07.15.65

20
in- Hyannis i . Bishop SheenT0 Aug. 8, An ecumenical meeting. co-sponsored by Falmouth, with'Rev. William ·C.· Canipben the Cape Cod Deanery of the Fall of St. Patrick's, Falmo'uth as· organist'- Diocese and the' Cape Cod Council of Members are ffom 12 Protestant and four' Churches will be held at g o'clock Sunday Catholic churches'. . afternoon, Aug. ,,8 in Barnstable High On Nov. 1, 1950, Bisj,op Sheen (then School, Hyannis. The public of all dEmomi- Monsignor) became National,DirectOr of 'the nations is invited. . . SoCiety for the Propagation the Faith, Speakers will be the Most Rev. Fulton which, according to the'Pope, is the Church's J. Sheen, D.D., National Director of the principal mission Society of the Propagation of the Faith and To devote full time. to this duty and 1;0 Auxiliary Bishop. of New York, and Rev. J. secure the needed funds which the Pope Robert Nelson, D.D., Fairchild ProfessOf' of alone can administer, Bishop Sheen resigned Systematic Theology in the Gl'aduate School his professorship of philoBOphy at the Cath- of Theology at Oberlin Colleg.e. olic University of. America, where he had Co-chairmen will be Rev. William F. taught for over 23 years. Vandever of the Cape Cod Council of When the National Oouncil of Catholic Churches and Very Rev. William D. Thom- Men decided to spons6r the Catholic Hour son, pastor of St. Francis Xavier Parish, Sunday evening in cooperation Hyannis and Dean of Cape Cod. with the National Broadcasting Company, . A musical program will be offered by a Bishop Sheen became the program's first Falmouth interfaith 'choir directed by Rev. regular speaker on tlie program following . , BISHOP SHEEN John Carajanes of Christ Lutheran Church, Turn to Page Nineteen REV. DR. NELSON . The ANCHOR Fall River, Mass., Thursday, July 15, 1965 tore Romano Monday, said that published statements in the con- troversy attrIbuted to Vatican PRICE tOe Vol. 9, No. 28 © 1965 The Anchor officials sho,Jld be considered· per Year Maryl.s.. Place in Church "entirely personal." . '. . , The paper was not specific' in its reference to· "Vatican oHi- Classma,te ·Lauds· Fr. 'Lynch Source of, Confl ict . dais." But' Father Thomas Stransky, C.S P., U.S.-born staff member of Vatican Secretar- DAYTON (NC)-Although' Catholics and As Chaplain, Cape Pastor iat for Promoting Christian are in opposite camps on the Blessed Virgin's place in Chris- had declared four Rev. George' E. pastor of Joseph's Parish, , after Miss Johnson was given tian belief, they may someday find agreement. That is "all River, and :a..classmate of Rev. James E. Lynch, eulogized conditional baptism in Washing- the opinIDn of Father WiHam J. Oole, S.M., of the theology the first pastor of St. Joan of Arc Parish, Orleans, 'as a tQn on July.:! that no Catholic department· at the Univer- "priest who accomplished much without show and ostenta- would question the validity 'of logy, said he believes a "break- sity of Dayton, all the of the Book through" already has been m.ade aion." Following a solemn school, convent, rectory and hall. of Common f'rayer of the Epis- tioit' con due t. e d by the on' the' question· of Mary, "at Pontificai Requiem Mass' In referring to Father Lynch'. copal Church-in which Miss Society· of, Mary. The Mari-· least on the' scholarly level." eelebrated by. Most Rev. Turn to Page Five Johnson wa'i baptized as an in- anist priest, a scholar·in Mario- He acknowledged,. lames I:r. Connolly, Bishop of that the great majority of Pro- the Diocese, in Our Lady of the testants, including Protestant. Expect Changes in Calendar and Breviory Visitation M1ssion Church, No. ism's most respected theologians, Eastham, Father Sullivan traced "possess no real interest ill the tremendous accomplishments Mary" at the present time. Papal Warning' on Experimentation of Father Lynl'h as assistant and He asked: then developed the service rec- "Is it "not strange that the vert' Both Pope Paul himself and' the Post-Conciliar Liturgicl:\.l Commission have deemed ord of Father Lynch as Army woman whom God chose to be chaplain during World War II in it necessary to warn that careful attention must be paid to the reformation desired and Hut mother should be the source the South Pacific Theatre of hoped for by the church. It is important that it be made' clear that the Church is not of the greatest difficulty be- )perations. tween Catholic and Protestants, abandoning her position' of divinely-granted authority nor are 'general permissions being This great priest, Father Sulli- who both acknowledge her SoD. granted to do just any experimentfltion imaginable. At the same time, it was pointed .an said, was recognized by the as their God and Saviour? government as a leader caring out that some changes, are expected in the liturgical calendar and in the Breviary. '-Strange, yes, but it is an for the ooys away from home at indisputable fact that it is so. war. This rE:('ognition was not True Reform No Generalities Ce I' tain I y most Protestants just a citation but an would agree with the European Army appointment to serve on In an audience in St. 'Peter's Basilica, 1'ope The Vatican Council's Liturgical Commission Calvinist theologian Max Thuri- the faculty of the Chaplains Paul insisted that aggiornamento does not mean a has warned that there have been no general per- an, who claimed that 'Catholic School at 'Harvard. His ability "weakening of the moral. temperament of the missions given to e:icperiment in liturgical matters. theology poses the most agoni" was recognized to such a degree modern Catholic." It is und"lrstandable-though The only time ·such a permission was given zing problem for ecumenical that the apPt'intment really sig- not laudable-that in such times ,of change, 'tra- was between July 3, 1964 and April 15, 1965. This thought.'" nified the naming of a chaplain ditional norms . are. often placE'd in question.' .. concerned concelebration and the reception of Father Cole said that the in- to serve as the ideal for all Such an action could be laudable only if it were Holy Communi.n 'under both species. fluential Protestant theologians clergymen preparing to enter the accompanied by great and cautious study, always At no other time and concerning no other Paul Tillich and Reinhold Nie- 8Crvice. according to the guidance of those who have liturgical affair was any kind of general permis- huhr have also criticized Catho- When appointed by the late knowledge and the authority to lay down laws sion granted. Thus "when rites or ceremonies or lic teaching on Mary. Bishop Cassidy to serve as the of. Christian living.'; innovations of any kind seem out of harmony "Tillich and Niebuhr are lead- first pastor of the Orleans parish, There .is .a. tendency today, .the Pope pointed with today's laws in liturgical :rnatters,- all of ers in a new movement which this great churchman established out, to follow "sheeplike the mentality. of the them are to be considered 'personal' innovations,'. might be called neo-Ptotestan..; the first parochial .school on ,. current fashion," t9·be "the friend of. the world... · , arising. from 'private agitation'" .• and by that tism," he said. "It tends to inter- eapeCod. In 17 years he saw the All this certainly "is not how· we must conceive very .fact ·disapproved· by· the' Constitution and. 'pret creedsymbo- «evelopment of a complete the 'aggionamen.to' to wMch the·CouncilcalJ,s Uo" . *be Consilium (Oommission)" " , lically . and' to rule . out the . .. 1Illit-parlah church, miuioa,. , . Turn ·Seventeea;I.... Tum Pa"e . ,j TUi'1t to' Paae T"oVel,.. . Vatican Paper Says Dioces'e Judge of Conditional Baptism VATICAN CITY (NC) fant-and th,>t it was "unfortu- particular refE'rence to the cir- nate" that the American Presi- cumstances in which it took The Vatican City daily news- clE'nt's daughter had been given place. paper in a brief statement cunditional baptism on entering "In this connection, statements OIl the rel:eption of Luci the Roman Catholic Church. attributed to Vatican circles have Johnson's entrance into the . L'Osservatore Romano's state- been publishE'(I. These statements Roman Catholic Church in effect ment said: if genuine-must be considered said that it is up to diocesan "Stories recently appeared in entirely personal. It is obvious authorities to decide whether H).e press regarding the' entry that, under circumstances such conditional baptism is in order. ir.to the Church of Miss Luci as those involved, the diocesan The same published Jchnson, daughter of the Presi- ecclesiastical authority is com- on 'the front page of L'Osserva- dent of the United States, with petent to express a

description

OIl the rel:eption of Luci the Roman Catholic Church. Johnson wa'i baptized as an in- anist priest, a scholar·in Mario- He acknowledged,. howeve~ "all River, and:a..classmate of Rev. James E. Lynch, eulogized conditional baptism in Washing­ the opinIDn of Father WiHam J. Oole, S.M., of the theology DAYTON (NC)-Although' Catholics and Prot~ta'llts the baptisma~ritual of the Book through" already has been m.ade VATICAN CITY (NC) sity of Dayton, all instit~­ REV. DR. NELSON ' . . i . • .

Transcript of 07.15.65

Page 1: 07.15.65

~lnterfaithDiologue in- Hyannisi .

Bishop SheenT0 Spea~' Aug. 8, An ecumenical meeting. co-sponsored by Falmouth, with'Rev. William ·C.· Canipben

the Cape Cod Deanery of the Fall ~iver of St. Patrick's, Falmo'uth as· organist' ­Diocese and the' Cape Cod Council of Members are ffom 12 Protestant and four' Churches will be held at g o'clock Sunday Catholic churches'. . afternoon, Aug. ,,8 in Barnstable High On Nov. 1, 1950, Bisj,op Sheen (then School, Hyannis. The public of all dEmomi- Monsignor) became National,DirectOr of 'the nations is invited. . . SoCiety for the Propagation ~of the Faith,

Speakers will be the Most Rev. Fulton which, according to the'Pope, is the Church's J. Sheen, D.D., National Director of the principal mission organi~ation.·

Society of the Propagation of the Faith and To devote full time. to this duty and 1;0 Auxiliary Bishop. of New York, and Rev. J. secure the needed funds which the Pope Robert Nelson, D.D., Fairchild ProfessOf' of alone can administer, Bishop Sheen resigned Systematic Theology in the Gl'aduate School his professorship of philoBOphy at the Cath­of Theology at Oberlin Colleg.e. olic University of. America, where he had

Co-chairmen will be Rev. William F. taught for over 23 years. Vandever of the Cape Cod Council of When the National Oouncil of Catholic Churches and Very Rev. William D. Thom­ Men decided to spons6r the Catholic Hour son, pastor of St. Francis Xavier Parish, Sunday evening broadcast~:in cooperation Hyannis and Dean of Cape Cod. with the National Broadcasting Company, .

A musical program will be offered by a Bishop Sheen became the program's first Falmouth interfaith 'choir directed by Rev. regular speaker on tlie program following . , BISHOP SHEEN John Carajanes of Christ Lutheran Church, Turn to Page Nineteen REV. DR. NELSON

.The ANCHOR

Fall River, Mass., Thursday, July 15, 1965 tore Romano Monday, said that published statements in the con­troversy attrIbuted to Vatican

PRICE tOeVol. 9, No. 28 © 1965 The Anchor officials sho,Jld be considered· ~4.00 per Year Maryl.s.. Place in Church"entirely personal."

. '. . , The paper was not specific' in its reference to· "Vatican oHi­Classma,te ·Lauds· Fr. 'Lynch Source of, Confl ict . dais." But' Father Thomas Stransky, C.S P., U.S.-born staff member of th~ Vatican Secretar­ DAYTON (NC)-Although' Catholics and Prot~ta'lltsAs Chaplain, Cape Pastor iat for Promoting Christian are in opposite camps on the Blessed Virgin's place in Chris­t~nity, had declared four d~ysRev. George' E. ~ullivan, pastor of St~ Joseph's Parish, , after Miss Johnson was given tian belief, they may someday find agreement. That is

"all River, and :a..classmate of Rev. James E. Lynch, eulogized conditional baptism in Washing­ the opinIDn of Father WiHam J. Oole, S.M., of the theologythe first pastor of St. Joan of Arc Parish, Orleans, 'as a tQn on July.:! that no Catholic department· at the Univer­"priest who accomplished much without show and ostenta­ would question the validity 'of logy, said he believes a "break­sity of Dayton, all instit~­the baptisma~ritualof the Book through" already has been m.adeaion." Following a solemn

school, convent, rectory and hall. of Common f'rayer of the Epis­ tioit' con due t. e d by the on' the' question· of Mary, "atPontificai Requiem Mass' In referring to Father Lynch'. copal Church-in which Miss Society· of, Mary. The Mari-· least on the' scholarly level."eelebrated by. Most Rev. Turn to Page Five Johnson wa'i baptized as an in- anist priest, a scholar·in Mario- He acknowledged,. howeve~ lames I:r. Connolly, Bishop of that the great majority of Pro­the Diocese, in Our Lady of the testants, including Protestant.Expect Changes in Calendar and BrevioryVisitation M1ssion Church, No. ism's most respected theologians, Eastham, Father Sullivan traced "possess no real interest ill the tremendous accomplishments Mary" at the present time.Papal Warning' on Experimentationof Father Lynl'h as assistant and He asked: then developed the service rec­ "Is it "not strange that the vert'

Both Pope Paul himself and' the Post-Conciliar Liturgicl:\.l Commission have deemedord of Father Lynch as Army woman whom God chose to be chaplain during World War II in it necessary to warn that careful attention must be paid to the reformation desired and Hut mother should be the source the South Pacific Theatre of hoped for by the church. It is important that it be made' clear that the Church is not of the greatest difficulty be­€)perations. tween Catholic and Protestants,abandoning her position' of divinely-granted authority nor are 'general permissions being

This great priest, Father Sulli ­ who both acknowledge her SoD.granted to do just any experimentfltion imaginable. At the same time, it was pointed.an said, was recognized by the as their God and Saviour? government as a leader caring out that some changes, are expected in the liturgical calendar and in the Breviary. '-Strange, yes, but it is an for the ooys away from home at indisputable fact that it is so. war. This rE:('ognition was not True Reform No Generalities C e I' t a i n I y most Protestants just a print.~d citation but an would agree with the EuropeanArmy appointment to serve on In an audience in St. 'Peter's Basilica, 1'ope The Vatican Council's Liturgical Commission Calvinist theologian Max Thuri­the faculty of the Chaplains Paul insisted that aggiornamento does not mean a has warned that there have been no general per- an, who claimed that 'Catholic School at 'Harvard. His ability "weakening of the moral. temperament of the missions given to e:icperiment in liturgical matters. theology poses the most agoni" was recognized to such a degree modern Catholic." It is und"lrstandable-though The only time ·such a permission was given zing problem for ecumenical that the apPt'intment really sig- not laudable-that in such times ,of change, 'tra­ was between July 3, 1964 and April 15, 1965. This thought.'"nified the naming of a chaplain ditional norms .are. often placE'd in question.' .. concerned concelebration and the reception of Father Cole said that the in­to serve as the ideal for all Such an action could be laudable only if it were Holy Communi.n 'under both species. fluential Protestant theologiansclergymen preparing to enter the accompanied by great and cautious study, always At no other time and concerning no other Paul Tillich and Reinhold Nie­8Crvice. according to the guidance of those who have liturgical affair was any kind of general permis- huhr have also criticized Catho­

When appointed by the late knowledge and the authority to lay down laws sion granted. Thus "when rites or ceremonies or lic teaching on Mary.Bishop Cassidy to serve as the of. Christian living.'; innovations of any kind seem out of harmony "Tillich and Niebuhr are lead­first pastor of the Orleans parish, There .is .a. tendency today, .the Pope pointed with today's laws in liturgical :rnatters,- all of ers in a new movement which this great churchman established out, to follow "sheeplike the mentality. of the them are to be considered 'personal' innovations,'. might be called neo-Ptotestan..; the first parochial .school on ,. current fashion," t9·be "the friend of. the world... · , arising. from 'private agitation'" .• and by that tism," he said. "It tends to inter­eapeCod. In 17 years he saw the All this certainly "is not how· we must conceive very .fact ·disapproved· by· the' Constitution and. 'pret theanci~nt creedsymbo­«evelopment of a complete par~ the 'aggionamen.to' to wMch the·CouncilcalJ,s Uo" . *be Consilium (Oommission)" " , lically . and' to rule .out the

. .. 1Illit-parlah church, miuioa,. , . Turn ~Pale ·Seventeea;I.... Tum ~. Pa"e Seventeea·~·~.,j TUi'1t to' Paae T"oVel,..• .

Vatican Paper Says Dioces'e Judge of Conditional Baptism

VATICAN CITY (NC) fant-and th,>t it was "unfortu­ particular refE'rence to the cir ­nate" that the American Presi­ cumstances in which it tookThe Vatican City daily news­clE'nt's daughter had been given place.paper in a brief statement cunditional baptism on entering "In this connection, statements

OIl the rel:eption of Luci the Roman Catholic Church. attributed to Vatican circles have Johnson's entrance into the . L'Osservatore Romano's state­ been publishE'(I. These statements Roman Catholic Church in effect ment said: if genuine-must be considered said that it is up to diocesan "Stories recently appeared in entirely personal. It is obvious authorities to decide whether H).e press regarding the' entry that, under circumstances such conditional baptism is in order. ir.to the Church of Miss Luci as those involved, the diocesan

The same s~~tement, published Jchnson, daughter of the Presi­ ecclesiastical authority is com­on 'the front page of L'Osserva­ dent of the United States, with petent to express a judgment.'~

Page 2: 07.15.65

2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 15, 1965 .. ,'_.

Proper of: the Mass For Sixth 'Sunday After Penteco'st

INTROIT: Ps. 27, 8-9 The Lord is the strength ,of his. people, the saving refuge of his anointed. Save your people, o Lord, and bless your inheritance; and rule them forever1. Ps. ibid, 1 To you, 0 Lord, I call; 0 myG9d, be not 'deaf' to ­me, lest, if you heed me not, I. become one of those 'going

.down into the pit. V. Glory be· to the Father. The Lord is the strength of hiB people, the saving refuge of his anointed.

GRADUAL: Ps. 89, 13 and 1 Return, 0 Lord 1 How long? Have pity on your servants! 0 Lord, you have been our refuge through all generations.

Alleluia, alleluia. V. Ps. 31, 2-3 In you, 0 Lord, I take refuge; let me never be put to shame. In your justice ~scue me and release me, incline your ear to me, make haste to deliver me! Alleluia.

OFFERTORY: Ps. 16,5 and 6-7 Make my steps stead­fast in your paths, that my feet may not falter. Incline your ear to me; hear my word. Show your, wondrous kindness, 0 Lord, 0 savior of those who trust in you.

COMMUNION: Ps. 26, 6 I will go round and 'offer in his tent, sacrifices with shouts of gladness; I will sing and chant praise to the Lo:rod

Bishop Asks Pastor to Resign For Delaying New Liturgy., B~GEYK (NC)-A Catholic

pastor here in The Netherlands who has t'leclined to introduce the revised -liturgy '-until com­pletion of a new parish church -has been asked by his bishop to resign.

Father G.M.A. van Elderen, 57, pastor of st. Peter's parish, earlier had been asked to resign by a group of his parishioners. They requested his resigriation in an open letter, and sent a copy of the letter to the local Ordinary, Bishop William Bek­kers of's Hertogenbosch. Bishop Bekkers himself has now re­quested Father van Elderen's resignation as pastor. . The reviSed liturgy was in­troduced -in the Netherlands last November in ~onformity with the ecumenical council's Con­stitution on Liturgy.

Father van Elderen said he 'Was postponing the changes until

N!!crology JULY 23

Rev. Patrick F. Doyle, 1893, Founder, SS, Peter & Paul, Fall River.

Rev. George B. McNamee, 1938, Pastor, Holy Name, Fall River.

JULY 25 Rev. Michael J. Cooke, 1913,

Pastor, st. Patrick, Fall River.

JULY 29- _.

Rev. Mathias McCabe, 1913, Pastor, Sacred Heart, Fall River.

Rev. Charles P. Trainor, S8., 1947, St. Edv'ard . Seminary, Seattle, Washington.

FORTY HOURS DEVOTIO~ _

July 18-St. Pius X, South Yarmouth.

st. Stephen, Dodgeville. JULY 18-St. Pius X, South

Yarmouth St. Stephen, Dodgeville.

July 25-St.franc~sof.Al1s1si,. New Bedford.

Holy Redeemer, Chatham g. 1--St. George, Westpo~

Sacred Hearts, Fairhaven. St. .T1;leresa, So. Attle­boro. .

nil ANCHIII second Clasa Postage Paid ItFI" RI¥I~

"'ass. Publlshed Ivery Thursday It 41u HlghlanO ~venuel Fill River MIss, by tile Clt!IOlIc Press 0'1 tile Diocese of Flit Rlvtr. SubscrilltlOll PIlei "" iItIt, ..tpa.. ......, ,..,.

the new St. Peter's. church was finished, and the church dedi­~ation had been set for July 7. .rhe rite, was postponed by Bish­op Bekkers, however, because of the pastor's noncompliance.

Sister Mary Paulita Going' To AustralBa

Word has been received of the transfer of Sister Mary Paulita of the Franciscan Missionaries of Mary, who has for the past three years taught fifth grade at Es­pirito Santo School, Fall River, to the community's missions in Australia.

Sister Mary Paulita, a trained social worker, will be assigned to social work in Australia. Be­fore traveling to her new post, she will spend several months in Rome at the Franciscan Mission­aries' motherhouse. She left Fall River Tuesday.

Mass Ordo FRIDAY-Mass of precious Sun­

day. IV Class. Green Mass Proper; No Gloria or Creed; 2nd CoIl. Blessed Virgin Mary

. of Mount Carmel; Common Preface. -

or .Blessed Virgin Mary of Mount Carmel. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; No -Creed; Preface of Blessed Virgin.

SATURDAY-Mass of the Bles­'sed Virgin for Saturday. IV Class White. Mass Proper; Gloria; 2nd CoIl. St, Alexius, Confessor; No Creed; Preface of Blesed Virgin.

or St, Alexius, Confessor. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; 2nd CoIl. Blessed Virgin for Saturday; No Creed; Common Preface.

SUNDAY-V! Sunday after .Pentecost. II' Class. Green. Mass

Propi!r; Gloria; Creed; Pre­face of Trinity.

MONDAY-St. Vincent De Paul Confessor.. III Class. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; No Creed; Common Preface.

TUESDAY-St. Jerome Aemil­lian, Confessor. III Class.

