the secretashy Urge Germaruls riat for more than half those years supervised the transition To Aid Vietnam to two separate organizationsshy

BONN (NC) - Two Germanthe NCCB and the USCC cardinals and two churchshyDuring Bishop Tanners secshy related relief organizations have

retaryship and in testimony to FALL RIVER PROVINCETOWN AND WESTPORT GIRLS WITHappealed to the German people

the growth of the work handled to collect money and to prayby the bishops secretariat an NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF EXTENSION VOIL~NTEERS DURINGfor the people of Vietnamimpressive addition to the headshy A week beore Mardi Gral lt- quarters building here was Joseph Cardinal Frings of Coshy THEIR YEAR OF VOLUNTEER WORK erected in 1960 logne asked the Catholics of his

archdiocese to cut down on Mardi Gras festivities and to donate magnanimously to the needy people of Vietnam Coshy These young college graduates have given a I year of their logne has long been known for its ampigtectacular Mardi Gras celeshy professional life to God in service in the South and West Are brations Citing the bombing Of North you willing to give twelve months of yourmiddotyouth to othersVietnam the plight of women and children caught between opposing forc~middot in the $()ut~ and the great number of refushygees Cardinal Frings asked how Catholics could watch pictures of these gravely distressing si~

WHY NOT ENROll AS ANuations on television and ceieshybrate Mardi Gras with a quiet The Spirit oj

Extension Volunteer HELPER middot$200 oconscience Alfred Cardinal Bengsch Of Extension Volunteer PROMOTER $500 o

Berlin asked for prayers for Sacrifice Extension Volunteer SPONSOR $1000 or more opeace in the world in a letter to the clergy of his diocese in which specifically mentioned AMOUNT ENCLOSED $ Vietnam as a name meaning Perfectlyblood and death RT REV RAYMOND T CONSIDINE PAIn a joint appeal Caritas the German Catholic relief organishy PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH OFFICE zation of Germanys Evangelical 368 NORTH MAIN STREETExemplifiedLutheran Church has asked for fALL RIVER MASS money to send food Md medishy

BISHOP P~VL F TANNU cine to the Children of Vietnam o

(-14 THf ANCHOR-Diocese of FaR Rfver-Th~rs Feb-29 1968 Two Objectives Jersey to Rehabilitate Young OffendersTells Jesuatts Engage in Deliberate

Help Increasing Spanish Group Attempts at lExperimentation UNION CITY (NC) - Two Hudson County Jan and in theST LOUIS (NC)-Deliber- carries its own reward he said area interfaith clergy groups youth house in Secaucus

iide attempts at experimenta- Now we must undertake new here in New Jersey are planning Father ThomasJ Murtha oftion with a readiness to accept forms some of which have a

joint action on the plightf West New York was named toall the risks that may be in- good chance to flop JIliserably youthful offenders housed m investigate means of setting UJltvolved were proposed for the An expert at the Second VatshyHudson County correctional in- a rehabilitation program t4ilSociet of Jesus at the close of ican Council Father Campion stitutions and to seek federal function after the release ~ III three-day session here on believes that the work of the assistance in meeting the needs youthful offendersbulllesuit renewal council has not yet begun to of Cuban refugeesFather Donald R Campion be absorbed within the Church

The joint session was held by The ~o groups will send a18J stressed at the renewal as a whole the North Hudson Clergy Coun- delegatIOn toWashIngton to askQession and in an interview This is not because it hasnt cU based here and the Chris- ~hat the area be declared anthat the Jesuits have both the been publicized enough or beshy tian Clergy United a West New Impacted area under the Cuban manpower and the resources to cause people havent read Y k Refugee Act and therefore beshy

engage in the type of expeii- enough or bishops havent talkshy or ~ro~p come eligible for special federal mentation which could serve ed enough he said But Vati shy A meetmg WIll be s()~ght WIth aid There are some 00000 tQdays Church Father Cam- can II opened up more areas the Hudson County Boar~ of Spanish~speakingpeople now m pion a sociologist and theolo- to discussion than it resolved Chosen Freeholders in an effort rth gian was recently named editor Among the sleep~rs in to establish a bettez climatefoi the ~o Hudson area and they cd America magazine council documents CIted by therehabiUtation of youthful continue to arrive at the rate of

Another speaker Fat her Father Campion was the conshy offenders now housed intne 200 to250 a month ~ 1 _

Avezy Dulles SJ stressed that cept of participation within the ~ doubt is a valuable and even Church Father Campionmiddot said lI1ecessary experience for the he believes collegiality is the Wide E~perience Christian in todays world most developed aspect in this

Fathers Campion and Dulles area and that some organization QU(lJD~ies Nu_ were two of the six main speak- has been given to it through the

UNITED- NATIONS (NC)ers at the closed meeting Some establishment of piie~ senates ltHQWCom pie t e devotion to theSSO Jesuits including 50 from But unless the idea of parti shyworlds needy children seemsCilutside the St Louis areaat-cipation is really the basis senshy a weighty task for a petite nun TDgtKEEPtended the sessions ates can become orgimizational

Father Campion said that Jes- gimmicks he said but a conversation with Sister Ullits as a group must face the Father Dulles discussing themiddot Kathl~eri Kelly MMmiddot provides LENmiddotTreassularice middotthat 20 years of make a significant contribution Church said ~ an interview diversified experience fact that their work should existence of doubt in todays

more to modern times that we have a radically differ- than qualifies her for the role

QUI IXIDPYFATHER lI MISSION jlUDTG me fllRlfaNTAL CHURCH

In the area of education It calIS for recasting the ex- wide Cath)lic charities organishy Need New Formula ent world view than in the past Caritas Internationalis worldshy

With the slason of Lent comes the qu~ionFather Campion called for con- pressions of the Christian messhy zation recently appointed Sisshy How can I beSt keep Lentl The answer ~s ~sideration of whether we are sage in terms of contemporary as observerter Kathleen its must make sacrifices on our own and nothing ISproviding the educational struc- knowledge if the message is to to the U N International GOOD III sacrifice unfess it hurts Whatwill be yo~rture for the new world have the impact it should Childrens Emergency Fun d WHIEN sacrifice bullbull Just think of the misslonlllne~ InIn the intellectual area Look Criticanny (UNICEF) Caritas Internationshy ITlf our 18 emerging countries who keep Lent allrather Campion noted that to- Doubt is not a bad thing he alis is one of 75 international HUmS year long Sacrifice something big this ye~rday more is needed than popu- said People should be looking and non-government organizashy When helping others hurts a bit you know you va larization of theology and phil- critically at the traditional forshy tions (NGOS) which enjoy conshy made a sacrifice()Sophy In a way we need a mulas and seeing what is revelashy sultative status with UNICEF whole new formula for making tion and what is a culturally

They represent oJer 4000csense of the world and life he conditioned formula which is affiliated private and non-profitfSaid now demanding reform

We should have men devoted Such adaptations are iD no organizations in more than 100 oOn his recent-trip through India 1V0~signor nations with a combined memshy Nolan saw priests and Sisters subSisting onto this single problem Their way a compromise of faith bership running into millions ounces of rice each day so they can share what own inner resources of security Father Dulles said We never they have with lepers and orphans $10 will feedmust be yery strong because to hear the divine message except Interviewed at the United Nashy FEED a family for several weeks at least $50 will feed

facethat kind of change is not III in terms of humans he said tions Sister Kathleen spoke of THE five families $100 ten families bullbullbull Only $975popular thing The Word of God comes her new rol~ at the international HUNGRY gives a priest 11 two-acre mode~ 18nn toraise

Council Opened Areas through man it is alW9YS tem- level and described how it his own food and teach his parishioners how to Father Campion said the can pered by man and it is this con~ evolved from her past activities raise more food Archbishop MalJ Gregorioa will

for experimentation W9S not ditioning which must change wrltetlo thank youI was in California andbased on inadequate work of Father Dulles said one value worked for 10 years in familyJesuits at the present time and of the death-of-God movement eounseling in the juvenile court IlJ Enable ~ girl to become a Sister For 41tl bullthat fact is part of the problem for Catholics is to shake _ I1tA1N day ($1250 a month $150 bull year $300 aleill foster lare and in otherMany times we have been suc- out of taking an uncritical with sa~ A together) you can pay In full fer her two-yeaIwork children sheeessful and being successful static view of God training have 8 Sister of your awnInthe last five years I moved SISTER

oat to community development and civil rights I was a member o For only $a5O a week ($10 a month $120 bull

year) you can make surethat an abandonedJesuit Seminarian Leads Campaign of a district council in bull San HELP Francisco - which subsequently A child has food clothing a blanket and love bullbullbull IAgainst Home Contract Firms was declared a poverty CHILD wen send you a photo of the boy or silt )011area

adoptCHICAGO (NC) - A Jesuit borne than its current market During my years there I waa Rminarian has launched a camshy value a member of the Catholic Intershy o Our priestS will offer promptly the Massespaign here against contractshy Following the exodus of racial Council and when I came MASSES you request Doyou wish to remember a loved holders of homes sold to Negro Lawndales white residents in back from Selma (she was on fOR one this Lent Your Mass offerings are usuallyfamilies at allegedly exorbitant the late 1950s thousands of of the persons selected to repshy LENT the only Incole our priests overseas receiverates homes were purchased by vari shy resent the archdiocese of san

Jack Macnamara SJ who ous bankS mortgage loan and Francisco in the Alabama civil o Enroll yourself your family and friends InlIives and works in nearby real estate companies at low rights march) I was appointed this Association You will be helping Pope Paul Lawndale is acting withthe ap- prices and then resold on conshy to serve on the Human Rights

JOI~ in one of his most ambitious and heartfelt works proval of his Jesuit superio~ tractto Negro families atofteIi - Commission by the mayor of THIS while sharing In the blessings of thousands of

Nacnarnara and a dozen supshy ~lImON Masses (The offering for one year is $2 perdouble the original purchase San Francisco the nun stated porters including several other price the leaflet reported She was the first nun ever apshy person $10 for a family perpetual membership Jesuit seminarians picketed the Paid Race Tax ltpOinted to any kind of~~yt is $25 per person $100 for a family) Chicago address of one investshy Macnamara said these conshy inJSan Fraidsco _

Iment company which holds title tracts should be renegotiated at

~ several homes sold on conshy the most recent FHA appraisal tract to Negroes Pickets dis- price ~ If I1t e SAiliNGS

tributed leaflets explaining the c2J 0 dJ ~ t~~ year SYSTEMATICThe issuemiddot here is moral rathshypurpose of their campaign er than legal he declared Th~ MONTHLY DEPOSITS

The leaflet cites the case of III law does not provide a remedy II tfMltIa fNVE$iMENyhome purchased by an investshy for the type of injustice that is d) aV~ J((~ year SAVINGSment company in January 1959 operative in this contract

for $13000 and then three NOTICE ACCOUNTSThousands of Negroes inmonths later sold on contract to Chicago are suffering from this a Negro buyer for $23000 450 ar ~~~~

It states the investment corn continued ~In effect they paid pany received $2000 as a down II race tax of approximately

type of injustice Macnamara

BCJs~ liverpayment on thiS contract whic~ $10000 when they bought their stipulated that middotthe balance was homes because it was impossishy SavonJs Bonkflo be paid over 20 years at sevshy bleto obtain mortgages 4Il per cent interest at the rate This is a striking example of BanI By Mail of $20140 each month how our legal system does notmiddot We Pay The Postage

Last December it reported a adequately protect black people Federal Housing Administration or poor people he said It appraisal on this home listed its stems from the fact that the law bull YARMOUTH SHOPP8NC PUll value at $15025 This means it aims at protecting property inshy bull SOUTH UltMOm bull HYANJIISexplained that the Negro buyer stead of persons And this helpl bull DENNIS PlmRT bull OSTFllVIUlIII paying $8000 more for tbe bull cause urbaJl unreal

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 ltI

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16 THE ANC )~-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968

New St LouimiddotsArchbi~hcp

PrOmilnent in Ecumen~$m Archbishop Jonh J Oarberry of St Louis well known

~()ng Oatholic leaders after 31 career that has taken him from a seminary classroom iii his natiYe Brooltl~ NCY~ to one of the nations MOse ~mpOOtallt archdiolaquoese1l is pershy

laaps evenmiddot better ~ownmiddot fJDlong Americas nom-Cafu6shylie religious leaders fon hisl work in ecumenism Cllair Ilillao of the Bishqps Commi~ee-Ibr Ecumenical and Intenrefi shyaious Affairs since th~ resigna Qion of Baltimores Lawrence Cardinal Shehan in November 11965 Bishop Carberry has au I9gtCrvised the massive catholic illllvoIvement in ecumeniCal ac-middot lli1 vities

He outlined his own entIliusishyeuroISm for ecumenism in a speech ~iven in January 1966 tolmemshy~rs of the Ohio (Protestant) lPastors Convention wheDI he aid

Common lHeritagel For years the general policY

(llln the Catholic Church) had ~en to stress the great chasm

which divides the euroatliolic Church and other Christian ehurches No effort was made m would seem on our part to Illave a meeting of minds A otudy of documents would seem ltD reveal that while we wera lbrayerfully disposed to) the ltecumenical movemerit nevershy1lheless the Catholic Church did lliittleto foster it

Bishop Carberry told the conshyvention that through the grace 0f God and the leadership or Pope John XXIII we became aware of the common heritage Which is ours

Has Great lHope

We began to realiZe~ how 18aptism unites us in ChriSt to Gee that the divinity of Christ is illhe cornerstone of all Christianshynay we began to real1ze the oommon treasure which we llnave in the Sacred Scripturesllikewise the common bondshyVhich exists with us in the

1lIIlissionary activities at the Church

There is great hope Bishopltearberry said that mrougb ~ialogue through prayerbull 1llluough respect for each others wiewpoint the grace of God may (i)Ile day in Gods divine provishy4llence bring about the- unitY which Christ prayed for at themiddot Last Supper

More recently members of ltOhios Protestant cliurches llllamed the bishop as OniosPbsshyoLr of Pas-tors the fl rst timmiddote hat bull

Grants Permis$ioll~

for SaturdayMass) SAN ANGELO (NC)-BiShop

Thomas TSchoepe of San Angelo lllas announced that the diocesan request for the Saturday Mass flaculty hagt been granted In the future the Sunday Mass 00shyltigation may be met by at shy~ndance at a Saturday aftershyllloon or evening Mass The pershylll1ission has been granted on an ~xperimental basis by the Vati shylttan for a period of five years

The diocese of San Argelo is 1lI Texas missionary diocese the bishop explained and there are areat dis tan c e s between churches and few priestswmiddot oerve the faithfuh ManYi ~llieSts

have two or morlt8 churclies tJ lllttend and will Be able- tQ give more time to the smaller ~urches with the Satucday Mass faculty Bishop TschoePe pointedi 9Ut Chat the faculty has been giVeth bull the whole diocese not just Ibo individual churches or areas Pastors who wish to make Usemiddot aJl the faculty must make formal application to the chancery ofshyillce

a~ statewide Protestant onganiza tion has presented its highest awa-rd 10 a eatho1iir clet1gymam A pla~J1e symbollZiDg the a~adi was~ glv~~ to the blShp at ~~~ Fenw~nIP Blmq~et on the Olbo PastollSgt ~onventi~m

DI~USS P~tilems U~dev Blsli~p~rlgte~rysl~d

er~hlPl laquoatholic ~elegations have ~et wl~h ~fflC1Blsbull and

tleolbglan~ of other- ChrIs~an churchesmiddot to dlSCUSS ecumemcal pooble~s r~~gmg from the pr~sshyence of Christ Ill tlie ~ucharlst to th-c nature of we prJes~ood

Before ta~mg cliarge of th Golumbusmiddot dIOcese on March 25 1965) Bishop euroarbery liadmiddot selved asmiddot coadjutor bishop and then bishop of Eafayette Ind Born in Brooklynj N~ Y Tulymiddot 31 1904 Bishop Carberry studied for the priestlioodi at Brooklyns Cathedral College or the Iin-middot maculate laquool1ception from 191ll to 1924 and at the North Amershyican College in Rome from 1924 to 1930

Oldained inmiddot Rome in 1929 tne bishop sfudiea canon law at the Catholic University of America in Washington D G and taught at Immaculate Conception Semshyinarl until Tune 1935 when he went on ldan to the diocese of Trenton N J He returned to BrooklYn in 1940 where hemiddotreshymained until being named coshyadjuror bishop of Lafayettemiddot in 19651

~~~5IiTI$ nUilft~U[jTIfi)

Ccopy]JJi]dIT [Qjfr[~lcopy[j

CHICAGO (NC) - Tohn A McDllrmott has changed me mindL-he1li remain as execu middot tivedirector of the Chicago Cat1iolic Interracial Council

The veteran council worKer last October announced he would leave the office to beshy

come Mridwest regional- ciVil rightsdirector for the ms De-middotmiddot partment of Health Enucation andi Welfare

A number of problems hava arisen since th-e announcement on my appointmentt last 0ctbBerwhichl caused me to have serl

ousmiddot second l thoughts MilDer moW said iil his decision to re~ maio with the ltlrc He citedi m1 patrtcular~ personnel cutliaclts in HEW wJiich woulli Iiinit the Midwest negional operatiiul

fo accepting McDermotits de cisionj HEW the government agency requestedi liiin to serve asmiddot ai special chdl- rights consuU ant while working for the CIC and he a~reed

IIlt a letter to the Dutch biINumber of Fllel71ch ops members of Michaels re-

gion asked for curbs on the nlgtshySeminarians Dllops tions Catliolic liberals The PARIS (Ne)-Thenumber of meeting also registered disap-

French seminarians h~s dropped proval of the new Dutch Cateshyby about 180 a year for the last chism~ claiminJ~ that it does nocent four years according to 1iigures represent true Catholic teach~ provided in amiddot press conference Michaels Lel~ion is considered by Bishop Jean Sauvage 011 ampshy even more CJlnservative thlW necy member of the bishops Confrontation another Catholic commission on the clergy and conservative organization Conshyseminaries frontations complaints about

For the 1967~68 sc1iolastic the content of the new Dutch year the tdtal number of sliumiddot catechismmiddot are believed to hae dents iil major seminaries m been instTllmentai in having tbe~ FhlOce is 43583 comparedl with book exltlmined by the VatiCan~lJ

4536 for the previous year Doctrinal Congregation 4722 )n 1965-66 and 4953 in 1964-65

Moreover in France at pres- Approves Agency eol ttiere are aBout 200 adults LQND()N (NC)--Jolin Cardl~

WIIO are preIgtaring for tOe ~er nal Heenan of Westminster liJaa manent diaconate as restored by approveq establishment ocf 1m the Second Vatican Council The agency to help priests who want first ordinations to this permashy 10 leave the priesthood znGl nent diaconate could take place nuns who want to leave the this year religious life

1P~alrn le~tUlm~1rn~~G~

$1lll~7 GG1l I1DtJ Sim LONDON (NC)-A study on

the problems of ecumenism in Great Britain will be made by a joint working group of the British Council of Churches and the Caholic Church with the results to be reported next Autumn

The study was planned at a meetingmiddot held atmiddot the Vita et Pax Benedictine I~onvent and attendshyed by nine Catholic representashytives an- 14 representatives of the BeC -

The projected study is exshypected to analyze such topics an the extent I)f cooperatiGn beshytween Catjwlics and members of the BeC the dialogUes bemg held theologicaL differences and the non~theological obstacles to closer unitygt

Auxiliary BishoJ- Langton Fox of lfenevia Wales and

Auxiliary Bishop Basil Chrisshytopher Butlelr OSB of Westshyminster headed tOe CatOolie delegation at the meeting

~(i]$~~rlaquolJpoundfr1) A$1k lMl~illlW) ~ltoy~ IHh~)~Dnd

U11RECHm (NC) -Michaels Legion an organization of Dutch Catholic~ uaditionalists has sent a telegram to Pope Pault H ungintg him tD protect essential orthodoxy and to S81fe tne DutchChurch~

At 3- meeting here attended b~ some 600) Catholic conserva tives led by Eouis Knuvelder the legion condemned the Dutch Catholic daily press the~ Dutch Gatholic tellvisioncompany and the countrys Catholic radio station for being too progressive

Father Baum Regards Ecumenical Center Closing Sign of Success TORONTO (NC)-The closing gian Charles Davis-A Quesshy

of the Center for Ecumenical tion of Conscience Davis book Studies at St Michaels Collegegt exmiddotplains his renunciation of the here is a sign of the centersmiddot euroatholic priesthood and the success Church and asks Catholic theo-

This is the viewpoint of Father logians who intend to stay in GregllllY Ballm O~SA founder the~ eurohurch to reply to several of tJie centeI1 who has an- t1iaologjcal points nQunlaquoed that it will b~ Closed BelUef Unbelief

inl JUne Thats what Im doing FatlieJJBaum-explalnedthalhe Fatller Baum said His book a

founded the centeJ ill 19631 when replYJ to Davis questions conshyecum~llusrn may have~ been a ceming the credibility of the new Idea Its purpose lie- s~ld Church in todays world will be was to promote ecumemcall called The Credibility of the studies at St Michaels Church Today It will be pub-

Taday he neports ecumen mal stlUdi~s at S1l Michaels are a reality- 1lli~ schGolls theology depal1tment 18 fully mte~ ~thl Protestant and ~gIIcan lfupartmentsmiddot at the-Umversity

of Toronto [hUB lie said~ the eC-lmenical

centell has fulfilled its purpose Such fUlfillment he said wmiddot

common in academic circles where there has been an ecushymenlical reVOlution For exam pIe ne said where once som1shyone might have nied to foster ecumenism through building an ecumenical library it is now impossible tq build a theological lilgtrary without its being ecushymenical

Need flDZ Programsmiddot Father Baum added that he

does not believe tJie ecumenical movement has reached fruitien in circles outside the academia world~ He said that he sees a real need pound01 formal ecumenmiddot ical programs on the parish and on all levels of the Churdl which have not yet been reached He a150 disclosed that perSOll ally he lias moved Gn frOlll ecumenism to new fields of thought

The AuIDlStinian has written a new book in answer to the latest by the English theolo-

U[[$ W)jf[rll IfSMsjIID~

rnliJ kUD-WIh ol 1TW[jiJ KETTERING (Neuro) - The 1-7shy

member parish board 00 St Charles Church~ here unanishymousll1 adopted a resolution 5 favor Qf open nousing legiSlashytion for thiS (1)hio suburban community

The parish boards action S~ poIied- unequivocallymiddot passage 0amp an open housing ordinance in themiddot virtuallr aUi-wltite commw-middot nity 00l more than 600001 res dents Tames J Gilvay and Peter Donanue attOrneys anlL pariBhlmiddot boarc members pre sentedthe resolutJoDj wliiclli tbok- themiddot position that the ghett) condit1ollG ~Ilichl Negroes enshycure ilm nearby DaYton are mshyiuriOwil to the entire commUlshyDitTmiddot

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Aftei tee closing of the Center for Ecumenical Studies Father Baum will stay on at St MishychaeFs au a professor of theolshyogy He is also planning another ~~

It will concentrate on the idea oi God in modern thought and will be a clear sign that Father Baum has moved away from his prime in terest in ecumen- ism

Born of Jewish parents in Berlin and reared as an agnostic Father Baum said he has now turned his whole thought to the study of belief and unbelief He will record his findings in me book he is now writing

~oh~ laquotmm~~litl ~Od1[9)

[~ Ao~ i N~regIJ$ CAMDEN (NC) - Bishop

Tames L Schad administrator of the Camden diocese was =ong citizens honored here foT their efforts in furthering the interests of the Negro comshymunity

Bishop Schad who has been active in community action projects such as the War on Poverty committees was pre sented a scroll during a proshygram sponsored by the Tenth Street Baptist church here in observance of the 43rd annual Negro History Week This year marks the first time a Romaa Catholic prelate has been so honored

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17 Oppose Church Clergy Participation in Politics

By Jsgr George G Higgins

The New RepubJic-whIch in this writers judgment W one CYl the be3t of Ameriros weekly journals of opinion especially hl it3 arovezoage cfcurrent economic and political developments----thinks that the time has com~ for anti shyVietnam clergymen aul1ayshy Be that as it maY I am ioshymen to translate tu1eir cVZl clined to think that the editors m0r81 indignation oveuror Vietshy of the French periodical Inforshynam into effective political mations Catholique InternashyDction inasmuch as this is the tionales make considerably only way to effect long-term more sense than the editors cOf ehanges in the The New Republic 011 this issue policies of this of clerical involvement in the country So far so-called politics of peace as laymen are Though they are vigorously concerned this and unqualifiedly opposed ~il

would seem to tW war in Vietnam and like be a self - evishy tWeditors ()f The New Repubshydent proposition li( clearly recognize that the L1s perfectly establishment of leace in the obvious t hat world is a political problem concerned layshy which calls for the active mshymen ou~ht to volvement ofChcistians as ~-en

translate their as all other men of good will moral indi~nashy they do not think that themiddot tion over Vietnam - or any cleJgy who are responsible foy other significant issue of public the unity of the Church should policy-into effecti-re poiiticltll be expected to take on the role

of party politiciansaction Given the fact that their pubshySound Tradition

lication ~CI has been oJe 01 tileOn the other hnd I aJl Evt most outspoken European critics

sure understandthat I fully or of U S involvement in Vietnam completely agree vitb The New and one of the most vigorousRepublic when it says that fue advocates middotof a politics of peaceclergy ought tncv likewise their warning against the parshy

Traditionally a the NR itself ticipation of the clergy in parshypvints out the clergy-in this tisan politics is highly signifi shycountry at least - have rnied cant and deserves to be taken amy from such participation very seriously (Christians and

AJJ a long-time subscriher to the Struggle ior Peaee InforshyT~2 New Republic I had Dlshy mations Catholique Internashyways been under the imp~ssio~ tionales Jan 15 1965)that its editors thought that en Fl lialgs lrindplebalance this was a sound tradishy

Those American Catholicstion Apparently lwweer I was who may happen to have a speshy

cial interest in the pros and consmistaken in this regard fora of this highly controversial issuerecent Nell Republic editorial will also want to read whatnoten with satisfaction that Hans Kung has to say about itAJlerican clerGYmen now apshy

pear to be ready in large numshy in his forthcoming bookThe Churchbers to get involved at a preshy

cinct level and to play C1l Father Kung has lectured exshyactivist role in both parties tensively throughout the United (Clergy in Politics The New SUItes in recent years and is

currently with us again as a visshyRepublic Feb 17 1968) iting professor at Union Theoshy

QuestioIS Meaning logical Seminary in New York What does this mean in pracshy Seen in the light of the Gosshy

tical terma Does it mean that pel le writes in his new book ministers rabbis and priests the relntionshipof the Church should endorse ltor oppose) parshy to the world contains only one ticular candic1ates fqr politiell essential aspect its ministry 10 office starting at the precinct the world level Does it mean that they Ministry does not mean raisshythemselves should run for ofshy ing ones voice or putting an -oar flee if only as a last reiort in all secular qIes1ions middotof ecoshy

If so does it also mean that nomic political sodaI middotcultural other clergymen should run artistic and scientific life against them if they happen to T1e Churchclmnot solve disagree with what they stand the greJt problems of the ()rld for Or does it mean toot only neiih2r the problell1of hunger those clergymen who are anti shy nor that of the populaticn nor Administration should get inshy that of war nor thlt oanonFmshyT-olved at a precinct leel and ity of power Dor that -of race play an activist role within hatred What the Church both parties can do can be expressed quite

Sicnifieani WarnlDI simply in one phrase it must I have raised these questions exist for the world

lot to make light of The New ACrefS With lFTK1mgRepublics editorial CD the subshyject under discussion but Anyone who hal ever baG the merely to BUggest that clerical pleasure of meeting Faiher involvement ill partisan politics Kung middotor is familiar wi1bhis over the issue of Vietnam is at writings will know witheut best a rather tricky business being told that be is not a hawk and will almost inevitably lead and that he is cot advocating to certain consequences which a policy of Christian withdrawal upon further reflection even the from the world editors of The New Republie middotOn the eontrary be stroniJy might eonceivably wish tc foreshy favors lhe all-ltltit involvement tall of Christians in temporal affairs

and notably iii the ~lities Of peace

To Speak in Boston Nevertheless be does net Rev Anthony T Padovano think that the institutienal

Church-and its clerical minisshySTD theology professor at ters-should pretend that theyImmaculate Conception Semishy

nary Darlington N J will speak have all the answers tc the problems of the worldia the Christian Culture lecture

aries sponsored by the Paulist And neither eoes be thinkshyFathers at 815 Wednesday night if I read him correctly-that tbe March 6 in John Hancock Ha)) clergy in ~ exeTeise of their Boston Tickets are available mission of peace should get inshyfrom 5 Park Street Boston volved in partisan jl)olities Nor 02108 do L

WOKS LIKE FUN Yes but listen to what it requires The Georgetown University erew keeps in s-hape with ~

AM ~i~enies in the gym foHow~ by a two-niile run UJl and do-Wll Observatory Hil~on tJhecampus Its cold up there said Dave Harris a member of the lightweifht crew but by then youlewtired you do-nt care NC Phottgt

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 ~ 968

Prayer for Peace To Cm(O)se Games

MEXICO CITY (NC) - All ecumenical prR)er for peaCf) service is being planned for the end of the 19th Olympic Gam~

here next October The sponsor of the service w shy

the Ecumenical Commission fcrr Religious Services (ECRS) fe the Olympic Games The comshymission is composed of 73 ChrisshytiRn and Jewish leaders in thi~

city Promment spiritual leadshyers will be invited to speak

At middot8 meeting here the rn ECRS spiritual leaders discusse~

the facilities for athletes and visitors to attend their varioU7J reUgious services

iI1be iMC)Cican government hw aPPI)o~ed ECRS plans for the ~ction of at least tw- JaIige bullclings as nondenonYshynational chapels

The original pIlan toeonstrl1ell one large church has been IcHsshytlarded The present plan is build one large building with no religious I)rnamentllJtion of alltl7 kind on the outskirts of the Olympic Villa and a similar Oilif)

on tne outskirts of the Olympze

Project InterracialInterfaith Cooperation Cultural Villa

tin (Re~~(Jtion of CcUege m addition Archbishop MEshymiddotgut Dario MirlllDda y Gomez Gl

1I1IAMI (NC)~When Florida The Rev Edward T Graham Mexico City hBs authorizeQ Memorial College predominant a Baptist minister key person downtown Catholic churches to ly Negro middotliberal arts school is behind the project has had asshy permit non-Catholic services = moved here frOl1l St Augustine sistance from Mrs Athalie their premises if non-Catholie and opens next September the Range Miamis first NeglO City comgregations should request i project will be the result of unshy Commissoioner who is a Cathshyusual interracial and interfaith olic teamwork Organhzet3 rOthEHSIl

The largest single contribll shyNegroeswhites and Chinese tiou of private funds has oome flainirt~ ClI1ter

have joined hands with Cathoshy from a supermarket executive lLOUISVILLE (NC) - TkeIlics Protestants and Jews tv M Austin Davis a Methodist Franciscan Conventional OrdGcontribute money time advice laiamis Catholic Bishop Coleshy has opened a Brothers Trainincand leadership to realize the

manF Carroll is a member vl1 Center here in an attempt to givedevelopment of the college on l the advisory board as is Maushy Brothers three years of active$10 million complex here rice Ferre diocese of Miami lay apostolic work following theirr leader novitiate

RabbiIrving Lehrman presshy Father Sebastian Cunnil1flshyCouncil Seores ident cd the Greater Miami ham OFM director of tlw Rabbinical Association a n 4ll OOlilter said We felt we haCFactory Closing Jewish lay leaders are amoag an cbligation to give our man

LONDON (NC-The impend- active workers oome training outside contam ing elosingof a large industricl $ bull $ an idea of what was neeclshyJilseph Rodriguez of the plant has been criticized by ~ edfromthem in the outside Puerto Rican Democratic ChEb lay -eouncil of Our Lady Of _rl11 In the past he addeeurohas prepared 11 scholarship PieshyGrace parish in southeast Lsnshy we were not fWfilling ~ gram for -the collegedCD DeedS 1d ~veryoneliturgy

The council expressed its deep concern at the recent No Comlmentclosure of factories in middotthis area Completean4 in particular of the impendshy VATICAN (orry (NC)-Ibe ing shutdown of the Associ2ted Vatican had no comment -oJ1 11

ElectricaIIndustries (AEI) plant repolt that ~hbishop Agostincgt BANKING Casaroli secretary for extraershyIt callid upon the governmeJrt dinary ecclesiastical affairs ilf SERVICEand the -ehaiTmanof the oomshy the Papal Secretariat of statepany torevsrse the decision 10 eonterred with Dlembers of ~

c~ don the plant because Of tor BristOl CountyN-orth Vietnamese missi-on iJJthe middotmoral religious and 5Ocial Parisjn lJanuarylt n JUWWampleffeets iCaiJS2a by the ~veshythat Archbishop Casaroli Wallmen1 a1popl1ation absent from the Vatican fOll

Copies ltOf the councils motion several days nlenUy BrjstoICounty were sent 1amp Prime ~1inister

Harold Wilson MiJiister of Trust Company Labor RayJ Gunter President ampf the Board of Trade Douglas Sturteant (

TAUNTO~ MASSJay and company officials iHoOkAlthough the councils action was a surprise to the pastel Ed 1897 IIHE BANJ(ONFather Joseph seally AA ~ uiltl~rs SUppJies JAUNTONGRHNprist sroa that he agreed ith it ftll3 Purchase Street Member 01 Feileral ~

Faiher 8enlly sait[ centbert Aellad iNew Bedford IDsuranee CorporaamptoDJlOt~cteil p01itiealand elaquolshy 996-5661 nomic motions to eome from the council but pointed out You cannot separate Feligimtl from eveJ~ay life

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968 Capacity Audience at Holy Name Parish ~ihss

My Consciesect1ce Discusses The J)etached Americans In Educ~tion Continued from Page One

Do we care -for knowledge

what happens to other people Why do we strive for college educations or for money Are we so anxious to confor~l1 that we never dare to PITTSBURGH

tMrI

~VJI and it must be understood in a

t mear-cu way

A person following his ~con-~ence must be sincere He cannot play games with his mind but must be honest with himself

A person foilowing his con~ liCience must be correct It iSl10t ugh that he sincerely beshy~ Reves that something is good or evil-he must be sure that hiS judgement is a correct one

agrees with Gods view of the matter

Sometimes people make misshytakes in judgement-honest misshytakes to be sure but mistakes iwnetheless The oft-quoted exshyample is that of the African savshyrage deep in the jungle who may be sincerely following his con- ooience when it tells him to kill omd eat his enemy His conshyscience is a sincere one But it~ Is a mistaken one since it does IIlOt agree with Gods Will He ond every person must c~m-

liitantly review his judgements to lbe sure that they are correct ones and riot sincere mistaken Utes

A person following his conshy3Cience must be certain He can not act with doubt or uncertainshy~ about the rightness or wrong- mess of an act since he would be Announces Prize acting with the willingness to

takea cpance on being wrong For Best Plan ~ offendi~g God and this is aever~ validmiddot If there is uncer- PITTSinJRqH (NC)-Bishop t8inty the person must seek aid John J Wright of middotPittsburgh III arriving at a sure and correct haS annoutc~d il priz~ of$IOOOtor professor ina p1inor semshy tudgementmiddot - formiddot the architect who submitsmiddoth be I f - inary chapiainof a school dishyThe Christian acts with amiddotcon- ~ e st p an or a Jliljgtr renoshy ocesan chancellor and finally

lllilence ~rned by the prlnciples vation of the sanctuary of St vicar general tilChrlst This is where tliEi Pa~l~ cath~middot~al_h~remiddot~T~~e ~om- The P6pe a~o nam~d Father

aturchsteachers the Pope Iiiid P~tit~o~ IS ~p~nmiddot ~omiddotal archJtec~ Bienvenido TudtiJdto be auxil- a message toAfrica and a mes ishops ~nfer middotthe pi~ture to wl~hlD ~e bound~~l~~s~f the iary bishop of Dumaguete in the sage ~lling for peaCe

Illelp men make judgementsmiddot thatmiddot lire guided by Christ Sometimes ~ese j~dge~eptsgo a~intitmiddotnat-middot lIIIa1 inclinations and tendencies md this has always been thedif-

~ti~ty of ~ing a Christian-- Ghrist demands much of His llmiddotowmiddotmiddotermiddots middot IIIU

At present Catholics are askshyiDg tlie Pope to make a morai judgement about birth control d especlmiddotallymiddot the PlmiddotUmiddot Some_lire castigating him for not givshy g a qulck declslon or else they lliie telling people to forget about llrim and to make their own adgeme tsmiddot th ttmiddot w- n m e ma er The Pope in order to make a ilecision must make it on the basis of facts Scientists must provide him with the facts and In this matter there is much that k~epinglVith the general lin~s sition in favor I)f open housing complex The Pope has asked and is still asking theologians to evaluate the scientific facts in 4he light of Christian principles Not all moral issues are simple And then the Pope will apply the principles to the facts and 1ril1 make a decision about the morality of the matter

This will guide the Catholic in fllorming his conscience -- in arshyriving at a judgement that is sipcere that is the correct orie at lS artmiddot d t d ce am JU gemen anthatmiddot is Christian

K of C Convention 51ated for Houston

lAN MARCOS (NC) The

1970 national convention of the ~ights of Columbus will be held in Houston it was an-Bounced here at a conference of Texas officers of the interna- _ tional fraternalorder

The announcement of the seshylection of Houston for the con- v~ntion which will be held in

be different These were among questions discussed by a capacity audience at the second in a series on Christian Morality sponsored by the parish council of Holy Name Church Fall River Sparked by Sisshy

John AIIcIa SUS Cter some 30 people from all parts of themiddot Diocese viewed the film The Detached Amerishycans then broke into small groups for buzz sessions

Thesis of the film was that Americans wont become in volved with each other It dra- matically pointed its message with the true story of Kitty

Genovese murdered on a New York Street while 38 of her neighbors watched ffom winshy

bull dowS-o--and did nothing Also depicted were amarried

couple talkingto each other with neither really listening a student going thriugh school as on an assembly line with his sole goal the position he could

hope for as a college graduate and various other examples of non-involvement

What is life worth if we do not give it away questioned Harry Reasoner at the end of the film The Holy Name audishyence agreed that life sbould be

used for others but tended to feel that there wasnt the im-Personalitv in a smailer city

Jthat is found in a large metropshyolis One Sister countered howshyever with stories brought to

h t htschool by children s e aug This is right in Fall River she stressed Others cited examshypIes of personal involvement in affaIrs of others but agreed that much more could and

Pope I~aul Names Two Aluxiliaries VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VImiddot hail named Msgr Jose T Sanchez to be auxiliary bishop of Caceres in the Philipshypines He takes the titular See of Lesvi

Msgr 5anlhez was vicar genshyeral of Legazpi at the time of his nomination

He was born March 17 1920 atPandan in the Legazpi dioshycese He completed his philoshysophical and ordinary theologishycal studies at the diocesan semshyinary and obtained a licentiate in theology at the University of St Thomas in Manila He was ordained Marc~ 12 1946 and then worked as an assistant passhy

Pltts~urgpchap~er9rmiddottl~e Afner- ~ Philippines Father Tudtud who Pope Paul also delivered 264 ~can -Inst~tUtofAlth~te~ts was36ye~~I)]fat ~hcent time ~fsPeeches bull (~~)_(h~ch mclud~~ ~tIePoit~- his noniinatiOJl studied philos- burgb dlO~es~and three adJa-ophy and theology at St Johns

c~nt countIes SeminarY inmiddotBoston Fath~r roseph P- Larkin He was born March 22 1931

eOm~ission chaiIm~nmiddot ili1(I-a at Mabola inmiddotthe Cebu arch~ member of the diQcesan bU~lll- diocese He worked as assistant - bullbull

iIg commissligtn~ said the pur- pastor Editor ltit Cebus Caiholic pose of thereiiovlition is to pro weekl~ and finally pastor of the ville a ~mQte suitable sanctu- Church of thE Blessed Sacrashy

ary setting fof the liturgical re- inent in Cebu In addition atf orms Qrought into beingmiddot by the time of his nomination he Vatican Council II was vice-superior of the Misshy

Father Lmiddotai-kir said because slon Society of the Philippines the cathedral must architectu-middot r~lly and liturgically allow for Issues Sttement both episcopal mdparish ser-- U

vices ~~any structurai cihimge O H R h offers a unique chalienge to the n umalu ig ts designer~ and provision for the LA CROSSE (NC)-Tbe La

new liturgy must be made in Crosse diocese has taken a poshy

and spirit 01 the existing struc- integrated arid ildequate educashy t4re tion fair employment and the

- defense of the rights of minorshyities

Christians and J~ws Bishop Frederick W Frekshying of the Wisconsin diocese

Honor Clergymen and the diocesan central com-NEW YORK (NC)-Clergy- mission approvedmiddot apmiddot officiai

men from thefour major faiths statem~nt titled Human Reshyhave been honored here by the lations in the Diocese of La National Coiuerence of Chris- Crosse

tians anltt Jews The statement was prepared

the third week of August was the practice has spread middotto a made by Dr Josepb G Murphy number of other cities hesaid of La Marque a member of the interrelgious understanding hasmiddot boara- of- directors fortbe Cathprogressed tremendously middotiIi reshyeticmiddot meDs oganization middotc~nhyearsbull

-

Tbe clergymeri cited for by the subcommission of human relations of the diocesan cornshycourageous leadership in intershymissionon social action and apshy

creedal relations were proved by both before submisshy Rev Dr ~ohn C Bennett sion to the central commissiollll

president of Union Theological ) in January Seminary

Father Robert I Gannon SJ president emeritus of Fordham CONRAD SEGUIN University

Bishop Silas of the GreekOrshy BODY COJMPANY thodox archdiocese of Nortb and Aluminum or Steel South America 944 Countr Street

Samuel D Leisdorf New NEW BEDFORD MASSYork philanthropist pointed out

wy 2-6618that the NCCJ firstmiddot honored reshyligious leaders of four faiths in September -1966 Noting that

should be done by individuals parishes and municipaiities

There were no solutions ofshyfered to the problems posed bythe film We dont expect to have answers to these quesshytions warned Sister John Alicia at the beginning of the program They are too big for us The film WltlS strictly on the

human level and this was pointed out in one group No one can solve all problems it was agreed but surely each Christian canmiddot trust the Holy Spirit to lead him to the probshylems he is equipped to do someshything about no matter how small

There was another point on whichmiddot everyohe in the audience was in enthusiastic agreement that there be more such eveshynings as the one sponsored by Holllgt Namemiddot

Vatmiddotn Report~lIo

Continued from Page One two encyclicals The Developshymiddotment of Peoples and Priestly Celshyibacy four motu proprios inshyeluding one creating central a lay council and the Papal Comshymission on International Justice anp Peace and another restorshying the permanerit diacol1ate treeapostolic constitutions inshyelUding one reshaping the

Churchs c~iitral administlatioii two apostolic exhortations one apostolic letter and 78 other Wessagesmiddotand letterS inclQding

He reeeived eight ehiets Of state including U SPresident Lyndon B Johnson and United Nations Secretary General U T~ant and gave 16 audiences to

th lmiddottmiddot I0 er men 10 ~ 1 lca life in cluding U SVi~ President Hushy~rt H Humphrey Republican presidential hopeful Richard M N d N Ixon an ew Yorks Sen Robert F Kennedy

He received visits from four delegations of Orthodox churCh men including Orthodox Ecushymenicai Patriarcp Athenagoras I of Constantinople besides visit shying Patriarch Athenagoras in ~ tanbul

The book covering last yearli activities of the Holy See conshysists of 1680 pages plus about 2(10 photographs

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Bishop John J Wright hasestablished a committee 1Jl)take a complete look at Oaampshy

olie education in the PittsburpD lOcese

The aim is fc dedde wha~ 1shyd t to tak tbe ~

lrec Ion e Dedecade for the best education of

all Catholics young and oldThe committee will evaluate all present Catholic educationshygrade and high schools eo egesConfraternity of Christian Doeshytrine classes adult education and other programs

The surveyors wiU 117 to deshyvise a plan based oa mstinl and potential resources in facll-Hies funds and Staff to guide the dioceses educational efforlll for the next 10 years or more

May Be FaI-lleaehiDg Among ideas eXpected to be

examined in the evaluation are proposals by some to cut back on Catholic schools or even til phase them out in place of an expanded adult education proshygram

Named head of the committee of educators priests and lay professionals is Father Vernon Gallagher CSSp former presishy

deht of Duquesne University here now serving as an official of the Holy Childhood Associashytion He also is a former proshyvincial of the Holy Gbost Fa~ ers eastern province

The committee Will be emshypowered to call before it di shyocesan officials to hold publlc meetingshire staff ~ring in exshyperts ThedioCege will finance the work

The committee Win make spe- eific recommendations to BishoP Wright after the study which 18 expected to take at least a yearbull

-Results are expected to have ~ar-reaching implicatiou fOr Catholic education here

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Two Unbeoten league Play f1fE ANCHOR-Diocese oTtall River-Ihurs feb 29 1968 19

Coach Says Sault Complete BallPlayerCape Cods NausetCompiles SMTB Playmaker Is Former Coyle $trBest Over-All Court Mark

BY JOE MIRANDA By PETER BARTEK

An excellent hall handler and Norton High Coach team player Is how Pat Sault of

Taunton is described by his Eleven of tile 12 aa-ea e1ubs with the best records in coach Phil Wetterland of the

their respective leagues are among those who will parshy Sou the a s t ern Massachu- setts Technogical Institute Inshyticipate in the March Tech basketball tournament in Boston stitute in North DartmouthFairhaven High of the Oapeway Conference and Nauset Sault a 19-year old freshman

of the Cape amp Island loop are is a former Coyle High hoopshythe only all-winning league a single league game while two ster who played four years for

went doWn to defeat In every the Warriors his final two underaggregations from this area encounter In which they were coach Jim Lanagan on the varshyin the Hub championship Involved Almost two-thirds 02 sityelimination tourney while Dartshy the Southeastern Mass teams

D)Quth High is the only one of Teaching CareerfinIshed wIth a 500 average OIlthe tOp dozen better Although young Pat has al shya 70 per cent coQlbines WIth

WIth 12 triumphs in the Cape ready made plans for the future league record amp Island competition Nauset which Include finishing his edshywhich failed to Regional also achieved the best ucation and pursuing a teachershyqualify an inshy over-all record winning 16 of coaching career dication t hat 11 encounters The Cape Cod Sault has not yet chosen a non-league school will be shooting for the major in college but according competition selshy Class D Tech title to his parents he is very much dom jeopardizes interested in teaching historyNew Bedford High 15 and and coaching They feel he willthe ultImate one in the Greater Boston Subshy be good at both as he alwaysgoal of most urban league finished with anschools Actual- Peter devoted his spare time to helpshy

over-all 17-2 mark for the Winshyly 311 per cent Bartek ing the younger neighborhoodter The Crimsons 937 average boys understand athletics moreof the 35 Southeastern Massashy captured its leagues pennant flag thoroughlychusetts school teamsmiddot have The Crimson Whalers are now Pat is the oldest son of Mrqualified for the Tech title play poised to annex the No 1 State and Mrs Charles A Sault and)let none managed an over-all honor by clinching the top one of four children A sisterundefeated season ranking Class A division in the Annette is a senior at BishopThree area clubs failed to win Boston title tourney Cassidy High James Michael

and Cheryl grammar school Representatives in Three B~ackets students at Mulcahey Schoof in

Taunton Fairhaven and Holy Family FamilYhas been eliminated in The family resides at 85 Mershy

HIgh of New Bedford aiming the Lawrence Catholic tourney rill Avenue In Taunton and are for the Class C Tech crown both Southeastern Mass does not members of St Pauls Parish fInished wIth an over-all 16-2 have one club among the Tech

Wetterland Commentsmark The latter Is still smart- Class B participants but th~re ing from its cliff-hanging defeat will be five area combinations Wetterland was high in his at the hands of Xavier in the -includIng Fairhaven and Holy praise of his five foot 11 inch State Catholic tourney Bill Family-in the Class C play and guard who tips the scales at Walshs two-pointer from the three-including Nauset-in the 160 pounds ~ssesses good speed floor which many thought Class D Hub competition and is a key in the Corsairs fast

meant victory at Lawrence was The other Class C contestants break offense nu1llfied by a travelling viola- patterns when SMTI is wurkshy a rest he should be in top conshySault lllsed strictly with thetion which cost the loss ofthe are Case High of Swansea Nar- iilg too quickly and making dition for the 1968-69 campaignvarsity was gaining valuablebasket resulting in a one-~Jnt ry co-champions Oliver Ames Dlistakes Sault gaIned his court savvy1 f tb of North Easton runners-up in experience and developing rapshy

The SMTI mentor continued from Lanagan at Coyle wheretiOs~~ e Narragnnsett~a~ theHockomock circuit and Den- bUy whep a knee Injury slowed he iii the complete ball player hemiddotstarted in his juJ)ior and senshyDis-Yarmouth of Cape Cod see his progress midway through

Durfee of Fall RIver and ond pI fi ish in tho C the campaiiPt but Wetterland noting that he can shoot but is Jor lieasons and was a Vital co Bishop Stang mgh of North ace n er e ape most --content setting Up his in the Warriors successduring DartmQutb are the other two middotNausetwill be joined by Mar- has turned in some excellent efshy teammates for easy pblnts He Ioth years I J

way loop said despite the handicap Pat

Is a team player and always sacshy As ~ Coyle High fr~hmanarea Class A representatives inmiddot thas VIneyard and Norton mib forts in a most successful SMTI rifices himself to help the club Pat was a member XJtb~ yearshythe Tecb toutnament ~e Fall in the Class D bracket The season

Sault possesses a good atti shy lings h09P team and al~Q~ parti shyRiver Hilltoppers willbe out Islanders finished second to Naushy Defensively Sault is cnitshytude is a tough competitor and cipated in track By hihSOphoshyto make amends for their nose- set in the Cape amp Island league standIng Offensively Sault is one of the players Wetterland is more year Saultcopfjned his dive finish in the Bristol COUl)ty while Norton was second in the the teams playmaker ana quarshyeounting on 1to help SMTI gain athlettc talents to basketbjlll andloop whIle Stang ~ke Ho17 Tri~Valley Conference terback 8Dlall college recognition in the turned in a cODlJPenlla))le acshyfuture Teallll Player coun~ o~ himself

Ifere~s How They Did hi LiBogue Play Played for Lanagan Sault also represented stWetterland said his outstandshyThere is doubt about his the hardwood

he following are the league 21 Bishop Feehan 7_1 ing worth to the Corsairs comes no Pauls on in the eourage said the Corsairs skipshy Taunton CYO and in the annual from the fact that he can slowrecords of the 35 Southeastem Msgr Coyle 7-1 after painful knee Easter tournament He playeddown the offense and set up per even a

Mass teams Ta~ton 7-7 injury Sault continued to jpve four years of Litue JeagueM N B Vocational 6-8 his all and attended every pracshy Baseball and one season in theK of C Masons1 Fairhaven 14-0 25 DIman Vocational 5-9 tice The injury has slowed him Pony League prior to ~ntetmamp

Nauset 12-0 Msgr Prevost 5-9 visibly but after the season and Coyle Higa 3 New Bedford 15-1 27 SandwIch 4-8 To Cooperate4 Holy Family 13-1 28 Nantucket 3-9

NOTRE DAME (NC) - lfashyCase 13-1 29 Old Rochester 4-10

30 tlonal leadellS of the Scottish6 Oliver Ames 12-2 West~rt 3-11 Bite Masons and the Knights ~oll another7 Marthas Vineyard ~ 31 Barnstable 2-12

of Columbus anno~ced memshy8 Bishop Stang 10~ 32 Dighton-Rehoboth 1-13 strike on~rs of their organizations wU1Dartmouth 104 33 Bourne 0-14 work together on domestic andDennis-Yarmouth 10-4 Chatham 0-12 the enerlY international problems faciolaquoDurfee 10-1 North AUleJooro 1-14

the nation12 Norton 105 you get George A Newbury soveshy13 Attleboro 9-5 Minister Officiates reign grand commander 01 from14 Harwich 7-5

Scottish Rite Masons In theProvIncetown 7-5 a slice ofDn Cathclic Church northern jurisdiction of the US18 Seekonk 8-6 MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-A Lu- and John W McDevitt supremeSomerset 86

theran mInister officiated at the knight of the Knights of ColumshyFalmouth 8-6 marriage of his son in Holy Cross bus made the announcementMansfield 8-6 Catholic church here at a dinner here s~nsoredWareham 8-6

Married were James H Graf jointly by the Masonic Lodge 29 L th and the Knights of Columbus

a u eran and CalTon Ann council in South Bend Episcopalian Rite Gutwinski 25 a Catholic The ceremony was rformed - Both praised the work of Fa-MINNEAPOLIS (NC)- Archshy ther John A OBrien of the

bishop Leo Binz and Coadjutor Grapoundfs fltthell the Rev Paul L University of Notre Dame for Archbishop ~ PY1)1e of the Graf pastor of Holy Trinity r better understanding among the Cafllolic archdIoceses of St Paul theran church two groups Minneapolis were present in the Permission for the Rev Gmt Father Theodore M Hesshysan~lary of St Marks Episcoshy to officiate at his sonB wedding burgh CSC president of the pal cathedral here for the inshy was granted by theSacred Con- University of Notre Dame said stallation of Bishop Philip F gregation for the Joctrine of This nIght marks a great step McNarry as coadjutor bishop of the Faitlh inl lWme in answer to ll forward and reflects the new the Epi6copal diocese of Minneshy J)etition by Archbishop Leo BiDz ~enical spirit which is unishysota of~ ~~-M~eapotis iing ~ople long separated-

PAT SAULT

c

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bull THE ANCHOR Dayton University Thurs Feb 29 196a Brief Religious on Ecumenism

Selects Advisors SOUTH ORANGE (NC) meanitigful dialogue should not tended not to lead to compro- DAYTON (NC)-An ll-mem-

Named resident Some 1000 mms and Brothers be confused with monologueshy mise but to conyergence ber advisory board of six stushyservfng in tli~ Newark archdi~shy or confrontation He added We talk now of our common dents two faculty members andSANTA CLARA (NC)-The cese were briefed on the basic we must be willing to be pershy belilefs he said not to com- three representatives of theboard of trustees of the Univershy principles of ecumenism in a suaded-we need an open mind promise each others faith but in community has been establishedlllity of Santa Clara has named program sponsored by the Newshy to seek out the truth wherever the hope that at some point in for the Office of Human Relashylrather Thomas D Terry SJ ark Archdiocese Commission for it might be shy the future we will converge tions at the University oJ Dayshy35th president of the Jesuit unishy Ecumenical Affairs

Ifersity Father Terry who sucshy Discussing the difficulties of As an example he pointed to tornSpeakers at the session ineeeds Father Patrick Donohoe establishing Christian-Jewish the wide divergence of views The board under the direcshySeton Hall University includeSJ recently appointed Califorshy dialogue he said we Christians regarding (he Mass and the Eu- tion of Charles Hirt director ofDr Leonard Swidler of Templeaia provinCial af the Society of are responsible for 2000 years charist that existed between the Office of Human RelationsUniversity Philadelphia aridJIesus has been academic vic~ of anti-Semitism and now_ we Martin Luther and the Council will be responsible for estabshyFather Thomas M McFadden ofpresident af Loyola University must overcome our mutual disshy of Trent Then he cited the re- lishing policy making programthe Brooklyn dioceseLos Angeles for the last year trust before dialogue can be cent statement on the Eucharist recommendations helping to

lllI1d a half Previous to that Swidler said dialogue with fruitful issued by Lutherans and Catho- alleviate campus racial probshyIIlIather Terry was dean of the others must be preceded by an lics to show how much closer lems and drawing up proposall ltWllege of arts and sciences at examination of Catholic attishy Father McFadden said diashy the two bodies have come since for implementation Santa Clara tudes In addition he said a logue among Christians is inshy that time

The lFulInitwJlre Open Daily 9 AM

Wonderland to 10 PM

of the IE=st Including ~atulIdCllYS

rendition of Eariy - American in soOid birch - this dramatic 3 piece bedroom

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$49

Page 9: 02.29.68

9 Money-Eating House Puts Garde1n Needs in Shadle

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick Oh~ ~ Iye~rIlfor the return of Spring and an opporshy

innity to gel out of this D1Ollampter we can a house I cra1ll IOOr house a monster because it seems that it has an inshy8Qtiable appetite for money We recently fiIrlished OUlr second floor (whiClh took a year of

its about 6 above outside andplanning six months of on with the able assistance of a Mld off oonstruotion and 1mshy hardy Winter wind the weather believable sums of money) is urging us all to stay inside J(ow we must have 11 basement Its a perfect day to keep your IIOOm which ea1ls for more mess oven going and your kitchen a money filled with delectable smells

Now there are individuals rve been baking beans since have the desire and the early mom a container of

capacity to be handymen and brown bread is steaibing in a Cbere are those of us who deshy huge kettle OIl the top oJ1 themiddot pend on others to do their work jets and I just set a cinnamonshyI fall into the latter category filled Indian pudding into the -ad I am paying for it I am 80 oven along with the beans The tired of furring ceiling tile aromas are beginning to mingle Dghting fixtures floor tile sidshy and all seems right with the tog etc that I am half hoping world Chat everything comes to a Smalil Dinners lItandstill What appears to be

0

These dre2l1Y months of low the simplest job turns out to be temperatures and stay-homeiIbe most complicated involved days are the perfect time to eIll shyIlleSS imagin91ble tertain your friends X love

Plano Moving nothing more than planning a Take our piano Two years small dinner party for a few

ago we bought an old upright friends and look forward to a 110 that the children could bave couple of days of cooking and their piano lessons in the comshy planning The dinner menu fort of their own home without should be made out at least a baving to nui to my mothers week ahead of time (with pershyevery night to practice The haps a few alternatives in case piano is 11 five toot upright items you plan to serve are not JI~ch cost us 5 available at this moment in thia

When the movelll igtrolliht it area The last time I made a to the ~o~ they ~ere very dinner menu I planned to start careful not 10 hurt tb~ piano off with prosciutto and melon but they managea to sandwich (a delightful combination of Cbe back door scrape half the flavors) only to find out that all paper i~ the hallway and there wasnt a fresh melon avaDshydent the mo1ding wherever theJ able for 10Ve or mOll1ey anyshylraveled where in 1be city I1 you have

Now tbat we are planninl your menu made out befOIle yoa the basement we decided go grocery obopping you avoid put the pianio there where It the disheartening happening of would not be an eyesore and DI7 starting to make a dish only to wife and I would not have find you dont have all tllle ilnshylisten to our fledglings takinC middotgredienta tring into the musical world Desserts tbat rm going to

Simpler said than done One serve to guests are more ofteD mover on seeing the size of the than not the kind Ulat can be piano and the size of our bulkshy made the evening or day before bead said I hOpe you wont be and then thats one less item I offended if I tell you the truth -have to think about the cIay I would advise you to take an that Im going to entertain axe and break it up and bU7 Many desserts lend themselves yourself a new piano He didnt to early preparation and it gives marge for this advice but me a feeling of security to know neither did he move the piano I have one or two completed Now all we have to do is remove desserts already in my freezer n of the stairs in the bulkhead or relrigerator as the busy da~middot

ItO that the movers can drop of preparation begins the piano into the cellar enshy A timetable of projects for kance a job which will cost the day of y~ur ~inner party is ftnimagined amounts of money a great help and I even time I am half tempted to buy that eacb item on the menu SlO thatbullbull I know just when a certain dish

And so it goes Not so in the has to go into the oven AJlL prden where everything iii tbis pre-party preparation leaves lItraightforward and results are the evening free to enjoy yourather immediate Marilyn keeps guests and your own cookingmsisting that the day will come Of course in jolly old New Engshywhen we wont have to bleed bull land a blizzaro can mmr yoUII our bank account to feed our party plans but then your PurishyInsatiable monster but I dont tan adaptability can come to the believe it In the meantime I fore and you can either pack ~ll continue to budget infinishy everything in your Jlreezer for tesimal sums for the garden anotber evening or you and _ile the house is reconstructed your spouse can sit down to a

IN THE KITCHEN sumptuous repast Last weljlk because it was CorrectiD

Rbool vacation week we took Note In a S)taghett1l AUce tile children to the Science Mushy

recipe in the February l ADehorIIeWI1 in Boston As we wanshy two eaD5 l)f toaiato paste wendered among the wonders at

omittedman and his universe I paused Jl()POVEIRSbull moment in front of a case that

displayed a cut-away section of This is an easy but ~al

the earth during the Winter seashy looking quick-bread Contrary lIOn Chipmunk and fieldmouse to most peoples idea popoven IleBtled warmly in their cozy are espeCially easy to make anderground castles waiting for always bake mine in a very iUIe rigors of a blustery Winter badly darkened muffill1 pan to pass and I must admit that at perhaps this is the secret oil mtI Ibat instant I was a bit envious success of Mr Mouse and Mrs Chipshy 1 cup flour munk who could retire from the teaspoon salt hzen world with all its cares 3 eggs (beaten)

Most of us cant crawl into a 1 cup milk bole and hibernate when the 1 Tablespoon melted butter aorth winds blow but we caD 1) Melt the butter ancll set ~nd more time enjoying tile aside and put the greased mufshy

pleasures of our warm (on top fin pans in the oven ~ tAe ground) homeamp ~ a) MUt toueUler a1J1 the __

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968

Voters Approve Open Housing

FLINT (NC) - Flints voters have become the first in the nation to approve an open houSoo ing ordinance in a public refershyendum

The measure pushed strongly by Negro Mayor Floyd McCree and the local Council of Churches was passed by a 43-vote margin The unofficial tally was 20172 to 20129

The Flint City Council passed an open housing ordinance in 1967 but its opponents led by John Birch Society section leadshyer Gerald Spencer had no trouble in gathering 5000 signashytures on a petition to place the

issue before the voters The religious support of the

ordinance was organized by the local Council of Churches with which Catholic parishes coopshyerated Several sponsored pubshylic debates on the measure and more expressed support for it in parish bulletins

Recommends Elimnnating First Four Grades

SPOKANE (NC) - A special study committee here in theBans Sales State of Washington has recomshymended the gradual phasing outSpanish Tov~i~t Convention Forbids of the first four grades in some

diocesan schools and a totalSelling Churchs Artistic Treasures emphasis upward in religious

SEVILLE (NC)- Andalusia For some proof that their education Provincial Tourist Convention fear is valid came from a decishy The committee comp~sed of in a resolution announced at the SiOD to sell donations decorating eight diocesan educators and close of its meeting here has Zaragozas shrine to the Virgin headed by Father Michael emphasized that artistic treas- of Pilar Accumulating for ONeill diocesan superintendent urea- decorating the nations nearly 100 years many of the at education made its recomshychurches are the property of the gifts of the faithful are both mendations to Bishop Bernan people and maT not be sold by artistic and financial treasures J Topel of Spokane after study-Church officials without the ap- Proceeds from the sale of the ing education in the diocese proval of local civil authorities Pilar treasures will go to wbat since August 1967

Admitting that the cburches Zaragozas Archbishop Pedro Elimination of grades one are permanent depositories of Cantero Cuadrado described as through four would allow the nations art the resolution urgent social necessities schools to strengthen grades was aimed at Spanish churchshy five through eight - middle men who have proposed selling school-and offer increased edshyart treasures to finance social CRS Sends Penicillin ucational benefits to a greater action projects number of students at the sameFor Vietnam Casualties or less cost the committees IeshyThe combination of increased NEW YORK (NC) - Within port saidemph~sis on social justice and hours after being inforined thatchurch renovation resulting the Saigon airport was againfrom the liturgy decree of the in operation the U S CatholicSecond Vatican Council has led Offering YouRelief Services (CRS) shippedmany Spaniards to fear that the out by aid 100000 doses of fast shychurches would be denuded of 3 Savings P~ansaction penicillin for civllian casshyancient treasures ualties in Vietnam Home Financing

The penicillin is an urgent need in Vietnam and will be WARJMI~Plan Byzantine Rite used for the civllian casualties

Installation March 5 by the four Sisters who are on co-oprD4liVEthe CRS medical teams in thatPITTSBURGH (NC)-Bishop country Fulther shipments willStephen J Kocisko will be honshy BANKfollowored at a banquet here followshy 281 Main St Wareham Ma

ing his March 5 installation as The peniciUin was given to Telephone 295-2400Bishop of the Byzantine-rite dishy the CRS by the Catholic Medshy

BaDk-8U lIerfIa IftfIIMI ocese of Pittsburg ical Mission Boarcll

Speakers will include Archshybishop Luigi Raimondi Aposshytolic Delegate in the United States wbo will officiate at the

installation John Cardinal Krol of Philadelphia Bishop John J Wright of Pittsburgh and Msgr Edward V Rosack who has been apostolic ildmmistrator of the Byzantine-rite diocese of PitsQurgh

Bishop Kocisko succeedsArchshybishop Nicholas T Elko who reshyeigned as ordinary of the Pittsshyburgh diocese ill1 lOecember Bishop Kocisko has been head of the Byzantine diocese of Passhysillc and will continue as its administrator IIlDti a new bishshyop js named

maining ingredients anell then MOTHER PARKERSlldd the cooled butter 3) Beat the batter until it hl OLD FASHIONEDcompletely smooth 4) Fill the well-buttered pans

full Place in a 450middot degree DOUGHNUTS oven for 15 minutes Reduce heat to 350middot and continue bakshy Baked by your Sunbeam Baker ing 20 to 25 minutes

AWARD WINNERS Award winners at a Winter Carshynival sponsored by the Fall River area CYO are left Janice Feno Somerset High School named Miss Personality and right Carol Silvia Durfee High School carnival queen Holding trophies is Richard Lown Durfee High School carshynival co-chairman

AFamily Favorite

bullbull

THE ANCHOKshy10 Thurs Feb 29 1968

Urge Cergymen Attend Meltefring On Scfielrnce

WASHINGTON (NC)shyCatholic clergy throughout the country are being urged to attend the second annual conference on science for cler- gymem at the Oak Ridge (Tenn) Associated Universities Aug 5-16 in cooperation with Oak Ridge National Laboratory

The conference entitled The Impact of Science on Society is sponsored by the National Science Foundation and the Alshyfred P Sloan Foundation Purshypose of the conference is to proshyvide clergymen of all faiths with an understanding of the nature scope effects and trends

of contemporary science - parshyticularly nuclear science

Dr W W Grigorieff chairshyman of the conference said the conference series originated in the recognition that most clershygymen actively engaged in pas torat work have little training in and understanding of sci shyence but are confrOnted almost

daily with problems and deci aions arising from its implicashytions

Dr Grigorieff s~icj in an inter- view with NC Nevvs Service that experience gained through the 1967 conference indicated to the conference advisory comshymittee that religious leaders of all f~i ths not only need to be conversallt with the content and llOcial dynamics of science but also are extremely eager to take advantage of the opportunity to become more acquainted with modern science

The conference director stated that this year the conference will be open to some 90 parshyticipants-three times as many IllS attended the 1967 conference

He pointed out that Roman Catholic applications for last years conference were not nushymerous and said that those who had applied were for the most part overqualified - that is they possessed professional qualifications and advanced training in science The confershyence he emphasized is not pri shymarily for such specialists

Practicing Cnergy Dr Grigorieff stated that an

announcement has been sent to bishops of anlimber of dioceses

throughout -the country in air eHort to stimulate iriterest in the aims of the conference He added that an effort is also being made to contact diocesan priests senates

He explained that conference participants will be selected on a nationwide basis from appli shy

cants representing various reli shygious )lodies arid emphasized that the majority are expected to be praCticing clergy-those actively engaged in the minis- try rather than in teaching reshysearch etc

He said that a limited number of seminary educators deans heads of clergy-in-service and religious editorf will be acshycepted as observers

Speakers will include Dr William G Pollard executive director of Oak Ridge Associshyated Universities who is also an Episcopal priest associated with St Stephens Church Oak Ridge and the author of several books and Alvin M Weinberg director of Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Askeel to Withdraw MILWAUKEE (NC) - The

Milwaukee priests senate has passed a resolution urging 11 priests of the archdiocese to work for a chalige in tlie policy of clubs which are discriminashytory or tG withdlW as members

INTERFAITH SERVICE Bishop Fulton J Sheen center of Rochester NY at shywnded an interfaith service at Mount Neboh Congregation in Manhattan With- the Bishshyop are the Rev Philip Hiat right rahbi of the congregation and Cantor Albert l- Stur- mer holding chalice wh() prepared the ceremony at which Bishop Sheen received aspeshycial Brotherhood Award SC Photo

Archdiocese- to IBatmiddottle

Race Prejudice -

BusmlrAeSS Archbishop Says CINCINNATI (NC) - Ar(h-

bishop KarlJ A1t~r launched Project Commitment here with an appeal to the Christian comshymunity to appreciate the size and urgency of the problems of race relations and an insistence that the finding of Solutions is everybodys business

Speaking at a Mass in 1l Saints church the Cincinmtti archbishop emphasized not on ly right attitudes among Catholic people but also united comshymunity-wide organization and effort are necessary 10 me~t the problem

He said government pm-middot grams heretofore have been t(o late and too little and adVHshycated something like the Mal shyshall Plan which at the end HI the Second World War rescued Europe from misery and dEshy

spair -The Mass marked the openshy

ing of the projects pilot prll- gram which will continue wittl

seven workshops at Moeller HighSchool on specific aspects of- racial prejudice and lliscrim- ination Endorsed by the Archdiocesan

Pastoral Council and sponsored by the Catholic Commission 011

Human Relations Project Com mitment is described as a promiddot gram ~o help Catholic lay lead ers recognize their responsibii ities and prepare for theiJ proper roles in t~e field of inmiddotmiddot terracial justice

Seven VVeeks Program Dayton will be the second

area in which Project Commitshyment will be launthed The date has been set tentatively for April 9and the program will continue for seven weeks

Archbishop Alter said experishyence gained in the pilot pro-

Forty Hours Format ST LOUIS (Nc)-The St Louis

archdiocese has dropped its reshyquirement that Forty Hours deshyvotion must be held annually in each parish Pastoral guideshy

lines from the Archdiocesan Liturgical Commission noted that parishes were free and encouraged to continue Forty Hours and offered possible new formats which are based on Scripture readings and themes of Eucharist priesthood and church

gram would be used in organizshying similar efforts in the other deaneries

St Francis de Sales deanery in t~s area was chosen as the first for the experiment beshycause its Catholic population represents a cross-section of the entire community and if a-- project succeeds here it may well succeed anywhere else the archbishop said

It has been estimated that more than 500 persons from 31 of the deanerys 34 parishes would tale part in the project

The archbishop detailed the reason why the whole archdioshy

cese was to be involved when the problems are so diverse in the various regions of the 19 counties and When iincertain areas there is no racial conflict because of a totally homogeshyneous population

National Prohlem

The answer is that the prob- lem of harmonious race relashyJions is not a local problem but a national problem involving all communities everywhere and affccting all our public relashytions political economic and social There may not be racial conflict but there can be race prejudice he said

The problem has moreover definite religious and moral asshypects he said and there are questions of social justice and social charity which concern every Christian and for which

Pope Honors Gellman Protest(OInlt Leader

BONN (NC) -Pope Paul VI has awarded the Great Cross of the Order of St Sylvester to Dr Reinhold von ThaddenshyTrieglaff at German Protestant leader

Dr Von Thadden-Trieglaff is the founder and honorary presshyident of the Kirchentag the anshynual German Protestnt convenshytion -

In the document accompanyshying the award the Pope thanked Dr Von Thadden-Trieglaff for his work on behalf of ecumtmshyism and asked him to continue working in this spirit of recon-

ciliation and brotherhood Bishop Adolf Bolte of Fulda

presented the award

he will find the appropriate anshywer in the teachings of the Gospel

All our Catholic people he said are charged with the reshysponsibility of supporting adeshyquate remedial legislation and of creating social institutions which will eliminate discrimishynation and alleviate the burdens of sickness poverty and )gnoshyrance No one can stand aloof from a program of social bettershyment

Dutch Bishops Take Poll of Priests

moving toward onenessTHE HAGUE (NC) -- The cardinal saidDutch bishops in an effort to

measure the effectiveness and opinions of the nations priests Priest on Facultyhave distributed a list of 39 questions to all priests deacons LANCASTER (NC) - Fathell and subdeacons in the country William J Walsh SJ is the Several questhms deal with first Catholic priest to be apshypriestly celibacy pointed a fullitime member oil

the LancaSter Theological SemishyD~awnupto determine what nary conducted by the Unitecllp~iests think of the priesthood Church of Christ here Fathetandto measure the clergys acshyWalsh assistant theology proshyceptance of the celibacy Iegulashy

- essor at the Jesuit notiviatetion the questionnaire will be

CardinalCites Church Role InSlaquosety --CHICAGO (NC) - Jobm

Cardinal Cody asserted heq that the Church must involVil) fultlelf in social problems 00 be true to its fundamentetl works

The cardinal spoke at a sefib vice in the First Presbyteri~ church making its lOOth anm versary celebration

Those who contest involve-shyment by the Chruch in prolraquo lems of society Cardinal Co~

said take an indefensible stand He said personal sanctity whiclli

is conceded to be the ChurchD rightful concern cannot bd sepilrated from social responsi shybility

If the Church has nothing 00 say to us regarding our obligashytions to our fellow man it kJ sadly neglecting our personall holiness Cardinal Cody said

We sin by Injustice We sm by lack of charity We are sancshytified by giving all men thellf due he added

Move Toward Unity Cardinal Cody did not specishy

fically mention race relationll but he said society mistrea~

certain groups or individuals1ll

He said if church members aNI in any way party to this evill the Church must become i~

volved The cardinal said COIb-

cern for personal holiness forcelll the Chuxch into action

Let the Church in such cil shycumstances stand idly by and Q will lose all reason for exisshytence he declared

Cardinal Cody was introduceell to the congregation by the Rev Harold Blake Walker pastor Cltf the church When asked ahow his appearance in a Protestanll church following the service the cardinal said not long age it would have been unthinkshyable He added that the Holy Spirit is moving strongly anell speedily

We are not yet perfectly one as Christ prayed but we arll

th~

evaluated by the Pastoral Insti shytute of the Catholic Churchin the Netherlands and the Insti shytute for Applied Sociology of the Catholic Universiiy of Nijmegen

Introducing the questions the bishops commented that in a period of Church renewal it is unavoidable that priests be conshyfronted with serious problems They then recommend that the priests answer the questions carefully keeping in mind the teachings of the Church and the roie of the Church in modern society

Wernersville Pa will take ihe post of assistant church history professor at the 143~year-olcll

Protestant seminary on July L

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Black Power MINNEAPOLIS (NC) - nle

only un-Christian thing about power is the abuse of power Father James E Groppj Milshywaukees militant civil rights leader told a Lutheran layshymens conference here

Neither is the striving fox power by a minority group unshyAmerican the priest asserted It is rather part of the American tradition he said and cited past drives for political power by labor unions Italians in New York and the Irish in Boston

Father Groppi also said that the Milwaukee NAACP Youth Council which he advises has adopted black power tactics only after we had used every tactic eveiy means we could think of to take the yoke off black people and nothing had been effective

He said that one use the counshycil had made of black power was in a united Negro boycott of stores during Christmas The white man doesnt give us a housing bill we dont give him our dollar he explained

Discussing the role of the Christian Church in the black mans struggle for equal rights Father Groppi said that the Church has been involved by her non-involvemen1i By such non-involvement he said the Church has aggravat~d the Neshygros problem

Today he said I the use of prudence as an excuse for cowshyardice is the great sin of tile Church

Students Interrupt Strike to Mourn

PARIS (NC) - The strike launched by the guild of law students at the Catholic Unishyversity of Paris has been intershyrupted by its leaders out of resJect for the mourning of the diocese of Paris following the death of Pierre Cardinal Veuil shylot who was chancellor of the instittltion

The strike was called to proshytest a reform of the university decided U()(ln by the French bishops and put into effectmiddot by the rector Msgr Pierre Haubt- mann The reform is designed to avoid having the Catholic uni- versity compete systematically with middotthe state university In all secular studies

The bish~ps decided that in addition to teaching and re search in the area of religion the Catholic universtty must first of all be devQted to Chrisshytian reflection on secular matshyters

Pastoral Institute To Open at Quito

BOGOrA (NC)-A new Latin American Pastoral Institute will be opened in April at Quito Ecuador as a project of the Latin American Bishops Counshycil (CELAM)

The institute will be a unit of the CELAM pastoral departshyment

Purpose of the institute will be to train personnel from the whole continent in pastoral work applicable to Latin Amershyica The institute will offer seven-month courses and Euroshypean specialists in pastoral work will also serve on the faculty

Meeting on Cities NOTRE DAME (NC) - An

international conference entitled NCities in Context will be held March 31 through April 3 at the University of Notre Dames Center for Continuing Educashytion

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968

litu~~W Changes Continued from Page One

in earlier periods-even thou~

they do not conrorm in all deshytails with the approved versiOlil of contemporary liturgical texto -are authorized

TANTUM ERGO An apshyproved Eucharistic hymn ilill praise of the Blessed Sacrament may be used in Benediction oil the Blessed Sacrament in place of the Latin hymn Tantum Ershygo

PSALMS Approved are the texis of the Psalms as published by Englands Grail Society anell that found in the Jerusalem Bishyble

Suggestnol1Js Denied

The Vatican turned down two requests made by the US Bishshyops both dealing with liturgic011 experimentation

No was answered to the reshyquest that the US Bishops be permitted to designate acade~ic

centers to supervise litulgicall innovation

Also denied was the request that some experimentation be approved without examinatioD by the Holy See

-Presently the Vatican mu~

approve proposed liturgical inshynovations before experiment3shytion can begin

Archbishop Dearden explainshyed While the two major proshyposals concerning liturgical enshyperjmentation were not alPshyproved at the present time ~

is clear that the Consilium iJ open to the submission of rite and texts of li-turgical adaptioTll which have been drawn up anll presented prior to actual experishymental use

Concrete proposals of rHeIl 2nd texts may continue to be sent to the Bishops CommittCCl on the Liturgy

Matter Deferred

The permission to substitutfl h)mns or other sacled songtl fur the texts now used at the entran~e Offertory and Comshymunion of the Mass was defershyred

Such hymns now generally added to the official texts were approved in principle however by the delegates to the Rome Synod of Bishops October 1967

The Baptismal Rite describecll among the changes was n~

contained in the Vatican lettertl authoiizing the other changoo but was made public by Archshybishop Dearden at the same time as the announcement of 1ibe changes was released

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L_ PATRON 01 MARCH The month of March is dedicated to St Joseph watchful

guardian of the Son of God and patron and protector of the universal Church Dedicashytion of the month of the year to events in the life of Christ and to particular saints is a practice of the People of God rather than an official action of the Church It comfantly middotrecalls the power and love of God for mankind present at all times and in every place

Bishops Hit Penna Birth Control Policy Addsmiddot to Rather Thon Solve Problems of Poor

HARRISBURG (NC)-The Pennsylvania Welfare Depaytments new policy of acfi~ely promoting birth control among poor people is a major step in the direction of a newand dangerous life management bymiddot the state The Pennsylvania Oatholic Conferencehas criti shycized the Welfare pepartments decision to middotinitiltte discussions of birth control with their clients Under previous pol- stru~en~ for population con- the polic~ because it will add icy birth coiltrol adviceias trol saidmiddot the PCC to the p~oblems of the poor and Moreover many of these do nothmg to get at the root

Jren~l~red only If the welfare same spokesmen see it as an in- causes of poverty reCIpIent asked for It The strument to improve what they We are bound to protest sysshynew policY has been in effect call the quality of our popula- tematic governmental involveshysince mid-January The Con- tion Putting the program to ment in decisions of citizens reshyference which represents the suchmiddota use represents one of its specting family size as a major states Bishops in public affairs worst dangers the danger that step in the direction of a new has denied that Church teach- the state will start-=-by guiding and dangerous life management ing on contraception is a factor some groups or classes to birth by the state the statement emshyin its opposition limitation-to select the types it phasized

Invasion of Prhacy desires to see propagated Rather our concern is over Dangerous Management Varied Talents

the ef~ort of the state to i~fl~- The statement noted that its SPOKANE (NC)-The newly e~c~ many wa~ a pelson s view in this regard is shared formed Catholic Board of EdushychOIce of family size-our con- b th ptt b h b h f th h ht d h middottmiddot y e 1 s lIlg lanc 0 e cation for the Diocese of Sposhycern IS elg ene w en I IS National Association for the Adshy kane has elected members whothe poor whom the state seeks t f C I d P I to mfluence the Conference stat t sad

emen IThe Confelence called promoshy

tion of birth control an invashysion of privacy and asserted the state should play no role in attempting even indi rectly to manage tne most intimate domain of personal life

The statement also took issue with Welfare Depart~ent deshynialsmiddot that the program is inshytended to contlOl population

Negro Opposition

Chiefspokesmen for groups which have pressured for this program in our state say they IJee it and demand it as not just II medical service but as an inshy

vancemen 0 0 ore eop e include educators and non-edushyh h tl tt k d th w IC recen y a ac e e cators priests pastors ReligiousWelfare Department for trying and lay personst r t th th f th N 0 Iml e glOW 0 e egro

populatIOn The Conference also criticized

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a2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River--Thurs Feb 29 1968

The PaJrish Parade ~T MARYS CAlllllIlEJI)lItAL FALL RiVER

Mrs Hadley Lackey will serve as chaIrman of arrangements for the monthly meeting of the Womens Guild scheduled for a oclock on Monday night March 4 in the Shamrock Room of the Corky Row Club

Mrs John OConnor chairshyman of the Scholarola scheduled for April 1 requests that all pledges be brought to the March meeting of the Guild Committee members are avail shyable for all who wish their pledges collected at home

ST THERESA J80 ~-y gtltBORO

The ~ =middotaternity of Christian Mothers will hold thei~ regular monthly meeting on Monday evening March 4 following the Stations of the Cross

Rev Leo R Gravel OMI son of Mr and Mrs Raymond Gravel ofmiddotWestminister St So Attleshyboro will be the guest speaker

Members of the Confraternity will receive Comunion in a body at the 9 oclock Mass on Sunday morning March 3

88 PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Mothe~~ ~f Boy Scouts will bold a p1i1gtlic social at 730 toshynight Boy Scouts informatiOn classes for the Ad Mtare Dei award wiil be gtheld tonight and every T~ursday night during March and April

Junior High Camp Fire Girls plan a splash party at the YMCA from 530 to 7 Saturday night March 2 imd a cakesale in the IIChool hall from 8 to 11 30 Sun- ~y morniii~

The annual Cub Scout Pack IT Blue and Gold Banquet and charter presentation will take place at 630 Sunday night in the

school hall

SACRJED IllEART NOATlLEBORO

Starting on March 12 and conshytinuing for the next three conshysecutive Tuesday nights there will be an EcUmenical Worship Study conducted at Sacred Heart Church First Universalist Church First Methodist Church and the Grace Church

The service will begin at 730 and will be followed by a coffee hour and a discussion period in the church hall

The Sacred Heart Church will open the program on March 12 with a discussion of the Mass

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Womens Guild win reshyceive Holy Communion in a group at the 8 oclock Mass on Sunday morning March 3

The regular monthly meeting of the Guild will be held on Wednesday night March 6 at 730 in the school on Earle Street

ST PATRICK FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild announces an open meeting for Monday March 4 A jewelry demonstrashytion will be featured In charge of arrangements is Mrs Stanley Pitera aided by Mrs Joseph Fazzina

The unit will celebrate St Patricks day Saturday night March 16 with a smorgasbord supper and dance in the school auditorium Supper will be served at 7 and danCing will folshylow from 8 to midnight with music by the Moon Mists Resshyervations will close Sundq March 10 and may be made with guild officen or board memshybers

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

Plilrishoia books are to be distributed the weekend of

The WQmens Club announces March 2 and 3 Prizes will be bull pot luck supper for 630 Monshyday nigh1 Maich 4 Chairmen are Mrs William T Marum Jr and Miss Mary L Tyrrell

John F Keavy Jr president cl the US Model Railroad Assn will show films at a Boy Scout meeing slated for Tuesday night March 5

Theologians SllaquolIted As CU Spe(Q]~eis

WASHINGTON (NC) - Dr Ellie Mascall one of Englando most prominent Anglican theoshylogians and Father Hans Kung an outspoken advocate of reform in~~ the Catholic Church wilil speak at the Catholic University of America l1Ite in March

Dr Mascall a vigorous 0pshy

ponent of the so-called New Theology will give the Charles A Hart Memorial Lectures from March 24 to 29 His lectures will

deal sucessively with the quesshytions of God man Christ and the Church

Father Kung a Swiss theoloshygian who played an influential role at the Second Vatican Counshycil will speak on Sincerity in the Church on March 18

St louis Ceremony ST LOUIS (NC) - Bishop

John J Carberry of Columbus will be installed as Archbishop of St Louis on March 25 in cershyemonies at St Louis cathedral here

Archbishop Luigi Raimondi apostolic delegate to the United States will officiate The date of the cerem0I1-Y will be exactly three years after that on which Bishop Carberry was installed ordinary of Columbus

awarded to the three individuals selling the most books

The Mystibrook Singers of Bishop Stang High School will lead singing at the 815 Mass Sunday morning M~rch 3

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

A parish supper sponsored by the Womens Guild will be held from 530 to 730 Saturday night March 2 in the school hall Tickets are available from Mrs Frank Kingsley ticket chairman or any board member

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

During Lent Masses will be at 7 AM 4 PM and 7 PM

Confessions will be heard one half hour before each Mass Stashytions of the Cross will be held at 345 and 645 Friday aftershynoons and evenings Children are urged to attend Mass at 4 each afternoon The Children of Mary anshynounce a periby sale Friday March 15 A Portuguese parish mission will be preached by Rev Anshytonio Pinto CM from Sunday March 3 through Saturday March 9 Services will open Sunday night March 3 with rosary sernlon and Benediction at 7 I)clock and Mass and sershymon will be held every weekday night at 7

ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

The Association of the Sacred Hearts will sponsor a tea at 7 on Sunday night Mar 3 in the rectory in honor of the Sisters staffing the parish schooL

The monthly meeting C1f 1lhe Association will follow the tea

SAMOAN BISHOP The first native Polynesian memshyber of the hieraIl~hy Bishopshyelect Pio Taofinlllu (cq) S M will be consecrated at Apia Western Samoa on May 29 by Bosoon-born A r c h b ish 0 p George H Pearce SM of Suva The Bishop-eloot 44 made -his novitiate with the Marists on Staten Island ~C Photo

Hospital ~~urses

Return middotto Nork hi Covingtol1l

COVINGTON (NC) A nurses walkout which began in mid-November at 100shyyear-old St Eliz~~beth Hosshypital here has ended Nearly 100 of the 140 members of tine Registered Nurses tgtrganizati01l have indicated they will retum to their jobS The walkout stemmed from bull dispute over recognition of their organization and patient care policies Since the settlement hospital officials have been inshyterviewing nurse to expedite their reemployment and placeshyment

Restore Full Service Hospital spokesmen said the

nurses will be restored to posts they formerly held in so far as possible The nurses will lose no tenure as a result of their absence and if the positions they previously held have been filled they will be offered comshyparable posts or benext in line for selection to the positions

Administration officials exshypressed satisfaction with the prospect of the nurses return and voiced the earnest hope that we can move forward tel restore the 100 beds to service which had to be taliten out of availability by reason of the shortage of nurses to care for the patients

Officials estimate til1at four tie eight we~ks might t~ required 110 restore full bed service

Cite Achievements The nurses leaders said the7

had achieved at least 13 gains during the thteenionth dispute pointing to the fact that a doctor and a nurse have been apshypointed to the hospital board of trustees the establishment of bull patient care committee comshyposed or nurses electeli by those now employed by the hospital and equipment changes in the patient care area

Mrs Pat Tanner vice chait shyman also said the nurses unshyderstand that a lay heid will be appointed head of the hospital

Sister M Coronata adminisshytrator was assigned to) another post in the sisterhood earlier this month and Sister Mark Bernard has been serving u acting administrator I~he Franshyciscan Sisters of the Poor haft operated the hospitaL

Love Is An Active Verb We who bear the noble name of Christian arid who are io9shy

ingly called the faithful stand in awe of the Mystery of Christ and the Mystery of His Church More than the mystery of Obrist and of His Church is something we live It is then our duty JIlON

and more to experience the living reality of the Cbureh hershyself Cbristain tradition affirms that by her relatioJiship with Christ tlbe Redeemer the Church is a kind of sacrament or an efficacous sign of intimaJte union with God and indeed an efshyficacious sign cf the uni~ of all mankind

As members of the household of the faith we have heeD eaDmiddot ed by God and endowed with the precious gift 01 faithThereshyfore we m1ls truly experience a sense of urgency in brinampinK aD men to tun union with Christ Since mankind today is joined together more 1ll1osely than ever before in historY by bonds thaamp are social technical and eultural should it be ilenied the spirshyitual unity that springs from faith The Gospel is Ught Ii Is lIIewness it is energy it is rebirth it is salvation

Should DOt interest in our own salvation necessarily move us tID loving concern for the salvation of others If the Church is the Sacrament Of Salvation should we not as members of the Church eome to an eve- clearer awareness of our pari in her mission in the o1uty of evangelization in the missionary mandate in the apOstolic commiSsion Clearly our duty consonant withthe blessings I-eceived from Christ is that of spreading offering and announcing ~ faith to Others in order that we might be clble to acquit ourselves of Uiis Christian obligation The Society for the Propagation of the Faith eXiSts For-those who desire to be where the action is or 110 be iIivOlvoom wOrld mission the Church pr0shy

claims her own essential inissionlU) character Indeed the Cburdl ill J4ission and therefore aD of 118 are truly missionaries

fa tills Yeai IaItIl we eaa testify to Gaefldl uieDt 04 om- ATatitade to God for the bleilldDc of faWt by ma~ bull aerIfiee te TIle Society for the PropapUOn 01 the Faith lor tile works of the Chureh ill the service Df tile poor and underprholshy~ed We eamaot be Uke our Master III the fWlness of HIs Dlvinit7 nor caD we hoPe to experienCe thelrlory of His Transfigmratio bat there lis ODe way ill whieh we eaa resemble Rim and that Is ~ beeomtitamp- a oervant to His poor aDd His UWe ODes throughshyout the world

The native celrgy is the ho~ of the Chureb in Mission lands Many youngmen have heard the can but are sadly turned away for lack of facilities and funds $250 will provide a year of semshyinary training $1500 will cover the cost of complete education to the priesthood Wont you help us to help them by sending your offering to The Society of st Peter the Apostle 366 Fifth Avenue New York N Y 10001

SALVATION AND SERVICE are the work of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith Please cut out this eolumn and send your offering to Right Reverend Edward T OMeara Nashytional Direetor 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or directly to yoUr loeal Diocesan DirectOr Rt Rev Msgr Raymond T Considine 361 Norib MaiD Street FaD IUver Massaelnuse~ts 03720

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THE ANOiOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 13Missouri Diocesan Board Pondersmiddot Closing Consolidating Schools

KANSAS CITY (NC)-Tbe 1H girls They would be abshyKansas City-8t Joseph diocese sorbed into the school popushyis exploring the possibility of lations of Lillis high school and closing some of its schools and st Theresas academy forming n larger area school Although 120 persons attendshy Extension Volunteers bull bull bullwhich could upgrade the qualshy ed the school board meetingity of education for all pupils they were not petmitted tp

At 0 school board meeting speakFather John P Cole supershyinJtenden~ of schools reported on L - shyPTA Bead Plotes~

the possibility of setting up 11 Make Life Wortl IVngA motion-passed unanimousshycentral area grade school in ly by the board-was made to

mid-town Kansas City The continue exploration into conshysingle school would serve the solidation of the schools Thispopulations of three existing was opposed by John J Mcshygrade schools Donough a representativeFather Cole also suggested the elected by the Catholic PTApossibility of closing Redempshy Federation who will be seatedtorist high school now serving as a board member in July

McDonough was permitted to $~[]7reg~ 2~ Ifreg[[~ take part in the discussion but

had no vote

~~ ~~[[U IT)J He protested against the defe3ltist clique who let our

WASHINGTON (NC)-Bishop schools get picked off one byPaul F Tanner newly named one He charged that TheOrdinary of the diocese of St New Peltlple - the diocesanAugustine Fla is onfy the newspaper members of the dishyfourth priest to serve as general ocesan school office officials of secretary of the United States the Missouri Catholic Confershybishops secretariat in the nearshy ence Kansas City pastors andmiddotly half-century of its existence other Church officials share in

Bishop Tanner was the last an anti-Catholic school recshygeneral secretary of NCWC the ordoriginal secretariat He was also the first general secretary of ODe Operation both of is dual suc~essors-tne

McDonough said that theNational Conferenceof Catholic school superintendent shouldBishops and the United States be goingmiddot to the state legislashyCatholic Conference The NCCB ture and Governor Hearnes tois the bishops agency for dealshydemand tax relief instead ofing with purely splritual matshyconsidering consolidation andters the USCC Is their secreshyclosing of schoolstariat for dealing with secular

affairs Father Colemiddot maJntained that The prelate has served in the the reorganization would not

U S bishops secretariat 28 represent a cutback The area years longer than any precedshy school would be able to opshying general secretary Born in erate out of one blilding to Peoria TII in 1905 and ordained serve three parishes It would a priestmiddot of the Milw~ukee archshy provide the same educational diocese in 1931middot he came to experience for the same number Washington in 1940 ~as assistant of students plus advantages director of the Youth Departshy Cooperation would make posshyment NCWC He ~as assistant sible a highly developed model general secretary from 1945 to school staffed by Sisters from 1958 and has been general secshy three communities retary since then He said it would be irresponshy

He is the first bishop to serve sible to run three operations at as secretary to the bishops secshy all costs when the diocese retariat could have one operation run

The NCWC (as Council and it more efficiently do a better Conference) had been in exisshy educational job and provide opshytence 47 years when it formally portunity for a better deployshywent out of existence at the anshy ment of personnel nual meeting of the bishops in November 1966 Bishop Tanner who had served in the secretashy Urge Germaruls riat for more than half those years supervised the transition To Aid Vietnam to two separate organizationsshy

BONN (NC) - Two Germanthe NCCB and the USCC cardinals and two churchshyDuring Bishop Tanners secshy related relief organizations have

retaryship and in testimony to FALL RIVER PROVINCETOWN AND WESTPORT GIRLS WITHappealed to the German people

the growth of the work handled to collect money and to prayby the bishops secretariat an NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF EXTENSION VOIL~NTEERS DURINGfor the people of Vietnamimpressive addition to the headshy A week beore Mardi Gral lt- quarters building here was Joseph Cardinal Frings of Coshy THEIR YEAR OF VOLUNTEER WORK erected in 1960 logne asked the Catholics of his

archdiocese to cut down on Mardi Gras festivities and to donate magnanimously to the needy people of Vietnam Coshy These young college graduates have given a I year of their logne has long been known for its ampigtectacular Mardi Gras celeshy professional life to God in service in the South and West Are brations Citing the bombing Of North you willing to give twelve months of yourmiddotyouth to othersVietnam the plight of women and children caught between opposing forc~middot in the $()ut~ and the great number of refushygees Cardinal Frings asked how Catholics could watch pictures of these gravely distressing si~

WHY NOT ENROll AS ANuations on television and ceieshybrate Mardi Gras with a quiet The Spirit oj

Extension Volunteer HELPER middot$200 oconscience Alfred Cardinal Bengsch Of Extension Volunteer PROMOTER $500 o

Berlin asked for prayers for Sacrifice Extension Volunteer SPONSOR $1000 or more opeace in the world in a letter to the clergy of his diocese in which specifically mentioned AMOUNT ENCLOSED $ Vietnam as a name meaning Perfectlyblood and death RT REV RAYMOND T CONSIDINE PAIn a joint appeal Caritas the German Catholic relief organishy PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH OFFICE zation of Germanys Evangelical 368 NORTH MAIN STREETExemplifiedLutheran Church has asked for fALL RIVER MASS money to send food Md medishy

BISHOP P~VL F TANNU cine to the Children of Vietnam o

(-14 THf ANCHOR-Diocese of FaR Rfver-Th~rs Feb-29 1968 Two Objectives Jersey to Rehabilitate Young OffendersTells Jesuatts Engage in Deliberate

Help Increasing Spanish Group Attempts at lExperimentation UNION CITY (NC) - Two Hudson County Jan and in theST LOUIS (NC)-Deliber- carries its own reward he said area interfaith clergy groups youth house in Secaucus

iide attempts at experimenta- Now we must undertake new here in New Jersey are planning Father ThomasJ Murtha oftion with a readiness to accept forms some of which have a

joint action on the plightf West New York was named toall the risks that may be in- good chance to flop JIliserably youthful offenders housed m investigate means of setting UJltvolved were proposed for the An expert at the Second VatshyHudson County correctional in- a rehabilitation program t4ilSociet of Jesus at the close of ican Council Father Campion stitutions and to seek federal function after the release ~ III three-day session here on believes that the work of the assistance in meeting the needs youthful offendersbulllesuit renewal council has not yet begun to of Cuban refugeesFather Donald R Campion be absorbed within the Church

The joint session was held by The ~o groups will send a18J stressed at the renewal as a whole the North Hudson Clergy Coun- delegatIOn toWashIngton to askQession and in an interview This is not because it hasnt cU based here and the Chris- ~hat the area be declared anthat the Jesuits have both the been publicized enough or beshy tian Clergy United a West New Impacted area under the Cuban manpower and the resources to cause people havent read Y k Refugee Act and therefore beshy

engage in the type of expeii- enough or bishops havent talkshy or ~ro~p come eligible for special federal mentation which could serve ed enough he said But Vati shy A meetmg WIll be s()~ght WIth aid There are some 00000 tQdays Church Father Cam- can II opened up more areas the Hudson County Boar~ of Spanish~speakingpeople now m pion a sociologist and theolo- to discussion than it resolved Chosen Freeholders in an effort rth gian was recently named editor Among the sleep~rs in to establish a bettez climatefoi the ~o Hudson area and they cd America magazine council documents CIted by therehabiUtation of youthful continue to arrive at the rate of

Another speaker Fat her Father Campion was the conshy offenders now housed intne 200 to250 a month ~ 1 _

Avezy Dulles SJ stressed that cept of participation within the ~ doubt is a valuable and even Church Father Campionmiddot said lI1ecessary experience for the he believes collegiality is the Wide E~perience Christian in todays world most developed aspect in this

Fathers Campion and Dulles area and that some organization QU(lJD~ies Nu_ were two of the six main speak- has been given to it through the

UNITED- NATIONS (NC)ers at the closed meeting Some establishment of piie~ senates ltHQWCom pie t e devotion to theSSO Jesuits including 50 from But unless the idea of parti shyworlds needy children seemsCilutside the St Louis areaat-cipation is really the basis senshy a weighty task for a petite nun TDgtKEEPtended the sessions ates can become orgimizational

Father Campion said that Jes- gimmicks he said but a conversation with Sister Ullits as a group must face the Father Dulles discussing themiddot Kathl~eri Kelly MMmiddot provides LENmiddotTreassularice middotthat 20 years of make a significant contribution Church said ~ an interview diversified experience fact that their work should existence of doubt in todays

more to modern times that we have a radically differ- than qualifies her for the role

QUI IXIDPYFATHER lI MISSION jlUDTG me fllRlfaNTAL CHURCH

In the area of education It calIS for recasting the ex- wide Cath)lic charities organishy Need New Formula ent world view than in the past Caritas Internationalis worldshy

With the slason of Lent comes the qu~ionFather Campion called for con- pressions of the Christian messhy zation recently appointed Sisshy How can I beSt keep Lentl The answer ~s ~sideration of whether we are sage in terms of contemporary as observerter Kathleen its must make sacrifices on our own and nothing ISproviding the educational struc- knowledge if the message is to to the U N International GOOD III sacrifice unfess it hurts Whatwill be yo~rture for the new world have the impact it should Childrens Emergency Fun d WHIEN sacrifice bullbull Just think of the misslonlllne~ InIn the intellectual area Look Criticanny (UNICEF) Caritas Internationshy ITlf our 18 emerging countries who keep Lent allrather Campion noted that to- Doubt is not a bad thing he alis is one of 75 international HUmS year long Sacrifice something big this ye~rday more is needed than popu- said People should be looking and non-government organizashy When helping others hurts a bit you know you va larization of theology and phil- critically at the traditional forshy tions (NGOS) which enjoy conshy made a sacrifice()Sophy In a way we need a mulas and seeing what is revelashy sultative status with UNICEF whole new formula for making tion and what is a culturally

They represent oJer 4000csense of the world and life he conditioned formula which is affiliated private and non-profitfSaid now demanding reform

We should have men devoted Such adaptations are iD no organizations in more than 100 oOn his recent-trip through India 1V0~signor nations with a combined memshy Nolan saw priests and Sisters subSisting onto this single problem Their way a compromise of faith bership running into millions ounces of rice each day so they can share what own inner resources of security Father Dulles said We never they have with lepers and orphans $10 will feedmust be yery strong because to hear the divine message except Interviewed at the United Nashy FEED a family for several weeks at least $50 will feed

facethat kind of change is not III in terms of humans he said tions Sister Kathleen spoke of THE five families $100 ten families bullbullbull Only $975popular thing The Word of God comes her new rol~ at the international HUNGRY gives a priest 11 two-acre mode~ 18nn toraise

Council Opened Areas through man it is alW9YS tem- level and described how it his own food and teach his parishioners how to Father Campion said the can pered by man and it is this con~ evolved from her past activities raise more food Archbishop MalJ Gregorioa will

for experimentation W9S not ditioning which must change wrltetlo thank youI was in California andbased on inadequate work of Father Dulles said one value worked for 10 years in familyJesuits at the present time and of the death-of-God movement eounseling in the juvenile court IlJ Enable ~ girl to become a Sister For 41tl bullthat fact is part of the problem for Catholics is to shake _ I1tA1N day ($1250 a month $150 bull year $300 aleill foster lare and in otherMany times we have been suc- out of taking an uncritical with sa~ A together) you can pay In full fer her two-yeaIwork children sheeessful and being successful static view of God training have 8 Sister of your awnInthe last five years I moved SISTER

oat to community development and civil rights I was a member o For only $a5O a week ($10 a month $120 bull

year) you can make surethat an abandonedJesuit Seminarian Leads Campaign of a district council in bull San HELP Francisco - which subsequently A child has food clothing a blanket and love bullbullbull IAgainst Home Contract Firms was declared a poverty CHILD wen send you a photo of the boy or silt )011area

adoptCHICAGO (NC) - A Jesuit borne than its current market During my years there I waa Rminarian has launched a camshy value a member of the Catholic Intershy o Our priestS will offer promptly the Massespaign here against contractshy Following the exodus of racial Council and when I came MASSES you request Doyou wish to remember a loved holders of homes sold to Negro Lawndales white residents in back from Selma (she was on fOR one this Lent Your Mass offerings are usuallyfamilies at allegedly exorbitant the late 1950s thousands of of the persons selected to repshy LENT the only Incole our priests overseas receiverates homes were purchased by vari shy resent the archdiocese of san

Jack Macnamara SJ who ous bankS mortgage loan and Francisco in the Alabama civil o Enroll yourself your family and friends InlIives and works in nearby real estate companies at low rights march) I was appointed this Association You will be helping Pope Paul Lawndale is acting withthe ap- prices and then resold on conshy to serve on the Human Rights

JOI~ in one of his most ambitious and heartfelt works proval of his Jesuit superio~ tractto Negro families atofteIi - Commission by the mayor of THIS while sharing In the blessings of thousands of

Nacnarnara and a dozen supshy ~lImON Masses (The offering for one year is $2 perdouble the original purchase San Francisco the nun stated porters including several other price the leaflet reported She was the first nun ever apshy person $10 for a family perpetual membership Jesuit seminarians picketed the Paid Race Tax ltpOinted to any kind of~~yt is $25 per person $100 for a family) Chicago address of one investshy Macnamara said these conshy inJSan Fraidsco _

Iment company which holds title tracts should be renegotiated at

~ several homes sold on conshy the most recent FHA appraisal tract to Negroes Pickets dis- price ~ If I1t e SAiliNGS

tributed leaflets explaining the c2J 0 dJ ~ t~~ year SYSTEMATICThe issuemiddot here is moral rathshypurpose of their campaign er than legal he declared Th~ MONTHLY DEPOSITS

The leaflet cites the case of III law does not provide a remedy II tfMltIa fNVE$iMENyhome purchased by an investshy for the type of injustice that is d) aV~ J((~ year SAVINGSment company in January 1959 operative in this contract

for $13000 and then three NOTICE ACCOUNTSThousands of Negroes inmonths later sold on contract to Chicago are suffering from this a Negro buyer for $23000 450 ar ~~~~

It states the investment corn continued ~In effect they paid pany received $2000 as a down II race tax of approximately

type of injustice Macnamara

BCJs~ liverpayment on thiS contract whic~ $10000 when they bought their stipulated that middotthe balance was homes because it was impossishy SavonJs Bonkflo be paid over 20 years at sevshy bleto obtain mortgages 4Il per cent interest at the rate This is a striking example of BanI By Mail of $20140 each month how our legal system does notmiddot We Pay The Postage

Last December it reported a adequately protect black people Federal Housing Administration or poor people he said It appraisal on this home listed its stems from the fact that the law bull YARMOUTH SHOPP8NC PUll value at $15025 This means it aims at protecting property inshy bull SOUTH UltMOm bull HYANJIISexplained that the Negro buyer stead of persons And this helpl bull DENNIS PlmRT bull OSTFllVIUlIII paying $8000 more for tbe bull cause urbaJl unreal

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HUNGRYmiddot FOR GOD TOO ~

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 ltI

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Home Missions Collection in Your Church-March 3 19611

16 THE ANC )~-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968

New St LouimiddotsArchbi~hcp

PrOmilnent in Ecumen~$m Archbishop Jonh J Oarberry of St Louis well known

~()ng Oatholic leaders after 31 career that has taken him from a seminary classroom iii his natiYe Brooltl~ NCY~ to one of the nations MOse ~mpOOtallt archdiolaquoese1l is pershy

laaps evenmiddot better ~ownmiddot fJDlong Americas nom-Cafu6shylie religious leaders fon hisl work in ecumenism Cllair Ilillao of the Bishqps Commi~ee-Ibr Ecumenical and Intenrefi shyaious Affairs since th~ resigna Qion of Baltimores Lawrence Cardinal Shehan in November 11965 Bishop Carberry has au I9gtCrvised the massive catholic illllvoIvement in ecumeniCal ac-middot lli1 vities

He outlined his own entIliusishyeuroISm for ecumenism in a speech ~iven in January 1966 tolmemshy~rs of the Ohio (Protestant) lPastors Convention wheDI he aid

Common lHeritagel For years the general policY

(llln the Catholic Church) had ~en to stress the great chasm

which divides the euroatliolic Church and other Christian ehurches No effort was made m would seem on our part to Illave a meeting of minds A otudy of documents would seem ltD reveal that while we wera lbrayerfully disposed to) the ltecumenical movemerit nevershy1lheless the Catholic Church did lliittleto foster it

Bishop Carberry told the conshyvention that through the grace 0f God and the leadership or Pope John XXIII we became aware of the common heritage Which is ours

Has Great lHope

We began to realiZe~ how 18aptism unites us in ChriSt to Gee that the divinity of Christ is illhe cornerstone of all Christianshynay we began to real1ze the oommon treasure which we llnave in the Sacred Scripturesllikewise the common bondshyVhich exists with us in the

1lIIlissionary activities at the Church

There is great hope Bishopltearberry said that mrougb ~ialogue through prayerbull 1llluough respect for each others wiewpoint the grace of God may (i)Ile day in Gods divine provishy4llence bring about the- unitY which Christ prayed for at themiddot Last Supper

More recently members of ltOhios Protestant cliurches llllamed the bishop as OniosPbsshyoLr of Pas-tors the fl rst timmiddote hat bull

Grants Permis$ioll~

for SaturdayMass) SAN ANGELO (NC)-BiShop

Thomas TSchoepe of San Angelo lllas announced that the diocesan request for the Saturday Mass flaculty hagt been granted In the future the Sunday Mass 00shyltigation may be met by at shy~ndance at a Saturday aftershyllloon or evening Mass The pershylll1ission has been granted on an ~xperimental basis by the Vati shylttan for a period of five years

The diocese of San Argelo is 1lI Texas missionary diocese the bishop explained and there are areat dis tan c e s between churches and few priestswmiddot oerve the faithfuh ManYi ~llieSts

have two or morlt8 churclies tJ lllttend and will Be able- tQ give more time to the smaller ~urches with the Satucday Mass faculty Bishop TschoePe pointedi 9Ut Chat the faculty has been giVeth bull the whole diocese not just Ibo individual churches or areas Pastors who wish to make Usemiddot aJl the faculty must make formal application to the chancery ofshyillce

a~ statewide Protestant onganiza tion has presented its highest awa-rd 10 a eatho1iir clet1gymam A pla~J1e symbollZiDg the a~adi was~ glv~~ to the blShp at ~~~ Fenw~nIP Blmq~et on the Olbo PastollSgt ~onventi~m

DI~USS P~tilems U~dev Blsli~p~rlgte~rysl~d

er~hlPl laquoatholic ~elegations have ~et wl~h ~fflC1Blsbull and

tleolbglan~ of other- ChrIs~an churchesmiddot to dlSCUSS ecumemcal pooble~s r~~gmg from the pr~sshyence of Christ Ill tlie ~ucharlst to th-c nature of we prJes~ood

Before ta~mg cliarge of th Golumbusmiddot dIOcese on March 25 1965) Bishop euroarbery liadmiddot selved asmiddot coadjutor bishop and then bishop of Eafayette Ind Born in Brooklynj N~ Y Tulymiddot 31 1904 Bishop Carberry studied for the priestlioodi at Brooklyns Cathedral College or the Iin-middot maculate laquool1ception from 191ll to 1924 and at the North Amershyican College in Rome from 1924 to 1930

Oldained inmiddot Rome in 1929 tne bishop sfudiea canon law at the Catholic University of America in Washington D G and taught at Immaculate Conception Semshyinarl until Tune 1935 when he went on ldan to the diocese of Trenton N J He returned to BrooklYn in 1940 where hemiddotreshymained until being named coshyadjuror bishop of Lafayettemiddot in 19651

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CHICAGO (NC) - Tohn A McDllrmott has changed me mindL-he1li remain as execu middot tivedirector of the Chicago Cat1iolic Interracial Council

The veteran council worKer last October announced he would leave the office to beshy

come Mridwest regional- ciVil rightsdirector for the ms De-middotmiddot partment of Health Enucation andi Welfare

A number of problems hava arisen since th-e announcement on my appointmentt last 0ctbBerwhichl caused me to have serl

ousmiddot second l thoughts MilDer moW said iil his decision to re~ maio with the ltlrc He citedi m1 patrtcular~ personnel cutliaclts in HEW wJiich woulli Iiinit the Midwest negional operatiiul

fo accepting McDermotits de cisionj HEW the government agency requestedi liiin to serve asmiddot ai special chdl- rights consuU ant while working for the CIC and he a~reed

IIlt a letter to the Dutch biINumber of Fllel71ch ops members of Michaels re-

gion asked for curbs on the nlgtshySeminarians Dllops tions Catliolic liberals The PARIS (Ne)-Thenumber of meeting also registered disap-

French seminarians h~s dropped proval of the new Dutch Cateshyby about 180 a year for the last chism~ claiminJ~ that it does nocent four years according to 1iigures represent true Catholic teach~ provided in amiddot press conference Michaels Lel~ion is considered by Bishop Jean Sauvage 011 ampshy even more CJlnservative thlW necy member of the bishops Confrontation another Catholic commission on the clergy and conservative organization Conshyseminaries frontations complaints about

For the 1967~68 sc1iolastic the content of the new Dutch year the tdtal number of sliumiddot catechismmiddot are believed to hae dents iil major seminaries m been instTllmentai in having tbe~ FhlOce is 43583 comparedl with book exltlmined by the VatiCan~lJ

4536 for the previous year Doctrinal Congregation 4722 )n 1965-66 and 4953 in 1964-65

Moreover in France at pres- Approves Agency eol ttiere are aBout 200 adults LQND()N (NC)--Jolin Cardl~

WIIO are preIgtaring for tOe ~er nal Heenan of Westminster liJaa manent diaconate as restored by approveq establishment ocf 1m the Second Vatican Council The agency to help priests who want first ordinations to this permashy 10 leave the priesthood znGl nent diaconate could take place nuns who want to leave the this year religious life

1P~alrn le~tUlm~1rn~~G~

$1lll~7 GG1l I1DtJ Sim LONDON (NC)-A study on

the problems of ecumenism in Great Britain will be made by a joint working group of the British Council of Churches and the Caholic Church with the results to be reported next Autumn

The study was planned at a meetingmiddot held atmiddot the Vita et Pax Benedictine I~onvent and attendshyed by nine Catholic representashytives an- 14 representatives of the BeC -

The projected study is exshypected to analyze such topics an the extent I)f cooperatiGn beshytween Catjwlics and members of the BeC the dialogUes bemg held theologicaL differences and the non~theological obstacles to closer unitygt

Auxiliary BishoJ- Langton Fox of lfenevia Wales and

Auxiliary Bishop Basil Chrisshytopher Butlelr OSB of Westshyminster headed tOe CatOolie delegation at the meeting

~(i]$~~rlaquolJpoundfr1) A$1k lMl~illlW) ~ltoy~ IHh~)~Dnd

U11RECHm (NC) -Michaels Legion an organization of Dutch Catholic~ uaditionalists has sent a telegram to Pope Pault H ungintg him tD protect essential orthodoxy and to S81fe tne DutchChurch~

At 3- meeting here attended b~ some 600) Catholic conserva tives led by Eouis Knuvelder the legion condemned the Dutch Catholic daily press the~ Dutch Gatholic tellvisioncompany and the countrys Catholic radio station for being too progressive

Father Baum Regards Ecumenical Center Closing Sign of Success TORONTO (NC)-The closing gian Charles Davis-A Quesshy

of the Center for Ecumenical tion of Conscience Davis book Studies at St Michaels Collegegt exmiddotplains his renunciation of the here is a sign of the centersmiddot euroatholic priesthood and the success Church and asks Catholic theo-

This is the viewpoint of Father logians who intend to stay in GregllllY Ballm O~SA founder the~ eurohurch to reply to several of tJie centeI1 who has an- t1iaologjcal points nQunlaquoed that it will b~ Closed BelUef Unbelief

inl JUne Thats what Im doing FatlieJJBaum-explalnedthalhe Fatller Baum said His book a

founded the centeJ ill 19631 when replYJ to Davis questions conshyecum~llusrn may have~ been a ceming the credibility of the new Idea Its purpose lie- s~ld Church in todays world will be was to promote ecumemcall called The Credibility of the studies at St Michaels Church Today It will be pub-

Taday he neports ecumen mal stlUdi~s at S1l Michaels are a reality- 1lli~ schGolls theology depal1tment 18 fully mte~ ~thl Protestant and ~gIIcan lfupartmentsmiddot at the-Umversity

of Toronto [hUB lie said~ the eC-lmenical

centell has fulfilled its purpose Such fUlfillment he said wmiddot

common in academic circles where there has been an ecushymenlical reVOlution For exam pIe ne said where once som1shyone might have nied to foster ecumenism through building an ecumenical library it is now impossible tq build a theological lilgtrary without its being ecushymenical

Need flDZ Programsmiddot Father Baum added that he

does not believe tJie ecumenical movement has reached fruitien in circles outside the academia world~ He said that he sees a real need pound01 formal ecumenmiddot ical programs on the parish and on all levels of the Churdl which have not yet been reached He a150 disclosed that perSOll ally he lias moved Gn frOlll ecumenism to new fields of thought

The AuIDlStinian has written a new book in answer to the latest by the English theolo-

U[[$ W)jf[rll IfSMsjIID~

rnliJ kUD-WIh ol 1TW[jiJ KETTERING (Neuro) - The 1-7shy

member parish board 00 St Charles Church~ here unanishymousll1 adopted a resolution 5 favor Qf open nousing legiSlashytion for thiS (1)hio suburban community

The parish boards action S~ poIied- unequivocallymiddot passage 0amp an open housing ordinance in themiddot virtuallr aUi-wltite commw-middot nity 00l more than 600001 res dents Tames J Gilvay and Peter Donanue attOrneys anlL pariBhlmiddot boarc members pre sentedthe resolutJoDj wliiclli tbok- themiddot position that the ghett) condit1ollG ~Ilichl Negroes enshycure ilm nearby DaYton are mshyiuriOwil to the entire commUlshyDitTmiddot

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Aftei tee closing of the Center for Ecumenical Studies Father Baum will stay on at St MishychaeFs au a professor of theolshyogy He is also planning another ~~

It will concentrate on the idea oi God in modern thought and will be a clear sign that Father Baum has moved away from his prime in terest in ecumen- ism

Born of Jewish parents in Berlin and reared as an agnostic Father Baum said he has now turned his whole thought to the study of belief and unbelief He will record his findings in me book he is now writing

~oh~ laquotmm~~litl ~Od1[9)

[~ Ao~ i N~regIJ$ CAMDEN (NC) - Bishop

Tames L Schad administrator of the Camden diocese was =ong citizens honored here foT their efforts in furthering the interests of the Negro comshymunity

Bishop Schad who has been active in community action projects such as the War on Poverty committees was pre sented a scroll during a proshygram sponsored by the Tenth Street Baptist church here in observance of the 43rd annual Negro History Week This year marks the first time a Romaa Catholic prelate has been so honored

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17 Oppose Church Clergy Participation in Politics

By Jsgr George G Higgins

The New RepubJic-whIch in this writers judgment W one CYl the be3t of Ameriros weekly journals of opinion especially hl it3 arovezoage cfcurrent economic and political developments----thinks that the time has com~ for anti shyVietnam clergymen aul1ayshy Be that as it maY I am ioshymen to translate tu1eir cVZl clined to think that the editors m0r81 indignation oveuror Vietshy of the French periodical Inforshynam into effective political mations Catholique InternashyDction inasmuch as this is the tionales make considerably only way to effect long-term more sense than the editors cOf ehanges in the The New Republic 011 this issue policies of this of clerical involvement in the country So far so-called politics of peace as laymen are Though they are vigorously concerned this and unqualifiedly opposed ~il

would seem to tW war in Vietnam and like be a self - evishy tWeditors ()f The New Repubshydent proposition li( clearly recognize that the L1s perfectly establishment of leace in the obvious t hat world is a political problem concerned layshy which calls for the active mshymen ou~ht to volvement ofChcistians as ~-en

translate their as all other men of good will moral indi~nashy they do not think that themiddot tion over Vietnam - or any cleJgy who are responsible foy other significant issue of public the unity of the Church should policy-into effecti-re poiiticltll be expected to take on the role

of party politiciansaction Given the fact that their pubshySound Tradition

lication ~CI has been oJe 01 tileOn the other hnd I aJl Evt most outspoken European critics

sure understandthat I fully or of U S involvement in Vietnam completely agree vitb The New and one of the most vigorousRepublic when it says that fue advocates middotof a politics of peaceclergy ought tncv likewise their warning against the parshy

Traditionally a the NR itself ticipation of the clergy in parshypvints out the clergy-in this tisan politics is highly signifi shycountry at least - have rnied cant and deserves to be taken amy from such participation very seriously (Christians and

AJJ a long-time subscriher to the Struggle ior Peaee InforshyT~2 New Republic I had Dlshy mations Catholique Internashyways been under the imp~ssio~ tionales Jan 15 1965)that its editors thought that en Fl lialgs lrindplebalance this was a sound tradishy

Those American Catholicstion Apparently lwweer I was who may happen to have a speshy

cial interest in the pros and consmistaken in this regard fora of this highly controversial issuerecent Nell Republic editorial will also want to read whatnoten with satisfaction that Hans Kung has to say about itAJlerican clerGYmen now apshy

pear to be ready in large numshy in his forthcoming bookThe Churchbers to get involved at a preshy

cinct level and to play C1l Father Kung has lectured exshyactivist role in both parties tensively throughout the United (Clergy in Politics The New SUItes in recent years and is

currently with us again as a visshyRepublic Feb 17 1968) iting professor at Union Theoshy

QuestioIS Meaning logical Seminary in New York What does this mean in pracshy Seen in the light of the Gosshy

tical terma Does it mean that pel le writes in his new book ministers rabbis and priests the relntionshipof the Church should endorse ltor oppose) parshy to the world contains only one ticular candic1ates fqr politiell essential aspect its ministry 10 office starting at the precinct the world level Does it mean that they Ministry does not mean raisshythemselves should run for ofshy ing ones voice or putting an -oar flee if only as a last reiort in all secular qIes1ions middotof ecoshy

If so does it also mean that nomic political sodaI middotcultural other clergymen should run artistic and scientific life against them if they happen to T1e Churchclmnot solve disagree with what they stand the greJt problems of the ()rld for Or does it mean toot only neiih2r the problell1of hunger those clergymen who are anti shy nor that of the populaticn nor Administration should get inshy that of war nor thlt oanonFmshyT-olved at a precinct leel and ity of power Dor that -of race play an activist role within hatred What the Church both parties can do can be expressed quite

Sicnifieani WarnlDI simply in one phrase it must I have raised these questions exist for the world

lot to make light of The New ACrefS With lFTK1mgRepublics editorial CD the subshyject under discussion but Anyone who hal ever baG the merely to BUggest that clerical pleasure of meeting Faiher involvement ill partisan politics Kung middotor is familiar wi1bhis over the issue of Vietnam is at writings will know witheut best a rather tricky business being told that be is not a hawk and will almost inevitably lead and that he is cot advocating to certain consequences which a policy of Christian withdrawal upon further reflection even the from the world editors of The New Republie middotOn the eontrary be stroniJy might eonceivably wish tc foreshy favors lhe all-ltltit involvement tall of Christians in temporal affairs

and notably iii the ~lities Of peace

To Speak in Boston Nevertheless be does net Rev Anthony T Padovano think that the institutienal

Church-and its clerical minisshySTD theology professor at ters-should pretend that theyImmaculate Conception Semishy

nary Darlington N J will speak have all the answers tc the problems of the worldia the Christian Culture lecture

aries sponsored by the Paulist And neither eoes be thinkshyFathers at 815 Wednesday night if I read him correctly-that tbe March 6 in John Hancock Ha)) clergy in ~ exeTeise of their Boston Tickets are available mission of peace should get inshyfrom 5 Park Street Boston volved in partisan jl)olities Nor 02108 do L

WOKS LIKE FUN Yes but listen to what it requires The Georgetown University erew keeps in s-hape with ~

AM ~i~enies in the gym foHow~ by a two-niile run UJl and do-Wll Observatory Hil~on tJhecampus Its cold up there said Dave Harris a member of the lightweifht crew but by then youlewtired you do-nt care NC Phottgt

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 ~ 968

Prayer for Peace To Cm(O)se Games

MEXICO CITY (NC) - All ecumenical prR)er for peaCf) service is being planned for the end of the 19th Olympic Gam~

here next October The sponsor of the service w shy

the Ecumenical Commission fcrr Religious Services (ECRS) fe the Olympic Games The comshymission is composed of 73 ChrisshytiRn and Jewish leaders in thi~

city Promment spiritual leadshyers will be invited to speak

At middot8 meeting here the rn ECRS spiritual leaders discusse~

the facilities for athletes and visitors to attend their varioU7J reUgious services

iI1be iMC)Cican government hw aPPI)o~ed ECRS plans for the ~ction of at least tw- JaIige bullclings as nondenonYshynational chapels

The original pIlan toeonstrl1ell one large church has been IcHsshytlarded The present plan is build one large building with no religious I)rnamentllJtion of alltl7 kind on the outskirts of the Olympic Villa and a similar Oilif)

on tne outskirts of the Olympze

Project InterracialInterfaith Cooperation Cultural Villa

tin (Re~~(Jtion of CcUege m addition Archbishop MEshymiddotgut Dario MirlllDda y Gomez Gl

1I1IAMI (NC)~When Florida The Rev Edward T Graham Mexico City hBs authorizeQ Memorial College predominant a Baptist minister key person downtown Catholic churches to ly Negro middotliberal arts school is behind the project has had asshy permit non-Catholic services = moved here frOl1l St Augustine sistance from Mrs Athalie their premises if non-Catholie and opens next September the Range Miamis first NeglO City comgregations should request i project will be the result of unshy Commissoioner who is a Cathshyusual interracial and interfaith olic teamwork Organhzet3 rOthEHSIl

The largest single contribll shyNegroeswhites and Chinese tiou of private funds has oome flainirt~ ClI1ter

have joined hands with Cathoshy from a supermarket executive lLOUISVILLE (NC) - TkeIlics Protestants and Jews tv M Austin Davis a Methodist Franciscan Conventional OrdGcontribute money time advice laiamis Catholic Bishop Coleshy has opened a Brothers Trainincand leadership to realize the

manF Carroll is a member vl1 Center here in an attempt to givedevelopment of the college on l the advisory board as is Maushy Brothers three years of active$10 million complex here rice Ferre diocese of Miami lay apostolic work following theirr leader novitiate

RabbiIrving Lehrman presshy Father Sebastian Cunnil1flshyCouncil Seores ident cd the Greater Miami ham OFM director of tlw Rabbinical Association a n 4ll OOlilter said We felt we haCFactory Closing Jewish lay leaders are amoag an cbligation to give our man

LONDON (NC-The impend- active workers oome training outside contam ing elosingof a large industricl $ bull $ an idea of what was neeclshyJilseph Rodriguez of the plant has been criticized by ~ edfromthem in the outside Puerto Rican Democratic ChEb lay -eouncil of Our Lady Of _rl11 In the past he addeeurohas prepared 11 scholarship PieshyGrace parish in southeast Lsnshy we were not fWfilling ~ gram for -the collegedCD DeedS 1d ~veryoneliturgy

The council expressed its deep concern at the recent No Comlmentclosure of factories in middotthis area Completean4 in particular of the impendshy VATICAN (orry (NC)-Ibe ing shutdown of the Associ2ted Vatican had no comment -oJ1 11

ElectricaIIndustries (AEI) plant repolt that ~hbishop Agostincgt BANKING Casaroli secretary for extraershyIt callid upon the governmeJrt dinary ecclesiastical affairs ilf SERVICEand the -ehaiTmanof the oomshy the Papal Secretariat of statepany torevsrse the decision 10 eonterred with Dlembers of ~

c~ don the plant because Of tor BristOl CountyN-orth Vietnamese missi-on iJJthe middotmoral religious and 5Ocial Parisjn lJanuarylt n JUWWampleffeets iCaiJS2a by the ~veshythat Archbishop Casaroli Wallmen1 a1popl1ation absent from the Vatican fOll

Copies ltOf the councils motion several days nlenUy BrjstoICounty were sent 1amp Prime ~1inister

Harold Wilson MiJiister of Trust Company Labor RayJ Gunter President ampf the Board of Trade Douglas Sturteant (

TAUNTO~ MASSJay and company officials iHoOkAlthough the councils action was a surprise to the pastel Ed 1897 IIHE BANJ(ONFather Joseph seally AA ~ uiltl~rs SUppJies JAUNTONGRHNprist sroa that he agreed ith it ftll3 Purchase Street Member 01 Feileral ~

Faiher 8enlly sait[ centbert Aellad iNew Bedford IDsuranee CorporaamptoDJlOt~cteil p01itiealand elaquolshy 996-5661 nomic motions to eome from the council but pointed out You cannot separate Feligimtl from eveJ~ay life

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968 Capacity Audience at Holy Name Parish ~ihss

My Consciesect1ce Discusses The J)etached Americans In Educ~tion Continued from Page One

Do we care -for knowledge

what happens to other people Why do we strive for college educations or for money Are we so anxious to confor~l1 that we never dare to PITTSBURGH

tMrI

~VJI and it must be understood in a

t mear-cu way

A person following his ~con-~ence must be sincere He cannot play games with his mind but must be honest with himself

A person foilowing his con~ liCience must be correct It iSl10t ugh that he sincerely beshy~ Reves that something is good or evil-he must be sure that hiS judgement is a correct one

agrees with Gods view of the matter

Sometimes people make misshytakes in judgement-honest misshytakes to be sure but mistakes iwnetheless The oft-quoted exshyample is that of the African savshyrage deep in the jungle who may be sincerely following his con- ooience when it tells him to kill omd eat his enemy His conshyscience is a sincere one But it~ Is a mistaken one since it does IIlOt agree with Gods Will He ond every person must c~m-

liitantly review his judgements to lbe sure that they are correct ones and riot sincere mistaken Utes

A person following his conshy3Cience must be certain He can not act with doubt or uncertainshy~ about the rightness or wrong- mess of an act since he would be Announces Prize acting with the willingness to

takea cpance on being wrong For Best Plan ~ offendi~g God and this is aever~ validmiddot If there is uncer- PITTSinJRqH (NC)-Bishop t8inty the person must seek aid John J Wright of middotPittsburgh III arriving at a sure and correct haS annoutc~d il priz~ of$IOOOtor professor ina p1inor semshy tudgementmiddot - formiddot the architect who submitsmiddoth be I f - inary chapiainof a school dishyThe Christian acts with amiddotcon- ~ e st p an or a Jliljgtr renoshy ocesan chancellor and finally

lllilence ~rned by the prlnciples vation of the sanctuary of St vicar general tilChrlst This is where tliEi Pa~l~ cath~middot~al_h~remiddot~T~~e ~om- The P6pe a~o nam~d Father

aturchsteachers the Pope Iiiid P~tit~o~ IS ~p~nmiddot ~omiddotal archJtec~ Bienvenido TudtiJdto be auxil- a message toAfrica and a mes ishops ~nfer middotthe pi~ture to wl~hlD ~e bound~~l~~s~f the iary bishop of Dumaguete in the sage ~lling for peaCe

Illelp men make judgementsmiddot thatmiddot lire guided by Christ Sometimes ~ese j~dge~eptsgo a~intitmiddotnat-middot lIIIa1 inclinations and tendencies md this has always been thedif-

~ti~ty of ~ing a Christian-- Ghrist demands much of His llmiddotowmiddotmiddotermiddots middot IIIU

At present Catholics are askshyiDg tlie Pope to make a morai judgement about birth control d especlmiddotallymiddot the PlmiddotUmiddot Some_lire castigating him for not givshy g a qulck declslon or else they lliie telling people to forget about llrim and to make their own adgeme tsmiddot th ttmiddot w- n m e ma er The Pope in order to make a ilecision must make it on the basis of facts Scientists must provide him with the facts and In this matter there is much that k~epinglVith the general lin~s sition in favor I)f open housing complex The Pope has asked and is still asking theologians to evaluate the scientific facts in 4he light of Christian principles Not all moral issues are simple And then the Pope will apply the principles to the facts and 1ril1 make a decision about the morality of the matter

This will guide the Catholic in fllorming his conscience -- in arshyriving at a judgement that is sipcere that is the correct orie at lS artmiddot d t d ce am JU gemen anthatmiddot is Christian

K of C Convention 51ated for Houston

lAN MARCOS (NC) The

1970 national convention of the ~ights of Columbus will be held in Houston it was an-Bounced here at a conference of Texas officers of the interna- _ tional fraternalorder

The announcement of the seshylection of Houston for the con- v~ntion which will be held in

be different These were among questions discussed by a capacity audience at the second in a series on Christian Morality sponsored by the parish council of Holy Name Church Fall River Sparked by Sisshy

John AIIcIa SUS Cter some 30 people from all parts of themiddot Diocese viewed the film The Detached Amerishycans then broke into small groups for buzz sessions

Thesis of the film was that Americans wont become in volved with each other It dra- matically pointed its message with the true story of Kitty

Genovese murdered on a New York Street while 38 of her neighbors watched ffom winshy

bull dowS-o--and did nothing Also depicted were amarried

couple talkingto each other with neither really listening a student going thriugh school as on an assembly line with his sole goal the position he could

hope for as a college graduate and various other examples of non-involvement

What is life worth if we do not give it away questioned Harry Reasoner at the end of the film The Holy Name audishyence agreed that life sbould be

used for others but tended to feel that there wasnt the im-Personalitv in a smailer city

Jthat is found in a large metropshyolis One Sister countered howshyever with stories brought to

h t htschool by children s e aug This is right in Fall River she stressed Others cited examshypIes of personal involvement in affaIrs of others but agreed that much more could and

Pope I~aul Names Two Aluxiliaries VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VImiddot hail named Msgr Jose T Sanchez to be auxiliary bishop of Caceres in the Philipshypines He takes the titular See of Lesvi

Msgr 5anlhez was vicar genshyeral of Legazpi at the time of his nomination

He was born March 17 1920 atPandan in the Legazpi dioshycese He completed his philoshysophical and ordinary theologishycal studies at the diocesan semshyinary and obtained a licentiate in theology at the University of St Thomas in Manila He was ordained Marc~ 12 1946 and then worked as an assistant passhy

Pltts~urgpchap~er9rmiddottl~e Afner- ~ Philippines Father Tudtud who Pope Paul also delivered 264 ~can -Inst~tUtofAlth~te~ts was36ye~~I)]fat ~hcent time ~fsPeeches bull (~~)_(h~ch mclud~~ ~tIePoit~- his noniinatiOJl studied philos- burgb dlO~es~and three adJa-ophy and theology at St Johns

c~nt countIes SeminarY inmiddotBoston Fath~r roseph P- Larkin He was born March 22 1931

eOm~ission chaiIm~nmiddot ili1(I-a at Mabola inmiddotthe Cebu arch~ member of the diQcesan bU~lll- diocese He worked as assistant - bullbull

iIg commissligtn~ said the pur- pastor Editor ltit Cebus Caiholic pose of thereiiovlition is to pro weekl~ and finally pastor of the ville a ~mQte suitable sanctu- Church of thE Blessed Sacrashy

ary setting fof the liturgical re- inent in Cebu In addition atf orms Qrought into beingmiddot by the time of his nomination he Vatican Council II was vice-superior of the Misshy

Father Lmiddotai-kir said because slon Society of the Philippines the cathedral must architectu-middot r~lly and liturgically allow for Issues Sttement both episcopal mdparish ser-- U

vices ~~any structurai cihimge O H R h offers a unique chalienge to the n umalu ig ts designer~ and provision for the LA CROSSE (NC)-Tbe La

new liturgy must be made in Crosse diocese has taken a poshy

and spirit 01 the existing struc- integrated arid ildequate educashy t4re tion fair employment and the

- defense of the rights of minorshyities

Christians and J~ws Bishop Frederick W Frekshying of the Wisconsin diocese

Honor Clergymen and the diocesan central com-NEW YORK (NC)-Clergy- mission approvedmiddot apmiddot officiai

men from thefour major faiths statem~nt titled Human Reshyhave been honored here by the lations in the Diocese of La National Coiuerence of Chris- Crosse

tians anltt Jews The statement was prepared

the third week of August was the practice has spread middotto a made by Dr Josepb G Murphy number of other cities hesaid of La Marque a member of the interrelgious understanding hasmiddot boara- of- directors fortbe Cathprogressed tremendously middotiIi reshyeticmiddot meDs oganization middotc~nhyearsbull

-

Tbe clergymeri cited for by the subcommission of human relations of the diocesan cornshycourageous leadership in intershymissionon social action and apshy

creedal relations were proved by both before submisshy Rev Dr ~ohn C Bennett sion to the central commissiollll

president of Union Theological ) in January Seminary

Father Robert I Gannon SJ president emeritus of Fordham CONRAD SEGUIN University

Bishop Silas of the GreekOrshy BODY COJMPANY thodox archdiocese of Nortb and Aluminum or Steel South America 944 Countr Street

Samuel D Leisdorf New NEW BEDFORD MASSYork philanthropist pointed out

wy 2-6618that the NCCJ firstmiddot honored reshyligious leaders of four faiths in September -1966 Noting that

should be done by individuals parishes and municipaiities

There were no solutions ofshyfered to the problems posed bythe film We dont expect to have answers to these quesshytions warned Sister John Alicia at the beginning of the program They are too big for us The film WltlS strictly on the

human level and this was pointed out in one group No one can solve all problems it was agreed but surely each Christian canmiddot trust the Holy Spirit to lead him to the probshylems he is equipped to do someshything about no matter how small

There was another point on whichmiddot everyohe in the audience was in enthusiastic agreement that there be more such eveshynings as the one sponsored by Holllgt Namemiddot

Vatmiddotn Report~lIo

Continued from Page One two encyclicals The Developshymiddotment of Peoples and Priestly Celshyibacy four motu proprios inshyeluding one creating central a lay council and the Papal Comshymission on International Justice anp Peace and another restorshying the permanerit diacol1ate treeapostolic constitutions inshyelUding one reshaping the

Churchs c~iitral administlatioii two apostolic exhortations one apostolic letter and 78 other Wessagesmiddotand letterS inclQding

He reeeived eight ehiets Of state including U SPresident Lyndon B Johnson and United Nations Secretary General U T~ant and gave 16 audiences to

th lmiddottmiddot I0 er men 10 ~ 1 lca life in cluding U SVi~ President Hushy~rt H Humphrey Republican presidential hopeful Richard M N d N Ixon an ew Yorks Sen Robert F Kennedy

He received visits from four delegations of Orthodox churCh men including Orthodox Ecushymenicai Patriarcp Athenagoras I of Constantinople besides visit shying Patriarch Athenagoras in ~ tanbul

The book covering last yearli activities of the Holy See conshysists of 1680 pages plus about 2(10 photographs

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SolvcnorlCln Center WlllCOnaln 53061

Bishop John J Wright hasestablished a committee 1Jl)take a complete look at Oaampshy

olie education in the PittsburpD lOcese

The aim is fc dedde wha~ 1shyd t to tak tbe ~

lrec Ion e Dedecade for the best education of

all Catholics young and oldThe committee will evaluate all present Catholic educationshygrade and high schools eo egesConfraternity of Christian Doeshytrine classes adult education and other programs

The surveyors wiU 117 to deshyvise a plan based oa mstinl and potential resources in facll-Hies funds and Staff to guide the dioceses educational efforlll for the next 10 years or more

May Be FaI-lleaehiDg Among ideas eXpected to be

examined in the evaluation are proposals by some to cut back on Catholic schools or even til phase them out in place of an expanded adult education proshygram

Named head of the committee of educators priests and lay professionals is Father Vernon Gallagher CSSp former presishy

deht of Duquesne University here now serving as an official of the Holy Childhood Associashytion He also is a former proshyvincial of the Holy Gbost Fa~ ers eastern province

The committee Will be emshypowered to call before it di shyocesan officials to hold publlc meetingshire staff ~ring in exshyperts ThedioCege will finance the work

The committee Win make spe- eific recommendations to BishoP Wright after the study which 18 expected to take at least a yearbull

-Results are expected to have ~ar-reaching implicatiou fOr Catholic education here

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Two Unbeoten league Play f1fE ANCHOR-Diocese oTtall River-Ihurs feb 29 1968 19

Coach Says Sault Complete BallPlayerCape Cods NausetCompiles SMTB Playmaker Is Former Coyle $trBest Over-All Court Mark

BY JOE MIRANDA By PETER BARTEK

An excellent hall handler and Norton High Coach team player Is how Pat Sault of

Taunton is described by his Eleven of tile 12 aa-ea e1ubs with the best records in coach Phil Wetterland of the

their respective leagues are among those who will parshy Sou the a s t ern Massachu- setts Technogical Institute Inshyticipate in the March Tech basketball tournament in Boston stitute in North DartmouthFairhaven High of the Oapeway Conference and Nauset Sault a 19-year old freshman

of the Cape amp Island loop are is a former Coyle High hoopshythe only all-winning league a single league game while two ster who played four years for

went doWn to defeat In every the Warriors his final two underaggregations from this area encounter In which they were coach Jim Lanagan on the varshyin the Hub championship Involved Almost two-thirds 02 sityelimination tourney while Dartshy the Southeastern Mass teams

D)Quth High is the only one of Teaching CareerfinIshed wIth a 500 average OIlthe tOp dozen better Although young Pat has al shya 70 per cent coQlbines WIth

WIth 12 triumphs in the Cape ready made plans for the future league record amp Island competition Nauset which Include finishing his edshywhich failed to Regional also achieved the best ucation and pursuing a teachershyqualify an inshy over-all record winning 16 of coaching career dication t hat 11 encounters The Cape Cod Sault has not yet chosen a non-league school will be shooting for the major in college but according competition selshy Class D Tech title to his parents he is very much dom jeopardizes interested in teaching historyNew Bedford High 15 and and coaching They feel he willthe ultImate one in the Greater Boston Subshy be good at both as he alwaysgoal of most urban league finished with anschools Actual- Peter devoted his spare time to helpshy

over-all 17-2 mark for the Winshyly 311 per cent Bartek ing the younger neighborhoodter The Crimsons 937 average boys understand athletics moreof the 35 Southeastern Massashy captured its leagues pennant flag thoroughlychusetts school teamsmiddot have The Crimson Whalers are now Pat is the oldest son of Mrqualified for the Tech title play poised to annex the No 1 State and Mrs Charles A Sault and)let none managed an over-all honor by clinching the top one of four children A sisterundefeated season ranking Class A division in the Annette is a senior at BishopThree area clubs failed to win Boston title tourney Cassidy High James Michael

and Cheryl grammar school Representatives in Three B~ackets students at Mulcahey Schoof in

Taunton Fairhaven and Holy Family FamilYhas been eliminated in The family resides at 85 Mershy

HIgh of New Bedford aiming the Lawrence Catholic tourney rill Avenue In Taunton and are for the Class C Tech crown both Southeastern Mass does not members of St Pauls Parish fInished wIth an over-all 16-2 have one club among the Tech

Wetterland Commentsmark The latter Is still smart- Class B participants but th~re ing from its cliff-hanging defeat will be five area combinations Wetterland was high in his at the hands of Xavier in the -includIng Fairhaven and Holy praise of his five foot 11 inch State Catholic tourney Bill Family-in the Class C play and guard who tips the scales at Walshs two-pointer from the three-including Nauset-in the 160 pounds ~ssesses good speed floor which many thought Class D Hub competition and is a key in the Corsairs fast

meant victory at Lawrence was The other Class C contestants break offense nu1llfied by a travelling viola- patterns when SMTI is wurkshy a rest he should be in top conshySault lllsed strictly with thetion which cost the loss ofthe are Case High of Swansea Nar- iilg too quickly and making dition for the 1968-69 campaignvarsity was gaining valuablebasket resulting in a one-~Jnt ry co-champions Oliver Ames Dlistakes Sault gaIned his court savvy1 f tb of North Easton runners-up in experience and developing rapshy

The SMTI mentor continued from Lanagan at Coyle wheretiOs~~ e Narragnnsett~a~ theHockomock circuit and Den- bUy whep a knee Injury slowed he iii the complete ball player hemiddotstarted in his juJ)ior and senshyDis-Yarmouth of Cape Cod see his progress midway through

Durfee of Fall RIver and ond pI fi ish in tho C the campaiiPt but Wetterland noting that he can shoot but is Jor lieasons and was a Vital co Bishop Stang mgh of North ace n er e ape most --content setting Up his in the Warriors successduring DartmQutb are the other two middotNausetwill be joined by Mar- has turned in some excellent efshy teammates for easy pblnts He Ioth years I J

way loop said despite the handicap Pat

Is a team player and always sacshy As ~ Coyle High fr~hmanarea Class A representatives inmiddot thas VIneyard and Norton mib forts in a most successful SMTI rifices himself to help the club Pat was a member XJtb~ yearshythe Tecb toutnament ~e Fall in the Class D bracket The season

Sault possesses a good atti shy lings h09P team and al~Q~ parti shyRiver Hilltoppers willbe out Islanders finished second to Naushy Defensively Sault is cnitshytude is a tough competitor and cipated in track By hihSOphoshyto make amends for their nose- set in the Cape amp Island league standIng Offensively Sault is one of the players Wetterland is more year Saultcopfjned his dive finish in the Bristol COUl)ty while Norton was second in the the teams playmaker ana quarshyeounting on 1to help SMTI gain athlettc talents to basketbjlll andloop whIle Stang ~ke Ho17 Tri~Valley Conference terback 8Dlall college recognition in the turned in a cODlJPenlla))le acshyfuture Teallll Player coun~ o~ himself

Ifere~s How They Did hi LiBogue Play Played for Lanagan Sault also represented stWetterland said his outstandshyThere is doubt about his the hardwood

he following are the league 21 Bishop Feehan 7_1 ing worth to the Corsairs comes no Pauls on in the eourage said the Corsairs skipshy Taunton CYO and in the annual from the fact that he can slowrecords of the 35 Southeastem Msgr Coyle 7-1 after painful knee Easter tournament He playeddown the offense and set up per even a

Mass teams Ta~ton 7-7 injury Sault continued to jpve four years of Litue JeagueM N B Vocational 6-8 his all and attended every pracshy Baseball and one season in theK of C Masons1 Fairhaven 14-0 25 DIman Vocational 5-9 tice The injury has slowed him Pony League prior to ~ntetmamp

Nauset 12-0 Msgr Prevost 5-9 visibly but after the season and Coyle Higa 3 New Bedford 15-1 27 SandwIch 4-8 To Cooperate4 Holy Family 13-1 28 Nantucket 3-9

NOTRE DAME (NC) - lfashyCase 13-1 29 Old Rochester 4-10

30 tlonal leadellS of the Scottish6 Oliver Ames 12-2 West~rt 3-11 Bite Masons and the Knights ~oll another7 Marthas Vineyard ~ 31 Barnstable 2-12

of Columbus anno~ced memshy8 Bishop Stang 10~ 32 Dighton-Rehoboth 1-13 strike on~rs of their organizations wU1Dartmouth 104 33 Bourne 0-14 work together on domestic andDennis-Yarmouth 10-4 Chatham 0-12 the enerlY international problems faciolaquoDurfee 10-1 North AUleJooro 1-14

the nation12 Norton 105 you get George A Newbury soveshy13 Attleboro 9-5 Minister Officiates reign grand commander 01 from14 Harwich 7-5

Scottish Rite Masons In theProvIncetown 7-5 a slice ofDn Cathclic Church northern jurisdiction of the US18 Seekonk 8-6 MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-A Lu- and John W McDevitt supremeSomerset 86

theran mInister officiated at the knight of the Knights of ColumshyFalmouth 8-6 marriage of his son in Holy Cross bus made the announcementMansfield 8-6 Catholic church here at a dinner here s~nsoredWareham 8-6

Married were James H Graf jointly by the Masonic Lodge 29 L th and the Knights of Columbus

a u eran and CalTon Ann council in South Bend Episcopalian Rite Gutwinski 25 a Catholic The ceremony was rformed - Both praised the work of Fa-MINNEAPOLIS (NC)- Archshy ther John A OBrien of the

bishop Leo Binz and Coadjutor Grapoundfs fltthell the Rev Paul L University of Notre Dame for Archbishop ~ PY1)1e of the Graf pastor of Holy Trinity r better understanding among the Cafllolic archdIoceses of St Paul theran church two groups Minneapolis were present in the Permission for the Rev Gmt Father Theodore M Hesshysan~lary of St Marks Episcoshy to officiate at his sonB wedding burgh CSC president of the pal cathedral here for the inshy was granted by theSacred Con- University of Notre Dame said stallation of Bishop Philip F gregation for the Joctrine of This nIght marks a great step McNarry as coadjutor bishop of the Faitlh inl lWme in answer to ll forward and reflects the new the Epi6copal diocese of Minneshy J)etition by Archbishop Leo BiDz ~enical spirit which is unishysota of~ ~~-M~eapotis iing ~ople long separated-

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bull THE ANCHOR Dayton University Thurs Feb 29 196a Brief Religious on Ecumenism

Selects Advisors SOUTH ORANGE (NC) meanitigful dialogue should not tended not to lead to compro- DAYTON (NC)-An ll-mem-

Named resident Some 1000 mms and Brothers be confused with monologueshy mise but to conyergence ber advisory board of six stushyservfng in tli~ Newark archdi~shy or confrontation He added We talk now of our common dents two faculty members andSANTA CLARA (NC)-The cese were briefed on the basic we must be willing to be pershy belilefs he said not to com- three representatives of theboard of trustees of the Univershy principles of ecumenism in a suaded-we need an open mind promise each others faith but in community has been establishedlllity of Santa Clara has named program sponsored by the Newshy to seek out the truth wherever the hope that at some point in for the Office of Human Relashylrather Thomas D Terry SJ ark Archdiocese Commission for it might be shy the future we will converge tions at the University oJ Dayshy35th president of the Jesuit unishy Ecumenical Affairs

Ifersity Father Terry who sucshy Discussing the difficulties of As an example he pointed to tornSpeakers at the session ineeeds Father Patrick Donohoe establishing Christian-Jewish the wide divergence of views The board under the direcshySeton Hall University includeSJ recently appointed Califorshy dialogue he said we Christians regarding (he Mass and the Eu- tion of Charles Hirt director ofDr Leonard Swidler of Templeaia provinCial af the Society of are responsible for 2000 years charist that existed between the Office of Human RelationsUniversity Philadelphia aridJIesus has been academic vic~ of anti-Semitism and now_ we Martin Luther and the Council will be responsible for estabshyFather Thomas M McFadden ofpresident af Loyola University must overcome our mutual disshy of Trent Then he cited the re- lishing policy making programthe Brooklyn dioceseLos Angeles for the last year trust before dialogue can be cent statement on the Eucharist recommendations helping to

lllI1d a half Previous to that Swidler said dialogue with fruitful issued by Lutherans and Catho- alleviate campus racial probshyIIlIather Terry was dean of the others must be preceded by an lics to show how much closer lems and drawing up proposall ltWllege of arts and sciences at examination of Catholic attishy Father McFadden said diashy the two bodies have come since for implementation Santa Clara tudes In addition he said a logue among Christians is inshy that time

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THE ANCHOKshy10 Thurs Feb 29 1968

Urge Cergymen Attend Meltefring On Scfielrnce

WASHINGTON (NC)shyCatholic clergy throughout the country are being urged to attend the second annual conference on science for cler- gymem at the Oak Ridge (Tenn) Associated Universities Aug 5-16 in cooperation with Oak Ridge National Laboratory

The conference entitled The Impact of Science on Society is sponsored by the National Science Foundation and the Alshyfred P Sloan Foundation Purshypose of the conference is to proshyvide clergymen of all faiths with an understanding of the nature scope effects and trends

of contemporary science - parshyticularly nuclear science

Dr W W Grigorieff chairshyman of the conference said the conference series originated in the recognition that most clershygymen actively engaged in pas torat work have little training in and understanding of sci shyence but are confrOnted almost

daily with problems and deci aions arising from its implicashytions

Dr Grigorieff s~icj in an inter- view with NC Nevvs Service that experience gained through the 1967 conference indicated to the conference advisory comshymittee that religious leaders of all f~i ths not only need to be conversallt with the content and llOcial dynamics of science but also are extremely eager to take advantage of the opportunity to become more acquainted with modern science

The conference director stated that this year the conference will be open to some 90 parshyticipants-three times as many IllS attended the 1967 conference

He pointed out that Roman Catholic applications for last years conference were not nushymerous and said that those who had applied were for the most part overqualified - that is they possessed professional qualifications and advanced training in science The confershyence he emphasized is not pri shymarily for such specialists

Practicing Cnergy Dr Grigorieff stated that an

announcement has been sent to bishops of anlimber of dioceses

throughout -the country in air eHort to stimulate iriterest in the aims of the conference He added that an effort is also being made to contact diocesan priests senates

He explained that conference participants will be selected on a nationwide basis from appli shy

cants representing various reli shygious )lodies arid emphasized that the majority are expected to be praCticing clergy-those actively engaged in the minis- try rather than in teaching reshysearch etc

He said that a limited number of seminary educators deans heads of clergy-in-service and religious editorf will be acshycepted as observers

Speakers will include Dr William G Pollard executive director of Oak Ridge Associshyated Universities who is also an Episcopal priest associated with St Stephens Church Oak Ridge and the author of several books and Alvin M Weinberg director of Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Askeel to Withdraw MILWAUKEE (NC) - The

Milwaukee priests senate has passed a resolution urging 11 priests of the archdiocese to work for a chalige in tlie policy of clubs which are discriminashytory or tG withdlW as members

INTERFAITH SERVICE Bishop Fulton J Sheen center of Rochester NY at shywnded an interfaith service at Mount Neboh Congregation in Manhattan With- the Bishshyop are the Rev Philip Hiat right rahbi of the congregation and Cantor Albert l- Stur- mer holding chalice wh() prepared the ceremony at which Bishop Sheen received aspeshycial Brotherhood Award SC Photo

Archdiocese- to IBatmiddottle

Race Prejudice -

BusmlrAeSS Archbishop Says CINCINNATI (NC) - Ar(h-

bishop KarlJ A1t~r launched Project Commitment here with an appeal to the Christian comshymunity to appreciate the size and urgency of the problems of race relations and an insistence that the finding of Solutions is everybodys business

Speaking at a Mass in 1l Saints church the Cincinmtti archbishop emphasized not on ly right attitudes among Catholic people but also united comshymunity-wide organization and effort are necessary 10 me~t the problem

He said government pm-middot grams heretofore have been t(o late and too little and adVHshycated something like the Mal shyshall Plan which at the end HI the Second World War rescued Europe from misery and dEshy

spair -The Mass marked the openshy

ing of the projects pilot prll- gram which will continue wittl

seven workshops at Moeller HighSchool on specific aspects of- racial prejudice and lliscrim- ination Endorsed by the Archdiocesan

Pastoral Council and sponsored by the Catholic Commission 011

Human Relations Project Com mitment is described as a promiddot gram ~o help Catholic lay lead ers recognize their responsibii ities and prepare for theiJ proper roles in t~e field of inmiddotmiddot terracial justice

Seven VVeeks Program Dayton will be the second

area in which Project Commitshyment will be launthed The date has been set tentatively for April 9and the program will continue for seven weeks

Archbishop Alter said experishyence gained in the pilot pro-

Forty Hours Format ST LOUIS (Nc)-The St Louis

archdiocese has dropped its reshyquirement that Forty Hours deshyvotion must be held annually in each parish Pastoral guideshy

lines from the Archdiocesan Liturgical Commission noted that parishes were free and encouraged to continue Forty Hours and offered possible new formats which are based on Scripture readings and themes of Eucharist priesthood and church

gram would be used in organizshying similar efforts in the other deaneries

St Francis de Sales deanery in t~s area was chosen as the first for the experiment beshycause its Catholic population represents a cross-section of the entire community and if a-- project succeeds here it may well succeed anywhere else the archbishop said

It has been estimated that more than 500 persons from 31 of the deanerys 34 parishes would tale part in the project

The archbishop detailed the reason why the whole archdioshy

cese was to be involved when the problems are so diverse in the various regions of the 19 counties and When iincertain areas there is no racial conflict because of a totally homogeshyneous population

National Prohlem

The answer is that the prob- lem of harmonious race relashyJions is not a local problem but a national problem involving all communities everywhere and affccting all our public relashytions political economic and social There may not be racial conflict but there can be race prejudice he said

The problem has moreover definite religious and moral asshypects he said and there are questions of social justice and social charity which concern every Christian and for which

Pope Honors Gellman Protest(OInlt Leader

BONN (NC) -Pope Paul VI has awarded the Great Cross of the Order of St Sylvester to Dr Reinhold von ThaddenshyTrieglaff at German Protestant leader

Dr Von Thadden-Trieglaff is the founder and honorary presshyident of the Kirchentag the anshynual German Protestnt convenshytion -

In the document accompanyshying the award the Pope thanked Dr Von Thadden-Trieglaff for his work on behalf of ecumtmshyism and asked him to continue working in this spirit of recon-

ciliation and brotherhood Bishop Adolf Bolte of Fulda

presented the award

he will find the appropriate anshywer in the teachings of the Gospel

All our Catholic people he said are charged with the reshysponsibility of supporting adeshyquate remedial legislation and of creating social institutions which will eliminate discrimishynation and alleviate the burdens of sickness poverty and )gnoshyrance No one can stand aloof from a program of social bettershyment

Dutch Bishops Take Poll of Priests

moving toward onenessTHE HAGUE (NC) -- The cardinal saidDutch bishops in an effort to

measure the effectiveness and opinions of the nations priests Priest on Facultyhave distributed a list of 39 questions to all priests deacons LANCASTER (NC) - Fathell and subdeacons in the country William J Walsh SJ is the Several questhms deal with first Catholic priest to be apshypriestly celibacy pointed a fullitime member oil

the LancaSter Theological SemishyD~awnupto determine what nary conducted by the Unitecllp~iests think of the priesthood Church of Christ here Fathetandto measure the clergys acshyWalsh assistant theology proshyceptance of the celibacy Iegulashy

- essor at the Jesuit notiviatetion the questionnaire will be

CardinalCites Church Role InSlaquosety --CHICAGO (NC) - Jobm

Cardinal Cody asserted heq that the Church must involVil) fultlelf in social problems 00 be true to its fundamentetl works

The cardinal spoke at a sefib vice in the First Presbyteri~ church making its lOOth anm versary celebration

Those who contest involve-shyment by the Chruch in prolraquo lems of society Cardinal Co~

said take an indefensible stand He said personal sanctity whiclli

is conceded to be the ChurchD rightful concern cannot bd sepilrated from social responsi shybility

If the Church has nothing 00 say to us regarding our obligashytions to our fellow man it kJ sadly neglecting our personall holiness Cardinal Cody said

We sin by Injustice We sm by lack of charity We are sancshytified by giving all men thellf due he added

Move Toward Unity Cardinal Cody did not specishy

fically mention race relationll but he said society mistrea~

certain groups or individuals1ll

He said if church members aNI in any way party to this evill the Church must become i~

volved The cardinal said COIb-

cern for personal holiness forcelll the Chuxch into action

Let the Church in such cil shycumstances stand idly by and Q will lose all reason for exisshytence he declared

Cardinal Cody was introduceell to the congregation by the Rev Harold Blake Walker pastor Cltf the church When asked ahow his appearance in a Protestanll church following the service the cardinal said not long age it would have been unthinkshyable He added that the Holy Spirit is moving strongly anell speedily

We are not yet perfectly one as Christ prayed but we arll

th~

evaluated by the Pastoral Insti shytute of the Catholic Churchin the Netherlands and the Insti shytute for Applied Sociology of the Catholic Universiiy of Nijmegen

Introducing the questions the bishops commented that in a period of Church renewal it is unavoidable that priests be conshyfronted with serious problems They then recommend that the priests answer the questions carefully keeping in mind the teachings of the Church and the roie of the Church in modern society

Wernersville Pa will take ihe post of assistant church history professor at the 143~year-olcll

Protestant seminary on July L

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Black Power MINNEAPOLIS (NC) - nle

only un-Christian thing about power is the abuse of power Father James E Groppj Milshywaukees militant civil rights leader told a Lutheran layshymens conference here

Neither is the striving fox power by a minority group unshyAmerican the priest asserted It is rather part of the American tradition he said and cited past drives for political power by labor unions Italians in New York and the Irish in Boston

Father Groppi also said that the Milwaukee NAACP Youth Council which he advises has adopted black power tactics only after we had used every tactic eveiy means we could think of to take the yoke off black people and nothing had been effective

He said that one use the counshycil had made of black power was in a united Negro boycott of stores during Christmas The white man doesnt give us a housing bill we dont give him our dollar he explained

Discussing the role of the Christian Church in the black mans struggle for equal rights Father Groppi said that the Church has been involved by her non-involvemen1i By such non-involvement he said the Church has aggravat~d the Neshygros problem

Today he said I the use of prudence as an excuse for cowshyardice is the great sin of tile Church

Students Interrupt Strike to Mourn

PARIS (NC) - The strike launched by the guild of law students at the Catholic Unishyversity of Paris has been intershyrupted by its leaders out of resJect for the mourning of the diocese of Paris following the death of Pierre Cardinal Veuil shylot who was chancellor of the instittltion

The strike was called to proshytest a reform of the university decided U()(ln by the French bishops and put into effectmiddot by the rector Msgr Pierre Haubt- mann The reform is designed to avoid having the Catholic uni- versity compete systematically with middotthe state university In all secular studies

The bish~ps decided that in addition to teaching and re search in the area of religion the Catholic universtty must first of all be devQted to Chrisshytian reflection on secular matshyters

Pastoral Institute To Open at Quito

BOGOrA (NC)-A new Latin American Pastoral Institute will be opened in April at Quito Ecuador as a project of the Latin American Bishops Counshycil (CELAM)

The institute will be a unit of the CELAM pastoral departshyment

Purpose of the institute will be to train personnel from the whole continent in pastoral work applicable to Latin Amershyica The institute will offer seven-month courses and Euroshypean specialists in pastoral work will also serve on the faculty

Meeting on Cities NOTRE DAME (NC) - An

international conference entitled NCities in Context will be held March 31 through April 3 at the University of Notre Dames Center for Continuing Educashytion

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968

litu~~W Changes Continued from Page One

in earlier periods-even thou~

they do not conrorm in all deshytails with the approved versiOlil of contemporary liturgical texto -are authorized

TANTUM ERGO An apshyproved Eucharistic hymn ilill praise of the Blessed Sacrament may be used in Benediction oil the Blessed Sacrament in place of the Latin hymn Tantum Ershygo

PSALMS Approved are the texis of the Psalms as published by Englands Grail Society anell that found in the Jerusalem Bishyble

Suggestnol1Js Denied

The Vatican turned down two requests made by the US Bishshyops both dealing with liturgic011 experimentation

No was answered to the reshyquest that the US Bishops be permitted to designate acade~ic

centers to supervise litulgicall innovation

Also denied was the request that some experimentation be approved without examinatioD by the Holy See

-Presently the Vatican mu~

approve proposed liturgical inshynovations before experiment3shytion can begin

Archbishop Dearden explainshyed While the two major proshyposals concerning liturgical enshyperjmentation were not alPshyproved at the present time ~

is clear that the Consilium iJ open to the submission of rite and texts of li-turgical adaptioTll which have been drawn up anll presented prior to actual experishymental use

Concrete proposals of rHeIl 2nd texts may continue to be sent to the Bishops CommittCCl on the Liturgy

Matter Deferred

The permission to substitutfl h)mns or other sacled songtl fur the texts now used at the entran~e Offertory and Comshymunion of the Mass was defershyred

Such hymns now generally added to the official texts were approved in principle however by the delegates to the Rome Synod of Bishops October 1967

The Baptismal Rite describecll among the changes was n~

contained in the Vatican lettertl authoiizing the other changoo but was made public by Archshybishop Dearden at the same time as the announcement of 1ibe changes was released

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L_ PATRON 01 MARCH The month of March is dedicated to St Joseph watchful

guardian of the Son of God and patron and protector of the universal Church Dedicashytion of the month of the year to events in the life of Christ and to particular saints is a practice of the People of God rather than an official action of the Church It comfantly middotrecalls the power and love of God for mankind present at all times and in every place

Bishops Hit Penna Birth Control Policy Addsmiddot to Rather Thon Solve Problems of Poor

HARRISBURG (NC)-The Pennsylvania Welfare Depaytments new policy of acfi~ely promoting birth control among poor people is a major step in the direction of a newand dangerous life management bymiddot the state The Pennsylvania Oatholic Conferencehas criti shycized the Welfare pepartments decision to middotinitiltte discussions of birth control with their clients Under previous pol- stru~en~ for population con- the polic~ because it will add icy birth coiltrol adviceias trol saidmiddot the PCC to the p~oblems of the poor and Moreover many of these do nothmg to get at the root

Jren~l~red only If the welfare same spokesmen see it as an in- causes of poverty reCIpIent asked for It The strument to improve what they We are bound to protest sysshynew policY has been in effect call the quality of our popula- tematic governmental involveshysince mid-January The Con- tion Putting the program to ment in decisions of citizens reshyference which represents the suchmiddota use represents one of its specting family size as a major states Bishops in public affairs worst dangers the danger that step in the direction of a new has denied that Church teach- the state will start-=-by guiding and dangerous life management ing on contraception is a factor some groups or classes to birth by the state the statement emshyin its opposition limitation-to select the types it phasized

Invasion of Prhacy desires to see propagated Rather our concern is over Dangerous Management Varied Talents

the ef~ort of the state to i~fl~- The statement noted that its SPOKANE (NC)-The newly e~c~ many wa~ a pelson s view in this regard is shared formed Catholic Board of EdushychOIce of family size-our con- b th ptt b h b h f th h ht d h middottmiddot y e 1 s lIlg lanc 0 e cation for the Diocese of Sposhycern IS elg ene w en I IS National Association for the Adshy kane has elected members whothe poor whom the state seeks t f C I d P I to mfluence the Conference stat t sad

emen IThe Confelence called promoshy

tion of birth control an invashysion of privacy and asserted the state should play no role in attempting even indi rectly to manage tne most intimate domain of personal life

The statement also took issue with Welfare Depart~ent deshynialsmiddot that the program is inshytended to contlOl population

Negro Opposition

Chiefspokesmen for groups which have pressured for this program in our state say they IJee it and demand it as not just II medical service but as an inshy

vancemen 0 0 ore eop e include educators and non-edushyh h tl tt k d th w IC recen y a ac e e cators priests pastors ReligiousWelfare Department for trying and lay personst r t th th f th N 0 Iml e glOW 0 e egro

populatIOn The Conference also criticized

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a2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River--Thurs Feb 29 1968

The PaJrish Parade ~T MARYS CAlllllIlEJI)lItAL FALL RiVER

Mrs Hadley Lackey will serve as chaIrman of arrangements for the monthly meeting of the Womens Guild scheduled for a oclock on Monday night March 4 in the Shamrock Room of the Corky Row Club

Mrs John OConnor chairshyman of the Scholarola scheduled for April 1 requests that all pledges be brought to the March meeting of the Guild Committee members are avail shyable for all who wish their pledges collected at home

ST THERESA J80 ~-y gtltBORO

The ~ =middotaternity of Christian Mothers will hold thei~ regular monthly meeting on Monday evening March 4 following the Stations of the Cross

Rev Leo R Gravel OMI son of Mr and Mrs Raymond Gravel ofmiddotWestminister St So Attleshyboro will be the guest speaker

Members of the Confraternity will receive Comunion in a body at the 9 oclock Mass on Sunday morning March 3

88 PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Mothe~~ ~f Boy Scouts will bold a p1i1gtlic social at 730 toshynight Boy Scouts informatiOn classes for the Ad Mtare Dei award wiil be gtheld tonight and every T~ursday night during March and April

Junior High Camp Fire Girls plan a splash party at the YMCA from 530 to 7 Saturday night March 2 imd a cakesale in the IIChool hall from 8 to 11 30 Sun- ~y morniii~

The annual Cub Scout Pack IT Blue and Gold Banquet and charter presentation will take place at 630 Sunday night in the

school hall

SACRJED IllEART NOATlLEBORO

Starting on March 12 and conshytinuing for the next three conshysecutive Tuesday nights there will be an EcUmenical Worship Study conducted at Sacred Heart Church First Universalist Church First Methodist Church and the Grace Church

The service will begin at 730 and will be followed by a coffee hour and a discussion period in the church hall

The Sacred Heart Church will open the program on March 12 with a discussion of the Mass

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Womens Guild win reshyceive Holy Communion in a group at the 8 oclock Mass on Sunday morning March 3

The regular monthly meeting of the Guild will be held on Wednesday night March 6 at 730 in the school on Earle Street

ST PATRICK FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild announces an open meeting for Monday March 4 A jewelry demonstrashytion will be featured In charge of arrangements is Mrs Stanley Pitera aided by Mrs Joseph Fazzina

The unit will celebrate St Patricks day Saturday night March 16 with a smorgasbord supper and dance in the school auditorium Supper will be served at 7 and danCing will folshylow from 8 to midnight with music by the Moon Mists Resshyervations will close Sundq March 10 and may be made with guild officen or board memshybers

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

Plilrishoia books are to be distributed the weekend of

The WQmens Club announces March 2 and 3 Prizes will be bull pot luck supper for 630 Monshyday nigh1 Maich 4 Chairmen are Mrs William T Marum Jr and Miss Mary L Tyrrell

John F Keavy Jr president cl the US Model Railroad Assn will show films at a Boy Scout meeing slated for Tuesday night March 5

Theologians SllaquolIted As CU Spe(Q]~eis

WASHINGTON (NC) - Dr Ellie Mascall one of Englando most prominent Anglican theoshylogians and Father Hans Kung an outspoken advocate of reform in~~ the Catholic Church wilil speak at the Catholic University of America l1Ite in March

Dr Mascall a vigorous 0pshy

ponent of the so-called New Theology will give the Charles A Hart Memorial Lectures from March 24 to 29 His lectures will

deal sucessively with the quesshytions of God man Christ and the Church

Father Kung a Swiss theoloshygian who played an influential role at the Second Vatican Counshycil will speak on Sincerity in the Church on March 18

St louis Ceremony ST LOUIS (NC) - Bishop

John J Carberry of Columbus will be installed as Archbishop of St Louis on March 25 in cershyemonies at St Louis cathedral here

Archbishop Luigi Raimondi apostolic delegate to the United States will officiate The date of the cerem0I1-Y will be exactly three years after that on which Bishop Carberry was installed ordinary of Columbus

awarded to the three individuals selling the most books

The Mystibrook Singers of Bishop Stang High School will lead singing at the 815 Mass Sunday morning M~rch 3

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

A parish supper sponsored by the Womens Guild will be held from 530 to 730 Saturday night March 2 in the school hall Tickets are available from Mrs Frank Kingsley ticket chairman or any board member

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

During Lent Masses will be at 7 AM 4 PM and 7 PM

Confessions will be heard one half hour before each Mass Stashytions of the Cross will be held at 345 and 645 Friday aftershynoons and evenings Children are urged to attend Mass at 4 each afternoon The Children of Mary anshynounce a periby sale Friday March 15 A Portuguese parish mission will be preached by Rev Anshytonio Pinto CM from Sunday March 3 through Saturday March 9 Services will open Sunday night March 3 with rosary sernlon and Benediction at 7 I)clock and Mass and sershymon will be held every weekday night at 7

ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

The Association of the Sacred Hearts will sponsor a tea at 7 on Sunday night Mar 3 in the rectory in honor of the Sisters staffing the parish schooL

The monthly meeting C1f 1lhe Association will follow the tea

SAMOAN BISHOP The first native Polynesian memshyber of the hieraIl~hy Bishopshyelect Pio Taofinlllu (cq) S M will be consecrated at Apia Western Samoa on May 29 by Bosoon-born A r c h b ish 0 p George H Pearce SM of Suva The Bishop-eloot 44 made -his novitiate with the Marists on Staten Island ~C Photo

Hospital ~~urses

Return middotto Nork hi Covingtol1l

COVINGTON (NC) A nurses walkout which began in mid-November at 100shyyear-old St Eliz~~beth Hosshypital here has ended Nearly 100 of the 140 members of tine Registered Nurses tgtrganizati01l have indicated they will retum to their jobS The walkout stemmed from bull dispute over recognition of their organization and patient care policies Since the settlement hospital officials have been inshyterviewing nurse to expedite their reemployment and placeshyment

Restore Full Service Hospital spokesmen said the

nurses will be restored to posts they formerly held in so far as possible The nurses will lose no tenure as a result of their absence and if the positions they previously held have been filled they will be offered comshyparable posts or benext in line for selection to the positions

Administration officials exshypressed satisfaction with the prospect of the nurses return and voiced the earnest hope that we can move forward tel restore the 100 beds to service which had to be taliten out of availability by reason of the shortage of nurses to care for the patients

Officials estimate til1at four tie eight we~ks might t~ required 110 restore full bed service

Cite Achievements The nurses leaders said the7

had achieved at least 13 gains during the thteenionth dispute pointing to the fact that a doctor and a nurse have been apshypointed to the hospital board of trustees the establishment of bull patient care committee comshyposed or nurses electeli by those now employed by the hospital and equipment changes in the patient care area

Mrs Pat Tanner vice chait shyman also said the nurses unshyderstand that a lay heid will be appointed head of the hospital

Sister M Coronata adminisshytrator was assigned to) another post in the sisterhood earlier this month and Sister Mark Bernard has been serving u acting administrator I~he Franshyciscan Sisters of the Poor haft operated the hospitaL

Love Is An Active Verb We who bear the noble name of Christian arid who are io9shy

ingly called the faithful stand in awe of the Mystery of Christ and the Mystery of His Church More than the mystery of Obrist and of His Church is something we live It is then our duty JIlON

and more to experience the living reality of the Cbureh hershyself Cbristain tradition affirms that by her relatioJiship with Christ tlbe Redeemer the Church is a kind of sacrament or an efficacous sign of intimaJte union with God and indeed an efshyficacious sign cf the uni~ of all mankind

As members of the household of the faith we have heeD eaDmiddot ed by God and endowed with the precious gift 01 faithThereshyfore we m1ls truly experience a sense of urgency in brinampinK aD men to tun union with Christ Since mankind today is joined together more 1ll1osely than ever before in historY by bonds thaamp are social technical and eultural should it be ilenied the spirshyitual unity that springs from faith The Gospel is Ught Ii Is lIIewness it is energy it is rebirth it is salvation

Should DOt interest in our own salvation necessarily move us tID loving concern for the salvation of others If the Church is the Sacrament Of Salvation should we not as members of the Church eome to an eve- clearer awareness of our pari in her mission in the o1uty of evangelization in the missionary mandate in the apOstolic commiSsion Clearly our duty consonant withthe blessings I-eceived from Christ is that of spreading offering and announcing ~ faith to Others in order that we might be clble to acquit ourselves of Uiis Christian obligation The Society for the Propagation of the Faith eXiSts For-those who desire to be where the action is or 110 be iIivOlvoom wOrld mission the Church pr0shy

claims her own essential inissionlU) character Indeed the Cburdl ill J4ission and therefore aD of 118 are truly missionaries

fa tills Yeai IaItIl we eaa testify to Gaefldl uieDt 04 om- ATatitade to God for the bleilldDc of faWt by ma~ bull aerIfiee te TIle Society for the PropapUOn 01 the Faith lor tile works of the Chureh ill the service Df tile poor and underprholshy~ed We eamaot be Uke our Master III the fWlness of HIs Dlvinit7 nor caD we hoPe to experienCe thelrlory of His Transfigmratio bat there lis ODe way ill whieh we eaa resemble Rim and that Is ~ beeomtitamp- a oervant to His poor aDd His UWe ODes throughshyout the world

The native celrgy is the ho~ of the Chureb in Mission lands Many youngmen have heard the can but are sadly turned away for lack of facilities and funds $250 will provide a year of semshyinary training $1500 will cover the cost of complete education to the priesthood Wont you help us to help them by sending your offering to The Society of st Peter the Apostle 366 Fifth Avenue New York N Y 10001

SALVATION AND SERVICE are the work of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith Please cut out this eolumn and send your offering to Right Reverend Edward T OMeara Nashytional Direetor 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or directly to yoUr loeal Diocesan DirectOr Rt Rev Msgr Raymond T Considine 361 Norib MaiD Street FaD IUver Massaelnuse~ts 03720

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THE ANOiOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 13Missouri Diocesan Board Pondersmiddot Closing Consolidating Schools

KANSAS CITY (NC)-Tbe 1H girls They would be abshyKansas City-8t Joseph diocese sorbed into the school popushyis exploring the possibility of lations of Lillis high school and closing some of its schools and st Theresas academy forming n larger area school Although 120 persons attendshy Extension Volunteers bull bull bullwhich could upgrade the qualshy ed the school board meetingity of education for all pupils they were not petmitted tp

At 0 school board meeting speakFather John P Cole supershyinJtenden~ of schools reported on L - shyPTA Bead Plotes~

the possibility of setting up 11 Make Life Wortl IVngA motion-passed unanimousshycentral area grade school in ly by the board-was made to

mid-town Kansas City The continue exploration into conshysingle school would serve the solidation of the schools Thispopulations of three existing was opposed by John J Mcshygrade schools Donough a representativeFather Cole also suggested the elected by the Catholic PTApossibility of closing Redempshy Federation who will be seatedtorist high school now serving as a board member in July

McDonough was permitted to $~[]7reg~ 2~ Ifreg[[~ take part in the discussion but

had no vote

~~ ~~[[U IT)J He protested against the defe3ltist clique who let our

WASHINGTON (NC)-Bishop schools get picked off one byPaul F Tanner newly named one He charged that TheOrdinary of the diocese of St New Peltlple - the diocesanAugustine Fla is onfy the newspaper members of the dishyfourth priest to serve as general ocesan school office officials of secretary of the United States the Missouri Catholic Confershybishops secretariat in the nearshy ence Kansas City pastors andmiddotly half-century of its existence other Church officials share in

Bishop Tanner was the last an anti-Catholic school recshygeneral secretary of NCWC the ordoriginal secretariat He was also the first general secretary of ODe Operation both of is dual suc~essors-tne

McDonough said that theNational Conferenceof Catholic school superintendent shouldBishops and the United States be goingmiddot to the state legislashyCatholic Conference The NCCB ture and Governor Hearnes tois the bishops agency for dealshydemand tax relief instead ofing with purely splritual matshyconsidering consolidation andters the USCC Is their secreshyclosing of schoolstariat for dealing with secular

affairs Father Colemiddot maJntained that The prelate has served in the the reorganization would not

U S bishops secretariat 28 represent a cutback The area years longer than any precedshy school would be able to opshying general secretary Born in erate out of one blilding to Peoria TII in 1905 and ordained serve three parishes It would a priestmiddot of the Milw~ukee archshy provide the same educational diocese in 1931middot he came to experience for the same number Washington in 1940 ~as assistant of students plus advantages director of the Youth Departshy Cooperation would make posshyment NCWC He ~as assistant sible a highly developed model general secretary from 1945 to school staffed by Sisters from 1958 and has been general secshy three communities retary since then He said it would be irresponshy

He is the first bishop to serve sible to run three operations at as secretary to the bishops secshy all costs when the diocese retariat could have one operation run

The NCWC (as Council and it more efficiently do a better Conference) had been in exisshy educational job and provide opshytence 47 years when it formally portunity for a better deployshywent out of existence at the anshy ment of personnel nual meeting of the bishops in November 1966 Bishop Tanner who had served in the secretashy Urge Germaruls riat for more than half those years supervised the transition To Aid Vietnam to two separate organizationsshy

BONN (NC) - Two Germanthe NCCB and the USCC cardinals and two churchshyDuring Bishop Tanners secshy related relief organizations have

retaryship and in testimony to FALL RIVER PROVINCETOWN AND WESTPORT GIRLS WITHappealed to the German people

the growth of the work handled to collect money and to prayby the bishops secretariat an NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF EXTENSION VOIL~NTEERS DURINGfor the people of Vietnamimpressive addition to the headshy A week beore Mardi Gral lt- quarters building here was Joseph Cardinal Frings of Coshy THEIR YEAR OF VOLUNTEER WORK erected in 1960 logne asked the Catholics of his

archdiocese to cut down on Mardi Gras festivities and to donate magnanimously to the needy people of Vietnam Coshy These young college graduates have given a I year of their logne has long been known for its ampigtectacular Mardi Gras celeshy professional life to God in service in the South and West Are brations Citing the bombing Of North you willing to give twelve months of yourmiddotyouth to othersVietnam the plight of women and children caught between opposing forc~middot in the $()ut~ and the great number of refushygees Cardinal Frings asked how Catholics could watch pictures of these gravely distressing si~

WHY NOT ENROll AS ANuations on television and ceieshybrate Mardi Gras with a quiet The Spirit oj

Extension Volunteer HELPER middot$200 oconscience Alfred Cardinal Bengsch Of Extension Volunteer PROMOTER $500 o

Berlin asked for prayers for Sacrifice Extension Volunteer SPONSOR $1000 or more opeace in the world in a letter to the clergy of his diocese in which specifically mentioned AMOUNT ENCLOSED $ Vietnam as a name meaning Perfectlyblood and death RT REV RAYMOND T CONSIDINE PAIn a joint appeal Caritas the German Catholic relief organishy PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH OFFICE zation of Germanys Evangelical 368 NORTH MAIN STREETExemplifiedLutheran Church has asked for fALL RIVER MASS money to send food Md medishy

BISHOP P~VL F TANNU cine to the Children of Vietnam o

(-14 THf ANCHOR-Diocese of FaR Rfver-Th~rs Feb-29 1968 Two Objectives Jersey to Rehabilitate Young OffendersTells Jesuatts Engage in Deliberate

Help Increasing Spanish Group Attempts at lExperimentation UNION CITY (NC) - Two Hudson County Jan and in theST LOUIS (NC)-Deliber- carries its own reward he said area interfaith clergy groups youth house in Secaucus

iide attempts at experimenta- Now we must undertake new here in New Jersey are planning Father ThomasJ Murtha oftion with a readiness to accept forms some of which have a

joint action on the plightf West New York was named toall the risks that may be in- good chance to flop JIliserably youthful offenders housed m investigate means of setting UJltvolved were proposed for the An expert at the Second VatshyHudson County correctional in- a rehabilitation program t4ilSociet of Jesus at the close of ican Council Father Campion stitutions and to seek federal function after the release ~ III three-day session here on believes that the work of the assistance in meeting the needs youthful offendersbulllesuit renewal council has not yet begun to of Cuban refugeesFather Donald R Campion be absorbed within the Church

The joint session was held by The ~o groups will send a18J stressed at the renewal as a whole the North Hudson Clergy Coun- delegatIOn toWashIngton to askQession and in an interview This is not because it hasnt cU based here and the Chris- ~hat the area be declared anthat the Jesuits have both the been publicized enough or beshy tian Clergy United a West New Impacted area under the Cuban manpower and the resources to cause people havent read Y k Refugee Act and therefore beshy

engage in the type of expeii- enough or bishops havent talkshy or ~ro~p come eligible for special federal mentation which could serve ed enough he said But Vati shy A meetmg WIll be s()~ght WIth aid There are some 00000 tQdays Church Father Cam- can II opened up more areas the Hudson County Boar~ of Spanish~speakingpeople now m pion a sociologist and theolo- to discussion than it resolved Chosen Freeholders in an effort rth gian was recently named editor Among the sleep~rs in to establish a bettez climatefoi the ~o Hudson area and they cd America magazine council documents CIted by therehabiUtation of youthful continue to arrive at the rate of

Another speaker Fat her Father Campion was the conshy offenders now housed intne 200 to250 a month ~ 1 _

Avezy Dulles SJ stressed that cept of participation within the ~ doubt is a valuable and even Church Father Campionmiddot said lI1ecessary experience for the he believes collegiality is the Wide E~perience Christian in todays world most developed aspect in this

Fathers Campion and Dulles area and that some organization QU(lJD~ies Nu_ were two of the six main speak- has been given to it through the

UNITED- NATIONS (NC)ers at the closed meeting Some establishment of piie~ senates ltHQWCom pie t e devotion to theSSO Jesuits including 50 from But unless the idea of parti shyworlds needy children seemsCilutside the St Louis areaat-cipation is really the basis senshy a weighty task for a petite nun TDgtKEEPtended the sessions ates can become orgimizational

Father Campion said that Jes- gimmicks he said but a conversation with Sister Ullits as a group must face the Father Dulles discussing themiddot Kathl~eri Kelly MMmiddot provides LENmiddotTreassularice middotthat 20 years of make a significant contribution Church said ~ an interview diversified experience fact that their work should existence of doubt in todays

more to modern times that we have a radically differ- than qualifies her for the role

QUI IXIDPYFATHER lI MISSION jlUDTG me fllRlfaNTAL CHURCH

In the area of education It calIS for recasting the ex- wide Cath)lic charities organishy Need New Formula ent world view than in the past Caritas Internationalis worldshy

With the slason of Lent comes the qu~ionFather Campion called for con- pressions of the Christian messhy zation recently appointed Sisshy How can I beSt keep Lentl The answer ~s ~sideration of whether we are sage in terms of contemporary as observerter Kathleen its must make sacrifices on our own and nothing ISproviding the educational struc- knowledge if the message is to to the U N International GOOD III sacrifice unfess it hurts Whatwill be yo~rture for the new world have the impact it should Childrens Emergency Fun d WHIEN sacrifice bullbull Just think of the misslonlllne~ InIn the intellectual area Look Criticanny (UNICEF) Caritas Internationshy ITlf our 18 emerging countries who keep Lent allrather Campion noted that to- Doubt is not a bad thing he alis is one of 75 international HUmS year long Sacrifice something big this ye~rday more is needed than popu- said People should be looking and non-government organizashy When helping others hurts a bit you know you va larization of theology and phil- critically at the traditional forshy tions (NGOS) which enjoy conshy made a sacrifice()Sophy In a way we need a mulas and seeing what is revelashy sultative status with UNICEF whole new formula for making tion and what is a culturally

They represent oJer 4000csense of the world and life he conditioned formula which is affiliated private and non-profitfSaid now demanding reform

We should have men devoted Such adaptations are iD no organizations in more than 100 oOn his recent-trip through India 1V0~signor nations with a combined memshy Nolan saw priests and Sisters subSisting onto this single problem Their way a compromise of faith bership running into millions ounces of rice each day so they can share what own inner resources of security Father Dulles said We never they have with lepers and orphans $10 will feedmust be yery strong because to hear the divine message except Interviewed at the United Nashy FEED a family for several weeks at least $50 will feed

facethat kind of change is not III in terms of humans he said tions Sister Kathleen spoke of THE five families $100 ten families bullbullbull Only $975popular thing The Word of God comes her new rol~ at the international HUNGRY gives a priest 11 two-acre mode~ 18nn toraise

Council Opened Areas through man it is alW9YS tem- level and described how it his own food and teach his parishioners how to Father Campion said the can pered by man and it is this con~ evolved from her past activities raise more food Archbishop MalJ Gregorioa will

for experimentation W9S not ditioning which must change wrltetlo thank youI was in California andbased on inadequate work of Father Dulles said one value worked for 10 years in familyJesuits at the present time and of the death-of-God movement eounseling in the juvenile court IlJ Enable ~ girl to become a Sister For 41tl bullthat fact is part of the problem for Catholics is to shake _ I1tA1N day ($1250 a month $150 bull year $300 aleill foster lare and in otherMany times we have been suc- out of taking an uncritical with sa~ A together) you can pay In full fer her two-yeaIwork children sheeessful and being successful static view of God training have 8 Sister of your awnInthe last five years I moved SISTER

oat to community development and civil rights I was a member o For only $a5O a week ($10 a month $120 bull

year) you can make surethat an abandonedJesuit Seminarian Leads Campaign of a district council in bull San HELP Francisco - which subsequently A child has food clothing a blanket and love bullbullbull IAgainst Home Contract Firms was declared a poverty CHILD wen send you a photo of the boy or silt )011area

adoptCHICAGO (NC) - A Jesuit borne than its current market During my years there I waa Rminarian has launched a camshy value a member of the Catholic Intershy o Our priestS will offer promptly the Massespaign here against contractshy Following the exodus of racial Council and when I came MASSES you request Doyou wish to remember a loved holders of homes sold to Negro Lawndales white residents in back from Selma (she was on fOR one this Lent Your Mass offerings are usuallyfamilies at allegedly exorbitant the late 1950s thousands of of the persons selected to repshy LENT the only Incole our priests overseas receiverates homes were purchased by vari shy resent the archdiocese of san

Jack Macnamara SJ who ous bankS mortgage loan and Francisco in the Alabama civil o Enroll yourself your family and friends InlIives and works in nearby real estate companies at low rights march) I was appointed this Association You will be helping Pope Paul Lawndale is acting withthe ap- prices and then resold on conshy to serve on the Human Rights

JOI~ in one of his most ambitious and heartfelt works proval of his Jesuit superio~ tractto Negro families atofteIi - Commission by the mayor of THIS while sharing In the blessings of thousands of

Nacnarnara and a dozen supshy ~lImON Masses (The offering for one year is $2 perdouble the original purchase San Francisco the nun stated porters including several other price the leaflet reported She was the first nun ever apshy person $10 for a family perpetual membership Jesuit seminarians picketed the Paid Race Tax ltpOinted to any kind of~~yt is $25 per person $100 for a family) Chicago address of one investshy Macnamara said these conshy inJSan Fraidsco _

Iment company which holds title tracts should be renegotiated at

~ several homes sold on conshy the most recent FHA appraisal tract to Negroes Pickets dis- price ~ If I1t e SAiliNGS

tributed leaflets explaining the c2J 0 dJ ~ t~~ year SYSTEMATICThe issuemiddot here is moral rathshypurpose of their campaign er than legal he declared Th~ MONTHLY DEPOSITS

The leaflet cites the case of III law does not provide a remedy II tfMltIa fNVE$iMENyhome purchased by an investshy for the type of injustice that is d) aV~ J((~ year SAVINGSment company in January 1959 operative in this contract

for $13000 and then three NOTICE ACCOUNTSThousands of Negroes inmonths later sold on contract to Chicago are suffering from this a Negro buyer for $23000 450 ar ~~~~

It states the investment corn continued ~In effect they paid pany received $2000 as a down II race tax of approximately

type of injustice Macnamara

BCJs~ liverpayment on thiS contract whic~ $10000 when they bought their stipulated that middotthe balance was homes because it was impossishy SavonJs Bonkflo be paid over 20 years at sevshy bleto obtain mortgages 4Il per cent interest at the rate This is a striking example of BanI By Mail of $20140 each month how our legal system does notmiddot We Pay The Postage

Last December it reported a adequately protect black people Federal Housing Administration or poor people he said It appraisal on this home listed its stems from the fact that the law bull YARMOUTH SHOPP8NC PUll value at $15025 This means it aims at protecting property inshy bull SOUTH UltMOm bull HYANJIISexplained that the Negro buyer stead of persons And this helpl bull DENNIS PlmRT bull OSTFllVIUlIII paying $8000 more for tbe bull cause urbaJl unreal

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THO middotCATHDLIC NEAR EAST WELFRIASSOCIATION

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 ltI

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Home Missions Collection in Your Church-March 3 19611

16 THE ANC )~-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968

New St LouimiddotsArchbi~hcp

PrOmilnent in Ecumen~$m Archbishop Jonh J Oarberry of St Louis well known

~()ng Oatholic leaders after 31 career that has taken him from a seminary classroom iii his natiYe Brooltl~ NCY~ to one of the nations MOse ~mpOOtallt archdiolaquoese1l is pershy

laaps evenmiddot better ~ownmiddot fJDlong Americas nom-Cafu6shylie religious leaders fon hisl work in ecumenism Cllair Ilillao of the Bishqps Commi~ee-Ibr Ecumenical and Intenrefi shyaious Affairs since th~ resigna Qion of Baltimores Lawrence Cardinal Shehan in November 11965 Bishop Carberry has au I9gtCrvised the massive catholic illllvoIvement in ecumeniCal ac-middot lli1 vities

He outlined his own entIliusishyeuroISm for ecumenism in a speech ~iven in January 1966 tolmemshy~rs of the Ohio (Protestant) lPastors Convention wheDI he aid

Common lHeritagel For years the general policY

(llln the Catholic Church) had ~en to stress the great chasm

which divides the euroatliolic Church and other Christian ehurches No effort was made m would seem on our part to Illave a meeting of minds A otudy of documents would seem ltD reveal that while we wera lbrayerfully disposed to) the ltecumenical movemerit nevershy1lheless the Catholic Church did lliittleto foster it

Bishop Carberry told the conshyvention that through the grace 0f God and the leadership or Pope John XXIII we became aware of the common heritage Which is ours

Has Great lHope

We began to realiZe~ how 18aptism unites us in ChriSt to Gee that the divinity of Christ is illhe cornerstone of all Christianshynay we began to real1ze the oommon treasure which we llnave in the Sacred Scripturesllikewise the common bondshyVhich exists with us in the

1lIIlissionary activities at the Church

There is great hope Bishopltearberry said that mrougb ~ialogue through prayerbull 1llluough respect for each others wiewpoint the grace of God may (i)Ile day in Gods divine provishy4llence bring about the- unitY which Christ prayed for at themiddot Last Supper

More recently members of ltOhios Protestant cliurches llllamed the bishop as OniosPbsshyoLr of Pas-tors the fl rst timmiddote hat bull

Grants Permis$ioll~

for SaturdayMass) SAN ANGELO (NC)-BiShop

Thomas TSchoepe of San Angelo lllas announced that the diocesan request for the Saturday Mass flaculty hagt been granted In the future the Sunday Mass 00shyltigation may be met by at shy~ndance at a Saturday aftershyllloon or evening Mass The pershylll1ission has been granted on an ~xperimental basis by the Vati shylttan for a period of five years

The diocese of San Argelo is 1lI Texas missionary diocese the bishop explained and there are areat dis tan c e s between churches and few priestswmiddot oerve the faithfuh ManYi ~llieSts

have two or morlt8 churclies tJ lllttend and will Be able- tQ give more time to the smaller ~urches with the Satucday Mass faculty Bishop TschoePe pointedi 9Ut Chat the faculty has been giVeth bull the whole diocese not just Ibo individual churches or areas Pastors who wish to make Usemiddot aJl the faculty must make formal application to the chancery ofshyillce

a~ statewide Protestant onganiza tion has presented its highest awa-rd 10 a eatho1iir clet1gymam A pla~J1e symbollZiDg the a~adi was~ glv~~ to the blShp at ~~~ Fenw~nIP Blmq~et on the Olbo PastollSgt ~onventi~m

DI~USS P~tilems U~dev Blsli~p~rlgte~rysl~d

er~hlPl laquoatholic ~elegations have ~et wl~h ~fflC1Blsbull and

tleolbglan~ of other- ChrIs~an churchesmiddot to dlSCUSS ecumemcal pooble~s r~~gmg from the pr~sshyence of Christ Ill tlie ~ucharlst to th-c nature of we prJes~ood

Before ta~mg cliarge of th Golumbusmiddot dIOcese on March 25 1965) Bishop euroarbery liadmiddot selved asmiddot coadjutor bishop and then bishop of Eafayette Ind Born in Brooklynj N~ Y Tulymiddot 31 1904 Bishop Carberry studied for the priestlioodi at Brooklyns Cathedral College or the Iin-middot maculate laquool1ception from 191ll to 1924 and at the North Amershyican College in Rome from 1924 to 1930

Oldained inmiddot Rome in 1929 tne bishop sfudiea canon law at the Catholic University of America in Washington D G and taught at Immaculate Conception Semshyinarl until Tune 1935 when he went on ldan to the diocese of Trenton N J He returned to BrooklYn in 1940 where hemiddotreshymained until being named coshyadjuror bishop of Lafayettemiddot in 19651