- White. Mass Proper; Gloria; 2nd ColI. St. Praxedis, Virgin; No Creed; Common Preface.

WEDNESDAY - St. Lawrence of 'Brindisi; Confessor and Doctor. of the Church. m Class. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; 2nd ColI. St. Praxedis; Virgin; No Creed; Common Preface.

THURSDAY-8t. Mary Magda­. lerie, Penitent. IIIClass. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; ,Ne Creed; Common Preface.

PAPAL RECEPTION: Pope Paul VI greets an invalid pilgrim from Fiesole, Italy, at an audience in St. Peter's. NC Photo. .

Special friends New Jersey Young Adults Offer AJd

To Delinquents PARAMUS (NC)-Qne of the

times when a youngster most needs a friend is when he has

. just been released from the Ber­gen County Shelter for juvenile delinquents.

Thanks to the efforts of two priests and their lay collabo­rators, that's just when he'. likely to have one. .

The lay people, young adults for the most part, are members of a group called "Special.Friends" recruited by Father Richard' J. Holmes. Catholic chaplain to Bergen County insti ­tutions, and his assistant, Father Michael J. O'Grady.

They offer personal friendship to those youngsters willing to accept it. They spend at least one evening a week with the re­leased youngsters and keep in frequent 1elephone contact with them.

From Broken Homes In the five years since Father

Holmes started the program, the Special Friends have worked with 200 youngsters, many frolll broken homes or lacking ade-

Confirms 2,000 RABAUL (NC) - Bishop Jo­

hannes Hophne, M. S. C., has ended a five-week trip through his Rabaul vicariate here in New Britain, traveling by power boat, canoe anq. foot.. During the trip he confirm'ed more than 2,000 persons. '.

BROOKLAWN FUNERAL HOME, ·INC.

.. Mlrcll Roy - G. Lorraine RllJ Roger laFrance

FUNERAL DIRECTORS 15 Irvington Ct.

995·5166 ,·New Bedford

quate religious training. Case histories attest to the

program's value. One was an iIi ­corrigible runaway girl. Her friend stayed with her for sev­eral years, went bowling with her, took her on drives, met with her at least weekly, listened to her problems.

Her friend was there the day she got married. And recently she was there again-as god­

mother when·the girl's first baby was baptized.

AUBERTIHE Funeral .Home Inc. Helen Aubertine Brough

William H. Aubertine Brian J. Aubertine

Spacious Parking Area WY 2-2957

129 Aile" St. New Bedfor4

O'ROURKE Funeral Home

571 Second Street Fan River, Mass.

OS 9-6072 MICHAEL J. McMAHON

Licensed Funeral Director Registerer' Embalme.r .

JEFFREY E. SULLIVAN FUlleral Bome

550 Loeust Street -Fall Itfve~. Mass.

OS 2-2391

Itoee B. 8uW?all leffre7 B.' SulUm

Pope Pa..I, Warns Of ~vasiYeness'

VATICAN CITY (NC)-P~ Paul V! offere<i Mass in' st. Peter's basilica before 10,000 young girls' who had come .• Rome for the 20th anniversa17 of their branch of Italian Cath­olic Action.

. ,. ."Be strong," hS' urged the~ "'Be strong for your dignity and for your calling as women look­ing ,for the conquest of evel'J'

. right, every development and every. perfection to which the modern Christian life of womell entitles you to aspire. Be stron, in order to be productive bl your . family, m your school, in your parish, in your wor" and in your associations."

He warned them against the spirit of modern youths whe have taken "evasiveness":. their slogan.

"It is fashionable to show one­self skeptical, disappointed and decadent," he said.

"In order to live, these young people have a need to evade, to reject, any obedience, any commitment, any service, any real love. They indulge in ir ­responsible freedom and in way­ward· selfishness."

.Greets Aylesford Carmelite Reviva'l

." L'ONDON (NC).:....P~pe. Paul .YI .expressed the hope that the "material ,rebuilding" of the famed Carmelite shrine of.. Ay­lesford, in. Kent, "will be. •

.pledge and herald~ of the re­building of the Catholic Faith in England.

1~ a letter to the prior of. the shrine the Pope said: ."We desire with all our heart that pilgrims of all faiths, and not least those oppressed by doubts, indifferentism, scepticism' and prejudices, . may find their way to' the sanctuary of beloved Aylesford."

'The rededication of the shrine will be ·preceded by ali open-air ordination. John Cardinal Hee­h'an of Westminister will preach at· a Mass on the day of the rededication.

D. D. Sullivan & Sons. FUNERAL HOME 469 LOCUST STREET

. FAll RIVER, Mass. ' OS 2-3381

Wilfred C. _ James E. Dris~1I Sullivan. Jr.

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

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Page 3: 07.15.65

3 Cathol'ic-Lutheran- Meeting' Shows A,greement,' Dissent'

BALTIMORE (NC) - Official representatives of the Roman Catholic Church and the -major Lutheran churches in the United States came together here for their first formal theological discussions -and determined to submit their areas of both agreement and disagreement 'to searching for Christian unity 'from one of

the Lutheran liturgical books,ex'amination. The first meet­and that all joined in reciting theing brought together top Lord's Prayer. '

/lCholars in the fields of theology Bishop Murphy, who is chair­and Scripture to analyze the in­ man· of the subcommission forterpretations given by both the dialogue with Luth~rans ofehurches to the Nicene Creed, the U. S. Bishops' Commissionwhich is used in both the Cath­ for Ecumenical Affairs-which'olic and Lutheran eucharistic designated the Catholic, repre­liturgies. sentatives - announced at the

'Deep Differences news conference that the groupThe experts agreed that Cath­ will meet again late next Feb­

olics and Lutherans "confess in ruary.eommon" the affirmation of faith which developed from the first ecumenical council, at Nicaea in ,Chinese Moslems Asia Minor in 325 A.D., even though it does not exhaust "the richness of Scripture regarding Praise Pope the person of Christ." TAIPEI (NC)-Four Chinese

There were major areas in Moslems who recently had anwhich the participants agreed, audience with Pope Paul VIbut there were disagreements as praised "kindness and magnani­well. According to the Rev. Paul mity" here, which one of them,1::. Empie of New York, executive Chien Yu-shu, said "will cer­tlirector of the National Luther­ tainly bring all religions closer an Council-who with Auxiliary

1o~ether, and ""ill do much toBishop T. Austin Murphy of Bal­ unite all Christians."timorE" served as cochairman of The M 0 s Ie m s-Chien, Paithe meeting - ''there are' deep Chien-min, Ma Huang-wen anddifferences of opinion between Abdula Timan-were welcomed.s:· back from a pilgramage to Mec­Recalling that the talks stem­ ca at' a dinner given by Archbis­med fr,om discussions he had had hop 'Paul Yu Pin, rector of thewith Bishop John J. Wright of

Catholic Fuj'en University here.Pittsburgh, Dr. Empie said, how­Their audience with the Popeever: "We have gone further

Cflme during their return tripthan either Bishop Wright or I through Europe. They were ac­dreamed of two years ago." companied 011 the visit by Hsieh

Fruitful MeetiD~ Shu-kang, Chinese ambassador Dr. Empie, at a press confer­ to the Holy See and Italy.

ence after the closed session on Archbishop Yu Pin is chair­the seventh floor of the new man of the Int~rfaith Amity As­Baltimore archdiocesan chancery SQCiation, which draws its mem­building, said that it "certainly bel's' from Formosa's four major was a very fruitful meeting for l'eligions - Buddhism, Taoism,which we are all very glad and Islam and Christianity:thankful." '

He said the whole tone of the Meeting was set by the "devo­ Pope Paul to Have tional experience" with which it opened. He cited the fact that Terrace on Palace Bishop Murphy, who presided VATICAN CITY (NC)-Work at the first day's sessions, had l>as begun on a new terrace spaceread a passage from St. Paul ~top the Vatican Palace to pro­from the Revised Standard Ver­ vide a recreational area near sion of the Bible. Pope Paul VI's private apart ­

He added that the Lutheran ment. delegates were gratified by the The terra('e will be completed

"further ecumenical note in that at the top of the part of the pal­the bishop also read a prayer ace that surrounds the so-called

Courtyard of the Holy Office. The courtyard is not even nearBroadcasters Plan the Holy Office headquarters,

Sta tion in Liberia but takes its name from the fact that the Holy Office was locatedTHE 1iAGUE (NC)-Celebrat­ there centuries ago.iog its 40th anniversary, the

Workmen started on the pro­Dutch Catholic radio and TV ject by removing roof tiles fromstation KRO will set up an affil ­the top floor, which is adjacentiated radio station in Liberia to the papal private apartments.• aBed "The Voice of Africa." The terrace is planned so as toThe new station will not be afford the Pope maximum pri­exclusively Catholic in tone, it vacy but without substantiallywas announced, but will work altering the facade of the build­with all groups. Its programs ing.will be in Swahili, English,

French and Arabic. Dutch Cath­elics will be asked for funds for Good StartIt;, and a grant has already been promised by the German Catho­ DJAKARTA (NC)-The new lic relief organization Misereor. Catholic daily newspaper "Kom­

The KRO jubilee will also be pas" has received more than ~lebrated through gifts of TV 15,000 subscriptions in its first receivel'S to needy aged persons, two days of publication here in

Iudonesia. .and through a week-long series ~ discussion programs-in c;urrent

'BLESSES PARENTS: Rev. George W. Coleman blesses his parents, Mr. 3'nd Mrs. George W. Coleman Sr. following his Solt~mn Mass in St. Patrick's Church, Somerset, on Sunday. '

Vatican City New~paper Replies ,To Criticism of Church Wealth

VATICAN CITY (NC) - Va­tican City's daily newspaper, responding to left wing news­paper allegations that the Holy See controls immense wealth, deClared that the Church's goods are given to it by the people and are returned to the people by'the Church. .

L' Osservatore Romano' said:' "The least that can be said' of certain publications ... is that they seem to disregard complete­ly the fact that those w.ho ad-' minister the Churcb's property are trying to make the Church's work for spiritual and materi ­al good broader and more fruit ­ful in the interest of all, even of those who do not accept the Church's higher motives."

L'Osservatore Romano recall ­ed, Pope Paul VI's own recent reference to the Church's fi ­nances when he spoke of their "blessed restricted-ness." It con­tinued:

"The Church is a visible as well as an invisible society. It is embodied in men and as such it has its own structure and must provide also for needs of a temporal nature in the ful­filment of a ministry as well as for a government which is uni­versal.

"If the financing of govern­ment is so large, the total admin­istrative requirements of a uni­versal orgal).ization s.uch as the

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs., July 15, 1965

Passionist Sees New Interest In Bible

FARMINGTON (NC)-A noted scripture scholar who has been in the midst of the Church's "aggiornamento" said here that there is a gratify­ing increase in interest among Catholics in the Bible.

Father Barnabas Ahern, C.P., here to lecture at a Biblical imd Liturgical Institute for priests and brothers, said in an inter­view that this trend is markedly evident in the United States.

"We can't say that it has reached the 'grassroots' to a.ny extent yet," he said, "but the movement is being, strongly felt among Catholic lay leaders and in colleges and schools. It is bringing the Bible right to the fore in the life of the Church.

"And this is as it should be. A meaningful faith must be ex­pressed in the thought patterns of Sacred Scripture. The only language really meaningful to the People of God is·the Word of God."

Father Barnabas does not at ­, tribute 'the "really tremendous" renewed love of Scripture amOng Catholics to the second Vatican' Council, although he emphasizes that the council has without question given great impetus tc. it. In' this country 'he traces Scriptural renewal back to the early 1950's, when' Catholics

.closely involved in the liturgical movement "began to emphasize the study of Scripture.PO

Over the Top lWORCESTER (NC) - HoI,.

Cross College has gone over the top in its first Development Fund campaign for $7.5 Il)illion. A total of $7,545,000 has beea raised since A ...ril 1962.

'41h AnnUli Noyena 10

SAINT ANNE

COME PRAY TO GOOD SAINT ANNE

Solemn Novena, July 17 to 25 . ~ail, Devotions at 3:00' and 7:30 ft•••

Feast' of Saint Anne, Monday, July 26 Masses (Shrine) ':00 A.M.

(Upper Church) 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 A.M.•nd • P.M.

Devotion Service and ProcesstoR 2, 3, 4, and 7:30 ~.M.

SAINT ANNE'S' SHRINE Itl Middle Street Fall River, Ma...

~hurch problems, including mis­8ionary" training, the priesthood' Way, and the Churell ift the -.odern world.

U.S. Tour BOSTON (NC)-Father Fred­

erick C. Copleston, S.J., profes­If(U of the history of philosphy at Heythrop College, England, and at the Gregorian University, Rome, 'will visit this country next spring to lecture at U.S. universities. His first appearance _ill be M Boston Collele.

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Page 4: 07.15.65

---------------------

4 THE ANt.liOK:......Oioces~ of Fan River-lhurs., July 15, 1965

Believes Tod.ay'sYouth Has More Virtues Than Faults

By Joseph T. McGloin, SJ. y &\1. may remember the high !!pirits &l a fun-loving

\mneh &f collegians some month!! llack who caused. some $6,000 damage·1;o the house they ..vue using after a com­ing-out party? "Justice" did a fine job in this ease for the y9tlng people, letting all of rior te everyone else. at this ripethem off without so much old age ef 11, though he does ~s a slap on the wrist, be­ nothing but play chess and read cause there was no proof that up eJl. palmistry, because that damage had been done with is "really :I science." any conscious and deliberate in­ You'd have to be blind not tent! One .0" te admit the existence of young the defendants people like this--pleasure-seek­made this clear ing, thrill-seeking, irrespon­when he said sible, shallow minded, complete­that he was not ly immature. The papers are full ashamed of his of them. No .:me could possibly part in the deny their existence. fracas, because Typical AduUs he, Ii k e the But-its 'jme we adults gave others, had the same credence to the head­been drinking lines and the polls about youth for two straight as we give to corresponding days wit h 0 u t articles abeut adults. We read food -or sleep, about youth's escapades, and and, therefore, that none of the nod knowingly that this is defendants w~ the same per­ typical of youth itself. But i'f son he had been when the d~ we ever happen to read about a age was inflicted. young person who devotes his

But justice or injustice is not Saturdays to helping the poor, the point here and now. Of or about the young Catholic boy more importance here is the and girl who attend daily acknowledgment of this same Mass, we look 011 these young­defendant that "someone" was sters as only individuals and responsible for the damage, but not "typical," he didn't know who! Everyday we read about adults

Seek Publicity convicted of drunken driving Now how does a young per­ or killing or rape or robbery.

son ever fall for a blooper like But we don't make the mistake this? Actually, there are many of saying "There is the typical reasons - the overpermissive­ adult." We save this sort of uni­ness of misguided parents, the versalizing for two groups­

teen-agers and those ofmouthings of unscrupulous and some unthinking college professors race we like to think inferior who con the young into accept­ to our own because somebody ing a fake set of values. This somewhere just has to be infe­gives said professors a lot of rior to us. publicity. And what's a tragedy Someone has referred to a or two in the young when a segment of our young people professor's sensational publicity today as "the new breed." Now is in the balance? this is a handy term., one which

Now this column has been in has a certain amount of truth existence just about two years. hidden in it. And before it W:lS a column, Treat as Intlifltlual the author's ideas about young But the fact is that every people were showing up for generation is, in a sense, a some years in otl1er places. And "new breed," and, in another anyone who has read any of sense, it isn't "a new breed" at those articles knows that kindly all. It's just that we adults have old Father is pretty darn sold only now discovered a few of on young people and knows very youth's real qualities instead of well that they are not represent­ only reading the headlines about ed by any group of kooks in one them. part ~f the country who take no This "new breed" is supposed responsibility for the $6009 to be a minority characterized damage, they caused, bec:luse by m:lDY very good qualities­they were drunk. intellectual curiosity, solid study

At the same time, .t has M of anything :lDd everything, be admitted that teen-agers dissatisfaction with mediocrity have their faults and potential 01' with "eXellS5' instead of an­faults, jUf"t as adults have, They swers. are, after all, human beings, too But I feel that youth with -even though the press. some­ these characteristics. at least times makes them seem like a potentially, is in the minority group from Mars who somehow only publicity-wise. Youth, as man age d to land on earth a group, is endowed with far through no fault of any adult. mere virtues than faults.

Confused Ideals Find the key to each one, Often enough, for inst:lDce, treating him as an individual

the ideals of youth can get con­ and Belt as P:lrt of some publi ­fused with things which haVe cized meG, and it is the rare

young person, not the usual one,Bothing to do with their real whEl will ·ltet rise to the chal­purpose in life-money, first,

and then comfort and pleasure lenee. and happiness sought in all the wronc places. Ornate MonstranceThe r e :Ire, unfortunately, teen-agel's like the "brain" who At World's Fair plays a little chess now :lDd NEW YORK (NC)-A sterlingthen, who qua school at 16 be­

silver, geld-plated monstrance,cause "nothing there was worth­symbolizing Catholic religiouswhile" He also makes no bones beliefs in the nuclear age, basabout the fact that he is supe­gone on display at the Vatican Pavilion at the World's Fair

Liturgy Music here.

ST. PAUL (NC)-A new re­ Nicknamed "the atomic mon­eording of examples of music strance," it was designed by Fr. for the Mass in English has been Daniel Roach, S,S.S., and lent produced at St. Catherine's to the fair by the Blessed Sac­Coli e g e here in Minnesota. rament Fathers of the American E n tit led "Sing Praise," the Province. The 16-pound mon­record featuring choral organi­ strance contains more than 500 zations, is available from the precious and semi-precious school. &tOllelio

SPEAK~R: Mrs. Joseph P Kennedy Sr. mother of our late president, John F. Kennedy, will give an illus­trated lecture in St. Pa­trick's School Auditorium, Fall Rivel', Sunday evening at 8. Proceeds will benefit the school and tickets may be obtained at the rectory.

Invite Educators T~> Conference In Washington

WASHINGTON (NC) Nearly 500 invited educators and persons from govern­ment, business and labor will g&ther here TUE'sday and Wed­ll€'sday for 'Preddent Johnson's White House Conference on Ed­llcation.

Participants in a variety' of panel discussions reflect all le~­els of publil> and private edu­cation. Nine prominent Catholic school edu~'1tors are scheduled to be among sp",akers.

President Johnson, who con­voked the conference with a plea that "~erica needs not 'just mQre edue::-tion, but better education," will greet delegates at the White House on Wednes­(lay.

Vice Pr9iden+ Hubert Hum­I,hrey will sneak to the confer­enee at a luncheOn Wednesday.

Catholi8 :Reprgentatives Particlp:lDts will include:

Msgr. Wiliam 11.: McManus, Chi­cago archdiocesan school super­intendent; "ather Paul C. Rein­ert, S.J.,pre;;irl~nt, St. Louis, Mo. University; Father Theodore M. JieSDurgh, C.S.C., pre sid e n t, Notre DaPJ,e University;

Alse, .Fafter Joseph McCles­key, head of social studies, Car­dinal O'Hara High School, Phil ­&delpbia; Si ~ter Mary Corita,

,chairman, department of art, Immaculate HE-axt College, Los Angeles; SislP.r Margaret Louise, st. Joseph's College, Brooklyn, N.Y.

Also, Fathbr Charles J. Lavery, president, St. John Fisher Col­le~, Rochester. N.Y.; Sister Jae­queline Grennan, pre sid e n t, Webster College, St. Louis, Mo.; ~nd George Shuster, assistant to the president. Notre Dame Uni­lier-sity.

For Korean School BONN (NC)-The miSSion

aid section of the German So­ciety for the Propagation of the Faith, with the help of 1,000 volunteers, has filled 74 railway cargo cars with old paper, clothes and iron in Luxemborg, its first collection outside Ger­many. Money realized by the collection - almost $20,000 ­will be used to build a cateche­tical sea4ilQl ill South Korea.

Says Ecumenism Step to Peace OCEAN CITY (NO) -Ecu­ tf) sing hymns, recite the Lortl'll

menisnl is nei1:her a historical "nyer, and hear addresses ~ event nor a psychological phen~ heth ]!Welates. omenon but a "step to peace 011. a Arekbishop Damiano called worldwide scale," Archbisholl . the eeumenieal movement "Bet,Celestine J. Damiano, bishop of. static but dynamic." He said: ... Camden, said at an ecumenical it! an enpgement; an evol"'~' fellowship service here in New meltt, a' vital and p..~lsatine DR­Jersey. tiertaking lIDder the inspiratiea'

The service, cosponsored Dy &f $he Holy Spirit'·Arehbishop Damiano and Meth­

'l'he archbishoP addetl: "Pro.edist Bishop Fred Pierce Corsell mutual love, in God's good time,of' Philadelphia, 'drew a congre­an authority acceptable to allgation ef almost 1,000 persona wiJl emerge. Our task is to leave sueh a future blessing in GoErItPosthumous Award hands, confident that it is iB

LONDON (NC) - Britain's goes h:lnds. All must be 'com... highest recognition of bravery, mitted hUmbly to God and God's the George Cross, was posthum­ t-emorrow. 1t is a firm step to ously awarded to a Catholic peace on a worldwide scale and newspaper reporter Michael demands our eal'lU!st and contin­Munnelly, who was stabbed to ued dedication. How can we death after going to the aid of urge mankind to pursue peace a milkman attacked by a gang when religion itself is in a state of 14 youths in London on of civil war bordering on an­Christmas Day. archy?"

AFRICA: PITV FATHER PIETRDS

THE HDLY FATHER'S " ••1011 ",a TO THE DRIENTAL CHURCH

In HalhaJ, Eritrea, Father Waldemar Pietras cooks his meals outdoors, over an open fire. His "rectory" 15 a one-room thatched hut made of mud. His parishioners are increasing, but

WHERE few of them earn more than five cents a dayl 1lIE .••• A lonely, penniless pioneer, Father Pietrus

FAMILY does not complain. He could go elsewhere, if he WAGE wished. He stays in Halhal because "God and

IS the poor need me here." • • • His dream is to FIVE build, before he dies. a church ($3,2QO). a

CENTS school ($2,800), and eventually a rectory A ($1,600) In Halhal. ·'It is little enough to give

DAY God In one's lifetime," he says•••• Will you give F.ather Pietros some help? Ifyou have your sights set on doing something permanent fot> God, why not build the church, school, or ree· tory. in memory of'your loved ones. and name It for your favorite saint? Please send some­thing ($100. $75, $50, $25, $10', $5, $2.. $1). 8S much as you can, rilht DOW. Father Pietras Is a priest tel be pitied.