~~~5IiTI$ nUilft~U[jTIfi)

Ccopy]JJi]dIT [Qjfr[~lcopy[j

CHICAGO (NC) - Tohn A McDllrmott has changed me mindL-he1li remain as execu middot tivedirector of the Chicago Cat1iolic Interracial Council

The veteran council worKer last October announced he would leave the office to beshy

come Mridwest regional- ciVil rightsdirector for the ms De-middotmiddot partment of Health Enucation andi Welfare

A number of problems hava arisen since th-e announcement on my appointmentt last 0ctbBerwhichl caused me to have serl

ousmiddot second l thoughts MilDer moW said iil his decision to re~ maio with the ltlrc He citedi m1 patrtcular~ personnel cutliaclts in HEW wJiich woulli Iiinit the Midwest negional operatiiul

fo accepting McDermotits de cisionj HEW the government agency requestedi liiin to serve asmiddot ai special chdl- rights consuU ant while working for the CIC and he a~reed

IIlt a letter to the Dutch biINumber of Fllel71ch ops members of Michaels re-

gion asked for curbs on the nlgtshySeminarians Dllops tions Catliolic liberals The PARIS (Ne)-Thenumber of meeting also registered disap-

French seminarians h~s dropped proval of the new Dutch Cateshyby about 180 a year for the last chism~ claiminJ~ that it does nocent four years according to 1iigures represent true Catholic teach~ provided in amiddot press conference Michaels Lel~ion is considered by Bishop Jean Sauvage 011 ampshy even more CJlnservative thlW necy member of the bishops Confrontation another Catholic commission on the clergy and conservative organization Conshyseminaries frontations complaints about

For the 1967~68 sc1iolastic the content of the new Dutch year the tdtal number of sliumiddot catechismmiddot are believed to hae dents iil major seminaries m been instTllmentai in having tbe~ FhlOce is 43583 comparedl with book exltlmined by the VatiCan~lJ

4536 for the previous year Doctrinal Congregation 4722 )n 1965-66 and 4953 in 1964-65

Moreover in France at pres- Approves Agency eol ttiere are aBout 200 adults LQND()N (NC)--Jolin Cardl~

WIIO are preIgtaring for tOe ~er nal Heenan of Westminster liJaa manent diaconate as restored by approveq establishment ocf 1m the Second Vatican Council The agency to help priests who want first ordinations to this permashy 10 leave the priesthood znGl nent diaconate could take place nuns who want to leave the this year religious life

1P~alrn le~tUlm~1rn~~G~

$1lll~7 GG1l I1DtJ Sim LONDON (NC)-A study on

the problems of ecumenism in Great Britain will be made by a joint working group of the British Council of Churches and the Caholic Church with the results to be reported next Autumn

The study was planned at a meetingmiddot held atmiddot the Vita et Pax Benedictine I~onvent and attendshyed by nine Catholic representashytives an- 14 representatives of the BeC -

The projected study is exshypected to analyze such topics an the extent I)f cooperatiGn beshytween Catjwlics and members of the BeC the dialogUes bemg held theologicaL differences and the non~theological obstacles to closer unitygt

Auxiliary BishoJ- Langton Fox of lfenevia Wales and

Auxiliary Bishop Basil Chrisshytopher Butlelr OSB of Westshyminster headed tOe CatOolie delegation at the meeting

~(i]$~~rlaquolJpoundfr1) A$1k lMl~illlW) ~ltoy~ IHh~)~Dnd

U11RECHm (NC) -Michaels Legion an organization of Dutch Catholic~ uaditionalists has sent a telegram to Pope Pault H ungintg him tD protect essential orthodoxy and to S81fe tne DutchChurch~

At 3- meeting here attended b~ some 600) Catholic conserva tives led by Eouis Knuvelder the legion condemned the Dutch Catholic daily press the~ Dutch Gatholic tellvisioncompany and the countrys Catholic radio station for being too progressive

Father Baum Regards Ecumenical Center Closing Sign of Success TORONTO (NC)-The closing gian Charles Davis-A Quesshy

of the Center for Ecumenical tion of Conscience Davis book Studies at St Michaels Collegegt exmiddotplains his renunciation of the here is a sign of the centersmiddot euroatholic priesthood and the success Church and asks Catholic theo-

This is the viewpoint of Father logians who intend to stay in GregllllY Ballm O~SA founder the~ eurohurch to reply to several of tJie centeI1 who has an- t1iaologjcal points nQunlaquoed that it will b~ Closed BelUef Unbelief

inl JUne Thats what Im doing FatlieJJBaum-explalnedthalhe Fatller Baum said His book a

founded the centeJ ill 19631 when replYJ to Davis questions conshyecum~llusrn may have~ been a ceming the credibility of the new Idea Its purpose lie- s~ld Church in todays world will be was to promote ecumemcall called The Credibility of the studies at St Michaels Church Today It will be pub-

Taday he neports ecumen mal stlUdi~s at S1l Michaels are a reality- 1lli~ schGolls theology depal1tment 18 fully mte~ ~thl Protestant and ~gIIcan lfupartmentsmiddot at the-Umversity

of Toronto [hUB lie said~ the eC-lmenical

centell has fulfilled its purpose Such fUlfillment he said wmiddot

common in academic circles where there has been an ecushymenlical reVOlution For exam pIe ne said where once som1shyone might have nied to foster ecumenism through building an ecumenical library it is now impossible tq build a theological lilgtrary without its being ecushymenical

Need flDZ Programsmiddot Father Baum added that he

does not believe tJie ecumenical movement has reached fruitien in circles outside the academia world~ He said that he sees a real need pound01 formal ecumenmiddot ical programs on the parish and on all levels of the Churdl which have not yet been reached He a150 disclosed that perSOll ally he lias moved Gn frOlll ecumenism to new fields of thought

The AuIDlStinian has written a new book in answer to the latest by the English theolo-

U[[$ W)jf[rll IfSMsjIID~

rnliJ kUD-WIh ol 1TW[jiJ KETTERING (Neuro) - The 1-7shy

member parish board 00 St Charles Church~ here unanishymousll1 adopted a resolution 5 favor Qf open nousing legiSlashytion for thiS (1)hio suburban community

The parish boards action S~ poIied- unequivocallymiddot passage 0amp an open housing ordinance in themiddot virtuallr aUi-wltite commw-middot nity 00l more than 600001 res dents Tames J Gilvay and Peter Donanue attOrneys anlL pariBhlmiddot boarc members pre sentedthe resolutJoDj wliiclli tbok- themiddot position that the ghett) condit1ollG ~Ilichl Negroes enshycure ilm nearby DaYton are mshyiuriOwil to the entire commUlshyDitTmiddot

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Aftei tee closing of the Center for Ecumenical Studies Father Baum will stay on at St MishychaeFs au a professor of theolshyogy He is also planning another ~~

It will concentrate on the idea oi God in modern thought and will be a clear sign that Father Baum has moved away from his prime in terest in ecumen- ism

Born of Jewish parents in Berlin and reared as an agnostic Father Baum said he has now turned his whole thought to the study of belief and unbelief He will record his findings in me book he is now writing

~oh~ laquotmm~~litl ~Od1[9)

[~ Ao~ i N~regIJ$ CAMDEN (NC) - Bishop

Tames L Schad administrator of the Camden diocese was =ong citizens honored here foT their efforts in furthering the interests of the Negro comshymunity

Bishop Schad who has been active in community action projects such as the War on Poverty committees was pre sented a scroll during a proshygram sponsored by the Tenth Street Baptist church here in observance of the 43rd annual Negro History Week This year marks the first time a Romaa Catholic prelate has been so honored

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17 Oppose Church Clergy Participation in Politics

By Jsgr George G Higgins

The New RepubJic-whIch in this writers judgment W one CYl the be3t of Ameriros weekly journals of opinion especially hl it3 arovezoage cfcurrent economic and political developments----thinks that the time has com~ for anti shyVietnam clergymen aul1ayshy Be that as it maY I am ioshymen to translate tu1eir cVZl clined to think that the editors m0r81 indignation oveuror Vietshy of the French periodical Inforshynam into effective political mations Catholique InternashyDction inasmuch as this is the tionales make considerably only way to effect long-term more sense than the editors cOf ehanges in the The New Republic 011 this issue policies of this of clerical involvement in the country So far so-called politics of peace as laymen are Though they are vigorously concerned this and unqualifiedly opposed ~il

would seem to tW war in Vietnam and like be a self - evishy tWeditors ()f The New Repubshydent proposition li( clearly recognize that the L1s perfectly establishment of leace in the obvious t hat world is a political problem concerned layshy which calls for the active mshymen ou~ht to volvement ofChcistians as ~-en

translate their as all other men of good will moral indi~nashy they do not think that themiddot tion over Vietnam - or any cleJgy who are responsible foy other significant issue of public the unity of the Church should policy-into effecti-re poiiticltll be expected to take on the role

of party politiciansaction Given the fact that their pubshySound Tradition

lication ~CI has been oJe 01 tileOn the other hnd I aJl Evt most outspoken European critics

sure understandthat I fully or of U S involvement in Vietnam completely agree vitb The New and one of the most vigorousRepublic when it says that fue advocates middotof a politics of peaceclergy ought tncv likewise their warning against the parshy

Traditionally a the NR itself ticipation of the clergy in parshypvints out the clergy-in this tisan politics is highly signifi shycountry at least - have rnied cant and deserves to be taken amy from such participation very seriously (Christians and

AJJ a long-time subscriher to the Struggle ior Peaee InforshyT~2 New Republic I had Dlshy mations Catholique Internashyways been under the imp~ssio~ tionales Jan 15 1965)that its editors thought that en Fl lialgs lrindplebalance this was a sound tradishy

Those American Catholicstion Apparently lwweer I was who may happen to have a speshy

cial interest in the pros and consmistaken in this regard fora of this highly controversial issuerecent Nell Republic editorial will also want to read whatnoten with satisfaction that Hans Kung has to say about itAJlerican clerGYmen now apshy

pear to be ready in large numshy in his forthcoming bookThe Churchbers to get involved at a preshy

cinct level and to play C1l Father Kung has lectured exshyactivist role in both parties tensively throughout the United (Clergy in Politics The New SUItes in recent years and is

currently with us again as a visshyRepublic Feb 17 1968) iting professor at Union Theoshy

QuestioIS Meaning logical Seminary in New York What does this mean in pracshy Seen in the light of the Gosshy

tical terma Does it mean that pel le writes in his new book ministers rabbis and priests the relntionshipof the Church should endorse ltor oppose) parshy to the world contains only one ticular candic1ates fqr politiell essential aspect its ministry 10 office starting at the precinct the world level Does it mean that they Ministry does not mean raisshythemselves should run for ofshy ing ones voice or putting an -oar flee if only as a last reiort in all secular qIes1ions middotof ecoshy

If so does it also mean that nomic political sodaI middotcultural other clergymen should run artistic and scientific life against them if they happen to T1e Churchclmnot solve disagree with what they stand the greJt problems of the ()rld for Or does it mean toot only neiih2r the problell1of hunger those clergymen who are anti shy nor that of the populaticn nor Administration should get inshy that of war nor thlt oanonFmshyT-olved at a precinct leel and ity of power Dor that -of race play an activist role within hatred What the Church both parties can do can be expressed quite

Sicnifieani WarnlDI simply in one phrase it must I have raised these questions exist for the world

lot to make light of The New ACrefS With lFTK1mgRepublics editorial CD the subshyject under discussion but Anyone who hal ever baG the merely to BUggest that clerical pleasure of meeting Faiher involvement ill partisan politics Kung middotor is familiar wi1bhis over the issue of Vietnam is at writings will know witheut best a rather tricky business being told that be is not a hawk and will almost inevitably lead and that he is cot advocating to certain consequences which a policy of Christian withdrawal upon further reflection even the from the world editors of The New Republie middotOn the eontrary be stroniJy might eonceivably wish tc foreshy favors lhe all-ltltit involvement tall of Christians in temporal affairs

and notably iii the ~lities Of peace

To Speak in Boston Nevertheless be does net Rev Anthony T Padovano think that the institutienal

Church-and its clerical minisshySTD theology professor at ters-should pretend that theyImmaculate Conception Semishy

nary Darlington N J will speak have all the answers tc the problems of the worldia the Christian Culture lecture

aries sponsored by the Paulist And neither eoes be thinkshyFathers at 815 Wednesday night if I read him correctly-that tbe March 6 in John Hancock Ha)) clergy in ~ exeTeise of their Boston Tickets are available mission of peace should get inshyfrom 5 Park Street Boston volved in partisan jl)olities Nor 02108 do L

WOKS LIKE FUN Yes but listen to what it requires The Georgetown University erew keeps in s-hape with ~

AM ~i~enies in the gym foHow~ by a two-niile run UJl and do-Wll Observatory Hil~on tJhecampus Its cold up there said Dave Harris a member of the lightweifht crew but by then youlewtired you do-nt care NC Phottgt

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 ~ 968

Prayer for Peace To Cm(O)se Games

MEXICO CITY (NC) - All ecumenical prR)er for peaCf) service is being planned for the end of the 19th Olympic Gam~

here next October The sponsor of the service w shy

the Ecumenical Commission fcrr Religious Services (ECRS) fe the Olympic Games The comshymission is composed of 73 ChrisshytiRn and Jewish leaders in thi~

city Promment spiritual leadshyers will be invited to speak

At middot8 meeting here the rn ECRS spiritual leaders discusse~

the facilities for athletes and visitors to attend their varioU7J reUgious services

iI1be iMC)Cican government hw aPPI)o~ed ECRS plans for the ~ction of at least tw- JaIige bullclings as nondenonYshynational chapels

The original pIlan toeonstrl1ell one large church has been IcHsshytlarded The present plan is build one large building with no religious I)rnamentllJtion of alltl7 kind on the outskirts of the Olympic Villa and a similar Oilif)

on tne outskirts of the Olympze

Project InterracialInterfaith Cooperation Cultural Villa

tin (Re~~(Jtion of CcUege m addition Archbishop MEshymiddotgut Dario MirlllDda y Gomez Gl

1I1IAMI (NC)~When Florida The Rev Edward T Graham Mexico City hBs authorizeQ Memorial College predominant a Baptist minister key person downtown Catholic churches to ly Negro middotliberal arts school is behind the project has had asshy permit non-Catholic services = moved here frOl1l St Augustine sistance from Mrs Athalie their premises if non-Catholie and opens next September the Range Miamis first NeglO City comgregations should request i project will be the result of unshy Commissoioner who is a Cathshyusual interracial and interfaith olic teamwork Organhzet3 rOthEHSIl

The largest single contribll shyNegroeswhites and Chinese tiou of private funds has oome flainirt~ ClI1ter

have joined hands with Cathoshy from a supermarket executive lLOUISVILLE (NC) - TkeIlics Protestants and Jews tv M Austin Davis a Methodist Franciscan Conventional OrdGcontribute money time advice laiamis Catholic Bishop Coleshy has opened a Brothers Trainincand leadership to realize the

manF Carroll is a member vl1 Center here in an attempt to givedevelopment of the college on l the advisory board as is Maushy Brothers three years of active$10 million complex here rice Ferre diocese of Miami lay apostolic work following theirr leader novitiate

RabbiIrving Lehrman presshy Father Sebastian Cunnil1flshyCouncil Seores ident cd the Greater Miami ham OFM director of tlw Rabbinical Association a n 4ll OOlilter said We felt we haCFactory Closing Jewish lay leaders are amoag an cbligation to give our man

LONDON (NC-The impend- active workers oome training outside contam ing elosingof a large industricl $ bull $ an idea of what was neeclshyJilseph Rodriguez of the plant has been criticized by ~ edfromthem in the outside Puerto Rican Democratic ChEb lay -eouncil of Our Lady Of _rl11 In the past he addeeurohas prepared 11 scholarship PieshyGrace parish in southeast Lsnshy we were not fWfilling ~ gram for -the collegedCD DeedS 1d ~veryoneliturgy

The council expressed its deep concern at the recent No Comlmentclosure of factories in middotthis area Completean4 in particular of the impendshy VATICAN (orry (NC)-Ibe ing shutdown of the Associ2ted Vatican had no comment -oJ1 11

ElectricaIIndustries (AEI) plant repolt that ~hbishop Agostincgt BANKING Casaroli secretary for extraershyIt callid upon the governmeJrt dinary ecclesiastical affairs ilf SERVICEand the -ehaiTmanof the oomshy the Papal Secretariat of statepany torevsrse the decision 10 eonterred with Dlembers of ~

c~ don the plant because Of tor BristOl CountyN-orth Vietnamese missi-on iJJthe middotmoral religious and 5Ocial Parisjn lJanuarylt n JUWWampleffeets iCaiJS2a by the ~veshythat Archbishop Casaroli Wallmen1 a1popl1ation absent from the Vatican fOll

Copies ltOf the councils motion several days nlenUy BrjstoICounty were sent 1amp Prime ~1inister

Harold Wilson MiJiister of Trust Company Labor RayJ Gunter President ampf the Board of Trade Douglas Sturteant (

TAUNTO~ MASSJay and company officials iHoOkAlthough the councils action was a surprise to the pastel Ed 1897 IIHE BANJ(ONFather Joseph seally AA ~ uiltl~rs SUppJies JAUNTONGRHNprist sroa that he agreed ith it ftll3 Purchase Street Member 01 Feileral ~

Faiher 8enlly sait[ centbert Aellad iNew Bedford IDsuranee CorporaamptoDJlOt~cteil p01itiealand elaquolshy 996-5661 nomic motions to eome from the council but pointed out You cannot separate Feligimtl from eveJ~ay life

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968 Capacity Audience at Holy Name Parish ~ihss

My Consciesect1ce Discusses The J)etached Americans In Educ~tion Continued from Page One

Do we care -for knowledge

what happens to other people Why do we strive for college educations or for money Are we so anxious to confor~l1 that we never dare to PITTSBURGH

tMrI

~VJI and it must be understood in a

t mear-cu way

A person following his ~con-~ence must be sincere He cannot play games with his mind but must be honest with himself

A person foilowing his con~ liCience must be correct It iSl10t ugh that he sincerely beshy~ Reves that something is good or evil-he must be sure that hiS judgement is a correct one

agrees with Gods view of the matter

Sometimes people make misshytakes in judgement-honest misshytakes to be sure but mistakes iwnetheless The oft-quoted exshyample is that of the African savshyrage deep in the jungle who may be sincerely following his con- ooience when it tells him to kill omd eat his enemy His conshyscience is a sincere one But it~ Is a mistaken one since it does IIlOt agree with Gods Will He ond every person must c~m-

liitantly review his judgements to lbe sure that they are correct ones and riot sincere mistaken Utes

A person following his conshy3Cience must be certain He can not act with doubt or uncertainshy~ about the rightness or wrong- mess of an act since he would be Announces Prize acting with the willingness to

takea cpance on being wrong For Best Plan ~ offendi~g God and this is aever~ validmiddot If there is uncer- PITTSinJRqH (NC)-Bishop t8inty the person must seek aid John J Wright of middotPittsburgh III arriving at a sure and correct haS annoutc~d il priz~ of$IOOOtor professor ina p1inor semshy tudgementmiddot - formiddot the architect who submitsmiddoth be I f - inary chapiainof a school dishyThe Christian acts with amiddotcon- ~ e st p an or a Jliljgtr renoshy ocesan chancellor and finally

lllilence ~rned by the prlnciples vation of the sanctuary of St vicar general tilChrlst This is where tliEi Pa~l~ cath~middot~al_h~remiddot~T~~e ~om- The P6pe a~o nam~d Father

aturchsteachers the Pope Iiiid P~tit~o~ IS ~p~nmiddot ~omiddotal archJtec~ Bienvenido TudtiJdto be auxil- a message toAfrica and a mes ishops ~nfer middotthe pi~ture to wl~hlD ~e bound~~l~~s~f the iary bishop of Dumaguete in the sage ~lling for peaCe

Illelp men make judgementsmiddot thatmiddot lire guided by Christ Sometimes ~ese j~dge~eptsgo a~intitmiddotnat-middot lIIIa1 inclinations and tendencies md this has always been thedif-

~ti~ty of ~ing a Christian-- Ghrist demands much of His llmiddotowmiddotmiddotermiddots middot IIIU

At present Catholics are askshyiDg tlie Pope to make a morai judgement about birth control d especlmiddotallymiddot the PlmiddotUmiddot Some_lire castigating him for not givshy g a qulck declslon or else they lliie telling people to forget about llrim and to make their own adgeme tsmiddot th ttmiddot w- n m e ma er The Pope in order to make a ilecision must make it on the basis of facts Scientists must provide him with the facts and In this matter there is much that k~epinglVith the general lin~s sition in favor I)f open housing complex The Pope has asked and is still asking theologians to evaluate the scientific facts in 4he light of Christian principles Not all moral issues are simple And then the Pope will apply the principles to the facts and 1ril1 make a decision about the morality of the matter

This will guide the Catholic in fllorming his conscience -- in arshyriving at a judgement that is sipcere that is the correct orie at lS artmiddot d t d ce am JU gemen anthatmiddot is Christian

K of C Convention 51ated for Houston

lAN MARCOS (NC) The

1970 national convention of the ~ights of Columbus will be held in Houston it was an-Bounced here at a conference of Texas officers of the interna- _ tional fraternalorder

The announcement of the seshylection of Houston for the con- v~ntion which will be held in

be different These were among questions discussed by a capacity audience at the second in a series on Christian Morality sponsored by the parish council of Holy Name Church Fall River Sparked by Sisshy

John AIIcIa SUS Cter some 30 people from all parts of themiddot Diocese viewed the film The Detached Amerishycans then broke into small groups for buzz sessions

Thesis of the film was that Americans wont become in volved with each other It dra- matically pointed its message with the true story of Kitty

Genovese murdered on a New York Street while 38 of her neighbors watched ffom winshy

bull dowS-o--and did nothing Also depicted were amarried

couple talkingto each other with neither really listening a student going thriugh school as on an assembly line with his sole goal the position he could

hope for as a college graduate and various other examples of non-involvement

What is life worth if we do not give it away questioned Harry Reasoner at the end of the film The Holy Name audishyence agreed that life sbould be

used for others but tended to feel that there wasnt the im-Personalitv in a smailer city

Jthat is found in a large metropshyolis One Sister countered howshyever with stories brought to

h t htschool by children s e aug This is right in Fall River she stressed Others cited examshypIes of personal involvement in affaIrs of others but agreed that much more could and

Pope I~aul Names Two Aluxiliaries VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VImiddot hail named Msgr Jose T Sanchez to be auxiliary bishop of Caceres in the Philipshypines He takes the titular See of Lesvi

Msgr 5anlhez was vicar genshyeral of Legazpi at the time of his nomination

He was born March 17 1920 atPandan in the Legazpi dioshycese He completed his philoshysophical and ordinary theologishycal studies at the diocesan semshyinary and obtained a licentiate in theology at the University of St Thomas in Manila He was ordained Marc~ 12 1946 and then worked as an assistant passhy

Pltts~urgpchap~er9rmiddottl~e Afner- ~ Philippines Father Tudtud who Pope Paul also delivered 264 ~can -Inst~tUtofAlth~te~ts was36ye~~I)]fat ~hcent time ~fsPeeches bull (~~)_(h~ch mclud~~ ~tIePoit~- his noniinatiOJl studied philos- burgb dlO~es~and three adJa-ophy and theology at St Johns

c~nt countIes SeminarY inmiddotBoston Fath~r roseph P- Larkin He was born March 22 1931

eOm~ission chaiIm~nmiddot ili1(I-a at Mabola inmiddotthe Cebu arch~ member of the diQcesan bU~lll- diocese He worked as assistant - bullbull

iIg commissligtn~ said the pur- pastor Editor ltit Cebus Caiholic pose of thereiiovlition is to pro weekl~ and finally pastor of the ville a ~mQte suitable sanctu- Church of thE Blessed Sacrashy

ary setting fof the liturgical re- inent in Cebu In addition atf orms Qrought into beingmiddot by the time of his nomination he Vatican Council II was vice-superior of the Misshy

Father Lmiddotai-kir said because slon Society of the Philippines the cathedral must architectu-middot r~lly and liturgically allow for Issues Sttement both episcopal mdparish ser-- U

vices ~~any structurai cihimge O H R h offers a unique chalienge to the n umalu ig ts designer~ and provision for the LA CROSSE (NC)-Tbe La

new liturgy must be made in Crosse diocese has taken a poshy

and spirit 01 the existing struc- integrated arid ildequate educashy t4re tion fair employment and the

- defense of the rights of minorshyities

Christians and J~ws Bishop Frederick W Frekshying of the Wisconsin diocese

Honor Clergymen and the diocesan central com-NEW YORK (NC)-Clergy- mission approvedmiddot apmiddot officiai

men from thefour major faiths statem~nt titled Human Reshyhave been honored here by the lations in the Diocese of La National Coiuerence of Chris- Crosse

tians anltt Jews The statement was prepared

the third week of August was the practice has spread middotto a made by Dr Josepb G Murphy number of other cities hesaid of La Marque a member of the interrelgious understanding hasmiddot boara- of- directors fortbe Cathprogressed tremendously middotiIi reshyeticmiddot meDs oganization middotc~nhyearsbull

-

Tbe clergymeri cited for by the subcommission of human relations of the diocesan cornshycourageous leadership in intershymissionon social action and apshy

creedal relations were proved by both before submisshy Rev Dr ~ohn C Bennett sion to the central commissiollll

president of Union Theological ) in January Seminary

Father Robert I Gannon SJ president emeritus of Fordham CONRAD SEGUIN University

Bishop Silas of the GreekOrshy BODY COJMPANY thodox archdiocese of Nortb and Aluminum or Steel South America 944 Countr Street

Samuel D Leisdorf New NEW BEDFORD MASSYork philanthropist pointed out

wy 2-6618that the NCCJ firstmiddot honored reshyligious leaders of four faiths in September -1966 Noting that

should be done by individuals parishes and municipaiities

There were no solutions ofshyfered to the problems posed bythe film We dont expect to have answers to these quesshytions warned Sister John Alicia at the beginning of the program They are too big for us The film WltlS strictly on the

human level and this was pointed out in one group No one can solve all problems it was agreed but surely each Christian canmiddot trust the Holy Spirit to lead him to the probshylems he is equipped to do someshything about no matter how small

There was another point on whichmiddot everyohe in the audience was in enthusiastic agreement that there be more such eveshynings as the one sponsored by Holllgt Namemiddot

Vatmiddotn Report~lIo

Continued from Page One two encyclicals The Developshymiddotment of Peoples and Priestly Celshyibacy four motu proprios inshyeluding one creating central a lay council and the Papal Comshymission on International Justice anp Peace and another restorshying the permanerit diacol1ate treeapostolic constitutions inshyelUding one reshaping the

Churchs c~iitral administlatioii two apostolic exhortations one apostolic letter and 78 other Wessagesmiddotand letterS inclQding

He reeeived eight ehiets Of state including U SPresident Lyndon B Johnson and United Nations Secretary General U T~ant and gave 16 audiences to

th lmiddottmiddot I0 er men 10 ~ 1 lca life in cluding U SVi~ President Hushy~rt H Humphrey Republican presidential hopeful Richard M N d N Ixon an ew Yorks Sen Robert F Kennedy

He received visits from four delegations of Orthodox churCh men including Orthodox Ecushymenicai Patriarcp Athenagoras I of Constantinople besides visit shying Patriarch Athenagoras in ~ tanbul

The book covering last yearli activities of the Holy See conshysists of 1680 pages plus about 2(10 photographs

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Bishop John J Wright hasestablished a committee 1Jl)take a complete look at Oaampshy

olie education in the PittsburpD lOcese

The aim is fc dedde wha~ 1shyd t to tak tbe ~

lrec Ion e Dedecade for the best education of

all Catholics young and oldThe committee will evaluate all present Catholic educationshygrade and high schools eo egesConfraternity of Christian Doeshytrine classes adult education and other programs

The surveyors wiU 117 to deshyvise a plan based oa mstinl and potential resources in facll-Hies funds and Staff to guide the dioceses educational efforlll for the next 10 years or more

May Be FaI-lleaehiDg Among ideas eXpected to be

examined in the evaluation are proposals by some to cut back on Catholic schools or even til phase them out in place of an expanded adult education proshygram

Named head of the committee of educators priests and lay professionals is Father Vernon Gallagher CSSp former presishy

deht of Duquesne University here now serving as an official of the Holy Childhood Associashytion He also is a former proshyvincial of the Holy Gbost Fa~ ers eastern province

The committee Will be emshypowered to call before it di shyocesan officials to hold publlc meetingshire staff ~ring in exshyperts ThedioCege will finance the work

The committee Win make spe- eific recommendations to BishoP Wright after the study which 18 expected to take at least a yearbull

-Results are expected to have ~ar-reaching implicatiou fOr Catholic education here

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Two Unbeoten league Play f1fE ANCHOR-Diocese oTtall River-Ihurs feb 29 1968 19

Coach Says Sault Complete BallPlayerCape Cods NausetCompiles SMTB Playmaker Is Former Coyle $trBest Over-All Court Mark

BY JOE MIRANDA By PETER BARTEK

An excellent hall handler and Norton High Coach team player Is how Pat Sault of

Taunton is described by his Eleven of tile 12 aa-ea e1ubs with the best records in coach Phil Wetterland of the

their respective leagues are among those who will parshy Sou the a s t ern Massachu- setts Technogical Institute Inshyticipate in the March Tech basketball tournament in Boston stitute in North DartmouthFairhaven High of the Oapeway Conference and Nauset Sault a 19-year old freshman

of the Cape amp Island loop are is a former Coyle High hoopshythe only all-winning league a single league game while two ster who played four years for

went doWn to defeat In every the Warriors his final two underaggregations from this area encounter In which they were coach Jim Lanagan on the varshyin the Hub championship Involved Almost two-thirds 02 sityelimination tourney while Dartshy the Southeastern Mass teams

D)Quth High is the only one of Teaching CareerfinIshed wIth a 500 average OIlthe tOp dozen better Although young Pat has al shya 70 per cent coQlbines WIth

WIth 12 triumphs in the Cape ready made plans for the future league record amp Island competition Nauset which Include finishing his edshywhich failed to Regional also achieved the best ucation and pursuing a teachershyqualify an inshy over-all record winning 16 of coaching career dication t hat 11 encounters The Cape Cod Sault has not yet chosen a non-league school will be shooting for the major in college but according competition selshy Class D Tech title to his parents he is very much dom jeopardizes interested in teaching historyNew Bedford High 15 and and coaching They feel he willthe ultImate one in the Greater Boston Subshy be good at both as he alwaysgoal of most urban league finished with anschools Actual- Peter devoted his spare time to helpshy

over-all 17-2 mark for the Winshyly 311 per cent Bartek ing the younger neighborhoodter The Crimsons 937 average boys understand athletics moreof the 35 Southeastern Massashy captured its leagues pennant flag thoroughlychusetts school teamsmiddot have The Crimson Whalers are now Pat is the oldest son of Mrqualified for the Tech title play poised to annex the No 1 State and Mrs Charles A Sault and)let none managed an over-all honor by clinching the top one of four children A sisterundefeated season ranking Class A division in the Annette is a senior at BishopThree area clubs failed to win Boston title tourney Cassidy High James Michael

and Cheryl grammar school Representatives in Three B~ackets students at Mulcahey Schoof in

Taunton Fairhaven and Holy Family FamilYhas been eliminated in The family resides at 85 Mershy

HIgh of New Bedford aiming the Lawrence Catholic tourney rill Avenue In Taunton and are for the Class C Tech crown both Southeastern Mass does not members of St Pauls Parish fInished wIth an over-all 16-2 have one club among the Tech

Wetterland Commentsmark The latter Is still smart- Class B participants but th~re ing from its cliff-hanging defeat will be five area combinations Wetterland was high in his at the hands of Xavier in the -includIng Fairhaven and Holy praise of his five foot 11 inch State Catholic tourney Bill Family-in the Class C play and guard who tips the scales at Walshs two-pointer from the three-including Nauset-in the 160 pounds ~ssesses good speed floor which many thought Class D Hub competition and is a key in the Corsairs fast

meant victory at Lawrence was The other Class C contestants break offense nu1llfied by a travelling viola- patterns when SMTI is wurkshy a rest he should be in top conshySault lllsed strictly with thetion which cost the loss ofthe are Case High of Swansea Nar- iilg too quickly and making dition for the 1968-69 campaignvarsity was gaining valuablebasket resulting in a one-~Jnt ry co-champions Oliver Ames Dlistakes Sault gaIned his court savvy1 f tb of North Easton runners-up in experience and developing rapshy

The SMTI mentor continued from Lanagan at Coyle wheretiOs~~ e Narragnnsett~a~ theHockomock circuit and Den- bUy whep a knee Injury slowed he iii the complete ball player hemiddotstarted in his juJ)ior and senshyDis-Yarmouth of Cape Cod see his progress midway through

Durfee of Fall RIver and ond pI fi ish in tho C the campaiiPt but Wetterland noting that he can shoot but is Jor lieasons and was a Vital co Bishop Stang mgh of North ace n er e ape most --content setting Up his in the Warriors successduring DartmQutb are the other two middotNausetwill be joined by Mar- has turned in some excellent efshy teammates for easy pblnts He Ioth years I J

way loop said despite the handicap Pat

Is a team player and always sacshy As ~ Coyle High fr~hmanarea Class A representatives inmiddot thas VIneyard and Norton mib forts in a most successful SMTI rifices himself to help the club Pat was a member XJtb~ yearshythe Tecb toutnament ~e Fall in the Class D bracket The season

Sault possesses a good atti shy lings h09P team and al~Q~ parti shyRiver Hilltoppers willbe out Islanders finished second to Naushy Defensively Sault is cnitshytude is a tough competitor and cipated in track By hihSOphoshyto make amends for their nose- set in the Cape amp Island league standIng Offensively Sault is one of the players Wetterland is more year Saultcopfjned his dive finish in the Bristol COUl)ty while Norton was second in the the teams playmaker ana quarshyeounting on 1to help SMTI gain athlettc talents to basketbjlll andloop whIle Stang ~ke Ho17 Tri~Valley Conference terback 8Dlall college recognition in the turned in a cODlJPenlla))le acshyfuture Teallll Player coun~ o~ himself

Ifere~s How They Did hi LiBogue Play Played for Lanagan Sault also represented stWetterland said his outstandshyThere is doubt about his the hardwood

he following are the league 21 Bishop Feehan 7_1 ing worth to the Corsairs comes no Pauls on in the eourage said the Corsairs skipshy Taunton CYO and in the annual from the fact that he can slowrecords of the 35 Southeastem Msgr Coyle 7-1 after painful knee Easter tournament He playeddown the offense and set up per even a

Mass teams Ta~ton 7-7 injury Sault continued to jpve four years of Litue JeagueM N B Vocational 6-8 his all and attended every pracshy Baseball and one season in theK of C Masons1 Fairhaven 14-0 25 DIman Vocational 5-9 tice The injury has slowed him Pony League prior to ~ntetmamp

Nauset 12-0 Msgr Prevost 5-9 visibly but after the season and Coyle Higa 3 New Bedford 15-1 27 SandwIch 4-8 To Cooperate4 Holy Family 13-1 28 Nantucket 3-9

NOTRE DAME (NC) - lfashyCase 13-1 29 Old Rochester 4-10

30 tlonal leadellS of the Scottish6 Oliver Ames 12-2 West~rt 3-11 Bite Masons and the Knights ~oll another7 Marthas Vineyard ~ 31 Barnstable 2-12

of Columbus anno~ced memshy8 Bishop Stang 10~ 32 Dighton-Rehoboth 1-13 strike on~rs of their organizations wU1Dartmouth 104 33 Bourne 0-14 work together on domestic andDennis-Yarmouth 10-4 Chatham 0-12 the enerlY international problems faciolaquoDurfee 10-1 North AUleJooro 1-14

the nation12 Norton 105 you get George A Newbury soveshy13 Attleboro 9-5 Minister Officiates reign grand commander 01 from14 Harwich 7-5

Scottish Rite Masons In theProvIncetown 7-5 a slice ofDn Cathclic Church northern jurisdiction of the US18 Seekonk 8-6 MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-A Lu- and John W McDevitt supremeSomerset 86

theran mInister officiated at the knight of the Knights of ColumshyFalmouth 8-6 marriage of his son in Holy Cross bus made the announcementMansfield 8-6 Catholic church here at a dinner here s~nsoredWareham 8-6

Married were James H Graf jointly by the Masonic Lodge 29 L th and the Knights of Columbus

a u eran and CalTon Ann council in South Bend Episcopalian Rite Gutwinski 25 a Catholic The ceremony was rformed - Both praised the work of Fa-MINNEAPOLIS (NC)- Archshy ther John A OBrien of the

bishop Leo Binz and Coadjutor Grapoundfs fltthell the Rev Paul L University of Notre Dame for Archbishop ~ PY1)1e of the Graf pastor of Holy Trinity r better understanding among the Cafllolic archdIoceses of St Paul theran church two groups Minneapolis were present in the Permission for the Rev Gmt Father Theodore M Hesshysan~lary of St Marks Episcoshy to officiate at his sonB wedding burgh CSC president of the pal cathedral here for the inshy was granted by theSacred Con- University of Notre Dame said stallation of Bishop Philip F gregation for the Joctrine of This nIght marks a great step McNarry as coadjutor bishop of the Faitlh inl lWme in answer to ll forward and reflects the new the Epi6copal diocese of Minneshy J)etition by Archbishop Leo BiDz ~enical spirit which is unishysota of~ ~~-M~eapotis iing ~ople long separated-

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bull THE ANCHOR Dayton University Thurs Feb 29 196a Brief Religious on Ecumenism

Selects Advisors SOUTH ORANGE (NC) meanitigful dialogue should not tended not to lead to compro- DAYTON (NC)-An ll-mem-

Named resident Some 1000 mms and Brothers be confused with monologueshy mise but to conyergence ber advisory board of six stushyservfng in tli~ Newark archdi~shy or confrontation He added We talk now of our common dents two faculty members andSANTA CLARA (NC)-The cese were briefed on the basic we must be willing to be pershy belilefs he said not to com- three representatives of theboard of trustees of the Univershy principles of ecumenism in a suaded-we need an open mind promise each others faith but in community has been establishedlllity of Santa Clara has named program sponsored by the Newshy to seek out the truth wherever the hope that at some point in for the Office of Human Relashylrather Thomas D Terry SJ ark Archdiocese Commission for it might be shy the future we will converge tions at the University oJ Dayshy35th president of the Jesuit unishy Ecumenical Affairs

Ifersity Father Terry who sucshy Discussing the difficulties of As an example he pointed to tornSpeakers at the session ineeeds Father Patrick Donohoe establishing Christian-Jewish the wide divergence of views The board under the direcshySeton Hall University includeSJ recently appointed Califorshy dialogue he said we Christians regarding (he Mass and the Eu- tion of Charles Hirt director ofDr Leonard Swidler of Templeaia provinCial af the Society of are responsible for 2000 years charist that existed between the Office of Human RelationsUniversity Philadelphia aridJIesus has been academic vic~ of anti-Semitism and now_ we Martin Luther and the Council will be responsible for estabshyFather Thomas M McFadden ofpresident af Loyola University must overcome our mutual disshy of Trent Then he cited the re- lishing policy making programthe Brooklyn dioceseLos Angeles for the last year trust before dialogue can be cent statement on the Eucharist recommendations helping to

lllI1d a half Previous to that Swidler said dialogue with fruitful issued by Lutherans and Catho- alleviate campus racial probshyIIlIather Terry was dean of the others must be preceded by an lics to show how much closer lems and drawing up proposall ltWllege of arts and sciences at examination of Catholic attishy Father McFadden said diashy the two bodies have come since for implementation Santa Clara tudes In addition he said a logue among Christians is inshy that time

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Page 11: 02.29.68

11 Priest DcfcsndJ~

Black Power MINNEAPOLIS (NC) - nle

only un-Christian thing about power is the abuse of power Father James E Groppj Milshywaukees militant civil rights leader told a Lutheran layshymens conference here

Neither is the striving fox power by a minority group unshyAmerican the priest asserted It is rather part of the American tradition he said and cited past drives for political power by labor unions Italians in New York and the Irish in Boston

Father Groppi also said that the Milwaukee NAACP Youth Council which he advises has adopted black power tactics only after we had used every tactic eveiy means we could think of to take the yoke off black people and nothing had been effective

He said that one use the counshycil had made of black power was in a united Negro boycott of stores during Christmas The white man doesnt give us a housing bill we dont give him our dollar he explained

Discussing the role of the Christian Church in the black mans struggle for equal rights Father Groppi said that the Church has been involved by her non-involvemen1i By such non-involvement he said the Church has aggravat~d the Neshygros problem

Today he said I the use of prudence as an excuse for cowshyardice is the great sin of tile Church

Students Interrupt Strike to Mourn

PARIS (NC) - The strike launched by the guild of law students at the Catholic Unishyversity of Paris has been intershyrupted by its leaders out of resJect for the mourning of the diocese of Paris following the death of Pierre Cardinal Veuil shylot who was chancellor of the instittltion

The strike was called to proshytest a reform of the university decided U()(ln by the French bishops and put into effectmiddot by the rector Msgr Pierre Haubt- mann The reform is designed to avoid having the Catholic uni- versity compete systematically with middotthe state university In all secular studies

The bish~ps decided that in addition to teaching and re search in the area of religion the Catholic universtty must first of all be devQted to Chrisshytian reflection on secular matshyters

Pastoral Institute To Open at Quito

BOGOrA (NC)-A new Latin American Pastoral Institute will be opened in April at Quito Ecuador as a project of the Latin American Bishops Counshycil (CELAM)

The institute will be a unit of the CELAM pastoral departshyment

Purpose of the institute will be to train personnel from the whole continent in pastoral work applicable to Latin Amershyica The institute will offer seven-month courses and Euroshypean specialists in pastoral work will also serve on the faculty

Meeting on Cities NOTRE DAME (NC) - An

international conference entitled NCities in Context will be held March 31 through April 3 at the University of Notre Dames Center for Continuing Educashytion

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968

litu~~W Changes Continued from Page One

in earlier periods-even thou~

they do not conrorm in all deshytails with the approved versiOlil of contemporary liturgical texto -are authorized

TANTUM ERGO An apshyproved Eucharistic hymn ilill praise of the Blessed Sacrament may be used in Benediction oil the Blessed Sacrament in place of the Latin hymn Tantum Ershygo

PSALMS Approved are the texis of the Psalms as published by Englands Grail Society anell that found in the Jerusalem Bishyble

Suggestnol1Js Denied

The Vatican turned down two requests made by the US Bishshyops both dealing with liturgic011 experimentation

No was answered to the reshyquest that the US Bishops be permitted to designate acade~ic

centers to supervise litulgicall innovation

Also denied was the request that some experimentation be approved without examinatioD by the Holy See

-Presently the Vatican mu~

approve proposed liturgical inshynovations before experiment3shytion can begin

Archbishop Dearden explainshyed While the two major proshyposals concerning liturgical enshyperjmentation were not alPshyproved at the present time ~

is clear that the Consilium iJ open to the submission of rite and texts of li-turgical adaptioTll which have been drawn up anll presented prior to actual experishymental use

Concrete proposals of rHeIl 2nd texts may continue to be sent to the Bishops CommittCCl on the Liturgy

Matter Deferred

The permission to substitutfl h)mns or other sacled songtl fur the texts now used at the entran~e Offertory and Comshymunion of the Mass was defershyred

Such hymns now generally added to the official texts were approved in principle however by the delegates to the Rome Synod of Bishops October 1967

The Baptismal Rite describecll among the changes was n~

contained in the Vatican lettertl authoiizing the other changoo but was made public by Archshybishop Dearden at the same time as the announcement of 1ibe changes was released

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L_ PATRON 01 MARCH The month of March is dedicated to St Joseph watchful

guardian of the Son of God and patron and protector of the universal Church Dedicashytion of the month of the year to events in the life of Christ and to particular saints is a practice of the People of God rather than an official action of the Church It comfantly middotrecalls the power and love of God for mankind present at all times and in every place

Bishops Hit Penna Birth Control Policy Addsmiddot to Rather Thon Solve Problems of Poor

HARRISBURG (NC)-The Pennsylvania Welfare Depaytments new policy of acfi~ely promoting birth control among poor people is a major step in the direction of a newand dangerous life management bymiddot the state The Pennsylvania Oatholic Conferencehas criti shycized the Welfare pepartments decision to middotinitiltte discussions of birth control with their clients Under previous pol- stru~en~ for population con- the polic~ because it will add icy birth coiltrol adviceias trol saidmiddot the PCC to the p~oblems of the poor and Moreover many of these do nothmg to get at the root

Jren~l~red only If the welfare same spokesmen see it as an in- causes of poverty reCIpIent asked for It The strument to improve what they We are bound to protest sysshynew policY has been in effect call the quality of our popula- tematic governmental involveshysince mid-January The Con- tion Putting the program to ment in decisions of citizens reshyference which represents the suchmiddota use represents one of its specting family size as a major states Bishops in public affairs worst dangers the danger that step in the direction of a new has denied that Church teach- the state will start-=-by guiding and dangerous life management ing on contraception is a factor some groups or classes to birth by the state the statement emshyin its opposition limitation-to select the types it phasized

Invasion of Prhacy desires to see propagated Rather our concern is over Dangerous Management Varied Talents

the ef~ort of the state to i~fl~- The statement noted that its SPOKANE (NC)-The newly e~c~ many wa~ a pelson s view in this regard is shared formed Catholic Board of EdushychOIce of family size-our con- b th ptt b h b h f th h ht d h middottmiddot y e 1 s lIlg lanc 0 e cation for the Diocese of Sposhycern IS elg ene w en I IS National Association for the Adshy kane has elected members whothe poor whom the state seeks t f C I d P I to mfluence the Conference stat t sad

emen IThe Confelence called promoshy

tion of birth control an invashysion of privacy and asserted the state should play no role in attempting even indi rectly to manage tne most intimate domain of personal life

The statement also took issue with Welfare Depart~ent deshynialsmiddot that the program is inshytended to contlOl population

Negro Opposition

Chiefspokesmen for groups which have pressured for this program in our state say they IJee it and demand it as not just II medical service but as an inshy

vancemen 0 0 ore eop e include educators and non-edushyh h tl tt k d th w IC recen y a ac e e cators priests pastors ReligiousWelfare Department for trying and lay personst r t th th f th N 0 Iml e glOW 0 e egro

populatIOn The Conference also criticized

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a2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River--Thurs Feb 29 1968

The PaJrish Parade ~T MARYS CAlllllIlEJI)lItAL FALL RiVER

Mrs Hadley Lackey will serve as chaIrman of arrangements for the monthly meeting of the Womens Guild scheduled for a oclock on Monday night March 4 in the Shamrock Room of the Corky Row Club

Mrs John OConnor chairshyman of the Scholarola scheduled for April 1 requests that all pledges be brought to the March meeting of the Guild Committee members are avail shyable for all who wish their pledges collected at home

ST THERESA J80 ~-y gtltBORO

The ~ =middotaternity of Christian Mothers will hold thei~ regular monthly meeting on Monday evening March 4 following the Stations of the Cross

Rev Leo R Gravel OMI son of Mr and Mrs Raymond Gravel ofmiddotWestminister St So Attleshyboro will be the guest speaker

Members of the Confraternity will receive Comunion in a body at the 9 oclock Mass on Sunday morning March 3

88 PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Mothe~~ ~f Boy Scouts will bold a p1i1gtlic social at 730 toshynight Boy Scouts informatiOn classes for the Ad Mtare Dei award wiil be gtheld tonight and every T~ursday night during March and April

Junior High Camp Fire Girls plan a splash party at the YMCA from 530 to 7 Saturday night March 2 imd a cakesale in the IIChool hall from 8 to 11 30 Sun- ~y morniii~

The annual Cub Scout Pack IT Blue and Gold Banquet and charter presentation will take place at 630 Sunday night in the

school hall

SACRJED IllEART NOATlLEBORO

Starting on March 12 and conshytinuing for the next three conshysecutive Tuesday nights there will be an EcUmenical Worship Study conducted at Sacred Heart Church First Universalist Church First Methodist Church and the Grace Church

The service will begin at 730 and will be followed by a coffee hour and a discussion period in the church hall

The Sacred Heart Church will open the program on March 12 with a discussion of the Mass

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Womens Guild win reshyceive Holy Communion in a group at the 8 oclock Mass on Sunday morning March 3

The regular monthly meeting of the Guild will be held on Wednesday night March 6 at 730 in the school on Earle Street

ST PATRICK FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild announces an open meeting for Monday March 4 A jewelry demonstrashytion will be featured In charge of arrangements is Mrs Stanley Pitera aided by Mrs Joseph Fazzina

The unit will celebrate St Patricks day Saturday night March 16 with a smorgasbord supper and dance in the school auditorium Supper will be served at 7 and danCing will folshylow from 8 to midnight with music by the Moon Mists Resshyervations will close Sundq March 10 and may be made with guild officen or board memshybers

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

Plilrishoia books are to be distributed the weekend of

The WQmens Club announces March 2 and 3 Prizes will be bull pot luck supper for 630 Monshyday nigh1 Maich 4 Chairmen are Mrs William T Marum Jr and Miss Mary L Tyrrell

John F Keavy Jr president cl the US Model Railroad Assn will show films at a Boy Scout meeing slated for Tuesday night March 5

Theologians SllaquolIted As CU Spe(Q]~eis

WASHINGTON (NC) - Dr Ellie Mascall one of Englando most prominent Anglican theoshylogians and Father Hans Kung an outspoken advocate of reform in~~ the Catholic Church wilil speak at the Catholic University of America l1Ite in March

Dr Mascall a vigorous 0pshy

ponent of the so-called New Theology will give the Charles A Hart Memorial Lectures from March 24 to 29 His lectures will

deal sucessively with the quesshytions of God man Christ and the Church

Father Kung a Swiss theoloshygian who played an influential role at the Second Vatican Counshycil will speak on Sincerity in the Church on March 18

St louis Ceremony ST LOUIS (NC) - Bishop

John J Carberry of Columbus will be installed as Archbishop of St Louis on March 25 in cershyemonies at St Louis cathedral here

Archbishop Luigi Raimondi apostolic delegate to the United States will officiate The date of the cerem0I1-Y will be exactly three years after that on which Bishop Carberry was installed ordinary of Columbus

awarded to the three individuals selling the most books

The Mystibrook Singers of Bishop Stang High School will lead singing at the 815 Mass Sunday morning M~rch 3

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

A parish supper sponsored by the Womens Guild will be held from 530 to 730 Saturday night March 2 in the school hall Tickets are available from Mrs Frank Kingsley ticket chairman or any board member

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

During Lent Masses will be at 7 AM 4 PM and 7 PM

Confessions will be heard one half hour before each Mass Stashytions of the Cross will be held at 345 and 645 Friday aftershynoons and evenings Children are urged to attend Mass at 4 each afternoon The Children of Mary anshynounce a periby sale Friday March 15 A Portuguese parish mission will be preached by Rev Anshytonio Pinto CM from Sunday March 3 through Saturday March 9 Services will open Sunday night March 3 with rosary sernlon and Benediction at 7 I)clock and Mass and sershymon will be held every weekday night at 7

ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

The Association of the Sacred Hearts will sponsor a tea at 7 on Sunday night Mar 3 in the rectory in honor of the Sisters staffing the parish schooL

The monthly meeting C1f 1lhe Association will follow the tea

SAMOAN BISHOP The first native Polynesian memshyber of the hieraIl~hy Bishopshyelect Pio Taofinlllu (cq) S M will be consecrated at Apia Western Samoa on May 29 by Bosoon-born A r c h b ish 0 p George H Pearce SM of Suva The Bishop-eloot 44 made -his novitiate with the Marists on Staten Island ~C Photo

Hospital ~~urses

Return middotto Nork hi Covingtol1l

COVINGTON (NC) A nurses walkout which began in mid-November at 100shyyear-old St Eliz~~beth Hosshypital here has ended Nearly 100 of the 140 members of tine Registered Nurses tgtrganizati01l have indicated they will retum to their jobS The walkout stemmed from bull dispute over recognition of their organization and patient care policies Since the settlement hospital officials have been inshyterviewing nurse to expedite their reemployment and placeshyment

Restore Full Service Hospital spokesmen said the

nurses will be restored to posts they formerly held in so far as possible The nurses will lose no tenure as a result of their absence and if the positions they previously held have been filled they will be offered comshyparable posts or benext in line for selection to the positions

Administration officials exshypressed satisfaction with the prospect of the nurses return and voiced the earnest hope that we can move forward tel restore the 100 beds to service which had to be taliten out of availability by reason of the shortage of nurses to care for the patients

Officials estimate til1at four tie eight we~ks might t~ required 110 restore full bed service

Cite Achievements The nurses leaders said the7

had achieved at least 13 gains during the thteenionth dispute pointing to the fact that a doctor and a nurse have been apshypointed to the hospital board of trustees the establishment of bull patient care committee comshyposed or nurses electeli by those now employed by the hospital and equipment changes in the patient care area

Mrs Pat Tanner vice chait shyman also said the nurses unshyderstand that a lay heid will be appointed head of the hospital

Sister M Coronata adminisshytrator was assigned to) another post in the sisterhood earlier this month and Sister Mark Bernard has been serving u acting administrator I~he Franshyciscan Sisters of the Poor haft operated the hospitaL

Love Is An Active Verb We who bear the noble name of Christian arid who are io9shy

ingly called the faithful stand in awe of the Mystery of Christ and the Mystery of His Church More than the mystery of Obrist and of His Church is something we live It is then our duty JIlON

and more to experience the living reality of the Cbureh hershyself Cbristain tradition affirms that by her relatioJiship with Christ tlbe Redeemer the Church is a kind of sacrament or an efficacous sign of intimaJte union with God and indeed an efshyficacious sign cf the uni~ of all mankind

As members of the household of the faith we have heeD eaDmiddot ed by God and endowed with the precious gift 01 faithThereshyfore we m1ls truly experience a sense of urgency in brinampinK aD men to tun union with Christ Since mankind today is joined together more 1ll1osely than ever before in historY by bonds thaamp are social technical and eultural should it be ilenied the spirshyitual unity that springs from faith The Gospel is Ught Ii Is lIIewness it is energy it is rebirth it is salvation

Should DOt interest in our own salvation necessarily move us tID loving concern for the salvation of others If the Church is the Sacrament Of Salvation should we not as members of the Church eome to an eve- clearer awareness of our pari in her mission in the o1uty of evangelization in the missionary mandate in the apOstolic commiSsion Clearly our duty consonant withthe blessings I-eceived from Christ is that of spreading offering and announcing ~ faith to Others in order that we might be clble to acquit ourselves of Uiis Christian obligation The Society for the Propagation of the Faith eXiSts For-those who desire to be where the action is or 110 be iIivOlvoom wOrld mission the Church pr0shy

claims her own essential inissionlU) character Indeed the Cburdl ill J4ission and therefore aD of 118 are truly missionaries

fa tills Yeai IaItIl we eaa testify to Gaefldl uieDt 04 om- ATatitade to God for the bleilldDc of faWt by ma~ bull aerIfiee te TIle Society for the PropapUOn 01 the Faith lor tile works of the Chureh ill the service Df tile poor and underprholshy~ed We eamaot be Uke our Master III the fWlness of HIs Dlvinit7 nor caD we hoPe to experienCe thelrlory of His Transfigmratio bat there lis ODe way ill whieh we eaa resemble Rim and that Is ~ beeomtitamp- a oervant to His poor aDd His UWe ODes throughshyout the world

The native celrgy is the ho~ of the Chureb in Mission lands Many youngmen have heard the can but are sadly turned away for lack of facilities and funds $250 will provide a year of semshyinary training $1500 will cover the cost of complete education to the priesthood Wont you help us to help them by sending your offering to The Society of st Peter the Apostle 366 Fifth Avenue New York N Y 10001

SALVATION AND SERVICE are the work of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith Please cut out this eolumn and send your offering to Right Reverend Edward T OMeara Nashytional Direetor 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or directly to yoUr loeal Diocesan DirectOr Rt Rev Msgr Raymond T Considine 361 Norib MaiD Street FaD IUver Massaelnuse~ts 03720

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THE ANOiOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 13Missouri Diocesan Board Pondersmiddot Closing Consolidating Schools

KANSAS CITY (NC)-Tbe 1H girls They would be abshyKansas City-8t Joseph diocese sorbed into the school popushyis exploring the possibility of lations of Lillis high school and closing some of its schools and st Theresas academy forming n larger area school Although 120 persons attendshy Extension Volunteers bull bull bullwhich could upgrade the qualshy ed the school board meetingity of education for all pupils they were not petmitted tp

At 0 school board meeting speakFather John P Cole supershyinJtenden~ of schools reported on L - shyPTA Bead Plotes~

the possibility of setting up 11 Make Life Wortl IVngA motion-passed unanimousshycentral area grade school in ly by the board-was made to

mid-town Kansas City The continue exploration into conshysingle school would serve the solidation of the schools Thispopulations of three existing was opposed by John J Mcshygrade schools Donough a representativeFather Cole also suggested the elected by the Catholic PTApossibility of closing Redempshy Federation who will be seatedtorist high school now serving as a board member in July

McDonough was permitted to $~[]7reg~ 2~ Ifreg[[~ take part in the discussion but

had no vote

~~ ~~[[U IT)J He protested against the defe3ltist clique who let our

WASHINGTON (NC)-Bishop schools get picked off one byPaul F Tanner newly named one He charged that TheOrdinary of the diocese of St New Peltlple - the diocesanAugustine Fla is onfy the newspaper members of the dishyfourth priest to serve as general ocesan school office officials of secretary of the United States the Missouri Catholic Confershybishops secretariat in the nearshy ence Kansas City pastors andmiddotly half-century of its existence other Church officials share in

Bishop Tanner was the last an anti-Catholic school recshygeneral secretary of NCWC the ordoriginal secretariat He was also the first general secretary of ODe Operation both of is dual suc~essors-tne

McDonough said that theNational Conferenceof Catholic school superintendent shouldBishops and the United States be goingmiddot to the state legislashyCatholic Conference The NCCB ture and Governor Hearnes tois the bishops agency for dealshydemand tax relief instead ofing with purely splritual matshyconsidering consolidation andters the USCC Is their secreshyclosing of schoolstariat for dealing with secular

affairs Father Colemiddot maJntained that The prelate has served in the the reorganization would not

U S bishops secretariat 28 represent a cutback The area years longer than any precedshy school would be able to opshying general secretary Born in erate out of one blilding to Peoria TII in 1905 and ordained serve three parishes It would a priestmiddot of the Milw~ukee archshy provide the same educational diocese in 1931middot he came to experience for the same number Washington in 1940 ~as assistant of students plus advantages director of the Youth Departshy Cooperation would make posshyment NCWC He ~as assistant sible a highly developed model general secretary from 1945 to school staffed by Sisters from 1958 and has been general secshy three communities retary since then He said it would be irresponshy

He is the first bishop to serve sible to run three operations at as secretary to the bishops secshy all costs when the diocese retariat could have one operation run

The NCWC (as Council and it more efficiently do a better Conference) had been in exisshy educational job and provide opshytence 47 years when it formally portunity for a better deployshywent out of existence at the anshy ment of personnel nual meeting of the bishops in November 1966 Bishop Tanner who had served in the secretashy Urge Germaruls riat for more than half those years supervised the transition To Aid Vietnam to two separate organizationsshy

BONN (NC) - Two Germanthe NCCB and the USCC cardinals and two churchshyDuring Bishop Tanners secshy related relief organizations have

retaryship and in testimony to FALL RIVER PROVINCETOWN AND WESTPORT GIRLS WITHappealed to the German people

the growth of the work handled to collect money and to prayby the bishops secretariat an NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF EXTENSION VOIL~NTEERS DURINGfor the people of Vietnamimpressive addition to the headshy A week beore Mardi Gral lt- quarters building here was Joseph Cardinal Frings of Coshy THEIR YEAR OF VOLUNTEER WORK erected in 1960 logne asked the Catholics of his

archdiocese to cut down on Mardi Gras festivities and to donate magnanimously to the needy people of Vietnam Coshy These young college graduates have given a I year of their logne has long been known for its ampigtectacular Mardi Gras celeshy professional life to God in service in the South and West Are brations Citing the bombing Of North you willing to give twelve months of yourmiddotyouth to othersVietnam the plight of women and children caught between opposing forc~middot in the $()ut~ and the great number of refushygees Cardinal Frings asked how Catholics could watch pictures of these gravely distressing si~

WHY NOT ENROll AS ANuations on television and ceieshybrate Mardi Gras with a quiet The Spirit oj

Extension Volunteer HELPER middot$200 oconscience Alfred Cardinal Bengsch Of Extension Volunteer PROMOTER $500 o

Berlin asked for prayers for Sacrifice Extension Volunteer SPONSOR $1000 or more opeace in the world in a letter to the clergy of his diocese in which specifically mentioned AMOUNT ENCLOSED $ Vietnam as a name meaning Perfectlyblood and death RT REV RAYMOND T CONSIDINE PAIn a joint appeal Caritas the German Catholic relief organishy PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH OFFICE zation of Germanys Evangelical 368 NORTH MAIN STREETExemplifiedLutheran Church has asked for fALL RIVER MASS money to send food Md medishy

BISHOP P~VL F TANNU cine to the Children of Vietnam o

(-14 THf ANCHOR-Diocese of FaR Rfver-Th~rs Feb-29 1968 Two Objectives Jersey to Rehabilitate Young OffendersTells Jesuatts Engage in Deliberate

Help Increasing Spanish Group Attempts at lExperimentation UNION CITY (NC) - Two Hudson County Jan and in theST LOUIS (NC)-Deliber- carries its own reward he said area interfaith clergy groups youth house in Secaucus

iide attempts at experimenta- Now we must undertake new here in New Jersey are planning Father ThomasJ Murtha oftion with a readiness to accept forms some of which have a

joint action on the plightf West New York was named toall the risks that may be in- good chance to flop JIliserably youthful offenders housed m investigate means of setting UJltvolved were proposed for the An expert at the Second VatshyHudson County correctional in- a rehabilitation program t4ilSociet of Jesus at the close of ican Council Father Campion stitutions and to seek federal function after the release ~ III three-day session here on believes that the work of the assistance in meeting the needs youthful offendersbulllesuit renewal council has not yet begun to of Cuban refugeesFather Donald R Campion be absorbed within the Church

The joint session was held by The ~o groups will send a18J stressed at the renewal as a whole the North Hudson Clergy Coun- delegatIOn toWashIngton to askQession and in an interview This is not because it hasnt cU based here and the Chris- ~hat the area be declared anthat the Jesuits have both the been publicized enough or beshy tian Clergy United a West New Impacted area under the Cuban manpower and the resources to cause people havent read Y k Refugee Act and therefore beshy

engage in the type of expeii- enough or bishops havent talkshy or ~ro~p come eligible for special federal mentation which could serve ed enough he said But Vati shy A meetmg WIll be s()~ght WIth aid There are some 00000 tQdays Church Father Cam- can II opened up more areas the Hudson County Boar~ of Spanish~speakingpeople now m pion a sociologist and theolo- to discussion than it resolved Chosen Freeholders in an effort rth gian was recently named editor Among the sleep~rs in to establish a bettez climatefoi the ~o Hudson area and they cd America magazine council documents CIted by therehabiUtation of youthful continue to arrive at the rate of

Another speaker Fat her Father Campion was the conshy offenders now housed intne 200 to250 a month ~ 1 _

Avezy Dulles SJ stressed that cept of participation within the ~ doubt is a valuable and even Church Father Campionmiddot said lI1ecessary experience for the he believes collegiality is the Wide E~perience Christian in todays world most developed aspect in this

Fathers Campion and Dulles area and that some organization QU(lJD~ies Nu_ were two of the six main speak- has been given to it through the

UNITED- NATIONS (NC)ers at the closed meeting Some establishment of piie~ senates ltHQWCom pie t e devotion to theSSO Jesuits including 50 from But unless the idea of parti shyworlds needy children seemsCilutside the St Louis areaat-cipation is really the basis senshy a weighty task for a petite nun TDgtKEEPtended the sessions ates can become orgimizational

Father Campion said that Jes- gimmicks he said but a conversation with Sister Ullits as a group must face the Father Dulles discussing themiddot Kathl~eri Kelly MMmiddot provides LENmiddotTreassularice middotthat 20 years of make a significant contribution Church said ~ an interview diversified experience fact that their work should existence of doubt in todays

more to modern times that we have a radically differ- than qualifies her for the role

QUI IXIDPYFATHER lI MISSION jlUDTG me fllRlfaNTAL CHURCH

In the area of education It calIS for recasting the ex- wide Cath)lic charities organishy Need New Formula ent world view than in the past Caritas Internationalis worldshy

With the slason of Lent comes the qu~ionFather Campion called for con- pressions of the Christian messhy zation recently appointed Sisshy How can I beSt keep Lentl The answer ~s ~sideration of whether we are sage in terms of contemporary as observerter Kathleen its must make sacrifices on our own and nothing ISproviding the educational struc- knowledge if the message is to to the U N International GOOD III sacrifice unfess it hurts Whatwill be yo~rture for the new world have the impact it should Childrens Emergency Fun d WHIEN sacrifice bullbull Just think of the misslonlllne~ InIn the intellectual area Look Criticanny (UNICEF) Caritas Internationshy ITlf our 18 emerging countries who keep Lent allrather Campion noted that to- Doubt is not a bad thing he alis is one of 75 international HUmS year long Sacrifice something big this ye~rday more is needed than popu- said People should be looking and non-government organizashy When helping others hurts a bit you know you va larization of theology and phil- critically at the traditional forshy tions (NGOS) which enjoy conshy made a sacrifice()Sophy In a way we need a mulas and seeing what is revelashy sultative status with UNICEF whole new formula for making tion and what is a culturally

They represent oJer 4000csense of the world and life he conditioned formula which is affiliated private and non-profitfSaid now demanding reform

We should have men devoted Such adaptations are iD no organizations in more than 100 oOn his recent-trip through India 1V0~signor nations with a combined memshy Nolan saw priests and Sisters subSisting onto this single problem Their way a compromise of faith bership running into millions ounces of rice each day so they can share what own inner resources of security Father Dulles said We never they have with lepers and orphans $10 will feedmust be yery strong because to hear the divine message except Interviewed at the United Nashy FEED a family for several weeks at least $50 will feed

facethat kind of change is not III in terms of humans he said tions Sister Kathleen spoke of THE five families $100 ten families bullbullbull Only $975popular thing The Word of God comes her new rol~ at the international HUNGRY gives a priest 11 two-acre mode~ 18nn toraise

Council Opened Areas through man it is alW9YS tem- level and described how it his own food and teach his parishioners how to Father Campion said the can pered by man and it is this con~ evolved from her past activities raise more food Archbishop MalJ Gregorioa will

for experimentation W9S not ditioning which must change wrltetlo thank youI was in California andbased on inadequate work of Father Dulles said one value worked for 10 years in familyJesuits at the present time and of the death-of-God movement eounseling in the juvenile court IlJ Enable ~ girl to become a Sister For 41tl bullthat fact is part of the problem for Catholics is to shake _ I1tA1N day ($1250 a month $150 bull year $300 aleill foster lare and in otherMany times we have been suc- out of taking an uncritical with sa~ A together) you can pay In full fer her two-yeaIwork children sheeessful and being successful static view of God training have 8 Sister of your awnInthe last five years I moved SISTER

oat to community development and civil rights I was a member o For only $a5O a week ($10 a month $120 bull

year) you can make surethat an abandonedJesuit Seminarian Leads Campaign of a district council in bull San HELP Francisco - which subsequently A child has food clothing a blanket and love bullbullbull IAgainst Home Contract Firms was declared a poverty CHILD wen send you a photo of the boy or silt )011area

adoptCHICAGO (NC) - A Jesuit borne than its current market During my years there I waa Rminarian has launched a camshy value a member of the Catholic Intershy o Our priestS will offer promptly the Massespaign here against contractshy Following the exodus of racial Council and when I came MASSES you request Doyou wish to remember a loved holders of homes sold to Negro Lawndales white residents in back from Selma (she was on fOR one this Lent Your Mass offerings are usuallyfamilies at allegedly exorbitant the late 1950s thousands of of the persons selected to repshy LENT the only Incole our priests overseas receiverates homes were purchased by vari shy resent the archdiocese of san

Jack Macnamara SJ who ous bankS mortgage loan and Francisco in the Alabama civil o Enroll yourself your family and friends InlIives and works in nearby real estate companies at low rights march) I was appointed this Association You will be helping Pope Paul Lawndale is acting withthe ap- prices and then resold on conshy to serve on the Human Rights

JOI~ in one of his most ambitious and heartfelt works proval of his Jesuit superio~ tractto Negro families atofteIi - Commission by the mayor of THIS while sharing In the blessings of thousands of

Nacnarnara and a dozen supshy ~lImON Masses (The offering for one year is $2 perdouble the original purchase San Francisco the nun stated porters including several other price the leaflet reported She was the first nun ever apshy person $10 for a family perpetual membership Jesuit seminarians picketed the Paid Race Tax ltpOinted to any kind of~~yt is $25 per person $100 for a family) Chicago address of one investshy Macnamara said these conshy inJSan Fraidsco _

Iment company which holds title tracts should be renegotiated at

~ several homes sold on conshy the most recent FHA appraisal tract to Negroes Pickets dis- price ~ If I1t e SAiliNGS

tributed leaflets explaining the c2J 0 dJ ~ t~~ year SYSTEMATICThe issuemiddot here is moral rathshypurpose of their campaign er than legal he declared Th~ MONTHLY DEPOSITS

The leaflet cites the case of III law does not provide a remedy II tfMltIa fNVE$iMENyhome purchased by an investshy for the type of injustice that is d) aV~ J((~ year SAVINGSment company in January 1959 operative in this contract

for $13000 and then three NOTICE ACCOUNTSThousands of Negroes inmonths later sold on contract to Chicago are suffering from this a Negro buyer for $23000 450 ar ~~~~

It states the investment corn continued ~In effect they paid pany received $2000 as a down II race tax of approximately

type of injustice Macnamara

BCJs~ liverpayment on thiS contract whic~ $10000 when they bought their stipulated that middotthe balance was homes because it was impossishy SavonJs Bonkflo be paid over 20 years at sevshy bleto obtain mortgages 4Il per cent interest at the rate This is a striking example of BanI By Mail of $20140 each month how our legal system does notmiddot We Pay The Postage

Last December it reported a adequately protect black people Federal Housing Administration or poor people he said It appraisal on this home listed its stems from the fact that the law bull YARMOUTH SHOPP8NC PUll value at $15025 This means it aims at protecting property inshy bull SOUTH UltMOm bull HYANJIISexplained that the Negro buyer stead of persons And this helpl bull DENNIS PlmRT bull OSTFllVIUlIII paying $8000 more for tbe bull cause urbaJl unreal

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offering CITY STATE ZIP ~DEE---

THO middotCATHDLIC NEAR EAST WELFRIASSOCIATION

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HUNGRYmiddot FOR GOD TOO ~

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 ltI

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Home Missions Collection in Your Church-March 3 19611

16 THE ANC )~-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968

New St LouimiddotsArchbi~hcp

PrOmilnent in Ecumen~$m Archbishop Jonh J Oarberry of St Louis well known

~()ng Oatholic leaders after 31 career that has taken him from a seminary classroom iii his natiYe Brooltl~ NCY~ to one of the nations MOse ~mpOOtallt archdiolaquoese1l is pershy

laaps evenmiddot better ~ownmiddot fJDlong Americas nom-Cafu6shylie religious leaders fon hisl work in ecumenism Cllair Ilillao of the Bishqps Commi~ee-Ibr Ecumenical and Intenrefi shyaious Affairs since th~ resigna Qion of Baltimores Lawrence Cardinal Shehan in November 11965 Bishop Carberry has au I9gtCrvised the massive catholic illllvoIvement in ecumeniCal ac-middot lli1 vities

He outlined his own entIliusishyeuroISm for ecumenism in a speech ~iven in January 1966 tolmemshy~rs of the Ohio (Protestant) lPastors Convention wheDI he aid

Common lHeritagel For years the general policY

(llln the Catholic Church) had ~en to stress the great chasm

which divides the euroatliolic Church and other Christian ehurches No effort was made m would seem on our part to Illave a meeting of minds A otudy of documents would seem ltD reveal that while we wera lbrayerfully disposed to) the ltecumenical movemerit nevershy1lheless the Catholic Church did lliittleto foster it

Bishop Carberry told the conshyvention that through the grace 0f God and the leadership or Pope John XXIII we became aware of the common heritage Which is ours

Has Great lHope

We began to realiZe~ how 18aptism unites us in ChriSt to Gee that the divinity of Christ is illhe cornerstone of all Christianshynay we began to real1ze the oommon treasure which we llnave in the Sacred Scripturesllikewise the common bondshyVhich exists with us in the

1lIIlissionary activities at the Church

There is great hope Bishopltearberry said that mrougb ~ialogue through prayerbull 1llluough respect for each others wiewpoint the grace of God may (i)Ile day in Gods divine provishy4llence bring about the- unitY which Christ prayed for at themiddot Last Supper

More recently members of ltOhios Protestant cliurches llllamed the bishop as OniosPbsshyoLr of Pas-tors the fl rst timmiddote hat bull

Grants Permis$ioll~

for SaturdayMass) SAN ANGELO (NC)-BiShop

Thomas TSchoepe of San Angelo lllas announced that the diocesan request for the Saturday Mass flaculty hagt been granted In the future the Sunday Mass 00shyltigation may be met by at shy~ndance at a Saturday aftershyllloon or evening Mass The pershylll1ission has been granted on an ~xperimental basis by the Vati shylttan for a period of five years

The diocese of San Argelo is 1lI Texas missionary diocese the bishop explained and there are areat dis tan c e s between churches and few priestswmiddot oerve the faithfuh ManYi ~llieSts

have two or morlt8 churclies tJ lllttend and will Be able- tQ give more time to the smaller ~urches with the Satucday Mass faculty Bishop TschoePe pointedi 9Ut Chat the faculty has been giVeth bull the whole diocese not just Ibo individual churches or areas Pastors who wish to make Usemiddot aJl the faculty must make formal application to the chancery ofshyillce

a~ statewide Protestant onganiza tion has presented its highest awa-rd 10 a eatho1iir clet1gymam A pla~J1e symbollZiDg the a~adi was~ glv~~ to the blShp at ~~~ Fenw~nIP Blmq~et on the Olbo PastollSgt ~onventi~m

DI~USS P~tilems U~dev Blsli~p~rlgte~rysl~d

er~hlPl laquoatholic ~elegations have ~et wl~h ~fflC1Blsbull and

tleolbglan~ of other- ChrIs~an churchesmiddot to dlSCUSS ecumemcal pooble~s r~~gmg from the pr~sshyence of Christ Ill tlie ~ucharlst to th-c nature of we prJes~ood

Before ta~mg cliarge of th Golumbusmiddot dIOcese on March 25 1965) Bishop euroarbery liadmiddot selved asmiddot coadjutor bishop and then bishop of Eafayette Ind Born in Brooklynj N~ Y Tulymiddot 31 1904 Bishop Carberry studied for the priestlioodi at Brooklyns Cathedral College or the Iin-middot maculate laquool1ception from 191ll to 1924 and at the North Amershyican College in Rome from 1924 to 1930

Oldained inmiddot Rome in 1929 tne bishop sfudiea canon law at the Catholic University of America in Washington D G and taught at Immaculate Conception Semshyinarl until Tune 1935 when he went on ldan to the diocese of Trenton N J He returned to BrooklYn in 1940 where hemiddotreshymained until being named coshyadjuror bishop of Lafayettemiddot in 19651

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CHICAGO (NC) - Tohn A McDllrmott has changed me mindL-he1li remain as execu middot tivedirector of the Chicago Cat1iolic Interracial Council

The veteran council worKer last October announced he would leave the office to beshy

come Mridwest regional- ciVil rightsdirector for the ms De-middotmiddot partment of Health Enucation andi Welfare

A number of problems hava arisen since th-e announcement on my appointmentt last 0ctbBerwhichl caused me to have serl

ousmiddot second l thoughts MilDer moW said iil his decision to re~ maio with the ltlrc He citedi m1 patrtcular~ personnel cutliaclts in HEW wJiich woulli Iiinit the Midwest negional operatiiul

fo accepting McDermotits de cisionj HEW the government agency requestedi liiin to serve asmiddot ai special chdl- rights consuU ant while working for the CIC and he a~reed

IIlt a letter to the Dutch biINumber of Fllel71ch ops members of Michaels re-

gion asked for curbs on the nlgtshySeminarians Dllops tions Catliolic liberals The PARIS (Ne)-Thenumber of meeting also registered disap-

French seminarians h~s dropped proval of the new Dutch Cateshyby about 180 a year for the last chism~ claiminJ~ that it does nocent four years according to 1iigures represent true Catholic teach~ provided in amiddot press conference Michaels Lel~ion is considered by Bishop Jean Sauvage 011 ampshy even more CJlnservative thlW necy member of the bishops Confrontation another Catholic commission on the clergy and conservative organization Conshyseminaries frontations complaints about

For the 1967~68 sc1iolastic the content of the new Dutch year the tdtal number of sliumiddot catechismmiddot are believed to hae dents iil major seminaries m been instTllmentai in having tbe~ FhlOce is 43583 comparedl with book exltlmined by the VatiCan~lJ

4536 for the previous year Doctrinal Congregation 4722 )n 1965-66 and 4953 in 1964-65

Moreover in France at pres- Approves Agency eol ttiere are aBout 200 adults LQND()N (NC)--Jolin Cardl~

WIIO are preIgtaring for tOe ~er nal Heenan of Westminster liJaa manent diaconate as restored by approveq establishment ocf 1m the Second Vatican Council The agency to help priests who want first ordinations to this permashy 10 leave the priesthood znGl nent diaconate could take place nuns who want to leave the this year religious life

1P~alrn le~tUlm~1rn~~G~

$1lll~7 GG1l I1DtJ Sim LONDON (NC)-A study on

the problems of ecumenism in Great Britain will be made by a joint working group of the British Council of Churches and the Caholic Church with the results to be reported next Autumn

The study was planned at a meetingmiddot held atmiddot the Vita et Pax Benedictine I~onvent and attendshyed by nine Catholic representashytives an- 14 representatives of the BeC -

The projected study is exshypected to analyze such topics an the extent I)f cooperatiGn beshytween Catjwlics and members of the BeC the dialogUes bemg held theologicaL differences and the non~theological obstacles to closer unitygt

Auxiliary BishoJ- Langton Fox of lfenevia Wales and

Auxiliary Bishop Basil Chrisshytopher Butlelr OSB of Westshyminster headed tOe CatOolie delegation at the meeting

~(i]$~~rlaquolJpoundfr1) A$1k lMl~illlW) ~ltoy~ IHh~)~Dnd

U11RECHm (NC) -Michaels Legion an organization of Dutch Catholic~ uaditionalists has sent a telegram to Pope Pault H ungintg him tD protect essential orthodoxy and to S81fe tne DutchChurch~

At 3- meeting here attended b~ some 600) Catholic conserva tives led by Eouis Knuvelder the legion condemned the Dutch Catholic daily press the~ Dutch Gatholic tellvisioncompany and the countrys Catholic radio station for being too progressive

Father Baum Regards Ecumenical Center Closing Sign of Success TORONTO (NC)-The closing gian Charles Davis-A Quesshy

of the Center for Ecumenical tion of Conscience Davis book Studies at St Michaels Collegegt exmiddotplains his renunciation of the here is a sign of the centersmiddot euroatholic priesthood and the success Church and asks Catholic theo-

This is the viewpoint of Father logians who intend to stay in GregllllY Ballm O~SA founder the~ eurohurch to reply to several of tJie centeI1 who has an- t1iaologjcal points nQunlaquoed that it will b~ Closed BelUef Unbelief

inl JUne Thats what Im doing FatlieJJBaum-explalnedthalhe Fatller Baum said His book a

founded the centeJ ill 19631 when replYJ to Davis questions conshyecum~llusrn may have~ been a ceming the credibility of the new Idea Its purpose lie- s~ld Church in todays world will be was to promote ecumemcall called The Credibility of the studies at St Michaels Church Today It will be pub-

Taday he neports ecumen mal stlUdi~s at S1l Michaels are a reality- 1lli~ schGolls theology depal1tment 18 fully mte~ ~thl Protestant and ~gIIcan lfupartmentsmiddot at the-Umversity

of Toronto [hUB lie said~ the eC-lmenical

centell has fulfilled its purpose Such fUlfillment he said wmiddot

common in academic circles where there has been an ecushymenlical reVOlution For exam pIe ne said where once som1shyone might have nied to foster ecumenism through building an ecumenical library it is now impossible tq build a theological lilgtrary without its being ecushymenical

Need flDZ Programsmiddot Father Baum added that he

does not believe tJie ecumenical movement has reached fruitien in circles outside the academia world~ He said that he sees a real need pound01 formal ecumenmiddot ical programs on the parish and on all levels of the Churdl which have not yet been reached He a150 disclosed that perSOll ally he lias moved Gn frOlll ecumenism to new fields of thought

The AuIDlStinian has written a new book in answer to the latest by the English theolo-

U[[$ W)jf[rll IfSMsjIID~

rnliJ kUD-WIh ol 1TW[jiJ KETTERING (Neuro) - The 1-7shy

member parish board 00 St Charles Church~ here unanishymousll1 adopted a resolution 5 favor Qf open nousing legiSlashytion for thiS (1)hio suburban community

The parish boards action S~ poIied- unequivocallymiddot passage 0amp an open housing ordinance in themiddot virtuallr aUi-wltite commw-middot nity 00l more than 600001 res dents Tames J Gilvay and Peter Donanue attOrneys anlL pariBhlmiddot boarc members pre sentedthe resolutJoDj wliiclli tbok- themiddot position that the ghett) condit1ollG ~Ilichl Negroes enshycure ilm nearby DaYton are mshyiuriOwil to the entire commUlshyDitTmiddot

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Aftei tee closing of the Center for Ecumenical Studies Father Baum will stay on at St MishychaeFs au a professor of theolshyogy He is also planning another ~~

It will concentrate on the idea oi God in modern thought and will be a clear sign that Father Baum has moved away from his prime in terest in ecumen- ism

Born of Jewish parents in Berlin and reared as an agnostic Father Baum said he has now turned his whole thought to the study of belief and unbelief He will record his findings in me book he is now writing

~oh~ laquotmm~~litl ~Od1[9)

[~ Ao~ i N~regIJ$ CAMDEN (NC) - Bishop

Tames L Schad administrator of the Camden diocese was =ong citizens honored here foT their efforts in furthering the interests of the Negro comshymunity

Bishop Schad who has been active in community action projects such as the War on Poverty committees was pre sented a scroll during a proshygram sponsored by the Tenth Street Baptist church here in observance of the 43rd annual Negro History Week This year marks the first time a Romaa Catholic prelate has been so honored

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17 Oppose Church Clergy Participation in Politics

By Jsgr George G Higgins

The New RepubJic-whIch in this writers judgment W one CYl the be3t of Ameriros weekly journals of opinion especially hl it3 arovezoage cfcurrent economic and political developments----thinks that the time has com~ for anti shyVietnam clergymen aul1ayshy Be that as it maY I am ioshymen to translate tu1eir cVZl clined to think that the editors m0r81 indignation oveuror Vietshy of the French periodical Inforshynam into effective political mations Catholique InternashyDction inasmuch as this is the tionales make considerably only way to effect long-term more sense than the editors cOf ehanges in the The New Republic 011 this issue policies of this of clerical involvement in the country So far so-called politics of peace as laymen are Though they are vigorously concerned this and unqualifiedly opposed ~il

would seem to tW war in Vietnam and like be a self - evishy tWeditors ()f The New Repubshydent proposition li( clearly recognize that the L1s perfectly establishment of leace in the obvious t hat world is a political problem concerned layshy which calls for the active mshymen ou~ht to volvement ofChcistians as ~-en

translate their as all other men of good will moral indi~nashy they do not think that themiddot tion over Vietnam - or any cleJgy who are responsible foy other significant issue of public the unity of the Church should policy-into effecti-re poiiticltll be expected to take on the role

of party politiciansaction Given the fact that their pubshySound Tradition

lication ~CI has been oJe 01 tileOn the other hnd I aJl Evt most outspoken European critics

sure understandthat I fully or of U S involvement in Vietnam completely agree vitb The New and one of the most vigorousRepublic when it says that fue advocates middotof a politics of peaceclergy ought tncv likewise their warning against the parshy

Traditionally a the NR itself ticipation of the clergy in parshypvints out the clergy-in this tisan politics is highly signifi shycountry at least - have rnied cant and deserves to be taken amy from such participation very seriously (Christians and

AJJ a long-time subscriher to the Struggle ior Peaee InforshyT~2 New Republic I had Dlshy mations Catholique Internashyways been under the imp~ssio~ tionales Jan 15 1965)that its editors thought that en Fl lialgs lrindplebalance this was a sound tradishy

Those American Catholicstion Apparently lwweer I was who may happen to have a speshy

cial interest in the pros and consmistaken in this regard fora of this highly controversial issuerecent Nell Republic editorial will also want to read whatnoten with satisfaction that Hans Kung has to say about itAJlerican clerGYmen now apshy

pear to be ready in large numshy in his forthcoming bookThe Churchbers to get involved at a preshy

cinct level and to play C1l Father Kung has lectured exshyactivist role in both parties tensively throughout the United (Clergy in Politics The New SUItes in recent years and is

currently with us again as a visshyRepublic Feb 17 1968) iting professor at Union Theoshy

QuestioIS Meaning logical Seminary in New York What does this mean in pracshy Seen in the light of the Gosshy

tical terma Does it mean that pel le writes in his new book ministers rabbis and priests the relntionshipof the Church should endorse ltor oppose) parshy to the world contains only one ticular candic1ates fqr politiell essential aspect its ministry 10 office starting at the precinct the world level Does it mean that they Ministry does not mean raisshythemselves should run for ofshy ing ones voice or putting an -oar flee if only as a last reiort in all secular qIes1ions middotof ecoshy

If so does it also mean that nomic political sodaI middotcultural other clergymen should run artistic and scientific life against them if they happen to T1e Churchclmnot solve disagree with what they stand the greJt problems of the ()rld for Or does it mean toot only neiih2r the problell1of hunger those clergymen who are anti shy nor that of the populaticn nor Administration should get inshy that of war nor thlt oanonFmshyT-olved at a precinct leel and ity of power Dor that -of race play an activist role within hatred What the Church both parties can do can be expressed quite

Sicnifieani WarnlDI simply in one phrase it must I have raised these questions exist for the world

lot to make light of The New ACrefS With lFTK1mgRepublics editorial CD the subshyject under discussion but Anyone who hal ever baG the merely to BUggest that clerical pleasure of meeting Faiher involvement ill partisan politics Kung middotor is familiar wi1bhis over the issue of Vietnam is at writings will know witheut best a rather tricky business being told that be is not a hawk and will almost inevitably lead and that he is cot advocating to certain consequences which a policy of Christian withdrawal upon further reflection even the from the world editors of The New Republie middotOn the eontrary be stroniJy might eonceivably wish tc foreshy favors lhe all-ltltit involvement tall of Christians in temporal affairs

and notably iii the ~lities Of peace

To Speak in Boston Nevertheless be does net Rev Anthony T Padovano think that the institutienal

Church-and its clerical minisshySTD theology professor at ters-should pretend that theyImmaculate Conception Semishy

nary Darlington N J will speak have all the answers tc the problems of the worldia the Christian Culture lecture

aries sponsored by the Paulist And neither eoes be thinkshyFathers at 815 Wednesday night if I read him correctly-that tbe March 6 in John Hancock Ha)) clergy in ~ exeTeise of their Boston Tickets are available mission of peace should get inshyfrom 5 Park Street Boston volved in partisan jl)olities Nor 02108 do L

WOKS LIKE FUN Yes but listen to what it requires The Georgetown University erew keeps in s-hape with ~

AM ~i~enies in the gym foHow~ by a two-niile run UJl and do-Wll Observatory Hil~on tJhecampus Its cold up there said Dave Harris a member of the lightweifht crew but by then youlewtired you do-nt care NC Phottgt

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 ~ 968

Prayer for Peace To Cm(O)se Games

MEXICO CITY (NC) - All ecumenical prR)er for peaCf) service is being planned for the end of the 19th Olympic Gam~

here next October The sponsor of the service w shy

the Ecumenical Commission fcrr Religious Services (ECRS) fe the Olympic Games The comshymission is composed of 73 ChrisshytiRn and Jewish leaders in thi~

city Promment spiritual leadshyers will be invited to speak

At middot8 meeting here the rn ECRS spiritual leaders discusse~

the facilities for athletes and visitors to attend their varioU7J reUgious services

iI1be iMC)Cican government hw aPPI)o~ed ECRS plans for the ~ction of at least tw- JaIige bullclings as nondenonYshynational chapels

The original pIlan toeonstrl1ell one large church has been IcHsshytlarded The present plan is build one large building with no religious I)rnamentllJtion of alltl7 kind on the outskirts of the Olympic Villa and a similar Oilif)

on tne outskirts of the Olympze

Project InterracialInterfaith Cooperation Cultural Villa

tin (Re~~(Jtion of CcUege m addition Archbishop MEshymiddotgut Dario MirlllDda y Gomez Gl

1I1IAMI (NC)~When Florida The Rev Edward T Graham Mexico City hBs authorizeQ Memorial College predominant a Baptist minister key person downtown Catholic churches to ly Negro middotliberal arts school is behind the project has had asshy permit non-Catholic services = moved here frOl1l St Augustine sistance from Mrs Athalie their premises if non-Catholie and opens next September the Range Miamis first NeglO City comgregations should request i project will be the result of unshy Commissoioner who is a Cathshyusual interracial and interfaith olic teamwork Organhzet3 rOthEHSIl

The largest single contribll shyNegroeswhites and Chinese tiou of private funds has oome flainirt~ ClI1ter

have joined hands with Cathoshy from a supermarket executive lLOUISVILLE (NC) - TkeIlics Protestants and Jews tv M Austin Davis a Methodist Franciscan Conventional OrdGcontribute money time advice laiamis Catholic Bishop Coleshy has opened a Brothers Trainincand leadership to realize the

manF Carroll is a member vl1 Center here in an attempt to givedevelopment of the college on l the advisory board as is Maushy Brothers three years of active$10 million complex here rice Ferre diocese of Miami lay apostolic work following theirr leader novitiate

RabbiIrving Lehrman presshy Father Sebastian Cunnil1flshyCouncil Seores ident cd the Greater Miami ham OFM director of tlw Rabbinical Association a n 4ll OOlilter said We felt we haCFactory Closing Jewish lay leaders are amoag an cbligation to give our man

LONDON (NC-The impend- active workers oome training outside contam ing elosingof a large industricl $ bull $ an idea of what was neeclshyJilseph Rodriguez of the plant has been criticized by ~ edfromthem in the outside Puerto Rican Democratic ChEb lay -eouncil of Our Lady Of _rl11 In the past he addeeurohas prepared 11 scholarship PieshyGrace parish in southeast Lsnshy we were not fWfilling ~ gram for -the collegedCD DeedS 1d ~veryoneliturgy

The council expressed its deep concern at the recent No Comlmentclosure of factories in middotthis area Completean4 in particular of the impendshy VATICAN (orry (NC)-Ibe ing shutdown of the Associ2ted Vatican had no comment -oJ1 11

ElectricaIIndustries (AEI) plant repolt that ~hbishop Agostincgt BANKING Casaroli secretary for extraershyIt callid upon the governmeJrt dinary ecclesiastical affairs ilf SERVICEand the -ehaiTmanof the oomshy the Papal Secretariat of statepany torevsrse the decision 10 eonterred with Dlembers of ~

c~ don the plant because Of tor BristOl CountyN-orth Vietnamese missi-on iJJthe middotmoral religious and 5Ocial Parisjn lJanuarylt n JUWWampleffeets iCaiJS2a by the ~veshythat Archbishop Casaroli Wallmen1 a1popl1ation absent from the Vatican fOll

Copies ltOf the councils motion several days nlenUy BrjstoICounty were sent 1amp Prime ~1inister

Harold Wilson MiJiister of Trust Company Labor RayJ Gunter President ampf the Board of Trade Douglas Sturteant (

TAUNTO~ MASSJay and company officials iHoOkAlthough the councils action was a surprise to the pastel Ed 1897 IIHE BANJ(ONFather Joseph seally AA ~ uiltl~rs SUppJies JAUNTONGRHNprist sroa that he agreed ith it ftll3 Purchase Street Member 01 Feileral ~

Faiher 8enlly sait[ centbert Aellad iNew Bedford IDsuranee CorporaamptoDJlOt~cteil p01itiealand elaquolshy 996-5661 nomic motions to eome from the council but pointed out You cannot separate Feligimtl from eveJ~ay life

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968 Capacity Audience at Holy Name Parish ~ihss

My Consciesect1ce Discusses The J)etached Americans In Educ~tion Continued from Page One

Do we care -for knowledge

what happens to other people Why do we strive for college educations or for money Are we so anxious to confor~l1 that we never dare to PITTSBURGH

tMrI

~VJI and it must be understood in a

t mear-cu way

A person following his ~con-~ence must be sincere He cannot play games with his mind but must be honest with himself

A person foilowing his con~ liCience must be correct It iSl10t ugh that he sincerely beshy~ Reves that something is good or evil-he must be sure that hiS judgement is a correct one

agrees with Gods view of the matter

Sometimes people make misshytakes in judgement-honest misshytakes to be sure but mistakes iwnetheless The oft-quoted exshyample is that of the African savshyrage deep in the jungle who may be sincerely following his con- ooience when it tells him to kill omd eat his enemy His conshyscience is a sincere one But it~ Is a mistaken one since it does IIlOt agree with Gods Will He ond every person must c~m-

liitantly review his judgements to lbe sure that they are correct ones and riot sincere mistaken Utes

A person following his conshy3Cience must be certain He can not act with doubt or uncertainshy~ about the rightness or wrong- mess of an act since he would be Announces Prize acting with the willingness to

takea cpance on being wrong For Best Plan ~ offendi~g God and this is aever~ validmiddot If there is uncer- PITTSinJRqH (NC)-Bishop t8inty the person must seek aid John J Wright of middotPittsburgh III arriving at a sure and correct haS annoutc~d il priz~ of$IOOOtor professor ina p1inor semshy tudgementmiddot - formiddot the architect who submitsmiddoth be I f - inary chapiainof a school dishyThe Christian acts with amiddotcon- ~ e st p an or a Jliljgtr renoshy ocesan chancellor and finally

lllilence ~rned by the prlnciples vation of the sanctuary of St vicar general tilChrlst This is where tliEi Pa~l~ cath~middot~al_h~remiddot~T~~e ~om- The P6pe a~o nam~d Father

aturchsteachers the Pope Iiiid P~tit~o~ IS ~p~nmiddot ~omiddotal archJtec~ Bienvenido TudtiJdto be auxil- a message toAfrica and a mes ishops ~nfer middotthe pi~ture to wl~hlD ~e bound~~l~~s~f the iary bishop of Dumaguete in the sage ~lling for peaCe

Illelp men make judgementsmiddot thatmiddot lire guided by Christ Sometimes ~ese j~dge~eptsgo a~intitmiddotnat-middot lIIIa1 inclinations and tendencies md this has always been thedif-

~ti~ty of ~ing a Christian-- Ghrist demands much of His llmiddotowmiddotmiddotermiddots middot IIIU

At present Catholics are askshyiDg tlie Pope to make a morai judgement about birth control d especlmiddotallymiddot the PlmiddotUmiddot Some_lire castigating him for not givshy g a qulck declslon or else they lliie telling people to forget about llrim and to make their own adgeme tsmiddot th ttmiddot w- n m e ma er The Pope in order to make a ilecision must make it on the basis of facts Scientists must provide him with the facts and In this matter there is much that k~epinglVith the general lin~s sition in favor I)f open housing complex The Pope has asked and is still asking theologians to evaluate the scientific facts in 4he light of Christian principles Not all moral issues are simple And then the Pope will apply the principles to the facts and 1ril1 make a decision about the morality of the matter

This will guide the Catholic in fllorming his conscience -- in arshyriving at a judgement that is sipcere that is the correct orie at lS artmiddot d t d ce am JU gemen anthatmiddot is Christian

K of C Convention 51ated for Houston

lAN MARCOS (NC) The

1970 national convention of the ~ights of Columbus will be held in Houston it was an-Bounced here at a conference of Texas officers of the interna- _ tional fraternalorder

The announcement of the seshylection of Houston for the con- v~ntion which will be held in

be different These were among questions discussed by a capacity audience at the second in a series on Christian Morality sponsored by the parish council of Holy Name Church Fall River Sparked by Sisshy

John AIIcIa SUS Cter some 30 people from all parts of themiddot Diocese viewed the film The Detached Amerishycans then broke into small groups for buzz sessions

Thesis of the film was that Americans wont become in volved with each other It dra- matically pointed its message with the true story of Kitty

Genovese murdered on a New York Street while 38 of her neighbors watched ffom winshy

bull dowS-o--and did nothing Also depicted were amarried

couple talkingto each other with neither really listening a student going thriugh school as on an assembly line with his sole goal the position he could

hope for as a college graduate and various other examples of non-involvement

What is life worth if we do not give it away questioned Harry Reasoner at the end of the film The Holy Name audishyence agreed that life sbould be

used for others but tended to feel that there wasnt the im-Personalitv in a smailer city

Jthat is found in a large metropshyolis One Sister countered howshyever with stories brought to

h t htschool by children s e aug This is right in Fall River she stressed Others cited examshypIes of personal involvement in affaIrs of others but agreed that much more could and

Pope I~aul Names Two Aluxiliaries VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VImiddot hail named Msgr Jose T Sanchez to be auxiliary bishop of Caceres in the Philipshypines He takes the titular See of Lesvi

Msgr 5anlhez was vicar genshyeral of Legazpi at the time of his nomination

He was born March 17 1920 atPandan in the Legazpi dioshycese He completed his philoshysophical and ordinary theologishycal studies at the diocesan semshyinary and obtained a licentiate in theology at the University of St Thomas in Manila He was ordained Marc~ 12 1946 and then worked as an assistant passhy

Pltts~urgpchap~er9rmiddottl~e Afner- ~ Philippines Father Tudtud who Pope Paul also delivered 264 ~can -Inst~tUtofAlth~te~ts was36ye~~I)]fat ~hcent time ~fsPeeches bull (~~)_(h~ch mclud~~ ~tIePoit~- his noniinatiOJl studied philos- burgb dlO~es~and three adJa-ophy and theology at St Johns

c~nt countIes SeminarY inmiddotBoston Fath~r roseph P- Larkin He was born March 22 1931

eOm~ission chaiIm~nmiddot ili1(I-a at Mabola inmiddotthe Cebu arch~ member of the diQcesan bU~lll- diocese He worked as assistant - bullbull

iIg commissligtn~ said the pur- pastor Editor ltit Cebus Caiholic pose of thereiiovlition is to pro weekl~ and finally pastor of the ville a ~mQte suitable sanctu- Church of thE Blessed Sacrashy

ary setting fof the liturgical re- inent in Cebu In addition atf orms Qrought into beingmiddot by the time of his nomination he Vatican Council II was vice-superior of the Misshy

Father Lmiddotai-kir said because slon Society of the Philippines the cathedral must architectu-middot r~lly and liturgically allow for Issues Sttement both episcopal mdparish ser-- U

vices ~~any structurai cihimge O H R h offers a unique chalienge to the n umalu ig ts designer~ and provision for the LA CROSSE (NC)-Tbe La

new liturgy must be made in Crosse diocese has taken a poshy

and spirit 01 the existing struc- integrated arid ildequate educashy t4re tion fair employment and the

- defense of the rights of minorshyities

Christians and J~ws Bishop Frederick W Frekshying of the Wisconsin diocese

Honor Clergymen and the diocesan central com-NEW YORK (NC)-Clergy- mission approvedmiddot apmiddot officiai

men from thefour major faiths statem~nt titled Human Reshyhave been honored here by the lations in the Diocese of La National Coiuerence of Chris- Crosse

tians anltt Jews The statement was prepared

the third week of August was the practice has spread middotto a made by Dr Josepb G Murphy number of other cities hesaid of La Marque a member of the interrelgious understanding hasmiddot boara- of- directors fortbe Cathprogressed tremendously middotiIi reshyeticmiddot meDs oganization middotc~nhyearsbull

-

Tbe clergymeri cited for by the subcommission of human relations of the diocesan cornshycourageous leadership in intershymissionon social action and apshy

creedal relations were proved by both before submisshy Rev Dr ~ohn C Bennett sion to the central commissiollll

president of Union Theological ) in January Seminary

Father Robert I Gannon SJ president emeritus of Fordham CONRAD SEGUIN University

Bishop Silas of the GreekOrshy BODY COJMPANY thodox archdiocese of Nortb and Aluminum or Steel South America 944 Countr Street

Samuel D Leisdorf New NEW BEDFORD MASSYork philanthropist pointed out

wy 2-6618that the NCCJ firstmiddot honored reshyligious leaders of four faiths in September -1966 Noting that

should be done by individuals parishes and municipaiities

There were no solutions ofshyfered to the problems posed bythe film We dont expect to have answers to these quesshytions warned Sister John Alicia at the beginning of the program They are too big for us The film WltlS strictly on the

human level and this was pointed out in one group No one can solve all problems it was agreed but surely each Christian canmiddot trust the Holy Spirit to lead him to the probshylems he is equipped to do someshything about no matter how small

There was another point on whichmiddot everyohe in the audience was in enthusiastic agreement that there be more such eveshynings as the one sponsored by Holllgt Namemiddot

Vatmiddotn Report~lIo

Continued from Page One two encyclicals The Developshymiddotment of Peoples and Priestly Celshyibacy four motu proprios inshyeluding one creating central a lay council and the Papal Comshymission on International Justice anp Peace and another restorshying the permanerit diacol1ate treeapostolic constitutions inshyelUding one reshaping the

Churchs c~iitral administlatioii two apostolic exhortations one apostolic letter and 78 other Wessagesmiddotand letterS inclQding

He reeeived eight ehiets Of state including U SPresident Lyndon B Johnson and United Nations Secretary General U T~ant and gave 16 audiences to

th lmiddottmiddot I0 er men 10 ~ 1 lca life in cluding U SVi~ President Hushy~rt H Humphrey Republican presidential hopeful Richard M N d N Ixon an ew Yorks Sen Robert F Kennedy

He received visits from four delegations of Orthodox churCh men including Orthodox Ecushymenicai Patriarcp Athenagoras I of Constantinople besides visit shying Patriarch Athenagoras in ~ tanbul

The book covering last yearli activities of the Holy See conshysists of 1680 pages plus about 2(10 photographs

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SolvcnorlCln Center WlllCOnaln 53061

Bishop John J Wright hasestablished a committee 1Jl)take a complete look at Oaampshy

olie education in the PittsburpD lOcese

The aim is fc dedde wha~ 1shyd t to tak tbe ~

lrec Ion e Dedecade for the best education of

all Catholics young and oldThe committee will evaluate all present Catholic educationshygrade and high schools eo egesConfraternity of Christian Doeshytrine classes adult education and other programs

The surveyors wiU 117 to deshyvise a plan based oa mstinl and potential resources in facll-Hies funds and Staff to guide the dioceses educational efforlll for the next 10 years or more

May Be FaI-lleaehiDg Among ideas eXpected to be

examined in the evaluation are proposals by some to cut back on Catholic schools or even til phase them out in place of an expanded adult education proshygram

Named head of the committee of educators priests and lay professionals is Father Vernon Gallagher CSSp former presishy

deht of Duquesne University here now serving as an official of the Holy Childhood Associashytion He also is a former proshyvincial of the Holy Gbost Fa~ ers eastern province

The committee Will be emshypowered to call before it di shyocesan officials to hold publlc meetingshire staff ~ring in exshyperts ThedioCege will finance the work

The committee Win make spe- eific recommendations to BishoP Wright after the study which 18 expected to take at least a yearbull

-Results are expected to have ~ar-reaching implicatiou fOr Catholic education here

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Two Unbeoten league Play f1fE ANCHOR-Diocese oTtall River-Ihurs feb 29 1968 19

Coach Says Sault Complete BallPlayerCape Cods NausetCompiles SMTB Playmaker Is Former Coyle $trBest Over-All Court Mark

BY JOE MIRANDA By PETER BARTEK

An excellent hall handler and Norton High Coach team player Is how Pat Sault of

Taunton is described by his Eleven of tile 12 aa-ea e1ubs with the best records in coach Phil Wetterland of the

their respective leagues are among those who will parshy Sou the a s t ern Massachu- setts Technogical Institute Inshyticipate in the March Tech basketball tournament in Boston stitute in North DartmouthFairhaven High of the Oapeway Conference and Nauset Sault a 19-year old freshman

of the Cape amp Island loop are is a former Coyle High hoopshythe only all-winning league a single league game while two ster who played four years for

went doWn to defeat In every the Warriors his final two underaggregations from this area encounter In which they were coach Jim Lanagan on the varshyin the Hub championship Involved Almost two-thirds 02 sityelimination tourney while Dartshy the Southeastern Mass teams

D)Quth High is the only one of Teaching CareerfinIshed wIth a 500 average OIlthe tOp dozen better Although young Pat has al shya 70 per cent coQlbines WIth

WIth 12 triumphs in the Cape ready made plans for the future league record amp Island competition Nauset which Include finishing his edshywhich failed to Regional also achieved the best ucation and pursuing a teachershyqualify an inshy over-all record winning 16 of coaching career dication t hat 11 encounters The Cape Cod Sault has not yet chosen a non-league school will be shooting for the major in college but according competition selshy Class D Tech title to his parents he is very much dom jeopardizes interested in teaching historyNew Bedford High 15 and and coaching They feel he willthe ultImate one in the Greater Boston Subshy be good at both as he alwaysgoal of most urban league finished with anschools Actual- Peter devoted his spare time to helpshy

over-all 17-2 mark for the Winshyly 311 per cent Bartek ing the younger neighborhoodter The Crimsons 937 average boys understand athletics moreof the 35 Southeastern Massashy captured its leagues pennant flag thoroughlychusetts school teamsmiddot have The Crimson Whalers are now Pat is the oldest son of Mrqualified for the Tech title play poised to annex the No 1 State and Mrs Charles A Sault and)let none managed an over-all honor by clinching the top one of four children A sisterundefeated season ranking Class A division in the Annette is a senior at BishopThree area clubs failed to win Boston title tourney Cassidy High James Michael

and Cheryl grammar school Representatives in Three B~ackets students at Mulcahey Schoof in

Taunton Fairhaven and Holy Family FamilYhas been eliminated in The family resides at 85 Mershy

HIgh of New Bedford aiming the Lawrence Catholic tourney rill Avenue In Taunton and are for the Class C Tech crown both Southeastern Mass does not members of St Pauls Parish fInished wIth an over-all 16-2 have one club among the Tech

Wetterland Commentsmark The latter Is still smart- Class B participants but th~re ing from its cliff-hanging defeat will be five area combinations Wetterland was high in his at the hands of Xavier in the -includIng Fairhaven and Holy praise of his five foot 11 inch State Catholic tourney Bill Family-in the Class C play and guard who tips the scales at Walshs two-pointer from the three-including Nauset-in the 160 pounds ~ssesses good speed floor which many thought Class D Hub competition and is a key in the Corsairs fast

meant victory at Lawrence was The other Class C contestants break offense nu1llfied by a travelling viola- patterns when SMTI is wurkshy a rest he should be in top conshySault lllsed strictly with thetion which cost the loss ofthe are Case High of Swansea Nar- iilg too quickly and making dition for the 1968-69 campaignvarsity was gaining valuablebasket resulting in a one-~Jnt ry co-champions Oliver Ames Dlistakes Sault gaIned his court savvy1 f tb of North Easton runners-up in experience and developing rapshy

The SMTI mentor continued from Lanagan at Coyle wheretiOs~~ e Narragnnsett~a~ theHockomock circuit and Den- bUy whep a knee Injury slowed he iii the complete ball player hemiddotstarted in his juJ)ior and senshyDis-Yarmouth of Cape Cod see his progress midway through

Durfee of Fall RIver and ond pI fi ish in tho C the campaiiPt but Wetterland noting that he can shoot but is Jor lieasons and was a Vital co Bishop Stang mgh of North ace n er e ape most --content setting Up his in the Warriors successduring DartmQutb are the other two middotNausetwill be joined by Mar- has turned in some excellent efshy teammates for easy pblnts He Ioth years I J

way loop said despite the handicap Pat

Is a team player and always sacshy As ~ Coyle High fr~hmanarea Class A representatives inmiddot thas VIneyard and Norton mib forts in a most successful SMTI rifices himself to help the club Pat was a member XJtb~ yearshythe Tecb toutnament ~e Fall in the Class D bracket The season

Sault possesses a good atti shy lings h09P team and al~Q~ parti shyRiver Hilltoppers willbe out Islanders finished second to Naushy Defensively Sault is cnitshytude is a tough competitor and cipated in track By hihSOphoshyto make amends for their nose- set in the Cape amp Island league standIng Offensively Sault is one of the players Wetterland is more year Saultcopfjned his dive finish in the Bristol COUl)ty while Norton was second in the the teams playmaker ana quarshyeounting on 1to help SMTI gain athlettc talents to basketbjlll andloop whIle Stang ~ke Ho17 Tri~Valley Conference terback 8Dlall college recognition in the turned in a cODlJPenlla))le acshyfuture Teallll Player coun~ o~ himself

Ifere~s How They Did hi LiBogue Play Played for Lanagan Sault also represented stWetterland said his outstandshyThere is doubt about his the hardwood

he following are the league 21 Bishop Feehan 7_1 ing worth to the Corsairs comes no Pauls on in the eourage said the Corsairs skipshy Taunton CYO and in the annual from the fact that he can slowrecords of the 35 Southeastem Msgr Coyle 7-1 after painful knee Easter tournament He playeddown the offense and set up per even a

Mass teams Ta~ton 7-7 injury Sault continued to jpve four years of Litue JeagueM N B Vocational 6-8 his all and attended every pracshy Baseball and one season in theK of C Masons1 Fairhaven 14-0 25 DIman Vocational 5-9 tice The injury has slowed him Pony League prior to ~ntetmamp

Nauset 12-0 Msgr Prevost 5-9 visibly but after the season and Coyle Higa 3 New Bedford 15-1 27 SandwIch 4-8 To Cooperate4 Holy Family 13-1 28 Nantucket 3-9

NOTRE DAME (NC) - lfashyCase 13-1 29 Old Rochester 4-10

30 tlonal leadellS of the Scottish6 Oliver Ames 12-2 West~rt 3-11 Bite Masons and the Knights ~oll another7 Marthas Vineyard ~ 31 Barnstable 2-12

of Columbus anno~ced memshy8 Bishop Stang 10~ 32 Dighton-Rehoboth 1-13 strike on~rs of their organizations wU1Dartmouth 104 33 Bourne 0-14 work together on domestic andDennis-Yarmouth 10-4 Chatham 0-12 the enerlY international problems faciolaquoDurfee 10-1 North AUleJooro 1-14

the nation12 Norton 105 you get George A Newbury soveshy13 Attleboro 9-5 Minister Officiates reign grand commander 01 from14 Harwich 7-5

Scottish Rite Masons In theProvIncetown 7-5 a slice ofDn Cathclic Church northern jurisdiction of the US18 Seekonk 8-6 MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-A Lu- and John W McDevitt supremeSomerset 86

theran mInister officiated at the knight of the Knights of ColumshyFalmouth 8-6 marriage of his son in Holy Cross bus made the announcementMansfield 8-6 Catholic church here at a dinner here s~nsoredWareham 8-6

Married were James H Graf jointly by the Masonic Lodge 29 L th and the Knights of Columbus

a u eran and CalTon Ann council in South Bend Episcopalian Rite Gutwinski 25 a Catholic The ceremony was rformed - Both praised the work of Fa-MINNEAPOLIS (NC)- Archshy ther John A OBrien of the

bishop Leo Binz and Coadjutor Grapoundfs fltthell the Rev Paul L University of Notre Dame for Archbishop ~ PY1)1e of the Graf pastor of Holy Trinity r better understanding among the Cafllolic archdIoceses of St Paul theran church two groups Minneapolis were present in the Permission for the Rev Gmt Father Theodore M Hesshysan~lary of St Marks Episcoshy to officiate at his sonB wedding burgh CSC president of the pal cathedral here for the inshy was granted by theSacred Con- University of Notre Dame said stallation of Bishop Philip F gregation for the Joctrine of This nIght marks a great step McNarry as coadjutor bishop of the Faitlh inl lWme in answer to ll forward and reflects the new the Epi6copal diocese of Minneshy J)etition by Archbishop Leo BiDz ~enical spirit which is unishysota of~ ~~-M~eapotis iing ~ople long separated-

PAT SAULT

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bull THE ANCHOR Dayton University Thurs Feb 29 196a Brief Religious on Ecumenism

Selects Advisors SOUTH ORANGE (NC) meanitigful dialogue should not tended not to lead to compro- DAYTON (NC)-An ll-mem-

Named resident Some 1000 mms and Brothers be confused with monologueshy mise but to conyergence ber advisory board of six stushyservfng in tli~ Newark archdi~shy or confrontation He added We talk now of our common dents two faculty members andSANTA CLARA (NC)-The cese were briefed on the basic we must be willing to be pershy belilefs he said not to com- three representatives of theboard of trustees of the Univershy principles of ecumenism in a suaded-we need an open mind promise each others faith but in community has been establishedlllity of Santa Clara has named program sponsored by the Newshy to seek out the truth wherever the hope that at some point in for the Office of Human Relashylrather Thomas D Terry SJ ark Archdiocese Commission for it might be shy the future we will converge tions at the University oJ Dayshy35th president of the Jesuit unishy Ecumenical Affairs

Ifersity Father Terry who sucshy Discussing the difficulties of As an example he pointed to tornSpeakers at the session ineeeds Father Patrick Donohoe establishing Christian-Jewish the wide divergence of views The board under the direcshySeton Hall University includeSJ recently appointed Califorshy dialogue he said we Christians regarding (he Mass and the Eu- tion of Charles Hirt director ofDr Leonard Swidler of Templeaia provinCial af the Society of are responsible for 2000 years charist that existed between the Office of Human RelationsUniversity Philadelphia aridJIesus has been academic vic~ of anti-Semitism and now_ we Martin Luther and the Council will be responsible for estabshyFather Thomas M McFadden ofpresident af Loyola University must overcome our mutual disshy of Trent Then he cited the re- lishing policy making programthe Brooklyn dioceseLos Angeles for the last year trust before dialogue can be cent statement on the Eucharist recommendations helping to

lllI1d a half Previous to that Swidler said dialogue with fruitful issued by Lutherans and Catho- alleviate campus racial probshyIIlIather Terry was dean of the others must be preceded by an lics to show how much closer lems and drawing up proposall ltWllege of arts and sciences at examination of Catholic attishy Father McFadden said diashy the two bodies have come since for implementation Santa Clara tudes In addition he said a logue among Christians is inshy that time

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Page 12: 02.29.68

a2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River--Thurs Feb 29 1968

The PaJrish Parade ~T MARYS CAlllllIlEJI)lItAL FALL RiVER

Mrs Hadley Lackey will serve as chaIrman of arrangements for the monthly meeting of the Womens Guild scheduled for a oclock on Monday night March 4 in the Shamrock Room of the Corky Row Club

Mrs John OConnor chairshyman of the Scholarola scheduled for April 1 requests that all pledges be brought to the March meeting of the Guild Committee members are avail shyable for all who wish their pledges collected at home

ST THERESA J80 ~-y gtltBORO

The ~ =middotaternity of Christian Mothers will hold thei~ regular monthly meeting on Monday evening March 4 following the Stations of the Cross

Rev Leo R Gravel OMI son of Mr and Mrs Raymond Gravel ofmiddotWestminister St So Attleshyboro will be the guest speaker

Members of the Confraternity will receive Comunion in a body at the 9 oclock Mass on Sunday morning March 3

88 PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Mothe~~ ~f Boy Scouts will bold a p1i1gtlic social at 730 toshynight Boy Scouts informatiOn classes for the Ad Mtare Dei award wiil be gtheld tonight and every T~ursday night during March and April

Junior High Camp Fire Girls plan a splash party at the YMCA from 530 to 7 Saturday night March 2 imd a cakesale in the IIChool hall from 8 to 11 30 Sun- ~y morniii~

The annual Cub Scout Pack IT Blue and Gold Banquet and charter presentation will take place at 630 Sunday night in the

school hall

SACRJED IllEART NOATlLEBORO

Starting on March 12 and conshytinuing for the next three conshysecutive Tuesday nights there will be an EcUmenical Worship Study conducted at Sacred Heart Church First Universalist Church First Methodist Church and the Grace Church

The service will begin at 730 and will be followed by a coffee hour and a discussion period in the church hall

The Sacred Heart Church will open the program on March 12 with a discussion of the Mass

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Womens Guild win reshyceive Holy Communion in a group at the 8 oclock Mass on Sunday morning March 3

The regular monthly meeting of the Guild will be held on Wednesday night March 6 at 730 in the school on Earle Street

ST PATRICK FALL RIVER

The Womens Guild announces an open meeting for Monday March 4 A jewelry demonstrashytion will be featured In charge of arrangements is Mrs Stanley Pitera aided by Mrs Joseph Fazzina

The unit will celebrate St Patricks day Saturday night March 16 with a smorgasbord supper and dance in the school auditorium Supper will be served at 7 and danCing will folshylow from 8 to midnight with music by the Moon Mists Resshyervations will close Sundq March 10 and may be made with guild officen or board memshybers

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

Plilrishoia books are to be distributed the weekend of

The WQmens Club announces March 2 and 3 Prizes will be bull pot luck supper for 630 Monshyday nigh1 Maich 4 Chairmen are Mrs William T Marum Jr and Miss Mary L Tyrrell

John F Keavy Jr president cl the US Model Railroad Assn will show films at a Boy Scout meeing slated for Tuesday night March 5

Theologians SllaquolIted As CU Spe(Q]~eis

WASHINGTON (NC) - Dr Ellie Mascall one of Englando most prominent Anglican theoshylogians and Father Hans Kung an outspoken advocate of reform in~~ the Catholic Church wilil speak at the Catholic University of America l1Ite in March

Dr Mascall a vigorous 0pshy

ponent of the so-called New Theology will give the Charles A Hart Memorial Lectures from March 24 to 29 His lectures will

deal sucessively with the quesshytions of God man Christ and the Church

Father Kung a Swiss theoloshygian who played an influential role at the Second Vatican Counshycil will speak on Sincerity in the Church on March 18

St louis Ceremony ST LOUIS (NC) - Bishop

John J Carberry of Columbus will be installed as Archbishop of St Louis on March 25 in cershyemonies at St Louis cathedral here

Archbishop Luigi Raimondi apostolic delegate to the United States will officiate The date of the cerem0I1-Y will be exactly three years after that on which Bishop Carberry was installed ordinary of Columbus

awarded to the three individuals selling the most books

The Mystibrook Singers of Bishop Stang High School will lead singing at the 815 Mass Sunday morning M~rch 3

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

A parish supper sponsored by the Womens Guild will be held from 530 to 730 Saturday night March 2 in the school hall Tickets are available from Mrs Frank Kingsley ticket chairman or any board member

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

During Lent Masses will be at 7 AM 4 PM and 7 PM

Confessions will be heard one half hour before each Mass Stashytions of the Cross will be held at 345 and 645 Friday aftershynoons and evenings Children are urged to attend Mass at 4 each afternoon The Children of Mary anshynounce a periby sale Friday March 15 A Portuguese parish mission will be preached by Rev Anshytonio Pinto CM from Sunday March 3 through Saturday March 9 Services will open Sunday night March 3 with rosary sernlon and Benediction at 7 I)clock and Mass and sershymon will be held every weekday night at 7

ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

The Association of the Sacred Hearts will sponsor a tea at 7 on Sunday night Mar 3 in the rectory in honor of the Sisters staffing the parish schooL

The monthly meeting C1f 1lhe Association will follow the tea

SAMOAN BISHOP The first native Polynesian memshyber of the hieraIl~hy Bishopshyelect Pio Taofinlllu (cq) S M will be consecrated at Apia Western Samoa on May 29 by Bosoon-born A r c h b ish 0 p George H Pearce SM of Suva The Bishop-eloot 44 made -his novitiate with the Marists on Staten Island ~C Photo

Hospital ~~urses

Return middotto Nork hi Covingtol1l

COVINGTON (NC) A nurses walkout which began in mid-November at 100shyyear-old St Eliz~~beth Hosshypital here has ended Nearly 100 of the 140 members of tine Registered Nurses tgtrganizati01l have indicated they will retum to their jobS The walkout stemmed from bull dispute over recognition of their organization and patient care policies Since the settlement hospital officials have been inshyterviewing nurse to expedite their reemployment and placeshyment

Restore Full Service Hospital spokesmen said the

nurses will be restored to posts they formerly held in so far as possible The nurses will lose no tenure as a result of their absence and if the positions they previously held have been filled they will be offered comshyparable posts or benext in line for selection to the positions

Administration officials exshypressed satisfaction with the prospect of the nurses return and voiced the earnest hope that we can move forward tel restore the 100 beds to service which had to be taliten out of availability by reason of the shortage of nurses to care for the patients

Officials estimate til1at four tie eight we~ks might t~ required 110 restore full bed service

Cite Achievements The nurses leaders said the7

had achieved at least 13 gains during the thteenionth dispute pointing to the fact that a doctor and a nurse have been apshypointed to the hospital board of trustees the establishment of bull patient care committee comshyposed or nurses electeli by those now employed by the hospital and equipment changes in the patient care area

Mrs Pat Tanner vice chait shyman also said the nurses unshyderstand that a lay heid will be appointed head of the hospital

Sister M Coronata adminisshytrator was assigned to) another post in the sisterhood earlier this month and Sister Mark Bernard has been serving u acting administrator I~he Franshyciscan Sisters of the Poor haft operated the hospitaL

Love Is An Active Verb We who bear the noble name of Christian arid who are io9shy

ingly called the faithful stand in awe of the Mystery of Christ and the Mystery of His Church More than the mystery of Obrist and of His Church is something we live It is then our duty JIlON

and more to experience the living reality of the Cbureh hershyself Cbristain tradition affirms that by her relatioJiship with Christ tlbe Redeemer the Church is a kind of sacrament or an efficacous sign of intimaJte union with God and indeed an efshyficacious sign cf the uni~ of all mankind

As members of the household of the faith we have heeD eaDmiddot ed by God and endowed with the precious gift 01 faithThereshyfore we m1ls truly experience a sense of urgency in brinampinK aD men to tun union with Christ Since mankind today is joined together more 1ll1osely than ever before in historY by bonds thaamp are social technical and eultural should it be ilenied the spirshyitual unity that springs from faith The Gospel is Ught Ii Is lIIewness it is energy it is rebirth it is salvation

Should DOt interest in our own salvation necessarily move us tID loving concern for the salvation of others If the Church is the Sacrament Of Salvation should we not as members of the Church eome to an eve- clearer awareness of our pari in her mission in the o1uty of evangelization in the missionary mandate in the apOstolic commiSsion Clearly our duty consonant withthe blessings I-eceived from Christ is that of spreading offering and announcing ~ faith to Others in order that we might be clble to acquit ourselves of Uiis Christian obligation The Society for the Propagation of the Faith eXiSts For-those who desire to be where the action is or 110 be iIivOlvoom wOrld mission the Church pr0shy

claims her own essential inissionlU) character Indeed the Cburdl ill J4ission and therefore aD of 118 are truly missionaries

fa tills Yeai IaItIl we eaa testify to Gaefldl uieDt 04 om- ATatitade to God for the bleilldDc of faWt by ma~ bull aerIfiee te TIle Society for the PropapUOn 01 the Faith lor tile works of the Chureh ill the service Df tile poor and underprholshy~ed We eamaot be Uke our Master III the fWlness of HIs Dlvinit7 nor caD we hoPe to experienCe thelrlory of His Transfigmratio bat there lis ODe way ill whieh we eaa resemble Rim and that Is ~ beeomtitamp- a oervant to His poor aDd His UWe ODes throughshyout the world

The native celrgy is the ho~ of the Chureb in Mission lands Many youngmen have heard the can but are sadly turned away for lack of facilities and funds $250 will provide a year of semshyinary training $1500 will cover the cost of complete education to the priesthood Wont you help us to help them by sending your offering to The Society of st Peter the Apostle 366 Fifth Avenue New York N Y 10001

SALVATION AND SERVICE are the work of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith Please cut out this eolumn and send your offering to Right Reverend Edward T OMeara Nashytional Direetor 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or directly to yoUr loeal Diocesan DirectOr Rt Rev Msgr Raymond T Considine 361 Norib MaiD Street FaD IUver Massaelnuse~ts 03720

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THE ANOiOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 13Missouri Diocesan Board Pondersmiddot Closing Consolidating Schools

KANSAS CITY (NC)-Tbe 1H girls They would be abshyKansas City-8t Joseph diocese sorbed into the school popushyis exploring the possibility of lations of Lillis high school and closing some of its schools and st Theresas academy forming n larger area school Although 120 persons attendshy Extension Volunteers bull bull bullwhich could upgrade the qualshy ed the school board meetingity of education for all pupils they were not petmitted tp

At 0 school board meeting speakFather John P Cole supershyinJtenden~ of schools reported on L - shyPTA Bead Plotes~

the possibility of setting up 11 Make Life Wortl IVngA motion-passed unanimousshycentral area grade school in ly by the board-was made to

mid-town Kansas City The continue exploration into conshysingle school would serve the solidation of the schools Thispopulations of three existing was opposed by John J Mcshygrade schools Donough a representativeFather Cole also suggested the elected by the Catholic PTApossibility of closing Redempshy Federation who will be seatedtorist high school now serving as a board member in July

McDonough was permitted to $~[]7reg~ 2~ Ifreg[[~ take part in the discussion but

had no vote

~~ ~~[[U IT)J He protested against the defe3ltist clique who let our

WASHINGTON (NC)-Bishop schools get picked off one byPaul F Tanner newly named one He charged that TheOrdinary of the diocese of St New Peltlple - the diocesanAugustine Fla is onfy the newspaper members of the dishyfourth priest to serve as general ocesan school office officials of secretary of the United States the Missouri Catholic Confershybishops secretariat in the nearshy ence Kansas City pastors andmiddotly half-century of its existence other Church officials share in

Bishop Tanner was the last an anti-Catholic school recshygeneral secretary of NCWC the ordoriginal secretariat He was also the first general secretary of ODe Operation both of is dual suc~essors-tne

McDonough said that theNational Conferenceof Catholic school superintendent shouldBishops and the United States be goingmiddot to the state legislashyCatholic Conference The NCCB ture and Governor Hearnes tois the bishops agency for dealshydemand tax relief instead ofing with purely splritual matshyconsidering consolidation andters the USCC Is their secreshyclosing of schoolstariat for dealing with secular

affairs Father Colemiddot maJntained that The prelate has served in the the reorganization would not

U S bishops secretariat 28 represent a cutback The area years longer than any precedshy school would be able to opshying general secretary Born in erate out of one blilding to Peoria TII in 1905 and ordained serve three parishes It would a priestmiddot of the Milw~ukee archshy provide the same educational diocese in 1931middot he came to experience for the same number Washington in 1940 ~as assistant of students plus advantages director of the Youth Departshy Cooperation would make posshyment NCWC He ~as assistant sible a highly developed model general secretary from 1945 to school staffed by Sisters from 1958 and has been general secshy three communities retary since then He said it would be irresponshy

He is the first bishop to serve sible to run three operations at as secretary to the bishops secshy all costs when the diocese retariat could have one operation run

The NCWC (as Council and it more efficiently do a better Conference) had been in exisshy educational job and provide opshytence 47 years when it formally portunity for a better deployshywent out of existence at the anshy ment of personnel nual meeting of the bishops in November 1966 Bishop Tanner who had served in the secretashy Urge Germaruls riat for more than half those years supervised the transition To Aid Vietnam to two separate organizationsshy

BONN (NC) - Two Germanthe NCCB and the USCC cardinals and two churchshyDuring Bishop Tanners secshy related relief organizations have

retaryship and in testimony to FALL RIVER PROVINCETOWN AND WESTPORT GIRLS WITHappealed to the German people

the growth of the work handled to collect money and to prayby the bishops secretariat an NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF EXTENSION VOIL~NTEERS DURINGfor the people of Vietnamimpressive addition to the headshy A week beore Mardi Gral lt- quarters building here was Joseph Cardinal Frings of Coshy THEIR YEAR OF VOLUNTEER WORK erected in 1960 logne asked the Catholics of his

archdiocese to cut down on Mardi Gras festivities and to donate magnanimously to the needy people of Vietnam Coshy These young college graduates have given a I year of their logne has long been known for its ampigtectacular Mardi Gras celeshy professional life to God in service in the South and West Are brations Citing the bombing Of North you willing to give twelve months of yourmiddotyouth to othersVietnam the plight of women and children caught between opposing forc~middot in the $()ut~ and the great number of refushygees Cardinal Frings asked how Catholics could watch pictures of these gravely distressing si~

WHY NOT ENROll AS ANuations on television and ceieshybrate Mardi Gras with a quiet The Spirit oj

Extension Volunteer HELPER middot$200 oconscience Alfred Cardinal Bengsch Of Extension Volunteer PROMOTER $500 o

Berlin asked for prayers for Sacrifice Extension Volunteer SPONSOR $1000 or more opeace in the world in a letter to the clergy of his diocese in which specifically mentioned AMOUNT ENCLOSED $ Vietnam as a name meaning Perfectlyblood and death RT REV RAYMOND T CONSIDINE PAIn a joint appeal Caritas the German Catholic relief organishy PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH OFFICE zation of Germanys Evangelical 368 NORTH MAIN STREETExemplifiedLutheran Church has asked for fALL RIVER MASS money to send food Md medishy