•ROW Father Pfetros receives no saJary. To keep him...

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Page 5: 07.15.65

5 :Major Role for Parish Choirs 'In Supporting New Liturgy

,HUNTINGTON (NC)-Cemposer-arranger Paul Weston said parish choirs must assume a major role in implementing the new liturgy if American church music is to meet the present demand "for a degree of musical commitment never before achieved in this COUll- their own splendid efforts to try:' He said many parishes comply" with participation. may' be trapped into drop- He emphasized that "speaking ping organized choirs in the is one thing, singing is anot.her." face of current regulations con- He reported the ~~penence eerning congregational singing, ::t o,?e church. mUSICIan who but insisted that "choirs are receIve~ nothing. but bla~k needed to stimulate and to train stares, ,~f not o~tnght hos~l1e the congregations." glan~es, w.hen first a~em~ting

. "to direct his congregatIon' 1ft a

ccn- CONGRESS: Planning various phases (i){ MS­pitality necessary for the CCD Regional Cungress scheduled fer Aug. 26-29, are, sea-ted: Rev. William E. Fa.rland, Priests; Rev. Edward C. Daffy, general chairman of hospitality; Rev. Justin J. Quinn, lay speakers. Standing: Rev. Thomas E. O'Dea, Sisters; Rev. Bertrand R. Chahot, Bishops.

Brothers of Sacred Heart Order Make Major-Changes in Rules

''To disband a chOlr now, 'Weston said, "is like firing the ...... h d I ttin th 'I-.cac er an e g e PUP! S" educate themselves.

The composer-arranger made Ilis "~on't bre~k u~ those choirs" !,lea m an article m the J~l~ 18 HSue of Our Sunday VlSltGr, .~ational Catholic weekly pub­Ji&Bed here.

New MeanDaC­wr ...' ' rt d that . ~e.. ,;on asse e even 1ft

IlM'Ulhes where the vernacular , tr d d ''un illi' I'" PO

was ~ 6"uce . . w ng ", Cath~lics . are finding a new .-eanmg m the Mass thl'Du~h

:Interfaith Effort AgainstPoverty

SANTA FE (NC)-The Area­aocese of Santa Fe is joiniAg with the New Mexico Council 9f Churches in a ~wide war .. poverty program :eared e.pecially to help migrant fat'IR btlerersand underempleyeli lleasonal agricultur~ workers.

The Council of Churehes, ef whicb the Santa Fe ,archdiocese ... member, received a $1,360,313 federal grant fO[' the anti-poverty program.

fte pragram will he carried evt in several multi-functional eemmunity centers to be started 1ft three sections of the state: the Pecos Valley, Rio Grande Yaney, and Northern New MeJC­«:0.

The centers' programs wiil. __lye adult, youth, 81ld )K'e­

8Cboe1 education, ~bild eare, _me-making, language sevelep­ment, vocational counseliR', ...a. housing .and .sanitation.

Archbishop James P. Davis of S_ta Fe, expressing pleasure M the federal grant, pointed MIt that one reason why the ..-oRdiecese joined the state eetll\cil was to cooperate in MaCh phases oi the soei.al • ... ­8tolate.

Supplies Stockpiled T. Help Mission

SOUTH ORANGE (NC) Mece than five tons of medical ...pplies have been stockpileti M Seton Hall ·University llere .. New Jersey.for shipment te Honduras where priests of iile IJewark archdiocese sia« • D'Hssion.

Tbe ceoperative ;project iM­~ved the Catholic Physicians &vilds in the four el)Untries III -.e Newark archdioeese, ~s

6'_ four 'Craolic hospitals _Ii seminarians from Immlrell ­We Cenception Seminary, Bar­lkIgt6n, N.J. The doctors IlK­eultu'izeft f e 11-0 w physicianil, lIt-{'es9in~ need for surplliS aR41 Mlftple medicines, while semi­.arians collected the goGlis, llfl8 aurses labeled andpaekace4"em for shipment.

Catholic Relief Serviees-Na­'tional Conference has arrangeti fGc shipment and some di9td­bution of the supplies. Other material will be given to phy­acians in Tegucigalpa, HeA­duras, where the Newark JDU.­.wn is -'located, for treat.e.t ei the area'. poor.

weH-known hymn. S f I

uccess uTh .. I t used th e mUSICIan a er e choir to "help them along" and "the results were overwhelming­ly successful." Members of the congregation had readily ack­nowledged a lack of confidence in their singing ~bility, "but when the choir led them along, they weren't timid about join­ing in."

Advising that "this practice .- th' g ~w" Weston re­lit no m .....,counted that New England Pur­itans "found it necessary to use a trained group apart from the cengregation to 'line eut the tune,' as they put it. The choir would sing out a phrase or line of the hymn, wmch was theft repeated by the congregatien.PO

Experiment Weston also cited the "con­

trolled experimentation with ilung Masses in English that bas heen carried out in various parishes in the Diocese ef Da':' "enport, Iowa."

"The people have IiJeen t91d what it is they're trying to accamplish," he reported, "and the choirs have been able to assist the congregations ia tak­,i~g the first steps fa this im­pctrtant effort."

M· · t Re·ects , .In15 rf J , dral Des.-gnCathe

BRAGANZA (NC)-The Port­uguese ministry 'of public works has rejected tqe design submit­te« for the proposed :Braganca cathedral here, in Portugal.

When plans were announced fer the construction of a cathe­aral. in Braganza, several arcbi­-tectural firms took part iR an • pen competition in w hie 11. priests and engineers acted as consultants. The winning design was sent to the ministry of pub­lic works, which rejected it after receiving a report from ttae ministry of education.

It is believed that the mini-IItry of education felt that the tiesign, a cube-like swucture, weu1d not blend well with Braganza'.s numerous 17th aRd 1-8th century buildings.

Bishop Manuel de Jesus Pere­ira of Braganza and Joliranda must now either stage another cempetition or commissien some individual architect to 8Ubmit a ~IlR.

Father Lynch C90tinuoo from' Page Gfte

4eeply religiOUS parents, . tile eu-lo«ist lalld"'Ci them fer their cam.paign for and net -camet the &:iving of two IIGDS to Ute ~rviee in Christ's priestheed.

"To the ve:'~ end,H Fattaer Sul­livan stated, "Father Lynch's work wasoerformed without ostentation to such a degree that it can tr~thfuUy be said that his right hand never knew what .m left hand was doing."

This spirit of sacrifice he -paases on, the eulogist said, and may we accppt it by offering Acrifices and prayers for pas­sage of his .>oul into its etel'li.M a:lery.

BATON ROUGE (NC) -Tile southern provincial of the Br9­thers of the Sacred Heart Bas announced four major elumges in the rules of the O['cier.

Brother Hubert, provincial, said the changes are adopti90 of a shorter liturgical office, modification of the members' dress, more frequent home visits, and ,the choice of retaining Itaptismal and family names.

The changes were authorized 'lty the general chapter of the .Brothers last November in Rome and are being gradually intl'9­auced in the various provinces.

/ The southern province in­eludes Louisiana. Mississippi, Alabama.' and Texas.

The Brothers' office had C()O­siste? of several litanies .and speClfiC prayers to the samt§. The new office is simply the liturgical office of the Claurch, ,. t th t db·' ts

SImIlar 0 a use T pries.

College to Admit Women Students

AUSTIN (NC)-Wmnell atu­dents will beacimitteti to a eo-ordinate college to De epened in the Fall of 1'96(; at St. Edward's University here in Texas.

:Brother Raymond Fleek, C.S. C., university president, sai. the co-ordinate college will be staf­fed by the Sisters, Servants el the Il1'lImIculate Heart of Mary el Monroe, lIfich. st. Eliwarti'lil has been an institution for JIlea .tudents only since it wufeUful­e4 in 1685.

'Mother Anne Marie, the _na' superior general, said a dis­tinctive college curriculum for wernen -students is being plan-Iled. She said separate claSSeil fO[' women and men students will be maintained durin, freslt ­man and sophomore years, but will not be maintained ri§itH, in the last two years.

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Modiiication of tile traditional dress of the Brothers was ac­complished by the elimination of the scapular and the Rooded cloak,

Lencthen Rome Visits Brothers will now wear a

simple black cassock with Cnl­cifix attached to the chest and a white Roman collar. They may' also wear a black business suit, white shirt and black tie en certain occasions.

Brothers used to be permitted two weeks at home &nce ever". five years. They may now spend five days at home each year plus an additional two days at Christmas time.

One Brother here said the former ruling had prevented some parent./; from enc@Uf"aginc their sons' vocations

Present membe' II to retal'n th rs ~ cthose

e name !pVeR em upon profession of their YOWS

or to use their baptismal names. They may also add their family Kames. Novices will simply ap­pend "Brother" te taek pvea Barnes.

famous for QUALITY'.d

SERVICE!

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., July 15, 1965

Consider Making Convert Clergy Catholic Clerics

LONDON (NC) - John Cardinal Heenan of West­minister· revealed here that the Roman Catholic bishops of England are considering plans to have former Anglican clergy­men' engage in pastoral work as clerics rather than laymen.

Cardinal Heenan referred to the problem eonfronting former clergymen who are married in a speech he' gave at the annual meeting of the Converts' Aid Society. Declaring that the Eng­lish hierarchy intends "to use the new powers given by the Vatican council," he said:

"There are many excellent Catholic laymen in Britian who have been clergy in the Church of England and dearly want to serve the Catholic Churoh­ROt as laity but as clergy.

LichteD Bwr.ea "For the first time we are

earnestly considering Jilow we eaa lighten the burden of those who are called UPoR to make .reat ,sacrifices by embracing the Catholic Church and leaving

'. the Anglican Church that Utey must love.

"We can provide them with the opportunity te serve as e I erg y-not necessarily as priests. But there are 90 many things they can do, now that even in the Mass itself people are so much more closely as­sociated with the priest; so much they can do, if they even bad, for example, the tonsure tet make them clergy, to allow them ie remain what they have al ­ways been-men of past_a! work." .

Cardinal Gets Gift SANTIAGO DE COMPOSTELA

(NC)-A motor-scooter lias heen presented to Fernando Cardiftal Quiroga y Palacios of Santiago de Compostela during an unusual ecooter pilgrimage here by meM­bers of the European Vespa Club observing the Santiago Holy Year. The gift will De ~ven by the Spanish cardinal to a 'semill ­ary.

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Page 6: 07.15.65

~ - .'

,;I-nt: ANc..110~-Oioceseof Fan River-Thurs., July 15; 1965 ti

Wishful T~inking Something is missing from the pages of the great

metropolitan newspapers these days. Time was, only a few months ago, when every issue would have a large ad signed by some of the nation's leading intellectuals and urging that this country get out of Vietnam. These aos were followed by those condemning the country for getting involved in' the Dominican Republic. But of late, there have been few of these.

It may be that the signers have run out of money. A full-page ad in a large daily is no mean expense.

It may be, too, that the signers have come to accept the fact that this country, according to the statements of some of its more formidable policy-makers, has committed itself to Vietnam and the Dominican Republic and will not turn back until its hopes are realized in both places. And such hopes, despite all implications to the contrary, are not imperialistic ambitions but the containment of Communism.

Those ads, when they were running, were a source of, irritation to many. Not that any group does not have a right to criticize the government and its policies. But there was a weary sameness in the assumption written into the ads that this country was wrong and that, somehow, the Communists were just waiting and eager to negotiate in a reasonable way if the United States would only let them do so.

It is disturbing to find such naivete in men and women who are leaders in the fields of education and the arts. Says King Over.SimplifiesWishful thinking can never take the place of facts.

Vietnam Crisis Problem Still a Place By Msgr. George G. Higgins

(Director, Social Action Dept;, N.e.W.e.)It_was refreshing to read in a national news magazine On July 2 Martin Luther King, Jr., speaking at a civil

a promotion in favor of the State of Kansafl with one of the rights rally in Petersburg, Va., called for a negotiated set­leading points being that this state means "People who tlement of the war in Vietnam and said that he may move, believe in God." his civil rights protests into the peace movement with tactics

There was an era when civil authorities would dutifully similar to the so-called teach­write into Constitutions, procbmations ~md the like the red automatically to the field

ins which have been held of international relations.community's acceptance of God and dependence upon Him. recently at several major uni­ Complicated ProblemThere is less and less of that now. It may be that people versities. He told a cheering In criticizing Dr. King's pro­refuse to accept the hypocricy of lip-service without action. ' crowd of 2,000 persons, repre­ posed 'peace rallies, I 'am not It may also be that there are more fastidi~lus atheists these senting the Virginia affiliates questioning his right to disagree days who are mightily distu~bed that their beliefs-or lack of the SOllth­ with the Administration's hand­

ern Christian ling of the Vietnam' crisis. ' On ' of them~are not made the standard of the comml1nity. - Leadership the other hand, I do questionBut it is good to see that God still has a place iIi the Conference', his judgment in trying to create

thinking of some civic officials-even when used in con­ that the civil the impression that the moral junction with a promotional campaign. rights m 0 V e­ issues involved in this crisis

, men t should are so transparently clear that address itself 'they can be, compared to the

, to the' problem moral issues .involved in 'theNot Both Ways of war to stave struggle for racial eqqality in off annihilation. the United States.

There is still a great deal of public worry and concern "It is worth­ The Vietnam crisis is a tra­over broken homes and the ills these give l'ise to. At the less to t a I k gically complicated problem­same time, there is renewed effort to make divorce laws about integra­ vastly more complicated than

ting," he said, ,"if there is no' the problem of racial injusticemore uniform' throughout the states and. this means, in world to integrate in." in the United States, It simply

most writing on the subject, making divorces easier to Dr. King was at pains to em­ doesn't lend itself to self-evi­

obtain.' , dent and transparently clear'phasize that he is just as con­When will society face the fact that it cannot have it cerned about seeing the defeat moral judgments. '

both / ways? As soon 'as the very principle of divorce is of Communism as anyone else. Kight to Opinion "But we won't defeat Commu­ All citizens of the Unitedadmitted, one must also admit with it all the ills following nism," he declared, "by guns States-including Dr. King 'and,on a divorce. And no matter what anyone may say, a' young or bombs or gases. We will do the members, of the Southern

couple entering marriage with the idea in the back of their it by making democracy work. Christian Leadership ConfereI1ce minds that a divorce is possible will never endure the ad­ The war in Vietnam," he con­ -have the right and, if you will,

tinued, "must be stopped. There the duty to engage in a rationaljustments that can bring them into a harmonious family must be a negotiated settlement public dialogue' about the moralif they make the effort and give the time. ' even with the Viet tong. The issues involved in the Vietnam

The very idea of divorce attacks family life and stabil ­ ,crisis and to make known theirlong night of war must be stop­ity. And there are many who like to think that the family ped." ,views as to how it should be still remains the basic and most sacred' unit of society. It After the rally, Dr. King told resolved. ,

Dr. King is alree.dy engaged inis too bad more is not being done to preserve and strengthen reporters that he has discussed such a dialogue. He maintainswith the directors of the South­it. that the United States shouldern Christian Leadership Con­strive immediately for a nego­ference "the possibility of hold­tiated settlement in Vietnaming peace rallies just like 'we even if this means negotiatinghave freedom rallies." directly with the Viet COIlg

Ill-Conceived Plan guerrilla leadership.In my' judgment, Dr. King W,ell and good. He is entitled

will' do a great disservice to to this opinion and has a per­his own reputation as well as to · feet right to advocate it as@rheANCHOR the cause of civil rights, which · widely as possible and in anyhe has served so effectively, if forum available to him; no mat' ­

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER ' he rashly decides to go ahead ter- how m:any ~ually sincere with this ill-conceived plan. . ,;lnd equally'peace-Ioving Amer­

, Pubtished weekly by The Catholic Press of the Dioeese of Fall River He is a ~an of many, parts, ' · iCans may happen 'to disairee' 'but he isn't Superman-and, with him., ' 410 Highland Avenue '

more to the point, he isn't Pres~ , , " . Pressure Taetiea'fatl River, Mass. 67S-71~1 ident of the Jnited States" or . But'does he have' a right iG . ,PUBLISHER ' Commander - in - Chief of 'the 'try',lo forecloSe the debate..:..:.on'

"A.~med. Fo~ces~ : ' "a ,matter which is certainly' ,veryM9;t Rev.' J~mes l. Connolly, D.O., ~hD.., He has demonstrated almost debatable from the moral' point ,GENERAL MANAGER' ". ASST. GENERAL MA~'AGER , eharismatir:: 'gifts of leadership ': 'of view~by' resorting 'systema­

in. the 8~rUggle for racial equa­ ,tical)y to', high-powered, pres­It., Rev. DanielF. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P~ Driscoll . " ~ , . , : lity, but the gods have made ;:s-urefacticS deliberately :caicu­MANAGING EDITOR him mad, 'if he, really, thinks -lated te force tile President'.

" ~hanci?' ..... ..'....Hugh J~ GOld... that these lifis ean be kansfw­:.0. '

E1181SI.1 'AVU

REV. JAMES A. CLARK Assistant Director

latin American Bureau, NCWC

FOR THE LOVE OF GOD

For the love of God Margie Ferguson sleeps under a mosquito net. For the love of God 'she rises early eac'h day. For the love of God she baa to be careful of the water she drinks and the food she eats. For the love of God she seldom sees an' American newspaper and never sees American television. For the love of God she is losing about $5,000 as a teacher in the states. For the love of God she never rides in a car but she has to walk where­ever she wishes to go. For the love of God she is a Papal Vol­unteer.

Mar gi e has been in Peru for a year and has two years to go. She works among Indian children. Until they met Margie these children had never had a teacher. They spoke only in mon­osyllables, thp.y didn't know· there was a place called the United States, they never tried to clean their teeth:

Margie makes them sing songs and play games. She reads with them and to them. Margie makes sure they eat a good meal with food sent down from the States. She tells them about the fine life they can have if they devel­op their initiative.

Margie is the first new thing to hit the Indians in the mount­ains of Peru for over a thousand years. She' knows that she can't

'change customs of centuries in three years. But Margie is con­fident that another will replaee her. •

Margie misses the movies. She misses pie and pastry. She misses her family. But Margie loves the Indian children. They still don't say much but when they smile slightly from under their som­breros she is glad that she made the tdifficult decision to volun­teer.

The parents and her charges are being bombarded by Com­munists. They want the adults to rebel and invade the plantations and riot and cause disorder. The Indians are still 'a silent people, still somber and slightly sullen. They have not responded to the appeals of the Communists. It's fortunate' because if ,they did their coOntry would be an easy victim for Communism.

,Margie didn't know'that chil ­. dren were starving. She didn't know what a strong threat Com­munism is. She didn't know that children' had never .spoken a complete sentence. She didn't know that disease racked whole

,settlements of Indians. Today she knows these things. Today she is hoPeful that her efforts will overcome some of these prob­

:leffiS,fo]: these, people.. She, is ' ,hopeful that when her children are adults they will, ·remain faithful to their ancient Catholic ' 'iaitti.' She' 'is 'hopeful that Jhey will resist Communism. She is 'hopetul thai th.et, will be an 'in­'tegral part of their, epuntry. _ .. -"..... ' ..

...Today, 'Margie' doesn't work

.0nlY-for ,the love, of ·9od.. She works for -the love' of A'nit8;"'oi·.luam, fIi'Pedro, 01: Maria, of'.:.'.

Page 7: 07.15.65

'.'" '1" " .••••

~F'

2fHE ANCHOR-DfoceM·ofhi Rt¥w-1'hvrS., July 1S. f961.

CATHEDRAL CAMPERS: Summer activities are in full swing at with counselor John Oliveira, Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, New Bedford. From ·Cathedral Camp, East Freetown, where boys from all over the Diocese left, Paul Mercier, St. Elizabeth, Edgartown; William O"Rourke, St. Law­·are enjoying Unequalled ·facilities. Left, on the rifle range with counselor rence, New Bedford; James Nicoletti, st. Thomas Mol',,,", Somerset; Mr. Thomas Couto, St. Michael's parish, Fall River, are, from left, Robert Oliveira. Right, it's swimming time for Michael Nun€'s~ St. Peter the Nuzzo, St. Patrick's, Wareham; Mack Toomey, St. John .Raptist, W~stport; Apostle, Provincetown; George Mendes, Our Lady of the Assumption, New Mack Bentley, Holy Rosary, Taunton. Center, boys prepare for craft session Bedford; Michael Smith, St. Mary, North Attleboro.