BISHOP P~VL F TANNU cine to the Children of Vietnam o

(-14 THf ANCHOR-Diocese of FaR Rfver-Th~rs Feb-29 1968 Two Objectives Jersey to Rehabilitate Young OffendersTells Jesuatts Engage in Deliberate

Help Increasing Spanish Group Attempts at lExperimentation UNION CITY (NC) - Two Hudson County Jan and in theST LOUIS (NC)-Deliber- carries its own reward he said area interfaith clergy groups youth house in Secaucus

iide attempts at experimenta- Now we must undertake new here in New Jersey are planning Father ThomasJ Murtha oftion with a readiness to accept forms some of which have a

joint action on the plightf West New York was named toall the risks that may be in- good chance to flop JIliserably youthful offenders housed m investigate means of setting UJltvolved were proposed for the An expert at the Second VatshyHudson County correctional in- a rehabilitation program t4ilSociet of Jesus at the close of ican Council Father Campion stitutions and to seek federal function after the release ~ III three-day session here on believes that the work of the assistance in meeting the needs youthful offendersbulllesuit renewal council has not yet begun to of Cuban refugeesFather Donald R Campion be absorbed within the Church

The joint session was held by The ~o groups will send a18J stressed at the renewal as a whole the North Hudson Clergy Coun- delegatIOn toWashIngton to askQession and in an interview This is not because it hasnt cU based here and the Chris- ~hat the area be declared anthat the Jesuits have both the been publicized enough or beshy tian Clergy United a West New Impacted area under the Cuban manpower and the resources to cause people havent read Y k Refugee Act and therefore beshy

engage in the type of expeii- enough or bishops havent talkshy or ~ro~p come eligible for special federal mentation which could serve ed enough he said But Vati shy A meetmg WIll be s()~ght WIth aid There are some 00000 tQdays Church Father Cam- can II opened up more areas the Hudson County Boar~ of Spanish~speakingpeople now m pion a sociologist and theolo- to discussion than it resolved Chosen Freeholders in an effort rth gian was recently named editor Among the sleep~rs in to establish a bettez climatefoi the ~o Hudson area and they cd America magazine council documents CIted by therehabiUtation of youthful continue to arrive at the rate of

Another speaker Fat her Father Campion was the conshy offenders now housed intne 200 to250 a month ~ 1 _

Avezy Dulles SJ stressed that cept of participation within the ~ doubt is a valuable and even Church Father Campionmiddot said lI1ecessary experience for the he believes collegiality is the Wide E~perience Christian in todays world most developed aspect in this

Fathers Campion and Dulles area and that some organization QU(lJD~ies Nu_ were two of the six main speak- has been given to it through the

UNITED- NATIONS (NC)ers at the closed meeting Some establishment of piie~ senates ltHQWCom pie t e devotion to theSSO Jesuits including 50 from But unless the idea of parti shyworlds needy children seemsCilutside the St Louis areaat-cipation is really the basis senshy a weighty task for a petite nun TDgtKEEPtended the sessions ates can become orgimizational

Father Campion said that Jes- gimmicks he said but a conversation with Sister Ullits as a group must face the Father Dulles discussing themiddot Kathl~eri Kelly MMmiddot provides LENmiddotTreassularice middotthat 20 years of make a significant contribution Church said ~ an interview diversified experience fact that their work should existence of doubt in todays

more to modern times that we have a radically differ- than qualifies her for the role

QUI IXIDPYFATHER lI MISSION jlUDTG me fllRlfaNTAL CHURCH

In the area of education It calIS for recasting the ex- wide Cath)lic charities organishy Need New Formula ent world view than in the past Caritas Internationalis worldshy

With the slason of Lent comes the qu~ionFather Campion called for con- pressions of the Christian messhy zation recently appointed Sisshy How can I beSt keep Lentl The answer ~s ~sideration of whether we are sage in terms of contemporary as observerter Kathleen its must make sacrifices on our own and nothing ISproviding the educational struc- knowledge if the message is to to the U N International GOOD III sacrifice unfess it hurts Whatwill be yo~rture for the new world have the impact it should Childrens Emergency Fun d WHIEN sacrifice bullbull Just think of the misslonlllne~ InIn the intellectual area Look Criticanny (UNICEF) Caritas Internationshy ITlf our 18 emerging countries who keep Lent allrather Campion noted that to- Doubt is not a bad thing he alis is one of 75 international HUmS year long Sacrifice something big this ye~rday more is needed than popu- said People should be looking and non-government organizashy When helping others hurts a bit you know you va larization of theology and phil- critically at the traditional forshy tions (NGOS) which enjoy conshy made a sacrifice()Sophy In a way we need a mulas and seeing what is revelashy sultative status with UNICEF whole new formula for making tion and what is a culturally

They represent oJer 4000csense of the world and life he conditioned formula which is affiliated private and non-profitfSaid now demanding reform

We should have men devoted Such adaptations are iD no organizations in more than 100 oOn his recent-trip through India 1V0~signor nations with a combined memshy Nolan saw priests and Sisters subSisting onto this single problem Their way a compromise of faith bership running into millions ounces of rice each day so they can share what own inner resources of security Father Dulles said We never they have with lepers and orphans $10 will feedmust be yery strong because to hear the divine message except Interviewed at the United Nashy FEED a family for several weeks at least $50 will feed

facethat kind of change is not III in terms of humans he said tions Sister Kathleen spoke of THE five families $100 ten families bullbullbull Only $975popular thing The Word of God comes her new rol~ at the international HUNGRY gives a priest 11 two-acre mode~ 18nn toraise

Council Opened Areas through man it is alW9YS tem- level and described how it his own food and teach his parishioners how to Father Campion said the can pered by man and it is this con~ evolved from her past activities raise more food Archbishop MalJ Gregorioa will

for experimentation W9S not ditioning which must change wrltetlo thank youI was in California andbased on inadequate work of Father Dulles said one value worked for 10 years in familyJesuits at the present time and of the death-of-God movement eounseling in the juvenile court IlJ Enable ~ girl to become a Sister For 41tl bullthat fact is part of the problem for Catholics is to shake _ I1tA1N day ($1250 a month $150 bull year $300 aleill foster lare and in otherMany times we have been suc- out of taking an uncritical with sa~ A together) you can pay In full fer her two-yeaIwork children sheeessful and being successful static view of God training have 8 Sister of your awnInthe last five years I moved SISTER

oat to community development and civil rights I was a member o For only $a5O a week ($10 a month $120 bull

year) you can make surethat an abandonedJesuit Seminarian Leads Campaign of a district council in bull San HELP Francisco - which subsequently A child has food clothing a blanket and love bullbullbull IAgainst Home Contract Firms was declared a poverty CHILD wen send you a photo of the boy or silt )011area

adoptCHICAGO (NC) - A Jesuit borne than its current market During my years there I waa Rminarian has launched a camshy value a member of the Catholic Intershy o Our priestS will offer promptly the Massespaign here against contractshy Following the exodus of racial Council and when I came MASSES you request Doyou wish to remember a loved holders of homes sold to Negro Lawndales white residents in back from Selma (she was on fOR one this Lent Your Mass offerings are usuallyfamilies at allegedly exorbitant the late 1950s thousands of of the persons selected to repshy LENT the only Incole our priests overseas receiverates homes were purchased by vari shy resent the archdiocese of san

Jack Macnamara SJ who ous bankS mortgage loan and Francisco in the Alabama civil o Enroll yourself your family and friends InlIives and works in nearby real estate companies at low rights march) I was appointed this Association You will be helping Pope Paul Lawndale is acting withthe ap- prices and then resold on conshy to serve on the Human Rights

JOI~ in one of his most ambitious and heartfelt works proval of his Jesuit superio~ tractto Negro families atofteIi - Commission by the mayor of THIS while sharing In the blessings of thousands of

Nacnarnara and a dozen supshy ~lImON Masses (The offering for one year is $2 perdouble the original purchase San Francisco the nun stated porters including several other price the leaflet reported She was the first nun ever apshy person $10 for a family perpetual membership Jesuit seminarians picketed the Paid Race Tax ltpOinted to any kind of~~yt is $25 per person $100 for a family) Chicago address of one investshy Macnamara said these conshy inJSan Fraidsco _

Iment company which holds title tracts should be renegotiated at

~ several homes sold on conshy the most recent FHA appraisal tract to Negroes Pickets dis- price ~ If I1t e SAiliNGS

tributed leaflets explaining the c2J 0 dJ ~ t~~ year SYSTEMATICThe issuemiddot here is moral rathshypurpose of their campaign er than legal he declared Th~ MONTHLY DEPOSITS

The leaflet cites the case of III law does not provide a remedy II tfMltIa fNVE$iMENyhome purchased by an investshy for the type of injustice that is d) aV~ J((~ year SAVINGSment company in January 1959 operative in this contract

for $13000 and then three NOTICE ACCOUNTSThousands of Negroes inmonths later sold on contract to Chicago are suffering from this a Negro buyer for $23000 450 ar ~~~~

It states the investment corn continued ~In effect they paid pany received $2000 as a down II race tax of approximately

type of injustice Macnamara

BCJs~ liverpayment on thiS contract whic~ $10000 when they bought their stipulated that middotthe balance was homes because it was impossishy SavonJs Bonkflo be paid over 20 years at sevshy bleto obtain mortgages 4Il per cent interest at the rate This is a striking example of BanI By Mail of $20140 each month how our legal system does notmiddot We Pay The Postage

Last December it reported a adequately protect black people Federal Housing Administration or poor people he said It appraisal on this home listed its stems from the fact that the law bull YARMOUTH SHOPP8NC PUll value at $15025 This means it aims at protecting property inshy bull SOUTH UltMOm bull HYANJIISexplained that the Negro buyer stead of persons And this helpl bull DENNIS PlmRT bull OSTFllVIUlIII paying $8000 more for tbe bull cause urbaJl unreal

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 ltI

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16 THE ANC )~-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968

New St LouimiddotsArchbi~hcp

PrOmilnent in Ecumen~$m Archbishop Jonh J Oarberry of St Louis well known

~()ng Oatholic leaders after 31 career that has taken him from a seminary classroom iii his natiYe Brooltl~ NCY~ to one of the nations MOse ~mpOOtallt archdiolaquoese1l is pershy

laaps evenmiddot better ~ownmiddot fJDlong Americas nom-Cafu6shylie religious leaders fon hisl work in ecumenism Cllair Ilillao of the Bishqps Commi~ee-Ibr Ecumenical and Intenrefi shyaious Affairs since th~ resigna Qion of Baltimores Lawrence Cardinal Shehan in November 11965 Bishop Carberry has au I9gtCrvised the massive catholic illllvoIvement in ecumeniCal ac-middot lli1 vities

He outlined his own entIliusishyeuroISm for ecumenism in a speech ~iven in January 1966 tolmemshy~rs of the Ohio (Protestant) lPastors Convention wheDI he aid

Common lHeritagel For years the general policY

(llln the Catholic Church) had ~en to stress the great chasm

which divides the euroatliolic Church and other Christian ehurches No effort was made m would seem on our part to Illave a meeting of minds A otudy of documents would seem ltD reveal that while we wera lbrayerfully disposed to) the ltecumenical movemerit nevershy1lheless the Catholic Church did lliittleto foster it

Bishop Carberry told the conshyvention that through the grace 0f God and the leadership or Pope John XXIII we became aware of the common heritage Which is ours

Has Great lHope

We began to realiZe~ how 18aptism unites us in ChriSt to Gee that the divinity of Christ is illhe cornerstone of all Christianshynay we began to real1ze the oommon treasure which we llnave in the Sacred Scripturesllikewise the common bondshyVhich exists with us in the

1lIIlissionary activities at the Church

There is great hope Bishopltearberry said that mrougb ~ialogue through prayerbull 1llluough respect for each others wiewpoint the grace of God may (i)Ile day in Gods divine provishy4llence bring about the- unitY which Christ prayed for at themiddot Last Supper

More recently members of ltOhios Protestant cliurches llllamed the bishop as OniosPbsshyoLr of Pas-tors the fl rst timmiddote hat bull

Grants Permis$ioll~

for SaturdayMass) SAN ANGELO (NC)-BiShop

Thomas TSchoepe of San Angelo lllas announced that the diocesan request for the Saturday Mass flaculty hagt been granted In the future the Sunday Mass 00shyltigation may be met by at shy~ndance at a Saturday aftershyllloon or evening Mass The pershylll1ission has been granted on an ~xperimental basis by the Vati shylttan for a period of five years

The diocese of San Argelo is 1lI Texas missionary diocese the bishop explained and there are areat dis tan c e s between churches and few priestswmiddot oerve the faithfuh ManYi ~llieSts

have two or morlt8 churclies tJ lllttend and will Be able- tQ give more time to the smaller ~urches with the Satucday Mass faculty Bishop TschoePe pointedi 9Ut Chat the faculty has been giVeth bull the whole diocese not just Ibo individual churches or areas Pastors who wish to make Usemiddot aJl the faculty must make formal application to the chancery ofshyillce

a~ statewide Protestant onganiza tion has presented its highest awa-rd 10 a eatho1iir clet1gymam A pla~J1e symbollZiDg the a~adi was~ glv~~ to the blShp at ~~~ Fenw~nIP Blmq~et on the Olbo PastollSgt ~onventi~m

DI~USS P~tilems U~dev Blsli~p~rlgte~rysl~d

er~hlPl laquoatholic ~elegations have ~et wl~h ~fflC1Blsbull and

tleolbglan~ of other- ChrIs~an churchesmiddot to dlSCUSS ecumemcal pooble~s r~~gmg from the pr~sshyence of Christ Ill tlie ~ucharlst to th-c nature of we prJes~ood

Before ta~mg cliarge of th Golumbusmiddot dIOcese on March 25 1965) Bishop euroarbery liadmiddot selved asmiddot coadjutor bishop and then bishop of Eafayette Ind Born in Brooklynj N~ Y Tulymiddot 31 1904 Bishop Carberry studied for the priestlioodi at Brooklyns Cathedral College or the Iin-middot maculate laquool1ception from 191ll to 1924 and at the North Amershyican College in Rome from 1924 to 1930

Oldained inmiddot Rome in 1929 tne bishop sfudiea canon law at the Catholic University of America in Washington D G and taught at Immaculate Conception Semshyinarl until Tune 1935 when he went on ldan to the diocese of Trenton N J He returned to BrooklYn in 1940 where hemiddotreshymained until being named coshyadjuror bishop of Lafayettemiddot in 19651

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Ccopy]JJi]dIT [Qjfr[~lcopy[j

CHICAGO (NC) - Tohn A McDllrmott has changed me mindL-he1li remain as execu middot tivedirector of the Chicago Cat1iolic Interracial Council

The veteran council worKer last October announced he would leave the office to beshy

come Mridwest regional- ciVil rightsdirector for the ms De-middotmiddot partment of Health Enucation andi Welfare

A number of problems hava arisen since th-e announcement on my appointmentt last 0ctbBerwhichl caused me to have serl

ousmiddot second l thoughts MilDer moW said iil his decision to re~ maio with the ltlrc He citedi m1 patrtcular~ personnel cutliaclts in HEW wJiich woulli Iiinit the Midwest negional operatiiul

fo accepting McDermotits de cisionj HEW the government agency requestedi liiin to serve asmiddot ai special chdl- rights consuU ant while working for the CIC and he a~reed

IIlt a letter to the Dutch biINumber of Fllel71ch ops members of Michaels re-

gion asked for curbs on the nlgtshySeminarians Dllops tions Catliolic liberals The PARIS (Ne)-Thenumber of meeting also registered disap-

French seminarians h~s dropped proval of the new Dutch Cateshyby about 180 a year for the last chism~ claiminJ~ that it does nocent four years according to 1iigures represent true Catholic teach~ provided in amiddot press conference Michaels Lel~ion is considered by Bishop Jean Sauvage 011 ampshy even more CJlnservative thlW necy member of the bishops Confrontation another Catholic commission on the clergy and conservative organization Conshyseminaries frontations complaints about

For the 1967~68 sc1iolastic the content of the new Dutch year the tdtal number of sliumiddot catechismmiddot are believed to hae dents iil major seminaries m been instTllmentai in having tbe~ FhlOce is 43583 comparedl with book exltlmined by the VatiCan~lJ

4536 for the previous year Doctrinal Congregation 4722 )n 1965-66 and 4953 in 1964-65

Moreover in France at pres- Approves Agency eol ttiere are aBout 200 adults LQND()N (NC)--Jolin Cardl~

WIIO are preIgtaring for tOe ~er nal Heenan of Westminster liJaa manent diaconate as restored by approveq establishment ocf 1m the Second Vatican Council The agency to help priests who want first ordinations to this permashy 10 leave the priesthood znGl nent diaconate could take place nuns who want to leave the this year religious life

1P~alrn le~tUlm~1rn~~G~

$1lll~7 GG1l I1DtJ Sim LONDON (NC)-A study on

the problems of ecumenism in Great Britain will be made by a joint working group of the British Council of Churches and the Caholic Church with the results to be reported next Autumn

The study was planned at a meetingmiddot held atmiddot the Vita et Pax Benedictine I~onvent and attendshyed by nine Catholic representashytives an- 14 representatives of the BeC -

The projected study is exshypected to analyze such topics an the extent I)f cooperatiGn beshytween Catjwlics and members of the BeC the dialogUes bemg held theologicaL differences and the non~theological obstacles to closer unitygt

Auxiliary BishoJ- Langton Fox of lfenevia Wales and

Auxiliary Bishop Basil Chrisshytopher Butlelr OSB of Westshyminster headed tOe CatOolie delegation at the meeting

~(i]$~~rlaquolJpoundfr1) A$1k lMl~illlW) ~ltoy~ IHh~)~Dnd

U11RECHm (NC) -Michaels Legion an organization of Dutch Catholic~ uaditionalists has sent a telegram to Pope Pault H ungintg him tD protect essential orthodoxy and to S81fe tne DutchChurch~

At 3- meeting here attended b~ some 600) Catholic conserva tives led by Eouis Knuvelder the legion condemned the Dutch Catholic daily press the~ Dutch Gatholic tellvisioncompany and the countrys Catholic radio station for being too progressive

Father Baum Regards Ecumenical Center Closing Sign of Success TORONTO (NC)-The closing gian Charles Davis-A Quesshy

of the Center for Ecumenical tion of Conscience Davis book Studies at St Michaels Collegegt exmiddotplains his renunciation of the here is a sign of the centersmiddot euroatholic priesthood and the success Church and asks Catholic theo-

This is the viewpoint of Father logians who intend to stay in GregllllY Ballm O~SA founder the~ eurohurch to reply to several of tJie centeI1 who has an- t1iaologjcal points nQunlaquoed that it will b~ Closed BelUef Unbelief

inl JUne Thats what Im doing FatlieJJBaum-explalnedthalhe Fatller Baum said His book a

founded the centeJ ill 19631 when replYJ to Davis questions conshyecum~llusrn may have~ been a ceming the credibility of the new Idea Its purpose lie- s~ld Church in todays world will be was to promote ecumemcall called The Credibility of the studies at St Michaels Church Today It will be pub-

Taday he neports ecumen mal stlUdi~s at S1l Michaels are a reality- 1lli~ schGolls theology depal1tment 18 fully mte~ ~thl Protestant and ~gIIcan lfupartmentsmiddot at the-Umversity

of Toronto [hUB lie said~ the eC-lmenical

centell has fulfilled its purpose Such fUlfillment he said wmiddot

common in academic circles where there has been an ecushymenlical reVOlution For exam pIe ne said where once som1shyone might have nied to foster ecumenism through building an ecumenical library it is now impossible tq build a theological lilgtrary without its being ecushymenical

Need flDZ Programsmiddot Father Baum added that he

does not believe tJie ecumenical movement has reached fruitien in circles outside the academia world~ He said that he sees a real need pound01 formal ecumenmiddot ical programs on the parish and on all levels of the Churdl which have not yet been reached He a150 disclosed that perSOll ally he lias moved Gn frOlll ecumenism to new fields of thought

The AuIDlStinian has written a new book in answer to the latest by the English theolo-

U[[$ W)jf[rll IfSMsjIID~

rnliJ kUD-WIh ol 1TW[jiJ KETTERING (Neuro) - The 1-7shy

member parish board 00 St Charles Church~ here unanishymousll1 adopted a resolution 5 favor Qf open nousing legiSlashytion for thiS (1)hio suburban community

The parish boards action S~ poIied- unequivocallymiddot passage 0amp an open housing ordinance in themiddot virtuallr aUi-wltite commw-middot nity 00l more than 600001 res dents Tames J Gilvay and Peter Donanue attOrneys anlL pariBhlmiddot boarc members pre sentedthe resolutJoDj wliiclli tbok- themiddot position that the ghett) condit1ollG ~Ilichl Negroes enshycure ilm nearby DaYton are mshyiuriOwil to the entire commUlshyDitTmiddot

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Aftei tee closing of the Center for Ecumenical Studies Father Baum will stay on at St MishychaeFs au a professor of theolshyogy He is also planning another ~~

It will concentrate on the idea oi God in modern thought and will be a clear sign that Father Baum has moved away from his prime in terest in ecumen- ism

Born of Jewish parents in Berlin and reared as an agnostic Father Baum said he has now turned his whole thought to the study of belief and unbelief He will record his findings in me book he is now writing

~oh~ laquotmm~~litl ~Od1[9)

[~ Ao~ i N~regIJ$ CAMDEN (NC) - Bishop

Tames L Schad administrator of the Camden diocese was =ong citizens honored here foT their efforts in furthering the interests of the Negro comshymunity

Bishop Schad who has been active in community action projects such as the War on Poverty committees was pre sented a scroll during a proshygram sponsored by the Tenth Street Baptist church here in observance of the 43rd annual Negro History Week This year marks the first time a Romaa Catholic prelate has been so honored

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17 Oppose Church Clergy Participation in Politics

By Jsgr George G Higgins

The New RepubJic-whIch in this writers judgment W one CYl the be3t of Ameriros weekly journals of opinion especially hl it3 arovezoage cfcurrent economic and political developments----thinks that the time has com~ for anti shyVietnam clergymen aul1ayshy Be that as it maY I am ioshymen to translate tu1eir cVZl clined to think that the editors m0r81 indignation oveuror Vietshy of the French periodical Inforshynam into effective political mations Catholique InternashyDction inasmuch as this is the tionales make considerably only way to effect long-term more sense than the editors cOf ehanges in the The New Republic 011 this issue policies of this of clerical involvement in the country So far so-called politics of peace as laymen are Though they are vigorously concerned this and unqualifiedly opposed ~il

would seem to tW war in Vietnam and like be a self - evishy tWeditors ()f The New Repubshydent proposition li( clearly recognize that the L1s perfectly establishment of leace in the obvious t hat world is a political problem concerned layshy which calls for the active mshymen ou~ht to volvement ofChcistians as ~-en

translate their as all other men of good will moral indi~nashy they do not think that themiddot tion over Vietnam - or any cleJgy who are responsible foy other significant issue of public the unity of the Church should policy-into effecti-re poiiticltll be expected to take on the role

of party politiciansaction Given the fact that their pubshySound Tradition

lication ~CI has been oJe 01 tileOn the other hnd I aJl Evt most outspoken European critics

sure understandthat I fully or of U S involvement in Vietnam completely agree vitb The New and one of the most vigorousRepublic when it says that fue advocates middotof a politics of peaceclergy ought tncv likewise their warning against the parshy

Traditionally a the NR itself ticipation of the clergy in parshypvints out the clergy-in this tisan politics is highly signifi shycountry at least - have rnied cant and deserves to be taken amy from such participation very seriously (Christians and

AJJ a long-time subscriher to the Struggle ior Peaee InforshyT~2 New Republic I had Dlshy mations Catholique Internashyways been under the imp~ssio~ tionales Jan 15 1965)that its editors thought that en Fl lialgs lrindplebalance this was a sound tradishy

Those American Catholicstion Apparently lwweer I was who may happen to have a speshy

cial interest in the pros and consmistaken in this regard fora of this highly controversial issuerecent Nell Republic editorial will also want to read whatnoten with satisfaction that Hans Kung has to say about itAJlerican clerGYmen now apshy

pear to be ready in large numshy in his forthcoming bookThe Churchbers to get involved at a preshy

cinct level and to play C1l Father Kung has lectured exshyactivist role in both parties tensively throughout the United (Clergy in Politics The New SUItes in recent years and is

currently with us again as a visshyRepublic Feb 17 1968) iting professor at Union Theoshy

QuestioIS Meaning logical Seminary in New York What does this mean in pracshy Seen in the light of the Gosshy

tical terma Does it mean that pel le writes in his new book ministers rabbis and priests the relntionshipof the Church should endorse ltor oppose) parshy to the world contains only one ticular candic1ates fqr politiell essential aspect its ministry 10 office starting at the precinct the world level Does it mean that they Ministry does not mean raisshythemselves should run for ofshy ing ones voice or putting an -oar flee if only as a last reiort in all secular qIes1ions middotof ecoshy

If so does it also mean that nomic political sodaI middotcultural other clergymen should run artistic and scientific life against them if they happen to T1e Churchclmnot solve disagree with what they stand the greJt problems of the ()rld for Or does it mean toot only neiih2r the problell1of hunger those clergymen who are anti shy nor that of the populaticn nor Administration should get inshy that of war nor thlt oanonFmshyT-olved at a precinct leel and ity of power Dor that -of race play an activist role within hatred What the Church both parties can do can be expressed quite

Sicnifieani WarnlDI simply in one phrase it must I have raised these questions exist for the world

lot to make light of The New ACrefS With lFTK1mgRepublics editorial CD the subshyject under discussion but Anyone who hal ever baG the merely to BUggest that clerical pleasure of meeting Faiher involvement ill partisan politics Kung middotor is familiar wi1bhis over the issue of Vietnam is at writings will know witheut best a rather tricky business being told that be is not a hawk and will almost inevitably lead and that he is cot advocating to certain consequences which a policy of Christian withdrawal upon further reflection even the from the world editors of The New Republie middotOn the eontrary be stroniJy might eonceivably wish tc foreshy favors lhe all-ltltit involvement tall of Christians in temporal affairs

and notably iii the ~lities Of peace

To Speak in Boston Nevertheless be does net Rev Anthony T Padovano think that the institutienal

Church-and its clerical minisshySTD theology professor at ters-should pretend that theyImmaculate Conception Semishy

nary Darlington N J will speak have all the answers tc the problems of the worldia the Christian Culture lecture

aries sponsored by the Paulist And neither eoes be thinkshyFathers at 815 Wednesday night if I read him correctly-that tbe March 6 in John Hancock Ha)) clergy in ~ exeTeise of their Boston Tickets are available mission of peace should get inshyfrom 5 Park Street Boston volved in partisan jl)olities Nor 02108 do L

WOKS LIKE FUN Yes but listen to what it requires The Georgetown University erew keeps in s-hape with ~

AM ~i~enies in the gym foHow~ by a two-niile run UJl and do-Wll Observatory Hil~on tJhecampus Its cold up there said Dave Harris a member of the lightweifht crew but by then youlewtired you do-nt care NC Phottgt

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 ~ 968

Prayer for Peace To Cm(O)se Games

MEXICO CITY (NC) - All ecumenical prR)er for peaCf) service is being planned for the end of the 19th Olympic Gam~

here next October The sponsor of the service w shy

the Ecumenical Commission fcrr Religious Services (ECRS) fe the Olympic Games The comshymission is composed of 73 ChrisshytiRn and Jewish leaders in thi~

city Promment spiritual leadshyers will be invited to speak

At middot8 meeting here the rn ECRS spiritual leaders discusse~

the facilities for athletes and visitors to attend their varioU7J reUgious services

iI1be iMC)Cican government hw aPPI)o~ed ECRS plans for the ~ction of at least tw- JaIige bullclings as nondenonYshynational chapels

The original pIlan toeonstrl1ell one large church has been IcHsshytlarded The present plan is build one large building with no religious I)rnamentllJtion of alltl7 kind on the outskirts of the Olympic Villa and a similar Oilif)

on tne outskirts of the Olympze

Project InterracialInterfaith Cooperation Cultural Villa

tin (Re~~(Jtion of CcUege m addition Archbishop MEshymiddotgut Dario MirlllDda y Gomez Gl

1I1IAMI (NC)~When Florida The Rev Edward T Graham Mexico City hBs authorizeQ Memorial College predominant a Baptist minister key person downtown Catholic churches to ly Negro middotliberal arts school is behind the project has had asshy permit non-Catholic services = moved here frOl1l St Augustine sistance from Mrs Athalie their premises if non-Catholie and opens next September the Range Miamis first NeglO City comgregations should request i project will be the result of unshy Commissoioner who is a Cathshyusual interracial and interfaith olic teamwork Organhzet3 rOthEHSIl

The largest single contribll shyNegroeswhites and Chinese tiou of private funds has oome flainirt~ ClI1ter

have joined hands with Cathoshy from a supermarket executive lLOUISVILLE (NC) - TkeIlics Protestants and Jews tv M Austin Davis a Methodist Franciscan Conventional OrdGcontribute money time advice laiamis Catholic Bishop Coleshy has opened a Brothers Trainincand leadership to realize the

manF Carroll is a member vl1 Center here in an attempt to givedevelopment of the college on l the advisory board as is Maushy Brothers three years of active$10 million complex here rice Ferre diocese of Miami lay apostolic work following theirr leader novitiate

RabbiIrving Lehrman presshy Father Sebastian Cunnil1flshyCouncil Seores ident cd the Greater Miami ham OFM director of tlw Rabbinical Association a n 4ll OOlilter said We felt we haCFactory Closing Jewish lay leaders are amoag an cbligation to give our man

LONDON (NC-The impend- active workers oome training outside contam ing elosingof a large industricl $ bull $ an idea of what was neeclshyJilseph Rodriguez of the plant has been criticized by ~ edfromthem in the outside Puerto Rican Democratic ChEb lay -eouncil of Our Lady Of _rl11 In the past he addeeurohas prepared 11 scholarship PieshyGrace parish in southeast Lsnshy we were not fWfilling ~ gram for -the collegedCD DeedS 1d ~veryoneliturgy

The council expressed its deep concern at the recent No Comlmentclosure of factories in middotthis area Completean4 in particular of the impendshy VATICAN (orry (NC)-Ibe ing shutdown of the Associ2ted Vatican had no comment -oJ1 11

ElectricaIIndustries (AEI) plant repolt that ~hbishop Agostincgt BANKING Casaroli secretary for extraershyIt callid upon the governmeJrt dinary ecclesiastical affairs ilf SERVICEand the -ehaiTmanof the oomshy the Papal Secretariat of statepany torevsrse the decision 10 eonterred with Dlembers of ~

c~ don the plant because Of tor BristOl CountyN-orth Vietnamese missi-on iJJthe middotmoral religious and 5Ocial Parisjn lJanuarylt n JUWWampleffeets iCaiJS2a by the ~veshythat Archbishop Casaroli Wallmen1 a1popl1ation absent from the Vatican fOll

Copies ltOf the councils motion several days nlenUy BrjstoICounty were sent 1amp Prime ~1inister

Harold Wilson MiJiister of Trust Company Labor RayJ Gunter President ampf the Board of Trade Douglas Sturteant (

TAUNTO~ MASSJay and company officials iHoOkAlthough the councils action was a surprise to the pastel Ed 1897 IIHE BANJ(ONFather Joseph seally AA ~ uiltl~rs SUppJies JAUNTONGRHNprist sroa that he agreed ith it ftll3 Purchase Street Member 01 Feileral ~

Faiher 8enlly sait[ centbert Aellad iNew Bedford IDsuranee CorporaamptoDJlOt~cteil p01itiealand elaquolshy 996-5661 nomic motions to eome from the council but pointed out You cannot separate Feligimtl from eveJ~ay life

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968 Capacity Audience at Holy Name Parish ~ihss

My Consciesect1ce Discusses The J)etached Americans In Educ~tion Continued from Page One

Do we care -for knowledge

what happens to other people Why do we strive for college educations or for money Are we so anxious to confor~l1 that we never dare to PITTSBURGH

tMrI

~VJI and it must be understood in a

t mear-cu way

A person following his ~con-~ence must be sincere He cannot play games with his mind but must be honest with himself

A person foilowing his con~ liCience must be correct It iSl10t ugh that he sincerely beshy~ Reves that something is good or evil-he must be sure that hiS judgement is a correct one

agrees with Gods view of the matter

Sometimes people make misshytakes in judgement-honest misshytakes to be sure but mistakes iwnetheless The oft-quoted exshyample is that of the African savshyrage deep in the jungle who may be sincerely following his con- ooience when it tells him to kill omd eat his enemy His conshyscience is a sincere one But it~ Is a mistaken one since it does IIlOt agree with Gods Will He ond every person must c~m-

liitantly review his judgements to lbe sure that they are correct ones and riot sincere mistaken Utes

A person following his conshy3Cience must be certain He can not act with doubt or uncertainshy~ about the rightness or wrong- mess of an act since he would be Announces Prize acting with the willingness to

takea cpance on being wrong For Best Plan ~ offendi~g God and this is aever~ validmiddot If there is uncer- PITTSinJRqH (NC)-Bishop t8inty the person must seek aid John J Wright of middotPittsburgh III arriving at a sure and correct haS annoutc~d il priz~ of$IOOOtor professor ina p1inor semshy tudgementmiddot - formiddot the architect who submitsmiddoth be I f - inary chapiainof a school dishyThe Christian acts with amiddotcon- ~ e st p an or a Jliljgtr renoshy ocesan chancellor and finally

lllilence ~rned by the prlnciples vation of the sanctuary of St vicar general tilChrlst This is where tliEi Pa~l~ cath~middot~al_h~remiddot~T~~e ~om- The P6pe a~o nam~d Father

aturchsteachers the Pope Iiiid P~tit~o~ IS ~p~nmiddot ~omiddotal archJtec~ Bienvenido TudtiJdto be auxil- a message toAfrica and a mes ishops ~nfer middotthe pi~ture to wl~hlD ~e bound~~l~~s~f the iary bishop of Dumaguete in the sage ~lling for peaCe

Illelp men make judgementsmiddot thatmiddot lire guided by Christ Sometimes ~ese j~dge~eptsgo a~intitmiddotnat-middot lIIIa1 inclinations and tendencies md this has always been thedif-

~ti~ty of ~ing a Christian-- Ghrist demands much of His llmiddotowmiddotmiddotermiddots middot IIIU

At present Catholics are askshyiDg tlie Pope to make a morai judgement about birth control d especlmiddotallymiddot the PlmiddotUmiddot Some_lire castigating him for not givshy g a qulck declslon or else they lliie telling people to forget about llrim and to make their own adgeme tsmiddot th ttmiddot w- n m e ma er The Pope in order to make a ilecision must make it on the basis of facts Scientists must provide him with the facts and In this matter there is much that k~epinglVith the general lin~s sition in favor I)f open housing complex The Pope has asked and is still asking theologians to evaluate the scientific facts in 4he light of Christian principles Not all moral issues are simple And then the Pope will apply the principles to the facts and 1ril1 make a decision about the morality of the matter

This will guide the Catholic in fllorming his conscience -- in arshyriving at a judgement that is sipcere that is the correct orie at lS artmiddot d t d ce am JU gemen anthatmiddot is Christian

K of C Convention 51ated for Houston

lAN MARCOS (NC) The

1970 national convention of the ~ights of Columbus will be held in Houston it was an-Bounced here at a conference of Texas officers of the interna- _ tional fraternalorder

The announcement of the seshylection of Houston for the con- v~ntion which will be held in

be different These were among questions discussed by a capacity audience at the second in a series on Christian Morality sponsored by the parish council of Holy Name Church Fall River Sparked by Sisshy

John AIIcIa SUS Cter some 30 people from all parts of themiddot Diocese viewed the film The Detached Amerishycans then broke into small groups for buzz sessions

Thesis of the film was that Americans wont become in volved with each other It dra- matically pointed its message with the true story of Kitty

Genovese murdered on a New York Street while 38 of her neighbors watched ffom winshy

bull dowS-o--and did nothing Also depicted were amarried

couple talkingto each other with neither really listening a student going thriugh school as on an assembly line with his sole goal the position he could

hope for as a college graduate and various other examples of non-involvement

What is life worth if we do not give it away questioned Harry Reasoner at the end of the film The Holy Name audishyence agreed that life sbould be

used for others but tended to feel that there wasnt the im-Personalitv in a smailer city

Jthat is found in a large metropshyolis One Sister countered howshyever with stories brought to

h t htschool by children s e aug This is right in Fall River she stressed Others cited examshypIes of personal involvement in affaIrs of others but agreed that much more could and

Pope I~aul Names Two Aluxiliaries VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VImiddot hail named Msgr Jose T Sanchez to be auxiliary bishop of Caceres in the Philipshypines He takes the titular See of Lesvi

Msgr 5anlhez was vicar genshyeral of Legazpi at the time of his nomination

He was born March 17 1920 atPandan in the Legazpi dioshycese He completed his philoshysophical and ordinary theologishycal studies at the diocesan semshyinary and obtained a licentiate in theology at the University of St Thomas in Manila He was ordained Marc~ 12 1946 and then worked as an assistant passhy

Pltts~urgpchap~er9rmiddottl~e Afner- ~ Philippines Father Tudtud who Pope Paul also delivered 264 ~can -Inst~tUtofAlth~te~ts was36ye~~I)]fat ~hcent time ~fsPeeches bull (~~)_(h~ch mclud~~ ~tIePoit~- his noniinatiOJl studied philos- burgb dlO~es~and three adJa-ophy and theology at St Johns

c~nt countIes SeminarY inmiddotBoston Fath~r roseph P- Larkin He was born March 22 1931

eOm~ission chaiIm~nmiddot ili1(I-a at Mabola inmiddotthe Cebu arch~ member of the diQcesan bU~lll- diocese He worked as assistant - bullbull

iIg commissligtn~ said the pur- pastor Editor ltit Cebus Caiholic pose of thereiiovlition is to pro weekl~ and finally pastor of the ville a ~mQte suitable sanctu- Church of thE Blessed Sacrashy

ary setting fof the liturgical re- inent in Cebu In addition atf orms Qrought into beingmiddot by the time of his nomination he Vatican Council II was vice-superior of the Misshy

Father Lmiddotai-kir said because slon Society of the Philippines the cathedral must architectu-middot r~lly and liturgically allow for Issues Sttement both episcopal mdparish ser-- U

vices ~~any structurai cihimge O H R h offers a unique chalienge to the n umalu ig ts designer~ and provision for the LA CROSSE (NC)-Tbe La

new liturgy must be made in Crosse diocese has taken a poshy

and spirit 01 the existing struc- integrated arid ildequate educashy t4re tion fair employment and the

- defense of the rights of minorshyities

Christians and J~ws Bishop Frederick W Frekshying of the Wisconsin diocese

Honor Clergymen and the diocesan central com-NEW YORK (NC)-Clergy- mission approvedmiddot apmiddot officiai

men from thefour major faiths statem~nt titled Human Reshyhave been honored here by the lations in the Diocese of La National Coiuerence of Chris- Crosse

tians anltt Jews The statement was prepared

the third week of August was the practice has spread middotto a made by Dr Josepb G Murphy number of other cities hesaid of La Marque a member of the interrelgious understanding hasmiddot boara- of- directors fortbe Cathprogressed tremendously middotiIi reshyeticmiddot meDs oganization middotc~nhyearsbull

-

Tbe clergymeri cited for by the subcommission of human relations of the diocesan cornshycourageous leadership in intershymissionon social action and apshy

creedal relations were proved by both before submisshy Rev Dr ~ohn C Bennett sion to the central commissiollll

president of Union Theological ) in January Seminary

Father Robert I Gannon SJ president emeritus of Fordham CONRAD SEGUIN University

Bishop Silas of the GreekOrshy BODY COJMPANY thodox archdiocese of Nortb and Aluminum or Steel South America 944 Countr Street

Samuel D Leisdorf New NEW BEDFORD MASSYork philanthropist pointed out

wy 2-6618that the NCCJ firstmiddot honored reshyligious leaders of four faiths in September -1966 Noting that

should be done by individuals parishes and municipaiities

There were no solutions ofshyfered to the problems posed bythe film We dont expect to have answers to these quesshytions warned Sister John Alicia at the beginning of the program They are too big for us The film WltlS strictly on the

human level and this was pointed out in one group No one can solve all problems it was agreed but surely each Christian canmiddot trust the Holy Spirit to lead him to the probshylems he is equipped to do someshything about no matter how small

There was another point on whichmiddot everyohe in the audience was in enthusiastic agreement that there be more such eveshynings as the one sponsored by Holllgt Namemiddot

Vatmiddotn Report~lIo

Continued from Page One two encyclicals The Developshymiddotment of Peoples and Priestly Celshyibacy four motu proprios inshyeluding one creating central a lay council and the Papal Comshymission on International Justice anp Peace and another restorshying the permanerit diacol1ate treeapostolic constitutions inshyelUding one reshaping the

Churchs c~iitral administlatioii two apostolic exhortations one apostolic letter and 78 other Wessagesmiddotand letterS inclQding

He reeeived eight ehiets Of state including U SPresident Lyndon B Johnson and United Nations Secretary General U T~ant and gave 16 audiences to

th lmiddottmiddot I0 er men 10 ~ 1 lca life in cluding U SVi~ President Hushy~rt H Humphrey Republican presidential hopeful Richard M N d N Ixon an ew Yorks Sen Robert F Kennedy

He received visits from four delegations of Orthodox churCh men including Orthodox Ecushymenicai Patriarcp Athenagoras I of Constantinople besides visit shying Patriarch Athenagoras in ~ tanbul

The book covering last yearli activities of the Holy See conshysists of 1680 pages plus about 2(10 photographs

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Bishop John J Wright hasestablished a committee 1Jl)take a complete look at Oaampshy

olie education in the PittsburpD lOcese

The aim is fc dedde wha~ 1shyd t to tak tbe ~

lrec Ion e Dedecade for the best education of

all Catholics young and oldThe committee will evaluate all present Catholic educationshygrade and high schools eo egesConfraternity of Christian Doeshytrine classes adult education and other programs

The surveyors wiU 117 to deshyvise a plan based oa mstinl and potential resources in facll-Hies funds and Staff to guide the dioceses educational efforlll for the next 10 years or more

May Be FaI-lleaehiDg Among ideas eXpected to be

examined in the evaluation are proposals by some to cut back on Catholic schools or even til phase them out in place of an expanded adult education proshygram

Named head of the committee of educators priests and lay professionals is Father Vernon Gallagher CSSp former presishy

deht of Duquesne University here now serving as an official of the Holy Childhood Associashytion He also is a former proshyvincial of the Holy Gbost Fa~ ers eastern province

The committee Will be emshypowered to call before it di shyocesan officials to hold publlc meetingshire staff ~ring in exshyperts ThedioCege will finance the work

The committee Win make spe- eific recommendations to BishoP Wright after the study which 18 expected to take at least a yearbull

-Results are expected to have ~ar-reaching implicatiou fOr Catholic education here

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Two Unbeoten league Play f1fE ANCHOR-Diocese oTtall River-Ihurs feb 29 1968 19

Coach Says Sault Complete BallPlayerCape Cods NausetCompiles SMTB Playmaker Is Former Coyle $trBest Over-All Court Mark

BY JOE MIRANDA By PETER BARTEK

An excellent hall handler and Norton High Coach team player Is how Pat Sault of

Taunton is described by his Eleven of tile 12 aa-ea e1ubs with the best records in coach Phil Wetterland of the

their respective leagues are among those who will parshy Sou the a s t ern Massachu- setts Technogical Institute Inshyticipate in the March Tech basketball tournament in Boston stitute in North DartmouthFairhaven High of the Oapeway Conference and Nauset Sault a 19-year old freshman

of the Cape amp Island loop are is a former Coyle High hoopshythe only all-winning league a single league game while two ster who played four years for

went doWn to defeat In every the Warriors his final two underaggregations from this area encounter In which they were coach Jim Lanagan on the varshyin the Hub championship Involved Almost two-thirds 02 sityelimination tourney while Dartshy the Southeastern Mass teams

D)Quth High is the only one of Teaching CareerfinIshed wIth a 500 average OIlthe tOp dozen better Although young Pat has al shya 70 per cent coQlbines WIth

WIth 12 triumphs in the Cape ready made plans for the future league record amp Island competition Nauset which Include finishing his edshywhich failed to Regional also achieved the best ucation and pursuing a teachershyqualify an inshy over-all record winning 16 of coaching career dication t hat 11 encounters The Cape Cod Sault has not yet chosen a non-league school will be shooting for the major in college but according competition selshy Class D Tech title to his parents he is very much dom jeopardizes interested in teaching historyNew Bedford High 15 and and coaching They feel he willthe ultImate one in the Greater Boston Subshy be good at both as he alwaysgoal of most urban league finished with anschools Actual- Peter devoted his spare time to helpshy

over-all 17-2 mark for the Winshyly 311 per cent Bartek ing the younger neighborhoodter The Crimsons 937 average boys understand athletics moreof the 35 Southeastern Massashy captured its leagues pennant flag thoroughlychusetts school teamsmiddot have The Crimson Whalers are now Pat is the oldest son of Mrqualified for the Tech title play poised to annex the No 1 State and Mrs Charles A Sault and)let none managed an over-all honor by clinching the top one of four children A sisterundefeated season ranking Class A division in the Annette is a senior at BishopThree area clubs failed to win Boston title tourney Cassidy High James Michael

and Cheryl grammar school Representatives in Three B~ackets students at Mulcahey Schoof in

Taunton Fairhaven and Holy Family FamilYhas been eliminated in The family resides at 85 Mershy

HIgh of New Bedford aiming the Lawrence Catholic tourney rill Avenue In Taunton and are for the Class C Tech crown both Southeastern Mass does not members of St Pauls Parish fInished wIth an over-all 16-2 have one club among the Tech

Wetterland Commentsmark The latter Is still smart- Class B participants but th~re ing from its cliff-hanging defeat will be five area combinations Wetterland was high in his at the hands of Xavier in the -includIng Fairhaven and Holy praise of his five foot 11 inch State Catholic tourney Bill Family-in the Class C play and guard who tips the scales at Walshs two-pointer from the three-including Nauset-in the 160 pounds ~ssesses good speed floor which many thought Class D Hub competition and is a key in the Corsairs fast

meant victory at Lawrence was The other Class C contestants break offense nu1llfied by a travelling viola- patterns when SMTI is wurkshy a rest he should be in top conshySault lllsed strictly with thetion which cost the loss ofthe are Case High of Swansea Nar- iilg too quickly and making dition for the 1968-69 campaignvarsity was gaining valuablebasket resulting in a one-~Jnt ry co-champions Oliver Ames Dlistakes Sault gaIned his court savvy1 f tb of North Easton runners-up in experience and developing rapshy

The SMTI mentor continued from Lanagan at Coyle wheretiOs~~ e Narragnnsett~a~ theHockomock circuit and Den- bUy whep a knee Injury slowed he iii the complete ball player hemiddotstarted in his juJ)ior and senshyDis-Yarmouth of Cape Cod see his progress midway through

Durfee of Fall RIver and ond pI fi ish in tho C the campaiiPt but Wetterland noting that he can shoot but is Jor lieasons and was a Vital co Bishop Stang mgh of North ace n er e ape most --content setting Up his in the Warriors successduring DartmQutb are the other two middotNausetwill be joined by Mar- has turned in some excellent efshy teammates for easy pblnts He Ioth years I J

way loop said despite the handicap Pat

Is a team player and always sacshy As ~ Coyle High fr~hmanarea Class A representatives inmiddot thas VIneyard and Norton mib forts in a most successful SMTI rifices himself to help the club Pat was a member XJtb~ yearshythe Tecb toutnament ~e Fall in the Class D bracket The season

Sault possesses a good atti shy lings h09P team and al~Q~ parti shyRiver Hilltoppers willbe out Islanders finished second to Naushy Defensively Sault is cnitshytude is a tough competitor and cipated in track By hihSOphoshyto make amends for their nose- set in the Cape amp Island league standIng Offensively Sault is one of the players Wetterland is more year Saultcopfjned his dive finish in the Bristol COUl)ty while Norton was second in the the teams playmaker ana quarshyeounting on 1to help SMTI gain athlettc talents to basketbjlll andloop whIle Stang ~ke Ho17 Tri~Valley Conference terback 8Dlall college recognition in the turned in a cODlJPenlla))le acshyfuture Teallll Player coun~ o~ himself

Ifere~s How They Did hi LiBogue Play Played for Lanagan Sault also represented stWetterland said his outstandshyThere is doubt about his the hardwood

he following are the league 21 Bishop Feehan 7_1 ing worth to the Corsairs comes no Pauls on in the eourage said the Corsairs skipshy Taunton CYO and in the annual from the fact that he can slowrecords of the 35 Southeastem Msgr Coyle 7-1 after painful knee Easter tournament He playeddown the offense and set up per even a

Mass teams Ta~ton 7-7 injury Sault continued to jpve four years of Litue JeagueM N B Vocational 6-8 his all and attended every pracshy Baseball and one season in theK of C Masons1 Fairhaven 14-0 25 DIman Vocational 5-9 tice The injury has slowed him Pony League prior to ~ntetmamp

Nauset 12-0 Msgr Prevost 5-9 visibly but after the season and Coyle Higa 3 New Bedford 15-1 27 SandwIch 4-8 To Cooperate4 Holy Family 13-1 28 Nantucket 3-9

NOTRE DAME (NC) - lfashyCase 13-1 29 Old Rochester 4-10

30 tlonal leadellS of the Scottish6 Oliver Ames 12-2 West~rt 3-11 Bite Masons and the Knights ~oll another7 Marthas Vineyard ~ 31 Barnstable 2-12

of Columbus anno~ced memshy8 Bishop Stang 10~ 32 Dighton-Rehoboth 1-13 strike on~rs of their organizations wU1Dartmouth 104 33 Bourne 0-14 work together on domestic andDennis-Yarmouth 10-4 Chatham 0-12 the enerlY international problems faciolaquoDurfee 10-1 North AUleJooro 1-14

the nation12 Norton 105 you get George A Newbury soveshy13 Attleboro 9-5 Minister Officiates reign grand commander 01 from14 Harwich 7-5

Scottish Rite Masons In theProvIncetown 7-5 a slice ofDn Cathclic Church northern jurisdiction of the US18 Seekonk 8-6 MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-A Lu- and John W McDevitt supremeSomerset 86

theran mInister officiated at the knight of the Knights of ColumshyFalmouth 8-6 marriage of his son in Holy Cross bus made the announcementMansfield 8-6 Catholic church here at a dinner here s~nsoredWareham 8-6

Married were James H Graf jointly by the Masonic Lodge 29 L th and the Knights of Columbus

a u eran and CalTon Ann council in South Bend Episcopalian Rite Gutwinski 25 a Catholic The ceremony was rformed - Both praised the work of Fa-MINNEAPOLIS (NC)- Archshy ther John A OBrien of the

bishop Leo Binz and Coadjutor Grapoundfs fltthell the Rev Paul L University of Notre Dame for Archbishop ~ PY1)1e of the Graf pastor of Holy Trinity r better understanding among the Cafllolic archdIoceses of St Paul theran church two groups Minneapolis were present in the Permission for the Rev Gmt Father Theodore M Hesshysan~lary of St Marks Episcoshy to officiate at his sonB wedding burgh CSC president of the pal cathedral here for the inshy was granted by theSacred Con- University of Notre Dame said stallation of Bishop Philip F gregation for the Joctrine of This nIght marks a great step McNarry as coadjutor bishop of the Faitlh inl lWme in answer to ll forward and reflects the new the Epi6copal diocese of Minneshy J)etition by Archbishop Leo BiDz ~enical spirit which is unishysota of~ ~~-M~eapotis iing ~ople long separated-

PAT SAULT

c

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bull THE ANCHOR Dayton University Thurs Feb 29 196a Brief Religious on Ecumenism

Selects Advisors SOUTH ORANGE (NC) meanitigful dialogue should not tended not to lead to compro- DAYTON (NC)-An ll-mem-

Named resident Some 1000 mms and Brothers be confused with monologueshy mise but to conyergence ber advisory board of six stushyservfng in tli~ Newark archdi~shy or confrontation He added We talk now of our common dents two faculty members andSANTA CLARA (NC)-The cese were briefed on the basic we must be willing to be pershy belilefs he said not to com- three representatives of theboard of trustees of the Univershy principles of ecumenism in a suaded-we need an open mind promise each others faith but in community has been establishedlllity of Santa Clara has named program sponsored by the Newshy to seek out the truth wherever the hope that at some point in for the Office of Human Relashylrather Thomas D Terry SJ ark Archdiocese Commission for it might be shy the future we will converge tions at the University oJ Dayshy35th president of the Jesuit unishy Ecumenical Affairs

Ifersity Father Terry who sucshy Discussing the difficulties of As an example he pointed to tornSpeakers at the session ineeeds Father Patrick Donohoe establishing Christian-Jewish the wide divergence of views The board under the direcshySeton Hall University includeSJ recently appointed Califorshy dialogue he said we Christians regarding (he Mass and the Eu- tion of Charles Hirt director ofDr Leonard Swidler of Templeaia provinCial af the Society of are responsible for 2000 years charist that existed between the Office of Human RelationsUniversity Philadelphia aridJIesus has been academic vic~ of anti-Semitism and now_ we Martin Luther and the Council will be responsible for estabshyFather Thomas M McFadden ofpresident af Loyola University must overcome our mutual disshy of Trent Then he cited the re- lishing policy making programthe Brooklyn dioceseLos Angeles for the last year trust before dialogue can be cent statement on the Eucharist recommendations helping to

lllI1d a half Previous to that Swidler said dialogue with fruitful issued by Lutherans and Catho- alleviate campus racial probshyIIlIather Terry was dean of the others must be preceded by an lics to show how much closer lems and drawing up proposall ltWllege of arts and sciences at examination of Catholic attishy Father McFadden said diashy the two bodies have come since for implementation Santa Clara tudes In addition he said a logue among Christians is inshy that time

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Wonderland to 10 PM

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Page 13: 02.29.68

THE ANOiOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 13Missouri Diocesan Board Pondersmiddot Closing Consolidating Schools

KANSAS CITY (NC)-Tbe 1H girls They would be abshyKansas City-8t Joseph diocese sorbed into the school popushyis exploring the possibility of lations of Lillis high school and closing some of its schools and st Theresas academy forming n larger area school Although 120 persons attendshy Extension Volunteers bull bull bullwhich could upgrade the qualshy ed the school board meetingity of education for all pupils they were not petmitted tp

At 0 school board meeting speakFather John P Cole supershyinJtenden~ of schools reported on L - shyPTA Bead Plotes~

the possibility of setting up 11 Make Life Wortl IVngA motion-passed unanimousshycentral area grade school in ly by the board-was made to

mid-town Kansas City The continue exploration into conshysingle school would serve the solidation of the schools Thispopulations of three existing was opposed by John J Mcshygrade schools Donough a representativeFather Cole also suggested the elected by the Catholic PTApossibility of closing Redempshy Federation who will be seatedtorist high school now serving as a board member in July

McDonough was permitted to $~[]7reg~ 2~ Ifreg[[~ take part in the discussion but

had no vote

~~ ~~[[U IT)J He protested against the defe3ltist clique who let our

WASHINGTON (NC)-Bishop schools get picked off one byPaul F Tanner newly named one He charged that TheOrdinary of the diocese of St New Peltlple - the diocesanAugustine Fla is onfy the newspaper members of the dishyfourth priest to serve as general ocesan school office officials of secretary of the United States the Missouri Catholic Confershybishops secretariat in the nearshy ence Kansas City pastors andmiddotly half-century of its existence other Church officials share in

Bishop Tanner was the last an anti-Catholic school recshygeneral secretary of NCWC the ordoriginal secretariat He was also the first general secretary of ODe Operation both of is dual suc~essors-tne

McDonough said that theNational Conferenceof Catholic school superintendent shouldBishops and the United States be goingmiddot to the state legislashyCatholic Conference The NCCB ture and Governor Hearnes tois the bishops agency for dealshydemand tax relief instead ofing with purely splritual matshyconsidering consolidation andters the USCC Is their secreshyclosing of schoolstariat for dealing with secular

affairs Father Colemiddot maJntained that The prelate has served in the the reorganization would not

U S bishops secretariat 28 represent a cutback The area years longer than any precedshy school would be able to opshying general secretary Born in erate out of one blilding to Peoria TII in 1905 and ordained serve three parishes It would a priestmiddot of the Milw~ukee archshy provide the same educational diocese in 1931middot he came to experience for the same number Washington in 1940 ~as assistant of students plus advantages director of the Youth Departshy Cooperation would make posshyment NCWC He ~as assistant sible a highly developed model general secretary from 1945 to school staffed by Sisters from 1958 and has been general secshy three communities retary since then He said it would be irresponshy

He is the first bishop to serve sible to run three operations at as secretary to the bishops secshy all costs when the diocese retariat could have one operation run

The NCWC (as Council and it more efficiently do a better Conference) had been in exisshy educational job and provide opshytence 47 years when it formally portunity for a better deployshywent out of existence at the anshy ment of personnel nual meeting of the bishops in November 1966 Bishop Tanner who had served in the secretashy Urge Germaruls riat for more than half those years supervised the transition To Aid Vietnam to two separate organizationsshy

BONN (NC) - Two Germanthe NCCB and the USCC cardinals and two churchshyDuring Bishop Tanners secshy related relief organizations have

retaryship and in testimony to FALL RIVER PROVINCETOWN AND WESTPORT GIRLS WITHappealed to the German people

the growth of the work handled to collect money and to prayby the bishops secretariat an NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF EXTENSION VOIL~NTEERS DURINGfor the people of Vietnamimpressive addition to the headshy A week beore Mardi Gral lt- quarters building here was Joseph Cardinal Frings of Coshy THEIR YEAR OF VOLUNTEER WORK erected in 1960 logne asked the Catholics of his

archdiocese to cut down on Mardi Gras festivities and to donate magnanimously to the needy people of Vietnam Coshy These young college graduates have given a I year of their logne has long been known for its ampigtectacular Mardi Gras celeshy professional life to God in service in the South and West Are brations Citing the bombing Of North you willing to give twelve months of yourmiddotyouth to othersVietnam the plight of women and children caught between opposing forc~middot in the $()ut~ and the great number of refushygees Cardinal Frings asked how Catholics could watch pictures of these gravely distressing si~

WHY NOT ENROll AS ANuations on television and ceieshybrate Mardi Gras with a quiet The Spirit oj

Extension Volunteer HELPER middot$200 oconscience Alfred Cardinal Bengsch Of Extension Volunteer PROMOTER $500 o

Berlin asked for prayers for Sacrifice Extension Volunteer SPONSOR $1000 or more opeace in the world in a letter to the clergy of his diocese in which specifically mentioned AMOUNT ENCLOSED $ Vietnam as a name meaning Perfectlyblood and death RT REV RAYMOND T CONSIDINE PAIn a joint appeal Caritas the German Catholic relief organishy PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH OFFICE zation of Germanys Evangelical 368 NORTH MAIN STREETExemplifiedLutheran Church has asked for fALL RIVER MASS money to send food Md medishy

BISHOP P~VL F TANNU cine to the Children of Vietnam o

(-14 THf ANCHOR-Diocese of FaR Rfver-Th~rs Feb-29 1968 Two Objectives Jersey to Rehabilitate Young OffendersTells Jesuatts Engage in Deliberate

Help Increasing Spanish Group Attempts at lExperimentation UNION CITY (NC) - Two Hudson County Jan and in theST LOUIS (NC)-Deliber- carries its own reward he said area interfaith clergy groups youth house in Secaucus

iide attempts at experimenta- Now we must undertake new here in New Jersey are planning Father ThomasJ Murtha oftion with a readiness to accept forms some of which have a

joint action on the plightf West New York was named toall the risks that may be in- good chance to flop JIliserably youthful offenders housed m investigate means of setting UJltvolved were proposed for the An expert at the Second VatshyHudson County correctional in- a rehabilitation program t4ilSociet of Jesus at the close of ican Council Father Campion stitutions and to seek federal function after the release ~ III three-day session here on believes that the work of the assistance in meeting the needs youthful offendersbulllesuit renewal council has not yet begun to of Cuban refugeesFather Donald R Campion be absorbed within the Church

The joint session was held by The ~o groups will send a18J stressed at the renewal as a whole the North Hudson Clergy Coun- delegatIOn toWashIngton to askQession and in an interview This is not because it hasnt cU based here and the Chris- ~hat the area be declared anthat the Jesuits have both the been publicized enough or beshy tian Clergy United a West New Impacted area under the Cuban manpower and the resources to cause people havent read Y k Refugee Act and therefore beshy

engage in the type of expeii- enough or bishops havent talkshy or ~ro~p come eligible for special federal mentation which could serve ed enough he said But Vati shy A meetmg WIll be s()~ght WIth aid There are some 00000 tQdays Church Father Cam- can II opened up more areas the Hudson County Boar~ of Spanish~speakingpeople now m pion a sociologist and theolo- to discussion than it resolved Chosen Freeholders in an effort rth gian was recently named editor Among the sleep~rs in to establish a bettez climatefoi the ~o Hudson area and they cd America magazine council documents CIted by therehabiUtation of youthful continue to arrive at the rate of

Another speaker Fat her Father Campion was the conshy offenders now housed intne 200 to250 a month ~ 1 _

Avezy Dulles SJ stressed that cept of participation within the ~ doubt is a valuable and even Church Father Campionmiddot said lI1ecessary experience for the he believes collegiality is the Wide E~perience Christian in todays world most developed aspect in this

Fathers Campion and Dulles area and that some organization QU(lJD~ies Nu_ were two of the six main speak- has been given to it through the

UNITED- NATIONS (NC)ers at the closed meeting Some establishment of piie~ senates ltHQWCom pie t e devotion to theSSO Jesuits including 50 from But unless the idea of parti shyworlds needy children seemsCilutside the St Louis areaat-cipation is really the basis senshy a weighty task for a petite nun TDgtKEEPtended the sessions ates can become orgimizational

Father Campion said that Jes- gimmicks he said but a conversation with Sister Ullits as a group must face the Father Dulles discussing themiddot Kathl~eri Kelly MMmiddot provides LENmiddotTreassularice middotthat 20 years of make a significant contribution Church said ~ an interview diversified experience fact that their work should existence of doubt in todays

more to modern times that we have a radically differ- than qualifies her for the role

QUI IXIDPYFATHER lI MISSION jlUDTG me fllRlfaNTAL CHURCH

In the area of education It calIS for recasting the ex- wide Cath)lic charities organishy Need New Formula ent world view than in the past Caritas Internationalis worldshy

With the slason of Lent comes the qu~ionFather Campion called for con- pressions of the Christian messhy zation recently appointed Sisshy How can I beSt keep Lentl The answer ~s ~sideration of whether we are sage in terms of contemporary as observerter Kathleen its must make sacrifices on our own and nothing ISproviding the educational struc- knowledge if the message is to to the U N International GOOD III sacrifice unfess it hurts Whatwill be yo~rture for the new world have the impact it should Childrens Emergency Fun d WHIEN sacrifice bullbull Just think of the misslonlllne~ InIn the intellectual area Look Criticanny (UNICEF) Caritas Internationshy ITlf our 18 emerging countries who keep Lent allrather Campion noted that to- Doubt is not a bad thing he alis is one of 75 international HUmS year long Sacrifice something big this ye~rday more is needed than popu- said People should be looking and non-government organizashy When helping others hurts a bit you know you va larization of theology and phil- critically at the traditional forshy tions (NGOS) which enjoy conshy made a sacrifice()Sophy In a way we need a mulas and seeing what is revelashy sultative status with UNICEF whole new formula for making tion and what is a culturally

They represent oJer 4000csense of the world and life he conditioned formula which is affiliated private and non-profitfSaid now demanding reform

We should have men devoted Such adaptations are iD no organizations in more than 100 oOn his recent-trip through India 1V0~signor nations with a combined memshy Nolan saw priests and Sisters subSisting onto this single problem Their way a compromise of faith bership running into millions ounces of rice each day so they can share what own inner resources of security Father Dulles said We never they have with lepers and orphans $10 will feedmust be yery strong because to hear the divine message except Interviewed at the United Nashy FEED a family for several weeks at least $50 will feed

facethat kind of change is not III in terms of humans he said tions Sister Kathleen spoke of THE five families $100 ten families bullbullbull Only $975popular thing The Word of God comes her new rol~ at the international HUNGRY gives a priest 11 two-acre mode~ 18nn toraise

Council Opened Areas through man it is alW9YS tem- level and described how it his own food and teach his parishioners how to Father Campion said the can pered by man and it is this con~ evolved from her past activities raise more food Archbishop MalJ Gregorioa will

for experimentation W9S not ditioning which must change wrltetlo thank youI was in California andbased on inadequate work of Father Dulles said one value worked for 10 years in familyJesuits at the present time and of the death-of-God movement eounseling in the juvenile court IlJ Enable ~ girl to become a Sister For 41tl bullthat fact is part of the problem for Catholics is to shake _ I1tA1N day ($1250 a month $150 bull year $300 aleill foster lare and in otherMany times we have been suc- out of taking an uncritical with sa~ A together) you can pay In full fer her two-yeaIwork children sheeessful and being successful static view of God training have 8 Sister of your awnInthe last five years I moved SISTER

oat to community development and civil rights I was a member o For only $a5O a week ($10 a month $120 bull

year) you can make surethat an abandonedJesuit Seminarian Leads Campaign of a district council in bull San HELP Francisco - which subsequently A child has food clothing a blanket and love bullbullbull IAgainst Home Contract Firms was declared a poverty CHILD wen send you a photo of the boy or silt )011area

adoptCHICAGO (NC) - A Jesuit borne than its current market During my years there I waa Rminarian has launched a camshy value a member of the Catholic Intershy o Our priestS will offer promptly the Massespaign here against contractshy Following the exodus of racial Council and when I came MASSES you request Doyou wish to remember a loved holders of homes sold to Negro Lawndales white residents in back from Selma (she was on fOR one this Lent Your Mass offerings are usuallyfamilies at allegedly exorbitant the late 1950s thousands of of the persons selected to repshy LENT the only Incole our priests overseas receiverates homes were purchased by vari shy resent the archdiocese of san

Jack Macnamara SJ who ous bankS mortgage loan and Francisco in the Alabama civil o Enroll yourself your family and friends InlIives and works in nearby real estate companies at low rights march) I was appointed this Association You will be helping Pope Paul Lawndale is acting withthe ap- prices and then resold on conshy to serve on the Human Rights

JOI~ in one of his most ambitious and heartfelt works proval of his Jesuit superio~ tractto Negro families atofteIi - Commission by the mayor of THIS while sharing In the blessings of thousands of

Nacnarnara and a dozen supshy ~lImON Masses (The offering for one year is $2 perdouble the original purchase San Francisco the nun stated porters including several other price the leaflet reported She was the first nun ever apshy person $10 for a family perpetual membership Jesuit seminarians picketed the Paid Race Tax ltpOinted to any kind of~~yt is $25 per person $100 for a family) Chicago address of one investshy Macnamara said these conshy inJSan Fraidsco _

Iment company which holds title tracts should be renegotiated at

~ several homes sold on conshy the most recent FHA appraisal tract to Negroes Pickets dis- price ~ If I1t e SAiliNGS

tributed leaflets explaining the c2J 0 dJ ~ t~~ year SYSTEMATICThe issuemiddot here is moral rathshypurpose of their campaign er than legal he declared Th~ MONTHLY DEPOSITS

The leaflet cites the case of III law does not provide a remedy II tfMltIa fNVE$iMENyhome purchased by an investshy for the type of injustice that is d) aV~ J((~ year SAVINGSment company in January 1959 operative in this contract

for $13000 and then three NOTICE ACCOUNTSThousands of Negroes inmonths later sold on contract to Chicago are suffering from this a Negro buyer for $23000 450 ar ~~~~

It states the investment corn continued ~In effect they paid pany received $2000 as a down II race tax of approximately

type of injustice Macnamara

BCJs~ liverpayment on thiS contract whic~ $10000 when they bought their stipulated that middotthe balance was homes because it was impossishy SavonJs Bonkflo be paid over 20 years at sevshy bleto obtain mortgages 4Il per cent interest at the rate This is a striking example of BanI By Mail of $20140 each month how our legal system does notmiddot We Pay The Postage

Last December it reported a adequately protect black people Federal Housing Administration or poor people he said It appraisal on this home listed its stems from the fact that the law bull YARMOUTH SHOPP8NC PUll value at $15025 This means it aims at protecting property inshy bull SOUTH UltMOm bull HYANJIISexplained that the Negro buyer stead of persons And this helpl bull DENNIS PlmRT bull OSTFllVIUlIII paying $8000 more for tbe bull cause urbaJl unreal

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HUNGRYmiddot FOR GOD TOO ~

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 ltI

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16 THE ANC )~-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968

New St LouimiddotsArchbi~hcp

PrOmilnent in Ecumen~$m Archbishop Jonh J Oarberry of St Louis well known

~()ng Oatholic leaders after 31 career that has taken him from a seminary classroom iii his natiYe Brooltl~ NCY~ to one of the nations MOse ~mpOOtallt archdiolaquoese1l is pershy

laaps evenmiddot better ~ownmiddot fJDlong Americas nom-Cafu6shylie religious leaders fon hisl work in ecumenism Cllair Ilillao of the Bishqps Commi~ee-Ibr Ecumenical and Intenrefi shyaious Affairs since th~ resigna Qion of Baltimores Lawrence Cardinal Shehan in November 11965 Bishop Carberry has au I9gtCrvised the massive catholic illllvoIvement in ecumeniCal ac-middot lli1 vities

He outlined his own entIliusishyeuroISm for ecumenism in a speech ~iven in January 1966 tolmemshy~rs of the Ohio (Protestant) lPastors Convention wheDI he aid

Common lHeritagel For years the general policY

(llln the Catholic Church) had ~en to stress the great chasm

which divides the euroatliolic Church and other Christian ehurches No effort was made m would seem on our part to Illave a meeting of minds A otudy of documents would seem ltD reveal that while we wera lbrayerfully disposed to) the ltecumenical movemerit nevershy1lheless the Catholic Church did lliittleto foster it

Bishop Carberry told the conshyvention that through the grace 0f God and the leadership or Pope John XXIII we became aware of the common heritage Which is ours

Has Great lHope

We began to realiZe~ how 18aptism unites us in ChriSt to Gee that the divinity of Christ is illhe cornerstone of all Christianshynay we began to real1ze the oommon treasure which we llnave in the Sacred Scripturesllikewise the common bondshyVhich exists with us in the

1lIIlissionary activities at the Church

There is great hope Bishopltearberry said that mrougb ~ialogue through prayerbull 1llluough respect for each others wiewpoint the grace of God may (i)Ile day in Gods divine provishy4llence bring about the- unitY which Christ prayed for at themiddot Last Supper

More recently members of ltOhios Protestant cliurches llllamed the bishop as OniosPbsshyoLr of Pas-tors the fl rst timmiddote hat bull

Grants Permis$ioll~

for SaturdayMass) SAN ANGELO (NC)-BiShop

Thomas TSchoepe of San Angelo lllas announced that the diocesan request for the Saturday Mass flaculty hagt been granted In the future the Sunday Mass 00shyltigation may be met by at shy~ndance at a Saturday aftershyllloon or evening Mass The pershylll1ission has been granted on an ~xperimental basis by the Vati shylttan for a period of five years

The diocese of San Argelo is 1lI Texas missionary diocese the bishop explained and there are areat dis tan c e s between churches and few priestswmiddot oerve the faithfuh ManYi ~llieSts

have two or morlt8 churclies tJ lllttend and will Be able- tQ give more time to the smaller ~urches with the Satucday Mass faculty Bishop TschoePe pointedi 9Ut Chat the faculty has been giVeth bull the whole diocese not just Ibo individual churches or areas Pastors who wish to make Usemiddot aJl the faculty must make formal application to the chancery ofshyillce

a~ statewide Protestant onganiza tion has presented its highest awa-rd 10 a eatho1iir clet1gymam A pla~J1e symbollZiDg the a~adi was~ glv~~ to the blShp at ~~~ Fenw~nIP Blmq~et on the Olbo PastollSgt ~onventi~m

DI~USS P~tilems U~dev Blsli~p~rlgte~rysl~d

er~hlPl laquoatholic ~elegations have ~et wl~h ~fflC1Blsbull and

tleolbglan~ of other- ChrIs~an churchesmiddot to dlSCUSS ecumemcal pooble~s r~~gmg from the pr~sshyence of Christ Ill tlie ~ucharlst to th-c nature of we prJes~ood

Before ta~mg cliarge of th Golumbusmiddot dIOcese on March 25 1965) Bishop euroarbery liadmiddot selved asmiddot coadjutor bishop and then bishop of Eafayette Ind Born in Brooklynj N~ Y Tulymiddot 31 1904 Bishop Carberry studied for the priestlioodi at Brooklyns Cathedral College or the Iin-middot maculate laquool1ception from 191ll to 1924 and at the North Amershyican College in Rome from 1924 to 1930

Oldained inmiddot Rome in 1929 tne bishop sfudiea canon law at the Catholic University of America in Washington D G and taught at Immaculate Conception Semshyinarl until Tune 1935 when he went on ldan to the diocese of Trenton N J He returned to BrooklYn in 1940 where hemiddotreshymained until being named coshyadjuror bishop of Lafayettemiddot in 19651

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CHICAGO (NC) - Tohn A McDllrmott has changed me mindL-he1li remain as execu middot tivedirector of the Chicago Cat1iolic Interracial Council

The veteran council worKer last October announced he would leave the office to beshy

come Mridwest regional- ciVil rightsdirector for the ms De-middotmiddot partment of Health Enucation andi Welfare

A number of problems hava arisen since th-e announcement on my appointmentt last 0ctbBerwhichl caused me to have serl

ousmiddot second l thoughts MilDer moW said iil his decision to re~ maio with the ltlrc He citedi m1 patrtcular~ personnel cutliaclts in HEW wJiich woulli Iiinit the Midwest negional operatiiul

fo accepting McDermotits de cisionj HEW the government agency requestedi liiin to serve asmiddot ai special chdl- rights consuU ant while working for the CIC and he a~reed

IIlt a letter to the Dutch biINumber of Fllel71ch ops members of Michaels re-

gion asked for curbs on the nlgtshySeminarians Dllops tions Catliolic liberals The PARIS (Ne)-Thenumber of meeting also registered disap-

French seminarians h~s dropped proval of the new Dutch Cateshyby about 180 a year for the last chism~ claiminJ~ that it does nocent four years according to 1iigures represent true Catholic teach~ provided in amiddot press conference Michaels Lel~ion is considered by Bishop Jean Sauvage 011 ampshy even more CJlnservative thlW necy member of the bishops Confrontation another Catholic commission on the clergy and conservative organization Conshyseminaries frontations complaints about

For the 1967~68 sc1iolastic the content of the new Dutch year the tdtal number of sliumiddot catechismmiddot are believed to hae dents iil major seminaries m been instTllmentai in having tbe~ FhlOce is 43583 comparedl with book exltlmined by the VatiCan~lJ

4536 for the previous year Doctrinal Congregation 4722 )n 1965-66 and 4953 in 1964-65

Moreover in France at pres- Approves Agency eol ttiere are aBout 200 adults LQND()N (NC)--Jolin Cardl~

WIIO are preIgtaring for tOe ~er nal Heenan of Westminster liJaa manent diaconate as restored by approveq establishment ocf 1m the Second Vatican Council The agency to help priests who want first ordinations to this permashy 10 leave the priesthood znGl nent diaconate could take place nuns who want to leave the this year religious life

1P~alrn le~tUlm~1rn~~G~

$1lll~7 GG1l I1DtJ Sim LONDON (NC)-A study on

the problems of ecumenism in Great Britain will be made by a joint working group of the British Council of Churches and the Caholic Church with the results to be reported next Autumn

The study was planned at a meetingmiddot held atmiddot the Vita et Pax Benedictine I~onvent and attendshyed by nine Catholic representashytives an- 14 representatives of the BeC -

The projected study is exshypected to analyze such topics an the extent I)f cooperatiGn beshytween Catjwlics and members of the BeC the dialogUes bemg held theologicaL differences and the non~theological obstacles to closer unitygt

Auxiliary BishoJ- Langton Fox of lfenevia Wales and

Auxiliary Bishop Basil Chrisshytopher Butlelr OSB of Westshyminster headed tOe CatOolie delegation at the meeting

~(i]$~~rlaquolJpoundfr1) A$1k lMl~illlW) ~ltoy~ IHh~)~Dnd

U11RECHm (NC) -Michaels Legion an organization of Dutch Catholic~ uaditionalists has sent a telegram to Pope Pault H ungintg him tD protect essential orthodoxy and to S81fe tne DutchChurch~

At 3- meeting here attended b~ some 600) Catholic conserva tives led by Eouis Knuvelder the legion condemned the Dutch Catholic daily press the~ Dutch Gatholic tellvisioncompany and the countrys Catholic radio station for being too progressive

Father Baum Regards Ecumenical Center Closing Sign of Success TORONTO (NC)-The closing gian Charles Davis-A Quesshy

of the Center for Ecumenical tion of Conscience Davis book Studies at St Michaels Collegegt exmiddotplains his renunciation of the here is a sign of the centersmiddot euroatholic priesthood and the success Church and asks Catholic theo-

This is the viewpoint of Father logians who intend to stay in GregllllY Ballm O~SA founder the~ eurohurch to reply to several of tJie centeI1 who has an- t1iaologjcal points nQunlaquoed that it will b~ Closed BelUef Unbelief

inl JUne Thats what Im doing FatlieJJBaum-explalnedthalhe Fatller Baum said His book a

founded the centeJ ill 19631 when replYJ to Davis questions conshyecum~llusrn may have~ been a ceming the credibility of the new Idea Its purpose lie- s~ld Church in todays world will be was to promote ecumemcall called The Credibility of the studies at St Michaels Church Today It will be pub-

Taday he neports ecumen mal stlUdi~s at S1l Michaels are a reality- 1lli~ schGolls theology depal1tment 18 fully mte~ ~thl Protestant and ~gIIcan lfupartmentsmiddot at the-Umversity

of Toronto [hUB lie said~ the eC-lmenical

centell has fulfilled its purpose Such fUlfillment he said wmiddot

common in academic circles where there has been an ecushymenlical reVOlution For exam pIe ne said where once som1shyone might have nied to foster ecumenism through building an ecumenical library it is now impossible tq build a theological lilgtrary without its being ecushymenical

Need flDZ Programsmiddot Father Baum added that he

does not believe tJie ecumenical movement has reached fruitien in circles outside the academia world~ He said that he sees a real need pound01 formal ecumenmiddot ical programs on the parish and on all levels of the Churdl which have not yet been reached He a150 disclosed that perSOll ally he lias moved Gn frOlll ecumenism to new fields of thought

The AuIDlStinian has written a new book in answer to the latest by the English theolo-

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rnliJ kUD-WIh ol 1TW[jiJ KETTERING (Neuro) - The 1-7shy

member parish board 00 St Charles Church~ here unanishymousll1 adopted a resolution 5 favor Qf open nousing legiSlashytion for thiS (1)hio suburban community

The parish boards action S~ poIied- unequivocallymiddot passage 0amp an open housing ordinance in themiddot virtuallr aUi-wltite commw-middot nity 00l more than 600001 res dents Tames J Gilvay and Peter Donanue attOrneys anlL pariBhlmiddot boarc members pre sentedthe resolutJoDj wliiclli tbok- themiddot position that the ghett) condit1ollG ~Ilichl Negroes enshycure ilm nearby DaYton are mshyiuriOwil to the entire commUlshyDitTmiddot

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Aftei tee closing of the Center for Ecumenical Studies Father Baum will stay on at St MishychaeFs au a professor of theolshyogy He is also planning another ~~

It will concentrate on the idea oi God in modern thought and will be a clear sign that Father Baum has moved away from his prime in terest in ecumen- ism

Born of Jewish parents in Berlin and reared as an agnostic Father Baum said he has now turned his whole thought to the study of belief and unbelief He will record his findings in me book he is now writing

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[~ Ao~ i N~regIJ$ CAMDEN (NC) - Bishop

Tames L Schad administrator of the Camden diocese was =ong citizens honored here foT their efforts in furthering the interests of the Negro comshymunity

Bishop Schad who has been active in community action projects such as the War on Poverty committees was pre sented a scroll during a proshygram sponsored by the Tenth Street Baptist church here in observance of the 43rd annual Negro History Week This year marks the first time a Romaa Catholic prelate has been so honored

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17 Oppose Church Clergy Participation in Politics

By Jsgr George G Higgins

The New RepubJic-whIch in this writers judgment W one CYl the be3t of Ameriros weekly journals of opinion especially hl it3 arovezoage cfcurrent economic and political developments----thinks that the time has com~ for anti shyVietnam clergymen aul1ayshy Be that as it maY I am ioshymen to translate tu1eir cVZl clined to think that the editors m0r81 indignation oveuror Vietshy of the French periodical Inforshynam into effective political mations Catholique InternashyDction inasmuch as this is the tionales make considerably only way to effect long-term more sense than the editors cOf ehanges in the The New Republic 011 this issue policies of this of clerical involvement in the country So far so-called politics of peace as laymen are Though they are vigorously concerned this and unqualifiedly opposed ~il

would seem to tW war in Vietnam and like be a self - evishy tWeditors ()f The New Repubshydent proposition li( clearly recognize that the L1s perfectly establishment of leace in the obvious t hat world is a political problem concerned layshy which calls for the active mshymen ou~ht to volvement ofChcistians as ~-en

translate their as all other men of good will moral indi~nashy they do not think that themiddot tion over Vietnam - or any cleJgy who are responsible foy other significant issue of public the unity of the Church should policy-into effecti-re poiiticltll be expected to take on the role

of party politiciansaction Given the fact that their pubshySound Tradition

lication ~CI has been oJe 01 tileOn the other hnd I aJl Evt most outspoken European critics

sure understandthat I fully or of U S involvement in Vietnam completely agree vitb The New and one of the most vigorousRepublic when it says that fue advocates middotof a politics of peaceclergy ought tncv likewise their warning against the parshy

Traditionally a the NR itself ticipation of the clergy in parshypvints out the clergy-in this tisan politics is highly signifi shycountry at least - have rnied cant and deserves to be taken amy from such participation very seriously (Christians and

AJJ a long-time subscriher to the Struggle ior Peaee InforshyT~2 New Republic I had Dlshy mations Catholique Internashyways been under the imp~ssio~ tionales Jan 15 1965)that its editors thought that en Fl lialgs lrindplebalance this was a sound tradishy

Those American Catholicstion Apparently lwweer I was who may happen to have a speshy

cial interest in the pros and consmistaken in this regard fora of this highly controversial issuerecent Nell Republic editorial will also want to read whatnoten with satisfaction that Hans Kung has to say about itAJlerican clerGYmen now apshy

pear to be ready in large numshy in his forthcoming bookThe Churchbers to get involved at a preshy

cinct level and to play C1l Father Kung has lectured exshyactivist role in both parties tensively throughout the United (Clergy in Politics The New SUItes in recent years and is

currently with us again as a visshyRepublic Feb 17 1968) iting professor at Union Theoshy

QuestioIS Meaning logical Seminary in New York What does this mean in pracshy Seen in the light of the Gosshy

tical terma Does it mean that pel le writes in his new book ministers rabbis and priests the relntionshipof the Church should endorse ltor oppose) parshy to the world contains only one ticular candic1ates fqr politiell essential aspect its ministry 10 office starting at the precinct the world level Does it mean that they Ministry does not mean raisshythemselves should run for ofshy ing ones voice or putting an -oar flee if only as a last reiort in all secular qIes1ions middotof ecoshy

If so does it also mean that nomic political sodaI middotcultural other clergymen should run artistic and scientific life against them if they happen to T1e Churchclmnot solve disagree with what they stand the greJt problems of the ()rld for Or does it mean toot only neiih2r the problell1of hunger those clergymen who are anti shy nor that of the populaticn nor Administration should get inshy that of war nor thlt oanonFmshyT-olved at a precinct leel and ity of power Dor that -of race play an activist role within hatred What the Church both parties can do can be expressed quite

Sicnifieani WarnlDI simply in one phrase it must I have raised these questions exist for the world

lot to make light of The New ACrefS With lFTK1mgRepublics editorial CD the subshyject under discussion but Anyone who hal ever baG the merely to BUggest that clerical pleasure of meeting Faiher involvement ill partisan politics Kung middotor is familiar wi1bhis over the issue of Vietnam is at writings will know witheut best a rather tricky business being told that be is not a hawk and will almost inevitably lead and that he is cot advocating to certain consequences which a policy of Christian withdrawal upon further reflection even the from the world editors of The New Republie middotOn the eontrary be stroniJy might eonceivably wish tc foreshy favors lhe all-ltltit involvement tall of Christians in temporal affairs

and notably iii the ~lities Of peace

To Speak in Boston Nevertheless be does net Rev Anthony T Padovano think that the institutienal

Church-and its clerical minisshySTD theology professor at ters-should pretend that theyImmaculate Conception Semishy

nary Darlington N J will speak have all the answers tc the problems of the worldia the Christian Culture lecture

aries sponsored by the Paulist And neither eoes be thinkshyFathers at 815 Wednesday night if I read him correctly-that tbe March 6 in John Hancock Ha)) clergy in ~ exeTeise of their Boston Tickets are available mission of peace should get inshyfrom 5 Park Street Boston volved in partisan jl)olities Nor 02108 do L

WOKS LIKE FUN Yes but listen to what it requires The Georgetown University erew keeps in s-hape with ~

AM ~i~enies in the gym foHow~ by a two-niile run UJl and do-Wll Observatory Hil~on tJhecampus Its cold up there said Dave Harris a member of the lightweifht crew but by then youlewtired you do-nt care NC Phottgt

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 ~ 968

Prayer for Peace To Cm(O)se Games

MEXICO CITY (NC) - All ecumenical prR)er for peaCf) service is being planned for the end of the 19th Olympic Gam~

here next October The sponsor of the service w shy

the Ecumenical Commission fcrr Religious Services (ECRS) fe the Olympic Games The comshymission is composed of 73 ChrisshytiRn and Jewish leaders in thi~

city Promment spiritual leadshyers will be invited to speak

At middot8 meeting here the rn ECRS spiritual leaders discusse~

the facilities for athletes and visitors to attend their varioU7J reUgious services

iI1be iMC)Cican government hw aPPI)o~ed ECRS plans for the ~ction of at least tw- JaIige bullclings as nondenonYshynational chapels

The original pIlan toeonstrl1ell one large church has been IcHsshytlarded The present plan is build one large building with no religious I)rnamentllJtion of alltl7 kind on the outskirts of the Olympic Villa and a similar Oilif)

on tne outskirts of the Olympze

Project InterracialInterfaith Cooperation Cultural Villa

tin (Re~~(Jtion of CcUege m addition Archbishop MEshymiddotgut Dario MirlllDda y Gomez Gl

1I1IAMI (NC)~When Florida The Rev Edward T Graham Mexico City hBs authorizeQ Memorial College predominant a Baptist minister key person downtown Catholic churches to ly Negro middotliberal arts school is behind the project has had asshy permit non-Catholic services = moved here frOl1l St Augustine sistance from Mrs Athalie their premises if non-Catholie and opens next September the Range Miamis first NeglO City comgregations should request i project will be the result of unshy Commissoioner who is a Cathshyusual interracial and interfaith olic teamwork Organhzet3 rOthEHSIl

The largest single contribll shyNegroeswhites and Chinese tiou of private funds has oome flainirt~ ClI1ter

have joined hands with Cathoshy from a supermarket executive lLOUISVILLE (NC) - TkeIlics Protestants and Jews tv M Austin Davis a Methodist Franciscan Conventional OrdGcontribute money time advice laiamis Catholic Bishop Coleshy has opened a Brothers Trainincand leadership to realize the

manF Carroll is a member vl1 Center here in an attempt to givedevelopment of the college on l the advisory board as is Maushy Brothers three years of active$10 million complex here rice Ferre diocese of Miami lay apostolic work following theirr leader novitiate

RabbiIrving Lehrman presshy Father Sebastian Cunnil1flshyCouncil Seores ident cd the Greater Miami ham OFM director of tlw Rabbinical Association a n 4ll OOlilter said We felt we haCFactory Closing Jewish lay leaders are amoag an cbligation to give our man

LONDON (NC-The impend- active workers oome training outside contam ing elosingof a large industricl $ bull $ an idea of what was neeclshyJilseph Rodriguez of the plant has been criticized by ~ edfromthem in the outside Puerto Rican Democratic ChEb lay -eouncil of Our Lady Of _rl11 In the past he addeeurohas prepared 11 scholarship PieshyGrace parish in southeast Lsnshy we were not fWfilling ~ gram for -the collegedCD DeedS 1d ~veryoneliturgy

The council expressed its deep concern at the recent No Comlmentclosure of factories in middotthis area Completean4 in particular of the impendshy VATICAN (orry (NC)-Ibe ing shutdown of the Associ2ted Vatican had no comment -oJ1 11

ElectricaIIndustries (AEI) plant repolt that ~hbishop Agostincgt BANKING Casaroli secretary for extraershyIt callid upon the governmeJrt dinary ecclesiastical affairs ilf SERVICEand the -ehaiTmanof the oomshy the Papal Secretariat of statepany torevsrse the decision 10 eonterred with Dlembers of ~

c~ don the plant because Of tor BristOl CountyN-orth Vietnamese missi-on iJJthe middotmoral religious and 5Ocial Parisjn lJanuarylt n JUWWampleffeets iCaiJS2a by the ~veshythat Archbishop Casaroli Wallmen1 a1popl1ation absent from the Vatican fOll

Copies ltOf the councils motion several days nlenUy BrjstoICounty were sent 1amp Prime ~1inister

Harold Wilson MiJiister of Trust Company Labor RayJ Gunter President ampf the Board of Trade Douglas Sturteant (

TAUNTO~ MASSJay and company officials iHoOkAlthough the councils action was a surprise to the pastel Ed 1897 IIHE BANJ(ONFather Joseph seally AA ~ uiltl~rs SUppJies JAUNTONGRHNprist sroa that he agreed ith it ftll3 Purchase Street Member 01 Feileral ~

Faiher 8enlly sait[ centbert Aellad iNew Bedford IDsuranee CorporaamptoDJlOt~cteil p01itiealand elaquolshy 996-5661 nomic motions to eome from the council but pointed out You cannot separate Feligimtl from eveJ~ay life

Notrre Dome St Vincent de Paul Store

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968 Capacity Audience at Holy Name Parish ~ihss

My Consciesect1ce Discusses The J)etached Americans In Educ~tion Continued from Page One

Do we care -for knowledge

what happens to other people Why do we strive for college educations or for money Are we so anxious to confor~l1 that we never dare to PITTSBURGH

tMrI

~VJI and it must be understood in a

t mear-cu way

A person following his ~con-~ence must be sincere He cannot play games with his mind but must be honest with himself

A person foilowing his con~ liCience must be correct It iSl10t ugh that he sincerely beshy~ Reves that something is good or evil-he must be sure that hiS judgement is a correct one

agrees with Gods view of the matter

Sometimes people make misshytakes in judgement-honest misshytakes to be sure but mistakes iwnetheless The oft-quoted exshyample is that of the African savshyrage deep in the jungle who may be sincerely following his con- ooience when it tells him to kill omd eat his enemy His conshyscience is a sincere one But it~ Is a mistaken one since it does IIlOt agree with Gods Will He ond every person must c~m-

liitantly review his judgements to lbe sure that they are correct ones and riot sincere mistaken Utes

A person following his conshy3Cience must be certain He can not act with doubt or uncertainshy~ about the rightness or wrong- mess of an act since he would be Announces Prize acting with the willingness to

takea cpance on being wrong For Best Plan ~ offendi~g God and this is aever~ validmiddot If there is uncer- PITTSinJRqH (NC)-Bishop t8inty the person must seek aid John J Wright of middotPittsburgh III arriving at a sure and correct haS annoutc~d il priz~ of$IOOOtor professor ina p1inor semshy tudgementmiddot - formiddot the architect who submitsmiddoth be I f - inary chapiainof a school dishyThe Christian acts with amiddotcon- ~ e st p an or a Jliljgtr renoshy ocesan chancellor and finally

lllilence ~rned by the prlnciples vation of the sanctuary of St vicar general tilChrlst This is where tliEi Pa~l~ cath~middot~al_h~remiddot~T~~e ~om- The P6pe a~o nam~d Father

aturchsteachers the Pope Iiiid P~tit~o~ IS ~p~nmiddot ~omiddotal archJtec~ Bienvenido TudtiJdto be auxil- a message toAfrica and a mes ishops ~nfer middotthe pi~ture to wl~hlD ~e bound~~l~~s~f the iary bishop of Dumaguete in the sage ~lling for peaCe

Illelp men make judgementsmiddot thatmiddot lire guided by Christ Sometimes ~ese j~dge~eptsgo a~intitmiddotnat-middot lIIIa1 inclinations and tendencies md this has always been thedif-

~ti~ty of ~ing a Christian-- Ghrist demands much of His llmiddotowmiddotmiddotermiddots middot IIIU

At present Catholics are askshyiDg tlie Pope to make a morai judgement about birth control d especlmiddotallymiddot the PlmiddotUmiddot Some_lire castigating him for not givshy g a qulck declslon or else they lliie telling people to forget about llrim and to make their own adgeme tsmiddot th ttmiddot w- n m e ma er The Pope in order to make a ilecision must make it on the basis of facts Scientists must provide him with the facts and In this matter there is much that k~epinglVith the general lin~s sition in favor I)f open housing complex The Pope has asked and is still asking theologians to evaluate the scientific facts in 4he light of Christian principles Not all moral issues are simple And then the Pope will apply the principles to the facts and 1ril1 make a decision about the morality of the matter

This will guide the Catholic in fllorming his conscience -- in arshyriving at a judgement that is sipcere that is the correct orie at lS artmiddot d t d ce am JU gemen anthatmiddot is Christian

K of C Convention 51ated for Houston

lAN MARCOS (NC) The

1970 national convention of the ~ights of Columbus will be held in Houston it was an-Bounced here at a conference of Texas officers of the interna- _ tional fraternalorder

The announcement of the seshylection of Houston for the con- v~ntion which will be held in

be different These were among questions discussed by a capacity audience at the second in a series on Christian Morality sponsored by the parish council of Holy Name Church Fall River Sparked by Sisshy

John AIIcIa SUS Cter some 30 people from all parts of themiddot Diocese viewed the film The Detached Amerishycans then broke into small groups for buzz sessions

Thesis of the film was that Americans wont become in volved with each other It dra- matically pointed its message with the true story of Kitty

Genovese murdered on a New York Street while 38 of her neighbors watched ffom winshy

bull dowS-o--and did nothing Also depicted were amarried

couple talkingto each other with neither really listening a student going thriugh school as on an assembly line with his sole goal the position he could

hope for as a college graduate and various other examples of non-involvement

What is life worth if we do not give it away questioned Harry Reasoner at the end of the film The Holy Name audishyence agreed that life sbould be

used for others but tended to feel that there wasnt the im-Personalitv in a smailer city

Jthat is found in a large metropshyolis One Sister countered howshyever with stories brought to

h t htschool by children s e aug This is right in Fall River she stressed Others cited examshypIes of personal involvement in affaIrs of others but agreed that much more could and

Pope I~aul Names Two Aluxiliaries VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VImiddot hail named Msgr Jose T Sanchez to be auxiliary bishop of Caceres in the Philipshypines He takes the titular See of Lesvi

Msgr 5anlhez was vicar genshyeral of Legazpi at the time of his nomination

He was born March 17 1920 atPandan in the Legazpi dioshycese He completed his philoshysophical and ordinary theologishycal studies at the diocesan semshyinary and obtained a licentiate in theology at the University of St Thomas in Manila He was ordained Marc~ 12 1946 and then worked as an assistant passhy

Pltts~urgpchap~er9rmiddottl~e Afner- ~ Philippines Father Tudtud who Pope Paul also delivered 264 ~can -Inst~tUtofAlth~te~ts was36ye~~I)]fat ~hcent time ~fsPeeches bull (~~)_(h~ch mclud~~ ~tIePoit~- his noniinatiOJl studied philos- burgb dlO~es~and three adJa-ophy and theology at St Johns

c~nt countIes SeminarY inmiddotBoston Fath~r roseph P- Larkin He was born March 22 1931

eOm~ission chaiIm~nmiddot ili1(I-a at Mabola inmiddotthe Cebu arch~ member of the diQcesan bU~lll- diocese He worked as assistant - bullbull

iIg commissligtn~ said the pur- pastor Editor ltit Cebus Caiholic pose of thereiiovlition is to pro weekl~ and finally pastor of the ville a ~mQte suitable sanctu- Church of thE Blessed Sacrashy

ary setting fof the liturgical re- inent in Cebu In addition atf orms Qrought into beingmiddot by the time of his nomination he Vatican Council II was vice-superior of the Misshy

Father Lmiddotai-kir said because slon Society of the Philippines the cathedral must architectu-middot r~lly and liturgically allow for Issues Sttement both episcopal mdparish ser-- U

vices ~~any structurai cihimge O H R h offers a unique chalienge to the n umalu ig ts designer~ and provision for the LA CROSSE (NC)-Tbe La

new liturgy must be made in Crosse diocese has taken a poshy

and spirit 01 the existing struc- integrated arid ildequate educashy t4re tion fair employment and the

- defense of the rights of minorshyities

Christians and J~ws Bishop Frederick W Frekshying of the Wisconsin diocese

Honor Clergymen and the diocesan central com-NEW YORK (NC)-Clergy- mission approvedmiddot apmiddot officiai

men from thefour major faiths statem~nt titled Human Reshyhave been honored here by the lations in the Diocese of La National Coiuerence of Chris- Crosse

tians anltt Jews The statement was prepared

the third week of August was the practice has spread middotto a made by Dr Josepb G Murphy number of other cities hesaid of La Marque a member of the interrelgious understanding hasmiddot boara- of- directors fortbe Cathprogressed tremendously middotiIi reshyeticmiddot meDs oganization middotc~nhyearsbull

-

Tbe clergymeri cited for by the subcommission of human relations of the diocesan cornshycourageous leadership in intershymissionon social action and apshy

creedal relations were proved by both before submisshy Rev Dr ~ohn C Bennett sion to the central commissiollll

president of Union Theological ) in January Seminary

Father Robert I Gannon SJ president emeritus of Fordham CONRAD SEGUIN University

Bishop Silas of the GreekOrshy BODY COJMPANY thodox archdiocese of Nortb and Aluminum or Steel South America 944 Countr Street

Samuel D Leisdorf New NEW BEDFORD MASSYork philanthropist pointed out

wy 2-6618that the NCCJ firstmiddot honored reshyligious leaders of four faiths in September -1966 Noting that

should be done by individuals parishes and municipaiities

There were no solutions ofshyfered to the problems posed bythe film We dont expect to have answers to these quesshytions warned Sister John Alicia at the beginning of the program They are too big for us The film WltlS strictly on the

human level and this was pointed out in one group No one can solve all problems it was agreed but surely each Christian canmiddot trust the Holy Spirit to lead him to the probshylems he is equipped to do someshything about no matter how small

There was another point on whichmiddot everyohe in the audience was in enthusiastic agreement that there be more such eveshynings as the one sponsored by Holllgt Namemiddot

Vatmiddotn Report~lIo

Continued from Page One two encyclicals The Developshymiddotment of Peoples and Priestly Celshyibacy four motu proprios inshyeluding one creating central a lay council and the Papal Comshymission on International Justice anp Peace and another restorshying the permanerit diacol1ate treeapostolic constitutions inshyelUding one reshaping the

Churchs c~iitral administlatioii two apostolic exhortations one apostolic letter and 78 other Wessagesmiddotand letterS inclQding

He reeeived eight ehiets Of state including U SPresident Lyndon B Johnson and United Nations Secretary General U T~ant and gave 16 audiences to

th lmiddottmiddot I0 er men 10 ~ 1 lca life in cluding U SVi~ President Hushy~rt H Humphrey Republican presidential hopeful Richard M N d N Ixon an ew Yorks Sen Robert F Kennedy

He received visits from four delegations of Orthodox churCh men including Orthodox Ecushymenicai Patriarcp Athenagoras I of Constantinople besides visit shying Patriarch Athenagoras in ~ tanbul

The book covering last yearli activities of the Holy See conshysists of 1680 pages plus about 2(10 photographs

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SolvcnorlCln Center WlllCOnaln 53061

Bishop John J Wright hasestablished a committee 1Jl)take a complete look at Oaampshy

olie education in the PittsburpD lOcese

The aim is fc dedde wha~ 1shyd t to tak tbe ~

lrec Ion e Dedecade for the best education of

all Catholics young and oldThe committee will evaluate all present Catholic educationshygrade and high schools eo egesConfraternity of Christian Doeshytrine classes adult education and other programs

The surveyors wiU 117 to deshyvise a plan based oa mstinl and potential resources in facll-Hies funds and Staff to guide the dioceses educational efforlll for the next 10 years or more

May Be FaI-lleaehiDg Among ideas eXpected to be

examined in the evaluation are proposals by some to cut back on Catholic schools or even til phase them out in place of an expanded adult education proshygram

Named head of the committee of educators priests and lay professionals is Father Vernon Gallagher CSSp former presishy

deht of Duquesne University here now serving as an official of the Holy Childhood Associashytion He also is a former proshyvincial of the Holy Gbost Fa~ ers eastern province

The committee Will be emshypowered to call before it di shyocesan officials to hold publlc meetingshire staff ~ring in exshyperts ThedioCege will finance the work

The committee Win make spe- eific recommendations to BishoP Wright after the study which 18 expected to take at least a yearbull

-Results are expected to have ~ar-reaching implicatiou fOr Catholic education here

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Two Unbeoten league Play f1fE ANCHOR-Diocese oTtall River-Ihurs feb 29 1968 19

Coach Says Sault Complete BallPlayerCape Cods NausetCompiles SMTB Playmaker Is Former Coyle $trBest Over-All Court Mark

BY JOE MIRANDA By PETER BARTEK

An excellent hall handler and Norton High Coach team player Is how Pat Sault of

Taunton is described by his Eleven of tile 12 aa-ea e1ubs with the best records in coach Phil Wetterland of the

their respective leagues are among those who will parshy Sou the a s t ern Massachu- setts Technogical Institute Inshyticipate in the March Tech basketball tournament in Boston stitute in North DartmouthFairhaven High of the Oapeway Conference and Nauset Sault a 19-year old freshman

of the Cape amp Island loop are is a former Coyle High hoopshythe only all-winning league a single league game while two ster who played four years for

went doWn to defeat In every the Warriors his final two underaggregations from this area encounter In which they were coach Jim Lanagan on the varshyin the Hub championship Involved Almost two-thirds 02 sityelimination tourney while Dartshy the Southeastern Mass teams

D)Quth High is the only one of Teaching CareerfinIshed wIth a 500 average OIlthe tOp dozen better Although young Pat has al shya 70 per cent coQlbines WIth

WIth 12 triumphs in the Cape ready made plans for the future league record amp Island competition Nauset which Include finishing his edshywhich failed to Regional also achieved the best ucation and pursuing a teachershyqualify an inshy over-all record winning 16 of coaching career dication t hat 11 encounters The Cape Cod Sault has not yet chosen a non-league school will be shooting for the major in college but according competition selshy Class D Tech title to his parents he is very much dom jeopardizes interested in teaching historyNew Bedford High 15 and and coaching They feel he willthe ultImate one in the Greater Boston Subshy be good at both as he alwaysgoal of most urban league finished with anschools Actual- Peter devoted his spare time to helpshy

over-all 17-2 mark for the Winshyly 311 per cent Bartek ing the younger neighborhoodter The Crimsons 937 average boys understand athletics moreof the 35 Southeastern Massashy captured its leagues pennant flag thoroughlychusetts school teamsmiddot have The Crimson Whalers are now Pat is the oldest son of Mrqualified for the Tech title play poised to annex the No 1 State and Mrs Charles A Sault and)let none managed an over-all honor by clinching the top one of four children A sisterundefeated season ranking Class A division in the Annette is a senior at BishopThree area clubs failed to win Boston title tourney Cassidy High James Michael

and Cheryl grammar school Representatives in Three B~ackets students at Mulcahey Schoof in

Taunton Fairhaven and Holy Family FamilYhas been eliminated in The family resides at 85 Mershy

HIgh of New Bedford aiming the Lawrence Catholic tourney rill Avenue In Taunton and are for the Class C Tech crown both Southeastern Mass does not members of St Pauls Parish fInished wIth an over-all 16-2 have one club among the Tech

Wetterland Commentsmark The latter Is still smart- Class B participants but th~re ing from its cliff-hanging defeat will be five area combinations Wetterland was high in his at the hands of Xavier in the -includIng Fairhaven and Holy praise of his five foot 11 inch State Catholic tourney Bill Family-in the Class C play and guard who tips the scales at Walshs two-pointer from the three-including Nauset-in the 160 pounds ~ssesses good speed floor which many thought Class D Hub competition and is a key in the Corsairs fast

meant victory at Lawrence was The other Class C contestants break offense nu1llfied by a travelling viola- patterns when SMTI is wurkshy a rest he should be in top conshySault lllsed strictly with thetion which cost the loss ofthe are Case High of Swansea Nar- iilg too quickly and making dition for the 1968-69 campaignvarsity was gaining valuablebasket resulting in a one-~Jnt ry co-champions Oliver Ames Dlistakes Sault gaIned his court savvy1 f tb of North Easton runners-up in experience and developing rapshy

The SMTI mentor continued from Lanagan at Coyle wheretiOs~~ e Narragnnsett~a~ theHockomock circuit and Den- bUy whep a knee Injury slowed he iii the complete ball player hemiddotstarted in his juJ)ior and senshyDis-Yarmouth of Cape Cod see his progress midway through

Durfee of Fall RIver and ond pI fi ish in tho C the campaiiPt but Wetterland noting that he can shoot but is Jor lieasons and was a Vital co Bishop Stang mgh of North ace n er e ape most --content setting Up his in the Warriors successduring DartmQutb are the other two middotNausetwill be joined by Mar- has turned in some excellent efshy teammates for easy pblnts He Ioth years I J

way loop said despite the handicap Pat

Is a team player and always sacshy As ~ Coyle High fr~hmanarea Class A representatives inmiddot thas VIneyard and Norton mib forts in a most successful SMTI rifices himself to help the club Pat was a member XJtb~ yearshythe Tecb toutnament ~e Fall in the Class D bracket The season

Sault possesses a good atti shy lings h09P team and al~Q~ parti shyRiver Hilltoppers willbe out Islanders finished second to Naushy Defensively Sault is cnitshytude is a tough competitor and cipated in track By hihSOphoshyto make amends for their nose- set in the Cape amp Island league standIng Offensively Sault is one of the players Wetterland is more year Saultcopfjned his dive finish in the Bristol COUl)ty while Norton was second in the the teams playmaker ana quarshyeounting on 1to help SMTI gain athlettc talents to basketbjlll andloop whIle Stang ~ke Ho17 Tri~Valley Conference terback 8Dlall college recognition in the turned in a cODlJPenlla))le acshyfuture Teallll Player coun~ o~ himself

Ifere~s How They Did hi LiBogue Play Played for Lanagan Sault also represented stWetterland said his outstandshyThere is doubt about his the hardwood

he following are the league 21 Bishop Feehan 7_1 ing worth to the Corsairs comes no Pauls on in the eourage said the Corsairs skipshy Taunton CYO and in the annual from the fact that he can slowrecords of the 35 Southeastem Msgr Coyle 7-1 after painful knee Easter tournament He playeddown the offense and set up per even a

Mass teams Ta~ton 7-7 injury Sault continued to jpve four years of Litue JeagueM N B Vocational 6-8 his all and attended every pracshy Baseball and one season in theK of C Masons1 Fairhaven 14-0 25 DIman Vocational 5-9 tice The injury has slowed him Pony League prior to ~ntetmamp

Nauset 12-0 Msgr Prevost 5-9 visibly but after the season and Coyle Higa 3 New Bedford 15-1 27 SandwIch 4-8 To Cooperate4 Holy Family 13-1 28 Nantucket 3-9

NOTRE DAME (NC) - lfashyCase 13-1 29 Old Rochester 4-10

30 tlonal leadellS of the Scottish6 Oliver Ames 12-2 West~rt 3-11 Bite Masons and the Knights ~oll another7 Marthas Vineyard ~ 31 Barnstable 2-12

of Columbus anno~ced memshy8 Bishop Stang 10~ 32 Dighton-Rehoboth 1-13 strike on~rs of their organizations wU1Dartmouth 104 33 Bourne 0-14 work together on domestic andDennis-Yarmouth 10-4 Chatham 0-12 the enerlY international problems faciolaquoDurfee 10-1 North AUleJooro 1-14

the nation12 Norton 105 you get George A Newbury soveshy13 Attleboro 9-5 Minister Officiates reign grand commander 01 from14 Harwich 7-5

Scottish Rite Masons In theProvIncetown 7-5 a slice ofDn Cathclic Church northern jurisdiction of the US18 Seekonk 8-6 MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-A Lu- and John W McDevitt supremeSomerset 86

theran mInister officiated at the knight of the Knights of ColumshyFalmouth 8-6 marriage of his son in Holy Cross bus made the announcementMansfield 8-6 Catholic church here at a dinner here s~nsoredWareham 8-6

Married were James H Graf jointly by the Masonic Lodge 29 L th and the Knights of Columbus

a u eran and CalTon Ann council in South Bend Episcopalian Rite Gutwinski 25 a Catholic The ceremony was rformed - Both praised the work of Fa-MINNEAPOLIS (NC)- Archshy ther John A OBrien of the

bishop Leo Binz and Coadjutor Grapoundfs fltthell the Rev Paul L University of Notre Dame for Archbishop ~ PY1)1e of the Graf pastor of Holy Trinity r better understanding among the Cafllolic archdIoceses of St Paul theran church two groups Minneapolis were present in the Permission for the Rev Gmt Father Theodore M Hesshysan~lary of St Marks Episcoshy to officiate at his sonB wedding burgh CSC president of the pal cathedral here for the inshy was granted by theSacred Con- University of Notre Dame said stallation of Bishop Philip F gregation for the Joctrine of This nIght marks a great step McNarry as coadjutor bishop of the Faitlh inl lWme in answer to ll forward and reflects the new the Epi6copal diocese of Minneshy J)etition by Archbishop Leo BiDz ~enical spirit which is unishysota of~ ~~-M~eapotis iing ~ople long separated-

PAT SAULT

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bull THE ANCHOR Dayton University Thurs Feb 29 196a Brief Religious on Ecumenism

Selects Advisors SOUTH ORANGE (NC) meanitigful dialogue should not tended not to lead to compro- DAYTON (NC)-An ll-mem-

Named resident Some 1000 mms and Brothers be confused with monologueshy mise but to conyergence ber advisory board of six stushyservfng in tli~ Newark archdi~shy or confrontation He added We talk now of our common dents two faculty members andSANTA CLARA (NC)-The cese were briefed on the basic we must be willing to be pershy belilefs he said not to com- three representatives of theboard of trustees of the Univershy principles of ecumenism in a suaded-we need an open mind promise each others faith but in community has been establishedlllity of Santa Clara has named program sponsored by the Newshy to seek out the truth wherever the hope that at some point in for the Office of Human Relashylrather Thomas D Terry SJ ark Archdiocese Commission for it might be shy the future we will converge tions at the University oJ Dayshy35th president of the Jesuit unishy Ecumenical Affairs

Ifersity Father Terry who sucshy Discussing the difficulties of As an example he pointed to tornSpeakers at the session ineeeds Father Patrick Donohoe establishing Christian-Jewish the wide divergence of views The board under the direcshySeton Hall University includeSJ recently appointed Califorshy dialogue he said we Christians regarding (he Mass and the Eu- tion of Charles Hirt director ofDr Leonard Swidler of Templeaia provinCial af the Society of are responsible for 2000 years charist that existed between the Office of Human RelationsUniversity Philadelphia aridJIesus has been academic vic~ of anti-Semitism and now_ we Martin Luther and the Council will be responsible for estabshyFather Thomas M McFadden ofpresident af Loyola University must overcome our mutual disshy of Trent Then he cited the re- lishing policy making programthe Brooklyn dioceseLos Angeles for the last year trust before dialogue can be cent statement on the Eucharist recommendations helping to

lllI1d a half Previous to that Swidler said dialogue with fruitful issued by Lutherans and Catho- alleviate campus racial probshyIIlIather Terry was dean of the others must be preceded by an lics to show how much closer lems and drawing up proposall ltWllege of arts and sciences at examination of Catholic attishy Father McFadden said diashy the two bodies have come since for implementation Santa Clara tudes In addition he said a logue among Christians is inshy that time

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Page 14: 02.29.68

(-14 THf ANCHOR-Diocese of FaR Rfver-Th~rs Feb-29 1968 Two Objectives Jersey to Rehabilitate Young OffendersTells Jesuatts Engage in Deliberate

Help Increasing Spanish Group Attempts at lExperimentation UNION CITY (NC) - Two Hudson County Jan and in theST LOUIS (NC)-Deliber- carries its own reward he said area interfaith clergy groups youth house in Secaucus

iide attempts at experimenta- Now we must undertake new here in New Jersey are planning Father ThomasJ Murtha oftion with a readiness to accept forms some of which have a

joint action on the plightf West New York was named toall the risks that may be in- good chance to flop JIliserably youthful offenders housed m investigate means of setting UJltvolved were proposed for the An expert at the Second VatshyHudson County correctional in- a rehabilitation program t4ilSociet of Jesus at the close of ican Council Father Campion stitutions and to seek federal function after the release ~ III three-day session here on believes that the work of the assistance in meeting the needs youthful offendersbulllesuit renewal council has not yet begun to of Cuban refugeesFather Donald R Campion be absorbed within the Church

The joint session was held by The ~o groups will send a18J stressed at the renewal as a whole the North Hudson Clergy Coun- delegatIOn toWashIngton to askQession and in an interview This is not because it hasnt cU based here and the Chris- ~hat the area be declared anthat the Jesuits have both the been publicized enough or beshy tian Clergy United a West New Impacted area under the Cuban manpower and the resources to cause people havent read Y k Refugee Act and therefore beshy

engage in the type of expeii- enough or bishops havent talkshy or ~ro~p come eligible for special federal mentation which could serve ed enough he said But Vati shy A meetmg WIll be s()~ght WIth aid There are some 00000 tQdays Church Father Cam- can II opened up more areas the Hudson County Boar~ of Spanish~speakingpeople now m pion a sociologist and theolo- to discussion than it resolved Chosen Freeholders in an effort rth gian was recently named editor Among the sleep~rs in to establish a bettez climatefoi the ~o Hudson area and they cd America magazine council documents CIted by therehabiUtation of youthful continue to arrive at the rate of

Another speaker Fat her Father Campion was the conshy offenders now housed intne 200 to250 a month ~ 1 _

Avezy Dulles SJ stressed that cept of participation within the ~ doubt is a valuable and even Church Father Campionmiddot said lI1ecessary experience for the he believes collegiality is the Wide E~perience Christian in todays world most developed aspect in this

Fathers Campion and Dulles area and that some organization QU(lJD~ies Nu_ were two of the six main speak- has been given to it through the

UNITED- NATIONS (NC)ers at the closed meeting Some establishment of piie~ senates ltHQWCom pie t e devotion to theSSO Jesuits including 50 from But unless the idea of parti shyworlds needy children seemsCilutside the St Louis areaat-cipation is really the basis senshy a weighty task for a petite nun TDgtKEEPtended the sessions ates can become orgimizational

Father Campion said that Jes- gimmicks he said but a conversation with Sister Ullits as a group must face the Father Dulles discussing themiddot Kathl~eri Kelly MMmiddot provides LENmiddotTreassularice middotthat 20 years of make a significant contribution Church said ~ an interview diversified experience fact that their work should existence of doubt in todays

more to modern times that we have a radically differ- than qualifies her for the role

QUI IXIDPYFATHER lI MISSION jlUDTG me fllRlfaNTAL CHURCH

In the area of education It calIS for recasting the ex- wide Cath)lic charities organishy Need New Formula ent world view than in the past Caritas Internationalis worldshy

With the slason of Lent comes the qu~ionFather Campion called for con- pressions of the Christian messhy zation recently appointed Sisshy How can I beSt keep Lentl The answer ~s ~sideration of whether we are sage in terms of contemporary as observerter Kathleen its must make sacrifices on our own and nothing ISproviding the educational struc- knowledge if the message is to to the U N International GOOD III sacrifice unfess it hurts Whatwill be yo~rture for the new world have the impact it should Childrens Emergency Fun d WHIEN sacrifice bullbull Just think of the misslonlllne~ InIn the intellectual area Look Criticanny (UNICEF) Caritas Internationshy ITlf our 18 emerging countries who keep Lent allrather Campion noted that to- Doubt is not a bad thing he alis is one of 75 international HUmS year long Sacrifice something big this ye~rday more is needed than popu- said People should be looking and non-government organizashy When helping others hurts a bit you know you va larization of theology and phil- critically at the traditional forshy tions (NGOS) which enjoy conshy made a sacrifice()Sophy In a way we need a mulas and seeing what is revelashy sultative status with UNICEF whole new formula for making tion and what is a culturally

They represent oJer 4000csense of the world and life he conditioned formula which is affiliated private and non-profitfSaid now demanding reform

We should have men devoted Such adaptations are iD no organizations in more than 100 oOn his recent-trip through India 1V0~signor nations with a combined memshy Nolan saw priests and Sisters subSisting onto this single problem Their way a compromise of faith bership running into millions ounces of rice each day so they can share what own inner resources of security Father Dulles said We never they have with lepers and orphans $10 will feedmust be yery strong because to hear the divine message except Interviewed at the United Nashy FEED a family for several weeks at least $50 will feed

facethat kind of change is not III in terms of humans he said tions Sister Kathleen spoke of THE five families $100 ten families bullbullbull Only $975popular thing The Word of God comes her new rol~ at the international HUNGRY gives a priest 11 two-acre mode~ 18nn toraise

Council Opened Areas through man it is alW9YS tem- level and described how it his own food and teach his parishioners how to Father Campion said the can pered by man and it is this con~ evolved from her past activities raise more food Archbishop MalJ Gregorioa will

for experimentation W9S not ditioning which must change wrltetlo thank youI was in California andbased on inadequate work of Father Dulles said one value worked for 10 years in familyJesuits at the present time and of the death-of-God movement eounseling in the juvenile court IlJ Enable ~ girl to become a Sister For 41tl bullthat fact is part of the problem for Catholics is to shake _ I1tA1N day ($1250 a month $150 bull year $300 aleill foster lare and in otherMany times we have been suc- out of taking an uncritical with sa~ A together) you can pay In full fer her two-yeaIwork children sheeessful and being successful static view of God training have 8 Sister of your awnInthe last five years I moved SISTER

oat to community development and civil rights I was a member o For only $a5O a week ($10 a month $120 bull

year) you can make surethat an abandonedJesuit Seminarian Leads Campaign of a district council in bull San HELP Francisco - which subsequently A child has food clothing a blanket and love bullbullbull IAgainst Home Contract Firms was declared a poverty CHILD wen send you a photo of the boy or silt )011area

adoptCHICAGO (NC) - A Jesuit borne than its current market During my years there I waa Rminarian has launched a camshy value a member of the Catholic Intershy o Our priestS will offer promptly the Massespaign here against contractshy Following the exodus of racial Council and when I came MASSES you request Doyou wish to remember a loved holders of homes sold to Negro Lawndales white residents in back from Selma (she was on fOR one this Lent Your Mass offerings are usuallyfamilies at allegedly exorbitant the late 1950s thousands of of the persons selected to repshy LENT the only Incole our priests overseas receiverates homes were purchased by vari shy resent the archdiocese of san

Jack Macnamara SJ who ous bankS mortgage loan and Francisco in the Alabama civil o Enroll yourself your family and friends InlIives and works in nearby real estate companies at low rights march) I was appointed this Association You will be helping Pope Paul Lawndale is acting withthe ap- prices and then resold on conshy to serve on the Human Rights

JOI~ in one of his most ambitious and heartfelt works proval of his Jesuit superio~ tractto Negro families atofteIi - Commission by the mayor of THIS while sharing In the blessings of thousands of

Nacnarnara and a dozen supshy ~lImON Masses (The offering for one year is $2 perdouble the original purchase San Francisco the nun stated porters including several other price the leaflet reported She was the first nun ever apshy person $10 for a family perpetual membership Jesuit seminarians picketed the Paid Race Tax ltpOinted to any kind of~~yt is $25 per person $100 for a family) Chicago address of one investshy Macnamara said these conshy inJSan Fraidsco _

Iment company which holds title tracts should be renegotiated at

~ several homes sold on conshy the most recent FHA appraisal tract to Negroes Pickets dis- price ~ If I1t e SAiliNGS

tributed leaflets explaining the c2J 0 dJ ~ t~~ year SYSTEMATICThe issuemiddot here is moral rathshypurpose of their campaign er than legal he declared Th~ MONTHLY DEPOSITS

The leaflet cites the case of III law does not provide a remedy II tfMltIa fNVE$iMENyhome purchased by an investshy for the type of injustice that is d) aV~ J((~ year SAVINGSment company in January 1959 operative in this contract

for $13000 and then three NOTICE ACCOUNTSThousands of Negroes inmonths later sold on contract to Chicago are suffering from this a Negro buyer for $23000 450 ar ~~~~

It states the investment corn continued ~In effect they paid pany received $2000 as a down II race tax of approximately

type of injustice Macnamara

BCJs~ liverpayment on thiS contract whic~ $10000 when they bought their stipulated that middotthe balance was homes because it was impossishy SavonJs Bonkflo be paid over 20 years at sevshy bleto obtain mortgages 4Il per cent interest at the rate This is a striking example of BanI By Mail of $20140 each month how our legal system does notmiddot We Pay The Postage

Last December it reported a adequately protect black people Federal Housing Administration or poor people he said It appraisal on this home listed its stems from the fact that the law bull YARMOUTH SHOPP8NC PUll value at $15025 This means it aims at protecting property inshy bull SOUTH UltMOm bull HYANJIISexplained that the Negro buyer stead of persons And this helpl bull DENNIS PlmRT bull OSTFllVIUlIII paying $8000 more for tbe bull cause urbaJl unreal

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THO middotCATHDLIC NEAR EAST WELFRIASSOCIATION

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HUNGRYmiddot FOR GOD TOO ~

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 ltI

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Home Missions Collection in Your Church-March 3 19611

16 THE ANC )~-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968

New St LouimiddotsArchbi~hcp

PrOmilnent in Ecumen~$m Archbishop Jonh J Oarberry of St Louis well known

~()ng Oatholic leaders after 31 career that has taken him from a seminary classroom iii his natiYe Brooltl~ NCY~ to one of the nations MOse ~mpOOtallt archdiolaquoese1l is pershy

laaps evenmiddot better ~ownmiddot fJDlong Americas nom-Cafu6shylie religious leaders fon hisl work in ecumenism Cllair Ilillao of the Bishqps Commi~ee-Ibr Ecumenical and Intenrefi shyaious Affairs since th~ resigna Qion of Baltimores Lawrence Cardinal Shehan in November 11965 Bishop Carberry has au I9gtCrvised the massive catholic illllvoIvement in ecumeniCal ac-middot lli1 vities

He outlined his own entIliusishyeuroISm for ecumenism in a speech ~iven in January 1966 tolmemshy~rs of the Ohio (Protestant) lPastors Convention wheDI he aid

Common lHeritagel For years the general policY

(llln the Catholic Church) had ~en to stress the great chasm

which divides the euroatliolic Church and other Christian ehurches No effort was made m would seem on our part to Illave a meeting of minds A otudy of documents would seem ltD reveal that while we wera lbrayerfully disposed to) the ltecumenical movemerit nevershy1lheless the Catholic Church did lliittleto foster it

Bishop Carberry told the conshyvention that through the grace 0f God and the leadership or Pope John XXIII we became aware of the common heritage Which is ours

Has Great lHope

We began to realiZe~ how 18aptism unites us in ChriSt to Gee that the divinity of Christ is illhe cornerstone of all Christianshynay we began to real1ze the oommon treasure which we llnave in the Sacred Scripturesllikewise the common bondshyVhich exists with us in the

1lIIlissionary activities at the Church

There is great hope Bishopltearberry said that mrougb ~ialogue through prayerbull 1llluough respect for each others wiewpoint the grace of God may (i)Ile day in Gods divine provishy4llence bring about the- unitY which Christ prayed for at themiddot Last Supper

More recently members of ltOhios Protestant cliurches llllamed the bishop as OniosPbsshyoLr of Pas-tors the fl rst timmiddote hat bull

Grants Permis$ioll~

for SaturdayMass) SAN ANGELO (NC)-BiShop

Thomas TSchoepe of San Angelo lllas announced that the diocesan request for the Saturday Mass flaculty hagt been granted In the future the Sunday Mass 00shyltigation may be met by at shy~ndance at a Saturday aftershyllloon or evening Mass The pershylll1ission has been granted on an ~xperimental basis by the Vati shylttan for a period of five years

The diocese of San Argelo is 1lI Texas missionary diocese the bishop explained and there are areat dis tan c e s between churches and few priestswmiddot oerve the faithfuh ManYi ~llieSts

have two or morlt8 churclies tJ lllttend and will Be able- tQ give more time to the smaller ~urches with the Satucday Mass faculty Bishop TschoePe pointedi 9Ut Chat the faculty has been giVeth bull the whole diocese not just Ibo individual churches or areas Pastors who wish to make Usemiddot aJl the faculty must make formal application to the chancery ofshyillce

a~ statewide Protestant onganiza tion has presented its highest awa-rd 10 a eatho1iir clet1gymam A pla~J1e symbollZiDg the a~adi was~ glv~~ to the blShp at ~~~ Fenw~nIP Blmq~et on the Olbo PastollSgt ~onventi~m

DI~USS P~tilems U~dev Blsli~p~rlgte~rysl~d

er~hlPl laquoatholic ~elegations have ~et wl~h ~fflC1Blsbull and

tleolbglan~ of other- ChrIs~an churchesmiddot to dlSCUSS ecumemcal pooble~s r~~gmg from the pr~sshyence of Christ Ill tlie ~ucharlst to th-c nature of we prJes~ood

Before ta~mg cliarge of th Golumbusmiddot dIOcese on March 25 1965) Bishop euroarbery liadmiddot selved asmiddot coadjutor bishop and then bishop of Eafayette Ind Born in Brooklynj N~ Y Tulymiddot 31 1904 Bishop Carberry studied for the priestlioodi at Brooklyns Cathedral College or the Iin-middot maculate laquool1ception from 191ll to 1924 and at the North Amershyican College in Rome from 1924 to 1930

Oldained inmiddot Rome in 1929 tne bishop sfudiea canon law at the Catholic University of America in Washington D G and taught at Immaculate Conception Semshyinarl until Tune 1935 when he went on ldan to the diocese of Trenton N J He returned to BrooklYn in 1940 where hemiddotreshymained until being named coshyadjuror bishop of Lafayettemiddot in 19651

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CHICAGO (NC) - Tohn A McDllrmott has changed me mindL-he1li remain as execu middot tivedirector of the Chicago Cat1iolic Interracial Council

The veteran council worKer last October announced he would leave the office to beshy

come Mridwest regional- ciVil rightsdirector for the ms De-middotmiddot partment of Health Enucation andi Welfare

A number of problems hava arisen since th-e announcement on my appointmentt last 0ctbBerwhichl caused me to have serl

ousmiddot second l thoughts MilDer moW said iil his decision to re~ maio with the ltlrc He citedi m1 patrtcular~ personnel cutliaclts in HEW wJiich woulli Iiinit the Midwest negional operatiiul

fo accepting McDermotits de cisionj HEW the government agency requestedi liiin to serve asmiddot ai special chdl- rights consuU ant while working for the CIC and he a~reed

IIlt a letter to the Dutch biINumber of Fllel71ch ops members of Michaels re-

gion asked for curbs on the nlgtshySeminarians Dllops tions Catliolic liberals The PARIS (Ne)-Thenumber of meeting also registered disap-

French seminarians h~s dropped proval of the new Dutch Cateshyby about 180 a year for the last chism~ claiminJ~ that it does nocent four years according to 1iigures represent true Catholic teach~ provided in amiddot press conference Michaels Lel~ion is considered by Bishop Jean Sauvage 011 ampshy even more CJlnservative thlW necy member of the bishops Confrontation another Catholic commission on the clergy and conservative organization Conshyseminaries frontations complaints about

For the 1967~68 sc1iolastic the content of the new Dutch year the tdtal number of sliumiddot catechismmiddot are believed to hae dents iil major seminaries m been instTllmentai in having tbe~ FhlOce is 43583 comparedl with book exltlmined by the VatiCan~lJ

4536 for the previous year Doctrinal Congregation 4722 )n 1965-66 and 4953 in 1964-65

Moreover in France at pres- Approves Agency eol ttiere are aBout 200 adults LQND()N (NC)--Jolin Cardl~

WIIO are preIgtaring for tOe ~er nal Heenan of Westminster liJaa manent diaconate as restored by approveq establishment ocf 1m the Second Vatican Council The agency to help priests who want first ordinations to this permashy 10 leave the priesthood znGl nent diaconate could take place nuns who want to leave the this year religious life

1P~alrn le~tUlm~1rn~~G~

$1lll~7 GG1l I1DtJ Sim LONDON (NC)-A study on

the problems of ecumenism in Great Britain will be made by a joint working group of the British Council of Churches and the Caholic Church with the results to be reported next Autumn

The study was planned at a meetingmiddot held atmiddot the Vita et Pax Benedictine I~onvent and attendshyed by nine Catholic representashytives an- 14 representatives of the BeC -

The projected study is exshypected to analyze such topics an the extent I)f cooperatiGn beshytween Catjwlics and members of the BeC the dialogUes bemg held theologicaL differences and the non~theological obstacles to closer unitygt

Auxiliary BishoJ- Langton Fox of lfenevia Wales and

Auxiliary Bishop Basil Chrisshytopher Butlelr OSB of Westshyminster headed tOe CatOolie delegation at the meeting

~(i]$~~rlaquolJpoundfr1) A$1k lMl~illlW) ~ltoy~ IHh~)~Dnd

U11RECHm (NC) -Michaels Legion an organization of Dutch Catholic~ uaditionalists has sent a telegram to Pope Pault H ungintg him tD protect essential orthodoxy and to S81fe tne DutchChurch~

At 3- meeting here attended b~ some 600) Catholic conserva tives led by Eouis Knuvelder the legion condemned the Dutch Catholic daily press the~ Dutch Gatholic tellvisioncompany and the countrys Catholic radio station for being too progressive

Father Baum Regards Ecumenical Center Closing Sign of Success TORONTO (NC)-The closing gian Charles Davis-A Quesshy

of the Center for Ecumenical tion of Conscience Davis book Studies at St Michaels Collegegt exmiddotplains his renunciation of the here is a sign of the centersmiddot euroatholic priesthood and the success Church and asks Catholic theo-

This is the viewpoint of Father logians who intend to stay in GregllllY Ballm O~SA founder the~ eurohurch to reply to several of tJie centeI1 who has an- t1iaologjcal points nQunlaquoed that it will b~ Closed BelUef Unbelief

inl JUne Thats what Im doing FatlieJJBaum-explalnedthalhe Fatller Baum said His book a

founded the centeJ ill 19631 when replYJ to Davis questions conshyecum~llusrn may have~ been a ceming the credibility of the new Idea Its purpose lie- s~ld Church in todays world will be was to promote ecumemcall called The Credibility of the studies at St Michaels Church Today It will be pub-

Taday he neports ecumen mal stlUdi~s at S1l Michaels are a reality- 1lli~ schGolls theology depal1tment 18 fully mte~ ~thl Protestant and ~gIIcan lfupartmentsmiddot at the-Umversity

of Toronto [hUB lie said~ the eC-lmenical

centell has fulfilled its purpose Such fUlfillment he said wmiddot

common in academic circles where there has been an ecushymenlical reVOlution For exam pIe ne said where once som1shyone might have nied to foster ecumenism through building an ecumenical library it is now impossible tq build a theological lilgtrary without its being ecushymenical

Need flDZ Programsmiddot Father Baum added that he

does not believe tJie ecumenical movement has reached fruitien in circles outside the academia world~ He said that he sees a real need pound01 formal ecumenmiddot ical programs on the parish and on all levels of the Churdl which have not yet been reached He a150 disclosed that perSOll ally he lias moved Gn frOlll ecumenism to new fields of thought

The AuIDlStinian has written a new book in answer to the latest by the English theolo-

U[[$ W)jf[rll IfSMsjIID~

rnliJ kUD-WIh ol 1TW[jiJ KETTERING (Neuro) - The 1-7shy

member parish board 00 St Charles Church~ here unanishymousll1 adopted a resolution 5 favor Qf open nousing legiSlashytion for thiS (1)hio suburban community

The parish boards action S~ poIied- unequivocallymiddot passage 0amp an open housing ordinance in themiddot virtuallr aUi-wltite commw-middot nity 00l more than 600001 res dents Tames J Gilvay and Peter Donanue attOrneys anlL pariBhlmiddot boarc members pre sentedthe resolutJoDj wliiclli tbok- themiddot position that the ghett) condit1ollG ~Ilichl Negroes enshycure ilm nearby DaYton are mshyiuriOwil to the entire commUlshyDitTmiddot

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Aftei tee closing of the Center for Ecumenical Studies Father Baum will stay on at St MishychaeFs au a professor of theolshyogy He is also planning another ~~

It will concentrate on the idea oi God in modern thought and will be a clear sign that Father Baum has moved away from his prime in terest in ecumen- ism

Born of Jewish parents in Berlin and reared as an agnostic Father Baum said he has now turned his whole thought to the study of belief and unbelief He will record his findings in me book he is now writing

~oh~ laquotmm~~litl ~Od1[9)

[~ Ao~ i N~regIJ$ CAMDEN (NC) - Bishop

Tames L Schad administrator of the Camden diocese was =ong citizens honored here foT their efforts in furthering the interests of the Negro comshymunity

Bishop Schad who has been active in community action projects such as the War on Poverty committees was pre sented a scroll during a proshygram sponsored by the Tenth Street Baptist church here in observance of the 43rd annual Negro History Week This year marks the first time a Romaa Catholic prelate has been so honored

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17 Oppose Church Clergy Participation in Politics

By Jsgr George G Higgins

The New RepubJic-whIch in this writers judgment W one CYl the be3t of Ameriros weekly journals of opinion especially hl it3 arovezoage cfcurrent economic and political developments----thinks that the time has com~ for anti shyVietnam clergymen aul1ayshy Be that as it maY I am ioshymen to translate tu1eir cVZl clined to think that the editors m0r81 indignation oveuror Vietshy of the French periodical Inforshynam into effective political mations Catholique InternashyDction inasmuch as this is the tionales make considerably only way to effect long-term more sense than the editors cOf ehanges in the The New Republic 011 this issue policies of this of clerical involvement in the country So far so-called politics of peace as laymen are Though they are vigorously concerned this and unqualifiedly opposed ~il

would seem to tW war in Vietnam and like be a self - evishy tWeditors ()f The New Repubshydent proposition li( clearly recognize that the L1s perfectly establishment of leace in the obvious t hat world is a political problem concerned layshy which calls for the active mshymen ou~ht to volvement ofChcistians as ~-en

translate their as all other men of good will moral indi~nashy they do not think that themiddot tion over Vietnam - or any cleJgy who are responsible foy other significant issue of public the unity of the Church should policy-into effecti-re poiiticltll be expected to take on the role

of party politiciansaction Given the fact that their pubshySound Tradition

lication ~CI has been oJe 01 tileOn the other hnd I aJl Evt most outspoken European critics

sure understandthat I fully or of U S involvement in Vietnam completely agree vitb The New and one of the most vigorousRepublic when it says that fue advocates middotof a politics of peaceclergy ought tncv likewise their warning against the parshy

Traditionally a the NR itself ticipation of the clergy in parshypvints out the clergy-in this tisan politics is highly signifi shycountry at least - have rnied cant and deserves to be taken amy from such participation very seriously (Christians and

AJJ a long-time subscriher to the Struggle ior Peaee InforshyT~2 New Republic I had Dlshy mations Catholique Internashyways been under the imp~ssio~ tionales Jan 15 1965)that its editors thought that en Fl lialgs lrindplebalance this was a sound tradishy

Those American Catholicstion Apparently lwweer I was who may happen to have a speshy

cial interest in the pros and consmistaken in this regard fora of this highly controversial issuerecent Nell Republic editorial will also want to read whatnoten with satisfaction that Hans Kung has to say about itAJlerican clerGYmen now apshy

pear to be ready in large numshy in his forthcoming bookThe Churchbers to get involved at a preshy

cinct level and to play C1l Father Kung has lectured exshyactivist role in both parties tensively throughout the United (Clergy in Politics The New SUItes in recent years and is

currently with us again as a visshyRepublic Feb 17 1968) iting professor at Union Theoshy

QuestioIS Meaning logical Seminary in New York What does this mean in pracshy Seen in the light of the Gosshy

tical terma Does it mean that pel le writes in his new book ministers rabbis and priests the relntionshipof the Church should endorse ltor oppose) parshy to the world contains only one ticular candic1ates fqr politiell essential aspect its ministry 10 office starting at the precinct the world level Does it mean that they Ministry does not mean raisshythemselves should run for ofshy ing ones voice or putting an -oar flee if only as a last reiort in all secular qIes1ions middotof ecoshy

If so does it also mean that nomic political sodaI middotcultural other clergymen should run artistic and scientific life against them if they happen to T1e Churchclmnot solve disagree with what they stand the greJt problems of the ()rld for Or does it mean toot only neiih2r the problell1of hunger those clergymen who are anti shy nor that of the populaticn nor Administration should get inshy that of war nor thlt oanonFmshyT-olved at a precinct leel and ity of power Dor that -of race play an activist role within hatred What the Church both parties can do can be expressed quite

Sicnifieani WarnlDI simply in one phrase it must I have raised these questions exist for the world

lot to make light of The New ACrefS With lFTK1mgRepublics editorial CD the subshyject under discussion but Anyone who hal ever baG the merely to BUggest that clerical pleasure of meeting Faiher involvement ill partisan politics Kung middotor is familiar wi1bhis over the issue of Vietnam is at writings will know witheut best a rather tricky business being told that be is not a hawk and will almost inevitably lead and that he is cot advocating to certain consequences which a policy of Christian withdrawal upon further reflection even the from the world editors of The New Republie middotOn the eontrary be stroniJy might eonceivably wish tc foreshy favors lhe all-ltltit involvement tall of Christians in temporal affairs

and notably iii the ~lities Of peace

To Speak in Boston Nevertheless be does net Rev Anthony T Padovano think that the institutienal

Church-and its clerical minisshySTD theology professor at ters-should pretend that theyImmaculate Conception Semishy

nary Darlington N J will speak have all the answers tc the problems of the worldia the Christian Culture lecture

aries sponsored by the Paulist And neither eoes be thinkshyFathers at 815 Wednesday night if I read him correctly-that tbe March 6 in John Hancock Ha)) clergy in ~ exeTeise of their Boston Tickets are available mission of peace should get inshyfrom 5 Park Street Boston volved in partisan jl)olities Nor 02108 do L

WOKS LIKE FUN Yes but listen to what it requires The Georgetown University erew keeps in s-hape with ~

AM ~i~enies in the gym foHow~ by a two-niile run UJl and do-Wll Observatory Hil~on tJhecampus Its cold up there said Dave Harris a member of the lightweifht crew but by then youlewtired you do-nt care NC Phottgt

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 ~ 968

Prayer for Peace To Cm(O)se Games

MEXICO CITY (NC) - All ecumenical prR)er for peaCf) service is being planned for the end of the 19th Olympic Gam~

here next October The sponsor of the service w shy

the Ecumenical Commission fcrr Religious Services (ECRS) fe the Olympic Games The comshymission is composed of 73 ChrisshytiRn and Jewish leaders in thi~

city Promment spiritual leadshyers will be invited to speak

At middot8 meeting here the rn ECRS spiritual leaders discusse~

the facilities for athletes and visitors to attend their varioU7J reUgious services

iI1be iMC)Cican government hw aPPI)o~ed ECRS plans for the ~ction of at least tw- JaIige bullclings as nondenonYshynational chapels

The original pIlan toeonstrl1ell one large church has been IcHsshytlarded The present plan is build one large building with no religious I)rnamentllJtion of alltl7 kind on the outskirts of the Olympic Villa and a similar Oilif)

on tne outskirts of the Olympze

Project InterracialInterfaith Cooperation Cultural Villa

tin (Re~~(Jtion of CcUege m addition Archbishop MEshymiddotgut Dario MirlllDda y Gomez Gl

1I1IAMI (NC)~When Florida The Rev Edward T Graham Mexico City hBs authorizeQ Memorial College predominant a Baptist minister key person downtown Catholic churches to ly Negro middotliberal arts school is behind the project has had asshy permit non-Catholic services = moved here frOl1l St Augustine sistance from Mrs Athalie their premises if non-Catholie and opens next September the Range Miamis first NeglO City comgregations should request i project will be the result of unshy Commissoioner who is a Cathshyusual interracial and interfaith olic teamwork Organhzet3 rOthEHSIl

The largest single contribll shyNegroeswhites and Chinese tiou of private funds has oome flainirt~ ClI1ter

have joined hands with Cathoshy from a supermarket executive lLOUISVILLE (NC) - TkeIlics Protestants and Jews tv M Austin Davis a Methodist Franciscan Conventional OrdGcontribute money time advice laiamis Catholic Bishop Coleshy has opened a Brothers Trainincand leadership to realize the

manF Carroll is a member vl1 Center here in an attempt to givedevelopment of the college on l the advisory board as is Maushy Brothers three years of active$10 million complex here rice Ferre diocese of Miami lay apostolic work following theirr leader novitiate

RabbiIrving Lehrman presshy Father Sebastian Cunnil1flshyCouncil Seores ident cd the Greater Miami ham OFM director of tlw Rabbinical Association a n 4ll OOlilter said We felt we haCFactory Closing Jewish lay leaders are amoag an cbligation to give our man

LONDON (NC-The impend- active workers oome training outside contam ing elosingof a large industricl $ bull $ an idea of what was neeclshyJilseph Rodriguez of the plant has been criticized by ~ edfromthem in the outside Puerto Rican Democratic ChEb lay -eouncil of Our Lady Of _rl11 In the past he addeeurohas prepared 11 scholarship PieshyGrace parish in southeast Lsnshy we were not fWfilling ~ gram for -the collegedCD DeedS 1d ~veryoneliturgy

The council expressed its deep concern at the recent No Comlmentclosure of factories in middotthis area Completean4 in particular of the impendshy VATICAN (orry (NC)-Ibe ing shutdown of the Associ2ted Vatican had no comment -oJ1 11

ElectricaIIndustries (AEI) plant repolt that ~hbishop Agostincgt BANKING Casaroli secretary for extraershyIt callid upon the governmeJrt dinary ecclesiastical affairs ilf SERVICEand the -ehaiTmanof the oomshy the Papal Secretariat of statepany torevsrse the decision 10 eonterred with Dlembers of ~

c~ don the plant because Of tor BristOl CountyN-orth Vietnamese missi-on iJJthe middotmoral religious and 5Ocial Parisjn lJanuarylt n JUWWampleffeets iCaiJS2a by the ~veshythat Archbishop Casaroli Wallmen1 a1popl1ation absent from the Vatican fOll

Copies ltOf the councils motion several days nlenUy BrjstoICounty were sent 1amp Prime ~1inister

Harold Wilson MiJiister of Trust Company Labor RayJ Gunter President ampf the Board of Trade Douglas Sturteant (

TAUNTO~ MASSJay and company officials iHoOkAlthough the councils action was a surprise to the pastel Ed 1897 IIHE BANJ(ONFather Joseph seally AA ~ uiltl~rs SUppJies JAUNTONGRHNprist sroa that he agreed ith it ftll3 Purchase Street Member 01 Feileral ~

Faiher 8enlly sait[ centbert Aellad iNew Bedford IDsuranee CorporaamptoDJlOt~cteil p01itiealand elaquolshy 996-5661 nomic motions to eome from the council but pointed out You cannot separate Feligimtl from eveJ~ay life

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968 Capacity Audience at Holy Name Parish ~ihss

My Consciesect1ce Discusses The J)etached Americans In Educ~tion Continued from Page One

Do we care -for knowledge

what happens to other people Why do we strive for college educations or for money Are we so anxious to confor~l1 that we never dare to PITTSBURGH

tMrI

~VJI and it must be understood in a

t mear-cu way

A person following his ~con-~ence must be sincere He cannot play games with his mind but must be honest with himself

A person foilowing his con~ liCience must be correct It iSl10t ugh that he sincerely beshy~ Reves that something is good or evil-he must be sure that hiS judgement is a correct one

agrees with Gods view of the matter

Sometimes people make misshytakes in judgement-honest misshytakes to be sure but mistakes iwnetheless The oft-quoted exshyample is that of the African savshyrage deep in the jungle who may be sincerely following his con- ooience when it tells him to kill omd eat his enemy His conshyscience is a sincere one But it~ Is a mistaken one since it does IIlOt agree with Gods Will He ond every person must c~m-

liitantly review his judgements to lbe sure that they are correct ones and riot sincere mistaken Utes

A person following his conshy3Cience must be certain He can not act with doubt or uncertainshy~ about the rightness or wrong- mess of an act since he would be Announces Prize acting with the willingness to

takea cpance on being wrong For Best Plan ~ offendi~g God and this is aever~ validmiddot If there is uncer- PITTSinJRqH (NC)-Bishop t8inty the person must seek aid John J Wright of middotPittsburgh III arriving at a sure and correct haS annoutc~d il priz~ of$IOOOtor professor ina p1inor semshy tudgementmiddot - formiddot the architect who submitsmiddoth be I f - inary chapiainof a school dishyThe Christian acts with amiddotcon- ~ e st p an or a Jliljgtr renoshy ocesan chancellor and finally

lllilence ~rned by the prlnciples vation of the sanctuary of St vicar general tilChrlst This is where tliEi Pa~l~ cath~middot~al_h~remiddot~T~~e ~om- The P6pe a~o nam~d Father

aturchsteachers the Pope Iiiid P~tit~o~ IS ~p~nmiddot ~omiddotal archJtec~ Bienvenido TudtiJdto be auxil- a message toAfrica and a mes ishops ~nfer middotthe pi~ture to wl~hlD ~e bound~~l~~s~f the iary bishop of Dumaguete in the sage ~lling for peaCe

Illelp men make judgementsmiddot thatmiddot lire guided by Christ Sometimes ~ese j~dge~eptsgo a~intitmiddotnat-middot lIIIa1 inclinations and tendencies md this has always been thedif-

~ti~ty of ~ing a Christian-- Ghrist demands much of His llmiddotowmiddotmiddotermiddots middot IIIU

At present Catholics are askshyiDg tlie Pope to make a morai judgement about birth control d especlmiddotallymiddot the PlmiddotUmiddot Some_lire castigating him for not givshy g a qulck declslon or else they lliie telling people to forget about llrim and to make their own adgeme tsmiddot th ttmiddot w- n m e ma er The Pope in order to make a ilecision must make it on the basis of facts Scientists must provide him with the facts and In this matter there is much that k~epinglVith the general lin~s sition in favor I)f open housing complex The Pope has asked and is still asking theologians to evaluate the scientific facts in 4he light of Christian principles Not all moral issues are simple And then the Pope will apply the principles to the facts and 1ril1 make a decision about the morality of the matter

This will guide the Catholic in fllorming his conscience -- in arshyriving at a judgement that is sipcere that is the correct orie at lS artmiddot d t d ce am JU gemen anthatmiddot is Christian

K of C Convention 51ated for Houston

lAN MARCOS (NC) The

1970 national convention of the ~ights of Columbus will be held in Houston it was an-Bounced here at a conference of Texas officers of the interna- _ tional fraternalorder

The announcement of the seshylection of Houston for the con- v~ntion which will be held in

be different These were among questions discussed by a capacity audience at the second in a series on Christian Morality sponsored by the parish council of Holy Name Church Fall River Sparked by Sisshy

John AIIcIa SUS Cter some 30 people from all parts of themiddot Diocese viewed the film The Detached Amerishycans then broke into small groups for buzz sessions

Thesis of the film was that Americans wont become in volved with each other It dra- matically pointed its message with the true story of Kitty

Genovese murdered on a New York Street while 38 of her neighbors watched ffom winshy

bull dowS-o--and did nothing Also depicted were amarried

couple talkingto each other with neither really listening a student going thriugh school as on an assembly line with his sole goal the position he could

hope for as a college graduate and various other examples of non-involvement

What is life worth if we do not give it away questioned Harry Reasoner at the end of the film The Holy Name audishyence agreed that life sbould be

used for others but tended to feel that there wasnt the im-Personalitv in a smailer city

Jthat is found in a large metropshyolis One Sister countered howshyever with stories brought to

h t htschool by children s e aug This is right in Fall River she stressed Others cited examshypIes of personal involvement in affaIrs of others but agreed that much more could and

Pope I~aul Names Two Aluxiliaries VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VImiddot hail named Msgr Jose T Sanchez to be auxiliary bishop of Caceres in the Philipshypines He takes the titular See of Lesvi

Msgr 5anlhez was vicar genshyeral of Legazpi at the time of his nomination

He was born March 17 1920 atPandan in the Legazpi dioshycese He completed his philoshysophical and ordinary theologishycal studies at the diocesan semshyinary and obtained a licentiate in theology at the University of St Thomas in Manila He was ordained Marc~ 12 1946 and then worked as an assistant passhy

Pltts~urgpchap~er9rmiddottl~e Afner- ~ Philippines Father Tudtud who Pope Paul also delivered 264 ~can -Inst~tUtofAlth~te~ts was36ye~~I)]fat ~hcent time ~fsPeeches bull (~~)_(h~ch mclud~~ ~tIePoit~- his noniinatiOJl studied philos- burgb dlO~es~and three adJa-ophy and theology at St Johns

c~nt countIes SeminarY inmiddotBoston Fath~r roseph P- Larkin He was born March 22 1931

eOm~ission chaiIm~nmiddot ili1(I-a at Mabola inmiddotthe Cebu arch~ member of the diQcesan bU~lll- diocese He worked as assistant - bullbull

iIg commissligtn~ said the pur- pastor Editor ltit Cebus Caiholic pose of thereiiovlition is to pro weekl~ and finally pastor of the ville a ~mQte suitable sanctu- Church of thE Blessed Sacrashy

ary setting fof the liturgical re- inent in Cebu In addition atf orms Qrought into beingmiddot by the time of his nomination he Vatican Council II was vice-superior of the Misshy

Father Lmiddotai-kir said because slon Society of the Philippines the cathedral must architectu-middot r~lly and liturgically allow for Issues Sttement both episcopal mdparish ser-- U

vices ~~any structurai cihimge O H R h offers a unique chalienge to the n umalu ig ts designer~ and provision for the LA CROSSE (NC)-Tbe La

new liturgy must be made in Crosse diocese has taken a poshy

and spirit 01 the existing struc- integrated arid ildequate educashy t4re tion fair employment and the

- defense of the rights of minorshyities

Christians and J~ws Bishop Frederick W Frekshying of the Wisconsin diocese

Honor Clergymen and the diocesan central com-NEW YORK (NC)-Clergy- mission approvedmiddot apmiddot officiai

men from thefour major faiths statem~nt titled Human Reshyhave been honored here by the lations in the Diocese of La National Coiuerence of Chris- Crosse

tians anltt Jews The statement was prepared

the third week of August was the practice has spread middotto a made by Dr Josepb G Murphy number of other cities hesaid of La Marque a member of the interrelgious understanding hasmiddot boara- of- directors fortbe Cathprogressed tremendously middotiIi reshyeticmiddot meDs oganization middotc~nhyearsbull

-

Tbe clergymeri cited for by the subcommission of human relations of the diocesan cornshycourageous leadership in intershymissionon social action and apshy

creedal relations were proved by both before submisshy Rev Dr ~ohn C Bennett sion to the central commissiollll

president of Union Theological ) in January Seminary

Father Robert I Gannon SJ president emeritus of Fordham CONRAD SEGUIN University

Bishop Silas of the GreekOrshy BODY COJMPANY thodox archdiocese of Nortb and Aluminum or Steel South America 944 Countr Street

Samuel D Leisdorf New NEW BEDFORD MASSYork philanthropist pointed out

wy 2-6618that the NCCJ firstmiddot honored reshyligious leaders of four faiths in September -1966 Noting that

should be done by individuals parishes and municipaiities

There were no solutions ofshyfered to the problems posed bythe film We dont expect to have answers to these quesshytions warned Sister John Alicia at the beginning of the program They are too big for us The film WltlS strictly on the

human level and this was pointed out in one group No one can solve all problems it was agreed but surely each Christian canmiddot trust the Holy Spirit to lead him to the probshylems he is equipped to do someshything about no matter how small

There was another point on whichmiddot everyohe in the audience was in enthusiastic agreement that there be more such eveshynings as the one sponsored by Holllgt Namemiddot

Vatmiddotn Report~lIo

Continued from Page One two encyclicals The Developshymiddotment of Peoples and Priestly Celshyibacy four motu proprios inshyeluding one creating central a lay council and the Papal Comshymission on International Justice anp Peace and another restorshying the permanerit diacol1ate treeapostolic constitutions inshyelUding one reshaping the

Churchs c~iitral administlatioii two apostolic exhortations one apostolic letter and 78 other Wessagesmiddotand letterS inclQding

He reeeived eight ehiets Of state including U SPresident Lyndon B Johnson and United Nations Secretary General U T~ant and gave 16 audiences to

th lmiddottmiddot I0 er men 10 ~ 1 lca life in cluding U SVi~ President Hushy~rt H Humphrey Republican presidential hopeful Richard M N d N Ixon an ew Yorks Sen Robert F Kennedy

He received visits from four delegations of Orthodox churCh men including Orthodox Ecushymenicai Patriarcp Athenagoras I of Constantinople besides visit shying Patriarch Athenagoras in ~ tanbul

The book covering last yearli activities of the Holy See conshysists of 1680 pages plus about 2(10 photographs

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SolvcnorlCln Center WlllCOnaln 53061

Bishop John J Wright hasestablished a committee 1Jl)take a complete look at Oaampshy

olie education in the PittsburpD lOcese

The aim is fc dedde wha~ 1shyd t to tak tbe ~

lrec Ion e Dedecade for the best education of

all Catholics young and oldThe committee will evaluate all present Catholic educationshygrade and high schools eo egesConfraternity of Christian Doeshytrine classes adult education and other programs

The surveyors wiU 117 to deshyvise a plan based oa mstinl and potential resources in facll-Hies funds and Staff to guide the dioceses educational efforlll for the next 10 years or more

May Be FaI-lleaehiDg Among ideas eXpected to be

examined in the evaluation are proposals by some to cut back on Catholic schools or even til phase them out in place of an expanded adult education proshygram

Named head of the committee of educators priests and lay professionals is Father Vernon Gallagher CSSp former presishy

deht of Duquesne University here now serving as an official of the Holy Childhood Associashytion He also is a former proshyvincial of the Holy Gbost Fa~ ers eastern province

The committee Will be emshypowered to call before it di shyocesan officials to hold publlc meetingshire staff ~ring in exshyperts ThedioCege will finance the work

The committee Win make spe- eific recommendations to BishoP Wright after the study which 18 expected to take at least a yearbull

-Results are expected to have ~ar-reaching implicatiou fOr Catholic education here

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Two Unbeoten league Play f1fE ANCHOR-Diocese oTtall River-Ihurs feb 29 1968 19

Coach Says Sault Complete BallPlayerCape Cods NausetCompiles SMTB Playmaker Is Former Coyle $trBest Over-All Court Mark

BY JOE MIRANDA By PETER BARTEK

An excellent hall handler and Norton High Coach team player Is how Pat Sault of

Taunton is described by his Eleven of tile 12 aa-ea e1ubs with the best records in coach Phil Wetterland of the

their respective leagues are among those who will parshy Sou the a s t ern Massachu- setts Technogical Institute Inshyticipate in the March Tech basketball tournament in Boston stitute in North DartmouthFairhaven High of the Oapeway Conference and Nauset Sault a 19-year old freshman

of the Cape amp Island loop are is a former Coyle High hoopshythe only all-winning league a single league game while two ster who played four years for

went doWn to defeat In every the Warriors his final two underaggregations from this area encounter In which they were coach Jim Lanagan on the varshyin the Hub championship Involved Almost two-thirds 02 sityelimination tourney while Dartshy the Southeastern Mass teams

D)Quth High is the only one of Teaching CareerfinIshed wIth a 500 average OIlthe tOp dozen better Although young Pat has al shya 70 per cent coQlbines WIth

WIth 12 triumphs in the Cape ready made plans for the future league record amp Island competition Nauset which Include finishing his edshywhich failed to Regional also achieved the best ucation and pursuing a teachershyqualify an inshy over-all record winning 16 of coaching career dication t hat 11 encounters The Cape Cod Sault has not yet chosen a non-league school will be shooting for the major in college but according competition selshy Class D Tech title to his parents he is very much dom jeopardizes interested in teaching historyNew Bedford High 15 and and coaching They feel he willthe ultImate one in the Greater Boston Subshy be good at both as he alwaysgoal of most urban league finished with anschools Actual- Peter devoted his spare time to helpshy

over-all 17-2 mark for the Winshyly 311 per cent Bartek ing the younger neighborhoodter The Crimsons 937 average boys understand athletics moreof the 35 Southeastern Massashy captured its leagues pennant flag thoroughlychusetts school teamsmiddot have The Crimson Whalers are now Pat is the oldest son of Mrqualified for the Tech title play poised to annex the No 1 State and Mrs Charles A Sault and)let none managed an over-all honor by clinching the top one of four children A sisterundefeated season ranking Class A division in the Annette is a senior at BishopThree area clubs failed to win Boston title tourney Cassidy High James Michael

and Cheryl grammar school Representatives in Three B~ackets students at Mulcahey Schoof in

Taunton Fairhaven and Holy Family FamilYhas been eliminated in The family resides at 85 Mershy

HIgh of New Bedford aiming the Lawrence Catholic tourney rill Avenue In Taunton and are for the Class C Tech crown both Southeastern Mass does not members of St Pauls Parish fInished wIth an over-all 16-2 have one club among the Tech

Wetterland Commentsmark The latter Is still smart- Class B participants but th~re ing from its cliff-hanging defeat will be five area combinations Wetterland was high in his at the hands of Xavier in the -includIng Fairhaven and Holy praise of his five foot 11 inch State Catholic tourney Bill Family-in the Class C play and guard who tips the scales at Walshs two-pointer from the three-including Nauset-in the 160 pounds ~ssesses good speed floor which many thought Class D Hub competition and is a key in the Corsairs fast

meant victory at Lawrence was The other Class C contestants break offense nu1llfied by a travelling viola- patterns when SMTI is wurkshy a rest he should be in top conshySault lllsed strictly with thetion which cost the loss ofthe are Case High of Swansea Nar- iilg too quickly and making dition for the 1968-69 campaignvarsity was gaining valuablebasket resulting in a one-~Jnt ry co-champions Oliver Ames Dlistakes Sault gaIned his court savvy1 f tb of North Easton runners-up in experience and developing rapshy

The SMTI mentor continued from Lanagan at Coyle wheretiOs~~ e Narragnnsett~a~ theHockomock circuit and Den- bUy whep a knee Injury slowed he iii the complete ball player hemiddotstarted in his juJ)ior and senshyDis-Yarmouth of Cape Cod see his progress midway through

Durfee of Fall RIver and ond pI fi ish in tho C the campaiiPt but Wetterland noting that he can shoot but is Jor lieasons and was a Vital co Bishop Stang mgh of North ace n er e ape most --content setting Up his in the Warriors successduring DartmQutb are the other two middotNausetwill be joined by Mar- has turned in some excellent efshy teammates for easy pblnts He Ioth years I J

way loop said despite the handicap Pat

Is a team player and always sacshy As ~ Coyle High fr~hmanarea Class A representatives inmiddot thas VIneyard and Norton mib forts in a most successful SMTI rifices himself to help the club Pat was a member XJtb~ yearshythe Tecb toutnament ~e Fall in the Class D bracket The season

Sault possesses a good atti shy lings h09P team and al~Q~ parti shyRiver Hilltoppers willbe out Islanders finished second to Naushy Defensively Sault is cnitshytude is a tough competitor and cipated in track By hihSOphoshyto make amends for their nose- set in the Cape amp Island league standIng Offensively Sault is one of the players Wetterland is more year Saultcopfjned his dive finish in the Bristol COUl)ty while Norton was second in the the teams playmaker ana quarshyeounting on 1to help SMTI gain athlettc talents to basketbjlll andloop whIle Stang ~ke Ho17 Tri~Valley Conference terback 8Dlall college recognition in the turned in a cODlJPenlla))le acshyfuture Teallll Player coun~ o~ himself

Ifere~s How They Did hi LiBogue Play Played for Lanagan Sault also represented stWetterland said his outstandshyThere is doubt about his the hardwood

he following are the league 21 Bishop Feehan 7_1 ing worth to the Corsairs comes no Pauls on in the eourage said the Corsairs skipshy Taunton CYO and in the annual from the fact that he can slowrecords of the 35 Southeastem Msgr Coyle 7-1 after painful knee Easter tournament He playeddown the offense and set up per even a

Mass teams Ta~ton 7-7 injury Sault continued to jpve four years of Litue JeagueM N B Vocational 6-8 his all and attended every pracshy Baseball and one season in theK of C Masons1 Fairhaven 14-0 25 DIman Vocational 5-9 tice The injury has slowed him Pony League prior to ~ntetmamp

Nauset 12-0 Msgr Prevost 5-9 visibly but after the season and Coyle Higa 3 New Bedford 15-1 27 SandwIch 4-8 To Cooperate4 Holy Family 13-1 28 Nantucket 3-9

NOTRE DAME (NC) - lfashyCase 13-1 29 Old Rochester 4-10

30 tlonal leadellS of the Scottish6 Oliver Ames 12-2 West~rt 3-11 Bite Masons and the Knights ~oll another7 Marthas Vineyard ~ 31 Barnstable 2-12

of Columbus anno~ced memshy8 Bishop Stang 10~ 32 Dighton-Rehoboth 1-13 strike on~rs of their organizations wU1Dartmouth 104 33 Bourne 0-14 work together on domestic andDennis-Yarmouth 10-4 Chatham 0-12 the enerlY international problems faciolaquoDurfee 10-1 North AUleJooro 1-14

the nation12 Norton 105 you get George A Newbury soveshy13 Attleboro 9-5 Minister Officiates reign grand commander 01 from14 Harwich 7-5