Report Canto" Steady Increase German Advocates Dialogue With World Priest's Death In Escapees

Cardinal Doepfner Urges Missionary ZealIn Red Prison From China HONG KONG (NC)-Word MUNICH (NC) - Catholics stances, outright defense is re­ The Christian, said the Munich MACAO (NC)-The Jesuit

must engage in dialogue with the quired, not a conversation that prelate, must always be ready tohas been received here that Fathers' Cas-a Ricci-a refu­world according to Julius Cardi- weakens." accept signs of a genuine rap­Father Dominic Tam of the nal Doepfner of Munich. He stressed that there are prochement and only reject a gee Relief station in this Canton archdiocese died in a . "Dialogue with non-Christians starting points for dialogue in conversation when "dialogue be­ Portuguese island territory Red China "hospital" as a result who believe in God," the Car- the pre-occupations that athe­ comes meaningless and impos- off the south Chi n a coast­of communist persection. dinal asserted "is gaining in- iSts and Christians have in com­ sible." . received 1,930 escapees from

The report was received by creasing significance nowadays." .. mon. The Christian must always communist China ip. the firstThe proper conduct of dia­Father Joseph Madeore, M.E.P., In a time when the questi~n is see his partner in dialogue, the six months of 1965, as comparedlogue, the -Cardinal added, re­pastor of Our Lady of the Ro­ on~ of faith or no faith, he said, Cardinai noted, as. a brother to 704 for the same period inquires freedom, hone.sty and fair­sary. church here. He said .Father there is a need for a closer union called to Christ's salvation, even 1964. ness, as well as an absence of"am died on May 11. of those who believe in Jesus though the Christian must main- A craving for personal free­calculation and early attemptsAt the time the communists Christ. . tain appropriate reserve. dom accounted for this nearlyat conversion. And, he said, "thetook control of Canton in 1949, Dialogue with atheists sh.ould three-fold increase in the num­Christian must be filled with a· Father Tam was an asistant at also be conducted, he added. ber of refugees, most of whommissionary zeal which is unfor­the cathedral there. Father Ma­ "The Church is putting the ques­ Pope Paul Praises' come from farming communitiestunately lacking in many."deore said that ''Father Tam was tion of dialogue with non­ in the Canton area.Chi'lean Presid~ntoften questioned and made to believers with extreme urgency Present Is Transitory Also, as in the case of the go to communist meetings de- today." V A TIC A N CITY (NC) "The Christian is called. upon 61 young farmers who swam

· signed to insult the Church. But Missionary Zeal Chile's Christian Democratic to give meaning to the world into the port of Macao on' the ·he kept intact his loyalty and The German Cardinal warned, president, paying a state visit from the basis of his faith. For morning of July 1, tighter food the faith of the Chinese Catho­ however, against being too gul­ to Pope P;lul VI, was welcomed him, the present-day world is restrictions' prompted flight. lics." lible in accepting dialogtre. "In with words of praise for his only transitory. In spite of that, Said one: "We used to get

After Bishop Dominic Tang, this case," he said, "prudent re­ ''love ior the humble classes." he cannot remain 'passive about 25 portions of rice a month­·S.J., apostolic administrator of serve and, under certain circum- President Eduardo Frei re­ it. We have been called to bear now we get 110 a year. We live Canton, was arrested, Fat her plied that the Chilean govern- witness to our divine experience on bananas and vegetables." 'l'am ran the See. In 1959, the Asks for Prayers 'ment and legislature are striv­ in conversation from man to Complained another: "No meat communists put him in a Canton ing ior "the redemption of the man," Cardinal Doepfner said. for six months." .

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prison and then transferred him In Critical Hour proletariat" as the best means to YingTak prison. There his VATICAN CITY (NC) - Pope of serving the common good health began" to fail as a result of Paul VI asked ihousands of of the entire Chilean nation.

faithful gathered at his weeklyenforced labor, poor conditions, Frei, wearing the Collar of ill treatment and no prop e r general audience to pray for him the Order of Pius IX Which the Dledical care. . and for the Church. Holy See had bestowed upon

After he was sent to a labor · Noting that he is celebrating him the. previous day, was, :re­· ·the second anniversary' of bis ceived in the Pope'. privateeamp, nothing further was' heard

election as PontiH, the Pope library.Of him until the news of his "llaid: . .death. Father Madeore said· that of "We take advantage of this A.t Consecration

occasion to recommend ourselfthe 30 Chinese diocesan' priests DUBLIN (NC) - Presidentto your prayers and to recom­attached to Canton, a fe.w are Eamon de Valera of Ireland at­• mend the entire Church, so thatstill alive; but little news· is tended tlli: consecration of 'Bis­'. iii this hour which is, c~ti~alheard of them. hop Anthony McFeely Qf Raphoefor the destinies of hum~nity, by WUliam Cardin'al Conway ofill this blessed and mysteriousBenedictine Heads' Armagh. The Church of Ireland · hour of the ecumenical council. (Anglican) was represented' by

·the ways of the Lord tow'ard"To Discuss Renewal Archdeacon Crooka of Letter­·achieving holiness of. the people. LISLE (NC)-Tbe heads 'of ·.kenny.. .of God, the unity of all 'Christ ­'. the 19 monasteries 'forming the

,i;ms, and prOSPerity' an.d. peace, American' Cassinese Congrega­· ix:t,.t,he. world. may be. clear andiion of Bi:medictines have agreed ·full.:', . '. · to hold an· extraordinai.jgeneral

· meeting ·next· year to' dIscuss Summl!l!~.. Fe·st.·va·l·· ·monastic"rtmewal. l'"

The' decision was taken .at . . St. Stanislaus. Parish,. .Fall the conclUsion of' the regularly . Rive:r:.. will hold . a Swnmer

. scheauled 35th general 'chap~er .E:estiva). at.. U.t:baJ;!. lJ,rove .8atur­. of the' 'cohgre·gatlon. 'Ordinarily ... ..day and,SuI;lday, ~y 24 and,,25.

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Page 8: 07.15.65

I

Phyllis McGin·ley Champions Happy Fulltime Homemakers

By Mary Tinley Daly , That unabashed and eloquently frank exponent of Amer­!lean housewifery, Phyllis McGinley, has, like good Pope John, ."opened windows and let in fresh air" on'a way of life many American women have been almost ashamed to enjoy - that of fulltime homemaking. Assailed on all sides by the attitude that homemaking per se is dull and boring, an unthinkable morass for "the educated wom­an," we note the .oaring success of Betty Friedan's T h lI)

Feminine Mystique. Mrs. F.r i e dan's contention that educated wom­en could not possibly fin d fulfillment in domesticity, that auch fulfillment must inevitably come from going forth into the marketplace, seems to be echoed and re-echoed.

"Success stories of women are tied into their achievements in t hat marketplace: the "five­figure" salaries, width of their' lnfluence, the i r "nation-wide Ipeaking tours," their organiza­tion of a business, or at least a branch-of-a-business. To make a "complete" story of these fem­inine successes, the author usu­ally illustrates' the article on the •uccessful woman (if she was married' somewhere along' this highroad) with pictures of. her

· family. 'Implication always is that she,Mrs. Success, achieved It all in spite of her domesti. duties.

CathoH., Colleges Too Even colleges, Catholic eoi­

leges as well, get' into ihe aCt, proudly boasting in their alum­nae reports of how many grad­uates are "using their education" after a brief-sometimes all too b r i e f - interval of "faD)ilyduties." .

It is. almost as though the hi- . atus of bearing and rearing chil ­dren through their first depend­ent stage were a necessary but begrudging contribution to the perpetuation of the race, a duty to be rid of as soon as possible.

Now, in a resounding rebuttal to the Betty Friedans, comes an extraordinarily able spokesman for those who like domesticity, prize-winning author Phyllis McGinley, in private life, Mrs. Charles Hayden, who sincerely believes that the educated wom­an of today can be happy M home.

In her book, SixpenCe in Her Shoe, now on the best-selling lists for more than 28 weeks, with sales. soaring over the 100,000 mark, Phyllis McGinley'.

Presentation Nuns Ope" New Mission in Mexico

· . LOS ANGELES (NC) - The Sisters of the' Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary win

· .Pen a' mission' in Mexico next I'all at the 400,:Year-old· parish8f .SanJacinto in' the' mountaill toWn of Ocosingo in Chiapas, Mexico's sOuthernmost state. "1'Iie 'Sisters Will staff a medical dispensary,' teach catechism. and ;nart an adult education pro­

message Is coming through UI women who in their hearts feel as she does, that homemaking is worthy of the best a woman has in her.

Few housewives, it's true, . have the talent of a Phyllis Mc­Ginley, and it was not her house­wifery that won her a Pulitzer

. prize,' the Laetare Medal, many an honorary doctor-ate .and a place as Time magazine's recent cover girl. Nevertheless, to have a woman ~f this stature espouse the cause of. the dignity of house­wifery, to declare publicly that (Time, June 18, 1965):

8my Guilt '"I feel so sorry· for this young­

er generation (of women). They've' got this silly guilt. They've been told that they're not contributing to the'world if they relax into their normal ocean of domesticity. 'If you're not a grellt artist or writer, you shouldn't 'be made to feel guilty. by having to be somebody be­lides a housewife."

.After reading Sixpence in Her Shoe, we picked up a previoua book of Phyllis McGinley, Times Three, pr~sented to 1IIIl by daughter-in-law Lu, with. an en­dearing inscription (Mo.ther'• Day, 1961). Buried back in the volume we read: "And how I might, in IlOmetall'

town instead, . . From nine to five be 'further­

ing a Career, Dwelling unfettered _ ~.

single fiat, . My . life Diy OWJi, likewise my'

dally bread-When I consider this, it's Yery

clear I might have done much worse.

I might,at that." Mrs. Elmer Jones Oft· Elm

Street, in whatever town, and Mrs. John Daly of this colum salute you, Phyms McGinley­our spokesman, Mrs. Charles Hayden.

Franciscan Nuns Elect Superior General

BALTIMORE (NC) - Mother Mary Alexander was elected su­perior general of the Franciscan Sisters of Mill Hill, London, En­gland, at the community's gen­eral chapter meeting here.

Since 1962, she has been pro­vincial of the sisterhood's Amer­ican province. She succeeda Mother M. Bernadette.

Mother Alexander is a native of Halifax, N. S., and was' b r 0 ugh 1 to Washington, D. C., in her infancy by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alexander J. Gray. 'l'he 191-member sisterhood has establishments in England and Africa, _ wen all in tbiB COUll­by•.

Sees Chu'rch Position Favorable in Iceland'

REYKJAVIK (NC)Theapoa­tollc delegate to the Scandinav­ian countries said that the Cath­olic Church here in Iceland is in an excellent position due to Ice­

CRS TRAINEES: Lay administrators in foreign ser­vice with Oatholic Relief Servlces-NCWC have grown to number 150, supervising di1'ltrihution of f")()d, clothing and medicine in 73 countries around the world. Here trainees Susan Fitzgerald, Belmont, Mass., and Stanley Garnett, Kansas City, Mo., question Bishop Edward E. Swanstrom, executive director of CRS, on their future assignments in the Philippine Islands. (NC Photos)

Stresses Women's Role. .

Sister Mary Luke Urges More Participation In Church, State Affairs

DENVER (NC)-Greater par- . sciousness more play while mak­ticipation by women in Church. and State affairs was advocated here by' Sister Mary Luke, first American woman auditor at the Second Vatican Council.

The .mother general of the Sisters of Loretto told a conven­tion of the Kappa Gamma Pi honor society here: "Wome~ should ~ represented on dioce­san, parish and local civie boards. They should be membera of commissions and planning or­ganizaUons, and parti~ipate in the wider areas of discussions.'"

Sister· Mary Luke singled out the current leadership institutes program of the National Council. of Catholic Women as "a step in the right direction." She said these institutes provide an in­sight into current problems and opportunities.

"Women have their role and the special place as wives and mothers," she said, "but with their better education and a larger measure of free time, they should take part in planning and discussion . sessions at many levels, giving their civic con-

Sing Along Technique For Church Singing

SPOKANE (NC) - A man whose livlihood once depended on his ability to get movie theater audiences to sing now has turned his attention to get­ting people to sing out in church.

Jean Anthony Grief, organist and hymn writer, .recalled that he used to play the organ in Chicago theaters during the heyday of movles. It was the" era of community singing at the movieil and the oJ.:ganist's job to get a.udien~s "to .raise 'th~ roof"- in song, Grief said. 1* was either iPat or ioodby job.

The ~br.uquewas based on three thlDge-siinple melOdy, easy-fiqwing''!iords and ~.not~ above'lC.". .Now 1be. owne'r 01 the Northwestern Organ im4 Chime Co., here, .Grief h~

. adopted the same technique :101' ehurch .sin~ing.

ing their collective voice heard with the Church and State."

Sister Mary Luke, who leaves Sept. 1 to participate in the fourth session of the Vatican council which convenes Sept. i4, said the.perfection of the Church and the .world never would be completed without the contri ­bution of women.

"The form and scope of. the Catholic women's relationship to the Church and the world is • subject that needs a great deal of research," Sister Mary Luke said. "Both men and women must take part in t~s research.­

"Cdrmente Nuns Mark Founding

roWSON (He) - Lawrenee CardiDal. Shehan of BaltimoJle will preside and preach at • Mass Saturday marking the 175th anniversary of the f01lllcl­ing of the.Carmelite nuris in .... United States.

The Carmelites were the fir. religious community of women in the original 13 colonies. The Discalced Carmelite Sisters 01 the Baltimore Carmel are direct descendants as a religious com­munity of the first foundatioa: in 1790 at Port Tobacco in south­ern Maryland's Charles County..

The anniversary Mass will be offered in the chapel of the com­munity's convent. Father Albert Bourke, O.C.D., an international official of the Discalced Carmel­ites in Rome, .will offer the Mass.

The original group of Carmel­ites came to the U. S. from Bel­gium after the Revolutiona.,. War at the request of Archbishop John Carroll of Baltimore. The-)' remained' in southern Maryland untii 1831, when economic con­ditions forced them to move .. Baltimore.

Catholic Colleges Hetp New OEO Projed

WASHINGTON (NC) - '!'we Catholic colleges are among .. public and private institutiolUl 01 higher education cooperating ill a new $2.2 million U. S. project

. to help disadvantaged hisIl school pupils enter college.

Webster' College,' near 81. Louis, Mo., and LeMoyne Col­lege, Syracuse, N. Y., will coa­duct .experimental programs thill Summer to measure what can be

-done for high school pupils witll special attention £tom a teaeheL

Webster, operated by ~he Sis­ters of Loretto, was granted $77,940 by the U. S. Office of Ec­onomic OpportUnity. LeMoyne. operated by Jesuit Fathers, wa. giWJ1 $90,428.

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< PANAMA crrY (NC)-Many Pope Paul VI to President As­ shire is the first non-Cathol1e' SOUTH BANK-Cove St. at Rodney French Boulevard Protestants are expected fopar­ geir Asgeirsson of Iceland. chosen to receive the st. Agnes LUND'S CORNER BANK-Acushnet Ave. near Lund'. Corner ticipate with their Catholic Asked at an interview about Award of the national Catholie WEST BANK-Kempton Street at Mill Stref)t . neighbors in • Family Rosary the situation of the Catholic War Veteran's Auxiliary. DARTMOUTH BANK-Dartmouth Street near Rockdale Ave. Crusade to be held in the prin­ Church in Iceland, the archbish­ Mrs. Sarah Bresnick was eipal towns' of Panama, which op answered that though Catho­ selected for the honor, given DRIVE-IN SERVICE .AT ALL BANKS will begin in this city early ill lics are few, the Church is never­ for outstanding work in .civie ,iuq. &he leu in a "eood Ilituation." affairs. ill church and a~ home.

Page 9: 07.15.65

9 >.-G,arden"Tour P'roves" ThatTiny ., Space Can, Delight ·Beholder··

By Marilyn and Joseph Roderick A month or so ago my wIfe talked me into taking a tour

of gardens which were open to the public in the Back Bay area of Boston, the Beacon Street and Commonwealth Av­enue section. This has always been a charming section of Boston, and is justly famous .

chaise lounge, drink in hand,f()r its display of magnolias gazing adoringly at her Sir Gal­which delight visitors in the ahad in Brooks Brothers ber­Spring. However, I had never mudas and white chef's apron. IlUSpected, although I attended Like most people, who suc­college in the Back Bay, that it cumb, eventually, to the per­was possible t<, have gardens suasions of the men in the grey :worthy of display sandwiched flannel suits we too, joined the between the apartment build- rllDks of "Revolving Rotisserie" lugs which line the streets of owners. We started out slowly BOston. I anticipated seeing a with mundane hamburgers and sreat deal of statuary (which such, with a moderate amount was present in some gardens), of success. Of course, a few pat­but was not prepared for the ties did find their way into the extp.nsive gardening that we did coals but they say one does lee. Qequire a taste for charcoal.

The gardens as • whole are However, being a home maga­best thought of as retreats or zine addict, I was constantly sanctuaries rather than as flow- confronted by "the greatest l)ar­er gardens.' Asided from potted beeue recipes 0 fall times" and ugonias, pansies. geraniums and ,~'hat woman with any interest other hot house plants, there in cookery could res i s t that was very little in the way of come-on for long. Our first ven­flowers. At most, the average ture was • barbecued chicken garden was no larger than 20 that gave us an opportunity to feet by 20 feet. What I fowid try out our electric sPit, or I interesting was the use of struc- should say for Joe to try out, ture which made. the gardens since I wasn't going to spoil his both pretty and comfortable.. male ego by taking those chef

Brick was used extenSively chores away from him; and I ftlr paving (there was'only One oid have my eye on that chaise lfi:wn in the 12 gardens ~e vis~ IIJunge. .ted), and although.it made·dif,.. Well, he rotated that bird for f!cult walking for women with about half a day, or so it seemed, tJigh he.els, it was very effective. with stops every now and then Brick was also Used forconstIvc- to squirt another dash of liquid ting raised be¢;, which gave' the fuel on the coals. This resulted gardens horizontal and yertic~ in., roaring flame that recalled lleq;Pectiv~ neCessary in • smaU ''The Last Days Of Pompeii" but garden. The vertical dimension the heat produced would just ~as a],so gained.through the.uSe about toast. marshmallow. The of vines, hanging basl!:etIJ and final meal was quite • failure IInall trees. as culinary efforts go and thiI

Plants of note were a Climbing fact along with succeeding one. bydrangea which covered .. 10 -resulted in our moving our- kit ­foot high wall for twenty. feet. cl1en back indoors, boosted b,. '!'he hyhrangea was not .blos.som- loud cheers from Joe. who' never Ing while we were there, but we did enjoy e;tting outdoors. ~ere told that it was truly apec- The following recipe 18 for tacular when in bloom. This one the majority who do cook out­

was particularly large and was doors successfully. I confess. I do estimated as being at least 50' this one in ~e oven. J'ears old.

In one garden there were two Limed-Glazed Rock Cornish espaliered apple trees which Game Hens 'Were only two years olt!. These 4 Rock Cornish game hens or were shaped in the form of can- small chickens, 1 to 1:IM lbs. each delabra and tied to a wooden lh cup butter melted fp.nce. In several cases flowering 2 tablespoons brown sugar dogwood was used very effec- 3 tablespoons lime juice tively to fill a sunny corner and 2 teaspoons soy sauce these slight trees were perfect 2 teaspoons salt. for the small gardens. L Thaw Rock Cornish game

There were fountains in al- hens according to directions on most every garden and the quiet the package. These tiny, delici ­trickle of water made the day ous birds are found in the frozen seem 10 degress cooler than it food section of your market. ~as·. These were truly pretty 2. Mix together melted butter, little gardens flouishing under sugar, lime iuice and soy sauce. dificult conditions. 3. Clean hens, rinse and pat

In The Kitchen dry. Brush cavities with some of "'Backyard Barbecue Bonanza" the sauce.

--Grills For Gourments on the 4. If you have a turning spit Go" shout the Summer ads as .' on your grill, insert rod through the Madison. Avenue ad men the hens, pressing tines of hold­work overtime' to convince'Us ing fork into breast. Take a that our status as the, a.irerage I'!~ce. of cord, about '20 inches American family rests on verY loD.g. bring it around the bird lIhaky foundations unless we and loop around each .wing, ty­move our kitchens outdoors. The ,;ing with a slip knot. Leave equal husbands of the family seems to ends of the string on each side. be the chief candidate Jor back- Take a second piece' of cord and ,.ard chef, as' most illuStrations . loop around tail and then around show a handsome virile male crossed legs. Tie very ';tightly to grilling handsome "~riJ:e' steaks .i<'eep bird on spit. Tie the two ~th apparent glee. The little pieces of core! together tightly. 'Woman in the pictur~}s lo~;- Fasten .rem~ning birds on spit lug gracefully on stu n n i n g in tbe same manner.

..... S hi' h" . 5. B r u s h beps with butter.""ew C 0 arslp :'" mixture. Baste frequently with ST. LOUIS (~C)-A three,- ., b~~ter mb:ture and drippings, if

~ar, $1,500 scholarship haS been you are using a drip pan under made available to the Catholic 6. .A.~?ut. :one. hour. roasting Hospit~ Association. by the time, .it .coals are good and hot. American Hospital. Supply. Cor- .Test for doneness by moving a poration for the use' of • lay 'leg g e n t I y,. drumstick-thigh student in the St. Louis Univer.. r joints move easily when' hens sity prograni in hospital admin-" are done. iBtration. The· scholarshipia' :7. For the less adventurous, Damed after Foster G. McPaw, oven rt;)asting instructions are chairman of the board· of Amer- 'found On packaee ·the birds come lean Hospital Supply. iL

HISTORIC EVENT: St. Annets Hospital, Fall River, had history repeated Monday night, when triplets were born to Mrs. Robert Pacheco of St. Mishael's Parish, Fall River, and thus a family tradition was prol0nged because nine years ago, her mother, Mrs. Joseph Pascoal of the same parish, left, had triplet girls at St. Anne's. Mother Marie Pierre, h 0 s pit a I administrator, l'ight, visits the mothers of two sets of triplets.

Returns to Selma Irish Registered ~urse to Work

At Good Samaritan Hospitalr

SAN FRANCISCO (NC)'-A young Irish nurse who. went to Selma, Ala., to participate in voting rightlil demonstrations last MlU'eh is returning th,ere to work at Good Samaritan Hospital, '\y"here injured d~moli~ atrators were treated.

"All of us who went would like to return to Selma" said Mar y Connaughton f~r the past three years a le~der of the Catholic Interracial Council of San Francisco. "I'm going for all of us. I have qualifications

. that are needed and no partic­ular commitments here."

She hopes other . nurses will

Mother Miriam Heads Medical Mission Nuns

PHILADELPHIA (NC)-8is­ter Miriam Hoover has been appointed provincial of the American Province of Medical Mission Sisters. She succeeds Mother M. Benedict Young.

.The former· Miriam Hoover of Lousville, Ohio a nursing education alumna of Marquette University, Milwaukee, pioneer­ed the' society's first medical center in Latin America. From 1951 Until 1961, she was admin­istrator of Our Lady 'of Coro­moto Hospital, Maracaibo, V~n';'

ezuela. . As American proVincial, Moth­

. er Miriam is responsiblEi'" for more tlian 400' Sisters stationed in 22" hospitals :and medical centers' in Uj;t"anda, Ghana, East ~d West ,Pakistan, India, .Yen": ezuela, . South Vietnam and" the trriiteil .states. .',' ,

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follow, to help an~ate the hospital's eritical shortage of registered nurses.

"As an Irish woman I feel I have a special obligation to go. The Irish should have a sense of justice for others. We had to fight for our own independence and survival, so we can't be smug now. We have the respon­sibility of l)elping other people get their rights.

"I came to this country and can live where I choose, if I can afford it, and go where I choose without being a citizen. But there are people who are American citizens of a different color who can't do this. This is a great injustice."