Scottish Rite Masons In theProvIncetown 7-5 a slice ofDn Cathclic Church northern jurisdiction of the US18 Seekonk 8-6 MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-A Lu- and John W McDevitt supremeSomerset 86

theran mInister officiated at the knight of the Knights of ColumshyFalmouth 8-6 marriage of his son in Holy Cross bus made the announcementMansfield 8-6 Catholic church here at a dinner here s~nsoredWareham 8-6

Married were James H Graf jointly by the Masonic Lodge 29 L th and the Knights of Columbus

a u eran and CalTon Ann council in South Bend Episcopalian Rite Gutwinski 25 a Catholic The ceremony was rformed - Both praised the work of Fa-MINNEAPOLIS (NC)- Archshy ther John A OBrien of the

bishop Leo Binz and Coadjutor Grapoundfs fltthell the Rev Paul L University of Notre Dame for Archbishop ~ PY1)1e of the Graf pastor of Holy Trinity r better understanding among the Cafllolic archdIoceses of St Paul theran church two groups Minneapolis were present in the Permission for the Rev Gmt Father Theodore M Hesshysan~lary of St Marks Episcoshy to officiate at his sonB wedding burgh CSC president of the pal cathedral here for the inshy was granted by theSacred Con- University of Notre Dame said stallation of Bishop Philip F gregation for the Joctrine of This nIght marks a great step McNarry as coadjutor bishop of the Faitlh inl lWme in answer to ll forward and reflects the new the Epi6copal diocese of Minneshy J)etition by Archbishop Leo BiDz ~enical spirit which is unishysota of~ ~~-M~eapotis iing ~ople long separated-

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bull THE ANCHOR Dayton University Thurs Feb 29 196a Brief Religious on Ecumenism

Selects Advisors SOUTH ORANGE (NC) meanitigful dialogue should not tended not to lead to compro- DAYTON (NC)-An ll-mem-

Named resident Some 1000 mms and Brothers be confused with monologueshy mise but to conyergence ber advisory board of six stushyservfng in tli~ Newark archdi~shy or confrontation He added We talk now of our common dents two faculty members andSANTA CLARA (NC)-The cese were briefed on the basic we must be willing to be pershy belilefs he said not to com- three representatives of theboard of trustees of the Univershy principles of ecumenism in a suaded-we need an open mind promise each others faith but in community has been establishedlllity of Santa Clara has named program sponsored by the Newshy to seek out the truth wherever the hope that at some point in for the Office of Human Relashylrather Thomas D Terry SJ ark Archdiocese Commission for it might be shy the future we will converge tions at the University oJ Dayshy35th president of the Jesuit unishy Ecumenical Affairs

Ifersity Father Terry who sucshy Discussing the difficulties of As an example he pointed to tornSpeakers at the session ineeeds Father Patrick Donohoe establishing Christian-Jewish the wide divergence of views The board under the direcshySeton Hall University includeSJ recently appointed Califorshy dialogue he said we Christians regarding (he Mass and the Eu- tion of Charles Hirt director ofDr Leonard Swidler of Templeaia provinCial af the Society of are responsible for 2000 years charist that existed between the Office of Human RelationsUniversity Philadelphia aridJIesus has been academic vic~ of anti-Semitism and now_ we Martin Luther and the Council will be responsible for estabshyFather Thomas M McFadden ofpresident af Loyola University must overcome our mutual disshy of Trent Then he cited the re- lishing policy making programthe Brooklyn dioceseLos Angeles for the last year trust before dialogue can be cent statement on the Eucharist recommendations helping to

lllI1d a half Previous to that Swidler said dialogue with fruitful issued by Lutherans and Catho- alleviate campus racial probshyIIlIather Terry was dean of the others must be preceded by an lics to show how much closer lems and drawing up proposall ltWllege of arts and sciences at examination of Catholic attishy Father McFadden said diashy the two bodies have come since for implementation Santa Clara tudes In addition he said a logue among Christians is inshy that time

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 29 1968 ltI

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16 THE ANC )~-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968

New St LouimiddotsArchbi~hcp

PrOmilnent in Ecumen~$m Archbishop Jonh J Oarberry of St Louis well known

~()ng Oatholic leaders after 31 career that has taken him from a seminary classroom iii his natiYe Brooltl~ NCY~ to one of the nations MOse ~mpOOtallt archdiolaquoese1l is pershy

laaps evenmiddot better ~ownmiddot fJDlong Americas nom-Cafu6shylie religious leaders fon hisl work in ecumenism Cllair Ilillao of the Bishqps Commi~ee-Ibr Ecumenical and Intenrefi shyaious Affairs since th~ resigna Qion of Baltimores Lawrence Cardinal Shehan in November 11965 Bishop Carberry has au I9gtCrvised the massive catholic illllvoIvement in ecumeniCal ac-middot lli1 vities

He outlined his own entIliusishyeuroISm for ecumenism in a speech ~iven in January 1966 tolmemshy~rs of the Ohio (Protestant) lPastors Convention wheDI he aid

Common lHeritagel For years the general policY

(llln the Catholic Church) had ~en to stress the great chasm

which divides the euroatliolic Church and other Christian ehurches No effort was made m would seem on our part to Illave a meeting of minds A otudy of documents would seem ltD reveal that while we wera lbrayerfully disposed to) the ltecumenical movemerit nevershy1lheless the Catholic Church did lliittleto foster it

Bishop Carberry told the conshyvention that through the grace 0f God and the leadership or Pope John XXIII we became aware of the common heritage Which is ours

Has Great lHope

We began to realiZe~ how 18aptism unites us in ChriSt to Gee that the divinity of Christ is illhe cornerstone of all Christianshynay we began to real1ze the oommon treasure which we llnave in the Sacred Scripturesllikewise the common bondshyVhich exists with us in the

1lIIlissionary activities at the Church

There is great hope Bishopltearberry said that mrougb ~ialogue through prayerbull 1llluough respect for each others wiewpoint the grace of God may (i)Ile day in Gods divine provishy4llence bring about the- unitY which Christ prayed for at themiddot Last Supper

More recently members of ltOhios Protestant cliurches llllamed the bishop as OniosPbsshyoLr of Pas-tors the fl rst timmiddote hat bull

Grants Permis$ioll~

for SaturdayMass) SAN ANGELO (NC)-BiShop

Thomas TSchoepe of San Angelo lllas announced that the diocesan request for the Saturday Mass flaculty hagt been granted In the future the Sunday Mass 00shyltigation may be met by at shy~ndance at a Saturday aftershyllloon or evening Mass The pershylll1ission has been granted on an ~xperimental basis by the Vati shylttan for a period of five years

The diocese of San Argelo is 1lI Texas missionary diocese the bishop explained and there are areat dis tan c e s between churches and few priestswmiddot oerve the faithfuh ManYi ~llieSts

have two or morlt8 churclies tJ lllttend and will Be able- tQ give more time to the smaller ~urches with the Satucday Mass faculty Bishop TschoePe pointedi 9Ut Chat the faculty has been giVeth bull the whole diocese not just Ibo individual churches or areas Pastors who wish to make Usemiddot aJl the faculty must make formal application to the chancery ofshyillce

a~ statewide Protestant onganiza tion has presented its highest awa-rd 10 a eatho1iir clet1gymam A pla~J1e symbollZiDg the a~adi was~ glv~~ to the blShp at ~~~ Fenw~nIP Blmq~et on the Olbo PastollSgt ~onventi~m

DI~USS P~tilems U~dev Blsli~p~rlgte~rysl~d

er~hlPl laquoatholic ~elegations have ~et wl~h ~fflC1Blsbull and

tleolbglan~ of other- ChrIs~an churchesmiddot to dlSCUSS ecumemcal pooble~s r~~gmg from the pr~sshyence of Christ Ill tlie ~ucharlst to th-c nature of we prJes~ood

Before ta~mg cliarge of th Golumbusmiddot dIOcese on March 25 1965) Bishop euroarbery liadmiddot selved asmiddot coadjutor bishop and then bishop of Eafayette Ind Born in Brooklynj N~ Y Tulymiddot 31 1904 Bishop Carberry studied for the priestlioodi at Brooklyns Cathedral College or the Iin-middot maculate laquool1ception from 191ll to 1924 and at the North Amershyican College in Rome from 1924 to 1930

Oldained inmiddot Rome in 1929 tne bishop sfudiea canon law at the Catholic University of America in Washington D G and taught at Immaculate Conception Semshyinarl until Tune 1935 when he went on ldan to the diocese of Trenton N J He returned to BrooklYn in 1940 where hemiddotreshymained until being named coshyadjuror bishop of Lafayettemiddot in 19651

~~~5IiTI$ nUilft~U[jTIfi)

Ccopy]JJi]dIT [Qjfr[~lcopy[j

CHICAGO (NC) - Tohn A McDllrmott has changed me mindL-he1li remain as execu middot tivedirector of the Chicago Cat1iolic Interracial Council

The veteran council worKer last October announced he would leave the office to beshy

come Mridwest regional- ciVil rightsdirector for the ms De-middotmiddot partment of Health Enucation andi Welfare

A number of problems hava arisen since th-e announcement on my appointmentt last 0ctbBerwhichl caused me to have serl

ousmiddot second l thoughts MilDer moW said iil his decision to re~ maio with the ltlrc He citedi m1 patrtcular~ personnel cutliaclts in HEW wJiich woulli Iiinit the Midwest negional operatiiul

fo accepting McDermotits de cisionj HEW the government agency requestedi liiin to serve asmiddot ai special chdl- rights consuU ant while working for the CIC and he a~reed

IIlt a letter to the Dutch biINumber of Fllel71ch ops members of Michaels re-

gion asked for curbs on the nlgtshySeminarians Dllops tions Catliolic liberals The PARIS (Ne)-Thenumber of meeting also registered disap-

French seminarians h~s dropped proval of the new Dutch Cateshyby about 180 a year for the last chism~ claiminJ~ that it does nocent four years according to 1iigures represent true Catholic teach~ provided in amiddot press conference Michaels Lel~ion is considered by Bishop Jean Sauvage 011 ampshy even more CJlnservative thlW necy member of the bishops Confrontation another Catholic commission on the clergy and conservative organization Conshyseminaries frontations complaints about

For the 1967~68 sc1iolastic the content of the new Dutch year the tdtal number of sliumiddot catechismmiddot are believed to hae dents iil major seminaries m been instTllmentai in having tbe~ FhlOce is 43583 comparedl with book exltlmined by the VatiCan~lJ

4536 for the previous year Doctrinal Congregation 4722 )n 1965-66 and 4953 in 1964-65

Moreover in France at pres- Approves Agency eol ttiere are aBout 200 adults LQND()N (NC)--Jolin Cardl~

WIIO are preIgtaring for tOe ~er nal Heenan of Westminster liJaa manent diaconate as restored by approveq establishment ocf 1m the Second Vatican Council The agency to help priests who want first ordinations to this permashy 10 leave the priesthood znGl nent diaconate could take place nuns who want to leave the this year religious life

1P~alrn le~tUlm~1rn~~G~

$1lll~7 GG1l I1DtJ Sim LONDON (NC)-A study on

the problems of ecumenism in Great Britain will be made by a joint working group of the British Council of Churches and the Caholic Church with the results to be reported next Autumn

The study was planned at a meetingmiddot held atmiddot the Vita et Pax Benedictine I~onvent and attendshyed by nine Catholic representashytives an- 14 representatives of the BeC -

The projected study is exshypected to analyze such topics an the extent I)f cooperatiGn beshytween Catjwlics and members of the BeC the dialogUes bemg held theologicaL differences and the non~theological obstacles to closer unitygt

Auxiliary BishoJ- Langton Fox of lfenevia Wales and

Auxiliary Bishop Basil Chrisshytopher Butlelr OSB of Westshyminster headed tOe CatOolie delegation at the meeting

~(i]$~~rlaquolJpoundfr1) A$1k lMl~illlW) ~ltoy~ IHh~)~Dnd

U11RECHm (NC) -Michaels Legion an organization of Dutch Catholic~ uaditionalists has sent a telegram to Pope Pault H ungintg him tD protect essential orthodoxy and to S81fe tne DutchChurch~

At 3- meeting here attended b~ some 600) Catholic conserva tives led by Eouis Knuvelder the legion condemned the Dutch Catholic daily press the~ Dutch Gatholic tellvisioncompany and the countrys Catholic radio station for being too progressive

Father Baum Regards Ecumenical Center Closing Sign of Success TORONTO (NC)-The closing gian Charles Davis-A Quesshy

of the Center for Ecumenical tion of Conscience Davis book Studies at St Michaels Collegegt exmiddotplains his renunciation of the here is a sign of the centersmiddot euroatholic priesthood and the success Church and asks Catholic theo-

This is the viewpoint of Father logians who intend to stay in GregllllY Ballm O~SA founder the~ eurohurch to reply to several of tJie centeI1 who has an- t1iaologjcal points nQunlaquoed that it will b~ Closed BelUef Unbelief

inl JUne Thats what Im doing FatlieJJBaum-explalnedthalhe Fatller Baum said His book a

founded the centeJ ill 19631 when replYJ to Davis questions conshyecum~llusrn may have~ been a ceming the credibility of the new Idea Its purpose lie- s~ld Church in todays world will be was to promote ecumemcall called The Credibility of the studies at St Michaels Church Today It will be pub-

Taday he neports ecumen mal stlUdi~s at S1l Michaels are a reality- 1lli~ schGolls theology depal1tment 18 fully mte~ ~thl Protestant and ~gIIcan lfupartmentsmiddot at the-Umversity

of Toronto [hUB lie said~ the eC-lmenical

centell has fulfilled its purpose Such fUlfillment he said wmiddot

common in academic circles where there has been an ecushymenlical reVOlution For exam pIe ne said where once som1shyone might have nied to foster ecumenism through building an ecumenical library it is now impossible tq build a theological lilgtrary without its being ecushymenical

Need flDZ Programsmiddot Father Baum added that he

does not believe tJie ecumenical movement has reached fruitien in circles outside the academia world~ He said that he sees a real need pound01 formal ecumenmiddot ical programs on the parish and on all levels of the Churdl which have not yet been reached He a150 disclosed that perSOll ally he lias moved Gn frOlll ecumenism to new fields of thought

The AuIDlStinian has written a new book in answer to the latest by the English theolo-

U[[$ W)jf[rll IfSMsjIID~

rnliJ kUD-WIh ol 1TW[jiJ KETTERING (Neuro) - The 1-7shy

member parish board 00 St Charles Church~ here unanishymousll1 adopted a resolution 5 favor Qf open nousing legiSlashytion for thiS (1)hio suburban community

The parish boards action S~ poIied- unequivocallymiddot passage 0amp an open housing ordinance in themiddot virtuallr aUi-wltite commw-middot nity 00l more than 600001 res dents Tames J Gilvay and Peter Donanue attOrneys anlL pariBhlmiddot boarc members pre sentedthe resolutJoDj wliiclli tbok- themiddot position that the ghett) condit1ollG ~Ilichl Negroes enshycure ilm nearby DaYton are mshyiuriOwil to the entire commUlshyDitTmiddot

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Aftei tee closing of the Center for Ecumenical Studies Father Baum will stay on at St MishychaeFs au a professor of theolshyogy He is also planning another ~~

It will concentrate on the idea oi God in modern thought and will be a clear sign that Father Baum has moved away from his prime in terest in ecumen- ism

Born of Jewish parents in Berlin and reared as an agnostic Father Baum said he has now turned his whole thought to the study of belief and unbelief He will record his findings in me book he is now writing

~oh~ laquotmm~~litl ~Od1[9)

[~ Ao~ i N~regIJ$ CAMDEN (NC) - Bishop

Tames L Schad administrator of the Camden diocese was =ong citizens honored here foT their efforts in furthering the interests of the Negro comshymunity

Bishop Schad who has been active in community action projects such as the War on Poverty committees was pre sented a scroll during a proshygram sponsored by the Tenth Street Baptist church here in observance of the 43rd annual Negro History Week This year marks the first time a Romaa Catholic prelate has been so honored

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17 Oppose Church Clergy Participation in Politics

By Jsgr George G Higgins

The New RepubJic-whIch in this writers judgment W one CYl the be3t of Ameriros weekly journals of opinion especially hl it3 arovezoage cfcurrent economic and political developments----thinks that the time has com~ for anti shyVietnam clergymen aul1ayshy Be that as it maY I am ioshymen to translate tu1eir cVZl clined to think that the editors m0r81 indignation oveuror Vietshy of the French periodical Inforshynam into effective political mations Catholique InternashyDction inasmuch as this is the tionales make considerably only way to effect long-term more sense than the editors cOf ehanges in the The New Republic 011 this issue policies of this of clerical involvement in the country So far so-called politics of peace as laymen are Though they are vigorously concerned this and unqualifiedly opposed ~il

would seem to tW war in Vietnam and like be a self - evishy tWeditors ()f The New Repubshydent proposition li( clearly recognize that the L1s perfectly establishment of leace in the obvious t hat world is a political problem concerned layshy which calls for the active mshymen ou~ht to volvement ofChcistians as ~-en

translate their as all other men of good will moral indi~nashy they do not think that themiddot tion over Vietnam - or any cleJgy who are responsible foy other significant issue of public the unity of the Church should policy-into effecti-re poiiticltll be expected to take on the role

of party politiciansaction Given the fact that their pubshySound Tradition

lication ~CI has been oJe 01 tileOn the other hnd I aJl Evt most outspoken European critics

sure understandthat I fully or of U S involvement in Vietnam completely agree vitb The New and one of the most vigorousRepublic when it says that fue advocates middotof a politics of peaceclergy ought tncv likewise their warning against the parshy

Traditionally a the NR itself ticipation of the clergy in parshypvints out the clergy-in this tisan politics is highly signifi shycountry at least - have rnied cant and deserves to be taken amy from such participation very seriously (Christians and

AJJ a long-time subscriher to the Struggle ior Peaee InforshyT~2 New Republic I had Dlshy mations Catholique Internashyways been under the imp~ssio~ tionales Jan 15 1965)that its editors thought that en Fl lialgs lrindplebalance this was a sound tradishy

Those American Catholicstion Apparently lwweer I was who may happen to have a speshy

cial interest in the pros and consmistaken in this regard fora of this highly controversial issuerecent Nell Republic editorial will also want to read whatnoten with satisfaction that Hans Kung has to say about itAJlerican clerGYmen now apshy

pear to be ready in large numshy in his forthcoming bookThe Churchbers to get involved at a preshy

cinct level and to play C1l Father Kung has lectured exshyactivist role in both parties tensively throughout the United (Clergy in Politics The New SUItes in recent years and is

currently with us again as a visshyRepublic Feb 17 1968) iting professor at Union Theoshy

QuestioIS Meaning logical Seminary in New York What does this mean in pracshy Seen in the light of the Gosshy

tical terma Does it mean that pel le writes in his new book ministers rabbis and priests the relntionshipof the Church should endorse ltor oppose) parshy to the world contains only one ticular candic1ates fqr politiell essential aspect its ministry 10 office starting at the precinct the world level Does it mean that they Ministry does not mean raisshythemselves should run for ofshy ing ones voice or putting an -oar flee if only as a last reiort in all secular qIes1ions middotof ecoshy

If so does it also mean that nomic political sodaI middotcultural other clergymen should run artistic and scientific life against them if they happen to T1e Churchclmnot solve disagree with what they stand the greJt problems of the ()rld for Or does it mean toot only neiih2r the problell1of hunger those clergymen who are anti shy nor that of the populaticn nor Administration should get inshy that of war nor thlt oanonFmshyT-olved at a precinct leel and ity of power Dor that -of race play an activist role within hatred What the Church both parties can do can be expressed quite

Sicnifieani WarnlDI simply in one phrase it must I have raised these questions exist for the world

lot to make light of The New ACrefS With lFTK1mgRepublics editorial CD the subshyject under discussion but Anyone who hal ever baG the merely to BUggest that clerical pleasure of meeting Faiher involvement ill partisan politics Kung middotor is familiar wi1bhis over the issue of Vietnam is at writings will know witheut best a rather tricky business being told that be is not a hawk and will almost inevitably lead and that he is cot advocating to certain consequences which a policy of Christian withdrawal upon further reflection even the from the world editors of The New Republie middotOn the eontrary be stroniJy might eonceivably wish tc foreshy favors lhe all-ltltit involvement tall of Christians in temporal affairs

and notably iii the ~lities Of peace

To Speak in Boston Nevertheless be does net Rev Anthony T Padovano think that the institutienal

Church-and its clerical minisshySTD theology professor at ters-should pretend that theyImmaculate Conception Semishy

nary Darlington N J will speak have all the answers tc the problems of the worldia the Christian Culture lecture

aries sponsored by the Paulist And neither eoes be thinkshyFathers at 815 Wednesday night if I read him correctly-that tbe March 6 in John Hancock Ha)) clergy in ~ exeTeise of their Boston Tickets are available mission of peace should get inshyfrom 5 Park Street Boston volved in partisan jl)olities Nor 02108 do L

WOKS LIKE FUN Yes but listen to what it requires The Georgetown University erew keeps in s-hape with ~

AM ~i~enies in the gym foHow~ by a two-niile run UJl and do-Wll Observatory Hil~on tJhecampus Its cold up there said Dave Harris a member of the lightweifht crew but by then youlewtired you do-nt care NC Phottgt

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 ~ 968

Prayer for Peace To Cm(O)se Games

MEXICO CITY (NC) - All ecumenical prR)er for peaCf) service is being planned for the end of the 19th Olympic Gam~

here next October The sponsor of the service w shy

the Ecumenical Commission fcrr Religious Services (ECRS) fe the Olympic Games The comshymission is composed of 73 ChrisshytiRn and Jewish leaders in thi~

city Promment spiritual leadshyers will be invited to speak

At middot8 meeting here the rn ECRS spiritual leaders discusse~

the facilities for athletes and visitors to attend their varioU7J reUgious services

iI1be iMC)Cican government hw aPPI)o~ed ECRS plans for the ~ction of at least tw- JaIige bullclings as nondenonYshynational chapels

The original pIlan toeonstrl1ell one large church has been IcHsshytlarded The present plan is build one large building with no religious I)rnamentllJtion of alltl7 kind on the outskirts of the Olympic Villa and a similar Oilif)

on tne outskirts of the Olympze

Project InterracialInterfaith Cooperation Cultural Villa

tin (Re~~(Jtion of CcUege m addition Archbishop MEshymiddotgut Dario MirlllDda y Gomez Gl

1I1IAMI (NC)~When Florida The Rev Edward T Graham Mexico City hBs authorizeQ Memorial College predominant a Baptist minister key person downtown Catholic churches to ly Negro middotliberal arts school is behind the project has had asshy permit non-Catholic services = moved here frOl1l St Augustine sistance from Mrs Athalie their premises if non-Catholie and opens next September the Range Miamis first NeglO City comgregations should request i project will be the result of unshy Commissoioner who is a Cathshyusual interracial and interfaith olic teamwork Organhzet3 rOthEHSIl

The largest single contribll shyNegroeswhites and Chinese tiou of private funds has oome flainirt~ ClI1ter

have joined hands with Cathoshy from a supermarket executive lLOUISVILLE (NC) - TkeIlics Protestants and Jews tv M Austin Davis a Methodist Franciscan Conventional OrdGcontribute money time advice laiamis Catholic Bishop Coleshy has opened a Brothers Trainincand leadership to realize the

manF Carroll is a member vl1 Center here in an attempt to givedevelopment of the college on l the advisory board as is Maushy Brothers three years of active$10 million complex here rice Ferre diocese of Miami lay apostolic work following theirr leader novitiate

RabbiIrving Lehrman presshy Father Sebastian Cunnil1flshyCouncil Seores ident cd the Greater Miami ham OFM director of tlw Rabbinical Association a n 4ll OOlilter said We felt we haCFactory Closing Jewish lay leaders are amoag an cbligation to give our man

LONDON (NC-The impend- active workers oome training outside contam ing elosingof a large industricl $ bull $ an idea of what was neeclshyJilseph Rodriguez of the plant has been criticized by ~ edfromthem in the outside Puerto Rican Democratic ChEb lay -eouncil of Our Lady Of _rl11 In the past he addeeurohas prepared 11 scholarship PieshyGrace parish in southeast Lsnshy we were not fWfilling ~ gram for -the collegedCD DeedS 1d ~veryoneliturgy

The council expressed its deep concern at the recent No Comlmentclosure of factories in middotthis area Completean4 in particular of the impendshy VATICAN (orry (NC)-Ibe ing shutdown of the Associ2ted Vatican had no comment -oJ1 11

ElectricaIIndustries (AEI) plant repolt that ~hbishop Agostincgt BANKING Casaroli secretary for extraershyIt callid upon the governmeJrt dinary ecclesiastical affairs ilf SERVICEand the -ehaiTmanof the oomshy the Papal Secretariat of statepany torevsrse the decision 10 eonterred with Dlembers of ~

c~ don the plant because Of tor BristOl CountyN-orth Vietnamese missi-on iJJthe middotmoral religious and 5Ocial Parisjn lJanuarylt n JUWWampleffeets iCaiJS2a by the ~veshythat Archbishop Casaroli Wallmen1 a1popl1ation absent from the Vatican fOll

Copies ltOf the councils motion several days nlenUy BrjstoICounty were sent 1amp Prime ~1inister

Harold Wilson MiJiister of Trust Company Labor RayJ Gunter President ampf the Board of Trade Douglas Sturteant (

TAUNTO~ MASSJay and company officials iHoOkAlthough the councils action was a surprise to the pastel Ed 1897 IIHE BANJ(ONFather Joseph seally AA ~ uiltl~rs SUppJies JAUNTONGRHNprist sroa that he agreed ith it ftll3 Purchase Street Member 01 Feileral ~

Faiher 8enlly sait[ centbert Aellad iNew Bedford IDsuranee CorporaamptoDJlOt~cteil p01itiealand elaquolshy 996-5661 nomic motions to eome from the council but pointed out You cannot separate Feligimtl from eveJ~ay life

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968 Capacity Audience at Holy Name Parish ~ihss

My Consciesect1ce Discusses The J)etached Americans In Educ~tion Continued from Page One

Do we care -for knowledge

what happens to other people Why do we strive for college educations or for money Are we so anxious to confor~l1 that we never dare to PITTSBURGH

tMrI

~VJI and it must be understood in a

t mear-cu way

A person following his ~con-~ence must be sincere He cannot play games with his mind but must be honest with himself

A person foilowing his con~ liCience must be correct It iSl10t ugh that he sincerely beshy~ Reves that something is good or evil-he must be sure that hiS judgement is a correct one

agrees with Gods view of the matter

Sometimes people make misshytakes in judgement-honest misshytakes to be sure but mistakes iwnetheless The oft-quoted exshyample is that of the African savshyrage deep in the jungle who may be sincerely following his con- ooience when it tells him to kill omd eat his enemy His conshyscience is a sincere one But it~ Is a mistaken one since it does IIlOt agree with Gods Will He ond every person must c~m-

liitantly review his judgements to lbe sure that they are correct ones and riot sincere mistaken Utes

A person following his conshy3Cience must be certain He can not act with doubt or uncertainshy~ about the rightness or wrong- mess of an act since he would be Announces Prize acting with the willingness to

takea cpance on being wrong For Best Plan ~ offendi~g God and this is aever~ validmiddot If there is uncer- PITTSinJRqH (NC)-Bishop t8inty the person must seek aid John J Wright of middotPittsburgh III arriving at a sure and correct haS annoutc~d il priz~ of$IOOOtor professor ina p1inor semshy tudgementmiddot - formiddot the architect who submitsmiddoth be I f - inary chapiainof a school dishyThe Christian acts with amiddotcon- ~ e st p an or a Jliljgtr renoshy ocesan chancellor and finally

lllilence ~rned by the prlnciples vation of the sanctuary of St vicar general tilChrlst This is where tliEi Pa~l~ cath~middot~al_h~remiddot~T~~e ~om- The P6pe a~o nam~d Father

aturchsteachers the Pope Iiiid P~tit~o~ IS ~p~nmiddot ~omiddotal archJtec~ Bienvenido TudtiJdto be auxil- a message toAfrica and a mes ishops ~nfer middotthe pi~ture to wl~hlD ~e bound~~l~~s~f the iary bishop of Dumaguete in the sage ~lling for peaCe

Illelp men make judgementsmiddot thatmiddot lire guided by Christ Sometimes ~ese j~dge~eptsgo a~intitmiddotnat-middot lIIIa1 inclinations and tendencies md this has always been thedif-

~ti~ty of ~ing a Christian-- Ghrist demands much of His llmiddotowmiddotmiddotermiddots middot IIIU

At present Catholics are askshyiDg tlie Pope to make a morai judgement about birth control d especlmiddotallymiddot the PlmiddotUmiddot Some_lire castigating him for not givshy g a qulck declslon or else they lliie telling people to forget about llrim and to make their own adgeme tsmiddot th ttmiddot w- n m e ma er The Pope in order to make a ilecision must make it on the basis of facts Scientists must provide him with the facts and In this matter there is much that k~epinglVith the general lin~s sition in favor I)f open housing complex The Pope has asked and is still asking theologians to evaluate the scientific facts in 4he light of Christian principles Not all moral issues are simple And then the Pope will apply the principles to the facts and 1ril1 make a decision about the morality of the matter

This will guide the Catholic in fllorming his conscience -- in arshyriving at a judgement that is sipcere that is the correct orie at lS artmiddot d t d ce am JU gemen anthatmiddot is Christian

K of C Convention 51ated for Houston

lAN MARCOS (NC) The

1970 national convention of the ~ights of Columbus will be held in Houston it was an-Bounced here at a conference of Texas officers of the interna- _ tional fraternalorder

The announcement of the seshylection of Houston for the con- v~ntion which will be held in

be different These were among questions discussed by a capacity audience at the second in a series on Christian Morality sponsored by the parish council of Holy Name Church Fall River Sparked by Sisshy

John AIIcIa SUS Cter some 30 people from all parts of themiddot Diocese viewed the film The Detached Amerishycans then broke into small groups for buzz sessions

Thesis of the film was that Americans wont become in volved with each other It dra- matically pointed its message with the true story of Kitty

Genovese murdered on a New York Street while 38 of her neighbors watched ffom winshy

bull dowS-o--and did nothing Also depicted were amarried

couple talkingto each other with neither really listening a student going thriugh school as on an assembly line with his sole goal the position he could

hope for as a college graduate and various other examples of non-involvement

What is life worth if we do not give it away questioned Harry Reasoner at the end of the film The Holy Name audishyence agreed that life sbould be

used for others but tended to feel that there wasnt the im-Personalitv in a smailer city

Jthat is found in a large metropshyolis One Sister countered howshyever with stories brought to

h t htschool by children s e aug This is right in Fall River she stressed Others cited examshypIes of personal involvement in affaIrs of others but agreed that much more could and

Pope I~aul Names Two Aluxiliaries VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VImiddot hail named Msgr Jose T Sanchez to be auxiliary bishop of Caceres in the Philipshypines He takes the titular See of Lesvi

Msgr 5anlhez was vicar genshyeral of Legazpi at the time of his nomination

He was born March 17 1920 atPandan in the Legazpi dioshycese He completed his philoshysophical and ordinary theologishycal studies at the diocesan semshyinary and obtained a licentiate in theology at the University of St Thomas in Manila He was ordained Marc~ 12 1946 and then worked as an assistant passhy

Pltts~urgpchap~er9rmiddottl~e Afner- ~ Philippines Father Tudtud who Pope Paul also delivered 264 ~can -Inst~tUtofAlth~te~ts was36ye~~I)]fat ~hcent time ~fsPeeches bull (~~)_(h~ch mclud~~ ~tIePoit~- his noniinatiOJl studied philos- burgb dlO~es~and three adJa-ophy and theology at St Johns

c~nt countIes SeminarY inmiddotBoston Fath~r roseph P- Larkin He was born March 22 1931

eOm~ission chaiIm~nmiddot ili1(I-a at Mabola inmiddotthe Cebu arch~ member of the diQcesan bU~lll- diocese He worked as assistant - bullbull

iIg commissligtn~ said the pur- pastor Editor ltit Cebus Caiholic pose of thereiiovlition is to pro weekl~ and finally pastor of the ville a ~mQte suitable sanctu- Church of thE Blessed Sacrashy

ary setting fof the liturgical re- inent in Cebu In addition atf orms Qrought into beingmiddot by the time of his nomination he Vatican Council II was vice-superior of the Misshy

Father Lmiddotai-kir said because slon Society of the Philippines the cathedral must architectu-middot r~lly and liturgically allow for Issues Sttement both episcopal mdparish ser-- U

vices ~~any structurai cihimge O H R h offers a unique chalienge to the n umalu ig ts designer~ and provision for the LA CROSSE (NC)-Tbe La

new liturgy must be made in Crosse diocese has taken a poshy

and spirit 01 the existing struc- integrated arid ildequate educashy t4re tion fair employment and the

- defense of the rights of minorshyities

Christians and J~ws Bishop Frederick W Frekshying of the Wisconsin diocese

Honor Clergymen and the diocesan central com-NEW YORK (NC)-Clergy- mission approvedmiddot apmiddot officiai

men from thefour major faiths statem~nt titled Human Reshyhave been honored here by the lations in the Diocese of La National Coiuerence of Chris- Crosse

tians anltt Jews The statement was prepared

the third week of August was the practice has spread middotto a made by Dr Josepb G Murphy number of other cities hesaid of La Marque a member of the interrelgious understanding hasmiddot boara- of- directors fortbe Cathprogressed tremendously middotiIi reshyeticmiddot meDs oganization middotc~nhyearsbull

-

Tbe clergymeri cited for by the subcommission of human relations of the diocesan cornshycourageous leadership in intershymissionon social action and apshy

creedal relations were proved by both before submisshy Rev Dr ~ohn C Bennett sion to the central commissiollll

president of Union Theological ) in January Seminary

Father Robert I Gannon SJ president emeritus of Fordham CONRAD SEGUIN University

Bishop Silas of the GreekOrshy BODY COJMPANY thodox archdiocese of Nortb and Aluminum or Steel South America 944 Countr Street

Samuel D Leisdorf New NEW BEDFORD MASSYork philanthropist pointed out

wy 2-6618that the NCCJ firstmiddot honored reshyligious leaders of four faiths in September -1966 Noting that

should be done by individuals parishes and municipaiities

There were no solutions ofshyfered to the problems posed bythe film We dont expect to have answers to these quesshytions warned Sister John Alicia at the beginning of the program They are too big for us The film WltlS strictly on the

human level and this was pointed out in one group No one can solve all problems it was agreed but surely each Christian canmiddot trust the Holy Spirit to lead him to the probshylems he is equipped to do someshything about no matter how small

There was another point on whichmiddot everyohe in the audience was in enthusiastic agreement that there be more such eveshynings as the one sponsored by Holllgt Namemiddot

Vatmiddotn Report~lIo

Continued from Page One two encyclicals The Developshymiddotment of Peoples and Priestly Celshyibacy four motu proprios inshyeluding one creating central a lay council and the Papal Comshymission on International Justice anp Peace and another restorshying the permanerit diacol1ate treeapostolic constitutions inshyelUding one reshaping the

Churchs c~iitral administlatioii two apostolic exhortations one apostolic letter and 78 other Wessagesmiddotand letterS inclQding

He reeeived eight ehiets Of state including U SPresident Lyndon B Johnson and United Nations Secretary General U T~ant and gave 16 audiences to

th lmiddottmiddot I0 er men 10 ~ 1 lca life in cluding U SVi~ President Hushy~rt H Humphrey Republican presidential hopeful Richard M N d N Ixon an ew Yorks Sen Robert F Kennedy

He received visits from four delegations of Orthodox churCh men including Orthodox Ecushymenicai Patriarcp Athenagoras I of Constantinople besides visit shying Patriarch Athenagoras in ~ tanbul

The book covering last yearli activities of the Holy See conshysists of 1680 pages plus about 2(10 photographs

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Bishop John J Wright hasestablished a committee 1Jl)take a complete look at Oaampshy

olie education in the PittsburpD lOcese

The aim is fc dedde wha~ 1shyd t to tak tbe ~

lrec Ion e Dedecade for the best education of

all Catholics young and oldThe committee will evaluate all present Catholic educationshygrade and high schools eo egesConfraternity of Christian Doeshytrine classes adult education and other programs

The surveyors wiU 117 to deshyvise a plan based oa mstinl and potential resources in facll-Hies funds and Staff to guide the dioceses educational efforlll for the next 10 years or more

May Be FaI-lleaehiDg Among ideas eXpected to be

examined in the evaluation are proposals by some to cut back on Catholic schools or even til phase them out in place of an expanded adult education proshygram

Named head of the committee of educators priests and lay professionals is Father Vernon Gallagher CSSp former presishy

deht of Duquesne University here now serving as an official of the Holy Childhood Associashytion He also is a former proshyvincial of the Holy Gbost Fa~ ers eastern province

The committee Will be emshypowered to call before it di shyocesan officials to hold publlc meetingshire staff ~ring in exshyperts ThedioCege will finance the work

The committee Win make spe- eific recommendations to BishoP Wright after the study which 18 expected to take at least a yearbull

-Results are expected to have ~ar-reaching implicatiou fOr Catholic education here

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Two Unbeoten league Play f1fE ANCHOR-Diocese oTtall River-Ihurs feb 29 1968 19

Coach Says Sault Complete BallPlayerCape Cods NausetCompiles SMTB Playmaker Is Former Coyle $trBest Over-All Court Mark

BY JOE MIRANDA By PETER BARTEK

An excellent hall handler and Norton High Coach team player Is how Pat Sault of

Taunton is described by his Eleven of tile 12 aa-ea e1ubs with the best records in coach Phil Wetterland of the

their respective leagues are among those who will parshy Sou the a s t ern Massachu- setts Technogical Institute Inshyticipate in the March Tech basketball tournament in Boston stitute in North DartmouthFairhaven High of the Oapeway Conference and Nauset Sault a 19-year old freshman

of the Cape amp Island loop are is a former Coyle High hoopshythe only all-winning league a single league game while two ster who played four years for

went doWn to defeat In every the Warriors his final two underaggregations from this area encounter In which they were coach Jim Lanagan on the varshyin the Hub championship Involved Almost two-thirds 02 sityelimination tourney while Dartshy the Southeastern Mass teams

D)Quth High is the only one of Teaching CareerfinIshed wIth a 500 average OIlthe tOp dozen better Although young Pat has al shya 70 per cent coQlbines WIth

WIth 12 triumphs in the Cape ready made plans for the future league record amp Island competition Nauset which Include finishing his edshywhich failed to Regional also achieved the best ucation and pursuing a teachershyqualify an inshy over-all record winning 16 of coaching career dication t hat 11 encounters The Cape Cod Sault has not yet chosen a non-league school will be shooting for the major in college but according competition selshy Class D Tech title to his parents he is very much dom jeopardizes interested in teaching historyNew Bedford High 15 and and coaching They feel he willthe ultImate one in the Greater Boston Subshy be good at both as he alwaysgoal of most urban league finished with anschools Actual- Peter devoted his spare time to helpshy

over-all 17-2 mark for the Winshyly 311 per cent Bartek ing the younger neighborhoodter The Crimsons 937 average boys understand athletics moreof the 35 Southeastern Massashy captured its leagues pennant flag thoroughlychusetts school teamsmiddot have The Crimson Whalers are now Pat is the oldest son of Mrqualified for the Tech title play poised to annex the No 1 State and Mrs Charles A Sault and)let none managed an over-all honor by clinching the top one of four children A sisterundefeated season ranking Class A division in the Annette is a senior at BishopThree area clubs failed to win Boston title tourney Cassidy High James Michael

and Cheryl grammar school Representatives in Three B~ackets students at Mulcahey Schoof in

Taunton Fairhaven and Holy Family FamilYhas been eliminated in The family resides at 85 Mershy

HIgh of New Bedford aiming the Lawrence Catholic tourney rill Avenue In Taunton and are for the Class C Tech crown both Southeastern Mass does not members of St Pauls Parish fInished wIth an over-all 16-2 have one club among the Tech

Wetterland Commentsmark The latter Is still smart- Class B participants but th~re ing from its cliff-hanging defeat will be five area combinations Wetterland was high in his at the hands of Xavier in the -includIng Fairhaven and Holy praise of his five foot 11 inch State Catholic tourney Bill Family-in the Class C play and guard who tips the scales at Walshs two-pointer from the three-including Nauset-in the 160 pounds ~ssesses good speed floor which many thought Class D Hub competition and is a key in the Corsairs fast

meant victory at Lawrence was The other Class C contestants break offense nu1llfied by a travelling viola- patterns when SMTI is wurkshy a rest he should be in top conshySault lllsed strictly with thetion which cost the loss ofthe are Case High of Swansea Nar- iilg too quickly and making dition for the 1968-69 campaignvarsity was gaining valuablebasket resulting in a one-~Jnt ry co-champions Oliver Ames Dlistakes Sault gaIned his court savvy1 f tb of North Easton runners-up in experience and developing rapshy

The SMTI mentor continued from Lanagan at Coyle wheretiOs~~ e Narragnnsett~a~ theHockomock circuit and Den- bUy whep a knee Injury slowed he iii the complete ball player hemiddotstarted in his juJ)ior and senshyDis-Yarmouth of Cape Cod see his progress midway through

Durfee of Fall RIver and ond pI fi ish in tho C the campaiiPt but Wetterland noting that he can shoot but is Jor lieasons and was a Vital co Bishop Stang mgh of North ace n er e ape most --content setting Up his in the Warriors successduring DartmQutb are the other two middotNausetwill be joined by Mar- has turned in some excellent efshy teammates for easy pblnts He Ioth years I J

way loop said despite the handicap Pat

Is a team player and always sacshy As ~ Coyle High fr~hmanarea Class A representatives inmiddot thas VIneyard and Norton mib forts in a most successful SMTI rifices himself to help the club Pat was a member XJtb~ yearshythe Tecb toutnament ~e Fall in the Class D bracket The season

Sault possesses a good atti shy lings h09P team and al~Q~ parti shyRiver Hilltoppers willbe out Islanders finished second to Naushy Defensively Sault is cnitshytude is a tough competitor and cipated in track By hihSOphoshyto make amends for their nose- set in the Cape amp Island league standIng Offensively Sault is one of the players Wetterland is more year Saultcopfjned his dive finish in the Bristol COUl)ty while Norton was second in the the teams playmaker ana quarshyeounting on 1to help SMTI gain athlettc talents to basketbjlll andloop whIle Stang ~ke Ho17 Tri~Valley Conference terback 8Dlall college recognition in the turned in a cODlJPenlla))le acshyfuture Teallll Player coun~ o~ himself

Ifere~s How They Did hi LiBogue Play Played for Lanagan Sault also represented stWetterland said his outstandshyThere is doubt about his the hardwood

he following are the league 21 Bishop Feehan 7_1 ing worth to the Corsairs comes no Pauls on in the eourage said the Corsairs skipshy Taunton CYO and in the annual from the fact that he can slowrecords of the 35 Southeastem Msgr Coyle 7-1 after painful knee Easter tournament He playeddown the offense and set up per even a

Mass teams Ta~ton 7-7 injury Sault continued to jpve four years of Litue JeagueM N B Vocational 6-8 his all and attended every pracshy Baseball and one season in theK of C Masons1 Fairhaven 14-0 25 DIman Vocational 5-9 tice The injury has slowed him Pony League prior to ~ntetmamp

Nauset 12-0 Msgr Prevost 5-9 visibly but after the season and Coyle Higa 3 New Bedford 15-1 27 SandwIch 4-8 To Cooperate4 Holy Family 13-1 28 Nantucket 3-9

NOTRE DAME (NC) - lfashyCase 13-1 29 Old Rochester 4-10

30 tlonal leadellS of the Scottish6 Oliver Ames 12-2 West~rt 3-11 Bite Masons and the Knights ~oll another7 Marthas Vineyard ~ 31 Barnstable 2-12

of Columbus anno~ced memshy8 Bishop Stang 10~ 32 Dighton-Rehoboth 1-13 strike on~rs of their organizations wU1Dartmouth 104 33 Bourne 0-14 work together on domestic andDennis-Yarmouth 10-4 Chatham 0-12 the enerlY international problems faciolaquoDurfee 10-1 North AUleJooro 1-14

the nation12 Norton 105 you get George A Newbury soveshy13 Attleboro 9-5 Minister Officiates reign grand commander 01 from14 Harwich 7-5

Scottish Rite Masons In theProvIncetown 7-5 a slice ofDn Cathclic Church northern jurisdiction of the US18 Seekonk 8-6 MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-A Lu- and John W McDevitt supremeSomerset 86

theran mInister officiated at the knight of the Knights of ColumshyFalmouth 8-6 marriage of his son in Holy Cross bus made the announcementMansfield 8-6 Catholic church here at a dinner here s~nsoredWareham 8-6

Married were James H Graf jointly by the Masonic Lodge 29 L th and the Knights of Columbus

a u eran and CalTon Ann council in South Bend Episcopalian Rite Gutwinski 25 a Catholic The ceremony was rformed - Both praised the work of Fa-MINNEAPOLIS (NC)- Archshy ther John A OBrien of the

bishop Leo Binz and Coadjutor Grapoundfs fltthell the Rev Paul L University of Notre Dame for Archbishop ~ PY1)1e of the Graf pastor of Holy Trinity r better understanding among the Cafllolic archdIoceses of St Paul theran church two groups Minneapolis were present in the Permission for the Rev Gmt Father Theodore M Hesshysan~lary of St Marks Episcoshy to officiate at his sonB wedding burgh CSC president of the pal cathedral here for the inshy was granted by theSacred Con- University of Notre Dame said stallation of Bishop Philip F gregation for the Joctrine of This nIght marks a great step McNarry as coadjutor bishop of the Faitlh inl lWme in answer to ll forward and reflects the new the Epi6copal diocese of Minneshy J)etition by Archbishop Leo BiDz ~enical spirit which is unishysota of~ ~~-M~eapotis iing ~ople long separated-

PAT SAULT

c

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bull THE ANCHOR Dayton University Thurs Feb 29 196a Brief Religious on Ecumenism

Selects Advisors SOUTH ORANGE (NC) meanitigful dialogue should not tended not to lead to compro- DAYTON (NC)-An ll-mem-

Named resident Some 1000 mms and Brothers be confused with monologueshy mise but to conyergence ber advisory board of six stushyservfng in tli~ Newark archdi~shy or confrontation He added We talk now of our common dents two faculty members andSANTA CLARA (NC)-The cese were briefed on the basic we must be willing to be pershy belilefs he said not to com- three representatives of theboard of trustees of the Univershy principles of ecumenism in a suaded-we need an open mind promise each others faith but in community has been establishedlllity of Santa Clara has named program sponsored by the Newshy to seek out the truth wherever the hope that at some point in for the Office of Human Relashylrather Thomas D Terry SJ ark Archdiocese Commission for it might be shy the future we will converge tions at the University oJ Dayshy35th president of the Jesuit unishy Ecumenical Affairs

Ifersity Father Terry who sucshy Discussing the difficulties of As an example he pointed to tornSpeakers at the session ineeeds Father Patrick Donohoe establishing Christian-Jewish the wide divergence of views The board under the direcshySeton Hall University includeSJ recently appointed Califorshy dialogue he said we Christians regarding (he Mass and the Eu- tion of Charles Hirt director ofDr Leonard Swidler of Templeaia provinCial af the Society of are responsible for 2000 years charist that existed between the Office of Human RelationsUniversity Philadelphia aridJIesus has been academic vic~ of anti-Semitism and now_ we Martin Luther and the Council will be responsible for estabshyFather Thomas M McFadden ofpresident af Loyola University must overcome our mutual disshy of Trent Then he cited the re- lishing policy making programthe Brooklyn dioceseLos Angeles for the last year trust before dialogue can be cent statement on the Eucharist recommendations helping to

lllI1d a half Previous to that Swidler said dialogue with fruitful issued by Lutherans and Catho- alleviate campus racial probshyIIlIather Terry was dean of the others must be preceded by an lics to show how much closer lems and drawing up proposall ltWllege of arts and sciences at examination of Catholic attishy Father McFadden said diashy the two bodies have come since for implementation Santa Clara tudes In addition he said a logue among Christians is inshy that time

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Wonderland to 10 PM

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Page 16: 02.29.68

16 THE ANC )~-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Feb 29 1968

New St LouimiddotsArchbi~hcp

PrOmilnent in Ecumen~$m Archbishop Jonh J Oarberry of St Louis well known

~()ng Oatholic leaders after 31 career that has taken him from a seminary classroom iii his natiYe Brooltl~ NCY~ to one of the nations MOse ~mpOOtallt archdiolaquoese1l is pershy

laaps evenmiddot better ~ownmiddot fJDlong Americas nom-Cafu6shylie religious leaders fon hisl work in ecumenism Cllair Ilillao of the Bishqps Commi~ee-Ibr Ecumenical and Intenrefi shyaious Affairs since th~ resigna Qion of Baltimores Lawrence Cardinal Shehan in November 11965 Bishop Carberry has au I9gtCrvised the massive catholic illllvoIvement in ecumeniCal ac-middot lli1 vities

He outlined his own entIliusishyeuroISm for ecumenism in a speech ~iven in January 1966 tolmemshy~rs of the Ohio (Protestant) lPastors Convention wheDI he aid

Common lHeritagel For years the general policY

(llln the Catholic Church) had ~en to stress the great chasm

which divides the euroatliolic Church and other Christian ehurches No effort was made m would seem on our part to Illave a meeting of minds A otudy of documents would seem ltD reveal that while we wera lbrayerfully disposed to) the ltecumenical movemerit nevershy1lheless the Catholic Church did lliittleto foster it

Bishop Carberry told the conshyvention that through the grace 0f God and the leadership or Pope John XXIII we became aware of the common heritage Which is ours

Has Great lHope

We began to realiZe~ how 18aptism unites us in ChriSt to Gee that the divinity of Christ is illhe cornerstone of all Christianshynay we began to real1ze the oommon treasure which we llnave in the Sacred Scripturesllikewise the common bondshyVhich exists with us in the

1lIIlissionary activities at the Church

There is great hope Bishopltearberry said that mrougb ~ialogue through prayerbull 1llluough respect for each others wiewpoint the grace of God may (i)Ile day in Gods divine provishy4llence bring about the- unitY which Christ prayed for at themiddot Last Supper

More recently members of ltOhios Protestant cliurches llllamed the bishop as OniosPbsshyoLr of Pas-tors the fl rst timmiddote hat bull

Grants Permis$ioll~

for SaturdayMass) SAN ANGELO (NC)-BiShop

Thomas TSchoepe of San Angelo lllas announced that the diocesan request for the Saturday Mass flaculty hagt been granted In the future the Sunday Mass 00shyltigation may be met by at shy~ndance at a Saturday aftershyllloon or evening Mass The pershylll1ission has been granted on an ~xperimental basis by the Vati shylttan for a period of five years

The diocese of San Argelo is 1lI Texas missionary diocese the bishop explained and there are areat dis tan c e s between churches and few priestswmiddot oerve the faithfuh ManYi ~llieSts

have two or morlt8 churclies tJ lllttend and will Be able- tQ give more time to the smaller ~urches with the Satucday Mass faculty Bishop TschoePe pointedi 9Ut Chat the faculty has been giVeth bull the whole diocese not just Ibo individual churches or areas Pastors who wish to make Usemiddot aJl the faculty must make formal application to the chancery ofshyillce

a~ statewide Protestant onganiza tion has presented its highest awa-rd 10 a eatho1iir clet1gymam A pla~J1e symbollZiDg the a~adi was~ glv~~ to the blShp at ~~~ Fenw~nIP Blmq~et on the Olbo PastollSgt ~onventi~m

DI~USS P~tilems U~dev Blsli~p~rlgte~rysl~d

er~hlPl laquoatholic ~elegations have ~et wl~h ~fflC1Blsbull and

tleolbglan~ of other- ChrIs~an churchesmiddot to dlSCUSS ecumemcal pooble~s r~~gmg from the pr~sshyence of Christ Ill tlie ~ucharlst to th-c nature of we prJes~ood

Before ta~mg cliarge of th Golumbusmiddot dIOcese on March 25 1965) Bishop euroarbery liadmiddot selved asmiddot coadjutor bishop and then bishop of Eafayette Ind Born in Brooklynj N~ Y Tulymiddot 31 1904 Bishop Carberry studied for the priestlioodi at Brooklyns Cathedral College or the Iin-middot maculate laquool1ception from 191ll to 1924 and at the North Amershyican College in Rome from 1924 to 1930

Oldained inmiddot Rome in 1929 tne bishop sfudiea canon law at the Catholic University of America in Washington D G and taught at Immaculate Conception Semshyinarl until Tune 1935 when he went on ldan to the diocese of Trenton N J He returned to BrooklYn in 1940 where hemiddotreshymained until being named coshyadjuror bishop of Lafayettemiddot in 19651

~~~5IiTI$ nUilft~U[jTIfi)

Ccopy]JJi]dIT [Qjfr[~lcopy[j

CHICAGO (NC) - Tohn A McDllrmott has changed me mindL-he1li remain as execu middot tivedirector of the Chicago Cat1iolic Interracial Council

The veteran council worKer last October announced he would leave the office to beshy

come Mridwest regional- ciVil rightsdirector for the ms De-middotmiddot partment of Health Enucation andi Welfare

A number of problems hava arisen since th-e announcement on my appointmentt last 0ctbBerwhichl caused me to have serl

ousmiddot second l thoughts MilDer moW said iil his decision to re~ maio with the ltlrc He citedi m1 patrtcular~ personnel cutliaclts in HEW wJiich woulli Iiinit the Midwest negional operatiiul

fo accepting McDermotits de cisionj HEW the government agency requestedi liiin to serve asmiddot ai special chdl- rights consuU ant while working for the CIC and he a~reed

IIlt a letter to the Dutch biINumber of Fllel71ch ops members of Michaels re-

gion asked for curbs on the nlgtshySeminarians Dllops tions Catliolic liberals The PARIS (Ne)-Thenumber of meeting also registered disap-

French seminarians h~s dropped proval of the new Dutch Cateshyby about 180 a year for the last chism~ claiminJ~ that it does nocent four years according to 1iigures represent true Catholic teach~ provided in amiddot press conference Michaels Lel~ion is considered by Bishop Jean Sauvage 011 ampshy even more CJlnservative thlW necy member of the bishops Confrontation another Catholic commission on the clergy and conservative organization Conshyseminaries frontations complaints about

For the 1967~68 sc1iolastic the content of the new Dutch year the tdtal number of sliumiddot catechismmiddot are believed to hae dents iil major seminaries m been instTllmentai in having tbe~ FhlOce is 43583 comparedl with book exltlmined by the VatiCan~lJ

4536 for the previous year Doctrinal Congregation 4722 )n 1965-66 and 4953 in 1964-65

Moreover in France at pres- Approves Agency eol ttiere are aBout 200 adults LQND()N (NC)--Jolin Cardl~

WIIO are preIgtaring for tOe ~er nal Heenan of Westminster liJaa manent diaconate as restored by approveq establishment ocf 1m the Second Vatican Council The agency to help priests who want first ordinations to this permashy 10 leave the priesthood znGl nent diaconate could take place nuns who want to leave the this year religious life

1P~alrn le~tUlm~1rn~~G~

$1lll~7 GG1l I1DtJ Sim LONDON (NC)-A study on

the problems of ecumenism in Great Britain will be made by a joint working group of the British Council of Churches and the Caholic Church with the results to be reported next Autumn

The study was planned at a meetingmiddot held atmiddot the Vita et Pax Benedictine I~onvent and attendshyed by nine Catholic representashytives an- 14 representatives of the BeC -

The projected study is exshypected to analyze such topics an the extent I)f cooperatiGn beshytween Catjwlics and members of the BeC the dialogUes bemg held theologicaL differences and the non~theological obstacles to closer unitygt

Auxiliary BishoJ- Langton Fox of lfenevia Wales and

Auxiliary Bishop Basil Chrisshytopher Butlelr OSB of Westshyminster headed tOe CatOolie delegation at the meeting

~(i]$~~rlaquolJpoundfr1) A$1k lMl~illlW) ~ltoy~ IHh~)~Dnd

U11RECHm (NC) -Michaels Legion an organization of Dutch Catholic~ uaditionalists has sent a telegram to Pope Pault H ungintg him tD protect essential orthodoxy and to S81fe tne DutchChurch~

At 3- meeting here attended b~ some 600) Catholic conserva tives led by Eouis Knuvelder the legion condemned the Dutch Catholic daily press the~ Dutch Gatholic tellvisioncompany and the countrys Catholic radio station for being too progressive

Father Baum Regards Ecumenical Center Closing Sign of Success TORONTO (NC)-The closing gian Charles Davis-A Quesshy

of the Center for Ecumenical tion of Conscience Davis book Studies at St Michaels Collegegt exmiddotplains his renunciation of the here is a sign of the centersmiddot euroatholic priesthood and the success Church and asks Catholic theo-

This is the viewpoint of Father logians who intend to stay in GregllllY Ballm O~SA founder the~ eurohurch to reply to several of tJie centeI1 who has an- t1iaologjcal points nQunlaquoed that it will b~ Closed BelUef Unbelief

inl JUne Thats what Im doing FatlieJJBaum-explalnedthalhe Fatller Baum said His book a

founded the centeJ ill 19631 when replYJ to Davis questions conshyecum~llusrn may have~ been a ceming the credibility of the new Idea Its purpose lie- s~ld Church in todays world will be was to promote ecumemcall called The Credibility of the studies at St Michaels Church Today It will be pub-

Taday he neports ecumen mal stlUdi~s at S1l Michaels are a reality- 1lli~ schGolls theology depal1tment 18 fully mte~ ~thl Protestant and ~gIIcan lfupartmentsmiddot at the-Umversity

of Toronto [hUB lie said~ the eC-lmenical

centell has fulfilled its purpose Such fUlfillment he said wmiddot

common in academic circles where there has been an ecushymenlical reVOlution For exam pIe ne said where once som1shyone might have nied to foster ecumenism through building an ecumenical library it is now impossible tq build a theological lilgtrary without its being ecushymenical

Need flDZ Programsmiddot Father Baum added that he

does not believe tJie ecumenical movement has reached fruitien in circles outside the academia world~ He said that he sees a real need pound01 formal ecumenmiddot ical programs on the parish and on all levels of the Churdl which have not yet been reached He a150 disclosed that perSOll ally he lias moved Gn frOlll ecumenism to new fields of thought

The AuIDlStinian has written a new book in answer to the latest by the English theolo-

U[[$ W)jf[rll IfSMsjIID~

rnliJ kUD-WIh ol 1TW[jiJ KETTERING (Neuro) - The 1-7shy

member parish board 00 St Charles Church~ here unanishymousll1 adopted a resolution 5 favor Qf open nousing legiSlashytion for thiS (1)hio suburban community

The parish boards action S~ poIied- unequivocallymiddot passage 0amp an open housing ordinance in themiddot virtuallr aUi-wltite commw-middot nity 00l more than 600001 res dents Tames J Gilvay and Peter Donanue attOrneys anlL pariBhlmiddot boarc members pre sentedthe resolutJoDj wliiclli tbok- themiddot position that the ghett) condit1ollG ~Ilichl Negroes enshycure ilm nearby DaYton are mshyiuriOwil to the entire commUlshyDitTmiddot

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Aftei tee closing of the Center for Ecumenical Studies Father Baum will stay on at St MishychaeFs au a professor of theolshyogy He is also planning another ~~

It will concentrate on the idea oi God in modern thought and will be a clear sign that Father Baum has moved away from his prime in terest in ecumen- ism

Born of Jewish parents in Berlin and reared as an agnostic Father Baum said he has now turned his whole thought to the study of belief and unbelief He will record his findings in me book he is now writing

~oh~ laquotmm~~litl ~Od1[9)

[~ Ao~ i N~regIJ$ CAMDEN (NC) - Bishop

Tames L Schad administrator of the Camden diocese was =ong citizens honored here foT their efforts in furthering the interests of the Negro comshymunity

Bishop Schad who has been active in community action projects such as the War on Poverty committees was pre sented a scroll during a proshygram sponsored by the Tenth Street Baptist church here in observance of the 43rd annual Negro History Week This year marks the first time a Romaa Catholic prelate has been so honored

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17 Oppose Church Clergy Participation in Politics

By Jsgr George G Higgins

The New RepubJic-whIch in this writers judgment W one CYl the be3t of Ameriros weekly journals of opinion especially hl it3 arovezoage cfcurrent economic and political developments----thinks that the time has com~ for anti shyVietnam clergymen aul1ayshy Be that as it maY I am ioshymen to translate tu1eir cVZl clined to think that the editors m0r81 indignation oveuror Vietshy of the French periodical Inforshynam into effective political mations Catholique InternashyDction inasmuch as this is the tionales make considerably only way to effect long-term more sense than the editors cOf ehanges in the The New Republic 011 this issue policies of this of clerical involvement in the country So far so-called politics of peace as laymen are Though they are vigorously concerned this and unqualifiedly opposed ~il

would seem to tW war in Vietnam and like be a self - evishy tWeditors ()f The New Repubshydent proposition li( clearly recognize that the L1s perfectly establishment of leace in the obvious t hat world is a political problem concerned layshy which calls for the active mshymen ou~ht to volvement ofChcistians as ~-en

translate their as all other men of good will moral indi~nashy they do not think that themiddot tion over Vietnam - or any cleJgy who are responsible foy other significant issue of public the unity of the Church should policy-into effecti-re poiiticltll be expected to take on the role

of party politiciansaction Given the fact that their pubshySound Tradition

lication ~CI has been oJe 01 tileOn the other hnd I aJl Evt most outspoken European critics

sure understandthat I fully or of U S involvement in Vietnam completely agree vitb The New and one of the most vigorousRepublic when it says that fue advocates middotof a politics of peaceclergy ought tncv likewise their warning against the parshy

Traditionally a the NR itself ticipation of the clergy in parshypvints out the clergy-in this tisan politics is highly signifi shycountry at least - have rnied cant and deserves to be taken amy from such participation very seriously (Christians and

AJJ a long-time subscriher to the Struggle ior Peaee InforshyT~2 New Republic I had Dlshy mations Catholique Internashyways been under the imp~ssio~ tionales Jan 15 1965)that its editors thought that en Fl lialgs lrindplebalance this was a sound tradishy

Those American Catholicstion Apparently lwweer I was who may happen to have a speshy

cial interest in the pros and consmistaken in this regard fora of this highly controversial issuerecent Nell Republic editorial will also want to read whatnoten with satisfaction that Hans Kung has to say about itAJlerican clerGYmen now apshy

pear to be ready in large numshy in his forthcoming bookThe Churchbers to get involved at a preshy

cinct level and to play C1l Father Kung has lectured exshyactivist role in both parties tensively throughout the United (Clergy in Politics The New SUItes in recent years and is

currently with us again as a visshyRepublic Feb 17 1968) iting professor at Union Theoshy

QuestioIS Meaning logical Seminary in New York What does this mean in pracshy Seen in the light of the Gosshy

tical terma Does it mean that pel le writes in his new book ministers rabbis and priests the relntionshipof the Church should endorse ltor oppose) parshy to the world contains only one ticular candic1ates fqr politiell essential aspect its ministry 10 office starting at the precinct the world level Does it mean that they Ministry does not mean raisshythemselves should run for ofshy ing ones voice or putting an -oar flee if only as a last reiort in all secular qIes1ions middotof ecoshy

If so does it also mean that nomic political sodaI middotcultural other clergymen should run artistic and scientific life against them if they happen to T1e Churchclmnot solve disagree with what they stand the greJt problems of the ()rld for Or does it mean toot only neiih2r the problell1of hunger those clergymen who are anti shy nor that of the populaticn nor Administration should get inshy that of war nor thlt oanonFmshyT-olved at a precinct leel and ity of power Dor that -of race play an activist role within hatred What the Church both parties can do can be expressed quite

Sicnifieani WarnlDI simply in one phrase it must I have raised these questions exist for the world

lot to make light of The New ACrefS With lFTK1mgRepublics editorial CD the subshyject under discussion but Anyone who hal ever baG the merely to BUggest that clerical pleasure of meeting Faiher involvement ill partisan politics Kung middotor is familiar wi1bhis over the issue of Vietnam is at writings will know witheut best a rather tricky business being told that be is not a hawk and will almost inevitably lead and that he is cot advocating to certain consequences which a policy of Christian withdrawal upon further reflection even the from the world editors of The New Republie middotOn the eontrary be stroniJy might eonceivably wish tc foreshy favors lhe all-ltltit involvement tall of Christians in temporal affairs

and notably iii the ~lities Of peace

To Speak in Boston Nevertheless be does net Rev Anthony T Padovano think that the institutienal

Church-and its clerical minisshySTD theology professor at ters-should pretend that theyImmaculate Conception Semishy

nary Darlington N J will speak have all the answers tc the problems of the worldia the Christian Culture lecture

aries sponsored by the Paulist And neither eoes be thinkshyFathers at 815 Wednesday night if I read him correctly-that tbe March 6 in John Hancock Ha)) clergy in ~ exeTeise of their Boston Tickets are available mission of peace should get inshyfrom 5 Park Street Boston volved in partisan jl)olities Nor 02108 do L

WOKS LIKE FUN Yes but listen to what it requires The Georgetown University erew keeps in s-hape with ~

AM ~i~enies in the gym foHow~ by a two-niile run UJl and do-Wll Observatory Hil~on tJhecampus Its cold up there said Dave Harris a member of the lightweifht crew but by then youlewtired you do-nt care NC Phottgt

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 ~ 968

Prayer for Peace To Cm(O)se Games

MEXICO CITY (NC) - All ecumenical prR)er for peaCf) service is being planned for the end of the 19th Olympic Gam~

here next October The sponsor of the service w shy

the Ecumenical Commission fcrr Religious Services (ECRS) fe the Olympic Games The comshymission is composed of 73 ChrisshytiRn and Jewish leaders in thi~

city Promment spiritual leadshyers will be invited to speak

At middot8 meeting here the rn ECRS spiritual leaders discusse~

the facilities for athletes and visitors to attend their varioU7J reUgious services

iI1be iMC)Cican government hw aPPI)o~ed ECRS plans for the ~ction of at least tw- JaIige bullclings as nondenonYshynational chapels

The original pIlan toeonstrl1ell one large church has been IcHsshytlarded The present plan is build one large building with no religious I)rnamentllJtion of alltl7 kind on the outskirts of the Olympic Villa and a similar Oilif)

on tne outskirts of the Olympze

Project InterracialInterfaith Cooperation Cultural Villa

tin (Re~~(Jtion of CcUege m addition Archbishop MEshymiddotgut Dario MirlllDda y Gomez Gl

1I1IAMI (NC)~When Florida The Rev Edward T Graham Mexico City hBs authorizeQ Memorial College predominant a Baptist minister key person downtown Catholic churches to ly Negro middotliberal arts school is behind the project has had asshy permit non-Catholic services = moved here frOl1l St Augustine sistance from Mrs Athalie their premises if non-Catholie and opens next September the Range Miamis first NeglO City comgregations should request i project will be the result of unshy Commissoioner who is a Cathshyusual interracial and interfaith olic teamwork Organhzet3 rOthEHSIl

The largest single contribll shyNegroeswhites and Chinese tiou of private funds has oome flainirt~ ClI1ter

have joined hands with Cathoshy from a supermarket executive lLOUISVILLE (NC) - TkeIlics Protestants and Jews tv M Austin Davis a Methodist Franciscan Conventional OrdGcontribute money time advice laiamis Catholic Bishop Coleshy has opened a Brothers Trainincand leadership to realize the

manF Carroll is a member vl1 Center here in an attempt to givedevelopment of the college on l the advisory board as is Maushy Brothers three years of active$10 million complex here rice Ferre diocese of Miami lay apostolic work following theirr leader novitiate

RabbiIrving Lehrman presshy Father Sebastian Cunnil1flshyCouncil Seores ident cd the Greater Miami ham OFM director of tlw Rabbinical Association a n 4ll OOlilter said We felt we haCFactory Closing Jewish lay leaders are amoag an cbligation to give our man

LONDON (NC-The impend- active workers oome training outside contam ing elosingof a large industricl $ bull $ an idea of what was neeclshyJilseph Rodriguez of the plant has been criticized by ~ edfromthem in the outside Puerto Rican Democratic ChEb lay -eouncil of Our Lady Of _rl11 In the past he addeeurohas prepared 11 scholarship PieshyGrace parish in southeast Lsnshy we were not fWfilling ~ gram for -the collegedCD DeedS 1d ~veryoneliturgy

The council expressed its deep concern at the recent No Comlmentclosure of factories in middotthis area Completean4 in particular of the impendshy VATICAN (orry (NC)-Ibe ing shutdown of the Associ2ted Vatican had no comment -oJ1 11

ElectricaIIndustries (AEI) plant repolt that ~hbishop Agostincgt BANKING Casaroli secretary for extraershyIt callid upon the governmeJrt dinary ecclesiastical affairs ilf SERVICEand the -ehaiTmanof the oomshy the Papal Secretariat of statepany torevsrse the decision 10 eonterred with Dlembers of ~

c~ don the plant because Of tor BristOl CountyN-orth Vietnamese missi-on iJJthe middotmoral religious and 5Ocial Parisjn lJanuarylt n JUWWampleffeets iCaiJS2a by the ~veshythat Archbishop Casaroli Wallmen1 a1popl1ation absent from the Vatican fOll

Copies ltOf the councils motion several days nlenUy BrjstoICounty were sent 1amp Prime ~1inister

Harold Wilson MiJiister of Trust Company Labor RayJ Gunter President ampf the Board of Trade Douglas Sturteant (

TAUNTO~ MASSJay and company officials iHoOkAlthough the councils action was a surprise to the pastel Ed 1897 IIHE BANJ(ONFather Joseph seally AA ~ uiltl~rs SUppJies JAUNTONGRHNprist sroa that he agreed ith it ftll3 Purchase Street Member 01 Feileral ~

Faiher 8enlly sait[ centbert Aellad iNew Bedford IDsuranee CorporaamptoDJlOt~cteil p01itiealand elaquolshy 996-5661 nomic motions to eome from the council but pointed out You cannot separate Feligimtl from eveJ~ay life

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968 Capacity Audience at Holy Name Parish ~ihss

My Consciesect1ce Discusses The J)etached Americans In Educ~tion Continued from Page One

Do we care -for knowledge

what happens to other people Why do we strive for college educations or for money Are we so anxious to confor~l1 that we never dare to PITTSBURGH

tMrI

~VJI and it must be understood in a

t mear-cu way

A person following his ~con-~ence must be sincere He cannot play games with his mind but must be honest with himself

A person foilowing his con~ liCience must be correct It iSl10t ugh that he sincerely beshy~ Reves that something is good or evil-he must be sure that hiS judgement is a correct one

agrees with Gods view of the matter

Sometimes people make misshytakes in judgement-honest misshytakes to be sure but mistakes iwnetheless The oft-quoted exshyample is that of the African savshyrage deep in the jungle who may be sincerely following his con- ooience when it tells him to kill omd eat his enemy His conshyscience is a sincere one But it~ Is a mistaken one since it does IIlOt agree with Gods Will He ond every person must c~m-

liitantly review his judgements to lbe sure that they are correct ones and riot sincere mistaken Utes

A person following his conshy3Cience must be certain He can not act with doubt or uncertainshy~ about the rightness or wrong- mess of an act since he would be Announces Prize acting with the willingness to

takea cpance on being wrong For Best Plan ~ offendi~g God and this is aever~ validmiddot If there is uncer- PITTSinJRqH (NC)-Bishop t8inty the person must seek aid John J Wright of middotPittsburgh III arriving at a sure and correct haS annoutc~d il priz~ of$IOOOtor professor ina p1inor semshy tudgementmiddot - formiddot the architect who submitsmiddoth be I f - inary chapiainof a school dishyThe Christian acts with amiddotcon- ~ e st p an or a Jliljgtr renoshy ocesan chancellor and finally

lllilence ~rned by the prlnciples vation of the sanctuary of St vicar general tilChrlst This is where tliEi Pa~l~ cath~middot~al_h~remiddot~T~~e ~om- The P6pe a~o nam~d Father

aturchsteachers the Pope Iiiid P~tit~o~ IS ~p~nmiddot ~omiddotal archJtec~ Bienvenido TudtiJdto be auxil- a message toAfrica and a mes ishops ~nfer middotthe pi~ture to wl~hlD ~e bound~~l~~s~f the iary bishop of Dumaguete in the sage ~lling for peaCe

Illelp men make judgementsmiddot thatmiddot lire guided by Christ Sometimes ~ese j~dge~eptsgo a~intitmiddotnat-middot lIIIa1 inclinations and tendencies md this has always been thedif-

~ti~ty of ~ing a Christian-- Ghrist demands much of His llmiddotowmiddotmiddotermiddots middot IIIU

At present Catholics are askshyiDg tlie Pope to make a morai judgement about birth control d especlmiddotallymiddot the PlmiddotUmiddot Some_lire castigating him for not givshy g a qulck declslon or else they lliie telling people to forget about llrim and to make their own adgeme tsmiddot th ttmiddot w- n m e ma er The Pope in order to make a ilecision must make it on the basis of facts Scientists must provide him with the facts and In this matter there is much that k~epinglVith the general lin~s sition in favor I)f open housing complex The Pope has asked and is still asking theologians to evaluate the scientific facts in 4he light of Christian principles Not all moral issues are simple And then the Pope will apply the principles to the facts and 1ril1 make a decision about the morality of the matter

This will guide the Catholic in fllorming his conscience -- in arshyriving at a judgement that is sipcere that is the correct orie at lS artmiddot d t d ce am JU gemen anthatmiddot is Christian

K of C Convention 51ated for Houston

lAN MARCOS (NC) The

1970 national convention of the ~ights of Columbus will be held in Houston it was an-Bounced here at a conference of Texas officers of the interna- _ tional fraternalorder

The announcement of the seshylection of Houston for the con- v~ntion which will be held in

be different These were among questions discussed by a capacity audience at the second in a series on Christian Morality sponsored by the parish council of Holy Name Church Fall River Sparked by Sisshy

John AIIcIa SUS Cter some 30 people from all parts of themiddot Diocese viewed the film The Detached Amerishycans then broke into small groups for buzz sessions

Thesis of the film was that Americans wont become in volved with each other It dra- matically pointed its message with the true story of Kitty

Genovese murdered on a New York Street while 38 of her neighbors watched ffom winshy

bull dowS-o--and did nothing Also depicted were amarried

couple talkingto each other with neither really listening a student going thriugh school as on an assembly line with his sole goal the position he could

hope for as a college graduate and various other examples of non-involvement

What is life worth if we do not give it away questioned Harry Reasoner at the end of the film The Holy Name audishyence agreed that life sbould be

used for others but tended to feel that there wasnt the im-Personalitv in a smailer city

Jthat is found in a large metropshyolis One Sister countered howshyever with stories brought to

h t htschool by children s e aug This is right in Fall River she stressed Others cited examshypIes of personal involvement in affaIrs of others but agreed that much more could and

Pope I~aul Names Two Aluxiliaries VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VImiddot hail named Msgr Jose T Sanchez to be auxiliary bishop of Caceres in the Philipshypines He takes the titular See of Lesvi

Msgr 5anlhez was vicar genshyeral of Legazpi at the time of his nomination

He was born March 17 1920 atPandan in the Legazpi dioshycese He completed his philoshysophical and ordinary theologishycal studies at the diocesan semshyinary and obtained a licentiate in theology at the University of St Thomas in Manila He was ordained Marc~ 12 1946 and then worked as an assistant passhy

Pltts~urgpchap~er9rmiddottl~e Afner- ~ Philippines Father Tudtud who Pope Paul also delivered 264 ~can -Inst~tUtofAlth~te~ts was36ye~~I)]fat ~hcent time ~fsPeeches bull (~~)_(h~ch mclud~~ ~tIePoit~- his noniinatiOJl studied philos- burgb dlO~es~and three adJa-ophy and theology at St Johns

c~nt countIes SeminarY inmiddotBoston Fath~r roseph P- Larkin He was born March 22 1931

eOm~ission chaiIm~nmiddot ili1(I-a at Mabola inmiddotthe Cebu arch~ member of the diQcesan bU~lll- diocese He worked as assistant - bullbull

iIg commissligtn~ said the pur- pastor Editor ltit Cebus Caiholic pose of thereiiovlition is to pro weekl~ and finally pastor of the ville a ~mQte suitable sanctu- Church of thE Blessed Sacrashy

ary setting fof the liturgical re- inent in Cebu In addition atf orms Qrought into beingmiddot by the time of his nomination he Vatican Council II was vice-superior of the Misshy

Father Lmiddotai-kir said because slon Society of the Philippines the cathedral must architectu-middot r~lly and liturgically allow for Issues Sttement both episcopal mdparish ser-- U

vices ~~any structurai cihimge O H R h offers a unique chalienge to the n umalu ig ts designer~ and provision for the LA CROSSE (NC)-Tbe La

new liturgy must be made in Crosse diocese has taken a poshy

and spirit 01 the existing struc- integrated arid ildequate educashy t4re tion fair employment and the

- defense of the rights of minorshyities

Christians and J~ws Bishop Frederick W Frekshying of the Wisconsin diocese

Honor Clergymen and the diocesan central com-NEW YORK (NC)-Clergy- mission approvedmiddot apmiddot officiai

men from thefour major faiths statem~nt titled Human Reshyhave been honored here by the lations in the Diocese of La National Coiuerence of Chris- Crosse

tians anltt Jews The statement was prepared

the third week of August was the practice has spread middotto a made by Dr Josepb G Murphy number of other cities hesaid of La Marque a member of the interrelgious understanding hasmiddot boara- of- directors fortbe Cathprogressed tremendously middotiIi reshyeticmiddot meDs oganization middotc~nhyearsbull

-

Tbe clergymeri cited for by the subcommission of human relations of the diocesan cornshycourageous leadership in intershymissionon social action and apshy

creedal relations were proved by both before submisshy Rev Dr ~ohn C Bennett sion to the central commissiollll

president of Union Theological ) in January Seminary

Father Robert I Gannon SJ president emeritus of Fordham CONRAD SEGUIN University

Bishop Silas of the GreekOrshy BODY COJMPANY thodox archdiocese of Nortb and Aluminum or Steel South America 944 Countr Street

Samuel D Leisdorf New NEW BEDFORD MASSYork philanthropist pointed out

wy 2-6618that the NCCJ firstmiddot honored reshyligious leaders of four faiths in September -1966 Noting that

should be done by individuals parishes and municipaiities

There were no solutions ofshyfered to the problems posed bythe film We dont expect to have answers to these quesshytions warned Sister John Alicia at the beginning of the program They are too big for us The film WltlS strictly on the

human level and this was pointed out in one group No one can solve all problems it was agreed but surely each Christian canmiddot trust the Holy Spirit to lead him to the probshylems he is equipped to do someshything about no matter how small

There was another point on whichmiddot everyohe in the audience was in enthusiastic agreement that there be more such eveshynings as the one sponsored by Holllgt Namemiddot

Vatmiddotn Report~lIo

Continued from Page One two encyclicals The Developshymiddotment of Peoples and Priestly Celshyibacy four motu proprios inshyeluding one creating central a lay council and the Papal Comshymission on International Justice anp Peace and another restorshying the permanerit diacol1ate treeapostolic constitutions inshyelUding one reshaping the

Churchs c~iitral administlatioii two apostolic exhortations one apostolic letter and 78 other Wessagesmiddotand letterS inclQding

He reeeived eight ehiets Of state including U SPresident Lyndon B Johnson and United Nations Secretary General U T~ant and gave 16 audiences to

th lmiddottmiddot I0 er men 10 ~ 1 lca life in cluding U SVi~ President Hushy~rt H Humphrey Republican presidential hopeful Richard M N d N Ixon an ew Yorks Sen Robert F Kennedy

He received visits from four delegations of Orthodox churCh men including Orthodox Ecushymenicai Patriarcp Athenagoras I of Constantinople besides visit shying Patriarch Athenagoras in ~ tanbul

The book covering last yearli activities of the Holy See conshysists of 1680 pages plus about 2(10 photographs

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SolvcnorlCln Center WlllCOnaln 53061

Bishop John J Wright hasestablished a committee 1Jl)take a complete look at Oaampshy

olie education in the PittsburpD lOcese

The aim is fc dedde wha~ 1shyd t to tak tbe ~

lrec Ion e Dedecade for the best education of

all Catholics young and oldThe committee will evaluate all present Catholic educationshygrade and high schools eo egesConfraternity of Christian Doeshytrine classes adult education and other programs

The surveyors wiU 117 to deshyvise a plan based oa mstinl and potential resources in facll-Hies funds and Staff to guide the dioceses educational efforlll for the next 10 years or more

May Be FaI-lleaehiDg Among ideas eXpected to be

examined in the evaluation are proposals by some to cut back on Catholic schools or even til phase them out in place of an expanded adult education proshygram