Born in Galway and reared in Roscommon, Ireland, Miss Conriaughton became interested in the plight of Southern Ne­groes when the Little Rock; Ark.. school iIitegration battle made headlines in Ireland.

Catholic Nurses Members of the Fall River

Catholic Nurses' Guild will man a first aid station at St. Anne's Shrine Sunday, July 25, when the feast of St. Anne will be ob­served by hundreds of pi1grims~ 'Ihe unit. will be in 'ch!U'ge of Mrs.. 'Thomas'Fleming, gUild presiden.t: Members'a~o plah a garden party Wednesday, Aug. H at the home of Mrs. Francis Quinn, 'Lakeville. In' charge' of arr~gements are Miss Helen Gould and Mis~ Katherine Nash.

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THE ANCHOR.... . " .. Thurs., July 15, 1965

Asks Bequests For Schools

FRESNO (NC) - A lasting solution "can be found to the problem of Catholic education if parishioners bequeath a part of their estates to the Church . for education of Catholic chil ­dren, the Monterey-Fresno di­ocesan superintendent of schools ~d.

Magr. James G. Dowling said: "In every parish there are

at least a few who could con­tribute sizable amounts to pro­vide scholarships for need,. students. There are many who could make bequests for Catho­lic education."

The "impoverished middle classes" he added, "are being pressed to the breaking point in' their heroic efforts to support • magnificent school system."

The government, too, could do more, he said. Although he sees "little hope" for its enact­ment; he called for tax exemp­tion on tuition paid at non­profit· schools.

''The crisis," the California Prelate noted.. "is real and very evident among ... the middle classes. It comes into clear focus in viewing· Cath01ic schools in our whole voluntary educational

Workshop for Catholic Secondary Principals

,WASHINGTON (NC)-Father Neil McCluskey, S.J., dean of education, Gonzaga University, Spokane, Wash., g a vet h e keynote address Monday, July i at· a five-day workshop here for Catholic secondary school prin­cipals.

The Jesuit was ·the fir I t speaker at the July " to ·10 eon­ference at Georgetown Univer­sity sponsored by the National Catholic Educational Association. His topic will be: "Is, the School Overorganized?"

Father C. Albert Koob, O. Praem., of the NCEA's Second­ary School Department, direc­tor .of the workshop, saId· 368 Catholic educators will attend.

Diocesan' Nurses The eighth annual Open House

for members and 'friends of the Fall River Diocesan Council of Catholic Nurses will be held Saturday afternoon, July 17, at the Summer home of Mr. and Mrs. Francis P. McCabe, 23 Pil ­grim Terrace, Rexhame Beach, Marshfield.

A barbecue will be served at 5 o'clock.

The proceeds from the affair will be added to the Mary E. Mc­Cabe Nursing Scholarship Fund.

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Page 10: 07.15.65

• •

THE ANCHOR- Kentucky Prelate Thurs., July'l5,' 196's

Expects IncreaseCalls Highways In ConvertsProving Ground LEXINGTON (NC)-The founder of the Guild of St.For Christians Paul, national organization

MUNICH (NC) - The of converts to Catholicism, archbishop of Munich has said here he expects the con­

'Tersion rate to rise again aftertaIled today's highways "a its decline of recent years.testing ground for human Msgr. Leonard Nienaber, pas­

responsibility, and a place where tor of Mary, Queen of the Holymen can pro v e themselves Rosary church, said his feelingChristians." .bout the drop-off in convents

Julius. Car din a I Doepfner is "one of concern but not anxi­told a traffic conference in this et.y."German city that Christians "This is God's work and Heshould accept modern means of can sweep people into thetransportation as a "gift of God." Church when He wants to,"

"There is food for thought." M::.gr. Nienaber said in an inter­he said, "in the fact that 60 per ,·iew. But he added that Catho­cent to 70 per cent of traffic lics in general have not beenaccidents are the driver's fault. "putting forth the effort" requir­In modern driving people have a ed for success in convert work.fascinating opportunity' to put The 1965 Official Cat hoI i e their Christian faith and morals Directory, published by P. .J.into practice." n..enedy and Sons, gave the num­

The cardinal cited disrespect 1:.er of U.S. converts to Catho­for the rights of others and for licism in the past year as 126,209, the Christian commandment of an increase of some 2,200 over charity as the main causes of the previous year. However, in· traffic accidents. He called upon 1955 the number of converts all motorists to look upon them­ w~s more than 139,000, even selves as members of a group though the total of U.S. Catho­in which everyone is "a man for lics was only 33 milion compar­tithers." ed with the current 45 milion.

Msgr. Nienaber organized the Guild of St. Paul in 1942 and hasCatholic Colleges specialized in convert work. The guild's motto, "Don't just makeOn Campus converts-Keep them!" under­lines its function as a follow-up

CANBERRA (NC)-A plan te organization to help new Catha.:put Catholic residential c.olleges lics adjust to Catholic life.tin the campus of the Australian He declined to attribute theNational University may soon be decline in converts to the grow­a reality. ing ecumenical spirit and said

The university's request of there are "many reasons" for the Department of the. Interior . the phenomenon. Among those for additional land has been . which have been suggested, he granted. The university wants .. ::laid, are "ap3thy" on the partto use the land for three colleges, of Catholics, a contemporarytine Protestant and two Catholic. "lack of spirituality'" and the

The Dominican order has in­ failure of the Church to speak formed the university of its '''with authority." willingness to. take charge of a Msgr. Nienaber said the 200-'student Catholic men's col­ Church should be willing to ac­lege. They propose to call it cept a decline in the number of Pope John XXIII college, and converts if that is in fact to told university officials that it be the price of ecumenism. But would "contribute to the Au­ he also predicted that there stralian scene genuine univer­ W 0 u 1d be a "resurgence oi sity objectivity, autonomy and people joining the Church." love of truth, and that in an "I think this will come before atmosphere of t ole ran c e it ~uy un ion of churches." he should foster a Christian mind ~tated. . and respect for Christian val.,. WASHINGTON ( N C ) pines. "Americans are tremen­ is rare even for a Bishop. "I He said Catholics .are begin­

A Philippine Bishop, who says dously popular in our country," can promise American lay mis­

Peace Corps Inspires Appeal for Teachers ues." ning to come into more active

he adopted the idea from the he said, "and Iurthemore all of sioners a similar experienceMeanwhile the Ursuline order cc,ntact with their neighbors andPeace Corps, wants young Amer­ · our people want to learn and of gratitude," he asserted.announced interest. in establish­ predicted that this would "payican!! to teach in his diocesan · perfect the English lanuage."ing a residential college for The prelate, who is also Sec-" off" in the conversion field.

Catholic women along the same schools. Great 'Experience . retary General of the Philippine . Bishop Mari;mo Gaviola oflines as the men's college. He said some Peace Corps Bishops' Catholic Welfare Or­ •••••••••••••••••workers have been made hon­ ganization, said that other mem­Cabanatuan admitted the tre­

mendous success of the Peace orary citizens of Philippine bers of his country's hierarchyMens Council Format. Corps in the Philippines prompt- : J B :municipalities, an honor which share his desire for American , ed him to seek American lay • •lay help.. "We will pay theirChanged ·in St. Louis help for his diocese in which transportation, if' they . wish, : LUMBER CO.:

ST.. LOUIS (Me)-The' St.' :i~~eO:~at~oli::~s'ts for half a Bridgeport Diocese and a salary too-of course' it •• • Louis Archdiocesan Council· of . . . . will be based on' a Phflippine :. $0. Dartmouth :

men has . Preserve Faith Staffs Brazil. Parish teacher's 'salary scale."Catholic completely . • . and Hyannis •re"ised it's constitution to achi-' ~'Of course, .m,any of them BRIDGEPORT (NC) - The Bishop Gaviola said that the • • • •are .only' noininaI "Catholics," · Diocese of Bridgeport has agreed missioners . would 'be housed •• • ••eve a Jmo~ inf~>rmal and flexi- observed ·Bishop. GaViola, !'but .50. Dartmouth WY 7·9314.· to staff· a new mission parish with' some of the fine'st Catholicble organ~zationai structure.. I really" can't blame them' for in Remanso, Brazil. families in' the . Philippines: • •One major change is to involve ,th~t-our.siJp~ly'ot .train.ed per­ '. . Hyannis 2921 •l"atherJoseph D. Potter; dio- : "Thei:rswill be a great human:priests directly in the> council's sonnel is so small. But as· the .... ••

. .. '.. '.• work for the first time by only Catholic country' in . the · cesan director of the Confra­ . experience." he pl'omisfild. . r•••••••••••·••••••

STUDIES STONE CUTTING: Summer School is the order of the day for thousands of teaching nuns. Shown here, Sister Mary Liliosa Shea, C.S.C., of Manchester, N.H., has included a course in the art of stone carving among her studies at the Catholic University of America, Washington, D.C. NC Photo.

ternity of Christian Doctrine,raising priest-moderators to the Orient, the Philippines has been will be the parish pastor withstatus of directors.' The new a: showplace for' Christi~nity. Father Edward J. McCall, prin­board of directors will have 23 . If it is lost the cost' will be ciRal o~ Stamford Cat hoi i e . laymen and 1~. priests. '. great,for it is often 'more' dif­

. High Sc~ool, as _assist~nt. The . With the approval of Joseph . ficult to re-Christianize- a 'coun­ Connecticut 'diocese also staffsCardinal Ritter of. St. .Louis, try than .to .evangelize it· the · a mission parish in Santa CruZ,·the board 'of directors also did first tinie!' Peru. .. away .with the committee and . Bishop Gaviola believes that· district sYl'tem used in the past. Americans can play an import-

The board also decided to ant role in preventing t}te de-:­~rop a formal "affiliates" an.d .. Christianization of the Philip­10 .cooperate with any .group ill

.any parish whether iUs formally erganized' or not.. Foreign Students

Abandoned as well was a' WASHINGTON (NC) ........ The IIIan whIch established man­ National Catholic ·Educational dated programs 'at ·the archdio­ Association said here that 70,751 eesan level whIch were then .foreign students were enr,olled in 10 be carried out by ·laymen Catholic colleges and universities in the distric~'and parish organi.. last school year·. Ail 11 per cent

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Page 11: 07.15.65

TfiE A""CHOR:- ,~-~. Suggests Nuns Thurs., July 15, 1965

Updote, to M'eet Modern Needs

SOUTH ORANGE (NC)­Change is necessary if Sis­ters are to be relevant in the modern world, an advocate of aggiornamento in the convent said here in New Jersey.

Sister Mary Luke, president of the Conference of Major Su­periors of Women Religious and an auditor at the Vatican coun­cil, urged Sisters to be more ecumenical in their activities, find ways to contribute to the solution of current problems, and alter convent schedules to meet modern needs.

Slle spoke at the Institute for International Service sponsored by the Association for Interna­tional Development, lay mis­sion-sending group, at Seton Hall University.

She cautioned her audience "never to underestimate the power of a woman---even if she's dressed in mpdieval garb."

Dialogue With Laity But while she urged Sisters

to adapt their clothing to "the time and place and needs of apostolic work," she stressed that the need for change in dress is not as important as the need for change in other areas.

HERE TO SEE HOW cen 'PROGRAM WORKS: Tw~ p~'iests, frem northern Italy are in the United States fur three' 'months to study the Confraternity of Christian Doc­trine program, to see how it'can be employed in Italy. Msgr. ~ario Sas~atelli, left, of .the archdiocese of Bologna and Father Luigi Giussani, right, of the archdiocese of MIlan are shown with Archbishop Robert E. Lucey of San Antonio, Texas, who invited them to

,this country. 'Ne Photo.Stressing the need for dialo­gue with the laity, Sister Mary Luke noted that "sometimes Re­ligiousdon't know the facts of life economically because we lire Uving in institutions."

Failure to understand the eco­nomic pressures on families can create problems in lay:'Religious relationships~,'she said.

Pope Addresses NATO Officers

VATICAN CITY (NV)-Pope Paul VI told a group of NATO. military men and their families that it is part of his apostolic office to educate souls in the love and practice of peace and liberty. , "

"We labor with all our might," he said, "to secure true peace and liberty' for all men. That is part of our apostolic office, especially since it is above all a work of a spiritual character: to educate souls in the love and practice of peace and liberty. This evidently cannot be done with external force."

His audience con sis ted of participants in the 27th course of the NA'TO College of Defense. He 'told those present represent­ing 15 nations, he was happy to welcome them and wish them well in their activity since, as their name indicated, they were not at a school ,of 'war or 'agres­sion but at one of defense. ,

"And the aims y()u propose to defend are among the most pre­cious existing in the world: li ­berty and peace," he said. He, told the NATO group that pc;>li­tical or military' means used for this purpose are outside his competence, but .lie is in com­plete accord with the achieve" ment of such aims.

Rites Congregation Studies Virtues' '

VATICAN CITY (NC) - The, Congregation' of 'Rites has met here to' investigate ]he, heroic Quality of virtues of Bishop Vital Justin Grandin, first' Ordinary .,f ,the diocese of St -Albert, now the archdiocese, of . Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

The invest'igation is a formal­

Pa'mphlet .Tells of Vikings on Cape Cod ,Bishop Thorlak Runolfson, consecrated in Iceland in 1118" "who had the audacity to

be descended from an American ancestor long before Columbus had a chance to show hini the way" is the subject Of a pamphlet by P.aul E. Remlinger and is of interest to members of, the Fall. River 'Diocese because his "American ancestor" was born on the Vinland Pro m 0 n tor y of - , '.

a ,prominent Icelandic family, 'found the Cape Cod PromontoryNorth America, now known: Thorfin Man _ of _ Destiny (or ""jthout difficulty. as' Cap~ C04· His s~ory, as told' by. Remlinger, begins with the explorations 'of Leif Ericson about the year 1000. Ericson, sailing' south fro~, Greenland, "landed on a mar-, ginal, uninhabited promontory area where he Wintered and did­

. some over-cautious exploring. 'ille reported a warm, snow­

less Winter with long hours of daylight-conditions found only on southern Cape Cod in the Dennisport-Hyanni!lPort a I' e a, and a great profusion of wild grapes as can be found only in areas" bordering on Nantucket Sound, as is testified to by sun­dry explorers.

"On Leif's return to Green­land, his brother Thorwald, w!:to insisted that the' new lands had not been sufficiently explored, obtained the use' of Leif's ship and sailed on to Leif's Vinland. While exploring in an area north

.of Vinland Promontory, he met his death resisting an attack of hostile natives with a great fleet of war canoes.

"A year later,' Thurstan, an­other brother, burning with en­thusiasm ,over reports about the new discoveJi,es, set out on an ill-advised. honeymoon voyage for Vinland with his bride Gudrid-the-Fair: . The voyage met with failure from the start. Their ship was tossed about on the ocean for weeks on end, till towards the end of Autumn ,it was'iinally'driveidar' up Green": land's west coaSt; where the ex­·hausted party ,took refuge in a fiord to spend the Winter amid"

'hunger and pestilence. One by one all of the crew died and j

finally, Gudrid's skipper himself, ihus thoroughly.. thwarting· for Gudrid a once, prospectively ·happy· honeymoon.·

,PermallelltCape Colon,­"On 'Gudrid's 'return to the

ity which is the overture to main colony the :following Sum­declaring a pel'SOn ','venerable" mer; three richly4aden merchant

Karlsefni) He could claim de- Wonderstrand scent from King O'Car)."oU of "As the party sailed ,southward Dutrlin and Osory;from Halfdan 'along its eastern limb, all were Whiteleg, King of 'the Norway' in admiration of, the long Highlanders, as well as from a straight beach such as would whole raft of European royalty 'ha've been most extraordinary in and nobility. 'Iceland. They dubbed this daz­

"This gallant merchant prince ....as soon attracted to Leif's wid­owed sister-in-law, Gudrid, who was declared to be 'the most beautiful of her sex, highly gifted, and in every respect a very superior person'. A wed­dihg, never to 'be forgotten fol­lowed the long extended Christ ­mas festivities. It was only then that the menfolk got their heads together and. started planning the further development of Vin­land.

"Three shiploads o~settlers set out the following Summer in a, serious' attempt to establish a permanent colony on the attrac­tive Vinland Promontory. From previous, descriptions and from first hlind pilot experience of several of, the' crew on the pre­vious VOyages, the little fleet

Japanese Exhibition .'

. To Benefit Mission' SYDNEY (NC)-'-A noted Jap­

zIfng stretch of seashore 'WON-' DERSTRAND'. Our own coun­trymen have more, recently placed the same under the Fed'" era1 Government under the title of 'Cape Cod National Seashore.'

"A settlement was soon accom­plished on the south shore and it was to prosper for three full years without'difficulty amid the bounty nature provided. During the first Autumn Gudrid was blessed with the birth of a son, who was given the ~hildish pet name of Snorre (Sound Sleeper). This child, born in such extra­ordinary circumstances, was to become the renowned ancestor of bishops, presidents of Ice­land, university professors, min­isters of state, the celebrated

: sculptor, Thorwaldsen, and con­temporary American aI' tis t ,

, Emile .Walters of Poughkeepsie, New York. More immediately, he became the grandfather of

,one of" Iceland's most extra­ordinary churchmen, B ish 0 p

' anese artist has authorized an'.,' Thorlak, who ruled the diocese' . exhibition in Sydney of his -Wood ' prints to help an, Australian Marist mission.

IGyoshi Saito loaned the 'prih$!' to . l,\I!;irist ,missionaryFather Anthony Glynn when he

. learned of the prl'est's desire to 'bri~g Japartese art to Australia. '

The' exhibit will benefit the Marist mission in Nara, Saito:s "ho~e 'city in Japan.

Montie Plumbinll & , , .

:Heat~' Co.~ 'Inc.' ' . . Reg: Master Plumber 2930

GEORGE ·M. MONTl£ '. ., Over 35 Years,and setting· him· on .the .road ships- put into'pott'1o 'batter for, '

toward canonization.~ G~e.nland products' 'and, spenc;1 'of SafisfiedServiCe ,The cOngrt!gation's ,meeting' ,the Winter.. The flag,ship was in 106 NO. MA1N STREn

.1so studied the virtues of Father, com man d" 'of" a, handsome, ,Fall River' ,,' ,0'5,5-749~

.Ado~l?~ P~~i~~ i~,~.~l~ap, o!e~ui~ ,wealt~y, ~.a-f~uh1',;gl~I:c~l!.qt of

of South Iceland from i118 A.D. to 1133 AD., as well as the great' grandfather of Bishops Biorn ~nd Brand."

.w

Sees Advantages' In Development Of Family Life

VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope Paul VI expressed con­cern with the development of modern family life but said he saw advantages in many of the innovations being made in it.

The Pope was speaking to par­ticipants' in the International Conference on the Family who ,"ere present at his weekly gen­eral audience. Twenty-eight na­tirms sent delegates to the Rome conference.

"In a world in complete trans­formation," the Pope said, "it would be useless to close one's eyes to changes which are taking place even in the most stable :md most traditional institutions. No matter how great were the merits of yesterday's family, it is the family of today and tomor­row which demand the attention of men who truly desire the good of humanity.

Positive Aspects "These 'new families' are cha­

}':'<cterized by many new aspects which can give rise in some to legitimate preoccupations. But­;;nd we say it without fear-the Church happily finds positive aspects in many of these inno­vations: the cessation, for ex­ample, of some social and do­mestic restrictions, more free and conscious choice of marriage partners, greater care in the for­mation of the spouses; a more lively interest in the education f}f children, and many other as­reets too numerous to list singly which are being or W'ill be stu­~ied by the specialists whom yO\! haVe invited to speak during ;your eO,nf~J:ence.. .

"It is our. desire that from , ~ our deliberations there may ~.rise a stronger desire to influ­t:nce public opinion and the authorities in 'each of your coun­tries with 'thp. purpose of inclu­ding, in the various laws that are PISSed, dispositions always more favorable to this essential and fuhdamental cell which is the family."

Reelected President WEST DE PERE (NC)-Fa­

ther James M. Darby, S.M., of Dayton, Ohio, was reelected president of the Conference of Major Superiors of M;en (eMS M) at the group's' annual meet-, ing here in Wisconsin.

n.e falmouth NotiolKJI 8~ Falmouth, Mass.

.; tile Yillar' Creell 1I11e1 1121

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Page 12: 07.15.65

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., July 15, 1965 ~'.... 'Father, Forgive T~em'-, " .,

'Making'" o'f' the P·resident' God Love You By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, D.D. Review of 1964 Election

The Little Flower, having heard of a condemned man in ParisBy Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy who refused to become reconciled to the Church before his death,

A remarkably good account of the very close 1960 undertook heavy penances and prayers. Just before the knife of the _guillotine fell, the condemned man asked to be received intoelection was given in Theodore White's The Making of the the Church. A similar incident has just come to light in the Missions.President-1960. Mr. White has now produced an even A Vietcong terrorist of Vietnam was found guilty of subversive

better book, The Making of the President-1964 (Atheneum. activities and sentenced to death. At the time of his arrest he was carrying hand grenades, mines and an order from CommuniSt$6.95) concerning last year's itics. And this is nowhere better superiors. The Legion of Mary, having heard of the death sentence,walkaway. The improvement seen than in the review of the

_began praying for the conversion of the condemned prisoner. Dur­is probably due to -experi- Republican primaries. Mr. White ing his trial the youth had declared that, being a Communist, heence, a longer period of prep- goes into great detail concerning had no religion. The court, to show partiality, asked him if he&ration, and greater attention the primaries in New Hampshire, wished to receive any consolation before death from either a to philosophical and sociological Oregon, and California, and Buddhist bonze or a Catholic priest. "J; choose the priest," theconsiderations. shows how the fortunes of the condemned youth answered.In any case, principal contenders were af­this is reporting fected thereby. i n g rea t e r But these primaries were not That Is how a Catholic priest rode In a prison VlUl witll depth. Not that nearly so decisive as might ap­ a Communist terrorist. All the way to the place of execution in that s h 0 u I d pear to the casual observer. , the Saigon central market he spoke to scare off any- Bar r y Goldwater's prospects the young man, tellin&" him consoling one of m 0 r e seemed to plummet in New truth'J about death. It is interestin&' that than rudimen- Hampshire, revive slightly in the other Communist prisoners, who tary i n tell i- Oregon, and skyrocket in Cali- stood with bandaged eyes' tied to a ,gence. This is fornia. JUBILARIAN: Rev. Die­ stake in from of sandbags; all shouted an even more Reluctant Candidate abuse before they were shot. But thisudonne Ma~se, O.F.M. a Fall

.. 'f a scinat i n g Goldwater was, in many re- youth met death calmly in full assuranceRiver native, celebrated his work than its .. _ IIpects, a reluctant candidate. He of forgivenes~ Once again Calvary was

golden jubilee of his religi­ re-enacted as condemnedpredecessor. It begins with an was passionately convinced that some men 'account of the death and funeral America was on the wrong track ous life as he offered a Mass behaved like the thief on the left, while of John -F. Kennedy, and a altogether, abandoning its anci­ of Thanksgiving in his home this young convert chose the way ,of pinpointing of what Kennedy's ent verities and imperilling its mercy.parish, Notre Dame, Fall administration did for, and precious freedom. He wanted River. Serving as curate inmeant to, the country. Kennedy, something done about this. But If the spiritual outpourings of the says Mr. White, was, above all, Whether or not that would in­ Quebec Province, he is a members of the Legion of Mary converted a Communist murderer, a man of reason and succeeded volve his trying for the presi­ brother of the late Rev.. Al­ then how many more good and holy people in Africa and Asia would in bringing the nation to a new dency, he was never consistently bert and Rev. Roland Masse. be brought to the loving embrace of the Cross, if we but joinedunderstanding of its own times, sure. ­ in the words of Our Lord: "Father, forgive them, for they know in' persuading it to face its prob- The so-called conservative not what they do"? If you wish to add a dime or more to yourlernS and its future realistically movement preceded Goldwater, Mary's Place prayers, to translate intercession into action, think of this. There and without dismay. ' and its organization had been is no alms-giving comparable to aiding the Missions. Why? ·1.- It

Suddenly he was gone, and 'going on for three years before Continued from Page One spreads the faith in gratitude for your gift of faith. 2. It aids 'the Lyndon Johnson was thrust'into Goldwater was invested with its iniraculous as unscientific and poor in whom Christ lives and, therefore; the Lord Himself' will his place. Johnson was, of course, leadership. to reject, all but the religiously rewar~ you. 3. The Society for the Propagation of the Faith makes a, very different sort of mlin. The man did not make the . pragmatic in the Biblical rev,e­ no investments; bUy.8 no real estate nor stocks or bonds with theBut he' came to' the presidency movement; the movement sought, lations." alms which enter into the Holy Father. treasury. You mightbetter prepared than anyone the man. It involved extremists, Their severe view of Mario­ remember the Society in your Will. But until then, send us awho had assumed it in like elr- undeniably, "but toward the logy is not surprising, he contin­ sacrifice every month. God-·Love Youl cumstances. center it involved hundreds of ued ,since from their viewpoint

Kennedy had given hi$ Vice- thousands of intenselY moral the question of Mary's divine President more 'information, people who hated and despised motherhood does not exist, For GOD LOVE YOU to Mrs~ S.~ lor '11· "I am not ~ndinc more responsibility, and more not only adultery but Commu- them Christ is not God, but ra­ tills money for a few (unnecessary) bathing suit because I ha..... participation in the supreme nism, waste, weakness, govern- ther "God is revealed in Hia been thinking of how many necessities It can buy for the poor." task than' had any previous ment bureaucracy, and anar- Christ," he said. to Anon. of Corpus ChrisU. Texas for $400" • • • some of President. Ready for the job, chy." . But even more orthodox and what God has dven to ine, to help those to whom He has dven and at his best when under a Convention Pictures· conservative Protestants, with much less of this world's goods. u'. • .' to M.E.R. for $1,500 "I

have never done· anything -to spread the faith that means 80 'muchheavy burden, Johnson provided The two conventions are bril- &:>me exceptions, are not prepar­a dazzling display of leadership, liantly depieted. Mr. White has (;d to concede anything to Mary, to me. I want this to help train a native priest to do it for me."­knowledgableness, ' 'and 'effi" a sure hand in separating the he declared. eiency right from the start. significant from the insignifi- The theologian said that, des- The color of each of the WORLD MISSION ROSARY'S decades

Great Change . cant and laying hold on what pite the adverse judgments of symbolizes one of the five continents of the world where mission­An election loomed in the is essential. All the confusion leading Protestants, Pope John aries are laboring to bring souls to Christ. Those of you who cannot

near future. Johnson would, in- of these gatherings is conveyed, XXIII ip 1960 viewed the mo­ go to the Missions can strengthen those who work in your placeevitably, be the De moe rat i e and the surface drama is re- dern development of "Mariology by praying for them. To receive the WORLD MISSION ROSARY nominee, and would want, in created. But none of this is al- Gnd Marian piety" as a way to Which has been blessed by Bishop Sheen, send your request and th~ short interval, -to project lowed to conceal the decisive Unity. an offering of $2 to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith his own image and make his moves and the central meaning. "What are we to say of Pope 366 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10001. ' own record. So, too, with the respective John's optimistic statement?" he

He did this by taking over campaigns. Mr. White spent asked. Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to it and mail it tothe Kennedy program practical- much time on the trail with it would be a mistake, he said,

Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of The Society forly in toto, but he exhibited his each of the candidates, and to conclude that Protestant con­the Propagation of the Faith, 366.Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. own high order of skill in getting seems to have had an opportu- sideration of Mary is completely 10001, or to your Diocesan Director, Rt. Rev. Raymond T. Con­the measures through the Con- nity to see each not only in and universally negative. 4lidine, 368 North Main Street" Fall River, Massachusetts.gress, where they had long been public but also at close quarters. He said recent Protestant wri­

.. stuck. If, as Mr. White says, He, therefore, has much original tmg about Mary is far removed Kennedy had found that "the material to offer, as well as as- in tone and content "from the domestic enemy was all the con- sessments based on immediate sharp and bitter diatribes of gealed past, all the native re- observation. even a decal1E' ago,"He noted that luctances em bod i e d in the Negro Revolution Max Thurian, who described Congress," Johnson knew how But he did not keep his eyes Mariology as an "a go n i z in g to overcoJlle these r~lutances in exclusively on the politicking. problem," has nevertheless made one after another concrete in- He also watched the background a "positive contribution to Mari­fiance., " ,'- against which it was set. PrOm- .ological dialogue" through his

It is Mr. White's opinion that inent in this is what he calls book "Mary, Mother of All a great change occurred in Lyn- the Negro Revolution of 1964. Christians." don Johnson once he was in the To that he gives,some' 50 pages, presidency. He· ;was' a : Texas packed with grlq>hic incident liberal;, schooled, in 'the N'ew and rich in shrewd examination. Audience Secretcirj Maclean's Sea FoodsDeat, familiar with poverty I~ is just here, in presenting the an<l.disadvantage, and a believer setting in depth' and with un­ Receives Medal UNION WHARF, ,FAIRHAVENiii .the' ability of law to effect common insight, that Mr;· White's ROME (NC)-':'A wo:man ,w.h~ ~ , ..., ~..~~~ ~.better conditions for 'people and second, book on presidential has helped hundreds of thou­=eneralsochll -Improvement. campaigns surpasses his first.. ' sands I)f Americanl1. get' ~to

; c; '.' Republican _Primaries., .. This' book is no' mere ent£r- papal, atidie~ces :was honored : But real viSion came to him tainment, although _vastly en­ here with the Pro Eccles~a 6t

oniy aft~r: he ascended the 'uIt!- tertaining. It is no ,mere manual Pontifice medal. ' .BISAI~LON~S mate peak. And that' viSion; 'of of practical politics, although it Miss Eleanor Caddel, who has the' Great Society· is, in" rwtr. supplies, a whole education in been secretary at the National White's judgment", 'not'simply that field. Catholic Welfare Conference GARAGE cornball stuff but something It is a, hard ,look at ~ei.;:a, papal audience ,office for 16

. genuine, incisive, and "pOwerful. the American' dilemma and op­ years, was cited' for' "outstand­The president has moved from portunity in the seventh. decade ing, faithful and long service." 24-Ho'ur Wrecker Service the. politics of means' to the 'of the twentieth century, and a' The presentation was made by politics, of ends. history of two radically. different Bishop Francis Reh, rector of

The whole book, naturally, approaches to the. problem as the Nortb American College,; 653 Washington Street, Fafrhaven is not devoted to this kin4iof expressed by two radically dif':' during a reception at the col­ WYman 4-5058 theoretical analysis. If abounds ferent men and mentalities in lege's ,graduate house, where b1 the rough~~d-tumbleof pol- a presidential elee:tion campaign. the audience office ia located.' •••••••••••••••••~ ••••~•••••_••••••~~••••••••i~~

HAVE A HOME

CLAM BOIL

Page 13: 07.15.65

I

,',Jesuit Favon 'High "Schools Over Inadequate Colleges

WASIDNGTON (NC) -The Med for good Catholie lrigh schools is 80 great that money and manpower should be diverted from the college level to build them up, a promi- ' nent Jesuit educator said heN.,And if closing some colleges is necesSary, that should be done, said F'ather Neil G.' McClusky, S. J.,' academic ,vice president of the Gonzaga 'University, Spokane, Wash.

Of cutting back Catholic col­, lege effort, Father McCluskey laid: "I am referring to the many second-rate institutions whose future as solid four year colleges is extremely doubtful. Dozens of them should revert to junior col­lege status. Many others should be changed over and allowed to bee 0 m e first-rate secondary schooJ&"

"The proliferation of Catholic eolleges, ..specially for women, has been the bewilderment of. the academie community," be said.

"Without endowment, without adequately trained faculty, with­out laboratory facilities and H­brary , holdings, without clear academic goals, a number 01. these institutions have bravely established themselves during the past 30 years. inspired by lome vague apostolic mandate,· he said.

"They eondemn themselves. for the most part, to tile Umbo of mediocrity; and in the aca­demic marketplace they debase the general coinage of. Catholie higher education," he added. '

The Jesuit held that the "most liS n if) can t development" in Catholic high schools is their movement "in a elitist diree-. tion."

"Some 88 Per cent of Amer-

Civil Authorities Remove Prelate

BONN (NC)-The vicar capl­tular of the Lithuani8ll arcb­diocese of !":aunas, Father Juo­saP8ll Stankevicius, has beenremoved from office for reasonS

, of "age and condition of health."

I

According to KNA, GerinaJl' Catholic news agency, govern­ment authorities were respon­sible for the removal of Father Stankevicius. His successor is Father Juozapas Matulaitis-Labukas.

Father Stankevicius attended the first two sessions of Vatican Council II as a council expert. When he was unable to go to Rome for the third session last Fall, it was presumed he had fallen into bad favor with the Soviet authorities. ' •

The Church is having great difficulty administering to 2.3

'llion Catholics in Lithuania, the only predoml'nantly Cath­olic

JDl

area in the U.S:S.R. Three of the four Lithuanian bishoPil are prevented from exercising their duties;' Of the, seven Lith­unian ecclesiastical t.erritories

iea's Catholic high schools now require admission tests and over 80 per cent charge tuition. Very quietly the principle seems to be operating that since there is not room for everybody in the Cath­olic high school, we take the be tt er prepared youngsters whose families can afford to pay the tuition and fees," he said.

There are in the nation today, he said, about 2,500 high schools enrolling about 1,095,500 stu­dents. Yet some of them are small, he said, noting a report that the 12th grade enrollment in 4S per cent of the secondary llChools is less than 38 s~dents.

Of high school students, he told the administrators that "the products of your schools more and more will have the responsi­bility for preserving the values and virtues of Christian morality. They are destined to be a leavell in the mass."

Asserts, Papacy Heavy Burden

THE HAGUE (NC)-BeI' ­Jtard Cardinal Alfrink said that Pope Paul VI "will prob­ably be confronted with far greater problems than those hill predecessor knew."

Cardinal Alfrink spoke at a Mass commemorating the second anniversary of :pope Paul'll eor­onation. He said:

"Everyone who attended thf! coronation of Pope Paul' VI iii Rome got the impression that the Pope did, not experience this ceremony as a great joy or honor, but'aS a heavy burden.

"One could obServe that the Pope doubted whether the triple erown could rightly be consider­ed the symbol of the papal

. si H t dJIllson. e accep e the papal erown only becau~e it was. long-standing tradition."

"It is clear," CardinaJ Alfrink aded, "that, Pope Paul want8 to be only. a pastor, a shepherd, and the chief bishop among hill brother bishops. It is the un­fortunate fate of Pope Paul VI that public opinion considen him to be merel:r the succesor of Pope John XXIII. But... Pope Paul will probably be confronted with far greater problems than those his predecessor knew." P F

ope irst to Use Hospital Chalice

:MADRID (NC)-Pope Paul'11 be h fiVI WI t erst priest to I b te Mee e ra ass with a chalice . ed b 1'500 t· ~

acqmr y, pa lentil VI;

Madrid'lI. Provincial Hospitaleh 1fo th ho ital' r esp s ape.The chaliee will be presentect...... ' th P b h ·tal del

'-two archdioceses, four dioeese-.'... e ope y a osp! e­and an independent pre.late-,_ only two have properly appoint­ed,, residential bishoftll, .....

Red Czechs Maintaill ,Guard, Over Sisters

VIENNA. (NC)-Visitoril Fe-" turning to Austria from commu­nist Czechoslovakia report that a convent of Catholic nUDII in Broumov 111, under strict watch and the, Sisters ' eannot even .tsit their ehurchwithou& • guard.

The Sis t e r II manufaeture hosts for an the churches ill Czechoslovakia. According to v1stors, however, only a small number of them are permitted to engage in charitable work. Most are compelled 10 wodE Joni boW'll ill. jae~,~

g~ti0:'l, ' ineludips ita ~aplain,J' th J CastUl' • d .

a ~r ose ., 0 ~ ero" 8t a, special:"audllimce .. taM' ... ti ' ~'It ill' ~ ~ 1be pOpe,:'

the chalice will· be returned te the hospital',. Ch8peJ.. .

Catholic' ,,' ,Teachers , ,

, SUppo~t .,Clea" TV. LONDOK (NC)-The Catho..

De Teac:hen lI'ederatlcin has, pledged its support for Britian'. current "clt>an-Up TV" campaign. ­

A' spokesman for the federa-' tlon, whieh • sending copies of a i>eti'tioD tor parliamentary action to all Catholie IlChools in England, said: ''It is our duty to support these people whose aim is identieal with our OWD: ' the protec:tioll 01. lOW18 people ~~~.. ' -_.-.

'..- . - --- ,t

TIME-SAVER: Indexing the New Catholic Encyclopedia by computer will s'ave a year's time, according to Sister M. Claudia, I.H.M., index editor, and Father John P. Whalen, managing editor. Pat Heiser, coniputor supervisor, explaine operation of the machine. NC Photo.

..... Cite"ears , omp e 10n Full-Time Staff of 130 Working 011 New

Catholic Encyclopedia WASHING'rON (NC) How mation on the Church. The C!Ut­-

do you plan a new encyclopedia? turaI' basis ja much wider 1b_ How do 'you go about putting "ne might expect.· ' down' 15 million words, one after The present staff and admift.. another, to make a new Catholic encyclopedia? Or, to be more explicit, to make ''The New Catholic Enr.ycIopedia," which will be published in 15 volumes by McGraw-Hill in September; 1966?

Thie hu been the job of • full-time staff of about 130 per­sons who are working in st. John's Hall at the Catholic Uni­,'crsity of America here. The names of the editors, headed by Bishop William J. McDonald as editor-in-chief and MsgI'. James A. Magner, associate editor-in­chief, fill one column down the Bide of the Encyclopedia's letter­head-and the staff fills St. John's Hall pretty much to capa­c\ty-and perhaps a bit more.

Authoritative Work l'atherJohn P. Whalen; who

.. managing editor of the Ency­elopedia, ealls it "a Catholic en­cyclopedia for an ecumenical' age." Both Father Whalen and Dr. Martin R.P. MeGuire, the.enior editor, stress that it is an encyclopedia fQr the intelligentlayman. It 18 not for children,. they said. "It ts written in lailgu­..ge'that should be intelligible to the average eollegegraduate or­the eQuivalen~for the intelli ­,aent, layman!''An~theY ,'ai8~ point out' that

tile, New Catholie Ene,-clopedia 18 n~ exclUllively, for a d u 1 t Catholics. "It is," the'Y note, ~'aJi' authori~tive, "rork on the Cath­olie Chureh ll1ld, all its as~ctI ... everybody who wan~s inior-'

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Irish to Haft More, Vernacular in Mass

DUBLIN (NC) - The, Irish hierarchy at a two·day meeting here approved more extensive use of the vernacular in the Mass and decided to send trans­lations to the Holy See for con­firmation.

In addition they sent back ,to their liturgical commission for revision draft texts of the prayer of the faithful and of the funeral service.

The bishops named Father Patrick McGoldrick of Derry professor of sacred liturgy at Maynooth, the national semin­ary near here. A Maynooth alumnus who was ordained ill 1962, Father McGoldrick is to study at a liturgical institute before taking up hi. profeSBOr­ship.

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Ontario Rectors Report Increase

•,In Dropouts

KINGSTON (NC)-Onb~r­to seminary rectol'S have reported the dropout rate to be increasing among candi­dates for the priesthood, the Canadi8ll Register said in a WIVey story. , MsgI'. W.B. Kerr, rector of St.

Augustine's seminary in Toron­to, said that "big salaries are attractive in today's world. don't think the boys ean really ue the future clearly defineeL In my time as a seminarian, we were satisified with what we had. I think students now are insecure in today's world."

Msgr. A.P. Mahoney, rector of St. Peter's seminary in Lon­don, laid that ' "40 years ago there was a 30 per cent dropout ill the minor seminaries-toda)' , it is 58 per cent. .

"Thill is not alarming. The world has changed. We've gone through two world wars; there itI much temptation in the world today. The young people ani qpestioning evefY.thing. They' think their elders have made a b 1u n d e r. They are acceptinc nothing without question,"

MsgI'. Mahoney noted that the Jlew Regina Mundi College is Londoll has switched policy ill view of the changes in today'. youth.

. That seminB!'Y, he laid, will permit students to Continue their studies through to eompletioll even if they decide not to be­come priests.

Father J. .,.~ Hochban, S._ ~

rector of the Jesuit Fathers' :He­~s College in Toronto, who re­ported that dropoutS in the final yean ,of a priest's preparation at his institution are' rising, said that one problem has been 8Il outlet for the young men's apo.. Rolie energi~.

"Young men who enter sernt­Ilaries are basically very good, idealistic men," he laid. "la IIeminaries, they, have no oppor­tunity to release pent-up aposto­lic zeal so we give them outside l!ssignments. They teach cate­chism in the poorer parishes, work in the Catholic Informa­tion Center and conduct general social worko"

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Page 14: 07.15.65

THE ANCHOR-.Diocese .of.Fan River::":l'hu"lt.",,July,.15, .1965 '" ...14 . ',. .'.' . .:,'... '. ......" .,' ,'. . .... .

Latin Church Shown Active In Social Action Programs

From "The Church in the New Latin America" Edited by John J. Considine, M.M.··

Manifesting the Church's new role in the Latin Ameri­ean temporal order are an impressive array of social action programs, promoting and implementing structural reforms that have arisen in the past decade with strong acceleration of spread and competence in

tion on the social injusticesthe past two years. Some of which are very near to a com­this advance is due to re­ mon heritage of alt" these coun­

sources from outside, as tries. through the Papal Volunteers of A layman who has played a the Church in the United States major role in the·social action and Catholic program in Chile is Dr. Sergio Relief Services, Ossa Pretot, Director of the NCWC, in the Chilean Institute for Develop­social welfare ment. Dr. Ossa has worked and r'elated closely on socio-economic mat­fields. G rea t ters with Cardinal Silva of San­credit must go tiago. He has been associated to MISEREOR with the remarkable group of and ADVENIAT, clergy and laity who have pre­the German ,pared the effective studies on bishops' develop­ Latin America's social problems ment programs. that have captured a leading The German place for the Catholic Church in Catholics have this field in Chile and through­concentrated their generous re­ out the continent. Dr. Ossa has sources of more than eight mil­ supplied much of the material lion dollars on setting up na­ following. ' tional systems of technical train­ We know the Church in Latin ing and .leader formation, by America today for its keen underwriting the programs pre­ awareness of the monstrous eco­pared by professional centers nomic unbalance under which Thousands at Britain's Vocations Show . . such as DESAL. DESAL and its great numbers of its members national affiliates like the live. The Church, "mother and Orders, Congregations Advertise Specia'tties Chilean Institute of Develop­ teacher," cannot be silent on ment, directed by Senor Ossa, such matters. We are proud of LONDON (NC)-The Catholic this country and its mission cen­ strangely unreal rei i g i ;, u s

. also render valued assistance to the Latin American bishops for Chu.rch put itself on public show ters oversC!lS But It was also an themes of the various stands; thethis stand.these social action systems in in London as it has never done open invibtion to non-Catholics nuns and priests ~nd monks in

obtaining donations· and loans NoSocial Sense . before, with an estimated 200,000 and to C~tholics not very sure often unrocognizable dress" the from governments, foundations, But is was not always so. people turning out to see it. about things to see something ·of" background music, was dramatic industry and labor. Bishops at the turn of the cen­ It hired a huge indoor stadium the inside work of the Church, . enough.

tury did not hold the views ofAttention should be given to and filled it with its wares fot to understand and to learn. . John Cardin·al Heenan told the the radio education movement, their successors today. all to see without obligation. For a Catholic just to witness 4,500 at the opening ceremonyAccion Cultural Popular, pio': It seems useful to quote some For 12 hours a day. for eight the swirling s<;ene with the of what he called "a great ..ad­neered by Msgr. Salcedo of Co­ paragraphs from a document in days nearly 150 Catholic orders venture" that "no one knows lombia and now spread into ten which Dr. Casanova, Archbishop and congregations as well as where it will end * • .But this is other countries, and to the rural secular grClUpS and lay societies Asks Active Role of Santiago, Chile, spoke.in 1891 fairly certain. Boys and girlsand labor movement in North­ took over the maSsive EarISof the "social problem," in ref­ who have not now seriously' east Brazil, Servicio de Asisten­ erence to "Rerum Novarum,". the Court aInphitheater, eacl. adver­ thought of being priests or· Re­In Community"cia Rural, to Father McLellan's encyclical of Leo XIII. . tising at its own booth or side­ ligious will have changed by the pioneer work in credit unions The Archbishop contended show the specialities of its own LA PAZ (NC)-An American end of the exhibition.:.-something

DOminican urged an audiencein Peru, to the housing cooper­ that the social problem origi­ practice. , will have happened to .them. God atives of INVICA, Chile, to the nated in unwillingnesS of - the And Earls Court, home of prize of 30 priests and Brothers from will have spoken to them." Venezuelan Institute of Commu­ fights, poli:ical rallies. and every the United States, Canada andpoor to accept as normal and nity Action, to the Mexican and sort of large gathering became a Holland to take an active rolejust the social differences be­ Schedule Liturgicalother social action programs. vast temporary "cathedral" with in community. development pro­tween the classes. grams.Christian Democracy "Some superficial minds,• thousands or visitors, many of Weeks in August

them non-~atholic. circulating Father Chrysostom H. Ge­Importance must be given to Archbishop Casanova wrote, "are BALTIMORE (NC) - Twonoisily among the attractions raetl, O.P., was the main speakerthe increasing rwe of Christian easily convinced that the provi­ more Liturgical Weeks will beradiating round a l:>i.g raised cen­ in the first of a series of meet­Democracy as expressed in the dential fact of th,e existence of held this Summer following thetral altar. ings of English-speaking priestspolitical, labor, managerial, uni­ social differences among men of first one here in Baltimore. Theto the La paz archdiocese hereversity and ciyle arenas by· equal nature is unjust. This The show, backed by thehier­ second will be. in Portland, Ore.,in Bolivia.Latin American lay movements false belief gives l:>irth to a fatai archy wjth the appropriate title Aug. 16 to 19, and the third in acting within the compass of antagonism between the rich imd "Challenge '65," was essentially The Chicago Dominican told Chicago, Aug. 30 to Sept. 2. their proper authority. This role the poor, between employers and a vocations exhibition, part of the missionaries that they should The national Liturgical Con­seems unusual to Cathollcs of the proletarians, between the fortu­ the Church's drive to persuade be active in community devel­ ference decided earlier this yearUnited States and often is diffi ­ nate and the unfortunate." more boy'! and girls to join the opment projects,· but acknow­ that because of great interest incult to grasp. Our own experi­ As a remedy to this dissatis­ ranks of priests and Religious in ledged they were sometimes the liturgical renewal three sep­ence has been so completely faction, His Excellency proceeds handicapped by a lack of imag­ arate meetings should be helddifferent; we tend to judge them to propose the practice of certain Aid· in ination on the part of a "simple;" instead of the traditional singleRestoringfrom the angle of our success­ moral virtues to be found in the unlettered rural population. "week."