Named head of the committee of educators priests and lay professionals is Father Vernon Gallagher CSSp former presishy

deht of Duquesne University here now serving as an official of the Holy Childhood Associashytion He also is a former proshyvincial of the Holy Gbost Fa~ ers eastern province

The committee Will be emshypowered to call before it di shyocesan officials to hold publlc meetingshire staff ~ring in exshyperts ThedioCege will finance the work

The committee Win make spe- eific recommendations to BishoP Wright after the study which 18 expected to take at least a yearbull

-Results are expected to have ~ar-reaching implicatiou fOr Catholic education here

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Two Unbeoten league Play f1fE ANCHOR-Diocese oTtall River-Ihurs feb 29 1968 19

Coach Says Sault Complete BallPlayerCape Cods NausetCompiles SMTB Playmaker Is Former Coyle $trBest Over-All Court Mark

BY JOE MIRANDA By PETER BARTEK

An excellent hall handler and Norton High Coach team player Is how Pat Sault of

Taunton is described by his Eleven of tile 12 aa-ea e1ubs with the best records in coach Phil Wetterland of the

their respective leagues are among those who will parshy Sou the a s t ern Massachu- setts Technogical Institute Inshyticipate in the March Tech basketball tournament in Boston stitute in North DartmouthFairhaven High of the Oapeway Conference and Nauset Sault a 19-year old freshman

of the Cape amp Island loop are is a former Coyle High hoopshythe only all-winning league a single league game while two ster who played four years for

went doWn to defeat In every the Warriors his final two underaggregations from this area encounter In which they were coach Jim Lanagan on the varshyin the Hub championship Involved Almost two-thirds 02 sityelimination tourney while Dartshy the Southeastern Mass teams

D)Quth High is the only one of Teaching CareerfinIshed wIth a 500 average OIlthe tOp dozen better Although young Pat has al shya 70 per cent coQlbines WIth

WIth 12 triumphs in the Cape ready made plans for the future league record amp Island competition Nauset which Include finishing his edshywhich failed to Regional also achieved the best ucation and pursuing a teachershyqualify an inshy over-all record winning 16 of coaching career dication t hat 11 encounters The Cape Cod Sault has not yet chosen a non-league school will be shooting for the major in college but according competition selshy Class D Tech title to his parents he is very much dom jeopardizes interested in teaching historyNew Bedford High 15 and and coaching They feel he willthe ultImate one in the Greater Boston Subshy be good at both as he alwaysgoal of most urban league finished with anschools Actual- Peter devoted his spare time to helpshy

over-all 17-2 mark for the Winshyly 311 per cent Bartek ing the younger neighborhoodter The Crimsons 937 average boys understand athletics moreof the 35 Southeastern Massashy captured its leagues pennant flag thoroughlychusetts school teamsmiddot have The Crimson Whalers are now Pat is the oldest son of Mrqualified for the Tech title play poised to annex the No 1 State and Mrs Charles A Sault and)let none managed an over-all honor by clinching the top one of four children A sisterundefeated season ranking Class A division in the Annette is a senior at BishopThree area clubs failed to win Boston title tourney Cassidy High James Michael

and Cheryl grammar school Representatives in Three B~ackets students at Mulcahey Schoof in

Taunton Fairhaven and Holy Family FamilYhas been eliminated in The family resides at 85 Mershy

HIgh of New Bedford aiming the Lawrence Catholic tourney rill Avenue In Taunton and are for the Class C Tech crown both Southeastern Mass does not members of St Pauls Parish fInished wIth an over-all 16-2 have one club among the Tech

Wetterland Commentsmark The latter Is still smart- Class B participants but th~re ing from its cliff-hanging defeat will be five area combinations Wetterland was high in his at the hands of Xavier in the -includIng Fairhaven and Holy praise of his five foot 11 inch State Catholic tourney Bill Family-in the Class C play and guard who tips the scales at Walshs two-pointer from the three-including Nauset-in the 160 pounds ~ssesses good speed floor which many thought Class D Hub competition and is a key in the Corsairs fast

meant victory at Lawrence was The other Class C contestants break offense nu1llfied by a travelling viola- patterns when SMTI is wurkshy a rest he should be in top conshySault lllsed strictly with thetion which cost the loss ofthe are Case High of Swansea Nar- iilg too quickly and making dition for the 1968-69 campaignvarsity was gaining valuablebasket resulting in a one-~Jnt ry co-champions Oliver Ames Dlistakes Sault gaIned his court savvy1 f tb of North Easton runners-up in experience and developing rapshy

The SMTI mentor continued from Lanagan at Coyle wheretiOs~~ e Narragnnsett~a~ theHockomock circuit and Den- bUy whep a knee Injury slowed he iii the complete ball player hemiddotstarted in his juJ)ior and senshyDis-Yarmouth of Cape Cod see his progress midway through

Durfee of Fall RIver and ond pI fi ish in tho C the campaiiPt but Wetterland noting that he can shoot but is Jor lieasons and was a Vital co Bishop Stang mgh of North ace n er e ape most --content setting Up his in the Warriors successduring DartmQutb are the other two middotNausetwill be joined by Mar- has turned in some excellent efshy teammates for easy pblnts He Ioth years I J

way loop said despite the handicap Pat

Is a team player and always sacshy As ~ Coyle High fr~hmanarea Class A representatives inmiddot thas VIneyard and Norton mib forts in a most successful SMTI rifices himself to help the club Pat was a member XJtb~ yearshythe Tecb toutnament ~e Fall in the Class D bracket The season

Sault possesses a good atti shy lings h09P team and al~Q~ parti shyRiver Hilltoppers willbe out Islanders finished second to Naushy Defensively Sault is cnitshytude is a tough competitor and cipated in track By hihSOphoshyto make amends for their nose- set in the Cape amp Island league standIng Offensively Sault is one of the players Wetterland is more year Saultcopfjned his dive finish in the Bristol COUl)ty while Norton was second in the the teams playmaker ana quarshyeounting on 1to help SMTI gain athlettc talents to basketbjlll andloop whIle Stang ~ke Ho17 Tri~Valley Conference terback 8Dlall college recognition in the turned in a cODlJPenlla))le acshyfuture Teallll Player coun~ o~ himself

Ifere~s How They Did hi LiBogue Play Played for Lanagan Sault also represented stWetterland said his outstandshyThere is doubt about his the hardwood

he following are the league 21 Bishop Feehan 7_1 ing worth to the Corsairs comes no Pauls on in the eourage said the Corsairs skipshy Taunton CYO and in the annual from the fact that he can slowrecords of the 35 Southeastem Msgr Coyle 7-1 after painful knee Easter tournament He playeddown the offense and set up per even a

Mass teams Ta~ton 7-7 injury Sault continued to jpve four years of Litue JeagueM N B Vocational 6-8 his all and attended every pracshy Baseball and one season in theK of C Masons1 Fairhaven 14-0 25 DIman Vocational 5-9 tice The injury has slowed him Pony League prior to ~ntetmamp

Nauset 12-0 Msgr Prevost 5-9 visibly but after the season and Coyle Higa 3 New Bedford 15-1 27 SandwIch 4-8 To Cooperate4 Holy Family 13-1 28 Nantucket 3-9

NOTRE DAME (NC) - lfashyCase 13-1 29 Old Rochester 4-10

30 tlonal leadellS of the Scottish6 Oliver Ames 12-2 West~rt 3-11 Bite Masons and the Knights ~oll another7 Marthas Vineyard ~ 31 Barnstable 2-12

of Columbus anno~ced memshy8 Bishop Stang 10~ 32 Dighton-Rehoboth 1-13 strike on~rs of their organizations wU1Dartmouth 104 33 Bourne 0-14 work together on domestic andDennis-Yarmouth 10-4 Chatham 0-12 the enerlY international problems faciolaquoDurfee 10-1 North AUleJooro 1-14

the nation12 Norton 105 you get George A Newbury soveshy13 Attleboro 9-5 Minister Officiates reign grand commander 01 from14 Harwich 7-5

Scottish Rite Masons In theProvIncetown 7-5 a slice ofDn Cathclic Church northern jurisdiction of the US18 Seekonk 8-6 MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-A Lu- and John W McDevitt supremeSomerset 86

theran mInister officiated at the knight of the Knights of ColumshyFalmouth 8-6 marriage of his son in Holy Cross bus made the announcementMansfield 8-6 Catholic church here at a dinner here s~nsoredWareham 8-6

Married were James H Graf jointly by the Masonic Lodge 29 L th and the Knights of Columbus

a u eran and CalTon Ann council in South Bend Episcopalian Rite Gutwinski 25 a Catholic The ceremony was rformed - Both praised the work of Fa-MINNEAPOLIS (NC)- Archshy ther John A OBrien of the

bishop Leo Binz and Coadjutor Grapoundfs fltthell the Rev Paul L University of Notre Dame for Archbishop ~ PY1)1e of the Graf pastor of Holy Trinity r better understanding among the Cafllolic archdIoceses of St Paul theran church two groups Minneapolis were present in the Permission for the Rev Gmt Father Theodore M Hesshysan~lary of St Marks Episcoshy to officiate at his sonB wedding burgh CSC president of the pal cathedral here for the inshy was granted by theSacred Con- University of Notre Dame said stallation of Bishop Philip F gregation for the Joctrine of This nIght marks a great step McNarry as coadjutor bishop of the Faitlh inl lWme in answer to ll forward and reflects the new the Epi6copal diocese of Minneshy J)etition by Archbishop Leo BiDz ~enical spirit which is unishysota of~ ~~-M~eapotis iing ~ople long separated-

PAT SAULT

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bull THE ANCHOR Dayton University Thurs Feb 29 196a Brief Religious on Ecumenism

Selects Advisors SOUTH ORANGE (NC) meanitigful dialogue should not tended not to lead to compro- DAYTON (NC)-An ll-mem-

Named resident Some 1000 mms and Brothers be confused with monologueshy mise but to conyergence ber advisory board of six stushyservfng in tli~ Newark archdi~shy or confrontation He added We talk now of our common dents two faculty members andSANTA CLARA (NC)-The cese were briefed on the basic we must be willing to be pershy belilefs he said not to com- three representatives of theboard of trustees of the Univershy principles of ecumenism in a suaded-we need an open mind promise each others faith but in community has been establishedlllity of Santa Clara has named program sponsored by the Newshy to seek out the truth wherever the hope that at some point in for the Office of Human Relashylrather Thomas D Terry SJ ark Archdiocese Commission for it might be shy the future we will converge tions at the University oJ Dayshy35th president of the Jesuit unishy Ecumenical Affairs

Ifersity Father Terry who sucshy Discussing the difficulties of As an example he pointed to tornSpeakers at the session ineeeds Father Patrick Donohoe establishing Christian-Jewish the wide divergence of views The board under the direcshySeton Hall University includeSJ recently appointed Califorshy dialogue he said we Christians regarding (he Mass and the Eu- tion of Charles Hirt director ofDr Leonard Swidler of Templeaia provinCial af the Society of are responsible for 2000 years charist that existed between the Office of Human RelationsUniversity Philadelphia aridJIesus has been academic vic~ of anti-Semitism and now_ we Martin Luther and the Council will be responsible for estabshyFather Thomas M McFadden ofpresident af Loyola University must overcome our mutual disshy of Trent Then he cited the re- lishing policy making programthe Brooklyn dioceseLos Angeles for the last year trust before dialogue can be cent statement on the Eucharist recommendations helping to

lllI1d a half Previous to that Swidler said dialogue with fruitful issued by Lutherans and Catho- alleviate campus racial probshyIIlIather Terry was dean of the others must be preceded by an lics to show how much closer lems and drawing up proposall ltWllege of arts and sciences at examination of Catholic attishy Father McFadden said diashy the two bodies have come since for implementation Santa Clara tudes In addition he said a logue among Christians is inshy that time

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Page 17: 02.29.68

17 Oppose Church Clergy Participation in Politics

By Jsgr George G Higgins

The New RepubJic-whIch in this writers judgment W one CYl the be3t of Ameriros weekly journals of opinion especially hl it3 arovezoage cfcurrent economic and political developments----thinks that the time has com~ for anti shyVietnam clergymen aul1ayshy Be that as it maY I am ioshymen to translate tu1eir cVZl clined to think that the editors m0r81 indignation oveuror Vietshy of the French periodical Inforshynam into effective political mations Catholique InternashyDction inasmuch as this is the tionales make considerably only way to effect long-term more sense than the editors cOf ehanges in the The New Republic 011 this issue policies of this of clerical involvement in the country So far so-called politics of peace as laymen are Though they are vigorously concerned this and unqualifiedly opposed ~il

would seem to tW war in Vietnam and like be a self - evishy tWeditors ()f The New Repubshydent proposition li( clearly recognize that the L1s perfectly establishment of leace in the obvious t hat world is a political problem concerned layshy which calls for the active mshymen ou~ht to volvement ofChcistians as ~-en

translate their as all other men of good will moral indi~nashy they do not think that themiddot tion over Vietnam - or any cleJgy who are responsible foy other significant issue of public the unity of the Church should policy-into effecti-re poiiticltll be expected to take on the role

of party politiciansaction Given the fact that their pubshySound Tradition

lication ~CI has been oJe 01 tileOn the other hnd I aJl Evt most outspoken European critics

sure understandthat I fully or of U S involvement in Vietnam completely agree vitb The New and one of the most vigorousRepublic when it says that fue advocates middotof a politics of peaceclergy ought tncv likewise their warning against the parshy

Traditionally a the NR itself ticipation of the clergy in parshypvints out the clergy-in this tisan politics is highly signifi shycountry at least - have rnied cant and deserves to be taken amy from such participation very seriously (Christians and

AJJ a long-time subscriher to the Struggle ior Peaee InforshyT~2 New Republic I had Dlshy mations Catholique Internashyways been under the imp~ssio~ tionales Jan 15 1965)that its editors thought that en Fl lialgs lrindplebalance this was a sound tradishy

Those American Catholicstion Apparently lwweer I was who may happen to have a speshy

cial interest in the pros and consmistaken in this regard fora of this highly controversial issuerecent Nell Republic editorial will also want to read whatnoten with satisfaction that Hans Kung has to say about itAJlerican clerGYmen now apshy

pear to be ready in large numshy in his forthcoming bookThe Churchbers to get involved at a preshy

cinct level and to play C1l Father Kung has lectured exshyactivist role in both parties tensively throughout the United (Clergy in Politics The New SUItes in recent years and is

currently with us again as a visshyRepublic Feb 17 1968) iting professor at Union Theoshy

QuestioIS Meaning logical Seminary in New York What does this mean in pracshy Seen in the light of the Gosshy

tical terma Does it mean that pel le writes in his new book ministers rabbis and priests the relntionshipof the Church should endorse ltor oppose) parshy to the world contains only one ticular candic1ates fqr politiell essential aspect its ministry 10 office starting at the precinct the world level Does it mean that they Ministry does not mean raisshythemselves should run for ofshy ing ones voice or putting an -oar flee if only as a last reiort in all secular qIes1ions middotof ecoshy

If so does it also mean that nomic political sodaI middotcultural other clergymen should run artistic and scientific life against them if they happen to T1e Churchclmnot solve disagree with what they stand the greJt problems of the ()rld for Or does it mean toot only neiih2r the problell1of hunger those clergymen who are anti shy nor that of the populaticn nor Administration should get inshy that of war nor thlt oanonFmshyT-olved at a precinct leel and ity of power Dor that -of race play an activist role within hatred What the Church both parties can do can be expressed quite

Sicnifieani WarnlDI simply in one phrase it must I have raised these questions exist for the world

lot to make light of The New ACrefS With lFTK1mgRepublics editorial CD the subshyject under discussion but Anyone who hal ever baG the merely to BUggest that clerical pleasure of meeting Faiher involvement ill partisan politics Kung middotor is familiar wi1bhis over the issue of Vietnam is at writings will know witheut best a rather tricky business being told that be is not a hawk and will almost inevitably lead and that he is cot advocating to certain consequences which a policy of Christian withdrawal upon further reflection even the from the world editors of The New Republie middotOn the eontrary be stroniJy might eonceivably wish tc foreshy favors lhe all-ltltit involvement tall of Christians in temporal affairs

and notably iii the ~lities Of peace

To Speak in Boston Nevertheless be does net Rev Anthony T Padovano think that the institutienal

Church-and its clerical minisshySTD theology professor at ters-should pretend that theyImmaculate Conception Semishy

nary Darlington N J will speak have all the answers tc the problems of the worldia the Christian Culture lecture

aries sponsored by the Paulist And neither eoes be thinkshyFathers at 815 Wednesday night if I read him correctly-that tbe March 6 in John Hancock Ha)) clergy in ~ exeTeise of their Boston Tickets are available mission of peace should get inshyfrom 5 Park Street Boston volved in partisan jl)olities Nor 02108 do L

WOKS LIKE FUN Yes but listen to what it requires The Georgetown University erew keeps in s-hape with ~

AM ~i~enies in the gym foHow~ by a two-niile run UJl and do-Wll Observatory Hil~on tJhecampus Its cold up there said Dave Harris a member of the lightweifht crew but by then youlewtired you do-nt care NC Phottgt

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 ~ 968

Prayer for Peace To Cm(O)se Games

MEXICO CITY (NC) - All ecumenical prR)er for peaCf) service is being planned for the end of the 19th Olympic Gam~

here next October The sponsor of the service w shy

the Ecumenical Commission fcrr Religious Services (ECRS) fe the Olympic Games The comshymission is composed of 73 ChrisshytiRn and Jewish leaders in thi~

city Promment spiritual leadshyers will be invited to speak

At middot8 meeting here the rn ECRS spiritual leaders discusse~

the facilities for athletes and visitors to attend their varioU7J reUgious services

iI1be iMC)Cican government hw aPPI)o~ed ECRS plans for the ~ction of at least tw- JaIige bullclings as nondenonYshynational chapels

The original pIlan toeonstrl1ell one large church has been IcHsshytlarded The present plan is build one large building with no religious I)rnamentllJtion of alltl7 kind on the outskirts of the Olympic Villa and a similar Oilif)

on tne outskirts of the Olympze

Project InterracialInterfaith Cooperation Cultural Villa

tin (Re~~(Jtion of CcUege m addition Archbishop MEshymiddotgut Dario MirlllDda y Gomez Gl

1I1IAMI (NC)~When Florida The Rev Edward T Graham Mexico City hBs authorizeQ Memorial College predominant a Baptist minister key person downtown Catholic churches to ly Negro middotliberal arts school is behind the project has had asshy permit non-Catholic services = moved here frOl1l St Augustine sistance from Mrs Athalie their premises if non-Catholie and opens next September the Range Miamis first NeglO City comgregations should request i project will be the result of unshy Commissoioner who is a Cathshyusual interracial and interfaith olic teamwork Organhzet3 rOthEHSIl

The largest single contribll shyNegroeswhites and Chinese tiou of private funds has oome flainirt~ ClI1ter

have joined hands with Cathoshy from a supermarket executive lLOUISVILLE (NC) - TkeIlics Protestants and Jews tv M Austin Davis a Methodist Franciscan Conventional OrdGcontribute money time advice laiamis Catholic Bishop Coleshy has opened a Brothers Trainincand leadership to realize the

manF Carroll is a member vl1 Center here in an attempt to givedevelopment of the college on l the advisory board as is Maushy Brothers three years of active$10 million complex here rice Ferre diocese of Miami lay apostolic work following theirr leader novitiate

RabbiIrving Lehrman presshy Father Sebastian Cunnil1flshyCouncil Seores ident cd the Greater Miami ham OFM director of tlw Rabbinical Association a n 4ll OOlilter said We felt we haCFactory Closing Jewish lay leaders are amoag an cbligation to give our man

LONDON (NC-The impend- active workers oome training outside contam ing elosingof a large industricl $ bull $ an idea of what was neeclshyJilseph Rodriguez of the plant has been criticized by ~ edfromthem in the outside Puerto Rican Democratic ChEb lay -eouncil of Our Lady Of _rl11 In the past he addeeurohas prepared 11 scholarship PieshyGrace parish in southeast Lsnshy we were not fWfilling ~ gram for -the collegedCD DeedS 1d ~veryoneliturgy

The council expressed its deep concern at the recent No Comlmentclosure of factories in middotthis area Completean4 in particular of the impendshy VATICAN (orry (NC)-Ibe ing shutdown of the Associ2ted Vatican had no comment -oJ1 11

ElectricaIIndustries (AEI) plant repolt that ~hbishop Agostincgt BANKING Casaroli secretary for extraershyIt callid upon the governmeJrt dinary ecclesiastical affairs ilf SERVICEand the -ehaiTmanof the oomshy the Papal Secretariat of statepany torevsrse the decision 10 eonterred with Dlembers of ~

c~ don the plant because Of tor BristOl CountyN-orth Vietnamese missi-on iJJthe middotmoral religious and 5Ocial Parisjn lJanuarylt n JUWWampleffeets iCaiJS2a by the ~veshythat Archbishop Casaroli Wallmen1 a1popl1ation absent from the Vatican fOll

Copies ltOf the councils motion several days nlenUy BrjstoICounty were sent 1amp Prime ~1inister

Harold Wilson MiJiister of Trust Company Labor RayJ Gunter President ampf the Board of Trade Douglas Sturteant (

TAUNTO~ MASSJay and company officials iHoOkAlthough the councils action was a surprise to the pastel Ed 1897 IIHE BANJ(ONFather Joseph seally AA ~ uiltl~rs SUppJies JAUNTONGRHNprist sroa that he agreed ith it ftll3 Purchase Street Member 01 Feileral ~

Faiher 8enlly sait[ centbert Aellad iNew Bedford IDsuranee CorporaamptoDJlOt~cteil p01itiealand elaquolshy 996-5661 nomic motions to eome from the council but pointed out You cannot separate Feligimtl from eveJ~ay life

Notrre Dome St Vincent de Paul Store

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11

tamp -

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968 Capacity Audience at Holy Name Parish ~ihss

My Consciesect1ce Discusses The J)etached Americans In Educ~tion Continued from Page One

Do we care -for knowledge

what happens to other people Why do we strive for college educations or for money Are we so anxious to confor~l1 that we never dare to PITTSBURGH

tMrI

~VJI and it must be understood in a

t mear-cu way

A person following his ~con-~ence must be sincere He cannot play games with his mind but must be honest with himself

A person foilowing his con~ liCience must be correct It iSl10t ugh that he sincerely beshy~ Reves that something is good or evil-he must be sure that hiS judgement is a correct one

agrees with Gods view of the matter

Sometimes people make misshytakes in judgement-honest misshytakes to be sure but mistakes iwnetheless The oft-quoted exshyample is that of the African savshyrage deep in the jungle who may be sincerely following his con- ooience when it tells him to kill omd eat his enemy His conshyscience is a sincere one But it~ Is a mistaken one since it does IIlOt agree with Gods Will He ond every person must c~m-

liitantly review his judgements to lbe sure that they are correct ones and riot sincere mistaken Utes

A person following his conshy3Cience must be certain He can not act with doubt or uncertainshy~ about the rightness or wrong- mess of an act since he would be Announces Prize acting with the willingness to

takea cpance on being wrong For Best Plan ~ offendi~g God and this is aever~ validmiddot If there is uncer- PITTSinJRqH (NC)-Bishop t8inty the person must seek aid John J Wright of middotPittsburgh III arriving at a sure and correct haS annoutc~d il priz~ of$IOOOtor professor ina p1inor semshy tudgementmiddot - formiddot the architect who submitsmiddoth be I f - inary chapiainof a school dishyThe Christian acts with amiddotcon- ~ e st p an or a Jliljgtr renoshy ocesan chancellor and finally

lllilence ~rned by the prlnciples vation of the sanctuary of St vicar general tilChrlst This is where tliEi Pa~l~ cath~middot~al_h~remiddot~T~~e ~om- The P6pe a~o nam~d Father

aturchsteachers the Pope Iiiid P~tit~o~ IS ~p~nmiddot ~omiddotal archJtec~ Bienvenido TudtiJdto be auxil- a message toAfrica and a mes ishops ~nfer middotthe pi~ture to wl~hlD ~e bound~~l~~s~f the iary bishop of Dumaguete in the sage ~lling for peaCe

Illelp men make judgementsmiddot thatmiddot lire guided by Christ Sometimes ~ese j~dge~eptsgo a~intitmiddotnat-middot lIIIa1 inclinations and tendencies md this has always been thedif-

~ti~ty of ~ing a Christian-- Ghrist demands much of His llmiddotowmiddotmiddotermiddots middot IIIU

At present Catholics are askshyiDg tlie Pope to make a morai judgement about birth control d especlmiddotallymiddot the PlmiddotUmiddot Some_lire castigating him for not givshy g a qulck declslon or else they lliie telling people to forget about llrim and to make their own adgeme tsmiddot th ttmiddot w- n m e ma er The Pope in order to make a ilecision must make it on the basis of facts Scientists must provide him with the facts and In this matter there is much that k~epinglVith the general lin~s sition in favor I)f open housing complex The Pope has asked and is still asking theologians to evaluate the scientific facts in 4he light of Christian principles Not all moral issues are simple And then the Pope will apply the principles to the facts and 1ril1 make a decision about the morality of the matter

This will guide the Catholic in fllorming his conscience -- in arshyriving at a judgement that is sipcere that is the correct orie at lS artmiddot d t d ce am JU gemen anthatmiddot is Christian

K of C Convention 51ated for Houston

lAN MARCOS (NC) The

1970 national convention of the ~ights of Columbus will be held in Houston it was an-Bounced here at a conference of Texas officers of the interna- _ tional fraternalorder

The announcement of the seshylection of Houston for the con- v~ntion which will be held in

be different These were among questions discussed by a capacity audience at the second in a series on Christian Morality sponsored by the parish council of Holy Name Church Fall River Sparked by Sisshy

John AIIcIa SUS Cter some 30 people from all parts of themiddot Diocese viewed the film The Detached Amerishycans then broke into small groups for buzz sessions

Thesis of the film was that Americans wont become in volved with each other It dra- matically pointed its message with the true story of Kitty

Genovese murdered on a New York Street while 38 of her neighbors watched ffom winshy

bull dowS-o--and did nothing Also depicted were amarried

couple talkingto each other with neither really listening a student going thriugh school as on an assembly line with his sole goal the position he could

hope for as a college graduate and various other examples of non-involvement

What is life worth if we do not give it away questioned Harry Reasoner at the end of the film The Holy Name audishyence agreed that life sbould be

used for others but tended to feel that there wasnt the im-Personalitv in a smailer city

Jthat is found in a large metropshyolis One Sister countered howshyever with stories brought to

h t htschool by children s e aug This is right in Fall River she stressed Others cited examshypIes of personal involvement in affaIrs of others but agreed that much more could and

Pope I~aul Names Two Aluxiliaries VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VImiddot hail named Msgr Jose T Sanchez to be auxiliary bishop of Caceres in the Philipshypines He takes the titular See of Lesvi

Msgr 5anlhez was vicar genshyeral of Legazpi at the time of his nomination

He was born March 17 1920 atPandan in the Legazpi dioshycese He completed his philoshysophical and ordinary theologishycal studies at the diocesan semshyinary and obtained a licentiate in theology at the University of St Thomas in Manila He was ordained Marc~ 12 1946 and then worked as an assistant passhy

Pltts~urgpchap~er9rmiddottl~e Afner- ~ Philippines Father Tudtud who Pope Paul also delivered 264 ~can -Inst~tUtofAlth~te~ts was36ye~~I)]fat ~hcent time ~fsPeeches bull (~~)_(h~ch mclud~~ ~tIePoit~- his noniinatiOJl studied philos- burgb dlO~es~and three adJa-ophy and theology at St Johns

c~nt countIes SeminarY inmiddotBoston Fath~r roseph P- Larkin He was born March 22 1931

eOm~ission chaiIm~nmiddot ili1(I-a at Mabola inmiddotthe Cebu arch~ member of the diQcesan bU~lll- diocese He worked as assistant - bullbull

iIg commissligtn~ said the pur- pastor Editor ltit Cebus Caiholic pose of thereiiovlition is to pro weekl~ and finally pastor of the ville a ~mQte suitable sanctu- Church of thE Blessed Sacrashy

ary setting fof the liturgical re- inent in Cebu In addition atf orms Qrought into beingmiddot by the time of his nomination he Vatican Council II was vice-superior of the Misshy

Father Lmiddotai-kir said because slon Society of the Philippines the cathedral must architectu-middot r~lly and liturgically allow for Issues Sttement both episcopal mdparish ser-- U

vices ~~any structurai cihimge O H R h offers a unique chalienge to the n umalu ig ts designer~ and provision for the LA CROSSE (NC)-Tbe La

new liturgy must be made in Crosse diocese has taken a poshy

and spirit 01 the existing struc- integrated arid ildequate educashy t4re tion fair employment and the

- defense of the rights of minorshyities

Christians and J~ws Bishop Frederick W Frekshying of the Wisconsin diocese

Honor Clergymen and the diocesan central com-NEW YORK (NC)-Clergy- mission approvedmiddot apmiddot officiai

men from thefour major faiths statem~nt titled Human Reshyhave been honored here by the lations in the Diocese of La National Coiuerence of Chris- Crosse

tians anltt Jews The statement was prepared

the third week of August was the practice has spread middotto a made by Dr Josepb G Murphy number of other cities hesaid of La Marque a member of the interrelgious understanding hasmiddot boara- of- directors fortbe Cathprogressed tremendously middotiIi reshyeticmiddot meDs oganization middotc~nhyearsbull

-

Tbe clergymeri cited for by the subcommission of human relations of the diocesan cornshycourageous leadership in intershymissionon social action and apshy

creedal relations were proved by both before submisshy Rev Dr ~ohn C Bennett sion to the central commissiollll

president of Union Theological ) in January Seminary

Father Robert I Gannon SJ president emeritus of Fordham CONRAD SEGUIN University

Bishop Silas of the GreekOrshy BODY COJMPANY thodox archdiocese of Nortb and Aluminum or Steel South America 944 Countr Street

Samuel D Leisdorf New NEW BEDFORD MASSYork philanthropist pointed out

wy 2-6618that the NCCJ firstmiddot honored reshyligious leaders of four faiths in September -1966 Noting that

should be done by individuals parishes and municipaiities

There were no solutions ofshyfered to the problems posed bythe film We dont expect to have answers to these quesshytions warned Sister John Alicia at the beginning of the program They are too big for us The film WltlS strictly on the

human level and this was pointed out in one group No one can solve all problems it was agreed but surely each Christian canmiddot trust the Holy Spirit to lead him to the probshylems he is equipped to do someshything about no matter how small

There was another point on whichmiddot everyohe in the audience was in enthusiastic agreement that there be more such eveshynings as the one sponsored by Holllgt Namemiddot

Vatmiddotn Report~lIo

Continued from Page One two encyclicals The Developshymiddotment of Peoples and Priestly Celshyibacy four motu proprios inshyeluding one creating central a lay council and the Papal Comshymission on International Justice anp Peace and another restorshying the permanerit diacol1ate treeapostolic constitutions inshyelUding one reshaping the

Churchs c~iitral administlatioii two apostolic exhortations one apostolic letter and 78 other Wessagesmiddotand letterS inclQding

He reeeived eight ehiets Of state including U SPresident Lyndon B Johnson and United Nations Secretary General U T~ant and gave 16 audiences to

th lmiddottmiddot I0 er men 10 ~ 1 lca life in cluding U SVi~ President Hushy~rt H Humphrey Republican presidential hopeful Richard M N d N Ixon an ew Yorks Sen Robert F Kennedy

He received visits from four delegations of Orthodox churCh men including Orthodox Ecushymenicai Patriarcp Athenagoras I of Constantinople besides visit shying Patriarch Athenagoras in ~ tanbul

The book covering last yearli activities of the Holy See conshysists of 1680 pages plus about 2(10 photographs

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Bishop John J Wright hasestablished a committee 1Jl)take a complete look at Oaampshy

olie education in the PittsburpD lOcese

The aim is fc dedde wha~ 1shyd t to tak tbe ~

lrec Ion e Dedecade for the best education of

all Catholics young and oldThe committee will evaluate all present Catholic educationshygrade and high schools eo egesConfraternity of Christian Doeshytrine classes adult education and other programs

The surveyors wiU 117 to deshyvise a plan based oa mstinl and potential resources in facll-Hies funds and Staff to guide the dioceses educational efforlll for the next 10 years or more

May Be FaI-lleaehiDg Among ideas eXpected to be

examined in the evaluation are proposals by some to cut back on Catholic schools or even til phase them out in place of an expanded adult education proshygram

Named head of the committee of educators priests and lay professionals is Father Vernon Gallagher CSSp former presishy

deht of Duquesne University here now serving as an official of the Holy Childhood Associashytion He also is a former proshyvincial of the Holy Gbost Fa~ ers eastern province

The committee Will be emshypowered to call before it di shyocesan officials to hold publlc meetingshire staff ~ring in exshyperts ThedioCege will finance the work

The committee Win make spe- eific recommendations to BishoP Wright after the study which 18 expected to take at least a yearbull

-Results are expected to have ~ar-reaching implicatiou fOr Catholic education here

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Two Unbeoten league Play f1fE ANCHOR-Diocese oTtall River-Ihurs feb 29 1968 19

Coach Says Sault Complete BallPlayerCape Cods NausetCompiles SMTB Playmaker Is Former Coyle $trBest Over-All Court Mark

BY JOE MIRANDA By PETER BARTEK

An excellent hall handler and Norton High Coach team player Is how Pat Sault of

Taunton is described by his Eleven of tile 12 aa-ea e1ubs with the best records in coach Phil Wetterland of the

their respective leagues are among those who will parshy Sou the a s t ern Massachu- setts Technogical Institute Inshyticipate in the March Tech basketball tournament in Boston stitute in North DartmouthFairhaven High of the Oapeway Conference and Nauset Sault a 19-year old freshman

of the Cape amp Island loop are is a former Coyle High hoopshythe only all-winning league a single league game while two ster who played four years for

went doWn to defeat In every the Warriors his final two underaggregations from this area encounter In which they were coach Jim Lanagan on the varshyin the Hub championship Involved Almost two-thirds 02 sityelimination tourney while Dartshy the Southeastern Mass teams

D)Quth High is the only one of Teaching CareerfinIshed wIth a 500 average OIlthe tOp dozen better Although young Pat has al shya 70 per cent coQlbines WIth

WIth 12 triumphs in the Cape ready made plans for the future league record amp Island competition Nauset which Include finishing his edshywhich failed to Regional also achieved the best ucation and pursuing a teachershyqualify an inshy over-all record winning 16 of coaching career dication t hat 11 encounters The Cape Cod Sault has not yet chosen a non-league school will be shooting for the major in college but according competition selshy Class D Tech title to his parents he is very much dom jeopardizes interested in teaching historyNew Bedford High 15 and and coaching They feel he willthe ultImate one in the Greater Boston Subshy be good at both as he alwaysgoal of most urban league finished with anschools Actual- Peter devoted his spare time to helpshy

over-all 17-2 mark for the Winshyly 311 per cent Bartek ing the younger neighborhoodter The Crimsons 937 average boys understand athletics moreof the 35 Southeastern Massashy captured its leagues pennant flag thoroughlychusetts school teamsmiddot have The Crimson Whalers are now Pat is the oldest son of Mrqualified for the Tech title play poised to annex the No 1 State and Mrs Charles A Sault and)let none managed an over-all honor by clinching the top one of four children A sisterundefeated season ranking Class A division in the Annette is a senior at BishopThree area clubs failed to win Boston title tourney Cassidy High James Michael

and Cheryl grammar school Representatives in Three B~ackets students at Mulcahey Schoof in

Taunton Fairhaven and Holy Family FamilYhas been eliminated in The family resides at 85 Mershy

HIgh of New Bedford aiming the Lawrence Catholic tourney rill Avenue In Taunton and are for the Class C Tech crown both Southeastern Mass does not members of St Pauls Parish fInished wIth an over-all 16-2 have one club among the Tech

Wetterland Commentsmark The latter Is still smart- Class B participants but th~re ing from its cliff-hanging defeat will be five area combinations Wetterland was high in his at the hands of Xavier in the -includIng Fairhaven and Holy praise of his five foot 11 inch State Catholic tourney Bill Family-in the Class C play and guard who tips the scales at Walshs two-pointer from the three-including Nauset-in the 160 pounds ~ssesses good speed floor which many thought Class D Hub competition and is a key in the Corsairs fast

meant victory at Lawrence was The other Class C contestants break offense nu1llfied by a travelling viola- patterns when SMTI is wurkshy a rest he should be in top conshySault lllsed strictly with thetion which cost the loss ofthe are Case High of Swansea Nar- iilg too quickly and making dition for the 1968-69 campaignvarsity was gaining valuablebasket resulting in a one-~Jnt ry co-champions Oliver Ames Dlistakes Sault gaIned his court savvy1 f tb of North Easton runners-up in experience and developing rapshy

The SMTI mentor continued from Lanagan at Coyle wheretiOs~~ e Narragnnsett~a~ theHockomock circuit and Den- bUy whep a knee Injury slowed he iii the complete ball player hemiddotstarted in his juJ)ior and senshyDis-Yarmouth of Cape Cod see his progress midway through

Durfee of Fall RIver and ond pI fi ish in tho C the campaiiPt but Wetterland noting that he can shoot but is Jor lieasons and was a Vital co Bishop Stang mgh of North ace n er e ape most --content setting Up his in the Warriors successduring DartmQutb are the other two middotNausetwill be joined by Mar- has turned in some excellent efshy teammates for easy pblnts He Ioth years I J

way loop said despite the handicap Pat

Is a team player and always sacshy As ~ Coyle High fr~hmanarea Class A representatives inmiddot thas VIneyard and Norton mib forts in a most successful SMTI rifices himself to help the club Pat was a member XJtb~ yearshythe Tecb toutnament ~e Fall in the Class D bracket The season

Sault possesses a good atti shy lings h09P team and al~Q~ parti shyRiver Hilltoppers willbe out Islanders finished second to Naushy Defensively Sault is cnitshytude is a tough competitor and cipated in track By hihSOphoshyto make amends for their nose- set in the Cape amp Island league standIng Offensively Sault is one of the players Wetterland is more year Saultcopfjned his dive finish in the Bristol COUl)ty while Norton was second in the the teams playmaker ana quarshyeounting on 1to help SMTI gain athlettc talents to basketbjlll andloop whIle Stang ~ke Ho17 Tri~Valley Conference terback 8Dlall college recognition in the turned in a cODlJPenlla))le acshyfuture Teallll Player coun~ o~ himself

Ifere~s How They Did hi LiBogue Play Played for Lanagan Sault also represented stWetterland said his outstandshyThere is doubt about his the hardwood

he following are the league 21 Bishop Feehan 7_1 ing worth to the Corsairs comes no Pauls on in the eourage said the Corsairs skipshy Taunton CYO and in the annual from the fact that he can slowrecords of the 35 Southeastem Msgr Coyle 7-1 after painful knee Easter tournament He playeddown the offense and set up per even a

Mass teams Ta~ton 7-7 injury Sault continued to jpve four years of Litue JeagueM N B Vocational 6-8 his all and attended every pracshy Baseball and one season in theK of C Masons1 Fairhaven 14-0 25 DIman Vocational 5-9 tice The injury has slowed him Pony League prior to ~ntetmamp

Nauset 12-0 Msgr Prevost 5-9 visibly but after the season and Coyle Higa 3 New Bedford 15-1 27 SandwIch 4-8 To Cooperate4 Holy Family 13-1 28 Nantucket 3-9

NOTRE DAME (NC) - lfashyCase 13-1 29 Old Rochester 4-10

30 tlonal leadellS of the Scottish6 Oliver Ames 12-2 West~rt 3-11 Bite Masons and the Knights ~oll another7 Marthas Vineyard ~ 31 Barnstable 2-12

of Columbus anno~ced memshy8 Bishop Stang 10~ 32 Dighton-Rehoboth 1-13 strike on~rs of their organizations wU1Dartmouth 104 33 Bourne 0-14 work together on domestic andDennis-Yarmouth 10-4 Chatham 0-12 the enerlY international problems faciolaquoDurfee 10-1 North AUleJooro 1-14

the nation12 Norton 105 you get George A Newbury soveshy13 Attleboro 9-5 Minister Officiates reign grand commander 01 from14 Harwich 7-5

Scottish Rite Masons In theProvIncetown 7-5 a slice ofDn Cathclic Church northern jurisdiction of the US18 Seekonk 8-6 MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-A Lu- and John W McDevitt supremeSomerset 86

theran mInister officiated at the knight of the Knights of ColumshyFalmouth 8-6 marriage of his son in Holy Cross bus made the announcementMansfield 8-6 Catholic church here at a dinner here s~nsoredWareham 8-6

Married were James H Graf jointly by the Masonic Lodge 29 L th and the Knights of Columbus

a u eran and CalTon Ann council in South Bend Episcopalian Rite Gutwinski 25 a Catholic The ceremony was rformed - Both praised the work of Fa-MINNEAPOLIS (NC)- Archshy ther John A OBrien of the

bishop Leo Binz and Coadjutor Grapoundfs fltthell the Rev Paul L University of Notre Dame for Archbishop ~ PY1)1e of the Graf pastor of Holy Trinity r better understanding among the Cafllolic archdIoceses of St Paul theran church two groups Minneapolis were present in the Permission for the Rev Gmt Father Theodore M Hesshysan~lary of St Marks Episcoshy to officiate at his sonB wedding burgh CSC president of the pal cathedral here for the inshy was granted by theSacred Con- University of Notre Dame said stallation of Bishop Philip F gregation for the Joctrine of This nIght marks a great step McNarry as coadjutor bishop of the Faitlh inl lWme in answer to ll forward and reflects the new the Epi6copal diocese of Minneshy J)etition by Archbishop Leo BiDz ~enical spirit which is unishysota of~ ~~-M~eapotis iing ~ople long separated-

PAT SAULT

c

20

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bull THE ANCHOR Dayton University Thurs Feb 29 196a Brief Religious on Ecumenism

Selects Advisors SOUTH ORANGE (NC) meanitigful dialogue should not tended not to lead to compro- DAYTON (NC)-An ll-mem-

Named resident Some 1000 mms and Brothers be confused with monologueshy mise but to conyergence ber advisory board of six stushyservfng in tli~ Newark archdi~shy or confrontation He added We talk now of our common dents two faculty members andSANTA CLARA (NC)-The cese were briefed on the basic we must be willing to be pershy belilefs he said not to com- three representatives of theboard of trustees of the Univershy principles of ecumenism in a suaded-we need an open mind promise each others faith but in community has been establishedlllity of Santa Clara has named program sponsored by the Newshy to seek out the truth wherever the hope that at some point in for the Office of Human Relashylrather Thomas D Terry SJ ark Archdiocese Commission for it might be shy the future we will converge tions at the University oJ Dayshy35th president of the Jesuit unishy Ecumenical Affairs

Ifersity Father Terry who sucshy Discussing the difficulties of As an example he pointed to tornSpeakers at the session ineeeds Father Patrick Donohoe establishing Christian-Jewish the wide divergence of views The board under the direcshySeton Hall University includeSJ recently appointed Califorshy dialogue he said we Christians regarding (he Mass and the Eu- tion of Charles Hirt director ofDr Leonard Swidler of Templeaia provinCial af the Society of are responsible for 2000 years charist that existed between the Office of Human RelationsUniversity Philadelphia aridJIesus has been academic vic~ of anti-Semitism and now_ we Martin Luther and the Council will be responsible for estabshyFather Thomas M McFadden ofpresident af Loyola University must overcome our mutual disshy of Trent Then he cited the re- lishing policy making programthe Brooklyn dioceseLos Angeles for the last year trust before dialogue can be cent statement on the Eucharist recommendations helping to

lllI1d a half Previous to that Swidler said dialogue with fruitful issued by Lutherans and Catho- alleviate campus racial probshyIIlIather Terry was dean of the others must be preceded by an lics to show how much closer lems and drawing up proposall ltWllege of arts and sciences at examination of Catholic attishy Father McFadden said diashy the two bodies have come since for implementation Santa Clara tudes In addition he said a logue among Christians is inshy that time

The lFulInitwJlre Open Daily 9 AM

Wonderland to 10 PM

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rendition of Eariy - American in soOid birch - this dramatic 3 piece bedroom

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Page 18: 02.29.68

bullbull

11

tamp -

THE ANCHOR-Thurs Feb 29 1968 Capacity Audience at Holy Name Parish ~ihss

My Consciesect1ce Discusses The J)etached Americans In Educ~tion Continued from Page One

Do we care -for knowledge

what happens to other people Why do we strive for college educations or for money Are we so anxious to confor~l1 that we never dare to PITTSBURGH

tMrI

~VJI and it must be understood in a

t mear-cu way

A person following his ~con-~ence must be sincere He cannot play games with his mind but must be honest with himself

A person foilowing his con~ liCience must be correct It iSl10t ugh that he sincerely beshy~ Reves that something is good or evil-he must be sure that hiS judgement is a correct one

agrees with Gods view of the matter

Sometimes people make misshytakes in judgement-honest misshytakes to be sure but mistakes iwnetheless The oft-quoted exshyample is that of the African savshyrage deep in the jungle who may be sincerely following his con- ooience when it tells him to kill omd eat his enemy His conshyscience is a sincere one But it~ Is a mistaken one since it does IIlOt agree with Gods Will He ond every person must c~m-

liitantly review his judgements to lbe sure that they are correct ones and riot sincere mistaken Utes

A person following his conshy3Cience must be certain He can not act with doubt or uncertainshy~ about the rightness or wrong- mess of an act since he would be Announces Prize acting with the willingness to

takea cpance on being wrong For Best Plan ~ offendi~g God and this is aever~ validmiddot If there is uncer- PITTSinJRqH (NC)-Bishop t8inty the person must seek aid John J Wright of middotPittsburgh III arriving at a sure and correct haS annoutc~d il priz~ of$IOOOtor professor ina p1inor semshy tudgementmiddot - formiddot the architect who submitsmiddoth be I f - inary chapiainof a school dishyThe Christian acts with amiddotcon- ~ e st p an or a Jliljgtr renoshy ocesan chancellor and finally

lllilence ~rned by the prlnciples vation of the sanctuary of St vicar general tilChrlst This is where tliEi Pa~l~ cath~middot~al_h~remiddot~T~~e ~om- The P6pe a~o nam~d Father

aturchsteachers the Pope Iiiid P~tit~o~ IS ~p~nmiddot ~omiddotal archJtec~ Bienvenido TudtiJdto be auxil- a message toAfrica and a mes ishops ~nfer middotthe pi~ture to wl~hlD ~e bound~~l~~s~f the iary bishop of Dumaguete in the sage ~lling for peaCe

Illelp men make judgementsmiddot thatmiddot lire guided by Christ Sometimes ~ese j~dge~eptsgo a~intitmiddotnat-middot lIIIa1 inclinations and tendencies md this has always been thedif-

~ti~ty of ~ing a Christian-- Ghrist demands much of His llmiddotowmiddotmiddotermiddots middot IIIU

At present Catholics are askshyiDg tlie Pope to make a morai judgement about birth control d especlmiddotallymiddot the PlmiddotUmiddot Some_lire castigating him for not givshy g a qulck declslon or else they lliie telling people to forget about llrim and to make their own adgeme tsmiddot th ttmiddot w- n m e ma er The Pope in order to make a ilecision must make it on the basis of facts Scientists must provide him with the facts and In this matter there is much that k~epinglVith the general lin~s sition in favor I)f open housing complex The Pope has asked and is still asking theologians to evaluate the scientific facts in 4he light of Christian principles Not all moral issues are simple And then the Pope will apply the principles to the facts and 1ril1 make a decision about the morality of the matter

This will guide the Catholic in fllorming his conscience -- in arshyriving at a judgement that is sipcere that is the correct orie at lS artmiddot d t d ce am JU gemen anthatmiddot is Christian

K of C Convention 51ated for Houston

lAN MARCOS (NC) The

1970 national convention of the ~ights of Columbus will be held in Houston it was an-Bounced here at a conference of Texas officers of the interna- _ tional fraternalorder

The announcement of the seshylection of Houston for the con- v~ntion which will be held in

be different These were among questions discussed by a capacity audience at the second in a series on Christian Morality sponsored by the parish council of Holy Name Church Fall River Sparked by Sisshy

John AIIcIa SUS Cter some 30 people from all parts of themiddot Diocese viewed the film The Detached Amerishycans then broke into small groups for buzz sessions

Thesis of the film was that Americans wont become in volved with each other It dra- matically pointed its message with the true story of Kitty

Genovese murdered on a New York Street while 38 of her neighbors watched ffom winshy

bull dowS-o--and did nothing Also depicted were amarried

couple talkingto each other with neither really listening a student going thriugh school as on an assembly line with his sole goal the position he could

hope for as a college graduate and various other examples of non-involvement

What is life worth if we do not give it away questioned Harry Reasoner at the end of the film The Holy Name audishyence agreed that life sbould be

used for others but tended to feel that there wasnt the im-Personalitv in a smailer city

Jthat is found in a large metropshyolis One Sister countered howshyever with stories brought to

h t htschool by children s e aug This is right in Fall River she stressed Others cited examshypIes of personal involvement in affaIrs of others but agreed that much more could and

Pope I~aul Names Two Aluxiliaries VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VImiddot hail named Msgr Jose T Sanchez to be auxiliary bishop of Caceres in the Philipshypines He takes the titular See of Lesvi

Msgr 5anlhez was vicar genshyeral of Legazpi at the time of his nomination

He was born March 17 1920 atPandan in the Legazpi dioshycese He completed his philoshysophical and ordinary theologishycal studies at the diocesan semshyinary and obtained a licentiate in theology at the University of St Thomas in Manila He was ordained Marc~ 12 1946 and then worked as an assistant passhy

Pltts~urgpchap~er9rmiddottl~e Afner- ~ Philippines Father Tudtud who Pope Paul also delivered 264 ~can -Inst~tUtofAlth~te~ts was36ye~~I)]fat ~hcent time ~fsPeeches bull (~~)_(h~ch mclud~~ ~tIePoit~- his noniinatiOJl studied philos- burgb dlO~es~and three adJa-ophy and theology at St Johns

c~nt countIes SeminarY inmiddotBoston Fath~r roseph P- Larkin He was born March 22 1931

eOm~ission chaiIm~nmiddot ili1(I-a at Mabola inmiddotthe Cebu arch~ member of the diQcesan bU~lll- diocese He worked as assistant - bullbull

iIg commissligtn~ said the pur- pastor Editor ltit Cebus Caiholic pose of thereiiovlition is to pro weekl~ and finally pastor of the ville a ~mQte suitable sanctu- Church of thE Blessed Sacrashy

ary setting fof the liturgical re- inent in Cebu In addition atf orms Qrought into beingmiddot by the time of his nomination he Vatican Council II was vice-superior of the Misshy

Father Lmiddotai-kir said because slon Society of the Philippines the cathedral must architectu-middot r~lly and liturgically allow for Issues Sttement both episcopal mdparish ser-- U

vices ~~any structurai cihimge O H R h offers a unique chalienge to the n umalu ig ts designer~ and provision for the LA CROSSE (NC)-Tbe La

new liturgy must be made in Crosse diocese has taken a poshy

and spirit 01 the existing struc- integrated arid ildequate educashy t4re tion fair employment and the

- defense of the rights of minorshyities

Christians and J~ws Bishop Frederick W Frekshying of the Wisconsin diocese

Honor Clergymen and the diocesan central com-NEW YORK (NC)-Clergy- mission approvedmiddot apmiddot officiai

men from thefour major faiths statem~nt titled Human Reshyhave been honored here by the lations in the Diocese of La National Coiuerence of Chris- Crosse

tians anltt Jews The statement was prepared

the third week of August was the practice has spread middotto a made by Dr Josepb G Murphy number of other cities hesaid of La Marque a member of the interrelgious understanding hasmiddot boara- of- directors fortbe Cathprogressed tremendously middotiIi reshyeticmiddot meDs oganization middotc~nhyearsbull

-

Tbe clergymeri cited for by the subcommission of human relations of the diocesan cornshycourageous leadership in intershymissionon social action and apshy

creedal relations were proved by both before submisshy Rev Dr ~ohn C Bennett sion to the central commissiollll

president of Union Theological ) in January Seminary

Father Robert I Gannon SJ president emeritus of Fordham CONRAD SEGUIN University

Bishop Silas of the GreekOrshy BODY COJMPANY thodox archdiocese of Nortb and Aluminum or Steel South America 944 Countr Street

Samuel D Leisdorf New NEW BEDFORD MASSYork philanthropist pointed out

wy 2-6618that the NCCJ firstmiddot honored reshyligious leaders of four faiths in September -1966 Noting that

should be done by individuals parishes and municipaiities

There were no solutions ofshyfered to the problems posed bythe film We dont expect to have answers to these quesshytions warned Sister John Alicia at the beginning of the program They are too big for us The film WltlS strictly on the

human level and this was pointed out in one group No one can solve all problems it was agreed but surely each Christian canmiddot trust the Holy Spirit to lead him to the probshylems he is equipped to do someshything about no matter how small

There was another point on whichmiddot everyohe in the audience was in enthusiastic agreement that there be more such eveshynings as the one sponsored by Holllgt Namemiddot

Vatmiddotn Report~lIo

Continued from Page One two encyclicals The Developshymiddotment of Peoples and Priestly Celshyibacy four motu proprios inshyeluding one creating central a lay council and the Papal Comshymission on International Justice anp Peace and another restorshying the permanerit diacol1ate treeapostolic constitutions inshyelUding one reshaping the

Churchs c~iitral administlatioii two apostolic exhortations one apostolic letter and 78 other Wessagesmiddotand letterS inclQding

He reeeived eight ehiets Of state including U SPresident Lyndon B Johnson and United Nations Secretary General U T~ant and gave 16 audiences to

th lmiddottmiddot I0 er men 10 ~ 1 lca life in cluding U SVi~ President Hushy~rt H Humphrey Republican presidential hopeful Richard M N d N Ixon an ew Yorks Sen Robert F Kennedy

He received visits from four delegations of Orthodox churCh men including Orthodox Ecushymenicai Patriarcp Athenagoras I of Constantinople besides visit shying Patriarch Athenagoras in ~ tanbul

The book covering last yearli activities of the Holy See conshysists of 1680 pages plus about 2(10 photographs

SCHOOL Maintenance Supplies

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SolvcnorlCln Center WlllCOnaln 53061

Bishop John J Wright hasestablished a committee 1Jl)take a complete look at Oaampshy

olie education in the PittsburpD lOcese

The aim is fc dedde wha~ 1shyd t to tak tbe ~

lrec Ion e Dedecade for the best education of

all Catholics young and oldThe committee will evaluate all present Catholic educationshygrade and high schools eo egesConfraternity of Christian Doeshytrine classes adult education and other programs

The surveyors wiU 117 to deshyvise a plan based oa mstinl and potential resources in facll-Hies funds and Staff to guide the dioceses educational efforlll for the next 10 years or more

May Be FaI-lleaehiDg Among ideas eXpected to be

examined in the evaluation are proposals by some to cut back on Catholic schools or even til phase them out in place of an expanded adult education proshygram

Named head of the committee of educators priests and lay professionals is Father Vernon Gallagher CSSp former presishy

deht of Duquesne University here now serving as an official of the Holy Childhood Associashytion He also is a former proshyvincial of the Holy Gbost Fa~ ers eastern province

The committee Will be emshypowered to call before it di shyocesan officials to hold publlc meetingshire staff ~ring in exshyperts ThedioCege will finance the work

The committee Win make spe- eific recommendations to BishoP Wright after the study which 18 expected to take at least a yearbull

-Results are expected to have ~ar-reaching implicatiou fOr Catholic education here

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Two Unbeoten league Play f1fE ANCHOR-Diocese oTtall River-Ihurs feb 29 1968 19

Coach Says Sault Complete BallPlayerCape Cods NausetCompiles SMTB Playmaker Is Former Coyle $trBest Over-All Court Mark

BY JOE MIRANDA By PETER BARTEK

An excellent hall handler and Norton High Coach team player Is how Pat Sault of

Taunton is described by his Eleven of tile 12 aa-ea e1ubs with the best records in coach Phil Wetterland of the

their respective leagues are among those who will parshy Sou the a s t ern Massachu- setts Technogical Institute Inshyticipate in the March Tech basketball tournament in Boston stitute in North DartmouthFairhaven High of the Oapeway Conference and Nauset Sault a 19-year old freshman

of the Cape amp Island loop are is a former Coyle High hoopshythe only all-winning league a single league game while two ster who played four years for

went doWn to defeat In every the Warriors his final two underaggregations from this area encounter In which they were coach Jim Lanagan on the varshyin the Hub championship Involved Almost two-thirds 02 sityelimination tourney while Dartshy the Southeastern Mass teams

D)Quth High is the only one of Teaching CareerfinIshed wIth a 500 average OIlthe tOp dozen better Although young Pat has al shya 70 per cent coQlbines WIth

WIth 12 triumphs in the Cape ready made plans for the future league record amp Island competition Nauset which Include finishing his edshywhich failed to Regional also achieved the best ucation and pursuing a teachershyqualify an inshy over-all record winning 16 of coaching career dication t hat 11 encounters The Cape Cod Sault has not yet chosen a non-league school will be shooting for the major in college but according competition selshy Class D Tech title to his parents he is very much dom jeopardizes interested in teaching historyNew Bedford High 15 and and coaching They feel he willthe ultImate one in the Greater Boston Subshy be good at both as he alwaysgoal of most urban league finished with anschools Actual- Peter devoted his spare time to helpshy

over-all 17-2 mark for the Winshyly 311 per cent Bartek ing the younger neighborhoodter The Crimsons 937 average boys understand athletics moreof the 35 Southeastern Massashy captured its leagues pennant flag thoroughlychusetts school teamsmiddot have The Crimson Whalers are now Pat is the oldest son of Mrqualified for the Tech title play poised to annex the No 1 State and Mrs Charles A Sault and)let none managed an over-all honor by clinching the top one of four children A sisterundefeated season ranking Class A division in the Annette is a senior at BishopThree area clubs failed to win Boston title tourney Cassidy High James Michael

and Cheryl grammar school Representatives in Three B~ackets students at Mulcahey Schoof in

Taunton Fairhaven and Holy Family FamilYhas been eliminated in The family resides at 85 Mershy

HIgh of New Bedford aiming the Lawrence Catholic tourney rill Avenue In Taunton and are for the Class C Tech crown both Southeastern Mass does not members of St Pauls Parish fInished wIth an over-all 16-2 have one club among the Tech

Wetterland Commentsmark The latter Is still smart- Class B participants but th~re ing from its cliff-hanging defeat will be five area combinations Wetterland was high in his at the hands of Xavier in the -includIng Fairhaven and Holy praise of his five foot 11 inch State Catholic tourney Bill Family-in the Class C play and guard who tips the scales at Walshs two-pointer from the three-including Nauset-in the 160 pounds ~ssesses good speed floor which many thought Class D Hub competition and is a key in the Corsairs fast

meant victory at Lawrence was The other Class C contestants break offense nu1llfied by a travelling viola- patterns when SMTI is wurkshy a rest he should be in top conshySault lllsed strictly with thetion which cost the loss ofthe are Case High of Swansea Nar- iilg too quickly and making dition for the 1968-69 campaignvarsity was gaining valuablebasket resulting in a one-~Jnt ry co-champions Oliver Ames Dlistakes Sault gaIned his court savvy1 f tb of North Easton runners-up in experience and developing rapshy

The SMTI mentor continued from Lanagan at Coyle wheretiOs~~ e Narragnnsett~a~ theHockomock circuit and Den- bUy whep a knee Injury slowed he iii the complete ball player hemiddotstarted in his juJ)ior and senshyDis-Yarmouth of Cape Cod see his progress midway through

Durfee of Fall RIver and ond pI fi ish in tho C the campaiiPt but Wetterland noting that he can shoot but is Jor lieasons and was a Vital co Bishop Stang mgh of North ace n er e ape most --content setting Up his in the Warriors successduring DartmQutb are the other two middotNausetwill be joined by Mar- has turned in some excellent efshy teammates for easy pblnts He Ioth years I J

way loop said despite the handicap Pat

Is a team player and always sacshy As ~ Coyle High fr~hmanarea Class A representatives inmiddot thas VIneyard and Norton mib forts in a most successful SMTI rifices himself to help the club Pat was a member XJtb~ yearshythe Tecb toutnament ~e Fall in the Class D bracket The season

Sault possesses a good atti shy lings h09P team and al~Q~ parti shyRiver Hilltoppers willbe out Islanders finished second to Naushy Defensively Sault is cnitshytude is a tough competitor and cipated in track By hihSOphoshyto make amends for their nose- set in the Cape amp Island league standIng Offensively Sault is one of the players Wetterland is more year Saultcopfjned his dive finish in the Bristol COUl)ty while Norton was second in the the teams playmaker ana quarshyeounting on 1to help SMTI gain athlettc talents to basketbjlll andloop whIle Stang ~ke Ho17 Tri~Valley Conference terback 8Dlall college recognition in the turned in a cODlJPenlla))le acshyfuture Teallll Player coun~ o~ himself

Ifere~s How They Did hi LiBogue Play Played for Lanagan Sault also represented stWetterland said his outstandshyThere is doubt about his the hardwood

he following are the league 21 Bishop Feehan 7_1 ing worth to the Corsairs comes no Pauls on in the eourage said the Corsairs skipshy Taunton CYO and in the annual from the fact that he can slowrecords of the 35 Southeastem Msgr Coyle 7-1 after painful knee Easter tournament He playeddown the offense and set up per even a

Mass teams Ta~ton 7-7 injury Sault continued to jpve four years of Litue JeagueM N B Vocational 6-8 his all and attended every pracshy Baseball and one season in theK of C Masons1 Fairhaven 14-0 25 DIman Vocational 5-9 tice The injury has slowed him Pony League prior to ~ntetmamp

Nauset 12-0 Msgr Prevost 5-9 visibly but after the season and Coyle Higa 3 New Bedford 15-1 27 SandwIch 4-8 To Cooperate4 Holy Family 13-1 28 Nantucket 3-9

NOTRE DAME (NC) - lfashyCase 13-1 29 Old Rochester 4-10

30 tlonal leadellS of the Scottish6 Oliver Ames 12-2 West~rt 3-11 Bite Masons and the Knights ~oll another7 Marthas Vineyard ~ 31 Barnstable 2-12

of Columbus anno~ced memshy8 Bishop Stang 10~ 32 Dighton-Rehoboth 1-13 strike on~rs of their organizations wU1Dartmouth 104 33 Bourne 0-14 work together on domestic andDennis-Yarmouth 10-4 Chatham 0-12 the enerlY international problems faciolaquoDurfee 10-1 North AUleJooro 1-14

the nation12 Norton 105 you get George A Newbury soveshy13 Attleboro 9-5 Minister Officiates reign grand commander 01 from14 Harwich 7-5

Scottish Rite Masons In theProvIncetown 7-5 a slice ofDn Cathclic Church northern jurisdiction of the US18 Seekonk 8-6 MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-A Lu- and John W McDevitt supremeSomerset 86

theran mInister officiated at the knight of the Knights of ColumshyFalmouth 8-6 marriage of his son in Holy Cross bus made the announcementMansfield 8-6 Catholic church here at a dinner here s~nsoredWareham 8-6

Married were James H Graf jointly by the Masonic Lodge 29 L th and the Knights of Columbus

a u eran and CalTon Ann council in South Bend Episcopalian Rite Gutwinski 25 a Catholic The ceremony was rformed - Both praised the work of Fa-MINNEAPOLIS (NC)- Archshy ther John A OBrien of the

bishop Leo Binz and Coadjutor Grapoundfs fltthell the Rev Paul L University of Notre Dame for Archbishop ~ PY1)1e of the Graf pastor of Holy Trinity r better understanding among the Cafllolic archdIoceses of St Paul theran church two groups Minneapolis were present in the Permission for the Rev Gmt Father Theodore M Hesshysan~lary of St Marks Episcoshy to officiate at his sonB wedding burgh CSC president of the pal cathedral here for the inshy was granted by theSacred Con- University of Notre Dame said stallation of Bishop Philip F gregation for the Joctrine of This nIght marks a great step McNarry as coadjutor bishop of the Faitlh inl lWme in answer to ll forward and reflects the new the Epi6copal diocese of Minneshy J)etition by Archbishop Leo BiDz ~enical spirit which is unishysota of~ ~~-M~eapotis iing ~ople long separated-

PAT SAULT

c

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bull THE ANCHOR Dayton University Thurs Feb 29 196a Brief Religious on Ecumenism

Selects Advisors SOUTH ORANGE (NC) meanitigful dialogue should not tended not to lead to compro- DAYTON (NC)-An ll-mem-

Named resident Some 1000 mms and Brothers be confused with monologueshy mise but to conyergence ber advisory board of six stushyservfng in tli~ Newark archdi~shy or confrontation He added We talk now of our common dents two faculty members andSANTA CLARA (NC)-The cese were briefed on the basic we must be willing to be pershy belilefs he said not to com- three representatives of theboard of trustees of the Univershy principles of ecumenism in a suaded-we need an open mind promise each others faith but in community has been establishedlllity of Santa Clara has named program sponsored by the Newshy to seek out the truth wherever the hope that at some point in for the Office of Human Relashylrather Thomas D Terry SJ ark Archdiocese Commission for it might be shy the future we will converge tions at the University oJ Dayshy35th president of the Jesuit unishy Ecumenical Affairs

Ifersity Father Terry who sucshy Discussing the difficulties of As an example he pointed to tornSpeakers at the session ineeeds Father Patrick Donohoe establishing Christian-Jewish the wide divergence of views The board under the direcshySeton Hall University includeSJ recently appointed Califorshy dialogue he said we Christians regarding (he Mass and the Eu- tion of Charles Hirt director ofDr Leonard Swidler of Templeaia provinCial af the Society of are responsible for 2000 years charist that existed between the Office of Human RelationsUniversity Philadelphia aridJIesus has been academic vic~ of anti-Semitism and now_ we Martin Luther and the Council will be responsible for estabshyFather Thomas M McFadden ofpresident af Loyola University must overcome our mutual disshy of Trent Then he cited the re- lishing policy making programthe Brooklyn dioceseLos Angeles for the last year trust before dialogue can be cent statement on the Eucharist recommendations helping to

lllI1d a half Previous to that Swidler said dialogue with fruitful issued by Lutherans and Catho- alleviate campus racial probshyIIlIather Terry was dean of the others must be preceded by an lics to show how much closer lems and drawing up proposall ltWllege of arts and sciences at examination of Catholic attishy Father McFadden said diashy the two bodies have come since for implementation Santa Clara tudes In addition he said a logue among Christians is inshy that time

The lFulInitwJlre Open Daily 9 AM

Wonderland to 10 PM

of the IE=st Including ~atulIdCllYS

rendition of Eariy - American in soOid birch - this dramatic 3 piece bedroom

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$49

Page 19: 02.29.68

Batter Whipped Sunbeam Bread

Two Unbeoten league Play f1fE ANCHOR-Diocese oTtall River-Ihurs feb 29 1968 19

Coach Says Sault Complete BallPlayerCape Cods NausetCompiles SMTB Playmaker Is Former Coyle $trBest Over-All Court Mark

BY JOE MIRANDA By PETER BARTEK

An excellent hall handler and Norton High Coach team player Is how Pat Sault of

Taunton is described by his Eleven of tile 12 aa-ea e1ubs with the best records in coach Phil Wetterland of the

their respective leagues are among those who will parshy Sou the a s t ern Massachu- setts Technogical Institute Inshyticipate in the March Tech basketball tournament in Boston stitute in North DartmouthFairhaven High of the Oapeway Conference and Nauset Sault a 19-year old freshman

of the Cape amp Island loop are is a former Coyle High hoopshythe only all-winning league a single league game while two ster who played four years for

went doWn to defeat In every the Warriors his final two underaggregations from this area encounter In which they were coach Jim Lanagan on the varshyin the Hub championship Involved Almost two-thirds 02 sityelimination tourney while Dartshy the Southeastern Mass teams

D)Quth High is the only one of Teaching CareerfinIshed wIth a 500 average OIlthe tOp dozen better Although young Pat has al shya 70 per cent coQlbines WIth

WIth 12 triumphs in the Cape ready made plans for the future league record amp Island competition Nauset which Include finishing his edshywhich failed to Regional also achieved the best ucation and pursuing a teachershyqualify an inshy over-all record winning 16 of coaching career dication t hat 11 encounters The Cape Cod Sault has not yet chosen a non-league school will be shooting for the major in college but according competition selshy Class D Tech title to his parents he is very much dom jeopardizes interested in teaching historyNew Bedford High 15 and and coaching They feel he willthe ultImate one in the Greater Boston Subshy be good at both as he alwaysgoal of most urban league finished with anschools Actual- Peter devoted his spare time to helpshy

over-all 17-2 mark for the Winshyly 311 per cent Bartek ing the younger neighborhoodter The Crimsons 937 average boys understand athletics moreof the 35 Southeastern Massashy captured its leagues pennant flag thoroughlychusetts school teamsmiddot have The Crimson Whalers are now Pat is the oldest son of Mrqualified for the Tech title play poised to annex the No 1 State and Mrs Charles A Sault and)let none managed an over-all honor by clinching the top one of four children A sisterundefeated season ranking Class A division in the Annette is a senior at BishopThree area clubs failed to win Boston title tourney Cassidy High James Michael

and Cheryl grammar school Representatives in Three B~ackets students at Mulcahey Schoof in

Taunton Fairhaven and Holy Family FamilYhas been eliminated in The family resides at 85 Mershy

HIgh of New Bedford aiming the Lawrence Catholic tourney rill Avenue In Taunton and are for the Class C Tech crown both Southeastern Mass does not members of St Pauls Parish fInished wIth an over-all 16-2 have one club among the Tech

Wetterland Commentsmark The latter Is still smart- Class B participants but th~re ing from its cliff-hanging defeat will be five area combinations Wetterland was high in his at the hands of Xavier in the -includIng Fairhaven and Holy praise of his five foot 11 inch State Catholic tourney Bill Family-in the Class C play and guard who tips the scales at Walshs two-pointer from the three-including Nauset-in the 160 pounds ~ssesses good speed floor which many thought Class D Hub competition and is a key in the Corsairs fast

meant victory at Lawrence was The other Class C contestants break offense nu1llfied by a travelling viola- patterns when SMTI is wurkshy a rest he should be in top conshySault lllsed strictly with thetion which cost the loss ofthe are Case High of Swansea Nar- iilg too quickly and making dition for the 1968-69 campaignvarsity was gaining valuablebasket resulting in a one-~Jnt ry co-champions Oliver Ames Dlistakes Sault gaIned his court savvy1 f tb of North Easton runners-up in experience and developing rapshy

The SMTI mentor continued from Lanagan at Coyle wheretiOs~~ e Narragnnsett~a~ theHockomock circuit and Den- bUy whep a knee Injury slowed he iii the complete ball player hemiddotstarted in his juJ)ior and senshyDis-Yarmouth of Cape Cod see his progress midway through

Durfee of Fall RIver and ond pI fi ish in tho C the campaiiPt but Wetterland noting that he can shoot but is Jor lieasons and was a Vital co Bishop Stang mgh of North ace n er e ape most --content setting Up his in the Warriors successduring DartmQutb are the other two middotNausetwill be joined by Mar- has turned in some excellent efshy teammates for easy pblnts He Ioth years I J

way loop said despite the handicap Pat

Is a team player and always sacshy As ~ Coyle High fr~hmanarea Class A representatives inmiddot thas VIneyard and Norton mib forts in a most successful SMTI rifices himself to help the club Pat was a member XJtb~ yearshythe Tecb toutnament ~e Fall in the Class D bracket The season

Sault possesses a good atti shy lings h09P team and al~Q~ parti shyRiver Hilltoppers willbe out Islanders finished second to Naushy Defensively Sault is cnitshytude is a tough competitor and cipated in track By hihSOphoshyto make amends for their nose- set in the Cape amp Island league standIng Offensively Sault is one of the players Wetterland is more year Saultcopfjned his dive finish in the Bristol COUl)ty while Norton was second in the the teams playmaker ana quarshyeounting on 1to help SMTI gain athlettc talents to basketbjlll andloop whIle Stang ~ke Ho17 Tri~Valley Conference terback 8Dlall college recognition in the turned in a cODlJPenlla))le acshyfuture Teallll Player coun~ o~ himself

Ifere~s How They Did hi LiBogue Play Played for Lanagan Sault also represented stWetterland said his outstandshyThere is doubt about his the hardwood

he following are the league 21 Bishop Feehan 7_1 ing worth to the Corsairs comes no Pauls on in the eourage said the Corsairs skipshy Taunton CYO and in the annual from the fact that he can slowrecords of the 35 Southeastem Msgr Coyle 7-1 after painful knee Easter tournament He playeddown the offense and set up per even a

Mass teams Ta~ton 7-7 injury Sault continued to jpve four years of Litue JeagueM N B Vocational 6-8 his all and attended every pracshy Baseball and one season in theK of C Masons1 Fairhaven 14-0 25 DIman Vocational 5-9 tice The injury has slowed him Pony League prior to ~ntetmamp

Nauset 12-0 Msgr Prevost 5-9 visibly but after the season and Coyle Higa 3 New Bedford 15-1 27 SandwIch 4-8 To Cooperate4 Holy Family 13-1 28 Nantucket 3-9

NOTRE DAME (NC) - lfashyCase 13-1 29 Old Rochester 4-10

30 tlonal leadellS of the Scottish6 Oliver Ames 12-2 West~rt 3-11 Bite Masons and the Knights ~oll another7 Marthas Vineyard ~ 31 Barnstable 2-12

of Columbus anno~ced memshy8 Bishop Stang 10~ 32 Dighton-Rehoboth 1-13 strike on~rs of their organizations wU1Dartmouth 104 33 Bourne 0-14 work together on domestic andDennis-Yarmouth 10-4 Chatham 0-12 the enerlY international problems faciolaquoDurfee 10-1 North AUleJooro 1-14

the nation12 Norton 105 you get George A Newbury soveshy13 Attleboro 9-5 Minister Officiates reign grand commander 01 from14 Harwich 7-5

Scottish Rite Masons In theProvIncetown 7-5 a slice ofDn Cathclic Church northern jurisdiction of the US18 Seekonk 8-6 MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-A Lu- and John W McDevitt supremeSomerset 86

theran mInister officiated at the knight of the Knights of ColumshyFalmouth 8-6 marriage of his son in Holy Cross bus made the announcementMansfield 8-6 Catholic church here at a dinner here s~nsoredWareham 8-6

Married were James H Graf jointly by the Masonic Lodge 29 L th and the Knights of Columbus

a u eran and CalTon Ann council in South Bend Episcopalian Rite Gutwinski 25 a Catholic The ceremony was rformed - Both praised the work of Fa-MINNEAPOLIS (NC)- Archshy ther John A OBrien of the

bishop Leo Binz and Coadjutor Grapoundfs fltthell the Rev Paul L University of Notre Dame for Archbishop ~ PY1)1e of the Graf pastor of Holy Trinity r better understanding among the Cafllolic archdIoceses of St Paul theran church two groups Minneapolis were present in the Permission for the Rev Gmt Father Theodore M Hesshysan~lary of St Marks Episcoshy to officiate at his sonB wedding burgh CSC president of the pal cathedral here for the inshy was granted by theSacred Con- University of Notre Dame said stallation of Bishop Philip F gregation for the Joctrine of This nIght marks a great step McNarry as coadjutor bishop of the Faitlh inl lWme in answer to ll forward and reflects the new the Epi6copal diocese of Minneshy J)etition by Archbishop Leo BiDz ~enical spirit which is unishysota of~ ~~-M~eapotis iing ~ople long separated-

PAT SAULT

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20

FREE DELIVERY

ACRES OF

MIElE PARKING

s

NIGHT TABLE EXTRA -

IA beautifui maple and at t~e

new Come see

sNo ~CIJII1Uts 011 Jrinanca

Companies 1l~ Pa

CONVENUlEm ijQJl~GIET DEIMS

bull THE ANCHOR Dayton University Thurs Feb 29 196a Brief Religious on Ecumenism

Selects Advisors SOUTH ORANGE (NC) meanitigful dialogue should not tended not to lead to compro- DAYTON (NC)-An ll-mem-

Named resident Some 1000 mms and Brothers be confused with monologueshy mise but to conyergence ber advisory board of six stushyservfng in tli~ Newark archdi~shy or confrontation He added We talk now of our common dents two faculty members andSANTA CLARA (NC)-The cese were briefed on the basic we must be willing to be pershy belilefs he said not to com- three representatives of theboard of trustees of the Univershy principles of ecumenism in a suaded-we need an open mind promise each others faith but in community has been establishedlllity of Santa Clara has named program sponsored by the Newshy to seek out the truth wherever the hope that at some point in for the Office of Human Relashylrather Thomas D Terry SJ ark Archdiocese Commission for it might be shy the future we will converge tions at the University oJ Dayshy35th president of the Jesuit unishy Ecumenical Affairs

Ifersity Father Terry who sucshy Discussing the difficulties of As an example he pointed to tornSpeakers at the session ineeeds Father Patrick Donohoe establishing Christian-Jewish the wide divergence of views The board under the direcshySeton Hall University includeSJ recently appointed Califorshy dialogue he said we Christians regarding (he Mass and the Eu- tion of Charles Hirt director ofDr Leonard Swidler of Templeaia provinCial af the Society of are responsible for 2000 years charist that existed between the Office of Human RelationsUniversity Philadelphia aridJIesus has been academic vic~ of anti-Semitism and now_ we Martin Luther and the Council will be responsible for estabshyFather Thomas M McFadden ofpresident af Loyola University must overcome our mutual disshy of Trent Then he cited the re- lishing policy making programthe Brooklyn dioceseLos Angeles for the last year trust before dialogue can be cent statement on the Eucharist recommendations helping to

lllI1d a half Previous to that Swidler said dialogue with fruitful issued by Lutherans and Catho- alleviate campus racial probshyIIlIather Terry was dean of the others must be preceded by an lics to show how much closer lems and drawing up proposall ltWllege of arts and sciences at examination of Catholic attishy Father McFadden said diashy the two bodies have come since for implementation Santa Clara tudes In addition he said a logue among Christians is inshy that time

The lFulInitwJlre Open Daily 9 AM

Wonderland to 10 PM

of the IE=st Including ~atulIdCllYS

rendition of Eariy - American in soOid birch - this dramatic 3 piece bedroom

unbelievable price is typical of ail the fine designs arriving daily atMasons

them 0111

$49

Page 20: 02.29.68

20

FREE DELIVERY

ACRES OF

MIElE PARKING

s

NIGHT TABLE EXTRA -

IA beautifui maple and at t~e

new Come see

sNo ~CIJII1Uts 011 Jrinanca

Companies 1l~ Pa

CONVENUlEm ijQJl~GIET DEIMS

bull THE ANCHOR Dayton University Thurs Feb 29 196a Brief Religious on Ecumenism

Selects Advisors SOUTH ORANGE (NC) meanitigful dialogue should not tended not to lead to compro- DAYTON (NC)-An ll-mem-

Named resident Some 1000 mms and Brothers be confused with monologueshy mise but to conyergence ber advisory board of six stushyservfng in tli~ Newark archdi~shy or confrontation He added We talk now of our common dents two faculty members andSANTA CLARA (NC)-The cese were briefed on the basic we must be willing to be pershy belilefs he said not to com- three representatives of theboard of trustees of the Univershy principles of ecumenism in a suaded-we need an open mind promise each others faith but in community has been establishedlllity of Santa Clara has named program sponsored by the Newshy to seek out the truth wherever the hope that at some point in for the Office of Human Relashylrather Thomas D Terry SJ ark Archdiocese Commission for it might be shy the future we will converge tions at the University oJ Dayshy35th president of the Jesuit unishy Ecumenical Affairs

Ifersity Father Terry who sucshy Discussing the difficulties of As an example he pointed to tornSpeakers at the session ineeeds Father Patrick Donohoe establishing Christian-Jewish the wide divergence of views The board under the direcshySeton Hall University includeSJ recently appointed Califorshy dialogue he said we Christians regarding (he Mass and the Eu- tion of Charles Hirt director ofDr Leonard Swidler of Templeaia provinCial af the Society of are responsible for 2000 years charist that existed between the Office of Human RelationsUniversity Philadelphia aridJIesus has been academic vic~ of anti-Semitism and now_ we Martin Luther and the Council will be responsible for estabshyFather Thomas M McFadden ofpresident af Loyola University must overcome our mutual disshy of Trent Then he cited the re- lishing policy making programthe Brooklyn dioceseLos Angeles for the last year trust before dialogue can be cent statement on the Eucharist recommendations helping to

lllI1d a half Previous to that Swidler said dialogue with fruitful issued by Lutherans and Catho- alleviate campus racial probshyIIlIather Terry was dean of the others must be preceded by an lics to show how much closer lems and drawing up proposall ltWllege of arts and sciences at examination of Catholic attishy Father McFadden said diashy the two bodies have come since for implementation Santa Clara tudes In addition he said a logue among Christians is inshy that time

The lFulInitwJlre Open Daily 9 AM

Wonderland to 10 PM

of the IE=st Including ~atulIdCllYS

rendition of Eariy - American in soOid birch - this dramatic 3 piece bedroom

unbelievable price is typical of ail the fine designs arriving daily atMasons

them 0111

$49