VOCATION CITATION: Mr. and Mrs. George Price (if Baltimore received the li'ordham University vocation citation from Father John· F. Gilson, S.J., as five of their children in religi,ous orde!'9 looked on. Left to right: Sister· Mary Josefa, O.S.P., Sister Mary Benedicta O.S.P., Sls~er Mary Georgette, O.S.P., Sistf'!r Mary Patrice, O.S.P., 'and Brother Eugene Price, S.S.J. Mr. and Mrs. Price have seven other children. (NCPho~os)

ful "American way of life" Gospel. The poor, he says, should English '"The priest's role is that of a which has operated from another practice resignation; the rich Church guiding missioner. The greatest frame of reference.' . should practice detachment from LONDON (NC)-The arch- need is inspiration, for the prob­

Christian leaders of Latin their riches. The latter must'con- bishop of Baltimore has con­ lems and ideas are not seen, America, clergy and lay, have in sider the poor to be their broth- tributed $10,000 on behalf of and when seen they are not the past five years pioneered and en and· succor them·in their Maryland Cathollcs towards the earrled out." . inspired social movements of need; the poor, in turn, should restoration of a historic 18th­ "We should study well before deep significance to their re­ find the means for their liveli- century English church. taking on any community pro­spective nations, to, t~e cOnti­ hood in honest work. Lawrence Cardinal Shehan ject,• the. Dominican told hi. nEmt, and indeed to all our hemi­ fellow priests, "especially prob­Speakin, of strikes and de- donated the money for the re­sphere. The Church is now be­ lema of moral and intellectualscribing the evidences of lOCial- building of the church of All coming known as the Mother of life, public temperance, publicism in Chile, Archbishop Casa- Saints at Wardour, Wiltshire. the Poor, Champion of the Op­ health and public recreatio~"nova says, "For _ long time now which was closely connected pressed, Teacher and Protagonist we have Observed in Chile the with the foundation of the state of Social Justice and a HWJlan presence of deadly germs in the of Maryland. The chw:ch wasOrde'r worthy of Sons of God form of socialist activities. More built in defiance of existingand Heirs of Heaven. Despite than once, unions have struck anti-Catholic laws by the devout dail~. headlined political insta,­ against' their employers, with' Arundel family, oOne of the fore­bility and social near-chaos in serious consequences to industry· most. Catholic .families . of Epg­some sectors, we have many and to themselves 'iii the· salaries' . land at that time, andcomp1eled reasons for hope and thanksgiv­ they have lost." .: I in 1776. ing. Thus a highly placed Church Anne Arundel, daughter. of

Plea for Social Chanr~. prelate of. the ·1'890's interpreted Lord Arundel 'of Wal'dour tnar-' Seldom have· we witnessed .,th~ ;~rqwi~g,~~content then ap- ried the s~cond ~Q!q.~al~~ore,. _.

such a multiplicity of pleas for·' pearing \ili:iong the wage earners. .whose brother, Leonard Calvert. ,8 cause by the various' CathQlia It·is, not di!#cult to understand l~d tb~. ~x'peditil,)n.·Whicnresu1~-, . hierarchies of a. large segment how· such an attitude projected ed in the foundation of Mary­of Christendom aa 'has' eome: out , 'an image"6f -the Church as pro-' land in tbe reign of King,Chatles' of Latin America during rec"nt .teetGI:.· Of .th~ wealthy. It is easy' I. The religious toleration Of years. We refer to the pastoral to see why entire. populations· 'M-aryland"s ccrnstittitio.r set-. the: letters issued bY. ilo· '" -hops in were gradually distanced from' pattern for the national consti ­almost every Latin, •..:an na- hel'. ~tion of the United State-.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fat! River-Thurs., July 15, 1965

Says Girl's Attitude First Step in Repudiating Faith

By John J. Kane, Ph.D. "My 20-year-old daughter, whom we reared a Catholic,

is about to marry a Protestant boy. We consider him a fine young man and he told us he would sign the pre-nuptial promises. But my daughter will not ask him to do so and intends to marry outside the More often it is a rationali ­Church. She considers the zation employed because theypromises "stupid." I told her cannot bring their behavoir into that her sisters cannot be conformity with Catholic teach­bridesmaids, as she wishes, and ing. This you may take as a that her father and I will nGt clue and try prudently to un­attend the wed­ cover the real reason. If you ding. Am I be­ do, the answer is within your i n g unfair?" hands. Des pit e the I rather doubt. however, any strong ecumen­ frontal attack on her position ical movement, will have happy results. All the for which we logic in the world will scarceh­all have high convince this young lady ~t hop es, your this point. At the moment she daughter's po­ is stubborn. Outright threats of sition see m s any kind will strengthen, not incredible. If weaken her resolve. the young man Flaunts Regulatie. is willing to But you do have a problemsign the prenuptial promises, of how to react to her. It will and so stated, why does she re­ have to be a mixed measure fuse to ask him? of kindness and firmness. Don't

Obviously, many persons who allow your :feelings to be de­are not Catholic regard tile flected to the boy. Apparently,promises as unfair. So de some he is not responsible for her Catholics. Some would prefer attitude. In fact, he may become an arrangement by which the a helpful ally.boys become Protestants, the Eventually, you will have to girls Catholics. This is absurd inform him that neither youand can only lead to interreli ­ nor your husband can attend gious conflicts within the family. such a wedding. Her sisters can­The family cannot share its re­ not be bridesmaids. Make it ligious experiences. This remains clear this is not in oppositionkue when one of the spouses t9 the Protestant church, but is not a Catholic, sometimes with to your daughter's quite un­quite dismal results. necessarily flauting the Church'.

Spirit of Catholicism regulations. It is also true that some make Neither ,can her sisters par­

the promises, only to break them ticipate in such a wedding. This later with the almost inevitable may also prove a source of con­conflicts. When spouses encoun­ flict within the home. You must ter this kind of deceit in mar­ remain firm but not harsh. And, riage, they fear it is merely incidentally, it is wise to inform an example of other serious your other daughters of this deceptions. fact now. Please don't wait until

Your daughter's refusal to they begin to get inv9lved in ask her fiance to sign this agree­ plans for being bridesmaids. It ment seems to me a symptom ttf will be even more troublesome somethingmucl1more serious. then. I honestly wonder if she, her­ If your daughters decisionself. is still a practising Cath­ seems quite definite and the pro­elic? Mere attendance at Sun­ posed marriage is not far off,day Mass is scarcely the criterion you should inform the pastorof sincere Catholicism. There is or one of the parish priests. The a spirit of Catholicism which pastor or one of his assistants involves honest efforts to prac­ must know of this. Perhapstise the virtues, including the they can help. But perhaps it virtue of obedience t~ the is too late. Church. Promises Are fteqllire41I fear you are witnessing ihe first step your daughter is taking The important step t9 he in repudiating her .laith. Is she taken now is a careful investi ­fully aware ,of the meaning of gation of what it is really all a marriage in which one party about. Is she .merely trying to is a Catholic in a Protestant gain attention? Is she so fearful

of losing this boy that she darechurch? not ask him to sign the promises,Seek Real Reason

In the eyes' of the Church, even thOllgh he informed you she will not be married at all. he would? Has he told her some­This would not be the case if thing different.? What a dismal Both parties were p:rot~stants. prospect a marriage has when

the future wife is already afraidIn her case it is. Don't pull any punches in so informing her. of her husband, if this be the

My sympathy goes net lmlJ" case. to you, her parents, but also te But don't -use your refusal to her. Some people do a~andGl1 attend the wedding as' a club. the faith for what to fuem are It is entirely undesirable that purely rational -reaSDAa. Theit' lIhe enter a Catholic marriage Dumber is few. exclusively because IX social

pressures. ~ 1Vould be a ~

of deceit.and quite wrene.African Asks More Finally, although really it

might have been mentioneaIrish Missto..ries first, pray that she may change DUBLIN (NC) -The Prime her attitudes. Some believe that

Minister flf Sierra Leone aaid the Vatican Council may abolish l>ere that Irish Holy Ghost Fath­ or modify the prenuptial prom­ers "save( my country from ises. But, atx:resent, this is the illiteracy when the country's purest speculation, and I lear British masters were endeavor­ there has been much too much ing to lower the standara of ef this kind of 1l'lpeculation. education." Under present regulations,

Sir Albert Margai, on a state these promises are required. ~sit to Ir~land, thanked the Your daughter may consider Irish missionaries for making these rules "stupid", but one Sierra Leone "one of the most may charitably inquire if her literate countries in Africa." He behavior does not more qualify added: "I wlsh many more Irish than the regulatio'll$ for this missioners would come ever.", epithet.

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Pontiff Names Council Juror

Lawrence Cardinal Shehan. Archbishop of Baltimore and the newest U. S. member of the Papal College of Cardinals hu been appoint~d by Pope Paul Nl

a Council President and the re­placement for the late Cardinal Meyer.

The Council Presidents are a board of Cardinals who, since the changes made by Pope Paul in the Council organization, serve as a jury. They are.to see to it that the rules of the council are always observed and they are to settle disputes concerning the Council rules.

The Chairman of the Council Presidents is Eugene Cardinal Tisserant, Dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals.

Priest With Peace Mission to Vietnam

NYACK (NC) - A Catholie priest is among the eroup 8f eight clergymen who left here Tuesday for Vietnam to inter­view religious leaders in an ef­fort to establish a basis for peace in the warto:cn country, • Msgr. Edward G. Murray, pas­

tor of Sacred Heart Churcb, Ros­lindale, Mass., accompaniea the group, the Fellowship of Kecen­ciliation, which plans to spend two weeks in SaigoR in talks with both Catholic and Buddhist leaders.

The International organisation (IFOR) was founded in HH9, ill Bilthoven, The Netherlanti, and has 35,000 members. Its kead­'quarters are in London, with a North American office in Ny­ack, N.Y., and a South Americall office in Montevideo, Uruguay.

Baptist to Instruct At Catholic College

WEST DE PERE (NCo) - A. Baptist scholar has been engaged. to teach theology at a Ca.helie college here in Wisconsin.

Canadian-born Leslie R. Kq­lock will join the faculty M St. Norbert College this Fall, Father D. M. Burk~, O. Praem., colleae president has announced. Key­lock, a graduate of the Univer­ c:~~~ BOKAR COfFEl city of Alberta and Wheatoll (Ill.) College, presently is a dee­toral candidate at the Univcraitr Gf 10"-

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Page 17: 07.15.65

I~

THE ANCHOR­ 17'No Generalities ' Dominican Academy Gradu.ate Spends Year1

Thurs., July 15,1965 ,Continued from Page One .

Such experimentation can be granted to territorial bodies of In .India, Hopes to Find Career There Establish Center bishops but only lJy the Holy See. The ('xperiments are to be For Resea rch Dark-eyed Claudette (~l'lcciabeve, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael F. Caceiabeve ofeondueted ooly by d~finitely

St. Ma1;:hieu's parish, Fall River, has heard and been entranced by the song of India. Juststated «F0ups and 1M • deter­ In Educationmined period of time. returned hom spending: h~r junior year of college a.t the Univereity of Delhi, she is hop­

The C....missio. carefully peinte4l out that ~ neil experi­ments are decided en, the Com­mission "will always communi­ate the faculty (permission) to the territorial ecclesiastical au­thority (the bishops. of a partic­ular place), and this in writing, with the addition of conditions and limits within which the ex­periments may be performed."

The Commission has not done such and any rumors to the con­trary by those who have gone beyond the rubrics in force or the liturgical constitution are in error.

The further suggestions for change in the reading of the Divine Office suggest the spac­ing of the 150 Psalms over a two-week period instead of over a one-week period as at present. The reason for such a change, the Commission points out, is "not for brevity or relaxation (of the obligation to offer the prayers) * * * but for a spiritu­al ,advantage. The length of the hours of :he Divine Office can be preserved by the addition of readings if it is desired."

One of the suggestions men­tions the reduction of Matins-­the during - the - night - prayer (and the longest hour) from nine to three psalms--except for the more solemn feasts.

It is al:w proposed that the calendar of saints' feasts be re­vised "so that it is demonstrated that sanctity is diffused through­out the universal Church, avoid­ing making the Roman calendar a Mediterranean calendar." Spe­fically proposed were the inclu­sion of' the Japanese, Canadian and Uganda Martyrs.

Several saints' feastdays could also be grouped together on one day, leaving an option as to which is to be celebrated in a particular place.

Guidelines for change were proposed:

-retention of all the Apostles and Evangelists;

-retention of all the mor~ an­cient martyrs who are univer­sally celebrated or have a special universal import for the life of the Church;

-retention of the "major" doctors of the Church (the "minor" are to be selected indi­vidually);

-a selection from all the areas of Church life--cle=-ical and lay.

True Reform Continued from Page One

The Pope continued, "Today, unfortunately, one sees a weak­ening in the observance of the\ precepts which up to now the Church has proposed for the sanctification and moral dignity of its sons. A spirit 'of criticism and even indocility and rebellion places in question the sacrosanct norms of Christian life, of ec­clesiastical deportment and of religious perfection.

"One speaks of 'liberation,' one makes man the center of every cult, one permits natural­istic criteria. The notion of sin is altered, obedience is im­pugned and its constitutional function in the odering of the ecclesiPstical community is con­tested."

Yet aggiornamento is neces­sary-not to permit the above­but "rather for the growth of his (modern Catholic) energies and to make him more aware and more responsive to his duties."

The Pope concluded: "We must keep this in mind if we truly wish that Christianity, which the Catholic Church in­terprets and lives, may bring light, unity. regeneration, pros­perity, peace and salvation to

ing to return tG the subcontinent af~r her graduation next June from the University of NEWTON (NC) -Jesuit ­eperate(l Boston College haeMassachusetts. "1 might be establj"'hed an educationalable to W()rk with the Peace research center here, said toCorps at first," she ~aid, be the first of its kind in

"and then possibly I could the United States. find a position with the Indian It i!! known as the New Eng­government." She mentioned as land Catholic Education Center a field in which she is especially and the regional unit is a co­interested the education of In­ operative enterprise of the col­dian women to their newly-won lege's school of education and rights as citizens. n dioceses in the six-state area.

How did Claudette's interest Director of the center is Fa­in India begin? She said she ther Paul F. McHugh of Man­made Indian friends at the Uni­ chester, N.H. He is assistant versity of Massachusetts' and be­ superintendent of schools - in came so interested in their coun­ the Manchester diocese, and an try that she decided to spend a inslructor at Mt. St. Mary's and year there as a student. She then St. Anselm's colleges.learned about the "College Year Pilot Projects .....in India" project sponsored by The center is designed to co­the UniversIty of Wisconsin, now ordinate and disseminate re­in its fifth year. She applied and search relevant to Catholic ed­was accepted. ucation in the New England,

Her adventure began with an area. Fr. McHugh sa~s 51)0,000intensive course in Hindi at the students are enrolled in Catho­University of California and her lic elementary and secondarystudy of ~he language, one of schools in the six states. India's tWIJ .major tongues, con­ The center's program, Fath~1! tinued at the University' of McHUgh says, will include re­Oelhi. s earchin shared-time and

"I can get along in Hindi," she shared-facilities with public ed­explained, "but all our classes ucation, use of data processing were in English and all the In­ in school and student scheduling,dian students have to speak and pilot projects in the latest English, so there wasn't mucli administrative techniques oftrouble anyway." team teaching, upgraded class­

Claudette, a government major rooms, the use of multi-sensoryat the University of Massachu­ teaching equipment and experi­setts, said that the poverty of mental studies in new curriculm.India is appalling t.:r newcomers. "The clothes and living quarters strike you first," she said. "Many Prelate to Mediate people live in a leanto propped against a wall-that's their home. Race Hiring Dispute Little children go around with BALTIMORE (NC) - Law­no clothes at all, and it's taktm rence Cardinal Shehan will for granted that thousands have mediate a dispute over hiring no place but the streets to practices between the local Con­sleep." gress of Racial EqualitY and

Noibiq But "ice six· C€lmmercial banks. She said that food shortages Cardinal Shehan has met

~ven affect those with money. separately with bankers and "While I was there, we had a ,,\lith CORE officials. The latter shortage of flour and sugar and charge that the banks employ no matter how much money a only a "token" three per centl person had, thes~ items were un­ vailed' at Claudette's hostel. similar to rhe civil rights move­ number of Negroes and should obtainable." Girls ltad to be in 'by 7 on Win­ ment here, however, and the have a work forc~ "at least 28

Some people, said CI:audette, ter nights and 7:30 during the general attitude seems apathetic. per cent" Neiro. Summer. Lights went out at 10, "Servants are treated as merelive on a diet of nothing but James 111. Griffin, BaltimoF.

rice, cooked with a little salt, with special permission extend­ machines," observed Claudette. CORE chapter chairman, said and deficiency diseases run ram­ ing t9 12 during exam periods. !\. graduate of Fall River's Cardinal Shehan "could be a, pant. She Hved in a college hos­ One overnight pass a month was Dominican Academy, she is ac­ ,'ery successful mediator W tel and there too, she noted, food permitted, one "shopping pass"1 tive in the International Club help the banks. make a mont was unappetizing. "We had meat and one "movie pass," all sUbj'ect at tbe University of Massachu­ positive effort to integrate mOM only twic~ a week:, and it wasn't to the housemother's approval. setts. She'!> bound to extend its fully."

didvery well cooked when we "She was called the warden," members' horizons this Winter. get it. Most meals consisted of commented Claudette wryly. vegetables and chipati-a pan­ Five Indian Sisters were -eake-like !lread." Trains Counselors ELECTRICAL'among residents and Claudette

The Fall River girl made the Cantractersand another Catholic student re­ WINOOSKI PARK (NC) ­most of college vacations, using cited the rosary with them St. Michael's College here illthem to travel around India. She nightly. New Hampshire will prepare ~~ made a pomt of visiting the fam­ 70 counselor trainees for theArranged marriages still areilies of' her University of Massa­ U. S. De par t men t of Labor ~~ the rule in India, she noted, evenchusetts friends, receiving a through an eight-week program.among the educated classeS'."royal welcome" from them. Under the program, supported "~ "They were so excited t<;l see '''A girl can say yes or no to

by a $56,932 grant, trainees someone who had seen their. sons her ~arents' choice, but after a or daughters just a short time­ while many get tired of saying will be- assigned chiefly to youth ,,~ ago." no and agree to a boy simply to corps work and to the employ­

94;4 County St. ~ The typical Indian house is escape pressure." me!lt service, helping the 16-10 New Bedfordbuilt around an atrium, said There is, however, very little 21-year old gronp.

Claudette, and is characteristi ­ divorce, mainly because it il cally very scantily furnished. socially disapproved. "Pads on the floor are used in­ --:India has a caste system instead of chairs." many ways much more rigid

Strict Rules than the barriers erected by India is the third largest pro­ prejudice in the United States,

ducer of mothion pictures in the said Claudette. There is no WHITE SPA world, said Claudette, but the movement to eradicate castes country has no television at all CATERERSas yet. The movies, nearly all hi color, and nearly all musicals, don't come up to Hollywood BARBERO'S • BANQUETS • WEDDINGS • PARTIESstandards, ~he commented. They are the source, however, of all ,PIZZA·PATIO • COMMUNION BREAKFASTSpopular songs in the country.

1I0UTE 6, HUTTLESON AVE."The songs are released fi ve or 1343 PlEASANT ST. FALL RIVER'tix months ahead of the movie." Near Fairhaven Drive-In Also popular are English and OSborne 3-7710Italian Dinners Our SpecialtyAmerican records and, yes, the

Service On Patioubiquitous Beatles. Extremely strict rules pre-

MUSIC INDIAN STYLE: A collection of' reeords is among souvenirs brought 'back by Clandette Cacciabeve, St. Mathieu's parish, Fall River. from year in India. The college student says American and Englislt records are also very popular with people.

Page 18: 07.15.65

THE ANCHOR­'18 Thurs" July 15, 196~

'The

Parish Parade OUR LADY OF PURGATORY, NEW BF1)FORD

The LatHes Guild will sponsor their anuual· ·weiner roast on Supday at the Summer home of Mrs. Selma Joseph; Winsagan­sett Heights, Fairhaven. The tickets are 99c and will include door prizes and Arabic enter­tainment.

ST. JOSEPH, FALL RIVER

Women's Guilli members will have an outing to the Summer home of Dr. and Mrs. Louis Kroger in Plymouth, leaving from the schoolyard at 3 Satur­day afternoon, July 17. Those in need of transportation may con­tact Mrs. James Bradshaw by today.

Donations for a parish auction may be left at the school begin­ning Monday, July 26 and end­ing Thursday, July 29. The auc­tion itself is scheduled for Satur­day, July 31.

ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI, NEW BEDFORD

The Women's League and Confraternity of Men will co­sponsor a picnic Suilday,' July !5 ·at the Italian Literary Club grounds, 328 Parker Street. Various booths, games, rides and contests will be featured and there will be a boccie tourna­ment for men. Accordion music will be heard and refreshments will be available.

Parents of 12 Win Vocation Award

NEW YORK (NC)-Mr. and Mrs. George Price,. parents of 12 children, were presented with the Award of Vocation Citation ItJ' the Institute' on Religious and Sacerdotal Vocations of the Fordham University School of Education.·

The Prices, five of whose chil ­dren are members of religious orders, were cited as "models of an upright, industrious and pious life," and said they have made "a most precious contri ­bution to God, to His Holy Church and to countless souls."

Mr. Price has been an active member of the Ames Methodist church in Baltimore, Md., fur 30 years. His wife, Lillian, is a member of St. Peter Claver's Catholic church there, and a member of the ladies' auxiliary of the Knights of St. J,ohn.

-- 73 Nuns Pay Visit To Migrant Camp

TIFFIN (NC)-8eventy-three Runs from the Franciscan moth­erhouse here scattered out for a visit to the migrants in their eamps in this northwestern Ohio area.

"Operation Love" will become a regular Summer activity. The nuns have reserved Wednesday evenings for their visits with the migrants. They just chat with the adults, sing and play with the children.

Father Thomas Wehinger, TO­ledo diocese priest assigned t. the migrant apostolate for the Summer, was pleased the way things went the first night. ~heir very presence in the eamp is a way of saying they're interested," Father Wehingel' said of the nuns.

Educational TV LOS ANGELES (NC)

A study week in educational television for teachers and school administratorS will be held July 26-30 at Loyola Uni­versity's Foley Gommunicatioaa Cilenter her", .

Approve Disaster . Help fo~ Schools

WASHINGTON (NC) - The House Education Committee has approved a bill to provide as­sistance to education as part of the federal program to help areas hit by natural disasters.

Passed on to the House Rules Committee, the bill (H.R. 9022)

. would provide money for the restoration of public schools and would stipulate. that temporary provision' he made for continu­ing the education of private school pupils whose school is un­usable.

Parochial and other private school pupils could be housed for a maximum of five years in quarters provided and equipped by public school authorities. The bill would specifically bar use of any disaster funds for relig­ious worship or instruction.

.Father of'100 Orphans Infantry Sergeant's Work for Japanese

Children Wins' Acclaim OSAKA (NC) - The n arne'

O'Reilly is a legerid in this sec­ond largeo;t city in Japan.

It all began on Christmas Day, 1949, when Sgt. Hugh F. X. O'Reilly was stationed here with the U. S. 27th Infantry Regiment. ~e p!ayed .Santa Cla~s to the kids In the- Holy Famlly Home that year, ~nd has carried on the ro~; ever ')Jnce,. .

These poor kId!. I? tattered clothe~, got so ~u~h kICk. oU!,?f Santa, Sgt. 0 Reilly said, I d love to have adopted them all."

O'Reilly did something better still; he got the whole regiment to adopt Holy Name Home, He began a monthly 9ayday collec­tion among the men of the regi­ment. to which pradically ever~'­one subscribed.

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Con~ributions po u red in, and soon the ramshackle shacks that served the orphanage gave way to comfortable living quar­ters, and the delighted orphans began to dress and eat better.

For the 'pa~t 16. years the men of the 27th have kept up their monthly contributions w hie h have totalE'd about $400,000 to date. Every year they send a Santa Claus team to Osaka. and send three childrf\n from "Holy Name Home to Hawaii.

O'Reilly, now employed by the Bank of Hp.waii, received an en­thusiastic welcome when he ar­rived in Osaka to discuss with Japanese officials a plan to speed up adoption of the orphans by American parents.

Asks Voters to lack School Tax Boost

ST. LOUIS (life) - Catholics in the city of st. Louis have beeR urged in a pastoral letter to vote in favOl' of a 9Chool tax: increase proposed by the St. Louis Board of Education.

, . Cardinal Joseph Ritter said ia

the pastoral that "the best in­vestment a city cart make in its future is to guarantee il good education for its young people."

"As citizens we must show • concern and interest not only in our own schools but in all other community 9Chools as well. Thi. is especially true in our con­cern for public education and the thousands it serves. Thelfe young people are our fellow citizens and we must do all we can to give them every oPPQrtll­nity for a good education."

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Page 19: 07.15.65

.. ' Cape Cod' Dialogue Aug. 8 Continued from Page One tinues as a leader in this commu­

the inaugural broadcast March Dion, which is specifically con­2, ,19~0. cerned with church unity. He is

. Ftrd TV Servtee likewise a member of the execu-The program, which began Oft tive committee of the Faith and '

• 1'1-station network, was car- ,Order department of the Na­ried in i~50 by 118 NBC affil- tional Council of Churches. lates and by short wave around From 1957 to 1960, Dr. Nelson the world, with an average was dean and professor of Theol­

.weekly listening audience esti- ogy .at Vanderbilt Divinity mated at four· million in the School, Nashville, but resigned

'United States alone. The Bishop in protest o>ver an issue of racial fl'equently received as many as segreg;ltion. In 1960-61 he was 6,000 letters a day from listenel'l, visiting prC?fessor of ecumenics

,about a third of them non-Cath- at Princeton Theological Semi­,olies., n~ and, from 1961-62, visiting

In 1940 he conducted the first .p~ofessor for the Theological religious service ever to be tel- ~,ucation Fund, Leonard Col­~ast; the, next year he served lege in Jabalpur and United as narrator of the March of College in Bangalore, India.

'Time film, "The sto1'7 of the . Dr. Ne~on fa an editor-at­'Bishop Sheen began his "Life large of the Christian Century. J8 Worth Living" television Be- He 18 a contributor to religious J;ies In,~e Fall of 1951. By 1956 and professional journals, has he wu appearing on 123 ABC written articles and chapters for felevision stations in'the United a number of books in his field, States and '300 radio stations. and has ed1ted four books. He is

Aathor, Editor the author of The Realm of Re­lt was estimated that he demption and of One Lord, One

reached 30 million persons each Church which has been traan,s­week. The telecost has an audi- ' la~ into German, Arabic, ence of persons of all faiths and Chinese, Japanese and was re­he has received as many as published in 1962 under the title, 30000 letters in one delivery' he Overcoming Christian Divisions. n~rmallY.averages 8,000 to 10;000' A third book, Criterion for the letters pe'r day. '

He also reaches millions through his writing, Including the "God Love You" column which appears in The Anchor and other Catholic publicatioris, and "Bishop Sheen Speaks," a syndicated column for the secu­lar press.· In addition, he is ed­itor of Wdrldmission,a quarterly review arid Mission a bi-month­ly, the'world's most widely cir ­culated Catholic magazine

. Dr. Nelson

Dr. Nelson has been Fairchild ,Professor of Systematic Theol­ogy was established as the pro-Theology at Oberlin since 1962. He is the fifth person to hold the professorship.

The Fairchild Chair of Theol­ogq was established as the pro­fessorship of systematic logic and renamed following 'Presi­dent James Harris Fairchild's 39 year tenure. 1859-'98. Other oc­cupants of the chair have been Charles G. Finney, 1835-58' Hen­ry Churchill Xing, 1897-1925; and Walter M. Horton, 1925-62. The first three Occupants were also presidents of the college.

A native of Winona Lake, Indiana, Dr, Nelson was gradu­ated from DePauw University in 1941. He received the B.D. from Yale University in 1944 and the

, Doctor of Theology magna cum laude from the University of Zurich, Switzerland, in 1951. He

1 holds honorary degrees from De­Pauw, Ohio Wesleyan and Wil­berforce Universities. In 1963 he was eleCted to the American Theological Society.

, Church Unity From 1953 to 1957 he served u

executive secretary of the Com­munion of Faith and Order of the WOl'ld Council of Churches in Geneva, Switzerland. He con-

I Pres.-.dent to Ask Teachers Corps

NEW YORK (NC)"-7'President .Johnson told the National Ed­ucation Association he win shortly propose to Congress aNational TeachersCorps--vol­unteers to help regular teachers in city slums and poor rural areas.

Mr. Johnson also told the ann~al convention ?'- the. na­tion s biggest educational gro~p

Church, appeared. in 1963, as well as a fourth, FIfty Years of Faith and Order (with John E. Skoglund), • ..

' Methodist MiDister D~.. Nelso~ has lect~red and

participated m ecum~Dlcal con­ferences in. 32 countries, He was a Methodist delegate to the Third Assembly of th~ World Council of Churches m New Delhi in .1961 and also to the World F81th and Order Confer­ence .in Montreal in 1963. A Methodist minister, he belongs to the North East Ohio Annual Conference.

During the past decade he has '.lectured at more than 100 col­lege and theological schools in the United States and abroad. In 1961 he was Peyton Lecturer at Southern Methodist Univer­sity and, in 1964, the Marrick Lecturer at Ohio Wesleyan.

Dr. Nelson is married to the former Patricia Mercer and the couple has two sons.

Name First Negro Basketball Coach

KINGSTON (NC) -Laverne' Tart, former Bradley University baseball star, is the first Negro appointed a coac;:11 in the Catho­lic Basketball League of the Scranton diocese here in Penn-Sylvairla.

Tart, voted the most valuable play~r in the 1964 National In­vitational Tournament in New York in which the Peoria, m.,

. university participated, was ap­pointed physical education di­rector and basketball coach at Kingston Central Catholic High . School; largest high school in the

"diocese.Tart has been playing profes­

,sional basketball wit h the

Wilkes-Barre BarODa of the Eastern League.

Jersey Lay Workers . Ready for Missions

NEWARK (NC) -Departureceremonies will be held h' ere·In· New Jersey on Sunday next, July 11 for 29 laymen who will soon undertake work in mission areas..

Twenty-three are from the Newar~ archdiocese and- six from the' Paterson diocese. They have signed. on as Extension

that he would support a federal" VolURteers; ~Papal Volunteers program of fellowships to enable 'lor Latin America, Marian elementa~ and secondary school Helpers and members of other teachers to update their know- groups engaged in the miSsion ledge. . apostolate. ';gladly respond in Christian

The program, he' said, would Among them is Susan MeAl­ friendship in all ways open also help teachel'B, especially van-ah' of . Westfield, who will to" them during such • visit. Negroes, ,displaced by school ,leave for her ~nd three-year· Anything that furthers m~tual integration. It would Jive them' "·term hi Argentina" as a member' . C h'd st i an acqllllintance and' aew sk111a to find joba. ., Catholica 1'01: Latin America. friendship ill detinteIT IlIl aMeL·

THE ANCHOR- 19 ,·Thurs., July 15, 1965

Plan New Statue Of Pope Pius XI

VATICAN CITY (NC) - It has finally been decided that the commemorative statue honoring Pope Pius XI in St. Peter's k not' worthy of that Pope's place in history.'

Without fanfare, the former statue, which has been in the basilica for a quarter of a cen­tury, has been removed, IIi its place is to be installed a new, modern bronze work which HI said to capture the dynamitl spirit of the one time mountain climber, Achille Ratti.

The new statue is by Italian sculptor Francisco Nagni. Pia. is shown seated, with 'his left hand on a book and his right hand lifted in ble~ing. He 18 vested in a cope, and wears a

POPE'S GIFT: Eduardo Frei, Chile's Christian Demo­cratic head of state, admires a silver statue of the Madonna and, Child given him by Pope P2ul VI, as the Holy Father praised him for his "love of the poor." Frf:'i replied that his government strives for political, 20cial and economic reform "to serve' the common good of the whole nation." NC Photo.

"Third Visit, Possible l,J Thant Invites Holy Father to UN ,

Came to United States in'1951, 1960' In the event Pope Paul VI

decides to visit the United States, it would be his third visit to this country.

He came here first in 1951 when he was Msgr. Giovanni Battista M 0 n tin i, Substitute Vatican Secretary of State, and spent two-and-a-half weeks

, tour~ng the country. As Giovanni Cardinal Mon­

tini, Archbishop of Milan, he returned in 1960 for a week's visit, during which the Univer­sity of Notre Dame awarded him an honorary doctorate of laws.

It has been confirmed that Secretary Gener~ U Thant of the'United Nations invited Pope Paul VI to ·visit' the' UN. Msgr. Alberto Giovannetti, the Holy See's permanent oQserver at the UN, has said that if the Pontiff

Had• Prospect .Of Pope's Visit

NEW YORK (N~) - Protes­tant church leaders have hailed the prospect of a visit to the United States by Pope Paul VI as a definite asset in the ecu­menical movement.

Commenting on the .reports that such a trip was being con­sidered, the Rev.' James Y. Mc­Cord, president of Princeton

Seminary apd head of the UnitedPresbyterian C h u r c h Unity

Commission, said the Pop ewould be "received very warm­ly in America by all men of good will."

it would be "a dramatic in­dication not only of the Vatican's interest in peace, but also of the new ecumenical spirit which prevails throughout all Chris­tendoJ.D today," he added. ,. AnothJi prominent church~ man, Rev. Franklin Clark Fry, president of - the L u the ran Church in America and chair­man of the central committee of the World Council of Churches, said: "Protestant leaders would

does come to the U.S., it prob­ably will be sometime during the' ~Oth UN session which be­gins Sept. 21. '

L'Osservatore Romano, Vati ­can' City daily newsP'aper, has stated. it is premature to say whether or when the, Pope will visit the U.S.

The 1951 trip of Msgr. Mon­tini was described as vacation travel. He spent the first four days of his trip visiting in Canada. He stopped in Montreal, Quebec, Ste. Anne de Beaupre,

, Cap de Madeline, Ottawa, King­ston and Toronto.

Cardinal's .Guest He entered the United States

at Niagara Falls, N.Y., continu­ing by plane the same day to Washington, D.C., where' he visited four days. He then vis­ited St. Louis, Denver, Chicago, Detroit, Pittsburgh and New York.

On hia 1960 visit, Cardinal Montini was the overnight guest of Francis Cardinal Spellman in New York. The following day he went by plane to South Bend, Ind. was awarded the honorary degree at the same ceremony in which President D wig h t D. Eisenhower wu honored.

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,The old· statue was in mar­ble, and the work of the famous

I Italian sculptor Pietro Canonico. Critics generally agreed that the sculptor, who Was in his severi­ties when he received the com:' lni'ssion 'to do the statue, failed tb catch the personality or strength 'of the late Pope. '. . " .

.. Gift from' Nuns ~ . ,,~O~HlLL· (NC)-Rev. Hubert ~ox, .. ' Anglican, vicar of St. Barnaqas pansh here in Eng,. land". has pre~ented Pope Paul VI with a stole made by An,. glican nuns of St. Margaret's convent. The Pope gave the vicar a silver medal in return, saying, "Anglicans are very near to our hearts; w~ pray for you every day." . '

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Page 20: 07.15.65

'20 ,tHE ANCffOR-l)ioceH of Fall Rtver-n,urs., July 15, "1965

GOLDEN JUBlLEE: Jubilee celebrations are in ord~r 'at Our Lady of ishioners active in celebration plans:- Antone-Michaels~ rresident of golden Angels parish, Fall River, where parishioners are preparing for a gala jubilee committee; Mrs. Lillian M. Theodore; jubilee baH- committee chair­round of festivities during the next two month~. Top left, Msgr. Anthony man; William Rego Jr., president of Knights of the Altar. Right, view l\I. Gomes, administrator, congratulates Manuel Morris, who will be 98 Sept. of church's main altar and reproduction of the Parish Patroness, Otir 8, two da~Ts after the parish attains its 50th anniversary. Bottom left, par- Lady of the Angel.

Our Lady of' An'gels Parish, Fall, River, ,Q'bs~rves Golden Jubilee Pilgrimage to, North American MartyrsS~rine ~ ~heduled for, Sept. 6

This Is the golden jubilee Children of· St. Agnes' Sodality, wedding occurred on. its found- . resulted in the recent renovation 20 and Saturday, Aug. 21 'wilt Children of Mary Sodality, CYO, " ir.g day,. Sept. 6, 1915. It was the . of the interior and, evterior of be general confession day for- year of Our Lady 'of Angels

,Knights of the Altar. and the marriage of Jose 'Ferreira Min- - Om: Lady of Angels. Additional­ parishioners. A golden jubileeparish, Fall River. Founded . Ladies' Guild, ho and Maria do Rosario Melo. - ly, a hall has been built to ac­ ball :will be held Saturday nightSept. 6, 1915, the parish will Nine Pastors Years of effort by parishioners ,commodate the many activities at the Dwelly Street Armory. eoncentrate anniversary observ­ Rev. Joseph G. Toledo was _ of-the bustling parish and a new At 4:30 Sun day afternoon, ances in August, although special Our Lady of Angels' first pastor, Vatican Concordat :, parking lot has been constructed Aug. 22 the Most Reverend Bis­events began as early as last serving from 1915 to 1920. His in the rear of the church. hop will celebrate a PontificalOctober and will 'lot end until successors were Rev. Dario A. Stirs Controversy, Year of Activities High Mass at Our Lady of An­Sept 6 itself, when parishioners Raposa, 1920 to 1923; Rev. A.P. HANOVER (NC)-A concor- Parishioners began celeprating gels. A jubilee dinner will followwill conclude a three day pil ­ Santos, 1923 to 1924; Rev. An­ dat on education drawn up be- . the golden jubilee with a candle­ at 6:30,' also at the armory.grimage to Auriesville, N. Y., the tonio M. Fortuna,. 1924 to 1930; tween the Holy See and the light procession last 0 c t I> b e r. Th~ parish pilgrimage to theShrine of the North American P.ev~ Adriano Moniz, D.D., 1930 state of Lower Saxony has led Other jubilee events which have Martyrs' Shrine 'will close theMartyrs. Prior to the formation to 1950; Rev. Antonio O. Ponte, to bittern~ss and mutual recrim- already taken: place include a cbservance.of Our Lady of Angels, Portu­ ::'951; Rev. Joseph L. Cabral, ination in this West qerman mystery ride, a mardi gras and guese families wor~hipped in ,Faithful to Ideals1951 to 1959; Rev. James V. Men­ territory, leaving some doubt as a special mission, condl1cted bythe lower church of st. Patrick's des, 1960 until his death in 1961; to whether the concordat will Dominican Fathers. Summing up the aims of the I,arish , Fall River. First services anniversary observance, Msgr.lI/Isgr. Anthony M. Gomes, 1961 be approved by the state legis­in the new edifice were held Feb. until the present. lature. Next to come is the annual Gomes declares: "A jubilee is 11, 1917. The cornerstone was and has always been the com-The first curate, appointed in Intended to increase the a- 'feast in honor of the parish'sblessed and dedicated by the late 1!-l28, was Rev. Theophile Oli­ mount of Catholic religious patron, Our Lady of Angels. Al­ . memoration of a great event in Bishop Feehan May 20, 1917. veira. Others have been Rev. A. training in the public schools, ways a highlight of the church the life of a people, of a race

The Holy Name Society ante­ C, Branco, Rev. ManuelAndrade, the concordat has resulted in year, this observance is expected or a nation." dates the church, being formed Rev. Luciano Pereira, Rev. A. , a surge of anti-Catholic feeling, to top all oth~rs. It will begin , "It -brings solemn rejoicing in Aug. 20, 1916. Its members do­ M.S. Greaves, Rev. Joaquim A. and some Liberal party members 'Wednesday, Aug. 11, and end ,the celebrations of the accom­nated the parish's main altar. Furtuna, Rev. Ernesto R. Bor­ have demanded the end of all Snnday, Aug. 15, with the pro­ plishment 'of ideals through la­Other parish organizations in­ ees and Rev. Robert J. Laugh­ religious training in the s~hools. gram to include band concerts, bor and sacrifices. Faithful to _lude the Holy Rosary Sodality, lin. German courts have ruled in a solemn religious procession, their ancestry. the Portuguese

Msgr. Gomes was elevated to the past education is subject 2nd features and attractions reople of Our Lady of Angell his present rank in .January, only to the states, not to the made .1!opular in past years. and in general all the Portu­Unveil Portrait 1964. He was invested April 21, national government. This has In the days following the pa­ guese of the United States of

SHANNO~ (NC) - Irish and Ui64. He notes that in the first compelled the Holy See to pro- tl.'onal feast, Masses will be of­ America live the lofty and great American government officials ~ car of the parish's formation, vide for the religious, training ,fered for deceased parishioners ,ideals of Christianity, Portu­eame together at Shannon air­ there· were 20 baptisms. In 1964 of Catholic students. by nego- " and for parish benefactors, and .gl.lese traditions and customs, port for the unveiling of a por­ there were 86~ , , .tiating directly with -the .states,' . Tuesday, Aug. 17 will be marked the faith of-the Catholic Church trait of, the late President John First child baptized' was Mali­ since there is nO .Catholic school as childrea's ·day. A candlelight and the .laws and customs of the

51 'oF, Kennedy. " \leI Raposo.: '.the -parish'5'; first ',system as such in, ~erniany~ procession -is set for Friday, AUI. United ,Sta~ of Amel'lca."